Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Aug 1965, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, August 24, 1965 a 6Shot-Down Priest Off Critical List MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)-- A ig Roman Catholic priest wounded in a burst of shotgun "fire in Haynesville, Ala., was -off the critical list at a Mont- gomery hospital today, while at a New Hampshire church, mourners gathered for the fu- neral of a slain companion. Rev. Richard Morrisroe, 26, of Chicago, was reported rally- ing somewhat by Baptist Hos- pital authorities, who changed their description of his condi- tion from critical to serious and said he has "'a good chance for survival." In Keene, N.H., meanwhile, funeral services were scheduled for 27-year-old Jonathan Dan- iels, an Episcopal seminary stu- dent fatally wounded by shot- gun slugs in the same incident. Thomas LL. Coleman, 55, a prominent Haynesville resident and special deputy sheriff, was charged with murder and as- sault with intent to murder in connection with the shootings and is free under $12,500 bond pending action by the county grand jury. Ku Klux Klan leaders deliv- ered angry replies Monday to charges by Alabama Attorney- General Richard Flowers that) 7 Daniels death was "another Klan murder." Robert M. Shelton, imperial wizard of the United Klans of America Inc., said that if Cole- man is a Klan member, "I have no knowledge of it." At Jackson, Miss,, mean- while, police said Rev. Donald Thompson, 59 - year - old white minister in serious condition from wounds suffered in a shot- gun ambush at his apartment, apparently was shot because of his civil rights activities. Police and federal agents joined in an investigation into the shooting which felled Thom- son Sunday night as he walked from the parking lot of his apartment building. Police said Thompson re- ported he saw a car enter the lot with a white man driving and two others in the rear seat. He heard one shot, then took a\« full charge of buckshot in the back of the left shoulder from a distance of about 25 feet. Mayor Orders Full Effort To Plug Watermain Leaks Americans Pension Director Extols Its Virtue NEW YORK (AP) -- eypeed | Robert Wagner has ordered an all-out effort to plug water-| main leaks robbing millions .| gallons daily from New York City's dwindling water supply.) Every available city engi-| neer, clerk and laborer will be} pressed into the search for "Jeaks in the 6,000 miles of wa- ter mains, aqueducts and reser- matoralty nomination, an- nounced the discovery of a "significant leak' in a Central Park sluice gate. REPORTERS SUFFER Water Commissioner Armand d'Angelo estimated the loss at less than 200,000 gallons a day,| Fl H | but Ryan said he figured it to) ew ome |Pickering has no fears about be ast least 750,000 gallons. D'Angelo engaged a diver to voirs. ! t "We want to repair every|porters to witness the inspec- leak as fast as possible and pre-| tion Monday. When Ryan ROBARTS WILL OPEN NEW Premier John Robarts of this new Atherley Narrows Ontario will officially open Bridge just east of Orillia on Tuesday. The new bridge, on Highway 12, was con- structed at a cost of $769,- BRIDGE AT ORILLIA STRATFORD (CP) -- A ca- mera-shy, close-mouthed Lynda Bird Johnson sipped cocktails and chatted with stage person- alities after a performance of Anton Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard Monday night. The 21-year-old daughter of United States President Lyndon Johnson refused to pose for pic- tures or talk to reporters as she continued to maintain her self-imposed status aé a private theatre-goer, It was thought earlier that Miss Johnson was too tired to' attend a cast party, because of the long trip from New York early Monday morning. But a spokesman said later, the party was being held at her request, As U.S. Secret Service men mingled with the guests, Miss Johnson, wearing a white, sleeveless, A-line' dress with scooped neck, a matching quilted coat and black shoes, talked with leading members of the cast, among them Bruno Gerrussi, Frances Hyland and Douglas Campbell. She was accompanied by 26- year - old Patrick Curlley, a teacher. at D'Youville College, Buffalo, Others in the 10-mem- ber party were Dr. and Mrs, Al- len Isen of Buffalo, friends of GEMINI FLIGHT 000 and replaces an old swing bridge built in 1925, --CP Wirephoto 'Acted; 104 TORONTO (CP)---Gordon L. rn . 2 _ |the complexities of dealing with TORONTO (CP) -- Canadian|19 provinces, now that he's ac- when their chartered planes|Canada Pension Plan. were impounded during the vent them from recurring,"|showed up d'Angelo ordered/ weekend have the Americans to His. tagger ui Bh hig Wagner said. him out of the gate house. 4 thank for their return here this Sr atite : rigs o oMarsh Mr é i ya i sed to leave and, mni om sai Minister Judy L sh, Mr. Leaks in the water lines; Ryan refused to leav morning, one of them said upon Pickering will be responsible waste an estimated 3,000,000) instead, police tossed out the re-} gallons a day. Breaks in the porters. : lines waste added millions of, Meantime, in Congress Mon- gallons, and one such break|day, Senator Hugh Scott (Rep. Sunday flooded a subway in| Pa.), ctiticized New York's wa- Brooklyn, knocking out' four) ter mains. : subway lines and 50,000 tele-| "New York is leaking like a) phones. sieve,' Scott said. | The water leaks seeped into' Earlier, after a survey of wa-| the city election campaign Sa-| Jersey, Pennsylvania and Dela-) turday when Representative ware, Interior Secretary Stew- William F. Ryan (Dem, N.Y.),|art L. Udall said New York City @ candidate for the Democratic| had "the leakiest water system) WEATHER FORECAST Sunny And Cool Today: Clear Tonight, Cooler able cloudiness tonight and issued at 5:30 a.m, EDT.: Wednesday, not much change in| Synopsis: Cool arctic air will|temperature, winds light. | probably advance into central Forecast Temperatures | and eastern Ontario late to-|Low tonight, high Wednesday: | TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts arrival at Toronto's tional Airport. th Thomas Linton, tour organi-|"°™ zer of the flight chartered by | Said. : ; the Canadian Council of Evan-| '! think the plan is the finest gelica! Protestant Churches, Piece of legislation that's ever said it was U.S. pressure that been passed anywhere, and the led to the release of the two benefits to the Canadian people planes. are going to be great," he said The other flight, which was/Monday night from his sub- due to return to Toronto Satur-|urban Scarborough home, 'I'm day, carried 104 members of|"0t afraid of the job, because the Estonia Social and Athletic the program is a good one, al- Club. though, for me, it will repre- The planes were Seized .by|sent a real challenge." British authorities at Gatwick; The 52 - year - old westerner Airport and were being held un-|\was commenting on his ap- til the Canadian government! pointment. promised to pay $36,000 alleg- A native of Langley Prairie, edly owed by World Wide Air-|B.C., who came to Toronto only ways. last May as chief executive of- The. group was unable toficer of the new Centenary reach a high commission offi-|Hospital being built at Scar- cial until Americans on the tour|borough, Mr. Pickering de- called the U.S. Embassy in Lon-|scribes himself as a man who don, Mr. Linton explained. jhas spent a lifetime in hospital Interna-|'o, the administration of the plan, the announcement administration. "I guess you |grams like the Canada Pension | |check the leak and invited re- tourists stranded in. England|cepted the job of directing the! Plan." HEADED COMMISSION could say I've had considerable experience in government pro- AT-A-GLANCE By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Astronauis--Air force Lt.- Col. L. Gordon Cooper Jr., command pilot, and navy Lt.- Cmdr. Charles Conrad Jr. de- scribed in excellent physical condition by ground physi- cians as the Gemini 5 space- men enter fourth day of flight. Duration--A decision for a Egypt, Arabs Agree To End Clashes CAIRO (Reuters) ---° Saudi Arabia's King Feisal and Egyp- jtian President Nasser have jagreed to end clashes on the He was chairman of the Man-|Saudi-Yemeni border, the Egyp- jitoba hospital commission jseven years, from 1958 to 1965, \but "then, of course, I was only! \dealing with one province." Mr. Pickering will be respon- sible for the implementation for|tian Middle East News agency reported today. The news agency, in a report from Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, jwhere the two leaders have |been meeting, said Feisal and land over-all administration of) Nasser agreed to establish joint \the new plan. He leaves for Ot- ltawa Sept. 1. | "I'll be involved as soon as |I get to Ottawa," he said, "At |the start, I'll want to discuss lyarious parts of the program with the various officers in- volved. Then, we can map out the strategy we'll use in getting jit off the ground." Mr. Pickering graduated in jarts from the University of Manitoba and in _ accounting from the University of Sas- katchewan. A Second World War veteran, he has held posts as accountant 'and collection manager for the Grey Nuns Hospital in Regina, and comp- troller of the St. Boniface, Man. General Hospital. In Toronto, he has lived the life of a bachelor. His wife is Saudi - Egyptian observation posts to supervise both the halt- jing of border clashes and infil- tration. They also concurred on a joint offer. of Saudi-Egyptian fi- nancial, cultural and social aid to. strife-torn: Yemen, it added. Cairo Radio, in a broadcast monitored in Beirut, today quoted King Fiesal as. saying "unconditional. agreement" had been reached in his talks with Nasser, The agreement would be signed today at Khuzam Palace, where Nasser is stay- ing, the radio added, Feisal Backs Vote In Yemen minimum of 61 orbits will be made by 9 a.m. EDT on the scheduled 121-orbit, eight-day flight. Mission--Cooper and Con- rad settling down to flight plan for eating and sleeping after first-day concern about oxygen pressure in fuel cells. Experiments -- The zodia cal light photography experi- ment was set for noon EDT over Canarvon, Australia. The experiment is an attempt to determine the cloudy, hazy light seen in the west after twilight and in the east be- fore sunrise. Attempts also will be made to photograph air glow, a faint background illumination of night sky. Outlook -- Flight Director Gene Krantz said there ap- peared to be nothing to halt . the mission from going the full eight days. The pressure in the liquid oxygen supply in the fuel cell had climbed to 100 pounds. Quote of the day: Conrad: "IT never thought cold spa- ghetti and meat balls could taste this good, but it sure | does." the Johnsons, Congressman and Mrs, Richard D, McCarthy, Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Gauthn and Mr. and Mrs. M. Poumitt, THINK TOO SECRET A group of actors from the Queen's Men Drama Group of Cincinnati said Miss Johnson could have been more open, penmitting pictures and a brief interview. One. woman, also from the U.S., said of the searet service men: "They're so smooth those boys -- so smooth -- they keep smiling, smiling." The Johnson party sat about eight rows from the front in a packed house. Miss. Johnson requested that her arrival be kept secret be- cause she said she wanted to attend the performance as a private p rson '9. maintain se- crecy, the party travelled on a back highway five miles longer than the usual route, to Strat- ford, : The party flew in three air- craft to London, Ont, from Buf- falo, N.Y. where Miss Johnson Z PLAN there's a TOU ia... a cn deh da di cae A Camera-Shy Lynda Bird |Attends Play At Stratford had appeared at a state fair. The airport terminal was locked and no one was allowed on the ramps as the group en- tered waiting cars. They are staying at an inn across the river from the thea- tre and are expected to leave sometime today. NING TO CROW ? Oshawa has no better place for you to raise a family than Braemor Gardens--plenty of room for young- sters to play and a complete choice of educational institutions for him to learn in. We think we've thought of your every convenience -- come out and see if we're right! better future for | a night. Windsor «.sseeeeee 59 78 busy trying to sell their house! spp ' nil | ke St. Clair, Lake Erie,|St. Thomas. "15 in Winnipeg, 'The oldest son,|Felsal of. Saudi Arabia hag! What's Comi southern Lake Huron, Niagara, | London er 48 75 Wayne, is a student at Royal} come out in favor of a plebis-| a 8 ming Windsor, London: Sunny today|Kitchener .. 48 5 Milit Col : cite to allow Yemenis to decide| and Wednesday, little tempera-|Mount Forest..... 42 70 eyaied aued +o RS weap enna what kind of govern t| Aft M ? ? ture change Wednesday, winds|Wingham .... 42 70 Daughter, Joan, will be taking) nouiq run the coantie lal er oon se light. Hamilton .. 4 73 | her final year in arts at the/formed sources said today. WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Northern kate, Hore. el St. Catharines.... 50 73 University of Manitoba in the| But Egypt's President Gamaljnext step in space after the Ontario, southern Georgian Toronto" dawns sie & 73 fall. Brian, a high school stu-| Abdel Nasser was understood) United States lands a man on Bay, Killaloe, Haliburton, Tor-| Peterborough soos 48 70 dent, and Ray, 10, and Mrs.|to oppose the idea of a plebis-| the moon is still uncertain, Con- ng pecocenag Psoe 1 and 2 Kingston .. be 70 | Pickering will be joining Mr.|cite and proposed instead that! gress has been told. Hight cooler Wednesday, winds -- - rH a Pickering in Ottawa_ next) the decision should be made by| James E, Webb, head of the Ir ciisen. Gskceian: Ges. 0 |Mackoks rm po month, Behe sheikhs and tribal dead) peasant sat -- agami, wl -- Ste, pe North d Bay 45 67 " a | The two Arab leaders - are| committee Monday the un- 7 si Me ay; pagal Vari- Sudbury ; <5 pi Carrier Quit fmeeting here in an effort to}manned voyager program in- able clou iness with an ocea-|Earlton seve 40 2 find a solution to the three-year) cludes a possible fly-by of Mars sional shower tonight. Cloudy|Sault Ste. Marie.. 45 70 | civil war in Yemen in which| in 1969 and landing of an auto- la eC | lof jsp sd aging oe va tanger vl . | F 7 F t they support opposite sides. mated exploration craft in 1971. iceawcis wie 5 a Dlocadladed pe ar 00 as King Feisal earlier told re-| Then he said, a better estimate ---- le eure LOPS str i ae 4 4 | porters "the success of our mis- can be obtained of the cost of ; ; : Se keden ade | BROCKVILLE (CP) -- Wil-|sion is more than certain,'"'| a possible man expedition. ar en liam Charles Blanchard, 26, a|While the authoritative Cairo Pea! =a8 | soldier stationed at Camp Peta-|"ewspaper Al Ahram said the) MANY ARE IMMIGRANTS : ew ncep itis ases wawa, was fined $200 in magis-| first meeting between the king} About 1,000,000 Common- trate's court Monday for aban-| and Nasser yielded the possibil-| wealth citizens now live per- (Stevenson Rd. N, at Annapolis) Discovered Over Weekend: | REGINA (CP) -- Nine new] The disease, equine encepha-| euspected cases of sleeping)litis, has affected horses in sickness in humans in Saskat-|Ssaskatchewan and Alberta chewan were reported during/and killed*several. the weekend, sca the total) 'There have been no deaths ro prunes miller, re.|2mong humans in Alberta but gional medical health officer in/sleeping sickness is suspected Moose Jaw, said Monday there|in the death more than a week were five suspected cases injago of a two-month-old baby: in hospital in Moose Jaw. Two! Regina. more cases were reported in Alberta veterinarians said the Regina health district andjseveral hundred horses in the two in the Weyburn health re-)province may be suffering from) gion. sleeping sickness in what they! There were 7 suspected cases|term possibly the worst ence:| in Regina hospital on Saturday.|phalitis epidemic since 1938-39.) NEWS IN BRIEF RED TAPE NOT WANTED MAY BRIDGE SEA BERLIN (AP) Bureauc-; MADRID (AP)--Jaime Veiga) racy hampers East Germany's| Ordonez, a Spanish transport} efforts to stop people from flee-|expert, has held discussions in| ing to the West, complains Iist)Tangier about the possibilities Lieut. Jakubetz in an army)of a bridge to link Europe with! ' 'magazine. He said green trip-|Africa« The Strait of Gibraltar) _ wires were delivered to thelis. 14.9 miles across and a border during -the snowy winter|bridge there would be the and white wires arrived in sum-' world's longest. mertime cs sig Rae SN A Lea MUST BEND A LOT LONDON (AP) -- The Royal 'Tank Regiment has acquired aj Secondary school will prob- recruit seven feet, 6% inches| ably be awarded at a spe- tall, David Bartraham, 19, will] cial meeting of the Oshawa The contract for the new $3,000,000 Harmony Road be posted to West Germany| Board of Education tonight, after he completes recruit train-|) Chairman Ted Bassett told ing. | the Times today, SHOW WIDE ASSORTMENT MILAN, Italy (AP)--Among NEED A NEW FURNACE? No Down Payment--First Payment the world figures represented in @ wax museum here will be doning mail a year ago while he was a postman. Police. said a bag of mail dated in July last year was found last week in a ditch out- TRAGIC DROWNING VICTIMS and Jim Huffman, Bottom row, left Wyn Rhydwen, and Shirley Huffman died in the water, along with the two Huffman children, Karen 3, The storm swept waters off Manitoulin Island claim- ed the lives of four people Sunday night. Pictured are the two survivors: Top row, side of nearby Calabogie. | Blanchard said he quit his job iwith the post office, drove offj|Coober Pedy, Australia, escape |with the mail and later threw|the desert heat by making their bit from his car, ity of a draft agreement on Yemen. | No statement was issued) manently among Britain's 60,- 000,000 population, -------------------------- jafter Monday's session. ESCAPE HEAT IN HOLES People in the mining town of homes in artificial caves, (1 MONEY left, Mrs. Bonnie Rhydwen, ° LISTEN VOICE OF THE STEELWORKERS on CKLB, 1350 On Your Dial Each Wednesday 12:10-12:15 Noon and Katherine. (CP) 3 rd » " 1 December--Cali eet Gee Ceara ae PERRY SPONSORED BY LOCAL 1817 péleon, the poet Dante andl ogy or Night . : . 729-2463 UNITED STEELWORKERS OF AMERICA acto Gary Cooper, \ ail H } ON TERM 2 GUARANTY TRUST 32 King St. B. 728-1653 --_ EARNS 1% | | REGISTRATION OSHAWA PUBLIC SCHOOLS Registrations of all pupils WHO ARE NEW TO THE CITY OR WHO HAVE MOVED)and will be attending a different school than the one they attended in June should register at the new school on Thursday, September 2nd, 1965 9:30 ath, to 11:45 a.m. Principals will be at their schools to accept registrations and assign pupils to DEPOSITS classes in-readiness for school opening at 9:00 a.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 7th. Pupils will be admitted to Kindergarten whose fifth birthday is not later than December 31st, 1965. Birth Certificates will be required for all children entering school for the first time. BOARD OF EDUCATION OSHAWA, ONTARIO J, ROSS BACKUS, Business Administrator end Seeretary-Treasurer ©. A, BASSETT, Chairman : Ae Cc. M. ELLIOTT, Superintendent ef Publie Schools

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy