Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Dec 1965, p. 3

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Zambia Moves Easy On Her Oil Stocks LUSAKA (AP) -- As Canada; and the United States step up! efforts to aid landlocked Zam-| bia following the gasoline sup- ply shutoff by the illegal Rho- desian government, stringent measures are being taken to ease the demand on oil stocks. Government ministers are us- ing smaller cars, diplomats have bought bicycles and many workers have cut out trips home for lunch. Gasoline rationing, which cur- rently limits motorists to one gallon a week, is expected to end wihin the next three months. Meanwhile the government is appealing for further economies. Zambia's watchword has _ be- come "Is your journey really necessary?" The situation is not helped by the temperamental telephone system, now being further over- worked as the public tries to do business without personal sonnel are operating in civilian clothes. Nyerere's demand follows the breaking off by Tanzania of diplomatic relations with Brit- ain in protest against "the fail- ure" of British Prime Minister Wilson to overthrow Ian Smith's white-minority Rhodesian re- gime by force. Within the -next fortnight, 44,- 000 gallons daily are exepcted to be on the road route from Tanzania. More than 150 trucks are engaged on the 1,000-mile haul from the Tanzanian rail- head. RCAF HELPING The first of four Canadian planes will begin flying fuel to Lusaka Thursday. The RCAF C- 130 Hercules transport arrived in Leopoldville Tuesday night. Three other RCAF C-130s are due in Leopoldville by. Jan. 2 | U.S. planes also are expected) to fly fuel supplies on the Leo-} poldville-to-Lusaka route. contact. Most people are pre- pared to wait for nearly thirty minutes for local calls rather than use up gasoline. The Canadian planes will bring the total daily fuel lift-- without U.S. aid--to about 76,- manga. This followed the return from Moscow of a Zambian min- isterial mission which said the Soviet government offered "ev- ery support," although they re- fused to give details. Back Pack To Be Used In Orbit DALLAS, Tex. (AP)--When Gemini 9 astronaut Charles Bassett takes a 90-minute stroll around the world next year, he will basically be a self-sustain- ing satellite--getting his propul- sion power and oxygen from a back pack. | The air force and LTV Aero-) space Corp. said Tuesday they have worked out steps neces- sary to don the 200-pound pack while outside a spaceship and ensure that it is working prop- ROME (AP)--The Rome city. government, taking a hasty sec- ond look at its downtown "pe destrian island' experiment, decided Tuesday night to allow automobiles inside the carless zone for an extra hour a i Owners of some of smartest shops, infuriated at being caught in the middle what one shopkeeper "this island of gloom," pro- tested dwindling business by. switching off their outside lights after dark. ' | In a 10-day trial period that began Monday, the city pro. hibited all traffic but buses and taxis from passing a 10-block area centred on the di Spagna, Drivers who lived in the zone had to get special stickers. ° The idea was to ease the daily. traffic strangle in the maze of narrow streets with their high- fashion boutiques, jewelry stores, plush gift shops and top art galleries. 9 At the same time, or so the city fathers thought, customers | JUDICIAL BAN in greater number would be ee | pleased with the idea of shop- _An. order by the Judicial of Oklahsoma City of all | Ping along streets liberated put into use: along Lake Tan-| FJliot M. See Jr. probably in| Pema he Mgrs i oo -- -- pone gy es |from exhaust-fume 'smog, 'blar- 000 gallons, This is just over! erly. half Zambia's needs. | Bassett, who will make a two- MEET INDUSTRY NEEDS | Other routes also are being) day flight with Command Pilot| Emergency measures have; jensured sufficient supplies for SOME SCHOOL BOARDS ARE GENEROUS Dr. A. Lee Thomas of Memphis, Tenn. shows the $55,035.00 check he received Pugwash Conference Meets In Addis Ababa ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) -- Christmas Eve from the Memphis Board of Educa- tion. There is only one thing l Conference sources said they The 15th Pugwash conference of| were expected to be brought up international s cient ists and first in a working group on thinkers was set to meet in this| world security. This group also) _ Ethiopian city today to study|)was likely to discuss non-dis-| Gronouski cut short a visit to science in aid of developing) semination of nuclear weapons.|the western Polish city of Poz countries, but with Viet Nam "Our conference cannot by- and other issues certain to be, pass so important a question in injected into the agenda Emperor Haile Selassie will) white terms of pyorld security as the rebellion in Rhodesia," address the opening session in) Millionshchikoy said Africa Hall, slated to be at tended by 90 scientists from 32 countries This is the first time the con ference, started in 1955 at Pug wash, N.S., by Canadian-born duals--and not as government) affairs who regularly takes part| U.S. industrialist Cyrus Eaton, has met in Africa Among the influential scient ists and thinkers whom Eaton, now 82, invited to his home to discuss problems in a country setting were physicist Einstein and British. philosophe Bertrand Russell. Since " help then! were "Our confetence also cannot discussing the important question of U.S, aggression against North Viet Nam. Al- jthough we are here as indivi- representatives--we must pay attention to public feeling in our countries."' ab U.S. delegate Prof. Bernard »|T. Feld said although the sci- 'Albert| entists came as individuals they) r| were not chosen at random and| influential in their own the gatherings have been held Sovernment circles. in widely separated parts of the world. AREN'T ON AGENDA "The Pug wash conference helps to keep open very impor-| tant channels of discussion and| communication among scien-| wrong, Dr. Thomas can't re- member anything he did to earn the money. Harriman's Trip Mystery WARSAW (AP)--W. Avetell Harriman, U.S. ambassador-at- large, arrived in Warsaw today on a mysterious mission U.S. Ambassador John A before dawn Shortly to. the and left meet Harriman ward, they went foreign ministry Harriman was accompanied to Poland by two U.S. foreign service officers, David Dean and Christopher Squires. Dean is a Chinese language expert and specialist on Chinese to after- Polish nan in the Warsaw meeting between the U.S. and Chinese Commu- nist ambassadors. Squires is an expert on East European af fairs, Most members, of the U.S embassy staff did not learn of Harriman's visit until after his! arrival. Harriman is one of Washing ton's most experienced. negoti- ators with Communist govern- ments and has often been used Viet Nam and Rhodesia were tists of different countries on|by the White House in special not on the agenda of the 15th|subjects of vital importance in| consultations with high Commu conference, but Prof. Mikhail intellectual and policy-making Millionshchikov, vice - presi -| spheres," Feld said. dent of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, said Tuesday The conference will last six these|days and all sessions will be questions "must" be discussed.| private. State Dept. Bypassed | By Three-Man Mission NEW YORK (AP)--A Self-ap- pointed three-man mission Hanoi bypassed the U.S to/ permission was state| said John McDermott, associate | "Quite frankly, government not sought," department in hopes of getting| editor of Viet-Report, at a press first-hand information on the peace intentions of the North Viet Nam Communists, says an editor of the magazine which sponsored the trip Hugh O'Brian Typed Now NEW YORK (AP) Hugh O'Brian as '"'Wyatt Earp' was for six years a fast gun and a high Nielsen rating in televi sion's Old West. O'Brian and the series quit while both were ahead and the actor looks back on the experience with mixed emotions. "Television offers a young unknown actor three things," he said. "Exposure to the public, money and aggravation." His aggravation was real enough when the western series went into syndicated reruns and he was free to take his career elsewhere. He found, as others before him, that he was a victim of type-casting. Today he is more mellow, but partly because he has finally succeeded in break- ing the mould "My problem was--and still is, in some quarters--that pro ducers of motion pictures may still think of me as a western actor." FILMS STILL AIM Moving from television into a film career is still the ambition of most young performers. O'Brian, currently in New York, rehearsing his part for next Sunday as host of NBC's Telephone Hour, has found a niche' in films, He recently re- turned from making an adven ture movie in The Philippines and a mystery shot in Ireland will be seen in movie houses soon. "I think ft is terribly im portant for an actor to keep working even when it isn't nec essary financially," he said "My ideal of the right balance of activity, and I'm getting close to it, is to make two pic tures a year, take.on four or five guest shots in and do six or eight stock," television weeks of cent Ul ure myuro wine cutire capacity 10 years ago. | conference Tuesday. "It is our duty to get the news and we're going after it,"' he said Federal Jaw provides penal ties of up fo five years in prison and a $5,000 fine for some un- authorized trips to foreign coun- tries Those who. went to Hanoi, eapital of North Viet Nam, are Staughton Lynd, 36, an associ- ate history professor at Yale Univeksity; Herbert Aptheker a Communist party veteran; and Thomas Hayden, 26, who has been active in student and civil rights groups McDermott said only Lynd represents the magazine on the trip, and added: "I really can- not comment on the other two, although we'll certainly be in- terested in their stories." McDermott said information received by Viet-Report "con- vinced us that the National Lib- eration Front (Viet Cong) and the Democratic Republic of (North) Viet Nam would wil- lingly move to end the war if two funda mental principles were Satisfied." He said the principles were that a government of national reconciliation be constituted in South Viet Nam and that the process of eventual reunifica- of the severed nation be set'in motion The Viet Cong, McDermott said, "has not demanded a monopoly of power in the south, but it has demanded that a new government come into power which will represent the actual! balance of forces in South Viet Nam." He said he expected Lynd to return to the United States in. about two weeks tion nist officials. Mimi Hines Scores U.S. Hit NEW YORK (CP) Mimi Hines, a Vancouver-born funny girl who sings and has prom- jinent teeth, took over Monday night as the star of Funny Girl, the smash musical in which Barbra Streisand has been im- personating Fanny Brice for the last 21 months. The critics admit that step- ping into Miss Streisand's stage shoes required a real act of courage, but thought Miss Hines made a strong debut Jack Thompson of nal-American, noting that Miss Hines has chosen not to imper- sonate the popular Miss Streis and but to play the role in-her own comic way, says the per formance "is, generally, as good as ever and sometimes better." Leonard Harris of The World Telegram and Sun says Miss Hines "moved the show along with as much drive as her pred- ecessor did, perhaps more."' Nevertheless, the critic says, she failed to match the deep impression achieved in the role by her predecessor. Man Killed By Snowslide CRESTON, B.C. (CP) -- Er- nest Ralph Coucher, 47, died un- der a snowslide on the Salmo- Creston highway near this com- munity 40 miles south of Nel- son, B.C., during a blizzard. RCMP said Mr. Croucher was returning to his job at Kimber- ley after spending Christmas with relatives in Vancouver when his car was buried in a 500-yard-wide snowslide about 25 miles west of here A snowplow uncovered his car The Jour- | Tuesday His body was inside.! |most industrial users British RAF Britannia trans- ports are bringing in more than 1,600 gallons a day, despite Tan-| zanian President Julius Nyer-| ere's demand that military per- jsonnel atthe Dar Es Salaam) fend of "the flying pipeline' be jreplaced by civilians. RAF per- | jganyika to the Zambian port of} mid-1966, will be the first astro- filed Tues., stripping federal Mpulungu and by railway from! naut to venture outside a space- P Judge Stephen Chandler the Portuguese Angolan port Of} craft in orbit without a space federal court clerk in Okla- homa City. (AP Wirephoto) Lobito. But these take time to) gun for propulsion. organize. The air force-developed pack The possibility of Soviet aid/pas a small rocket system -of arose Tuesday with the depar-| its own to manoeuvre the astro- ture for Dar Es Salaam of Zam-| naut through space bian Vice-President Reuben Ka-| §pace agency officials have called it "a real Buck Rogers MAN POSES AS PHYSICIAN UNDETECTED FOR OVER YEA HONOLULU (AP)--A Hono- lulu man told the Star-Bulle- tin Tuesday he posed as a physician at the University of California medica! centre in San Francisco and lectured there on anatomy more than a year before he was un- masked. Thomas Miyawaki, blamed the "extreme pressure of the Japanese custom of obeying your parents' wishes; they so much wanted me to be a doc- tor and I could not let them down. I tried very hard to ful- fill my parents' wishes, but I couldn't do it." In San Francisco, Dr. L.L. Bennett, acting vice-chancel- lor of the medical centre, said Miyawaki did not treat. any patients and was not connec- ted with the hospital. He was a graduate assist- ant, helping in undergraduate anatomy laboratories and classes. After graduation from Maryknoll High School, Hono- lulu, in 1947, Mivawaki at- tended Loyola University, Los Angeles, majoring in zoology He dropped out because "I could see at that time I did affair."' Because of limited space in- side the crew compartment, the | back pack-will be carried into space in the adapter section at the rear of both Gemini 8 and 9. The astfonaut will be con- nected 'to the spacecraft during his space walk by a rope-like tether line. By HENRY S. BRADSHER MOSCOW (AP) -- Alexander | Shelepin, a top-level Soviet trou-! not have the ability to become a. doctor." Then he went to Johns Hop- kins University, Baltimore, becoming a. technician there | and taking some courses. He told the Star-Bulletin he went to San Francisco with false credentials showing he had a doctor of medicine degree from Johns Hopkins phi et Poi leader Pension Plan © Change Asked | Dean Harold Harper, of the graduate division of the med- MONTREAL (CP) --- Officials| wit jead a delegation to Hanoi| ical centre, showed a letter to | of 17 railway unions, saying Ca-| chortly. | the San Francisco Examiner |nadian Pacific Railway employ-| Tho Chinese have been urging from Irene Davis, John Hop- jees are "up in arms," asked!tanoi to take a tough line, de- kins' registrar. It noted: jthe CPR Tuesday to negotiate) manding the ouster of Amer- "Mr. Miyawaki does not | changes in the railway pension|jcans from all of Viet Nam. hold a degree from Hopkins | arrangement announced earlier) pypiic statements here have in- although on a number of oc- | this month. dicated the Soviets would prefer casions he has presented cre- The union officials protested|, softer line that could lead to dentials to medical schools in- | what they called the decision! .n end of the Vietnamese con- dicating he is indeed a Hop- | by CPR Chairman N. R. Crump! flict. kins graduate." that the pension matters they Miyawaki said medical cen- | wanted to discuss "are not open) FEUD WITH CHINESE _ | tre officials were so pleased | to discussion." Since last month the Chinese/ with his work that they | The representatives are mem- and Soviets have been publicly | wanted him to become a |bers of the General Chairmen's| feuding over whether Moscow is faculty member. A resultant | Association, which consists of| sending enough military aid to examination for a doctor of | the general chairman of all the! Hanoi. ? philosophy degree led to his |intepnational unions at the CPR.| (The suggestion of Shelepin for undoing. Shocked by the re- | Association Chairman J. H./such a mission could mean that sults, investigators checked | Clark said: the Russians are approaching Miyawaki's credentials. inoi, with peace prospects pos-) sibly in the balance. The brief announcement said| Shelepin, 47-year-old former ead of the Soviet secret police, "If the CPR does not agree|Ho Chi Minh's Communist re-) __ Soviet Troubleshoster To Visit North Viet Nam nist) party and the North Viet- namese government. Shelepin, regarded by ment position. most bleshooter, will visit North Viet/observers in Moscow as sec- Nam, the official news agency|ond in the Soviet party to First Tass announced Tuesday night.|Secretary Leonid Brezhnev, The scheduled trip.of the So-| was relieved of his duties as a viet Communist party's No, 2! first deputy premier recently so comes as Moscow and) that he could concentrate all his Peking are fighting to influence|energies on party affairs. He the Communist regime in Ha-| thus no longer holds a govern-| |ing horns and the menace of | bumper-to-bumper traffic. NWELONVON Tawny Canadian Port LONDON WINERY LIMITE Before you buy any Piano or Organ $06... 165 SIMCOE STREET SOUTH 728-2921 He came to Honolulu this (to negotiate, then the employ-|gime on @ party-to-party basis month to be.with his parents. | ees would be within their rights|in an effort to assert strong So- to contemplate some sort of|viet influence in Indochina in Growth Seen During 1965 MONTREAL (CP) -- N. R Crump, chairman and chief ex- ecutive officer of the CPR, called on government, labor and management in a year-end mes- sage to meet the problem of international competition in a "realistic manner." Mr. Crump called 1945 a year of "continued growth in the Ca- nadian economy and of continu ing adaptation by Canadian Pa cific to both the opportunities presented andthe problems raised." The high level of economic ac- tivity had led to the "most sub- stantial program of acquisition of new equipment since 1957." In 1965, more than $67,000,000 worth of motive power, rolling stock and freight equipment was added to the CPR fleet He referred to the "rapid in- crease in maritime labor costs and the effect of significantly expanded air competition on the Good Nemes To Remember hen Buying or Selling wi REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker--President Bill MeFeeters--Vice Pres. Schofield-Aker Ltd. 723-2265 ONCE-A-YEAR SALE | strike action. view of apparent Chinese efforts The CPR announced to cu bo shut the Russians out of transatlantic st sen.| employees Dec. 14 that in view South Asia.) : ae operas RREUR Pave \of the impending Canada and; The ggg a . nd } t aed |Quebec pension plans, it in-|delegation wou visi 0) ee ee ate ta, tamned to integrate rather than) Viet Nam at the invitation of | eye ' |add its own private plan to the|the Central Committee of the enormous wage demands j | . have. beet bate on ds which | public schemes. Vietnamese Workers (Commu- way industry by unions repre- sedean senting their employees." , North Atlantic' as. a "serious problem" in the company's THE ULTIMATE IN LUXURY LIVING!! * PRESTIGE CARVING WAS WELCOME The old ship's figurehead was originally a charm to lure friendly spirits aboard. A FEW i tad f 1 AND 2 - mt BEDROOM DISTINCTION HEAT WITH OIL SUITES DIXON'S cones AVAILABLE OIL UNDERGROUND |, 723-1712 JANUARY SALE 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS PARKING o ee 728-291 124 PARK ROAD NORTH: OSHAWA SPECIAL 2 SITTINGS 4 27 KING ST. WEST was treasurer N. W. NEW YEAR'S DAY FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 725-2611 HOTEL LANCASTER P.M, AND 6 P.M, OSHAWA CUSTOM TAILORED CLOTHES AT REMARKABLE REDUCTIONS HUNDREDS OF QUALITY IMPORTED CLOTHS, ALL FROM OUR REGULAR SAMPLES! Ca ) | Loox _- IH HHH Ue | | \ 7 --Oshawa 'limes rno young =~ @ 10 | juss muse PH ee CLOSED SAT. NEW YEAR'S DAY ; 232 , Simcoe Street ' S d S) South 728-7974 Doorway eg to man's world Finest Quality @ Regular Stock The bést quality furs made in our own fac- tory by the highest skilled craftsmen, assur- ing you of the lowest 'maker' to "wearer prices. MARTEN'S FURS 75 KING STREET EAST a Opposite Hotel Genosha

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