THE OSHAWA TIMEC, Tyseday. February 15, 1966 ne wave THE aene GLORE IN-A GLANCE Canada's Maple Leaf Flag One Year Toward Forever LOTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's eay, leaf flag is one year old It was officially hoisted to the top of flagpoles across the coun- try and around the world on Feb. 15, 1965. The bitter par- liamentary debate which had raged on and off for six months in 1964 was replaced by prayers and appeals by Governor-Gen- eral Vanier and Prime Minister Pearson that it fly over a united country. A spokesman for the prime minister's office said Monday there would be no special cere- mony here today marking the anniversary. But the prime min- ister was expected to make a brief statement in the Com- mons, : WON'T TRY SELLING TORONTO (CP)----The Chris- tian pavilion at Expo 67 in Montreal will reach out to peo- ple who think they can get along without God, said a Jesuit priest at the unveiling of its de- sign Monday. Rev. John O'Brien said the $1,300,000 dis- play will not try to sell Chris- tianity. It is designed to reach! modern man, WILL CUT AIRLIFT OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's contribution to the Zambia oil) airlift of four Hercules transport planes will be cut to two during the Exercise Winter Express, a defence department spokesman) said Monday. Air Transport) Command will lift a Canadian infantry battalion and its equip- ment to northern Norway during the month-long NATO exercise beginning late in February. OPPOSITION FILED OTTAWA (CP) -- Three sub ; demand until 1975, an official said Monday. Dr. Gaetan J. Cote of Monireal, president of the 20,000-member Engineering Institute of Canada, said there is a 30-per-cent increase in new engineering students. TS 12 YEARS NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. (CP) -- David Louis Harrison, 32, former Vancouver and Nel- son, B.C,, policeman, was sen- tenced Monday to 12 years for the 1962 armed robbery of a bank in adjoining Burnaby mu- nicipality. He was convicted Friday of the robbery and of possession of $6,500 in stolen money. SEES GREATER SHARE VANCOUVER (CP)--A Tor- onto advertising executive pre- dicted Monday that in future newspapers will get a greater share of the Canadian advertis- er's dollar. C. Warren | Reynolds, president of Ronalds-Reynolds and Co., said in an interview that over the next few years dollar advertising in newspa- pers will exceed that of any other medium. START INDIAN STUDY OTTAWA (CP) -- An $80,000 research study on the special difficulties Canadian Indians have with the lagy was officially started Monday. under the aus- pices of the Canadian Correc- tions Association. CF-5 EASY TO FLY OTTAWA (CP) -- The CF-5 fighter-bomber is "so easy' to fly that it doesn't require a ground training simulator, De- fence Minister Hellyer said Monday in the Commons, He was replying to Douglas Hark- ness, former Conservative de- fence minister, who asked why had been cancelled, Great Morale On 2 Sides (Reuters) and Pakistani "orthodox rig WASHINGTON Both the Indian armies displayed idity" and " and flexibility' in the clared Kashmir war last sum mer, says an Israeli military! correspondent in a review pub lished by a U.S, military jour nal But the correspondent praises the troop leadership, by both sides The author is. Leo Heiman, lack of imagination) unde-} morale, | }patriotism and discipline shown missions opposing a bid for 8) whose assessment appears in mew operation of the privately- |The Military Review, the offi- owned CTV television os cial publication of the U.S, com- Stan eee gs maa a ga BG nal Seatae thatl One of Heiman's chief 'con- 2 Png CHCH TVR ati clusions is that U.S. . Patton! Hen GEOEY | an and wy Fan, rove , . MONC-| to be cumbersome. older, simpler, and less compli- cated than the American-made) ; Patton tanks utilized by the Pakistani forces,"' he says. . there is no doubt now} that the sheer modernity of the| |Patton was its undoing | "The Patton is so vastly su-/ perior to Centurions and Sher- mans that under normal condi-| tions no comparisons could be} made. But the U.S. tanks proved) too complicated for the soldiers | who operated them. ™ . computers went wrong, | Pakistani tank crews fed mis-| leading information into the electronic brains, the heavy guns had to be. operated by hand,;-and .the crews were $9/ preoccupied with modern gadg-| etry that they had little time} a contract for a CF-5 simulator | . | ~ Indo-Pakistan Altercation: ] FACE THAT LAUNCHED... Actress Elizabeth Taylor s "Helen of Troy'? and her actor-husband Richard Bur ton as "Dr. Faustus" pose 4 IU's Return To CLC Key > Lifting Of Tri usteeship OTTAWA (CP) --Readmis- sion of the Seafarers' Interna- tional Union of Canatla to the Canadian Labor Congress is the key to withdrawal of the federal trusteeship over maritime un- ions, the trustees said in their annual report to Parliament Monday. ¢ The SIU was expelled from the central Jabor body in. 1959 for raiding the membership of other unions. There have been informal disoussions in recent months on an application to have the expulsion revoked and the issue may be decided at the CLC's April convention in Win- nipeg. The trustees' report, tabled in the Commons by Labor Minis- ter Nicholson without comment, amounted to an indirect appeal to the CLC to accept the SIU back into its ranks. it also revealed that the three- man board of trustees has been making efforts to promote the formation of a single maritime union, with one branch to han- die ships' officers and another for ordinary sailors. Merger talks were held last year but were not successful. The trusteeship was estab- NEW YORK (AP)---CBS had a pleasant valentine for viewers in Monday night's Gene Kelly in New York, New York--A singing, dancing hour-long love note about the big city. The show spun all over town on a crazy guided tour, break ing out of the usual confining sets that make so many variety shows look alike There was Kelly dancing #| down a real McDougal Alley in Greenwich Village, tripping lightly around the court of the Museum of Modern Art, Rockefeller Centre , roller skating Park and touching a lot of other famous bases in between, in a scene from the play, Dr. Faustus", which opens tonight for a one-week run at Oxford, England. (AP) Western Reds Join Slam On Soviet Writers' Jailing LONDON (AP)--West Euro-, party, said nothing in the pres- left for fighting. To many arm-|pean Communists joined liter-| ent situation of the Soviet Union Allen, and-dance and Tommy plus a number of song- Steele, skating! ice} in Central): numbers by Kelly] the a British} Duke Ellington, jboy in a current Broadway hit, A Bright Night On Video. With Gene Kelly And Co. and Gower Champion, back in an absence. The format is one that lends itself to repetition in tuneful salutes to other great cities. | 000,000 homes in the United figure to double by the end of the year. The current figure is 85 per cent higher than it was a year ago and indicates that about one U.S. home in 10 now can see programs in color. Recommended tonight: |, CBS Reports, 10-11 EST, The ABC, 'music of Pop, 10-11, | Tony Bennett 'and the Dave Clark Five. . his dancing shoes after too long! NBC estimates more than 5,-| | States are equipped with color television sets and expects the| lished by Parliament in the tau of 1963 on the recommendation of the Norris inquiry which in- vestigated a wave of labor vio- lence on the Great Lakes. It was given control over the SIU. and four CLC affiliates-- the Canadian Maritime Union, the Canadian Merchant Service Guild, the National Association of Marine Engineers and 13 marine locals of the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway, Trans- port and General Workers. The trusteeship legislation is due to expire at the end of this year and the report made it clear that the trustees hope no extension will be needed. But in doing so they cautioned that the return of the SIU as "an acceptable, active and re+ spected affiliate of the CLC" is one of the main requirements |to completing their task this year. In addition to proposing a un- ion merger, the report says |there would be greater stability in the industry if the shipping companies would unite in an employers' organization. "To their own detriment, the |employers have been clearly un- co-ordinated in their efforts to date," it said. "The sooner unity of the em- ployers on one hand and unity of the unions on the other hand can be achieved, and the sooner the two parties can increase the scope of their joint industrial relations and manpower activi- | ties to provide stable industrial self-government, then the better it will be for the seamen, the unions, the employers and the Sandwiched in were a couple| Divorce Dilemma, a study of a/public."' of comedy numbers by Woody national problem; The Anatomy a study of!companies except Upper Lakes explosion" q with Ltd. of-Toronto are linked in an industrial bargaining organiza- At present all major shipping Still Alive On | Girl's Kidney- } TORONTO (CP)s-Arthur Van Zandt, 42-year-old Owen Souna planted kidney from an acti- dent victim two weeks ago, is holding his own in a Toronto hospital, doctors said Monday. He received the transplant Jan. 31 aftér Frances Gagliardi, 16, was killed in a Toronto traf- fic accident. Doctors said the new kidney 'is -wokirng, but not yet suffici- ently to cleanse Mr,' Van Zandt's blood alone. MEL KRUGER REPRESENTATIVE SUN LIFE Assurance Company of Canada BUSINESS: 725-4563 HOME: 723-7900 ies, ultra-modern hardware is ary leaders today in protesting| warranted such harsh sen- not an asset." | the prison sentences given two) fences, It called them "'incom- ton, N.B., and the Canadian Broadcasting League have filed Deployment of armor became!/ opposition to the bid by the) # battle of attrition, India losing member stations of CTV to take! 114 Centurion and Sherman over operation of the network. | tanks and 57 armored cars, and SOME WANT PEACE WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- North Viet Nam has disclosed that some of its Communist party officials are "pacifists" who oppose a prolonged war in Viet Nam and want to negotiate) | Pakistan's losses totalling 471) vehicles. HANDLE TANKS BETTER "The tanks themselves were| better handled by the Indians| istani Air Force were too mod-; \than by the Pakist |because the Indian tanks were! warfare." anis, mainly| Heiman also says that low-| level air missions in support of troops were launched with |greater efficiency by the In- dians than by the Pakistanis, because "the American - made jet aircraft utilized by the Pak- ern for conventional frontline| a peaceful settlement with the United States. The existence of the group was made known in an article written by Le Duk Tho, a leading party official, which appeared in the Feb. 3 issue of Nhan Dan, the party newspaper. SKIPPER SUSPENDED CLEVELAND (AP) -- The) thaster of the U.S. freighter) Cedarville, which sank with a|Spin the outboards, Avast, Ye Shippers, Heed! Great Lakes Rise Again By A. F. MAHAN DETROIT (AP)--Great Lakes | sailors: Crank up the cruisers,|an even two feet ahead of a hoist the | year ago. loss of 10 lives following a col-|sails. And if you're a shipper: Get |ting gates were opened last fall last May, has been handed ajready to cram more tonnage |to feed lower lakes, is two! one-year suspension of his li-|into 'the freighters. Al the lakes are up--from a the forecast is for another half-| nounced Monday. Capt. Martin|couple of inches to a couple of |foot gain there. | lision in the Straits of Mackinac} cence, the U.S. Coast Guard an- E. Joppich, 55, of Rogers City, Mich., feet -- aes with a year had pleaded guilty to| ago, and the U.S charges of excessive speed in|of Engineers' Army Corps lake survey ex- fog. His ship sank May 7, fol-| pects them to.keep right on ris- lowing a collision with the Nor- wegian freighter Topdalsfjord. WEDDING DATE SET WASHINGTON (AP) --Presi- flent and Patrick Nugent of Wau- kegan, Ill., will be married Aug 6 in Washington, the White House announced Monday. HARD WORK COMING | GENEVA (Reuters) -- Cana- dian Trade Minister Robert Winters said Monday long, hard negotiations are coming up in international tariff-cutting talks here and Canada would do its best to bring the talks to a suc- cessful conclusion. KING TO VISIT AMMAN (AP) Jordan's royal palace announced Monday that King Hussein and his Eng- lish-born prife, Princess Muna have accepted Queen Eliza- beth's invitation to pay a state visit to Britain. The announce- ment said the visit will begin next July 19 and will last from seven to 10 days. CHART HARBOR LONDON (AP)--A Canadian! survey ship is urgently charting a harbor on Queen Elizabeth's! Caribbean tour for fear the} royal yacht Britannia may run aground when it arrives Feb.} 20, The harbor is at Fammouth, Antigua, which has not been} sounded for more. than a cen-| tury. The survey vessel Bathend! was on a training cruise when) it was pressed into service. STILL NEED ENGINEERS VANCOUVER (CP) -- Cana- dian universities are turning out) more professional engineers but the supply will not equal the! p.m. ing until.July. Michigan and Huron, 're- bounding from 1964 and 1965 all- time lows, foot, Johnson's daughter Luci ruary of 1965 and are expected already are up one five inches over mid-Feb- to add almost another two feet by the end of July The forecast is that Erie and Ontario will add within frac- PARLIAMENT AT-A-GLANCE MONDAY, Feb, 1 The government tabled 1966-67 spending estimates in the Commons totalling $9,318,- 224,878, up some 91% per cent. Maritime Union trustees submitted their annual report, telling of efforts to promote a single union in the maritime field. The Commons continued de- bate on transport department estimates for 1965-66 Opposition MPs again tacked the railways for 4, 1966 at- ules, ,tions of another foot. Erie al- | ready is 10 inches and Ontario Superior, on which compensa- inches ahead of a year ago and| FELL IN FALL The big upsurge is due to heavy precipitation in the fall| of 1965, which brought that| year's average = the Great | Lakes basin up to 36.89 inches, | compared with pe 24.92 in} 1963, 29.56 in 1964 ,and a long- term average of 31.02 inches an- nually New precipitation may show a bit quicker this year than in recent below-normal ones Smaller inland lakes, whose levels sagged with those of the Great Lakes, now are higher So are streams which feed the Great Lakes and' the ground water table generally is up Lake St. Clair, a major con necting link between Huron and Erie, is one foot, seven inches 'up from mid-February 1965 and is expected to gain almost this much more by mid-year July levels are expected to be above average for the last 10 years on all the lakes and even above the 1860 - 1965 average on Lake Superior. The Ontario level is expected virtually to be even with the all-time average by next Aug. : not | | moving grain quickly enough | | to meet heavy shipping sched- They also criticized the CPR | for trimming passenger serv- | ices. Transport Minister Pickers- | gill said car and ship loadings of grain have improved. Other MPs concentrated on local transport problems rang- ing from airports to ferry services TUESDAY, Feb. 15 The Commons meets at 2:30 EST to continue study of transport. estimiates. The Senate stands adjourned until | 99 Feb, 22 RENT- 725-6553 DAY -- WEEK -- MONTH '5.00 PER DAY 725-6553 RUTHERFORD"S CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS A-CAR PLUS LOW MILEAGE CHARGE 14 ALBERT ST, Oshawa | | Soviet writers in Moscow. The writers, Andrei Sinyavsky and Yuli Daniel, were sentenced Monday to seven and five years at hard labor respectively for publishing books abroad that depicted Soviet life in an un- |favorable light. Their four-day | trial was closed to the western press, and only brief accounts} of the testimony pvere published} by Soviet news organs. "The handling of this affair has done a great disservice to the Soviet Union than have the words of Sinyavsky and Da: niel,"'" said John Gollan, secre- tary-general of the British Com- munist party. "The court has found the ac- cused guilty, but the full evid- ; ence for the prosecution and de- | fence which led the court to this | conclusion has not been made blic."" QUESTIONS TERMS L'Unita, published by Italy's jlarge Communist party, said |the prison terms seemed "'with- |out doubt very severe." Copenhagen's Land og Folk (country and people), the news- paper of the Danish Communist CO? at wi WARY Mire prevent prehensible.' 'The Séviet Union is not at war," the paper said. 'There is no emergency. The internal re- sources and popular pre-condi- tions for the building up of communism are enormous. "Against such a background, the verdicts against the Soviet. writers are incomprehen- sible." Valery Tarsis, a Soviet writer who published anti-Soviet works abroad but was allowed to tra- vel to London last week to lec- ture, said the sentences were "tan attempt on the part of the Soviet authorities to return to the Stalinist methods of arbitra- riness."' | TREES ARE CUT SOONER North American walnut trees, once commonly 150 feet tall, now seldom reach 100 feet. pee two} Air C STARTS WED. -- TWO HITS Elvis Presley in "BLUE HAWAII" -- "SEVEN SLAVES AGAINST WORLD" BILTMORE Today Only: The 3rd Dey None But The Brove "THUNDERBALL KEVIN ie LORY Prodicad by PANAVISON" [f MeCUNTED ARTISTS KS NOW PLAYING ! TIMES -- 1:40 - 4:20 NATIONAL The greatest Othello ever by the greatest actor of our time. | LAURENCE - 7:05 - 9:30, LCS. 9:15 AN ACTUAL PERFORMANCE OF THE THEATRE OF GREAT BRITAIN EVENINGS 8 P.M. ALL SEATS $2.00 MATINEES 2 P.M, ADULTS $1.50 STUDENTS $1.00 OLIVIER-OTHELLO A B.H.E. 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