|Speculator Gained When Johnson's Plans Known WASHINGTON (AP) -- Thejagriculture department were Us agric ulture department is| asked by the investigator to tell nificant step in its program to, 'Inere was no reason to ava) sere een dene ence nenacanae arene ae (CPj)-- develop s as delivery ve- China's. ability. to develop mis- lan unauthorized and "premature where and when they receiv Chinese hicles for lear bombs siles since China had 'quite a | Gisciosure of President jJotm-|their information and other de- Prof. Hung, designated head) crop of scientists," including H,|0n's plans to increase soybean tails. Those questioned told the geography of energy, said Wed-\of the new department of geog-| 8. Tsein, whom he described as acreage this year permitted alinvestigator they regarded such nesday he expects Communist) | raphy at the University ofjone of the world's leading speculator to make "a pile of information as confidential and |China soon will Jaunch » smali'Guelph, said he based his esti-| rocket specialists, money. declined to co-operate. leatellite, imate on reports of leading Jap- TRAVELLED TEACHER This became known Wednes- Lester Condon, the inspector- ogy Huns. eg im an- Chine physicists who had visited Prof. Hung, in Canada since day after an investigator of the general, told a reporter later nual meeting © e Cana- in 0 dian A acocteilnn of Geogra-| 'The Japanese haven queli- pry poten Bay Bn _ department's office of inspector- that his agency fully respected |phers, said in an interview such| fied how soon is 'soon' but there) ,, nited College, affiliated witn general questioned reporters re- the decision of the newspaper ja Jaunching would bring great|are some guesses it would be the University of Manitoba in| Sarding their handling of the men to keep their sources of in- prestige to China and be a sig-/in 1967," he added, 'Chinese Space Shot Expected Soon: Hung By DAVE BAZAY SHERBROOKE, Que. Prof. Fred Hung, a scholar whose specialty is the ; t Mrs. M, F. Doan of Lon- don, Ont., dove to safety on _ the front seat of her car to Overtime Ban Slows Traffic TORONTO (CP) Rush-hour transportation service was cut by more than 20 per cent in Metropolitan Toronto today when about 300 bus and street ear drivers refused to work evertime : A Toronto Transit Commis- sion spokesman. said that de spite the slowdown in service 'things weren't too bad this morning." "The streeicars and buses ¥ as crowded as they are every morning, but because peo ple leave at various times tra- yelling wasn't too bad," The spokesman said he ex- cted it would be worse during he evening rush hour when most people leave for home at about the same time Edward McDermott, president ef Division 113 of the Amalga- mated Transit Union (CLC), said after a union meeting that a strike is ilkely within a few weeks, Normally 1,532 buses and streetcars are in service in the morning and night, Toronto's subway will not be affected by the slowdown Mr, McDermott sald a concil- fation board report is expected next week and union members ean legally strike seven days after it « received Drivers and motormen now received $2.48 an hour under a eontract that expired March 31 They want a 62-cents-an hour increase, The TTC has offered 52 cents over 30 months, ' NARROW escape this 12-ton truck, She suffered cuts from flying glass F cement minor The ESCAPE truck was empty, Truck dri ver George Nash, 30, of Lon- don, swerved to avoid a col CNIB Broom Store Closed When 25 Men Walk Off Job TORONTO (CP)--George Lit- tle, spokesman for 25 .-blind workers who walked off the job Wednesday at the Canadian Na- tional Institute for the Blind, gave the men could not meet the cost of living with the wages shop, they he said. Demands inglude a 10-cent-an- hour increase for hourly work- ere, Mr. Little said the institute has offered increases of $2.25 are self-supporting, Winnipeg, His teaching travels| President's announcement formation confidential, include trips to Japan and the While it was learned the in- | United States, where he recently | vesigaticn was being made, de- | spent eight months as a visiting! partment officials would not dis- professor close the exact nautre of the He described the difficulties complaint, nor whe made it between the United States aund|Nor would they identify the Communist China as "a conflict! speculator involved of pride' that involves even President. Johnson and Chair- man Mao Tse-tung of the Com- A spokesman for the inspec- tor-general's office, while with- Good Nemes To Remember When Buying or Selling REAL ESTATE Reg, Aker --- President Bill McFesters ~~ Vice Pres. lision with another car (not in picture) and the cement truck tappled over ederal Drug Officers Outline LSD Dangers OTTAWA (CP)--Use of the drug LSD by the beatnik fringe a potential danger to the drug taker and to his compan ions, federal drug officers say Efforts now are being made by the federal Food and Drug Directorate to draft legal con trols on trafficking and posses sion of LSD Federal concern about misuse of LSD is illustrated in the cur rent issue of Canada's Mental Health, a publication of the fed eral health department's mental health division Dr, F, Gordon Johnson, a London, Ont., psychiatrist, de scribes in an article in the pub is lication some of the effects pro duced by LSD in controlled medical use, They include vio lent. outbursts by the taker who may try to act on emotions of love fear Dr. Johnson also says that tests indicate that 'in spite be the apparent profundity of thought that he (the LSD taker) experiences, intellectual stand ards actually deteriorate This is the kind which, in uncontrolled of LSD by unqualified persons, has the federal government worried, | {The United States also is dis turbed about growing use hatred and of effect use of| WEATHER FORECAST Seasonable Temperatures And Clear Skies Ahead TORONTO (CP) Forecasts issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m Synopsis: Little change in the current weather pattern is ex pected today and Friday Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On tario, Georgian Bay, Haliburton HERE and THERE LIBERAL PICNIC The Liberal Associations in the Oshawa area have plans for a grand family pienic on June 28 at Springhill Park at 1.40 p.m, with Mr. Andrew Thompson, leader of the Lib- eral party in Ontario, attend- Ing INCORPORATION The current issue of The On- tario Gazette carries the in- formation thal letters patent of incorporation have been granted to Paradise Orchards Limited, The firm has its head office in Bowmanville STUDENT TRIP Grade 7 students John. F Kennedy school will be taking a tour of historic Niagara Falls next month, Permission for the excursion was given Wednes day by the Oshawa separate school board, Sister Carmella, in a letter to Sister Agnes Teresa, supervising principal said the trip had been planned for June 14 or 16, Stre said the atudenis would be taken by car and ised three teacher al super by FAIR TICKETS Oshawa Separate Schoo! Board Wednesday night accepted a pro posa! fram the South Ontario Agricultural Society to have free children's day tickets for Oshawa Fair distributed in its schools MEETING MINUTES Oshawa Separie School trus tees decided Wednesday to stop sending out minutes of. its meet ings except to those who speci fieally request them, The move was proposed by trustee George Sciuk and backed by trustee Terrence O'Connor agreed that minutes do not ways give of the general board on various matters and also that it is cosly to distribute the minutes so widely al picture of the an accurate feeling UNICEF was granted permis Oshawa committee sion by the Oshawa Separate School Board Wednesday night to approach schools in iis system with re gard to participation in the 1966 Hallowe'en program. A_ letter from Mrs. Hl, D, Joyce, secre tary of the committee, said approval does not obli gate any school to take part or any pupil to participate, She said it is a voluntary participa tion on all levels which encour age board understanding bel ween children all over the world and gives Canadian pupils an oppor tunity to make a personal behalf of sick and hungry children in other countries effort on Psychologist Says Expo '67 His Baby MONTREAT, Gerard action filed: in is suing the Canadian Corpora- tion for the 1947 World Exhibi- tion for $80,000 for taking the original plans for the fair he 1958 (CP) Psvehol Desautels Superior ogist in an Court, , which claims to have fathered in asks that he y the father The action a be declared offi Dr. jof Expo 67 (THREE) SURVEY SALARY RANGE survey anistent: alt phaves of municipal surveying Applicant must be fully ox lent experience stetus, ete, in writing, by $00 pom PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT REQUIRES 54,098.00 te $7,232.00 (40 heur week Under the direction ef the Survey Superviver direct « tespomible for performing the deteiled work ef 4 in the Munelipel Surveying Meld, T jen with the Onterie Association of ting Technicions and Teehnelegivte ar heve equive- Applicants theavld pubmit full deteils of education ~ CITY OF OSHAWA PARTY CHIEFS number of expere }eae ee, martial Mey 25th. te © PERSONNEL OFFICER City Hell, Oohaws, Onterie who} Tor and Winds over Killaloe, Windsor, London onto, Hamilton; Sunny warm today and Friday, westerly 15 except light night Aigoma, Sault Ste, Marie, Ti magami, southern White River North Bay, Sudbury Mostly sunny and warm today and Fri day, Winds' wesieriy 15 except light overnight Northern White River, Coch rane; Sunny with a few cloudy periods and a few scattered afterndon or evening showers or thunderstorms today Mainly !sunny Friday, Not much change in temperatures, Winds westerly except mostly light! Pal] ig 115 to 25 overnight Main! and wes! Ottawa region and warm today Winds light except the affernoons sunny j Friday. | 16 in Forecast Lows tonight, Windsor St. Thomas . London Kitchener Mount Forest WINBNAM voseeeees Hamilton... St. Catharines Toronto Peterborough .« Kingston rrenton , Killaloe . Muskoka , North Bay Sudbury Rarliton Sault Ste Kapuskasing White River , Moosonee Temperatures highs Friday 50 50 78 SPECIAL WEEKLY MESSAGE | TO MEMBERS OF FOOD CLUB 100-38 lida 148-38 187-38 195-78 1946-51 209-38 233-112 254-48 270 46 280-56 431-102 1O7--51 432-102 THESE NUMBERS CORRESPOND WITH MAY LIST. HAS YOUR FOOD |} DOLLAR LOST IT'S STRETCH? Phone 723-1163 OUR PRICES FOR FREEZERS | | START 164°° | | FROM bystanders * iR LSD among the unqualified and is conducting congressional hearings on the subjec 2 POTENTIAL DANGER It's the potential danger in volved that we are trying to pro tect people against says Dr A, Chapman, head of the fed eral Food and Drugs Director ale Dr, Jot following observed effects in pa tients administered LSD such & shifting of nson catalogues the Visual distortions sharpening of colors objects in the room, a shim mery appearance of space and distortions of body image tremors, perspira.ion, dilation of the pupils of the eyes and palpitation, nausea or vomiting Lge usually in the first minutes two hours and are follawed in the second to fifth hour by Meaningful images of & pleas ant or unpleasant nature; wit drawal of attention into an ir ner world of fantasy; emotional instability ranging from continu ous euphoric laughter to deey depression and sobbing, sense of personal identity 'becomes thinned out'; mystical experi ence in which he feels extreme unity with God or the universe and that he deeply understands the essence of life occur te ) they earned j In an interview after the workers up a picket line 19 cents for hourly-rated em around a broom ahop operated ployees by the institute, Mr. Little said a piece workers made an average $65 a week and hourly rated workers received $48 to $52 a week He said none of the employ has unemployment insu rance, and deductions for the Canada Pension Plan have re duced the blind workers' take home pay The workers to $2.75 a week for plece-work- ers and a sliding scale less than set M. Mayne tute's personnel manager, said that employs heavily subsi- Vitam the insti the brodm shop the workers is dized "We cannot give they ask at this time,"' he said, "but we have made offers of increases with the intention of trying to improve the shop's ef- ficiency.' them all are aware of their dependence on the insti- tute for employment, but al though they work in a sheltered PM Speaks Out On Rhodesia MONTREAL (CP) Com monwealth: survival depends on the death of white supremacy in Rhodesia, Prime Minister Pearson said Wednesday night Members in Africa and Asia would not stand for anything less than an early change to majority rule by native Rho desians White now acceptable nent,' the prime the Montreal branch of the Royal Commonwealth Society : If there is not an an- swer to satisfy all members the association is not likely to remain a multiracial common wealth," Mr. Pearson, who was speak ing on Commonwealth Day, con- ceded that economic sanctions against the lan Smith regime in Rhodesia have not worked as quickly as expected, 'There have been leaks, pecially oll leaks," he said But the sanctions had been ef fective enough to spur talks be tween Rhodesia and Britain, 'an encouraging development", and use of force or compulsory sanc- tions would be a "great mis- take," Such steps would drive to gether Rhodesia and South Af rica and probably bring blood shed International Labor May Harvest Crop BRANTFORD, Ont. (CP) -- Casual Jabor from the United States, Jamaica, England and Belgium may help harvest On- tario's 1966 tobacco crop if ar- rangements between the Ontario Flue - Cured Tobacco Growers' Marketing Board and th fed- eral government are eted successfully, The board expects a minimum crop of 210,000,000 pounds this year, Tobacco farmers will need the foreign help plus available Canadian casual labor to com- plete the harvest is nol contl- minority rule on any minister told Poor weather early in May set the planting about a week behind but the board said Wed- nesday about 10 per cent of the growers have completed plant ing. ~ Baa 7 WUICE 31 og es. munist party. "Mao is too proud to bend and how can you expect she United States, the richest and strongest country in the wor'd, to kowtow to Mao." In a paper prepared for pres- entation today, Prof. Hung re views recent developments in China's energy resources, .d cribed as."a contemporary ex ample of a continuing power revolution in a developing econ- omy." Despite a slow start, he says China has become the world's leading producer of hard coal, excluding lignite. Coal produc- tion increased from metric tons in 1952 to 420,000,000 metric tons in 1960, ELECTRICITY UP China's output of electrical energy increased 10.7 times from 7,260,000,000 kilowatts in 1952 to 77,000,000,000 kilowatts in 1964, reaching the Soviet level of 1949 He says China claims to have become self-sufficient in erude petroleum by 1963, reporting an increase in output from 463,000 metric tons in 1952 to an esti- mated 4,000,000 metric tons in 1974 He ites this industrial growth to fuller use of man- power by employing three and even four overlapping work shifts during a 24-hour day in holding details of the complaint said the agency had been in- formed that a report. of the presidential plans had been pub- lished well ahead of the noon release time. Reporters SCHOFIELD-AKER LTD. 723-2265 assigned to the 66,500,000 | The QUALITY name to look for when buying GINGER ALE In handy major coal mines and a drive for higher labor productivity. Despite these gains, he says, China has a long way to go be- fore catching western nations In per capita supply of inanimate, ~~ energy. Expressed in these terms, China's output was 0.6 metric tons of coal in 1960, com pared to nine tons for the U and 1,5 tons for erage YN ee, Sa eet ine NO Pa fa. De the world ay-} A MUST Studin Srurcn Now Cpen at NESBITT'S Ladies' Wear 33 King Street East, Oshawa. Dedicated te High Style Sporteweer end imported Knits @ OPEN DAILY @ ii IGHLY RECOMMENDED Che Rih Room NOW OPEN SUNDAY 4 TO 7.30 P.M. Continental French Buffet Served Daily 11:30 . 2 p.m, -- 5 to 8 p.m, GENOSHA HOTEL INTERIOR DECORATOR FURNITURE DRAPERIES BROADLOOM 15 King Street East CUSTOM MADE DRAPES Phone 725-2686 When "easy" NOW... Is the time to switch... It's thet time ef the year when interest is poid on savings accounts . .. THE PERFECT TIME TO SWITCH UP... 444% eon SAVINGS 4% on CHEQUING 6% on 1 t. 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