Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Jul 1966, p. 20

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ol ka ae a ee 20 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, July 15, 1966 Dr. R, Glenn Reed, Jr. KIWANIS PRESIDENT Fred W. Kitchen, president of the Kiwanis Club of Oshawa, announced at the club meeting this week, that Dr. R. Glenn Reed, Jr., Marietta, Georgia, was elected president of Ki- wanis International, at the or- ganization's 5ist annual con- vent, in Portland, Oregan. As leader of the international serv- ice organization, Dr. Reed will be spokesman for its 275,000 members in ada, Mexico, the Caribbean, the Far East and 'Western Europe. |retary of State George W. Ball, |through July 6, 1966, Mrkva met |it, He succeeds Edward C, Keefe, Okthoma City educational ex- ecutive, who has held the presi-| diplomat, Jiri Opatrny, a Czech|Opatrny took over. gm " 4 jattache here, has been ordered; |" Nei ih My Willis, of East Kildonan, Mani-|out of the country. A second,|Pl¥Ying the Czechs with rela- dency since last August. Jack Traps WASHINGTON (AP) -- TWo Czechoslovakian diplomats at- tempted to have a listening de- vice planted in key offices of the U.S. state department build- ing, it was announced Wednes- day. It was the first time state de- partment authorities could re- call an announced discovery of a Communist eavesdropping at- tempt-in--their-- headquart- ers although many secret listen- ing "devices have been uncov- ered in U.S. embassies in Com- munist capitals. The attempted "bugging" was uncovered through the sleuthing of American double agent Frank J. Mrkva, who worked with the Federal Bureau of In- vestigation. The Czechs asked Mrkva at first to plant a tiny microphone transmitter in the office of the |director of Eastern European af- wh 5,400 clubs, \fairs, but they aimed for big-| throughout United States, Can-|ger game Jater--including tun-| jing in on the talks of Undersec: | The result of Mrkva's four years of sleuthing: One Czech U.S. Double Agent Czech Spies conference Wednesday and in provided him with a catalog of a later interview, Mrkva said|government furniture last De- it all began back in 1961 when|cember which could be used in he was a passport office em:|designing an eaves dropping ployee whose duties included| gadget to fit unobtrusively with taking official passports to em-|such furniture, bassies around Washington {Or pp OVIDE RADIO visas. i Mrkva's parents came from) Finally, last May 29 Opatrny Czechoslovakia. He speak s/84ve Mrkva a small rectangu- Czech and still has relatives in|!at wood box about 13 inches the Iron Curtain country. Event-|!ong and one inch thick, It con- invi him |@ined-a tiny mnicrophone and-a pag yg Me ol pg em radio transmitter which could | bassy |be turned on and off by radio | Mrkva was under standing in-|"emote control outside the state structions to report to his su-|4epartment building, The Czech agent periors if any of the embassies | |tried to cultivate him, He did|Mrkva $1,000 for sneaking the "bug" under the base of the his wif | , ' ' emer gk the Crech nt Of | pookeasé in the office of the di- \aion, rector of East European affairs. | : i Opatrny paid a $500. instal- Fg Bg ro Mga open tn |ment and said if the device ling dinner at a Washington res-|Worked, another one should be itaurant Nov. 30, 1961. |installed in Ball's office. | | This was as far as the opera- MEET 48 TIMES tion got, Instead of planting the From November, 1961,|device where the Czechs wanted Mrkva turned it over to the FBI. The FBI tested it briefly sessions with Pisk,|in the building and found it worked effectively, but that was Mrkva said he started sup-/its only use. Opatrny, meanwhile, Pisk and Opatrny 48 times. After 11 became toba, is the new Canadian in-|7denek Pisk, is being allowed to|tively minor items but then the|concerned that the eavesdrop- vice-president and Howell, Q.C., of ternational Walter 4H, } Therap V | three, is getting an honor award | FBI. Reaps | Profits | ST. THOMAS (CP)--Patients at the Ontario Hospital here are undergoing therapeutic treat-/ ment and at the same time! stay in the United States only jbecause he now is with the : Peterborough, is one of seven|Czech mission to the United |Particularly States, which puts him in a dif- ferent diplomatic category. GETS RAISE Mrkva, 38-year-old father of and a spot promotion increasing {his salary to $10,987 from $9,267 closed his more serious goal-- ja year. j At a state department press' Communists wanted more. ing gear was not working as the The Czech agent did not pay|Czech anticipated. Mrkva told well, however. him he had dropped the device, \Mrkva recalls getting "paltry/presumably putting it out of jsums" like $100 or $200 at a|commission, jtime. He received $3,440 over a| At their last meeting July 6, four-year period. Opatrny said there were other He turned it all over to the/|offices besides Ball's where the Czechs wanted to place eaves- Opatrny dis-|dropping equipment. ' After that, the state depart installing listening devices in|ment and FBI decided to make state department offices. Mrkva |the affair public In May, 1965, Chicago Mass Murders Rival School System Grisly Slayings NEW YORK (AP)--Few mass Study Urged STRATFORD (CP) -- Busi- nessman T. J. Flood has re- In Past Years body of Terry Jo's sister, literally working their way back murders of recent times have| Renee, 7, After he learned that|signed as chairman of the sep- to society. With the help of four south- | eight nurses in a Chicago resi-|committed suicide western Ontario firms, the hos-)dence hall today. pital authorities have up to 20) patients participating in indus-| mass killing occurred on a quiet|ami by Roberto Ramirez, a for- street. in Camden, N.J. trial work A classic case of senseless Sept, 6, A portion of the hospital's | 1949. large laundry has been turned} On that day Howard Uruh, a} equalled in horror the killing of |Terry Jo had been rescued, he jarate school board with a rec- ommendation that the city's Another mass killing at sea public and separate school sys- was admitted last year in Mi-|tems be investigated "If we really believe in the mer Cuban lobsterman. Rami-jecumenical movement we could rez said that during an argu-jand should be analyzing the ment with Rogelio Diaz, cap-|separate school system to deter- into a small factory and there|mild - mannered, Bible-reading|tain of the banana boat Seven|mine if its continuance under the rated jobs. The firms are Victory Manu-|went Co. of|street, gunning down 13 stran-| Canada Ltd. and Parkspin Ltd.,| gers. both of St. Thomas, and North-jthe state hospital facturing and Gasket patients work on hourly-|Second World War veteran, took|Seas, he shot a souvenir German pistol and|death and then turned his gun/he said in a statement to the on a rampage in the Uruh is still confined in| in Trenton, | ern Electric Co. Ltd. and Lon-|N.J. | don Salvage and Trading Co.| Ltd., both of London. 'Tn the past we helped pa-| tients in learning social graces} and handicrafts" said Dr. C, A. Cleland, the hospital superin- tendent. "'Now we are able to) train some in a way that will) help them, when they are dis-| charged... ."" | | LIKES PLAN | "It's one of the most hopeful | things we've done since T've| been here," said Miss Shirley | Campbell, director of active therapies 'The industrial project is a giant step for the patients to prove to themselves that they can work, can produce and can| jing stand of again." Workers receive an hourly at the start. Later they are paid on an incentive basis, working five hours a day One patient said the new therapy "certainly helps out." It's tough to sit around the vards and wait from one meal the next." Seven patients already have been sent on jobs outside, rang- ing from office to factory work. the stress working rate to World Code Plea Issued ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)--A retired medical school president Thursday urged a-universal in- ternational code to govern med- ical experimentation on human beings Dr Marion Fay president emeritus of Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania, that in order to arrive at the code: 'Clear, uncompromising ques- tions about the ethics of experi- mentation and about the meth ods of practice on human be- ings should be asked in every country." Dr. Fay told a session of the Medical Women's International Association, which concludes its week-long 10th congress today with a trip to Niagara Falls, Ont. "The new drugs have brought new dangers. There is a grow- ing concern among physicians about the use of strictly re search methods in the treatment of patients, not only in the ever increasing clinical experimen- tation but also in the every-day medication and surgery to which the patient is subjected." Physicians have the duty to insist that the manufacturers of 1 new drug test it in every pos ible way before they give it to their patients, she emphasized \dmittedly, this may "result in the loss or delay of some im- portant research But this ethical problem must resolved by the and the scientist together order to reach the proper com promise between of scientific growth and respect for human life," she said. be physician in the dem |Bluebelle by fae said | For sheer cold - bloodedness, | |few mass murders rival the 1929 | mid-1940s. \a Chicago gangster slayings| known as the St. Valentine's| Day massacre | Seven members of the gang ruled by George (Bugs) Moran | were waiting for Moran in their | headquarters when four or five men, two of them in police uni- forms, came in and ordered the | seven Moran mobsters to line up against a wall. The victims meekly complied, thinking it a routine police raid, A few moments later the seven lay dead, riddled by ma- chine-gun bullets The Al Capone gang, fighting Moran for control of bootleg was blamed for the slaughter, but the killers were never caught One of the most terrifying Stories of mass murder was told in November, 1961, by a lit tle girl rescued after 3% days at sea on a cork raft Eleven-year-old Terry Jo Du- perrault told Miami investigat ors her parents, Arthur and Jean Duperrault of Green Bay, Wis., and her brother. were Slaughtered aboard the ketch Capt. Julian Har A J wre ar ee a his whe olan ha witht Vey, WHS -B1SS Wite Mary Harvey had been rescued ear lier in a dinghy with the dead average at the University of Chicago while making his |murderous night - time forays, Stabbed one woman to death beat and shot another to death and kidnapped, killed and dis- memebered a six-year-old girl At the scene of the second Slaying, scrawled across a mir ror in lipstick were words "For heaven's sake catch me before I kill more. I cannot con- trol myself.'" these Brief Attire Wins Feature In Breeze TORONTO (CP)--Brief At- jtire, a medium-sized filly with ja king-size heart,.took on some jof Canada's best sprinters |Thursday at Woodbine race track and left them gasping: for |breath. The four-year-old filly, owned | by S. Lihou of Toronto, won the jfeatured seventh trace in a time |for six furlongs of 1:09 4-5, just four-fifths of a second behind Day's track record Atti won the second race peegoty, with first-race win jner Doc Nan for a $123.00 daily double The exactor of Princess paid $44.50 Toki jand Yumka 68 YEARS CITY DIRECTORY Publishers 1898. VERNON DIRECTORIES Limited, Member As- sociation of North American Direc tory Publishers, 29 Rebeces Street, Hamilton, Ont. Phone JA 2-5066. since the captain tojthe present plan is justified," on four other shipmates. Today's tragedy is added to; 'We are trying to give Grade a list of bizarre crimes in Chi-/9 and 10 students the advan- cago that includes the "'lipstick|tages that come from qualified murder," one of a series of kill-|subject specialists, department ings by William Heirens in the heads, vocational guidance and fully integrated sports pro- Heirens, who maintained ajgram | board a BIRKS Price SALE OF SPRING & SUMMER HANDBAGS AND JEWELLERY ~ OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE | promised |* ities ik ag ~e Gaton Add beauty to wood as you protect it. EATONIA STAINS AND FINISHES A fast, efficient and attractive way to finish or refinish furniture, woodwork, antiques, boats, etc. You retain the natural beauty of the wood as you protect if from weather and handling. There's a wide range of good quality Eatonia stains to choose from -- each gallon covers about 6CO sa. ft. Please order colours by number. CEDAR REDWOOD EXTERIOR STAIN For natural exterior wood garden furniture, siding, shingles, etc. A penetrating flat stain and sealer for redwood, cedar or cypress, leaves a natural redwood colour on new and weather-bleached woods. No. E301. QUART GALLON 2.15 6.95 Other Popular Eatonia Natural Wood Stains: 305 FRENCH PROVINCIAL 306 FRUITWOOL 307 HONEY MAPLE QUART GALLON R5 85 Fat | 6.95 POLYURETHANE EXTERIOR CLEAR FINISH Use this tough, erdsion-resistant product alone os a clear finish, or as a finishing coat over the stains above, QUART GALLON 3.15 10.75 POLYURETHANE PLASTIC SATIN Leaves a velvety finish with a hand-rubbed look, yet requires no rubbing. Can also be used on stained and painted surfaces Polyurethane plastic gloss adds a scuff-resistant lustre to floors, furni- ture, ete, and on outside surface provides protection from weather. Same prices for satin or gloss 4 PINT QUART 1.10 3.15 EATON'S LOWER LEVEL, DEPT. 274 Save 25.35 to 31.70 MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S Two-Trouser Suits Reg. 75.00 to 95.00! 308 PLATINUM 309 RED MAHOGANY 311 WALNUT 302 BLONEI 303 BUTTERNUT 304 DRIFTWOOL @e @et ee. ef @e @f ee @eE ee Va PINT The man in the wool worsted suit. He's calm, cool and sophisticated. He knows what he wants and how to get it. He's in command of every situation. He could be you, English or domestic worsteds. Choose from trim 2-or-3-button models with tailored or natural shoulders: Plain or pleated trousers. Traditional good looks, built-in comfort, and the satisfaction of knowing that the style is right up-to-the-minute. Available. in. bracing shades of blue, grey or brown. Sizes 36 to 46 in- cluding some tall and short models. Try one on, You'll feel like a new man. SPECIAL, two-trouser suit 9.65 10 63-30 EATON'S MALL LEVEL, DEPT. 229 10.75 PHONE 725-7373 EATON'S WELCOMES VISITORS TO OSHAWA... and may we suggest that when you're shopping for souvenirs, you visit our "Canadian Gift Shop" Here's where you'll find a wealth of original Canadian craftmanship .. . beautiful plaques and trays in handsome metalcraft and glass; Indian and Eskimo crafts; plus fine Canadian wool blankets; exquisite wood carvings and a host glassware; in fact whatever your taste, the Gift Shop offers fascinating and rewarding shopping @ EATON'S MALL LEVEL STORE HOURS: 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday, Open Thursday and Friday Nights Until 9 a

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