» THE OSHAWA TIMES, 7 Tuesday, August 2, 1966 The strike has grounded Kast- ern, National, Northwest, Trans World and United Airiines. A settlement worth an esti- mated $73,000,000 during a three- year period was reached at White House negotiations Fri- day night, only to be turned down by the 35,000 striking the International mi ntenn prcture- | way. ; . a. | s 8 Seamans said, proved man's bil Quiet Again Than Was Anticipated -- : By R.C. Psychiatrist | - 1: let Again | Than cipate or Airlines Looms sim, rere | . irst | trist, who had sought evidence| whom the method had been suc- WASHINGTON (AP) -- The to open the way to the moonjup with an Agena for s firstiwaik, shortened by a low feel "p P melideat Joh A be bait period he chose, and could re-the Civic H y A - dante Gene tc een he sto dire the ¢ ative evaluation of the ident Johnson the power to ha ' Ae? dl cate nti ide bo-Tnuse rectly to the c & ended quietly at this resort cen- deputy 'administrator of the Na-| hikes Agena, powerless after four i oti *| abstinence. from sexual. inter-| "They passed the buck to the of rhythm is productive of se OPPOSED MOVE tu make sure it stayed that tributions of the two-man "gens ment that collected data of mi- ability to get out and "inspect NEW YORK (AP)--A leading| Consequently, he asked for re. After Fight HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) --{ael Collins scored a host of ac-|cult work sessions outside Gem- Under. the amended terms, | . P oy ' " to support the rhythm method|cessful in regulating births. The|Senate today goes to work on than we could have hoped for/dual rendezvous; jsupply, and a "'space stand" new the order, but the machin- Thus, Dr. Robert Se man Pa i los ? fev tae hel is a poor method. method, the countrywide airlines strike : . & session. " work for no longer than 180,'Te Monday night, but provin-|tional Aeronautics and Space - ; " months in orbit, Collins walked Ar ; " o rj : resident of the United States,' . rious psychological harm," says course during a woman's fertile P lini project, now heading for ra- Labor Secretary sisinisins | Grand Bend Gemini Further Advanced! N Rhythm Method Scored rand bend wemini urther Advanced | oe oe |crometeorites in space, This, lother objects in space." Roman Catholic. psychia-\plies from only couples for Gemini has done much more complishments, including a line-|inj 10 -- the half - hour space {Johnson. could end it for any| GRAND BEND, Ont. (CP)--|¢ " yas ¢ "the kc H f een Se eee eee tod. to. bis| leglatation that would give Pres- a five years ago. It was called "the most com: during which he stood in his ists could be forced back to o 'catching a second | -- ze . 'equires for up to six months, ; : { must conclude that the use, The rhythm method requires days, cial police patrolled the streets | Administration, summed up con- it ' : zoux prclogcal harm. ays ruse uring & woman's fertile Drier eater Wayne Morte over to it to retrieve an experi W. Willard (Dem. Ore. fessor in the theology school of the Catholic University of America. + Dr. Cavanagh, a member of "the birth control study commis-) 'sion named by Pope Paul, re- oe | ae "ports fis findings from vey in the August issue of Mar- sriage magazine. a--sur- has disapproved contraceptive means, "Many of the individuals are leading heroic iives of frustra- tion," he. says. 'The letters made me wonder if God in- tended Catholics to suffer so." In his preliminary report, he includes several typical letters ) after the Senate's labor committee voted new leg- \jslation Monday night, putting the strike deadlock back in the president's lap. The administration prefers a bill which would have Congress itself halt the walkout, now in its 26th day.' Organized labor strongly opposes any back-to- * Based on replies to. a ques- that accompanied the question- wo, order--whether it origin- 'tionnaire from 2,000 'successful "users" of the rhythm method, :Dr. Cavanagh concludes that its 'use deprives "a woman of the'dar, pains, desires, psychology, Senate naire replies. Said one: "We have calculated periods by thermometer, calen- ates on Capital Hill or at the White House. Morse said he will ask the instead to have Con- sconjugal act during the time of| graphs, charts, wheels, tables,| gress write a. strike-ending or- ther greatest desire' and thus »"'causes severe frustration in imany couples." 'CAUSES DISCORD Furthermore, he says, "dis- agreement over its use and quarrels over its failures cause tmarital discord' and "such 'marital disharmony with its at stending symptoms may cause 'psychic damage to the off: rspring."" The survey was originated ,last fall by Dr. Cavanagh on 'the theory that the rhythm method had more detractors than supporters because the »successful users, for the most part, were not from. being heard) luck, guess, math, estimates, sugarpaper, moods, secretions, elations, depressions and the moon. It is true that the time for desire for both is the unsafe time. The frustration is enor- GUS, 6a: * Said another letter: 'How misled I was about marriage! I worked hard to be a virgin for my husband. Then [ get married and the church tells me I can show love eight or nine days out of 29. Sure I can show it when I want but we don't want 10 children. We both have ulcers--and only two children." The pontifical commission re- ported to Pope Paul in June with its contents and reaction from him still forthcoming, : Changes Seem Extreme On The Hollywodd Scene By CYNTHIA LOWRY HOLLYWOOD (AP)--Change comes to Hollywood by ex- tremes--fast or slow. The instant success of ABC's Batman, last season immedi- ately turned television's atten- tion to other cartoon and old ra- dio characters Next sea- son ABC will follow up with 'The Green Hornet, and NBC is preparing a TV version of Dick Tracy. Other similar properties, in- cluding Orphan Annie, are available, The same thing has_hap- pened before--The Man From U.N.C.L.E unleashed a rash of shows with James Bondish heroes. And it will happen again with The Girl From U.N.C.L.E on NBC next season The fantasy fad, kicked off two seasons ago with Be- witched, appears to be waning. It's last vestige will be It's! About Time, a CBS comedy about a couple of astronauts caught in a space mishap thal lands them back on earth 1,000,- 000 years ago. The show will bid for laughs by contrasting modern men with their ances- tors Space adventure and science fiction will figure »rominently in next season's schedules, un- doubtedly because Lost In Space and Voyage To The Bot- tom Of The Sea have done 1967 Seen Big Year For Labor By W. J. DAVIS WASHINGTON (AP) -- The strike against five U.S. airlines, forall its uproar, may be just a small thing compared to what's ahead in + American labor-management warfare and the problem of settling economy-crippling strikes This is true because 1966 is not a year in which many big wage contracts must be negoti- ated. But next year is a differ- ent story, with contracts expir- ing in the giant auto, trucking, rubber and clothing industries Also in 1967 there will be new contracts to be hammered out for. paper workers leather workers, food processors and meat packers, and _ telephone and telegraph industries Strikes are a distinct possibil- ity. If they occur, and persist, new demands that the govern- ment "do something" are sure to arise, and as surely to be resisted in some quarters. Something unusual has hap- pened in 1966: A lot of city gov ernment employees have gone on strike for better pay, shorter hours and better. working con ditions, in the same pattern fol lowed for years by private em ployees The public payroll strikers have been mainly teachers, but have also included welfare workers firemen policemen doctors, nurses, transit workers ard garbage collectors Among private-indusitry em ployees, the Communications Workers of America has called for a strike vote by 24,000 members who work as instal- lers for the Western Electric Co, The results of the vote will be announced Aug. 20 is ELECTRIC NEXT? On the = big-business there's a prospect of hot trouble this summer or fall between the International Union of trical Workers and the Genera! Electric Co. scene Elec pretty well, Coming up: Star Trek on NBC and Time Tunnel n ABC But there will be a large rep- resentation among the 34 new programs of familiar cate- gories: Westerns, police action Stories, war stories and, most of all, comedies It took a long time, but the overworked situation comedy Starting the happy suburban family (smart mother, dopey father and two sharp kids) now is as out of style as teased hair. NBC, obviously upset by ABC's last - minute decision to launch most of its new pro- grams a week ahead of the planned three-network week, an- nounced Monday it would have "sneak previews' of three new programs a week early, too. Thus on Thursday, Sept. 8, we can get our first look at Star Trek, The. Hero, a comedy about a TV star, and Tarzan. Tarzan will be shown on a one-time basis in the early eve- ning Daniel Boone spot, moving into its Friday night spot the following week, a gambit to at- tract Boone's big child audi- ence to the jungle saga ABC's Peyton Place, which becomes a twice » weekly show (instead of thrice weekly) in September, has written Mia Farrow out of the by having her character, Alison MacKenzie, just away quietly under somewhat mys- terious circumstances Toward the end of Septem- ber, a new, innocent young girl will appear. Her name is Leigh Tavior - Young and the show's writers are still mulling over her Peyton Place name and a way to introduce her into the tangled story line series g0 der. Argentina Exodus Seen BUENOS AIRES (AP) -- An exodus of university teachers and students. from Argentina was predicted today as a result of the police of government seizure universities and bloody clashes with students, "Many of the best professors will leave," said Warren Am-| |brose, a professor of mathema-| tics from Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology who has been teaching at the University of | Buenos Aires. oot Ambrose, 51, was caught in) the battle Friday night between} police and students and reported | he and other professors were beaten and insulted by police In Washington, the state de partment expressed concern to the Argentine embassy. It was not learned immedia- tely whether Ambrose would be| among those living, but he told| reporters: 'Government behav-| ior is going to set back seriously | the development of Argentina."| ACTION WAS RARE President Juan Carlos Ongan- ia's military regime, in a dras- tic action rare for Latin Amer- ica, took over all nine state uni- versities Friday, contending| that Communists had_ pene- trated the faculties and student bodies. Traditionally, Latin American universities are auto- nomous and immune from gov- ernment intervention. | Violence broke out when stu-| dents refused to leave the Bue- nos Aires campus after the gov-| ernment orders suspending the universities' autonomous mired | After the disturbance, the! schools were ordered closed un-) til Aug. 16. Ongania, an army general.) seized power in a coup June 28 from President Arturo Illia, charging Illia had failed to pro- mote Argentina's development, The government Monday night authorized three universities to resume classes, saying the rec- tors had agreed to government control. But the 150,000 students at the other six universities, whose rectors refused to submit to government direction, re-| mained on an enforced two-week vacation Police guarded the six cam- puses Hilario Fernandez Long, rec-| tor of the University of Buenos/ Aires, resigned as did many of his faculty GLECOFF'S Take advantage o Buys to refill your cupboards after your Holiday Weekends. HAMBURG ASSORTED COOKIES 174 RITSO OPEN DAILY 8 ee it WK MEADOWGOLD BRICKS ICE CREAM ONT. NO. 1 HOME GROWN TOMATOES GLECOFF'S supermarner SUPERMARKET f these Great Food 242 «1.00 3 xcs. 89* meu 20" 99° 4-QUART BASKET N ROAD S. A.M, to 10 P.M, members of Association of Machinists (AFL- CIO) in balloting Sunday. WANT IT NOW The union membership wants the entire wage and fringe bene- fits package, estimated at 72 cents an "hour, paid inmmedi- ately, not/in stages, Of this amount, wages total 52 cents. The settlement reached at the White House gave the machni-! ists 18 cents an hour the first year. Current wages run up to $3.52 an hour. The measure that reached the Senate today would give John- son an alternative which by all 'indications he did not want. Under its terms, Congress would find that the strike has caused a transportation crisis warranting emergency action But it would leave it to Johnson to take that action, and to set the strike-stopping period. This amended measure sup- planted one which would have empowered Johnson to halt the strike for as many as three 60 day periods. Wirtz advised the committee Monday against provision for a series of 60-day strike stopping orders. Wirtz said if the committee chose to act, it should adopt in- stead a measure proposed by Morse, to have Congress- itself block the walkout forr six months, Senator Jacob Javils (Rep. N.Y.), a champion of the meas- ure approved by the committee, said he thought it could be passed today or Wednesday. "The president has a respon- sibility to execute the laws," Javits said, '1 don't think il's buck passing; I don't think it's putting the executive on the spot, That's the way the gov- ernment works." Wirtz said there was scant hope of a negotiated settlement in the immediate future, The labor secretary conferred with William Curtin, the airliner ne- gotiator,. and arranged to talk today with P. L. (Roy) Seimil- ler, president of the striking union. Six constables from London, | | Sarnia and Strathroy joined the! \local 11 - man detachment to} \guard against any further dis-| |turbances that kept police and| military police from Camp Ip-| perwash busy Saturday night, | late Sunday night and early) Monday morning. Police said they encountered no trouble as the last of an es- timated 20,000 holiday visitors | left for home, The town has a regular population of 700, Two London youths were ar- rested following renewed mob violence Sunday night, Steve Barre, 17, was charged with be- ing a public nuisance after a youth threw an empty pop bot- tle at a constable. Robert La-! Marsh, 17, was charged with possession of an offensive wea- pon--a fire axe--and causing a disturbance Both are scheduled to appear in' Lambton County court in Sarnia today, The trouble apparently started shortly after midnight Sunday when a fight broke out between two youths. jpid completion with two more) flights this year. Gemini Il, as.a rendezvous | Youth, 19, Dies be and space walk flight, will next off the launching pad Sept 9, to be followed by Gemini 12 seven or eight weeks later. Seamans, speaking at a press j . - 19/nesse, 19, of St. which ended July 21,/died in nospiiai fiere Monday the Gemini conference flight on noted that Gemini, in addition | "ight to paving the way for the Apollo man-to-the-moon program, had 8 an opera- tional spacracraft important to "given this country national defence," He spoke specifically of the three-day Gemini 10 mission during which navy Cmdr. John Young and air force Maj. Mich- Lorne Henderson, Conserva- tive member of the Ontario leg- islature from Lambton East, said he will discuss Grand Bend's police strength with At- torney-General Arthur Wishart. Superintendent A. E, Ayers, of the provincial police, said ad ditional help for the detachment is: being considéred for the La bor Day weekend, Of Gun Wounds | QUEBEC (CP) -- Roger Ge- Anseleme, Que, of wounds suffered in |what police described as a ame of Russian roulette. Police said Genesse shot him- 'self with a .38-calibre revolys earlier Monday in a branch of La Banque Canadienne Na- tionale. in St. Anseleme, 20} |miles south of Quebec City, He} was employed at the bank. Genesse apparently placed a single bullet in the cylinder of his six-shot revolver, police said, They believe he pointed the revolver at himself and pulled the trigger without look- ing to see if the bullet was lodged against the firing pin $0 WHY RETIRE? 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