Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Sep 1966, p. 18

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Pa a ec a a i a | 18 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, Beptember 12, 1966 Sou th Vi et Fi gh t S H ay d Canadian Cannibalism rontres Sek. agate sie AY Dyn Enalnd man died from a stab wound in the chest here Monday --the fourth British policeman killed on po at month, bagdte4 ear-o! were in connection with 'vag Enifing papers which maintain that the maintenance of service prestige * ee nigh of military opini . we! ion speech he showed that he ,ce-\against integration Feiains Ove Described At Congress AUCKLAND (CP)--The idea To Curb Cholera, Plague sas ae as These men aren't in training for space flights, though their work might be considered as dangerous. PRECARIOUS PERCH * lon a charge of delivering a ~'|false message with intent to 'jalarm a switchboard operator . the city water tower at Strat- ford, Ont, They are repainting (CP Photo) "|blew himself up in a House of There were 7,000 cases of cholera in the South Viet- namese capital of Saigon during the first eight months of this year. A Ca» nadian Fiess veperter de- SCrivED tno ace Coo of the war-torn country. By DOUGLAS AMARON SAIGON (CP) -- Cholera and plague and removal of the conditions that breed these diseases are the major health problem in South Viet Nam. The war and two .of its' ad- juncts--population shifts and the booming economy--make it difficult to meet that prob- lem but the World Health Or- ganization gives full marks to the South Vietnamese govern- ment for trying. The Canadian governmeni has allocated more _ tnan $1,000,000 to medical aid here this year and in the last few weeks 500,000 doses of oral vaccine against polio and the first of 10 pre-packaged emer- --+ hospital units have ar- rived, In addition, work has begun on a Canadian-supported tu- berculosis clinic at Quang WILL STAND TRIAL TORONTO (CP) -- George William Clarke, 47 , Monday elected trial by judge and jury on the same evening a man '\Commons washroom. Clarke, a CBC sound technician, entered no plea and bail of $200 was 'continued. Operator Elizabeth Brown said an unknown man told her 'that the same thing that happened in Ottawa was going to happen in the TV sta- tion shortly," OPENS COURTHOUSE TORONTO (CP) -- Premier Robarts Monday opened the new $13,760,000 Metropolitan Toronto courthouse on down- town University Avenue, The building, which houses 10 court- rooms for the Ontario Supreme Court, eight for York County court and one for the federal Exchequer Court, will be put into use today. HAIRCUT ORDERED TORONTO (CP) -- At least one Toronto high school has or- s or ea about isin oe bilan Jews Search For Dead Kin'.'2"5,.20 e's) | In Berlin Burial Ground BERLIN (AP) -- They came from all over the world looking for their dead, feeling a little uneasy to be in Germany. They are Jews and their des- tination at the end of a shaded street in East Berlin is the Weissensee cemetery, where 114,000 Jews are interred. The dead of Weissensee are not the victims of Nazi death camps. Most of them were dur- jed before the Second World «War. But with the war and the deportation of Jews came re- ports of the deaths of some who managed to stay in Berlin, Just before war's end, about 5,100 Jews were registered in Berlin. Once there were 270,000. One visitor who came to Weis- sensee was a journalist from Jerusalem. He and his wife fled trom Berlin and the Nazis in 1933. They had misgivings about coming back, even now, but the husband wanted to find his fath- er's grave. "He died in 1942 in Berlin," he said. 'I know that from peo- ple who were still here then, But I do not know where he was buried. That is why I came to Weissensee." ATTENDANT HELPS A woman attendant helped the man look through card files and registers, but his father's name was not listed. "Tf he died in Berlin during the war, he was buried here," she said. "That had nothing to do with the persecution. You died, you were buried and if you were a Jew, you-were buried here." The visiting son said he would check further with civil auth- orities in the West Berlin dis- trict where his father lived. dered a youth to have a haircut come back until his hair was shorter. But School Trustee William Ross says he may bring the case before the school board Wednesday, when he hopes a law professor will speak on Mike's behalf. SUGGEST FINE PLAN HAMILTON (CP) -- Pay-| ment of traffic fines at chart- ered banks was suggested Mon- day in a grand jury's presenta- tion at general sessions of NEWS IN BRIEF |The chair will be financially Bussieres said the group would continue to formulate plans in order to present a better appli- cation to the international or- ganization at its convention next year in Toronto. NAMED CONSUL - GENERAL OTTAWA (CP)--Gear McEn- tyre, 53, Canada's chief tax col- lector, has been appointed con- sul-general in Los Angeles, Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Martin announced Monday. Mr. McEn- tyre has served 12 years as deputy revenue minister, super- vising the taxation division, which collects personal and cor- poration income taxes and suc- cession duties and administers the Canada Pension Plan. RCMP MAKE CHANGES OTTAWA (CP)--Chief Supt. W. J. Fitzsimmons, 53, of West- boro, Ont., and Toronto, the RCMP's commanding officer in southern Ontario, will assume command of the force in Al- berta in December, Commis- sioner George B. McClellan an- nounced Monday. Supt. G. R, Engel, 58, of Edmonton and Vancouver, will move to On- tario, HARVARD PLANS CHAIR MONTREAL (CP)--A_ chair n Canadian studies will be in- stituted next year at Harvard University, Dr. Nathan Pusey, the university's president, an- nounced Monday. 'The ignor- ance Americans have of Can- ada is colossal," Dr. Pusey said at the founding meeting of the Harvard Club of Montreal. supported by 85 Canadian com- panies, whose contributions will be matched by American bene- factors. Ngai, 325 miles north of here, and Canada is assisting the medical faculty at the Univer sity of Hue, 125 miles further to the north, Canedian religious groups such as Les Freres Ge St Jean de Dieu, wno opera a hospital for refugees 18 miles north of Saigon, also join the continuing struggle for better health, CAN'T GET NURSES But these are a drop in the bucket in relation to the needs of a country where, in addi- tion to war-aggravated dis- eases, there are the usual Southeas! Asian ailments such as malaria, dengue fever, ty- phoid and dysentery, A shortage of trained per- sonnel and lack of money are major drawbacks in the battle against disease. Young people who normally might enter health and welfare services are drafted into the forces as soon as they leave university, Those who are available are grabbed up quickly by foreign companies, rapidly expanding in the war-boom economy, whose salary scale sometimes is riore than double what the Viet Nam government can offer, Dr. 8S, F. Farmaian, re- gional director for the W.H.O., said a nurse's starting salary after 12 years of school and three of nursing training is 2,600 piastres a month, about $24 in Canadian terms, al- though of course worth more in spending power, She can reach a maximum of 5,000 piastres after 20 years. "T pay my servant, who neither reads nor writes, 3,600 piastres, so you can see why it is difficult to recruit nurses," Dr, Farmaian said, DOCTORS PAID LITTLE There is no socialized medi- cine here and the government is hard-pressed to find doc- tors at the maximum 8,000-a- month scale the health minis- try is allowed, Ordinary prac- tioners here can make about 30,000 piastres. Even drivers for the minis- try's vehicles are hard to find at a 3,000- to 4,000-piastre rate the government pays. Some taxi and pedicab drivers make that money in a--few days and foreign industry pays double the amount for its drivers, whe of integration of the armed serv- ices into a single force on the Canadian pattern is still being actively canvassed in influential circles in New Zealand, A few months ago the plan seemed to be dead and buried << dae Ge New Zanaland was con- cerned, It had been studied for 10 years and the idea of some unification had been approved, A-certain amount of amalga- mation of function, especially for civilian staff, was carried out, But the three services pre- sented stubborn opposition to merging of their units, A defence white paper setting out policy until 1970 was pub- lished a few months ago in which the idea of complete in- tegration was rejected, The tains faith in it, MIGHT TAKE 2 YEARS erwhelming, however, and early - reversal of the white paper pol- There are alternatives to thejicy is not likely, resent organization of the New aland forces, he said, 'Fore- most among them is the Cana- dian scheme for reorganizing the three services ints & single defence force, "New Zealand is much better circumstanced for this kind of military reform, but seems al- lergic to it, Some day we will be bound to take a good hard a at it objectively on its mer- 8. "Because unification, even of common functions, lacks mili- tary support and politica) ap- peal in New Zealand, it may take 20 years to achieve instead of two, <e0e white paper held that since New Zealand units would always op- erate with other forces, and since none of New Zealand's major allies had integrated, the idea was no' practicable, But one of the ablest New Zealand administrators of re- cent years now has returned to the attack, He is J, K, Hunn, former secretary of defence, and recognized as a far-sighted civil servant whose ideas have often gained acceptance after a pe- riod of resistance, Hunn has been retired for nearly a year, but retains much influence with the public, He was impressed with the Cana- dian system when he studied it for possible application to New Zealand, In a major public "The validity of three sepa- rate armed services is not axio- matic, least of all for New Zea- and, "This country should select the most useful military contri- butions that could be made to the United Nations and in minor, not continental, conflicts in Asia, and assemble them into an integrated defence force, starting with integration of com- mand, intelligence, planning, communications and logistics." The speech has drawn wide EXHIBITION 725-4551 The outstending peinti: on exhibit will be fro f the "seh-a0mn Centu cr © Ven Byne Acnolr Do You Have Your '66-'67 MEMBERSHIP | TICKETS ? if See Poge 17 ©, OSHAWA LITTLE THEATRE , Var ere some of the masters repre- sented, You will be given @ cross-section of humenity shown in the face f mon os shown in these peint- ings. This selection of pantie loan courtesy of The stitute of Onterio, CANADIAN AUTOMOTIVE MUSEUM 99 SIMCOE ST, $. OSHAWA ie on rt tne County Court. The jury called payment of fines at banks as a solution to the problem. WILL PREPARE BID in 1963, will not apply for ad- mission to the International Junior Chamber Association un- til 1967, the federation's presi- dent said Monday. Jean-Louis attention to parking difficulties | for tha public and suggested) MONTREAL (CP)--La Fed-| eration des Jeunes Chambres | du Canada Francais, which) broke away from the Canadian | Junior Chamber of Commerce | Gain $4.50 Write Hamilton Coin Exchange 42 James St, North -- Mallaatare wwesewses S First Time Ever Offered! 1965 Proof-like Mint Sets Price List end Cetalogues on All Coins Free! & Investors: each te: Hamilton, Ont., Canada INTERIOR DECORATOR FURNITURE DRAPERIES BROADLOOM 15 King Street East CUSTOM MADE DRAPES Phone 725-2686 clothing end books. skills, Name Address Age .. Semone eeeweeees Mall or Bri i THE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF OSHAWA NOTICE OF INTENTION TO ESTABLISH AND LAY OUT A HIGHWAY TAKE NOTICE that the Council of The Corporation cf the City of Oshawa at its meeting to be held on Monday the 19th day of September, 1966 at 7:30 p.m. at the Council Chambers, City Hall, Oshawa intends to pass a by-law to establish and lay out as a public highway in the City of Oshawa to be known as Centen- nial Parkway, that part of highway shown on the Plan forming part of this notice located between the in- tersection of the centre line of Centennial Parkway cs shown on the plan with the south limit of Mill Street, nt ju pe & e h ad ! 1S 9 of this--notice. te aN oy Nie : ei a More detailed plans showing the highway to be established are on file and may be exam- ined at the office of the City Clerk, City Hall, OSHAWA, Ontario. AND TAKE FURTHER NOTICE that at the said meeting the Council shall hear in person er by his counsel, solicitor or agent any person who claims that his land will be prejudicially affected by the by-law and who applies to be heard. a nnn and the intersection of Centennial Parkway as shown on the plan-with the north limit of Colborne Street, The foliowing pian forms part-of be \! ald Dae ae \ Al AT eG Sturdy ore the shoulders of the news poper boy for on them rests the re- Sponsibilty of bridging the gap be- tween mewspaper and the reader, The newspaper they deliver represents the combined labour of thousands of peo- ple both here and abroad, plus pro- duction costs that run into the thous. ands of dollars, It is therefore a job that cannot be taken lightly, the suc- cess or failure of the route depends entirely on a keen sense of detail and strong interest in business, Both strong prerequisites in today's world of business. But few people have such an inbred instinct and the carrier's Job affords oh excellent opportunity for a young boy or girl to learn these - >> APPLICATION MAKE YOUR APPLICATION NOW! Your Application te the "Times" Circulation Depertment in Oshawa or Wh DATED AT OSHAWA THIS 23rd DAY OF AUGUST, A.D. 1966 &. B, Barrerd, 5O Centre Street OSHAWA, Onterio. Esq. ~ City Clerk WANTED! Energetic, Enthusiastie YOUNGSTERS Age 10 to 14 who want to earn extra money as Times Carriers Entering High School this Fall? Help purchase beck to school FORM -- WEePOCESUOT ICT TT Tit Tire | PNR OOO Ree meme sree nerereeeeereteeeeeeeee City eeeeneenereoeeerere of the constable, Brian Arm: strong, who died in hospital after an emergency operation, Bn. InN Tobstas| ee [WW IWWA For All Your Fall Sewing Needs Shop at ~ House o Faprie. 11% King St. East

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