Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Feb 1967, p. 7

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OTTAWA (CP)--A |, Canadian embassy in Peking $ advo- cated Wednesday night as a means tv replenish dwindling Western knowledge ati under- standing of Communisi. Chin. | Retired career diplomat Es- jeott Reid also proyaysed that 8) (Canada lead an agwault on \world poverty by mwore than 3;Canadian Embassy ) Advocated, Peking --Negotiations with China in the next two years to estab lish an embassy in Peking. --Posting of teams of four of Canada's "most brilliant for- eign service officers' to the embassy for two-year stings. | --Establishment. of a first-! rate institute for the study of! contemporary China by for THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdoy, February 2, 1967 7 -- Of Police Brutality Doctor Testifies In Court nie °s sta er insor MONTREAL (CP)--Dr. Na-| The preliminary hearing|ings throughout the province poleon Martinez testified Wed-|arose from a $250,000 civil suit}during Centennial Year. nesday at the opening of a pre-|filed by Sicotte, a 40-year-old liminary hearing into charges|Montreal - area businessman, | of police brutality that Louis|who alleges that police used/ | Sicotte had been treated for 1 brutal force during an investi-| a/Tib fractures and a broken big}gation of arson cases in 1965. | | toe. Dr. Martinez said treatment) Dr. Martinez, neurosurgeon at/had consisted mainly of' rest Montreal's Notre Dame Hos-|and administration of pain kill- LIFT WITH MANY HANDS VICTORIA (CP) ~--A centen- nial "travelling gavel" began a year-long journey through Bri- tish Columbia municipalities in January. A total of 137 mayors low The Globe and Mail's ex- ample," he said. The Rhodes scholar. described world poverty as an even more serious problem than ignorance in China. He. urged public support for foreign aid program that would] set $1,000,000,000 as an annual CONTINENTAL STEAM BATHS MONDAY SPECIAL (7 p.m. to 11 p.m.) = | oe | EVEN HE'S UNHAPPY A walrus at the Brook- field Zoo, near Chicago, ex- presses his displeasure after another snow storm hit the area Wednesday night. The walrus hanging a pool, into the water as the snow | began to fall | on the edge of quickly slipped back Johnson May Reply To VC Latest Hint Of Peace Talks WASHINGTON (AP) --Presi- dent Johnson may reply today to North Vietnam's latest hint of peace talks--one reported to have been sent to the United States this week through neutral! countries The president is expected to deal with the matter today at a late-afternoon press confer- ence. North Vietnam was reported| to have drawn U.S. attention to two policy statements made in Hanoi last weekend on the pos- sibility of peace talks, saying * they should get serious consid- eration in Washington. The manoeuvre was carried out through unnamed neutral governments and urged the U.S. state department to look carefully at the statements. The neutrals said, according to the reports, that they acted at the suggestion of North Vietnam. Dean Rusk, U.S. secretary of state, said Wednesday, 'It' may be that events in China may. give Hanoi somewhat more freedom of action than they might have felt they had a little earlier. "And so we're exploring the possibilities here to find out whether or not it is possibly the case, but we just don't know yet." China and Russia are the main suppliers of arms and other aid to North Vietnam, but Rusk said he thinks China has somewhat more influence on North Vietnam than Russia. "If Peking were to throw its weight behind an immediate peace in Southeast Asia, that would have immediat results . . . there would be peace very) promptly."' | Rusk took the line that the jtwo-year-long bombing of North} |Vietnam has hurt the Commu- nist regime and now the major objective of Hanoi's diplomatic campaign is to get the bombing stopped. Some U.S. officials, however, see some possibility that peace talks might still come. Any move in this direction would confront Johnson with a policy decision on whether a promise of direct discussions on peace between the U.S. and North Vietnam would be a suf- ficient reason for ending the bombing, The U.S. has said any halt to the bombing also must bring some Communist de-escalation of the military effort. Rusk, in an interview for broadcast in Britain, defended the bombing as important from The Hanoi statements last weekend said that if the U.S. would stop the bombing there could be talks between it .and North Vietnam. This stopped short of a Hanoi commitment to talk but U.S. of- ficials, it is understood, are trying to find out through diplo- matic channels whether this is an indication of possible North Vietnamese readiness for peace discussions. In Ottawa, External Affairs Minister Martin disclosed that a Canadian representative will make another visit to Hanoi shortly. He did not elaborate but pre- sumably was referring to the forthcoming visit by Orm Dier, 47-year-old native of Vancouver tripling the $300,000,00i) it now "target by 1973. puts into foreign aid. eign service officers, : This would put Canada in a The two - prong Program| COULD Fay OFF position to lead an international| would help close tw gaps in| These measures could pay off campaign to mobilize more sup-| "the defences of ciyilization"|for the whole Western world in/port for Anternational agencies and embark Canada upon an-|the next decade, he said. The now helping poor countries. -- other "golden decade" of for-|institute could ground newspa- sen eign policy, he said. \- {per men, businessmen and Now the principal! of York|Scholars on modern China as a University's Glendon College in|Preparation for posting there. ROBERTS WON'T RUN TORONTO (CP) --Premier John Robarts told the legisla-| |Toronto, Mr. Reid spent 33| He praised The Toronto Globe|ture Wednesday he does not years in Canada's fgrign serv-|and Mail for being the only|plan to run for national leader | ice. \ |newspaper in the west world to! of the Progressive Conservative| Influential banking aind indus-| Keep a full-time correspondent, 'party. He said it would be im-| |David Oancia, in Peking. moral for him to even think of trial executives, senmiors and) ee community leaders" weard his| 'I very much hope it will be;seeking the job if he planned to |detailed 5,000 - word |speech to| possible for a number of other|lead his party in another elec- the Canadian Centenary Ee and agencies to fol-'tion. cil. MIGHT CLOSE GAP | . He sald an emtngy Py Pell haute coiffure king might do much he next 10 years "to help chose the dan-|* International Coiffeurs gerous gap between hina and|* the rest of the world; a Canada and the U.S.,*withdrew| diplomats from matirtfand China| ~ in 1949. | "There is an ever -diminishin amount of expert, recent, first-|7 hand knowledge and under-|* For stylish Hair Cutting, Make an appointment with Mr. Antoine standing of China in Ottawa | * 725-4531 6 EUROPEAN 71 CELINA ST. bid Washington,"'. Mr. aaa | : : pion OSHAWA, ONT. H. KASSINGER CONSTRUCTION 150 an He proposed these @typs: ly. we ; ! |mitted to the hospital under po- jing from back pains and show-, when he was admitted and oth-! Men and Ladies Steam Boths Together (bathing suits essential) pital, was the first witness tojers and that Sicotte had been testify at the hearing into bru-|released after 12 days. tality charges against 15 Que- 2 es bec policemen and private fire SOME FRACTURES OLD | investigators Another medical witness, Dr./f att OTHER DAYS MEN ONLY He said Sicotte had been ad-|Francois Telmosse, said that 2 p.m. to 11 p.m |some of Sicotte's fractures had SUNDAYS (8 @.m. to 1 p.m.) lice escort Nov, 17, 1965, suffer-|been more than a month old 16A ONTARIO STREET 728-2460 ing difficulty in walking. lers were moje recent. Have Your Custom Built Home, built by the Best KASSIRGER Construction Kassinger Construction can offer you the vost experience ond craftsmanship which hos made the 4 nomo i sia F ly Plac t nome Kassinger, synomous with "Lovely aces to Mortgdges can be orranged If desired. Look to Kassinger Live'. Kassinger will build to your own design or you assing 9 Have your own lot developed by Kassinger Construction can choose your home from one of the mony award winning designs of Kassingers who has been in external affairs for 20 years. Dier takes over from Victor Moore as Canada's senior delegate on the Interna- tional Control Commission in Vietnam. a military standpoint but said} it also serves a political pur- | pose. | "If North Vietnam could sit there indefinitely, safe and com-' fortable, while it sends men and arms into South Vietnam," Rusk said, "what would be their incentive ever to make peace" Despite many probings, "we never had from anybody what they (the North Vietnamese) would do if we stopped the; bombing," Rusk told a ques-| tioner. He was interviewed by HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS four British newspaper men. | Easy to like. That is if you like an easy whisky. If so, you should have no difficulty liking 5 Star. Where things get difficult Is In making a whisky this good. It means selecting whiskies from our five distilleries across Canada (only Seagram's has 5, by the way). Then blending and re-blending them to get 5 Star's easy taste, Is It worth all the trouble? Easy for you to find out. 5 Star. Easy whisky. The old, country stores had the idea first. They : bought good fresh produce, direct from the farmer, \then they got it to the customer quickly and at a ' reasonable price. And that's the idea behind Becker's. We're in _ the milk business. And we buy our milk direct from over 170 selected dairy farmers. And we get it to you quickly. From the cow _ to your table can take less than 24 hours. 24 \. Another old-fashioned idea we dusted of f 4m a - The idea behind Becker's. was to sell at a reasonable price. So even today, a 3-quart jug of Becker's milk costs 24° less than 3 single quarts of home-delivered milk. There's one more idea we borrowed from the old, country stores: our storekeepers actually talk to you: They help you find items you want. PS Or simply pass the time of day. = What an old-fashioned way to run a business. But then, the idea seems to work. BECKERS THE JUG MILK STORE

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