Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Oct 1967, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowmane ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- crio and Durham Counties, itre "VOL. 26--No, 232 125.00 She Oshawa Fimes 10e , 55 Per Fong tay. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1967 Saturday . Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Offi Ottawa and for payment ef Prateoe ie Geant diab Weather Report : becoming mainly cloudy in afternoon. Warmer i tonight 42 high tomorrow TWENTY-SIX PAGES | : INQUEST AFTERMATH Anglican _Clergyman d over) tec c L CONSUMER PRICE INDE OTTAWA (CP)--Lower food prices at the beginning of Sep- hed the price index down one-fifth of a point to 150.7 from 150.9 in August, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported today. Lower pharmaceutical prices, following removal of the federal sales tax, also contributed to the slight drop in the index, SM LLL NGI which is based on 1949 prices equalling 100. All other components of the index rose except tobacco and alcohol which remained unchanged. Biggest increase was in clothing. At 150.7, the all-items index for September was 5.6 points above the index for September last year. This represents price DO - Quits Post TORONTO (CP)--Rev. G.jasked Ca i i : ev. G. inon Smit > hg Smith, rector of St. Mat-lignation Thursday, gg pe se 03 ed ow! 1g oad the jury ruled the 'hiaie. i ; - Douglas Tisdall,|ter and his wi i resigned Thursday in the a loge ig im cdulieen of an inquest into the death of} 1 specially pur- g clothiers. Lux- at can be tailored + size 44 regular ling a larger size | group of cloths ylourings. ilored and detail- 2 from the many To-Measure Style lengths so shop y e EL, DEPT. 230 orate se yy a "Good ker useful. See ample cup. vel 0 5:00 p.m. k t f & t 18-year-old Katherine Globe. Rt. Rev. G. B. Snell, Anglica Bishop of Toronto, CANON MOORE SMITH + + « Makes Protest said he » Canon Smith remains a minis- Katherine died June 21 in the jchurch rectory of a brain in| abscess and meningitis. The inquest jury heard that a faith healing group at the church had tried to cure the girl with prayer and exorcism rites, Mr. Tisdall resigned "as a Measure of protest" over the way the bishop had treated the matter, He said he was proud of his association with Canon Smith. Bishop Snell said Mr. Tisdall was notified that his tenure of office and association with St. Matthias ended with the resig- nation of Canon Smith. A church official said that ter in the Anglican Church, although no plans for his future have been considered yet. The Venerable G. H. Johnson, archdeacon of the diocese, has been appointed temporary priest-in-charge of St. Matthias. Bishop Snell announced a commission to investigate activities of the St. Matthias group, a step recommended by the jury. Emergency Talks On Tram Strike MONTREAL (CP)--The Que- bec cabinet meets in emergen- cy session again today to dis- cuss action on Montreal's stale- mated transit strike. With negotiators for the Montreal Transportation Com- mission and its 6,000 bus and subway workers not expected to resume talks until at least Tuesday, hope for a quick end to the strike seems to lie with the government. Late Thursday MTC Chair- man Lucien L'Allier said nego- tiator Jacques Guilbault will not be meeting with union lead- ers before next Tuesday to dis- cuss the 16-day strike. Robert Burns, lawyer for the Confederation of National Trade Unions, parent body of the five MTC unions involved in the dispute, called the delay regrettable and said he is ready to meet with MTC bargainers at any time. RELEASED DEMANDS Meantime, the CNTU made public revised wage demands which a spokesman said nad been known to mediator Mr. Justice Francois Chevalier of, Quebec Superior Court, who gave up attempts to bring the two parties together Wednes-} day. The union proposal, altered from the original demand for an immediate raise to $3.50 fram the present average of Rir Terminals' Needs Stressed © [2.7).."$3i50 in two stages dur. born losers. room in the turkey world for a turkey who "'chicken'"'. Rossland Road West turkey I _ UT nL UL Onn a increases of almost four per cent in the year, Economists say that ideally, prices should not increase more than two per cent a year, PRICES LOWER The food price index fell to 148.5 from 151.2, largely as a result of seasonally lower prices for most fresh vegeta- TOIL UI HULL em TM Mn sf CALLAN TN iste DIP bles and some fresh fruits, There were also lower prices for poultry, wieners, lamb, sugar and infants' foods. The housing component of the all-items index rose to 152.6 from 152.2 because of generally higher rents and home-owner- ship costs. In August, the consumer price index rose seven-tenths of F vA A TMM na ASSL a@ point to 150.9 from 150.2 mainly because of higher food prices.:'The food index rose to 151.2 from 148.5 in July. The consumer price index measures changes since 1949 in the prices of a selection of 300 goods and services typical of those bought in 1957 by families of two to six people, living in rr i iN NA IFTH OF CAT AcHTNLIN A sunita a ' a | OINT cities of more than 30,000 us ie -- with annual ienoeane which during 1957 ranged d $2,500 to $7,000. eae: Prices are surveyed late in the month and applied te the following month. In the case of sad new September index, ces were surveye August. \eciriae a | Turkeys are fighters--but There is no is a Frank Hoag, a " TURKEYS' FATE farmer, says. if a turkey shows cowardice and backs down from a fight or is badly beaten in a fight, the other birds will gang up and tear it to death with their those claws. He says the birds BLEAK AT THANKSGIVING killing about 100 of the 600 birds he bought this spring, RUSSIAN SCIENTIST DEFECTS EDMONTON (CP)--Dr. Boris/|to the Canadi Dotsen k 0, a ranking Soviet|department oma ewer 0 nuclear scientist, said Thursday|and was granted a one- ae night he has applied to remain|extension of his stay in Conga permanently in Canada because|Immigration authorities told z= this country he can find aca-|him they would consider his lemic freedom, ' \application for permanent resi- Dr. Dotsenko, 41, is a former|dence here at the end of the chief nuclear scientist at the|one-year period. Ukrainian Academy of Science Dr. Detainee came to in Kiev. He came to the Univer-| p, hange wd ale gee i a| agreement between tas Corre rant, aving een | <j : granted 10 months' leave from = had Se See ae ee his lates appointment as a head Int rit jof the nuclear laboratory at), get lewed by telephone at Kier "sate University in' the|%e home, ot Dr. 3. 7 Samp, So.5.N, ry re Dr. Dotsenko said in an inter- Ie beg ce department, he said view that since he applied to Sonata da Cunha ane bak are Tend paliticat the Canadian immigration Pope department for per resi-|** dent status, he has been visited| The professional reasons are by two representatives of the|the major ones, Dr. Dotsenko Soviet embassy at Ottawa. jadded. "They tried hard to yaa "The main point is that I am me to go back. They said I\a scientist and in the conditi ion: Sune be here in Canada I can work tee jUnion. . . . \more effectively. | "I told them I was staying) "There is a far more, * here. I would not go back to the) Well, I am not afraid to use-the-- ~~ Soviet Union, that's for sure." 'word-- there is a far more ae ko said he ppt ot) deme i * approach here. Case Of Soviet OTTAWA (CP) -- Defection;stay in Canada because of the of Dr. Boris Dotsenko, Sovieticenditiens under which he nuclear scientist, in order that/worked in Russia--"lack of con- he can have academic freedom|tact with the outside world, the safe in the Soviet Thanksgiving. And those that are not sold at Christ- have a tendency to like peo- ple better than each other, but they probably reverse to feelings Thanksgiving. Mr. Hoag is around Christmas for Thanksgiving. Contrary popular belief, birds are bought during the season than at more and sold later. mas will be killed, frozen in Canada, parallels the a Russian chemist who and gained political --Oshawa Times Photo |here six years ago. TORONTO (CP)--The presi-|ing an 18-month contract. nis Fall when guest consults s. Check the listings it store at the right the eye -- see the. ) at vith + 6.00 1 6.00 7.50 ine Ow- 34 ie ® dle: 13.50 dation Dept., Upper m, to 5:00 p.m. to uited to your figure PHONE 725-7373 riday "til 9 p.m. dent of Air Canada said Thurs- day huge sums of money will have to be spent in airport ter- minal facilities to accommodate the predicted growth in air traf- fic. Gordon McGregor was speak- ing to a symposium sponsored by the Canadian Aeronautics and Space Institute. He said two jumbo sub-sonic jets could land at an airport within the same hour and unload more than 700 passen- It suggested an immediate raise to $3.35 'retroactive to July 12, with an additional 15 cents an hour from Jan. 1, 1968. Mr. Justice Chevalier resigned Wednesday after the Negotiations Offer Made bus and subway workers voted overwhelmingly to turn down) his suggestion for a settlement) on the basis of a wage increase) to $3.05 an hour. This was three cents more than the offer of $3.02 made by Mr, L'Allier after the strike gers. began Sept. 21. Astro Wanted Moon Trip Dies In His Jet Trainer TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP)-- An astronaut who said he want- ~\ ed to be first on the moon and specialized in the craft that will | make the trip was killed Thurs- day when his T-38 jet trainer plowed into a hilltop. Maj. Clifton C. Williams Jr., 35, a. member of the U.S. Marine Corps and one of the third generation of U.S. astro- nauts, was flying alone from Cape Kennedy to Houston Manned Space Centre by way of Mobile, Ala., where his father was reported ill. Williams radioed the distress signal about 2 p.m., and 10 min- utes later a helicopter rescue ha crew from Moody Air Force Base at nearby Valdosta, Ga., arrived at the scene on a plan- * tation near Miccosukee, Fla., 15 miles north of here. "The plane disintegrated and the body disintegrated with it," said Maj. Joe Johnson of Moody. Johnson said the fiery poi dove doyft, so straight it singe trees ek phteged between pines 100 féet apart without touching them. A board of inquiry headed by the first American spaceman, Capt. Alan B. Shepard, was named to investigate the crash. Williams was the eighth American astronaut to die acci- dentally, the fourth in the crash of a jet plane. MAJOR C. WILLIAMS + «+ Flying Alone Williams was eager for space S ight. "T'd like to go on every one." Williams had said. "Of course, if you said which mission I would most like to have, I'd say the first lunar flight you can make from the standpoint of personal satisfaction and accomplishment." Williams was married after his selection as an astronaut in 1963. He had one child. BRUSSELS, Belgium (CP)-- The Common Market's execu- tive commission today published a report recommend- ing the opening of negotiations on applications by Britain, Nor- way, Denmark and Ireland for membership of the community. The report, which said Britain's shaky economy will FIRST COMULATIVE TOTALS GIVEN The ratio of wounded to killed com-|in the Vietnam war is running the U.S. U.S. Casualties Hit 101,025 Since 1961 SAIGON (AP)--The U.S.|Jan. 1, 1961, 86,635 wounded, 545|half--were treated and immedi- command disclosed today for|missing and 211 captured or|ately returned to duty. the first time its official total of|interned. | U.S. combat casualties--101,025 case of|falsity of information and the sought | difficulty of self-expression." asylum| Klochko since has been living in seclusion near Montreal. He Mikhail Antonovich Klochko,|has done some lecturing, and 64, a specialist in organic|wrote a book about his experi- as a Soviet scientifie BROKEN HEART DEATH CAUSE LONDON (Reuters)-- Dying of a broken heart is no myth, a six-year study by a family doctor in a small Welsh town. indicated. Dr. William Dwi Rees found the death rate among the newly bereaved was six times greater than for every body else in the town, Llanidloes, The British Medical Journal reports. lscientists when he slipped aw: from his colleagues and ask allowed to stay. simple scientist who wanted chemistry, was visiting Canada|ences |with a touring group of Russian|jemissary to China before his --since the beginning of major make negotiations difficult, will be formally submitted to the) European parliament of the six,| who will discuss it at a future session in Strasbourg, West| Germany. British leaders were prepar- ing swift counter-moves against the report's claim about the country's economy and its implication of a devaluation of sterling. Prime Minister Wilson today authorized Foreign Secretary George Brown to prepare a full answer to the criticism within the next few days when foreign ministers of the seven-nation Western European Union meet in London. The WEU, formed as a defence group, links Britain with the Common Market coun- tries. SUBMITTED REPORT The commission's report has already been submitted to the community's council of minis- ters which is obliged to ask the lopinion and advice of the com- mission on applications for membership. The commission says that only by opening negotiations with the four applicants can solutions be found to the prob- lems arising from their entry into the European community. "In any case," it says, "an adaptation of the British econ- omy appears necessary." Word of Britain's tactic emerged after French Presi- dent de Gaulle Thursday sum- moned British Ambassador Sir Patrick Reilly for a surprise talk on Britain's application to nam nearly seven years ago. A high-ranking spokesman} said that as of the end of last week 13,634 American troops) Previously, mand issued only weekly totals. ested. The spokesman said that American involvement in Viet-| Cumulative tabulations were |kept unofficially by those inter-| of| had been killed in action sincelthe wounded, 41,002--nearly SUVA, Fiji of the 7,459-ton Australian car- go-liner Lakemba, aground on a Fijian reef, were taken off in| rough seas Thursday night. As waves continued to lash the stricken vessel, Captain Captain, 29 Crewmen Moved From Stricken Cargo Liner (Reuters)--The|John P. Ward and his men captain and 29 crew members|made for land on the fishing launch, Sereniwai. Melbourne salvage expert Capt. J. Fant, who flew here Thursday, was on his today to examine the ship. way about six to one, higher than the three-to-one ratio in the Korean War. The spokesman said this was because during the Korean conflict only the wounded who were sent to hos-) pital were carried on the offi- times more persons than normal died within a year of losing a close rela- tive, he found. Men ran a bigger risk of this than cial casualty rolls. | In the war, U.S. air raiders| kept up their drive Thursday: to} block two key points where war material enters North Vietnam --the port of Haiphong and rail- road lines just below China's border. It was the third straight day of attacks on railroad bridges in the narrow valleys 10 miles from China and the second day in a row of strikes against the bridges leading out of Hai- phong. TORONTO (CP)--Dr. George Wodehouse, director of the Uni- versity of Toronto's health clin- ic, revealed Thursday he helped 19 unnamed female students secure birth control materials. Under Canada's Criminal Code, it is unlawful to sell, dis- pose of or publicize any medi- cine, drug or article intended to prevent contraception. : "J don't want to make if sound as if everyone is promis- cuous, but we have 25,000 stu- dents of varying ages and quite only in search of advice," said Dr, Wodehouse. and individual decision," said. Both the universities include girls '"'going steady." a few have already made a join. Idecision for themselves end are University Director Says Helped Girls To Get Pill technical|common-sense interpretation of} © "As far as single girls are concerned, I believe as most physicians do, that birth control is a matter of medical advice he of Toronto and Waterloo have admitted supplying pills to stu- dents about to be married but Dr. Wodehouse last night broadened Toronto's policy to "Tt seemed to me to be a the wishes of the province and university," he said. "We are not condoning the Grade 13 should get contracep- tives as part of their university course." Last month, a group of Var- sity senior coeds decided to dis- tribute birth control informa- tion to arriving freshman girls and later to contact girls in dormitories and offer refer ences to Planned Parenthood and area doctors, impression | : that everyone graduating from| * born officer and his contin- gent are dug in at Bukavu, capital of Kivu province. = AP Wirephoto 'ii | of the explosions. ui Ai MEH | ,.In THE TIMES * Anything to declare ? Liquor, Grugs, clothes, draft-cards ? * ay)break with Russia. ed} When he defected, he said: "T. Canadian authorities to bejonly hope that the time will |soon come when I will be able to! out of the glare of publicity." He described himself as ajto get back to my work and get Robert Nixon Visite--P, 11 3,000 Children Help--P. 5 Red Sox Even Series--P. 8 Ann Landers--12 Ajax News--5 City News--11 Classified--16, 17, 18 ace Comics--21 gemaasss| Tn [ae Editorial--4 0 5 1 ff "> Financial--20 Col. Jean Schramme and . Obituaries--18 his white mercenary army ry < we have agreed to quit the |7 1 m : aig 2th International {4 es cs pl A Red Cross announced in |? r] Theatres--14 Geneva today. The Belgian. |= Weather---2 Whitby News--5 Women's--12, 13 " 'NEWS HIGHLIGHTS | Dockworkers Refuse To Work Ship TILBURY (AP) -- Angry British dockworkers in the Port of London refused to work a Communist Chinese freighter today following 2 battle with Chinese crew mem- bers. Police broke up a mob of 60 longshoremen and Chinese who grappled on the River Thames dockside Thursday after a docker hurled a picture of Mao Tse-tung to the ground when it was pinned on him by a crew member. One Chinese was believed to have a broken arm and two nursed black eyes. Sewer Explosions Smash Windows TORONTO (CP) -- A series of explosions in the sewerage system in east end Toronto today smashed win- dows and sent employees scurrying for cover. No injuries were reported as the explosions blew several manhole covers into the air, shooting flames and smoke near cars and pedestrians. Police sealed off traffic in the area while firemen and city works employees hunted for the source 7 MM |

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