Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Oct 1967, p. 1

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8th vores | KNOW SLIMS lephone or Mail Orders) le zipper closing. Pes e paveGh Gee eee 8 PT. 246 TS PHONE 725-7373 ETTLES | not interfer with durability. with black handle. & GG Pere ernie (i PHONE 725-7373 pie Reg, 1.29 k, brown, royal blue, » be Sonera ira : 99 PHONE 725-7373 LLOW CASES lephone or Mail Orders) fe. Great shower gift! 49 , DEPT, 936 mple Dresses lephone or Mail Orders) ster knits, printed wools, and 18.00 . . S41 | Freezer 95 , 29Y2"" deep, Holds up ol. Counter-balanced lid e price and save by buy- fr. PHONE 725-7373 Ss! s! Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- erio and Durham. Counties. VOL. 26--NO. 249 + She Oshawa Fimes INe Single Copy 8Se Per Week Home Deliverea Weather Report Cold cloudy weather will bring snowflurries. Low tonight 35; high Saturday 40. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1967 Authorized o8 Second Class Mall Post Office Deportment Ottewa and for payment of Postage in Cash For Mid-East | | UNITED NATIONS (AP)--Ajthe council to act on it next drafting team of the United Na- week. tions Security Council was re-;| The drafting committee has ported near agreement today On|been going over plans submitted a plan aimed at opening the)by India, Denmark and Latin ROYAL COMMISSION | TO PROBE POLLUTION UN Team Plots| Peace Motion | Study Starts Immediately, - Will Cover All Aspects | | TORONTO (CP)--Health Min-; However, under questioning "'ister Dymond announced today|he said he had no results of the that a royal commission will be}measurements with him nor did |set up immediately to study allhe know whether they indicated jaspects of air, soil and water the fluoride particles in the air pollution in the Port Maitland|exceeded "safe" limits set by larea, lhis department. | Dr. Dymond told a press con-! Pressed by reporters to make ference the commission, to be the figures public, he told his |set up under the Public Inquir-|questioners that 'a better thing jies Act, will study pollution in|for you to do' now would be to |the area "'as it affects human|leave this thing in the hands of |health, . livestock, agricultural|the committee and not prejudice | | | | | | UN CENTRAL BACK STOPPED IN HIS TRACKS Central player. has no where to go as he is hit by two O'Neill Redmen in last night's high school sen- jor footbal game at Kins- men Stadium. O'Neill de- feated Central 13-6 and now advances to the city champ- ionship against Donevan Collegiate next Wednehday. O'Neill and Donevan jun- iors also meet in the final U.S. Sea Limit Protests Rejected By Canada OTTAWA (CP)--External Af-| fairs Minister Martin today re-ise ve ral opposition questions jected U.S. protests about Cana-jabout the U.S. protest that Par- dian implementation of a 12-\liament in 1964 enacted a 12- mile fishing zone. mile zone. Mr. Martin told the Com-| The Canadian _ action mons: "I see no reason to apo-|based on precedents set logize for the action we have|other countries and the U.S. taken." 'self had a 12-mile fishing zone. The U.S. had known of the; Mr. Martin dismissed the oral steps Canada was going to take|protest of Robert McCloskey, in establishing a 12-mile zone. It)U.S. state department spokes- was a case where friendly coun-;man, as a comment by an indi- tries would just have to disa-|vidual on the law of another gree with Canada. 'country. The minister said in reply to| Parliament had taken a deci- 'sion and the "law of the land |would be observed,"" Mr. Martin declared. The U.S. is objecting to the was|method of establishing the zone: by|From _ baselines it-|headland to headland. The zone drawn from will thus enclose many large |bays as reserved exclusively for |Canadian fishermen, The U.S. wanted Canada to stick to a zone based on a base- line of the coastline itself. Plastic Pail Believed Clue GODERICH, Ont. (CP)--A yellow plastic pail found washed up on a beach north of here Thursday is the latest clue in the. disappearance on Lake Huron of two Stratford men. Police are "almost certain' it belongs to one of the two week- end sailors missing since Sun- day. Neil Wormsbecker, owner of a 20-foot sailboat found capsized and adrift near here late Sun- day by a passing lake freighter, and Henk Halff, both 30, were last seen about 1:45 p.m. Sun- day sailing south of Goderich harbor. A life-jacket found near Ipper- wash Wednesday and thought to be from the capsized craft was ig \discarded when inspection showed it had been in the water for a considerable period of time. as they play next Thursday way to a permanent settlement! America. ofthe Arab-lsraei conflict. | 'The Indian plan, favored by h 3 . s bers of the 15-nation council ee iS vive goed ene ode were to put the ey mee toltive specific instructions to call a proposal to send a nage UN | for withdrawal of Israeli troops] « representative to the Middle'r.qm land they seized from| athe drafting team consists of bare Soman and Syria ta ie) 5 pies > war. six of the 10 elected council Pune ¥ | members--India Argentina,|. The Danish draft, supported} Brazil, Nigeria, Ethiopia and|by the United States and Israel,| Mali. : would merely give general. in- Canada is a non permanent |Structions to the representative. | member of the council but is} The Latin American proposal | not on the drafting team. resembles that of India, calling} Delegates predicted that the|for Israeli withdrawal from "po-} full 10-member group would sitions occupied by it as a re-| firm up a resolution in time for sult" of the war Secretary-General : Thant, meanwhile, sought sup- JAMES BOND FACES port for his plan to increase the number of observers to 90 from 43 along the 107-mile Suez Canal WITNESS SH | Mrs. Mary Franckts was | shot late last night in Chat- | tanooga and wounded in the left shoulder. She told police she was shot because of James Hoffa legal proceed- ings. She is the key figure in the probe for the third new trial: motion for Hoffa p| 8oing on in Chattanooga. 1 Rest Home tablished \concern relating to emissions in|health department. \the Port Maitland area." her testimony regarding the | (AP. Wirephoto) ae to fumes from the oper- SGT. JAMES BON LONDON (AP) -- James Bond confronted James Bond in court Thursday. Actor Sean Connery, who plays secret agent James jand equip-them with boats and , vegetation and economic|their findings." ; The minister stressed that no He said it was being es-doctor's report on fluorosis in "because of public/his patient had reached the "No information has been di- His announcement came fivejrected to us until now that any days after the screening of a|humans may be suffering from CBC television documentary on|fluorosis," he said. pollution problems. A _ Detroit) oy doctor interviewed on the pro-| MOUGH JOB gram said he had found symp-| He agreed, however, that the toms of fluorosis--fluoride poi- disease would be difficult for a soning--in. two farmers. general practitioner to diag- A fertilizer plant at Port Mait-|"0S¢. land owned by Electric Reduc-|, Asked why the department tion Co. last year paid area|hadn't investigated the possibili. farmers compensation for dis-|t¥ of humans being affected ease to animals and crops at-/after the disease had been diag- nosed in 200 cattle in 1965, the | minister replied that cattle were \particularly susceptible. PLAN STUDY He said that since the govern- | Dr. Dymond also announced| ment assumed the power to con- "comprehensive |trol industrial pollution in 1963 ation. plans for a \helicopters. OK THANT'S PROPOSAL One Israeli source at the United Nations said 'Thant's Fire Kills | study" conditions in the area. | He said the study would '"'sup- |\plement atmospheric made for several years." to document pollution 'emissions from this plant have been reduced 90 per cent." Dr. Dymond said the royal fluoride|commission would have three measurements which have heen|members but probably wouldn't judge. be headed by a. fara would ke no difference} at Kinsmen Stadium, meetin, the: filma, "eae [Because 'fe all dependson the cused of speeding and the One. Person --Oshawa Times Photo | 90 Minute Papal Talk Heals Rift VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Pope Paul and Orthodox Patriarch Athenagoras met for 90 minutes in the Pope's study today--their offer who signed the sum- mons was police Sgt. James Bond. "This case is not without its humorous side," com- mented Percy Bloomfield, Connery's lawyer. "T should think it's mak- ing history," said Judge T. | will toward peace on the part of/ vANCOUVER (CP)--At least the parties concerned. : one person is known dead and Although Tuesday's artillery/11 were taken to hospital follow- iduel across the southern end ofling a two-alarm fire early today the canal wrecked two refiner-|in a south Vancouver rest home. jies in Suez which produce about! The fire broke out at three-fourths of Egypt's petro-|4:22 a.m. PDT in a ground-floor leum products, an Egyptian|suite of the two-storey Finnish- government spokesman said no|Canadian Rest Home, which Swan who fined Connery £15 ($45). |rael. sa sm0 Said Sgt. Bond: "It's un- | "We have faith in world|jowed through the building and F |public opinion and the United|trapped many of the residents. grt ice a! \Nations charter and we do not! All were evacuated. The home there's nothing I can do (believe in revenge, he said in|was built several years ago. ebout it." la statement. "We would resort) Names of the dead and in- . to violence only as a last meas-|jyred have not been released. retaliation is planned against Is-/housed about 50 elderly Persons. | Fire officials said smoke bil-| Hellyer Promises To Veto Closing Of Air Canada Base WINNIPEG (CP) -- Trans-ja federal-provincial committee port Minister Hellyer said|will be established to intensify Thursday night Air Canada's|studies aimed at maintaining decision to close its Winnipeg|Winnipeg's position as a major overhaul base by 1970 will be airline servicing centre, A re- overruled. appraisal will also be conducted At the same time, he prom-jof Air Canada's earlier projec- ised that he will make an all-out|tions which led to the decision longest private talk yet on ways Cause of the fire has not been| to bring their two churches back together after 900 years of schism. "We will see each other to- morrow," the Pope told Athena- goras at the door as the meet- ing ended with another "tne. tvo| kiss of peace between the two church leaders. No communique on the talk was issued. The talks between the 70-| year-old Pope and 81-year-old patriarch are considered the most important since they began work to unite their churches. They met in Jerusa-| lem three years ago and in Tur-| |key last July. | |. They conferred in French} without interpreters, while their| aides met separately at the Vat- ican secretariat for Christian! unity. | France Donates Expo Pavilion PARIS (Reuters)--France will donate its pavilion at Expo 67 to Montreal when the Expo closes, the foreign ministry an- nounced today. | The French government will spend 500,000 francs (more than $100,000) on restoring the pavil- ion and reproducing historical documents relating to the histo- ry of Quebec and other docu- ments in the pavilion's literary museum which will also be do- nated to Montreal, it said. |determined. | | One 68-year-old resident said he jumped from a window in his jsuite when he looked out his) door and saw the smoke. | A neighbor, Paul Jantunenpo, | heard a noise shortly after the} fire broke out, saw smoke and Cong Suicidal Attacks flames at the rest home, and SAIGON (AP)--A South Viet-|Viet Cong mortarmen opened up|rushed over to awaken and help namese infantry battalionjsimultaneously on two towns as evacuate the residents. ot hurled back three suicidaljguerrillas launched a ground as-| At least one suite in the build-| charges by a North Vietnamese|sault on a battalion of the South)!ng was heavily damaged and regiment today and reported 134) Vietnamese 5th Infantry Divi-|the rest - the _building was} of the regiment killed in a jun-|sion. | jdamaged | V smoke, gle clearing 70 miles north of! Unofficial e the Saigon. jbattle area said 12 government . The action near Phuoc Binh,| troops were killed and 24 wound- Blast Injures capital of Phuoc Long province,|@¢, sinieue ak was the biggest ground battle in| Twenty MiGs on runways at) 0 Kill 0 week dominated by intense| North Vietnam's Phuc Yen alt| ne, ALS ne US. air raids on North viet- field and another MiG base were reported destroyed or; HAMILTON (CP)--One man Be .eq| damaged in raids this week, two is dead and a second is in criti- The U.S. command anseyieaut es 'were shot from the skies over/cal condition today after being that three U.S. Navy jets were) 5h. yen Tuesday and another|severely burned in an explosion shot down in Thursday's raids "probable" kill flew off trailing!at Dofasco's No. 1 oxygen prod- and all three pilots were MISS") smoke near Haiphong. ucing plant Thursday night. ing. This brought U.S. losses in The U.S, command announced; Robert Bennett, 33. of Bur- the last three days to 10 planes ihe loss of seven U.S. planesjlington died six hours after and raised to 717 the total of Tuesday and Wednesday but in|being admitted to hospital with U.S. combat planes officially re its first communique today said|/second- and third-degree burns ported lost over North Vietnam. thing of any losses Thursday. |to his entire body, U.S. pilots: reported shooting; Jn the Gulf of Tonkin off} A workmate, John Wood, 25 of down two more MiGs during North Vietnam, the motor of an Hamilton, is listed in 'critical raids on Hanoi Thursday, bring-| air-to-ground rocket exploded irjcondition with second- and ing their score to 24 North Viet-|an ammunition handling room|third-degree burns to most of namese jets reported destroyed/on the U.S. aircraft carrier his body. or damaged in the air and on|Coral Sea, injuring nine sailors, Cause of the explosion and the ground this week. three critically. The nine were amount of damage-considered In Phuoc Long province,|men flown to Japan for treat- minor---has not been determined which borders on Cambodia,| ment. yet. reports from TESTED IN MONTREAL MONTREAL (CP )--A new Each patient was SPEEDS RECOVERY ea New Drug Reduces Coronary Pains | given a The doctors reported that required less tablets as a result effort bo age the uncertainty] to close its Winnipeg facilities. ae eg Pro a ee a Premier Duff Roblin of Mani- nounced plans to close it in 1962, toba had requested the meeting The transport minister madejwith federal authorities after the statements during a 90-min-|Air Canada announced Oct. 5 ute meeting with Manitoba's air|that it was speeding up its clo- policy committee, an organiza-|sure of the Winnipeg base. It tion made up of representatives|said it planned to consolidate from government, business andjthe overhaul facilities in the labor Montreal suburb of Dorval by At the meeting, it was decided! 1970, NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Queen Approves Abortion Law LONDON (Reuters) -- The Queen gave royal assent to- day to a bill liberalizing Britain's 100-year-old abortion laws. The bill, which completed a stormy passage through Parliament Wednesday, will become law in April. It re- ceived House of Lords approval Thursday night. Police Headquarters Locks Doors TORONTO (CP) -- Front doors of the new police head- quarters here are to be locked at night because it is too easy for burglars to enter offices within the building. The front doors will be locked from 6 p.m. to 7 a.m. daily and on Saturdays, Sundays and legal holidays. The only re- maining entry will be through a rear door, Girl Killed After Leaving Bus CLARENCE CREEK, Ont. (CP) -- A little girl who went back on the road to get her wind-blown hat was killed by a car Thursday just after getting off a school bus in front of her home here. sgn ..In THE TIMES Today O'Neill Ousts Central--P. 6 Plant Officials Visit -- P. 5 CHANCE TO SEE EXPO This underpriviledged youngster, and thousands like. him, will get a chance to see Expo 67 before it closes Sunday. The Inter- Service Clubs Council or- ganized a program for needy children and elderly persons Thursday whereby cash and passports were contributed to give the underpriviledged a chance to see the world's fair. & (CP Wirepho drug aimed at relieving some of the violent chest pains associat- ed with coronary artery disease has undergone extensive testing at the Montreal General Hospi- tal, the Canadian Cardiovascu- lar Society was told today. The drug, called Propranolol, was administered to patients at the hospital in a program called a 'double blind crossover' in which patients were unaware whether they were getting the drug or not. Dr. H. F. Mizgala, Dr. R. C. Davis and Dr.-A. Y. Khan su- pervised the program in which 18 patients were chosen for the study. daily pill and his reaction was. noted. There was no indication to the patient whether he was receiving Propranolol or merely a salt pill. DOCTORS UNAWARE In order to assure absolute honesty in the reaction, the doc- tors administering the drugs were also unaware which pill was being given. Only. the hospi- tal pharmacist knew which pill was the drug. Most of the patients had taken part in-similar-- studies in the past and were considered reli- able witnesses by the doctors in- * volved, each patient recorded his or her attacks and their severity on daily charts. After a period of six months, 12 of the 15 patients who com- pleted the tests reported their attacks were less severe after using the drug. The doctors also noted that one patient experienced total re- lief from the attacks while another achieved total relief when the quantity of the drug was increased. FEWER PILLS ' Seven others, who normally took nitroglycerin tablets to re- duce the pain from the attacks, of the Propranolol dosage. In conclusion, the. doctors noted that the patients' ability to do exercises without pain was increased in five of six patients who were taking the drug. "These results suggest that Propranolol, when administered in adequate. doses, reduce the frequency of... attacks and increases exercise tolerance in patients with coronary artery disease. "Further controlled studies are necessary to assess Pro- pranolol's safety and ultimate role in the long term treatment of gcoronary artery disease," tle} reported. Ann Landers--10 Ajax News--5 City News--9 Classified--14, 15, 16 Comics--18 Editorial--4 Financial--13 Obituaries--16 Sports--6, 7 Television--18 Theatres--12 Weather--2 Whitby.News--5 Women's--10, 11 with "This time we're ready, Israel!" lamang

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