2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, July 5, 1964 GOOD EVENING .By JACK GEARIN , COUNCIL WILLING TO TALK WITH 3 FIRMS The King street CNR tracks issue is as full of surprises as a Hitchcock murder thriller. City Council, in a dramatic and unexpected move Tues- day, agreed to resume negotiations for a settlement on condi- tion that all three firms using the tracks attend. The action was taken after two of the three firms wrote Council with a request that negotiations be resumed. Council, at any rate, has agreed to a meeting tonight at City Hall under those conditions. Mayor Thomas and all councillors will be present -- some may criticize the fact that Council didn't first appoint a special committee to meet with the firms in the prelim- inary stages to facilitate matters more quickly; such critic- ism is not without merit but, in all fairness to Council, it it did appear anxious to get along with the negotiation busi- ness as quickly as possible because of the time element. If work is to get started this year, there is need for haste; also, several councillors will be absent on holidays. during Aug- ust, It will be difficult to get a quorum. If all parties concerned -- the firms as well as our duly elected representatives -- approach the negotiations table in a spirit of reasonable compromise, (and not with petty selfishness), there is every reason to believe that the com- plex municipal problem can be quickly solved. This will require a little give on both sides. It is encouraging at least to see that so many of the parties involved are willing to sit down and discuss the matter, which was the proposal made during the two-day hearing here of the Board of Transport Commissioners by the chairman, Rod Kerr. The negotiations can be frustrating for all parties -- they can also be of great importance to the future of the City, especially the downtown King street business area that has deteriorated so quickly because of the existence of the cumbersome tracks. The Board of Transport Commissioners, during its two- day sitting in Oshawa last Spring, appeared to go out of its way to urge the City (which made the application for the removal of the tracks) and the three user-firms to get to- gether. Time could prove our assessment all wrong, but it would appear that the Board could foresee difficulty in allowing a decision in favor of the City under the Canada Railway Act, regardless of the fine presentation made by City Solicitor E. J. McNeely. Several inquiries by this department to ascertain when the Board will hand down its ruling have not been success- ful -- the Board merely says through its spokesman that it will notify the City when its decision is prepared. Federal tribunals of this kind, because usually of a heavy backlog of work, do not move too quickly HAWKETTES ADD COLOR TO GAMES Speaking of Oshawa's baton twirling community, that is growing these days by leaps and bounds: The Hawkettes (composed of girls from baton twirling achools in Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Port Perry, Black- stock, Seagrave, etc., under the direction of Miss Ruth Ann Deboski, Jean Bright and Penny McMullen) are busy re- hearsing on the GM main office parking lot these days. They will provide entertainment at games of the Oshawa Hawk-eye football team and hope to get permission to use Kinsmen Stadium for rehearsals. The girls started rehearsals in May on the parking lot at the Oshawa Shopping Cenire. They are to be commended for training so hard to per- fect their style, but the results have been worthwhile and they will add much color and entertainment to the local junior grid games, LITTLE NOTES FROM HITHER AND YON Rev. W. James Scott, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Scott of 52 Division street, has been assigned to a parish in Co- bourg, Ont., under Rev. Joseph Collins, Father Scott was ordained in Peterborough last June 2. He is a graduate of St. Augustine's Seminary. . . .. Mark Holmes, 4-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Don Holmes (formerly of Oshawa) con- tinues to show improvement in California where his family moved recently in an effort to help him in his fight against Cystic Fibrosis (which blocks a child's digestion and infects the lungs). There was some good news in the June 30 issue of The Oshawa Times for victims of the disease -- the death rate of a group of children being given intensive treatment at Cleveland has been reduced to one-tenth the normal, a U.S. doctor told the Canadian Pediatric Society in London, Ont., recently. CITY FIELD ENGINEER HEADS OTC R. F. Richardson, a field engineer with the City since 1949, was commended in City Council Tuesday for his recent appointment to a high position -- the presidency of the On- tario Traffic Conference (which has a membership of 350). The OTC's objective is to improve traffic control and safety in Ontario municipalities. Alfred Metcalfe, 470 King street east, will retire this month after 35 years' service with General Motors of Canada here.. He is supervisor of the Suggestions Department and. a director of the National Association of Suggestions Systems and of the Toronto chap- ter of the Canadian Association. Mr. Metcalfe was tendered a special banquet this week by fellow-workers at the Hotel Genosha with the GM Pipe Band (with which he worked as a director) in attendance. He will reside in Vancouver, B.C. AROUND THE HUSTINGS OF ONTARIO RIDING Ever hear of the Hampton Conference? That's a big name these days in Progressive Conservative circles in Ontario riding. Its the name of a top-level, PC political pow-wow scheduled for sometime around the middle of this month at Hampton. The 'exact date will be set when William "Bill'" Newman, the PC's organizer in the riding, returns from a European trip. The exact nature of the meeting is a hush-hush secret but only the top party names in the riding will attend -- Party Strategy will be in high on the agenda for discussion and the best guess is that the PC's will make even greater efforts this time to increase their vote in Oshawa City which shrunk June 18 from 13,048 (the 1958 total) to 11,458 as compared with 8,495 for Miss Aileen Hall, NDP, and 7,559 for Norman Cafik, Liberal. Labor Minister Starr's Oshawa lead was a sizeable one, but he is a perfectionist who is never satisfied with anything but the best, insofar as Party effort in campaigns is con- cerned. Both the Liberals and the NDP's previously announced that they would start their campaigns carly this time, a proposed plan of action that was devised likely because of the static state of things today in Ottawa. 'Many Doctors Reply To SOS REGINA (CP) -- The Sas- katchewan government's SOS call for doctors is getting an answer. Doctors from Britain, the United States and other parts of Canada now are helping to pro- vide emergency medical ser- vices for the province, belea- gured by the first doctor's strike in North American his- tory. The Saskatchewan govern- ment says 11 doctors have al- ready arrived as temporary help and expects the number to grow steadily. Biggest source of help is ex- pected to be Britain, where 25,- 000 physicians and 2,400 hos- pitals have been advised by mail of Saskatchewan's need. Provincial health officials said |British doctors will begin to ar- rive in Saskatchewan shortly at the rate of four a day. These 'would include general practi- tioners and specialists who now operate under Britain's state- }run medical plan. 'SIGN CONTRACTS 60 persons are being inter- viewed at the Saskatchewan government's office in London. | These selected are signed to|phychiatry in Montreal. contracts varying from one to} three months under which the} provincial government pays' re- turn air fares and provides remuneration ranging between $900 and $1,800 a month. These doctors -- a different group from those recruited in |Britain to fill permament posts |--may partially offset the 63 doctors reported by the Saskat- jchewan College of Physicians jand Surgeons to have quit the | : , |province in recent weeks. jical practice, British doctors, if jon the British medical register, may practise in Canada with. out further qualification. However, American doctors jhave to write examinations be- |fore becoming eligible for join- jing the provincial College of} |Physicians and Surgeons' regis-| jtry. U.S. volunteers, hired by jthe Saskatchewan Medical Care Insurance Commission, are be- jing assigned as internes in hos- | pitals under licenced physi- |cians. At present the newcomers in- clude six from Britain, two| from the U.S. and three from other Canadian provinces. Two his services, and soon after was flying halfway across the con- tinent to the Prairie province to take up an interne's post at the hospital at Leader, 250 miies west of Regina. "T feel it was my duty as al' : physician to offer my -services for patients in need of medical care," he said Wednesday night in an interview. He said he turned his own pa- tients over to two colleagues. There was "'no idea of. remun- eration or reward" in his apply- ing for the job. Dr. Beck said he will go home as soon as the province's doc- tors resume normal practice. He hoped it would be this week- end. ONT. DOCS HELP | A number of doctors in On- tario: hospitals have also indi- cated they will offer their ser- vices temporarily in Saskatche- OS a OO Se ars eS ee e * |Decision as it does today, in the belief '\ture the hydrogen bomb. Strauss, former head of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commis- sion and long active in nuclear developments, stresses the fate- fulness of the decision in a new book, published this week (by Doubleday). WASHINGTON (AP) -- The United States would not exist of Lewis L, Strauss, had it not been for the momentous deci- sion 12 years ago to manufac: Hydrogen Bomb Backed In his chapter on the "deci- sion to detect," Strauss emphas- ized the urgency of learning what the Russians were doing in a nuclear way behind the Tron Curtain. Detection was possible by measuring radioactivity in the atmosphere but, Strauss noted, there was much opposition. In September, 1949, the moni- toring system pushed by Strauss picked up evidence that an | The book, Men and Decisi tells of the great controversy that surrounded jbomb and the H-bomb, as well |as other issues, in the years be- fore, during and after the Sec- lond World War. r;) Summing up the arguments over the H-bomb, and praising President Truman's decision to go ahead with it, Strauss wrote: | "We were able to test our first weapon involving a thermonu- clear reaction the following Au- the atomic atomic explosion had occurred within the Soviet Union. Strauss commented: "It is sobering to speculate on the course of events had there been no monitoring system in operation in 1949. Russian suc- cess in that summer would have been unknown to us, : | "In consequence, we would have made no attempt to de- velop a thermonuclear weapon. It was our positive knowledge of Russian attainment of fission wan. The commission's new re- cruits include one Saskatche- wan doctor who changed his an n | Hottest Blaze Under Canadian law and med-| | Saskatchewan doctors also have jcome out of retirement. [ANSWERS SOS Dr. Gerhard Beck, 53, a Jack-| jsonville, Fla., physician, ans- jwered the SOS after reading|west of here. jabout the Saskatchewan situa-| tion in the Florida Times-Union| Sunday. He telephoned Deputy Pre- jmier J. H. Brockelbank, offered | 7 Years In Jail | On Dope Charges TORONTO (CP) -- Margaret Fern Decarle, 23, of Montreal, |who admitted bringing 500 cap- mind. He is Dr. S. P. Simonds, who some time ago had planned to leave his practice at Imperial to do - post-graduate Fig ee Es sa i ze ae i a c Impera PATIENT EATS WITH STAFF Mrs. Rose Donnawell (sec- | the three members of the | government's medical care » He w ; _, ond from left), the only pa- night hospital staff. The hos- | insurance plan. Some doctors ar iy tae. Bo Myo +e gp tient at Cupar Union Hospital! | pital's doctor, along with oth- have remained for emergency the situation in Saskatchewan in Cupar, Saskatchean, ot er physicians in the province, service. Cupar is without a ; her dinner Wednesday ith | have quit in protest of the | doctor. (AP Wirephoto) The commission said he then} ---- inn ac vel OSE) sett gtl nai c gust. ment, not only in the eyes of} the world, but in fact. Had we the . there is no reason to believe that é corded time to equal their ac-|been before us--to compromise, " s i ae {bomb capabilities which gener- i iba gine sg hPa voy yecs|ated the recommendation to de- ick oF th ws Yivelop a qualitatively superior gio tgghe eueis margin did we|"eapon--thus to maintain our ome to being second in arma- meer sapertority. ie "The Russian success in de- veloping thermonuclear weapon capability in 1953 would have found the United States hope- lessly outdistanced." "Hard decisions would have after test, egun our development successful Russian we would have been ac- omplishment." 'appease, surrender or fight. weit? sew" | Non-Ops Unions Show New Contract Demand surrender to blackmail" and] turned back to Saskatchewan.| He has been given a temporary assignment and hopes to pro- ceed to Montreal later. MONTREAL (CP)--Canada's,an-hour wage increase to thej|cial reaction from the railways non - operating railway unions|durable goods standard. |to the unions' arguments to sup-| In Ten Years have put a price tag on their] That is an average of wages|Port their controversial job se-| jnew contract demands--almost) paid in several basic Canadian| curity program--a plan _pre-| = . |$46,000,000 .a year for wages) industries. It has been rejected|Viously decried by the railways Running Wild plus-an additional $14,000,000 alfor years by the. railways as a|@S Meaning economic ruin. year in 10 years for their job) yardstick to measure what the| In presenting the union esti- ROBERVAL, Que. (CP)--The|S¢curity program. non-ops should be paid. |mate of what it would cost, Mr. Trenche River fire -- hottest,| The figures were made pub-| 'The 100-page union brief, read|Hall said it could be imple- smokiest and biggest seen in 10|lic Wednesday for the first time|jnto evidence by veteran chief|mented for almost nothing, with years in this'neck of the woods|since the contract demands/negotiator Frank Hall, said the|the cost rising gradually over --ran wild Wednesday, riding|were presented last December,|standard has received support|the next 10 years to $14,000,000 the wind eight miles down the!at the opening session of a fed-|from every railway conciliation 2 Year: Pierriche River. eral conciliation board set up to|board since the end of the Sec-| The plan would limit reduc- All 400 fire fighters could do\tty to find a compromise -solu-!ond World War. tions in the number of employ- was stay out of its path and|tion to the dispute. The standard now is about 12/¢¢S With five or more years' concentrate on checking the fire} The union brief, drawing|cents an hour above the aver-| Seniority to one per cent a year.) from the rear and sides. |heavily for support on the find-|age non-ops wage of $1.91 an| The board, under the chair-| Special Weekly Message To Members Of CHAMBERS Information For Persons Considering A CAREER IN ACCOUNTING For many years The Certified Public Accountants Association of Ontario has provided educational facilities for accounting students who are employed in the offices of practising public accountants and for those otherwise employed. Following the recent merging of membership of The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Ontario and The Certified Public Accountants Association of Ontario, arrangements have been made for students presently registered on the C.P.A. course of study to continue to graduation. However, no new enrolments will be accepted by The Certified Public Accountants Association of Ontario. Those seeking a professional career in. public accounting may apply for enrolment on the course of study of The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Ontario. ENQUIRIES SHOULD BE DIRECTED TO THE REGISTRAR, THE INSTITUTE OF CHARTER- ED ACCOUNTANTS OF ONTARIO, 69 BLOOR STREET, EAST, TORONTO 5. For those who prefer a professional accounting career in industry, there will be available a course of study of a standard equivalent to that formerly 'offered by The Certified Public Accountants Assoc- iation of Ontario. Arrangements have been made for The Society of |Sules of heroin valued at $3,000|/perty and two more big ones, from Montreal to Toronto, was,one 10 square miles in_ size, | JOHN A. OVENS 33 FOOD CLUB | 173 Industrial and Cost Accountants of Ontario to conduct this course, separate and distinct from its sentenced to seven years in| penitentiary Wednesday for! \trafficking in narcotics, She! | pleaded guilty. | | Miss Decarle was arrested May 29 when she left an air- craft from Montreal at Malton} |Airport in Toronto and placed|western Quebec counties also|ago in the Tuebingen \a package in a garbage can at|closed Wednesday. jthe rear of a home. The parcel] Outside of Lac St. Jean and | contained 10 cigarette pack- ages, each with 50 capsules of] heroin inside, an RCMP officer | testified. 60 oes 302 B24 55. an EE 213 Optometrist | en HARE OPTICAL is 8 BOND ST. EAST 723-4811 control since last Friday on Ca-|~ ~| throughout the life of a two-year! sit for about eight weeks before nadian International Paper, . contract, it starts working on its report. iles s -| ' os Its finding will not be bindin Company leases 60 miles south Student Jailed OPPOSE STANDARD e binding * fire have salvaged woods camps| For Seducing and corded wood--3,000 cords] certain to include renewed at.|t¥@ Union nominee, and Halifax) worth $50,000 were burned dur-!| oie 'i "ilawyer Gordon Cooper, repre- ing the weekend | 0 omen tacks on the standard itself as senting the railways . well as on the unions' forecast). that can be seen in Trois-Ri-|05Y poiags Pang o el to the unions was for an in-| vieres, 150° miles south, ie oh dent ' sida a ldefinite wage increase--some-| Meanwhile another serious|®". 5 s by _convincing| thing rejected out of hand by! i imi jhas Chantier Gagnon Limitee pro soonths: imprisohinent. The student, Nikolaus. Reissig,| were aflame on timber leases\has weak eyesight, a bad leg) the northern areas of Lavio-|repeated insulting behavior and} lette, Quebec and _ Portneuf| bodily injury. The offences were) Counties to the public. Eleven|committed three or four years} di | northern St. Maurice Valley re-|that his doctor could prescribe} gions, fires were burning injonly one hope for him--love-| Abitibi County and the Ungava|making. Without love, he was| it's A Fact! Yes, Nu-Way has over 50 rolls of carpet on display. No matter what type.of corpet you want, you will be able to MAINLY SUNNY WEATHER | WEATHER FORECAST seeitot... NU-WAY RU 174 MARY STREET "All work done in Oshawa by Q Feasting on more than 20|iNgs of previous boards, made|hour. The unions say a 22-cent|manship of Mr. Justice Craig Although the rajlway argu- rip binaton sagtck VISIBLE 150 MILES TUEBINGEN, West Germany|. nay saueh it will rive itr, fire was reported burning 40|them his doctor had prescribed) ty. 'inion negotiators. north of Lac St. Jean. and was only 60 per cent fit for) trict. region. ee |doomed to go mad, blind or die. square miles of paper-dry slash,|it clear that the non-ops have/increase is needed to close the|Monroe of the British Columbia the big blaze has been out of/|tied their demand for a 22-cent-\gap and maintain parity|Supreme Court, is expected to Five aircraft helping fight the ments are still to be presented), 1he ee ae oe to the board, they are almost|,)""."' : of Authorities said the fire is so\(Reuters)--A 39-year-old. geol-|'"&, the next two years. hot it is forming cumulus clouds| The railways' counter-propo. ; jlove as the only cure for him,| ~ miles due west of Roberval -on| been sentenced to 16| There was no immediate offi-| The provincial government] Work, a court was told Tuesday.) has closed Roberval County and} The court found him guilty of| The court said Reissig con- fided in his prospective lovers) et a geses ww" Sees ? ait TPT RE FORAY i co. LTD. 728-4681 lified Oshawa Technici other course. As an interim measure, students will be enrolled by the Society on the present C.P.A. course of study with the understanding that upon graduation they will be granted a designation, other than C.P.A., to attest to their achievement, ENQUIRIES SHOULD BE DIRECTED TO THE SOCIETY OF INDUSTRIAL AND COST ACCOUNT- ANTS OF ONTARIO, 31 WALNUT STREET, SOUTH, P.O. BOX 176, HAMILTON, ONTARIO. THIS NOTICE 1S PUBLISHED BY THE CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS ASSOCIATION OF ONTARIO ORRE LAMB LEGS BREAKFAST and Friday. Little change in| Warm, Humid jtemperature. Winds southwest} |15, becoming light at night, SAUSAGE . | Pereense temperatures: CTION oe on Lhe, sae i aka ARSE | Low tonight High Friday oe ee oe OF Peterborough Trenton . Killaloe Muskoka North Bay Sudbury Earlton ..« Kapuskasing ...- White River. .... with about half a dozen trucking ; {Windsor s.6.35 > 65 b ' K T said our " 5 SHOPSY § ALL BEEF . membership turns the proposals| ea er een | Against New down, we have no alternative London .. te aay - Kitchener . ilfred Sefton, president o : ; Co tract Terms \in0r Local 880, 'said his ex. 0% Weather office at 5 a.m.:|readings. | Hamilton n | t Temperatures will climb to| Lake Erie, Lake St. Clair, Ni-lst. Catharines . proposals and said the same is 7 - of leaders of five striking) 'Ue of the Hamilton executive, |Peratures, coupled with low hu-|ron, Haliburton, Timagami re- y Teamster union locals have said constituted Local 141 in London, ™er weather. The story is dif-| toni, Toronto, Sudbury, North " Patrick Hallinan, said '"we're ferent north of Lake Superior. | Bay: Sunny and, warm today terms aimed at settling the On- i fario trucking strike now in its! either." cloudy skies and a few scat- Algoma, Cochrane regions, oo ee 200 The local leaders, who went/tered showers. This disturbance|Sault Ste. Marie: Clear with John Kennedy, vice-president|into executive sessions Tuesday r of Toronto Local 938--represent- to discuss terms arrived at by/ of the cloud is expected to move little 'change in temperature eastward as-far as Kapuskas-| Winds light. Moosonee . .-. . « 95 7,000 striking drivers -- said|)management during the week- +s terms fall 3% cents short of end, are expected to recom- be mainly sunny throughout the cloudy today. A few showers Sault Ste. Marie ' forecast regions and tempera+' morning. Mainly clear tonight|Mount Forest. . « .5: . Trucker Unions '::', Kennedy ie | St. Thomas... . but to st Fs fis oases Pe nN ; ot ea Forecasts issued by the Tor-|tures will be similar to today's Wingham . is 0 L 0 NA C HT U 8 ae os each 61 ecutive is "quite against" the th é lithe low 80s today. § -| io, Li TORONTO (CP)--A majority | w 80s today. These tem-|agara, Lake Ontario, Lake Hu-|Toronto.. . . Vice-president of the newly.| midity, add up to pleasant sum-| gions, Windsor, London, Hamil- they 'are against new contract i not too keen on the proposals) .A weak disturbance is giving/and Friday, Winds light. sixth week. ; . | will weaken steadily but some} cloudy periods today and Friday ing about half of the more than government conciliators and ing and James Bay. Friday will) White River region Mainly Timmins agreements sighed separately, mend rejection'of the terms.