"Q 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, March 6, 1963 GOOD EVENING -- ByJACKGEARIN -- PLAN CRACKDOWN ON ERRANT MOTORISTS Warning to all City motorists: City police are ready to inaugurate a crackdown drive on errant motorists who have been getting too much leeway, ac- cording to departmental observers. ' "We are going to start a idrive on those motor- TORONTO (CP)--Discussions on air pollution control and a shortage of nurses and the col- lapse from exhaustion of Eco- nomics Minister Robert Mac- aulay were highlights of a full day of activity in the. Ontario legislature Tuesday. The cost of enforcing anti-poll "some form -of. subsidization the municipalities." James Trotter (L-- Toron' Ists who insist on breaking '¢he speed limits," said Chief !Herbert F today. +. "I don't stating pub 'ely that somebody is liable *to get hurt, but this drive 4s long overdue, We must en- tforce our traffic Jaws more ' ridigly than we have been do- 'ing, that's all there is to it. :We have been holding off 'with radar, etc. because of sthe icy conditions of the igoads. We wanted to be fair, "put too many motorists are * taking advantage of the situ- ; ation. I thought it was only +fair to. sound a warning * first." é ; 'CITY FOLK -- SINGING TRIO SCORES HIT _ Murray Johnston is reclining in the sun these days on ethe tropical isle of Tobago near Trinidad. He's due back in "two weeks. - . . Oshawa's dancing Taylor Twins -- 'the sons "of Mr, and Mrs. Andy Horchik of 762 Palace -- are rehearsing *@ new act in New York City for the swank niteries . . . An- other Oshawa musical trio is gradually making a go of it in the highly competitive world of show business. They're the Fanwood Trio, folk singers. They are Bob Cunningham, 20, David MacMillan, 19, and Ted Parrott, 21. They recently com- "pleted a 13,000-mile tour of Western Canada and the U.S. West Coast. CHIEF FLINTOFF . KIN MAY SPONSOR STEAM-ENGINE EXCURSION Nothing final has been settled, but the Oshawa Kinsmen are toying with the idea of sponsoring the famous CNR (re- tired) steam-engine No. 6167 for an excursion to the Niagara Peninsula blossom country in May. This sounds like a sound business idea. Old 6167 drew 'more than 700 spectators to the CNR station here last Summer when she stopped enroute.home after a Belleville-Picton ex- *"cursion -- many of these would welcome a trip aboard her, especially with Oshawa as the take-off point. There are other reasons -- the famonus engine may be relegated to the scrap heap at the end of the year, according to other reports. There has been a strong public demand for this type of railway excursion -- as the Upper Canada Rail- way Society has so amply demonstrated -- but a CNR spokes- man admitted that No. 6167 (one of the few remaining speci- mens of the breed available) would soon be in need of an extensive repair job on her tubes, which could rum as high as "The price may make a repair job prohibitive, DOWNTOWN MALL PLAN HAS MERIT Dean Kelly deserves support for his proposed all-out cam- - paign to beautify the downtown business sector, He and his supporters visualize the downtown King street area eventually as a wide open mail. It would have trees, gar- dens and fountains. What a beautiful thought! Mr. Kelly is a persistent man. This is fortunate. His gran- provincial regulations to control air pollution in urban areas. awa) said the health depart- Premier Robarts explained a 25-minute delay in starting Tuesday's sitting with his an- nouncement that Mr, Macaulay had collapsed just outside the legislative chamber, The 41-year-old minister's heart and pulse rate were nor- mal but he was to be held in hospital 24 hours for examina- tion. He had been working on the province's trade crusade and in preparing estimate for his two departmeiits -- energy 're- sources and economics and de- velopment--for presentation to the legislature. Energy re- sources eéstimates: had been scheduled for submission today. Health Minister Matthew B. Dymond replied unceremoni- ously "Oh, nuis," to oppositi left enforcement of anti-poll laws." Labor Minister has instituted prosecution of Toronto contractor, one whose workers suffered "bends" while working in any person violating regu! tions governing conditions f vincial regulations Criminal: Code. and ment has done a "very bad job" in air pollution control. tion regulations, was high and the . province should provide Parkdale) said the province has tion regulations to the munic- ipalities. The government "should see to it that the munic- ipalities are enforcing the! H. Leslic| Rowntree said his department the pressurized tunnel in Toronto Feb. 26, He.did not specify the nature of the charge but said underground workers is liable to prosecution under both pro- the John McGean, 31, of suburban Macaulay Collapses Before House Session Agincourt was placed in a de- compression chamber at Buf- falo, N.Y., Feb. 27 when a search failed to turn up such a chamber in Toronto. Transport Minister James Auld announced that most On- tario truckers will be required to file. with the transport de- partment their rates for hauling goods effective May 1. The new regulations prevent any licenced carrier from changing his rates for 30 days after filing them and will make it illegal to charge any rates other than those filed. Excluded from the new pro- cedure will be operators of fleets of four vehicles or less, livestock and farm supply car- riers and most dump truck and construction vehicles, Gordon Innes (L-- Oxford) said the shooting of a Wood- stock policeman last October might indicate there "should be stricter regulations" on mental patients likely to stray from "open door' hospital grounds. Dr. Dymond replied that u- to to u- a of a a- or hammering at a shortage of nurses in the province. He said the opposition members were of the opinion that "no one knows anything but you." RECRUIT FROM BRITAIN? Ray Edwards (L--Wentworth)! had told the House he was in- formed by a doctor that the shortage of nurses in at least one instance caused a postpone- ment of surgery and in other cases, hospitals had. to recruit nurses from Britain before they could open. He said he could nob disclose the name of the surgeon who had complained but it was up to the Progressive Conservative government to in- vestigate the charges, Dr, Dymond said he knew of no hospital that had been closed or unable to open because of the. nurse shortage but some hospitals closed parts of wards on weekends because married nurses could not be induced to work weekends. He said the Ontario govern- ment had set an example in nurses' training but would not take over complete supervision in this field. He added that a debate of nurses' training 'does not' belong in this department at all." In a night sitting, Liberal and New Democratic members urged the government to set up Mrs. Pearson Resigns VOW Position sor of the Voice of Women. day that she ago because much more belligerent" in i nuclear arms, it," she said. At a press conference la week Mrs. Helen Tucker, aims of the Vow. can," she said. litical overtones." Mrs, Therese Casgrain, n T. D. Thomas (NDP -- Osh- . OTTAWA (CP)--Mrs. Lester Pearson says she has resigned her position as honorary spon- The Liberal leader's wife said in a telephone interview Tues- left the 7,000- member organization a week 'it has become opposition to Canada acquiring "This was not the case when I first became associated with VoW co-founder, said it might be difficult for members of the Liberal party who were also members of the VoW to resolve their party's views with the "But it seems some of them In Toronto, a spokesman for Mr. Pearson said Mrs. Pearson resigned because the VoW had "taken on certain partisan, po- tional president of the Vow,| said in Montreal the organiza-| tion has acknowledged "with re- gret" the letter of resignation. "elopement'"' of mental patients from 'open door" institutions is not a matter of serious concern. During debate of his. depart- ment's spending estimates, he said there were 20 "eloped" pa- OTTAWA (CP) -- Bernard Boulanger, $15,000 - a - year administrator of the Canadian Seafarers' welfare plan, has Ibeen ordered to appear Friday before Mr. Justice T, G. Norris for trying to withhold docu- ments filed with the federal la- bor inquiry. Mr. Boulanger refused to hand over two minute books of the board of trustees of the wel- fare plan, claiming that the trustees had Bg ha eam not to produce the documents. "They belong to the trustees," said Mr. Boulanger Tuesday. "I asked for them and they told me not to bring them." INTERPRETING THE NEWS Bidault 'Scoop' Not Diplomatic By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer The British television inter- view with exiled Georges Bi- dault is the sort of thing that "ROBERT MACAULAY As for the appearance being a scoop, Bidault has already been seen on television since he went underground and has given "exclusive" interviews to Amer- tients missing from minimum security mental institutions last December. "Some of them wander away and get lost," he said. 'But few of them leave with the idea of deliberately escaping." The death of Constable Thomas Black, who was at- tempting to return two patients from a Woodstock bus depot, did not indicate the open-door policy should be changed. Dr. Dymond .also told the House his department is nearly ready to make a submission to the university affairs commit- tee on a possible second dentai college for Ontario. He said he could not say yet whether the province would contribute fi- nancially to any new dental col- lege. Municipal Affairs Minister Wilfred Spooner said Ontario ts st a federal-provincial winter works program from April 30 to May 31, matching federal action, Un- usually cold weather had de- layed many projects. Orange Brief Opposes RC diose plans for the future will-be confronted by many road- blocks, one of the worst of which will be municipal apathy and indecision, His urban redevelopment dreams can only become @ reality with the full co-operation of many citizens, including City Council and his own Oshawa's Businessmen's Association, (currently in need of a good membership drive.) Mr. Kelly may ruffle official furs. unnecessarily in his @reat zeal to get things done, but isn't this understandable ? The City, and many of his own downtown business colleagues, have been dragging their feet for years on such important municipal matters. Some day we may thank him for his constant prodding, planning in the face of many discouragements, Such optimism, drive and imaginative planning as he has , displayed has been sadly missing at the official municipal level. The point is that he cares about such matters. There are too few citizens who do care. We need far more of them. ARE CITY TRUCKS USED AS TAXIS? Memo to "Four Times Gazette Readers and, Taxpayers": Unsigned letters to newspapers, such as yours, are usually relegated to the waste basket, and rightfully so. This will be an exception because of the frequency of ver- bal complaints similar to yours. You ask why City Hall trucks (building inspectors) are used as taxi cabs -- i.e. to take inspectors home at night and also to dinner (for 114-hour periods)? One inspector lives half-a-mile off any main road, you allege, so that is two miles daily for a start, not counting the mileage downtown to City Hail. In closing you write: "Perhaps it costs nothing to run the above trucks or do our City experts think we taxpayers should be in Whitby." There is no desire herein to participate in this word battle at least until our information is more complete, but City Engineer Fred Crome Tuesday gave this explanation: "Inspectors in the City Engineering Department take City trucks home at noon and also keep them home overnight because they frequently get emergency calls there and it is essential that they get to the job without delay." This explanation may not satisfy all, in view: of the wide usage of City trucks for what appears. to be extra-curricular duty (at a heavy annual cost to the taxpayer), but at least its an explanation. Perhaps City Hall will give us a breakdown on the _ annual cost of such truck usage, as above described, in all : @epartments (including the City Works Yard and Parks De- pin where there have been some glaring examples of waste). This letter is of importance to taxpayers. Vaccine Choice Advice Given TORONTO (CP)--The choice between Sabin and Salk vac. for poliomyelitis should depend more on local condi- om scientific merit, says bly effective in controlling a Ja- Panese epidemic in 1961, he said. Within a few weeks of giv- ing 13,000,000 doses to children, reported cases dropped from 500 a week to three or four a week. He said 2,500,000 doses of Salk vaccine were given in Can- ada without incident, although 79 cases of polio developed in the United States among per- sons inoculated there with con- minated vaccine. "If Canada had not had this of| successful experiment, Salk vac- cine would have been doomed," WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy, Colder For Thursday Forecasts issued by the Tor-|Earlton onto weather office at 4:30 a.m.|Kapuskasing Synopsis: A vigorous March! White River. storm has moved into south-| Moosonee western Ontario, Westerly Sault Ste Marie.. winds and snowflurries accom-|Mount Forest..... pany falling temperatures with| Timmins the passage of the disturbance) and locally heavy snow is likely}. Observed Temperatures in central Ontario during the|Low overnight, high Tuesday day. Colder weather over| Dawson 17 Northern Ontario will gradually| Victoria move southward Thursday. | £dmonton Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,|Regina ..... tteeee Lake Huron regions, Windsor, | Winnipeg London: Partial clearing to. Lakeliead night but mainly cloudy with sic Ste. Marie... few snowflurries and not much ame River change in temperature Thurs. es . day. Winds becoming northwest § -- Bay.... 15 Thursday. rs sug . Niagara, Lake Ontario, south- win oka ern Georgian Bay regions, Tor- I mn " snowflurries this afternoon. Ton ON eee Variable cloudiness with occa- }Acteontag ore sional snowflurries and continu-| 147 nah 'hae ing cool Thursday. Winds be- ay . coming northwest 15 Thursday.| *UCDec «++. Northern Georgian Bay, Hali- | School Grants TORONTO (CP)--The Loyal Orange Association in Ontario said Tuesday in a brief that the Roman Catholic Church 'con- ducts a relentless war against state and public education." The brief, mailed to Premier Robarts and members of the legislature, opposed a request last October from Roman Cath- olic bishops for extended gov- ernment grants to separate schools, The premier last month an- nounced a program for distribu- tion of grants to provide all On- tario students with equal edu- cational opportunities' Mr. Ro- barts rejected the bishops' re- quests for separate secondary schools and teachers coileges. The Orange Association sug- gested that separate schools perpetuate tendencies t oward segregation and are designed to recruit priests. It said a vote on the issue wouid clearly show the electorate against it. GOOD FOOD Breaktast, Lunch, Dinner BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12-2 P.M. Hotel Lancaster has authorized extension of the makes Frenchmen wonder sad i 'orrespond- about the invincible ineensitivity| (a #04 European correspo SIU Welfare Official Ordered Before Probe car from Montreal to Ottawa where they were dramatically delivered to the judge minutes The minute books had been filed earlier as exhibits with Mr. Justice Norris' one-man in- quiry commission on Great Lakes labor strife. Georges La- chance, Liberal MP for Mont- real Lafontaine in the last Par- liament, borrowed the books from the commission on his un- dertaking as lawyer for Mr.|rep Boulanger to return them later "I am still. undertaking to bring back the books, but I\ada don't have them," said Mr. La- chance. MUST RETURN wi "It you turned those books over to somebody and\aga you are now not able to get them back you are incon- gaa said Mr, Justice Nor- s, "They were exhibits. They were filed here and it is as bad as if someone went into some-| body else's house and took the property of that person." Mr. Justice Norris gave Mr. Lachance and Mr, Boulanger about two hours to arrange for the return of the missing ex- hibits. The books were rushed by but finally relented, ide them as the three SIU tn including SIU president Cc. Banks, and one company trus- tee, W. E. Collison of Montreal. COMING EVENTS ents in various clandestine meet-' ing places. PREFER DE GAULLE Frenchmen made clear in last November's elections that they most important news-magazine|prefer de Gaulle to any avail- programs to a political refugee|able alternative leader, what- whose sole reason for being is/¢ver reservations some may to usurp power from the Frenchjhave about his authoritarian! head of state, President Charles|style. | de Gaulle. | "Therefore they may ask To top it all, British news-|whether journalistic avidity for papers hail the broadcast as ajexclusive stories should be "palpable scoop." Placed ahead of a sense of How would Britons feel, the|'esponsibility toward a friendly French may ask, if France's|°oUmtry. -- ; national TV service suddenly| On a visit to Paris last week, gave star treatment to some|this reporter found that Bidault renegade Englishman dedicated|is widely regarded as a tragic to the liquidation of Prime Min-|figure whom history has passed ister Harold Macmillan? by. Twice premier and four times Strontium-90 _|esumats "te Boras Level Rises In U.K. Milk strong policy in Indochina and Algeria at a time when events were forcing the retreat of Eu- rope from Asia and Africa.. LONDON (Reuters) -- Levels of strontium-90 in milk rose in all areas of Britain in the late ispring and early summer of Some say the slight, mild- spoken Bidault was powerfully 1962; the Agricultural Research Council said in a report pub- influenced by his wife, a former resident of Indochina now living in the Paris suburb of St. Cloud. A professor of history before the outbreak of the Second World War, Bidault served in the army, was taken prisoner lished here today. The average level for the year up to September, 1962, reflect- ing fallout from the 1961 nuclear tests, was about 60 per cent higher than the average for| 1961, the report said. | and on release played an honor- But it was slightly less than in able role in the underground resistance movement. September, 1050, after the 1958 nuclear tests. Today he calls the movement The total iodine-131 entering he heads the 'National Council' milk in 1962 was less than the of the Resistance." "Perhaps that is the sad thing amount observed in the autumn of 1961, about Bidault," a French news- The average value of stron- paper editor said last week. "He doesn't know that times have changed. He has not been able to shake off the habit of being in resistance to some- thing." tium-90 in British milk in the 12 months to last September was less than eight per cent of the accepted safety level for the population as a whole and never rose above 20 per cent of} this level, the report added. of the Anglo-Saxons. At a time when Anglo-French relations are sorely in need of discretion, the BBC suddenly accords top billing on one of its OSHAWA'S ORIGINAL CARPET CENTRE at Nu-Way, carpet and broad- loom has been a specialty for §| 18 years . . . with thousands of yards on display to select from. 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