Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 Feb 1964, p. 4

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Se ea ee SS pnineninismmenpcememmancntae staie at eent segura cam tale iate eriteter erin RNR a am anes ee ve 7 Ser om 5 MO ERE Sian ste I sport i es = * yacht Britannia to Quebec Study Given : By Minister At Mount Zion @ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, Pebrosry 1, 1964 WEEK'S NEWS IN REVIEW French Leader Plugs Neutrality For By BORIS MISKEW Pong for a Southeast Asia with a for better rela- tions with unist China if neutrality is to be achieved. his earlier dec- son to es tablish dip) relations with Communist China, de Gaulle said at a conference Paris that rance will extend her co- "operation and assistance to the Asian and South American continents while maintaining her aid to African countries. He said he had discussed this subject with Prime Minis- "ter Pearson during Pearson's "pleasant and fruitful" visit "to France a few weeks ago. * It is impossible for France or the West, de Gaulle, said, "to have any policy for South- teast Asia or even for the So- «viet Union that does not take "China's influence into ac- it. "There is no war or peace imaginable in Asia without China being involved," the French leader said, "It is in- concevable to conclude «@ treaty of neutrality concern- ing the states of Southeast Asia . . . without China being a Pak eanwhile, it was learned in Ottawa that the Canadian government--which does not recognize Communist China-- has decided to give recogm- tion to ia, a Commu- nist. buffer state of 3,000,000 between the Soviet Union and China, And a source close to the Canadian cabinet said earlier that Canada likely will favor entry of Communist China into the United Nations in (November. COUP IN SAIGON Blaming French efforts to neutralize South Viet Nam, . « Gen. Nguyen Khanh seized power Thursday from the South Vietnamese junta which had overthrown Presi- dent Ngo Dinh Diem. The new military strong- man, who took over in a bloodless coup, said his aim is to keep South Viet Nam from vom neutral and he prom: a government of na- tional union made up of rep- resentatives of all walks of Observers believe this means Khanh and his 35-man vilian authorities. QUEEN TO VISIT The Queen and Philip will visit Charlottetown and Quebec City in October to mark the 1 anniversary of the conferences in 1864 which led to Confederation. The royal visit will be re- stricted to the Prince Edward Island and Quebec capitals this year. Plans cali for the Queen to arrive by plane in Charlottetown about Oct. 6 and travel aboard the royal City, lea Quebec Ci see On it af CONGO REBELS Congolese troops beat off attacks b errillas on the town of Idiofa in Kwilu prow 'ince as United Nations neli- copters continued to rescue missionaries and their fam- ilies -- including Canadians-- from the troubled southwest Congo. A Canadian officer was sur- rounded early in the week by 150 Congolese warriors and was beaten unconscious dur- ing an attempt to free a group of -- Catholic nuns and Lt-Col. Paul Mayer, 47, of Ottawa, was commanding a scue team of four UN heli- copters at Kisandji mission, in northern Kwango, when the attack took place. The officer managed to have the mission- aries freed after regaining consciousness. LAUNCH SATELLITES The United States launched a camera-carrying Ranger VI Spacecraft from Cape Ken- nedy Thursday and scientists re-aimed the off-course craft early Friday and said "we probably will hit the moon." Plans called for the 804, pound spacecraft to strike the moon, Its six television cam- eras are designed to snap 3,- 000 close-up pictures of the moon in the final 10 minutes of its flight. The Soviet Union, mean- while, launched two space stations into orbit with a single rocket. One was re- ported in an orbit ranging up to 42,000 miles above the earth, There was no indication of the size and weight of the two space stations launched one day after the U.S. used its powerful Saturn booster rocket to hurl the biggest Fo bars yet--a 17-ton satel- ite--into space, SEIZE ARMS In an 80-minute raid Thurs- day, a gang of 15 teen-agers, ied by a man of about 30, struck at Les Fusiliers Mont- Royal Armory in Montr al and escaped with enough fire- power to outfit a small army. Authorities feared a new outbreak of terrorism by young extremists seeking to -- Quebec from Confeder- No one was hurt but nine employees and military per- sonnel were left gagged and bound. Among the items stolen were 30 new - issue machine - guns, six older- model machine - guns, mor- tars, rifles, sidearms and am- munition. REHEARSES HAMLET Actor Richard Burton, ac- companied by Elizabeth Tay- lor, arrived in Toronto this week where Burton began re- hearsals Thursday for an un- -- version of Ham- et. World briefs: The bodies of three U.S. Air Force officers killed Tuesday when their T-39 jet trainer was downed over East Germany arrived in West Berlin Friday. . . . Brit- ish and American plans for a NATO peace-keeping army on Cyprus ran into a snag in By MRS. LORNE JONES BALSAM and MT. ZION--The . United Church Women mei at. _the home of Mrs. Richard Day | - with the president, Mrs. Lorne - Jones, presiding. a The theme of the meeting was . "Light." A paper was given by "Mrs, Lioyd Wilson on '"Win- «dows" and Mrs. Richard Day "gave comments on the topic. Rev. J. Fleetham conducted a study on 'The Word and the Way.' PERSONALS Mrs. Allen Carson has ac- cepted a position as teacher at Brooklin school. A number attended the mis- cellaneous shower for Mr. and Mrs. George Johnson at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Jones. Mr. and Mrs. Burnett Jamie- son and Mary Jean. Mrs. Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Parrott of Ashburn. Mrs. Lioyd Wilson spent a few days in Toronto with re'a- tives. Fifty went on the tour General Motors on a Asia diplomatic meetings in Lon- don, with Cypriots of both Greek and Turkish blood ex- pressing dissatisfaction. . . . Prime Minister Pearson en- joyed a Florida vacation of seclusion following last weeks talks with President Johnson. . . » The British Labor part; leader, Harold Wilson, will visit Canada and the United States early in March unless a British nrg election is called for that month, WEEK IN ONTARIO Liquor and wine price in- creases that will bring the On- tario government an addi- tional $12,000,000 in tax rev- enue but add comparatively little to the incomes of dis- tillers and vintners went into effect today. The increases, announced Wednesday, range from 20 to 30 cents on a 26- ounce bottle for liquor and 10 to 15 cents for a bottle of wine. a% Premier Robarts announced Thursday that R. Percy Mil- ligan, 57, of Cornwall, Crown attorney for the united coun- ties of Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry for 15 years, will replace Judge Bruce Mac- donald as chairman of the On- tario Police Commission. Harold A. Deneau, 28, who had spent 12 years in a men- tal hospital awaiting a court ruling that he was fit to stand trial on a charge of non-capi- tal murder, walked out of On- tario Supreme Court in Co- bourg a free man Thursday after a jury acquitted him. Deneau, a Cobourg farm worker, was charged iwth killing Sydney James Goft whose body was found in a barn March 16, 1952, but Mr. Justice J, M. King told the jury he was puzzled by the absence of blood on Deneau's hands and on the rock with which he was alleged to have killed Goff. Maria Butch, a 21-year-old Hamilton gypsy, was charged with witchcraft Thursday and remanded to Feb. 14 under an ancient law that is still part of the Canadian Criminal Code. Police said the charges were laid ;.fter a policewoman twice visited Miss Butch, They will allege the gypsy told the policewoman she could rid her of an evil curse, Olympic Games hero is a guy in coveralls and a hard hat. carrying the pride of Japan on down, build-'em-up preparations for the 18th Olympiad to be jackhammer din compounding one more? backblocks of Japanese Build 22 Olympic Rds. his first visit to and quickly left in disgust. city cousins were of not much ac- count, he figured, if the best tenn could afford was wooden' = Z ing hold the Olympics is amazing| in itself, Over-all expenditure, including all governmental work), such as building of roads, con- struction of sites, expansion of Tokyo Airport, is estimated at more than $555, 000,000. PAY FOR PROPERTY More than 70 per cent of the $200,000,000 budgeted by the city of Tokyo for "Olympic roads' was used to buy land and com- pensate property owners for their losses. Property owners included fishermen who lost By DAVE STOCKAND TOKYO (CP) --- Japan's The construction worker is his shoulders in the knock-'em- staged next October--and Jap- anese pride is a weighty com- modity. s The first impression in the nage. It comments, hopefully: importance dents is the fact " installation of the expressways,idents will benefit greatly." phe tthe tes SS ener DOORS OPEN 1:00 P.M. CONTINUOUS from 1:30 P.M. 'jone, is hopeful the expresswaysyiraitic accidents, in mate o the will cut down on theratic car-|celebrated but notorious kam' kaze taxicab drivers, will b minimized to one-fifth of thos "Ol extreme humanitar-jon ordinary roads of compara an to local resi-\ble length, Here, again, thank: that with the|to the Olympics. The Professor's Apprentice goes way-out:on hisown! EXTRA DISNEYLAND AFTER DARK TEQHNIOOLOR een teenie valuable fishing grounds where the new highways skirt the the neon madness of the Ginza, shoreline and cross the tidal the clanging, congested caba- resi- Hockey Sunday Night: Leafs vs. Detroit 1 pm. areas of Tokyo bay. Until recently rebuilding the war + shattered economy has been Japan's No, 1 concern. Transport was neglected where it did not directly contribute to productivity. The Olympics have changed all that, But Olympics or not, the traffic problem in Tokyo was rapidly nearing a crisis point that only mammoth effort could possibly alleviate. The number of registered mo- tor vehicles in Tokyo is increas- ing by 10,000 monthly, There are 960,000 vehicles registered ret-cluttered heart of Tokyo, is that even the Olympic plum isn't worth the chaos the con- struction is causing, "T just don't believe it," said one stunned visitor. "'It's like building a luxury hotel to put up a guest for a single week- end," The modernization of Tokyo's traffic and transportation sys- tem, which will ensure that Games visitors setting out for the opening pageantry don't ar- rive for the closing ceremonies instead, is truly an awe-inspir- ing project. Central Presents TWO ... ONE-ACT PLAYS anda MUSICAL FANTASY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13th and FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14th CENTRAL COLLEGIATE AUDITORIUM ADMISSION 50¢ AT 8 P.M. ----_-- in Tekyo now--in 1942 the num- ber wag 60,000--and the present figure will rise to 1,000,000 by 1065. WALKING IS HAZARDOUS And lo the poor pedestrian. At some. Tokyo 'intersections there are banners available which the walker can wave as he steps off the curb, They say in eftect, "Have pity, I have got to cross the street," and way system. Protective plank-/they give about the same degree ing atop the underground dig-/of security as stepping into a EXTEND SUBWAY Twenty-two "Olympic roads" are being expanded or built and eight elevated expressways four lanes wide are thrusting out in all directions. One will cut driv- ing time from Tokyo's Haneda Airport to the city centre to 15 minutes from one hour. Underground there is almost as much activity with a series of extensions to the Tokyo sub- a PANACOLOR | 2VAL "THE THING WITHOUT A FACE" | BARRY MARTHA SULLIVAN ... HYER gings, eel-slippery in the rain,/nuclear battlefield with a flag has added yet another hazardiof truce. to driving in Tokyo--but what's) The Japan Visitor's Guide, for The Japanese are fond of the story of the peasant from the lonshu who made SATURDAY The Great Big Wondertul Sound of Music | SMART WOMEN ,.. TODAY & SUNDAY "BOTH IN BLAZING COLOR ' STARTS SUNDAY YOUR ACADEMY AUTHENTIC! AWARD eaaee RAW! REAL! SOPHI grt 'NAKED 'MADAME' AMAZON' in COLOR in COLOR Three organizations with end his erchestre Il have their corpets ond uphol- important interests in On- Dancing 9 "til 121) : tario's draft medical insur- ccurvetionss Fasares * vas-saagy "ev -- b rw ance legislation--the Ontario 7 ea' Association, the Ca- nadian Health Insurance As lb le DURACLEAN sociation and Physicians' Ser- ) | " 728-8518 vices Incorporated -- this CO» hewn * week prop d chang ata public hearing. Among other things, they said government subsidies for medical insur- ance should be limited to welfare cases and persons who do not earn enough to pay income tax. RESULTS COUNT! meals MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Consult @ Member of the Oshawa & District Real Estate Board O'KEEFE CENTRE "aut" BILTMORE TS e "THE SEDUCERS" "KARATE" } Lat Day SATURDAY Club (formerly Vareoe's) UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP Sunday Meeting 11 A.M, ADDRESS: "A REASONABLE FAITH" SPEAKER: DR. C. H. JACKSON, M.A, PH.D., Dip.Ed., F.B.P.S, Psychologist, Mental Health Clinic, Oshawe C.R.A. BUILDING 100 GIBB ST. You are invited to attend A VERY GOOD IDEA __ This Sunday Take The Family Out To Dinner! ~ FEATURING DELICIOUS, TASTY ROAST PRIME RIBS of BEEF --also-- ROAST TURKEY Genosha Hotel AMPLE PARKING © )PENS MONDAY! THRU FEB. DIRECT FROM BROADWAY WITH THE ORIGINAL STARS SID CAESAR (IN PERSON) IN "LITTLE ME" DRUG STORES OPEN THIS SUNDAY EVENINGS 8:30 MATS. WED. & SAT. 2 P.M. BOX OFFICE OPEN 11 A.M.--9 P.M. | 12:00 AM. to 6:00 P.M. 241 KING ST. EAST 9 SIMCOE ST. NORTH | TAMBLYN DRUG STORE 728-5101 | SHOPPING CENTRE | JAMIESON DRUGS | MITCHELL'S DRUGS 725-1169 723-3431 | A Terrific Travelogue Treat! THE KIWANIS CLUB OF OSHAWA INC. Ils Honored to Present The World Renowned Explorer COLONEL JOHN D.GRAIG With His Exotic Presentation "OVER AND UNDER THE CARIBBEAN SEA" : SERVICE i i STATIONS | OPEN THIS SUNDAY 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. ROBINSON'S PRESTON'S SUNOCO STATION 925 SIMCOE ST. NORTH 4 CRANFIELD'S B-A STATION 331 PARK RD, SOUTH GANGEMI'S SERVICE STATION 809 SIMCOE ST, SOUTH ESSO STATION 89 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH FLOYD PRICE SUNOCO STATION $31 RITSON RD, SOUTH DON DOWN SHELL STATION 97 KING ST. E. PLEASURE VALLEY SERVICE STATION 1600 SIMCOE ST. NORTH | Monday, Feb. 3rd 8:15 P.M. SHARP Central Collegiate Auditorium SIMCOE STREET SOUTH tt is indeed a privilege to welcome Col. Craig back te Oshawa ofter on absence of six yeors, He is without doubt, one of the top men in the travelogue field. Col, Creig has spent the best years of his bottom of the sea. He is the distinguished author of a best seller-- life searching for adventure on the lend, in the cir ond on the "Danger is My Business" and hes been a producer of nationally broadcast television series notably "Expedition", His newest travelogue th. been filmed against o beckground of the historic islands and blue waters of the West Indies. Don't miss it--it's full of surprises and the photography is outstanding, Bring your friends. THIS IS A TRAVELOGUE YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS! SEASON TICKETS (6 Admissions) $5.00 SEASON TICKETS (Students) .... $2.50 GENERAL ADMISSION--EACH TRAVELOGUE ...... $1.00 GENERAL ADMISSION--STUDENTS .............. S0e TICKETS may be purchased from any member of the Oshawo Kiwonis Club or at the Central Collegiote Auditorium TEE-PEE DRIVE-IN 401 AT LIVERPOOL RD. Free electric-in-car heaters Tonight and Sunday 3 € | TROY DONAHUE -- CONNIE STEVENS BIG (2) SANDRA DEE-- JOHN SANSON HITS 'The Restless Years' (9) "Whatever Happened To Baby Jane" @ ADULT ENTERTAINMENT e@ TUESDAY LAST DAY Screenptay by LAWRENCE Fount ard DAD SWIFT + Based on the stage play ty LAWRENCE ROMAR Pepe anes og noe cere / Directed toy. DAVID SWIT ~Preduced ty FREDERICK BRISSOR FEATURE TIMES PLAZA Now 2:40; 3,35; $:30; 7:39 Playing | 9:25 test Complete YES new 9:25 THIS WEEK GET "Count Victors" "PEEPING and HIDING" 8:30 - 11:30 MEMBERS 40c -- NON-MEMBERS 60¢ CANADIAN PREMIER! ODEON BAY RIDGES JOINS... NEW YORK, PARIS and TORONTO IN PRESEN- ener FILM TOP MAGAZINES AND ACCLAIM! ...NOW SHOWING... -Y Peter SellerS- George': Seatt, oo Pe ~Stanloy Kubrick's ed ox Sime or low | Learned Te 'And Love The Bom, FSS EY Ay ' PEE E SY 4 Featbas E i7~ === Sig Haden een Wye Si PhS ater te waren Stanley Rabrick, Peter George & TerySouthern S722°C52. eee 'A Cotemiza Pictirres Retease ALSO | Glen Ford in "CRY FOR HAPPY" -- Color FREE ELECTRIC IN CAR HEATER © NITELY FROM 7:30 aN

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