Ra Qe agg ye THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, April 27, 1964 GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN -- GOOD NEWS FOR SCHOOLS FOR RETARDED A bill of interest to the Oshawa and District Association for Retarded Children is before the Ontario Legisiature. It will provide an entirely new approach to the opera- tion of schools for retarded children, according to Al- bert V. Walker, MPP, Osh- awa Riding. ~The Department of Edu- cation will pay 75-80 per- cent of the cost of opera- tion of these schools begin- ning next January 1. The school will be under direction of the "Education Authority", four members appointed by City Council and two by. -the Retarded Children's Association. The move will put the schools for retardéd chil-. ALBERT WALKER dren on the same basis as other schools under the Department of Education. It will eliminate the present search for donations by the schools. The Education Authority will deal solely with the operation of the Retarded Children's School Program: The Retarded Ohildren's Association will continue to function and carty out their vatious programs, which are outside the reaim of the actual school operation. FORMER "A and P" SITE SELLS FOR $83,000 REAL ESTATE NOTES: The sale price of that 1714-19 Simcoe street north proper- ty (jtist north of the Four Corners on the east side) was $83,000, it was learned today. The identity of the purchaser still was unknown this week. The deal will not be finalized actually until June 30, but an offerto-purchase has been signed by both parties (which makes it "a fitm deal" in the parlance of realtors). There is much downtown speculation as to the identity of the purchaser of the central site -- 120 feet by 42. OCEAN CAR-CARRIER DUE IN MAY 45 Arrival date of the SS Isolde of the Wallenius Lines at Oshawa Harbor for shipment of 200 GM Oshawa-made cars to Swetien has been set tentatively for May 4 or 5 (previous date was April 25.) The Wallenius Lines of Sweden is a pioneer in the ocean transportation of automobiles. It was the first to build ships specially for this purpose. The firm also operates a fleet of tankers and ore carriers. It is one of the major shipowning companies in Sweden. Wallenius commeced operating its specially-built ves- séls in 1955, incorporating several new features designed to increase efficiency and reduce the cost of the ocean trans- portation of automobiles. When the first two vessels for this special purpose -- to catty autos to and from the Great Lakes--were constructed, the result was that the capacity increased by about 54 per- cent compared with ordinary vessels of equal length and beam. The lines' new building plans will call for several 24,000- *tonners with a car capacity of 2,000 units, and smalier ships with 'a capacity of 250-350 cars. Since January, 1955, Wallen- itis has built its car-carrying fleet to 23 vessels. Annuaily more than 100,000 cars are shipped by it in many direc- tions, but mainly acfoss the North Atlantic. Wallenius has e@ current capacity to ship more than 15,000 cars a month on its own ships. This total will be 'more than doubled in 1964-65. --~ This visit of the Isolde should be an interesting One for citizens interested in ocean-going car carriers. The length of its stay has not been announced but it should be short--the ship can handle 150 cars per hour on the Roll-On-Roll-Off method. COUNCIL STUDIES PLEBISCITE WORDING City Council, will meet soon to determine the exact word- 'ng of the question to be put on the Ward system plebiscite sext December. City Solicitor Edward McNeely is already studying the question -- one of the points to. be ironed out is whether or not the Board of Education would be elected under the Ward system, if said system was approved by the electorate. The PUC would not be affected if the Ward system did come in which could not happen, incidentially, before two yéars from next December. "OLD MANASSA MAULER" WOWS DONEVAN STUDENTS Time can heal much bitterness. Jack Dempsey proves it. Asked by a reporter in Oshawa last Thursday if he had met Gene Tunney, his ex-ring adversary of the 1920's re- cently, Jack put it this way: "We meet quite often. We were together in Boston last wéek -- next week I'm goirig out. to California to campaign on behalf of Gene's son, John, a Democratic congres- sional candidate in that state." aac Remeber Dempsey's bit- terness after Tunney defeat- ed him 'twice (in Philadel- phia, Sept, 23, 1926, before 120,757, largest crowd in box- ing history which paid $1,- 895,733;. -and in Chicago, Sept, 22, 1927, when 104,- 943 paid $2,658,660, alltime record gate)? "The Old Matiassa Maul- er' -- still lithe, efferves- cent and looking more like 49 than' 69, his actual age) dumed up at the Dr. F. J. Donevan Cl, Thursday for Aiba oii a 30-ninute talk with 864 JACK DEMPSEY students, His enthusiastic, but well-mannéred audience accorded him the kind of reception that should be reserved for im- mortals of the sports world. They listened carefully, asked questions. f Dempsey (sponsored on a tratiscontinental speaking tour by DeVry Technical Institute) urged them to complete their edutation, regardiess the cost in time, money, effort ("it's almost impossible today to get ahead in life without an educa- tion -- émployers simply aren't interested jn you otherwise") It's also important to have a4 strong, healthy body. He eaid: "I don't wart fo preach, but I can tell you this -- I owe any success. I had in the ring to the fact that I looked after my body. Be especially careful of cigaretts and liquor." Lowis Angel Firpo of Argentina was one of the "totighest"' méh he ever faced. Dempsey knocked him down seven times in the first round, but Firpo knocked him out of the ring into the press row from where he was assisted back to the ring by hewspapermen (according to Nat Fiefschér in A Pie- torial History of Boxing) Firpo was knocked out jn the, sec- , ond, but miliions thought he should have been deciared winner. Dempsey said he is suing "Sports Illustrated' for a recent story in which it was: alleged that he used cement in his gloves during the Jess Willard fight : * "They phoned me ard 'old. me the told themh riot to tise it. 'Phey me, them and the case should dome up 'soon." A ry about lors and | ighored so I am suitg House Examines |Taxing Changes OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com-| But Quebec pays such an al- mons begins detailed study to-\ipwance now and an arrange- day ofthe income tax changes! ont has been worked out for proposed by Finance Minister) Gordon in his March 16 budget. Pw province to continue paying Several items in the incomejits allowance and collect from tax changes may provide) Ottawa the money Quebéc reési- springboards for the opposition | dents would have received to discuss federal-provincial tax| ithrough the federal family' al- relations. \lowance. A provision dealing with de-| ductions in computing taxable| or TWO DEALS to ineéthe where family allow-|,, - US *fangement was part m) | ances are paid may be used to|the deal negotiated between the' raise the federal-provincial is-|°W° governments at the same] jtime'as provision was made for. has worked with South Vietnamese regret at and adopted viously the top age was 16. | |bec-Ottawa deal involves the own income tax would receive} side workers) continued the pa-|/Com nons, presiding officer per-| The city countered with a/year extenstion to 1967 in tax} out of a hollow tree after he Parks board employees Emergency services' main-|U.5. forces in South Viet Namiofficials expressed attifude to- "Westmoreland has been in building | up an efficient aid ef- ef- Canada this year. Fred S.jagreement, as one U.S. official sue. Ottawa plans to extend fam.|'he federal government's Can- ily allowances, at $10 a month, 248 Pension Plan to parallel the to children attending school be.|2cnefits and contributions of tween ages 16 ahd 18, Pre-| 2uebec's Proposed pension plan. | A second feature of the Que- ;amount the provinces ate to re- id ceive as théir share of personal tri 6 e€aps income tax collections. Ottawa | Proposes to turn over to the, 3 |provinces an additional two per Garba e On cent next year and a further ltwo per cent in 1966. Residents) of provinces which collect their) Main Streets :: equivalent abatement on) their federal © tax. : VANCOUVER (CP) : _ Whether the opposition par-| garbage continues to pile up in ties will be able to discuss these Vancouver. subjects during study of the in-; | Pickets of the 1,500-member|Come tax resolutions will de-| Civic Employees' Union (out-|Pe mon the extent .to which the ltrol they began Thursday as of-|mits Tien to range beyond the| \fer and counter-offer, was made Provisions of the resolutions, | and rejected. Other subjects which may} The union, striking' for a 19-/Come in for special attention in- cent - an - hour increase on a/Clude an increase to 50 per cent} basic $2.0914 rate, offered to re-/from 30 in the rate at which open negotiations with city heavy construction equipment spokesmen. may be written off and a three-} James Stokes, 15, is haule d proposal that the dispute be/exemptions for new manufac-| was trapped upside-down for lsubmitted to binding arbitration|turing and processing busi-| nearly three hours, Firemen, --a proposal! the union rejected. nesses in | slow~ growth areas. unable to pull Stokes out at Street litter and garbage be- ---- gan piling up in the downtown area. Sidewalks dlong © main thoroughfares were littered with papers. |struck Thursday and .the others including. garbagemen, street cleaners, grave diggers, mech- anics, electricians and water jand sewer crews, left their jobs |Friday. SAIGON (AP)--Appointment, Me who | The city promised emergency of Lt.-Gen. William C. West-| lservices will be maintained. moreland as commander of a ltai 7 i fans 8 was seen Sunday as presaging Harkins' pr aie lorew to" repair water maing;| new and tougher U.S. poliey|a "walt 'and see |maintenance of sewage pump-|" this Southeast Asian nation.|ward his successor. | ling stations; provision for a ten-| President Johnson anhounced f pened eS a the S a det ot At least one swing|in Washigton Saturday that Vis y sb gige 07 Pre: va ba bridge; a crew to open graves Westmoreland would succeed/ © ° HSN, Vielna: nie ; ie Gen. Paul D. Harkins as of Aug|°? no South Vietnamese toes. jini cases where the plot was pur- Harkins did a good job here jchased before the strike began nes a crew to service police South Viet Nam as Harkin's' vehicles, deputy for the last three aa months and 'his appointment R A ks WILL SPEND $600,000 came as no surprise. omania s jUnlimited (Canada) official) There was no comment from | said Sunday $600,000 has' been/either man on the change- over; Russia, China |alloted for operations of the} jand no official American reac- leonservation or ganization in/tion, But there was general| To End Feud Auger of Vancouver, chairman/put it privately, that "things ny ' Ne ' of the board, reported in a pre-|will be entirely different when " BELGRADE (Reuters)---The pared statement that 21 water- Westmoreland takes over.' omanian Communist party fowl conservation projects were| 'If we are going to get tough| has Publicly appealed to the Bo- conipleted in Canada last yearjhere, with our friends as well po Pht on se | Conrouia --five in Manitoba, 10 in Saskat- as our enemies, Westmoreland nd hilt the bourse toward chewan and si3 six in Alberta. _'is the man for it," said another) 'lit "ee wane 'G handeunilatle | WEATHER FORECAST Nebraska Storm Brings Showers Wingham movement. The Yugoslav news agency Tanjug reported Sunday that the appeal, published in the of-| ficial Romanian party news- |paper Scinteia, was addressed! to all Commutiist parties and "primarily to the two |parties of the Soviet Union and China." The document was approved last week at.a plenary session of the Romanian party's cen- tral committee, -Tanjug rep- ported from Bucharest. The session, which ended Wednesday, heard a report about talks which a Romanian party delegation headed by Pre- mier Ion Gheorghe Maurer had ilast month with Chinese, North Korean and Soviet leaders. | The Romanian party said it pledged itself in favor of estab- lishing "unity and cohesion in the camp of socialist countries and the world Communist and 'workers thovement."" bo) 50 5D 50 50 50 Forecasts issued by the Tor onto weather office at 5:30 a.m.|Hamilton Synopsis: Threatening to)St. Catharine bring..unsettled weather to On-|Toronto .. tario is a storm centre now Peterborough . over Nebraska and moving|!renton northeastward toward the| Killaloe Great Lakes. Cloudy weather|Muskoka a and scattered showers moved|North Bay.....+++ close to the Windsor area dur-|Sudbury .. ing the night and will spread) Barlton jgradually north and east today|Sault Ste. Marie,. oe affecting most sections of On-) Kapuskasing terio tonight and Tuesday. | White River. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,|Moosonee .. VAN DOOS UNINJURED Fy NICOSIA, Cyprus. (CP) Greek-Cypriots hit a Canadian armored ear with rifle fire Sun- day but stopped firing when) |they were advised by radio that) lthe vehicle carried United Na-| tions troops. There: were no casualties) among the seven Canadians in the car under command of Sgt. Yvon Richard of Quebec City. The shooting took place as Ca- force on Cyprus, said the Ca- nadians had. not properly iden- tified their atmored car. The , Greek-Cypriots stopped firing as soon as they were told! by- radio that the vehicle was) Canadian, Col. Woodcock said. AWARE OF DANGER "We were aware of the dah- gér to which we exposed our- selves in effecting these patrols, and that was why we used) Greek Snipers Fire At Canada Troops -- two mountains nicknamed Gin and Brandy. "The same situation is devel- oping thete as west of the pass," the Canadian commén- der said, The Greek-Cypriots captured 'a mountain top west of the Ky- tenia Pass during a UWattle which began early Saturday. Shortly before the capture, Capt. Danny Kay, the Royal HOLLOW TREE TRAPS BOY Tougher U.S. Policies : Predicted In Vietnam hina to unite all: their forces) that sreatinonsense" jmacy and firmness. |Windsor: Mostly cloudy and Timmins imild Tuesday. Scattereq show- RELIABLE fools POOLS ers and chance of a thunder- W. E. ROTH CONST. LTD.OSHAWA, ONTARIO storm mostly ending by Tues- \day morning. Winds southerly 15 to 20 shifting westerly 20 ONLY equipped and installed ready 5 26 a 5 for your swimming pleasure. Easy Finaftcing Arranged \Tuesday afternoon, Lake Huron, Niagara, west © YOUR INQUIRIES ARE INVITED @ 725-9991 'We Have The Experience" 728-7083 jern Lake Ontario, southern Georgian Bay, London, Hamil- ton: Cloudy with scattered showtrs atid chance of a thun- derstorm. tonight and Tuesday. |Winds southeasterly 10 to 20. | Toronto: Cloudy with occa- jsidnal showers and. chances of thunderstorm tonight and Tues-| Steel reinforced, one piece concrete construction. Fully day, Winds southeasterly 10 to |22nd's. intelligence officer, went to the stefie and Called for a unit ambulance to carry away the bedy of a Cypriot casualty, SENDS MEN Maj. Patrick Tremblay of Chicoutimi, Que., a Royal 22nd icompanhy commandér, sent three jeeploads of en: tp the nadian patrols moved into Turk-'amored cars,' he 'said. ish - Cypriot. villages on the The Greek-Cypriots already southern flank of thé Kyrenia|were directing their fire on to lmountains near the Kyrenia/four of the villages from their Pass. positions atop a' mountain west The villages now are threat-|of the Kyrenia Pass. lened by Greek-Cypriot forces| 'The aim of our patrols," Col. | lwho captured a Turkish 44-|Woodcock said, "was to tty to} vance post Saturday, Hundreds/convince the villagers to stay 'of Turkish families fled from home, promising them our pro- the villages as a result of the/tection from eventual attacks | mountain. 5 Greck advance. by Greek-Cypriots." | The group, unde Lt.-Col. Andrew Woodcock,| Meanwhile, east of Kyrenia|2"d Lieut. Franco' commander of the 1st Battalion|Pass Turks and Greeks only a|Montreal, was replac of the Royal 29nd Regiment,|few hundred yards apart con-/4ay afternoon by four a major unit 'the Canadian|tinued firing at one another on cars of the Royal Catiadian Dra- scons. Other Canadians were posted in the sector through Saturday. night. Maj. Tremblay said four ob- ervatioh pésts were being maintained 'continually west of the Kyrehia Pass There was a heavy exthange rife, machine-gun and mor- fire through most of Sun- Pid Dief Calls For New Deal On Homeowners Taxes. ' (CP)--Opposi-|planners, he said. It could in- tar has|corporate the activities 0° Cen- dav tral Mortgage and Housing Cor. The Canadian company ¢om-- tions for householders equiva- poration and other agenc'es mander said his troops were in lent to the municipal taxes they|/dealing with urban matters ng immediate danger in. their pay on their homes. Speaking sig as housing and the fnanc-jobservation posts. "They are at the annual meeting Saturday|ing of industrial development. (not directly between the two 'he Sule jof the Western Ontario Progres-| Premier Robarts called for/emplacements and are not di- ne youth, He was treated for |ciye Conservative Association,|more frequent mecting: be-\rectly threatened," he said. minor cuts and released. Mr. Diefenbaker received fre-|tween federal and provincial) "7 they do become thieat- att AI Wirephoto) quent applause as he charged \leaders. ened, then we'll have to decide the Liberal Government with, In a-brief reference to pen- what to do," Maj. Trmblay accepting Conservative policies) sions, Mr.. Robarts said he! added. they previously condemned. |made it, plain both inside and Pleated Robarts, to whom loutside the legislature he favors| VISITS CASTLE Mr a pension plan with common) Cdl. Woodcock visited historie If hirer Ste eg A contributions .and spenefits for St. Hilarion Castle Saturday to buliding not oaly a strong On-|4!l Canadians. } offer medical aid to beleagu- |tario a strong Canada," ar- | The premier predicted the tax,ered Turkish-Cypriots defending rived as Ur. Diefenbaker fin- 'structure committee, which de- |the medieval fortress. Capt. Kay shed his address, In a gesture veloped out of the two féederal-|accompanied him. provincial conferences, will play - ort and he is due for e./0f federal-provincial unity, Mr. ee ment,"' said a U.S cee. Robarts approached the plat- pee per, oel ae rere NE R KN WwW Wesimorcland will have to form and the two leaders shook national vunity, WHAT THEY'RE DOING LONDON, 'Ont tion Leader Diefenbaker called for income ~tax--deduc- first, sawed off the upper half of the tree in order to- free | reur Dief Slaps Libs work on two levels--as a states- hands. . : man and a soldier--in his new) At an. earlier. press confer- assignment if the United States ence, pe Dociciea BY cbt bo is going to solve the dilemma prime minister sa ere cou it has faced in South Viet Nam|be Serious repercussions from For 'Patty Cake' the last. 10 years the royal commission on bank- ; : TORONTO (CP) -- O i Winning the war against the|iNs and finance recommenda: Leader Diefenbaker yearn elusive and increasingly aggres- tion Friday to withdraw small Saturday the Liberals conside loan support of businessmen 7 : sive Communist 'Viet Cong. is fan aoa, | Parliament "a place where you! generally rega and --~lenough proble ge wacit we There were a number ot otiet aie. eae shade ssid an even more challenging prob- recommendations from the hae i lem is the one of uniting the commission which he did not paket Git tae aad Ge, government and the people be,(asree with but he was not pre-/¢nbaker told the annual confer- Mad ine ae ch pared to specify them. ae of Toronto and District a rt. oung Progressive Conserva- The U.S. failed to solve this|)MAKES PENSION PROPOSAL, ie Council, '"'when' you stand problem yor the dictatorial) Mr. Diefenbaker suggested in} | Up for what's right, that's ob- nine-year 'ign of President/his address that consideration| struction.' Ngo Dinh Die m. It has not been|should be given to raising the) Mr. Diefenbaker said one of able to solve it in the nearly|basic old age pension--now $75) the great questions the young jsix months since Diem wasia month at age 70--and relat-|Conservatives must answer. is loverthrown and killed. ing it to further increases in the|"who shall govern." An uneasy alliance links the|cost of living. "Will it be the professional members of the military juntas| Consideration of tax relief forjadministrators, the bureau- followed Diem. Factions home owners, he said, ig an éle-|crats, the embryo big brothers within the army and outside it/ment in the urban policy being|spawned by big government and) are still jockeying. for position, developed by the Progressive|dragged into political office on motivated by personal ambition|Conservatives, The party suf-|the specious argument that 'ex that jeopardizes the future of|fered heavy losses in urban rid-/perts' in applying policy make! the country. ings in the last federal election. the best. creators of policy?" As a result, there is a grow-| He observed that the tax re-|n ing body of Western opinion that lief he mentioned is offered in advocates firmer U.S. céntrol|/the United States as are deduc- over the war effort, a "no/tions for interest payments on attitude toward the|home mortgages. South Vietnamese government; Establishment of a federal de- implemented with tact, diplo- jpartment of urban affairs also will" be considered by party) NOW YOU CAN LEARN... 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