Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Jun 1965, p. 4

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i he Oshawa Simes Published by Canadian Newspapers Limited 86 King St. E ? Oshawa, Ontario T. L. Wilson, Publisher TUESDAY, JUNE 8, 1965 --- PAGE 4 Dominion Day Festival Will Be Greatest Yet As Jul ! scores of committee workers of the draws nearer, the Oshawa Folk Festival organization are bending every effort to ensure that this year's Dominion Day cele- bration will be by far the greatest of the series staged to date. One of the encouraging features is the willingne of all the ethnic groups in the city, and individual citizens of varying racial origins who be- long no organized group, to play their part in making the 1964 festi- val the. most successful yet held Started in a small way by a group of citizens interested in developing a closer relationship between the man ethnic groups making up Oshawa's population, the Folk Fes- tival has now reached proportions which make it an annual event of major portions, In this accom- piishment, the hard-working execu- tive has encouraged by and in and een great the support, both financial the provision of NATO May The United a select c tropnies tnat ales proposa ymmittee of four or five powers be set up within the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. to im- prove strategic planning and con- Suitation ma well be tne méans of saving NATO from distegration. It comes closer than anything which has yet the ideas which were proposed by Gen- eral de Gaulle in 1958, and rejection of which has heen at French. disentanglement from NATO by slow devrees since then, heen put forward: to the root of In 1958, General de Gaulle made his famous proposal that a three- power global directoate, made up of Britain United States and France, be set up as a sort of tri- umvirate to act as an inner execu- the The Oshawa Times NILSON, Publisher R. C. ROOKE, General Menager c MeCONECHY Editor The Oshawa 7 combining The Oshawe Times estoblished 187 and t Whitby Gazette and Chranicle established 1863) is published daily Sundays and Statutory holidays excepted Members of Canadian Oaily Newspaper Publish er Associatic The Conadian Press, Audit 8 ef ¢ ation and the Onterio Previncia Associot The Canadian Press is exclu entitled to the use of republication ef 4 despatched the paper credited to it er te Associated Press or Reuters. and olse the loca! news published therein. All rights of special des pe es are aise reserved e Themaor Build 425 University Avenue, Toronte, Ontario; 640 Cathcart Street, Monweal P.O SUBS Pickering, Bow Alvert Fable oncheste $1800 pe GOOD EVENING Juvenile Court Publicity Might Help Are pre res ons. ( t ) fan and = juvenile Mil tno at ct Some vid and nfluential es ne wince un d ediv alarmed by the juve- ¢ ywuer nicture have heed amoring for a revision of ent po wh makes new ym such es hard to ra.) W Pointa erk of e Oshawa Fam and Juvenile ' and Sergear Norman Smyth fra Division, Osh ava Police. Nave deéfinite \ x the subject h is opposed to admitting the press at such bunals F they would favor a new Pr to allow a flow of news stories approved by the presid ing judge when he thinks such & vould he i pub 4 jsed yungsters w nain anonymous Nn says that such re would make the publie me aware' of work be- ing e to curb juvenile delin ¢ and adds h stories w d give the P a se e g in k at they a g te d such a } PME times when auch press releases could do a lot of good and help the juvenile There are awards, given by many of the city's organizations, ranging from the Ju- nior Chamber of Cormmerce to the Old Country Club From the information which is now available, it is certain that the program for July 1 of this year, pius the gigantic parade which is assured, will make this a day on which the people of Oshawa will want to stay at home in their own city to enjov the fruits of the labor of the Folk Festival committee That in itself would be a good thing for the city, and, possibly, a good thing for many citizens of Oshawa who, in venturing abroad on holiday trips, might he the \ tims of traffic accidents on crowded highways. This factor was not, of course, one of the obiectives of the Folk ning its program, but it mignt we be a secondar' Festival organization in plan " result of the magni- tude of the July 1 event if it re- the ceives from Oshawa citizens patronage it deserves Be Salvaged tive of NATO. The general's idea was rejected by Britain and the United States In November of 1958 whe Prime Minister Diefenbaker of Can- ada spent three days with General de Gaulle in Paris, they had a full discussion of the French president's plan Mr. Diefenbaker, however, aiso rejected it, and stated then tnata that was needed wa A greater measure of consultation be tween NATO. countries The thought behind the United States proposal! for a four or five nation committee is that it would ty to bring greater for the use of nuc rea planning ear weapons in the case of aggression, and give the leading partners in the NATO alli- ance more to say about nuclear planning The kev to acceptance of this plan lies in the mind of .General de Gaulle, Since his triumvirate idea was rejected in 1958, he has heen drawing steadily further away from partitipation in NATO. His recent decision to take no part in the next NATO exercises is one instance of his of thea from ance, It withdrawal the activities ma be that the American plan was put for hone of mollif ward in the ng the recaici- trant general. In rea the view- points of these two countries on nu clear defence are still far apart. It is doubtful if the olive branch held out by the United States will bring tnem much closer together Atomic Plant For Pakistan (Peterhorough Examiner) There will be relief among those who work with Canadian Atomic Power Departmentthis week. The company has signed an agreement with Pakistan for the construction of a $60,000,000 nuclear power station to be built near Karachi. The agreement re- presents one of the largest ex- port contracts signed by a Ca- nadian company This is cause for congratula- tion on. two counts, The most obvious one is that the com- pany's faith in its heavy water, natural uranium program has heen justified. This is a signifi- cant nu ear engineering triumph, the ramifications of which will unquestionably reach into. all. nuclea power plant design. It may well cause re- appraisais among coun tries who have adopted enriched uranium, plutonium and graph- ite programs But perhaps the greater cause for satisfaction is that by a pro- cess of sustained and detailed bargaining, and by the use of every advantage tha ould he brought to the agreement, CGB anded a con otner negotiators have tract that could well have gone elsewhere. For a nation that relies for ts prosper on trade s fitting that we can trade with the shrewdest mer chant traders of the Orient Car Makers Seen At Fault (WINDSOR STAR) Who's to blame because to day's cars aren't as safe as they could be? The auto manufactur érs or the publi * The auto manufacturers are a fault because they don't build O into their cars every conceivable safety feature possible, It's not 5 e a case of crimina egie but it may well be a case of post anda 'eI S Owe 1 poning some new safety feature because the pubdil isnt read Ry R. J. ANDERSON A ecu g themé in Prof s onf betweer ationa fn of ce tiping b ' ss 4 : ae ? Canadian Pret Staff Writer } P analyses of both class and r safety for a great deal of flash ? i: se in of m and power groups is that Cans A sece there are me I ada has found itself ir e mid- terms Fre - the major makilig die of the 0 entu with in 4 n M/ iC: S ee wee adequate educational arrange- craft and tions of Ca s0cie ays ae Seat 3 { Carieton mE he ind al society t Pc MUSINGS Ur is become Although it has a stru le tern ¢ m fee a ja's @ t ( owr y I ef g to find e { yiding err a geograr ada 1 the His Societ c a e Historica é directo ching Anes ' a 0 n ke , We 1 Of Oshawa and dis s ¢ ora ' ' pe w ASE 1 a nd a alio ¢ 1 Taking a keen interest ir tier acing Building up its archives ' p r | c ave arge hea 0 elite groups to Records. documents and old thase the ne re he ¢ ed ough ma Y mw de a ty] Books and manuscripts which ) nmigratior Kemy s r he determine the shape and dire Te the sto of the ea er ! f { . id ew ) es on tion 0 development Settlement of the district pa : egio n an ' diffe Canada is a new society and i ' ) ' Wr ( in I should have had great ADDO 1 a work of love 'ma Pa . e 1 a ed ir e v0 a ad great oppor That is we wort vhile er o Pre a fragme i 0 0 a tunities for institutional innova- d those ir of ma @ ar f so 5 4 t olitical leve lion, but so far has been incap Iding up the archives a pow a a ef apable of dealing able of taking a ad it e Would welcome any gifts of r udie with 2 " s change an expe ehtat Of old family record ture De . V ajor problems as an langes and x imeftation Have a -nermanent place in Making " sponsored r rial socie for more democratic The Her House Museum } the ) e Research ustrative of the extent of ieties."* ( ! of co entration of e onom c Back in pioneer days na yrewore Tol Meise powe n the hands of a few is Many of the old settlers who ed at. Prof: Porter's outline of the Ar Had 'the habit of keeping ot gus-Corp... which in 1957 con YEARS AGO Voluminous diaries in which 1 add 1 a trolled g ompanies with Thev recorded the events f; . al asse of $900,000 000 with Of their dav to day ves . sho ed the ywn total assets of jess than 20 YEARS AGO And so created a record ve mor P } 1 $60,000,000 le W June 8, 1945 Of the earls stor tional atte 4 , " j . t f the early histo al a 0 The techniques of gaining Ministers participating in. 20th Of their own communities tio t f are ) rhey J " i 4 ola simple: 'T are {0 anniversar of Church Union than or ence acquire minor ontrol by buy were Rey I. V. MeNeelyv. Rev Most of these old pioneers Re € la ip enough shares to outvote 4 J) Cornett, Rev. Gear Te Have long since passed awa are nume > ' a othe ombination of share ford. Rey 1! ee kndars a Rut those who left behind ina ation growth holders and thus to elect Argus. Donovan Jones Re eae Their personal diaries have ] directors to the board Crozie Rey. F. W. Mahafte Made a great contribution I as. } Prof Porter's group of Re Bs Wilson and Re To th es al of r T he p ervation of the re pe ' f > elites is organized labo and W. G. Gardner lstor f ir t « History of their me. t YY ) trade union leade The power grow 65.000 a e of ti® corporate elite and the The pupils of Oshawa m Th abit of makir : . t or elit } r F cpa I s hab 0 making da ne 0 63 to ado ¢ 10 means §jegiate and Vo ial Institute Records of peopie and events 5 500 000 in om equa because Ce corporate had invested $157.149 i War an be of much value a D g © te ha na onsolidated Savings Stamps Certificates torical refer ce ' ¢ t owe hich 1 fy . 7 ) h sit a eferer { a vorid f WV ome rom the and Victory Bonds since start of utt generation ¢ litions sropert inst For future generations po nit d Lit of prope in the war in 1939 Sut we are afraid that t population tions, whereas the labor Ss habit disappeared t 0 anadian ha emerged after. struggles ; y 4 Pi BR King Street Pub Schoo! held en the pioneers passed popula aimed at reducing such powe Bch And few people today will ' ; ts annual "open house'. Guests Take the trouble to : x SEES UNION CONFLICT ss f eceived by Miss } ¥ ' ) c tolm princip \ Follow their good example , lf union leaders are to fune ; ) ah ; ripa and M € ate ank irne resident of th lune & 1965. tion gre tion in the future as a counter 4 president of the ¢ i t gro Home and School Associatior ) vailing force in the structure of . ' \ social power, he savs. they will have to eale new structures By Jack Gearin ourts and the police in thei tato qu gathered at the here, In the difficult work Four Corners to impede police game of ind Sergeant Smyth-savys that 'ap and firemer n their difficult ' proved news releases vuld escue operatior aq rowhar the city m serve as a deterrent to voung wa eded to releace or-one thing sters who contemplate serious of ¢ a i the s ha wrongdoing i he southw the mark 01 The time has arrive pra ally dese \side from some changes this direction."* abo inom trial reserve said the serge and f t Comm Or siding judge is the mar NEW INDUSTRY? whethe suited to make such de , The fight to get new indust for the pu is more. compe c »s han land o Speaking furthe vv the bh essential ta the 9 ) awa Family and Juvenile long-ra . ry a l4-vear-old lad from an | AY " Iniario nua tano was recent '4 1 ca estif o the h of the $18 000 ; suspended sentence indef above statement nkate anil there when he eade > eee ns arkacn comm : d ng a car witho a ance en la al Oshawa ers (tus dad Jevel even when a municipality around the That was the case of last Feb has obvious a * r such as place in whict rua & when a a vent good indus 1 vith és i " throug? f ed z e vwated } said b g and Sin ' nind much m ) Saturda ek .w tv's d The car. brushed a's i al Coma " mel with 0 nun and both came to re agair { Cotin Much of the dis when if ymeé the B Shoe ore or ° on had to do-with the City's 7 who aoutt € Industrial Park, that southeast These are o ha | ed area set aside fo ansion enes of wh youth ad never d f ' we nad wit} ' } ' Tt ° a te t 4 ! i fa . 0 wid ra atte I lidr er ¥AS ano needed to as far, but panicked when he tried municipality's big industry to e.op. More than 2,000 apec- years to altragl new industry iNOKINE siteg does not come this way. Keith fa an a new and new techniques He sees abor suffe ng from weaknesses in its structure. One And the muse of Jose also vent up agai Bethe and the Lord was with then ludges 1:22 The ma who has God with hin shouldn't worry about \ e against him. "if God be for us who can be against us?"' TODAY IN Ry THE CANADIAN PRESS June &, 1985 Tom Pai the Eng Ls A an libertariar died the age of 73 sR vea oday--in 1809. After meeting Benjamin Franklin i 1774 he emigrated to Ame a and immediately 10K a republican po © War of Inde lence He late aided t f h Revolution I va 7 ar and pro olitical writer and among his works are Com mon Sense, The Rights of Man and The Age'of Rea yt f ' ry 44 ¢ ' ore ie 18hb--} st sessior » Ot tawa of the Canadian; Par- Lament. IT DOESN'T SEEM TO TRANSLATE INTO FRENCH 35 YEARS AGO June &, 1930 D. F. Johnston was elected president of the Oshawa Rotary Club for the year 1930-31 é ded to 1 ratepayers of the ir 1A ons adm 1 of.a new municipa m building Members of the Oshawa Cana dian Legion joined in a building bee at the Kiwanis Camp site to erect. the amp's ¢¢ F building First World War Fifty years ago toda in 1915 William Jennings Bryan resigned as U.S. sec retary of state after di agreeing with President Wilson. over policy towards Germany; French forces were active in the Neuville St. Vaast and -"Lab sectors Second World War Twer i\ aro toda in 1940--the loss of the British armed uiser Carinthia, a former Cunard announced two € ears ine WAS and Queen paid a to ist Cana- the King surprise visit dian Division, ¢ UNSTABLE COUNTRY Latin America Fertile Ground For Communists By WILLIAM L. RYAN QUITO, Ecuador (AP)---Com- Munist attempts to capitalize on the Dominican Republic crisis flopped in Ecuador as in many Latin American countries. The extreme leftists may hope. for better luck with internal Ecua- dorian issues The ingredients of an explo sion exist in a combination of political and economic troubles in this chronically unstable country of 5,000,000. If the explosion comes, a jumble of issues could produce a chaotic situation in which op- portunists on the extreme left could hope to stir violence The ruling mij junta which seized power in July 1963, is taking cautious stéps in hopes of escaping a storm. Its life depends upon whether it can overcome dissensions in its own ranks and maintain suffi to keep itself in cient power The tres inity threatening storm cen about Ecuador's small middle class and business ele ments. The sources of the storm would be frustration with increasing burdensome eco problems and angry im with the junta's re luctance. to surrender power to a civilidn government, nomic patience UNSTABLE SINCE Ecuador has e November dent |barra was ove ceeded b his 1961 unstable 1961 when Maria Velasco thrown and suc vice-president heen si Pre Jose unpredictable Julio Arosemena h self over-thrown two years later by a junta of army, navy and air force officers. Admira Ramon Castro Jijon heads the delicate b need junta rhe inta is credited with making serious attacks upon Ecuador's economic problems: but these are so complex that years will be required to make headway, and in this country there is a feeling among for- eigners that no person or group can rule for long The junta outlawed the Com munist part but it. also sus pended all electoral processes ln response, all politica! parties declared themselves opposed to the milita rulers Now olitical and economic problems are merging. If and QUEEN'S PARK Weaknesses Seen In Farm Boards By DON O'HEARN IRONTO--~A ombination of imstance has brought rather emphatically to the fore front recently a point of weak ness probably serious weak ness--in farm marketing and as sociated operations weakness ' probably poor management at the top happens there have heen three examples of this in the new recent almost concurs rer There has been the nquiry into F.A.M.E. Although the re port on. this inquiry into the meal-packing co - operative has not been presented. and there- fore e question regarding it is st ub judice, there is little doubt from the evidence that the direction of the development of this organization was not' of the highest standard \ short time ago, the Hennes sey report on the milk industry had strong criticism of some of the business fices of the producers marketing board. And this has been brought up in the House Also in the House, there has onsiderable discussion of the operation of the bean grow ers marketing board. And from the discussion it appears nearly everybody here, including Agri- culture Minister. W. A. Stewart, pra cheese been feels there is room for improve- ment in the operations of this board QUESTION OPERATION These three cases are enough to cause question of the calibre and the efficiency boards, of which many reason why of operation of all such there are a The firs might suspect this might he low is that the boards are mostly headed by men who are farmers or at least were farmers until moved fulltime into market great one they Ing And fa hackground in big the character in which boards are engaged don't have the business of these mers Second' farmers. are individu al And @xperience has shown that-this can extend to the oneration of the boards There is a POINTED PARAGRAPHS says children olled. If so are areful not to let anybody find it out tendency in the op ) hole ike to be cont they It's often after vou gat home from vacation thaf you realize vu really couldn't afford one S Thomas Timés-Journal My dad-wants me te the things he never had when he was a boy -- including five A's on my report card," havea when the storm bréaks, the smal! but violent extreme léft will try to provoke violence and drag in other sues, such as "Vankee nperialism" in the Caribbean, spreading the notion that Ecuador may become a second Dominican Republic On the political side, the junta wanted to hold off popular elec- tions until 1967. All political par- ties, across the spectrum. de- mand a prompter return {o 'constitutional' government. The junta backed away cau- tiously, as it has done on other issues, and indicated it might bow to these demands LOST BANANA MARKET Economi problems aggra vate the political ones. Ecuador depends for income on her agri cultural exports, 60 per cent of which are bananas, It has just suffered a heavy blow in the complete joss of the Japanese marke! fo a new banana indus- try on Formosa To preserve foreign exchange he junta tried to restrict crédit and cut down import Antici pating th oastal merchants, most 1 Guayaqu stocked inventories. Imports soared to new highs in April The junta's new restrictions were effective Ma 1, but this raised an uproa which the business community of the coast--which is always in seeth ing conflict with the highland- er of Quito--went on strike, and were supporfed by labor elements and others During tk period there developed: a plot to overthrow the junta which was nipped in the bud The junta promised to review its edict o mports and the strike ended after two weeks, Bu the basic problem re mained I'he political-economic situa tion is building a point of ten- sion where something is likely to' break. If and when_ that comes, it probably will involve violence Given the restiveness in @ country which is still more than half illiterate and most of whose people are desperately poor a confused situation can result, ready made for the ac- tivities of political opportunists, eration of these schemes for the ndividualist of all to top and stay there. And after a while he reaches the position somewhat of a semi- ezal The other members of his board begin to regard him as an expert and man of wisdom and authority trongest rise to the bow to his tion is obviously not a situation Such a sit bad. And it that can be easily corrected, de spite the fact,it is evidently fairly wide-spread today One obvious however, fs in the members of the plan If they keep a lively interest and make they have full rights and e, then thes LISTEN HERE: control sure voting exerel an curb autocracy Jack Dennett OTE Ea "KEEP INFORMED..." Jack's many years in the news broadcasting business and his intelligent, analytical and calm look at the day's events have earned him the largest audience of any newscaster in Canada, His ten-minute newscasts at 8:00 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. capsulize and crystalize the sometimes confusing events of the day on the international, national and jocal scene. People who like to be well informed on what's happening in the world, are always found listen- ing to Jack Dennett. CFRB O101© ONTARIO'S FAMILY STATION

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