Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Sep 1965, p. 2

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For Ajax AJAX (Staff) -- Parents of Ajax public school children will have an opportunity to learn the new mathematics this Fall. The Ajax Public School Board Monday night, decided to offer a series of lectures free of charge at the Parkside Auditor- ium during the next three thonths, to acquaint parents with the "new mathematics" now taught in Ontario Schools, Two keynote addresses will be given at the Parkside Auditor- ium one on Oct. 6 dealing with the new mathematics from Grades 1 - 4 and one on Nov, 10 for the Grave 5+ 8 program. These will be followed with weekly discussions for four weeks, After the opening ses- sion on Oct. 6 there will be a session on Grade 1 mathematics on Oct, 13, Grade 2 on Oct, 20, Grade 3 on Oct, 27 and Grade 4 on Nov, 3, The keynote address on Nov, 10 will be followed by four Wed- nesday evening sessions of sub- jects by topic rather than grade Ajax Public school teachers wil! be conducting the course, LORD DURHAM ADDITION Property Committee Chair- Parents classrooms at the Lord Durham Public School was progressing satisfactorily and is expected to be completed by the end of No- vember, Outside of a bus problem on the opening day of school there appears to be no major prob- lem doubling up classrooms at Lord Elgin and Parkside Schoois until the new addition is com- pleted. Mr. Reid reported that all the schools had been painted inside during the holiday recess and that window repairs had been kept at a minimum during the summer holidays due to the 'no trespassing' signs after dark, placed on school property in the Spring and added police protection. ENROLMENT UP Ajax public school enrolment was reported to be up almost three percent this year with 1703 students attending the four public schools compared 'with 1657 during the last school year Management committee chair- man H. Philp reported that the increase was almost entirely concentrated in the south area man Jack Reid reported to the\of town in the Southwood sub- 'New Math Course Pearson Offers A Tribute To Speaker Macnaughton OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson said Monday Alan Macnaughton, who has an- nounced his retirement from politics, made a 'distinguished contribution to our parliamen- tary life as a member and Speaker."' Mr. Macnaughton, 63, said in a statement he will not seek re-election in the Nov. 8 general re-election in the Montreal Mount Royal riding he has held since 1949. | After a four-hour cabinet) meeting, the prime minister told reporters Mr. Macnaughton had been one of three men #ug- gested to the post of permanent Speaker of the Commons if the office is created, Mr. Pearson said the second man, former. Conservative-ap 'Agricultural | Scholarships | BOWMANVILLE -- The E, A. Summers Memorial Scholarship Committee today announced the jaward of four scholarships to iresidents of Durham County who plan to further their educa- pointed Speaker Roland Mich- ener, has indicated he would) not be willing to take the job. The third, Lacien Lamou- eux, deputy-Speaker in the last Parliament and seeking re- election in Stormont riding, is "still in public life," the prime minister noted, | Mr. Pearson said the cabinet meeting was lengthy because "we don't expect to be around much in the next four or five weeks." He had no announce- ments to make about what was discussed, The prime minister said he) has no plans to visit New York for the forthcoming visit of Pope Paul to the United Na-|7 tions, External Affairs Minister Martin would represent Can- ada, Doomed Killer Appeal Filed TORONTO (CP)--An appeal has been filed with the Supreme Court of Canada by lawyers for Matthew Kerry Smith, 24, of; Toronto, scheduled to be hanged! New Formula For Prostate TORONTO (CP) -- Injecting radioactive gold directly into the tumor has become useful as an adjunct to surgery in treating cancer of the prostate, an lowa City doctor said here Monday night. Dr. Reuben Flocks, professor and head of the department of urology at the University of lowa medical school, said in a Baycrest Hospittl annual lec- ture Monday night that cancer of the prostate is one of the foremost causes of male can- cer deaths and is the common- est form of cancer in men ex- cept for skin cancer It occurs most frequently in a between the ages of and Surgery markedly raised the survival | rate, The gold treatment has ad- vantages over surgery in that it does not result in impotence as radical prostatectomy often does and use of it alone elim- inates such surgical complica- tions as incontinence. Research is being done on use of radioactive phosphorus which has an affinity for pros- tate tissue, rather as lodine has for the thyroid gland, Although this treatme ts still mairily in the stage of an- imal experimentation, it may prove the most effective of all if developed without damaging side effects, Dr. Flocks said. 'Baycrest Hospital is an 88-bed onvalescent hospital associated | If caught early, surgery or © radioactive gold 'eaiment ig| With the Jewish Home for the virtually 100 per cent effective,| 4604 here. pe a Dr, Flocks said, But because of) cases the malignant cells have) MAKE PAPER TO LAST spread to other parts of the! Seientisis have developed a body before the cancer is de treated type of book paper tected, whieh they hope will last 1,000 Dr. Flocks said radiouctive years, instead of crumbling in gold treatment, offen in canis few generations as do most junction with surgery, haw modern papers Board that the addition of six division. tion in the field of agriculture, é Oct, 6 The F. A, Summers Scholar- Smith was convicted for the ' . | ship, valued at $100, was award:|pegtie-bandit slaying of Jack! S. awa Oar @a t jed to Paul Tamblyn, who is @ Blane during @ duly, 1964, bank) |student in the fourth year de-| robbery, . S E ' ' Of B l | gree course at the agricultural) - --amcenceeraaacio ~! P De ey teW eat Refiring! IN ONE BRAND Oshawa's Board of Health has! Council referred Dr, Stowart's| Cuuuea school ee college for ad- gq j a? stopped enforcing-a-bylaw which teuer-to-the-public-works-com=| "11, ed training . -- --. ;{Madern homes -- ori inally| may not be valid. | mittee and city solicttor H. J.jgacn men mchon tealicost over $11,000 all ser- Dr, C. C. Stewart, Medical Of-| Couch, Pere nn t rot ty a ei Ip. vices, great scenery, clean ficer of Health, told council last} Dr, Stewart, said the IS-year-| Ke 1K ats f lod Sas x ®/5ure air, hunting & fishing,| night by letter, that the city's|old bylaw has been enforced) a pnt wf aged wen onjimedical services --~ now! former solicitor E, G. McNeely|to make persons connect their| yn, ane igs sh ot send $7,900. and the Ontario Water Re-| premises to sanitary sewers iniike wemprviiie fie aitaral| ' : sources Commission have given) cases of failing septic tanks oF! sth | se galas side gad Send Coupon Today -- the opinion that the bylaw, with! unsatisfactory privies. | Sane OE ap Fy sds POE - respect to the connection of a} He said the Public Health Act | dwelling to the sanitary sewer| makes no mention of required or o BOWES & COCKS | system, "must be held in ser-| compulsory connection of prem- REALTORS, LTD. | 333 Charlotte St. Pererhoreuy® ! Please send Foredey Hts, Folder | i] | | | \college, University of Guelph, |The scholarship is given annual- ly to a student attending an agri- INTO COLLEGE lyn, 18-years-old, started col- lege yesterday as one of 486 freshmen, (AP) Carolyn A, Glenn, daugh- orbit the earth, is a fresh- ter of Col. John A. Glenn, man at Mt. Holyoke College first American Astronaut to in South Hadley, Mass, Caro- Unless A Miracle Wrought Rivard In Hands Of Jury | | was summoned for Rivard him-|witnesses -- Prof. Paul Rioux and former police captain Ar-| mand Morin--said he did not} write it | The transcript was admitted! The J. 8. McLean Foundation | wards, valued at $125 each, went to Brian Bradley, of Bow-| manville and Ken Knox, | |Hampton, The scholarships are | awarded on the completion of| the first term at the page red Agricultural School to a student |having an average of at least | Adams Private Stock CUSTOM BLENDED CANADIAN RYE WHISKY Vhomas dams Distillers Ltd, ious doubt', ises, WEATHER FORECAST _--~-- seeweneeeereme By JOHN LeBLANC LAREDO, Tei, (CP)--Unless| self, chief figure in the con-| Lucien Rivaré--pulls a rabbit/spiracy allegations and in the out of the hat, a south Texas still-echoing political reverbera- jury will receive today the case tions in Canada. of the alleged narcotics kingpin) arid three other Montrealers ac}, cused of conspiring to run vast) quantities of heroin into the United States. As the trial entered the sev.) enth day, there remained only) a few hours of argument for) arid against the group centred around Rivard, whose long fight) against the U.S. government-- including political involvements| and a jailbreak --has finally come down to the wire. Closing pleas to the jury were to come only on behalf of Ri- vard, 50, and Joseph Raymond) Jones, alleged runner of drugs from Europe to Montreal. | None of the Canadians took the witness stand when the de- fetice's turn came Monday after! more than four days of evidence) in which the U.S. government) sought to prove by two dozen witnesses and 126 exhibits that) they formed part of a pipeline, to flood $200,000,000 worth of dope into the U.S. by way of Canada and Mexico : Their lawyers called only two minor witnesses to chailenge| some aspects of the govern-| ment's case, and none at all! Oshawans {rom Malta join in celebrations with their former countrymen to- day as the Mediterranean headquarters for NATO marks its first anniversary of independence, Known as the Island of Sunshine and History. the much fought over island was granted its independence from Britain Sept. 21, 1964. Doric Lodge, AF and AM, Pickering, was the scene of a reception in honor of Cyril E. Morley, on Thursday night. Mr. Morley was re- cently elected District Dep- uty Grand Master of Dis- trict 3. A capacity crowd was in attendance from var- ious parts of Central On: tario. Mr. Morley was the guest speaker at the ban- quet, following many mes- sages of congratulations and verbal tributes. Illustrated talks on an Al- gonquin Park canoe trip and on birds in the Oshawa aréa will be given tonight at a meeting of the Oshawa Naturalists' Club, The meet- ing gets underway at 7.30 p.m, at E. A. Lovell School, Centre st. Detectives from Hamilton Police joined officers from Oshawa city police last night in the search for a man wanted in connection with two bank robberies in the Hamilton area. The man, Clifford Wells, was found walking on Gibbons st. He was arrested with no strug- gie and taken to Hamilton on a warrant. The Hon. M. B. Dymond, provincial minister of health, will outline his obser- vations on health and medi- €al conditions in Russia for the Chamber' of Commerce Oct. 4 in the Genosha Hotel. The Oshawa Fpilepsy S0-, cial Club is holding regular meetings every other week at Obrist Gburch (Anglican) treasury expert here. | wrote the note but the d THERE CHARGE PERJURY | Defence testimony and pleas) Monday were aimed at estab- llishing the innocence of Charles|the note, there's still all this y.| Emile Groleau, a frail furniture) other testimony." salesman accused by the gov-| ernment of being Rivard's "'ex-) ecutive officer," and Julien Gagnon, another salesman and alleged dope courier. Their law-) yers attributed perjury to the chief government witnesses. | The only evidence brought in} on. Rivard's behalf was part of the transcript from his extradi- tion hearing in Montreal, in which two defence witnesses gave handwriting testimony clashing with evidence of a U.S. | It dealt with a note found on| Joseph Michel Caron, self-styled dope courier for Rivard, when he was picked up here in 1963 with 76 pounds of heroin. Caron testified the note's cryptic over prosecution objections, but] later Assistant Prosecutor Wil-| liam Butler told the jury: "Even if Rivard didn't write | TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued at 5:30 a.m, EDT: | Synopsis: Ontario's late sum- mer heat wave appears likely to continue with little change IMPLICATES THEM ALL The chief "other testimony") was that of Caron, who impli-| cated all of the defendants in one aspect or another; Mrs.ltoday and Wednesday Caron, who accompanied him| fake st, Clair, Lake Erie,| to Mexico and on two other al-!rake Huron, Niagara, Lake! Semtreal to the United Sterse,(00 ect) catuemn verging) and Roser Beaushannin another|ony' Haliburton, Killaloe, Wind-| courier who claimed he ran aleith kag os Ayes : ' | ®'with cloudy intervals and ¢on-| oe Na rp gyran gine a Mexico) tinuing very warm and humid} ound in 1963 today and. Wednesday. Scat- Gaiten's be aweek Charles tered thunderstorms, Winds Fansler, called a Montreal bel ass ™ ice station operator, Vincent Northern Georgian Bay, Tim- Yalenti; to testify that Aug. 8,/284mi, Algoma, Sault Ste. Ma-| 1963, during a period when rie, North Bay, Sudbury:| Caron claimed Gagnon's car/Cloudy today and Wednesday was being unloaded of heroin, |Rain and scattered --thunder- French consisted of instructions for telephoning Rivard after) getting into the U.S. from| Mexico. The government's handwrit- ing evidence was that Rivard Montreal on Hillcroft st. The next one is scheduled for Sept, 23. A bowling outing is set for this Thursday at Oshawa Shoping Centre. Anyone in- terested in joining the club should call Vicky Knox at 728-2037 or Alan Attersley at 723-1775, Douglas J. M.. Bullied, president of the Oshawa and District Real Estate Board heads a local contingent of realtors at. the Canadian Association of Real Estate Boards annual convention in Edmonton, Other city real- tors in Edmonton are: .Lioyd Metcalf, Joe Maga, Reg Aker, Bill McFeeters, Wal- ter Frank, Joe Barhoski and Tom Hurar. The physi- cal foundation of urban real estate value, equity invest- ment and real estate credit, and the dynamics of change in urban real estate is being discussed, . "What do you really be- lieve?" is the subject of a series of public lectures by the Unitarian Fellowship of Oshawa. Unitarian clergy- men from Toronto and Osh- awa will give these lectures in the McLaughlin Library auditorium on three con- secutive Tuesdays beginning Sept, 28. The first lecture entitied 'Man's Religious Quest" by Toronto's Rev. John Morgan. Rev. Morgan has been active in nuclear disarmament committees and he sponsored the Cana- dian Campaign for nuclear disarmament An accident at the junc- tion of Taunton rd. w. and Thornton rd. n. on Satur- day afternoon sent one per- son to hospital with minor injuries. A car driven by Wayne J, Robinson, of. 23 Athol st. w., was forced off the road by an un- identified car that pulled out in front of his car. A passenger, Wayne Wilfred Robinson, of 102 Taunton rd. w., received cuts to the > wight leg and bruises, it was in Yalenti's establish.|Storms tonight and Wednesday ment for repairs, jLight winds and not much | Yalenti admitted he had not ome svn ae jap |been sure of the date in testi-|,, ose ocnrad: mony before the extradition|0Udy today and Wednesday hearing but said he now was Forecast Temperatures positive of it. Low tonight, high Wednesday: | St. Thomas,. LONdON .rcccceves Kitchener .sccscee Mount Forest...» Wingham ... Hamilton St Toronto Peterborough , Trenton Kingston Killaloe Muskoka on North Bay....eee. Sudbury. . Earlton tenes Sault Ste. Marie.. Kapuskasing White River... 68 68 68 68 68 68 seeee Catharines... ry eeee Heat Wave Will Continue "--_ At Least One More Da You can borrow $50 for 2 weeks for just 47¢ -+- just one example of many "payday loan" plans to meet your needs. NEED A NEW FURNACE? > PERRY Fansler sug gested Caron) windso 68 made _up the story involving the}. four accused after getting ||f nailed here with the heroin, For Groleau, 56, counsel Law- |) rence Mann called as a witness || a woman friend, waitress Si- | mone Huard, who said-she had |never heard him mention Caron, || iShe had been with Groleau | | during most of his visiting hours || while he was in hospital with a heart attack in July and August of 1963 and had never seen} Caron there. Caron has testified that dur- ling this period Groleau tele- phaned him instructions and | |also called him to the hospital | jand gave him money. | | USE NEW WITNESS The prosecution then intro- duced a last-minute witness-- | Fred Goldstein, a staff member | of the Montreal Jewish General Hospital, who said Groleau had a telephone in his room during most of his stay. Groleau's lawyer said Caron's | testimony was so full of incon- sistencies and lies it should be given no credence. { The prosecution speech-mak- ing was low-keyed except for a | few ringing phrases from Wood- row Seals, chief U.S. district at- | torney from Houston, who} talked of a conspiracy "'stagger- ing the imagination' and of "brilliant minds operating out | jof a friendly country, out of |; what they thought was a privi- leged sanctuary." | Assistant Prosecutor Butler | 'slipped into baseball idiom to describe Paul Mondoloni, al- leged to have handled Canada- bound dope at the Mexico City | end for Caron and Beauchemin. "He's the pitcher, you might say, and Rivard the catcher," | Butler suggested. | TWO NOT CAUGHT | Of nine persons named in the jalleged conspiracy to smuggle | | dope into the U.S., Mondoloni is jone of two who has not been } caught. The other is Jorge Mo- reno Chauvet, a Mexican. also | alleged to have helped load up | the two couriers at the Mexican end, Beauchemin and Caron are not named. Caron has pleaded | guilty to smuggling and is doing | 110 years; he is not charged in) }the present -case. Beauchemin /jf} thas never been charged, il 11 ONTARIO STREET | What You SUPERIOR FINANCE } | | | | Township of East Whitby 1965 TAXES SECOND INSTALMENT DUE OCTOBER, Ist. 1965 These taxes may be paid at the Township office in COLUMBUS, ONTARIO OR AT THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA, 27 SIMCOE STREET, N., OSHAWA, A penalty of 1% @ month is being added to the First Instal- ments due on June Ist, and will alse be added to the Second Instalment efter October, Ist. 1965. 17 SIMCOE ST. N. 725-6541 No Down Payment--First Payment || Day or Night . . . 723-3443 | r COM The fastest growing all- Don Rees, Manager Canadian Loan Company M, WM, GOLDIE, Clerk & Tax Collector Harold E. Pierson, Pres, PHONE 728-0203 CHEST Means To You MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Hove you ever wondered why the young man down the street usés @ cane ond is 36 unsteady/on his feet? Or why the young housewife seems to stagger around the super- market and leon on her grocery cart for support? These young adults may be suffering from Multiple Sclerosis --- @ chronie, crippling disease of the central nervous system which frequently attocks people in the prime of life, The disease is characterized in the early stages by relapses followed by periods of portial or complete recovery, The cause is unknown and there is no known cure for this great neurological disorder. Although there is no medical treatment which hos been proven to control or halt MS, physicians are able to treat the individual symptoms and in mony cases help the patient to live @ more comfortable and useful life. The Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada sup- ports medical research at Canadian universities which is made possible through nominal membership fees in the Society, private donations and participation in community oppeals such as the Greater Oshawa Community Chest, The Society, through its Chapters across Canada, administers @ Patient Service Program which offers understanding and tangible assistance to patients including the provision of equipment on permanent loan, home and hospital visiting and social and recreational activities, MS patients try hard te live as normally as possible, for as long as possible, but always they are fighting the uncertainy of their condition becoming more severe, perhaps to the point where job and family may be endangered. Patients continually hope that science will provide a control for their mysterious ailment in time to help them, Those of us who have not felt the force of this disease look to medical research to solve this problem so that our children may be spored the fear and ravages of Multiple Sclerosis. z \ If you would like te support this progrom of research and patient services, or if you would like further information, please contact the United Appea! office at Your donation now will insure continued research and will Street, Oshawo, 11 Ontario assure MS patients that someone in the community does care, cares enough to fight along with them egainst the greatest cause of chronic disability among young adults today, REATER OSHAWA COMMUNITY CHEST Robert J. Branch, Executive Secretery

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