Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Nov 1965, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, November 4, 1965 VETERAN OF THREE WARS Female Reporter Dies In Viet Nam ', . By GEORGE ESPER ' DA NANG, South Viet Nam (AP)---"She didn't seem like a girl at all... ." When U.S. marines said this of Dickey Chapelle, they meant it as a sincere compliment. ~» The 47 - year - old American ? r - corre! a8 veteran of three wars, gave her life for her prfession early to- day in the same way she had lived it, asking no privileges be- cause she was a woman alone Jn a man's world, : Miss Chapelle died on the 'floor of a helicopter as it was ta' her to a field hospital. MORE MALES Death Fron Cancer Up 3 Per Cent OTTAWA (CP)--Cancer ac- counted for 17 per cent of all pared with 14 per cent in 1950, the Dominion Bureau of Statis- tics reported today. The bureau also reported that cancer deaths among men rose during the period but the cor- responding female death rate 4 \ declined, Other facts revealed in the special survey were: --Cancer of the digestive or- gans and associated periton- eum accounetd for nearly 40 deaths in Canada in 1963, com-|* -|Another Montreal From For Mr. Pearson By STEWART MacLEOD | LINDSAY, Ont. (CP)--Prime Minister Pearson Wednes- day fight completed the most hectic 24 hours of his campaign with a rousing rally here that helped eliminate the memories of two outbreaks. of rowdyism, phoney assassination threat and two bomb scares, Moving from Tuesday night's bedlam in Montreal, where a rally was punctuated by fights and interruptions, Mr, Pearson came into this quiet Ontario community Wednesday night and found more, Placards were smashed over a few heads be- fore the prime minister re- gained centre stage to deliver one of his best - received speeches of the campaign. Before he reached Lindsay, police formed a_ tiht ring to those levels, whatever party it is, is not a party that should be. supported," One of the students sata later they were not affiliated with any political party. TO HELP TOURISM The prime minister had opened: his final Ontario cam- paign swing earlier in the day at Owen Sound by telling a noon rally that the government will give financial assistance to the tourist industry, "one of Can- ada's most important." The accelerated depreciation program available to industries in designated areas will be ex- tended to cover tourist facili- ties, he announced, Between 200 and 300 persons filled the hotel dining room and another 500 stood outside in the | |5,30 a.m.: WEATHER FORECAST cold. Winds "nor 5 with gusts to 50° decreasing to Cloudy And Cold Today. Clearing Sunny Friday TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts) ssued by the weather office st Synopsis: Across the southern half of the province the tem- perature will drop steadily throughout the day. Winds will drop off to light late today and tonight. Overnight temper- atures will be very cold in ail parts of the province, near 20 in the south and five to 10 in the north. Mainly sunny skies combined with light winds will produce a much more pleasant day over most of the district Friday. Lake St. Clair, Lake Ontario, Lake Erie, Niagara, Windsor, Hamilton, Toronto: Mainly cloudy, windy and much colder light this evening. White River, Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie: Cloudy with snow- flurries and cold today. Friday mainly sunny becoming cloudy by afternoon. Occasional snow -- late in the day. Winds northerly 20 today, light tonight and becoming southerly 20 Fri- day afternoon. Forecast Temperaiires j Low tonight, high Friday: snowflurries. Clearing over- night, Fridsy mainly sunny sn rar Winds yoy remnir 25) with gusts to 45 decreasing to! light by this evening. bg se shanes Sp Lake Huron, southern Georg-|7 4 onias jan Bay, London: Cloudy, windy Kitch and much colder today. Scat-| yy . rig areneene tered snowflurries with heavier|Mount Forest..... snowsqualls in. some localities, Clearing overnight. Mainly sunny and cool Friday, Winds northwesterly 25 with gusts to 50 decreasing to light hy this evening. Toronto Symiies Peterborough .... Kingston ....++0++ N-Fleet Could Head For Viet TOKYO (Reuters)--A fleet of nuclear-powered U.S, navy ves- sels, comprising the aircraft carrier Enterprise, the guided missile frigate Bainbridge and the cruiser Long Beach, may jjoin the U.S, 7th Fleet for Viet Nam. Operaucus, the Japensss national daily Asahi Shumbun says. The newspaper attributed the report to reliable U.S. Navy jsources in Yokosuka, near Tokyo. A U.S. navy spokesman said the Enterprise and Bain! e were expected in the ic late this month and the guided missile frigate Truxton some- tme n 1966. Haliburton, Killaloe, northern | Georgian Bay, Timagami, Coch-) rane, North Bay, Sudbury: Cloudy and windy with snow-| flurries and much colder today, Clearing over ffight, Friday mainly sunny and not quite so MARTEN'S 58th She had been wounded in the itoday. A few brief showers or wmeck 'when a mine booby..trap exploded among U.S. rines she was with on an operation 64 around his Peterborough hotel'street, after someone phoned the local) apoyt 500 were on the main television station with an &5-|<treet at Wiarton to greet the| per cent of all cancer deaths among men in 1963, and can- cer of the respiratory system, for lung cancer, miles south of Da Nang. - Four marines also were ywounded by the mine. « Miss Chapelle was the first newspaper woman and the third) '"member of the press killed in "the Viet Nam war. WAS UP FRONT The . newspaper woman had DICKEY CHAPPELLE | several times on combat as- signments, She was a familiar| figure among American and) been up front with the marine|South Vietnamese marines on} "company when it began moving|patrol, always in jungle fa-| *down a hill from the bivouac|tigues with a slouch bush hat) "area to begin the day's patroll-|hdiing her hornrimmed glasses) * ing. The booby trap exploded at/and a field pack crammed with "the foot of the hill, triggered|cameras, film and a tape re- by a grenade wired to an $1-'corder strapped to her back. | "millimetre mortar sell. A correspondent in 'the Sec-| * Miss Chapelle was on assign- ond World War, she had cov- Sment for The National Obser-| ered virtually 'every trouble spot ~ver, a Sunday newspaper, and/since its end. They included Ko- for the RKO-Central radio net-|rea, Cuba, the Dominican Re- work, whose New York station/public, Algeria, Lebanon, Kash- fs WOR. She had previously|mir and Hungary. worked in Viet Nam for the Na-| JAILED IN HUNGARY tional Geographic Magazine. In 1956, she was jailed by the An accomplished pilot and Communists during the Hunga- parachutist, she parachuted/rian revolution. several times into the thick of She contributed to the fighting. Digest, Life Magazine, the Na- She had been to Viet Namitional Geographic and Argosy. Medical Aid To North Viet. From Americans Is Illegal SAN FRANCISCO (AP) --jfederal law for anyone to send James F. Collins, a retired) money or blood, directly or in- Readers army gneral who is president|directly, to the Viet Cong or/down by 5.5 per cent. of the American Red Cross,/North Viet Nam," -- begga Ma edical aid/Cross president said. sent by Americans to North Collins, former top army com- 7 -- ty ocean mander in the Pacific, is visit- ence such a drive was not likely| © mene Ton Svar: Chepeery. to succeed anyway. He noted t that only the International Red|® Cross committee in Geneva\®'OUP> the Red the medical aid commit-| death rate rose for men oyer| Wrestling age 50, but showed no strong trend for those under 50. The! He referred to a movement|cancer death rate for females} Stanford University by a/declined at all ages, except for) Montreal, sassination threat, Nothing hap- prime minister when he arrived jpened- and Mr, fn gee Wh0|there from Montreal. came out of the hotel and min- ; h He told his Owen Sound audi- gled ker} some poe be' ence that a federal-provincial ae ene f 1|(ourist conference will be called ey of the incident untill' Nov. 22-24 to discuss other @ ois |ways to encourage the industry, While. this was going on, the, hen the prime minister |Lindsay school, where the rally again hammered at the theme to be held, was being/of majority government. was --Between 1950 and 1963 can-|searched for explosives. Noth-| ei U.S. vs. Reds including more than 22 per cent, --Cancer of the breast and genito - urinary organs ac-| counted for nearly 41 per cent of cancer deaths among women, and cancer of the di- gestive system and periton- eum for nearly 37 per cent. cer death rates rose for men ing was found, in all provinces, with the) After the Montreal meeting jargest increases in Quebec, | an explosive device was found in Ontario and British Columbia|ine auditorium. and the smallest increases in| Again Wednesday night, the Saskatchewan and New contents of Mr. Pearson's state- Brunswick. jments tended to be blurred by --Between the same years,|the unruly activity on the floor cancer death rates fot women|This time it was six. students VICTORIA (CP) -- A former dropped most in Quebec, On- from Trent University at Peter member of the International tario and British Columbia, borough, accusing Mr, Pearson|Control Commission in Viet but were appreciably higher of "stealing our votes," gr says United States forces Newfoundland, ree 5 in that country eventually will = --_--? CAN'T VOTE be defeated but communism This was a reference to the "will fall of its. own dead l % fact that, university students weight," a eS p es cannot vote away from home in a Fas : the Nov. 8 general election be ; a retired RCAF squadron jcause they were not in resi- sop to Hugh Campbell, told Women Down dence when the election writs niversity of Victoria students were ixsted. communism will fall in Viet Nam because the Vietnamese The bureau made a study of; But they also carried plac- "are such a freedom-loving peo- cancer death rates on the basis|ards saying 'Mr, Pearson the ple." of age-adjusted figures. It found/crime minister." Mr. Campbell, who served that if the age distribution of) 'Sit down, sit down," roared) with the ICC in Viet Nam from the population' had remained|ihe people behind the standing!1961 to 1963, said members of the same as it was in 1956/demonstrtors And while Mr./the three ICC forces--Canada throughout the period, the death)Pearson was trying to regain\India and Poland -- ignored rate for males would have gone order, a woman armed with a/preaches of. the Geneva agree- up by 11.6 per cent, and the fe-/placard of her own belted one/ment on Viet Nam in favor of male rate would have gonelof the students. Men jumped'their allies. into the fray, blows were ex-| "Like pretending I didn't see The study found that the male|changed and some disorganized'a flight of United States heli- matches developed/copters overhead . . . or Amer- |hefore the police took over. ican warships in the harbor," "It's all right, it's all right,|Mr, Campbell said. leave them alone," the prime} "We (the Canadians and In- minister said, 'This is not'dians) could point out an armed Chinese PT-boat 30 feet away "They are hurting no one butjand the Poles could not see it," themselves." he said, women over 80, The bureau said it is making ashamed of In Courtroom| could relay blood to North Viet|tee, which is this week asking 0 Nam. "It's my understanding that|aid North Vietnamese civilians. the treasury department, under| the aiding the enemy provisions,| mittee has ruled that it's a violation of pledges and $180. a more detailed analysis of can- cer mortality by the diseased In the last two days, the com-|°"22" shyt grees Koro : said it collected 5° ratory, or genito-urinary--and plans to release a further re-| _.. |port early next year. | r blood donation pledges to| HERE and THERE Oshawa Fire Department had a quiet*day yesterday answering only one minor lock out and a false alarm. City ambulance answered three routine house calls. Contract for the construction of a storm sewer to serve East- dale Collegiate was awarded to Elora Construction Co. Li Elor's bid of $19,004 was the lowest of four submitted. Five, _ bids were invited. The board of education will pay the cost of constructing the sewer. Pickering Township Council | learned this week that 95 | building permits represent- ing an estimated value of $1,515,550 were issued in Octo- ber. Six of the permits were for hydro building with an estimated value of $316,470. Pickering Township Council this week recommended that the Conservation Authority acquire the area known as Frenchman's Bay and the sur- rounding water lots, Oshawa's funded and un- funded debenture debt was estimated earlier this year at $28,000,000. In a Times' story Wednesday it was stated that the undunded debt only was estimated at $28 million. The help of Col, R. 8. Me- Laughlin in local scouting was again noticed at the annual meeting of the Oshawa Dis- trict Council of Boy Scouts. SPECIAL WEEKLY MESSAGE TO MEMBERS OF Chamben; FOOD CLUB 34 229-- 68 34 7 78 7 a4 FREE BUFFET IN OCTOBER Every Seturdey 2 P.M, to 4 P.M, Every Wednesdey 7 P.M, te 9 P.M, AT ALL FIVE PLANTS Phone Fer Deteils 723-1163 ' ment, These are being used |theria, whooping cough, mea- |that cancer in all its forms was |the second greatest killer next |to cardiovascular-renal diseases : --diseases of the heart and ar- During the year Col. Mec- |teries, intracranial lesions and Laughlin donated 9.25 acres of | chronic nephritis, land in the south east corner | of Camp Samac. He also The death rate per 100,000 of : ~ |population in 1963 was 390.2 for undertook to build a new busi- cardiovascular - renal diseases ness office housing board |139.7 for cancer, 54.3 per ac- room, archives and meeting jcidents, four for tuberculosis, rooms at the Camp. He also /44.4 for influenza, bronchitis donated two small sail craft |and pneumonia, and 0.6 for four to the local scouting move- |communicable diseases -- diph- The report issued today said | on the Camp Samac lake. sles and scarlet fever. | Bi: | TT AH ' You're seen outdoors too \ ... and to the man who is considers ate of his appearance, an overcoat by Warren K. Cook is an important part of his wardrobe, The same dis- tinctive styling, quality fabrics and traditionally fine finishing that goes into a Warren K. Cook suit, you will find in our wide selection of over+ coats, "Doorway To A Man's World" 2314 SIMCOE STREET SOUTH Phone:728-7974 Ae PLA A BY However, the prime minister 'crime minister," "A party that has to descend] "T was bloody appeared annoyed, or hurt, by|some of the things I was re- the two placards calling him/quired to do because of the ex- ternal affairs department's pol- icy Mi Nam," Anytime Jordan Valley Table Wines are wines to be enjoyed. 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