- Grey Cup Parade: What Else's New? Ottawa, St. Catharines, Oshawa, Guelph, Belleville and Owen Sound. i Calgary sent two chuckwag- ons, two outriders, 16 cowboys on horseback, a marching group 'of singers, a stagecoach and a float depicting the city. Winnipeg sent its police pipe band, a horse-drawn Red River cart, and girls handing out miniature footballs provided by the Blue Bombers. MOTOR SCOOTER TEAM Edmonton was represented by a 30 motor \t precision team. oor apne - is afternoon. a float with a moving carouse neck cots Reed of Sas-|depicting football symbols, en- katchewan Roughriders, djtered by the city and the Pa- Canada's outstanding football | cific National Exhibition. player this season, and Wayne Hamilton entered a float Harris of Calgary Stampeders, showing a crouched tiger and the country's top lineman, were/the city's Junior Chamber of on view. Commerce sent one showing So was Miss Grey Cup and)Hamilton's industry with a ti- the eight other candidates for|ger rising over it. the crown, each representing a) Toronto was represented by a team in the Canadian Foot- | float showing the proposed St. ball League, and figure - skat-|Lawrence Centre for the Per- ing- champion Petra Burka of|forming Arts and one depicting | Toronto, \the 13 municipalities making up 30 FLOATS |Metropolitan Toronto. The parade, organized by the) The federal government cen-| Toronto junior board of trade, 'tennial Comumtesion, sent a Aedt| contained: a record 125 units,/showing a giant aple leaf} including 30 floats. composed of li flags, one for There were also 20 bands rep-jeach province and one for the resenting Toronto, Hamilton,/north. Aboard were four cheer- Winnipeg, Brockville, the Uni-jleaders. i versity of Western Ontario in} The Ontario department of} London and Queen's University,|tourism and information's float) Kingston. ltook the form of a_ bateau) Fifteen majorette groups in-|passing through the locks of Up: cluded representatives from|per Canada Village, a pioneer Toronto, Hamilton, Winnipeg,isettlement near Morrisburg. } ; {Qn N-Tests Says Canada Bombs, Strafing Softens Cong ceca kati: |Canada warned the United Na- And Set Ground-Battle Stage sv: ssy na i vous ve ST ne maa ending Machine Citizenship's obber Convicted Archaic Law | A 27-year-old Ajax man washe got out of the car he w. jfound guilty at Oshawa yester-yunsteady on his feet, |day'of stealing money from Gen- eral Motors food vending machines, Donald Hickey, of Exeter cres., Ajax, pleaded guilty to a charge of theft over $50. He was remanded two weeks for sentence. Early Piercy, a representa- tive of the vending machine company, explained that Hickey was employed as a! routeman with the company. | His duties were to check vending machines at GM, re- stock them, and clean out cash. Overa three-week period he was checked on the money he was removing from the ma- chine. Through later calcula- 'tions it was discovered' that over $108 was missing. The money, he said, had been found on the premises and re- , jturned to the vending machine company. Joseph Fenyves, of Arthur st., Two other similar charges in-|pleaded guilty to g Her- volving two other routemen|bert Hachey outside his home. working at GM were remanded|After the attack Hachey had| for hearing to December 17.. |had three stitches inserted over an eye injury. as|tion Minister Nicholson prom- * 'ised a further assault on Cana- dian citizenship restrictions as immigrant atheists Mr. and° Mrs. Martin Vanderpol became Canadians Friday, The immigration minister . said in an interview that a white paper on citizenship will be de- livered to the next session of Parliament. The granting of citizenship to the Dutch-born Vanderpols was only the second time a citizen- ship court had allowed an appli- cant to waive the bible oath. | Citizenship registrar Ross Martin of Ottaw: on precedent set by an Ontario Ap- eal Court last summer--al- owed the Vanderpols to substi- tute an oath of allegiance. The plight of atheists faced with a bible oath reached the public when Mr. and Mrs. Jules - Bergsma were. refused citizen- ship in Ontario. : The import was ---- ant named Sybil, a four- = - old rookie from North- brook, Ill. : And to the relief of celebrat- ing Grey Cup fans who lined fowntown streets to see the 90- minute-long parade, she wasn't a k elephant. fee was colored gold. Other entries included a thampionship steer from. the Royal Winter Fair in Toronto which is slated to go to play- ers on the winning team in the _ cup final between Hamilton Ti- be Cats and Winnipeg Blue A charge of having an offen- sive weapon was dismissed against 'Martin Tony Udall, of Oshawa, when the youth agreed to the police confiscation of an air pistol, On a charge of failing to! : provide information to the Osh- awa Unemployment Insurance Commission, Mrs. Dorothy M. Smith, of RR 1, Oshawa, was fined $25 and costs or 10 days in. jail. Mrs. Smith had earlier plead- ed not guilty to the charge. She told the court that all available records of a former restaurant business had now been handed over to the UIC, A 30-year-old Oshawa man was remanded for sentence on a charge of assault. 1 OLD WORLD TRADIT On two charges of failing to} file sales tax returns Barbara |Dillon of the Dillon Manufac- turing Company was fined a |total of $50 -- $25 and costs or |10 days on each charge. Mrs. |Dillon admitted the charges. For being drunk in a public place Cyril Lok, of Drew st.,| was fined $50 and costs or 30) days in jail. Lok admitted that) it was his second liquor: offence this year. ONE HECK OF A PLACE TO PARK A TRUCK A gasoline tank truck jured. which crushed through fail- ing of bridge on Kennedy Good Faith No Policeman 3 Men Would Be | |Welsh, of Albert st., both ad- * . 'Pickering Reeve eround tests make it imperalve mitted stealing tools valued at that an effective means of veri- BROUGHAM (TC) -- A stand-|in the township government --|$40 from the Grandview Golf| Aoastvecs ff Mn ugteotaent to fication is worked out to ensure|ing-room-only , crowd of more and five members each for Club barn on Bloor st. e. A ' hibit underground nuclear that all countries signing the|than 200 persons crowded the|School Areas One and Two. | SAIGON (AP)--A_ regiment|agents and because of guerrilla tive is based on the 'good|treaty will honor their obliga-/Town Hall here last night to) Ajj those nominated have until, °° v p of Viet Cong guerrillas and ajharassment. : testing : Willem F. facet, ef Baldom| large South Vietnamese force| The Communists sent portion of the semi-trailer rig crashed to street 30 feet below. Driver wes in- Expressway on northwest side of Chicago hangs half way over edge. Tractor LONDON CREAM LONDON © Ontan® Canmava (AP) For making a false statement! to obtain unemployment insur-| ance Richard Beagrsaf, of Osh-! awa, was fined $25 and costs or| 10 days in jail. | The court heard that Beagrsaf made a statement to the UIC saying that he had had to earn- ings for a week this year. In actual fact, Magistrate Frank Ebbs was told, he had been in full employment during that week. | | Two 18-year-old Oshawa) youths were remanded for sen- jtence when they appeared on a jjoint charge of break, enter and | theft. Jack Kenneth MacDonald, of |Adelaide st. e., and Norvin NEW WORLD PERFECTION For driving while impaired) '2nd-String Arson Ring Roman Catholic} up/faith of perticipests -- tions. Coa ae deca fae tonight at 9 p.m, to qualify. st., was fined $100 and costs or 5 iG- 'rj | ts then lead to a breakdown aa | i : i Incumbent reeve C. W. Lay-\10 d in jail. H leaded locked in battle today at|/MiG 17s Friday in an attempt|even Be lfuls in the Dec. 4 election. y-|10 days in jail. He p > the Michelin rubber plantation|to waylay two U.S. Air Force |of the sacdictaieusae i s | Open are the positions of|cox is running again. Opposing|guilty to the charge. | THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS 45 miles northeast of Saigon, al F101 unarmed reconnaisance| Lt.-Gen. E. L. M. Burns, Can- e S Tucl y reeve, deputy-reeve, a council-\him are a former warden of the' Crown Attorney Bruce| U;S. spokesman reported. planes near Yen Bai, about 75/ada's chief disarmament negoti- lor for each of the five wards | ont J, Bhevinan Reotd qjAffleck said that Jacob narrow- | Ryerson Polytechnical Institute U.S. navy and air force planes|miles northwest of Hanoi. ator, told the UN General As- ' sueuener ace PM nye 2 SCOU, | All lly missed hitting an Oshawa| hammered guerrilla positions! From four to six of the enemy|sembly's' main political com- Catholic Boy |Harry Ashton, who resigned his} jotice cruiser. The cruiser turn-| ANNOUNCES THAT inside the big French planta-|jets attacked the U.S. planes, | mittee that Re 2 ied |job as township bylaw enforce-'ed round and gave chase. | tion throughout the day. the spokesman reported, bilt)banning undergroun ests |ment officer to run. vf ae : 7 ; Th battle followed two days|the U.S. pilots saw them, took|might 'undo what has been ac-) JAKARTA (Reuters) -- A ee Jacob eventually stopped' in THE WINTER TERM ihe | rs ; . rar reat 7 Deputy-reeve Mrs. J. McPher-|the driveway of a house. When of comparative quiet in South/evasive action, and escaped|complished so far" if the treaty\Catholic youth leader has been t Mrs { Viet Nam. |witout being hit. is not based on an effective de- crucified ty Indonesian Commv- |son will run again in an attempt; OF ithe Michelin plantation is the) A target for U.S. planes Fri-/tection poh ol : debate|nists in the Central Java city of to hold her office. She wilt be| ran ui izer largest rubber producer injday was the main railway link' Burns spoke during a debate "™™ ©" J JEBEC. (C os 'dee lopposed by Donald Be Hopkins q : South Viet Nam, but the French|between Hanoi and the Chinesejon a dréft resolution, co-spon-Bojalali, the Piaget Ey a von atk eae P THE TRIMESTER SYSTEM management abandoned it five|border. The aircraft hit two of|sored by 35 non-aligned coun-/newspaper Kompas (Compass)|."<,cond "sideline" arson rin leg : god Obes oo PO weeks ago because of the huge)the railway bridges and a sid-|tries, which calls for suspension reports, Sacatis i aches grevines:|ipane iS ee canine oe FOR COURSES IN taxes demanded by Viet Cong'ing. fe a ae ace ate-| The newspaper says also that; The second arson ring, cen-|S, A. Osterhaut fighting for the a. es amp : sralaneit committee, of which|"'dozens" of Communists were|{red in the Beauce area -south|seat. BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION . ; x 4 eae : ' of Quebec City, is reported to} w. G. Newman is retiring in {Canada is a member, continue|killed while trying to escape Pier : he g OTTAWA (CP)--The health No Softly, Cooing Lark, jits work on a "comprehensivel trom soldiers eho rounded be the poner a of Bo Ward Two. Donald A. Beer and | department 'i; corti to stop the! AND test-ban treaty." | persons involved in the giantiGeorge Hodgson are after this open sale of the tranquilizer| H | "The proposed treaty to ban|tem up in the vilage of|trans-Quebec arson ring which) seat. ae tellowlnw Couebt at that | ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY 0 © Lik | underground tests would supple-|Munda in Central Java. pod is being investigated inten-| In Ward Three Donald Waring cee hapcidal i oy ae it | 1S azes 1 e ome ment the Moscow nuclear test-| The Indonesian. army has)"Y°Y. , .|Will try to keep his seat in a)oonans for kicks. COMMENCES i ; \ban treaty which prohibits tests|been engaged in a bloody strug- Rachsty spread ectiet ig enna nate against John R. Williams ° a apokearkan for the food aod MONDAY, JANUARY 3, 1966 steady assurance, He has ain hi atmosphere and under AF te a py Rael vad Stone ae re Se bie a oue ee ce oe ' " firm grasp on the character, is| water. | 4 iscover i ime-| ; ty . H ividee ; suitably heres and gentle' in| -Strongly supporting the res-|cessful Oct. 1 attempt to over- re Oar dahanane oe, in pega Joon Ben be pds ype Sige : SEMESTER FEES turn and contributes greatly to|olution on underground nuclear|throw President Sukarno. Many ; , ; placing the drug on the pre-| Business Administration $151 BY ROBERT STEVENSON {(Editor's Note: Mr. Steven- gon, 34, is an Oshawa sales- lies. man. After taking. an Eli Rill workshop course he has acted in several CBC TV shows: GM Presents, On Camera and The Unforeseen. He has acted fn several other plays in Toronto. He has written some 20° short stories, as yet un- published, Mr. Stevenson is a -- of the Oshawa Little eatre.) |The Lark, a two act play by Jean Anouilh with a translation by Christopher Fry. burst upon! the Oshawa Library stage this week with all the brilliance of/selfish, priggish dandy philosi-| a blazing comet. : Dealing with the inquis Joan, this semi-classical presen- tation is an examination of the|and Mr, Williams brings it off! historical figures involved, is vibrant and alive. A STAR 18 BORN 'Maureen Langridge captures the compassionate character of St. Joan with a rare display of acting ability that is no less than superb. She brings to the part a certain freshness and finesse that is a pleasure to watch. Her frail "frame, her vpice, are instruments of per- fection as she carries the play to it's terrible climax. Her ex- pressive eyes, twinkling with mischief one moment, sparkling with scorn and anger the next, the ultimate effect the en- semble does achieve, As the evil Inquisitor Russ Flutter is ably sinister. When his cobra eyes focus on the helpless Joan we feel her fate is no longer in doubt. The horror of his person seems to ooze from his fingertips and drowns the stage in darkness, ; Rex Williams portrays Beau- oh cn amp in an easy natural man- jner, full of subtle shading. This phizes throughout the play at- jIt is an extremely difficult part in grand style. | Pat Monaghan, The Promoter,|occasional snowflurries in all|Mount Forest attacks his part with a grim intensity that is almost fright-| ening. There is no mercy for) Joan from this man who per-|* \testing, Burns said the difficul- ties in the detection of under- Indonesians blame the coup at- tempt on the Communists. | | WEATHER FORECAST KA Cloudy, Cold Weekend | Decreasing High Winds | TORONTO (CP) -- Official forecasts issued by the weather ition of|tempting to justify his position. office at 5:30 a.m. Synopsis: Sunday will bring} jmainly cloudy cool weather with) |regions. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni-| gara, Lake Huron, . Western) Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Sunday. WINdser i csivecsiee St. Thomas .. London ... Kitchener .. Wingham ...sceee. Hamilton ......00- St. Catharines .... Toronto jsecutes her with one accusa-!Lake Ontario, Windsor, London,| Peterborough ..... jtion after another, | Harry Chapman has directed |the production with a high de- }gree of competence: and skill. |He has drawn fine performan-| di | ces from his actors and sends/ain Bay, Algoma, Sault Ste. Ma-|Farlton . racing along with rie: the play never a dull moment. The in- |tricate scene changes, moving from the past, to the present | Toronto, |cloudiness and cold with winds Hamilton: Variable} iminishing. Eastern Lake Ontario, Georg- Variable cloudiness and Southern Timagami, Halibur- Trenton Killaloe ... Sudbury ... Sault Ste. ai" Kapuskasi Marie DE sss cold. Winds decreasing slowly.|White River ...... Moosohee .... ] | | Justice department officials have said the discovered bodies are those of persons who might have been dangerous witnesses against the arson ring and who were killed in an underworld purge. Four persons have already appeared in Quebec City courts in connection with fires in the Beauce area. Two have pleaded guilty to arson and conspiracy jcharges and two have pleaded/ | not guilty. in Ward Four. N. W. Waller, R.| Pryor and W. McPherson are} the others. | Ward Five Coun. Hubert Wank is retiring. After this seat are| R. H.-Brown, Miss E. Violet | Swan and R. Chatten. Four of the five sitting mem-| bers in School Area One are running again. They are: R./ Simons, Gordon Pearce, Charles | McTaggart and Mrs. Eleanour McKean, Board chairman Donald Gib- son is not running. Newcomers | Police said they believe the are wo, H, Britton, Austin Pearse |investigation they now are con- and A. Van Der Hout. ducting in Beauce will uncover) |links with yet another ring. This! other ring would be one deaiing in stolen automobiles. John Herke Is pleased to announce to all his friends end old customers thot he is now styling et... EDWARD'S Barber Shop 5 Celina St. Thirteen persons are contest-| ing the five seats on School Area Two's board. scription list. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS Engineering Technology $156 Applications are now being received for the SUMMER TERM WHICH BEGINS MAY 2, 1966 Inf : eoatl end Ap Forms Write Te THE REGISTRAR RYERSON' POLYTECHNICAL INSTITUTE 50 Gould Street, Toronto 2, Ontario For Further = | Send Coupon Today for this and then to the future, are ac-|ton, Killaloe, North Bay, Sud-|/Timmins complished with a smoothness|pury: Mainly cloudy with scat Kingston and polish that is incredible, flurri ! ast:! with appropriate musical in. tered snowflurries, Winds east-| terludes that enhance, but never @Tly 30 becoming southwest 35 to 7:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. then clouded and confused with) grief, are set in delicate fea-| tures that telegraph her every) thought to an audience held! spellbound by her performance., Catalogue of more than 125 "MATCHBOX" TOYS IN FULL COLOUR {Played by Norman Edmons-/"!rude, upon the play. 50. : son, the part of Robert De Beau-| Bert Heaver and Ev Richards) White River, Northern Timag dricourt is a comedy sensation.|were excellent as Joan's dis-|ami, Cochrane: Cloudy and cold Here is an actor of consum-|traught parents, with Charles|with snowflurries. Winds west- mate skill whose performance|Sorrie portraying the compas-/érly 30. 1 delight any seasoned|Sionate Brother Ladvenu. Keith} Western James Bay: Snow eatre goer. Waddling like a Williams played the fiery Farr tae, drifting snow. Not. much lame duck, his delivery punc-|tain La Hire who defended Joan|change in temperature. Winds tuated by gastromic histrionics,|before her capture, northeast 30. with eyes that can expand [0 2 | pees : saucer-like circumference, he Hlusters foolishly along with an end result that is truly excep-| tional. One scene alone, played; by Mr. Edmonsson and Miss | Langridge, is well worth the price of admission. FINE PERFORMANCES Douglas Reenay brings many years. of acting experience. to the: part of Charles. He plays thé puerile Dauphin with great relish, capturing the foppish thanner, the indecision and! prissiness the character de- mands. ; Gauchon, The Bishop, who Helatedly tries to befriend Joan, ip played by Gwyn Roberts with | NEED... : Fuel Oil | DRUG STORES. OPEN THIS SUNDAY 12:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. KARNS DRUGS LIMITED 28 KING ST. EAST PHONE 723-4621 RITSON DRUGS 264 KING ST. EAST PHONE 725-5370 JURY & LOVELL LIMITED 530 Sim. vu 37. SOUTH PHONE 725-3546 ASK DAD OR MOM HELP YOU FILL IN COUPON OSHAWA ESSO SERVICE KING ST. W., AT PARK RD. -- 728-1601 PRESTON'S SUNOCO STATION 925 SIMCOE ST. NORTH CRANFIELD'S B-A STATION 331 PARK RD. SOUTH FLOYD PRICE SUNOCO STATION 531 RITSON RD, SOUTH DON DOWN SHELL STATION 97 KING ST, EAST GANGEMI SERVICE STATION 809 SIMCOE ST. S. GARY'S ESSO SERVICE STATION 89 SIMCOE ST. 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