"ROUND THE GLOBE-IN A GLANCE Gallery Operator Appeals 'Obscene' Art Convictions TORONTO (CP) -- Dorothy Cameron of Toronto announced Tuesday she will appeal her conviction on seven charges of displaying obscene pictures in her Toronto art gallery. Miss Cameron, fined $50 on each of seven charges last week, said the issues are far too important to the community at large to let the matter rest. PLEDGE CO-OPERATION LONDON (AP) -- Common- wealth countries have pledged Britain their co-operation in its expulsion of the Rhodesian Sugar Association from mem- bership in the Commonwealth sugar agreement, the ministry of agriculture, fisheries and food announced today. CRITICIZES SHOW HALIFAX (CP) -- Opposition Leader John Diefenbaker Tues- day described a Sunday night hour-long CBC television show on the Saskatchewan River as "one of the worst caricatures" he had ever seen. Mr. Diefen- baker, at an airport press con- ference, said instead of being a descriptive portrayal of the Saskatchewan River, it was a vehicle for two folk singers whose hair was so long it would even shame the Beatles. WOULD CHANGE LAWS LONDON (Reuters) -- The House of Lords Tuesday night voted 67 to 8 in favor of liberal- izing Britain's 100-year-old abor- tion laws. The bill--if it wins approval in the House cf Com- mons--would legalize abortion after pregnancy by rape or in- cest, and in cases in which the mother is incapable for health reasons of assuming moral and legal responsibility for the child. FORECASTS SHORTAGE NEW DELHI (AP)--The gov- ernment revealed Tuesday that hungry India is in for a critical) food shortage. A white paper| A Cure For Fading Flags, But Not For A While Yet OTTAWA (CP) -- Scientists have. solved the problem of Can- ada's red maple leaf flags turn- ing orange but fading flags still will be around for a while. "You can't expect manufac- turers to throw away their stocks," said Dr. Gunter Wys- zecki, a National Research Council color expert who went to work on the problem last June. The color problem was not peculiar to the maple leaf flag, he said, but a problem common} to flags of all nations. The 40-year-old native of Ger- many, who is satisfied the basic problem is solved, said in an in- terview: "It was just a case of select- ing a standard color scale for the flags and using a color-fast dye that would not fade." The color selection problem said drought has severely dam- aged food grain crops and the harvest will be far short of the amount needed to feed India's 480,000,000 people. INDICT STUDENT NEW ORLEANS (AP)--A fed- eral grand jury indicted honor student Thomas Robinson, 16, Tuesday for piracy and intimi- dation for his Nov..17 attempt to commandeer a jefliner over the Gulf of Mexico. The Browns- ville, Tex., youth was indicted on three counts--one of which-- piracy -- carries a maximum penalty of death. WILL OPEN SCHOOL TORONTO (CP)--York Uni- versity here wi" open a school of business next fall, says Dr. James M. Gillies, who is organ- izing the new faculty. The school of business, the first division in a proposed faculty of adminis- trative studies, will have about 20 undergraduate students and 20 graduate students and a fac- ulty staff of 10 next' year. EXPLAINS KNIFE WOODSTOCK (CP) -- A de- fence lawyer told magistrate's court Tuesday it's second na- jture for an Indian to tote a \|knife to town. Magistrate R. G. ve! Pact i mission on illumination, whith cf carrying @ tomensiod wateeke es a three-number code to};,; Ne ; identify ail entore, tists about| aid against Glenn Hopps, 17, of 500,000 different shades of red.|° M°#rby reserve. | SEND OUT SAMPLES | LAST TRAIN LEAVES The specifications Dr. Wys-|, ALVINSTON, Ont. (CP)--The zecki has been working on list|/@st freight train pulled out of two red shades and samples|this community 30 miles south- will be sent to manufacturers,|WeSt of London Tuesday, mark- They just have to keep their|ing the close of the Canadian reds within this range. ee Railways branch line There are 10 different reds|Which had served 'it since 1892. visible to the human eye in the)?¢ CNR had been given ap- specification range, but the var-|Proval by the board of trans- iations are too small to be no-|POrt governors to close the line ticed on different flags flying|Detween Glencoe and Alvinston side by side. because it was not paying its Dr. Wyszecki said part of the|¥#y. original color problem was a Author Fined, fighters at each base are on Se I OPE AE Soy om ge ao THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, December 1, 1965 27 OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada is content with hits arrangements with the United States which govern custody and control. of American nuciear warheads at two RCAF bases in West Ger- many, officials say. They say that the physical, mechanical and electronic de- vices involved in these arrange- ments, which also apply to other NATO nations in Europe, including West Germany, make absolutely certain that nobody can fly around with a nuclear bomb aboard. Officials here are still scratching their heads over a recent Washington report "dis- closing' that nuclear warheads are mounted on West German Starfighter bombers. On Sept. 28, 1962, U.S. De- fence Secretary Robert McNa- mara said at a Washington press conference on his return from Europe: "We stoppe? ot the 50th U.S. Canada Pleased With Deal On U.S. N-Weapon Control what is known as quick action alert. This status is necessary because the planes would have smergency to avoid being de- stroyed on the ground. The planes on quick action alert are in "pens" whose doors must be opened before. they can get out. The pens and .the planes are under armed guard. The pilots stay near the air- craft but not in them. The nuclear bombs are slung to get into the air quickly in an under the planes but they are not armed. e® A DAZZLING BONANZAT Fighter Wing which maintains a constant strip alert of U.S. fighter aircraft loaded with, in this case, both nuclear and non- "We visited the 33rd German Fighter Wing, also equipped with aircraft on the strip alert, in this case also loaded on the/| alert strips with nuclear war-/| heads; these, of course, bein in the custody of the U.S. cus- todial personnel." American nuclear warheads of up to 60 kiistons--the equiv- alent of 60,000 tons of TNT-- have been stored at the Zwei- brucken and Baden - Soellingen RCAF baseg since last year. They are firmly in the cus- tody and control of American personnel and can be used only on the authority of the U.S. president. | Canada can decide on its own) not to use the weapons, but it} cannot decide on its own to use| them. | Like the West Germans, the| RCAF also flies, Starfighters--; six squadrons from these two/ 1 bases. A certain number of Star- faded sample of red material) Defamed Dag was not as simple as it might appear. The international com- sent to the manufacturers ~~ the flag was adopted last year. KALMAR, Sweden (Reuters) |A Swedish author was fined Railroader Hurt The Most From Automation's Effects jeters By BEN WARD OTTAWA (CP)--A labor de partment survey of declining occupations in Canada shows that railroaders are being the hardest hit by automation and technological change. trades, only carpenters showed a decline and it was minor. Masonry workers jumped 43 per cent and plumbers 26 per cent. The flag committee's decision} called for a "Red Ensign red," he said, '"'and I think he sent a Red Ensign that was off shade --it was on the orange side." | | Tuesday for defaming the name of the late United Nations Sec- retary-General Dag Hammar- skjold. A court here ordered Bengt Stjernkrantz, author and pub- lisher of a 16-page booklet en- titled Dag. Hammarskjold--God and Asassin, to pay an undis- closed fine scaled on a percent- age of his salary. The booklet claims the secre- tary-general may have com- mitted suicide by overpowering (35), streetcar operators and shoema! 22). Among the ma, ~ cunstruction STARTS TODAY nuclear munitions. | STOCK UP and 'SAVE! « GLECOFF'S Supermarket Where Savings ON Quality Foods ARE A Weekly Event FRIDAY | For The § The Fan winging Set tabulous " CHARMAINES" CL -- "McHales Navy Joins Air Force" IN COLOR 2ND HIT "WILD SEED" ADULT DOORS OPEN 6:30 . Clliua SS the crew of the aircraft in which he was killed, The department's latest re- search publication, Manpower Trends in Canada 1951-61, lists 20 occupations that declined during the survey period. Eight of the 20 were in railroading. Biggest drop was among lo- comotive firemen who were down almost 50 per cent to about 38,000. This reflects the} 1958 agreement, reached after two strikes, under which fire- men were ruled unnecessary on yard and freight diesels but all firemen of that time would be kept at work until they resigned or retired. The number of 'mechanics and repairmen in railway carshops dipped by 23 per cent to about)}. 7,100. Telegraph operators were down 35 per cent at 4,500 and baggagemen-expressmen off 22) per cent at 1,900. | Bigger, faster trains cut into' the ranks of conductors and lo-| comotive engineers with con-| ductors dropped about 10 per cent to 5,800 and engineers off 19 per cent at 7,700. Brakemen and switchmen lost 26 per cent of their numbers in the decade, shrinking to about 12,000. Sectionmen fell 23 per cent to 23,000. In this same period railway business increased significantly despite the fewer workers. Com- See Our Exciting Gift Selection | ® 1965 Evinrudes: | 3-- 9.5 -- 33-- 40 HP. | Up to 30% OFF | ® 1966 Evinrudes, including the fold-up 3 h.p. exclusive with Evinrude @ A selection of compasses, tach- ometers, speedometers, electric MISTLETOE BALL U.A.W. HALL-- Bond St. E., Oshawa SAT., DEC, 4 8:30 P.M. Music by GEORGE MACKO JR. REFRESHMENTS 3.50 Per Couple horns, boat hardware Depth indicators, radio tele- "PLAYFUL SEX COMEDY INSPIRED BY THE DECAMERON! STYLE, POLISH, VERVE?" winnie phones, Special Price on R.C.A. Citizens Band 159.95 For fomily fun --see the new Outboard Marine Snow Cruiser, now on display. CONVENIENT BUDGET TERMS OSHAWA YACHTHAVEN Harbour Rd. off Simcoe S$. bined revenues of the CNR and| CPR in 1961 were almost 20 per) 723-1901 cent higher than in 1951. On the CNR alone, the aver-| fs age number on the payroll dropped from 124,000 in 1951 to} 99,500 in 1961. | Among non-railway occupa-| tions, the hardest hit were) boiler firemen who dropped al-| most 40 per cent to 6,800. This) was due to mechanized methods of feeding boilers, particularly | in power-producing plants. | Also down sharply were tire) and tube builders (35 per cent), textile weavers (49), black- smiths and forgemen (45), Riv- LEARN to SKATE (Eight classes for 5.00) BASIC FUNDAMENTALS IN FIGURE AND HOCKEY SKATING TAUGHT BY Professional Figure Skating Instructress i STARTS TODAY "There can be a "K decided must-see... pes- sesses all the energies and urges of the great ones." "A grand uproarious bash! Zorba is the fire sf life itself." ney alee? OPEN DAILY 8 a.m. 10 p.m. For Your Convenience FROZEN FOODS Valley Farm FRENCH FRIES 9-oz. pkg. Produce Fefreshing Floride Seediess White Grapefrult 10 for 69¢ Holiend March No. 1 Washed CARROTS ae 19 COOKING ONIONS SIRLOIN -- T-BONE or WING STEAK, ROUND STEAK or ROAST Ib. RINDLESS BACON STEWING BUTTERMATE Fresh Made by Dempters 24-02, Loot BREAD 5 ron 95° ] ts, 58° SELECT PACKERS COOKED ~ e HAMS iw 1.19 TIN HOTESS 2 CUP 100 TO 7Q¢ TEA BAGS 'icc DOG FOOD 10 ,,,;1.00 ZIP 13-0Z. CANNED 89° 65 ' A must for your outside Garbege Cone y PLASTIC GARBAGE BAGS A must for Christmas Period HEIN PICKLES A PACK Kitchen during the "5° OFF IN 59° Any kind -of HEINE PICKLES i] DEMPSTER'S FAMILY SIZE | PIES BLUEBERRY @ DRUGS and CLOTHING e ge ig 39¢ gc" Ale Swiss Rolls ""3,2°* 35¢. COLGATE TOOTHPASTE SECRET DEODORANT REG. 1.29 CHRISTMAS CARDS . noun 99° w~ 1.50 1.07 t GLECOFF'S 174 RITSON RD. S. SHOP BY PHONE 725-3445 FREE DELIVERY $10 OVER Miss D. Hambly For children 5 to 15 years of age THE NORTH OSHAWA ARENA (Outdoor Artificiel Ice) REGINA (CP)---Crimes com- mitted by juveniles in Regina in- | creased 20 per cent last year to 599, says the police .depart-| ment's annual report. Most of | the crimes were theft or burg: | lary, but crimes of violence in- | creased as well. DEALING YOU CAR? The Men To See Is JACK HUGHES et ONTARIC MOTOR SALES LTD. Phone 725-1111 : Every Saturday from 10:00 - 11:00 and 11:00 - 12:00 A.M. Commencing Saturday, December 11 REGISTRATION: SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4th' at the North Oshawa Arena on Nonquon Rd. from 10:00 - 12:00 A.M. AN ACTIVITY OF THE OSHAWA RECREATION DEPARTMENT WINNER ACADEMY AWARDS! one FEATURE DAILY AT: 1:40-4:00 6:35-9:05 9 weno at oe ALAN BATES-IRENE PAPAS MICHAEL CACOYANNIS PRODUCTION "ZORBATHE GREEK" co-srannna LILA KEDROVA Academy Award Winner~"BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS" REGENT A FAMOUS | PLAYERS THEATRE FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! TICKETS BOWLING TICKETS Free Game of Bowling at Eastway Bowling Lanes at Townline with over $5.00 Order