Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Mar 1966, p. 2

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t. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, March 10, 1966 WORLD AMATEUR HOCKEY HEADS APPROVE Banff Olympics Proposal Backed By CARL MOLLINS LJUBLJANA, Yugoslavia |(©P) -- Canada's proposal to hold the 1972 Winter Olympics in Banff, Alta., won general ap- proval here today from world 'amateur hockey officials, | Ted Trafford of Calgary, a di- jrector of Banff's Olympics °72 committee, outlined proposals at a meeting of the International Ice Hockey Federation and found no objections from IHF delegates attending th orld hockey championships h™e. "Technically, the IIHF is in full support of Banff," said J. F. (Bunny) Ahearne, IIHF pres- ident who will speak for hockey at a meeting in Rome next month of the International RCAF Plane To Return Some Air Crash Bodies From AP-Reuters TOKYO (CP)--Ed Ogden, Far East manager of Canadian Pa- cific Airlines, said today an RCAF plane would leave Satur- day with some of the bodies of victims of the CPA. DC-8 crash here last Friday He said 32 of the 64 bodies-- * including those of 18 Canadian residents--have been identified CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Speaking to the new Dutch prince, he mentioned the '"'many hours which were certainly not easy for you. I am certain that, as more people meet you an jour nation comes to know you |better, their confidence in you 'and respect for you will grow." Three youthful reigning mon-! archs and their queens were present. All were from countries occupied by Germany during the Second World War. Olympic Committee which will|put to the IOC next month. consider various bids for the| The IHF has the right to ob- 197? Games. ject to proposals at the IOC Ahearne and some delegates|meeting if it believes they do \ had raised objections to Japa-/not meet hockey's needs. Belgium and his Spanish-born nese plans for the 1972 Winter| Trafford told the IIHF Banff|Queen Fabiola, King Constan- Games after hearing proposals|would schedule the 1972 Games|tine of Greece and his Danish- at a meeting last Monday tolfor at least 11 days--Feb. 17-27,| born Queen Anne-Marie, and hold the games in Sapporo. There would be two main in-|Baudouin's brother-in-law and The objections centred on Sap- door rinks--one accommodating] sister, Grand Duke Jean and jporo's plans to stage hockey|10,000 spectators, the other 3,500|Grand Duchess Josephine Char- land figure-skating competitions|plus--an indoor practice rink,|!otte of Luxembourg on the same rink. The hockey|two outdoor practice rinks and) - Britain's Queen Elizabeth was men also said Sapporo's pro-jan artificial, outdoor speedskat-|represented by Princess Ma- posed eight days of ¢ompetition|ing oval. would be insufficie: for the! 'Trafford, who was assisted by|and her ,daughter and son, |hockey tournament, Frank, Currie of Calgary, said}Princess Alexandra and Prince | Japanese delegate B. S. Hirai afterwards he was ag 2A ia said later he would seek adjust-|the IIHF reaction an opefu ee Seas ments to meet hockey's require-|that the IOC would award the| LIV ED IN ANADA ments before Sapporo's case is\games to Banff Beatrix, a, WES two years old seo és a when the Germans invaded her country and she was taken into jexile with her family in Can- ada Close friends said the princess AMSTERDAM WEDDING They were King Baudouin of], rina, dowager Duchess of Kent, |- 869 actually produced last week, the Motor Vehicle Manufactur- ers' Association reports. Studebaker Plans The Dutch government infor- For 240 Cars | : yhaesgh Total car production to March mation service, in an official bi-| ography of the bridegroom,| TORONTO (CP) -- Stude-/5 was 153,890 compared with stressed that he was drafted|Daker of Canada, which .an-|12%,356 for the same time in and "saw no action." He was|nounced last Friday it is going}1965. Truck production remained captured by the Americans in |0Ut of the car-making business,|well ahead with 34,191 coming Italy in May, 1945, and was a|!as scheduled production for 240|off the assembly lines against driver and interpreter in pris-|¢4TS this week. 23,829 in the same period last oner-of-war camps ip Italy and| Last week the company pro-|Year. England. duced 239 cars, raising output} He and Beatrix met at a Swiss|so far this year \o 1,712 units, ski resort in January, 1965. The !compared the engagement was announced five'same period last year. months later, There was an up-; Vehicle production in Canada roar, but parliament finally ap-|this week is scheduled to reach proved the match. 22,030 units compared with 20,- LUCITE: PAINT DEMONSTRATION FEW PLAYS SURVIVE The names of 150 Greek trage- idians of the 5th century BC are known but only three of their plays have survived bh 9 neo tan With vau0 1GL qiip CANADA | was not unduly concerned about threats of violence. "She's bride as nervous would be, but cially worried about any trou- ble,' said Mrs. Bradbrooke Smith of Ottawa, one of eight official witnesses at the civil ceremony) Mrs. Smith is the former Re- nee Roell and was a schoolmate of Beatrix at Rockcliffe Park primary school in Ottawa when her aunt was secretary to the then princess Juliana, now queen, as any not espe- Tokyo. One Canadian was/3% years ago at the request of among the victims, the British government. It was ade of %-inch metal and was RCAF PLANE AVAILABLE ae Spee dae geen be Gedon weld the HCAR 'lane designed to record flight beha- ne .| vior--but not to survive a crash could carry some of the BOAC ms North American victims if this . North Viet Dr. Elizabeth Simpson, an she was horrified by cruelty : ' 4 she observed during the oeeve regi gar hunt that killed 50,000 seals. ines a sea pup pend han kites She said she saw pups be- St. Lawrence ice. The 26- ing skinned while still alive. year-old veterinarian said and 10 already have been sent ito their home countries. Seven Americans died in the crash. Meanwhile, James Wilson, British Overseas Airways Corp. manager for Japan, said about half of the '124 bodies from the airline's Boeing 707 crash on Mount Fuji Saturday have been identified, including 41 of the 89 base at Tachikawa, outside To- kyo. A mortuary officer at the base indicated it might take several days to identity all the bodies. The U.S. Air Force said four airmen were sent to the Mount Fuji crash scene to help collect Forces Take Garrison dian crash and 111 from the BOAC disaster were taken to the mortuary at the U.S. air By THOMAS A, REEDY SAIGON (AP) -- North Viet- namese regulars overwhelmed Pickering Township Area e Has P.S. Hike Of 2.9 Mills ROSEBANK (Staff) -- Pick-|mated for 1966 by the Board ering Township Area 2 School! was: board covering the fast-grow-| Amount carried forward from ing southern part of the Town- 1965, including advances to cap- ship from Ajax to Scarborough ital funds recoverable $76,- announced a school budget for! 666.63. Residential lot fee pay- 1966 totalling $1,517,171.41 Mon-| ments $23,000. day night, representing a mill Estimated legislative grants |American victims. He said there had been no de- cision on when the bodies would be shipped home but that sched- uled commerci:l airliners would be used. The plane crashed Sa- turday some 80 miles south of WEATHER FORECAST the personal effects of the Amer-/| the isolated Ashau special forces ican victims camp today after a fierce, two- A BOAC spokesman said in| day fight by 300 mountain tribes- London the Boeing 707 carried'a}men and their 15 to 20 U.S. ad- flight recorder--but not a crash visers. recorder. A U.S. spokesman pronounced He said the plane was carry-|the doom of the garrison in for- ing a test instrument installed ested hills near the Laotian bor- ' ' -- |der. Casualties among the defend- ers were heavy. | But Col. William McKean, commander of special forces in The Westerkerk (West Church)--scene of the religious ceremony--is only 50 yards from the house in which Anne Frank kept her diary while hiding from the Nazis with her family. Gen. Nguyen Chanh Thi, might be removed as commander of the Ist Army Corps. This is the zone that includes the fallen Ashau special forces camp. The bad weather that plagued the defence of Ashau also cur- tailed air raids against North Viet Nam. SPECIAL WEEKLY MESSAGE TO MEMBERS OF the area 360 miles north of Sai- } | | Friday and Saturday Afternoons 10 LUCKY WINNERS Each Hour on the Half Hour Both Friday and Saturday Afternoons a gallon of LUCITE Given FREE To Some Lucky Person in the Store. } | THIS WEEK ONLY LUCITE DULUX WALL PAINT SATIN SHEEN 7.95gal.or 2.59 at. 6.95 gal. or | 2.25 qt. rate of about 34.6. {(Provincial and Federal taxes) | The estimated rate represents | $745,342. Amount to be raised | ® Public School hike of 2.9 mills bY Township levy $672,162.78. | over the 1965 budget. The total increase in expendi- | Cost of instruction including ied SF an ak et teachers' salaries and supplies |P°Ct®¢ 10 De some g2a0,0N) com: | was estimated at $938,435 prising the following major in- ce creases: Teacher and care- Administration costs including |taker staff salaries up $157,000. gon, said his men "fought eveny inch of the way" and he thought the attackers' toll was also high. The Communists took the for- Friday Mostly Cloudy And Continuing As Mild": csv. so ve TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts'and milder with snow or rain |i TUins and flames by the North issued by the weather office at|likely. Winds easterly 15 today| Vietnamese attack and U.S E-hambew- "FOOD CLUB PATTE' business and academic offices, employees benefits, insurance, telephone, office supplies etc., will cost $80,345.38. Plant maintenance cost in- cluding caretaker salaries, sup-|been largely offset by increased/anq will retreat northward afternoon |Debenture repayment up $4 000, instruction supplies up $27, 1000, and jup $12,000 30 a.m.: Synopsis: The southern limit ary today in the Haliburton- and southeast 20 Friday. Cochrane, Timagami: Sunny maintenance supplies | of cold air will become station-|with cloudy periods and colder|American aircraft and three today. Friday clouding over | The increase of monies has|northern Georgian Bay regions|with occasional snow in the or evening and a plies, fuel, hydro and water will legislative grants and the ac-'ggain Friday as milder air ap-|little milder. Winds becoming jtual increase to Township rate- proaches from the west. Some easterly 15 to 20 this afternoon. | cost, $222,900.33. Bus operation and salaries during 1966 is expected to cost |payers is some $62,000. The Board reported snow or rain is likely over that northern areas Friday as a new cloudy periods tod Ottawa region: Sunny with ay and Fri- $28,184.50 while cost of sports|School Area 2 had absorbed idistirbance enters northwestern day but mainly cloudy tonight and athletic supplies has been'more than 500 additional stu-! Ontario, budgeted at $2,967.80. Academic staff mileage and| the up. dents 1965 budget was since drawn Population | Little change is expected over the lower Great Lakes regions cost of capital equipment was|trends indicate that a further|with variable amounts of cloud 500 students could be added to/and sunshine expected and tem- budgeted at $10,100 Payment of principal and in-|the total enrollment by Septem-/yeratures continuing to reach| Windsor .........+. 35 the | 49s and in a few cases the low St. Thomas total number of students to terest on debentures will amount to $234,238.40. ber of this year bringing The breakdown of income esti-'more than 4,500. HERE and THERE The Pickering Township Parks and Recreation Com- mittee. has ruled that in fu- ture all proposed expendi- tures by local parks boards he approved by the commit- tee and that all purchases must be made through the parks administrator, Balsam Park will be fixed but no new parks will be set up in Pickering Township this year. The Pickering Town- ship Parks and Recreation Committee will endeavor to help the West Rouge area as it has no park. Oshawa Fire deait with only grass fire on yesterday, City answered five calls. Department one minor Rosedale st. ambulance routine house Wilfred _McMechan was elected president of the Bow- manville Chamber of Com- merce at its recent annual meeting. Other officers elect- ed for the coming year were Vice-President Fred Tippins, Secretary-Treasurer «Mrs. R. A. Frank, Directors, W. B. Syer, Don Milligan, Jack T. Taylor, Carl Bickell, James A. Bell, Art Hooper, Bob Lawton, Cuthbert McDonald, Ken Purdy, Don MacGregor, George Stephens. About 300 fire and indus- trial officials attended the annual meeting here Wednes- day of the Oshawa and Ajax section of the Industrial Acci- dent Prevention Association. Head table guests were A. Rosso, safety co-ordinator, Lake Ontario Steel Co. Ltd., Whitby; B. Corner, Whitby fire chief; T. Lyle, Bowman- ville fire-chief; H. R. Hobbs, Oshawa fire chief; W. R Branch, personnel manager, Fittings Ltd., Oshawa; K. E Cowan, personnel supervisor, Dupont of Canada Ltd., Whit- by; W. D. McGilvary, chair man, Oshawa and Ajax sec- tion of the association; L. Pilkington, fire marshall, Robert Simpson's Ltd., Wes- ton, Ont.; R. C, Miller, vice- president and general man- ager, Dyer and Miller Bros. Ltd., Toronto; F. J. Dennis, personnel superintendent, Du- pont of Canada Ltd, Ajax; A. FE. Roach, chairman, Cen- tral Ontario Genera] Motors of Canada Ltd., Oshawa; A H. Illson, service supervisor, Consumers Gas Co., Oshawa. Pickering Township Coun- cil hax granted permission to Temple Taxi to increase its rates from a 40 cent meter drop to 50 cents. Proposals Township outside workers and the clerical union have been turned down by council. The matter will go to conciliation. A grant of $50 to the Mark- ham Fair made this week by Pickering Township Council was from Pickering DON'T Che Ki FORGET h Room 50s. both today and: Friday Lake St. Clair, Lake Huron, Lake Erie, Niagara, Lake On- tario, southern Georgian Bay, Windsor, Hamilton, London, Toronto: Becoming mainly cloudy this afternoon. Milder Chance of a few showers this evening or tonight. Friday mostly cloudy and continuing mild. Winds light southerly to day southerly 15 Friday Algoma, Sault Ste. northern Georgian Bay, Hali- burton, Killoaloe, North Bay, {Sudbury: Cloudy and cooler to- day. Friday mainiy cloudy "atia milder. Winds light. White River: Mainly cloudy and cooler today. Friday cloudy Marie Oshawa Discount House Protests 2% | Sales Tax Increase During our recent interview with with a few scattered showers or flurries. Mild. Light winds. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Friday 55 50 London .... 50 Kitchener ... Mount Forest . Wingham .. Hamilton .. St. Catharines Toronio Peterborough . Kingston Lrenuton « Killaloe .. Muskoka North Bay Sudbury . Earlton ... Sault Ste. Ma Kapuskasing s White River .. Moosonee ... Timmins .. Frank McCammond, the owner of Oshawa Discount House, a few questions were answered regarding his atest advertising promotion. Since House has refused to take the 3% purchase month of March, and possibly he rt receives McCammond recalls a Goverr tion of the 3% Sale their local Member d never buyers have been almost 5 cut in their paycheck This practice, he informed us, will have beer the Ist of March Oshawa Discount sales tax from any shopper for any continue during the ger, depending on the extent of ment Official saying just prior. to Tax that, if enough people had of Parliament, the Provincial 3% put int the provin paying 3% nm most purchase force in © lo ¢ for yeors, Effective. April Ist the consumer is facing another 2% planes trying to drive them off Heavy clouds hindered the planes were lost EVACUATE SOME Before the collapse, helicop ters flew out '"'a certain num- ber of defenders," the spokes- man said. He gave no figures. A flurry of speculation on the political scene came as Premier Nguyen Cao Ky and other mem- bers of the ruling military junta met under heavy security at Saigon's airport While Vietnamese Air Force planes circled overhead and tanks and troops guarded the compound, the military junta PEtttal OUR PRICES FOR FREEZERS | START 164° | FROM PHONE met amid reports that one of its most powerful members, Lt,- | 723-1163 errno nen) A.B.N.R. ° SIZES FROM 1'2" x 2' Included these superb and KASHANS, ROYAL KERMANS, silk QUOMS (special to the co RUNNERS, BLOOCH, HAMEDA VARAMIN, KAZAK, etc me other in , etc, unique pieces and s The: publ cordially is Rugs. Under the direct instructions © to sell these beautiful pieces in KING ST., The exhibition will be on view a PLEASE NOTE ---~ Our expert and | tron --= will be In attendance et presents a PUBLIC AUCTION PERSIAN RUGS invited to to appreciate the fine rcaftsmanship apparent in these: Persian instructed, immediately after the termination of the exhibition, PUBLIC AUCTION Thursday, March 10th AT 7:30 P.M. Genosha Hotel 10 from 10 A.M, to auction time at 7:30 P.M, OF IRAN F 4" to 27'S" x 16'5" valuable rugs are: Imperial ROYAL SAROUKS, interwoven llection) BOKHARAS, SHIRAZ, N, TABRIZ, MOSEL, ARDEBIL, plus a collection of rare and Persian Rugs view this exciting exhibition f the A.B.N.R. we have been dividually by OSHAWA t the Genosha Hotel on March jecturer on Persian Rugs -- from the exhibition end at the time 95 Years at 85 Simcoe St. N. 725-3529 Now is the time to switch to SEAGRAM'S FIVE STAR Canad am Aye Wohisk ty JOSEPH E.SEAGRAM & SONS LIMITED WATERLOO, ONTARIO, CANADA This means every 100.00 earned will only be worth 95.00 in purchas- ing power, In the tradition of passing as much savings on to their ustomers as possible, Oshawa Discount House js protesting this 2% incraese by allowing their Tax Free any re] they choc at stor ain re-emr this ¢£ y Ww 1 jef March, and ¢ NOW OPEN SUNDAY 4 TO 7:30 P.M. Continental French Buffet Served Daily 11:30 - 2 p.m. -- 5 to 8 p.m GENOSHA HOTEL of the auction sole, Only Seagram can distill whisky this smooth and sell it at a price this low! customer Mr purchase MYLES KING Auctioneer --- Oshawa se their ammc ha vecsitiataeenlianee

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