Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Apr 1966, p. 2

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, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, Aprm zy¥, 1¥00 NEED NOT TELL OF ACTIVITIES Judge Backs Agent In Slander Trial U THANT IN LONDON LONDON (CP) -- U Thant, United Nations secretary - gen- eral, said today the Rhodesian measures by Britain to bring its rebellious white-ruled colony affair could cause racial friction) into line, Thant told a press con- |between the rich white peoples|ference. But he did not elabor- land poor non-white peeples of|até on what steps Britain might the world. take. Security Council which at Pearson government is expected|* Prime Minister Wilson an- than expected in 4 discussion) witheconomic sanctions re- The situation is "sufficiently On a European swing, Thant said he was speaking in the con- New Confidence Easter authorized Britain to use the Royal Navy to intercept oil to face new tests of confidence) nounced Wednesday that infor- next week in a twe-day supply|mal talks--without commitment of the proposed new electoral | maining in force, MP, government House Leader} BALTIMORE (CP - AP) -- A U.S, federai judge ruled Thurs- day that, an agent for the USB. Central Intelligence Agency need not divulge information about his activities as an agent, even though he is being sued for slander by a Canadian citi- zen, Eerik Heine, 46, of Rexdale, Ont., an Estonian native and na- turalized Canadian, has sucd the agent, Juri Raus, for $110,- 000, because Raus said he was a Soviet agent. Judge Roszel Thomsen of U.S. district court made his ruling at a three-hour, pre-trial hearing in the suit, which Heine filed against Raus two years ago. Heine contended that Raus, 39, of Hyattsville, Md., de- nounced him as an agent of the Soviet secret police in 1963 at a meeting of the Estonian com- munity in New York. Both men/jenge the government since ma-|son and other British leaders. are Estonian natives. Raus is &) jor controveries broke out over} naturalized American. a CBC dispute and the handling Raus, coached openly by law-|of the Munsinger judicial in- yers at the court session here, | quiry, admitted he was in the pay Of} CBC producers are threaten the CIA, but had little else tojing to strike Sunday night to say. The CIA submitted a state-|protest changes affecting' the| text of resolutions passed by the Tests Slated jtankers Carrying Rhodesia- debate in the Commons. jon either side--will be held be- UN General Assembly and the OTTAWA (CP)--The minority | bound supplies, With. MPs progressing faster|tween Britain and Rhodesia, the supply debate likely will be) held Monday and Tuesday. | 4,000,000, Tougher U.K. Stand On Rhodesia Asked explosive" to warrant stronger| \ | | | He indicated that Britain has. no new initiative for possible set-|dled the case when he was told tlement of the Viet Nam con- flict. Britain and the Soviet Un- ion are co-chairmen of the Ge- neva conference which ended the fndochinese civit war and partitioned Viet Nam; Thant was ending a four-day official visit to Sritain Asked if he had auy new ideas or new action in mind for a Viet Nam settlement, he replied: "Some basic pable of discussion, for instance whether the partier primarily involved can discover the moda- lities of implementing the Ge neva agreement of 1054." "T don't think that at the mo- ment the UN should be in- |volved," he said, 'Ii the Secur- jity Council is to be involved, one , age der) Rhodesia's dominant White! prerequisite is that it must be baker cabinet, The reports also! Mcllraith said Thursday night) minority totals 220,000 while the|in # position to heat both aides|said she was on a first-name| jblack population stands atlof the question. That is a must, basis with Mr. Hees. I don't think that Hanm or Pe This will give opposition par-| Thant did not touch on the|king is willing to appear before|Mr, Pearson instructed him to! ties. their first openings to chal-| substance of his talks with Wil-|the Security Council! to plead its|have Mr case." Wilson, Smiih ment to the court that to di+!program This Hou) Has Seven| vulge further information pays and the opposition failed| ar ase "would be contrary to the se-|last week in an attempt to de-| curity interests of the United! hate the whole issue of public | Justice Wishart Spence of the Panama and Mexico. issues are ca: she held a passport under the name Munsinger-Hessler. Commissioner McClellan ear- jlier had acknowledged an '"'un- explainable "error" by the RCMP passport control bureau 'and immigration department hee ge allowed the woman to get jinto Canada in 1955. MUNSINGER Continued from P. 1 The inquiry headed by Mr.|Britain, Germany, Colombia, Supreme Court of Canada is in- Under cross-examination by vestigating charges by Justice| Arthur Pattillo, counsel for Mr. Minister Cardin that two or|Fleming, the commissioner ac-| more Conservative cabinet min-|knowledged that he had not, isters were involved with Mrs.|brought to Mr. Fleming's at-| seeine |Munsinger and that then prime| tention Mr. Sevigny's alleged| Man, 46, Missing minister Diefenbaker esses eS eae until late January, | I G . B 'about it. n eorgl ay 1963. Mr. Fleming became jus- tice minister Aug. 9, 1962, suc-) Mr. Justice Spence will be |ceeding Davie Fulton. | TOBERMORY, Ont. (CP) -- hearing Supreme Court cases) Mr. Fleming testified that he|Raymond Hebert, 46, of Tober- next week and the inquiry is ad-|had not even heard anygossip|mory was reported missing jjourtied until Monday, May %,\about the Munsinger dase until Wednesday after he failed ta at 10:30 a.m, Mr. Harvison and Commissioner |complete a four-mile trip over Secret, testimony April, 18 by) McClellan came to him about it storm-swept Georgian Bay be- pom ge rata page in late January, 1963, tween here and Cape Hurd, ive tradé minister, is sched-| He had been shocked, upset! , tiled to be made public today|and disturbed. He had pHing 1 die wae pao te > at the request of Mr. Hees'|mediately to Mr. Diefenbaker/day morning when: he Prine jlawyer with this information, jout on the journey in his 14-foot RCMP reports submitted to) 'The then prime minister had|boat powered by & 10chorse- the inquiry have stated that)"answered very swiftly' that|power outhoard engine. Mrs. Munsinger, who lived in) he knew all about the case, that! Canada off and on from 1955)Mr, Fulton had told him about ito early 1961, was a common )it,-that he had called in Mr. iprostitute, petty thief, passer of| gevigny for a talk and that he| bad cheques and onetime Soviet way satisfied there had been no! spy who was the mistress Of preach of security, | yjerre § oclate - erty saiaitar in th "Dielens Mr. Harvison testified Wed- jnesday he had informed Mr.| Fulton about the affair Dee. 7,| 1960, and was under the "dis-| : wit finet impression" Mr. Fulton) Commissioner MeClellan sald) sad gone immediately to. Mr.| Diefenbaker | He also said the association between Mr. Sevigny and Mrs. Munsinger ceased immediately after Dec, 7, 1960 the Favreau briefed on ithe Munsinger case. This had been done Dee. J, 1964, by As jsistant Commissioner W. HL, |Kelly,, ROMP director of 8@-\ "yy nd Mig Saviens ' lourity and intelligence , 1G Peees POVIGny WEE | The comminsioner also sala the courtroom during the tha and his predecessor, C. W. commissioner's testimony, Harvison, were concerned about) Jules Dupre, Mr. Sevigny's iMr. Sevigny's status even after 'awyer, has said Mr. Sevigny iMrs, Munsinger left Canada intends to testify lreb. 6 1061 Mr. Dupre maintained that Mrs, Munsinger entered Canada APPOINTMENT |States."" |GAVE SOME TESTIMONY Although under CIA orders not to answer questions, Raus gave some testimouy, Judge Thomsen fixed May 15 as date for arguménts on a de- | fence motion to dismiss the suit. |The judge ruled Raus did not jhave to give detailed informa- {tion on the salary he received lfrom the CIA, after he heard frequent objections by lawyers ata eved e for Raus, the CIA and the fed- eral government hed ! Y --New; The crab is some 18 quadril- he lawyers also contended Pingo tag go lion miles from the earth. Since that Raus should not be forced trillions of miles from the earthiit takes light 3,000 years °to to testify as to the "why, when, --remnants of supernovae or ex-| travel the distance through who and how of alleged meet-) oding stars that erupted up to) space, the stellar explosion that ings with FBI agents concern-; 10,000 years ago--have been re- produced it must have taken/ing Heine. _ : ported. place more than 2,000 years be-| An affidavit signed by the) The new information, gleaned|fore the Chinese astronomers CIA director, Admiral F. W. Ra- from balloons lofted less than 25/ spotted it. born, and entered into the rec-| miles high, was reported Thurs-. Researchers Allan Jacobson/ord of the hearing. said Raus day by two groups of scientists and Laurence Peterson of the 'must respectfully decline to te the American Physical So-| University of California at San answer questions which would ciety. Diego told about the Crab x-ray elicit information that relates to) It includes: findings, gleaned from a balloon intelligence sources and meth- 1. Discovery by University of|30,000 feet above Palestine, | ods which I have prohibited Rochester physicists that a sec-|Tex., last September. from disclosure. ond kind of energy -- gamma The University of Rochester spieipasa? rays--is coming from a pre-|findings, reported by Dr. a.-G. sumed wrecked star known as|M. Duthrie, were obtained in a "Cygnus XR-1," because x-rays | balloon launched 120,000 feet) were detected from it two years;high from the same area a ago {month later. The massive collection of stel-| The import of both sets of lar materia! spawning both findings is this: kinds of rays is located within) That x-rays and the newly the Milky Way galaxy, and is|noted gamma rays from star estimated to be between 30 and|wrecks are themselves the re-| oo! i, a few dual aia' the 60 quadrillion miles from the sult of highly energetic electrons} o aience wae @iUhiNe 6 Gr oats. in the billion-volt range--vastly |i iter 'Thursday night. oe 2. New details about the en-)more energetic than electrons: The aitezed Migs Canis oul of ergy range of x-rays coming produced in atom-smashed ma- ie tone Seathe and van! frem the Crab Nebula, probably | chines. through the street crowa at 16] the most studied object in the Further, the findings give new ce Hot a celica scunbes aky beyond the solar system, support for a theory that, in the lia cane wiastiel Nite 16 the and itself the gaseous wreck of|far reaches of space, nature is sidewalk ' a supernova first observed by operating titanic atom-smashing © cused Juri Haus, an agent of the Central Intelligence Agency, of slandering him by calling him an agent of the Soviet Secret Police. --(AP) Wirephoto) Ferik Heine, 46, of Rex- dale, Ont. (on right) pon- ders words of his lawyer following a pretrial hearing in Federal Court here Thursday. Heine has ac- Theatre Manager Fatally Stabbed | NEW YORK (AP)--The man- ager of a movie theatre just off Times Square was fatally) stabbed in his office -- appar-| ently in a struggle with a holdup} | broadcasting. Opposition Leader Diefen- baker has also been critical of the scope and organization of the inquiry into the Gerda Mun singer affair. There was no immediate in- jdication as to which issue the opposition will choose to raise, jhowever. Non - confidence mo- tions can be introduced on al- jmost any topic in supply de- bates By JOSEPH MacSWEEN {pressed more strongly to use LONDON (CP)--Both Prime|force or extend sanctions to fin Minister Wilson and Premier|ish the Smith regime. He was lan Smith were in trouble,/@nxious not to ruin the Rhode That's one reason Britain and|sian economy while' ousting Rhodesia are talking again. gern dia ae Noes rt er 4 | pithodesia, the outlook ap ve ae shale both! parently was bleaker, Observers mates of the likely outcome of |PePorted the mood changed. re Rhodesia's Nov. 11. unilateral) °°ntly: The flag-waving of a few declaration of independence. jmonths ago was replaced by a Smith: 46 dit ld b jcertain foreboding. Smith, 46, said it wou ean} « "eight-day | wonder," implying Smith must have been shaken gg when Wilson was returned to there would be " week or so of power with a 97-member major- splash headlines, then the bUSY ity in the March $1 British elec- world would turn to other|,." ; ee OTTAWA 'CASE NOT CONCLUDED' He testified If thia had heen an espion- age case, long experience would indicate to Harvison atid me that just because she had left the country the case. was not conclded 'We theorized , . . on the pos- sibility that Mr. Sevigny had) |been compromised and might have succumbed to being com- promised and might have been in contact with agents of Rus- sian intelligence. "The fact is that an agent in 1955 with a German passport giving her name as Munsinger- Hessler after being refused en- try on security grounds in 1952. Commission counsel J. L.| O'Brien has said Mrs. Mun- singer first applied for entry under her maiden name Hessler | in 1952 but entered Canada three years later under her married name Munsinger when her Hessler file in Europe would have been destroyed. Mr. Dupre said he went to the German consulate in Montreal Wednesday to check on Mrs. McCROHANS AND COMPANY LIMITED wish to announce the appointment of MR. SAM LO- CHRAN as GENERAL MANA- GER of the CENTRAL HOTEL, Mr. Lochran wos formerly as- sociated with the Ports of Call, Toronto and was Assistant Manager of Club Embassy, To- ronto. Mr. Lochran's career in the Hotel field was interrupted by o tour of duty in the British Army. He decided to 'leave Europe to seek greater advance- ment in his. profession ond chose Canada because it was a progressive country. AT - A - GLANCE By THE CANADIAN PRESS | THURSDAY, April 28, 1966 RCMP Commissioner George B. Meclellan told the Gerda Munsinger inquiry he jwas asked by Prime Minister Pearson in November, 1964, whether the force had any information of impropriety or scandal concerning MPs He replied in the affirma- tive and turned over the Munsinger file to Mr. Pear- son, he testified, The National Farmers Un- fon presented a brief calling for nationalization of the CPR for attempting a "swindle"' over passenger services. Producers offered to sus- | pend a strike deadline against the CBC in their television | battle if the CBC would sus- pend its decision not to retire things. By now it may. seem tion. more like a 158-day nightmare.| PROMISED FOLLOWERS found that sanc- oil Wilson, 50, tions--even not produce the "'quick cure"|countries -- presumably South|Mumerous he predicted for the Rhodesian) Africa and Portugal -- would| country. | situation the co-hosts of This Hour Has | Seven Days. The Commons continued de- bate on redistribution of fed- | eral electoral ridings, hearing complaints from MPs in New Brunswick and Alberta Ontario MPs also got their {monwealth When Commonwealth ministers held an meeting on Rhodesia in Lagos in January, Wilson's men spoke| nounced a business-as-usual pol-|@ Woman, known to use as an inlicy and allowed oil shipments|@gent of Soviet intelligence and A fewlacross the Limpopo into Rho- |turned the phrase/desia, there were many signs|Canada) 'sooner or later'? became more that Smith's action caused acute down Smith months."' of bringing "weeks, not months _ later, popular in government circles. PRESSURES BUILT UP Afro-Asaian pressures were again building up for more de- cisive British action against up- Smith promised his followers sanctions--did|ast summer that at least two|date. This has happened on recognize his regime after he prime |declared it independent. But not) of instruction on espionage. . . emergency |One country recognized Smith. Although South Africa an- worry in Prime Minister Hend- rik Verwoerd's government. Indeed, the speculation § in London is that the Rhodesian issue would have come to a start. white-ruled Rhodesia, The|ead earlier but for the British Commonwealth sanctions mittee, established at a "breathing spell" to complete com-|and South: African elections. Lagos, | met last week and gave Britain| : , . |sufficient gasoline and oil from There are conflicting reports on whether Rhodesia is getting talks with South Africa aimed| South Africa to meet her needs. scale oil the large - through at stopping "seepage" embargo. The deadline for a new Com- meeting -- July -- was getting embarrassingly near, trade prime ministers having But it appears clear that Wil- son's success in preventing oil! flowing -up the pipeline from Beira in Portuguese bique was a bitter blow to the Rhodesians. PLOT UPSET may be directed and operated|Munsinger's passport. He said) for a period of time by one jhe will introduce evidence that' member of Russian intelligence patie who may be replaced at a later NEWSPAPER CAREER OPPORTUNITIES The Oshawa Times 'has several. openings for persons interested in a career in a newspaper opera- tion. Positions offer good working conditions, salary and employee benefits. ALL APPLICATIONS TO BE IN WRITING ONLY, AND INCLUDE FULL PARTICULARS. occasions in this! "If I were writing a textbook I would use this case. We were faced with a situation in which down (from entering under her maiden name, managed to get in under another name and achieved an association with the associate minister in one of our most vital} departments, the department of national defence "It was a classic type of case. The mere fact that she had left was no indication that, if he had been comprised, the case was over by any means. "We had no knowledge as to what, if any, action had been taken or whether the new min- ister (Donald Fleming) was The Positions Available Are: © BUSINESS OFFICE (Female) CLERK to handle General Business Office Duties. Typing experience necessary. APPLY IN WRITING TO R. D. MALCOLMSON. © DISPLAY ADVERTISING TRAINEE WENT ON TRIPS Commissioner McClellan added, however, that it was the Chinese in the year 1054. |systems. The threatre manager, Leon- views on the record, been set at Lagos in case Smith) Reports in London and Salis- ard Derene, 51, was found lying still was in power by mid-sum- jon the office floor with chest) wounds. Currency was scattered on the jfloor of the office. The man seized, James 'Banks, 28, was booked by police on a charge of homicide. Russ Started, Stopped Plan On Anti - Missiles WASHINGTON (AP)--U.S. of-| check on such developments in- fi¢ials said today the Russians/side Russia, in part through the) ,, - started. to build anti-missile fa-|use of reconnaissance satellites. Lord S Prayer cilities some time ago but, Reports of anti-missile sites : ; apg: on stopped, apparently because being erected around Leningrad LONDON (AP)--The Church they ran into difficulties. jand Moscow date back to 1963/0f England is considering chang- | This was the firmest informa-|but there~fas-never~been--any-ig_ some Elizabethan phrases) tion yet provided that the So-| official confirmation. In itS version of the Lord's) viet Union actually had begun a| The Russians have made Prayer to conform with modern) system designed to knock down|claims that they have the abil- &ammar. ay U.S. intercontinental ballistic! ity to knock down U.S. missiles) The contemplated revisions missiles. and American authorities have|ar@ "our Father which art in The officials said they do not not challenged this. heayen" to "our Father who art know whether the Russians now However, officials stressed in heaven," the phrase Peal are deploying an anti-missile that--regardless of what kind of @atth as it is in heaven" to "on| system a system the Russians might in- ©atth as it is in heaven" and This disclaimer was taken stall--the U.S. missile force can them that trespass" to "those with some skepticism. The penetrate any defence system who trespass United States keeps a close and destroy the Soviet Union The proposals will be sub- Broader Divorce HUSBAND AT Garg? Th to WMAnérd tropice CHILDBIRTH clergy in the southern province! Laws Possible POTTSTOWN, Pa. of the church. They probably will be submitléd to the north- ern province of York .later, If TORONTO (CP)--Senator Ar- both agree, Parliament proba- thur Roebuck (L--Ontario) said') Mrs. Bernice Schultz bly will be asked to approve the Thursday Canada may get' birth to her fifth child this change broader divorce Jaws this year week--with her husband sit- The church's Prayer Book hecause of a growing demand ting by her side handcuffed to |dates from 1662 but includes for reform her right wrist phrases carried forward from a He said in an interview thal David C. Schultz didn't get | version prepared 100 years be- private members' bills now be- the attending physician's per- fore : fore a joint Senate-Commons mission to be there. Nor did committee may lead to changes, attendants at Pottstown Me- in divorce grounds, possibly of morial Hospital given him wider range than those an- permission to enter the de- nounced Wednesday in New livery room just after dawn York State. last Monday. Grounds for divorce in New But Schultz said he didn't York now include cruelty andi see the birth of his first four homosexuality, and living apart) children--and wasn't going to for two years after first obtain-| be denied by the doctors from ing a court separation decree of witnessing the fifth. entering into a routine separate The hospital disclosed the agreement. incident Wednesday, report- Adultery was previously the ing that Schultz burst into only grounds for divorce in New) the delivery room after his York State, as it is'dn most Of wife was taken there in labor Canada. He snapped on the handcuffs (AP)-- gave Negro Students In Demonstration SALISBURY (Reuters)-- About 50 Negro students carry- ing such slogans as "We defy the Smith regime'? demon- strated today in the grounds of the University College of Rho- desia and Nyasaland The students gathered as the college council prepared to meet, The council "is consider- ing a report on disturbances on FRIDAY, April 29 The Commons meets at 11 a.m. EDT to continue the re- distribution debate ate stands May 3. adjourned until Changes Seen = WEATHER FORECAST mer. And in New York, an African move was afoot to get the -problem back into the 1U, Nations May 10. The Sen- 4 nited Nations by May 10 British politicians say the one thing Wilson could not do was stand still. He knew that sooner rather than later he would be Rain Due On Saturday, Increasing Cloudiness TORONTO (CP) -- Forecast issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m.: Synopsis: Increasing cloudi- ness is forecast over southern Ontario Saturday to be followed by rain Saturday night or Sun- day. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, ake Huron, Windsor, London Mainly sunny today with not much change in temperature Cloudy Saturday followed by rain in the late afternoon or evening. Winds light today east 15 Saturday Lake Ontario, Geor- gian Bay, Haliburton, Killaloe, Toronto, Hamilton: Mainly sunny and warmer today. Clear tonight. Increasing cloudiness Saturday followed by rain in the Niagara, coming east 15 Saturday. Timagami, Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, North Bay, Sudbury: Clear tonight. Sunny Saturday morning becoming cloudy to- ward evening. Winds light. Cochrane, White River: Vari- able cloudiness with a few scat- tered showers or snowflurries today. night. Mainly sunny Saturday Winds west 15 to 25 today be- coming light tonight and Satur- day. Ottawa region: Sunny this afternoon and Saturday. Season- able temperatures, Winds west- erly 15 Forecast Low tonight, high Saturday Windsor St. Thomas . London Kitchener Mount Forest .... Wingham «sess Hamilton ......5 St. Catharines . Toronto Peterborough .... Kingston ...ss06 temperatures jevening. Winds light today be- Trenton .. Killaloe sscccscece Muskoka .. North Bay . Sudbury EKarlton Sault Ste Kapuskasing .... White River ..... Moosonee . see A little milder. Clear to-| Timmins HERE AND THERE Eight babies were born at | Memorial | e Bowmanville Hospital during the week end- fing April 24. Eighty patients were admitted performed. Thirty - nine em- ergency treatmenis were. giv- en. Seventy - seven patients were discharged. - one | Ten | major and 34 operations were | --and stood "IT was so shocked," said Mrs. Sarah Mace, nurse in charge. "What could I do? I just got him a stool to sit on and we put a gown on him." And there Schultz sat, for 89 minutes, until his third son was born, Only then did he unlock the handcuffs What did his Schultz replied, mad at me." think? "She's not wife the university campus last] month, [t also will discuss the jresignation offer of the princi- | jpal, Walter Adams, who refused | jlo give police information about | an escaped Negro who had been} attending lectures at the univer- Sity The students dispersed after the council's vice-chairman; Sir Henry Macdowell, asked them not demonstrate while the meeting was in pro- NOW open! ALCAN Furniture & Appliances 452 Simcoe St. S. 723-0011 Oshawa's New Furniture and Appliance Store feat- uring Admirol T.V., Zenith, Top Service and many to top lines of furniture and appliances. council i gress, bury indicate that Smith's rep- resentatives had tried to ar- range 27 tanker cargoes of oil to be piped through Beira, suf- ficient to supply Rhodesia for a year. But Wilson upset the. plot by obtaining ~ United Nations authority to prevent such tank- ers going to Beira. H. KET -LTD. REALTOR 723-7463 $17,900. Owner must move north et once, and sacrifice price, it is a clean-cut 7 \ beth- room br' oe Sat sub- urbs of = Imagine! Payments $100 in ere only monthly with principel, terest and taxes 2 bedroom bungelew In fab ulous ¢ondition in the ex clusive tly St Excelle SOLD | retired couple © sini samuy, Priced right for cash sole, MOTEL Modern all brick motel livie close to Or 10) Ss ne excellent in w supplement your ten unit orters, x ht oe with cept yo juity down pa vestment income. Advertised and sold lost week by Douglas Carmichael 723-7463 We desperately need executive type homes for employees of Ontario's largest Hydro project west of Whitby. CASH SALES ONLY Call DOUGLAS CARMICHAEL 723-7463 inever established that Mrs. | | Munsinger engaged in espion- jage activities during her stay, jin Canada, broken by trips to The applicant for this position should be a boy 19 er 20, and be loéking for the opportunity te train in an interest- ing and rewarding profession. Chauffeur's licence neces- sary. ' @ CLASSIFIED SALES CLERK This position offers an Interesting challenge for « woman who loves' telephone work. Some previous telephone or sales experience preferred APPLY IN WRITING TO L. B. LEITH The Oshawa Times os ss ay HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS OSHAWA PUBLIC SCHOOLS REGISTRATION Kindergarten and Grade 1 Pupils Registration of Kindergarten and Grade ! pupils who will be entering school. for the first time in September, 1966, will be held in all schools except King Street, Ridgeway, and T. R. McEwen Senior Schools during the afternoons of MAY 4th and MAY 5th,,from 1:30 P.M. to 4:00 P.M. For KINDERGARTEN, the Registration will be for children whose 5th Birthday is not later than December 31st, 1966. For GRADE |, the Registration will be accepted for children whose 6th Birthday is not later than December 31st, 1966. Pupils now enrolled in Kindergarten do not need to register for Grade |. Birth Certificates must be presented before children will be finally admitted. If these are not presently available they should be obtained im- mediately from the Registrar General's Department, 70 Lombard Street, Toronto, Ontario, (Fee $2.00) and submitted to the principal on or before June 29th, 1966 --. The Board would appreciate as complete a registration as possible so that the adjustment of school districts may be completed as early as possible. BOARD OF EDUCATION Oshawa, Ontario. M, Elliott, J. Ross Backus, c. Superintendent of Public Schools, Business Administrator, $. E. Lovell, Chairmon.

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