Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Jul 1966, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Scturdey, July 2, 1966 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE -« VW To Set Up Board | OTTAWA (CP) -- Legislation setting up the new immigration appeal board will be introduced in the Commens Monday by Im- migration Minister Marchand. "He has indicated the new board will make final decisions in de- portation cases and other im- migration matters, replacing smintatertat ihilite: mhiisveriai 'Pirate Ban Ahead LONDON (Reuters) -- The! 'government promised Friday) action within six weeks against unlicenced pirate radio stations which broadcast commercial programs from. off-shore trans- |) mitters. Postmaster - General Anthony Wedgwood Benn told the House|' of Commons hé will bring in a hill to deal with the pirates be- fore Parliament adjourns for its | summer break in the first or second week of August. Some of the pirates are an- chored outside British territorial limits to dodge the law, broad- casting popular music inter- tary LaMarsh said Thursday re- apersed with advertising to an|ports that CBC President Al- audience estimated to number phonse Ouimet ignored an order in the millions. from the corporation's board of directors are incorrect. She was replying to Opposition Leader Queen Named Diefenbaker who asked whether NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP),it were true that Mr. Quimet Diane Coulter, 18, of Leaming-| had been instructed to fire H. ton, Ont., was crowned Miss Do- G. Walker, CBC vice-president iminion of Canada Friday andjin charge of English-language will represent Canada in three|programs and that he refused major international beauty to do so. competitions. The. blonde, blue-eyed hair- dresser will represent Canada in the Miss Universe, Miss World and Miss International contests. Second was Marjorie field, 20, representing Central Ontario. Sharron Holleran, Catharines, was picked the most friendly competitor by the girls themselves. Hon Judy LaMarsh 'Draws Prison Term RANGOON (AP)--An Ameri can who entered Burma illegally Scho-/as been sentenced to three ears' imprisonment at hard |a- or for importing foreign cur- 17. of St. Tencies, the government-owned ti ;|Working People's Daily reported Friday. Thomas Francis Tracy, 25, entered Burma without the jmecessary visa from the Thai |border post of Meisauk. Acquittal Appeal | a ge gl Seek Soviet Aid TORONTO (CP)--The attor- ney-generals department 'Thurs- ' day appealed the acquittal of RAWALPINDI (AP) -- Presi Gary Ian Torrie, 21, of Owen|dent Mohammad Ayub Khan an- Sound, on charges of criminal|nounced Friday that a Pakistani negligence and dangerous driv-| economic mission will seek aid ing in a traffic accident Jan. 16 if ¥ ae which killed Mr. and Mrs. Le-|{tom the Soviet Union. Ayub's ©\ gave their president a mandate ,make it impossible for Andre |to become a surgeon as his fa- |ther wished. | Strike Turned Down | point have voted against strike | action. | But the 50-member branch of the Customs and Excise Offi-) cers Association Wednesday to support "work to rule" ac- tion. President Bud Watters will take the decision to a weekend meeting of national branch pres-| \idents in Toronto. | The Toronto meeting has been called. to organize a protest against salary -freezing under the new civil service job re- classification program. First Hand View TEL-AVIV (Reuters) -- Gen Moshe Dayan, tough one-eyed a firsthand inspection of the Viet Nam War next week The 5l-year-old general be- lieves the new type of mobile campaign being fought in Viet |Nam with 'similar weapons to ' have vital lessons for Israel, Gen. Dayan, commander of Israel's 1956 Sinai campaign against Egypt, did not seek per- mission from the Israeli foreign ministry before planning the mission. Foreign Minister Abba Eban has stated anything said or writ ten about Viet Nam by Gen. _| Dayan would not be the respon- Which much in Canada "must be cher-/contained frequent reference to tory ished and developed if we are|Canadian overseas service pro- to be worthy of our heritage,"'|grams and tc the roles youth sibility of his government. Cairo newspapers have de- scribed the visit as preparation! by Israel for a new war of ag- gression. Churchill Poems LONDON (AP)--Actress Sa- rah Churchill, daughter of Brit- ain's wartime leader, wil] pub- lish her first book of poems Monday, It is called The Empty Spaces. "The poems range from those I wrote when I was 17 to those written 18 months ago,"' she said in an interview. his own country's army could -- Governor-General Lauds | OTTAWA (CP)--State Secre- l!¢?9 of Israel's army, will make] Ben Barth of Boston con- soles friends outside Fed- eral Court in Boston where mutual friend David O'Brien Veterans Honor 'World War Dead By CARL MOLLINS | THIEPVAL, France (CP)-- Cid seidiers, young troops and thousands who lost relatives at the Battle of the Somme thronged the tidy lanes of Pic- ardy Friday to honor the dead of a half-century ago. British, French, Canadian and other Commonwealth veterans returned to the scene of the First World War campaign that opened with the slaughter of July 1, 1916, and continued for almost five months until 1,200,- 000 men and boys on both sides had been killea or wounded. "Blackmail Charge Made KINGSTON (CP)--A_ union The pilgrims sought out old battlegrounds in the rich, rolling farmiands, Visiied ine graves,or old comrades in dozens of ceme- taries among fields of wheat and sugarbeets or joined in or- ganized rituals of remem- brance. For Canadians, ceremonies at Beaumont - Hamel, Gudecourt, Courcellette and Arnas recalled that Canada suffered 24,009 cas- ualties that summer and fall. Newfoundland, then a colony, had 1,305. casualties. HOLD SERVICE The climax in Friday's round of a weekend series of cere- monies came at an allied serv- ice at Thiepval where a tower- \ing pile of arches in red brick and grey stone honors 73,000 dead. Their graves along the |rivers Somme and Ancre are unknown. Two platoons of the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light -In- | Plant. at the Canadian Industries Lid.| plant accused the company Thursday of trying to blackmail employees in connection with] the closing of an ammonia! James Bell, president of Local} 9-670, Oil, Chemical and Atomic) Workers Union (CLC), accused) fantry joined French and Brit- ish detachments in forming a guard of honor. Two DC-8s of the RCAF Transport Command flew low over the memorial jarch with pinpoint timing and dropped a shower of poppies at the end of the service. TEARS FOR was definite ter Youth Correctional for burning his draft card. sentenced A PACIFIST O'Brien in response question by Judge to a George to an in- rm to a Federal Center Sweeney as to whether he would carry a draft card, Canadian Youth Works | OTTAWA (CP) -- The spirit has accomplished so Governor-General Vanier said in his July 1 message. World attention will focus on Canada as the centennial year approaches, he said in a pre- sion is '"'therefore an appropri- ate moment to examine our na- tional conscience and say whether or not in 1967 we will, as a nation, be able to stand ter Pearson said in his July 1 up under the world's scrutiny Miss Churchill is 51. Her last!" jhusband--now dead--was Lord PROVIDE FUNDS { Much of th rected to C have taken developing countries. He was har e message was di-| "I hope we will never lose anada's youth. It sight of this challenge that his- has posed for us, nor} weary in the task of meeting ge Children Drown Canada and in in ppy to praise young Canadians because there was a jtendency "to deery our youth ... as delinquent and good-for- pared statement, and the occa-| nothing. If they are, whose fault is it? It is them credit when we find some good to say about them." OTTAWA ( message tha -- {not been vigilant enough in pro- moting national spirit and pride "We have not been as vigilant Mother Charged FAIRFIELD, Me. (AP) -- A Fairfield mother was charged with murder Friday in the drownings of her three chil- dren, just as she had been 12 years ago when her first three children drowned. At that time, Mrs. Constance Fisher, now 37, was found in- sane, A grand jury declined to only fair to' give CP)--Prime Minis- t Canadians have management of 'attempting to| Earlier, in weather as sunny blackmail and intimidate the 48 the-day the Somme battle employees . . . into accepting|9Pened, French schoolchildren the latest company offer." brought posies of fresh flowers The 700 workers are seeking |(° #,Ccremony at the Canadian replied "in good conscience, I feel I cannot." Barth's friends were not identified. (AP Wirephoto) |a 55-cent-an-hour wage increase|emorial in Courcellette, 2 cSeaaee ----------|in a one-year contract. The , At Beaumont-Hamel and Gue- * HMatest company offer is 35 cents\decourt Canadians joined 26 over a two-year contract. survivors of the- Royal New- Ga | Mr. Bell said the company has|foundland Regiment in paying \threatened to nullify their re-|ttibute to island soldiers' who ® leent documents on severance| fell in those encounters July 1 I payment in the event of a strike. | and Oct, 12, 1916. n Ta 1c | He said this 'is purely and sim-| French veterans presented 30 ply an effort to force the em- | Newfoundland hale Canadian z u J | ployees to accept an inferior set-|survivors of the 1916 battles plage varenmenet PRESS | ent." | with medals inscribed "'Ceux de avi prong aaah AB 4 Personnel Manager Stanley |/# ---- roughly "Men of fic deaths 'across Canada since| mompson, said the company) Dé Pomme. _ 6 p.m, Thursday, local tnnss | Was only trying to point out the) With less than two days re \Strliee ait say -- -| 8 ; maining in the 78-hour weekend | He said the CIL offer to em- 15 highway deaths have been re-|ployees at the ammonia plant| ported. The Canadian Highwaylis designed to keep the em-| Safety Council had predicted 85| ployees there until the plant can| par tere a mishaps dur-|be relocated in Lambton County. ng oliday. -- | tar has tabulated at least 23 ve| MP Wants Tour cidental deaths. These include Of Cattle Barns the 15 traffic deaths, six drown- OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com-| ings and one fire death, In 1963, the last three-day Do- |mons agriculture committee will visit the controversial cattle minion Day weekend, there was quarantine station on Grosse a record toll of 172 deaths, 85 on roads. During this year's | tie Que., if H. W. Danforth land Morton and their three|announcement followed by one sons. The Mortons were from/week his dispatch of a military Chatsworth. mission to Moscow and by one |Audley but she rarely uses the title Lady Audley. "I write poetry quite natur- indict her and she spent five three-day Victoria Day weekend| (PC--Kent) has his way. years in a mental hospital. She in May there were 129 fatalities; He urged the committee) |was discharged as. completely H |Thursday to make the trip in} WASHINGTON (CP) -- Stud- as we should have been in pro- ies aimed at improving two ma- moting the national spirit, the % : day the departure of China's Acquit Former Nazi. Premier Chou En-lai after a : short and cool stay, HAGEN, West Germany (Reu-| ters)--A court here Friday ac-| Labor Protest quitted a former Nazi police of-! ficial charged with the murder} : ) of Jews in the Bialystok area of; use of court injunctions in labor| the Soviet Union during the Sec-| disputes will create a loss of ond World War. Franz Lampe,|respect for judiciary proceed- 70, former. commander. of the|ings, President John R. Lynk Bielsk police headquarters near,of the Nova Scotia Federation Bialystok, was charged with| of Labor (CLC) said Friday complicity in the manslaughter, Mr. Lynk said in a statement of six persons, a crime which the recent arrest and jailing of can no longer be prosecuted un- 'rade unionists in British Co- der the statue of limitations. Iumbia and Ontario probably will have repercussions through- 'Copter Saves 78 out Canada. He said the injunctions pro- 7 "ee hibiting or restricting picketing N (AP)--South Af- daa te fan atone Fri-|4t plants involved in strikes is day lifted 14 passengers includ-|# violation of the basic rights ing a six-month-old baby, and °f Workers. 64 crew members off the 8,000 * ton passenger - freighter Sea- Damages Claim farer as it lay smashed on the ' © : rocks offshore from Cape Town. |. gece th eh Mom cid The Seafarer ran aground in| voyned' research scientist, has darkness and broke up in pound- Mikd w. $115,006 damace" sult _ against the University of Mont- ing seas. real and the Turnbull Elevator HERE AND THERE Ltd. for injuries suffered by his 12-year-old son in an escalator . accident. CUBS AT CAMP The declaration on which the - CUB PACK No. 27,0f St. Ger- action is based states that Dr trude's Church, King St. F., is|Selye's son Andre caught his Spending the weekend at a! right hand in the escalator lead- campsite 27 miles east of Osh-|ing from Maplewood Avenue up 'awa. More than 32 boys are at/ the side of Mount Royal to the Hans re- camp under the direction of university's main building Cubmaster Eric Woodward and The fingers of the youngster's his staff -- Assistant Cubmas- hand were crushed in the mech- 4er James Kellar and James anism at the top of the moving Mulligan. Harry Van Heughten, stairway. This permanent dam- chairman of the church's age, the declaration says, will Scout-Cub committee, was a ">> visitor Friday when the theme for the day was "Caveman" The camp will break up late Plan Move Sunday afternoon when the Cubs will attend Mass F G | INSPECTOR HONORED or rant More than 100 teachers gathered at Hampton United WELLAND (CP)--A 10-year Church to 'honor E. J. D. Web- old boy, known as Grant, who ster who retired as public school| has been in a ward of the Ham inspector for Bowmanville, Cart-|ilton Ontario Hospital for 43 wright and Darlington. A wallet days in a room with male drug 'and cheque were presented to! addicts, alcoholics and sex devi- Mr. Webster and a bouquet to ates, will soon be moved, says Mrs. Webster. the director of the Welland Children's Aid Society FINDS OLD COIN Waldon Goff said Thursday a Terry Sheehan, three-year-old treatment centre has been on of Mr. and Mrs. William) lected for Grant, who was sent Sheehan, Duke St., Bowman-jto the hospital as an incorrigi-! ville, picked up an 1886 United|ble delinquent. The boy was States cent piece on the drive-'placed in the society's care way of his grandfather's home. after his mother told a juvenile x np Nee nS court she could not handle him LIBERALS TO PICNIC Mr. Goff would not say when Durham County Liberals will) the poy will be moved or where hold their annual picnic July 23) will go at Waltona Park. Andrew -- Thompson, party leader in the Jegislature, will be the speaker, LONDON (CP) NAVAL PICNIC steady market in Oshawa Naval Club held its unusual car licence plates but annual picnic at Waltona Park, nobody answered High Mac- Newcastle, Sunday. Toronto|jean's advertisement for "UD naval veterans were guests at|1."' "I had hoped that somebody the outing. During the after-'; king a car to Rhodesia might moon, there were games and|buyy the plate," he said. The races for the picnickers and a! asking price was £1,000, ball game between Oshawa and Toronto, won by Oshawa, five to three. To round out the happy occasion, a tug-of-war across the creek between two est NO TAKERS FOR SLOGAN There a Britain for is RAINS LITTLE Precipitation in Canada. is low the the northern erritories ally," she commented. "When I HALIFAX (CP) -- Continued " jor highways in Paraguay will write down my feelings on pa- be financed by $800,000 in Cana- per. When ot De age to express|dian funds, the Inter-American myself vocay I reach for my|Development Bank has an- bi Eis Rae ic Bae RTE OTE nounced. The bank administers Accused Robber Refused Bail $20,000,000 provided by the Ca- ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)--An get angry, upset, sad or happy I American aid. WEATHER FORECAST national pride that our country should command in her chil dren--the love for and dedica- tion to a Canada second to none in the world as she nears her second century." He said it will take hard work) Nathalie Rose, nine months, in| Brunswick two road deaths and| station to test the cattle for foot and devotion to bequeath 'he nadian government for Latin'country's young a'strong, pros-' Centre Thursday. perous, independent nation. appeals court decided Friday a lower court error in refusing 80 in traffic accidents. ~/ held without bail. Mrs. Fisher showed no emo- Of this weekend's total, On- jtion as a judge explained to her 'ario has registered six traffic the three warrants charging her|deaths and three drownings. with' the murder of Kathleen| Quebec had two road fatalities Louise, 6, Michael Jon, 4, and|and the fire death and New their rural home at Fairfield @ drowning. Manitoba and Alberta each re- She entered no plea and was ported two traffic fatalities, Newfoundland and Nova Scotia Her husband, Carl, who found each one drowning and British the children dead and his wife Columbia one highway death. unconscious from a dose of Saskatchewan and Prince Ed- sleeping pills, was not at the ward Island were fatality-free. lcured in 1959. \light of recent criticism. of han-| dling the importation of 113 head} of Charolais cattle from France last year. | Mr. Danforth | $500,000 to build the isolation . DOUG TRIVETT said cost H. Millen Real Estate Ltd. ore pleased to announce the addi- tion of Doug Trivett to their sales staff. Doug has on excel- lent real estate background and also wes formerly Sales Man- ager of McLaughlin Coal and Supplies Ltd. for several years. and mouth disease. The department plans to jspend $350,000 this year to en- large the station. "Anyone who is in the cattle business is astonished as to why} it costs $850,000 to keep some) cattle in those barns for a few, bail to a Canadian accused of participation in a $423,000 rob- bery of a Brink's Inc., vault in Syracuse, N.Y., in October. The Appellate Division of the New York State Supreme Court reversed the decision of Judge Elmer N. Gale of Onondaga County Court that denied bail to Joel Singer, 23, of Chomedy, Que., a Montreal suburb The division ruled the case should be returned to Onondaga County Court in Syracuse Singer, arrested Dec. 5 in Montreal, was one of seven per- sons indicted for the robbery. The others have not been named, Missionary Priest Dies MASERU, Basutoland (Reut- er's)--The body of 60-year-old french - Canadian priest was found Friday in a pool of blood in his study at the Roman Cath- olic mission at Tsoeneneng about 30 miles from here Police believe the priest, Rey Almazar Meinard, was shot in the head Thursday night and that the motive for the murder was robbery. Father Menard, a member of the Oblates Order, is believed to be from Valleyfield, Que. Three nuns found the body, clad only in a shirt and lying} in the middle of the room, afier Father Meinard failed to appear __ at mass Police believe Father Meinard was dragged from his bedroom to the study, where he is be- Se-/ lieved to have had about 50 rand/ |($70), a week's pay small staff of casual in a safe, Most Rey, Emmanuel Mbath- oana, Roman Catholic Arch- bishop of Basutoland, issued a Statement expressing "grief and for his laborers horror at this senseless crime." | No Changes In Outlook For Fine Holiday Weathe brief court session. In 1954, when she drowned her first three children, whose ages were 6, 4 and 11 months, Mrs. Fisher attempted suicide by drinking shampoo. Her hus- band, now 45, found her uncon- TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts|and Sunday. Not much change Scious then, too issued by the weather office at'in temperatures. Winds light. region: Synopsis: Sunny hot weather cloudy periods and chance of a is likely to persist through the|thundershower today and Sun-| holiday weekend in southern and day. Very warm. Winds light.| 5:30 a.m. central Ontario as a high pres- sure area remains practically stationery over the Great Lakes and eastern United States. As the hot spell continues both tem- peratures and humidity are edg- ing slowly upward and after- noon readings in the low 90s are forecast for most places in On- tario today. Scattered thunder- storm activity is expected to continue across northern On- tario today and Sunday. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On- tario, southern Georgian Bay, Windsor, London, Toronto, Ham- ilton: Mainly sunny and contin- uing hot today 'and Sunday. Winds light Northern Georgian Bay, Ilali burton, Killaloe, Algoma, Saul' Ste. Marie, Timagami, southern White River, North Bay, Sud- bury: Mainly sunny and contin- uing hot today and Sunday. A few cloudy periods and chance of isolated thunderstorms Sun- day. Winds light Northern While River, Coch rane: Mainly sunny but with cloudy intervals and scattered showers or thunderstorms today THIS I$ FOR YOU! | Fast Service | Good Food Reasonable Prices Convenient Location HOTEL LANCASTER 27 KING ST. WEST, OSHAWA CITY OF --PLANNING Reporting fo Deputy Planr ng Dire Answer telephone and Procedures rec@ive vis Minimum Grade 12. Good shorther . giving ONE CLERK/STENOGRAPHER SALARY RANGE -- $3,720.00 - $4,945.00 (3614 hour week) type correspondence, filing correspondence and documents, OSHAWA DEPARTMENT ctor, take dictation, transcribe end itors; give information en Zoning rd and typing speed end previous alt nent details of experience 1966, to THE PERSONNEL CFFICER, City Holl, Oshawe, perti Btt Ottawa Forecast Lows tonight Highs Sunday Windsor St London .,.. Kitchener .. Mount Forest |Wingham .... Hamilton .. 'St. Catharines Toronto Peterborough . Kingston Trenton . Killaloe'.. Muskoka North Bay Sudbury . Barlion Sault Ste | Kapuskasing White River . Moosonee . Timmins Thomas .. Marie ,.. 65 Sunny with Red Denied Visa Announces Appeal NEW YORK (AP)--Gus Hall, general secretary of the U.S. Communist party, says he will appeal a U.S. state department temperatures decision denying him permission * to visit China, Cuba, North Viet Nam and North Korea, Hall applied for special travel permission as a writer for the party publication, The Worker. Permission was denied because "Mr profession," said department press officer Marshall Wright. Wright said a fulltime re- porter for The Worker could get permission to visit the countries, off limits to U.S. citizens gener- ally Hlall said "the state depart ment has no right or authority to dictate to The Worker or any other publication the qualifica tions of its journalists." OSHAWA GENERAL HOSPITAL PUBLIC NOTICE BEGINNING ON MONDAY, JULY 4th, 1966 Tis TELEPHONE NU/ABER OF THE OSHAWA GENERAL HOSPITAL WILL BE CHANGED TO 723-1541 W. A. HOLLAND, Administrator, CALL ATTENTION FARMERS! SAVE On... Gasoline - Diesel and Motor Oils Out of Oshawa, Whitby and District 668-3341 WHY PAY MORE?: PREMIUM QUALITY Farm Tanks Available CCLLECT DX OIL | @j ba, waa won by Oshawa. 'averaging 10 inches annually, | > r 4 Hall is not a journalist by| weeks." He is well know in sporting circles and community affairs ond is anxious to serve his many i] friends ond business acquant- 'T ances in all matters pertaining to real estate. The survey does not include known slayings, suicides, na-' tural or industrial deaths. PAINT FENCE OTTAWA (CP) A fence around the construction site of the Performing Arts Centre was assigned board-by-board to 67 Ottawa artists. They painted it in competition for a $650 prize. The fence has become a tour- ist attraction. The artists' crea- tions will be auctioned in aid of a children's hospital. CALL OR SEE DIXON'S FOR OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 728-1656 H. MILLEN Real Estate Ltd. s STEINBERG EARLY WEEK FEATURES © MONDAY @ TUESDAY @ WEDNESDAY ICE CASTLE lee Cream KOUNTY KIST, STANDARD Wax Beans FRESH, TASTY, Ground Chuck FRESH, LEAN, BONELESS Stewing Beef ASSORTED FLAVORS 15-02. WHOLE TIN Low Everyday Prices PLUS Free "Pinky" Stamps! * 2

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