Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Aug 1966, p. 3

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TOPIC MARGARET SMITH DAVE CROTIN . WILL ANYTHING be accom- plished by the student ex- change program -- like the one which brought 30 Quebec stu- dents to Oshawa? Six people , Were asked this question during aman -on- the - street survey. They said: Dave Crotin, 961 Masson St., Oshawa; "Sure, | think it is a good idea. It isn't doing any harm and I think it is good to bring both provinces together and show the Quebec «people how. the rest of the coun- try lives and they can show the students how their part of the DOW BROWN 604 King St. W.; 'I the stu- dents are benefitting anything by it, it should be af right, If there is an improvement in the French-speaking and the En- giish students' language and they can see the equality of each other -- then it has to be a good thing for everybody concerned," Don Brown, New- castle: "Yes, I think @ lot can be accomplished, If they can learn to understand people of other provinces, especially of another language, it will help to build a better country in the mg Student Exchange Program ULEN BONNETTA son's language it is always eas- jer to understand his habits." Glen Bonpetia, RR 3, Burketon: "I think it is a good idea be- cause it teaches you more about another language. This always makes for better communica- tion, It also enables people from two different cultures and languages to see how each other lives and better understand what problems they are con- fronted with." Mrs, Lucienne LaBel, 315 Hillcroft; 'It's good fo exchange the ideas of two) languages and it's a good way MRS, LUCIEWNE LaBeL CATHY WOOD French Canadian myself and all of my children speak French. If we go to Quebec they will be able to talk French, | think it is good for a person to know two languages,"' Cathy Wood, 2% Beaty: "it's a good thing. | would like to try it myself and learn the French that is spoken in Quebec, The French we learn in school is Paris French and it-is a bit different than the French from Quebec, | am in favor of learning French that is spoken in Quebec than' a foreign lan- jrather Ky Pledges Vote By Nov. 1967. From Reuters-AP SAIGON (CP) -- Premier Nguyen Cao Ky today promised South Viet Nam an elected gov- ernment by November, 1967, and said he would devote him- self exclusively to his job as air force commander after that. The 35-year-old premier made his pledge in a statement at the start of a campaign to spur in- terest in elections for delegates to a constitutional assembly Sept, 11. The assembly will be given six months to write a con- stitution under which South Viet Nam can change over from mili-| tary to civilian rule, Ky is the central figure in the military jimta which came to power 14 months ago Meanwhile, the Buddhist Uni- fied Church again accused Ky and Chief of State LA,-Gen, Nguyen Van Thieu of oppressing the| leaders, the militant | and deceiving the people in or- der to cling to power, In a lengthy letter to the twa Buddhis leadership denounced the planned constituent assembly as 'a disguised elected body to to promote bilingualism, | am| guage." country lives."' Margaret Smith,| future. If you understamd a per- prolong the period when the gov- ernment will have to return the |two sisters Betty Anne, 9, and sovereignty of the nation to the Grace, 8, of Palmerston, Ont., representatives of the people," | drowned in Conestogo Lake, On the military front, the U.S | Robert Scott, 57, of Sombra, command announced the loss of }Ont., in hospital from injuries|two air force F-104 Starfighters suffered in a two-car collision| during heavy raids on North jeast of Sombra Friday night; |Viet Nam Monday, Both pilots | Eldon Wesley Amikon, 12, of|are missing \the Golden Lake Indian Re-|- One Starfighter was hit 40 | serve, drowned when he fell 14) miles north of Hanoi, the other feet down a community well; |65 miles northwest of the North Week-end Accidents Kill 109 Persons gery tera ge Mum gogpd hor Bye + nod By THE CANADIAN PRESS jtraffic fatalities and five drown-|Mount Hope, five miles south of water skiing accident on Lower to-air missiles, the spokesman Accidents claimed at least 109|ings while Manitoba had seven| Hamilton Beverley Lake said, but did not say whether victims across Canada during|deaths in traffic--including the} William Kenneth Stengel, 15, Stephen Naismith, 13, of Ud- the Starfighters were knocked the Civic Holiday weekend, ex-|multiple deaths in a three-carjof Windsor, Ont., when his mo- ney, Ont,, when struck by a car|down by the Soviet-built rockets ceeding by 12 the record set Jast|collision in Minnedosa Monday|tor scooter collided head-on near his home. ror conventional ground fire. year, |--and two drownings. with a car about 18 miles east SATURDAY The U.S, has lost 918 aircraft The Monday holiday, not stat-| Seven persons died on high-| of Bracebridge . RD: a over North Viet Nam utory but proclaimed by indivi- ways in Saskatchewan where| John Lisle, 8, of Ottawa, Michael Liscio, 18, of Toronto,| U.S. military headquarters re- dual municipalities was cele-| another person drowned also. idrowned in the Mississippi drowned when his canoe cap-|ported four sharp actions in the In Alberta, three persons died| River near Pakenham, Ont. sized near Toronto Island; rugged central plateau region 10 brated in Ontario, Manitoba and| Alberta, where at least 50 per-'in highway mishaps, two boys "e ; Fred James Elliot, 60, of Hol-| miles east of the Cambodian ) ' SUNDAY loway, Ont., drowned when he border and 235 miles north of sons died accidentally, six in a! were killed when detonator caps single highway accident in Min-\exploded and another person Norman Joseph Babineau, 19, fell from a boat in Lingham! s¢ r f of Quebec City, who was serv-| Lake; nedosa, Man, when struck by a train, : ' : A Canadian Press survey; newfoundland and New| \"% with the Canadian Army at Joan Boland, 17, of Galt and/after short fire fights but at last from 6 p.m, Friday to midnight Br i London, Ont,, drowned while Lauden Boyles, 49, of Toronto|report the fourth was continuing : : runswick each had a highway). Crystal Lake aud 'alatithe : Monday, local times, listed 69) jswimming in Crystal Lake, in a two-car collision on High-|toward nightfall, All of the ac : fatality and a drowning and|" (4) ill :. 16. of Lindsay traffic deaths, 30 drownings, 000\Neva Gootin 'had two Highway len Wi iams, 16, of Lindsay, way 35 near Orono, tions involved company size fire death and nine deaths due |qeaths. "\Ont,, in hospital from injuries; james Bruce Walker, 22, of U-S- units, The size of the en- to miscellaneous mishaps, The includ received in a motorcycle accl- Welland in a two-car collision|¢™y forces was not known, the highways, 10 persons) ; Ay _ Carns, east of Orillia; John Carbe, 8, of Toronto drowned, a woman died from a' known suicides or slayings. Larry Vanhorne, 20, and Eu- when he ran into the path of fall and a baby was killed when MONDAY gene Raymond Desmarais, 17, a car near his home: ® concrete step fell on. her, of Little Current, Ont,, when) Adolphe Tessier, 51, of Corn- their small car overturned on @ wall in a two-car collision at 1965 RECORD EXCEEDED fessional and The gon master of Three of the clashes broke off | Negroes Said | Quebec's accidental death toll, Isabelle Moore, 69, of Chat Under Torture was 34, with 20 highway deaths,/ham, in hospital Monday from)road near their home on Mani- Tancaster. nine drownings, a fire death, a/head injuries suffered in a fall|{ouylin Island; Michael Robinson, 20, off LONDON (AP)--Amnesty In death from a fall, an electrocu-|down a flight of stairs Satur-| Paul Snider, 19, of Niagara|windsor in -hospital from. in-|ternational charged today that| tion, an asphyxiation and a/ day; Township, drowned in the Niag-| juries suffered when his motor.|the all-white minority govern-| woman killed when a telephone| A 25-year-old Hamilton manjara River about two miles north) cycle collided with a car at Col. ment in Rhodesia is torturing) cable fell on her, when the car in which he was/of Niagara Falls; chester; imprisoned Negroes British Columbia reported six| riding crashed into a ditch near; Muriel Fischer, Raymond Austin Lumley, 21,; In a report on prison condi opie oe cate. : of Hillier in a two-car collision|tions in the breakaway central) 15 miles south of Belleville: African colony, Amnesty Inter Morris Pennie, 55, of London, national said electric shocks | Ont., Mrs, Loreen Ada John 50,/were used and gave details of of Toronto and Ralph A. Ra-|beatings with "fists, boots and cher, 54, of Brampton in a two-|batons."" Some prisoners had car collision near Brampton; been threatened with castration Thomas Helen, 56, of Mano- Amnesty International de- tick Station, in hospital from in-|Scribed itself as a non - political | juries suffered Friday night | organization which works for| Rev. Virgil Wood of Boston when his tractor collided with|the release of political prison- ers throughout the world 12, and her Fires, Lootings, Vandalism | Hit North Omaha District OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -- Gov. Puerto Ricans, poured into the, Frank Morrison of Nebraska re-|streets. turns to Omaha today to dis-/ cuss what action might be taken) to return peace to the city's pre- dominantly - Negro near north side where racial violence has erupted for three straight days. Even as the governor planned the return, gasoline bombs hit a half-dozen stores early today. No one was injured and no se- rious damage was done, but some merchants stood guard with shotguns through the night seeking to prevent the looting which occurred Sunday and Monday. |had addressed a crowd of 1,000 a car near Ottawa; il f : Isolated disturbances be g a n|Negroes earlier in Providence,, Barbara Wood, 4, of Jackson's The report said the prison diet Monday night after two officers, |Urging them to force an end to Point, drowned in four feet of was nutritionally inadequate | attempting to quell a domestic|de facto segregation in public) water off Jackson's Point in cells---many verminous -- were] quarrel in the area, shot and schools, Wood called Black Lake Simcoe overcrowded, medical facilities} killed a 37-year-old father of Power 'one of the most beauti FRIDAY were insufficient; and there was) eight children. |ful phrases. I've heard in a long ; ' no policy for rehabilitating pris time." George Watson Fletcher, 59, | oners | POLICE MOVE IN Another disturbance erupted and his wife Winnifred, 59, of si ayer International said it) e s s swar j : a Brampton, killed in a two-carjcollected its information Peso Rt oxganenoon tye her for the second atraight night at) collision on Highway 91 nearthrough interviews. with meted policemen moved in ana| Perth Amboy, N.J., in a pre-| Stayner Negroes released from. prison prevented the crowd from|¢ominantly Puerto Rican neigh-) Ada Bedman, 6, of Galt, when and from lawyers and welfare breaking up into smalle y|Porhood, It _ occurred shortly) struck by a car near Ayton, workers groups. after city officials and anti-pov Donna Gill, 22° months, of It said it was impossible to The crowd pelted policemen erty workers met with about 500) Markham, in hospital from in-|know how many "'prisoners of with socks, sedastied squad car esidents in an attempt to work! juries suffered when a large conscience" are being held in The fires, lootings and vandal-|windows and started a tire in| ut problems concrete step fell on her, Rhodesia. ism which took place in thelone building . with homemade} neighborhood early Monday re-\hombs. However, most of the| sulted in the arrests of 24 adults | residents were off the streets by and seven juveniles, Mayor A.\}] p.m. { 7s ' ia V. Sorensen, after visiting the] Police in Providence, R.1,, area, said city officials would he Mat 2% | Were struck by stones and bot-| not tolerate any more of this ltles Monday flight as they broke | Morrison, who spent the na-'ypy a disturbance involving 100 tional guard into Omaha during | young Negroes after a civil racial violence last month, was! riehts rally: to meet with Sorensen today. Two policemen were injured | In Chicago, beefed-up police|as they made several arrests to patrols prevented another po-|quell the disturbance. They| tential racial explosion in ajwore helmets and carried ply-| northwest side neighbor hood wood shields to ward off mis- | after 1,500 residents, most! y'siles. Se Oshawa Fair THURS., FRI., and SAT., AUG. 4-5-6 THURS. EVENING GATES OPEN 4 P.M. Building 6 P.M. Saddle Classes 6 P.M. 9 P.M. - MISS OSHAWA FAIR CONTEST CKLB RECORD HOP FRIDAY: Livestock Judging P.M.--Horse Races (Wagering Privileges) P.M.--Modern Square Dancing SATURDAY - 4-H CLUB ACTIVITY DAY 1:30 P.M.-Horse Racing (Wagering Privileges) 6:00 P.M.-Trotting Pony Races 8:30 P.M.--Modern Dancing (2 bands) "RITCHIE KNIGHT and the MIDNIGHTS" "SHAWN JACKSON and the MAJESTICS" VISIT OLD MacDONALD'S FARM ADULTS 75c¢ Children Under 12 , 25¢ ALEXANDRA PARK OSHAWA WE CAN COMPOUND COSMETIC PRESCRIPTIONS it moy surprise you to know ancient records mentioned thet pharmacists, then celled apothecories, prepared the healing, ond beeutifying lotions and unquents. Even now Dermatologists prescribe some for problem skins, When directed by physicions, we can color them for different complexions. A pharmacy is @ safe plece to get cosmetics. Of course we cerry your favourite products and we know ebout their ingredients, If you ask for suggestions, we cen give you inf d professionel , Our ti inventory is controlled like our drugs s0 they elweys will be potently fresh, YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need « medicine. Pick up your prescription if shopping nearby, or we will deliver promptly without extra cherge. A great many people entrust us with their prescriptions. May we compound yours? EASTVIEW PHARMACY 573 King Street Eost Oshowe PHONE 725-3594 Fost -- Free ---- Motorized Delivery P. B. Francis, Phm.B. -- J. R. Steffen, B.Sc. Phm. Cars 50c Britain's Queen Ii presents the Jules Rimet Cup to Bobby Moore, cap- Philip Vetoed Prejudice Seen LONDON (AP) dent of one of Britain's leading | clusion scientific societies blamed pro- against prejudice the blackballing of Prince Philip from honorary membership Sir Gordon Sutherland, dent of the Institute of Physics Physical Society Cambridge, told reporters "Less than eight per cent eli gible took the trouble to vote, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, August 2,1966 3 a , Ui CAPTAIN time, (See story on Page AP Wirephoto via cable : from London) buh bide QUEEN PRESENTS CUP TO tain of the winning English team which beat a West German team in the World NGLISH Cup final game at Wembley Stadium, London. The Eng- lish team won, 4-2, in over- Elizabeth | {become an honorary. member t April. Sir Gordon said Prince Philip, ja leading exponent of techno- \logical development in Britain, received a two-to-one majority. The re- ported the Prince was rejected With 850 votes for and 250 against, but this was on the ba- sis of a candidate being turned if of vyoling pro- JAPAN MOVES FAST Japan's export trade in- creased 14,5 per cent annually between 1955 and 1964, a world's record, FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth have suffered real embarrassment because their plate dropped, slipped or wob- bled at just the wrong time. Do not posal, live in fear of this happening to you. aes Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH, When -reports of the snub | the alkaline (non-acid) powder, on leaked out, Buckingham Palace] your ppt Sig et teeth more rn y, wi e - remained silent and referred In-| able. Does not sour, 'Checks. "plate quiries to the society and its] odor breath". Get PASTRMTE at members " | drug counters everyw! Sunday Telegraph ~ The presi-|thinking it was a foregone con- Those who voted did so for doctrinaire reasons--every honorary fellow has been an eminent scientist or Nobel Prize winner, In other words, professienal prejudice." Sunday for down only one-quarter those refused the presi- The Prince's nomination to an and ' . f honorary fellowship of the. soci Emmanuel College ety was rejected in a secret bal lot had the Prince invitation 1o| after the by letter accepted EE Would you really like to put Some money away and let it grow for a year... and a second year... and a sixth year? Buy our new Growth Savings Certificates You receive $10.00 for every $7.50 you invest for six years. That's a one-third increase in your money, Available in denominations of $10.00 upwards ~ they're cashable at any time and carry a special life insurance redemption feature, Also ask about our Income Savings Certificates, CANADIAN IMPERIAL BANK OF COMMERCE

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