Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Aug 1966, p. 2

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% 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, August 16, 1966 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Special Labor Study Tlrerad ww I Www MONTREAL (CP)--The for- mation of a special labor study commission as an answer to Ca- nadian labor strife and strike problems was advocated Mon- day by Labor Minister Nichol- Minister of Ontario, said Monday the res- ignations were necesssary to bring attention to the nursing profession's need for collective bargaining. "We are having to use power to get the bargaining unit we want. This is distasteful but if Ruw aie | son. Interviewed on board the Em- press of Canada after the ship had docked in Montreal harbor, Mr. Nicholson said the commis- sion could operate under the di- rection of the Economic Council of Canada. "It would involve senior peo- ple in labor and management - and perhaps universities and would naturally require their full co-operation," Mr. Nichol- son said, The labor minister was on his way back to Ottawa after a brief European vacation where he studied labor problems in Britain. Mr. Nichol heard debat in the British Parliament and held discussions with British Labor Minister Gunther during the course of his vacation. Grizzly Bear Hunt CARDSTON, Ajta. (CP) -- Mounted hunters and a light air- craft Monday flushed a grizzly bear from bush country near here and searchers said they are "nine tenths sure" it is the one that mauled a boy Sunday. However, the bear almost cer- tainly escaped into Waterton Lakes National Park, where hunting is forbidden. Park offi- cials refused to let the men en- ter the park to continue the) hunt. HON. J. R. NICHOLSON with the governments of Cam- bodia and Thailand, which have accused each other of frontier violations repeatedly for sev- it is necessary, we must use it." Victims To Wed GARLAND, Tex. (AP)--"You can't keep a girl down when she's getting married," said Janet Paulos, one of the Austin sniper's victims. She has left her hospital bed to plan for her wedding next week. Janet, 20, and Abdul Kashab, 26, of Baghdad, Iraq, postponed | Aug. 27, but they'll walk down | the aisle without assistance and | with no bandages showing. The couple was walking to- ward a snack shop on Austin's main street by the University of Texas Aug. 1 when they were} knocked down by Charles Whit- | man's bullets from the tower. | "We were some of the lucky | | the wedding from Aug. 20 until | eral months, jone," Janet said, adding that neither her left shoulder or her Hours Reduced fiance's right elbow would be LONDON (AP)--New legisla-|permanently impaired by the tion limiting the working hours | bullet wounds. of British airline pilots was an- i Policemen Charged nounced by the government to- day. At present a crew of two pilots can be booked to work up| WINCHESTER, Ky. (AP) -- to 15 hours, The new proposals|Threée policemen have been would impose a maximum of 11/charged with murder in connec- hours in jets. tion with the fatal shooting of a 26-year-old Winchester Negro. Collie Hampton died from gun- Fire Toll 30° others with hands to their faces and a few crying -- made up a major part of the District of Columbia Stadium in Washington. Girls some screaming, THIS WAS some of the fans' reaction last night as the Beatles performed in mn Nis In | PROJECT TO START SEPT. 1 | Plane Wreck City Loans $50,000 VIENNA (AP)--The Austrian} embassy in Bucharest said to-} day a Romanian airlines pas-| mger plane crashed near the} " Klan Pickets Stadium While Beatles Sound - Off the audience which watched the British performers. --AP Wirephoto Stage 'trances to warehouse sheds so WASHINGTON (AP) --The Beatles, steering clear of ama- teur theology, resume their North American tour today, having sent thousands of Wash- other people feel better, it will make me feel better." The Beatles' leader had drawn criticism with his remark that ". . . We're more popular ington's teen-agers into cheer-|than Jesus now." ing fits. | Later Lennon apologized, say- Under eleborete police suard,|ing he had merely tried to de- the unshorn quartet performed | plore some people's attitude to- Monday night for 32,164 fans in|ward Christianity. D.C. Stadium. Five members of the Ku Klux | Klan, proclaiming their objec- | tion to Beatle John Lennon's re- marks about Christianity, pick- eted the stadium. Earlier, at a news conference, Lennon was asked by a reporter if the Vatican had made him feel better, had sort of got him off a hot spot? This was a ref- erence to a Il'Osservatore Ro- mano article saying Lennon had spoken of Christ without think- ing, "offhandedly and not im- iously." Lennon replied: "If it makes Dockers Walkout QUEBEC (CP) -- Some 150 freight handlers staged a walk- out at the port here Monday ac- cusing truckers of taking their work away from them. After walking off their jobs, the freight handlers blocked en- that truckers could not enter to pick up or unload goods. Armand Bourgeois, business N.S. May Buy Firm Control HALIFAX (CP)--The Chroni- cle-Herald says the Nova Sco- tia government is expected to complete negotiations today with the major American share- holders of Deuterium of Canada Ltd. to purchase the remaining shares in the company building a heavy water plant at Glace Bay, N.S. Deuterium had a contract with Atomic Energy of Canada Lid. to supply 200 tons of heavy wa- ter annually to the federal agency. The deadline for Deu- terium to submit a bid to sup- ply a further 200 tons annually jexpired midnight Monday. The Chronicle-Herald says the \increased cost for the expansion of the Glace Bay plant and the concommitant increasing finan- cial responsibility on the part of the province has been given as the major reason for the pro- vincial government's desire to increase its share in Deuterium. At the time the heavy water plant was first proposed, Indus- trial Estates Ltd., a provincial government corporation, guar- anteed $12,000,000 towards the capital construction costs of the plant. agent for the Brotherhood of Railway, Steamship Clerks, Freight handlers, express and Station Employees said the men| are protesting because the} Good Names To Remember When Buying or Selling To Centennial Plan |shot wounds Sunday night at his| 8° FOE brenohy eran violets |town of Sibiu last Thursday, | The boy, seven-year-old) MELBOURNE, Monty Heigeson of Del Bonita, Alta., was bitten three times by the animal and suffered two cracked ribs. He was in good condition in hospital. The bear ripped open the tent} in which the boy and his par- ents were sleeping and began to carry. him away. The boy's mother grabbed her son by the leg as the bear reared away from the tent. Foreman Charged PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- An assistant foreman of the U.S. Mint was accused Monday of | killing about 24 passengers and Construction of the centennial|000 project can start Sept. 1 Terrence V. Kelly, the cam- lia (Reuters)--Frederick Hass,| Hampton's brother, James, 64, died from burns: in hospital|/took out warrants against four Tuesday, the 30th victim of a| policemen Monday night, but of- fire at a Salvation Army hostel|ficials said the fourth officer Saturday night. }would not be arraigned until he crew members. An embassy _ spokesman reached by telephone said Ro- manian authorities so far have not published a report about the Aug. 11 crash. The embassy) janteed last night when city council approved a temporary} loan of $50,000 to the project's campaign committee. recreation complex was guar-|of this year. If the pledges are not in, this money will be available, coun- cil heard. Ald. Hayward Murdoch said this was probably as urgent a _ recovers from a_ bullet wound Rebels Raid Town) received in a scuffle at HAM: | oe informed about it because) The money was RANGOON (Reuters)--About) 'Three of the officers were ar-| a0 Austrian married couple was|with the understanding that it would be repaid from campaign 180 Communist Burmese rebels|raigned and bail was set eer victims. ne raided and over-ran the town of|§5 990 each. A preliminary hear-| "5 ar as we there funds when the campaign is advanced | matter as ever to come before council. "If this is delayed, it may be know necessary to recall tenders paign's finance chairman, told council everything '"'is looking bright and the campaign is go- ing very well". But some of the companies, he said, already have commit- ments this year and his com- mittee will have to wait until next year before it can receive donations. Mindon about 200 miles north- west of here Monday, the offi- cial Working People's Daily says. The rebels, who took $2,- 000 in cash from the treasury, lost three dead and two injured and killed three policemen, the selling faulty coins to coin col-| paper says. lectors. Normally such coins are destroyed and as a result any Corruption Charged! reaching collectors command high prices. Everett S. Shaw, 26, the assistant foreman, was charged specifically with em- bezziement of coins from the moint. Reds Thanked TOKYO (AP) -- North Viet Nam thanked the Soviet Union and China in dentical words Tuesday for their "whole- hearted support." It named the Russians first. The expressions of gratitude appeared in two of 28 slogans adopted for the 21st anniversary of the founding of the Democratic Republic od Viet SINGAPORE (Reuters)--Yu- suf Mudalam, Indonesia's for- mer minister of central bank affairs, has been charged with corruption and subversion, ra- dio Jakarta said Monday. Mu- dalam was accused by army strongman Gen. Suharto of hav- ing misused billions of rupiahs of "the Indonesian revolution fund," the radio said. He also was accused of having a secret cache of 1,000 rifles and 350,000 Jing was set for Friday. | | | | Danes Volunteer | COPENHAGEN (Reuters) -- |Sixteen Danes have volunteered for service with the Viet Cong in Viet Nam, the newspaper Ej- strabladet says. It publishes an application form which it says has been prepared by a group of left- wing organizations to set up a Danish volunteer force to fight U.S, troops in Viet Nam. The application form warns} that service would be for an in- definite period, without pay or compensation in case of death or injury, and that reprisals could be expected from Danish authorities. Volunteers also are being hg rounds of ammunition, the ra- dio added. Collision Kills Two cruited in Sweden, the newspa- per says. |TV Crew Arrives were about 24 dead and no sur- vivors,"' the spokesman said. The embassy spokesman said the Soviet-made [lyushin 14 of the Romanian national airlines TAROM was on a domestic flight from Cluj, in central Transylvania, o Bucharest. Transylvania, to Bucharest Algonquin Closing Too Hasty? Algonquin St. no longer exists but the former little unopened Street continues to haunt city council. Last night some aldermen ex- pressed the opinion that per- haps council had acted too hastily on closing thé street. completed. He told council his committee would like to start the project on Sept. 1 to ensure completion which would involve consider- Council was told the $50,000'able unnecessary expense on is needed so work on the $1,010,-'the city's part,' he said. tain jobs the handlers felt were theirs "by right." He said the freight handlers have also had customary work hours taken away from them. The strike by the freight han- dlers -- who load and unload trucks and railway cars at port warehouses -- has not affected movement of ships which are truckers have been doing cer-| REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker -- President Bill McFeeters -- Vice Pres. SCHOFIELD-AKER LTD. 723-2265 handled by, longshoremen. Now Is The Time To Order Your Winter Fuel Save PHONE On Premium Quality FUEL OIL 668-3341 DX FUEL OIL Serving Oshawa - Whitby - Ajax and District by the centennial year and also told council he had telephoned the Ontario Municipal Board, LONDON (AP) -- The Queen) "The bridge is one of the|would promptly deal with the got caught up Sunday in Brit-|showpieces of British engineer-|city's request for the $50,000. celebrate a royal visit to Eng-| Gloucester County council, offi-|chase the Glecoff property ad- |\land's west country, where she/ ea] host to the royal party, say \Jacent to the civic 'ium 50- : A ; when the campaign is com- the 'Queen and Prince Philip year-old builder, protested: pleted. | pay for their meal. "When finance is tight people to take advantage of the winter | who must also grant approval jain's economy drive. A contro-|ing," said a transport ministry A decision can be expected lis to open a new bridge. its share of $21,000 seems too| for $22 600. This money will also The slightly more than four should cut their cloth accord- A t it C t h R t work's program. us erl y a C. es oya y I. F. Markson, city 'treasurer, On Way To Bridge Openi n ay 0 rl ge pening of the advance, and the presi- dent assured him the board versy blew up over plans to/official, "It cost £8,000,000."" in three or four days, he said. spend about £25,000 ($75,000) to} put some members of the Council also agreed to pur- There have been suggestions) much. be - pe i i ee agg |that guests at a luncheon for; Coun. Percy Walker, a nial proje paig: 9 | -e involved in|; acre parcel will' provide the Then partion pre tnrsiver | ingly." auditorium with land stretching ithe row -- transport, economic} The council over-ruled Walker|south to the CPR railway Nam. The anniversary is Sept.| MAPLE, Ont, (CP) -- Eric) MONTREAL (CP).-- A six 2 |Hadwen, 7, and his son, Rich-|man television crew from Scot- ' jard, 10, were killed Monday |!and arrived Monday to start Appoints Swede when their truck was in colli-|shooting what they describe as sion with a train near this com-|'"'the most ambitious endeavour UNITED NATIONS (AP)--|munity 10 miles north of Tor-|by a film unit from Britain" to The United Nations announced| onto. tell the Canadian story. Monday Secretary - General U) Headed by director Don Cum-| Thant has named Swedish dip- by ing and writer James Gordon, lomat Herbert de Ribbing to -| Nurses May Strike (2 crew will make four half- to Cambodia and Thailand to| TORONTO (CP) -- About 30j/hour documentaries and other jimprovement on the street?" Comments were made that @fairs a nd the Gloucester! put one member, Tommy Har- "this is the fastest street clos-| County council. ris, 54, suggested those who "gol ing on record', "it should have} The transport ministry is foot- i . i, | been tabled', "there were ex-|ing most of the bill--allocating 6 iad -- eee va tenuating circumstances", and| $31,640 for a dais, stands and Prince Philip help pay for it. 'where are the records of road! crush barriers; $3,640 for first-| The Welsh office, host to the} € aid and lavatory facilities; | dignitaries on the Welsh side of Discussion arose after Ald.| $4,760 for a private lunch for) the river, said: John Brady told council the|1,600 guests; and $7,500 for! 'we provide a very modest traffic and public safety com-| flags, bunting, program and a!jyneh--just a buffet affair. I mittee wanted a petition -- to|/ commemorative stone, don't think the trenkury would tracks. DIXON'S F OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS seek 'ways and means to re-|public health nurses in Halton, |films during a seven - week,|have the street remain open --| | ihitnis Spa fe haargee ye : ios, solve outstanding issues" be-|Stormont, Dundas and Gi |coasAniomel tour. leatinuad: tram ite aden: on te en ates the Bade Frag ae CmPRUMEre aI garry counties are prepared to| One of the films, depicting the| hin cominittes. had itil A eine = : 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. tween those two Asian neigh-| He said -- 'Nuclear Submarine Inventor 723-4663 bors. A UN spokesman said|walk off their job Sept. 12 un-|Montreal world's fair, Expo 67,/unanimously recommended to Thant designated de Ribbing/less the counties agree to nego-|will be shown to more than council that the street remain for his new post in consultation | tiate a new contract. 4,000,000 British viewers. Jopen but council voted to close} | Letters of resignation giving) Mr. Cuming said the series |jt and give the street property Latin io es AOA ORLA i TARE IRN 0 Simm jone month's notice were re-|will deal with immigration,|free to abutting proper | cei nate i be t me HERE AND THERE | ceived Monday by the employ-|standards of living and great! ers, iB Seanery Own ers, NO ENDORSATION | Oshawa and _ District) real estate board were in-| formed that city council at) their meeting April 18, 1966 ap- proved a recommendation from the public works committee not The Ontario - Halton County|national achievements like the} |Health Unit, Milton, and United|development of the Si. Law-jnever have been referred to his Counties of Stormont, Dundas | rence Seaway, railways, high-} and Glengarry Health Unit,|ways and air routes. | Cornwall. Lloyd B. Sharpe, director of|by Scottish Television Ltd. |employment relations for i hens is owned by Canadian- born publisher Lord Thomson. oo Nurses Association WEATHER FORECAST to endorse a city of Windsor) | resolution with regards to a| minimum standards bylaw in| housing. Ald. Alex Shestowsky told council] the Windsor resolu-| tion didn't go far enough and) the city solicitor has suggested} _ the works committee explore it| further. $191,446 DEBENTURE Council last night authorized the borrowing of $191,446 on TORONTO (CP) -- Forecast; Wednesday. Winds light. Some Slight Cooling Ahead sis.!i"suic" seers | 3 After Storms, Heavy Rain 3 and there's nothing the/man said. 'He is not suffering The petition, therefore, should BREST, France (CP-AP) committee, he said seph Papp of Montreal, who| Ald. Brady added that when says he crossed the Atlantic in lo vo records of improvements to the|is in the psychiatric ward of the | Street existed he was informed Brest Nav 29- Hospital today none could be found. after telling his story to French FINAL MOVE authorities. If improvements had been| A hospital spokesman said made, then the street land| Papp, a native of Hungary, had could be sold rather than given|@ Paris-Brest railway ticket in H. J. Couch, city solicitor, "Aside from his story of the told council as far as he was|Sbmarine, he appears to be al- concerned the street is already|together normal," the spokes- from: any physical malady at all. Nevertheless, we're keeping him in the psychiatric ward." city can do now. thuch NUS, In French Psychiatric Ward and--is pilot and uranium technician in Hungary before coming to Can- 33 and was_a iets The team was sent to Canadaje tried to determine if any/a submarine he made himself,|ada in 1957. She said he had been dream- ing of building a submarine) since he was 15 and had spent his spare time working on the vessel. He worked for a stone masonry company in Montreal. Boldog said Papp left behind a film of the submarine. Shown by a Montreal television station Monday, it contained shots of the craft on land. Boldog said the crafi weighed four tons, was 28 feet long and he had been told it could do up to 300 miles an hour. PICTURE OSHAWA TIMES | RE-PRINTS Available At SERVICE 251 King St. E., Oshawe 8 x 10 -- 1.50 each 5x 7 -- 1.25 each 20% Discount on Orders of 5 or More Pictures debentures to pay part of the | issued by the weather office at cost of the construction and/5:30 a.m.: equipment of an addition to the | Synopsis: Severe weather | afternoon. Ridgeway senior public school| warnings issued Monday night | cloudy intervals and sea- and Grandview public school. | continue in light of possible re- development of squall line ac- Timagami, southern White |River, Cochrane: Clearing this Sunny with a few |sonable temperatures Wednes- day. Winds light. Spain Invites UN Inspection UNITED NATIONS (AP). -- Papp was found bobbing off} Brest harbor Friday in an in- flatable life raft, and insisted he} crossed the Atlantic in his own homemade submarine, which he} said sank on a Brittany beach. | REDUCE SPEED Oshawa suburban roads com- mission wil] be requested to give consideration to reducing limit on Harmony feet north of the Oshawa city limits to a speed of 40 mph, council decided. CINDERELLA PLAY The O.R.C. Drama Club will |tivity. Copious rainfalls are an-| Northern White River: Vari-| ticipated in all localities through | @ble cloudiness today and Wed- lsouthern Ontario. Warm nesday, Scattered showers late weather is predicted across the |tonight and Wednesday. Winds \lower lakes Wednesday al-|!ight. jthough it will be somewhat Forecast Temperatures |cooler tonight. Low tonight, high Wednesday | Lake St. Clair, Lake Huron, | Windsor ....++.+++. Lake Erie, Windsor, London: |St. Thomas .. Weather warning issued. Clear-| London ing this afternoon. Sunny with/Kitchener ... |lonial power. For the first time in United, Officials said no submarine| Nations history, the special/was found on any Brittany) committee on colonialism is beach. sending a mission to inspect a ' The Canadian embassy in} colony by invitation of the co-.Paris said Papp had lost his| passport and Canadian consular A seven-member subcommit-| officials would be in communi- tee will leave tonight for Ma-|cation with him concerning his drid to confer with authorities ;/Teturn home. | before visiting Spanish Equa-| The embassy said it had no) \torial Guinea in west Africa information indicating Papp} session or 30 days. Cash H. KEIT HOUSES BUY or RENT LARGE FIRM TRANSFERRING PERSONNEL FROM QUEBEC AND NORTHERN ONTARIO. Desire 3 | and 4 bedroom homes in this area; immediate pos- payment arranged. | Call 723-7463 H LTD. | The subcommittee includes|made the trip in a submarine. | present the play "Cinderella" |seasonable temperatures Wed-|Mount Forest ..... this evening. The children in|nesday. Winds northwest near| Wingham ....... the club have made all the/15. |Hamilton . props and their costumes for} Niagara, Lake Ontario, Geor-|St. Catharine: the production. This perform- gian Bay, Haliburton, Killaloe, |Toronto .......+ ance is a culmination of the|Toronto, Hamilton, Sudbur y,| Peterborough summer's classes in drama.|North Bay: Weather warning|Kingston .......... § The cast includes Christine | issued. Rain ending during the|Trenton ......... Clay -- Prince; Janice Milne--|afternoon, Risk of hail and lo-| Killaloe Cinderella; Diane McDonald--jcally damaging winds up to 50|Muskoka ... Marie the stepsister; Sharon|miles an hour briefly in a few|North Bay . . Magett -- Jovatte the second |isolated thunderstorms. Sunny | Sudbury ........... | stepsister; Sue Gow step-|with seasonable temperatures) Earlton ........... 5 mother; Christine - Riedler --|Wednesday. Winds becoming} Sault Ste. Marie ... 5 fairy godmother; Monica|northwest 15 this afternoon. |Kapuskasing . Tasek -- footman; Carla Mc-| Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie: |White River ... Ilveen, Mary Lou Kuttschrut-|Clearing this afternoon. Sunny|Moosonee .. ter -- Heralds. jwith a few cloudy intervals!Timmins ....... seh 75 |than 12,000 are Europeans. | |representatives of Chile, Den- RCMP ALERT SHIPS jmark, Mali, Poland, Sierra' In Montreal, Mrs. Papp said} |Leone, Syria and Tanzania. It;her husband left home after) jhas been instructed to investi-|telling her he planned to cross} gate conditions in the territory |to England or Scotland in the "with a view to speeding up the|submarine, She reported him | implementation" of the UN Gen-|missing to police Sunday and jeral Assembly's 1980 declaration|the RCMP issued a warning to |for the independence of colonial'ships in the Atlantic to watch} peoples. for the craft. At a recent meeting in Al- Nicholas Boldog, a_ painting} |giers, a Spanish delegate in-|contractor who said he has| | vited the committee to' check on| known Papp several years, said} conditions the craft had been anchored at Equatorial Guinea has a pop-|Sorel, Que., on the St. Law- | ulation of 235,000, of whom. less|rence River Reporting to the Director of Des secretarial, receptionist, shorthand, typist and experienced SALARY RANGE: 3,720.00 to $4,9 Comprehensive employee benefits. Apply in writing only. giving all pe morital status, age, etc., Mrs. Papp told reporters her before 5:00 p.m. CITY OF OSHAWA REQUIRES BRANCH STENOGRAPHER Public Works Department ign and Control, and performing and clerical duties of a varied nature for the Design and Control! Department Must be capable of taking responsibility and using initiative, accurote in dictaphone work, Several years experience in general office procedure necessary, 45,00 rtinent data, experience, education, August 26th, 1966 to: Personnel Officer City Hall Oshawa, Ontario The NU-WAY PHOTO | do you need to ma comfortable, more |i mer -- Air Conditioning or De-Humidi- fying to beat the heat by day, to sleep better at night? For the Winter -- a new Oil Furnace for cozier comfort and better heating -- a Humid sore throats and co needs anytime for b call in Lander-Stark. Their own staff of fully qualified techn your service. Phone 725-3581. Butlers 43 KING STREET 7253581 ke your home more veable? For the Sum- ifier to help prevent Ids? Whatever your etter home comfort, icians are always at ee, WEST, OSHAWA

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