Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Aug 1966, p. 3

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THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, Au, st 20, 1966 3 Judge Clears Se ee Texas Gulf vance of the news release and then profited when the stock rose in price. as news of the Texas Gulf ore find became NEW YORK (AP)--A federal judge Friday cleared Texas Gulf Sulphur Co. and 10 of its emplovees of using "inside" in- public. The government said the news "I don't know how I will ever | formation to profit from stock get over it," sne said. Sue anu Hunt On For Robbers After Farm Home Raid LEBRET, Sask. (CP) -- Ayjday as they ransacked a farm who lay with her head inside a search continued today for twojhome near this community 60|pillow case as she heard the men who held nine persons cap-|miles northeast of Regina. robbers searching her home, de- tive for more than an hour Fri-|. Mrs. Joseph Redmond, 72, | scribed her experience as '"'ter- and frichtening "' and_fright bd Bridge Drop Costs Board OTTAWA (CP) -- The Heron Road Bridge collapse Aug. 10 that killed eight men and in- iured at least 50 will cost the Ontario workmen's comp tien haard "at least $250.000 but probably much more," Chair- release downgraded reports about the size and grade of ore found as "without factual ba- sis." the complant added that she eenake wae Salsa "AnA Wiles sihlo * stn n Test tha nae % WaAMaACUUD, Vur wc Compo S man Bruce Legge told a press conference Friday. All widows already have re- ceived lump sum payments of Auto Makers - UAW Set her 74-year-old husband were captured as they returned about 10:30 a.m. from a shopping trip secretary and an engineer were found guilty. The inside information con- leading and was known to be so by several officers of the company, including Clayton. to Lebret, five miles south. Contract Re-Opening Talks =: sve mis'ui."" DETROIT (AP)--Auto indus-jabout production workers de-|came out carrying a gun. try representatives meet Mon- mands to be included in any pay| "My husband asked what he day with the United Auto Work- | raise. There are 700,000 produc-| wanted and told him if it was ers on a proposal that skilled |tion workers and 200,000 skilled|money .. . he could have it. workers be granted an imme-|tradesmen employed in the auto| 'Then he pushed my husband diate pay raise. pe a ; ; i . down 'on the ground." The UAW's contracts with the e union is asking for a!) The man ordered them into big three -- General Motors, vagy he yee Agree gee nliger house and made them sit Ford and Chrysler--don't ex-\1n2 workers have snnguieed oe chesterfield, said pire for another year. The union |Mrs. Redmond. they want $1. wants to reopen the agreements : bs ' to negotiate a wage increase. Production workers announced 'TIED US UP 7 : no goal. " ' F ; " The industry is expected to re- a He tied us up and put pillow) ican continent. ject the eeabell which comes| O° tradesmen say tool and|cases over our heads. He| The government charged in at a time when it is beginning die makers in auto plants get|yointed the gun at us and toldlits civil suit that Texas Gulf duction of 1967 models $3.97. The bureau of labor sta-\ys to do what he said." procuce ts tistics figures the average| yrs Redmond said she did Leaders of a movement to get |straight-time wage in the auto- Hot see the second man but 'un immediate pay raise for the| motive industry as a whole, in-| : ; ; n im » IN| could hear him moving about on} cerned an ore discovery near Timmins late in 1963. Judge Dudley B. Bonsal found that Texas Gulf secretary David M. Crawford and engineer Rich- ard H. Clayton violated the U.S. Securities Exchange Act and its rules pertaining to insider trad- ing. But Bonsal ruled that Texas Gulf did not violate the act in issuing an April 12, 1964, news release concerning what was said to be one of the biggest copper finds on the North Amer- $300 and are eligible for a $75 monthly widow's allowance and $40 monthly for each orphan. The board chairman also said that O. J. Gaffney Ltd., Strat- ford, main contractor on the bridge, which was under con- struction, has never been penal- ized by the board. The board, which administers a compulsory accident insu- rance scheme for employers, penalizes companies that have a bad safety record. Plant Sale CALL OR SEE DIXON'S OIL FURNACES SERViNG OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 MARTIAN - MOLAR MAN? Not a bad question. Ac- tually it's an Akron, Ohio, dentist experimenting with a B. F. Goodrich "space helmet" in his everyday skilled workers tried, mean-|cluding skilled workers, is $3.22 Confirmed NEW YORK (AP) -- Duter- 'ium Corp. of New York said | Friday it has agreed to sell its |Canadian affiliate, Deuterium lof Canada Ltd., with its heavy | water plant at Glace Bay, N.S., |to the province of Nova Scotia for a substantial amount of | cash. | The U.S. firm owned 47 per | cent of the Canadian company and three per cent was owned |by Jerome S. Spevack, presi-| |dent of both the American and} | Canadian firms. The remaining 50 per cent) was owned by Industrial Es- breath between himself and the infec- practice. Dr. Lee R. Schu- macher is the brain -- and face -- behind the helmet. He believes it can eliminate "cross contamination" of patients, reducing chances of passing tions to later patients. Machinists End Strike Against US. Airlines By NEIL GILBRIDE WASHINGTON (AP) -- Some planes of five major U.S. air- lines began flying early today after machinists' ended a six- week-long strike that profoundly shook the Johnson administra- tion's economic policy and gave Congress its biggest political scare in years. "The strike is now over,"' said| president P. L. (Roy) Siemiller| of the International Association | of Machinists (AFL-CIO) after} militant union members voted| 17,727 to 8,235 to accept a lucra-| tive new contract and end the/ worst airlines walkout in U.S./ history. The five airlines are Eastern, United, Northwest, National and Trans World. The contract approval send-| ing 35,400 strikers back to work|ing a strike vote among West- permits Congress to drop politi-|ern Electric Company telephone tates Ltd., a Nova Scotia Crown | corporation, so the sale will in effect make Nova Scotia the| sole owner. | 4 Canadian Press story from| Halifax Thursday reported er- roneously that Deuterium Corp. was the company bought by Nova Scotia. Quebec Strike wage increases to 3.2 per cent|(Wayne) Morse (Dem. Ore.) a year and sets a precedent for|and his associates had just kept other unions to cite in pressing | quiet on the Senate floor and| for fatter paycheques. let collective bargaining work,"| The airlines settlement is esti-|Siemiller said in announcing mated to average slightly more| ratification. End Reached than six per cent annually. This remark touched on a GET 15 PER CENT ' major question in the strike---| QUEBEC (CP) Maurice | The new contract gives 15 per/should Congress and the White |Bellemare, the provincial labor'| cent in wage increases during| House keep hands off such ma-| minister, announced early today a pees! period = wien jor labor-management clashes? |that agreement in principle has xp Wr atk Caute tors an toa 1ei|,,20% aitlines appeared for a) seet ee agtiald. seike: by the final year of the agreement | "me to be walling to see 0 ab f the National in 1968. This means' top-rated whether Congress would force|3,000 members 0} the Nationa' nA ' . . P the strikers back to work pend-| Federation of Textile Workers rece edged poses <= oa ing further negotiations or com-|(CNTU) at the four plants of aid at least $4.08 an hour pulsory arbitration. jthe Dominion Textile Co. Ltd. ee ace ves But as Congress, facing gen-| 4 The minister did not disclose shy her ; { etails of the agreement, still In an early indication of the eral elections just three months| b tified by the texti effect of the hefty contract, the|@way, showed increasing signs| je telhied "by. tne tesele Communications Workers of|of delay and the multi-million-| Workers. America (AFL-CIO) said in tak-|dollar airlines losses mounted,| Mr. Bellemare said the re- the settlement was hammered|spective sides in the dispute, out in a final 20-hour negotia-|which closed plants at Sher- tion session at the labor depart-|brooke, Magog, Montmorency while, to figure out what to do| hourly. SEARCHER FOR "TURNED-ON STRIKES PAY DIRT IN CITY TORONTO (CP) -- Rosalyn L. Switzen, a New York school teacher - grandmother who believes every child has the potential to become a ge- nius, visited Toronto this week looking for "'turned-on" peo- ple. She found some, notably Prof. Marshall McLuhan of the University of Toronto, the man sometimes referred to as the prophet of the new elec- tronic age. Said Rosalyn after hours with Dr. McLuhan: "There is a man of history. I simply cannot understand why more Canadians don't ap- preciate what a man of genius they have in their midst." Mrs. Switzen, 52, is presi- dent of the National Commu- nication Laboratories in New York City. A teacher for 24 years, she has taken a leave of absence to find out how many turned-on people will listen to her campaign against kainophobia . . . the fear of change. By beirg turned on, Mrs. Switzen means ridding oneself of outdated ways of approach- ing problems and refusing to reject new ideas simply be- cause they are new. "All children want to learn," she said in an inter- view. "'The trouble is that we stake out imaginary cages for two them -- cultural and social-- and they fit into them. "Birds are an excellent ex- ample. Few people know that wild birds have boundaries outside of which they will not stray, even if it means starv- ing or going mateless. They are like bird cages in the air. "It's the same with humans. We have automatic censors inside ourselves that sieve out information that disturbs or challenges. Turned-off people stay inside their own cages, rejecting ideas or information that disturbs them." Mrs. Switzen and her group dynamics researchers say they have isolated 75 defence mechanisms by which people unconsciously reject informa- | tion. "I find that as a general average only one out of four executives are turned on. The average for reporters is one | out of 20. With teachers, it's only one out of 500." Change is overtaking almost every area of life, but it is not being recognized, partic- ularly in the schools, she said. "The best-kept secret in the U.S. is that a child doesn't have to go to school for the first three years to learn to read. His 10-year-old. brother could do a better job of teach- ing him with automated ma- terial already available." One Killed in |the second floor. | The pair, believed to have} |held a woman clerk and 20 cus- | \tomers at gunpoint Wednesday | before stealing $165 from a store at Oaksbela, Sask., 65) miles northwest of Lebret, es-| caped with $150 in cash, food, | |credit cards, a transistor radio, | \a rifle and a shotgun. They left} in a half-ton truck stolen from the Redmond home. | Mrs. Redmond described the | capture of Mike Bourassa, his wife and five children after the family arrived from their nearby farm to draw water from the Redmonds' well. "They locked the children in| \a little room and then took Mike | DRUG STORES OPEN THIS SUNDAY 12:00 A.M. to 6:00,-P.M. EASTVIEW PHARMACY 573 KING STREET EAST PHONE 725-3594 MEDICAL PHARMACY 300 KING STREET WEST PHONE 728-6277 North Simcoe Pharmacy Ltd. 909 SIMCOE ST. NORTH PHONE 723-3418 and Mrs. Bourassa upstairs'| where they were tied up in dif- ferent rooms," she said. | "Mr, Bourassa got loose soon | jafter they left and cut the rest) jof us loose," said Mrs. Red- jmond, OSHAWA TIMES PICTURE RE-PRINTS Available At NU-WAY PHOTO SERVICE 251 King St. E., Oshawa 8 x 10 -- 1.50 each 5 x 7 -- 1.25 each 20% Discount on Orders of 5 or More Pictures SERVICE STATIONS OPEN THIS SUNDAY 7:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. BISSONETTE'S SHELL STATION 381 KING STREET WEST COOPER'S TEXACO STATION 410 RITSON ROAD NORTH SPUR OIL STATION 78 BOND STREET WEST ROBINSON'S B.P. STATION 574 RITSON ROAD SOUTH cally explosive legislation that|installers that it was shooting} would have ordered strikers|for a similar agreement de- back to their jobs for the first/signed to shatter the adminis- cottating 'non-stop. time in U.S. history. Organized|tration's anti - inflation wage|--the first was an abortive Boge d aid labor had lined up solidly in op-| guidelines. |White House settlement an-| The negotiators were sched- PETERBOROUGH (CP) - position to the legislation. "The good news I have for|nounced by President Johnson|uled to meet again at 11 a.m, | Violet Moruss of Toronto was But it shatters White House|you tonight could have been|that ended in a crushing rejec-|today to review a draft of the|killed Friday and two men were guidelines designed to limit yours a month ago if Senator tion vote July 31. collective agreement and to set|injured in a two-car crash at Court Restrains Touring Yugoslavs Show ment early Tuesday. {and Drummondville, Que., came It was-the second agreement|to terms after 22 hours of ne-| | DURNO'S SUPERTEST 574 KING STREET EAST BILENDUKE'S ESSO STATION 1004 SIMCOE STREET SOUTH BILL'S WHITE ROSE 352 WILSON ROAD SOUTH Two-Car Crash | The 4 C's of Saving CONFIDENCE ! CONVENIENCE ! COMFORT! be offered for ratification. jnorth of here. oe : The lenethy and violence -- Injured were William Rich- wiarkat dis mite: ba April. 1 ardson of Toronto and Charles harke® dsp gan April }.\Godsell, 21, of Niagara Falls, Negotiations were carried on in an irregular pattern. Workers before the walkout earned an Irate Farmer -- COBURG, Ont. (CP) -- John Alyea, the 69-year-old Murray Township farmer who has guarded his land with a shotgun since last spring to prevent ex- propriation, had a restraining order issued against him Fri- day in county court. County Court Judge J. C. M Curelly also issued a Sheriff's! Warrant to allow Trenton Pub! lic Utilities Commission con- struction crews to go on Alyea's land. Twelve of Alyea's 100 acres were officially expropriated in July by the commission. A commission spokesman said the land was needed to complete a 90,000,000 gallon water reser- voir. Mr. Alyea said the court's ac- tion was disappointing but said Interest In Mutual Trade By FRITS ROOS {sian collective farm, but appar-| E ___jently in line with Yugoslav re-| OTTAWA (CP) -- Canadians} vision of Marxism, the people| who think their country has @|who run it play a bigger role| monopoly on big farming, bet-/than the state. The Canadian| ter have a talk with four Yu-|asriculture department aes goslavs, managers of a 55,000-| cribes the farm as a "co-oper: acre spread near the Hungarian ative enterprise.' 2 pe border, who are visiting the cap-| eds ital as part of a 12-day busi-| SHARE PROFITS ness trip to Canada. | Last year, Mr. Spika said in| ' average of $1.79 an hour. | BUSINESS MEN'S LISTON WINS GOTEBORG, Sweden (AP |Former world champion Sonny} Liston knocked out Amos John- son of Medina, Ohio,. Friday ithe third round of a scheduled 10-round boxing match. felled Johnson with a right up-} percut after two knockdowns the second round. be 95¢ -- 1.35 Good Food DOWNTOWN LOCATION FULLY LICENSED PARKING REAR OF HOTEL HOTEL LANCASTER 27 KING ST. W in He in| CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST CONFIDENCE -- knowing that you are receiving the best rate of interest -- paid more often. CONVENIENCE -- longer saving hours | daily and all day Saturday, | GOMFORT -- dealing with: friendly | people -- with a community Trust Com- pany. Heading the group is Ivan,an interview, "we had a: nine- Spika, general director of the|per-cent profit of about $5,000,- | Industrijsko Poljoprivedni Kom-|900--$3,000,000 was divided binat, a compuierized agro-in-; aiioug oui workers, part af the) dustrial state enterprise that|balance was plowed back and raises farm products, treats|the remainder went to the them and sells them to con-/State." sumers at home and abroad. The farm was toured in May Converted in Canadian dol- by federal Agriculture Minister| ' Paeany . |Greene, the first Canadian of} lars, the Kombinat's annual in-| capinet rank to visit Yugo-/ CITY O F OSHAWA TRAFFIC CLERK No. 2 SALARY RANGE--$4,348.00 to $4,943.00 (361% hour week) To set up and maintain street inventory records, process and record results and Traffic studies, assist in obtaining and maintaining Traffic data, pavement width, condition of road surface, structures, street lighting facilities, traffic control devices, accident records, by-laws | SAVE WITH... | | /A) Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation 19 Simcoe St, N. Oshawa, 723-5221 RUSSELL'S TEXACO 461 PARK ROAD SOUTH BILL'S B.A. SERVICE 284 SIMCOE ST.S. ai mi he wasn't giving up his fight: "T will not give up any part of my farm. The PUC is yellow and needed a sheriff before Women Teachers Deplore School Babysitting Chores TORONTO (CP)--The Feder- address to the feder- vec Be et ne ation, Margaret Kirkham, a unk a ee e s ca aakine schoolteacher from Nakina, that playground supervision by,OMt., said she would like to see teachers be discontinued |the offspring of Indian mothers The teachers plan to send|and white fathers get some fi- their resolution to their parent)|nancial help body the Ontario Tee Federation for approval NOT RECOGNIZED Delegates to the 25,000 mem-| Mrs. Kirkham said Indi ber federation said the time|Tecognized by the federal gov- spent in supervising students|etmment received enough finan- could be better spent in prepar-|cial aid 'but what about the In an a Communist west of the Iron Curtain. The occasion of Mr. Greene's visit was Canada's first entry at jan international agricultural fair in Yugoslavia--22 Canadian Holstein - Friesian purebreds. The Kombinat bought the whole lot, which won the fair's jhighest honor, a gold medal. Mr. Greene responded the happy affair by inviting its managers for a return trip to Canada. Mr. Spika declined to say weather he was in Canada to buy something. "We are inter- ested in mutual trade," was all he volunteered. | On Wednesday the Yugoslavs | start a tour of Ontario with a visit to Massey - Ferguson op- erations in Toronto. The re- maining Ontario itinerary be- jfore returning home Aug. 29, calls for visits to Maple, Schom- berg, Hamilton, Jerseyville, come totals some $55,000,000, '|slavia, country flowing in through its 3,400 dairy cows, 8,000 other live- stock, large acreage of sugar coming on my land. I'll be cut-|beets and 12 plants such as a ting grass in my orchard with|dairy, sugar and candy fac- a sickle, but my shotgun will be|tories and a cannery handy. They haven't won yet."! It all has the sound of a Rus- to to 4NS\ Brantford, Kitchener, Chatham, | | Merlin, Ridgetown, London and | Niagara Falls. pertaining to traffic and amendments to by-laws, A Full High School, Required to have 1966 Chauffeur's Licence in good | | standing Apply in writing only giving full personal data, education, etc, 5:00 p.m. August 26th, 1966, | PERSONNEL OFFICER, City Hall, | OSHAWA Ontario. by 23 King St. W. Bowmanville, 623-2527 | HOUSES BUY or RENT LARGE FIRM TRANSFERRING PERSONNEL FROM QUEBEC AND NORTHERN ONTARIO. Desire 3 and 4 bedroom homes in this area; immediate pos- session or 30 days. Cash payment arranged. 723-7463 . H. KEITH LTD. | ATTENTION FARMERS! University Courses Offered in Oshawa Again this year, Queen's University is offering credit courses for the residents of Oshawa and area. Lectures will be held every two weeks. COMMERCE Nips of accounting ommencing: October 1, 9:30 a.m. An introduction to the study of animal and human behaviour. Commencing: September 30, 7:30 p.m. Psychology 012 Restoration and 18th Century literature. ENGLISH 024 Commencing: September 30, 7:30 p.m. Mannerium, The Rococo and Pre-Romantic Art. ART 660 Roque, Students registering for the first time in a degree program must meet the regular university entrance requirements, al- The Doorway To A Man"s World Will Be CLOSED August 22 to August 3!st FOR RENOVATIONS Re-open Thursday, Sept. Ist For Service During Closing PHONE 728-7974 ing lessons. They said the super- vision could be done by safety} patrol employees, park attend- ants and '"'people who are not wasting other talents." Some teachers said they feel} ones who are not helped--and are not recognized as. Indians by the federal government? She said she knew of a "'hy- peractive Scot" in her commu- nity near Port Arthur who fa- Good Names To Remember "When Buying or Selling REAL ESTATE WHY PAY MORE? SAVE . PREMIUM QUALITY though these do not apply to persons writing only to audit a course. 100.00 for each credit course. 25.00 for each course audited. FEES: ------ they are being exploited as un-|thered 127 daughters and sons paid babysitters in supervising|by his 25 Indian wifes. She said lunch hours, selling tickets and|these children would receive no carrying out other duties that | aid unless recognized by the limited their teaching time |government as Indian The federation also asked that| In other the Ontario Teachers' Federa-|tion Friday recommended pay tion allow a teacher faced with|increases for themselves and. in- disciplinary action to bring le-|dicated their approval of 60-per- gal counsel on her behalf to aicent raises given their federa- board of inquiry. tion executive earlier this year. moves, the associa- Reg. Aker -- President Bill McFeeters --- Vice Pres. SCHOFIELD-AKER LTD. 723-2265 Gasoline - Diesel and Motor Oils Farm Tanks And Pumps Available Out of Oshawa, Whitby and District CALL COLLECT DX 0 : L 668-3341 | Registrations must be received before September ra All enquiries should be directed to: The Department of Extension /QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY KINGSTON ONTARIO PA SH ee

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