Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Sep 1966, p. 3

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| t | ) U f ' TODAY MRS. IVAN usr, Sci rnment's s' pel medicare for one Six were asked this question ¢ a man-on-the- street survey. They said: Mrs. J. D. Elliot, 498 Simcoe N.: "Yes, I'm in favor of it because I feel the Liberals are aware - the tight money situation and by putting it through would just aggrevate the situation. Ss TOPIC McDONALD JOHN DERKACH They have to do something and by cancelling this for another year, have at least started.' John Hunt, 256 College Ave.: "T personally don't think that the Liberals know what they are doing. It strikes me as rather odd that they would promise medicare and after such a big build up, just -- it." John Derkach, 859 Ritson S.: "No I'm not in favor. They should get it started as soon Medicar icare Delay JON HUNT as possible. It has to be dose sooner or later." Mrs. Ivan McDonald, 67 Creto: 'I think that it is awful. I don't under- stand it fully, but I don't think they should have cancelled it. Medicare is needed quite badly by a lot of people and this was their opportunity to get it, now they can't," Nora McQuoid, 762 Lakeview: "Yes, I think that it should be cancelled for one year. It will give Ontario wRs, '@ .D. SLLIOTT GEORGE MARTIN and the other provinces a chance to prepare for it. Some of the provinces, like Sas- katchewan, are ready, but not Shippers MONTREAL (CP)--The fed- eral commission investigating the operation of the Montreal docks was told Friday that union men run the waterfront. Paul Renaud, counsel for the|: Shipping Federation of Can- ada, said he could produce a dossier to back up his state- ment. The commission, headed by!, Laurent Picard, was established]; following negotiations in which the Internationa! WLongshore- men's Association won a 30-per- cent wage increase over a two- year contract. Ontario and others." George Martin, 731 Oshawa Bivd. N,: "I'm certainly not in favor. This was one of their plat- forms during the last election campaign, They promised the public that they would give them medicare. Now they are not going to come across." UN's Strained Budget May Be Eased By Reds By WILLIAM N. OATS UNTIED NATIONS (AP) -- Russia and Hungary are ex- pected to make voluntary con- tributions soon to ease the United Nations peacekeeping deficit, UN informants say. They anticipated the contri- butions would be forthcoming in the next week or two, to fulfil vague, general commitments made over a year ago. The UN Judge Orders Protection For Negro Schoolchildren * GRENADA, Miss. (AP) -- A federal judge has made per- manent his order that Grenada officials protect Negro children from "savage and senseless" attack by white men. Judge Claude Clayton, issued his order Friday night in Ox- ford, 45 miles to the north. He said the violence Monday and Tuesday was "'the shame of all who occupy leadership, both of- ficials and civic, in the county and the city of Grenada." He referred to attacks on Negro children outside newly desegregated schools by white men swinging axe handles and chains. The ruling came after two days of testimony on the vio- Grenada officials would be exposed to contempt of court action by failure to obey the in- junction. The possible conse- quences were emphasized when Judge Clayton sentenced Gren- ada Constable Grady Carroll to four months in prison for con- tempt Carroll had refused to accept a federal court subpoena and punched a lawyer who tried to serve it on him, Meanwhile, civil rights lead- ers have scheduled four day- time protest marches in this north Mississippi city of 8,000. Hosea Williams, a top lieu- tenant to Dr. Martin Luther King in the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said the ience. in many instances, police {drive now centres on adequate merely watched the attacks, witnesses said. housing, a equal justice. "living wage," and {second term as secretary-gen- General Assembly session opens Tuesday. Eastern European sources expressed belief the contribu- tions would be made before next weekend by Hungarian Foreign Minister Janos Peter and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. Some Eastern Europeans said the purpose was to encourage U Thant of Burma to accept a eral and to spotlight the United States as the main barrier to his doing that. Thant gave notice Sept. 1 that he had decided against a sec- ond term. His current term ex- pires Nov. %. He cited such problems as a UN deficit, poor prospects for future UN peace- New Ruling Means Jail NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) A Niagara Falls, Ont. man was convicted of break and entry with intent Friday on the basis of a footprint found near an overturned safe, The magistrate who make the ruling said he believes it is unprecedented in Canada, Frederick Stevens, 21, was sentenced to 25 months in pen- itentiary after Donald Harris, sergeant of detectives, said 10 points in the footprint sequence were matched on Steven's foot. "The characteristics between the scene-of-crime print and Stevens leaves no doubt in my mind that they are the same," Sgt. Harris told Magistrate A. D. Barron, Magistrate Barron invited de- fence counsel Ronald Riou to appeal his decision to a higher will be upheld. keeping activities, lack of uni- versality in UN membership and the threat of a major war over Viet Nam as influencing his decision. REFUSED TO PAY created the financial deficit by refusing to pay disputed UN General Assembly assessments for peacekeeping purposes. They differ with the majority aver how te sutharize new sc. on oP erations in iiai fieid. d for preventing the China Alleges U.5. Air Atiacks United Nations from becoming ® universal organization bv its | opposition to seating of Com- | munist China. U.S. policy in The Soviet bloc and France | | __ The United States has been WAITRESS F BITE ON BITER VANCOUVER (CP) Waitress Paulette Russell Fri- day put the bite on a B.C. Lions football player whom she claims bit her on the posterior. The 24-year-old Vancouver woman launched Supreme Court action against line- backer Rudy Reschke seeking unspecified damages. The college student claims Reschke bit her while she was waiting on a group of football players at a local beer parlor where she works a part-time waitress. The writ, filed in B,C, Su- preme Court by lawyer Charles A. Drozdzik, claims 'general and special damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff as a result of the deliberate and malicious actions of the defendant, re- sulting in injuries to the right lower dorsal region of the plaintiff, causing her emo- tional upset and embarrass- ment. . Miss Russell said earlier this week that Keschke bit her after a number of foot- ball players bet a total of $50 that he wouldn't do it. Reschke denied he bit the court to determine whether it| woman. 'Labor Runs Docks' Claim The shipping federation said the 30 - ner - cent raise was granted ai the union agreed to accept a reduction in the size of its work gangs. However, the union denies that the agreement was con- = on any such understand- ng _ The Pomromoenge ed 8 findings on erie ret Peer tties ing. Norman Wolfe, managing di- rector of the Wolfe Stevedore Co,, spent the whole day on the witness stand pleading for the right of management to decide how many men should perform a certain - job. He called for a reduction in the mandatory work gang size for grain ship loading which was set down by arbitration in 1953, Mr. Wolfe said nine men can adequately 'perform the job now being done by 12. CARS RESCUED SAILORS EASTBOURNE, England (CP)--Passing motorists helped refuel a cabin cruiser drifting out of fuel off the Kent coast. The drivers were aboard a car ferry bound for France and si- phoned off enough gas to get the cruiser back to port. REGINA (CP) -- Most Rev, Michael Ramsey, Archbishop of Canterbury, says affluence is a great danger to a church. "An affluent church ought to examine its conscience because the church should set an exam- ple of simplicity of living and should be in the forefront of spending its resources on other peopie," ne said. Dr. Ramsey, spiritual leader of 44,000,000 Anglicans, made the comment during a wide- ranging press conference Fri- day before leaving for Saska- toon to continue his cross-Can- ada tour. On the age of leisure, he said: "The Christian doctrine is that every man should do an honest day's work and receive a day's honest pay. The ideal obviously stands but there is more diffi- culty in applying it in a time when some jobs are dull and mechanical and the hours are so short. . . . The church must support cultural advances." CHUVALO SIGNS MONTREAL (CP) -- George Chuvalo, Canadian heavyweight champion, has signed with Montreal promoter Johnny Rou- geau for a 10-round bout against Mel Thurnbow of Paterson, |N.J., here Tuesday, Aug. 16. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Soturdey, nota. 3 Archbishop Warns Against Church Affluence Danger |=" On the 'relationship between vo and state TT archbishop sa "The Christian church has to affirm certain main principles in relation to the life of the community, For instance, . has to affirm that apartheid is ut- terly periene ka ig ig oe is not not 'through 'leaders ; making pronouncements, but Christians throwing themselves into public life . . . though statements by leaders 'inevitably have to be made." ATTENTION FARMERS ! WHY PAY MORE? SAVE ON... Gasoline - Diesel and Motor Oils Farm Tanks And poms. 3 iene Out of Oshawa, Whitby ond a. 'OIL | CALL COLLECT 668-3341 pycaaridancr wey: ron fibre (from the household cleanser borax) would be ee ee loaded CALL OR SEE DIXON'S on FURNACES "SERVING | oA. OVER q 313 ytd | 723-4663 PREMIUM QUALITY THE CANADIAN CLUB ONTARIO COUNTY oe oon OPENING -- ae. ka MEETING THURSDAY, SEPT. 22, 1966 | HOTEL GENOSHA, OSHAWA Start now--call your travel agent. Let him begin your Barbados Bon- anza on a BWIA Sunjet to the brilliant be aches and in-bond shops and deep-sea fishing and friendly bars and cricket matches and swinging nights. Strike up conversations with the warm- ECARREBADDON BONANZA begins with BWIA hobbies -- in white helmets. Watch the flying fish fleet come in--then dine on their | Viet Nam also has been criti- |cized by Thant, who deplored \' 'relying on force and military Near North Viet Nam Border TOKYO (Reuters) -- The people would sweep away all "American gangsters" if they intruded into Chinese territory, the Chinese Communist party newspaper People's Daily said tod: The newspaper's comment came in an editorial on two al- leged American air attacks on Chinese territory Sept. 5 and 9. China announced Friday that its fighter planes fought an air Take Final Training REGINA (CP) -- The last class of recruits to take eques- trian training graduated Fri- day. from the RCMP college. Thirty - two members of Class A-66-67 and their horses were inspected and then re- tired to the stables. Thirty of the horses will be sold at public auction today while the remainder will be shipped east for possible use in the RCMP musical ride. Commissioner George 5B. McClellan announced last May that equestrian training would be replaced by more academic studies and physical training. The horse has been an in- tegral part of the RCMP since the inception of its predeces- sor, the Northwest Mounted Police, in 1873. In early years the horse was the only means of police transportation besides foot- slogging. But with the coming of the auto, the horse started to take a back seat until in recent years the animal was used only in RCMP ceremon- ies. Equestrian training was considered invaluable for de- veloping courage and self- control among police recruits who spent 105 hours learning to ride and handle the mounts during the six-month college course. Now they're more concerned with learning how to handle mounts with internal combustion engines. The Regina stable will re- main open for a few years. It will be used for. breaking new horses for the musical ride. FEEDS THE FAMILY fishy, but the trawler Cape Blomidon really did catch the big one when on the Bariks re- cently. After being dressed for market, pounds, enough for' more than 100 guests. battle with U.S. jet bombers during the Sept. 9 raid over the Kwangsi Chung autonomous re-) gion close to North Viet Nam. | The New China news agency reported that one U.S. F-105 Thunderchief was damaged. Three Chinese villagers' were wounded and an ox killed, it said. The People's Daily editorial) said the two air attacks fol- lowed a U.S. raid on a small Chinese freighter in Tonkin Bay Aug. 29 and were important war provocations that made 700,000,000 Chinese indignant. | In Saigon Sept. 10, a U.S. spokesman said three North Vietnamese MiG-21 supersonic jet fighters fired on two U.S. Thunderchiefs 30 miles south of the cod weighed 65) means in a deceptive pursuit of peace.' A UN committee has esti- mated the peacekeeping deficit at between $32,000,000 and $53,- 000,000. How much the Russians and Hungarians will contribute is not Known. The 19th General Assembly in 1964-65 was deadlocked over the financial issue because the United States threatened to up- hold a '"'no vote" article in the UN charter which would deny. a vote to any member two The United States dropped that threat last year after all members agreed to make vol- untary contributions to remove the deficit. But most of the members, including the Soviet the Chinese border the day be- | fore. Union, France and the United States, have yet to do so. insurance After all, it's the largest in Canada. Chances are the best kind of insuran ment that works well fo 73 KING EAST OSHAWA, ONT. uick! Do you know the name of your company? o Don't be surprised if you find it's the "Royal", general insurance group you didn't know that! You see, the Royal does not have salesmen. It deals through independent agents, like us. We are neighbours to you; we're impartial--- ce men to know your needs. It's an arrange- r you. Bob Stroud. LIMITED ~_ | INSURANCES OF ALL CLASSES HALIFAX (CP) -- It sounds | OFFICE 723-5251 RESIDEN: 723.- 3318 The Club will begin its regular winter series with a group of outstanding speakers, and arrangements have been completed for the meetings as follows: Thursday -- September 22nd MR. ARTHUR E. HARNETT Mr. Harnett, Ottawa Parliamentary correspondent for CFRB Toronto and CJAD Montreal, has a long association with radio and TV, He has hod numerous assignments outside of Canada; having attended for the third time the NATO Ministerial Con- ference in Brussels, the 1964, 1965 and !966 Conference of Commonwealth Prime Ministers in London, and accompanied Prime Minister Pearson to the United States for meetings with President Johnson at Washington, Camp David and Campobello. In late 1965 Mr. Harnett visited Africa and spent a short time in Rhodesia, His topic will be 'Rhodesia and the Common- wealth." Thursday -- October 27th MR. GEO. G. VINCENT, B.A., LECTURER ON SOUTH AMERICA During his college days he served on exploratory surveys. In Northern B.C. Following some years of teaching. free-lonce writing and public relations work, he joined the British Army in 1940 and attained the rank of Captain. In 1942 he became the Head of Canadian Section, British Ministry of Information, and just before "'D" Day, Head of the Empire Press Section of that Ministry and Joint Secretary of Standing Joint Committee, Empire Press Union and Ministry of Information, Following several other high positions in Commonwealth Relations and Information Offices in the United Kingdom and Canada, and industrial public relations in Canada, Mr. Vincent returned to travel and writing and has done considerable writing, lecturing and television and radio appeorances. His topic will be "South America -- @ Continent of Contrasts', These are two of the seven speakers you will hear in the winter series. The meeting on September 22nd is open to anyone who wishes to attend. Admission to subsequent meetings will be by membership card. The annual dues are $5.00 per person or $7.50 per couple and may be mailed to the treasurer Mr. James Mc- Cansh, Manager, The Bank of Montreal, Oshawa, Ontario, or paid when attending a meeting, Dinner will be served at 6:30 p.m. followed by the speaker's address at 7:30 p.m. Those unable to attend the dinner, may come as many members do, to hear the speaker at 7:30 p.m. (Dinner Tickets $2.00). The prime purpose of the Canadian Club when the first one was formed in 1892 was, and still is, to help us become better informed Canadians and stimulate the Canadian spirit, We might enlarge on this by saying that the purposes are to foster throughout Canada an interest in public affairs ond ts sltivete attachment Coenadia and to cultivate an attachment to Canadian insti- tutions. Membership is open to any interested citi- zen. BRITISH WEST INDIAN AIRWAYS woolens, Caribbean handicrafts-- and Barbados rum. BWIA will whisk you down on a quiet 727 Sunjet. While you fly, you'll dine sumptuously. And be tended by Caribbean stewardesses who combine British thoroughness with West Indian grace. For informa- tion and reservations, contact your travel agent, or any BOAC office. catch, a delicate, succulent fish that is one of the Carib- bean's -great. dishes.. Go swimming, sailing, water skiing. Stroll on the colorful docks -- observe the harbor police dressed in of Nelson's navy. Snap up marvelous buys clothing, antiques, British the uniform in tailored "Four Seasons Travel take the Worry Out of Travelling" FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL 57 KING STREET EAST CALL 728-6201 "Servicing Oshawa - Whitby - Bowmanville Areas" | MEADOWS TRAVEL SERVICE |25 KING STREET EAST, OSHAWA TELEPHONE 723-9441

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