Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Nov 1966, p. 2

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i ug OSHAWA TIMES, Tussdey, November 22, 1966 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE 'United Church Backs Divorce Law Change ' ' special Commons - Senate Pe 'committee on divorce, the 'church expressed "deep dissat- 4sfaction" with present Cana- divorce laws in which sai 8 Pec 'Some homes in our socle are a living hell for a husband, wife and children," said the brief. « "If the granting of @ divorce relieve the situation and d to a better arrangement all concerned, .we believe that the Christian church should fot oppose but rather support such action." «However, the brief said that ail possible means of concilia- flon--advice from ministers, so- ¢eial workers, marriage counsel- brs, medical doctors, lawyers the court--should be com- ory to help preserve mar- ge and the family before di- vorce is granted. = The brief, red by a five- man grew ohar a apsee was approved by the "general council at th Jury Urges Charge "DEEP RIVER, Ont. (CP)--A eoroner's jury recommended Bender night that Custodis Ca- chimney of a heating plant éwned by Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. Mailbag Check OTTAWA (CP) -- OTTAWA -~ The United Mle sal tone c marriage ay" JOHN PICKERSGILL + «+ + orders probe Inquiry Promised OTTAWA (CP)---A full inves- tigation has been ordered into a level crossing accident at Port Hope, Ont., Saturday night that killed five persons, Trans- port Minister Pickersgill told the Commons Monday. Reply- ing to Stanley Knowles (NDP innipeg North Centre), he said he had asked the board of transport commissioners to in- vestigate the car-train collision " report as quickly as pos- le. «+ + Won't meet press Meeting Postponed JAKARTA Indonesia (Reut- ers)--A meeting between i. Post| dent Sukarno and the chief edi- tors of Jakarta's newspapers scheduled for Tuesday was postponed indefinitely, No rea- son was given for the postpone- ment of the mee! to have been held at the pre t's pal- ace. been {mplica -. |investigation > \rest Pennell Reports -- Bolicito ee tMAnncll ssid Monday that led to the ar- of a mines department em- s| ployee Saturday. In a brief report on the arrest to the Commons, Mr. Pennell said the RCMP investigation ')\has not implicated any other ent employee and no charges are expected. Bower Edward Featherstone, a 27-year-old printing crafts- man in the federal mapping branch, was arrested Saturday. He appeared in magistrate's Cour here Monday ana Was 7e- manded for a week on two Yugoslav News BELGRADE (AP)-~Peking's Red Guards have split into op- posing groups struggling to con- trol the Communist youth move- ment, Ld RAP ag news agency Tanjug sa' y. Tanjug said Peking's Red Guard newspaper Hast is Red identified the groups as the revolutionary insurgents, who consider themselves the only true representatives of Mao Tse- tung, and an older outfit la- d royalists. The Red Guard newspaper, on a fight between the groups at a textile factory Sept. 11, urged dissolution of the roy- alist unit, Tanjug's correspon-) dent in Peking said. He said the incident, prev- fously known about from pos- Rewspaper as part of the strug: gle in Mao's cultural revolution and purge. MAO'S MEN MINORITY The paper said the incident happened when Mao's Red Gisrus were a nuncrty of tS! at the factory, The account said charges under the Official Se- crets Act, Capital Calm PORT AU PRINCE (AP)-- This capital of Haiti was calm Monday and there was no indi- cation of an invasion by oppo- nents of President Francois Du- valier. A Sunday night broad- cast by a U.S. network, the Co- Broadcasting System, quoted Haitian underground sources as saying Duvalier's op- ents had invaded Haiti, ere was no confirmation of the report. Ex-Governor Dies PITTSBURGH (AP) -- David L. Lawrence, 77, master poll- ©) iticlan and former governor of Pennsylvania, died in hospital Monday. He was stricken by a heart attack while speaking at £ --- party rally here lov. 4. Russia Aids India NE WDELHI (AP)---The So- viet Union announced Monday it will $1,780,000 worth of farm equipment to set up five state seed farms. bassador I. A. Benediktov said his government also has agreed to supply an additional $20,500,- 000 worth of agricultural ma- chinery on credit terms favor: able to both countries. Treasurer Quits WASHINGTON (AP) --Mrs. Kathryn O'Hay Granahan has submitted her resignation as treasurer of the United States. She has been in ill health for many months, There was no im- mediate White House comment, As treasurer, Mrs, Granahan's ature appeared on the lower } nd corner of the country's paper money. French Visit PARIS (Reuters)---Gen. Jean V, Allard, chief of Canada's de- Family Affair RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -|man, his wife and her son social wife, Nancy, 86; \ | Delma Pryor, just turned 65, Runs For Mayor OTTAWA (CP) -- John D. Kroeker, the 37-year-old federal insurance department actuary fired in April, 1965, for criticiz- ing the Canada Pension Plan, announced Monday he will run for mayor in the . 5 Ottawa elections. Convention Signed UNITED NATIONS (AFP)-- Norway and Vatican City have signed the UN convention against racial discrimination, it was announced Monday night. The convention was adopted by Be General Assembly Dec, 21, HERE and THERE HOSPITAL REPORT Forty-five babies were born, during the week ending Nov. 19, at the Oshawa General Hospi- tal. Three hundred and forty- one patients were admitted and $51 discharged. One hundred major, 182 minor as well as 93 eye, ear, nose and throat oper- ations were performed. Forty. two casts were applied and 209 ieeuiene @iu Saainaucns given. The physiotherapy de- partment gave 1,009 treatments and made 723 visits; while the occupational therapy depart- ment handled 231 cases. PRIZE WINNERS Several pupils of St. Joseph's school were successful in a con- test held by the Educational ABC's of Industry. The follow- ing won prizes: Angelo Viola, Mark Foley and Liesbeth (for projects) and Michelle fadstrien for hand writing. The roles of the physiothera- and occupational therapist, the rehabilitation of crippled children and adults, were ex- plained by Mrs. Lynne Baifour, and co-ordinator of the Oshawa Crippled Chil- dren's School and Treatment Centre, at the Oshawa Rotary Club luncheon meeting. SKATING RINKS WHITBY (Staff) -- Seven skating rinks are to be con- structed at schools and other sites in Whitby by town coun- cil at an estimated cost of $600. The three school boards will be responsible for constructing eight other rinks in the town, LETTERS PATENT The current issue of The On- tario Gazette carries the in- formation that letters patent of incorporation have been grant- ed to two Oshawa companies, They are Reg. T. Smith Con- struction Limited and Thornco Holdings Limited. TREE CUTTING WHITBY (Staff) -- Cutting dead and dangerous trees in Whitby is expected to cost town council about $2,000 this year and an additional $6,040 at the beginning of 1967. Alice REARDON ALDERMAN 4 Years Experience. } Year on Finance Committee, 1 Yeor on Porks & P: \. 2 veer Vice Chairman of Public forks. 3 Yeors Choirmen Public Housing. 723-2057 official said Monday, He will chief to visit the French armed forces and their installations in Metropolitan France. Students Picket Campus Cafeteria WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--About 90 resident students at the Uni- versity of Windsor picketed the campus cafeteria Monday pro- testing the catering service. More than 200 of the 600 resi- dent students at the university have been stricken by attacks of nausea and dizziness in the last few days. Medical authorities here, who have carefully checked the cafeteria and other campus facilities for a possible source of bacterial infection, have been unable to pinpoint the cause of the outbreak. ters, now was presented by the| 20: Chinese Red Guards Splinter Agency Claims Guards who attacked the other guards, and injured many of them, The paper said similar incl- dents are occurring in many factories and the struggle be- tween the two groups is acute. Tass, the Soviet news agency, reported today that the Red Guards have launched cam- paigns in Peking against Hun- gary and Bulgaria as part of a general effort to fan "'anti-So- viet hysteria," Slogans attacking both coun- tries were posted in front of their embassies along with anti- Soviet propaganda, Tass said. The report did not give the substance of the attacks on the two East Europeah Communist ernments, but China last Friday protested against the ex- pulsion of Chinese students from Hungary, and Buigaria took the lead at the Bulgarian Commu nist party congress last week in in proposing an international Communist congress which pre- sumahly would read the Chinese out of the world Communist the royausio collected 500 Red movement, SAIGON. (AP)--A_ U.S, mill- tary spokesman said today the North Vietnamese inflicted heavy casualties on a_three- platoon force of about 105 men of the U.S, ist Air Cavalry Di- vision in fighting in the central highlands of South Viet Nam. @ battle took place 22 miles southwest of the U.S, Special Forces camp at Plei Djering. The spokesman sald one pla- toon--about 35 men--was over- run and took the brunt of the casualties. He would not com- ment on reports there were only three survivors in the. platoon, U.S. military officials consis: tently refuse to give specific casualty figures in any action on grounds of security, The North Vietnamese killed several wounded Americans as they swept across the battle: field, the spokesman reported, The cavalrymen reported kill- Am-|ing 102 North Vietnamese with the aid of air strikes and artil- lery. The North Vietnamese force was estimated at a bat- talion of about 500 men in all, and the force that overran the cavalry platoon was reported to be 150 to 200 men. U.S. B-52 bombers fle wover the Plei Djering area today in support of the 25th and Ist Air Cavalry divisions and dropped their bombs on a North Vietna- mese staging area 17 miles west of the special forces camp. WEATHER STILL. BAD Over North Viet Nam, the bad flying weather of the last two weeks persisted and U.S. pilots flew only 41 missions Monday. They hit at storage areas, roads and truck parks, mostly in the southern panhandle. A U.S. spokesman announced that two, wounded prisoners ¢ap- tured last Saturday during fighting in Communist war Zone C near the Cambodian border had identified themselves as n. first Canadian armed service |Cambodia North Vietnamese Troops Kill Wounded U.S. Soldiers A huge U.S. force is still hunt- ing the Viet Cong 9th Division in Zone C, in Tay. Ninh prov- ince, after hard fighting the week before last. U.S. head. uarters said the Viet Cong fired 20 mortar shells at the tactical command post of the 25th Division's 2nd Brigade to- day on the northern edge of Zone C, but U.S. casualties were light. The South Vietnamese for. eign ministry meanwhile charged that 50 Cambodian sol- diers crossed the border last Friday, entered a South Vietna- mese village, abducted one of the villagers and took him and 14 water buffalo back into Cam- bodia, The foreign ministry pro- tested to the Cambodian govern: ment. French Emigration Increase Sought MONTREAL (CP _ -- Man: power Minister Jean Marchand said Monday night he hopes to meet President de Gaulle of France in Paris next week to discuss the possibility of getting more Frénch citizens to move to Canada. He told a Liberal association act in guburban Mount Royal he will fly to Paris Fri- day to propose an increase in the number of French citizens who emigrate to Canada, espe- clally to Quebec, He said federal govern- ment would\ welcome assistance from Quebec in this matter, ebec could create immigra- tion offices in French-speaking countries as Ontario and Al- berta had do#e in English- speaking countries. MINE DIAMONDS South - West Africa exported 1,656,234 carats of diamonds, worth $100,000,000, in 1965, FOR P.U.C. ar You'll enjoy it. Enjoy Alway tinalina taste of Jordan Valley Crackling Rosé, and adores its high-spirited gaiety. So will you. Try Jordan Valley Crackling Rosé anytime. af air! She dali Gr Gilt, ONG GGug ee ~ fun to be with, intelligent to talk to, Sally is a man's kind te hts in the - JORDAN WINES Anywhere...anytime , dordan Valley Crackiing Rosé Refreshing, lively, lightly bubbled Jordan Valley Pink Champagne Busy with bubbles, pert and pink & Yard Orders Blood Tests BENHAM, England (AP)-- Scotland Yard today ordered a mass blood test of men and boys in this Berkshire village where a 17-year-old girl was raped, stabbed and strangled three weeks ago, "This is the first time any- thing like this has been done in a murder investigation," said Detective Supt, Walter Virgo, "The blood test will be en- tirely voluntary, course we do know wh is and where everyone lives in this rather small village." Notices headed "murder" were distributed to every home and shop in the area. All males between the ages of 16 and 50-- a total of 190 men and boys-- were asked to give blood sam- ples, The nude body of Yolande Waddington, a children's nurse, was found in a ditch Oct, 28 near the farm where she worked, Some of the bloodstains On Her twrn civining Were noi hers, indicating that the girl drew blood from her attacker in the struggle, police said, WORK'S A TREAT FOR 98-YEAR-OLD LONDON (AP) -- Freder- ick Holden celebrated his 92nd birthday by announcing he plans to continue working an eight-hour day, five days a week, : 'T'd shrivel up if I ever re- tired," he said. Not only does he put in a full day as a supervisor in the Savoy Hotel's bookkeeping de- partment, he uses the subway daily and always offers his seat to women when the cars get crowded, Holden was eligible for a pension 27 years ago. Two weeks ago Holden strolled thto a London shoot- ing gallery and asked to take a few shots, He got two bull's eyes, Asked whether he ever smoked or drank, Holden re- plied: "Smoke? Why I started when I was 13." And drink? "Well, I started on gin when I was, let's see, about 18," Asked his secret, he re- plied: "The idea is--you want to treat work as a pasttime, May I have another gin, please." WEATHER FORECAST [Hamilton .......65. 35" St. Catharines .,..+ a 35 TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued at 5:30 a.m.: Synopsis: A strong southerly circulation has developed over Ontario and mild air has pushed as far north as James Bay; Mainly sunny skies have re- sulted in southern Ontario but considerable cloudiness has de- veloped in northern regions. Colder air in the northwestern corner of Ontario will move southeastward only as far as Lake superior, Warmer air is expected to into southern Ontario Wednesday, Lake St, Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, southern Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Niagara re- gions, Windsor, London, Ham- ilton; Mainly sunny and milder today. Wednesday mainly cloudy and warmer, Winds south 20. Lake Ontario region, Toronto: patchy fog dissipating this morning. Mainly sunny and milder today, Wednesday mainly cloudy and warmer. Winds south 20, Warm Trend Will Continue: Cloudy Weather Predicted Peterborough ...... 30 HON sesseveees 32 North Bay ..0-se++ Sudbury ..sscoveess 3 Earlton seeseveeess Northern Georgian Bay, Ti- Sault Ste, Marie .-. 35 magami regions, North Bay, Sudbury: Increasing cloudiness today. Wednesday cloudy with chance of rain, Algoma, White. River, Coch- rane pene: Cloudy and mild oday. Wednesday cloudy with intermittent rain or: wet snow and colder. Winds south 20 to- pi and light northerly Wednes- lay. Western James Bay region: Cloudy with intermittent rain and mild today, Wednesday cloudy with snowflurries and colder. Winds southwest 15 to- day and north 15 Wednesday, Ottawa and region: and milder today, Wednesday sunny with cloudy periods and still milder, Winds light today southwesterly 15 Wednesday. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight high Wednesday Windsor vesscseeees 40 6 St. Thomas .eroese. 38 be LONGON sesssevceees 35 Kitchener sisseeses 35 Mount Forest ..... 32 Wingham cssseeees 82 BRANTFORD (CP) -- A bi- federal state, with jurisdiction over all social security pro- grams, human rights, and uni- versity education vested in Ot- tawa, was advocated Monday night by J. T. Thorson, retired president of the Exchequer Court of Canada, He told a Canadian Club audi- ence that Quebec could have a special niche in Confederation but talk of Canada as a bi- cultural nation of English and French cultures is "utter non- sense and should be curtly dis- missed," Speaking on the shape of Can- ada in its second century, Mr. Thorson said he is confident there will continue to be a Can- ada in the next 100 years, but there will be changes in its con- stitution, Canada now is a very different country than the one co by Confederation in 67. There has been a basic shift in what should be regarded as federal and provincial respon- sibilities since 1867 when "mat- ters of a merely local or private nature in the province" was as- signed to provincial govern- m \ Retired Judge Advocates Bi-Federal Canadian State Models to Choose From. (Reg. 19.95) CARRYING CASE rity should be moved out of the jurisdiction of the provinces and vested exclusively in the federal Parliament, he said. Social se- curity is a matter of national concern and responsibility and the trend has been towards Ot- tawa since old age pensions were first established in 1927. Such a transfer to Ottawa would put an end to squabbling between the province and the federal government over in- creasing shares of the tax dol- lar, and stop "opting out" pro- cedures which erode central au-i§ A Cerrying thority, he added. "The whole field of human rights should be assigned to the FREE... With eny Polerold Color Pack Comere, principle to Ontario's code, islating against dis- crimination, The Canadian In- dian must be treated equally with the rest of Canadians. exoo 67 a 728-6201 Four Seasons Travel ents. The whole field of social secu- oe Beat ve NO MONEY DOWN ~ NO PAYMENTS "til JAN. 16th, 1967 | Come in to-day ! Look around! 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