Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Feb 1967, p. 17

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CORES | D PRESS more 139 ork 125 98 Us 3 is 118 * nm 113 troit 134 go 121 ------ a 'XOTIC 1 (CP) -- 1 of the jigned an me of the stom and ondon to y parish- ied they the old 14 NT IS standout u sew it flirty, whip it r prints, : Girls' Size 10 in coins or each 'esidents . plainly R a JOY ee 6115 atterns, in new n Cata- ree pat- ec. ¥ iy The ¢ dummy warheads that would ae » measures to jam detection sys- MAO SAYINGS GET CIRCULATION Red Chinese, some of Peking. This picture was \ whom wave booklets con- made on Jan. 26 and was taining sayings of Mao Tse- obtained: | £t.s 1m: Japanese : ©. aa sources in Tokyo. tung, gather on a street in (AP Wirephoto) New Era Foreseen For U.S. Tn Strategic Weaponry WASHINGTON (AP) -- purred by Russia's limited de- ployment of an anti-missile de- fence, the United States is em- barked on far-ranging ballistic missile programs that mark a ) new era in strategic weaponry. Strength by sheer numbers of warheads is the main object of the multi-billion-dollar effort, but attention is also being fo- cused on highly-sophisticated- guidance and re-entry systems, decoys and penetration aids. The critical goal is maintain- taining what Defence Secre- tary Robert McNamara calls an "assured destruction' capa- bility--the power to unleash an unchecked amount of destruc- tion against any enemy. As an informed source put it: "We want the enemy to know by his own calculations. that we % can overwhelm him, when we ) add some fancy stuff to make ' his defences more expensive." "fancy stuff' includes McNamara discussed this as- pect in. his annual military re- port to Congress last month, saying "it is not the number of missiles which is important but rather the character of the payloads they carry; the mis- sile is simply the delivery ve- hicle."" In other words, U.S. missiles will be equipped more and more with multiple warheads. U.S. officials only a few days ago acknowledged for the first time that the newest sea-based Poseidon missiles, which will soon be deployed, will be armed with multiple warheads. ISOLATE MINUTEMAN The Minuteman II, which will eventually be planted in concrete firing silos in northern and central areas of the United States, will also carry more than one nuclear package. Aviation Week magazine re- ports that the United States is developing new re-entry vehicle technology to "'establish the ca- pability to launch more than five hydrogen warheads" on a single Minuteman III or Posei- don missile. "If this technology is success- ful, the U.S. by 1972 will be able to blanket the Soviet Union and China with more than 5,000 warheads launched by 1,656 missiles,' Aviation Week's Ed- ward H. Kolcum wrote. McNamara is ordering devel- opment and deployment of the multi-headed Poiseidon at an eventual cost of more than $3,- 000,000,000. 4 separate from Minutemen II in- J) tercontinental missiles in flight ~*~ to confuse enemy radars and electromagnetic counter- tems. YANKS HOLD 3-1 EDGE The United States now has © three times as many intercon- tinental missiles as Russia, 446 to the Russians' 470, by Pentagon figures. Sources say the gap is nar- rowing, but the United States ;will maintain a wide lead in terms of warheads. © European Communist Countries | Split Up Over German Issues WARSAW (AP) -- The Mid-|may demand keeping alive a winter meeting of Warsaw Pact countries here showed that, on German issues, the European Communist countries are split- ting into northern and southern groups. A .two-sentence communique ending the talks among Soviet ) bloc foreign ministers in Po- land's capital last week con- tained no denunciation of the new West German government and omitted the usual phrases about agreement and unani- mity. It spoke only of "friendly co-operation and full mutual un- derstanding." As diplomats read it, this in- dicated agreement to disagree and meant that southern mem- bers of the Communist alliance now are abstaining from the criticism that the '"'northern- ers," East Germany, Poland and the Soviet Union, have for West German overtures for Eu- ropean reconciliation. The latest meeting was preci- pitated by Romania's opening of diplomatic relations with Bonn Jan. 31 in a menner that alarmed Poland and East Ger- many. They thought the act should have taken place in Bucharest rather than Bonn and West German "menace" and ex- acting the highest possible price from Bonn for normal relations. Czechoslovakia seems to stand between the northern and southern extremes. Like Bul- garia and Hungary, the Czecho- slovaks are considering diplo- matic relations with Bonn for trade reasons. Like Poland and the Soviet Union, Prague has bad memories and frontier ques- tions lingering from the Second World War. The Warsaw communique said the foreign ministers had re- viewed developments since the bloc's July, 1966, Bucharest dec- laration, which declared that se- curity and normal relations in Europe require recognition that there are two German states, that present frontiers are permanent, and that nuclear weapons must be denied to the Germans. "MEMORABLE!" --n,, times 20th CENTURY-FOX presents a Foreign Minister Willy Brandt should have been told to his face that he speaks only for West| Germany, not for the whole Ger- | man people, But Romania, Hungary and} Bulgaria, which have no fron-; tiers with Germany, have sari viewing the issue more on the basis of economic self-in- terest than of Communist broth- erhood. WANT TOP VALUE To East Germany, the Soviet) Union and Poland, West Ger-| many is a question of ideolory politics and emotion. For the East Berlin and Warsaw Com- munist regimes, survival itself CINEMASCOPE Color by ADULT ENTERTAINMENT Also "SNIPERS RIDGE" Mon. to Fri. Show Storts 7:30 Sot. and Sun. Show. Starts 6:30 FREE IN-CAR HEATERS CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE QuecH BAY RIDGES epee os oe ~aoe 668-2692 nae) 282-3969 Reconciliation Hope Fades | | EXPANDS HUMAN CONSCIOUSNESS TORONTO (CP) --Dr. Rich- ard Alpert, former Harvard University professor, says LSD is a valid way to expand hu- man consciousness and_ this could be the next stage in hu- man evolution. The LSD experience increases sensory perception, he said Sat- urday. " . . , Colors like you've never seen before. And if you're listening to Miles Davis' trum- pet you feel you're inside every note." Dr. Alpert, a former of LSD- promoting Dr. Timothy Leary, was participating in a panel discussion at a psychedelic fes- tival, Perception '67, at the Uni- versity of Toronto. He said that during an LSD "trip" a person feels "in ex- perience with the universe." Then he added: "Our culture has a concept of man over the universe and people never see how they flow in it." Opponents on the panel came out strongly against use of ly- sergic acid diethylamide, un- less taken under controlled con- ditions. SOCIAL USE DANGEROUS Dr. Adam Rosenblatt of New York argued that the social use of LSD is dangerous. Users are in search of the fantasy world of a child and, as a child needs a mother, the LSD user needs someone to provide a maternal MAN OVER THE UNIVERSE | cruich or psychotic. He said LSD should be taken only under controlled conditions that can protect the user against mental and _ physical harm. Dr. Humphrey Osmond, an LSD researcher, said bad ex- periences are not the result of the drug but of its careless use, Accidents occur because the user is ignorant of the effects and values of the drug. Dr. Leary, foremost exponent of LSD, was barred from enter- ing Canada to appear at the festival because of a 30-year conviction in the United States or possession of marijuana which he has appealed. he risks becoming For Caouette and Socreds | OTTAWA (CP)--Hopes for aliste House leader when Gilles leagues to meet with the Cred- * | reconciliation between the Cred-|Gregoire was expelled for sep-litistes, but no invitations had litiste and Social Credit parties|aratist connections, was ap-|been received. japparently vanished Sunda y| pointed national organizer. He) Leader Real|was assigned to travel across|support of the people of Que- Caouette announced a coast-to-|Canada to set up provincial as-|pec, they are attempting to! when Creditiste "Apparently having lost the PIZZA [TALIAN, FREE DELIVERY e@ On Any Order Over A Dollar Professor Explains LSD Reactions Roth men were fired from Harvard in 1963 for their ex- periments with students in the use of LSD Charles Hanley, philosophy professor at the University of Toronto, said the drug offers no moral, scientific or psycho- logical benefits. Mr. Hanley told of a former University of Toronto mathe- matics student who took LSD and killed his personality. He now is in a mental hospital, he said. Allan Kamin, co-chairman of the festival lost $1,000 because of lack of accommodation, More tickets could have been sold if the lecture halls had been larger And Introducing George's Special Pasta Al Forno @ Cabbage Rolls Now Under New Management The Town and Country 723-1821 lcoast organization campaign for |sociations of the party using the | bolster their situation by talk- | 15 Bond St. E |his Quebec - based Ralliement |English name Social Credit ing national. Talk is one thing. ware Creditiste. | Rally. To win the support of the people At a press conference follow-| Mr. Langlois was born in/of Canada is another." seeeeeeeeces ing a closed-door weekend meet-|Saskatchewan and, although} wr 'Thompson returned to i ing of the party's 20-member executive, Mr. Caouette said hundreds of believers in Social Credit outside Quebec have writ- ten him urging him to lead an "active, living party." Raymond Langlois, Megantic, who became Credit- Celibacy ' Defended 'By Pocock TORONTO (CP)--Most Rev. Philip F. Pocock, Roman Catho- lic co-adjutor archbishop of Tor- onto, Sunday night said he knew of no doctrinal reason why women couldn't be ordained as priests. the changing role of the priest, Archbishop Pocock defended th celibate priesthood and said priests are going through a puri- fying process by exposure to the secular press. He said that a man entering the priesthood and a life of celi- bacy must love more, not less. 'He must love God with his whole heart, and his whole mind and his whole soul, and must be willing to sacrifice the love of a woman," he said. He said the celibate life en- ables the priest to dedicate his life completely to God. CITES REASONS The Archbishop listed a grow- ing lack of reverence for priests and bishops and an increased interest in religious affairs on the part of the secular news media as two of the reasons for the shortage of men entering priesthood. He said just as newspapers put headlines on crime rather than virtue, they also report the faults of the church and the priests. On the possibility of ordaining women to the priesthood, he said it would be interesting to find out what women them- selves want. "IT sometimes think we should take a vote on it with only women eligible to vote," he said. Archbishop Pocock said an- other aspect of change in the status of priests, especially members of the church hier- archy, is less use of ecclesiasti- cal pomp. He said titles such as My Lord, Your Grace and Your Excellency resulted from cul- MP for} Speaking to an audience on) more proficient in French, often speaks English in the Commons. He began talks with Social Ottawa Sunday from Brandon, | where he attended the annual) jconvention of the Manitoba So- E SEATS NOW Bt 4 , Peep : OFFICIAL Credit officials soon after the cial Credit League. He said the ex 067 "4 jdeparture of Mr. 'Gregoire. party there was enthusiastic TICKET 7 ¢ H. A. Olson, Social Credit MP|anq° was planning an educa- npidegell for Medicine Hat and chairman Resets jof the Social Credit caucus, said jhe was disappointed. |DOOR 'CLOSED' | 'This seems to close the door {to a reconciliation," le said. The National Council of the So- cial Credit Association, at its meeting in Regina last month, decided to set up an eight-mem- ber committee to investigate a reconciliation. Mr. Caouette said Sunday he had heard nothing from the committee. Asked whether there Mr. Thompson said he would be interested to see what comes of Mr. Caouette's talk of a na- /tional organization. He said the Creditiste leader had said he would invite the executives of the provincial Social Credit Thieves Steal WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Police here are searching for thieves jwho. broke into a wholesale grocery warehouse and escaped with 177 cases of cigarettes. Police said the cigarettes, valued at almost $28,000, were taken from a sealed storage room on the second floor of the building after a hole had been cut through a ceiling. Police said the theft was first noticed Saturday morning when the company's president, Ben- jamin Boulton, went to work. "The cigarettes are just as negotiable as money," a police spokesman said. Pair Acquitted In Plane Theft SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)-- Two Canadians charged with transporting a stolen plane from Kerrville, Tex., to the Bahamas were acquitted Friday night. Cleared of the charge were Allen N. Siegel, 26, of Toronto and Jay B. Ramm, 25, of Wind- sor, Ont. The Federal court jury of eight men and four women de- Ld sented in Quebec City and Cigarettes Roun, It was such speeches in 1961- tional drive in the province, Describing his plans to ex- pand coast to coast, Mr. Caou- ette said he would seek to form |a Genuine Social Credit govern- ment based on the monetary theories of the late Maj. C. H. Douglas. WANTS DIVIDEND = 2 SogccccreeeSoceest So Gre uvasersrresesee ORgorseeseeoe 2 ON SALE FAMOUS PLAYERS THEATRE *=- RODGERS « HAMMERSTEIN'S SPAGHETTI Oe oe eP OOOO OHSS OOOH OETHORE HSER HLHH0808 AT BOXOFFICE OR BY MAIL! pp ROBERT WISE ) 1 + /} e TESOND 2 a: egies MUSIS : ng rk er siz? -- -- MATINEES 2.00 PM) 77" a : Se ec aaninnasemnmanem mann mn meme mane ale 4 Maines iwWesnesdov) orcs 135 ° oo COUNTS THE HOARD THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, February 13, 1967 17 {gold and platinum Shriner's pin LOS ANGELES (AP) -- For and the key to a pocket watch. more than 50 years, Irwin Levis : = =? often dozed in a big armchair in the shop where he was a IZZA jewelry salesman. He has been dead for nine months but the store recently turned out the Phone 723-0241 chair's upholstery. There were or 728-0192 found 40 coins, one of them EPI'S more than a century old and worth $17, several knives, a! The Coronet Lounge of the CADILLAC HOTEL * ° Presents SARA DELRAI and the TOGS don't miss this exciting versatile group "_Wwuwrwrvwvvwvvvvvv ORDER YOUR CHINESE FOOD CALL THE RICKSHA 728-1676 He said the party would cam-| paign for a monthly dividend| for every taxpayer and interest- | free loans to municipalities, | provinces and school boards by | the Bank of Canada. : a candidate in the Hull, Que., byelection and are considering contesting the Sudbury, Ont., byelection as well. | The executive committee de-| cided to begin a_ series of| weekly paid political broadcasts | on privately-owned TV stations | NOW PLAYING WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS! _ METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER marsenes A CARLO PONT! PRODUCTION 5.3 had been any change singe the gig txmressed ine shone, that DAVID LEAN'S FILM o sors rasrerwucs iff Pgpyecest by Ss edd e ph Sagi' toba, Ontario and other prov-| DOCTOR ZHiVAGO ied, "No, inces would join his party. tN PANAVISION® AND METROCOU change. The Creditistes plan to enter x BOX OFFICE OPEN 12-9 P.M. EVES AT 8:30 P.M. SAT. & SUN. at 2 P.M. & 8:30 P.M. ODEON (x, ADULT ENTERTAINMENT PHONE 725-5833 -- 725-5562 Harry Hideaway HELD OVER THE BEAU HANNON in Sherbrooke, Jonquiere and/* Rimouski, Que. Similar broad- casts are already being pre- 62 that made Mr. Caouette a household name in Quebec and | paved the way for his 26-riding sweep in the 1962 general elec- tion. The split with the Socreds, defections and election defeats have reduced the Creditiste Commons group to eight mem- bers. Mr. Thompson leads a five- member group in the House, two from Alberta and three from British Columbia. Held Over i cia teelienioaidasiaaieebatinamaaeaniaie DEAN MARTIN 3 MATT HELM A(BOLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE KARL MALDEN' URDERERS TUESDAY y PHONE 723-2645 FEATURE TIMES 1:20 -- 3:25 5:30 -- 7:40 -- 9:40 ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY & SAT. AFTERNOON THE GENOSHA tore: * MAMA eee eS SS ee FAMILY SPECIAL! 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Comedian and Vocalist @ SWINGING BAND @ "EL SARIDA" -- Exotic Dancer Entertainment Nightly ' Saturday Matinee 4 to 6 P.M. French Buffet Daily 12 - 2:30 and 5 - 9 p.m. SUNDAY DINNERS 5 to 8:30 P.M. Now Licensed Under L.C.B.O. Banquets -- Weddings -- Parties -- For Information Phone Whitby 668-3386 $ "GIRLS INCORPORATED" All Girl Revue Entertainment Nightly--Saturday Matinee DUNDAS ST WHITBY Crowd at ee Forbes Trio Returns to the Blue Horse Lounge with the Country and Western Music HOTEL LANCASTER THE GOLD RUSH LOUNGE The Fabulous DAWN TRIO PLUS ONE Musical Comedy KING ST. OSHAWA

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