Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Mar 1967, p. 2

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Q THE OSHAWA TIMBS, Fridey, Merch 31, 1967 meet, A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Logexpo Fraud Charges Unfounded, Police Report MONTREAL (CP) -- Pierre Dupuy, commissioner - general for Expo 67, said Thursday a provincial police investigation has discovered no foundation for any allegations of fraud in Logexpo, the fair's lodging serv- ice. Speaking at a news confer- ence, he said he has been told this by J. Adrien Robert, direc- tor of the Quebec Provincial Police. French Week OTTAWA (CP) -- Roger N. Seguin, president of |' Associa- tion canadienne-francaise d'ed- ucation d'ontario, said Thurs- day that French-speaking On- tarians will have their "place : NERVY STRIKE WEATHER FORECAST *. BY BURGLAR MONTREAL (CP) -- Paul Martineau, member of a five - man Quebec commis- sion now inquiring into crime and related problems in the province, received some bad news Thursday. His law office in Hull, Que., near Ottawa, was bur- giarized, the loot totalling $15.98. Mr. Martineau, at a ses- sion of the commission in Montreal, had one comment on the burglary: "Hmm." Others Named TORONTO (CP)--The Tele- gram says fugitive Elias Rab-| biah has named people he; claims were behind an _ at-) tempted stock market fraud in 1965 in a statement delivered to the royal commission investi- | gating the colanse of Atlntic' Mother Bout Rabbiah, whose whereabouts For Patterson? is unknown, is wanted in Can- PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Floyd ada and the United States on jcharges of fraud, uttering and Patterson, former heavyweight champion, tuned up for a pos- jconspiracy. He was founder of) |Racan Photo-Copy Corp. in 1960 and its president until 1964. |change to snow and snowflur- Partly Cloudy Skies, Cooler As Cold Front Advances | * | TORONTO (CP) -- Official | Winds westerly 20 today, north-| forecasts issued at 5:30 a.m.: |west 20 Saturday. | Synopsis: Eastern regions of} (Cochrane, Timagami: Cloudy Ontario will warm up rapidly t0-/and mild with occasional show-| day. Precipitation is confined to! ers today. Saturday cloudy and| showers across Northern On-|much colder with occasional tario and showers and thunder-|snowflurries. Winds southerly 20} pps i ~-- aye sg - today, northwest 25 Saturday. | yancing eastward across Late! Ottawa: Sunny with 'some Superior. The showers willl igudy periods today. Variable cloudiness tonight and Saturday with widely scattered showers becoming warmer today. Winds southeast 15 today, southwest 15 tonight. ries over the northern half of the province tonight. Showers and thundershowers are also ex- pected to spread into the lower Great Lakes late today and to- po as Ergwid nd Augie ea Forecast Temperatures urday wi cloudy and coo with snowflurries in the north oe avernight, Migh Satarday while southern Ontario has ep --itd chess sevens 42 58 partly cloudy skies and cooler|St: Thomas ........ 42 55 well-known Ray Scherer and Morgan \ley and Frank McGee in going in the sun' in the province of} » Ontario. Mr. Seguin was speaking at'@ the banquet marking the close of French Week in the federal capital. Distaff Stamp OTTAWA (CP)--The post of- fice will issue a stamp May 24) to commemorate the 50th anni-| versary of women being allowed | to vote in Canada's federal elec- tions. | The new five - cent stamp,}| based on a design by Helen Fitz- | gerald of Toronto, is medium- sized and colored mauve, black and grey. Third Party? BIMINI, Bahamas Birth of a 'black become a-third party in United States was announced! Thursday by Adam _ Clayton Powell and other Negro lead- ers meeting on this British re- sort island. The ousted Democratic con- gressman, who lives in self ex- ile here, told a press confer- ence a national campaign "to elect the black man" would be pushed. Dean Named TORONTO (CP)--Prof. Ron- bid St. John Macdonald, 38, has been appointed dean of the faculty of law at the University of Toronto, it was announced Thursday. | He succeeds Dr. Cecil Wright who retires as June 30 but remains on staff as a professor. Prof. Macdonald was born in Montreal. He is a member of the bar in Nova Scotia and On- tario with degrees from Dal- Rousie, London and Harvard universities. He came to U of T in 1961. A. dean| HERE AND THERE SKATING CARNIVAL Jay Humphry, of Vancouver, runner-up in the 1967 senior men's Canadian championship will be the featured performer at the figure skating carnival, April 14 and 15, at the Bowman- ville Memorial Arena. Mary Jane Oke of Bowmanville and Victor Irving of Unionville, 1967 unior pairs champions and eith Lawrence of Toronto will also perform. The carnival theme is 'Salute to Canada" and the arena will be decorated around a centennial theme. EXPO CONTEST Mrs. G. K. Wiltshire, 872 Mas- gon St., Oshawa is the final weekly winner in The Oshawa Times Expo 67 contest which ended last week after 26 weeks. An announcement will be made within the next two weeks on the Expo trip winner. | COLLEGE HILL A program including choral) selections, square dancing, tumbling, a quiz contest and a centennial play, all presented by the pupils, featured in the meet- ing of the College Hill Home and School Association recently. As its Centennial project, the Col- lege Hill Home and School As- sociation will purchase a chalk board eraser cleaner for the school. GRASS FIRES Summer is approaching and with it comes the grass fires. Thursday there were five such fires. GUARANTY TRUST 32 KING ST. E. (AP) ~/€ political power third force' that could) ; the | @ {90 minutes of each other from |was found in an adjoining bed- | COL. ROBIN OLDS Veteran Air Ace | | FURNACES HIT Col. Robin Olds, 44-year-old World War II ace, Jed U.S. Air Force attack that blew out the| vital blast furnaces of North) Vietnam's Thai. Nguyen steel} plant yesterday, the U.S. Com- mand in Saigon announced to- day. The plant is about 57 miles north of Hanoi. Family Deaths TORONTO (CP) -- Margaret Davis, 87, and her daughter, Dorothy Sullivan, 45, both of Toronto, died Thursday within injuries received in a downtown} fire Wednesday which claimed) the life of Ming Thick, 50. | Mrs. Sullivan was found by firemen on a charred chester- field. She suffered burns to 80 per cent of her body. Mrs. Da- vis, suffering smoke inhalation, room, | Mr. Thick, smothered to} death on the living room floor of the apartment. Lineman Dies SARNIA (CP),-- An Ontario} Hydro lineman, revived Wed- nesday in a daring pole-top res- cue by.co - workers after he received a shock, died Thurs- day night in Sarnia hospital. Donald C. Core, of Forest, a 36-year-old father of four, was severely burned by an arc from 'a 230,000-volt power line, | while working in the Wyoming, area. ' fg |cal Association, said Thursday | jmeeting here. grade 13 has lost a year by the jearlier in the evening that Pat-| time he reaches retirement |terson may get his long-awaited age, he said. jchance for another shot at Clay ee . {before the champ is inducted Disillusioned jinto the U.S. Army late next! month. MONTREAL (CP)-- Dr. j ' 2. Normand J. Belliveau, presi-| an SHIEAED, IBY Ss MIRDASEr, | Herbert Muhammed, said an of-| jfer had been made to Patter-| json for an April 25 title match, | that on a recent trip to Europe} ,; F A ;: | he found a great deal of disit.| 0 Detroit the possible site. lusionment about state - sup- | ported medical c: lans. | Stressing that he was speak-| Teamsters Call ing only for himself, Dr. Bel-| é For Strike Vote liveau said, however, that he| found no body of medical or} lay opinion 'in any of the coun-; WASHINGTON. (AP) -- The| tries he visited that was in)Teamsters Union ordered Thurs- favor of returning to the pre- day a country - wide strike vious conditions before national|locked contract talks for some i schemes were intro-|500,000 workers in the U.S.| uced. dent-elect of the Canadian Medi- : | The action came after union} Rand Hearing \negotiators spurned a reported | | three-year, 37 - cent wage offer! TORONTO (CP) -- Com-|from industry negotiators rep- | pulsory arbitration should bejresenting some 12,000 trucking | imposed when it appears that|companies. a union or a company is des-| The union has come down in) tined to disappear if a strike|bargaining to what it calls a/| continues, the Rand commis-| basic minimum demand total- sion on labor disputes was told/ling 56 cents an hour, including | Thursday. an 11-cent cost-of-living increase | "This is a government re-|in the first year of a three-year sponsibility," said Rob-|contract. Five cents could be ert Earles, president of the Tor-|¢liminated in future years if onto Mailers' Union. \living costs decline sufficiently. The Mailers have been on, Union sources said the com- strike against the three Toronto|Pany's latest offer was rejected daily newspapers since July g, |unanimously by the approxi- 1964, ;mately 700 local union delegates Tuition Climbs Ee ora Wisse? tae | AMATEUR will rise in all but the engineer- HOUR | CONTEST ing faculty, President H. G. Thode announced Thursday. Anyone over 21 wishing te cudition, Arts and science fees will be increased to $530, up $15, and | physical education fees will} jump $30 to $45. Nursing fees | will be $516 for new students | and $458 for those students al- | ready studying the course. | PLEASE CALL Nursing fees last year were | 723-4693 $400. | Engineering fees will stay at MR. STREET $600. BONDED STOC ANDTHE SOCIALITE. Open To Serve You Mon. - Thurs. $ te 5 Friday & to Saturday $ te { good names to remember |) If you have a Commercial Property To Sell or Lease REG AKER, pres, BILL McFEETERS, vice-pres. SCHOFIELD-AKER 723-2265 Over 33 yeors in Business 4 | GOODERHAM'S HAVE BEEN DISTILLING FINE CANADIAN WHISKIES SINCE 1832, Or what to select without paying dearly. Whether you're going to a social whirl or a 'coming out', we offer a word of caution. You needn't pay a high sum for a fine Canadian whisky. You can have Gooderham's Bonded Stock for a very sensible price. Its flavour is rich and. mellow and goes down smoothly with even the most discerning people. You won't find any whisky' , more in good taste. And its disarmingly low price certainly adds OX to the pleasure. oe Be Tonb onde f Racan went into bankruptcy in|Sible fight with heavyweight 1965, shortly after Atlantic Ac-(champion Cassius Clay by|fmperatures. 35 ceptance collapsed. [Thursday nee Wa Agere Regional forecasts: 48 ursday night in 2:37 0 e| Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,| w; Grade 13 Waste \first round of a scheduled 10-\Lake Huron, Georgian Bay, snr erriatenny ae hs round bout. |Windsor, London, North Bay,|c} Catharines BRANTFORD (CP) -- Grade) Patterson didn't even give his|Sudbury: Considerable cloudi-|, ene * e {13 is obsolete, and is a waste of |little-known opponent time to get|ness, windy and warm today Toronto ..... , 55 time and money, George|started before lowering the'with chance of scattered show-|Pcterborough . 50 mF. Pew, superintendent of boom: lers or thundershowers this eve-| Kingston ...... 52 / Brantford secondary schools,| Patterson stung McMurray|ning or tonight. Saturday vari-|1Tenton ... 52 |said Thursday. with a long left that dropped the|able cloudiness and cooler,| Killaloe ... 45 He told a service club that Sacramento, Calif., fighter o|Winds southerly 20 to 30 today, Muskoka .. 45 |the Ontario pre-university edu- his knees, then finished him off|becoming westerly 20 overnight| North Bay 40 jcational program could be, and moments later with a lightning/and decreasing to light Satur-|Sudbury .. 40 jshould be, compressed into 12 combination. day. |Earlton ....... 38 years, as it is in other proy- "na oe weighed 197, Mc-| Niagara, Lake Ontario, Hali-| Sault Ste. Marie ... 25 40 inces. Murray 20914. | ; 'tor 4].| Kapuskasing ...... L The person who completes| The Associated Press learned | urton: some Hemi White civer. a 0 FH Increasing cloud cover, windy and warmer today. Chance of a shower or thunder- shower tonight or Saturday morning, then variable cloudi- ness and cooler. Winds 20 to 30, becoming westerly 15 to 20 Sat- urday. Moosonee ... Timming ..<.s0s006 18 35 HELPING NATURE ROSTOCK (AP)--The apes in an East German zoo here were issued sweat suits at the end of Algoma, White River: Mainly|the winter and the penguins cloudy and mild with scattered|were fed extra vitamins. These showers or thundershowers to-| preventive measures were taken day. Staurday cloudy and colder|to guard against colds on the approach of spring. with occasional snowflurries. More Newsmen jan Return To Air | teen-agers they can come to| services dressed as they please --in shorts, slacks or mini-skirts NEW YORK (AP)--Two more NBC _newscasters, LONDON (CP)--The curate of SUPPORT FOR YOUTH east London parish has told slacks. if they like. Rev. Edward Wal- ton, 56, criticized parishioners who complained about a girl in "They should have thanked God she was in church and not in some sleazy coffee bar smoking reefers,' he said. Beatty, have joined Chet Hunt-| on the air despite a strike by the American Federation of Tel- evision and Radio Artists. But in Washington, state de- partment sources said State Secretary Dean Rusk will not appear on NBC's international Meet the Press program Sun- | day if the strike by the 18,000- member union is still on against the major U.S. TV and radio and the union have been sum- moned to Washington Saturday | for mediation talk in an effort | to settle the walkout, now in its third day. The union struck NBC, CBS, ABC and the Mutual ' Broadcasting System Wednes-| day. | The strike is over wages and | commercial fees. It was called in behalf of about 100 local on- Teenagers!! Read This Active Recreational Programmes are being offer- ed to boys and girls ages 14-20 on Friday nights at Northminster United Church Gymnasium. This op- portunity is being offered from 7:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M. from now until June 2, 1967. Registration fee for the season is 2.00. All partici- pants must appear suitably dressed with gymnasium shoes. This teenage recreation program is being offered by Northminster United Church in co-operation with the Oshawa Recreation Department. For full ae o the Oshawa Recreation Department at Everyone welcome -- Come and meet your friends. the-air news personnel at net- work - owned stations in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles. | Their salaries exceed $11,000 a year. Most network personnel, some of whose salaries range upward to the $100,000 - level, supported the strike as mem- bers of AFTRA even though network newscasters had | jreached an agreement last Jan. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S | OIL | 313 ALBERT ST. | 24-HOUR . SERVICE | 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 SEARS are pleased to announce the appointment of MR. ROY YEO as a sales representative Mr. Yeo"s 5 years experience in the real estate business in Oshawa, provides him with the ability to help you in your real estate needs, whether buying or selling. Lioyd Metcalf Real Estate Limited 40 King St. E. 728-4678 LLOYD METCALF REAL ESTATE Ltd. the Galleries Opening Wed., April 5. Watch for it! VISIT Johansen's '67 MODEL HOMES A BRAND NEW WORLD OF JOHANSEN'S Beautifully Designed and Quality Built Homes "The Centennial" ALUMINUM 'OSHAWA FREE PARKING WINTER protection .. . SUMMER comfort Sepp Prime Windows C.M.H.C. Accepted Sliding Glass Pation Doors Hhevers fev Lifetime, Ventilated --Bus Stops --Parking Lots K -- Vy Gos Pump Islands OOL ENT All-Season ¢ All-Aluminum Jalousies DOORWAY CANOPIES AWNINGS Alumingm 3iding KoolVents bring enduring color. ful beauty and extra utility to all buildings .. will pay for themselves out of repair and replacement sav- ings. B iful color binati Convenient Terms » FHA Financing SHOWROOM AND FACTORY 95 ATHOL ST. E. OSHAWA : PHON E 728-1633 Reglazing and Rescreening of Inserts for Aluminum Doors and Windows Baked Enemel Finishes Optional LOCATION From STEVENSON'S RD. N, go west on ANNAPOLIS to the West End of ANNAPOLIS -- then look for signs pointing north. BAL- MORAL DRIVE is just west of McLaughlin Collegiate. TIME 2to5 p.m. THIS WEEKEND -- Sat., April 1, Sunday April 2, And Every Day by Appointment -- Phone 723-5221 As soon as you enter the '67 JOHANSEN MODEL HOME you feel « warm quality of excellence. You know you are in a home built to be LIVED IN. There are so many features you just don't want to miss visiting this beautiful home. A home by Johansen can be yours. CE iM Crric they will handle This prime location hos everything « family eould desire, 200 yards from public end separate, grade and high schools and churches, very close access to shopping and mojor troffie arteries leading in all directions. financing stage Floor covering: Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation EXCLUSIVE SALES AGENTS Real Estate Department RALPH SCHOFIELD, Su 19 Simcoe St. N. Oshawa as 77 UNE BETTER When dealing through Central Ontario Trust, planning of your new home through the TO SELLING YOUR PRESENT HOME. Model House decorated by HOLDEN BROS, FURNITURE CO. D D'S DRY GOODS. Appliances by HOME APPLIANCES, ANOTHER MEDALLION ALL . ELECTRIC HOME. everything for you from the on the lot of your choice rapes by WAR ANGUS GRAYDON. pr. 723-5221 OFFER YOU TWO CHOICES FOR EXPO '67 BUS TRIPS TO EXPO Air-ride, Highway Buses by Burley Bus Lines. No 'School Buses" Ne. Ne. No, WANT ROOMS FOR Leave Days Nights Tickets EX PO ? May 6, Sat, 2 1 2 May 16, Tues, 3 2 3 May 23, Tues. 4 3 4 4 May 27, Sat. 2 1 2 cere wen June 7, Wed, 3 2 3 June 21, Wed. 3 2 3 July 19, Wed. 3 2 3 DOUBLE BED C July 25, Tues, 4 3 4 i 8 ) 2 2 ' 4 3 4 2 1 2 4 3 4 3 2 3 aces? 2 3 i} Included is all transportation, both to and. from Oshowa, Montreal as well as shuttling from Canadiana Village to Expo; accommodation based on two per room and an Expo tick- et per day. Cost of the two day trip is 28.00, Cost of three day trip is 46.50. Cost of four day trip is 65.00, Advance Sale Price $ PER 24 NIGHT Canadian Village Two double beds, four-piece private bath. One flet rate whether cecu- pied by 2, 3, or 4 persons. On April 1, this price advances te $25, FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL 576-3131 57 King St. E., Oshawa IN BOWMANVILLE JURY & LOVELL TRAVEL AGENCY 623-3182 18 King St. E. i } ; ' Ai ATH tine. b Greek attem] andrec sulted Premii Beca Paras immec was bi a suct tion fo lopoulc Nation Greece Obse oulos 1 tre Un party dreas mer ft reou. 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