Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Apr 1967, p. 9

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field for r: d the chiefs' ath analysis ympulsory for suspects. neral did not st that pedes- entify them- d by police. ee that mag- » given peri- val examina- 'REASURE ypes of metal s potash and LEADS e River Dan- but brown. CONTRASTING AND CONFUSING Floodgates Open In U.K. For Comment On Canada By HAROLD MORRISON LONDON (CP)--Reflection on the centennial and the opening of Expo 67 have opened the floodgates of British comment about Canada, leaving stay-at- home Britons with a contrasting, confusing picture of their Com- monwealth partner across. the Atlantic. Writing in the Daily Teleg- taph's weekend magazine, de- voted this week almost entirely to Canada, author Stephen Viz- inczey suggests that far from being backward colonials, Cana- dians are trying to cope with a kind of affluent, open and mixed society that Britain may become in a decade or two, But though Canadians have reat wealth, they are '"'as yet oo complacent with their sud- den good fortune to be truly ci- vilized. Or perhaps it's fairer to say that civilized life in Canada vacillate between going home _bety Simple, depicts Canada in his and staying in London, ever a column today as an endless for- foreigner, and so if I finally of-/est of conifers, a place without fer up some prejudiced personal/history 'places where nothing history, it is because I consider | pt the slightest interest has ever it typical of my Canadian gen-|happened,"" To him Expo 67 is eration." ja name "'both clinical and bar- Another author, Nicholas Mon-|barous," summing up every- sarrat, who returned to Britain | thing he doesn't want. after 15 years in Canada, sug-| More refreshing is the com- gests there is a national sick-/ment of Fergus Cashin in the ness in Canada, the philosophy|Daily Sketch who describes of "anything for a buck" that| Expo 67 as an exciting exhibi- infects business and politics. tion, with the British pavilion "This selfish opportunism has|making Britain the greatest its reflection in union lawless-|country of them all. The BBC ness--illegal picketing, beating|treated its viewers to a 45-min- up of strike breakers, overturn-jute Expo preview Wednesday ing or burning of delivery trucks! night. . . . « It is unpleasant, often y atrocious, but it is understand- oe Eat Morpertoer ped trie able. The men watch the boss : ; ° |who had getting away with it? by manip-| 4, Canida la the tat ace cee ulation and they feel stronglis intrigued by that element of FIRST 'LOVE - IN' SET FOR DETROIT DETROIT (CP) -- There's likely to be so much love around Detroit next Sunday that hundreds of police will be on duty to control it. John Sinclair, 25, who sells paintings, has organized De- troit's first Love-In, a mas- sive out-pouring of goodwill-- if it doesn't get out of hand, He said the Love-In will take place on Belle Isle, in the De- troit River across from Wind- sor, Ont. The rules to be observed by the thousands expected to at- tend include: bring your own lunch, don't raise your voice and dress comfortably or even a little strangely. Sinclair said he expects 20 bands to show up and play for. the love of it, people to express affection for each other, flowers galore and thou- sands of balloons. The police will be there to see the milk of human kind- ness doesn't turn to sexy be- havior, Sinclair said. enough to copy him," | x i A ; |Expo that resulted in the con- R. H. C. Steed, Daily Teleg- struction of a man-made island! had no yesterday and may need a tomorrow before it can really take hold." | EXPRESS SOME REGRETS Montreal to take up residence} in London 13 years ago, writes! in the same edition published to-| day that though he loves London) best, he still has many regrets: "There are more than a small} number of things peculiarly Ca-| nadian that I miss... . I still raph editorial writer, says that|; Canada, despite all her achieve-|i" the St. Lawrence River. | ments, "has not lived up to the has been built but not yet a na-/own . . "You mean it's possible?"' she/almost had its own bunny-girl jenterprise and virility of her|¢x¢laimed. 'Nobody else|/Eskimo carving but Kumakuluk " |British and French forbears. On| seemed to find Expo 67's islandjof Baffin Island decided to re- Mordecai Richler, who le \foundations laid at confedera-|extraordinary. But I'm fired|move the ears when his sculp- tion a century ago a country| with the idea of building my|ture caused so much hilarity PN jamong visitors. LAUGH KILLED BUNNY MONTREAL (CP) -- Expo 67 | guns soon may be used in Brit- of pulp, and at current prices sih Columbia's year-old war to/a ton of pulp sells. for $60. That repel an alien invader of valua-means B.C.'s stake in its war ble forests. tiously slipped into North Amer- ica from an unnamed European country several years ago, hid- iden in immigrant balsam \shrubs. long, the balsam woolly aphid can maim, cripple, dwarf and kill a tree, or a forest. The tiny insect is so powerful the B.C. |forest service ranks it with fire jas énemy No. 1, | tation of balsam woolly aphd is a direct threat to the province's 260,000,000,000 board feet of standing balsam and fir timber. The tiny insect could wipe our 14 per cent of the forest which covers nearly three-quarters Of|trees, the B.C. forest service is B.C.'s 359,279 square mile area. ulp, and B.C. has 18 pulp mills|) teavitiad and 16 Pech rh vari-|fired from a 9 mm rifle hurls a ous stages of planning, says Cy 50-pound test nylon cord over Phillips, chief protection officer| {he top of a 150-foot high fir tree. for the B.C, Forest Service. COSTLY WAR |Using the wire as a cutting! B.C. May Enlist Aircratt, Guns, Fight Forest Invader VICTORIA (CP)--Aircraft and)balsam timber to make two tons) on the tiny insect could amount The enemy, a bug, surrepti- to $3,000,000,000. | A joint provincial-federal gov- ernment project was started in an attempt to find out more about the aphid. Working within ja $300,000 project budget, 18 members of the B.C, forest service are making extensive surveys to find the extent of the infestations, so far apparently confined to the lower mainland and southern Vancouver island. There also is an infestation of the same insect in the Maritime provinces, but there is a differ- ence, There, the insect attacls the twigs and ends of branches of balsam trees, but here it at- tacks tree trunks. To get samples of infected Legs than 1-16th of an inch The forest service says infes- B é "at perfecting strange gun-saw alsam's primary use is for). rangement. A blank cartridge In the middle of the nylon cord is a small piece of fine wire. It takes 1,000 board feet ofledge, two men alternately pull! their end of the nylon cord, saw- ing off the top few inches of the/ sample tree without felling it. Mr, Phillips said the federaljadapt a carbonium-based spray,|forests from aircraft. £S1'D CANADIAN RYE WHISKY DEEMED Oy RAM WALEEE A SOME UMITED, wALKERVI\LE, CANABA, LMM Special moments call for Walker's Special Old 'anada's most popular whisky Smooth, mellow flavour. Decanter-style bottle. Its Canada's best selling whisky THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridoy, April 28, 1967 g researchers now are trying tojwhich would be applied on the aw tion." HAS NO HISTORY To add to the contrast, Daily Telegraph columnist Mich- ael Wharton, writing as Peter Owners Of Canal Property' Called Up For Federal Fees Now: conventional residential mortgages with loans up to $50000 OTTAWA (CP)--Several hun- dred owners of commercial properties along the Trent and Rideau Canal systems have re- ceived notices from the federal transport department that they are required to pay fees for the use of submerged lands occu- pied by docks or other struc- tures. A department spokes- man said Wednesday the fed- eral government has for de- cades held property rights on the beds of lakes and rivers along the two Ontario pleasure- craft routes and has a policy requiring annual lease pay- ments for the use of this un- derwater land. Relatively few property own- ers had bothered to obtain leases, however, and the de- partment has decided to. en- COMMON LANGUAGE English is the common lang uage in the Philippines, al- though 80 dialects are spoken, force the policy. The crack- down has started this season on commercial properties such as marinas and fishing camps. Private cottagers are being ex- empted, at least temporarily. At the same time, the depart- ment has revised the formula for annual lease charges. It used to be based on the as- sessed value of the shore prop- erty. Now it will be based solely on the area of water occupied by the dock or other mooring structure. if For a water lot with an aver- age distance from shore of up to 50 feet, the charge will be 20 cents for each foot of front- age. Lots extending 51 to 100 feet out will pay 30 cents a foot frontage. The frontage rate in- creases by 10 cents on each ad- ditional 50 feet to a maximum 80 cents on lots of 301 feet or more. Annual minimum charge is $25 for water lots under 100 feet and $50 over 100 feet. To enjoy the of paying all y one monthly a NY every paycheck. 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