Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Apr 1967, p. 3

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art classes to high ts. He planned the oungsters with an d talent for draw- 7 2:30- 5:00 2:30- 5:00 2:30- 5:00 3) 7) = Weuminn no 88888 10:00-12:00 1:30- 4:00 ocr emensnincnenen nO ATA MD TT ERR LS N ILS be entering all schools sols during ».M. dren whose 1 whose 6th egister for be finally tained im- ard Street, 1 or before as possible s early as LLIOTT, t Schools . HAWA ADIO week at th, 1967 your ntify ion'. mere F 7] % STUDENT AT STERN INQUEST Man Lying On Parapet, Missing Moments Later TORONTO (CP) -- A witness, Police later said that Stern who saw a Toronto man fall from a Toronto viaduct. and a Toronto Conservatory student waited 12 days before telling had experimented hours before police appeared Friday to tes-|his death with the hallucinatory tify at an inquest into the deatl.|drug LSD. David H. O'Brien, 36, was| Mr. Brien, an arts student at brought by police to testify at|York University, said he was the inquest into the death of N.|\driving west on the viaduct John Stern, 20, whose body was|about 10:29 p.m. when he saw found on the Dof' Valley Park-|the form of a man lying on the way below the viaduct March|parapet of the bridge. 18. | He said the man seemed to Drugs To Fight Epidemic Refused By Red Chinese TOKYO (AP) -- Calling it altetracycline, sulfa and penicil- dirty trick, Communist China |lin. today rejected a move by the| sources said the government Johnson' administration to allow |acted partly for humanitarian sales of American drugs to fight! reasons and partly in the hope epidemics reported on the Chi-/of preventing the reported epi- nese mainland. ; : eee j\demics from spreading to An article in the official Pe-|friendly Asian countries. king People's Daily under the} The Peking People's daily headline, 'God of plague ped- dies vaccine" accuses the United States of trying to spread rumors about epidemics in order to harm China's rela- tions with its neighbors. Travellers from China have recently reported widespread outbreaks 'of meningitis, chol- era and infectious hepatitis. Of- ficial Chinese statements have tended to back up the reports. U.S. officials said last week 14 drug manufacturers were told at a meeting with Law- rence C. McQuade, assistant secretary of commerce for do- mestic and international busi- ness, that the government would look favorably on appli- cations to sell to the Chinese such drugs as cholera vaccines, Sweeping Changes Near In Manitoba Liquor Laws. WINNIPEG (CP) -- Sweep- ing changes in Manitoba's liq- uor laws moved close to imple- mentation Friday despite at least a dozen amendments dur- ing committee study in the legislature to limit the extent of the revisions. Third reading and royal as- sent, normally formalities, are needed before the changes be- come law. There were indica- tions, however, that some opponents intended to continue their fight into third readi The ch most ex i since 1959, provided for liquor advertising, extended hours of sale, home consumption of comments on the U.S. move in terms similar to its scathing at- tacks on American involvement in Vietnam. It says the United States was making 'extremely vicious anti- Chinese propaganda' intended to discredit the Chinese people "and present heinous U.S. im- perialism as a god of mercy to deceive the people of the world." "Bless us! These U.S, imper- ialist panjandrums have sud- denly taken pity on us Chinese people and shown concern for our health!" it says. 'Should we not weep tears of gratitude? Unfortunately . . .' people can see at once that it is a dirty trick and nothing less.' suggested advertising be elimi- nated while, at the same time, the Manitoba legislature should seek a national and interna- tional code covering liquor pro- motion. Labor Minister Obie Baizley and T. P. Hillhouse (L--Sel- kirk) both supported advertis- ing. Mr. Hillhouse said morals cannot be legislated and Mr. Baizley contended restriction of advertising discrimi- nated against the graphic arts. FISHERMAN home-made wine and Sunday HITS FINAL SNAG sale of liquor with meals. Liquor advertising drew the sustained opposition with NDP Leader Russ Paulley introduc- ing, at two different stages of clause-by-clause study, amend- ments to remove provision for it. Opposition Leader Gil Molgat ada Rated Top Market WASHINGTON (CP) --The Canadian market remains the most important one for U.S. exporters despite evidence that 1967 capital spending in Canada will ease, says a special Cen- tennial review of North Ameri- can trade. : The lengthy appraisal,. cover- ing Canada's main areas, ap- pears in the commerce depart- ment's publication International Commerce, timed for the open- ing of Expo 67. The introduction by U.S. Ambassador W. Walton Butterworth notes that Canada 100 years ago sold the U.S. $25,000,000 and imported $21,- 000,000, standing third behind France and Germany as the best U.S. customer. Today, Canada is. and prob- ably will remain No, 1 in sales to and purchases from the U.S., Butterworth concludes. EDMONTON (CP) --'Ter- rible' Tom Denson couldn't wait to get out fishing this spring. He dreamed about it all winter. He waited Thursday for ar- rival of his latest veteran's pension cheque before strik- ing out on his oversized tri- cycle on a planned 1,700-mile fishing trip. The 52 - year - old bachelor said he had it in mind to head west to try his luck at fishing for bass, salmon, steel- heads and trout in British Co- lumbia. He figured he would pedal 50 miles a day and re- turn home in July. He said his angling earned him the nickname, Terrible. "I'm the world's worst 'fish- erman. You know, I get the line all snagged up and ey- erything."' But "something like 16 fishin' poles" showed his love of angling. : Tom's cheque arrived and he started out Friday morn- ing. He died of a heart attack just west of the city limits. Sohn Ovens 0. D. OPTOMETRIST PHONE 723-4811 have no control over his body from the waist up. He said his arms seemed to be shaking as though he was making an effort a himsélf from falling 0! "By the time I stopped the car and backed up to the spot where the man had been lying, | ot disappeared," Mr. Brien! said. SAW SPOTS OF BLOOD "I looked over the bridge rail! and saw some blood spots on the parkway, but did not see the body. A man on the side of the! road was taking off his coat! and starting to wave it." He said he thought the body may have been picked up in a car and taken away. | Asked by Dr. F. D. Cruick-| shank, acting chief coroner, why he had waited 12 days to inform the police, Mr. O'Brien said he was in a state of shock. He said he wanted to talk the |matter over with a psychology jteacher to be able to interpret |what he did see and what was conjecture. | Earlier, Dr. Morton Shulman, former metropolitan Toronto} chief coroner, was critical of the inquest because Mr. O'Brien had not been called to testify. SPOKE TO TEEN-AGERS Stern reportedly told at least four teen agers he was going to Army Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of armed forces in Vietnam, leans close to Speaker of the House John W. McCormack to hear his words over the WESTMORELAND APPLAUDED IN CONGRESS applause at the end of the general's speech to a joint Session of Congress in the Capitol yesterday. Vice President Humphrey stands applauding at left. After praising the training and quality of the. men of his command, he appealed for the continued support of the American public at home. --AP Wirephoto take LSD in a Toronto hotel! room. Leslie Schniffer, 17, who tes- Canada and Ontario Evidence Acts, described the LSD trip taken by Stern in the hotel room, Schniffer said he had smoked ing a contact the money. marijuana and taken LSD with Stern and others in the York- ville district of Toronto. ternal Affairs Minister Paul to go to New York, supposedly|rriday the positions to buy drugs, but that Stern had| sides f e ; i in the Vietnam conflict failed to obtain them after giv- P immediate hope of a ceasefire After Stern's return to Tor-| agreement. onto a week later, Schniffer) He spoke to reporters after a said he helped Stern package|45.minute conversation with U marijuana into 55 bags. He said|Thant, his second meeting with these were later taken to York-|the UN Secretary-General in 24 He said he had lent Stern $200/\jartin of Canada told reporters|Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister of both Vasily have hardened and he sees no|at UN _ headquarters |Ambassador Arthur Goldberg, Kuznetsov and Soviet Ambassador Nikolai Fedorenko in New! York in the last two days. | At the press conference, Mar- tin declined all comment on military operations and buildups jby either side in the Vietnam 'war. "I am not going to take a bag. Schniffer said he told Stern he did not intend to take LSD at the hotel. He said Stern went into the bathroom of the hotel room and he heard Stern mix something in a glass much the| way a seltzer is mixed. ville and sold by Stern for $10 Board Of Ing About 15 minutes later, it) started to affect Stern, he said. "He was happy. He said he was seeing bright lights and colors and later wrote some- thing on a_ hotel brochure," Schniffer said. board of inquiry headed by Wing Cmdr. H. R. Graham was called Friday to investigate the crash of a C-130 Hercules air- craft which killed six crew members. to Schniffer's home. He said he left Stern at the corner near|armed forces he could get a bus. | Killed were Fit. Lt. Charles Bus driver Leonard Oliver|Matthews, 40, Ottawa; Fit. Lt. told the jury he remembers/D. Jack Buchner, 35, Trenton; Stern getting on the bus because/F It. Lt. Richard F. Garber, 30, he was giggling and laughing|Winnipeg; Fit. Sgt. Harold and appeared to be intoxicated.|Jones, 45, Canadian Forces To Probe Hercules Crash : | : ili in Ottawa April 11 for a TRENTON, Ont. (CP) -- A)Base, Greenwood, N.S.; Fit, Sgt,|lined in : REPORTS LSD EFFECT | : A , gradual, four-stage cessation of Royal Canadian Air Ferce|Adrian Voogt, 34, Trenton and hostilities and disengagement of base Thursday|Canadian Forces department of his home and pointed out where|night during a landing practice.|flight 'safety arrived Friday to uiry Named Sgt.- Oliver Potier, 35, Kingston, N.S. |. The board of inquiry is to hold its first session today. Other members of the board are Sqdn. Lar. J. R...Howey, Fit. Lt. G. | The four-engined turbo-prop| Meering and Fit. Lt. J. A. Mc-| He said Stern later became|aircraft crashed and exploded/Clure. depressed and they took a 1a%i| about 1% miles from the end of the main runway of the Trenton|Owens and F. S. Smith of the Squadron leaders D. W. survey the crash scene. The $2,600,000 plane, noted for its ability to make short take- offs and landings, apparently brushed power lines as it went usuarteracmee POSitions Have Hardened' On Vietnam, Says Martin UNITED NATIONS (CP)--Ex-{hours. He also talked with U.S. up this line of questioning at all. It would not be the least pro-| ductive or helpful to the situa- tion." OUTLINES PROGRAM He said he wanted to stress three things: | --"We," meaning govern-| ments in touch with both | THE OSHAWA TIMES, Soterday, April 29, 1967 3 | OTTAWA (CP) --A day-long|compared with Wednesday's sitting of the Senate, during|\Commons sitting, the 249th of which debate ranged from the|the session establishing a rec- cost of anti-ballistic missiles tojord for the lower house. the strangeness of modern art,| Conservative Senators, as did ended Friday night with com-|their MP colleagues in the Com- iness and adjournment for albate on unification. Senator M. week's recess. The Senate met at 11 a.m. and with a luncheon break, worked until 7:15 p.m. to clean up work sent to it by the Com- mons in a rush Wednesday so the lower house could adjourn in time for Thursday's official opening of Expo 67 in Montreal. Both houses will reassemble Monday, May 8, for brief royal assent and prorogation cere- monies in the forenoon, followed later in the day by formal open- ing of a new session, the second of Canada's 27th Parliament since Confederation. Measures passed by the Sen- ate Friday included: --Unification of the army, navy and air force into a single force, with a common walking-out uniform and rank structure, which the govern-| ment hopes to proclaim into} JOIN law: this fall though it may | A fort e- | Penseme years, berere de: 7 FOUR SEASON'S TRAVEL --Appropriations to carry the | government through May and) June, with extra funds for) visits by the Royal Family| and other heads of state, Expo | and centennial celebrations. | --Subsidies for adult trades training, making payments both to workers recommended for vocational studies by the} manpower department and to} provincial governments for| the educational costs involved. | --Ratification of Finance Min-| fence costs. If Russia and the United anti - ballistic missile systems, the expensive defence installa- tions, he said. He estimated the cost at an additional $3,000,000,- 000 a year for Canada, trippling the current defence budget. Senator John Connolly (L-- Ontario), government Sen- jate leader and a member of the cabinet without portfolio, said such expense would be far be- yond Canada's ability to carry. on their SUNTOURS TOUR to EXPO '67 Every Friday (7:00 p.m.), Bus leaving for 3 days. Every Mon- day for 5 days (including Upper Canada Village and Ottawa). All accommodation, transporta- tion, passes, return Included. pletion of its parliamentary bus-|mons, carried most of the de- |Grattan O'Leary (PC--Ontario) said unification was an expen- sive and time-consuming experi- ment at a time when the gov- ernment should be concerned about the future of Canadian de- States don't agree not to install Canada will be forced to go into 'Unification, Training Funds Given Approval In Senate [But he said unification would |mean some savings in defence expenditures on men and equip- ment. ADULT PRESTIGE RESIDENCE 'Excellence in apartment planning 'Comfort in living 'Prestige in location 'Unequalled in space 'Adult occupancy, |CONTACT MR. NORMAN OSTER ot 723-1712 or 728-2911 FOR AN APPOINTMENT jon of Fi | inate the special tveper-ceni | FOUR SEASON'S TRAVEL refundable tax on corporate cash profits at the end of March, instead of at the end of October as originally sched- uled. It was the Senate's 116th sit- ting day .of the session which began in January last year, Washington and Hanoi, "must G@ORGIAN mansions PARK ROAD NORTH 57 King St. E. Phone 576-3131 | Progressive Conservative do everything we possibly can to bring the war to an end." --"The problems that the world will face when the war ends must be anticipated." --The nations of the world must be prepared to "take the kind of measures required" to assure peace and stability. | Martin recalled a plan he out- WHEN YOU NEED "HOME-NURSING" CALL A V.0.N. 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Mr. O'Connor said Stern rode the train to Keele Street back to Woodbine and returned to get off at the Castle Frank station--at the viaduct where he was found dead, He estima- ted the time at about 10:30 p.m. The inquest was adjourned to the Bay Street) THEN ¥E May 12. ay | | | Fast Action HOUSE SALES! | Call @ Member of the OSHAWA end DISTRICT REAL ESTATE BOARD and List Photo aag| NF MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 8 BOND ST. E., OSHAWA FOR. WOMEN NECK SUPPORT OBESITY OR ABDOMINAL TRACTION 6277 SURGICAL ~~ SUPPORTS @ FITTED BY QUALIFIED FITTERS @ MEDICAL PHARMACY LTD. 300 KING STREET WEST, OSHAWA, ONTARIO MEDICAL Psp h BUILDING Ub DOVE Troister Available at leading onto Transit Com ion sub- way trainman, said he saw : Stern dancing on a _ subway The love affair of the Furniture stores everywhere. OUR y, i Up 1 yp NTH ROISTERY year--you and your Troister Chesterfield. We've got your colour, | a colour that will light | up your living room, turn on your guests and exalt your personal taste. 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