Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 May 1967, p. 2

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2 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, Mey 20, 1967 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Plane Crashes On Freeway, Toronto Undertaker Dies TORONTO (CP)--John A. Jer- rett, 54, a Toronto undertaker, was killed Friday night when his twin-engined Beechcraft Bo- nanxa crashed into the shoulder of the Macdonald-Cartier Free- way near Toronto International Airport just west of here. There were no passengers in the aircraft. The four-seat air- craft, leap-frogging over the east and west lanes of the busy, four-lane highway, caused two cars and a truck to collide but nobody was injured. Witnesses said the light plane apparently developed engine trouble as it approached the main runway at the airport about 14 miles west of High- way 27. The plane swung in low, struck a fence on the south side of the freeway, slammed into the shoulder losing one engine and a door. It then hopped over the eastbound lanes, bounced off the median and over the west- bound lanes before coming to rest in a ditch on the north side of the highway. Mr. Jerrett, president of Jer- rett Funeral Chapels Ltd. and a father of two, was returning from Welland. He was an ex- perienced pilot. Transport. department officials at the airport Friday night de- clined to comment. on whether the pilot had received permis- sion to land. Debris of the aircraft, which burst into flames at impact, was scattered over the highway, glowing down traffic. De-Salt Project WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- ident Johnson signed into law Friday a bill authorizing a etart on a $444,000,000 project to use the power of the atom to turn sea water into fresh water on an unparallelled scale. The de-salting plant will be built off the coast of California and the goal is to turn out 150,000,000 gallons of fresh water a day by 1070--twice as much as the world now is pro- ducing from salt water. Johnson said: "This plant alone will not ly make the deserts bloom. But 'more than we have yet done, hen lan now dry. empty tain life and feed the people of the world." Arts Grants ' OTTAWA (CP)--The Canada council Thursday announced gens to the arts totalling $122,- Awards of $10,000 have been made to the Association of Uni- versities and Colleges of Can- ada toward the cost of a con- ference on The Arts and the University at Queen's Univer- , Kingston. McMaster University, Ham- flton, has been awarded $2,500 b speakers from Englend or seminars at Council Okayed UNITED NATIONS pot The UN General Asse: voted Friday to set up a coun- cil to take over the territory of South-West Africa and lead it to dence. The vote was 85 to 2. Thirty countries, including Canada, ab- The resolution, sponsored by 76 African, Asian and Latin American countries, is a se- = to a General Assembly res- ution of last October that de- elared South Africa had for- feited its right to govern South- West Africa, HERE AND THERE NEW ASSISTANT Edmond R. Blomme, former- of Huttonville, has assum- ed his duties as assistant sup- erintendent of the Pine Ridge School at Bowmanville. AJAX PARADE The Ajax Centennial Parade will be held at 1:30 p.m., Mon- day, May 22, and not Saturday CLAUDE JODOIN «+. in hospital 'Mild Stroke' OTTAWA (CP) -- Claude Jo- doin, 54, President of the Cana- dian Labor Congress, was taken to hospital late Friday after- noon after suffering what an associate said was "a mild stroke" in his: office. Mr. Jodoin collapsed at his desk, apparently stricken with a general paralysis of his right side. A doctor who was called ordered him sent by ambulance to the Civic Hospital. Boycott Asked - OTTAWA (CP) -- Claude Jo- doin, president of the 1,350,000- member Canadian Labor Con- gress, urged Prime Minister Pearson in a letter Friday to support a labor move to have Greece boycotted by European - \was told she had informed po- '\found in a food freezer were = \terms. She had elected trial by Three In Freezer VEGREVILLE, Alta. (CP)-- The trial of Patricia Brown, 22, sentenced to four years on two charges of criminal negligence, lice the bodies of three babies her children. She was sentenced Thursday to two four - year concurrent! judge alone. The former telephone opera- tor was charged with having caused the deaths of two infants whose bodies were found by her mother in the basement food freezer in her parents' home at Tofield last August. On Pinklist TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto board of education was pink- listed Friday and its exper- ienced high school teachers in- vited to resign by the Ontario Secondary Schoo! Teachers' Federation, The pinklist, so called because it is a notice written on pink paper, does not forbid teachers from working for the school board, but deprives them of federation benefits if they do. Sse s CBC Criticized OTTAWA (CP) -- Creditiste Leader Real Caouette has called for a parliamentary committee "to get the rats out of the CBC." Mr. Caouette said during the Commons throne speech debate Friday that the publicly-owned CBC's English and French net- -- are "infested with social- sts,"" He complained about a "bias to socialism" that invariably favored the Ne w Democratic Party. organizations. The proposal, by the Interna- tional Confederation of Free Trade Unions, is to have the European Economic Com- munity, the Organization for Economic Co - operation and Development, and the Council of Europe suspend all relations "until democratic rights are restored in the country and all. political prisoners freed." army. surgeon-poet Col. with the Gree government/da' where Col. McCrae was born Nov, 30, 1872, was declared a national historic site last year. Flanders Poet OTTAWA (CP)-- The federal government will pay half the $40,000 cost of acquiring and re- storing the Guelph birthplace of John McCrae, author of In Flanders' Fields, it was announced Thurs-|ified," he said. y. The Walter Street house Col. McCrae wrote his fa- mous First World War poem during the Battle of Ypres in 1915 while stationed in an eight- foot - square, dug - out dressing station. The poem, a tribute to war dead buried in the poppy- covered fields of Flanders, was published in the Dec. 8, 1915 'MONTREAL (Special) -- Members of the F. J. Donevan Collegiate Institute Senior Or- chestra ended a highly success- ful visit to Expo 67 with two outdoor concerts on the Expo grounds this week, Under the direction of F. Alan Reesor, the 69-member orches- tra braved cold weather and high winds to perform on the open-air bandshell between the pavilions of France and Brit- ain. Twice, their sheet music was blown into the surrounding water and had to be fished out. Undaunted, the orchestra play- ed selections by Leroy Ander- son, Tchaikovsky and Verdi. They ended their concert with a medley from The Sound of Music. VARIETY OF MUSIC Master of Ceremonies Bill O'Reilly explained to the audi- ence in French and in English that the purpose of the concert was to present different types of music. Accordingly, a num- ber of members of the band, who call themselves the Just Six Plus One, played three Ti- juana_ Brass-style numbers. The LSD, a folk group, sang two songs which were well re- ceived by the audience. At one point during the per- formance the high winds blew water from the surrounding awnings on the audience. Amid gales of laughter, they moved to another section of the band- shell, Members of the Senior Or- chestra had been planning their Winds Plagued City Band At Expo '67 Performances trip to Montreal since the be- ginning of the year. A money- raising committee headed by Brian Barker worked all year. The orchestra held a dance, a fashion show and a card party. They sold decals and chocolate bars and gave two concerts to raise the necessary money. Mr. Reesor commented, "They really worked hard for}; this trip. I think they've had a lot of fun." Principal of the school, A. B. Woods accompanied the orches- tra, along with members of the staff, Mrs. E. W. Stewart, J. Elliott, J. Potz, Miss B. Murphy, Miss M. Hacker and Miss N. Grout. Miss Grout, a former Mont- success. "I had never expected it would be so beautiful. I hope I - return again when school ends." member of the Ontario legisla- ture suggested Friday that the house is making a poor showing for itself in its debate on Prem- John Walker Frances|ier. Robarts' proposal for a } federal - provincial conference Maron, Kaw. Ryenel andi C ofederation. Parkdale) said the debate, which opened Thursday with the promise of being one of the house's longest on a resolution, was pared to the great Confedera- ment speakers have acted "'like a bunch of schoolboys getting up and reading psalms." themselves. They stand up and read from a piece of paper like choirboys."" barts' call for a two-day Con- realer, said the fair was a great federation of Tomo conten ence will resume Tuesday. The Premier said it will continue until everyone wishing to speak has had a chance. WEATHER FORECAST Major Issue, Minor Debate TORONTO (CP) -- A Liberal James Trotter (L -- Toronto a sad affair when com- ion debates of 1865. He said Conservative govern- "They're not thinking for The debate on Premier Ro- POINTS OF INTEREST Bill O'Reilly said he had found some of the smaller nationa pavilions and the theme pavilions the most interesting. Other members of the band favored the pavilions. of Brit- ain, France, Canada, the pro- vincial pavilions, Bell Telephone with its 360-degree movie the- atre, and the theme pavilion Labyrinth, 4 All agreed that the fair and 2 the trip had been unqualified successes. They also mentioned that even in three days they had not been able to see all of the fair. TORONTO (CP) -- Legisla- tion providing for a new Mental Health Act which would remove the idea that mentally-ill per- sons "should be put away," was introduced in the legislature Friday. Health Minister Matthew Dy- mond said the act provides that admission to mental institutions will be made solely on the basis of medical judgment. "The rights of the individual are not only preserved but fort- "Committal hearings before magistrate are not retained, nor are procedures which allow ad- missions to hospital on police judgments alone." He told the house that under doctors who left New York in a single-engined plane Friday to try to duplicate Charles A. Lind- bergh's historic flight to Paris French capital today less than Officials said. Sommer, Ky., and Dr. John Rieger, 45, of Los Gatos, Calif., arrived at Cormeille Airport, a short dis- M i 1H tk Act T E d Lena northwest of Paris, at en e 0 n York 20 hours before, at 8:49 a.m. Friday. 'Put Them Away' Attitude: LINDBERG TIME CUT BY DOCTORS PARIS (AP)--Two American 0 years ago, landed near the 0 hours after takeoff, airport The officials said Dr. Francis 54, of Barbourville, 745 a.m. They had left New Lindbergh made the flight in 3 hours, 29 minutes, 30 sec- north flurries. Sunny With Few Clouds, Little Warmer For Sunday TORONTO (CP) -- Official forecast issued at 5:30 a.m. to- day. Synopsis: Ontario is in a strong northwesterly flow of cold air, Showers and snowflur- ries are occurring across the and this will continue through most of today. In the lower Great Lakes regions there will be mostly sunny but windy weather today. The prospects for Sunday are for sunny but still somewhat cool weather in the southern sections of the province. Across the rest of On- tario skies will be variable and there is a chance of some light rainshowers. Toronto, Hamilton, London, Windsor, Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Niagara, Lake Ontario, southern Lake Huron regions: Sunny with a few cloudy periods, windy and cool today. Mostly sunny and not quite so cool Sunday. Winds northwest 15 to 25 today and light Sun- day. Sudbury, North Bay, northern Lake Huron, Haliburton, Geor- gian Bay regions: Mostly cloudy and cooler with scattered show- ers today. Clear and cool to- night. Variable cloudiness and not quite so cool Sunday. Winds northwest 20 to 30 today and light Sunday. Algoma, White River regions: Mostly cloudy, windy and cool with scattered showers or snow- Partial clearing this afternoon. Sunday variable cloudiness and continuing cool. Winds northwest 20 to 30 today and light Sunday. Timagami, Cochrane, western James Bay regions: windy and cold with scattered showers or snowflurries today. Variable cloudiness and cold to- night and Sunday. Winds south- Cloudy, the right to appeal the doctor's pened % - review board consisting of a lawyer, two psy- chiatrists and two laymen. Patients admitted because they were unfit to stand trial for criminal offences or because they were found not guilty by reason of insanity would also be given the statutory protection of an annual examination by an advisory review board under the chairmanship of a Supreme Court judge. "It now can be said that no patient detained in any psychia- tric facility in this province will be without the opportunity of receiving an independent re- view of his case," said Mr. nds, $ $$ $ $ $ $$ ATTENTION $$$ $ $ $ FARMERS! $ WHY PAY MORE? SAVE * . » « PREMIUM QUALITY Gasoline - Diesel and Motor Oils Farm Tanks and Pumps Available Out of Oshawa, Whitby and District DX Ol CALL COLLECT 668-3341 $ nththththak eae an eT the act, medical certificates will no longer serve as legal authority to detain a patient for an indeterminate period. The act would force a doctor to te - examine and re - admit a patient at frequent intervais. The patient would also have edition of Punch. 'Public' Plea OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana- dian Welfare Council asked Pri- me Minister Pearson Thursday for assurance that the federal medical care insurance pro- gram will be administered by a "public authority, in the fullest interpretation of the phrase." The council said recom: mendations have also been sent LIONEL CHEVRIER e+ » received gift Giant Tapestry MONTREAL (CP) -- Lionel Chevrier, Canada's commis- sioner-general for state visits this year, went to the Czecho- slovakia pavilion Friday to take the provincial legislatures and would permit intermediary agencies to have a role in ad- ministering provincial schemes, subject to a public body assessing claims for pay- ment and fixing the amount to be paid. to provincial premiers, MPs, other officials, The federal scheme, which goes into effect July 1, 1968, health Money. To . Invest! 614% per annum for five years by investing in Gueranteed Investment Certificates which ere Guerenteed--es to Principal and Interest, Flexible--moy be used as Col- lateral for loans. meble---by Execut the event of death, A é- Trustee Act In- ors In a close look at that country's gift to Canada, a giant tapestry. Mr. Chevrier received the gift officially for the Canadian government May 16 from Pres- ident Antonin Novotny of Czech- oslovakia but Friday he was able to take a close look at the masterpiece, measuring about 12 feet by 24 feet. The tapestry, called The Maple and Lime Tree, was commissioned by the Czech gov- ernment cially as a gift to the Canadian government. It expresses friendship between the two countries. Fast Action HOUSE SALES! Call «@ Member of the OSHAWA and DISTRICT . REAL ESTATE BOARD and List Photo meals vestments, CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION ai SATURDAYS MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE as reported in Thursday's issue of The Times. MUSIC EXAMS The board of examiners of the Royal Conservatory of Mu- will conduct examinations in » June 26 to June 28, in- . Examiner, George Mc- is principal of the Scar- Branch of the conser- is a member of ie E e : of examiners. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. | 24-HOUR. SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 EARS NECK SUPPORT TRACTION Rg SURGICAL ~" rw SUPPORTS @ FITTED BY QUALIFIED FITTERS © OBESITY OR ABDOMINAL MEDICAL PHARMACY LTD. 300 KING STREET WEST, OSHAWA, ONTARIO MEDICAL ARTS BUILDING 728-6277 _* BACK Dymond.. RIG OSHAWA RADIO Pick up your Ent CKLB's "EXPO TRIG OSHAWA RADIO EXCURSION' Five Days at "Expo '67" Expenses Paid For A Family Form Today and be eligible for a week at Expo '67, stay at Habitat '67 during the week of July 24th, 1967 Fill Out Your Entry Form and Mail To CKLB. Listen for your entry to be selected and when KL-Radio calls you simply, identify the sponsor on this particular portion of CKLB "Expo Excursion". Mer- chants who supplied card must be listed. You and the merchant are eligible to win the Grand Prize. The Final Award Will Be Made June 9, 1967 Cadillac. Billards Marty's Record Bar Plantation Chicken Rundle Gerden Centre John Swon Hardware Flowers by Penrose Oshawa Wood Products Ward's Dry Goods Oshawe Discount House Ideal Deiry Products Ltd. Arnold Palmer Cleaning Centre Roger's Appliances Ross Mills Floors Ltd. Bowmanville Kramp Furniture ENTRY FORMS AVAILABLE Flying Dutchman Meter Hotel Whitby Bestway Motors Bay Ridges Odeon Bay Ridges Mercantile Deptment Store YY "ie Wy Expo '67 "expo excursion" Heard Several Times A Day On CKLB 1350 Radio Oshawa ee. west 15 to 25 today and light Sunday. Kingston ....+++... 38 Trenton ... - 38 58 Killaloe ... - 35 55 Muskoka .. 35 58 North Bay toe 22 50 Sudbury .. ooo 82 50 eee 30 50 Ei eacense Sault Ste. Marie ... 32 50 Kapuskasing .... 25 45 White River . Moosonee ... Timmins ......... eee 25 45 Montreal and Ottawa regions Mainly cloudy with some show- ers or thundershowers today, Sunday cloudy with sunny WORKING FOR BA There are about 90,000 undere graduate students at Australian periods. Cool. Winds westerly 15/ universities. to 20, Forecast temperatures Low overnight, high Sunday Windsor ..... ceceee 38 65 St. Thomas ........ 35 60 London o. 35 60 Kitchener ...... soe 35 60 Mount Forest ..... 32 58 Wingham ......00. 32 58 Hamilton ......+0+. 38 60 St. Catharines .... 40 60 Toronto Peterborough BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCHEONS 95e -- 1.35 DINNER 5:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Food Reasonable Prices Parking Rear of Hotel HOTEL. LANCASTER 27 KING ST. W. DRUG STORES OPEN MONDAY -- VICTORIA DAY 12 A.M, to 6 P.M. KARN DRUGS LIMITED 28 KING ST. E. 723-4621 JURY & LOVELL LTD. 530 SIMCOE ST. 5S. 725-3346 DRUG STORES Open Sunday 12 a.m. to 6 p.m. McCORDICK'S 360 WILSON RD, S. MITCHELL'S DRUGS LTD. 9 SIMCOE ST. N. PHARMACY 725-8711 723-3431 TO SHOW YOU EMIT 11 Ontario St., Oshawa HARD OF HEARING! WE'LL BE IN. YOUR TOWN TUESDAY, MAY 23rd 1, IMPERIAL OPTICAL COMPLETE SERVICE * Complete line of accessories and batteries for all makes of hearing aids. THE LATEST "LIVING SOUND" HEARING AIDS 728-6239 ' Pee on all hearing aids, conventional mode! Fidelity Hearing Aid, There is a Zenith f of el tronically correctable hearing loss. ns iota taed kgiiaard . FREE DEMONSTRATION Free on-the-spot service check of all makes GILBERT L. SCOTT AT IMPERIAL OPTICAL 11 Ontario St. * Cc makes of hearing aids, % Appointments in the privacy of your home or office at your convenience. Coll us. * yeewv @ complete line ef Zenith Hearing Mr. G, L. Scott, Zenith Dealer, Certified Hearing Aid Consultant Model for model -- feature for feature -- you won't find a better hearing aid than Zenith -- anywhere. Zenith all-transistor models include slim, trim eyeglass hearing aids, i inconspicuous at-the-ear and the world's finest High- °* NO OBLIGATION 728-6239 OPEN THIS SERVICE STATIONS SUNDAY 7:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. WHITE ROSE DOVE'S FINA R. J. TUMEY'S SHELL STATION 962 SIMCOE STREET NORTH LEX NATHAN'S SUNOCO STATION 215 KING STREET WEST COOPER'S TEXACO STATION 56 BRUCE STREET McLELLAN TIRE and BATTERY LTD. 38 PRINCE STREET T. GOCH SUPERTEST STATION 437 SIMCOE STREET SOUTH WINDER'S ESSO STATION KING end RITSON ROAD SOUTH RAY ALLEN'S ESSO STATION 288 BLOOR STREET WEST BROWN'S SUPERTEST STATION 334 PARK ROAD SOUTH GLINT'S TEXACO STATION WENTWORTH and CEDAR 792 SIMCOE STREET SOUTH STATION STATION Cedric Orchar unit director of Si Boys' Club says bi types are being co the hall to go on 27, from 10 a.m. Proceeds from the Mayo Majo! Most of the reso forward at the annt of the Association Mayors and Reeves Falls this week had relieving municipalit for education, Ma; Marks said yesterd: Overall he was with the '"'efficiency resolutions were d and "'the vigor of th who attended"'. The numerous res education tax were into one request thi vincial government 80 per cent of mun cation costs. Although this wa: "mayors and reeve: for Mr. Marks he inc the same resolution tion tax seemed to every year. He addec they will get the mé¢ Board of education 8. Wotton says the represents a transfer cational tax load fro tial to general. '" owner is taxed for necessity (his home). ince gets its revenue ple who have either School ( Some Ut A. J. Scott, past-p the Urban Developn tute said Thursday, " education and social a municipality can mockery out of any : community planning.' Mr. Scott, one of tw at a seminar sponso! Central Ontario Join' Board, said because | involved in providi tional facilities man palities are relucte ahead with urban de' He said the provinci ment must distribute more evenly across th and by doing so re municipality of the e burden. DRAWBACKS Mr. Scott said urba ment on a municipal two main drawbacks, ' often unable to hire trained and qualified personnel, and the m defeats the purpose development in many too many developmen He said the answer tt urban development gional level with res to a regional board. He said the regio had three main functi --to prepare officia ment plans for the re --to deal with draft subdivision; --deal with all matte ing in the region. ir. Scott concluded "regional planning un gional government with a change in the | would allow for constr jectives in the field development." DELAYS COSTLY Mr. Scott was fol Milton Farrow, superv subdivision section, d of municipal affairs. Mr. Farrow said h had three masters to in reviewing cases f development. A respon the province whose must be protected;

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