Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 May 1967, p. 3

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To Vote cts tly said there is ) ignore punish- errent to crime more and more abilitation." But, habilitation has both in methods the offenders nade clear that ; not a success t being stressed state and local pend $1,000,000,- seping prisoners d only $200,000,- ition. Ninety per sonnel at correc- ns are guards, re on treatment er cent do aca- ational work, s oF alled areful lyment wish, p et Sele S 19.67 3 36.67 Ss 49.67 s 79.67 98 99.67 Ss 18.67 AMERAS o 67.67 3 167.67 ARS io 34.67 5 24.67 sO 19.67 BARBARA POTTERY WHAT do you think of the new GO transit commuter train service which starts to- day and do you plan on us- ing it 'travelling to Toronto for work or pleasure? Six people were asked this ques- tion during the second part of a man - on - the - street survey. They said: Barbara Pottery, 391 Eliz- abeth St: "If it was closer to Oshawa I think it would be great. I think that I would travel on it if it were pop- ular enough and everyone else ome HTN NEEM 12 Canadiats Die, Five Hurt In Air Crashes On Holiday By THE CANADIAN PRESS the Victoria Day weekend killed 12 Canadians and injured five} others. The bodies of two Vancouver men were found Monday in the wreckage of a light plane at Harrison Lake, 60 miles east of Vancouver. The plane was on a routine flight when it slammed into a stand of timber. Four other B.C. men, a pilot and three skydivers, were killed Saturday when their single-en- gine plane crashed at the 3,500- foot level of Vernon Mountain southeast of Vernon in the Oka- nagan Valley. Three veteran Air Canada pi- lots died Saturday night in the crash of a DC-8F jet at Ottawa International Airport, The pilots were on a training flight at- tempting a simulated landing when the four-engine, 131-seat aircraft plunged to earth. CRASHES IN PARK Two Quebec men were killed] and another injured Saturday when a single - engine Piper Champion smashed into the side of a hill in Mont Tremblant pro- vincial park, 100 miles north- HARRY |tempted to land on Whitewater west of Montreal. It was be- MRS, HARRY ARNOLD ARNOLD was using it. I would use it for pleasure." Mr. Harry Arnold, 603 Centre St., Whitby: "I think that it is a dandy thing. Should be useful for people that travel to Toronto every day. Transportation has never kept up with the population I think that if they had this years ago, they wouldn't have the problems on_ the highways that they do today."" Mrs, Harry Arnold, 603 Centre St., Whitby: "I think that it is a good idea. I'd like to travel on it for pleas- i Ulblsi ~, ROGER BLUNT FRED B ure, It would be a great thing for going to Toronto for a day and missing all of the heavy traffic." Roger Blunt, 136 Townline Road West: "I agree with it wholeheartedly. It has my full support. Roads are so crowded today that you can't really get out and enjoy a ride in the country. I plan on using it but I would like to see it come to Oshawa." Fred Brooks, 97 Cromwell Ave: "I think it's a great thing for a lot of people. Es- pecially people that travel to : or: 5 ROOKS MRS, ARTHUR VENN | it would be cheaper for them to travel by the new com- muter. I won't use it myself, I'm 65.now and been driving a car ever since I was 18," Mrs. Arthur Venn, 276 Kaiser Cres. 'I think it will be con: venient for people who travel back and forth to Toronto every day. I won't use it for quite a while because I have a family to look after and that takes most of my time. time. (Times Photos) mt intra n4v singe lieved the pontoon - equippedjeral investigator said Monday Six airplane crashes during| plane was attempting to land on/night. a lake during bad weather. A Toronto man died Friday/ones aboard the $6,500,000 jet, night when his two-engine plane| were killed. caught a shoulder of the Mac- donald - Cartier Freeway while attempting a landing at Toronto} International Airport. The light} plane flipped across the busy! highway and burst into flames in the opposite ditch. A single-engine plane crashed and sank Friday night as it at- injured. Three other Ontario men were injured earlier Friday when a light aircraft carsh - landed|@ flight instructor, was in charge. Capt. Donald J. Orr, 46, Brampton, Ont., and Capt. escaped injury when he was|Clark Henning, 48, Oakville, forced to land his plane on a|Ont., were being trained in what Burlington, Ont., golf course aa as a conversion ight. STUDY DATA about 25 miles east of Sault Ste. Marie, while a Hamilton man after it ran out of fuel. OTTAWA (CP)--An Air Can- ada DC8F was making a nor-|recorder, recoyered from the mal approach Saturday when it| Wreckage, started Monday. Sig- dropped 150 feet and exploded|nals from about 35 systems on in a bare field about one-half|the jet are taped on the re- mile short of an Ottawa Inter-|Corder and decoding them takes national Airport runway, a fed-|Some time, said Bolduc. 'New Dimensions' Talked By Johnson After Paris Trip By DAVE BAZAY QUEBEC (CP)--Premier Dan- fel Johnson returned from Paris Monday with an agreement to participate in a French satellite project that would give Quebec greater presence on the interna- tional scene. Mr. Johnson, cheered by about 200 Quebecers on his ar- rival, talked triumphantly of a 'new dimension" in France- Quebec relations after his five- day visit, which resulted in nine new projects of co-operation. He won French approval for a Quebec role in France's pro-| posed satellite communications) project, which envisages ex- change of radio and television broadcasts among French- speaking people of the world. He said details of the tele- crash investigation in the fed- eral transport department, said the plane was on "'a direct line | approach," plane that ploughed into a Lon- don cabbage patch Nov. 6, 1963, in an abortive take-off. The 90 Lake, nine miles northwest of|Passengers and seven crew es- Sudbury. Four Barrie men were|Caped but it cost $2,000,000 to rebuild the jet. This time No. 813 was on a training flight, stage. | Three veteran pilots, the only Richard L. Bolduc, chief of air The jet was No, 813, the same Capt, William A. Robinson, 46, A study of the flight data The crash occurred in clear weather. The northwest wind that was gusting up to 25 miles an hour wasn't considered strong enough to affect the big jet, even at the critical landing ments between Francé and Que- bec. Other projects include crea-} tion of a joint committee to study the possibility of French investment in Quebec and in- tensification of exchanges at the technical, administrative and cultural level. No date was mentioned in the satellite project, but France is understood to be planning a launching of such a satellite in 1970. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 /EARS SVETLANK WRITES Word Sent To Children BOSTON (AP)--'Do not re- ject me in your hearts my chil- dren,"' a mother wrote, "'be- cause you are more precious to me than anything in the world, my dear ones, and I think of you constantly, and I pray for you, since nobody here pre- vents me from doing so." The mother is Svetlana Alli- luyeva, the daughter of Stalin, writing a lament for her home- land, her children and her Rus- sian friends, "the Russia I have lost, the Russia that has been taken from me by cruel fate." The manuscript, appearing in the June issue of the Atlantic monthly which will be pub- lished Thursday, describes Pas- ternak's book as "'a revelation about my own life and about the life of Russia I knew." The manuscript also became a message to her son, Joseph, 22, and daughter, Katya, 17, whom she left in Russia. gious antiquity NINTH HEAD OF STATE More Than Million At Expo On Victoria Day Weekend By JACK TRACY MONTREAL (CP)--Expo 67 ably will be exceeded "\today spread {ts welcome mat|/DIPS BELOW FORECAST \for President Zalman Shazar of| Saturday was the only day Israel who came to the fair' to|since the fair opened that at- lattend his country's flag-raising| ceremonies | 4| Visitors in Canada since Fri-| Siday, the president and rs Busk Faces Shazar were wined and dined at.a white-tie reception in Mont- s the city every day. I think |real's city hall Monday night t | Their program for today calls 1e alta e 'or a welcome to the fair by Pierre Dupuy, Moving along a ramp Its exhi --water conservation, conquest) of the desert and developmen of its industry The number of visitors \Expo exceeded 1,000,000 during} the Saturday - through - Monday Victoria Day holiday period By 12 midnight Monday the turnstiles had counted 343,515 visitors, for the day, bringing the total number of visits dur- ing the fair's 25 public days to 6,385,552 Actual attendance at the fair has been running 1,900,000 visits ahead of pre-opening statistical) predictions. Today's estimate] and architect required. commissioner-| WASHINGTON (AP) -- State general, inspection of a guard Secretary Rusk faces a barrage of honor, raising of the Israelij°f Senatorial questions on the flag, a 2l-gun salute and Mr intensified war in Vietnam and Shazar's reply in Hebrew President Shazar is the ninth head of state to come to Expo since the fair opened April 27 Meanwhile, the Israeli pavil- ion was polished up and de- clared closed to the public for) the day because of the official | functions EXEMPLIFY ISRAEL The pavilion, with its cubist|tarily because of Vietnam. walls, geometric roof and land-| The state department said scaped garden tells the story of the Jewish nation eos : en-|0f territorial integrity in the circling the two-level display,|Middle East. | visitors see the Israel of reli-|, Committee members want to) in an exhibit|know if President Johnson has|- dominated by the Dead Sea appealed to Moscow to help pre- | | Scrolls called for 129,550 but it prob- the extent of U.S. peacekeeping commitments in the boiling Middle East. Chairman J, W. Fulbright said in advance of a scheduled ap- pearance by Rusk today at a closed session of the Senate for- eign relations committee that he fears an outbreak in the Middle East might find the) United States overextended mili- Monday the United States THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, Mey 23, 1967 3 FRIGID FLORIDA tendance dropped below esti- mates Saturday's prediction was for 307,610 visitors but rain and wind plus chilly tempera- iy kept the rumber down to Montreal's bus and subway system poured thousands Lawrence River Monday but officials of the pub- licly-owned Montreal Transpor- tation Commission said the weekend came off without a But fair officials had to use buses to supplement the Expo Express which carries visitors free across 34 miles of track linking Expo's three main sites University Fires FOR THIS BIRD | Flag - Bumer WASHINGTON (CP) -- In- MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- A_|diana State University has fired sparrow that lived almost {Canadian-born Scott Chisholm, a month in 30 - below - zero |31, who burned a small Amer- temperatures in a Miami |ican flag during an English lec- food warehouse freezer fin- |ture April 19, the office of Re- ally remembered Monday |publican Congressman Richard why he came to Florida. Roudebush said Monday. When warehouse em- Roudebush, a member of the ployees opened the freezer |House of Representatives from for photographers, the spar- (Indiana, has asked the justice row headed for the sun- |department to consider deport- shine. ing the lecturer and still is Jack Westbrook, head of |Wwaiting for a reply from the of- the warehouse's poultry di- |fice of Attorney-General. vision, said he had tried for three weeks to get the bird to fly the coop. €xp067 "T couldn't see how it r Feral Spl org West- Four Seasons Travel * average: a grees below." wey | I] DIAN Vilage ONLY eecommo: | dation--Annex te EXPO grounds, Loading platforms on the five express. stations were packed and attendants held _ visitors back to prevent the crowds be- ing pushed off the platforms in legends. Thursday is the United States' |~ national day at the fair when Postmaster - General Lawrence based on old French-Canadian | country at the flag-ralsing cere-| |stands behind a 1950 guarantee Mr O'Brien will also preside over a special ceremony mark- | ing the first day of a US stamp| honoring the Canadian centen-| jvent a military explosion be-) bits illustrate the {ween Israel and the Arab na-| achievements of the 19-year-old| 'ions in the Middle East. nation and the difficulties ahead| 4 White House spokesman} |said Monday that the U.S. has! t/been in touch with all parties | jconcerned in the Middle East at dispute. But Press Secretary | |George Christian neither would jconfirm nor deny that the presi- jdent had urged the Russians to LUNCHEONS 5:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Porking Rear of Hotel |help head off a conflagration. Gohn Ovens 0. OD. OPTOMETRIST PHONE 723-4811 to: RESIDENT CLERK OF WORKS For construction of addition to Oshawa City Hall. Minimum 15 year's experience in General Con- struction, knowledge of liaison work between owner if Oshawa resident preferred. Send resume, giving detail of previous experience | Pentiond, Boker & Polson, Architects, | 45 Charlee Street Reet, gree 5 | |] (250. yards). NIGHT LIFE ' $6.25 per been peved on r ol be Night Spots in Le: Village at| |] Also incihe' about our Bus Tours. xpo feat De | Pp ature entertainment Phone 576-3131 OUR CHILDREN DESERVE BETTER CARE Let's start giving the children a breck. Stop leaving dici and dang h hold prod where they are easily available for our tiny tots to cause them- selves possible harm or even death. There ere much too many serious accidents. We must never leave any medicine within a child's reach, After giving or taking any medicine, lock it up safely in a special cabinet. If you must keep household bleaches and other harmful household products under the sink, make the doors which enclose them impossible for children to open. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medicine. Pick up your prescription if shopping near- by, or we wiil deliver promptly without extra charge. A great many people entrust us with their prescriptions, May we compound and dispense yours P EASTVIEW PHARMACY 573 King Street East Oshawa "PHONE 725-3594 Fast --- Free -- Motorized Delivery P. B, Francis, Phm.B, -- J, R. Steffen, B.Sc. Phm. 8 BOND ST. E., OSHAWA LOWEST EXCURSION FARES To Britain and Europe ARD TRAVEL BUREAU LTD. Alex Shopping Ploze 942-6690 communications project have to be worked out. LOOK TO OTTAWA Mr. Johnson expressed sur-| prise that the federal govern-| ment had not moved into this) field. He said he saw no prob-| lems with Ottawa and would) like to co-operate if the federal | government also wanted a role in the project. The premier told a press con- ference that all nine new pro- jects, including the satellite pro-| posal, will be worked out within the framework of existing edu-| cational and cultural agree-| Global Water Confab Opens WASHINGTON (CP)--A long look at global water' problems begins today at the opening of the international conference on water for peace. Nearly 80 nations and about 5,000 delegates are expected for the conference, which ends May 31. A Canadian delegation of more than 60 -- federal and provin- cial--is attending, with the ad- vance proviso that no discussion will be accepted about possible water exports to the United States. Yugoslavia is the only Com- munist country registered at the meeting suggeted by President Johnson two years ago when he pledged that the U.S. was "pre- pared to contribute its share of the resources needed for an in- ternational crash program to deal with world water re- sources." OSHAWA ALUMINUM Soles & Service @ ALUMINUM SIDING ALUMINUM STORMS, . 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