® THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, Auguet 22, 1967 ce eis Pp RAG SEI Seen ener) Be i By DON HARVEY magistrate did not ask for a|the cells to await transportation) NORTH BATTLEFORD, Plea back the mental hospital. Sask. (CP )--Victor Ernest) Among 50 spectators who| An intensive police investiga-| Hoffman, 21, was remanded for|crowded the second-floor court-|tion involving 75 RCMP ended) * *. "HEART ATTACK SUSPECTEL | Spokesman at a_ hospital where Bobby was taken in ertical condition, said he may have suffered a heart Paul Johnquist and Leo Gilligan are two of the mec on the ledge aiding in rescue, while firemen's Peter Bobby, 65, window washer dangles by a safe- ty belt over a third - floor ledge of a downtown build- ing in Minneapolis, Minn., ladder is propped alongside attack Mon. Bobby fell, bruising the building. Bobby was : his forehead. Policeman rescued moments later. (AP Wirephoto) Viet Nam Situation Seen | WASHINGTON (AP)--Sena-| President Johnson said againjover Chinese soil was "most tor Clifford P. Case suggested Monday U.S. goals in the war unfortunate and very ominous. today the heavy U.S. military | are limited to stopping aggres involvement in Vietnam has sojsion "to assure a small and|io¢ failed to bring about "those tranped the Johnson adminis-|struggling nation the chance to : sb tration that the Saigon govern-\chari its own future in free- social and political changes in ment can ignore demands for|dom." South Vietnam and those reforms in the South basic civil reforms. | PRESENTS MEDAL namese government and mili- Case, a New Jersey Republi- we . awk can and a member of the Sen-) s remarks came at a Whi 4 ; ' a ate foreign relations committee,|Hou-e ceremony at which he| 'ary sisposstensiesanans without which said plans to dispatch 45,000 presented the Medal of Honor victory" is impossible. additional U.S. troops empha-|to Sgt. Jimmie E. Howard of! Unless President Johnson size that "'American prestige is|the U.S. Marine Corps for valor produces some credible evi- 60 deeply involved that welin Vietnam. dence of progress toward those can't withdraw and the South Vietnamese, knowing this, feel|the navy's earlier announce-| unable to avoid the conclusion free to ignore our require-| ment that two of its attack/that the task is beyond the ments." planes are missing and pre-|capacity of his administration." "I am convinced that the| sumed downed in China. | American people will not} That announcement also) accept such a position," hejbrought little comment from) said, "Yet the president's deci-|senatoers who last week com- sion to send more troops is/plained that bombings within 10 hard to reconcile with any con-|miles of the Chinese border clusion other than that the/were increasing the risk of administration has allowedjChinese intervention. Brampton Has 1,000 Cases { itself to be trapped into this) But Chairman J. W. Ful- ppampron (CP) -- Magis- intolerable dilemma." \brigkt (Dem.--Ark.) of the Sen- | : ; 5 trate J D. Burger sta down to Case's views were in a pre-jate foreign relations committee) } andie the weekly court here pared Senate speech. said the straying of the planes togay and found 1,000 cases on the docket. More, it was clearly evident. aste een n eserves Hundreds of people jammed the courtroom, the parking lot ms was packed and other persons : d with a date with justice had 140) essiona y raine parked their cars on nearby streeis, By ELINOR READING {school had problems: Courses While Magistrate Burger sat VANCOUVER (CP)--A sur-jwere geared for young stu-|jin his chamber drinking coffee, vey of women university gradu-| dents, part-time programs for|accused persons, anxious -- ates says Canada is wastingigraduate study were few,|return to work, were making reserves of professionally -|course schedules were hard to}d ea!s with policemen. Most trained women who are kept/fit to family life and admission agreed to plead guilty, pay the out of the labor force by tax] requirements in schools of fine end leave. laws, university policies or pre-|social work and library science| «t's the third time this year judice and habit citi were rigid. |the docket has been this big," "We talk a great deal about : , the magistrate said. 'I don't the brain drain to other coun- MADE SMALLER STUDY a _|know what I can do about the tries.' said Patricia Cockburn, A parallel but smaller stu Y | situation." director of the $25,000 survey |! French - speaking graduates Bal 'i réleased in book form Monday/|S2!d the entire comm chaliaad Parke Ag police sgt. nae by the Canadian Federation of ur one |Strickland, supervising the Jniversity Women. - A campaign by the depart-| 9 oon j saat id i ee what about the brain/ment of labor to encourage the] seks is on vacation, said it} déain down the kitchen sink?" jhiring of women graduates|2s 2 common occurrence dur-| The 196-page study was ini- older than 40; ing July. August and September tiated in 1966 to find out what| 2 Legislation to set standards for the docket to be crowded. was needed for women gradu-|for part-time work; "Mest counties have justices ates to improve their academic' 3. Establishment of ajof the peace to handle the skills and re-enter employment.|women's occupational counsel-|minur offences," Sgt. Strick- The Ontario, Quebec and feder- ling and information service; land said. "But Peel County al governments contributed) 4. Vocational schools for the|doesn't have a JP, although we} $18,000 of its cost and the|training of domestic help; have asked the attorney-) CFUW $7,000 5. Part-time university) general's' department to appoint courses leading to a degree; one." 4 The report recommends tax changes, vocational information' 6. Services such as nursery; A. A. Russell, inspector of; and ineré d part-time work|schools, school lunches and/legal offices in the attorney-| to jure women back into their|group supervision after school | general's department was una-| professions. It also suggests) hours. |vailable for comment. more flexible graduate pro-|-- oo grams and more financial assistance to help them return to school. 15,000 SENT SURVEY . The survey, sent to 15,000 women across Canada and returned by about 6,500, found 55 per cent of the university- trained women were working full or part-time and another seven per cent had definite plans to work. But 17 per. cent were undecid- ed about working, and 42 per cent hesitated about going back to school. These are the minori- ties the report says can be recruited to fill gaps in teach- ing and other professions. Women surveyed said they did not work because of pre- school children and ambivalent attitudes toward working out- side the home. They also said they lacked job information, opportunities for part-time work and income tax deduc- tions for household help. "Our survey shows more than one-third of the women not working are deterred by the present income tax structure," said Mrs, Cockburn. Those who went back to HELD OVER FOR "Yy.0-U" BREAKING ALL OSHAWA RECORD'S COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents SIDNEY POITIER "iwes cuvet' af ny PRODUCTION OF ' : Jo "TO SIR, WITH LOVE" TIMES -- 1:30 - 3:20 - 5:25 - 7:30 - 9:30 Clize's| Td |Sask, where he was arrested|SHACKLED AGAIN | world-famous ] mm Orchestra, conducted by Arthur Py P is ' A ; i ) le a ) 1¢ y ATtAUT) was - provincial |tion courses, seven will begin As n @) era e Fiedler, gave a thrilling concert vocational training program {Courses this year and one is to) at Expo 67's Place des Nations * saluted Canada's Centennial Case said the administration| Year Viet-|by Governor John A. Volpe aS\ing in Canada into the mid-20th'|to start in B.C. this year. Johnson made no reference to) goals, he said, '"'we shall be| heen treated to such a perform-|of criticism but unable to do {-| department while Chief Stanley! = a mental examination Monday|room in the city police station|with the peaceable arrest of when he appeared before Mag-|were Mrs. Lee Hill, 19, of Hoffman on his father's farm. | istrate J. M. Policha on a Chetwynd, B.C., oldest surviv-; It came some three hours |charge of capital murder in the|/ing Peterson. Seated with her after the Petersons were in a j|Aug. 15 shooting death of was her husband, brother-in-'single grave at the Shell Lake \James Peterson, 47, a Shell !aw and father-in-law, jvillage cemetery, 57 miles east Lake district farmer. Hofiman's parents, Mr. and of Prince Albert. MER , Mrs Robert Hoffman, were not| The slain were Mr, Peterson, Brg ast _ Roper pagar in court. his, wife Evelyn, 42; and their face While in the dock Hoffman'children, Jean, 17; Mary, 13; slain Hoffman, father's farm near hand- Dorothy, 11; Pearl, 9; William, 5; Colin, 2, and Larry, 1. Four-year-old Phyllis was t unharmed as she slept under Saturday, showed little emotion' But was shackled when he the bedclothes between two of during the 10-minute court) was led away from the dock to'her sisters. Mrs. Hill was at . |was released from his employed on his) oysfs Leask, Hoffman Gets Mental Test As Murder Case Remanded her home in Chetwynd at the time of the shooting. Police said 28 shots fired j About 1,500 persons attended the 17-minute . Anglican -- burial service at Shell Lake, a small farming community 65 miles northeast of North Battleford. - Mr, Peterson's coffin was) > draped with a Canadian flag, in| ; tribute to his military service in tho Second World War. There was a bouquet of red roses and a single rose on the coffin of his wife, buried with one-year-old Larry, and single red roses on the coffins of the other chil- drer. were | = appearance. He was remanded for 30 days to the mental hospi- ve'altainion"""" Liberal MP Gives When told he had been com- mitted for psychiatric examina- ' we tion, he asked the magistrate: "iene mer tl «« CN Responsibility shock treatment?" | BENCH REPLIED = PORT ELGIN, Ont. (CP) --] Mr. Munro said quite a few The magistrate replied: "I do 1¢ Canadians do not pay more|Canadians were 'not a_ bit not really know, but I believe aitention to the constitutional |interested in the constitutional there will be preliminary exam- division of responsibility, they | differencse. They think it's eva- ination by doctors. will not have a country, a/sion" on the part of the federal Hoffman was under heavy|young Liberal MP warned here) government. | RCMP escort during the one-) Monday. He blasted uninformed citi-| mile drive to the courtroom! John C. Munro, 36, parlia-| zens who seem to approach the from his cell. Two RCMP offi-/ mentary secretary to Jean|issue with an attitude like this: cers took him to the prisoner's Marchand, minister of manpow-| Don't tell us the probelm, just box where he sat staring at the er and immigration, said he|tell us what to do. | floor and stroking a bandage on feels a co-operative federation 7" his right thumb. -- with a continuing dialogue a a He rose immediately when| between the provincial govern- Ontario Leads Data Process | his name was called by the| ments and Ottawa -- is the only magistrate and walked to stand answer. directly in front of the bench. The Hamilton East member \The charge was read and the/said legislators can no longer | oe 1OOR at in the the fine print |look TORONTO (CP)--Ontario| British North America Act. leads other provinces in high-| Speaking at the 7th annual|schocl data-processing teach- os on Ontario Conference on Inter-jing, according to a Group Relations, he said Cana- dians are going to have to learn |what body is responsible for| {implementation of what legisla- tion. made by the Canadian Educa- tion Association. Questionnaires were sent i) 150 school boards, of which 115 Too often, he said, Canadians rened : { do not want to know the facts. Fifteen Ontario school boards A case in point, he claimed,|have data-processing _ instruc- the federal At Expo MONTREAL Boston (CP)--The Pops originally subsidized entirely by |Start the following year. federal and provincial funds but y ni s Massachusett Monday night as Massachu 7 Alberta ranks second, with) turned back Ligon to the|four boards already giving] bbl hich treated provinces to finance on their| computer instruction and one to|------ The Orchestra, which treate |star* in 1968-1969. Three Saskat-| own. The federal - provincial plan provided funds for con-|c he wan boards Struction of facilities and equip-|courses and B.C. and Manitoba ment to bring vocational train-|have one each, with one more a jam-packed audience of 20,000 to a performance under the stars, was brought to Canada the New England state cele-| century. brated its self-proclaimed Mas-| There are no courses in Que- " é *<| 'We had no say in the admin-|bec, but one is planned for the "oh pi Day at the world's istration or operation. All we| coming year and one for 1968- . é 'i ¢ did was put up money," Mr. !1969. It was the first time since the Munro said. A total of 6,164 students were| official opening of Expo April) jt was '"'one awful thing," he|receiving courses in data-pro-| 27 that visitors to the fair had| said to be on the receiving end|cessing in 1966-1967. ; | The CEA says the survey was jance at Place des Nations, nor-| more than advise critics to take\undertaken because many mally the centre of a teen-age|their problems to the provinces|employers are being forced to discotheque as Expo evenings! which administered the pro-|use computers less because of draw to a close. |gram. \shortages of trained personnel. Massachusetts took the spot- light at Expo shortly after the ' Gavattiie of Mrs, Lyndon ih 9.9.9.6.6.0.0.6.66.6 606600000 4 Johnson, wife of the United) ' States president, who had| wound up a two-day informal ' and private visit to the fair. Today was being devoted to TODAY 5 the Soviet Ukraine, whose flag| will be raised at ceremonies at) : JS Place des Nations to be attended by Pyotr R. Tronko, deputy chairman of the council of ministers of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, and| |Pierre Dupuy, Expo's com-| missioner-general. Mr. Volpe presented Mayor Jean Drapeau of Montreal with an engraved silver platter from |"'the Commonwealth of Massa- |chusetts" to remind the mayor of the occasion as well as the admiration of his achievements The wackiest road HELD OVER WALTER "108 BRENNAN LOWELL GARBER- DOTRICE a WYNN GD WALT DISNEY process |tempting for each of the 10 pre- survey |State in Canada like England, \er we realize it the better so we are giving) § Warni Di ° a He said the federal govern- ment got out of its shared spending arrangement -- intro- duced at a time when the need for vocational training facilities was critical -- for many rea- sons, He said all the provinces --| : without incurring any element] © of blame -- tried to get one up| on Ottawa while the federal government worked toward the same end. . TIGER BY THE TAIL says are worth $20,000. (AP Wirephoto) He conceded it was very miers to try and get an advan- tage but warned they will have to learn to downplay their con- siderations in the best interests of the country as a whole. "We'll never have a unitary John Tumpson, 25, a law student, has a tiger by the tail. He says he has figured out how to crack a gas sta- tion giveaway game -- but can't get paid for cards he RAINFALL IS ZERO No rain has ever been record- | ed at Calama, Chile. | France or Sweden and the soon- ATTRACTION can get to work from there." On another matter, Mr. Munro said discrimination was built | into Canada's existing immigration policy. he Liberal member! Phone 723-0241 or 728-0192 explained the regulation he was| referring to made it possible for people to sponsor a wider variety of relatives in Europe than, for example, Asia. HELD OVER BY POPULAR DEMAND DANNY COUGLAN REVIEW FEATURING... DANNY COUGLAN Singer, M.C., Composer and Recording Artist And His or YOUNG CANADIANS Spur of the THE SPRUCE VILLA HOTEL WHITBY gh 2 al nes RESERVATIONS - 668-3386 EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION The Exciting PEGGY JACKSON AND HER EXOTICS Moment Walk In. Entertainment and Dancing Nightly Saturday Matinee 4 to 6 p.m. French Buffet Daily 12-12:30 and 5-9 p.m. Sunday Dinners 5-8:30 p.m, DINERS CARDS HONORED Now Licensed unde C.8.0, for Sunday ff PHONE 7235-2645 Banquets -- Weddings -- Parties «and "TWICE ah the only way to live! jin helping bring the world's fair to Canada this year. The Massachusetts The legend of the my co cEagle REGENT | BOVEINDE TECHNICOLOR® was welcomed to Expo by Rob- A COMALTOHER ert Shaw, the fair's deputy ee ' # 5 commiselonereeneral, aad FEATURE DAILY AT: 2:50--5:05---7:20--9:35 later visited city hall where he ---- | signed the visitors' book before OSHAWA ENDS TONIGHT returning to the fair for the evening of entertainment. DEBBIE REYNOLDS Z "THE SINGING NUN" HAYLEY MILLS "Trouble With Angels" NOW SHOWING "WHAT IN HELL STARTS TOMORROW | BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 8:00 BOTH IN COLOR He's that playboy trouble-shooter who shoots the works]... DEAN MARTIN as MATT HELM _ "Tae SILENCE SFLLASEVENS ONAN A census (1D CHARIS COLUMBIA PICTURES presents for murder! | Hang them | for taking " woman!" MOTOR INN Newly Opened Motor Inn Invites you to enjoy our excellent entertainment, elegant atmosphere and fine cuisine. We would ask you to treat yourself to one of our gourmet dinners -- specially pamper- ed and prepared to your individual taste. Apartment Lounge Special - SHRIMPS "MIGNONETTE" CHEF SALAD, SAUTED CHICKEN IN WHITE WINE SAUCE, MUSHROOMS ADULT | | Ne ENTERTAINMENT COWMBIA PICTURES Presemma | RICHARD | ANN. _-- WIDMARK il THE WAY WEST PANAVISION' COLOR = 7"S 2 by Deluxe | sti, | TODAY ae ' 'et ---- AAURDERERS kow | ODEON), re CAMILA SPARV:JAMES GREGORY-BEVERLY ADAMS 39 KING ST. iia YOUR CHR 2 YOUR RESERVED SEAT. CHILDREN under 12 FREE!- | WITH RICE AND VEGETABLES, CREME DE MENTHE PARFAIT FLAMBE, PENTHOUSE BOTTOMLESS CUP OF COFFEE. COMPLETE $3.60 Continuous Nightly Entertainment FEATURING: Gary Dean and the Intended DINNER %& DANCING % FULLY LICENSED ° KINGSTON RD. & HWY. 2 WESTHILL 282-1155 pf -- LF Lf -- |? -- Ft - FF _t - 1__f- |_f | and } bert | Toron moutl Osha 789 Js a pair Oshaw to run ir weeks ¢ tion, wi peak. A spo works | etructior etart soc Driver F ever - ' by the least fo The di engaged coe, no Brock t¢ ing in | Stevensc land Ri creek. We 5.6 "A show. T Miss Sal Flying ( describir Abbotsfo Internati Just b solo ret Columbii Chipn woman | paring f Kitchene The J Aug. 11 attendan She ar aerobatic Bia! Seiz LAGOS Secessio: control o Lagos a of Ibadai turing | Ore, in here. They | troops w from Or fighting new posi Fede strikes used to i push int HOL ¢ Be ee thle ee la i a BME! cae salttieh