Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Sep 1967, p. 24

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shana CPaxnn 8DOV VO MHAANg Pe {BOABAR ' >>> >>> Db DD RIAN 24 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, September 6, 1967 | OPEN SPECULATION "NEW PONTIAC GRANDE PARISIENNE Larger engines, concealed 275 hp. In addition there are winsdhield wipers, a wider two optional eights -- a 396 track and some styling putting out 325 hp and a giant changes are the main fea- tures offered by Pontiac in its 1968 models. The styling is on the same theme as last year but with a new bumper - grille combina tion in front and large, long taillights at the rear. A 327-cubic-inch V8 replaces the 283 as the standard eight while the six is upper from 230 to 250 cubic inches. The 327's are available in 210 and (pvrsnnngeanneneoceeecancncannt mE Department Of Ed THE 68s -- LARGER ENGINES barrel carburetor. Standard safety positions, new lights, ger marker window control handles. Pontiac is offering 17 models 427 which is rated at 385 hp with dual exhausts and a four features added to the new models in- clude seat belts with push- button buckles for all passen- side- safety arm- rests, energy-absorbing seat backs, and yielding door and By ARCH MacKENZIE surface, the verbal war being) warped by the American mili-) tary brass against Defence Sec-| retary McNamara is aimed at bombing of North Vietnam. military tradition of wading) boldly into controversial politi-| cal oeffairs, want McNamara's hed as well. They have allies in Congress.! Parisienne. tiac, features new instrumen- The overhead cam six en V8 engines offering 265 and 320 hp, and three choices of 400 cubic-inch engines. mg cation To Reduce Scholarships By JOHN JENSEN TORONTO plan of scholarships for every|ing as reported by his school. student earning an average of jwill be made on the basis of a) Under the Canada Student|cut infiltration of men or aid) The Grade continued next year with the/cation department. amount reduced from $400 to} Beginning with 13 examinations |i (CP)--Ontario's|student's final Grade 13 stand- Loan plan, applicants are eligi-|/from ble for loans based on summer|counts the value of taking the} $150, a department of education school year, Grade 13 standings must make his own arrange- lwill be based on a student's|)ments with the lender, usualy D. S. Bethune, director of the|full-year performance and his'a bank, for repayment. spokesman said Tuesday. student awards at the depart-/marks on papers set and ment of university affairs, said in an interview the plan will be) Student awards of about $400 We set by the federal govern-|very integrated with the Ontario Stu-jare made available to students! mont, a ® aguils me coe }marked by his teachers. Mr. Bethune said that accord- ing to the family income sched- with a net dent Awards and the Canada'needing financial helo and jncome of $6,000 under normal Student Loans programs. jenrolled in a recognized insti-'«ircymstances is expected to The requirements will remain|tute of post-secondary educa- contribute about $800 for one the same, except that awards tion. child attending university. The integrated plans are Reduced Drug Costs Urged sit" vcatitnr' so ie By University Principal SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP) -- Michael Sheldon, assistant to the principal at Bishop's Uni- versity in nearby Lennoxville, said Tuesday he believes the cost of drugs in Canada today is higher than it should be. He told a service club meet- ing forthright action is required by the government to reduce) the cost to its proper level. | "The proposals . which now | are being considered in Ottawa would have little impact on the prices paid by most people. They would create hazards for) drug quality and safety and/ they would impede the growth} of a flourishing, research-based! pharmaceutical industry in "Canada." He said companies are free to| "set any price they choose on| their products, but some of! them appear to be "extremely") short-sighted in their pricing} and to invite both public criti- cism and political action, rer ated only th ya p) vfessional fee, --Drugs should be handed to the purchaser in the manufacturer's original package, conveying ade- quate information about the drug and how it should be taken unless the physician orders otherwise. --The manufacturer's price for drug products should be the subject of negotiations with government as it is in most industrialized western countries. --The federal government should establish an _ inde- pendent source of drug information, staffed and advised by the most' compe- tent physicians and other scientists. --Governments should ensure all citizens have available a fair system of insuring against major drug expenses as an extension of medical care insurance. year at a university as deter- mined by individual | stances and requirements, Mr. «Bethune said. By providing no ;more than the funds essential |to meet university costs, the two governments hope to | comparative an alternative seems to me to) 'be completely illusory.' bringing about the all-out) The military's agitation rel- fects falling public support for Bui there also is open specu-|the war as well as signs of lation here that the chiefs ofjthree serious American miscon- staff, in that peculiar American cept'os about the entire war, ' of WASHINGTON (CP)--On the). .4), air campaign against the/ing ty owe ewvrewe™ the fighting mood and abili- of the South Vietnamese "But however tempting, such) Army. |MOOD MISINTERPRETED Critics say U.S. leaders have under-estimated the tenacity of |the Communist North and their | : Viet Cong allies in the South, 3 McNamara has emerged as a! over-estimated once again the nist Says Washington Star colum-| Richard Wilson: 'As the) frustrations of the Vietnam war} continue, and as public support) for it continues to slip, the pres-| Dr. J. R. Brummit of Vancou- sure inevitably increases for yer assistant professor of more decisive action. It is not| pediatrics at the University of in the nature or tradition of the) Rritish Columbia, in'an address American military command to 4 accept defeat gracefully." The editor ally have won an initial round in/KKKL vaccine program which) with some unusual features. Congress and that the president,involves three shots of killed moderate--the effective impact of conventional/ must "'restore civilian control| vaccine followed by a shot of New York Times says) that the generals) dove among the senior advisers _o+ non-nuclear--bombing, andiof national policy." ' Killed Measles Vaccine American Military Brass {Condemned By Professor Out To Get McNamara TORONTO (CP)--A killed measles vaccine recommended |by the Ontario Health depart- eplacing it with some new kind) "eS t-/m y [replacing some new kindjbadly over-estimated the figh date be 0 ua ecuuse keribus| ent was described Tuesday as reactions can follow if a child receiving the vaccine later comes in'contact with wild measies or receives a shot of a live vaccine. The statement was made by to the Canadian Pediatric Soci- ety convention. The Ontario health ment supports the depart- so-called live virus vaccine, The depart- | € | | ment has offered free vaccine to any municipal health depart- ment that wishes to undertake the immunization program. Dr. Brummitt said the danger! of the KKKL program arises if a child is not brought back for the fourth and final shot of live vaccine after receiving the three shots of killed vaccine. UNUSUAL FEATURES The killed vaccine by ftself has long been known to give only brief immunity, said Dr. Brummit, If a child who does not get the reinforcing shot of live vaccine comes in contact with natural measles he may get a severe case of measles He said some children have developed pneumonia and an unusual rash beginning in. the feet and legs and working toward the centre of the body. A child may also develop a severe reaction if he receives a shot of live vaccine several months or a year or two after receiving only the killed vac- cine, said Dr. Brummitt. Those who support the killed vaccine say it has fewer and less severe side effects and, unlike the live vaccine, can be administered to infants under. one year of age. Dr. Brummitt agreed that previous use of the killed vac- cine does diminish the reactions to live vaccine. However, he said the latest type of live virus vaccine known as the further attenuated vaccine does not produce. an unacceptable inci- dence of reactions. Ontario municipalities using the live vaccine in immuniza- tion programs, as did London last Apri], are not reimbursed by the provincial government for the cost of the vaccine. gine has been enlarged to 250- lNoT SATISFIED cubic-inches and is available | in 175 or 215 hp. There are also two new 350-cubic-inch circum-| |around President Joh fhe president says ony tha junstruck. This has not jenough for the military, as fil |tered through a Senate subcom mittee manned mainly by southern Democrats who want the war finished as) lsoun as possible regardless of any threats from China or the) hard-line |}Sovict Union. | The committee says milttary at the cost of U.S. live'. McNamara's own testimony lincreased air strikes to further It also dis- the North. ncome and the net income of|port ef Haiphong out of the) j 80 per cent or better on final|written in June were the last to the family. The federal govern-| war. j Grade 13 examinations will be|be set and marked by the edu- ment pays interest on the loans} unti' six months after the stu-) yinced that the final decision in the presentident's graduation, when he/this conflict will not come until Said McNamara: "I am con- we and our allies prove to} North Vietnam that she cannot win in the South. The tragic |and Jong-drawn-out character of |that conflict in the South makes tempting the prospect na Britons View | McLuhanism | LONDON (CP)--About 200) \baffled Britons, all invited from | the top echelons of journalism, | publishing and television, were| |initiated Tuesday into the mys-| jteries of McLuhanism. | | The occasion was a deftly organized preview for the Brit- lish publication Sept. 28 of four }books by Marshall McLuhan, | lextend necessary aid to all stu-/the Canadian professor whose} dents able to succeed in post-| secondary education. | Mr. Bethune said he expected that financial aid available to! |students from private sources! jwould also undergo changes to| conform with the integrated) |government programs. Private ischolarships and bursaries} jalready were deducted from the| jworth of an Ontario Student! Award. | TO PLAN EXHIBITS | TORONTO, Ont.. (CP)--John| Yesno, 29, an Ojibway Indian |who last year was named the} Canadian Broadcasting Corpo-| ration's best actor, has been| appointed assistant co-ordinator} of the Indian Hall of Fame ex-| jhibits at the Canadian National) edition of The G {Exhibition. Mr. Yesno, was Mr. Sheldon outlined five| A text of Mr. Sheldon's| winner of.the Wilderness Award| areas for government action --Pharmacists should be | speech was delivery. released before|for an appearance in the Wo-| ijeck series on CBC-TV. 4 THE HISTORIC CITY La Maison Pierre au Cal- yet -- Calvet House -- is located at the corner of 6on-Secour and Saint-Paul) St. in old Montreal. The biiilding, owned by Ogilvy Co., was built in the mid- die of the 18th century and in recent years had fallen into disrepair. Last year it was restored as part of a program to preserve old Montreal. (CP Photo) _| Archer Denounces | _|power fof another country writin%s on communication} have beconte popular in the last} several years. The gathering took in the! McLuhan message via an hour- long film featuring a monologue by the author. | A .howl of protest went up} when McLuhan--a professor at the University of Toronto who will teach this year in New York--remarked that not until the Beatles did Britain's work- ing-class achieve musical expression. | Among the books to be! published are: A _ paperback| edition of McLuhan's Under- standing Media, two hard-cover books and The Medium is the! Message. The fourth is a paperback) utenberg Galax- | | "McLuhan long has had avid! readers in Britain, but his ideas| are hazily known to many oth-| ers. Advertisement | | TORONTO (CP)--An adver-| tised offer of cheap labor from| |Pakistan has been described as| "'disgracefully irresponsible ' | : |by Davie Archer, president of jthe Ontario Federation of Labor. An advertisement placed in a Toronto newspaper Tuesday by 'Kashmir Enterprises from) |Rawalpindi, West Pakistan, |reads: ae can supply to the Cana- dian industries, firms, offices and individuals the skilled, semi-skilled and unskilled labor | men and women from 21-45/ with _degree, professional or} technical qualifications from Pakistan at very low wages. ..| Mr. Archer said: "If Qanadian employers accept (such an invitation they should \\be ashamed of them- selves. his is an open invita- tion to Ganada to raid the man- despefately fighting for its eco-| nomic existence."" | Albert Hepworth, internation-| , |al affairs director of the Cana- | jdian Labor Congress, promised a CLC investigation into the matter. \"there's no deep division ... no quarrels, no antagonisms."' {By act, however, he has sided sienne 2 plus 2, and Grande | with the generals and the admi- § |rals in steady escalation of the The 1968 Firebird, by Pon- |bombing against the North to the point where, he says, only tation, new ventilation, big- |about 5¢ of 350 targets remain ger engines and new design. | been good jcasts doubt on the ability of} t McNamara has "shackled" the| (A ee | | | ie s y V " io «| ape. A : Y feo Ip # A108, TET Tread BAYER ASPIRIN 100's -- Sugg. list 9c TEMPORARY HAIR COLORING "se" 1.69 a Wist 2.00 Helene Curtis Tender Touch BATH OIL $2.00 13 ox, size plus:$1.10 4 ox. size 1,75 sixe plus 98c size LDA. : wat 1.49 | : 1.27 FEDERAL TAX removed from all items on which it previously applied! Scripto "MAD-MOD" PENS 1.09 cach, o 2 w 1.99 NEW DAWR Hair Color... you shampoo! 1.79 FACELLE cAN ppiad \\,) pourra od | KLEENEX > FACIAL TISSUES © Sugg. Mist 1.29 ea, Su08, Sugg. hist 2.25 2 rolls 35¢ Cepacol Pleasant tasting antibacterial Meuth Wash and Gergle. 1.09 Fiush-a-byes DISPOSABLE DIAPERS Mewbeon 60', Mediem or Toddlers 48's. 2.09 'WILKINSON SUPER STAINLESS STEEL mee 5 ye ; TAKE BROMO SELTZER For upset stomach, edgy nerves, headaches. mw 93 14 on. Sugg. list 1.40 Sug. fest 2.49 / Feoal miseries. re caine _ Family Size 63chitn 93e fist 69¢ Pate) GETS POST IN MINISTRY OTTAWA (CP)--Rodney | Grey, 46, director of the finance, department's international eco- nomics relations division, has been appointed an assistant deputy minister in the depart- ment, it was announced Friday. Mr. Grey, a naive of Regina and a graduate of Queen's Uni- |versity, Kingston, with post- graduate diplomas from the | University of Toronto and the [University of Londog, joined N (ie KARN'S 28 KING ST. B. 723-4621 McCORDICK'S 360 WILSON RD. S. 725-8711 LANE'S 302 STEVENSON RD. NORTH 723-1131 AND 2 EASTVIEW PHARMACY 573 KING ST. E. 725-3594 MITCHELL'S 9 SIMCOE ST. N. 723-3431 JAMIESON'S 241 KING ST. E. 725-1169 LAW'S 1204 WECKER DRIVE 725-3525 North Simcoe Pharmacy 907 SIMCOE ST. NORTH 723-3418 the department in 1953. MUGGS AND SKEETER MICKEY MOUSE oe 7 GRANDMA HEAVENS

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