Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Dec 1967, p. 7

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w York City and assengers and a okesman said 13 s were derailed, esulted from the two bolted rail okesman said. injured were ad- hester hospitals. were discharged HE WORLD'S GHTIEST MEN! G-M presents ULES, SON NG A COOL RIVATE EYE HT SCENES ND WRONG WOMEN! CoStamng N« RICHARD CONTE 3» SIMON OAKLAND N-LLOYD BOCHNER nt VE!! GE ER dren MR $2.50 AME & cases where beatings are sus- "DRIFTWOOD DENTURES Beach. He says they come Dental technology instruc- tor Matthew Comito sur- veys jug of 300 dentures picked up along Miami THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, December 27,1967 7 from fishermen who "do more drinking than fish- ing" and swimmers who get a mouthful of water and lose their teeth. --AP Wirephoto -New Safety Regulations To Be Studied By Industry | WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S; transportation department called Tuesday for comment from industry, research and other Interested groups on 12 proposed new safety regulations for motor vehicles. The tentative regulations would require anti-theft devices, ban potentially dangerous exte- rior protrusions, order the in- stallation of head rests and set standards .for concealed head- lights, among other things. The department set Jan. 26 as the deadline for submission of views by the outside groups. The National Highway Safety Bureau then will evaluate the comments and develop final) standards. These will be made official by action of the federal highway administrator. Proposed new regulations to apply to 1969-model vehicles manufactured after Dec. '31, 1968 would: | 1. Require installation by the} manufacturer of headrests on all passenger cars to reduce the frequency and severity of neck injuries in rear-end collisions, 2. Require passenger car lock- ing systems to minimize acci- dental opening of rear doors by children from the inside and prevent opening from the out- side. 3. Require improved hood- latch devices to reduce the pos-|death of her 19-year-old son, has sibility of accidental opening and obstruction of the driver's view. 4. Establish standards to as- sure that headlights that can be} concealed woule be in open posi- tion in the event of failure of the. shielding or rotating device. 5 Extend to multi-purpose Passenger vehicles, trucks, buses and smaller cars, now ex- empt, present passenger car re- quirements from _ windshield wiping and washing systems, in- cluding a twe-speed wiper. 6. Establish performance) standards for windshield de- frosting systems and extend re- quirements from proper defros-| ters to trucks and buses. 7, Limit the use of ornamental! exterior protrusions to no more than one-half inch from the sur- rounding surface, unless con- structed to break away under a force of 10 ponds or more. 8. Require that every passen- ger car have a vehicle identifi- cation number on a permanent part of the car in such a way that removal or alteration would show evidence of tamper- ing. The number would have to be inside the car but readable from the outside. Proposed new standards to af-| fect new vehicles manufactured Dec. 31, 1969, would: 1, Require that all passenger cars have an ignition locking system that would warn. the driver, when he opened his door to get out, that the key had been) left in the ignition; have a} locked position that would pre-| | vent the operation of the engine and either the steering or moblli-| ty of the car when anyone tried to start it without a key. A fur-! ther requirement would be that) the system make it impossible to remove the key without acti- vating the locking device. 2, Extend to multi-purpose passenger vehicles safety stand-| ards for door latches, hinges, other vehicles. 3. Specify standards to mini- ;mize injury when glove com- |partment and other doors in| passenger cars pop open in crashes | become dislodged in an acci-| dent, This would be aimed at| |preventing occupants from| | being thrown through the wind- | shield opening. Bodies May CORDELE, Ga. (AP) -- A preliminary hearing for Mrs. Janie Gibbs, charged with mur- |der in the arsenic poisoning been postponed and authorities have indicated the bodies of four other members of her fam- ily--all of whom died in the last two years--may be exhumed. Superior Court Judge Leroy McMurray Jr. postponed the hearing Tuesday after Mrs. Gibbs' two court-appointed law- yers requested more time to study the case. A short time later, the state prosecutor, Solicitor-General D. E. Turk, said the bodies of Mrs. Gibbs' husband, two other sons and a grandson might be ex- poe However, he gave no in- dication as to when this action {might be expected. | The plump, blue-eyed Mrs. Gibbs appeared briefly in court Battered Baby Cases 3 Continue To TORONTO (CP) -- About 18] or 20 children die each year in| Ontario from beatings and prob- ably the same number die in pected as the cause of death, says Dr. H. B. Cotnam, Ontario supervising coroner. Most physically-mistreated children die as a result of a number of beatings 'but even when a coroner's jury attaches blame to the parents for an in- fant's death, few cases end up in court. "The problem is nothing new. This has always been with us-- it probably always will be. Many of the people who beat their children are in serious need of psychiatric help." Despite legislation which went into effect a year ago to protect! persons who report mistreat- ment of children, there has been an increase in the number of battered babies. In 1966, the first year a prov- incial registry on such ort was kept, 225 cases were report- fil ed. So far this year 341 cases have been reported, and "8 charges laid. PINPOINTS CAUSE Lloyd Richardson, director of the Children's Aid Society, says Increase the increase may be due to a population increase, '"'particu- \larly amongst families where this is likely to occur.' Dr. Cotnam says child-beating can happen in any stratum of society. However, wealthier people are able to hide it better." Hospital doctors who suspect a child has been beaten notify the Children's Aid Society, which informs the child welfare department. The department maintains a registry of known child-beaters and if they are in- Be Exhumed In Arsenic Poisoning Case} Tuesday. Officials said she B. broke into tears while in the courtroom. The Dec. Gibbs, who currently is being held without bond, has shocked many residents of this south central Georgia town. Some pointed out that only last week the wife of a local law enforce-| ment officer allowed Mrs. Gibbs to baby sit with the couple's small child. RAN NURSERY FOR 25 | Others mentioned that at least 25 working mothers had brought their children to Mrs, small nursery. | Mrs. Jack Dowdy, wife of the) minister of the Pleasant Grove) Baptist Church, described Mrs.| . a very considerate, kind, | congenial Christian as I knew her.' after an autopsy revealed sever- al milligrams of arsenic in the body of Mrs. Gibbs' son, Roger Ludean Gibbs. The said the son died last Oct. 28 cal hospital. Just three weeks before his) death, the bureau said, his month-old son also died. The officers said another of! Mrs. Gibbs' sons, 16-year-old) Melvin Gibbs, died last January | of what was listed as a rare muscular disease. And, a few months earlier, they said a 13- year-old son, Marvin Gibbs, died of what was described as hepatitis. Mrs. Gibbs' husband, 40-year-| old Charles Clayton Gibbs, died in January, 1966. Officials said his death was attributed to al heart attack. "An investigation 1s being| made as to these deaths,"' the volved, the CAS takes custody of the child. f= FUEL OIL 4g bureau said. ¢ | fH AUTOMATIC, WEATHER CONTROLLED DELIVERY gy 40 years e xperience--budget plan : McLAUGHLIN 110 King W., Oshawa eee eee ee ~ COAL AND SUPPLIES LTD. 723- ig | | | = | | | | | | | and locks that now apply 0 P 23 arrest of Mrs. fi wae f yibbs as "a wonderful person |i Officers said the arrest came § 19-year-old |B Georgia Bureau of Investigation | DOMINO RICHMELLO |INSTANT COFFEE RICHMELLO SALAD DRESSING *: 11 DELICIOUS FLAVOURS -- GRAND PRIX BEVERAGES CANNED 12 COUNTRY CLUB O.T.F. Everything Baked Right In The Store ONLY Try-Em With Smoked Meots Scotch Baps or. 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