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Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Feb 1964, p. 13

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Cana AWA WAABA Wadaosdon Babemow 16. 1044 dian Asks Russians To Declare ICBM Total GENEVA™--The Soviet Union istic and red litle of East-West Soviet delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin accused the Western powers at the 17-nation disarm- ament conference of 'lack of enthusiasm' in discussing So- viet proposals and said the West "does. not give us much hope" for progress inthe Geneva ne- gotiations, Lt.-Gen, E. L, M, Burns, Ca- nadian delegate to the confer- sia to come out into the open and declare how many inter- ~ gaabaad ballistic missiles it as, / Burns said' since the confer- ence was discussing the propo- sal for the elimination of mis- 'slies made by Russian Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko it was only fair the Russians state how many they have. He also said the Soviet dele- gation should propose numbers Jury Awards Suit Against SARNIA (GP) -- An Ontario Supreme Court jury awarded $88,701 Tuesday to a Sarnia man and his 27-year-old son who sued a police constable for false ar- rest and using "grossly exces- sive force," The damages were against Sarnia constable Richard Gunn, Plaintiffs were George Walter Williams and his son William, who suffered brain injuries dur- ing the April 27, 1963, incident that left him with the mental age of an eight year old, Doctors testified that the younger Williams had suffered permanent brain damage, par- tial paralysis and loss of sight in his left eye. The jury ruled that Const. Gunn caused the injuries, that he could have made the arrest with less violence and that he used more force than was rea- sonable and necessary. Its decision came after Mr. Justice E. L. Haines claimed in $88,791 In Policeman whatsoever to arrest persons creating a disturbance in their own apartments," TAKEN TO HOSPITAL The younger Williams taken unconscious to hospital lafter police, checking a break- in at a neighboring apartment, heard a party in progress in the Williams apartment A fight involving other men, a woman and six police offi- cers occurred after the officers told William Williams he was under arrest, was) struck Williams two blows with a nightstick when he entered the Williams apartment. | more right" than' an ordinary | citizen to use force, and that a} citizen has the right to resist illegal arrest. a warrant, his charge to the jury that po- lice officers "have no right apartment without but Gunn did so. ence, earlier had called on Rus-| the with regard to the reduction of missiles, "We think that it is for the Soviet delegation to propose numbers," rs said, "After all, these are their proposals," He added that a further rea- son in calling for a Russian declaration was that the num- ber of inter-continental and other nuclear weapon vehicles in possession of the United States already was announced, "However, there is great un- certainty about the number of ICBMs in the Soviet Union's possession," the Canadian dele- gate added, IS .ECRET "As a matter of policy, the Soviet Union keeps this a secret. This may have been necessary for military reasons but obvi- ously it imposes great difficul- ties in assessing the dimensions of any dsarmament plans af- fecting nuclear weapons vehi- cles,"* Burns quoted U.S. Defence is to indicate that the number of missiles in a minimum-bal- anced deterrent such as the Gromyko proposals envisage should look towards the higher tT than the lower num- r,' REJECTS REALITY Tsarapkin told the conference the U.S. government 'does not face reality' in proposing an across-the-board, 30-per-cent re- duction of arms in the first stage of disarmament and 35 per cent in each of two subse- quent phases, He accused the U.S. govern: ment of pushing production of nuclear weapons to shift the nu- clear balance heavily in its own favor before staged disarm- ament begins, 'Five years from now the production of nuclear weapons will be trebled" in the United States, Tsarapkin as- serted. "In mid + 1965 the United States will have more than 1,000 intercontinental nuclear Secretary Robert McNamara that the U.S. has more than 500 rockets,' Tsarapkin told report- |who announced last November/ers after the two-hour session, "If we follow the American 2-Man Orbit Late This Year WASHINGTON (AP) Fil- teen of the 29 U.S, astronauts) have completed general training for project Gemini, and the first manned flight of the two-man spacecraft will. be made late this year, the National Aeronau- tics and Space Administration said Tuesday, Dr, George E, Mueller, NASA associate administrator for manned space flight, said de- 'tailed planning for the first Gemini mission -- an unmanned flight scheduled for early this spring---is completed and plan- ning is well along for the sec- ond and third flights, Mueller told the House of Rep- {resentatives subcommittee on manned space flight that before the first manned orbital flight of the: three-man Apollo space- craft -- a larger vehicle de- signed ultimately for flights to the moon and back -- Gemini will have accomplished 860 hours of manned flight, This will incude three mis- sions of long duration and six lfor the practice of rendezvous| jwith other spacecraft, By com- |parison, project Mercury made only 54 hours of manned flight, 2 = Cold Winds Fail To Hamper Jobs WINNIPEG (CP)--Winters in this Prairie city are among the coldest of any major popula- tion centre in North America 'but construction is going ahead full stride, Why? "In an area where the odds appear to be against you, you make full use of what facilities are available,"' says Jim. Fox, manager of the Winnipeg branch of the National Employ- ment Service, As a result, the ranks of win- ter jobless are dwindling. MAKE PROGRESS "Great strides have been made in conquering the yearly ogre of seasonal unemploy- ment,"' says Mr, Fox, "and I think the progress will con- tinue." In January, 22,460 persons ap- plied to NES for jobs of all kinds compared with 28,784 for the same month last year, Some 3,782 were placed in jobs, an increase of 382, Mueller said rendezvous mis- sions will begin next year, An Agena D target vehicle will be| loperational 'ong-range ballistic) plan for a 30-per-cent cut in the boosted into orbit by an Atlas/grams has led more persons to 000, 17 cents a share; 1962, Part of the reason, officials say, is that emphasis on educa- tion and job - retraining pro- held there were financial advan- tages to winter building, He said a survey involving projects costing from $20,000 to $2,000,000 across Canada 'more than confirmed the contentions of the association that winter construction is both feasible and economical," CCA President Thomas A, \Somerville said in a speech last fall itis an "outmoded bogey" that winter-built structures are necessarily inferior in quality and excessive in costs, | "Perhaps the highest relative jvolume of wintertime building lis carried Sut in centres like |Winnipeg and Montreal where the severity of the winter cli- mate is such that special efforts have been made over the years to beat the problem," whavaa Mian veuaye AYACREE With Stealing Young Couple PRESCOTT, Ont, (CP)--Pre- liminary hearing of Edward J. Souci of Prescott, charged with kidnapping a young man and his pregnant, teenage wife, ended here Tuesday, Trial was set for March 24, Albert David Spencer, 20, of Prescott, alleges he and his wife Marilyn, 18, were taken to Niagara Falls, Ont, and held there for a week in January to prevent him testifying at. an 1s ville Tamine 99 ans wine af Auobin wha hatnad ideal Seen: Cor Saee Trees pencer in a hotel room. later put him aboard' a for Ottawa, received six) in jail, i Spencer told Pregeot ° teate's court at Souel's, hea Tuesday that before he was kid- napped the second time he, received two threatent calls from Montreal, he withdraw the i against Austin, ae PRECIOUS Choice sea otter sold for as much as and in one year, were taken, other kidnap trial involvi Spencer and Smiths Falls hote' owner Charles Austin, 42, . Austin was convicted of fore: ible confinement of Spencer by Tanark County court at Perth last Thursday and sentenced to MAPLE NET EARNINGS Great Lakes Paper Co, Ltd, year ended Dec, $1: 1968, $4,672,324, $1.30 a share; 1962, $4,355,849, $1.21, Lakeland Natural Gas Ltd, year ended Dec, 31; 1963, $309;- missiles and it was planned tolfirst stage the United States/rocket and 24 hours later a Ti-/permanent employment rather'194.971, seven cents, increase this number to more/would then still have about 800/tan booster will launch the Ge-|than the casual labor market than 1,700 by 1966. rockets, And this is far more|mini spacecraft into orbit close The Canadian said there were|than they have now, Even dur-|'® the Agena, only reports and estimates of ing the third stage of disarma- Using a radar computer sys-) But builders are putting more emphasis on winter construc: tion, helped in part by the new the Soviet Union's stock which|ment the United States would|tem, the Gemini spacecraft will|§$500 federal bonus to owners of placed the figure at 1,000 inter-/have more rockets than at pres-/Manoeuvre toward Testimony revealed that Gunn|Continental rockets and about/e 800 intermediate and medium:-| range ballistic missiles, | "The problem is, to whatianything about Soviet missile | cedure manually and ballistic missiles if we should) accept the Gromyko neapossl?"| Burns asked the conference. He suggested the reduction of} at 100 instead of 10. "The point of this argument! nt," Tsarapkin added. viet delegate avoided saying Mr, Justice Haines told the |numbers should we reduce this| production. jury that a policeman "has no/steat and increasing number of} Tsarapkin told reporters: "It is very difficult to speak of a the' Agena until they are only about 20 feet jwill complete the docking pro-| visually, BUILDING. LOOKS GOOD TORONTO (CP) --- Figures re- 7 winter-built home Western officials said the So- apart, After that the: astronauts/TOPS IN CANADA There is more winter work in metropolitan Winnipeg than anywhere in Canada, says Mr Fox, but.winter construction is on the upswing across the coun- possible compromise in this si-\leased by the Toronto building|'TY: tuation, "We consider the elimination The judge also observed that;numbers of missiles should not/of nuclear weapons the very the plaintiff had told. Const./be too drastic, adding that the/core of disarmament. The/1964, Permits for construction) Gunn he could not enter the}minimum deterrent number be| United States does not. Whatiin January totalled $5,412,239,|~ possible compromise can there} be?" PIECES .. FOR 20 CHURCH Seal: STREET department indicate building) |construction in the city may be headed fora record year in} compared with $2,809,492 in the! previous Januany, LOW ICE WILSON'S FURNITURE Made a Large Purchase of Famous SEALY MATTRESSES Now Offered at ""Never-Before" -- _ "Never-Again" Fantastic Savings Two PIECES AS Sealy, HURRY For BEST Selection! . . . Budget Terms . .. FREE Delivery WILSON FURNITURE CO. DOWNTOWN OSHAWA 16 BUY NOW FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY PHONE: 723-3211 W. G .Malcolm, president of Malcolm Construction here, pre- pared a report for the Canadian Construction Association . which Bonnie Jayne HAIRSTYLING (formerly Budget Beauty Bar) 72 CHURCH STREET FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 723-4212 Your HAIR Will Look LOVELY! yy "years in penitentiary, Or- CARPET COMPANY 282 King W., Oshawa ®@ Tel, 728-9587 Oshawa's Rug and Carpet Centre Broadloom-Tile-Linoleum professional YOU GETA BARREL OF FLAVOUR IN EVERY BOTTLE OF BRADING 3 RADING ALE povak, Coe 1 Call for Brading that's strong on flavour vm -the quality Ale

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