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Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Feb 1964, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, February 22, 1964 GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN -- -ARTHUR WILLIAMS TO ADDRESS NDP MEETING HERE "NOTES FROM THE HUSTINGS: : Ontario (Federal) Riding New Democratic Party Asso- _ elation will meet in the Hotel Genosha Sunday night. The guest speaker will be Arthur Williams, the 72-year- old former Federal member of Parliament for Ontario Riding "who needs no introduction to Ontario's Trade Union world. ' : Williams scored the only Federal victory registered by the in Ontario Riding when he won the 1948 by- election following the death of E, R. 8. Sinclair, Liberal ~ he defeated Lyman Gifford, Liberal, (Mr. Gifford's lone entry for an election outside the municipal and county folds) and Frank McCallum, PC. Mr. Williams was de- feated in the 4949 Federal election by Walter Thomson (who headed the Provincial Liberal Party in 1954 when it " suffered such a humiliating " . defeat). The Welsh-born (Tredegar) MR. and MRS, WILLIAMS williams retired in 1959 when "he was a director of the 'United Mine Workers of America in Canada, He joined the old British Labor Party as a youth. He came to Canada in "1929 and moved to Oshawa in 1944. Williams lives in retirement on a one-acre Pickering Township farm. President Louis Munroe of the riding association will preside, Perhaps the meeting will afford an opportunity for the local NDP party to do some "'good old down-to-earth soul- searching', (as recommended by Donald MacDonald) to as- certain the real reason behind recent reverses in Federal and Provincial elections. TAYLOR'S GROUP WINS BY 6 OF 8 SEATS : President Albert "'Ab' Taylor's Democratic Right-Wing Group won six of eight positions on the top GM Bargaining emmittee in recent elections of Local 222, UAW-CLC. Wil- Yam "Bill" Harding is chairman. The 37-year-old Taylor, serving his first term as president of the 14,000-member Local, also saw his group make a clean -sweep of the Election committee, which will supervise all balloting in the next two years. Result of the vote to select delegates for the annual UAW policy-setting convention in Atlantic City, N.J., will likely be SUDBURY (CP) -- A libel ac- tion against the Sudbury Star was dismissed Friday by a six- man Ontario Supreme Court jury. Former city controller Peter Guimond, 39, filed the action against the newspaper alleging defamation in an editorial and a cartoon published during the 1961 civic election campaign when he ran unsuccessfully for mayor, In his two-hour charge to the jury, Mr. Justice Campbell Grant outlined the rights and responsibilities of a newspaper in commenting upon public af- fairs, He said the newspaper has the same rights as any ordin- ary citizen to state its views. It has the responsibility to base its comment pon facts which it believes to be true and to comment fairly, presenting ar- guments which could be pre- sented by any fair-minded citi- zen, Dealing with points raised by itnesses for both sides, the . |judge referred to evidence given on the interpretation of the car- Jury Dismisses . Suit For Libel case with vigor and do his very best for his client had. no place in the courts of the land. There was reference, the judge said, to the case being. 8 "fight between David and Go- liath'" But he told the jury to 1 10ve this thought from their consideration, All parties to any action were equal in the eyes of the law. Counsel for Mr, Guimond, J, J, Fitzpatrick of Toronto, had said earlier to the jury that "a fight between a newspaper and an ordinary nan is n uneven fight--it is fight between Da- vid and Goliath..." "There is no suggestion here that the defendant paper had any of the sins of Goliath or that the plaintiff had all the virtues of David," Mr. Justice Grant said, World Series Bet Caused toon in the case, He recalled one witness say- ing the cartoon suggested Mr. Guimond was using public funds for his own personal benefit. CANNOT MEAN THEFT "This is nothing less than a charge of theft or conversion," said Mr, Justice Grant. 'As you look at this whole editorial pur- pose and the discussion in re- gard to economy and undue spending they allege, it cannot reasonably mean by innuendo or in any othe way that the plaintiff was being accused of theft." "Tt is well known that an ald- erman has no access to city funds himself. It is, possible at) all that any reasonably person| would have thought that he was} |being accused of theft?" The judge said some state-| }ments had been made by wit- |nesses that went beyond what would normally be accepted by the court. He said this was not a reflection against counsel, for counsel who did not argue his | Murder: Police NEW YORK (AP) -- A 23- year-old Park Avenue business- man is under arrest, charged }with murdering a bookmaker with whom he had placed a big bet on New York 'ankees in baseball's 1963 World Series. Los Angeles Dodgers won the series in four games, Mark Fein, identified by po- lice as president of a_ firm which manufactures cardboard boxes and tin cans, was ar- rested Thursdy night as he left his apartment. He was accused of shooting Reuben Markowitz, whose bound body was found in a trunk in the Harlem. River Nov. 8 with four bullet wounds. | Detectives said the shooting occurred in a Manhattan apart- ment on Oct, 10, where Fein had arranged to meet Marko- witz ostensibly to pay off a $25,- 000 bet on the Yankees. Police said Fein had lost $60,- 000 to another bookmaker. known when this is in print, but the vote on the Canadi Labor Congress convention delegation will not be known until next week. Taylor was to head a 10-man delegation to St. Catharines, Ont., today for a meeting of the National GM Inter-Corpora- tion Council with union representatives of five GM plants in Ontario, LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE Best news out of City Hall this week concerned Mayor Lyman Gifford -- bulletins were still carefully worded, but His Worship appeared to be "on the mend", finally, in St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, where he underwent major sur- gery recently, He has a rugged constitution. The citizens are pulling for a speedy, complete recovery. . . . Deputy Chief Edward 'Ted' Ferguson of Oshawa City Police is also recovering from 'woh in hospital at Lindsay and will "}e absent for several w The Oshawa Green Gaels , "Lacrosse Club will honor their 1963 Canadian Junior Lacrosse champions Saturday, February 22, at a victory banquet in the Oshawa Golf Club. PETER NEWMAN "REGRETFULLY" DECLINES Peter Newman -- author of the highly controversial -"Renegade in Power: the Diefenbaker Years" (McClelland and Stewart) has "'regretfully" declined an invitation to be guest speaker within the next two months at a dinner-meet- _4ng of the Catholic Luncheon Club of Oshawa (and this an- nouncement won't displease "Mike" Starr or Senator Alistair Grosart in the least). Mr, Newman has an overseas assignment due to extend several weeks, but hopes to be available for a CLC date next Fali -- "Renegade", meanwhile, continues to make publishing history with a Canadian sale of more than 23,000 and publica- tion due in the U.S. (a high honor for a Canadian politicial book). Perhaps the CLC (anxious to continue its policy of engag- ing big-name speakers) would extend an invitation to Mr. Kevin Cahill, the writer of<sétret: municipal reports and part- time thespian ('Juno and the Paycock"') as a guest speaker-- his works (the Cahill Report) are not as well known as Mr. Newman's, true, but they have aroused widespread curiosity, speculation, and he is anything but a dull speaker. NEW BRUNSWICK REPORT DESERVES STUDY MEMO TO ALBERT V. WALKER, MPP, OSHAWA RIDING: Please nudge your boss, Premier John Robarts. Tell him to get the machinery moving soon for some sort of reform on Ontario's antiquated municipal government set- up ('An ox cart plodding in the space age," is the way one editorial pen described it). You are but one member, a sophomore at that, but you have had long experience in the municipal field, fully realize the inefficiency, waste in the present system filled with unnec- sary burdens for the weary taxpayer. You know of the revolutionary proposals made in the Royal Commission report of New Brunswick's set-up which would put municipal government there back in step with the times -- Premier Louis Robichaud is studying them. Will he act? The New Brunswick report is important because it also \ applies to all Canadian provinces. Lawyer Edward G. Byrne, who headed the commission, says, "the report should be read wherever. there's a municipal structure like ours" (which is Ontario). The report's theme is centralization, with the municipal handing over vast powers to the pravince. Let's not hear much of. that talk about losing our autonomy - 'unless some worthwhile reform is effected soon, we're going to lose far more than our autonomy. May we hear from you soon on this report? Myers, who retired last year Sugar Price latter 15 years as director of the |United States sugar policy staff Fl tt B t in the commerce department, u er as |spoke at the Western Candy : cagt Conference in Palo Alto. : Official Says | "The temperate zones, where \high wages have tended in the PALO ALTO, Calif. (AP) --j|past to check 'production," he 'The former director of U.S.|said, "may be more important ugar policy said Friday world|sources of supply in the future.""| @ugar consumers can anticipate) Myers said the sugar industry ,adequate supplies of sugar at may never again experience reasonable prices during the} 'eoming years. the past" The ction was made by| prices." 'Lawrence Myers the board of Nationa Company, a subsidiary of C./meet the growing demand, since Ex-SS Of . (CP from Reuters-AP FRANKFURT -- a former ad- jutant at Auschwitz concentra- tion camp being tried here for wartime atrocities was re-ar- resteq at the end of Friday's session on new murder charges. The former SS (Nazi Elite Guard) officer, Robert Mulka, was out on bail when placed junder arrest, Chief Prosecutor Hans Gross- man told the court new wit- nesses had come forward to tes- tify against Mulka and that a new investigation would be opened, | Court sources said the new charges against Mulka related |to Auschwitz but to a different jpart of his activities as adju- jtant, He refused to give any de- tails. The sources thought it likely) the new charges would be in- jtroduced into the current trial| of 22 men accused of carrying| jout mass murders at the Aus-| jchwitz camp in Poland during jthe Second World War. |DECISION POSTPONED | Earlier the defence for Mulka |--one of the main defendants in jthe trial--asked that proceed- jings against him be stopped be- jcause the alleged crimes fell un- ider the statute of limitations. |The court postponed a decision on the request. Nuclear Power Will Supply Ontario Hydro TORONTO (CP) -- A large |part of the future requirements] lof the Ontario Hydro-Electric} Power Commission is "'certain") to be supplied by nuclear power in the mext decade or two, a civilian atomic expert says. I, N. MacKey, engineering manager oft he civilian atomic |power department of Canadian, |General Electric Company, Pe- | terborough, told the closing ses- jsion of the Ontario Provincial Dailies Association Friday that growing world demand for power also will provide a bright) future for the Canadian type of) nuclear power plant in develop- ing countries. "The almost certain prospect of many large nuclear power stations throughout the world should leadt he governments of several countries to stock-pile juranium in the near future while prices are at a minimum. "Present production costs as- sure Ontario mines of the op- portunity to meet much of the world's requirements for raw uranium oxide." t | pers throughout the province that more than 90 per cent of the cost of nuclear power in On- tario can be spent in Ontario. | | tcan be spent in Ontario | "The fuel consumed annually! the disastrously low prices of/by a single 2,000-megawatt nu-|much 1o or "excessively high|clear generating station isjadded. Martin Munich's Institute of |ments | Self suggestions" Mr, MacKey told executives|Wouldn't have kept me up for , 'from non-metropolitan newspa-| another half-hour when I fin-| possession. jally reached that tiny coral ficer Arrested Again During Friday's session Dr. historian at} Modern History, said that by 192 so many concentration camp pris- oners were dying that records were no longer kept on the ex-/ act number. perishing. Disease alone killed about 500,000 goncentration camp pris- oners by war's end, he said. Only about 2.5 per cent of the camp guards--members of the so-called '"'death's head" regi- -- requested ~~ Broszat, Sgt. Ronald Crevier, identi- fied as one of the RCMP's in- vestigation team that seized 186 pounds of heroin Feb, 15 in a locker in 'a Montreal SURVEY CONTRADICTS DYMOND 136 PACKETS OF HEROIN FOUND railway station, looks over some of the polyethylene bags containing the narcotics, Two Latin American diplomats and a Frenchman have been ar- Waiti TORONTO (CP) -- Waiting lists for hospital beds are the rule in larger Ontario munici- palities, a survey made Friday shows. Most hospital administrators said there is no bed shortage for emergency cases, . but for other patients, They said that while the situation is not critical, it is also not desirable. Health Minister Dymond told the legislature Thursday. "'most cities and towns in Ontario now have an adequate number of beds available for their present population." Although no accurate account could be given of the number of persons on hospital waiting lists in Metropolitan Toronto, Dr. John B. Neilson, chairman of the Ontario Hospital Services Commission, estimated the fig- ure in the thousands, The hospital bed shortage, he Hospitals Have agreed there is a waiting list! Lists a waiting list buf gave no wait- \fng time. | Kingston hospital spokesmen said there are waiting lists at both Hotel Dieu and General Hospitals, At Hotel Dieu, ur- gent cases face a two-week wait and non-urgent cases have to wait two months. The general has a 300-patient waiting list. The 326-bed Sudbury General Hospital has a waiting. period of five months, said administra- tor Sister Paula. Victoria Hospital in London reported an average wait for non-emergency cases of three months, St. Joseph's had a six- week waiting period. In North Bay, St. Joseph's |to Attorney-General Cass by the rested in New York, The RCMP withheld news of the find to enable United States and French authorities time to make arrests. Crime Report Made Public Next Week TORONTO (CP) -- A report on organized crime in Ontario, expected to comprise a 100-page text, will:be formally submitted end of next week, it was learned Friday. Judge Bruce J. S. Macdonald said in an intervisw Mr, Cass has already seen a copy of the report's findings and recommen- dations earlier this week so that proper legislation could be pre- pared. Judge Macdonald, former chairman of the Ontario Police Commission who resigned ear- lier this year to return to the bench, said he doubts whether jthe commission will ask that any part of the report be kept secret, General and Civic Hospital both on a 10-day waiting pe- riod. DIVIDENDS said, is serious but not critical in Metropolitan Toronto, iI KITCHENER SHORT cy Hospital officials in Kitchener), said the city has 5.3 beds for) every 1,000 population, well be: low the 6.25 beds considered an): acceptable level. In Ottawa, a three - month waiting period is the rule at Ci- vic Hospital although no emer- gency cases are forced to wait. General Hospital had 495 on| ir N HYPNOTIC RE TO CUT SMOKING HABIT NEW YORK (CP) -- Want t© stop smoking? Okay. Turn on the record player, lie back and relax. Now listen carefully to the narration. "In order to stop smoking you must want to." Now close your eyes and repeat: 'My legs are relaxed. My arms are relaxed. My en- tire body is relaxed. I am completely relaxed... ." In this state, says the nar- ration, "you can give your- and when you slowly open your eyes, the suggestions will remain with you permanently. GIVES SUGGESTIONS Ready for the suggestions? Just flip the record, lie back, relax again and close your eyes. "IT will think and act in a positive and constructive way. "T will have full and com- plete control over my mental abilities... . "Once I have. made a de- cision, I will stick to it. "I have decided to give up | smoking. My mind will accept every suggestion that help me quit smoking. "I will look better . . better . . . feel st and happy... .' Got the idea will . feel rong, healthy ? Sound easy? CORD USED Well, Joseph Lampl, New /|$ York City hypnosis expert who wrote and narrated the long-play recording The Re- cord Way from which the above instruc- tioms are taken, says. it easy. "All you do," he says in the notes on the record's r is March 4. 9: 2; common *0 cents, mon 30 cents, April 27, record record March 2 to Stop Smoking |ment jApril 1, March 18. By THE CANADIAN PRESS Algonquin Building Credits 4d., common 10 cents, -pref. 4% cents, March 14, record \¥ His original 18-month leave of ja'sence from the bench was ex- tended three times so he and two other commission members could complete the crime. re- port. The commission obtained its material from Detroit, Wind- sor, Buffalo, Washington, New and) ork, Ottawa, Montreal | Toronto. ia tall man of grave demeanor INTERPRETING THE NEWS Gaullist By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer The appointment of Jules Leger as Canadian ambassador to Paris sets a skilled and subtle mind to work in a_ sensitive area, as If Canada is seeking a dia- logue with President Charles de Gaulle, Leger is one man who has the intellectual equipment to sustain it without flinching in the face of Gaullist logic and rhetoric, At 50, Leger is one of the most experienced Canadian ca- reer diplomats and one of the external affairs department's leading political thinkers. His appointment reflects the chang- ing balance of power in Europe and shows the new importance France is accorded as one of Canada's founding nations, Son of a country storekeeper from Valleyfield, Que., Leger is whose flair for quiet understate- Bobby Baker Pictured As Poor Buyer WASHINGTON (AP) -- Bobby Baker, who a year ago claimed a net worth of more than $2,- }000,000 and powerful friends in |the Senate, \ as pictured Friday as a borrower of small sums totalling about $1,000 in the last couple of months. The testimony came from one of Baker's business associates, Fred B. Black Jr., who said he held a block of Tulsa bank stock recommended by the late mul- timillionaire Senator Robert S. Kerr (Dem. Okla.) for Baker, but that Baker never produced his share of the money. Black told the Senate rules /committee at a closed session Leger Can Face Logi ment hides a twinkling good humor, Colleagues say he is "very finely tuned" culturally and artistically, As a former ambassador to NATO, he knows his way around Paris, His brother, Paul-Emile Cardinal Leger, archbis' of Montreal, has an international reputation as one of the leaders of the liberal wing of the Ro- man Catholic Church, an ad- vance guard that draws much of its inspiration from France, West Germany and The Neth- erlands, LEGER FOR POPE? At one time there were even published reports that de Gaulle wanted a French-speaking pope and that Cardinal Leger was the man he had in mind. Apart from Canada's concern to inject fresh vigor into rela- tionships with France, the new ambassador will confront @ full international slate in Paris, The French capital is a focal point in some of the most acute ten- sions facing the Western alli- ance, Even in Canadian circles, Ambassador Leger may have a tricky time, French - Canadian separatists have set up an inter- national committee in Paris to spread the message and Pari- sians sometimes are puzzled in distinguishing between various currents of Canadian opinion. With Leger's posting to Paris on top of the appointment of Lionel Chevrier as. high com- missioner in London, Canada's two top diplomatic posts in Eu- rope now ars held by French- speaking Canadians, The suggestion once was can- vassed that the appointment of a French-Canadian to London, as happened for the first time in Chevrier's case, would be an appropriate moment to place an English-speaking Canadian in Paris, The appointment of a man of Leger's calibre will console any who advocated this last Monday that he borrowed $15,000 to buy 6,400 shares of stock in the "armers and Mer- "ants State Bank in Tulsa af- ter Ker! him it would be "a fine investment." as secretary Democratic majority, Black's testimony Friday. Baker, before a closed session ihearing. | | Denison Mines Ltd., common 0 cents, April 15, record April Oct. 15, ecord Oct. 2. Fraser Companies Ltd., com- farch 31. Globe Envelopes Ltd., class A/ 3 cents, May 1, record April] Greyhound Lines of Canada Ontario Steel 1.75, May 15, non 10 cents, record Feb. 26, Tambton Loan and - Invest- Co., common 8 cents, | TORONTO (CP) -- Expansion programs of a number of non- metropolitan Ontario daily Ltd., common 14 cents, April 1,)newspapers are proceeding with a total value of more than $5,- Products Co.}000,000, the Ontario Provincial |Ltd., common 20 cents, pref.|Dailies Association was told Fri- record April 15./day at the closing session of its Shully's Industries Ltd., com-| tw o-day convention, W. J. Garner, general mana- ger of the Peterborough Exam- iner and retiring president, said in his. concluding address that | WEATHER FORECAST jacket, "is place yourself in a comfortable position and concentrate." Playing both sides @ the record at least snce a day, the average person should bz able to master the power of controlling the smoking ha- bit within 10 days, Lamp! | Bays. | Lampl, about 40, has been | a cigarette smoker since he |i, predicted for today. Patches of cloud and snowflurries how-|*" jever continue to move inland| Kitchener seeeeeee from Lake Huron and effect|Mount Forest.. the/Wingham ..... Hamilton was 18. When the U.S. sur- | geon general's committee reported several weeks ago that cigarette smoking is harmful to hes!th, Lampl | applied his self - hypnosis methods and quit smoking. Then came the recording idea--which Lamp! now may find use for himself. When distributors .in the b Yr 0 ;some snowbelt. Snow Sunday Turning Cold Forecasts issued by the Tor-| onto weather office at 5:30 a.m.) Windsor .......00. Synopsis Fair, milder weather St | Lol localities through A cold outbreak will descend St. elow Lake Superior tonight and) nove through southern sections| f the province Sunday, iTr Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,|Ki Toronto Peterborough ..... Muskoka Forecast Temperatures 20 20 20 20 15 15 20 20 20 15 20 15 35 35 35 35 30 30 35 35 3% 33 Thomas. ....+ MGON so scccsecee Catharines. .... ENON crevecee 35 Haloe. ... 20 25 U.S. and Canada snapped up 14,000 'copies of 'the initial pressing of the record, Lamp! | said, "I got so nervous, I | started smoking again." Cuban Patrol Boat Finds Ex-Marine SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) -- Aj day his gruelling 28-hour swim through shark-infested waters! "My leaking life jacket} reef,' Trevor B. Burns, 42-year-} the S.racuse Herald - Journal Javana hotel. | "And I wouldn't have lasted) Peer myself," he -- j His passage has been arranged |husky ex-marine described Fri-|by the Swiss embassy in Ha-| tonight and early Sunday, Cold vana, j "I had run into bad weather) after his light aircraft went/and low visibility after taking/near 30 by Sunday morning. a off the Cuban coast last/off from Montego Bay, i nday. Jam- aica," he explained. His deStin-} ation was Grand Cayman Is.| ind, another British Caribben About 300 miles out, he said, the plane ran out of fuel and! old Syracuse businessman, told|glided into the sea. The flyer said he struggled to "The fuel consumed annually|in a telephone interview from a)keep thoughts of sharks out of his mind becatse he realized panic might prove fatal. His 23-year-old wife, Annette, and their one - year - old son,) worth roughly $10,000,000, Since} Burns' rescue Tuesday from/Todd, are awaiting him in their jdomestic requirements , chairman of} He noted that world consum-|this can be mined, refined and/the reef by a Cuban patrol boat|Syracuse home. Mrs. Burns has nal Molassesjers cannot depend upon Cuba to|fabricated entirely in Ontario,|was reported Thursday by Ha-jsaid her husband has been op- should/vana radio. He is expected tolerating his own kitchenware Brewer and Company, Ltd., of/sugar production there now is|support a lively industry in the|fly home by way of Mexico as firm in Ponce; Puerto Rico, for labout half its previous potential. Hi iu. |1970s,"" vo jsoon as he is physically able.|the last six months, Ss, prenpame nas a Lake Ontario, Niagara, Wind-| sor, Hamilton, Toronto, south- ern Georgian Bay, Lake Huron, London: Cloudy with snow flur- ries Sunday. Milder tonight but turning cold again late Sunday. Winds south west 15 tonight and northerly near 30 late Sunday. Haliburton: Cloudy with snow- flurries and turning colder Sun- day. Winds southwest 15 to-) night and northerly 15 to 26 Sun-/ day. : Northern ' eorgian Bay, Al- goma, Timaganmi, Sudbury, North Bay: Drifting snow late again Sunday.. Southwest winds 15 to 25 becoming northerly White River, Cochrane: Light snow today becoming more con- tinuous. with heavy drifting to- North Bay.... Sudbury Barlton ..soccsscce Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing ..... White River....... Moosonee . Timmins GC, Northern News: |Kay, Sarnia Observer; | Macgillivray, Times-Journal; mi, Galt Reporter; Fred Bar-) on, |gencer. Ontario Papers 'Have Good Year money on plant and equipment than radio and television com- bined, Meetings attended by some 50 newspaper executives were jdevoted to discussions of busi- jness and operating problems and descriptions of new tech- niques in the news publishing field, Reports indicated that 1963 had been a generally good year for Ontario provincial newspa- pers, with prospects continuing: bright for 1964, ELECT EXECUTIVE Officers elected for the cur- rent year are; honorary presi- dent, F, H. Leslie, Niagara Falls Review, now in his 63rd year as publisher and a char- ter member of the association; president; P. §. Robertson, pub. The committee, which is seek- ing to determine whether the 35-year-old Baker misused his official position while serving to the Senate's released who resigned under fire last Oct. 7, was subpoenaed last Wednesday and is due to reap- pear before the committee next Tuesday, this time at an open across Canada the newspaper industry is spending more attempt at bicultural balance. CBC Will Try Programs With No Commercials TORONTO (CP). -- The CBC plans this year to provide en- tirely separate programming for its English-language FM ra- dio stations in Montreal, Tor- onto, Ottawa and Vancouver and as an experiment to carry no commercials on them for at least one year, Announcing these plans in an address Friday to the Ontario Association of Architects, CBC Prseident Alphone Oulmet said music will take up roughly 80 per cent of the program time of the stations, all of which will operate from 7 a.m. to ight. r. Oulmet noted the four stations for the most part have been carrying the regular AM (aplitude modulation) service of the CBC Trans-Canada Radio Network. Their new, separate programming would. be de- signed "to exploit fully the cap- abilities of FM (frequency mod- ulation) transmission." Mr. Oulmet said these changes would be introduced be- fore Oct. 1, when CJBC, th publicly - owned co! 's second AM radio station in Tor- onto, will be converted to French - language program- ming. The more important elements of present CJBC programming would be transferred to CBL, the CBC's other Toronto AM station, or to the FM service. Mr. Ouimet said "no other CBC stations to be switched from English to French -- or vice versa." lisher of the Cornwall Standard- Freeholder; first vice - presi- dent, C. B. Binder, publisher, Port Arthur News - Chronicle; jsecond vice-president, W. R. jSootheran, Niagara Falls Re-| view. Directors are: Chas. D. Ding- man, Stratford Beacon - Her- ald; C. J. McTavish, Owen Sound Sun Times; R. M.) Pearce, Simcoe Reformer; | Michael Davies, Kingston Whig- Standard; J. R, Bates, St. Cath- arines Standard; A, C, Moore, | Brockville Recorder and Times; L. Butler, Kirkland Lake, John B. Me- G. B. Fort William; N. D. Hamil-) Belleville Ontario Intelli- ANNIVERSARY PLANS Special events and festivities mark the 150th anniversary of the Norwegian constitution in May, 1964. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS HORSE SALE ENDS +1 MIAMI, Fla, (AP)--The 19th annual sale of horses of racing) age concluded at Hialeah Park) Tuesday iwth 100 going for! $303,400 during the two-day auc-| tion, Top price of $31,000 went for Pertinax, three-year-old son of Traffic Judge out of Easy Eight by Eight Thirty, sold by Philip Godfrey to I, J. Collins of Lancaster, Ohio. night. Snow flurries and drift- ing snow Sunday, Turning cold) tonight. Winds northeast 30 to-| night. THE KEY To The SALE || LIST WITH PAUL RISTOW REALTOR 728-9474 187, KING EAST, OSHAWA SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Ges Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol 728-9441 trade experience would be pension plan and compony including salary expected to Interviews will be arranged BARDAHL the world's leading manufacturer of automotive additives, requires a FIELD REPRESENTATIVE to cover the OSHAWA-KINGSTON AREA Applicants should be sales oriented and hove a knows lege of marketing consumer products. Automobile salaried and offers potential advancement to mane agement level. Benefits include: group insurance, In confidence send brief business and personal details, Director of Personnel Berdeht Lubricants (Canada) Limited 6099 New Metropoliten Blvd. Pointe Claire, Quebec. an asset. This position is cor. locally, ads a ont ee

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