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Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Jun 1964, p. 2

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ele Sik Sarat, "Sg @ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, June 18, 1964 Senator Urges. GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN -- FLY-IN BREAKFAST SET FOR SUNDAY NEXT . General-manager George Slocombe of the Oshawa Muni- 'cipal Airport, is beating the publicity drums with fervor these days for an important upcoming aeronautical event -- the ninth annual Fly-in Breakfast of the Oshawa Flying Club next Sunday morning, Jane 2ist. This is the largest annual fly-in of its kind in Canada, thanks to Mr. Slocombe and his hard-working staff. More than 350 planes are expected, some from the United States, the Mari- times; flying clubs, schools and private owners 'rom Brampton, Brantford, Toron- to, Kingston, Kitchener, Hamilton, London and St. Catharines are also expected to be on hand. President W. E. Gillette of the Oshawa Flying Club has been directing prepara- tory activities of late. De- GEORGE SLOCOMBE © P@rtment of Transport offi- ' cials are making special Plans to ensure a safe and orderly flow of air traffic. They will direct operations from the control tower. Between 8 a.m, and 11 a.m. more than one plane a min- ute is expected to land -- these will include jaunt single- aeaters and multi-passenger, twin-engined aircraft. There will be prizes for the first arrival, the oldest and youngest pilot, and the most distance flight. More than 1,000 break- fasts will be served by volunteer club members. In 1963 the 1200-odd visitors put away 250 dozen eggs, 150 pounds of bacon, 90 gallons of coffee, 130 loaves of bread and 45 pounds of butter. Home-built aircraft are expected. Some weigh only 650 pounds, have an 85-horsepower engine and aie at 100 miles per hour, They cost from $1,000 to PARKING ENFORCEMENT SEEN AS SENSELESS Dear Mr. Gearin: Zealous enforcement of City traffic bylaws by police offi- cers is something citizens should admire -- provided such enforcement comes within the boundaries of common sense. If the speed merchants who tear down our streets at ex- cessive speeds and scream the tires at the corners (or tail- gate down Ritson road a la Mosport) are curtailed, no citi- zen worthy of the name could be anything but grateful. However, when a police officer issues a Parking ticket toa citizen for parking on the boulevard portion of his own '\ommended that the immigration Law Changes On Lost 'Men' OTTAWA (CP) -- Adoption of an amendment to the Criminal Code which would prevent pro- longed detention without trial of persons accused of violating fed- eral immigration laws was urged in the Senate Wednesday by Senator David Croll of Tor- onto, The Liberal senator also rec- department provide sympathetic legal counsel for all persons de- tained under the Immigration Act. Referring to recent Toronto; cases where immigrants claimed to have been detained under provisions of the Immi- gration Act for a number of; days without .any action being! taken, Senator Croll said: | "The mere possibility that a person may be held in detention; for a protracted period without public knowledge is abhorrent to! me and many other people both in and out of public life." The bill under discussion in the Senate Wednesday would amend the Criminal Code to al- low for an appeal by a prisoner against the order of a judge) who refused to discharge him under habeas corpus. In supporting the principle of -Millionaire Mel Lastman, 31, owner of a 24-store appliance chain in Toronto, posed as a newspoy in downtown Toronto Wednesday in a personal ex- periment to test people's hon- HONESTY PAYS WELL esty, He 'sold newspapers to 14 persons, giving extra change to all of them. Five - customers walked away with the extra change. Mrs, Fleur Chalu of Toronto, left, one of the nine who pointed out _Lastman's "error", received $100 for her honesty, She said the money would go toward her husband's medical costs. Arne Sorensen of Toronto, in WASHINGTON (AP) -- Black market sales atc nlacements of babies in New York and Cali- fornia were described for inves- tigating enators Wednesday in tigating senators Wednesday in mothers receiving $1,500 for each new-born child. Gael Greene, a New York City freelance writer, told the Senate subcommittee on juv- nile delinquency that several years ago she investigated the black market in babies in Cali- fornia for the New York Post, posing as an expectant, unwed mother. ? She said she went to a lawyer named Ralph Benson -- whom she called "the merchant prince of independent adoptions" in Los Angeles--and he told her he) usually budgeted $1,500 for the natural mother in adoptions he handled. Miss Greene quoted him as saying: "You pay all your expenses ouf of that, . . . What's left is yours to keep." How much he received from} the adopting parents was not disclosed. Testimony presented Tuesday about other areas of the U.S. brought out that some the right picture, refused to accept his reward "'because the paperboy needs it more than I." He later took a small reward when convinced Last- | man could well afford it. the bill, which has already been passed by the House of Com- mons, the senator said it would LEAF-FLAG MAY BREEZE THROUGH ensure the security of every in- dividual against arbitrary: im-| prisonment. The bill, which received sec-| ond reading--approval in prin-| ciple--now goes before a Sen-| ate committee for further ex- But Jack Faces Storm charges for arranging private placements of children have ranged up to $7,500. The subcommittee is consider- ing legislation to curb the prac- tice. It would provide imprison- ment up to fiye years or a) $10,000 fine or both "for any-| one who profited from the; OTTAWA (CP)--The split in|bers. This would provide that| An Opposition member said) Mr. Pearson, replying to |tigatton to determine 'whether | | | amination. the flag resolution, while add- jing voting strength to the dis- jtinctive Canadian flag, may |mean a rough reception for the |proposal to give some recogni- |tion to the Union Jack. "T'll never vote for the Union Jack," says a Conservative The|backbencher who stoutly advo- leates the retention of the Red |Ensign. "There'll be a lot of Red En- ivi |sign supporters to go against re SF abpe d. vest the Union Jack,'"' said another member of the party. '""'We want U.S. Investigates Canadian Firm's Beef Sale Price | WASHINGTON (AP) -- \U.S. treasury announced Wed- jnesday it has started an inves- |steaks from a Canadian con- cern are being sold in the the Union Jack "may continue to be flown as a symbol of Cana- dian membership in the Com- monwealth of mations and our jallegiance to the Crown." [RESOLUTION SPLIT Originally, members were to |have voted on the two questions }at once. But when the resolution came before the Houst Monday, Speaker Alan Macnaughton ruled that the two issues would be voted on separately. The division seemed to assure la big majority for the new flag | 1 any action on the Union Jack| Michael Starr (PC -- Ontario), will depend to a large degree|said the fact that the Union on how well members can make} Jack proposal has been separ- their positions known to their} ated from the Commons resolu- constituents. "You can's expect);tion on a distinctive Canadian a member from the Prairies to|flag doesn't change the govern- stand up and vote against the| ment's position. Union Jack unless the folks} Mr. Pearson had 'said prev- back home know exactly why!iously that the government re- he is doing it." gards its flag resolution--at the Some observers say the re-|time covering both flags--as a sults of Monday's byelections in| matter of confidence. The reso- Saskatoon and Nipissing could) }ytion was split Monday by lso have a strong bearing on|Speaker Alan Macnaughton so party stretegy in the flag debate.| +n. two proposals could be voted placement of a child for adop-| tion if the child were trans- ported in interstate or foreign commerce." Another witness, Chariton G. Blair, a Belfast, N.Y., lawyer, testified Wednesday he has helped arrange adoptions for 30 years and handles 35 to 40 cases a year. ig He said some of the natural mothers were as young as 12 but most were between 21 and 32. Some of them have asked him how much they were going to get for their babies, he said, "Baby Bootlegging Probe Hears Of $1,500 Budget - The Hetzers did not adopt a child through Blair, Wednesday's testimony ended the two days of subcommittee hearings, -- QUEBEC (CP) -- Two bec cabinet ministers said Wed- nesday in the legislature they have no information which lead them to believe a black market in babies exists in Montreal, Their statement newspaper reports from Wi ington where a New York ° licewoman testified before U.S. Senate subcommittee which is collécting evidence in support of legislation to tighten laws against profiteering in unwanted babies. : The policewoman, Theresa L. Heath, said she had learned from a reliable source that the baby black market is -again flourishing in Montreal where her investigations some years ago showed Montreal babies were being sold to couples in the New York area. Attorney-General Rene Ham- el and Emitien Lafrance, minis. ter of family and social welfare, said that several years ago there were reports of sale of babies but that there has been no recurrence. Scottish City Plague Said 'Contained' ABERDEEN (AP) -- Aber- deen's health officer announced Wednesday that this Scottish city's month-old typhoid - demic has been "contained" with no evidence of any new sources although 447 people are still in hospital with the dis- ease. Dr. Ian MacQueen proclaimed happily that this hard-hit. North Sea resort was lifting its vol- untary quarantine. Que- et the ensign because it's a Cana-|) cause many Quebec mem-| OTTAWA (CP) -- The govern-|on separately, |adding: United States at less than fair| ian flag: we don't want. the While the number of typhoid driveway, I think it is about time that such action was spot- lighted -- the more so when the complaint which prompted such questionable action concerned an area approximately one-half mile from where the ticket was issued. To be issued a parking ticket for using a driveway which is maintained by a citizen, when the vehicle was tpl on "a public road nor sidewalk, and which has been r such purpose for 15 years, is, i ini : Mibddes chclen, y , 18, in my humble opinion, The principle of this business is wrong, I say that when action is necessary to remedy parking complaints, let such action be taken in the areas of the complaints -- not on the streets where the problem does not exist. We have never had trouble on Central Park boulevard north, between King and Richmond, to my knowledge. z We need a change in the existing boulevard bylaw, which = e effect: 'You spend the money to maintain the aot ne the road into your own property, but the . We also need a change in the enforcement of 0 ' the bylaw, if-the existing situation cannot, or will not be modified. ooh change simply would be to take action on complaints in the areas where such complaints are received by the Police but not where such action is not required: ; Yours sincerely, R. M. LEARMONTH, 33 Central Park boulevard north, City. i NOTES FROM THE OSHAWA HARBOR AREA «it was a well-kept local secret for hours, but the SS Tristan of Sweden stopped over at Oshawa Harbor last week to take on a special cargo -- 122 Oshawa-made GM cars bound for Stockholm. ie The 2,65-ton Tristan is 378 feet long. She berthed late Friday night and was eastbound by noon Saturday, the sec- ond ocean-going car-carrier to berth here in. seven weeks (the Isolde, also of Sweden, was the last.) ~The Tristan successfully managed to turn around in the hafbor, recently dredged to increase depth. The east wharf area is now completely fenced -- rumor has it that flood- lights will be installed soon. When are we going to see the removal of those atro- cious-looking high piles of crushed gravel on the west side of the harbor (in that area so often used by the public?) Or do*the lesees propose to put fences around to keep little children from climbing them, (a most precarious pastime that could easily result in a fatality?) NOTES FROM THE BANQUET CIRCUIT Crown Attorney Bruce W. Affleck (one of the great favorites around the local banquet circuit, along with Ter- ence V. Kelly), will be the guest speaker tonight at " 'i a dinner-meeting of the , Oshawa Soroptimist Club in the Hotel Genosha. Other head table guests will be Glady Neale, a director of the Macmillan Company of Canada Ltd., an@ Mrs. Ruth Bestwick, incoming club president, prominent in this district for several years in local Progressive Conserva- tive circles, especially as campaign manager for Mich- ael Starr, MP, Ontario rid- ing. Will Mr. Affleck discuss | the Jack Ruby case, on which he has done so much research of late? . . . Doug- las Gower, the City realtor, RUTH BESTWICK sends. a postcard from Sus- sex, where he stopped off briefly for a visit during his cur- rent tour of the British Isles. . . . The annual Mess Dinner of the Sergeants' Mess of the Ontario Regiment (RCAC) will be held in the Armories next Saturday night. LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE John Armstrong, 15-year-old Oshawa skier, has been selected as a member of the Canadian Amateur Ski Associa- tion's 1964-65 national jumping team, He placed sixth in the Canadian championship in Ottawa last March in competition with youngsters, 18 and under. He is the son of Mr. and Mre. Harold Armstrong, of 103 Alexandra street. : Lloyd J. Algar, recently appointed assistant general man- ager of the Oshawa Public Utilities Commission, graduated in Electrical Engineering from the University of Toronto in 1954. He played basketball at Varsity and is married to the value. Mr. Pearson also told Mr.) "T said 'Nothing.' I told them isteaks |Farms~ Ltd., The treasury said the inves-|British flag." \tigation involved 12- to 18-ounce| The Commons now is debat- produced by Holiday|ing the first part of the resolu- Chippewa, |The complaint was made by adoption of a distinctive Cana- | } | Freezer Queen Inc., Buffalo,dian national flag--three red N.Y. |maple leaves on a white back- The duty may be raised on| ground with a vertical blue bar an import which is sold at less|at each side. than fair value provided such! If and when this is voted on, sales are injurious to Amer-|the second part of the resolution|tiye party made the same de- | party | ican industry. WEATHER FORECAST Muggy Night-- Cloudy Friday Forecasts issued by the Tor-| Lake Erie: Winds southeast onto weather office at 5:30 a.m.|10 to 15 knots, increasing to 20 Synopsis: Very warm muggy|to 25 this afternoon; chance of air is being driven toward the| a few showers today or a thun- Great Lakes by a storm mov-| derstorm this evening. ing north east from Nebraska.| Lake Ontario: Winds variable A warm balmy night tonight will| light, becoming southeast 15 set the stage for very warm|knots this: afternoon and in- weather through southern On-| creasing to 20 to 25 tonight; a tario Friday. But cooler air| few showers today. rushing eastward behind the storm will likely set off show- ers and thunderstorms during the day and threatens with cool weather again this weekend, Tandon |... Rainfalls are predicted tonight) ritchener will be brought before the mem- Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Friday | Windsor 65 St. Thomas... 5 |and early Friday around the uP-| yiount Forest...++ per lakes. |Wingham .,. Lake St. Clair, southern Lake| Hamilton ay Huron, Lake Erie, Windsor,|/<) Catharines iLondon: Variable cloudiness |moronto this afternoon with chance Of @/ peterborough .... thunderstorm again late in the|prenton day. Clear and warm tonight. |Kitlaloe ..... Increasing cloudiness Friday | North Bay... followed by showers and scat-|\sudpury tered thunderstorms. Win 5) Rarlton southerly 15 to 20. ._. |Sault Ste, Marie... Northern Lake Huron, Niag-| Kapuskasing es ara, southem Georgian Bay,|/white River... western Lake Ontario, Hamil-| yoosonee ton, Toronto: Clear and warm|immins .. tonight. Sunny Friday but cloud-| Kingston .. bers, who opposed inclusion md ment's life will be at stake _ the Union Jack, were now free \to vote on the new flag by it- | self Ont./tion dealing with the proposed! "phe 13-~-member~-Creditiste| monwealth connection, jparty, which had _ previously jsaid it couldn't support the \two-flag resolution', said it would throw all its weight be- hind the maple leaf flag. Que- |bec members in the Conserva- | cision. ~ | Initial reaction had suggested |the Union Jack portion of the jresolution would also breeze jthrough the Commons when it arose. It was generally as- sumed that most of the Con- servative members who are fighting on behalf of the Red Ensign would automatically stand for the Union Jack. Not so, says one of the back- benchers. "The Union Jack is not a Canadian flag, and we don't want it as such. And what we're really opposed to is two |flags. We've been clear on jthis."" difficulty in planning strategy because a vote against the Un- ion Jack could be easily mis- understood in home constituen- cles, "We haven't got that prob- jlem,". said a Quebec member jof the party. 'The. Quebec |members of the party will prob- jably all vote for the new flag and against the Union Jack." | Quebec members of other Op. }position parties are also ex- pected to be against the second jresolution although' most Liber- jals will likely support the Union Jack. There has been some specula- |tion that the Conservative will |propose an amendment seeking recognition of the Red Ensign-- instead of the Union Jack--as a symbol of Commonwealth mem- bership. But this, said an MP, kone run counter to the party's jargument against two flags for 'Canada, ing over in the afternoon with showers and scattered thunder- istorms toward evening. Winds) \becoming southerly 15 to 20 late} |today. : | | Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali-| burton: Showers this afternoon} and this evening. Mostly sunny Friday but clouding over late) lin the day. Winds southerly 15 to 20 tonight and Friday, =| Northern Georgian Bay, Tim-| agami, Sudbury, North Bay: | Variable cloudiness with scat- tered showers and thunder-| storms Friday. Turning cooler | DINE OUT at the Newly Remodelled GRAND RESTAURANT late Friday. Winds becoming west to southwest Friday.n | Algoma, southern White) River: Mostly cloudy, with show- | ers and scattered thunderstorms | tonight and early Friday. Cooler | Friday. Winds westerly 15 Fri-| day becoming northerly in the afternoon. Northern White River, Coch-| rane: Rain occasionally heavy | in thunderstorms tonight taper- | ing off to showers on Friday. | Much cooler Friday. Winds or coming easterly tonight and/| northerly Friday. TORONTO (CP) -- Marine forecasts issued by the weather) office at $:30,a.m., valid until/ 11 a.m, Friday: Includes Chicken M Suey, Sweet and Sour SPECIAL CHINESE DINNER ushroom Chop Spare Ribs and 85° Lake Superior: Winds south- | east, increasing to 25 knos to- day and shifting to northerly 20 to 30 tonight, showers and thun- derstorms with extensive fog. Lake Huron, Georgian Bay:| Winds southeast 20 to 25 knots, | becoming southwest Jate} tonight! showers and scattered former Dorothy Bolduc of Toronto -- they have four children. paca ending this eve- i 2 FOR TAKE-OUT ORDERS PHONE 728-4666 RESTAURANT 14% KING ST. E. UPSTAIRS But he sald there would be| | the vote on its proposal that use of the Union Jack be per-| mitted to denote Canada's Com-| Prime} Minister Pearson informed the| Commons Wednesday. Starr that it would be inappro-|they were not selling their priate to obtain written author-|babies." ization from the Queen about) Elizabeth Anglim, supervisor use of the Union Jack until the|of the adoption service depart- Canadian Parliament deals with|ment, Children's Aid Society, the government's proposal. Erie 'County, N.Y., gave the MONTREAL (CP)--- A Cana- dian doctor shared the spotlight with space topics as some 1,200 heart specialists from all over the Western Hemisphere dis- cussed new ideas and perennial hart problems Wednesday. Dr. David Paul of Montreal was elected president of the In- teramerican Society of Cardio- logy for the next four years. He is the first Canadian to fill the |post. The congress sponsored by the society and ending Friday re- ceived a space briefing from four doctors connected with the United States programs for put- ting humans into earth orbits and beyond. The doctors, including a Ca- nadian - born specialist, traced some of the effects on heart functioning of high acceleration and inactivity in space flights. | They said recent research in- jdicated the dizziness exper- ienced by U.S. astronaut Gordon Cooper after his earth orbits last 'year could have resulted from jacceleration, inactivity and de- |ydration as well as from weightlessness in space. | \p to now, weightlessness has been thought the major if not the sole cause of the dizziness. Heart Specialists Hear Of Spaceman's Troubles subcommittee a letter from Harry G. and Gladys L. Hetzer of Cheektowaga, N.Y., telling of their experience with Blair |when they sought to adopt a jchild, The letter said in part: "He said that his fee was $700 but that he would have to Dr. D. Owens Coons, native|Pay the mother's care for the of Hamilton; said the sensation|@mount of time that she was in resembled the feeling earth-|this area before giving birth to bound people: experience after|the baby, if she was from out cases confined to hospitals here declined again with three sus- pects released as cleared, the number of confirmed cases in- creased two to 400. Forty-seven suspected cases also remain in hospital. REPORT NEW CASE ABERDEEN (Reuters) -- A new typhoid patient was ad- mitted to hospital here Tues- day as officials in this Scottish city warned of the serious ef- fects being wreaked on the city's economy by the month- old epidemic. Figures released Tuesday showed that Aberdeen now has 398 confirmed cases, getting up from a long period|°f town." four more than Monday. in bed. Dr. Coons, now attached to the manned spacecraft centre in Houston, Tex., traced the bodily source of the dizziness to the "'inability of the cardio- vascular system to make provi- sions for retaining conscious- ness." Somewhat less complex-sound- ing was the idea expressed by Dr. Lawrence Lamb for a pos- sible means of providing space- jmen with exercise in their cap-| sules, } He said a stationary bicycle might come in handy for this purpose, although "we're not| sure just what sort of exercise is required for the astronaut." Dr. 'Lamb, who teaches inter- nal medicine at the Brooks U.S. Air Force Base in Texas, said the study of inactivity among capsul ~ enclosed astronauts might be of use to people in general, whose resistace to heart diseases is sapped by lack of physical exercise. HALF SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS Featuring TACOMA by FOR- SYTHE 65% Polyester and 35% Cotton. OTHER STYLES FROM $4.00 | GEORGE C. 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