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Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Jun 1964, p. 2

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THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, June 30, 1964 GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN -- 4 THAILAND ROTARIAN LAUDS TORONTO, OSHAWA It's a small world, isn't it? Ask Michael Rudka of Oshawa, He's international presi- dent of the 17,000-member Refrigeration Service Engineering Society, and a member of the Oshawa Rotary Club. When the club asked "Mike" to provide accommodation in his home recently for two guests from Bangkok, Thai- land, during the Rotary International Convention, he didn't realize one thing -- Burin Hirunburana, one of the guests, was in the same business as. himself (refrigeration engineer- ing.) | Burin, 27, is manager of Bangkok Engineering Co. Ltd, It provides sales and service in refrigeration, air conditioning and _ heating. He directs a staff of 40, speaks fairly good English: His companion was Mana Pathomvanich, assistant man- aging director, The Taht Soon Lee Rice Co. Lid., FROM CLERK TO BARON the Independent Television Auth- orities license for Scotland and plunged into the television field jwith both fists, This also proved to be ah outstanding success. "Tn 1959, he concluded, per- Lebanon Lodge Testimonial |haps what was his biggest deal Dinner in Oshawa. in taking over the Kemsley "Much has been written, and newspaper group, the biggest said, about our honored guest/prsss group in the country. over the years and I think per-| 'Along with his North Ameri- haps one of the salient reasons can interests this made him the for the people's interest is that owner of 70 newspapers, Sunday he is a living example of thé dailies, evenings and weeklies - fact that one does not have to spread. over five countries. be born with a silver spoon in Fresh fro mthis brilliant deal his mouth to make good. |he. once said, "I'd like to make _ Our honored guest was born) it one hindred". This wish was in Toronto, the son of a DATbER on te be fulfilled, and received his education in... aia ; the Church Street Public Ele- (BY 1963 the Thomson ofgani- mentary School and 'Jarvis Zation, as if is mow kn i. Street Collegiate. owned 108 newspapers in 1 "He left school carly and countries. These include the started' to earn his own living ¥Orld famous Sunday Times and las a clerk, and following a the National Dailies of Scotland , and Wales, the Scotsman and Following is the text of the remarks by T. L. Wil- son, Publisher of The Osh- awa Times, who introduced guest speaker Lord Thom- son of Fleet at last night's course in a Toronto business 'Thomson's Life tlined fof the Scottish Regiment and. "Lord Thomson was created holds Directorship of the boardsja Baron in the New Year's of Reuters a world news gather- honors list in 1963. He took the ling institution arid the Abitibi title of Lord Thomson of Fleet 'Power and Paper Co, Ltd., asjof Northbridge, in the City of jwell as as many other organi-| Edinburgh, on the 10th of March) 'zations. 1964, and took his seat in the) | "Much more. could be said|/House of Lords on the 18th of 'about his many aquisitions but March, 1964. iI must leave some time for _ to ak since that is one ; | +B lite for your presence|!® 8 great pleasure to present) here this evening. the head of our family to you on "Lord Thomson's motto On)this occasion, one whom all of \the Coat of Arms accorded t0\ys in the family regard as a |him in 1958 is, 'Never a Back-\'pait rather than a boss an iward Step'. No man could have whose word, in our | \a fitter motto and none more|as good as his bond, The Right fully exempiified in the quarter|Honorable Lord Thotson eentury preceding its grant. |Fleet. K, Norways PM pinion, is, 'ury Secretary Douglas 'EVIL FOR GOOD' Senator Auto Firm Bait By HAROLD MORRISON WASHINGTON (CP) -- Sena- tor Paul Douglas accused Can- ada Monday of "returning evil for good" by introducing the au- tomotive incentive program af- ter the U.S. agreed to exempt proposed U.S. tax on foreign se-| curities. | The Illinois Democrat, acting as chairman of the U.S. Senate finance committee, said he be- lieved in the principle of turn- Ing the other cheek, but para-| phrasing the biblical expression, | he just wished the bread Treas- Dillon casts upon the waters is re- Dillon, teatiag on, legisia- tion to implement the-stock tax,| agreed in part but said the Ca-| nadian automotive incentive pro- gram, to encourage auto ex- Boaco's Defeat Slaps At Blue Devils In | Juvenile Game In a Juvenile - Junior lacrosse game here at the Children's Douglas suggested the automo- Arena last night, Bosco Real tive plan, which some Ameri- Estate whipped Beaupre Blue can parts manufacturers have Devils 6-3 in a rough condemned as hurting their own 84me. sales, was not indicative of hem- Ken Howard and Fred Green- Ispheric solidarity. He noted wood led Bosco's with two Canada also is trading with each. Doug Sutton and "My friends, and brethren, it'new Canadian issues from the|Cuba and Red China but Dillon Lewis added the others, reminded him this trade is Norton scored two goals for mainly in food. Canada does not'the losers, while Krasnag add- sell strategic goods to. these eq a single. : : countries. Bosco's led 2-0 after the first In his introductory statement, period and 8-1 at the end of the Dillon said the exemption for second, : Canada does not impair the ef-- BEAUPRES-- goal, McPhee; 'ectiveness of the tax, esti: Barrett, Robinson, . Powlenzuk, . eid' the CE. te Braiden, Salter, Laxton, Keen- mated to yield the U.S. treas-'., wilson, Norton, Little, ury about $30,000,000 a year and Werry, Krasnay and increase the foreign borrowing rate in the U.S, by about one percentage point. BOSCO'S -- goal, Bremner} Spencer, Gresham, Thompson, Sutton, Wood, P. Wilson, Lewis, The Canadian government has Howard, Chappell, Greenwood, Pleaded for quick action to re- MacDonald and. Wasyluk. move the uncertainty which has : school became successively a the Western Mail respectively. Bangkok. The pair was on a four- month tour that touched Ja- pan, Hong. Kong, Hawaii, United States, England, France, Germany, Italy and Switzerland. Their impress- ions of North America were interesting. Burin, a member of the Rotary Club of Dhonburi, Bang- kok, wrote the following '"'thank you' 'letter to Mr. Rudka under date of June 16: "Dear Mike: '1 have arrived in Hartford, Conn., and would like to thank you for your wonderful hospitality, which I have never before had, I enjoyed life with your family, also the won- derful trips to Toronto during the convention. "T found Canada, and Toronto, different from the United States. "J visited six U.S. but I found 'Toronto a very friendly city where people were always smiling; they seem- ed to enjoy their lives by slower movements than in the big cities of the U.S., especially in Chicago. Your people are very helpful and made all Rotatians feel that they were in their homeland. Most Rotarians I met said the same thing. "I also found that Toronto seems to have the best and cleanest of subways in the world -- this is very special im- pression to Mana and me. "While I was with your family in Oshawa I thought that I was in my house in Bangkok. We have many aspects the same, especially I am also in air-conditioning business. Your kindness while we were your guests will long be re- membered. I would like to say how lucky Mana and I were with your family. "T found Canadians peaceful and smiling; of course, the symbol of Toronto and Oshawa is cleanliness. "Give my regards to your lovely wife and family. Will see you in Paris in 1967, Sincerely, "BURIN HIRUNBURANA" "MIKE" RUDKA cities, LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE Ernest Kneisel, vice-president and director of sales for Hotel Quinte in Belleville, has accepted the duties of indus- trial commissioner for Belleville on a temporary basis... . Remember Subdivider Herman Kassinger's long-standing feud with the City Engineering Department? Remember how the City requested he re-build those beautiful stone gates at the entrance to Beau Valiey to conform with a bylaw because they were too high (about two feet).. Mr. K won out: on this point, He also scored on another point last week. Magis- trate Harry Jermyn dismissed four charges against him of building without a permit on Greenwood crescent in the northwest. The City refused to issue the permits last May because the road grading was not completed. HOOLIGANISM SHOULD NOT BE TOLERATED Isn't it about time that some official step was taken to put a stop to '"'disturbances" in and around seme of our City beverage rooms? The majority of these establishments locally are well fun, steer clear of such incidents, but it doesn't take many "disturbances" to spread alarm. There -should be no official tolerance of hooliganism, fisticuffs, free-for-alis in a public 'place, wherein life and limb are endangered, most of all in women's beverage rooms. Perhaps some of the injured were quickly released after treatment at hospital for minor hurts, but how long will it be before someone is seriously hurt, maimed for life? Is official silence a good thing at 'such time, on the eve of the opening of new liquor outlets, when the need for official supervision will be much greater? The Police are sometimes blamed for not putting a curb on such beverage room shennanigans, but this is primarily the job management. The Police who are paid by the taxpayers, have other, more important jobs to perform than the hour-by-hour supervision of beverage rooms. There is another ¢4e to it -- too often the Police are called in when a beverag om melee has almost subsided, when it is diff- a # n& impossible, to gather evidence. Combatants @re aotoriously shy about co-operation with the Law on such accasions and little wonder. The Oshawa Police Department automatically forwards copies of reports on such "disturbances" to the Ontario Liquor Licence Board, the Provincial watch-dog over such establishments The question may be asked: "What does Liquor Licence Board do with such reports? them away, and forget about them? Such questions are pertinent in view of the imminent increase of liquor outlets locally Such questions should be the concern also of the Oshawa Board of Police Commission. the Ontario Does it file Salesman, farmer, stenographer "In addition the organization Spar In Parley jports through a tariff rebate) qiscouraged Canadian borrow- has a total of 95 miscellaneous publications, including -- such glossies as the Tattler, the Sphere and the Illustrated Lon- don News. and bookkeeper, "He was rejectéd for overseas | Service in World War I because of defective eyesight but was assigned to the Canadian Mitit'a in which he held the rank of Lieutenant. "In the early 30's we find our honored guest trying to sell jradio sets in Northern Ontario where the radio reception was very bad, but as an indication of his resourcefulness and cour- ageousness he set up his' own small broadcasting station with a second hand transmitter bought on credit and ran it on 'canned' music "The studio was a dressing room of the jocal theatre, This certainly helped him sell his radio sets but he found that people wanted to use this media for advertising, and it wasn't jlong before he found that there |was more profit in selling the advertising than there was in selling the radio sets "And thus was the beginning of the ownership of several radio and television stations in Canada "His initia] venture inte news- "There are seven book eom- panies in the group, one of the biggest being the firm of Thom- as Nelson and Sons Ltd., with branches in the United King- dom, New York, Canada, Aus- tralia and South Africa. "The group also includes 11 printing companies in 5 different countries and a. firm of block makers in London, together with the London School of Speed Writing "Apart from Lord Thomson's highly successful television sta- tion in Scotland, The Scottish Television Ltd., -his television interests embrace 12 different countries, together with radio interests in 6 different countries, "nOe of the features of inter- est to the people wherever the local newspaper becomes a Thomson newspaper that usually the first thing that hap- pens is that suitable premises \ are acquired -- the plant and |papers was almost as daring. equipment. modernized and local |He took over the local weekly. . autonomy. is insisted upon. that was his first attempt in the, «T can testify to the fact that publishing business. . . on pay-at no time has Mr Thomson, or ment of a bad debt. he paid his chief tieutenants, told: me, $75. down and the rest in instal- a, Publisher of The Times, that ments - --but he made the news-'t must print this or I must print paper a profitable proposition that. "Consequently, one newspaper, 'He is the Honorary Colonel led to another, and in ten years ---- he had a chain-of small daily evening newspapers from Van- couver to Quebec, as well as the three radio stations. "In those days, as now, his gospel is hard work. They tell me that he starts to work early in the morning and works 'til a hours at night 1s BUKAVU (AP) -- Congolese Army forces inched forward Monday in lukewarm pursuit of "They tell me, also, that when he.went to Florida on a yachting holiday one time he bought a Communist-backed rebel war- perecarer there just to have' riors whose threat against this something to do on the holiday city has been - eastern Congo . 5 Bp g i}.! 2 In 1953, by this time a mil-\ shattered by fighter - bomber lionaire, and verging on 60 years' 4; : ; air attacks. of age - - a time when a lot of Tribal warfare and rebellion people would be thinking of their raged on in other eastern areas retirement, he was looking for on the eve of a United Nations new fields of activity and turned ¢ 99 p withdrawal from The to the country of his forefathers.) Congo "He flew to Edinburgh and ac- U.S.-made T-28 fighter-bomb- quired control of the Scotsman ers drove drugged and fanatical group of newspapers, which wer Rufulero rebel hordes back into having some financial difficul- the jungles over the last few ties at the time days after they had come close "About this time, he to seizing this Kivu province = WEATHER FORECAST Thunderstorm Risk Overnight the Tor- onto weather office at 5:30 a.m Synopsis: Cooler air is ex- pected to advance across North- ern Ontario today preceded by scattered thunderstorms, It will likely move into. southern On- tario toight. Wednesday will be definitely cooler throughout Northern Ontario and not quite so warm in the south Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On- tario, Windsor, London, Hamil- ton: Variable cloudiness and some scattered thunderstorms tonight. Wednesday sunny with cloudy periods and not quite so warm. Winds becoming north- west 15 Wednesday. Toronto: Variable cloudiness and chance of a thunderstorm tonight. Wednesday sunny with a few cloudy periods and not quite so hot. Winds becoming northwest 15 Wednesday Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Ti secured Forecast temperatures: Low tonight, high Wednesday Windsor ... vee (70 85 St. Thomas 70 82 London 65 Kitchener 65 Mount Forest ...+.+ Wingham Hamilton St. Catharines Toronto .. Peterborough . Trenton Killaloe Muskoka North Bay Sudbury H@ritOn sscescdsvcee Sault Ste. Marie ... 55 Kapuskasing .. White River Moosonee Timmins .... Pay No More Than 4% Congolese Army 'Pursues Rebels OSLO. (Reuters)--Soviet Pre- mier Khrushchev and his Nor- wegian counterpart, Einar Ger- hardsen, held their first round of political talks of the current Khrushchey visit to Norway but "did not always concur." Norwegian Foreign Minister 'Halvard Lange told reporters after the meeting that the Rus- sians and the Norwegians had only exchanged views and that there had been no negotiations He said the discussions covered the international situation, and other questions of mutual inter- est He said Khrushchev did. not raise the subject of NATO bases in Norway, nor proposals for a Scandinavian "nuclear free"' zone. Monday, the 70 - year - old Kremlin leader showed signs of fatigue following his. arrival from Sweden, on his current 18; day Scandinavian tour, but brightened considerable later in the day. In an 80-minute private talk with Norwegian government and opposition leaders, Khrush- chev said he had no cares about who would succeed him as pre- mier. HAVE APPAPATUS A Norwegian present during the talks quoted him as saying: "We have now established the necessary appatatus of party | centre in the Ruzisi Valley. Demoralized and unenthusias- tic Congolese Army forces moved slowly down the valley toward Uvira, headquarters of the revolt against The Congo's tottering central government. The dissidents are led by for- mer provincial justice minister Gaston Soumialot and are pledged to the support of left- ist guerrilla chief Pierre Mu- lele, whose own revolt has been going on for months in Kwilu province, to the west of here and: closer to Leopoldville, the national capital. POLITICIANS JOCKEY In Leope!dville, meanwhile, politicians, including former se- cessionist president Moise |Tshombe of Katanga province, |jockeyed for position in what may be a new Congo central government. A national referen- | dum is under way -- scheduled jto end in.mid-July--on a_ pro- | posed new constitution. Premier| Cyrille Adoula has admitted his days as leader are numbered. Aside from several terrorist grenade attacks in Leopoldville | during the weekend, most of the activity in the capital has been in the form of political man- oeuvring. But in the eastern Congo, de- void of UN peace forces for nine months, tribes were hitting the warpath in what one diplo- mat described as "endemic an- archy."' Congolese Army officers claim that at least one tribe has re- verted to cannibalism leadership to take care of the question of succession.' Speaking of his two immedi- ate predecessors, Marshal Nik- olai Bulganin and Georgi Mal- enkov, he described the former as a bookkeeper rather than a politician "He was a bookkeeper, has always been a bookkeeper and was never a politician,' Khrush- chev said. As for Malenkov, 'He could never make up his mind. Now he is a director of a power plant That is very easy, because the plant is fully automated." Khrushchey made no mention by name of former foreign min- ister Vyacheslav Molotoy, But he appeared to include him scheme, was not introduced un-) til months after the U.S. de-! cided to exempt the new Cana- dian issues. Had the U.S. not agreed to the exemption. the Canadian government might have been forced to devalue the. Canadian dollar, he added. When the U.S securities tax proposal first was announced a year ago, Canada became gripped by ' real pa- nic."' . In exempting new 'Canadian issues, Canada had been in- formed that the president had power under the legislation to revoke or reduce the exemption and he could take this step if Canada's borrowings in the U.S did not remain within agreed limits. when he said Russia's former, THERE'S QUESTION leaders "have all ben taken care of, because they have been pensioned." NEWS IN BRIEF BACK TO 'NORMAL' HONG KONG (AP) -- Hong Kong goes back on "normal" water rations Wednesday after 13 months of two buckets daily a person. Norma! water rations in Hong Kong are eight hours supply a day. A typhoon last month broke the drought with more than 10 inches of rain. DIES AFTER CLIMB NEW DELHI (AP)--A Sherpa mountain guide died only hours | away from rescue by helicopter after the Indian expedition he was with conquered the 25,635- foot Nanda Nevi Peak June 27. It was learned Tuesday. Reports jsaid Ang Nima died Monday as he was carried by his colleagues to within a few miles from where the helicopter had been arranged to take him to a@ hos- pital. BOYS CRASH LAND PLANE SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (AP) A stolen, single-engine aireraft carrying two North Adams, Mass., boys--aged 15 and 13-- crash-landed in a large parking lot on the city's west side Tues- day, police said. Police reported that the 15-year-old pilot and his companion were unhurt when the plane ran the length of the 300-foot-long parking lot and smashed into a wire fence at the rear of the General Electric Company Plant. RUSSIAN BASSO DIES MOSCOW (AP)--The newspa- per Sovetskaya Kultura (Soviet Culture) announced Tuesday the death of Alexander Pirogov, a leading basso of the Bolshoi Theatre. He was 65. Official sources said he died June 26, HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS There are - 29 great As for the Canadian automo- tive program, there is a serious question, he said, whether ship- ments to the U.S. under this scheme would trigger the intro- duction of protective U.S. coun- tervailing duties. Dillon said this matter now is under formal con- sideration by the customs bur- eau. He is sure, he argued at an- other point, that Canadians would not look on the automo- tive incentive plan as returning evil for good PISTOLS IN WRECK TAIPEI (AP) -- Two pistols have been- found in the wreck- age of a plane which crashed June 20 in central Formosa, carrying 57 persons to their deaths. An air line official asked Nationalist China's Legis- lative Yuan (Parliament) to make a thorough investigation and answer the question: 'Was the pilot shot?" Wang Wen-san, chairman of the Civil Air Trans- port line, said one of the pis- tols was found in a hollowed- out book, an American military manual. dealing with radar and marked "top secret." Twenty Americans, many of them serv- icemen and their families, were among those killed in the crash. Just A Minute... «+, you con moke your travel re- servations with complete confi- dence when you call TRAVEL. They have the staff with the "know-how" thet only exper- jience can give, 668-3304, DONALD | COSENS & MARTIN Insurance 67 King St. E., Oshawa 720-1515 Soa Insurance Res; 725-2802 of 725-7413 U.S. Dillon estimated new Cana- dian issues sold in the US. dropped to $91,000,000 in the first three months of 1964 com pared with $737,000,000 for the full year of 1963. ings. in the too many bills? Noe SPira, Bits ae gan t consolidate by mortgage Get out from under bills and monthly payments. You. can pay your bills in full, have cash in hand, and only one monthly mortgage payment--with a Coronation Mortgage plan worked out to suit your budget. Get in the clear--call Coronation today. call CORONATION "THEY'RE THE MORTGAGE PEOPLE" IN OSHAWA CALL: ' SCHOFIELD-AKER LTD. 360 KING STREET W. TELEPHONE 723-2268 EVENING: PHONE 728-3376 Tarif Scheme Said No Threat To US. Firms TORONTO (CP)--A Canadian automotive organization. claims the federal government's tariff incentive program to help in- crease domestic car production offers no threat to the United States parts industry : The Automotive Parts Manu facturers' Association (Canada) said Monday it has released a statement because of publicity that has arisen over suggested US. application of duties against Canadian parts. The tariff incentive plan troduced jast October has ne ther interrupted nor decreased demand for U.S. parts in Can ada--in fact the démand has in in ereased, said D. §. Wood, ez-|hour, ecutive vice-president and man- magami, North Bay, Scattered ager of the association. thunderstorms in the late after- Canadian imports of automo- noon and evening. Wednesday tive parts from the U.S. in-)mainly sunny and cooler. Winds creased hy $65,000,000 since the becoming northwest 15 to 20 plan went into operation, the as- Wednesday. sociation said, Algoma, White River, Coch- Exports of automotive parts rane: Clear and cooler tonight from Canada to the U.S. rose Wednesday. sunny. Winds de- to $32,000,000 in 1963 from $9,- creasing to 10 to 15 tonight. 000,000 in 1961 and the upward trend was still evident in early TORONTO (CP) Marine 1963 figures. forecasts issued by the weather "It will be noted," the state- office at 8:30 a.m', valid until ment said, 'that the absolute 11 a.m. EDT Wednesday: increase in exports of automo- Lake Superior: Winds west to tive parts to the United States northwest 15 to 25 knots, de- in 1963 over 1962 amouned to creasing to 10 to 15. tonight; $22,000,000. In the same period mainly clear the absolute increase in-exports Lake Huron, Georgian Bay: of automotive parts from the Winds southwest 20 to 30 knots, United States to Canada shifting to west to northwest 15 amounted to $113,000,000." to 20 tonight; sunny followed by "scattered thindersqualls late BIG DIGGER this afternoon and evening The Soviet Union has Lake Erie Ontario! oped a rotary milling machine, Winds southwest to 20 that can cut lange canals al the kots; sunny today $0 rate of 2,700 yards of earth an lated thudershowers to- jnight . devel Lake vesterly a few i late -- When -- Selling Your Property McGiLL "ni" Broker HARRY 0, PERRY, Sales Mar. Day or Night--728-4285 NEED A NEW... OIL FURNACE? Call PERRY Day or night 723-3443 BUYER _. __ SELLER 728-9474 PAUL RISTOW REALTOR 187 KING 8ST. £. whiskies in >. Adams Private Stock CANADIAN RYE WHISKY hd THURSDAY, SULY 2 -- 1:30 to 4:30; 6:00 to 9:00 P.M. at ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM, SIMCOE ST. NORTH | Regular ond mew blood donors are urgently requested to attend with or without an appointment. WE ARE DESPERATELY SHORT OF ALL TYPES OF BLOOD WE NEED AT LEAST 450 BOTTLES OF BLOOD TO MEET THE NEEDS OF OUR PATIENTS IN JULY

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