Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Feb 1965, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

THE OSHAWA TIMBS, 'uesday, Febsuery 16, 1965 Crittenden, former district at- torney, said criminals will be less likely to attack an officer who is armed with a weapon as deadly a: the shotgun. The 12-gauge shotguns will use shells containing the larg- est buckshot available. Burned Church, Gets 2] Months ST. CATHARINES 'CP) -- A youth who said he accidentally a book of burning 'matches during a break in " caused damage estimated a $100,000 to the First United Church here was sentenced Monday to 21 months in reform- atory. Henry Franklin Boozan, 17, to charges of and entering and theft of a movie projector and am- plifier Jan. 30. "Short Beers -- Drawn Monday TORONTO (CP)--Beer par- jors in the province threw & curve at patrons Monday. The curve is on new, smaller -- in which draught beer served, The size of the glasses is down to 7.6 ounces from 8.5 ounces, but the price stays the Liquor Ontario gave the official go- ahead to a previously announced regulation lifting price restric- tions on beer parlors and hotels and pubs across the province took advantage. Bottled beer prices in most beer parlors were also raised, , nickel to 33 cents. Policeman at Lima, Peru, wades into student demon- strators who were protest- ing an increase in taxicab and bus fares last week. The students blocked _ streets near the University of Cay- stano Heredia in downtown Lima for nearly an hour be- fore the Civil Guard was CAB-FARE HIKE IGNITES RIOTS called in to restore order. One student got a .22-caliber bullet in his heel. --AP Wirephoto Rome Closes 'Deputy After One-Day Run By GERALD MILLER ROME (AP)--A group of Ital- ian actors bowed to a city gov- ernment ban on The Deputy to- day after giving one perform- ance of the controversial play behind the locked doors of a Rome bookstore. The Rome prefecture banned the play by West German writer Rolf Hochhuth after the Vatican radio and newspaper attacked efforts by Gian Maria Volonte and a group of actors te stage the play Ii questions whether Pope Piux XIi did all he could to save the Jews from the Nazis. "We made our point," said |/Volonte. "We wagted to show, we had a right to put the play on here. We'll meet later to de- cide what to do next." Volonte suggested his group WASHINGTON (AP) --A spokesman said Monday the state department is investigat- ing the mysterious activities of an American - owned _ aircraft U.S. Searches Mystery Of Arms-Carrying Plane dam and Beek in The Nether- lands where 100 parachutes were loaded. On Feb. 3, the plane was flown to Prague, Czechoslovakia where a cargo might try to stage The Deputy outside Rome, since the ban ap- plies only to the city. In banning the play, the pre- fecture cited the 1929 Lateran Concordat that established rela- tions between the government of Italy and the Vatican state. It recognizes a special status for Rome as the centre of Ro- man Catholicism and obliges the Italian state to protect the pap- acy frora "public offence and injury." Volonte's troupe tried first to present the play before an in- vited auaience Saturday night in an improvised theatre. The police prevented that perform- and on the ground Volante had not obtained a safety licence for a pubiic gathering. Police took some of the audi- ence away by force, and the actors began a sit-in in the theatre behind a police dbarri- MAPLE LEAF RISES ACROSS CANADA By THE CANADIAN PRESS Unity was the theme stressed in speeches Monday as the ma- ple leaf flag was raised on poles across Canada and at Ca- nadian world. On Parliament Hill Prime flag- |the decision has been made by missions around the/dian "Their feelings and emotions should be honored and re- spected. But I am sure, now that the representatives of the Cana- ie in Parliament as- sembled, that all Canadians, as good patriots, will accept that dceision and fly with pride our national flag." But John Grasscamp of Niag- ara Falls, Ont., paraded on Par- black to protest the replacement of the Ensign by the red maple leaf flag. He told reporters he represented millions of Cana- dians who "feel bad" about the change, then left the hill before the new flag was hoisted. FULL OF PROMISE In Quebec, Premier Jean Le- sage said the new flag itself to our eyes as something immensely simple, like a new- liament Hill with a big Red En- sign draped and bordered in born baby who also is full of magnificent promise." By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (CP) -- Diplomatic sdurces said Monday the Viet Nam and Cyprus situations il- lustrate how difficult it is for Canada to withdraw from a peace-keeping task once it is undertaken. When a situation cooled off, as in Cyprus, nobody wanted to withdraw the peace-keepers and Viet Nam, Cyprus Illustrate Peace-Keeping Difficulties On the other hand, when a situation became hot, as in Viet Nam, the feeling usually was that withdrawal of the peace- keepers might worsen things all around. Informants said Canada would like to quit the three-power truce commissions in Viet Nam, Laos and Cambodia but that it doesn't want to retreat under risk rocking the boat. fire or without general agree- Competition, Slammed By TORONTO (CP) Compe- tition and profit - seeking are "sacred cows' to which Cana- dians give "obsequious obeis- ance," Rev. J. Ray Hord said today in his annual report to the United Church of Canada's board of evangelism and social service. Mr. Hord, board secretary, said the greatest achievements in history "have not been prompted by competition and profit, but by the desire to serve one's fellow man." "It's high time we presented our young people with a new philosophy based on co-opera- tion rather than competition, on mutuai sharing rather than on selfish getting." Economic and political goals Canadians should aim for, Mr. Hord said, include: --An adequate standard of living for all citizens. --Government sponsorship of legislation and programs to protect the weak and improve conditions of the poor. --Availability of education to all youths at universities and trades training institutes. --Adequate social security for elderly persons, the unem- ployed, ill and disabled. --Representation by workers in the management of indus- try and a fair share of profits. Profiteering UC Secretary CHURCH SHOULD LEAD Mr. Hord also said the church should give leadership in proj- ects aimed at the renewal and redevelopment of depressed ag- ricultural areas in Canada. Since Prime Minister Pearson has said a free vote on the abo- lition of the death penalty will be held in the Commons, the church has '"'a strategic oppor- tunity" to acquaint members of Parliament and others with "the hope -of the gospel for the reformation of all offenders." The United Church general council in 1960 recommended to the government that life im- prisonment should replace the death penalty. Mr. Hord said Christians now ment among the nations which established the i 1954. The commission actually did retire from Laos in 1960 but had to return when civil strife re- sumed. ing on the commission in Viet Nam, 26 of them in the Com- munist north. _ Diplomatic quarters also said it now appears the mandate of the United Nations police force in Cyprus, to which Canada is the largest manpower contribu- tor, will be extended beyond March 26 at least until the end of June. There are more than 1,100 Ca- nadians in the 6,500-man UN force. Up to now, the cost to Canada has been nearly $4,600,- 000. The monthly cost now is around $305,000. On March 26, the UN force will have been in operation for one year. At that time, assuming the force is kept on, the 1st bat- talion, Queen's Own Rifles, from Victoria will replace the ist bat- talion, Canadian Guards, from Picton, Ont., as the main Cana- dian contingent on the island where Greek and Turkish Cyp- riots have been feuding for more in| sign has But the country it symbolizes now is full grown, the premier said, 'From coast to coast, let this flag be a symbol of the drawing together of all Cana- dians,"' Some 15 separatists disagreed with him, -- "down with the maple leaf, long live the fleur-de-lis." The fleur-de-lis is the provincial flag of Quebec. Victoria was the first provin- cial capital to have the flag raised. But only four persons-- a reporter and a photographer-- turned up for the raising at the crack of dawn. - Charlottetown was the first provincial centre to hold an offi- cial ceremony--at 10 a.m. The flag was raised beside the Union Jack and the Nova Scotia flag atop 147- year-old Province House in Halifax. The Red En- never been flown from Province House. 2,000 AT QUEEN'S PARK A 100-man guard of honor from the Guards pre- sented arms when the new flag was raised at Queen's Park in Toronto. Some 2,000 spectators sang O Canada as the flag a custodian, a commissionaire, Moi Unity Theme Stressed At Ceremony inched up the staff. Ontario Liberal leader An- drew Thompson was injured in a two-car crash as he drove to the ceremonies. An aide said Mr. Thompson appeared to have suffered a slight back injury. He was treated at home by a doctor. Canadian forces serving with peace-keeping Treaty Organization in France and Germany raised the flag nday. Navy units on both coasts and RCN vessels in The West Indies replaced the blue and white en- signs with the maple leaf flag. Dig For Body DOLGEVILLE, N.Y. (AP) -- The lifeless body of James Mitchell, 23, entombed during his secon¢ visit to Schroeder's cave, lay 100 feet below the ground today as men turned to machines to tear through the soil and limestone above him. State police said it was a cer- SEAT BELTS GO TO DOGS LITTLE FALLS, N.J. (AP)--If you think seat belts are for the birds, con- sider the case of Henry La- sala. He thinks they're for the dogs. Lasala's 45-pound dober- man-retriever rides in style and safety with a seat belt made it by attaching a standard safety belt to a dog harness. "Cleo loves it," says La- sala. "There's no more slid- ing under the dashboard on quick stops or danger she will go out the window or door. It also prevents her read annoying me while I ive."" tainty that the body of the Win- throp, Mass., cave explorer, soaked by freezing waters for the last three days, would have to remain in an underground crater in the labyrinth for at least another day or two. Earth - moving machines be- gan sc a 20-yardsquare swath over the cavern late Mon- day to remove eight to 10 feet of soil so that drills could attack the 32 feet of limestone over the crater opening that Mitchell en- tered Saturday. than a year. WEATHER FORECAST must learn that evangelism means "hope in action," not merely a relationship between God and individuals for the sal- vation of souls. Evangelism "must take into account modern man's legitim- ate desires for a better life on this earth as well as in the age to come," he said. "4 gospel which does not offer the fulfillment of man's secular hopes will fall on deaf ears in vast sections of our modern world, . i." Text of Mr. Hord's report was released to the press prior to presentation, TORONTO (CP) -- Official forecasts issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m. Synopsis: Light snow will fall through northern and central Ontario Wednesday but is un- likely to do the same in south- ern sections of the province as coo! seasonal temperatures prevail in all regions. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Niagara, Western Lake Ontario, Windsor, Toronto, Hamilton: Cloud, Some Wind Not Much Change Kingston ....++00. Kapuskasing ..... White River...... Moosonee ...0+++- TimMiNS ...scc0ee VISIT braemor gar ens (Stevenson Rd. N. ond Annapolis Ave.) Community For Young Moderns and So-0-0-0 Convenient Cc HERE and THERE cade. Mostly cloudy with not much which was found to have ajof munitions was loaded. Kidnapper Hangs Self CLEVELAND (AP) -- A 22 - year-old self-admitted kidnap- per of a seven-year-old girl took his own life early today in 'a cellblock in Cuyahoga County jail, the sheriff's office re- ported. Chief jailer William Lynch said the body of William Re- hard was found hanging from a bar. | Lynch said Rehard tied a towel around his neck and ap- parently climbed onto a radia- tor and then stepped off. Rehard left a note in which he said he was sorry for what cargo of military equipment from boii) sides of the Iron Cur- tain when it made an unauthor- ized landing Feb. 4 on Malta. State department officials said Maltese authorities seized the plane and levied fines of £100 ($300) each on the pilot and a man identified as president of the company owning the air- craft. Robert J. McCloskey, the state department press officer, told a press conference the situ- ation is "somewhat unclear" but that the plane was a four-engine Constellation registered to U.S. Airways of New York which handles charter service. The aircraft, said the state department, had a cargo of parachutes, rifles, automatic weapons and ammunition. The flight originated in Eng- land about Feb. 2, McCloskey said, and went first to Amster- He said the pilot filed a flight plan at Prague giving Libya as destination but. landed instead at Malta. | 180 Strikers Back To Work PETERBOROUGH 'CP) About 180 workers, who walked off their jobs at two Raybestos- Manhattan of Canada Limited plants here last Thursday, re- turned to work Monday. At a meeting Sunday about} 70 members of: Local 5141 of! United Steelworkers of America} (CLE) agreed to return to work on condition that union officials jand management would meet to- day in an effort to resolve a dis- pute over shift-work proposals. The dispute involves the com-| pany's proposal to change to a| swing-shift method from the | had happened to Donna Adkins and wished it had not happened, Lynch said. He had admitted forcing Donna into a car Jan. 21, hold- ing her overnight in a garage and then abandoning her on the Ohio Turnpike 13 miles from her home. Before reJeasing the girl, Re- hard fired blank cartridges near her eyes, he told police. One of the girl', eyes later had to be removed by surgery. Mother Won't Admit Son Dead FRESNO, Calif. (AP)--Thir- teen years after her son's plane crashed on Labrador, Mrs. J: Griffin refused to believe that he is deaa. That despite the fact a body bearing his identification, Fran- cs McLaughlin, 32, was found in Canada--200 miles from the crash wreckage. "How did he get so far? Everyon: told me he Could not have walked so far in the ter- rible winter weather," she in- sists. "And where is Jerome Kurt," his navigator? McLaugh lin and Kurtz, a New| Yorker, were ferrying a two- engine civilian plane from New York to Jugoslavia. Their plane vanished Oct. 16, 1952, 60 miles from Goose Bay, Indians found the plane the next summer. Iis radio was on a wing. There was evidence of two campfires and footprints, but-no bodies. Nothing was found until a few MORE WORK IF PHONES OUT? FRANKFURT (AP)--A Ba- varian firm plans to stop phones ringing for the boss and his entire staff for at least one hour every day, so everyone can concentrate on his work The experiment was an- nounced here Monday by the "business efficiency commit- tee," a private group sup- ported by West German in- | dustries to aid their efficiency programs. The firm's name 'was not disclosed The anti-telephone decree is to affect everyone con- nected with the firm. Even business partners have been ohn| asked to respect the "silent hour" and not place any calls to the firm during the period. The experiment will be car- ried out during the hour of the day that experience has shown to be the quietest. Man's Origins: 350,000,000 Years tario Museum = scientist Monday he has proved 350,000,000 years to a fish known as the crossopterygian. Gordon Edmuna, a specialist in extinct vertebrate animals, said the theory' that man is linked with this long-vanished, lobe-finned fish is not new. But mg claims he is the first to prove weeks ago when an Indian dis- covered 2 body bearing Mc- Laughlin's identity card near} Natasbquan, Que. Dr. Edmund found fossils of the crossopterygian on the north shore of the Bay of Chaleur in |Quebec, TORONTO (CP)--A Royal On- said that man can trace his origins back present system whereby the employees work one of three ishifts. The change would have \the workers change shifts once every two weeks and they would rotate on the three shifts. 'MP Would Bar 'Malcolm X | SMETHWICK, England (Reu-) ters)--Peter Griffiths, Conserva-| tive member of Parliament for this race - conscious industrial town, said today he would de- mand in Parliament that steps be taken to bar militant Amer-) ican Negro leade1 Malcolm X) from Britain. | Griffiths said he would ask Home Secretary Sir Frank Sos- kice in the House of Commons Thursday to declare the bearded Negro an undesirable alien. He also will ask why Malcolm X was allowed into Britain last week. During his visit the former leader of the Black Muslim sect visited this. Midlands industrial town, whose large colored im- migrant community have made it a flashpoint: for racial anta- |gonisms. Griffiths, who defeated Monday night, while Volonte remained inside the theatre and the police were still outside, the actors slipped out by twos and |threes and went to a bookshop where an invited audience of 150--inciuding journalists, crit- ics and left-wing members of parliament -- watched a per- formance without sets. BUZZING TOYS BUG P.O. BOYS - WASHINGTON (AP)-- Bzzzzzzzzzz. The U.S. post office has had a lot of it lately. And is expecting more. Most 'of the trouble has been traced to battery-pow- ered toys and devices shipped through the mail. Many art activated by. vi- bration on a conveyor belt. They "cause considerable loss of time until the parcel is isolated and examined to determine cause of the sound," said the post office department's weekly bulle- tin to postal workers. Man- ufacturers were urged to develop better packaging. | Frank G. Raymant, a | vice-president of Du Pont | of Canada Ltd., will ad- dress the Oshawa-Ajax sec- tion of the Industrial Acci- dent Prevention Associa- tions on February 17 at the Genosha Hotel, Over 300 people are expected to at- tend the dinner. Magistrate Frank S. Ebbs 4s recovering at his Mary street home after a bout of flu. He does not expect to return to the Bench this week. William Howard, of Mar- land avenue, went to Lake Simcoe, ice-fishing Sunday with 25 fellow employees of Duplate of Canada Ltd., - and caught a ducking. He was soaked when his foot slipped on the ice and he dropped through the _ ice hole. Mr. Howard was drag- ged out by his friends and rushed to Virginia Beach. He reported that there were no ill-effects. Three people escaped seri- ous iriury Saturday night in a two car collision at the Po STRATFORD (CP)--John Pit- man, 21, was brought here in police custody from Sarnia Mon- day after being charged with the capital murder of a girl whose parents employed him as farm hand. A warrant for his arrest was, issued after Marianne Vander- viiet, 21, was found shot to death Sunday in her parents' home near Dublin, about 15 miles northwest of here. Pitman was arrested in down- town Sarnia and will appear in Stratford magistrate's court Wednesday. former Labor foreign secretary Patrick Gordon Walker in last October's general elections, pro- tested today in a statement that the BBC had created an "arti- HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S ficial incident" 'by bringing Mal- colm here | Need Mortgage Money? McGILL | Day or Night - 728-4285 | Real Estete Broker OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SEPVING OSHAWA OVER © 50 YE'S lice Capture Murder Accused Miss Vandervliet, a school teacher in Kitchener, had been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Foort Vanderviiet, for the weekend. Her body was found on a kitchen couch when her parents and two younger brothers re- turned home from visiting friends about 5 p.m. Sunday. An autopsy showed that she had been shot through the heart with a .22-calibre bullet. There was one bullet wound. junction of Ritson road south with Cedar street. A car driven by Samuel Harvey McPhee, 1048, Cedar street, was involved in a collision with a car driven by 21-year-old Allison Rus- mussen, 392, Sharon ave- nue. Mrs. Harvey McPhee sus- tained a sore neck in the crash, Mr. Joseph Connell, Gen- eral Secretary of the Kitch- ener-Waterloo Young Men's Christian Association, will be the speaker at the Osh- awa Builders' Association Civic Night to be held at the Genosha Hotel on February 25. Humanitarian, educator, youth worker, chaplain and outstanding public speaker, Mr. Connell has twice re- ceived the Twin Cities citi- zen of the year award. Congratulations to Kim Stanley, RR 4, Farewell avenue, Oshawa, who cele- brates her eighth birthday today. Bob Reynolds of the Motor City Car Club has won three trophies at the Dallas Auto- tama in Texas. In competi- tions which drew 100 cars to the show last weekend, Reynolds came first in the custom hardtop class (with his 1963 Chevrolet); best candy (special lacquer) paint; and won the trophy for the competitor who came the farthest distance (1,664 miles). Reynolds left the car in Indianapolis for a show this weekend. He has com- peted in severa) American cities this season, including New York, Boston, Philadel- phia and Detroit. A new township hall and municipal office is to be Rama Townsh'p's centen- nial project. The proposed site is on Highway 69 near the old township hall. CARPET SALEMAN REQUIRED Permanent position for qualified person. Must be fully experienced in carpeting and resilient flooring. Salary open, APPLY IN PERSON ONLY TO Ancus-(GRAYDON 282 KING ST. W. change in temperature and light winds. Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali- burton, Killaloe: Cloudy with little change in temperature. Winds light. Lake Huron, Southern Geor- gian Bay, regions London: Cloudy with little change in temperature and light winds. Northern Georgian Bay, Al- goma, Southern White River, Timagami, Cochrane, North Bay, Sudbury: Mostly cloudy and milder with a few snow- flurries. Winds light. Northern White River, West- ern James Bay: Cloudy with moderating temperatures and = light snow. Winds ight. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Wednesday: Windsor St. Thomas........ London ....esseee Kitchener .... Mount Forest. Wingham .. Hamilton .... . St. Catharines.... TOTONLO .2.cccceve Peterborough .... $50 to Pay all your bills with a Superior "Clean-up Loan"' . »- and reduce your monthly payments by as much as half $5000 SUPERIOR FINANCE oy the fastest gr Trenton ...... cece ing all Ci 17 Simcoe Street North, Oshawe Daily to 6:30 p.m.; Friday to Other evenings by 31 SUPERIOR offices to serve you loan np 725-6541 8.00 p.m, it. GUARDIAN MAINTENANCE Recommended Maintenance Services EACH 30 DAYS (60 DAYS IN SUMMER) Change engine oil. Clean and re-oil crankcase breather cap. Check for fuel, water or oil leaks. Check all fluid and lubricant levels in- cluding brake master cylinder. Test antifreeze. .90 PLUS OIL AND MATERIAL 'AS NEEDED Only GM Factory Approved Parts And Materials Used HEADQUARTERS FOR GM QUALITY ENGINEERED ACCESSORIES 266 King Street West -- Phone For Appointment SERVICE DEPT 723-4634 ASK FOR: -- ED WALLACE JACK SAARINEN CHARLIE BALL

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy