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Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Aug 1965, p. 22

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22 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, August 18, 1965 Cabinet, Pearson Confer Prior To Prophetic Tour OTTAWA (CP) -- Many fed- inisters are head- fo the capital for a gz with Prime Min- 'oday before he two - province western trip that could determ- ine whether eral cabinet m ing back final meetin; ister Pearson ti sets out on a called this year. an election at Edmonton Aug. 28. iSihas said he favors both returning one, Wednesday, Aug. 25, at Prince George and Banff Aug. 27 and External Affairs Minister Martin, who has said he does not want an election now, and Finance Minister Gordon, who are to Ottawa for By PETER BUCKLEY LONDON: (CP)--A polio epi- demic in the Lancashire town of Blackburn has raised a spec- tre, in Britain that medical au- thorities had hoped would never appear again. "Let our misfortune be @ warning to everyone," Dr. John Ardley, medical, officer at Polio Epidemic, And A Warning enormous toll, In both 1947 and 1950, mofe than 7,000 Britons were hit by the disease and about one victim in 10 died from it. Other post-war years saw smaller outbreaks. Nearly 4,000 died of polio in the years before 1957. Since then, the total has steadily declined until last year, and five - CANADA STILL ARCTIC IN U.S. SMITHS FALLS, Ont. (CP)--Two married couples from Brooklyn, N.Y., who were named "Tourists of the Month" here Tuesday, confessed their bags were packed with heavy winter clothing because they thought Canada was a "frigid country." Temperature in this drought - ravaged town 50 miles south of Ottawa L.A. And Chicago Refused To Enter Strife Program WASHINGTON (AP) -- Riot- torn Los Angeles, along with Chicago, refused to join in a summer-long federal program designed to avert racial strife, it was learned Tuesday. U.S. government sources said Los Angeles Mayor Sam. Yorty and Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley were the only two of 11 city leaders who refused to join the then-secret program, land, Oakland, Calif., Philadet-| phia and Gary, Ind. | ment officlals and. minority! Ie Los Angeles and Chicago, groups, : jone U.S. official said, the may- So far, the nine cities servedjors replied they felt any racial © by the project have not had/tensions could be handled on major racial disturbances. the local level. : Officials said the 11 cities If were chosen as potential trou- ble spots. The federal men have sought to expedite government pro- grams designed to combat pov- erty. At the same time, they have tried to serve as channels "YOU'VENNEVER TASTED CHICKEN $O GOOD" ivery or Pick-Up when only 49 cases of information among govern- Blackburn, said Tuesday in a deaths were reported. telephone interview. Latest count showed 19 con- firmed cases of polio in Black-| gpRAK IN MANY TONGUES burn, with a population of 105,-| NBC-TV shows for export are 000, and 13 cases suspected. dubbed in Spanish, French, Ger- One death has been recorded. man, Portuguése, Italian and The outbreak has been officially Japanese. classed as an epidemic. | "We hadn't had any polio for a few years and people had be- come complacent," Dr. Ardley said. "It's the same old story. We are always warning people that they should be immunized, but they do not respond until they see the danger in their midst." The national health ministry said less than one-half the Brit- A full-time | federal official has been assigned to each of the other nine cities since the beginning of the summer. These men are on duty now in the other cities involved: Boston, New: York, . Newark, Rochester, N.Y.,. Detroit, Cleve- the cabinet meeting. Y BE ABSENT Thé*nine probable absentees include Labor Minister Mac- Eachen; looked' on as one of the more influential members of the cabinet. Farthest away is Health Minister Judy LaMarsh--in Ha- wali, Before departing the coun- try, she said in "'ancouver at the weekend that she and most of her: close friends in the cabi- net would like an election this year. Traditionally, dissolution of Parliament and the calling of| an.election are prerogatives of the prime minister although): ie cabinet ministers.may offer ad- ish population of 55,000,000 has been immunized, despite con-)' | H W is st ioe jcerted programs of free vacine i +3.) cer grams yacine, aWall a Should Mr. Pearson decide|jmmunization : in the cotton- against an election now, there) ,anufacturing' town of Black- Mutiny Win lis the possibility none would be|y..-n was even below the na- Its Director aw jheld until at least late 1966 Ol tional average. belts: be Onl |1967. Officials in all partieS\qemic began two weeks ago. want a minimum of six months|qn1y about one-third of the following the official publica- people had been vaccinated. By BOB THOMAS HONOLULU (AP)--Out here they're ,still talking about the Hawaii mutiny. tion of new ridings to reorgan-| % : ize their associations for ee CRASH PROGRAM It was a clash between high- powered corporative thin king About 15 of the 24 cabinet ministers are expected to at- tend, A majority of the cabinet is understood to favor a fall election. Most of the prime minister's closest political ad- visers are expected at the meet- ing. Wednesday night Mr. Pear- gon leaves for Toronto where he opens the Canadian National 4 Exhibition Friday before head- ing for British Columbia and Alberta, He opens Exhibition at climbed to 84 degrees as Alan Cooper and Barry Goldman and their wives were given. a conducted tour by a local tourist com- mittee. Tee-7e2t DELIVERED PIPING HOT TRIED MANY JOBS | Before becoming an actor,| Burt Lancaster was a_ circus acrobat, road. gang laborer, salesman, boiler stoker, singing waiter and G, I. | the Pacific National Vancouver Satur- day, spends three days pri- vately on Vancouver Island, and then speaks at Vancouver celebrations i ; and began a crash program of in the first half of 1967 are|inmunization and an_ esti- cited by some Liberals as an| nated total of 95,000 have now argument against an elec-\,.on treated e) new boundaries ss | Ardley brought in emer- The antennial igency supplies of oral vaccine and the gentle spirit of Poly- n esia. Here is the picture of the tion early that year, OLDSTER IS OLDEST The Blackburn outbreak has more than doubled the polio toll lin Britain within two weeks. The only ,actor on TV's As|The disease had been on the mutiny I drew from the surviv- The World: Turns who has been|wane in the country since large- with the show continually since|scale immunization began in 1956 is Santos Ortega, who plays|1956 | Grandpa Hughes. Before that, polio took an) ors: After filming in Norway, New England and Hollywood, the Hawaii company came to Oahu with high hopes and budget to match. Meanwhile, the movie's backers watched the budget climb higher and higher. Fin- ished film was returning to Hollywood at a sluggish rate. Panicsville. | United Artists and Marisch Brothers brass converged on Honolulu. They arrived at the classic solution for such affairs: Fire the director--George Roy | Hill. \THREE PROBLEMS What had gone wrong? Said star Max von Sydow: "There were three problems-- we ran into a lot of'rain; work-| ing on the sailing ships con-| sumed a lot of time; and the) number of unprofessional actors required time' and patience on George's part." 'Where was never a question about the quality of the film," added Julie Andrews. "When the trouble arose, we asked to see what had been shot, and we found {t excellent." But the corporative minds de- cided Hill must go. They reckoned without the simple loyalty of the Polynes- jan people. An imposing figure among the amateur actors recruited for) Hawaii is Jocelyn Lagarde, a) 300-pound Tahitian who was| signed to play the Hawaiian) queen Malama. She knew no English before the film, and) Hill had directed her with infin-| ite care. | When she heard the director} was fired, she issued the edict:) No Hili, no Maiama. She would sail home to Tahiti. Manu Taunaole, a Fijian who 'oo portrays her son in the film, | agreed that he would quit movie if Hill were canned He action, and the casting workers! who hired them resigned their AVOID DRIVING PARKING LONG jobs. » Reshooting. wi WORRIES" PROBLEMS' WALKS GO BY BUS in the middle. Reshooting with a new native cast might shoot! DIRECT INTO THE GROUNDS | August 20th, to September 6th the budget up to $20,000,000.| REDUCED FARES They acquiesced. Hill was re-). hired. ADULTS STUDENTS $2.85 $2.35 CHARGE YOUR Back-To- School Requirements ZELLER'S 3 EASY. BUDGET PLANS Downtown Store -- Simcoe South and Oshawe Shopping Centre A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE Pontiac Parisienne Custom Sport Convertivle When Hill reported to the set the day afterward, he was greeted with applause and kisses from his loyal cast. | BOMB CRADLED NEVER ROCKED VANCOUVER (CP) -- An army bomb disposal expert who rode for 20 terrifying minutes with a live bomb | eradied in his arms said Tuesday: "That's the kind of thing that scares you." | Lieut. D. A, Renshaw, 26, made the six-mile ride Mon- day in the back of a truck from a home in suburban Co- quitlam where the Second World War bomb was dis- covered under a garage floor. Lieut. Renshaw said the bomb could have exploded at any time during the trip to a municipal gravel pit where it was detonated harmlessly 'That was the worst-looking bomb I've ever handled," he said. 'I could see it still had the safety pin in but it was so rusted that the pin could have been powdered inside "When a bomb's like that anything could 'set it off." | It was the second bomb found in. the garage in a week. The owner, Alphonse Doucette, found a similar bomb, last Friday and it was exploded by an army demoli- tion team Police said they were later notified by a former owner of the home that in 1948 he placed two bombs under the garage floor. Police quoted th Olaf F : e man, Olaf Faderdahl, as Whitby -- Horry Donald Ltd. saying a friend had given him the bombs and suggested - age erage Saye ea he use them for doorstops. Phone 668-3675 Been waiting for the right moment to buy your new Pontiac? Round Trip Includes Admission CHILDREN $.90 -- (Bus Fare Only) LEAVE OSHAWA Z 7:30 A.M. Z12:30 P.M. 8:30 A.M. Z 1:30 P.M. 9:30 A.M. X 5:15 P.M. 10:30 A.M. 11:30 AM. Z 6:15 P.M. BUSES LEAVE WHITBY 9 MINUTES LATER X--Saturday and Labor Day Only cd This is it. find volume sales, you know you'll also find the best deals. It's as simple as that. And there's one more thing in your favour. Perhaps your Pontiac is a convertible. Or a sport coupe. A four-door sedan, maybe. Or a station wagon. But whichever model . ... Well, the picture gets even brighter. So if you've been waiting for the right time to buy that new Pontiac, wait no longer. The magic moment is here. Pontiac The new look of Success H. DICK PONTIAC-BUICK LIMITED 266 KING ST. W., OSHAWA, ONT. 103 DUNDAS ST. EAST, WHITBY, ONT. PHONE 723-4364 PHONE 668-5846 Be sure to wetch "Telescope" on CBLT, Fridays at 9:30 and "Rogues" on CBLT, Thursday at 10:00 p.m. Z--Starts Sat., Aug. 21st you choose, be assured that it's all Pontiac. With all Pontiac's desirability, quality and value. And it has never been easier to buy that new Pontiac than it is right now. Because of unusually high used car sales, LEAVE EXHIBITION Z6:30 P.M. 7:30 P.M. 8:30 P.M. r > +0 pe lea our Pontiac dealer needs all the good; 24:30 P.M. Z5:30 P.M. 9:30 P.M. 10:30 P.M, Y11:00 P.M, lean late-models he can get. That means that your present car just has to be worth more when you trade on a Pontiac, And Only Y--Atter Grandstand Aug. 21st -- Daylight Time bor Day | Z ' rts Sat Reason? For one thing, the 1965 Pontiac is Canada's Success Car, And where you |Exhibition . passengers travelling on regular busses will transfer at Toronto Bus Terminal to busses running into the grounds, when you consider Pontiac's modest price Tickets and Information at | Oshawe Bus Terminal, 18 Prince St. 723-2241 | } THE CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LIMITED

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