a Ba ME iene ones es Pweg ate oast * VANCOUVER (CP) -- Rec-| Washington | state, not British Sord snowfalls paralyzed] Columbia. | the Fraser Valley, briefly iso-) Coming on top of the season's "Jated Vancouver, and created) first snowfalls Thursday and havoc on Vancouver Island) friday, the storm created high- Monday. |way conditions blamed for Some people who may not! many of B.C.'s 14 weekend traf- "normally see a flake all year| fic fatalities. "looked out on a foot of snow. "The cumulative total since * Thursday for places such as Na-; naimo on' the island was more 'than 25 inches. « Power losses were so frequent in and around Victoria they . could not be counted and many »families went to bed without "heat, water or lights } Monday's snow came from a storm that swept north up the U.S. coast. Victoria's 8.9 inches marked the heaviest one- day fall since 1923 and the 9.8 inches dropped on Vancouver eclipsed all records. Residents of both cities stayed home in droves because it was a holiday anyway. Another storm brewing off California promised more snow today, but a late forecast promised it would move inland across 2,000 DELAYED About 2,000 passengers were delayed most of the day in Van- couver with the cancellation or postponement of flights by United Airlines, Air Canada and Canadian Pacific Airlines. The | airport was reopened at 5 p.m. Rail passengers were sub- jected to only slight delays on the mainland, but a CPR day- liner heading out of Victoria had to turn around just north of Na naimo, The temperature played tag with the freezing mark and epee of the precipitation late Monday came as rain. In the Victoria area, the sud- den snowfall thing front weddings to the an- |nual bird count. | While B.C. Suffers Gales Ontario Cold, East Better By THE CANADIAN PRESS Winter storms battered the east and west coasts of Canada Monday, bringing with. them winds up to 75 miles an hour and leaving deep snow, ice, power failures and snarled traf- fic. In British Columbia and the northwestern United States more of the same is the outlook today but in the Atlantic prov- inces more temperate condi- tions are expecled. with only light snow. Most of the weethar action Monday was in Brit)sh Colum- bia as a storm tied up nighway traffic, grounded aircraft pulled down power and tele- phone lines and knocked out at least two radio stations. About a foot of snow dropped on the south coast of British Co- lumbia and Highways Minister « Philip Gaglardi issued a plea to * motorists to stay off the roads « He said traffic conditions were poor throughout the prov- ince and plows were busy with « clearing operations RAIN FOLLOWS The day ended with rain and fast - melting snow in many . areas. Another fall would begin again sometime today, the * weather office said. In Prince Edward Island, high winds and blowing. snow blocked many roads, while Nova) Scotia reported icy driving con-| : re ditions. Sydney airport recorded | wind gusts up to 75 miles an| hour that forced cancellation of all flights during the day Gale warnings were ccntinued for Newfoundland coastal areas Inland, a cold air mass is ex- pected to cover all of Ontario,| giving a mixture of cloud and! sunshine. Temperatures wil! range from about 20 in the south to below zero in the north. GETS COLDER The outlook for Quebec is much the same, with snowflur- ries and light snow overnight changing to clearing and colder conditions during the day. Strengthening winds and fresh snow threatened near-blizzard conditions in southwestern Sas- katchewan, while temperatures were expected to stay weil be- low zero everywhere but in southern Alberta. Light snow, which started in Alberta Monday, was to. con- tinue with up to three inches forecasts in the south and an inch in the north. Temperatures in Alberta, Sas- katchewan and Manitoba were In the Maritimes, parts of|expected to range from a high * Cape Breton received six to 10/of zero to a low of, 20 below. inches of snow and winds of up|More snow was forecast for to 50 miles an hour. Manitoba. disrupted every-| a DELIVERED FROM THE VALLEY OF DEATH than an hour while the 5,600 gallons of gas his truck car- ried trickled around him. He said he hit a soft shoulder and pulled away too fast Savage suffered a little cut near his right ear. (AP) James Savage of Ft. Lau- derdale, Fla., is trapped in the cab of his gasoline truck near Miami, today as un- identified rescuer attempts Yale Professor To Hanoi, To 'Clear Up V-C's Image' NEW YORK (AP)--Staughton| $5,000 fine, five years in prison,|seeks to organize the poor on Lynd, a Yale professor and a/jor both for visiting North Viet issues such as housing, unem- spokesman for the "new left,"|Nam without permission from ployment and welfare. is reported in Hanoi to talk with|the U.S. state department Aptheker, director. of the leaders of Communist North) wayden, 26, is an organizer|American Institute of Marxist Viet Nam and the Viet Cong. |for the new community union| Studies in New York, is a his Lynd, accompanied. by tw0! project in Newark, N.J., which|torian and author of two books Sctectod isin" to" coe WORST UK SOCCER TEAM KEEPS UP THE BAD WORK result in stiff federal penalties The trip is sponsored by the} BOURNEMOUTH (AP) -- magazine Viet Report "in an ef- fort to clarify the position of} the National Liberation Front (Viet Cong) and the Democra-| tic Republic of Nam," said John McDermott, associate editor of the maga- zine. At the end of the season Hillingdon met Wimborne St. Giles~another team pith no victories, Wimborne St, Giles North) Viet COres? | "We'll never live this down,' | moaned the captain of Brit- | ain's worst soccer team, Memory, BERKELEY, Calif. ing a promising new memory| pill to see whether it aids fal-| tering memories. | | Others are, or soon will be, (AP) --|come along. It Some persons now are swallow- painful or crippling memories. May Soon Become Reality might erase The prospects result from re- search into the brain and its mysterious mechanism of memory. Some scientists think THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, December 28, 1965 | The new pill and other re- |search into the chemistry and | behavior of the brain ere a |prime topic Monday at sessions lof the American Association for the Advancement of Science at the University of California 'BUT GAN THEY taking the same pill to see) memory involves a special kind whether it helps them learn! or chemical. Others deny there faster. is any "magic memory mol-/SEE ACID ROLE If this drug -- or something ecule" involved. They don't) One current theory holds that campus. FIND A HOUSE? SASKATOON (CP)* RCMP Monday were seek-.» ing a missing house. * The house, which John» Polovick of Clavet, Sask., > said hé bought recently, from the CNR, had dis-« appeared from its original; site just south of here. 4 RCMP said Mr. Polovick; went to the site Christmas * Eve and was astonished to' discover the house was- missing. : seereck | we like it -- really works, then a{think the brain mechanism is) memory of any new knowledge "forgettery"' pill might also|that simple. | or experience is stored in brain} ------ | cells--some of the 10,000,000,000 of them--through a nucleic acid Early Viet Peace Unlikely: "2.2% ssn . 5 | something that increased the . ; | manufacture of RNA might im-| --RAussie Foreign Minister jist stor," sits | learn. "We don't want to defeat the) And they turned up a good no hope for an early end to the| enemy in the sense of bringing) bet, judging from tests on rats, war in Viet Nam, External Af-|him to the point of uncondi-|Said Dr. N. P. Plotnikoff and fairs Minister Paul Hasluck oftional surrender. We don't| Dr. Alvin J. Glasky of Abbott Australia said today. | want to destroy anything or| Laboratories, Chicago, and Dr. He told a press conference: | gain any territory or power. All/lonel N. Simon, biochemist of "My is that| we want to do is stop him from the Illinois State Pediatric In- Hanoi would prefer a long-joverthrowing an independent) stitute. drawn war of attrition. There| South Viet Nam. | Rats, given the chemical, are better prospects for them in| "Winning the war, for us,/ magnesium pemoline, learned! this and they have no particu-| would be if we did just that. In| a useful kind of behavior -- to lar interest in talking about)that restricted meaning of wn-| avoid an electric shock--four to |peace at this stage." ning, I believe we can win. five times faster than untreated | Asked if the anti-Communist) "We are in a difficult posi-|rats, Dr. Plotnikoff said. And lforces could win the war, he/tion of fighting a war in a de-|they remembered the lessons for | said: 'fensive attitude." ferporgd rather than 'days, he pera ---- | added. 12 000 A Y S d 'Humans now are starting to | | take the experimental drug to $ ' "i.™ @ar uggeste learn whether it may benefit PERTH (Reuters)--There is| 4 ' Remember this number... Lyi remember this wine! | As Maximum To Teachers TORONTO (CP)--Secondary! The assembly, which repre- school teachers in Ontario|sents 22,600 secondary school yshould be paid. a maximum |teachers, rejected the recom- $12,000 a year in order to at-|mendations for education made tract top quality. persons into|by the one - man Goldenberg the profession, a H amilton/royal commission on Metropol |school teacher says itan Toronto's future. Instead, J. H. Russell, chairman of|it passed a resolution *support- |the salary committee of thejing a proposal for a four-city |Ontario Secondary School|plan for Metro students. |Teachers' Federation, said in| The federation also passed a lan interview Monday" that the| resolution opposing H. Carl Gol-| lfigure was strictly a personal|denberg's recommendation for) one. It was not suggested by|a strong Metropolitan school | the federation's annual assem-|board working with 11 district | bly which opened a four-day jeducation councils. | meeting here Monday. | i MEN'S: WEAR The resolution said the rec- The assembly barred the ommendations would lead "'to \press when discussion of teach-|rigidity, standardization and bu- ers' salaries started reaucratic control." Mr. Russell said his sug- gested maximum salary would} be between $1,000 and $1,500 a :a| Ink-Firm Owner, jyear more than top salaries a bg ae in closed ses. President Dead | The assembly |sion passed a resolution warn- ing local bargainung units not to accept voluntary conciliation | or arbitration of salary disputes 'Jest this give rise to a move- |ment to have conciliation and} arbitration procedures made a LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Fred- erick Parkinson, 45, owner and) president of Parkinson Inks Ltd. | of London, here Sunday. died at his home Born in Toronto, he came to | "never, never." the \London in 1950. ce ea anes defeated Hillingdon and since | ialntian ** ed | part of legislation that date Hillingdon has been ia sie . iiiclocweealeenie calling its club the worst team in Britain. So far this season, Hilling- | don has lost all 16 games and |f a, ciitied to essume ility for has given up more than 100 |§ Labour Reletions fob goals i solary i pensi policy, et_negotictions, Victory seemed almost cer: | grievances ond other benefit programs. Department established. tai M d + wh ih The successful applicant to have sound academic background end must ain Monday when the hove fairly broed experience In above ereas. No others need apply. Shaftesbury ladies showed up |[ Municipal experience an asset. with one lady missing. Initial salary will be in @ range from $0,183.00 te $10,017.00 end wilt "But we're gallant, if noth- depend upon q' and ing else." sa . Watkins as he Replies will be treated in strictest confidence. Stete age, th d th : ; 1 . bstitute present sclory, experience and other pertinent date. offere e girls a su ute i Applications close 5:90 p.m., Jonuery Tth, 1966. named Brian Blake. | PERSONNEL OFFICER, Pg Feovhag = a ee | City Hall, Oshewa, Onterle. | The other two men an In a desperate bid to win a iteip are Thomas Hayden, 4l game, the Hillingdon team |founder of the Students for ®) Monday played the Shaftes- |Democratic Society, and Her-| bury Ladies Soccer Club. bert Aptheker, a reputed Com-| "The Hillingdonians found- 20 Seep Through Curtain 7 In New Defections Wave <Qrestvarenive | iether gu 'cinoered 73 o The three left New York Dec.| the girls. ; app ' . " . VIENNA, Austria (AP) --,garian cruise liner Nessebar PE Fate i Pegg be gstd a ; aloe Bapelevable; a ; : Mos A g and then to| said Brian Watkins, captain of Twenty Iron Curtain travellers|arrival in Piraeus port last! North Viet Nam by way of Cam-| the Hillingdonians. "I mean have slipped out of Communist} week and have sought asylum \bodia said MoDarmétt ' you. would have thought wed hands in an apparent wave of| Police in the Swedish port of| wepermott said the maga-| win this one." Gerpcone tom ihe banks of Kariskrons reported "that two zine is sponsoring the mission} In 30 games last year, Hil- - ginpreni id gh toe Kaa [Pater had asked for asylum|pecause "reports that appear in| lingdon scored no_ victory. +8 vena, te \rechosiova - | following & Christ mas Evel the American press purportedly| Their opponents netted 283 ian tourists failed to turn up at| mutiny aboard a trawler in. the describing .or attributing posi-| goals against them the~-assigned--collection--- point stormy Baltic:-A--Swedish-eoast tions to the National eteeatinn ' ; * when their party took off by bus|guard cutter which spotted the| F ont d the DRV co flict with for the homeward journey tojtrawler found the Frlbeabiucy me : Czechoslovakia, Austrian travel|locked in a Skipper their reports of their position 2 cabin. The two : ia ta agency officials said. The rest | crew members had taken com- oe of ane feipit to of the group left after a pro-|mand of the ship, police said.|~ ,und 36. an assistant profes- longed wait. ae ith Despite the recent increase in|sor of history at Yale Univer-| Austrian authorities ft it defections, eastern Communist| sity, has a long identification ie tee ask for polil- regimes have shown no sign of with pacifist activities a) . at b: t 7 t Tes a wi ' Ripe .. Gy aad tie Greek: thinis- ad Ing ravel to the We ee The three men could face a that two Bulgarians and 4 Hun- Central Ontario Trust OD MA R 4 J : Declares Dividend rae HLLED CHICKENS": > J IT'S HOT BATH On Savings Accounts COMPLETE SELECTION OF ALL SIZES FRESH KILLED TURKEYS FOR A 'DOCTOR' 5% io he paid in 1966 on 1965 balances GEESE -- CAPONS -- ROASTING CHICKENS -- ALSO STUFFING and TRIMMINGS VICTORIA (CP) -- While others shivered during LEAN MEATY BEEF © C * d Blade Roast 59: 2 ggg C | NUTS 49 BROOKSIDE 24 OZ. BREAD = tor Yc Monday's snow storm and BONELESS BRISKET 59 HOSTESS 13 OZ. REG. 69%e PERSONNEL OFFICER -- CITY OF OSHAWA of P 1 and prog exp educction, 04 HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS OSHAWA'S FINEST SELECTION ie 7 Here you will find the finest, the entirely correct in formal wear for the New Year man's wildlife gardens, and his system is not attuned to freezing weather _ Mrs Hyndman spent the 5 m in 1966 if the account remains at or above the blackout hours warming 4 during the yeor 1966. If the baloace drops below pans of water atop an oil ear end level during 1966. the depositor receive heater and pouring the interest ot the usual 414% per annum rate paid ond com- water over the chilly alliga- pounded quarterly : tor Central Ontario Trust Savings Account Depos extra Christmas present this year. The Company has announced thot Savings Account balances at December 31st, 1945, will eam festivities , » . and for future occasions, will still "Now is the time to transfer dormant balances earning less then 5% per annum or to start Saving with. that Christmas bonus!" spokesman said, December is Central Ontario Trust's Anniversary Month and the Company has gone on record of stoting that becouse interest rates of al! levels ore ly higher, it is adding the 5% interest "fringe benefit' to Sovings Accounts: that qualify as a gesture of oppreciation to its thousands of loyal depositors Ujput, (eenoey PHILOSOPHER sac RENTALS and Progress Tailored FORMAL WEAR Deposits mode to existing Savings' Accounts before December 31st, 1965, will qualify for the 5% interest rate as well as new sovings accounts opened before December 31st, 1965, ot either of the Cornpany's offices in Oshawa and Bowmonville, Central Ontario Trust recently roised its Guaranteed investment Certifi- cate rates to 6% for 3 to 5 year terms and 534% for | and yeor terms. mpony is presently a showmg of pamtings---by I known Kendall ortist, Mr. Richard Morton, in the lobby Oshowa requior The C having the w of head office building at 19 Simcoe Street North in vites depositors ond. friends to.drop in during business hours, 9 to 6 Mondays to Thursdays, 9 to 9 on Fridays and.9 to 5 on Saturdays. Passengers waiting for buses on Sim- coe Street North are invited inside in wet or cold weather CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION / PRIME RIB 19 Simece St. N. 723-5221 23 King St. W. 623-2527 | & ROAST eee MEN'S WEAR LTD. ESTABLISHED 1924 OPEN---WEDNESDAY TILL 6. THURSDAY TILL 9 FRIDAY TILL 6 LOVER 30 YRS. IN BUSINESS | STEPHENSON'S GARAGE subsequent' power failures, It was the only way to foot alligator at Cecil Hynd- 'POT ROAST "LEAN MEATY BEEF ROAST 69 POTATG CHIPS 10 55. SHOR T First 4 Rib STROUD'S Dr. Archibald took warm baths. keep him alive. Dr. Archibald is a three- BONELESS BEEF SHOULDER ROAST j SHORT RIB DEVON RINDLESS | "KING OF ROASTS" BACON 89: tb STORE. HOURS OPEN WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY NIGHTS 'TIL 9 FOUNTAINHEAD 'OF SERVICE Oshawa 74 SIMCOE WN. Bewmanville 725-0522 725-0560 15 CHURCH STREET