FQ THE CSHAWA TIMES, Monday, Jenuery 24, 1966 Copper Suppiy Causes Concern By KEN SMITH Canadian Press Business Editor A further indication of inter- national concern about the cop- per supply situation came last week as Canada, Britain and the United States tightened ex- port controls on the red metal. Canada imposed quotas on, the overseas export of copper scrap, limiting exports during the current quarter year to the level which existed between January, 1964, and July, 1965. The government said this will represent a substantial reduc- 4ion from recent off-shore ship- ping levels and added that quotas for the remaining quar- ters of this year will be deter- mined. by supply conditions. . In the first nine months of 1965, copper scrap shipments were estimated at 20,900 tons, 'compared with about 21,000 tons in all of 1964. The quota, which had been ex- pected by both producers and users, Won general approval al- though some concern was ex- pressed about the possible ef- fect on domestic prices. Typical reaction, how- ever, was expressed by one large user who said anything that might help assure a stable domestic market is bounl to be welcomed. The British action involved the withdrawing of a clause in tts export regulations that per- mitted shipping out copper scrap if the refined metal was returned to Britain for use there. The government gras re- ported- concerned about some of the shipments not finding their way back again. The toughest action came from the U.S., which imposed a virtual rgo on export of do-| mestic ores' and set tight quotas; for shipment abroad of other) categories of the metal. | Business reaction to another Ottawa development -- The) After some delay, a few of the exhibits relating to Atlantic's fi- nancial statement prior to its failure to meet some short-term debt and to official lists of the company's creditors were opened to reporters. : Documents shed little new light on the company's tangled affairs, since most of the infor- mation had been available from Atlantic's receiver and other sources, but they did show it was using $7,500,000 of its $7,750,000 worth of bank credit at Dec. 31, 1964. That meant Atlantic had only $250,000 unused bank credit to meet short-term debts of more than $41,000,000, although in the U.S.--where Atlantic was con- sidered a good investment by many first-class organizations-- such bank credits normally are expected to equal outstanding short-term obligations. ' The documents also showed that most major shareholders did not sell shares as the col- many actually increased their holdings. Atlantic shares were selling as high as $22.25 before the col- lapse; now there is no market for them. The commission is expected to sit for more than a year be- fore all the evidence it wants is heard, A Conviction In Rape Of LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Melvin| LeRoy Hackett, 41, of London| was found guilty Friday of rap- ing a 63-year-old London widow at her home Christmas Day. lapse approached. Rathe Tr, throne speech--was subdued. Mr. Justice J. M. King re- ie : * | The favorite fireplug for | this Wichita Falls Bassett } By SID MOODY I am the third best amateur Dixieland trombonist in New Jersey. g I know because I've heard the other two. W980 8: T'S JUST TOO Hound was covered. in nearly five inches of snow Friday so the sad-faced ja destroyer was bearihg down jon him and he feverishly play® \the prelude to Ain't Gonna Giy |Nobody None of My Jelly Roll which he knew. cold. times ponder what the jthought out there in the murk.| wildered by bosses and commu-| COLD hound just gave a shudder and trotted off. (AP) Confessions Of Sid Moody 'Dixieland 63-Year-Old | ata jnot yet ready }march. After all, jtonic in this for the funeral| there's no evéiter|" | world, none, not I some-ieven three quick martinis, than captain|to come home beaten and be-| | MORE TO SAY FOR THE UNHEARD ONES "By STEWART MacLEOD OTTAWA (CP) -- Backbench members of both the Liberal and Conservative parties are likely to have more to say in Humble Man Was Balewa LAGOS (Reuters) -- Sir Abu- bakar Tafawa Balewa, the 53- year-old former prime minister of Nigeria who met a violent death last week, had humble beginnings. Son of a village butcher in Bauchi, northern Nigeria, he hada passion for learning and went from his provincial school to Katsina Training College where he qualified as a teacher in 1928, Slim, serious and modest in manner, he could speak elo- quently when necessary but be- lieved in statesmanship rather this Parliament than the last. This doesn't necessarily mean they will speak more often in the Commons -- although some intend doing that--but there are indications the party caucuses will be far more lively than in the last session. Members of both parties say this trend is already apparent. Meetings held since the Nov. 8 general election are reported to have produced a rash of out- spoken ideas, and arguments that have tended to change the complexion of the party caucus. The biggest change is said to be in the Conservative party. Although the caucus is still dominated by the presence of party leader John Diefenbaker, many new articulate voices have been added since the last session. Besides former min- isters Davie Fulton, George Hees there are several young rookie and Richard A. Bell,| the views of the caucus are well known to the ministers." As a result, a caucus meeting several weeks ago produced a wide-open debate on the advisa- bility, or otherwise, of increas- ing old age pensions. Prime Minister Pearson and his cabi- net are still considering all the views, In addition, controversial bills on such subjects as divorce and| birth contro] are being proposed by Liberal backbenchers. The problem of hearing all backhench views in the smaller The Session Of The Backbencher soa has 'never been @ prob- jem. Because of their size -- the NDP has 21 members, the Cre- ditistes nine and Social Credit five--every member has an easy opportunity to present views on every subject. Sources say that most do so at every caucus. They also have a greater op- portunity to present individual views in the Commons itself. All 131 Liberals and 97 Conserva- tives could not speak in every debate without the -- mill grinding to a standstill. McLAUGHLIN members who are said to have no hesitation about expressing their views. than oratory. The turning point in his life came at the age of 33, when he went to London University's In- stitute of Education. He said after his return in new eyes because I had seen people who lived without fear, who obeyed the law as part of their nature and who knew in- dividual liberty." That same elected to the Northern region jhouse of assembly and in 1947 to the federal house where he became transport minister in 1954. He attended constitutional talks in London in 1957, the year he became prime minister. STROVE FOR UNITY Balewa was a member of the small Gere tribe and had the task of forging national unity in a land of 250 tribes in Nigeria |which became independent in fi He was a strict Moslem--the title al Haji came from his: hav- ing made the pilgrimage to Mecca in 1957--but he was op-| "Caucus is shaping up as a far more exciting event now," jone member said. "And it's jbound to get better as we go along." He said the discussion on the |1946 that he saw Nigeria "'with!rules to be followed in the new) |Parliament brought out a far more lively discussion than {would have been possible in the last session, 'Every opinion was lgiven full consideration," the year he was)member said. 'It wasn't just a! jcase of the backbenchers being |briefed." |LIBERALS SPEAK OUT In the Liberal caucus, there jwas a relatively outspoken jgroup of backbenchers during jthe last session. Members say jit's even more so this time. | One explained it this way: | "With the cabinet changes, |we're still not sure just how the jgovernment will approach cer- tain fields such as welfare, and until a specific direction is es- |tablished we want to make sure by William | JANUARY | | THE COLLEGIATE DRAMA CLUB presents | "The Merchant of Venice" Shakespeare IN THE SCHOOL AUDITORIUM ON | THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY 27, 28, 29 ALL. SEATS RESERVED -- $1 | FOR RESERVATIONS TELEPHONE 728-9407 | WIN A FREE posed to mixing religion with| politics. | He stood for co - operation: Its call for renewed emphasis|manded him to Jan. 28 for sen-! on education won widespread tencing. approval but at the moment} The Dixie buff will go any-'ters, slam the door to the den, They, and I, are members of : |were, any time to play for amy-/turn on the hi-fi and bray along| a lost tribe of ministrels in a there are two major preoccupa- tions for executives concerning Parliament -- the forthcoming revision of the bank act and Fi- Mance Minister Sharp's first budget. Elsewhere on the business scene, the autopsy into the mes- siest death of 1965 opened quietly as the royal commission on Atlantic Acceptance Corp. began sitting. In a two-day session, before adjourning until Feb. 7, it re- ceived more than 350 exhibits-- enough to fill a 30 - foot - long shelf. Most of the exhibits were the books of companies caught directly or indirectly in the fai- lure of the finance company in June, 1965. | jury deliberated t' fore bringing in its verdict. Hackett was sentenced three years in penitentiary Jan.| |}11 for indecently assaulting a 50 10-year-old London area girl the day before the woman was raped. LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Henry Pool, 20, of London Friday was sentenced to three years in pen- itentiary on a: charge of inde- cently assaulting a 53-year-old woman in Thames Park Sept. 27. Pool is scheduled to appear before Mr. Justice J. M. King next Wednesday to be sentenced on another charge of indecent assault involving a 25-year-old London teacher. Infant Mortality Still High, And No One Cares: Doctor MONTREAL An Ontario Supreme Court|/world of electronic guitars and hree hours be-| to} bearded balladeers. 'Dixie buffs are a mixed bag) j--some rich, some poor, some od, some not so good. About) jall they have in common is. a} jdeep aversion to When the! |Saints go Marchin' In which jthey regard as fondly as Bing! |Crosby must When the Blue of| jthe Night Meets the Gold of the Day. They are scattered all over the United States. The campu town of Ann Arbor, Mich., is home of ~the Boll Weevil Jazz band. In New Orleans, nursery) of it all, surgeon-banjoist Ed-) mond (Doc) Souchon calls the| tunes. | In Hollywood, a group of ar-) tists at Walt Disney's studio jhave organized themselves as) |the Firehouse Five Plus Two) jand made records; a name and) | money. | We amateur dixielandists are ja highly itinerant group, often| |because for some reason jaren't asked back to the same) S| |thing or nothing, "some one or| n e FEEL DESERTED o one. What he needs most is| home. One such is provided} Larry Pratt, a Manhattan) lawyer, pianist, trombonist and| patron of the arts. Once month he rents a hall in the Po- lish national home on a by with a record of Basin St. Blues. |»; ith th That's how to get even w world. And there's nothing th the West, especially Brit- ©lain. Queen Elizabeth knighted him in 1960 and he was ap- 7S more|pointed a Privy Councillor the jcharacter building than to hit 4 following year. | clinker so foul that the rhythm| He visited the U.S. in 1955 to ,|Section loses the beat, yet you|study the Mississippi waterways ork's Lower East Side and in-|™USt swallow pride and press|and was made an honorary citi- vites about 40 or so musicians) and their friends. On a given night you might hear John Bucher, a Wal! St Broker and the fastest coronet) jin the East; Dr. Harold Taylor,| former head of Sarah Lawrence}! College; Jack Wells, a Boston doctor, Hart Levitt, a prep school English master; Arnold Roth, a cartoonist; Burr Wis- hart, a Presbyterian minister, | and a Frenchman generally) known as Jacques who plays an | exquisite soprano sax. | A true Dixielandist-lives for a} playing date, or gig. His job is! purely a necessity which he sometimes dismisses as "my daytime gig." i | (CP) -- Thenual meeting of the Royal Col-|Place twice. When we do organ-' But sometimes Dixielanders death rate among unborn and/lege of Physicians and Surgeons|!2@.@ Combo, word gets around|might feel like two passenger) brand-new infants is still rela-/of Canada had cited traffic acci-|24 people start a tively high and many people don't seem to care, an indig- nant obstetrician from Balti- more said Friday. Dr. A. C. Barnes said the mortality rate for babies dur- ing the period prior to birth and immediately afterward is greater than it is for humans at any other period of life--ex- cept for the over-768. In the United States, it comes to 3.5 per cent and it is much the same in Canada, said Dr. Barnes, director of obstetrics and gynecology at Johns Hop-| |dent injuries as "by far the |most important health problem in Canada." But there was at least one jsource of hope held out amid) the general gloominess of the! doctors statements on the acci-} dent situation. ~~ Dr. Fraser Gurd, professor of surgery at McGill University in |Montreal, said the point now is heing reached where persons suffering internal injuries in lear accidents won't inevitably die from them | sking us to play for benefits, parties and} jsuch, usually for free but with |drinks on the house (Dixieland-! ers feel as fraternally towards a dry host as they do to Ringo} Starr), PLAYED ON BARGE | I, for instance, have played at| a_ church benefit, countny clubs, converted grist mill, at lawn parties, living room. parties,| family reunions and college re-| unions. I have played on a mule- drawn barge along the Dela- pigeons sitting on a limb and saying to each other: 'Where are all the others?"' | 'After a while you get to see the same old faces," said Bu- cher, who plays about two nights week around -New-York-} "You begin to see the same faces in the audience, too. Well, if knickers are coming back and raccoon coats already jyacht clubs, in gin mills, in alhave, and if Eddie Condon's is still open, maybe Dixieland is what does on 'to solo's end. _And there is nothing so splen- } \did as to roar along apres moi,|word of his home policies. In. lzen of New Orleans. National unity was the watch- le de luge slide into the horn|foreign affairs, in spite of his behind you. Nothing. So you might understand the story they tell of a jazz buff I know who played so often his|as a matter of routine with an wife gave him an ultimatum: The horn or her. He's still playing horn. , and feel the whole band pick up /|friendship with the West, he was | quoted in 1960 as saying "We consider it wrong for the federal government to associate itself y of the power blocs." He was married, several children. and had ANNOUNCING THE GRAND OPENING OF A NEW Crescent Finance OFFICE 126 Brock Street South, Whitby where you can rent the money to DO WHAT YOU WANT TO DO -- NOW! i * Open Bo } NIGHT on the TOWN DENNIS ARSENEAU Fuel Oil Seles and Service | Free Burner Service { FOR MEN 3264WILSON RD.S Telephone 728-6007 ir Styling Steff under direction of TERRY. KELLY DISNEY USED CARS LTD, M GUARANTEED USED CARS "We are never setistied until you ere." 1200 DUNDAS ST. SAST 668-5891 WHITBY ONTARIO | Yon "2 wling -- Set, Evening end Sunday DM. & Automatic Lenes & Snack Bor COUNTY BOWL 118 BYRON ST. N 668-2631 SHORTY'S CIGAR STORE * Brigham Bricr Pipes * Guns * Ammunition * 100 Kinds of Pipe Tobacce Hours: 8 e.m. te 10 p.m. daily 121 Brock N. 668-8361 Decorator PAINT NOW A COMPLETE INTERIOR DECORATING SERVICE FOR YOUR HOME 723-9033 ® Crescent Finance comes to your community endorsed by thousands THIS SPACE 1S OPEN FOR YOUR ADVERTISING MESSAGE 723-3474 RSM ANRC ke PES Each week for 26 weeks you cen win "Night on the Town", compliments of the porticipating businesses on this advertisement. All you are required to do is read through each advertisement corefully. There wit! appear in.@ num- ber of the advertisements each week, the letters forming the name of one of the participating businesses, Cor- rectly identify the business each week ond send your answer along with your néme ond address to "Night on the Town". Contest Editor ¢/o The Oshawa Times. The first correct answer drawn MERCURY TAXI «a *& Fast x Friendly & Courteous 725-4771 14 ALBERT OSHAWA kins University. Some such injuries-- including| ware River and at an Elks ball The doctor. made his remarks)\¢@mage to the brain---would|/during which we were asked to after other doctors at the an- doom the patient but others now! play Auld Lang Syne in memory Testa. -----________--_ | are being mastered with new/of departed Elks. | |techniques, said Dr. Gurd, Dixie can be a friend in need, Teen Girl Faces | The conference is -being at-,too. I know.a resourceful fellow, -- tended. by an estimated 1,800| who played trombone in lieu of| Baby-Killing Rap doctors from across Canada.a fog horn while sailing on the} and from foreign countries [Atlantic What turned aut ta he! PETERBOROUGH (CP) : - : Dorothy Quigley, 17, of Peter- borough was charged Saturday riceitpeasscaes| © WE'RE HANDING YOU arccree:) EUROPEONA =| sar SILVER PLATTER |" Year's Day by two young boys. An autopsy showed the infant bled to death and had its throat} and chest slashed. If you've got the time, we've got everything else... A ? BOAC flight at the very time you want eal And wesonigeetises new low, low fares! This summer there's a record number of 29 transatlantic flights a week from Toronto. Jet direct to London by magnificent BOAC Rolls-Royce 707 or Air Canada giant DC-8 jet. From April 1, the new low transatlantic fares come into effect. (Example: a 21-day Economy Excursion Toronto-Paris flight will cost you only $381* return.) Europe's waiting. So why wait any longer? See your Travel Agent. "Bubject to government approval. = BOAC BRITISH OVERSEAS AIRWAYS CORPORATION WITH AIR CANADA BOAC agent . . . 728-6201 AIR CANADA agent 728-6202 Four Seasons Travel _ 728-6203 BOOK NOW FOR SUMMER "66" Genosha Hotel ENJOY OUR CONTINENTAL BUFFET THE RIB ROOM Hrs, 11:30 - 2 P.M. & Bo © PLM. Mon. to Fri, Set. 5 to 8 WALTON'S Supertest AND Snack Bar 728-0231 DAILY SPECIALS nm: ge ee ries anu rastries Fresh Daily special attention te children" a uk eoch week will win « night on the town. Entries must be received no later than Friday noon of each week. YOU RECEIVE > Male Styletor the "lady et the Oshewa Beauty Parlor. 2. Hair Style for the man et Rudy's Hairstyling for Men. fan ©. 18 of satisfied people who are living better. today because they were able to rent money to get things done. Is it time your family had new clothes? Got your eye on some new furniture? Thinking about a new or hatter ear? Like ta nav off some bothersome bills and have only one easy monthly pay- ment to remember? the ROMP ___ offer young men? 4 ane ait suit dry cleaned ot Rinkers Cleaners. ion for the ing by . Ti pi -- Mereury Taxi. . Dinner for two in the Rib Room et the Genosha Hotel. 6. Win two quest tickets to see Tom Adams in "The 2nd Best Secret Agent in the whole wide world." in techni: 7. Entertainment In the Starlite Room et the Genosha Hotel. "MY ANSWER IS" "We pay B. M. Hamre, Manoger You can do--have--buy what you wont now--becouse you can rent the money from Crescent. Open 24 Hrs. 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