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Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Mar 1966, p. 2

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2 HS OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, March 14, 1966 Centre ae writen; " WELCOME Charity tour. (See story on Page 3.) PHILIP ACCORDED WESTERN Prince Philip of England anthropic group, as he is welcomed to California arrived at Palm Springs, by a group of Desert Cir- Calif., airport Sunday night cus Deputies, women's phil- on another leg of his U.S. Crisis Centre IS MUSHROOM A VEGETABLE? OTTAWA (CP)--Is a mush- Move Is From AP-Reuters jaccept PARIS (CP) -- President de | their forces in France. Canada) ty Seen | | command over French room a fruit or vegetable--or | is it neither? That's the earthy problem be settled by judicial hear- Gaulle believes the world crisis |has approximately 2,120 men at} ings before the tariff board. centre has moved from Europe| to Asia, and he no longer sees any need for an Atlantic alli- Marville and Metz under its NATO commitment, WANTS SHUTDOWN The board said in a notice | made public today that "some doubt exists" as to whether a LEAKS FOUND IN ROCKET By JIM STROTHMAN | CAPE KENNEDY, Fila. (AP) | The rendezvous and space-walk flight of the Gemini 8 astro-} nauts. was postponed today for| 24 hours -- uniil Wednesday-- when leaks were discovered in an Atlas rocket and in aspace-| suit circuit of the spacecraft. | The Nationa! Aeronautics and | Space Administration reported | the trouble was discovered dur- | ing checks that were to precede) the final countdown, strong and David R. Scott, will use the extra time to further review their flight plan, the) space agency reported. The Atlas, is to launch an Agena satellite into space as a target for the astronauts to chase and hitch on to. The Atlas leak was discovered when liquid oxygen was found in a helium sphere used to pres- North The blizzard which raked | the U.S. northern plains | March 2-5 may go down as the worst on record, in terms of its intensity and duration. Vast areas were paralysed. Many persons in peril lived through it. Some didn't. This is the story. Gemini 8 Flight Delayed 24 Hours surize the fuel tanks. Somehow, the oxygen had seeped into the sphere. : The spacecraft leak was in a space-suit circuit which is to separate moisture from recircu- lated cabin air during the three- day flight. The launch times for the tricky space doubleheader will remain the same Wednesday. The Atlas-Agena is to blast off at 10 a.m, EST to propel the 26- a |foot-long Agena into a planned! The astronauts, Neil A. Arm-/|185.mile-high orbit around the! earth. WILL MEET AGENA Armstrong and Scott are blast off at 11:41 a.m., catch up with the Agena on Gemini 8's fourth orbit 544 hours later and link up with it an hour later. Early Wednesday morning, Scott will work outside the to, spacecraft for 24% hours at the end of a 100-foot lifeline. | The extent of life at high alti- 'tudes and the effect of outer space on living things from earth will be the basis of an im- jportant experiment initiated 'during Scott's space walk. , The astronaut plans to take # |package of tive organisms--in- |cluding three ty) of viruses, imold spores and other mocro- | scopic specimens--and attach it \to the Agena space target. In addition, a sterile patch will be attached te the Agena which is designed to collect specimens of life present in space. The same Agena may be used jas a second target for a later 'Gemini mission -- Gemini 10, The astronauts on board that spaceship hope to recover the packages left by Scott so scien- tists on earth can study what |happened. sputtered out completely by noon Friday. At 11 a.m. Friday, the Metro transit system pulled its last buses Off the job. Long before that people who had somehow managed to reach work were advised to head Plains Blizzard May Have Made History Saturday morning, they fought | their way free of the car and |walked home across crusted} drifts. The three young coaches from | |Fort Yates were stuck about 30| miles south of Mandan. | home if their job allowed them! They ripped out the back |to, and to stay put if they hadn't | cushion of the car. There, in the By GEORGE MOSES Associated Press Staff Writer Spring is an elusive visitor to) jthe northern great plains of the | United States. It drops in briefly jafter the cold of January and |February to set the snow melt- left. Every town in toba was cut off and that al southern Mni- 1 |hotels and motels in rural areas| Toad. were filled to capacity and be- yond by stranded motorisis. To keep his family from suf- 'back seat, they burned every- thing burnable--including some jwooden fence posts near the The men shared the three sweet rolls, grabbed fistfuls of snow for water. | | i | | Pilot, 32, Lost In North 51 Hours At 45-Below ANCHORAGE (AP). -- A U.S. Air Force pilot lost in the Alaska wilderness for 51 hours says he was confident of rescue while he waged a battle for survival in temperatures ranging down to. AQ Anew. - ow 45 dezrees Delo sero: Capt. Roy Macdonald, who bailed out of his F-106 fighter- interceptor jet after a collision over central Alaska last Thurs- day, said his only concern was to keep calm. "I was concerned about my safety in that weather," Mac- donald said. "But 1 knew if I could last long enough I would be rescued." i The 32-year-old pilot 'of the ist Fighter Wing at Selfridge, Mich., Air Force Base, de- scribed the hours before rescue by an air force helicopter after he arrived at Elmendorf Air Force Base here. "T landed a little off a ridge," he said. 'There were trees about 100 yards down and I went into that area to make a camp." He first spread out his orange and white parachute on the ridge so it could be seen from the air. "I burrowed a place in the snow--to get out of the wind,"'! % he said. "I was comfortable, but AIR FORCE CAPT. ROY MacDONALD appeared fit yesterday as he arrived in Anchorage at Elmendorf Air Force Base following his rescue from a frozen wilder- up. cold," Snow covered the ground and during his waiting period there were continuous snow flurries. Macdonald said he relied on the parachute survival pack for 'food, hedding and his hone far rescue, When his io signal- ling device ceased to function 'a few hours after he was on the ground, he used flares in at- tempts to attract searching air- craft. 7 Saturday afternoon, one of Macdonald's flare signals and his parachute were spotted by a crewman aboard a C-123. | The aircraft radioed a heli- copter which reached him five minutes later. He was flown to Galena, an air force station, where a flight surgeon pro- nounced him in "beautiful shape." Macdonald had been the sub- ject of an intensive search over a 4,900-square-mile area by 22 military and civilian aircraft after his plane collided with a T-33 jet trainer. The pilot of the trainer, Maj. Vincent Hooper of Tyrone, Pas., landed his plane | safely at Galena -- approxim- j ately 100 miles northwest of where Macdonald was picked HERE and THERE Congratulations are extend- ed today to Mark Shackelton, of 89 High st., Bowmanville, who celebrates his fourth birthday. The annual car show of the Motor City Car Club will be held at the Oshawa Children's Arena, .May 13, 14 and 15, it was decided at a meeting of the club's executive. Some GEORGE GATHERCOLE, first vice-chairman of the On- tario Hydro - Electric Power Commission, will be the guest speaker Tuesday at the an- nual civic night sponsored by the Oshawa and Distric Build- ers' Association, to be held at the Hotel. Genosha. ness. He parachuted from his F106 jet fighter after a mid-air collision in Central Alaska last Thursday and spent 51 hours fighting for survival in minus 45 de- gree preather before his res- cue. --AP Wirephoto 50 cars from Canada and the United States are expect- ed to_ participate for troph- jes and cash awards. | FALSE TEETH Chewing Efficiency Increased up to 35% Clinical testa @ you can now chew better--make dentures average % more effective if you Robert Batty, Brooklin, re- cently purchased nine head of registered Guernsey cat- ance military organization. The note to the U.S. contained faire ; He told the 14 other alliance |# clear invitation for the U.S.| piece ron gegen aa * members this in diplomatic|to close down most, if not all, it seams. & mushroom may notes handed to ambassadors |its 40 supply bases and head-) ». comething entirely differ- fn Paris Wednesday and Thurs-|quarters on French soil. Specif-| ,,; eaither. fruit ioe veget- day. The text of the notes was/ically mentioned was the big| released Saturday. headquarters of U.S. forces in The messages, which had the Europe at Saint Germain. might be clear imprint of de Gaulle's; Almost everything included in The board is studying cus- prose style, said France was/the note had been said, oT] toms duties on niathinery ini withdrawing the remain-|hinted at, in French statements| ported for 'weighing and pack- ing forces it has assigned to|within the last month. But the aging fresh fruits and veget- NATO commands, and that two|text of the note made it cleat) shies The problem now Ut principal NATO military head-|this is an irreversible decision,| gecige whether miushrooms quarters should leave French |and there is practically nothing! 45 pe regarded as included tice doesn't indicate what it able, although the board's no- | ling and to remind the hardy /|focating as the drifts closed over| At 2:30 a.m. Saturday a res- 'plainsmen winter won't last for-/them, Mettler would roll down|cue party from Mandan found ever. a back window and shovel until|them. All three were taken to Then it usually gives way to\he could crawl through enough | hospital for treatment of smoke- another blast or two of icy air|to widen the hole to the top of irritated eyes from the fire that before: it returns to stay. the drift. kept them alive. March of 1966 opened with) -------- reer wcttgumes 8 Netestt:| WEATHER FORECAST Milder Again Tuesday, the U.S. weather bureau pre- dicted snow ending by Thurs-| day, with possibly heavy snow) lin western South Dakota. } One who héard that snow jwarning was a hardy rancher territory. The decision was ir-/left to negotiate. reversible, the messages indi- cated. that must At the same time as they | Supreme The two allied headquarters! leave France are| Headquarters Allied| were released, American offi-| Powers in Europe, located out- clals were saying the U.S. considering whether to is|side Paris, take} Central and Allied Powers Europe at Fontaine- back nuclear warheads now in|bleau. The S.H.A.P.E. is com- French hands if France with-}manded by U.S, Gen, Lyman draws its forces from NATO|Lemnitzer and the Fontaine-| command. | bleau headquarters by French A US. official here said Sat-!Gen. Jean Crespin. urday that no decision had been Among the reasons France| among fresh fruits and veget- ables, or whether the tariff item should make specific | mention of mushrooms. Interested parties have been asked by the board to submit | written briefs on the subject, | sending 70 copies to the board by April 4. The board will | then have a public hearing | on the subject April 18. The 70. copies will be used by the board's staff and cir- made in Washington as to what|gave for withdrawal was the/ culated among all other inter- | would be done about the war- fact armament, "the very nature of which excludes her being inte- to the French | grated." heads. ADVISES CANADA An. addition note, handed to Canadian Am-| bassador Jules Leger Thurs-} day, said France could accept on its territory only foreign) forces, installations and bases} that come under French com- mand. The note recalled that Canada and France have agreements for the construction and use of French airfields by the RCAF. it has its own atomic ested parties who want to participate in the case. Other factors listed were: --The threats to Europe) which produced NATO no} longer have an immediate and menacing character. --The nuclear equilibrium be- tween Russia and the. U.S. has replaced the American monopoly. And this has trans- formed the general conditions for the defence of the West. "The French government TALKS USELESS considers these agreements no France would have been longer respond to present condi-|happy to propose negotiation on} { the ready note. "to tions," sagl France was change in French policy. Pulp, Pape Probe Urged TORONTO (CP)--John Bas- sett, publisher of The Telegram, | says it is time for the govern-| ment to undertake an inquiry| into the pulp and paper industry | because of rising newsprint But {all the changes, the notes said, | prices. study but any such talks would have) and, if need be, to settle with| been doomed to failure by the | The the Canadian government the attitudes of the other govern-| increase of $10 a ton in the price/|tiny practical consequences" of this ments, which favor integration | of newsprint. "will place a heavy|The. Diedes'. daughter, 13-vea of forces. Since this is unac-|huyrden on Canadian daily news-|old Betty, was a seventh-grader He said in a signed article in Telegram Saturday that the France also is ready, it said, ceptable to France, the French|papers, and based on the pub- to discuss what military facili-| government saw no hope of get-|jished profits of the main news-| rose. ties could be put at Canada's|ting what it wanted from nego-| print companies, cannot be jus-/more than a few feet. disposal in the case of a con- tiation and decided to act by tified." flict in which both countries itself. participate because of their At- lantic alliance. The notes said France is re- nesses since the Second World/northwestern North Dakota an Mr. Bassett said few busi- inamed Otto Mettler, who lives 16 miles northeast of McLaugh-| lin, S.D., near the North Dakota border. Mettler, his wife and their son, Lyle, 7, had been visiting a daughter in nearby Lemmon, | on her birthday. As a light snow began, the Mettlers started home by car. In Mea ughlin, Mettler bought 50 cents worth of candy bars. Across the North Dakota line, in Mandan, three basketball | coaches from the Indian reser- vation town of Fort Yates, Har- lan Wash, Allen Mitzenberger and James Barret, decided to drive the 69 miles home to Fort Yates anyway. In their car were three sweet rolls. Z | Southeast of Mandan, across} the Missouri River, lies the little town of Strasburg, N.D. Fading road signs label it the home town of bandleader Lawrence Welk. A cousin, Eugene Welk, | farms east of town. His _six-| year - old daughter, Carleen, | splashed. around the muddy farmyard in her new overshoes. The storm also hit the Ray-| mon Diede farm near another town called Woodworth. | r-| The snow thickened. The wind Quickly it was hard to see} Drifts | highways and) all but | d formed on stopped travel dead over maining faithful to the Atlantic) war have been able to load southeastern South Dakota. Canada, and the U.S., which alliance and withdrawing only|their customers with a corre- was handed a separate note from the military organizations| sponding installations, set up after the NA both have said they will not was signed. dealing with U.S Principals Rap "Cattle Auction" | }companies never been investi-| TORONTO (CP) --. Several, school principals complained of the "cattle auction'" atmosphere that prevailed when about 100 Ontario school boards began) their teacher hiring campaigns) here Saturday. The school boards set up of- fices in a midtown hotel to fill an estimated 4,000 vacancies in the provinces secondary schools. | Some 3,000 teachers and pros- pective teachers lined up to await interviews. The crush will resume at com- ing weekends with most boards signing up new teachers. for this fall by May 1. W. H. Stuart, principal of Lit- tle Current high school on Mani-} toulin Island, said in an inter-! view: "We deplore how this is turn- {ng into a cattle auction. While! I'm supposed to be teaching! school J'm down here in an un- dignified academic race with other principals caught in the|with trade commissioners, im- game race." | made adequate this mad mar- ket will cease." A principal who would not give his name said the provin; cial government should take re-| sponsibility for dignifying the| annual hiring procedures. Most teachers seek positions) in Toronto or other southern On-! tario centres, Trade Committee To Visit Canada | CANBERRA Australian overseas trade pub- licity committee will leave Syd- ney néxt week on a_ six-week visit to Canada, Japan, Europe and Britain to study food ex- port marketing methods, it was announced today. Trade Minister John McEwen said the committee would confer | | wholesale distributors | porters, Mr, Stuart said the blame 2d retailers rests with the public for refus-| McEwen said Japan and Can-| 7 ing to pay adequate salaries tojada were included in the tour teachers. "They are coming. up but are still at Jeast $1,500 be- low those for comparable pro-/they fessiong. When salaries are'greater promotion activity, because their intports of Aus- tralian food were increasing and offered opportunities for (Reuters) -- An! increase that rates $60 a ton since 1945 The Telegram ing successive increases from 1945 to 1958, and then a period of stable prices until this year POSES QUESTIONS "Why have the newsprint gated under the Combines Act?" he asked. 'Why have succes- sive governments never ques- tioned if Canadian newspapers are being treated equitably." Mr. Bassett said other divi- sions of the paper industry have come under government scru- tiny, including the paper box in- dustry and fine paper opera- tions. Mr. Bassett said this doesn't mean there has been anything illegal in their policies, 'but it is legitimate to ask why there hasn't at least been some in- quiry if for no other reason than to get answers before the pub- ic He said. the government has adopted a policy that it is nec- essary for Canadian publica-| tions to have an opportunity to flourish and to-be owned and) controlled only by Canadians. | 4 if you think there is not « good plece te ect in Osh- awe... then you haven't tried the dining reom et the HOTEL LANCASTER, 27 KING ST. WEST, OSHAWA | cea taal ae | The storm that swept over the Dakotas from the southwest TO treaty with the newsprint companies'|that day packed winds clocked| periods today and Tuesday. series of increases to $144 from|unofficially in some placed at) Cooler. Winds light. more than 100 miles an hour, 69 accompanied! miles officially. It laid down a and Tuesday. Mild today. Colder the article with a graph show-|blanket of snow ranging up tO Tyesd: three feet. The northern arm of the storm Friday hammered a 100,- 000-square-mile chunk of Can- ada from west of Winnipeg to east of the Lakehead into par- alysed chaos, Four deaths were attributed to the blizzard --ihree from heart attacks and one from frost bite. Schools were closed and | | communities turned into ghost |towns by impenetrable snow- drifts. | Metropolitan Winnipeg's half- million population made a game | | Friday morning start toward a |normal day--but all efforts had pa a ty le F. your sprinkle a little on is the alkaline plates. FAS' (non-acid) powder that holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste. Doesn't sour. Checks denture breath. Get FAS der to- day at drug counters everywhere, | ---- | tle in the United States. He | bought eight head from Cur- tis Manor Dairy, Ine., Os- wego, N.Y. and one head from the herd of Rebecca J. Caspe Batavia, N.Y. Viet Consensus 'In U.S. Sought | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sena-|- |tor J. W. Fulbright said today | the Senate foreign relations} committee which he heads is | 'fostering ¢ontroversy" in the} | hope of attaining a true national | consensus on Viet Nam policy. | The Arkansas Democrat, who! has criticized President John- son's Viet Nam policies, said the| | | | | | | | NOW OPEN! ALCAN |Sunny skies and light winds will Spring Spell Continues TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts] Forecast Temperatures issued by the weather office at| Low tonight High Tuesday asses 5 Windsor 30 Synopsis: Another fine spring St. Thomas day is in store for most of On-| London .... tario day as high pressure per:| Kitchener . sists over the Great Lakes ares. = ie Saad caee allow temperatures to reach the| Hamilton ... high 40s and low 50s in southern| St. Catharines .... regions and near the mid-40s in| Toronto central regions. Cooler air| Peterborough . spread southward to northern| Kingston Lake Superior and the Cochrane| Killaloe ... region overnight so. that tem-| Muskoka . peratures will be noticeably| North Bay cooler in the north country to-| Sudbury . day--about 10 to 15 ;Earlton .. dergees lower than Sunday's readings. | Sault Ste. Marie | Kapuskasing ...++ This fair weather will COn-| White River tinue into Tuesday with another) yoosonee ... mild day expected lower Great Lakes, a cooler temperatures in the Al-| goma, Georgian Bay and Haili-| burton regions and a sunny but} cool day in the north. | Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, | Niagara, Lake Huron, Lake On-/} tario, Windsor, London, Hamil-| ton, Toronto: Sunny and a little} milder today and Tuesday. Winds light. ' Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, Haliburton, Killaloe, Georgian Bay, North Bay, Sudbury: Sunny with a few cloudy periods) today and Tuesday. A littl milder today but cooler Tu day. Winds light, "| City-Wide Delivery Timagami, Cochrane, White| MITCHELL'S River: Sunny with a few Sent Simcoe N. Ottawa region: Sunny today| Open Evenings Till 9 P.M 5.30 a.m. seeaeee seeeeeee ay. Light winds. DON'T FORGET Che KRih Room NOW OPEN SUNDAY 4 TO 7:30 P.M. Continental French Buffet Served Daily 11:30 - 2 p.m. -- 5 to 8 p.m. GENOSHA HOTEL MAister DONUT' 438 KING STREET WEST Opposite The Oshawa Shopping Centre 725-9063 WILL YOU HELP THE OSHAWA CRIPPLED CHILDREN SCHOOL BYILDING FUND Everyone Purchasing « Dozen De- nuts on Monday, Tuesday and Wed- nesday at the Regular Price of 79 will Receive Back 10c to be Put in Fund Box on the Counter: i | U.S. is divided about American objectives in Asia and only "the| honest and responsible airing of | differences" can clear the air. | With the committee resuming| hearings on China Wednesday, | | Fulbright spoke out in defence | |of its role in a speech prepared | 'for the National Conference of} | Higher Education in Chicago. | Meet your é you can count to four--walk a ight line--and love making Furniture & Appliances 452 Simcoe St. S, 723-0011 Oshawa's New Furniture and Appliance Store feate uring Admiral T.V., Zenith, Top Service and many top lines of furniture and appliances. THE COMMON COLD CAN BE DANGEROUS A cold may be just @ passing nuisance te young adults, But, it can be a serious threat te infants, elder- ly people or the chronically ill. Heart petients, or those with chronic lung di: whe develop @ fever of even one degree above normal should consult @ physician immediately. For them @ cold can pave the way to infil chronic b hitis or i There is no known cure for the common cold, But, we do heve many safe remedies to relieve the eches and discomforts till the cold goes eway. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need @ medicine. Pick up your prescription if shopping neer- by, or we will deliver promptly without extra cha A great many people entrust us with their prescriptions. May we compound yours? EASTVIEW PHARMACY 573 King Street East Oshawa PHONE 725-3594 Fost -- Free Motorized Delivery P. B. Francis, Phm. B. -- J, R. Steffen, B.Sc., Phm. new friends -- Arthur 's skilled dance instructors will Soeesessooceroeeseereses me lsformetion on eS eethonet American Old Time Frog i i i i a td i i Oo o oO onoo eo Pe : z @. vAr Tew KAurray NOTICE TO ALL EX-SERVICE MEN WOMEN and DEPENDENTS All ex-service personnel and their dependents are invited to take advantage of a FREE LEGION SERVICE --W. R. BUCK Assistant Secretary, Service Bureau, Toronto LEGION HALL, BRANCH NO. 43 Thursday, March 17th From 2 p.m. to Completion of Business To give skilled advice on Veteran's Benefits. Any- one with questions on War Disability Pension, War Veteran's Allowance (Burnt Out Pension) FRANCHISED pTUDIO £1% Simcoe St. 5S. Open 1 te 10 P.M. Daily CALL 728-1681 Treatment or Hospital Care is urged to call or write to MR. C. A. BRISEBOIS, Business Manager of Royal Canadian Legion, Branch 43, 90 Centre Street, Oshawa, who will arrange an appointment.

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