TOPLESS, AND BOTTOMLESS, TOO Lack of a bathing suit proves no barrier to Alex- andra Curtis' desire to take a dip in the surf with her daddy, actor Tony Curtis. The two - year - old blonde, whose mother is actress Christine Kaufman, was visiting him at Malibu where he is "making .a Quake | VASHKENT (AP)--Under a moonless sky eerie lights from bulldozers illuminate heaps of rubble, splintered tree stumps and what is left of houses that once stood in earth quake- wrecked Tashkent, On nearby streets, the people who used to live in the houses sit in tents watching the demo- lition crews and talking about last April's powerful tremor that left 300,000 persons home- less in this' largest city in So- yiet Central Asia. Five miles away, other men and equipment work through the night to complete a massive housing project called Chilinzar. Before the winter rains come in November, Chilinzar's apart- ments must house thousands of those now living in tents, Soviet officials say. The earthquake April 26 was a powerful one, reaching a force of 6.25 on the 10-point richter scale, In the four months since the first quake, there have been more than 600 additional trem- ors, including five big jolts, yet Soviet officials say only 15 per- sons have been killed and about 500 injured, Earthquake damage caused jauthorities to condemn more ithan 2,000,000 square yards of downtown housing. MASSES HOMELESS As a result,' says Sofia So- kolova, assistant editor of the newspaper Pravda Vostoka Make | (ruin of the east), '68, 000 fam- ilies became homeless." At an average of more than four persons per family, this imeans that _about 300,000 per- "Don't when she decided the | movie, Waves," she wanted to go in water. (AP Wirephoto) Bigger Defence Bill To Be Hellyers Goal OTTAWA (CP)--Defence Min-, The current 1966-67 defence, ister. Hellyer has indicated he | budget is $1,573,000,000. will seek cabinet approval for a bigger defence budget in 1967-68. FACES FINANCIAL CRISIS . A ,\, Informants said Mr. Hellyer He told the Commons defence ||. facing a financial crisis in committee June 23--a_ trans-|);. department. cript of the evidence was made Th ya P e original plan--and it has Lovenus mig fe rg his de-| not Peirce that savings partment has made savings). we 4 through integration and_ will pies sat Guuune eld oo make ete: for more new weapons, not, as But," he added, 'these sav-|it is sometimes assumed, for a ings can be eaten up in a very | smaller defence budget. short time through increased --Byt in 1965-66, administration, costs unless we can get enough| personnel and operations costs | 000 on personnel, operations and|inally estimated it could buy | maintenance. 125 CF-5 attack planes for This would represent a cut of ay 000,000. Now it estimates it |more than $50,000,000 on the per-'can obtain only 115 for this \sonnel, operations and mainten- amnpant of money. ance side of the ledger. Three Oberon class subma- But this does not take into|rines were to cost some $33,- account a big pay increase| 00,000. Now the estimated cost promised for the armed forces|is nearly $50,000,000. in October. |PRESENTS A PROBLEM Meanwhile, equipment costs} Informants said Mr. Hellyer are going up. For instance, de-;has some difficult choices in velopment and production costs|light of, his promised pay in- of the Buffalo transport plane|creases: Reduced spending on now are estimated at $41,000, 000 | weapons, which would upset his extra money to offset the deval- went up about $21,000,000 to| against an estimate of $36,000,-|original program, or a request uation of purchasing power." | $1,150,000,000 while expenditures When Mr. Hellyer took over on new weapons, equipment and the defence portfolio in 1963, he | construction went down by $35,- got cabinet approval for a de-| 000,000 to $204,500,000. fence budget of some $1,550,000; In the current fiscal year, Mr. +000 a year for five years with|Hellyer has forecast weapons "an annual two - per - cent in-|expenditures of about $300,000,- crease to cover increasing costs.'000 and an outlay of $1,097,500,- Landymore Says Morale Low In The Maritimes By DAVE McINTOSH jis going to be and that will) OTTAWA (CP) -- Rear-Ad-|solve the problem. . . miral William Landymore told) 'I think the first and most) the Commons defence commit- tee June 23 that morale in Mari- time Command was bad be- cause the defence department indicate to the officers and men 000 a year ago. |to the cabinet for a bigger de- Construction of four new de-|fence budget. stroyers does not start until 1968, Mr. Hellyer told the commit- but already the estimated cost|tee: 'I think you will appreci- has shot up to $160,440,000 from |ate the problems that we face the originally estimated $142,-|in the future if we have to 000,000. make substantial increases in | important thing is to clarify the} jidentity for all three services |definition of unification and to|would be difficult. . exactly what the force is|Tyesday night he had not yet The defence department orig-| Pay and allowances in order to compete with the civilian mar- ket. "This will pose a continuing problem for _us unless we can City Digs Out | forces Ruins By ANTHONY C. COLLINGS |sons--one fourth of Tashkent' 5| an immigrant, rather than a Ca- 1,206,908 populaticona--iost their homes. More than half of, these have had their homes torn) down and have been assigned other housing. Mrs. Sikolova says, 'there are about 177,000 persons whose status this winter has been set- tled. The remaining 120,000 or so are deciding what to do." building two new hospitals with a total of 300 beds, they have repaired three existing hospitals and are repairing 27 others. Six new schools are being built and 170 old ones repaired. To calm worried parents, Soviet officials provided facilities for $2,000 school children to spend Tashkent, Tashkent residents terror during the first days after the big quake but now say they're used to it and even joke about it. The men even tell bawdy stqries about husbands coming home to the wrong tents. | Population At / 20,000,000 Mark Construction crews also are} the summer at camps far from! lived in| caravan folk ¢ QUIT QUEEN SANDRINGHAM, England (CP)--Thirty gypsies and other|berry pickers on the royal es-;while pay. have quit the|tate because, they say, the crop|ranges from Ie Py Queen's employment as black-jis too thin to provide worth-\for each pound picked: THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, Aaguit 10, 1966 3 OTTAWA (CP)--The 20,000,- 000th person will be added to Canada's population about mid- }month and there is a growing likelihood that he or she will be | Gadlsni-born baby. Officials of the Dominion Bu- reau of Statistics, who make pe- riodic estimates of the cqun- | try's population and currently are compiling the results of this year's June 1 census count, aren't able to say when the pop- ulation will click over from 19,- | 999,999 to 20,000,000. If their estimates have been out for the past five years, the figure may already have been reached. But the statisticians ar -onfident that the recently- nced June 1 panulation of 19, 919,000 is reasonably actly rate. The recent population trend has been a lower birth rate and a continuing high level of immi- grant arrivals. Combining births, immigrant | arrivals, deaths, and the avail- able emmigration figures which run six months or more behind the times, the country's popula- tion increases by about 33,000 a month, This unofficial estimate would put the population at about 19,985,000 at the beginning of August and at the 20,000,000 |mark about Aug. 15. TOKYO (AP) -- Seven North Americans just back from Cam- bodia said today they are con- vinced Prince Norodom Sihan- ouk, Cambodia's ruler, is neut- ral toward the Viet Nam war and is trying to keep Communist troops from using his country as a sanctuary. Sihanouk said there is "'lim- munist Vietnamese along Cam- bodia's border, but no Cambod- ian '"'wilfu:ly co-operates" with them, Russell Johnson of the American Friends Service Com- mittee told a press conference. Part of Cambodia's 33,000- man army patrols the border, and village militiamen are on the lookout for strangers, said Canadian-born Donald Duncan, a former U.S. Army special sergeant born Donald a former U.S. Army special for- ces sergeant in Viet Nam who now is on the staff of Ramports magazine. Johnson, Duncan and their five companions formed an "Americans want to know" cit- izens' mission which visited Cambodia from July 27 to Aug. 9 to check on U.S. allegations that the Viet Cong and North fence budget ceiling to offset the increased costs of labor, both on the civil and military sides," Michael Forrestall, tive MP for Halifax: "There are savings but you are not over- joyed about what is happening to those savings?" Mr, Hellyer: "You have put it very well." but that. it expects to get only \hale that number. Any transition to a single | Admiral Landymore said THE ULTIMATE IN LUXURY LIVING! Adult Building Central Location Prestige Address Distinction Beyond Compare Cambodia Prince Neutral, Seven Visitors Maintain ited"? movement of a new Com-| obtain more money, a higher de- Conserva- had not clarified what it meant by a unified defence force. It was on that same day that Defence Minister Hellyer asked the 50-year-old maritime chief for his resignation. Admiral Landymore declined to resign and Mr. Hellyer sacked him three weeks later. The transcript of part of Ad- miral Landymore's testimony before the committee was made public Tuesday. It did not. indi- cate where deletions had been made by the defence depart- ment on security and other grounds. | Admiral Landymore has said} the non-secret part of his testi- mony was censored by Mr. Hell- yer's staff before he gave it to the committee. USED FIGURES Mr. Hellyer has said the ad- miral had dealt with personnel | figures which were a matter for} going to look like; what kind of| seen the minutes of the com- careers people are going t0/mittee hearing and "I don't have in it.' |think it would be appropriate Admiral Landymore said in| ifor me to comment until I've reply to John Matheson, Liberal|seen the minutes.' MP for Leeds, that there is} He said in a telephone inter- "great" reluctance in the navy|yiew from his home at West about unification. |Lawrenceton, N.S., near Hali- He..told Heber Smith, Con-|fax, that he was unable to tell servative MP' for Simcoe-North,|without seeing the minutes that the navy must recruit 2,600; which parts had been held back men in the next year to keep|for security reasons and "I've Underground and Level Parking By Appointment Only 723-1712 -- 728-2911 mansions GECRG! a m 124 PARK ROAD NORTH: OSHAWA its. present. shi in operation! got to be very careful on this." TROUD Vietnamese soldiers were using the country as a/sanctuary. The mission members said that during their border inspec- tions by plane, truck and on foot, they found no evidence that Cambodia's frontiers area was such a sanctuary. Duncan admitted under ques- tioning that it is possible for small groups of soldiers to hide or travel undiscovered through some of the heavily-foliaged bor- der country. How To Hold FALSE TEETH More Firmly in Place Do your false teeth annoy and em- barrass by slipping, dropping or wob- bling when you eat, laugh or talk? Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your plates. This alkaline (non-acid) powder holds false teeth more firmly and more comfortably. No gummy, Booey, pasty taste or feeling. Does not sour. Checks "plate odor" (denture breath). Get FASTEETH today at drug counters everywhere. thursday and friday, August 11-12 1347 SIMCOE ST. NORTH, Oshawa, Ontario 235 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH, Oshawa, Ontario 1003 DUNDAS ST. 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