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Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Sep 1966, p. 3

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NRT TE RTT TT Free University Tuition . TODAY'S TOPIC BOB McRAB WAYNE Should the government subsi- dize universities so that every- one could receive a free edu-|"'I don't think they should be- cation? Six people were asked this|deal right now. If anyone wants question during a man-on-the- survey. They said: Bobjhave to do is have the marks thems ' ; "T thinkland they can get the money doing a good|from a grant, or a loan at the MeRae, 493 Woodcrest: the government is job as it is. There are bursaries ' nt, and any-|King E.: selena hg the should be subsidized. It costs a What|lot of money to go to university loan from school. one can get a bank to go to Robichaud's Reform MARKLS MRS, JOYCE GROOT more can they do?" Wayne Markle, 503 Madison Avenue: cause they are doing a great to go on to university, all they bank." Brian McLeod, RR 4, "T think that they KATHY MONAHAN and when you have to pay it for four years in a row with no real income, it could get to be real tough on a guy." Kathy Monahan, Simcoe St.; "I don't think that education should be entirely free but I think that the government should pay some of the cost, If they pay all of it, then half of the educa- tion value will be lost." Mrs. Letty Smidstra, 13 Waverly St., Bowmanville: 'I think so. It is Plan Gains Voters Approval SAINT JOHN, N.B. election Monday as Mayor Stephen H. Weyman retained a Saint John City seat for the Liberal party. Dr. Weyman, 43, polled 8,271 (CP)-- Premier Louis J. Robichaud's controversial municipal reform program survived its first test at the polls in a provincial by- votes, only 63 more than Pro- gressive Conservative Lorne McGuigan, 30, a high school teacher who received8.2-08. Gil- bert Soucy, 25, a union official and the first New Democratic Party member to contest a seat in the New Brunswick legisla- ture, trailed with 908. Premier Robichaud arrived) Lawyer Advocates Right To Disobey OTTAWA (CP)--Laws to en-|Marsh, the keynote speaker, sure the right to civil disobedi- ence should be enacted, a na- tional conference was told Mon- day. Toronto lawyer Sidney Linden|of a royal commission on the advocated "'the right of an in-jrights of women, particularly dividual to disobey a law he|in employment. Other speakers thinks bad." Alan Borovoy, another To-|on Indians; prohibition of child ci acest --| 'Bad Laws said that in some areas rights are being reduced to privileges) by law. She was among the advocates |proposed a similar commission marriages; reméval of mental jtions of ronto lawyer active in civil lib- erties, upheld '"'a belief in the law as a way to secure human rights" where racial discrimin- .. ation is involved. They were among 15 speak-|7 schooling. illness as a barrier to immigra- tion and facilities to educate an estimated 2,000,000 adult Cana- dians who have less than Grade era Gf ferins segestions on' Mr. Linden said the rights what Canada can do for the|problem is "constantly coming United Nations International|up' in labor disputes. Another Year for Human Rights in 1968.| such area was non-violent pro- The conference was sponsored|test demonstrations. Canadian Citizenship| He said in an interview a , |man should be able to express Though 175 national volun-|disapproval of a law without tary agncies and 32 federal|fear of arrest for contempt or| and provincial departments and) causing a disturbance. organizations were invited,) Gerald Vandezande, exec- fewer than 100 sent representa-| utive secretary of the Christian tives. |Labor Association of Canada, Mr. Linden is general counsel said compulsory checkoff and of the Canadian Civil Liberties|other such labor laws violate Association while Mr. Borovoy|the right of a worker to choice represents the national human) of unions. rights committee of the Cana-| He hoped the worker's right dian Labor Congress. "to refuse to join" would be} State Secretary Judy La-| won by 1968. Multi - Role Fighter - Bomber : here late Monday night trom| Fredericton to extend greetings | to the mayor. | "Judging from the results in| Saint John, I think the people of| New Brunswick would react} extremely favorably to the pro-| gram in a general election," he} |said in an interview. However, Progressive Conser-| vatives said there were allega- irregularities at the polls and they were making im- mediate plans for a recount. President George L. Keith of the Saint John City PC Associ- ation said in a statement: "After checking with our poll agents, we find a large number of spoiled ballots and no reason- able explanation. .. ." ABOUT 360 SPOIL BALLOTS About 17,400 of 28,267 eligible voters cast ballots at 136 polls. The number of spoiled ballots was estimated at between 330 and 360. Sherwood said the final outcome} of the byelection is "unsure," according to the figures. The premier said the outcome of the byelection was a personal victory for the mayor and a vic- tory for his government's Pro- gram cf Evolution » aweening Plan to give the province direct control of. health, education, welfare, justice, assessment and taxation while abolishing county councils. Dr. Weyman fills a vacancy created by the resignation in January of Lands and Mines Minister Daniel A. Riley. He Mr. McGuigan 47.21 and Mr. Soucy 5.22. The result gave the Liberals 31 seats in the 52-seat legisla- tive assembly, 11 more than the Progressive Conservatives. No date has been set to fill a Resti- gouche county seat left vacant |by the death of Dr. Georges L. Dumont, former health minister who died in July. CLAMP ON SPEED Squadrons Planned By RCAF OTTAWA (CP)--The MRS. LETTY SMIDSTRA BRIAN McLEOD being proven more: each day|judgment. By THE CANADIAN PRESS A mounting attack by Andrew Thompson and his Ontario Lib- eral. party against the decision to postpone start of the federal government's medical care pro- gram for one year apparently other provincial Liberal parties, Three leaders Monday ex- | pressed disappointment..but ap- peared unopposed to Mr. Sharp's. move. Premier Joseph Smallwood of Newfound- land said he was prepared to \follow. the finance minister's Two. other leaders that education is important for|declined to say anything im- anyone to get a good job or /mediately and others could not even get along in society. Some be reached for, comment. can't afford the cost of educa-| Mr. Thompson Saturday told tion." Mrs. Joyce Groot, 192)a weekend meeting of 48 Lib- Liberty St., Bowmanville: think that the governmen should subsidize universities. 1 would give a lot of youngsters Jlerals in Peterborough that he t)was dismayed by Mr. Sharp's t)announcement in the House of Commons 'Thursday that the incentive that is needed to|program was being delayed a better themselves, it.' Some givelyear a8 an_ anti - inflation up because they can't afford measure. ' | Mr. Thompson said he planned to fight for restoration lof the original starting date of July 1, 1967, CRASH PROVES SAFETY VALUE DETROIT (AP) -- E. M. (Pete) Estes, Chevrolet's general manager, proved the hard way Monday the value of seat belts, Estes, a General Motors vice-president, told 200 re- porters at Chevrolet's press review earlier in the day that one of the encouraging things in auto safety is that more people are using seat belts. Four hours later, Estes' chauffeur - driven car was involved in a three-car col- lision in suburban South- field. Estes and his driver were wearing seat belts. The Estes car spun off the road and landed in a ditch. The other two cars wound up in another ditch. Two persons suffered minor injuries. Monday night the Ontario Lib- jeral party's policy committee jpassed a resolution urging the loriginal date be restored. 'Deadly Gas 'Affects 85 TORRANCE, Calif. (AP)--A welder's- torch cut the wrong gas' line Monday, loosing a deadly cloud of yellow-green Medicare Lag Attack Draws Little Support ceed with its planning for a medical care service. Adrian Berry, Alberta party leader, said "It's unfortunate is drawing little support from & the; The|the Canadian government's) that it was. deemed necessary at this time to make this de- cision." v4 Jean Lesage, former premier of Quebec, said he wanted to 7 see what happens at the forth- ,coming federal-provincial con- ference before making any com- ment. Peter Nicholson, Nova Scotia Liberal leader, said Monday "4 night he was not ready to com- ment. Party leaders in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and British Co- lumbia could not be reached for comment Monday night. HAS COMMITMENT In a statement Monday Mr. Thompson said the Liberal INSTALLERS WANTED Aluminum -- Doors-Windews- Awnings-Siding ANDREW THOMPSON _ | | resolution will be presented to |the national Liberal party con- ference in Ottawa Oct. 10-12. HE'LL FOLLOW | | Premier Smaliwood's only, |comment on the announcement | was: | | "I'm quite prepared to follow) truck and tools. APPLY SHULLY'S INDUSTRIES LIMITED 73 Wingold Ave., Toronto RUS 1-6622 |judgment in this matter." | Premier Alex Campbell of \Princee Edward Island ex- jpressed "deep disappointment" jover the postponement. Premier Louis. J. Robichaud| \of New Brunswick said in Fred- ericton Friday the postpone- iment was. "'regretted" but his Liberal government would pro-! Steady work --- Must have own ff} THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, September 12, 1966 3 party had a moral commitment to bring in medical care. _ "We had the policy in 1919 and . . . we pushed for this policy in the last two general elections." He said there were better ways to stop inflation than post- ponement of medical care and cuts in university scholarship and research spending as an- gunced hy Me aane + arn, RoOUnleS re "Medicare, university schol- arsmips and research represent long - term investments which this country must make to re- main strong. "They should not be cut when it is possible to control inflation by chopping less t, non-investment, short-term pro- jects." Mr. Thompson said Saturday he doubted whether Prime Min- ister Pearson, in London for the Commonwealth prime ministers conference, knew Mr. Sharp in- tended to make the announce- ment Sharp's speech. eel onsite OSHAWA HOME SHOW THURS., FRI., SAT., SEPT. 15th, 16th, 17th. |chlorine gas which felled at} least 85 persons. | Fourteen persons, including a| | six-year-old boy, were taken to| | hospitai. | "T was trying to isolate an old gas main,' said welder |Kenneth Witt, 39. 'From the in- |formation I had the pipe I set the torch to was supposed to |be the one removed, Obviously, it wasn't." Hundreds of workers fled Nurses Quit Provincial PC Leader C. a Health Units TORONTO (CP) -- Nurses at nearby industria] plants. Winds carried the fumes to a nearby parking lot where 700 construc- tion workers were reporting to work. Fifty of them collapsed. One of two sheriff's deputies diverting traffic from the scene was in serious condition. Homes in the area were evac- Ontario health units in Halton| uated. County and the united counties} Firemen donned gas masks of Stormont, Dundas and Glen-|and sprayed water fog from garry resigned Monday in a bidjhigh - pressure lines to dissi- polled 47.57 per cent of the vote, | BONN (AP)--A speed limit of | 4 to get their local associations! reenanived ae heargaining agents. Dr. A. F. Bull, medical of-) ficer of health, met with the 34/ nurses but reached no agree-| ment. Both groups of nurses! said they will go back only) when the health boards recog-' nize their associations. Doris Gibney, assistant exec- utive secretary of the Regis- tered Nurses' Association of | Ontario, said the nurses believe) they will win because they do! not believe the health boards will close the units perma- nently. | The two local associations, | the Nurses Association of Halton County and the United | Counties Nurses Association, japplied to the Ontario Labor) | Relations Board for certifica- | tion last August. The application was turned lown when the health board| 75 m.p.h. is being considered! passed a bylaw invoking a law RCAF sembly line at Canadair Ltd., for West Germany's 3,000 miles| that forbids extension of the La- plans to form four CF-5 fighter-| Montreal, Aug. 18, 1967, Thelof autobahns, on which 15,710|0r Relations Act to municipal bomber squadrons of 18 planes) production rate will be five each and station them all in planes a month. Canada. ing. It will be based at Cold! of changes incorporated in the Lake, Alta. plane after the U.S. experience) Sites for the three operational with it in the Viet Nam war.| squadrons--the first will, have|C stands for Canadian in CF-5. been formed by Jan. 1, 1969-- Takeoff performance has been have not yet been selected but improved by 19 per cent but the they will likely be in the vicinity| CF-5 will still need a runway of the army's training ateas at at least 4,800 feet long. It won't Camp Gagetown, N.B., Camp)require concrete runways but Petawawa, Ont., and Camp will need something better than Wainwright, Alta. a pasture, such as steel-mesh or The supersonic CF-5s will be Plank. : used in Mobile Command pri-| RCAF officers who have flown marily for reconnaissance and the plane and are associated surveillance. Their other roles| With its Canadian development are interdiction, close support of Praise the aircraft. ground troops and air-to-air in-- They say it will take the terception. RCAF back to a type of flying| : --low-level strafing -- which it} The program calls for produc- ; ong -- wach % tion of 113 planes at a poe of Hasn't engaged in since the end $215,000,000. The first CF-5 is ° the Second World War. scheduled to come off the as-- The plane is said to be so phd actrees abe easy to maintain that each) = squadron will require a ground Tourism Good crew of only 200, about half the! # normal number for today's com- plex aircraft. The plane is designed to sup- people were killed and 432,770) Officials rate the CF-5 about |injured last year. There is. n0| Halton. resigned and 12 of 14 Officials say one of the squad- 20 per cent better than the|speed limit at present and four|nurses in the other counties) rons will be primarily for train-|present American F-5 because|out of five citizens want one. 'quit. employees, pate the lethal cloud. Despite their gas masks. seven firemen were among the victims. The ruptured six-inch, '8,000- foot-long chlorine pipeline runs from Stauffer Chemical Co., which owns it, to American Chemical Corp. Sluggish Kidneys May Bring Restless Nights If you "fight the pillow', toss and turn ail through the night and don't really know why--perhaps here's news and help for you! One cause of such restlessness may be traced to sluggish kidney action. Urinary irri- tation and bladder discomfort may follow. The result can be backache and restless nights. This is when Dodd's | Kidney Pills can help bring relief. Dodd's stimulate kidney action, helps relieve the irritated condition that causes the backache. Take Dodd's, and see if you don't feel better, rest better. Used successfully by millions for over 70 years. New large size saves money, Live Royally... start your "dream boat" savings BOATING FUN, new car, country cottage -- any one of the good things 'in life. You can have them by sav- ing for them. Start now by et a Savings Account at the Royal Bank. Interest will fatten it up. And the Royal is the convenient place because there's a branch near you. ROYAL BANK Monday, 22 of 24 nurses in Announce 'New Healing Substance... Shrinks Piles, Checks Itch Exclusive healing substance proven to shrink hemorrhoids... and repair damaged tissue. A d h i has found a unique healing substance with the ability to shrink hemor- thoids painlessly. It relieves itch- ing and discomfort in minutes and speeds up healing of the injured, inflamed tissues. One hemorrhoidal case history after another reported "'very strik- ing improvement." Pain was promptly and gently relieved . . . actual reduction or retraction \shrinking) took place. these case histories were 8 variety of hemorrhoidal condi- Minister Says BROCKVILLE (CP)--James Auld, Ontario minister of tour- port United Nations peacekeep.-| tons. Relief even occurred in cases ing operations or Canadian) ®% long standing, and most im- | ground troops in a limited, con-| 9ortant of all, results were so ventional -war anywhere in the| 'herough that this improvement many months. This was accomplished with 2 new healing substance (Bio-Dyne) which quickly helps heal injured cells and stimulates growth of new tissue, Bio-Dyne is offered in oint- ment and suppository form called Preparation H. In addition to actually shrink- ing hemorrhoids, Preparation H lubricates and makes elimination less painful. It helps prevent im- fection which is a principal cause of hemorrhoids. Just ask your druggist for. Pre- paration H Suppositories or Pre- paration H Ointment (with a special applicator). Satisfaction or your money PREMIERE SHOWING IK Stereo new idea fq In et CHERNEY'S 1966 HOME SHOW EXHIBIT 9. 00S OSHAWA HOME SHOW ism and information, said Mon- day night that 1966 was one of! the most successful tourism z years in 'Ontario's history. \2 Speaking to a service club; |§ Mr. Auld said increases have) been shown in the amount of| money spent by tourists and the |¢ number of cars entering the ¢ province. Motel occupancy in eastern Ontario was up as much as 14 per cent, he said, and restaur- ant revenues as much as 18 per) cent. The minister also said the St.) Lawrence Parks Commission world. was maintained over a period of A MESSAGE TO ALL refunded. eos -------- Pica 702 BY « : IN q) up BLECTROHOME Brilliant new idea in stereo! This superbly crafted Electrohome room divider hes ample space for books, records, objects d'art or a portable TV. The biggest surprise comes when you slide PUBLIC MEETING back the doors of Electrohome's new CIRCA 702 to unveil a ot control 1. 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