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Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Feb 1967, p. 19

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red ockey ont and Mark Mike Jenkins the Lake Vista he shutout. ed Storie 3-2 on a goal scored on with only a | in the game. Restive Soviet Intellectuals| Show New Vigor. Certainty By JOHN BEST MOSCOW (CP)--Russia's lib-|tion in the eral intelligentsia, which one} year ago was reeling from the shock of the Sinyavsky-Daniel trial, appears to be making some kind of comeback. land smuggling their sat works out of Russia for publica- West. There were rumors Tvardovsky would lose the Novy Mir editorship in the open sea- son on liberal intellectuals that that) | Average By THE CANADIAN PRESS The average hunter prob- ably wouldn't care to add up all the expenses that are in- Hunter armed with questionnaires, , to gather the statistics for a study. The study is being paid for 'Wouldn't Add Cost were bought in B.C. by hunt- ers that year. More than $146,000 went to the provincial government for THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, February 21, 1967 JQ Allan Wainio, Lake Simcoe forest district biologist, says that since 1960, samples of duck wings have shown a de- cline in the number of im- mature ducks, indicating in- cubation or brood rearing has been unsuccessful. A theory is that the black duck may be the victim of pollution which reduces or eliminates desirable plant and Kingside goals |followed the sensational trial,| volved when he goes after i i ; j Ben Wiatrzyk There have been a number Of} but he weathered the storm--al| deer or moose. Taste, week eee aan -- som ee prvd animal food and lowers the va. Storie Park signs that the restive intellec-/tripyte to his stature in the| If his wife found out what tion called Resources of the | and 'packers and $731,000 was quality of some breeding and pred by Barry tuals are asserting themselves! artistic community. he spends on equipment, | Future Inc., but the provincial | rung up by service industries | Wintering areas. Another rea- d Dale Wilson. with new vigor and confidence.| The Poetry Day volume also| travel, food and lodgings she | fish and game briich in Vice | such af travel aad lodging. son is that marshes are being GAME sion played the is seven - game yoffs with Lake . Woodview and all posting vic- ain, it was tne shine, as there outs in the four osted their first year, as they 1 a 3-0 defeat. lie, Todd Smith, , as he turned o earn his shut- Jista goals were obby DeGray; rison and Chris i i in France,|Rilenkov, "but he never sep- wondering what the if tion, passes, return included. voor gg ig ed al ag France,| arated himself from the mother. decline of the black duck. | Ulloa ong Reader il cog land, from the fountain of his New Zealand Holds Regatta | Ba tales by net ae | FOUR SEASON'S TRAVEL A number of artists whose works were frowned upon be- cause they didn't toe the Social- ist realism line have recently been exhibited for the first time in many years. They include Alexander Tyshler, Robert Falk and Kuzmav Petrov-Vodkin. Tass news agency announced} that even the well-known sym- bolist, Mare Chagall, was to be exhibited at the Tretyakov gal- lery after a Jong break. Later, however, it corrected the an- nouncement. | Whether in fact plans had been made to exhibit Chagall, and were later cancelled, was not clear. Rehabilitation of Chagall, who was born in Rus- The special volume of poetry contains a glowing prose trib- ute to Boris Pasternak by the writer Nikolay Rilenkov, "as well as a full-page photograph of Pasternak taken in the last years of his life. POETRY ACCEPTED Pasternak was viciously de- nounced by Soviet authorities for his novel, Doctor Zhivago, which won the 1958 Nobel Prize for literature. He was forced to reject the prize. Pasternak, who died in 1960, has 'lately been rehabilitated as a poet though not yet as a prose writer. "Pasternak may have erred in his estimates of certain tem- porary phenomena," writes culture." might not let him go. Besides, discovering that. a deer--providing he bags orfe --has cost him $5 to $10 or whatever it comes to a pound might take much of the fun | out of hunting. If the hunter prefers to re- main ignorant, however, at least one province is vitally interested. British Columbia wants to know the economic benefits of hunting. Dr. Peter Pearse of the University of British Colum- bia set out two years ago, toria is co-operating. Dr. Pearse still has a lot of adding up to do but he has come up with a few prelim- inary statistics that show how important hunting is to the province. Some 15,000 big game hunt- ers spent more than $2,000,000 to get 14,000 animals in the East Kootenay region during the 1964 season. Food costing $319,000, alco- hol valued at $93,000 and other items worth $134,000 Height Of Southern Summer and technical } department Fred Riddle, a . licensed trapper who has been work- ing in the Northwest Terri- tories for 30 years, offers some advice on how to make a good shelter out of seven- or eight-foot snow- drifts, : "I dig a hole in the snow pile, scoop it out, light a couple of candles and in a matter of minutes it be- comeés warm enough to take off the parka." Riddle is 72. Ontario lands and forests biologists are caused i that's important béCause the | filled in or being deepened for boating. FOUR SEASON'S TRAVEL on their SUNTOURS TOUR to EXPO '67 Every Friday (7:00 p.m.), Bus leaving for 3 days. Every Mon- day for 5 days (including Upper Canada Village and Ottawa). All accommodation, transporta- in many high schools. Yacht builders' clubs flourish. Members often work together in|_ a boat club pavilion or club-| house, compare notes and prob-; lems and benefit from the su pervision and advice of experi- enced builders. The craft so built vary from small, simple one - child boats up to large and elaborate ves- sels which take several years of exacting work. As with virtually all sports in New Zealand, yachting is a people's recreation, not the pre serve of the wealthy. Some of the champion yachts on the Auckland harbor are owned and sailed by men of modest means. '(and prose published annually in| Last March, a couple of By J. C. GRAHAM leonnection with Soviet Poetry'/months after Sinyavsky and|Canadiaw Press Correspondent | |Day contains a laudatory article Daniel were sentenced, 63 So-| AUCKLAND (CP) -- At this 'lon Alexander 'T'vardovsky, re-| Viet writers addressed a letter|time of the year, the height of garded as a leader of the liberal|'0 the Kremlin leadership warn-|the southern summer, there is cause. ling of the 'dangerous prece-|held annually in New Zealand dent" the trial had established.|a_ sailing regatta regularly {ALMOST LOST JOB The letter apparently was ig-|billed as the largest one - day | Tvardovsky, editor of the lit--nored by Soviet leaders but it event of its kind in the world. jerary quarterly Novy Mir--New! indicated a new-found boldness| Whether the claim can be SHAPING UP |World--has frequently been un-jon the part of the signers, who supported is sometimes queried. jder attack from die-hard ele-joffered to stand "'surety' if; But New Zealanders can prob- jments in the literary com-|Sinyavsky and Daniel were re-| ably claim with justification that {munity and in the: Communist! leased. lfew regattas of any size any- party who don't want to see any! At about the same time, an-|where approach the ownership relaxation of the state's tight/other group of 26 intellectuals record of vessels which sail in control over creative artists. addressed a letter to Communist|the Auckland regatta. Some 70 chief Leonid Brezhnev e The article in the Poetry Day! party per cent of all the craft taking Ill al Trade Still Goes On vine written by Vladimir|warning against a rehabilitation|part are built by those who sail eg ' Ognev, a critic, praises Tvard-|of Stalin. Rumors were circulat- ocay for his "organic erudi-ling that Brezhnev intended to them. The Auckland anniversary re- tion, the breadth and boldness | deliver a speech at the then- of his thoughts, his natural cul-| pending party congress for- By JAM" H. HUSSEY | Canadian Press Correspondent 57 King St. E. Phone 576-3131 | black duck makes up 20 to 25 per cent of the hunters' bag in the Atlantic Flyway states. anos Serer. S€ += VOmnABIS EMPLOYMENT WANTED pavilions at the Montreal southwest. world's faif looked like Monday, viewed from the This is what the French (left), British (middle) and West German (lower right) (CP Wirephoto) proven door-to-door salesman, available to call on homes everyday, Is honest, diligent and loyal to his employer. Never takes a day off ond is willing to work for only 96c¢ per day. Will never ask for a raise; but feels you may wont to increase his effectiveness after results are attained. If you would like to have this salesman on your staff please phone 723-3492 and let a Times ""Ad-visor"' help you word your Timeg "Action" Classified Ad. Full-time, NEW u 227, J. Ferris 298 Go Getters 14, Gay 3, Flyers 12, Hi Los cky Strikes 9, Alley ) and Jesters 6. gatta, which marks the city's official birthday, Jan, 29, or the ture." |mally restoring the late dictator|nearest convenient day, -- has FINGER ON TAP Tvardovsky came under fierce! to favor. jbeen held annually for 127 years} LONDON (CP)--Soft water attack last winter following the} That letter also was ignored--|since the city was founded. The| may be partly responsible for imprisonment of Andrei Sinyav-|in the sense that the signatories|large area of sheltered, island-| OREuy : Sponsiple for studded waters in Auckland har-|Heart disease, think doctors at MIXED DOUBLES van Jackson 820 (253, 760 (276, 292); Jack 0); Pete Makarchuk patrol boats that are steadily on| Fish fetched a good price at the move with their radar al-'that time and it was said that Reg, Norris 742 (280, BURIN, Nfld. (CP)--Illegal| ways watching. a quintal of dried fish--112'sky and Yuli Daniel for engag-|got no reply. But Stalin was not § ' ' 719 (259, 264, 236)3 5 Lata: ; pe ' ° 4, i dias eae " ' i s ; ; 4 <i 1s mn ; ' St. George's Hospital. They badd arr' be-| The RCMP boats patrol the'pounds--was worth five gallonsjing in anti-Soviet propaganda| rehabilitated. |bor and environs make it ideal 0 7 , 215); Jim Goodes trade is still carried on be Pp p g g bea ; for pleasure crafl, found a much higher rate of and the|south coast of Newfoundland onjof rum. At the current price of of St Ear! Westlake 681 Bud Morey 680 )222, tween Newfoundland French-owned islands thejheart trouble among 169 young In the circumstances, 4 in| mem of Glasgow, where the wa- Jack Anderson 284, icky Kotasienski 262, fella "Makarchuk 250, : Kutasienski 247, Al y Jackson 240 and Dropouts 6, We Try bs 5, Lucky ix 4, Die fers 3, Buddys 2 and OOD LADIES Depratto 740 (254 725 (333, 217); L. + G. Knight 650 (238, 37, 228); E, Baldwin owbray 625 (255); B. \. Witterick 625 (231, 8), and &, Campbell . Burrus 250, 200, M, rs 240, E. Adair 225, . Farnham 220, 8. nce 210, 206, J. Bel- Jones 209, Burrus 8, Hubbelle ses 7, Collins 5, De- end Campbells 3. BLIND LEAGUE this week was Scolt 6, 154) 320; followed 121, 164) 285; Rolly 42); Ada McDonough orrest (81, 76) 157; 1393 Vi Pike (60, 71) 1, 54) 105 and Clara 1. onie Dischenke (S51, SFFICR re Ash 749, Al Ash Herb Mackie 648, 8, Gord Stillman 633, larren Burbridge 623, Pierre-Miquelon. Most activity is reported along Newfoundland's south) coast. Traffic was slow last summer but picked up with the approach of short autumn eve- nings and longer nights. RCMP officers reported seizing two cargoes containing bottled spir-| its. and tinned alcohol. | Smuggling cheap liquor across the 12 miles of open sea between the French territory and the province usually reaches its peak before the Eas- ter and Christmas seasons. Little more than a year ago a government retail liquor store, the first in southern dland, was opened at Marystown on the Burin Penin- sula, but the smuggling game continued. There is a reason. Not only ean liquor be purchased more cheaply in St. Pierre, but to- bacco products and other mer- chandise are available at low prices and Newfoundlanders can also sell fish, mutton and other produce of their island on the French islands. a year-round basis and keep ajrum in Newfoundland's retail . constant watch on the move-|liquor stores that would make a} Candid Lannon May Get You ment of craft between the prov- ince and the French islands. But the main reason that li quor is not smuggled over to Newfoundland on a large com- mercial scale is that the prov- ince has lost practically all the old-time banking and freighting schooners that visited St. Pierre-Miquelon, some séveral times annually, for docking and refit or to seek shelter from storms, while on their way to the Grand Banks and Canadian mainland ports. Smuggling between New- foundland's south coast fisher- men and St, Pierre-Miquelon was quite an activity as early as 1837, Capt. Thomas Bennett of the patrol ship Rainbow com- plained of it to Governor Pres- cott. SMUGGLING QUADRUPLED He suggested customs officers be established along the coast and thought there was too close an association between the French islanders and Newfound- land fishermen. In recent years, he said, smuggling from St. quintal of fish worth almost $100 today. In 1845 the Newfoundland leg- islature passed an act putting an export duty on bait fish. But the act could not be enforced without the aid of patrol vessels and the British government would not supply them. | And so the smuggling game} jcontinued until recent times |when Newfoundland could sup- |ply her own customs. officers jand patrol ships. Even this did not put an end to the illicit trade, The passing of the Newfoundland banking schooners and patrols by mod- ern RCMP craft since Confed- eration have greatly hampered, but haven't halted, the smug- |glers. | As one old salt said recently, the only move that would com- pletely curb the movement be- tween St. Pierre-Miquelon and Newfoundland would be the abandonment of the French is- ands by the French. RAISING THE TONE VANCOUVER (CP) -- If you are wanted by the law and have had your photograph distributed to various police departments, you'd better steer clear of Van-; couver, Candid Lannon may get you. | Candid Lannon, who gets his nickname from the Candid Camera television show, is Con- stable Dennis Lannon. He has almost total recall and spends Kis spare time leafing through photos of persons wanted by police throughout North Amer- ca. In 1966 his photographic memory clicked so often that he apprehended 50 persons whose pictures had been circulated. "A person may have the gift of a retentive memory but not use it," says Deputy Chief John Fisk. '"'Lannon's success is the result. of his having this gift and applying it to his--and cer- If You Are Wanted By The Law after Lannon identifies the faces. PRAISED BY CROOK What's more, Constable Lan- non describes his team-mate as an excellent investigator and interrogator. '""'We have worked closely together for the past three years and have both learned much from each other." A bad-cheque artist arrested by Const. Lannon on a six- month - old warrant told the taken. "How the officer picked me out is beyond me. It is an amazing piece of police work, recognizing me in the dark and rain. He certainly deserves a lot of credit." The man was sentenced to 20 days for false pretences. magistrate he was astonished when the officer recognized him) puild small sail boats from the on a crowded street corner. The |time they can handle tools. Stan- man said he had changed a lot|/dard designs are readily avail- since the police photo was/able and special classes in boat| popularity of yacht racing |New Zealand's largest city is ter is soft, than in 148 young| hardly surprising, The latest an- Londoners, where it is hard. niversary regatta saw 1,000 yachts racing in the harbor si- multaneously under a system of split - second timing and me-| |ticulous organizing of courses| |which made order out of appar-| jent chaos. | BUILD CRAFT But the big impetus to Auck- land yachting has been the do- it-yourself backyard building of small craft. In every suburb of Auckland | yachts of varying sizes can be) seen at any time of the year | under construction. | Boys and even girls begin to building are held in the evenings good names to remember If you have a Commercial Property | CARPET CLEANING tainly our--benefit." 1f your rug 1s valuable to you... it But Constable Lannon doesn't take his talent for granted. He carries a large folder containing about 500 photos in his patrol car. He can also call on the val- uable services of his longtime partner, Constable Ron Foyle, who specializes in récalling the names and records of persons John Gibbs 613. Ash 304, Clint Martin Reid McConnell 247, 3, Jean Kossatz 234, | Atherton 237, Hero an Lamoureux 237, ire Things 4, Un Six 3, Alley Cats + and Spitbalis 3, No y i To Sell or Lease Const. Lannon doesn't confine his talents to on-duty hours. Last June he and his family REG AKER, pres. were driving downtown on : BILL McFEETERS, vice-pres. shopping trip when he sudd SCHOFIELD-AKER len stopped the car, got out and told his wife to meet him later at 723-2265 Over 33 years in Business Pierre had quadrupled and was ATCROTE . also being carried on with sea- LEICESTER, England (CP) men from United States and|The county education commit- Canadian ports. |tee prepared a course for pop Liquor, tobacco, food, clothing|groups this February called i ad te vine he Pata! being |"Make a better sound." Its rought in from Boston, Halifax, ET RIESE Quebec and the French islands, | ™usical director, Raymond in exchange for bait fish, to the|Thorpe, formerly conducted the prejudice of English merchants.|famous Halle Orchestra. RCMP KEEPS VIGIL Today's smuggling {is done mainly in small fishing boats, mostly motorized dories, that can make the 12-mile run to the French islands from points on the tip of the Burin Peninsula ve in less than two hours. But it's deserves the very best . . . and it costs no more. Modern equipment, skill and only fully experienced men guarantee d section, you the best of results when we clean police headquarters. Then he hurried off after a man he had spotted in a crowd. your soiled rugs, whether it be wall-to- a risky operation. The dories J Teams are slow compared with RCMP r Soccer y»--Old Country ;, including Sat- LEAGUE ion I VTL F | 6 85 82 § 5 6 53 35 33 8 7 40 3 410 52 8 7 42 510 48 17 54 510 Pe wp Puasa scree mH Prrmauvwssay asada Ree ae ee 3= a NO mnwe aes: ¢ chance to ' ou e teres pack hom a See CN's Pavilion at €XP06/7 18670 1967 pea" Bargain" OM wall or loose rugs. Other services of- fered by Angus-Graydon are binding, Repairing, Fringing, Dying, Alterations and Custom Installations. ANnGus-(5RAYDON 9 x 12' only 10.85 The Cost is ONLY 1 0: PER SQ. FT. Example CARPET COMPANY LIMITED "Carpet Cleaning Division" TELEPHONE 728-6254

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