Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 29, 1968, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Winnipeg free press monday july 29, 1968 congestion at . Airports costing million a year by Vern Haugland Washington a air lines estimate that delays due to traffic congestion in the United states Are costing them a year in extra fuel added Crew tune and inefficient use of equipment. In addition annoyed and in convenience passengers Are losing millions of dollars a year in productive time. Transportation Secretary Alan Boyd has estimated that needed Airport improvements and expansion will Cost through 1975, and that the Cost of bringing navigation systems up to Date will be about a year for the next four or five years in addition to cur rent airways appropriations of about a year. The air transport association merchants of death first inside Story of the conning heroin Supply line every minute of every Day someone injects heroin into his completes the vicious Circle of the narcotics Racket. August Reader s digest features the first of a behind the scenes two part report which describes the merchants of misery and death who control the world traffic in heroin. It s a frightening Story who Are these men How do they direct an organization that spreads from the poppy Fields of the Middle East to the pushers and users of North America this article the re sult of a four year investigation reveals for the first time the secret Workings of the terrible dope Trade. Learn How the powerful mafia like Union Corse in Marseille uses Gam bling and sex to blackmail respectable businessmen into dope smuggling and Why heroin shipments Are often channelled through Montreal rather than new York. Don t miss August Reader s digest now on Sale. Representing the airline Industry has produced a summary of the air traffic congestion problem which answers some of the questions about Long Range resolutions to air congestion. The Industry answers do not touch upon demands by Federal air traffic controllers for More manpower. The controllers launched a by the Book safety Campaign july 3 which has contributed to the current crisis of delays. A Bill before Congress would provide immediate Relief for the manpower shortage. The government the controllers and several Industry groups also Are trying to work out other Short Range solutions. Question what s the Basic problem answer the great increase in air traffic. Airline passenger traffic has increased an average of 15 per cent a year for the last five years. The airlines Are add ing More than passengers a Day. This is More than matched by the growth of private aviation which now accounts for almost 75 per cent of the landings and takeoffs at airports equipped with Federal aviation administration control towers. Private planes operated almost hours last year com pared with for the air lines. Q. What about the future traffic a. Airline traffic will triple by 1975, and the private aviation Fleet will increase by about one third. Q. What Long Range solutions do the airlines propose a. Establishment of an air port development Trust fund financed by a two per cent in crease in the passenger ticket tax. Resulting revenues would provide funds for Airport expansion. Also increased funding for airways followed by consideration by Congress of the whole user charge question. Open Days nights at the factory Quality room group s599 value factory to you Means big savings Only a month any room can be bought separately Complete bedroom with free mattress it Spring factory to you Complete Dinette factory to you free Bonus gifts table lamps 20 piece Bedspread boudoir lamps dish set Pillow cases toss pillows or Blanket Coffie table 24 piece pillows end tables cutlery set sheets nothing layaway or storage till needed 618arlington near Sargent pm. 775-4426 it a need should be found for user charges beyond the current five per cent ticket tax the air lines will accept them under an arrangement that All who use the system pay their fair share. At present through the five per cent ticket tax recognized by Congress As a user charge airline traffic generates in annual revenues. This is about equal to the 45 per cent share of the airways Cost that the Faa says the airlines should Bear. Q. What of other users a. Through an aviation Gaso line tax of two cents a gallon private users paid about last year or Only 4.3 per cent of the the Faa considered their fair share in 1967. Many private plane users actually contribute no taxes whatsoever toward the Cost of maintaining the airways sys tem i the passengers of the scheduled airlines Are be coming increasingly aware of this disparity and Are beginning to question Why they must wait deaths Aubin Theodore 72, of St. Adolphe Man. Ballen Teve mrs. Ethel 81, of Vancouver Easte William h., 78. Of 282 Rutland Street St. James. Einarson l. 79, of lunar Man. Fowler mrs. Myrtle 48, of 690 Pritchard Avenue. Fraser Alex 59, of 968 Sherburn Street employed by the system. Fredericksen mrs. Holger 60, of old Kil Donan. Brossais Andre 67, of Desautels Street St. Boniface. Grenier Jules 77, of 248 Kitson Street St. Boniface. Keele Mccheyne mrs. Arnold Eleanor 70, of 62 Poison Avenue. Kiely Elizabeth j., 90, of Nightingale nursing Home formerly of 596 Mcdermot Avenue. Kneller William Charles 84, of 790 Mcdermot Avenue retired car locomotive Engineer. Laughton James Sinclair 86, of 555 Lanark Street suite 307, formerly of Brandon Man. Malanchuk Sophie 75, of 1311 Alexander Avenue widow of Steve Malanchuk. Martz Charles p., 82, of 234 Mclean Street Charles Wood. Nelson e. Albert 78, of 320 Sherbrook Street. A Emezon Leon 79, of 825 Bannerman Avenue. Newcombe William m., of Winnipeg Beach Man., for Merly of Winnipeg. Oleferuk Andrew 82, of 99 Selkirk Avenue. Payne Rev. Richard Daely 51, of Camp Morton Man. Penno mrs. Helen of 756 Broadway. Reid William Andrew 79, of Arborg Man. Ritchot Carole Lyla Janet 19, of 399 Home Street employed by Ackland Ltd. Sessions William Walter 86, of Sperling Man. Simmie Margaret 96, 1132 Warsaw Avenue. Spillett Annie Eliza 75, of Dauphin Man., formerly of Petersfield Mani widow of Issac Spillett. Puzak William 50, of Silver Mountain ont. Surtees Lawrence Elmer 80, of 80 St. Vital Road St. Vital. Wheaton Partlow Allison 84, of 604 Matheson Avenue West Kiwo Nan. For further information see classified death notices by the Canadian press London William Barkley 70 parliamentary reporter and commentator of the daily express for 40 whose work was syndicated in Many Commonwealth countries. Madrid Angel Cardinal Herrera y Oria 81, one of Spain s most influential Church men and politicians in the last 50 years. Koncler or sr., 76, chairman of the Board and chief executive offi cer of the Kohler co. Rochester Minn. Or. Charles w. Mayo 70, the last Mayo family member to work at the medical clinic his father and Uncle in a car Accident. Forde 48, Britain s second heart trans Plant patient two. Days after he received his new heart. Silver Spring babe Adams who pitched 46 shutouts for the Pittsburgh pirates appeared in 481 games and had a 196-139 record played 19 the pirates. Nanaimo Cam Eron 71, a Farmer shipyard worker and legislator since 1937, and recently chosen by the new democratic party to be chair Man of the nip caucus in the new commons of a stroke. Goettinger West Germany Otto Hahn 89, atomic research Pioneer who proved atomic Fis Sion could be achieved by bom Barding uranium with neutrons and received the Nobel Chemis try prize in 1944 after a Long illness. For Landing clearance on equal footing with the Man Rich enough to buy his own plane but who is not paying an equal share of the airways Cost. Q. What alternative is there to requiring an users to pay fair shares of the Cost of modernizing airways and airports a. Perhaps serious thought should be Given to establishing priorities for the use of these scarce resources on the basis of Public need and financial participation. Q. How can All users of the airways system be required to pay their fair share of the. Costs a. A first step might be a registration fee for private air Craft. Q. How would the Airport development Trust fund work a it would be set up within the . Treasury and administered by the. Transportation Secretary. Besides proceeds of a two per cent tax on airline Pas sengers within the ., there would be. Revenue from a Flat fee of a trip for passengers going abroad. Q. What airports would be Eli Gible for financial help a. Both the major Hub air ports and the smaller ones. Funds also would be available for reliever Fields near major airports used to relieve the big Fields of Pri vate traffic which does not need to land there. Q. In what form would the fund provide assistance a. It would pay up to 75 per cent of the debt service of air port Bond issues and also would provide Short term Loans for planning land acquisition and the Start of construction of urgently needed projects pending approval of Long term financial Aid. Q. What would this assistance amount to a. The two per cent ticket tax and the fee for foreign flights would generate about the first year. By using the Money for debt service the Trust fund would be Able to sup port about in air port construction in the first year alone. Negroes too poor Washington a hous ing experts anticipate Only gradual movement of negroes into White neighbourhoods As a result of a recent United states supreme court decision and passage of the Federal open housing Law. Our Best guess is that there s going to be no huge massive influx of negroes into White areas said an authoritative source at the department of housing and Urban development. The source said the main Rea son is that most negroes simply can t afford to move into most White areas. Eugene Conser executive vice president of the National association of real estate boards agreed. The open housing provisions contained in the 1968 civil rights act passed in May Rule out discrimination of the basis of race color religion or nation Al origin. It goes into effect in three stages and will cover 80 per cent of the country s hous ing by 1970. The supreme court decision issued june 17, holds that an 1866 civil rights Law prohibits All racial discrimination in Sale or rental of housing. It goes beyond the new Law whose one major exemption would have permitted discrimination by an owner of his own Home who Sells or rents it with out the Aid of a broker. Housing Secretary Robert c. Weaver said the Johnson administration s new housing Bill pending in Congress will add considerably to the Supply of integrated housing within reach of negroes in Low and moderate income Levels. He said some of the new housing units will be dispersed in White or predominantly White neighbourhoods. But Weaver also said in an interview that one of the factors which might work against 1 a r g e a c a 1 e movement of negroes to White areas is grow ing Black nationalism whose advocates believe negroes should live among themselves. Officials said further that Many negroes will want to re main among negroes that Many will want to stay in their present even because they have roots there. The officials agreed that mid dle class negroes Are the ones most Likely to move. Bomb blasts Fountain Rome a for bombs hurled from a speeding Auto exploded before sunday against the base of the famous obelisk Fountain in Rome s ele Gant Piazza Del Popolo. No one was Hurt but the blasts gouged out chunks of Stone and broke several Steps in the Marble stairway that surrounds the Fountain. The Square is a favor Ite meeting place for Rome s artist Colony and members of the literary and movie world. First of the week meat values at Safeway sliced. Select qualify. Young and tender. Serve liver and Bacon. In. Buck Discon v beef Steak ettes 79 Haddock in Batter acc cod fish cakes High Fiat Inma fms Fraun 14 of. Pkg. High tar Brand. Wrath frown. 12 n. Safeway s your Best place to save Maple Leaf. For Quick snacks or sandwiches. .49 canned hams potato chips prune plums lunch Box. Crisp fresh. 12 of. 1 49 Omo detergent a pk9. 69c meat spreads Camay soap con. Rob dior 39c Mackintosh Toffee pkg. 39c Camay soap 39c insect repellent s ,1. 99c Good Luck Margarine pm 88c Zinc rings 43c Oval Tine milk 29c Gem or jewel Glass lids 33c Check and compare Safeway s every Day Low Low prices save you Money. Tolani. Pineapple juice Itutti 32c Motino fim Cut la cigarette tobacco s Canada packers tender Lake lard . 17 Libby. Of tic prepared Mustard v 25c Cul Coc Wax paper 2m Ron. J7 Kellogg s special k v a 62c Gaines meal carafe a Modess 89c .jrrean.1 plums Washington grown. Canada no. 1 Grade. La 29 celery carrots imported. Canada no. 1 Grade. Crisp clean stalks. Stalk California of wit. Go Nodal 29 39 Safeway o copyright 1960. Canada Safeway limited Iii Oay Tami Day Jiffy a met 31 it i am or torn Winnipeg Selkirk Mia Riff to limit i
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