Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Sep 1962, p. 2

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2 The Oshawa Times, Tuesdey, September 18, 1962 dian Labor Congress began its case--including testimony from two former SIU officials who now head the CMU, Michael Sheeh CMU presid and James Todd, CMU treasurer. CHARGES DICTATORIAL -- Mr. Sheehan, a burly Liver- By ROBERT RICE OTTAWA (CP) --The federal inquiry into waterfront labor violence and shipping disrup- tions appears to be under way on two fronts--in public and be- hind the scenes. When public hearings opened today before Mr. Justice T. G. Norris here, one of his special Lakes Labor Violence) Probed On Two Fronts secretary- SIU men has been completed, although they may be recalled later, and the CLC now is head- ing into a new phase of its case, It apparently plans to call sea- men before the commission to cite their experiences at the hands of the SIU. J Mr. Sheehan testified Monday his life "wouldn't be worth a counsel was in Montreal making an on-the-spot investigation of the books and records of the Seafarers International Union of Canada, Junior counsel Marc Lalonde was making the internal study of SIU documents, apparently cent" if he had tried to organize seamen aboard ships of Upper Lakes while the company held a contract with the rival SIU. The union leader, a former waterfront patrolman for the Seafarers Union, told the one- man. investigation that the only pool-born man with a salty way of giving evidence, charged that the SIU was ruled in a dictator- jal fashion by its president, American-born Hal C, Banks. He also alleged that voies were rigged and members swindled. The testimony of the two ex- with a chartered accountant as an adviser. He is expected to make a sim- flar study of the records of the Canadian Maritime Union, a rival seamen's union trying to oust the SIU from Canadian lakeships. A hint was also dropped at Monday's hearing that the com- mission is trying to reach offi- Used For way the CMU could break the SIU's hold on Upper Lakes ships was fo sign a contract first with the company, then re- cruit the crews, He made this remark after Mr. Dubin suggested that one), 6f the problems before the com- mission was the shipping indus- try practice of unions and man- agement settling contracts with- Trawl Nets cials of the International Long- shoremen's Association, a union involved inthe investigation but so far not present at any hear-| Rough Fish WINNIPEG (CP) -- A new| WILL HAVE VOICE out reference to the employees. | ings. jmethod of taking coarse fish) Mr, Sheehan said that once! |from inland waters is proving] the CMU is "built and steadily WORLD BANK MEETING Chief F. S. Okotie-Eboh of ; ed the annual meeting of the | ton Monday. Nigeria talks with Erik Bro- | World Bank and International --(AP Wirephoto) foss of Norway as they attend-| Monetary Fund in Washing- RC, Protestant Talks Seen Mutual Benefit to break\understanding because |questions as religious thing may happen down the walls." The churches must "get know each other and share our for unity." ment of tentative talks between|various concerns," He urged his church to en- Roman Catholics and Protes-| He told the general council of/courage and pray for the work tants could lead to "mutual en-|the church here that talks be-\of the ecumenical council, an richment"' of the churches. Dr. Ernest E. Long, perman:| 7 a|Montreal and elsewhere pl gentle the | useful," but any permanent ef.|other churches attending as ob- By CARL MOLLINS LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- The general secretary of the United Church of Canada says develop- | World Council of Churches. "Tt must be apparent that we the liberty, to|mixed marriages and prayers |tween individual Roman Catho-|assembly of Roman Catholic lic and Protestant scholars in/leaders opening in Rome next are|month with representatives of} real dialogue" between thebe represented through the j}are living, if not in a time of nication with the Roman Catho-| churches, certainly in a time of cautious level of attempts to-| ing to them, desiring real com-| = dient chat cinoere ae tect could only result from "al servers. The United Church will t " .| churches. ota Helin Cad kd Protestants "must respond in junderstanding and with a pro- jper degree of expectation' tolnew relationships between the e ree | Polio Strains jlic Church, he said. new climate," he said. Ten years ago when he was a min- gy nog COUNCIL jister in Montreal, he added, "it Sparked Move | peaking on inter-church re-|was almost impossible to find a world council of churches, Dr.| tq Long said there is hope that De Ente rhmladed his au- health department official says|PP¢ John's second Vatican dience that relations with Ro- that only one of the three polio|©ouncil might produce belter/man Catholics remain at the virus strains in the Sabin oral | polio vaccine used in Canada }wards more understanding. --_ suspension of Sabin vac. B * B TO COMMUNICATE Nh eee ee f usinessman bac. \the churches "would not mean The Canadian - made Sabin) ~oRONTO (CP) -- Toronto|surrender of principle or con- vaccine provides protection|pisinessman Arthur Plumstead, |viction or indifference to truth, Type I polio is responsible for|iast Tuesday, returned to his between 60 and 70 per cent Of! home Monday by air from ye adios and mutual enrich. paralytic polio cases. |couver. Until he telephoned|ment." : The official said the depart-|home from Vancouver earlier) Dr. Long spoke on relations strain which gives protection after the general council's ex- against Type III polio. He said it was not possible to stop use of one virus strain under the tempts at understanding might) jany overtures for fuller commu-/Roman and non Roman lations and the work of the/noint of contact'? between che OTTAWA (CP) -- A federal led to the decision to recom.| Missing Toronto Full conversations between against all three types of polio.|§9 who had been missing since but caring for the others, listen- ment is concerned about the|Monday, he was unaware that|between the churches five days Canadian program as all three strains are included in one dose.|realizing what he was doing. |as we have known it." police were searching for him, Police said he had been suf- fering extreme mental and physical fatigue and had 'taken a train to Vancouver without moderator, Very Rev. Hugh A. |McLeod, said heavy Roman Catholic immigration in Canada jcoulc achieve "'the end of liberty | classes support Britain'sentry| GENERALLY CLOUDY WEATHER |St. Catharines.... |TOTONLO cesceesese WEATHER FORECAST REFER TO ILA There was a brief, explained reference to a com- mission letter sent a week ago to an ILA officer in Halifax, but so far unanswered. | Asked about the letter outside) the hearing, Charles Dubin, sen- ior counsel for the commission of inquiry, declined to elaborate. - The commission has _ wide powers, not only to subpoena witnesses but to demand pro- duction of pertinent documents and records, The federal investigation was ordered by the government after the CMU-SIU struggle re- sulted in disruptions and harass- ment of CMU ships in American|10 feet deep and 72 ft. long. lakeports and a retaliatory boy-| It was found that many fish cott against SIU ships in the|were in mid-lake and net near St. Lawrence Seaway. the shore where the experiment So far, the inquiry has heard|took place. A mid-water trawl from witnesses from the Upper|had to be developed. Lakes Shipping Company,| Mr. Witney says this trawl which broke with the SIU injhas not been as successful and April and signed a_ contract with the CMU, They told about violence, intimidation and har- | assment since severing rela- tions with the SIU, | When the Upper Lakes line wound up evidence, the Cana- INTERPRETING THE NEWS EEC Sides Like Split Over Suez | By ALAN HARVEY , The sort of opinion now mov. | Canadian Press Staff Writer jing against the Common Mar- Shades of the Suez crisis!|ket, the magazine adds,-is When it comes to the Common|"'very like one large segment of Market, it seems British opin-/the opinion that reacted so vio. ion is behaving just as it did/lently" against criticism of the jin 1956, Suez venture. It is "an alliance | Then, the Anglo-French inter-|of the elderly upper classes' and a success on Lake Winnipeg. The use of trawl nets is ex- pected to be of value in remov- ing normally unprofitable rough fish from inland ,waters ai rea- sonable expense. ' C. H. Witney, minister of na- tural resources, says the in. creased use of rough fish will {also be an important develop- |ment in the fishing industry. Using a 42-foot boat and a three - man crew, the depart- ment hit a peak of 2,200 pounds of maria and tulibee in one hour. The nets, designed specifically for the lake, were 30 feet wide, un-| are being made, | He said that in the first 18 days of the season 30,000 pounds lof course fish were taken, to be used principally as processed 'animal food, that further refinements now} ~| Paul, }running"' it will ensure that its |seamen members have a voice in negotiations. The Upper |Lakes contract was the first |won by the CMU and hence was different. | Mr. Sheehan said that in No-| vember, 1960, top representa- The Salah Eldin from Alex, andria, Egypt, and the Galila (foreground) from Haifa, Is- rael, are docked side by side in Toronto harbor. Both are unloading general cargoes. | ARABS, ISRAELIS TOGETHER The crews are predominantly : Arab and Israeli. --(CP Wirephoto) tives of the ILA the SIU and the Teamsters union met in Montreal to establish a mari- time trades department. This. agency, apparently a) Canadian version of the MTD of the American Federation of Labor - Congress of Industrial Organizations, was intended as first step toward a rival !abor federation to the Canadian La- 'bor Congress, he said. By HAROLD MORRISON He also said the aim was to| WASHINGTON (CP)--A state {gain control of labor in the en-\department official said Mon. pega --______________------ | Russian planes which flew over, |Canada were added to the Cu- | |tion, the official said. is that the planes in question dis- MONTREAL (CP) -- An 18th rentu b i ; Py DATO HERE PRS. Ot, He added that the department 'has made no complaint to the |dismantled and is to be reas-|~@" lsembled at the Jacques de | incidents. The early Quebec barn, an/Keating, New York Republican, excellent example of its type,|that the Canadian government Baie St. Paul in 1607. bombers or transport planes to Like other old barns in the|be added to the Cuban Air cedar logs. Joints were sealed| with lime mortar, held in place ANDS NATO ACTION The Jacques de Champlain|meeting of NATO ministers to historical village was founded|halt NATO trade with Cuba, group of Montreal businessmen| "It is intolerable for the Ca- who wanted to preserve authen-|nadian government to permit lvention was thought to have|the blunt old traditionalist un- \split Britons into two clear|skilled-laborer class." | groups. Politically-minded peo- ple generally deplored the ac- \tion, while ordinary citizens ap- plauded it. : Some commentators saw it as a straight case of intellectuals Munich |versus the proletariat or, more| : al crudely, as "the eggheads ver-/ Chamberlain, too, could claim sus the boneheads." |a majority, made up of the| Now, as the big debate of|timorous, the ignorant and the| Commonwealth prime ministers| unrealistic -- "the same dismal) draws to a close, the lines are| coalition that is opposing Prime/ said to be drawn in much the| Minister Macmillan today." | same manner. The British mag-| 4 separate article in azine The Economist, analyzing same paper says it is " a recent survey, says it. looks as though in general the young people and the well-educated} | | |day Telegraph draws a paral-! \lel with the British opinion that} supported Neville Chamber-| jlain's appeasement policy at | the) the young, the adventurous and the more intelligent" who want to go into Europe, while the '"'cal- culating, the traditional and th into the European Economic] 9jq» J stiaiy nd the Community, while opposition) comes from older folks and the| yWRGES PERSUASION | traditionally-minded. | ' _ ie Lord Altrincham, writing in | the en pe JMaponener |says British people in the mass Judge Quashes . Deportation | | Ord * lot the rightness of the C rder i. -jare against entry, whereas "top people' are convinced Britain TORONTO (CP)--Mr. Justice| . British sentiment may well be E. G. Moorhouse Monday|divided along the {should join. Altrincham rec- jommends a "'sustained and pas- |sionate" campaign by Britain's leaders to persuade the country lines sug-| should be In a similar vein, the Sun-|- . |charov, a 29-year-old Bulgarian) ~ had ordered Grancharov de- Cloudy, Cool Weather Seen Forecasts issued by the Tor. onto weather office at 5 a.m.: Synopsis: Predominantly cool, cloudy weather has settled over Ontario and there is every indi- cation that such will be the case for the next couple of days. Lake St. Clair region, Wind-|? sor: Partly cloudy and cool to- day and Wednesday, a few showers Wednesday. Winds northwest 15.to 20. Lake Erie, southern Lake Hu. ron, Niagara, western Lake On- tario regions, Hamilton, London, Toronto: Partly cloudy with a continuing cool Wednesday. Winds northwest 15 to 25, Northern Lake Huron, Geor-. gian Bay regions: Mostly cloudy and cool with occasional brief showers today and Wed. iad Winds northwest 15 to Timagami, Cochrane, White River, Algoma regions, Sud. bury, North Bay, Sault Ste. Marie: Mostly cloudy and cool with brief showers today and hy aaa Winds northwest 15 to 25, Forecast Temperatures Sault Ste. Marie... Observed Temperatures Low overnight, High Monday Dawson cessseesese | Victoria ..++++ Edmonton .sseeees Regina .sccssscees Winnipeg «.ccsess Lakehead «.+.+e+++ 3 [North Bay .. Sudbury . Muskoka ... chance of a few brief showers|Low tonight, High Wednesday (windsor .... today. Mostly cloudy and. cool with scattered showers Wednes- day. Winds northwest 15 to 25. Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali- burton regions: Partly cloudy and ¢ool with a few showers to. day. Cloudy. with showers and 65 65 62 62 60 60 65 | Windsor ....... oes }St. Thomas........ London .... Kitchener }Wingham ......+.. |Mount Forept..... Hamilton .4..++0» London {TOFONLO cesececeess 5 Killaloe Ottawa .. Montreal ... Quebec ... 'Halifax ssecccreees 66 quashed a deportation order|gested, though it against Martin Georgieff Gran. refugee. The immigration department fported after his conviction last |November on two charges of fraud involving $1,505. Before the trial Grancharov |spent just over two months' in \jail, unable to raise $1,000 bail. noted that the press comments quoted are all from sources that support the Common Mar. ket. Whatever the division be. tween young and old, informed or uninformed, it is almost cer- tainly true to say that a great number of Britons simply find it difficult to make up their minds about a decision that is |tire seaway from the ocean to/day Senator Kenneth Keating is the Lakehead. mistaken in his statement that Reassemble Barn >#" Air Force. 2 5 . The department's informa- | At Historic Site charged cargo and personnel in Cuba and returned to Russia. 200 miles northeast of Montreal, has b , | shite Prise carefully canadian government about the |Champlain historical village. The official was asked for comment on the statement by belonged to Bernard Fortin,/had supplied pilot observers or whose ancestors helped to found) guides Shor the flight of light region, it was built of squared|Force." | Demanding that the United by maple pegs. |States call for an immediate near the town of Chambly, 15|Keating told a special meeting miles east of Montreal, by ajot two Senate committees: tie examples of early Quebec/the flight of Soviet planes over architecture at a historic site.|Canada in order to supply addi- Local | Ownership Prospects Dim By DON HANRIGHT | mission on Canada's economic OTTAWA (CP)--The Toronto) prospects was 'that foreign- and Montreal stock exchanges|owned concerns in Canada Monday saw only dim prospects|"should sell an appreciable in- for Canadians getting more and, terest in their equity stock to bigger slices of ownership in| Canadians." foreign-owned subsidiaries oper-| Recently, the Montreal ex- ating in this country. change asked the presidents of And they expressed the fear) 94 of the largest subsidiaries to \that any legislative actions to|}consider such a move. Results to|were meagre. One firm sell a part of their assets to)was actually planning to make Canadians would create more| stocks available to Canadians, problems than the one solved./30 had not replied and 63 were They asked the law-makers to/either indifferent or had re- use extreme care in this situa- jected the proposal outright. ion. | Some foreign corporations "All we can do is to keep on)saw such a move as an inter- pushing the American company)ference in management. Others to consider it," said Eric Kie-| said they could arrange internal rans, president of the Montreal/ financing. Still others faced low Stock Exchange. Both ex-/ profits over long periods, changes indicated they had) In any event, the brief said,| been "pushing" in this way, but|"'there is much justification to with few results. |the criticism that Canadians do Mr. Kierans and Gen. How-| not retain shares purchased in| ard D. Graham, president of the) these subsidiary _operations."'| Toronto Stock Exchange, andj Possibly this could be overcome their associates appeared before) by intensive selling and the the, royal commission on bank-) growing awareness of Cana- ing and finance, now studying} dians of the political importance the entire Canadian capital)and economic advantages of! market. | holding such stock. | force foreign. corporations {tional equipment for Cuba. It is Intolerable that, in addition, the Canadian government should for the flight of light bombers or transport planes to be added to the Cuban Air Force-" When Keating's office was jasked for amplification of his jremarks--especially the state- ment that the planes had been added to the Cuban Air Force-- an aide said the senator was unagailable but that he had ob- tained the information from a jmnewspaper, He had not con- sulted the state department be- fore delivering his charges be- fore the special joint session of the Senate armed services and foreign relations committee. RCAF AMPLIFIES In Ottawa an RCAF spokes- man said Russian . speakin |RCAF pilots have been placed aboard Russian planes crossing Canadian east coast territory en} route to Cuba "as a routine! safety measure."' Three such flights were made last year and four so far this year. supply pilot observers or guides} Planes Over Canada Not For Cuba Force \thority and said the planes in- |volved were making round trips and had not been left in Cuba. |He said the carriers were civi+ lian cargo planes carrying cargo and personnel. | While the department would \like to see NATO countries lagree to halt use of their com- |mercial shipping in the ship- |ment of Communist goods to |Cuba, the department. has jraised no argument nor made any complaint about the Cana- dian crews aboard the Russian planes, he said. | The two Senate committees held the joint meeting to try to |blend congressional and admin- jistration views into one common national declaration on t he Communist military buildup in Cuba. Before the committees are proposals ranging from a mill- tary blockade and economic boycott of Cuba to a blanket endorsement of what moves Kennedy might consider. neces- ° sary. | NEW SLAPSTICKS LONDON (CP) -- Comedian "But to say that these planes|Bob Monkhouse is turning the are being added to the Cuban/clock back to make a series of air forcé is ridiculous," t he|slapstick movies, aimed at tele- spokesman added, 'In eachivision, He has formed a com- case our pilots have continued|pany with photographer Harri- on to Cuba with these planes|son Marks and producer Robert and returned aboard them. No|Hartford . Harris. The latter planes have remained in Cuba./said: "We will use all the old No bombers were involved." |4 "Furthermore, all the planes|tticks--custard pies, buckets of have been civilian transports.|water and the Keystone Cops ressed as British policemen." A Canadian authority here, reiterating the RCAF state- ment, said three Russian planes) had flown from Britain to Cuba by way of Canada during the summer, In accordance with in-| ternational practice and Cana-| dian air safety regulations, Ca-/ nadian pilot - navigators had been placed aboard to advise the Russian crews on guiding) the carriers to and from Gander) Airport in Newfoundland. | MAKE ROUND TRIPS | The state department official agreed with the Canadian au- SHORGAS| HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, relieble Ges Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 TRAVEL WITHOUT WORRY WINTER CRUISES CARIBBEAN Avoid Disappointment BOOK EARLY SAILING SCHEDULES AVAILABLE RS NITEREEL DONALD TRAVEL SERVICE j|AWA--WHITBY--BROOKLIN WHITBY OSH, 300 DUNDAS ST. E. MO 8-3304 RECOMMENDED IN 1957 | The subsidiaries issue is not new. A key recommendation of} largely an act of faith. the 1957 report of the royal com-) 1 The department had ruled that this period in jail should not }count toward the immigrant's {length of domicile in Canada. As a result Grancharov fell just |short of the required period and ithe immigration department was able to start deportation | proceedings. | Walter Broley, representing |Grancharov, argued success- lfully today that the jail period | should count towards Granchar- lov"s citizenship, since it was time spent awaiting trial and jnot as a result of conviction. Grancharov received a sus- pended sentence with orders to make restitution after convic-! ition on the fraud charges, At the immigration depart. }ment hearing in June he had | pleaded that to be sent back to} Bulgaria would be the equival.| ent of a death sentence for him. 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