2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, November 21, 1964 if ' i ilbig Ontario segment of Can- Canadian automakers effect of laying off Auto Unions To Have Showdown? TORONTO (CP) -- While strikes have been hitting the United States automobile econ- omy, slower-moving develop- ments in the Canadian auto in- dustry are picking up tempo to- wards a labor - management showdown. Contract negotiations in the ada's basic steel business are hardening simultaneously: Strikes have been authorized --but not called--at two Ontario steel producers and at the auto- making firms of General Mo- tors and Chrysler, GM's 22,500 Canadian workers have a strike deadline of Dec. 3 and Ford of Canada workers vote Sunday. Studebaker is in negotiations and the strike threat has not come up yet. So is the big im- plement-making firm of Mas- sey-Ferguson, with 8,000 work- ers, where contracts expire Dec, 15. The United Auto' Workers (CL£) is putting the heat on the as the union in the U.S, ties up Ford production there. The Ford dis- pute in that country has had the bout 4,500 Canadian assembly line work- ers for lack of parts. STAGE WILDCAT STRIKE General Motors of Canada had its first labor strife since contract negotiations began Sept. 9 when chassis. workers among the 4,500 night-shift em- ployees at its giant Oshawa plant staged a wildcat strike Friday. GM _ said production was unable to continue without them so it sent the rest of the shift home. The strikers were protesting a deadlock in negotiations, an- nounced earlier in the day when a conciliation board tabled its report. The men agreed to re- turn to work Monday, The, same conciliation board meets next week with Chrysler and the union--which has 6,800 workers there--and is expected te make an almost-automatic and quick no-settlement report legalizing a strike seven days later, Ford's Canadian contract does not expire until Dec. 1, but the decks are being dieared for the final stage of bargaining there too. The UAW should have strike authorization from its 9,500 Ford personnel during the weekend, and steps are being taken to get the conciliation board procedure out of the way. General Motors has assembly lines or subsidiaries at Oshawa, St. Catharines, Toronto, Wind- sor and London, Ford is centred at Oakville and Windsor, Chrys- jer at Windsor and Studebaker at Hamilton. ARE FAR APART Where the tenor of thé auto negotiations has been disclosed --in the case of General Mo- tors--the company 4nd union are far apart. GM offered the same wage increases as the un- ion obtained in the U.S.--going to 2.8 per cent in the final year of a three-year céontract--but the union also wants to close the long-standing gap with U.S. pay. A peculiarly Canadian com- plication is the UAW's insist- ence on some sort of right-to- strike provision in the new con- tract. Only Canadian automaker not touched by the current négotia- tions is American Motors, whose contract does not expi' until June. By GERRY McNEIL QUEBEC' (CP) Recom- mendations that would blend Quebec's Roman Catholic and Protestant educational! struc- tures into a supple and uniform system were turned over to Ed- ucation Minister Paul Gerin-La- joie Friday. : "A system, not two systems, but a system,"' said Msgr. Al- phonse-Marie Parent, the Laval University authority who has piloted the royal commission on education through three years of work, i First volume of its report re- sulted in establishment of a de- partment of education. The third volume, dealing with fi- nancing and denominational questions, is due in about two weeks. The 404-page second volume offers 192 recommendations that would transform the present system from nursery to grad- uate school, Most sweeping changes would involve the pre-university level, now cluttered with evérything from high school to classical college to trade school institu- tions. The report said these di- verse structures, plus an "an- archic situation" at the univer- sity admission level, often lead | Pearson "Unpertur About $15,000 Jobs COLONEL McLAUGHLIN RECEIVES RARELY-PRESENTED JEWEL Eminent Knight T. Hopkins, Past Provincial Prior and Very Eminent Knight Douglas 1 of Oshawa. and Malta. The preseatation was made by Rt. Eminent Knight John Wheeler, Provin- cial Grand Prior of the Toron- ber of St. John the Almoner Preceptory, No. 15 Knights Templar, under the Sovereign A new honor { has -- been bestowed upon .Col; R. S&. McLaughlin, He has become Domin- From the first man in Oshawa and one of five or six in Canada Great Priory of the ion of Canada, United Relig- ious and Military Orders. of to District Knights Templar, He was accompanied by Emi- Taylor,' the left are Mr. Taylor, Mr. Hopkins, Colonel McLaughlin, nent Knight George Taylor, Presiding Preceptor, Rt. Mr. Wheeler, Mr. Taylor. --Photo by Hornsby the Temple of St. John of Jerusalem, Palestine, Rhodes to be presented with a jewel marking 60 years as a mem- "It can be shown that the pro- posed procedure is distinctly) interpretation| suf- 15 blow to the government's anti-/captured 17 others Friday in als OTTAWA (CP) -- The canni- est politicians try to protect their rear by making their ac- tions conform as closely as pos- sible to their past pronounce- ments. Prime Minister Pearson may have got a new lesson in the need for this after the round of criticism 'whic hgreeted the latest of his senatorial appoint- ments. Reporters and columnists, surveying the kind of appoint- taries go on to document the nine senators named by Mr. Pearson, They emphasize that one was a cabinet minister who had become a political liability, three were party fundraisers known here as bagmen, one was a political organizer, another gave up his Commons seat so Maurice Lamontagne could get into the cabinet and three were provincial or national presidents of Liberal organizations. COMMENTS AGREE ments- Mr. Pearson has made since becoming prime minister in 1963, unanimously came up with the conclusion that he has violated his own precepts. Their favorite quotation is a television address by Mr. Pear- son last Jan. 5 in which the! prime minister called for a new politics to emerge. In summary | the aim of new politics was to) bend the party interest to the} public interest. From this point, the commen- Mount Named To Honor JFK OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada memorialized John Fitzgerald <ennedy Friday by naming a BS 00 on mountain in the ukon near the Alaska bor- der Mount Kennedy. Prime Minister Pearson, an- nouncing the step in the Com- mons, said the government's decision was intended to com- memorate the sad anniver- | sary of the American' presi- dent's death and honor his | memory : "I believe it is appropriate that Canada's memorial to him should be a mountain. A | mountain is solid and endur- ing -- and so will be his place in history." Opposition Leader~ Diefen- baker said the government's action epitomizes the words used about. Kennedy and about Lincoln -- "Now he be- longs to the ages," New Democratic Leader Douglas said it is amazing that "a man who held office for so brief a period of time should have left the imprint on his personality so indelibly stamped upon his day and | generation." | Social Credit Leader Thomp- | son said President Kennedy "made a greater impact on | | the world in a fewer number | of years than any other per- | son, at least in our genera- tion." Gilbert Rondeau (Creditiste | --Shefford) said president Kennedy's policies, prestige and acts live in the memory of all. NEED ANEW... : Ol, FURNACE? Call PERRY Dey or night 723-3443 HAVE AT Larry Nakamura (left) lands a good one on the shoul- der of Dick Tsuruda as they practice the ancient Japanese sport of Kerido in Toronto. In real life it would probably cut his collarbone in two--Kendo is the Japanese form of fencing in which bamboo YOU, SIR Staffs are used Samurai swords, thus making return bouts possible. Even | with bamboo whistling through the r instead of ste el, the duel ists 1 eed he avy che yates and face masks to absorb the blows --CP Wirephoto | instead of robe JUSTICE MINISTER FAVREAU: FLOODS AID REDS "BNA Formula Won't Martial I = 8 uu f e As Contining I Vi 7 N inister Favreau said Friday| night that the new formula for e SAIGON (AP)--The govern-jridden forest Friday as part of amending the British North Am- less confining than present con-iment proclaimed martial law/Operation Brush fire but met erica Act will not be as confin-|Stitutional conventions," he|today in six flood-ravaged cen-|stiff guerrilla resistance. ing as present amending pro-|said. |tral provinces in an apparent}REDS OPEN FIRE cedures. | Any rigidity produced by the attempt to halt Communist| The Viet Cong, hiding in the He told the closing dinner of|unanimity clause is eased by |" ne typhoons. have hit the ee hay nina it ~ ore ¥ songs Oe iuer ee < judicial inter- coastal region this month get tthe se feel ins y fir Vista. and world affairs that = white! bas "in the sual added 11 pow- mitting the Viet Cong to make|/mesé. The paratroopers were paper. with full details of thelers to federal jurisdiction and significant inroads. Highwayjordered out of the forest after proposed formula will be pre-|21 to provincial jurisdiction, Mr. |2nd hil peer ished pod ms We eee ane cs tenes i ha sa eat {SUL disruy . ed 2 rs s y pete) meee Oe yaad Ke ge ge ED such judicial} Viet Cong strength in the area|a helicopter In taking issue with oppon-|review to interpret our cinnti-{ace, increased esd 4g, s ies mage yee habe ents of the proposed amending|tution with continued sensitivity! raga at, Roope Ried or Vie one prone, an Snaee Cones - com" changing needs, |Communist war. The govern-|third successful Eagle flight in ay. Favreal Sd te ah inka se repre claimed the Viet Cong}as many days, a U.S. military Fdinsaliadt ettiotien' tts drhaesk the : infiltrated from North Viet|spokesman said. He added that na ¢ : a lage see TO PRODUCE GOLD }Nam, ithe operation in Quang Nam procedure would p veg Confed- Columbia Placers Ltd. plans} Meantime, 35 miles northwest] province west of Da Nang killed eration in a Straitjacket. jto bring its British Columbiajof Saigon, 7,000 government|117 Viet Cong and captured 70 The fonmula, worked out at! gold property into production|paratroopers retreated wit hlin three days. a recent federal-provincial COn-inext spring, President Frank J./their dead from Communist-| The government said it ference, would require a unami-|Sanelli says. The property has|infested Boi Loi rubber forest.|fered \ three dead and mous vote of the provinces and/55,000,600 cubic yards of gravel|/The unit entered the tunnel-'wounded in the assault age on all changes. affect-\as - ore-beari reserves, con-|----______ sm A ida esta Serta ae ing the fundamental rights of|sulting geologist George Hol-| the provinces, |brook reported. WEATHER FORECAST S flurri Cold, Wi old, Windy | TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts| White River, Cochrane: jissued by the weather office at|Mostly clear and very cold to- 0 a.m.: day tonight and Sunday. Winds | Synopsis: Steady or slowly \light increasing to west to north- falling temperatures, strong|West 20 later today. |west and northwest winds which} Forecast Temperatures |may at times reach 40 miles an|,ow tonight, high Sunday: hour or more, along with scat-| windsor x jtered snowflurries, is the win- St The mag jtry prospect for southern part); ~ fisisad of Ontario today LODdDN sess | be Kitchener .. Near Lake Huron and Geor-|Mount Forest ..... gian Bay off and on snowsqualls| Wingham .... may dump six to eight inches of | Hamilton lfresh snow. The cold weather/st, Catharine . jand snowflurries will continue|Toronto jinto Sunday with gradual slack-| peterborough -Jening of winds tonight and to-|Trenton .... | morrow. Kingston Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni-|Killaloe ... agara, Lake Ontario, Windsor,|Muskoka .. Hamilton, Toronto: Gale warn-|North Bay ing issued, Cloudy with clear Sudbury periods, windy and very cold|Earlton.... with scattered snowflurries to-|Sault Ste. } day and Sunday. Winds west to| Kapuskasing west northwest 20 to 35 dimin-| White River . ishing gradually to westerly 15|Moosonce . to 20 tonight and Sunday, |Timmins Lake Huron, Southern Geor-|, gian Bay, London: Gale warn-} ing issued, Cloudy, windy and} cold with snowflurries, occa-| sional snowsqualls and drifting! snow today tonight and Sunday. | ,| Winds west to northwest 20 to| 35 diminishing gradually to} west to northwest 15 to 20 to-| night and Sunday. Haliburton, Killaloe: Mainly cloudy, windy and colder with | occasional snowflurries today} and Sunday. Winds west to| northwest 20 to 35 diminishing | gradually to northwest 15 to 20! tonight and Sunday. Northern Georgian Bay, Tim agami, North Bay, Sudbury: | Sunny with a few cloudy periods and continuing very cold today and Sunday. A few. scattered snowflurries tonight and Sun- day. Winds west to northwest j15 to 30 diminishing gradually on Sunday COSENS & MARTIN Insurance 67 King St. E., Oshawa imerince | 220-7515 Res: 723-2802 of 725-7413 WHITING. E. For ALDERMAN A sampling of comment: Ron Collister, Toronto Tele- jgram -- "nearly all of Mr. | Pearson's appointees have this in common: They all qualify for political rewards for helping Mr. Pearson to power." Peter Newman, Toronto Star --"This. is political payoff on a grandiose scale, It has left the disciples of Mike Pearson's' 'new politics' disturbed and bewild- ered." Columnist-MP Douglas Fisher (NDP --Port Arthur) in the Commons: "I felt I had to draw attention of the House .. . to how inconsistent and how silly is the Liberals' claim to be re- formers and the radicals." Charles Lynch, Southam News Service: "A bagman's lot is not a happy one unless, as some- times happens, he hits the jack- pot in the form of an appoint- ment to the Senate." The critics usually point out that Mr. Pearson really wasn't departing from almost standard practice of the past, noting the occasional exceptions such as |Louis St. Laurent's appointment of a Conservative and an inde- jpendent and John Diefenbak- er's appointment of the upper chamber's first Indian. Mr. Pearson is said to be un- perturbed and unrepentant about this spotlighting of his choices for $15,000-a-year, life- time jobs. WILL IMPOSE LIMIT Solicitor - General J. Watson MacNaught told the Commons in reply to Mr, Fisher that the government intends to go ahead as soon as possible: with one measure of Senate reform prom- ised by Mr. Pearson -- retire- ment of senators at age' 75. bed" Some of the younger Liberals, attracted by Mr. Pear son's "new politics" outlook, are said to be upset at this indication their chief is prepared to play the same old style politics with senatorial appointments. Usually they are told that while it's true Mr, Pearson hasn't taken a new approach he hasn't used the old approach in any bad sense of the word. The men involved are mostly out- standing in some other field of endeavor than loyal party serv- ice. And there's still the worry that any radical departure from past practice will alienate loyal party men who have hopes succeeding to senatorial chairs. Mother Watches Daughter Drown cal mother was grabbed by by- standers as she pluged into the icy Mattagami River Friday to rescue her five-year-old daugh- ter. The girl slowly sank and disappeared. Suzanne Ouellette held onto a thin piece of ice for about five minutes after she broke through the surface ice and dropped into the river, but went under as a hastily-launched rescue boat approached. into the river to ge to her daughter's aid, but was dragged back. She made several at- tempts to get free, but was firmly held. TIMMINS (CP) -- A hysteri-|¢ Mrs. Isidore Ouellette leaped jj students up a blind vocational alley. WANTS UNIFORMITY It recommended a uniform 13 years of schooling in both Ro man Catholic and Protestant, English- and French - language systems, with six years of ele- mentary school instead of Uniform RC, Protestant Education Report Made Study" was proposed for the secondary level, New structures also were pro- posed at the univesity level to handle an influx of students éx- pected to increase by 22,000 in five years from 1966 to 1971 in the French-language system. Admission levels at university should be after no more than 13 years, allowing bachelor's degree courses to be cut to three from four years. It was proposed McGill, Mont-, real and Laval, the three ma- jor universities, concentrate on graduate and research work with Sir George Williams, Bish- op's jand. Sherbrooke z resources to undergraduate ed- ucation. Also proposed was ion soon of two new universiti¢s of limited charter--in other words, chartered to give bachelors' de- grees only--in Montreal. One would be for English- speaking Catholics and - would comprise Loyola College for men, Marianapolis College for women, Thomas More Institute, an adult education school, and St. Joseph's Teachers' College. The other would group exist- ing French-language institutions like classical colleges into a Mortgage Money? McGILL Broker Dey or Night - 728-4285 seven, four years of secondary school, and a final two years of school at a new "institute" level--grades 12 and 13. About 25 to 30 institutes would be formed, the government set- ting up public corporations to operate them, each handling about 1,500 students. They would offer broad options--ba- sic courses flanked by choices that would guide students into university or give them practi- cal professional training for em- ployment. Present structures like the more than 100 classical colleges would be invited "'to integrate"' into the new institutes, contri- buting teachers, equipment and quarters. Technical institutes, domestic science schools and all bodies now' giving instruction beyond the llth grade also would be drawn into the insti- tutes. In elementary school, promo- tions would be automatic and hasis on development of the student rather than upon exams and homework. Co - education was tecom- mended for the elementary level as an obvious means of VISIT braemor gardens (Stevenson Rd. N. end Annapolis Ave.) Community For Young Moderns and So-0-0-0 Convenient cutting. costs, and a "serious DRUG STORES. i OPEN THIS SUNDAY -- 12:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. 7 NOTICE TO LUTHERANS in Oshawa District If you desire information about the new. Canade Synod Luth- eron Church to be estabilshed in Oshawe . . Contect REV. H. FISCHER 177 Ressiand Rd. E. PHONE 725-2755 meee NOMINATION MEETING ROSSLYNN PLAZA CENTRAL 211 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH JURY & LOVELL LIMITED 728-4668 PHARMACY 723-4070 TAMBLYN DRUG STORE 5S KING ST. EAST 723-3143 SERVICE STATIONS OPEN THIS SUNDAY TOWNSHIP ON MONDAY, NOV From 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. for the proper persons for offices of R lors for the Township Council for the new Township School ship School Areas No. | and N clair's), No. 4 (Myrtle), No. 5 ( No. 7 (Ashburn) replaced by one Board, consist time and in the same manner pal Council. ation Meeting and govern th greater number of candidates, soid offices, are nominated a ~ No. No. No. No. No. No. 2, 3 and 4--The Dr. 5--Sinclair's School 6 and 7--Township 8 and 9--Meadower. 10--Myrtle Commu ember 12th, 1964 and w a.m. until 7 o'clock p.m. by a general vote of the Public OF WHITBY In the Township Hall, Brooklin, Ontario EMBER 30th, 1964 purpose of nominating fit and eeve, Deputy Reeve, 3 Council- and 5 Public School Trustees Area which shall include the prresent School Areas and School Sections as follows: Town- 0. 2, School Sections No. 2 (Sin- Baggotsville), No. 6 (Spencer's), These Boords of School Trustees will be of 5 members only, elected hool supporters at the same os the election for the Munici- All electors are hereby required to take notice of this Nomin- emselves accordingly and if @ than are required to fill the nd make the required deciar- ation, Polls will be open in the following places: No. 1--Mrs. Mabel McGregor's residence (No, 2 Highway west of Whitby) Robert Thornton School (4th Concession) Holl, Brooklin est School nity Hall 11--James Sandison's Residence, Ashburn in the said Township of Whitby on Saturday, Dec- ill be open from 9 e'clock and no longer. MURRAY ROBINSON, Returning Ofticer 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. R, J. TUMEY'S SHELL STATION 962 SIMCOE ALEX NATHAN'S 215 KING COOPER'S TEXACO STATION 56 BRUCE STREET WHITE ROSE STATION 38 PRINC T. GOCH SUPERTEST STATION 437 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH WINDER'S ESSO STATION KING and RITSO! TOM CULLEN'S ESSO STATION 288 BLOOR ST. WEST (Formerly Kemp's) George Brown's SUPERTEST STATION 334 PARK ROAD SOUTH CLINT'S TEXACO STATION WENTWORTH and CEDAR DOVE'S FIN 792 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH SHELL -- HANDY ANDY COR. KING ST. and ST. NORTH SUNOCO STATION ST, WEST E STREET N ROAD SOUTH A 'STATION SETEVENSON'S RD.