Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Jan 1965, p. 8

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£ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, Januery 12, 1965 MRS. K. R. SMITH, left, + a teacher at Gertrude Col- pus Public School, is assisted by Red Cross Nurse, Mrs, Cecil Marshall of Oshawa, during a recent monthly blood donor Clinic held at St. Gregory's Audi- torium, Mrs. Smith was one of 386 donors at the clinic. --Oshawa Times Photo surgeon - general reported Mon- day what he called encourag- ing. progress in getting Ameri- plored '"'the amount of ciga- rette smoking still going on." Surgeon-General Luther L. Terry of the U.S. public health service made the report at a meeting at which figures were given, with his agency's en- dorsement, that despite gains in "Canadians Are All Suffering" MONTREAL (CP) -- French- Canadian separatists in Quebec have correctly seen that their province's resources have been "alienated," but the same fate has befallen other Canadians without their noticing it, Pro- fessor Charles Burchill of Royal Roads University in Victoria said Monday night. The dean of arts at the fed- eral military university, also president of the World Federal- ists of Canada, was speaking to the Montreal branch of the or- ganization, which favors world- wide government links to keep peace between nations. What the Quebec separatists complain of, the taking over of their resources by English- speaking Americans, has hap- pened to all of Canada, but has provoked mo reaction outside French Canada, he said. "Quebec is worrying about the loss of ability to direct her own destiny, The loss is equally real in the rest of Can- ada but the rest of Canada lisn't worrying. They don't even know it's happened." Success Of Council Hinges On Report OTTAWA (CP)--The success|thur J. R. Smith, former. head of the Economic Council of Can-|of the Canadian-American Com- 'ada is likely to depend ulti-/mittee and the Canadian Trade mately on what the government/Committee, both private organ- does about the first council re-| izations. port, published Monday. The part-time council mem- president, Canadian Union of Public Employees (CLC). Mrs. A. F. W. Plumptre, Ot- tawa, national president of the --- Association of Can- ada. The council was created by Parliament on Liberal govern- ment initiative about 18 months 'ago to develop a consensus on the performance of the econ- omy, its potential and the poli- cies needed. This is an experiment. Should government, industry or labor completely ignore this consen- sus of the leading sectors of the economy there isn't much doubt that many of the 28 council members will quickly lost inter- est in their task, informants say. Council chairman is John J. Deutsch, 53, a Saskatchewan- born economist who for 30 years has been accepting tough economic assignments from both Liberal and Conservative governments. He is a former assistant deputy finance minis- ter and vice - principal of Queen's University. He has worked on five major royal) commissions. | HAD FREE HAND | Long before taking on the} $26,000-a-year job, it is under-| stood he had an influence in} shaping the government legis-| lation to create the council and was given practically a free| hand by Prime Minister Pear- son in putting the council itself) together. bers: Ian M. MacKeigan, Halifax, chairman of the Atlantic De- velopment Board. J. B. Estey, Loggieville, N.B., H. George de Young, Wel- land, Ont., president of Rio Al- gom Mines and former head of the now-defunct National Prod- uctivity Council. president of the Fisheries Coun-| | cil of Canada. | Robert M. Fowler, Montreal,| William 0. Twaits, Toronto, president of Imperial Oil Ltd. | W. Ladyman, Toronto, inter- president of the Canadian Pulp|national vice-president of the and Paper Association. _ _ {International B ro t h erhood of} W. J. Bennett, Montreal, vice-|EJectrical Workers (CLC). president and director, Iron Ore! wijjiam Mahoney, Toronto ge ty Ee nc 5 Sasa \national director for Canada of axwen Ww. mackense, Montithe United Steelworkers of real, chairman of the board,! america (CLC). Chemcell (1963) Ltd. | ae ..Roger Charbonneau, Mont-| Philip A. Chester, Winnipeg, director of Continental Oil Co. real, director of the Ecole des} Hautes Etudes Commerciales. A. P. Gleave, Saskatoon, pres- Joseph-A. Corteau, Montreal,|ident of the National Farmers' general manager, Co-operative) Union. a Federee. de Quebec. \, Francis G. Set, Bie . jton, senior partner: of Winspear, senda Vee it namo, Anderson and Doane. Marcel Pepin, Montreal, gen-| Walter C. Koerner, Vancou- | i jeter Chine eral secretary, Confederation off van > adage of Rayonier Can National Trade Unions. : Francois E. Cleyn, Hunting- Hugh A. Martin, Vancouver, ton, Que., president of Cleyn|}; and Tinker Ltd. jee aee Yves Dube, professor of eco- nomics, Laval University. Claude Jodoin, Ottawa, presi Killer Owns tary, national legislative com- |president of Marwell Construc-| Another Riel For N.W.T.? By STUART LAKE FROBISHER BAY, N.W.T. (CP)--Will another Louis Riel rise up in- the Northwest Terri- tories and lead Indians and Es- kimos in rebellion against the white man who allows the northern natives to live under conditions that wouldn't be tol- erated in the provinces? Are the churches playing a destructive rather than a con- structive role in the North? And in all the visions of the northland's future and the bright tomorrows that may re- sult from stepped-up education programs, what of the adults of today? Must they live out their lives in shabby housing without proper sanitation, adequate heating and electricity? These were some of the ques- tions asked by a group of prom- inent Canadians after an eight- day swing through the North with members of the Northwest Territories council. Prime reasons for the 4,000- mile trip that started at Hay River in, the Mackenzie region and ended in Frobisher Bay on Baffin Island in time for the Parliament of the North's win- ter session was to <Sive the newly-elected governing body a \first-hand look at the special problems in the territories. | It also was designed to make \the natives more aware of their government. Dinners and other social events were held in most settlements visited by the group! with time allotted for presenta- dent, Canadian Labor Congress. A Newspaper A. R. Gibbons, Ottawa, secre-| NICOSIA (CP) -- A self-con- mittee of the International Rail- |way Brotherhoods. tion of formal briefs, question- and - answer periods and in- 'The two other full-time coun-| David Kirk, Ottawa, secre-jfessed killer might appear anjformal discussions. cil members are directors Louis|tary-treasurer of the Canadian|ynlikely man to own and edit, Accompanying council mem- Couillard, former Canadian am- bassador to Norway, and Ar- Federation of Agriculture. Cyprus's largest-selling newspa- Stanley A. Little, national|per but then a lot of things Re-Distribution Of ay don't make sense on this island. That man is Nicos Sampson, |29. The first few issues of -his |newspaper Makhi -- meaning |Combat --serialized the gory story of how he murdered 15 = Js | 4 "OKA x é Ridings To Start Soon fasta. ose By MICHAEL GILLAN that ended in 1960. |sult in few constituencies ¢s-| Now Makhi sells about 20,000 OTTAWA (CP)--AIl appoint-|caping the knife. ments to the 10 provincial re-| To bring. ridings nearer to distribution commissions that/representation by population,| are charged with revamping\urban areas will be handed a the federal electoral map have/greater number of Commons been decided and only a@ feW!seats at the expense of rural formalities remain before the| areas, ape cos Job Begins. - | Political parties: will have to Commons Speaker Alan Mac-|reyamp constituency organiza- naughton, as a matter of cour-|tions--an organization task ex-| tesy, is writing this week to the |pected to take them from three| five party leaders to inform|tg six months when the new| them of his 20 choices--two for| boundaries are finally settled on| each four-man commission. learly next year. Commission chairmen, chosen) For Mr. Macnaughton, ap- by the provincial chief justices) pointing the 20 commissioners is from their colleagues on the bench, have also been selected. Fourth member of each com-|jitical strife. mission is Nelson Castonguay, the federal representation com- OBJECTED TO CLAUSE missioner. | He got the job when the New | Mr. Macnaughton's list will|Democratic Party successfully| be forwarded. to State Secretary objected to clauses in the draft} Lamontagne Friday. The cab-|bill that would have required) inet must pass an order-in-coun- the prime minister and the} cil to make the appointments years of trying to arbitrate po- 'copies a day. Its sister paper Nikhi, named for the Greek goddess of war, also sells well. Both bear their owner's imprint on nearly every page. Every day Greek - Cypriots pickup One newspaper or an- other and read long, garrulous editorials decrying Turkish be- Stiality, American imperialism and all things not purely and fundamentally Greek. Turkish-Cypriots get the same violently one - sided approach from their two daily newspa- pers. The 11 daily papers on Cyprus thing to keep alive bitterness live on the island. If the native press errs too much on one side, circulating extreme and inflammatory edi- torial opinion, the sole English- language paper -- the Cyprus Mail--swings the other way, jbers on the tour were Pat jO'Neil, secretary-treasurer of jthe British Columbia Federa- ition of Labor; Christopher Young, editor of the Ottawa Cit- jizen; Paul Deacon, editor of the |Financial Post; Dr. Richard |Glover, director of the human jhistory branch of the National |\Museum; Diane Rowley, 'gov- ernor of the Arctic Institute; Dr. C. S. Brant, head of the Boreal Institute of the Univer- sity of Alberta; deputy minister Ernest Cote and other officials of the northern affairs depart- ment. Could Be Used For Red Rockets OTTAWA (CP) -- Electronic equipment of the type an Ot- \tawa businessman is charged with selling to the Soviet em- bassy could be used for rock- etry, a witness testified Mon- his touchiest job in nearly two! probably do as much as any-/4@y in magistrate's court. David L. Maunder, president} jand suspicion among the 500,000) of Timberline Construction and| |Greeks and 100,000: Turks who|/quipment Limited, pleaded {not guilty to selling two Vidi- jcon tubes to the commercial counsellor at the embassy, con- trary to the Export and Import Permits Act. Dr. George T. Pullen, a spe- cialist in electro - optical de- -|eribed cigarette smokin leader of the opposition to name legal. one man each to each commis-| EXPECT NOTICE SOON Announcement of the legal deadline for proclamation com- mission members is expected between Jan. 20 and Jan. 25-- sion. This still smacked of political partisanship, the NDP said. The commissioners settled on|than nothing at all are drawn from the academic} -- --~_________ field, such as university presi- eschewing editorials completely.}vices with the Canadian Arm- |, Its editor spoke of bomb at-|aments Research Establish- jtacks on other presses, and saidjments, told the court he be- it is better to print a little bit|lieved such tubes were used in rocketry. dents, and from the provincial! civil services--persons such as chief electoral officers or sur- The legislation, passed late last year, is the first Canadian attempt to have federal ridings redistributed in a near ratio to|Veyors-general. population by an independent] The act sets a one-year limit body. |for reporting to Parliament. On- In the past a parliamentary|tario and Quebec will need most committee redrafted boundar-|of the year, while provinces ies, and a government majority on the committee often pro- duced highly political results. much less time. The, provisions for protesting Within a week after the}a corthmission's boundary set- proclamation the commissions] ting will require another two or are expected to hold their first|three months, putting the effec- meetings to begin. the politi-|tive date for new ridings about cally - charged job that will re-)mid-April of next year. with fewer ridings will need | CUT Your FUEL COST FREE! FREE PARTS FOR YOUR FURNACE --~ PREE FURNACE CLEANOUT -- FREE 24-HOUR SERVICE 725-1212 WESTERN OIL Co. Surgeon-General Still Unhappy About Smoking WASHINGTON (AP) -- The} weaning people away from cig- arette smoking, the habit still kills at least 125,000 in the United States annually -- and cans to swear off eg ag og even kill as many as 300,- ut at the same time he de-j000. The Tobacco Institute Inc., a spokesman for the industry in the United States, had no im- mediate comment. The session marked the first anniversary of the report by a special advisory committee to the surgeon-general which des- as a major hazard to health, and calied for "appropriate reme- dial action" by the country. Terry said that progress made during the last year in getting additional people to swear off cigarette smoking brings to some 18,000,000 the number of Americans who now are "ex-smokers." Reporting a drop in adult cig- arette consumption since 1962-- and indicating that perhaps most of it occurred during the last year--Terry said: WOULD BE MORE "Tf smoking habits had con- tinued at the level of three years ago, there would be 3,500,- 000 more smokers than there actually are today... ." He said that if, in fact, "noth- ing had happened" in the last year--as he said some critics have charged--"cigarette con- sumption would now be much |higher than it was a year ago --and it isn't." Terry said a recent national, random sampling of 3,500 house- holds had given at least prelim- inary evidence that: --An additional seven per cent of men over 21 have given up cigarette smoking since 1962 --thus adding to the approxi- mate 18 per cent who were ex- smokers at the time of the 1962 \surveys, --The percentage of addi- tional women swearing off since 1962 was less than that for men --only two or three per cent added to those who had sworn off prior to 1962. But this was the first time on record in which the trend has been down- ward for female smokers." Senator Maurine Neuberger (Dem. Ore.), who once smoked herself but gave it up, advo- cated at the meeting that '"'to- ibacco be taken off the list of crops the government sup- ports." TORONTO (CP) -- The Con- servatives may soon be with- out a national party, B. S. Mac- asey, Liberal member of Par- liament for Verdun, said today. Commenting on criticism of Prime Minister Pearson, Mr. Mackasey asked: 'When one talks of leadership, where is the leadership in the Conserva- tive ranks?" He told the Toronto Liberal Businessmen's Association that the Conservative party is "a party that at any time now may cease to be a_ national one, a party so out of touch with the quiet revolution in Tories May Soon Lose Party: Grit -- Quebec that unless some lead- from the scene in The prime minister's sensi- tivity to the problems of Que- bec have eased the pressure on Provincial Premier Jean Le- sage, Mr. Mackasey, an Eng- lish-speaking Quebecer, said, "Today, thanks to the time gained for Mr. Lesage, ow province is busy revolutionizing its educational system, busy ex- panding its economy, busy clos- ing the economic gap between Quebec and the rest of the na- | Window shopping? It's like window shopping in a store that has every- thing, isn't it? Reading your daily newspaper, I mean. It's where local merchants usually display their most attractive values--first! It's where they an- nounce their big sales and tell you about special bargains. It's: how national advertisers bring you news about their products, too. Yes, news. Daily newspaper advertising is news; Good news. Browsing through your daily news- paper, you can look for news about the products and services you're interested in. You can discuss quality, compare features and prices; and somee times make decisions that will save hours of shope ping around. One nice thing about daily newspaper advertising: You can read the ads you're interested in when you want to read them. There's no one.to stop you in the middle of a news story and make you read anad, The Oshawa Times AN INFORMED PUBLIC IS THE BEST GUARANTEE OF FREEDOM a SE eT ee ees a ee Secor ¢

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