CLC Calls Conference On 'Raiding' OTTAWA (CP) -- A special] | union strategy conference has) © been called next week by al, group of Canadian Labor Con- gress affiliates to discuss a counter - attack against raiding activity of the Confeder- ation of National Trade Unions (ENTU) in Quebec. Leaders of more than a dozen unions will meet behind closed doors here Thursday to put together an organized pro- gram of anti - CNTU action. Informants said the key issue at the meeting will be a cam- paign to win back some of the thousands of members lost to CNTU raiders in the last two years. Claude Jodoin, president of the 1,106,000-member CLC, set the tone of next week's meet- ing with a blistering attack Thursday on the CNTU and its president, Jean Marchand. Replying to criticism of the CLC voiced by Mr. Marchand Wednesday in a speech to the Richelieu Club of Ottawa, Mr. Jodoin said: "The tactics which have been followed by his organization in attacking other unions have been both nefarious and dam- aging to the workers of Canada and the unity of our country. "The CLC believes in the co- operation of people of all races, colors and creeds and is most vigorously opposed to fanning the flames of ethnic differ- ences. The president of the CNTU may make pompous statements about discrimina- tion, but the members of the staff under his direction do not follow these principles." 'Strike Service' TORONTO (CP) -- Premier Robarts refused Thursday to suspend the business of the On- tario legislature today so mem- bers could attend an inter - de- nominational service to pray for settlement of the Toronto newspaper strike. But Mr. Robarts promised that the government would do nothing to cause a vote while members were absent. NDP Leader Donald Mac- Donald asked for the suspen- sion of business so all could be at the 12:15 p.m. service, to be attended by leaders of the United, Anglican and Roman Catholic churches in Toronto. MALCOLM X SAYS FIGHT IN SELMA Malcolm X, black nation- alist leader, talks at church in Selma, Ala. Thursday to young Negroes taking part in voter registration pro- ests. Malcolm X said there should be more militancy in the demonstrations. NEW ARGUMENT Which PC Has Right To Call Convention? OTTAWA (CP) -- While the| controversy rages over whether the Progressive Conservatives will hold a leadership conven-| tion, a subsidiary argument is| | |convention. tion should call a leadership| Dissident Quebec Leader Leon Balcer contends the national ex- tends only the national associa-|stage to call a leadership con- vention, adopts the Macquarrie a n |th rgument that the caucus is too arrowly based to pronounce on e question. In a statement Thursday an- Peking Embraces Kosygin PEKING (Reuters) -- Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin was warmly embraced and wel- comed in Russian by his Chi- nese counterpart Chou En-lai when he arrived here today for a one-day visit on his way to North Viet Nam. But it was clear the Chinese TROTTER, GROSSMAN BATTLE TORONTO (CP) -- The hue and cry raised by a grand jury report last fall on conditions at the Mercer women's reform- atory in Toronto boiled over Thursday into a shouting match by two members of the Ontario legislature. James Trotter (L -- Toronto Parkdale) said employees at the reformatory had lied to Richard Lyall, the grand jury foreman. Allan Grossman, minister of reform institutions, leaped to his feet and demanded to know what right Mr. Trotter had to accuse civil servants of lying. The men yelled back and forth for a while until the speaker, Donald Morrow, calmed the proceedings. Earlier, Mr. Trottier had ac- cused the government of mak- ing a 'vicious attempt" to sil- ence Mr. Lyall. He told of a crit- ical letter Mr. Lyall, an insur- ance agency operator, received from the department of insur- ance, a section of the attorney- general's department. QUOTED MATRON Mr. Trotter said Mr. Lyall used his insurance agency sta- tionery to send members of the legislature a press clipping of a story quoting a matron who quit Mercer as saying the grand jury's findings were cor- rect. Mr. Lyall later received a letter from A. A. Halford, licensing officer in the depart- ment of insurance, stating: "As WATER, WATER EVERYWHERE? TUCSON, Ariz. 'AP) -- Pima County has an un- usual problem -- $24,715 in state funds for lake im- provement. There isn't a lake in the county. GE Employees Back To Jobs PETERBOROUGH (CP)--Ca- nadian General Electric work- ers were to begin returning to work today after their union agreed to a meeting with the company to discuss the use of a motion picture camera in the plant. the subject matter has no rela- tion to the business of an insur- ance agent, we must ask that you refrain from using your letterhead to deal with private matters." On another subject, Murray Gaunt (L--Huron-Bruce) rec- ommended to the legislature that Ontario's first two-year community colleges should be established in Sarnia, Barrie, Kitchener and North Bay. Lib- eral leader Andrew Thompson has proposed a 25-school com- munity college network across the province. A report prepared by the de- partment of Labor forecasted that, of Ontario's 10 economic regions, the northeastern region and the lakehead region will show the greatest percentage increases in the labor force by 1986. The province's labor force was 2,393,015 in 1961 and will range from 3,673,600 to nearly THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, February 5, 1965 3 4; Sai SCHOOL REGIONS SET Education minister William Davis announced his depart- ment has drawn up boundaries for the first five of 10 educa- tional regions envisaged for On- tario as part of a program to establish decision-making ap- paratus outside Toronto. The first five regional centres will be Port Arthur, Sudbury, North Bay, London and Kitchener-Wa- terloo. Two acts introduced in the legislature . Thursday provide that: --a coroner must be notified of all bodies donated to medi- cal schools for anatomical dis- section. hospitals must administer tests to new-born babies for the presence of phenylketonuria, |known as pku, a metabolic dis- jorder of childhood which re- isults in a chemical imbalance nee by 1986, the report Queen's Park Tempers Flare As 'Mercer Spawns Shouting in the blood and causes menta) retardation. RELAX with a nighte ar JORDAN BRANVIN Cc onerrv CHILL IF DESIRED free home delivery phone Jordan Wines jecutive "is the only body with) ; " | ; _|nouncing he will not attend to- lthe necessary authority to de laay's caicas oh the eve Ob o aowticiggie a Y ky BN ©o"* national executive meeting, he argues the executive should be The premier said the labor department has held more than 100 meetings with representa- tives of the International Typo- going on over who is empowered to call such a convention. One side argues the national! as the most repre- regarded this first visit here of a top Russian leader since Nik- ita Khrushchev came in 1959 as Workers who were suspended after they left their jobs in pro- test over the use of a time- graphical Union (CLC) and the since the strike began July 9. The newspapers --The Star, 'elegram and The Globe The T and Mail -- have continued to|MUS'. decisive part, sion. The decision should be ajof MPs and the national execu-jpears to have conflicts about ive "with the weight a little|calling leadership conventions. publish. CHIP OFF BLOCK j executive, sentative body of the party be--wANTS JOINT DECISION three Toronto daily newspapers|;,.en conventions or annual) On the other hand, Gordon meetings, has the power. the caucus of members o MONTREAL (CP) -- Michael|jiament with the latter body) mr, Macquarrie rejects out-| | | Another argues the executive ust play a part, but not the in such a deci-| ve and) f Par-| oint ohe by the executi Meighen, grandson of former|weighing slightly heavier. | Conservative prime minister Ar- Heath Macquarrie, MP for) Churchill, Conservative House| leader and MP for South Centre, argues | a joint decision of the caucus) t given a free hand to deal with |the leadership question "unham- pered by influence or pressure, Winnipeg|actual or potential, from any it must be|quarter." The party's constitution ap- heavier on the side of caucus."'| right any suggestion the caucus| has sole authority or responsi-| thur Meighen, has been elected|Queens and a member of the|pility in selecting or endorsing] president of the Young Progres-|constitution committee of the|narty leaders. sive Conservative Association of|Progressive Conservative Asso-| Montreal's St. Antoine - West-|ciation, takes a somewhat dif- mount constituency. ferent line from either. He con- Powers Of Sex Realized -- Sharp Starts OTTAWA(CP)--Sex has been officially recognized by the trade department as a powerful promoter of international trade. Trade Minister Sharp an-| nounced Thursday his depart- 'ment will sponsor a_ search throughout Japan for a young woman to be named Miss Japan-; Canada Friendship. She will be brought to Canada for a tour, then go back to Tokyo to be featured in Can- ada's exhibit at the Tokyo inter- national trade fair, April 16 to May 6. The trade department's! Girl Hunt budget for this frank promotion of trade through femininity is $40,000. Seven distinguished Japanese industrialists and leaders in the arts have consented to act as judges along with Canadian Am- bassador R. P. Bower and Com- mercial Minister R. G. C. Smith in Tokyo. Final judging will be at a, re- ception at the Canadian em- bassy in Tokyo March 10. Stops on the winner's tour will be Vancouver, Banff, Alta., Calgary, Regina, Winnipeg, Montreal, Quebec, Ottawa, Tor- onto and Edmonton. "I would be very leery of pre-| suming to speak for the whole} jof the party on matters of an} lextra - parliamentary character} Living Costs Soar Again OTTAWA (CP)--Living costs in Canada rose to a record high now causing anxiety to Conserv-|in January, the Dominion Bu- atives throughout the country,"|reay of Statistics reported today. ee Macquarrie says. | | "The calling of leadership} |conventions is a matter for the| \national association, a much} \larger body which by constitu-| tion must be representative of| jall constituencies in the country jas well as of all (party) organi- \zations as well." | Mr. Churchill says 'the leader who fails to have the majority support of his caucus is in a very precarious position." "T couldn't accept that the executive is the controlling in- terest and I wouldn't argue that the caucus is the controlling in- terest." ADOPT ARGUMENT Mr. Balcer, in arguing only the national executive has the Inecessary authority at this De Gaulle's 'Big 4-Plus' Call i | | | | | Not Subject To Fast Action PARIS (Reuters)--President de Gaulle's call for a big four- plus-Peking conference on the United Nations involves no immediate, French government action, foreign ministry sources here said today. Officials here said they were expecting initial U.S. objections to the proposal but hoped it will prove fruitful in due course. De Gaulle proposed the con- ference in Geneva of the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China to restore the UN's "equilibrium." French sources recalled that there was an initially hostile reaction to de Gaulle's 1963 call for the neutralization of ism here that de Gaulle's call for a basic reform of the world body, and above all a renewal of the security council's pre- dominance in the task of pre- serving world peace, will find wide echoes. g On the question of reforming the world's reserve currency system, de Gaulle focussed dis- satisfaction which -has- been widespread but mainly private in France and elsewhere. The subject of reform was raised notably at a meeting in August last year of. the Inter- national Monetary Fund in Tokyo. De. Gaulle's pronounce- ment was expected to give it a new impetus. France is in a good position) to call for reform, observers| here said. ' The French _ international payments situation is excellent,| with gold and foreign currency) reserves of more than $5,000,- 000,000, | In Washington, U.S. treasury officials said de Gaulle's pro- posal for a return to the gold standard lacked support in Eur- ope and had no prospect of adoption. | Several French newspapers said today some of President de Gaulle's statements in his press conference were divorced from reality. | | Indochina. They said this hostility has now been modified to such a point that French authorities no longer think peace by nego- tiation in South Viet Nam, with Communist China's concur- rence, merely a long - term prospect. REACTION NEGATIVE De Gaulle proposed the UN eonference at his semi - annual press conference here Thurs- day. First official reaction from) Washington and London was negative. CIA However, there was optim-! AND OTHER: INSURANCE JOHN McPHERSON 110 Cabot St. CO-OPERATORS INSURANCE May |: Co-operate in plonning your insurance protection AUTOMOBILE @ URBAN FIRE FAMILY LIABILITY ¢© LIFE ACCIDENT AND SICKNESS Phone 728-7207 and CO-OPERATORS LIFE The consumer price index was 136.9, up 0.1 per cent from the previous record of 136.8 in December, and 2 per cent over the January, 1964, index of 134.2. Five of the seven major com- ponents making up the index went up while the other two, food and clothing, went down. uncfficial. There was neither the usual ceremonial guard of honor nor welcoming crowds when the two leaders drove from the air- port to the government guest house where Kosygin is stay- ing. As Kosygin stepped off the plane, Chou told him in Rus- sian: "I am very glad to see you here in Peking." Both men smiled as the So- viet leader replied: "I am glad too: We met not long ago. It is always good to see. you." Chou and Foreign Minister Chen Yi arrived at the airport at the last minute to join the Russian embassy staff. and other Communist diplomats in an informal welcome to the So- viet premier, Diplomatic sources said the two premiers will hold talks to- day but the topics were not dis- closed. Kosygin is on his way with a large Kremlin delegation to the North Vietnamese capital of Hanoi. study camera agreed to resume work after the suspension ends, said William Woodbeck, business agent, for Local 524 of the United Elect#ical Radio and Machine Workers of America (Ind.). But Mr. Woodbeck said if the company continues to use the camera, the employees -- will walk out again. The company declined to say if the camera was to be in use today. Union and management offi- cials have tentatively called a meeting for Feb. 11 in Toronto to discuss the dispute. Today, 300 hourly-rated ma- chine shop and structural steel workers were returning to the plant. 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