Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Oct 1965, p. 3

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iA THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, October 6, 1965 2. CLC Keeping SIU In Cold Pending Convention Okay OTTAWA laid the entire blame for 'vio- : Red Country | Create Crown Corporation Papal Visit Of Post Office Says Judge More Likely VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The impact of Pope Paul's visit to the United Nations strengthened a impression here to- day that his next foreign trip will take him to a Communist country. The handshake and animated conversation the pontiff had with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko at the UN has added to this impression. Poland appeared the country most likely to receive the Pope. When he returned from New York Tuesday, the Pope said he would 'continue to work as much as possible for world peace." Observers took this to mean 'that he would also continue to travel, personally carrying the) gospel of peace wherever he felt it would serve mankind. Many in Vatican circles are convinced. that Pope Paul's three flights outside Italy have smoothed the way for a personal! peace pilgrimage into a Com- munist land whose political ide-) ology includes atheism. | "CHASM PREOCCUPIES | The Pope has made it clear, that he is profoundly preoccu:| pied by the chasm between Communism and Christianity. | Until now he has been ap-; proaching the problem in two , ways -- denouncing, repressive methods in Communist lands, and working through quiet dip- lomacy to improve conditions for Catholics living under com- munism. A third approach could be a personal trip. Poland appears the most log: ical choice for a papal visit be-| cause that Catholic country will) celebrate next year the 1,000th anniversary of its conversion to Christianity. | And there are reports the gov- ernment in Warsaw would like the Pope to come. The official Soviet news agency Tass came out with high praise for the Pope's UN spéech and said it will "defin- itely make a positive contribu- E. A. Clark hasn't missed a harvest since he was 10 years old and this year, at 'Bishop S VICTORIA (CP)--The "North |American head of the Old Ro- {man Catholic church said here |Tuesday night that Roman Ca- : tholic biship Remi de Roo eae strengthening worl |should be removed from his di-| peace. od locese of Victoria because of his Tass said the pontiff's words|'harassment" of seven nuns. | were "received as a solemn Msgr. Gerard Greeley, 24, of| of the church in those. countries) where it wields great influence|transferred." to achieve the aim of peace." The American monsignor, jformer Roman Catholic, is in| |Victoria to confer with Mother) ay or ormu a Cecilia Mary, 76, and her six} Ster nurs. To Save Nati 0 ave a 00 inc the old church--described y Msgr. Greeley as "the ille- WINNIPEG (CP) -- A Cana-igitimate daughter of Rome." dian industrialist said Tuesday) The old church broke away n | Mother Cecilia has said she plans to lead her sister nuns nimal-ten Lipapal Roman Catholics aa - 80th YEAR IN ON GRAIN HARVEST 90, he's still at it. Here he examines a field of uncut flax on his son's farm at hould Be 'For Harassment Of Nuns order, the Sisters of the Love of Jesus. In 1937, she converted have been told by Roman Ca tholic authorities to abandon the Good Shepherd Animal Shelter they have been running for sev- ory. Msgr. Greeley. After the meeting, g nuns were 'not any- more." NEAR SWITCH She said they had "not ex- actly, yet" changed churches.| But the switch is "not too far off." Mother Cecilia said she plans to take Roman Catholic lay peo- | ple into the Old Roman Catho-|gan moving into the mi |lic Church because "I'm mis-|shooting range on the s OTTAWA (CP) -- The third and final report of a special commissioner who reviewed sal- aires of 58,000 civil servants, among them postal workers, was made public Tuesday, Prime Minister Pearson said| the treasury board will be told to implement the' pay increases the report recommends for 8,000 Group D government em- ployees. He also promised considera- tion of two controversial issues raised in the report by Judge J. C. Anderson. y The first would involve turn- ing the 40,000-employee post of- fice into a Crown corporation like the CBC or Canadian Na- tional Railways. The second would mean intro- duction of regional salary scales for some Group D categories in- stead of the present system that sets national levels for all sal- aried civil servants. Judge Anderson presented the Crown corporation proposal. ENDS PATRONAGE If the post office became & Crown corporation it "would be insulated from politics and the last vestiges of patronage woul be taken away from it," he said. Postal rates might be ad- justed to make the department, which now loses money, pay its way if it became a corporation. An argument against the cor- poration idea was that "'insula- tion from Parliament" might be seen as interfering with the accountability of the govern- ment for the service, Judge An- derson said. The public might also object to such a change. Furthermore, Crown corpora- tion employees had the right to strike and '"'it might be very contentious ff, asa result of re- cent experience, the resolution faith. leral years and return to a pri-| Mother Cecilia led a band of nuns She conferred Tuesday with\animal shelter 11960s. Her Good Shepherd Ani-iguq@GEST TWO HEADS vie 4 Spine tow ; ley, | Aft a Mother/mal Shelter was financed with pledge to use the moral weightioid Bridge, N.J., said: "I de-|Cecilia modified her statement/money inherited from her mand that the bishop should be|last week, that she .and her father. Their Own Death-Sentence lof wage disputes were left to be settled by strike action rather than by aroitration." It was Judge Anderson who earlier this year was. called upon te rush his first report after a wildcat strike by postal workers spread to several ma- jor cities. The judge suggested the post office, even as now organized, might "adopt financial prac- tices similar to those of public utilities" to generate enough in- come to pay its way. The corporation idea won ap- proval from Godfroy Cote, gen- eral secretary-treasurer of the Canadian Union of Postal Work- ers. "We've been advocating this for years," he said in an inter- view. However, regional pay would have far more significance for the civil service. JUDGE FAVORED IDEA Judge Anderson said he fa- lvors the idea where there is "a close relationship to the rates of pay of employees outside the (CP)--The execu- tive council of the Canadinn La- bor Congress made ii official Tuesday that the Seafarers' In- ternational Union of Canada will not be reinstated in the CLC un- less a full-fledged convention of the congress supports the move. Claude Jodoin, president of the .1,500,000 - member 'labor body, issued a statement to that effect after the CLC's 20-man executive council spent almost a full day discussing the SIU's application for readmission. The SIU was booted out of the congress in 1959; by executive council action after it was found guilty of raiding the member- ship of another CLC affiliate, the Natinal Association of Ma- rine Engineers, Later the CLC set up an op- position union, the Canadian Maritime Union, 'and supported it in an organizational cam- paign against the SIU, BLAMED SIU A wave of labor violence erupted on the Great Lakes and tence the SIU. The said SIU Chie? Hal C. Banks organized the beatings of rival union leaders and the general harassment of lake vessels run by rival union members. As a result.of the , Parliament set up a readeatly over all Maritime unions. The . trusteeship fired Mr. Banks, who later fled Canada to escape a five-year prison term for con- spiracy to assault. Earlier this year the SIU of North America made formal ap- plication to the CLC to be re- admitted to the national labor body. triggered a federal inquiry that jcivil service possessing similar |skills and employed in the same regional or local labor market,"} i } OTTAWA (CP)--CBC direc- tors start a three-day meeting in Toronto today with their own death sentence a prime item on Treherne, Man., 80 miles west of Winnipeg. (CP) Sacked | her nuns to the Roman Catholic the priory to an in the early from /11 - member board since the \broadcasting was issued. \high on the blacklist. jthe publicly-owned corporation the agenda. : It is the first meeting of the Fowler committee report on The CBC came in for 'some severe criticism in the report, with its internal organization A key recommendation was for a new broadcasting author- ity under a full-time chairman. If- implemented by the govern- ment, this would mean the dis- appearance of the CBC board and the Board of Broadcast Governors. The report by the committee under Montreal businessman. R. M. Fowler also suggested aboli- tion' of the posts of president) and vice-president of the CBC. | President Alphonse Ouimet of and W. E. S. Briggs, senior vice-president, also are on the CBC board. | | | The Fowler recommendation was for a CBC director-general responsible for long-term oper- ations and a general manager to run the CBC day by day. The two would be directly re- sponsible to the broadcasting authority, which would have Ttem 1 For CBC Directors the CBC try to improve radio programming, an area which had become a 'neglected child" since the advent of TV. DISCUSS FOWLER -Most of the rest of the time is expected to be devoted to Fowler. However, a_ current union-management dispute also is due for discussion. This involves demands by the Association of Canadian Radio and Television Artists (Ind.) for all CBC writers to be ACTRA members or clear their scripts through ACTRA. The union also seeks a work guarantee by having the CBC pledge certain sums annually to be spent on Canadian talent. 16-Year-Old Swims Channel DOVER, England (Reuters) Philip Gollop, a 16-year-old ap- prentice engineer, Tuesday night became the youngest Briton ever to swim the Eng- lish Channel. Swimming through thick fog, he took 14 hours. and 31 min- utes to make the crossing from Cap. Gris Nez, France, to the shore near Dover, on the Eng- lish south coast. For the last 10 miles, visibil- ity was less than 100 yards and Philip was several times in the power to. hire and . fire Battle 'Sword | TOKYO (AP) Some 200 farmers with 30 bulldozers be- litary lopes of them. The CBC board, with nine) members from other walks of life as well as the two top cor- |poration officials, has regular |meetings each two months. The danger of being hit by passing steamers. A spokesman for the Civil] \Service Association of Canada) jagreed. with the idea of a re-| lgional premium, but only after) a national salary floor had been) established. Judge Anderson said a re- gional system would help solve) recruiting problems in some) areas. He gave as an example | a survey of ™ Ontario post of-|| fices that showed a staff turn-| over between January and May this year ranging from 18 per) cent at Burlington to 48 per cent) at Oakville. | The pay increases rec-| ommended Tuesday include a $360 raise granted all Group D civil servants earlier this year. For the 8,000 affected by the A'2% Interest Caleu 5°4% G.1.0's *Guaranteed Investment Certificates SAVINGS CCOUNTS lated and Paid Quarterly third report, total increases will/ range from $550 to $650 a year.| The latest raise is retroactive) to Aug. 1, 1965. The employees all were earn-| ing $5,400 or more a year. The raises to all 58,000 Group SAVINGS MONDAY -- THURS. 9 TO 6 FRIDAY HOURS . SATURDAY 9 TO 5 9709 D workers increase the govern- ment payroll by about $28,700,- 000 annually. HEAD OFFICE 19 Simeoe St. N. Oshewe Tel. 723-5221 In Vancouver; William Kay, national president of the Cana- dian Union of Postal Workers, said the postal workers would be pleased to see the post of- fice department turned into a Crown corporation. He said he would have to study Judge Anderson's tailed recommendations on re- gional pay. scales before com- menting, but that regional pay runs contrary to union policy. | CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST t } 23 King St. W. Bowmanville Tel. 623-2527 & SAVINGS CORPORATION Bowmanville Office Closed on Wednesdeys si Canada's growth will be re-ifrom the Roman Catholic|sionary-minded," |Mt. Fuji today in an attempt last was before the Fowler re- port came out Sept, 9. | The report and how it might} i tarded unless ents ac-\church in the late 1770s. | The missionary spirit of|to block the U.S. Army's next] tion is taken to stimulate im-| Mother Cecilia and the other|Mother Cecilia goes back more|practice firing of Little John migration and foreign invest-\six nuns are considering join-|than 40 years: In 1922, shelrockets today and Friday. eg ogy, Badamndy the tax bur' jing the old church because they'founded an Anglican nursing) Police warned the farmers tee gy f jo a ae ae ie 45 ag OLR --|move out of the danger zone) 2¥ ii a losed. E. Py Taylor, an official of . ' limmediately. But the farmers|ome. The meetings are Site , 100 major fpompanies, said in H h letarted. tillin ' .| The program committee, an intervi@w that Canada is not ump rey l S S 0 ace aan pees Reaetea, jwhieh groups all members of growing as fast as it should. Japanese leftists claim prac:|the full board, meets -- "My 'formula is very simple 'tice firing of the Little one gel agagA siti ec taal Canada should have a more lib- = t irocket, which is capable of car-| ie > drew praise in eral immigration policy and re Iran e onsen jrying nuclear warheads, paves! Fowler report for much of ped they (government) should stop. baa ithe way for nuclear armament|programming, in contrast to burdening people who accom-| WASHINGTON (AP)--A spe-| plish things with excessively) cific agreement provides that high taxation." Iibsedighece pp ager c i Mr. Taylor, in Winnipeg to gd ge sol 'a oP ba the attend the first meeting of Car: ecient faces surgery Friday ling Breweries Ltd. national for removal of his gall bladder board of directors, said Canada' johnson and mamphcky sand ae Stat pg arye ved had an agreement since shortly eign capie NS"\after their election last Novem- tion was being run as if it were bar providines ; an 'old, decadent country." 1 aa bnoringr aerate - pre dent would inability the is wotd--it linform the vice-president, and ¢ ing president, exercising the duties of the office until the in- ability ended. 2. In the event an. inability prevented the president from communicating with the vice- president, the latter, after such consultation as he deemed ap- propriate, would decide whether to take over the powers of the office and serve as acting pres- ident until the inability ended. 3. In either event, the presi- dent would decide when the in- ability had ended and at that time would resume the full ex- ercise of his powers and duties. The terms are similar to agreements reached between former President HKisenhower and former vice - president Nixon. The same phraseology had been agreed to verbally by the late President John F. Ken- nedy and Johnson What stands out in the rela- tionship of Johnson and -Hum phrey, however, is the kind of confidence the head man has in his stand-in. This was less Deals R TORONTO (CP)--An end to secret expropriation dealing by government agencies was called for Tuesday by the Ontario Fed- eration of Agriculture. In a brief to the McRuer royal commission on.civil rights, the OFA said that while it con- curred in the right of the Crown to xpropriate, its expropriating authorities should clean up their image. "The various authorities jhrow up their hands in holy terror at the idea of exposing their ideas to public scrutiny," said the OFA, '"'but we believe! it is time that we became ma- ture enough to recognize that if. our public actions cannot stand up to public scrutiny then, probably they have no justifica- tion in being called public ac- tions." Over the years the OFA has come to act as a sort of ombuds discernible in Eisenhower's re-!| lationship with Nixon was absent in. Franklin D.| Roose velt's consideration of Harry S Truman. Truman knew. literally noth- ing about what was going on in the White House when Roose- velt died. Gen. George C. Mar- shall had to -fill him on on the fact that there had been a suc- cessful test prototype of the atomic bomb fired, in contrast; Humphrey sat in on all of the major -d sue ine Siete has | NE ETRE cisions of tration. Septarian Dies In Hotel Fight PETERBOROUGH (CP)--An jlelderly hotel employee was dead and another man was in j;hospital today following a scuf- fle late Tuesday at a down- town hotel. } Robert Norton, about 74, was found dead on his bed at the American House hotel where he lived and worked. Grant Hef-) fernan, 59, also a resident at the hotel, was in St, Joseph's! General Hospital with a frac- tured leg. Police were questioning a man believed to be from Van-| couver in connection with the) incident. Mr. Heffernan was be- lieved to have been injured when he came to Norton's aid) after a scuffle developed in a} hotel corridor. | man for farmers disgruntled at the prices offered them for their mand by the Crown expropriat- ing authorities, the brief said. RED CROSS _ To strengthen the farmer's negotiating position, it called for amendments to the provin- cial Expropriation Procedures Act setting out a clear state HOME NURSING COURSE ment of. policy as to what-com pensation the former could ex- pect to receive. GOOD FOOD BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12 Noon to 2 ois DINNER 5:30 te 8 PM. FULLY LICENSED DINING ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER 27 King St. W., Oshaws Vocationa THIS COURSE IS O'Neill Collegiate and TUES., OCT. 12th Registration -- 7:30 P.M. | Institute FREE OF CHARGE And itjof Japan and will involve the country in the Viet Nam war. The farmers want to cultivate the land. Ite stinging comments about the bulk of fare offered by pri vate television and radio sta- Itions. But the report suggested "NORM" FISHER'S Meat Market "SN ee For Personalized Ae ¢ Holiday Week-End SPECIALS! arvien | | before introducing it in See! Hear Electrohome "Solid State' Stereo -- Stereo with the Difference 1965. HEAR PERFECTED "SOLID STATE" STEREO "Solid State" Stereo is stereo of the most advanced design -- replaces tubes with transistors. When properly engineered, "solid state' circuitry results in longer trouble-free service and improved sound. Electrohome devoted four full years of research and testing to be sure its solid state stereo was perfected, SERVICE BY GUK OWN TECHNICIANS STEAKS SIRLOIN and WING ROASTS BONELESS ROUND STEAK RUMP ROAST Tender BLADE STEAKS Boneless POT ROAST MINCED CHUCK STEAK 2 ,,;, 1.00 COUNTRY SAUSAGE 5... 1.00 3x 1.00 BOLOGNA "cc © FREEZER SPECIAL ¢ Hindquarters . Ib, 53¢ BEE Front Quarters Ib, 33¢ Sides Ib, 43¢ a a foc avttna & wropping @ Prices en Request for Red & STORE HOURS ~~ Open Mondey te Sai jay 8 a.m, te 6 p.m, Friday Night ti 9 p.m, se Norm Fisher's Meat Market 22 Simcoe St. North Phone 723-3732 TROUD FOOD MA a4 ST QUALITY MEATS HIGHE Fresh Killed-Oven Ready TURKEYS All Weights At Lowest Prices SIMCOE -- Grade "A"--Not Frozen 6-8 Ib. Ave, K ST. NORTH U.S.A. 4l TOKAY 225i ET, NO. 1 LEAN MEATY % BONELESS BRISKET POT ROAST BONELESS BEEF SHOULDER ECONOMY 6 ond 7 RIB SHORT CUT Ist 4 RIB PRIME RIB 30 49 09 a9 79 FRESH PORK ro BUTT FRESH. PORK ro sco SHOULDER LOIN END David's Ch BISCUITS oc. Mallow 4 49' 39 First G 'ni 57 BUTTER Brookside . 13 +» 24-02, 2-39: = em STEAKS om UUGUOSEGNGEOUUOUGUOUOUUESENTAEUCOUUAE OOD SUSEGSEAUSUEEN AA EA EET! Lean Tender = Red Brand SMOKED 79 PICNIC HAMS 09:

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