Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 May 1967, p. 6

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o *6 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, May 8, 1967 It stands 66 feet high at the entrance to the main exhibit area of the Cana- dian pavilion at Expo 67 and it is supposed to rep- resent a maple tree at autumn. The '"'leaves" of the tree are flag-sized nylon 'PEOPLE TREE' AT CANADIAN PAVILION panels in yellows, oranges and reds and on the panels are silk-screen reproduc- Strict Orders Of Silence 'After Que. Liberals Meet By REMY d'ANJOU QUEBEC (CP) -- Differences of opinion between groups * within the Quebec Liberal party discussion at two secret party meetings during the week-|told reporters at the door of the bed jend, The party's 100-member po-|ing was held. are believed to have come un- /litical commission met Saturday Carol Mann Takes Tall City Open MIDLAND, Tex. jbers of the le, {Sunda Those attending the meetings\comment--at least until next|-- |were under strict orders of si-|Sunday." (AP)--Carol) and a caucus of Liberal mem-|meeting, March Briere, gislature was held}of id the political said: y. lence, Mann climbed out of a hospital) A party spokesman said: bed Sunday and won the 54-hole| "This order of silence will be $12,500 Tall City Open golf tour- nament with a closing one-un- der-par 71 for 214. She beat Mickey Wright by two strokes. Suffering from pinched discs jrespected. If there are those who do not wish to respect it, they have only to leave the party. "It isn't a gag, because lib- tions of pictures of Cana- dian life. Pans In Lake, (CP Photo) TO ELIMINATE U.S. TIES OTTAWA (CP)--A long-term goal of amalgamating more than 100 existing Canadian un- jons into 10 national industrial unions has been proposed to the Canadian Labor Congress by one of its major affiliates. The idea, advanced by the Ca- nadian Union of Public Employ- ees, could mean the elimination of U.S.-controlled international unions which now dominate the Canadian labor scene. CUPE makes the proposal in a 25,000-word brief to the CLC's commission on constitution and structure. The commission has been meeting privately with un- ions across the country and CUPE is the first to make pub- lic its views. Other suggestions in the brief include: / : Strikes 'Part OTTAWA (CP) -- Strikes should not be considered as a social catastrophe but rather as part and parcel of the indus- trial scene, the Canadian La- bor Congress said today in a brief to the Rand inquiry into labor disputes. Arguing that labor law is al- ready weighted on the side of management, the 1,350,000- member congress said outlaw- ing strikes would not solve any- thing. "Industrial peace at all costs is not a desirable goal," the CLC said in its presentation to Three Escape BANCROFT, Ont, (CP)-- Three occupants of a_single- jengine float plane escaped in- jJury Saturday night when their aircraft plunged into Baptiste Lake near the community 70 miles northwest of Belleville. on the} They were Howard Mitten, 38, dean {of Hespeler, Ont., the pilot and commission,|Owner of the aircraft; Kenneth Dahmer, 32, of Galt, and Allan make any|Dinniwell of London, Ont. Ivan C. Rand, former judge of the Supreme Court of Canada, sitting as a one-man Ontario royal commission. "The possibility of strikes must be accepted as a calcu- lated risk wherever workers are free to form trade unions, to engage in collective bargaining and engage in strike action." The 7,000 - word brief said Canadian workers and their unions feel that labor laws "Everything's all right," he Reform Club, where the meet- Asked for comment "The chief will Renewed efforts for a mer- ger of the CLC and the Con- federation of National Trade Unions into one central labor body, --Reduction of the CLC's full- time executive to two mem- bers from four, eliminating two executive vice-presidents. --Changes in the executive council to ensure all major segments in organized labor of adequate representation. --A major overhaul of the bi- ennial convention program, scrapping speeches and cere- monies to allow more time for general debate on current la- bor problems. Appointment of a woman to direct organization of women workers. Withdrawal of the CLC from And Parcel' Industrial Life, CLC Claims which have been biased in fa- vor of employers. By and large, the employer was left in a dominant position with fewer restrictions placed upon him. Unions still were re- garded by most employers as a necessary evil, to be eliminated at the first opportunity. The CLC said compulsory ar- bitration in Australia has been unable to prevent strikes. When workers were sufficiently aroused they would strike no matter what the law said. The brief said the remedy to the situation is not the prohibi- tion of strikes but in new atti- tudes by both sides. "These include encourage- ment for labor and manage- ment to develop better collect- ive bargaining and disputes set- tlement procedures by them- selves through voluntary agree- ment; more skilled conciliation services on the part of govern- ment, and a greater obligation on the part of the so-called es- sential industries to deal in good faith with their employees." He refused to say what he meant by "until next Sunday." CIA Accused direct political action, but re- taining support of the New Democratic Party. CUPE, which now has about 110,000 members among provin- cial and municipal employees, warns that the labor movement must drop its resistance to |change. "We accuse the employers, the old-line parties and the es- tablishment of hardening of the arteries, but we above all suffer from this ourselves," the brief says. *.. . Nobody is more con- servative, with a small c, than the average trade union organ- ization," CUPE argues that no union can operate effectively in Can- ada with fewer than 25,000 mem- bers. There are many existing unions with fewer than 1,000 members and all but a handful are below the 25,000 mark. Its brief says the creation of 10 industrial unions 'ton a Cana- dian basis'? would put each of them: in the range between 25,- 000 and 300,000 members. Each of the 10 would have a specific field of operation-- lic employees and the like. The brief pays tribute to the work done by American unions "some Canadian sections of in- ternational unions are seriously curtailed by international con- stitutions." Hikers 'Pileup', One Girl Dies ¢ |Strike Action Authorized CHATHAM (CP)--Strike ac tion against company member: of the Structural Steel Erectior Contractors Association was ap- proved Sunday by members of Local 700, International Associ- ation of Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers. From a paid-up membership of 569 workers in southwestern Ontario, 139 showed up and voted 131 to 7 authorizing union Officials to seek approval of strike action from union head- quarters in St. Louis, Mo. There was one spoiled ballot. Henry .Kobryn, of Windsor, More Fatalities On Air Flights MONTREAL (CP)--The num- ber of passengers killed during flights made on the scheduled air services of the world rose to 908 in 1966 from 684 in 1965, the International Civil Aviation Organization said in a_ state- ment Sunday, The statement, from the Mont- real headquarters of the organ- ization, a 'Jnited Nations affi- liate, is a summary of the an- building trades, transport, pub-/tral council. in Canada but contends that in|totalled about miatters of jurisdiction, struc-/U,S, currency during 1966 -- ture and political freedom) nual report of the ICAO's cen- Profits made by airlines in the |ICAO's 113 member countries $932,000,000 in highest total revenue recorded since the organization was formed in 1947. Turbo-jets, which account for nearly 80 per cent of passenger miles travelled, were involved in only about half of all pas- senger fatalities. Accidents to non - scheduled flights accounted for six fatali- ties in 1966 compared to 12 in 1965. " NEWCASTLE ON TYNE, England (AP) -- A 17-year-old girl died and more than 30 per- sons pale hurt Sunday at the start of a long-distance walk ie aimed at raising money. for an|@@hw@alas YOUR DRUG Oxford University famine relief NEEDS campaign, A police spokesman said 8,000 to 10,000 persons had assem- bled for the walk in a local park when someone stumbled on a slope. "There was a pileup of people falling," he said, "and the dead girl was at the bottom," Ambulances took the injured to hospitals, where seven were detained and others released after treatment. TORE Phone 723-2245 /IDE-DELIVE! FREE-CITY if JURY AND LOVELL Amalgamation Talked At Iron Workers Meeting For 100 Unions Into 10 Local 700 business agent, listed 9 structural steel companies in he London, Windsor and Sarnia area that would be affected. Mr. Kobryn said approval to strike is expected from St, Louis by Tuesday and strike action would follow immedi- ately. ' The local's working. agree- ment with the contractors ex- pired May 1. The union is seek- ing $1.27 an hour more for workers bringing the hourly rate to $4.90 in @ two-year con- tract. TORONTO (CP) -- Structural and reinforcing steel workers seeking a wage increase of $1.27 an hour over two years author- ized their union executive Sun- day to-call a construction strike. The 900 men will be able to strike legally Wednesday, but the timing of a work stoppage was left to the executive of Lo- cal of the International Associ- ation of Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers, The increase sought by the men would give the 500 struc- tural steel workers $4.90 an hour in 1969 and raise the pay of the men handling reinforcing steel to $3.71 an hour by that time. There were indications that any strike would be sélective- against particular firms--rather than general. However, there was a possibility that if strikes affected some firms, other members of the construction as- sociation and the Steel Erectors Association of Ontario would lock out their employees, Tire-ific buy! DUNLOP TN Fake Photo NEW ORLEANS (AP)--Dis- which will require an operation, |erty of action remains. It asks Miss Mann was taken to hos-|that the internal structures of pital early Sunday when she/the party be looked to and that was startled by someone knock-|no aid is given to the informa- ing on her door at her hotel and fell when she leaped out of bed. She wrenched her back and had to be put in traction. But she took some pills she had ob- tained from a Baltimore doctor and was able to leave and ar- rived at the Midland Country Club just before teeing off time. Miss Mann said she played in severe pain the first six holes, tion media." FORESEE SHOWDOWN Saturday, Montreal La Presse said a "final confrontation" be- tween the so-called moderate and progressive Liberals was shaping up at the meetings. Following Saturday's meeting of the political commission, Mr. Lesage said there is no danger trict Attorney Jim Garrison has accused the U.S, Central Intelli- gence Agency of giving the Warren commission a 'fake photograph" of Lee Harvey Os- wald, the man the commission said killed President Kennedy. Garrison's charge .Saturday came after the CIA pointed Fri- day to Warren commission tes- timony in which officials of the | | | | UTE WALL SALE ONLY 95 $ . EACH -but finally "just forgot aboutlof resignations and that the| 28ency denied reports published (7.75-14) it." icci " A here that Oswald may have , commission will continue intact: A with trade been acting as an undercover Mother Of Six Shot To Death - Husband On Murder Charge MAYN' H, Ont. (CP)-- A 33-year-old mother of six was "shot to death and her mother- in-law wounded Sunday despite Children's Aid Society, said the older Mrs. Scott grabbed at the we which went off, wounding er. the efforts of a social worker) to subdue a man armed with a rifle, Dead is Mrs. Doreen Scott while Mrs. Margaret Scott, 57, is in Peterborough Civic Hospi- tal with a gunshot wound in a leg. Kinley Willmot Scott, a 37- "year - old construction worker, has been charged with capital murder in connection with his " wife's death. |/DESCRIBES STRUGGLE | "I struggled with him, but he jthrew me on the floor and ran out into the yard," Mr. Coffey i | Mr. Coffey said Doreen Scott jran out of the house and jcrouched beside his. car. said the man shot her through jan open car window. | Mr. Coffey said he called po- lice while the man tossed the jgun on the porch and waited. He}: agent for the secret U.S. espio- nage organization. Garrison is conducting an in- vestigation of what he says was a plot conceived to kill Presi- dent Kennedy. Garrison Saturday challenged the CIA to produce what he in- dicated was an important photo of Oswald which he said had been "'suppressed for more than three years." He said Oswald and the Cu- ban with whom he was photo- graphed in Mexico a few days before Kennedy's assassination were "seen frequently together in New Orleans and Dallas in November of 1963." "It is perfectly obvious," Gar- rison said, "that the reason the true picture of Oswald and his companion was withheld, and a fake picture substituted, was GILLIS ABOARD THE BLUENOSE That's a blackwall price. So these Sporty Twin Whitewalls are going to be snapped up fast. You'll find you can get special credit terms. "Just say charge it!" o> ial worker, W. R. Cof-| . Scott i i '|because one or both of these] . Mike Gillis, who for the interviews Capt. Maxwell also has a weekly television ' ion Ea a4 gies disastins lect piecing ee ae ee men were working for agencies} last 20 years has been pass- Coggins of the schooner show, Fisherman's Log, 'family problems with thejScott children ranging in age|°f the United. States govern-| ing on wisdom and warning Bluenose II for his CBC seen in the Maritimes. "younger Mrs. Scott in her|from 4 to 14, are being cared) Ment, here in the summer of} to fishermen and _ sailors Fisgerman's Broadcast. Gil- ' home when a man with a rifle for by the society. 8 |1963."" in the Maritime provinces, lis, a Newfoundland native, (CP Photo) came out of a bedroom. | Maynooth is 50 miles north of Mr. Coffey, of the Bellville! Peterborough. $ Pool owners: | e G } Stuck THE _f ? : hy Wh ASSOCIATES for Cash: Quick to Start... et f iS ree atare 4 JUST SAY * : M4 $ b ' Quiet on the go! friends for if you can't 'CHARGE uk / i OC U I C borrow 50 dollars . 7 Automatic, radio, with black top. 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