J 2° THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, June'27, 1963 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN oo aeue 'Pilotage Law O NEILL QUITS COMMITTEE CHAIRMANSHIP © For the sake of the record: Trustee Dr, A, E, O'Neill has not resigned from the Board of Education. ' He has resigned from the chairmanship of the tManage- ment committee in protest over what he termed "faulty procedural practices whereby 'the Management committee has not always been consulted on important business mat- ters concerning it.' Dr. O'Neill added: "In my opinion, they are going around the Manage- ment committee and these things are being handled by other committees," He said his committee was no long- er "an important one". His resignation was ac- cepted by the Board Monday 5-2. He personally voted in favor of it as did the follow- ing trustees--Rt. Rev. Mon- signor Philip Coffey, George Fletcher, Leo Glover and Stan Lovell. Trustees Lee and Shaw opposed it. Chair- man George K. Drynan ab- stained, The following trus- tees were absent -- Arm- strong, Saywell, Bassett and Nicols, Mr. Drynan pointed out Monday that procedural rules did not permit debate or discussion on the resigna- tion before the vole -- he agreed to amend the rules if the trustees so wished, but the proposal got no support. 4 Mr. Drynan said that a letter of resignation (from the Management committee) written by Dr, O'Neill had been dis- cussed by the Board in caucus' -- Dr, O'Neill said that he did not attend this meeting and that he desired an open discussion on the matter "so that the public would know why I resigned." Dr. O'Neill's resignation letter was written several days ago -- some trustees asked him to reconsider and withdraw it, but he refused because, he said, nothing was being done to correct the situation about which he had complained. ("I could not see how any move was being made to correct the abuses about which I was protesting," he said). Dr. O'Neill is a past president of the Ontario Secondary. Schoo! Teachers' Federation and was a member of the com- mittee that drew up the constitution of the Ontario Teachers' Federation Dr. O'Neill started his seventh year on the Board last January. Few Oshawa residents seeking municipal office could match his record at the polls. He led the Board race December 5, 1960, with a whopping 7,219 votes. He ran sec- ond December 3, 1962, with 6,766 votes as compared with the 7,162 vote total compiled by Trustee Stan Lovell, the leader. Mrs. Clayton Lee will take over the chairmanship of the Management committee. TARTAN TWIRLERS NEED AN "ANGEL" Remember the Tartan Twirlers? They are the cute little baton-twirling lassies, ages 10 to 18, who perform so well locally whenever. there's a big Parade, such as the Tracks Removal, Civie Auditorium, etc. The Tartan Twirlers, there are 30, have a problem. They need a sponsor, an angel, to help finance their proposed trip to Quebec next August 2-3 -- specifically, they want to g0 to Riviere de Loup, near Quebec City, for the International Pageant of Majorette Corps. The girls deserve a helping hand. They have been a eredit to the City, especially in such extravaganzas as The Grey Cup Parade -- they have won 20 trophies, including some at the CNE, since they were organized back in June, 1960. Interested parties should contact Miss Irene Harvey, their teacher, at 725-6122. THE ROAD TO FAME CAN BE ROUGH It only seems like yesterday that Don Crossley made his local debut as a singer at King Street United Church. It was nine years ago actually; since that time, the 25- year-old former GM Engineering Dept. employee has had a unique career as a professional singer. Nobody has tried harder than Crossley ~ son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Crossley of 792 Grierson -- to crash Canada's big- time television as a singer, but always something happens to keep him from his main goal, that of being an established star with headquarters in Toronto or New York Crossley had drawn rave reviews on the Torente TV na- tional networks since his debut in 1958, but he never seems to stick around ' His biggest inreads on the way to 'TV fame have been made in Winnipeg where he is known to thousands as "Mr. Television", where he has a weekly TV show, two radio pro- gfams and consistently high ratings for two years. His fan club numbers 1,000. He still wants to "crack" Toronto, where the money is bigger, where most of the network shows are made. LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE ' John DeHart, the indefatigable president of the fledgling Lake Vista Ratepayers Association, writes from Lake Musko- ka where he is attending an insurance convention. . . . Mr. Jacob Shoychet and his son, Sidney, of Taunton road east, left last Saturday for a two-week visit to Israel, K OF C FETES MUNICIPAL LEADERS St. Gregory's Council 2671 of the Knights of Columbus did a heads-up job Tuesday night in paying tribute to Oshawa's municipal leaders, elected and otherwise Their fifth annual Civie Night celebration was an unqualified success; like its predecessors, it did much to create good-will between the hosts and their public-mind- ed guests who are not al- ways received with such dis- plays of warm hospitality. The program does not place too much emphasis on speech-making (which was cut to a bare minimum); instead it accentuates the social amenities -- all in all, it was a splendid public relations job. Most of the visitors were household names in our municipal world -- Alder- men Hayward Murdoch, Ce- phas Gay, Gordon Attersley, Cecil Bint, Albert V. Walker and Norman Down, City Soli- citor Edward McNeely, City Treasurer Frank Markson, City Assessor Eldon. Kerr, etc, Hon. "Mike" Starr arrived just before the start of pro ceedings and was warmly applauded. Grand Knight Edward J. Power and Chancellog, Edmond Burrows, as well as their entertainment commitiee, are to be, congratulated. EDMOND BURROWS Needs Change MONTREAL, (CP) ~ Shippers! The federation of SK) Law- jand pilots, agreeing on little rence River Pilots, reptesent- else, are agreed that Canada's| ing pilot associations in five dis- laws on pilotage need to be! tricts along Canada's main wa- changed. terway, wants fewer civil serv- The Shipping Federation of ants involved in pilotage, the Canada, grouping owners,| imposition of compulsory pilot- agents and operators of Ships, age and more freedom for pi- wants a organization to run pilot serv-| own business. : ices, less power for pilots' asso-. The divergent. and yet similar ciations and participation by views were made known Wed. shippers in the setting of pilot-/nesday when both organizations }age fees-and training of pilots.) released briefs they are submit- --|ting for discussion to the royal commission on pilotage, which = stronger government) lots associations to run their|' Committee Will Meet waterways, The shippers, talking of stead- ily deteriorating relations and | steadily increasing pilotage fees lover the last few years, called for the establishment of a gov- ernment board of pilotage com- INTERPRETING THE NEWS Mixed-Manned - NATO Unpopular By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer There may be a chance--if only a slim chance--that Prime é Minister Macmillan will give powered submarines : President Kennedy an encour. The offer of Polaris missiles aging reply on his proposed) remains but the proposal now multilateral, mixed - manned envisages some 25 surface ships NATO nuclear force when they instead of submarines, each meet in Britain this weekend. manned by crews from at least But the consensus in British 'ree countries, government. circles is that the yepo INCLUDED | public since 1961 when Kennedy, in an Ottawa speech, offered to NATO Polaris-equipped nuclear- Concept is so unpopular in the gach country would have the defence department and among military men and parliamen- tary backbenchers that a Brit- jish decision will take more | time. power of veto over the use of |the nuclear weapons, The plus \thus is. primarily political, a device by which such countries |who guide ships in 'ports and By DAVE McINTOSH missioners to run pilot services. OTTAWA (CP)--The Canada- {t would work through local pi- | United States joint cabinet com- Jotage committees, with real }mittee on trade and economic autonomy and real power. Pilot! |affairs will meet this autumn fees in designated districts for the first time since January,| would be set by negotiation be-| Spoke to a brother of Negro Charles Evers, the slain Mississippi leader, Medgar Evers, as he gathering 'at a EVERS IN BOSTON memorial service on historie Boston Common Wednesday, Evers said: "We've died on all battlefields for democracy -- how long do you want us to waii?"' The legislature recess- ed and Gov, Peabody released state employees for the me- morial service --(AP Wirephoto) | 1962. tween shippers and pilots, as;-- External Affairs Minister wages are set by negotiation be-| Martin also said in an interview|/tween employers and employ. that the Canada-U.S, ministerial) ees. committee on joint defence will; The federation described: the meet before the end of this) pilots corporations as all-power- year. This committee has not) fy] organizations able to enforce held a meeting since July, 1960.) whatever fees they like for pi- Mr. Martin said differences in| jotage because they have a mo- the Canadian and American|nopoly and could tie up ship. jbalance + of - payments situa-|ping from the Great Lakes to. | tion affect many of the relation-' the St, Lawrence gulf. |ships between the two coun-| jl pilots have to,gbe mem- j tries: They must be understood! bers of the corporations or they| ;on both sides of the border if/qon't work, the shippers the two nations were to deal) charged jwith each other "in a reason-/ The pilots federation said it able and sensible manner." wants the pilotage clause of the) The Hyannis Port, Mass., Canada Shipping Act struck out] meeting between Prime Minis-|and separate pilotage law) | ter Pearson and President Ken-| passed. The post of pilotage| nedy had been a "down-to-| commissioner should be created earth" approach to the 'many! and the present pilotage author- |serious problems" facing the! jty of the transport department| two countries scrapped | CITES ACTION TAKEN The federation said it doesn't By JAMES M, LONG Mr. Martin touched on nearly want boards, but a single com-|. VATICAN CITY (AP)--Pope every aspect of Canadian for- missioner with perhaps two as. Paul VI has pledged himself to eign policy, describing how the) sistants, so that lines of author-/follow the path of progress pio- new government had acted in| jty would be clear and simple|neered by Pope John XXIII. this field during the '60 dayS)and the multiplication of civil! a6 vemarke @ith adininiiice of decision service jobs stopped. The COM-|tive experience and important Some of his major points missioner would have to be fully astoral reparation given him 1. The outcome of defence phjjingual since two-thirds of Hgts B ephedgadga tll toes Pope policy Maia by ca oe Canada's pilots. are French-| piyc xq] : | the Canadian Commons defence speaking. Dae a a i 'a. jcommittee should enable the! The commissioner's job would pba Hepa Oa a seksi lr government to help decide the) be only supervisory. of state. But Pius had under future shape of Canada's de-) The pilots rejected the ship- stood the value of the rich hu fence effort pers demands for negotiation of) man contracts and deep person- 2,.The government had de-| fees, and for participation bY | a) atisfactions of the pastoral jeided to take part in the UN/the shippers in the training of/\. os. hice edep | ~ : ; experience which he never had. operation in Yemen--about one-/ apprentice pilots. Pius first gave Giovanni Bat- jquarter of the 200-man UN mis- 1 {| tista Montini a broad outlook on sion is Canadian--despite "per-| ing the total to at \least $50,000,-) 1 world tram the Vatican's of. haps hazardous circumstances," 000 annually. : sre a : 3. A study has started on pos.| 5. Steps are being taken to.|fice of secretary of state. and sible improvements in Canada's) ward implementation of the de-| then gent ee 40 Milan a military standby arrangements|cision to establish a 12-mile| Pishop in Italy's industrial Re jfor the UN and possibl¢y.,co-| fishing zone effective mid-May, | i ' lordination with those of Wer 1964, . It cost Pope Pius his right- | countries, 6. There has been a lessening; 140d man in church administra- 4, Canada's foreign aid pro- of labor strife on the Great)ton. But it gave Archbishop grams were under review. The| Lakes since the government had| Montini eight rich years of pas- | $8,500,000. cut in the Colombo} made the U.S. better acquainted) 'oral experience that rounded iplan contribution last year|with the implications of the|°Ut his preparation to become b stor i is- shippi i <. Pope Paul VI. should be restored, again rais sh pping disputes There were paradoxes in his career. One was that he de. clined the red hat of cardinal just 10 years before he was elected Pope | UNSWERVING LOYALTY | But there was the underlying Trained in administration | and given vital pastoral du- ties by conservative Pope- Pius XII, the new pontiff has pledged himself to fol- low the path of progress charted by Pope John XXIII, In this second of a series, AP correspondent James M. Long, who has known Paul VI for years, reports on the pontiff's work as a Vatican diplomat and pastor. WEATHER FORECAST Continued Hot _Weather Seen Forecasts by the Toronto pub-; Hamilton lic weather office at 4:30 a.m. st Catharines EDT F 7 Toronto Synopsis: Temperatures a which rose uncomfortably close Peterborough to the 90s at many places in On-' Trenton tario Wednesday are expected) Killaloe .. te reach the same levels again) Muskoka . today in southern Ontario, North Bay Slightly cooler air is moving Sudbury .. into northern and central Onta-! Zariton rio accompanied by isolated Sault Ste. Marie... thunderstorms, Temporary re- Kapuskasing .... lief of this sort may reach the| White River.. lower lakes regions tonight or Moosonee .. Friday. Timmins Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, sexs Niagara, Lake Huron, Lake On. 'ario regions, Windsor, London, Hamilton,-Toronto: Mostly! sunny today and Friday, Chance of a few isolated afternoon or evening thundershowers both to- day and Friday, Continuing 'hot, Winds light. Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Al- goma, Timagami, Cochrane, White River regions, North Bay, | Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: Sunny with a few cloudy periods and isolated dhundershowers to day and Vriday. Slightly cooler | Winds light | | Forecast Temperatures low tonight, high Friday Windsor .. i&, Thomas | London Kitchener ... Mount Forest Wingham . consistency of loyalty, in his de- | voted service (o Pope Pius, and | his dedicated support of Pope John's program of progress. When he moved into the papal apartment of the Apostolic Pal- ace after election last Friday it |was almost like coming home for the veteran Vatican siates- ;man,. For almost half his life Pope Paul's office and his home had been in the Vatican secre- tariat of state, since 1924, soon after reiurning from his first diplomatic assignment as secre tary to the apostolic nuncio in Warsaw. He was then 27, His rise was steady, first un- der Pope Pius XI and then un- der Pius XII. Y 187 King St. E. ci € Seite, 65 65 68 60 fi5 Mb #0 60 #0 fo 55 50 50 50 GOOD FOOD Breaktast, Lunch, Dinner 8 A.M. to 2 P.M, '5:30 P.M. to 8 P.M, Hotel Lancaster @ Commercial ond Indust Sites @ lLeaseback @ Development Paul Ristow REALTOR 728-9474 a8 85 &5 a7 82 NOW IS THE TIME Ta glove that carpet or chest- erffeld cleaned professiorially. in Oshowa's Original! Carpet Cleaning Centre where fully guaranteed satisfaction is fi) assured, Phon¢ 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY $7. nee | Wek In 1937 he became substitute secretary of state. Pope Pius XII promoted him in November of 1952.to pro-secretary of state, an office in which he was the Pope's right - hand man in chureh administration It was a year later, in the con- sistory.of 1953, that Pope Pius announced. he had asked Arch- bishop Montini to accept the red hat of cardinal. The pope said Montini refused "from his sense of duty,"' preferring to serve the Pope in his office ia the secre- tariat of state INT TO MILAN 4 It was a sacrifice of prince- hood rarely disclosed) in the) modern history of the. Roman| Catholic Church, Pius obviously was deeply moved, A year later, in 1954, the Pope sent Montini north to Milan, as archbishop of the most important diocese in Italy outside Rome. History may record it as an act of destiny. But at the time Archbishop Montini wept. "Oggi Sono rimasto orfano," The newly-appointed archbishop said sorrowfully --'Today I have become an orphan." Yet on Epiphany Day of early January, 1955, when the new Archbishop of Milan drove into|~ his diocese, for the first time a} pastor, he had already dedi- cated himself to his new duties, He had gone to meet his chal- lenge there in the Red belt. But Two Bank Robbers Get Twenty Years COOKSVILLE, Ont. (CP--' Two American bankrobbers said} in court Wednesday they came) to Canada {o infiltrate the FLQ) and collect reward money by) turning in terrorists to police. Melvin George Brown, 35, of Houston, Tex., and Donald Co! cases and sent his beloved books, tham, 33, of Tacoma, Wash.,| were each sentenced years' hard pleaded guilty to armed rob- bery and abducting two tellers in a $10,000 bank robbery. The men held up a branch of the Royal Bank of Canada near here May 27 They wounded a constable as they hustled two bank tellers into a police cruiser and fled. "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YET, WITHIN REACH OF ALL" GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL 390 King W. 728-6226 Paul To Follow Path Blazed By Pope John his first words were those of prayer, of affection, of hope. Pray," he urged the people gently, "Pray as I pray--sthat the vi- bration of machinery 'shall be- come as music, and the fumes of the smokestacks shall be- come as incense." FIGHTS COMMUNISM Then, with the intensity. with which he always plunged into new endeavor, he went to. work to make it so. He sent out a call for priests and rounded up nearly 1,000 of them from all over Italy, He sent them out to the industrial suburbs of the city to carry the message of the church into the strongholds of communism, And he went out there him- self, The Archbishop of Milan put on a miner's helmet and went down into the pits. He went to the factories. And he went out to face the Communists in their own Red fortress, the sub. 'urb of Sesto San Giovanni, They were lined up in the workshops there in oil-stained blue overalls. Many eyed the slight, ascetic - looking arch- bishop defiantly. STRAIGHT TALK He ,hit out straight from the shoulder: "Let it not be said that reli gion is an opium which seeks to dull in men their drive for progress and better life. To the contrary, religion is the light, the glory and the force behind this hope." This was one of the first ef many of his dramatic 'speeches on social justice. He did not stop at visiting the workers in their plants and at their assembly lines. He went to their wives and their children in humble homes When Archbishop Montin| went to Milan he brought all his worldly goods in three suit ahead of him in. wooden crates. to 20 When he came back to Rome, labor after they|he still had the books, the three suitcases of meagre personal belongings--and eight years of the close. personal pastoral re lations that a pope would need in the new age of man COOPER'S TEXACO SERVICE Quality tune-up Auto Electric and General Repairs 56 BRUCE ST. 723-9632 410 RITSON RD. N. 725-8033 | JORDAN WF pS | as West Germany would get | Perhaps the government some degree of control over ;would have made up its mind/nuclear weapons without ac. jon the question before now. but! tually coming into possession of |for the Profumo sex scandal) them, The Kennedy theory is which has engaged the attention| that NATO would get its nu- of Macmillan and other minis- clear deterrent without prolifer. ters in recent weeks. | The idea of a multilateral force has been kicked around in Robarts Denies Joining Lesage | Against Ottawa RIDGETOWN, @nt. (CP) -- Premier Robarts denied Wed- nesday night that he and Pre- mier Lesage of Quebec are forming an "axis" to press fis- cal demands on Ottawa. Mr, Robarts told a dinner of the Canadian Seed Growers As- sociation in this town 15 miles east of Chatham that his recent statement in Quebec City has been interpreted in some quar. ters as a "gang-up" on Ottawa. The premier had told a Que- bec meeting that he could not find Premier Lesage's demands for a greater share of federal tax revenues too unreasonable, "Now that would indeed be a strange phenomenon -- a Tory- Grit axis against a Grit admin. istration,"" Mr. Robarts com- mented, "The fact.is that Mr. Lesage, in accepting his responsibilities in Quebec, and I, accepting my responsibilities in Ontario, share common, problems in planning the present and future develop- ment of our respective prov. inces."" Both provinces need vast sums for schools, hospitals, |highways, power developments and other basic items, he said. "However, I believe sincerely that there must be wholehearted co-operation between all the governments of Canada in the development and implementa. tion of policies which are de. signed to move our country for- ward to bigher goals, "TL can think of nothing more futile than the bickering of par- tisan politics when we are en- deavoring to find solutions to many problems that beset us at the federal-provincial level." ation of nuclear weapons, Kennedy's unequivocal assur- ances to the West Germans during his current European tour that the United States is in Europe to stay had its im- pact in Britain. The feeling seems to be growing that Brit- ain would make a_ serious political mistake by rejecting the much-discussed force, now called the MLF. Two Conservative London newspapers -- The Daily Mail and The Financial Times--took up this theme Wednesday. It is noted that Biitain lost its chance to become a founder- member of the European Com- |mon Market only to be repulsed |when it tried to join after the market became a going con. cern, Would it be wise to spur |membership in another Atiantie } club?" Kennedy obviously has tried to knock the props from under President de Gaulle's thesis of |a Europe dominated by France jwith an independent French {nuclear deterrent, PLEASED BRITONS This caused considerable sat- isfaction in Britain and support- ers of the MLF are asking why the government is not support- . |ing the NATO force as a meas- ure to isolate de Gaulle, if | nothing else. | It is obvious te correspond- }ents that officials of the foreign jOffice take a different attitude |toward the MLF from that of the defence department Pio foreign office is worried | aBout what will happen !f Brit- jain doesn't go in--particularly if Kennedy pushes through with the plan in any case. It is noted jthat Macmillan agreed six |months ago In Nassau to the principle of a multilateral force. Military men, however, say the West already has plenty of nuclear missiles to destroy the Soviet _Union or any other potential enemy. The proposed | fleet would be merely an expen- 'sive "luxury," vulnerable to | attack. Special Weekly DIXON'S OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER 30 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 Message To Members Of CHAMBERS FOOD CLUB -- 114 wo 145 190 The "makings' of a fine cigarette! Swerce vie! f ALWAYS FRESH IN 2 LB, TIN Famous for mildness and fine full flavour! ? CIGARETTE TOBACCO AND HANDY POCKET PACKI