2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, Merch 17, 1964 e GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN Cypriots Watch 'Peace Role Terms | NICOSIA (AP)--There's anew, 3. Will the British, canadian, = "AB" TAYLOR OFF TO ATLANTIC CITY UAW POW-WOW President Albert "Ab" Taylor of Local 222, UAW-CLC, will head a 20-man delegation from Oshawa and district to the annual Policy-making Convention of the UAW in Atlantic City, N.J., this week. The 37-year-old Taylor elected last June has once before been a delegate of the Local to this important meeting. He will be accom- panied by the following © delegates: 15 from _ the 1 GM unit; two from Duplate Canada Ltd.; one from On- tario Steel Producis Co. Ltd.; and two from Hou- ~ daille Industries Ltd. Editor John Brady of The Oshaworker (official organ of the 14,800-member Local) has a unique plan for the next edition, deadline of which is March 26--some of the president's and his own) will be sent from the New which columns (including the AB. TAYLOR Jersey will allow for the latest coverage. convention, MORE PROS AND CONS ON WARD SYSTEM For the sake of the record -- City Clerk Roy Barrand said today an aldermanic can- didate need not be resident in a ward in which he was.run- ning, if he qualified otherwise under the Ontario Municipal act (as a property owner, British subject and resided. within five miles of the City.) Also, it would not be necessary for him to own property in said ward. There has been some confusion on this point on and oft Council, including this department. For instance, Alderman Norman Down, southeast, could run in some north-of-King ward, and his sev- en northeast Council colleagues could also stand in distant wards. It is understandable that memories are foggy on some details of a system. discarded here in the mid-1930's. The growing clamor for a return to the ward system has been prompted primarily by the belief there is a need for stronger regional representation on Council -- some vet- eran observers of the municipal scene scoff at such proposal as "a retrogade step municipally speaking, 'but it is diffi- cult to ignore influential opinions to the contrary, including that 420-name cross-city petition of last September for a ward system plebiscite at the next municipal election. The successful candidate need not come from the ward . he represents, but he would have a moral obligation to rep- resent that ward to the best of his: ability (otherwise he could not expect to be re-elected there.) What is urgently needed in Oshawa is a campaign of education on the ward system, a refresher course, so to speak, so that the electorate would be in a better position to assess it accurately. The fact that Gouncil has not yet acted officially on the 420-name petition on its agenda since last October naturally has caused concern in some official circles. Will Council ignore the request for a plebiscite al- together or will it order one so late it will be impossible for any effect publicity or education program. Alderman Cliff Pilkey stood up in open Council several months ago and hinted that City Solicitor Edward G. Mc- Neely should be instructed to gather some pertinent data on the subject (including an appraisal of the legal ramifications), but he got no support -- to this day, no official request has been made by Council to Mr. McNeely for such information. What many taxpayers want is the right to be able to vote on the matter in a plebiscite, regardless of what their vote maybe; they don't want Council to decide the issue for them. There could be a Board of Control for Oshawa under the ward system after the population hit the 100,000 mark; between 45,000 and 100,000 such a board could be elected after endorsation at a plebiscite and passage of a bylaw. A Toronto newspaperman '(a close observer of Metro's municipal scene) told this department last week that the Queen City's ward system tended to make the aldermen too "parochial" because they had to keep a closer eye on the needs of their ward than would otherwise be the case. This observation may be true, but doesn't suffer from arochialism?"' oo much, in our Oshawa's council Too little is as bad We do not share the belief that present crop of aldermen, man for man, is. alert to. the over-all problems of the city (as has been claimed by some of their supporters.) : too litthe "pé as our opinion, In fairness to Alderman Gordon column of March 12 against the ward neither am I for time to study Attersley -- he said our tended to create the impression he was system. 'I am not Lopposed to the system, it at this time, at least until I have had it further,' he said t LITTLE NOTES FROM. HERE AND THERE The annual Dinner of Unit 42, the Canadian Corps As- sociation, drew than to the clubrooms Saturday night, including dent Leslie Crooks of Hamilton who heads tario ,.command ('Oshawa is the 'most hospitable of all the units in the Canadian Corps,' he said.) Ma salvation Army, the Corps' padre, international situation" in Cyprus and performed by Canadian troops. Speech- curtailed somewhat at this year's dinner. Poli- tical repre ("Mike' Starr, MP; Albert V, -Walker, MPP, and man John Brady, were all present, but none was invited to speak.) . Members of the Sergeants' Mess of the Ontario Regiment accorded Joseph Homes, former Mess president, a rousing reception at the spaghetti dinner in his honor Saturday night, with standing room tHe order of the day. It was a fitting tribute to a man who worked hard in bygone years to make the Mess a happy place to visit. Nkrumah Talks more Pre O 15 the Corps r Fred Lewis of th spoke of the 'tense UN making was the role to be ntatives Alderr Britain, Spain and Portugal "by \suspicious character in embat-'Irish and Swedish soldiers of; itled Cyprus today and his name;UN force have the right to it jis "terms of reference." challenge a Greek government | The expression has filtered) soldier waving a rifle and make. \through this multilingual island|him stand to? 'ever since the United Nations 4. Who is to decide who is a Provinces May Get 'Veterans Hospitals. stepped into the civil conflict/joyal Cypriot and a rebel. The jand by so doing appeared tO Greek-Cypriots claim they, as |have stopped Greek- and Turk-|the 80 per cent majority, have jish-Cypriots from' killing each) the only legitimate government other. : status and Turkish-Cypriots are United Nations forces from) rebels. How is such a decision |Canada are assembling here,|tg he made at 2 gunpoint bar- joining British troops, and the) yjey? Cypriots as well as govern: 5, where does United Nations jments in Athens and anara authority start and where does are watching to determine Just! iy. authority of President Ma- what the United Nations intends karios' government end? 5 to do aside from merely "keep- ing the nena" ! 6. If the Greek ambassador Senior officers and top civil- Says one thing, the Turkish am- jans engaged in the complex bassador says another and the |problem inherited by the United Cypriot government says a Nations all said Monday they third, what decision do United would be bound by their "'terms| Nations officials then make? of reference," but none was'., oRIN are i he " NOT DEFINED prepared to say what that These questions all come un-; MEBN, der 'terms of references' and: ORDERS UNCERTAIN no one here seems to know Terms of reference are in fact What boundaries have been Ge orders. Specific orders to fined, if in fact they have been.' United Nations commanders) The general dictate is to re- are still up in the air. store peace and end the civil Questions being asked now conflict. That ill bwe done by; jare: terms of reference stretching 1. Will all Greek-Cypriots, al! the way down from UN Sec- who control the government,|rtary-General U Thant to a a powerful and angry minority) blue beret. weapon, be disarmed? 2. Are United Nations forces, ambassador to second secretary -- including at present British and|in various embassies, the sub- Canadians and eventually Irish| ject of terms of reference was and Swedish, under instructions being discussed here. Most to disarm all elements and be|agreed they would like to sub- the only true police force of the stitute another character for it island? named "spell out.' braces DE GAULLE GREETED IN MEXICO President Charles President de and Turkish-Cypriots, who wield Corporal. or private in his new) Gaulle, left, of France em- Adolfo From general to private, from| Lopez Mateos as the French 'Soviet Attacks woweint Chinese Renew Chief of State arrives at the on a four-day official visit. (AP Wirephoto) Gabon Clears U:S.. Of Plot Charges LIBREVILLE (AP)--Gabon's| police were withdrawn to bar- dian |President Leon Mba said Mon-| racks | | MOSCOW (AP)--A delegationkeeps in contact with foreign from Communist Romania|/Communist parties. talked to Soviet Premier Khrushchev Monday on the way back from what was believed to have been a peace-making mis- sion to Peking. And there was jstrong indication the Romanians learried bad news. While' the Romanians met with Khrushchev at Gagra on the Black Sea, Communist China renewed its attack on the Soviet leadership. So did Alba- nia, Peking's ideological ally in Europe. Some diplomats in Moscow speculated that the news brought back by the Romanians made clear that patching up the Soviet-Chinese quarrel is impos- sible at this time and Khrush- jchev will speak out soon. Some |international Communist lead- jers believe peace in the camp lis impossible. 5 | The Romanian delega- tion, headed by Premier Gheor- ghe Maurer, flew to Gagra Sun- day, after' a week's stay in China, Soviet sources said they made the trip with the knowl- edge of Soviet party leaders |who have been seeking a way jout of the increasingly bitter deadlock between Chinese and Soviet leaders over the best means to communize the world FLEW HOME A brief dispatch by the Soviet 'news agency Tass reported the delegation talked to Khrushchev and other party leaders in Gagra, then flew home to Bu- charest, directly across the Black Sea from Gagra "Representatives of the two parties exchanged opinions on questions of mutual interest re- lating to the struggle for strengthening the unity and the cohesion of the international Communist and working class movement,"' Tass said With the Soviet premier were Anastas Mikoyan, first deputy premier who is an old confidant of Khrushchev, and Yuri Andro- pov, a Soviet party leader who 2 East Germans Escape Trawler 3ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--Two East German seamen who walked into a police station Sun day and asked for political asy- j/jum were being held in protec- 'tive custody by the RCMP Mon- day The men, -Dernd Rudolf Gla- ser, 19, and Dietrich Eckhardt Wicher, 22, left the East Ger- |man trawler Eisenach, a police | officer, said Police, unable to understand the seamen, called the RCMP who used an interpreter He said Ghanas' diplomacy is geared towards persuading| During the period of the Ro- manan visit, the Chinese) broadcast no attacks. Earlier they had assailed Khrushchev. unrelentingly, declaring he was no longer top leader in the Com- munist movement. The moment 'the Romanians left, the attacks were resumed.! Peking radio again accused the Russians of publishing offen- sive stories about the Chinese, although Western correspond- ents have found none recently. The broadcast said the Chi-, nese would exhaust the mate-|strike against the Mba govern- bassador day he does not believe the United States was involved in-a recent plot against his regime. In a statement to The Associ-| troops will remain in Gabon dur- that ated Press, he paid tribute to the|ing the April 12 legislative elec- force into Cyprus, the Canadian/fect, it wanted to know whether "disinterested aid given by the|tions, expected to give rise tojgovernment was being widely|the force would be expected to great American republic." The Gabonese president thus personally cleared the contro- versy which led to a 'U.S. go home" campaign among French residents of this West African country, a former French col- ony. The French community had the idea that the U.S, em- bassy here backed last month's putsch, which briefly unseated pro-French Mba Billed as a "revolution" students and youth leaders, by a |TROOPS TO STAY The president said French violence. Discussing the charges against the U.S., Mba said: "Nothing. permits to determine that the United States played a role in the recent events, How- ever, relations of friendship ex- isting between members of the U.S. embassy and some politi- cians who participated in the rebellion could have given this impression to some, an impres- sion which I do not share," Mba was referring to the friendship between U.S. Am- Charles Darlington rial they had on hand to report! ment fizzled during the day. AS'anq jailed Opposition Leader about the Russian side, then would decide what action to take | Gabonese reported to work as usual, steel-helmeted troops un- der French officers and special WEATHER FORECAST Mainly Sunny On Wednesday Forecasts by the Toronto weather office at 5:30 a.m.: Snow will continue most of the day in Northern regions, A mix- ture of cloud an dsunshine with a few snowflurries near Lake Huron is expected for southern regions. Mainly sunny cool weather is forecast for Wednes- day for most of Ontario, Area of high pressure approaches the Great Lakes Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni- agara, Lake Ontario. Windsor, Hamilton, Toronto: Sunny but with cloudy intervals and cooler today. Wednesday mainly sunny. Winds easterly 20 with higher gusts today northwest 15 to 25 Wednesday Lake Huron, southern - Geor- gian Bay, London: Windy and cooler with considerable cloudi- ness and occasional snowflur- ries today. Sunny with cloudy periods Wednesday. Winds west-! erly 20 with higher gusts today northwest 15 to 25 Wednesday. | Northern Georgian Bay, Hali- burton, North Bay, Mainly cloudy and windy with a few snowflurries. Wednesday sunny with cloudy periods Turning colder today. Winds west 20 with higher gusts today northwest 25 Wednesday Timagami, Cochrane: Mainly cloudy with a few snowflurries Ronald W. Bilsky, D.C, CHIROPRACTOR Athletic Injuries Nervous Skin Disorders 100 King St. E. 728-5156 Sudbury: tonight. Sunny aad cold Wednes- day. Winds north 20 Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, White River: Clearing late to- day. Mainly sunny Wednesday. Colder. Winds light Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Wednesday Windsor 15 32 St. Thomas. London .... Kitchener Mount Forest. Wingham .... Hamilton St. Catharines Toronto Peterborough .... Trenton Killaloe .. Muskoka North Bay Sudbury . Earlton .... oe Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing White River. Moosonee . Timmins SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gas Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 Jean Hilaire Aubame WINS THIRD TITLE WINNIPEG (CP) -- Hamilton YMCA captured the Canadian men's volleyball title for the third time Saturday, defeating | Toronto Broadview YMCA 15-3 115-8 in 'a. best-of-three final. | Vancouver Alumni came from | behind to defeat Toronto Blues 9-15, 15-8, 15-8 to take the best- |of-three women's final and the national title. airport in Mexico City today | OTTAWA (CP) -- The great|to a special committee for de-|high standard must be available \pension debate, part two, begins!tailed study and public hear-jat all times to disabled veteres \today in the Commons. sings. lans; | Health Minister LaMarsh| The planned to introduce the Liberal|scheme in operation, next Jan-jg 'government's revised Canada|uary. y 'Pension Plan almost eight) Another politically - delicate months to the day after she in-\subject--medical care for war), troduce the original version. |veterans--was brought up in the "The most importnt mesure'Commons Monday.. hate: ' . . " an bere Minne Gorden TRANSFER PLANNED Mr. Teillet said later thes ldescrihed the plan in'his budget; Veterans Minister Teillet an- transfers will occur over a pe-" ispeech Monday nounced that the government riod of several years, His de-» He said it is intended 'to|Plans to transfer. the 13 veter-/partment would continue to pay." lpermit all the workers of Can-/20S' hospitals, with. 8,000 beds, for veterans' treatment. to provincial or local authori-| jye said negotiations 'ada to look forward to an oppor- |' : ltuni j ity ties for use as active-treatment have started wi he \tunity to retire eventually with Seneral: hospitals. 'This means with t jfar more security and dignity ss) ments of Manitoba and Alberta.» |than has been poaibie hereto- the government is -- The 13 DVA hospitals cost=: Maga! ing a key recommendation Of/ about $50,000,000 to operate an- | Prime Minister Pearson told;the Glassco royal commission 'jyaiy, se 'the Commons he hopes the leg-'0" government organization, Mr. Teillet said 70 per cent.® jislation will be approved in He laid down three conditions| the DVA patients now are-» |principle before the Easter re- for each transfer: aged veterans with chronic ill-™ jcess, March 27, and be referred. 1. Immediate nesses. This was discouraging -- Laas staff recruiting and there was a critical shortage of nurses. Gordon Churchill, former Con- servative veterans minister, criticized the new policy as a betrayal of the veterans. New Democratic Leader Douglas and A. B. Patterson (SC--Fraser Valley) predicted a hostile reaction from vet- crans. Creditiste Leader Real Caou- ette congratulated the govern-. ment. MEETS VETERANS Mr. Teillet met 30 representa- tives from 10 national veterans' organizations. He said many had expressed reservations, but the principle generally had been accepted. government wants the} 2, Treatment must also be® vailable to other sick veterans 'in their own communities; = 3. All employees of veterans ospitals must be assured: of 5 satisfactory employment else-® '- already . govern: treatment of INTERPRETING THE NEWS Canada Still Wants Mediator In Cyprus By CARMAN CUMMING mats see as a favorable sign the Canadian Press Staff Writer |fact that both Greece and Tur- In the compelling urgency to|key have welcomed the Cyprus et a United Nations presence|force and agreed to help pay into Cyprus, Canada bal age for it set aside some of its doubts an : ; pre-conditions about the UN TERMS IN DOUBT operation, Another factor known to have No one could be sure, in those caused Ottawa concern was the tic . 'ana-|relationship the' force -would i . ri sap rah eageen aaa yt have to the two Cypriot commu-| A Plea for including mentally - dered into the air Friday, that/nities. iberonias oatlonty ta ts pe te th Turks were bluffing in their' Late last week Canada's UN provincial hospital insurance threat to invade the island delegation asked for assurance ashi failed to win support In the mood of welcome calm|that the force would have the Heer Liberal MPs tn the Ppo' 2 followed the token UN/co-operation of both sides. In ef- mone " . Com Instead, government support- . é beets ers urged that action await the cut/treat the Turks as rebels her royal commission on health services report, expected to be about May. The plea came from David praised for deciding to } through its doubts and get on|the Greek fighters as off the job agents of law enforcement. But the doubts remain. Ot-)| The Greek - Cypriots under| tawa:can be expected to press president Makarios had madelgorlikow (NDP -- Winnipeg hard in the next few days to\clear that this was what they|North) in a private members' pin down the assurances itiexpected of the UN. The Turk-| motion. hasn't been able to get so far.jich-Cypriot minority had been) Mr. Orlikow argued that the The fact that the force is|just as plain in saying they had|yast majority of mental patients committed may make the tasking intention of going alonginow are confined to undere harder. \quietly jstaffed and under-equipped pro- STILL NO MEDIATOR There is no evidence yet that/vincial institutions. One of the conditions Canadajthis problem has been dealt! Dr. Harry Harley (L--Halton)- - had set down was that there|with. There has been no public/said he agreed with Mr. Orli- should be some advance hope|clarification, for example, of|kow in principle and expressed for progress on a political set- whether the UN peace-keepers|the hope the royal commission tlement while the force was,will be allowed to use their|will provide sufficient informa- holding the Greek and Turkish weapons to prevent the '"'ar-|tion to clear up the "anomalies" communities at arm's length. jrest'" of a Turkish-Cypriot byjin present legislation. Prime Minister Pearson said|Makarios' regularized irregu-| Lloyd Francis (L--Carleton) Canada wanted to ensure "'that/lars. said inclusion of tubercular pa- the choice of a mediator and| It is safe to predict that/tients wouldn't have significant his terms of reference would be|within 'days one side or the\effect on their treatment. such as to lead to the expecta-\other--or both--will be accus-| NEED... tion that a solution to the dis-)ing the UN of favoring the other FUEL OIL? pute in Cyprus might be found) side within a reasonable time." The Canadian commander inj No mediator has been named os ag baphden Amy, may| Call as yet, Hopes for a political set- well have felt more uneasiness) itlement arocaead sf slimmer|than pleasure Sunday when a, PERRY following Friday's confronta-/happy Greek-Cypriot presented] Day or Night 723-3443 ition, although some UN diplo-'him with a bouquet of flowers. 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