2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Soturdey, Merch 21, 1964 GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN TWO AUDITORIUM BYLAWS GET GREEN LIGHT The City's official.marriage to the Civie Auditorium proj- ect was solemnized still further this week with the passage by Council Monday of two pieces of legislation: i Bylaw 4361 to authorize execution of an agreement be- tween the City and Allward,-Gouinlock, Toronto architects, for the project. Bylaw 4363 to authorize con- struction of the audikorium at an estimated cost of $1,277,000 -- an earlier bylaw passed by Council will per- mit the corporation to, issue debentures up to $850,000 to build it. The City, in addi- tion, will pick up any defi- cits. There was some specula- tion this week in the ranks of rabid supporters of the auditorium as to whether City Council would include a Sunday sports plebiscite on the ballots for the next muni- cipal election in December. Sunday is tradtionally the biggest revenue producer of the week for such centres in Ontario, most of which are carrying.increasingly heavy defi- cits. Oshawa would need a plebiscite for Sunday why not inelude it in the upcoming municipal e'ection in De- cember (along with one on the ward There is little 'doubt but that Sunday sport would be ac- cepted here, especially as Sunday movies and cocktail lounges were endorsed in recent months. Older citizens will recall when Sunday sports was a red- hot, highly controversial issue locally, when it was rejected in a plebiscite as follows: "No Vote'--6,128, "Yes Vote'-- 4,446. That was in the election of December 1, 1952, when John Naylor defeated Frank McCallum (6,688 to 4,209) in one of the hardest-hitting .mayoralty campaigns ever seen locally.» McCallum, the highly articulate: champion of Sun¢ day sports, was' s'outly opposed by such influential groups as the Oshawa Ministerial Association FRANK McCALLUM sports, so system?) MAYOR OPTIMISTIC ABOUT EARLY RETURN Mayor Lyman Gifford feels fine, but he's still weak from that recent surgery, down to 141 pounds from 174. He was his usual cheery,.optimistic self this week as he acnvalesced on his Sydenham Harbor farm ("where I like to listen to the grass grow') -- he was also confident he will receive "'a clean bill of health" in about four weeks time, when he expects to return to his City Hall desk. He is due back to St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, in two weeks for a 14-day observation period which he describes as a formality.' He gets around the house, but doesn't go outside, retires promptly a' 8:30 p.m. and keeps strictly away from anything which cou'd be designated 'official, business" He has one pressing problem -- how to personally answer "those of cards "merely hundreds get-we'l' : LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE The Village Id ifol san will perform in the McLaughlin Col- This is not a local group, but a Euclid, Ohio, performing in the iradi:jon: *.The concert will be under the * Oshawa chapier SPEBSQSA Lake Vista \ssociation. wil} hold a general: meeting tomorrow F. Cannon Public Kmera'd Attersley, former Dunnie hockey and wheel in wh) is atso a Whitby Town councillor, ots"? onight quartet from Schoo great, alignment store Osh- DOS s on for:more than a year. "If you're going do it in half measures," he; said, would taitk abou giving up candy for f Alderman Attersley Is on Oshawa's e'ection day port up, you can't peop! Gordon peren- l leader at the aldermanic po CENTENNIAL PLANS TO' TAKE FOR SOON -- MURDOCH Jowmanville. may buid a new public library to celebrate in 1967 would {nis 'aus like to prepare an official vicious Occasion doing Murdoch on City awa layward the agenda, said today matter Councik once To. emphasize he the the applications urgency of matter dead'ine for fund grant to the al -*Proyincial governments is: next August. What could Oshawa get in the -way If Osha contribute de of such grants? willing to pita (on population , of ' Was $1 an: estimated 67,000) for a total of $67,000, it $134,000. other words, the City would pay one-third the total .cost of any such Such grants could be u * for th f bui'dings, establishment celebra ions, _ parades could receive in project ed public parks te., but HAYWARD MURDOCH erection of not for public BOARD MUST OPEN AIA, DOORS -- WERRY Why are school boards their doors to the Press at most City Councils? ;: The disturbing question kept popping tp with regularity week." : In Brantford, the Board of Education fost its patience and passed a new policy -- the Press will be admitted only to regular meetings, not committee meetings: In Oshawa, where the Board's Press censorship has been @ touchy subject for months, Trustee William T. Werry drop- ped something of a bombshell Monday by serving notice of that the Press be notified of all (hey already notified to as reluctant meetings, generally all committee so open do this motion that he would move reguiar and comm#tee of the former.) Mr. Werry on his " the following right at a meeting of the Oshawa and District Labor Council meetings ar, put emphasis notice mregest statement yet heard. locally on He when he made the gitre the subject, e ' admitted to al mec "] believe that terms that we demand, as on behind the closed méetings. of the Board and we must be prepared to support this demand with action,' he told the ODLC, which hi tand He said the ed dowr pecia rom a. trustee vanis the Press withouy reservation he taxpayers, to know what is going tings we must say in strongest possible endorsed ODIA made hi meaningless. or tab'ec must make sure Board motion is { We lal 'mus' not wate expose those tru ter who are absent, or al when the yote is taken," he added, : the Seafarers' the Union's Montreal Liberals, Tories Crush Non-Confidence Try By RONALD LEBEL | OTTAWA (CP) -- On the sec-|eight Creditistes. Lining up with}mine the validity of the Que- ond day of the Commons bud-|the government were 102 Lib-|bec get debate, some MPs got tired! erals, and!Social lobbed verbal bricks at the Que-- Howard of discussing the budget bec government instead Gerald A yerful provincialists"' jlow Libéral, Quebec |Minister Rene Levesque, inces will have even less Gerald W. Baldwin (PC |Peace River) said Quebec's par- stripped of too many taxation|/ The NDP returned the favor by|body at Trois - Rivieres. Next |tial ban on lumber exports other -provinces violates jconstitution and could lead Jother barriers to SIU PRESIDENT ENTERS HEADQUARTERS Paul Hall, 70, president of International Union (AFL-CIO), walks into head- quarters for a meeting with Regan (L'-- Hali-|government on such motions for| The NDP amendment sought to!other language. fax) said Friday that if "pow-|its like his fel- Resources Atlantic provinces take a dim!by the Conservatives Thursday.|Ottawa last fall. This week Le- have view of Quebec's demands, sup- their way, the have-not prov- ported by Ontario, for a larger to be voted or Tuesday, attacks|the commision at Sherbrooke pure the able inter-provin-|inces and support national pro- Napanee Man Prairie Liberal May |,2m For Murder Get Cabinet Position | By KEN KELLY jmajorities and the seat is re-|they can hold it by giving for- Charles Morton Loyst. 51, con OTTAWA (CP) -- The exis-|garded as one of the safer ones/ mal notification of the vacanay.| victeq Friday of nen < capital tence of two vacancies in the/for the government. This placed the government un- murder in the Oct. 9 death of Commons may be a factor in| A second theory is that the,der the. obligation of setting a Hugh James McMahon 64 |Prime Minister Pearson's;new revenue minister may not byelection day within six was sentenced to life imprison- lsearch for a new revenue min- even be from Ontario but per-| months, ; aa ister. haps a prairie Liberal. The Lib-| There was' some talk here e : Several theories are going the erals haven't a Saskatchewan last summer and fall that Hazen Loyst, who boarded with Me rounds in the. capital about how cabinet minister--because they|Argue, for 17 years a OCF and Mahon a nd his : wife, was Mr. Pearson will replace the failed to.win a single seat in| New Democratic MP who bolted charged with capital murder late John R. Garland who died that province. to the Liberals in 1962, coveted after McMahon was fatally shot March 14. | With a vacancy in Saskatoon, the Saskatoon Liberal nomina-|in his home near Kaladar, about One is that 'he may ask the they may stage an all-out bid tion after his defeat in Assini-.2f miles north of here. constituency association in Mr.to wrest it from the Progres-/boia last April. Dressed in a white sweat shirt | Garland's former riding --Nip- sive Conservatives. If they do,, It was generally conceded and blue jeans, Loyst seemd issing--to accept as their candi-a Libzral winner would have that had he won he would have) comewhat stunned by the ver- date Tom Kent, Mr. Pearson's strong claims to a cabinet post.;\been in the cabinet formed ict, presented after three close friend and $25,000-a-year, The Saskatoon seat was held when the Liberals took office hours of deliberation by the On- policy co-ordinator. since 1957 by Harry Jones, who} April 23. : tario Supreme Court jury. In Nipissing, Mr. Garland died March 4, and the Conserv-' Still another idea is that Mr. | Taténce. Coannal 1. S$. Wil- piled up ever-increasing Liberallatives showed confidence that Pearson may dip into the exist-| ou shby confined his case to a ae re a \ Friday, in 1 | fe Fong as NeW 45-minute address "tga , ; _ which he disputed evidence pre- One of the first names men nted by the Crown during the 11-day trial. tioned in this regard is that of 5° in Police testified that Loyst and J. Benson, parliamentary secretary to Finance Minister Gordon and regarded as a|Mrs. McHahon reported " the lstrong "new guard'. Ontario Shooting to the provincial po- Liberal. lice detachment in Kaladar Another is Larry Pennell,'shortly after midnight Oct. 10. lawyer MP for Brant - Haldi-| A rifle was found by police mand who won plaudits among about 1!4 miles from the scene the Liberals for his handling of of the shooting. difficult political problems as They said Loyst told them deputy chairman of the Com-, Oct. 10 he had had a .303-calibre mons privileges .and elections rifle stolen from his car two or committee. three days earlier INTERPRETING THE NEWS 'Bilingual Reporters Cover Probe Hearings By THE CANADIAN PRESS |Sudbury for commission hear- Two bilingual Canadian Press /!8°S- ue reporters are covering hearings When the commission holds of the royal commission on bi- SUCh split sessions, the reports lingualism and biculturalism for of each man are translated so the national news agency that they will be available for They are Guy Rondeau, 39- Publication in both language. year-old CP chief of bureau at HEADS BUREAU Quebec, and Ronald Lebel, 26. Rondeau has been CP chief of parliamentary correspondent at bureau in his hometown of Que- Ott . wa. Rondeau S working pee city for the last two years. language is French while Le- We was CP French - language Astiy vil ap ge id yma gigs parliamentary pkey agp at 0A del Rceepanes aae. Ottawa in 1960 and 1 after F Rondeau reports for French-\orving as legislature corres- forestry provision. language newspapers and Lebel pondent at Quebec, He was on 70 Conservatives, seven, Qpposition Leader Diefen- for English-language papers but the staff. of Broadcast News, Credit MPs and Frank|baker spoke briefly just before|detail obtained by only one o CP's subsidiary handling news j T 5 NO Skeena),| the vote to explain why his|the reporters is translated for), yadio and television sta- U N rade alks pledged to vote for the. minority; party opposed the NDP motion.|newspapers published in the tions, from 150 to 153 and ' joined CP two years later after} of the main non-| Both reported preliminary holding the post of news editor| motion, introduced|sessions of the commission at 4+ radio station CHRC, Quebec. | TN y i F Lebel, a native of Edmund- The Conservative motion, due|bel covered sessions of part of ton N'B.. joined CP's Ottawa(the site of conferences of end- fail 'in' September 1961, af- less complexity -- with aims of share of direct taxes. the government for its high|while Rondeau was with the/te, haying been news editor of Utmost simplicity. If the federal government was spending and substantial deficit.;other half of the investigating the Saint John Telegraph-Jour-| Thus the United Nations con- nal where he worked. during|ference on trade and develop- : summer vacations from 1956 to|ment, opening Monday, is likely ebel is at 1958 He was a reporter with|to prove at least as complex as the Ottawa Journal while study-|the disarmament talks long in real to protest the ousting of Hal C. Banks as president of the Canadian SIU. (CP Wirephoto) Charles Turner, newly-appoint- ed president of the SIU of Canada and Charles Millard, Federal Maritime Union trustees. Mr. Hall is in Mont- drew their only support from;federal goverment to By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer It seems Geneva's fate to be In the array of "developed" and developing countries Can- ada is in a somewhat special category. Although it enjoys a high standard of living, it has commodity problems similar to those of the developing coun- tries. first two years in office delete most Mr. Regan said people in the confidence The whole issue is full of po- litical implications for the fu- ture because it means that two- thirds of the world's population the Wednesday, Rondeau will be at London, Ont., while I to powers, it would no longer bejindicating it wil) oppose to make tax equalization} Conservative motion. to:payments to the poorer prov- * jto non-confidence jvote of |that the government did not cut | defence n.oney ment and foreign aid. ONLY 20 VOTES jcial trade. This would threaten grams. {Canada's survival as "a viable }economic unit." t ing ¢ with the "Fuzzy - thinking empire builders of the Rene Levesque lawyer-MPs_ spoke ilk" should know, he said, that parties combined| Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and New: Democratic other have-not provinces would motion by ajleave Confederation if the cen- 180 to 20. tral government was weakened The motion expressed regret' unduly The two before their crush a spending to provide legitimate aspirations of Que- for economic develop- bee residents to improve their economic position and preserve their French culture, But they became perturbed when - these aims were used as a guise by Quebec to obtain "unfair com- mercial advantage." Mr. Baldwin said Quebec's announced clamp-down on lum- ber shipments to Ontario saw- jmills beginning next fa:] Is an infraction of Section 121 of the British North America Act, which provided for free move- ment of goods between prov- inces HAD BEEN DISCUSSED Trade Minister Sharp replied that he had discussed the. mat- The 12 NDP members present Commonwealth 'Trade Views Please Heath LONDON wealth countries are approach- (CP) Common- world trade conference conviction that "pros- indivisible," Trade verity is Minister Edward Heath of: Brit. t¢f with members of the Que- the end of a two-day 18-country ( to tions conference on trade and Should be , : : . development opening in Geneva Preme Court of Canada by the!: Capt. Johnston said the pilot} WEATHER FORECAST Clear, Cooler Sunny Sunday had con- entirely jurisdic- government and it was province's bec at cluded that within the called "on. Na Mr Friday spoke ain said Heath to reporters meeting the United ommonwealth for said the -issue referred to the Su- prepare Baldwin Monday Speaking London meeting chairman of the Heath said he "immensely heartened" by as was Pilot Altered -- Drunk Charge TORONTO (CP)--The suspen-|altered a card on which the Nova Scotiains supported the sion of a pilot for drinking and/captain of a German freighter 1960 had reported him drunk in De- falsifying a documenf in may have resulted from the,troit but 'he did not commit an way the man behaves when he|unpardonable sin." wakes up,- the Federal 'Royal "However," added the cap- Commission on Maritime Pilot-|tain, "he has never taken part age was told Friday. in pilotage since." Captain Soman S. Johnston SERIOUS BREACH chr a betes Sm] common chan, Great Lakes Pilots said 'the sini Justice te vee pernier of. the identified man referred to is not pusbre SOpeHOy Court, sale al: 4 [ 1... {tering documets is a very se- a drinking man, but staggers! rious breach, He suggested that when he is waking up the Department conducted a full Capt. Johnston said the pilot,examination before disciplining helped him organize the Corpor- the pilot. "However, we can as- ation and his connection with' sure you we will investigate," the Corporation may have influ-|he said. enced the Transport Depart- In his brief, Capt. Johnston ment's handling of the case. charged that- many pilotage The. captain was testifying problems are the. direct result of during the fifth day of the cur-)bungling by the marine regula- rent Commission hearings tions branch of the nautical di- which end here March 30 and re-| vision of the department of sume again April 6-24. Hearings! transport. have already been held in the He recommended the estab- Maritimes, British Colum- lishment of a Canadian pilotage bia, and St. Catharines 'commission consisting of experts from the shipping com- -|panies, pilots' organizations and the transport department. He said pilots should not be government employees as they attitude of the» Common- representatives whose 're "moderate and rea- the The Geneva meeting -- bring- ing together 123 countries-- would not begin in a spirit of "animosity" between developed and developing countries 'but rather in a spirit of co-opera tion Zepresenting Canada here Forecasts issued by the. Tor- onto weather office at 5:30 a.m Synopsis: Chances are now were Lionel Chevrier, high Ccom- good that only a few flurries missioner in London, and vet- of light snow or in southwestern eran diplomat Dana Wilgress, sections a few showers will oc- who flew to Geneva Friday cur, Skies will begin clearing aN across the province tonight and TO ATTEND sunny but cool weather eXx- Martin Ferhane a a pected on Sunday, minister, is scheduled to deliver ' : anada's diatement. i Lake St ¢ lair; Take Erie Genava Rieelns southern Lake Iluron, Niagara, Commonwealth eomtries Windsor, f,ondon, Iamilton : : Clearing overnight, sunny with Ion 2 ee a She fa ye a few cloudy intervals Sunday. blanket trae pealeron es hefore ate? OEN Flas Noctawest thinking of scrapping the tradi- vent 20 Sunday tional Commonwealth prefer- Toronto: Chance of a_ few ences, Heath declared. . showers or flurries of wet snow Britain has indicated it would in the afternoon. Clearing and be willing to agree to blanket turning cooler tonight. Sunny preferences: on three conditions With a few cloudy intervals Sun- --if the Commonwealth agreed.,4ay Northwest winds near 20 if other industrial nations| Sunday, lagreed, and if the present most) Northern Lake Huron, favored nation tariff rates are Ontario, Haliburton, is policy Lake Asked specifically whetherern White River, Canada approved the approach, North Bay: Mostly sunny Sun- Heath said the Canadians "did day, Northwest winds near 20 not discuss this in detail." Sunday. Generally, the developing Northern White River, Coch Commonwealth nations "want)rane- Mostly sunny Sunday but to see what they might get out clouding over : . : of it," Heath added Northeast winds near 15. Georgian, not increased as a consequence. Bay, Algoma, Timagami, south-! Sudbury, late in the day.| jare in the Welland Canal-Lake {Erie - Sarnia pilotage district \They should be free agents, he said. Send Murder ore coeanras | Suapedt-To st "Tho » 3 | Penetang St. Thomas . London Kitchener LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Peter Mount Fo Raymond Robichaud, 23, Wingham charged with non-capital mur- Hamilton : der in the death here of Mrs St. Catharine. Caroline Ida Weldman last Sep- Toronto tember, was committed Friday Peterborough to the Ontario Hospital for the Trenton .... Criminally Insane at Penetan- Killaloe guishene Muskoka Magistrate G. G. Marshman North Bay . made the committal on a l:eu- tenant-governor's warrant, Robichaud had been in cus- - 22 18 18, 15 Sudbury Earlton Sault Ste. Marie Kapuskasing 25 3n 10 25 : --jand essential -- as had Labor gqigficulty tody since Jan. 20 on a charge'death of Mrs. Weldman ing at Carleton University from|progress on the shores of Lake arate fot have taken a othe 'meenteade of the confer- | eign p-/ence is frightening in itself -- }1,500 delegates from 123 coun- ada. pisces surely will Bh able ve Their reports also go to create a noise volume unusual Broadcast News which provides even for the old Palais des Na- ews services both in French ons. : nd English to Canada's broad- Yet, there are encouraging casting stations. aspects, The timing is probably a --jbetter than the instigators of the conference -- the have-not nations--hoped when they be-| gan their campaign a few years ago --mostly non-white--is poor and can be expected to become in- creasingly rebellious unless special interest in language su : ne ; prospects improve, jects and biculturalism in Can- ' On the other hand, developed countries must see it as simple self - interest to correct the im- balance asfar as possible . but' not in terms of handouts or cold charity. n a The developing countries will be unable to get political sta- bility without a solid economic base. Political instability would Tensions between East and|be a standing threat fo peace. West have eased considerably|These countries also pledge, in in the interim, giving an im-jeffect, that with development proved opportunity for action they will 'be' able 'to provide U.S. To Curb 3 . : Port Violence on the inequities between, --in|"long-tenm trade reciprocity" the global context, the rich in- and contribute to the prosperity OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada is|dustrial nations of the north of the more sophisticated indus: relying on U.S. government as-|and the poor develeping coun- trial countries. as well as to surances of co-operation in tries of the south. their own. Canadian cargo ships when the) Britain's Prime Minister Sir "Prosperity is indivisible," 1s" maintaining free movement of Alec Douglas-Home referred to' the way it is put by Edward Great Lakes shipping season this change in _political-econ-|Heath, British trade and indus- opens. External Affairs Minister "mic lines of force in a speech|try minister. Martin indicated Friday. to the Empire Club of Toronto} . Martin Says Mr. Martin said that he re-| during his February visit to |ceived the assurances in discus-| Canada lsions last fall with U.S. State| Despite the progress of the lSeopetary. Dean Rusk have-not rations, the stark fact He said in an interview that ro ged agee sad pci he was referring to these talks Prkaile Reanie dens ke ek |--held last year when the Great creasing for the manufactured j Lakes: labor Babee war ont products of the industrial coun- cal--when he told the Commons irles which aleo bave attained earlier Friday that U.S author-/ 4:5) georee of. self-suificiency ities had promised to CO-OPET™ in raw materials or substitutes, | ate in averting harassment Of | and agriculture, |Canadian ships. in U.S. lake Meanwhile. exports pri-| ports. mary commodities--the prod-/ He said that at that time he/ ucts' of the. poorer countries--| had pointed out to Mr, Rusk|are expanding at a_ relatively that co-operation wads desirable! igow rate. Those countries have in getting enough |Minister MacEachen in similar) money to buy manufactured jtalks about the same time with | products and coping with their Wirtz. |debts. A price collapse for one IEXPECTS CO-OPERATION. | Product in one year can mean | Mr. Martin said he feels that|"isaster for a particular coun- those talks to alter Canada's |'T¥: "recent" conversations with Mr. expectation of U.S. government co-operation in ensuring unim- peded movement of Canadian ships on the Great Lakes. In Washington, a spokesman for Labor Secretary Wirtz de- nied that there had been any "recent" conversations with Mr. MacEachen. of 'breaking into Mrs Weld ; man's apartment. This charge was later withdrawn and he by TCA Jet of R. Irwin Cruikshanks os pri upon which you may depend when in search of thorough, reli- able and exp d in buying or selling real estote. Bolahood Brothers Limited, Realtors 101 Simcoe North 7285123 anata 18TH ANNUAL eae Flower Show REEDS Florists This Sunday Mar, 22 White River . Moosonee Timmins "15 -10 -10 THE KEY 25, 15 25 : The SALE LIST WITH PAUL RISTOW REALTOR 728-9474 187 KING EAST, OSHAWA Ist, to September 30th, property which is fenced HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT. ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS RELIABLE for your swimming pleasu 725-9991 W. E. ROTH CONST. LTD.--O§HAWA, ONTARIO Steel reinforced, one piece concrete construction. Fully 2quipped and installed ready @ YOUR INC'IIRIES ARE INVITED @ "We Have The Experience' 728-7083 All. Dogs over 6 weeks which are now due and SWIMMING POOLS - Dogs are not allowed to. ONLY _any time of the year. $2675 re. P. Ke All Dogs must be tied up or on a leash from April Office, Police Station or City Dog Control Office. Dogs boarded at Dog Control at nominal cost. 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