Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Apr 1964, p. 2

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SUPPORTS APARTHEID TORONTO CP)--A_ quickly- formed Toronto committee is seeking a face-to-face meeting with financier W. Garfield Wes ton to have him explain his re- cent defence of South Africa's|' ragial separation apartheid) policy. Ten persons, calling them selves the Anti-Weston Commit- tee, resolved Tuesday to let the outcome of their direct meeting determine whether to picket Toronto stores of Loblaw Groce- terias Company Limited, owned by the giant George Weston Company of which Mr. Weston is chairman, The Canadian-born food king spoke up Monday for the South African government's side in the segregation debate, contend- ing it would be ridiculous to en- franchise "millions of colored men whose ethics are not ours and whose Christian morals are completely absent." Mr. Weston, whose company has 6,000 employees in South Af- rica, said 'every black picka- the African tion, dismissed Mr. Weston as' Mr. Weston's remarks as an "overnight expert." LAW GROUP URGES CHANGE 'Police Stations Not Best Site For Court' Pickets May Protest Food Magnate's Views Mr, Lewis, who in 1960 and} 1961 was in Ghana and Tangan-jon Christian morality. 1 don't yika aiding in the rehabilitation| think that should be a passport of South Africans who fled their|for Western democracy." country, said such: statements 'debase Christianity by using it as a blind for white supremacy and immorality born of greed. 'His (Mr, Weston's) defence of an essentially Nazi system|What they think about his re- runs wholly counter to informed! Marks. world opinion,"' | Isaac Akande, a Nigerian Por, dent at the University of Tor- onto and executive member of|of Toronto and a student of |South African affairs, described Students Associa TORONTO. (CP)--Ontario Hy- dro is being forced to put greater emphasis on the burning of coal for the province's power needs because of low waetr levels and a declining number of sites where water power is available. This was the gist of a mes- sage given 'to the legislature Tuesday by R. J. Boyer (PC-- Muskoka), the government's member on the Ontario Hydro Electric. Po wer Commission, Mr. Boyer is second vice-chair- man of Hydro. The combined effect of low water levels and ice conditions "He's basing his judgments He said the association plans to petition African ambassadors in Ottawa, New York and Wash- ington to let Mr. Weston "know Rey. . W. B. Wheeler, chair- man of the council for social service for the Anglican diocese first three months of this year cost the province an energy loss of 8,000,000 kilowatt Mv. Boyer said. To make up for this, Hydro's thermal generating plants had to burn an additional 320,000 'most regretable." tons of coal. Mr, Boyer said that in 1963 |Hydro purchased 3,500,000 tons of coal compared with 500,000 tons in 1961. MORE IN FUTURE "As more coal-fired plants are built and our present ones ex- on the Niagara River during the! hours, | Burning Of Coal Pushed On Hydro sel is being built at Port Weller to ferry coal to Ontario from |the East, The ship would be able to carry more than 22,000 tons, The statement said that while there was no letting up by Hy- dro to harness water power to produce electricity, the number | of sites where Ontario could add ¢ to its hydraulic power resources are limited. Last year coal-burning er stations reached a pnsth of 2,108,000 kilowatts in the prov- ince, compared to a total from all sources of 7,756,000 kilo- watts. |SHARE WILL RISE Thermal plants produced 25 per cent of Hydro's total out- | jput. The commission forecasts ' that by 1970 this figure will rise | jto 42 per cent as Hwdro puts } even more reliance on coal, Water-powered genating sta- |tions, which now produce 65 per- cent of the province's electrical energy needs, would account for only 50 per cent by 1970. About six per. cnet would be jsupnlied by nuclear generat stations and the province woul |have to buy the rest of its elec- tricity. ; Mr. Boyer outlined plans to } é ' { POLICE SEND BEATLE FANS HOME ed Sunday night. Just to make Tickets for the Beatles Sep- sure there'd be no hard feel- tember performance go on ings police handed out num- sale Wednesday. Lineup start- bered tickets, guaranteeing ninny or black mammy can cail PORT ARTHUR CP) -- On- the Police Act is to be amended,|panded, coa]! will become an construct. an ice boom in Lake i pie seins auauaa tario magistrates should be kept it should require police to tell/even greater item in our pur-|Erie to hold back "massive dis- His remarks to the company's | %f police 'commissions to pre-|an accused person of his rights|chasing." chamges of ice" into the Niagara | annual meeting followed a three-|serve their impartiality on the | and help him to obtain counsel} Hydro buys most of its coal River which hampered the gen- |month visit to South Africa. bench, a brief from the 40-mem- immediately. from the United States but re-|erating complex ber Thunder Bay Law Associa- Deputy Attorney - General cently reached an agreement) The two-mile boom would be WANTS BOYCOTT tion stated Tuesday. W. B. Common, chairman of the|With, interests in Nova Scotia|place@ in Lake Erie above the The committee, which in-| Alfred A. Petrone, who pre-|joint committee, reiterated for 2,850,000 tons to be deliv-|water intake for Buffalo, N.Y., |eludes writers, teachers, univer-|sented the brief to the joint| strong personal objection to po- ered by 1967, if the plan is approved by the |sity students and housewives,/committee on legal aid meet-|iice being required to inform|_™": Boyer said a 680-foot yes-'international joint commission |has expressed an intent to es-|ing here, said magistrates could accused of their rights. He ex-| SS ee eta ne er er ee ae tablish a boycott of Mr, Wes-\not exercise proper objectivity | pressed the ine objection at jton's businesses as well as/if a policeman they helped hire) ogmmittee hearings in Sudbury |pieket the stores. or promote appeared as a PrOS-! Monday. Will Study At its meeting Tuesdgy, ecution witness during a case. Bill 99 headed by Negro author Austin| The brief also stated that mag-|IN 'STRAIGHTJACKET' 's Offi Ex-Lakes Czar S O 1ce | TORONTO (CP)--The govern-|Clarke, the committee decided istrates should not hold court in) «1; would be putting law en- ment has- scheduled without|to wait until Friday before mak-| police stations. 'It appears that forcement in a straightjacket," MONTREAL CP) -- In the te force unions with United)sliding wall panel, Another knob| publicity a meeting of its legal|ing final plans. a magistrate's function is im-|said Mr. Common. "The officer huge hall of a downtown Mon-|States roots to grant greater,|was turned and the lights went) pills committee to deal with bill At another meeting a group paired by close proximity to the| might give the person the wrong treal hotel trade unionists from|autonomy to their Canadian }o-/on in the aquarium. The Cur-'99- the Police Amendment Act|called the Canadian "Anti-Apar-|Prosecution."" jadvice,"' the rough-and-tumble days of] cals, tains opened. antes : .| which gave rise to bitter con-|theid Committee resolved to| The association suggested the) wr Petrone suggested per- labor aired their ideas about) It was the parliament of labor In the =. was a ago |troversy last 'month. picket a Liquor Control Board|judiciary, government, police) sons suspected of impaired driv- overtime, human rights, work jin session see: at ps ie ii atl The committee will meet at/of Ontario store here Saturday and legal _ professions _ Should ing are not always aware of ing conditions: Down the street near the wa- agen. felt hei Ea -|10 a.m. Thursday in the legisla-/pecause it objects to South Af-|participate in the perfection, not|their rights. Some don't know A few blocks away, in the|terfront, Charles Millard, one- |The ottah chairs were 10W|ture building to discuss the bill.|;ican wines and brandies being] the replacement, of Ontario's|they are not compelled to take sixth-floor penthouse sisine ot tae leader of the pbb este ann ety aes few -- | ~ pyelic| esta through government out- Le program of free legalla breath analyzer test. the Seafarers' International Un-junion in Canada, was demon-|syyjpoLs GOING have inquired about the date, |jets. aid. , rief si ste tinsel : ion of Canada, a panel in the/strating the automated devices} by next week, the desk will|S#id a spokesman in the office stephen Lewis, member of the slides dis wae poh ce ago nothing more boo Aid friendly | complete and the nuclear cuts wall silently moved upwards to|that SIU President Hal C. Banks! pe gone--possibly the last sym-|% the clerk of the legislature.(ontario legislature for Scarbor-|* sures treuneciiy induce or at-(in all police stations or be given gesture--but it could amount tojare not subject to independent reveal a TV set and the drapes|had' installed in his penthouse|po) of a man who was de-|. Lhe spokesman said the meet- ough West, demanded that the ; raph odie igs ieee We to every suspect at the time of 'oo wa oe ee mee of any' kind. slid back-magically from a vast/olfice. nounced by a federal inquiry as|ins has not been made public government ban the. gale oe emp : ge a ---- pg There was nothing sacrificial) Some observers see a danger expanse of sunlight windows. Mr. Banks was gone--deposed|a power-hungry tyrant, a cor-| imply seis ' s est a = SE South African goods in Ontario. presen 'the "pried bald pe The briet also dealt with the petertihory jaaees bal Freee mp Wack a ee Both are pictures of organized /last month by the trustees. rupt and lawless leader who ran a otes pe geet a meter He put a resolution to this ef-|the "stated presumption that the| question of bail, contending that]/Khrushchey about cutting the naciioemnenete va in the labor in Canada in 1964. But the leather-covered walls/a job-selling racket instead of a e to|fect on the legislature order pa-|court would treat the offender|persons charged with impaired|over-production of fissionable|actual- disarmament which or careless driving or other of-|materials for warheads. everyone hopes -- is being ne- At the hotel, some 1,600 dele-jin the foyer of his executive) union. Pyge te eal pea sd - x0 per, making no mention of Mr. | lightly." tes from about 100 jons|suite were still there. So was| The office of Mr. Banks will/De otherwise and never has , " M a iil winne ave oi 4 ' " , is| cot r ga ro untons | suite es ee : the accused |fences of no grave consequence] To realize how far away this gotiated by the 17-nation Fast- the "shocking re-)should not be deprived of lib-|is from actual disarmament it| West committee in Geneva. pen "" as' i i new The brie were embrolied in policy de-|the miniature aquarium in the|be tummed into a board room for ae meses Rebeca a th be Procseli at Rig Five bates at the fifth constitutional] wall. So was his massive cincu-|the SIU executive. Although expressions of out-/'ale 7 weet fini! aur the seteecs Is aaate isa War ar wiki Ge eee nement # : =aaten ssk and his padded chair--| Reporters saw the recreation|'@se followed the introduction of Svements enea COn-| sual _& s mo ) ; aie | 'A ssary to a PROGRES / convention of the Canadian La-|lar desk and his padded cha . the bill and disclosure of its sec-| tempt. as light as anticipated, Thus, if|bail. Johnson's statement in Januany sRESS ABSENT tion to grant extraordinary pow- aD ; if re --------Ithat the United States andthe) The. test-ban treaty does not the same places back in the lineup after the hockey game. (CP Wirephoto) Quiet Meeting It's hockey night in Toronto and Beatle fans are being dis- placed from their lineup out- side Maple Leaf Gardens to WALIS COVERED IN LEATHER make way for puck addicts. INTERPRETING THE NEWS A-Explosives Cut Friendly' Move By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer {ments with a show of good wit, This follow-up to the test-han The new nuclear. move be- treaty is seen as a welcome ad- jtween the Russians and the| vance, although it is well to re- |Anglo-Americans is in itself/member that the treaty is not said Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Thursday 40 40) 38 38 35 35 38 6 Gaarlt Sault bor Congress. Out of raw reso-|Set higher than all other chairs,room for off-duty sailors, . the| : ; the ario Police Com- Soviet Union now have enough) preclude development of ever- pe ge, 'they were fecbboning) Visitors. bershop ers to the Ontario Police Com-) § the policies that. will guide or- Mr. Millard, appointed by the. Some searched the push bot- has ae : |equal 10 tons. of TNT for every|fact, the U.S. now claims to s simmered down. ; hav: 6G ' ae "Interest seems to have }man, woman and child on the have obtained 'important infor- years. tees to end Great Lakes labor|dreaded do-not-ship list--unsuc- : | im A va sane , Sot iene a . HEARD APPEAI troubles, demonstrated the de- cessfully. the spokesman in the clerk's:of- 'ara caeie om p Peewee si sic ot ee ah . CS; Ris fice. anes - ; |does ' . s PSs He twisted.a knob and the|SIU official. 'They were burned re é i sa , 4 oe Pearson appeal for labor's sup-/TV set was unveiled behind allast year." Sey toon 'sensation ned at : Sep ; |guard in a field of snow threw the cold reception given by the port for a program of economic} ss : z é |some surplus: snow over the Russian delegate to a U.S. pro- aimed at curbing unem- iev; 2 itte : ini believing that the committee ; 4 : | stockpile pi ype Ess |missiles, The hope is that the care, pensions and other social) take welfare programs. | dians and Eskimos find their) rightful place in Canadian so-| They argued about interna-| TORONTO (CP)--Enengy Re- tional unionism--and decided by sources Minister Simonett an- problem aside for another two Tuesday to help alleviate south- years, rejecting any CLC move western (ntario's water short- Saying the government "is e€X- tremely interested in bringing By THE CANADIAN PRESS struction of water-holding reser- Grand'Mere, Que.--J. Alphida|VitS,' the minister told the leg- ber of Parliament 'during the |™etease to 75 per cent from 50 Second World War was one of |/Pet cent its portion of the cost conscription. The 'government also would Montreal--Capt, R. V. Burns. 254m the. municipality's por- ; . z "lon condition this would be paid rn Pacific Steamships since|pack by Jan. 1, 1967. Mr. Si- Montreal--Joseph W. Ganann,|three-year deferment. 67, assistant general-manager| "By this arrangement it is Calgary--Mrs. Stella Thomp-jon projects which normally son, 84, mother of oilmen Frank|might have to be delayed be- 'jes suffered in a beating in her|have been committed at this home. point of time," he said Forecasts issued by the Tor-|periods of rain and drizzle to- onto weather office at 5:30 a.m.iday. Cloudy with a few sunny thunder rolled across the lower' Western James Bay, northern lakes Tuesday night in advance| White River: Cloudy and cool southwestern Ontario. A fewjat times wet snow. Sunny with showers remain this morning}a few cloudy intervals and not pated. Most localities will. be considerably warmer than Tues- snow and chilly rains into Windsor northwestern Ontario St... Thomas, Lake Erie, Niagara, western Kitchener Lake Ontario, Windsor, London, Mount Forest. cloudiness, windy and warmer | Hamilton fi today. Sunny with a few cloudy St. Catharines Eastern Lake Ontario liali- Peterborough .... burton, southern Georgian Bay: | Trenton ~ ; ' -| Muskoka ..... chance of thunderstorms to- Mus ey clearing by evening, Be-| North Bay.... 5 yw a. few Eariton ys ternoon. Sunny with a A sone intervals Thursday Ste. Marie... 3 ., agami, southern White River erie alae "Cochrane, Sud- Moosonee tutions and _ impassioned So that he looked down on his'free medical clinic and the bar- mission, the public apparently nuclear weapons stockpiled to|more-deadiy weapons and, in ganized labor for the next two government as one of three trus-|tom record files for clues to the > obtail : dropped off considerably," said jface of the earth." mation" in this direction in They heard Prime Minister vices for visiting reporters. "You won't find it," sald an lbeing. It is as if children on Geneva has been underlined by , hall for the committee meeting,| ae P a ies ee a lfence,. keeping intact theirPosal for a freeze on strategic ployment and providing health) They talked about helping In- ciety @ three-to-one vote to leave the/nounced a three-point program age. DEATHS about .a speed-up in the con- Crete, 73, who as Liberal mem.||slature the government would a group of MPs who opposed of these reservoirs. 88, general manager of Cana.|"0"_% the cost Of § Tepervosr jmonett referred to this as a of the Royal Bank of Canada. hoped that a start can be made and George McMahon; of injur-|cause local financial resounces In Oshawa Area Synopsis: Drenching rains and intervals and cooler Thursday of warmer air which moved into today with occasionai rain and but some clearing is antici-|so cool Thursday day. The storm brought wet Lake St. Clair, Lake Huron, | London Hamilton and Toronto: Variable Wingham j-iervais Thursday Toronto . Cloudy' with. a few showers an) Killaloe .. coming windy and warmer this | Sudbury .. Northern Georgian Bay Al-| Kapuskasing bary, North Bay: Cloudy with, Timmins eave i Subsidy Offered For Farm Ponds The second point in the pro- gram was an offer to farmers of a subsidy for building farm ponds. | Mr. Simonett said the govern-| ment would pay 50 per cent of jthe cost-up' to a maximum of 1 $500. The new policy would be m jretroactive to Nov. 1, 1963, jassist farmers who acted on the urging of the government to build ponds on their fanms The third step announced by Mr. Simonett was a program of| financial help for drought- stricken areas in southern On- tario, The minister gaid it could} be extended to the north should the need arise. ' The government would give county councils authority to des-| ignate one or more of its town- ships as drought-stricken areas) if the council felt that 50 per cent of all sources of water sup- ply for human and livestock purposes was inadequate. When an area was so. desig- nated, the provincial govern- {ment would bear half the cost of amy emergency water supply |to the townships | Mr. Simonett said the policy |changes would riot affect an ex- listing 50-50 cost - sharing ar-| rangement between the provin- cial govermment and various jconservation authorities. ade to fantes en. YOU NEVER KNOW WHAT THEY'RE DOING '2 oo» at he DISCOUNT HOUSE | jscale organization in Ontario in room at Queen's Park might not . % ? ; | be large enough to accommo- date the expected crowd. Section. 14 of the bill, which would have granted the commis- sion the power to imprison per- |sons who refused to testify be-| fore it in secret about crime in Ontario, already has been killed by the legislature Creditistes Plan Drive Into Ontario BELLEVILLE (CP)*-- Real Caouette, leader of Le Rallie- ment des Creditistes, said Tues- day his party will begin full- the near future. | "'We will start organizing full! time, probably in the next two weeks," he said in an interview! after a speech to the Belleville! Sales and Advertising Clu. ' He said his party will enter] a candidate in a byelection in Nipissing. | He said his party is already| searched the Red River Tues- organized in Toronto, Welland,| day for three boys missing North Bay, Sudbury, Kirkland! and feared drowned. They Lake and Timmins, had been seen on a raft fash- Divers and draggers FUR TRADE-IN TIME! © HIGHEST ALLOWANCE NOW ON YOUR OLD FUR COAT ¢ NO DOWN PAYMENT @ FREE STORAGE MARTEN'S FURS 75 KING ST. E. 723-7921 Cold Fur Storage Vaults on Premises! (Si al FEAR BOYS FELL OFF RAFT St. Boniface, could not be found. (See wire story) ioned from the roof of a car. The raft reached the river bank, but the boys, all of There are great Private Stock CANADIAN RYE WHISKY Whermed Otebaand Debiidteors Zit. (CP Wirephoto) |, GOVERNMENT INSPECTED MEATS inion al |Geneva talks now will x00DWILL SHO |more life | Only when they start throw-| Oyerhanging the whole mat- ing away the snowballs will dis-/ter is the billion-dollar question armament begin and the other/of how Red China is to be kids know anything like real se-|hrought into disarmament ne- curity, And kids don't take|gotiations. kindly to scuttling snowballs. |" Anyway, most people feel a Yet. most people find consid-/distinct improvement in: com- crate ccoeengemant in the/narison with the days when Sir rushchey - Johnson move--/winston Churchill warned a even in that they were able th gardareaee world that jaw- synchronize their announce-|jaw-jaw is better than war-war- war. NAMED DIRECTOR : There still is plenty of janr- OTTAWA (CP)--Dr. Jack D,|@w-jaw. yet = a |Ives, 32, internationally - known |S-0Ps_8te_ 8% . : Canadian geographer, has been S-4 named director of the geo- graphical branch of the depart-| BUYER -- SELLER ment of mines and technical | surveys, it was announced Mon- 728-9474 PAUL .RISTOW day. He succeeds Dr. N. L. Nicholson, who resigned re- REALTOR 187 KING ST, E. cently to join the staff of the University of Western Ontario at London. Dr. Ives previously was assistant to Dr. Nicholson. --_--_-- ----_------ --- ---- i "NORM" FISHER'S 3 Meat Market 2%) For Personalized pe Service Ga "Ss FREEZER SPECIAL | | | BEEF 39: lb | FRONT QUARTERS l No Charge for Cutting, Wrapping or Freezing | eal haenaendtiaeeiemaanenamititeane $1.00 SPECIALS 3 LBS. LEAN MINCED BEEF 4 LBS. LEAN RIB STEW 3 LBS. BOLOGNA by the piece 4 LBS. PORK HOCKS ANY OF THE ABOVE FOR SI SKINLESS WIENERS 2 lb. 79° ) Norm Fisher's 2 SIMGOE ST. N. LEAN SLICED COOKED HAM lb. 99* ert Market 723-3132. | ce a Se Se ee

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