Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Dec 1964, p. 2

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Federation Won't Quell Bargaining By Teachers educational studies until we; Salaries came under discus-|discipline members who bar- have cleared up the mess which\sion by both the secondary|gain individually with high exists 'there at the moment."|school federation and the On-|school boards on salaries. Al Studies are planned on com-|tario Public School Men Teach-|teachers' survey showed that) of a five-man secondary educa-|munity colleges, changes to the|ers' Federation, also holding its|57.3 per cent of the members tion commission designed 'to|Grade 13 program, free text- annual meeting in Toronto. bargain on their own. é "better the province's educa-|book plans, team teaching and, The scondary school teach-) Heated argument broke out tion system." leffectiveness of other pro-ers went into secret séssion to among the secondary school The commission is intended|grams. |discuss their problems. Jimiteachers after top officials of to "initiate, stimulate and co-| Glenn Kilmer of Brantford,/Russell of Hamilton, chairman'the federation were accused of ordinate" activity of the On-| chairman of a committee which'of the salaries committee, said/reyealing confidential informa- tario Secondary School rae age Res ~ pene. said there Reeen: be pos reed ef-|tion about members. ers Federation in educational|that although the federation|forts to "put a quality price} ; | studies and place the feder-|will not have the power to im- tag on quality teaching." | ai uabert of Butlincton aekinl| ation in the forefront of edu-|plement changes which its stud-| Delegates to the public school nat no information about a cational leadership. lies may show are needed, itifederation meeting voted), wacher would be given b the! Robert Brooks of Toronto toldjhopes it will put up such per-jagainst the principle of accept-\r.qeration until the teacher hadi 400 delegates to the federation's|suasive arguments that the de-ling salary cuts for teachers} .on warned, It was deteatadl annual meeting: "It's high|partment of education will have with only basic qualifications.| 'nanimously 4 but dietrict time we moved into the field of|no aiiernative but to agree. (They also rejected a motion to spokesmen e aid they had 2 US. Soldiers Captured [hn rane By Viet Cong Guerrillas --igitucsinan fs served as an "'ulti- to federation chiefs At the peak of the fightingjpelled. In preparation for thejelementary schools, while the some 1,200 government troops|massive assault today, planesisecondary school teachers capital of Binh Nghia today,|faced about the same number|dropped flares all night while voted to complain to Physicians} but the Viet Cong guerrillas}of Communists, making it one|fighters strafed and bombed Services Incorporated about a captured two U.S. soldiers andjof the largest engagements in'Communist positions. fee increase for medical ben- wiped out nearly two compan-South Viet Nam in the last) AP correspondent Peter Ar- efits earlier this year. | ies of government. troops. jfour years. nett tried to drive to the scene} Two other U.S. soldiers,) Three U.S. helicopters were and reported the Vieg Cong had) Storm Flatt ens members of the special forces, |shot down Tuesday. cut the road in three places, were killed Tuesday nig in) Fe AMMED WITH REFUGEES making ground relief difficult. | n Saigon, a number of offi- cials said they believed another ower 0 es TORONTO (CP)--Represent- atives of 20,000 Ontario high school teachers voted up to} $150,000 Tuesday for creation) that information should not be loosely given out in the future. | In other business, the public school teachers endorsed by 147 SAIGON (AP)--Government| forees recaptured the district) another action 30 miles north of Saigon. Their deaths brought; The town, jammed with 6,000 SHOT DURING HOLDUP Miss Judy Hill, 19-year-old green eyed beauty from Fort Worth, Texas, was named 1965 Maid of Cotton in the finals at Memphis. She was chosen over 20-contestants in two-days of judging. Miss Hill will represent the Cotton In- dustry for the coming. year with trips to Canada Europe. and (AP Wirephoto) Spaghetti-Untangling Like Italian Politics By DOUG MARSHALL Canadian Press Staff Writer It may seem a political para- dex that a right-wing Socialist has been elected president of Roman Catholic Italy largely because of crucial backing from * the Communists. The convolutions of Italy's multi-party politics frequently puzzle outsiders, but Monday's election of 66-year-old Giuseppe Saragat--after a record-break- ing 13 days and 21 ballots--takes more untangling than a plate of) congealed spaghetti. As the first Socialist head-of- tic who likes to pretend he puts|gat's long rivalry with Italy's poetry before politics. | But in fact he is a tough and determined Soc ia list, seldom|withdrew his nomination to end out of the limelight, with a po-|the deadlock on the presidential litical philosophy that has won/balloting. him warm friends in Britain's| Saragat broke with Nenni in Labor Party. | For Italy to elect a Socialist) president indicates how far the|Socialists were travelling too} : ; f country has moved to the left|close to the Communists. Now, |: Denis said he couldn't tell in recent years and holds out the|with Saragat elevated possibility that Moro's shaky | presidency, Nenni may be able left-of-centre coalition may soon|to take over as leader of both} find itself on firmer ground. | If nothing else, the election} probably means the end of Sara-!party. to' 241 the number of Amer-|Roman Catholic refugees from) icans killed in combat in South'North Viet Nam, was occupied Viet Nam since December,|by the Viet Cong Dec. 5 but coup attempt was afoot. Outwardly, things appeared sage hor ey or ' peaceful as negotiations con- » sleet an igh winds 1961, nee aaa forces drove them tinued on the dispute between|Caused extensive damage to Thirteen Americans now are/0u'. j : _\U.S. authorities and Lt.-Gen.©¢°™Mmunications on Cape missing. -- ; _| A powerful Viet Cong unit/Nguyen Khanh, the armed Breton Tuesday when some 200 Six U.S. servicemen also overran Binh Nghia again Mon- forces chief, over military in-|telephone and power poles were bite) pig 0 nN wd piriag or bent Two eid ie Ranger tervention in South Viet Nam's|flattened by the combined force attle for Bin ghia, es!companies tried to re-enter the ojyjjj , of the wind an i east of Saigon. Fighting still|town but were driven off. icivilian government. But there d weight of sleet ded A boy lies fatally w on the blood-spattered floor of a liquor store which, police said, he tried to hold up last night with a_ pistol that wouldn't shoot. The .22 calibre pistol 'was designed for blanks only and its barrel was plug- ged. Hospital attendants iden- was widespread fear, appar- n wires. | tified the boy as Joseph Jack- son. Manni 15. Five ac- quaintances told police they refused a request by Manning to join him in the holdup at- tempt. The store owner, Albert Bolinaro, said he shot the boy when his attention was diverted by a customer entering the store. --AP Wirephoto flickered igs Bry og Pe Tuesday, a government bat- ently based on inside informa- Cong was _ believe 0 haVetalion of 500 men was flown in|tion,. that a new and_ possibly -- its final onslaught on the/py helicopter but also was re-\violent plot was about to hatch. n Labor Income I arte set tess" Qntario Climbs fer. : TORONTO (CP) A pilot,Lake Ontario with 7% per cent, Mr, Matthews said there waS|study of labor income in Onta-|mid-western Ontario with 7% all the difference in the world! rio from 1951 to 1962 shows that|per cent and Lake Erie with 7% between this statement and Mr.|six of the province's 10 eco-|per cent. Crevier's testimony today thatinomic regions experienced) The study also shows that above-average growth rates of per - capita labor income has regional labor income. been consistently higher in the Eastern Ontario, Georg- metropolitan region, northeast- ian Bay, Metropolitan Toronto,¢? Ontario and northwestern the Lake Ontario region, mid- Ontario. western Ontario and the Lake| Per-capita income in 1962 Erie region were all above the Was $3,529 for the Metro region, provincial average of 7% per|$3,701 for northeastern Ontario LAWYER FEARED | (Continued from Page 1) other Socialist leader, Pietro|telephone conversation stated Nenni, the deputy premier who|that Mr. Denis denied Mr. Rou- 1947 to found the Social Demo- crat party because he felt the the Mr, Lamontagne who was be- hind the whole affair. Mr. Crevier said to the best of his recollection, when Mr. Lamontagne said in his opinion Mr. Rouleau was the person in- __|volved, Mr. Denis said 'Pierre to the Socialists and the Social Democrats, and form a unified state in the 18-year history of the Italian parliament, Saragat will forsake the main political arena and move to a loftier post that makes him something of a figurehead, much like a Cana- dian governor-general. ACTS IN CRISIS * But in times of crisis the pres- ident can exercise considerable influence by dissolving Parlia- ment and appointing prime min- isters. In the present, chroni- eally-unstable state of Italian politics, a crisis is always justjnessmen of this small lumber- ling town--ravaged by flood in Saragat, an able foreign min-|1955 and again last week--say ister in Premier Aldo Moro's|their town is in the throes of} four-party coalition, is a roman-'death. around the corner. "OLDER PEOPLE WIPED OUT" I can't tell you." READS TESTIMONY cent, says R. H. Frank of the 4nd $3,554 for northwestern On- Ontario economics and develop-tario. The provincial average ment department, was $3,529. Flood-Torn Town In Death Throes WEOTT, Calif. (AP) -- Busi- | | | | |barber |post office leans against the Mr. Andre Villeneuve, counsel for |Mr. Rouleau, read Mr. Lamon- itagne's testimony that Mr, De- Eastern Ontario, with the de- The share of labor dollars in velopment of chemical and as- cre! Niagara region declined to papi abd sociated industries, registered|!3.3 per cent from 15.4 per cent nis said specifically Mr. Rou-\i,6 biggest gains with "an an-|because of its outlying position leau we tah ce nat ws lnual growth rate 814 per cent. |in relation to.major industrial _Mr. il enesive _ Mr. co Writing in the monthly Onta-/markets, the study says. But vier if he now wished to make), + ognomic Review, Mr.|per-capita income exceeded the any correction or explanation.|prank says that Metropolitan|$3,000 level throughout the pe- Mr. i eel og mem Toronto is capturing a larger|tiod because wages in the steel They stand and tslk in small was fresher when e wrote his|anq larger share of. labor in-\and automotive industries rose : ; Aug. 22 report than it is now.) a sharply groups on hillsides overlooking} 5 PA come. Its average annual rate bf : : ; | Mr, Villeneuve then asked) rege sj| Mr the sea of silt that buries Weott.| , ' of labor income growth was 7% ' . . ©O\'.'whether Mr. Crevier's state- x of a large portion of existin Most of them agree that it ; per cent. | ot pee 4 ae rested pad ' ' '» y,|ment in the report was true. automotive operations to cen- isn't 'practical or profitable" to Rasa ia 5 spies ol ©. OP 0 Cen rebuild Mr. ,Crevier said "yes, abso- LISTS INCREASES tral Ontario caused the Lake St. Rusty Wier 'aailstant civil lutely."" Other regional increases were Clair region's low annual Watenee chiet tn Weott, said:|. Mr. Crevier resumed testify- Georgian Bay with 8% per cent,\growth of only five per cent. "We're old hands at this. Our|ing after causing a brief flurry; i ssarale is still good. Bat, when! tice opening of the morning): WEAt key FORLGAST they don't have too much time Session to- regain." When he failed to appear at e Drizzle, Foggy Turning Cooler The tempestuous Eel River the 10 a.m. opening, Chief Jus- wiped out Weott in 1955 -- at|tice Frederic Dorion of the Que- 32 32 exactly the same time of year.|bec Superior Court adjourned Most of those who lost every-|the hearing briefly until Mr thing in the current disaster Crevier showed up. were losers nine years ago. While inquiry officials were on Mrs, Agnes Johnson, 70,|/the telephone trying to locate watched her home float down him, Mr. Crevier arrived, ap-| the town's main street and{parently under 'the impression. TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts)St. Thomas....+4. settle on the roof of the Se-|the hearing was to resume at issued by the weather office at London .. Wee ae ' |10:30 a.m. ne a.m.; Slight! ._ Kitchener n the downtown area there a Synopsis: Slightly cooler air . are 34 homes destroyed, 11 TELLS OF TALK is expected to. move into the al Forest..... businesses destroyed or missing, Mr. Crevier, 36, began his province today bringing a grad- Hamman ie and two motels wrecked, The testimony Tuesday with this-ae- ual dissipitation of the fog in Re ty te shop is missing. The|count of conversation between southern Ontario. However, it To 'i harines. Denis and Mr. Lamon- may re-form late tonight, ipsam tagne: Lake St. Clair Lake Erie, Reterioronah -------- |Niagara, Windsor: Overcast with fog patches and occasional Trenton seeeees drizzle. Very mild today tur- Killaloe ... ing a little cooler ionight,| Muskoka .. Winds light. North Bay... Lake Huron, Lake Ontario, Sudbury .... . To Be Rabid London, Toronto, Hamilton; Be- Marlton . comiig overcast with occa. Sault Ste. Marte. 'BRANTFORD (CP) -- 'Tests| sional drizzle this afternoon and Kapuskasing .... conducted on the head of a full-|tonight. Fog forming again late| White River. a4 Norwood Man's grown 20-pound fox shot here|tonight and early Thursday.|Moosanee .. seeneeene bus station. The town's main street called the Avenue of Giants--| is partially cleared. At all sides, off the roadway are pools of} silt that suck like quicksand, | } jbody of Leaman Haddlesey, 40,/bies lof Norwood, Ont., was _recov-| jered Tuesday from the bottom|John Daniels as it walked out IN BLOOM FOR A DAY has spent a lifetime designing and creating floats for Pasa- travaganza. She has designed | more than 100 prize winners. --AP Wirephoto dena's New Year's Tourna- ment of Roses, stands beside one of her unfinished floats for Friday's. parade. Like every one she has created over the 'past 50 years, it will be completely covered with flowers and buds the night be- fore the hours-long floral ex- | NEED Mortgage Money? Reo! Estate Broker 728-4285 McGiLl 7 earlier this month have re-|Very mild today turningiTimmins ... PETERBOROUGH (CP)--The vealed that the animal had ra-|slightly cooler tonight. Winds' - Frank says the transfer) The Maritime Telegraph and|\---- | oe Company said at least 105 poles had been| | counted down in westem and| ormer oron 0 an jnorthern Cape Breton, leaving! irra communities without tele-| phone. service. | The Nova Scotia Power Com-| Sentenced Today mission said about 100 of its! poles were down and af least 500 ; RENO, Nev. (AP)--A former|said it has been advised Cum- q customers were without accountant for a Toronto bank'mings is wanted in Toronto for power. _ jis to be sentenced in U.S. dis-jtaking $17,800 in travellers' The sleet was accompanied|trict court today on a charge|cheques from Leaside branch by winds up to 50 miles anjof interstate transportation of|of the Bank of Montreal, where hour. jstolen property. he worked. a7 | Robert Donald Cummings, 28,| Immigration authorities have w has pleaded guilty to carrying!placed a hold order on him. Canada Has a Nuclear Role $7,350 in stolen travellers') The maximum penalty on the cheques from Los Angeles to interstate transportation charge Reno Nov. 17. is 10 years in prison for $10,000 The court denied motions by 'ine, or both. |Cummings' court appointed) Cummings was arrested in OTTAWA (CP) -- External lawyer to dismiss the charge. nearby Sparks, Nev., in Novem- Affairs Minister Martin said U.S, attorney's office) ber. Tuesday countries like Canada| if a which have followed "a_ con-| scious policy 'of muciear sei, Cancer Treatments} HEAT WITH OIL restraint'? have a special role St t I N Y and responsibility in winning) r . jagreement to prevent the a n ow ear DIXON Ss spread of nuclear weapons. NEW YORK (AP) -- Treat-| OIL | In a year - end~ statement ment of certain types of cancer| broadcast by the CBC's short-|with an antibiotic called dactin- wave international service, Mr.;omycin will begin in hospitals 313 ALBERT ST. Martin said the Communist Chi-|in the new year, Merck and jnese nuclear test last October| Company has announced. 24-HOUR SERVICE was clearly a setback in the| The drug manufacturer. said |search for a peaceful and or-|the antibiotic has been found 723-4663 derly world. juseful against a rare type of "T say this because Canada|kidney cancer known as Wilm's SERVING OSHAWA OVER is one of the countries which|tumor, but is not a cure for the glider ta has for many years had _ the)|disease. technical and economic capa-| ~~ city of manufacturing nuclear |weapons but which has deliber- ately refrained from turning jthat capacity to other than the peaceful use of the atom." Mr. Martin said India has jseen its contribution to world! |peace lying in the same direc- |tion. | |} "The Chinese nuclear test jseems to me to point up the} urgent need for an_ interna-| jtionalagreement or agree-| |ments to prevent the further| proliferation of nuclear weap-| ons | | "In bringing about such an| jagreement, I can see a special jrole and responsibility for coun- tries which, like Canada, have followed a conscious policy of nuclear self-restraint."' f WHEN YOU NEED MEDICINE FAST !! have your DOCTOR phone your PRESCRIPTION to Eastview Pharmacy 573 KING E. 725-3594 2 Cer Oclivery . JAYCEE TIN WITH US light. Georgian Bay, Killaloe, Hal- iburton, North Bay, Sudbury: of Stony Lake, about 28 miles|of a dog pen with his dog. He|Turning a little cooler with northeast of here. . shot the animal and the head|snowflurries tonight and Thurs- Haddlesey drowned Sunday|was sent to a labroatory in Hull,/day. Winds light. afternoon when his snowmobile Que. | Algoma: Cloudy and turning crashed through the ice after, James Farrington, Brartford|cooler today. Thursday cloudy | Dey or night NEED A NEW... OIL FURNACE? Call PERRY 723-3443 The fox was discovered by "INTRO-'69" New Year's Eve hitting a hole. The vehicle was|small animal control officer,|with light snow in the afternoon recovered Monday. said Tuesday night two dogs be-|and evening. Winds light. Two other men in the snuw-|lieved to have been in contact} Timagami, White River,| mobile with Haddlesey--Fred-|with the fox have been de-| Cochrane: Cloudy with inter-| jerick Craig of Rouge Hills,|stroyed. Imittent light snow, Cooler to-| 'Ont., and William Payne of| He said his-department will] night, Winds light. | Norwood, both 43--were rescued|issue summonses to persons' Forecast Temperatures | by Roger Davidson, 16, and Don-}who permit their dogs to run|Low tonight, high Thursday: ald' Lush, 19, both of the Tor-) loose. 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