pase collectively on wages and ed SIXTEEN HOURS OF MAY DAYS Innis Kelly of Vancouver, a Pacific Western Airlines radio operator, is greeted by his girl friend at the airport after being flown from Ketchikan, Alaska, with other survivors of the Granduc mining camp slide in northwestern B.C, Kelly spent 16 hours' at a make- shift radio transmitter send- ing distress calls from Gran- duc. : --(CP Wirlephoto) No Satisfactory Alternative To Bargaining, Morris Says OTTAWA (CP)--There is no 'satisfactory alternative to col- 'lective bargaining for determin- 'ing wage rates, Joseph Morris, tive vice-pr t of the Canadian Labor Congress, said _here Sunday. He told délegates to the week- end biennial convention of the Canadian Maritime Union (CLC) that other alternatives such as rate setting by a gov- ernment body or by employers had proved ineffective. "Among the rights gained by labor through centuries of 'struggle, the greatest and most dmportant is the right to bar- Jack Staples of Welland. was elected president. Other offi- cers elected were: Secretary- treasurer, James Todd of Wel- land; vice - president, Robert Smith of Wiarton, Ont.; execu- tive board members: Walter Gonyou of Toronto and Regis Quenelle of Port MeNicell, Ont.; board of .trustees: Wil- liam Fournier of Port. McNic- oll; Ralph Edwards of Vasey, Ont., and Morley Grace of Mid- land, Ont. The convention passed a reso- lution urging the federal govern- ment to introduce a_ subsidy program to encourage develop- ment of a Canadian deep sea merchant marine. It asked the government in another resolution to negotiate an agreement with the United States prohibiting foreign ships from plying between Canadian and U.S. ports on inland waters. Other resolutions called for training schools for seamen, more efficient life preservers and improved government safety inspection services on all vessels. conditions,""" he said. :Bilingualism 'Growth Seen QUEBEC (CP) -- Premier John Robarts of Ontario says he believes the use of both French and English in every part of Canada is an objective that can be achieved in his grandchildren's lifetime. ' Mr. Robarts, addressing a Quebec government luncheon in his honor Saturday, said he doubts whether this will be pos- sible in his own lifetime or in that of his children. He 'mentioned present efforts towards hilingualism in his province. "As we perfect our methods of instruction and as we develop more teachers," he said; "I look forward to the future expansion of the teaching and, indeed, the use of the French language; in Ontario." Also at the luncheon, Pre- mier Lesage of Quebec said: "We should continue to try to achieve a higher success than peaceful coexistence." Whatever the: differ ence, French- and English - speaking Canadians are not enemies, Mr. Lesage said. "They should learn to live and gurvive to- gether in the same country. Agency Said In Chaos PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- The War Supplies Agency, part of the emergency supply plan- ning branch of the departmetit of national defence, exists only on paper and is in "chaotic" shape, Judge John Kennedy said Saturday, The agency is responsible for control of production, distribu- tion and pricing of supplies in Canada in event of attack. Judge Kennedy, a_ retired Peterborough County judge, spoke to members of the agency at a Zone 4 conference at nearby Rockhaven. At present, ho one has power to carry out emergency meas- ures that would have to be taken in event of a nuclear at- tack, he said.' All that exists are documents in draft form, undated, with black spaces and unsigned. He called "fantastic" a plan whereby in event of an attack a message would be sent from WSA national headquarters to regional directors and then to zone officials. "The only practical strategy of nuclear warfare is to attack without warning and it is most improbable that in the event of an attack, any message would ever be sent from national headquarters," 'said Judge Ken- nedy. olds International Ine. announced today that it has ac- quired all the capital stock o' ,|versities. » {led at their source--usually the |school of social work, agreed, Reynolds Buy All of Stock MONTREAL (CP) -- Reyn- f Filter Lite All-Weather (Alum) Ltd. in which it previously held a 50-per-cent interest. Filter Lite operates plants in Montreal and suburban Ville la Salle manufacturing aluminum storm windows and doors. Reynolds International is a wholly - owned subsidiary of Reynolds Metals Company of the United States: ond Canadian flag. has been found burned here. Royal Canadian Legion Friday raised a flag at the legion hall Canadian Flag Found Burned STRATFORD (CP) -- A sec- The Stratford branch of the "~ another over the cenotaph. Friday night Archibald Donald, branch president, found the. burned remains of the flag in front of the hall. Saturday the flag at the cen- otaph was found in charred pieces at the base of the pole. The guy wires had been cut. The branch had decided|: Thursday to fly the new flag in- stead of the Red Ensign. Stresses Emo Reflection On Colleges TORONTO (CP)--Two mental health experts agreed Sunday |that the rising number of stu- ldents with emotional problems indicates serious flaws in uni- Dr. Eli Bower, mental health consultant in education at the National Institute of Health in Bethesda, Md., said that the ba- sic aids of universities should be changed and that mental health problems should be tack- social system within with uni- versity. Dr. T. Grygier, professor at the University of Toronto tional Ills saying that those students who are seeking status rather than education at university are more likely to have more seri- ous mental health problems. Both men were speaking to a conference on student mental health sponsored by the Ontario region of the Canadian Union of Students. Dr. Bower said that a new approach to learning would have to be created to teach students to process rather than just learn the information available. He also suggested greater communication among the faculty, administration and |was made in the light of a state- STURGEON FALLS HIGH SCHOOL DISPUTE FLARES STURGEON Falls, Ont. (CP)--The high. school board here is caught up in a contro- versy over its proposal to pay Roman Catholic and Protestant clergymen for giving religious instruction in the school. The Roman Catholic hier- archy in the diocese of Sault Ste. Marie says the board should pay the insiructors. The provincial department of education says it doesn't think the board is allowed to do it. A Protestant interdenomina- tional group here says the board can't. and shouldn't pay the in- structors Bruno Vannier, board chair- man, said in a statement Fri- day that the board's proposal ment to the board by Msgr. Adolphe Proulx, chancellor of the diocese, that the diocese would build a separate school if the board did not hire a teacher of religion. This town of 6,288, about 22 miles west of North Bay, is pre- Would Pay Clergy For Instructions dominantiy French - speaking and Roman Catholic, There are 1,100 students in the high school. Students in all grades but Grade 13, except for a few who are excused at the request of their parents, receive 35 min- utes of religious instruction each week. A priest instructs the 800 Catholics and a minister in- structs a small group of Protes- tants, PASSED RESOLUTION On Sept. 23 the board passed, with one of its five members dissenting, a resolution that it would "adopt a policy of paying for the teaching of religion" in grades 9 to 12. Rev. Nei! G. Price, president of the North Bay and District Ministerial Association, a group of Protestant clergymen, said Friday 'that the board's pro- posal would be tested in the courts if carried out. The association passed a res- olution expressing to Education Minister William Davis its "strong disapproval of the prin- ciple and practice of paying out of public funds for the teaching of religion in the public high schools," Last Nov. 27, F. S. Rivers, chief director of education for the department, wrote the board that its proposal was "of doubtful validity" because "there appears to be no provi- Henry Ford II Excommunicated DETROIT (AP) -- Rev. Ed- mund Battersby, spokes- man for the Detroit arch- diocese, said Sunday that Henry Ford II "was automat- ically excommunicated" from the Roman Catholic Church by his marriage Friday to Italian divorcee Maria Cristina Vet- tore Austin. "When a Catholic who has a valid marriage is divorced and remarries, he is excommuni- cated,' Father Battersby said. "That is church law." Father Battersby said he un- derstands the new Mrs. Ford also is a Roman Catholic and, f this is correct, "the same would apply to her." sion in the school acts for pay- ment of a teacher of religious instruction." In December, James Gracie, a board trustee, moved that the board rescind its resolution in the light of Mr. Rivers' letter. Mr. Gracie could not find a seconder for his motion and later resigned from the board. The board passed later an- other resolution saying it "rec- ognizes the necessity of im- proved religious instruction" and 'the necessity of paying an honorarium to the instructors of|j various denominations in recog- nition of services rendered." By TOM MITCHELL OTTAWA (CP) -- Prospects look: a tiny bit brighter for Prime Minister Pearson's fore- cast of three weeks to wind up the business of the current parliamentary session and clear the decks for a new one. The 54-clause jabor standards bill was the first item of bus- iness brought before the Com- mons when it sat Tuesday after a two-month break. By Friday the bill was given second read~- ing, approval in principle, and awaits only the formality of third reading, probably today. However, the labor code was considered the least contentious Hopes Brighter That House Can Conclude In 3 Weeks of the legislative items Mr. Pearson said he hoped to clean up in a three-week sting round- ing off the session. Still to come are the Canada Pension Plan and a formula for provinces who choose to stay out of federal - provincial shared-cost programs. TALK OF THREE MONTHS Some opposition MPs have 'been talking about three months as a more likely figure than three weeks to clean up the legislative hangover. What former Conservative health minister J. Waldo Mon- teith called the "'fifth edition" of the pension plan came be- DEATHS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Kenora, Ont. -- Senator John A. (Pete) Robertson, 52, a for- mer railway conductor; of a heart attack. New York--Malcolm X, 38, American Negro nationalist; shot by an assassin. New Westminster, B.C.--Rolf Macey, 61, assistant editor of the daily New Westminster Co- lumbian; after a heart attack. Montreal--Mrs, Edna Marie Wamboldt, 40, wife of Reg Wamboldt, wire editor of the Montreal Star. Santa Barbara, Calif.--Mrs. Donald Culross Peattie, 64, nov- elist and onetime roving editor for Reader's Digest. Helsinki -- Eljas Erkko, 69, owner of the largest newspaper in Finland, Helsingin Sanomat; after a stroke. Ste. Agathe, Que. -- Norman Namerow, 32, prominent figure in Eastern Canadian auto rac- ing; of a heart attack. Madrid -- Prince Michael Waschinsky, 60, film producer who claimed descent irom the Polish royal family; after a heart attack. Aurora, Ont. -- Jean Moffat, 60, reeve of Aurora; -after a brief illness. Saint John, N.B.--Rev. Leo Sexsmith, 70, well-known mem- ber of the Redemptorist Order of the Roman Catholic Church, who was born in Marysville, Ont.; after a brief illness. fore the House during the week with the government's an- nouncement on reducing to 65 from 70 the age of eligibility for the old age assistance pay- ments. The eligible age for the pay- ments would drop a year for each year until 1970, when all persons age 65 would get the assistance payment, currently $75 a month. Although this step met gen- eral approval in the Commons, Mr. Monteith and other Con- servative MPs served notice at a press conference they plan to battle for other revisions in the plan when it comes before the House. The opting - out formula has also run into opposition and cuuld play a part in stretching out the session past Mr. Pear- son's 'three weeks. Union Starts PITTSBURGH (AP) -- The United Steelworkers Union will begin today an official tabula- tion of votes cast in its heated Feb. 9 election. Three international tellers of the union will supervise the count, which will be made be- hind locked doors at union headquarters by outside work- ers hired by the Honest Ballot Association, a private organ- ization. Chief contest to be decided is the bitter battle for president between incumbent David J. yoy and the union's No. man, Secretary-Treasurer I. W. Abel. An incomplete and. unofficial tally by The Associated Press gave Abel a lead of some 7,000 votes. It's indeterminate when the official results will be an- Steel Election Ballots Big Count Must Learn To Struggle TORONTO (CP) -- Charlotte Whitton, former mayor of Ot- tawa, said Saturday the great- est challenge to a teacher is to instill a sense of purpose in children. "We must remember there must be a struggle and purpose in life," she told a dinner meet- ing of the Federation of Women Teachers' Associations of On- THE OSHAWA TIPAES, Aas Se ae a Te 7 Mondey, February 22, 1965 3 MOSCOW (AP)--The new So- viet regime. Sunday proclaimed a new dea! for intellectuals. At the same time, the Krem- lin harshly criticized former premier Nikita Khrushchev's attitude toward _-- intelli- gentsia. The policy statement was de-|he Soviet Regime Proclaims New Deal For Intellectuals for different schools and trends, different styles and competing with each efter ond united at the same time by their common dialectical-mate- rialistic outlook and unity of the pecans St eeeerne ee livered by Alexei M. Rumyant- sev, editor-in-chief of Pravda, the Soviet Communist Party organ. Without mentioning Khrush- chev by name, he referred to time. The term is rarely used) now except in a derogatory sense and is closely identified with the Stalinist dictatorship. NEED EXPERIMENT Rumyantsey said genuine scientific and cultural creativity "are possible only under condi- tions of search and experiment, free expression and the clash of opinions." "The fruitful development of as the vozhd during his life-| TASTE the golden goodne: ~ JORDA BRANVIN Sherr CHILL IF DESIRED science, literature and art calls tario. The child's mind must be prevented from slipping into an easy attitude of acceptance, Miss Whitton said. Teachers must "offer a strong counteraction to TV, ra- dio, records and comic strips by appealing to children in other fields.' Miss Whitton drew applause twice during her speech--when she said teachers were paid too little and when she recom- mended that teachers be given fnore control over their prac- ice. Rap Possible Rate Increase BELLEVILLE (CP) -- The Ontario Mayors and Reeves Association will join with the Canadian Association of May- ors and Municipalities in a brief objecting to possible rate in- creases by the Bell Telephone Company of Canada, Mayor Jack Ellis of Belle- ville, an associate executive, said Friday Bell already has made representations to the federal government seeking a seven per cent increase in earn- ings and boosting its profit structure to $117,000,000 from TUESDAY WHILE THEY TROUL Tues. and Wed. AN GRADE "A" OVEN READY CHICKENS LAST SKINLESS WIENERS RINDLESS BACON LEAN MINCED BEEF L :$ $ LEAN TENDER $50,000,000, nounced. The tellers must role on all protests before the count is final, and indications are that there will be numerous protests, About 980,000 members in some 3,300 locals in Canada and the United States were eli- gible to vote. However, it is estimated that only 650,000 bal- lots were cast. BACKACHE and RHEUMATISM Pain wice a8 Many women as mi are made erred ga a urinary irritation caused rm, Escherichia Coli. To quickly combat th the secondary aches, muscular pains and dist sleep caused by Kidneyand yg irritations, try taking 2 little CYSTEX tablets with & glass of water 3 times daily for a few days, OYSTEX is a cleaning urinary anti- septic, also an analgesic pain reliever for Rheumatism, Sciatica Pains, Headache, Backache, and muscular pains, Get OYSTEX from druggist. Feel better fast. =p Vow! Faise reoth | - Fit Beautifully! Amazing dental discovery, 'Cushion Grip'® -- ends sore spots -- refits loose dentures to hold snug as a dentist's mold! Tasteless! Nothing to mix! 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