ELLIOT LAKE, Ont. (CP)--|weigh the long-term effects of a| This depressed uranium mining|deal which would involve some Prime Minister Pearson Satur-jreserves of uranium. day that the government will "I hope we will be able to not let it die. overcome the difficulties," said He said that if current nego-|Mr. Pearson. If completed it tiations to sell France 100,000,-|would be the biggest commer- 090 pounds of uranium oxide)cial transaction ever negotiated fall through, his governmenti/by Canada. will find some other way to) Although he cited no figures, keep the uranium industry in|the deal is understood to be being. worth some. $700,000,000. Cur- It was as member of Parlia-jrent price for uranium oxide is ment for Algoma East that Mr. $4.38 a pound but informed Pearson sat down with a group|sources say the price under dis- of Elliot Lake municipal offici-jcussion is much higher. Ex- als and businessmen, discussed|perts are forecasting that de- their frustrations and dis-/mand for uranium will rise appointments and pledged to|sharply and that the price is bring their urgent needs to the likely' to go beyond $7 a pound attention of the prime minister|by the 1970s. of Canada. | "Mr, Pearson said it is "our, He said Trade Minister Sharpjresponsibility to maintain a vi-| would be going to Paris soon/able uranium industry, either} for negotiations on the proposal|by contract--or if the contract by Elliot Lake's Consolidated collapses -- by some other| Denison Mine to sell uranium|method." oxide to France. The minister|ASKS QUESTION was to have gone at the week-| A questioner asked whether end but his trip was postponed|the meeting should assume the because France was not ready|government might stockpile} to start talks, uranium, This was a reference) MUST ISSUE LICENCE to the government program) It: was a straight commercial|from July 1, 1963, to July 1,} transaction but the government|1964, when it bought and stock-| entered into it since its atomic|piled uranium from two mines) energy control board wouldjat Elliot Lake and one at Ban-| have to issue a licence for ship-|croft in eastern Ontario. ments. Difficulties arose be-| Mr. Pearson replied that he cause the government had|was not in a position to say) international commitments on how it would be done. selling uranium. A LONG WAY HOME | Betty American jet airliner from Australia. They said Robson Bjornson Nurse feeds 20-year-old Brian Rob- Sueeallt, Paci nour flight | e e | } cn n'a Im Anges to SN ait as ates (PPOLS, Student pital today where the -- posjtion in the crate--billed ' young man was taken by as a computer! Robson told authorities who found him them he was trying to re- stowed away in a_ crate turn to Great Britain as cheap as possible (AP Wirephoto) that arrived at the airport last night aboard a Pan 4 Escapees sriaiesinaisaioags WASHINGTON (AP) -- Somejing commission that was sent e who stayed to listen and argue|to Santo Domingo. T Be hours came away feeling While many, like Dr. T10 Towns there was no winning side Hoyt of the University of New | But college students and pro-| Mexico, felt the teach-in worth \fessors, after a weekend mass|While, others disagreed. "teach-in" discussion of U.S Viet Nam policy, seem to think) P. Knowles of Wisconsin turned a Qe ave the idea is simply great. down an invitation to attend a | "Questioning of American for-| tea h-in at - oe of Teen a a , ; : eign policy is a responsibility! Wisconsin at Milwaukee. ecg or amar a eee sane wat oe university students have never "1 question whether these in- when the wash from their own| cident occurred, é taken on before in this coun. dividuals raat ee ay gaa motorized canoe swamped the| Clark said he swam in the ai-|tY:" said Margaret Thomas, a apences ~ their acts," the gov- vessel as they were fishing. Ajrection from which their vessel political science student _ Am sabres. : fourth man swam a mile in the|had come. When he reached sonar pin bideet ie La hl a sae Unive) sity, R J frigid waters to safety and later|shore, he had to walk back en, ey, Eooeet Have Gens 10 Oh He ' ia ke 'tho cht the joined the search for his com-/along the bank of the Ghost] !0"8 S50. : fide =e se i bi panions' bodies. River for 20 miles to the main The apa of the marathon, Dead are Stanley Thompson,|highway and from there to 15 hours of discussion Saturday ,| 23, a provincial police consta-|Matheson. He arrived early dei Washington. It cede broad-| ble, Robert McCullough, 26, and|Sunday, about 10 hours after cast by radio and television to Robert Haley, 24, all of Mathe-|the accident. more than 100 college campuses} son, 42 miles east of here. Their) Clark was taken first to his in the United States and Can- bodies were not immediately re-/home for treatment. Later, he ada. In some instances, groups Are Sou ht covered. joined a group of 21 volunteer watched a few hours, then got) , Allan Clark,.23, also of Mathe-|searchers who set out in seven into their own lengthy debates) son, told police he managed to|motorized canoes from a point over the U.S. position in Viet) MONTREAL (CP) -- Police kick off his boots before setting!20 milds from the accident site. |° am: ' here said today they have been out for shore in heavy oilskins., The search was carried out in Carroll Cagle, former editor advised of the penitentiary es- He left one man clinging to the steady rain which had been|0f the campus newspaper aticape of four Montrealers serv- canoe and the others clutching|pounding the Timmins area| New. Mexico University, an ding long terms and described as their floating sleeping bags. since Friday. Thomas Horn, a student council) extremely dangerous. near LW are |member at that school, said) Police said today the escape : |they didn't think either the ad-/at Prince Albert, Sask., took Ontario s Medico Car B ll | ministration or critics of its pol-| place overnight. Details were e 1 icy won the debate. not available here REACTION MIXED Pees a to have escaped Reaction to the teach-In was were Maurice Gosselin, 31, sen- Scored B Andrew Thom son : tenced in 1959 to 22 years; Ro-| | Vegan mixed, a survey found. as z ail garde 4 {At Timmins, more than : Some verbal heat was di- oe Savard, a, sentenced toad Leslie Frost linches was reported pel OTTAWA (CP) -- Attackingjuntary membership and par-jrected at McGeorge Bundy {19 5 to 25 aici Claude Pitre, |were flooded and creeks on the the Ontario government's med-jticipation by private insurance|presidential adviser on national 33, sentenced Ra hn he Given Award lwest side of the town over- ical care bill, provincial Lib- companies \security, who cancelled out-of years, pe Ab Lamarche, 28. | flowed. eral Leader Andrew Thompson, His party would settle for|the Washington program at the °°1\)"8 a life term. ao ' nal Saturday called for good health/nothing less than universal,|last minute. ihe All wer prison for rob- \ Legpeal lean . -_ i bien 8 hae oaie on | beries, Gosselin was also said|Frost, former Progressive Con-|'N©), most of it in a three-hour care to be as openly available! comprehensive health coverage,| Some leaders of the teach-in 4 A as education. including drugs, dental and eye| wired Bundy Sunday asking for to be serving time for the at- He told the annual meeting of) care an "alternative confrontation" tempted-siurder of a policeman. the Eastern Ontario Liberal As-| On housing in Ontario, he saidjon television over Viet Nam Pete ee sociation his party would op-\there are "more than 30,000) policies. This, however, was be- pose the government bill "with people lined up" in a major|fore it was revealed Bundy was all the resources at our com-|city waiting for adequate low-|a member of a U.S. fact-find- mand." cost housing, "waiting to get ences -- The Ontario Conservative|some alternative to their rat- Clergymen Hold Session PM Gives His Pledg 'To Uranium Centre centre got assurance from|25 per cent of Canada's proven|park in the area, subject He announced another Elliot|council, It would also be necessary to\Lake development. The federalicake during the talk. Edwin) switch their opinions government was ready to estab- lish a 160-square-mile national): to concurrence of the Ontario gov- ernment. 'We'll get busy on it as soon as Queen's Park an- nounces formal acceptance." It would help create employment in the area, Moreover, the Company of Young Canadians, being set up to serve in poverty - stricken areas at home and abroad, would need a training centre. Elliot Lake had the accommo- dation. "I'll see that the organ- izing committee knows about Elliot Lake." | Before returning to Ottawa, the prime minister and_ his iparty visited another new Elliot Lake project -- the Centre for Continuing Education where he talked to members of women's hospital auxiliaries, just finish-) ing a stay, and to an incoming| group taking a girl guide exec- utive training course. He termed the centre, a fed-. eral'- provincial project, "the start of something big" and| hoped that one day it would be) as famous in the east as the Banff School of Fine Arts in the west. From Elliot Lake, Mr. Pear- son drove some 100 miles to! Sudbury to fly back to Ottawa pausing en route at the com- he sat down to talk over local problems with the S Like Idea | 'Week-end Mass "Teach-In' teach-in caused many | professors and students to |now favor the administration | policy. "For the first time," he said Republica Governor Warren|"those who favor the adminis-|_-- ses ag tration's policy had a chance to |speak out... and because of it | students listened rather care- |fully and quite a bit of them changed their thinking." Two professors who took lea-- ing and opposing sides in the teach-in continued their debate the |television program, Meet | Press jwas lifted by the winds, torn lapart and hurled 250 feet, troop- ers said. "Nobody saw a funnel-shaped cloud," said Trooper R. W. Mil- ler, referring to reports the wind may have been a tornado. The weather bureau at Buf- \falo declined to label the wind |a tornado, but a spokesman said "the conditions were there fo a tornado." Miller said the storm left a |path of destruction at least "12 |miles long and a half - mile wide' through a_ mostly |sparsely-settled area in south |Chautauqua County. |servative premier of Ontario, was one of four recipients of the Ontario Water Resources vice Award: Thursday. Premier John Robarts pre- sented awards to Mr. Frost, Al- nancial Times says P; | reconcile government had retained "odi-\infested tarpaper shacks, many in its medicallof them without adequate ous features" UN Transfer _.TORONTO (CP)--A group Of pert Edward Berry of Toronto, Toronto clergymen participated) ong Dr. John S, Bates of Fred- hour sermon - and-\ericton, chairman of the New in a five - plan such as means tests, vol-|toilets prayer session for peace in Viet| Brunswick and Nova Scotia pro- Nam Sunday to emphasize their vincial water authority. belief that peace in that coun- : try is partly a responsibility of} The award was given posthu- Requested PHNOM PENH (AP)--Prinee Norodom Sihanouk, Cambodia's Canadians. An inter-faith clergy, which sponsored $13,800 Grants Tax Cut Are Announced . Bid Seen ee iit nn OTTAWA (CP)--Grants total- WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres-|United Nations be transferred tion by ling $13,800 for research groups Toronto ident Johnson announced Satur-|to Geneva from New York be- Peace In clergy at two Ontario universities were Viet Nam is an urgent announced today by the Canada Council. ; day he will recommend that)cause of the "racist policy" of ,' : : i Queen's University at King- Congress cut excise taxes by the United States. F lives of all Canadians." Most j ston gets $5,800 for a research $1,750,000,000 July 1, by a like Speaking to the opening ses- major Canadian. religious ' team looking into the workings|@amount next Jan, 1, and byjsion of the Cambodian parlia- groups were represented. of the Canadian economy and|$464,000,000 more by 1970 ment, Sihanouk said E ee That adds up to almost $4,-- "Without wanting to ask for 000,000,000 over a five - year the founding of a rival organi- period zation for the United Nations, Johnson said he will recom-jour country should assume the mend that the excise tax on/honor of proposing that in face automobiles and air condition- of the racism and discrimina be reduced effective imme-|tion of the American whites, the diately real partisans of racial equal- related policy problems | The: University of Waterloo at t Waterloo ,Ont., gets $2,400 for a survey on press coverage at the 1963 federal election. The aim 1} to assess any impression of the f Canadian political parties which can be gathered from the news- N.Y. Windstorm Rips Barns JAMESTOWN, N.Y er papers and to search for re gional variations in these is 10 per cent, which means it\the headquarters of the United|damaged or destroyed Sunday images adds $225 to the cost of the!Nations in New York. We couldjnight by what state police de- Se average automobile. Johnson suggest that the United Nations| scribe as "'a terrific windstorm" proposed cutting it to seven per/move, for example, to Geneva,|in southwestern New York cent now -- a saving of about! at least until the American gov- State. $75 to the average car buyer, ernment abandons its racist pol Three persons were reported and to five per cent by 1967.|icies at home and abroad," GOOD FOOD BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12 Noon to 2 P.M. DINNER 5:30 to 8 P.M. FULLY LICENSED DINING ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER 27 King St. W., Oshowe LENNOX cooling coil to your furnace Enjoy whole-house air conditioning More economical than "room" units Put the furnace blower, filter, d diffusers to work 365 da; Ping efor COMPLETE com it Leis eee Shane -, easy to buy, thrifty ms : " - \, Free estimate. y to operate. Call for 723-2245 LL YOUR DRUG NEEDS TORE FREE-CITY-WIDE-DELIVERY 43 King Street West, Oshawe JURY AND LOVELL 723-358) committee of|"r'. the|chairman of session, called it a preach-in| and pray-in and an "affirma-) that} moral issue which involves the|Pollution control. (AP) -- The excise levy on new autosjity should respond by desertinz| Homes, harns and vehicles were| injured when their mobile home Now's the time to add a jmously to Arthur Melville Sni- der of. Waterloo, Ont., first the commission, and was received by his widow, Mrs. Mary Snider. e U.K. Paper Sees Johnson "An Impulsive President" LONDON (Reuters)--The Fi- sident} Johnson's foreign policiés in the last six months have given some people an image of an "impulsive president; over - conscious, of his own and Amer- ica's power." The influential business daily says the president now had to regain the confidence of American allies. In an editorial headlined U.S. Policy Comes Under Fire, the paper says: "Criticism has been levelled not only at what the president has done but also at the way in which he has done it. "His sudden reversal of pol- icy on the multilateral force in December of last year, his var- ious decisions on Viet Nam, the abruptness of the cancellation of the visits of (Pakistani) Pres- ident Ayub Khan and (Indian Premier) Mr. Shastri and, fin- ally, American intervention in the Dominican Republic, have all come under fire." The paper questions Presi- dent Johnson's declaration that the U.S. would not stand idly by and let the Communists set THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, Mey 17, 1965 3 wings of the extremist 'hawks' who advocated the unre- stricted bombing of North Viet Nam, and argue that China would not intervene for fear of retaliation against her Lanchow atomic plant." There was 'not the slightest ing the Viet Nam war than he had been before China exploded its second atomic bomb. and professors at the sity of Toronto were urged Sat- Demonstrations Are Proposed TORONTO (CP) -- Students Univer- urday to demonstrate against Adlai Stevenson, United States ambassador to the United Na- tions, when he visits the univer- sity May 28 to receive an hon- orary doctorate of laws. reason," the editorial says, for thinking President Johnson was| The call came from Paul more prepared to risk extend- Simon, an Ontario Hydro- Electric Power Commission employee and part-time univer- sity lecturer, during a day-long! campus '"'teach - in" that fea- Miner's Museum For Centennial GLACE BAY, N.S. (CP)--A miners' museum complete with tured debate on Viet Nam. Earlier, more than 300 stu- dents and teachers at the uni- versity watched a similar but larger debate on television that took place in Washington. Would Invite : The Pontiff WARSAW (Reuters) -- Ins, quiries have begun here with Communist authorities to ex? plore the possibility of Pope Paul visiting Poland next year as a pilgrim when his country celebrates its millenium. If the. visit took place it would be the first by a pope to a Com munist state and would mark @ milestone in relations be' the Vatican and Communist re- gimes of eastern Europe, where on ageaal of Roman Catholics ve. . Confirming that feelers hav@ been put out at a high level by the Church, a Catholic source today said inquiries were such a private nature that no details could be expected for many months. ere etoun araaONA its own coal mine will be Breton's major centennial proj- ect and the Cape Breton Miners' Foundation has launched a cam- paign for $534,000 to build it. To be built in the Glace Bay area, heart of the island's coal- mining district, the project will gets its design from a compe- tition among Nova Scotia archi- tects. up another government in the Western hemisphere. It asks 1f|Cohen of Sydney, chairman of this meant that any future pop- ular revolt against a right-wing|will be a memorial honoring} regime w9uld precipitate U.S. intervention aimed at restoring the "'status quo ante." |munity of Nairn Centre where| WINGS CLIPPED The Daily Telegraph says injthe industry, township|an editorial Washington advo- eating sandwiches andicates of unrestricted bombing of North Viet Nam appear to have had their proposals blunted by State Secretary Dean Rusk Commenting on Peking's ex-} plosion Friday of an atomic bomb, the Conservative daily notes that Rusk had told a con- gressional subcommittee not too much weight should be given to Russian fear of China and that YOUNZ |, serious threat to either Rus- p sia or China by the West might|about 1,000 feet and be equipped the two Communist|with machinery and tools. nations. The Telegraph says: "This would seem to clip 'Hail Storm Hits Areas professor at|Sunday night on NBC's radio-| | Ld 'In Ontario TORONTO (CP)--A rain and|ing hail storm swept across south-|* 1 western and Northern Ontario Sunday, disrupting power. serv ice, flooding hundreds of base |ments |driving hazardous. Winds gusted to 45 miles an hour in the storm. Golfball-size hailstones fell in Huntsville area 100 miles y/north of Toronto, Hail also felljg. at Centralia and Mount Forest! w the lin the London-Kitchener region Weather officials said "wide observance" wide area of the province. |. Areas juous rain during the weekend. |period Sunday night. | MANY ACCIDENTS The weather office said the was the Commission Distinguished Ser-| heaviest in the area since |Timmins rainfall August, 1962, when three per | sons were drowned by flooding| |creeks. Provincial police reported an joutbreak of auto collisions on the Queen Elizabeth Way be- ltween Hamilton and Toronto, but there were no serious in- juries. Some suburban areas of Tor jonto were: without power for two hours after lightning struck transformers. High winds fanned sparks in la bonfire near Brantford to a The award is given to persons|nearby barn, causing damage to jpromoting objectives of water|the barn and machinery stored lin it. thelold and new techniques. and making highway the indicated that hail fell over a generally north of the Upper | Great Lakes had almost contin- It's the brainchild of Nina F. the board of the foundation, and \those who have worked in the! lindustry since the first pick un-| covered coal 250 years ago. Exhibits will tell the story of} including the ge- ology of coal, the structure of mines and the history of mine communications in which two famous inventors--Marconi and) |Bell--played a prominent part. Documents, books, newspa- pers and films will be collected in an archives section, and there will be a memorial room dedi- cated to miners who were killed while working. An adjoining coal mine built by engineers will be open for tours. It will have a slope of Un- employed and retired miners will conduct tours and explain) | Opening is scheduled for the |spring of 1967, centennial year. NOTICE TO ALL EX-SERVICE WOMEN and DEPENDENTS All ex-service personnel invited to take W. R. LEGION HALL, Veteran's Allowance Street, Oshawa, who will FREE LEGION SERVICE Assistant Secretary, Service Bureau, Toronto Wednesday, May 19th From 3 to Completion of Business To give skilled advice on Veteran's Benefits. Any- one with questions on was disability pension, War (Burnt Out Pension)... Treatment or Hospital Care is urged to call or write to MR. C. A. BRISEBOIS, Business Manager of Royal Canadian Legion, Branch 43, 90 Centre and their dependents are advantage of a BUCK BRANCH NO, 43 arrange an appointment. | Legion Oratory Champ Named | TORONTO (CP) -- Judy Gol- jlinger, 17, of Carleton Place, |Ont., won the provincial Royal Canadian Legion public speak- contest for the third time day. Miss Gollinger placed first in the Grades 11 to 13 classifica- tion. Two years ago she won the Grades 9 and 10 class and three years ago the Grades 7 and 8. Other winners were John McGuirk, 15, of Bowmanville, Grades 9 and 10; David Innes, 13, of Woodstock, Grades 7 and and Linnea Johnson, 11, of Wiarton, Grades 1 to 6 class. | Pilot Missing In RCAF Jet PRESTWICK, Scotland (Reu- ters) -- Hope faded today for 'Ithe missing pilot of an RCAF jet fighter that crashed Sunday at sea off northwest Scotland. The F-104 Starfighter was pi- loted by Fit. Lt. Ian McKnight. f Wreckage of the plane was seen in the water off the northwest coast during a joint American- British search. An RAF Shackleton aircraft searched for 'more than four hours today but found nothing. S. Air Force planes at Prest- wick were standing by to re- join the search if -needed. McKnight, married with two children, lived with his family near the vphere he was based. G Your Money Earns More At CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION eer | » 4 < SSS955585 RGR SAVING HOURS: Mon.-Thurs, 9 to 6 Friday 9to9 Saturday 9 to 5 FOUNT b>) gy, 5 vd t on Savings Accounts. Paid on Chequing Accounts from the day the account is opened. Paid Quarter- ly on minimum monthly balance. No charge for cheques written. when invested in our Guaranteed Investment Certificates for 6 to 10 yeors. Authorized Trustee investments. Redeemable on death, *Yearly Rate b) q am $3595" Head Office: 19 Simeoe St. N. Oshawa Tel. 723-5221 h SINHEAD OF -ERVICE Prestwick airport) | | LOCKS' COST TABLED ment plans to make capital ex- penditures of $18,997,000 on the twinning of Welland Canal locks during 1965, the Commons was told Monday by Transport Min- ister Pickersgill. Expenditures lon the project during 1964 to- talled $3,987,500. ET NEW UNIQUE SCOTIABANK sect «Get °4 for every *3 with six-year Scotiabank Savings i Buy as little as $10 worth or as much as you like--cashable any time. | Coola arnx -| OTTAWA (CP)--The govern- WEDN LEAN SLICED SIDE BACON TUESDAY AND ALL DAY ESDAY SPECIAL 2 ibs. $].00 FRESH MADE COUNTRY SAUSAGE 4 ws. 69° MEATY Ibs. $].00 BUEHLER'S 12 KING ST, EAST -- 723-3633 t ii