Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 Jun 1965, p. 3

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oe dinate ee eat ee tithes Guid ents o Pome a eee v Teach Your Child To Swim - 7 Here is the seventh les- son of The Times' 10-part series showing how to teach your child to swim. These simple instructions were developed for The Star by Dick Lough, direc- tor of aquatics for Central YMCA in Toronto. As your child progresses, remember to make sure that each step is thorough- ly mastered before proceed- ing to the next. This seventh lesson teaches your child how to propel himself through the water, now that he's learned to float. Take the child to a depth of 14 inches and have him put his hands on the bottom and allow his legs to float to the top. Then tell him to begin moving his-legs from the hips, up and down slowly, with the knees straight. Finally, have him step it up, always kicking only 6 inches up or down. this, take him to waist depth, facing the shore. Have him put his hands When. he can do out in front, head down and push off into a float, then begin moving his legs, keeping knees straight and By BOB EXELL TORONTO (CP) -- After 98 sitting days, the Ontario legis- lature ended its 1965 session Tuesday, counting as its handi- work a total of 176 new acts for the statute books. Some of the acts. will not come into effect for a year or more, yet the accomplishments of the record-length session-- the previous longest was 8 days--should in a large way re- shape the face of the province. As Lt.-Gov. Earl Rowe pro- rogued the third session of the 27th legislature at 5:20 p.m., he gave royal assent to 75 bills, one providing for establishment of community colleges. » The first of these -- to be known as colléges of applied arts and technology -- may opened by the fall of 1966, precipitating a revolutionary toes pointed. array nti anise Martin Swipes Discreetly | At U.S. Dominica Activities By DAVE McINTOSH UN to avoid the dangers of OTTAWA (CP) -- External|abuse by one state or group of Affairs Minister Martin dis-jstates represented on the peace |™ NE NALA SNOUT AEE | rit | } | 7, grade change in the educational struc- ture of Ontario. f It will see students who might otherwise leave school after Grade 12 or Grade 13 carry on for two more years in junior colleges, and others who nor- mally might not make the in university graduate 4\with diplomas in technological e skills. Perhaps 20 or more of the two - year junior colleges, de- signed as a continuance from} be| from the Ontario coat of arms. Legislature Ends Session 98 Days, 176 Laws Later and families with taxable in- come of up to about $1,200. The government has not yet said what. the maximum pre- plan. Costs are to be set by a new medical services insurance council. The scheme basically} will offer only physicians' and surgeons' services. Another bill that will not take effect for more than a year is the Commuter Services Act set- ting up a railway commuter system along Lake Ontario be- tween Burlington and Dunbar- ton, through Metro Toronto. Before the Easter recess the legislature approved a number of bills, including one giving the province its own flag--the red ensign bearing the shield The flag was claimed May 21. . In other pre-Easter business, the house passed a bill outlaw- ing strikes by hospital em- ployee unions.. It provides for compulsory arbitration. However, Premier Robarts maintained his government is opposed to compulsory arbitra- tion. formally pro- | single milk marketing board to A new Milk Act setting up a govern the handling of all fluid) milk in Ontario was introduced in an attempt to restore order to the marketing system. mium rates will be under the! Board The board replaces the exist- ing Whole Milk Producers League and the Concentrated Milk Producers Marketing Another act that will have no THE OSHAWA. TIMES, Wednesdey, June 23, 1968 3 OTTAWA (CP)--Pressure on behalf of Canada's Indians was brought to bear both inside and outside the Commons Tuesday. An attempt by New Demo- ¢rat MPs to beat back a gov- effect for the present is the re- placement of the three-per-cent sales tax on cigarettes with an equal tobacco tax. While the government contends the change was made only for ad- ministrative reasons, there has been speculation that the to- bacco tax might be raised in a year. or two to provide the gov- ernment with needed revenue. The budget passed by the legislature this- year was the largest in Ontario's . history, calling for expenditures of $1,460,000,000, However, no new taxes were levied. It was fore- cast the province will have to borrow $141,000,000 during the year. Tax incentives were offered to new corporations locating in six tederally - designated areas. The incentives will be in the form of three-year tax holidays for processing or manufactur- ing businesses. The designated areas are the Windsor, Cornwall, Chatham: Wallaceburg, Timmins and El- liot Lake districts of the Na- tional Employment Service. During the session the mem- bership of the house decreased ernment bill setting up an In- dian claims commission to iron out difficulties spruting from old treaty rights was trampled in a 153-to-13 vote. And in a meeting with Citi- izenship. Minister Nicholson on Parliament Hill Indian leaders were told that the minister did not have authority to confirm that the tribes constitute a sep- arate nation and are entitled to huge land parcels and contin- gent mineral rights. New Democrat speakers dur- ing the Commons debate mai Up SELZNICK DIES David O. Selznick, the legendary Hollywood pro- ducer of such outstanding films as "Gone With The Wind" and '"'Rebecca", died in Hollywood of a heart at- tack yesterday. He won Aca- demy Awards for both those films. He was 63, and left his wife, actress Jennifer Jones, and two children. : (AP) | Varsity Hit: tained that the current bill did Indian rights. Their amendment suggested a complete revamp- ing. But- all other members pres- ent voted against the NDP amendment and the bill was given d reading--approval in principle--and sent off to a special committee. New Demo- jcrats called "on division" to re- jcord their opposition. | Before their delegation met Indian Rights Fought For ' In And Out Of Parliament the five-nation Iroquois Confed- eracy paraded before the Par- liament Buildings.They carried placards reading "Abolish the inhuman Indian Act" and "Brit- ish - Canadian governments, hands off mineral royalties." "We have our own nation af the white man has no right {6 make laws for the red man," said Chief Louis Hall of 4 Caughnawaga reserve Montreal, spokesman for the In- dians, ¥ The few royalties that had been set Taide for Indians went, into a ft controlled by government, he said, 'They give with the one hand and take. away with the other." ri | Fastest Relit | For This | Painful 'Foot Trouble ail shape De: Scholl's for corns between toes pain a 'os nsanty aptly mora them when used medicated disks included. 1 D! Scholls Zino-pads "CORNS*::.:" not offer enough safeguards for! V : Expropriate | Your Money Earns More At CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION creetly criticized Tuesday the force. } United States intervention in It had been more important the Dominican Republic in tes-|to keep the peace than to ob- timony before the Commonsitain what was "'legalistically external affairs committee. |desirable"--that is, consent of |B Committee members were|the-UN for the intervention.' not discreet at all. ' , Marvin Gelber ( L-- York DOCTRINE 'DANGEROUS |Grade 12, will be established) 74, within 10 years. Full construc-| 7\tion costs are to be borne by; A milk commission will | by one to 107, due to the death place the existing milk industry|of Joe Gould (L -- Toronto Po board, Producers' quotas in the| Bracondaie). Premier Robarts the provincial government. | various marketing areas will|has not yet set a date for a| | The community colleges bill,| he wiped out and new ones will| byelection, although it is ex- along with the _Conservative/ pe established. | pected in the fall. | government's Medical Care In-| sion | surance Act, likely will be re- s . Impropriety TORONTO (CP)--The possi- bility of impropriety in the ex-} propriation of land by the Uni-} versity of Toronto was raised in| | the legislature Tuesday by Fred South) said Pe fi Me hel was tion was a blow to the United i, ctrine" that a regional grou Nations and the inter - Amer- nouiq bypass the UN if it te ican system, la UN veto of its intervention. The U.S. had turned the Mon-| Under such a doctrine, the roe Doctrine inside out. It noW) Arab League could intervene in wanted to exclude from Latin|[srael if Arabs within America not only foreign £0v-|hegan a revolution or if the ernments but any domestiCileague simply said there were government it didn't happen to\Communists in the Israeli gov- like. ; ernment. T. C. Douglas, New Demo-| Andrew Brewin (NDP -- Tor- cratic Party leader, said the/onto Greenwood) said the "dan- U.S. has equated revolution' gerous" U.S. intervention could with communism and has re-/not be justified by. word - mak- served to itself the right to in-jing. The principles of the UN tervene when it doesn't agree|charter had been contravened. with the aims of a revolution. Mr, Martin said unilateral Jack McIntosh (PC -- Swiftlaction was 'not the ideal ar- Current - Maple Creek) said he|rangement." It would be help- can see no difference between/ful if regional groups had the U.S, intervention in the|standby units ready for peace- Dominican Republic and the keeping use by them or the UN. 1956 Russian intervention in| The minister said he did not Hungary. know what else OAS could have done in the circumstances NOT DESIRABLE ' F ' Mr. Martin said the Canadian Mac Reggae' said the U.S. 'overnment believes that uni-\(ous ave Chosen non - inter- lateral action is not desirable.| : The U.S. had been justified,| however, in attempting to) CUT REQUIRE NTS "clothe its intervention with the' WINDSOR, Ont. -P) -- The International umbrella" of the} University of Windsor will re- Organization of American quire fewer papers and credits States. |for admission in September, The action of the OAS had) 1966, it was announced during been '"'wise and minimal" in| the weekend. A spokesman said view of the fact Russia would that in response to repeated "preaching a dangerous Mr. Douglas said Mr. eel tthe| | | > & YVON DUPUIS Dupuis Wiil 'Seek Drop Of Charges ST. JOHNS, Que. (CP)--De-| fence lawyers for Yvon Dupuis) have served notices that they) will resume their efforts July 6 to have influence - peddling charges against the former fed-, eral cabinet minister thrown out. Lawyer Raymond Daoust} made the announcement in| court Tuesday after Mr, Dupuis| was 'rdered to appear July 6 for u. ary statement, a stage in Quebec legal proceedings at which the defence may attempt to show cause why the case should not go to the trial stage.| In practice, the defence us-| ually waives voluntary state-| have vetoed in the UN Security Council any approval for an' OAS peacekeeping force in the Dominican Republic. Mr. Martin added that any regional peacekeeping oper- ation must derive its authority or receive approval from thei cent average. requests from the education de- partment, the university's sen- ate has decided to reduce ad- mission requirements from nine to eight credits, with a 60 per cent average, and from eight to ment and proceeds directly to} trial. But Mr. Daoust said he| will call witnesses and present| his case in an attempt to have |the charges dismissed. Mr. Dupuis is charged with seven credits, with a 66 perjhaving asked for and received) $10,000 in 1961 to. support. an| One Grit Opposes F ellows: japplication by Roch Deslauriers}| |for a provincial charter to oper- jate a racetrack at nearby St. | Luc. | Judge Andre Regnier com- mitted him to voluntary state- on the strength of evi- Keep Queen In The Oath eons' stents" TORONTO (CP) -- The pres-| oath be altered to exclude ref- ident of the Toronto 'and Dis- trict Liberal Association said Tuesday he disagrees with fel: low Liberals who think refer- ences to the Queen should be expunged from Canada's izenship oath. Lawyer J. H. Potts said any oath of allégiance to the Queen is an oath to the head of the state of Canada. He was referring to a_ brief from the Spadina Young Lib- eral Association that. asked the cit-| HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS ; of preliminary hearing in erences to God and the Queen. March and April. Mr. Potts said as long as the ee cre Queen is the head of state un- der the present form of consti TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto tutional monarchy, her name/Rifles of the Continental Foot- should be retained in the cit-/ball League today announced izenship oath the signing of Francis (Bubba)! As far as God is concerned,|Marriott as playing - coach for} however, Mr. Potts said: the 1965 season. Marriott, 26,) "I do not think people should|was a quarterback with New| be deprived of the right of cit-\York Giants of the National izenship because they will not|Football League and .Montreal Swear an oath to a God they Alouettes of the Canadian Foot- don't believe in." ball League. SIGN MARRIOTT membered as the most impor- tant pieces of legislation from | the session. Neither act will take effect for a year or more, but next month residents will see more liberal drinking laws that will allow beer parlors. to remain open between 6:30 p.m. and 8 p.m.--the normal supper clos- ing period -- and will see the introduction of music and | games into beverage rooms. Other changes will allow the serving of alcoholic beverages in aircraft, in live theatres, in| ® dining rooms attached to bowl- ing alleys and curling rinks and in open-air portions of licensed restaurants. The government introduced legislation emphasizing the pre- vention of child neglect by of- fering home services to fam- ilies where circum stances might lead to neglect of the children. Whereas children's aid soci- eties formerly became the guardians of neglected children by court order, the provincial government now will assume wardship, CAS care of children will be maintained under a new financial arrangement, The government's medical services insurance legislation is not scheduled to take effect until June 1, 1966, and oppo- sition members have freely predicted that even then it will not become a reality because of what they say is growing) public opposition. Passed after the bitterest, most prolonged debate of the season' the law establishes con- trols over all private or non- profit companies which offer medical insurance to the people of Ontario. The insurance carriers will be required to sell 'standard in- surance contracts at stipulated maximum premiums to any person who asks to buy them, whether sick or well, old or ~| young. The government will sub- sidize persons whose income is so low that medical care insur- ance coverage may be beyond them. Those with no. taxable income will have the full sub- scription costs paid for them. A graded scale of premium subsidies will be provided for) individuals with taxable income} of up to $500, couples with tax- able income of up to $1,000, BONELESS ROLLED POT ROAST BONELESS BEEF SHOULDER LEAN MEATY SHORT RIB ECONOMY 6 & 7 RIB SHORT CUT Ist 4 ribs PRIME RIB Lean Meaty . Blade Bone Removed BLADE ROAST 43: 30 39 39 79 49: 3 CALIFORNIA, VALENCIA ORANGES DOZ. vis te ay David's 4 Kinds BISCUITS axv s 123. FRESH PORK SHOULDER 49:: Cc ) FRESH PORK ; Assorted "BUTT ib C ¢ FRESH PorK Kool-Aid voxv 25: C3 Ib Ib a > } LOIN END o Cashmere Toilet TISSUE 12 rolls s] ee, [ Yopsees claacon M ade; chickens 39° 9 | MONTREAL (CP)--Leonard J. (Red) McLaughlin, president of the Seafarers' International Union of Canada (Ind.), was committed Tuesday to volun- tary statement Oct. 5 on) charges of conspiracy in a march on Ottawa 20 months go. Judge Emile Trottier of court of sessions also committed eight other members of the SIU at that time to voluntary statement in the. case. They are charged with. con- spiring to have SIU members abandon their ships for the march in violation of the Can- uku Shipping Act. The SIU members paraded in Ottawa in the fall of 1963 to protest estab-| lishment of the federal board) of maritime trustees over marine unions, including the SIU. McLaughlin was vice-pres- ident of the union at the time. Voluntary statement is that stage in Quebec legal proceed- lings following eigen | hearing at which an accused may attempt to show cause) why he should not be sent to} | trial. | The eight others are Donald Swaite, Gilbert Gauthier, John McCuaig, John Royce Paul Gagne, Raymond Doucet, {Thomas Piercey and Harvey McKinnon, Judge Trottier acquitted Fred Southern, Henning Jacob- son, Gilbert Johnson and Rene Turcotte, who were minor SIU officers. In his statement, Judge Trot- tier quoted the words of Hal Banks, then the SIU president, who has since skipped the coun-| try. Banks said it was "the} most vicious legislation passed| against any union in the West-| ern Hemisphere in all history.' In committing McLaughlin,'of the proposed sale. First Step Of Prosecution Against 'Red', SIU Finished Judge Trottier said: "He co- overated in organizing the march and was seen acting as one of the chiefs of the adven- ture." The judge added: "The court) must underline that its sole purpose at preliminary hear- ing was to find if there was apparent basic proof against the accused. "The court's duty was not to decide if the accused were guilty. or not guilty but to de- cid= whether or not there was matter for trial. It is sufficient for the magistrate to ask him- self if there is a probability of conviction." $100,000 Suit. Cut To 1 Buck LONDON, Ont. (CP)--A $100,- 000 damage suit for breach of contract was reduced to $1 in Ontario Supreme Court Tues- day. The civil action had been filed by Parkdale Towers Lim- ited of London against Emil Wozniak of Hespeler, Ont., after the latter withdrew from an agreement to purchase a 47- unit, $423,000 apartment build- ing and a bungalow in London last fall. Describing the suit as "'a use- less piece of litigation which should. not have been pursued by the plaintiff,' Mr. Justice Neil Fraser said there had been a breach of contract by the defendant, but the plaintiff now was 'in a better position fi- nancially -because the contract had not been fulfilled. The value of the property, he said, had risen since the time mere PAYS 4% That extra interest can make a deposit 9 am to 5 pm--later o care of all the details. 728-1 N Why be content with a GUARANTY TRUST ON YOUR SAVINGS ACCOUNT chequing privileges, too. If you wish, we'll return cancelled cheques. We do not close our doors at 3 pm. You Transfer your account to us. We will take GUARANTY TRUST Company of Canada 32 King St. B, 3%? INTEREST soon adds up. Full or withdrawal from n Fridays. | Young (NDP--Yorkview). | Mr. Young said the university | expropriated land and buildings| with an estimated value of $200,- 000, bypassing adjacent vacant land on the Streetsville Road in| Peel County. | A firm which advised the' University of Toronto on the | section of the site for use by} | Erindale College was Don Mills} Development Ltd., part of the} corporate empire of E. P. Tay-| lor, Mr. Young said." And the vacant land which| the U. of T. chose to ignore was owned by Erin Mills De- velopments Ltd., of which E. P. Taylor is chairman of the board. | SUGGESTS LINK | Mr. Young suggested that) this connection may have had something to do with the fact that the land with buildings on} it was expropriated while Erin| Mills was allowed to retain its) vacant land. "It is asking too much of! human nature to expect that a company could not possibly be influenced in its recommenda- tions by a eonsideration of the interests of a sister company in the same corporate empire," he said. ! Z gz (ee nd SAVING HOURS: Mon.-Thurs. 9 to 6 Friday 9to9 9to 5 rm INT: Seturdoy a il 339: 7444 SESS 199! > gp an | on Savings Accounts. Peid oA compounded quart- erly, on Chequing Accounts from the dey the account is opened. Paid Quarter- ly on minimum monthly belance. No charge. for cheques written. when invested in our Guaranteed Investment Certificates for 6 to 10 years. Authorized Trustee investments. Redeemable on death, *Yearly Rate BY Head Office: 19 Simcoe St. N. Oshawa NHEAD Tel. 723-5221 OF SERVICE CARL Real CARL B, OLSEN 20 RAY ST OSHAWA Complete REAL ESTATE SERVICES Residential Commercial Photo M.L.S, N.H.A. 'Homes Mortgages Arranged HENRY R. 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