Travel Best Solution To- One Canada By MICHAEL GILLAN OTTAWA (CP) -- Enthusiastic high s ts from Brit Columbia's Okanagan Valley were on Parliament Hill the her day talking excitedly about their first trip to Quebec, The accounts given by the 24 centennial travellers --- among 3,000 students the Centennial Commission and provincial edu- cation departments have on the road this summer--indicate the country's national unity prob- lems might be helped by a little more travel by everybody, The students stayed in Quebec City for two days and in Mont- real for four, being billetted at homes where only French is spoken. Like students in most other provinces, they found their sec: ondary - school French inade- quate for conversation, althou some said they began to get the hang of it by the time they were leaving. The most common comment was the different picture they ained of Quebec and its resi- ents compared with the one hag ag picked up from living in BU. | | 'JUST LIKE OURSELVES' "Out home all we ever hear about are the separatists," said one, 'But we found most of the people were just like ourselves and our parents 'There are more separatists in B.C, than in Quebec, The only difference is that in B,.C,| the separatists paint obscene) words in public places while in| Quebec they paint FLQ." In Montreal, they had three) free days to tour where they wanted and to talk to as many people as possible, This, cou- pled with two days in Quebec | City, was too short a time, some | said, and many plan to pay an-| other visit to the province when they are older, | Besides the 3,000 under direct sponsorship of the Centennial Commission and the provincial education departments, another 11,000 Canadian high school stu- dents have been on the move this summer, Not all English-speaking stu- dents get to Quebec, but all have an opportunity to meet) people in a province other than} their own, Revamp Plan called for complete overhaul of legislation regulating the man-|aims--to strengthen the hand of| the federation authority to de- | agement of companies. t In a paper presented today) to the third Commonwealth and empire law conference here, David §, M. Huberman of the University of British Colum- bia's faculty of law said com- panies legislation in the vari ous Commonwealth jurisdic: tions has not kept pace with|enue Minister FE. J, Benson said) civil service rates. the needs of the modern busi: Thursday night the 30,000 pre- aay Benson also appealed to|P ness community. Prof. Huberman condemned|the government should, in his attempts at 'piecemeal im-| opinion, be brought under the government to provements" in company law and advocated formulation of; codes that would put into con- crete form the principles de- rived from more than a century) of common law decisions. He suggested that where the | directors are guilty of abuses! or where opposing factions) within the corporation are at] loggerheads, minority share- holders should be given free ac-| cess to the courts without the present necessity of proving al state of affairs sufficient to re-| quire a winding-up of the com:| ny, ig on Huberman said it is no longer adequate "to have an) omnibus companies act which, in trying to be all things to all companies, has ended up by be- ing a hindrance to each." He advocated acceptance of the practice of cumulative vot- ing for directors, Under this recess, at present authorized y legislation only in India and the province of Ontario, share- holders, in voting for directors, get the number of votes equal te the number of shares they own multiplied by the number of directors. | Prof, Huberman also advo- cated abandonment of the long: established common law rule which forbids companies buying their own shares. | | | Offset Paper -- Fully Defunct VANCOUVER (CP) -- A sec: ond receiver has heen appointed for the defunct Vancouver Times, : In its application for the ap- pointment before the British Co- lumbia Supreme Court Thurs- day, the Montreal Trust Co. said there is no prospect The Times can resume publication, | | lan H, Bell was appointed re- if} ceiver and manager to protect the accounts receivable for de- benture holders Earlier this month Peter Stanley was appointed receiver || of the lands and premises of | The Times. The Times ceased publication Aug. @ and halted its commer. later. The newspaper started publication last September. question and substitute another) servants, it is essential that the that was described by federa-| federation be able to present a tion officials as a compromise) strong and united front if it is to Company Law : lenged on grounds that it could/conference went through its spell the end of the affiliates'|/second-last day: autonomy within the federation] Representatives of postal SYDNEY, Australia (CP)--A/and could even force some to} unions gave 90 days' notice prominent Canadian lawyer has) yj} out of the national body.) that they will have to study __jrious condition in hospital in} cial printing operations a week | Te ate ale a Ie tel odin dale tis cinin, iia aah i So neck by South Vietnamese soldiers before they began their interrogation of her as a Viet Cong suspect near Ap A Russian-made rifle, car: ried by this woman when she was captured in nearby brush, is slung around her Attempt At, Stronger Union Of Civil Servants Scuttled public employees on service. WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)---A bid)of the affiliates and to pressed by the Civil Service Federation|for union with other civil serv- of Canada to move quickly to-jice organizations, | ward a more centralized union-| The second resolution -- ap- ism for civil servants was side-| proved by a 131-to-39 secret bal:| tracked Thursday by some of lot--calls simply for the feder| its own member groups, jation to seek unity 'with all or Objections by employee affili-) any' civil service groups, ations making up the federation; Federation spokesmen said) forced delegates at the federa-|the setback could be serious, tion's 24th triennial conference! One source said that, with the to pull back a strongly-worded| government's promise of collec. resolution dealing with the/tive bargaining rights for civil imed at trying to please every-| represent its 80,000 members, ne | There were these other major The first resolution was chal-|developments as the week-long It would have had two major a conference resolution giving he federation at the expense| mand bargaining rights for) CS Act Protection Suggested For Prevailing-Rate Workers WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Rev:| they are hired rather than by| vailing-rate employees hired bY | the federation to work with the 'develop a sys- Civil Service Act tem of collective bargaining a "THR OSHAWA TIMERS, Fridey, Augut 27,1965 3 Election: Now Or In 19677, Not Only Options For PM By FRASER MacDOUGALL OTTAWA. (CP)----What is the THE LADY IS A GUERRILLA, IT'S THOUGHT La Ghi, The girl behind the woman, also was captured the brush yesterday, AP Wirephote Joe Belland, national secre: tary of the Canadian Railway Mail Clerks Federation, said the resolution may mean his organization will have to pull out of the federation, postal workers now have bar- their} own constitution, | --~Delegates approved a res: olution opposing any govern- but emphasized this does not mean civil servants should exercise such a right indiscriminately, They approved the principle of another resolution calling for the application of the Rand formula to civil serv. ants, requiring them to pay dues to employee associations whether they belong to the or- ganizations or not, They reaffirmed the stand federation's national council that it should be ree: ognized by the government as basis for Prime Minister Pear- son's conclusion, hotly disputed by the Conservatives, that it is not possible to hold a federal eneral election under re stribution before the end of 19667 The expected redistribution timetable does not bear out the prime minister's remark at as conferences in Ottawa last week and in Vancouver Thursday, His statement has been- interpreted as an indica: tion the minority government is deciding between an election this year-or none until 1967, The redistribution, by 10 in- dependent provincial commis: sions and based on the 1061 census population count, could be completed and become law any time next year from Jate April until early June, But that does not clear the way for an immediate election Afurther redistribution lies ahead before the country can --vote under the new set-up-- shifting the boundaries of the 50,000 individual polling subdi- visions, a task election experts say can be done onl yby con: atituency returning officers, NEEDS TWO MONTHS Nelso Caatonguay, chief electoral officer, has said that he will need at least two months after appointment of the last new returning officer to have the poll job done and everything in readiness for a vote, Even all this does not add up to the delay Mr, Pearson men- tioned,A competent political ob server suggests that the un- known quantity -- and possibly what the prime minister was thinking about--is how long it will take after redistribution to make necessary returning offi- cer appointments, The returning officer, the man who runs the election in each constituency, is named by the government, A_ political ap NY. Joins In Stock Probe NEW YORK (CP) -- The New York County district attorney's office has joined other enforce: ment agencies investigating the possibility that a highly com. plex stock swindle is related to a Canadian finance company's default on more than an estl- mated $32,000,000 in creditors' notes, District Attorney Frank Ho- gan said Thursday his office is investigating a complaint that Analogue Controls Ine, of Hicksville, N.Y., a producer of electronicscomponents, filed a false financial statement for the 1964 financial year, Analogue, an American company, owes money to At- lantic Acceptance Corp, Ltd,, a Toronto sales finance company, and has been taken over by bargaining agent for the pub- lic service since it is the ma:| # jority representative of all|ship June 17 after defaulting on On the dispute involving the ostal unions, delegates tacked ja clause on to the resolution) saying the federation's postal affiliations would not be denied right to bargain through He told the 24th triennial con-|and arbitration of which we can ference of the Civil Service Fed-| be proud, eration of Canada that the gov-, He told the 200 representas| ernment has made no decision) tives of 80,000 CSF members| -- on this matter, but he feels it| that until the collective bargain- is overdue and will seek to im-|ing rights now promised by the! Coronary Claims Crippled' Driver GODERICH, Ont, (CP) = A offered other civil servants.|fairly expeditiously within the| polio victim who operated his They are paid on the basis of; framework of existing law and| car py hand controls died Thurs: plement it. {gevernment come into effect these hired by the government,jeration should "do everything usually on an hourly-rated ba-/possible to ensure that out sis, but without the protections; standing problems are handled going rates in the area in whichi practice." Sleeping Sickness Moves | Into Alberta; Boy Stricken ttn. 18 alee orton, jheart attack, EDMONTON (CP) -- Sleep-|jeee ing sickness apparently has! spread to southern Alberta, Dr, Alan Van Orman, medical offi- cer for the Cardston district, | said Thursday, He said a li-year-old resident | of Hillspring, 45 miles south-| west of Lethbridge, is in Cards: | ton hospital with symptoms of the disease. A definite diagnosis | cannot be made until results of a blood test are determined A Toronto resident was in se 1% Calgary, apparently suffering from the disease, and two! others have also been admitted to hospital there. Dr. Van Orman also said horses in several communities | near Lethbridge have been| stricken. All cases have devel aped since Monday, he said Sleeping sickness was re ported earlier near St, Paul, about 100 miles northeast of Ed- 4% their own brotherhood, but Mr, Belland said this is not enough Prevailing-rate employees are| both government and the ted: ry Atlantic's receiver, Atlantic went into receiver: ja $5,000,000 note that had ma: jtured June 14, Analogue was suspended from the Toronto Stock Exchange |May 14 because Canadian au thorities suspected that more than 200,000 shares of the com pointee, he ia traditionally chosen from active supporters of the party in power, How long does it take to ap- point returning officers? In the} past it has taken more than a year to come up with a fairly full slate after redistribution or overhaul of the Election Act, SOME RETAINED That was the case in 1933 when' the Conservatives, in power for 'three years, retained only 12 ey Liberal ap: pointees, ' also after three years in office and nearing an election deel: n 1998 the Liberals, sion, took better than a year when they retained only 12 previous appointees under a new act, In 1960 the Conserva- tives took a year to name 233, retaining 30 incumbents, It took a year, too, under re- der redistribution in 1947 and 152, although there were com: paratively few changes since the Liberals were dealing with a lineup they had appointed, There is some doubt as to how many new appointments will be necessary under the pending redistribution, One school of thought here is that when the rew election plan be- comes effective, all returning vacant, That would. require 264 new appointments or, in some cases, re-appointments, Another view is that redistri- bution will mean changes only in constituencies with com: pletely new boundaries or new names, or in any where changes shift the returning officer right out of his riding, He has to be an eligiblevoter within his con: stituency, SUBJECT TO CHANGE Initial proposals of the 10 boundary commissions, still sub> ject to change, provide 132 new constituencies, In another 32, the returning officer is removed by the residence requirement, Thus, barring further changes which are quite possible, there 'jare at least 162 appointments to be made, Moreover, the great) majorit, yof current returning officers were appointed by the Conservatives in 1960, Even in the present heady eleetion atmosphere, there the half-dozen vacancies in the ranks of the 263 returning offi- cers for the present 265 Com: mons seats, The figures don't balance because there are two two-member seats, Whatever the basis for Mr, Pearson's conclusion, the Con: officer posts will become! seems to be no haste in filling] servatives don't agree with it, Richard Thrasher, the party's national director, termed it "a lot of nonsense" and said an election is possible in June, 1966, under redistribution, The timetable for completing redistribution, first change in boundaries since 1954 when it was based on the 1951 census, is not precise because of certain side factors, The 10 provincial commis- sions have until next Jan, 20 to ireport, Hight will probably do 80 before the end of this year and the others should meet the deadline, If Parliament is sit. ting, the reports are tabled as foon as. received, 10 CAN OBJECT Within 30 es of tabling, any 10 MPs can object to a report and call for a debate, The Com- mons is required to take it up within another 15 ag Once the debate is over, the report is referred back to the provin- cial commission concerned and it has 30 days to deal with it. Then redistribution is vir: tually automatic, Mr, Caston- guay, as representation com: missioner, prepares a draft or: der and the cabinet has five days to issue a proclamation de-| | claring it to be in force, It is effective on dissolution of the' existing Parliament or, if Par: liament is dissolved at the time, on the succeeding Parliament, One possible delaying factor is that if Parliament is not ait ting when the reports come. in, they are tabled within the first five days after it does sit, A long Christmas recess, well into February as this year, could delay the process, So could de- bate, not specifically limited by the Redistribution Act, e ------EEEEEEEa LEONARD JAMES BROOKS CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT announces thet as ef August 1, 1965 his Oshawa Accounting Practice has heen conveyed te GORDON R, DAY, €.G,A, whe will eonduet his practice as @ pub> lie accountant et the present premises Suite 205W, Oshewe Shopping Centre, Oshewe, Onterie and LEONARD JAMES BROOKS will neo longer be associated with the Oshawa Aecounting Practice carried on 'at the above address, THE ULTIMATE IN * PRESTIGE DISTINCTION BEYOND COMPARE UNDERGROUND i PARKING * pany's stock had been distrib: uted illegally, | day when his car leapt over a} guard rail and sank in 23. feet of water in Goderich harbor, A pathologist's report on) Glenwood ©, Campbell, 56, of | 15 miles northeast of} Q°" 1Year to 4 Year Guaranteed Investment Certificates, 5 year to 10 year G.I.C.'s -- 534% SAVINGS ACCOUNTS Interest calculated and paid quarterly Effective yield over 10 years -- 5.6% P.A, monton = COMMUNITY SAVINGS SERVICE e@ | REED'S Florists | WEEK - END | 'SPECIAL GLADIOLUS cash & Oe a ff CARRY BUNCH REED'S Florists | Downtown Drive-in Simeoe & Bond 143 Bloor W. 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