Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Aug 1965, p. 3

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~ (8 Decides On Walkout It Need Be By KEN SMITH _ WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- A strike if necessary -- but not necessarily a strike. The paraphrase of a com- ment attributed to the late prime minister Mackenzie King on conscription sums up = re- action of the triennial confer- ence of the Civil Service Fed- eration of Canada to the issue of the right to strike. The 200 delegates, represent- ing the federation's 80,000 mem- bers, spent plenty of time dur- ing their week-long conference debating the issue but there was almost unanimous agree- 'ment Friday that civil servants need the right to walk off their jobs except in a: few vital services, At the same time, however, the delegates agreed it might never be used and then only in exceptional cases where bar- gaining failed completely to win concessions from the gov- ernment. They steered carefully away from a formal demand for the right to strike, agreeing finally on a resolution to oppose any bid by the government to im- e a strike ban in. expected legislation giving civil servants the right to collective bargain- ing. CONSIDER AFFILIATION On the last day the delegates turned to the question of pos- sible affiliation with the Cana- dian Labor Congress but. found it necessary to compose a com- promise resolution, They approved an amended statement .alling on the feder- ation's national affiliates--the employee groups making up the larger body--to join the CLC as quickly as possible, but left the question of a marriage be- tween the federation and the CLC up to the CSF's national council _when it feels it is "proper." There were these other clos- ing day developments: Delegates approved a revised constitution aimed at giving more authority to the federa- tion as a central body, taking some ay from the national affiliates. Speakers said it will be es- sential to have a strong feder- ation able to. meet the govern- ment on service - wide issues once collective bargain- ing starts. A 15-cent-a-month increase to 45 cents in per capita dues paid to the federation by the affiliates was approved, eo penngy at IRR ldi A VIETNAMESE Nica joni during 4q (left picture) pulls a sus- pected Viet Cong woman by the hair as he lifts her out of a stream into which she was after her capture near Ap LaGhi. Her arms were bound behind her before the water torture, The soldier sought information on the identify and whereabouts of guerrilla forces in the area. In the second picture an American soldier wraps a bandage around the arm of the wife of a village chieftan in Plei Ron, after she was tortured by Viet Cong guer- rillas, Arrival of U.S. troops in the remote montagnard village of Pleiku, in South Viet Nam broke up a V-C torture session in which pieces of flesh were cut from the woman's body and her arms slashed, Her hus- band and son were executed and other villagers. shot in the legs as guerrillas sought information. --NBC and AP Photos VANCOUVER (CP)--An An- teed yearly stipend of $3,400. After 16 years in one of these missionary dioceses, he's cer- tain of $4,000, It doesn't go far if he sends one or more teen- aged. children south to school at $1,000 a year each, But these minimum salaries are a measureable improvement he owes to Friday's session of the church's 22nd general synod here, Delegates increased the basic stipend for clergy in missionary diocese to $3,200 from $3,1500, a fractionary improvement, But they also added $200 for service of six to 10 years, $400 for serv- ice of 11 to 15 years, and $800 15 years previously. The synod also took measures to improve housing and travel allowances, Bishops of the hin- terland dioceses of the Anglican Church of Canada stood to tell the synod the cl would for priests ordained more than) Priest Gets Paltry $3,600 For North Missions Work © The synod, which is the legis- glican priest with 10 years injlative body of the church, will Canada's northland won't buy|have its lower house of clergy many luxuries with a guaran-jand lay delegates cut to 222 members from 315. It will meet every two years instead of every three, and replace an electoral college as the body electing the primate of : the church, Two large executive commit- tees will be replaced by a sin- gle national executive of 45 per- sons. A complicated formula keeps intact the jealously- guarded right of each diocese to be represented in executive councils, but most of the 28 di- oceses will now have to be sat- isfied with one representative-- layman, priest or bishop--in- jstead of three or four. This synod will be recorded in the history of the church as the one that approved the prin- ciples of union with the United Church of Canada. More than one priest has said that Thurs- day's decision, and the brilliant stat ts of Christian belief LB] Gets In Steel Parley NEW YORK (AP ) -- Presi- * dent Johnson took a hand in the touch-and-go U.S. steel industry labor negotiations during the week, ' He telephoned R. Conrad , Cooper, chief negotiator for the industry, and I. W. Abel, presi- dent of the United Steelworkers 'of America, and urged a settle- mean a great difference to the comfort of their priests. The third day of the momen- tous synod gave approval to a major reorganization of the church's legislative and execu- tive councils. Sukarno Will Soon Cut Off that preceded it, had an elec- trifying effect on the synod room, One of the significant items ahead is a proposal to change the church's stand against re- marriage of divorced persons. 'Missions, Bishop Predicts By KEN KELLY KNOWLTON, Que. (CP) -- John Diefenbaker set out this week to prove he isn't an anti- Quebec ogre and to fire the opening guns for the federal election campaign he feels is jin the offing. He left here Friday for Ot- tawa satisfied he'd achieved both. "There wasn't a jarring ele- ment throughout," he remarked contrasting what he called "dire warnings' against making this first Quebec tour since 1963 with his recepiion as he whirl- winded through the province's Eastern Townships. | Obviously buoyed up by his experience, he began to show the old campaign style, drop- ping such election appetizers as a promise of a substantial cut in personal and corporation in- come taxes and municipal-tax deductibility for home-owners when they pay their income taxes, But these came late in his tour. He concentrated on the Progressive Conservative rty's farm platform at in- formal, hand- shaking affairs with farmers and speeches to large audiences, WINS CHEERS He was cheered lustily in the heart of 'bleu' territory for al speech entirely in French, ex- cept for one English sentence. The hall was iammed with an estimated 1,200 while another large crowd outside the hall lis- ment as the Sept. 1. deadline) yaANCOUVER (CP) -- Presi- neared, The union will be free| dent Sukarno of Indonesia may to strike then. ___ |soon slam the door to Western 'aan oo thet nen gl missionaries, Most Rey, Isabelo . de los Reyes, Supreme Bishop ae _ wr to ra yf ed the Philippine. Independent set rei von ane Guus our Church, said in an interview Further meetings between the oe opposing parties were scheduled in advance of the deadline. A strike would pull 450,000 workers off their jobs and shut off 80 per cent of U.S. steel pro- duction. MAY INTERVENE It was considered possible that if a strike occurs, Johnson would act under the Taft-Hart- ley act to obtain an injunction to send the men back to work for 80 days. However, some sources said . this was unlikely because stock-| piles of steel have been built up! by users as a hedge against a/ strike. | * Business news in Asia is bleak because of the rising strength of nationalistic and anti-Christian native relig- ions, he said. "In Indonesia, things look ivery gloomy if Sukarno re- mains. Western missionaries VANCOUVER (CP) -- The continued to be next step towards Anglican- In a survey of 100 companie 90 per cent said business wa 'booming. They mentioned the| Friday. "The ball is in our court, are prudently withdrawing and 'Next Move Toward Union United Church's: Moore Viet Nam war, causing in- creased defence spending, and the excise tax cut, lowering prices, as factors. New durable goods orders, a key indicator of future indus- trial output, rose in July with said Dr. A, B, B. Moore, pre: ident of Victoria College, To synod approving principles o union between the churches, the help of increased defence business. Orders increased 5 per cent to $22,000,000,000 from! June's $20,900,000,000. Another important barometer, | Rew machine tool orders, fell) 11.4 per cent in July to $119,- 100,000 from $134,500,000 in June| Dut were 12.4 per cent above the $106,000,000 million a year earlier. Rainmaker On Just 4 Hours TIMMINS (CP) -- The rain- making machines hired by the!of Canada. Ontario Hydro- Electric Com-| Copies of the statement were mission. were in operation only|in delegates' chairs when they four hours this summer and did arrived Thursda y morning. not cause the excessive rainfallif heir acceptance Thursday fn northeastern Ontario, W.jnight of the principles of union Ross Strike, Hydro chairman! fel] short of unanimous approval presentation and. debate, said. VANCOUVER (CP) -- An un- signed statement implying dis- 'favor of Anglican-United Church union apparently rebounded. on its distributors at the general synod of the Anglican Church | The outlook for Christianity) permitting Indonesian mission- aries to carry on the work. "Throughout Asia, Christianity is identified with western colon- ialism. Some people think re- ligious colonialism is replacing political colonialism, "Christianity is really on the defensive in Asia... . and the Communists are exploiting this anti-Christian sentiment," He said that in most Asian countries, more people are be- ing converted from Christianity to other religions than the other | ! Ith United Church union must beja prediction, but I can express} ® s,|taken by the United Church,/the gjone of its leading officials said/action," Ce aS {the United Church Committee of i iTen, which onto, after Thursday night's/Anglican committee formulated | lvote of the Anglican general/the principles. | way around. "Now we have to deal with e matter too, I can't make hope we will take the same Moore was chairman of tened on loudspeakers. His pronunciation of French, at times in the past almost un-| recognizable as the | e of Moliere, showed enough im- provement for Quebec report: ers to hand out surprised com- pliments. - His pace was exhausting--s brisk walk at 6:30 a.m., break- fast, a stop at city halls, tours at industrial plants, a buffet luncheon in a farming commu-| nity, another small business plant in the afternoon, a press conference, dinner and some- times a night political rally, With his 70th birthday falling next Sept. 10, his remarkable vigor drew as many comments lin the areas he visited as his determined attempt to get bet- ter command of French. | The strain hardly showed. Even when it had ended, he was up at 6 a.m. Friday to drive to Ottawa. He has a peech scheduled to be deliv- ered Sunday at Elk Island Park near Edmonton to a Ukrginian- Canadian picnic, Pearson as frightened to go be- fore Parliament this fall to an- swer for the things turned up in the Dorion judicial inquiry into bribery and coercion charges. He called the minority gov- ernment "banana-spined" and blamed it for disunity, suspicion) and unrest unprecedented in Canadian history. He acknowledged his party had experienced internal trou- bles since the election setbacks of 1962 and 1963. He told one audience here his aim was to bring the various elements of the party together. He never directly referred to his former Quebec lieutenant,| Leon Balcer, MP for Trois-| Rivieres, quitting the party ear-| lier this year to sit as an in- dependent with another of the eight Conservatives elected in 1963. But he referred often to the issue which brought the final break with his former transport minister -- the Favreau-Fulton constitutional amending for- mula, which he opposed and Mr. Balcer supported. GAINS SUPPORT "I've been pictured as the great enemy of this province because I dared to say this for- mula would place our. children for generations in a strait-| jacket, Now all over this nation people are beginning to say the) stand we took was the right) stand," | "There's something greater! than popularity--to stand for a principle." Virtually every time he spoke --and he delivered 11 speeches apart from press conferences) and informal chats--he empha-| sized the need for Canadians to move toward "the preservation of this nation in strength, unity! and amity," Generally he remained in| Conservative territory--St. Hy- acinthe-Bagot, Nicolet - Yam- aska and Brome - Mississquoi| ridings. He swung briefly into Liberal - held Stanstead and Drummond - Arthabaska and) Creditiste-held Shefford. | STATES FARM POLICY Since his audiences were) mainly rural, he hammered re- peatedly at his party's farm pol-| icy--remove the 11-per- cent sales tax on building materials | and production machinery, give | the dairy farmer a price as) close as possible to $4 a hun- dredweight, establish an east- ern feed grain agency to mar-| ket western feeds at "'reason-| able" prices, federal grants to| He flayed Prime Minister together with the He told the synod Thursday: | "This changing secular rev-| "T was very thrilled with the/Slutionary world will not be andjtouched by delighted with the results,' he|be hind denominational in for- churches dug 'tresses."' Statement Opposes Union, Rebounds On Distributors | Bishop of New Westminster and chairman of the Anglican com- mittee that helped formulate the principles, dismissed the matter as "the kind of thing that happens at almost every meeting of this kind." He said he-had not seen the quotations before and believed them to be 'taken out of con- text-and put together in wrong context." ALGONQUIN PARK, Ont, \(CP)--The Ontario Teachers' Federation has asked for regu- jlations which would allow intel- jligence and aptitude tests and lresults to be kept secret. Delegates said Friday the tests become useless once their lcontent is widely known, | The federation's board of gov- ernors passed a resolution ask- ing the provincial government for controls as a result of a case in which a London, Ont,, school trustee went to court in an attempt to get copies of in- itelligence and aptitude tests build farm training schools and) Teachers Asking Secrecy | In Results Of IQ Testing © of education which may be at-) tended by the public." | The federation governors also decided to set up a com- mittee to study claims that teachers' working conditions are unsatisfactory. | Teachers told the board that they are being forced to work) acreage payments for eastern farmers similar to those paid western farmers. His tour began and continued amid speculation of a fall elec- tion being called, He made it plain he thinks one would be wrong and that Mr. Pearson is alibiing because he fears Par- liament in arguing that redis- tribution rules out an election in 1966. Regardless of whether Mr, Pearson calls an election, Mr, Diefenbaker hinted that he's planning another of his election- style visits to Quebec. Diefenbaker Now Confident Witness Baptism He's Won Quebec Support From 12 to 82 LONDON, Ont, (CP)--A 12- year-old boy and an 82-year-old man were among 140 Jehovah's Witnesses who entered the iswimming pool of a London mo- tel Friday for baptism by im- mersion. : Hundreds of relatives and friends lined the outer edge of the pool as three mfnisters of local congregations performed the ceremony. Wtinesses from London, St. Thomas, Brantford, Windsor, Hamilton, Sarnia, and Chatham were among the newly-baptized from Western Ontario, apes rs sa arma en ee i In Viet Nam War SAIGON (AP) -- Women are poping to prey on U.S. soldiers. caught up in war in South t month a laundress tried Viet Nam--some as active com-|to smuggle powerful explosives batants, others as spies or sab-lin her girdle into a U.S, heli- oteurs and others as innocent/copter base at Soc Trang, South bystanders, Vietnamese security Both the South Vietnamese|caught her, questioned her, Army and the Viet Cong guer-|took her out into a ne rillas deal harshly with hostile|field and executed her. women they catch, Some are| On the other side, the. executed, others tortured in an effort to extract information. tion . The Viet Cong relies more heavily on women, 'although|,.Nom- combatant women are frequently killed or wounded by the South Viet Nam. govern- ; ment recently announced plans ty oo Bron side tn wartare to induct e between the|" vibages, * ages of 20 and 25 into a re- serve army to help defend vil- : 4 C , a) % lages against the guerrillas, The. Soviet Communist party 25: KING KOIN CAR WASH | newspaper Pravda says the deputy commander of the Viet Cong guerrillas is a widow, Mme. Nguyen Thi Dinh, The U.S. Army's. 178rd. Air- Cong force threw grenades at them in an operation 25 miles north of Saigon. See the BEST-- Many South Vietnamese Before you INVEST women are enlisted as spies or Here's The BREAKTHROUGH IN COIN OP, CAR WASH Heavy Duty Chain Driven Pumps 340 RPM 600 Ibs. Pressure -- Wash & Rinse Coll or Write KING KOIN een Elizabeth Bivd. 'eronte 18, Ont. saboteurs by the Viet Cong, Some ply the bars of Saigon, Delegate Predicts UN Debts Paid Off MONTREAL (CP) -- Gilles Grondin, second secretary to the permanent Canadian dele- gation to the United Nations, predicted Friday that France and Russia will pay off their United Nations debts in the next two or three months, Mr, Gron- din was addressing the bilin- gual student seminar on the United Nations here, remota SALES CAREER OPPORTUNITY Rapidly expanding Canadian company will seleet « represente- tive in the Oshawe aree, Will give professionel individuelly . supervised training to an industrious person ever age 28 with successful sales business end who has management potential, Substontial starting salary with incentive fer rapid grewth, group life and health insurance benefits included, 255-7379 Write in confidence te Box 426 Oshawa Times, giving back~ ground and experience. Va A WEEK'S VACATION T0 EUROPE FOR ONLY ATTENTION FARMERS! «+. Why Pay More SAVE. ssrzrese, GASOLINE - DIESEL & MOTOR OILS Farm Tanks Available DX 0] CALL TODAY $2.40 EXTRA! fin thrift-season, Jet economy airfare fram Montreal to Amsterdam is $233.60; sailing, you can relax your way, Montreal to Rotterdam, in an outside double Cabin aboard the popular s.s, Ryndam for $236.00, (Some accommodations cost even less.) The differ+ enceé of $2.40--or less--gives you, en route, the most fantastic week's vacation, Gourmet meals, first-run movies, deck sports, swimming pool, full alr-condi- tioning, and a large 275 Ib. free baggage allowance, What's more, during Thrift Season you can enjoy additional round trip savings up to 25%. Whatever the season, whatever the ship, value Is one big reason why you'll get more out of your trip when you ask your idravel agent for Holland-America Line! : Pay later plan available, From Montreal: 8.8, RYDAM, Sept, 30, Nov, 23, From New York: 8.8, ROTTERDAM, NIEUW AMSTERDAM and STATENDAM. Alst seguilar departures of the popular MAASDAM and the one-dlass PRINSES MARGRIET. 11, Oct, 5, Oct. SPECIAL HOLIDAY SAILINGS You'll find @ spectal Holiday atmosphere on the Ryndam, from Montreal Nov, 23 and the Nieuw Amsterdam, Statendam and Prinses Margriet, from New York Nov, 24, Dee, 7 and Deo, 10 respectively, Sali a "Happy Ship" from Montreal or New York to Ireland, England, France, Holland, Germany Commerce and Transportation Bldg., TEL. EM 3-8221 40 Front St, W., Torento 1, Ont. i, Restaurant, you did. 1 Year to 4 Year 1 5% Guaranteed Investment Certificates, 5 year to 10 year G.1.C.'s -- 534% 4% SAVINGS ACCOUNTS longer than is required by de- partment of education regula-! tions. | L. Dorothy Martin of Tor-| onto said teachers are asked to superise play periods, monitor lunch _ breaks close schools, She said this is against regulations which spec- used in London schools. | The court turned down the jrequest by, Trustee R. W. Buch- Iner, But the judge \that the ruling might have been different if the board of educa- indicated) said Friday. by just three votes Derek Bedson of Winnipeg, a|tion, rather than an individual Farmers in this area pro-| The statement purported to tested when it was disclosedjquote Most Rev. Arthur Mi- Aug. 13 that Hydro had brought/chael Ramsey, Archbishop of 18 rainmaking machines in the|Canterbury, as saying he could Timmins-Kapuskasing area t0!/not participate in any plan for keep up water tables in the Anglican-Methodist union which northern watershed would "'compromise oyr Catho It rained almost every day of lic heritage." Rt Rev. the second half of August. lay delegate from the Diocese of Rupert's Land, was the only speaker Thursday night against the principles. He said he had no part in the preparation or distribution of the statement, but he believed : other delegates from the diocese |confidential information to thé|was elected president of the Godfrey Gower,\had been responsible for it, \ trustee, had made the request. The federation resolution asks the provincial department lof education to "formulate: reg- ulations which would control the issuing of standard test forms, their results and other public or to meetings of ify teachers must be at school each day from 8:30 a.m, until 15 minutes after classes end. The study committee -- will survey Ontario teachers and report to the board next year. The governors recommended set aside as Canada Day, in which special school programs would honor Canada, its that one day each winter be) and open and) 104 BROCK ST. 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