Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Jan 1966, p. 8

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6 mE OSHAWA TIMES, Pildsy, Sanuary 7, 1966 ROUEN THE CLORE IN - -- eT awerer RCAF Lan ds In Tanzania To Set Up An Air Force DAR ES SALAAM (Reuters) A 14-man RCAF advance party arrived here Thursday to be- gin a five-year program to aid the establishment of a Tanzan- ian air force. night at the devastated Rhone- Alpes oil refinery at Feyzin, France, near here, and the dan- ger of further explosions ap- peared to be over. At least 12 Under an agreement reached in September, Canada will send some 50 advisory and training personnel to Tanzania. The pro- gram calls for training here and in Canada of some 400 Tanzanians for the people's de- fence forces air wing. Informed sources have esti- mated the cost of the program at about $1,800,000 annually. Canada also is to provide Tan- zania's air wing with up to four Caribou and eight other mil- itary aircraft. GIVES WARNING ELMVALE, Ont. (CP)--On- tario was warned Thursday it would lose a valuable economic assist if the maple syrup indus- try was allowed to decline fur- ther. "The situation is danger- ous and demands attention," R. E. Goodin, secretary of the On- tario Food Council, told a meet- ing of maple syrup producers in this village 18 miles north of Barrie. SUGGESTS ACTION TORONTO (CP) -- E. R. Vadeboncoeur, president of WYSR radio and TV station in Syracuse, N.Y., Thursday told Canadian broadcasters .they should be prepared to enter the editorial field. He told a luncheon meeting of the Cana- dian Broadcast Executives So- ciety that newspaper editorial voices are becoming fewer be- cause of economic pressures which have forced newspapers to fold or merge with other papers. SECOND TIME IS THE WORST NEW YORK (AP)--A man who claimed $51,300 found on a bus isn't likely to get it back. The U.S. government says he owes that much and more in income taxes. The $48,800 in cash and $2,500 in travellers' cheques was in a shaving kit left on a Kennedy Airport bus Tuesday night. Louis di Rubba of Scars- dale, N.Y., turned in the kit and Frank Durkin, 52, claimed it Wednes- day. Durkin a former officer in'a Bronx trucking firm, told po- lice he had flown to Puerto Rico before he noticed his loss. The money represented proceeds from the sale of his business and house. The revenue service, which is routinely notified when large sums of money are found, confiscated the $51,300 after Durkin showed up. A spokesman said Durkin owed the bus driver, | men, including 10 firemen, were presumed to have lost their lives in, the blaze, which broke out Tuesday. DIEF WILL ATTEND ST. JOHNS, Que. (CP)--Op- position Leader John Diefen- baker is scheduled to attend a Jan. 15, meeting here of Que- bec's eight Progressive Conser- vative MPs and the party's Quebec candidates defeated in the Nov. 8 general election. SCHOONER GROUNDS MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--The king- size cruise schooner Polynesia crunched on to a Bahamas reef Thursday and stuck fast. U.S. Coast Guard helicopters and ci- vilian yachts fetried all 35 pas- sengers 15 miles to the Bahama island of Bimini. ACT AGAINST KLAN WASHINGTON (AP) -- Con- |tempt - of - Congress action was started Thursday against Imperial Wizard Robert Shelton and six other Ku Klux Klan leaders who refused to supply records to the UN-American activities committee of the U.S. House of Representatives. ELECTED BISHOP HONG KONG (Reuters)-- Most Rev. Joost de Blank, for- mer Anglican archbishop of \Cape Town, South Africa, was CMA Readv 7. ------e LO Daigalll On Medicare TORONTO (CF) -- The pros- pect of government-sponsored medical care insurance and the possibility that representatives of the medical profession might have to resort to arbitration has prompted the Canadian Medical Asscciztion to form a special committee on collective bargaining and arbitration. Dr. Arthur D. Kelly, the association's general secretary, makes this disclosure in the current issue of the CMA Jour- nal, He said the committee has already heid cne meeting and plans a second this month. Dr. Kelly's report says the committee, aided by outside consultants, is inquiring into the activities of the CMA's pro- vincial divisions and studying federal and provincial. reports and legislation on collective bargaining. The knowledge will be applied to future CMA activ- ities. The studies are being made because "the prospect of medi- care makes it necessary to con- template agreements with gov- ernments which undertake to finance medical services and such agreements may require representatives of the medical profession to consult, to negoti- ate, to conciliate and to resort to arbitration," the report says. "This is the vocabulary of collective bargaining, a process jelected bishop of Hong es which we are not expert but jand Macao Thursday by about|one which we will need to learn $70,000 in back taxes for 1960. [999 clergy and lay delegates |if doctors are to influence their PLANS SERIES The Dominion Automobile Asso- ciation plans to run a series on driver education in the press in| an effort to reduce highway ac- cidents. President R. W. Trol- lope of London, Ont., said Thursday. Mr. Trollope said in a speech this would be couplec with an intensive driver - edu- cation campaign through the as sociation's member service di vision. PHILIP WILL VISIT LONDON (AP) -- Prince Philip, life member of Variety Clubs International, will visit major cities of Canada and the} United States in March to pro-| mote Variety Clubs charities, it was announced Thursday night.) The Queen's husband will ar-| rive in New York March 17. He will visit Toronto. QUELL LAST FIRE LYONS (Reuters) -- Firemen put out the last fire Thursday Unstruck Plant Picket Stopped HAMILTON (CP) -- An in- terim injunction issued Thurs- day night prohibits striking gas company workers from picket- ing United Gas Ltd. premises here and at Burlington and Oak- ville, More than 200 workers, mem- bers of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union (CLC), earlier refused to cross picket jines manned by about 70 mem- bers of Windsor and Sarnia lo- cals of the union, on strike against Union Gas Co. of Can- ada Ltd. since Nov. 1. Workers at United Gas, a sub- sidiary of Union Gas, are in ne- gotiations for a new contract. The men had refused to re- turn to work across the picket line despite orders by officials of their Loca] 9-633 and interna- tional union representatives. The orders triggered the res- ignations of 14 union stewards. James Curran, president of the union's Hamilton local, said the stewards quit their posts after refusing to obey company and union orders to cross the picket lines The injunction issued by County Judge Alan L. Ambrose 'here. own destiny." 'His D-Day Nears By RONALD LEBEL OTTAWA (CP)--The case of Mr, Justice Leo Landreville likely will reach the showdown stage early in the parliamen- tary session opening Jan. 18 and contitsutional precedents could be set. ' Jutice Minister Lucien Car- din asked the judge last Sep- tember to resign from the On- tario Supreme Court but he refused. Mr, Cardin said Judge Land- reville's removal was recom- mended to the federal govern- ment last may in a confidential report from the Law Society of Upper Canada, official organiza- tion of the Ontario bar. The justice minister an- nounced last month that he would consider proposing a par- liamentary inquiry into the judge's conduct as mayor of Sudbury before his elevation to the bench in 1956. He was still hoping that Judge Landreville would step down voluntarily before Jan. 18, but so far the judge has main- tained public silence. Constitutional. author ities agree that no Superior Court judge has ever been removed since Confederation. Two at- tempts to unseat Quebec judges were made by parliamentary committees in the first 10 years after Confederation, but the judges were cleared of the al- legations against them. The cumbersome procedure has not been attempted since then. Judge Landreville was criti- cized by an Ontario royal com- mission that investigated the manner in which Northern On- tario Natural Gas Co., obtained franchises from several munici- palities. In 1964, the judge was charged with municipal corrup- tion and conspiracy but the charges were dismissed after a preliminary hearing. There pas evidence at the hearing that he made a $117,000 profit from the sale of NONG shares after re- signing as mayor. Since then, several opposition MPs have demanded his resig- nation or action to investigate the case. These pleas are ex- pected to be repeated at the forthcoming session. To ensure the. independence of the judiciary from political interference, the Fathers of Confederation stipulated in sec- tion 99 of the British North America Act that Superior Court judges can, be removed only by the governor-general on address by the Commons and Senate. The constitution does not mention grounds for removal except to provide that judges shall "hold office during good behavior." An amendment passed in 1960 requires all judges to retire at 75. Comments by Mr. Cardin and British constitutional precedents indicate that any action to re- move Judge Landreville would involve an inquiry by a joint Commons-Senate committee. The committee would call wit- nesses and hear sworn testi- mony like a court. It would then recommend for or against removal in a report to the two parent chambers. prohibits picketing until Wed- nesday. FOR SALE in braemor gardens Come and inspect Oshawa's most convenient community at Stevenson Road North and Annapolis, You'll like what you see ! | lf RC 6e-m "When aman says it says a lotfor the man" | Red The CARLING BREWERIES Limited Cap PRE-VALENTINE SALE ALL VALENTINES 12 PRICE 56 ONLY VACUUM FLASKS CUPS SAUCERS 72 ONLY Coca-Cola CASE OF 12's 62: 100 ONLY COCA MATS 14 x 24 Check Design 99: 144 ONLY DISH DRAINER TRAY AND STRAINER 1.37 100 ONLY EMBA KLEEN for Rijg_and Upholstery On Highway No, 2 Seiween Ssiiawa and Whitby

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