Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Jan 1966, p. 2

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Peendew January 11. 1966 "LAGOS, Niveria (AP)--Brit- " {sh policy on the breakaway ~ Rhodesian regime will be ex- ~ amined at a two-day gathering » of Commonwealth leaders which » @pened here today. - Arrival statements by dele- » gates indicate most are willing to r and see whether the some qualified .his wil- s with a warning that sures, including rvention, should not if sanctions prove heavy security detail the hotel where all : , including Prime Min- - ister Pearson and host Prime "> Minister Abubakar Tafawa Ba- é , are residing and where © the sessions will take place. © Prime Minister Wilson of Brit- ain Monday night said the Com- monwealth conference "is im- it... but won't make or ic Arriving on an RAF aircraft from London, Wilson told an air- conference he thinks "the Commonwealth can emerge with greater strength-- not necessarily today or tomor- = gow or next week but when in due course, and despite its anx- » taken a course which is right." Wilson is expected to remain firm against military interven- tion in Rhodesia and is also ex- ~ pected to resist setting any time} limit for the replacement of Smith. H Sources said he was likely to) . eall-on Commonwealth nations to assist Zambia ,whose econ- omy is tied to, and in many ways dominated by, Rhodesian control of railways, electric power, transport and telecom- munications. * Wilson apparently has in mind | a caretaker administration for | Rhodesia made up of promin-| ent Rhodesians and likely to/a ban on petroleum, blockage of eontain some members of the Rhodesia's overseas t government--but defin-|reserves and an embargo on |purchase of Rhodesia's agricul- Elections would not be held tural products. ly not Smith. Smith Sanciions: PMs 'Wait-See' under the one-man, une-vote rule held sacred by Africans. Sources said Wilson expects years of white rule while Rho- desia's Africans acquire train- ing and education before attain- ing majority rule. PROBLEM VITAL Wilson said Rhodesia, which is the only item on the agenda of the meeting, 'is a problem of vital importance to that coun- try, Africa, and, I believe, the world," He said he hoped those na- tions who are impatient with British sanctions and propose military intervention "would recognize the great changes in the situation in the last three weeks." He declined comment on the question of a time limit for sanctions to end the breakaway regime and added: 'We do not seek merely to bring Mr. Smith to his knees. We also want to restore constitutional rule." Half an hour before Wilson arrived, Archbishop Makarios of Cyprus and Singapore Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew reached Lagos on the same commercial flight. The Singapore leader termed the conference "a test of strength in whether Britain acts impartially with blacks and white." COULD MEAN WAR In replying to a question, he said that if Smith '"'gets away with it" it could lead to racial war. "It would lead to deteriora- tion of relations between Euro- pean and non-European peoples | throughout the world," he said. | Archbishop Makarios said Cy-| prus supported majority rule with one-man-one-vote in South-| ern Rhodesia. Edwina Keller, who says she has used more stage names than she cares to remember in the past, hay returned to Toronto for an appearance that bears little resemblance to any of her old roles as a showgirl. She was ordained last month as a minister of an evangelical cout Sisreist. "564 7 Billion | THE DEATH severely sanctions are crippling Rhodesia's economy. The present sanctions include | (Continued From Page One) financial | From Taxes inces will have combined total 4"d progress." |revenues from taxes federal ; a | government pay ments, and, 8reat humanist of our time. lother sources amounting to $4,-| British Prime Minister Wil- 701,683,000 this fiscal year, the|S0M, also in Nigeria, said the Dominion Bureau of Statistics;!°2S Of Shastri "will be felt A NEW JOB, BETTER WRITERS church in the United States and will appear in Toronto's Massey Halil as_ Sister Edwina with Brother Bill, a Buffalo N. Y., preacher. OF SHASTRI | Shastri and Ayub in their Dec- \laration of Tashkent agreed to they solved no basic problems. jover Kashmir, which has pro- voked two wars in Asia in the last 18 years. Official spokesmen for both By THE CANADIAN PRESS Highway crews in parts of Saskatchewan and eastern New- foundland today were started on what would turn out to be a week's plowing in the wake of two enormous blizzards that slugged the areas Sunday. The worst storm to hit Regina in almost 20 years left the city buried under drifts that officials estimated could disrupt normal movement for a week. Condi- tions at Moose Jaw were sim- ilar. Milder weather was to move into Saskatchewan today al- though predicted highs of 10 above were unlikely to help in snow-clearing operations. Only) light snow was expected. Hurricane-force winds gust- ing to 85 miles an hour pushed the Atlantic blizzard through |Eastern Nova Scotia and Cape | Breton Sunday. It moved across jto Newfoundland around noon jand piled drifts up to 15 feet in| |the streets of St. John's, A 300 - mile stretch on the) |Trans - Canada Highway from |St. John's to Grafd Falls was) jblocked but by Monday night! plows had reached a point 50 miles west of the capital. As communications were re-| gions, the teachers want parity | between men and women. | stored, reports of washed-out | bridges, causeways and sections of road filtered in from the is-| land's south coast, battered by | giant seas and high tides during| | the storm. | POWER RESTORED | Power was restored in most of iSt. John's Monday night. after | widespread failures. Schools lwere to remain closed for the | |a new collective agreement. Teachers' MONTREAL (CP)--When 284 French-speaking teachers went on strike a week ago today in the suburban Montreal school region of Le Gardeur, it was an outgrowth of unrest in their pro- fession in Quebec. When 354 teachers went.on strike a day later in the Ot- tawa Valley school region in and west of Hull, it was a) further symptom of the same unrest, Since thén, 123 teachers have walked out in the Papineau re- gion, while still more have planus to do so Jan. 19 in Vaudreuil- Soulanges west of Montreal. In the Eastern Townships, several thousand teachers have decided not to strike but to quit their jobs unless the local school boards meet their conditions for In all these instances, the teachers want higher wages; but wages alone are only part of the problem. It is not simply wages as such, but increases that will bring their salaries up to what they consider equitable ges On Ao Dar = See 1 =F a education in Quebec, the rest of Canada and the United States. FORMS DEPARTMENT After the report by the com- mission, the government estab- lished a department of educa- tion which has been reorgan- izing the structure of the school system and teaching in the province, Since coming into being, the department has consolidated the myriad local school commis- sions--some 1,200 of them be- fore reorganization--into 55 re- gional school boards. Last year, the government revised an act concerning employees in public service to allow them to strike, legally. Prior to that, teachers used the device of holding "study sessions."' Some school commissions have difficulty in raising money to pay the teachers. When the commissions do not have enough money, the teachers may continue to work until their situation gets desperate. The education depart- levels. z \or shore up local finances. But PAY IS LOWER jwhen it comes down to hard ide The Rails' Part Of New Session In the Ottawa Valley school region, the teachers .compare their salaries with those in the City of Ottawa and find them- selves getting less. In all re- There are, however, deeper factors--factors that go back to) iFrere Untel and the new) awakening in Quebec. | When Frere Untel, known in| burst upon Quebec a few years jago, readers of the book recog- | nized the story all too well. | Brother Jean-Paul Desbiens, lauthor of Les Insolences du | second day today but businesses | rere Untel (The Impertinences|pected on proposed legislation ment then steps in to shake up Strike: cash, the commissions have to get a good part of it from the community. THERE'S SHORTAGE With the increasing stress on education and the growing num- ber of children in schools, not to mention adult classes at night, there haven't been enough teachers to go around. Nor have there been enough classrooms, although the educa- tion department is building more and more schools under the regional boards. - The teachers say they have to work longer hours because of larger classes. As a result, they haven't the time to take addj- tional courses in university to improve their own standing, status and salary. In negotiations, the Hull re- gional school board is prepajing a new salary scale, based partly on a conciliator's suggestions, which is to be presented to teachers' representatives Wed- nesday. There was no immediate sign of a move toward negotiation in the Papineau and Le Gardeur areas, 'MPs Wi For OTTAWA (CP) -- Railway | | English as Brother Anonymous, | Matters are certain to com- |mand a major share of atten jtion in the new Parliament jopening Jan. 18, a week from) | today. | | A marathon debate is ex-| |were expected to re-open after! or Brother Anonymous), told of |stemming from the report four ithe weekly Monday holiday. ithe long suffering of a Roman years ago of the MacPherson Elsewhere in Canada gener-| Catholic teaching brother who/royal commission on transpor- ally typical winter conditions | were predicted for today. Southern Ontario was ex- pected to follow the warm and President . Johnson said his! ejimiflate many le lent uri Se ghee ye y of the after-|cold pattern prevalent uring death was a "grievous blow to effects. of the conflict between |the last couple of weeks. The OTTAWA (CP)--The 10 proy-| the hopes of mankind for peace their two natidns last fall, but|temperature in Ottawa dropped |to zero early today from 38 Kosygin hailed Shastri as "'a hey Jeft unsettled their quarrel) Monday. In Toronto the plunge was to 15 above from 43, Northern Ontario remai cold with some snow. Milder weather was moving was trying to educate the chil- dren of Quebec. The book sold \like hot cakes. | Underlying the story. was the \eoritention that education in | Quebec left much to be desired, la problem that the Lesage gov- | ernment tackled soon after com- ing into office in 1960. The government set up a ined |Toyal commission which studied | tation. But there could be even heav- lier fireworks if, as expected, |the wage dispute between the railways and their non-operat- jing employees reaches a strike jerisis and is dumped, into Ot- tawa's lap. Another storm centre is the recommendation of Mr. Justice Samuel Freedman that federal labor laws -be amended to give unions a voice in the introduc- tion of automation.' two Montreal - Vancouver pas- senger trains. .<) Conservative MPs from the Prairies also are expected to mount a stiff attack on branch- line abandonment which would affect 'mainly the maze of sec- ondary rail lines in the Western \farm region. | However, the government \feels most of the problems in | this regard were ironed out last jyear and that the new formula for abandonment generally will be accepted. | A more delicate area is that jof maximum rate control. This jinvolves a formula for a ceiling on the rates that may %e levied |against so-called 'captive ship- |pers," who have no alternative to railway transport. | The wage dispute on the rail- jays poses a companion prob- 'lem. Because rail freight rates have been frozen since 1959 to + Of issue | throughout the Commonwealth, . * f - Laid Against B.C.'s Bennett reported today. ; ri i - | Their total general expendi- 27d indeed everywhere. His/ work out withdrawal of the a few snowflurries and highs of Slander Suit Tossed Out ltures, exclusive of debt retire-| qualities of statesmanship, sin-/heayily armed divisions strung five and 10 below were fore- VANCOUVER (CP) -- Pre-| sides also differed i i i 0 differed on how t0/ across Alberta and in Manitoba | This stemmed from the await new legislation, the rail- judge's inquiry last year into| ways say they have no means of CNR runthroughs at Nakina,| paying a wage increase. Their Ont., and Wainwright, Alta. non-operating workers are de- FACE OTHER PROBLEMS |manding boosts ranging to more Labor Asks Why Doctor than $1 an hour. | ment, will run to $5,170,020,000,| cerity and integrity are valued."| out along a 1,500-mile ceasefire | cas jthe bureau said in an advance + eo yaganey said cea deeply tine. ' yanuges gee h Columbia's coastal re 9 : j snocke: . ' ritis 0 la tim of rumor and speculation" | 7¢!e28¢ of data to be contained ' ef eagle aha India received the news of iseneatnnse ware rising to the . mier W. A. C. Bennett Mon- : * day won dismissal of a slander ; Suit brought against him by 'George E. P. Jones, former » chairman of the B.C, purchas- ' ing commission. 5 r. Justice H. W. McInnes *, ruled in B.C. Supreme Court that remarks made by the pre- * mier at # Victoria Social Credit » meeting last March contained " no slander of Jones, either in the ordinary .meaning of the ~ -- or in the innuendo Jones' + f After delivering his 19-page judgment in which he reviewed the history of the case of Jones, dismissed by an act of the leg- islature in March, 1965, the judge recalled the eight-man charged with accepting a bene-| 1964-65 fiscal year. had refused to recognize an or-| jantic ij | : f } > provinces grants, trans- der-in-council relieving him and| ¢, estate . : stiost tx Ris cite | fer of estate taxes and compen jJones were later dismissed in| The balance will come from lic- county court in Victoria and|ences and permits and liquor the decision was upheld in the) profits. | B.C. Court of Appeal. Shastri died at 1:32 a.m. (2:32 p.m. EST Monday) in. the villa where he was staying outside Tashkent. Aides said he dined alone at 10:30 p.m., telephoned his family in New Delhi, and went to bed half an hour later but could not sleep. CALLS FOR DOCTOR At about 1:20 a.m., the prime minister was seized by a cough- ing spell and staggered into the sation for withdrawal from joi oat crying,' 'Doctor, doctor.' il the legislature passed an act! Ili m join') His staff, packing to leave Tash- ocing his dismissal programs totalling $474,885,000./,ent today, put their chief back os Semen The provinces' own taxes are|t, bed and summoned his per- The criminal charges against|expected to yield $3,113,690,000. | onal physician, Dr. R ry ;Chugh. The doctor said Shastri : K | lost consciousness three minutes Liquor profits are ex- jater and stopped breathing at and that the inference was that)" i annual report to be is- Jones pas dishonest and unfit|*¥¢d next month. | The revenue figure is up 23.2 to act as chai : : chasing hecikiones of the pur jper cent and the expenditure poiae! : s jfigure up 21.5 per cent from nm Oct. 2, 1964, Jones was|combined provincial totals in fit from a Victoria car dealer,| 'The fi 2 " : cae gures released today A man who had dealings with) showed federal government pay- the government. Jones had then) ments to the provinces through been relieved of his duties but tax-sharing arrangements, At-| jury and told them he had dis-| missed the action. The judge said that should Premier Bennett ask for costs, he had no alternative but to al-| low them. - | Jones' lawyer, Tom Berger,| said he had not decided whether | to appeal. The remarks on which Jones based his suit were made by the premier after Jones had been forcibly retired as chair-| man of the commission with full salary up to Feb. 15, 1966. This) would give him the required 10 years' service for pension rights and pay him a pension for life. The premier, when address- ing the Social Credit Associa-|* tion, was quoted as saying: "I'm not going to talk about the Jones boy. I could say a lot, but just let me assure you of this: The position taken by the overnment is the right posi-| ion." | Jones' counsel argued that the remarks contained "an in- nuendo which left Jones the vic- REDMEN WHIP AGGIES | KINGSTON (CP)--Royal Mil-) itary College Redmen defeated Montreal's Macdonald College Aggies 84-66 in Ottawa - St. Lawrence Athletic Association eallege basketball here Friday - night. High scorer for the Red- men was Bob Mason with 20 points. Ron Rayner scored 17) points for Macdonald. | Tass, the Soviet news agency, ter, and another a month after Warming Up Wednesd z when he and Ayub Khan were Synopsis: Snowflurries will|with an occasional light snow- dances. ure, jating temperatures. Winds west|to the villa, said, "We must zero degree temperatures ex-| Variable cloudiness| across Pakistan. Since the fierce i pected to be $259,730,000. __ 1:32. A team of eight Soviet |physicians joined in unsuccess- WEATHER FORECAST |ful attempts to revive him. oe |reported that death was due to : | .s s 7 7 a heart attack. Shastri had had sunny And F dav: i. : a serious heart attack in 1959, nunny Aan rigid l 0 ay; before becoming prime minis- succeeding Nehru. Shastri had seemed in good spirits earlier in the evening : TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts| burton, Killaloe, Hamilton, Tor-| Kosygin's guests at a reception. Saee by the weather office at) onto: Clear and yery cold today|He smiled and clapped at a 30 a.m.: except for a few, cloudy periods|brief program of music and Aa gue subside today as| flurry this morning. Clear and) Indian Defence Minister Y. B. winds vg with the ap-| cold tonight. Wednesday in-|Chavan said the prime minister, proach of an area of high pres-| creasing cloudiness with moder- during the automobile ride back It will be a clear cold night|/to northwest 25 decreasi P . 3 ; | ast 25 easing to fight bravely for peace as we over Ontario again tonight with| light this evening, . fought in the conflict." Lake Huron, southern Georg-| Shastri's body was flown home pond around the lower Greatiian Bay: praised. "A akes. land very cold today. § kistani w tw : i , y. Snoyflur-|Indo- Pakistani war, the two Wednesday will see moder-|ries and occasional snowsqualls|countries have barred each jating temperatures with in-|to lee of open lakes ending by other's planes from crossing creasing cloud over approach-| evening. Clear and cold tonight, their borders. ing from the west. Snow is ex-' Wednesday increasing cloudi-| oy, Se nee pected to spread across north-|ness with moderating tempera- RUSSIANS 'SHATTERED ern regions during the day and) tures, Snow likely beginning by! ,,38!@" President | Nikolai will likely reach southern areas| evening. Winds northwest 95 de. POdgorny and Prime Minister we! evening. 5 _ |ereasing to light tonight. gph a i message 10 india s _Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Timagami, Cochrane: Mainly president said the Soviet people Northern Georgian Bay Wind-|clear and very cold today. and| Cre Shattered by the untimely sor, North Bay, Sudbury: Clear] tonight. Wednesday 'cloud-| death of an outstanding Indian and very cold today. Wednesday) ing over in the morning with St@!esman._ : increasing cloudiness with mod-|snow beginnin gy by after-|. It was Kosygin who brought erating temperatures. $0 me) noon. Moderating temperatures. | 90@Stt and the Pakistani leader stiow likely by evening. Winds| Winds becoming light this after- together in Tashkent for their we 2 decreasing! ffoon and southerly 15 Wednes- ens Braet id See oe s F i day ! > was Niagara, Lake Ontario, Hali-| White River, Algoma, Sauit|{undly shaken and grieved by HERE and THERE The Stan Rogers mentioned in a@ court report last week is not the Stanley Rogers who resides at 180 Olive Ave. An Oshawa rink, skipped by Miss Doreen Dobbie, won the prizes for high score with one in the business girls bonspiel last Saturday at the Peferbo- rough Golf and Country Club. The rink had a score of 23 points. Other members of the rink were Madeline Tubb, Gerry Otway and Fay McLeish. During the week ending Jan. 8 there were 38 births at the Oshawa General Hospital. Three hundred and fifty-one patients were admitted and 275 discharg- ed. Ninety-five major and 113 minor operations were perform- ed in addition to 82 eye, ear, nase end throat eperations. A | Ste. Marie: Clear and very cold|*"o*death of Shastri, adding he jtoday. Increasing cloudiness| "25 deeply impressed during jand milder tonight. Wednesday| 'te Jast few days by the Indian icloudy and milder with occa. | eader's sincerity and dedication sional snow. Winds light becom- to the cause of settling outstand- total of 190 treatments and exa-|ing southeast 15 to 20 Wednes-| '78 rig lb ala tay pe minations were given. Forty! 4aY United Nations Secretary-Gen- ts wi ee ; y eral U Thant said: "Not India nse -- applied. During the Forecast Temperatures alone, not Asia alone, but the wee ere were 429 physio-| Low tonight high Wednesday: (whole world will mourn his rgd Maye pag and 332 vis-| windsor 10 0 |passing." hinee Gee wat Thomas 10 In Canberra, Prime Minister therapy cases were handled | uondon Sir Robert Menzies of Australia said Shastri took office as prime minister at a testing time and had established himself as a leader in his own right. Prime. Minister Keith Holy- joake of New Zealand said in Wellington that the Tashkent agreement would stand as a monument to Shastri. ' Kitchener A meeting of the Oshawa Or-| Mount Forest..... ganic Gardeners Club will be| Wingham held at E. A. Lovell School to-| Hamilton night. The meeting starts at g| St Catharines.... p.m. Peterborough .... 2 a ; inet | MOESUE se ciceces GERMS BEAT INDUSTRY iin" *°""" PENZANCE, England (CP)--)| Muskoka .... A sneeze stopped a 53,000-ton| North Bay. oil tanker off the Cornish coast] Sudbury .. recently. The Esso London was| Karlton i outward bound when one of the|Sault Ste. Marie crew sneezed so hard he dis | Kapuska ing 5 located his jaw. The vessel had| White r to return to port to get him to NEED... Fuel Oil CALL PERRY Day or Night 723-3443 miver,. | Moosonee .., epececens Shastri's death in the middle of a chill winter night. Except for \lights and an unusual bustle at a few government buildings, there was no indication at first that the country had lost its prime minister. Most people were asleep when the government radio, normally jsilent at night, announced the |death in English and Hindi. "The nation which only a few hours ago welcomed the Tash- kent declaration . . . is in deep mourning," the announcer said. |NANDA TAKES OVER | About two hours after Shas- jtri's death Nanda, who is 67, took over the reins of govern- ment. As home minister he was next in line, and he was sworn jin by President Radhakrishnan |in a brief ceremony at the presi- }dential palace. | The president and Nanda then ;went to Shastri's residence to pay their respects to the prime }minister's- wife, Lalita, They |were accompanied by Mrs. In-| dira Gandhi, Nehru's daughter, who is information and broad- casting minister. Gradually a crowd of mourn- ers formed at the Shastri resi- dence. Government ministers and family friends were ad-| | mitted inside the brick and iron- |barred walls; the public stood silently outside, a steadily swell- jing sea of humanity waiting to file past the body when it was returned to lie in state. The government announced 12 days of state mourning. All gov- ernment offices were closed to-| |day and Wednesday. Most shops | in the capi ere also shut. | MAY KEEP POST Congress party members in Parliament will meet soon to de- cide whether Nanda will remain, at the head of the government or be pushed aside for someone else, as he was after Nehru's death. Observers expressed be- | lief that he has a good chance! of holding the post this time. Newspaper commentators in| |Britain said Shastri's sudden death might touch off. new ten- sions on the smoldering sub- continent and put India's de- mocracy to a severe test. | They questioned whether the Tashkent agreements could be carried out smoothly, noting that much of the negotiation jthat produced the agreement took place privately between Shastri and Ayub. Khan or with | mid-40s today with some rain. In northern B.C., 30 - degree readings were bringing a wel- |come break after two weeks of sub-zero conditions. Quebec was becoming cold and windy but no heavy snow- fall was expected. US. Press Gets Heave By Sukarno JAKARTA (AP) -- Pesident Sukarno today ordered all American correspondents ex- pelled from Indonesia. Sukarno' issued the order in | speech at a ceremony installing} the new Indonesian ambassador to Syria, H. M. Sudjono. The president said he has de- cided to expel American cor- respondents in retaliation for) lies he said were being written) in the American press about the} current Indonesian political cri-| Sis. There now are two American walked 1,000 miles in 1,000 con-|transport commissioners allow- | correspondents in Indonesia: R.|secutive hours in England injing the CPR to discontinue the E. Staniard of United Press In- ternational and Donald Kirk,| representing the New York Times. Antoine Yared of The Associ- ated Press is a Lebanese. NOT FOR THE DEAF The "SPECTRA", a new tiny aid -- so small it can barely be seen when vorn -- a miracle to say the least. Fantastic, for anyone wiih nerve deafness. As powerful as aids three times iss size. Once you see and try it you'll be convinced that this is what you have wanted for years. Ask about our 5-year guarantee., Just phone or write Poul Bellinger, 723-5401. (Acousticon Hearing Aids) \their Soviet mediator, Kosygin. | 1119 Northridge St., Oshawa It's simple how quickly one may lose pounds of unsightly fat right in your own home. Make this home recipe yourself. It's easy, no trouble at all and costs little. Just go to your drug store and ask for four ounces of Naran Concentrate. Pour this into a pint bottle and add enough | aap oa juice to fill the bottle. 'ake two tablespoons full a day an needed and follow the Naran | Plan. | _ If your first purchase does not ahem won @ simnle easy way to | bloat cg 23 lip much bet- New Home Recipe Reducing Plan. lose bulky fat and help regain slender more graceful curves; if reducible pounds and inches of excess fat don't disappear from neck, chin, arms, abdomen, hips, calves and ankles just return the empty bottle for your money back. Follow this easy way en- dorsed by many who have tried this plan and help bring back alluring curves' and graceful slenderness. Note how quickly ter you feel, More alive, youthful and active, --_--, Was Sacked BRANTFORD (CP) -- Brant- ford labor council unanimously. passed a resolution Monday ask- ing the board of governors of Brantford General Hospital to make public its reasons for bar-| ring Dr, G. A, Marin from the | hospital. The hospital's action against Dr Marin came shortly after) an inquest Dec. 2 into the death! Michael Finnerty of Oct. 16 of Brantford who was fatally in- jured in a traffic accident. Dr. Marin was on emergency call at the hospital that night | but did not see Mr. Finnerty juntil after he died. Nurses tes- jtified at the. inquest that Dr. |Marin had been asked to come jto the hospital but that he had | refused. Dr. Marin testified he had only been asked once to go to the hos pital and the request came during the last phone call |he received. The hospital board subse- quently suspended Dr. Marin's privileges at the hospital inde- finitely. WALKED LONG Captain Robert WAY Barclay 1809. jto run -tiew station, and the Also pending is che proposed recapitalization of the publicly- owned CNR to ease its debt burden; establishment of an Ot- tawa terminal railway company retroactive approval of more than $70,000,000 in railway sub- sidies still owing for 1965. Transport Minister' Pickers- gill will have his hands full trying to clear this overloaded jagenda, along with the host of other transport matters rang- ing from regional air policy to a revised shipbuilding subsidy plan. Informants say -the minister is determined to complete the MacPherson legislation in the 1966 session. It could be the de- bate of the year. This legislation would remove most federal controls over the railways, freeing them to set rates, abandon uneconomic branch lines and scrap money- losing services they have been |compelled to retain as a matter of public policy. Subsidies would gradually be eliminated. The idea is to return the rail- way industry to a free competi- itive environment, |PROTESTS LIKELY Opposition MPs undoubtedly will raise protests about the Dominion, one of the railway's Join the Canadian Forces Investigate the life of travel & adventure that awaits you... CANADIAN FORCES CAREER COUNSELLOR right here in THE OSH Wednesday, 12 January, 1966 Noon TT bute? Le ME BE ag G5 CFL Lah N Pa ww yg B MPa There is a militant attitude among the 15 non - operating unions involved in the current negotiations and most observers believe a nationwide strike iy likely unless blocked by federai | action. REASONS to fly to Europe this summer | BOAC offers you 29 excellent' reasons why you should fly to Europe this summer -- &@ re cord number of 29 trans atlantic flights from Toronto. There's sure to be one to fit with your travel plans. Jet direct to London by magni-+ ficent BOAC Rolls-Royce 707 or Air Canada giant DC-8 jet. From April 1 transatlantie fares are the lowest ever. (Example: 21-day Economy Excursion Toronto - Rome will cost you only $465* ree turn--a saving of $40.) Come to think of it, that's another good reason. That makes 30! See your Travel Agent. He'll give you several more, "Subject to government approval. DOLE yy ay 1 ST be" / hahaha od hd See your |AWA ARMOURY -- 6:00 P.M, | SERVICE > BOAC BRITISH OVERSEAS AIRWAYS CORPORATION WITH AIR CANADA BOOK NOW FOR Summer "66" BOAC Agent vs» 728-6201 Air Canada Agent ss 128-6202 Four Seasons Travel 728-6203 FOR FAST EFFICIENT

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