B THE osHawa 'TIMES, Tuerdey, March 3, 1966 Baga oe eed omar t " a 7 on the west by Bay. The montage shows how the Ea- ton Centre skyscrapers and open plazas and courts in- tegrate with the City Hall and Civic Square. Left fore- A montage of Eaton Cen- tre superimposed on the 22.5 superblock site bounded on the south by Queen, on the north by Dundas West, on the east by Yonge, and Downtown Toront Details of a multi-million dol-|sors as. a further major step lar plan to revitalize Toronto's|forward in the revitalization of downtown core were presented/the entire downtown area. -- to William R. Allen, Chairman) David Kinnear, executive of the Metropolitan Council, |vice-president of Eaton's, said Mayor Phillip G. Givens and/the planners believe that "the Metro and City Councillors andjimplementation of the Master officials today by John David' Plan -- as a complementary de- Eaton and officers of The T.| velopment to the new City Hall Eaton Co. Limited and Eaton/and Nathan Phillips Square -- Centre Limited, the Eaton sub-) would make the most significant sidiary responsible for the proj- contribution we believe possible ground is the new Metropol- itan Toronto court building and just south of it Osgoode Hall. (Photo by Ezra Stoller) o Core 1S earry tariffs "culmination of eight years of ada from the US carry tariff 1958, ranging from 17. % to 25 per study beginning in June, when the City of Toronto Plan- ning staff developed Project Vik-|U-S. carry a7 ¥4-per-cent tariff ing as a basis for our company's participation in ment of the downtown area. BEST PLAN "We believe the plan the revitalization of this -|thrown last Thursday in a mili- the redevelop-|cent of Canada's 300 parts man- pre-| would sented to you this morning t0\ and be the best possible approach to| parts stra-' manufacturing industry." In Moscow By FRED W. COLEMAN MOSCOW (AP) -- Kwame |and police who deposed him. Nkrumah, deposed president of| Ghana, stopped over in Moscow rah, president of the National today for talks with Soviet lead- Liberation Council now govern- ers. And the military leaders ing Ghana, told a press confer- who overthrew him said Nkru-|ence that if Nkrumah "dares to mah would be put on trial if;come back to this country he he returned to Ghana. | will be tried for the crimes he Puicies z oa Gromyko was at the airport when Nkrumah arrived Monday night aboard a special Russian plane from Peking. They talked for about half an hour, then| drove off separately. | Nkrumah was believed to be} staying in a Soviet government guesthouse in Moscow's Lenin Hills awaiting a .summons to; meet with Kremlin leaders. Nkrumah was in Peking con- ferring with Chinese leaders when his regime was over- Ankrah said Ghana's airport was closed to all planes of the | Soviet airline Aeroflot 'because they carried Nkrumah away." Cont, From Page One crime and its possible links to govern There are demands. to see 'syhether the administration of justice has been siibject to in- filtration by gangs, thugs and Mafia-dominated individuals," The Spencer case had re- ltary coup. He left Peking Mon- Parts-role For Canada 'Seen Threat TORONTO (CP) Canada would become a parts ware- house instead of a manufacturer lif the Canada- United States lauto-trade agreement is ex- tended to include replacement parts, Arthur Paulin said Mon day. against condemnation without trial, he said. 'More and more it is becoim- a government can stand against public opinion which generally has demanded an investigation into the circumstances, the strange, the bizarre circum- stances of the Spencer case."' Conservative MPs Eldon Woolliams (Bow River) and R. G. L. Fairweather (Royal) both mentioned "resignation" and both suggested Mr. Cardin should stand up to the cabinet on Spencer's behalf. Mr. Fairweather said the jus- tice minister should resign if the cabinet refused to meet his demand for an inquiry. Mr. Paulin, president of the Automotive Industries Associa- |tion, said at a press conference replacement parts entering Can- cent, while parts going into the wAapE DECISION 3ut the justice minister 2 torted that the .decision not to give Spencer a hearing was |made by him in the interests of 'national security He was the one who suggested to the prime minister that an inquiry would be unwarranted. The government got support e- He said because of this 70 per ufacturers are U.S. subsidiaries, but if tariffs were removed "a Canadian subsidiary plant no longer be necessary Canada would become a warehouse instead of a CARDIN STANDS FIRM sulted in a great public outery| ing a quesiion of whether or not} ect, The Eaton project, involving an investment of up to $260,000,-/ 000 was described by its spon- "Modem Idea" Features Guara OTTAWA (CP)--Finance Min-| ister Sharp claimed for the Lib-| erals Monday a "modern idea'"' advanced by the New Demo- tratic Party as a means to pro- viding all Canadians with a guaranteed annual income Stanley Knowles (NDP--Win- alpeg North Centre), speaking th an adjournment. debate in the Commons, asked the minis- ter whether he had considered "megative income tax" in plan- fing his next budget. Under the negative income tax system, as he described it,| "reasonable tax exemption lev- als would be set" and the gov- ernment would impose taxes above those levels. But "'those below would receive payment to bring them up to those levels." "T invite the minister, in the to the continuing revitalization of the entire core of Metropol- itan Toronto." He said that the plan is the From The NDP nteed Income preparation of his budget this) year, to take a look at it,"' said Mr. Knowles. Mr. Sharp said: "I am pleased that a member. of the NDP should show this interest in a modern idea" the Liberals had held for years. He said negative income tax was illustrated by family allow- ance legislation by the Liberal government "many year's ago." He personally thought--"and I think I speak for the govern-| ment"--that all public policy in Canada should be directed to- ward providing "all. citizens with adequate income." But he said he had doubts that a negative income tax was "the best way of reaching this goal." HERE and THERE Fifty-one babies were born | at the Oshawa General Hos- pital during the week ending | Feb. 26. Three hundred and | thirty-five patients were ad- mitted and 341 discharged. | Ninety-five major and 119 minor operations, as well as 62 eye, ear, nose and throat operations were performed. | Two hundred and fifty-one treatments and examinations were given and 41 casts ap- lied. The physiotherapy __partment gave 688 treatments and made 547 visits. The occupational therapy depart- ment handled 175 cases. | New members of the Rotary Club 'of Oshawa conducted the club's Monday meeting. Cecil Stephenson presided. Other new members took care of other duties during the meeting. City trustees Monday night accepted the resignation of D. M. Disney of the Oshawa Centra) Collegiate and Voca- Joe Perlove, 60, Dies In Toronto TORONTO (CP) -- Joe Per- love, turf writer),for The Star since 1937, died of cancer here Monday: He was 60 A dapper, rollicking man, he was known by all those in the racing business and by many of the more frequent bettors. Going to the races was his profession, and he loved it. "The first day I ever went to the tracks," he once said, 'it was raining and the track was muddy. First race, here's a horse called Mud. I got to take a horse called Mud and what do you think? It win. Now the sun begins to break through the clouds and here's another horse called Clear Skies. Got to bet. Down it comes. Pays $17. How long, 1 ask myself, has this game heen going on? "T've been at the races every day of my life since, or wanted to be, and the gorgeous part of te ia I mat doing it." de- | tional Institute staff. Mr. Dis- ney has accepted a public school principalship in an- | other system, George Rob- erts, superintendent of sec- | ondary schools, told the board. Mrs. C. C. Lee will be the Oshawa board of education representative at the official opening of - education week in Ontario to be held at 2 p.m., March 6 in Adam Scott Collegiate, Peter- borough. Trustees D. J. Powless and Mrs. C. C. Lee Monday night were appointed delegates to the Social Planning Council which will hold its annual meeting tonight at the YWCA. India Rejects Idea For Pact NEW DELHI (Reuters)--In dia today rejected the idea of joining a pact to contain Chi nese communism in Southeast Asia. Such pacts did not help peace | but might increase tension and |impinge on India's independ- tence, Pime Minister Mrs. Ind- ira Gandhi sald in her first ma- jor speech as premier in Par- liament. She said India would not make a nuclear bomb as China had done On Viet Naim, she said every effort should be made for a peaceful settlemént on the basis of the Geneva agreement. lover the next 15 years. tegic area," Mr. Kinnear said,| 'This, he said, would work to and predicted the project would /|the detriment of Canadian parts have a dramatically benefi-|dealers and the Canadian econ- cial effect on Toronto", and!omy as a whole would "inspire and underwrite) A survey of AIA members Toronto's future as one of the showed about 90 per cent were world's great cities'. against extending the auto The Master Plan, as envis-|agreement. Details of the sur- aged, embraces 22.5 acres be-| vey will be released to the 66th tween Queen, Dundas, Yongejconvention of the AIA today. and Bay streets. Construction) -- : - - would proceed in several phases WEATHER FOREC The Centre extends 46 feet in the form of an attack on the Conservatives by Gilles Gre- goire (Creditiste--Lapointe). Mr. Gregoire asked why Da- yie Fulton, former Conservative justice. minister, hadn't said a word about the Spencer case during the debate. Of all the lawyers on Conserv- 'ative benches, Mr. Fulton was AST below ground to include two parking levels, a concourse level and a promenade level. From the plaza level, at street, buildings soar as high as 900 feet. | The Centre will contain "he} entire spectrum of downtyrn activities, a gigantic reall) TORONTO (CP) -- Forecast complex in which the neW\issued by the weather office at Eaton store will occupy 1,200,-|5-39 a:m.: 000 square feet, and, in the) ¢ynopsis: .A storm centre initial phase, other retail stores|moying rapidly northeastward will occupy a planned 500,000 across southern Ontario is pre- square feet. dicted by rainfalls of about one- The Plan conceives of four half inch and followed by a few towers rising from the Plaza; /hours of wet snow after which one, an office tower of 32 stor-'there should be partial clearing. eys, two of 57 storeys, and &/ Somewhat cooler air is advanc- fourth office-apartment toweling across Lake Superior and of 69 storeys. A 500-room CON-| should reach the eastern vention hotel completes th€/tions of Ontario this afternoon. group of major buildings on the some light snow accompanies site this outbreak although the snow area is not expected to reach the southernmost regions of On- tario. High pressure' should dominate the weather picture tonight and Wednesday, bring- ing a return to settled weather conditions. Lake St. Clair, Windsor: Clear and a little cooler tonight. Wed- nesday sunny and milder again Winds northwest 25 today be coming light tonight and Wed- nesday. Lake Huron, Lake Erie, Nia- gara, western Lake Ontario London. Toronto, Ha milton: "|Clearing. Mainly clear tonight and Wednesday. Cooler tonight but milder again Wednesday. Wind west to northwest 25 to- day becoming light tonight and Wednesday. astern Lake Ontario: Rain possibly changing to wet snow ending this afternoon, Clearing this evening. Mainly sunny Wed- nesday, Cooler tonight but milder again Wednesday. Winds west to northwest 5 to 25 Northern Geo n Bay, Hali- burton, Killaloe: Clearing. Vari HOTEL PUBLIC ROOMS | In the all-weather shopping Promenade -- completely free of vehicular traffic there would be 80,000 square feet of| hotel public rooms and conven- {tion halls, 125,000 square feet for cultural and recreational ac- ltivities, in addition to the ex- itensive shopping facilities and |passenger lounge and ticketing offices for the bus terminal. This exclusively pedestrian llevel would be the hub of the {below grade walk s from Tucndae Centre to adjacent develop ments '"'and, we hope, ultimate- ly", Mr. Kinnear said, "all the way to Union Station." The below grade levels con nect directly with the Yonge Street subway stations and with the fiiture Queen Street subway stations and include the bus terminal at the Concourse Level Cheonat Provision is made for under ground parking for up to 2,700 cars which enter and leave the Centre through ramps on widen- able cloudiness with a few snow ed Bay and Dundas Streets flurries tonight. Wednesday The old City Hall clock tower - and the Cenotaph will reniain at the head of Bay Street and the setting for The Church of the Holy Trinity will be greatly en hanced. ! 30% OFF Greeting Cards Toys - Hobby Kites Purchases Over $1.00 Special Change-Over Sale at Newton's 23 ATHOL ST. WEST, OSHAWA Contains a Unique That Relieves Pain As I One of the most common afflic- tions is a condition known as "Itching Piles". It is most em- SAVE! FUEL OIL DX FU ON PREMIUM QUALITY Phone 668-3341 Serving Oshawa --- Whitby & Ajax Districts barrassing for the sufferer dur- ing the day and especially aggravating at night. If you want satisfactory relief --here's good news, A renowned research laboratory has found a unique healing substance with the ability to promptly relieve the burning itch and pain. It actually shrinks hemorrhoids. | This substance has been shown | t© prodace a most effective rate of healing. Its germ-killing pro- 16: with occasional sec-! Burning Rectal Iteh Relieved In Minutes This Special Hemorrhoid Remedy Cooler Spell Tonight. Milder On Wednesday mainly sunny, A little cooler to- night. Winds west to northwest 15 to 25. Timagami, North Bay, Sud- bury: Snowflurries this after- noon. Wednesday mainly sunny. A little cooler tonight. Winds west to northwest 15 to 25, Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, White River, Cochrane: Cloudy light snow to- day clearing tonight. Wednes- day mainly sunny. Cooler Winds becoming west 20 this afternoon then decreasing to about 15 tonight. Ottawa region: Rain changing to snowflurries late in the day. Wednesday cloudy with a few sunny intervals clearing late in the day. Mild today. Not quite so mild Wednesday. Winds east- erly 20 to 30 becoming westerly 20 today. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Wednesday: Windsor St London Kitchener .. Mount. Forest..... Wingham Hamilton St. Catharines Toronto Peterborough ... Kingston ... Trenton .. Killaloe Muskoka North Bay Sudbury Karlton es Sault Ste. Marie Kapuskasing .... White River.... Moosonee .. Timmins Healing Substance t Shrinks Hemorrhoids 'Ex-Ghana Chief Visit {tended to make sure the Rus- | Ankrah, in his first radio ad- idress to the nation, warned all jeguntries "to keep out of our nobles and leave us alone to Our best to solve them." pees ea ee aaa jaimed at the United Arab Re- public, Guinea and any other Afriman states that have rallied to the support of Nkrumah. the most qualified to speak on a matter of national security. | Mr, Gregoire questioned the | integrity of those who supported jan inquiry for Spencer and jasked whether they had ever |made an attempt to defend him in court. He twitted Mr, Diefenbaker |for making a 'pathetic' de- jfence of a man he'd never seen, Had any Conservative MP tried to see Spencer? Mr. Gregoire said the |speeches smacked of demagog- uery and he questioned the in- tegrity of proponents of an in- quiry SUMMARIZES VIEW Mr. Diefenbaker marized this position ing "The government won't place him in the dock but will place him forever in a pillory. He has been judged outside the law, convicted without evidence and punished without verdict. "He carries a stigma as a traitor to his. country." David Orlikow (NDP--Winni- peg North) challenged Citizen- ship Minister Marchand to de- fend Section 50 of the Civil Serv- ice Act under which Spencer was fired. The section had a totalitarian concept Mr. Marchand replied that Section 50 does deny civil serv- ants some of the rights union workers have. 3ut it was essential for a gov- ernment employee with a griev- ance to air it and Spencer had not done this. David Lewis (NDP -- York South) said Spencer has no right of appeal under Section 50. 30th Mr. Gregoire and Pierre Elliott Trudeau (L-- Montreal Mount. Royal), parliamentary secretary to Prime Minister Pearson, suggested Spencer might have a case in civil courts. had by sum- Say- Progress Seen On Water Policy OTTAWA (CP) ---Resources Minister Pepin said Monday in the Commons MPs should not be pessimistic about develop- ment of a national water policy. He said in reply to a question that there is ne single policy yet but that "great progress is being made. Opposition Leader Diefen- baker asked whether any diver- sion of water from the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River sys- tem to Chesapeake Bay in the U.S. has been referred to the International Joint Commission. Mr. Pepin said funds have been allocated for such a study in the U.S. If any diversion was planned, the government would expect the U.S. to consult it un der the boundary water treaty The International Joint Com- mission handles such problems under the treaty, ment" was reported. This im- provement was maintained over | a period of months! Among | these sufferers were a wide varb | ety of hemorrhoid conditionse-- even cases of long standing. This was accomplished by a new healing substance (Bio- Dyne)---developed by a world- renowned research institution. This substance is now obtain- able in ointment or sappository form known as Preparation H. | Ask for Preparation H Saup- positories (convenient to carry if away from home) or Prepara EL OIL perties also help prevent infection In one hemorrhoid case after tion H Ointment. with special applicator. Available at all drug counters. Satisfaction or your Pinata wae | another "very striking pr > section = Se cae eer ate Tan St ai yd en ages Rg BE Ria ee oo | | By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL ST. LOUIS (AP)--Elliot See | dr., was quiet and introspective. - |day voving to crush the army|The.moye apparently was in- humble about his part as an as- tronaut in the U.S. space pro- In Acera, Lt.-Gen. J. A. Ank-/stans do not bring him back. at: Maj. Charles A. Bassett I was a devoted family maa jwho lavished attention on his Model - A Ford whenever his rigorous schedule permitted. Both were killed when their ed here Monday. |had been focused toward a sin- jgle flight--the two- or three-day space mission of Gemini 9, ten- |tatively scheduled for May. | See, a 38-year-old civilian, jand Bassett, 34, were flying from Houston into St. Louis | Tuesday for more training when itheir T-38 jet plane glanced off a McDonnell Aircraft Corp. |building near the airport and fell to earth in flames. There were no funeral plans early today and the bodies of the astronauts were taken to the county morgue. Ironically, the were to ride into space was in- | side the building--less than 500 |feet from their bodies. McDon- nell builds the spacecraft. TWO OTHERS FOLLOW In another T-38, right behind See and Bassett, was the Gem- ini 9 backup crew, air force Lt.- Col. Thomas P. Stafford, 35, and navy Lt.-Cmdr. Eugene A. Cerman, 31, who landed safely. They did not see the crash. Later in the day they were named the prime crew of the space mission, and a_ space agency official said the flights of Gemini 8--in mid-March-- and Gemini 9 are expected to be on schedule. Bassett was a nephew of the Jate Gordon Byshe and Mrs.| Byshe of Ottawa and spent his summer vacations at the Byshe! farm at Manotick, Ont. He was a member of the Ottawa Flying 'lub prior to enlistment in the U.S. Air Force and completed training with the club for his night pilot rating The four astronauts were to undergo two weeks training to- gether at the plant in a large simulator used in preparing for Gemini missions. Surveying the effect of the deaths on the Gemini schedule, a Manned Spacecraft Centre of- ficial said: '"'Everything is on | } | Firm Threatens To Move. ' capsule they| EUGENE A, CERNAN schedule; the schedule isn't go-| ing to change at all." Visibility was poor at Lam- bert-St. Louis Airport as See the pilot of the single-engine jet, made his descent, The plane hit the roof, gouged a triangu- lar wedge in the building's cor-; rugated steel sides, and dropped in flames. It was 2,000 feet to the left of the instrument land- ing runway. TRIES TO RECOVER One witness said the pilot turned on his afterburners, ap- parently in a desperate attempt to gain altitude. Some debris fell in the build- ing which houses a jet fighter production line in addition to jthe area where the spacecraft | nee i et ape Te TEE -- RISE Ta 'Gemini 8 And 9 Likely To Remain On Schedule THOMAS P. STAFFORD sett of the tragedy. Sally, the oldest of See's three children, had her 10th birthday last Tues- day. Bassett was the father of a nine-year-old girl and a boy who will be five next month. Bassett, the son of an air force officer, took his first solo flight on his 16th birthday and had more than 3,000 hours as a pilot. Cerman, instead of Bassett, now will take the lengthy space walk during the flight that will test a complete new astronaut manoeuvring unit. He will pro- pel himself at least one time around the world outside the craft, using a back pack with small rockets instead of a space gun, was being prepared for ship- ment to Cape Kennedy, Fla.| Shock knocked down 15 workers | and two were treated in hospi-| tal. McDonnell said more than 2,000 were in the building. The spacecraft was not dam- aged. Navy Cmdr. Alan B. Shepard Jr., who was the first American} in space, flew to St. Louis to| head the investigation into the crash. Fellow astronauts in Houston told the wives of See and Bas-| Plant At Niagara Falls NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) Employees of the Canadian Carborundum Co. plant here were warned Monday night that unless production costs in one department can be lowered within 60 days, that section or the entire plant may be moved from the city Company officials told a mass meeting of 600 employees that costs in the bonded abrasives must be lowered. Officials of the Canadian sub- sidiary and the parent firm, the Carborundum Co. of Niagara Falls, N.Y., told employees there are three choices. The company can continue with a planned $3,500,000 expan- sion in Niagara Falls; it can maintain some facilities in the city and locate the expansion elsewhere, or if can move the entire plant. Fred W. Scott, vice-president and general manager of the Ca- nadian subsidiary, said a major factor is labor rates and to cre- ate a sound basis for expan- sion, the company is requesting a review of the piece-rate sys- tem, the inter-plant seniority system and a solution of main- tenance trade classifications. SEE 'BIG STICK' Officials of Local 4151, United Steelworkers of America (CLC), which represents the employ- ees, said the company's pro- posals would be big stick in the minds of workers. Bert Davis, local president, said: "We had no inkling the company was going to make these demands on the union." The company and union re- cently signed a three-year con- tract, he said. "If these factors were so important now, why weren't they stressed during these negotiations?" He said a membership meet- ing will be called to discuss the situation before the contract can be reopened, 90% OF ALL Millionaires become so through owning Reol Estate. More money hes been made in Real Estote than in all Industriel Investme bined. The wise man or wage corner of today invests his money in Real Estote. This is @ quotation by Andrew Carnegie. DOUGLAS CARMICHAEL For Buying or Selling H. KEITH LTD. REALTOR CALL 723-7463 CITY OF TWO PLANNIN Additions te Challenging positions in rapidiy de velopment under the supervision o The positions require graduates of Starting salary commensurate with Excellent working conditions and fri Applications close 5:00 p.m., Fri Please submit comprehensive resum OSHAWA REQUIRES G ASSISTANTS present staff) veloping City of 75,000. Duties of varied nature encompassing all phases of community de f the Planning Director. a recognized University possessing @ degree in Planning or other reloted fields qualifications and experience, nge benefits day, March 4th, 1966, e, stating current salary te: PERSONNEL OFFICER, City Hall, Oshawa, Onterle. 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For Further Information a Call The Oshawa C. o N is designed to 'assist the small businessman in dealing more effectively with the legal aspects of his rse Department of Education . $25 nd Registration Forms f C. at 728-1683