Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Sep 1966, p. 1

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Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Onte~ ario and Durham r VOL. 95 -- NO, 200 sr inane Weather Report Rain expected to coritinue overnight with cooler tem- peratures, Low tonight 58; high Thursday 65, aan BLOOD AND tears stream down the face of 19-year- old Abbie Kimble who was struck by a flying object hurled by angry whites dur- Negroes Go To ing a civil rights march-in Grenada, Miss., Tuesday night. Adjusting a bandage on the injured marcher is Rev. Andrew Young, exec utive director of the South- ern Christian . Leadership Conference whd' headed the march. ~AP Wirephoto School While Violence Flares GRENADA, Miss, (AP)--Ne-| Clayton, a former. army. gen: gro pupils return for their third| eral, issued the order Tuesday day of classes at newly deseg-/ night. of Grenada schools today" A bach had ; zenbach ha uested. jt. rl Judge to protect them provide pretation ier Me Senor aie sawae Ol wegeegerjdren. ine justice «department aah | also asked for the order to pro- U.S. District Judge Claude F.' vide for the arrest and prosecu- Beer Drought May Spread As Warehousemen Strike TORONTO (CP)--A strike by;pend on the warehousing com- bara ag of glad Ware-|pany for deliveries. ousing Co, Ltd. here may) private individuals, however, bring @ beer drought to Toronto|can continue to buy beer at taverns and spread to other On-/certain Brewers' Retail stores tario centres, a company offi-|while the supply lasts. In Tor- cial said. Tuesday night. jonto, they also may telephone "We took this battle on with/any of the five breweries which tion..of. those who assault the Neero children. on Without the order, Grenada Attorney - General. Nicholas/officials would continue "in} their wilful failure and te protect. tha Namiw' attianas po reste sg sty an@ their parents. -- Even as Judge: Clayton held a hearing on the request for a temporary restraining order, Negroes were marching through Grenada streets' Tuesday night. At the courthouse square they were peppered with rocks and bottle hurled by whites, who also used slingshots to propel lead fishing sinkers at the marchers. Heavily armed state highway patrolmen, bolstered by a force of state game wardens, moved in and dispersed the whites. The state officers escorted the Negroes back to their starting point--~a church seven blocks from the square. the expectation that it might/maintain home delivery serv- spread throughout the prov-jices in the metropolitan area. vince," the spokesman said. Brewers' Warehousing, owned It was feared the strike, ana iby Ontario's breweries, closed accompanying drought, might " spread via a sympathy walkout |>4 of its putlets dn Toronto by Brewers' Warehousing em-|Tuesday and maintained 19 ployees in other Ontario/others with supervisory person-! centres. nel. The supervisors will move The strike has cut off supplies|to other outlets as stocks are| to licensees of the Liquor Con-/depleted in the 19 stories still| trol Board of Ontario, who de-iopen until all the beer is gone. | Viet Cong Guerillas Demolish | $1 Million Military Motor Pool SAIGON (AP)--A Viet Cong demolition squad stormed into a military motor pool near Sai- gon before dawn today, cap- tured an American soldier, killed four South Vietnamese militiamen and blew up 52 trucks. U.S. officials estimated dam- age at $1,000.00. They said the guerrillas escaped. {brought down a U.S. F-100 Su- In the air, U.S. bombers/persabre jet. The pilot went used to airlift U.S. Ist Air Cav- alry troops into the coastal val- leys near An Khe The air cavalrymen flushed Viet Cong troops from holes and tunnels but so far had not en- gaged the main force. Ground fire destroyed one helicopter and damaged five others. Viet Cong gunners also BACK-BITING ANGERS GIRL VANCOUVER (CP) -- Van- couver waitress Paula Rus- sell, 24, said Tuesday she will bring suit against B.C. Lions football player Rudy Reschke, who' allegedly bit her posterior. Miss. Russell, a student at Vancouver City College, said the incident took place on La- or Day in a city beer parlor where she is employed as a part-time waitress. She said five other players bet a total of $50 one of them wouldn't bite Miss Russell's derriere. "That's more than I make in a week," she said, "Tt don't know who did it, but I know it wasn't me," Reschke, formerly of the Uni- | versity of Utah, said Tuesday, "And I haven't received a writ er heard from a lawyer yet," struck at a North Vietnamese) down with his plane. |world," the Gemini 11 astro- 'Space Craft 'Flight Reaches 'Record Height ered the astronauts since the flight started. It apparently was an exhaust film deposited on the window when: the second stage of their Titan II rocket ignited as they blasted into space from Cape Kennedy Monday. PERSPIRED HEAVILY Because he only had to stand up in his seat today for the pic- ture taking, the workload was much less than that which over- taxed Gordon during his space walk Tuesday. Within minutes Tuesday he was breathing and. perspiring heavily. His right eye became blinded with sweat and he had to scurry back to the safety of the cabin. During the stand-up exercise, Gordon was tethered to the in- side of the cabin by four lines --three of them for oxygen, communications and biomedical instrumentation. The fourth was a restraint tether, shorter than the others to prevent the three key lines from breaking in case weightlessness suddenly pulled him toward the. outside. Gordon aimed an ultraviolet camera, mounted on the side' of the craft, at selected stars. = 2 SOOT Trask aaease 2 20 8 CASES re Conrad and Gordon also we: /busy shutterbugs as they darte to their record height, taking weather and terrain pictures for meteorologists and geologists. "We're on top of the world," Conrad reported as they reached the peak of the roller coaster orbital path. CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) Shouting 'We're on top of the nauts today soared higher and faster than man has ever flown and Richard Gordon later poked the upper 'half of his body into space to photograph the stars. "T tell you, you can't believe it!" command pilot Charies Conrad exclaimed as Gemini 11 rode the power of an Agena rocket 850 miles above the earth over eastern Australia. "Utterly fantastic the world is round." After reaching the high out- post twice, the astronauts re- turned to their original path, which ranged from 180 to 190 miles high. At 8:49 a.m. EDT Gordon opened his hatch and stood in his seat as Gemini 11 passed high over the Indian Ocean. For two hours 20 minutes he was to snap scientific pictures of relatively young stars. SMUDGE BLURS STAR A smudge on Conrad's window posed some difficultly, because the command pilot had to sight on the stars in order to aim the acecraft for the proper cam- so bad I can't even stars,"' Conrad said. Apparently he and Gordon worked out a solution. Minutes later Conrad reported they were taking star pictures and "'we're going along just fine... We're on orion." The window smudge has both- Major Changes Demanded In Rhodesia Draft Release LONDON (CP) -- Afro-Asian! Prime Minister Pearson had countries today rejected the| played a major role in attempt- terms of a Canadian-prepared|ing to mediate the struggle and | draft communique on Rhodesia/ preserve the Commonwealth. land demanded major changes,| Informants said Comm on- an African informant said. | weaith leaders spent about | 40 The list of proposed amend-| minutes discussing the Canadian }ments, he said, was drawn up|draft and the Afro-Asian de- at-an Afro-Asian caucus before|mands and then returned to | the 22 ~ country Commonwealth) other world issues. leaders conference plunged into) ja crucial attempt to rescue the 7 8 a WOMAN'S PLACE lover the Rhodesian issue. | The amendments, which in- cluded the maior demand that IS IN THE HOME in Rhodesia without Negro ma-| A young housewife told a jority rule, were considered at) court here today that her the restricted meeting of lead-/ husband nailed her in a ers on the 'conference's ninth! cupboard for 10 hours to The Africans also demanded) went to work. jthe Commonwealth support) -- ser mother-in-law fed her mandatory United Nations) through a hole in the cup- against Rhodesia and the use of) poard--with toast cut into | the minority-white regime of through a straw, Annabel |Ian Smith. Mawson, 24, said. The draft Canadian state- ' Husband Raymond Maw- ment, attempting to bridge the acu, 38, has. pleaded aot | Afro-Asians, was understood to! . ; i ee cover the main points of con- er bed falsely imprisoning | tention without spelling out firm 5 : | recommendations for action. jassociation from a grave split A ' J |there be no legal independence; MELBOURNE (Reuters) day. keep her at home while he |force if sanctions fail to topple; strips and tea sucked split between Britain and the guilty to charges of assault- et NA v8 BN ba roitersrapcqerersererssrar Torre Rar tr? Smiling after his. fifth straight victory at B.C. polls Monday, checks into an Ot- tax conference, Niet eae vc Tani Queen, Philip Plan '67 Canadian Visit LONDON (CP)--The Queen and Prince Philip will visit Canada next summer but will confine their week's tour to Ot- tawa and Montreal. Bucking- ham Palace ruled out any fur- ther extension. The palace, in announcing the trip today, said it will start about June 30 when the royal couple will fly to Ottawa for centennial ceremonies, They then will visit Expo 67 at Mont- real before returning to Lon- | don. | The .palace spokesman said [he return flight will be about |July 5 or July 6. He said visits |by the Queen to other Canadian jcommunities have been ruled out because of the "heavy ad- ministration" invoived in the {other royal visits by the Queen @ |Mother and by Princess Alex- jandra and her husband, Angus | Ogilvy. | The Queen Mother will visit /Prince. Edward Island, Nova} Scotia, New Brunswick and |Newfoundland during July for |, jabout 10 days after the Tr West indies in February ihis and E rince Philip have le t. lyear, and Prince Philip visited |_ Princess Alexandra will visit}canada by himself in March jOntario, Manitoba, Saskatche-|after his visit to the United |wan, Alberta, British Columbia, | states. h i QUEEN ELIZABETH They touched down at New- undland on their way to the poses to separate federal j levies of Sharp Ofiers Freedom To Increase Tax Levy + ri 7 ; ¢ Provinces Seek More Cash Ottawa Defends Revenue OTTAWA . (CP)--The federal government put a "'no trespass- ing" sign on its own tax rev- enues today as bargaining opened on new federal - provin- cial tax arrangements. At the same time, it offered the provinces more freedom to levy the taxes they need as long as they accept the respon- sibility for them. The double theme is sounded in Finance Minister Sharp's opening statement to the fed- eral - provincial tax structure committee which starts a two- day meeting this afternoon. The statement was released Tuesday night as provincial delegates headed by seven pre- miers and three finance minis- ters arrived in Ottawa carrying tax demands. Both Quebec and Ontario weighed in with notice that theirs will be big. 'The indicated. Ottdwa reply was, in effect: "Levy them yourself." =» WON'T GIVE MORE Mr. Sharp says the federal government will surrender no more "tax room" to the prov- inces and intends to change the Income Tax Act to make clear the provinces have access to all the revenue sources they need for their growing services. The federal government pro. and personal in- ne taxes to get rid of idea in the nnblic mind thet on bigger slice of taxes for provin- cial purposes can be taken only if Ottawa settles for a smaller one, Other main federal proposals for. the 1967-72 tax agree ments. ~-An increase to $491,500,000 from $352,800,000 in equaliza- tion payments to the poorer provinces, calculated on a 'prosperity index" formula. A federal shift away from direct participation in shared- cost social programs, with an offer of an additional 17 per cent of personal income taxes, plus extra, to replace federal payments. The cumulative effect of the 17-point tax transfer for shared- cost programs is expected to re- sult in @ 50-50 federal - provin- cial split of personal income taxes. Provinces now levy about 25 per cent.of the basic personal income tax, apoult zd per centr of corporation income tax, and 75 per cent of estate taxes, Mr. Sharp stakes out a firm federal claim against further provincial encroachments on the federal level of both corporation and personal income taxes. He said federal and provincial governments share full consti- tutional rights in these fields. But he says corporation in- come taxes have national char- acteristics, since profits may be the Yukon and the Northwest Territories during the second |half of May and early June. The Queen and Prince Philip jlast visited Canada together in |October, 1964, 'Stelco Increase' missile centre for the seventh} ------ day in a row Tuesday. On the ground, the Americans launched their biggest helicop- FINANCE MINISTER'S MEETING ter assault of the war in a new offensive in the coastal vaileys! of central Viet Nam. | One of their first discoveries was a i3}-member entertainment troupe from Hanoi, They also took into custody three nurses at a Viet Cong hospital. U.S. Army officers said the Viet Cong blasted a hole in the barbed wire fence surrounding the motor pool on the outskirts of Saigon and charged through Sharp OTTAWA (CP)--Some , of the| remarks by Finance Minister Sharp in 'is opening statement! a familiar ring. He calls for recognition of the) principle "that both Parliament} Echoes Mr. Diefenbaker was ringing the death knell of the tax-rental system under which, in most for today's federal-provincial fi-|provinees, Ottawa collected all nance ministers' meeting have|personal and corporation in- come tax and estate taxes and paid an agreed share to. provin- cial treasuries. Diefenbaker Theme vative plan that became effec- tive April 1, 1962, he didn't make any move to resurrect the old tax-rental plan. The rental scheme was born during the Second World War and remained a keystone of fed- eral-provincial fiscal relations OTTAWA (CP)--Finance Min- ister Sharp Tuesday urged the Steel Co. of Canada Ltd. to re- consider and rescind its decis-| ion to increase prices. | Mr. Sharp said in a statement that he heard "'with concern and) jregret" the announcement by} the company that it was. in- creasing prices by about three | per cent for some of its main) cent of basic personal income tax to give the provinces taxing room, Seven provinces have moved : in to collect that amount. Three| Product lines. others take more, Manitoba and| The federal minister said that) Saskatchewan take 29 per cent,|if the company is. not prepared) so their taxpayers pay an addi-|to wipe out the increase, he) earned outside the province in which the corporation's head of- Stabilization payments to pro- tect provinces in case of re- gional or general economit Tecession. COST $750,000,000 The major shared ~ cost ars rangements in question are hos- pital insurance, national health grants and the new Canada As- sistance Plan covering old age assistance, blind and disabled allowances and unemployment assistance. Together, they cost the treasury more than §750,- 000,000 a year. They are basically areas of provincial jurisdiction, and fed- eral participation in such areas threatens "a continuing influ- ence on provincial jon- making," says the statement. Federal conditions for these programs would be dropped, the payments could continue under a different and "unconditional" formula and provinces would be able to take the full responsibil. oy for their programs they de- sire. The federal philosophy on tax- sharing sheds the principle that provincial tax advances can be made only in the face of federal withdrawals. "The principle. that does call for recognition is a different one: Namely that both Parlia- ment and provincial fice is located, And the tax is must accept their | Pe St a ah r direction as to what mone} ishould be raised and ee tax arrange: : designate a "standard ea personal income tax--a rate of federal abatement to provide taxing room: for the provinces, EXCEED RATE : The provinces are free to im- pose any rate they choose, three provinces in fact the rate with-their levies, they risk accusations of 'do: taxation." ; Mr. Sharp said the federal government proposed te recom- mend to Parliament removal of the inhibiting words "standard ve from the Income Tax ct, Shared - Cost Program Change Will Give Income Taxes Split needed as an instrument of na- tional economic policy. He outlines a similar argu: ment for federal claims to per- sonal income tax, through which equity is achieved between the rich and the poor across the na- tion." The federal task to. promote balanced economic development runs as an undercurrent through the statement. Mr, Sharp emphasized that Ottawa will continue to employ federal- provincial measures on @ shared - cost basis "for eco- nomic purposes." One such program that would be allowed to expire is the roads - to - resources scheme, under which only $8,000,000 of the original 1958 federal com- mitment of $75,000,000 remains to be spent. HONG KONG (Reuters) Causes Concem NEWS HIGHLIGHTS | Chinese Army Told War Is Ahead -- -- The Chinese army was told today in a Liberation Army daily editorial that the current "cultural revolution" war. is a measure to prepare for | Rail Commuter Fare Increase Stalled .OTTAWA (CP) -- A one-month postponement of the CPR's proposed increases in commuter fares were order- ed today by the board of transport commissioners. NHR TRE until i962. tional five percentage points. [Plans to suggest that a joint Provincial premiers didn't; Quebec collects' its own in-| parliamentary committee look take kindly to Mr. Diefenbaker's| come tax under rules that differ|into the action. 1960 proposal. Quebec's Jean|from the federal system. It re-| Mr. Sharp said that the com- Lesage termed it '"'completely|celves the 24-per-cent abate-| pany, if it acceded to his re- unacceptable." To British Co-jment as a credit and an addi-| quest, would be "helping to} lumbia's Premier Bennett it] tional 23 percentage points as|bring to an end the upward!/ was "'totally unrealistic." jan equivalent for opting out of} spiral of prices and wage in- T. C. Douglas of Saskatche jcertain federal - provincial! creases," | wan forecast a "return to the|S*8red-cost programs. | tax jungle of the 1930s." | All provinces except Quebec use Otfawa as the collecting J rent | r Unacceptable or unrealistic Or| agent for their income tax. Que- g the plan went into ef . |bec collects its own. fect for the five-year period end-| The provinces may not like ing next March 31. i |Mr. Sharp's plan any more than By this year, the federal gov- jthey liked Mr. Diefenbaker's ernment had given up 24 per and provincial legislatures must| accept their financial respon- OFFERS A SCHEME sibilities and that each should| Instead, he offered-a scheme look to its own electors for di-junder which provinces could rection as to what money should/collect their own taxes in those streved be raised and how it should be fields. To facilitate that, the fed- . spent." jeral government would reduce DESTROY A MISSILE John Diefenbaker sounded the|its levies by fixed percentages. The U.S. command also re-|same theme in somewhat differ-|The provinces could either col- ported that American bombersjent language to a federal-pro-|lect the percentage Ottawa gave destroyed one missile when they) vincial conference six years ago|up, or they could boost taxes hit a North Vietnamese missile|when he was. Conservative'on their own. The federal gov- site 30 miles northeast of Doing}prime minister ernment would handle the -col- Hoi for the seventh time. That) 'Tt is an old adage of public ilecting for -provinces if they brought to five the number ofjfinance that the government! wished Soviet-made missiles blown up)that spends the money ought to| Although Mr. Sharp's tax- since Saturday. jcollect the money," said Mr.|sharing proposal differs in de- A total of 120 helicopters were! Diefenbaker Oct. 26, 1960. ltail from the' five-year 'Consere bad with guns blazing. A platoon of militiamen on guard pulled out during the initial onslaught. Officers said the installation's administrative building was de- | ..In THE TIMES Today.. Labor Council Supports Centennial Parkway---P, 13 Public School Enroliment Increases--P, 5 Bishops Seeks Te improve Gaels Offence--P. 8 Obits---29 Sports--8, 9, 10 Theatre--11 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax News--5 Women's--14, 15, 16, 17 Ann Landers--14 City News--13 Classified --26 to 29 Comics--38 Editorial--4 Financial--30 If the company was not pre-| pared to do so, then it was a/ for the parliamentary | matter committee "in view of the im- portance this basic industry can have in contributing to price sta-| bility." t MW > pact a jungle, UHRA LU \six years ago. ATTEN Una Be 7

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