Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Sep 1966, p. 3

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DEITY AND DIETER Sitting crosslegged like the Buddha statue above him, Spec. 4 Mark L. Cay- wood of Bakersfield, Calif., heats his can of C-rations in the ruins of a Vietna- mese pagoda near Xuan Loc in jungles of 35 miles east of Saigon earlier this week. Caywood and other members of a 173rd Air- borne Brigade battalion moved into the area by helicopter to try to trap the Viet Cong. The enemy had fled before the para- troopers arrived. (AP Wirephoto) Rights Leader Unveils Store Boycott Plan -|and provincial governments far Fiscal Conference By TOM MITCHELL apart on what measures ought OTTAWA (CP) -- The prov-|to be contained in a new five- inces and Ottawa wrapped up|year tax agreement. It con- their fiscal conference Thurs-| cluded with little apparent clos- day with agreement to keep!ing of the gap. talking about the politically! But there was agreement that thorny question of taxes. officials of the two levels of gov- This was the main point to|}ernment would continue meet- emerge isem- the Sidia.e,iiue on technical asnacts of var. federal which opened with the is and ious proposals and "that another meeting of finance ministers ARCHBISHOP'S VIEW | Commonwealth Diplomacy Earns Thanks For Canada REGINA (CP) -- Most Rev.|tended by 3,000 people in Re- Michael Ramsey, Archbishop of|gina's armories, the Roman Canterbury, said Thursday night] Catholic Archbishop of Regina Canada has "the gratitude of! welcomed Dr. Ramsey. thousands within the Common-| Referring to Dr. Ramsey's re-| wealth" for her statesmanship | cent visit with Pope Paul, Most at the Commonwealth confer-|Rev. M. C. O'Neil said "'the ence in London on the Rhode-| bridge, which for centuries had sian problem. | fallen between Rome and Can- "In the last anxious days the|terbury, was being rebuilt." Commonwealth has had to face; He assured the Anglican pri-| lone of the most difficult prob- mate that '"'here in Saskatche-| lems of statesthanship, namely| wan, we... are following your) Rhodesia," the spiritual leader|lead" in relations with other! of 44,000,000 Anglicans said, Christians. | "From Canada came the voice) Archbishop Ramsey told the of statesmahship and reason.|crowd he sometimes is con-| Canada's contribution has been|cerned by the God-is-dead the- very great." ology. : " : Prime Minister Pearson rep-|,,"God is not dead," he said. resented Canada at the confer: | God is very much alive . . . ence. | He H, beer * me ae --_ " remy fe « » GC y concerned, not only Later at a public service al-) vith religion, but with all the happeriings of the world." | | Accompanied by Mrs. Ram-} Firm Plarns si isctsti wot sent Atom Plant | Saskatoon following a news con-| CHICAGO (AP) -- General} | ference and private meeting | with clergy. Electric Co. said Thursday it/ plans to build near Morris, Ill.) the first commercial Board Reserves Parole Decision OTTAWA (CP)--The national | parole board reserved decision} nuclear} fuel recovery plant in the U.S.) to serve the growing nuclear electric power industry. If approved by the Atomic) CHICAGO (AP)--Dr. Martin) ity of the city's major stores and; He said the situation of Negro Luther King Jr. unveiled the economic phase of the Chicago) freedom movement clothiers. King sai 'employment is worse than it id pickets would be| was 15 years ago and he cited Thursday' stationed Saturday at Saks Fifth| labor department figures which| night, announcing plans for "no| Avenue, a fashionable women's he said indicated unemployment buying' campaigns and the or- ganization of Negro employees in downtown stores. "['m going to march siraigit) un Michigan Avenue andl _ straight up state street and or-| King said these tactics w ganize every store in this city,"|be part of the economic cam- ign designed to improve wages of Negro employees he or-| |ganizes and who work in many | ity officers today arrested 33 |downtown stores and to make Both streets house the major-| more jobs available to Negroes. said in a rally attended by persons at a south side King 500 shop on Michigan Avenue. Rev. James Bevel, righis workers wauld stare and try an clathe ould among white persons is decreas- a King/ing while unemployment among |aid, said Negro and white civil | Negroes is rising. meee | VaCelS ATTESE 'Zambian Miners | LUSAKA (Reuters) -- Secur- Negroes in Zambia's - strike-hit copperbelt area. A government compere said they were sent) to rural areas. Ruthorities Order Review .2% s!.1:.2005% |the copperbelt, where several) thousand miners are on strike because of a dispute over pen- Of Buchenwald Witch Case =: payments, the ever pe said. |portion now is estimated at 40) tentia Energy Commission, construc-| Thursday on whether bank rob- tion of the proposed $15,000,000| ber Edwin Alonzo Boyd is eligi-| Yacility would service nuclear, A spokesman said the board plants across the U.S. felt it didn't have enough infor- plant would begin in 1967, The! ble for parole. | r. Paul H. Reinker, general; mation on which to base a de- manager in charge of fuel re-| Cision. It set a two-month time | qa THE ULTIMATE IN LUXURY LIVING! covery operations, said the fa-|limit for its staff to cility would be able to separate| information. --_ : and recover one-half of the un-| Boyd, once Canada's most- used portion of fuel used by nu-| Wanted criminal, is serving a clear power plants. The unused| life sentence at peel gather the cen mesming thet the; <5 <= process about one-| beginning his term in Kingston fifth of all fuel committed to| in 1952. He was paroled in 1962 nuclear reactors. but went back four months later Reinker said the reclaimed or| because of parole violations. recovered material, could be} used in nuclear reactors, there- APPLAUD ORCHESTRA by preserving the U.S. energy) BERLIN, West Germany resources. | (Reuters) -- The Canadian Na- The plant also will recover) tional Youth Orchestra won ova- valuable nuclear by - products, | tions here Wednesday for its fi- including isotopes, which are/nal performance of its current formed while the fuel is in the/tour, Under the baton of Wal- reactor. ter Susskind, the 103 members plant could Tax Demands Unsettled | SHARP SATISFIED jinces have divvied up the tax- Ends would be held, probably in mid- October, This meeting would hammer! out reports to go before a No-| vember conference of provincial premiers with Prime Minister Pearson, | The two day conference amounted mainiv to a sparring match, with delegates feeling out the positions of the federal government and the-other prov- inces. Federal Finance Minister Sharp expressed satisfaction with the results at a wind-up press conference. There had been sharp differences of opin- ion, he said, but they were "in the right. spirit." Mr. Sharp placed before the provinces a proposal to revamp drastically the old lines under which Ottawa and the prov- payers' money and shouldered responsibilities for various so- cial services. His key points: | --The federal government will stop trimming back its share of such levies as income tax which allowed the provinces room to increase theirs. --The province would be free to raise more income tax|object to federal intervention! money as long as they levy) into their jurisdiction with pro-| the tax themselves. --Equalization grants paid poorer provinces to bring their social services to par with the richer ones would be| when Ottawa introduced a na-| determined by a new "pros-| perity index' formula. --Ottawa intends to end most! of its direct participation in| "We would have liked a say | shared-cost programs, turning) over to the provinces a slice| of income tax revenues to re-| place the current federal pay- ments. Mr. Sharp proposed that Ot-) tawa retain roughly half of the revenue from personal income} taxes across Canada and the 75) per cent of corporation income! taxes it now collects. These} were needed to give the cen-| tral government the power to in- fluence the national economy. | RAISE OBJECTIONS But premiers Daniel Johnson of Quebec and others voiced strong objections. Ottawa must give up almost 100 per cent of these direct tax! -- aaa a: SS SE TS RSE SN fields to Quebec, Mr. Johnson said, because Ottawa's. pres- ence there is unconstitutional. The British North America Act gave direct tax fields to the provinces, Faced with the need to in- crease services in many fields, Quebec had no alternative. "This is the only deal open to us." Premier John Robarts of On- tario didn't seek the whole in- come tax field. But his province wanted an immediate increase in the slice of these taxes it now gets. ; Premier uti me : toba was especially al the soaring cost of education and his province's need for more revenue to meet this. He said the federal government was ignoring this aspect. Several provinces were ruf- fled by the federal proposal to withdraw from such shared-cost programs as hospital insurance, national health grants and the Canada Assistance Plan cover- ing old age assistance and blind and disabled allowances. TUNE CHANGED? At the press conference, Mr. Sharp said Ottawa had been ac- cused of paternalism for foster- 'ing such programs. But now that it was offering to pull out, it found the provinces weren't eager to shoulder the respon- sibility for the programs de- ; ° THE OSHAWA TIMES, | Friday, September 16, 1966 3 cial fields and then saying in effect; "We're really not invad- ing, we're only offering moriey." Equalization grants went down fine with those provinces Quebec and the Atlantic prov- inces except Prince Edward Is- land--that stand to see their the proposed new formula, THATCHER MIFFED Premier Ross Thatcher of Saskatchewan, whose province WOwa turn ~mHies St "have" from a "have-not" in the new setup, was miffed de- spite an Ottawa proposal that his current payment be phased out over five years. Premier W. A. C, Bennett of British Columbia said the whole principle of equalization pay- ments should be challenged be- cause it hadn't worked. Premier E. C. Manning of Alberta said some way should be found so that. residents of richer prov- jinces aren't asked to carry too |heavy a tax penalty to support roe ed shares given a good boost under). that the situation is too muddled at beg to start dre a new five-year agreement suggested waiting for the Car- ter royal commission report on the whole tax structure as @ guide, adopting an interim one- raed agreement in the mean- ime, Mr, Sharp told the press con- ference he hadn't found much sion of the present agreement on its present terms, INSTALLERS WANTED Aluminum Doors-Windows- Awnings-Siding Steady work -- Must heve own truck end tools, APPLY SHULLY'S. INDUSTRIES the poorer areas, Both provinces are in the! "have" category. | Mr. Manning, Mr. Thatcher | LIMIttTeo 73 Wingold Ave., Toronto and Mr. Roblin a if RUS 1-6622 spite the tax slice they were offered to pay for them. Mr. Johnson said provinces grams that have ready-drawn terms. There had been no_ prior agreements with the provinces tional medical care insurance program on a cost-sharing basis as a 'fait accompli." on medicare," he added, Mr. Robarts said he objected to Ottawa moving into provin- Good Names To Remember When Buying or Selling REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker -- President Bill McFeeters -- Vice Pres. 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Total "A study course describes and illus- folder and registration write to: of C Leet, A 112 King Street West, Toronte 1, Ontarie FASHIONS SINCE 1867 FREE SCHOOL eget COVERS The 5th "'C" Of Saving enthusiasm for a straight exten- \ MUNICH, West Germany| was passed, the term was com- . (AP)--Bavarian justice authori-|muted to four years in prison| -"e 'hree-week-long strike at] For Lost Man ties have ordered a review of} by the then U.S, military goy-| one itme involved almost all the! the case of Ilse Koch, the witch/ernor, Gen. Lucius D. Clay.|Negro labor force of 37,000,|,PORT HOPE, Ont. (CP)-- of the Buchenwalk concentra-|She was freed in 1949 from the| costing Zambia about $2,500,000| Planes from the armed forces tion camp, to see whether she|U.S. war crimes prison at|a day. iy cag " fnat ace should be freed from her life) I erg but was behind bars} Zambia is the world's second pound . --s prettlion aghered a . Seasaad di | mk ves nan jail within 90)largest copper producer. The| believed drowned when he fell > een Dasgery a bogs 0 seven mines in its copperbeltitrom a boat on Lake Ontario scribed by a hea) Me Mo In 1951, a German court con-/have been hit by two previous| early 'Thursday Nazi camp as a brutal pervert, /victed her of murder and sev-| Waves of industrial unrest this) 'The missing man James pont preg aendk Wate War, eral other counts and sentenced] year. Hart, 9, a Cobourg, le be A justice ministry spokesman fife. prong maximum penalty of The strikers are demanding|lieved to have fallen from a said the clemency review, "att e Bak birth to a boy/hat money paid into mine pen-|boat owned and operated by which comes automatically for Shortly after starting her sen-| sions plans be refunded before| Bay Albert Hirock of Baltimore, all prisoners serving life juice tonne Par We the child|they join a national provident|about five miles east of Co- tences, is due fo begin shortly. | en 'plan next month, a 'bourg. The widow of the Buchenwald oe <a tenmmtn commander was first sentenced | gm see 2 UNEMPLOYED MEN AND WOMEN | FREE COURSES AVAILABLE PLUS LIVING ALLOWANCE dence cited at her trial alleged The Federal and Provincial Governments, in conjunction with the THE OSHAWA BOARD OF EDUCATION make lampshades of their skin, | WILL CONDUCT TRAINING COURSES AT and that she was behind numer- | THE CANADIAN VOCATIONAL INSTITUTE ous other sadistic crimes com- mitted at the camp. 26 ALBERT STREET, SOUTH, AND In 1948, a year after sentence EASTDALE COLLEGIATE AND VOCATIONAL INSTITUTE Germans Lose HARMONY ROAD, NORTH, OSHAWA. Another Plane BONN (AP)--The West Ger- TO START MONDAY, OCTOBER 3rd, 1966 6 MOS. man Air Force announced to- day the loss of its 62nd F-104 Starfighter since it began fly- - the U.S.-designed plane in 1961, 10 MOS. 6 MOS. 4 MOS. 10 MOS. 10 MOS 4 MOS. 4 MOS COMMON SENSE: meaning that now is @ good time to be setting aside money just in case, At present, conditions generally are unsettled, to say the least and people who have money on deposit at 414% (Like OUR saving depositors) are realizing the full benefit of the first 4 C's of savings os well, THESE ARE: COMFORT: that feeling thot comes from knowing that you have cash available when you need it, sunday morning: CONVENIENCE; Longer saving hours daily and all day Saturday, you ve got the time- CONFIDENCE: Knowing that you are receiving the best rate of interest paid more often. CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST: deoling with a COM- MUNITY Trust Company, local savings invest- ment. arowth, Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation 19 SIMCOE ST. 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Bell Canada Quebec Plans Tighter Law QUEBEC (CP) Maurice Bellemare, Quebec labor min- ister, said Thursday he deplores the scorn for court injunctions | shown by strikers recently and! announced that the provincial! government is working on plans to tighten the law on this point. The Quebec government will no longer tolerate this state of affairs, he told the opening ses- sion of the annual. congress of 4 the Quebee provincial Chambre § de Commerce, Prime Windows CMHC Accepted Aluminum Siding ff Jalousies Sliding Gless Patio Doors All courses are conducted Monday through Friday for six hours per day. REMEMBER -- 90% of our graduates get jobs -- WHY NOT. YOU ? VACANCIES ARE AVAILABLE NOW APPLY AT YOUR LOCAL NATIONAL EMPLOYMENT, SERVICE OFFICE. W. G. 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