Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Nov 1966, p. 1

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Weather Report Sunny, Some clouds today, Tuesday warmer. Low to- night 30. High tomorrow 45. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowmane ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, ave VOL. 95 -- NO. 257 Bhe O; OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1966 10¢ Single © BSc Per Weak Home: Soliverad va Time Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Department By 'Ottawa and for payment ff Pe of Postage in Cash TWENTY-SIX PAGES CHARLES TEMPLETON e+. Too Much Di ivision In Ranks 750,000 Jobs Required : Council Gives Warning OTTAWA (CP)--Canada will have to find 750,000 new jobs for people entering the labor force by 1970, the third annual review of the Economic Council of Canada said today. If the jobs aren't found, it warned, menpiernen' could i rapidly--much .more rap nas p the 1950s when seven per first. review, the report says. Then the aims were to create enough new jobs to take care of emerging. workers and ing was ing shortages of many high skills, can help minimize the mismatehing in_ signifi- cant areas of labor demand and supply. ductivity and to minimize losses of income, not only to indivyid- uals but to the country as a whole." The increase in women '] especially regions of the strongest demand Of the total in- oe at psa : the twin employmentio. workers. es outlined in the coUun-| crease in jobs of 1,000,000 since 1963, about one' - third were women, raising their number in TEMPLETON WON'T SEEK LIBERAL LEADERSHIP By DAVID DAVIDSON TORONTO (CP) -- Broad- caster - businessman Charles Templeton said today he will not be a candidate for the lead- ership of the Ontario Liberal party and that he 'could fore- see no set of circumstances" that would make him change his mind. Mr, Templeton told a news conference at Queen's Park he Somers ceturevrs ftese tomsned, rer HaG given ie isau ion- siderable thought since the res- ignation last Wednesday of An- drew Thompson for health rea- sons, Family and business respon- sibilities were given by Mr, Templeton as major reasons for not seeking the leadership, but he also cited division in the Lib- eral party as a factor. FRICTION EVIDENT "It has become quite clear in verant dave that . . . I would face active opposition from a number of the members of the provincial caucus and from some others in responsible po- sitions in the party." Mr, Templeton, 51, who lost the leadership to Mr. Thompson three years ago after the resig- nation of John Wintermeyer, called on provincial Liberals to "find the man behind whom the party can unite." A former evangelist and newspaper executive, he said a major consideration in his de- cision not to seek the leadership was his business responsibili- ties. He is president of Technama- tion Canada Ltd. and a director of Hathaway Templeton Ltd. and has "contractual relation- ships in both radio and televis- ion and other interests." "All of these form my liveli- hood and would have to be ter- minated in the event I became a candidate for the leadership of * party," Mr, Templeton said. "Most men holding political office have sources of income which continue whether they daily operate their business af- fairs or not. This does not ob- tain in my case," Robert Nixon, elected house leader following Mr. Thomp- son's resignation, said today he will 'reassess' his decision not to seek the party leadership in = of Mr. Templeton's decise ion. The member: for Brant said he was that Mr, Templeton had decided not to run. He described him as a "good campaigner" and said he hopes Mr. Templeton wili seek a legislature seat in the provine cial election expected within @ year. "They also help to raise pro-|~ Economy Said Short Of Goals OTTAWA (CP)--The economy is falling slightly short of its|pears to have been in a rather main goals of continuous/delicately balanced position by growth, rising employment and Stable prices and the time is near for some easing of the restraints on expansion, the Economie Council of Canada said today. In its third annual review, the advisory body urged greater encouragement for production and productivity and said the federal government must give the lead in smoothing out swings in the important con- struction. industry. The countil said it doubts that an incomes policy or prices and wages guidelines would work in Canada, except for a short pe- riod of time and in unusual cir- cumstances. Canada, faced more competition than 'most countries in both the goods it sells abroad: and what it im- ports. OTTAWA (CP).=+ Bower Ed: ward Featherstone, 27, a print- ing craftsman in the federal mapping branch, appeared in the work force to more than 000, to find other work to cut down excessive unemployment. | Now, however, with unem-| ployment down to 3.5 per cent! from 5.5 in 1963, the task of! creating jobs for people enter-| ing the work force should have) drop in farm employment. The first. review in 1963 fore-| magistrate's court today and was remanded for one week der the Official Secrets Act. Property bail of $12,500 was set, but there was no indication cast the agricultural work force| whether Featherstone would be would declife by "The Canadian economy ap- mid-1966 in relation to its me- jdium- and longer-term goals and potentialities," the council | Said. "In fact, the case might be made that the economy appears |to have been moving, or at least threatening to move, | Slightly away from all of its basic economic and social goals jat the same time." |SET HIGH GOALS The goals, set by the council in its first annual review of the economy in January, 1965, are full employment, a high rate of economic growth, reasonable stability of prices, a_ viable |balance of international pay- ments and an equitable distri- bution of rising incomes across Canada, But the council now finds: Unemployment has risen slightly. Productivity growth has slowed. ~Epcet and, conten ¢ od, ra ; categories, "4 balance of. payments. "We have concluded | ceivable that the economy could more slightly further from several of its goals in the near-term future, the underly- --There is concern 'about! maintaining strength in the} | | We that} & Another factor affecting the) without plea on two charges un-| while it' is by no means incon- labor picture has been a sharp! away). 100,000 by) able to raise it, He was kept in)ing situation--both internation: OTTAWA (CP)--The federal government should steer clear of so-called "'guidelines" in ef- forts to control wage and price increases, says the Economic Council of Canada, Voluntary guidelines won't work and the government hasn't the power to make them com- pulsory, says the council in its third annual review, issued to- day. The report suggests better use of other levers, old and new, to keep the cost of living in order. It says: Use of taxation and credit 'controls to regulate the econ- efore: they shove up prices, The federal and provincial governments must make their construction programs an im- portant regulator of . economic activity, Policies to build up productiv- ity have been good, but must be much better, ~The federal government's performance as employer and collective bargainer could stand considerable improve- sad Guidelines' Policy - Caution Proposed Canada Economic Council Delivers Annual Review The council makes these points ei bape section on wages, prices etl which takes up pt bait of the 110,000-word annual re- view. It worked feverishly to complete this complex study, requested. by the federal gov- ernment March 22, 1965. NO EASY REMEDY. It concluded there are no easy remedies for inflai pressures, no ready substitutes for free collective ba: and flexible determination of wages and prices, The council said Canada faces mild inflation which cannot be blamed on. anyone in The economy is close to. full ployment and it in moreserm (canes est the boaey demain Consumers, government for its "an The remedy prescribed is not a doctoring of the demand as much as improving the supply. As a kicker, the council for vast increases in federal provincial : consultation about policy and in economic re search, Wage - and - prices are rejected after s' of their use in the United States, Brit. ain, France, Sweden and The ment, Netherlands. jcustody for the time being. ally and domestically--still dis- ' ts He was arrested early Satur-|niays indications of sufficient : , ' f 4 a " LIBERAL LEADER JEAN Quebec Liberal Federation, Kierans, a Montrealer, re- Oa an ee etcinine cdent| basic. strength and balance tol Tesage (right) congratu- Sunday. night at the end of -- ceived 768 votes while Jean oe aie o cILL eA oka make it unlikely that the coun-| jates Eric Kierans, newlys the three-day Liberal, con- _'Teteault reosiyed 642. ¢ taining a classified chart relat-|try faces the d f i ing to "maritime defences" for] ionged or wialee dopaied re thom| elected president of the vention im Montreal, Mr. P Wirephoto) Despite the creation of al-|'" 1963. a parooes. on to the sa-/tne goals," said the 110,000-word most 1,000,000 new jobs in the) fety of the state. meds eee") HUNTER KILLS | pee cscs er Bilingualism And Feuding " | 1970. car precedence over {TViNé 19)" However, a drop ofthat much In its first review, the coun.| already. has. occurred, reducing cil eet prey onal target of| the number employed on farms tl per cent as maximum gj-|t0 less than eight per cent of lowable unemployment |the work force from 10 per cent Talks Continue For Air Canada MONTREAL (CP) -- Nego-}day indicated "there was a de- tiators for Air Canada and the ae for settlement on both International Association of Ma-|°°C58- Py , chinists were to continue talks senctiedt ht --. sug: today in an effort to end thelcested a federal mediator might lee ci Geman the alt-/he welcomed if negotiations do it i Negotiations were to resume + ea a too extreme some of Mr. Kie- rans' proposals for making the Liberal organization more dem- and their three cygnets were killed by a man who had rented a rowboat to go out and shoot some food on the training, }posed of management, labor} e a the report says. | SOMERS. N.Y. (AP)--The |and academic economists under St b i b ] BETTER PROGRAMS URGED) family of five swans on Mus- Ne ere lc poping 1r uepec iperdais "More effective policies and) coot reservoir here -- which jreport periodically on medium-| though they cannot overnight) attraction--were killed one by ; |for the economy. | bec. Liberal party,.rocked by in-/of other issues--one generated relieve rapidly accumulat-| one by a hunter with an auto- URGES CAUTION * |ternal dissension. in recent|by the internal feuding, the sec- nereeieste --------=| matic shotgun Sunday. | It said, in brief, that the econ-|months, has opted for a com-|ong involving bilingualism. ocratic, at 10 a.m. EST in a downtown MEDIATOR rmaiiees i j i , +4) -|clal questions 'affecting its fu-|ex-cabinet minister, won elec- i i The two sides got -together Fire-Explosion ype " -- pet - peony, Sipe a aan oh |tion as president of the Quebec Reta dea pieces briefly gyro aay ad first : mediator since Richard Ged- {\term measures which would be| But the party's annual con-| Liberal Federation. party's general leadership--es- meeting since Nov. 18, when tely ty te ae as the pone 9 faetiee | Feaieteact | SWAN F AMILY jand consumer onomsts under programs in this field, even| had been a popular tourist ||and long-term trends and goals) sroyrppar, (CP)--The Que-)ploded into uproar over a pair The female swan, the male omy this year needs some|Promising course on two cru-| Eric Kierans, reform-minded) 'The convention approved aj "el. Th cialis aie wee elites Guts Bungalow \inappropriate for the achieve-|vention, where the decisions} As federation secretary and| pecially as it concerns finances,|C°™Tact talks failed to produce MONTREAL (CP)--Two per- 'sons were reported in conmuition Simday fouowing fire and explosion that stroyed a bungalow in north-end/ Montreal Saturday. Two other! persons were also injured. Mrs. Lucille Moreau, 48, her daughter Lise, 17, and her sons Michel, 22, and Robert, 12, were} taken by ambulance to hospital. | Mrs. Moreau and her daughter| were reported in serious condi- tion. Mrs, Moreau's husband, Paul- Emile Moreau, 50, was not at home at the time of the blast POPULATIONGROWTH CITED reservoir in Westchester |} y AK } County, state police said. Romuald Sisineki, 28, = Po. lish alien in the U.S. since 1959, was taken into custody as the illegal hunter. At his home, he told a re- porter: 'They looked just like gooses to me and I have a goose-shooting licence. . . . did. not know they were swans." He was charged with vio- lating the federal Migratory Bird Act and the New York State Conservation Law Soaring Food Costs Probed DEPUTY DIES Dr, Z. S. Phimister, On- tario deputy minister of education, night. appointed deputy early last year. died Sunday He was 61. He was minister (CP Wirephoto) NO GRAIN CUSHIONS LEFT ; ppent of longer-term goals," jresirictions and cutbacks inj | government spending have mod- jerated pressures towards over- expansion, but said there was! & a long time-lag in these policies) } becoming really effective. "Special care must be exer- |cised to give consideration to al | timely easing of the fiscal re-| § {straints on investment--again having regard to the long lags! § likely to be involved between! | j} any such actions and their prob- jable effects on investment out-| | ays." were made with little outward|treasurer, the convention chose It noted that tighter credit/fuss during the weekend, ex-|two men who had labelled as the Kierans' a settlement of the dispute in- union, was dismissed by the OTTAWA (CP)--Forces em- bedded deep in North America and the world are behind the rising cost of food, says the Economic Council of Canada hints that the growth of world population, so far able to draw down food surpluses with little effect on prices, may soon become the most potent force of all Other pressures cited today in the council's third annual re- view: Canada's 1962 dollar de- valuation; pushes exerted by North America's current eco- nomic boom; the post-war revo- lution in food processing and marketing The council says almost all of the world's cushion of wheat, coarse grains, butter and cheese stocks has disappeared since 1961. In North America, there have been other, subtle effects. When Canadian wheat stocks were large and backing up on farms, many farmers used to turn to livestock production on a major scale. Today's ig, sound markets for wheat tend to keep farmers out of the beef and dairy business. The continent's economic health has meant 'individual wealth, and a long, strong ef- fect on food demand, says the council. Shoppers want better, more highly processed foods Industry has drained workers from the farm and the agricul- tural sector has not been able to respond well to demand with higher production. The share of the retail food h cost taken by the farmer now is 40 per cent; in 1949 it was 60 per cent Retail food prices last year were 36 per cent above the 1949 level; farm prices were only 10 per cent higher. The review noted, however, that since early 1965 farm prices have accounted for six to seven per cent of the rate of increase in food prices. The effect of pegging the Ca- nadian dollar in 1962 has been harder to measure. But the council concluded that much of the increases in prices of im- ports has been due to the steep decline in the foreign currency value of the dollar, which made it more expensive to buy the foreign exchange that pays for these products, Stefan Cardinal Wyszyn- ski braves a bitter wind in an outdoor altar at Bisly- stock, Poland, today to end Poland's Christian millen- jum celebration with a dec- laration of forgiveness to CARDINAL ENDS MILLENIUM Communist authorities for their hostility to the year- long event. More than 40,000 worshippers attend- ed. (AP Wirephoto by cable But proposal dealing with management of the eiectoral fund was waitered- down--with Mr. Kierans' ap- proval--in the compromise plan presented by Leader Jean Le- sage. SAYS IT'S VICTORY The new federation president, a bilingual Montrealer whose mother tongue is English, said Sunday night his slate won a big victory in that "90 per of its original reform plan was included in the Lesage compromise, An angry confrontation he- tion between Rene Levesque, a leading light of the Liberal left, and Dr. Irenee Lapierre, retir- ing federation president, almost stole the show Sunday. Dr. Lapierre was quoted as leave it. UNITED NATIONS (¢@P)-- Six countries proposed formally name a committee to study the mend a solution "taking into ac- area." Belgium, Bolivia, Chile, Italy and Trinidad and| Tobago submitted a resolution, from Warsaw) originally drafted by Italy, for saying in a radio interview that) = Mr, Levesque was no asset to|~ volving 5,200 union members. Mike Pitchford, co-chairman of the union's negotiating com- mittee, said the session Satur- union Nov. 13 for submitting settlement proposals directly to the union membership without approval of union leaders, NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Troop Cuts In Europe Urged LONDON (Reuters) -- Foreign Secretary George Brown today suggested troop cuts by both Western and Com- munist powers in Europe as a means of improving the situation on. the continent. 'A lot of men and a lot of money are being tied up on both sides and if it were possible to release some of this without creating additional risks and dangers it would surely be to the advantage of all of us," he declared. JOC ERETRAS TARA Meee the party and probably would! that the UN General Assembly |~ : : Editorial--4 question of seating Communist | © China in the UN and recom-|/ | +» 13 Brazil, |s that purpose, bt . et oa ee oe ae ee ; In THE TIMES 100 GM Jobs Created -- P. 11 School Honors Scholers -- P. 5 Generals Lose Two -- P. 8 Ann Landers----12 City News--11 Classified----16 to 19 Financial--15 Comics---21 2 Obits---19 count the existing situation and| = ' the political realities of the|= Sports--8, 9, 10 Theatre--6, 7 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax--S, 6 Women's--12,13 utigaane Now in its thirtieth day the Greater Oskawa Community Chest has reached $235,680 of its $345,875 objective.

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