Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Jan 1967, p. 3

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del oll rses shy. are , $0 SATISFIED AT LAST Montreal lawyer Marc "Briere leans back with sat- isfaction as a CPR conduc- tor asks him for his ticket in broken French. Mr. Briere has been waging the language dispute with the CPR since St. Jean Baptiste Day, June 24, 1965, when the conductor asked him for his ticket in English and the lawyer refused 0 give it to him. : --CP Wirephoto Jury Blames Negligence For Dorion Fatal Crash By DAVE MacDONALD |tators, witnesses, lawyers, po- DORION, Que. (CP)--A five-|licemen, reporters and photog- man coroner's jury is to presént|raphers._heard-- Jury Foreman recommendations today follow-|Paul Carrier read the verdict ing its finding that an Oct. 7|Thursday night after the jury school bus-train collision that claimed 20 lives was acciden- tal. A hushed crowd of 200 spec- had been out for two hours and 15 minutes. The whirr of TV cameras and the pop of flash-bulbs punctu- RC, Anglican Take First Steps To Unity GAZZADA, Italy (Reuters) The Roman Catholic and Ang- lican Churches have announced they have taken the first steps| Anglican Rev. Eugene R. Fair- towards restoring unity after weather, 45, professor of dog- 400 years of separation. A joint communique Thursday night after three days of discussions here between 10 Roman Catholic and 11 Angli- can theologians recommended the establishment of a special commission for studying the! theology of marriage and its} applications to mixed mar-| riages. The scholars said they had a free and frank discussion on "such subjects as the relation of the church to the gospel's au- thority and comprehensiveness, intercommunion, and the place of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Christian theology and devo- tion." The scholars said they also decided to make recommenda- tions for joint action in certain practical matters intended to remove tensions and promote issued sity of Toronto's Trinity Col- jin the U.S. and will bring to- gether between 2,500 and 3,000 Theologians the growing together of Angli- cans and Roman Catholics. Two Canadians attended: matic theology at the Univer- lege, and Rev. John Keating of Toronto, a member of the Paul- ist Fathers of New York and director of ecumenism for the} English-speaking Roman Cath- olic bishops of Canada. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)-- Plans were announced Thurs- day for a national ecumenical conference to be held here Sept. 5-8 to be called the National Consultation on the Church in Community Life. The program, to be held on the Ohio State University campus, is the first of its kind clergymen and lay church lead- ated his statement that the jury had unanimously found the col- lision "not of criminal origin but accidental." Mr. Carrier said that in the opinion of the jury it seemed there was negligence. Follow- ing testimony given principally by the operators and employ- ees of the CNR, it had been demonstrated beyond any doubt that the level crossing con- cerned was extremely danger- ous. The jury recommended that security measures taken after the accident be maintained. Since Oct. 7, CNR trains have been instructed not to exceed 25 miles an hour while passing through the crossing at Dorion, 25 miles west of Montreal. The fireman of the 101-car westbound freight train which hit the bus testified his train was travelling at 55 miles an hour shortly before the acci- dent. The engineer of an east- thound passenger train which passed through the level cross- ing seconds before the freight train testified that his train hour. dents aged between 14 and 1 to a dance in Hudson, Que.| Eighteen students and Marcel | Fleury, 20, the driver, died im-| mediately. Another student died | eight days later. ; The bus moved on to the tracks after the automatic bar- rier on the south side of the | ers, Roman Catholic and Prot- estant, from non - metropolitan areas of the 50 states. Restoration Of Lost Rights Sought By Indian Tribesmen OTTAWA (CP) -- Ontario's diverse Indian tribes presented a united and impressive front Thursday in asking Ottawa to! restore native hunting and fish- ing rights as a centennial proj- ect. | The spectrum of the prov-| ince's Indians, from the. Mo-) hawks of the St. Lawrence to the Chippewans of the north- west, were present as a brief on the subject was read to In- dian Affairs Minister Laing. Backing them were delegates of a number of non-Indian or- ganizations, ranging from steel- workers and auto workers union tracks rose while the north bar-| rier remained down. The force of the collision split | the bus in half and flaming 'Civil Service Powers | | Questioned In House power in the civil service! Its powers would include the cropped up as the Commons!spending of about $480,000,000 continued to whittle away at aljover the next eight years and massive government bill which|the right to impose penalties establishes a 17-member board/for those disobeying its regula- to control land, sea and air} tions, It also would assume the! transport coming under federal authority of board of transport jurisdiction. commissioners and' other fed- -~Debate_on the bill continues eral boards it will displace. today. "Never before have so few Mr. Baldwin won non-elected people been given | 5 from his own party, the so much power in relation to| OTTAWA (CP)--Members of the three major political parties in the Commons agreed Thurs- day that perhaps too much 'power is being placed in the hands of government boards, agencies and Crown corpora- tions. | 'As the result of the immense; growth of governmental activ- Jity, one can ask whether expert jpublic servants are becoming p a support Lib- jthe masters of the people,"' was erals and the NDP in calling the economic characteristics of fairs, page sory pear bbe "Second, if Clarkson Gor- the way it was put by Gerald/for a committee io watch over|this country and the right tol firm will begin 'immediately' |90"'S. investigation is to have {Baldwin (PC--Peace River). activities of the so-called "super deal with all aspects of trans-|1q work with the Ontario Se-|2"% lasting, corrective value, | The growth of uncontrolled'board." portation," said the Alberta! curities Commission in an at-|itS terms of reference should go LICENSE meee ee ~ | lawyer. tempt 'to speed up the investi-|beyond the internal affairs of e Transport Minister Pickers- gation. Prudential Finance itself. | PC F By ] t D t gill said he agreed with the "My goal will be to produce They should include a thor- PLATES 'PCs For Byelection Dates But he objected to Mr. |win's proposal'to have the com- | mittee established by rather than by a rule of the Commons. He said the Com- mons transport committee 'For Two Vacant Ridings ; By RONALD LEBEL ing the death of Rodger Mitch- OTTAWA (CP)--Federal by- ell earlier this month. could do the job. elections must be called in Sud-- Theogene Ricard (PC--St. Hy- Mr. Baldwin's amendment bury and Hull, Que., by July 12 acinthe-Bagot) gave a similar was put aside for debate later |under legal action taken Thurs- notice regarding Hull, whose; when it was hoped the differ- |day by Commons Speaker Lu-| veteran MP Alexis Caron died. ences on how the committee will b ith |cien Lamoureux at the request! last August. be established would be over- 'of Conservative MPs. Speaker Lucien Lamoureux come. b The Conservatives invoked a immediately sent warrants to. Mr. Baldwin kicked off the th Chief Electoral Officer Jean- debate by saying there was too d Mare Hamel declaring the two much apathy and _ indifference d /seats vacant. This means that in Canada by the way Parlia- writs for byelections must be ment was giving section of the House of Com- ;mons Act requiring the prime |minister to announce byelec- |tions within six months after House seats are officially de- clared vacant. ; | The byelections will not have |to be held before July 12, but Prime Minister Pearson has un-| No byelections would be nec- til then to announce the voting essary if a general election date. Both ridings formerly were called by July 12. were held by Liberal MPs. Commons standings are Lib- | Conservative House Leaderjerals 130, Conservatives 96, the rights of |Michael Starr gave formal uo-/NDP 21, Creditistes 8, Social maintain some say in the tice in the Commons that the| Credit 5, independents 3, vacant/board's doings had to be pre- Sudbury seat is vacant follow-'2; total 265. | served. Mae ee Ce ee on a ~-- | Establishing the committee by statute meant that it could meet at the start of each ses- sion of Parliament without wait- ing for the government to take action. Too often governments \delayed setting up committees for political advantage, Mrs |12. The interval between the is- social and economic life." Alvin Hamilton (PC--Qu'Ap- |g pelle) said Parliament has ac- vi cepted that it must delegate the usually is two months. Apprentice Dies, Three Hurt In Truck Terminal Explosion ing handled. idea of a watchdog committee. jan interim report at the earliest | ough investigation of the facts Bald- possible date," he told a news ,2vailable to the attorney-gen- ' ¢ at statute gaaencs 2 wee Us 12 Oe ee ees eae countancy t how weak and ineffectual the|helpless to act. Ontario Securities Commission : really is." the public; tree's announcement should not issued by Mr. Hamel by July service "the almost uncon-| "'lull" those who lost money in) trolled power .to regulate and|the Prudential Finance collapse ; suance of the writs and voting deal with various aspects of our |into thinking "that the govern- |ment. has suddenly become a| wide powers to the board. But ald, Ontario's NDP leader, said! Parliament to) ------ aaah went through at 60 miles an! | OTTAWA (CP) -- A 16-year-| old apprentice mechanic was killed and three other workers injured when an explosion and fire rocked the truck terminal) of Taggart Service Ltd. in the city's west end. Kirt Younie crawled out of the wrecked building and was rushed to hospital, but died shortly afterward. A native of Smiths Falls, he had been living in Ottawa for about a year. | George Furst, 45, of Ottawa, | the mechanic foreman, and Bob Crothers, 27, of North Gower, a driver, are listed in good cox.di- tion in hospital. Fred Ryan, 46, of Perth, the stock room at-| tendant was treated and re-| leased. The explosion blew out part of one wall of the single-storey cinder - block structure. Wit- nesses said it happened about 10 minutes before the 6 p.m./ SAULT STE, MARIE, Ont.| (CP)--J. D. Speranzini, concili-| report to William Dickie, chief|case himself, said the charge ation officer with the provincial conciliation officer, n ' said| concentrate his efforts on con- Safety Act will be read in mag- department of labor, |Thursday he has failed to geticiliation between two railway Algoma Steel Corp. Ltd. and 80' brotherhoods and the company. striking bricklayers to resume! negotiations they discontinued) sive operation Dec. 15 after 129, Company to recover the $100,- members of Local 606, Brother-| 900 cost of the coroner's inquest "T am satisfied that I cannot|hood of Locomotive Firemen|held last November. The in- bring the two parties together,"|and Enginemen and Local 6| quest jury found the tompany Jan. 4. quitting time. . tin Ottawa. Conciliation Efforts Fail wrt cat ots's'a| Between Steel Firm, Unio Five other men who were in| }amilton said. the building at the time escaped; Herb Gray (L--Essex West) without injury. Firemen had the said there was_no question that blaze under control in about 15/4!l MPs agreed in the principle aut |\that the super board should dachige come under the continuing sur- Damage was estimated at/veillance of the Commons. several thousand dollars. One| But the way to do it was to diesel truck cab unit was in the|develop specialist committees repair section of the building. | backed by professional and per- The roof of this section col-| manent staff. lapsed. H. W. Herridge (NDP--Koo- H. I. Terris, Ottawa manager, |tenay, West) favored ' aged said he did not believe there| £6. OL. Ae, OMMOnB 10. Wat was any connection between ah tte ee oe gt explosion and the company's : i avoE Alipite. ened jtempt "'to change the constitu- Taggart Services has tion by the side door by pro- oa Cacti a dee lenge oad EE for the establishment of ion organization campaign) |committees on a statutory since Aug. 17, 1966, Mr. Terris|D2Sis."" 'This was most unsound. said that acts of violence had occurred at the company's City To Charge Montreal. terminal, but that he Saas a had never received any threats Building Firm OTTAWA (CP)--The City of | Ottawa will charge 0. J. Gaf- fey, Construction Ltd. of Strat- | ford with failing to provide ade- /quate bracing on the Heron Road bridge which collapsed| last. August killing nine -work-| men. | City solicitor Donald Hamb- Mr. Speranzini said he would !ing, who will prosecute the and then Under the Ontario Construction istrate's court on Friday. Mr. Hambling said the city) Algoma shut down its mas-| Will also sue the construction for the failure of he said, "They are too wide! and Enginemen and Local 611,|esponsible wreckage from the front half|apart on the issues." was dragged 2,000 feet down dis seer RE Brotherhood of Railroad Train-|the wooden falsework at the men, refused to cross picket|Dridge site. province to province and be- cause the provinces have juris- diction over fish and game. Ottawa has been paying court costs for Indians charged with fish and game infractions and has a report on the situation; from a committee of senior of-| ficials. | An attempt was being made to develop "a basic body of law} to say what we have to do to right the situation." i "We do not yet have the an-jinquest, | swer."" | the line. Thursday, Jean Lapointe, Do-! rion police chief, said in answer | to a question from juror Car- rier--an engineer--that an at- tempt had been made to check reports that persons had been) seen tampering with the south | barrier just before it rose to! let the bus move forward. QUESTION 136 His men had questioned 136 persons and taken statements from 63 others but had been un- able to come up with any more information than had come out) in the course of the four-day} jlines set up by the bricklayers. Puma d D About 8,000 workers, most of| 7,000,000 by 1981 arge uo them members of the United| Steelworkers of America, were in Metro --Reply in confidence to Box §! |laid off following the shutdown. Sle t In Hut |. The bricklayers, members of | --Partner wanted to help ae- |Local 29, International Associa-| quire 100 acre farm | tion of Bricklayers, Masons and| TORONTO (CP) -- A home-| Plasterers, have asked for a 50-| less couple who police said|cent hourly increase over base| were living atop an apartment|pay of $3.28 in a one-year con-| building in an elevator equip-/ tract. i ment hut were among four per-| The company has offered 60; sons remanded one week Thurs-| cents over three years, but the) --in King Township with front- age on 400 and Jane Street. --Tremendous future growth potential, Five witnesses testified they|reported in critical condition | day in connection with the stab-|main item of disagreement' is| D1331 bing of a Toronto Transit Com-;the union's demand for double} mission bus driver. time for Saturday and Sunday OSHAWA TIMES | Norman Partington, 40, at-/ work. | | tacked early Wednesday, was |- -- Sec ho TET <= = | MAY SEE U.S. OFFICIALS saw figures in the vicinity of|Thursday in hospital with stab) The government is "consider-| {he south barrier just before the | wounds. men to Rt. Rev. Neville Clarke, Anglican bishop of James Bay. cussions with U.S. authorities to A scattering of delegates from) hear their views," Mr. Laing jury, Judge Blain referred to Indian groups in other provinces S@id. and from major national bodies also faced Mr. Laing in a crowded hotel room. : t On| Canadian Indians have been|their reserves, Mr. Laing said| objecting for 50 years to the|he wasn't aware of this. If it) Migratory Birds Convention Act/W@S_,S0, the Canadian case! signed in 1916 by Canada and! Would be helped. | the United States. The brief said it was the un- The Supreme Court of Canada pleasant role of the delegation recently has upheld lower court . '0 introduce a note of discord decisions that the international imo this symphony of national agreement overrules Indian, Centennial merriment." i rights to shoot ducks and geese|._ The last 100 years have vis- for food at any time on reserves| ited an unimaginable deteriora- or on unoccupied Crown lands. tion in the life of Indians," it said, listing living standards U.S, Indians aren't bound by the! UP TO PARLIAMENT that would "stagger the imagin-| fg nti A . siavere arrested later in the The brief said legal argu- ation" of most Canadians. junder "active consideration," | se. i i ments can be carried no further. Mr. Laing said that, like tne Commons was told Thurs. spariment san dry throats, dried out furniture | and it is now up to Parliament every previous minister of In- 9Y- | to restore the rights it abro-| dian affairs, he will undoubt-| gated through the agreement. | edly leave office a failure be-| modification of the treatylis so great. rights, then Ottawa 'should nego-| But Parliament' was setting tiate with the Indians to "devise aside more money than ever for appropriate compensation." Mr. Laing said a "'sorry and|housing program was well un- clumsy oversight" was made in|der way and Indians had io suid labor leaders with shorter | 1916 when Indian rights weren't|cational opportunities no other ing the possibility of having dis-/7:30 p.m. collision. When a delegate said that described the figures as ahad- convention when hunting on/witnesses did not see the fig- serving six - month sentences In his summing-up for the the fact that four of the five had owy and the fact that 21 other ures at all. Ottawa Studies Jailed Unionists OTTAWA (CP)--The cases of two Vancouver labor leaders for defying court injunctions are DR. B: DOHERTY, M.D. wishes to announce the relocation of his office to 173 Simcoe St. North Lower Suite - Reardon Building Commencing Januory 16, Tel. Unchanged 723-4198 Police said Jolin Frederick Lyon, 18, and his 20-year-old / wife, Karen, were penniless and | had been sleeping in the ele- vator hut. They are charged as | accessories after the fact. Lyon) is also charged with attempted robbery. j Paul Harold Thomson, 19, and) John Edward McKerman, 18, are charged with wounding and with attempted robbery. Thom- | son lived:in an apartment in the | building where the Lyons slept. The building overlooks the! route travelled regularly by Mr. | Partington's bus. | Thomson and McKernan were arrested early Thursday in a} downtown poolroom. The Lyons | *DRY AIR in your home means Solicitor - General Pennell | oug n jWas replying to Frank Howard | If public interest required' aj cause the Indian social problem|(NDP -- Skeena), who asked whether Paddy Neale and Tom Clarke will receive federal clemency and be released from \ Indians, a five-year $112,000,000| jail immediately. The two union officials and| | Commercial Property and:drapes, static shocks as you walk. Call 725-3581 and have LANDER-STARK install a HU- MIDIFIER -- you'll be amazed at the difference it makes to have good names to remember If you have a To Sell or Lease REG AKER, pres. f-- taken into account in the agree-| Canadian could benefit from. ment. * | terms, Jeffrey Power and Arti) BILL MCFEETERS, vice-pres. } |O'Keefe, were sentenced Sept.) SCHOFIELD-AKER fl "Oh, come off it," muttered|30 for taking part in a picket THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, Januery 13, 1967 3 TAIPEI, Formosa (Reuters) TORONTO (CP) -- The On-|the hiring of Clarkson Gordon at shot down two Chinese Commu- Plans For Prudential Probe Nationalist China oo ; Claims Victories Criticized By Liberals, NDP .2"%.c%e"3,.2e% Force today claimed to hava ario government announced'an estimated cost of $50,000|nist MiG-19s in a dogfight off lans Thursday to speed up its|should not be permitted "to|Quemoy Island in the Formosan' investigation of the Prudential | divert attention from the cen-| Straits. Finance Corp. collapse, but Lib- {ral eral and New Democratic Party |dential Finance."' These are: | spokesmen were still unhappy issue arising from Pru-| The defence ministry said Na- . 'tionalist jet fighters involved in e said that one of the main | , i vay. . . ' a dogfight with 12 MiG-19s - bout the way the case was be- issues is to provide legislation het ne loss and pao gra em ;"'to_prevent.a_repetition of such e_safely . L. Rowntree, minister of) a fiasco, and compensation for gcntaotiaee nancial and commercial af-| the. noteholders. 1967 James Trotter, Liberal mem-|. "The public is entitled to this, er for Toronto Parkdale, saidjin view of the attorney-gener- ne hiring of an outside ac- al's contention that, since no firm "shows just|!aw was being broken, he was 102 Brock St. $.--Wwhitby Daily -- 9 to 5 p.m. SAT. 9 to 12 P.M. ae LIFE-LINE 576-2111 With Your Telephone Pastor-- Rev. Fred Spring @ Daily Messages, Encouragement And Prayer @ Be Sure To Call Today "It proves what many have} een saying for a long time--| ne securities commission just oes not have enough staff to 0 its job properly." Mr. Trotter. said Mr, Rown- reat friend of the small in- estor."" Donald C. MacDonald, On- r ONTARIO SMOKERS CAN WIN 'Nw 2,000 Switch to Matinee for the money Look for the certificate in every pack of Matinée, King Size or regular. If it's a lucky number, and you qualify, you win $5, $25, $250, even $2500. Thousands of winning certificates right here in this region. 'Switch to Matinée today. Stay for the mildness Matinée is the mildest cigarette in Canada -- this is a documented fact. We select tobaccos grown mild to begin with. Then we add the exclusive Excello filter to deliver a really mild, relaxing smoke. Switch to Matinée; you'll stay for the mildness. more money, more mildness -- Matinee gives you more fresh, moist air around! He said the situation is com- an Indian delegate as the famil- line demonstration in Vancou- 5 plicated by the fact that the i ar statistics were read.\ver last May after picketing 1916 convention is | ee writers or some-jhad been banned by court in- that treaty rights vary from thing." 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