Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Feb 1967, p. 1

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Home Of Oshawa, ville, Ajax, neighboring Newspaper Whitby, Bowman- Pickering and centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 96 -- NO. 39 She Oshawa Times 10¢ Single Copy 5S¢ Per Week Home TBelivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1967 Weather Report Gale force winds over Ontario will diminish during the day. Clear skies and cold weather, Low tonight -5; high Friday, 15. Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Cttowa and for payment of Postage in Cash TWENTY-FOUR PAGES FORMER HOCKEY GREAT WITH FUTURE OSHAWA STARS Milt Schmidt, left, centre for the famed Kraut Line which came out of Kitch- ener to star in the National Hockey League with Boston Bruins in the late 1930's and 1940's, passes along some helpful tips to Terry Gallag- her, centre, six-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs, Robert Gal- lagher, 597 Braemore Court, and Gregory Puchalski, right, six-year-old son of 000 IN JOBS OPEN NEW PROJECT 'Que. Bill Give " | $15 Million Cement Plant Slated Near Bowmanville BOWMANVILLE (staff) At could involve roughly another jleast 500 construction jobs are jexpected to be created in the $10,000,000 The development is located on | | " Final Reading QUEBEC (CP) -- The Quebec legislative assembly today gave third and final reading to a controversial bill designed to end strikes by 12,000 Roman Catholic, school teachers in the province. The assembly passed _ the measure by a vote of 53-35 after giving it clause by clause study for almost seven hours. Opposition leader Jean Le- sage made a last ditch effort to change the bill but his motion for amendment on third read- ing was defeated 53-35. The bill, which now requires |passage by the upper house of ithe legislature as well as final sanctioning by Lt. Gov. Hugh LaPointe, would order = the teachers back to work within 48 hours of its enactment and extend their present collective agreement until June, 1968. The measure, pushed by Premier Daniel Johnson, has aroused loud protest from Cath-! Mr. and Mrs. William Puch- alski, Dymond Drive. The boys are members of the Oshawa Catholic Youth Or- ganization"s Squirt Hockey League which plays at Civic Auditorium Oshawa Times Photos olic and Protestant teachers' I groups in the province. J area when development of a | $15,000,000 cement plant com iplex get under way southwest of here possibly by the end of March. 750 acres south of the CNR railway line. The property bor- ders Lake Ontario, with about ad acres on the west side of averly Road and rou | An official of St. Mary's Ce- acres on the east Desig se pment Company announced to When production starts the day that work on the company's company plans to employ 80 to new production site will start,/100 workers and produce 2,000, ee ae by next 000 barrels of cement anually. mon s end and may be com- The roject w consis , |jplete near the close of 1968. Pires ais ae mad | Kenneth MacKenzie, project|room (where raw materials are engineer, said the $15,000,000/crushed and ground), a 'kil' figure represents the company's|where cement is burned, and initial investment on the pro-|23 silos to store raw material ject: Later expansion plans|and finished cement. Croll Positiv Of Credit Help | ish what the government calls; OTTAWA (CP) Senator ust and equitable salary levels' David Croll is confident that Zs JEAN eo « « last LESAGE ditch stand for all teachers in the province} most of his committees rec- ANNOUNCE STOPPAGE On Wednesday night the groups representing 56,200 and would forestall further} ommendations on consumer govern- walkouts pending the |credit controls will find their Danger To Democracy Duick Recovery Forecast; Seen By Landymore OTTAWA (CP) -- Rear Ad- miral William Landymore dis- missed from the navy by. De- fence Minister Hellyer last July for internal opposition to arm- ed forces unification, says mobile command is dangerous still in the navy until April -- drew the biggest crowd in the four-year history of the com- mittee. Many in the audience, apparently naval officers or former officers, and their wives, applauded loudly at the to Canadian d acy. of his brief. "If ever our commander of that command decided to set himself up to control this coun- try of ours, he has a ready- made organization to achieve it," the former chief of Mari- time Command told the Com- Credit Charge Opposition members of the} committee are making plans to call as witnesses six or seven other officers compulsorily re- tired by Mr, Hellyer last sum- mer. They include Lieut. Gen. Robert Moncel, Vice 'Chiet~-of| Defence staff, Lt. Gen, Frank Fleury, Comptroller General, and Air Marshall Clare Annis, Chief of Technical Services. Admiral Landymore said armed forces unification is vir- tually destroying the navy. teachers announced they plan a general one day work) - Robarts Quitting Denied f:"",<..'m"% om TORONTO (CP) -- A quickjin Exeter the premier "fell ili|leave virtually all of Quebec's) recovery was predicted for/quickly" and "will be up andjone million five hundred thou- Premier John Robarts as party/running in a relatively short|Sand school children no class ment's planned overhaul of the|way unto the statute books of education system. jthe federal and provincial gov- 3 he 3 | ernments. | The main recommendation he ce, He's In Ra told a press conference Wed- nesday when the recommenda- tions were unveiled, are "to all hofficials denied Wednesday /|time." night that he might soon re- i tire. \COMMENT ON REPORT Elmer Bell, president of the) Commenting on a report in Ontario Progressive Conserva-|the Globe and Mail tive" Ass: vin-|Quoted unnamed party sources eriation, and cial treasurer Charles ac-\88 saying they expect Mr. Naughton threw cold wate? on|Rebarts the speculative reports about|"ext provincial retirement. Mr. Robarts, in hospital in|the report London with an illness de-|ated. scribed only as, "'a serious in- ternal problem,'"' was reported election, was to retire before the be-| cause of illness, Mr. Bell said) unsubstanti- He said no reason exists for room instruction. The central organization of protestant teachers also said it was asking the Lt. Gov. to with- which |hoid assent for the bill -- a re- quest that could spark hot con- stitutional arguments. a classes. liberal protest against The strikes have been on for weeks in some areas depriving total of 285,000 children of} Recent days have seen Joudjister formerly put his name the| forward |intents and purposes, already a ees tates fait accompli." | 'The federal government is OTTAWA (CP) -- Conserva-|Winning parliamentary approv- tive MP George Hees today|al of bank act ammendments confirmed he will be a fourth|Which will require full disclos- candidate at the party leader-|Ures of interest rates and service ship convention Sept. 6-9 in|charges on chartered bank Toronto. loans. Many of the provinces Long expected to run, the $6-\have, or are enacting similar year-old former cabinet coal > aaa in the provincial jeid. |_ This, the Liberal senator from|families with income of $4,000 Ontario said, will naturally lead/a year or less, would be limited | SENATOR CROLL e « » Heads Committee in a morning press Still Mounting OTTAWA (CP)--The Domin- ion Bureau of Statistics re- ported Wednesday the con- the 50-year-old mie Unification would be the down. Premier to steP/tinion Nationale government's |conference. "greatest fiasco of all time" and it was "orientated political- ly and not militarily." The navy has been so torn resting comfortablu. William Kinmond, the prem-| Mr. MacNaughton, in Toron- ier's press secretary, said in-jto, called a newspaper report ternal bleeding which sent Mr.|"'purely speculation." Robarts to hospital Tuesday} measure, backed by at least; Davie Fulton, an old cabinet/t0 disclousre of true interest/to $1,500, and would be granted lone. threat from a union leader|mate, is the other principal rates of consumer loan and/only for purchase of equipment lof a possible general strike in|committed contender for the/Credit facilities, necessary to maintain family Quebec, and a course of protest|job held for the last decade by 'Advertising cannot be farjlife. "As far as the Progressive|from some organizations of par-|John Diefenbaker who has not behind; and if they are smart{ Ron Bassord (L -- Vancouver mons Defence committee Wed- nesday. If a minister of National De- fence and a Commander of Mobile Commands got together, we could have a dictatorship over night. As members of par- liament, we should contemplate this organization with some alarm. With headquarters at St. Hubert, Quebec, mobile com- mand is in effect the army. It includes all four brigades and later will include four squad- rons of attack planes. Admiral Landymore is ex- pected to undergo questioning for several hours today by committee members. Question- ing was only started when the committee adjourned 6.00 p.m. Wednesday. TAX HEARING sumer credit balances outstand- ing are continuing to mount. The bureau's report was {s-} sued independently of a Senate-| Commons committee reco m- jmendation that unstated ceil-| ings be put on interest and car-| rying charges, and that the full| rates of interest and other! charges be disclosed plainly to} shoppers. The parliamentary commit- tee report said outstanding credit at the end of 1965 was more than $7,000,000,000. DBS monthly reports are in- complete because ckedit unions} and caisses popula\res make| figures available only at the! end of each year, and tail dealers make only quart- Admiral Landymore, wearing his uniform -- officially, he is DAVID GROOS (right), chairman of the Commons defence committee, greets dismissed Rear Admiral Landymore prior to the meeting of the committee in Ottawa Wednesday. Admiral "re- erly reports. Landymore was chief of Maritime Command--Atlan- tic and Pacific fleets and the RCAF's anti-submarine squadrons -- when he was fired last July 12 for in- ternal opposition te armed apart that its personal struc- ture has been seriously weak- ened. MORALE DECLINES | Morale has declined to the) point where operational effec-| tiveness was being affected, he| said in reply to questions. He said the last study he saw while maritime ¢ommand- er showed that the armed forces would de¢line under| unification. They /now number} about 105,000. / | Admiral Landymore said the} unification bilf gives the de- fence --, powers far too sweeping. One section of the bill "Al- lows our forces to be seconded to any state." forces unification. In a brief to the committee, he said the navy is being torn apart by unification so much that its personnel structure has been seriously weakened. had stopped and his condition) Party was "clinically improved." Mr. Bell said in his Mao Accused Russ Baiting |party's provincial leader since MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet|! Communist party accused Mao Tse-tung today of planning new! attempts to provide a 'break in Soviet Chinese relations. In Peking, more anti Russian pro- nouncements were reported. On Formosa, nationalist China central news agency said armed clashes between forces for and against Mao have spread from Tibet 'throughout the adjoining province of Szechwan, in south- west China. It said that the fighting had prevented supplies from reach- ing Maoists in Tibet and that clashes in Lhasa, a capital pre- viously reported under anti Maoist control, were nearing a climax. A pro nationalist Chinese newspaper in Hong Kong said Kwangsi province bordering on North Viet Nam has been taken over by anti Maoists but Mao's supporters have the upper hand in some big cities. Clashes were reported in Wuchow, Kwangsi city of more than 2,000. Except during the actual war, the Soviet communist newspaper Pravda said in a 4,000 word art- icle "never before has such a fierce campaign been conduct- ed' against the Soviet Union. It said relations with China were likely to get worse. Union Leaders Out Of Prison CHILLIWACK, B.C. (CP) --| Union leaders Paddy Neale and Tom Clarke were released from prison Wednesday, six weeks before their six-month terms| were to end. Neale is secretary of the Van- couver Labor Council. Neale and Clarke were con- victed of contempt of court for participating in demonstrations outside Lenkurt Electric Co. in Burnaby after the British Co- lumbia Supreme Court had is- sued an injunction prohibiting (CP Wirephoto} demonstrations. is concerned, in opinion, Mr. Robarts is still the home/leader and the ter of Ontario and likely Prime Minis wil my|ents as well as teacher groups./Said yet whether he will One Montreal parent group {said Wednesday night it plans a Mr, Robarts has been the/to join in. 1961. | Mr. Kinménd told the press ier's illness might have on his political career statement of this would have to wait until X-rays were taken|nesday nig to determine the nature of his|mollify its angry opponents. illness. that any Through it all, Premier John- son has stuck to his strike end- ing guns. {conference that it was too early to say what effect the prem-|/ MAKES AMENDMENTS igh i He did announce what seemed|commit himself as a candidate|poor people out of the hands of|credit, shall be required by law minor juntil today, the former cabinet|the money changers and put/to disclose to the consumer the : three|them in the hands of lenders|total cost of that credit, ex- ht, but these did not/months has shown all the signs | under 'of a man running for the party | he said. comparitively to the bill to. be amendments | Wed- The bill is designed to estab- Vg j a f z Friday "march" on the provin-| be for a long period of time,"|cjal legislature and wants par- the provincial secretary said. jents from across the province) ' Toll run gain. The two other dark horse already in the race; lare Hugh Horner, MP for| | Jasper Edson and a virtual un- known, John MacLean, a Brock- ville, Ontario, businessman. The press conference an- nouncement by Mr. Hees was almost a mere _ formality. /Although he had refused to ja | | candidates jminister for ihe last leadership. S Mount In Vietnam SAIGON (AP) -- Enemy and allied tolls mounted today in |the Vietnam war's bioodiest week of the new year, with 385 more communists reported kill-| ed, moderate casualties to two} U.S. companies of infantry and! 13 U.S. helicopters downed. South Vietnamese troops} smashed a Viet Cong battalion! during a two day battle. in the Mekong Delta, killing 311 guer- rillas and capturing six, a gov- ernment spokesman. said. In the central highlands near the Cambodian border, two companies of the U.S. 4th in- fantry division suffered mod- erate casualties Wednesday in ifighting that took the lives of 74 enemy. Schools Open 16 Hours A Day INDIANS GO TO POLLS Morarji Desai, former finance minister of India and main contender for its pre- miership, 'casts ballot today in Bulsar, India. In- dians started week-long nat- ional elections. Voting was ecarred by fighting. mainly in states of Andhra Pradesh and Madras. Two were killed. At stake are 520 seats in Parliament and 3,650 seats in state assemblies. AP Wirephote COOKSVILLE, Ont. (CP) |Toronto Township has approved la program to use its schools 16} {hours a day, seven days a week, for everything from education! of children to prenatal classes for expectant mothers, says {township Reeve Robert Speck. | "The program calls for devel- joping new schools in conjunc- tion with new parks and trans- forming the facilities into com- jmunity centres offering loca- |tions for education, recreation, public health classes, welfare programs, libraries and other community services, Mr. Speck said. est long term bank loans to low income families, backed by gov- ernment guarantees, will be act- ed upon. PROTECTS POOR will) Burrard) " the finance companies Commons co-chair- quickly clear the situation up,"'}man of the committee, gave full Senator Croll said. credit for the work to Senator He also expressed confidence|Croll. The Toronto Senator first that the Senate Commons Com-/introduced an interest disclousre mittee's proposal for low inter-/bill in the senate in 1960. The main committee recome | mendation was: "That every person, firm or corporation, including every chartered bank, carrying on the The purpose is to '"'take the|business of extending consumer auspieces,| pressed both as a lump sum and |the terms of simple annu The loans would be only for'interest."' nnn TRULY NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Pictures Show One Landing Area PASADENA, California (AP) First pictures by Lunar Orbiter III show at least one area of the moon is smooth enough fo; astronauts to land. India's Election In Second Day NEW DELHI (AP) -- India's fourth general election went into its second day today with at least three persons reported killed and 20 injured as political violence spread. 250 Motor Launch Passengers Drowned TEHRAN, Iran (Reuters) -- About 250 passengers were drowned when a motor launch capsized in the Gulf of Oman during a heavy storm, the newspaper Kayhan re- ported today. Cold Wave Moves Into Southern Ont. TORONTO (CP) -- A coldwave accompanied by gale force winds moved into Southern Ontario today following a snow and rain storm which struck the area Wednesday night. government TO ys .. In THE TIMES Today .. Nick Domas Explains Expresssway Project -- P. 13 Peterborough Rink Wins Kiwanis Bonspiel -- P. 8 County Asks Firm Standards For Schools -- P. 5 Pickering News--5, 6 Sports--8, 9, 10 Television--18 Theatres--23 Weather--2 Whitby News--5, 6 Women's--14, 15, 16 Ann Landers--14 Ajax News--5, 6 City News--13 Classified--20, 21, 22 Comics--18 Editorial---4 Financiol--19 Obituories--23 Panitien

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