Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Feb 1967, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. ville, VOL. 96 -- NO: 41 10¢ Single Co Sse Per Week Home py he Oshawa Times Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1967 Ottawa and for payment of Authorized as Second Class niin Post Office Department Weather Report Cold arctic air will continue today and Some light snow expected, Low to- night 5, high Sunday, 25. tomorow. TWENTY-TWO PAGES Postage In Cash CANADIAN FOLKLORE of Friday The performance will be sponsored by the Kiwanis Club in the Civic Auditorium, Originally plan- ned to provide recreational One of the highlights the Centennial Year in Osh awa will be the Festival Canada presentation of Les Feux - Follets, here next Defence Left In Uproar Stevens Quits As Chairman By Shouting, Shoving OTTAWA (CP) -- Two un- scheduled bouts--one shouting, * one shoving--broke out at the end of an uproarious meeting of the Commons defence com- mittee Friday. In one corner, Defence Minis- ter Hellyer and retired Vice- Admiral Herbert Rayner, now administrator of the Anglican diocese of Ottawa, raised their voices to one another. In the opposite corner, Jack McIntosh (PC -- Swift Current- § Maple Creek) gave Harold Winch (NDP--Vancouver East) a shove which sent Mr. Winch stumbling back against a chair. Mr. McIntosh had been need]- ing the committee's witness and Mr. Winch had been needling Mr. McIntosh throughout the sitting. "He hit me," Mr. Winch said later. 'And me a cripple." | Mr. Winch has been on| HAROLD WINCH ..-He Hit Me crutches or cane recently with/miral Rayner approached Mr.|said he had made the state-\,et price is about $11 to $12 8) yaKARTA (AP) Hellyer when. the meeting ended "in- bad knee. The row was touched off by|and accused him of issuing a brief--flowery in its praise of nuendo" and "propaganda." armed forces unification plans| He said Mr. Hellyer and his presented by Kenneth Pat-|staff had tried to give the im- rick, Montreal businessman and|pression that the admiral him- wartime RCAF group captain. self had issued the order. The brief referred at one| 'I made no such statement," point to an April, 1964, order Admiral Rayner snapped --as purportedly issued by Admiral | Mr, McIntosh angrily strode out Rayner, then chief of navaljof the room after his encounter gtaff, saying in part: ". . . the) with Mr, Winch. end objective of a single ere) Mr. Hellyer said: "I know, it bem my statement." ice is firm." ACCOSTS MINISTER | William Lee, executive as: His face crimson with anger, | the usually mild-mannered Ad- Commons Urged To Drop Extension Of Strike Rights a st- Rayner that nobody had ever ant to Mr. Hellyer, told Admiral} 65 danc- musicians semble ers comprises and 1g exponents of Ca- nada's diverse ethnic heri- tage. The group is pictured activity. Les Feux - Follets concentrated more and more on folklore research and the interpreatation of authentic Canadian dance. The en- singer WINNIPEG (CP) -- Sinclair Stevens, Toronto financier, Fri- .|day relinquished his position as lchairman of the board of the | Bank of Western Canada and di to pay more than $1,000,000 due shares. | Mr. » | British | said his group, Finance Stevens tnternational Canada Ltd., will make avai-jscription due wyi¥ requested? in to/a news release Jssued by the di- the meeting would reduce BIF's holding in|but there was no indication how |the bank to about 30 per cent this point ultimately would be} preferably stock lable for 'sale, }western Canadians, that lfrom its present 51 per cent. | | In an interview, after the |meeting of 13 of the bank's 17 directors, Mr. Stevens put a stiff price on his withdrawal from the position of majority share j holder. | He said although he was will- 'i 3 ing to sell $2,500,000 to $3,000,-/ -- mae }000 worth of shares, he expected) {to be paid the subscription price 'of $15 a share. The current raar-| {ment. share. | 'You . sent the signal,"| Jf the stock is purchased by| |Mr. Lee said. |western interests, BIF wouid be | Admiral Rayner retorted: "y] out Mr. Stevens said. He said he resigned to indi- cate his group's desire that the bank be "truly western" and the same feeling motivated the) stock sale offer. | Mr. Stevens will remain a di rector, leaving James E. Coyn of Winni firmly in control of| Australians send it. I had no option." Mr. Hellyer suggested that |Admiral Rayner appear before Ithe committee. Teh admiral said he would be glad to do so. QUOTES SIGNA L | Mr. Patrick's testimony jthe point said: "Admiral H. S. Rayner, chief of the naval staff, on April: 3, 1964, published a four . page statement from which I quote: ""The third and final step will be the unification of the on | three services. It is reasonable to expect that it will be three or four years before it will be possible to take this action. However, the end objective of a | SAIGON (AP) Australian | bush and killed 70 Viet Cong) Friday, a spokesman for the Ist COMES TO LIFE WITH LES FEUX-FOLLETS here in one of the numbers from toire drawn from Canadian tradition. the impressive reper- For 'Truly Western' Bank jchief executive officer. Unconfirmed reports said! Shanski, 3 : onda Winnipeg businessman, and W. myeti rectors gave him until March 3\T. Brown, a Vancouver invest the on his group's subscription for | task of securing enough western jcapital to buy the shares offer jbank directors John jment banker, were given \by Mr. Stevens Payment of the ($1,450,000 sj rectors following resolved. The unpaid stock was ment. policies of the bank. Military Will Ask Sukarno To Quit that President nite congressional ouster Sukarno _ might left holding "30 per cent of the| military leaders were reported | learned. \ was asked by the minister to|total bank stock at the most," preparing to try again Sunday| Previous reports. among unionjattacked Meany's leadership on} leaders gathering for the 13,-|all f to persuade him to quit. bank policy as president and and 200,000-member Confedera-| yd ih- sub- scribed for by BIF, whose offi- cers have said they will with {hold payment until they are sat isfied as to the future. manage- -- Fearing|tack on AFL - CIO leadership, | of|will brush aside the attempts of|years ago in the historic merger) renorted in. serious ig-|peacemakers to patch up the of the American Federation of with back burns' and the country, Indonesia's|quarrel between the two, it was) Labor and the Congress of In head injuries i TWO Labor Crisis Grips Quebec QUEBEC (CP)--The biggest labor crisis in years faced Que-|say what exactly was planned-- bec today as a new law forcing/only that "You will find out 112,000 striking teach back to when it happens." Iwork neared the orcement A QFL affiliate, the Montreal stage Labor Council, invited unions he key man in the representing its 150,000 mem- --Raymond Laliberte be ganize special confer of the 50,000-member tion des Instituteurs ¢ -turned a deaf ear to questions about whether intended to jorder a second mass*study ses- jsion by provincial teachers. With. the help of 6,200: mem- bers of the Provincial Associa tion of Protestant Teachers, the CIC closed nearly every public classroom in Quebee Friday and teachers spent the day studying |the much-debated legislation Enacted into Jaw at 1:45 p.m. Friday, Bill 25 orders teachers back into their classrooms Mon-} day morning and extends their) expired collective agreements until June, 1968 In Montreal, news of the bill's passage was quickly followed by the announcement that officials of Quebec's two most powerful abor groups--the 300,000-mem ber Quebec Federation of Labor But a spokesman would not tuation president Corpora rs to or and form of protest action for wo who do not have the legal right to go on strike or do not wish to strike, By late Friday, only one large group. among the- striking Ro- man Catholic teachers had ences study sessions it} onques ers he the back-to-work law by calling a meeting for 9 a.m. Monday "As far. as we are concerned we are still on strike," said Robert Dobe, general chairman of the 1,500-rnember leration of English - speaking Catholic Teachers of Montreal. The rest of Montreal's 9,000 striking teachers, members of *Alliance des professeurs cath oliques, have called a for Sunday to decide what they do 0 meeting The Provincial Association Protestant Teachers issued statement saying all tion of National Trade Unions-- t "stand united had called a joint meeting for; must be they French or Protestant." But association of ficials were uncertain what ac jtion would be taken until 1 The CNTU issued a statement icalling the bill "a threat not rey against the teachers but against all society' and prom- tical' action committees." ithe bill. | Meany Plans Fast Action In Replacing UAW Head MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)--|500,000-member federation's ex AFL - CIO. President jreplace Walter Reuther, the United-Auto Workers, on the|place Reuther, | !Reuther will completely pull the Jauto workers out of the federa-| tion. | tive council, it was learned to- iday. | Meany, irked at Reuther's at- dustrial Organizations, sharply ronts, including foreign pol- jicy, organizing of new worke economies, civil rights and bar- Skirt Ambush | | \@ troops bypassed an enemy am-| = Guerrillas in a six-hour battle) gaining tactics. Although Meany has been in la jesting mood about Reuther's| lharsh criticisms, it was learned) : |today that the 72-year-old feder- lation president is serious about Eielecting a replacement for : |Reuther on the 29-member coun- ¢ jcil. CHICAGO (AP)--United Auto Workers locals in the Chicago} ? area have approved a proposal * \to disaffiliate with the AFL-CIO. Local UAW leaders represent-| + ing 60,000 members and 55 lo- | \eals gave unanimous approval made it clear it intended to defy | of a teachers} English, Catholic or jcould be determined if Protes- ised establishment of- 108 "'poli-'tant teachers are affected by George | ecutive council meeting had in-| |Meany plans prompt action' to; dicated the possibility of putting} & head of |off a decision on whether to re-|trailer they were who resigned, |Smashed into the back of an labor federation's ruling execu-juntil it became clear whether} Reuther, who joined Meany 11) |tion with facial cuts and burns MOTORISTS KILLED IN CRASH City, District Men In Car; | OutOfControl, Struck Pole WHITBY (Staff) were killed early the car in which riding went out of the Baseline Road, guidepost and a hydro pole and came to rest near a f¢ Dead are Herbert -- Two men]! His today when| Oshawa) thes >| Bould n Mr. 1936 in parents are Della (of and the late George 3ould was born Aug. 25 Oshawa, He has been resident of the city all his life and worked at Fittings Ltd., Zould, 30, 312 Leslie for seven years. He was a mem- awa driver of the car, and pas-\ber of the United Steelworkers senger Mervin Neil, Yakeley 21, RR 3, Oshawa, Whitby Town ship The accident happened 3 a.m. seven-tenths of mile east of Thicksons Road. Both Mr. Bould and Mr, Yakeley jwere reported dead on arrival at Oshawa General Hospital shortly after the crash. An Ontario provincial spokesman at Whitby the car was westbound on Baseline and had just ove ved by his two cars when it failed to ne-|\fy and Mr gotiate a curve. No other people! y ey; two brothers, Glenn are believed to have aryl, all at home; grand- the car, a 1957 model. arents Mr. and Mrs. Stanley frame was separated from the) sjaq; ( and Mrs. body in the crash and the Vakelev Goodwood. hicle was reduced to a "heap wepien will he of metal", Investigating officer was OPP Sete Dpae gg at . p.m, Constable T, W. Phillips. Chanel WHEE ahaa aneral apel, ¥ , where the body resting, nee a William St., Osh Union Resting at the Armstrong Fu- neral Home, funeral services will be held in the chapel Tues- day at 2-p.m., conducted by Rev. L. W. Herbert of Kings- view United Church. Interment will be at Oshawa Union Ce- metery, M. N. Mr ttings } about a police report the | riaken|, YAKELEY Yakeley, employed at Ltd., Oshawa, is sur- mother and father, Albert and Nelda Vand I The car's been in laremont ve-| Christophe The funeral H. W. BOULD Mr. Bould is survived by his wife, the former Thelma Ald sworth; three sisters all of Osh-| Funeral service will be conduc. awa; Mrs, June Jackson, Mrs.\ted by Rev. W. J. S. McClure Kk. Waite (Evelyn) and Mrs. L.jof S ndrew's Presbyterian | White (Arla); and two brothers,|Church, Whitby. Place of ine Clifford of Hampton and Jack|terment was not known at press- of Newcastle. ilime Visitors will at chapel at p.m. Sunday. be received Py the 2 t BERNER Les Vehicle Rams Bus, Two Men [Injured BOWMANVILLE (Staff) Two Hamilton men are in Me moria! Hospital here today suf fering injuries received last night when the tractor riding | Mike Flanagan, two of 20 hock- Jey ple from Kingston who were bound for a hockey game n Oshawa. Also on the bus, owned by Frontenac Coach Lines Ltd., Kingston, was 'manager of the Kingston Frontenac Junior B hockey club, Jim Magee, two other team officials 4nd a bus driver. The two injured hockey players suffered minor knee 'jinjuries and were unable to condition|play last night in a game de- E possible |jayed: about two hours. The The truck's dri-)Frontenacs lost 6-3 to Oshawa. ver, Stanley Gurman, also 37,) Members of the team put out was described in good condi-| a fire aboard the bus with ve- | extinguishers and some in| unidentified players helped Gur- the crash, at 7.40 p.m. at the'man pull Puffer from the truck, Liberty Street Freeway inter-;which burst into flames on the change, were Ed Leman andiimpact of the crash. in Oshawa-bound bus on the Macdonald - Cartier Freeway. Police say the trailer burst into flames and was destro yed. Injured was Daniel Puffer | Reported slightly injured NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Pressure Mounts In Clerical Marriage VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Pressure was said today to be increasing inside the Vatican for a major review of the Roman Catholic Church's clerical celibacy rule, as more priests abandon their vows for marriage. | Ford Of Canada To Layoff 95 Employees WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Ford of Canada Ltd. has an- 4 |to a resolution favoring a break tek a Hor? rishi aut : ngle service is firm. |Australian Task Force an from the Chicago Federation of OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition | bargaining for the public sery- |i It is already approved in | Robert Andras (I, --Port!nounced today. MPs Friday cited recent strikes ice. in public service industries as|principle, and the Commons was they urged the government in|to return to the measure Mon- the Commons to abandon its! day, plan to extend the right tol The government was served strike to most. federal employ-| early warning that MPs planned ees. 5 jto seek amendments. Richard The Public Service Staff Re-|4, Bell (PC -- Carleton) tried lations Act, a 116-clause bill,|two and 'had them go down by gives some 200,000 civil servants |yotes of 41 to 23 and 34 to 17. the right to opt for strikers or; But the heat came when the compulsory arbitration as the | House reached the strike cption final method of dispute settle-| cjayse, ; ) Arthur) put the same quotation jon the record earlier in the |week to make the argument that the military knew about unification plans from 1964. Admiral Rayner, who, like Mr. Helly.er, .has attended nearly all the cammittee meet- dicated .his anger when Mr. Andras used the quotation. | But he said the second time | It was the fourth straight) day allied units--South Vietna-; mese, Koreans, Americans and |Australians--have clashed with| |guerrillas or North Vietnamese) jregulars, They have claimed an jover-all enemy death toll ex-| An army spokesman in Can- jberra, Australia said eight Aus- \tralians were killed and more jthan 20 wounded in the battle. ment. Opposition .MPs cited recent) The Commons began clause-|strikes in the postal service, air- by-clause study of the bill pro-llines, railways and the current directed by Mr. Hellyer to send|northern Quang Ngai province} the order. and jand although the action tapered viding a system of collective scanaaagasgenenereyre sete yan seaecmpmnmane Pcie Times hd (OES AMA' Lamhe me Re RF | bud ior week Feux Follets To Auditorium. Les play Civic 2 Club Also find: On The Town Gorden Guide Showtime At The Mo Teen Scene Television Highlights - OCVE Has Own Political in. the Showcase you'll es | Quebec teachers' strike as rca- sons to beware granting civil servants the strike option. J. Patrick Nowlan (PC-- Digby-Annapolis-Kings): "Frankly Iam against giving the right through legislation to public servants to strike. Com- pulsory arbitration is one mat- ter but the right to strike is an{ unfortunate blazing of a new trail which with IT cannot agree,' GROAN AT PROSPECT Howard Johnston (SC nagan-Revelstoke): "Tam sure the people of Can- ada listening to the debate this afiernoon must groan at thought of extending the rights to strike at this time to the civil service, in the light of the un- Oka lanes experience we have had this past year." the} Mr. MelIntosh Gordon |off . today,' allied troops con-! Churchill, a former Conserva-/tinued hunting for, their fleeing tive defence minister, had given! adversaries. Mr. Patrick a rough time. | Senn which he |CLAIMS, INSULT | er ms Mr, Churchill said Mr. Pat-| India's Elections lrick had insulted the committee | land .that he regretted he had s | ibeen called as a witness. Bring Stormy Week! {! Mr. McIntosh asked Mr. Pat-| rick whether he pays Canadian) NEW DELHI (AP) -- India's income tax and whether any of|stormy, week - long national jhis firms do business with the elections enjered their fourth }government day today with at least four Mr. Patrick said he certainly |persons dead and 75 injured in does pay Canadian income tax scattered clashes. land that none of his present) The continuing Vv iole noe |firms do business with the goy-|brought a warning from Prime} jernment. |Minister Indira Gandhi that her He added that his formerjadministration "will deal firmly ifirm--Canadian Aviation Elec-|with these acts, of Jawlessness."'| tronics of Montreal Tt' is a matter for. regret }founded in 1959--had p that instances violence and} to both the Conservative |assault continue," Mrs, Gandh and Liberal governments, isaid. | sold od of icts ceeding i,000. le ; ings in the last two weeks, -- in a week was too much, He re-| This .week's battles raged] 4 peated to reporters he had been from the Mekong Delta to} i TWO HURT IN BUS-TRUCK CRASH Bowmanville for | jfold President Two men. were injured last night when the tractor trailer they were riding in struck the back of this bus (above) at the Liberty Street westbound inter- + Labor-Industrial Union Council : the local AFL-CIO body Mao Plagued By Rebellion TOKYO. (AP) -- Re China's remote vastnesses con-} tinues to plague Mao Tse-tung's | lforces and an aide to the Com-| |munist chairman was quoted today as sa the influence} of Mao's chief adversaries re a |mains strong. Opposition was Inner Mongolia churia and Szechwan as well as Fukien province op posite Formosa | Japanese journalists reported ithat Chi Pen-yu, a member of jMao's purge committee, vid) Communist Secretary - General} Teng Hsiao-ping' and Deputy Premier Tao Chu have "failed to bow their heads and admit] Itheir crimes." Their influence after six months of the was described as. still \deep-rooted."" Chi is €eported alsa to have} a discussion group . that Lin Shao-chi. still re | osed| admitted a | | bellion in| | | aed | reported in| Tibet, Man-} yravince, | 4 | Laan purge | very | change at the Macdonald-Cartier Free- High ' traffic in the thound » was block- about hours. --Oshaga Times way uses admit that he op Mao we to on four and has '"'only Photo proposing a reactionary line.'"'! gy nounced here the indefinite layoff of 95 employees of its axle and transmission plant. A spokesman said the layoff "would bring employment into line with passenger car production schedules', He said the employment of those in the foundry and engine plants here would not be affected Matheson Arrives In Singapore SINGAPORE (AP) John R. Matheson, parlia- mentary secretary to Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson, arrived here today for talks with island republic leaders on world problems, particularly Vietnam and China. .. In THE TIMES Today .. ~P.9 Pp, 6 Strect Beautification Discussed By Merchants -- P. 15 County Approves Three Mill Increose Crushmen Triumph Despite Penolties Ann Landers--10 Ajox New 20 I Cheer 16 1867 | 1967 ering News-- co CENTENNIAL FEATURE Scouts in Oshawa have been active for more than 50 years. For a Centennial year look at the post and future see Page 9. Comigs Edi

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy