Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Mar 1967, p. 3

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sana anne | QUAKERS DEFY This group of Michigan Quakers defied the govern- ment Sunday by giving $1,400 to Canadian Quakers to buy medical supplies for civilians in North Vietnam. GOVERNMENT They are pictured walking across the Ambassador Bridge at Detroit to pre- sent the Canadians with a symbolic $1 bill in a Bible to demonstrate completion of the money transfer. BY LANDREVILLE Appeal Sent To Pearson TORONTO (CP)--Mr. Justice Leo Landreville, who faces re- moval from the bench of the Ontario Supreme Court for al- leged improper behavior, said Sunday he has sent a letter to Prime Minister Pearson asking that his case be referred to the Supreme Court of Canada or that he be allowed to appear before the bar of the House of Commons. Mr. Justice Landreville said he told Mr. Pearson in a letter mailed Wednesday that he has been denied natural justice. The joint committee of the Commons and Senate voted 12 to 4 in favor of the judge's re- moval from the bench after hearing testimony concerning his acceptance of free stock of Northern Ontario Natural Gas Co., which he later sold for $117,000. Introduction of addresses to the Governor-General asking for removal of the judge is expected after the Easter recess of Par- liament. "At the outset I do know that my public image has been soiled by my very appearance in seven proceedings of the joint com- mittee and that I may be an embarrassment," the judge wrote to Mr. Pearson. MADE DECISION "My usefulness on the bench may be considered most ques- tionable. But I decided five years ago that to resign is an admission of guilt,' he wrote. "On the contrary, I reaffirm my innocence. I am not allowed to retire, which I would con- sider." "T beg of you to order the tabling before every member of the House, of a copy of our memorandum and that of Mr. Ollivier, parliamentary counsel, on the precedents and authori- ties quoted. Surely it is not too much to ask that members be informed before they vote." * Mr. Justice Landreville said he was told he was not on trial when he asked to bring charac- ter witness before the joint com- mittee. He wrote Mr. Pearson, "I have yet to know or be told what I am accused of and yet to have a trial or a hearing in accord- ance with the basic principles of natural justice and according to law as enunciated by the Supreme Court of Canada." "I wish to remind you, sir, that security of tenure of a Supreme Court judge as guar- anteed by Section 99 of the British North America Act, is not to be considered with the formality of an amendment to with every historical precedent, the law and the opinion of authorities on the subject." "There being no accusation, no trial, there being no question as to the performance of my duties as a judge for over 10 years, I must conclude, there- being liquidated out of office on mere suspicion of an act done prior to my appointment. "In the alternative, may I appeal to you, sir, as prime minister of Canada, in view of the foregoing, to recognize my right to appear at the bar of justice in the House of Com- mons." Mr. Justice Landreville, in re- viewing recent events for Mr. Pearson's benefit, quoted Magi- strate A. J. Marck's judgment that there was no evidence to support allegations of municipal corruption. Mr. Justice Landreville was mayor of Sudbury in 1956 when Northern Ontario Natural Gas was granted a municipal natural gas franchise. He received an option on 10,000 NONG shares at $2.50 each. Early in 1957, he exercised the stock option, selling 2,500 shares at $10 to cover the purchase of all 10,000. He sold the remaining 7,500 shares over the next four years, turning a profit of $117,- Se Ss i) Mr. Justice Landreville said he received the stock option because of his friendship with NONG President Ralph K. Far- ris and because he intended to take a directorship with NONG after his term as mayor. The judge denied doing any favors for Mr. Farris or NONG while he was mayor or of using influence to help the company obtain the municipal franchise. Municipal corruption charges against him were dismissed by Magistrate Marck at a prelim- inary hearing in 1964. A year ago, Justice Minister Lucien Cardin named Ivan C. AT EAST,.GULF RESORTS with firecrackers. A them to jail burst East and Gulf Coast resorts, to climax their holiday vacations. 16 youths were NEW YORK (AP) -- Youth Early Sunday, had its fling during: the Easter arrested by Fort weekend, mainly at several police after they pelted officers Youth Has Fling Easter Weekend high school Lauderdale van taking into tlames been cut by ing midnight Saturday night. By the time the fracas was vroken up at 2 a.m., THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, March 27, 1967 3 TO CLIMAX HOLIDAY VACATIONS | | Broadway Rolls Out Carpet For Special Tony Awards NEW YORK (AP) -- Broad-|poser John Kander and lyricist way rolled out its best red car-|Freq Ebb, sharing the medal- pet Sunday night to present the lion for the best' musical: 4 Tony awards for theatre excel-|--. ee panera Prince for his direction; to RECITE POETRY Sounds at the gathering in- cluded mainly bongo drums, bells, guitars and group sing- ing. Some recited poetry and students began riot- a policeman had a broken bottle and But it wasn't all rioting and ar- rests as the mod set staged a West Coast "'love-in' and a Manhattan "be-in." Police heaved sighs of relief Sunday as more than 40,000 col- legians headed back to classes, leaving some beaches strewn with beer cans and other de- bris. At Fort Lauderdale, Fla., the bulk of 30,000 college boys and girls began a mass exodus to various campuses. There were 500 arrests for drunkenness, rowdyism, loitering and inter- fering with police from Thurs- day through Sunday. but the driver quickly opened the door and averted serious 1n- jury. At Biloxi, Miss., 85° youths were arrested on such charges of disorderly. conduct, destroy- ing property, drunken driving, interfering with highway traffic and indecent exposure. TEAR DOWN PIERS Police Chief Louise Rosetti said: "It's a mess. They've been breaking windshields of cars, tearing up lawn chairs, and tearing down piers to build bonfires." At Ocean Drive Beach, &°., several hundred college a some 150 students were in jail. In Hollywood, Calif., early made speeches. In New York's Central Park, lence and take its place among the Motion Picture Academy |gcore: Sunday about 500 teen-agers be- ae ; to Patricia Zipprodt for came unruly as they left the phd gle of the bears- awards and television's Em-|costuming; Boris Aronson for International Teen Fair. They rr evar a Phi staged the mys. scenic design, and Ronald Field, were tossing bottles and rocks city's first "'be - in," featuring The hour - long 2Ist annual|choreography. at passing cars when police closed in. Fifteen were arrested but there were no injuries and little property damage. At Los Angeles, 4,500 bearded and mini-skirted hippies gath- love and "happenings." The girls wore painted faces "love" printed across the forehead--while a number --such as of the boys were bare-chested and barefoot under sunny the international spectacles of;Kander and Ebb for the best Tony award presentation, tele- vised from the Shubert Theatre by the American Broadcasting Co.,. was the 'best show on Broadway Sunday night -- all other Broadway theatres were €xP067 Four Seasons Travel Are exclusive agents for CANA- ered at Elysian Park Sunday skies. dark for the Easter holiday. |] DIANA Village. ONLY . accommo- for a "'love-in." One group of about 1,000 The musical Cabaret and anjj (fon anne™ te EXPO grounds. R Ph ag 4 Foci vith us, cist dbnbigge go fellowship English play, The pe gene $6.00 per person based on aby,' sai eter Bergman, about every 15 minutes or so ing, scooped up 12 of hte 16],, .. . tg helped organize the en- by joining hands in a "love silver nviillibes. Me SS Seaet Oe Pe oN campment. "So is Buddah." circle,' Barbara Harris of The Apple| Phone 576-3131 |Tree and Robert Preston of I\* |do! I do! took the top awards| for. musical performances and} Closure Seen fore, that I am in jeopardy of|! 38 Perish In Traffic At least 49 Canadians lost) period, 38 dying in traffic | A Canadian Press survey) from 6 p.m. Thursday to mid-| night Sunday, local times, showed 15 persons died in traffic} in Quebec and 11 in British Columbia, including seven in a} three-car crash at Fernie, near) the Alberta-B.C. border. The Canadian Highway Safety 57 persons would die in traffic) accidents during the holiday. A total of 14 persons died in teen - agers fire and three the Welland Canal. BOY SMOTHERED A nan died in hospital after a 10-year-old boy was smothered him. A professional skier was small jump and struck a tree and a man died from head injuries suffered when he fell down a flight of stairs in a billiard hall. A youngster is also believed to have drowned in the Vermil- lion River, 18 miles from Sud- bury Manitoba recorded four deaths on highways and Nova Scotia had two traffic deaths. Prince Edward Island and Alberta each reported one traf- fic fatality Alberta also had one death in a hunting accident. Newfoundland, New Brunswick and Saskatchewan were fatality- ee, During the Easter weekend holiday period in 1966, 67 per- sons died in accidents across Canada, including 53 traffic deaths. The survey does not include industrial or natural deaths, known suicides or slayings. Closure Seen Possibility PORT HOPE (CP)--Russell Honey, chairman of the Liberal caucus in Parliament, says the government may have to use closure to force armed forces unification into the law books. Closure aims at forcing an end to Commons, debate on a certain bill. The bill, the Canadian Armed Forces Reorganization Act, has been vigorously opposed by the Conservatives, along with sev- eral retired staff officers. NDP members have criticized De- fence Minister Hellyer's han- dling of the bill. Council had predicted that 47 to 8 000 tons of crude oil, lese aped, spread the black carpet to most of Britain's south coast. The Torrey Canyon split al-|once emulsified, will spread and being pinned under his car and|most exactly amidships and the when a mound of silage fell onjapart with the bows at an angle killed when he went over ajtion. CN Ferry Stuck In Ice Off North Sydney, N.S. By COLIN FROST | ,AND'S END, England (AP)! ping slowly from the reef and By THE CANADIAN PRESS |The giant American tanker Tor- |sinking into deeper waters. The whole of the afterdeck section, janother their lives in accidents during|the Seven Stones rocks today, lripped by an explosion soon after|unable to fly the Easter weekend holiday) cpijling a new sea of oil towards|the 61,263-ton tanker struck the|wings were clogged with oil. fouled beaches of|reef 10 days ago, was under} |water with only the funnel show-|some species may become ex-|" 7 A small army of bird|P@™y jrey Canyon lay split in two on} jthe already - |southwest England. Thousands of Britons were| mobilized to fight one of the greatest pollution threats in Bri-|insured for $16,500,000 she is the tish history. Huge seas during the night wrecked apart. the amount that already has More than 70 miles of coast-| In places the oil today two halves lay about 25 yards of 40 degrees to the stern sec- ing above the waves. in merchant marine history. In the Torrey Canyon/addition, her cargo of 120,000 If she sinks completely|tons of crude oil she will spew out an estimated/$1,680,000 and now is causing twice |havoc as it slithers towards the |into deep water from resorts of Cornwall in the Eng- lish Channel. clear from the black patches already scarring the beaches that they face an almost hope- less fight. 49 Killled, Giant Tanker Splits Oil Covers Beaches One expert than 15,000 gulls, corm other sea birds have 30,000 were The stern appeared to be slip- | tinct. Nearly 1,000 feet long, and/lovers was mobilized many as possible fro) largest and most expensive loss|FEAR FOR OYSTER was worth \of Cornwall oyster fa' resort. estimated more} because Nature lovers feared that} Men also worked around the clock trying to save rich oyster|peet growers," beds in river estuaries. Dredges| said. : o moved more than 700,000 oysters ; jis owned by Prince Charles and A sea of 'oil stretched to the/leased to a chain of fi 0 io. f fy teattie. two line, from The Lizard ti New-jhorizon towards the Scilly Isles ntario, four in traffic, Y|/quay, have been polluted by the ~ . advancing oil. drowned when the car in ar slick is 10 inches thick, Gales they were riding plunged into) ocact The worst hit beaches on the at Newquay, Cornwall's leading orants and died and| then. trapped, A their dag! sated }20,000 acres. So far, to save as |2cres. m the oil. | Ss the Duchy "4 uaranteed growers a rm, which 3 7 For Refinery CHATHAM (CP) -- The Can-| ada and Dominion Sugar Co. said Saturday it will close its| went jbeet sugar refinery Friday un- less an additional 2,882 acres of/Marian Seldes sugar beets are available by|Balance and Ian Holm of The statement |the firm cannot make even a} |modest profit without at least!to the com-|librettist has contracted for 17,118 the company | The federal government has) mini-| mum subsidy of about $15 a ton. said|dramatic roles. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 /EARS Beryl Reid of The Killing of | Sister George and Paul Rodgers of The Homecoming took medal- jlions as top stars in straight | drama. Tonys for supporting roles to Joel Grey and Peg Murray, both of Cabarat, and to! of A Delicate Homecoming for_ supporting! | Other awards to Cabaret went producer Harold Prince, Jose Masteroff, com-' Field men will continue con-| |tracting throughout the week. "The decision rests with southwestern Ontario sugar| | WE ARE A PRESCRIPTION PHARMACY ish stores. drug counters everywhere. poFALSE TEETH to the west. Cornish riviera were at Mara- invi i An armada of fishing boats, |zion and Prah Sands, where the| Rock, Slide or Slip? Sedo sphectgs tab dye pr sheet Gu! J r with adc dod mene organs jeiudge was up to 12 inches deep. |, ¥ASTEETM. an tmproved powder eines. reatened. to|ing their work, push rough | Beaches _| to sprin' on upper or lower ithe oll patches spraying deter-lreath, 'Porthtowan, St. Aquos Mtn we Oe ae ee Boch one ie alphabetically clessified'so thet we can gent. The theory is that the oil, | E ¥ ' 2 | Ne asty tast: locate it in seconds. Many are dated for expiration and nas pit dee ht Hs i fap edaglicon Bae Bas footlag. Pasir eer Aisaikaline (non discarded if not dispensed by us before then. The odds is s s cid). i sink, but from the air it was odor 'breath. Get FASTEETH at are that we have in stock the ingredients of any pres- Of course we supply many. other products for your better health and comfort, but our prescription volume is the basic service we concentrate on most. You are | cription, even including those written by physicians in distant cities. SYDNEY, N.S. (CP) -- The CNR ferry William Carson re- mained stuck in ice about six miles off North Sydney, N.S., this morning with 58 passengers aboard. The Carson left North Sydney Saturday night on a routine six - hour run to Port aux Basques, Nfld., but became trapped in ice at the entrance of narrows leading to the har- bor. A department of transport icebreaker, the John A. Mac- donald, is with the Carson, but neither have had much success breaking through the thick ice which is being driven onshore by the wind. A CNR spokesman said the Carson's captain radioed Sun- day night that every time the ferry, which is also built as an icebreaker, moved back to take a run, the ice pressed into the opening. The spokesman said he did not know whether the Carson would be able to head back for North' Sydney. The ferry is about two miles from the near- est land. Meanwhile, ice conditions in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. gen- erally kept transport depart- ment icebreakers busy. GOING IS SLOW | shipping is "still moving, but it is very slow." | Abnormally cold temperatures during the last two months had built up huge ice layers, the heaviest since the department had started a comprehensive | icebreaking program in 1960-61. Three freighters reported Sun-} day to be trapped in ice near Anticosti Island in the northern gulf, were free today as wind and tide shifted the ice. The icebreaker Sir William Alex- TUESDAY, MARCH 28th 7:00 P.M. Wor. Bro. D. R. Wor. Master CEDAR LODGE A.F. A.M. NO. 270 All members are requested to attend a masonic service for our late BRO. ALLAN C. PRITCHARD GENT MEETING ARMSTRONG FUNERAL HOME Masonic Clothing BARNES Bro. C. E. HOUCK Secretary YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medicine. Pick up your prescription if shopping nearby, or we will deliver promptly without extra charge. A great many people entrust us with their prescriptions. May we compound end dispense yours P EASTVIEW PHARMACY 573 King Street East Oshawa PHONE 725-3594 ---- po A SIMPLE ander had been battering her way towards them. The icebreaker d' Tberville | was excorting a freighter to} Dalhousie, N.B., while the Tup- | per was in New Brunswick's | Miramichi Bay to free another' cargo vessel. Capt. Kelso said the '| breaker Sir Humphrey Gilbert is to leave Port aux Basques | to take station off Cape Race, | Nfld. The other icebreaker in| the region, the Labrador, was | standing by near sealing oper-| ations in Notre Dame -- a" northern Newf minutes driving dis H. tance from Oshawa, ALL CASH. (Builders' Prices and Tenders Invited) CALL GORDON CHARLTON 728-8569 Sales Representatiev For KEITH LTD. One of Ontario's Largest Realtors TORONTO BUYER! Advertising Executive locating in Oshawa from Toronto wishes to build 'his own home on a suitable 10 Acre Lot within 10 'SECRET' TO | POPULARITY* "Come alive" in '67! Leave your shyness at home to dance and mix with the active set at Arthur Murray's. Don't be « a sociai "drop-out"! Capt. E. L. Kelso, the depart- thent's ice operations chief who Sunday described ice conditions in the gulf as grim, said today Mr. Honey, Liberal member for Durham in Ontario, in his weekly report to his constitu- ents, says: "The problem the govern- ment will have is a procedural one--getting the bill to a vote. The Conservative party will un- doubtedly launch a filibuster to prevent a decision being taken." Only after wilful attempts to prolong the debate are "pa- tently apparent," would the government consider imple- menting closure. Rand, a retired judge of the APPOINTMENT Supreme Court of Canada, as a federal commissioner to investi- gate Mr. Justice Landreville's stock transactions and to advise whether the dealings constituted misbehavior, Under the British North America Act, high court' judges hold office in good behavior un- til retirement at 75. In a critical report tabled in the Commons last August, Mr. Rand found that Mr. Justice Landreville had proved himself unfit for the proper exercise of his judicial functions. good names to remember }) If you have a Commercial Property To Sell or Lease REG AKER, pres. BILL McFEETERS, vice-pres. SCHOFIELD-AKER 723-2265 | Over 33 years in Business a statute. 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