Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Mar 1967, p. 28

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28 THE OSHAWA TIMES, We dnesday, March 29, 1967 LOGEXPO CLEARS BACKLOG OF MAIL The Manager of Logexpo, the housing service for the 1967 world's fair, sits hap- pily among a pile of letters representing the last of a huge backlog going out to prospective Expo visitors. The office to date has re- served room for 400,000 who will spend a total of 2,000,- 000 bed-nights in Montreal. --CP Wirephoto Full Legal Status For Unions Recommended In Windsor WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) --The Windsor Chamber of Commerce recommended today that trade} unions be given full legal status, enabling them to sue) and be sued. The brief, to be presented to} the Rand commission inquiring into Ontario labor problems, also sought retention of injunc- tions in labor disputes. The commission, a one-man inquiry by Ivan C. Rand, for- mer justice of the Supreme Court, opened hearings Tues- jday with submissions from the |Windsor and District Labor Council and a private citizen. BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE Failure To Reply To Query On Income Tax Nets Fines: BOWMANVILLE -- Failure to reply to a request for in- formation sent by régistered| partment brought fines for two Newcastle men in Magistrate's| Court here Tuesday. Gordon L. Gray will pay $50 and $5 costs, as an alternative, and Henry Demark, RR 2, $75 and $5.50 costs, or 10 days. HIT CRUISER A 19-year-old Toronto student was fined $25 and costs, or five days, on conviction for careless driving. Lynn Barbara Barnacott, 45) Crossington Crescent, said she was unfamiliar with this area and entered Highway 35 from entirely sign. She collided with a sout bound police cruiser driven by |Constable E. G. mail by the Income Tax De-| borough But the presence of the royal commission helped spark a strike here by 100 employees of Hiram Walker and Sons Ltd. WALKED OFF JOBS Works in the rack warehouse, blending and bottling depart- ments, members of Local 61 of the Distillery Workers Union, staged a wildcat strike Tuesday afternoon when the company barred two employees from at- tending the hearings as observ- ers. The company allowed the lo- cal's president, Robert Dupuis, to attend but prevented two other union executives from overlooking the stop Hope, Peter- resulting in a total of \$900 damage. |DROVE CARELESSLY A Castleton man. was fined with seven days|$75 and $8 costs, or 10 days, fol- lowing conviction for careless driving. Albert Andre Viaene, RR 8, jpulled off the road at Ajax and jslept for four hours then con- tinued east on Highway 401 at 3 a.m. East of Newcastle his car left the highway, crossed jthe median and rammed a westbound car transport owned by. Charlton Transport, Bond Street East, Oshawa. Police estimated damage to Taunton Road on the wrong side|the car at $800 and $500 to the of the triangular traffic island'trailer. Chocolate Brown Oil Downs Gulls, Choked To Death LONDON (AP) -- The white-| feathered gannet soared mag- nificently 20 feet above the sea.| Suddenly, with closed wings, it dived in search of food. The bird emerged from the water coated with chocolate-brown oil, unable to fly, choking to death It was one of thousands of bird and marine-life victims of the Torrey Canyon, the Ameri- can-owned tanker wrecked on the Seven Stones reef off Land's End. As millions of gallons of oil from the tanker washed towards the English south coast, marine biologists and ornithologists ex- pressed fear for the fauna that) live by the sea. Casualties among the gulls,| cormorants, guillemots, puffins and gannets already are being) counted in thousands. A spokes-} man of the Royal Society for! the Prevention of Cruelty to Ani-| mals estimated more than 15,-| 000 birds have died so far and another 30,000 probably will die! after being trapped in the oil slick. The oil clogs their feath- ers, preventing them from fly ing, and often chokes them to death. RETURN AFTER WINTER This month the guillemots, ra zorbills and puffins gather in huge flocks 20 miles out afier wintering at sea. Then they fly in to nest and each lays a single egg. Apart from those killed by the spreading ooze thousands more may change their breed- ing places. Even before the oil hit the beaches the herring gulls and! kittiwakes were affected. Wad- ing birds such as sandpipers, redshanks and oyster catchers were next as the oil. polluted shores. SITTERS' RULES SET LAS VEGAS (AP)--A_ baby- sitter who strikes an unruly child or sneaks a cigarette with- out the parents' permission could wind up in jail for eight) months and be fined $500 under | a new city ordinance. Babysit- | ters employed by agencies must | be 21 years old, in good health, | and must not smoke except with on. Fresh - water birds, such as |herons, coots and kingfishers, also will be in danger if the oil gets into tidal creeks. All that the bird lovers can do is to scramble over the rocks, picking up the bedrag- gled, oil - covered victims and rush them to RSPCA clinics for cleaning with detergents. leaving their jobs. The men then struck the dis- tillery firm and caused the lay- | h-|off of 300 other employees for): the afternoon. Edward Baillargeon, presi- dent of the labor council, told the commission that employees at Chrysler Canada Ltd., here BRIEFING OF JOHNSON NEW YORK (AP)--The de- fence department denies state- * iments in William Manchester's - |book that President Johnson had not been advised on procedures for ordering nuclear retaliation in the event of an attack follow- ing the Kennedy assassination. Security officials in the Ken- + |\nedy administration also denied that Johnson had not been briefed. The U.S. atomic attack code was carried in a football- shaped satchel that lay in the presidential jet which took John- son and the body of Kennedy back to Washington from Dallas Nov. 22, 1963. Kennedy officials said that at the late president's insistence Johnson had been made _tho- roughly familiar on the contents of the satchel. The Death of a President: "The difficulty was that John- ison had no idea of what was in |the bag. He knew that it existed, but he hadn't been briefed about the contents, and if the thunder- bolt of all-out war struck that afternoon, the country's retalia- tory arsenal could be spiked until he had been led through Taz Shepard's primers for the first time." WAS JFK AIDE Capt. Tazewell Shepard was a military aide to President Ken- nedy. Manchester also. writes: "Had Russia attacked across the DEW (Distant Early Warn- ing) line, the greatest military establishment in the history of the world might easily have been musclebound during the 15 \fateful minutes of warning time and perhaps even afterward, when second-strike capacity be- came a factor." A spokesman for the defence department issued a statement Manchester says in the book,;Tuesday saying: "The statements carried by the press services attributed to William Manchester bearing on the nuclear readiness of the United States on Nov, 22, 1963, were untrue. Manchester Claim Denied By Defence Department "On that date, Lyndon John- son, as vice-president and as president, was fully aware of the procedures used to authorize the release of nuclear weapons in retaliation against attack on the! United States." \SAYS PHONES TIED UP Manchester also says there was a slowdown in commercial telephone service because of the great load of calls in the hours immediately following the assas- sination. He says phones in the Senate and House of Represent- atives offices, the White House and the signal corps had been paralysed temporarily. According to Manchester's ac- count, Senator Edward Kennedy roamed the streets.in Washing- ton; trying the phones of stran- gers, until he got through to then - Attorney - General Robert Kennedy, to learn whether their brother was dead. The defence department said: Governm ental communica- tions, military and civil, were fully operational at all times and were far in excess of any requirement arising out of any security emergency. Those se- cure communications operate in- -- of commercial sys- tem The defence department also took issue with a passage in the book which says that fears of an international plot to overthrow the United States government prompted D e fence Secretary Robert McNamara to alert every American military base around the world the moment he heard Kennedy had been shot in Dallas. WAS NO CHANGE The department said: "The joint staff did not order any change in the state of alert of the armed forces following the tion of Presid Kennedy. However, the joint staff did send a message to the commands informing them of the assassination and cautioning that they should be especially on the alert." The book, published by Harper) and Row, had an April 6 release date for reviews, but the em- bargo was broken Tuesday by Women's Wear Daily, a tabloid newspaper for the fashion trade, after the book went on sale pre- maturely in Pittsburgh. The book runs 647 pages,plus charts, diagrams and a list of sources. It sells for $10 in the US. | Too Much Time In Field Denied OTTAWA (CP) -- A charge that Canadian university pro- fessors are spending too much time on fields other than teach- ing drew a denial Tuesday from a university official. The charge made Monday by John Rudolph of Calgary is "unfounded" and shows a 'Jack of knowledge about to- day's university courses," said J. G. Parr, dean of applied science at University of Wind- sor. : "Some people make the mis- take of thinking that the uni- versity curriculum is the same as when they went to school 20 or more years ago," Mr. Parr said in an interview Mr. Rudolph's complaint was made at a plenary session of the Canadian Institute of Min- ing and Metallurgy annual meeting. Canada's minerals industry has only itself to blame for the current shortage of skilled manpower, Mr. Parr said. Uni- versities need more co-opera- tion from industry to improve the situation. are drifting toward strike ac- tion because of grievances which in some cases had been outstanding for two years. SEES 4TH STRIKE log of 700 grievances had "re- sulted in three strikes and we can see ourselves drifting into a fourth." He said that the company, of which he is an employee, had deliberately allowed grievances to pile up so that they 'end up being negotiated across the bargaining table at the time of a new contract." Mr. Baillargeon recom- mended that unions be allowed to strike during the life of a contract, as now exists in the United States, to 'create a power balance between man- agement and the unions so that grievances would be speedily resolved." Trevelyn Brown, a Chrysler employee, submitted a brief as a private individual, suggesting that consumer prices should be stabilized for as long as work- ers' contracts were operative. He said that prices of con- sumer products rose so rapidly that wage boosts won through new contracts were nullified by the end of contracts. NOW all-new SABRE TOPS to. go with your poydebee Mans SHORTS AS | SLIMS--Sizes 8 t SHORTS--Sizes 8 31 Simcoe St. South "TOPS" IN SPORTSWEAR . . COLORFUL - TOPS--Sizes 8 to 20, 8.98-12.98 WARD'S DRY GOODS LTD. y '0 20, 10.98-14.98 to 20--8.98-12.98 725-1151 He said that an existing back- | ' ¥ Supplied by THE OSHAWA WHOLESALE LIMITED supply depot for progressive independents CATSUP HELP US CELEBRATE OUR 16th BIRTHDAY FREE CAKE While Shopping March 30th, 3ist and April ist, have a FREE PIECE OF Birthday CAKE. FREE COFFEE You can also enjoy a FREE CUP OF COFFEE with your piece of Birthday Cake FREE 163 BAGS OF GROCERIES: ENTER OUR ANNIVERSARY CONTEST TODAY! Entry blanks ere available at the checkouts. You could win a $16. bag of groceries or a $16. IGA Food Certificate. 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