Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Mar 1967, p. 3

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'lin lave urch ffee aid. Jit Jit if Flooding In West LONDON, Ont rivers in western Ontario but observers feared a warm rain could worsen the situation. Ice jams in the Grand River spilled water Thursday Highway 104 south of Grand Valley, and flooded several fields north of Belwood Lake near Fergus. At Galt and Brantford, the Grand is about five feet above normal winter levels. At Southampton ice Wednesday night piled up on piers seemed to have moved into Lake Huron, The Saugeen River is virtually free of ice but a great deal of snow remains to which I (CP)--Minor| flooding was reported on some over|curred. Some ice is Begins | Ontario At Paisley and Durham, some minor flooding of fields and! yards was reported. | On the Maitland River, in |Wingham, the usual spring jflooding of river flats has oc- jammed 'east of Highway 4 bridges but was causing no concern. | At Chatham, Thames River waters are only six feet nine) inches above normal, well be- low the flood danger point, city waterworks officials said Thursday night. The Sydenham River at Wal- laceburg is free of ice and most of the snow in the area has melted, leading local officials to feel any danger of flooding is be melted in the area. past. King Seeks Successor After Greek Premier Quits ATHENS (AP)--King Constan- tine. began Jooking for a new Greek government today after attempts to bring Andreas Pap- andreou to trial for treason re- sulted in the resignation of Premier John Paraskevopoulos. Because Constantine accepted Paraskevopoulos' resignation immediately Thursday night, it was believed that the king had a successor in mind. Specula- tion focused on Panyiotis Canel- lopoulos, head of the rightist National Radical Union, one of Greece's two biggest parties. Observers expected Canellop- oulos to be opposed by the Cen- tre Union, Greece's other major party which is headed by An- dreas Papandreou's father, for- mer premier George Papand- reou. | The fall of Paraskevopoulos' caretaker government, named last December to prepare for general elections May 28, re- sulted from attempts to bring Andreas to trial as a leader of zation of military officers and an attempt by his father to ex- tend his immunity from prosecu- tion as a member of Parlia- ment. The Aspida group {is charged with plotting to end the mon- archy and make Greece a neutralist, socialist republic. Fifteen officers have been con- victed of treason in the case but Andreas has escaped be- cause members of Parliament are immune from prosecution. His immunity would expire with the dissolution of Parlia- ment before the elections. His father proposed that all such immunities extend until new Parliament convened. The Radical Union opposed the idea, and Paraskevopoulos I sided with Papandreou then withdrew the Centre Union's support from the government and the premier, needing both major parties for|ten Of course not. Actually Jean Eva Gagnon, 16-month old daughter of Mr. Mrs. Roland T. Gagnon of Hudson, N.H., is a peace- able little girl.. What real- and By RODNEY PINDER JONDON (AP) yon as scrap iron. tion to the battle to drive the a majority in Parliament, re the leftist Aspida secret organi- Progress Seen In Efforts To Avert N.Y. Paper Strike :!r'swves ist in' NEW YORK (AP)--Progress| was reported today in efforts to prevent a strike in the news- paper industry here. Optimism rose following a series of negotiations that con-| tinued past the midnight Thurs-| day night exploration of con- tracts between five of the city's major newspapers and 10 unions. No Decisions So Chief Quits | CAPE CROKER, Ont. (CP)-- Failure by the Indian affairs department to give Indians enough chance to make their own decisions was cited by Wilmer Nadjiwon Thursday night as reason for his resigna- tion as chief of the Cape Croker Indian Reserve this week. Mr. Nadjiwon, who had been chief for the past three years, said in an interview that the system of having both a super- intendent and a community de- velopment officer doesn't seem to have worked at Cape Croker, because the two men work at cross purposes. Mr. Nadjiwan said high offi- cials in the Indian affairs. de- partment seem to favor giving more discretionary powers to Indians, but the new approach apparently is not filtering down to local officials. A member of the Cape Croker council will replace Mr. Nadjiwan as chairman until a signed. supertanker's oil from England's southern beaches and a cam- paign for international legal ac- tion to deal with repetitions of the disaster. With all the oil apparently out of the wreck, the admiralty said there would be no further bomb- the west tip of England. Nor will divers be sent down to inspect Theodore W. Kheel, chief me-|the oil tanks. diator in the negotiations said at 3:10 a.m.: "There will obviously not be any strike today but the situa- tion is still not settled." r Officers of all 10 unions|ment "We regard it as oil - free scrap fron," An official Prime Minister Wilson's govern- a spokesman said. statement said has asked for an early emerged from a meeting Thurs-|meeting of the intergovernmen- day night and announced a set-|tal tlement was possible. § Kheel made the no - strike|it statement as tween representatives of publishers and union were recessed until to- night. REPORTS PROGRESS "fl He_ said progress had heen made on some issues involving |cape the deliverers. Also, talks be- Th tween the printers union and the publishers had produced "excel-|°W' Maritime Consultative Or- ganization. The government said was preparing proposals for negotiations be-|action when a ship sinks out- the |side the deliverers|threatens a country's interests. The chief target: will be the big tanker fleets sailing under territorial waters but ags of convenience," usually Liberia's or Panama's, to es- taxes and union wages. e Torrey Canyon, although ned by the Union Oil Co. of lent progress on some of the|California, was registered in matters discussed." Liberia. Negotiations between the} Meanwhile it appeared that printers union and newspaper |the broken wreckage of the 38,- representatives were interrupted |99.gross-ton tanker had given when the printers at The Daily |p News began a union meeting at the last of the 35,800,000 gal- lons of crude oil that were in 2 a.m., for the announced ra her holds when she ran on the pose of discussing the status o negotiations. The last editions of the morn- ung newspaper had gone to press before the start of the meeting, which was permitted by the union's contract with The| Daily News. | Videotape Next': For Libraries cat byelection is held to fill the chief's post. Lake Pollution Tests Planned | OTTAWA (CP)--The federal resources department will es- tablish a research centre at Burlington, Ont. this summer to study pollution in Lake On- tario. The. department said Thurs- day it will spend about $5,727,- 500 during the next two years to develop the centre. Work will begin this spring on the renovation of an exist- ing building at Pier 29, ac- quired from the Hamilton har- bor commission, and on con- struction of power, gas and water lines to the pier. Next year, the government will build a workshop to house ships and small craft and ma- rine equipment. A_ heating plant, sea-wall and marine rail- way to the workshop also will be built. TORONTO (CP) 'Education Aides' Course Offered TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario's jcommunity colleges will offer a two-year course for "education assistants" whose job will be relieve teachers of clerical and mechanical chores, an edu- ion department official said Wednesday. Roger Allan of Sudbury, the --Libraries | department's mid - northern of the future should include|area superintendent, told guid- videotape archives where the ance counsellors attending the public will be able to view re-/annual convention of the On- runs of public affairs and edu- |tar; cational TV programs, the|the president of the Ontario Li- braries Association said Thurs-| co} fall io Educational Association new course will open this at North York's Seneca lege and several other com- ay. munity colleges. Al Bowron, chief librarian of the Scarborough public library, told the Ontario Association for Continuing Education that if libraries are to provide a use- ful service in the community they should broaden their func- tions to include television, films and records as well as books. He suggested the public li- brary should become an_in- tegral part of Ontario's pro- posed educational television system. PRODUCE PROGRAMS The subject was introduced by John Ross of the Ontario education department's educa- tional TV branch, who said the branch has produced 150 half- hour programs for use in the current academic year and plans 200 programs in 1967-68. New Home Recipe Reducing Plan It's simple how quickly one may lose pounds of unsightly fat right in your own home, Make this home recipe yourself. It's easy, no trouble at all and costs little. Just go to your drug store and ask for four ounces of Naran Concentrate. Pour this into a pint bottle and add enough pefruit juice to fill the bottle. 'ake two tablespoons full a day as needed and follow the Naran Plan. If your first purchase does not lose bulky fat and help regain slender more graceful curves; if reducible pounds and inches of excess fat don't disappear from neck, chin, arms, abdomen, hips, calves and ankles just return the empty bottle for your money back. Follow this easy way en- dorsed by many who have tried this plan and help bring back alluring curves and graceful slenderness. Note how quickly bloat cy me ag ai dk much bet- ter you feel. More alive, youthful ghow you ea simple easy way to peat appearing and active, ' Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation RETIREMENT SAVINGS PLAN Seves Income Tex and provides Retirement Income % Government Approved %& No loading fees or charges t%& Payments made before Feb- ruory 28, 1967 are deduct- ible for 1966 Income Tax purposes, %& Investment options -- Stocks --Bonds -- Mortgages & Official receipt for Tax pur- poses, CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION North 19 Simeoe Street 723-5221 23 King Street West, 623-2527 OPEN Het 1GHTS nd @ SATURDAYS RATHER FIGHT THAN...? (cmon) ly hapened is she fell on the end of an arm of a couch and "'raised" her own "Eas- ter Egg." jan says it'll be gone in ab- out three weeks. ---- - | U K C 0 Fi h |The first ag agg excusable to say now the evi- priety of (Mr. Turcott) in cast-|dence is not ready." ® . oncentrates n 1g t ing reflection on the character) 5 |Seven Stones reef during tha. conservatives --Britain to-|storm March 17 { 7 "|day wrote off the Torrey Can-|time since then the sea around) with the Speaker within 48 hours|Mr. Hinman |the reef was clear of oil The government turned its at-|more than a mile. In Quebec Crime |. MONTREAL (CP) --Director,into the province's administra- \J. Adrien Robert of the Quebec! tion of justice. Provincial Police Thursday con- cies in crime-fighting in Quebec/inal code which prevent police at a royal commission inquiry|from seizing telephone equip- Alta. Member On Defensive After Attack On Socreds EDMONTON (CP)--A proce-|sinuations he has made, for dural argument Thursday de- which he is prepared to assume layed debate on a motion in the/ responsibility, together with evi- Alberta legislature that has al-|dence justifying such charges." ready placed on the defensive) Mr. Maccagno said the first the man who last month took on part calls Mr. Turcott's conduct two members of the Social)into question and that he should Credit government by himself.) be allowed to make a statement, The 15-minute argument ended|then withdraw from the house when Speaker Art Dixon decided! during further discussion. to wait until today before ruling) But, he said, before this {s cagno, agreed with the decision but)quired time, the house should said he would not challenge it.|proceed with the first part. | The motion sponsored by Mr. Manning is aimed at Garth Tur- for time until at least Tuesday cott (NDP -- Pincher Creck-|to prepare his "statement of de- who last month fence." questioned the propriety of some) «This {s the most serious |some land dealings by the mu-|thing that's ever happened to jalcipal affairs minister, A. J.|me. It affects me and my whole | Hooke, and said the former Pro-| future and I must be given time | vincial ag aged nee W. Pik to prepare." jman, may have used his cabinet! at Manning replied; "These |post to further his own ends. insinuations were aed as far The motion is in two parts./pack as last fall, and it is in- Family physic- Mr. Turcott said that after and reputation of other .. . : mem bers without presenting) @0ling the documents he sald evidence." ning said last week there was a|MUST FILE CHARGES no evidence of wrongdoing on The second directs him to file|the part of either Mr. Hooke or "For Beaches; Tanker Scrap irciie sss sonnet by wienet mao thi | For the first for|of passage, "any and all spe-| "All I'm asking is five days leific charges relative to the in-jand he's denying it." Mr. Turcott asked the house| 'Director Lists Deficiencies | Fighting jment as evidence in gambling cases and said the theory that nonsense. He told the five-man commis- sion inquiring into the judicial system, police methods and or- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, Merch 31, 1967 3 Crash Clues | In Recorders | NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- The f f In his second day of testimony, legalizing gambling would drive recovery of a Delta jet's flight tinued his inventory of deficien-|he critized sections of the crim-|the underworld from this field is'and voice recorders may pro-|Canada's 12 medical schools, vide clues to the cause of the! jcrash that killed 18 persons Thursday. The recorders were found at Interns To Carry Medicare North ° TORONTO (CP) -- Eighty four senior medical students and interns, seven each from will head to Canada's far northwest this summer to cele- brate Centennial Year by give ganized crime that he has tried|the scene of the crash and sent|i"& Medical care to Eskimos. without success to get the fed- {eral justice department. to lift the ban on seizing telephone or telegraph equipment in gam- bling cases. Federally-chartered card clubs which charge an hourly rental of {10 cents to players but take no |"cut" from the pot were known \to be covers for illicit betting 'which is tied in with interna- tional syndicates. He said the experience of Brit- jain and some states of the U.S | shows that legalizing gambling is not a solution to the problem of underworld control, legal.""" Larger fees for witnesses were proposed by the QPP head to /overcome the fear people have| of losing money when they get involved in a trial. Reviewing the division if tasks| between internatinal and local jcrime organizations, he said the! jlatter concentrate on bank rob-| jberies, hijacking, arson, fraudu-} lent bankruptcy and _ prostitu-! tion. | €XP067 Four Seasons Travel Are exclusive agents for CANA- DIANA Villoge. ONLY _accommo- dation--Annex to EXPO grounds. fi} (250_ yards | $6.25 per person based on party of 4, | Also inquire about eur Bus Tours, Phone 576-3131 |to Washington for examination. | _ Civil Aercnautics Board inves-| tigators, meanwhile, continued |digging through bits of the air-| \liner that crashed into a motel | filled with high school children. Both recorders showed fire damage, but. a C.A.B. spokes- }man said ihey appeared to be in |good shape. A flight recorder ltranscribes such things as alti- tude, rate of speed, ascent, de scent and direction. A voice re- jcorder records all conversations in the cockpit. HITS MOTEL | Five pilots and an Inspector on a point of order raised by|done, the second part of the mo-| "The underworld will infiltrate for the federal aviation agency |Opposition Leader Mike Mac-|tion should be debated. Then, if anything it thinks offers the op-died aboard natn the four-engine : : Mr. Turcott failed to produce | portunity for easy money, even Delta Air Lines jet as it cart- Premier FE. C. Manning dis- specific charges within the re-ji¢ the undertaking concerned is|wheeled flaming into the Hilton jInn motel. Twelve persons per- ished in the path of the plane Nine Wisconsin high school girls and a maintenance man| died in the motel, At least 11 Walmsley & Magill OFFICE EQUIP. LTD. 725-3506 9 KING ST. E., OSHAWA were injured. Today, it's just one of thousands of shopping areas tant to consider Canadian-made that offer Canadian shoppers an incredible array of quality products--strong evidence of the good things that happen when people SHOP CANADIAN. Shopping in Ontario has changed a lot. The Province's tremendous industrial growth has helped make more and better products available than ever before, Now, Ontario has stores of every size and in the world. homes. Bat in Ontario, 73% of ail dwellings are owner-occupied, description offering a vast selection of the best But, incredibly enough, this is only the begin- © Ontario's growth has incinded plans for the future, Now products the world can offer--most of them made tight here in Canada, sales success means more jobs and higher wages. Youracceptance of Canadian-made goodsis already paying big dividends in Ontario, Our unemploy- ment figure is only 2.5% Earned personal incomes are 18% higher per capita than the national average and our standard of living ranks with the highest ning. The best is yet to come. And you can help, One way: 'when shopping for price and quality, Canada's and stores offer more products and better products than ever before It seems like only yesterday this was a farmer's field. Their ONTARIO'S GROWTH RECORD @ During 1966, the number of people employed in Ontario rose by 102,000. At the same time, salaries and wages climbed by 12% to SIL6 billion. @ In many parts of the world, few people own their own we have 21 universities and more than 40 other institutions of When shopping for price and quality, Shop Canadian @ ONTARIO GOVERNMENT TRADE CRUSADE Department of Economics and Development Smt e

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