2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, April 13, 1967 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE [Police Ready For Exp Civil Service Organizations Quebec Minister Says File Applications For Union OTTAWA (CP)--Three civil service organizations represent- ing 100,000 federal workers filed applications for union certifica- tion today as the government formally opened the door to col- lective bargaining by its em- ployees. Board Chairman Jacob Fin- kelman, former head of the Ontario labor relations board, received the certification docu- ments from Claude Edwards, president of the Public Service Alliance of Canada, Bill Kay, head of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, and Roger De- carie, president of the Letter * Carriers Union of Canada. The government gave notice in the Canada Gazette earlier this month that April 13 would be the date for receiving certi- fication bids for about half of the 200,000 federal civil serv- ants covered by the new col- lective bargaining legislation. The alliance laid claim to 80,-| 000 workers in the operational category. The two postal unions, which work together in the postal union council, applied on behalf of about 20,000. There is a five-day period in which other organizations may intervene in the applications. Then the board will check the membership claims and decide on certification, a procedure of about five weeks. After certification, the groups will be free to serve contract Auto Production OTTAWA (CP)--Motor vehi- cle production in March totalled 85,053 units, down nearly 12 per cent from March production last year, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported today. March production this year included 62,905 passenger vehi- cles and 22,148 commercial ve- hicles, compared with 79,455 and 16,870 respectively last year. Total production during the \first three months of 1967 was 238,446 units, also nearly 12 per cent below last year's figure. DBS also reported that Janu- ary shipments of made-in-Can- ada motor vehicles by manufac- turers totalled 76,530 units, 4.5 per cent below the correspond- ling figure for January, 1966. 'Defeated Red Star CHICAGO (AP)--Athletico of Bilbao, Spain, defeated Red |Star of Belgrade, Yugoslavia, |3-1 Wednesday night before |9,786 rain-dampened fans who |came to see the debut of big- time soccer here. Chicago has an entry in the United Soccer Association and |the National Professional Soc- cer League, both professional \leagues which play their first games later this year. Stonefish . demands on the government for the first time. Imperial Order HAMILTON (CP) -- The Im- perial Order, Daughters of the Empire, will try to collect enough money this spring to supply a bookmobile in a needy area in Dominica, the Ontario chapter was told Wednesday. The coast - to - coast: pennies project was announced Wednes- day by Mrs. R. Bruce Craik of Dundas, Ont., assistant secre- tary for junior chapters. During the annual meeting of provincial chapter of Ontario. This is a Canada-wide under- taking, Mrs. Craik said. Last year, junior IODE chap- | ST. THOMAS (CP)--Thomas Stonefish, 38, of the Dutton area, charged with non - capi- tal murder, interrupted his On- tario Supreme Court trial Wed- nesday to call his father '"'a ly- ing s.0.b."' His father, McAlpine Stone- fish, was testifying at the trial of his son in connection with the "Leyes Feasibility CHATHAM (CP)--Reports on the feasibility and economic benefits of two major Canada- United States bridge links were authorized by the St. Clair Re- gional Development Council Board Wednesday night. Directors approved a Kent possible savings to industry through construction of an On- tario-Ohio causeway over Lake |Erie. WOODSTOCK (CP) -- The Zone, 3, Ontario Municipal Clerks and Treasurers' Asso- ciation voted at its spring con- |ference Wednesday to ask for a provincial royal commission into the preservation of agricul- 'tural lands in the face of com- }mercial and industrial expan- sion. Ontario Labor TORONTO (CP) -- The On- tario labor department Wed- nesday announced the estab- lishment of a pilot career consultant centre to help women who wish to return to the labor force. | Labor Minister Dalton Bales |said in a statement the new service of the department's lwomen's bureau will open in {Toronto April 24. Composer Dies SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)-- Frederick A. Hazel, prominent in the musical life of Saint John, died in hospital Wednes- day after a lengthy illness. He became known for the operet- Whatever the problems raised by Expo 67, the police will be ready, says Quebec's justice |minister. Justice Minister Jean-Jacques \Bertrand said in the legislature \Wednesday that the police will be able to handle problems ranging from traffic tie-ups to organized crime. He rejected a suggestion that special legislation is necessary to integrate provincial police with municipal police in the of the fair. The suggestion was made by \Yves Provost, head of a five- man commission on the admin- istration of justice, and cited in the legislature by former justice minister Claude Wagner. The Quebec legislature was one of six sitting. The others are in Manitoba, Ontario, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Is- land and Newfoundland. EXPERT TO TESTIFY In the Ontario house, Attor- ney-General Arthur Wishart said Dr. Abram Hoffer of the Uni- versity of Saskatchewan, an ex- Zone 2 request for a study on/Montreal area for the duration|pert on the hallucinatory drug |LSD, has been asked to testify jat an inquest into the death of a Toronto youth. LONDON (Reuters) -- There will not be anybody there to de- fend the United States position when Bertrand Russell's on- again, off-again Vietnam tribu- ing--if it ever does. | A watered-down version of the so-called tribunal was to have met at the Continental Ho- tel in Paris later this month, but the manager cancelled the reservation "because I am pro- American." | Manager Lambert van Sterk- jenburg said he did not know |when the reservation was made jexactly what was to take place there. ; A spokesman for the tribu- {bunal's organizers says it will 'be held somewhere else if nec- jessary, starting on. schedule | April. 26. SOME CALL IT A TRIAL Strictly speaking, there will be no defendants before the tri- bunal, although it has often been described as a trial of nal finally gets around to meet- Royal Commission Nobody To Defend U.S. For Russell Viet Tribunal No American of any rank or name has volunteered to appear as a 'defence witness," spokesman for the tribunal said. LOOKS AT TWO POINTS At its first hearing, the Rus- sell group will consider two questions: 1 Have the United States, Australia, New Zealand and South Korea committed acts of aggression according to inter- national law; and 2 Has there been bombard- ment of targets of a purely civilian character -- hospitals, schools--and on what scale has | this occurred? | Before the tribunal will be a jreport by one of five teams of investigators who went to Viet- nam in recent months. | Other questions to be dealt with later, on the basis of re- jports by the other teams, are: Have Viet Cong prisoners been tortured and killed and have there been reprisals against the civilian population such as the has the death of Dennis Dodge, 42, of/tas he produced over a period Wallacetown, following incident|/of years and won a Canadian at the Stonefish residence Feb.|Drama award in 1957 for his President Johnson, Defence Sec-|shooting of hostages; retary Robert McNamara and|U.S. used or experimented with other U.S. leaders. new or forbidden weapons; have 23. Shopping Centre TORONTO (CP) -- Plans to build a 44 - store, $100,000,000 suburban shopping centre, de- scribed as the largest commer- cial devel t of its kind in ters throughout Canada supplied books to replace books in a burnt-out library in Dominica. Second Time FRANKFURT (Reuters)--For -the second time in almost two months the West German fed- eral bank today lowered the bank rate by one half of one per cent. The bank rate was lowered to 3% per cent from four per cent. The bank's central council cut one half of one per cent off the rate in reducing it to four per cent Feb. 16. Bank sources said the cut was a logical move after Canada and the United States recently lowered their bank rates. First Lady PARIS (AP) -- Ngo Dinh le Thui, 22, daughter of Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhu, former first lady of South Vietnam, was fatally in- jured Wednesday when her car and two trucks were in colli- sion, authorities reported. The girl, a law student in Paris, was driving near Paris when the accident occurred. She died in hospital. Mme. Nhu, sister-in-law of the late South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem, is believed to be living in Italy. Safety TORONTO (CP)--A one-year program of research using a computer, into the economics "of construction accident pre- vention and the factors in- volved has been launched by Construction Safety Association of Ontario. The project consists of a series of studies in which in- terviews will be conducted with top management of selected construction firms. At present, 385 contractors are participat- The first study will provide a ing. The first study will provide a statistical description of the construction industry in On- tario. A second will try to de- termine the relation of profita- bility to accident frequency. A later study will investigate "accident proneness," to see whether such a condition ex- Canada, were announced Wed- nesday. S. B. McLaughlin of Mc- Laughlin Associates Ltd., Tor- onto, said his company envis- ages the development as the core of a super - city stretching from Oshawa to Hamilton. Site of the proposed development is jcontribution to the development / of musical drama. Becomes Publisher PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. (CP)--Appointment of J. W. Denhoff, 44,.as publisher of the Prince Albert Herald was an- nounced Wednesday. He suc- ceeds H. B, Cowan, publisher for 10 years, who announced his resignation effective this week. Mr. Denhoff is executive editor of the Moose Jaw Times-Her- ald. In Moose Jaw, it was an- nounced that J. R. Ray Guay, 42, assistant city editor of the on 1,200 acres just north of Cooksville on Highway 10. Lead And Zinc WASHINGTON (CP)--A_ re- newed application of import re- strictions on lead and zinc would "represent a serious de- parture from trade policy and would damage foreign relations "with Canada, Mexico, Aus- tralia and other nations, a U.S. government spokesman said Wednesday. But he warned the potential for serious over-supply exists both internationally and in the U.S. Disgruntled TORONTO (CP)--A disgrunt- led shareholder at the annual meeting of Interprovincial Pipe Line Co. Wednesday criticized the company for not paying him $9,000 compensation for expro- priating part of his farm five years ago. "Why can't someone receive compensation for damages? asked Frank Richardson, a farmer near Mount Hope, Ont., 15 miles south of Hamilton. RC Choice CHICAGO (AP) -- Roman Catholics living in remote areas of the United States soon may have their choice for their weekly mass obligation--Satur- day or Sunday. The National Conference of Catholic Bishops, which closes its four-day policymaking meet- ing today, has given individual bishops permission to ask the Vatican to permit the change. Most Rev. Ernest J. Primeau, Bishop of Manchester, N.H., told reporters Wednesday night that priests in dioceses that cover large areas could say mass for more Catholics if they could use both Saturday and ists. Sunday. HERE and THERE INCORPORATION The granting of letters patent of incorporation to Schwarz Brothers Livestock Limited, of Darlington Township, is an- nounced in the current issue of The Ontario Gazette. SPECIAL COURSE Pearl Diane Hoare, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hoar, King Street, Newcastle, a Grade 12 student at Bowman- ville High School, has been chosen to attend a six-week science and mathematics course at Lakefield this sum- mer. She was one of 35 chosen for the course. PC PRESIDENT Mrs. Elsie Fisk has been elected president at the annual meeting of the Clarke Township Progressive Conservat've Asso- @iation. Other officers ure Or- ville Chatterton, first vice-presi- dent; W. Kay Lycett, secretary and Jack Bairstow, treasurer. L. Hallowell is the immediate past president. BOWMANVILLE HOSPITAL Seventy-three patients were ladmitted and 80 discharged at the Bowmanville Memorial Hos- pital during the week ending March 9. There were five births. Fourteen major and 33 minor operations were perform- ed and 39 emergency treat- ments given. ARENA EQUIPMENT Bowmanville Town- Council this week recommended the acceptance of a $18,923 offer from the Creamery Package Co., to install refrigeration equipment in the Memorial Arena. A committee will also look into the condition of the arena roof, Regina Leader-Post for the last The 19 - member tribunal, headed by Lord Russell and Frencch philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre, plans to hold a series of separate meetings, each con- cerned with specific aspects of U.S. and South Vietnamese ac- tion, Only afterwards, according to the organizers, will there be a decision as to who should be held responsible. But there is no doubt that the tribunal will be pointing an accusing finger at President Johnson. Russell, 94 ,invited Johnson to Paris to defend himself, or to send a representative to do it for him. No one was surprised the U.S. president did not ac- two years, has been appointed editor of The Times-Herald. Put Off Statehood LONDON (CP) -- Statehood day for the Caribbean island of St. Vincent has been postponed, the British Commonwealth of- fice announced Wednesday. Britain had planned to make the colony a member of the West Indies Associated States May 29 but a political crisis has forced a new election, ex- pected May 16, and the post- ponement of statehood. Award For Writer PARIS Reuters) -- Fernand Ouelette, 37, of Montreal Wed- nesday won the France-Quebec Literary Prize for Edgard Varese, the first biography ever written on the French avant guarde composer who died in 1962. The 2,000 - franc prize, awarded for the third time, is sponsored by the Paris Assocla- tion des Ecrivains de la Met et de l'Outre-Mer and the Quebec cultural affairs ministry. Michener ) In England | LONDON (CP)--A represent- jative of the Queen welcomed Roland Michener, Canadian Governor - General designate, and his wife when they arrived here today from New Delhi. Lord Sorenson, lord-in-waiting to the Queen, welcomed the Micheners along with the Brit- ish government's representative, Col. J. M. Hugo, ceremonial secretary, and the acting Cana- dian high commissioner; Geof- frey Murray, and his wife. Also at the airport for the greeting was Gen. J. V. Allard, chief of the Canadian defence staff, visiting London after at- tending Vimy memorial cere- monies in France during the "acts.of genocide' been com- namese population. The tribunal is the climax of Lord Russell's vociferous cru- sade against American involve- ment in Vietnam, which he be- gan before the Americans en- tered the war on a massive scale in February, 1963. STRIVES FOR PEACE It also is one of the major enterprises of his life-long ca- reer as a pacifist and social re- former, during which he fought for women's suffrage, against colonialism and nuclear arma- ment and kept up a steady cor- respondence with world leaders cept. urging them toward peace. ST. BRIEUC, France (AP)-- Officials in northwest France hope to requisition all local sep- tic. tank pumps to help clear their beaches of oil from the wrecked supertanker Torrey Canyon, The beaches are gummed up with detergents and trash. One pump, pulled along the beach by a tractor, sucked up nearly 2,000 gallons an hour of the smelly slime and dumped it into hastily prepared trenches for burial. Slicks up to 11 miles long still were moving into the nortl Brittany coast. Fishermen and their families in one area worked into the night Wednes- day making a 5%4-mile straw and net dam to protect a stretch of oyster beds. Thousands of civilian volun- teers and troops used shovels, wash basins and fire engine pumps to load the sludge into France To Clear Beaches By Removing Septic Tanks tank trucks for dumping in abandoned quarries. AVALON, N.J. (AP) --The white resort beaches here began to blacken Wednesday from the thick oil which is bringing death to hundreds of sea-diving ducks. A conservation official re- ported the number of dead or dying birds had risen to 2,500, with another 8,000 seriously af- fected, The U.S. Coast Guard said some beaches were becoming stained at the water line. Hundreds of residents pa- trolled the beaches with conser- vation agents to pick up the oil- slicked birds. Many took the birds to their homes to bath them in detergents. But Fred Ferrigno, a biolotist with the state division of fish and game said: "It looks worse than ever." Officials believe the oil was dumped by a merchant tanker far at sea. TORONTO (CP) --Some tips on how fat people can keep their weight down have come out of a medical session here. Dr. Barbara A. McLaren, dean of the faculty of food sciences at the University of Toronto, said Wednesday that excessively-fat persons must get right down to their normal weight if they want to main- tain it. She spoke at a meeting of medical research volunteers at the Hospital for Sick Children. | weekend. Michener, who was serving as Canadian high commissioner to India when he was appointed to succeed Gen. Georges Van- ier, scheduled a press confer- ence for later today. The Mich- eners will dine with the Queen tonight before continuing on to Ottawa Friday. INVENTS HOME BOON LONDON (AP) Michael | Haggerty was tired of the rain| starting every time he hung his | baby's diapers out so he in-| vented an alarm signal. It! sounds off at the first drop and | gives him time to clear the line| before the downpour starts. The | brainstorm was invented while Mrs. Haggerty was in hospital and now is being marketed at | £5 each, auromatic | TRANSMISSION | CENTSE | | | 1038 Simcoe St N. 728-7339 | } Of all Transmission | o/ Repairs Could've Been JO Avoided by Preven- tive Maintenance Every 25,000 Miles. Reconditioned Transmissions For Chev., Pontiacs (Cdn.) Exchange $125. Plus Installation and Fluid. All Work Guaranteed Come from Medical Session Some Tips For Fat People The volunteers, organized by the Ontario Heart Foundation, help researchers study nutri- tional aspects of hardening of the arteries. The volunteers cut calories, exercise and swallow formula diets in the interests of science Samples of their blood are taken to measure serum fats and other constituerits. SPECIAL WEEKLY MESSAGE TO MEMBERS RE APRIL BULLETIN Ghambeu, FOOD CLUB 108 -- 75 64-- 48 138-- 144 267 -- 48 209-- 86 274-- 68 211-- 86 85 -- 212-- 86 (Oshawa Only) 213-- 86 314-- 32 214-- 86 325-- 38 216-- 86 444-- 42 } 217-- 88 468-- 72 | 218 -- 106 494 -- 128 | 219-- 67 SI0-- 48 220-- $4 636-- 72 221-- $4 651 -- 54 222-- 78 656 -- 124 242 -- 67 779--~ 48 251-- 68 790-- 66 | 256-- 68 831-- 96 | 263-- 54 860-- 48 Phone ! 123-1163 John Stern, a student, died in a fall after apparently taking LSD. In other legislatures: Winnipeg: The Manitoba leg- islature almost completed clause-by-clause approval of a bill providing for a five-per-cent Sales tax in the province. Only one clause to be approved re- mains before the bill is sub- mitted for third reading. Fredericton: The New Bruns- wick legislature was told that liquor sales in the province reached a record high of $34,- 446,534 during 1966, giving a net profit of $12,224,235--an increase of $505,316 over the previous year. Charlottetown: A number of amendments to the Prince Ed- ward Island Liquor Control Act included a provision to abolish the system of individual permits for Island residents. The amend- |ments were given second read- jing in the legislature Tuesday. St. John's: Opposition Leader Gerald Ottenheimer told the leg- islature that Newfoundland risks having people lose faith in the industrial development of the province by allowing develop- ment to be closely associated jwith John C. Doyle. Mr, Otten- jheimer said Mr. Doyle has been convicted in the United States of sending unregistered stocks through the mail, has jumped bail in the U.S., faces a three- year prison term there and has had his assets in Canada frozen by the internal revenue depart- ment. The Opposition leader's re- marks came during debate on a bill under which Canadian Jav- elin, controlled by Mr. Doyle, its chairman, would be the ma jor partner in a Newfoundland pulp and linerboard plant. Harlton ..cosccsese 32 Sault Ste. Marie ... 40 TORONTO (CP) -- Official forecasts issued at 5:30 a.m. EST: Synopsis: Cloudiness will in- credse today across the prov- inces as a series of weather dis- turbances moves slowly north- ward across the mid-western United States. There will be scattered showers in the north- ern and western sections of the province today and by Friday there will be rain over most of Ontario. Temperatures will moderate today and Friday as increasing southerly winds bring warmer air to the province. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, southern Lake Huron regions, Windsor, London: Mostly cloudy with a few showers and warmer today. Cloudy and mild tonight and early Friday. Light winds increasing to southerly 20 today. Northern Lake Huron, Niag- ara, Lake Ontario, Haliburton, Killaloe, southern Georgian Bay regions, Hamilton, Toronto: Variable cloudiness and a little milder today. Friday cloudy and mild with occasional rain, Light winds increasing to southerly 20 today. Northern Georgian Bay, Al- goma, Timagami, Cochrane, White River regions, North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: Vari- able cloudiness and warmer to- day. Friday overcast with occa- sional rain and mild. Winds southerly. Montreal and Ottawa regions: Mostly sunny today. Friday cloudy with a few sunny periods and continuing mild. Light winds. Forecast temperatures Windsor ... 45 St. Thomas - 40 55 London ...sseoseeee 40 55 Free On Bail, mitted against the South Viet-| SAIGON (AP) -- An English- man arrested in Saigon last June 10 on charges of involun- tary manslaughter and illegal carrying of arms is free on bail and no trial date has been set, the British vice-consul said here today. The embassy official said John Meadows, 27, of Newton Linford, Leicestershire, and a former 'resident of Oakville, Ont., is free on $3,400 bond. Meadows is accused of shoot- ing a Vietnamese to death. According to a signed state- ment which Meadows gave Sai- gon police, the British vice- consul said, Meadows said he was escorting a Vietnamese woman to her home. She pre- ceded him around a corner and what Meadows described as "a gang of thieves'"' tried to snatch the woman's handbag. Meadows allegedly told police he fired a pistol at the fleeing youths. One of them died of a gunshot wound: June 13. CHINESE REDS RETURNED RANGOON (AP) -- The Bur- mese government has returned 488 Chinese Communists who crossed the border into Burma last February to escape Red Englishman Saigon Arrest No Trial Set The vice-consul said that the trial date has not been set be- cause Vietnamese officials still are conducting an investigation into the shooting. Meadows was working for an American contracting firm -- which no longer operates in Vietnam--at the time of the shooting. He now is employed by another American firm. The vice-consul said Meadows lists RTE FIGHT CANCER WITHA CHECK UP AND A CHEQUE SUPPORT THE CANADIAN CANCER sociary April is Cancer Month Give Generously. PLEASE Guard persecution. THOMAS H. | | ! Telephone BARRISTER, ts pleased to announce | Stephen M. Zubkavich, B.A. LL.B, is now associated with him In the practice of law at SUITE 303 -- THE TIMES BUILDING ¥* 86 KING ST. EAST, OSHAWA, ONT. GREER, B.A. SOLICITOR 728-6209 | NOTICE | hood. «+. Which are -- IDEAL THIS MESSAGE CITIZENS OF OSHAWA and DISTRICT We as fellow citizens of your community || depend on your patronage for our liveli- So please support us, by purchasing milk | which is produced by your local Dairies | OSHAWA DAIRY HILLCREST DAIRY THE MEMBERS The Dairy Workers Union DAIRY SPONSORED BY himself as a logistics specialist. | ; © | WEATHER FORECAST Cloudiness Will Increase Scattered Showers Friday Kitchener ....++005 40 55 Mount Forest . Wingham ... 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Speakii of Trade prepared claiming decision own goo He has not turn was afte Despit the rec becomin proved through der-in-cc a statut The n commen is that Lavallee change committ music ci dignity, Othe the anth governr To: He By LOND onto bu striped concent London | the Poli Polish wood, ' years ir it was li in 1944, tend the white s camp si sons wh He ar wearing uniform oner ant ing tha compen: former Canadia Sherw ada in } manage' tate con view th richest had onl; 70 of th Former in Cana TIME F He sai statutor: crimes further tion. Sherw expense Of th