Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Apr 1967, p. 4

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THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, April 13, 1967 3 3 | ishart Tells Legislature Communist Forces Wreck | Hoffer Invited To Inquest ) cs TORONTO (CP) -- Attorney-jday a Saskatchewan expert on)quest ade death of Toronto! Two U.S. Traffic Bridges General Arthur Wishart told|the hallucinatory drug LSD has| student John Stern, killed in a} ;|the Ontario legislature Wednes-|been invited to testify at an in-|fall after apparently taking the) SAIGON (AP) -- Communist . |forces below the demilitarized r. ' m | Wishart said Dr. Abra-|zone wrecked two bridges to-|due to activity in the northern| PC S March Perfect Stride: Hoffer, psychiatric direc-|day that carried heavy supply|part of South Vietnam, includ. |rematurely and blew off the {tor for the Saskatchewan de- jpartment of public health, To Unification Bill Debat traffic for U.S. marines injing the Communist attack on | aBht Wing. The pilot is missing. South Vietnam's northernmost|the provincial capital of Quang} |would have been invited to ap- pear at the inquest. when it Money To By DENNIS ORCHARD OTTAWA (CP) -- Conserva- provinces. Tri last weekend. G :. . . a : ] me opened Tuesday if the coroner round fighting generally con-| The two bridges that the Com had known he was in the city. f | Invest agen nvest ! tives marched back into the uni- fication debate Wednesday with- earn | tinued at a low pitch, and the|munists brought down were on navy "you may find yourself; Mr. Hoffer told a news con- out missing a stride. U.S. command announced cas-|the main highway, No. 1, from with a force without tradition|ference Tuesday he had not walty figures for last week re-|the marine base at Da Nang to or loyalties. |then been invited to appear at Jack McIntosh (PC -- Swift Current-Maple Creek), speaking per annum for five years port fell into Cam Ranh Bay on |a takeoff run. A navy patrol boat pulled two injured airmen from the water but seven other men are missing. A marine Skyhawk jet crashed west of Da Nang in : Peer ,...{What appeared to be a freak ac- before to 284 killea and 69 miss . As the plane dived into ing. Some of the increase was), bomb run, a bomb went off bE Sissi flecting the drop in major ac- Quang Tri. "That might well mean the|the inquest when it resumes within a few hours of new stra- tion. The report said 177 Ameri-| The biggest was a quarter- difference between defeat and] 4pri] 98. cans and 1,478 Communists| mile-long railway and highway victory in combat." tegy decisions taken at a party caucus meeting, said the fight | : were killed last week and 1,345|pridge six miles above "Da Michael Forrestall (PC--Hali-| The adjournment came about will go against legislation mak- Americans were wounded. All/Nang. Communist swimmers fax) said his area is already after the dismissal of Dr. Mor-|these figures were below the av- |hefore dawn apparently floated feeling the impact of base con-|ton Shulman as chief coroner ing the armed forces a single service. | erage of recent weeks. explosives into place against solidation under unification, al-|for Metropolitan Toronto. However, South Vietnamesejone of the support towers, and though the legislation has not VALUED TESTIMONY Conservatives were the only speakers during the three hours by investing in Guaranteed Investment Certificates which are Guoranteed--as to Principal end interest, Flexible--may be used es Col- lateral for loans, Redeemable--by Executors in the event of death, Authorized--as Trustee Act In- vestments. CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUS) & SAVINGS CORPORATION 19 Simcoe St. N., Oshawa 723-5221 | In other legislature business: | 1. Labor Minister Dalton {Bales announced the establish- jment of a pilot career consul- re-/tant centre to help women who wish to return to the labor) Army casualties increased|the explosion brought down two yet been passed. about 40 per cent over the week of the five spans. He called on Mr. Hellyer to} Dr. Shulman complained! v reveal base amalgamation plans/Tyesday night that the value of| oe eee : L r rs}so that other plans can be laid/the Stern inquest would be U S Steel | American authorities fear, and 45 minutes available in|for relocation and retraining of|jessened if Dr. Hoffer were un- ohn that the Communist attacks in Wednesday's short Commons sit-|civilian defence employees left able to testify. . bey oe 7. phe | igh co ting. without jobs. es P I at upsetting the already delicate! It was the eighth day of de- Angus MacLean (PC--Queens) | rice ncrease political balance in the prov- bate on the unification bill and|said the government is acting | PITTSBURGH (AP) -- US. lg td geerues has long |the House had not moved be-/the part of a dictator" by: ig- Steel Corp. announced price in- oan a eg of L niet agin yond general arguments on the noring the will of a majority, ciaases Walnewday '6 |sidence and in addition there \first of 65 clauses in the legisla-|which opposes unification. : Sday on ores believed to be some 35,000 \tion. | The unification hassle odd-sized structural steel sec-|North V ietnamese regular | "We feel that this is what the|sumed after echoes of a 50-year- Tt : a ft jtions and sheet piling. troops in the province, in the| |people of Canada expect of us," old First World War Battle dur- force. The new service of the neighboring demilitarized zone, | HEADLESS PHOTOGRAPHER Accurate aim is impres- sion indicated by "head- less' photographer when Swedish trade delegates demonstrate cannon sal- vaged from sunken ship Wasa. Swedish delegates are Arad Nobell and Goran Evarnstrom, in Vancouver , ; , The biggest steelmaker i . . for B.C. Trade Fair |Mr. McIntosh said. ling the daily Commons question|depattment's women's bureau si aker in the/q, just across the border in Prime Minister Pearson, De-| period. will open in Toronto April 24. |U.S. said the average increase|North Vietnam. \fence Minister Hellyer and the) NDP Leader Douglas referred jin price across the entire struc-) The blown bridges entire cabinet should recognize|to the absence of President de ke and sheet piling product much of the position taken by his party|Gaulle from the commemora-| ines is $2.49 a ton, or less than carried | the ammunition for U.S. artillerymen manning po- 2. Health Minister Matthew Dymond introduced an amend- ment to the Human Tissue Act (CP Wirephoto) 23 King a Ws. Bowmanville 27 Camp Edges Closer To Entering PC Race By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP)--Dalton Camp edged closer to entering the Progressive Conservative lead- ership race Wednesday night. The Conservative party's na- tional president returned from a 'European trip and took pub- lic note of speculation that he will run to succeed John Dief- enbaker. Speaking to the Ottawa Board of Trade, Mr. Camp was un- prepared to deny the reports, claiming the right to make his decision and announce it in his own good time. | He has already said he would not turn down a draft but that was after the party sustained his bid last November for a na- tional leadership review. Later, the leadership convention was set for Toronto Sept. 6-9. Since then, a number of MPs have said privately they hope to draft him in a race that al- ready has a half dozen declared candidates and others waiting in the Wings. This may have been on Mr. Camp's mind when he told the Board of Trade that anyone thinking about the leadership for himself "will realize that others have their view about his capacities and qualifications as well, and these are as vital at least as his own; sometimes they are more so." Unanimous Approval Met In 0 Canada, OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com- mons unanimously approved Wednesday a report by a Sen- ate - Commons committee re- commending that the present music for O Canada be adopted by the government as the na- tional anthem. Also approved was a second recommendation that the tradi- tional music for God Save the Queen be adopted as the royal anthem in Canada. Still before the joint commit- tee is the more controversial question of the words for O Canada. Despite Commons approval, the recommendations, before becoming law, must be ap- proved by the government through a proclamation, an or- der-in-council, or by introducing a statute in Parliament. The music for O Canada re- commended by the committee is that composed by Calixa Lavallee in 1880. The _ sole change recommended by the committee is that the sheet music carry the notation: "With dignity, not too slowly." Other recommendations by the anthem committee: that the government obtain the copy- As Anthem right to the music for O Canada so that "it shall belong to Her Majesty in right of Canada for all time." The copywright now belongs to the Toronto music publishing firm of George V. Thompson Ltd., which also has the copy- right for the English words. The committee asked that its terms of reference concerning lyrics of the anthems be broadened. The present refer- ence "is far too restrictive to permit the detailed study which this question deserves."' It wants authority to: call for persons, papers and records; to examine witnesses; and to re- tain experts. If the government. concurs, the committee could hear from people who want to suggest new words for the anthems. Perry Ryan (L -- Toronto Spadina), committee co-chair- man, said in an interview his 18 member committee will likely have to be reconstituted when the session of Parliament ends -- expected within a few weeks, Then, with broader terms of reference, it could come to grip with the words of the anthems. Toronto Busi nhessman Heads For Auschwitz By CAROL KENNEDY 1 LONDON (CP) A Tor-| onto businessman wearing the! striped prison garb of a Nazi concentration camp flew into London today on a pilgrimage to the Polish town of Auschwitz. Polish - born Sigmund Sher- wood, 44, who endured four years in Auschwitz camp until it was liberated by the Russians in 1944, was on his way to at- tend the unveiling Sunday of a white stone memorial on the camp site to the 4,000,000 per- sons who lost their lives there. He arrived at London Airport wearing the black-striped white uniform of an Auschwitz pris- oner and carrying a sign claim- ing that Germany still owes compensation to more than 1,200 former prisoners who now are Canadian citizens. Sherwood, who settled in Can- ada in 1949 and now is general manager of a Toronto real es- tate company, said. in an inter view that West Germany, "the richest republic in the world" had only made compensation to 70 of the 1,300 members of his Former Prisoners Association in Canada. TIME RUNNING OUT He said that after October, the statutory limitation on Nazi war crimes will put an end to further claims for compensa- tion. expenses on the trip. the 4,000,000 victims of! : q Sherwood is paying his own | Auschwitz, 3,000,000 were Poles. Auschwitz has been preserved as a national shrine in Poland. Part of it remains as it was in 1944 and the rest devoted to a museum. The unveiling of the monu- ment, which incorporates the grisly symbolism of cremator- ium chimneys, will be per- formed by Polish Premier Josef Cyrankiewicz. A Polish embassy spokesman in London said former prisoners were coming from some 40 countries to at- tend the ceremony. PRESCRIPTIONS City-Wide Delivery MITCHELL'S DRUGS 9 Simcoe N. 723-3431 "When the convention gathers in Toronto, in the general inter- est of the country, it ought to be confronted with as broadly rep-| resentative a choice as possible. "This suggests, to many, I be- lieve, candidates present both} from within and without the caucus of Conservative MPs. "TI have never made any sec- ret of the fact that I had hoped that one of the present Conser- vative provincial premiers would be a candidate. But, of | course, that is their decision. It} is also theirs, if they decide,| as to when they decide. "Having said that, one need only add that these same op- tions apply to everyone else as well." Mr. Camp spoke in the past tense of his hopes of the pre- miers -- Robert Stanfield of Nova Scotia, John Robarts of Ontario and Duff Roblin of Man- itoba--entering the leadership race. ROBLIN URGED TO RUN Premiers Stanfield and Rob- arts have said they are not available. Premier Roblin has not yet publicly made his posi- tion clear, although he is known to have been urged by some Conservatives to run. Mr. Camp said that until this is settled "there are other pre- cincts to be heard from." With a possible hint that as leader he would try to offset any internal enmity over the leadership issue with an appeal to voters outside the party, Mr. Camp said: "In the deliberative process of a national party moving to- wards a convention, its dele- gates must consider not only their own opinions but those of the broad mass of the Canadian electorate including the grow- ing numbers of political inde- pendents and indeed a number and withdraw the bill. jtion ceremonies in France Sun- Dr. P. B. Rynard ie vereec ode bd of the Battle of Vimy Ridge coe East) said that with union| and asked whether the president of the infantry, air force and/had been invited. Martin Luther King Decrie Viet War By Speaking Out ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -- Dr.said Wednesday in Los Angeles Martin Luther King's outspoken|he had not advocated a fusion opposition to the Vietnam warjof the civil rights and peace has raised fears of stiffening}movements. white.reaction among civil) Defining his position on the rights leaders, but few think it/war, King said: "I feel this war will have an appreciable effect/in Vietnam is damaging to the on local rights issues, an AssO-|soul of our nation. It is hurting ciated Press survey indicates. |the civil rights movement more The conclusion was drawnithan my taking a stand on the from interviews with Negro and| war, I do not believe our nation white officials in cities around the United States. "We hear it and we don't," said Rev. P. H. Lewis, a Negro leader in Selma, Ala., where King staged a massive voting rights drive in 1965. "I don't think it will have any great ef- fect. I don't think it will hurt tice, equality and democracy if it is trapped in the role of a self - appointed world police- man." King had drawn criticism from Whitney M. Young Jr., head of the National Urban League; the National Associa- tion for the Advancement of Co- lored People and others. "But in San Francisco, Percy Steele, a Negro and executive can be a moral leader of jus-| of 1962-63 which will permit a |doctor to obtain advance per- jmission from the next-of-kin in jany case where the doctor feels}. |the person involved is incapa- ble of requesting that his kid- neys, corneas and other parts of his body be made available \for transplants and his death is imminent and inevitable. 3. Provincial licensing of pest exterminators is provided for in a new Pesticides Act introduced lin the legislature which pro- \vides for a new pesticides ad- visory board. 4. Attorney-General Wishart jannounced the appointment of S. A. Caldbick of Timmins as senior advisory Crown attorney for Ontario. The province now has 86 full-time Crown attor- neys and assistant Crown at- torneys. 5. Labor Minister Bales an- jnounced the establishment of |the Ontario Union-Management {Council, headed by Dr. John Crispo, director of the Univer- sity of Toronto's new industrial relations centre which will at- tempt to solve union-manage- |ment problems. director of the Bay Area Urba: League, said: "It's a mistake 4 put the two issues together. It kind of fragments the whole fo- ens the civil rights movement ment." | Steele said King's stand weak- ens the civil rights hovement and will hurt the war effort. CLOSE DIVISION The interviews reflected a close division of favorable and unfavorable reactions to King's position opposing U.S. involve- ment in Vietnam. Several per- sons said King's statement of- fered an excuse for white resis- tance to the civil rights move- ment. "I think we are going to find some reaction now regardless of what position Dr. King or others take on the war or other is- sues," said Atlant's vice-mayor, Sam Massell. He said white Americans are finding it more difficult to cope with issues of open housing and improved job opportunities for Negroes. of those who ordinarily support other parties. | "No party can hope to form! a government in this country | without some of their support."| "It would be this way whether or not there was a peace move- ment. People will use it as an excuse." King, replying to criticism, whisk OUR TRADE-IN FUR SALE sreat, gently blended into every drop two per cent. sitions around Gio Linh from| which American 175-millimeter| urday, guns shell North Vietnam. A spokesman said the items| Two plane losses in South] involved in the increase ac-|Vietnam added to U.S. casual-! count for about one-tenth of one|ties today. per cent of all U.S. Steel sales. A four - engined C141 trans-! The boosts go into effect 7 OPEN FRIDAY yids on SATURDAYS a es aged ies are CANCER APRIL IS CANCER MONTH RESEARCH DONATION the time when your old fur coat can be as good as $150, in « ; Once a year we put our furs on sale the "trade-in" way. During this period you will see reductions upword from 15% in addition to of Adams Private Stock. IS URGENTLY NEEDED TO SUPPORT CANCER : EDUCATION & CANCER WELFARE the hi your old furs, TRADE-UP NOW YOU WILL BE 75 King St. F hest trade-in on FREE STORAGE ON ALL FURS PURCHASED NOW! TO A FUR COAT PROUD TO OWN 29-whisk Downtown Oshawa Don't spill a drop. Private Stock is the THOMAS ADAMS DISTILLERS LTD. TORONTO y whisky. SERVICES CANCER CAMPAIGN APRIL {0th to 24th CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY ONTARIO COUNTY UNIT Please Give Generous when Canvasser calls at Your Home or Place of Business. Canvassing will be done by the Kiwanis Club members The Piyan Chapter of Hadassah and many o ther groups.

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