Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Jun 1967, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, June 7, 1967 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Problem Of Arab Refugees never land of Transjordan be- fore 1950. In that year, Transjordan's Ontario Hydro Cleared Of Erosion Responsibility | Doctors Volunteer OTTAWA (CP) -- Arab com- munities in Canada rallied Tues- day to support Arab forces in the Middle East. The president of the Arab Community of Canada, a loosely-knit group that counts 3,000 to 4,000 members in Can ada, but is active in Ottawa Toronto and Montreal, said the|® group is sending "only doctors for the present." Dr. George Haggar said 30 Canadian doctors have volun teered to leave for the Middle East anytime. Pair Sentenced WOODSTOCK, Ont. Ffank Kessler, fordsville, Ont., Tuesday to two and Dianne Mary De Fauw, 17 tence for possession of narcot- ics. Both pleaded guilty ear- lier. Vice = Admiral Dies doin was reported still uncon- SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)--Vice- Admiral Charles A. Lockwood, 77, commander of the U.S. Navy's Second World War Pa- cific submarine force which more than a_ thousand | enemy ships, died Tuesday of | sank a heart attack. With headquarters at Pear!| Harbor, Lockwood directed Us.| Synod Overrules submarine operations which sank seven Japanese aircraft carriers, one battleship, and five cruisers. Review Status KINGSTON (CP)--The status of the arts in Canadian univer- sities is being reviewed and hopefully defined during a con- ference at Queen's University. Drama, music and other arts representatives from 45 Cana- dian universities registered Monday and Tuesday and more than 300 are expected before the first general session today. Also attending are representa- tives of the CBC, National Film Board, Canadian Conference on the Arts, Canadian Music Cen- tre, centennial commission, the departments of education of On- tario and Quebec and arts schools. Presbyterians LUNENBURG, N.S. (CP) -- Rev. E. H. Bean of Sydney, N.S. has been nominated by the : moderator of the 93rd general assembly of the Presbyterian Church in Canada. The week- ry. Mr. Bean is minister of Bethel Presbyterian Church in Sydney and clerk of the synod of the Atlantic provinces. Rev. A, Loren MacKay of Hamilton and Rey. John Logan- Vencta of Ottawa also have been neminated. Recount Begins SUDBURY (CP)--A_ judicial recount of votes cast in the May 29 federal byelection here will begin today before Judge J, M. Cooper. The recount was requested by Liberal James Jerome who lost (CP)-- 18, of Straf- was sentenced months in jail of North Walsingham Township given a two-year suspended sen- the byelection to M. C. (Bud) Germa of the NDP by 120 votes. It is expected to last several days. Mr. Germa polled 18,962 votes to Mr. Jerome's 18,842. Legal Aid Bogged KITCHENER (CP)--Ontario's new legal aid system has been swamped by more than 100,000 applications during the last two months, the Ontario Welfare Of- ficers' Association was told Tuesday. W. G. Smith, director of Field Services of the department of | social and family services, said CLAUDE JODOIN .. Still Unconscious Still Unconscious By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press Staff Writer Until the problem of the Arab refugees from Israel is solved, the Middle East will re- main politically explosive and a danger to world peace. But the problem seems utterly in- soluble. For almost 20 years, a quest for a-solution has been going on. Neutrals close to Middle East problems saw three basic ways to approach the problem of establishing stability there. One was to seek a method to resettle the refugees. It failed. Another was to seek political settlement between Israel and the Arab nations so some refu- gees could return to their for- mer homes. It failed. The third way was war. It, too, has failed so far--with the Arabs not strong enough to ac- complish a solution by means of battle. The slogan uniting all Arabs against Israel is a cry for "liberating the Arab home- land." Its emotional appeal, far from abating over two decades, has become stronger all the time as parent passes the word expelled the displaced knows the exact figure. Over the years their number has grown by the natural process, Today, by best estimates, per- haps a few more than 1,000,000 Appears Utterly Insoluble The problem was created at the outset of the Palestine War of 1948-49, when Jewish troops, storming through Arab villages, inhabitants and sent them fleeing behind the protection of Arab lines. DISPLACINGS GROW Hundreds of th d King Abdullah annexed Pales- tine territory on the west side of the river fronting on Israel. By doing so he tripled the coun- try's population and left a source of constant headache for the future king of Jordan. GRUBBY HABITATS In the capital, Amman, ref- ugees were crowded into 'the Mahajarin Souk, a hotbed of riot, most of them hating the king. Only one-third of Jordan's this way. Nobody persons claim the status of refugee. They have lived in slums in the outskirts of cities in Leba- non, Syria and Jordan and in the Gaza Strip which Egypt oc- cupied on Israel's southwest Mediterranean coast after the war. They were a_ constant source of political ferment. For the little kingdom of Jordan, they became a grave problem, Palestinian Arabs feel themselves superior, intellectu- ally and otherwise, to the Bed- ouins who hail from the east side of the Jordan River and to child. who made up the tiny never- concrete block shacks, refugees lived in camps. Others live in tin shacks, rock huts, some in no homes at. all, just carrying about their worldly goods in boxes, sleeping and eating wherever they could. The Jordanian government could not ignore them. It gave them a vote, places in the cabinet and in the legislature. In Lebanon and Syria the refugees live in mud huts or and brood constantly about their former homeland. In the Gaza Strip--as elsewhere--the refu- gees form a pool for the re- cruitment of the commandos who infiltrate Israel and attack, Prompting Israel to retaliation. While Israel feels itself stronger than all the Arabs combined, there seems no pros- pect of persuading the Israelis to make concessions on the ref- |the program came on so sud- |denly that his department had to abandon plans to give need tests, and had to set up a sep- OTTAWA (CP) -- Claude J0-| vate office in Toronto to deal with the daily quota of drunks and prostitutes using legal aid. He said provisions were made Sf ha fe : for granting a temporary cer- right side of his body. _ _,| tificate if applications could not The 54-year-old pr Of/be channelled quickly enough. the Canadian Labor Congress) . Jail Death remained in serious condition. BRANTFORD (CP)--A man who was left with his tie and shoelaces because he was in po- lice cells as a lodger and not a prisoner apparently hanged himself Monday night, police said Tuesday. Edmund Earl Green, 59, was found dead in the cell Tuesday scious in hospital Tuesday, 18 days after suffering a major stroke that has paralysed the SAULT STE, MARIE (CP)-- Algoma synod delegates voted 75 to 69 Tuesday to hold the 1969 Canadian Anglican Synod at Laurentian University in Sud- bury. The vote overruled a decision of the Algoma synod executive committee last fall that the na- tional meeting of 500 dele- gates should be held at Lake- head University in Port Ar- thur. Barn Bums MOUNT BRYDGBS, Ont. (CP) -- Flames fanned by gusting winds swept through a large barn, a house, two gar- ages and damaged a church about a half-block from the bus- iness section Tuesday, causin an estimated $20,000 damage. One fireman, Leith Laughton, morning, part of his tie knotted around his neck and the re- mainder dangling from a bar on the cell door. Police admitted him as a lodger at the request of the Family Service Bureau because he had been causing a disturb- ance in the room where he lived alone. New Bishop TORONTO (CP)--Guy. Mar- shall of St. Stephens church was in Toronto Western Hospital recovering from a kidney stone operation Tuesday when the an- nouncement was made of his UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- Diplomats feared today there would be a slow response to the UN Security Council's call 'or a general ceasefire in the Mid- die East. One council member said that "what we may get is a series of local ceasefires," beginning on the front between Jordan and Israel. Jordan was reported here to have sought U.S. medi- ation in the conflict. The Security Council ap- pealed unanimously Tuesday night for a ceasefire between Israel and its Arab neighbors, but Foreign Minister Abba Eban of Israel told the council his country will accept it only if the Arab countries accept it. Three Arab speakers -- For- eign Minister Adnan Pachachi of Iraq, Ambassador George Tomeh of Syria and Foreign Minister Ahmed Taibi Benhima of Morocco--charged that the ceasefire resolution ignored Is- raeli "'aggression."' CONDEMN REACTION They were backed by Soviet Slow Response Feared By Diplomats To Ceasefire usual patience, the foreign min- ister said. Then, with Egypt blockading the Gulf of Aqaba and drawing the Arab states together into an alliance for the purpose of wip- ing Israel out 'we knew that our limit of safety had been reached and perhaps passed." RIGHTEOUS CAUSE Israel began to exercise its right of self-defence under Art- icle 51 of the UN Charter and ugee problem. Israel says the Arabs fled their homes of their own accord and thus are not Israels responsibility. The Arabs say they were driven out by conquest. Israel has never moved to ne- gotiate on the question of re- patriating Arabs. The Arabs steadfastly 'refuse to give up their claims to lands the Jéws inhabit. Professor Denies Newspaper Report TORONTO (CP)--The Globe and Mail says that Dr. J. Grant Davy of the University of Al- berta Tuesday called highly in- accurate an earlier Globe story "newer in history has armed force been used righteous and compelling cause." The council resolution, pre- sented by Ambassador Hans Tabor of Denmark, called upon the countries engaged in hostili- ties 'as a first step, to take forth with all measures for an immediate ceasefire and for a cessation of all military activi- ties in the area." TEMPORARY HALT Canadian Ambassador George Ignatieff described the resolu- tion as "'only a first step' and in a more 25-year-old son of Fire Chief Les Laughton, of the Caradoc Township Volunteer suffered extensive burns. and Melbourne, under the Cara- doc Brigade, along with de- Presbytery of Cape Breton for Bartmeata < ia Strathroy fought the blazes for 1% hours before gaining con- long assembly begins in Ottawa| 'Tol toda: church should engage in social action in the community, dele- gates to the 1967 congress of the Presbyterian Church in Canada were told Tuesday. . election as Anglican suffragan bishop for the diocese of Trini- Asipmecense Rinee! Fesorenhs, ad. who accused Israel of "'unleash- ing aggression" against Egypt and other Arab countries. He said the council "'must condemn the actions of Israel and take urgent measures necessary for the restoration of peace in the Middle East." Diplomatic sources said, how- ever, that it was a sudden shift in the Soviet position Tuesday that made it possible for the 15 countries on the Security Coun- Brigade, Canon Marshall was taken to hospital Monday and was oper- ated on Tuesday, He is reported in satisfactory condition. Rt. Rev. G. B. Snell made the announcement to the 115th Anglican synod. Slow Down Ships pe ag (CP)-- one iow sels will have to cur eir : speed to lessen shore damage in|"il to unite behind a ceasefire some parts of the St. Lawrence|'esolution after they had spent Seaway under regulations an-|many hours in fruitless argu- nounced by the seaway author-|ment since Monday morning. Firemen from Mount Brydges| Delaware and : Social Action KINGSTON (CP) -- The urged the council to seize the opportunity "to deal effectively and in an equitable manner with the fund tal bl i implicating him in trouble at McMaster University. Dr. Davy, a professor in the political science department at the University of Alberta, called the article '"'one of the worst pieces of journalism I've ever seen," The story in Monday's Globe said the president of University College at McMaster, E. Tugo Salmon, was resisting a new empirical approach to political science introduced by Dr. Davy. Dr. Davy, in Hamilton to sell a house, said the article did not tell the whole story, of the dis- pute which had little to do with his leaving McMaster. WEATHER FORECAST TORONTO (CP) -- Official forecasts issued at 5:30 a.m. to- day. Synopsis: Cloudy, mild, un- settled weather along with scat- tered showers and thunder- storms this morning and likely to persist with little change to- day and Thursday in southern Ontario. Toronto, Hamilton, London, Windsor; Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, Cloudy, Mild, Unsetiled Weather Continues Today Lake Ontario, southern Geor- gian Bay, Haliburton regions: Variable cloudiness, a few sunny intervals and a few scat- tered showers or thunderstorms today and Thursday. Continuing warm with slowly increasing humidity. Winds south to south west 10 to 15. Sudbury, North Bay, northern Georgian Bay, Algoma, Tima- gami, southern White River re- gions: Cloudy with scattered WINNIPEG (CP) -- Princess Alexandra joined the mini-skirt set at an informal dance in the Manitoba legislature Tues- day night, ending a hectic two- day state visit to the province. Today, the princess and her husband, Angus Ogilvy, were scheduled to leave Winnipeg at 9 a.m. CDT by air for Ottawa and the conclusion of their 26- day visit to Canada. The dance, attended by 1,000 young people from various parts of the province, was a fitting end for the visit of the fun-lov- Dance Ends Manitoba Visit For Mini-Skirted Princess York boat, Mr. Ogilvy expressed a desire to "see how it oper- ates." A 10-man crew from the Royal Canadian Navy reserve were de- lighted, and paddled the boat out into the Red River a short dis- tance, Later, at St. Bonifi Hos- showers and a few thundershow- ers today. Rain and scattered thundershowers Thursday. Not much change in temperatures. Winds light. Northern White River, Coch- rane, western James Bay re- gions: Showers then clearing this morning and becoming mainly sunny. Clouding over Thursday followed by rain be- ginning during the morning or afternoon. Not much change in temperatures. Montreal and Ottawa regions: Variable cloudiness, a few scat- tered showers this afternoon and evening. Seasonable tem- peratures, Winds light. Forecast Temperatures Low overnight, high Thursday 85 Windsor .......+0++ 68 BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCHEONS Se -- 1.35 DINNER 5:30 p.m. te 8:00 p.m. Good Food . Reasonable Prices Parking Rear of Hotel MOTEL. LANCASTER 27 KING ST, W. pital, the princess was wel- comed by 1,000 patients, staff and district residents. Instead of inspecting an honor guard of students from St. Mary's Acad- emy, the princess gathered them around her for an informal chat. 4 5-Year Guaranteed ing couple. They mingled and lingered among the guests, talk- ing to many and dancing with several. During the day Princess Alex- andra placed the cornerstone for an ultra - modern museum of man and nature and minutes later christened a replica of the York boats that plied the Prai- rie waterways for 200 years. After christening the 40-foot ALL TOGETHER The ancient city - state of Athens had about 200,000 inhab- itants in its heyday. Estimates, Reasonable FREE Retes, Repair Speciclist. Investment Certificates NOW EARN 612% per annum for five years by investing in Guaranteed Investment Certificates which ere Facog tetien. SERVICE MADE US. Call 723-1191 =as to Principal and Interest, Flexible--may be used as Col- lateral for loans, Redeemable--by Executors in the event of death. tion, knowledge of liasion Architect required. to: RESIDENT CLERK | OF WORKS For construction of addition to Oshawa City Hall. Minimum 10 years' experience in General Construc- work between Owner and Send resume, giving detail of previous experience Pentland, Baker & Polson, Architects 45 Charles Street East, Torente 5 Attention; Mr. K. Squires He said professors are resign- Trustee Act ine vestments. CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUS} & SAVINGS CORPORATION 19 Simeon St. N., Oshewe 723-5221 23 King St. W., Bowmanville 623-2527 OPIN FRIDAY NIGHTS and SATURDAYS x ing there for reasons other than the current problems. which underlie the m int! of peace and security in the area." Alluding to the span of time between the current war and the Suez crisis of 1956, he said: 'We cannot and we must not wait for another 10 years, with another crisis which will result again in fighting and blood-letting and bring us all €xpog7 | Four Seasons Travel Are exclusive agents for CANA- DIANA Village, ONLY accommo- dation--Annex to EXPO grounds, (250 yards). .25 per Leger Pipa on party @ Also Inquire about our Bue Tours, Phone 576-3131 once more to the edge of cat-| astrophe." | ity Tuesday. Eban told the council that The announcement listed four|Egypt's President Gamal Abdel Dr. Harold Englund of Ber-|areas where vessels 65 foot or|Nasser had called for total war and the destruction of Israel keley, Calif., advised delegates HERE AND THERE: to become experts on their home NEW ADDRESS In Tuesday's column 'Before the Magistrate", it was report- ed that Helen O'Conner lived at 8 Simcoe St. S. Miss O'Con- ner no longer resides at that address. LETTERS PATENT The current issue of The On- tario Gazette carries the in- formation that letters patent of incorporation have been grant- ed to five Oshawa district firms. They are: Lundy Con- struction Limited, Whitby; Morgan-Caswell and Company Limited, Pickering Township; Orono Food and Service Centre Limited, Clarke Township; Penny and Whitman Enter- prises Limited and Z. and F. Management Limited, both of Oshawa. | towns and conditions in them, then seek to improve the wel- more in length will be restricted to a 10-mile-an-hour limit, They are in the Hamilton Islanc-Corn- wall area, at Morrisburg, Pres- before hostilities broke out. In the face of Nasser's "deliberate policy of politicide, the murder fare of the neglected. EET cott and the Brockville Narrows.|of a state," Israel showed un- BRIDGELAND turns "Bargainsville" Join the 'IN' Crowd! 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They said: | Foster, 335 Bruce seven kids -- yot to have time to vision. The only have time to do i them." Mrs. Ju 'Berinvanncvtnntaaagetten nti Two No To Foll By KEN CI OTTAWA (CP) | tives and New D ranged Tuesday fc mons _non-confiden the Liberal govern ing the summer p recess. Both hinged on budget presented |: by Finance Minist In a brief resun budget debate, J. teith, (PC--Perth) government of spe icy and moved a nt motion attacking it cial critic Colin ( lowed up with an expanding the criti The start of the again focussed on East war, with opp bers pressing the for information on and United Nation halt it. Opposition Lea: baker, who was vately on the wa Minister Pearson < Affairs Minister | gested a secret se House to discuss th Mr. Pearson sai think this was ne he left open the po debate on the top when the external part ment spendil could be called. The Conservative dence motion said ment has "failed n set an example of f sibility with its pl 000,000 deficit in the cal year. 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