Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Jun 1967, p. 3

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ir 1 Ontario it Temperatures pmnight, high Saturday ~ PAS re 85 'Seasons Travel jusive agents for CANA. Village. ONLY accommo- Annex to EXPO grounds, ds). 5 per person besed on party of 4, Jire about our Bus Tours, one 576-3131 a ALL OR SEE XON'S - FURNACES G OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS OUR SERVICE ALBERT ST. 23-4663 CENTRE rden Probleme dens -5757 , |ARN'S HOTO SALE Comp at Sale 24.98 19.67 63.85 36.67 «$9.95 49.67 se 99.95 79.67 119.95 99.67 24.95 18.67 1E CAMERAS 94,50 67.67 235.85 167.67 CULARS 47,30 34.67 39.95 24.67 31.50 19.67 n and y troubles" - Install FACTORY ~- OSHAWA 3-1633 More than 30 girl mem- bers of the Simcoe Hail Teen-Age Club will hold a car wash at the Esso Serv- at King and Park road tomorrow from ice centre TEEN - AGE GIRLS PLAN FOR TRIP TO EXPO '67 9, a.m. to 5 p.m. to help raise funds to take the club to the world's fair at Expo -'67 in Montreal. The girls are shown in rehear- sal for their Saturday chores. --Oshawa Times Punish Israel, Says Soviet; : U.S. Offers Package Deal UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- The Soviet Union is saying to other members of the United Nations Security Council that Israel is a bully and aggressor and must be punished. The United States, presenting a sort of package deal, is urg- ing the council to call simul- taneously for full observance of its ceasefire resolutions and for a start on a peace - building dialogue between Israel and the Arab countries. Canada is asking the 15-coun- try council to make sure first that a general ceasefire is in effect and then tackle the next step without attempting to say what that step should be. Under the apparently tire- less leadership of the council began another round of private consultations early today in an effort to find some area of agreement that will enable the council to do something more about the Arab-Israeli crisis at its next meeting, scheduled for today at 3 p.m. Embodied in separate draft resolutions before the council, these three approaches to the problems of the Middle East add up today to another dead- lock in the United Nations or- gan which, according to the UN charter, is supposed to police the world. ACCEPT CEASEFIRE An appeal for a_ general ceasefire Tuesday night and a demand for one Wednesday aft- ernoon have been the only coun- cil actions so far. Nothing was decided about enforcement measures or even steps to en- sure compliance. Secretary- General U Thant has received acceptances, however, from all the main belligerents, Egypt, Most Canadians In Israel, Arab States -- Still There OTTAWA (CP)--The majority of Canadians known officially to he in Israel and the Arab states b.:dering her before the out- break of war in the Middle East were still there Thursday, re- ports the external affairs de- partment. It said that less than two weeks before the war started last Monday there were 580 Canadians registered with their embassy in Israel, 371 in Le- banon, 138 in the United Arab Republic, 38 in Jordan and 26 in Syria. The department emphasized these were minimum numbers. Canadians were not required to register at their embassies abroad and many did not. There was no accurate way of know- ing how many tourists were in the warring countries, let alone government and business personnel and dependents. Two chartered planes evacu- ated 123 Canadians from Le- banon Wednesday. By Thursday, Ambassador' John Stearns in Cairo estimated only about 30 Canadians were left in the U.A.R. Arrangements for further evacuations in the war zone will be put into effect whenever necessary, the department said. It cited the. situation in Israel as an illustration of how diffi- cult it is for the government here to fix the numbers of Ca- nadians in the war theatre. On May 23-24 there were 580 Cana- dians registered with the em- bassy in Tel Aviv. After war broke out, additional Canadians registered, bringing the total to almost 900. Ambassador G. G. Crean in Rome. has made air charter arrangements for evacuation to Italy of those Canadians in Is- rael if necessary. It is thought here some of the remaining Canadians in the U.A.R. may join Americans leaving on a chartered liner from Alexan- Canada has been looking after Britain's affairs in the U.A.R. since diplomatic relations be- tween the two were severed months ago. The BBC has been broadcasting messages to Bri- tons and other Commonwealth citizens wishing to leave Egypt to contact the British interests section of the Canadian em- bassy in Cairo. : Plans are being worked out with the British in other Arab states for air, sea and road evacuation as necessary, the department said. The recent secession of East- ern Nigeria from the rest of that country created more prob- lems for the Canadian govern- ment. The CBC international service and the BBC began Wednesday to broadcast messages to Cana- dians and other British Com- monwealth citizens that while there appeared no immediate danger it seemed advisable for their women and children to be sent out to Lagos, the Nigerian capital. The Canadian high commis- sion has sent a representative to the Eastern Niegria town of Enugu to work with the British mission there in helping the dependents to leave. A week ago there were an estimated 700 Canadians in the whole of Ni- geria, of whom about 130 were living in Eastern Nigeria, which is claiming independence under the name of Biafra. FOR SALE: SKELETON LOUTH, England (CP)--This Lincolnshire town's municipal council not only admits it has a skeleton in its closet but is trying to sell the relic which has been hanging in a cup- board for 30 years. No one knows who it belonged to. It will probably wind up in a dria. medical school. Reitman's SWIMSUIT SALE Was Advertised In Error On Thursday, June 8th SALE STARTS : FRIDAY, JUNE 16th SORRY LADIES! using such agr s Israel, Jordan and Syria. If pressed to a vote, the U.S. motion faces a probable Soviet veto on the grounds that, in the words of Soviet Ambassador Nikolai Fedorenko, it is gloss- ing over its ally's responsibil- ity for aggression." Fedorenko insisted in his draft resolution, introduced Thursday, that the council de- mand the withdrawal of Israeli forces behind armistice lines drawn by the UN in 1949 at the end of the first. Arab - Israeli war. If pressed to a vote, how- ever, his motion appears headed for decisive defeat be- cause a majority of council 's either disbelieve {hat Israel is an aggressor or think that there is insufficient evi- dence to put the blame for the conflict wholly on its side. The Canadian motion, intro- duced Wednesday, was the first of three draft resolutions and diplomatic sources indicated the council could fall back upon it as a new starting point. The treason why it didn't become one earlier is that it was seen by the Soviet Union as opening the door to majority initiatives by the UN. The Canadian motion would give Tabor and Secretary - Gen- eral U Thant general authority to do whatever they can '"'to bring about full and effective compliance with the council's ceasefire resolutions." EXPLAINS ACTION Canadian ambassador George Ignatieff told reporters that since there is no "international presence" in some areas where Israelis and Arabs have been fighting, "it is difficult to deter- mine who is doing what against whom." He said the council has to make sure the ceasefire is pro- cured, then deal with the issue of withdrawal of Israeli forces from Egyptian and Jordan ter- ritory and other questions that would be involved in a Middle East settlement. The key paragraph -in the U.S. draft resolution, presented by Ambassador Arthur Gold- berg Thursday, would have the council "call for discusslons promptly" after the ceasefire "among the parties concerned, third - party or Nations assistance as United they may wish, looking towards the establishment of viable t: ing the withdrawal and disengagement of armed personnel, the renun- ciation of force regardless of its nature, the maintenance of vi- tal international rights and the establishment of a stable and durable peace in the Middle East." , The implication of this para- graph, as one Canadian diplo- mat saw it, "is that everything in the Middle East should stand pat until there is a final settle- ment." NEW FRONT LAWN SENATE DEBATE SCHEDULED By RONALD LEBEL OTTAWA (CP)--Justice Leo Landreville has resigned from the Ontario Supreme Court amid government indications that he may get a life pension of $18,666 a year. The 57-year-old judge and one- time Sudbury mayor resigned just as the Senate was sched- uled te~@pen debate Thursday on an unprecedented motion to unseat him for alleged improper conduct in stock dealings. Opposition spokesmen in both houses served notice they will fight any government move to award the judge a special pen- sion. Justice Minister Trudeau an- nounced in the Commons that the government had accepted the resignation, effective June 30. Asked about a possible pen- sion, he replied amid opposi- tion hoots: "T think it is very much the type of matter to which the gov- ernment might well give some consideration." the minister said he would have At a press conference later, Landreville Resigns, May Receive Pension against a pension. CANNOT CONTINUE | Justice Landreville said in his) letter: "After five difficult years) and appearing in seven hear- ings, my health and wealth are impaired. I cannot continue." He said the controversy aris- ing from his $117,000 stock mar- ket windfall 10 years ago de-! stroyed his usefulness as a} judge, but reaffirmed his inno-! cence of any wrongdoing. His integrity or conduct in hearing court cases had never {been questioned. | "In my personal life as |mayor, solicitor or citizen, I re- peat emphatically and reaffirm my innocence of any wrongdo- ing in law or ethics. But I can- not remove unfounded suspi- cions."" | He thanked the residents of Sudbury for their "continued | to weigh arguments for andjconfidence and persisterce in jdefending me." | THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, June 9, 1967 3 7,500 shares in Northern On- tario Natural Gas Co. free -of charge. He sold the stock later for $117,000. --That he had failed to | move "grave suspicion of im-| propriety" arising from his) acceptance in early 1957 of! WHEREABOUTS UNKNOWN | The judge dated his resigna-| tion letter in Ottawa Wednes- day and was unavailable for comment Thursday. His wife said in Toronto he was still in Ottawa, but a local hotel said he checked out Thursday morn- ing. | The resignation was an-| nounced in the Commons about 30 minutes before the Senate was expected to open a long and bitter impeachment debate. Senator Daniel Lang (L--Tor- onto), co-chairman of a special Commons - Senate committee that recommended the judge's removal in March, quickly with- drew his impeachment motion filed Tuesday night. The resolution made two ac- cusastions against the judge: ALL NEW ON HIGH SEAS | SEATTLE (AP) -- The freighter Chena is on the high seas with Walter 0. Kraft's new front lawn. The sodden ship sailed Thursday night with 6,000 feet of turf, sent' from a nearby grass farm for the lawn of Kraft's new home at Kodiak, Alaska. The strips of sod will be kept in vans cooled to 33 de- grees for the five-day trip. Peking Mobs Flay British By ANTHONY Grey PEKING (Reuters)--Foreign demonstrators forced their way into the compound of Britain's diplomatic mission in Peking today and smashed windows and set fire to a car. The demonstrators -- Arab, African and European Commu- nists resident in Peking--threw eggs at one British diplomat who tried to stop them enter- ing the mission. The attack came as massive demonstrations, centred on the Middle East war, continued in Peking for the third consecutive day. After smashing the windows of the British office, the dem- onstrators went to the residence of the British charge d'Affaires, Donald Hopson, and made as if vo-11-yuurself with new Easy-to-install PATIOS Bee new Alsynite te modernize your present home . . . or in the construction of « new one... it hes « hovseful of wees! R resists weather! Nails, saws, drills easily | Lightweight, yet will net shatter! Shimmering celeurs are bonded right int... lets light in, keops store out. See Alsynite Translucent Penels today! al : : TM ey PAINTEGLASS CENTRE ir Canadian Pittsburgh Ind. Ltd. 273 Simece St. 9. -- Oshawe 723-1181 CONTROL -- adds protection EASY REACH CONTROLS... DISCHARGE ... LARGE, RID' STANDARDS. Twist-aFlex trademark to enter the compound. But Hopson lined six or seven of his staff in the gateway and they prevented the demonstra- tors entering. During the scuffle the first secretary, Anthony Blishen, was struck on the head with plac- ards and his spectacles were smashed. Brazilian Shot By Colleague BRASILIA (AP)--A Brazilian congressman shot a colleague Thursday during a hand-to-hand struggle in a hall of the Con- gress building. Security officers said Deputy Nelson Carneiro shot Deputy Eustacio Souto Maior 'twice in the chest outside an office of the Brazilian Democratic Move- ment, the country's only oppo- sition party. Doctors at a hospi- tal to which Souto Maior was taken said his life was not in danger. Acquaintance said Souto Maior slapped Carneiro in the face during a dispute a week ago. Lander-Stark is the Answer! - « « The Question? 43 KING STREET WEST Which leading Fue! Of" your service job from stert te finish » . uneonditionelty Querentees its workmanship? Cell 725-3581 fer Home Air-Conditioning er thet new Olf Furnace you promised your home fer next winter. LANDER- STARK OIL LIMITED OSHAWA mustang '25' BY WARD-man' _ HITS THE TARGET for PERFORMANCE and THRIFT MUSTANG '25'! A new thoroughbred in the Yard-Man line; made with quality, runs with economy and priced for the thrifty. MUSTANG '25' has all these features ready to go: FLOTATION DECK with Twist- concept in smooth, contour lawn mowing... SAFETY BLADE ACTION CLUTCH -- step on it to go, release it to stop... REVERSE GEAR SHIFT ... AUTOMOTIVE TYPE STEERING -+.3-WAY ADJUSTABLE PADDED SEAT... GUARAN- TEED MOWER HOUSING WITH CLEAN-FLO GRASS MATIC TIRES ...4 HP BRIGGS & STRATTON ENGINE . . . UNDERDECK EXHAUST ... CONFORMS TO ASA Distrib y DUKE LAWN EQUIPMENT LIMITED 1184 Plains Rd. E., Burlington, Ont. Burlington 637-5216 At Your Locel Dealer G. S. WHITE & SON LTD. 1300 Si St. N. Oshewa a-Flex® cutting action--a new to fine lawn care... LIVE FORWARD, NEUTRAL AND E-EASY WHEELS ... PNEU- ted B "Yes you can continue your education." Do you plan to or write to: Student Awards Department of University Affairs, 481 University Avenue ONTARIO Toronto 2 ~ ©) This booklet shows you how you can get financial help. or other post-secondary institution? Do you need financial assistance? To learn whether you can qualify under the Ontario Student Awards | program, obtain this brochure from | your secondary school, or from the | institution of your choice | | | attend a university BIGGER! BIGGER! BETTER! om Progress Report The above photo shows our New Aerial for Channel 10 Rochester. This antenna is 6'8" x 6'8'. As you can see it is taller than Mr. Small who is holding it. 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