Los Angeles. Balding will ty in the 150-man field begin- ig competition at the Baltus- Golf Club Today. TIME FOR DEFENCE .S. embassies and consu- ss in some overseas cities installing windows of lam- ted, shatterproof glass, The amendment approved by ge committee provided for the Clear Policy On Resources Necessary To Prevent Clash OTTAWA (CP)--Trouble will develop between the national nergy board of Canada and the .§. Federal Power Commission nless the government sets out clear policy on resource de- velopment, Alvin Hamilton, for- mer Conservative agriculture minister, warned Wednesday in the Commons. The MP for Qu'Appelle, Sask., Conservative leadership can- didate and a staunch defender of Canadian autonomy, also called for a policy statement on national hydro-electric trans- mission grid. He said such a grid is "vital the whole concept of sov- preignty and using our energy sa basic part of strengthening our bargaining power in the field of resource use on the con- tinent."" Mr. Hamilton threw a barrage lof questions at Energy Minister Pepin as the minister intro- duced the $142,000,000 spending estimates for the energy, mines nd resources department for. e 1967-68 fiscal year. He did not specify in what area he felt trouble might arise between the energy board and ipower commission but said he nad been waiting four years for he government to outline its policy on oil and gas transmis- gion, oil and gas regulations in shelf, the relationship between atomic electric power and hy- dro resources and a national water policy which "we desper- ately need." Mr. Hamilton said the U.S. has undertaken studies, but it was embarrassing to have to in- terpolate from their figures. Yet he accused the minister 0: frightening the Canadian peopl by talking in generalities when figures were available, even though those figures were adapted from American studies. He said studies showed the U.S. water requirements were 650,000,000,000 gallons a day whereas minimum flows of Ca- nadian rivers totalled 1,620,000,- 900,000 gallons a day, "so there is no need for the Canadian people to be terrified' abvut their future water requirements. The 120,000,000 acre-feet of water the U.S. "had the colossal gall to come to us and ask for" would generate $360,000,000,000 worth of industrial production per year, according to estimattes in a study published in the United States, he said. He said it was the duty of the minister to give these facts so the Canadian people will not be "robbed of their heritage." Mr. Hamilton praised Mr. Pepin for the research work done by the department, but the North and on the continental said he is distressed at the ab- House Denies Students University B TORONTO (CP)--A_passion- ate five-hour debate on whether students should sit on the Uni- versity of Western Ontario's board of governors ended Wed- inesday night with the legisla- ture voting "no" by a 58-to-21 margin. In the process, Elmer Sopha (L--Sudbury) predicted that a contribution to the debate by Education Minister Davis would destroy his political career and (Premier Robarts declared that atudent representation on uni- ersity boards is '"'inevitable." The stage for the debate was set Feb. 13 when the university icame to the legislature with a private bill revising the univer- ity's charter in a variety of iways. When the bill, sponsored by ohn White (PC London South), reached the legislature's private bills committee March , It was confronted by a stu- dent delegation which made an Imposing argument for direct presentation on the board of overnors. "which called for the students to be represented on the board by : The students sought, and won, Dae of a clause in the bill "a non-student. STUDENTS GET CHOICE Aig at to be repr d by ny person of their choice duly lected by them. ' University officials present at he meeting responded by The bill sat on the legisla- ture's order paper until June 8 when it was unanimously given second reading without debate. But the following day Mr. Davis served notice of introduc- ing an amendment which elim- oard Seat inated the clause inserted by the committee, in effect wiping out student representation alto- gether, That is where the matter stood Wednesday afternoon when the house began clause- sence of policy statements by the minister. Mr. Pepin introduced the esti- mates with a half-hour review of the work undertaken by the department and the projects under way to study water and mineral resources. COMPANY STALLED Murdo Martin (NDP -- Tim- mins) said Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. had ignored the growing needs for gas in east- ern markets and had stalled for 18 months while "playing games" with the government. He said it didn't matter which route was used as long as work started immediately on a nigger gas pipe line through Northern Ontario. H. A, Olson (SC -- Medicine Hat) joined Mr. Martin in urg- ing immediate action on the new natural gas transmission line. It would soon be too late to get lines built in time to pre- vent a serious shortage in On- tario and Quebec next winter. Replying to opposition party leaders during the question period, Prime Minister Pearson said he believed Canada would have to participate in solving the Arab refugee problem, not only by financial aid, but by accepting some Palestine Arab refugees as immigrants if inter- national arrangements can be worked out. He said Canada had abstained from voting on the Security Council resolution presented by the U.S.S.R. condemning Israel as the aggressor in the recent war and urging a withdrawal of Israeli forces to pre-war lines. Government House Leader MacEachen advised the House that CBC plans to televise the Commons in action as part of a centennial project has been scrapped. Presence of the cameras in the galleries on Monday raised questions from MPs and the cameras were removed before by-clause study of the bill. the House met Tuesday. You Borrow $2,000 $3,000 $4,000 $5,000 ments, PARLIAMENT AT-A-GLANCE By THE CANADIAN PRESS WEDNESDAY, June 14, 1967 Prime Minister Pearson told the Commons Canada would have to accept Palestinian ref- ugees if an international plan for their relief is worked out. Government House 'Leader MacEachen said a proposal for the CBC to take some TV films' of the Commons in ac- tion has been dropped. The prime minister an- nounced appointment of Mr. Justice Rhodes Smith as chief justice of Manitoba. A Nova Scotia delegation headed by Premier Stanfield sought help for the Cape Breton steel industry from a group of cabinet ministers but received no commitments. Opposition spokesmen criti- cized the government for not developing long - range re- source policies as the Com- mons studied estimates of the energy department. THURSDAY, June 15 The Commons meets at 2:30 p.m. to open consideration of a bill to establish the Cape Breton Development Corp. and to discuss estimates of the registrar - general's depart- ment. Budget Debate Unfinished As Legislature In 92nd Day TORONTO (CP) -- The fifth session of Ontario's 27th parlia- ment went into its 92nd day to- PH Be Pee day with five - legislature's select committee on election law was not pro- ducing results. Premier Rob- arts denied an allegation by speakers still on the schedule. There had been speculation that the third longest session ever would end Weanesday, but by the evening the legislature found itself involved in a pas- sionate debate on student rep- resentation on the hoard of gov- ernors at the University of West- ern Ontario -- a debate that stretched on for five-hours. The outcome of the debate-- one of the livliest of the session --was approval of a private bill from Government Whip John White (London South) giving the students a representative on the board, but not one from the student body. The representative is to be a former faculty member or a graduate who has been out of the university for at least a year. In other business: -- Kenneth Bryden (NDP-- Toronto Woodbine) and Ver- non Singer (L.--. Toronto Downsview) charged that the Mr. Singer that the govern- wyient was stalling on the mat- ter of electoral reform. --A written reply from Pre- mier Robaris to a question from E. G. Freeman (NDP-- Fort William) stated that at the end of March there were 2,991 establishments licensed by the Liquor Control Board of Ontario. --In another statement, an- swering 2 query from: Oppo- sition Leader Robert Nixon, the premier said 375 em- ployees of the Workmen's Compensation Board -- which employs about 1,400 persons-- have resigned in the last 16 months. -- Fernand Guindon (PC-- Stormont), chairman of the St. Lawrence Parks Commis- sion, said paid admissions to Upper Canada Village, a re- construction of a pioneer com- munity near Cornwall, are running 85 per cent higher this year than in 1966. Lawrence Peters, son of Mrs, Joseph Peters and the late Mr. Peters of Strath- roy, received his Bachelor of Arts Degree at the Con- vocation of the University of Western Ontario held Wednesday, May 31. Mr. Peters was born in Oshawa and received his earliest education at St. Gregory's Separate School. He will teach at Wallaceburg Sec- ondary School in Septem- ber. Britannia THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, June 15, 1967 9 | FED UP } , | OXFORD, England (AP)~By ja vote of 160 to 90 the Oxford |Union debating society has ap- Leaves Friday LONDON (Reuters) -- Portsmouth, England, Friday to | -- meet Queen Elizabeth and} Prince Philip at Cornwall, Ont., July 2, it was announced today. A Royal Navy release said the royal couple will disembark at! Kingston, Ont., July 5 after they | visit Expo 67 at Montreal July | 3. | The Queen mother will em- bark on board the Britannia at Saint John, N.B., July 10 for a tour of the Maritime provinces. She will disembark at St. John's, Nfld., July 22 and the Britannia will return to Ports- mouth, arriving July 28. DEFINITION IS LOOSE DACCA, Pakistan (AP) -- Girls and married couples as jwell_as single men may join the Pakistan Bachelors Associ- jation formed during Family Planning Week here. The rules: Members may not marry and those who'are married may not have more than two children. 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