Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Jul 1967, p. 3

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BUCKLEY R. McEwen Battles DIRECT CRAFT RK PLAZA inteed Certificates EARN 270 JT @ years in. Gueranteed nt Certificates te Principal and e used @s Col- loons, r Executors in of death, Trustee Act in- TARIO TRUST CORPORATION '., Bowmenville 2527 OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS end SATURDAYS | 576-2287 It's anybody's guess what Prince Takamatsu, back to camera, said to Mrs, Pear- Québec, Federal Officials By DAVE MacDONALD MONTREAL (CP)--One of the from as far away as Cannes, Le Havre and Puerto Rico. In the basin Monday, near . Expo Marina Accomodation ma Seen As Cheapest On Site marina since opening day, a higher wages here. Monday, but} t fact Mr. Lavigne attributes to|caused no tie-up at the main} his policy of "running the place Toronto examination centre. 200 driver THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, July 11, 1967 3 Examiners Work-To-Rule TORONTO (CP). -- Ontario' examiners bega' heir work-to-rule campaign for} 4 best accommodation bargains to son at a reception at WHAT MADE MRS. PEARSON LAUGH? Ot- tawa Monday, but whatever it was, she apparently en- i Minister joyed it. Prime Pearson shares the humor also. Tangle On de Gaulle Plans QUEBEC (CP)--A mixup be- It was announced in Ottawa,practise is to have a reception| settlement at the Citadel later on the sched-! struction tie-up. | tween the federal and Quebec|that Gen. de Gaulle would then| to bejule. Monday over details of the five-| greeted again by the Governor- governments day state visit of President Charles de Gaulle of France. The office of the commis-| to Canada announced appeared evident|proceed to the Citadel, General. TO HONOR VANIER rat' There, the French president} sioner general for state visits| would place a wreath at the bur-| in Ot-lial place of the late Gov.-Gen. Usually Lt.-Gov. Hughes La- pointe holds a reception there borer's International, Union, for chiefs of state in the even-) ing before the state given by|headquarters in Washington for the provincial government, | The reporter suggested to Mr./ tawa that Gen. de Gaulle's first)Georges Vanier within the Cita- ix stop would be at the Citadel, Aut walle. Masse that there was a mixup! summer residence of the Gov- ernor - General. : Marcel Masse, Quebec cabinet} minister responsible for state| cally impossible for the Gover- visits in the province, an-| nor-General to greet him at both because the Quebec government Questioned on this at a press was planning its portion of the "It's not arranged. It's conference, Mr. Masse said: | physi- nounced Monday that the gen-|places. What's he going to do, eral would make his first stop|run ahead?" at Quebec's city hall. President de Gaulle arrives|two chiefs of state might ride to| He w: the two levels of government.|reluctance of the international D iikete or Gate alien nee as not ruling out the pos-| fice to lend a hand cost the|Onto's construction tie-up. de Gaulle visit independently of the federal government. Mr. Masse said Quebec's com- mittee was working alone but there was consultation between |Erancols Lavigne, of Expo's marina, said in an there are any cancellations and there have been some," said Mr. Lavigne. Projected attendance at the 372-berth marina for the fair's six-month run was 9,000 and capacity booked by last Octo- ber." cause of "'late delivery of boats, mechanical even divorces." be had in Montreal this summer is a 25 - acre marina located right on the Expo 67 site. While many Expo visitors ex- haust themselves searching out nearby accommodation, the boating fraternity is billeted at the site for what has to be the fair's most economic housing facilities. "You can't beat our rates," commodore nterview Monday. "The daily berthing fee for a 40-foot cabin cruiser sleeping six would be $5.25. 2,000 WAITING The popularity of the marina, jocated in the La Ronde amuse- ment area on the eastern tip of St. Helen's Island, is proved by the waiting list of 2,000 vessels. "They're waiting to see if 'we had 80 per cent of our Cancellations had come in be- breakdowns and "But this represents only one Aug. 31. After that it's a little| easier." two boats from were two smaller vessels of the less plush but more typically Canadian variety that have been arriving steadily opened. Two 21-foot lon arrived Monday packed with 13 4 sun-bronzed boys from North|While prepared to extract the Bay, Ont. | pu Tackled as a centennial pro- 20,000,000 visitor expected -- to ject, the long trip had taken the|Pass through the turnstiles Puerto Rico,| rough." without a pass sign' since Expo owner. g war canoes) 20,000,000 TODAY last drop of publici' boys through raging rapids and sometime today. The public was not admitted to the area around the boats Expo 67 authorities ed by a boat- mean- ty from their southshore Longeuil. heavy downpours since July 1. John Inglis, 21, one of the 13, Camp Ponacka, a private boys' The youngsters called them- | f: selves the Voyageurs and after |t a few hours in the marina pad- died across the St. Lawrence River to camp for the night in Also in the marina Monday was one of its largest visitors so far, the 118-foot yacht Chantic-|s leer, owned by the president of an outboard motor company. Mr. Lavigne said one of the marina's lar ges t contingents Guiana May 26, 1966. will arrive July 18 "when we expect 100 sailing craft from the Great Lakes Sailing Squadron." The $1,500,000 basin provides customers with everything from individual telephone lines to a| haul-out lift that can take a 40-| ton load out of the water. They | to 1% per cent of bookings and|also have a 160-seat restaurant we are jammed right through to| and a small snack bar for their use only. pany were to sponsor the visit- said all the boys had come or's visit to the site over a 24- ge aay come som hour period after he had been camp located on Lake Baptiste, |Selected and interviewed near over ceremonies marking it at Place des Nations. Expo and a cigarette com- "We charge 15 cents a foot! just north of Bancroft. Ont. the St, Helen's Island site en- with a $5 minimum." | if trance. the branch to which the exam- | CAMP ACROSS RIVER Today is Guyana Day at the|iners belong, said there was air with Guyana Prime Minis- er Forbes Burnham presiding The 44-year-old law graduate of the University of London has been involved in the West In- dian country's turbulent politics | ince 1948. He became the first prime minister of Guyana when it received independence and aj| signed contracts for more than change of name from British! $150,000,000 work abroad cision setting examiner salaries Annual Report Reveals There is usually a six-week wait for an examination, but some applicants cancel their appointments every day. Mon- day, the licence centre was not accepting on-the-spot replace- ments as it usually does, and by 4 p.m., closing time, the cen- tre was empty. Alvin Faught, chief steward of Branch 151 of the civil service association of Ontario, said Monday the union considered an Ontario arbitration board de- at between $4,500 and $5,625 "a paupers handout." Earl H. Dickson, president of only a slight chance that per- sons trying for driver's licences would be penalized by the cam- paign. "We pretty well always work to rule, anyway," he said, WIN OUTSIDE JOBS Yugoslav builders have this year. CBC Cost $5.90 A Head OTTAWA (CP)--The CBC cost|difference Canadians about $5.90 a head|the CBC board of directors and of opinion between There have been few reports|during the 1966-67 fiscal year.| Auditor-General Maxwell. Hen- The annual report of the pub-|derson on a retirement payment Vessels have come to Expolof trouble or rowdyism at the} TORONTO (CP) -- An intra- union battle may be shaping up in the aftermath of a partial of Toronto's con- Gerry Gallagher, business agent of Local 183 of the La- Monday criticized international lack of support during the eight- week strike. Members of the local voted Sunday to accept increases of 85 to 95 cents an hour over 29 months, which will raise a laborer's annual income to the $7,000 to $8,000 bracket. While the boost was the big- gest increase in the local's his- licly-owned corporation released' of Monday showed net operating| year's -- rene' 'Internal Union Strife Brews 3 'wiz:,siees In Metro's Laborers' Strike jas part of the reason. tario office." from each local in the U.S. we! could have held out indefinitely. | "If there is some law that says international headquarters can't send money to Canadian locals during strikes we should never send them another dime." He said there might be union reprisals for his statements, but "the story should be told and| to me." cals by international offices has | it's time we stopped it." Meanwhile, tory, Mr. Gallagher said the aboard the French Navy/the Citadel in the same vehicle,|sibility of Gen. de Gaulle visit-|™en thousands of dollars. Cruiser Colbert July 23, berth-|but Mr. Masse said this was not/ing the Governor-General. All state| the arrangements were not final. ing at Wolfe's Cove, where he/the usual will be greeted by Gov-Gen. Ro-|visits here. é Masse said the usual'each day. land Michener. practise on Many changes were being made ment did not entirely end Tor- Still to be settled are disputes 'The horrible thing is we are|involving 500 locked-out labor- sending millions of dollars in|e€rs on commercial and indus- dues to the U.S. hea ldn't get A monument to Paul de Chomedey, Sieur de Maisonneuve, stands amid skyscrapers in Montreal's Place Ville Marie. Maisson- neuve was the founder and first governor of Ville Marie, which later became the city of Montreal. He arrived in Quebec in 1641 and was governor for 22 years. In the early years his small colony was under constant Indian attack. Maisonneuve returned to France in 1665 and died in retirement in 1676. The domed building. behind his statue is the Royal Bank of Canada building. was é BEYOND THE FOUNDER'S 'DREAMS | (CP Photo) PAVING @ 2 Years Guarantee ® @ Free Estimates @ ASPHALT & CONCRETE DICK KNOCKER & SONS 723-2132, OSHAWA <:|for newborn political reasons, : his lawyer returns from Winni- -|peg July 24. f| Mr. Justice Parker said Dr lors. He said he had asked head- quarters to circulate a letter to all locals asking that they sup- port Toronto strikers. CLAIMS POOR RESPONSE "All I got back was a one- sentence letter referring the rs and when Poa for help I/iron workers and about et it." buildings, several hundred 600 em. ployees of seven major ready- mix concrete firms. ig were to today among contractors, com- mercial laborers and ready-mix men, but there is no immediate prospect for a settlement of the iron-workers grievances, labor spokesmen said. TORONTO (CP)--Dr. Morton Shulman, central figure in a royal commission investigating his charges of government in- Cotnam's Lawyer Accuses 153,014 from sales of advertis- The corporation earned $35,- g time and collected another $1,042,996 from interest on in- vestments and other sources. However, it also had to charge jup $7,012,574 for depreciation of| jequipment and plant. Sunday's settle-| 1967-68. $25,000, equivalent to one salary, to W. E. § Briggs, a senior vice-president. " The start of color telecasting|the Commons on broadcasting, and increased expenditures for|Mr. Henderson approved the re- \centennial programs were cited|port with the exception of this tors in a dispute between the CBC board. Mr. Briggs re- tired last Jan. 25. The cabinet had decreed that\ yonday, \Mr. Briggs' salary was $25,000 a : year and the CBC board had no I, | A 7,000-pound Indian ele- phant arrived in Halifax Monday on the last leg of a trip from Bombay to East River, will serve as hardboard plant built by In- dian interests. MASCOT ARRIVES N.S. The elephant mascot at a SIU Negotiators, Firms rom soft ner we sate Secretar Ragume Conciliation Talks whole matter back to the On-| Total operating costs were|not within the competence" of] sailors belonging to the Seafar- ri {$154,340,599, com pared with| If we had received even $10/$133,446,819 in 1965-66. | authority to make the additional| payment, Mr. Henderson wrote. |OUIMET DISAGREES CBC President J. The annual report revealed a'letter to Miss LaMarsh. Alphonse|back into conciliation -- talks |Ouimet rejected this view. He|broke June 30--after conversa- Because this report covered|noted that Mr. Briggs' service|tions which were touched off I don't give a damn what the |Pperations only up to last March|to the CBC extended over 30|during the weekend by a tele-| international people try to do/|31, the bulk of the bill for cen-\|years, including the seven|gram from SIU president Leon- |tennial programming will show|years he spent as a vice-presi-| ard McLaughlin. "The duping of Canadian lo:|Up in the 1967-68 annual revort.|dent up to his retirement. In spending estimates tabled) "A special retiring allowance| prepared to meet for talks to! been going on since 1900 andjearlier in Parliament, the cor-|for senior executives in certain poration sought $143,960,000 for|cases is common practice in in- "i js \ dustry," Mr. Ouimet said in his| Paid leave, a manning schedule TORONTO (CP) -- Negotia- the union could strike, tying up , x 33| most ships on the lake, July 22. payment, which he said "was|shipping companies and 5,000 ae -- -------- ers' International Union were called back into conciliation Talks under Louis Fine, fed- erally - appointed chairman of | the conciliation board in the) dispute, are to resume today. | Mr. Fine called the parties} The telegram said the SIU is| implement a 40-hour work week, | covering the number of seamen | Demoted To The demotion of the ambi- Union Boss The 80,000,000 - member. or- | tious, 48-year-old leader followed ganization of Soviet unions is elimination of a number of his/controlled by the Communist jproteges fron: key jobs amid) party and has limited powers to |signs of a Kremlin power strug-/take initiatives on behalf of its Shulman Of Backing Down was ignoring a Court of Appeal decision that he should be al- lowed to present his evidence through a lawyer of his own terference in inquests, was ac- cused Monday of backing out of. the commission's hearings because he cannot prove his case. Barry Pepper, defending Dr. H. B. Cotnam, Ontario super- vising coroner, against Dr. Shul- man's charges that he suppres- sed inquests, said Dr. Shulman left the hearing Monday because he is "afraid to face the n.usic"' Dr. Shulman left the hearing after Mr. Justice William D. Parker refused his second re- quest for an adjournment until Shulman had had enough time "All you want to do is play games," he said. "I'm getting tired of playing games. I want to get on with this." SAYS COURT IGNORED Dr. Shulman said as he left the hearing that he will take no further part in it because it to secure a lawyer--two months | c bin in rejecting Mr. Pepper's ended, but said he will not ar-| rest Dr. Shulman if he fails to) co-operate. In testimony Monday, commission heard of incidents involving two women who died after having cancer serums ad- ministered to them. Dr. Shulman says inquests should have been held in both cases but were suppressed be- cause of collusion between prov- incial officials and the College of Physicians and Surgeons, li- censing body for Ontario doc- gle. Recent events have indicated that, from a leading position in the collective leadership that) succeeded Nikita Khrushchev} in October, 1964, Shelepin has been progressively isolated) within the Kremlin high com- mand headed by Communist, Mr, Justice Parker joined| etary Leonid! commission lawyer Charles Du-|P Byeriney. iii | suggestion that the hearing be|peTAINS SEAT The appointment today left jhim with his seat on the party's the|11-man Politburo, the committee that runs the Soviet Union. The announcement failed to mention his other key job, a party sec- retaryship. Experienced non - Communist analysts long have suspected that Shelepin might lose his Poliburo and secretariat posts in a quiet purge. The new ap- pointment was a step in that direction. Shelepin, named chairn.an of Y0 MONEY ON TERM OPEN SOON OSHAWA Deposits over 1% GUARANTY TRUST H FEDERALLY INCORPORATED AND SUPERVISED Capital and Reserve $26,000,000 Rein Harmatare, Manager UR \ EARNS DEPOSITS $400,000,000 E., Oshawa Tel. 728-1653 22 King St. members. a | WINERY LIMITED Kremlin Secret Police Head" tsiern:2 ses » mn 1 | | ' required for different vessels | mum guarantee of six work, days a week with time-and-a- | half overtime. @ BLUE CROSS @ P.S.l. @ GREEN SHIELD NEED NOT PAY CASH! You Give Us' The Doctors Mr. Fine said Monday night there is no definite date for a MOSCOW (AP) -- Alexander, the All-Union Central Council of/final report from him, although N. Shelepin, former head of the/Trade Unions today, succeeded| Mr. Soviet secret police and long a/Viktor V. Grishin, an alternate contender for top power, wasjor non-voting member of the named today to the powerless/Poliburo who had been trade post of Soviet trade union boss.|/union boss since 1956. 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