€ SIU Members |Fine Buildings Improve Broadcast Employee's Strike | Support Policy Community College Image Averted For Several Days |ing members of the Seafarers'} TORONTO (CP) -- Communi-jthe fortress-like 'concrete build- ing throughout British Colum- MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)--|ington--involved in the negotia- International Union of Canada/ty colleges should improve their|ing and it was almost as diffi-/bia Wednesday, but cooler A threatened strike by 3,000/tions, which started Aug. 7. |Wednesday voted unanimously image by the construction ofjcult to find a di "enthu- ther and widespread show- broadcast employees was| Terms of the networks' final|to continue the strike between/"fine buildings" which would|siastic about the place." €rs swung the tide of battle BOWMANVILLE - Supplying,are or what they are doing." Ontaris clacti averted, at least for severalloffer were not disclosed, but/its 5,400 striking lake sailorsilend status to them, J. W.| He criticized the college's|favor of firefighters for the first|liquor to minors and illegal pos-| Steve Demichuik, R.R. 1, on campaign. days, when union negotiators/the tentative NBC contract was and 32 Great Lakes pping Hazelton, pr of Mohawk/ 'sealed environment" of air-|time this summer. session of liquor brought a fine| pleaded not guilty to the charge.|_ Miss Ouellette said the Ontar- College in Hamilton said| conditioned artificially lighted| 'The weather pattern that\of $100 and costs, or 15 days,|He said he lived alone and had|i0 legislature pays most of the reached agreement Tuesday|reported to cover a three-year|companies. : with 'the National Broadcasting |period and. was to be retroac:| At Thorald, Owen Sound and) Wednesday. lecture rooms, and the large|has been plaguing us all season|plus 10 days in jail, for a Bow-|a colour TV. Neighborhood|education bill and it, rather children, boys and girls, came|than boards of governors, . Go., on a new contract andjtive to the expiration five|Midland, Ont., crowds in each} Mr. Hazelton, addressing the central hall surrounded by alhas been broken in all parts of|manville man in magistrate's } to his house to watch it and|Should have ultimate control Students Press For Financing LONDON, Ont. CP) -- Monique Ouellette, president of the Ontario Union of Students, says the 80,000-member union BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE Bowmanville Man Fined On Two Liquor Charges i. te'stiteme:*sa versity financing during the | @ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, September 8, 1967 Forest Fires Bum In B.C. VICTORIA (CP) -- There - to submit to union mem-|months ago of NABET's old|port supported the executive of conference on community col-|concrete balcony which gives|the province," said Tegid|court here Tuesday. Ses seepani from the Amer-! contract. __|the SIU and national policy/lege design at Scarborough col-|the students "feelings of Beg Jones, spokesman for the B.C.| Walter Barrett, R.R. 3, was|stayed quite late ,he said. over funds. : ican Broadcasting Co. The union had been working committee on the position to lege, said he was strongly quacy and of being under scru-|forest service. found by police asleep in his "Someone has to know where Tim O'Sullivan, spokesman|under an extension that expired hold out for a 40-hour week andjagainst the idea that the =ol- tiny from above." There have been more than|car in Dale Park. Five teenage|*! FINE : the money is going," she said . last Friday. a work spread of eight hours in|leges were for those not bright 2,800 fires in B.C. this summer,|youths were having a drinking| Illegal possession of liquor|Wednesday in an interview, littering the highway|"'The legislature can't question for negotiators of the National Association of Broadcast Employees and _ Technicians burning over an area of about|party nearby. Mr. Barrett ad-/and ALLEN JOINS ESKS 200,000 acres, But only three big}mitted buying the two cases of|brought a total fine of $81 orjexpenditures because it doesn't EDMONTON (CP) -- Ernie/fires have hit commercial tim-jbeer and three bottles of wine|12 days for 2 Bowmanville man.|see the budgets." Shuswap Lake near Kmloops, a|fournd at the scene. During the|William K. Crowells, R.R. 5,! she said OUS will distribute a ber -- 'a 45,000-acre blaze aijlast month all oe 'oat have|pleaded guilty to both charges. bist ddcluding : aninmeane Dr.. David Abbey, assistant/c, me A {10,000-acre blaze southeast of|been convicted by Magistrate 5 af cpartinator of research for thelrreday by Edmonton Est |G see she, iret Metso Une font | CLR GROWS [councils at Ontrie universes hase ag aa 4 X A CALGARY (CP)--New Arriv-|and community colleges. Ontario Institute for Studies in mos of the Western Football|/on Vancouver Island. DISMISSED lals to Calgary, a social club for| : Need An Oli Furnace? A major difference in the two,a 12-hour period. enough for university. proposals, . union args Before the strike, the spread! "The social status given to i : \. . the networks' policies was eight in 24 hours. th 4 . AFL-CIO), said ABC's propos-| Said. was rks' was eig } jo Ghasenain: of a univeraity Cr eg ABET ad model AH Be cae oe ame gi Na Ames (Pokey) Allen, detensive al ion' vi : MASE mended tha -lhighly over- " : | na oniwe ee |\demanded a four-day work tinued much longer, the SIU's ghly over-rated," he said. back released by British : : |week and pay raises from the! national policy committee and The union committee, recom-/ present $218 to $300 a week for executive be empowered to for- mending acceptance of the NBC/ most of its members. |mally request the government settlement, said a vote on both) A scheduled strike announce- tg place the Canadian shipping proposals is expected in a mat-' ment Tuseday by NABET was industry under government con- Education, said Toronto's Scar- i th ill < a Pee ere aun. "I am appalled by the lack|newcomers, has grown to more borough _ College, known|Conference. In turn, the Eski- tei: 08 throughout the world for its|mos dropped tight end Everett ahh rare repented cal UMey. of concern that certain parents|than 70 members since a hand- ter of days. delayed after federal mediators trol and administration. u vor O'Sullivan said the mechanics |called another negotiating ses- The 5,400 sailors from 17g|@rchitecture, is disliked by its} y1)wood who played: five |show," observed Magistrate R.|ful of new arrivals founded it in CALL of the union vote would be/sion. ° |vessels walked off the job Aug. | Students. games for Edmonton this sea- STILL STRIKES |B. Baxter in dismissing a charze\J: . Members, from more P mapped at a meeting in Miami|/ Employees of Columbia'17, tying up inland shipping| He said it is almost impossi-|son after coming from Winni-| -More than 15,000,000 peoplejof supplying liquor to munors|than 13 countries, meet weekly ERRY Beach today. The union has|Broadcasting System, repre- along the St. Lawrence River,|ble to pick up an architectural|peg Blue Bombers. Allen, 24,|suffer from leprosy but modern|laid against a Newtonville man.|for sightseeing trips and holp 723-3443 bargaining units in five cities--|sented by a different union, the Great Lakes and Eastern journal anywhere in the world|had been with the Lions for|treatment can effect a slow|"It looks as if they could not|one another find housing, jobs PAY on wieHT care less where their childrenjor other clubs. New York, Los Angeles, San|were not affected by the nego- ports. iwithout finding a reference tolthree seasons. cure. Federal Employees Get Leave To Study Second Language HAMILTON (CP) -- More|unaware of, or insensitive to. than 5,000 federal employees one of the most fundamental will be off duty this fall for|current issues of our national periods ranging from a_ few life." days to a year to study a sec-. This policy would mean with- ond language. in 15 or 20 years "and perma-| The language is either|nently thereafter," there would | French or English, a confer-|be enough resources to appoint ence of the Institute of Public {truly bilingual senior officials. | More than 5,000 civil servants : an outline of programs to make/this fall and the figure would} 2 OYOVOWOWOS NWA AN 4) 4 /AN ANNAN ANA AY AN AY OANA (NAVAV AV ANA VAN A NANA AOA :_ ANNY'S Canada's Oldest and Finest Chain of Health Spas INALDY. SIV, Administration was told by fed-| eral official Sylvain Cloutier in | were taking language training cman the federal government bilin-|grow to 10,000 by 1971. gual. The students were following ' Mr. Cloutier is assistant sec-|courses ranging from a daily HIGH SC retary in charge of programs in| one-hour class to "'total immer- e in Oshawa the treasury board. jsion" for three weeks. in today, wi He told administrators that in) Meanwhile, 20 English-speak- } Y holding th Left, freshn @ personal survey by mail ofjing senior officials and their the provinces and 20 of/families were now in Quebec Canada's largest cities, he|City for a one-year immersion found little indication of policy|while 1 0 French-speaking offi- on hiring bilingual employees. j|cials and their families were in He said the results of the sur-| Toronto for a year, a program yey were informative in show-|that would be continued -- in ing the "appalling degree" to years to come. Which public administrators} Text of his speech was issued throughout the country '"'are|to the press before delivery. Canadian War Veterans Ask Parity With Civil Service | Nic Of It will be h Oshawa to fi: to improve hi the board of its night scho OSHAWA WINNIPEG (CP)--Canada's capped, told the group's Sist 145,000 pensioned war veterans|biennial convention there September ani 'want parity with the lowest|should be more communication The board ! 'wage in the federal civil serv-\between government and local thing from gr the unemploy @, H. C. Chadderton of Toron-\level about programs of reha- executive secretary of the|bilitation for the paraplegic. Wer Amputations of Canada, R : gaid Wednesday. | ev. Sidney FE. Lambert, 81, "Tt would mean a jump from of Toronto was returned as $2,760 a year to more than $4,-| President, a position he had 000,"" he said in an interview. |held since the war amputees Mr. Chadderton said that pen- organization was formed wai | gion rates since the Pension Act|1929- was introduced in 1919 appear] Keith E. Butler, of Kitchener, to have no stable yardstick. /Ont., member of the Ontario Harold Russel, chairman of| legislature for Kitchener - President Johnson's committee Waterloo, was elected vice on employment of the handi-| president French Canadian Pleas For Positive Recognition HAMILTON (CP)--A strongiada which is holding its four-| plea for Canada to give positive|day annual conference at recognition to French Cana-!McMaster University. dians--and other ethnic groups "was made Wednesday by a Prominent French Canadian at a Hamilton conference. f technical colle ' arts subjects ! degree from sity in Kingstc In addition, workers' cour: in two-week al and on Satur i \ G. L. Robert ! of secondary 1 awa, said he than last year' in the regula and another 8 for the unemy ] He said the quite low but | is extremely hi ly in the wint said he has loc out problem the United SI equally high ir ; One exceptio: ple who take tl ing offered at legiate by Quee people pay th usually stay,' said. FOUR SUBJEC The four sub Queen's -- Eng sociology and $100 each. Th : changed each y He is a member of the coun- cil of the institute and also a member of the board of direc- Edmonton born Ernest Cote, tors of the Centennial Commis- 34, whose ancestors came to °°": | Canada from France in 1635 "Canadians have two) added: "If Canada is to contin-,Choices: drifting or moving | ue as a young, virile nation the ahead positively in the field of} individual citizen must feel able| human relations," he said. "If to fulfil himself wherever he|We 'rift-rifts, wrangles and lives and without feeling he has Tancour will rode and eventu- to choose between his province ally negate our viability as a| and Canada. dynamic country." "This," he added, "requires He admitted that some parts political leadership at all levels|of Canada will prefer to remain of government - municipal,| bilingual, but as a world trad. | provincial and federal." ing nation, "we will lose heav-| Mr. Cote was the guestiily unless we have many Cana-| speaker at the Institute of|dians who speak more than one Public Administration of Can-|language."' 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