Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Sep 1967, p. 3

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rT ttractive 5.99 9.99 LIMITED UANTITY rd gets Price 3.75. NT PRICE LY. ) PRINTED ETTE 1 save special. 63 yd. NT PRICE ~Y. Whitby MacDONALD'S GOAL Futuristic Dream Emerges As NDP Election Platform By THE CANADIAN PRESS A vision of futuristic cities surrounded by gr Its, heli- Ports, monorails and 200-mile- an-hour trains emerged Thurs- day in the campaign fight for the Oct. 17 general election in Ontario. The dream of a super - urban Ontario was proclaimed by Donald MacDonald, leader of the New Democratic Party, at his eloquent best speaking in London riding of Premier John Robarts. "Call this a dream. Call it a vision. Call it what you will. For me, it is a goal and it is one which IJ believe will change the people of Ontario." Envisaging an Ontario of 100,000,000 population by 2067, he said the province has the material and wealth to do the job. 'All we need is the will and a government to go out and do the job." But money, and where to find it, was paramount in the minds|today while Mr. of Mr. Robarts and Liberal leader Robert Nixon winding up 15 days of tough campaigning. SPEAKS ON EXEMPTION Mr. Robarts, speaking to 1,- 000 persons attending a school opening in St. Thomas, said the government's decision to grant home owners a basic tax exemption and to assume the cost of justice administration has stretched its resources. Ontario would have to tighten its belt to pay for those serv- ices. "We areundertakinga review of existing programs to effect all possible economies," Mr. Robarts said. Campaigning in Cobourg Mr. Nixon called for reform of elec- tion law, saying every candi- date should be able financially to make an adequate approach to the public. Both the Conservative and Liberal leaders move their campaign into the Toronto area MacDonald tours the Sarnia district. _ Mayor Revokes Licence Of Hippie's Newspaper By DENNIS BELL VANCOUVER (CP) -- Faced with an all - out counter -| attack by the flower children, Mayor Tom Campbell Thursday night announced he has no real objections to sale of the Geor- gia Straight, Vancouver's hip- pie newspaper, except when it is sold to school children on school property. Shortly after the city licenc- ing department lifted the semi- weekly publication's business licence -- a move that would effectively halt printing -- the hippies brought the full weight of flower power into action. The first garget was the downtown courthouse, where 100 hollering hippies picketed with signs in what was billed as a "Be-in support of the Georgia Straight Legal Defence Fund." The hippies attracted another 300 curious spectators early Thursday evening as mini - skirted girls moved through the crowd collecting funds to sup- port the newspaper in any legal action that might follow. The hippies laid plans for another be-in at city hall at noon today and word got | { The mayor had described the! |publication as "a filthy, perv- erted paper' that 'should not be sold te our children." He said he was enraged when reports reached him the paper! was being sold on school prop-| erty to school children. | In a more conciliatory mood jafter learning late Thursday jnight what the flower children had in store, Mayor Campbell said he still thinks the paper "is washroom journalism' but he had no objections to its sale in the downtown area or to hip- |pies. | He said he did not think the| licence' suspension constituted! censorship by the city fathers, attributed to Mr. his department. NOT OBSCENE The mayor said he does not think the paper is "obscene" by legal definition' He said he would have no objection to rein- statement of its licence provid- ed it was kept off school prop- erty. Stuart McMorran, city prose- cutor, agreed with Mayor Cc bell. He doubted if the Harrell and around that all r tabl pies were expected to attend. CLAIM 63,000 READERS The Georgia Straight, which claimed a circulation of 63,000 on its last edition, had its busi- mess licence taken away by, licence inspector Milt Harrell with the approval of Mayor paper could be convicted of being obscene, though it published many "borderline"' articles. Incensed editors of the Geor- gia Straight had threatened to battle the case through the courts, claiming the licence} suspension was a case of free- Campbell. dom of the press. Witness Says Spankings, Ritual Used On Dead Girl TORONTO (CP) -- A 19 - year - old housewife who left St. Matthias' Anglican Church because she felt the members were "sick," spoke Thursday of spankings and incantations to exorcise devils. At the inquiry into the death June 21 of Katherine Globe, 18, from a brain abscess and men- ingitis, Mrs. Dale Webb said that Katherine, who was stay- ing at the rectory was spanked on several occasions by Canon Moore Smith, church rector. and other members of the congregation to get the "hell" out of her. Mrs. Webb recited an invoca- tion she said was used as a rit- ual to banish devils: 'I com- mand in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ that all the hell and atmosphere within me be bound and chained by the Lord Jesus Christ and that it go straight where it can be dealt with." On June 21, Mrs. Webb said the girl was slapped in the face by Canon Smith's wife, Violet, and during the day was spanked by Canon Smith, David Smith, 26, her fiance and Canon Smith's son, and by her broth- er, Alex, 24, a second - year divinity student at the Univer- sity of Toronto. Mrs, Webb, who had a bed- room two doors from Kathe- rine's, said there was a group of about 70 persuns at the church who believed in devils and that they were led by Canon Smith, Rev. Douglas Tis- dall, assistant parish priest, and Mrs. Marjorie Rogers Replying to a question from Dr. H. B. Cotnam, Ontario's supervising coroner, Mrs. Webb; testified that spankings had not occurred before in the church group. SAYS SCREAMS HEARD Mrs. Webb said that on the day Katherine died she was "screaming terribly" and that Father Tisdall and the giri's brother were called to exorcise her and drive the devil out of her. "They went upstairs and then Father Tisdall came to the landing and shouted: 'Don't panic. She's not breathing. Phone the fire department," Mrs. Webb said. After an ambulance came and took Katherine away ,Mrs Webb said she and _ several other persons went to the church and lay down on the floor at the front wo pray. Constable Gerald Close testi- fied he arrived: at the rectory shortly after firemen who tried to revive Katherine with inhala- tors. He said the girl was wear- ing only panties, which were pulled partway down her thighs. Katherine died the same day she was scheduled to have an appointment with Dr. D. A. Haldenby, ear specialist at Toronto Western Hospital. Crew Members Burned In Flash Fire SYDNEY, N.S. (CP)--Three crew members of the bulk car- rier Ontario Power were in fai condition in hospital here toda; after suffering extensive burns in a fire aboard their ship. k n said though censorship could be| Vietnamese who say they are |hooted at Thursday by an audi- Mr. MacDonald said the cor- nerstone of his plan for future Ontario would be regional zov- areas surrounding cities such Kitchener, Oshawa, Sudbury, Windsor and St. Catharines. SEES GLOWING VISTA His ideal society, free of "rot and blight', would overcome the tendency to create faceless cities. "It shall be a society where we can .. . build new satellite cities and create natu- ral preserves." Mr. Robarts said the govern- ment is overhauling "our budg- ly certain that priorities are aitabilched ant fbatnalt? Under the basicexemption grant, the government pays 'property taxes on the first $2,- 000 assessment on all self-con- tained residential units. At Port Colborne, the pre- mier promised to continue. to press the federal government to remove tolls on the 27-mile-long Welland canal which he scribed as "discrimination jagainst the industries and peo-|Robert ple of Ontario."' Seventy - five persons braved |a downpour in Port Hope tocar. hear Mr. Nixon claim that retardation of democracy has Mr. Robarts. The 'aura of prosperity" in Ontario demand- ed development of democracy "away from the old political straight-jacket that we still find holding up progress." At dissolution, the Conserva- tives held 75 seats in the legis- lature, the Liberals 20 and the NDP eight. goa aesar' «| U.S. Embassy Questions Viet War Chemicals MONTREAL (CP) -- Three members of the National Liber- ation Front of South Vietnam were widely booed, hissed and ence of about 750 Sir George Frequently interrupted by shouts and vehement insults, Ly Van Sau denounced what he called American destruction of the small Asian nation and spoke of American atrocities he said were committed in Viet- nam. Although they are being kept under tight security wraps by their sponsors i'Union general des etudiants du Quebec -- the General Union of Quebec Stu- dents -- during their visit and would divulge little personal information about themselves, the Vietnamese said they belong to a student union of the NFL. The Sir George Williams stu- dents loudly booed and flung insults at the Vietnamese dur- ing the entire speech. Some stu- dents had an effigy, a black pyjama - clad dummy that had a cardboard head painted with a red hammer and sickle. Sir George is an English - language university. Sau, Mrs. Nguyen Ngoc Eung and Le Mai arrived in Montreal Wednesday for a two - week tour of Quebec during which they will talk to students about the war. Verdict Angers Aberfan People MERTHYR TYDFIL (AP) -- Angry parents wept and shout- ed outside a courthouse in this Welsh community Thursday after a coroner announced ver- dicts of accidental death for the 144 victims of the Aberfan coat disaster. "Tell them it's a farce,' cried one mother. The parents had watched pale and silent inside. the court as coroner Benjamin Hamilton took just four minutes to deliv- er his verdict. He then formally closed the mass inquest, which opened almost a year ago following the Oct. 21 disaster when 116 Aber- fan children were buried alive in a huge slide of black coal ernments operating initially in|statement in as Ottawa, Hamilton, London,| John et procedures to make absolute-| Rightists Seek Review TORONTO (CP) -- The Cana- dian civil Liberties Association called Thursday night for a police civilian review board for Toronto claiming a policeman is never entitled to use more job. The association made the connection with the conviction Wednesday of Napiorkowski, 27, who claimed police stamped on his foot and swore at him when he tried to stop four officers from beating a teen-ager. Napiorkowski was for assaulting a police officer and lectured on authority by Magistrate R. C. Taylor. "The assumption cf the court is that if a policeman oversters \the law, the citizen must never jinterfere," the assuciation said. "This is a worrisome principle) because it may compel a citi- '\zen to serve the police but not the law." \spending authority the|formal supply motion, It rejected claims by | magistrate during the trial that) |police sometimes have to use a} "little more force' than neces- sary. "We do not recognize that a policeman is never entitled to force than necessary to do his|tary participation in the current fined $25 anything definite to say to the respect for) UNLESS OPPOSITION PRESSES | THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, September 29, 1967 3 OTTAWA (CP)--Parliamem |debate on national unity and constitutional reform may be limited to initiatives by opposi- tion parties in the next three or four weeks. | The prime minister's office |says there seems little likeli- jhood Mr. Pearson will have jc Oommons on either subject 'before mid-October. And Health Minister Mac- {Eachen, government leader in the Commons, says he sees lit- tle prospect of a change in this unless the opposition parties Mid-October Seen Date admires Prime Minister Pear- son's courage facing the Com- mons each day with so few ministers present to reply to questions. Mr. Stanfield, who watches Stanfield Raps Liberal Cabinet OTTAWA (CP) -- Conserva- tive leader Robert Stanfield For National Unity Debate With increasing discussion of| possible Quebec separation out-| side the Commons, there) seemed to be a growing expec- tation this week that Mr. Pear- son might take some parlia-) mentary initiative in the next! Federation which is expected to vote on Rene Levesque's pro-| Since electing a new leader in ~ |said Thursday-there have been too few Liberal cabinet minis- ters in the Commons so far to posal of a sovereign Quebec| Cnable him to form a judgment within a Canadian common market. | of the government. He said at a luncheon at the | National Press Club that he Commons proceedings from the gallery pending a_ byelection, also said he is surprised that almost all the. press gallery jleaves the Comomns after the question period and does not return. 10 days. |Robert Stanfield Sept. 9, the, But the government still is;Conservatives haven't appeared| waiting for reports of a consti-|anxious to say anything defini- tutional task force working|tive of the constitutional ques-| under the general direction of|tion pending their leader's elec- Justice Minister Trudeau. \tion to the Commons and com-| Informants say not much is/pletion of their review of the| expected from it before the end/whole subject, including his! of November. personal statements and the! A second report of the royal patty policy committee's state- commission on bilingualism and| ment. & biculturalism is expected to|--------------- TOMORROW! IF YOU ARE HARD OF HEARING, DON'T FAIL TO ATTEND press the issue. | They will have several oppor- tunities. One occurs Monday when the government seeks} through a PROVIDE MEANS |November. CONSULTATION In addition, the provincial, governments, with federal 23 EGLINTON SQUARE "HEARING AlD 0 '@IF HEARING IS YOUR PROBLEM, BELTONE IS , YOUR ANSWER*= deal with many aspects of the; problem. It probably won't be in the government's hands until} observers on hand, are to meet SCARBOROUGH And debate on Finance Minis-|jn Toronto in November for ter Sharp's budget could pro-| premier Robarts' Confederation vide another vehicle for discus-| for Tomorrow Conference use more force than is neces-|Sion of these subjects. sary." | Mr. Pearson has said nothing The Crown accused Napior-|could be more important than a kowski of grabbing Constable|debate on these issues at the Copeland while other/right time and place. But he) \officers escorted two perscns|gave no further clue than to) jarrested for fighting to patrol|say he hoped this would come) "shortly." | | OTTAWA (CP) -- A United) ment as to any information that |States embassy spokesman said/we may have about the nature here Thursday his government! and purpose of this visit." has not made any inquiries} 'But I would like to look inlo about the visit to Montreal of | the nature of the query, if) three visitors from South Viet-| any." | nam. Mr. Pearson was replying to| He said information about the|a series of opposition questions three members of the National|about the visit, including one Liberation Front had been vol-|from Mr. Starr about the unteered by the Canadian gov-|grounds on which travel visas ernment. But he stressed that| were issued to the three stu- 'Vietnam Students' Visit aay | 7 | Ho L i Williams University students. | sated ae wnt Per, neither the U.S. embassy here or the American government in Washington had asked for the information. Questions about the three opped up in the Commons Thursday when Conservative Starr whether the U.S. government asked Canada for information on them. the visitors as "so - called stu- dents," said: tion, I think we dents, now in Montreal, to make "propaganda" tours. Mr. Pearson said they tra-| jvelled on valid North Viet-| namese passports, which are honored by Canada just as Canadian passports are honored by the North Vietnamese gov- ernment. If they had used documents jissued by the National Libera- tion Front, they would not have Mr. Pearson, who referred to|been granted visas. He said the government does not know the purpose of the "Subject to further examina-| visit but it did not seem "possi- received ajble or desirable" query from the U.S. govern-'visas under the circumstances. to refuse By Serbian TORONTO (CP) -- The Ser- bian National Committee Thursday released details of a protest to the federal govern- ment over RCMP raids on 35 Serbian homes. Michael Starr, Conservative interim leader, questioned Mr. Pearson on the raids during Thursday's Commons session. The prime minister said he had no knowledge of the protest. On Sept. 15 RCMP raided Serbian homes in Toronto, Hamilton, Brantford and Mont- real, and also searched Serbian newspaper offices in Hamilton and Toronto. The protest calls for an inquiry into the basis for RCMP search warrants, and asks that steps be taken to assure that the constitutional rights of Canadian citizens "cannot be at stake on any ill - founded or malicious information." Dusan P. Lazarevich, com- mittee secretary, said the organization did not know what lay behind the raids. "We believe Communists may be among top police officials." He said committee members were used to being searched by secret police in Serbia, but the RCMP "are going after their closest friends in this Commu- nist fight." CLAIM STRENGTH He said the Serbians are the but the strongest anti - Commu- nist group in Canada." The protest also objects to the term "yugoslav terrorists' sludge. Hamilton said he was bound by the findings of a government appointed tribunal which found the National Coal Board and some of its employees responsi- ble but passed no criminal indictment. On Freighter Cape Breton, from the ship a few miles off shore, Early this JOIN 'EM BOMBAY (AP)--The chief government minister of prohibi- tionist Maharashtra state, V. P. Naik, announced he will legal- ize a sort of near beer of 3.5 per cent alcoholic content to wean drinkers away from hard morning they were transferred to hospital in Sydney. liquor. CARIBBEAN TWO WEEK HOLIDAY Every Seturday by Air Canada charter flight, es of Jen. 6th (everybody can join). Firat time ever offered in Canada. SAVINGS FROM ie UP TO $123 PER PERSON. Enquire now et Four Seasons Travel 57 King St. E. Oshewa 576-3131 The Ontario Power was en route from here to Toronto with a cargo of coal. Kenneth Moore, 2, of Collingwood, Ont., was the most seriously injured. The other men were identified as Robert MacKay, 20, of Georgetown, Ont., and Douglas MacDonald, 24, of Glace Bay, N.S. A spokesman for the ship's Toronto owners said the men were injured in what was described as a "flash fire." They were brought to hospital at Neil's Harbor, in northern LOOKING FOR A COMMFORTABLE QUIET RENDEZVOUS DOWTOWN? THEN GO TO THE Tally-Ho Room Hotel Lancaster 27: KING ST, WEST SUPPLY TEACHERS REQUIRED Oshawa Separate School Board Applications to be Made Out to FRANK E. SHINE Business Administrator 209 Simcoe St. N. "strongest -- not the largest --| RCMP Raids Protested Committee which the RCMP were reported to have applied to the group. It said the term means crimi- nal and that there are no per. sons with criminal records 1a the organization. Mr. Lazarevich said police uncovered two revolvers in their search--both guerrilla war souvenirs. He said the RCMP also seized Belgrade telephone director with names marked of those on the mailing list for pamphlets the group sends out monthly. Mr. Lazarevich said no effort had been made to return the book. If given to Yugoslav authorities, he said, those per- sons indicated could be impris- oned for up to three years. WON'T HURT CHANCES | Out of these events, the feder-| al government may be able to shape its own constitutional proposals. 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