; 36 42 sonens 3 42 sees Oe 40 beeces 36 40 soos 36 40 32 40 3 40 3 35 30 35 [INGS )UNTS PERSONAL CHEQUING ACCOUNTS SONAL ANS NTARIO TRUST CORPORATION St. N., Oshewe 3-5221 'Ww. Bowmanvile 3-2527 OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS end SATURDAYS for all ages. 3° RR PECIAL enderwrap allows 19° Sd ECIAL STICK ON ECIAL SNOW" Compare 984, FINANCE MINISTERS MEET TODAY Boom Year Seen ' But Not So In Canada | For US. By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA (CP) -- Finance Minister Sharp is scheduled to open a two-day meeting of prov- PARLIAMENT jahead with it and put up the jrest of the cost. | But the federal government} jnow is reluctant to introduce the incial finance ministers today with a survey of economic pros-| > pects for 1968. Informants said that gener-| ally the outlook says it will be a/ boom year for the United} , States, but much less of a boom year for Canada. Much depends, the economists Say, On congressional action in Washington on a request by President Johnson for a 10-per-| cent surcharge on income and/ corporation taxes, and on action! by all governments in Canada! to fight inflation. j Mr. Sharp set the tone last| week when he announced feder-| al government spending next! year will be kept to an increase! of 4% per cent over this year. This is regarded as a severe limitation' in view of govern- ment spending growth rates of 10 per cent in the last two years. Within the 4% per cent AT-A-GLANCE By THE CANADIAN PRESS WEDNESDAY, Nov. 15, 1967 A vote against adjournment of the Commons debate on capital punishment Wednes- day led.some MPs to predict that a government bill to hang only murderers of police offi- cers would be approved. A motion by Roland Godin (Creditiste--Portneuf) to ad- journ the debate for Wednes- day only since the govern- ment has the right to call the order of business each day, was defeated 125 to 71. Robert Stanfield took his seat in the Commons as Oppo- sition leader. There was ap- plause from all parties. He thanked Prime Minister Pearson and other party lead- ers for their welcome and Said a good opposition is es- , Must come price and wage in- sential to good government. creases, and other expenditure) Labor Minister Nicholson increases geared to Canada's said he is trying to get ship- growing population. owners and the _longshore- Mr. Sharp will meet the proy-| men's union to agree on arbi- incial treasurers--three of them! tration of a dispute that has are premiers, as well-in a com-| Caused a series of work stopp- mittee room on the West Block| 48¢s and slowdowns in Mont- of the Parliament Buildings. real and other, St. Lawrence River ports. CLOSED TO PRESS | Mr. Pearson said Premier The meeting will be closed to| G. I. Smith of Nova Scotia the press and public, but some| will be in Ottawa today to dis- of the main statements may be| cuss all aspects of the pro- jplan if it should add to \inflationary pressures. Mr.| Sharp said last week the gov-| ernment will not borrow to fi-| {nance medical care insurance,| |but will introduce new taxes to} |pay for it. . | Saskatchewan is the only) |Province now operating a plan) |which would qualify for federal) |subsidy. Other provinces must} 'give notice by the end of this' jyear if they want to begin it) jnext July 1. | MAY LIKE DELAY | Without saying so publicly, in! view of the parliamentary com- mitmentt,h e ef deral gov ern- mitment, the federal govern-) ment has given every indication} it would be quite happy to have the provinces delay introduction! jof the insurance plan. i There is expected to be some - Fg ne between Mr. Sharp and -- |the provincial ministers of tax |reform. The radical |made by the royal commission ee taxation headed by Kenneth Carter of Toronto last spring jnow are being reviewed. The provinces have been jasked to state their views by| ¥ jthe end of this month. None so| far have done so. Nor has Mr.| |Sharp given any firm indication! jof his thinking. Business gener- jally- has opposed the Carter |plan, while Labor . spokesmen| proposals|;, made public. The Economic Council _of Canada two years ago that these annual conferences of finance ministers} be open, so there can be more| bate on a bill to abolish capi- | knowledgable public debate| tal punishment for a five-year | about the subjects discussed. After the review of the eco-| Policemen and prison guards nomic future, medical care in-| Would be excepted. surance and tax reform meas-| ures are bound to be the main| topics of discussion. | The federal government is} committed, under an act passed} by Parliament, to begin next July 1 to pay half the average national cost of medicare, in| suggested Steel and Coal Co. steel-plant have supported it. posed closing of the Dominion Fis DR. GORDON MURRA~' | (left) explains his latest | tudents medical breakthrough to Dr. | G. D. Hart. A medical meet- ing in Toronto Tuesday night at Sydney. The Commons continued de- trial period. The murderers of Reject Rector' THURSDAY, Nov. 16 The Commons sits at 2:30 p.m. EST to continue de- bate on a bill to abolish capi- tal punishment for a five-year trial period. The Senate is ad- journed to Nov. 21. | LONDON, Ont. dent leaders of the University of Western Ontario have decided jto reject indirect participation sor | Hm gece ye to Dr. Gordon Murray's medical on the university board of gov- breakthrough have ranged fan those provinces prepared to go F irst Day In Stanfield Chides Judy OTTAWA (CP) -- It was a big day for Bob Stanfield, former premier of Nova Scotia. Beginning at 10:30 a.m., Mr. Stanfield: --Was sworn in as member of Parliament for Colchester- Hants. --Took his seat in the Com- mons as leader of the official Opposition. --Found himself voting against most of his Conserva- tive followers and with the gov- ernment. Joined critics of State Secre- tary Judy LaMarsh for her "rotten management" charge against CBC top brass. In a brief ceremony in the of- tice of Commons Clerk Alistair Fraser at 10:30 a.m., Mr. Stan- field became an MP when he signed the oath of allegiance which says: "I do swear that I will be faithful and bear true al- legiance to her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the Second." Mr. Fraser then -handed Mr. Stanfield a parliamentary rule book, a railway pass and the key to his office. HEARS APPLAUSE It was to all-party applause that Mr. Stanfield took his seat| as the Commons opened at 2:30 Mm. Pile thanked all those who} made his welcome and said a good opposition is essential to good government. If the Con- servatives could improve the government, all Canadians would rejoice. He took the front-row seat previously occupied by John|moralizing to the CBC. Ss. _jernor: |congratulations to serious reser- Peter Larson, president of the! vations student's council, announced} Tue . Commons Wednesday night , participation), 07 puesday. of a former student on the; board as proposed in the new ; |University Act is unacceptable. [Wiig gts ees tad bald thls Under the act the students) py Murray proved that it " » ee j may elect a "rector"--a former|oouid when Bertram Proulx, a} : 'student. |20-y river fr Tieton baker! 20-year-old truck driver from St.| nal cord "although all the books| Diefenbaker, Mr. "We feel the students can be! "her was absent, better represented by writing cr hae oe a be- Later in the Commons Mr.|the board and negotiating on is- Uudience of doctors Ba, as they arise," Mr. Larson | piegics can stand again. i i | Mr. Proulx had been para- 'is east, pe the rector lysed for three years following "A rector doesn't have to pay|pn accident in which he severed for parking, eat in the cafete-|/S spinal sees rias or pay residence fees. Un-| Di; Ludwig Guttman, a noted paraplegia specialist, said less we know he suffers these things we don't know if he's ar- neerey es the pice! Se guing our point of view." added that the newspaper re- Western battled for nearly a port describing the operation year to win direct representa- "does not sound feasible." Dr. tion on the board, finally grant- Satan. divakts wie United ed by a private bills committee Kingdom ministry of pensions of the Ontario legislature last spinal injuries centre at Aylesbu- spring. ry, England. Stanfield voted with the govern- ment against a motion to ad- journ debate for the rest of the day on a government bill to limit the death penalty to murd- erers of policemen and prison guards, The motion was defeat- ed 15 to 71. Mr. Stanfield told his follow: ers they were free to vote as they chose, and they did: 57 voted for adjournment, 15 joined him in voting against the mo- tion. UNITY A MUST Later in the day, Mr. Stan- field told a gathering at the opening of the new Macdonald - Cartier library that unless the Conservative party makes Ca- nadian unity a fact today, it Open Extra Day fails both the past and the fu-' ture. Public response to operation| reputation, The party had to be a "gen-|of the Canada Pension Plan in|"a tremendous step forward." uine institution of innovation"'|OShawa has increased over) The operation is "'a major and and develop: the habit of es-|the last nine months to a pointidramatic breakthrough" he tablishing precedents. r He switched briefly to French|Services and got a round of applause. "I/days per week. get most applause from those > who live in Saskatchewan," heloffice, at 310 Simcoe St. S., will| said with a smile. be open on Tuesdays. The new gy consultant at the Mayo Clinic On the CBC television pro-'schedule starts Nov, 21. in Minnesota, said he would gram 20-Million Questions, Mr.| Arthur Young, now residing injneed a lot more information on Stanfield said State Secretary|Oshawa, is in charge of the|the operation before he could Judy LaMarsh had done nothing| office and will help in filling out;express an opinion to improve respect for govern-|pension plan applications and| "But if Dr. Murray has actual- ment with her charge of rotten!will provide information about|ly successfully rejoined a sev-| management in the CBC. the pension plan and old agejered spinal cord he has done) He said Miss LaMarsh's State-| security and guaranteed income! something very wonderful." ment on the Pierre Berton tele-|supplement. | This is not the first time the! rosurgery at the University of |Chicago, at first expressed doubt and asked whether the re- Pension Office and be opened two throughout the world have been| stymied by the problem |port could be a swindle. When| |he was assured of Dr. Murray's|ment'? but not 'bad faith" in he admitted it was|authorizing the printing. of an of} Pesta In addition to Thursdays, the| trying to restore nerve function. | ouiity Dr. J. G. Love, senior neurolo-|heen dismissed from his post. Saw _a '"'permanently' lyzed. man_ stand up, with assistance walk. Dr Murry, who - won world fame. for his open-heart para- and Disbelief To Exultation, «Reaction To Dr. Murray TORONTO (CP) -- Reactions,73-year-old doctor, 'a native eleaine' in artificial Stratford, has startled the med cal world. | He was a junior demonstrator |"eW in surgery at the University of | complaints ranging fron. ulcers Dr. Murray told/Toronto in 1939 when he suc-|t0 flat feet and daring tech ow he rejoined a shattered spi- cessfully performed the rare}"!uUes in heart surgery grafting of an artery He is probably best known in ternationally for a "blue baby"| operation, the first in Canada, 20 years ago. It drew him pa- tients from four continents. He was introduced Tuesday Tuesday and showed that para-|night as the man who first| transplanted a kidney in Can- sn the inventor of the first | McGill Editor Reprimanded MONTREAL (CP) -- A Mce- |Gill University student judiciary |committee Wednesday night ex onerated the editor-in-chief of the McGill Daily for his part in the printing of an allegedly ob- |scene article, but roundly repri Dr. John Mullan, chief of neu-;manded him for his "extremely irresponsible' action The judicial committee of the student society ruled that Peter Allnutt was guilty of 'bad judg larticle recounting fictitious events surrounding the death of President Kennedy and involv- |where the office must double its|said, adding that doctorSling President Johnson. If the seven law students on the committee had found Allnutt of malice, he would have two Pierre However, Allnutt and other Daily staffers, Fournier and Peter Fekete, must face the McGill senate committee on student discipline on charges of conduct prejudi- cial to their status as university students. vision show was exceedingly re-|, grettable and bound to be de-| Trustees Fear Proposals Will Harm Education TORONTO (CP) School trustees fear the elimination of 900 Ontario school boards an- nounced Tuesday night by Pre- mier Robarts may ease school administration at the expense of education. Trustees feel that while larger units may make financing eas- jer, they 'will also remove schools decisions from the peo- ple and force children to ride buses long distances to school. Mr. Robarts also said school boards will issue tax bills sep- arately from municipal coun- cils. Jean Watson, executive secre- tary of the Ontario School Trus- tees and Municipal Councillors Association, said a similar move in Britain resulted in peo- ple losing interest in their schools. Mrs. Watson said her own county of Oxford, with 17 dis- tricts, is too large to be serv- iced by one board. She favors amalgamation of township boards or the establishment of a county board if the county is small enough. Meanwhile, opposition leaders criticized the Way Mr. Robarts proposes to establish country - wide boards although both said , they favor larger school admin- istration units. Liberal Leader Robert Nixon said his party will support the principle of the bill when it is! introduced in the legislature, which is expected to open late | in January or early in Febru-} ary. Mr. Robarts said the plan| to replace local school boards} will go into effect Jan. 1, 1969. Mr. Nixon's maifi complaint was that Mr. Robarts made no} promise that the provincial gov- ernment would assume a larger share of education costs. | The Liberal and New Demo- cratic parties want the govern- ment to pay 80 per cent of edu- | cation costs. The government| now pays as much as 90 per cent in some areas, but opposi- tion parties say total support is/| less than 50 per cent. ACTION PIECEMEAL Donald MacDonald, NDP lead- er, said the government's action is piecemeal "in that it deals with only one aspect of many in| the complex problem of moder- nizing local government." The government proposed to es-| tablish new school units "'with-| out having grappled with the| basic inequity and inadequacy| of local taxes." | Barry Lowes, Metropolitan| Toronto school board chairman] whose area will not change with, the setting up of the new sys- tem, said the establishment of| Get a Winning Deal on the "WINNING CAR!" 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Fury! 13% DISCOUNT ON ALL NEW CARS or a $500. minimum trade allow- ance on your car regardless of yeor or condition. 723-2284 NO BLOT ON THE FUTURE OTTAWA (CP )--Record 8} A federal-provincial would become New Statute Proposed For Juvenile Offenders | THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, November 16, 1967 3 | | confer-leither case the juvenile court re reports, sen-jence on the subject is scheduled) would decide the "disposition" tences become findings and/for early 1968 and a number of|or sentence. juvenile delinquents becom ejchanges may be s u ggested| The draft specifies that no one young offenders under a_pro-|there 'under 17 may be committed to \posed federal statute now being| Copies of the report, aimed atlan adult institution. \studied by the provinces, jmodernizing and standardizing) However, it admits that waiv- The legislation is aimed at) juvenile law procedure, havejer for trial and sentence in an jending the days when a 12-\been sent to attorneys-generall adult court would imply that the jyear-old, so pathetic the guards! across the country youth was not suitable for an in- jchipped in to buy him a bicycle.! Under the old 1908 act. last stitution for young offenders. i |found himself behind the bars ofjreyised in 1929, the minimum; This "leaves hanging" the |St. Vincent de Paul peniten-lage of criminal responsibility :s|question of where those sen- tiary seven tenced on serious charges It would make it impossible! This would be raised to 10 or! should be sent, the draft for anyone under 17 to be sent|12, a decision left to the feder-| -- seated enninanteatt {to a penal institution for adult|al-provincial"conference. offenders The 17th birthday would mark/ says. SPECIAL WEEKLY MESSAGE As_ recently as 1963 Eldonjthe maximum wage, now 16 to |Woolliams, Conservative MP for|18 depending on the province, TO MEMBERS |Bow River, told the Commons! Youths between 14 and 17 of a boy in Dorchester Peniten-/ would be classed as young ot-| tiary so small the guards feared fenders, subject to a fine of up! he would squeeze through the/to $100 or a term up to three! lhars of his cell years in training school, | mun j. Rederal oiicials: eald kag However, the emphasis would| Clb jday the redrafted Juvenile De fis ais na jlinquents Act, renamed the chil-|be on probation and other such FOOD CLUB dren and Young Offenders Act, Methods would prevent such situations Under 14s would be known as \ number of juveniles were Child offenders THIS WEEK'S LOWER PRICES still being sentenced to peniten A i Se ee nah tiary or prison but the practice,would class minor offenders as was to send them to reformato-|"violators."' sak Bae Ps a a as ries instead A juvenile court judge could 172 a 7: ee . order a voung offender, between ee i ARE STILL JAILED 14 and 17, to an adult court for iW 8 ve are i Because of lack of other facil- trial and sentence sai ak sos 38 ities, juveniles were still occa-| He could also order the young 209 -- 98 309--- 74 sionally jailed with adults in/offender to an adult court for 211 --~ 98 218 144 some parts of the country trial only, the youth to be re 212 -- 98 320 --~ 144 Federal officials have termed'manded back to juvenile court 213 -- 98 324 -- 156 surgery and artificial kid the---thick_--revision, crammed for sentence. 214 -- 98 321 ---- 144 ney, has developed a new jwith explanatory notes, sugges-; -Bither the young -offender or 215 -- 98 34) --~ 156 technique for rejoining sey tions and question marks, ajan attorney-general could re- 216 -- 9B 495 -- 148 ered spinal cords "basis for discussion."' quire an adult court trial, but in 218 -- 408 --~ 37 (CP Wirephoto) ' : gested 252 -- 98 436-- 72 | _ 253 -- 58 449 97 | 264 -- 48 436-- 58 'High School Students was mon } 274 ---- 64 TI2-- 48 Fi T E 277 -- 68 369 -- 98 | Start First Term Exams | juows 723110 About. 2,000 Oshawa high! Dr. C. M. Elliott, superin- school students got an early|tendent of public schbbla; 'ania SAVE MORE ! bine in Nott Ral ma- taste of what will be occupy-|there is. no requirement that RAEI es eae avar ihe SD Sa hel Ral ing most of their time for the students write any formal ex- Meat Cutting Bemenstretion I next week and a half as they'ams at this time. at all & plants. surgical procedures for started in on their first term "Progress reports will be sent examinations Wednesday home in the first week of De-|f very TUESDAY in NOVEMBER Although all 5,200 will fin-icember," he said. 'These will) at 8 P.M. ish Nov. 24, Donevan and O'Neill | be based on the-student's per- A former professor of surgery|collegiates started Wednesday|formance during the fall term, || tear. te eustem aut your own Bir- at the University of Toronto and|while Eastdale, McLaughlin and|In some schools, particularly in|g 'Im Steeks end Loin Chops for Res rurgery at Toronto Gen-|Central started today. the senior grades, there will/f *Y*" bbc een ral Hospital, he said Tuesday, This term, for the first time,|be a period of formal testing. sages peru menied for eightjgrade 13 examinations will be\In other schools and classes, VISITORS WELCOME years before daring to try the|set by the individual schools|the report will be based on Spinal-cord operation on human|and not-by the Ontario Depart-\short tests spaced throughout | Sherk Shene book fey ener beings ment of Education. \the term." wii cai ------ 1 \ | Our new collection. of leisure wear offers many ways to reach your goal of comfort in style! 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