Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Dec 1967, p. 3

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atens City ajor pay increases and of the work week. he experience of a 12- sport strike which cost an estimated $1, 0 Jast January, big s were taking steps to try to ensure that loyees can get in from 'bs. iemical Bank of New ted seven fishing boats ts personnel across the nd East rivers. ITEL SPACE ,000 New Yorkers have hotel rooms for the du any strike. companies chartered yuses and taxis, as well g facilities. 1ase Manhattan Bank o convert its spacious dential suites into bed- d move about 80 camp the carpeted lounges wer Manhattan head- ion said its members rk until 5 a.m, Monday w Year's Eve revellers , despite the fact the *xpires at midnight. the pension plan de- by the union, 20-year s could retire at half union also seeks a 30- across-the-board pay duction of the work 30 hours from 40 and efits. Motormen now $4 an hour and bus JOKING FOR A FORTABLE QUIET VOUS DOWNTOWNP iN GO TO THE ly-Ho Room 1 Lancaster KING ST, WEST ) IN 1968 High School Teachers Told To Demand Power, Money THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, December 28, 1967 3 EFFECTIVE NEW YEAR'S DAY North Bay To Double Size TORONTO (CP) -- The Ontar-!th io Secondary School Teachers' Federation was told Wednesday that teachers must demand more power and more money next year. Charles McCaffray of Oitawa,| president of the federation, said the province's school structure will collapse if students get more rights while teachers still are treated as second-class citi- zens. Mr. McCaffray was speaking e OSSTF, suggested increases of eight to 10 per cent next year for the province's 28,000 high |quality teaching." | Mr. Russell said the teachers' inegotiating committees should be asking school trustees for a salary range of $6,600 to $14,600. The current range is $6,000 to 1$13.600. Mr. McCaffray said all school boards should reserve two posi- school teachers. He said theyjcurriculum of. secondary teach: |should seek "quality salaries forjer-training institutions." supports a resolution that the OSSTF should aim to "control the entrance requirements and T. H. Smith, a Port' Arthur high school teacher and mem- ber of the commission tendering the resolution, said control will have to be shared with faculty members of teachers' colleges. Thomas Washer, chairman of a committee of school trustee representatives and OSSTF members, said unless financial at a news conference after ad.|tions for teacher members to be dressing the opening session of|¢lected by the public on a sep- aid is the federation's annual meeting.|4"@te ballot. Earlier, James Russell, chair-|CONTROLS CURRICULUM man of the salary committee of . . joccur when the six-week teach- Anglican, Catholic Leaders "=", s:**"s0 = Talk Merger In Malta | ne ' TORONTO (CP) -- Talks thisiat the bidding the previous year Thee Bodies of Archbishop Michael Ramsey weekend in Malta between An-| glican and Roman Catholic|and the Pope. church leaders could pave the} relationship with the said Wednesday. Dr. Eugene Fairweather of|together as Christian brothers. Toronto said that merger efforts} If this did evolve, but talks with the Unitedicans Church have bogged down. He was interviewed before he boarded a plane for Malta. the United Church of Canada's Dr. Fairweather, a professor|gnral council, said in an intr- of dogmatic theology at Trinity|/view: "We would not be interest- College, University of Toronto,!ed in anything other than the in- was appointed by the Arch-|tegration of structures as well bishop of Canterbury to partici-|as sacraments of the two \churches. pate in the Malta discussions. "During long periods of talk} 'We would be interested in a we haven't received much en:|totally-new embodiment of the thusiasm and there still isn'tlchurch--richer and more far much," he said about talks with}reaching than either one alone." the United Church. "But we cer-| He said plans for union were tainly have it with the Romanjaimed at a merger by 1974, but Catholics because of our widejadded that the Anglican-Roman areas of agreement." Catholic talks could make the The talks began last Jan. 12'merger more difficult. | in a_ loosely-knit church with a small u." Father Kills Daughters, Says 'World Too Wicked' JONESBORO, La. (AP) -- A|morning that he was taking the father, who told neighbors he!four girls to visit his mother. considered the world '"too| Later he drove to the funeral wicked" for his four little girls.|parlor, owned by Mrs. E. L. Ed- delivered their bodies to a funer-|monds. Mr. McCaffray said he also He said the immediate goal of way for an eventual three-way the talks was "'some form of sa- Unitedicramental communion" in Church, an Anglican theologian|which members of each church} would be encouraged to worship] ies of three members of the} he said,! plump brunette whose between Anglicans and Roman|then the United Church might . eu max shocked Catholics are proceeding swiftly | be invited to join with the Angli- "united| nity, Dr. Ernest Long, secretary of/ 35th birthday in jail Christmas forthcoming from the provincial government, Ontario will find itself in September, 1969, "with a drastically de- creased supply of teachers." A shortage is expected to teachers for Ontario's high schools is abandoned next year.| Exhumed | CORDELE, Ga. (AP) -- Au-| | thorities have exhumed the bod-| |family of Mrs. Janie Gibbs, a} a murder charge has shocked | } this southwest Georgia commu-| Mrs. Gibbs, who spent her Day, has been charged with! i : murder in the arsenic poisoning! This a8 en aerial view of death of her 19-year-old son,| the University of Saskatch- Roger Ludean Gibbs. His death| ©¥4", Regina, campus with sparked an investigation into|_ the downtown area in the jthe deaths of four other mem-|_ bers of the family, all of who: died within the last two years Mrs. Gibbs operated a small| nursery and at times cared for more than a score of young chil- dren. Wednesday authorities or- dered the bodies of her husband al parlor Wednesday and said| he had killed them. The father, Earl Clinton Wat-|' son, 31-year-old worker at Jonesboro meat processing) company, was taken to a men-|"I"ve had an accident. wrong," aicould help him." "| didn't know anything was Mrs. Edmonds said. 'He appeared calm, I asked if I! jan. 93, 1967, of what was listed! She quoted Watson as saying: I've A GROWING UNIVERSITY background. More than $6, 000,000 has been spent on the new campus and this figure is expected to exceed Old Grandeur Restored To St. Lawrence Hall NORTH BAY (CP) -- By next m= |Monday, this city's attractions its--moose and bear hunting, a =| nudist colony, a missile site and a cottage resort area. North Bay will increase its area Jan. 1 by more than 38 times--to 137 square miles from 2,260 acres--through amalgama- tion. It becomes the nation's TORONTO (CP) -- expected to begin Central Canada next July. Alan Clarke, national director lof the Company of Young Cana- |dians, said the project is still in its rudimentary stages and is g¢ ;entirely of Indian origin. | Ernest Benedict, an Indian of the St. Regis reserve near Corn- wall, hired as a CYC staff mem- {ber last October to develop the project, said the train will not H | be a one-year project "We intend to run it forever, jhe said. | "The CYC will support it for the first year and then we hope 'to get help from industries, uni- versities, foundations and pri- vate donations." The college, to be named the $50,000,000 by 1973 when en- rolment -- now about 3,000, mn 5 -- should hit 8,000 North American Indian Travel- (CP Photo) 'Of Maritime will include--all within city lim-| Through Amalgamation |second largest city in area,| Ferris. In the process, the city's after Calgary. | popula vont will almost double to With the move will come such! 42,600 from 23,000. possibilities as city firemen} Mayor Merle Dickerson al- fighting forest fires and city Po-| ready is planning a huge party licemen hunting for children|for the new city to be held in lost in the bush | March with the winter carnival. After 10 years. of off-and-on| He hopes to get 40,000 visitors talks, North Bay will amalgam-|and says "business suit' are ate with the neighboring town-! out. We want them heredn bush iships of Widdifield and West clothes, the more colorful the e = 1 better." Railway College To Tak Education To Indians __ among reserves in Eastern and| | | Although no curriculum has | been set, Mr, Benedict said arts| and crafts, marketing and Eng-| lish might be taught at North ern Ontario reserves while busi- ness courses and Indian law may be taught in southern Ontario Two modes of education are proposed--classes for adults when the train visits reserves and classes for about 60 younger people who would trav- el with the train for a time, then get off to make room for new students A board of directors for the proposed college is expected to be selected at a general meet ing of Ontario Indians Saturday at the Six Nations reserve near Brantford 7 Judge Resigns From Board For a decade, North Bay and the two townships were unable to agree on amalgamation or some other mutual arrange- ment. During this time the city became land-starved, ending up with about 700 acres to spare, most of it unsuitable for devel- A railway|ling College, will be managed | opment. =|college for Canada's Indians is| by Indian groups and spend two| Then Mayor Dickerson moved travelling! to three weeks at each reserve.) in. MAYOR TOOK ACTION "I just took the bull by the horns," he says, explaining how he persuaded city council to pass a_ resolution to annex choice industrial land in Widdi- field Township. But council later had second thoughts about its annexation application and called in a Toronto consulting firm to draft an annexation proposal. The firm's report last May said all three municipalities essentially were one economic unit, and while the city's population might be static for two decades, the township's population would triple The report recommended the city annex.parts of both town- ships. The city submitted this to the Ontario Municipal Board and in Octoher the board or- dered total amalgamation for the good of all three municipali- ties Trustees SPECIAL WEEKLY MESSAGE tal hospital for observation and killed my babies." land 4 ' ae ' MONTREAL (CP) Judge] The mandate of the board, TO MEMBERS erties ey sons emp, TORONTO (¢ P) -- It haslerecting stair rails and touching|Centre which, as a result of the! Rene Lippe will leave the feder-|which handled among other RE DECEMBER BULLETIN rhnue ip trauE Ndi mes ye tak : n glee ant nig |Up gilt trim in the grand hall to|restoration, may never be built.|a] - maritime trustees board|things the SIU's election of offi- ipl sel, ation ei a ae sae! ut Ys restore it to its 19th century! Bids for the centre, still with-| today after serving on it--|cers and contract renewals, was Ne Gane, sick ei eo has a een ennial grandeur. out final approval by the city,|mostly as chairman--since it/originally scheduled to expire) Cf ities said, after an auto} Bact Asari It was a last minute effort to Provincial or federal govern-|was instituted more than fourjlast December, but was extend- rp seu) git Psy Te-| The St. Lawrence Hall, whose \ : ments, have far exceeded latest! years ago led for another year because MUN YS vealed several milligrams of ar | walls echoed the words of Sir heat the centennial clock. The! octimated costs of $5,450,000 for!" The board was established toljoint hiring halls had not yet! FOOD ths Pg wpe = Roger! John A. Macdonald and George|hall's doors 'will open to the'a modest-sized theatre and con- take legal control of the Sea-|been established by the five CLUB tent gat ry gs seg of his|Brown, today will be opened by public New Year's Day. cert hall: farers' International Union after|unions and the SIU was not yet son--Mrs. Gibbs' grand-|Goyernor-General Roland Mich-| 'The restoration of the down-| The original St. Lawrencelan inquiry into Great Lakes /fully reaffiliated with the CLC. son--are in the same cemetery ener, town St. Lawrence Centre for|Hall, built in 1850 after the first ion trouble Mr. Millard. of Toronto a 35--- 38 286-- 48 j but were not exhumed. , 'ur ; F sa te ies ; -joj-\town hall was destroyed by fire aes : ar' hic ee ack iC Gece Games tae i ore Roger Gibbs died Oct. 28 in Workmen swarmed over its|the Performing Arts was origi \hag evaad nha, \ re,| Mandate of the. board, which Joseph Mackenzie of Ottawa, Tice - | 302 --~ 28 |hospital; his son. three weeks four floors late Wednesday nightinally planned in 1962 as part of aried history. was also composed of Mr, Jus-|who replaced Judge Dryer as eed = a ec earlier. and early today, laying carpet,'the $25,000,000 St. Lawrence SEES JENNY LIND tice Victor : Dryer of ae ie ad ken kc gen aap both left ie - < | 5 esa ska : - -- - > none SER ave : i - % x ish Columbia Supreme Court)the Montreal offices of the trus- vl asalet-+,4 4 -- 162 are rag DISEASE " i" Linh seenicierne oe cision and Sogig a pe = sos pase for their homes. rH ae ao prea 148 | Another of Mrs. Gibbs' sons, | | E ] Pp k t fore a ctowded house. Sir Jona{etulive of the Canadian Labor) 21 96 | 647 -- 120 esata Jail Employees Picke A Macdonald and Goorgel Sear and all ts files will be) | FREE PEPSI wie | Bo as a rare muscular disease.| . . cae yt Lodlbongen shipped to Ottawa. EPI'S a 3 3 ang apamee mercies! At Ontario Legislature ferris sevice') She usm, sia goa | BES 'ie what was describe: ; y a need ace hepatitis. Zi a g panniers lees efglabliched tn. ie loyal to IZZA 'mj after suffering another in a examination. He sat quietly in the waiting) Tina Chagmine, 9, and Karen|r Her husband, Charles Clayton 'oom until officers arrived. | Gibbs, 40, died Jan. 21, 1966, in Hope, 8, had been killed with a| Watson was discharged from | hospital of what was believed to 30-06-c alibre rifle. Margaret|the Central State Hospital in| phe a heart attack. Wendy, 5, and Faith Erline, 3,)Pineville six weeks ago after one z had been strangled. ju Townspeople said Watson fre-ment. He was taken to the East the} Louisiana quently announced that "world is too wicked a place for|J my kids to grow up in." He had|servation, He will remain there talked of studying for the minis-|u try. \V WENT VISITING | et Ann Watson, Wednesday Chief Walking Buffalo Of Stoney Indians Dies BANFF, Alta. (CP) -- Chief Walking Buffalo of Alberta's Stony Indians is dead at 97. He died Wednesday in hospi- series of strokes that afflicted him during the last few years. Funeral arrangements were not announced but it was expect- ed he would be buried in the tribal cemetery at the Morley reserve, his lifelong home, 40 miles west of Calgary. Born March 20, 1870, he soon was orphaned, But Rev. John MacLean, one of the West's first Methodist missionaries, adopted him in 1881 and christened him George MacLean. He was elected chief of the Stonys in 1920 and stepped down i becoming the tribe's stat later chiefs. BETTER UNDERSTANDING He had two great loves: man depression. ndergoing psychiatric _ treat- is ae State Hospital in T gh fe ackson for treatment and ob- ou aw | ntil the next grand jury con- enes, probably in March. Cuts Deaths | No charges were filed. | Music lovers of that era came union President Harold C. TORONTO (CP) -- About 80/about 400 Toronto court work- to the hall to hear the Toronto Banks walked off the job, crip- Employees demon- vants, The government announced Dec. 11 it will assume all costs| of administering justice Jan. 1.| To accomplish this it will take|had sent a telegram to Premier|city rented out two floors to the |members of the Canadian Union| ers, said: jof Public _| strated in front of the Ontario|is. We just want to retain the' Metropolitan Choral Society. jlegislature Wednesday to pro-!union of our choice." | "We don't care who our boss jtest a government move that! Workers at Ontario's other/Played in the hall for the first!; io, would soon make them civil ser-| city jail, in Hamilton, also were| time in Toronto. represented. SENT TELEGRAM Mr. Higgins told reporters he Friends and neighbors said he} LONDON (AP) -- Britain re-|over the province's 35 regional| John Robarts asking for "a stay Watson told his wife, Margar-|recently showed signs of deep corded 98 traffic deaths during|4"4 two city jails and municipal | of execution" but as yet had re- _|the five-day. Christmas holiday |--60 fewer than last year--and Castle Wednesday credited jtough, new Jaw with keeping many drinking drivers off the road. Mrs keepers. and others to get the Castle, who fought pub Christmas 1965, but we cannot! lafford to be complacent. Any| \death is one too many." | Britain's top motoring organi-| zations, staunch defenders of drivers' rights, were impressed. A spokesman for the Royal Au- tomobile Club said a number of \factors could have contributed jto the drop in fatalities "but |there can be little doubt that the jnew drink-and-driving law kept) ;many people off the roads."' § | The law became effective in f October. Motorists suspected of} |traffic violations became liable) to be stopped by police and) igiven a "breathalyser" test to {measure the alcohol in_ their! | blood. | The test is administered ini- tially by making the motorist esman and adviser to; CHIEF WALKING BUFFALO |pjow inio a balloon with a spe- Icial mouthpiece containing crys- tals that turn green if the alco- hol content is higher than 80 Among survivors are a son,|milligrams to 100 millilitres of ... World Traveller courts. Employees now represented Transport Minister B b ajby the CUPE would become/Friday with Allan Grossman, el lca SH recall ape "4 | members of the Civil Service minister of reform institutions, Association Wally Higgins, president of Pennie, Sa i?8'a"| Aymored Truck Stolen From Public YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) --; Thieves escaped with $301,000 in an armored truck Wednesday by driving it out of a parking lot crowded with people while the two guards were in a depart- ment store. The truck was found within 30 minutes abandoned about 14 miles away from the shopping area, in nearby Boardman, with $32,000 still inside. Police said the thieves switched the rest of the loot to.a getaway car. Authorities said someone eyi- dently fad keys to open the truck doors that locked auto- matically when closed. There was no sign of forced entry into | the Kane Secret Service Co.) truck. ceived no reply. Mr. Higgins said talks last convinced him the takeover could not be legalized until it|to restore the hall to its original CUPE Local 79 that representsjhad approval of the legislature. beauty. Parking Lot The two guards, Steve Sulik,} 46, and James Lockhart, 45,| were in Almart's Department Store about "four or five min-| utes,"' Police Chief Don Hawk- ins said. Several witnesses outside the store said a man in uniform got into the truck and drove away. | It was found abandoned in a park. "They were certainly familiar with the operation,"' said Hawk- ins. "I would say it has every) appearance of being an inside| job."" The chief said the robbery, largest in the recollection of of- ficials in the Youngstown area, | was pulled by "'two or three men," jand gold ceiling combination |From the centre ceiling panel TE 1LONDON hangs a_ $17,000 crystal gas| Philharmonic Vocal Society, Toronto z port facilities, in what Society pling | or the| was called an illegal strike Banks had been criticized in a federal report as the virtual dic- of a corrupt, thug-ridden and undemocratic SIU. Judge Lippe returns Musical In 1857, Handel's Messiah was For three years after the Sec- | ond World War, part of the| building was used as a dormito- ry for homeless men. Later, the to his chamber in the Montreal court house next Thursday to resume his duties as judge provincial court National Ballet Guild. The com- |pleted hall will once again be the guild's home. Damaged sculpture, gas chan- |deliers, iron railings, fine an- tique wallpapers and period fur- nishings all had to be recreated The Great Hall on the third floor room has been 'painted a delicate salmon pink and ivory) with a Wedgwood blue, ivory chandelier, the gift of an anony- mous donor. In the main entrance hall, 42 illuminated silk screen pictures depicting life in Toronto will greet visitors. Canadian Pot LONDON WINERY LIMITED ANNUAL JANUARY and nature. He believed that if| several daughters, many grand- man understood nature, he} children and _great-grandchil- would understand himself and|dren, and at least two great- bring about the brotherhood of great-grandchildren. blood. Offenders can be fined up to £100 ($257)--with automatic driving suspension for a year. | The old chief was deeply reli- all mankind. DX -- DX -- DX -- DISTRESS SALE DX -- DX -- DX gious and referred to the out- doors as God's university. In 1959, he embarked on a 62,000-mile world tour on behalf of the Moral! Re-armament Movement, meeting kings and queens and other top state lead- SAV WITH IX sions: an ancient medicine stick that was said to have been car- ried by the first Chief Walking Buffalo many generations ago, and an album of photographs of his round-the-world trip. Endowed with a generous sense of humor, the chief re- ferred to Anglo-Saxons as $ ers. He had two prized posses- ¢ "white savages," and in the in- terview last winter, when a re- porter said he didn't understand Sioux, the chief replied with a BE WISE: .. . ¢ ECONOMIZE ! FUEL | Phone 668 -3341 ¢| ESS; Dipping Tank -- Ceiling $ Easy Terms arranged. FRANK SMITH 576-1415 OIL | DX -- DX -- DX -- twinkle in his eyes: | "Huh, you not bilingual." | bX = by -- DX | 303 HILLSIDE AVE. Body Shop -- Factory Building 7,400 Sq. Ft. Factory & Office Space Strategically located on one of Oshawa's busiest traffic arteries (Stevenson Rd. 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