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Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Jan 1963, p. 1

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$660,000 Bay Ridges Public School Opened --P. 4 Cloudy-and continuing mild te- day and Wednesday with.a few THOUGHT FOR TODAY White lies have been out of fashion for years -- now they come in technicolor. he Oshawa Sines periods-of light snow or drizzle. VOL. 92 -- NO. 6 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1963 Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Ottawa and for poyment Office Depertment, ef Postage in Cash. SIXTEEN PAGES Glassco Report May OTTAWA (CP) --Recommen- dations of the Gilassco royal icommission on government or- iganization may be a major theme of Prime Minister Diefen-| baker's campaign in the next} federal election This possibility was suggested in Conservative circles after the third volume in the commis- sion's report on its studies was Battle Shaping | Become Voting Issue made public Monday night. It was felt that the party's appeal to the electorate would be en- hanced if recommendations of the first three volumes were put into effect quickly and firmly. However, Liberals say the re- port could not be an election issue in the nommal sense of the term. Their view is that there would be no division among the parties on the general issue of civil service administrative ef- lficiency, although there may be some differences over detail. So far, Social Credit and New Democratic Parties haven't | Over New U.S. Wheat Program : Parliamentarians are away | WASHINGTON (AP) -- New| trom the capital. The House re-|U.S. farm legislation may be} sumes sitting Jan. 21 forced to take a back seat dur-| ing the next three months to a --(CP Wirephoto) | battle between the Kenndy ad --------------"| ministration and the 'American |Farm Bureau Federation over| QUIET ON THE HILL the relative quiet of the Par- liamentary scene. The House of Commons is recessed for the holiday season sanile any Freshiy-falien snow lies atop the fence and on the ground in front of Ottawa's Parliament Buildings in this photo by Malik, emphasizing a} UN Military Sque |@ new wheat program. This program will be sub-| mitted to a grower referendum} at a date in the spring yet to} be set iggy Secretary pOrvill man, it wm into" etfect inj - into effect in 1964 But the shooting already Sal started, with both sides regard- ing the referendum as a poten- jtial turning point in future fed- eral farm policies Freeman has listed the ref- erendum as a make-or-break is- sue as far as future farm con.| trols are concerned. The new wheat plan, author-| ized by Congress last year at! the recommendation of the ad- | Tightens On Katanga WUISABETHVILLE -- Swed-|manding that he surrender his)ville was @ convoy of reporters' tsh United Nations troops havel|last-<ditch stronghold of Kolwezi|cars. taken a north Katanga rail) without a fight. Tshombe and the Belgian con- town in The Congo without a Tshombe returned to Elisa-|sy) left the car outside the resi- fight, g the military|bethville today, arriving by car} dence of Katangan Police Chief squeeze on President Moise|from the Rhodesian border. | Pius Sapwe, where a small Fg ea tottering movement) With him in a black limou-|crowd which had gathered be- for Katanga province indepen- | sine were Frederick van de| gan to clap Katangan capital, and Odilon| ented scorched-earth warfare in voiced any substantial criticism of Glassco rec ¢ mmendations, Some observers suggest that in the election campaign both are likely to put more stress on their economic theories than on jgovernment organization and administration, Parliament has not debated the recommendations contained in the first two voluems and will not receive the third vol- ume until it returns to work Jan, 21 The only criticism, voiced by the Liberal and NDP groups in the Commons, was over ap- pointment of Senator Wallace MeCutchec:, 'minister without portfolio, as the minister in charge of implementing the rec- ommendations. The parties complaine 4 that as a senator he is not answer- able in the Commons for his actions. Prime Minister Diefen- baker replied that the :govern- ment will be answerable collec- tively and ministers individually for their own departments. POLICE PROBING SUSPECTED RAPE | PICKERING . (Staff) Pickering Township Police are investigating a sus- pected rape incident in volving an 18-year-old towm » Ghiet "ftegin- aid Parker said his depart- ment is checking into a complaint phoned into the Police Station by the ginl's parents Monday night. The investigation is being headed up by Sgt. Richard Bodley and Sgt. R. Holly- wood ? The girl will be question- ed later today, Chief Par- ker said this morning | Walle, the Belgian consul in the Sarli Tshombe had threat- The thrust into Kaniama, re Bag pene ee yes miles northwest of this Katanga) Nwenda, atangan envoy to|ni< fight to prevent full integra- capital, came as the UN com- Brussels. tion of Katanga into the Congo mand was believed preparing) His only escort on the 32-mile), Republic. an ultimatum to Tshombe de-|drive from Kipushi to Elisabeth- ministration, would tighten con-|_ jtrols and set up a two-price sys-| tem. The top price would go to} |that portion of the crop des-! tined for domestic use and all] or part of the export market. | -| UN headquarters in New York j denounced Tshombe's scorched- jearth threats as reckless and jirresponsible. A spokesman for A lower price wuld be assigned |Secretary General U Thanti+y wheat used for other pur- |said the UN will exert every! jjcos jeffort. to prevent application of! This program would require! such a policy a reduction of about 8,000,000 Caouette Remark Treated Coolly UN officials have promised|acres from the minimum 55, Tshombe safe conduct to return/000,000 acres allotted By THE CANADIAN PRESS |in the legislature here and inito the capital, but they have| under the present A number of French-speaking] ™unicipal councils. As far as I/made it clear there is no chance Hence, in Western Canada|know, no: French-speaking per-|for any second looks at Congo| Production at a time when ther have responded coolly to re-|S0n has ever been denied the reunification. Thant marks by Real Caouette, dep-|Tight of free translation in any|put his unity plan uty leader of the Social Credit|/f Manitoba's courts.' by Jan. 14 farm bureau, want party, that French - Canadians); Rev. Gontran Laviolette, ed-| Although time appeared to be both in the matter of pricin are not treated fairly in thelitor of the Catholic Sundayirunning out for the .Katanga|4nd production West Herald, said: "I can't under-| president, was believed he} The farm bur eau Mr. Caouette said in an Ot-|Stand why Mr. Caouetie should) still. had 10 days or so before|U.S. general farm organize tawa interview during the week-|S@y this He has no understand-|the UN force would be ready|can win the battle if it can get end that he was 'dissatisfied' |ing of the situation. The French|to strike at Kolwei from Jadot-| more than one third of the with the treatment his fellow)" Manitoba have nothing to cry|ville, about 80 miles to the growers voting to go along with French - Canadians receive in| Persecution al about." southeast. it Western Canada. He said) 3 . French-Canadians in the West should be treated in the same manner as Anglo-Saxons in Que- bec. This would involve setting | program. surpluses But opponents wants to)ar ; into effect led by the less control, 4 argest ion the British Paper Insists Mr. Diefenbaker and his cab- inet colleagues believes the} ELECTED PRESIDENT Dr. Norman A, M, MacKen- zie, former president of the University of British Colum- bia, has been elected president of the Canadian Institute on Public Affairs, He succeeds W. R. Carroll. --(CP Wirephoto) jstage was set for a new assault} on the problems of government when it brought in a new plan of dominion - provincial financ- ing, revised the system of agri- cultural subsidies, started mov- ing out big farm surpluses, po social security benefits jntwrodwred mepeures to en- eae Camadian industry to expand markets at home and abroad. More mandate than the minority vic-| tory it won last June 18 But the principal begun to make real economies} and improve efficiency in ali de-/ "partments of government Striking Printers -- Boycott Inquiry NEW YORK (AP) -- Striking) temporarily, a study by three blackout. And the printers have asked the U.S. attorney-general to. investigate what they call possible by the publishers The board of judges invited all parties in the strike to at- tend a session today to discuss procedure and the issues of the dipute A board spokesman said tele-| grams of invitation were sent to the publishers and to all craft) }unions refusing to cross picket lines set up by the printers. The strike began 32 days ago bi printers' chief negotiator, | tram A. Powers, 1 measures along these) Proposals lines appear likely before the} VICTORIA (AP) -- A recom- government seeks a stronger|/mendation by the Glassco royal commission that Royal Roads pitch on| opposition from retired senior which the government is likely| Officers of the navy and army, to make its appeal is that it has|but support from a retired air} |marshal. They were commenting on al of the commission's report! part | on government organiza- ltion which also urged abolition) | Of the naval education director-} late--which runs a prep school at Esquimalt, B.C Some Oppose Royal Roads Glassco OTTAWA (CP)--The federal government has been advised to call a halt to its massive activity in hospitals and educa- tion--including the $50,000,000- a-year operation of war veter- ans' hospitals. Third volume of the Glassco royal commission report on government organization, made public Monday night by Prime Minister Diefenbaker, says fed- eral hospitals for veterans, In- dians and military personnel should be turned over to the provinces or local communities. It proposes a sharp with- drawal from the Indian school system, curtailment of military education and a hard look at the propriety of continuing free schools for the children of serv- icemen. commission argues that there eral and provincial nancing their extra burden. taihs @ host of proposals to pull the longer belongs URGES ANNUITIES HALT original purpose; In both these fields, the royal is considerable waste in the duplication of facilities by fed- govern. ments. It says great economies and increased efficiency will result if the provinces are put in full control, with Ottawa fi- The 180,000-word report con- ernment out of activities ich it maintains Ottawa no It urges @ halt to the sale of cial government annuities, contend-| tives.' ing they have outlived their} calls for a CUT FEDERAL SERVICE PROBE URGES OTTAWA Quit Hospitals Urges ices from statistical work should be expanded) to storage plants (they should be -- says millions of dollaes are being"! lost on public services each year because the govern- ment doesn't charge enough for them and often doesn't know the true costs on which to base such charges. In this area, it calls for im creased charges for national park admissions, patents, fees, wharves and tree seedlings. Some had been unchanged for 50 years or more. Almost every section of the report criticizes the trend te perpetuate any government ac ttivity once, it is esablished. . "The development of similar services by provinces or private organizations can convert the role of the federal government from that of a pioneer to that of a competitor," the commis- sion says. Often a choice of methods existed for carrying out a oe ticular service. f "And, things 'being equal, your commissioners fa vot ' those jmodes. which assign to other agencies the, actual ision of a service to the public, | to the federal definition of goals and stand- ards and the provision or finan- Support or other incem | l FAVOR FREE ENTERPRISE This would free the govern- For more details on the Glasco Royal Commission Report on government or- ganization, see stories on Pages 2, 6, and 13. scrapping of the Veterans' Land Act administration; suggests an end to the toll-free operation of |pleasure-craft canals, and rec-| ment to concentrate on its ma jor responsibilities. "In addition, the growth of the public service can. be checked and the other institutions--public and private --serving the Canadian people can be strengthened, not only. Ip resources available to them. but also in experience and skill." Strengthening other sectors of the economy also would bric -- and the}ommends a more business- like| additional taxes into the federal |RCN hospital .at HMCS Naden.|approach to post office opera-| purse. would co-operate. Powers said Sunday fact-finding study He. also announced asked U.S. Attorney he has - General an agreement among publish- ers of the nine closed newspa- pers that a strike against one was a strike againat all "This agreement,' telegraphed Kennedy, "'is one which eliminates competition among nwspapers involved and therefore raises the- question! whether the anti-trust laws are being violated." | Powers |mandant it should stay in operation, Capt. J. M. Grant, first com- of Royal Roads, said) but| as a naval college "T feel very strongly that the operated their own cadet train- ing colleges," said Capt. Grant "I believe economies could anti-trust law violations! Robert F Kennedy to look into|be achieved and more officers inspired to enter the three serv- ices if each service operated and staffed its own cadet train- ing college." Canada's other joint service |colleges are at Kingston and Si. Johns, Que Rear-Admiral W. M. Landy- | more, flag. officer, Pacific Coast, said he would hate to see the] college closed. "We are very satisfied with ap schools where ------ would be in French, use of! president} jof striking local 6 of the Inter-| |ithe college. I think Royal Roads is doing a magnificent job turn- tions In jgreat each case it argues that) economies can be) jachieved with no loss of public} But it} service or efficiency. The three-man royal commis- sion headed by the Toronto ac- countant and business executive, J. Grant Glassco, 57, spent two years and nearly $3,000,000 di- recting an intensive study into the complex system which runs the massive federal organiza- jtion, It hired 197 specialists to jconclusions are those of the commissioners alone. Serving with Mr. Glassco are|, Eugene Therrien, 56, Montreal jinsurance company executive and lawyer, and Watson Sellar, 68, of Ottawa, retired auditor- general of Canada This latest report--two more jgather research, but the written} The report is in seven sec tions, The first two are an. ex- tension of the November report which dealt with supporting ser- |vices for. government. They dis- growers| Printers have boycotted, at least|members of ocal 6 will meet|training of junior officers could|avoids putting a total price tag] cuss public information and eco. to decide whether the|be carried out much more eco-jon possible savings it is designed to reduce|Judges of this city's newspaper| printers will go along with the|nomically if the three services| jnomic and statistical services, |The other five involve direct services for the public, These are entitled education; health; lending, guaranteeing and insur- ing; the post office and miscel laneous activity. Most of the major recommen- dations are in the health see tion. | In hospital care for veterans, the commission strongly urges that Ottawa withdraw entirely from the field and leave it te the public hospitals, It advo cates halting further construc tion of veterans' hospitals and selling present active-treatment hospitals to communities. It warns that if present trends continue, the government faces Kennedy Raps | jnational Typographical U nion| jing out well-educated young/are to come--contains proposals French in provincial legislatures! and in correspondence between public officials and F rench-| speaking citizens. Larry Desjardins, Liberal member of the Manitoba legis- lature for St. Boniface, a pre- Mock Attack Occurred LONDON (Reuters) The} "Moral: You can't keep aj | London Daily Express sticks by) good spokesman quiet iad its claim that British Vulcan' Express defence expert Chap-|not ahi recently penetrated|man Pincher says British gov-) raid dominantly French speaking| successfully the air defence|ernment departments -- centred) Meanwhile, the air ministry. city immediately adjacent o/shield over the United States. |in Whitehall -- 'almost always blamed "misunderstanding be- Winnipeg, said: "We are far be- Despite official denials in both|conform because of a near- tween air ministry officials" for ebec ard to the! London and Washington Mon- pathological fear of offending the confusion. But the ministry hind Q in reg day that British bombers had| Washington and a compulsive continued to decline all com. school question, but I can't/narticipated in any exercises|desire to give in to the hidden| ment on whether British bomb- agree with the rest of his state-|over North America in the last} persuaders in the Pentagon ers had any time succeeded ment. We are definitely not sec-/!5 months, Express reporter) An Express editorial on the|in piercing the North American {Keith Thompson in a front-page|raid controversy titled air -shield and reaching vits - : al ie} é z ing ital ond - class Lge hls ag oe writes the people the facts." United States targets a spoken in our legisial "The fact that V-bombers; The Express says "immense| «w, do not comment on the MAYOR COMMENTS have pe netrated U.S. defences,|issues have been raised" by the|ecuit of an exercise." the air "He is just looking for crou-/and recently aceesshespa Pi sex a esi 'the| ministry spokesman said bie." said Mayor Joseph Guay| The Express said Monday) power and effectiveness 0 Brit- The spokesman repreated the of St. Boniface. "We don't want|that the mock at tack took place|ain's nuclear force," and "the) rina) . air ministry statement) any change here. I think there|"a few weeks ago.' Vulnerability of her greatest! which said British bombers only| is no doubt that the English min- Png Express and other Lon-|al 2 | hates: : jonce took part in a joint exer-| 7 ay 2iegre rre- ority in Quebec is getting more|don newspapers said Monday clegrapn alr COrre-| cise to test North American air consideration than the French/that the delta - wing Vulcan|spondent, Air Commodore E. defences--exercise Sky Shield I op M avs in an i aR. ORY + minority in regard to the school| --_-- rs, using a route over|M. Donaldson, says in an inside on Oct. 14. 1961. Canada, ipp roug JS.) page story: question. slipped through U.S.|page story He said a "misunderstanding" na Donaldson says North Amer- ican defence procedures have been changed since 'the | | is 'give is | (AFL-CIO), also was among the invited. But he said he would) not, at least for the time be-! jing, attend meetings of the so- jcalled "board of public account- | ability."' TO STUDY SITUATION One of the board's main pur- poses is to study the newspaper shutdown to determine whether the public's interests "'are be- ing given due account." The board of judges has an advisory role only, and is not empowered to pass judgment on wages and other strike issues. The publishers sai do they YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Industrial Commission Personnel Cut -|ferred at | Page 9 | Two School ~ University Of Mississippi OXFORD, Miss swer to charges: by Attorney- General Robert F. Kennedy, Chancellor John D. Williams of the University of Mississippi says the school has obeyed all federal orders since its deseg- regation crisis last fall Williams said no complaint had been made by a justice de-| partment official when he con- length with university Officials last week Kennedy's criticism of univer- sity officials came after James! H. Meredith said Monday he} would withdraw from the uni-| versity unless the situation) changes. Meredith, 29, is the first Negro known to have been jadmitted to the university. Meredith, who distributed a (AP)--In an- | | men." linvolving a wide range of serv- CONTINUED PAGE 3 air defences and flew over) '"'Whether the America like | ; --s "However; i ans like) was responsible for a ministry | major U.S. cities to admit it or not, a raid did statement Mondz later cor-! EMERGENCY The only other London news-|take place 15 months ago. Four Sctied etal Giinde nen! School Auditoriums CITY PHONE NUMBERS jrected -- that Vulce - | Paper to comment today on the| Vulcan bombers took part ou erably nn soca a Closed Sundays .... took part in a joint exercise di _leontroversy is the Communist and it was successfully executed | . 'about two months ago." party London Daily Worker|0n Saturday; Oct. 14, 1961.' ' eee ae POLICE 725-1 FIRE DEPT HOSPITAL 723-221 spoken Additions Planned . Page 9 |statement at a press conference} jin his. dormitory apartment, | |didn't say what changes he had| 9 |in mind. But he told reporters} he felt he had te savé a "situa-| jtion more conducive to learn- ing." | A little later Kennedy issued a statement in Washington in which he called on university of- ficials to take appropriate steps} service colleges which the jto make it possible for Mere-| Glassco Royal Commission 3 |dith to 'continue in school. | says should be closed. In its French is Page Minister Speaks On which pokes some tongue-in-| Donaldson says an American) The spokesman also denied) Interest Conflicts cheek fun at original conflict-|general told him at the time that U.S. pressure had been ex- 3 'ling official' statements fromitha 'surprised erted on Britain to deny the Washington and London under/at mproved| Stories in order 'to save face." ad V-bomber "raid'!t Vulcan 'The air ministry was solely mixed up ends} evice concerned with accuratel; fool radar defences tablishing the facts," he said Page ® pear to bé out of proportion to the results achieved (CP Wirephoto from National Defence). third colume of recommenda- tions released Monday night the Royal Commission said ex- penditures on the college ap- Voting Hours Change Proposed Judge A C. Hail In New Council . THIS IS ROYAL ROADS College, Victoria, one of the a Page $8 the go with he v Swear: Page em a al s to es.

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