2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, Jenuery 17, 1967 . A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Trustees Lax In Duty Starr Says In House OTTAWA (CP) -- All three; . federal trustees supervising the} maritime unions have agreed) to stay on the job during the) one-year extension of the trust- eeship ordered late last month, Labor Minister Nicholson and announced Monday. j He said Judge Rene Lippe of} Montreal, Charles Millard of Toronto and Joseph MacKenzie | of Ottawa will continue in their roles at government request. The minister tabled in the Commons a copy of the cabi- net's surprise order of Dec. 29) which extended the trusteeship! legislation just two days before it was to have expired. | Michael Starr (PC -- On- tario) said the extension is proof the trustees have not car-! ried out the cleanup role Par-! liament assigned to them. They had been lax in their duty; oth- erwise the job would have been| done by now. | Mr. Nicholson said the > the| sion was made because the trustees had not completed certain objectives. Chief of these was unity among the five unions, a cohesion of employer groups and the reorganization of hiring halls. | Mr. Starr said the trustees, have not been able to clean up the Seafarers' International Un- jon of Canada, blamed by a 1963 inquiry report for the inter- union violence that led to the trusteeship action. | The former Conservative la- bor minister said the same SIU executive holds power, minus only Hal Banks who was fired by the trustees in the spring of 1964. If the trusteeship was no} more productive this year than} in the past, the Great Lakes) shipping industry would reyert|ter Luigi Preti of Italy said to violence as soon as the trust- eeship ended. All Salt, No Beer BRILON, West Germany (AP) --Thieves who stole a heavy truck Monday night with beer advertisements painted on its side are due for a letdown, police reported Tuesday. The truck contained no beer--just 200 sacks of salt. Takers In Soup NASSAU, Bahamas (AP)-- Mark William Lavelly, 21, an American and and Australian, Joseph E. Cooke, 24, were sen- tenced to a month in jail for stealing a turtle. The two said they took the turtle as a prank. At the court's order the turtle was returned to the tank of a tortoise shell manufacturer. 10 Fall To Death HYDERABAD, India (Reut- ers)--Ten construction workers fell to their deaths and 78 others were injured Monday when bamboo scaffolding collapsed at the site of a dam being built at Nagarjunsagar. Ex-Mayor Dies '. SIDMOUTH, England (Reut- ers)--Sir Harry Edward Augus- tus Twyford, 97, lord mayor of London in 1937-38, died here _ 10, it was announced Tues- ay. Artisans Aided FLORENCE (AP) -- A fund founded by Italian fashion de- signer Emilio Pucci to aid the flood-stricken artisans of Flor- ence announced Tuesday it had received nearly $1,000,000 from companies in Canada and the United States. The fund said that 29 companies, including two in Canada, had made con- tributions totalling $987,000. Democratic Party, $ T. C. DOUGLAS «+. address council Says NDP Ahead | TORONTO (CP)--T. C. Doug-| OTTAWA (CP) -- Joseph las, national leader of the New|Contran Bisson, 53, has been the|appointed to a one-year term NDP has a "reasonable pros-|on the Canadian Pension Com- pect" of taking over as the of-| mission, it was announced Mon- |ficial Opposition at Ottawa and|day. Former chairman of the as the new government of On-|Unemployment Insurance Com- tario. Addressing the NDP pro-|mission, Mr. Bisson has been vincial council here Sunday, he said public opinion polls show the NDP moving ahead almost everywhere in Canada but par- ticularly in Ontario. Smoke More ROME (AP)--Finance Minis- says Educationist Dies TORONTO (CP)--Dr. Stanley Rendall, retired superintendent of secondary education for On- tario, died Monday. Dr. Rendall was born in Blenheim Town- ship, Oxford County, and edu- cated in Plattsville, Ont., and Woodstock. An honor graduate in classics from Queen's Uni- versity, he was made an hon- orary doctor of laws in May, 1959, by the University of West- ern Ontario. Commons Monday. He said an additional $100,000 has been al- located for relief assistance to Italy, but the aid office had not yet decided what type of proj- ject to undertake. Pension Post BUILDER SEEKS LONE HOLD-OUT TORONTO (CP)--The will of an individual proved too much for a corporate giant. Greenwin Construction Co. Ltd. appealed Monday to city council for the right to build its apartment development around the home of Kate Burgess. Mrs. Burgess, 79, has tor a year held up a start of the project because the memories of a lifetime are in the house she and her husba nd built with their own hands in 1912. The construction company is reported to have offered her husband built with their own hands in 1912. The construction company is reported to have offered her at least $40,000 house, twice what it on the open market. for the is worth Now, through counsel E. A, out for a comprehensive de- velopment that would include Mrs. Burgess' property. and Goodman, the company is . s m Italian Farms Aided) suesesing tnt they nay per OTTAWA (CP) -- The exter-| in the house rent-free until she nal aid office will ship Cana- dies, design the surrounding dian cattle worth $400,000 to} building to blend in with its Italy to help farmers hit by di-| architecture a nd, perhaps, sastrous floods, External Af-| eyen paint her house. fairs Minister Martin told the) ~ phe city has been holding the company needs its per- mission to change the plan. All the other home-owners in | the area have sold to make way for the development. B.C. Students Will Bring Von Thadden To Campus VANCOUVER (CP) -- The University of British Columbia students' organization said Mon- day night it will go ahead with plans to bring Adolph von Thad- den to Vancouver despite grow- ing protests from Jewish leaders }across Canada. _ Brian Plummer, head of the |Alma Mater Society's special events committee, said von Thadden, vice-chairman of the right-wing West German Na- |tional Democratic Party, is scheduled to speak Jan. 31 at the campus. Many European political ob- servers say the party is ideolog- ically neo-Fascist and numbers | among its followers many mem- |bers of Hitler's elite SS corps. | The party denies it is neo-Nazi. Mr. Plummer said he has {reached a tentative agreement with executives of the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. show Sun- day, under which the society would bring von Thadden to 'to the CBC. | The students' organiza- | tion spokesman said full security measures will be taken if neces- sary to protect von Thadden from any violence or demonstra- tions. "Tf we receive any indication of trouble at all we will alert RCMP," said Mr. Plummer. The CBC last week cancelled plans to bring von Thadden to Seen As Opposit By JOSEPH MacSWEEN LONDON (CP)--Amid smoul- dering discontent, Parliament returns today from the Christ- mas recess to resume its long struggle over such issues as the |steel bill--and Prime Minister |Wilson's personality. | Wilson and Foreign Secretary |George Brown were scheduled consul general in New Orleans and later in Los Angeles before accepting his present appoint- ment, Whales Trapped EDMONTON (CP)--The last three members of a herd of trapped beluga whales were Faculty Pl ea For Pearson KINGSTON (CP) -- A letter urging the government to en- dorse proposals by Secretary- General U Thant of the United Nations for settlement of the Vietnam war has been sent to Prime Minister Pearson by 151 faculty members at University. The letter, released here, also Qucen's |Monday Italians smoked more cigarettes in 1965 than. ever-he- fore. Preti said the state-run 500,000,000 cigarettes last year, up 6.6 per cent from the year before. Opera Star Dies BOLOGNA, Italy (AP)--Gi- sella Adorni, Italian soprano who starred with Caruso, died Tuesday. She was 89. & IRWIN HASKETT «+. announces move New Post TORONTO (CP) -- The ap- pointment of Robert H. Humph- ries as registrar of motor ve- hicles was announced Monday by Transport Minister Irwin Haskett. Mr. Humphries, born in the Peterborough district, joined the department of the provincial secretary in 1938, served in the RCAF during the Second World War and subse- quently transferred to the attor- ney-general's department. HERE and THERE RESERVE SEATS The Rotary Club of Oshawa has reserved a block of 150/ seats for its members and their wives at the Oshawa Night be- | ing held to honor Don Jackson, Feb. 1, at Maple Leaf Gardens. ROTARY CONFERENCE | A large number of the mem- bers of the Rotary Club of Osh- awa are planning to attend the annual conference of District 707, Rotary International, being held Feb. 24 and 25 at the Royal York Hotel, Toronto. CENTENNIAL PARTY St. Joseph's CPTA will hold a centennial card party at St. Gregory's auditorium Feb. 14 and not Feb. 10 as was re- ported in The Times Saturday. LAKE VISTA SCHOOL Nine tenders were opened by board of education Monday night for the building of the new Lake Vista Senior School which will be built on Cedar Street. The bids are being kept confidential until the board's architect has had time to check out some cf the bidding com- panies. The new school is set THE WHOLE FAMILY ENJOYS Skiing -- Curling -- oll winter sport: ond the best of evertyhing ot Cannia Kingsway P.O. Lake of Bays TE, 705-635-2221 for completion by August of this year. RED CROSS DRIVE Board of education approved Monday night a Red Cross re- quest for permission to hold a Junior Red Cross Campaign in the city's public schools. EDUCATION MEETING The next meeting of the Osh- awa Board of Education will be held at the board's administra- tobacco monopoly had sold 64,- still at their to the Pacific Ocean. TATTINGSTONE, Eskimo Lake breathing hole Monday. Tom Rusnak,..presidentof the Lions Club of the arctic community of Inuvik, reported the latest Sighting of the stranded mam- mals, prevented by an early freeze from making their way Body Dismembered England (AP)--A farmer plowing his field Monday found the nude, asks the government "to advo- all foreign military forces in North and South Vietnam, ac- companied by the introduction of an international peacekeep- ing force in the theatre of con- flict" and "'to take the initia- tive in mounting an urgent pro- gram of economic and social assistance to the war - stricken ly) | Reread The faculty members asked the government to prohibit the sale of any Canadian military equipment destined for Vietnam cate the phased withdrawal of dismembered body of a teen- age boy neatly packed into two suitcases near this Suffolk vil- lage, 40 miles northeast of Lon- don. Scotland Yard detectives were called in and a_ police spokesman said the body was believed to have been cut up within the last few days. Tariffs Raised GEORGETOWN, Guyana (CP) -- Peter D'Aguiar, Guy- ana's finance minister, Monday announced increases in a vari- ety of import tariffs as part of an attempt to finance expected government expenditures in the coming year of $81,000,000. D'Aguiar, in presenting his budget, said revenue of more than $84,000,000 is expected to result from existing tax sources and the new ones he is intro- Air Agreement PARIS (Reuters) -- Britain and France agreed Monday to go ahead with the joint project for building a supersonic, swing-wing combat aircraft, it was announced here. The agreement was reached in day- long talks between Defence Minister Denis Healey of Brit- Boy Escapes 'Nitro' Blast NORTH KAMLOOPS, Police were called B.C. (CP) -- A four - ounce bottle of nitroglycerine, discovered Sun- day by a small boy, was ex- ploded harmlessly early Mon- day by an army bomb disposal ducing. team. after a child took a number of blasting caps to his home. He told his parents he found the caps in a parking lot behind a_ hotel. RCMP investigated and found the bottle in the same general area where $18,000 and a loaded gun were recovered Saturday night following a grocery store holdup. ain and Armed Forces Minister Pierre Messmer of France. Spain Clamps Down National Court of Public Order Monday sentenced 13 workers to prison terms ranging from six months to 2% years for il- legal association and propa- ganda. They were arrested in April while distributing hand- bills calling for Spanish work- ers to cripple production in var- ious factories and join the out- lawed Communist party. You Know What? PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -- When Thomas Craft found his apartment on fire early Monday he jumped out of the second- storey window. Then he went to the front door of the building tion offices on Jan. 30 starting at 7.30 p.m. TORONTO (CP) -- School Faced MADRID, Spain pepe! Bias Threat William Ross, chairman of the Toronto board of education, said Mon- day racial prejudice, not lack of money, threatened to close and to provide medical supplies to the civilian populations of North and South Vietnam. | Two faculty members asked that their disagreement with the letter be recorded. There are 1,800 full- and part-time members on the Queen's fac- ulty. lcation in this country do not ja dinner of the London School jto finish their Rome talks with jItalian leaders--and meet the | Pope--before flying back this jafternoon to London and their | places on the Labor front bench in the Commons. The Rome visit began Sunday when Wilson and Brown hit the Common Market trail on which they will stop at six capitals in the next 10 weeks in their quest for entry into the European Economic Community. Tory Opposition Leader Ed- ward Heath is reported confi- dent Wilson and Brown will have a rough ride on their re- connaissance. Many Tory mem- bers--and perhaps some Labor U.K. Boosts Tuition Fees LONDON (CP) -- Education Secretary Anthony Crosland ex- plained to an international stu- dent audience Monday night why the British government considers it necessary to in- crease fees for overseas stu- dents more than 3% times. | Tuition fees, now averaging £70 ($210) a year, will be in- creased to £250 for future over- seas students under a plan an- nounced by Crosland Dec. 21. The increase will be limited to an extra £50 a year for those lalready at British universities, "Tuition: fees for higher edu- represent anything like the full cost of providing the courses," Crosland said Monday night at of Oriental and. African Studies. "For universities in general, they cover an average only about eight per cent of recur- rent costs." There are some 65,000 over- seas students in Britain, two- thirds from the Commonwealth. Crosland said that in some cases, it Is cheaper for a stu- dent from a fully developed country to come here for his higher education than to get it in his own country. While many of the students are from underdeveloped count- ries, Crosland also noted that 30 per cent come from the United States, the "old Domin- ions" -- Canada, New Zealand and Australia--Western Europe and Scandinavia. Attack On Wilson's Sincerity ion Strategy members as well--are far from convinced that Wilson really wants to join the market even though he has said, "We mean business." Legislation to nationalize steel facing Parliament but there is evidence of deepening political conflict ahead over the person- ality and alleged lack of. in- tegrity of Wilson himself. EDITORIAL BLUNT Members of Parliament see as significant a brutally-blunt editorial in the current issue of The Weekly News, published by the Conservative central office and obviously officially ap- proved. They say it points the direction of Tory strategy. The editorial speaks of the "dishonest words, the dishonest promises and the dishonest ma- noeuvres of the most dishonest man it has ever been the mis- fortune of the British nation to elect to its highest office." The Tory reasoning is said to be that sooner or later the elec- torate will become disen- chanted with Wilson. Heath wants to be sure that if that time comes, lines will be clearly drawn between Wilson and himself. Heath, however, has been em- barrassed by two of his own | Canada and sell interview rights! the campus police force and the! is the most contentious issue, Canada for an interview in| Toronto because of threats of violent demonstrations. | "We felt a visit by von Thad- den would bring undue risk to his own safety and that of others," said J. Alphonse Qui-| met, CBC president. ducer of Sunday, said in Toy- onto he stil! hopes to get an interview with the West German WEATHER FORECAST TORONTO (CP) -- Official forecasts at 5:30 a.m. Tuesday: ! combine with snow squalls cold is predi foyming over a od op boi Low tonight High Wednesday |Georgian Bay, bringing blustery! windsor ... 3 stg gr tod Negi ig a conditions throughout southern! g¢. Thomas Ontario. On Wednesday, sunny London sae th OF | Kitch Icy Northwest Winds Force End To Mild Spell 25 shifting to westerly 25 with gusts to 40 early this afternoon Synopsis: Winds shifting this,;and decreasing to westerly 15 morning into the. northwest will) tonight. Forecast temperatures politician, possibly by sending a CBC crew to West Germany. sible arrangements with the UBC Alma Mater Society to get von Thadden to Vancouver. | Louis Herman, national chair-| man 6f the Canadian Jewish | a taped television interview. Mr. Herman said the See | has learned that von Thadden will visit New York in the next} with the CBC. Sam Kaplan, editor of the Jewish Western Bulletin, said in Vancouver the students' invita- tion was irresponsible. "T hope that if he does come, the students will be responsible enough to let other people, who are experts on the problem, share the stage with him," Mr. Kaplan said. He said that if UBC students want to study the causes and realities of Nazism, they should find better methods of doing it. In the Commons Monday, State Secretary Judy LaMarsh said von Thadden appeared on the CBC show The Public Eye in November without adverse| public reaction. She said there is a strong element of public opinion which feels the CBC's mandate is to provide a forum so that the public can see and hear people in the news. Mr. Duke agreed. He said he vas alarmed that a minority group could bring enough pres- sure to bear to deprive Canadian television viewers of the rights to see an interview with a man in the news. "A pressure group takes ac- tion and we find the rug pulled said. main lieutenants in the days leading up to the resumption of Parliament. Duncan Sandys, former Commonwealth secre- tary, organized a mass imbrog- lio over Rhodesia in Trafalgar square Sunday. Enoch Powell, former health secretary and sometimes termed the Tory i made a h else- where that seemed to denigrate the export effort which is so firmly supported by Heath as well as Wilson. { BROWN GETS PUBLICITY CBC Supplies Sets To Staff OTTAWA (CP) -- The CBC Congress, said his organization|much colder with scattered) Killaloe .... is opposed to any public ap-|snowflurries and variable cloud-|Muskoka ... pearance in Canada by vonjiness today. Sunny and cold North Bay . Thadden, either in person or in| Wednesday. Winds west to! Sudbury .. few days for a taped interview|and turning much colder with|Moosonee .. most of the province but snow-| Mount Forest .. flurries will likely persist in the) wingham He did not. comment on pos- snowbelt areas of southern On-| Hamilton 0 10 0 10 0 10 covccees 0 10 or O 8 soveesas, ©: 10 sicsccee 0 13 tario. |St. Catharines ... 5 13 Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,/Toronto ..... soon 0 13 | Niagara, Lake Ontario, Halibur- Peterborough .... -5 10 ton regions, Windsor, Toronto, | Kingston eoqccoeee 0 13 Hamilton: Windy and turning} Trenton .... 0 13 {northwest near 30 but gusting! Rarlton .. -30 -10 at times to 50. | Sault oe, Marie ' < 0 Lake Huron, southern Geor-| Kapuskasing ... + -35 +10 gian Bay regions, Cloudy, windy | White River ..... -40 4 | snowflurries today. Snowsqualls| Timmins hoeeehis 10 accompanied with heavy drift-| ing and blowing snow through- out the snowbelt areas. Vari- able cloudiness and a few snow- flurries Wednesday. Northwest | winds near 30 but gusting at times to 50. Southern White River, Al-| goma, Timaga mi, northern} Georgian Bay, Cochrane re-| gions: Snow gradually easing} this morning but heavy drift- | ing and blowing snow continu-| ing throughout the day. Mostly clear and very cold tonight and Wednesday. Winds becoming! northerly near 30 with gusts to! 50 this morning. | Northern White River region: Clear and very cold today and | Wednesday. Considerable drift-| ing and blowing snow today.! Northernly winds 20 to 30. | Western James Bay region:| Clear and very cold in all but) extreme southeastern sections today and Wednesday. Snow in| extreme southeastern sections | ending this afternoon. Continu-; ing very cold. Ottawa and region: Snow this morning changing to flurries this afternoon and clearing this evening. Turning colder today. out from under our feet," he|wednesday sunny and very cold. Winds southeasterly 15 to WELSH STAND OUT South Wales is Britain's lar- gest steel-producing area, turn- ing out more than a quarter of Britain's total output. Qs Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation RETIREMENT SAVINGS PLAN Saves Income Tox end provides Retirement Income % Government Approved x No loading fees or charges % Payments made before Feb- ruary 28, 1967 are deduct- ible for 1966 Income Tax purposes, %* Investment options -- Stocks --Bonds -- Mortgages *& Official receipt for Tax pur- poses. CENTRAL ONTARIO. TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION 19 Simcoe Street North 723-5221 23 King Street West, 623-2527 OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS end SATURDAYS has purchased 107 color televi- sion sets at a cost of about $80,- 250 to allow some officials to monitor programs at home or in offices, State Secretary La- Marsh said in a written reply to a Commons question Mon- But there have been other newspaper stories--about ebul- lient George Brown. Although generally of a complimentary nature, the stories made much of Brown's unpredictability. A New York Times account said he made "'the dropped brick a trademark." Current - Maple Creek), asked the question, also wanted to know which officials got sets. day. Jack McIntosh (PC -- Swift | who Miss LaMarsh said receivers | were assigned "'to, those offi- | cials whose duties require pro- | gram viewing at home or in offices where production moni- | tors are not available." | Much glum comment has been made in the Commons and outside about the declining power of Parliament. "The political life of the na- tion rolls on without it," says/ the Conservative Daily Mail in an editorial today. Anthony Barber, Tory spokes- man on steel, will lead an op- position drive to stop the gov- ernment's effort to force the na- tionalization bill through the Commons by the beginning of next week. These government's big majority indicates there can HEAT WITH OIL | YOUNG AGES WINTER CLEARANCE REDUCTIONS TO 30% On all winter clothing for the youngsters -- infonts to size 14. "The Best Costs Less At..." YOUNG AGES OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR . SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS be. only one outcome. Court Remands Prudential Head TORONTO (CP)--Joseph Be- noit Brien, president of the bankrupt Prudential Finance Co., was remanded to Feb. 16 when he appeared in . court the city's school for immigrant pupils. "The money to run the school is there and has always been there," he said in an interview. "The question was not lack of money; it was how do we just- ify spending more per capita to educate immigrant children than to educate native Canadi-! ans? Monday on six charges of el pr | The remand was granted after Brien's lawyer, Joseph Pomerant, announced he was withdrawing from the case. He did not give a reason for his decision. provided. Applicant must to work for a future. Bail of $10,000 was continued. Major Rubber Co. requires retail salesman for local branch. Outstanding opportunity for young man 21 to 27 with grade 12 education. Sales experience an asset, but not necessary. Complete trainfng PHONE 728-6222 FOR AN APPOINTMENT be ambitious and willing (et et Ff Fa Don't suffer poor heating service - call 725-3581 for fast, radio- controlled service by our own staff of full qualified heating tech- nicians. LANDER-STARK Courtesy and com- petence always as- sures satisfaction. "To me that is racial preju-| dice and that's the kind of and rang the doorbell to report/worry which was expressed the fire, during discussions on closing." Sir John A: MacDonald Would Have Been First In Line. We mean that, Sir John, being Scot by birth, conservative in taste and thrifty by nature, would, were he alive to-day, been FIRST IN LINE on THURSDAY, 19th January, 1967 to sample the savings at MURRAY JOHNSTON'S 12 YEARLY SALE OF QUALITY CLOTHING AND WINTER WEAR. You, too, can be as smart as Sir John by visiting Murray Johnston's during this honest-to-goodness sale. 'Multiple Listing Service L. S. Lefey is shown receiving the Oshawa & District Real Estate Board "Salesman of the Year' Award. The presentation was made at the 13th Annual 0.D.R.E.B. meeting by Lloyd G. Corson, F.R.I., Chairman of the for the local Board. -- it | SALES OPPORTUNITY | 22 ONTARIO PHONE 723-7071 WEEKDAYS 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. -- SATURDAYS 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY Canada's Largest Tax Service with Over 1500 Offices in Nerth Ameriea STREET MRS, DAVIE Ontario's been amen sale of al with meals you in fa Jubb, 140 | husband wi that fond really care see anythin Mrs. D. E. mony Rd. Mis In STE. AGA' house-to-hous dren missing run by a Ron away religiou tinued today rounding this tains commu Sgt. Ray: head of the | lice detachm and social we so far found 1 have '"'anothe in a search \ by the refus: In Ke LONDON ( into the myst drug poisonin Alexa Metcal widow of mil ducer Sir / ended Monda: dict with the | able to satisf circumstances While rulin; coroner said | consumed "s ties" of a hy chloral she di she was doi foctors who year-old wo! over-prescribir of which sh taken more t safe maximun . The coroner McEwan, hit gave a sev "fringe med Ex-Am Asked NEW YORI John Kenneth vard said M John F. Kenn made in two husband last to William \ Death of a Pr In an article Saturday Revi native of Ion who was Ken dor to India books as With erre Salinger, | of His Comp Fay, Jr. Galbraith sa Stern I Bonn F BONN (AP) West German has urged the to delete parts a President M nedy found o} Stern's publish rejected the re Stern has | Look magazin of the book t chester withor Look agreed t with the Ke Robert F. Ke N.Y.) asked St deletions. Dr. Ulrich Li of the Bundest: science, cultu tion, wrote Na See no convini journalistic ar; gard Mrs. Ker In his reply Lohmar: "You have which is exp journalist: To before reac sions... .Inr sorship of W chester's report family, I am in big Germar newspapers. A action of the against Manche "Tt is not tru tions desired | family touch © feelings of Mrs would mean thi regards her neé about President sessae