'Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, neighboring Pickering and centres jin Ont- crio and Durham Counties, VOL. 96 -- NO. 50 10e Single Copy Ghe Oshawa Times SSe Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1, 1967 Weather Report * Milder weather for today and tomorrow. mostly cloudy. Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa ond for payment of Postage in Cash Tomorrow I SOW 20; high Thursday, be ht, will tonig 38 THIRTY PAGES OSC CHAIRMAN J. R. Kimber Heads T.S.E. TORONTO (CP)--The Toronto | Stock Exchange has ended eight ~ months without a president by : picking John R. Kimber, srties| + Commission, HENRY LANGFORD . Chairman ; chairman of the commission. GORDON GRUNDY . » Vice-chairman man of the Ontario Securities who has sparked | many changes in the securities! field in recent years, The 49-year-old lawyer is the} second president elected from outside the membership of Can-} ada's biggest securities market. | He succeeds Lt.-Gen. Howard D. Graham, who was the first. | Other appointments an-) nounced Tuesday were: --Henry E. Langford, 63, re-! tired president of Eastern and Chartered Trust Co., as chair-| man of the securities commis-| sion succeeding Mr. Kimber. | --Gordon Grundy, 55, former| president of Studebaker Canada} Ltd., as first full - time vice - --David S. Beatty, 51, deputy | chairman of Burns Brothers and} Denton Ltd., Toronto invest- | ment firm; a; F, MacFarland, and Prof. John Willis, Univer-| sity of Toronto, as part - time| commissioners. Mr. Beatty, who retires from his firm, is a former president| of the Investment Dealers Asso- ciation of Canada. The appointment was an- nounced jointly by Leslie Rown- tree, Ontario commercial affairs minister, and the ex-| change. William Somerville, executive) vice-president of the exchange, said the appointment had been discussed with the provincial government. Opposition Raps | : | Kimber' TORONTO (CP) -- Opposition spokesmen are apprehensive about the functions of the On- tario Securities Commission now that its chairman, J. R. Kimber, has been named presi- dent of the Toronto Stock Ex- change. Vernon Singer, Liberal finan- ejal critic, asked Tuesday: 'What will happen to the com- mission's closed - door inquiry into the collapse of Prudential Finance? "Does Mr. Kimber's abrupt resignation from the commis- sion mean that he has been re- moved from the inquiry? And if he has been removed, why?" James Renwick, the New Angry Wives Show StewMeat In Protest Of High Prices TORONTO (CP)--The. Woman Against Soaring Prices took their shopping bags to a par- liamentary committee meeting Tuesday--filled with goods they said shouldn't be sold in super- markets. Housing developers were there also, complaining that the cost of house construction has skyrocketed because of too much government red tape and too little planning. It was a one-day hearing of the Senate-Commons committee on consumer credit and prices. Eleven briefs were presented during the crowded sitting. Women Against Soaring Prices, a Toronto-based organi- zation which says it is in con- tact with 25, 00 consumers, calls Quaker Yacht To Haiphong TOKYO (Reuters) -- The Quaker "peace'"' yacht Phoenix, loaded with medical supplies for North Vietnam, sailed from Hiroshima today for Haiphong via Hong Kong. Its American pacifist crew planned to discharge about one ton of medical supplies at Hai- phong and then travel to Hanoi to help the North Vietnamese rebuild areas bombed by U.S. planes. The 50-foot, 30-ton ketch, car- rying 82 kits of medical sup- plies, was skippered by anthro- pologist Dr. Earle Reynolds, sailing with his Japanese wife and four American Quakers, Horace Champney, a 6l-year- old retired printer of Yellow Springs, Ohio, the oldest mem ber of the crew, said that Quakers were also engaged in relief workin South Vietnam and the voyage of the' Phoenix was part of a Quaker project to help both sides. Reynolds was sent to Hiro- shima after the end of the Sec- ond World War to carry out genetic studies of children born to atomic bomb victims. Switch Party's said there now will Democratic specialist, which there will be no qualified! persons in office fully conver-! sant with the functions of the commission, "For some time it will be ex- tremely difficult for the com- mission to perform its function; as a public body charged with the protection of the public." Mr. Renwick reiterated his party's contention that the com- mission, "being a completely independent public body operat- ing Solely in the public inter-| est,' should have no Ngee ping connections with the ex- 'change. for government scrutiny of food- price manipulation and gim- mick marketing. The organization brought a roast to the meeting--described as 18 pieces of stew meat tied together and sold by a Loblaw} supermarket as a pot roast-- as well as other retail goods} that filled two shopping bags. Stanley Randall Undergoes Surgery TORONTO (CP) -- Stanley Randall, Ontario economics and development minister, was re- ported in satisfactory condition in hospital today following an appendectomy. The 59-year-old member of the legislature for Toronto-Don Mills suffered what appeared to be an attack of indigestion just as the estimates of his depart- ment were to be presented in the legislature Tuesday. He walked to his car and was driven to Toronto General Hos- pital where his illness was diagnosed as acute appendicitis and an operation was sched- uled. \the financial | | be 'a period of time during! © jof | |Commerce asked |government today to wage |tal war'? | | | 3 : | | i tic speed limits" } |highways and imposition of min-| {drivers and for 4 jpended. War On| pa Drivers | Proposed TORONTO (CP) the Ontario --Directors Chamber of the Ontario} "to- on highway accidents} and proposed a 16-point battle plan. In a brief to Transport Min ister Irwin Haskett, the direc- tors called for a system of man- datory chemical tests for sus- pected alcohol impairment of "probationary" licences for new drivers and those whose licences are sus- "realis- Ontario} The brief also sought for imum speed limits | highways The directors mended: --Government - approved dri- ver training courses for all licence applicants under 18; --Re examination of the operation of Ontario's demerit points system; --Investigation of the "consis- tency and appropriateness of penalties levied by magis- on = super- also recom- x NESHOBA COUNTY Deputy Sheriff Cecil Price puffs a cigar and wears a western style hat as he leaves the Federal Court in Meridian, Miss., after he was among 19 indicted on charges of conspiracy in the 1964 slaying of three civil trates for ¢onvictions under the Highway Traffic Act' with a view of narrowing magistrates' discretion in sen tencing; ---A mandatory 60-day jail| term for conviction of driving while one's licence is ger suspension, plus loss of cence for life "under saneie| OSHAWA POLICE, PICKETERS SCUFFLE An Oshawa police officer drags a picketer into a cruiser near the strike- bound Oshawa Engineering and Welding Co. Ltd. plant _on _Albert Street. A _non- union worker and four members of management, including owner William Marshall, were escorted into the building past about 30 pickets. About 30 police- men were also on_ the scene at 8 a.m. today. --Oshawa Times Photo By Joe Serge - IN CARTER TAX REPORT of the minister pf transport;" Classification / tor vehicles and licensing farm vehicles that travel on or cross highways; --Improved markings at exits from superhighways. Dept. Rapped In Deaths Of Four' DEEP RIVER, Ont. (CP)-- A coroner's jury Tuesday night shouldered the Ontario high- jways department with 75 per| Unwed Mothers, Divorcees Get Tender Treatment OTTAWA (CP)--The Carter royal commission on_ taxation shows more tenderness than current astringent tax law for unwed mother, "common- law wife," and gay divorcee. But in other respects, the commission's revolutionary pro- posals for taxing families rather than breadwinners will mean a closer inspection of family affairs by the tax col- lector than now is the case. The six-member commission headed by Kenneth Carter, Tor- onto tax expert, recommended a twin scale of income tax rates. There would be, first, a slid- ing scale of rates on taxable in- come for the "unattached indi- vidual' starting at 12 per cent in the $1,000 to $1,500 bracket and running up to 50 per cent on income in excess of $100,000. Then there would be a new, low, family-rate scale, starting at 13 per cent of taxable in- comes between $2,100 and $3,- 000, and running up to the same 50 per cent on income in excess of $100,000. But the family rate would climb less sharply than| the individual rate on incomes} up to $40,000 a year. Included in some of the more | remain in school, special provisions recommended lif they are infirm. by the commission are these: --An unmarried mother who! retains custody of her child| would qualify for the pendent children would fern part of the unit up to the age| lof 21, or up to age 25 if they| Actual sup- |port would be the test of de- pendency. But a family unit would also | lower start when an unmarried| family-rate plan for the full woman has a child, = age years in which the child is born and as long as she maintains it. --A man and woman living together as common - law spouses would also qualify for the lower rate after a year's co- habitation, whether or not they have. children. --A divorced or separated couple, with each sharing re- sponsibility for the upbringing of children, would each be ac- corded the lower family-rate. The report says present tax law is unfair to families living in similar circumstances but having different martial stand- ing ii Says a family unit for tax purposes should start when a man and woman marry. De- | fied individual adopt more children, or a ivorced or| separated spouse retains cus-| tody of one or more children. / A family unit would remain ee as long as there aré any dependent children. Death of one spouse would not break the family unit, and inheritance of his estate by the mother and dependent children would not be taxed. It would be consid- ered an intra - family transac-| tion. But death of both spouses, and the passing of their estate to sons and daughters who have reached the status of unat- tached individuals or members or their ¢wn new family units, would terminate the old family unit. cent of the blame for an ac jcident which killed four PeOPIe | das , here last Dec. 23. he jury said the department | Pesos have erected highway signs warning of icy driving conditions on Highway 17 about) |40 miles northwest of here. | Nicola Dilisio, 43, of Montreal, should bear 25 per cent of the |blame for the two-car crash, or beyond 91 |the jury said. Mr. Dilisio was|turned in the Dahmer case driver of the north - bound car| |which slid cross - wise into the |ended path of the § second ve vehicle. Allard Seeks Quick Passage On Armed Forces Unification Bill OTTAWA (CP)-~Gen. Jean V. |. Allard, chief of defence staff, has pleaded for quick passage by Parliament of the armed} forces unification bill. | "Uncertainty is our worst} enemy," the general told the | Commons defence committee! Tuesday. "We now live with this unset- tled question. When the troops | know where they stand, they) will be able to settle down." | Canada's first French-speak- ing chief of staff said that de- lay of even a few months in| starting unification will se-| riously impair morale. ' of self - pro- pelled farm vehicles as o*, ° |the army and air force now is rights workers at Philadel- phia, Miss. Price is cur- rently running for sheriff of Neshoba County, a job now held by Sheriff Lawrence Rainey, who was among those 19 indicted. (AP Wirephoto) 'Klan Chief Named | In Death Of Three | MERIDAN, Miss. Mississippi Ku Klux Klan leader has been added to the list of} those the federal government [contends were involved in the [staying of three civil rights orkers near Philadelphia, Miss. Sam Bowers Jr., a Laurel coin machine distributor, was jone of 19 men charged Tuesday lon a federal conspiracy indict- ment. Bowers, who the FBI says is the Imperial Wizard of the White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan -- the most violent an most clandestine of the various Klan groups--had not previously seen named in the Philadelphia | t a was, however, indicted last year with 14 other men in the Vernon \Dahmer death at Hat- tiesburg. Dahmer, Negro leader, died after a fire-bombing attack on his home tn January, 1966. U.S. District Judge Harold Cox said indictments were re-|' when the grand jury session at Jackson Monday. A federal source said these would Gen. Allatd said Defence Min- ister Hellyer has given assur- ances thet he will hold off, proclamation until the armed forces are "good and reddy"? to jimplement it. "We will advise him (the minister) the proper time for proclamation of the bill,' the! general added. |\CITES MORALE Gen. Allard said morale | | | in as good as it has ever been and that with "half a chance' it will be equally as good in the navy. "NO DIEFENBAKER CANDIDATE" "TEMPERAMENTS | ARE DIFFERENT" | Starr's Early Campaign To Be In Low Key In an exclusive story pub- decided at a Sept. 6- run only if didn't. 9 conven- Mr, Diefenbaker Without mentioning Mr. Dief- enbaker, whose personality has would suppor draw "from my area of 't---the ordinary Canadian, ernment's presentation of case last week to a grand jury! |day: at Jackson. | | The 19 were indicted under|been started for the inspector, felony provisions of an 1870 civil| Albert Clarmo, rights statute providing a max- imum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fine, burg. Seven Deaths In Aden Riots ' Hundreds (AP) -- Ajbe disclosed today at Hatt ties-| Of Troops On Guard ADEN (Reuters) of British troops sup irmored cars today patrolled strikebound Aden where seven persons were killed and at least 24 hours of vio- Hundreds rorted by 16 wounded in lence Troops an Arab who opened distributing leaflets, accidentally killed a boy in the Crater district early today as a general strike called by labor and nationalist organizations continued The officer commanding Brit- ish troops in the district said his men fired on the Arab, calling on him to halt three times A bullet gravely wounded the man before hitting the child and killing him. The man later died At least 350 British troops were out this morning on roof- \tops and in sand-bagged posi- jtions in Crater town | In Maalla town a British sol- |dier was injured by a grenade thrown into a public works de- partment compound. A military spokesman said jtwo British women were killed and 11 persons injured by a time bomb that exploded Tues- \de ay night during a dinner party jin the apartment of a British political officer employed by Middle East Command head- quarters. Four of the injured were in hospital and the others were discharged after treatment, the |spokesman said. British troops clashed Tues- }day night with Arab crowds who fire on A total of 18 were arrested at | beat two men to death in the Meridian in | case, | Then the FBI made the in- itial arrests in the case Dec. the Philadelphia | streets and then tried to storm jthe headquarters of the opposi- tion South Arabian League. About 35 persons were detained 1964, it said the killings were eae later released, -- Klan assassination plot.' FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover was said more than $750,000 spent in its exhaustive investi- gation and 259 agents were as- signed to the case. John Doar, assistant U.S. at-|th d torney-general who is chief civil] spector ice department, made the gov- TULL rights troubleshooter for the jus-| |found to be the/R, | | Pet Cat ian MOH Report Says OTTAWA (CP)--A pet cat at bit a humane society in- last Friday has been rabid, the city's imedical officer of health, Dr. A. Kennedy, reported Tues- Anti - rables injections have and the cat's owners, Mr. and Mrs. Colin Clarke of south-end Ossington Street. Mn | NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Iraqui Bans 31 Ford Firms BAGDAD (Reuters) -- The Traqui government today announced a ban on 31 firms owned by the Ford Motor Co. as part of the Arab league's boycott of companies The biacklisted firms include Philco Radio and 18 makes of automobiles manufactured doing business with Israel. by Ford or its subsidiaries. the parent company in December, Iraq banned dealings with along with boycotts of Coca-Cola and the Radio Corp. of America. Quakers Will Turn To Disobedience NEW HAVEN, Com, States treasury have announced Wednesday department, (AP) -- Thwarted by the United eight New Haven Quakers they will turn to civil dis- obedience to. give medical aid to North Vietnam and the Viet Cong. At the risk of 10-year prison terms, the New Haven Young Friends committee for Vietnam Relief will donate unlicensed funds to the Canadian Friends Service Committee of Toronto to buy the supplies. A licence re- quest by the group was turned down Monday along with 50 similar requests, by the treasury department. Vietnamese Inflict Heavy Casualties SAIGON (CP) flicted heavy casualties on two U.S. and hammered at positions of long North Vietnamese troops have in- marine companies range American guns south of the demilitarized zone with intensive mortar bar- rages, U.S, spokesmen announced today. st lished in The Oshawe Times Saturday, Michael Starr, Ontario riding MP, told the Times Ottawa bureau cor- respondent, Farmer Tiss- ington he was definitely in the Conservative leadership race and. was planning to campaign in all 10 provin- ces. A Canadian Press staff writer followed ~ up The Times story: By KEN CLARK OTTAWA (CP)--lIt's. the low- key approach for Michael Starr in his slow-starting bid for the Conservative leadership to be tion in Toronto. "'There's plenty of time to get into high key," the former labor minister told a reporter in his office Tuesday. "That will be done in the last two months before the convention." Mr. Starr, Conservative floor leader in the Commons, eased into the race where others dra- matically 'jumped. He finally committed himself last week- end in Oshawa, core city of Ontario riding which he has represented in the Commons since 1952 His declaration ended a weeks-old fence-sitting stance during which he said he would "IT don't believe he will run," Mr. Starr said. 'I can only go on that assumption." Mr. Starr said he did not declare earlier, partly because of Mr. Diefen- baker's equivocal position and partly because there was plenty of time before the convention. Although an uncompromising Diefenbaker loyalist, Mr. Starr ('Call me Mike') said he is not a Diefenbaker candidate. Is he in the Diefenbaker mould? 'Every person has a different temperament. and a. different method of approach even though goals may be the same,' Mr, Starr replied. dominated the party for a' de- cade, Mr. Starr indicated he is of a different breed: Strictly a team-work -man, both in the Commons and in the party In line with this, he shied away from questions of policy which the party will als dis- cuss at the convention. "Tt would be ridiculous of me to have a platform of my own and have a different one than the party," he said. He would carry out the party's wishes. His chances of winning are "very good,' he said, Neither of his two pritcipal opponents, George Hees or Davis Fulton, the farmer, laborer, small bus- inessman." Mr. Starr says he's slowly on his campaign stepped up his public appear- ances in the last two weeks. He has just completed an Ontario swing. Asked how he would appeal to youth, a big voting bloc at the convention, the 56-year-old MP said: "I've never had any problems appealing to youth. I think young, I'm interested in today, tomorrow and the future. What has. gone on in the past history." moving but has 1S .. In THE TIMES Today... Council Meets With Union, Police On Strike--P. 13 Women's GM Bonspiel Under Way--P. 8 Ann Landers--14 Ajax News--5 City News+-13 Classified--24, 25 Comics---29 Editoriol--4 Financial Obituaries , 26 Pickering News Sports--8, 9, 1 Television--29 Theatres--2 Weother--2 Whitby New 14 Wome