4 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pader, 'September 13, 1965 Little Sign Of Revolt Among East Germans JOHN 0. KEHLER (AP) -- Dissatisfac- tion of the East German people with the Communist regime continues to be widespread, but after a week behind the Iron Curtain, this reporter found no evidence that a new revolt is bering Snorale of the people, aap tough political pressures scarcity of certain essential food items, seemed higher than it_Was seven months ago when I fast visited East Germany. Because of the unusually se- vere winter and resulting seri- ous fuel and food shortages, = people's mood then was losive, t East Germany since has hed a good harvest and there cé@ftainly are no shortages of = staples as bread and pota- "Dn the other hand, butter continues to be short in supply-- ote half pound being allotted each person every 10 days. This bitter is of poor quality and expensive. FRESH MEAT SCARCE Fresh meat also is scarce bw all kinds of sausage were eae available. 'No, we are not starving," eatd a housewife in Dresden. "Bj it irks you that you can't buy onions whenever you want them or that not/a single store has any vinegar when I want to pickle cucumbers." During ,a recent heat wave, housewives at Leipzig and ag den be queue up a.m. rg Ay ice Yor their ice boxes "And when the ice man ar- rived he never had enough to satisfy everyone," one house- wife said, "It's little things like that that make us so angry." While East German industry exhibited electric appliances such as refrigerators at the fall consumer goods fair in Leipzig, the ordinary East German must register and wait at least two years before he can purchase one. However, certain Communist party members and members of the "intelligentsia," such as sci- entists and engineers, can pur- chase any appliance without de- lay. While complaints about food and other consumer goods have decreased since last winter, there is increased bitterness over political pressures. Factory workers, probably be- cause of the forthcoming gen- eral election, are subjected to at least two political meetings a week. Program Smokers ~ Roswell Park Memorial Institute, New York state's cancer research centre, em- sarhed this week on a 30- y exPerimental help smokers give habit. " aeons 60 volun staff sas "By MICHAEL KEATING "BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)--The deductive object inflaming the imaginaiton of 60 men today e slim, white tubular ape of a cigarette. Tortured by this vision are volunteers in the throes of second day of withdrawal er cigarette-smoking, Our lings are virtually unani- mous--we miss it, very much. "We have stopped smoking benefit ourselves and to help Roswell Park Memorial Distitute perfect a technique Sonic Booms Jolt Ontario Residents SYRACUSE, N.Y, (AP) -- the residents of this elty, sae are old hat, But some ons a4 Hamilton, Toronto and Niagara Falls, Ont., thought the sky was falling. 'The 26th region of the North Afierican Air Defence Com- va headquartered here, held aif defence training mission ex- eveises Tuesday night and Wed- nétday morning. Airmen flew jets after simulated targets in the air from New England south tg.the Carolinas and west trough Ohio. racusans tunnelled their a under pillows, But many of | r northern neighbors, unac- tomed to full - fledged aer- ia]. exerciss and sonic booms, Helping To Quit that other smokers might use to drop the habit, The program has been tried with success on the institute staff. This is its second test. If 20 of the 60 starters re- main non-smokers after six months, Roswell Park will consider its technique success- l, HELPED BY DRUG We are being helped by lobeline, a nicotine substitute. We take two tablets daily-- one in the morning before the cigarette-and-coffee urge is victorious: as it was my case Wednesday and another with supper. We are additionally bol- stered by a vial of lobeline lozenges, flavored with enough cinnamon to bite the tongue. These are to use "as needed," that is, when will power falters under a whiff ot your neighbor's cigarette. The nicotine substitute ts expected to reduce the desire for smoking. Roswell Park doctors believe that nicotine is the substance that makes smoking so difficult to quit. Because of the weight gains some people experience when they stop emoking, each o| Morning we also take a pill to depress our appetites, MAYBE WE AREN'T... When the East Germans tried to revolt in 1953, the climate was entirely different. Food shortages were severe, Pressure to increase work norms w unbearable, Religious activit 3\was being ruthlessly suppressed to and many Protestant and Ro- man Catholic clergymen were jailed. Now, instead of talk about an uprising, one hears more people express hope that the present East-West honeymoon arising from the limited nuclear test ban agreemcnt eventually will result in liberalization of controls in East Germany. Ngo Dinh Thuc Gives Vatican Big Problem VATICAN CITY (AP)--Arch- bishop Pierre Martin Ngo Dinh Thue, brother of South Viet Nam' have confronted the Vatican with one of its most sensitive diplomatic problems of modern times. Its gravity was seen in re- ports by Vatican sources that a papal audience for the. Roman Catholic prelate had been can- celled and Archbishop Thuc's admission that the Vatican had ordered him to be quiet about the political situation in his troubled homeland. Church circles eblieve cancel- lation of an audience with Pope Paul would indicate the Vatican wanted to avoid any appearance of a stand on President Ngo Dinh Diem's government, em. broiled in a bitter struggle with Viet Nam's Buddhists. Veteran church officials could not recall that any such situa- tion involving a prelate with close ties to a ruling family had arisen since the Vatican ceased to be a temporal power a cen- tury age. Archbishop Thic, who arrived in Rome six days ago, made an unexpected flight to the United States Wednesday, insisting he had not sought a papal audience at this time. ORDERED KEEP SILENT The 65-year-old prelate said the Holy See had ordered him to keep silent and that without permission from the Vatican secretariat of state, he could not properly speak out beyond the confines of his archdiocese of Hue, The archbishop denied that he had told an Italian reporter on his arrival in Rome that U.S. policies in Viet Nam were aimed at replacing Diem's regime. Vatcan sources said a private audience with Pope Paul had been scheduled on Tuesday, then cancelled at the last min- ute, That is, we THINK we are taking those pills -- Only 30 of the 60 volunteers actua 4 take pills that con- tain lobeline and the appetite- depressant. The other half have pills that contain no drugs. None knows whether he has active pills or fakes. This is the "control" needed to measure the various fac- tors working on participants, Dr. Charles A, Ross, direct- ing the experiment, says that in the initial test some insti- tute staff members quit smok- ing with no aid but fake pills, Ballet Tep, Baton Twirling REGISTER NOW FOR PALL TERM IRENIE HARVEY C.D.T.A. == NB,T.A, 424 King St, West PHONE 725-6122 imagination and will power. awakened with a start, One res- t in Niagara Falls, Ont., Ay appeared the whole city mis was @ routine aero- ice defence mission," a 8 beoman for the U.S, Air said. "We can't defend space without exceeding the ed of sound and when our tighter - interceptors pass the u barrier they create a sound phenomenon called the ic boom." he spokesman admitted, ever, that Tuesday's exer- was unusually comprehen- shve. eee are phe gy 9 for 19 "We try to y more than 30,- earth so that © sound of these booms will dissipated before they reach But the 'enemy' isn't move predictably, so often our planes get close ash to the earth to give it a I shock." t Disposal Planned Of Butter Surplus CDrrAWA (GP)---The federal government will dispose of its 7 ee 200,000,000-pound but- ter cures, at a loss if neces: Agriculture Minister s said Wednesday, aa 4 no question but that wWé probably will have to take a loss, But we sell it, be, I'm sure at. stocks would be depleted alittle this winter during 'the dairy - output decline, ba told a EP pron setting Pp hay to Ah ow. that cra] OBESE IRM@a""DOUCE zante aps butter oil--~a processed of butter for storage pur- =: _ ae. ¥ eoaking fot 2 Comedy & Thrill Hits! FRANK SINATRA DEAN MARTIN ent linie "Sergeants 3" TAB HUNTER ----IN-- "THE BURNING HILLS" WITH NATALIE WOOD BURISCH COMPANY.0EDWARD L. ALPERSON nese JACK LEMMON and death everything in fact ) SHIRLEY MacLaINne Stiff Requests For Ontario From Tourists TORONTO (CP) -- American tourists who visited Ontario this summer had some stiff recom- mi s on improving ac- commodations, the department of travel and publicity said Wednesday, Cards were issued to the tourists along with other infor- mation and many were returned the department. Wrote Mr, and Mrs, William Cohen of Miami, Fla.: "Ws were never able to get ice when we arrived at motels in smaller towns--sometimes not even cold drinks," "We resent the fact that no one in Canada would tell us about the duty-free shopping centre in Niagara Falls," wrote . H. Hawley Jr. of Atlatita, a. Other visitors did not like paying $13 for a season's fishin licence when they only wanted it for two weeks. Not enough highway markings for 'trailer accommodations and unen- forced, speed limits also were criticized. But many replies were sim- llar to the one received from 8 president, appears to|'snanks a million'." C, J, Cielwich of Jersey City, N.J.: "For more than 35 years I've been spending my holidays For N.S. By IAN DONALDSON HALIFAX (CP)--More than a century ago pees s came to ond : ig sanctu- ary reedom after a life of rats Eas United States. In some respects reg! descendants still are seek- ing it, : g anonymous home-own- ers M a Halifax suburb wee! F hate 6 simmering racial fact 'that Negro leaders here see as more subtle but just as real as more dramatic prob- lems in the southern U.S. The descendants of freed slaves who settled in communi- ties around Halifax occasional'y complain of being refused hair- cuts and being tumed away by landlords, However, they shop in the biggest stores, take seats in buses and drink beer in the taverns without raising eye- brows on white foreheads. But, say Negro clergymen and other leaders, integration :n housing is a different matter. Their point seems to come home in Fairview, a residential suburb just across the western boundary of this city whose Ne- gro population is estimated at about 1,800. LARGEST IN CANADA in. Ontario. I want to say Nova Scotia has the largest Negr» population of any Cana- DRIVE OUT + TO ALWAYS A NIGHT COLOR CARTOON! BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 7:30 SHOW STARTS AT 8:05 STARTING DALY CHILDREN UNDER 12 ADMITTED FREE! TONIGHT thru SATURDAY SUNDAY! GRIGITTE BARDOT IN COLOR AND CINEMASCOPE "AND GOD CREATED WOMAN" NO OME UNDER 18 WILL = BE ADMITTED FOR THIS PERFORMANCE. ~~ PLUS TOP CO-FEATURE OSHAWA DRIVE-IN THEATRE x A 723.4972 GALA OPENING DANCE AT THE ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION HALL 90 CENTRE ST. OSHAWA A completely re-decorated hall in- tluding new dropes brings a refresh. Ing appearance to the Legion Hall this year. SAT., SEPT. 14 9 P.M, TILL 12 P.M. Feeturing... ADMISSION $2.00 per couple DOUGE 2:00 - 4:25 - 6:50 - 9:25 LAST see sHOW Doug Weeks Band Housing Probiem Negroes dian province with most of the 9,000 Negroes living in Halifax County. A homeowners meeting this week in Fairview drew heated protests against a proposed low- rental housing development in the area and the racial matter this|°2™e out from anonymous lips. One man demanded: "'Is thi people from that colored settle- swere§ they are going to clear The place referred to by the Fairview homeowner is Afric- ville, an ancient shanty town nestled' between railway tracks and the city 4ump in Halifax's north end, going 19 be apace for dslace| Py Board Opens -- Tenders On Painting Jo Job ORONO--The The board withheld Public! repairs of valves on ne School Board met me secelliy Missa ie. wea tenecies' thatlinn lastpring in classroom six had| schoo book: the gy Hage they sore tende: nting ap- eal a a Fogger' to the prin- three applications for the pation of ee J hetler was appoini hourly wage of $1.50, Duties we for pit eins, Others app! wel an hour and Mrs. Wm. completed, Sroneper Madill at a yearly rate of $250. Only one tender was recei for the painting at the sch which was received from Doug Simpson. Tendered price for painting was $172. A letter was received from Mrs. Donald Staples asking per- mission to send two children to SHOWN TODAY AT: 2:40-4:55-7:10.9:25 DON'T SAY IT... SCREAM ITI A New PSYCHO THRILLER? TRAUMA --with -- LYNN BARI ADULT ENTERTAINMENT ™ BILTMORE I csv OR SPECTACULAR! "MILL OF THE STONE WOMEN" ADULT ENTERTAINMENT I a a) me SATURDAY From 1:30 P.M, a Female audiences automobile. Expiains What Most Parents Can't... "MOM and DAD" Now for the first time shown to Male end See and discuss It in the privacy of your own 2 Showings nitely 8:00 and 10:00 P.M. pegs = > ey it Entertainment unday) , SPECIAL VY PRICE PASS To the SATURDAY, Sept. 14th KINSMEN SUPER CAR AT THE GO- © PETERBOROUGH MEMORIAL ies OVER $8, 600 1N PRIZES INCLUDING 1963\eanp SEDAN or $2,000 Cosh. Snowbell" (58 Nes.) $1, 000 Hi-Le Geme, Small Snowball 800 me nes.) Plus $600 reguler gomes, vase speciel games. 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