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Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Sep 1965, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tucsdey, September 28, 1968 Diefenbaker Puts Campaign In High By STEWART MacLEOD MONTREAL (CP) -- With a 14-hour day of whistle-stopping behind him, Conservative Leader Diefenbaker set himself @ 16-hour schedule today for his first major campaigning in Que- bec since the election was an- nounced. Taking off from Monrteal, he was to drive 75 miles to St. Adolphe, another 35 miles to Harrington, 60 miles to Lachute for an evening rally; then 75 miles to Ottawa. . "f never felt better in my life,' he said Monday night after he had shaken the last of some 600 hands for the day. "Tt's been a long day though." His day started at Campbell ton, N.B., where he jumped off the private railway car that hac carried him from Halifax over- night, and began shaking every hand within reach. He was to do this more than a dozen times before his train pulled into Montreal. "Bonjour, bonjour," said the 70-year-old leader. '"'Nom?"' And every time a name was pronounced, Mr. Diefenbaker pronounced it back. Several times he spelled them out. 'Ah, bon voyaye," he said in reference to 'his trip to Halifax derful trip; better than .57.and 15g." "Je suis Madame Diefenba- ker, said his wife, who also shook most of the hands on the platform. The crowds were lighter than in previous campaigns, although they gradually built up as the train got closer to Montreal. More. than 150 were out at Levis, across the river from Quebec City, and there were 100 at St. Hyacinthe. | The smallest turnout was at Rimouski, where Gerard Oue- lette, a one-time Social Credit MP who joined the Conserva- tives during the last Parlia- ment, came down the platform with seven others. Several more came along before the train left. | Mr. Diefenbaker made no) speeches during the day, and he held no press conferences. "IT just want to mect as many peo- ple as possible." | Station platforms were flecked) |with snow in many places. Oc- jeasionally, Mr. Diefen-| fe" baker signed autographs and at} |Rivere-du-Loup he signed his) name on a cast. which covere ja woman's broken wrist. He plunged into French on} jseveral occasions and often| jended by joining in the laugh- and St. John's, Nfld. "A won-|ter. 40 Per Cent Not Decided / On Choice, Douglas Claims GUELPH, Ont. (CP) -- NDP Leader T. C. Douglas said Mon- day night a poll still to be pub- lished shows that 40 per cent of Canadians have not yet decided how to vote in the Nov. 8 fed- eral election. | strike by 136 mem- of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers union (CLC) at the British Ameri- can Oil refinery at Moose The ber num industries? Mr Douglas} asked. He said the Liberals in 1963 had promised to establish the Canada Development Corpora-| * ll tion designed to buy Canada! 0 back from U.S. control. KIDS CET INTO STRIKE Jaw moved into its second week Monday. Keith Hun- chuk, secretary of OCAW local 9595s bargaining com- ACT, TOO HAYNEVILLE, Ala. (AP)--A deputy sheriff who fought suc- cessfully against a delay in his trial goes before a jury today on a charge of manslaughter in the killing of a civil rights worker. = First the trial judge, T. Werth Thagard, and then a fed- eral judge, turned down mo- tions Monday to postpone the trial of Thomas L. Coleman, 55- year-old special officer and, a prominent Hayneville resident. Coleman, a highway engineer in private life, is charged with manslaughter in the shotgun slaying of Jonathan Daniels, an Episcopal (Anglican) seminary student from Keene, N.H., who had come to Alabama to help Negroes in their struggle for voting rights. Daniels, 27, was killed and a {Roman Catholic priest, Rev. |Richard Morrisroe, 26, of Chi- cago, was critically wounded outside a Hayneville. grocery store the afternoon of Aug. 20. |Coleman also is under indict- ment on an assault and battery charge for the shooting of Mor- | risroe. Deputy Beats Delay Move In Minister-Slaying Trial slaughter is 10 years in prison; for assault and battery, a $500 fine and one year in jail. Thagard in circuit (state) court and Richard T. Rives, speaking for a three-judge fed- eral court, refused also to or- der postponement of another trial growing out of a separate civil rights slaying in rural Lowndes County. | Because of their rulings, a 21- year-old Ku Klux Klansman, Collie Leroy Wilkins Jr., is still scheduled for trial here Wednes- day in the same century-old | courtroom on a charge of mur- der in the death of a white De- troit housewife, Mrs, Viola Li, uzz0. But whether Wilkins, a Fair- field, Ala., mechanic, is actu- jally tried this week will depend on the length of Coleman's trial. |This is the final week of the |September term of court, and |"Thagard isn't likely to let the Wilkins case get started if the other runs past Wednesday. If it is postponed, it may be set for trial again at a special court term in mid-October. 'The | young, crew-cut Klan member Maximum penalty for man-| was tried last May, but the jury Reds Behind Plot To Discredit CIA WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Central Intelligence Agency is |circulating among an_ inner- |group of congressmen a report mittee was joined on the | campaign aimed at a but icket line by his two |also striking at the . Sh hters, earryin lac- The activity, says the CIA re- cannes < 8 " port, is chiefly planned and di- ards just like Dad's. (CP) | rected by a. special ege Meets |No Eyes To See Success, -!ment of disinformation" estab- lished in the KGB, the Soviet | state security service. The CIA says the KGB de- "depart-| ,gar Hoover." Hoover is direc- }tor of the FBI. | The CIA, often under attack |both at home and abroad for describing a Soviet propaganda! some of its reported operations) {in the cold war, issued the re- |port to members of Congress | charged with keeping an eye on | its operations, | Youth Seen Fog Hinders Missing Men SOUTHEND, England (Reut- ers)--Rescuers groped' through thick fog off the southeast Eng- from Selma. to Montgomery,|land coast today seeking 18 She had participated in the| men missing after a collision in march and was ferrying other) 4 . marchers back to Selma. ithe main shipping channel in |which one vessel was sunk. Two other klansmen, Eugene! Thomas and William 0. Eaton,) 'The 2,258-ton sludge - carrier both of Bessemer, Ala., also arejsir Joseph Rawlinson sank af- under indictment for murder in|ter a collision with a 287-ton the Liuzzo killing. They have/tug, the Danube VIII, in the not been tried. |main shipping channel at the Alabama Attorney - Generaljentrance to the Thames -- an Richmond Flowers found him-jarea noted for its dangerous self in the position Monday' of tidal currents. " asking that guard to delay the} Coleman and Wilkins trials and then, in federal court, opposing) a motion which would have de layed those and all other jury trials in Lowndes County for the! time being. The American Civil Liberties Union, which earlier had filed a' suit aimed at getting more Ne- groes on the jury rolls in the county, asked the federal court to delay all jury trials until the issue is settled. Flowers told the court he couldn't go along with that 're- quest because it challenged the Lowndes County jury system. The attorney-general had crit- icized the grand jury for indict- ing Coleman on a manslaughter | }charge instead of murder. He jsaid the request for postpone- | | ment would be the first step to- |ward asking another grand jury to return a murder indict-! ment, was unable to agree on a ver- dict Mrs. Liuzzo, the 39-year-old wife of a Teamsters Union of- ficial, was slain in her car on U.S. Highway 80 last March 25 following the civil rights march OLD WORLD TRADITION LONDON CREAM Canadian Chery LONDON WINERY UIMITED LONDON @ ONTARIO Canaona NEW WORLD PERFECTION Want higher interest on your savings? partment was set up by former Premier Khrushchev, and is headed by Gen. Ivan Ivanovich Agayants, "a senior, profes-| TORONTO (CP)--Young per- sional intelligence officer with|Sons in Canada are neha aware long experience and well-devel-/than their elders of their coun- oped agent and political con-|Ty's vital role in the United Na- tacts in Western Europe." _|tions, the president of the eas th am-|United Nations Association in The objective of ary |Canada said Saturday. paign, the report states, "is to) ~. _ achieve the destruction, break- Canada is in phage ably up and neutralization of CIA" good position in this world or- with an ultimate goal "'to is0-/canization," Brig. John Herbert ante _-- hai pags a Reps Price of Montreal told an ex- bees ong saunas, United ecutive meeting of the associa- States." tion. "By striking at CIA," the re-| «we have an excellent peace- port said, "the attack also cen- ,eeping record, no record of tres on the intelligence commU-|cojonialism, no territorial am- jnity with particular thrust pitions, no large armed forces against the FBI and Mr. J. Ed-\and a reputation of fulfilling THAT IS SOME |, we we have nothing to ACTING, BABY! More Aware He did not identify the poll] But when Finance Minister but said it reports that the per-|Gordon first proposed the cor- Needs Of Area China Musicians On Tour centage of undecided voters!poration in Parliament "the! 'gcarboro College. was built in has risen three points in recent/screams from Bay Street and response to a need," Dr. A. F., SAN FRANCISCO (AP) --,here two weeks, then head for weeks. Jessie James Street' forced|Wynne Plumptre, principal of|With luck, talent and courage,|Los Angeles. From there they Mr. Douglas described these|him to back vut and devise ajthe college, told members of the|22 blind Chinese music students} plan to go where "anyone will voters as. those "'who have be-|watered - down proposal that/Rotary Club of Oshawa at their| are making their dreams come|iisten to their performance in come fed up, disappvinted, dis-;was unveiled in the 1965 bud-|Monday luncheon meeting. "wel true. America," said Mr. Liu, head illusioned and even disgusted| get. hope to be a community college} Without being able to see the | °f 4 Protestant mission in Hong with the lack of leadership in| jclosely associated with the/strings they pluck or the keys Kong. to the 40-per- \gain, we can be relatively ob- s nomination meeting that Grit Attacks jenrolment of about 200 students, tour of-the United States here lish professor at Guelph Univer- Both Tommy jnew building, located in the | dream fulfilled for the stu- (CP)---Gene'Rheaume, Pro: Mr. Douglas said that if 60 | |shortly. |Kong music training centre for|, who claims he knows. the this party will form the next erated with the University of| Kong flats. stituents, was put to a test cent figure for the undecided|real Liberal attacked the lead-|versity because of the need for) musician taught by a blind) Mr. Rheaume introduced 75 jective and therefore we are Ottawa." needs of this area." they strike, the 22 refugees He spoke to 725 persons at a} "The college, which has an|from China opened a concert se REALLY KNOWS lected John Harney, 34, an Eng-| lis holding classes on the Uni-| Sunday. |versity of Toronto campus, Its) «This tour of America is a HIS ELECTORS sity, as the party's candidate in Wellington South. g\Highland Creek area of Scar-|dents," said Rev. Liu Kuang gressive Conservative mem- jborough Township, will open) Tien, the principal of the Hong) jer of the last Parliament per cent of those who still are e undecided swing to the NDP D f b k | The speaker said it was de-|the blind. His students live a} names of 20.000 of his | 1e en a er jcided to erect a college, fed-|communal life in two Hong! Northwest Territories -con- government. His reference VANCOUVER (CP)--A Mont'|Toronto, rather than a new uni-| Stephen K. Shao, a sighted| last weekend. Asked about his claim, a first class staff and the de-|teacher, started the schoél by) sire to attract good students. vote is the highest for thisjers of the New Democratic and group that has been cited by|Progressive Conservative par- persons at a banquet he a party leader in the campaign. |ties Monday night, saying T. C. Every member of the staff is a ATTACKS AGREEMENT Mr. Douglas renewed his at- tack on the Canadian-U.S. auto! agreement, saving that amounts to a $50,000,000 raid on| the public. treasury by the big! auto companies. | The government had no right to make such an agreement without first consulting Parlia- ment and insisting on lower car prices in return for the $50,000,-| 000 tariff rebate involved, he said. | Prime Minister Pearson had said he wanted a majority gov- ernment to put through essen-| tial legislation and had men- tioned "trade deals." Did this mean more 'secret deals" like the auto pact with} the steel, electrical and alumi-| lof Parliament for St. Lawrence- full member of the university teaching staff who will be able jto use the university's research | facilities. The new college will. provide three-year gencral courses in arts and science leading to bachelor of arts or bachelor of science degrees. When the en- rolment grows 'o 5,000 a wider variety of courses will be given. "We at Scarboro are going to teach better than anyone else : The classes will be small so "What does the NDP stand/there will be close contact with for these days? Mother-!the teaching staf'. We will have hood, prosperity, peace, friend-|q language taboratory and the ship. Eyen I could vote for/most modern and up to date this closed circuit television system Mr. Turner was speaking at\in Canada in every classroom," a Liberal meeting that renomi-|Dr. Plumptre said. nated Mr. Laing as candidate|------ Serene Douglas is hungry for power and John Diefenbaker is a fail- ure. John Turner, former member St. George and parliamentary secretary to Northern Affairs Minister Arthur Laing, said: "Douglas has said that peo- ple will vote for him because he is the only leader nobody is mad at, but wnat sort of plat- form is this? HERE and THERE Representatives of youth groups in Oshawa will meet Friday afternoon at city hall with Judge William T. Little, in Vancouver South. | nae Body Recovered From Whirlpool NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) The body of 18-year-old Arthur and especially Ald. Clifford |Tyson of St. Catharines was re- Pilkey and city clerk Roy |covered Monday from the Barrand for their efforts in |whirlpool of the Niagara River. connection with the visit of | The gathering together 35 blind teen-| age refugees. | Blind students, in addition to music, are taught history, geog- raphy and mathematics. After a four-year course they are qualified to teach music in Hong Kong high schools. | | The students arrived in San} Francisco last Tuesday from Jong Kong and will remain WEATHER FORECAST was attending. He named their home towns and in many cases gave the mid- dle name. The meeting Saturday nominated him Conserva- tive candidate in the Terri- tories in the Nov. 8 federal election. He has held the seat since 1963. Drizzle, Overcast Today, Wednesday TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued at 5:30 a.m. EDT: Synopsis: Light rain and| drizzle spreading across Mich-| igan will reach southwestern Ontario during the afternoon. It is unlikely that this rain will affect the northern half of the province but a few scattered showers or snowflurries are an- ticipated, Cloudy, Cold Eastern Lake Ontario Killa loe, Haliburton: Occasional light rain this evening and to- night; variable cloudiness and continuing cool Wednesday. Winds light Wednesday. Northern Georgian Bay, Tim- agami, Algoma, Sault Ste. Ma- rie, North Bay, Sudbury: Sunny with cloudy periods and contin- uing cool Wednesday. Winds LOS ANGELES (AP)-- Guaranteed to make medical students take an interest in their work: Scantily-clad art models coached to act out the symptoms of patients. This new approach to teach- ing young doctors better diag- nostic techniques was shown | Monday by the University of Southern California's school of medicine. The stars: Rose McewWil- liams, 22, and Lynn Taylor, 27, models recruited from the university's art classes, who have been given 100 hours of instruction in how 'neurologi- cal patients behave. The girls have learned to simulate --paralysis, --loss--ot sensation, blindness and ab- normal reflexes so well that one physician, called in to test Miss Taylor's an examination: "Good Heavens, girl: with this trouble?" proficiency as | an actress, blurted out after | Why | didn't you come to us sooner | trusted by the emerging small countries, particularly the Afro- Asian nations." The meeting in Toronto and a regional meeting Friday in Oakville were a prelude to United Nations Week, Oct. 24 to 30. ~ Retiring! Modern homes -- originally| lcost over $11,000 all ser- \vices, great scenery, clean} |pure air, hunting & fishing,| medical services now! |$7,900. Send Coupon Todey -- | No obligation | ee @ BOWES & COCKS REALTORS 333 Cherlotte $¢. | || | youth had plunged 180) Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni-|becoming light tonight. White River, Cochrane; clearing tonight. Sunny with | cloudy intervals and continuing | cool Wednesday, Winds light. secretary of the provincial select committee of youth, Judge Little will discuss pro- cedures on the preparation of briefs for the select com- the Governor-General and Ma- |feet from the Rainbow Bridge,|agara, Lake Huron, Southern dame Vanier to Oshawa. Ald. |about three miles upstream, on/Georgian Bay, Western Lake Pilkey was chairman of the |the morning of Sept. 18. | Ontario, Windsor, London, Ha- arrangement committee and| He was clinging to a flagimilton, Toronto: Occasional TWO FIREMEN REQUIRED CITY OF OSHAWA Look into National mittee when it holds hearings in Oshawa in November. Fred Crome, city works commissioner and _ Robert Richardson, deputy city works commissioner, are attending the Canadian Good Roads Association convention at Saskatoon this week. City council last night ap- proved subdivision agree- ments between the city and Rossiynn Estates Ltd, and Herman Kassinger. Four city aldermen were authorized last night to at- tend a public housing confer- ence in Toronto on Wednes- day and Thursday. The alder- men are Mrs, Alice Reardon, chairman of. council's public housing committee, Mrs. Christine Thomas and Cephas Gay, directors of the Oshawa Housing Company, and Mrs. Margaret Shaw. Ald. John Brady. is rest- ing at home after spending several days at the Oshawa General Hospital, Mayor Lyman Gifford told members of city council last night. He said Ald. Brady's doctor has advised him to rest at home fora week or so. Ald. Brady entered hospital last week after complaining of "chest pains." Mayor Lyman. Gifford last night thanked city aldermen chairman of the civic lunch- eon. Mr. Barrand was secre- tary of the arrangement com- mittee Christopher Heard, age 6, 181 Hibbert st., was reported in "good condition' Saturday at the. Oshawa General Hos- pital after being injured in a traffic accident. Mrs. William Heard, the boy's mother, said Christopher was crossing Park rd. s., at Pacific ave., on his way to St. Thomas Aquinas school. Thursday noon when he was struck by a_ truck. There is no school guard at the crossing. The boy suf- fered external injuries in the accident. Anne Rowsell, 736 Jasmine cres., and Dennis Connelly, 513 Mary st. e., Whitby were pole on the bridge when a po-|light rain, beginning this after-| liceman approached and _ tried/noon: cloudy with sunny pe-| to talk to him. The youth re-|riods and continuing cool Wed-| leased his grip and dropped|nesday, Winds becoming light} into the river without replying. tonight Accidents Cut Of 9-10ths | SASKATOON (CP)--Canadian tioned -- was stricter enforce- traffic accidents could be cut| ment of traffic laws. | by as much as 90 per cent,! 'There is no royal road to Gordon aTylor, Alberta minis- safety," Mr. Taylor said, But | ter of highways, said today. he added that he couldn't agree Mr. Taylor, president of the|Canadians have "failed com- | Canadian Good Roads Associa- pletely" to cut the toll of high-| tion, told a roads association| way deaths in the last 30 years. convention such a reduction in He noted that 40,000 Cana-| Possible, Minister Thinks =: Forecast Temperatures | Low tonight, high Wednesday: Windsor coebese > 48 60 | St. Thomas London Kitchener Mount Forest. Wingham Hamilton ..... St. Catharines, 45 42 42 40 40 42 42 45 40 40 42 35 2 32 32 30 35 28 30 25 28 Peterborough Trenton Kingston Killaloe Muskoka North Ba: Sudbury Earlton . Sault Ste. Marie Kapuskasing White River. Moosonee eee se eeeeeee Minimum Qualifications: Age 21 to 28. Height 5' 10", weight 150 Ibs. Have successfully passed Grade 10 High School Examination. Medically and physically fit. Chauffeur's license in good standing. To be available for duty October 11th, 1965. PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT CITY HALL, OSHAWA, ONTARIO, ENGINEERING ACCOUNTS CLERK CITY OF OSHAWA Salary Range -- 92.00 per week to 108.00 per week Nov. 1, 1965 -- Salary Range -- 98.00 per week te 115.00 per week (361% hour week) Under the direction of the Subdivision Control Engineer to be Natic ynal Trust SINCE 1898 the lucky. winners of bicycles Saturday in a draw at the Oshawa Bowling Lanes, Osh- awa Shopping Centre. Allan Berry, organizer of the jun- jor league, made the draw. ery driver could be persuaded} to leave liquor alone and to} drive in accordance with the aw. "We must use every agency available to reach the hearts jand minds of all Canadians in| order that safe walking and! driving will become habitual,' Mr. Taylor said in his presi- dential address The OPP detachment at Bowmanville re ported the weekend was very quiet with only a few minor accidents The traffic situaiion in the Mosport track area was said to be *'not too bad." Mr. Taylor said he has asked provincial registrars, senior| police officers and senior traf-| fic engineers in each province what measures they would take to reduce traffic accidents if they had "absolute powers and limitless resources" to do so Federal Riding tive campaign members will Hotel Genosha Room pPm,: talks on the election. Conserva- committees mect in the Flectwood al 6 nue Strategy tomorrow to night on He said the most frequently 8 | suggested remedy |by 24 of 'the 30 people ques- | upcoming Nov accidents 'would develop if ev-|dians have been killed in traf-| mentioned | fic accidents in the last 10; years, But the death rate per| hundred million vehicle miles has decreased from 15.8 in 1936) to 8.3 in 1963 : Technical sessions began Sun-| day, but the convention was of-| ficially opened today by Hon. | R. L, Hanbidge, lieutenant-gov- | ernor of Saskatoon. A copy of Mr. Taylor's ad- dress was released to the press in advance of delivery. NEED A NEW FURNACE? Ne Down Payment--First Payment December--Cell PERRY resopnsible for the maintainin Timmins -- the preparation of Preliminary Master Marketing Ltd. IMMEDIATE CASH INCOME SPARE TIME, NO SELLING Reliable individuals requir- ed to service established accounts 4-6 hours weekly. Only family men of good employment with sound and stable background need apply. Write including phone num- ber fo Mr. Boxter. BOX D-928 THE OSHAWA for the preparation of the app ario Department of Highways keeping of records on Land Pu: the Public Works Department; assigned Qualifications: mentary accounting, statistical icipal Accounting and Enginee: be received before 5:00 p.m., Dey or Night. . . 723-3443 TIMES dividers; for the preparation of Local Improvement Assessments; under the Connecting Link Agreement; for the preparation of annual applications for subsidies from Department of Highways of Ontario for Land Purchases an subsidizable projects and the taining a system of budgetry control covering all divisions of Senior Matriculation or equivalent, including bookkeeping, ele- Applications giving age, marital status, experience, etc., should PERSONNEL OFFICER, City Holl, g of Subdivision Accounts and and Final Settlements for Sub- lication for subsidy to the Ont- for construction projects done rchases; establishing and main- direction of.part time staff as methods. Familiarity with Mun- ring is desirable, Friday, October Ist, 1965, Oshawa, Ontaric, You get a big 4% interest* on your savings at National Trust. But that's not all. You also get free chequing privileges on any reasonable number of cheques, And National Trust stays open longer hours for your convenience. Look into National for your savings-- and while you're at it, inquire about National Trust's complete range of personal trust services. They're worth looking into tool "interest calculated on the minimum half-yearly balance, 32 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH, OSHAWA AND 12 OTHER OFFICES IN GREATER TORONTO OS-18

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