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Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Jun 1966, p. 1

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Home Newspaper @f Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Aiax Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, 10¢ VOL. 95 -- NO. 119 50¢ Per Week roma" Betivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1966 The Oshawa Times Weather Report Rain and thunderstorms fore- cast with a temperature drop. Low tonight 55; high Thursday, 68, THIRTY-FOUR PAGES Authorized Second Close Malt Post Office Daportment Ottowa ond for payment of in Cash, 26 Pickets On Contempt Charge Convicted US. | Negroes » Join Rights _# Forces Rally HERNANDO, Miss. Major civil rights leaders con- tinue James H. Meredith's march through Mississippi to- day while Governor Paul John- son condemned the march but promised police protection for it Five Negro leaders combined forces to carry on the 225-mile walk to Jackson, Miss., started by Meredith and interrupted by three shotgun blasts. Aubrey J. Norvell, 40, a Mem- phis white man accused of as- sault with intent to murder in the wounding of Meredith with birdshot, was held under $25,000 bond. His lawyers were draft-jby the shooting brought together | (AP)--|bar at the University of Mis-| sissippi in 1962, ended in the 27th mile, near Hernando. He started on the theory that if he could walk through Mis-| sissippi unharmed it would prove to Negroes who live in| the state that they could safely register as voters. Reaction to the attack on} Meredith was one factor in the} large turnout of Negro voters in| the state's congressional pri- maries Tuesday. It was a rec- ord--though less than Negro leaders hoped for as white can-; didates won handily. | The rallying of forces stirred| ing an appeal to have the bond! the big five of civil rights at a) reduced, Three bus loads of sympath- izers from Chicago will join the march soon, said Floyd McKes- j sick, head of the Congress of call for people to come," AUBREY JAMES NOR- VELL, 40, a resident of a Memphis, Tenn., suburb, is shown as he was led to an arraignment in Hernando "Won't Upset Apple Cart' States New Quebec Leader QUEBEC. (CP)--Daniel John-|Sunday, upsetting the Liberals|called for Quebec control of all son, whose Union Nationale}who obtained 51 seats. Two in-|income and corporation taxes party took the largest number/dependents also were elected. |as well as over of seats,in Quebec's provincial] At the dissolution of the last| duties. election Sunday, said Tuesday/95-seat assembly, the Liberals|WwANT ALL REVENUE night he will be firm at federal-|held 63 seats and the Union Na-| Mr. Johnson still intended to provincial conferences but tionale 28. There was one in-lask for "100 per cent" of all "won't negotiate with a shot-|dependent and three vacancies./tax revenues which originate in gun." Mr, Johnson had said at the| Quebec, Mr. Johnson, interviewed on start of his election campaign) Premier Jean Lesage, mean- the English-language CBC tele-|that "we are not going to beg|while, denied rumors that he vision program Newsmagazine,|for these (provincial) rights, we) plans to resign the Liberal lead- said that Quebec is justified in will take them."' lership. : demanding certain "rights, "but; "Tuesday night he said he still; He said in a telephone inter- won't negotiate to "'upset the|pelieves in this attitude but "I/View that "the radio has said apple cart." |won't walk into the negotiations|that I will resign as head of the His party won 55 seats in the|with a shotgun." Liberal party. i newly-enlarged 108-seat house} The party election platform 'That is unfounded. I remain teen ~ oe -- | party leader, no matter what I decide about turning over the government. I am rolling up my sleeves and going to work." Mr. Lesage said a meeting of his cabinet to discuss future party policy will be held today. He had announced earlier that the cabinet meeting will deal with "routine though pressing matters." A Libera! party caucus will be held Thursday, the. premier Tueggay on charges stem- ming from the shotgun wounding of James Mere- dith Monday as Meredith was marching from Mem- phis to Jackson, Miss. Mere- dith was reported in good condition Tuesday in a Memphis hospital. : (AP Wirephoto) Election Upsets Postpone Federal - Provincial Talks OTTAWA (CP) -- A federal-| provincial conference that in- cluded a ceremony in Victoria to celebrate a British Columbia anniversary has been cancelled because of problems caused by elections in three provinces, Prime Minister Pearson said Tuesday succession | - Wages For '« Premier Bennett of B.C., who was to be host for a June 16-18 meeting of the prime minister jand the premiers, agreed a de- said, and "'after the caucus 1 will meet with Mr. Johnson." j|load their cargoes. Racial Equality. "We have made a national said Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., head of the Southern Christian! Leadership Conference. 'The number will grow every day." ISSUED PLEA In Jackson, Governor Johnson, issued a plea for residents to/Tuesday by Dr. King, McKes- "ignore completely these ex-' hibitionists" and said he would) meeting Tuesday night in Mem- phis, 25 miles north of Her- nando. With Dr. King and McKessick) were Stokely Carmichael chair- man of the Student Non-violent Co-ordinating Committee; Roy | Wilkins, executive secretary of} the National Association for the} Advancement of Colored People; and Whitney Young,| director of The Urban League. | RESUMED WALK | Meredith's walk was resumed} sick and Carmichael, bd ° At first, the threé leaders, ets 1Sl . | use any state power to keep the} with about six other men, linked peace -- presumably including arms and walked south on the! the national guard, The walk by Meredith, 33, the| blocked by a line of highway| slender former U.S, Air Force) sergeant who broke the racial) highway. They were quickly patrolmen, who ordered them off the pavement. 'Moderate Buddhist Calls | | iI jealled today for a halt to riot-| jing and human sacrifices but éader of the Buddhist Instit said his followers will continue to struggle in a "non-violent| ised continued although perhaps) spirit" to overthrow Premier/less dangerous civil unrest as) |Nguyen Cao Ky's South Viet Nam. Seamen Seek Ship Boycott LONDON (CP)--Striking sea- men, having already moved to tighten their clamp-down on Britain's trade, today consider ja still-secret judicial report on 'the strike, now in its 24th day. The national executive of the seamen's union has asked other unions to boycott all British ships, foreign tankers bringing in oil normally carried by Brit- ish ships and all foreign ves- sels engaged in British coastal trade And dockside unions in for- eign ports will be asked to boy- cott all British ships, tying them up wherever they happen to be. Until now only British ships that returned fo Britain have | been affected by the strike, and |those ships were allowed to un- Halt To Anti - SAIGON (AP)--The moderate, ute) Chau, chief architect of a tem- Ky Struggle porary political truce with the 'Challenge To Courts' Termed In Judgment TORONTO (CP)--Chief Jus- tice G, A. Gale of the Ontario Supreme Court convicted 26 un- jion men Tuesday on contempt jcharges in what he termed a} |deliberate and open challenge to ithe authority of the courts. The. charges involved mass picketing Jast February at the Tileo Plastics Co. in Peterbor- ough while a court injunction) was in force limiting pickets to/| 12. The men will be sentenced have unbridled power to use mass picketing, then they should seek proper channels for bringing about a change, "In this respéct they have no higher right than any citizen of this country, and no one should be permitted to express his dis- pleasure at the state of the law by deliberately flouting it." "The illegal picketing was well planned and deliberate and SENATOR ROBERT KEN- NEDY is surrounded by South African students and newsmen as he tours Stel- lenbosch, near Cape Town, Banned Chief South Africa, yesterday. The New York senator is on a | five-day visit in South Africa at the invitation of a student organization. ployer must close his doors to |await the outcome. At present Friday. The strike continues. In a 50-page judgment, the chief justice said "no one should) be permitted to express his dis- pleasure at the state of the law by deliberately flouting it." |! "To follow any other rule would be to tread the road to anarchy and chaos. The illegal picketing was well planned and deliberate and an open chal- lenge to the authority of the courts." The judgment said there: ap- pears to be a misconception among certain leaders and members of trade unions about privileges of employers and em- ployees. NEEDN'T CLOSE DOORS "They seem to think that i an open challenge to the author- ty Of the courts," the judgment said. E. B. Jolliffe, counsel for 24 of the demonstrators, had con- ended that the signs and con- duct of the accused men were part of a campaign to change a branch of the law they con- sidered unfair. Mr, Justice Gale said in his judgment that if the defendants wanted to protest the law, they could have held a demonstra- tion in an arena or at the pro- vincial legislature. The Tilco strike was called last Dec, 14 by the United Tex- tile Workers Union of Ametica (CLC) after failure to agree on a contract, once a strike is called, the em- that is not the case. | "Employees have the right to |strike, but by the same token employers have a right to con- tinue their operations and pro- tect their property." Court was told that Feb. 23-24, at the height of the demonstra- tions, 400 persons paraded' around the plant although there 'We Will Fight CLC Head Vows TORONTO (CP)--Labor lead- ers say the union tight to dem- onstrate peacefully has been damaged by the contempt con: victions Tuesday against 26 men charged in connection with + were only 35 Tilco employzes on| mass picketing in Pe' 2. Claude "The picket line was a for-|Canadian Labor Congress, said midable and imposing spec-|that if the decision interpreted we +% C oor vag said. | the law correctly, then '"'the law aiel e chief justice said the in-/must be changed, because it's ieah as tee bistliat of the Junction order issued by Mr./a bad law." Fink j Justice J. M. King was agreed} He added: "After all, workers After both his' addresses Ken-|! bY both union and company. |are citizens of Canada, and they Inedy took part in question-and- Yet demonstrators _at Tileojhave the right to peacefully answer sessions with the stu-|f0Tmed a "long moving human/demonstrate so the pubtic can dents. Some of the questions belt occupying both edges of the|know their point of view. showed opposition, and ther e|five-foot sidewalk around the} "Organized labor in Canada, was shocked silen » in the hall|Plant'" and running across the |including provincial groups and at one point when a white stu- plant's two driveways. local labor councils, will con- dent said pamphlets were be-| INCLUDES CHAIRMAN tinue the fight to put an end to ing distributed linking Kennedy The convicted men included| injunctions in labor disputes." to the assassination of|5tanley Rouse, chairman of the| Clifford Pilkey, president of his brother, President John-¥,| Peterborough . Labor Council's|the Oshawa and District Labor Kennedy. injunction committee, William|Council, said the decision in- | JOHANNESBURG, South Af-|speech--delivered without press jrica (Reuters)--Senator Robert F,. Kennedy today paid a visit to. Albert Lutuli, Nobel peace prize winner, and conferred with the former chief for 70 minutes. Kennedy and his wife, Ethel, flew by helicopter from Durban to Stanger, the nearest town to the farm where 'Lutuli is re- stricted by the government. Kennedy, who later returned to Johannesburg, said Lutuli was "one of the most impressive men I have ever met... . his military junta last week, prom- regimein| the ruling generals prepared for| national elections Sept. 11, The junta began reviewing the recommendations of its 32- jman electoral commission.|¢.9n p Speculation centred on whether |the government would accept | the most controversial of the proposals--to permit the consti- tuent assembly elected-in Sep- tember to become a_ govern- ment after it drafts a constitu- tion. The proposal would shorten the life of the military regime --the chief goal of the militant Buddhists. Ky, however, said earlier he expected asecond round of voting for a national legislature and that the change-| over to civilian rule would take about a year. INCLUDES MINORITIES As expected, the commission proposed a 150-seat constituent assembly -- roughly one repre- sentative for every 100,000 pop- ulation. It proposed allocating 11 seats for two national minor- ities--Cambodians living in Viet Nam and the mountain tribes-| men, M4 Mulders, council president, and| volved the civil liberties of un- Pe eee 1 sy Mig Vice-President George Ruther-|{on men. pamphlets." Neither had hun-|!ord. é y "The granting of injunctions dreds of persons questioned by Chief Justice Gale said. that that are contrary to civil liber- reporters trying to trace them. with the enhanced role of the/ties is wrong. If a man wants trade unions there must be an|to walk up and down before a IS CRITICIZED increased social responsibility| building on a public thorough- As Kennedy spoke to the stu-|which includes the responsibil-| fare that is his right." dents, a South African deputylity to recognize and promote! The union which called the minister at another Durban| support for law and order. strike at Tilco, the United Tex- meeting was labelling Kennedy| "Any program, no matter how|tile Workers of America (CLC), a little snip" for what he/worthy the ultimate goal which| will meet tonight. Its officials jealled his audacity in presum-| prescribes wilful defiance of the| declined immediate comment on ing to dictate solutions to South/law, can only be regarded as|the decision. Africa's problems after only|an exercise in irresponsibility.) E. B. Jolliffe, counsel for 24 three days in the country "H----trade--unions~ "feel that}of the men, also declined to | present legislation is unfair or}comment or to.say whether an lunrealistic and that they should! appeal will be launched. STUDENTS PACK HALL | | roe mu |New Seaway | Tuesday night, in his second | ; i] speech of the day, Kennedy was heard by the biggest crowd to vars been Talks Likely NEWS HIGHLIGHTS |packing the main hall of the | Unixersity of Natal and another |. OTTAWA (CP)--There is no /18,000 students and others out-|{mmediate prospect of new ne-| side, gotiations to head off a strike of| Earlier in the day he was 1,200 Canadian workers on the} z 4 4j.| St. Lawrence Seaway June 17,| Stalin Beto ge Att |informants said today. | Nam war. One faction urges the Canadian government ; : i ) to take action to halt the war. The other doesn't want | ' iversity, despite the| Both sides, however, are be- ; Pair pt aadiomgis ie tavor|lieved to be preparing for the| the church involved in politics. |the racial separation policies of| Possibility of new talks later| |the South African government, |this week through a federal me-| compassion, understanding and tolerance were most impressive " The New York Democratic senator had received permis- lsion from the South African |government to visit the ex-| \chief's home, about 30 miles urban. The former chief, 65, who is |restricted under South Africa's | Suppression of Communism Act, |appeared well and happy. | Kennedy told reporters they |discussed the problems of the} United-States sf tes-and-the future-of the Negro people in South Af- rica. cnn ec Viet War Splits Presbyterians TORONTO (CP) -- The 92nd General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in Canada has split over the Viet The senator's aides said they regarded the Stellenbosch) diator. j Tuesday Labor Minister Nich-| olson and Transport Minister| Pickersgill discussed possible federal action in the dispute be- Air - Canada Strike Probable TORONTO (CP) -- The Canadian Air Line Employees Association probably will strike against Air Canada next week if current voting favors a walkout, a spokesman lay is "unavoidable"', Mr. Pear- son said, The conference will probably be held in Ottawa in the fall Only business item on the agenda of the Victoria meeting was discussion of federal aid to education. Th open day of the con- fererfce was intended to cele- brate the centennial of the union of the B.C. mainland with Van- couver Island. The change came because of the uncertainty about who would represent two provinces at the conference and Manitoba Premier Duff Roblin's indica- tion that he would be unable to} attend, Prince Edward Island voters) went to the polls last week and }a winner has still to be de- Needy Urged said today. MONTREAL (CP) -- Canada and the United States should start considering a guaranteed minimum wage for people who can't earn a decent living wage, Kenneth Galbraith, economics professor at Harvard Univer- sity and former United States ambassador to India, said Tues- day night. He told the 95th annual meet ing of the Canadian Manufac- turers' Association both coun- tries now make income avail- thle to needy people, but "sub- ject to variousmeans tests that tre both costly to administer and an affront to human dig- sity." Noting that Canada had pio- veered in family allowances in North America, Prof. Galbraith i native of Jona Station, Ont suggested it is time that Can tda experiment with inteed income. tween the St. Lawrence Seaway Authority and the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway, Trans- port and General Workers (CLC). A reliable source said the two} |ministers decided against im-| taining the future disposition of| mediate action, Further meet-| these troops involves technical|ings are being held today with! jand military questions but not! top labor department officers, | political ones. Jnion spokesmen said there is| 2 negotiate on the future role of}tial, played a quiet, background/ARE MANY SUGGESTIONS little chance that the two sides| = the French troops, was reported role. Some of the Allies, prin-| Canada and other NATO coun-|will get together voluntarily. to have been shown to West{cipally Britain and the United|tries reject this French view. They said the appointment of a German Foreign Minister Ger-!States, maintain Canada is too|/But since it appears that de|federal mediator would be the|- hard Schroeder who agreed. ready to appease President de|Gaulle may be ready to pull his| quickest way of arranging a di- During the morning session of| Gaulle whose sudden withdrawal|troops out of Germany if he| rect meeting. i | jhe 15 ministers it was reported|/from NATO's military com-j|doesn't get his way, a variety of/ An executive of the seaway the other: ministers had vir-|mand has caused the present;compromises have been sug-jauthority said there had been tually begged France to accept] NATO rupture igested. Martin said one possible} no new approach from the man- a compromise solution on the is-| Originally the 14 ministersjapproach is that the negotia- agement side and none was ' sue. proposed that negotiations onjtions be conducted by NATO| planned immediately. = City News--17 Rusk and Couve met privately/PLAYED TOP ROLE the future role of the 70,000/Secretary-General Manlio Bro-|. A strike would seal off the Clossified--28, 29, 30, 31 and agreed: to an. amended Dutch Foreign Minister Joseph) French troops be negotiated by/sio, the representative of one of|seaway's Montreal-to-Lake On-| Obifs--23 clared. Daniel Johnson's Union statement of principles which'Luns played the role of efnis-!a committee of five--Britain,/the NATO countries along with|tario entrance and the vitall? Editorial---4 Nationale party won a four-seat will be submitted to the fullisary for the 14, moving back|the U.S., Italy, West Germany|/NATO's supreme 'commander|Welland Canal Canal link be-| Financial--27 a guar- majority Sunday to defeat Pre-|council in the afternoon, and forth from the two campsjand The Netherlands, Couve de/and the chairman of the French tween Lake Ontario and Lake (mier Jean Lesage's Liberals, ' An American spokesman saidiwith various suggestions and|Murville wejected this, main-'chiefs of staff, . Erie, Americans Hope For Compromise Over NATO Role Of French Forces By HAROLD MORRISON BRUSSELS (CP) -- A brief Private meeting between U.S. State Secretary Dean Rusk and French Foreign Minister Marr- rice Couve de Murville today paved the gay for a final NATO compromise on the crucial ques- tion of the future of French troops in West Germany. After the French foreign min- ister rejected all other propos- als, leading to announcement by a NATO press spokesman that the negotiations had failed, Reagan Wins Republican Nomination SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Ronald Reagan, in his first bid for public office, won the Republican nomination for governor of California in a landslide today. | there now is full hope of a suc-|Couve de Murville's rejections. cessful outcome, The Rusk-| Canada's External Affairs Couve proposals, dealing with|Minister Paul Martin, who be- the method in which NATO can|lieves a compromise is essen- ... In THE TIMES today... Teen Safe-Driving Campaign Folds--P. 17 Green Gaels Gain At Mimico--P, 10 Check Lene Finds Many Refective Cars--P, 5 Ann Landers--14 Comics--26 Sports--10, 11, 12, 13. Theatre--15 Whitby News--5, 6 Women's--18, 19, 20, 21 Weather---2 sus

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