THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, April 14, 1965 35) Ottawa Reporters Will Lose 'Home' OTTAWA (CP) -- Commons; Speaker Alan Macnaughton served what amounts to an eviction notice on the parlia- mentary press gallery Tuesday. In a letter to Gallery Presi- dent James Stewart, Speaker Macnaughton set July 1 as the deadline for vacating a corridor in the centre block of the Par- liament Buildings where some 35 of the galleny's 128 mem- bers have their desks. The corridor is an overflow from the gallery's main work- ing room which Speaker Mac- naughton proposes turning into a "hot room" with common facilities for writing and filing urgent news. The letter marks the culmin- ation of intermittent negotia- tions over several years with successive Commons Speakers about space for the gallery whose members are newspaper, radio, TV and periodical report- ers who gather news of Parlia- ment and government on a full- time basis. Last October, Speaker Mac- naughton suggested that the gallery switch its main quar- - ters to the Norlite Building, a seven - storey, government- owned structure on Wellington Street just across from Parlia- ment Hill. Speaker Macnaughton said: "T am left with no alternative but to direct that the corridor be cleared without delay." He was ready to give the gallery until July 1 to do so. MAKES PROPOSALS Speaker Macnaughton made three proposals for accommo-| dating the gallery off Parlia-| ment Hill. | --He renewed his offer to arrange space in the Norlite| 'Building, Gallery members' would be expected to pay! rent, probably $3.25 a square foot a year. Pr Hanover Estates Limited, a Canadian company, had ac- quired property on downtown Sparks Street, one block from Parliament Hill, and was pre- pared to erect a modern building to be called the Na-| tional Press Centre. Rental/ would be $3.75 a square foot year. --FP Publications, which owns seven Canadian papers) including the Ottawa Journal, was interested in constructing a downtown building and would be prepared to reserve space for the gallery. | MEMBERSHIP GROWS In 1917 the gallery had about 30 members during. parliament-! ary sessions and about 12 at, other times. Membership has| grown, particularly in the last} 10 years, with the addition of| broadcasters resentatives of Canadian publl- cations. Despite use of the corridor outside their alloted quarters, about 50 gallery members have no desk space. Gallery members pay no rent. Desks, filing cabinets, of- fice supplies and telephones are provided free. Speaker Mac- naughton has estimated annual cost to the government at about In his letter to Mr. Stewart Tuesday, the speaker reported he had received a letter from Works Minister 'Cardin saying occupation of the corridor by the gallery constitutes a seri-; ous fire hazard. | Speaker Macnatighton said} jthat in the case of the Hanover Estates and FP Publications proposals, gallery members would work out arrangements with the principals. Some press gallery members already rent downtown offices, and more rep-|using gallery faciliites only for) fast-breaking news. | VIEWS DIFFER | Membership has been divided) over the idea of moving from Parliament Hill. Those ----* shift argue it would make Working more difficult and break with tradi-| tion. They also contend that to do their jobs effectively, they need ready access to Senate and Commons chambers and work- ing space nearby. | Members supporting a move say it would remove any stigma of "'free-loading"' from report- ers, give them more privacy and eliminate overcrowding. Multi-Racialism A Reality In Portugal's Mozambique By LYNN HEINZERLING Thousands of Africans are/ moving away from a sub-| are LOURENCO MARQUES (AP) sistence level into the cash! Two schoolboys skip through @leconomy as dusty schoolyard in Mozam-'they receive small farmers. financial and bique, one black hand claspeditechnical assistance as well as in a white one. ... An African farmer jabbers in marketing facilities. Portuguese to his white Portu-\RACES NOT SPLIT guese neighbor amid the green rice stalks. . . There is no segregation on jracial lines in Angola or Mo- On the busy streets of Low-zambique. Intermarriage is ac-| renco Marques, shoppers of al-\cepted without question. most every shade known to} In Angola's population of - elbow each other amica-\a bout 5,000,000 are 250,000 . : jwhites and about 100,000 mulat- Here, in lush, tropical Mo-'toes. Among the 6,500,000 in zambique, and across the COn-\wo7ambique, there are 15,000 tinent in Angola, another voth| Europeans, guese province, may res 'mixed descent and 50,000 people _ of smaller last chance for a genuine, mul-\qr munities of Chinese, . Indi- ti-racial society in Africa. The Portuguese, who came to} both shores of Africa more than! 400 years ago, say they are de- jans and Arabs. "We will reach the point |when the local population will termined to foster and main-|want to go in its own," one tain it. | The 35 member states of' the) Organization of African Unity) want every foot of African soil under African or Arab rule. | With the aid of Algerian' and|countries Portuguese official said. "However, we could never accept an election as has been eld in some other African where the people Communist Chinese arms, th€\yoteq for crocodiles or pea: OAU has been supporting re- bellions inside the northern cocks, They must be conscious frontiers of both Angola and|of the fact they are deciding Mozambique. SEND 100,000 TROOPS The Portuguese answer was to send more. than troops to the two territories, known as "provinces" in Lis- bon and "colonies" to the Af- rican nationalist leaders. What chance has Portugal, a their own destiny." He declined to guess when the local people might reach 100,000 this point. JOKE GOES TOO FAR CHANDIGARH, India (AP)-- A practical joker succeeded too well in the Punjab state legisla- coated ome ENP NTS eiteintiiadioncn se caas canmnecemetentiiitt adie ER ee OE ee pO en ee ys bing EET Reig MANN MOTEL Mie BMT ORE aN, eb, a RR BIE IO NB NN DR GOR ACNE OR Ge a tS RE There's so much for you at EATON'S « EATON'S ii Haddon Ha | ; . 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