WON'T Steph: Steph 1 left, 66 - year - old veteran of Greek politics and a dep- uty premier in the govern- ment of ousted Premier George Papandreou, confers ACCEPT ROYAL with Savas Papapolitis at a party caucus in Athens Monday. He announced he would return mandate from King Constantine to try to form a new government. MANDATE CITY OF OTTAWA IS FOCAL POINT OTTAWA (CP) -- A report made public Monday recom- mends ripping apart the admin- istrative fabric of Ottawa and 16 other area municipalities and mending them into a new re- gional government. W. J. Spooner, Ontario min- ister of municipal affairs, dropped the revolutionary 66- page report into the laps of the elected heads of the municipali- ties concerned at a luncheon. The report by independent commissioner Murray -V. Jones, who received 56 submissions Report Would Unite 17 Municipalities during the last year, followed requests by some of the munici- palities, particularly Ottawa, for such a study, 9 The major recommendations would wipe out all existing councils, boards and' commis- sions and replace them with a regional council and district councils. This would eliminate all administrations and bound- aries in the 17 municipalities ranging from Ottawa with a mayor, four-member board of control and 20 aldermen to bir CSuAWA. TIMES, a Tuesdey, August 1%, 1968 3 township councils with reeves and councillors, Besides the city of Ottawa, the municipalities involved are the city of Eastview, Carleton County, the villages of Rock- cliffe Park, Stittsville and Rich- mond and 11 townships--Ne- pean, Gloucester, Fitzroy, Hunt- ley, Torbolton, March, Goul- bourn, North Gower, Marlbor- ough, Cumberland and Osgoode. Rockcliffe, Nepean and Glou- cester are suburban areas while the other villages and townships are rural, Stephano poulos' decision came after Center Union Party deputies voted against allowing his to form a gov- ernment. By JOSEPH E. MOHBAT | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Fed-| eral registrars begin placing Negroes on the voting rolls of} nine U.S. southern counties to-| day--with no questions asked| about their intelligence. | And the justice department goes to work in the federal! courts of Texas, Virginia and Alabama to seek an end to poll) taxes as a requirement for vot-| ing in state and local elections. | The Voting Rights Act of 1965 got up a full head of steam) Monday night when Attorney-| Police Nab 260 Persons In Washington "Sit-down" WASHINGTON (AP)--Police whistles blew, red paint splat- tered and a march on Capitol Hill to protest U.S. policies in Viet Nam ended in noisy confu- sion with the arrest of 260 per- sons who defied police orders and staged a sit-down. Most of those arrested--about half of the estimated total of 500 demonstrators were charged with two counts of dis- orderly conduct. Their cases were handled in Washington's first night police rourt in 10 years. Russ Score 'Guidelines' UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) The Soviet Union Monday took objection to "guidelines" pre- sented by U Thant, the secre- tary-general, for solving the United Nations crisis over peace-keeping operations. The principles for the conduct of future peace-keeping opera- tions laid down by U Thant "do not provide a basis for future concerted action by all mem- bers of the United Nations in matters concerning the main- tenance of international peace and security," the Soviet Union said. The Soviet statement, pub- lished in a report by the secre- tary general, lessened hopes that a special committee on peace-keeping operations would be able to break the current impasse in negotiations when it resumes meeting next Monday. The report contained the views of 18 countries on the guidelines put forward by the secretary - general and Alex Quaison - Sackey, chairman of the committee and Foreign Min- ister of Ghana, in June. Those who pleaded guilty be- fore the three judges received varying sentences: $50 or 30 days in jail, $25 or five days and 25 or three days. Those who pleaded not guilty were scheduled for trial later in the week. BELONG TO GROUPS | The demonstration ended four days of meetings and picketing by the newly-formed Assembly of Unrepresented People. Most of its members also belong to civil rights organizations and they sang We Shall Overcome and Freedom as they marched Monday. In the early planning stages for the assembly'a meetings, leaders had said the group would try to invade the House of Representatives to pass its declaration of peace. This proposal was dropped, however, and the demonstrators sat on a hot sidewalk in 90-de- gree weather. Shortly before the mass ar- rest, two men later identified as followers of the American Nazi party jumped from a crowd of on-lookers to hurl red plant at the marchers. "They're commies, all of. them!" the two shouted. They were charged with disorderly conduct. HITS REPORTERS Among those hit by the paint were reporters and march lead- ers Staughton Lynd, an assist- ant professor of history at Yale University, and Robert Moses Parris, a leader in the Student Non-Violent Co-ordinating Com- mittee and Mississippi's Free- dom Democratic party. Parris, Lynd and two others at the front of the line were ar- rested when they ignored police orders and headed for the main Capitol steps. At this, many of their follow- jers sat down. Others retreated if where police said they could find sanctuary. Can't Prosecute On Statement, ' OTTAWA (CP) -- Revenue Minister Benson cannot be taken to court for saying Oppo- sition Leader Diefenbaker made an untrue statement during the postal strike, the opposition leader said through his office Monday. Mr. Benson lenged Mr. Diefenbaker to take him to court for saying the op- position leader made a state- ment "that was just not true'"-- that the Civil Service Commis- sion's pay research bureau had recommended a $660-a-year pay boost for postal workers, Saturday chal- Grounded Airplane | Finally Departs PRESTWICK, Scotland (Reu- ters) -- A chartered plane, grounded here since Saturday with engine trouble, finally left Monday night to pick up 100 members of a Scottish social club stranded in Toronto. The Super-Constellation, char- tered from World Wide Airlines of Canada, took off Saturday for Toronto with a party of Cana- dians aboard. It returned here two hours later after the trou- ble developed. The Scottish group was due to 'return to Britain Monday after a three-week visit to Can- ada. Last year, 183 members of the club from Motherwell near here Minister Dief" Says Mr. Diefenbaker, in a state- ment he authorized a spokes- man to issue, said there is no who makes an accusation that a statement is untrue. He called Mr. Benson's chal- 'lenge a smokescreen, and again }-\demanded that the bureau's recommendations, to the com- mission be made public. The government has denied the bureau makes recommen- dations. It says the bureau pro- vides comparative data which the commission uses to make recommendations to the govern- legal recourse against a person) Six Nuns Arrested Get Bail Catholic nuns arrested in a ra- cial demonstration in downtown Chicago were saved from being jailed Monday when two law- costs. A circuit court judge entered a finding of guilty of charges of obstructing traffic, and One sof the sisters told the court ceive at fhe social agency where they are stationed, should be spent for the poor. 'Therefore they would not pay the fines. Two lawyers, present during the trial: but not involved in it,| volunteered to share the fines) and costs equally. They are| Maurice Scott Jr. and Howard) Geter Jr. | The.nuns, all members of the! order of the Daughters of Char-| ity of St. Vincent de Paul, are) white. : they knelt at a street intersec- tion and sang songs in a dem- onstration against a school su- perintendent whom integration- ists accuse of administrative policies that they say foster al- leged segregation in Chicago schools. Saskatchewan To 'Streamline' REGINA (CP) -- The Sas- katchewan government intends to implement as many of the recommendations of the royal commission on government ad- ministration as possible, Pre- mier Ross Thatcher said Mon- day. _ Mr. Thatcher was coinment- ing at a press conference at which the 1,040-page report was| made public. The three-man commission, established a year ago, made 177 specific recommendations following a study of the govern- ment's day-to-day business. The report said the govern- ment needs a large dose of "modern management science"' to streamline its operations. Savings could amount to as much as $15,000,000 annually, it said. The government, Mr. Thatcher said, already has re- organized its health department in line with the commission's recommendations. The report would not mean any civil servants would be dis- missed, Mr. Thatcher said, but there would be the possibility of transfer of workers displaced }ment. by the streamlining program. were delayed for 36 hours be- fore they could fly to New York. That time their chartered plane was grounded in the U.S. with mechanical trouble. ' CUSTOM BLENDED CANADIAN RYE WHISKY Phomas Adams Distillers Zlde 29 GREAT WHISKIES IN ONE BRAND... CHICAGO (AP)--Six Roman} money the sisters re-| 'Denis' Lawyer Has Received All Dorion Inquiry Evidence | Joiners, |General Nicholas Katzenbach-- after a day of study and tele-| }phone consultations -- desig-| jnated those counties where past experience led him to believe the services of examiners, all) regular Civil Service Commis- sion employees, would be needed. | The counties are in Missis- sippi, Alabama and Louisiana.} The first one on the justice |department's list was Dallas| County, Ala. That's where Selma is, and Selma is where racial violence flared last} spring just before President| Johnson called for legislation] | /to southern Negroes. | | Immediately upon Katzen-) bach's announcement of the! fined| nine counties in which federal|some of them don't know a| 'Viet Nam the sisters $25 and costs each. | registration will be launched,!thing in the world." Negroes Put On Vote Roll . In 9 U.S. South Counties Chairman John W. Macy of the Civil Service Commission sent two examiners to each. Negroes who have been turned away before now may fill out a simple application form--or have it filled out for them, if they're illiterate--and be placed on the voting rolls simply by meeting such re- quirements as age, residence and a record clear of felony convictions. Meanwhile, justice depart- ment lawyers put the finishing touches on suits to be filed in Austin, Richmond and Mont- gomery attacking the state poll tax requirements. These suits are required of the attorney- general by the new law. The first was filed Saturday chal- lenging Mississippi's poll tax. The dispatching of federal registrars brought a generally critical reaction from officials in the counties affected. In Dempolis, Ala., in Ma- rengo County, Registrar Tay- lor Speidle said he had never discriminated against would-be Negro voters. He said he thought votérs should be able to read and write, and that| yers paid their fines and court +, guarantee the right to vote|"everyone got the same test." "It's pretty rough the way) HELP FIGHT NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -- A magistrate has settled a dif- ficult decision over owftership of a collie by letting the dog decide. ; . As both alleged owners stood 10 feet apart against a wall Monday the brown and white collie was let into the courtroom. Without hesitation; the five- year-old dog ran directly to Clifton..Williams, 45. The Wil- liams family calls the dog Prince. The other claimant, Mrs. Alice Rivera, 31, called out Boy, the name the Rivera family had given its collie. The dog moved towards Mrs. Rivera, circled around DOG SETTLES BIG DISPUTE |AS TO HIS REAL OWNERSHIP i] her, and. then ran back to Wil- |} liams. ! Magistrate Samuel H. Low-. man then ruled that the dog belonged to Williams, who said he bought it as a puppy for his son. | Mrs. Rivera bought a collie | several weeks ago for $20. She | said she was certain it was not | Williams' dog. The Williams later went to the Rivera home and said that | the Riveras' Boy was really | their Prince, The Riveras dis- agreed, and the dispute went to court. Williams was all. smiles after the decision and said he would pay Mrs, Rivera the $20 she had spent. She cried over losing the dog. ON CRIME TORONTO (CP)--The Tor- onto Stock Exchange has done its bit to stamp out illegal gambling in North America, Here's how: Last Thursday the exchange proudly began issuing exact hourly volume figures through its computer system, replacing the old method of issuing volumes approximated to the nearest thousand shares. The practice continued Fri- day but was abruptly halted Monday when a few seasoned veterans informed officials that criminals in the United States have used the final three digits of exchange vol- umes as pay-off numbers in the 'numbers rackets." "We started this thing in a fit of efficiency," said P. N. O'Hara, exchange director of computer and communica- tions, "but we don't like to be WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sen- ator Gaylord Nelson (Dem. Wis.), said today the free trade agreement on automobile parts between the United States and Canada can lead only to dis- aster. The agreement was negoti- ated by the two governments and is awaiting congressional approval. The House of Repre- sentatives already has ap- proved it. Nelson said in a speech for the Senate that the agreement would be damaging to busi- nesses in Wisconsin and other parts of the U.S. "This is not free trade," Nel- son said. "It simply amounts Car Parts Free Trade Criticized By Senator to guaranteeing Canadian firms a certain portion of our present market. "It would. sacrifice estab- lished American businesses, jobs and production, which would simply be handed over to Canada. This is outright sub- sidization of Canadian auto pro- duction." A Wisconsin firm, Modine Manufacturing Co. of Racine, complained recently that it was losing its market for automo- bile radiators through what it considered unfair Canadian competition. Nelson said U.S. auto manu- facturers were buying Canadian r associated with this el Wes A look at the record books would have saved the embar- rassment. In_ pre - Second World War days precise vol- umes were issued hourly and at the close and the method was discontinued then for the same reason. The exchange will revert to the old method of reporting trading. Sex Education Is Solution Seen MOSCOW (AP)--Official op- position to sex education in the Soviet Union gradually is being overcome by a quiet revolution. A textbook The Sexual Life of they're going to register these| illiterates,'".he said. "Why| OTTAWA (CP) -- Louis As-| saly, lawyer for ex-ministerial/| aide Raymond Denis, said Mon- day he now has received a com-| plete English transcript of _~ Dorion inquiry evidence and is| reading it "just as quickly as I can." | He said, however, that he will) not be ready to proceed Aug. Lawyers for the nuns said|19, the date set for Denis' pre-|yoj4me 22 on, but it was im- liminary hearing on charges of} attempted bribery and | tion of justice in the Rivard) $4.30 Hourly 'Rate By '69. TORONTO (CP) -- Striking carpenters here voted Monday, to accept a 92- cent - an - hour) wage increase over four years) and end their 49-day strike against 78 contractors of the} Toronto Construction Associa-| tion. | The strikers, members of the} Brotherhood of Carpenters and (CLC) voted 1,678 to} 471 to accept the latest contrac-| tors' offer, which will give them an additional five cents an hour! of welfare payments and two) per cent more holiday pay in| addition to the wage increase.) earlier returned to work with) case. He said in an interview) he will not be ready to proceed} until September." | Mr. Assaly said he received the first 21 volumes of the 8,500- page transcript last Friday. A week earlier the RCMP deliv- ered him the final 21 volumes. "T tried then reading it from possible because of the continu- ous references to previous tes- timony," Mr. Assaly said. "Now I'm starting over again from volume 1." ; Mr. Assaly received a French transcript of the Dorion evi- dence some time ago. However, he said he was not fluent enough in the language to rely on it. The justice department told him four English translations were available. Two were found in the hands of Crown Attorney John Cassells and RCMP Ceun- sel Norman Matthews, but the| other two apparently had dis-| appeared. | Finally, the RCMP, which had kept its own transcript of the} evidence, printed an Engli copy for Mr. Assaly. | WINNER IS ANONYMOUS | RIO DE JANEIRO. (AP)--A bird from Argentina has won caged by nationalities, but 'Truth' Hard To Come By COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) Ben Bassett, Associated Press foreign news editor, said Mon- day that in coverage of the situ- ation in Viet Nam, the truth is sometimes difficult to come by because. of "efforts in Saigon and Washington to obscure the true picture." 'We propose to tell the truth about Viet Nam as we see it," Bassett said at a luncheon meeting of the New York State Society of Newspaper Editors, held as the society opened a two-day summer session. One of the reasons that the fighting in Viet Nam will con- tinue for a long time, Bassett said, is that the Viet Cong are the outgrowth of a nationalist group born in that country's fight against the French. "While the Communists have taken advantage of the situa- tion, there is the underlying sentiment that they are fighting for their own government and their own way of life," he said. While the United States may be able to extend its military or ideological strength in that area jof Southeast Asia, Bassett said: "J doubt that we can be lucky enough for the rest of the world} to stand still while we are try- ing to do it." He said the Chinese may be able to "flank us" by taking The pay hike will bring their| the world's canary singingjover Malaysia and Thailand wages by 1969 to $4.30 an hour.| Championship. But that is allialso is under some Chinese More than 1,500 carpenters|the judges know. The birds are|pressure. He said the widespread air Man will be published for use in schools early next year, in- formed sources said Monday. It had been refused publication originally. Health workers have been urging for some time that a greater knowledge of sex be given to the Soviet people but educators have been reluctant. The Soviet government has taken the attitude that overpop- ulation is not a problem in a Communist system. Education to limit families has not been considered necessary. Abortions are freely permit- ted, however, and are popular. Some women have them reg- ularly. tors even though they were no cheaper than those made by Modine. Canada was encouraging this by a compli- cated "duty remission" scheme, he said. He said a Canadian firm which sold radiators in the United States could import into Canada an equal amount of auto parts or finished automo- biles, duty free. By waiving these duties on imports, Can- ada was subsidizing its own ex- porters, CALL... DIXON'S FOR OIL FURNACES FUEL OIL AND HEATING SERVICE SERVING THE PUBLIC OVER 50 YEARS 313 ALBERT ST, OSHAWA 723-4663 Happiness Is "es } TREE YIELDS my A car's bakelite steering wheel and anti-freeze, as well as the wooden dashboard panel, are tree products. STARTS THURSDAY Cherney's Semi-Annual | Inventory SALE 723-7900 110 contractors who are not|three prize winners in the Ar-|strikes intended to convince the members of the association but|gentine cage, including the|North Vietnamese that they who pledged to pay the negoti-| world champion, have -- win apparently have not ated rates and benefits. |their paper identification tags. 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