@ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, September 5, 1962 Douks Continue Trek To Prison At Agassiz . CASTLEGAR, B.C. (CP)-- While Kootenay school authori- ties worried about a shortage of , more than 600 Sons of om Doukhobors got mo- bile today to continue their trek from interior to coastal British Columbia. 'The large representation of the religious sect arrived at this Columbia River town Tuesday night after a three-day march from Krestova, 20 miles north. They have picked up fellow members along the way and es- timates of the number of the group range as high as 900, The marchers planned to travel by car and truck today to Grand- Forks, centre of an- other Doukhobor sett] ement, where they hope fo double their number, They are heading for Agassiz, more than 400 miles west in the Fraser Valley, where many of their menfolk are serving prison terms for terrorism. They say they want to be near them. FEW TURN UP At Crescent Valley, near Krestova, only 24 of an expected 124 .students turned up when school opened Tuesday and only one of these was a Freedomite The pattern was similar at other predominantly - Freedo- mite schools in the area. More than 100 school-age chjl- dren and about 75 younger chil- dren are accompanying their General Robert Bonner Tuesday asked RCMP: for a report on truancy and possible neglect of domites moved along the south- ern trans-provincial highway at about one mile an hour. Near brilliant the Freedgmite marchers stopped at the tomb of Peter (The Lordly) Verigin, former spiritual leader of the entire Doukhobor community who was killed in a mysterious blast aboard a train in 1924. However, a group of 12 ortho- dox Doukhobors stood guard guard and refused to permit the chanting, praying Freedomites to enter the fenced-in tomb area, Verigin's tomb has been bombed nine times in recent years. At Agassiz, municipal officials said sanitation bylaws would be enforced to prevent the Free- domites from setting up a shack town near Mountain Prison. SAY BON VOYAGE : But at Nelson, B.C., a few miles from Krestova, city offi- cials wished the Freedomites a bon voyage and hoped that they would make it to Agassiz. "We feel we would like to help them on their way," Nel- son Mayor Tom_ Shorthouse said. "It's a pitiful sight in a way to see them on the road . . . but I'm sure it's just a big bluff and they'll be back before long." Freedomites have been blamed for terrorizing the Nel- ings, arson and other acts. Most of the more than 100 Freedo- mite men at Mountain Prison are serving terms up to 28 years for terrorism. "They've done so much harm in this area, we're all dis- gusted," said an official of the Nelson Chamber of Commerce. Sight-seeing motorists, many with cameras, lined up along the highway watching the marchers. At the head of the cavalcade]. for. part of the march was beared Pete Slastukin, 79, wear- ing only shorts and rubber san- dals while he pushed a_two- wheel cart carrying clothing and food for the trip. CARRY BANNER Behind -him two babushka- wearing women carried a ban- ner which quoted in, part Can- ada's Bill of Rights. Further back in the proces- sion, Molly .Popoff, 75, lay crip- pled and semi-conscious in a wooden farm. cart pulled by other sect members. "Tf we left her behind she would die. Her chances are no worse if she is with us," said one of the women pulling the cart. ' At Mountain Prison, officials said the Freedomite terrorists are unaware of the march be- cause they have no access to newspapers, radio or televi- son area for years with bomb-! sian." ] INTERPRETING THE NEWS Four of the 54 girls compet- ing for the title of Miss Am- erica pose together at Atlan- children in the. Doukhobor march. One of the few bright spots in the .Freedomite picture in the Kootenays in recent years. has been the attendance of Fredo- mite children in the regular school systm. The children were freed from a government dormitory school in 1959 after parents promised to send them to school. Parents taking part in the march say they jntend to send the children to school once they get to Agassiz. One of the women said the law provides that people making a move can keep their children out of schoo! until they get settled. ALLOWS TO CAMP The huge Freedomite- party camped Tuesday night on the four-acre farm of Ernie Eadie after a ferry crossing of the Columbia River. Eadie offered his fields to the Freedomites after they tried unsuccessfully to rent the nearby Kinnaird municipal camping ground. The Doukhobors plan to con- tinue their journey in cars after marching -through Grand Forks, arriving in Agassiz,.70 miles east of Vancouver, Thursday night. RCMP officers patrolled the half-mile-long procession Tues- day to maintain order and keep Red PM By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer Without its growing strength and ability to stir up a crisis a a time and place of its own choice, Russia is boldly chal- lenging the Monroe Doctrine frim a position just 90 miles off United States shores. A few decades ago any Euro- pean power would have thought twice before ignoring the Ameri- can warning, first ununciated by President James Monroe in 1823, to keep political fingers off the independent. Latin American countries. Monroe declared: "We should consider any attempt on their (Europe's) part to extend their system to any portion of his hemisphere as dangerous o our peace and safety." Soviet Premier Khrushchev says that doctrine is dead. He has made a deal with Fidel Castro to send men and equip- ment -- industrial as well as military -- into Cuba to bolster the road clear while the Free- Monroe Doctrine tic City, N.J., Tuesday where INTERNATIONAL BEAUTIES the pageant got under way. From left: Miss Hawaii, Pat- tricia Lei Anderson; Miss Cali- fornia, Pamela Gamble; Ala- Murder Suspect Remanded Again RIA, Ont. (CP)-- Mrs. Betty MacDonald, 29, charged with the July 26 mur- der of her husband, Clifford, 37, was given her second remand Tuesday. © Cour sent her back to On- tanio Hospital, Brockville, for further observation until Oct. 9. She was admitted to hospital after her first court appearance on July 31. Clifford MacDonald was stabbed through the stomach, with a foot-long butcher's knife at the family cottage 14 miles east of Lancaster, about 30 miles east of Cornwall. Double Murderer Executed Tuesday SAN QUENTIN, Calif. (AP)-- Lawrence Garner was ted Tuesday in the California gas chamber for a double killing that ended a wedding party of criminals. During his last days of life, Garner tried 'vainly to be granted a one - hour meeting with his wife in prison, then set- tled for a 15 minute good-bye over the telephone. The pellets were dropped at 10:04 a.m, and he was pro- nounced dead at 10:12. Garner went to his death calmly. He was condemned. for shoot- ing down in the San Bernardino desert Richard Lee Now!en, 30, an escaped convict who was on his way to be married in Las Vegas, Nev., and the bride-to- be, Mrs, Hurley Skene, 28, di- vorced Los Angeles narcoti parolee. : Garner, 30, was the grooms po Bernardino County au: thorities said the . 6 shooting ended = Setunes bridal party and forgery plot- ting expedition. ; Pee Take Your N in CASH! 4 BEST BUY!I--YOU SAVE 12c! YORK PEAS RED:WHIT Mt 15-0Z. TINS 99° ska, Mary Dee Fox; Miss Canada, Hel Maria Hold BEST BUY !--YOU SAVE 11c !--AYLMER TOMATO SOUP 10-0Z. TINS 89° --AP Wirephoto Defies unrest at home and the threat of invasion from abroad, Cuba is crawling a the edge} of poverty and can't afford to pay for the big Soviet cares! By STUART LAKE tion, which has required no Jess} | OTTAWA (CP) Trade than 100 ships for transport|schools for engineers, lawyers, alone. doctors and other professional What guarantee can Khrush-/men were advocated Tuesday chev have that the huge Soviet}as means of relieving over- investment in manpower and|crowding at Canadian universi- equipment in Cuba won't soon/ ties. College Overcrowding Solution Suggested fits for the three or four years they spend acquiring wisdom. HE DISAGREES The opposite view was pre- sented by Ottawa lawyer Dun- can MacTavish. He said univer- sities should be open to all who wish to attend. Universities train students to be bulldozed into the Caribbean through invasion or revolution? The guarantee, in Soviet eyes, may lie in the powder keg of Berlin. President Kennedy has vir- tually acknowledged 'that the Monroe Doctrine has_ been breached -- '"'That is why we oppose . . . what is happening in Cuba today." But he also says he is opposed to any direct invasion of Cuba. Dr. Alan Mewett of Queen's University told delegates to a seminar sponsored by the Na- tional Federation of Canadian University Students that neither economic nor intellectual bar- riers are the answer to the overflow -of students. He said campus life should be made so unattractive that only those sincerely desiring an edu- cation would attend universi- ties. take their place in society. Therefore entrance require- ments should be lowered to al- low more Canadian youths to take advantage of this training. He said those who pass uni- versity entrance exams "'show only an ability to express what little knowledge they possess with facility." The five-day seminar, study- ing the effect of universities on CHEFSE BEST BUY [--YOU SAVE 14c !--Sc OFF PACK--MAPLE LEAF SLICES mKe. 49° ' BEST BUY J---YOU SAVE 4c !---CROWN 'CORN SYRUP . it 278 NABISC Uhivérsity of. Toronto, said the BEST Buy !--YOU SAVE 7c<! SHREDDED WHEAT . 2 uc 39° college method of putting stu- dents on their own should be adopted in the later years of secondary. schooling. Pierre Dansereau, former BEST BUY !--YOU SAVE 6c! TEA BAGS"™ "ae 29° dean of science at the Univer- sity of -Montreal, said students should disobey civil authority if they feel unfair laws are. en- acted by governments. BEST BUY !--YOU SAVE 24c | 18¢ OFF GIANT SURF PACK 63° But he said the disobedience should be of a passive nature and that the students must be prepared to take the conse- quences of their actions. KLEENE BEST BUY !--YOU SAVE 30c! FACIAL TISSUES CHUBBY OR REGULAR 7s] RED & WHITE'S ANNUAL LAMB SALE! that Communist state agains Though American concern is great, "the United States has obligations all around the world, Kennedy into a distasteful de- prospects of a shooting war in ger from the trigger. Too many attend university so they'can make more money in life, or for prestige purposes. Those who wanted to learn professions could go to schools that teach them. Universities SCATTERED CLOUDINESS THURSDAY WEATHER FORECAST ~ Clear And Cold - Weather Tonight Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5 a.m.: Synopsis: Showers and thun- derstorms occurred over east- ern Ontario this morning as cooler air spread from the mid- west. Heavy rainfall accompan- fed the change: to colder weather in Northern Ontario, where up to an inch of rain was reported at some areas. The temperature at Timmins} dropped to 37 from. 67 degrees in a few hours during the night. Readings in the mid-30s were = through Northern On- 0. Showers will gradually end @uring the day. Mainly sunny and cool weather with light winds is forecast for most of the province Thursday. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni- ra, western Lake Ontario re- . Windsor, Hamilton: Cloudy with showers and much cooler today, clearing this after- noon. Mainly sunny and contin- uing cool Thursday. Winds northwest 25 today, becoming light tonight and Thursday, Lake Huron, Georgian Bay, Algoma, Timagami re gions, North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: Cloudy with a few show- ers and much cooler today, clearing this evening. Mainly Eastern Lake Ontario, Haii- burton regions: Cloudy with showers and chance of a thun- derstorm today, turning much cooler by afternoon. Clear and cold tonight. Sunny with a few cloudy intervals Thursday and continuing cool, Winds south 15, ng northwest 25 by after. hoon and northwest 15 Thurs- Cochrane, White River re- gions: Variable cloudiness to- day and Thursday, a few light showers. Warmer Thursday. Winds west 15. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Thursday 5 Peterborough .... Trenton Killaloe Muskoka . North Bay. Sudbury Earlton ... . Timmins ......06. 'sunny and cool Thursday. Winds} northwest 25, becorhing light to.) and Thursday Kapuskasing White River. IMoosonee «i .s.0008 would be for students who did not expect any immediate bene- Canadian life, was also told that the greatest problem facing: col- lege students is adjusting to the difference between high schovl and university teaching. SUGGESTS PLAN Dr. Moffat St. A. Woodside, principal of University College, By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS As school bells rang over the southern U.S. Tuesday, Negro and white children attended classes together in both paro- chial and public schools. For some of the Negro chil- dren, it was the first time they had been in a school formerly reserved for white children. The transition was quiet. A few pickets appeared as Ro- grated at New Orleans. Catholic schools also were de- segregated in other communi- ties in Louisiana and at Atlanta. Integration of pyblic schools was stepped up in Arkansas, Florida, Florida, Tennessee and Virginia. Efforts to integrate schools at Baton Rouge, La., Huntsville and Gadsden, Ala.'edeaed. Ga., failed. ¥ STATES HOLD OUT Observed Temperatures Low overnight, High Tuesday Dawson sesccseeee 29 man Catholic schools were inte- ws ROR csseess cbse Winnipeg ......+» Alabama, Mississippi and South Carolina remain the only southern states that have no ra- cially integrated public schools. About 40 Negro children at- tended 15. parochial schools in New Orleans.Of 48,000 Catholic |school pupils in New Orleans, about 9,000 are Negroes. CONTACT LENSES Phone 723-4191 F. R. BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE NORTH White River......« 8, S. Marié......06 Kapuskasing . Why Pay More ?? LET US SAVE YOU $$$ ON MEAT!! 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