-eation from the national board ieee Ss aan > plist gg 14 Die OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, October 1, 170% Federal marshals wearing gas masks stand guard as e Hee QUELL CAMPUS DEMONSTRATIONS students demonstrated on the | Sunday night protesting court | campus of Ole Miss at Oxford | ordered enrollment of James Douks Take Up Westward Trek HOPE, B.C. (CP) -- British Columbia's Freedomite Doukho- bo. became trekkers again this weekend, moving 90 miles from Printecno into this village at the head of the Fraser Valley. It will be a month Tuesday since the Freedomites left their homes in the Kootenay, 300 miles to the east, after an- nouncing thir _ intention of marching on Agassiz, where 68 Freedomite terrorists are held in Mountain Prison. The Doukhobors have march- ed and shuttled westward in cars. Long camping stops were made near Grand Forks and at| Bromley Park, a government} campsite east of Princeton. Agassiz, on the north side o the Fraser River, is 35 milés west of here. About 400 of the 1,000 - odd Bromley camp number arrived here Sunday and the rest were expected to follow as quickly as cars could carry them in. | STAY IN PARK The Doukhobors are staying in Coquihalla Park, a village- owned site. .| Paul Scherle, chairman of the village commission, said earlier |\the Sons could use the site for two days before they moved on to Agassiz. He added that the 1 Lesage Says Quebec | Master Of Own House MONTREAL (CP)--Premier Jean Lesage said Sunday night the issue in the Nov. 14 Quebec election is whether the. people of Quebec or "alien trusts" will control the province's economy. He told an audience of 1,500 supporters gathered at a $50-a- plate Liberal dinner that the days of "economic colonialism" are coming to an end in Quebec. "For the first time in their history," Mr. Lesage said, "the people of Quebec are in a posi- tion to become masters in their own house." To achieve this goal, it would be necessary to place all pro- duction and distribution of elec- tric power in Quebec under pub- efit, in the destruction of a lic ownership. |public .legacy in profiting from His government, elected only|the sale of Hydro-Quebec's nat- two years ago after 16 consec-|ural gas system to private inter- utive years of Union Nationale) ests." administration, had decided to| This sale, to the Quebec Nat- stake its existence "on this vital) ural Gas Corporation, took place question." jin 1957. A royal commission re- Referring several times to| ported earlier this year that Daniel Johnson as "the leader|several ministers in the Union imposed upon the Union Na-| Nationale government of the tionale," Mr. Lesage challenged|day, including Mr. Johnson, him: }owned shares in the private 1. To say "categorically and) corporation. B without beating around the) 3, [> "disclose what sort of bush" where he stands on public) advantages, direct or indirect, ownership of electric power. _/his party is receiving to cam- 2. To "explain why he par-/naign in favor of the private ticipated, for his personal ben-! power companies?" | Bank Robber Get Warden's Backing KINGSTON (CP)--Warden V| S. J. Richmond of Kingston Penitentiary said Sunday the case of Edwin Aonzo Boyd has been under consideration by the National Parole Board since last June, The warden said, however he has not received any communi- in connection with Boyd's re- lease, Mr, Richmond did say that he would be the most surprised man in the world if Boyd ever gets into trouble again if he is released. Boyd has served 10 years of a life sentence for crimes that included robbing eight Toronto- area banks of a total of $115,- 000 and twice escaping from the certificate two days before) launch his campaign. Rene . Levesque, natural re-| sources minister, spoke at the | Liberal dinner in Montreal Sun- day night and said expropriation |of private power companies may "unlock the unhealthy part" of French-Canadian na- | tionalism. | Mr. Levesque said tional Parole Board, the war-| den said: |of any general policy of na- "We (the warden's office) re-|tionalization (expropriation). If ceive notification in the form of|I felt otherwise I'd say other. a certificate with the conditions| wise. of parole. I read it to him (the| Meanwhile, Mr. Johnson had prisoner) and if he agrees to} to cancel a weekend flying trip the conditions he signs it and I/ to the Magdalen Islands because personally witness and date it. |of bad weather, He had an- "We almost always receive|nounced earlier the trip would the ex- various police forces are noti-| In another election develop-| fied of the parole,' he said. 4 , a ment, Dr, Marcel Chaput re- Fh aD omy ge mgs tov' a wite| pened as presiieci-seneet i ephon | Le Rassemblement po r - asked if the warden could con-| nendance Navophinca. Arona firm her husband's parole. Hel atist movement--to emphasize said he told both Boyd and his|he is running on a_ personal propriation "is not the beginning li Meredith, a Negro. --(AP Wirephoto) group is not likely to move un- til Wednesday at the earliest. Rusk Rules Out Agassiz is a part of Kent mu- nicipality, which passed an e emergency bylaw two weeks ago Russia-U S saying the Freedomites couldn't bathed enter Agassiz, because their |past record of violence consti- Deal On Cuba |tuted a hazard, There was no bea hay attempts, if any, will be made to prevent WASHINGTON (AP) -- State : Secretary. Rusk ruled out Sun- the Sons from entering. _ day night rnd ate of a U.S-Soviet deal to en ussian intervention in Cuba for West- US. Charges ern rear apie be oe gl or on American bases abroad. | 4 R ds B h | "You cannot support freedom e oug t in one place by ban pi freedom in another,"' Rusk sai in a pre-recorded television in- Defence Secrets terview. "In any event, we have spe-- UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- cial commitments here in this hemisphere under our hemis- phere charters, and we canno: connect in negotiations or in trades the problem of Cuba with the defence of freedom in other places." His remarks were made in re- sponse to a question about some possible U.S.-Soviet deal. There has been speculation in congres- sional and diplomatic quarters here and in New York that Soviet government might try io use its position in Cuba to pry US. concessions on West Ber- n. Earlier, President Kennedy and Lord Home, the British for- eign secretary, restated Sunday their countries' 'determination to stand firm in Berlin- Kennedy and Lord Home ex- pressed also their agreement on the "serious nature of develop- ments in Cuba" and discussed methods of halting any further spread of communism in the Caribbean area. COSTLY WAR The United States charged two Soviet UN diplomats Saturday with buying U.S. defence. se- crets from a sailor and de- manded that the Soviet Union send the two home immediately. The Soviet Union protested to the United States tha federal agents had illegally arrested, manhandled and questioned the two men and it called for pun- ishment of those responsible. The protest said one of the Rus- sians was hurt. The two countries acted in diplomatic notes that passed be tween the Soviet and U.S, dele- gations to the United Nations, | The Russian diplomats were | Evgeni M. Prokhorov, 31,.a sec- }ond secretary in the Soviet dele | gation, and Ivan Y. Vyrodoy, 38, a third secretary. The sailor was a yeoman first class, Cornelius Drunimond, 33, |a Negro from Baltimore, Md., | stationed at the U.S, naval base jin Newport, R.I. : | A U.S. diplomatic source said |the two Russians declined to re- |veal their identity to the FBI | The Second World War is es-| when apprehended and the FBI wife that he had received no/| basis as a candidate in Montreal official word from the National) Bourget. timated to have run down Brit-| did not know they were diplo- ish domestic capital by about|mats until they arrived at its £3,000,000,000. ° office. Parole Board regarding the pa- role. | Toronto's Don Jail. The 48- year-old man was Canada's most wanted criminal before his arrest 10 years ago. The warden said Boyd has been working outside the prison for the last few months with only .one unarmed guard. He said he told Boyd about the news reports that indicated the man would be paroled "because he would probably hear it on the radio." Describing the procedure fol- lowed if such a parole were to be recommended by the. Na- 6-Orbit Flight Threatened By Tropical Storms ' CAP OANAVERAL, Fila. (AP)--Two major storms--Tro- pical storm Daisy in the Atlan-) tic and typhoon Dinah in the Pacific--posed possible threats today to Walter M. Schirra's projected six-orbit space flight, scheduled Wednesday. ; Daisy was an immediate threat. Dinah was not expected to cause trouble unless the shot is delayed. A spokesman for the U.S. Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Administration reported offi- cials are keeping a close watch on the two weather systems. Daisy boiled up 420 miles east of Puerto Rico Sunday and the San Juan weather bureau re- ported winds up to 50 miles an - hour in a small area near the centre, The storm was follow- ing: course which would cre- ate a heavy sea problem Wed- nesday near Grand Turk Island, the ocean area where Schirra would land if trouble forced his flight to be erminated fter three orbits. es : Grand Turk is eee 800 ave southeast of Cape Canaveral, CAN BE HURRICANE Intensification of the storm could make it a full-fledged hur- ricane by Wednesday. Dinah was reported in the Pacific southeast of Japan. It could bring rough weather to the recovery areas for the fourth, fifth and sixth orbits-- east and northeast of Midway) Island. : Almost perfect weather is a must in possible landing zones before the launching will be at- Trade Shots For Two Hours | CP from Reuters-AP AMMAN, Jordan (AP)--Jor-- COLOMBO--A major scandal danian and Israeli forces ex-|broke open here today with the changed fire for two hours in| publication of charges that two a border incident in the Tul-/Canadian schoolteachers were karm area Sunday, a military| being expelled from Ceylon be- spokesman announced. cause they resisted. the ad- The spokesman said a Jordan | vances of several top Ceylonese jan patrol met a jeep carrying) government officiais. six Israeli soldiers near the) Th charges appear in an edi- village of Hazlet Issa. \torial in the Ceylon Daily News Shots were exchanged and the|@nd demand an 'immediate in- Israelis were joined by two) vestigation into the loathsome} more military vehicles from|immoral advances . . . of offi- their side of the border, the|cial wolves who prey on the spokesman continued. He said| helpless by virtue of their brief firing continued for two hours,|#uthority. ; then the Israelis withdrew. it ie paper games the sae The spokesman said there] C@cners as Sarah de Vloo, 28, were no Jordanian:casualties, |f Bow Island, Alta., and Alice |Sorochan of Lac la Biche, Alta. . They came to Ceylon together Downed Pilot Without Water Jordan-Israel 'Ceylonese O 'Branded As 'Wolves' Hicials celled because of an adverse po- lice report but there are no ac- cusations against Miss Soro- chan. Miss de Vioo claimed she had been the victim of immoral ad-| INCLUDING POLICE. | vances by several leading Cey-| The paper demands that the lonese, including a member of| officials be "exposed so that so- the legislature, several high-|ciety can mark them down for ranking police officers and a top|what they really are and give ranking civil servant. |the punishment such outcasts "They tried to get off with)deserve. me at every turn," she said.| "It's such conduct of men at But "I refused them and was\the top that corrupts society given less than a week to pack|and wrecks it after destroying my bags and get out of Cey-jits moral foundations," the pa- lon." per says. The case of the two women| Miss de Vloo, an attractive has been taken up by the in-| daughter of a grain farmer, told spector-general of police who|the Ceylon Observer earlier that The Daily News in its editor- ial says 'The public will be as disgusted as the unfortunate" Canadian women at the beha- vior of the Ceylonese officials.) one of the officials wanted to Kennedy Calls Out Troops To Quell Race Riots WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- ident Kennedy declares it was his inescapable duty to call out troops when Mississippi defied court orders to enrol a Negro at the state university. The president said Sunday night in a radio-television , ad- dress that he hoped it would be unnecessary to use troops, even though conciliation and persua- sion had failed to obtain the ad- mission of Negro James H Meredith. After his address, Kennedy sat beside' the teltphone in his office getting up-to-the-minute reports on rioting, gun fire and tear gas sweeping across the university campus at Oxford-- and the arrival on the scene of federal military reinforcements Attorney-General Robert Ken- nedy and several members of the White House staff kept the vigil with him. Courts of law, all the way up to the Supreme Court, Kennedy said in his speech, ordered Meredith's admission into the university. IS U.S. OBLIGATION When the orders were defied) and those who tried to carry them out were threatened with arrest and violence, the U.S. Court of Appeals "made clear the fact that the enforcement of its order had become an obliga- tion of the United States gov- ernment." "Even though this govern ment had not originally been a party to the case, my responsi- bility as president was there. fore inescapable. I accept il. . "I deeply regret the fact that any action by the executive branch was necessary in. this jcase, but all other avenues and jalternatives, including persua- jsion and conciliation, had been |tried and exhausted." | A peaceful and sensible solu. \tion would have been possible | without federal intercession, 'Kennedy said, had Mississippi's police powers been used to sup- port court orders instead of "'de- liberately and unlawfully block- ing them' and had the univer- sity quietly admitted Mere- dith. Kennedy said students have been admitted, regardless of race, to universities in nine other southern states. GOVERNOR GIVES IN The president had put off his address for 2% hours. In the interval, U-S. marshals had in- stalled Meredith on the Ole Miss campus and the governor, Ross Barnett, had acknowl edged "We are physically over- powered." Barnett, who has been cited for contempt for spurning court orders to permit Meredith's en- rollment, still proteste¢ hotly that the federal government was destroying the constituion and rampling on state sovereignty. But he said in a statement he abhored prospects of bloodshed and. was urging all Mississip- pians and instructing state of- ficers to "do everything in their power to preserve peace and to avoid violence in any form." Kennedy avoided any dress- ing down of Barnett by name. And, as he spoke, the students at the university were ignoring the governor's appeal to avoid violence. Kennedy closed his talk with an appeal of his own to the stu- dents, to uphold the law and ac. cede with honor to the admis- sion of a Negro in their midst. He said 'You have a new op- portunity to show that you are }men of patriotism and integrity. For the most effective means for upholding the law is not the State policemen or the mar- shals or the national guard, It is you." SINGER GETS TERM BERLIN (AP) -- Gabrielle Hammerstein, 38 - year - old American singer, has been sen- tenced by an East German court to six years in prison on a charge of spying, U.S: authori. ties reported Sunday. Miss Hammerstein previously had told reporters in West Berlin she is a Wagnerian soprano and that she had played several en- gagements in East German opera houses. said Sunday he would look into the circumstances surrounding| the expulsion. gles. Before the two women came} She has a temporay if here to Ceylon, they travelled with the Pakistan International through North America, Hawaii,' Airways and has been living Japan, Hong Kong, Burma,|with a Ceylonese family in Co- Thailand and India. They are|lombo's swank Longden Place show her wild life in the jun- EYE EXAMINATIONS 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH returning to Hong Kong. | district. For3Days | Both women were planning to |leave Ceylon Tuesday on the ;French liner Cambodge after | having been given a week to get {out of the country. Miss de Vioo's visa was officially can- VANCOUVER. (CP)--A pilot! told Sunday of lying semi-con- scious for three days beside his light plane after it crashed into the side of a mountain near Hope, 100 miles east of here. | Ernest Johnston 28, of Sid- wey B.C., said he lay dazed, aching all over and suffering from thirst. He could not reach/ a stream nearby. | He said in an interview from| his hospital bed he has no idea} what caused his single-engined| Cessna to crash Thursday night! on a flight from Castlegar in| the southeast Kootenay to Vic-) toria, | He was picked up Sunday by) RCAF helicopter and taken first] to hospital at Hope, then brought here, He was reported| in satisfactory condition. Full extent of his injuries was not! determined. FOR YOURSELF . « « huge living room with fir orate room over garage which : : floor tiled) . . . enclosed JOINS SERVICE | The 33,500 - ton Transvaal Castle entered thé Africa serv. ice of the Union Castle Line this year, becoming the eighth } 360 KING WEST ship of the lig, COME AND SEE IT breezway . . . smort kitchen . . . finished rec room, with fire- . all on one big, landscaped lot. The owner has left town. . . its well worth a visit. 3 SCHOFIELD. AKER wm CALL HENRY STINSON, BUS. 723-2265 or RES. 725-0243 eplace . . . big dining room | . . 3 bedrooms plus sep- could be used as bedroom - or - office [it's panelied, Originally aw $1 . house must be 723-2265 THIS HOUSE BEING SOLD AT SACRIFICE PRICE ! OPEN FOR INSPECTION MON. & TUES. EVE. (Oct. Ist & 2nd) FROM 5 P.M. TILL 9 P.M. i You really have to see this home to appreciate the value, Has stone ond brick front 113 HARMONY RD. NORTH Listed at $23,900 7,900 Use Slang Terms To | Get Voter, NDP Plan By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP)--If the public thinks of a dame as a broad or a broad as a dame, politicians must make their appeal to the voters on those terms. Without any disrespect in- tended to the fair sex, David Lewis, New Democratic vice- president and MP for the Tor- onto constituency of York. South, used the descriptive phrases Sunday night to illustrate the party's new preoccupation with communicating its image to the voter, The occasion was a press con- ference discussion of decisions) at a two-day meeting of the party's federal council to im- prove its public image and en- liven the organization to be ready for an early federal elec- tion. "It's like this," said Mr. Lewis in discussing the party's efforts to communicate with the voter, "I don't know whether you call a dame a broad or a broad a dame but we want to be sure we're using the right word," "And if you cau wer # suck chick, you're really out of date," interjected national Leader T. C, Douglas who was taking time from his camseigs in the Oct, 22 byelection in Burnaby - Coquitlam in British Columbia to attend the opening of Parliament and the party's government council, The party's new look at com- municating with the voter and its resolve to improve organiza- tion by launching a series of or- ganization and election schools to train key workers arose from a critical examination of its ef- forts in the June 18 general election, National President Oliver, McGill University pro- fessor of political science, said the council is determined to put its next election campaign on a more expert basis than it has in the past. Hence the decision to establish traing sch At the same time, the coun- try is determined to put its next election campaign on a more Michael) Past. Hence th decision to eS-_ to establish training schools. At the same e, the coun-» cil decided that "because of the possibility of an early election," local constituencies should be- gin immediately to nominate candidates and set up campaign machinery. GET CARTE BLANCHE The council gave the 18 New Democratic MPs carte blanche to act as they see fit in show-. down votes in the Commons where three opposition groups outnumber the Progressive Con- servative government support- ers 148 to 116. Would the NDP members join with the Liberals in voting non- confidence in the government? "The decision will be. made in the light of all the circum- stances," replied House Leader H. W, Herridge, MP for Koote- nay West, inaicating that mem- bers are waiting to see what elaboration Prime Minister Diefenbaker will make today of the program outlined in Thurs- day's speech from the throne. expert basis than it has in the WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy Tuesday, Chance Of Rain Forecasts issued by the Tor-, Forecast Temperatures ~ public weather office at\Low tonight, high Tuesday a.m.: wi Synopsis: Mainly sunny skies| Windsor and near normal temperatures|5t- Thomas,...... in the 60s today. A band of cloud will brush extreme south- western Onterio today as a U.S. weather system moves slowly eastward. This disturbance will] bring increasing cloudiness over southern Ontario with some showers likely over the lower lakes regions today, Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Windsor, London: Partly cloudy with little tem- perature change today. Tuesday mainly cloudy with chance of showers, winds light. Lake Ontario, Niagara, Ham- ilton, Toronto; Mainly sunny and continuing mild today. Tuesday increasing cloudiness with a chance of showers, winds Hamilton ..... St. Catharines. TOFONtO .s..+s00000 Peterborough . Trenton «sosecveees Killaloe ..scossess Muskoka . North Bay.. Sudbury .. Earlton ..... Kapuskasing .. White River....... Moosonee ..-+eeess Timmins ......++.. EXPECT SHOWERS OVER ONTARIO TUESDAY light. Haliburton region: cloudy. this morning, this afternoon, day mainly sunny, winds light. Algoma, Georgian Bay ions, North Bay, Sudbury, ault Ste. Marie: Mainly sunny and a little warmer today. Tues- day partly cloudy, winds light. White River, Timagami, Cochrane: Mainly Sunny today, continuing mild. Tuesday partly cloudy, winds light: LARGE LIBRARY _ Cambridge University Library in England contains about 2,- 500,000 books. 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