4 if | ' HEAVILY ARMED REDS WATCH FOR ESCAPEES THE DIVIDED LAND -- PART 3 Seeing Is Believing By JOSEPH MatSWEEN BERLIN (CP)--The first stark| impression of the Berlin Wall is) that it has to be seen to be be-| ved. | From the Western side, the) etran, 4 Wall cati get. But he's wrong. 3t'$ worse from the East id many other lwhich ] a)mount -- on birthdays, for in-)stacles in the Todeszone. This reverse wonder of the world, built of sickly grey, por- ous, concrete brick, splotche and stained, is topped by rusty|Stance--to wave greetings over : "jth barbed wire The .macabre atmosphere is} deepened by the sight of sol-|t lattraction. You can buy post- r figtites it is as ugly as/to a platform and view Repudiated By TORONTO (GP) -- The On-| Earlier, the party was told in tario New Democratic Partyja report from a study group voted Wednesday to repudiate|that it should adopt the concept any suggestions of a merger ofjof a guaranteed minimum in- the NDP with any other politi-\come, unrelated to work, as a cal party. |platform plank, No formal ac- The party ended its three-day tion was taken on the report. convention by voting for # reso-/ 4 panel that dealt with. the lution which would require any economic growth of Ontario execttive member to resign' and automation said New Dem- from the exétutive before tn-|jorats must be prepared to ad- dertaking any talks with mem-|yocate such idéds as a guatan- bers of other political parties.|tecq income "even though it He could still. be a party mem-| runs counter to the puritan ethic ber. of our sdciéty." The resolution indicated that reports of exploratory talks be-| URGE HIGHER RATES tween high-ranking NDP mem-| The imposition of increased bets and the Liberals after the overtime ratés and thé redic- causéd many members to reuse lation were suggested by the 16 renew their membership. panel as temporaty méasurés. Tories Turn Spotlight On Four Problem Areas OTTAWA (CP) -- Coviserva-jto make an assessment of the tives will turn a spotlight on/four major problem areas and four major problem areas, in-|encourage a "dialogue" on cluding Confederation and na-|themt. tional unity, at the four - day) His view is that political par- national conference on Cana- ties have difficulty, not in solv- dian goals next month. ing problems, but in under- Dalton Camp, president of/standing them. To keep pace intersection was reduced to rub-| each other aS well as on travel-! ble by Second World War bomb-|jers, Cars were thoroughly| ay leeabeked. Conversation was nil.| From this side the wall as-| cards and knicknacks or climb) sumes a new dimension in ugli-| the/ness, since to the other stains desolate ground where Hitler)whitewash has been added to) ied in his bunker. There are|show up movement. The. wall is small platforms|backed up by secondary bar- and frierds/riers, tank traps and other ob- the wall is a tourist) relatives The zone has long been evacu- e wall, ated and buildings destroyed t> Hitler's suicide bunker is injallow a clear field of fire for) he Todeszone, the East Berlinjthe soldiers, assisted by flood- program for the Fredericton|try and the world. About 200 persors--half seé-| their time examining these For Work 2. Government's role in de- or or er and national unity. of the University of Toronto and; The papers, which have been the Progressive Conservative /with the times, political parties Association of Canada, an-|must study and assess the sub- conference, plannéd to set a)-------- w background from which future Pp bli | lected by the party organiza- tions and half by the confer- problem areas: : 1. The individual's role in a eloping the national economy.) TORONTO (CP) -- Publishers i "Canada in the world." |of the three Toronto daily Discussion leaders include a/Sttike began July 9, advertised number of Americans ahd even|today for outside help to be Bruce Whitestone from a Mont-jusing supervisory and non-un- real investment firm--who at-|ion employees to carry out com- nouriced Wednesday night the| stantial changes in their coun- party policy will develop. | . ence organizers -- will spend vertise changing society. 4.-Prospects for Confederation | Newspapers, operating without two men--Dean Ian MacDonald/fired on a permament basis. tended the Liberals' so-called|posing foom work sinee 680 ept. 25 provincial election tion of working hours by legis-| their regular printers since aj} 'Merger Suggestions -- (But it warhéd these should not be thought of as final solations. Establishment of an industry and manpower agency to deal with plant location, worker mo- bility, --. and sae, re- search was also suggested. It would encourage or shifts of industry to variots atéas of the province. The réport also called for teg- islation to require long + term advance notices by business of atiy major changes in total em- iployment and types of employ: ment. Employer bea A training facilities, which the re- \port said now are adequate, snould take place in collabota- tion with labor, managertient and government through an eco- nomic planfing board atid a la- |bor markét board. REJECT PARTY LAB)L Another panel reported that the majority of its menibers felt there was not sufficient lég- islation at the provincial and fedéral levels to allow the im- plémentation of a realistic NDP |program at the municipal lével. For this reason, it rejected by ja 16-t0-14 vote the use of the party label in municipal elec-} tions. | Lowering of the voting age to| 18 in Ontario was stiggested by a panel on modern democracy in Ontario. It also suggested calling of elections: every four years on a fixed date except when a government is defeated in the legislature; placing of party affiliatiofis on the ballot; | jand limiting of campaign expen-| ditures to 15 cents a voter in} urban polls and 20 cents in rural) polls. | Party mémbers called off a plained mass demonstration on picket lines outside the three |Toronto daily newspapers, Da- vid Lewis, a national vice-pres-| | jyer |papers, and ré for striking printers at the jmight add sdme difficulties in jseatch of a settlement and vio- late an injunction limiting the number of pickets in front of the newspapers. ident of the party and a law-|ment is going on. Every Vesti-\tiate contracts and studied the said the demonstration| completely destroyed," she said) fo women, iscourage| ) neth K, Irving of Muncié, Ind., presidefit of Air and Spacé Mantfacturing Infc., said New Brunswick was be- ing considered as the site for the plant. The 18a is a two- seater vertical takeoff afd This 18a rotorcraft will be built in Canada for the Brit- ish Cotimonwealth by at- rangement with the Indiana firm Owning the rights, it was anfiounced Wednesday. Ken- BUILD NEW ROTORCRAFT IN CANADA landing aircraft with a rangé of 3% hours and @ tob sp of 126 mpl. Its threé-biadé rotor ig powered only on také- off and the pusher propellot ig used in flight. : --(CP Wiréphoto) RIGHTS WORKER Claims Women Suffer Prejudice By JEAN SHARP | results in poor schooling for Ne- TORONTO (CP) -- Addie Wy-|gtoes which in turfi helps to ait is a Négro and a woman|keép them at the low end of who works for equal rights for|thé employmént scale. both groups as a Chicago union) RMPLAYED BY UNION official and civil rights worker.) Mrs, Wyatt is program co-or-| Both, she says, suffer discrim-|qinator for the United Packing-| ination, prejudice and the ¢f-|house Workers, and a member fects of outmoded custom. of state and national ecommis+ "Hot or cold, extremists OF|sions on the status of women, | moderates, the civil right Move-/ 4; such she has helped nego- gage of segregation must be) problems of job opportunities Wednesday. ' She said opportunities for | She was addressing a lunchs| women have increased in many |éon sponsored by the women's |fields, but not in industry. committee of the New Demo-\women, especially Negro | cratic panty at their provincial! women, perform low paid jobs | convention. 7 which 'are easily automated. | She said the Negro waited pa-| "The focus of public attention tiently for change, with little must be brought on the unrea- sonableness of discrimination based on sex," she said. At a préss coriferencée, Mfs. Wyatt said women if Canada and all ovér the world should recognize the civil rights crisis as part of a tétal problem the whole world is facing. "She should recognize herself the rights of every person and be dn advocate of those rights. "No Negro has avoided béirig hurt by the évil of segregation. I don't know of any group which has received so little from a {country and been so loyal to it." PRESCRIPTIONS Rebels In Congo diers lurking in East Berlin)"'zone of death' where guards/lights and loudspeakers. windows, watching with field)have orders to liquidate anyone) "At first the guards thinkers conference at Kingeten/ Members of Focal $1 of the 1h- : ' |hope, until he took matters into in 1960. ternational Typogtaphical Un- his own hands to force a crisis. would glasses, machine-guns ready to| approaching the wall from their| shoot to miss, but they don't kill anyone who tries to scale/side. There are cosy signs like/get away with that any more," the wall. t "This monstrosity is probably|sraum (living space) will cost the best propaganda we couldjonly your head." have," said a West Berlin offi-| cial, but without satisfaction. || vistas Here and there are triangular|contrast wooden shrine-like memorials,|Berlin, where stores burst with | puildings his: 'The Bonn wish for Leben-|we were told. Industrial production has) : jgreatly improved in. East Ger-| The pti rng oo dreary | many ifi recent years and the| ey 'th bee $4 1 {|S0-called "Khrushchev archi-| wi ooming WeSlitecture" of the new apartment) on the main residén-| Mr. Camp told a press con-|ion (CLC) went on_ Strike, ference that the purpose is not/placed ads in The Globe and! to discuss Conservative party|Mail seeking experienced com- policy for the next election but/posing room employees. pe ere The Globe and Mail, a morn- ing paper, and The Star and The Telegram, evening papers, sought applications from _lino- Youth Is Jailed Abduction Charge |type operators, compositor ma- Warn US. Citizens BUKAVU, The Congo (AP)--=| {Congolese rebels anfotinced) | Wednesday they could not guar-| antee the safety of Belgian and) U.S. citizens following the deci-| sion by Belgium and the United) States to increase their military) aid to The Congo. Now a néw Negto has emerged who speaks for himself and re- pudiates the belief that he is satisfied with his lot. "Housing is the greatest prob-) lem. The otitlook for widespread) progress in education is dimmed by the pattern of housing seg-| tegation."' } COSENS & MARTIN Insurance 67 King St. E., Oshawa 728-7515 All Lines of Insurance Res: 725-2802 ot 725-7413 DELIVERY MITCHELL'S DRUGS 9 Simeoe North 723-3431 owns sence bearing wreaths, and flowers.|merchandise and new housing) ;; | These mark the 'places where\is the pride of the Federal Ree ee ie 8 eon | wotild-be escapees were slain) public. lsmelly "Stalin architecture" sifcé the wall went up in Au-|/ Visiting Commonwealth re-| dwellings erected after the war t, 1961. |porters saw nothing senSatioral) ; joors and windows of East but merely what has become| QUEUE FOR FRUIT i a female person under the Berlin buildings flush with the] routine in this upside-down strip) Behind these impressive build-|of 16 years. bordér are blocked in and atiwhere the Communist worldlings, however, many back} The court was told one point a high a wall| and the-West nudge each other.|streets are lined with bombed-|Thomson was on parole f séfves as a section of the bar-| jout rier. Corpses are admitted from|ZONE CLEARED _\htiman habitation wouldn't beltering and theft. West Berlin to the Communist), We crossed to East Berlin at! suspected but for curtains at} Thorison pleade of Brantf sentenced Thomson, 20, {Wednesday was guilty days. quiet Saturday morning, a Leb-| ; anesé student acting as guide| DRAWS TOURISTS since West Berliners may not Store displays wére generally Women stood depressing. ; a the hot June sun,|cab to his home here. He BRANTFORD (CP) -- Gary|chinists, }one year in jail for abduc relies of the war wherela Setiterice for breaking and en-jishers wanted gifl from her home last Satir-| sidé at a checkpoint on certain|famed Checkpoint Charlie on 4| the windows. rey a 15-year-old Paris, Ont.,| Kelp. | in\day and bringing her by taxi-/Star and five at The Telegram Theré Are Special Benefits For All BUSINESS EXEC AND SALESMEN Fer personel wie br tor @® ACADIAN Company use there ofe , definite advantages when e PONTIAC vou lease a new... e BUICK No insurance costs . . . No maintenance costs everything on one or two year leese items .. for full details, MILLS AUTO LEASE PHONE 723-4634 tTp. | Whether the segregation ex- The rebel announcement Was!ists by law, ag in the south, or made by "General" Nicolas Ol-|py custom, as in the nofth, it enga on Stanleyville radio. He - spoke of Belgians and Ameri-| cans living in areas controlled by his army. NEED A NEW... OIL FURNACE? Call monitors, paste ord,|makeup artists and floor men.| _to|Floor men put type together in ting|page forms. age) The publishers sent letters to the printers last week asking that/them to return to work individ- romjually. The letters said the pub- to inform the printers that jobs were avail- {6 able before seeking. outside women one ee PAUL RISTOW LTD. REALTOR Other Models On Request Phone er come @ 728-9474 187 King St. Eost So far 12 employees at The ad-jare reported to have returned Day or night 723-3443 A group of Commonwealth enter. | queues \to work. reporters, driving along the wall, stopped at Potsdamer |three times, a device by which) Platz where Etrope's busiest'the border soldiers check on waiting for such goodies as|mitted molestnig the girl. orafiges atid bananas. One large show-window displayed nothing but--beer, one brand. Passports . were scrutinized] WEATHER FORECAST When we tipped a_ state- restaurant waiter with cigar- ettes--the hay-tasting East Ger- Mainly Sunny Warmer Forecast issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5:30.a.m. Synopsis: Mostly cloudy skies and very cool temperatures are found throughout the forecast region, Little change is fore- séen for today. However, Fri- day should see more sunshine and slightly warmer temipera- tures. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni- agata, Lake Huron, Algoma re- gions, Lake Ontario, Windsor, L6ndon, Toronto, Hamilton: Méstly cloudy, very cool and a few brief showers today. Fri- day mainly sunny and not quite sd cool, Winds northwestely 10 to'20 today, becoming light to- night. eorgian Bay, Haliburton, Ti- magami regions, North Bay, pay cine At Ae eee A Mafia Man WINDSOR, Ont; (CP) -- A closed immigration hearing will be held today for Guiseppe (Cékeye-Joe) Catalanotte, ar- rested by RCMP Tuesday An immigration department statement said Catalanotte is, regarded by Detroit police as a top man in the Mafia, Catalan- otte was deported from the United States in 1957 after num- eréus convictions for offences ranging from nafcotics to extor- ti, fter deportation from the U.§., Catalanotte lived in Cuba! ual left when the Fidel Castto regime ee rag ta later reported in Windsor, b vanished after RCMP and FBI} agents learned of his where- abouts. f In 1958 he was named by a US, narcotics agent as a Mafia mémber in the Detroit-Windsor aréa, At that time his wife was living in Windsor, many brands are expensive--he followed us to the door with thanks. We had paid our bill with West German marks, an operation requiring form-filling by a flustered manageress, Street-strollers were mostly older folk and children. The Sudbury, Killaloe: Mainly young men and badge ae have, af cloudy and very cool with scat-| ine, Saying S608, "vole with tered showers today. Friday) about 55 of them, as it turned Sunny with cloudy intervals and) out yoted for death at the wall not quite so cool. Winds north- |" ¥ westerly 10 to 20. Friday U.S. SPORTSMAN DIES White River region: Variable " ; cloudiness and very cool WAS. aore' fe Gauthier poe of Mostly sunny and not quite so|q)..° $ cool Friday. Winds northwest 10 One's most prominent sports " ei meeoming Hert fontstt, |Tuesday in a Blind River, Ont., Western James Bay, Coch-|hospital. He was 74. He suf- rane regions: Cloudy and very |tered a heart attack some time figures for half a century, died cool with periods of light rain or drizzle today. Variable cloud- inéss and not quite so cool Fri- day.. Winds northwest 10 to 20. TORONTO (CP) Marine forecasts issued by the Toronto weather office at 8:30 a.m. to- day, valid until 10 a.m. Friday: | Lake Superior: Winds west to jnorthwest 15 to 20 knots, be- ago, His condition was compli- cated by asthma. For 34 years Gauthier served as athletic di- rector and track coach, and for 26 years as head football coach at Ohio Wesleyan University. PERRY ) 266 KING ST. West. Pay No More Than 4% When -- 5 Your Property Real Estate He was|Killaloe .. but) Muskoka «+.sssse, |coming light late tonight, most- ly fair. Lake Huron, Georgian Bay, Lake Erie, Lake Ontario: Winds ioc MeN. i, northwest 15 to 25 knots, dimin- ishing to 10 to 20 knots tonight, mostly cloudy with a few light showers today, becoming fair tonight. John Ovens, 0.0. OPTOMETRIST 8 BOND ST. E., OSHAWA PH. 723-4811 Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Friday Windsor st bdeeeees St. Thomas.....ss. London Kitchener .... Mount Forest. 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