Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Apr 1965, p. 3

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{ France Will Keep SEATO Seat Cooled PARIS (AP)--France served notice Friday that it intends to adopt an empty-chair policy in the Southeast Asia Treaty Or- ganization (SEATO), a Pacific counterpart of NATO. Authorized government sources announced no French warships will take part in naval manoeuvres of the eight-coun- try alliance opening in the South China Sea May 1. The French decision to stand aside from the manoeuvres, dubbed Seahorse, followed by only three days an announce- ment that France will send an observer rather than a minis- terial representative to a meet- ing of the SEATO foreign min- isters in London May 3. The French moves appear clearly to underline President de Gaulle's objection to U.S. policy in Viet Nam. But highly -.placed French government sources said that, as of now, France has no in- tention of formally withdrawing! from SEATO. | Instead, they said, France in- tends to pursue the empty-chair, policy--not taking part physic- ally in alliance activities, but still technically remaining a member. NFB Earns Dr, Martin Luther King Jr., is completely hemmed KING MARCH ator hatte vi * ES ON 'THE COMMON" Ralph Abernathy (right) lead march to historic Bos- ton Common. King came to stration to protest segrega- tion in schools, jobs and housing. (AP Wirephoto) convictions for publishing evi-| \struction of five new student; The problem is compoundedjagainst the Sun Publishing Co. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, April 24,1965 3 Magistrate Fines Papers, Then Suggests An Appeal VANCOUVER (CP) -- ers wt in the belief they were} However, he said, it was not Sun and Province newspapers|within the law. up to a magistrate or the press Friday were fined a nominal! "There would be a very sub-|to decide on the admissability $25 each and urged by Magis-|stantial penalty if 1 thoughtjat a higher-court trial of evi- trate Gordort Scott to appeallotherwise," the magistrate said.|dence given at a preliminary The charges were laid follow-|hearing. during a_ preliminaryjing stories Dec. 16 last year on| 'The articles were published in which a_ witness|the previous day's testimony atin the belief that the admission did not fall within Section 455 , dence hearing § } s r quoted the defendant as admit-|a preliminary. hearing in a ting his guilt. jmurder case. lof the Criminal Code,' The magistrate called the, The accused later was founditrate Scott said. trial a test case and said he\not guilty. Ce . | The section was amended by hoped it would be appealed to| Magistrate Scott said the/parjiament in 1959 to ban any establish some authoritativecase had given him much CoM-|reference in published reports law on~the, subject. cern, He said he had been im-lfg admissions or confessions He saié-Re made the fines Pressed at first with defenceltengered in evidence. at a pre- inal because he belleves the een e, nae. Mtatements. Wiiiminary 'hearing: pill either nominal because he 8 question could be published be-|tne accused is discharged or the newspaper reports in question|cause they would be admissable| <uhcequent trial ended. Anyone were published in good faithiat a higher-court trial. iguilty of such an offence is pun- : Be ee ey ishable by summary conviction. Mazgis- 'now. provides accommodation! Counsel for the newspapers jdean of students, said the situ-\pecause ijt had not been made! Board Buys \for 804 students. had argued that the articles | * j dealt with the statement of a | Dr. Frederick J. Speckeen,| ines It was not a confession| s Residences lation remains critical since 1,-|to any official and was merely} ' /655 students have to be accom-|hearsay. WATERLOO, Ont. (CP)--Con-/modated this fall. The fines were assessed residences at Waterloo Lutheranjby the announcement of neigh-|and Southam Press Ltd., pub- University was approved Fri-|boring University of Waterloo|jishers of The Province. day by the board of governors.|that they will accept 1,000 more! a ; : : The units will house 336 stu-students this fall but cannot oad hares -- we dents and cost more than $1,-;provide on-campus accommoda-/newspapers were laid by the {000,000. The 25 - acre campus'tion for them all. Crown prosecutor, CERTAIN TO MAKE YOU HAPPY | Beautiful Braemor Is perfect for family living . . . packed with features that will delight the most discriminating or economy minded home-seekers, designed to offer you the maximum for the minimum .,. la (Stephenson Rd. N. et Annapolis) in as he and his aide Rey. Boston to lead the demon- 4 Ribbons NEW YORK (CP) -- | films produced by the National) Film Board of Canada received) blue ribbon awards Friday night at the seventh annual American Film Festival. A total of 365 non-theatrical films from a number of coun- tries were screened during the | with the all - 'Bogalusa Does About-Face Electric heating costs far less than you may think BOGALUSA, La. (AP)--City, officials have agreed to meet Negro Bogalusa | four-day festival, sponsored bY iCivie and Voters League, alter- the Educational Film Library Association, The Enduring Wilderness a|represent the Negro community | | developments: 28-minute color film produced by the NFB for the northern af-| fairs department, captured the top prize in the conservation category. ' Cornet at Night, a 14-minute black and white film, won the top prize in the stories-for- children category, while The Hutterites received top prize as the best doctrinal and denom- inational film in the religious category. The Hutterites is black and white and runs 28 minutes. The fourth blue ribbon was for a 35-millimetre film strip in ing an earlier stand that the civil rights organization doesn't} here, "I'm. perfectly satisfied by the action taken by the mayor and his council,' said league President A. Z. Young. Announcement of the city's about-face came at a press con- ference early today by the three volunteer mediators who came here to try a fresh ap- proach to settling racial differ- ences that have sharply di- vided Bogalusa, a paper mill town of 22,000. Even as the mediation team| --a labor leader and two poli-} ticians--met with city officials) - Agrees To Negro Meeting the Voters League and will sit and discuss problems, but we! also point out there are other Negr-o organizations in the city," parish public schools that Hig have been integrated through! the third grade under a grade- a-year plan. --Police at Montgomery, Ala. had to fire pistols into the air! to disperse a rock- and bottle-| ' throwing crowd of students) taking part in a demonstra- tion on the campus of a Ne- gro college. A force of 12 Ne- gro officers from the Mobile| police department was called| in to aid in dealing with any| "We're saying. we recognize} said Cutrer. Elsewhere, there were these --At Boston, Rev. Martin Luther King drew an esti- mated 18,000 to hear him speak after a three-mile pro- test march through the pre- dominately Negro section of| Roxbury. He said: "We| future demonstrations | § march in Boston to tell Bos-| ---The general assembly of ton, and the rest 'of the na-| the Presbyterian Church in tion, that we will no longer} the United States, meeting at tolerate segregation which is| Montreat, N.C., rejected a re-| a new form of slavery." quest for a pastoral letter to} --A federal judge at New Or-| all its churches which would} leans ordered a speedup in) have forbade, in effect, racial! the desegregation of Orleans' discrimination. $130.70 is all Mr. and Mra. J. Reist, of Ayton, near Walkerton, Ontario paid last year to heat their three-bedroom home, includ- ing the basement. 'If we were building another home," says Mr. Reist, 'It would be electrically $161.28,, all Mr. and Mrs. MacLellan of Hanmer, near Sudbury, Ontario paid last year to heat their six-room house. "Our cost is below our neighbours' who have an identical- size house with another kind of heating," says $11 7.56 isall Mr.andMrs.S.R. Warnica paid last year to heat their 1200 sq. ft. home in Grimsby, Ontario. 'It's even less than the esti- mate Hydro gave us," says Mrs. Warnica. "We like it because it's quiet, gentle heat. You never color. Its title is electronic com-|2N4 civil rights groups, the Ku puter Occupations and it was Klux Klan secretly distributed produced for the labor depart-/%@ndbills throughout Bogalusa. | ment. 85 We have never appreciated outsiders telling us how to run our city. Outsiders have often causted trouble in our city," Bird Beams a the handbills. heated because of the low operating cost and hear it." the comfort." Mrs. MacLellan. "We'll never go back to any other system." *3,000,000 Lawyers for the city and the civil rights group will meet! with the mediators sometime Both Ways WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Early Bird communications sat- ellite and its associated ground stations demonstrated Friday their ability to handle transat- lantic television traffic. From its stationary position 22,300 miles above the Atlantic, between Brazil and Africa, the spacecraft relayed live and filmed television transmissions simultaneously, both ways, be- tween stations in the United States and Europe for a series of experiments lasting about si. hours. "The picutres were of good quality and demonstrated capa-| bility of two-way space televi-| sion without loss of clarity or} performance," the Communica-| tions Satellite Corporation re- ported. | The tests were designed to align spacecraft and ground equipment in preparation for an} hour-long, inaugural transatlan- tic TV program. May 2. Canada is building a ground) station to work with Early Bird} at Mill Village, N.S., 80 miles) southwest of Halifax. It is ex- next week to set the ground' rules for the racial negotia- tions. Later, Mayor Jesse Cutrer,| reached at his home, said the| community affairs committee, | consisting of 24 business and) civic leaders, had unanimously approved and endorsed the po- sition taken by himself and the council. Two Hurt Plane Crash ORLANDO, Fla. (CP)--Two Canadian youths, injured when a light plane they were flying} crashed on a central Florida ranch Wednesday, remained in serious condition in hospital Friday night. Donald W. McFadden, 19, and Wayne Woodman, 21, both of Wallaceburg, Ont.,.were on a six-week vacation when the ac- cident' occurred. The boy's parents said after purchase brings you greatest appliance savings ever! CHERNEY'S Furniture World has joined with McClary-Easy dealers from coast to coast to make a collective purchase that gives us $3,000,000 buying power and you the greatest savings ever on McClary-Easy appliances. HERE'S THE RANGE BUY OF THE YEAR ¢ 2 Infinite and 2 Seven-heat switches « Flood-lite cooking top « Automatic timer and minute minder e Radiant heat barbecue e Miracle oven with optional rotisserie « Removy- able oven door with panorama window e Big remoyable stor- age drawer © Timed appliance outlet ¢ Stay-up elements, © Deluxe features ¢ Deluxe quality $214.27, all Mr. and Mrs. R. Moyer paid last year to heat their 2348 aq. ft. home in Woodstock, Ontario. "We're very happy with the cost," says Mrs. Moyer. "We would definite- ly put electric heating in if we built again," adds Mr. Moyer. Electrically heated homes, insulated to Hydro standards, cost no more to heat than homes with other systems. Flameless electric heating is depend- $125.23 is all Mr. and Mra. G. Angus of Scarborough, Ontario paid last year to heat their six-room house. 'I'd never go back to any other system now," says Mrs. Angus. 'We are very comfortable and it's so economical it's just fantastic!" people are turning to electric heating for the comfort, cleanliness and econ- omy they want in a heating system. Electric heating is one of the many features of the famous Medallion all- $12 7,69 is all Mr. and Mrs. M. Pal paid last year to heat their home in Maitland, near Brockville, Ontario. "Hydro rates have dropped twice since we installed electric heat- ing," says Mr. Pal. "The complete lack of main- tenance saves us money, too," adds Mrs, Pal. ELECTRIC HEATING FOR YOUR PRESENT HOME If you are planning home extensions or if parts of your home are not now properly heated, you can install supplementary electric heating for less than it costs to extend your present heating system. pected to be put into service on|learning of the crash that they| an experimental basis this fall,| were unaware either of the boys could fly a plane or had a pilot's licence. The United able, safe, and completely clean, since electric homes. For full information, consult a qualified electric heating there is no combustion to produce dust, |States Federal Aviation Agency e es }was investigating. Into Main -- City Street -- EMERSON, Man. (CP)--Resi- dents of this border community went to sleep Friday to the hum of pumps, battling the flooding Red River as it spilled its over- flow into the business sector. To them, the sound is not a) new one. The Red has ram- paged before. And the 930 resi- dents are prepared Meanwhile, there was word Friday to indicate that in the; Red River valley as a whole| the flood threat had eased some-| what as the flood crest ap-| proached Manitoba through; North Dakota. Flood control officials again) revised downward the crest Police said the plane was reg- istered to Bob Geddes of Grand Bahama, Bahama Islands. Automation Not Present Threat EDMONTON (CP) -- Auto- mation poses no immediate) threat to members of the In-| ternational Brotherhood of Rail- way 'Trainmen, (CLC) Union! President Charles Tuna of Cleveland said Friday Mr. Luna told a press confer ence during a visit to Edmon- ton that there are some auto- matic switching yards in use in} North America, but more than} 95 per cent of yards on the con-} tinent still are manned. He said he has not seen ma-| AS ADVERTISED COAST-TO- COAST dirt, film or soot. No wonder so many contractor, or your Hydro, ELECTRIC HEATING () your hydro IS THE SUPERIOR HEATING SYSTEM DOWNSVIEW Adelaide Street Fast HARMONY YILLAGE Walnut Court SEE MEDALLION ALL-ELECTRIC HOMES ON DISPLAY IN THESE COMMUNITIES ROSSLYN HEIGHTS Norwich Street North of Rossland Rd. W. BELLE VISTA Melrose Street BEAU VALLEY Oshawa Blvd. N. 385 KING STREET EAST : ENJOY THE COMFORTS OF ELECTRIC HOME HEAT--PHONE TODAY TOWNSEND ELECTRIC LIMITED 723-2343 hines that will f th a chines will perform the op-| FOR ELECTRIC HEAT ESTIMATES -- CALL "JIM" McTEAGUE ELECTRIC LTD. 415 Cochrane, Whitby ELECTRIC HEATING CONTRACTORS 668-4278 forecasts for the province and/ erations involved in most yards.| said peak levels would not be} The union represents 190,000 as high as previously antici-)/brakemen, yardmen and con- pated jductors in the U.S. and Can- Flood contro! headquarters atlada Winnipeg attributed this to a lack of heavy percipitation re- " x si cently, reduced flows in tribu- CHIEF CONVICTED taries of the Red, and a heavy| TORONTO (CP) -- Raymond! carry-off of water by the Red|Walsh, former police chief of at a low flood level. Mount orest, Ont., was con- At Emerson the Red stoodivicted Thursday of impaired late Friday at 785 feet above driving and fined $150 or 15 sea level--one foot below the an- days Walsh's car mounted a ticipated crest, expected late to-|safety island here Feb. 8, injur- night er Sunday. jing four persons. CROSS-CANADA SALE See it In Our Window For Complete Home Electric Heat Service Call:- WESTERN ELECTRIC FURNITURE WORLD 80 KING ST. EAST Trull's Rd. South ~_

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