rihearEgERenRRERNUNNNR ' EX-OFFICER ALSO KKK MAN Nazi Still Active; Leads Armed Mob STOCKHOLM (AP)--A Swed- ish daily claims a German Nazi ex-officer, Gen. Raymond Kritzinger Rudman, is headin g a "heavily armed" South Afri- can Nazi movement, equipped with two old German submai ines. The Expressen, continuing iis series of unveiling a Swedish Nazi movement with interna- tional ties, also published ta facsimile of a letter from Rud man to a contact man in Caira. It came from the movements headquarters in Pietermartiz- burg, South Africa, the news- paper said. Rudman is also a grand dragon of the Ku Klux K'an}, the daily said. Expressen said the two Ger-| man U-boats were located in a) supposedly secret bunker which) the Germans had dynamited)i99 more persons mentioned in|University into the Algerian coastline dure) papers seized at the foundation|ROTC review because he fears The 'Qu ing the war The ex-general, it went on also had access to "large quan ties of weapons which are be+, ainst Premier Tage Erlander)stration against ing kept near Benghazi in Libya." | NEVER DETECTED After the war, the paper! claimed, the commanders of the submarines at the secret Algerian base -- apparently never detected by the Allies-- left the U-boats behind and went underground, one of them ber of German technicians in the ex-general's organization in South Africa. The paper claimed its infor- mation on the organization was obtained in connection with its investigation of the Car} Ern- frid Carlbergs Foundation but did not indicate whether there was any direct connection be- tween the two. Expressen says the founda- tion is headed by Bjoern Lun- dahl, one of seven men de- tained following the paper's al- legations. It said the group planned the overthrow of the Swedish government and tlie mass murder of Swedish Jews. A court here meanwhile was asked today to commit the 30- year-old Lundahl for trial. There} was no immediate ruling. | Police have said that about) office are being questioned -- among other things--about a murder threat early last year interior ministry officials continued. searching Province for arms that may have been hidden| there after the Second World War. They have mentioned find ing a document, supposedly from the foundation and! destined for Egypt, asking for "war gases with complete in- and Police Vaermland turning up along with a num- PM Has Aske structions." d Followers | } For Views On Election By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min-| ister Pearson is reliably re-| ported to have asked his 128 eying hope that the Opposition... peg fafa oe Bic a oie supporters in the Commons t0| might provide him with a Com- oi ~ at lad ge of attracted ay lamer alee jonjmons defeat as the road to ai Shout 900 students and faculty |fri whether a federal electionjelection in a recent speech in igi acuity from members took part in a 12-hour|Massachusetts should be held this year. The fact that there is less en- thusiasm for a 1965 election among the Liberal backbench} members than among Mr. Pear-idefeat would mean an election, professor Eric Wolf of Michi- son's cabiriet colleagues " may) explain a tapering off of talk of the government calling an/ early election, | The significance of Mr. Pear-| son's step about 10 days ago is) in the fact that it indicates the prime minister has come a long way from his views on an elec- tion of a year ago. At that time, Mr. Pearson is reported to have considered it out of the question to call an election even when urged by many of his supporters to do so over the flag issue. | His request for the members'! views now appears to indicate that Mr. Pearson is prepared to contemplate calling an election without his government being defeated in the Commons by numerically - stronger opposi- tion parties. WILL BE FACTOR Whether he decides to call one will depend on a lot more than the views of his supporters. But they will be a factor and, if the degree of opposition to such a step has been accur- ately gauged, will cause him to miove slowly. Mr, Pearson revealed a ling- Montreal. Noting that his minority gov- ernment faces a series of votes! in the Commons, on which a Mr. Pearson told his Montreal) Liberal audience that one day) the opposition parties may mis- The American Intellectual! Demands Halt To Warfare informed citizens to participate in public affairs. "This is a republic, not an autocracy, and not a rubber- stamp democracy." ' The teach-in sessions consist of faculty members giving their Segments of the U.S. aca- demic community have shown considerable concern over the war in Viet Nam, McGeorge Bundy, President Johnson's special assistant for national security affairs, is representing the adminis- |reasons why they think the tration viewpoint, in the |United States should pull out of latest in a series of "teach- |Viet Nam. ins," debates, protests and demonstrations, as reported in this AP survey. RUSK HITS BACK A sign that the teach-ins are being taken seriously be the By STEPHEN M. AUG Jehnson administration was the Associated Press Staff Writer jrecent criticism by State Secre- A former law professor from|tary Dean Rusk of the "*gulli- Viet Nam sits on a prayer rug|bility of educated men" on the before a statue of Buddha in a Viet Nam question. Brooklyn: Unitarian church and Tie state department has be- enters the ninth week of a fast,\gun dispatching officials to protesting the Viet Nam war. some colleges to give the ad- Two dozen students picket on|ministration viewpoint. the hot, dusty plains near Pres-| One official, Barney. Taylor, ident Johnson's Texas ranch\deputy chief of the U.S. mission urging U.S. withdrawal from to Haiti, told 1,000 students at Viet Nam. "Negotiate, don't es- Queens College that "the presi- GREATEST COMEDIAN OFF ALL SIRES A BEATNIK PROBLEM -- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, Mey 17,1965 13 By THOMAS A. REEDY LONDON (AP)--His mother says he's & beatnik. His father hasn't spoken to him in three years. But he says he is free and contented, That's Michael Chaplin, 19- year-old son of Charlie Chaplin and Oona O'Neill, and grand- son of playwright Eugene O'Neill. He ran away from his father's Swiss home three years ago rather than bow to a demand that he go to college. He chose London where his father was three years," said Michael, 'I have seen my mother and talked to her from time to time." The hubbub about Chaplin junior naturally attracred the entertainment world, if only be- cause of the name. Mother Oona's advice to get a job fell on attentive ears. A record company (Decca) hired Chaplin to cut a new record for a tour of French music/much of his native country and halls, starting in Paris in Sep-|doesn't appear to hanker after tember, jit, The Chaplins live in Switzer- "How will this affect your/land, lack of ambition? | He's against people telling | q hope the song goes over./him how to live, how to dress, | don't know about the book,"/how to look, and how to think. jhe said, "I like to sing, all sorts|Even about politics, says Mi- of pop music, I like music gen-\chael: erally, and Beethoven as well,, «1 find the political figures especially his Seventh (SyM-|interesting in Rodadien but phony) and the Pastorallas for what they say, I have Young Chaplin: Charlie Wont Talk To Him Where does one go from here? "IT get along," says Michael. made for him called I Am) (Sixth)." What I Am. A publisher as-| we has been i j 4 U 4 playing guitar signed a ghost writer to helpjand singing for his own amuse- him write a book about himself; !ment for years. His best friend, no interest." Money? He doesn't seem to have any or want any. born and developed the talent and fortune. Why London? "Oh, it's slow and grim and to be a spectator,' young Chap- lin explained in an interview. He's married to actress Pa- calate," their signs say. dent is astonished that he and The president of Columbia|Secretary of State Rusk aren't cancels a_ naval/getting through." een's College group in-|gav ovation to Seymour mass arrests' cin|Melpfan, Columbia University student demompoNtical science professor, who it, Demonstra- dpscribed the Viet Cong as ordi- fronnary people looking for a decent "extreme violence, serious an jury and breaking up a tors urged withdrawal Viet Nam life. A centennial celebration at A Cornell University is disrupted)man at when 75 students marchiwhen he said he saw tyranny through a stunned audience|'in the faces of Tibetan refu- chanting: "'End the war in Viet gees who climbed the cruel and Nam, Bring the troops home."| merciless trails through the And, in a back row at an au-|Himalayas to India to escape ditorium in New York City's|from the Communist Chinese." Queens College, speakers drone WAS HECKLED on through the night protesting The spokesman, Turner A U.S. policy in Viet Nam--a/Shelton, was heckled when he teach-in reiesicd to criticism of the U.S. OPPOSE POLICY bombings over North Viet Nam. These are some of the pro-|Shelton asked: '"'What about the tests that have arisen across the people in our embassy when a United States -- largely from|bomb blows them, fo bits?" the academic community--| "Bring them home," came a against the Johnson administra-|shout from the audience, But tion's policy in Viet Nam. there was a burst of applause By far the most popular|when Shelton asked: "Who is form of protest is also the new-|going to protect you, then, while est--the teach-in. you sit at home?" Teach-ins were Another Boston area teach-in about. 2,000 students included faculty speakers Harvard, Brandeis and Institute of then Technology. All criticized U.S policy, but only a few called for complete withdrawal ins is! At Cornell University, W |Averell Harriman, U.S. ambas- gan's anthropology department, |sador at large, was booed, heck- who says: led and called "liar" this week "There are those of us in thejas he discussed American poli- state department spokes- Harvard was booed reported to when | It all-night seminar, Since they have spread to more than 30 other colleges. Defending the teach. - tricia Johns and they have a |baby. He wears tennis shoes, jslacks and old shirts. His hair \falls down around his shoulders. TALKS LIKE POET | Lean and lanky, with a mous- jtache and stubble of chin beard, he has the hands of a pianist. \His gestures are quick but jgraceful, He smokes a cigarette a minute, His dark, brooding eyes are those of an O'Neill His soft voice is that of a boy who could have been a poet or a musician or anything gentle Why has he chosen this way to live? Young Chaplin opened up 2 bit about it when he got into jthe news' recently, It started jwhen he was arrested with Pe- iter Adler, son of harmonica |king Larry Adler, for tossing coins into a fountain on a gay Hyde Park evening, Then some- ibody found he was drawing £10 ($30) a week National Assis- tance to support his wife and child. His mother came to town with father Charlie and five of their eight children. Oona, 40, chose the occasion to blast her son publicly, She said in a state- ment: " "The young man is a prob- jlem and I am sorry he was given National Assistance. He has stubbornly refused an edu- eation for three years and therefore he should get a job and go to work. If I do not wish to indulge him as a beatnik that is my privilege." | calculate and defeat the govern- __, was att: aera win ; 'i jacademic community who feellcies and goals in Viet Nam and HAS NO "AMBITION ment by accident. | 'Then he added, "or we may calculate," implying that the government might court a aa mons defeat and thus escape whatever stigma is attached to cajilng voluntarily the third election in four years. | However, the performance of the opposition parties indicates thew will take great care not to} provide the government with) this easy road to the polls, In asking for his members'| opinions on a 1965 election, Mr.| Pearson may also have had an-| other purpose, On the assump- tion that most of the opposition mennbers don't want an election) and knowing that word of his} request to Liberal MPs would filter out, Mr. Pearson may have been counting on election" worries to mak $ : ; 5 t ake the opposition return after a five-year absence| London. The younger boys, Dun-|5,000, so much convention busi-| more: amenable to passing the government's legislative propos- als, | Death Writes Of First Wom NEW YORK (AP)--Frances Perkins, first woman cabinet! member in the U.S. government whose three-cornered hat be- came a symbol that enraged New Deal opponents, died Fri-| day at the age of 83. The colorful, controversial labor secretary under Presi- Career's End an In Cabinet as president at the height of the great. depression, During her tenure there were sitdown strikes and skirmishes between the American Federa- tion of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organizations. She was the target of much dent Franklin D. Roosevelt from criticism when social security 1933 to 1945 died in Midtown|and the National Labor Rela- Hospital, She was admitted two tions Act were introduced and weeks ago for a routine exam- achieved over militant opposi- ination. While in hospital she|tion. suffered a stroke. Miss Perkins, a dark - eyed, Miss Perkins, who was born dark-haired spry woman, didn't in Boston, spent the last years particularly relish references to of her life as an elder states-jher sex. woman, Time had mellowed op-| 'Being a woman," she said position to her term of office/during her first years in the during the greatest period Ofjcabinet, 'has only bothered me labor turmoil and economic, up-'in climbing trees." heaval in U.S. history Labor Secretary W. Willard ® Wirtz said in Washington "Every man and woman in| America who works at a living wage, under safe conditions, for! reasonable hours, or who is pro-| out of life? tected by unemployment insur ance or social security is her debtor." LABOR TRIBUTE | George Meany, AFL-CIO pres ident, said; "The good she did for millions of her fellow citi- ' Life on "just enough" i and dull existence. Yet it zens stands as an. enduring monument to her memory and sos there could be no greater me from interest and divide morial."' In 1911, Miss Perkins success- fully pushed for the introduc- temporary soluti tion of legal standards of safety porary solution but for factories in New York State income and more money worries. P. Andrey after 145 working girls were The answer is an annuity. It scientifically com- Representative killed in the Triangle Shirt. bines interest and capital to provide a guaranteed Bus. 728-7391 waist fire on March 25 of that income for life. It banishes stock i Res, 725-2602 year. A year later she was f : shes stock market worries. credited with gaining the 54- hour work week for women and children in New York The factory fire catapulted Miss Perkins into the arena of will provide depends on example, and the kind organized labor. She got her first government job in 1919, when the late governor Al Smith of New York appointed her to head the state industrial commission This ultimately her to Roosevelt's cabinet. She was one of Roosevelt's original cabi- net members when he took ever! ° led ed Over 65 and want more | Investigate an Annuity. to-day who live on a limited pension, Extra money ean help, But in many cases it's still not enough to really enjoy life. Selling investments for cash is a Gives peace of mind, How much income an annuity popular type would give a man age 70 who deposits $10,000, an income of $1,248 @ year as long as he lives. For information on an annuity to fit your needs just call the Manufacturers Life representative. MANUFACTURERS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY very deeply the responsibility of|the Dominican Republic Eve Arden: Happy Woma Who Left It All For Family By BOB THOMAS \'We had a tutor for the chil- HOLLYWOOD (AP)--"Money/dren and every day or so we isn't everything," says Eve Ar-|would take expeditions to the den with such conviction that Vatican and other points of in- you find yourself wanting to be-|terest, It was a marvellous edu- lieve her, cation for the kids, and for The lanky, wry-voiced come-|Brooks and me, too." dienne was explaining how she| After six months at the villa, happened to turn her back on\the family set up residence in a thriving career to live with|London for a year. The older her family in Europe for two! daughter, Liza, went to school in years Switzerland, while Now Eve is making her film|tended a dramatic academy in (last one: Dark at the Top of|can and Douglas, were enrolled the Stairs) to play a women's/at a schodl. within walking dis- air force lieutenant in Sergeant'tance from home. Deadhead," The film has afforded her aicontinent before coming home sentimental reunion with Gale| Now all of them are willing to Gordon, her principal in Ourjreturn to Furope at any time Miss Brooks. It seems incred-|----- " ca ible that it has been eight years| since the television series ended Viet Nam War --maybe the continual reruns) make it seem more recent | ; Eve looks her same hand-| Is Discussed some self, and she admitted) SMITHS FALLS, Ont. (CP)-- that she never felt better. The Dr. H. F. Frank,. whose out two-year leave of absence had|cnoken criticism of conditions at a lot to do with that. How did'the institution he heads has it come about? helped bring changes in the ALWAYS TALKED ABOUT IT 'care of the province's mentally "Well, we always talkediretarded children, was -- pre- about how nice it would be to!sented Saturday with a_ life show the children Europe,"' she}membership in the Ontario As- explained. "So one day we just sociation for Retarded Children. decided to do it." Dr, Frank, only the fifth per- She and her, husband, Brooks son to receive the honor, has West, packed up the four chil-|peen superintendent of the On- dren, closed the ranch and flew|tario hospital school here since to Rome. They stayed in a ho-|jt was opened in 1952. tel until they decided it was too "But Mrs Kenneth Klein- noisy, then rented a villa out-\steuber of Port Colborne, asso- side the city ciation president, said the "It sat upon a hill, with noth-/award was not being made to ing nearby but a farmhouse inithe head of an institution, but each direction,' she recalled.'to 'Hal Frank, humanitarian," ncome can be a frustrating *s the life led by many people nds on their few investments in the long run it means less many factors. Your age, for of annuity you buy. One The family took a tour of the| _ Said Michael; "I left because my father insisted on my hav- ing an education, his way. | |have been in many schools and I never passed an examination I don't know anything. [ have no ambition. I just want to be a spectator." He sounded as though being the son of a famous father was more of a burden than he cared to carry. "T haven't spoken to him for SEEKS MORE BUSINESS MONTREAL (CP)--Hotel faci- lities built for the 1967 World's \Fair here will allow the city to | accommodate conventions of 10,- 000 delegates, said the director Connie at-|of the city's tourist bureau. Up) to now the maximum has been |ness has been lost to Toronto, he said, for comedy which brought famelscreen role (he had appeared| monica, not in a hurry. And I just want|TO TOUR IN FRANCE a sort of "life with father'! young Adier, joins hi thing. He' has been tested for althould be tes -- tus = 4 in his father's A King in New York.) He's against boarding school lfor boys, having seen nothing j : else since he was eight. Though Then a Paris producer signed'born in Santa Monica, Calif., RONALD W. BILSKY, 0.¢. 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