Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Nov 1965, p. 3

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AT BIRACIAL MEET IN CHARLOTTE Roy Wikins, executive director of the NAACP, was guest speaker at a biracial meeting in Charlotte, N.C., Sunday. The meeting was called after the nightrider bombing of the homes of resented the city's civic club; Chamber of Com- merce President Brodie Griffith and William Mullins of the Charlotte United Ap- peal. (AP Wirephoto) four Negro civil rights lead- ers. Other speakers, left to right, were Mayor Stan R. Brockshire, state HAACP President Kelly Alexander; H. Thomas Finlay, who rep- pi 74 ARRESTED IN TURORTO Cup C By JIM CRERAR TORONTO (CP)--Most of the howling was done by the wind on Grey Cup weekend. Chill winds whipped through downtown streets Saturday night, and the throngs that usu- ally whoop it up after the an- nual East - West football final chose to stay indoors. Police put extra men on duty and waited for the wholesale celebrating that never material- ized. Only 74 arrests, mostly for drunkenness, were made in downtown Toronto after the game, won 22-16 by Hamilton Tiger-Cats over Winnipeg Blue Bombers. The hotel and night- club belt usually yields about 60 arrests on a normal Satur- day night, police said. Even Hamilton supporters re-| fused to let their exuberance! jbubble over. There were no} istreet demonstrations and po-| lice reported no more arrests) jthan usual, Chill Winds Thwart se Celebr Grions Some felt. there would have; One Hamilton fan pulled out been more revelty if two other|all the stops by yanking the) teams had met in the game./emergency cord of the five-| This was the sixth in nine years|coach CNR special taking about between Winnipeg and Hamil- |500 Tiger-Cat fans home after THE .OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, November 29, 1965 rs ' OTTAWA (CP)--Justice Min- ister Lucien Cardin said Sunday night that the Canadian involved in last spring's Russian spy ring jis going to be kept under per- |manent surveillance. "As far as I'm concerned, I'm going to see that there is sur- veillance on this man as long as he's in Canada," Mr. Cardin gts in a television interview. The justice' minister had an nounced previously that~ no criminal proceedings will be undertaken against the Cana- dian because of insufficient le- gal evidence to ensure a con- viction. Mr. Cardin referred to the man _as Spencer. The Vancou- iver Province in a 'story earlier this month said Vancouver Teamsters Hit By Power Fight TORONTO (CP)--While mem- bers of the International .Team-| sters Union (ind.) wage a cold) war against Ontario trucking firms, a power struggle within their: ranks threatens to cloud jthe issue. ton and it maybe that the fans|the game. He held the train up the same old clubs. | Burlington. Few fans who came in fiom) The fans demonstrated briefly around for the post-game cele-|train finally reached Hamilton, brations, preferring to enjey the|but the crowd broke up quickly, And disappointment of/tion for the Tiger-Cats in Ham- Bomber fans was evident asjilton Saturday night, but a civic 3,000 who. made the trip here'night. didn't bother to stay overnight. |---- Bomber Special! pulled into| Pl Sl ted ; downtown Union Station eariy| an a | Winnipeg late Saturday night. The lobby of Toronto's Royal| MONTREAL (CP) -- Pinter lday night but the atmos#here| Jean Lesage says his govern-! A victory dance produced no medicare plan for low income 'serious incidents. jgroups in 1966 and attacked jical insurance plan a "social- jist" measure. Quebec College of Pharmacists where he received a diploma pe ners in the college Sat- day, Mr. Lesage said the meeting Friday was also an-|Would serve as a bridge for the nounced. latter until a full-scale medi- 5,000-member local was brought} Mr. Lesage called those who about by Mr. Thibault andiopposed medicare "reactionary are becoming accustomed to|for nearly an hour in nearby Hamilton for the game stayed/at the railway station when the! victory at home. There was no formal recep- about 1,200 of the estimatedireception is scheduled for to- The 17 - coach CNR_ Blue) Saturday morning and left for) On Medicare York Hotel was crowded Satur-) was quieter than in other years./ment intends to establish a "> ithose who call a Bzeneral med- Speaking at a meeting of the awarding him an honorary before an executive committee ofan 'tor. low -income groups The power struggle within the Care plan can be implemented. Lloyd Merritt, secretary-treas-/enemies of progress'? who label Surveillance To Be Kept. On Suspect In Spy Ring Your Personal Christmas Gift Centre ror FIM 24 postal worker Victor G. Spen- cer, 57, had identified himself as the civil servant investigated in connection with the spy case. Two Russian embassy offi- cials were expelled from the country over the investigation. ON CBC-TV Mr. Cardin was interviewed about the case on the CBC tele- vision network This Hour Has Seven Days. He was asked how the man could clear his name since there was to be no prose- cution. "Tf he wants to have a trial and clear his name, certainly he can have that," the minister replied but did not indicate how a trial was to be held, He also said that several thou- 'a postal clerk end hed ns Russians for information | would have been av anyone. He said the 'money parently was for expenses travel to Ottawa. The man --- x. cess to secret information, MANY NEVER = SUSPECT CAUSE OF BACKACHES. May Be Simply Sluggish Kidney Action ite e pity ta.put up with this backache because you just don't the cause, and the medication on gr ah. You Bans if ome slug; ur! 2 oe eel result can ging backache. This is snnoyin Eee tate? ae "s stimula: lieve the irritated isar A mig that the-backache. Take Dodd's and see you don't feel better, rest better. Us sucseustully by millions for over Pe -- "a Bs sand dollars was paid by the years, New large size esves money. > VADIANT CLEANERS NOW HAS 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS @ 1120 Simcoe St. N. 728-2361 @ Oshawa -- Centre 725-10 for iho up and delivery call 728-2361 NOTICE TO ALL EX-SERVICE MEN a WOMEN and DEPENDENTS The battle against the truck-|urer of the local, who are at: 'socialist' all those. who con- ing firms came to a head Sun- |tempting to wrest control of af-|tribute to the flowering of man- lday as members of the union's|fairs from president Ken Mc- kind. |Hamilton local approved a cam-| Dougall "In all justice,' Mr. | 4 Russia Blames Chinese Girl Safe All ex-service personnel and their dependents are Lesage| invited to take advantage of a For Red-bloc Disunity By HENRY §. BRADSHER MOSCOW (AP) --The Soviet Union blames China for the in- bility of the Communist bloc) to offer more effective aid to! the Viet Cong in Viet Nam. It does_ so in a statement, published as an editorial across two-thirds of Pravda's front page, that is as notable for what {t does not say as for what it floes. Although clearly a reply to a Chinese editorial attack Nov, 11, the Pravda editorial does not!plication related to Viet Nam. |department informing him thatimembership meetings dény Chinese charges of efforts early this year to halt the Viet- names fighting: It says China turned down specific proposals | to assist Vietnamese commu-isors are hamperifig the strug- girl has been or where she was Thibault, nists, but omits explanations of what these proposals were. The theme of the editorial sn} Pravda, the Soviet Communist} is. the need|the editorial fits in with reports| school. the Comrunist|long circulating here of China' s| Bangkok. jobstructing Soviet efforts to) party newspaper, for unity in camp. jdemarcation both _ politically) 'In Bangkok, Father Told Pravda commented Noy. 16| LOS ANGELES that the Chinese editorial was|Search for pretty "saturated with impermissible, Mary Wilson' ended when U.S jutterly groundless, slanderous,|authorities- in Bangkok, Thai- provocation fabrications, » |land, reported today Sunday's editorial says the So-|Was safe and with her mother, viet Union had tried "to organ-|her father said here ize joint actions" and proposed Dr. George Wilson told co-operation "on highly impor-|Associated Press he received a tant specific issues," all by im-|telephone call from the state} and organizationally between" the Soviet and Chinese camps of Communists. (AP) -- Al The Chinese refused, it said. |Mary and her mother were re- "Thoae who refuse to co-oper-|united Sunday night. jate-and-turn down. proposals for| Wilson said he had no further joint actions against the aggres-| jinformation about where the gle of the Vietnamese people found. land help the aggressor," says| Ten days ago, Mary told her|- Pravda. jparents she was going to stop] There were no details, But/by another girl's home after| Instead, she flew to Mrs, Wilson flew to Bangkok} The Chinese said Nov. 11 thatisend war materials and possi-|to help with the search. Soviet unity pleas are a fraud./bly even troops to North Viet Nam,|Nam. "have no other pur-| Calis for unity on Viet they said, pose in mind than to deceive the world; to tie the fraternal coun- mies to the chariot of Soviet- lobstructed the transit of Soviet! collaboration for world to use the question) U.S. domination, of Viet Nam as an important) counter in their bargaining with the United States. . Peking then called for a for- mal split--"draw a clear line of U.S. Policies Under Protest CALGARY (CP)--About fsten Tesiuents ot Calna 100 thrrreentery and Red Deer Saturday paraded through downtown Calgary to protest United States policies in the Vietnamese war. A bus carried marchers from Edmonton and Red Deer and they were joined by about 50 Calgary residents The demonstration was or dérly. Leaders of the procession earried a placard identifying the group as the Edmonton commit- tee to end the war in Viet Nam. Marching beside the denion- strators was a smaller group protesting their actions. The smaller group carried a sign reading "Down with these Com- munists and three cheers for the U.S.A." The marchers paraded to the United States consulate where they lined up on two sides of "the building. A delegation of eight drove to the home of J. L. Hagan, U.S. consul-general, letters--two addressed Hagan and one Johnson. to Mr to President to deliver three) Earlier, Wilson had waited by |two telephones at the family's The Chinese editorial of Nov.!home in the Los Angeles suburb i accused the Russians of/of Encino, baffled by his daugh- \'spreading the lie that 'Chinajter's disappearance "Her mother couldn't sit by jmili t ary equipment for Viet|any longer. She had to fly out Nam'. last (Saturday) night to try and Peking said Soviet 'aid to pick up the trail,' he said. Viet Nam is far from commen-| The father said a letter and surate with the strength of the a cable from Tokyo only added Soviet Union." It has the ulte-'to the mystery. rior motive of "trying to hood - wink the people at home and USED CREDIT CARD abroad, keep the situation in| In the letter, the girl apolo- Viet Nam under their control, gized for buying airline tickets gain a say on the Viet Nam/on her mother's credit card, She question and strike a bargain promised to pay back the money with U.S. imperialism on it,",after working for a year in an the Chinese charged. orphanage. Then came the cable._telling the parents not to worry and that their daughter was coming home. The cable was signed '"'Mary." Paper Hikes. Price 3 Cents Still more mystery. In her WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) --Thejroom the parents found (1) a price of the Windsor Star in-jnote in which the girl said she creases to 10 cents a copy from planned to take a trip, (2) the seven cents today. written telephone number for The only. daily paper in its the Catholic Sisters of Social circulation area in southwestern Service and (3) the scribbled Ontario to have remained below name "Caulfield." . the 10-cent single copy _ price,|-------- 84 the newspaper also increased SESS Pa aa ee eee eee ae SALVATION ARMY BAND its home delivery price to 50 cents a week--for six days-- from 40 cents a week, Wage and salary commit- ments, up nearly 20 per cent over 1962, have. been given as reason 1 for the increase in price. will Good Names To Remember When Buying or Selling REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker -- P; Bill McFeeters -- Schofield-Aker Ltd, 723-2265 16-year-old! land drive unsafe equipment, the girlg The) CHRISTMAS PLAYING NOVEMBER 30th DECEMBER 1, 2, 7, 8, 9, 14, 15, 16. The Collectors will be readily identified by the Salvation Army Uniform paign of disobedience and non- co-operation against Ontario trucking companies. | Local president Ray Taggart said the campaign, including joutright refusal to work over- has, drive overloaded trucks is intended to compel the compa- nies to- stop reprisals against teamsters involved in an illegal work stoppage last month. Meanwhile, the executive committee of the teamsters' lo- cal 938 announced that two Sunday \decided ocal ontnire In.aanl oi president James Hoffa to settle eareal differences. The suspension of Charles Local 938 business) for refusing to appear agent, Slum Landlords Plan Criticized TORONTO (CP)--A eyo housing authority says picke ing, marching and name- J ailing| could help Toronto find a solu-| tion to its housing problems. Addressing an interdenomina- tional conference on housing, James P. Twomey, executive idirector of Community Renewal) said these were) Foundation Inc., effective methods of getting co- operation from slum landlords. | _ If the landlord doesn't re- spond to quiet pressure, citizens could picket his property carry- ing signs identifying him as a slum landlord. "This method is often success ful,' Mr. Twomey said. . "The man's phone rings all night when his neigivors put tie pres The membership meeting at Toronto, which the executive committee said was attended py 1130 men, called for Mr, Me- Dougall's resignation. Mr. Mer- ritt, the only member of the ex- ecutive committee to chaired the meeting. The two meetings which sup- ported Mr. McDougall were held at Sudbury and North Bay Mr. McDougall attended both meetings and the committee said both passed motions direct- ing him to call Mr. Hoffa into the situation Both meetings also refused to jaccept a motion that would cur jtail Mr. McDougall's right to hire and fire business agents, which had been passed at a Tor- onto membership meeting Nov 14. The committee also said the \Northern Ontario meetings |passed votes of confidence in Mr. McDougall to carry on as chief negotiator of the team- sters' 25-man negotiating com- |mittee, representing five locals in Ontario with a membership "of 10,000. POISED TO STRIKE The five locals--938 at Toronto [which includes membership at jNorth Bay and Sudbury, and others at Hamilton, Kingston, Windsor and London -- are poised for a strike as early as Jan. 1, } The threatened strike stems from the alleged reprisals by trucking firms against union members who took part in the Hamilton work stoppage last attene asked, 'Is not the work of the government in the areas of edu- cation} labor, health, social se- curity, the principle factor in| the rapid evolution that is tak- ing placé in Quebec." Mr. Lesage said all organiza- 'tions should present their posi- tions on medicare to a commit- tee which will be formed at the SAM ROTISH Men's Wear 7 KING ST. E. 725-2433 W. A. next session of the , eeelneee WHAT'S 9 DANCING? WRONG, 6 Lack confidence Outdated steps ..... Can't lead Can't follow Need practice .......+++ seeeeseeees We are offering a special intro- ductory dance course for only $15.00. Because we wont you to see for yourself how quickly and easily you can learn to dance at the Arthur Murray Studio, Even if you've never danced before, you can go. dancing after a lesson or two, and at gay student parties, you'll meet new friends . gain poise and popularity. There are no strangers at Arthur Murray's. Everybody dances and hos fun. This $15.00 dance course is good for a limited time only, Open daily 1:00 to 10:00 p.m. ARTHUR MURRAY W. Marks Licencee 11% SIMCOE ST, S$. 728-1681 Wednesda To give skilled advice on one with questions on War Disability Pension, War Veteran's Allowance (B Treatment or Hospital Ca to MR. C. A. BRISEBOIS, Business Manager of Royal Canadian Legion, Street, Oshawa, who will FREE LEGION SERVICE Assistant Secretary, Service Bureau, Toronto LEGION HALL, BRANCH NO, 43 From 3 to Completion of Business BUCK y, Dec. Ist Veteran's Benefits. Any- urnt Out Pension)... re is urged to call or write Branch 43, 90 Centre arrange an appointment. 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