Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Nov 1967, p. 3

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wer ses cises strict control rmed troops, cease- gthens police meas- ; plainclothes agents. ok and corner of the ts up many concen- nps and ruthlessly the discontent and pf the working peo- ws agency said. 2 _ these are almost harges often aimed ction in the Chinese RANTY ST CO. | Types of nes Needed 1G OR SELLING SING ARRANGED » you list wtih JARANTY Estate Dept. 728-1653 -ECIALS Chairman ) IVERSON yers stablishment r s under the \ct, 1967 to @ municipal subject to a wner erty ndar » tax duc- nent it of nber 1 form may >, telephone SA Cex) ed to assist rks, Q.C., jayor. --npremnentnnntecn A PORTION OF THE esti- mated 17,000 marchers who walked 35 miles around Hamilton Bay Sunday to Anti-Hunger Drive Helped Yemen Regime Seen Read By Thousands Of Marchers For Royal Reconciliation Thousands of persons in var-| In ponmnnn RUSSIAN gunnery ennnemnnngenn REVOLUTION'S 50th ANNIVERSARY raise money for worthy walk. Similar walks were causes, is shown on Main el 'oss the country Street West, about three Held moroes: ip county, miles after starting the --CP Wirephoto Hamilton, By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON (AP) -- A month before the Russian Revolution of 1917 Lenin, who had dreamed of just that, was thinking he might never see it happen in his lifetime. This wasn't the only contra- diction in what followed. Lenin's Bolsheviks were only a small minority, numbering perhaps 25,000 and with no plans for a takeover, at that time in March, 1917, when Czar Nicholas II was forced out and more moderate forces, took over, In the months that followed Lenin built. up support, particu- larly among factory workers in Moscow and St. Petersburg, while the opposition remained disorganized, confused, ays stupid, split, and in some POWER SHUFFLE Thedar better organized Rolsheviks, believing their chance was then or never,, made their daring grab for power Nov. 7, 1917, 50 years ago Tues- day. They have held that power since. The direct causes of the up- heaval were Russian disaster in the First World War, a -night- mare of economic hardship, and Western influence which for more than 50 years had¢been_ penetrating Russian thought with democratic ideas. At that time Russians simply loved their homelaud which had been harsh and brutal on all of them except the elite. Russia was about 100 years *behind the West industrially in 1917; now it is second only to the United States. From a na- tion almost medieval in many ways in 1917 it has become one of the world's two superpowers. From a nation whose czar was getting advice from a so- called mad monk, Rasputin, Russia has penetrated space. The reason: Soviets have striven for excellence in science and technology. IGNORED CONSUMERS But at the same time they have tried to wipe out illiteracy and educate the masses. Living conditions don't compare with the West if only because the So- viets have concentrated on in- dustry. and neglected consumer goods. Nevertheless, 'politically the THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, November 6, 1967 3 DIRECT CAUSES OUTLINED Soviet Union belongs back in another age. It is, despite all the things they may be said in its favor, a political despotism The people have no sense of de- mocracy or self-rule But, for that matter, through- out their history they never did. And under Stalin, who executed almost all his old Bolshevik con- temporaries, the Soviet' Union had one of the worst terror reigns in history By simply surviving it be- came a bulavark of world com- munism which grew elsewhere as the yedrs passed. And while the Soviets preach Marxism they have never achieved com- munism. - DE*OUNCED BY CHINA While encouraging commu- nism elsewhere and even impos- ing it--as they did in Eastern Europe---they are now de- nounced by the Chinese as they betrayers of communism. and Marxism, Will the Soviet Union change and become a democratic soci- ety with no dictatorship? It wiil, if it follows the pattern of the great revolutions of modern times. Those. revolutions have been moving from West. to East. All were too rigid starting ut --Cromwell's Puritan revolution in England in the middle of the 17th century, the French revolu- tion in the 18th century when the Jacobins had their own reign of terror, Hitler's mad re- gime which followed the Ger- man revolution after the First World War--all eventually were replaced by moderate; demo- cratic societies = Lenin Made Big Power Grab 50 Years Ago SAN'A * 2 E 5 (AP)--Yemen's new,sword-waving tribesmen surged approximatély|route in a project promoted by republican regime indicatesjinto the streets to cheer the new ious parts of Canad aparticipat-|17,000 marchers started out on a|Share-Canada and organized by that it will seek reconciliation' regime. ed Saturday in a 'miles for Mil- lions" march to raise money to combat world hunger. The project was sponsored by the Centennial International De- velopment Program which seeks to co-ordinate the activi- ties of various international re- lief agencies and foster interest of Canadians in them, Participants were asked to find sponsors who paid a certain sum for each mile walked. New Satellite Multi- pu CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) --A multi-purpose 'pinball' sat- ellite soared ariund the earth today as a successful herald to one of America's busiest space weeks, The new ATS III, for Applica- tions Technology Satellite, rock- eted into orbit from Cape Kenne- dy Sunday night to test systems that might eventually provide man with greater benefits from space. Included are new experiments In communications, weather prediction and navigation. ATS III is one of four U.S. space shots scheduled this week. Also on tap are: 1. ' Surveyor VI, set to blast off from the Cape at 2:22 a.m. EST Tuesday on a planned 65-hour flight to the moon. The space- craft is intended to land in a po- tential astronaut landing site near the centre of the moon's surface to snap photographs and analyse the lunar soil. 2. ESSA VI, another in a se- ries of operational weather- study satellites, to be launched 35-mile walk to raise money for|the Mid-Scarborough Youth aid-to Africa. About 10,000 fin- Centre. ished the journey. Allan Wager, 13, walked into Mayor Victor Copps took part,|@ police station and signed up 20 with the royalists to end the five-year-long civil war. The new regime came power Sunday Iriani, 56, is a long-time oppo nent of Sallal. At the former to|president's request, he had been in a_bloodless|imprisoned in Cairo for a year intending to walk three miles, Officers at a nickel-a-mile. He coup while President Abdullah| before returning to Yemen Oct but finished the entire course--|completed his march at mid- gaining $10 a mile for the last 10/night Saturday, and Sunday col- miles: lected his pledged $40, Police The youngest walker to finish|¢Stimate the youngsters earned was. 10 yearsold andthe oldest about $200. was 65. Marjorie Carruthers, co-chair- In Toronto, an estimated 2,000/man of the march, said in an in- marchers covered a 38.8-mile terview Sunday that 264 com- --__--_______----_------ |pleted the course. Each finisher will receive a bronze centennial medal. Up to Sunday night, Mrs. Car- ruthers said the marchers had earned $9,431. Further pledges * were expected to bring the final rT ose amount to $12,000 she said. p | In Vancouver, 4,000 persons {took part in a 23-mile Oxfam- |Air Free Base, Santa| Crossroads Africa march. Barbara, Calif. Among the organizations .be- 3. A mammoth Saturn V rock-|nefitting from the Miles for Mil- near al Sallal was. out of the country It said its goal is to "correct the situation" in Yemen Cairo's Middle East news agency quoted the. new acting president, Abdel Rahman Iriani, as saying contacts were under way with pro-royalist -- tribes with the aim of bringing them into the republican fold. Iriani is a conservative and is believed to have great influence with the warring tribes. SUPPORT REGIME The new premier, Moshen el Ainy, said all tribes have ex- pressed backing for the new re- gime. He also said Yemen would follow a "good neighbor" policy with all sister states, in- | 7 om ts i ; | et, similar to the one which one lions march are CARE of Can-| juding the neighboring mon-| day will propel. astronauts to the|ada; CUSO (Canadian Universi-|, hy of Saudi Arabia, which! moon, to undergo 'its first test|ties Services Overseas); Local- backed the royalists in the civil] jlaunching Thursday from thejInternational projects; and the yay that began when Sallal led Le f | \Cape. The rocket, largest, most|Indian-Eskimo Association of |powerful ever built, is to boost|Canada. jan unmanned Apollo moonship}"~ 111.400 miles into space. a ATS III settled Sunday night A into an initial transfer orbit i e ranging from 155 to about 23,000) miles above the earth. About 10:45 a.m. today,.a. ground sta- tion planned to send a signal to fire a motor aboard the space- craft. The firing is to arrest the 22,300 miles above Brazil. complete the super-structure of Among equipment for the sat-|Sseparate school education in the ellite's 18 experiments are three|Province, Toronto lawyer Ar- shiny, baseball-size steel balls|thur Maloney said Saturday. which give it the "pinball" nick-| Mr. Maloney told a congress name. jof the Association of Catholic At a future date, the three|High School Boards of Ontario) balls are to be ejected from the|that Catholics must continue _ payload in a navigation test.|/Press for government financial |Sensors aboard the satellite are|aid to Catholic high schools. to determine if the balls instead} Government grants are provi end of Grade 10. Increased government aid Wednesday from Vandenberg EXPO BABY BAPTIZED The only baby borfi on the Expo site was baptized Catherine-Helene Lavergne Sunday in a Habitat apart- ment by Most Rev. Percl- val Caza, Roman Catholic Bishop of Valleyfield, Que. --------|would mean more expense for ney said, but "to complete the! last sixth of the structure of Catholic education should not cause- an undue strain on the budget of Ontario." "To finance the cost of edilca- \tion in the Catholic public} 'dent public school' system." By WILLIAM N. OATIS UNITED NATIONS | King Hussein +2 made the strongest Arab bid for s43 |peace with Israel so far, telling a television audience that. Arab leaders are willing to recognize Israel's rights to exist and_pos- ly to let Israeli ships through the Suez Canal if Israel meets "the right, conditions." | Replying to questions on the CBS program Face the Nationa, Hussein said a pre-requisite to direct peace talks is the with- drawal of Israeli troops from all ia war. Israel has said it never will let go of Old Jerusalem, which| Jordan seized in the 1948 Pales-| tine war, and Israeli Prime| Minister Levi Eshkol indicated) a week ago that Israel intends to keep other Arab areas it cap- tured in June. RENEW HOSTILITIES Artillery and tank fire punc- tuated the pre-dawn stillness on the Israeli-Jordanian ceasefire line Sunday, marking the third| border clash in three weeks be-! tween the two countries. An Israeli army spokesman said Jordanian guns opened up to cover Arab saboteurs who blew up a building at a farm settlement and were trying to cross the Riyer Jordan to Angelique Beauchemin, a safety. > nurse at the Expo Clinic, Jordan charged that Israel 'holds Catherine-Helene as |jopened the two-hour artillery duel by firing on homes in the Mrs. J. R. Lavergne: gazes fondly at her eight-day-old |Ghor area of northern Jordan baby. No. fatalities were reported " (CP Wirephoto) either side. For Schools | | TORONTO (CP)--Ontario yemen peace commission spon- satellite in a stationary orbit/Roman Catholics must work to! <oreq py the two nations, and it appeared that Sallal's ouster, if Egyp- support there given to the Presi-/corner of the Arabia Arab soil it occupied in the June East the overthrow of Yemen's 1I- century-old monarchy in 1962. Egypt sent 40,000 troops to Yemen to keep the republicans in power, but its losses in the June war with Israel forced President Nasser to agree with King Feisal of Saudi Arabia to end their involvement in Yemen and try to restore peace there. not engineered by the tians, must at least have had their blessing. RECALLS TROCPS Observers said Iriani and his team of officers are likely to co-operate with Egypt and Saudi Arabia to reach a peace agreement in Yemen. Egypt al- of stars can be used as naviga-/ed to Catholic schools up to the ready has started pulling out its) tion aids for far-out manned and unmanned space vehicles. estimated 27,000 troops still in} and Saudi Arabia has Yemen, money and weap-| quit supplying |provincial taxpayers, Mr. Malo-|ons to the royalist troops en- camped in the hills The Middle East news agency) said Sallal the coup in Baghdad, Iraq, an cancelled plans to go on to Mos- | Knowles Sallal had obstructed the | heard the news of|Bonavista d djheld by the Liberals since New- French, 27 for an ostensible reconcili- ation with Sallal El Ainy, a former foreign minister, will head a cabinet of 13: civilians and one. army offi- cer, Abdel Salam Sabra was ap- pointed vice-premier and _ inter- nal affairs minister. SEX .DE-EMPHASIS SEEN TO CURB PRESENT GROWTH LOS ANGELES (AP)--Ex- perts pictured the 2ist century Sunday as a time when care in overcrowded hospitals will cost $500 a day and sex in movies and fashions will be de-emphasized to help curb an exploding population Dr. John H. Knowles, gen eral director of Massachusetts General Hospital at Boston, told a Harvard medical alum ni conference on medicine in the 21st Century that "If current trends continue, we in the 21st century will be caring for people with an av- erage age of 85 years and those afflicted with radiation sickness as. well as those in need of-transplanted new or- gans and spare parts."' said hospital pa- tients will pay '"'at least $500 a day" for care in institutions which he predicted would be "run largely by the federal government in one hand and the collective bargaining of unions on the other."' Dr. Roy O. Greep, professor | of population studies at the Harvard School of Public Health, said unchecked popu lation expansion will result in "an accelerated deterioration in the quality of our living conditions, a marked increase in both air and water pollution and a steady decline in our stare of natural resources." Warning that "we are on a collision course with disaster PRESIDENT ABDULLAH al Sallal of Yemen has been overthrown and the army has seized power in a blood- unless we do something to sta- | less coup, a military com- bilize our population very munique announced today soon," Greep called for a in San'a, Yémen. Sallal was change in traditional Ameri- | out of the country when the army takeover occurred. He was reported in Baghdad, Iraq, on his way to the So- viet Union for celebrations marking. the 50th anniver- sary of the Bolshevik Re- volution. can attitudes toward women. | "We need to prepare women for a working role in our world," he said, "Not as | the Russian woman in indus- | try but .as professionals and non-professionals."' Greep, whose research with --AP Wirephoto p tality 35 Killed On Highways In Canada On Weekend By THE CANADIAN PRESS Forty-six persons died in acci dents across Canada during the weekend on highways 4 Can TRS: from 6-p.m. Fridé five miles east of Bowmanville. Antoinette Gravelle of Greg- oires Mill, in a head-on car 'rash five miles east of Kapus- 75 northwest of survey ka mid 75 miles until Timmins night Sunday, local times, also. Ogli Coleman Graham, 60, in showed five persons died in Barrie hospital due to internal fires two in hunting mishaps, bleeding after suffering eve in- two persons drowned and two jur d facial cuts in a truck died in other acciden ( Frida Quebec had the rest prov i 5 incial-death--tolt-with-13" traffic ; FRIDAY 5 4 fatalities and two drowning .f Uren Belanger, 52, of En- while Ontario had eight killed Salt fe ds At CPABH DOAE on highways and one in a hunt-/./23!e2art, 85 miles southeast of 4 Timmins ing acciden seals Four persons died in automo peerage bile mishaps, three in fires and one in a fall -om a cliff in Brit-| ish Columbia Alberta had one highway fa two fire and one hunting death. Manitoba had three per-! sons killed on highways and one in an accidental shooting | Traffic mishaps claimed four ives in Saskatchewan and one in each of Newfoundland and New Brunswick | Nova Scotia and PYince Ed- ward Island were fatality-free | Known suicides and slayings, \industrial and natural deaths are not included in the weekly survey | The Ontario dead: | PLANNING A.+,. © BANQUET © CONVENTION SUNDAY Dr. Fernand Begin, 40, North \Bay dentist, of exposure on ar- \rival at Sturgeon Falls hospital hormones contributed to the development of birth control pills, urged "direct govern- ment involvement in the birth control problem." He said "this would be neither an in- vasion of human rights nor deprivation of human liber- ties, but it is a necessity." Air Pullution Seen Harmful TORONTO (CP)--Air poll levels |healthy persons, says Harry Be-! |lyea, Metropolitan Toronto's ai Byelection Slated Today _ |risns start In Newfoundland Riding BONAVISTA, Nfld: Chilly temperatures and thun- der showers were forecast for today's federal byelection in - Twillingate, a riding Confederation foundland joined cow for the celebration of the|in 1949. 50th anniversary of the Bolshe- school system through to Grade|vik Revolution. It gave no indi-jafter J. n peninsula,|majority of crowds of civilians, soldiers andivotes in the last election in 1965 byelection was called W. Pickersgill, former The 13 would impose no greater bur-|cation what Sallal might do/transport minister, resigned| den on the Ontario taxpayer next from Parliament in September.! than is at present borne by his! In San'a, capital of this smalliMr. Pickersgill, who' had held counterpart in Quebec for thejdesert nation tn the southwest|the seat since 1953, piled up a more than 6,000 Hussein Makes Strong Bid For Arab-Israel Peace | Hussein meets with State Sec-|that new borders must he nego- Johnson Wednesday Arab countries have refused to recognize Israel's right to exist and have maintained that the 1948 state of war-never-has ended. RECOGNIZE RIGHTS But Hussein said the Arab leaders at the Khartoum sum mit conference in September agreed to offer ."to recognize the right of all to live in peace and security' in the Middle Jas Asked if Egyptian President Nasser would allow Israeli ships to tise the Suez.Canal and the Strait of Tiran, Hussein replied: "T think if the right conditions were met, yes." | Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban repeated Israel's insist- ence on direct peace talks with Syria, Jordan and Egypt in a speech in London Sunday night He- told a Zionist Federation celebration of the 50th anniver- sary of the Balfour Declaration DOWNTOWN DELIGHTFUL INFORMAL DINING ROOM GOOD FOOD REASONABLE PRICES Noon Luncheohs Special Hotel Lancaster 27 KING ST. WEST | (AP)-- retary Dean Rusk in Washing- tiated between Israel and her jn Alberta's Jasper-Edson rid- of Jordan Sunday ton today and with President three Arab neighbors. GOOD NAMES TO REMEMBER when considering life insurance HAROLD E. ARMSTRONG, C.L.U. JOHN H. ARNOTT ROY M. ATKINSON W. 0. BENNETT, MRS. M. ©. BULL, C.L.U. GORDON L. CLARK CORDELL DARLING JOHN E. DE HART JACK TERPSTRA J. A. Nicholson, €.L. Central Ontario Branch Oshawa Shopping Centre Zh EXCELSIOR LIFE (CP)--| Mr. Belyea said in a state. |by sulphur from Ontario Hydro's Richar Today's election will be a,Hearne plant, 13 miles from the} three-way bat Deaue cn Liber-/ Queensway General Hospital. al Charle Granger, who re-; He said no charges would be signed f/om the provincial legis-|laid against the plant. lature haa yn year; Wilfred! «There is no evidence to tie in , a Progressive con- TY mere y servative contesting ~ his first |*he plant. There is only knowl election and Samuel Drover, an edge of the wind direction and independent. the fact that this sort of emis- The Liberals and Conserva-)sion comes from a plant like tives waged a bittered six-week) that," campaign in the riding, with a) hectic round of meetings in the last few days The Best Fuel Oil For Less Mr. Drover concentrated his WESTERN campaign on_ door-knocking About 24,740 voters are eligi- OSHAWA OIL LTD. ble to cast ballots today, with polls open from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. NST 725-1212 Present Commons standing: = = Liberals 131, PCs 93, NDP 22, Creditiste 8, Social Credit 4, In- dependent 3 and vacant 4 | Byelections are also sched- uled today in the Nova Scotia riding of Colchester-Hants and ing. Grace Thomas We to our Sales Staff at Guide Real- ty Limited. Grace is well known in Oshawo anda long time res- ident of Oshawa, Grace will be pleased to serve you and is well > | qualified to render professional and conscientious service as she has passed all courses required by the Oshawa and District Real Estate Board. GUIDE REALTY | . LIMITED have added a new member C.L.U. U., Branch Manager Phone: 725-4578 = tion readings near a west-end} : : |hospital last week approached | @e#-hospital after being struck considered harmful to. \after a boat he was duck hunt- jing in capsized on Lake Nipiss- \ing. | Robert Turgeon, 13, of Thorn- hill, in Richmond Hill hospital after being struck on his bicycle} y-|by_a@ car a few hours earlier. | Edward Praught, 40, of Toron- ©@ MEETING First Class Facilities For 20 to 400 Guests Quality. Service Experienced Staff RESERVE YOUR FUNCTION NOW! 723-4641 by a truck while crossing a downtown Toronto street Satur- ir] ORY: Andrew SATURDAY Crabbe, 40, after | . [being thrown 114 feet in a two- "HOTEL ment Saturday that the high|car collision in Niagara Falls. | ; pollution probably was caused) yr. James Swidtzer. 21. of dioxide ericnard| por onto, in a two-car collision! DX -- DX -- DX -- DX -- BE WISE: .. . ECONOMIZE ! SAVESS my FUEL OIL Phone 668-3341 -- DX = DX =D DX -- DX PR KR R K * PRA PF ARAB DX -- DX -- DX 54. SIMCOE NORTH ~ Tuestiay and Wednesday Specials - LEAN TENDER De ints §9: STE 09: Pot Roast FRESHLY GROUND MINCED BEEF TASTY SKINLESS | 723-5281 a BONELESS WIENERS

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