King Stays I il ; J By REX THOMAS SELMA, Ala. (AP)--Negroes chanting 'freedom, freedom," 7 promised new court action in ~ their right-to-vote struggle and) vowed to continue their protest marches today despite mass. ar- rests. With Dr. Martin Luther King | Jr. still. in jail, other leaders | took command of the voter reg- © istration campaign and called ¢ for more volunteers to keep the street demonstrations going. City police and sheriff's dep- uties arrested 505 Negroes Tues- § day, most of them teen-aged students who stayed out of school to join the growing pro- test. It brought to almost 1,300 the number taken into custody this week and raised the total to 1,600 since the campaign & started 16 days ago. Negro lawyers said mean- while they would ask a federal judge today to order the Dallas County board of registrars to meet more often and stay in session longer each day to give prospective Negro voters more time to apply for regis- tration. WILL SEEK INJUNCTION The lawyers said they also would petition U.S. District Judge Daniel Thomas in Mo- bile for an injunction to pro- hibit city police from arresting Negroes participating in right- to-vote marches. Thomas already has issued a similar restraining order against Sheriff James Clark and his deputies. State law requires the regis- trars to meet on the first and third Mondays in each month, but provides additional time if needed, with the approval of # state authorities who pay the cost. To meet the demands, the board in Selma kept its doors open for 12 days last month, and only in the last six days after the civil rights campaign began did any substantial num-| ber of Negroes apply The board is scheduled to meet only two days this month ; registrar, Clark told the Ne- that the board of registrars was not in ses- Negroes. who marched into the courthouse Tuesday seek ing to seek the head voter Dallas County Sheriff, Jim Clark, left, uses his night- stick to prod one of several groes sion. The Negroes, about 100 of them, were arrested when they failed to. dis- perse. (AP. Wirephoto) EMPHASIZE STRUGGLE The demonstrations Tuesday, emphasizing once more the struggle for voting rights and at| the same time protesting the ar- rest of King, brought the arrest! of 111 adult Negroes and 394| teen-aged students. | Sheriff's deputies arrested the| adults on contempt. - of - court! charges as they stood in line) "tuxedo unid'nism" and an| outside the courthouse to dra- matize once again their de- mands for longer registration periods even though the board! was not in session. | The contempt charges grew of the fact that a'state judge was presiding over a session of his court on the second floor of the building and_. complained that the demonstration was dis- turbing the orderly_process .of his court. David tional president since 1952. TORONTO (CP) -- Canadian members of the United Steel- workers of America (CLC), largest union in Canada, ap- pear to be putting their weight behind a move to overthrow J. MeDonald, interna- Top Canadian officers of the I candidacy of BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE Phony C heques Convict Youth WHITBY (Staff) -- A 20-year-|bage piled in cardboard contain-|have sent out notices to strik- old Whitby youth was found guil-jers in the lane behind the res-/ing workers' fa ty of three counts of passing} worthless cheques, Tuesday in| Whitby Magistrate's Court. | Michael Charles Loople, 20,| 1117 Brock street south, plead-| ed not guilty to three charges of false pretences with. intent to defraud. | Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck) told the Court that on two sep- arate occasions during Decem-| ber, 1964, Loople had cashed| cheques for $15 at Fleming's Shell Service Station, Donald Fleming. said he had redeemed two cheques, bath for) $15, and had later found them} to be worthless. - The third charge accused Loo- ple of obtaining $50.15 in cash and merchandise by passing worthless cheques to Joe Otten- brite, proprietor of Ottenbrite Men's Wear. Mr. Ottenbrite said he had sold Loople items worth $20.15, and had received two worthless cheques in payment. He added that when he ap- proached Loople about the worthless cheques he was given a cheque for $50.15 by Hoople, and that he had given Hoople, the balance ($30) in cash. The cheque -for $50.15 proved worthless he added Magistrate Jermyn comment- ed, 'It's back-door theft, and the businessman, who has to meet his bills every month serves protection from this type} of thing." | Loople was remanded for sen- tence in two weeks. also Piling garbage in improper containers is contrary to a town bylaw, and contravention of that} law cost a local restaurant op- erator $5 and costs when he ap- peared in Court Tuesday. Danny Fong, owner of the, Golden Gate Restaurant, Brock} street south, was convicted of} breaking the town's Garbage Bylaw No. 1828. Sydney Correll, bylaw inspec-)| taurant. The bylaw 'states that garbage must be put out in metal con- tainers that are fitted with a top. W.| followed their advice and nom- inated the Abel slate. | The election is next Tuesday. | The Canadian vote could be crucial in a close election. The balloting is on a popular-vote basis among the full member- ship, and the Canadian mem- {bership of 110,000 is about 10 union are endorsing the pres-|per cent of the union's total. idential | Abel, now secretary - treasurer|thrown. down. the, gauntlet to and most locals in Canada have|the powerful McDonald, who is The 56 - year - old Abel has 62, on the grounds -- among jothers -- of "one - man rule," Chrysler, UAW Both Tell 'Why' WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Chrys- ler Canada Limited and the {United Auto Workers (CLC) milies explaining eir positions in the current strike which has idled some 17,000 employees since last | Thursday. The company's message states the offer made to the A fine of $10 and costs was|union is among the best in the imposed on Clarence Rice, 69, k|when he was convicted of being| asks drunk in a public place The court was told Rice was) f| erations. found, Jan. 29, on the floor o a' local cigar store. Alternate penalty at five days in jail Life Is Found At South Pole WASHINGTON (AP) -- Scien- tists have found a tiny, spider- like creature living in a minia- ture "garden high above a des- olate Antarctic icecap only 309 miles from the South Pole The National Science Founda- tion, reporting this, said the dis- covery represents the southern- most point at which "'any ani- mal life is known to exist." It may help solve some of the great riddles about the early his- tory of the antarctic continent the foundation said The creature, tentatively was identified as a mite, is pink iri/lect in following doctor's orders} hun-|by a coroner's jury Tuesday at} color and about one one - dredth of an inch long. It was found living &mong microscopic algae and fungi in the soil of the Queen Maud mountain 'range. oasis there, high above the ice, provided warmth, greenery. and water," was covered by simple plants called lichens Biologist Keith A Hawaii's Bishop jindustry. The . union bulletin more control. for workers in scheduling of production and pace of assembly-line op- Discussions Tuesday were set}among committees working on| }special items. The main bar- --|gaining teams did not meet. |. The main issues separating | company and union negotiators involve working conditions at the plants The employees of three Chry- sler plants and Walker Metals Limited, a Chrysler subsidiary, walked off their jobs last Thurs- day and have maintained quiet picket lines since then. All are members of Local 444, UAW . Office . workers remain on their jobs. The strike does not affect Chrysler plants in other cities. Pen's Negligence Blamed For Death KINGSTON . (CP) -- Prison personnel were accused of ne & an' inquest into the Jan. 21 |death of a prisoner at Kingston | Penitentiary The five-man jury said "neg- doctor" caused over-relaxation when his lungs became con- own stomach. It recommended that better "alarming drift' toward what is described as the pretence that employers' and employees' interests are identical. Canadian Director William A. Mahoney and the three dis- trict directors in this country, who are elected by the Cana- dian membership in the union's quadrennial voting, are Strongly urging in a letter to their rank and file that a big vote. be rolled up for the Abel group. "There is a strong feeling among our American brothers" their letter says, 'that rank- and-file participation in union affairs has given way to person- ality to the detriment of the union's vitality; that we have tended to become a_ sleeping jgiant; that division in the lead- ership of our union must be ended. "That is why directors came to the unani- jmous view that the time had jarrived for the election of a jstrong new leadership team to. jguide our union." | The Abel - McDonald power |play will have no immediate the Canadian Steelworkers Exec. Letter Urges Presidents Defeat effect on the Canadian leader- ship setup. The national director and two of the district directors--Larry Sefton of District 6 (Ontario and the West) and Jim Nichol- son of District 2 (Maritimes) have been returned for four years by acclamation. Quebec Director Pat Burke is not con- testing the election, for family reasons. The Quebec post is being sought by Jean Beaudry, Burke's assistant, and Jean Gerin - Lajoie, a steelworker staff representative and first vice-president of the Quebec Federation of Labor. One Canadian is running in the international elections. He is John Shipperbottom, veteran financial secretary of Local 1005 at Hamilton, a candidate ifor' one of the three positions jof international teller. These of- |ficials conduct the four - year jelections -- posts. that carry |prestige but no added money-- jand one usually is a Canadian. ja'fonso Murray of New Glas- |gow, N.S., has been a teller for jyears but is not running this 'year, Cloverleaf Investigation | WHITBY (Staff)--A coroner's |jury recommended the Ontario |Department of Highways inves- jtigate the cloverleaf on High- jway 401 at Ajax, following an jinquest here Tuesday night into jthe death of a motorist and his |passenger. The men were in- volved in a two-car accident |Christmas Eve. The verdict said that Matti |Johannes Makela, 20, of Bow- jmanville, driver of a small |European car,. died as the re- isult of a ruptured heart due to jthe motor accident which was feaused by a_ misadventure brought on by the confusing in- jtersection and signs. The jury lrecommended the department investigate the cloverleaf with |the object of making it safer in future Adolf Jakonen, 38, of Oshawa, [a passenger in the Makela ve- hicle, died at Oshawa General | Hospital after sustaining a frac- jtured skull and two broken legs.| A miniature|lect of orders prescribed by a|\ VEHICLE SWERVED Miles King, 28, of Oshawa, "a little world of|in Peter Votel, 34, who suffered |driver of the second vehicle |testified he had been travelling |the foundation said. The ground|gested with material from his|west in the passing lane, fol- \lowing another vehicle, He said jthe -car in front suddenly J. Wise of} supervision be given to the ad-| swerved to the right and he saw Museum, One| ministration of drugs and to pa-\the headlights of an oncoming of a science foundation team of|tients while under the influence) vehicle. scientists surveying the insect and mite population of: Antare- fica, collected the mite at of drugs. Votel was undergoing |treatment in the psychiatric a/ward of the prison hospital. .. King stated he had seen a car in the eastbound lane blink its Inquest Jury Suggestion said he had been travelling east when he noticed a Volkswagen containing two persons, also proceeding easterly but in the westbound lane. He had attempted to signal to the driver but he was unsuccessful in at- tracting his attention. John Ricketts said he was travelling westerly in the driv- ing lane. The Volkswagen pass- ed him, going in the opposite direction, but in the passing lane. "T couldn't believe what I saw at first," he said, and added, "the lights, however, did not blind him." He siated the car appeared to be moving in a Straight line. Constable J. O. Chapman, of the Whitby OPP detachment, said he found Makela dead be- hind the steering wheel of the Volkswagen when he arrived. Jakonen was lying outside the jear. | ALIENS RETURNED MEXICO CITY (AP)Mexico deported an average of one un- desirable alien each day during 1964, officials report. Deporta- tions were based mainly on fl- Hlegal entry and illegal activi- ties. |) HEAT WITH OIL TORONTO (CP) -- The Can- ada Pension Plan will pinch the poor and pay the rich, Ken Bryden (NDP -- Toronto Wood- bine) told the Ontario legisla- ture Tuesday. He said income tax write-offs will allow a man earning $15,- 000 or $20,000 a year to pay less in. premiums than a man with an annual salary of $5,000. Both men pay $79.20 a year in premiums, but the percent- age savings on deductible in- come are greater for the higher income bracket. He estimated a man earning $15,000 would pay a net premium of $47.52 while the $5,000-a-year man wouid pay $62.57 net. "It is certainly not reason- OTTAWA (CP) -- Two Tor- onto actuaries poured heaps of criticism on the proposed Can- ada Pension Plan Tuesday, and one of them said the plan was given unanimous approval in the Commons because of 'an unintentional form of black- mail." Edward Ruse, an, insurance company actuary who came to Ottawa as a private citizen, pulled out all stops in blasting the proposed pension scheme. ",, . The Canada Pension Plan is dangerous, complex, expen- sive and monstrous. I con- fidently but regretfully predict you and I--and even its strong- est advocates -- will live to deeply regret it." "IT should now. bluntly state that, in my sincere, unselfish and considered opinion, Miss (Health Minister Judy) La- Marsh's 'team of 16 experts with over 300. years' service' has conceived a Franken- stein, . ie! "T am frightened of it," he said. ' Mr. Ruse's brief followed a presentation by W. R. Joyce, another Toronto actuary, who also said the proposed plan is poorly designed to meet the social needs of Canada. Both briefs said the persons needing help the most were the most able or proper that a public pension plan be used... effect a transfer from the rela- tively poor to the rich." Albert Walker (PC--Oshawa) said the Workmen's Compen- sation Act should provide full payment until an injured em- ployee is able to return to his 'regular job. EMPLOYERS UNWILLING He said workers dismissed from hospitals as "'fir for light work" often find employers un- willing to accept anything less than the full day's work the employee could do before he was disabled. Arthur Reaume (L -- Essex North) predicted rank-and-file New Democratic Party mem- Passing Of Plan Said 'Blackmail' fighters said most of their members were in a unique position under the proposed plan because they must retire at 60. This would mean that earnings would drop off sharply between 60 and 65 when they would normally be computed in ithe earnings - base for the pro- posed plan. The association asked that for pension purposes, a fire- fighter's earnings. should be counted only until he retires, and not to 65 as proposed under the plan, i Bias a a a a a Mien TL OL I IC eT ry THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, Februcry 3, 1965 3 bers will join Liberals in the to|next provincial election to rid Ontario of its "autocratic'"' Con- servative government. ° He attacked the Conserva- tives for making no mention in the throne speech of possible relaxation of Ontario's liquor laws. Beer and wine with meals should be allowed on Sundays, he said. Reg Gisborn (NDP -- Went- worth East) introduced a bill to increase the mandatory va- cation - with - pay period to two weeks from one after a year's employment. Transport Minister Irwin Haskett, answering a question from Stan Farquhar (L -- Al- goma - Manitoulin), said the government is considering a BUY quality and e JORDAN BRANVIN Sherry CHILL IF DESIRED free home delivery phone Jordan Wines Pension Plan Pinches Poor, Pays Rich-- Bryden, NDP It stops to let off . Leo Troy (L -- N said he might read to the lature excerpts from Hill, recently declared scene by the Ontai Appeal, to "let the j house" decide whether century. noyel is ature. * Community For Young Moderns and So-0-0-0 Convenient neglected under the plan. Mr. Ruse said relatively few people in Canada understood the program and "'it is a mat- ter of grave concern to me that the vast majority of Canadians have been more misled than educated by many of the offi- cial statements and explana- tions released to the press, the public -- and during the On- tario election campaign -- to audiences of Ontario voters." In another brief, the Inter- national Association of Fire- ~ home protection at less cost with a Homeowners Policy. 1 Contact me today ZEN WARENYC! 1203 Oshawa Blvd. N. hawa 725-5841 THURSDAY, FEB. 4th--1:30 to 4:30; 6:00 to'9:00 p.m. at ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM, SIMCOE ST. N. Regulor and new blood donors are urgently requested te attend with or without on appointment. Our Blood Bank is in Urgent Need of More Blood STATS FARM MEET THE NEEDS OF OUR PATIENTS IN FEBRUARY Canadian Head Office, Scarborough, Ont. 34 SIMCOE ST. NORTH HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS § --EXTRA FEATURE-- NO. 1 CELLO PEAMEAL 4 9 ae 19. COTTAGE ROLLS ee al | LEAN MEATY BEEF Blade Roast BISCUITS FIRST GRADE ORONO CREAMERY C Ib DAVID'S--4 Kinds 49: FRESH PORK SHOULDER Cc Ib \POT ROAST @ FRESH PORK C Ib c Ib 3 Brookside 24-0z, Loaves Bread EXTRA FEATURE ae tor, told the court he saw gar- al 99 0g lights moments before the acci-} DIXON'S jpoint more than 100 - miles! Psychiatrist Dr. R. J. Mc- dent occurred, but the accident jcloser to the South Pole than |Caldon testified at the inquest /gecyrred before he tealized why | 313 ALBERT ST. BROWN LAST WHITE jinsects had previously been|that he interviewed Votel after ights had b blinki \ LONDON (AP) _ Dr. Leslie|found. the man threatened to comtithl tech necnen. sag Pre sn Brown, Anglican Archbishop of| 'The spot is also several hun-|suicide Jan. 19 and prescribed| 4 Uganda and Bishop of Nami-|dred miles closer to the South|a drug called Nozinan, a tran-| rembe, announced he is resign-|Pole than areas in which pen-/quilizer which also helps pre-| Need ing because he believes the/guins and other birds ordinar-|vent nausea. The dosage was] Morteave Money? 24-HOUR SERVICE Uganda church can best be| ily are found 25 milligrams four times a day. | g g y served by an African. Dr.| The scientists offered no| Raymond 'Algate, a_ hospital) CALL aol a | 723-4663 j ain-| views 7 it sa che: ficer i > ae ic ward | tate I) ' Brown, 52, is the last remain-|views on how the mite reached officer in the psychiatric ward, | McGILL ae ll SERVING OSHAWA OVER | 50 YEARS Day or Night - 728-4285 il : BUTT FRESH PORK LOIN END Cc lb BONELESS BEEF 49 SHOULDER 09 ECONOMY 6 & 7 RIB PRIME RIB SHORT CUT Ist 4 RIBS PRIME RIB OVEN READY CHICKENS 22-3 Ib. ave. DEVON RINDLESS BACON LB. CELLO ing non African bishop in|the suburbs of the pole, or) testified that Votel was given a Uganda, where Britain formerly|whether it's an' original settler|total of 125 milligrams in six | ruled as a protector. there. hours. \