Rm ii ti te ARMY oe Fag a 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thuredey, Merch 11, 1968 DEVELOPMENTS (Continued gan. The vigil grew out of a might march, which along with an earlier one was halted by Mayor Joe Smitherman and state police. --A cold rain brought an abrupt end early today to a demonstration in Montgom- ery by about 125 civil rights marchers before the Capitol building. Earlier, about 1,000 demonstrators tried to get into the Capitol to see Wal- lace, but were kept out by . A home made fire was thrown on to a Negro house but was extin- guished with little damage. Former Florida Governor Leroy Collins, a personal rep- resentative of President John- son, cancelled a scheduled speech at the University of Florida and flew back to Selma, where he hoped to talk with white and Negro leaders today. WED BAIL im Stanley Hoggle, 36, and Elmer Cook, 41, were re- lefsed from Selma jail on bail of, $7,500 each on charges of as- sault with intent to murder. They were taken immediately into custody by FBI agents on federal warrants charging con- apiracy to violate the ministers' civil rights. Taken before U.S, Commis- signer Marian House for an after-midnight arraignment, the men again were released, this é on $5,000 bail. Hey remained in city jail. If.he makes bail he will be ar- raigned on the federal charge. The men were charged with béating Reeb, Rev. Orloff F. , 25, of Boston, and Rev. Olson, 32, of Berkeley, Calif. The other two ministers from page one) halted at Selma by Smitherman and police backed up by hun- dreds of state troopers. "It was decided by the mayor . |to use the city's emergency po- lice powers to stop demonstra- tions at this time," Baker said. RETURN TO CHURCH The marchers prayed, sang the civil rights theme song, We Shall Overcome, then returned to the church. As the procession began {fil- ing back to the church, small groups of Negroes and white ministers walked the eight blocks to the Dallas County courthouse. The marchers, eventually totalling hundreds, walked quietly around the b'ock con- taining of the green, three- storey courthouse, State troop- ers massed quickly around the building, focal point of the Ne- gro voter registration drive. There were no incidents. The night procession, with about 75 white ministers in the forefront, was stopped by Baker, with about 18 police officers be- hind him and state troopers massed 100 yards down the street from the red brick church. At Montgomery, the cold rain drove away the remnants of about 1,000 marchers who tried to see Wallace. Police Chief Marvin Stanley said the shiver- ing demonstrators could stay in the street as long a they liked despite the fact that their pa- rade permit expired at mid- night. WHEAT GROUP ARRIVES QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -- A group representing Canada's National Wheat Board arrived here Wednesday for a seven-day escaped serious injury. Two major marches, includ- visit before continuing a tour of Latin America. The delegation ing the night pr , were is headed by J. B. Lawrie. HERE and THERE "The Ajax High School @enior girls' basketball team lost to Norwood' Dis- trict High School by a score of 22 to 12 in the senior. *B" COSSA championships yed at the Ontario School the Deaf at Belleville. The Norwood team, which did not lose a game during the season, won the title. District schools did well Tuesday in the chorus classes at the Peterborough Kiwanis Music Festival. Hampton School choir won the class for village schools tlass with 85 marks. Vieteria County Council voted to continue the possibility of a regional jail the refusal of the Counties of Durham Northumberland to par- ticipate. The United Coun- ties Council said it would not participate unless it re- ceived compensation for re- cent renovations at its jail in Cobourg. An EMO meeting at Co- bourg this week failed to reach a decision on the establishment of an emer- gency radio communication network to serve Northum- berland and Durham Coun- ties. Only two of the six members of the EMO com- mittee attended. The cost would be borne by the coun- ties and the province. The original plan called for a base station at the counties building in Cobourg and at least nine satellite stations throughout the counties. Education Minister Wil- fam Davis addressed the exp March 13 are very brisk and a standing room only crowd is expected at the Civic Auditorium, says president Alex Pankiw. Mrs. John Norris is carnival chairman, Vic Kitchen is' in charge of the program, Mrs. I. Nugent and Mrs. B. Higgins are in: charge of costumes, Mrs. Evelyn Leach is in charge of tickets. A dessert tea and millin-. .| ery showing was held yes- terday by Centre Street | United Church Women. At | the recent regular meeting of the group, Miss Vera Watson and Mrs, Howard Canning conducted the wor- ship service; Mrs, Archie | Britton sang, accompanied | by Miss Irene Winter; and Mrs. Arthur Magee, assist- ed by several others, gave a Bible study on the Book | of Amos. | Dr. Allan R. Cooke, a for- mer resident of Oshawa, died last Sunday in King- ston General Hospital. He was 67 . A member of the Royal College of Dental Surgeons, he was a mem- ber of the Oshawa Kinsmen Club while living here. The funeral was held Wednesday in Kingston. N@ one was injured in a two-car collision on Anna- polis avenue at Tweeds- muir avenue yesterday. Drivers involved were Alan Maguire, 250 Edward street, and John Edwin Elliott, 610 Tweedsmuir avenue. The annual "Daffodil 'Tea' sponsored by the On- tario County unit of the Canadian Cancer will be held March 31 at Centennial: Hall, King Street United Church. Mrs. W Syer, Women's Service A Chinese youngster sips milk from a bow! in Macao, off the coast of China, where he and his family sought refuge from the food short- THE.DAY IN OTTAWA By THE CANADIAN PRESS WEDNESDAY, March 10, 1965 The Commons contin- ued study of the contributory Canada Pension Plan after a wrangle over a reply by Jus- tice Minister Favreau. Opposition Leader Diefen- baker insisted Mr. Favreau made a false reply to a ques- tion concerning a letter ex- change with the Quebec gov- ernment, Mr. Favreau insisted his re- | ply was true and demanded a withdrawal, refused by Mr. Diefenbaker. After a heated shouting match, the matter was dropped and the House pro- ceeded with its business. On the pension plan, the House approved a govern- ment amendment to allow a drop-off of 15 per cent of low- | earning years in figuring ben- efits. $ The original bill allowed 10 per cent and NDP and Con- servative members pressed for 20 per cent but were de- feated 66 to 60. THURSDAY, March 11 The Commons meets at 2:30 p.m. to continue the pension debate. The Senate meets at 3 p.m, Rail Unions Seek Ottaw | Protection OTTAWA lrepresenting more than 100,000|state of Quebec Society {operating railway workers ap-|Judge Trottier cut him off j jpealed to the government today |to write job protection camped (Continued from page one) at the consulate over- STARVATION WILL GOVERN HIS POLITICS ages of the Chinese main- land: Hunger is one of the key elements in the cold war and will undoubtedly unfluence whether this boy, MONTREAL (CP) -- Michelle Saunier, 31, refused to. give ev- idence Wednesday at a prelim- inary hearing into charges against her and three young men involving a plot to bomb U.S. national monuments. Miss Saunier, a psychology| professor at a Montreal teach- jers college, at first refused to ibe sworn in on the grounds it |might '"'incriminate" her posi- ltion in regards to an indictment lagainst her in the U.S. in the lsame case. She is wanted in| New York on a charge of con-| |spiring to damage federal prop-| erty. | Later, however she relented,| and was sworn in. but refused | to her, and Judge Emile Trot- tier ordered her to step down \from the stand. | Appearing in prelimin- lary hearing with her are Jean Giroux, 20, a post office worker; Raymond Sabourin, 20, an office clerk, and Gilles Le- |gault, 31, a salesman. They all face various charges, ranging \from conspiracy to possession |of explosives, in connection with} the recently - exposed terrorist plot to blow up national monu- ments in New York, Washing- ton and Philadelphia. | Three Negroes and Michelle) |Ducios, a former Montreal tele-| lvision personality, are awaiting) trial in New York. Their arrest exposed the plot. |ALSO REFUSES Legault also |sworn in. As soon as the handcuffs were jremoved he launched into a speech but got not farther than refused to be (CP)--Nine unionsjhis opening "as a citizen of the} not when "T must interrupt you at once meas-jto tell you that-you are a citi-|/yainly Michelle Refuses To Talk 'At Bomb-Plot Preliminary with "patriotic salutations" the writer said he was certain parcels .. . put them" and that his decision was requested "because I would not like to blow up the cabin," " |"something is' done" and millions of the world's underfed peoples, wilt call the west brother or the east comrade. | } --AP Wirephoto "keeping where he The hearing continues. WEATHER FORECAST '\would continue their vigil and a night in freezing temperatures. This morning they were dragged to the sidewalk by about a dozen police officers as the consulate staff reported for work, The demonstrators remained |seated on the sidewalk and dis- cussed strategy with one of their leaders, Jill Anweiler, a first-year arts student from Melville, Sask. About 56 other students) walked in a line just north of the consulate. POLICE DRAG OUT More than %@ demonstrators moved into the consulate lobby in a sit-in Wednesday and were dragged out by police. "We hope more and more people will protest in the way we have," Arthur Pape, Uni- versity of Toronto graduate and a leader of the demonstration, said early today. "We consider this (the dem- onstration) a significant action to protest to the citizens in Ala- bama." Pape, 22, a member of the Student Union for Peace Action, was critical of President John- son for not taking action in Ala- bama where whites as well as Negroes have been injured in civil rights demonstrations. Pape said the students in of the consulate 'un til in Ala- front bama. He was asked if the students had made any representation to the Canadian government so its influence could be brought to bear on the situation. "We want to protest as di- rectly as we can to the U.S.," Pape said. "'We are demonstrat- ing for fellow human beings jrather than for U.S. citizens in particular." All was quiet among the dem- onstrators during the night. Some talked quietly, some joked few sang. Placards raised high during the day rested on the ground near the demonstrators. More than 30 demonstrators Wednesday moved into the con- sulate's lobby in a sit-in and had to be removed forcibly by police. Crowds dwindled after the ex- pulsion, but about 30 of the group staged a sit-down demon- stration on the sidewalk out- side. 'STUPID' WORMS EAT KNOWLEDGE ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)-- Eight thousand flatworms named George are attending a college of cannibal knowledge at the University of Michigan. They are students in a re- search project headed by James V. McConnell, who has worked with the worms for 12 years. He said one phase of his studies showed that worms can learn by eating smart worms, This, he said, indi cates a time will come when injections from a normal per- son to a retarded one could improve the retarded person. The flatworms, technically known as planaria have a brain of sorts and a fairly well - developed central ner- vous system. McConnell says they have been caught to re- act to lights and electric shocks and to creep through mazes. RETAIN KNOWLEDGE Then McConnell found that the educated worms were cut in half,. both sections retained the previous conditioning given the entire worm. The next step was to feed the educated worms to the un- educated ones. McConnell found that the uneducated worms not only increased their weight but their knowl- edge as well. McConnell thinks a chemical substance in the body--ribo- nucteic acid--may be respon- sible for passing learning from one worm to another. Now, he is trying to prove this theory. He also hopes to prove that if the substance can be extracted and injected into another it will not be harmful. If proven, it might someday be possible to help the men- tally retarded with injections THEY STILL WANT IN 'Market' By DOUG MARSHALL Canadian Press Staff Writer British ministers are quietly informing the six European Common Market countries Britain still hopes to be a pass- enger on the European boat, particularly now it is heading in the difficult waters of polit- ical union. Michael Stewart, British for- eign minister, told a meeting of the Western European Union in Rome Tuesday Britain ulti- mately wants to join a Euro- Britain Seeks Entry | When labor, with its anti- European record in opposition, came to power last fall, French and West German diplomats argued this was a sign Britain had finally turned her back on and it was time to move ahead without her. The Europeans were particu- larly anxious to begin prelimin- ary discussions on a political union, The issue had been shelved for two years, partly b of West German - pean community provided her essential interests are safe- guarded. The WEU is made up of Britain and the six Common market members France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, The Netherlands and Luxem bourg. Stewart's statement, reaffirm- ing what he said in Br 1 French differences over the possible structure and partly because Belgium and The Netherlands refused to proceed without Britain taking part. The January talks between de Gaulle and West Germany's Chancellor Er hard smoothed over the first difficulty and the last month, "indicates no fund- amental change in_ Britain's position on European entry. And despite some friendly French contended that, with La- bor in power, waiting for Brit- ain 'is no longer a valid ex, cuse." words from France's Pr de Gaulle, who had vetoed Britain's previous attempt to join the Common Market, there has been no real alteration in French conditions since negotia- tions broke down two years ago NOT SO HOSTILE But in the last few months Britain's labor government has been at pains to reassure the Six it is neither as hostile nor as indifferent to European de- velopment as some Common Market leaders apparently be- lieve. ; VISIT braemor of ribonucleic acid, McConnell said. REED'S Sunny And Cold Today, T to answer the first question put] TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts| issued by the weather office at|Low tonight, high Friday: 5:30 a.m: Synopsis: A series of weak weather systems now in north- ern Alberta and over the Dako- tas will pass south of the lower Great Lakes on Friday, giving a chance of some light snow. Temperatures will remain on the cold side again Friday. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, Windsor, Hamilton, London: Clouding over again tonight with chance of some light snow. Friday variable cloudiness and _ not much change in. temperature. Winds light. Lake Ontario, Haliburton, Killaloe, Toronto: Friday sunny with cloudy periods and chance of a few snowflurries. Not much change in temperature. Winds becoming light this evening. Georgian Bay, Timagami, North Bay, . Sudbury Friday sunny with cloudy periods and much change in temper- ature, Winds becoming light this afternoon White River, sunny Cochrane: and continuing lures into ifs proposed railway'zen like all of us here in this|cold today and Friday. Winds | legislation | country and we're concerned) | light Omorrow Forecast Temperatures 15 15 10 10 |Windsor ... St. Thomas... London Kitchener . Mount Fore Wingham ... Hamilton St, Catharines.... Toronto Peterborough .... Trenton ..-. Kingston Killaloe .. Muskoka .. North Bay......0 Sudbury .... Eariton Sault Ste. Marie Kapuskasing White River 10 Chrysler Rolls 2000 Vehicles TORONTO (CP)--The return to production by Chrysler of Canada workers this week has added almost 2,000 vehicles to the total scheduled output of Canada's car makers, the Mo- tor Vehicles Manufacturers' As- sociation said Wednesday. Scheduled production is 15,299 cars and 2,816 trucks, compared with 13,355 and 2,896 actually produced last weed. Output for the year, however, continues to lag behind the sim- ilar 1964 period because of shut- downs caused by labor troubles. City-Wide Delivery MITCHELL'S DRUGS 9 Simcoe N. 723-3431 Open Evenings Till 9 P.M. The Rock of Gibraltar Is "S-H-A-K-Y"" Compared to the Value of Your "ACTIVE REALTY" LISTING 728-5157 WEEK-END CASH, CARRY Flower Special ROSES 97« A BUNCH REED'S Florists Downtown Drive-In Simcoe & Bond 163 Bloar W. OSHAWA g ah vd ears (Stevenson Rd. N. end Annapolis Ave.) Community For Young Moderns and So-0-0-0 Convenient | | | "Now New Spring Fabrics" Showing Reka ar ateta s a Oshawa Kiwanis Club and head table guests were: Bill MacDonald, inspector of with a charge laid under the) - Criminal Code of Canada," the} "I'm certainly not chairman, says all women in Oshawa and district are welcome. In a joint brief to the cabinet, ithe uniots complained that the |bill offers about $80,000,000 injjudge said. 48 RECORD PLAYER Simcoe St. South blic schools; Frank ire, business administra- tor of the Oshawa Separate School Board; Dr. Charles M. Elliott, superintendent, Oshawa Public Works; Mayor Lyman Gifford; Art Berry, club secretary; Bob Broadbent, President; Hon. William Davis; Albert V. Ab" Walker, MLA; Steve Saywell, Lt.-Governor of District 6B and member of Oshawa Board of Educa- tion; Ted Bassett, member of Oshawa Board of Educa- tion; Ross Backus. business administrator of the Osh- awa Board of Education; 'Al Cay, chairman of the Ki- wanis Boys' and Girls' Com- mittee and member of Ad- visory Vocational Commit- tee of the Board of Educa- tion. tulations are ex- tended to Walter S.: Fare- well of 192 Huron street and George Cheesman, 543 Montrave avenue, who are celebrating birthdays to- day. Oshawa Skating Club's carnival rehearsal this week "went exceptionally well" reports a club spokesman. "All the Osh- awa skaters have been working very hard for the past two months to per- fect their 'group numbers," eaid the spokesman. The rehearsal was conducted by elub professionals Mrs. Bar- bara MacDonald, Mrs. Jane Milne and Mel Matthews. Ticket sales for the Osh- awa Skating Club's carnival An Oshawa man was slightly injured early yester- day morning in a collision between a rush-hour bus and a car. The collision. occurred on Park road south at Greenwood avenue. ander MacDonald, 376 Wel- land avenue, the driver of the bus, had just stopped to take on passengers. Roger Arden Hatfield, King street east, the driver of the car involved, receiv- ed a lacerated nose. A pas- senger who had just board- ed the bus was knocked down by the collision but not hurt. While highways in the dis; trict were reported bare and dry today, conditions on rural sideroads are not ' good In many _ instances the frost is starting to come out and the gravel roads are soft and. muddy. School held open house last week as their part of this week's Education Week program Well over 300 parents, a 75 per cent turnout, toured the school speaking to teachers and viewing displays put on by the classes. A silver collection taken during the evening raised $10 for the Simcoe Hall. Boys' Club. Westmount | Need Mortgage Money? McGILL | Day or Night - 728-4285 Real Estate Broker jassistance for the railways but nothing to the employees and communities that will be ad- versely affected. The legislation, which the gov- ernment wants to pass in the Alex- [next parliamentary session, is tary evid jbased on the 1961 recommenda- Htions of the MacPherson royal }commission. It would let the railways abandon money-losing lvices, free them of subsidies land rate control and allow them Ito compete on a_ sink-or-swim }basis with other transport meth- | ods | The union brief, presented at lan open meeting with the cabi- net, said many railway workers will lose their jobs and many more will be forced to move to fother regions when abandon- ments begin. | | NEED... 723-3443 Day er Night to let you make hes about independence." Trottier ordered going }speec Judge refusal. The Crown filed documen-| 'e against Sabourin! after Mo and RCMP of- lficers told the court of his ar- rest Feb, 27. | Among the exhibits placed be-| 354 ibranch lines and passenger ser-|fore the court was a letter) |from Girioux seized in Sabou-| jrin's apartment , In the letter which was signed HEAT WITH OIL | DIXON'S | OIL | 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS him| sworn in but he persisted in his} } REPAIRS @ ALL MAKES e FREE Pick-up end Delivery Call 723-3867 REALTY LTD. Members Oshawa & District Real Estate Board tsa 2 APIS hui la fy By Festive at Five capital with canapés stellar with sandwiches and outstanding with hors-d'oeuvre dandy with dips splendid with shrimp choice with cheese classic with caviar cheery with chatter thrillingly thrifty ( 'JORDAN VALLEY. Cracking ROSE CHILL DESIRED [ rd JORDAN WINES LIMITED | select the fabric, the ing accents the clothes. Choose from 232 Simcoe Sout Open Friday Till 9 P.M. 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