a eee te Legislature May Still Sit TORONTO (CP)--The Nov. 8 federal election will not neces- Despite Vote| sarily prevent a fall session of] the Ontario legislature, Premier | Robarts said Wednesday. "There would be time.to hold| if it was necessary," he said. | Date of the next session has} not been announced. VICTORIA (CP) -- Premier Bennet! winner of the Nov. 8 federal election--whoever it may be. The premier at a press con- ference. here would not say who| government. He urged voters to "think" before casting a single vote for a Liberal candidate," he was not backing the Pro- gressive Conservatives either. The New Democratic Party and Social Credit he ruled out as contenders for government. | VANCOUVER (CP) -- The} head of the People's National Party of Canada said Wednes- day his group will have six or| seven candidates in the Nov. 8) federal election. | George Burnham, _ who} founded the Red Ensign Club earlier this year, said candi-| dates of the PNP will run in Victoria, Nanimo, North Van- couver, Vancouver South, New| Westminster , and the Fraser| Valley. He said main planks in the party's platform will be the re- turn of the Red Ensign as na- tional flag, free education for all students including books and supplies and provision of jobs| for all graduates when they) leave school. | ST. JOHNS, Que. (CP)--Yvon Dupuis, former federal minister without portfolio, said Wednes- day he plans to seek the offi- cial Liberal nomination in his present constituency. Mr. Dupuis declined to com- ment on whether he would run as an independent if he did not get the nomination. | The former minister, 38, is awaiting trial on charges of conspiring to obtain a_ race- track franchise from the Que-)/newed battle between two big) suits, bec government in his constitu- ency of St. Jean - Iberville- Napierville. Prime Minister Pearson said last July Mr. Dupuis will be opposed by an "official" Lib- eral if he runs in the next elec-| tion. | The former minister said the| rules of the Quebec section of the Liberal federal organization require a convention in each Quebec constituency to choose candidates. j | | | Of Campaign QUEBEC (CP)--Premier Le- sage said Wednesday he will stay out of the federal election campaign and that the calling of the Nov. 8 vote will not inter- fere with his plans to tour West- ern Canada beginning Sept. 19. The premier also told report- ers he was "'surprised to a cer- tain extent'? at the calling of the election, announced Tues- day night by Prime Minister) Pearson. Speaking to reporters, Mr. Lesage said that during his three-week western tour he will answer no questions by news- paper men on politics He would also abstain during the electoral campaign from expressing opinions on the fed- t eral parties and on the election|described as unwilling to an-) Mill's valid cards so far down! swer questions, unable to get @\to 7,214, or just under 50 "Tt is a tradition that the pre-|point across, unorganized, and) cent of the indicated wor race. SSW wins Si NO Mr Tid i Cid OL GREAT CROP IN WESTERN ONTARIO Patricia Ann Yellowage, 20, was crowned Miss West- ern Ontario in Windsor (Tuesday night) following Windsor, and right, Diana Coulter of Leamington. The new queen is a Windsor school teacher. (CP) her Monday night winning of the Miss Windsor title. Flanking her, left, is run- ner-up Ursula Winkler of By JOHN LeBLANC TORONTO (CP) -- The re- Legal Fight Over U.K. Labor For INCO Rights Won't Seek | Wage-Hikes BRIGHTON, England (CP)-- thin margin after a long fight bristling with violence and law- By WILLIAM NEVILLE OTTAWA (CP) -- After an United Nations eral. be read by a UN under-secre- tary, C. Y. Narasimhan. Later in the day, External Affairs Minister Martin will out- line 'his views on world affairs to the conference, being held in Canada for the first time. Both speeches are expected to run the gamut of interna- 'itional issues, touching on the '|United Nations, Viet Nam 'and Kashmir, The 600 - odd delegates will continue their general debate which got underway Wernes- day with the Viet Nam war the main topic and the Communist bloc doing most of the talking. TAKE TURNS CLEAN-UP HINT BUCKINGHAM, Que. Broom handles mailed to Quebec mayors by the pro- vincial government almost caused several angry breaks in provincial-munict- pal relations Wednesday. The broom handles ar- rived with a green tag ask- ing the mayors to attach the "suitable tool" and clean up. their municipali- ties Was Quebec City suggest- ing there was corruption in their local governments? the mayors wondered. But a note inside the cardboard containers saved the day. It asked. the mayors to clean up their municipalities -- for Cen- tennial Year, that fs. opening round of polemics on Viet Nam, delegates to the in- ter - Parliamentary Conference were sitting back today to hear a speech prepared by U Thant, secretary-gen-|, U Thant cancelled his ap- pearance here to fly to Asia to attempt mediation in the India- Pakistan conflict. His text will) BRUSHES ANGER | THE OSHAWA 'TIMES, Thursday, September ¥, 1965 3) " rhiat Speech Head Todaysor 7% To Internarliamentarians satellites, joined by the United Arab Republic, took turns ac- cusing the U.S. of "aggression"' in Southeast Asia and demand- ing an immediate end to all American military activity North Viet Nam. Congressman Alexander Pir- nie, a New York Republican, replied that his country shares the concern over the "ordeal" in Viet Nam and had repeatedly announced its "unconditional readiness" to negotiate a peace- ful settlement. All this verbal jousting was but a preliminary to the ex- pected main battle on Viet Nam Friday when both Russia and the UAR: seek conference ap- proval to submit draft resolu- tions formally condemning the United States. Both resolutions already have been rejected by a solid margin in the inter-parliamentary coun- cil, a conference sub-group, and the same result is expected in the 61-country general body. That would lave a third res- lolution on Viet Nam, submitted Representatives of the Soviet| py the council itself and calling, Union and six East European|for a ceasefire and negotiations |without pinning fault on either |side. |22 GROUPS HEARD Operating on a_ strictly-en lforced 15-minute time limit for jeach national delegation, 22 groups were able to set forth their views Wednesday in the 14% hours of discussion which \followed the formal opening by Governor-General Vanier and Prime Minister Pearson. Other than the Communist delegates, most speakers shied away from controversy, empha- sizing the general principle of negotiating international differ- ences and urging an end to all nuclear testing and the spread of nuclear weapons. Almost all of them lavished praise on Canada for the con- ference arrangements and the country's general record, Albert Wame Onwuma Agye man of Ghana even saluted Ca- nadians for their "courage"' in selecting last year a national quiet elegance." there, including the bombing of flag of "great distinction and | Va mee SF BS litical parties, that harried ing is back at national head- quarters with the announce- ment of the Nov. 8 election. Mrs. Bobby O'Neill, a Liberal public relations worker, Wed- nesday described the difference a day makes: "Everything has to be done right at the minute requested." Visits to some party head- quarters here leave the impres- sion that everybody reached for a telephone and called head of- fice the day after the announce- ment. The telephone was ringing when the first person showed up for work at 7:30 a.m. at Con- servative headquarters. It kept right on. The only curb on calls was the capacity of lines available. OFFERS FLOWIN | Callers include party workers | offering their services and can- |didates seeking instructions. | Just before noon, Richard Thrasher, the Conservative na- itional director, had six long- |distance calls hanging. His ex- ecutive assistant, Flora Mae- Donald, had three. Mr. Thrasher told a reporter: "T'll be on the telephone al-| jmost entirely for the next 48 | hours." "4 | Terry Grier, the New Demo-; cratic Party's national secre-| \tary, puffed a cigarette as he) lsat at his desk with his tie) |loosened and coat off. His tele- phone rang all day too. | Bill MacEachern, Liberal public relations director, said) |many of the phone calls were| from volunteer workers offering | their services. | at | CALL... | DIXON'S FOR OIL FURNACES FUEL OIL AND HEATING SERVICE SERVING THE PUBLIC OVER 50 YEARS 313 ALBERT ST. OSHAWA 723-4663 as Pe ey ee ee 7 Sac Ng -Go-Go Feeling Is Back With Party Organizations Tha Creditistes wha werk out! The .NNY.Tikeral snd Cae. of the Parliament Buildings of-|servative headquarters In the fice of Leader Real Caouette,|/capital resembled busy busi- also had an active telephone. i ness offices. ' Even melting ice cubes can't dilute the true taste of Adams Gold Stripe. It will keep its flavour to the very bottom of the glass--the mark of a great whisky. THOMAS ADAMS DISTILLERS LTD, Toronto, Ont, i) unions for one of Canadian la-| G. Ww. T, Reed, chairman of bor's richest prizes--the huge) , hard-rock miners local at Po ese anpergsagaa poner de-|ingly voted Wednesday for self-| ' S pos : : jbury--went through one of its/end of a one-day closing hear-|restraint in seeking new ma closing rounds Wednesday. ing but said there was a massjincreases to help the Labor gov: | Poe fonecde ge win Eas evidence to be digested fromjernment shore up the weakend | application by the Gieosadent| Gone sessions: ate and at national economy, battered in| International Union of Mine,| challenged the validity of many|P&tt by steep wage rises and | Mill and Smelter Workers for) of Mine-Mill's new membership| Widespread strikes. a certification vote at Interna-| cards. ae ; a tional Nickel Co, of Canada,| baie * where it lost bargaining rights a goons in this three years ago to the United|SPpucation I ever there was Steelworkers of America (CLC).|Tottenness before the board,"|proved a measure requiring un- The unit is Canada's biggest| (Me Steelworkers' lawyer, Johniions to submit new wage de-| union local with a membership] Ose? of Toronto, said in his mands to a union committee to) of about 15,000 and ~dues of| Clpsing summation as he re-\determine whether such pro-| around $1,000,000 a year. Mine-| ewed evidence of illegitimate) nosed increases conform with) Mill held it for 17 years before| "atts. He said they formed Althe national interest. This, in Steel pushed it out by a razor-| fi -- _ should knock out/ effect, would give the central a e application. |body some control over the bar- 'gaining power of individual un- |Organized British labor grudg-| In a 5-to-3 decision, repre-| sentatives of the 8,700,000-mem- ber Trades Union Congress ap- nesday--in a appraisal called The Black an Blue. versity' society after polling 2,000 stu-|day that as of the filing dents. | SUGGESTS AIM UBC Profs | For the challenging union, ae | counsel John Nelligan of Ot-) The measure was backed by | bed | Given Word cards with a view to frustrating| {that union and with the concur-| VANCOUVER (CP) ~-- Profes- isors in the University of British Columbia's science faculty got themselves Wed-| 72-page student) d he word on It was compiled by the uni- science undergraduate S$ One chemistry professor was mier of Quebec does not con-|incoherent. cern himself with federal elec-| tions. I have no intention of go-| oe this tradition." | r. Lesage said it is possible he will be in Europe Nov. 8 on a trip whose itinerary he said wore is not yet fixed. / \ Karachi: City Hit By Perils | Karachi is a flat and humid seaport that swelters and dreams of past glories on the | Arabian Sea northwest of®the Indus River delta. It was once a great metrop-| olis of British imperialism) northwest of the less Oriental, | British-styled city of Bombay, | and a port of entry for the fabled Northwest frontier and Afghanistan. When it was made the cap-|-- ital of newly - independent Pak- | istan in 1947, Karachi's popula- tion went over 1,000,000 and has stayed at that figure al- though the government has moved to the cooler, unclut- tered Rawalpindi area. The Karachi federal capital district had a population of 2,153,000 in 1961. Karachi is a_ considerable naval base and has been a ma- | jor international air base since | routes were established from | Europe to the east in the 1920s, It was a big base of the U.S.) Air Transport Command. dur- ing the Second World War. The chief industry of Karachi | --besides shipping--is the pro- | cessing of agricultural products wn. in the rich, irrigated | interland. It is the seat of the Univer- sity of Sind and a major. edu- cational centre. | A geophysics professor's lec-| tures were summed up: "Bor- ing and lethargic." Of 133 professors rated, 33 considered . outstanding, and 60 as above average. Courses and methods also were criticised, new discovery and approaching} the. height of advanced tech- niques, it is indeed strange that students must suffer from such primitive and insane recording methods as note-taking in lec- tures," it said. "The professors are continu- ally rating students through pa- pers and exams," said a spokésman for the students. "but seldom do students have a chance to rate professors other than griping in the lynch- room." OLD WORLD TRADITION | LONDON CREAM Canadian huny LONDON WINERY LMITED LONDON ONTAN® fimaea NEW WORLD PERFECTION ati Suggested some Steel sup-|the union's governing council in porters had signed Mine-Mill the hope it would serve as a rence, if not the direct incite- ment, of Steel officials. ' "T suggest that this is the real|™@nds to the national pattern of deceit that has come jand aisha board for study be before the board.' he said. |fore the unions may do battl 'There has been no suggestion| ith management. that Mine-Mill condoned dishon- sega Minister est or sloppy practices. the Economics Brown has warned volunteer substitute for a gov- ernment plan to force unions to submit all such future wage de- | | | George union Mine-Mill filed a total of 7,850|.ouncil the Labor government Iectaboesip cards --" May.|intends to bring in legislati ne board announced ednes-!i, December caliing fort the\compulsory "early date it has det®rmined the 569. Jt has narrowed Mine- Brown asked Per!pnort on the measure. king force. To get a certification he vote,|ernment's current t challenging union needs|incomes policy, warning" : isystem to give the board the| working force at Inco was 14,-ichance of considering the mer- jits of various wage increases, the union's sup- A motion rejecting the gov-| prices and} backed by a} cards totalling 45 per cent of| group of unions led by the 120,- | the working force. In the vote,'000-strong boiler makers and|m it would need 50 per cent plus|shipwrights, was one '6.131,000 votes to 2,212,000, "In this age in which univer-| sities are on the threshold of 4% Guaranteed | 1 Year to 4 Year nest ment Certificates, 5 year to 10 year G.I.C.'s -- 534% 1% 9 '° SAVINGS ACCOUNTS Interest calculated and paid quarterly Effective yield over 10 years -- 5.6% P.A, COMMUNITY SAVINGS SERVICE @ GROWTH D yeren i sane! dideree | a i 4 , $9995" i 6 Heed Office: 19 Simcoe St. N. 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