Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 Oct 1965, p. 9

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ey a em Seg SM Hee Se ake eee eee ON OT, 6 iy ee OW We ee & tenes ep terng " é + ran rte er a a oa O| Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, VOL. 94 -- NO. 247 Be stint tii tia didi ama gd as as aa Jee Ry AGE NONE R TS r lte e lEcha 4 BEE FO A Sy hued OE ESE SO cn hal il li ee Sees i aa pony tty * -- Ghe Oshawa Gimes 1 Seale Co Per' Weak ome 'Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1965 = LORE Gee aPOn we a ieee Sachs Se ~ Ottawa" and Molt Bose Och POY ST EYL Y A POPC ET Ye TA ee Be et et ee fh a ee Weather Report Cloudy with sunny periods, Less windy. Turning much cooler. Low tonight, 38. Hig Sunday, 45. TWENTY-EIGHT PACES --" Postage in Cash. 'EVE OF DESTRUCTION, AND COLLECTION FOR RED FEATHER where students were invited to have a bash at ten cents a throw. Four Grade 12C students are shown above taking swings at the old wreck. They are, left, Lon- nie Appleby, 18, Robert Local students got into the auto wrecking business Fri- day and raised a pile of money for the Greater Osh- awa Community Chest. The car smash-up was held at Donevan Collegiate Institute Muir, 18, David Crowe, 18, and Elliott Beharrell, 17. The wing-ding could not have been held without the help of a city car wrecking company which donated the one of several such fund raising ventures which are being organized by students at Oshawa's collegiates and schools. --Oshawa Times Photo old automobile to the young- sters. All the kids who took part in the smash-up direct- ly aided the Community Chest agencies' work. The Donevan CVI event is just Two Klansmen Agree To Talk 'GO' SO FAR a Astronauts All Set For im of 'Kians' of ; SOMETIME PREACHER Woodle, 41, a sometime brick- layer as well as preacher around Lexington, N.C., drew national attention a few weeks ago when he was pictured first speaking at Klan rallies and then, disillusioned, denouncing the Klan. Woodle said the 'grief and pain" of his nine or 10 months among the knights of the Ku Klux Klan--and an apparently quick fall from favor--culmin- ated in a telephone call. Asked whether the caller threatened him with 'bodily harm," Woodle shifted in his chair and said, 'I don't know if it is bodily harm, but he said he had the authority to do away with me." After nervous laughter in the hearing room died down, Wil- lis asked whether the Klansman who did the threatening was in the room. Turning, Woodle singled out) \a swarthy man smiling in the} ad-|first row and declared: "He's the fella sitting there with the! moustache." ets and. secrecy, 'After plodding for three days through the murk of financial records and fifth-amendment pleadings, the hearings by the House committee on un-Ameri- can activities struck some fire Friday. In rapid succession on the witness stand: 1, Klansman Joseph G. Du- Bois of Goldsboro, N.C., re- signed from the Klan on the spot, saying he put God and country over the KKK oath, and turned over his records. 2. A former Klan chaplain, Roy Woodle, dramatically pointed out a Klan "night- hawk" among the spectators. and said the man had made a thinly disguised threat on his life. fy Afterward, committee chair- man Edwin E. Willis (Dem. La.) told reporters to expect "many other revelations' and added: "It is my hope and be- lief that this might result in| a chain reaction." Although Congress has Gemini VI CAPE KENNEDY, Fila. (AP) Passing every test with ease, the Gemini 6 pilots racked up still more flight rehearsals to- day for Monday's date with a target in space. Only the weather posed a question mark on the horizon. Weathermen now say they fear "sluggish cloud forma- tions" over the launch area Monday, but so far they are not expected to be serious enough to bar the launching of the Gemini 6 and the target Agena. - Command pilot Walter Ads Rejection TORONTO (CP)--Dr. Andrew, "We advised Dr. Stewart of Stewart, of the Boardjthe action we were taking and of Broadcast Governors, saidjhe did indeed express a per- Friday he has told the CTV tele-jsonal opinion on the matter," vision network it was mistakenjhe said. "'He stressed to us that in rejecting a political adver-|it was no more than a personal tisement placed by the New/opinion since the decision is a Democratic Party. matter of network policy and However, he said this was ajnot within the authority of the 'purely personal opinion" and|board." conceded that the network has} Mr. Hind-Smith declined to the legal right to reject com-|comment on the opinion Dr. mercials not acceptable to it.|Stewart expressed to the net- Dr. Stewart's views were| work. made known in a statement} To the NDP charge that the given by him at Ottawa to the|network decision resulted from NDP--which made a public is-|pressure of advertisers, Mr. sue of the rejection Thursday--|Hind-Smith said: "We have not and released here by Eamon/been approached by any adver- Park, the party's national pres-|tiser, or any advertising agency ident. either before or after our de- Mr. Park simultaneously re-|cision." ; Taken Legal: Stewart fi: $1 BILLIO N COSTS: FOR UNIVERSITIES 2 Hours Wilki HAYNEVILLE, Ala. (AP)-- Alabama's attorney - general, Richard Flowers, says two other Ku Klux Klansmen will be tried on murder charges despite the acquittal of a third in the civil rights killing of a white Detroit housewife. Flowers commented after Collie Leroy Wilkins, Jr., 21, was freed Friday by a circuit court Jaap. The five-day trial was Wil- kins' second for the murder of Mrs. Viola Grett Liuzzo, 39. The first ended in a mistrial with a deadlocked jury. A jury of i2 white men, which included four -challenged by Flowers for prejudice, reported the acquittal verdict after de- liberating about one hour and 45 minut The defendant, a crew-cut, baby-faced Fairfield, Ala., mechanic, smiled broadly. The verdict was greeted with applause by a crowded court- room in the century-old Lown- des County courthouse, built with slave labor. The spectators included the Although not big enough to fill a machine gun am- munition case, this tiny pup lets out a warning bark as if to protect his owner, Sgt. MACHINE-GUNNER'S MASCOT | Portion Paid By Province | In 5 Years LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Preser- vation of academic freedom in the face of mounting govern- ment financial involvement in | |university affairs is one of On- ;\tario's most delicate education :|problems, Premier Robarts said Friday. He added however that mu- tual co-operation has enabled the proviricial government and university officials to strike a happy medium. The Ontario premier spoke at the official opening of the Uni- versity of Western Ontario's $5,500,000 medical sciences building. The ceremony, a high light of Western's homecoming weekend, also included dedica- tion of the building's research laboratories to the memory of the late J. B. Collip, dean of medicine from 1947 to 1961. Mr. Robarts said Ontario's education problems should be described in terms of challenge, not crisis, although he predicted that universities would cost the province $1,000,000,000 in the next five years. He said the challe: William Spring of Philladet- 'pew mingo. (AP) other two Klansmen who Flow- ers. said will be tried, Eugene 'Thomas, 42, and Wiliam Orville Eaton, 41, both of Bessemer, MILITARILY, IF NECESSARY Ala., and' Wilkins' middle-aged the nightrider shooting of Mrs. Liuzzo, who was shuttling civil rights marchers back to Selma the night of March 25 follow. ing a march on Montgomery: King Promises New Marches PARIS (AP)--Dr. Martin Lu- ther King announced today he is cutting short a European trip to return home Monday to or- ganize marches in protest against the acquittal of a Ku Klux Klansman in the death of a white civil rights worker. Collie Leroy Wilkins Jr. was ACCRA, Ghana _ (Reuters)-- African: leaders 'today headed into the third' day' of their sum- mit conference here after pledg- ing to take military action if necessary in the event of a uni- lateral declaration of independ- ence by Rhodesia. In a resolution adopted Fri- day, the 28 heads of state and government leaders. present also called on Britain to sus- pend the white ~ ruled African colony's constitution and use force if necessary to take over its administration. on the 36 OAU member states to reconsider their relations with Britain if it agreed to Rhodesian independence under bers use every possible means, including armed force if neces- Africa Leaders Will React! If Rhodesia Goes It Alone|.. top-level' meeting of the OAU, opened 'Thursday plea by Ghanaian President Kwame Nkrumah for Britain to use force if necessary to pre- vent Rhodesia from declaring independence unilaterally, night, with & government must shoulder the main burden of university aid because education is a provin- cial Yesponsibility -- and he wants to keep it that way. Elsewhere in homecoming functions Dr. J. M. R. Beye erldge, president of Wolfville, N.S.'s Acadia University, told the fifth homecoming medical conference that federal govern- ment financing of higher educa- tion is essential to prevent the relegation of Canada and Cana- The resolution adopted called minority white government. It recommended that mem- Schirra and pilot Thomas Staf- ford squeezed in a little gym time today in a schedule de- voted mostly to more simulated flights, rehearsings and rendez- vous and docking with their space target. They've already logged more than 125 hours in the various simulators in the last six months--well over the 100 hours of practice flight most Gemini crews have taken into space. But in their brief one- two-day flight, Schirra newed the NDP's charge that the refusal of CTV and some in- dividual TV stations to carry the election advertisement re- sulted from "pressure from the advertising business." | | The 60-second commercial, jone of a series in connection with the NDP's consumer-pro- tection appeal, depicted a housewife and an announcer in- dicating disgust at failure of a |household product to live up to or its TV advertising. CTV. said the and/NDP ad was misleading. freed in Hayneville, Ala., Fri- day after being acquitted of the slaying of Mrs. Viola Liuzzo. Dr. King called the jury ver- dict "one of the most dastardly crimes against justice that the Pearson Marks unanimously, then read out to cheering delegates at a public session following Friday's Or- ganization meetings. Sary, if Britain failed to stop a unilateral declaration of in- dependence, It urged Britain to secure the immediate release of restricted African nationalist leaders in Rhodesia and to call a consti- The resolution was passed of African Unity The Accra. summit, the. third Birthday Of UN South has performed to date." "OTTAWA (CP) -- With time| In a statement, Dr. King said and patience the United Nations|the acquittal of Wilkins 'threat can be made a truly effectivejens all of the progress that we instrument for international col-/have made up to this point in laboration, Prime Minister|the south, for if murder can go Pearson said Friday. unpunished, who will dare to In a statement marking UN/use public accommodation or Day and the 20th anniversary|attempt to register to vote when tutional conference to be at- tended by representatives of the entire Rhodesian population. FBI Charges dians to increasingly subservi- ent roles in future world affairs. Dr. Beveridge, a 1950 gradu- ate of Western, said a nation's economic, moral, spiritual and intellectual welfare depends upon the capital made in human beings through education. investment 'Card-Burner IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP)-- NEWS HIGHLIGHTS | Stafford have by far the most Two FBI agents arrested a Uni- He identified him as Boyd/difficult flying job to date. |SEEK MORE TALKS jof the world organization, Mr./death may well be the price of Hamby. | They will hunt down the tar-| Mr. Park said that, in view|Pearson said the UN's peace-|these rights. The committee said Hamby get. Agena rocket, match its or-\of Dr. Stewart's statement, the|keeping record has been good,| '"'It is also a serious challenge was Grand Nighthawk of the|bit and dock with it--the first|NDP would reopen with CTV) but many countries are still un-jto the non - violent movement. North Carolina realm with au-|\time this has been done. |the question of running the con-| Willing to seek solutions to dis-/We have been patient... . Now thority over cross burnings and| Fuel was loaded Friday into|troversial commercial. |putes through peaceful means.|we have no alternative but to other things. the Atlas rocket that will launch! Michael Hind - Smith, CTV) He also said that after 20/organize a massive direct ac- Called to the stand, Hamby the Agena target rocket into|vice-president of programs and/years the necessary political,/tion movement to make mur- irefused to say whether he ever|space at 11 a.m. EDT Monday.|sales, expressed surprise that material and financial support/der of persons in the pursuit of } saw the preacher before, made|The Gemini 6 will follow into|Dr. Stewart would make avhave not been put up to enable|their constitutional rights a fed- the phone call or burned a cross|space aboard a Titan 2 rocket|"public statement of a private the UN to take effective i crime, tried in the federal versity of Iowa student Friday on a warrant charging him with; destroying his U.S. military draft card, Stephen Smith, 20, of ical . Iowa, who burned what he said was his draft card Wednesday before an estimated 100 persons in protest over U.S. Viet Nam policies, gvas arrested at the! apartment of friends. Judge Meunier Wins A New Trial .-EACH DAY CLOSER To NOV. 8) 1: ottabesS cote Maer the Quebec Superior Court won a, new trial Friday, be- cause of an error which the Quebec Court of Appeals said | was made by his«trial judge last year. Meunier was sen- e | tenced to two years on three counts of perjury arising For Final Stages from evidence he gave at a furniture fraud inquiry. He In another speech, he called the . Conservative leader a "scandal and a Three Arraigned On Arson Charges QUEBEC (CP) -- Three persons were to be arraigned here today on charges of arson and conspiracy to commit arson, a Quebec justice department spokesman said Fri- day night. The men had been scheduled earlier for a court appearance Friday, but had not appeared when the courts adjourned for the day. No reason was given for the post- ponement. : Russ Happy has been out on bail pending appeal. Sask.; said 'discrimination on the basis of race or color is the vehicle on which commu- ment doing nothing about it except trying to sweep it un- this week, delivered his 'first major defence of the govern- vard, bail ~ jumping unionist Hal Banks and investigations of fraudulent In THE TIMES ment's against the scandal allegations of his op- ponents. "Ludicrously false : . . ma- licious invention,' was the way he described the charges, He accused the opposition of distorting the facts with "insinuations . . . whispering campaigns . . . witch - hunts misrepresentations .. . integrity bankrupcies nism often marches.' New Democrat Leader Douglas has touched on the crime _aspect, too. In one spe he said: "You see. the tentac' the underworld reaching into the councils of the nation and the govern- and arson in Quebec. "Do you see the picture un- ravelling," he asked in a typi- cal speech, 'a picture of wrongdoing that goes right to the vitals of the heart of the nation? Do you want your sons and daughters to be made subject to addiction in narcotics?" , deau and Jean Marchand to monger" "true separatist, trying to sep- arate Quebec from: the rest of Canada through his campaign of villification and unfounded | accusation. | Mr. Douglas at one point described Mr. Diefenbaker as a good opposition leader but "a disaster" as head of a government, der the rug." Creditiste Leader Caouette has said repeatedly that the "Liberal party is financed by the underworld in Canada and the underworld in turn con- trols the Liberal party." On the nomination of new-guard Liberal candidates Gerard Pelletier, Pierre Elliot Tru- Evening Classes ---- P. 11 Showcase -- Second Section Crushmen Swamp Trenton -- P. 8 Ann Landers -- 13 City News -- 11 Classified -- 16, 17, 18, 19 Comics --- 15 Editorial -- 4 Financial -- 20 Obits -- 20 Sports -- 8, 9 Theatre -- 10 Whitby News -- 5 Women's -- 12, 13 Weather -- 2 innuendos."" Mr. Diefenbaker has seldom made a speech since the start of the campaign withoiit ham- mering at government hon- esty. He usually sums up by saying a vote for the Conserv- atives would help "clean up this mess." He gives a recitation. of events involving convicted narcotics smuggler Lucien Ri- run in Quebec, he said: "But you never saw healthy apples cure rotten apples. Don't worry, before long they will be rotten too." Privy Council President Favreau has been a leading sniper at Mr. Diefenbaker on unity, telling one audience Quebec's Provincial Secre- tary Bona Arsenault -- Mr. Diefenbaker used to bring laughter in the Commons by referring to him as Bony--got this one off at a Liberal rally in Quebec: "You know, the worst pos- sible calamity in Canada at the present time is not the atomic bomb, cholera or rats, but Diefenbaker." : Whenever he talks of wheat, Mr. Diefen baker mentions that Agriculture Minister Hays is "a millionaire' and Trade Minister Sharp "learned his agriculture on the streets of Toronto." He says the Liberals would A make all' persons not' of All Other Party Leaders French or English descent On Page 3. "not to allow Diefenbaker and "second-class citizens" and in = = his cohorts to poison your one speech in Assiniboia, jum mn mnie hearts and thoughts." ELECTION REPORT Douglas -- P. 2. oriented Communist party, (PKI) suppressed. } Reliable informants said Fri-| the current army 'crackdown on) guage on the hustings is start- the PKI. ing to get steamy as the fire Informants said they were| Under the federal election pot abortive Sept. 30 coup against) Most of the barbs shot at President Sukarno. Conservative Leader Diefen- Meanwhile, Sukarno called a| baker have been aimed at his The newspaper API (Fire) re-| big groups but getting little ported an exchange of gunfire| answering fire, presumably % " s lonesian troops and} because the major parties feel _ Now in its ninth day, the between Ind P p Greater Oshawa Community Chest campaign has reach- ed the $101,387 mark of the $306,000 target. JAKARTA (CP)--The Sovietlin Woodle's yard, lat 12:41 p.m, 'opinion." ures whenever a crisis oCcurs.|judicial seat.'"' day that Soviet embassy offi- present at one of the meetings builds up towards Nov. 8 special meeting of his top civil') record as prime minister and armed Communists outside aj the best way to handle these Union is reported to have ---- cials in Jakarta are visiting the and quoted the Soviet diplomats, Prime Minister Pearson and jan and military adyisers today} his. position on Canadian Communist party branch of-| groups is to ignore them as passed the word to the Indo- nesian military that it would be LANGUAFE GETS A LITTLE ROUGHER see offices of high ranking army g officers and telling them the So- as saying they agreed with the} his Liberals have taken a par- military that Peking, through) ticular roasting on the hon- in the wake of an outbreak!. unity. of shootings in, the capital Fri- Leaders of the other parties fice, It was the first time shoot-) much as possible. ing had been heard in Jakarta} Mr. Pearson, in a grim- giad to see Indonesia's Chinese- viet Union has no objection to| OTTAWA (CP) -- The lan- the PKI, had a hand in the} esty-in-government issue. day. | have been sniping at both the since the abortive coup. faced television appearance UTS LE

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy