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Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Aug 1967, p. 3

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ervals urday : scattered show- 'showers tonight Cooler Saturday. s 15 to 20 today ; Saturday. region: Mainly 'm today. Satur- oudy with scat- and continuing light todya and Saturday. emperatures High Saturday t Call JUHARSON LIFE Company ada BUSINESS: 725-4563 YOUNG CANADIANS 'TO OVERCOME' RADICALS By KEN CLARK OTTAWA (CP)--Executive Director Alan Clarke said Thursday he is confident of the future of the Company of Young Canadians despite a blowup over the role of young radicals. At a news conference, he rejected a newspaper claim that a group of radicals, includ- ing Marxists, are attempting a takeover of the federally-spon- sored organization. Radicals had made a contri- bution to the organization, but there had been no takeover by any group, he said. Nor were there Communists in the com- pany which has 85 volunteers and 40 trainees in the field , demonstrations in and around) - to stage a noisy '"'love-in" to be , used in a film in the making on quotes Leo Ewaschuck, attempting to raise community, social and economic levels. The munist-oriented."" in Film Board On Location With Hippies TORONTO (CP)--The Globe and Mail says a spokesman for the National Film Board has admitted that an NFB film crew manoeuvred some of the) event, during a series of hippie} the Yorkville coffee-house dis-| trict early this week. | The paper quotes the spokes-! man as saying the NFB obtained a permit from Toron- to's parks department Friday youth today. NFB crews were on hand in mid-town Queen's Park for a love-in that greeted six hippies when they were released from) jail Sunday after being arrested) on charges of creating a dis-| turkance in Yorkville early Sunday morning. | The Sunday love-in attracted hundreds to Queen's Park. The Globe and Mail article NFB location business manager, as saying the permit to film aj love-in had been obtained Fri-| unattributed newspaper charge claimed that some CYC radicals .were "possibly Com- Lynr Curtis, a Victoria CYC field worker, was cited in the Montreal Gazette story as the author of an article critical of the company in Scan, a publica- tion which the newspaper claimed was Communist-orient- ed. Mr. Clarke said he knew Mr. Curtis and the field worker's family and he is not a Commu- nist. The company plans no action against Mr. Curtis. He is entitled te express his views. ATTACKS MIDDLE CLASS The idea behind the Curtis view of 'a rotting middle class" was consistent with CYC aims and principles, Mr. Clarke said. The official added he did not agree with some other Cur- tis points. Mr. Clarke acknowledged that the company has no formal screening process to find Com- munists. But nobody with a i nine TO CU ... TO WALL STREET, WITH LOVE totalitarian viewpoint could sur- vive the company's selection process for volunteer field workers, he said. He was "confident of the future of the company" despite the radical takeover claims, the Curtis involvement (Mr. Curtis advised activist radicals to join the CYC) and the controversy surrounding David Depoe, 23, another CYC field worker. Mr. DePoe, working with hip- pies in Toronto's Yorkville dis- trict, faces a charge of creating a disturbance following a hip- pie-po!;ce street clash, The CYC has hired a Toronto lawyer to defend Mr. DePoe, Mr. Ciarke said. But the com- pany is identifying with the field worker, not the issue he is involved in. Defending Mr. DePoe, Mr. Clarke said the worker was invited to Yorkville and is fill- ing his prescribed role there: ius I nn helping the hippie community develop and communicate with nam " jn said. towards a program But the CYC is moving important the larger society around it. ASKED ON EXPULSION Asked whether Mr, DePoe My. Clarke specifically reject- By THE CANADIA NPRESS would be expelled from the ed other newspaper charges, John Diefenbaker and most of CYC if convicted, Mr. Clarke namely that the company has *Ithe men who are out to wrest said only that company volun- teers must work within the law. As for the legitimacy of Mr. DeFoe's work among hippies, Mr. Clarke said the number of people who have opted out of regular society is small numeri- cally, but they represent a more important segment of the community than their numbers indicate. The Yorkville hippies are alienated from society. The $20,000-a-year official to Canadiar life. REJECTS CHARGES decided against sending volun- teers abroad, that official gov- ernment policy on the company has * staff 'wobbled feebly" and the has been weakened by recent resignations. The furore is the latest in a series that have arisen over slow volunteer recruitment, the resignation of the first execu- tive director and other matters. Established company last year, the has a_ $2,400,000 his job from him were on the move Thursday but the Conser- vative leader was still not say- ing whether he's in the running for the job himself. While Davie Fulton, Donald Fleming, Alvin Hamilton, Wal- lace McCutcheon and George Hees were drumming up sup- port for their leadership bids. the 72-year-old party chieftain) paid a sentimental visit to the house where he was born. said the company is far broad- er than the two men who have are dong been in the news. Many more workers, unheralded work. Tie "We are fully aware of the make mistakes a annua we have made," he New Work Contract Signed Averting Strike On Ferries Sic ors 20" 0 MONCTON (CP)--The threat- ened strike against ferries oper- ating between Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and between |Nova Scotia and New England |was averted early today when the CNR signed a new work jcontract with the union repre- senting the ferry | bers. | The agreement came _ less |than i2 hours before 1,050 men | were scheduled to leave their jobs aboard ferries operating |between North Sydney, N.S., and Fort aux Basques, Nfld., jand between Yarmouth, N.S., and Bar Harbor, Me. The strike, would have sev- ered the main transportation link between Newfoundland and |the Canadian mainland | Tne new agreement was ham- mered out during a_ six-hour} meeting between the CNR and |the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway, Transport and Gen- eral Workers in the CNR's Atlantic region regional head- quarters building here Both sides confirmed the set- tlement early today. The railway immediately lift- led embargoes it had placed {earlier this week on freight shipments to and from New- foundland. trative staff of 70 and 125 field in their two-year assignments, crewmem-) 1 budget with an adminis- And he kept up the guessing} game he has played successful- ly from the start of the race which will reach a climax at the Sept. 5-9 leadership conven- tion in Toronto. But reports Thursday pers:st- ed that Mr. Diefenbaker's actions, and actions on_ his behalf by others, indicate he plans a fight to the finisa. ' Reliable sources said one uch move was a request to all in Canada volunteers in the field from $300 to $350 a month Ss convention headquarters for a alt names, addresses and teleplione | $100 yg numbers. They settled for months. Later, during a visit to the Bargaining in the final hours 0! 4 yellow-brick epselaacend bogged down over the timing of/Home at Neustadt, Ont., Mr the increases. The formula|Diefenbaker denied that either finally agreed upon calls for a he or his staff had made such a $55 monthly increase retroact-equest. : ive to May, 1. another $35 ef- In Montreal, Mr. Fulton, for- fective next Feb. 1 and a final| mer Justice minister, told dele- $20 next Oo 1. gates at a reception that the Tay iy crews in North Sydney leadership is already within his| eas aig . "| grasp. were ordered to prepare to Brae See te work "as usual" today by Jack Victory is here," he told an arkohs: the "unlink Atlanbe enthusiastic audience. The Lib- resion vice:chairman. Mr. Par eral part is no longer accept- PepiO vicecualman. wr. Pal lable in @uebec, he said. He sons said 'everything will go ae «1. %.,expected full participation by on schedule today--the strike is French-Canadians in the Con- over" over | servative party. He discounted the idea that he had been on the political scene too long. 'The delegates I have talked to don't share this Role Requeste By 'Checkmate' 3!" "0% "hh TORONTO (CP)--The Cana: "They didn't necessarily want dian Civil Liberties Association|mew men but ol isga experi- wi a will ask Toronto to take a sec-/enced , men new ond look at its "Operation | @Pproach. Checkmate". calling for citizen) Here's what other candidates THE OSHAWA TI MES, Friday, August 25,1967 3 Alvin Hamilton: "I'll put up my ideas against George Hees'! fluency in French." While Mr. Hamilton held forth in English for more than! an hour at a press conference before Quebec City's French- language press, Mr. Hees issued another of his policy statements from his Toronto! headquarters. It outlined plans} for a new program to solve the world hunger crisis In the sixth of seven such planned statements. Mr. Hees also called for the reorganiza- tion of the external affairs department to co-ordinate for-| eign, defence and economic nat icies, along with production of al white paper on Canada's objec- tives abroad ONE STATE, 2 NATIONS Senator McCutcheon, speak ing before a news conference at Toronto, said Canada is one sovereign state but it has two nations "or maybe more, just as in Great Britain there are Welsh, Irish, English and Scots." Mr. Fleming was in Halifax Thursday and told a news con- ference he thought Canada had too many political parties. "You can see the effect on this in Parliament where the multi- plicity of parties often retards Rightist Hess Kills Himself HANNOVER, West Germany (Reuters)--Otto Hess, a leading figure in West Germany's extreme right-wing National Democratic party, has commit- ted suicide, a party official said today. Hess, 58-year-old former colo- nel in the Nazi storm troopers, was found dying by a lodger at is home in Bissendorf about 6 p.m. Thursday, said Walde- of the party presidium He died soon after being taken to hospital. Schuetz was unable to give' the cause of his assistance increasing! were Saying: crime. Senator McCutcheon: The Irving Himel, an association|Conservative party must revive director, said in an interview|its organization. What was Thursday he would ask Mayor|needed was a new constitution- William Dennison to investigate|al method for the party to ease immediately whether the the transition from one leader 'increase in crime pusties the! to another. to fight death. mar Schuetz, a fellow. member! Chief On Sentimental Jaunt, Other Tories Travel Too transaction of business. He was confident he would win and expected strong Nova Scotia support despite Premier Robert Stanfield's entry into the leadership race. : Former agriculture minister Hamilton's remark about George Hees' French arose when a reporter asked for his opinion on Mr. Hees' thesis that future prime ministers should be bilingual Two French-language report- ers walked up to Mr. Hamilton at the end of the conference and shook his hand, including the one who asked the question on bilingualism '4 5-Year Guaranteed Investment Certificates NOW EARN 614% per annum for five years parliamentary by investing in Guaranteed Investment Certificates which are Guaranteed--cas to Principal and Interest. Flexible--may be used os Col- lateral for loans. Redeemable--by Executors In the event of death. Authorized--os Trustee Act In- vestments. CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION 19 Simcoe St. N., Oshawe 723-5221 23 King St. W., Bowmanville 623-2527 OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS and 2 "ATURDAYS. FOUNTAINHEAD . Y OF SERVICE 4 "Van Belle A flame flickers at the tip of a $5 bill as New York hip- pies throw their money ar- ound during a visit to the nation's financial centre on Wall St. today. More than day ard that neither he nor anyone else knew a demonstra-) tion would be held in Yorkville early Sunday morning. a dozen hippies threw dol- lar bills onto the floor of the New York Stock Ex- change from the visitors' gallery and then burned the five dollars on the Mr. Ewaschuk denied the| NFB had any part in organizing} the ensuing disturbances among hippies or in planning hippie strategy. Foreign Affairs Main Concern Oath Broken, Of Canadians, Grafftey Reports OTTAWA (CP)--In. the final report of his national public jopinion poll made public Thurs- a Ss otnam " heward Grafftey, the Con- |servative MP for Brome-Missis- quoi, says the chief concern of TORONTO (CP)--The Parker Royal commission Thursday heard its last spate of ch T Pl heard its last spate of charses| "Truscott Plea sel for Dr. H. B. Cotnam, Ontario, supervising coroner, T p S$ suggesting that Dr. Morton 0 ope een Shulman be prosecuted for breaking an oath of secrecy. OTTAWA adhered me ot Barry Petter said Dr. Shul-| local Italian Canadians plans to man "committed an offence" | petition. Pope Paul VI in a bid by searching death certificates|{0 obtain a new ye gh ind in Ontario government files and | vicred murderer Steven us: passing on information in one Colt. ; ae of them to Hamilton reporter) Mrs. Norma Bjerke, a house- Gerald McAuliffe. wife from nearby Aylmer, Que., Dr. Shulme had'. ohireed said in an interview Thursday r. Shulman had chargee\che has already obtained 3,000 government interference and) signatures for the petition. rile a ene. His| Pope Paul will be asked to sign Charges, made alter ie Wasiit It will then be circulated in fired as Metropolitan Toronto}! Per tani prompted the Minister Trudeau. G3 _| Truscott, then 14, was con- More than 3,000 pages of evi-|victed in Goderich, Ont., in 1959 gia - ae rill bebe of the sex slaying of ipeenced submitte uring the four|/}.ynne Harper. His death sen- yg agg Pose a i grea tence was onmeeaind to life . D. Parker says it will take! imprisonment in 1960. him at least a month to fashion) Jas} December the Supreme his report. Court of Canada held a full- Dr. Shulman's lawyer, E. B.|scale inquiry into Truscott's Jolliffe, protested that there is| conviction ~ in giro oer no evidence his client was notjeight of the nine judges he authorized to receive copies of|that Truscott had been properly death certificates. convicted. Italy and finally sent to Justice OPEN THIS SUNDAY 4:30 TO 8:00 P.M. With ber facilities. Make your reservations NOW, Phone 723-4641. Canadians is with foreign affairs. Other major issues discov- ered by Mr. Grafftey's roving interviewers after talking with 8,519 Canadians over four months were taxes and living costs, national unity, and politi- cal leadership. Three university students in a tape recorder-equipped station wagon travelled more than 16,- |000 miles in the summer. On foreign affairs, the report says, the majority feeling is that the government should take aefinite stands and these stands should be explained to the people. Genera!ly Canadians favored greater restraint in government spending to keep taxes down. "They want government to tackle inflation before it prices food right out of the reach of the people." Five things the report says Canadians are not worried about are air and water pollu- tion, defence, communications, Indian affairs and transporta- tion LEWIS OPTICAL Established for over 30 years 10% King Street West 725-0444 street outside after guards threw them out. They call- |COMPROMISE AGREED The new contract was a com- plan. ed their activities "a lov- \promise. The union had been|asked to report promptly ing gesture'. No one was (seeking a $100 monthly across-|"suspicious persons, arrested. the-board increase over 24\able actions, dangerous Under the plan, the public is Credit question-|the Conservatives would cas 2 condi-|ceed in extending '"'much more (AP Wirephoto) |months while the CNR 'hadjtions." The informant's anony-| widely the basis of its political jottered $100 over 31% months.|mity is guaranteed. Donald Fleming: The Social party should withdraw on|from federal politics. If it did, suc-| Gardeninc CENTRE Take A Drive \support." CHECK SAFETY | LINDSAY, Ont. (CP)--An| Wf buildings in Victoria and Hali- burton counties are being lehecked by the Emergency Measures Organization to deier- mine their ability to provide protection against radioactive fall-out. 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