North Bay Nugget from North Bay, Ontario, Canada (2024)

Canadians await action Quebec premier elect Oppose Cambodia fighting (Continued from Page One) support for the move into Cambodia, National Guard troops patrolled at the University of Wisconsin in Madison after, police said, more than 35 persons were arrested in two days of window smashing and firebomb vandalism. University spokesmen estimated 10,000 persons attended a campus rally Tuesday night. The rally was peaceful but there was vandalism afterward. The wave of protests was touched off Monday when National Guardsmen called out by Ohio Gov. James A.

Rhodes to control anti-war demonstrations at Kent State, fired into a crowd. Four students were killed. The Faculty Senate Tuesday blamed Rhodes and his adjutant-general, S. T. Del Corso, for the deaths.

Fifteen persons were injured early today when helmeted police armed with clubs and sidearms routed some 500 Seton University students in South Orange, N.J. The students had camped around a street bonfire to protest the war. FIRE TEAR GAS Buffalo, N.Y., police fired tear gas and battled students on the campus of Buffalo State and nearby streets University, night. The incident volving about 500 students followed similar encounters during the day. Police also used tear gas and clubs in the state Capitol building in Austin, to break up a demonstration by several hundred protesters who had marched from the University of Texas campus six blocks away.

Princeton University faculty voted to suspend classes for the remainder of the semester and took a stand as a group condemning the war in Southeast Asia. They also approved a recess prior to the two November election SO students can work in political campaigns. Boston University cancelled final examinations and May 17 commencement exercises. call for a nationwide student strike was made by Charles Gonzales, president of the Student National Education Association. There appeared to be a wide re- sponse.

JULIE STAYS HOME President Nixon's daughter Julie, and her husband, David Eisenhower, remained at their Northampton, apartment as students at her college, Smith, and his, Amherst, voted to strike. In Washington, Mrs. Nixon cancelled her scheduled trip to Fredericksburg, today because of planned anti-war dem- DEATHS at York Central Hospital, Richmond Hill, SERRE: on Sunday evening, May 3, 1970, Julien Andrew Serre, in his 60th year, beloved husband of Desniges Mousseau, formerly of Chiswick and Kiosk. Resting at the Paul Funeral Home, Powassan. Requiem high mass in St.

Louis de France Church, Chiswick, on Thursday at 10 a.m. Interment Chiswick Cemetery. STORIE At his home in Powassan, on Tuesday, May 5, 1970, Thomas Storie, in his 92nd year, beloved husband of Rose Hanselman. Resting at the Paul Funeral Home, Powassan. Services in Powassan United Church, on Thursday at 2 p.m.

Interment Union Cemetery. LOST Lost, red leather wallet. Bell Telephone office. Contains important papers. Dial 474-4803.

dy-8 Lost, tinted bifocals, Friday. Dial 472-8654. 3 Lost, blood hound, yellow in color, white around neck. Please dial 474-5729." 3 Lost, blue budgie, vicinity Reynolds and Vimy St. Finder please dial 472-6125.

3 Lost, black rimmed glasses, with one arm, between Cambrian College and The Royal Bank. 472-5596. 6 Lost, small black and brown female terrier, vicinity Copeland answers to Missy. Dial 474-3145. 4 Lost, black Labrador, family pet, no collar, very friendly, answers to Blackie.

Dial 472-8704. 3 FOUND We will insert up to 15 words 2 days free of charge. All it costs you to 6 found ad is a phone call Found, white dog with brown ears, dark spots on nose. Suspected to be male. Dial 474- 4396.

4 Found, motorcyclist's helmet, on Saturday. Dial 474-7056, ask for Gabe, after six. 4 Found, girl's CCM blue Scrambler bicycle, vicinity Cassells and Princess Sts. Dial 474-2938. 4 The North Bay Nugget, May 6, 1970 WEATHER REPORT NORTHERN OUTLOOK TEMPERATURES OTTAWA (CP) Prime Minister Trudeau trying to "capture" Robert Bourassa before the Quebec Liberal leader takes over as premier? Mr.

Trudeau and his chief Quebec lieutenant, Regional Expansion Minister Jean Marchand, have been busy publicly interpreting what Mr. Bourassa will do as premier. Teachers (Continued from Page One) turally some positions will still be available as unforeseen situations present them- selves. ATTEND UNIVERSITY If a student has proven himself poor academically at the college this year, with low marks, and has indicated to Mr. Johnson that "teaching is not for him," the college principal has counselled that student to look towards another profession that might interest him.

However, for those students who "know within their heart that they truly want to be said Mr. Johnson, "I have advised that they attend university this year." If they are still interested In entering the teaching protession after that one year of university, said Mr. Johnson, then they should try to obtain a teaching job in the fall of 1971. the employment situation is still the same next fall." said Mr. Johnson, "and I have had no indication that next year will be any better, I advise students to return to university a second year." Mr.

Johnson commented that his students are serious about the teaching profession, they should perhaps plan to attend university for two years and then seek employment in the spring of 1972. the spring of 1972, the supply and demand situation should have levelled out and prospective teachers should be able to find jobs quite easily," stated the college principal. A government program to raise teaching standards In Ontario has stipulated that all students entering teachers' colleges in Ontario in September 1971 must have at least one year of university. Three arrested after U.S. flag burned at Toronto TORONTO (CP) Three demonstrators were arrested Tuesday night when a United States flag was burned during a demonstration outside the U.S.

consulate here. The three-hour demonstration generally was peaceful as 500 persons protested the shooting deaths Monday of four students at Ohio's Kent State University and U.S. involvement in Cambodia. In Montreal, at least four persons were arrested as about 650 persons demonstrated there against the U.S. student deaths.

Some rocks were thrown and small fires were started when police tried to disperse the crowd. A three-minute melee broke out during the protest here when a U.S. flag was burned and a jar of red paint was thrown against the door of the In Moscow, Idaho, a fire damaged a naval Reserve Officers Training Corps building on the campus of the University of Idaho. Earlier, 30 miles away in Lewiston, a fire swept through a National Guard armory. The entire Los Angeles police force was mobilized and a state of emergency declared when a rally on the University of California at Los Angeles campus turned into a rock-throwing melee.

Sixty-nine were arrested and four were injured at the rally, attended by some 3,000 at its peak. Some 700 University of Chicago students marched on a National Guard armory and demanded the lowering of the American flag to half staff in honor of the slain Kent students. Col. Charles Wilson, ROTC battalion commander, ordered the flag lowered becauce police were outnumbered. Tension eases (Continued from Page One) and waved the gun in self-defence.

The school said the gun had not been fired. But a man identifying himself only as a special officer for Portage County said he saw a cameraman firing his pistol between the advancing guardsmen and the crowd of students. The Kent State faculty senate, representing 1,170 full-time instructors, adopted a resolution Tuesday to refuse to resume teaching until the Guard moves out. In another development the executive director of the Ohio American Civil Liberties Union, Benson Wolman, called on Gov. James A.

Rhodes to remove S. T. Del Corso as Ohio National Guard commander. He said the guardsmen who cut down the students with a burst of rifle fire were trained, overeager and poorly controlled." The faculty resolution blamed Gov. Rhodes and Del Corso for Obituaries and funerals A.

S. Waite onstrations at Mary Washington University there. There some indications of support for the Cambodian intervention. At the Mormon Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, student newspaper then Daily Universe said: "We understand the rationale behind Mr. Nixon's decision and support him in it." At the University of Keniucky, A.

B. (Happy) Chandler, a trustee and former Kentucky governor, denounced an antiwar protest as an "outrage" and told of hitting a demonstrator "with a crisp right hand right on his In New York, thousands of college and high school ran through the midtown business district shouting "revenge Kent State." A rally was held in front of the United Nations building. Rocks were thrown through several windows. The funeral service for Arthur Stanley Waite, 432 McPhail was conducted todav in the Martyn Chapel by Rev. C.

W. Cope of St. Andrew's United Church. A former employee at the Canadian Pacific Railway, freight sheds, Mr. died Sunday in hospital following a lengthy illness.

Pallbearers were: Pat Row, Windsor: Bill and Michael Griffiths, both of Toronto; Harry Marshall and Robert Nicoll, both of North Bay and Harry Mackey, Sudbury. Interment was at Terrace Lawn Cemetery. A resident of North Bay since 1926, Mr. Waite was born in England Aug. 10.

1897. son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Charles William Waite. His to the former Eva 'Madeline Griffiths took place Sept.

21, at Aurora. Mr. Waite attended St. Andrew's United Church and was a former member of the church choir. A gardening enthusiast, he specialized in flowers and was a keen bowler for, Surviving many years.

are his wife and one son, William Charles, Callander. Mrs. 0. Carriere CORBEIL-The funeral mass for Mrs. Oscar Carriere of Corbeil was offered today at Sacred Heart Church by Rev.

L. Beaudoin. Mrs. Carriere, 80, died Sunday in hospital at North Bay following a lengthy illness. Pallbearers were: Richard Carriere, Gerard Gravelle, Paul Gareau, Yvon, Conrad and Gaston Deschene, all grandsons of Mrs.

Carriere. Interment was at Corbeil Cemetery. The daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Adolphis Leblanc, Eleonore Carriere was born North Bay March 13, 1890.

Her marriage to Oscar Carriere took place in 1912 at Corbeil, where she attended Sacred Heart Church. Besides her husband, she is survived by five sons: Edgar, Toronto; Armand, Kitchener; Arthur, Hespeler; Roland, Corbeil, and Lionel, North Bay; six daughters: Mrs. Anotole Deschene (Antoinette), Corbeil; Mrs. Arthur Chatelain (Bernadette), Hamilton; Mrs. chener; Mrs.

Joseph Gravelle veile Rosario Gareau (Marie), (Aline), North Bay; Mrs. Alexandre Clunas (Germaine), Montreal, and Mrs. Norman Preston (Blanche), Kitchener; 57 grandchildren, 25 greatgrandchildren and a sister, Mrs. Joseph Drouin (Maria), Timmins. Two brothers and two sisters predeceased Mrs.

Carriere. Open 3 new fronts SAIGON (AP) U.S. and South Vietnamese forces opened three new fronts inside Cambodia today, but in Vietnam the North Vietnamese launched a massive asthat killed 25 Americans at an artillery base south of the demilitarized zone. It was the largest number of Americans reported killed in a single attack in 21, years. Thirty more Americans from the 101st Airborne Division were reported wounded in the attack on the artillery base 16 miles south of the DMZ.

Initial reports said 15 North Vietnamese were killed. While a heavy mortar barrage pinned down the U.S. troops, the North Vietnamese hit the base firing rocket grenades and rifles. Sharp fighting and terror attacks were reported at several other points In the northern provinces, with six more Americans and 15 guerrillas killed. A grenade thrown into a police station in Da Nang killed six etnamese policemen and wounded six.

CONCENTRATE ON NORTH The North Vietnamese appeared to be putting most of their retaliatory effort into the northern provinces. U.S. officials claim the operations in Cambodia have disrupted Communist supply lines to the south of South Vietnam. Thousands more American and South Vietnamese troops crossed into Cambodia in the biggest offensive of the war. Informed sources said between 20,000 and 25.000 .000 Amertcan troops and about an equal number of South Vietnamese now are hunting North Vietnamese and Viet Cong base camps in Cambodia at six points along 250 miles of the border.

The Southern allied commands claimed more than 2,500 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong killed, most of them by air strikes, since the first offensive was launched Thursday. Thousands of tons of arms, ammunition, other military equipment and food have been captured or destroyed, headquarters said. But they still have not located the Communist headquarters to be in Cambodia. Incomplete reports: put Southern allied casualties at 17 Americans and 170 South Vietnamese troops killed and 61 U.S. and 651 South Vietnamese troops wounded.

TAKE SNUOL In the Fish Hook region of Cambodia, about 80 miles north-northwest of Saigon, the North Vietnamese pulled out of the plantation town of Snuol as American bombers wiped out 90 per cent of it. and a U.S. tank force rolled in unopposed. The bombers were called in after the tank column fought its way into the centre of the town Tuesday and then had to retreat. The three fronts opened today were northeast and southwest of the Fish Hook: 1.

Three thousand U.S. infantry from the 25th Division began moving by helicopter and mored personnel carriers westward along Route 20, 50 miles southwest of the Fish Hook. 2. South Vietnamese troops moved north out of Loc Ninh and were to link up with the U.S. 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment advancing northeast on Route 7 after capturing Snuol.

3. Helicopters landed troops of the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division and South Vietnamese troops 23 miles north of Song Be and about 10 miles beyond the border. This is also northeast of the Fish Hook. Ships home WASHINGTON (Reuters) Soviet worldwide naval manoeuvres in which more than 200 ships participated epparently ended April 29, the U.S.

defence department reported Tuesday. It said in a statement most of the participating vessels have returned to home waters. The ships ranged over the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian oceans and the Mediterranean, Norwegian, North, Barents, Baltic and Black seas, Synopsis: With a large cool high pressure area building into the Great Lakes overnight skies were generally clear and temperatures decidedly cool. Armstrong, Geraldton and White River all dipped to near 15 above while near freezing temperatures were common near the lower lakes. Today will be mainly sunny and cool but Thursday will see temperatures easing back up toward normal with the sunny weather continuing.

Toronto, Hamilton, London. Windsor, North Bay, Sudbury, Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, 'Niagara, western' Lake Ontario, Georgian Bay: Sunny with cloudy periods and cool today. Clear cold tonight, sunny and warmer Thursday. Winds northwesterly near 20, decreasing to light this evening.

Algoma, White River, Cochrane, Temagami: Mostly sunny today and Thursday. Cool today, becoming warmer on Thursday, winds light. Low tonight High Thursday North Bay 30 60 Sudbury 30 60 Earlton 25 65 Sault Ste. Marie 35 60 Kapuskasing 32 60 White River 30 60 Moosonee 30 55 Timmins 32 60 Windsor 35 70 St. Thomas 35 65 London 32 65 Kitchener 32 65 Mount Forest 30 60 Wingham 30 60 Hamilton 32 60 St.

Catharines 32 Toronto 35 Peterborough 30 Kingston 30 Trenton 30 60 Killaloe 25 65 Muskoka 30 60 They have even been saying what Mr. Bourassa thinks, before the premier-elect can say himself what is in his mind on major issues. Some observers say the object of this operation is attempt to condition Canadians to what Mr. Bourassa will do as premier and to get Mr. Bourassa to conform to these expectations.

Others say Mr. Bourassa is his own man with his own mandate and the country will just have to wait to see what he does, on his own, without any Ottawa coaching. TRUDEAU SAYS. Since Mr. Bourassa won the Quebec election April 29, Mr.

Trudeau has told reporters that the Quebec Liberal leader will: -Solve the province's economic ills only through co-operation with Ottawa, the other provinces and private investors; -Accept federal-provincial shared-cost programs which the previous Quebec administration rejected; -Give Ottawa credit for federal expenditures in Quebec; -Forget about foreign adventures with France: -Approve 8 new national park for Quebec; -Not revive special status or the two nation theory. -Likely proceed with the federal-provincial constitutional review: -Tax Quebecers more if he wants more tax revenue instead of asking Ottawa for more money: -Come up for re-election in 1974. that' Mr. Marchand said Saturday Ottawa-Quebec relations would improve. He knew Mr.

Bourassa personally "and 1 don't think he would be critical only for the purpose of being critical." Quebec and Ottawa seem bound for easier relations even if Mr. Bourassa does only half the things Mr. Trudeau and Mr. Marchand say he will do Courthouse (Continued from Page One) "I would like to point out that the local newspaper is quite friendly to you, particularly. I could never figure out why, but they are.

do not have many enemies in North Bay," the minaster retorted. "well. not with the newspaper anvway, said Mr. Smith. "They think you are a great fellow just can't understand "Ever since I went up and told jested Mr.

Sim- onett. "That was a great speech you made that night. It got a lot of coverage," the Nipissing member said. "We have been trying to get you to come to Timmins ever sino2, said Rev. William Ferrier, NDP member for Cochrane South.

Returning to the subject of the courthouse. Mr. Smith told the minister that: "Some of the cracks in the walls of that building are just about big enough for your head to fit through." "They must be Liberal Leader Robert Nixon said wryly Three killed Three killed CALCUTTA (Reuters) Palice shot and killed three persons Tuesday when a mob attacked police outpost in this capital of troubled West Bengal state. ART WORKSHOP IN NORTH BAY "Learn To Do By Doing;" this is the theme of the In-Service Art Workshop which began on Tuesday at St. Alexander's School in North Bay.

The purpose of the workshop is to give an opportunity to local teachers to get a broader scope of Art Education in the use of materials and the deaths, saying: "We hold the guardsmen, acting under orders and under severe psychological pressure less responsible for the massacre than our Gov. Rhodes and Gen. Del Corso, whose inflammatory indoctrination produced this pressure." In the three days of rioting which began Friday, there were a total of 136 arrests -the majority of them curfew violators and persons carrying concealed weapons. University President Dr. Robert I.

White told reporters that this time, it is not possible to sav when a reopening can Portage County Coroner Dr. Robert Sybert said the bodies of the four dead students had been released to their parents. The dead were Sandy Lee Scheuer, 20. of Youngstown, Ohio; Jeffry Miller, 20, Plainview, N.Y: Wil liam K. Schroeder, 19, of Lorain.

Ohio and Allison Krause. 19. of Pittsburgh, Pa. consulate. Many of the demonstrators charged the door, yelling "Kill the pigs." Two mounted policemen.

not previously in evidence, appeared out of the darkness and pushed the crowd back onto the sidewalk. About 35 Metropolitan Toronto police were on hand. CHARGE TWO William Douglas Walker, 20. and James W. Doyle, 18, both of Toronto.

were charged with 85- saulting police. Andrew R. Adach. 23, of no fixed address, was charged with causing a disturbance. The newest symbol of protest, a rifle-range target pinned over the heart, was worn by several demonstrators.

The protesters carried placards reading: "Generation genocide," and "Get out of Asia." the planning and teaching of school art, through actual participation. The workshop is sponsored by the Canadian Crayon Company and all materials used at the workshop will be furnished by the company. Dorothy J. Wiese, a specialist in Art Education with the company, will conduct the workshop and give hints on working with, finger paint, water colors, clay, chalk and crayons. Shown from the left are: Miss Wiese, Sister Patricia Ann Dennis, St.

Rita's, Ray Burnette, St. Alexander School, Sister Judith Shea, Corpus Christi, and Marj Bolton, Our Lady of Sorrows, Sturgeon Falls. -Nugget Staff Photo "Thank God for peace," Dube tells Hollanders Bill Boss, CP war correspondent in Italy, Western Europe and Korea, has returned to The Netherlands for a week to report for CP on special celebrations marking the 25th anniversary of the end of the seeond world war. By BILL BOSS THE HAGUE (CP) Veterans Affairs Minister JeanEudes Dube of Canada, In a brief thank you speech at Zutphen Tuesday, referred to occasional placards that have popped up at remembrance ceremonies in The Netherlands. "We have come here," he said, "not to glory war as some young people would seem to think but to thank God for peace." At Wageningen Monday night, and again at Zutphen, "two or three young people appeared carrying signs reading "Holland 1945, Cambodia 1970.

They stood or sat quietly in their places, made no comments Nixon's greatest gamble Bv JOHN HEFFERNAN WASHINGTON (Reuters) President Nixon is awaiting the outcome of the greatest gamble of his life, the success or failure of his Cambodian venture, with quiet confidence. He has until June 30. the date he said Tuesday American troops would be out of Cambodia, to make or break. In the words of a faithful supporter, Republican Senator Robert B. Dole of Kansas: 11 works.

it is stroke of genius. a If it doesn't. he strikes out." That just about sums up the national attitude as angry debate continues over the president's decisions to order thousands of United States troops to seek out the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong sanctuaries in Cambodia and to destroy them. If the president is unable to produce convincing proof of the correctness of the new move. political experts say he will be finished politically and destined to be a one-term president.

Inability to find large dumps of Communist arms, ammunition and equipment in the sanetuaries, and expansion of the present operations, would produce even more bitterness than that which already divides the country. NEEDS SUCCESS The president's relations with critics in Congress, who were not consulted in advance about his military decision, already have produced major censtitutional problems, which only suecess on the battlefield can effectively quiet. By deciding to attack the Cambodian sanctuaries, Nixon tollowed a recommendation that was made long ago by U.S. military leaders, but always rejected by former president Johnson as an unnecessary risk. What changed Nixon's thinking was the sudden ouster of Prince Norodom Sihanouk.

who as chief of state had kept Cambodia neutral while winking at the use of Cambodian territory by the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong for attacks on South Vietnam. A new and more friendly government in Phnom Penh, Nixon's military strategists argued, provided an opportunity to knock out the sanctuaries and help shorten the Vietnam war. Now that American forces are in Cambodia, the nagging question is: How are they going to get out, especially if the Communists mount an attack ON Phnom Penh. as battlefield dispatches suggest? If the present friendly government fell and Communists took over. the North Vietnamese would have a much larger base than the sanctuaries they have enjoyed up to now.

and information officers at Wageningen and Zutphen said they understood the "protests" to be against the general form the observances are taking, not specifically against the Canadians who are here as guests. In both cities about 10 miles apart on the banks of the Ijssel River, happiness reigned and it was obvious that most of the townspeople were jubilant over the return among them of soldiers personifying the 3rd Canadian Infantry Division troops who "liberated" them in 1945. Both cities suffered in the fighting. PRESENTS PENNANT Brig. Graham Gibson, commander of the 7th Canadian Infantry Brigade which took De.

venter April 7, 1945, and subsequently made a Freeman of the city, presented Burgomaster Nicolas Bolkestein with the jeep pennart that he flew as brigade commander on entering Deventer. He received a standing ovation. Gibson is spending 10 days there as a guest of the city. Maj. George A.

Ecroyd, Freeman of Zutphen and that city's guest, was equally acclaimed when, his voice breaking with emotion, he presented Burgomaster J. J. Roeters van Lennep with the flag of Canada. He said, alternating his phrases between French and English. that he hopes "the people of Zutphen will take this present of the beloved flag of my country as symbol of the supreme sacritice made by our comrades that they and their children may forever live in peace and Ecroyd was a company commander of the Regiment de la Chaudiere which with the North Shore Regiment captured Zutphen.

"I feel awfully humble by the fact that they see in me the living symbol of all that Canada has meant to he said after the ceremony. In both cities the Canadian Forces detachment from West Germany under Capt. Bob Chaulks of Cornerbrook, was applauded as it marched through the streets. Peace talks boycotted by Communists PARIS (AP) The Communist side boycotted the Vietnam peace, talks today to protest North American air raids on Vietnam last weekend and U.S. military operations bodia.

But the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong did not break up the conference. The North Vietnamese nounced that they were postponing today's 66th meeting of the peace talks until Thursday, May 14. The regular Thursday meeting this week had been scheduled for today because this Thursdav is Ascension Day, A holiday in France. Announcing the boycott and postponement, North Vietnamese spokesman Nguyen Thanh Le told a news conference that the Nixon administration had violated a promise by the Johnson administration to stop the bombing, and all other acts of war against North Vietnam. He said that instead President had intensified and extended the war.

PIXies by Wohl I FEEL SORRY FOR HIM. A SLIPPED DISC CAN BE VERY PAINFUL. pp Tat. key U.S. Pot.

Off 15-13 WOWL 10 1970 by Fenture rigato Syndicate, rererved far..

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