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DC News Lm-—cdn. Roundup 4.10-Must: In "M Ali’ 4. ntdewri line Fish I'csst Metinae in“ ‘‘“‘''“'’'v °‘Wi°ttetown- 'I'huu.. Jan. 30, mos. isi 1 | Coinmissioners Calledi lraitors In Article hggfftfigdllc‘? -- In an or-.‘ The article says members of Made __ my a Traitor llthe commission are devoting‘ l-he “’99kl.\' 1-9 Temlmlthemaelves “at high salaries to ?nfg‘eC.'Sal U";1305r1)fl <J3ftQuebec prov-the ‘defence of federal inter. aegcrlhfi the i 5101:1319 P31'lY.‘eSi.s. The article also says the CB-C and hegrfisi out of the s of Alphonse Ouimet. mfimbe} 0‘ "1 C 31 anguage president of the CBC. recently sion on an .'i"e my °°""-n-!s“ ‘"5 d‘.’“""°d~ . __ icuturaiism and biiin-i “It is iiiu, um Eualism as traitors to French.made" says the a Ca"“da~ ‘ “Ottawa needs accomplices ‘~ W‘-t=l:_lyV compares tiieilt is unnerved by Quebec's na- "Wal commission to the myaiuonalism: thus it must find “"."‘1m?5-Win on arts, letters aridlrlahl in Quebec. the traitors |StiFnrt=_s_ which it describes as I who will do good jobs, ones that the famoiis Massey . Leivesqiie-,the_ dictators and the tyrants ccvritralizing commission wiiiciiitheniselves cannot do. Permitted Ottawa to invade the. “Mr. Pearson did not have to constitutional domatn reserved look far. The traitors are al- l” fl‘-9 Drovinccs." Rt. Hon. Vin- ireedy in place They are sitting cent Massey, former govei-mi-.ion the Laurendeau-Diinton com- seneral. and V Rev. lmlssion. in the presidency of the traitors are l'i.l(lE. Georges - Henri Levesque, (oi-.iCBC. . . mer dean of social sciences at‘ The article describes the CBC Laval Uiiiversity. were chair-ias the “rich and costly head. iman ‘and vice - chairman. re-if!‘-'3"e1'5 0f Liberal and social- -‘_P‘—‘"-i"°lIv'. of the arts commis- ‘Silt: P1‘0paganda." All Phblicity I - - ision. Ewes refused extremists. iiide-_ ' in its critirism of membcrsipendem °1°m°“'‘5- 3'15 “W59 0; the myal commission an bi_ who no longer believed in Con- Cuiiumilsm and bumguahsm‘ . federation or in the Ottawa gov- the article mentions that one of lemmem' the rnembers is a priest. He, “.35 not named Rev. Clement. Inottawa. no ranking CBC (1,,,m,-9, of the University of officials! vvég-Ce avaiilgble for . V _ , icommen . , ‘pres er-it A]. M?“ Bm"f“‘i°k 15 3 member °’.phonse Ouimet was out of town the commission. lon vacation. [Employment Service Slated éFor New Look, Bigger Role BY ROBERT RICE OTTAWA iCP)A proposal to imake the government aware of V new problems and needs that give the National Employmeritimay be arising in the 13130; ,Sci-vice a new look and a big- 'markct. ger role in coordinating man-l power mhcy and employment mnit. ‘:s;‘¢;u’l¢giesiictmas _a job doctor. flrogrséms will bite placed before‘ - .e era} ca met soon. a re-'7 ltahie source said here. ‘the bfsismfotrhefois-iiiltntinem as If the cabinet approves. the‘iy,)iCv ‘ 8 M new temploymcnt service will “ . shifted from the Unemployment In th" MW ’'°!‘'’' 15”’ 33' insurance Commission into the pens Say’ the lvnrk °f the em’ ifederal labor department. ploymem semce "um Lawrence Seaway and in itheilicly in a diarpiyuwoirded ed!- Gnut Lakes. ,torlsl in the latest issue of the This suggestion was placedlofficial newspaper of the Ca- before the trustees—along withlnadian Brotherhood of Railway. some other ideas——al a closed- Transport and General W011‘- door meeting in Montreal Mon-iers. one of the five unioiis_ un- day. l der trusteeship. A spokesman for the trustees? “The trustees seem to have said there are no plans to re-lthe idea that they are merety move Mr. Banks before thsisupervisors and custodians. start of the 1964 shipping ;ea.‘vi'hose job is to enforce peace son. and order between the unions‘ The trustees, Hid the !pokes,VthemS9.1"/CD and between unions‘ man. are continuing the policy and 5l'“P ‘ .°“’“°”- they adopted when they tools:CBRT °d‘l°"”‘l' office in October after Par‘lia- CLEAN UP SIU ‘i ment passed the unprecedented The CBRT said the real jobl Marine Transportation Uniona;of the trustees is to clean up. Trustees Act——a policy that no the Sn} -— “misting its hoodluinl union officer will be removedlleadership. wiping out the in-l during the trusteeshlp unleasffamous do-not-ship lists and the trustees feel such action be- ‘other questionable hiring hall comes necessary. etliods. and putting the demo- Up to ii . the spol-:esman.cratic control of the union in‘ added. Mr. Banks has co-open ‘the hands of its members." ated with the trustees. While the CLC officers were The top officers of the CLC meeting the trustees in Mont-5 are understood to have warned real. representatives of the trustees that a ahiitdowii CBRT and the three other uri- with Mr. Banks is inevitable. ‘ions under the trusteeship con-. They feel that Mr. Banks ferred in Ottawa. They are re- should be ousted from off‘ice.ported reliably to have passed. now. with the trustees moving a strongly-worded resolution at- in under their federal powers itacl-ting the trustees for not. to manage and contrd. the S11! taking decisive action to house- until democratic processes can ciean the STU. be r stored. ' 0 far. the text of the resolu- This view was expressed pub- tion has been kept private. R|PLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT vwiaimie’ AIDE l lT76'l859 I WHOSE HUSBRND FREMGI GENERAL LAZARE HOCHE DIED N l799.l2EMAillED A WIDOW FOR 60 YEARS asnow saaoiw PIOIAILY GERVES ME I JUST ¢0lJ'\'-'7 VOU2 LAST SEASON? HOMI RUN! 6'X .lN3‘9V_ .i.illO3S 113)! X113 9.00—CBC News & Voice Report. . era 8.58-News Headlines and Weather l The transfer was recom- meridai by the Gill inquiry‘ committee as part of its blue- print for ovcriiauhng the unern-~ ploymcrit insurance pro-, gram and meeting the future: m3n.D0‘1'cr needs of the nation.i Government sources say the more cmiiri be made by cabineti order. without legislative action’ in Parliament. department officials see NEE in a new role as the‘ frontline link between workersi and the various govcrnmeritl manpower programs oi- Yrainini and relocating workers; the era of technological i change. i The agency would be mores‘ than lust lob - placement. agency trying to match job‘ openings with available work—.‘ era. It would gather information: diagnosing why certain work-l are unable to keep jobs.| then prescribing remedi ac-‘ tion under government retrain» in: or relocation programs, NEW AWARENESS In addition, the service would? vision of responsibilities under .the present UI(‘,labor depart- .ment setup. sh be meshed with the labor depart. merit. thus eliminating the di- A step in this direction was taken when Labor Minister Mactachen gave WES a more HAVING REIECTED M/RRIAGE PROPOSALS FEOM 3 Fl?!-WCH f/ELD M.4PS‘h'AZS‘ -06!’ OF k/HOMBERIJRDOTTF, BEMME KING 0‘ SHED!" Ongrnn-hi-‘I-. trsswust-us-s significant role in implementing the older - worker employment. and training incentive program.- ;Gov’t Marine Union Trustees :: i . . . _ 28. Select._ tCome Under Labor Criticism 1 “'§’..‘:’.‘.":;i*“ i By ROBERT RICE t O‘!"i‘AWA «rPi—riie govern- ‘ments marine union trustees; vare comiria under critical fire‘ lfi-om orzanired labor for 9‘ way they appear to be handling i the Great Lakes labor situation. .5 Crux oi the mounting critl-l cism is the fact that I-lal C. Banks is still president of the CONTRACT BRIDGE By 3. JAY BECKER Smith dealer. Neither side vulnerable. NORTH OKQ OK9862 K3 ‘A0104 EAST Q 10964 3 QAIOFI .a.xJ7e eotms 43732 .75 i OQJ97C 3 Q93 QAJIS QAQJJIM 65 ' 4.682 The bidding: South West North East 19 ass 84- Pass -89 Pass 49 Opening lead-— queen of dia-‘ morids. ; There are many hands where one play is the key to the suc-; was or failure of the contract‘ Here is an iinusiiai case where; derlarer‘s opening play turned: our to be decisive The hand occurred in a team; 520-Tempo 5 40-CBC Notebook (son-—CBC News 8. inland Weather 6.l5-—On Parliament Hill 6 20—Maritime éportscsst 6.30—Mustc in The Evening 7.l5—B~/tins 7.2o—Marine Weather & Musical Interlude 7.30-Business Barometer 7.35—Maritims Magazine 9.30-CBC Strings io4oo.—caC National News Roundup- ; spent-inc Personally lO.30—Chicho’s Flare li.00-$yrnphOt‘|Y H0" Scores. Inland I 12.15-—The Jazz Band Ball |2.45-Musis in The Nlaht match. At both tables the con? tract was four hearts and etl both tables the lead was the; queen of diamonds. i At the first. table. deciarei-ll and East took the ace and re-; turned a diamond. West won and shifted to the nine of ubs. East took the ten with the jack and returned a spade. South had to lose another club trick later and wound up going down one. Of course. South was unlucky to find East with both club honors. but that's the way e wheel sometimes spins. The declarer at the second table succeeded in making the Under this experimental ideaj ACROSS 2Rich employers are offered govern-i 1.Listof 8 Birdsaa merit subsidies $75 as‘ candidates a.cla.s month for hiring workers aged} 6.Prii-na. 4 Number 45 and older from the ranks of.‘ donnu 5. Measure the jobless. ; 11.Poi-t 6.Simp1c_tois The employment service wesi 12' Cusmm 7'E3yPt‘a" set up in 1941 at. the same time, 13‘ .51 8”‘?°“eS5 as the Unemployment Insur-t 14'J°“‘°d_ C‘5.‘°m ance Commission. but it weal 15'§°u1;"$t' 9a“§°gSt° .n 1 created as a wing of the corn-‘ ‘ . , nfission. 10.POX‘t.iOl‘|IOf 10. Marsh disgust YMRIHISIAIIWQ i curved lines plants . Cached 35. Give over iNES has operated under the 141 it 27 Srk shadow the unemployment‘ ° ' “cm ' 1° 36'Gr°“nd insurance plan. : °'l.’br' 16'D'Stmc", t°geth°’ grain , 18. Like measure. 28. Stuff 38. Speck The emphasis seemed to be' 19_Big Fr. 29. Kinda: 39.Golfet' on unemployment. not on em- 20_Poem -19. Wind daisy ogan ployment. The shift of NES to 21,Rioya,1;eat insti-u- 30. Worldly £1.Casua1 the labor department would 81- 23. Shinto men 32. Giba greeting ter this accent, labor depart- temple merit sources say. 24.Me§.‘ailic i 7. '5 4. is s 1 s 9 Io c it it I is. e er scrutinize i3 I4 IS lb I —_ ; 32 on-y is I9 ao "-' Seafarers‘ International Union 33- EXC13-mI-- of Canada—despite the findings tion El 22 as of a federal inquiry commis- 34- C1103 sion that he dominates ‘seamen it-1-“_ 1‘ 7-5 by tyranny. terror and corrup- 35- T1_E'°F5n9-11 iion 36.Disfigure 7.6 2.1 so 29 so The Canadian Labor Congress 37'R°g‘“" ._.. has urged the trustees to oust 9 !1:_°:5:5i°“ " 37- 55 Mr. Banks before ships begin - ‘ 5 —— , 4 - 40. Eat away 34 35 Bt- moiing if! April through the St. l 41_M°°!_ 2. Discourage 3‘! 5% 59 43.Denta.1 filling 4° 4' DO 1. Jewish ‘‘ ‘*5 l . month One letter simply stands for a.notliei'. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two 0's. etc. single letters, apos- covered the queen with the lunar trophies. the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. A Crnitogram Quotation WM]-IJI-IWJVEHXA SWJRHBAJSA I-{K INA AREA ODVJXHDD WR HCJ'W'l‘VJSA.— Yesterdays Cryptoquote: IN’ OPERA THE TEXT MUST BE THE OBEDIENT DAUGHTER OF‘ THE MUSIC—MOZART 0 1964. Kin: Features Syndicate. Inc. contract when he played the. three of diamonds from dummy on the opening lead. I Against this play there was no defense to heat the contract. It West had shifted to a club at this point. south could have as- sured the contract by going up with the ace and later discarding the king of diamonds from dummy on one of his high spad- es. But West led another diamond at trick two and East was in with the are. He could now do no better then return a spade. which South took in dummy with the queen. Declarer drew two rounds of; triimps. cashed two more rounds of spades. discarding a c i u b from dummy. and then played a club to the ten. East won with the jack. but he now had to lead a club into the A-Q or else give deciarer a ruff and discard. So; South made four hearts as a re-I suit of his play at trick one. The second deciarer realized um, East was bound to have e ace of diamonds. and that by ducking the queen he was assur- mg the contract regardless of how the clubs dietflieted. lt 1OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE ‘Vi-is t-iiccure DID WI MlN.§;l'.|.. V)lOO1Vd a_9_ij__iiiisii_aiisjs soonw uiieinriiaiaa am Jiirrzots iii! iiowimis H M532; ii... \ I $E.PED 1H|N|< UP % NOV fit-IOOI. fill WE BU FATi.-IER STEDYOUR OUT...AN' IZNIV '|I.1 /; - / \ Aw; __‘. s I u -C ‘(.4 4