"1 «'r. 3 «New Kev—amt i . . _ SARNIA, Ont, — These three pretty girls were among the celebrities who helped kick-off HELP KICK: OFF ruuo DRIVE Sarnia’s Red Feather fund drive Lou Ann Cleaver, Miss Sarnia at a big rally Monday night. Golden Bear; and Lena Wolfe. From left: Connie Williams; (AP Wirephoto) CBS Reporter ls Asked To Leave Russia NEW YORK (AP)—The C‘oluim- bia Broadcasting System said V‘ednesday, its Moscow news re- porter has been ordered to leave Russia as the result of the recent network telecast here of a play called The Plot To Kill Stalin. John Day, director of CBS news, said that Paul Niven, cori- ' respondent in the Russian capital since last December, was sum- moned this morning to the press department of the ministry of for- eign affairs. His accreditation was cancelled and he was given one week to leave the country. Day said Niven was told that the Soviet Union would have noth- ing further to do with the net- work because of the drama. pre- sented Sept. 25. PERMISSION REFUSED Permission was refused to ap- ply for accreditation of a new correspondent or to have some memlber of the present American press corps in- Moscow act as a CBS representative. Mikhail Menshikov. Soviet amp bassador. filed a complaint Mon- day with the state department about the play. . He termed the play “a‘filthy slander against the Soviet Union and the Soviet government.” One scene of the play depicted Soviet Premier Khrushchev pre- venting an aide giving medicine to Joseph Stalin as the dictator lay dying. Financiers Like Horses, Is View TRENTON, N.S. (OP)~Mines Minister Comtois says American financiers are like docile farm horses, but they’ll tramp on your feet even though they don’t mean 0. The minister made the compar- ison Tuesday during a tour of Pictou County coal mines and Do- minion Steel and Coal Corpora- tion plants. He was referring to American cutbacks of imported base metals from Canada. “Their financiers come up here and spend millions developing mines. Then they cut down their imports and the mines are closed, Workers disperse and everything is flat. They’ll be back but it’s if..." ._ .an gou see $l5.OOO in your future? You don't. need a crystal ball to see your financial future. An Investors Syndicate plan will make your financial dreams come true. ’l‘alk it over soon With an Investors representative — "your best friend financially." Call or write: 6. F. Cameron District Mgr. Summerside J. 6. Montgomery Charlottetown Investors \ upsetting and hurts Canada. intend to hurt me, but he did. “It’s the same with the Ameri- cans. They just act to suit them- selves and don’t know they are hurting us. “So we have to remind them from time to time." “When I was a boy on the farm we had an old work horse . . . docile, a lovely horse. But one day when I was harnessing him he stepped on my bare foot. It hurt a lot. Now, that horse didn‘t “Continental noises” Series m Senorita» end Sorts SYDNEY All? PARIS unsure Distributor P. {1, flex. 538% Phone: iii-ti} Sydney: fine Reinaldan {icon Page 14 The Guardian Friday, Oct. 10. 1 Obieciicns To Student Aid ’Bolclerclosh’ OTTAWA (CP‘ 7 Suggestions that the Canadian constitution makes it impossible to develop a national program of student aid for university students are “bai- derdash," T. L. Hoskin oi the University of Western Ontario said Wednesday. Western’s dean of men told a panel discussion on free educa- tion there already is federal-pru- vincial cooperation on the dis- tribution of university grants. The 10 provinces—each one al- ready with some form of student aid program—could cooperate to provide more consistent aid for students in all parts of the coun- try, he told the National Contain ence of Canadian Univer51ty Stu- dents congress meeting here. OPPOSE FREE EDUCATION Opposition to free education came from S. H. Deeks of Tor- onto, executive direcror of the as University Industrial Foundation on Educag tit-n. Mr. Deeks said things provided free are given little value and that earning education is both an incentive and an education in it self. However, he said, a system of scholarships to provide education for willing and qualified students who lack finances also is neces- sary. Dr. Eugene Forsey, research director of the Canadian Labor (Congress, 5 aid he supported “freer” higher education and as- sistance which would go beyond free tuition. NOT RICH ENOUGH Dr. Forsey said Canada isn’t rich enough to subsidize “numb skulls and lazyibones." But a democratic society should believe is equal educational op- portunity, otherwise the nation‘s 958 ‘soul—and economy—could be im- __.. poverished. General support for free higher education came from spokesmen amcn-g the 100 delegates to the conference. _ Marvin Jay, delegate from Sir George Williams College, Mont- lreal said that in the province of Quebec it is a case of “educating the educated in the value of edu- cation.” Mr. Jay said that. if whoever pays the piper calls the tune, “we have been requesting the tune ‘The Best Things In Life Are Free,’ but we have been get- ting . . . ‘Beautiful Dreame-r.’ " Former Dalhousie Professor Dies TORONTO — (CP) — George Vibert Douglas, 64, former pro— fessor of geology at Dalhousie University in Halifax, died sud- denly of a heart attack here Wed- nesdauy. Born in Montreal, he lived here since his retirement from the Dal-housie faculty last year. A graduate of McGill University he ’ “‘""*"E.““I‘"TT="'L':€£'I":'2.'2‘f‘ *flf‘flflqfl-E-Hfifiwvwn.w—W "4"?!"‘ft"sr-e:~vrn-~i...-....3 rs .,. li« .. 1. fur.- v. r was the author of 50 papers on geology. 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