Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 18 Jun 1959, p. 13

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Labor Party Still Divided | By ED SIMON delegates at Labor's annual con- | Canadian Press Staff Writer |Bresses. | Britain's Labor party, in the ASTUTE EXECUTIVE throes of its annual re-examina-| Even if the union's vote, which tion of the nuclear disarmament defied the advice of the union no sign of re-|leadership, is repeated elsewhere, division |the astute party executive is un- likely to allow itself to he com- mitted to unilateral disarmament, The party's present policy _ |question, shows solving the deep-seated # \within its own ranks. Labor's long pacifist tradition has rebelled periodically against the emergence of the hydrogen promises a unilateral halt to H- 'bomb as a decisive factor in bomb tests, r rdless of the out-| global politics. The party's lead- come of the current Geneva ne-| {lors. conscious of their respon | gotiations that have led to eal SEI 1 Oshawa Times hye VOL. 88--No. OSHAWA-WHITBY, THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1959 PAGE THIRTEEN Trouble Brewing South America In silities as the country's poten-|temporary suspension by all nu- ial rulers, have sought with!clear powers. arying success to reconcile The only basis for further con- "| practical considerations i phasic principles The conflict sharpened by the rece a » the National Union of General|decision persuaded other and Municipal Workers to throw tries to do the same has coun- w it hicessions to the party's left wing is a promise by Gaitskell that a|ININE YEARS been labor government would be will- fo .57 nt decision|ing to renounce the bomb if its ! 949 5 Honduras Rebels Enter Nicaragua {APRIL 1 its weight behind the campaign] But France is briskly pursuing| to force Britain to abandon the|its plans to enter the H-bomb| BM bomb unilaterally field, and the most sanguine of } In past vears. the bloc vote of Labor's pacifists would be hard trade union representatives has put to believe that Britain's ex 4 upheld party leader Hugh Gait ample would dissuade President skell in beating down similar|de Gaulle from his course, | 8 Aneurin Bevan, Gaitskell's probable choice as foreign secre- tary if Labor comes to power, was clearly ill at e when the nuclear issue came up at last wear's party conference SHOCKED SUPPORTERS It was Bevan, one-time leader of the rebel faction that bore hi | name, who shocked his support- ers two vears ago by backing Gaitskell with the memorable {phrase that Labor should not send its foreign secretary naked Win be nC Ltd. k into the international conference| Players Canadian Corp. Lid., has| .,amher hy depriving him of the| announced that the first Cana-\yonb ac a bargaining counter. {dian sysetm of home pay-as-you-| phe bargaining prowess of non-| { see television will be constructed |, jaar, statesmen such as West {lin the western suburb of Etobl-|Germany's Chancellor Adenauer| coke tends to aken Bevan's argu-| Starting with more than 70 ment, But many party members| {miles of TV cable and a poten- sre unwilling 'to see Britain's| tial of 13,000 homes, the system|gtrength diminish when her allies| . will be readily expandable tolare ruled by men like Adenauer| Sgt. Arnold serve an area of 40,000 West Tor- and de Gaulle, whose motives flight engineer, Camrose, Alta.; [onto homes, J. J. Fitzgibbons, they distrust. | FS Edgar C. Grose, flight at- preside and managing director,| By pers: agion or brie force, s ; 3 told a press conference Gaitskell is likely to head off his tendant, Thorold, Ont; and |p... ome including motion pic-|party's left - wingers. But Labor | Sgt. J. 0, Gerard Mignault, (tures, will be available on the party members, like many other Isle Verte, P.Q., steward | pay-TV at varying prices. The in-| Western politicians, remain un --(National Defence) |stallation cost would probably beleasy about the H-bomb. SSRI $5. Education TV and events of S------ school and university bursaries|the University of Western On. local importance would be offered September tario London, Ont free as a public Service . a Mr, Fitzgibbons said London, The announcement said a min-, Grants of $800 each will go to Ont, may be the second Cana- imum of 10 bursaries of between Assumption College, Windsor; dian community to gel pay TV. ~ 1 His company was constructing a $250 and $500 would go to high/McMaster University, community antenna there i resolutions from rank - and - file First Pay Television TORONTO (CP) Famous CREW OF ROYAL PLANE bers are: Cpl. Edith Cole, stew- | Sask.; Comet which will fly Queen | ardess, W/C William Carr, cap- Elizabeth and Prince Philip | tain, of Grand Bank, Nfld.; | during part of their tour of | F/L Kenneth C. Lee, first of- | Canada pose on the ramp be- | ficer, of Dauphin, Man.; F/L side the aircraft at RCAF Sta- | Hugh Filleul, radio officer, tion Uplands, near Ottawa. | Innisfail, Alta.; F/O James From bottom, the crew mem- | Braiden, navigator, Morse, | ATA Awards Bursaries TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario sity. Automotive Transport Association announced Wednesday it will [ty Queen's University, Kingston,| Crew members of the RCAF Peterson, Drop In Prices | TORONTO (CP) Hamilton; setup would be adaptable to pay- ronto for nv. Guelph. per. oo Inco Runounces On Shutdow | Interna- don, od Pow. to/tional Nickel Company of Can- Ontario Retail Gasoline and Auto-| The meeting will also be school students entering univer- waterloo College. Waterloo; Car-make American channels avail-lada Ltd. Wednesday announced motive Service Association, said|to ratify recommendations that |leton University, Ottawa; and On-|able to London viewers. To be a '% cent price drop to 30 cents Wednesday night service station| Grants of $1,200 will be made|tario Agricultural College, /in operation by the fall, the new Canadian a pound delivered To-|pperators in Metropolitan Toronto| ng | Canadian domestic cop-/will vote Wednesday on a strike|station operators be made inde-|litical detainees in the jail but for background of recent invasion of Ideadline, | 168.1 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS , The rioting subsided after Ine Invasion alarms in Nicaragua, | terior Minister Jose Navarro said new army pressure in Argentina/he would consider the amnesty and prison riots in Havana and d. He also pr d to res Panama churned up fresh turmoil| move prisoners from old dune today in Latin America. geons inside the prison moat and Nicaraguan President Luis So-|t0 arrest a police lieutenant the moza said he had unconfirmed |rioters accused of firing the open. reports of a rebel force of about|in§ shot provoking the violence. 50 had invaded his country from| In Colon, Panama, five Cuban MAY | 125.6 Hw" Honduras, He charged that an-|Prisoners and six guards were in- other group was poised for a|jured in what prison authorities 7 {strike from Costa Rica. (termed @ mutiny. The Cubang | Somoza said the new invaders|Were among 89 invaders impris, apparently landed in Honduras|oned early in May after the col from Cuba. He sent units of the|lapse of an expedition to' overs COST OF Nicaraguan National Guard to the|throw President Ernesto de Ia 2 00 ZA LIVING [7 APPIN 777. {Honduran border to check the|Guardia Jr, The invaders, who reports supposedly are awaiting trial, a LIVING COSTS UP Living costs increased during April following a | decline, The cost-of-living - | dex at May 1 stood at 125.6, up two fifths of a point from 125.4 on April 1. This graph (shaded area) traces the year- | aver of the price index during 1949-57 and its move- | Ges Stations Will Ballot TORONTO (CP)--K. W. Lang-| managing director of the| | this year, Army leaders met in secret in/have grown increasingly restless {Buenos Aires amid reports that|because they have not been ale |officers were demanding changes|lowed to return to Cuba, : 8! in some of President Arturo Fron.| Cuban army officials claimed The index is based |dizi's policies. Their demands| they had uncovered another move on 1949 prices equalling 100. |were reported to include the re- against Castro's regime. They ace Also shown is the index for |imoyal of War Secretary Gen,|cused an official of the Domine average wages and salaries poctor Solanas Pacheco and his/ican Republic of masterminding which stood at 169.1 at April [tough and influential undersecre-|the latest move. 5 last date for which figures |tarys Col. Manuel Raimundez, | Three former soldiers of ex-dies are available : : | Frondizi held a conference with|tator Fulgencio Batista"s army --(CP Newsmap) |military and security advisers.|were held in Baracoa, Cuba, om [Navy and air men were kept incharges of planning attacks on ye vote io be taken in an their barracks, apparently to pre- public buildings. effort to end the gasoline price{vent {rouble developing with . war which has brought prices| army garisons. |v a2tafiavan, seuionts slashed tuning ia parts o Toronia i Unrest was reported growing in|returning to classes from a twos grades of oS lgrar |the army following the arrest of week holiday imposed by the govs Between 359 and S09 cenit alto generals after they demanded ernment, Large groups of girls gallon, down from 43.9. | that the government stop using|and boys defied a state order to the army to break strikes return to school and fought Mr. Langdon said about 1,000| Rioters in Havana's crowded|mounted police who tried to scats of the 1,200 operators in greater | Principe prison took over the|ter them. . Toronto are expected to attend|prison walls for more than four| In Tegucigalpa, the Honduras the meeting. hours until authorities granted headquarters of the Organization asked |some of their demands. of American States was showered The rioters were held at bay|with eggs and avocados by stu oil companies be divorced from by police gunfire. They were de-/dents. An OAS commission had the retail business and service|manding amnesty, not for the po- been sent there to investigate the ment through 1958 and so far pendent. common criminals. Nicaragua, . award more than $12,000 in high the University of Toronto, and .F. GOODRICH & CITIES SERVICE CHASSIS LUBRICATION EVERY wr Anniversary s» LE BALOONS eo LOLLIPOPS PIGGY BANKS FOR THE CHILDREN M WE HAVE CREDIT TERMS TO SUIT YOU COMPLETE LINES OF CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS eo GAS e OIL © LUBRICATION 17 CU. FT. REG. 399.95 SALE PRICE 11.2 Cu. SALE PRICE Fr. 52.1b. Freezer 49% 319" SALE PRICE 4 CYCLE--2 H.P. 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