RAT REE 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, May 25, 1960 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN SHE'S A PROUD, LOVELY QUEEN--THE 707 She's a proud and lovely sky queen, BOAC Rolls Royce 707 jetliner. She's the kind that will enter trans-Atlantic service in June (Montreal to London in 6 hours, 5 minutes), the kind that costs $6,000,000 each (BOAC has 15 of them on order from Boeing). From now on we want to go jetliner, if we fly. It's faster, more comfortable and far more exciting. We reached this decision Sunday during a one-hour trial stint aboard one of these aeronautical dream- boats (powered by four Rolls Royce engines with a guaranteed minimum thrust of 17,500 pounds). There were 120 other guests aboard (maximum 173 passengers, plus a crew of 10). They were mostly press and television representatives, travel and airline oficials, together with wives and small children, in- cluding a girl of 4. When we were at 35,000 feet a press acquaintence wanted to introduce us to a Mr, Jack Jerrett of Toronto, but we politely declined when informed that he was the president of the Jerrett Funeral Chapel Ltd, Toronto, and an avid amateur flier who owns a Cessna. We could think of better places to meet fun- eral directors. The 707 cruised quietly at altitudes of 30,000 to 35.000 feet, and at speeds ranging from 400 to 600 miles per hour, over such points as London (Ont.), Niagara Falls and Buffalo. It's an experience to be treasured. The four 707 Rolls Royce by-pass turbo jet en- gines sang like Nightingales, but not too loud from the pressurized cabins. She's a tremendous size--length 152 feet, 11 inches and span 142 feet, five inches. As she races down that Malton airstrip, you wonder secretly if she will ever take off. The ascent is rapid even startling, but ever so smooth. The Malton countryside almost fades from view in a matter of seconds. Earlier, before the take-off, the captain's deep, friendly voice comes over the inter-com like that of a dear, dear friend. "Don't be alarmed," he says, in the best manner of a good bedside physician, "if you notice a slight jolt after we leave the ground--that's only the wheels moving up under the plane". > ; From then on you're more relaxed and everything is done for your comfort. The guests are soon moving about inspecting the plane. It has three sections-- Economy, three seats together; De Luxe, two seats; and First Class, where there's more room. There were some Oshawa and district faces aboard, such as Max Barker, Whitby; Ernie Howard of Howard Travel Agency, Ajax; and G. H. Haagmans, of Four Seasons Travel Agency, Oshawa, Occasionally you get peeps © feet below through a broken cloud. There's nothing too good for the guests--tasty sandwiches, Gin tonic, Scotch (Vat 69) and Champagne (Moulin Rouge)--once we get over U.S. territory. The captain is 45-year old, Vancouver-born John Woodman who commanded the DC-7C with the Queen Mother aboard on its trip from London to Montreal in the new { land, thousands of | | CYRUS EATON IN PRAGUE Cyrus Eaton, right, Cleve- vited Eaton to Prague. Eaton land industrialist who recently = was quoted today by CTK, offi- | was target of senatorial criti- cial Czech news agency, as | cism for his association and saying: "I love Czechoslo- visits with Soviet Premier vakia". He charged U.S. State | | Khrushchev, arrives in Prague, | Department with blocking con- | capital of Red - dominated | tracts between American and | | Czechoslovakia Friday. At left = Communist scientists, CTK | | 46 Prof. Jaroslav Prochazka of | said. | --AP Wirephoto ' WINNIPEG (CP)--More Ameri-| the Engineering Institute of Can.| ada said Tuesday. "From the last figures avail- able," K. F. Tupper of Toronto said at a press conference, "'we lost about one engineering grad- uate in 10 to the United States, but about twice that number) came to Canada both from the | | United States and Europe." Mr. Tupper is a member of| EIC"s education committee. The| institute's annual meeting started | today. 'About 800 engineers have regis- | classes with four months of work- tered for the three-day sessions, | 11%. most of which will deal with highly technical subjects. The EIC has a membership of about Flood Danger | Past In Foleyet FOLEYET (CP) -- Flood dan- gers in this rail community 60 miles west of Timmins seem to have passed, Lands and Forest Minister Spooner of Ontario said Tuesday. A dam on Ivanhoe Lake, 18 miles south of here, burst 10 days ago and a 134oot flood crest swept into the village. Many residents were evacuated. The minisier said he will rec- ommend reconstruction of the dam. No estimate of the total damage to the area has made. Floods at Peterbell, about 80 miles west of Timmins, have | ronsi | {dropped considerably, reports gress constitution which forbids said. In Toronto, city council voted $5,000 to assist flood victims at Foleyet. The money will turned over to Ontario branch of the Red Cross Society, but will be earmarked for families dis- placed by the flood. | Charles University, which in- INTERPRETING THE NEWS Gaitskell Works On Labor Policy By ED SIMON Canadian Press Staff Writer Streak missile program and di-| government abandoned the Blue | position as a result of the scrap- to protect the proper jurisdiction ping of the Blue Streak, (he is- | the students may be doing menial be} 00d has remained mum---doing No Shortage Of Engineers Mr. Tupper said there is no! can engineers move to Canada particular shortage of engineers| than this country loses to the|in Canada although more could] f | United States, a past president of | be absorbed. i SPECIFIC SHORTAGES | Hugh G. Conn of Queen's Uni-| versity: Kingston, chairman of] the education committee, said oc- casional shortages develop in some specialties. There may be a shortage of metallurgical engi- neers but this would be tempor- ary and would stimulate training in that specialty. ! Mr. Tupper commented favor- ably on the engineering school at Waterloo College in Waterloo. Students alternate four months of | | Mr Tupper said 'the main {benefit of this plan is that it] |allows a student to earn enough | money for his education" He said the calibre of engineer from such a school is not neces- sarily higher than graduates from other engineering schools because factory work. Teamsters Keep Mum On Ouster OTTAWA (CP) -- The 40,000 member Teamsters brotherhood (will be automatically ousted from |the Canadian Labor Congress this Saturday unless it agrees to live {up to the CLC no-raiding rule. | The Teamsters Union was given until May 28 to abide by the con- unions to raid each other's mem | bership ranks. So far, a CLC spokesman said Tuesday, the Teamsters brother- nothing about the CLC expulsion lorder issued last month in Mont- real at the CLC biennial conven- | tion, GUILTY OF RAIDING The Teamsters were found | guilty of raiding the Brotherhood of Railway Clerks which repre- sents workers in the CPR"s new merchandise service at Vancou ver I. M. (Casey) Dodds of Tor- | onto, the Teamsters' Canadian di- {rector, forced the inter - union {squabble to the convention floor {when his compromise settlement |was turned down by the CLC's {executive council, He had rejected a CLC pledge of the Teamsters Union in any Monarch PASTRY FLOUR 7-LB. BAG 97° LIBBYS DEEP BROWNED BEANS 20.07. TINS 2%: 37 WHITE SWAN--TOILET Tissue 4... 49° Sole MARGARINE 1-LB. PACK 3 for 69: 3 Take Your Savings In Cash at Sproule's ROBINHOOD CAKE MIXES 3 New Flavors Family Size 2 tor 39: Orange--Cherry--Bananas HEINZ -- CONDENSED TOMATO SOUP 10-02. Tins 34: | CHASE & SANDBORN--29c OFF PACK Instant COFFEE Jumbo 10-o0x. 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Some 30 supply such items as radar, sextants, oxygen equip- ment, gallery fittings and seats. : The task of the crew--three pilots and a flight engineer--is helped by the relative simplicity of the 707's flight deck--in fact, the 707 has approximately 100 fewer controls and instruments than a large piston- engined airliner. Modern technical equipment includes the radar scanner, which enables pilots to detect turb=- ulent areas ahead and to avoid them, a British-built teleprinter which picks up radio weather reports and types them out for the crew to read. "It was a wonderful trip," said a little, old lady as we disembarked at Malton. "Too, too wonderful to describe. Isn't it typical of a week-end in Toronto, that you have to go 35,000 feet above the earth to get a drink on Sunday. Prince Philip was right when he erit- icized our liquor laws." most of their opportunity, |sters and the Railway Clerks. The supply of plaster of paris may deliver a nuclear blow. yet enable Hugh Gaitskell to |BOTH PARTIES SPLIT BOB RANKINE, LEFT, AND JACK HORNE OF GM ARE YOU LISTENING, PUBLIC SPEAKER? Add tips for public speakers: If you want to hold an audience's attention, make them laugh first, even a little bit. Laughter eases the tension and paves the way for the speaker to get his message across more effectively. This was the message given today by two Oshawa district men who have done considerable public speak- ing lately. : They are Bob Rankine, 23, of R.R. No. 4, Oshawa, and Jack Horne, 22, of 6 George Street, Ajax, who re- cently completed extensive tours as lecturers with the 40-minute GM science show, Previews of Progress. Says Bob: "We would tell an audience of 900 students in Fred- ericton, N.B. that we were about to play something from Tchaikowsky over the loudspeaker--instead we'd surprise them with the Charleston. It was corny, but it got chuckles." Bob was flown to Sydney, N.S., last October to join the show. He then toured New Brunswick and Nova Scotia until December 3--then he started out in Jan- uary last and visited points between Oshawa, Cornwall, Ottawa, North Bay and Barrie. He said his biggest thrill was speaking before 1200 students in Saint John. Jack, who started with GM last year as a plant tours guide, joined the Progress show last January. He toured from Oshawa to Cornwall to Ottawa te North Bay to Barrie. The pair will start a new tour soon--the show will be offered to dealers who will arrange to show it to ser- vice clubs, etc. from Cornwall to Windsor. mend the crumbling defence - ais icy of Britain's ance pot: | As leader of the opposition, | Before Nikita Khrushchev | Gaitskell was prevented from | staged his angry walkout from | capitalizing on the resultant con-| the summit talks in the French fusion in government ranks be-| [capital last week, a mounting [cause his own forces were in al- tide of pacifism was sweeping most equal disarray. ithrough Labor's rank and file and| Gaitskell himself had strongly | |beginning to lap around the foun-| supported an independent British | |dations of Gaitskell's party lead- |nuclear deterrent. A powerful| | ership. | group of Labor MPs had opposed | The normal minority group of|it as strategically and financially party members who are pacifist impracticable, backed by the pa- |by long end deeply - held con- cifists who wanted Britain to viction had been swelled by Gait-|have nothing whatever to do with |skell's involvement in the de nuclear weapons. | {fence crisis that arose when the! With the collapse of Gaitskell's pacifists succeeded in winning {substantial support for unilateral nuclear disarmament from the trade unions, traditionally the strongest supporters of the party leads ip. ALLIANCE SHATTERED The unlikley alliance of econ- omy - minded unionists, high- minded idealists and Moscow- minded leftists was born in an atmosphere of improved East- | West relations, when Khrushchev was amiably touring the corn fields of Towe and elinking glasses with visiting United States legislators in the Kremlin. His abrupt return in Paris to | the language and attitudes of the Pension Fund Transfer Pleaded OTTAWA (CP) Government; Finance Minister Fleming re- and opposition MPs made strong iterated the government stand pleas in the Commons Tuesday |that the matter is primarily pro- night for measures to enable em-|vincial. The only federal control ployees to transfer credits in in- was exercised through the Income dustrial pension funds if they Tax Act, which gave exemptions change jobs Ito employers and employees con- Several members said trans. |iributing to industrial pension ferable industrial pensions on a|funds. : | national scale would remove fi-! The matter aancial and security handicaps grievance by W. H. McMillan {for employees - (L--Welland), H. W. Herridge --- (CCF--Kootenay West) and Hu- |bert Badanai (L--Fort William), MONETARY LOSS Under most industrial pension plans, Mr. McMillan said, an em. ployee has no right to the con- tributions made on his behalf by the employer if the employee leaves before the plan matures. Sickness or some other cause could mean the loss of that money Sometimes was raised as a Railway's 'Evidence PartDoubted By KENNEDY WELLS pinned to jobs because they Canadian Press Staff Writer | feared to lose that money or MONTREAL (CP)--The chair-| were faced with a loss of secur- man of a three-man conciliation ity. Men over 40 could find it board hearing a wage dispute be- difficult to get work because most {tween Canada's railways and pensions mature only after 20 or |their 120,000 non-operating em-|25 years. {Dloyees expressed serious doubts, Mr McMillan agreed with Mr. | Tuesday about the value of a ma-/Herridge that there should be| | jor piece of railway evidence. uniformity across the country, The evidence is a study donc provided through the Income Tax! {by Woods, Gordon and Co., a pri- Act | vate consulting firm, comparing My. Herridge referred to repre- |e wages of the non-ops With sentations made to the govern. similar workers in outside indus- ment on the matter by the Cana-| | tries. dian Labor Congress and the In.| | Scheduled to be presented to- ternational Union of Mine: Mill Jay. the Woods, Sorin Tepont E and Smelter Workers (Ind) {the most important argumen lu | the railways' thesis that the none UNDER, STUDY, : : 4 9 ; ming said the question] ops are already adequately paid Yemains 'under stidy. He noted | When conciliation hearings re- 1 "0, Ton Sa y. ° ep | sumed Tuesday after a four-day | ; Uniar 381 Ans wil] adjournment, a railway spokes ure committee studying the mat- | man told union questioners that ir Badanai disagreed with {none of the sources of informa- " Re Co | |tion presented in the survey! MZ Fleming's view that the mat-| | would be available since the out-|1r is a provincial one. The fed-| era: government had some re-| | side industries surveyed had been *'™ SU | promised it was confidential sponsibility in seeing that pen-| sion plans were transferrable. Mr. Justice J. V. H. Milvain, i " {chairman of the board, said evi. Lawrence E. Kindt (PC--Mac-| |dence presented before the con- leod) said Canada needs a sys-| | ciliation board had weight only in|tém where the worker can shift men were kept cold war shattered the makeshift anti - Gaitskell coalition at a stroke. This time it was the party leader who was prompt to exploit his windfall. He lost no time in launching a hard - hitting campaign against the advocates of unilateral dis-| armament and Britain's with- drawal from the NATO alliance. |His first audience, the National {Union of General and Municipal {Workres, resoundingly supported him. | Gaitskell still was faced with the task of supplying his party |with a workable defence policy, {a problem he shared with Prime | Minister Macmillan. But, with Khrushchev's help, his rout of of $50,000.000,000 spent annually the unilateralists has given him a sorely-needed breathing space. ICPR's merchandise service, |which integrates road, rail and) |sea transport, may eventually ex-| pand across ffanada, thus open- ing new areas of conflict between |the rival unions. SEE NEW ALLIANCE | I the CLC tosses out the Team |sters Union, an alliance of the | Teamsters and Seafarers' Inter- national Union is expected, link- ling the 10,000-member SIU on the Great Lakes with the powenful |truck driver's brotherhood. kn 'Cyrus Eaton Raps U.S. Government | PRAGUE (AP)--Cyrus Eaton, | American financier and indus- | trialist, was quoted Tuesday as | saying *'I love Czechoslovakia." Eaton addressed the philosophy faculty of Charles University here, the official news agency CTK reported. He is visiting this country at the invitation of the university. The Nova Scotia-born million aire called Premier Khrushchev's proposal for complete disarma ment "a sound way for the pros- | perity of the world." If the United | States would shrug off the burden for armament, "then there would be much greater prosperity." Jack doesn't like to be too confident when he walks out on the platform because he thinks over-confidence ean result in a sloppy, disjointed performance. Man In Hospital After Shooting ORILLIA herty, 52, was in critical condi- for severe shock tion in hospital Tuesday night! Mr Doherty was after a bullet from a .22-calibre the rifle by his side vile passed through body! Police are jpvestigating. his home. near his heart in a shooting in His wife Theresa, believed to have been the only other person present at the time of the shoot- (CP)--William Do-|ing, is in hospital being treated found wit! | accordance with how well it was ius vested pension interest | proved. "If they (Woods, aid the federal Income Tax Act Gordon) do information then naturally evidence is weakened, there is no question of that." Dr. Jack Weldon, University economist Arnold Peters (CCF a McGill|employees don't want and een given a copy of the report|to their pension contributions. n advance, said it is impossib'e| As such employees got older, yr the unions to assess the re- the employer obta ned. corres ort unless they could see the|pondingly = greater working papers. « Ithem, C. W. Carter (L--Burin-Burgeo)| not disclose the source of their|could attach conditions to tax ex-| the emptions ensuring such a system. | -- Timis-| {kaming) said that in some cases pension the plans because they are tied to one unions' chief adviser, who had!iob unless they forfeit the right i Dr, H. F. Verwoerd, Prime Minister of South Africa, is re- cuperating in his official resi- dence, Libertas, in Pretoria, power over after an April 9 attempt on his ! life. 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