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The Oshawa Times, 19 Aug 1961, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, August 19, 1961 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN GM MASTER CONTRACT TALKS LOOM The tempo started to quicken this week in the executive world and ranks of Local 222, UAW-CLC, in anticipation of a big upcoming event, (one that could change the economy of the City.) The big business item is the GM-UAW master con= tract negotiations scheduled to start in October. " to the local's proposals; as another prelude to the big five, 8 UAW locals met k | here this week to complete the pro- | posed contract which is to § nds of the com- pany early in September. event, delegates from Canadian #| submissions for | | be in the ha As a reminder that Walker Mr. director ed, Mr, E. H. president and) Burt (Canadian with notes dealing MALCOLM. SMITH naming Oshawa a spot (Mr. B. was in favor) for the negotiations and the status of the National Canadian General Motors Intra- Corporation Council (formed in 1940 and composed of delegates from each local). The 1958-61 master agreement runs out October 31. Oshawa and Windsor locals of the UAW voted for strike action in 1958, but this was nullified on orders from the International UAW because three other Cana- dian locals objected (Frigidaire, McKinnon and Diesel plants. REALTORS PLAN CIVIC NIGHT DINNER The Oshawa and District Real Estate Board is leav- ing no stones unturned as its big event for September 13 approaches. That's the date for its second annual Civic Night than 250 last councillors Dinner, a posh affair that attracted more year, including district reeves, and municipal officials. The special guest speaker la Daddy" Gardiner, Toronto's colorful Metro Cour man, This year that role will be filled by Dr Wilson, president of the National Proprieta the firm that would develop the vast bor ing and merchandising centre in the harbor area known mayors, st year was Fred "Big cil chair= Allan C, Corp. Ltd. ed warehous- as Intermart. The subject of his address is to be "Intermart in Oshawa and the Growth of The Harbor," a timely topic that has led to all sorts of speculation as to what Dr. Wilson will say about a subject that has thus far left too many people confused. Dr. Wilson's address will precede by two days the date when NPCL must satisfy the City of its financial ability to complete the first phase of Intermart (a section of the bonded merchandising project) by next year. Don't expect him to make any momentous nouncement regarding Intermart because of t Dr. Wilson is candid on this point. "If there is any big announcement to make on th date, I will be only too glad to do so," he said today. "We can't guarantee anything at this time, however-- as for my subject, it might be a general economic talk on the harbor area." Dr. Wilson also said, That Professor John L. McDougall of Queen's Uni- sersity is currently completing a two-week economic sur=- yey of the Oshawa harbor area--on behalf of NPCL-- to determine charges that could be applicable to harbor facilities, especially in regard to warehousing and wharf- age. That NPCL would either satisfy the City by Sep- tember 15 of its financial ability to complete the first phase of Intermart or ask for an extension of time. He made no announcement-on progress made in the financing of the vast project, (but he did say several weeks ago that this would likely be done by mortgage instead of by the issuance of stocks.) RCN'S ALERT SYSTEM FEEBLE The Royal Canadian Navy warned some people, but apparently not the right ones, when it decided to hold lake manoeuvres off Oshawa Thursday with the frigate HMCS Buckingham, with the shooting of anti- submarine mortar and four-inch guns (at a target towed by an RCN vessel). The RCN notified such agencies the OPP, Toronto, the Department of Transport, Prescott, the RCAF, Trenton, but these people failed to pass the word along. As a result, thousands of people in a 30-mile radius were caused unnecessary alarm, windows rattled and houses shook. In addition, Oshawa's lakefront traffic was tied up and city firemen needlessly employed for more than an hour on a wild goose chase. Thanks to the inefficiency of the RCN's alert system, hundreds here were needlessly alarmed and caused great inconvenience, The manoeuvres will be continued next Wednesday. CD NOT FIT SUBJECT FOR LEVITY Civil Defence is not a fit subject for levity at most times, but those Whitby Township volunteer firemen who forgot to turn off their wailing siren about 5 a.m. Tuesday sure started a chain of events that belong in the comic opera class. Not only did they put the fear of The Lord into hundreds of indignant Oshawa citizens aroused from' their sleep--who mistook it for a CD alarm---they also emphasized once again the tragic apathy of citizens and officialdom alike towards the subject of CD. Thanks to a strong West wind, the sound carried for miles, so much so that Fire Chief Rae Hobbs (at his Lauder street home) thought the noise was coming from a point atop the nearby Christ Memorial Church on Mary street, One of the Toronto dailies made much ado about the fact that dozens of the awakened citizens phoned the CD number in their phone book and got no answer; also, the paper quoted a "Gene Kelly" (this was a misprint and should have read "Dean Kelly") of Oshawa as saying: "Maybe they think the Russians are going to be too gentlemanly to bomb us before daylight." Mr, Kelly's flip comment delighted the corn-bar- rel wits but it irked Emergency Measure Co-ordinator S. F. Wotton, who was puzzled to know why Mr, Kelly (former local head of the ground observer corps of the Air Defence Command) would be so confused on CD procedure. Doesn't he read his mail?" protested Mr, Wotton. "We sent him two books on this very subject two weeks ago--'11 Steps to Survival' and 'Your Basement Fall-out Shelter". Of all the people in Oshawa, he should be one of the first to know the procedure," ¥ 4 ane fact: as President Malcolm Smith and his executive were busy : putting the finishing touches the bargaining could be spirit- (GM George i of the UAW) exchanged sharp such items as the advisability of} venue Rr FIRST George Pyne, keeper of Riv- ORANGUTANG BORN IN CANADA orangutang born in zoo a week it INTERPRETING THE NEWS E. Berlin Won Points For K By DAVID OANCIA Canadian Press Staff Writer Soviet Premier the international over Berlin. poker A growing number of observ-/of the powers that fought Ger- ers are beginning to wonder| many during the Second World whether the German and Ber- war lin problems haven't been tran formed beyond recognition by | w the measures Walter Ulbricht Communist regime took day. There was a tendency at first to write off Ulbricit's move as But observ-| *¢ to view cation to the Western powers. a panic measure. ers now are beginning as a carefully move which may have a number of goals important t communism. Permanent success, howeve will depend on whether or not wan Ulbricht and his Soviet mentor WANT ACTION can make the measures stick. MADE THREE AIMS This is what they have ac- complished so far: 1. They have halted the flow] ie. Zoo officials said it is the |of refugees to West Berlin by| Khrushchev| may have won the first hand in| corporating East Berlin into game East Germany. ht' {alism and virtually placed it Sun-iout of bounds to East Berliners 'alculated : 2 aed tion forces" of Britain, the U.S. | Plugging the hole through which their manpower drained away. 2. They have succeeded in in- Legally, it's | part of an area occupied by four 5° 3. They have quarantined the est Berlin showplace of capi- and East Germans. They have done all this with the minimum amount of provo- | West Berliners and the *"'occupa- o and France still are able to tra- vel to the Communist sector r,| without hindrance. a West Berliners understand- first birth of orangutang in | Canada. --(CP Wirephoto). | - -- -} Ukraine-Born Klochko Tells Of Background By ARCH MacKENZIE | Canadian Press Staff Writer erdale Zoo in Toronto, holds | ago. It has been named Arch- { | { hail Antonovich Klochko? ! | The Soviet chemist, defecting other luggage before agreeing ner of Labor--the Soviet's sec- {on tiptoe from an Ottawa hotel | Tuesday night, left a picture bassy and he got it--except for der f | Friday of a small keyved-up man 2 copybook and a copy of in 1948 (or platinum refining ¢ nearly 60 who can still laugh--a Khrushchev's Russia Today, an theory and finally a medal for|y man stubborn enough to wait English-language book. service to the cause of Soviet-|{ five years to break away. WAS TEACHER Chinese friendship. He sat or stood at a plain| The Klochko vital statistics r varnished desk in the auditor-|are simple. Born 59 years ago dia and Austria t {jum of the RCMP headquarters, | in the Ukraine, taking honors in He had paid his own way to almost able to touch Commis- chemistry in 1925 at Kiev Poly- {sioner C. men will stick with the scientist|to teach. He went as long as he wishes. Immigra-|in 1930 and then i e tion Minister Fairclough and Where he headed a laboratory. |liked by Soviet powers above. Justice Minister Fulton attended He is widowed. In 1948, he said, he criticized the press conference He was a Communist from distortions in Russian scientific Dr. Klochko said his field of, 1930 until his defection, except history and suppression of his physical and inorganic chemis-| for the year of 1937, when alll works had begun then. {trv concerned more peaceful = RE Fgh bi hal ie Pub Vacation | Spends His Best By Archbishop | Week In Prison {i | work or Russian rocketry. ! Physically, he appeared short |--perhaps five feet, six inches His hands moved restlessly-- | clamped behind him or knuckled| {on the top of the desk. Archbishop of Canterbury, the | His closely-set blue eyes rolled) Most Rev. Dr. Michael Ramsey {upward or gazed down when he primate of all England, is va-| {talked but he looked directly at|cationing in a pub These were | questioners when he answered "I like the food," said the 57. Mike Gisondi's lin fast Russian or halting--but| year-old churchman in an inter- after g 1 | sometimes hurried--English. He! view. "It's good plain stuff--and his hiding place in the had high-colored pink cheeks,|I like a drop of cider with it.|of southern Michigan | straight nose, closely - trimmed] The cider rounds off the meal." largest walled prison sandy-grey hair and moustache] Known as a forthright and world. and a slight head tremor as he courageous i nd ivi dualist, the| Spotting an electric light cord © | stood swaying from one foot toi new archbishop has been taking!extending from the ceiling to al convicted words Friday in the|v an ve Russ Claim Maps Show Bomb Plan MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet less plausible than it did," says(to carry out the study. It re- birds government has published doc- The Economist of London. He grinned again when he de-| Russia trembled under the purg- uments it claims were secret [scribed taking just an air bag ing of Joseph Stalin. He took plans for a nuclear attack by source of OTTAWA (CP)--Who is Mik-/in his defection break. But he four decorations--Order of Dis- the United States and its allies had demanded the return of his tinction, Order of the Red Ban- on the Soviet Union. Photo copies of the document to be interviewéd by the em- ond-highest award after the Or- distributed to reporters Friday set. of Lenin--the Stalin Prize showed a nuclear bombing pat- : Rr of WESTERN JOB ern stretching from west he Caspian Sea in the Jnion across southern R Si Ea through Afghanistan and. contin- Besides China, he visited In-|uing to Communist China's fron- ier. : . The Russians claimed the pat- Montreal in one of two parties tern--which included provisional W. Harvison, whose|technical Institute, he stayed on from Russia. The other was fi targets in countries friendly to|party's shadow to Leningrad nanced by the state. Dr. Klochko (ho west--was the outline of an|tary, to Moscow, did not regard himself as well offensive action against the Sov- y et Union. However, to reporters show the plan, it appeared to be not moment." the outline of an offensive action but rather a bombing plan toast H be put into effect in the event|opinion solid of a Soviet attack against Cen-| tral Treaty Organization Coun- {tries on Russia's southern bor- der. JACKSON. Mich. (AI It appeared possible the doc- Sh \ JACKSON, Mich. (AP)--"This uments fell HOLME, England (AP)--The was the best week I ever spent after the 1958 revolution in Iraq in prison in my whole life. I'took it out of the Baghdad Pact, | enjoyed it thoroughly." which then became CENTO. | killer WERE CENTRED The documents, displayed in histor: guards finally discovered the reception room of the gov- cannery [ernment news agency Tass, cen- prison, |tred on a large colored map on into Soviet vhich the Russians had place xplosions on targets. All documents were dated in he spring of 1958 and appeared Soviet atiol ovis with the responsibility for the hands designs representing nuclear lA ' 4 PENGUIN-LIKE SEA BIRDS (ably are incensed and feel ac- [tions should be taken y 2ainst the Communists, But Western mom ier Book On Murre ception of those in Bonn and [Borin 5 appear bo have oo . . cluded that Ulbricht's measures {do not merit retaliatory mea | G t H gh P e | oes at this stage. | e S 1 rails | The crisis is far from over. | : " : l ; OTTAWA (CP)--Federal offi- eggs a delicacy. There is also Ld Is yeak may have passed.| qi, predict a book about the plenty of meat on the bird, with an 'entirely new situation |penguin-like murre will gain in-| which weighs about two pounds. Bey : M9 ternational recognition for New-| There is more nourishment to | "The idea that West Beri IS! toundland's "Mr. Conservation." |a murre's eggs than a chicken's, | a political asset Which the as The reaction so far has been Writes Mr. Tuck. Each bird lays | ast: not negotiate id bein o|"wonderful," says Leslie M. only one egg "and yet they are jouse Regotigtion oon 8 nol k. who took almost 10 years probably the most abundant sea gain buy only loss, now looks Tuck, who took aimos years in the northern hemis- {sulted in the first book on the! Phere. West Berlin still remains a Sleek black and white sea bird, The most serious factor en- trouble, annoyance that wings over his native New- dangering the murre is oil pol- and expense to the Communists. foundland and much of the lution. The birds frequent the 3ut this does not automatically northern hemisphere. shipping lanes of the North At- s make it a Western political as-| The Murres, recently pub- lantic and oil fouling their wings {lished by the Queen's Printer, 18 killing more birds off the |has already had much favorable coast of Newfoundland than the comment, including praise from hunters. Prime Minister Diefenbaker. WORLD POPULATION "It's conceivable that The| Despite this, and the fact that of 2,200,000 West Berliners. Murres may become a classic only 25 per cent of the young This doesn't mean that/in its field" said Resources live to leave the precarious nest- Khrushchev holds all the aces.{Minister Dinsdale. ing areas, Mr. Tuck estimates Dennis Healey, the Labor| Mr. Tuck, onetime naturalithere are 56,000,000 murres in "foreign secre-|history teacher, is the only the world. said in a statement "working biologist" in the fed- Mr. Tuck began studying na- Khrushchev has "screwed theleral Canadian Wildlife Service ture as a youngster in his native lid down on East Germany and|without a degree in biology. Trinity Bay. As a school teacher there could be an explosion any| ___ _ _ _ ----- he favored natural history and n {MEANS EXTRA EFFORT then spent five years as pv "At the moment the terror in| 'Sometimes I think it's better ipa] of two different schools. East Germany has put world|that way," he said in an inter-| Dyring the Second World War ly on our side. |view. "You work harder because pe worked with a photographic [you have to prove something." unit at a United States naval | The 49-year-old outdoors ex-|air station in Newfoundland and {pert stopped here en route to his his book is sprinkled with his {home in St. John's, Nfld., after own color or black and white {working at Churchill, Man., on photos of the murres. {his latest assignment--a book on -- - Veteran Judge ye siipe How to Hear Bette: With or Without ies, Aged 89 Dies, Age Sh NAR | In his study of the murres, NEW YORK (AP) -- Judge the grey-haired naturalist was, Learned Hand, 89, one of the away from home for as long as) most respected jurists in the ty.ee months at a time, climb- A Hearing Aid Do you know that by sitting in » certain part of a room you can hear better ? Do you know how to listen The Western nations are left [lives, freedom and the interests d | {the other. rooms at the pub for his vaca- | He broke into laughter, re tion for years | vea'ing teeth well sprinkled with, "My new job won't stop me | gold fillings, when his interpre- from . coming here," he ex-| {ter made a slip. It concerned) plained. "Why should it?" | {the scientist's single-room Mos-| Dr. Ramsey became | cow home where the lone win-|bishop June 27. dow faced a courtyard used by, He and Mrs. Ramsey {trucks. Fumes -- alcoholic, the paying about £10 ($28) a wee {interpreter said -- often poured, for their three-week holiday. in. { The ancient pub -- Oliver | Dr. Klochko joined in the|Cromwell once stayed there--is {laughter but interjected: "Ben-|located next door to the village | zine, benzine'--naming a motor church. It's called The Church | fuel. arch- are k WARM Above-normal temperatures are predicted for most of | Western Canada from mid- | August to mid-September in a Null "i the 30-day outlook of the Unit- ed States weather bureau. The outlook, based on long-range predictions is not a specific | PERIOD IN THE WEST pile of packing boxes, the six|! ang. abpeay guards pulled away the boxes 0 outline If I Justice of the U. and found Gisondi sipping a cup targets in case of Soviet attacks Court" because of of instant coffee. He made the southward. aie coffee by dipping a hot wire in But TASS had its version of the cup. what they represented. The Sov- ros teandt jet agency said CENTO nations pore, Juycarld Gisond who Zyl Turkey. Tran and Pa; Michigan prisons, also had a 12- kistan--put "finishing touches" inch knife, three books, the cof- on the bombing program last fee, powdered milk, cookies, SPINS In & meeling attended by bread, jam, candy bars, soap, |e, representatives. The United towels, cold pills, nail clippers States is not a member > the and foot powder. Elliance but 'is associated with Ga pg Tass said this showed "the S. Supreme the high re-| gard in which he and his opin- ions were held by high court] jurists. Supreme Court Justice Benja- min Cardozo once referred to him as 'the most distinguished living English-speaking jurists," ! and he was acclaimed in legal circles as a "judge's judge." Some of the 2,000 opinions he| |wrote also received literary ac-| (claim. One of his most famous | . Ag - nT Was the 1950 court of appeals (United, States andthe CENTO [L001 Ul, Sind the con worked out plans, exposing them jee Bon x i OD oF ommunicH |as preparing war against the charges of conspiracy to San] [ESSR ou other peace-loving, 4 "2 qyocate overthrow of the | | CENTO leaders were quoted government by force and vio-| {as describing their organization | \€ nee, | las "purely defensive alliance." {Tass commented: "All these [statements are nothing but a disguise." Final Tributes | ome documents bore seen Po Dz. Buchman common to western military | {preparatory orders. One docu-| ALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP)--Dr.| {ment was entitled: "Nuclear in-|Frank Buchman was buried {terdiction targets on lines of Friday amid tributes from {enemy advance taken from world leaders and followers of {recce (reconnaissance) reports." [the Moral Re-Armament Move- |--------------------"----"""|ment he founded more than 20 . |years ago. New Bond Series |" A procession of 70 cars fol- {lowed the coach carrying Dr. On Sale October {Buchman's body from his home| ' ' . to St. John's Lutheran Church| OTTAW! P)--! series A airvi | of CERAA (CPA ow, sri and hen to Fairview Comey go on sale in October and the where he was buried in 2 Plot} {last series is being withdrawn beside those of his parents and from sale Aug. J a ,.|@ brother, nounced Friday it way an "It was the kind of service Finance Minister Fleming was he would have liked and the |liaile any time after the last kind Se asked foc lu Hs wi : Nov. 15 to close off sal e|Salc Rev, Arnold I. eller, who forecast. A change in weather |1960° caiac Details of £ of ihe officiated at the rites. { pattern may produce major | series of savings bonds will be] Dr. Buchman, 83, died of a errors. Light precipitation iS imade known in September, a|heart attack Aug. 7 while va- also expected in the Prairies. (finance department statement cationing in the Black Forest re- |sort of Freudenstadt, Germany. a visit ar- " ™ |search and analyzing laborato- 1entists {ries of a North American indus-| | [trial corporation, jranged a year ago. | a | Throughout the day, which in- 1 en Y | cluded a visit to the Falls, the| | seven ignored reporters and| | {photographers. At one point, | St [American Express Tour guide| u orn {and interpreter Ted Rysefield of | New York became involved in| NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) a argument with his charges | Seven Soviet scientists Friday. no 1° tried to persuade them 2 t Y() i ara ry 5D) completed their scheduled tour| ? Super e yi Toposters i of a local factory's chemical © Scientists deiiberalley | h |foiled attempts to photograph {laboratories and doggedly de- thom by turning their heads or |clined to comment on Tuesday's blocking the cameramen's view. |defection of their comrade, Dr.| The Russians are expected to] Mikhail Klochko. {tour the Sir Adam Beck gener-| ata ra p g ating station before they leave | Mo Rushians Jarrived from|;oqay, They fly to the Soviet Un-| aronto by bus and spent tWolion from Montreal later in the| (hours touring the $1,000,000 re- day. ' Clitf Mills 48 Hour Special A & 1956 N= BUICK 2-DOOR, Immaculate condi- tion, Low mileage. 5845 CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LID. 230 KING ST. WESY_- 725-6651 story of the US. who wasjng rock cliffs and treacher- hailed by his colleagues as the |,,s coastlines in Newfoundland, apostole of liberty under thelyaphrador, Ungava Bay, Hudson | law, died Friday. {Bay and Lancaster Sound. Hand, who retired in 1051 as| He toured museums and li- |chief judge of the second circuit|yraries in Europe studying ma- court of appeals -- the busiest|toyja] on the bird that nests by federal appeals court in the na-|the millions in summer in cliff tion--often was called the "10th | oionies. It spends the fall and| 10 a person who mumbles? If you winter in vast flocks around the| are only slightly hard-of-hearing, coasts on the northern con.| there are many ways you can hear tinents. ' better without using mechanical "At least 5,000,000 winter off assistance. As a public service, the south and southeast coasts, Maico has prepared a booklet of Newfoundland." filled with hints and tips on how | to get the most out of the hearing you have, It's a valuable booklet and it's yours free. We'll mail it to you in a plain envelope. SCIENTIFIC WORK { The result of his studies was a scientific, yet easy-to-read! history of the murre, once used extensively for food on both sides of the Atlantic and now|, banned to hunters in all of North| America except Newfoundland. |! The murre was once im-11 portant to the economy of New-| foundland. When the island be-|" HEARING SERVICE came a province in 1949 special |l 850 Yonge St., Toronte allowance was made in the mi-| WAinut 4-2317 gratory bird regulations to allow | coastal residents to continue | Please send free booklet utilizing the big bird. f About 100,000 a year are killed |" sppRress over the province now, consid-t erably fewer than years ago.[y ©'TY.. ' Some European countries--espe- | OT/MV/8/19/61 cially Russia -- consider murre |* -. a. - USE YOUR OLD BURNER IN YOUR NEW FURNACE-- When you need a new oil furnace, have your present burner unit checked. If it's in good working order, it can be transferred to. your new furnace unit--resulting in substantially re- duced costs for you! Enjoy the wonderful world of Esso warmth --with Esso heating equipment. only 10% down SPREAD OVER 5) pa Yeags / Payments MOSIER SHEET METAL 292 KING ST. WEST PHONE 725-2734 comfortable (

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