2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, September 22, 1961 L os | ". N AIRPORT AND RUNNERS-UP | ardess is flanked by runners- | Alitalia and Christine Gates, up Carolyn White (left) Miss | Miss Pan American. -- (CP Wirephoto from UKI h 2k MISS LONDO Maureen Dale (centre) was | picked Miss London Airport the judges' choice when they ! 1861 recently. The BOAC stew- oh Haven't Easy Answer Recommend Student Get To Fallout Problems § py, OTTAWA (CP) AL what/sent swirling around the earth./incomplete concerning the pos- BARRIE (CP)--Norman Stod:-| point does fallout from nuclear|They become a problem when sible effects on health of short-|dart, chairman of Barrie Dis- bomb explosions constitute a/they start to settle, lived fission products absorbed|trict Collegiate board's trans. danger to the health of Cana. The radioactive materials cre-|0ver a long period of time. portation committee, said dians? - ated by atomic blasts are of They do not know at what leyv-|Thursday he may recommend 4 : sak te A VO. BLD +t. els these types of fission prod- that separate high school stu- Federal health officials said|{two types. There are short-|€8 : 3 "i Thursday there is no easy an- lived products which decay over (ucts would be harmful. And|dent Robert Silman, 13, be al- swer. Full significance of the|a brief period and long-lived they do not know how long they|lowed to ride the board's school many factors involved is not yet|ones which remain active for Would have to be absorbed to bus. : - d d by health scientists./many years create a health hazard. But, said Mr. Stoddart, even BE a , [onuste Following a nuclear explosion, The long-lived fission products] if he and one other board mem- When the Russians tset off al, "Coo VE Lith department's are considered the main hazard ber who supports him can per. : in the atmos-| Ine Ieceral health depariment s ¥ "at lenct/suade the rest of the board to nuclear bomb test In / 24 air-sampling stations begin to|!0 health. It will be at least phere, some 200 different kinds a | record increased radioactivity|three months before ic afeal Pine in the air: most of it cased by|department can determine the|--he is afraid of setting a pre-| a liv s {4 |degree to which new bomb ex-|cedent. | the short-lived fission products plosions have increased the lev. 1t might open the way for bu. DON'T CAUSE CONCERN els of these products siness college students and for The short-lived fission prod-| The chief ones are strontium-|PUPilS Of the district retarded ucts in the air are inhaled. Buty and cesium-137. They fall to school in Barrie to ask for because they are around ior|earth and settle on plant life, transportation, he said. only a short time they are not!Sirontium-90 is found in the, OWever, because Bobby considered by officials to cons-imjlk from cows which have lives so close fo the school bus titute a health hazard and offi- eaten grass and fodder on which|route and because there is room For CNR cials say these factors must be this material has fallen. Sam-| 21 his particular bus, I might taken into consideration in as-/ples of milk powder are being) oc IHN to make an excep- ! a uman sessing the significance of collected by the health depart. HOM. . BLL oe Wmen higher fallout readings as a re-| ment 4 by he health depart! ns itis, Robert covers the 12 dian Labor Congress has pro-|Sult of Soviet bomb tests since! Strontium-90 levels are meas- | Miles from his Oro Station home posed full integration of Negro|Sept. 1. : ured in micromicrocuries per| oy walking or cycling 2}3 miles and white employees of the| Fallout levels in air samples gram of calcium, which is pre-|® @ Public bus stop, then walk- CNR's sleeping, dining and par-|3re determined by ihe rale of sent in about one quart of milk.| 18 another mile from the ter. Jor car service, Setar i De £2 Youctive prog. A micromicrocurie is a millionth minal i ig Joseph's - : CIS Create: y nuciea exXpio-iof a millio: a o 5 | 8 os oh . ale Broposal ras made in a sions, They are given in ig ioath of 3 sane, x The board earlier refused to pid Bd of th foecinl CLC tegrations per minute per cubic|of radium. let him ride the bus following vii, Sg ar hat he metre of air. a request from his mother, Mrs. bli | ge, d CNR 4 the| The International Commission SET SAFE EVEL R. W. Silman. She argued the on Ay Beaton hoy Rail. |" Radiological Protection has| The so-called lifetime *'safe" family supports the collegiate wor Tratsport and Generale the safe maximum permis-|level of strontium-90 in milk js board through taxes and the Workers (CLC) practised racial |Sible radioactivity level at 6.6 33 micromicrocuries a quart. In/bus, which passes 200 yards discrimination in their collective|Units: But this is the level at|solid foods it is 33 micromicro from the Silman home, has a {which they musi be inhaled over curies a kilogram (2.2 pounds).|room on board for Robert. 8 > {a lifetime. | A total of 73 micromicrocuries| Mrs. Silman said she is will: _ Mr. Blum found that the un-| pr E. A. Watkinson, princi- of strontium-90 from all sources|ing to pay Robert's fare. ion's national officers did notipai medical officer of thelis considered the maximum al-| Protestant neighbors already practise any racial discrimina-|health d e p a r tment's environ-|{lowable total intaken by an in-|are behind the Silmans' appeal. tion against Negro sleeping carimental health division, Dr. P.|dividual on a daily basis| An education department porters. |M. Bird, senior scientific officer throughout a lifetime. But a per-|spokesman said the boy would However, he reported that thjof the health department's ra-son may ingest up to 1,000 mi. | not be covered by insurance if a day for lim-|{he caught the bus now. He could it only if the separate CNR, as well as other Canadian |diation protection division, and|cromicrocuries and North American railways,|Health Minister Monteith are ited periods without ill effects,|ride had "in the past" practised a|concerned about what might! The health department's last|school board took out a con- policy of racial discrimination|happen if Canadians are sub- measurement of strontium - 90|tract for Robert with the bus against Negroes and in partic-|jected to high levels of short-|levels in Canadian milk--at the|owner. ular in the promotion of Negro|lived fission products over a end of December, 1960--was 9.5 = employees to supervisory pasi-|long period of time. |micromicrocuries per gram of tions. However, other federal health'calcium in one quart of milk. Lo Cold Ww one, 7" "1 Wowever, otter _ Long ar "Ahead: Dief +| TORONTO (CP)--Prime Min- {ister Diefenbaker said Thurs- day that the cold war will be a part of life for a long time but the cannot see it bursting out /into a hot war | The Communist forces and the {free world are waging a strug- igle for the minds of men and {the free nations must take the {initiative to show the uncom- {mitted peoples that there is a {way of life superior to commu- {nism, the prime minister said. | Mr. Diefenbaker spoke at the convocation of Victoria Univer- sity from which he received an {honorary degree of sacred let- |ters. Integration | | Television Play 'Launches Search HALIFAX (CP)--A search for "> |a ship reported sinking in Hud- ~ (son Strait ended in a television studio in New York Thursday. U.S. rescue authorities re- ported to Search and Rescue winds 20 to 30 knots. Partly headquarters here Wednesda cloudy with a few showers or|night that a ham radio operator thundershowers reported hearing a distress sig- COOL AIR EDGING EASTWARD WEATHER FORECAST Will Continue Sunny, Warm Forecasts issued by the Tor-|Chance of a thundershower Sa- onto weather office at 5 a.m.: |turday afternoon. Winds light to- Synopsis: The weather Satur-|day southwest 20 Saturday day promises to continue warm, Algoma, Timagami regions: in Southern Ontario as cooler North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste air in northern regions makes Marie: Partly cloudy with a few slow pro gress southwarc to-|showers or thundershowers to- wards the lower Great Lakes. (day. Some fog tonight. Mainly Lake St. Clair, Lake Huron, cloudy with a few showers and Georgian Bay, Lake Erie Re. turning cooler Saturday gions, Windsor, London: Sunny! White River, Cochrane re. with cloudy intervals and con-|gions: Mainly cloudy with scat- tinuing warm today and Satur-{tered showers and chance of a| day. Chance of an afternoon or|thundershower today. Cloudy evening thundershower. Winds!and cooler with a few showers southwest 15 Saturday. Lake Ontario, Niagara, Hali-| Marine forecasts burton regions, Toronto, Hamil-/11 a.m. Saturday White River ton: Mainly sunny and continu-| Georgian Bay and Lake Moosonee . ing yarm today and Saturday. 'Huron: South to southwest|S.S Marie . winds 20 fo 30 knots. Partly|in Hudson Strait. cloudy with isolated thunder-| When a check indicated a bad showers storm was in progress in the Lake Ontario: South to south-|area, Search and Rescue began west winds 10 to 20 knols. Partlyla check of all known shipping. cloudy None was missing. On Thursday the distress sig- nals were traced to some rea- High Saturday: |listic dialogue in a play on an 5 80 |unidentified New York televi- 80 sion station. Through an atmos- 80 pheric freak the make-believe 80 distress signals were picked up 80 on short wave. 80 EE 80 80 RO Forecast Temperatures ow tonight, Windsor St. Thomas London Kitchener . Wingham .. Hamilton .. Toronto ... Peterborough . Trenton Killaloe Muskoka .. North Bay Sudbury ... Earlton . Kapuskasing Vicious Dog Act Charge Remanded By MRS. M. CHATTERLY UXBRIDGE -- Charges under the Provincial statutes of the Vicious Dogs Act against Claude Watson of Goodwood were remanded to Oct. 3 in {Uxbridge court. valid until ™\ NN N\ Provincial Autonomy Still In UN Platform QUEBEC (CP)--The issue of/deau, 51, of Sherbrooke, Que.; provincial autonomy, for 25|Maurice S. Hebert, 36, Montreal years the battle-cry of the Un-llawyer; and Raymond Maher, ion Nationale, likely will con-|40, Quebec City lawyer. tinue to be the key plank in the Mr. Hebert and Mr. party's platform. were hot Now, however, it may be ta- the opening ceremonies Thurs. ken a step further with a group|day when Antonio Talbot, retir- in the party calling for recogni-/ing interim leader, urged the tion of Quebec's right to self-party to remain provincially- determination, draft resolution by the itical ties, party's Quebec County Associa- "For an autonomous prov- tion asks recognition of this ince, there must be an autonom- claimed right and suggests thelous party," he told the more Union Nationale work towards|than 2,000 delegates and alter- "a revision of the constitution nates in the Agricultural Pavil- so that Quebec can enjoy all the lion of Quebec's Exhibition powers of sovereignty necessary grounds. for its fulfilment." The three-day convention is While not suggesting Quebec scheduled to wind up Saturday secede, the group from a Que- night when 1,987 eligible voters bec 'area riding long a hotbed choose a new leader, for French - Canadian national- Are a ism claims that the province MUST BE PASSED could drop out of Confederation 0p if it wants. -it The draft resolution, sched uled to be studied by the lead ership convention's committee on constitutional matters, had the effect of a bombshell. Of the six leadership candi dates two were available for |comment. | Daniel Johnson, 46, member {for Bagot and former hydrau ihe proposal. | |INEEDS ADDED POWERS | Jean - Jacques Bertrand, 45, member for Missisquoi and for- of a Teamsters on an mer president union local charge. ter, said he believes Quebec must remain within Confedera- tion, but at the same time must work towards acquiring the | powers necessary for Quebec's 43, former president of Miami Beach Teamsters Local 320. torting $20,000 from Neo Gra- Maher on the platform for minded and free of federal pol-| ies of the draft resolution of life or death for the French. is understood there are|Canadian people." Judge Tells Jury | 'Wrong Verdict' NEW YORK (AP) -- A fed- As a matter of fact, Gross is -- [lic resources minister, declined eral judge told a jury Thursday now serving time for tax eva- | vure Printing Company of|plement three other similar proposals from other convention groups-- were distributed during opening ceremonies. It is not scheduled to come before the convention until--and if -- it is passed by resolutions committee on consti tutional matters. A memorandum accompany. ing the draft resolution said "the (provincial government is [completely sovereign within the limits of its jurisdiction. The French - Canadian people has possession of the state of Que- bec and can legally declare it self a sovereign nation . , "Quebec can live alone eco- nomically and it can establish, on its own, all the international relations allowed emancipated peoples . . . "The autonomy and emanci- pation of Quebec is a question to comment until he has studied jt had reached 'the wrong ver-|sion on some of the money he ~-- dict" after it acquitted a for-/is accused of extorting." Gross was chargea with .ex- extortion|torting $4,000 a year from 1054 through 1958 from Neo Gravure | Nar LOTT "freed by a jury of two women by threatening labor troubles mer youth and welfare minis- 410 non was Harold Gross,|that would halt delivery of the American Weekly, a newspaper supplement, to the New York Gross had been accused of ex-|/Journal - American. Neo Gravure prints the sup- at its Weekhawken | African Glade setting out ex- French-Canadians to "blossom out" within the framework Confederation. "There is nothing against ask- ing and working towards more of Weekhawken, N.J., and the plant. The firm was reimbursed Hearst Publishing Company In-|by the Hearst company for the corporated, |sums Gross was accused of ex- He is serving a three - year|torting. sentence at Lewisburg federal Lake Erie: South to southwest nal from a ship battling a storm|sem powers," he said. "1 believe :that all this can be worked out |peacefully." | penitentiary for income tax evasion, When the jury announced its Mr. Bertrand and Mr. John-|yerdict after deliberating an] son appear to be neck - and-\hour, Judge Gregory F. Noo- neck run-away candidates for nan commented: the leadership. 'Ladies and gentlemen, in my/| Gabias, 40, member for Trois. wrong verdict. In my opinion, Rivieres; Mayor Armand Na- Gross was guilty of extortion. INTERPRETING THE NEWS Slim Displays Calm Approach By JOSEPH MacSWEEN mittee on Hungary, he toured Canadian Press Staff Writer Europe interviewing Hungarian Appointment of Tunisia'srefugees from the Soviet sup- Mongo Slim as president of the pression of 1956 and helped {United Nations General Assem-|write reports on that situation. Lly dramatizes the growing im-| Representing his country on portance of African countries inthe 11-member Security Council the UN and also his own quiet!j; 1959 and 1960, he was a lead- and efficient services. ing strategist in moves to bring In his calm approach to world calm to The Congo. problems Slim is reminiscent of Slim and French ambassador| the late UN Secretary-General Armand Berard sometimes had! Dag Hammarskjold. In his in-/sharp exchanges over the years| augural speech he did no pussy- but the two appear to admire footing on sharp issues. onic another and more than once | He raised the danger of icined in laughter over some France, Portugal and South Af-/slipup in debate in the Security rica by demanding independence | Council, for Algeria and Angola and con-, The small-statured Tunisian demning the policy of apartheid enjoys the respect of diplomats (racial separation). and correspondents alike and in| While one view was that he brivate conversations was often departed from the impartiality, mentioned as a likely successor of the UN presidency, this over. [of Hammarskjold, had the sec- { -|looked that Slim has long been rctary-general lived to complete la revolutionary for African in-|(his term. But if the discreet jdependence. As a matter of in-|Slim ever considered this he |terest his predecessor, Ireland's| did not confirm it for corres- Frederick Boland, also was an!pondents |carly fighter for home rule ~ against Britain. STUDIED IN PARIS Slim, a five - foot, two-inch bachelor who turned 53 only last Friday, is grandson of one of the last ministers of war to serve before Tunisia became a) French protectorate ingl881. He took a law degree in| Paris, joined the Neo Destour| (nationalist) party of Tunisia, | became its political strategist] --and twice served time in French jails. He headed a delegation fo Paris for the 1954-55 'talks that] led to Tunisian autonomy and later was interior minister, In March 1956 he was in on the] {final independence negotiations. For 4% years Slim served as his country's permanent repre- sentative in the UN and during that period doubled as ambas-| |sador to the United States and |Canada. HITS BOTH Unlike some other African leaders, he condemned not only| the old imperialism but also] criticized the new Soviet im-| perialism. Appointed by the as-| bly to a five-member com-| Emergent LEBANON LODGE All Masonic brethren are u FRIDAY, SEPTE Wor. Bro. C. Templar Secretary DEATHS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Ottawa--William Duncan Her- ridge, 73, Ottawa lawyer, the health 8gree--and he doubts they could] The other candidates are Uves opinion you have reached the|served as Canada's ambassador {to the United States from 1931 {to 1935. j Quebec--Paul Lepage, 55, a pioneer figure in the growth of| ~~ Ei Say Re AIS BS a Sa OUT OF SEASON Crewmen of the freighter | ed 1959 registration plates, found it had been stolen in that year. Hurricane lashed New England coast Thursday. --(AP Wirephoto) tra lines to ride out hurricane Esther hooked on to an auto- mobile in harbor, Police check- | ATTENTION BOWLERS The "Bowl-O-Way"' Shirt by Bluestone Now Available at Black's Men's Wear CRESTED SHIRTS for Bowling Teoms (both Men's ond Women's) designed according specifications, to your "The House Of Style For Men & Boys" BLACK'S MEN'S WEAR 74 SIMCOE N, 723.3611 tte Cl A CLS A ,AA French - language broadcasting in Canada in the last quarter- century. 169, composer of such songs as | Phoenix, Ariz.--~Roy K, Marsh, {I Never Knew, Caribbean Sea, |The Ozark Trail and I Can't {Stop Loving You Now. | Warsaw--Andrzej Munk, 36, one of Poland's most talented movie directors; in an auto ac- |cident. Munich -- Dimitri Kandaurov, 59, exiled Russian novelist who worked for radio liberation, and) anti-Communist radio station; reported as suicide by police. Detroit--Harold H. McKinnon, 58, who founded Detroit's huge] Goodwill Industries, which pro-| vides employment for handi-| capped persons through repair of discarded articles. Toronto--Herbert E. T. Haul- tain, 92, inventor and professor emeritus of mining engineering at University of Toronto. Rome--Rev. Filippo Soccorsi, 61, director emeritus of Vatican Radio. JOKE HAS PAYOFF RICHMOND, England (CP-- Car mechanic Robert Webb welded together some pieces of scrap metal and sent the result- ing creation to a London art gal-| lery as a joke. Now he's been| given a £105 commission to do a "'nautical scene" for a wealthy collector of modern art. ATTENTION! ALL WIVES OF LOCAL 222 U.AW. MEMBERS You are cordially invited to attend a special meeting sponsored by the UAW Ladies' Auxiliary No. 27 On Monday, Sept. 25 - 2 P.M. In the U.A.W. HALL, Bond St. E. This is an opportunity for all Union members wives to acquaint themselves with the negotiations that are taking place at the present time, with The General Motors Corporation. TEA WILL BE SERVED U.A.W.--Ladies' Auxiliary AF. & AM. 139 rgently requested to attend o Masonic Service for our late VY. WOR. BRO. GORDON HOULDEN 7:30 o'clock at Mcintosh-Anderson Funeral Home MBER 22, 1961 Masonic Clothing Wor. Bro. D. M. Jacobi Master Cliff Mills 48-Hour C Full Com THE | 230 KING ST. WEST ® OLDSMOBILE CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LID. Special 1955 ONVERTIBLE y Power Equipped. pletely Re-Finished 1145 Cd ew jl mor OUR SERVICE IS FREE!! FREE Furnace Cleanout This Year and Every Year, FREE Oil Burner Tune-Up. © FREE 24-Hour ""Round-the-Clock" Burner Service, AUTOMATIC "Weather Controlled" Delivery ----No Need to Phone for Delivery "REFINERY FRESH" White Rose Unifined Fuel Oil , . . At 17.7¢ per gal. WESTERN OIL CO. 725-6651 CALL 725-1212