Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Oct 1961, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdoy, October 26, 1961 PREMIERS IN PROFILE Professor Tried On Heresy Charge PRETORIA (AP) -- One of South Africa's big Dutch Re- formed churches nas put a the- ology professor on trial on charges of teaching heresies. The trial includes a question' of the church's stand toward the lgovernment's policy of apar- heid (racial segregation). At the opening of the trial Tuesday Church leaders barred the press and admitted only Church pledge they would not disclose any of the proceedings. carried reports of the proceed- ings and photographs of the hearings. In addition, the Church trial board ran into trouble with the parent church in The Nether- lands, which sent a public tele- gram urging that the trial be stopped. On trial is Rev. Albert Ste 'Is 'Ridiculous' WASHINGTON (CP) Dr. Ralph E. Lapp, 9 United States) -------- members under a} phanus Geyser, 42 - year - old professor at the University of Pretoria. He is being tried by the commission of the general conference of the Nederduitsch Hervormde Kerk, second - lar- gest of the three big Dutch Re- formed churches in this coun- \try. His accusers are three stu- dents who claim he made here- ical interpretations of the New Testament. The South African Press As- sociation reported the first charge is one of heresy based But newspapers Wednesday|on Bible interpretations during) | university lectures. The second is one of "continued resistance to Church decisions and Church jlaw" relating to racial segrega- |tion in the Church and a Church ldecision which forbids criticism of this law. The Johannesburg English- language Rand Daily Mail, jwhich splashed a front page jon the first day's hearings, ed- litorially condemned the trial. \It said Prof. Geyser is ' |ployed by a tax - supported uni |versity and is entitled to a pub llic hearing of his views and an iswers to his accusers. |picture and bannerline report|on bail em-| Family Defence Cited In Trial CAYUGA (CP)--Bruce Blan- chard, 20, testifying in his own defence against a manslaughter \charge, said Wednesday he lfired a rifle at his father be- jcause "if he hadn't been; |stopped- he would have killed \the whole family.' | | The youth is charged in the | slaying of his father, Albert /Blanchard, 51, April 2. | He told Mr. Justice G. T. |Walsh he saw his father's face 'as he was smashing through the door of their barricaded house. = "That wasn't Dad coming through the door, it was an an-| imal," he said The youth told the court he} fired a .22-calibre rifle at his) father's shoulder to stop him lcoming into the house. | "J didn't think I had hit him. Then he fell" The father had been arrested ithe previous day on an assault |charge laid by his wife, the); court heard. He had been freed and warned to stay away from the family home |pending a court hearing. The trial continues. | 'Order 8 More PCs Criticised For Caution TORONTO (CP) -- Donald C, MacDonald, Ontario leader of the New Democratic Party, said Wednesday night the new leader of the provincial Pro- gressive Conservative party is steeped in the "cautious Tory approach."' Mr. MacDona'd said the fact was best illustrated by John Robarts' reluctance to talk gov- ernment policies during the leadership campaign. He said the only time Mr. Robarts indicated what could be thought of as a political opin ion was at a meeting of Young Progressive Conservatives at the University of Toronto where he said he opposes free univer- # isity education The NDP leader said Mr. Robarts' reasoning was that free education at the university level "didn't jibe with his ideas of free enterprise." "This was the argument used by the Torics a century ago," he said, "and is a perfect ex- ample of the cautious Toryism he embodies." "This is a hrake on the wheel progress." of Katanga Exchanges Premier Frost of Ontario | leader. Education Minister | Jast night after Mr. Robarts |nuclear scientist who helped de- John Robarts joined him on the platform of the Toronto leadership convention hall (right) matched grins with his successor as provincial Progressive Conser vative Sisters In Court Recall Nightmare WALKERTON (CP)--Two at-|their mother outdoors tractive young sisters recalled)watched him dispose of in a murder trial court here|bloody butcher knife and bed- Wednesday tie nightmarish/clothes. Democratic Party will soon events surrounding the disap-| Anne, then nine years old,/launch a country - wide cam- pearance of their mother ninejsaid the last words she heard|paign to sign up trade union lo- years ago. her mother utter were '"'Arthur,jcals behind the party. political Margaret Kendall Bell, now|please don't." |program, 20, and her sister Anne Kendall,| Margaret, 11 at the time, said) Party officials said Wednes- 18, testified as Crown witnesses|she and her:sister were awak-|day that application forms--in at the Ontario Supreme Courtjened by a "commotion" in the|triplicate--are to be mailed out trial of their father for capitallearly morning of Aug. 2, 1952,|to union locals early next week, murder. Arthur J. Kendall, 50,|as they slept together above/with full instructions on how to is accused of murdering his/their parents in a double bunk.|affiliate formally with the new wife, Helen, who vanished Aug.| Huddled together on their bed,|party, founded this summer by 71952, while she and her hus-junder parental instructions ne-|the CCF and the Canadian La- and were living with their five|ver to make a noise or get up|bor Congress: children in a Bruce Peninsulaluntil called, the girls said, they About 6,000 individual locals cabin. lsilently watched their father|of unions affiliated with the had won on the sixth ballot. --(CP Wirephoto) NDP Plans Campaign For Names OTTAWA. (CP) -- The New and a HITS CRITICS LONDON (CP) -- Sir Albert Kendall's dark-haired daugh-| place a bloody knife on a table,|CLC in Canada will receive the ters, their voices almost a whis-jhalf-drag their mother out the/application forms. Their total per at times in the hushed|door of the one - room cabin,|membership is more than 1,150,- courtroom, recounted how as/then return to take away the/000 workers. a children they heard a night-time|knife, strip his bed and wipe} In some cases, the affiliation "commotion" between their pa-jup a bloodstain on the floor. material is being sent to the rents, saw their father half-drag| Their father instructed them/national headquarters of unions ito tell anyone who might ask|--rather than to the individual s |that their mother had left homejlocals. ome of the larger un- Woman Admits ltwo days earlier. They saidjions want to forward the mem- jthey followed the instructions|bership forms themselves, in- M il juntil early this year, although| cluding special material of their ur er ul t |questioned by pplice seveng ows on why individual locals _ itimes following gtheir mother's/should affiliate with the new eon, een, an deaoerue eee newspaper in which he claims! a Included in the affiliation she committed a murder tor| Farmers Worried ipecngs 18 Be masta, te which a man now is serving life JO SPORCEDS aun js OCoe imprisonment is to be raised in 0 Li st k and NDP leader T. C. Douglas, the House of Commons. ver lve: Oc who is to resign next month as Victor Yates of the opposition, BRAMPTON (CP) --Peeljpremier of Saskatchewan Lab '|County officials expressed con-|lead the new left-of-centre po- jor party announced Wednes-| . s e litical re day that in the new parliament-|ern tonight that Canadian far-|litical party. ary session opening Tuesday he|™ers are not being advised how) Affiliation instructions _spe- will ask Home Secretary R. A.|'0 Protect their livestock from'cify that each affiliating union Butler what consideration he is|T@dloactive fallout. : must provide an escape clause giving to 'this new evidence."|, Reeve Fred Kline of Bramp-\for those who do not wish dues Yates also sent a letter to But-|'0" asked-a Peel County Emer-|paid 6n their behalf to the new ler asking for an inquiry gency Measures Organizaiton| party. . : : |meeting what is the use of plan- --------- The imprisoned man, Eam-\ning for survival of the popula onn Hamilton, was jailed for|;; " Yi ae agar stabitia Al 4 Ww tion if no provision is made fo: g Alexander Watson tO maintaining safe supplies of ; death. -- food Richardson, artist and former An article in the News of the) The meeting adopted a resolu-| president of the Royal Academy, World Oct. 8 quotes a womanition requesting the federal andjsays critics are like bats, named Veronique Collins as/|provincial departments of agri-| owls and fleas. saying she stabbed Walton with|culture to send instructions on| ways upside down, a piece of steel shaped to a how food can be maintained in hoot knife blade. safe condition lvelop the first atom bomb, dis- missed as "ridiculous' Russian claims that it has developed a defence against intercontinen- tal ballistic missiles- "The Russians have not as/ yet detonated any large nuclear) jdevice in space and I believe) lthey must first do this before! they can make any claim to an anti-missile missile," Lapp said) in an interview. | "All of the Russian explosions in their current series have been in the atmosphere. I am convinced they will have to try Lose 350,000,000 Lockheed Jets Perkins fs | OTTAWA (CP)--The defence Needles In Space production department has or- dered eight more training ver-| WASHINGTON (AP) -- Thejsions of the CF-104 low-level jet| U.S. Air Force can't find the|homber from Lockheed Ait-| 350,000,000 copper needles it)craft Corporation, Burbank, Ca-| thought it had released into)jif, authorities disclosed Wed-| space from an -- pig |nesday. It announce ednesday | Z : '4 ie he order, worth some $11,- night that its Lincoln Labora-|q99 999 pushes the cost of the tories, in charge of Project West) om '104 program. to more than Ford, reported that no radari¢ss9 999.990, Of this amount, -- has yet eae established) contracts with Lockheed total with the mass of minute nee- : : dies, called dipoles. more than $46,000,000. Ernie DeDycker as he at- tempts to peer into lounge car in which five Chicago supported by | men died. The two cars were Montana Highway Patrol Sgt. | fused by the impact and had | to be cut apart by acetylene | torches. ine 's Prisoners With UN ELISABETHVILLE (AP) -- |Katanga prov ince and the United Nations exchanged pris- loners Wednesday night, mark- --(AP Wirephoto) ling an end to the armed con- flict between secessionist. Ka- |tanga and the UN- Scientist Dispels im merme g rem Fallout Worries |190 prisoners -- mainly Irish-- captured in last month's fight- jing. UN forces had moved \then to disarm foreign officers la space shot if they are to make} While this was discouraging The Canadian government or- serving in Katanga. The action "They are. al-| too much, and are always nipping | any progress on 2" anti-missile missile. "Even having done this, they will encounter a large number of difficulties including solu- tions to striking engineering problems in order to develop point-to - point defence," Lapp isaid, Pp' Trl | , + , to those conducting the test, it/iginally ordered 14 CF-104 train-) OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's! "I am not alarmed person-|amounted to an attempt to was happy news for astronom-|ers {rom Lockheed when it de-jchief defence scientist says alljally," said the soft - spoken sci-|bring the province eg le ers and others who had pro-|cided to have 200 CF-104s built|fallout is bad but that there isjentist, -\control of the central Congo tested that the orbiting blanket|at Canadair agp hypervgie yky4 real cause for worry in Can-| "Fallout has not yet reached|government in Leopoldville. of hair-like needles might inter-|to re-equip the RCAF air divi-jada over the radioactive dust}jeyels where there is need to| The UN returned some 250 fere with their studies. |sion in Europe. Hay the current Russian nu-|worry in Canada." | is the RCAF's|clear tests. Walinul Ae |Katangans. At the same time ut wasn't good for any-ityn forces withdrew from the The idea was to use the blan-| The CF-104 ore Dr AL Hat hai ket of needles for boyncing ra-/name for the Lockhee tar-| r. A. H. Zimmerman, chalt-\ oq. But f, Ags ; : 4 oe ee eee Elisabethville post office and said in an interview a; high as from. the United|other strongpoints held during INTERPRETING THE NEWS dio signals back tp earth. fighter which a number of coun-|man of the Defence Research) .onj Soviet series still was not produce about| Wednesday: States tests in 1958. the fighting. ----------|tries are building under licence.|Board, |Canadair will |150 for the United States mu-| "] don't want to gloss over |tual aid program after it com-|the seriousness of the matter| | By HAROLD MORRISON The United States, concerned) over the deteriorating situation in South Viet 'Nam, is prepared) to increase its military aid to) the pro-Western Vietnamese. But there is reluctance to make any immediate large- scale commitment of American| troops to that area in fear that! it might invite Red China into active participation in the Com-| |munist fight against the South tO|\Vet Nam government of presi- guerrillas dent Ngo Dinh Diem. | Thus there is doubt, no matter what Gen. Maxwell Taylor rec-| jommends to President Kennedy} following his on-the-spot investi-} | ECM Lacking Agriculture Agreement BRUSSELS (Reuers) --: The -Common Market's council of| ministers ended a_ three-day) meeting Wednesday with out) reaching agreement on a com-) mon agricultural policy urgen-; i \tly. requested by France and The Netherlands. But the ministers adopted a ) |definite timetable for the gra- dual elimination of discriminat- tory measures against bu-| 1% sinesses and persons other than} wage-earners within the six-na- tion trade alliance, | The ministerial council de- ; cided to refer agricultural prob- 'jlems to another special meet-| ing Nov. 20 and 21. Adoption of a common agri- 3 jcultural policy is regarded as a ©*\particularly urgent matter, be- lcause of France's declared in-| S |tention to veto the transition of| + \the market 'to its second stage} --which envisages the cutting of | |internal tariffs by 60 per cent "lof their initial leyels -- if first! ,|steps toward such a policy have {not been taken by the end of *;|\ this. year. *1| The French government has Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Friday: WEATHER FORECAST Mainly Sunny, Cooler Friday | Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5 a.m.: Synopsis: Brisk northerly winds and snow are reported north of Lake Superior this morning and showers are fre- |Kitchener «.s..++0+ |Wingham , |Hamilton ..... |St. Catharines Toronto Peterborough . becoming northwest 25 today, decreasing to light tonight. \Trenton .. Northern Lake Huron, Hali-|Killaloe . burton, Georgian Bay, Algoma,|Muskoka . Timagami, Southern White|North Bay . River regions, Sudbury, North/Sudbury .... | lpree under heavy pressure from| French farmers, who object to jthe fact that they cannot export! |their surplus produce to other {members of the market on the jsame preferential terms given South Viet Nam | att To Get More Aid Canadian | Canadian Press Staff Writer (military build-up in South Viet ' ry | [ghmoereonas Daas, the, timetce In Aransas pletes the order of 200 for the|put as yet, even with explosion | |RCAF in 1963. of a 50-megaton bomb, there is no real cause for worry in Can- ada." Earlier, Health Minister Mon- teith said in a statement that fallout from the Soviet series of nuclear tests has not contamin- ated Canada's fresh milk sup- plies. "In view of the public con- jcern about fallout, I want to emphasize that current supplies of fluid milk are safe for hu- man consumption," the state- ment said. Cattle now were moving from | CANADIAN CONCERT ASSOCIATION PRESENTS LA BOHEME IN ENGLISH gations of any major wanes Whoopers Nam for some time to come. an increased tated ot Anpeaien military supplies an nstruc-} . - tion; through increased local Hale Mire od whooving canes support of Diem and by pushing/the Aransas national wildlife the three - power International) reruge on the Texas Gulf Coast |pasture to barn and therefore Control Commission into greater|in,. jnterio r department 'an.|were consuming feed harvested | |before the nuclear tests. Their| effort to investigate complaints! nounced Wednesday. of border violation, subversion) whi or) 19 d It at milk therefore was not contam- and murder by Communist) "ne Siete" llc hted t Wlinated with radioactive iodine. from_ neighboring} Youns birds, were sighted from) Dr. Zimmerman. said there North Viet Nam- observation posts at strategic/nas been a "terrible hullabaloo" points on the refuge, where about fallout I CANADA A MEMBER they spend the winter. * sii The control commission !s| The whooping crane, one of Cliff Mills 48-Hour Special made up of Canada, Poland and|North America's largest and| India with India as chairman.|rarest birds, spends its sum- American authorities attach no|mers in Canada's Wood Buffalo] blame to Canada's efforts but/National Park south of Great| Full Power Equipment they are sharply critical of In-/Sjave Lake and winfers at or| dia's leadership and lament the/near Aransas, making the 2,500-| fact that Communist Poland is}5090-mile migration in spring| Mechanicelly Sound. tion route or from Canadian of-| 795 ficials who patrol the large| THE nesting area to protect the suttha Mt ' e | CLIFF MILLS MOTOR tensify training of South Viet-| The cranes usually begin ar- | ® more a hindrance than help injand fall. At one time the birds namese troops and sent themjriving at Aransas early in Oc-| 230 KING STREET WEST 725-6651 WASHINGTON (AP) -- MEMBERSHIPS NOW AVAILABLE FROM CANVASSERS AND AT WILSON AND LES Nam and generally supervise) V! peace terms that ended the In-/sional reports along the migra- dochina war in 1954, An alternative to any decision to send American troops into tween North and South Viet : vation although there are ier solving the border crisis. were almost extinct The commission, acting under i the authority of the Geneva Last spring the whoope r| conference co-chairmen, Britain| flock, comprising 36 birds, took; and Russia, are supposed to in-|ff from Aransas, presumably! vestigate quickly any com.|eaded north, plaints of border violations be-| Once on the wing, the cranes) are practically free from obser-} into North Viet Nam in counter-| tober, The last straggler usu-) guerrilla operations. ally turns up by mid-December. | American authorities say they ce are determined to keep South|¢ Viet Nam out of Communist) hands. | MINERS CLAIM | NOTTINGHAM, England (CP) A group of miners from the, Midlands are claiming a Euro- pean record for coal - getting. During September they pro-| duced 50 hundredweiglit of coal per man-shift, a figure they claim has never been beaten by a similar unit in Europe. FOOD MARKET, 54 SIMCOE ST. NORTH Did You Know... In the main Dining Room of | the GENOSHA HOTEL you can | have o Full-course Dinnr for ONLY 95¢e. @ HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS e MUSHROOMS Cc \to industrial producers within |the six-nation community. | NO. 1 Ib WHITE | TAX Tues., Wed., Thurs., Fri. DINNERS 1.49 STEAKS SIRLOIN, T-BONE CANADA'S FINEST Cc RED BRAND 49: 19 FRESH PORK E FRESH PORK BUTT LEAN MEATY SHORT CUT (Ist 4) PRIME RIB DAVID'S--4 KINDS REGULAR 29c BISCUITS DELMAR FREE 39 quent over the remainder of the province. The unsettled weather will continue most of today, but fair and cool weather with dim- inishing winds is expected Fri- day as a high - pressure area moves into the province. Lake St- Clair, Lake Erie, Southern Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake Ontario regions, Windsor, London, Hamilton, Toronto: Mainly cloudy with occasional showers today. Clear and cooler Bay, Sault Ste. Marie: Cloudy with showers today, changing to snowflurries this evening. Vari- able cloudiness and continuing cool Friday. Winds west to) jnorthwest 20 to 30 today, be- Earlton Kapuskasing . White River .. Moosonee S.S. Marie .. 4 P.M. TO 8 P.M, ood jcoming west 15 Friday. } Northern White River, Coch-| lrane' regions: Overcast with' jrain or wet snow today, chang- ing to snowflurries tonight Variable cloudiness and contin with frost tonight. Mainly sunny uing cool Friday. Winds north- RESTAURANT Room, uyuilable for business meetings and banquets. AMPLE PARKING 1626 SIMCOE ST. NORTH PHONE 725-9111 F. R. BLACK 0.D. OPTOMETRIST Contact Lens Consultation or Eye Examinotion BY APPOINTMENT PHONE 723-4191 136 SIMCOE ST. N., OSHAWA 4 FRESH PORK END CHOICE LAMB DEVON RINDLESS BACON <«"~ ECONOMY -- 6&7 BONELESS SHOULDER BONELESS PLATE Pot Roast 39 39 30 and c@pl Friday. Winds west 15,|west 25 toda, west 15 Friday.| 39 39 Margarine CANADA PACKERS KAM "3% TIN YOUNG OVEN READY FRESH Turkeys 6-8 LBS. 23 39 45; \ t ._ »

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