2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, December 28, 1961 a\frow 'DEAD' MAN FEELS FINE Crewman, Merlin Robinson of the dredge Cartagena (cen- tre) who was one of ten men snatched from the stormy North Atlantic by Coast Guard cutter Acushnet unconscious and "apparently dead" hugs | his rescuers as they arrived | from Foster, R.I., jumped in Boston Wednesday night. | into the sea to cut him loose Bewis R. Openshaw, AM/1 | from a raft. Robinson. from from Augusta, Maine (left) | Harrisburg, Miss., said "I revived Robinson through | feel fine and have no pain or mouth to mouth resuscitation, | complaints." and Robert Pinard SN/BM ! --(AP Wirephoto) Second S tations 'Green Believes 'Teachers NMIAMILTON (CP) -- Teachers across Ontario adopted Wednesday a report aimed at preventing the province's school systems from becoming too "'ex- amination-conscious." The teachers -- delegates to the annual assembly of the On- tario Secondary School Teach- ers' Federation -- agreed that testing of the free-response or essay type should continue to be regarded as of primary import- ance in testing procedure. .'vhis would mean retaining ex- aminations based on. the stu- dents' intelligence to comple- meni tests based solely on fac- tual knowledge. The report of the testing com- mittee, brought in by G. C, Hay ot Mitchell, said there is great dange: in concluding that the Student scoring the highest marks in an examination is hest educated, Evaluation of the student woud always be a- necessary part of the educational process, Mr. Hay said, but testing was net education. The committee concluded : Views On Examinations Pad Angry Worker Kills His Boss CLEVELAND (AP) -- Angry because he was fired, a 55-year- old maintenance worker killed his supervisor and wounded two other men at the Ohio Overall Cleaning Company Wednesday, A few minutes later and a block away police killed the gun- man after he fired at them from the back seat of an automobile he had commandeered. Police free-response testing should be continued in Grade 13. examina- tiors 'provided there is~con- stant study and improvement." Greater stress on testing in teachei-training programs was advocated to make teachers mame familiar with good testing procedures Thc delegates, representing 13,200 secondary, school teach- ers, approved the. committees recommendation that the report ve sent to all Ontario second- ary schools for study. In an address to the almost 400 delegates, R. A. Cozens of Delhi said education in the prov- ince is being seriously hampered by lack of co-operation between the groups who control it. These groups, he said, are the government and the teachers. He called for all concerned to act as a team. of Cleveland. . manager who discharged Payne --was killed. Arthur Ponds, 52, general ma- nager of the company, which employs nearly 200, was in hos- head, Gerald Connolly, 57, plant saf- jety director, was in fair condi- tion with a bullet wound in the stomach, About 100 employees saw the shooting rampage, and 16 of these were treated for shock. identified him as Spencer Payne| ) Roy Hoge, 38, a production] j pital with a bullet wound in the] 7 BUTS: ees Ms CLOUDY FOR MOST PARTS OF COUNTRY Referring to the recently in- | treduced Robarts plan, Mr. Co- zeus said the government and teachers had proceeded alone rather than consulting each otner "for the common good." ERowever, Mr. Cozens said,|on work clothes. Seventy-five others were given sedatives. Police said Payne was dis-| charged near the start of the work day when he sat in front| of his locker instead of putting Honduras Eyed By Guatemala TEGUCIG ALP A, Honduras|'h Ydigoras Fuentes of Guatemala, which claims British Honduras, said here Wednesday he will break off relations with Britain and expel all Britons from Gua- temala within the next two months, He was answering questions at a press conference about his|Wednesday said nearly 1,500,-/ The objection is that there is|@gainst drivers of the racing plans for "reincor porating'"|000 Negroes left southern states| nothing to show Tarzan, the ape| ©4TS. |for other areas of the U.S. in}man, and Jane were legally) British Honduras in Guate- since ement of his plan| Shortly after getting his dis- Premier Robarts has co - oper-|charge pay, Payne appeared in ated much more closely with|the plant carrying a revolver the province's educators. and pistol. | The Robarts plan was ex-|- pected to spark most interest | |when resolutions are brought to) ioor, beginning today. | Tarzan, Jane [Heavy Migration Not Married? LOS ANGELES (AP)--There | Of U.S. Negroes may be a move afoot in subur- ban Downey to ban all Tarzan| WASHINGTON (AP) -- The|books from elementary school| |United States census bureau/ libraries. | |WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy, Colder : Friday Promise others to hospitals in serious) Worecasts issued by the Tor-ian Bay regions, London? condition. 'onto weather office at 4:30 a.m.:|Cloudy with occasional snow- The accident, involving four; Synopsis: Arctic air covers all|flurries and a few local snow- autos, occurred on a busy high-|of Ontario and cold cloudy) squalls today and Friday. Colder way about a mile north of here.| weather is n sopanp to ht eb i Bhag | snared 4 15 be 20. { | over the province today and Fri-| orthern Georgian Bay, Tima- ik "ane tassbuiies, ae thea { day. Some snowflurries will oc-| gami, Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, two cars were racing each other|cur over most of Ontario both) White River, Cochrane regions, "i days, with a few snowsqualls in| North Bay, Sudbury: Mainly cloudy with a few light snow- and caused the accident." He} ee 1 2s filed| the vicinity of Lake Huron and oe By a ge ae Og flurries today and Friday. A lit- tle colder today. Winds light to- {southern Georgian Bay. Mid- day, northwest 15 to 20 Friday. Highway Race Takes 4 Lives WILLIAMSTON, N.C. (AP)-- An apparentiy pre - arranged highway race claimed the lives of four innocent persons near afternoon temperatures both days will range from the 20s in The trooper said two of thelthe south to. the teens in the | mala, jthe 1950s--a record number for! married. jautos were racing each other|) jin jsouth toward Williamstown : TORONTO (CP) -- Observed In Trouble: BBG OTIAWA (CP)--The Board of| Broadcast Governors says Can- ada's second television stations are having financial troubles tiun with their programs. {meeting wi fect on their programming. The board referred in a state-|per-cent Canadian content. re- ment Wednesday to the privat-|quirement that goes into effect ely-owned stations which began|next April 1, and at the same competing this year with CBC/time improve programming. or CBC-affiliated stations in Hal-| Ihe BBG statement said that ifax, Montreal, Toronto, Ottawa, |because of the present situation, Winnipeg, Edmonton, Calgary|whiie the BBG is prepared to and Vancouver, hear bids for other "second" Although these stations are injstations "'it is the view of the they are "experiencing some|beyond the major centres will difficulty in meeting their obli-|proceed slowly." It added: gations,' the statement said. It) "Even in the most favorable did not elaborate. Dr. Andrew Stewart, board| chairman, said later that up to Oct. 31 all of these second sta-| believe that the conditions jus- tify the provision of 'third' serv- ice. by rebroadcasting stations at the present | tiors were exceeding their op-jor otherwise, erating-cost estimates and only|time." tising revenue they expected. | He said the result of their} over - optimistic financial fore- casts is that they are hard-| x Z gram commitments they made} On Resignation to the board. ' ; TCRONTO (CP)--The Ontario VARIETY MISSING _ Public $c hool Men Teachers He indicated the main BBG/federation voted Wednesday to tious are meeting the require-iwho participate in any federa- ment for 45-per-cent Canadian|tion-approved mass resignation content in programming, there|to back up salary demands. is a iack of variety in their TV| The federation, which repre- ing Canadian programming injteaclers in elementary schools, the prime viewing period, 7 tolalso authorized continued at- ll p.m. : ; ternpts at amalgamation with Di. Stewart said winter TV)the 22,000-member Federation of tiora' economic improvement] of Ontario. probably will be reflected in an} \ similar motion passed by improved financial picture in|the male teachers last year was tS! rebuffed by the women. two were obtaining the adver- sees 7 ae Teachers' Pay pressed to meet some of the pro-| coucern is that while the sta-|compensate financially teachers shows and they are not provid: |sents approximately 7,500 male schedules and the recent na-|Women Teachers' Associations subfequent monthly re por which the stations submit to the BBG the second stations in connec- The BBG said earlier it WAS) sion, th the station operat- aud it is concerned about the ef-!ors to discuss ways the board) 4; coujd help them meet the 55- 'he federation also voted to|emicd UN Bolstered OTTAWA (CP)--External Af | fairs Minister Green says he be- lieves the United Nations has| been strengthened as a result of its last General Assembly _ses- a long-standing dispute over the Guatemalan claim to British Honduras, formér Spanish terri- tory settled by woodcutters from jthe British West Indies and a British colony since 1862. he Guatemalan claim is ed largely on old Spanish { | "At the start, it looked-like a a saster," he said Wednesday| | Block office, temala. Bri |_UN'Secretary - General Dag!proposed t Hammarskjold had just been/tional Court at The Hague to de- killed in a plane accident and it' cide the legal issue. | Seemed "there would be no pos-| (In San Salvador, Field Mar |sibility of getting anything'shal Viscount Montgomery said | through, he would ask the British gov- tain has repeatedly o ask the Interna- But a new acting secretary-\ernment to find peaceful s0lu-| Chinese, relatively favorable locations,/board that alternative service| general, U Thant of Burma, had|tion to the problem of British|and Eski Honduras. (Montgomery spoke to report- s Tuesday before leaving by been appointed -- "a great ac- complishment in itself" -- and oy e situations, the board does not|there had been agreement on a/air for London after visits iol anadians Push committee,|both British Honduras and Gua- a temala. (Ydigoras was reported last week as saying Guatemala was ready to break off diplomatic re- lations with Britain. But after ' an interview with Montgomery, the Russian nuclear tests. he said he was prepared to wait Mr. Green said U Thant/until February for ihe results of is "showing considerable|/Montgomery's conferences with strength" and that the UN ac-ithe British government and complished more than anyone|members of Parliament.) new disarmament an 'outer space committee, | world food bank and a bond is- |sue. The UN was still function-| ing in The Congo. World opinion had been focussed by. the UN on j had any right to expect when it) opened its 16th session last fall.| . . Soviet Appoints involved in nearly every major} initiative taken at the UN ses- it had been an "exceedingly) WASHINGTON (AP)--The So- good year. viet government has asked cept Anatoly F. Dobrynin as its ambassador to the United | s 8 \said Wednesday. | Driving Count Dobrynin will succeed Mikhail sented his country in Washing- {Tore nto Township police car was ton since February, 1958. Four |forcea off the road in a high- | arded as normal for Soviet dip- when the fugitive Gar ete: caught fire. A 14-year-old boy mainly interested in trade, the ; new envoy is known to be more | Constable Roger Barrie pulled alongsidé the fleeing 1950-model/tics. He is now head of the : American affairs division of the forced him on to the shoulder o the road, | Britain and Guatemala have|any 10-year period. |. The classification "non-white"' Superintendent Bruce Moore The net migration of non-|of the Downey unified school jwhites from the South was esti-| district said Wednesday the is- jmated at 1,457,000 as compared| sue was raised at the last school \with 1,245,000 during the 1940s.| board meeting. Robert L. Ryan, | | Mississippi had the largest|a board member, said he'd been} inet emigration of non - whites--|told a librarian at one of the! /323,000. schools took out all the Tarzan | With net non-white immigra-| books. | ; ' A ve Fine:|maps showing the territory as/tion of 345,000 California led the| an' " none of its occupants were in- lin an interview in his East) part of the vice-royalty of Gua-| ed the) Tarzan's honor was defended|' |states followed by New York,|by Cyril R. Rothmund, who was| 282,000; Illinois, 189,000; Ohio,| manager of the late Edgar Rice} |133,000; Michigan 127,000; New) Burroughs, author of the Tarzan| |\Jersey, 112,000; and Florida,| stories. 101,000. : Rothmund said Burroughs had} Tarzan and Jane legally mar-| Japanese,|ried in The Return of Tarzan, | Hawaiians|second book in the Tarzan se- Lries. jincludes not only Negroes but |American Indians, Filipinos, mos. iy Deep Into North OTTAWA (CP)--Ships of the|ers of Nansen Sound until forced Canadian Marine Service this| back by 80 - foot - thick polar year retraced the steps of Arc-|ice. tic explorers and sailed farther], ,... ae cane | jnorth than any Canadian ves- LESS ICE TO FIGHT isels had ever penetrated--ali| In a year - end review issued| as part of the season's routine.| Wednesday, the transport de-| This work consisted of: partent said there was less ice 1, Installing the world's first|than usual in most other areas) automatic weather recording] of the Arctic and this helped station at Sherwood Head, on|make 1961 the most successful the south end of Axel Heiberg|year so far for the marine ser- Island. vice fleet. 2. Charting the ocean floor}. The Macdonald, Labrador and and ice formations in the chan-|N. B. McLean of the federal ice- nels around Devon and Bathurst|breaker fleet discovered many islands, which had not been|relics of early Arctic explora- |visited since early explorers|tions. The articles have been went there 100 years ago. sent to the Maritime Museum of | 3. Travelling 161,354 miles and|Canada in Halifax. |ferrying 110,006 tons of cargo in| These included two anchors |Arctic waters in 17 government/and parts of the steam engine vessels and 11 chartered com-|from the Victory, abandoned in mercial ships. the Gulf of Boothia in 1832 by 4. Opening sea lanes with ice-|Sir John Ross | breakers and supplying weather; The Labrador recovered two| |stations, defence installations) anchors on Somerset Island jand Eskimo communities. which are believed to be relics | The newest transport depart-|of HMS Fury, part of the sec- |ment icebreaker, the John A.! ong Parry expedition, crushed Macdonald, pushed northward) by ice and lost in 1825. | from Eureka, on Ellesmere Is-| "The Labrador sailed almost {o| | fe | the unchartered t- | ti seal ante ichelcoat ad Mercy Bay on Banks _Island,} | The minister said Canada was| sion and that, for this country, New U.S. Envoy |Washington's agreement to ac- 'Boy, 14, Faces States, diplomatic informants A. Menshikov who has repre- CLARKSON, Ont. (CP) -- A years in a foreign post are re- spzed chase Wednesday which While Menshikov has been has been charged. interested in international poli- Cot, buf it cut in on him a Soviet ministry. A short circuit in the boy's where explorer Robert McClure} was forced to abandon his ship Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Ontario, Niagara, Halibur- ton regions, Windsor, Hamilton: Mainly cloudy with a few light snowflurries today and Friday. Colder today. Winds westerly 15 to 20. Toronto: Mainly cloudy today and Friday. Colder. Winds west- erly 15 to 20 when one of them smashed into the rear of another southbound car, skidded into the left lane and struck a northbound auto head-on, killing four persons riding in it. The second racing car also crashed into the pile-up, but temperatures: Min..,.Max Dawson .. ose « oD -26 Victoria .. » 37 41 Edmonton... +. -4 6 RONDA: icpesceasess "ae 4 Winnipeg .. .'+ » -2 Fort William... .-5 S.S. Marie. .6.. 5 |Kapuskasing . . . .-15 North Bay. .... 10 Sudbury... e006 8 Muskoka . . « Windsor ..+.-. 13 London . ++. +17 Toronto . + « « 18 Ottawa «eee 2 4 jured. Killed were Isaac Bond, 47, his wife, Bertha, 45, his father, Lake Huron, southern Georg- Charlie, 76, and his sister, Re- becca, 44, s Long Distance One of the intared hye pega s fied by Bragg as t river of] Sg Pi eeeee one athe ete ts rvice an pone ORT SBE 2 OTTAWA (CP) -- The Bell|Halifax . ae Telephone Company of Canada| Forecast temperatures: today filed proposed rates for a 7 : = new kind of long-distance tle - hae ate: phone service for Ontario and! Recount Ordered [avttec"Sthsesters "™" S. tmis« p TORONTO (CP)--Judge Rob-| The proposed tariffs were|Kitchener...-+ + 15 ert Forsyth Wednesday ordered|filed with the Board of Trans-|wingham ... « +15 a full recount of suburban Eto-|port Commissioners with a re-|Hamilton . . » me bicoke's 40,000 - ballot liquor|quest that they be approved in/st, Catharines .°. 15 plebiscite. jtime for a Feb, 1 start on the/Toronto. .... + .15 In a plebiscite Nov. 25, ap-|new service. Feterrerouss «2 + 10 al was voted for liquor in| The new arrangement--known Trenton , ., dining lounges but not a bars.|98 Wide area henge rhs Nore Sey. Spoiled ballots were re-examined!» aimed chiefly at large bu- jsinesses or industries which Did You Know mae and enough accepted to approve|place a considerable volume of In the main Dining Reem of. bars as well. long-distance calls. Judge Forsyth said he was| With wide area telephone the GENOSHA HOTEL you con have o Full-course Dinner for ; service, the customer will pay a consenting to a recount of alll monthly rate to.call most tele- ONLY 95c. ballots in fairness to Etobicoke's|phones in specified zones on a Vote No Committee. 'direct distance dialing basis. Cliff Mills 48-Hour Special 1956 OLDSMOBILE Holiday Hardiop "98" Power steering, power brakes, Hydramatic and Radio, CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. Liquor Plebiscite me + ae bottled INTERPRETING THE NEWS Diplomats Fear 'Goa Hypnosis Investigator in 1851 while trying to sail the Northwest Passage from the west. 230 KING STREET WEST 725-6651 | | committee of the British Colum-|W9uld not know about it. bia_ safety council suggested| sending pictures of moose and} person under 16 owning a car kngs what to shoot at. , «YoRKEY jim to drive it. eign A U.9:9; P" af * tenon I rrbeep AIGHANISIAN Coase mGyP There ts nothing to prevent a deer to hunters, so they will|po.ice said, but it is illegal for By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer The story of India's invasion of tiny Goa is not over. Some vagy | United States officials feel there will be repercussions in other '| parts of the world, in Southeast '|Asia and the Middle East, as ambitious leaders become hypnotized by the deceptive '|dream of easy conquest. They feel some element of this hypnosis has spread into Indo- '\nesia and Iraq. It could move into other parts of the Middle East and down into Africa, causing a new rash of worri- some war tremors in 1962. Prime Minister Nehru was a leader in the use of world opin- There in world opinion for "this clap- trap Goa action."" But the ma-| jority of Indians seem to have nothing but applause for Neh- ru's "liberation" of the little Portuguese colony. is reason to believe Kennedy, aroused by the flip- pant way Nehru tossed his ap- peal aside, used more persuas- ion to prevent President Su- karno of Indonesia from follow- ing a similar pattern to take over Netherlands New Guinea. WON'T BE EASY But Sukarne may still be tempted to foilow the style-set- ting Nehru if negotiations with The Netherlands break down. ion to restrain attempts at con- West New Guinea, infested with FOOD MARKET 54 SIMCOE ST. NORTH CANADA'S FINEST RED BRAND BEEF PORTERHOUSE & SIRLOIN C STEAK 99i. SHORT CUT (THE p2rent Ontario Teachers Feder- intend to apply any pressure to atin» to the four elementary ' and one high-school teachers' Every Possible Witness' Asked l ess the delegates agreed to refer|car finally stopped the chase| back to the policy committee at-!| ard police used hand extingu- tempis to define a mass resig-|ishc1s to put out the fire. poe by Pee ae ahd on a MIGHT HELP "her 14-year-olds. They kept it ge of attempted murder. "ANC o Nc y i 5 Delanch couneel rank aioos VANCOUVER (CP) Youth) a vacant lot so their. parents gued that the crown had not} proven anything beyond Wood-| house's presence and opportun-| of Windsor, on Nov. 7 | Brown testified that he only| had vague recollections of being} received another shock. FOUND WIRES Detective Paul Morris testi- wire extended into the dining room, 4 The second wire was found in quest by force. And while the treacherous jungles, may prove press in the United States sub-;no easy conquest. | |jected him to one of the sharp-| Similarly, Premier Abdel Ka- est attacks ever tossed at a non-|rim Kassem of Iraq seems to ARISTOCRAT OF ROASTS) PRIME RIB 69i. FANCY APPLES McIntosh 3-LB, BAG CHRISTIE'S BROOKSIDE 24-oz BREAD TURKEYS EVISCERATED OVEN-READY 39: Su. 45 Ibs. MAPLE LEAF BRAND 4c per Ib. higher WE ALSO HAVE ALL SIZES 29: 2-37° 20 Ibs. and up ae . ® ] Communist Jeader for his Goan/ have a sudden new urge to take i|invasion, U.S. officials said aid] over oil-rich Kuwait, a shiekdom ||to India will not be disturbed. | Britain has pledged to protect. | FRESH PORK Fresh Killed Turkeys FRESH KILLED PEEK FREAN -- Reg. Meanwhile the board did not investigate the relation of the association under it. The motion to pay teachers in- volvea in mass resignations was aprroved overwhelmingly after For Testimon y nation. The executive was given Police said th z ; ' e boy, charged| WINDSOR (CP) -- Matthew temporary authority to make yith being a faveile détingunnt Woodhouse, 26, of Weston, Ont.,|the definition. |because of dangerous driving, was committed Wednesday for ~ |bought the car jointly with two ello said he intended to call "every possible .person I can" for the continuation of the pre- liminary hearing Friday. He ar- ity and so had not established} a prima facie case. | Woodhouse is accused of try-| ing to murder John. Brown, 27,| attacked in his home. He said as he picked up the phone he) received an electrical shock He picked up the phone again and fied he found two lengths of wire in the Brown home. One piece was bare at both ends and at- tached to a kitchen faucet. The the headboard of Brown's bed. It was coiled and covered with what appeared to be blood. Brown said he dimly recalled "ta struggle of some sort". When| ? he discovered he was bleeding usely from facia} lacerations Nea atia Arabian Seo La o. e climbed into the bathtub "with the idea that I wasn't go- ing to mess up the place." Woodhouse was found in the house by police. | Brown said he and Woodhouse! had been friends for years and| that Woodhouse was a frequent weekend visitor in his home. Both men came to Canada from| Newcastle, Eng. j 4 " oP ae AREA OF UNREST Gulf is denoted by line (A). In Kenya (C), troops are ready to. move in case of hidobae I< Map locates Kuwait, small sheikdom on the Persian Gulf where a takeover attempt by neighboring Iraq (B) is fear- | trouble. Yemen, underlined, ed. Route of seven British | and Egypt broke their United warships from. Mombasa, jAreb States association. Kenya, toward the Persian --(AP Wirephoto Map) i? || REJECT APPEAL The U.S. provided India with more than $3,000,000,000 in eco- nomic aid during the last 10 years. More 1s on the way. And yet when President Kennedy ap- pealed to Nehru not to use force jin Goa, the appeal was rejected. Nehru apparently felt he could New British forces have been| rushed to the Middle East. The whiplash of world opinion | has lost its sting. Guns and) planes have to be used to re-| place the impotency of words. For this, to some extent, Nehru must share the blame. }afford to put national above in- jternational interests, especially |when he had the support of the F. R. BLACK O.D. | OPTOMETRIST Contact Lens Consultation or | Soviet Union. Now, belatedly, Rajagopalachari, India's elder! Statesman, comes forward Chakrvatthi to| Eye Examination BY APPOINTMENT PHONE 723-4191 | warn that India will pay heav. ily| 136 SIMCOE ST. N., OSHAWA l SHOULDER FRESH PORK BUTT FRESH PORK END LOIN FRESH (HAM) Leg of Pork FRESH 45i. 551. 55i. 591. SIDE PORK 49i. Shortcake "19° SUNBEAM -- Reg. 33¢ C Pp Stuffing 29° K AMERICA DRY - QUARTS PLUS DEPOSIT Gingerale 2 t 29¢ FRESH KILLED 59 GEESE OVEN-READY CAPONS 539i. CHICKENS 49%. FRESH KILLED c ba ay Ib OVEN READY Turkeys eB. ROASTING-FRYING Chickens *