Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Oct 1962, p. 2

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; Bi THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, October 10, 1962 GOOD E By JACK VENING GEARIN TOO MANY STUDENTS DRIVE CARS Wendell Brewster, the director of recreation for the Osh- awa Recreation Commission, de: Mr, Brewster, the soul of : diplomacy, pointed out the other day in careful language that Canada's Physical Fit- ness Program was lagging behind that of such countries as Holland; Denmark and Britain (which he visited re- cently as a delegate with the Ontario Recreation As sociation the Society of the Directors of Recreation of of Ontario). : It wasn't difficult to read between. the lines and te sense that Mr. Brewster was trying to handle the situation with kid gloves, (somewhat like a bedside physician who doesn't tell the patient just how bad he is lest he alarm him unnec- essarily.) He didn't. come right out serves a bouquet: WENDELL BREWSTER like Prince Philip and a few others, and say that our PF Program was in a dreadful mess, which it is --certainly a less sensitive speaker would have come out and stated that Canada was lagging behind ju in this particular field. Remember how Mayor C seevral months. ago that too ma dents walked with a slouch on st about every major power hristine Thomas complained ny Oshawa Public School stu- parade and how this remark brought strong protests from people like Trustee George K. Drynan, QC, of the Board of Education ? We wouldn't care to take sides in this particular dispute, but we do think that the first approach to a solution of the proble must -start with the parents. 'Have you ever noticed an Oshawa high school yard and immediate district and observed the number of cars parked while classes are in progress ? The majority don't belong to the teachers, as some may suspect -- they belong to the pupils and this situation represents one of the greatest detri- ments to cur Youth Fitness Program today. | Too many teen-agers are driving cars to and from school when they should be walking; also, goodness knows, the PUC needs every bit of revenue it can get). ' Why doesn't T. D. '"'Tommy" Thomas propose a Provin- | cial law that would make it illegal for any student to drive a car to or from school unless three-mile limit? That would Physical Fitness Program start he or she lived beyond the be a good way to get our ed, | NOTES FROM THE MUNICIPAL HUSTINGS OVERHEARD IN A CITY HALL ELEVATOR: First Voice -- Why are so many aldermen going to retire from politics this year? Second Voice -- I think so me of them simply want to | retire so they'll have more time for travel -- after all, they don't even get time for a good European tour under the present crowded schedule. It's cation, not like the Board of Edu- » PETERBOROUGH HAS A WOMAN MAYOR MUNICIPAL NOTES FROM ONTARIO: So Peterborough's City Council has turned to the Distaff Side in selecting a replacement Stanley McBride's term as may to serve the rest of Sheriff or of that City? | Alderman Alene Holt, the nominee, is also expected to be a candidate for the mayoralty next December -- her two-months tentire of office will give her an opportunity to see how she | _ can handle such perplexing prob! tion of the City Administrator system (that has been hanging fire for too many months) and the controversial store-closing lems as Peterborough's adop- | | 'Link Businessman To Gaming House | | TORONTO (CP) --A leading |businessman of Niagara Falls, iOnt., who has denied gambling iconnections, was linked Tuesday jto one of Ontario's most notori- ous'gaming houses in testimony before the province's royal com- mission on crime. Wealthy Albert Iannuzzeli, owner of two motels and other businesses, was described by lawyer Archibald Sheppard as the man who retained him to file annual government returns for Niagara Falls' Ramsey Club between 1953 and 1957 when the now-closed house was running a big international crap game. Iannuzzelli, an Italian - born former dishwasher who had a fast financial rise in the last 20 years, previously had denied police suspicions that he had a major hand in the club, one of Ontario's top three in its palmy days. But Tuesday lawyer Sheppard of the Falls city testified Ian- nuzzelli retained him in con- nection with the club and pro- vided him with the information forms. He said he sent his bills iter filling out the government ito Iannuzzelli but did not recall |who actually paid him. CLAIMS 'PRIVILEGE' The lawyer testified over the protest of Walton C. Rose of| Toronto, Iannuzzelli's counsel,| who claimed: privilege in law-| yer-client communications in-| volving the Niagara Falls men. Mr. Justice W, D. Roach, the! commissioner, said he was "'noi; so sure" there was a right of privilege (which could result in| keeping communications secret) | if it involved concealing a| crime. "We'll see as we go along,' he gaid, but he did not interfere in the brief questioning of Ian-} nuzzlli's lawyer at the end of the day's public. sitting. After the open sitting, }one-man commission went into private session to re-examine} Deputy Commissioner James} Bartlett of the Ontario Provin-; cial Police on earlier evidence) suggesting an association be-| tween the officer and top gamb- ler Joseph McDermott. Mayor Robert Simpson of Arnprior, Ont., had testified that a few years ago Bartlett intro- duced him to a "Mr, McDer- mott" who promptly tackled the mayor on whether he thought then premier Leslie Frost--a Simpson friend -- could do any- thing for gamblers. The mayor was unable to pick the gambler lout of a group in the court-| /room. | Commission counsel Roland F. | Wilson said after the public jhearing that the deputy's testi- imony would be made public at |s commission spokesman said it/whether Mr. Scott Xo been sat-/1, 22 'Tuesday > when Mrs./asked on allowing motion pic- lnow was uncertain that the|iSfied with his explanations. (ps onga Brady, 54, died in hospi- tures, theatrical performances,| commission would sit today. ('we WANT THE FACTS' tal. jeocers and lectures after 1:30) who gave direct testimony Fri-| . m iy +1, | Pope Pius XII, who died four | Gay--chaie to § ema nul) years ago Tuesday, is con- | ground. In left foreground is ducted before the cathedral | part of Bernini's famed can- ; ' | altar, background, in St. Pe- ,/interrogators kept calling on the} 2/!@T, rb gh : eae | minister for answers instead of| ter's basilica in Vatican City | More than 1,000 cardinals and the attorney-general on the fact \that he called on Scotland Yard counsel in the prosecution of McDermott and partner Vincent some hitherto-secret tion" leader John Wintermeyer, looked like a "smear" attempt! ing about "the very subject we have been canvassing here for six months," although the min- ister contended that lawyer had been spreading serious charges based largely on hearsay.' Liberal counsel wanted to know Other developments before the commission Tuesday. 1, Cross - examination of At- torney-General Kelso Roberts, major opposition target con- cerning crime in Ontario, ended abruptly when: an exasperated Liberal counsel B. J. MacKin- non gave up part-way through an argumentative questioning session. 2. New Democratic Party counsel Andrew Brewin, Com- mons member for Toronto Greenwood, called the attorney- general "'naive'"' in his dealings with gamblers and Mr. Roberts accused him of asking "silly questions." 3. The attorney - general ad- mitted he might have told a magistrate, who complained to him that the late mines minis- er James Maloney tried to in- terfere in a gambling case in 1959, that his fellow minister could have been drunk. Magis- trate. Fred Thompson said the minister called him at 9 a.m 4, Stanton Hogg, Toronto law- yer and former Conservative- appointed assistant crown attor- ney here, said he had no direct knowledge of criminals' payoffs to officials and police. Mr. Hogg, now associate Liberal counsel] at the inquiry, was un-} der examination on a speech he made at a political meeting in} 1961, suggesting politico-crimi-| nal tieups. | CALLS FOR ANSWERS The opposition lawyers' cross- examination of Mr. Roberts--} late in the morning session after} stormy passages in which the} Commemorative service for speeches. It came to a head when Mr. MacKinnon was questioning the CAPSULE NEWS for a réport in 1961 on Toronto lawyer Eric Scott, an associate Feeley on police bribery charges, after Mr. Scott spilled "corrup- information to Liberal it Mr. MacKinnon claimed "libellous and! ($ As the attorney-general told of a meeting last year in which he said he answered the Scott allegations item by item, the 2 LONDON 29,700). UK. Defector Shares Estate coat who later became legends, died Tuesday. Miss Beach came to France with the American Red Cross in 1917 and later opened a Left Bank library, bookshop and part-time publishing house.| |The Germans closed it in 1940. | (Reuters)--Donald| crisis in Berlin in the weeks just Maclean, former British diplo-|ahead." He did not specify what 4 4 mat who defected to Russia injthe trouble might be, but said against Mr. Scott, who was tell-|j951, was left 50 ($150) and a\"'the determination and unity of fifth share in the residue of the|this country to maintain our po- estate of his mother, Lady Mac-|sition in West Berlin is appar- lean, who died in July at 82,/ent." | Lady Maclean, whose will was published Tuesday, left £9,904 DIES FROM INJURIES NEW YOR (AP)--The death at Wednesday's elections, boiler explosion at a New York] tions of Sunday sport and en- telephone company office rose|tertainment, ll from _ last SERVICE FOR POPE PIUS | Tuesday. Pope John XXIII sits on throne in left back- opy covering the papal altar. bishops, on hance for the Ecu- menical Council opening Thursday, took part in the ceremonies. --(AP Wirephoto via radio from Rome) INTERPRETING THE NEWs By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer A long - term move toward restoring the disrupted unity of Christendom. starts this week amid perhaps the most genial auspices of modern times. It is a cautious beginning. Any optimism about the outcome is overlaid with prudent reserva- tions and candid acknowledge- ment of immense difficulties. Yet there is a small hope, and possibly more than a hope, that after four centuries of schism and hostility the foundations may be laid over the next six months for a rapproachment be- tween the Church of Rome and the rest of the Christian world. Basically, that is the main purpose of the second Vatican council--the 21st General As- sembly of the Roman Catholic Church--which opens Thursday in the Basilica' of St. Peter's, the world's most famous \church, |OCTOGENARIAN LEADS | | Nearly 3,000 prelates, in copes and golden mitres, are gathered at the bidding of Pope Johw Christian Unity Move Cautious deacons. XXIII, an octogenarian from a Choice Facing | Deformed Son | TORONTO (CP) -- A young /Toronto couple this week must |decide whether to keep their six-week-old deformed son. N 1e ASK SUNDAY SUPPORT VOTE | KINGSTON (CP)--City coun- icil Tuesday night approved by- |laws calling for a vote on issues the December municipal including the ques- Voters will be HAD HEART ATTACK | "What difference does it : |p.m, Sunday, The deputy commissioner tes. make?" interjected the com- CHARGES IN DEATHS | VOTE ON SUNDAY MOVIES tified in private because his doc-| missioner. "I don't want any| DIJON, France (Reuters)--| © sesighss mI tor has recommended against al opinions from Eric Scott. We|The engineer agd mechanic of| KITCHENER (CP) -- City} public appearance for the offi-| want the facts." cer, who suffered a heart ai- tack after giving evidence last! At this point, Mr. MacKinnon tossed his documents on the a freight train involved in a col-|council Tuesday night passed a llision with the Paris-Trieste ex-|bylaw providing for a plebiscite press Friday have been charged|on Sunday movies to be held in with manslaughter through neg-|conjunction with Kitchener's 75, rioting at Atlanta, bylaw. | Sandy Baird the "Looking Around" columnist of the Kitch- éner-Waterloo Record is up in arms because Kitchener's Mayor Gray attended the Good Roads Association convention in Quebec City although His Worship has made it clear that he is to retire from civic service at the end of the year ("Which means that any knowledge he picks up in Quebec will be wasted so far as the City is concerned." protested against that City's re-assessment equalization. pro- gram, and was especially unhappy because "a greater separ- ation" had developed between residential and commercial- uring. \table and sat down with an un- un ' : ; ag rr has denied the in-| audible remark, ligence, justice officials said/ municipal elections Dec. 3. increase in farm d elivery |Tuesday. Nine passengers were : quotas. The soft durum wheat CALLS ELECTION is used for such foods as spa- jtroduction, and Bartlett has| Earlier, he questioned the at- fhe istated his only Temembered | torney - general closely on why |meeting with the gambler was|he had waited three or four killed and 24 injured in crash. |Governor Sir Robert Stapeldon MAY BE CRISIS |dissolved The Bahamas House LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)--At-|of Assembly Tuesday and called torney-General Kennedy saidja general election for Nov. 26, Tuesday night "'it is quite pos-| |sible that we will face a grea) wee tea tas ee |New York City Ballet was |warmly received, by spectators lat the Bolshoi Theatre Tuesday jnight. The company, which in- jwhen McDermott accompanied|months bfore getting in touch) partner Vincent Feeley on ajwith the then mines minister |visit to his home in a abortive about Magistrate Thompson's} attempt to get his help for a|complaint of interference in his| lgovernment service station;gambling case on behalf of the franchise in 1958. | defence. industrial properties. He wanted to know why residential as- sessment in Sarnia had taken over a larger percentage of the total city assessments when industrial assessments had drop- ped by proportion. J. P. Comme (Toronto assessment consultant whose firm conducted Oshawa's two-year Re-Assessment Equalization Survey recently) appeared before the Sarnia Council and de- fended the City's assessment Department there on its program gtam ("The Carnia City Assessment Department is competent and it has done a competent job," he said). He pointed out that any commercial establishments had vacant premises in the 'main business area--these properties, because they were vacant, had to be assessed as residential and wre contribu- tory to the difference in the residential commercial ratio. POLICE "COURTESY" DRAWS PRAISE NOTE How many good deeds performed by the Police go un- noticed by the public? Ont., today to call attention to " call of duty" on the part of an not identify. Her car got stuc Highway No. 2 at midnight and who quickly sent an officer to A woman phoned from Cooksville, 'an act of courtesy beyond the OPP officer, whom she could k in the mud on a shoal of she phoned Bowmanville OPP the scene. Said the woman: "Not only did the officer go to great trouble to phone a tow- truck operator, so that I would not be stranded far from home in the middle of the night. he was gracious enough to wait until the truck pulled my car from the mud. It is acts of duty such as this that deserve special mention, believe you me." Investment By Canada Up In US. By HAROLD MORRISON WASHINGTON (CP) -- Can- ada's direct investment in United States industry increased! to $1,989,000,000 in 1961 from $1,029,000,000 in 1950, the U.S. commerce department reported Tuesday, In the first comprehensive study of its kind in two decades, the department estimated U.S. industry attracted more foreign capital from Canada in the last 12 years than from any other the first time in more than a decade, there was a small net withdrawal of $3,000,000 in Ca- nadian capital in 1961. ; Total direct foreign invest- ment in American firms from all countries more-than doubled in the 1950-61 period, rising to $7,392,000,000 from $3,391,000,- 000. Britain led the field with her portion increasing to $2,484,- 000,00 from $1,168,00,0. While Britain was the main source of foreign funds for American industry, Canada led in the specific field of manufac- turing--the most popular cate- gory of industry for foreign in- vestors. production. of alcoholic bever- ages, machinery and_ nickel metals, Canadian direct invest- ment in U.S. manufacturing rose to $975,00,000 in 1961 from country except Britain. However, the investment flow) from Canada, for partial or fulljlines increased to $194,000,000\showers tonight and early|Kitchener . control of companies in the/from $56,000,0 and in finance|Thursday morning. Unitd States, tended to decline} in the jast few years and for $468,000,000 in 1950. Canada's in- vestment share in U.S. oil pipe- and insurance companies. to $274,00,000 from $153,000,000. Concentrated mainly in the! SOME SHOWERS TONIGHT | WEATHER FORECAST | | |Toronto .+++sese0+e 52 65 Jin an attempt to swim the Eng- eterborough «++. 50 62 liish Channel. Last month Miss Trenton +s++ee+eee+ 50 62 Revell abandoned the Dover-to-| | Killaloe «+++ 50-62 France swim after six miles} ar Vy ou Vy pe 9 . because of cold weather. | AY +6 5 | Sudbury .... 50 60 IGNORED ORDER vd Earlton ..... 48 ' 60 |Dr. Webster Stone, 61, former) uring urs ay Kapuskasing 48 60 |president of Arnold College, White River. 48 60 (Bridgeport, Conn., 'and his wife Moosonee ...+++ 45 55 |Tuesday were sentenced to 30 Official forecasts issued byjburton regions: Cloudy with a|Mount Forest..... 50 60 |days in jail for contempt of the the Toronto weather office at\few scattered showers ending|Sault Ste. Marie... 48 60 |New York State Supreme Court. 5 a.m.: : this morning. Mainly sunny this ( They were cited for ignoring the Synopsis: Clearing will take|afternoon. becoming cloudy by Observed Temperatures court's order to remove a place across eastern Ontario|tonight. A few scattered show-\Low overnight, High Tuesday |'!9thesline strung with tattered this morning. However a weakjers Thursday, not much change Habeson 33 96 rags outside their Rye, N.Y., disturbance is racing eastward/in temperature, winds light. |victoria .......... 44 55 N.Y., home, The clothesline was across northern United States long opie Algoma, Whitelmamonton 0... 24 hla 'itedace tobe and will spread cloud into the|River, Cochrane regions, Sault : Se ae ce a western regions today and into en ge bison cloudiness se ede Ms be 18th ANNIVERSARY the eastern areas by this even-|today, oudy. with scattered a y i ling. showers tonight and. Thursday. ge i "4 BROADLOOM Lake St. Clair, Lake. Huron,|Winds light, not much changejy ¢ rie. ot 58 Lake. Erie, Niegara; Western|!" temperature. Kapuskasing 44 58 SALE Lake Ontario, Georgian Bay re- Eee: North Bay. 44 58 gions, Windsor, London, Hamil-| Forecast Temperatures | ciapury .., te ! ton, Toronto, Sudbury, North|Low tonight, High Thursday | Muskoka .. 53 "2 | COMING SOON Bay: Sunny with a few cloudy|Windsor .......... 52 65. |Windsor . 49 64 intervals becoming mainly|St. Thomas. 52 65 .|London .. 50 61 | cloudy late today. One or two/London .. 50 65 |Toronto . 5] 64 NU WAY ee ; 50 65 Viele ive 50 56 bd Partly|Wingham .. 50 60 {Montreal .......0% 0 56 cloudy Thursday, winds light. |Hamilton .. 52 65 | Quebec eee, & 55 174 ie o ih 8205 [Halifax ...ccessere 46 64 | : anaes! ( Eastern Lake Ontario, Hajj-!st. Catharines.+++. 3 oa lence is organized by the uni- . | i cludes two Canadian-born bal- jlerinas, will spend eight weeks jin Moscow and other Russian cities. It recently completed a five-week European tour, | TO DISCUSS ECONOMY | QUEBEC (CP) -- The second) annual Canadian affairs confer-| ence will be held on the theme Pee rg and its Economy Nov. |20-24 at Laval University, it was announced Tuesday. The confer- |versity's students. their protest against rising real Justice Gerald Nolan stayed their sentence un- til Friday to give them time to appeal or remove the line. state taxes. BOOKSELLER DIES PARIS (AP)--Sylvia Beach, bookseller and confidante in the 1920s of young publisher, American KLAN TO MEET ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -- The Ku Klux Klan plans to hold . rally at Bessemer, Ala., Satur-!,,);)); font x day night to hear reports on| William Robert, live in a three the University of Mississippi after the arrival of Negro James H. Meredith. The Klan's dragon, Calvin Craig of|tunds last week to keep up hos- announced details of/nital insurance coverage. | the rally Tuesday. Bessemer is} 'The Ontario department a suburb of Birmingham. | INCREASES QUOTA WINNIPEG (CP)--The Cana-|60 cases of thalidomite deform- dian wheat board in a move tolity across Canada. have more durum wheat in al position for export sales, an- | nounced Tuesday a three-bushel NASSAU, The Bahamas (CP)|Shetti and macaroni. TO FORM NEW PART THETFORD, England (Reut- ers)--Frank Ofdan, a 47-year- old automobile engineer, jnounced here today he is launch- ing a new political party whose main platform will be strong opposition to Britain entering the European Common Market. It will be called the United Brit- ish Party and he will be pres- ident, 'LIBERALIZE' PRESS MADRID (AP)--Spanish In-| formation Minister Manuel Fra-| ger Iribarne said Tuesday that! press censorship has disappeared in Spain." He said| this was "an experiment which will be replaced by a new eralized press law aimed to-| ward throwing public opinion! into greater relief." | authors an- "almost} lib| The baby was born without arms and Jegs after the mother took the tranquillizer thalido- mide during early pregnancy. The baby must leave hospital by Friday- Truck driver William Thomp- son, 20, and Mrs. Thompson, 17, say the boy, Brian Carl, will need expensive specialist treat- ment if he is to learn to per- form even somc of the simple functions of everday living. Mrs. Thompson said Tuesday they had not been permitted to see Brian Carl for the first few lweeks because doctors thought "it might upset us too much." {spent a lot of time with him on |Friday, trying to decide what) can be done," she said. | | Mr. and Mrs. Thompson and| their other child, one-year-old room apartment on a monthly income of $188. They have no medical insur-| ance and had to accept welfare |health 'has accepted three ue- formed babies into its care. Of-| ficials estimate there are about! «BIG LITTER | GREENVILLE, Pa. (AP)--A| |veterinarian says the birth of| \24 pigs five days apart to a |pure-bred sow was "unheard of previously." Dr, Harold Nichols said the pigs were born to a landrace sow owned by Blaine Dick of nearby Hadley, Oct. 1 and Oct. 6. Dr. Nichols said the largest litter known before was 18. He said he knew of no previ-| ous case of double litters. | [ SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gas Deoler in your area. } 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) peasant family of 13 children, " whose benign personality and unexpectedly energy have help- ed about his first ecumenical conference in nearly 'a century. When broadly smiling Angelo « lan, first came to. the Holy See, Roncalli of Bergamo, near Mi- " they called him "Papa d_ tran- sizione'" -- caretaker pope. But the man who was th it to be just a stop-gap start the Roman Catholic world Jan. { 25, 1959, by calling for a gen- + tral council of the church in response voice." fo an "unexpected "First there must be a coun- cil, to reform the church and ' revive the spirit of the gospel," said the Pope. 'Then we shall ; be 'able to understand our sep- » arated brethren and they will , understand us." The council will also occupy it- self with countless details of doctrine and from dictates on eating fish on , |Friday to the possibility of mar- ried men being ordained as One of the confer. ; ence's aimis is "aggiornamento" --modernization--and some the closed sessions will give pro- longed and earnest study to anti- lerical trends in some Eu- | lropean countries. |OTHERS WATCH CLOSELY | Couple With | church will watch the confer- liturgy, ranging of Religions outside the Roman jence with interest and sympa- ithy. One of the best summaries lof their attitude comes from Bernard . Pawley, canon of Ely Cathedral in Cam- bridgeshire who for the last 18 months has been in Rome as personal representative of the archbishops of Canterbury and York on the Vatican secretariat for promoting Christian unity. 51-year-old Acknowledging all the difficul- ties, the canon comments: "The points of agreement be- tween the two churches are far more in number, and far great- er in importance, than those which separate them. "This indisputable fact must be kept firmly in view. For it is almost incredible that, in the face of the present urgencies, bodies of Christian people who agree about so much can be separated by so little." "But we love our son and wel SAVE! 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