Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Oct 1963, p. 21

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: TIME AND CHANGE Soviet Farming -- | Needs Outlined |. WASHINGTON (AP) -- Two 'Americans who recently had a took at Soviet farming--Agricul- 'ture Secretary Orville Freeman 'and Iowa farmer Roswell Garst 'think the Russians will over- come their crop shortages. ! But it will atke time and changes, they said. * Garst, who in 1959 was host w Soviet Premier Khrushchev a his Coons Rapids farm, made latest of a number of trips Russia in May and advised Khrushchev about Russian agri- culture problems. " Freeman toured Soviet agri- cultural areas in July to get first-hand information on Rus- sia's agricultural productive ca- pacity and methods. Both Freeman and Garst learned -- as Khrushchev has since told his people--that the Kremlin is plowing a new fur- row in its farm planning. Efforts will be concentrated on intensifying production on the'older farming areas threugh increased use of fertilizer and irrigation to supplement rainfall when droughts threaten. It was . a drodght that was blamed for this year's poor wheat crop in Russia. "I feel certain," Freeman told a reporter, 'that the So- viets will be able to increase production if they follow through on their fertilizer and a may take 10 years or more. But I believe the time is coming when the Soviets, like this coun- try, will be _ Producing sur- plusses." American farmers are mak- ing greater and greater use of irrigation to supplement sho! rainfyalls. Many wheat farmers in the southern Great Plains purpose. In addition to more fertilizer and irrigation, Freeman and U.S. experts on Soviet agricul- ture believe the Russians need more machinery, better techni- cally informed farmers and an incentive system that would en- courage Soviet producers to Famed Cheese ' CAERPHILLY, Wales (CP)--' The famed Caerphilly rho Ne cheese is going to be produced} an industrial estate in this Gla- morgan community and a per: centage of output will be ear- marked for export, from Caerphilly was produced in quantity here in the early 1900s stripped iocal production was largely trans-' have drilled deep wells for this|{@'Ted to England's west coun- ufactured in west Wales and New Zealand. family ture of Caerphilly cheese for nearly a century, will be associ- ated with the new company. Returns Home gain in its old home .town. A factory will be formed on The cheese that took its name| but later demand out- resources and y. Caerphilly cheese is also man- John Davies, member of a ted with work harder to increase produc-| tion, | Garst said the Russians have! so much land that they need/Dickinson, 63-year-old native of not reach the degree of intensi- -|C fied farming attained in the) record for longest service of U.S. ja Freeman said some of the ex-|d perts he took along with him|Caada. with Holy Trinity Church here in 1922, on his Soviet tour were critical of some of the Soviet cultural SERVES CHATHAM, Ont. CHURCH (CP)--Cecil hester, England, may have the ny Sunday School superinten- ent in the Anglican Church :of' He took up the task serving 40 years. Fa cine Erhard BONN (AP) -- Ludwig Er- hard, after patiently waiting in the wings for years, becomes West Germany's new chancellor this week. Konrad Adenauer, the retiring chancellor, did not want Erhard, his popular economics minister, to succeed him. Adenauer de- layed his retirement because he believed Erhard did not have the political talent to follow kim. Erhard built up his following until he became the only cheice or party and its coalition ally, the Free Democratic party. To- gether they control the majority in Parliament needed to elect him. the Christian Democratic Erhard, fat, jovial and 66, is taking over one of the toughest political world. He has to govern with a coalition. He takes over a coun- try with politically explosive problems, over a Social Democratic oppo- sition gaining more and more favor with the voters. assignments in the He has to triumph Erhard brings to the chancel- lorship 14 years of experience as a cabinet member and great personal popularity as the . "father of the economic mir- acie'"' of post-war recovery. He opposes the government's mix- ing in business and supports U.S.-favored policies on Europe ana the Atlantic alliance. "rhard is inheriting a. stable, prosperous country but al; many problems that could blow up in his face during the next two years. That is all the time left before the next election, in which he must lead his party to a strong showing if he hopes to be re-e:ected chancellor. Erhard has promised to con- tinue the main lines of Aden- auer's policies, but indicated there will be difference in em- phasis and. details, Unlike Adenauer, who has run tiings his own way with an iron will, Erhard will not impose his policies on the new government but seek to put them over on their merits. He is planning to handle the cabinet like a team. This carries the risk that he will be forced to settle for comprom- ise measures and fail to carry through: a program that would impress the' voters. 0! ci u y belief that take many of the best students, have made the problem of ad- missions a matter of public con- British universities. it was not really a question of being unco-operative. Notes Problem | Of Admissions CAMBRIDGE, Egland (CP) ir Ivor Jennings, retiring vice- hancellor of Cambridge Uni- versity, says there is a problem of public relations in connection with the admission of students to Oxford and Cambridge. In his valedictory speech, Sir} Ivor spoke of the considerable pressure for places at the two universities, and said there was ome adverse publicity suggest- ing that the attitude of the au- thorities was sonietimes ob- structive. . The success of members of these universities in the ca- reers in which success is meas- urable by sociologists, the sus- picion that the education provided may sometimes be Ger than that given in séme ther places, and perhaps the these universities " Sir Ivor said. "major diffi- ern, He said one culty" of which the public is naware is that Oxford and Cambridge admit students a ear later than do most other Therefore THE retail 'TIMES, Wedneater g October 16, 1969 a1: Of Liv ing Sea Captain J.Y. Cousteau is re- nowned in the scientific and literary world because of his unique ability to combine scien- tific quest, technological imno- vation and personal adventure, Cousteau, who helped invent the Aqua-Lung with Emile Gagna, is known as "the father of free diving." In his new, long-awaited book, * G SEA" (The Mus- son Book Co. Ltd.) with James Dugan, Captain Cousteau gives a thrilling account of his deiv- ings into the sea, using his famous oceanography ship, Calypso, as a mobile base, and with a dazzling array of new depth-exploring techniques and devices, This book follows h's "THE SILENT WORLD," an exciting chronicle of free-diving| ti day with the Aqua-Lung, pub- lished a decade ago. This book has dramatic im- pact as Cousteau tells of his high adventures beneath the mantling oceans. Cousteau and his professional diving team other wrecks, from one sunk the Bronze Age to a f: which went down a", eyes. EXCITING CHAPTERS There are some excil scend to the bottom of the sea, which engul's the vessel. 2,000 years -- he is entrapped Gibraltar current. ers, excavate a ship which sank in the third century, B.C. They also roam afar to investigate their chap- ters. The Mathyscaph, which Captain Cousteau uses to de- starts an undersea avalanche le also drinks wine that has rest- ed on the bottom of the sea a ai night by 25-foot seaweeds in the The information on the Deep- sea Camera sled is better than anything out of Science fiction-- the Camera was developed be- cause of persistent attempts to learn what causes the rise and fall of the Deep Scattering lay- also because of curiosity about life on the ocean floor. The Camera sled travels miles below the ocean's surface pho- setieh ne pheapnapicn never before seen by man: It ig: inter+ esting to learn also that the ex- plorer's range underwater has been extended tly ". Cour steau's Diving¢ Saucer, a jet- rine with riseen' or classified; sharks with shovel snouts white protruding eyes; a silve fish shaped like a triangle; a fish whose skin is marked off into perfect checkerboard hl squares. Also introduced is the "fruckfish," an animal un accountably grown to 50 times the normal weight of. its. spe, cies, and eg the giant grouper which became the divers' ne ie at le unders ase is lustios't by pain a ; it is also marked by moments of rare beauty in the of splendor in the world below the seas. This iz one o° the most fascitie ating: true adventure stories of our time. -The lavish and num» erous. illustrations -- many color -- enhance the appeal this. most outstanding which should find a place ee adventure library shelf.~ practices. "We think they plow too deep and plant too deep and use too} much seed. Yet we found the se same cultural practices fol-| lowed in the dry lands areas all over the Soviet Union, Ap- parently they have been de- creed from Moscow." irrigation plans." Garst agreed. "Of course, it will be a slow and very expensive process," said the Iowan at his home. 'It BOXER'S NAME Boxer "Sugar Ray" con's real name is Smith. Robin- Walker Like Light? try Captain Morgan WHITE! also BLACK LABEL - GOLD LABEL - DE LUXE NOW 5 DIFFERENT KINDS OF CHEVROLETS FOR MORE CHOICE T 2 3 '64 CHEVY II dy '64 CORVAIR § 64 CORVETTE Corvair { "G4 LUXURY JET-SMOOTH CHEVROLET Ina class all its own in every- thing but price, the'64 Chevrolet rivals just about anything on the road today in styling, com- fort and performance. 14 power teams. 7 different engines. 15 models in four series including exciting new Impala Super Sports, luxurious Impalas, handsome Bel. Airs and low- cost Biscaynes.. THE ALL-NEW LINE, CHEVELLE! 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