The Oshawa Times, 26 Nov 1958, p. 34

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4 i534 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, November 26, 1958 = : ' 1 ] : i | ' 81 reactor duction nt Rare Human Drama CONSIDER MASS PRODUCTION poses production of at least 50 plants, reducing the of each unit and making nuclear generators competitive in cost with conventional hydro and ood news for uranium pro- ers of Canada is this atom designed for General Electric pro- cost mass by [3 he .1 The company Rh ih steam plants by 1965. In this proposed boiling-water design, the turbine-generator is install- ed on top of the building at left, with the familiar spherical-re- actor enclosure at right, At Climax In Australia Cen SY » seen By LOUIS LECK adian Press Correspondent on were sel x . $500 each » became a na ¥ of a cel The nad J ) tizen $ For Ww was al ward ' wi JUST] ba nm feels t fuefice are on Xam lems « long 2aro0s Bv'toll edible ARE dreRE Ww Age May Top 103-Year Mark RICHMOND, Sask. CP ertificate indicates Paschke is 103 years old but may be older members of he should there ke he CE ON TRIAL st Some Man maintain A t1 somo brated his 106th birthday Oct. 29 vamal)ira--are p,+ the non-use of birth certifi cates in earlier days may keep his actual birth date a mystery written in 1936 Roman Perham 1an way nat ne and not tri the prob $0 nbolizes who atjira f his not kan and in people ed by hunting snakes and lizards ecting grubs practicall to white men The certificate ays the recerds of the Catholic church at Minn , in an 1870 census. go liv I'he prolific artist's pictures the ng for as much as leader ifting collapsed about iis family aboriginal friend drink some of have cele pic a the worst forms of exploitation The supply of liquor, to borigi nes by unscrupulous white trad ers had merely show his birth date given pay "old man" or of a group within tribe » He spent much of his time with government the natives in a cheap camp be called the Some man with dry Soak world" called him the » black wan's face said tribal leaders vinted the bone Namatjira or side a Motis other watercourse commuting by taxi "white to and oth put He laughed at But certainly true that Namatjira gathered a big tribal retinue. which lived on There was 3 drinking bouts jira was a witness at an inquest hen a magistrate said he ma ave indir:ctly contributed to a es it was his wild Namat bounty talk of w h A woman's death Anton oLD LIFE ENDS Then both Namatjira's worlds him. He let an rum, and was charged under law framed to prevent one of Namatjira protested that he left a bottle open he didn't know his friend i the original Massachusetts Bay acknowledged hig ture of the Boston metropolitan had A curse Mangy Boston Cows Same Blamed For Nuisance om. PHILADELPHIA (AP) By GAVIN SCOTT ficient farming communities, and| "This is the cornerstone on Shadows the fiction on stage in "BOSTON (CP)--A few mangy strong sentiment still exists for whieh we hope to build further the play, TEL e Disenchanted, $ows that clopped around the|the preservation of local auton co-operation," says Mr. McBride, Which is here preparing for its slopes of Boston's Beacon Hilllomy. Less harmony prevails in the Broadway opening Dec. 3. more than three centuries ago Because of this various state supply of water, sewage and the, The backstage drama has a {are held responsible for a ma- agencies have attempted with maintenance of parks. The|¢ast of two--Jason Robards Sr. jor nuisance the city still con- varying degrees of success to co- MDC's pipelines carry water to and his son, Jason Jr. tends with, ordinate services. 28 towns, and sewage disposal to|, When Jason Sr. steps on stage The pre - revolutionAry cow MAJOR HEADACHE 38 towns. It maintains parks and iy Now York Opeuig mew, paths determined many of the i roadways in 39 towns. While lit- . ; -¥ : city's twisting downtown streets. i ow uspettation, foe malanee, tle trouble arises within these|38ainst blindness and obscurity. Today, Bostonians still seek ali. Lolo labliched in 1947 to ad. BrOUPIngs, towns on the fringe of He will be making his first Broad- workable plan to ease congestion | "o.oo "0 transportation for the serviced areas squabble fre. W2Y appearance in 36 years. for the metropolitan area's 2.500, 14" contisuous cities and towns, uently about the advisability of Robards, 65, RO Oe eh 000 inhabitants. Boston was the first U.S. city to Joining. pear d opposite eles enc! hen As in most North American cit- to 0 CL back in 1894. bat . The post-war national trend to|!n Seventh Heaven on Broadway ies, transportation -- it cost, im-| Loi pr Co thing The decentralization has adversely af- and starred in the movies, plays provement and expansion--is the | / b |fected Boston's tax base, only 51|2 Supporting role in the play oven) ] {expanding underground tunnels| i ' which elevates his son to star prime issue in metropolitan plan- provide a major headache to leg-| PCT cent of what it was in 1930. i ning. But problems such as wa- [0.0 With uneven expansion in the biljjug. a 5 Wot ter supply, sewage disposal, {its Gary ol late con. Suburbs, facilities in Boston) Sung Robards, 36, is vi e j|health, fire and police services, representatives in the legis. Proper are often left unused. 1t|peak ol AB scting Sareer M oh i|electric power and recreation, lature from, say, Cape Cod or is not uncommon to find subur- | 1® OTC S2i0. 10 Reve! ou 0 f|are also plaguing the vast com: uo io sadsachusetts are unen- Pan schooi rooms jammed and | GF because of Mis famer's de plex of more than 100 cities and |, siastic about increasing state|V3ant ones in the core of the eine as an scion. towns within a 25-mile radius of | 1) "ol SC Tas not benefit | itY- BROUGHT INSECURITY their constituents. MTA assess- ANOTHER PROBLEM. '"'He was a big name," said the ment are based on the relative] Added to the result of this 500 about the father. "Then sud- populations of the cities it serves, scrambled distribution of facilit- denly he wasn't a star. From the but even so, some sort of state its is the general economic un-|!Me I was 14 there was always a subsidy is needed every year to|der-development of the metropol- nse of worry, or terrific inse- make the subway and bus lines|itan area, Boston's rate of growth CUrity. : of the city a going proposition. lags behind the national average, The younger man suggested his So, too, is the construction of with 49 per cent of the families father for the role in the play expressways in the Boston area in the area earning less than $3, Written by Harvey Breit and a regional issue that cuts sharply 000 a year. novelist Budd Schulberg. The colony. PLANNERS IMPRESSED City planners in the Chamber of Commerce and private groups look with awe at Toronto's Met- ropolitan g ov e rnment scheme, first in North America to bring local governments under central control. who once ap- ; For a Brighter Christmas a Diamond From Felt Bros. PARA , 3 QANNY "I don't think anything like the Toronto Metro plan could ever develop here," says Paul Me- Bride, a planning official at the Greater Boston Chamber of Com- merce There is too much ap athy--even fear in the outlying cities and towns that they will have to yield their authority." Politically, the most salient fea across party dines at the older man plays a warm, father- House. The state's department of pub- lic works and metropolitan dist- rict commission each have m vested millions in the central art ery, an elevated expressway that cuts into the heart of the busi- ness district, and Storrow Drive a commuters' thoroughfare. But lit took years to get the improve State While Boston enjoys the pres- tige of several nationally - known {rave a character modelled after | educational and medical centres, the late writer, F. Scott Fitz-| it pays a high price for them in!garald y : loss of taxes. More than $8,000, "pou ic rv underwent in Feb- 000 worth of ncn-taxable institu- wary 1957. an operation which tions has contributed to the eco- returned 'his sight. His affliction nomic decline of the core city had kept him off the screen A partial answer to Boston's eight years, virtually condemned problems probably lies in estab him to his small cottage in Sher- ments approved. fishing Wh hg ey pulse a Oe a ere Je dives CO-OPERATF., WELL and urban renewal. But advice with hig second wife He wears politan centres, the area was not| Little friction arises in the ad- in planning will only help, not inch thick eye glasses offstage. settled by an overflow from the ministration of fire and police solve. An .ntegrated metropolitan «qy¢ hard for me." said the city. Most of the suburbs were services. In emegencies, the com- scheme seems hopeless at pres elder Robards. "The 'pace is fast founded as indo pendent, self-suf- munties co-operate fully ent. almost too fast." But at the Britons See Gen erals |strummed his baritone ukelele As Human Beings {until 5 a.m. Next day, he slept for 11 hours | "Me and Jason, we're a couple |of guys together," he said. "No {son or pop for us. I don't give him advice. 1 go to him for ad- vice now." By ED § of a group of bemedalled na Perhaps the outstanding assess- TYPING CHAMP DIES Canadian Press Staff Writer tional heroes assailing each other ment of his book. comes from TORONTO (CP) -- Mrs. Irma LONDON (CP)--Ever since the with the querulous fervor of the Lord Attlee, Britain's first post Wright Trenholm, former holder Duke of Wellington returned from occupants of rival soapboxes in|war prime minister, who endured|of the world's amateur speed-typ- the triumphal field of Waterloo to! Hyde Park much from Montgomery, his chief ing title and Canadian speed typ- serve an undistinguished term as' Not all the august figures have of the general staff ing champion five times, died in his country's prime minister, Brit- appeared comfortable in their qf jt jo not always accurate hospital Sunday after short ill- ons have come to regard tieic new role but the ebullient Monty and not always judicious, it is al-|ness. Born in Hamilton, she won | generals as human beings rather tackles it as enthusiastically as iflways stirring and sincere, as its the world's amateur title in Cali- than monuments of infallibility he had been doing it all his life. author always is Attlee writes, fornia in 1928 for her average They have vigorously second While the rights and wrongs of speed of 118 flawesss words a guessed military decisions atthe campaigns in which he took may think less of him minute for a full half-hour. As Balaclava and Mafeking, Khar: part may not be settled for a gen judge of mén and affairs/the undefeated professional toum and Passchendaele, confer- eration, his book adds immeasur- they have read it; but no. speed-typing champion of Canada ring knighthoods on ably to the dimensions of the per- Pody will think less of Montgom- in 1946, she was typing 157 words the men in charge but displaying sonality that emerged from the ery as a man a minute. equal generosity in latter- battles themselves day criticism of the tactics they His abrupt and tactless dismis- region. is its historical tradition of independent local govern ments. Unlike other major metro- SIMON "Many a alter as peerages or their like friend to his son, who por- | 5% contact lenses on stage, guarter- |v: Be sure to .see Felt Brothers' collection Before you make this important pur- chase at every price level, you'll find a wide selection of the finest diamonds , . . beautifully mounted and en- hanced by the tradition of quality our name implies, Diamonds illustrated . . . Representative of the variety you'll find in our collec- tion priced from $85 to $1,000, FELT BROS. (ESTABLISHED 1886) DIAMONDS -- WATCHES -- 12 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH SILVERWARE OSHAWA Fine Watch Repairing A Specialty RAR AAA AAA FRARIARAIVIAIRAID VIVIAN, AA AH HHA THY EERE CERES L ¥ ey LR) J] » SER ERRENER » » LX KH) ey - SEL E RRR RRR 3 > 3 » would drink. But he received al omnigved Mr. Paschke, once a carpenter six-month sentence anyway and! pplication of the memoirs of and later an Alberta farmer, now served several days before being yic.ount Montgomery of Alamein, ves retired in this hamlet, 65 released on bail in which the free-swinging field miles northeast of Medicine Hat,| Two state premiers pleaded for marshal dented the brass hats of He rises daily between 6|clemency for Namatjira and Aus. coo of hic illustrious colleagues, and 7 a.m., enjoys a hot bow! of tralian Territories Minister Paul is the tatest instance of the gen «A Namatjira"s time the tribes- men have lived mainly on white man's food, usually supplied by missions or by the government while whi'e Australia's cattle vb@in the best of the old hunting grounds dddaad JH OE Sait Skggells.. Cn 3 4k * Lx 3x ¢ sal of contemporaries who failed PAA HH to measure up to his exacting |as standards is balanced by inci-|[%5% dents in which he cheerfully and | candidly takes note of his own shortcomings. "I should like to say that where A Fadl AA N LH HE RE EOE HOE RR Namatjira would side h he- not artist, He as 'Batter ent, The came critics taught probably never been heard of out is tribe--the Aruntas--had once watched a visiting Rex Battershee, at work ked to try his hand and shee, astonished at his tal him all he could Namatjira canvases be a sensation although some they poor in wheelchair to which he has been have confined for the last five years The oldtimer vhen it was German emigrated to North America early 1900s was employed in var a ious Alberta centres as a car penter He took up homesteading sald were bert to appeal born 'in Dangig necessary territory, open as coditions a vouth and for a time in the him regain his own grip on life." took manly, dignified way and had no sharply critical of other generals 12 complaints to make." porridge and spends the day in a Hasluck declared "The way is wide open for Al If any sentence is he will serve it in the in his own country, and in most likely to help lawyer said "in a Namatjira's the sentence he gentle- Namatjira himself said nothing erals themselves getting into the act SHARPLY CRITICAL A year ago when shal Lord Alanbrooke, chief of the Imperial general staff, published his memoirs, some of the livelier passages were friction has occurred and tempers run high it has nearly always been my own fault," he had writ- ten to his secretary for war, Sir James Grigg, a few days before D-Day in a letter reproduced in the memoirs. But he is equally merciless in condemning others A Field Mar wartime IA 3B A little folks on your shopping list. € YOUNG MODERNS Visit our wonderland of exciting Christmas Gifts . . . for the Montgomery is revealed as possessing an unsuspected grasp British and American, and a few Su of the limits of military and civil even took issue with Sir Winston FIRST VISIT FROM SANTA miles north of Irvine, Alta., near jurisdiction in national policy--in theory. But instances abound in which his excellent principles technique: that there werd no hu man figures in the landscapes simply because the artist didn't know how to represent them the Alberta-Saskatchewan houn He "went bush' --that is. he dis. Churchill himself on questions of dary, just before the First World appeared int. the desert, appar. military strategy War and. farmed the al ently to seek solace amid the Both books provoked a cross. « J ; most half a century strange reds and blues of the fire of counter - arguments from were forgotten in the esl, of 3 UNIQUE VISION Mr. Pascitke had. six sons snd stark country that made him the aggrieved targets of eriticism, situation in which he was deni Yet it was undeniable that Na- six daughters by his first wife famous presenting the intriguing picture his own way, matjira in his His second wife, 7) years old = . V2 ne AWA WWVAN AHEAD RB EB owh harsh beautiful does all the chores around t including hauling wood " Many gifts to choose in our Infants Dept. 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