The Oshawa Times, 16 Mar 1960, p. 21

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20 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, March 16 1960 g programs instituted a dangerous tified." | bile. Maj, Gerry Yarymowich of | for overcoming much of it with ! Toronto and Montreal says sup- | improvisation. His men made. ply is one of his chief problems | a big contribution to camp but praises his Canadian troops | morale by recovering and re- | ng to service an old ice- g plant left behind by i forces. (National Defence) This is a general view of the Canadian vehicle compound at Rafah, Egypt, centre of RCEME work to keep UNEF troops mo- New UN Commander |Casanova's ; Memo Tough, Durable Sikh |p 71%, derly withdrawal of opposing for-|jand understanding of the tough Canadian Press Staff Writer [ces and according to interna. task is first class." | WIESBADEN, Germany (AP)-- RAFAH, Egypt (CP) The tional agreement, While jt did not| He also had a word for the The memoirs of Casanova, the new commander of the UN Emer.|0P¢rate on Israeli territory, it maintenance, or support troops|italian lover and adventurer, will gency Force is a tough and dur. | Vas respected by Jew as it that Which Canada provides for the po issued next month in the first able Sikh with an established rec. (DY the Arab. It was to see that force--service corps, sappers, re-|aythentic edition since they were ord in war who's hoping to help illegal border activity and, mis-pairmen, signallers aud air trans- written more than 160 years ago win the peace .in this explosive| Understanding weren't created by|port men. 'They've met the chal-|, German publisher reports. corner of the Holy Land. And he's|iS0iated incidents which before lenge of different standards of re- Giovanni. Giscomo. Casanova glad he's got Canadians in a key|[2d created tension and led to pairs and a wide variety of equip-|. JWEET,, FORRORS, CECA E spot : [rdkseale wa, ment and have adapted and im ing the last years before he died Maj.-Gen. Prem Singh Gyani FIGHTING SIKH provised in a way that ean hardly |;,"1995 at the age of 73. n ! C Toved ™ A wants to start right in by dis-| The Indian commander is 49 ng TL iy The account of his amorous af- pelling a few popular notions and comes from Chandigarh, the ot "fai 1 € 3 : lo /ith anybody in a tough fairs was considered too detailed about the role and purpose of his| new Indian capital of Punjab, (5°! 2] ng wi y y 8 | for publication at the time. A unique command. He doesn't like|created when the province was| i |French writer, Jean Lafurgue, UNEF called "police" and he divided between India and Pak-| What are his outstanding im- | enared an "expurgated orig- wants to emphasize the limita-/istan. He comes from fighting pressions of Canadians generally: By JACK BRAYLEY | A {inal" version. tions of his force as set by inter- Sikhs but he doffed his hat and| 'They're alert, self-confident and} The F. A. Brockhaus Publish- national agreement. with a smile pointed out that he|cheerful--and I'm very glad Ive ng House of Leipzig acquired Shaking his head vigorously, |didn't conform with the tradi-/got them in my command. Casanova's manuscript in 1820. the tall, slim Indian army gun-| tional Sikh "hairdo" as he called| This is the first time in history| Brockhaus and the Paris house ner successor to Canada's Lt.-lit. He's clean-shaven whereas his Canadians have been in com-|of Librairie Plon now will pub- Gen. E.L.M. Burns, says: religion calls for both beard and mand of an Indian officer of the|lish the memoirs in the original "Doxt 2 police, Toa means Jong hen knotted in a curl under | Commonwealth. And how do they French. The first double volume a lack of law and order, crime ;a turban. i ite r .lis due out April 21, wi ive and punishment, punitive meas. He is right at home with Cans- iro; a he win hog bp? to follow at intervals of ures -and the like and that's got dians and in fact has two bro- good guy," says Cpl. Joe Morris,/two to four months. The com- nothing to do with our job as Ithers-in-law, Krishan and Pimmy ,n RCD from Middleton, N.S.,|plete work, almost 4,000 pages, see it. . . .We're strictly a peace|Ahuja, who have decided to adopt ;nq Camp Borden, Ont, |should be available early in 1961. force and by our very presence Canadian citizenship and make tm and our moral effect, interposed|Toronto their home. They are! as we are, between declared ene- sons of his father-in-law, Mulk || mies, we prevent incidents that|Raj Ahuja, a former Indian trade might lead to clashes, clashes commissioner in Toronto. The| that might lead to minor skirm-|general has visited Canada sev-| ishes and to major conflicts. jeral times and likes especially | "If there are no incidents there the Muskoka resort district of are no tensions and eventually we Ontario. I hope bitter memories will be suc-|ing an army training school in ceeded by a practical approach to| He first met Canadians attend-| the situation and a climate will|England. His own part in the [§i be created for a final settle- Second World War saw him serv-| ment." [ing with distinction in the Burma 5 A theatre. But after the war he WON'T PREDICT |met Canadians again as a mem. He didn't care to guess wheniher of the International Truce such a happy day would come or, Supervisory Commission in Indo- || in other words, how long helChina, when his opposite number [fl _ figured UNEF would be needed from Canada was R.O.G. Morton || to patrol the hard and unyield f Toronto, a fried with whom he |(fi Sinai between Israel and a criti- ag maintained contact ever [fl cal part of the United Arab Re- since. | public. It has been operating since the Suez crisis of 1956. CANADIAN DISCIPLINE He's "impressed" with the dis- || The general relaxed under the | date palms that shaded him from |cipline of Canadians in his com- ||| a warm Fe y sun. A reporter mand. "They have a high sense || had waylaid him as he conducted of duty which is so important in| po " a familiarization tour of this big our work." Canadian base camp. He re-! He had personally gone on pa- || turned and again to his/trol with a Royal Canadian Drag- || chief topic: that UNEF was ajoon squadron--just relieved by|| preventive and not a police force. the Fort Garry Horse--and saw It had t created by the how effectively they operated. ted 1 to provide an or-|"They showed that their training! ANZ Look al Dad's Den Dad has a perfect place to display his trophies . . . and to have some privacy, too . . . since he remodeled with the help of BROWN"S LUMBER & SUP- PLIES. They furnished all the mat- Edmonton's 'Java Shop' For Lovers Of Coffee y AL MARKLE 2 | "T 1 Canadian Press Staff Writer | "i [touched off a discussion of the : proper role of British TV in in- * |vestigating matters of public im- . portance. | | 'Controversy Over rial By Television The five MPs, all vehement] Chris Chataway, the one-time tanti-Communists, argued that it Olympic distance runner Who was T i is improper for television author- a T* interviewer before he was | LONDON (CP) -- A searching ities "to use their great power oflelected as a Conservative MP {television study of the affairs of puplic appeal to coerce people to last October, described the views {a Communist-led labor union has gyphject themselyes to inquisition of the five Labor MPs as '"'de- by spreading abroad accusations pressingly totalitarian." against them." Pointing to the protection of- Response to the letter was vol- fered by the libel laws, Chat- Only Cockneys Can Really Talk In Rhyming Slang By STEWART MacLEOD [graduate utters his "well played, Canadian Press Staff Writer [SII LONDON (CP) -- Suppose a Chances are the Cockney has [Cockney slides up to you and/a great deal more pride in his says your trouble and strife has accomplishment. a crust of bread like Annie| It used to be generally ac Laurie. {cepted that rhyming slang orig. Even with the slightest smat- inated in London's underworld tering of knowledge about cock-|freely without giving hints to be. [ney rhyming slang you would wildered police. But a life-long know that trouble and grie sade! of the subject, Julian v . means wife--it's a natural. And Franklyn, has just brought out _,/uminous and unfavorable. Cor-(away added: it's a wellknown fact--in Lon-(book, A Dictionary of Rhyming | The controversy was aroused respondents, who included politi-| 'To argue, as Mr. Robens and| jo" oact end.that crust of bread|Slang, in which he scuttles this by two programs broadcast bYicians and TV personalities, ar-his frienCs in effect do, that soi; i0anc" head. Annie Laurie, of belief e publicly-owned BBC and deal-gued that the broadcasts had|important a means of communi-looyrce was the beautiful swan-| By ED SIMON | |dent Frank Foulkes an opportun- 'lity to reply. | :| A letter to The Times, over the ceived his share of rough treat- : cabinet ministers, Alfred Robens, Canadian Press Stafi Writer EDMONTON (CP) -- Six years ago Steve Panteluk' was an un- discriminating coffee drinker. i s a connoisseur and ing his future that a lot of other people care about good coffee. Mr. major Tea and Co wholesal The ¢ Panteluk is manager and shareholder of Edmonton ffee Limited, a retail the Java e house with carefully cultivated "old world" atmosphere catering to people whose taste in coffee - can't be satisfied by ordinary brands. DENTIST'S IDEA It all started when Mr. Pan- teluk visited his dentist six years ago. '"He started talking rather wist- fully about the old-time retail coffee shops. 1 got the idea that if he was interested, maybe a lot of other people 'were, too." The Java Shop began with re- tail sales by the pound of various blends. as, and still is, nded by Mr. Pan- nd to order. an article in the about English es- shops. 1 decided that i oresso could drag the English away from tea, there was a def- inite market here." ESPRESSO MACHINE Mr. Panteluk brought in an es- presso machine that brews a cup of coffee by forcing live steam under pre re through finely- ground coffee, . It's slow - about four minutes a cup-- but the re- sult is, in any coffee-lover's opin- ion, worth the wait After a remodelling job, the ava Shop was opened for busi- ness ¢s a coffee house. For the first couple of years it fland salesman before I got com- but moved into the fancy foods [fi line upon requests from cus-|| tomers | "You know--a customer comes | in and asks why we don't carry | pickled quail eggs. pickled quail eggs." ART EXHIBIT | The next additions to the al.| ready-crowded walls of the Java |} Shop were products of artists in | the Edmonton area. nw "We don't try to sell the pic. | tures or the pottery, but the! prices are marked and if some- one wants to buy, we'll sell it for || the artist. It's mostly just display." Mr. Panteluk, 30, was born in Wayne, a mining town in the Drumheller Valley, and started working with a CNR track gang|| when he was 16. After six years|| with CNR, during which time he | was transferred to Edmonton, he|| quit and went to work with a|| {lumber company. "Then I got a job with a tea | | and coffee blending firm. I didn't || know anything about coffee, || didn't even drink it, but was al| blender within a week of starting, || I stayed for a year, worked as all roaster, blender, warehouseman pletely dissatisfied." i Cathode Nickel Up For Sale By Gov't WASHINGTON (AP)--The gov- ernment announced Tuesday it)! has about 5,000,000 pounds of cut cathode nickel available for sale to American consumers. The general services adminis- tration said the nickel is part of {the 19,000,000 pounds which it an-| |nouriced Jan."15 was available for isale in larger uncut cathodes. | So, we carry | | i I | if erials . . . including the handsome pre- finished Plywood Panelling that cov- ers worn, cracked walls permanently and is maintenance free. Come in NOW to look over our complete line of panelling and other quality materials « » » and get FREE estimates. PANELLING FOR AN 8 x 12' ROOM AS LOW AS $10.00 A MONTH for fi Protect your car by parking it in a port. Materials to build a one-car carport as low as $9.00 a month, You can have an Inter- Provincial Cottage for as little as $100 down ! "BUY EASTER SEALS! BROWN'S LUMBER & SUPPLIES LTD. | 436 RITSON ROAD NORTH DIAL RA 5-4704 OSHAWA, ONTARIO ing with the Electrical Trades heen fair to both sides and ex-|cation as television should es-lyooked creature immortalized by [Union. The first presented de-|pressed alarm at any attempt to chew all controversial matters of Rabbie Burns. tailed accusations of irregulari-irestrain television front dealing Public concern seems to me to be ties in the union's last election with matters of public import- highly dangerous." and the second gave ETU Presi: ance, | SH oudrow Wyatt, a Labor MP Mal x sour. Who conducted a TV inquiry into 1a ooh Megeriose, 2 the ETU controversy more than two years ago, wrote that the| signature of five right-wing Labor|ment in TV interviews, said the union's leaders then had refused ANNIE IS A LORRY bers of Parliament, said the jet " 'c./t0 appear on a broadcast unless| membe letter left him completely mys permitted to make happily for the gates of Rome. That, mate, means home, |nalist srk cion | {without bein uestioned. As i ci y Jrecoasnl, sale by television." Muggeridge, who was strongly Eg q ney slang means, in a decidedly three former! 2 g {their opponents had been ques-'uncomplimentary way, a three- |attacked a Jo, years 20, for tioned in detail, Wyatt declined ton lorry. In Canadian lingo and : r {wri a magazin icle crit-ito accept the proviso and the/tonnages this is roughl 3%- pains BAe Walker 30d cizing the Royal Family, said ETU ders did not appear, [ton io y giv 2a The letter tofed that Frank ® i Boral Jain alice Wyatt termed "absurd" the ar-| Rhymning slang is loaded with : sti an w 0 i i 's why it' | Haxell, the BTUs general secre- ll Rati coniroversy| Somme that television should not traps like that. That's why it's {tary, decline an Invitation 10'anq that the television inferview- chance that one party in a dis- it sounds ridiculous coming from appear on the first program, iner's task is no different from pute may fost g 4 ate his anyone but a Cockney. 8 which opponents of the executive that of the newspaper revorter. [case on the same conditions as| From a Cockney it's merely in- made charges of such gravity| Muggeridge noted that the ETU everyone else. {comprehensible. : that Foulkes was "under greatiofficials had been subjected to) : | A true-blue Cockney -- defined pressure" to appear the following|similar accusations over a period| las anyone born within the sounds week. Both Foulkes and Hax-|of years and had exercised their, fof Bow Bells in London's east ell are avowed Communists. right to leave their critics unan- |end--can rattle off terms like UNWANTED MAIL HAILEYBURY, Ont. (CP)~--The ter continues, Foulkes was sub- sented to appear, he had the right doesn't include dead cats or mice. and mortar" (daughter), "north {jected to "a sort of trial, con-to break off the interview at any Post office clerks found someland south" (mouth), "bottle and ducted by a self-appointed public time. Since there was no hint/dead mice in the mail box re- stopper" (copper or policeman) |prosecutor before a jury of mil- of compulsion, the proceedings cently, and later found a dead!and "boiled rag" (old hag or {lions of viewers." icould not be regarded as a trial.|cat. lady) just as easily as the Eton It might take you weeks to dis- statements|cover that Annie Laurie in Cock- conduct an inquiry if there is a better left to experts. And anyway In the second program, the let- swered. Even when Foulkes con- mail must go through--but this| "plates of meat" (feet), "bricks| MOTIVE TO FOOL | He claims it developed between So in all probability you would Cockney and Irish laborers im thank the Cockney kindly, offer L 'him an oily rag (fag) and head tive than to fool London who had no deeper mo- each other. Gradually the systems merged, jand sailors carried them to Aus- |tralia and the west coast of the {United States, It's all highly complicated. Perhaps the most widely-used {rhyme in London is "rosy lea" which stands for tea. Even waite ers in London's best restaurants know this one. They won't admit {it though. | Other common ones are "ap- ples and pears," meaning |*"stairs," and "currant bun," for "sun." A "drunk" is referred to as an "elephant's," a shortened version of the original "ele. phant's trunk." Likewise, "Aris. totle" once substituted for '"'bot- tle," but it has since been [trimmed down to * 'arry." . "Rabbit and pork" is an old stand-by for "talk" -- Cockneys somehow manage to make pork and talk 'rhyme--but it is usually shortened to "rabbit" and just recently to "bunny." 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