- Food In India [Interview Pollsters Attempt Smallwood Irked far 'Believed gest Problem [believed By RUKMINI DEVI cently signed the world's biggest Just En Act | To Tap US. Minds LJ [J | Canadian Press Correspondent [grain deals in Washington, has 1 1 | BOMBAY (CP)--Food has pe- been touring the country im: | ' come one of India's major pre pressing on state governments OTTAWA (CP) i occupations, second only to the and federal agencies the need to Arthur Roebuc!: said Thursday |defence of her Himalayan fron-|increase food production. His tar- he thinks the CBC's television men have never met or spoken|pasted . down hair give him a tiers against an unpredictable get is 110,000,000 tons a year by interview with a self-styled pro- sional pollsters face a critical to each other, even casually. homey appearance. Red China. the end of 1965-6, the terminalifessional divorce co-respondent; i test this year as they feverishly Attorney - General Curtis relays| | Federal and: state governments year of the third five year plan, may have been just an act and/ : 4] - , Hi b F | oi £ ; go "ha d ow inter. attempt to tap the minds of U.S. James J. Greene, 3l-year-old the government's thoughts to the, POLITICAL FAMILY have launched the biggest grain Current annual production is that the young woman inter 1952 and 16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, July 2, 1960 By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON (CP) -- Profe correctly predicted the 1952. and after leading the Allies to a great 1956 President . Eisenhower vic- war victory tories with small margins of de- ation from the actual vote cast. therefore likely to be tight and Rut critics say that while the the vote close, leaving little room 1956 election results| 'O° margin of error in election By JOE DUPUIS idential fight 's Canadian Press Staff Writer ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP) ACROSS 1.U.8. President 6. Singing group 11. Ruby, for one .12. Hangman's 2, Pig. pen 23. A lump 24. Greek letter 25. Thrice (comb. form) 27. Re. volves 28. Youth 32. Sleep sound 87. Egyptian 83. Aquatie god SO rain 6. Great Lake ¥. Brilliant stratagems 8, Weights 9, Serf 10. Receptions 17. Abusive rope 13, Winged 14. Finnish measure 15. King (Sp.) scholar 4 s A i . , . 4 : 1 rp h 'tress. voters to determine who the next ; A : predictions The profes lawyer - politician, is Canada's three Conservatives in the 36-| A native of St. John's, Mr. proquction program since Indialaround 73,000,000 tons. orate Si ede TIRE of American president may be. {ya ave Neos relatively So t0| say they've sharpened their youngest opposition leader and, Seat house. Greene was born into a family gained her independence. The Send : p ecause 0). S1Sepfower s wood likes to mention often. His gg sti at ann on on | Al . i 5. J f J suc ] rte gap, estimated at about 150,000,-/000,000 tons of imported grains.| .ageous for a public body like the|publicans in the November U.S.| Wty. Yinec of 1948 than 1952 or POLLS MISLEADING Why? Because he faces one of say he is the only opposition 19 Ferrla 92 7 rs tk " . t N ©] + Nix . i ar. 2 . Ferrland for 24 years and pre- official and political circles re- ton "food bank" is envisaged as!picht in addition to their regular tor John Kennedy convince his Neither Nixon nor Kennedy nor ator Albert in by Joseph R. Smallv 1, shrewd the i i is he by Joseph R. Smallwood, shre the premier, in one of his {Joseph, a Conservative now, was pace of industrialization upon|, o.oo heen launched in 15/the woman interview ed on| Will a presidential darkhorse sonal attractiveness, the prestige misleading," tending to create a However, the walkout by the Mr. Greene had defended the " ' : t 0 oy iti | i So } laying so much emphasis in re-| oo one and spur far. vides a maximum penalty of 14|enson a chance for a comeback? emerged on the political scene! this. Tuesday, June 21, showed Mr, ing the 1959 loggers' strike. servative. At Oxford, he was a ' b v u' Iv N 'e Wa step; | Officials of the Federal Plan- (he TV interview was just an act |their latest pulse-taking on these his own nd fertile brain for re. versity, South Bend, Ind., where only one sure way of stepping up a Pp g 4 2. Remove from Mr. Smallwood after a facts. Produce the proof 1 _ever 1949, he was leader of the Wrang the utmost speed." able to turn the corner in food criminal code for wilfully publish-| signed penetration in depth by 4. En- member Albert Furey. [shrugged off the question. ments Sadashiv Kauoji Patil, India's ence was much attention be- public ing tailor-made surveys for pol- : ice and The incident. was in marked ulary and easy eloquence. No Debating Society. He continued ' ; aid. that azines and other periodicals contrast to the atmosphere that bench-thumping orator like Mr. his legal studies at the Inner {have been an act, he said, tha does not excuse the CBC for RIGHT OR WRONG entered the legislature th above the level of a mild sne ind was admitted to the bar in . nai He captured St. John's for His round face, piercing eyes and' England in 195: M G i | if 2 y a e7e evidence tecoive a la 5 ns vide nce to deceive a law oot. each survey and published pre- Rerarding the request of On-/gioiion lurks the shadow of the tario's Attorney - General Kelsol, oy tayors 1948 catastrophe. Will of Liberals, fact Mr. Small- driv idei 3 ape } > 3. 4 3 "i i i 2 ser » voter' s say, ¢ berals, a fa drive is aimed at bridging the modern warehouses to store 3,-| ..ii'in an interview "it was out- tain the White House for the Re up for. 1960 seems to be one more closer 'to the voter's moods 0 succeed pes Veteran legislature reporters ir y rz 0 ; ¥ 119 (Greene, was Liberal member forane demand some 2,000,000 tons. The 5,000,000: they allegedly may make $100 a Can youthful Democratic Sena-| pes Den chines in provincial politics led|wood. It happened May 31 when| I sore of Tenne at-| 2: APE i ETI ini 1 > " s, tural economy can sustain the/ An intensive agricultural pro-| He advocated prosecution of country with his popularity? hopefuls appears to have the per-| lic opinion polls may be "grossly land workers of America (CLC), said| go 39 L A 2 other national leaders have been yy "Cin cove as model dem. [or Which the Criminal Code pro-| Has twice-defeated Adlai Stev- "isenhower -- a man who|vored in the poll. Gallup denies tive group from the legislature Greene was an IWA lawyer dur- Ways considered himself a Con- i - - : ; -- : ors to : . : . ! ¢ Nehru said recently: "There is| | Senator Roebuck said that if eagerly publish the. results of of said: "Ypu've got such a fertHe ative club. At Notre Dame Uni y es CROSSWORD PUZZLE vere unable to get an apol- membering quotes; let's have the he is to industrialize ourselves with confident that the country will be jiable to prosecution under the Joining the scientifically - de- Er: 3 3. Absent 5 ™ he! J 1 vk arliz M + t the premier and. Conservative! The premier stuttered, then Id US. - styled mock parlia- gyoRAGE PROBLEM that at no time since independ- cause injury or mischief to th& the efforts of private grogps do §. Driving valuable asset is a ready vocab- he was president of the Halsbury straw ; newspape ag- ' Although the interview may StraV polls by newspapers, mag ford educated Rhodes that even in anger hardly rises of the British jrdicial system Dope Peddlers [ action--the fabricating ofc mood and opinion, behind majority in his first election, suc Roberts to the CBC for the eeding eteran party leader Malcolm Hollet Mr. Smallwood and Mr each other n the House. In vasn"t unusual for to ask gently, "Is that okay with you Malcolm?" Feeling between the premier Mr. Greene erupted the first 2 India is building a network of the Senate's divorce committee, Will Vice-President Nixon rel sopularily, the contest shaping| 31d gaimed experience td hew some say, the one most unlikely PREMIER FLUSTERED great - uncle, Daniel Josephg) bushels, between production!Existing warehouses can store CBC to tell young women how election? I CaN bles : 3 ge critic, > atic Se: the most powerful political magleader ever to fluster Mr, Small- B ie Cr} emocrs 3 {mier briefly in 1894. His father. ji;0 that only a sound agricul-|a reserve against emergencies. |working, salary." colleagues he car sweep the|any of the other presidential doesn't agrec. He feels i a rese ag king salary | or a or f Newf " o srnati J | Liberal premier of ewfound- tacks on the International Wood Liberal member for Bell Island .33 : . h ' . % i " " a . n idat ; . which Prime Minister Nehru and|gictvicts -- one in each state, charges of fabricating evidence emerge from the South? or the vote-getting "pull" of an|bandwagon for the candidate fa three-man Progressive Conscrva-IWA in the legislature. Mr.| But Mr. Greene says he al : ; cent months. -- eater e years imprisonment, Almost daily, the poll-takers ee ------ Greene has some political tricks) Mr. Greene interrupted and member of the campus Conserv. greater efforts +s 1oft the chamber sn! Mind an nsi stre ning Commission are guardedly| as he believes, the CBC might beland other litical questions, The PCs left the chamber when graduated 'with an MA in our defensive strength and that Ss po. !| fhe p . Rnd : (print.) name-ca exchange between defended them in this House." lers, a student debating club that by the end of .1966. They note ing false news or statements that the national organizations are Probabl Ji G i t'! Whil tud 1 t Oxford Fouteret | robably Jim Greenes mos 'hile studying law at Oxlord, dynamic food minister who re-'ing given to the food problem. 2 Youn litical customers and the potshot LIVELY OPPOSITIO™! ug ta --r-- -- g 8 - yO EXCUSE prevailed before Mr. G.ecne, Ox- Smallwood, he has a soft voice Temple, one of the famous inns . hreadeasting a report of a erim-| panind e2+h test of the coun the PCs last fall with 147-vote Hollett from often smiled at he com eats mittee it the remier By NEW and YORK (AP)--The day of the present session. The telephone system has started do- for" the first $8,000 House was ime 000 ( meeting in the new 11-storey nfederation Building ng away with the alphabet Peculiar as it may seem reason is that the telephone ple running out hir phone numbers 24,000,000 phones d in U.S one needed a-nu I asn't gol 0 say any- with word prefix that p t first," Mr. Greene could understand, such as But I st couldn't sit or Evergreen ] see him have his day." The problem of overn prefixes was getting ence he time mort : Ihe JOEY'S DAY of = « ¢ Day th 11 the fulfilmen ince vas 'Joey dream, tld one day lative f a the 1950. Eact home re. finding An hou toughe ment policies to the ed ong attack on and h building as red the home shatte tra a of study and tests that nly one thing they change the system eventually, phone nun an speeches, he said be partly letters and p in the next numbers, such as FI (elds 7-2643, but all digits: pening da d I prem i 1 peace So ments. If Mr. Greene won't In Telephone Numbheis FRANCIS STILLEY Plaza experts concluded after a be could any 347-2643 ay the two (Actually, as far as the phone first to get the new system. Iphabet Leticrs system is concerned, you're really dialing numbers now when you dial letters). REMEMBERING THEM Will all-digit phone numbers be harder to remember? U.S the peo of all "All-nume n for a als can be short time just etter-numeral combi- said a Bell system)( esman a remem have re as since easily as mber natior eople spok "That's how mos used: you look it up and remembe i sr alllenough to dial. It lohger numbers in the just takes a to remember the all-r ones permanently, but only a re book such people ther remember vay.' The gives the uch combinations new syste bers phone compan artly r of dial tone area. Falls greater mber iven Wichita th Tex., was life first offences, is the federal gov ernment's idea of a punishment to fit the crime of narcotics traf- ficking, said Thursday. given for such a severe sentence in the justice department's prep wation of a new approach to Ca- to Fulton told the ¢ have been or will be sounded out on nounced last vould After two years it is reported to be elsewhere process. and nature r |Crime. The ered man) ment's work ARCH MacKENZIE Press Staff Wri (CP)--A perhaps even By Canadian OTTAWA sentence, maximum for Present Canada's clearly Justice Minister Fulton Cabinet approval has been ways in jail The new ealmen addiction, Mr ommons. dian narcotics tions British 'ecessary by Quebec, ion, The governments of ylumbia, Ontario and the main centres ol addic Provincial come inal addict the new approach first an- month would be proposal to the act so that there be a life sentence imposed r the first offence (of traf- Fulton said. severeity of the sentence depend on circumstances tion addicted where he ha through Douglas Centre) "It The case with 25 in 1 addict working fine. The stable will be a change long-time The following are extracts from the Statement of the Chairman, Mr. Roy Thomson, circulated with the Report and Accounts for the year ended 31st December, 1959, submitted to the Annual Meeting of Thomson Newspapers Limited on 2nd June, 1960. > General Kemsley Newspapers Ltd. and Scottish Television Ltd. is unqualified success, and that most encouraging Considerable managerial reorganisation has been carried out since I have become Chairman and no fewer than 23 executive promotions, including those of six general managers, have been made, nearly all from within the Company. The calibre and vigour which I have found in all ranks of the organisation have been most impressive and I feel that we are creating an exceptionally strong team capable of meeting any strains in the future and calls for expansion. 4 For some months the Board has been com- posed of the five full-time executive directors and myself, but I believe the ideal Board for this Company is one of full-time executive direc- tors fortified by the counsel and advice of successful executives in a wider range of business activities Mr. lain Stewart, Chairman of Hall-Thermo- tank Ltd., and a Director of Scottish Television, accepted our invitation to become a Director on 17th March and we warmly welcome him. I propose to enlarge the Board further by the addition of several other men of experience and stature The Company has been organised in three divisions--newspapers, television and general printing, and their activities are well co- ordinated. Although the results of The Scots- man and #s associated newspapers are not included m the consohidated accounts; these publications eperate under the acgis of the controlling company, The Sunday Times Despite the amazing developments which have h d during the past | AM happy to tell you that the merger of ready proving an prospects are few years, the Prees is still, and must remain, the most effective and most powerful medium for keeping the people of any country fully informed about what is happening in the world. Nowhere is this better demonstrated than in the newspaper which my predecessor built up into one of the most famous world organs of news and comment : The Sunday Times I am very proud of all the newspapers acquired by Thomson Newspapers, but the one whose ownership brings me the greatest pride and the greatest challenge is The Sunday Times A great newspaper has a personality of its own, which a wise proprictor respects. 1 re- solved- from the start that new ownership should not change the editorial character of The Sunday Times, and, in particular, should not alter the high standards of critical judg- ment, accuracy and independence which this newspaper outstandingly represents. My views on the independence of editors are well known, and there have been no changes whatever in the higher editorial levels of The Sunday Times 1 have every confidence that the Editor and his colleagues will go on producing a newspaper of the highest journalistic, standards, such as they have already established. The reputation of The Sunday Times for freedom of expression has indeed, I belicve, been enhanced during recent months. Growth in Circulation The circulation in the first quarter of 1960 averaged 933,519 copies per issue, an increase of 58,871 over the same period of 1959. All the evidence is that old readers stayed, and new readers were wonsand kept because they found that The Sunday Times was the best Sunday newspaper in the country. As its readership expands, so its interests naturally broaden : a newspaper with a circula- tion approaching a million must concern itself with topics and tastes which were only marginal when its circulation was half as great. The Sunday Times has been able to do this, without prejudice to the range or standard of its established interests, because along with its' circulation its size has more dramatically. increased and even THE THOMSON ORGANISATION sUNDAYS The Sunday Times - Empire News - Sunday Graphic - The Sunday Sun, Newcastle mornings The Scotsman - Western Mail, Wales Sheffield Telegraph - The Press & Journal, Aberdeen minister's NOT ADEQUATE methods of criminal has failed to cope with situation where one-third are al- 3,400 approach the sick person in s certifiec qualified person co-operation into play with the non-erim over eral government has no jurisdic- hoped the person who has become ments through a access to drugs or|term treatment Jung (PC s. aid, teen-ag while the or-all He popuiation 1s Mr. Fulton added that an: addict tends to show a pattern of escape ob] delinquency first, usually juven-|bankruptcy woman' id he svmpathizes CBC officials © who man a peared nceal unders "'dovble-crossine' "But if the CB( the traffickin sta cov of his d ance TV that ifentity their par on her ands He handling addicts itself full responsihility Fulton said statements she made." would addict delinquency CTAL MATTER (CCF as alle PROVIN H Id N nch ve Fast) said would j11ne nal the fed-|iy which Mr. Fulton provincial iment the profession Mr program afoot as a patient. | judges they can ard training 17 those facts mspect facilities Vancouver vea dition in giving sentence said a rey ely|ruptey name, Senator R~ebuck with gave before she an they we said he objection the woman. feel it is honor a bound to protect her, it takes on hefore addiction Vancou- E addiction is and urged that nonr-crimi- addicts be required to govern- will make" such provision. campaign. Fulton said there is a long-| to ion of the Bar Act is planned so tha be less easy for debtors to| and Elmer igations by going into pump out their surveys the pollsters be ale to avoid the embarrassment of another tot-| ally wrong predictien? The 1948 election results tolled v4 doom for the professionals. All of them had been totally wrong.| They had predicted an eas White House victory for' Repub-| lican Thomas Dewey only to find the people had re-elected Demo-| crat Harry Truman as president. | What went wrong? | -- There was a rush of excuses. There hadn't been encugh poll- taking in the final days before voting day. No one ! d on a nescsible last-min '} in the voters' minds. The licans, resting on prediction e| pollsters, ad become compla- it's|cent. They had slackened their fight in the last few days of the th the | to the an Some recalled the fate of the have|Literary Digest which had con- visit penitentiaries where ducted straw poll for 20 years rehabilitation until it called the wrong shot in thus rs into considera- Tp tak-11936 and then collapsed PPOS PPEDIOT such as Gallup continued to Gener- ally, they and their colleagues! profe nals known George Roper 16. Passes, as time satire mammal 18, Observe 24. Ball 19. Large points, 19. Foundation 20, Prescrip- eg 22. Musie tion 85. Ardor note term 36. Pleasant 23. Moist 26. Alter, as a text 29, Merry 80. Hawaiian bird 81, Jewish mornith 32. Endured 10, English . author 41. Malay island 43. Mother-of« pearl 44. Run away to'Gretna en iets and 16. A wish DOWN 1. Partly open 88. Policemen (slang) 89. Maple, for one 42, Asian river IN GREAT BRIT The Journal of Commerce, Liverpool - The Sporting Chronicle, Manchester AlN The Journal, Neweastle evenings Evening Chronicle. Manchester 'Evening Chronicle, Newcastle - The Star, Sheffield South Wales Echo, Cardiff - Evening Gazette, Middlesbrough - Evening Telegraph, Blackburn - Evening Express, Aberdeen Ewening Dispatch, Edinburgh wrewxLiEs The Weekly Scotsman - Lancashire & Cheshire County Newspapers - Merthyr Express and Pontypridd Observer Series - Highland News Series peErODICALS T.V. Guide : Pins & Needles vmiLmvision Scottish Television Limited eEnveErRAL PRINTING Charles Birchall and Sons Limited W. P. Sedgwick Limited - North Western Printers Limited + Withy Growe Press Eimited - Tudor Printing Works - Highland Printers kimited - Paul Fischer's Studios Linvited y birthof anew era Advertisers have been quick to recognise the significance of its growth and on many occasions during the past year we have been forced thro_gh lack of space, to omit advertis ing. There .is no other newspaper quite like The Sunday Times in the opportunities it provides for all kinds of advertisers. At present our plans for development are controlled by various physical ceilings on pro duction but early in the New Year the printing of the London editions will be on new presses in Thomson House, capable of producing newspapers of up to 48 pages in two separately folded sections. We shall be well placed to make The Sunday Times a complete newspaper cum-magazine, giving the reader (and especially the young reader) everything that he or she Wants in the fields of news, sport, public affairs 'the arts and literature, fashion and the home, finance and business, scientific and practical interests, and general reading matter. All this will be done in an easily handled form. The Magazine" Section' The Magazine Section has fully confirmed the success it secured from its start. The City pages, the sperts news and the pages of women's interests have been expanded as a matter of deliberate policy. The most striking innovation in make-up has been the gathering of the general news pages together at the front of the paper, a move which emphasised how much news and news-background The Sunday Times prints. Such changes have been achieved without any injury to the essential core of top- level criticism, reporting and comment for which readers confidently look to The Sunday Times. 1 have no doubt whatever that its future from every point of view will be even greater than its past. I should like now to turn your attentior towards some of our other publications. Regional Newspapers We have a substantial stake in the popplar and highly competitive Sunday newspaper fiel which aggregates over three million copies each week. The solid strength, however, of the Artist's impression of the new Thomson House which will dominate London's Gray's Inn Road. Group lies in our regional publications in the great cities and industrial areas of England, Scotland and Wales. These constitute the type of enterprise with which | have been familiar for much of my life and 1 have enjoyed every second of the all-too-short personal visits I have madé to most of them with our Managing Director. 1 shall never forget the way we have been received: by the chief citizens of those powerful communities and by the staffs of our offices. 1 am deeply conscious of my responsi- bilities to these fine people. Our papers are in the hands of excellent executives; 1 do not in any way attempt to lay down their editorial policy from London. Such papers deserve the best we can give them in management and editorial services and from the outset we have been carrying out an intensive review of the standard of their prem- ises and plant. My philosophy has been that expenditure to improve production, so that there is always spare printing capacity in hand and to give better working conditions, is always justified. We have, therefore, been planning accordingly. New Developments and Trends In Manchester the installation of new plant for production of larger papers was completed earlier this year. In Sheffield the new wing costing ever £500,000 is mow occupied and further extensions have been approved. This autumn we will be moving into our new Cardiff office, which will be the most modern of its type in Europe. We intend to consolidate further the Western Mail as the national daily of Wales by extending the scope of its coverage of all aspects of the life of the Principality We expect to finalise plans shortly for the complete rebuilding and re-equipment of ous Newcastle office and the size of our Middles- brough premises will ultimately be doubled The Aberdeen and Blackburn' offices will also be altered and enlarged. It is particularly good to record that the circulations of our twelve regional morning and evening newspapers, and of our groups of weeklies, are extremely | althy. Two of them are, in fact, reaching new sales peaks this year and others are showing higher sales levels than for some years past. The advance -of television has helped to emphasise the regional nature of markets and the value of regional advertising. Television areas will. to an ever-increasing degree, deter- mine advertising campaigns and, since com- mercial television and regional newspapers are _complementary to one another, we have every- hing to gain. There are immense possibilities for our gen- cral printing business throughout Britain and we are engaged in co-ordinating its activities The Business of Newspaper Ownership I have often said that newspapers --and now television --are not to me means to personal power, or instruments of propaganda, but a business. It is as a businessman that J approach the whole problem of their administration. By their very nature newspapers must mirror the image of the people whom they serve; and if this mirror is distorted, and not faithfully reflecting, in the long run it will prove to be bad business. In closing may I say this. We in the Thomson Group are at the birth of a new era. an era, | am sure, which holds special promise for ambitious men and women to march with our expanding and forward-looking organisation.