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

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2 . THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, September 10, 1962 |New S. African Step Predicted By P By RICHARD KASISCHKE JOHANNESBURG (AP) English - language newspapers here predict a new step--house arrest n will be d in the South African govern- Teicet campaign to silence Po! more than half of them white-- Provisions of South Atrica's| eee ined yp aos police per antsabotage law empowtr|raids and arrests against sus Vorster to. confine people to| pened People, and. | OLgamias scoped gga ood an pean po Formally outlawed the multi- late who can visit them. Suci people would be allowed to con-) tinue their jobs if these were| not considered harmful to the) state, } The case against them is ex-! pected to be based on the! charge that their political ten-| dencies undermine the security) of white civilization and aid in the spread of Communist doc-! trines. lates of the Anglican and Premier Hendrik Verwoerd,|Roman Catholic churches met Vorster, and other government/at the University of Waterloo officials, st ated in recent|Sunday to mark the dedication speeches that action must bejof their churches' colleges on taken against "liberalism which|the campus. Critics of the anti - sabotage _lact claim that it violates tra- | ditional civil liberties. Under the Anti-Sabotage Act, promulgated last July, Vorster has so far: Placed 102 South Africans--a Anglican, RC Prelates Meet At Waterloo WATERLOO, Ont. (CP)--Pre- apers -racial South African Congress of Democrats under the Suppres- sion of Communism Act. The congress went under the ban which previously hit South Af- | rica's Communist party and two African organizations--the Afri- can National Congress once headed by Nobel Peace Prize- winner Albert Luthuli and its offshoot, the Pan-African Con- gress, |MAY SILENCE ALL The Johannesburg Sunday Times says: "It is conceivable that in order to silence Com- munists and agitators still more effectively it may be necessary for minister Vorster to silence the entire nation." The Sunday Times and Sun- day Express complain their re- porters were turned away and only Afrikaner reporters were admitted at a big reception Sat- urday night in nearby Pretoria honoring Verwoerd on his 61st birthday. Admirers presented Verwoerd) with an -eight-sided birthday cake which pictured him atop lis the smaller brother of com-| Chicago Man As Pio CHICAGO (AP) -- A Chicago man says he is assembling a group of people who will try to get away from it all. The moving spirit, Robert H, Van Schoick, 31, says his party will embark next spring on a pioneer settling venture in northern Canada, At this stage, he won't pin- point the proposed settlement site beyond saying that it isn't north of the tree line, and it's somewhere in either the Kee- watin or Mackenzie district, but not close.to Hudson Bay. Vén 'Schoick advertised re- cently in two Chicago Newspa- pers, asking for persons to help him settle a small portion of the Northwest Territories. He now finds himself sifting through more than 300 applica- tions. "The response has been, fab- ulous. Everyone wants' to' go," he said. Van Schoick first planned to take a group of about 20 with him. Now he says there will be Most Rev. Howard H. Clark,/g pyramid whose. supports in- ag holding the number to Primate of the Anglican Church) cluded the shoulders of common} in Canada, officially dedicated) people and Bibles. Renison College and Most Rev.. ------------- munism." | Van Schoick, a former florist, _ said he expects the group to SURVIVED ORDEAL ed dead after 42-foot fishpack- er sank in storm. Scratches on arm were suffered when hus- band pulled her through bro- Mrs. Eileen Case, eight months pregnant, spent first five hours of her 18th birthday clinging to makeshift raft in rough seas of Strait of Georgia near Vancouver. Her husband, Jimmy, 21, and three other men are missing and presum- | boat sank. Unborn baby - is apparently unharmed. (CP Wirephoto) icebox in a shed behind her grandfather's home in central Ottawa. It was 20 inches high Girl, 4, Trapped In Unused Icebox ana 20 inches: wide. She was discovered at mid- OTTAWA (CP)--Four-year-old) night, long after police had been Maria Assunta Erasmo wasicalled into search for her. trapped in se -- i seven hours Saturday night be- ' fore her: grandfather discovered) STEADY BOMBARDMENT her "'on her last breath." More than 1,000,000 Commun- She was released from hos-|ist Chinese artillery shells fired pital after a checkup. at the Chinese Nationalist island The little daughter of Mr. andjof Quemoy between 1949 and Mrs. Antonio Erasmo climbed) 1962 killed fewer than 200 civil- into the bottom section of thelians. THUNDERSHOWERS EXPEC WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy, Cooler During Tuesday Forecasts issued by the Tor-jcasional rain or drizzle' today onto weather office at 5 a.m.:/and Tuesday. Light winds. . Synopsis: A disturbance form-/ ing near Chicago is expected to Forecast Temperatures pot vote axes adhd during the| Low tonight, High Tuesday day, giving Ontario continued Windsor ......- 60 unsettled weather. Gradually St. Thomas........ 60 improving conditions are fore- 60 cast for most areas Tuesday as 60 cooler, drier air moves in be- hind the ~--; Lake St. Clair, Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake| St. Catharines. Ontario, Windsor, London, Ha-| Toronto ..... milton, Toronto: Mainly cloudy enrol 4 and humid today with a few Kilial oroug scattered showers. Chance of, thundershowers this evening. Cloudy and a little cooler Tues- day, clearing in thf afternoon. Winds southwest 15 today, northwest 15 Tuesday. Georgian Bay, Timagami, Al- Kitchener .. Mount Forest.... Wingham ..... Hamilton ..... Sault Ste. Marie... White River....... ken window of wheelhouse as | | J h F. Ryan, Bishop of RC Archbishop Hemilton, later dedicated stl +-|Jerome's and Notre Dame col- must have a deeper and more) Young Liberal Rap Election Platform | HAMILTON (CP)--The | Lib-| jeral platform in the June 1 federal election came under fire Saturday at the annual meeting of the Ontario. Young Liberal Association. Several of the 50 delegates a resolutions committee meet- ing variously attacked and de-| fended the platform in discuss- ing a resolution by Jerry Graf- stein of Toronto which sought establishment of a committee to organize and re-examine party policies. Among the platform's critics was Dr. Russell Taylor of Tor- onto, who said the 75-plank plat- form might well have been cut to two or three broad planks. 5 Raps Program '* ps og Accompanied by church and eye - + college dignitaries, the two prel-| Of Sterilizing ates. met between services in aj brief ceremony to exchange) WASHINGTON (AP). -- 'The eer ee ee erome, Bemen Catholic Arcemssen of Archbishop Clark said in his ee oe otic ed dedication address that, the joint ra hgh Fit 2 annie ceremony is an indication that clinic, which. includes a pro- the rn OF ee Oe. gram of family planning--some- ron ge ; . sai t pr nyo times through surgical steriliza- con Bh Sroat" fe a@ded ae by tion. 5 > adh Such a program is "absolutely ae tht sta university. Pe cg Pe $t|| In the second dedication cere- oyle told church-goers in St. eahey tales Brin ak Me -- cyoncage t Fau- dents attending St. Jerome and The clinic haha wee au"/Notre Dame colleges must not quler Hospital 245 years. 280 10 ony geek a university degree of needy mothers. prepare for a profession but Since the family planning 'n-\¢.) reachiny ae ; A 2 | gg purpose--preparing struction program began, Some) themselves for a place in life. 60 of the 200 women treated) The two colleges are the first have chosen to be sterilized after' Ffoiik canon CloTiactemedl ot |the child is born. Sterilization iS tial colleges to be constructed | generally limited to married) |, the compus of the five-year- i mashers Ron Pes spent university. A United Church |The mothers are instructed also} : x : iB 'es college--St. Paul's United Col- in contraceptive methods of egeis under construction and -- ~-- i a Mennonite college -- Conrad Archbishop O'Boyle said the \Crehal College--will be. started program's "obvious and crudely); the fall of 1963 selfish and materialistic pur- i ALOR OR NCCI | | pose is to reduce the tax rate in| | Fauquier County." | Dr, James L. Dellinger, pres-| ident of the staff on the hospi-/ al has said: 'This is strietly| On Stabbed Somali' a voluntary program... ee not sh Deritizatio | SCUNTHORPE, ENGLAND,}| |(Reuters) -- Police questioned -|scotes of men here Sunday |about the knife murder of a = |Somali Negro worker in a Sat- urday night street fight between) 50 or 60 Irishmen, Scots and! colored workers. The Somali, Osman Moham- med Yusef, 23, died of stab |wounds. Three other men were} taken to hospital unconscious. Two Scotland Yard officers} we're n mill the inquiry. FINISH PIPELINE KARLSRUHE, West Germany §|(Reuters)--The 470-mile, $125,-) 000,000. Marseille-Karlsruhe oil] with official dedication of the} section beneath the Rhine. Sa- hara oil will flow in the pipe-| line. TED --| SEATTLE (CP)--The World's; | Fair took on the appearance of Moosonee .... 48 55 |\@ Canadian outpost during ine lWimning 5c cc a8 55 |weekend as a mammoth contin-| | : gent from north of the border} | Observed Temperatures |prepared to start Canada Week| | Low overnight, activities. | | Low overnight, High Suntey |" Feic olficinls said the RCMP| musical ride, the military tat-| | too, RCAF band and aerial} acrobatics and performances of} a Montreal play wil make it) jone of the most colorful na tional observances at the six-! month exposition. A total of 650 military and RCM Ppersonnel will partici- pate in the week Happy as a pair of tourists, Kapuskasing 45 55 | | Victoria ...++. Edmonton .... Regina Winnipeg ... Lakehead ..... White River. S. S. Marie.... Kapuskasing ..... North Bay........ Sudbury ........ Se Muskoka ...,. Scores Questioned a erature contained policies which }eancelled out other policies but it was simple and easy to read. Ww lis difficult to discuss things with |him: philosophically." jan amendment to the Grafstein jresolution urging the party to came from London to help in'cific and clear--cut way then defeated the amended resolu- tion. Michael Walsh of Toronto said popeline was completed Sunday |cided that James E. Coyne, for: }Canadian Outpo At Seattle Fair As it was, he said, some voters got a muddled picture of the party's program. | But Russell Sullivan of Tor- onto maintained the program couldn't have been clearer. Booklets explaining party phii- osophies were abundant and of good quality. TOO SIMPLIFIED? Leo Gray of Windsor said Democrat literature was} attractive to voters because it was drastically over-simplified. "The problems facing the na- tions today are complex and cannot be. explained easily," Mr. Gray said. 'The NDP lit- hen a man is unemployed it The delegates first approved present its policy in a more spe- the motion would have hrown | spend 244 years somewhere in the vast area between Hudson Bay and the Yukon. EXPECTS MORE "This will be one of the best prepared and thought-out expe- ditions ever," -he said. 'We| hope to be the pioneers of this! ~ area and the nucleus of follow-| ing waves of settlers that open| alongside Coast Guard boat | at left, brought 44 Cuban re- | CUBAN REFUGEES IN These sailing craft, tied up | fugees to Miami after a five- | dren who were among Ii1 re- day voyage from Eastern Cuba. Shown aboard are some of the men, women and chil- fugees. arriving on six boats during this weekend. (AP. Wirephoto) this territory. "In many ways I have col- lected a group of idealists and realists who want to retain basic philosophies and senses of value. I am amazed at the higher calibre of people, who have applied. Among the applicants, Van Schoick said, were: A gun- smith, a professional hunter, a chemist, a geologist, an ama- teur composer, a doctor and some farmers. There were sin- gle persons of both sexes and married couples with children. Nan. Schoick said settling in the wilderness has been his dream since childhood. "'Its one chance in a thousand and I'm going to give it a tumble." The Canadian government has consented to the expedition and offered assistance, he said. Role Of Women Probe Finds Only Questions By PATRICIA RUSAK Subjects discussed in the TORONTO (CP)--A_ four-day|CBC-sponsored conference's 16 conference exploring the role of} workshops and three group ses- women in present-day society|sions ranged from discrimina- raised more questions than it| tion against women in education answered, Dr. Henry David of|}and employment to the nature New York said Sunday. }of femininity and sexual satis- Summarizing The Real World| faction in marriage. of Woman at its closing session, | i the president of New York's| IDEAS EMERGE "Neither men nor New School for Social Research children, said the examination of the| Could be excluded from any dis- world of Canadian women jn-\ cussion," Dr. David said. He volved an examination of eviry| added that six major ideas aspect of Canadian life. emerged from the discussions: ea aNeEts 7238) rs 1. Freedom of choice for Ca- | nadian women has been greatly | magnified and has resulted in new living patterns and conse- quently new needs and new ex- of their present. behavior and about the future. No one at the conference ac- tually knew how many working mothers need day-care facilities for their children, or the degree of guilt or frustration existing among Canadian women, Dr. David sajd. Practical ways of adjusting values with realities suggested by the delegates included ad- justment of educational and em- ployment schedules to accom- modate women, increased child- care facilities, flexibility in edu- cation and legislation assuring the legal status of women work- ers. Forest Fire Plan To Halt Anthrax FORT SMITH, N.W.T. (CP)jshoulders and lungs, and some-) A 700-square-mile muskeg, bush/times affects the stomach. It) and forest fire was to. bejcan be transmitted to humans touched off about 80 miles) through contact. north of here today as part.of/ Two federal employees figh- a sweeping government counter-| ing the outbreak contracted the attack against an epidemic of| disease, one in the form of a anthrax among Buffalo. | skin infection which produced By Saturday, 274 of the ani-|black - headed boils and the mals had: perished and werejother an internal type which burned and buried as the plague} caused bronchial pneumonia. brought a halt to Buffalo sport) Antibiotics cured both. hunting, the threat of a vast]... cm ' quaranine and a danger of re-| SEAL OFF AREA newed outbreaks which health} Government spokesman said Officials say may exist for many|Saturday some form of quaran- years. tine was expected to be im- The swift-killing infectious di-| Posed on a 4,000 - square - mile sease affects animals primarily,|@%@a stretching from 'the Al- produces growths on the limbs, berta - N.W.T. border to the a note of dissent into the party. The Young Liberals also de- mer governor of the Bank of rate having his face on Canadian postage stamps. } in| | | st The tattoo is the largest, staged outside the British Com-| monweaith. In a tryout troopers} threaded through ranks of troopers with the finesse of a chorus line. The tattoo will be performed before a facade representing Old Fort Henry, near Kingston, Ont. LA. depicts three phases of French, British and Canadian. The trops wear colorful uni- forms of the eras depicted. The only. Canadian perfor- mance for which fairgoers have to pay will be the presentation of Gratien Gelinas' Bousille and the Just. OUT-OF-WORK, ts»: BUT IN FUNDS Purpsse of the huge blaze is to reduce chances of further in-| NEW YORK (AP) -- The shabbily dressed defen- dant's court-appointed law- yer pleaded for low bail Sunday on the ground his client was an_ out-of-work seasonal garment worker. The client, Michael Tor- toso, 48, of Brooklyn, was charged with petty larceny and possession of burglar tools after he allegedly looted a telephone coin box. The judge assented to the plea and set cash bond of $250. Tortoso then dug into his pants pocket, hauled out a bankroll se vera! inches thick and peeled off 25 $10 bills. Asked about. it, Tortoso said the roll contained $527. The judge held the case over till Wednesday. "That's good," offered Tortoso. "Tuesday I've got to go to the unemp!oyment office to get my cheque." | Much ofthe area is soggy} muskeg and damp - soil bush culty was expected in keeping 'the fire alive. Two water- bomber aircraft used to keep) ies will alternate this work with) petroleum bomb - dropping to keep the fire going. | form of a. spore for many years. and grass country where diffi- the fire within the Set boundar-| | tir | is rr ------| Liberal Promises Research Program HAMILTON (CP) --Liberal| 'Leader John Wintermeyer told | Liberal Association neht that the Liberals -- if} up an institute for educational| | research, "We know little about how; | practical use," he said. | -- fection from the anthrax bacil-- === lus, which can survive in the === delegates to the Ontario Young == Saturday == Fo elected in Ontario -- will set == --- the mind works, and what we|/===== do know is not being put to==-- pectations, 2, Canadian women realize} the importance of . developing their potential and regard sthe scale of waste as "too large to be tolerated." 3. Women feel opportunities and favilities for self-develop- ment must be broadened. 4. They feel discrimination gems should not be based upon sex,| either in industry, government of education. 'Inequality of op-| portunity exists especially in the) field of education, which makes) it possible for discrimination on the basis' of sex." | 5, A whole range of adjust-| ments and accommodations are needed to bring present realities of life into harmony with social institutions, attitudes and val- ues, 6. Women are still uncertain about the actual facts of Cana- dian society, the acceptability He predicted the impact of the four - day conference, al- tended by close to 500 delegates from throughout Canada repre- senting 18 national women's or- © ganizations, will' besfelt.in. i¥e- years' time in home life," schools, churches and every as- dian jife. PREMIUMS AS LOW AS PER YEAR © Budget Terms Available @ Easy Monthly Payments Schofield-Aker Limited 360 KING WEST PHONE 1723-2265 . @ Don Ellison @ Gerry Osborne @ Ralph Schofield ; @ Reg Aker Now would be a good time to have your rugs and = carpets cleaned. Fast Friendly -- Efficient Service. | eococccecssnssnnt HHH CARPET COMPANY 282 King St. West, Oshewe Tel, 728-9381 e@ AMPLE FREE PARKING @ |Oanadian Ambassador Charles) S, A, Ritchie and Mrs. Ritchie larrived from Washington, D.C., to participate. 'This is a very exciting as- signment,"' Mr. Ritchie said in! jan interview. He said the tattoo lis going to be terrific. | Windsor London . | Killaloe ... Ottawa ... {Quebec ... : |Halifax .......+... goma, North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: Cloudy with occasional rain beginning dur- ing the morning. A few thunder- showers this afternoon or even- ing. Mainly cloudy and a little cooler Tuesday. Winds light, be- coming southerly 15 this after- noon and northwest 15 tonight. 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