2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, November 5, 1962 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN OSHAWA TO HAVE CAR MUSEUM Oshawa is to have an antique auto museum ('to tell the © story of the automobile industry in Canada") as a perman- ent attraction. A tentative opening date has been set for "'early Spring, 1963" for the museum which is to be located in a 20,000 square- foot building at 99 Simcoe street south formerly occupied by Anglo-Canadian Drug Co., and owned by Dr. J. E. Rundle. The museum will be operated under the auspices of the Oshawa C of C whose president, Gordon Riehl, made the an- nouncement today. The Chamber will rent the building under an option-to-buy lease which is to run for five years. 'Mr. Riehl said that he will make further statement about the museum later in the week. He said that Oshawa is the logical place to tell the story as no other community in Canada has played such a prominent role in the development of the automobile in the Dominion. "The story of the McLaughlin Carriage Company is unique in Canada and is to a large degree the story of the automobile in Canada," he said today. "Oshawa has played a major role in putting Canada on wheels. We are proud of the cfaftsmanship and technical ability of our people. We have had a number of able people work on this project already and we expect many more to be added, "'he added, "We have received encouragement from the Oshawa Historical Society, the Classic Car Club, the Custom Car Club and many others, thus far. We will need help in getting the building renovated," he said. Herb Robinson is chairman of the special Chamber com- mittee in charge of the project. Ed. Armstrong, recently re- tired as chief engineer of General Motors of Canada, is man- ager. TRUSTEE SHAW TO RUN FOR BOARD Another municipal election mystery was solved today. Mrs. Margaret Shaw -- the fiery, outspoken trustee from _ the Board of Education -- made known her plans for De- cember 3, Oshawa's municipal election day. Mrs, Shaw (who loves to call a spade a spade regard- less of where the chips may fall) said she will not run for City Council, as was so widely rumored, She will, instead, return to 'my first love" and seek her third two-year term as a Board Trustee. This announcement will undoubtedly cause as much joy around City Council as it will spread gloom in the ranks of the majority (but not all)) of her Board col- « leagues who would gladly see her drop out of politics alto- gether, and for a good rea- son. She has long been a bitter critic of the Board's heavy spending (especially on pro- jects like the new R. S. Mc- Laughlin Collegiate and Voca- tional Institute and the Hills- MRS. SHAW dale Public School, where the average cost per room is dangerously near, if not over, the $30,000 mark). Mrs. Shaw, a slender housewife who certainly must be regarded as one of the foremost champions of the underdog on the local scene, has long been a Board "'rebel" in the truest sense of the word. She fought tooth and nail for more than three months last Summer with several board members on behalf of a recently-graduated (with high honors) public school teacher who sought a local appointment, who was a member of the Jehovah's Witness sect. The Board delayed action for several months while it pondered about what it should do regarding some of the applicant's religious beliefs, especially that which had to do with his refusing to sing God Save The Queen. Mrs. Shaw, who is not a Jehovah's Witness, argued that it would be discriminatory to bar him from the staff because of his religious beliefs. She finally won out, but not until several heated sessions were held and the applicant. had just about given up hope of ever being accepted She was equally as indignant recently when two elderly long-service employes in the janitorial service were dismissed for reasons which, to her, seemed "unjust, inhuman." Such behavior as outlined naturally does not endear the 42-year-old Belfast-born housewife to the majority of her Board colleagues who strongly resent what a spokesman de- scribes as "unnecessary publicity" -- the group especially resents Mrs. Shaw's penetrating questions, strong denuncia- tion of Board policies and general 'non-conformist behavior." To forally express their displeasure. with her, the Board majority early this year took disciplinary action by reduc- inging her committee assignments from five to two so that she now holds only two obscure posts (vice-chairmanship of the Public School building and planning committee and a seat on the Public Relations committee and a seat on the Public Relations committee whose operations are practically nil. What has been the reaction of the voters to Mrs. Shaw's non-conformist role on the Board? Police were called Sunday to investigate reports of chil- dren playing with a large snake in Montreal's east-end. ROVING SNAKE They returned with the reptile shown with Csts. Jean-Paul Samson (left) and Roch Rog- er. Police believe the seven- foot long snake was part of a show and either escape". or was abandoned. They could not say what kind of snake it was. By GEORGE W. CORNELL handclasp, a smile, a tilt of eye- brow. , These are parts of an unspo- ken and unwritten vocabulary that no dictionary can fully de- fine and no linguist translate. wealth of meaning. This in a similar way, is the) kind of voiceless language that} the Roman Catholic Church is examining today in an effort to make the expressions more vi- The signs and sequences of carrying powerful meanings and connotations irreducible to mere words. port and the content. : Under one proposal, Catholic | |bring out mort vividiy ihe unity| Two Brothers, Vatican Probes Role Of Wordless Phrase {simply are not understood or,worshippers would receive com- VATICAN CITY (AP) -- A/make no point to most people."|}munion in both bread and wine, in celebrating of the |the church are regarded as| Supper. At present they receive only | bread, while the consecrat | priest "If everyone received both the bread and wine, i of priest and people,"' said Rev. Eugene H, Maly, of Cincinnati, also a council liturgical expert, || why Elizabeth Rygiel had been . |away from home. Lord's| ing) takes both bread and| Yet only those versed in the) wine, Christ is believed to be| Yet they carry, for all.men, a heritage can grasp the full im-|fully present in both elements. Dead Girl's Friend Found Saturday TORONTO (CP)--A 13-year- old girl friend of murdered Ju- lian Wolanski missing for three weeks, was found Saturday by Metro police. Police gave no explanation She left her hgme Oct. 14 but gave no indication where she was going. The girl was a friend of Julian Wolanski whose raped, beaten, and shot body was found in a suburban lover's lane ditch last Aug. 12. The killer has not yet been caught. U.S. Ends Tests, Calls For Treaty WASHINGTON: (AP) -- The United States announced * Sun- day the end of its current ser- ries of nuclear tests in the at- mosphere over the Pacific. A statement issued by the White House said a_ high-al- titude shot fired Sunday morn- ing over Johnson Island con- cluded the test series, Under- ground nuclear weapons tests will continue in, Nevada. The statement attributed to President. Kennedy but distri- buted by Press Secretary Pierre Salinger said in part: "I hope that in the next month we can conclude an effective test-ban treaty so that the world can be free from all testing, Agree- ment in this area would be an important first step toward our continuing goal of workable dis- armament arrangements which can cut down the threat of war. "Last March 2 I offered to stop further nuclear tests, if the Soviet Union would accept an effectively verified test - ban treaty. This offer still stands. We shall devote our best efforts to conclude such a treaty and hope all others will do the same," This morning's shot over the Pacific was a low-yield device fired 20 to 30 miles high by a Nike-Hercules rocket. ' Support Delay Criticism Is "Unjustified" VANCOUVER (CP) -- Exter- Affairs Minister Howard Green arrived here Saturday |after talks with world leaders jat the United Nations in New | | | By RELMAN MORIN WASHINGTON (AP) -- Imag- ine a strip of photographic film, 20 to 30 feet wide, some six miles long. Cut in sections, it is stretched across the floor. Photo analyists, on hands and knees, craw! around on the picture, pecring at them through stereo micro- scopes, special magnifying glasses. The technicians note any detail of change in terrain, More especially, they lvok for objects on the sites that weren't there yesterday, They charter the birth of a crisis, a Soviet nuclear threat taking shape on Cuban bases. Beginning Monday, Oct. 15, says a chief of intelligence, U.S. pilots flew six and seven photo reconnaissance missions over Cuba daily, he says. The planes miles of film. Today; you look at a sequence of pictures taken above the mis- sile site. The first shots show brought back "We blanketed the island,"| empty country. Then, appar- ently out of thin air, construc- tion becomes visible in succeed- ing days--anti-aircraft, a half- completed security fence, pre- fabricated. concrete arches, a "batch" plant for making ce- ment, launching pads, fire con- trol bunkers, an earth-molded structure, revetments. It was this evidence that caused President Kennedy to declare a 'quarantine' on ship- ments of offensive weapons to Cuba and to demand the dis- mantling of the missile sites. al- ready built. A top intelligence agent says that in late August Cuban refu- gees reported the arrival of So- viet "technicians" in Cuba and the erection of rocket launch- ers, The refugees were inter- rogated. Checks on 'the sites showed they were surface-to-air launchers, and "cruise sites," coasta]. missile artillery. In September a U-2 photo plane belonging to the Chinese Nationalists on Formosa was shot down from 70,000 feet over BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -- Al- bert Frederick Nussbaum Jr.,| 28, one of the FBI's 10 most| wanted men, was captured early Sunday by the FBI and the Buffalo police after a 20- minute high-speed auto chase in the city's downtown secton. More than 30 cars took part in the pursuit, The FBI said Nussbaum, "'al- leged to be the brains of a vi- cious gang of bank robbers who were equipped with a large ar- senal of high - powered fire- arms," surrendered without a struggle after his car was cor- nered by several FBI and po- lice cars. He shut off the car's lights, slid down onto the front seat and gave himself up. the chase, led by FBI agent-in- charge William Alexander. No shots were fired during! participating in four hank rob- beries in which a total of more than $160,000 was taken. In one, a bank guard was shot to death and a policeman wounded by Nussbaum's partner, Bobby Pictures Tell Story Of Missile Buildup Communist China. U-2 flights over Cuba were suspended '"'un- til we could learn what brought down the plane in China." Low-flying. planes, often com- ing in at altitudes of 300 to 800 feet, continued the surveillance. The officer won't disclose what brought down the U-2 in China. SHOWS LARGE CRATES A photo made Sept. 28 of a Soviet freighter showed some large. crates on deck. Evalua- tion indicates they "probably" were Ilyushin-28s, a Soviet light bomber, with a range of 750 miles. These crates were un- loaded in remote ports, not Ha- vana, and solely by the Rus- sians, not the Cubans, In the last days of Septem- ber. Cuban refugees reported heavy night-timetruck traffic on the highways. The freight was covered, In early October bad weather over Cuba caused a second sus- pension of the reconnaissance flights. On Oct. 14 a photo mission revealed missile sites under ~ |construction, They were for me- Grenade Carrying Suspect Captured dium rockets, range 1,000 miles, and for intermediates, range 2,000 miles. On the same day, pictures were taken of the cy- lindrical crates, seen Sept, 28 on the freighter, now at San Juliano airport. It was con- firmed that IL-28s were in the crates. On Oct. 15 these photographs were evaluated, They touched off the train of events that led to the "quarantine," Randell Wilcoxson, 33, the FBI said. NEWS IN BRIEF Wilcoxson, another of the FBI's 10-most-wanted men, still is missing, .along with Nuss- ing, along with Nussbaum's 19- year-qld companion, Jacqueline Rose. She allegedly drove the getaway car in at least one of the holdups, the FBI said, Agents declined to discuss how long Nussbaum, a Buffalo native, had been here before being captured. His wife, Ali- cia, still lives in Buffaio. Nussbaum and Wilcoxson, of Delray Beach, Fila., allegedly held up two banks in Buffalo, one in Washington and another GERMANS FLEE COPENHAGEN (AP) -- Two young East Germans waded ashore to the Danish island of . Moen, today after crossing the Baltic Sea in a small boat. They said they fled to avoid being drafted into the East German army. MOROCCANS TO VOTE RABAT, Morocco (AP)--King Hassan II signed a law Sunday authorizing a referendum for a Moroccan constitution. No date for the referendum was set. CARRIED RIFLE Nussbaum was carrying a .22- calibre rifle in the car, how- ever, and had two live hand grenades in the pocket of his fatigue jacket, the FBI said. in- Brooklyn, N.Y. However, ali voters must regis- ter by Nov. 13 to participate. | COMING EVENTS vid and significant to modern) man, The church has its own spe-| cial terminology -- the bowed head, the genuflection, the} shared "bread," the fingered water, the incense, statues, can- dies, bells, the hands that trace Sister Die In Tree-Fort Fire STURGIS, Sask. lap b f' the cross. young brothers and their sister cg cgay |died Saturday in a fire which There are many other word-| as . less phrases, throughout the | ewer through their small tree urgical lexicon of the church. | iad: were Danny William| EXPLAINS OBJECT \Carlson, 12, Patricia Ann, 9. "The objective is to makejand Jackie Miles, 8, children them more understandable andjof Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Carlson. more comprehensible,' said] Another brother, Wade Owen, Rev. Frederick McManus, of]7, is in critical condition in hos- Washington, a liturgical consul: pital. tant to the Vatican ecumenical) RCMP said the children were council. |playing in a wooden tree house : *P*"|York and said criticism aimed ae taal ht au tees peat are, ate § y s ¢ bish- i f an} ops, such as the extra time that ot on anjustiiies, ge fering fe and the tagatminis!| to a crisis like this, he said, sues raised by passing the com- He would revi sie mon tp. Fo ee engeera : Py | ee 4 sien 'cap. Musi-Protesiants eacl nen, -- with help given . Patan | anada. pepnense small Fiatees. |"oT feel It will be some time ' One bishop, on the council) before the world comes to an- oor, was quoted as suying: | other crisis such as the Cuban "T"ve heard all kinds of rea-|situation of the past few) sons why our people should not| weeks," Mr. Green said, receive in both kinds--inconve-| Mr. Green said Soviet Pre- nience, hygiene and _ otherjmier Khrushchev _ underesti- things. But let us go back to the|mated the determination of Bible. Our Lord said, 'This is| President Kennedy. He was sur- my body,' and he distributed|prised that Russia didn't take the bread, and he said, 'This is}counter-measures in Beriin at For two weeks, the world- wide assembly of more than 2,200 bishops, archbishops and cardinals have been weighing they had made about 100 yards \from the farm house. They ap- parently lit a metal lamp filled with gasoline and an explosion my blood' and he also distri- buted the wine." the. time of the Cuban block- \ ade. and flames destroyed the tree house. proposed revisions in the. vari- ous practices of worship. "We want to get rid of those) RCMP said the tree house, things that detract and that are|four feet square and three feet without real meaning," Father|high, was about 10 feet above Teenagers Feud |McManus said. 'Some things ground. | WEATHER FORECAST Snow Squalls, Colder Tuesday -- Forecasts issued by the Tor-|few snowflurries today and) onto weather office at 5 a.m.:/Tuesday. Overcast with contin- Synopsis: Cold air which cov-juous snow beginning late. Tues- ers Northern Ontario will pene-|day. Colder today becoming| trate southward today to cover|milder Tuesday, Winds light be-| all of the province by eg coming southwest 15 Tuesday. | s ered snowflurries an pine in the lee of lakes) Ferecen Temperatures will accompany the arctic air, |LOW ton ight, High Tuesday | There is no valid reason to believe it has hurt her -- on the contrary, it has boosted her stock according to the most recent election results which show that she doubled her vote-strength in two years, 1958-60. She made a respectable debut in municipal' politics in 1958, as an unknown, when she tallied 2,633 votes to place 12h -- the last seat -- on the Board. She bolstered this showing tremendously in the turbulent 1960 race when big Board heads were falling all around her, including a perennial winner of long standing -- that was when she rolled up an impressive 5,241 votes to place sixth (as compared with Trustee A. E. O'Neill, who placed first with 7,219 votes). Veteran observers of the local scene realize one point -- she is a force to be reckoned with in any honest appraisal of the local political scene at municipal level. Despite bitter denunciations which she draws from Board members, she has a strong following, primarily because she is that rarity in public life today -- an elected representative who is. un- afraid to speak out when she thinks there is needless waste, when she thinks an injustice is being done. Such things in- furiate her. Her pet peeve currently is that Oshawa's classrooms cost far too much to build, an average of from $26,000 minimum to $31,000 and over ("which prices are ridiculous") each. She says well-constructed classrooms are built for as little as $22,000 each within three or four miles of Oshawa. She does not think that education today is expensive when the over-all picture is considered ("when it comes to supplying the needs of our children") but she feels that far too much is spent on buildings, on so-called "frills and fancies." She would like to see Public School teachers get a better deal salary-wise. : "It-we have contented teachers, we will have contented children,"" she said. > Lake St, Clair, Lake Erie re-/ Windsor | lgions, Windsor: Cloudy with|St. Thomas. | showers ending early this morn- London .... ing. A few snowflurries this Kitchener .... \afternoon and evening, partly|Mount Forest. \cloudy Tuesday. Turning colder Wingham .. late today. Winds northeast 10/Hamilton .. lincreasing to 25 by this after-|St. Catharine 25 |noon and becoming light late to-/ Toronto | night, | Peterborough Lake Huron, Niagara, south-|Trenton western Georgian Bay regions, |Killaloe ..., London, Toronto, Hamilton:|Muskoka ..... Mainly cloudy with a few snow-|North Bay........ flurries and scattered snow-|Sudbury ......... squalls today and Tuesday,|Earlton ......... colder. Winds northeast 15 in-/Kapuskasing . creasing to 25 by this afternioon| White River. and becoming light late tonight.; Moosonee northeastern Georgian Bay re-|Sault Ste. Marie... gions: Variable cloudiness with Timmins scattered snowflurries tonight) 'groups remained for about two) |one stage a crowd of about 200 With Vigilantes PRESTON, Ont. (CP)--Black-, 'We were only doing our duty jacketed teen-agers and self-|as citizens," said Ernest Kells, styled vigilantes clashed during] one of the self-styled vigilantes. the weekend on the main street] Mayor Allan Reuter said Sun- of this town near Galt. |day night trouble has been The trouble started shortly| brewing in Preston for a long after midnight Friday when|time and has now come to a| members left the Royal Cana-|head. dian Legion Hall. and began) During the last week five picketing a e itengedey Pilg) teen-age girls have been mol- vic Mogg headquarters for the| wed on the main street and The teen-agers immédiately police have broken up seven poured out of the restaurant/fights involving young people. and there was some scuffling) Both Mayor Reuter and Po- before police arrived. A few lice Chief Gordon N. Bogle said |the vigilantes are as bad as the punches were exchanged. | Police separated the factions,|youths and have only made matters worse. driving the teen-agers to one| EYE side of the street and the 30 or 40 adults to the other. The two EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by appointment F. R, BLACK, O.D. | 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH hours, shouting at éach other. CROWD REACHES 200 Other citizens arrived and at| was milling around, NIGHT of cards South Simcoe School,,RUMMAGE sale, Centre Street United NEED FUEL OIL? Gaal, PERR 723-3443 DAY OR NIGHT | LIABILITY INSURANCE PREMIUMS AS LOW AS PER YEAR © Budget Terms Available @ Easy Monthly Payments Schofield-Aker Limited 360 KING WEST PHONE 723-2265 Nussbaum is charged oll |Lanch served. Tickets .50. at door. | y» Nov. 7, 8 p.m. Good prizes,|Church, Tuesday, Nov. 6 at 1.30, FALL Bazaar, Tea and Bake sale, Wed- BINGO Eastview Park, Tuesday 2/nesday, Nvember 7 at 7 p.m. at St. 2 p.m. Euchre Wednesday 8 p.m. Re-|Georges Catholic Parish oerner prizes, A 50 cents. |0f Jackson and Albert Street, Monthly prize $5. | HOT! ! TURKEY SUPPER WED., NOV. 7th SEAGRAVE United Church Starting ot 4.30 until All are served. Adults $1.50 Juniors 75¢ BINGO KINSMEN BINGO TUESDAY, 8 O'CLOCK FREE ADMISSION EXTRA BUSES Jackpot Nos. 58 and 53 EARLY BIRD GAMES TEAM 3 __ JUBILEE PAVILION WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE BINGO Nos. 52 and 53 TONIGHT -- 8 P.M, RED BARN _EXTRA BUSES os Oshawa Tennis Club St. Gertrude's Auditorium TO-NIGHT AT 8 P.M. 690 KINGST. E. AT FAREWELL FREE ADMISSION Snowball jackpot $240.-56 Nos. ; $20 Consolation Reg. Jackpot 53 Nos. $100 - $20 Consolation Good Prizes, Seieiniine Serving You Since Fifty-Two! BRIDGE EUCHRE TUES., NOV. 6th, 8 P.M. 75c¢ includes, prizes, lunch (Corner Ritson & Hillcroft) Telephone 728-1625 REALTOR 728-9474 5212 SIMCOE ST. N. Don Ellison Gerry Osborne Ralph Schofield Reg Aker @ AMPLE FREE PARKING @ ~WCOLWORTH'S and Tuesday, colder, Winds northerly 15 increasing to 25 by| this afternoon. and becoming) light Tuesday morning. Observed Temperatures Low overnight, high Sunday Dawson Victoria Super Bakery Specials BAKED FRESH DAILY IN OUR OWN KITCHEN! ! NOTICE TO ALL EX-SERVICE MEN WOMEN AND DEPENDENTS All ex-service personnel and their dependents are invited to take advantage of a FREE LEGION SERVICE W. R. BUCK | Assistant Secretary, Service Bureau, Toronto LEGION HALL, BRANCH NO. 43 Timagami region, North dl meee fos Sudbury: Cloudy with a few ayinnis sunny intervals and a few snow- flurries today and . Tuesday, Song be bag 4 25 Becom:| ng light tonight and southwest} 15 Tuesday afternoon. Legh ne Cochrane region: Mainly|\sudbury ... cloudy with a few snowflurries| Muskoka .. today and Tuesday. Continuous! windsor . snow beginning late Tuesday.|London .. Colder today, a little milder|Toronto .. Tuesday: Winds light becoming Ottawa ... |southwest 15 Tuesday Montreal . Algoma regions, Sault Ste. Quebec .. \Marie: Partly cloudy with a|Halifax ......+. Kapuskasing Your Favorite STRAWBERRY CREAM ROLLS Special This Week EACH Special Delicious, Fresh Fruit LEMON This Week 45: SPECIAL PRICES ALL THIS WEEK !! PHONE BAKERY ORDERS -- 725-3421 Wednesday, Nov. 7th FROM 2:00 TO 4:30 P.M. Also from 7:00 p.m., to completion:of business... to give skilled advice on Veteran's Benefits. Any- one with question on war disability pension, War Veteran's Allowance (Burnt-Out Pension)... Treat- , ment or Hospital care is urged to call or write to MR, A. C. BRISBOIS, Business Manager of Royal Canadian Legion, Branch 43, 90 Centre Street, - Oshawa, who will arrange .an appointment.