Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Oct 1963, p. 22

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, October 15, 1963 INTERPRETING THE NEW»s "End Of German 'Personality Era By ALAN HARVEY Press Staff Writer "A faint note of anxiety ac- eompanies the passing of the Adenauer era. Is it safe to trust the Ger- mans? How will they react now that Konrad Adenauer is finally taking his firm hand off the wheel? 4 Is Ludwig Erhard just a stop- gap chancellor? Will Foreign) jn Minister Gerhard Schroeder durn out to be the new strong- man? These are some of the ques- tions as Erhard, still on the sunny side of 70, takes over to- a schnitzel in every German fry- ing pan, and his popularity with the ordinary voter may surprise those who consider it likely that Willy Brandt's Social Demo- crats will topple the Christian Democrats in the next election. Apart from personalities, the transfer of power may result in fresh questioning about: German tentions. an unidentified German _poli- tician has been quoted as say- ing, the German people have come to realize "they are not generally loved and do not even day from the iron-willed man of lowe thetmhelves."' 87 who has ruled. the Federal Republic for the last 14 years. Historically, it is a major turning point. It ends a virtu- ally unbroken 30-year period of strong personal rule, first under SHOW HOSTILITY Some British newspapers, headed by The Daily Express, have repeatedly shown hostility. "This paper has long sought gore Adolf. Hitler and to expose the duplicity of the the benevolent, but autocratic, Adenauer. Erhard, ruddy-cheeked, cigar- smoking economist from Ba- varia, tends to be played down as a "rubber lion" who will col- japse under heavy pressure. Some observers foresee a strug- Germans," The Express said recently. "They cannot be trusted." A much more favorable re- port on Germany comes from Terence Prittie of the Man- chester Guardian. Transferred gle for power within a few|*® London after 16 years as a months, OVERLY HESITANT It may be that the new chan- cellor is underrated. He has shown himself patient, perhaps correspondent in West Ger- many, Prittie says the old "'in- ward- looking, isolated" Ger- many has been replaced by a nation that wants to belong to the Western community in the hesitant, in withstanding a es-|fullest sense. ties of snubs from Adenauer, A_ weekly magazine -- The who would have preferred al-|Spectator--also deprecates: anti- noe anyone else to succeed/German sentiment, that "cen- sorious chorus in which die- But Erhard is the archticet|hards of the left vie with the of the, post-war economic mir- know-nothings of the right." acle, the free trader who put 'Union Leader Hits Canadian Bread Exports - UTICA, N.Y, (AP)--A. bakery Union leader said Monday that the jobs of. thousands of north- érn New York state bakers are being threatened by importa- tion of tariff + free Canadian read into the United 'States, ~ Daniel J, Motto, president of the New York-New Jersey dis- trict council of the Bakery and Confectionery Workers of America, commented before en- tering what he said was an "emergency meeting" of -his union's executive committee to|fTe midnight Friday. deal with the situation. Motto said Camadian bread|broom, she found a masked 'was under-selling U.S. bread in|man wearing a toque crouching northern New York, especially|in a dark corner. in the Buffalo-Rochester area but also as far east and south|nim, @s Syracuse. American bakers are unable|the light carrying a rifle. to take counter measures, he said, because they must pay a 7¥%-per-cent tariff on bread they send into Canada, while their competitors' bread is admitted to the U.S. without a tariff charge. Motto said four bakeries had gone out of business in Buffalo and one in Rochester as a re- Anglo » German differences, The Economist says,-are a "residue of antagonism and in- comprehension left by history." And The Evening News, in a article by Charles Curran, says those who repeatedly voice sus- picion of Germany are trying to."go on. killing Hitler with their mouths." Sisters Scare Two Intruders PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- Three elderly sisters used a broom and their voices to scare off an armed intruder and his companion. Mrs. Ros Minicola, 79, heard a noise in her home shortly be- After arming herself with a As she was about to attack a second masked man wearing -a toque stepped into "This is a hold up," he said. Mrs. Minicola retreated down the hall to where her sisters, Mrs, Rae Rochetta, 70 and Mrs. roo Companaro, 80, were sit- ig. The three women started. to yell and Mrs. Campanaro called lice. : 4 The two men ran off. sult of competition from Cana- dian bread. Other bakeries in that area have cut production by up to 50 per cent, he said. Motto said the obvious: solu- tion was either to remove the tariff on American bread shipped into Canada or to im- pose a 7%4-per-cent tariff on Ca- madian bread imported into the United States. We'd like to call fo your attention A truly happy modern invention. 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