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The Oshawa Times, 7 Mar 1961, p. 6

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The Oshawa Times Pubbished by Conadion Wewspapers Limited, #6 King 5. E., Odhows, Ont dled Vowptny, Mercy 7 v4 Williams Winning Few U. S. Friends In Africa These wes some mid spice when President Wenpedy npppomted G. Men nen Wittiems, former governor of Mick: igen, to the post of US, assistant secre tary of state for African wifes. Other Kennedy appointments seemed to be perticlarly well fitted for thew jobs but 2 more willy chowe then My Withieme wes difficile 10 wmegine. Mi Williams bimeetf confessed thet he did not know much shout Africs but he promised to lesen He is learning the hard way ohserver described bimn gs "peting ke on verted Dale Carnegie" His em berrassing fumbling bas drawn the at tention of even pro-Kennedy newspapers in the United States The Mibyakes Journal, for exemple, records highlights of Williams current 12-nation fact finding tour of Aricd" In Kenyr he seid thet the United States backed the principle of "Africa for Africans" After outeries from the white end Asien communities, Williams hestened to add thet he regarded any One "ne one whe lived ws Mrice ee en "Aiicel, ¥ the mative Africans enjoyed this one, they had only to wet & dey for their tim 10 be offended. Witkiems sug gested thet they whendon mnciemt Wer ditions wd labor wn the fields with thew Wives -- & sensible suggestion, perkieps, fet mer ii thet perticider time end place, Once seein, diplomacy would heave meant sticking to fact finding end delay ng, the CRBmentary tlh & more ppv Fate FHL ald AG Moving on to Uganda, Willems said thet the Upited States wanted strong, stable and independent governments n Africa to avoid a veacwwm where "ae other kind of tyranny can enter" The British governor's jaw dropped aft the another kind of tyranny] end "Well, I withdraw aot fumbled i | mean thet the tyrannical in the best tradition of the image crested by a "an of Eisenhower's political pantinents 1g nner apr delicate Jobs, Weakness For Secrecy There are always so many good offered by public offi for refusing to tell the it should know about its own affal it heing the v "reasons pbc "The one about not the public and hoariest of them all and most absurd," Hamilton Bpectator in expressing some sound views on the relationship between the public good and what officials some times think is the publie good "Something of the given excuse session n interest Is aguest the notes the was sort As an at a turbulent of the Ontario last week," notes the Spectator, "The attorney general refused to release a report from the provincial marshall about fire hazards in Fs county schools, Premier Frost the report was a matter between the government and the school only ~~ a position which very natural ly angered opposition MLAs, Later in the week, the attorney general did make a general statement about 42 schools covered in the réport, In ten, Legislature fire said hoards cent of the work recom groups senled down to 26 per cent and only nothing 70 to ea ras Bl) per men: , OLNer mras nad done lon left anout them Lhe Was get report pulling the thout angestheties impress any government's Sehool important; school hoards bodies, so are the Ontario the fire any or all are puniic Legis! department ature and marshal's For to labe a report confidential because it might cause embarrassment is to deny the basis of elective responsibility "The public is made up of tax. foot the bill for the ace salaries of personages, groups and departments at all levels, They are entitled to know whether or not the schools their children attend are safe, The demoeratic process is in a sad state if they ean't he told what they and pay to know, without having the legislature thrown payers who Liviti and should know into an uproar, He Got A Congregation It seems, according to the New York Times, that there was a young, earnest Lutheran country pastor in Denmark, who got tired of looking af the nearly-empty pews in his church in Kongerslev, He. had worked hard to prepare himself for the ministry, had labored as a teacher and a dock worker, even while studying theology at Copenhagen University, Indeed, he had been awarded the university's gold medal for theology, Pastor Joergenson him self an advertisement and placed in the help wanted columns of the local newspaper; It read; "Priest seeks work as priest in Kongersley, I am trained to expound and interpret the Bible (seven vears study) and to explain the Christian faith to modern people, Are there not just 10 or 20 families who, on their own initiative, can think of em ploying me for this purpose! Reply soonest, wrote The Parish Priest, Tye Oshawa Times Oshawa [imes combining The Oshawa (established 1871) and the Whithy Gazelle and Chrenigly (established 1843) it published daily (Sundays and statutory holidays excepted) Members of Canadian Dally Newspapers Publishers Association. The Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulation and the Onlaria Pravingiai Dailies Assas ciation. The Canadian Press is exclus ely entitled fo the use for republication ef all ews despatched nthe paper credited ta i or ta The Associated Press or Reuters, and ala the local news published therein. All righty special despatches are alse reserved The ot Offices: Thomsen Building, 428 University Avenus Toronto. Ontarie; 840 Cathcart Street, Montreal, PQ. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Deliverad by carrion Pickering, Bowmanviil Albert. Maple Grove Liverpool, Tauntan Drone Laskar in Oshawa Whitby foekling ant Perry Hampton. Frenchman's Tyrone Dunbarton Enniskillen, Brougham Burketon nt Columbus Greenwoed Kinsale. Raglan ¢ eck Manchester Pontypool and Newsastle, not over 45¢ Pet week By mail (in provines of Ontarie) aulsias carriers delivery areas 12.00; elsewhere 15.00 per vear Circulation for the issue of Feb, 28, 1961 17.223 Ajax Prince Bay '8, Or is a priest a luxury on article The people of Times reported, pretended Kongerslev, the were shamed, and scandalized that Pastor Joergensen had stooped to ad- vertising to get to go chureh," Frankly, think the young had a good idea; others may disagree, It's certainly subject to eriticism than some of the crowds we have witnessed in this country, We'll never forget the even ing an apiary expert released a warm of bees in one of Cleveland's to he people to we man less getlers large churches, although we've fors gotten what this was supposed to prove, Enough, You want to know what happened at the church in Denmark the next Sunday following the adver- tisement? pew was filled, proving, that even in the Lord's work, advertising pays, Every Other Editor's Views TIME NOT OUR SIDE (Vietaria Times) Strong nerves and cool heads must be reinforced by a new willingness to accept real sacrifices which, in America anyway, have been avoided so far under the impression that time and events were on our side, Clearly they are not, Bible Thoughts Before I formed you in the womb 1 knew you, and hefare you were born I consecrated you, ~ Jeremiah 1:8 An infinite. God with a holy purpose of each has this glorify Him put us on earth to They have forsaken me, the fountain of living waters, and hewed out cisterns for themselves, broken Jeremiah 2:13 Evil two of God's way; and conceited making of our own, cisterns, = has faces rejection "nN CRAE BREAK CLASS INSERT KEY PRAT iG Rd EW ERLE MEY AAA AL MALLS Ai NOW WHERE WAS THAT KEY? "OTTAWA REPORT Protest Against Nuclear Weapons By PATRICK NICHOLSON OVEAWA--~On March 1, 1954 a single nuclear hombh was ex ploded which released energy equivalent 18.6000 500 tons of ™F more than all the exj off in all the in human history Thus have scientists perfected man's power to destroy life Carbon 14 suns ances is already 150.600 to Fis was ons sel War and other radio released hy held will of ley kemia,. while 100.000 children will he horn with gross phys legl and mental defects, 350,000 children will die in their early and 000.000 will be still active _Buciear CRUSE ie yickims Years horn At Easter 1958, the late Pope Fius XII spoke of the enormous henefits that eould derive from the use of nuclear power for peaceful purposes; hut he de plored the fact that other uses have heen sought and found suitable for producing in stead death and destruction." ""Yvery day is a melancholy step forward on thi iragie road," the Holy Father de plored And the human race almost loses hope of heing able to stop this suicidal madness." COMMON MAN SHOCKED Inspired hy such statements and terrified hy such facts, groups of common men and women are banding themselves together to urge their govern ments to work for a world-wide han on nuclear testing and on the manufacture of nuelear weapons. These groups are neither political nor religious They seek to ensure the sur vival of the human race in the face of a danger which they believe hath real and urgent They also feel that the danger already grave with only four nations--Hritain, France, U.8.A and Russia---as full members of the "nuclear elub,'" will he mul tiplied within the next 10 years when scientists, now working to develop nuclear secrets achieve their aim in such countries as China, Egypt, Israel, Japan, Ar genting and Brazil INSIDE YOU hs | : me r-- Thus in Britgin, the active Campaign for Nuclear disarm amen ERihered a huge army of 100.000 protest-marchers last Easter. Similar groups are as tive in Indig, Japan, Denmark and elsewhere Here in Canada, a Commitiee for the Control of Radiation Hazards" has heen formed; it already has branches in Moose Jaw fontreal, Re gina, Halifax, Saskatoon, Cal gary and Edmonton. And in B.C. it was taken up hy a group of anxious mothers meeting in a private home, now expanded into 20 individual commitiees in Vancouver and distriet. Typi- cally the Edmonton branch in. cludes the Anglican Primate the Catholic archhishop, a Bap tist Past-Moderator, and rank. ing dignitaries of other churches ALL, CAN HELP These groups emphasize that in our democracy, every vole counts, Every individual who believes in this cause can aid it, hy starting formal or pri vate discussions, and especially hy writing letters to the prime minister and MPs at the Par: liament Building, Ottawa (no postage stamp required on let ters so addressed) Hon, Howard Green, our for: eign minister, 1s more dedicated than any other Canadian fo the preposition that The Bomb must e hanned, He deserves the sup port and prayers of all, Your letters will encourage him But while the government led hy John Diefenbaer recognizes this as mankind's No, 1 prob. lem today which must he solved to safeguard life on this planet--=Canadians who support Mr, Diefenbaker's attitude to nuclear hazards (and who does not?) must also recognize the essential need to man our ram parts against attack until all possible enemies have agreed with us to disarm. There can he no safety in unilateral dis armament, and nuclear fall-out does not respect neutrality National Bulging Vessels Cause Headache By BURTON H, FERN, MD CAN YOU imagine a head ache that starts near your jaw and shoots down your neck? Migraine may! This migraine can hlast across your face, shoot down your neck or erupt in your ah. domen, The pain stems from tiny arteries that bulge like overfilled sausages Something triggers the auto matic nerves that eantral blood vessel size, For an ineh or so the tiny arteries relax, Further along, the same vessel tightens inta spasm. Blood is dammed back Inte the relaxed partion where the tiny artery bulges, stretching raw nerve endings in its wall These irritated nerves ery with the pain of migraine, Al first you feel twinges around the eye or nose, Then the pain climbs onto the forehead, stretches back to the temple or radiates dawn to the teeth and neck ONESIDED COLD Because the bulging all flow on one side, migraine never spreads bevond the middle of the face, The irritat ed nerves redden ane eye and flood # with tears or clog one nostril and make you sneeze Imagine ! A "one-sided cold ! Ralph suffers from migraine of the face For months he seems well Then one + sided face pains vessels strike, one after another. The agony lasts anywhere from a few minutes to a few hours, He ean usually count on several bouts each week before the siege lets up, EXTRA RLOOD When Ralph lies down, his face feels like exploding, Lying flat, his heart doesn't have to pump up-hill to drive blood to the face, And so extra blood gushes through the already overstuffed arteries, Nothing can cure the pain, It has to burn out itself. Giant doses of ergot chemicals - medicines that curve ordinary migraine = can fireproof your tiny arteries against new flare ups, but no fireproofing can douse the flames once the flare: up starts You can see that migraine isn't any ordinary headache, In fact, it may not he a headache at all. It can flare up any place where autamatic nerves start to act up Any far-out migraine, espe. elally migraine in the abdomen, can confuse the hest medical minds=--and give doctors a real headache! FAST GROWTH The ponulution of Venezuela estimated at 6.607.000 in 1989, is increasing by more than 3.3 per cent every year BY-GONE DAYS mW YEARS AGO choir members of Bt $s Anglican Churen gath ered at the church hall to hid farewell to Mrs, Jack Peacock solnist for 11 whe leaving to lake resh dence in Fort Arthur The Georg choir ERIS Was Hp A hylaw count closing Wednesday January to the was passed hy ety all slores on afternoons from end of October At the annual meeting of the Corporation of Women's College Hospital Mrs Gordon D Conant was appointed 8 mem: ber of the hoard of governors The 7600 quota of war savings pledges set hy the Commitiee for Oshawa and East Whithy Township, was exceeded hy S324 according to a report from Hayden MacDonald, chairman of the local eommitiee C. M., Mundy of Oshawa was appointed director of the Provincial Command at the Pro- vincial Council meeting of the Boy Scouts The price of milk advanced to 12 cenis a quart and seven cents a pint to Oshawa con SUmMers The Gshawa Ski Club arrang ed for a special show te pro- mote the sale of War Savings stamps, Dean Palle, president of the club and Ralph Scho: field, treasurer, were in charge of the promotion City council took immediate action to reduce fire hazards in and around the Williams Fiano Building after hearing the Fire Chief's report of the situation Mrs. A. E. Bhaw, Oshawa eon: vener of the Home Education Committee of the Home and School Council, was guest speak: er at the Thornton's Corners Home and School Association The munition plant south of Pickering was taking form and Dr, V. E, Cartwright assisted hy other medical men were exams ining applicants to fill the de: mand for workers Cates Reveal Art Snobbery * AMSTERDAM (CP) Are tists' cafes are as popular here as they are in Paris but in the Duteh metropolis there's a difs ference The gathering spots of the heard - and - beret set here ops erate under a sort of class dis tinction, the cafe the artist frequents depending on the sta- ture he haps achieved in his field C A poet =>gne of those said to have "arrived pointed to a particular cafe >and com mented: "This place, it's for third « class artista, 1 used to go there five years ago." Amsterdam is also a place rich in the treasures of art and theatre and indisputably a city for painters and of painters, It is a clean and beautiful place, oriss - crossed by sev: eral canals, and every time you eross a bridge you seem to cateh the scent of some fresh fragrance VAN GOGH IS HERO One is never far from a mus seum anywhere in Holland. At the Stedelijk Museum of Modern Art, one of Europe's best, there was recently an ex» hibition devoted entirely to the works of the late Canadian painter Paul Emile Borduas, who died a year ago in Paris, This museum is noted for its collection of the works of Vin. cent van Gogh, A good number ol the Dutch master's paintings now are on tour in Canada At the Rijksmuseum visitors are attracted to the works of Rembrandt, Frans Hals and Vermeer, Says Government Must Hold Reins By DON HEARN BORE The siliest #atement of the Japv Only ome year? Well, perhaps oY JRE i is this statement by Bx V. 5 Wison, president of the Ontario Wamaipel Electoic As BCR i or Ontario Wydve ever becomes # fof of The govern- ment and hecomes FE Hie to # minister of the Crown, | believe the m HARRY which we eRjioy if certainly Maappear, nd the fndveds of millions of Aoliars he moma peities have contri ed Ww singe fond. comity Rit 8 lently Fe maorpoviied io ave other department of EVER ment A WONSTERT Boh Sannders must be Raving # Get hackle iw Me grave over hat one Bol wilt wp the MEA #% # butler Wetween Wyden and. the EPVEITIRENT He pursed i, (ook Ws mem bers on wonderful (rips and filled them full of » sense of falar soil importance ss why he mid He probably Mant intend to REPORT FROM UK. Rirlines Consider Monorail Proposal Br M. MANTYRE HOOD Special London, (Eng) Eovraspmdent For The Oshawn Times LONDON ~~ Mi present plans come 16 fruition, AW PRESER gers traveling to London mir port from the city with he able ta make the JNImey ROR-HOP 0 15 minutes, instead of enduring the 0 16 M0 minte coseh ride which is now involved, the time varying aeeording to the traffic conditions. The plan is 16 build an glecine ne, With RR AVEr head monorail, with trains cap ahie of carrying As many Rs #0 500 engers an hour This scheme was outlined 16 the senior members of the we nationalized mirtines and the British Transport Commission in London by Andre Meffre, a French engineer who has built similar lines in his own country This system, as | have learned on my air travels in Europe is coming into general use from airports on the ouiskirts of large cities to the city terminals I first enjoyed is speed and comfort on a trip to Brussels OVEY R VERF REN COST 565,000 060 The total cost of the scheme to link London with is airport by a monorail rallway would be $5.450.000 a mile, or Approxi- mately $66 million for is 15 miles, including the Tolling stock, After hearing the plan explained in detail, Lord Doug las of Kirtleside, chairman of british European Airways, said the BEA would he contribute $2,800,000 towards the capital cost of the link Mr. Meffre described B sys: tem now heing tested in France its trains ran at 62 miles per hour, and this could he in creased to 75 miles an hour Fach coach would accommo date 125 persons, including standing passengers, which, of course, is quite customary In France, With automatie signal ling, trains could he run every 90 seconds, On the London Air port run the time for the jour: ney would he ahout 15 min. utes, Air travellers know only ton well the slow and tortuous progress by motor coach from the London Terminal out to the airport, and feel lucky if they make it within an hour USED IN GERMANY As further evidence of the utility 'of the project, German experts, who have had much longer practical experience with overhead monorail lines, show: ed the British transport party films of a system originated hy a Rwedish engineer, Dr, Axel Wenner:-Gren, known as the Alweg system, which operates at about 50 miles an hour, This When your home needs any kind of altera- tion or repair, , . adding a room, repairing the roof, redecorating . , , and you doen't have the necessary cash--come to The Bank of Nava Scotia for a low-interest Home Improve. More than 600 offices across Canada london, New York, Chicago, the Caribbean willing fe fs the system which last som mer | sew In operation at Frankfurt, Germany, The same system is in use in Los Angeles California Lord Dowglas, interviewed after the presentation, said he thewght the ides was very prom ising. wt he was not sure Rs vet which would be the hest system 19 use. He felt the decision rest: ed with the government, He was net sure how the British public would react 19 heavy things whizzing over heads." He had, however, had several meet ings with the minister of avia tion on the subject, and was awaiting & government deci sin Sir chairman company would he willing to contribute to some system 19 improve transportation te and from the airport deputy said his Wilfred Neden of BOAL t #0 fe moet Be enjoying Me rests WHO CONTRAST Pr. Wilson's statement, of CORE, TRAINEES AMY ONE Swe ple answer I govermment sw gong 19 annleml Hyden who 167 Or showid we let James B. Poncan spend millions & Jesr withewt aomtrsl? i fs Pr. Wilson and the OMEA gong to continl wm? Well. just how? What is he WACRIRERY ' Woneance. Complete and Wier RONGRNEE NEED CONTRO, Yow put petty politicians sich ws this -- many of ham Ld oAntad--in powitions SETH wuthonty and in thelr minds they awtomatically mown the chariots of the Caesars, the increasing, WH Rot wegent, need for some contrais aver the enlossis down Umversity Ave, that is building dreams of em pire with your and my money. PARAGRAPHICAL WISDOM The psychiatrist whe says women's hats are designed hy men who hale Women 18 mise taken. Only women could hate wamen that intensely A few scientists pre beginning to believe thet dolphins are smarter than people, | may turn out that there are intelli- gent beings on at least one planet A million - dollar idea: Apply the art of camouflage fo # dress so that milady's middie age spread wouldn't he appare ent YELLOW PAGES BULLETIN AMONG THE NEW MODELS BUTLE 'S MOTOR TRICYCLE BUILY IN 1885 WAS BELIEVED MOBILE CANADA TODAY KEEPS SOME HA MILLION SETHE MOTOR VENIGLES ON THE ROAD WITH THE HELP OF 70 BE THE FIRST ENGLISH VEHICLE POWERED BY AN INTERNAL COMBUSTION THE PARIS" BORDEAUX AUTO RACE AVERAGED A DIZZY 16 MILES PER HOUR AA ALL A Scotiabank Home improvement Lean == the best way to fix up yow home Fix up your home, too several years, ment Loan, Repayment can be spread over with instalments tailored to your convenience, Visit your Scotiabank manager and discuss your plans, Right new is an excellent time. 2 x Aeottir BANK THE BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA MANAGER: Oshawa Bianch, Kingsley M. Hume -

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