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Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Dec 1961, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, December 18, 196, Wy oN PARIS (CP)--The communi-| que at the end of the NATO ministerial meeting here did a pretty poor job of papering over the areas of disagreement re- garding Berlin. | It took several hours of de- bate Friday before the aloof- ness of France and the eager- ness of Britain and the United States towards negotiations could be skillfully carried off in the most important paragraph' of the document. | Finally, what is boiled down to was that France had agreed| that the others could go ahead and negitiate if they want, There was, however, no sugges- tion France would take part, | Thus the position was much} the same as when the three-day | annual meeting opened. The for-| eign ministers of Britain, the| U.S., France and West Germ-| any had sessions before the NATO meetings started and the fact they made separate pres- , jentations instead of the hoped for joint communique underlined their inability to agree. The French position is that to |negotiate one must be prepared ito make some concessions. As! |far as President de Gaulle is }concerned there can be no con-| jcessions and, therefore, should |be no negotiations, |SEE LITTLE COMFORT So, as Prime Minister Mac- |millan and President Kennedy ; Fe 4 < BEST DRESSED WOMEN An Eskimo and an Indian is woman from Great Whale River, a tiny settlement 700 miles north of Montreal, stand with the district's CP: France Agrees West To Talk About Berlin Union on the scrapheap of ob- solete Westerp political institu- tiors,"" GREEN COMMENTS External Affairs Minis ter Howard Green, before flying back to Ottawa, expressed the opinion the corference 'worked out pretty well" in view of 'the seriousness of matters on the agenda. But the accomplish- ments, of course, "'would have ot be weighed against what hap- pens from here on."- He sought to impréss the meeting with the importance of a positive approach to the Ber- lin problem. This view was in- corporated into the approved communique." Katanga came up several times and Green made it clear Canada supported the United OLTAWA (CP) Establish: | ment of a changed unemploy- ment insurance fund, supported by taxes from all and paying enefits to all unemployed, was proposed today to the special committee of inquiry on unem- ployment insurance. The Confederation of National Trude Unions, the central body of quebec's trade union move- ment, made the proposal in a bricf which also urged that ben- efit payments extend over an unlimited period and that the new fund's operations not ap- jar as part of the federal gov- ernment's regular budget. The brief. was presented as the committee, -headed by Ern- e:1 C. Gill of Toronto, president of the Canada Life Insurance Conipany, resumed public 'hear- ings on unemployment insur- ance. The committee's task is to find out ,how. the unemploy- ment insurance fund can be saved from bankruptcy, whether it 1s being abused and, if so, how abuses can be eliminated, SEES BASIC DEFECTS The brief from the 95,000- member CNTU argued that the present fund, which had sunk to & low point of $110,000,000 at Unemployed Fund Plans Proposed |REJECTS PROPOSALS Nations and, indirectly, the U.S, Strongly supported by Norway, Green aimed at eliminating the impression that the U.S. stood alone in supporting the UN's Congo. activity. The Canadian minister is known to consider the UN a cor- nerstone of Canadian foreign policy. He apparently insisted The Congo be treated as UN business with no interference from NATO, West -German demands for steps. towards making NATO a nucléar power found little en- thusiasm. The proposal was again put aside, to be studied later, The U.S. urged that NATO | seek to accomplish its target in conventional forces before aim- ing at becoming a fourht nu-| ae -| INDIAN COMMANDER This is India's LA, Gen, 4, Chaudhuri who je in pvenait command of Indian operatione against the three Partigiese enclaves of Goa, sauih of Rombay, Indian trodpe start ed the invasion of Wie en claves today, according (4 #4 | government spokesman Al Wirephita Whites Avoid Intergrated fue CNTU plan, the brief said, would partly eliminate fluctuations in fund assets, Con- siderably more revenue would be available through general tax contributions, By keeping the! tax collections outside regular) budget tig oy ged o> pied . Py government the fund would es- S P ] cape tax rate changes made in! wimming 00 goud and bad times, | SALISBURY (Reuters) Regarding the unlimited ben-|Few whites went to the munic efit period rather than the pre-|ipal central swimming pool Sun sent 52-week period, the brief|day following a city council de- said this does not imply that|cistom Friday that all pools in regulations pvoviding disqualifi-|the Salisbury area of Southern cation or penalty for those who| Rhodesia be open to all races refuse to work would disap-| Tiere were 12 whites at the pear. pool, which until Friday was re- |served for whites only. Eight In- 5 ldians were swimming. The brief rejected proposals} A pool spokesman said: "Nor- put forward at earlier hearings|mal:y we would have about 200 by various groups such as the! people on a day like this." |Chamber of Commerce and Re-| Tit city council's decision to tail Merchants Association on|make all pools multi-racial was grounds they did not satisfac-|in line with a ruling by the Rho- 'only deal with the problem. desian Federation Supreme The difficulty was two-fold --| Court. the economy lacks adequate de-| 'Whites only" signs in this jvelopment of 'manufacturing in-|self governing British colony dustries necessary to high em-|are coming down one by one, ployment and the present sys-| Under pressure from Negroes, tem. of relieving the plight of|Asians and white liberals, great the unemployed, while capable|@4vances towards a non-racial he ig pleased to note that U|The Sunday Observer of Lon- mid-year from $926,700,000 at|° f prompt remedy without ma- socicty have been made in the Mother's Wish SARNIA (CP) -- Ellen Way- brant's last hope of heeding her mother's dying wish appears to have vanished. "Keep the family together," her mother said before she died of cancer Nov, 13. e But a fire Friday left the chil- dren homeless and 17 year - old Ellen, who had cooked and cared for six brothers and_ sisters p Siitce their mother's death, was informed the family will be dis- |p persed by public authorities, f,Jen struggled to keep home| for Jo-Ann, 16, Sharon, 14, Ro- |bert, 13, Steven, 12, Heather, 8 aid Wendy, 6 on a welfare al- Jotment of $20 weckly for groc-| jeries $60 monthly for their) shabby cottage a few miles cast of we city, and bills for hydro} and gas. She often complained) flat the relief wasn't enough. , spark from a log in an| apen fireplace sent flames sear-| rig through the house and at-| tracted the attention of public aul orities Sines then Sharon, Robert, | ard Seven have been placed in} fonder homes by the Children's Aid Suniety. The youngest two ilenther and Wendy had been renvved before the fire by the wnriy and placed in perman- cnt foster homes | iien and Jo-Ann, above the sonely's age limit, are staying with friends, Mr. and Mrs, Wil-| fia.n Murray, Their father, Alan Wayorant, has been separated frown the family for five years. Besides the CAS, the Sarnia fownship welfare department! and the Canadian Cancer Soci- ety helped the children after their mother's death, but not enough to keep them together. 1, Murray said the author- ities are to blame for turning a cold shoulder on the orphaned family. "Wen deserved to succeed," 1S to ook after the amily," she added that $20 was not 1Cant Be Kept he said. "She did a tremend@us . job with these children." . -" e"len said the "Children's Aid ociety thought I was too a vr it 4.01gh to buy a week's food. The slim. blue-eyed teen-ager spoke in a low monotone of de- SPais as she described her light. One of the few persons who stuck by her, she said, was er boy friend, Robert Poirier, 18 DO YOU NEED A LOAN UNTIL PAYDAY? $50 for 2 weeks costs only 47c Lorger amounts ond many other plens te suit your $50 to $5000 without endorsers or benkeble security SUPERIOR FINANCE 17 SIMCOE N. 725-6541 "The Fastest Growing, All- Ceanedi Loan Compeny" Open Wednesday *night unt 8 Seturdey until nsen Other evenings by applentment 17 Offices in Ontario ----o-- FUEL & HEATING | "Ma F pany for more than"® years. She keeps accurate records in the e¢- counting department, Md. "Mary" RAHME ry" hes been with the com- OR TOP QUALITY last year though a number of racial barriers remain. H | Prime Minister Sir Edgar |Whitehead has said the govern- }ment will sweep away racial dis- criniination and create a state lin which 3,000,000 Negroes, 220,- ployee contributions. prepare for their Bermuda ;meeting, they can take little! ange from the results of the aris sessions Roman Catholic priest, Father | right the Indian winner, Possibly there was a degree Antonio Ostan, after being | Agnes Nataschequam, with of improvement in that West judged the best - dressed | the Eskimo, winner, Louisa |Germany supported more} women of their race at a spe- | Kooksalik, in-the centre. strongly the Anglo - American} cial Ghristmas party. On the | --€P~from National Defence |plan and that only France rise%e a '8 ------ spiced ----------=| among the 15-nation alliance did| ' not give firm approval. bed Diet Expresses | Delegates sought emphatic- Tra e it u re | jally to dispel reports of disun-| H F E d jity and, if there were other im- | portant disagreements, it was 2 | ope or n almost impossible for those out- Policy De en e es Bl aide the conference room to | 0 oodshed earn details | OTTAWA (CP) -- During the, rade and diplomatic repre-| (prawa (CP)--Prime TO Dn le « poasih te ibe bdo last year Canadian representa- sentatives in Washington, and | tor Diefenbaker expressed hope| leading diplomats and one ob. tives in the United States have/jin other U.S, centres where Can |Saturday that the present tragic| server suggested this came, in quietly been making concerted|ada maintains trade or consu-/<ityation in Katanga can be|part, from the "shrinking au- efforts to get across this coun-jlar offices, have since been g0-|. cedily resolved "so that there| thority of foreign ministers with try's position on the tricky ques-|irg out of their way to explain) may be an end to the bloodshed| do-it - yourself presidents and tion of trade with Communist-|the Canadian a to Amer: 'there " [prime ministers behind them."| led Cuba. jicans "with -whom they come "He said in a statement that' Robert Stephens, writing in Ciiicials here say the efforts | ©ontact. ; ; : | 0 have produced good. results in| Canada's position, basically, /Thant, acting secretary-general/don, said "One had indeed the|the end of 1956, suffers from ali°" UPheaval, was inadequate. the: form of more widespreadjis that it has no grounds on/of the United Nations, has ta-|feeling in Paris that NATO, at/nmber of basic defects. understanding among Ameri-|which to break off economic re-|ken steps = end Bis farsenal ool Poel sg irk Peg ag TY said: thadund ak cow oon, as ada's business - as-|).4; i |representative to The Congo to] pres 1, dan-| : i F G b oe ae = Cuba, |lations with Cube. 3 carries pg] Per be once more the possibil-;ger of joining the Council Cb ea cannot avoid Progres-| rogmen Ta . i _|'rade relations with all coun-|ities of re-opening negotiations| Europe and Western European|S!ve depletion even with in-| The U.S,, reacting to a ser-|,. creases in employer and em- jes of "provocations from|tties, . regardless of what it/hetween the central government § gg Cuba's revolutionary govern. |'hinks of their political systems./aud Katanga. He welcomed the TREE EXPENSE | nent, slapped an embargo more| Officials here are quick to|fact that parallel action is be- than a year ago on all Amer-|Point out that Canada's policy is|ing taken by President Kennedy. FOR CHRISTMAS ican shipments to Cuba except|in line with that of most NATO) In another statement on The drugs and foodstuffs. countries. . : [cones oe reel gyre ORILLIA (CP) -- Ralph did not join in|, Canada has been increasing|ter Green said Saturday that) Cjayton Hopkins, 41, of Oril- gyro lcieoryggli y oe ee ig sales of manufactured goods|Canada "strongly backs' the} jig decided to cut his own that Cuba would turn to Can-|!0 Cuba but the most'notable| American stand on United Na-| Christmas tree this year. ada for many goods now denied |¢xpansion has been in livestock tions operations in Katanga. | So he set out for a lot op- to it by the U.S. some promin-|20d poultry, i gyn ee onngy vag eh erated by the Orillia Conser- evt Americans cried betrayal. | With Canadian exports pe | eerie Paris with Defence| vation Club, where you can They were scarcely placated|Cuiva climbing -- and likely to/ Minister Harkness and Finance| Cut .Your own tree for $1.50. by subsequent assurances that|hit $25,000,000 to $30,000,000 this| Minister Fleming from a three-| On the way he collided with Canada would not allow itself to|year? compared with $13,000,000/day meeting of the NATO minis-| . hag a Ai Pa be used.as a back -door out-\last year -- it appears likely a rote gee Hannda srnitn Saab ts Mla 'car was $40, : 2 " . 2 , Ict for American shipments to however that the explanations to see an end to the fighting in| to hers $75, Cuta, or export weapons or,will have to continue for some| The Congo but said UN action| On the way back he was strategic goods there. itime to ~* ne. |must be supported. A car driven by Calvin Vi- vian, 18, of Coldwater, smashed into the back of his car, causing $75 damage and Damage to Vivian's car was $150 Mr. Hopkins drove home and bought a $2 Christmas tree from a lot 100 yards from his house. : Ford Workers || Favor Strike ed OO a OTA AS - 4| WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Some aS TO 2,800 Ford of Canada workers voted 98.8 per cent in favor of strike action at a meeting Sun- day. Herb Kelly, president of local /|200, United Auto Workers (CLC), said announcing the re- 1 | sult that a conciliation board js to meet again in Toronto Dec, Bole. » | 29. He added that unless agree- Ge di J wilt ment is reached, a strike dead- line would be set CooL early in January. George Burt, director, said Oakville workers will vote on strike action today. He added that parts depot em- ployees at North York voted 54 |to 1 Thursday of striking. FRANCIS 55-65 A tant 28 AS CLOUDY AND WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy Tonight Turning Colder =": Forecasts issued by the Tor-|Overcast with snowflurries to- Ottawa onto weather office at 5 a.m.:|day.and Tuesday; turning col-|------ {Edmonton . Regina ... a | Winnipeg .... 6 | Lakehead ....++.++ 23 White River ..... SS. Marie ..+..0+. 23 Kapuskasing oe | |North Bay y++..s- jers no offer has yet been made |Sudbury .... by the company. Muskoka .. | Windsor .... in early October. The concilia- the latter part of November but little progress has been made. | involved in another accident. | C IS ¢ jof the New Zealand Herald, who breaking. the Christmas tree. |played a prominent part in the | sometime) vaw rexionall! Third Thursday in Dec., 1961 Mr. Burt informed the work- | Both parties began bargaining tion board was called in during The capsule of Discoverer 36| Commonwealth Press Union. Space Capsule |tion, several categories of work- space apsu Three jers, who would lose their jobs| air force frogmen parachuted jin another depression like that|into the Pacific north of Hawali jof the 1930s, are not covered. 'Saturday and recovered Discov- jerer 36's record-space capsule) jfrom the sea. | DEATHS The Discoverer Agena -- sec- jond stage -- still is orbiting] Toronto Harry Francisjearth with an experimental de-| |White, Q.C., 51, a lawyer injtector aboard for sniffing out Toronto for 25 years, who was/nuclear explosions in space, an jone of the founders of the Ca-/air force spokesman said. jnadian Tax Foundation. | Oakville -- E Arnold Ban-/established a launch-to - impact} jfield, 54, a member of the Oak-|distance record for Discoverer |ville - Trafalgar Memorial Hos-|nosecones in space travel, the jpital board of governors and anjair force said. jauthority on Canadian stamps.| It returned to earth atfter| Auckland, N.Z. -- Ronald Dun-| whirling 1,682,670 miles in| can Horton, 53, chairman and/space. The capsule was in outer managing director of Wilson|space for 98 hours and 29 min-| jand Horton Limited, publishers|utes, orbiting the planet' 64| jtimes, ~The' recovery was the third} success for the frogmen--called | AG ~|pararescuemen. It was the TULIP CENTRE fourth Discoverer space pack- Haarlem in Holland has been|age recovered from the sea. |the leading world centre of tulip|Seven others have been snagged | breeding for more' than 200\in the air by hook-equipped air- years, craft. THE CITY OF OSHAWA PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE. ASSOC. | NOTICE There will be NO DINNER MEETING on the DINNER MEETINGS WILL BE RESUMED |] ON THE THIRD THURSDAY IN JANU- ARY, 1962, AND WILL CONTINUE ON THE THIRD THURSDAY OF EVERY MONTH THEREAFTER. Doctors Fighting: Hepatitis Spread | PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE, | Man. (CP)--Medical authorities are trying to eliminate a mild but fast-spreading epidemic of} infectious hepatitis at the Por-| tage home for mental defectives) Medical superintendent Dr, H. S. Atkinson said Saturday 300) jpersons have come down with! the liver ailment in the last three months and 50 are still receiving treatment. 000 whites and 17,000 Asians and| persons of mixed blood will have | equality of opportunity. ' PHONE 723-4663 Serving the Public For More Than Fifty Years MATTRESS KING THE FURNITURE AND fe a ae he bee ae woipoge fF se OS . 4 d * i 4 tp ote THREE STAR Assorted Colors ! non ED WILSON'S § WARE ADORE SA TIRES RECLINER CHAIRS 7: \ ,) Synopsis: Colder air west of der, Winds light, becoming f Cliff M the Great Lakes will invade On-| northerly 15 this afternoon. gario today so that tempera- Forecast Temperatures A Comfortable tures will dip to well below-zero| Low tonight, High Tuesday | Practical Gift ! northwest of Lake Foe ged to- he ml cpdecsses. 28 38 night and to the high 20s in|St. Thomas ....... bee ogg ge me Ff Lenees ceveee . SHOES or Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,| Kitchener Lake Huron, Lake Ontario, Nia-/Wingham . seas SLIPPERS gara regions, Windsor, London,| Hamilton ... ..... 35 FROM Toronto, Hamilton: Cloudy to-|St. Catharines .... day; variable cloudiness tonight|Toronto ;.... Model Shoe -Store wend Tuesday, turning yon | maa saees "a few snowflurries Tues-|/Trenton .. ' : day, winds light. Killaloe .......65 « pe! ee eS 2... | Southern Georgian Bay, Hali-/ Muskoka .......... lait deri i Al -- burton regions: Overcast with North Bay . freezing drizzle and occasional| Sudbury .... pe agp por kd hd {pean oeee cloudy with scattered snowflur-| Kapuskasing ..... ries tonight and Tuesday, colder| White River ..... SHOE STORE Tuesday. Winds. light. Moosonee Northern, Georgian Bay, Al- Observed temperatures: 55 KING STREET EAST goma, Sault Ste. Marie, Tima- Min, (corner Albert St.) gami, Cochrane, White River re-| Dawson -47 gions,.North Bay, Sudbury:|Victoria ......... 38 Max. -25 46 Free parking in the reor gt ills 48-Hour Special 1958 BUICK HARDTOP Dynaflow, custom radio, *1295 | CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. 230 KING STREET WEST : 745-6651 COVERINGS LY Ft. BRIGHTEN UP YOUR CHRISTMAS REGULAR 29.95 FURN PHONE 723-3211 ¢ od os T Ree) STUDENTS' DESKS Arborite Top, Roomy Drawer 1§.28 ITURE | oy a Od Ss Ss iil Nein, Sis 2 suleee

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