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Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Jul 1963, p. 2

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@ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, July 29, 1963 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN LIBERALS GIVE McCALLUM OLD POST Following so close as it does on the recent, unexpected appointment of George Hees to a top spot on the World's Fair Board, the re-appointment of Oshawa's Frank McCallum to a high Federal post has political tongues wagging on both sides of the fence. . Mr. McCallum was as- signed by the Liberal govern- ment two weeks ago to re- sume his old post as chair- man of the National Employ- ment committee, an advisory group to the National Em- ployment Service which will include 16 members this year (instead of 14), including two new appointees from. the world of Education. Mr. McCallum, mayor of * Oshawa 1946 - 48, inclusive, had more in common with Mr, Hees than the fact that they were both Party big- wigs in their own ridings -- each had a falling out with former Premier John Diefen- baker in the declining days of the late departed administra- FRANK McCALLUM ton The appointment of Mr. McCallum will undoubtedly ruf- fle some Liberal furs (who will undoubtedly feel that this prize plumb should have gone to one of the party faithful); on the other hand, it should do much to enhance the reputa- tion and prestige of Premier Lester Pearson in rebel PC ranks, aS well as in the ranks of the liberal-minded, because Mr. McCallum is eminently qualified for 'such a position, by training, background and temperment. It would be premature and unwise to signal the demise of the medieval political patronage system on the strength of thee two appointments alone, but they will instill more hope in the hopeful that such a system could be déomed eventually. There is still a long way.,to go and both parties have been equally guilty of such practice, but it is a-shameful situation which allows competent public servants to be replaced merely because their political color is currently unpopular Mr. McCallum has long been one of Oshawa's more pop- ular public figures. He first came to Oshawa in 1927 to play baseball for the General Motors Central Ontario League entry He remained long enough to become president of McCallum Transport Ltd. and affiliated companies (has since retired) WRI LONDON (AP)--The Soviet Union's agreement with the United States and Britain on a nuclear test . ban treaty may mark a turning point in Russ.an policy toward the West, opening a period of world peace. Or it may be merely an interlude in the cold war, Behind .the enthusiastic ac- claim of leaders in Washington and London, there is some sient |scepticism, When U.S. State Secretary) Dean Rusk and the British For. eign Secretary, the Eari of Home, go to Moscow in mid- August to sign the pact they are expected to probe the Kremlin's intentions further Their job will be to follow up, | |Some Silent Sceptics 'On Nuclear Test Ban be policed from outside Soviet borders. The secrecy cover of the Soviet closed society js left intact. CAN ESCAPE The test ban also contains an escape clause and thus constit- utes a minimum commitment to stop testing. The clause speci- fie that, on three months' no- tice, any one of the powers may withdraw "'if it decides that ex- traordinary events, related to the subject matter of this treaty, have jeopardized the sapreme interest of its country." That seems to mean that if China explodes a nuclear device the U.S. could pull out of the agreement, Or if France con- tinues testing, as President to be one of the great historic documents of the modern world. certain side effects, whether Khrushchev intended them or not: It will make far more difficult ----perhaps impossible Ken. nedy's task of pushing through plans for a North Atlantic Treaty Organization nuclear. missile avy, devised to ive West Germany a voice in nu- clear weapons policy ithout formation of a West German na- tional nuclear force. The pro- posal has already divided West Europe. How Kennedy can carry through the project at a time of declining tension is hard to see. The treaty is also like'y to The treaty is likely to have| j lat a higher level of diplomacy,|Charles de Gaulle has left no the ground - breaking negotia-)doubt it will, the Soviet Union sitions just concluded by Soviet/could do likewise. ; Foreign Minister peneane eae none bse ® READS ABOUT TRIAL | | Dr. Stephen Ward reads | newspaper in a London apart- ment Sunday. Ward, 50, is on Red Subs Said Worrying Ottawa trial for vice charges résumed today (AP Wirephoto) LONDON (Reuters)--Sunday|sians stay outide the three-mile could get results, according to|bones, none was listed as in se-| Express correspondent Patrick/jimit, Fellows adds. * |Hailsham, Andrei gro-| But in spite of limitations, the |myko, U.S, State Undersecre.|treaty symbolizes a remarkable tary W, Averell Harriman andjchange in the atmosphere of British Science Minister Lord|East-West relations, If it proves jto be the first step in a series If the probe goes well, it will|Of agreement on Europe and almost certainly lead to a fal|| disarmament it could turn out jsummit meeting of Khrushchev,| ~~ ae ets - ""* 46 People Hurt FACE BIG PROBLEMS _ In Bridge Fall Some top British officials warn in private' conversation} against great optimism. As they) MOUNT CLEMENS, Mich see the outlook, such tough)(AP)--Forty-six persons were |East-West problems as the iu-jinjured Saturday when a foot- jture of divided Berlin and Ger-jbridge over a river at a golf {many and disarmament inspec-|course collapsed Trial {tion inside the Soviet Union are} Eighty persons toppled 18 feet/France has announced t will still a long way from solution.jinto the Clinton River at the The best judgment among/Hillcrest Country Club as apec- Western diplomats at 'the mo-jtators and golfers at the wom- jment is that Khrushchev's cur-jen's Wolverine Open tourna- rent effort to improve relations;ment crowded across the 200- with the West is a direct out-|foot-long, wooden-planked sus igrowth of his:split with the Chi-!pension bridge jnese over his peaceful coexis-| Six of the injured, including tence policy \golf professional Jo Anne Pren If he were going to stick to/tice of Birmingham, Ala. stil! his policy against Peking's hard|were in hospital Sunday. Al- line he had to prove that he\though some suffered broken this evaluation. The easiest/rious condition make it more difficult for either Kennedy or Khrushchev to conduct underground nuclear tests, even though those would be permitted. This is a problem in world public opinion. The im. plication of_the ban on tes:s in the air, under water and in space is that the powers want to stop all testing. A new East-West crisis over Berlin becomes less posible.| Khruhchev cannot play his dip-| | lomatic game both ways. \% Quarrelling among the West-| ern powers, as well as within the Soviet-Chinese camp, is cer- \tain to increase | One reason is that the test iban itself and arious issues |which the Rusians have aso- jciated with it are diviive Bewildered, a child sits alone on pile of rubble that once was her home in Skopje, Yugosla- via. The tot was one of the survivors of devastating ear- thquake that struck the city jnot join in the test-ban treaty. West Germany is opposed to a non-aggression act, whicn 5 Khrushchev's next roject for |East-West negotiation. |_ Another reason is that, when |Soviet hostility recedes, the na- jtural differences which exist in| {the Western alliance always| come to the fore | | LONELY SU Differing RVIV on July 26. More than 700 bod- ies of victims have been re- covered from ruins and many thousands were injured and left homeless. The fate of this child's family is unknown, (AP Wirephoto) Opinions Soviet Premier On Nature Of Man Fails Attempt form was to negotiate a low-cost} A mooring snapped and all) At Ottawa, a defence spokes-/agreement with the West \four ,of the bridge's four steel] : i oy 3 yap-| The agreement, which ex-icables let loose at once. The! c worrying defence Man said The Express story ap g : ich ex-jcables s t . The} tic coast is ying pears to be a somewhat exag.|Cludes underground testing, bridge swayed crazily under its chiefs in Ottawa. ss ed | ' jdoes not even require thatiheavy load just before it} Fellows reports that on three|gerated combination of @ CoU-/Knrushchev admit a token num-|plunged into four to six feet of and one of Oshawa's most civic-minded citizens with affilia tions in numerous clubs and societies. His rise in the business world had a definite Horatio Alger tinge. He's a brother of Hiram McCallum, former mayor of Toronto and president of the CNE, Fellows says Russian submar- ae ee ee GENEVA PARK, Ont. (CP)|/by which Christendom lived |Wide differences of opinion con-|Their places have been taken by feerning the nature of man and/scientific and scientistic myths jof his relationship to God were|which, because they are our McCallum served in City Council for 10 years. He was defeated by John Naylor in 1953 when he attempted to be re- elected mayor on the highly-controversial issue of Sunday Sports, which brought influential groups, such as the Oshawa Ministerial Association, in opposition to him He is a former president of the Automotive Transporta- tion Association of Ontario. He is also a 32nd. degree Mason and a member of the Scottish Rite. DYSON RAPS BRITISH OFFICIALS Geoffrey Dyson, Canadian director of the Royal Canadian Legion's Sports Training Plan, was super-critical here last week at Britain's Track and Field set-up as now constituted under the British Amateur Athletic Board. He said: "Britain's track and field set-up won't be made well until Harold Abrahams, honorary treasurer, and Jack Crump, hon- orary secretary, resign their posts. They've been in power for more than 30 years and that's far too long. They did a splendid job for several years but today they are the worst possible examples in al] British sports of solid entrenchment at the top. "When I eventually return to Britain after completion of my five-year contract with the Canadian Legion I hope to finish my last 10 years in General Physical Education. I will never again coach a British Olmpic team. The bosses of the British Amateur Athletic Association have depressed and discouraged me by their mismanagement of the whole coach- ing system, by not giving proper recognition to a national pro coach." CITY HALL OVERCROWDING STILL SERIOUS Crown Assets Disposal Corporation has put a $215,000 price tag on the old Kitchener post office building, if the City ofy Kitchener wants to buy, it. If not the building will be sold by tender. It is standard practice with CADC to make a special price on surplus government property when it is sought by a city for purposes of municipal improvement. This was what happened in the case of the old Oshawa Post Office and adjoining site formeriy occupied by the old Customs building, but the City turned it down. The much-needed de- partmental exodus from City Hall to ease serious over-crowd- ing will start at the end of August -- the Welfare Department will move to rented quarters in a building occupied by Mc- Laughlin Fuel Oi] Ltd, on Kjng street west. City Hall em- ployees are crowded closer than sardines in a can Canada Advised Two People Kill OfUS. Plans In Pipeline Blast To Check Tax Two persons believed to be pro- OTTAWA | Communist saboteurs were re- (CP)--The United explosion of a bomb planted at States government has advised|an American-owned oil pipeline Canada of its plans to set up near Lake Maracaibo an interdepartmental commit. Officials said the bomb ap- tee to keep a check on the parently went off prematurely promised exemption for new at the Creole Petroleum Com Canadian securities issues from pany pipeline that carries oi! the proposed U.S. tax on Aer-/from the Lake Maracaibo field Pet's bullet last month, ican purchases of foreign secu-/2¢ar here. It has been the tar rities. get of three other attemped The U.S. notice to the finance bombings department here, received Sat. urday, was accompanied by an assurance that the newest move FUND GROWS EDMONTON (CP) -- The involves no departure from the | Northwest Territories Flood Re- July 21 agreement under which lief Fund has almost doubled to(Ceived "a real tr yre exemption was granted che committee will not meaniwas established after Canadian borrowings U.S, market. In the July 21 announcement . of the exemption for Canadian), securities issues, the United), ; cumini & States. said it interended to sivelos nee Rag gs ap he yCanadian issues a complete €X-|a32°. fore sais ~ emption from the American tax oe ee The tax is aimed at reducing the drain on U.S. gold reserves] resulting from outflows American Capital In return, the Canadian gov. in the/Fort Simpson, N.W.T rament undertook not to take dvantage of continued tax-free serves "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YET WITHIN REACH OF ALL" 390 King W. 728-6226 CLEAN -YOUR FURNACE TODAY FREE TO CUSTOMERS au PERRY 723-3443 DAY OR NIGHT graphed a Soviet trawler picking territorial waters. There was no lup submarine - detection buoys/indication the sub was refuel- jdropped by another Canadian ling. jaircraft, says Fellows | eens Widow _jbage ported killed Sunday night in the $121,392 from $69,257 in less *han|Windsor police department on Canadian officials were in-la month, Treasurer Lorne Sny-jher ormed that establishment o!/der reported Saturday. The fund never had the opportunity to be : ; spring/escorted in a friendly manner rationing or licensing of new foods ravaged Hay River and)by police occasions Canadian trawlermen| ple of incidents reported in re have surprised submarines re-jcent years snd Ad'y-al Ray- fuelling from 7,000-ton '"'fishing|ner's testimony before the par- supply" ships. He say. RCAF |iamentary defence committee, plane spotted Soviet submar-| A navy spokesman said about ines on the surface in the mid-ithree years ago a Canadian) dle of Russian fishing fleets. fishing captain reported sight-/ Near Grand Banks off New.|ing a sub alongside a Russian| foundiand, RCAF planes photo-| fishing fleet mother ship outside | He also said it is not uncom.| Fellows quotes Admiral H, S./™on for fishing fleets to recover Rayner, Canadian naval chief of sonobuoy detection gear which istaff, as testifying to a special|is dropped from the air in prac- |parliamentary committee on de. tice. No effort is made to re- fence that the '"'presence of a Cover the gear which is not se- lforce of this size must be con-/cret sidered a potential menace." Admiral Rayner said in his But there is little Canada testimony regarding the size of icould do as long as the Rus-/the Russian fishing fleet that the seeeuanas mre . " "presence of a force of this size must be considered a potential jmenace in time of crisis. or hos tilities." ber of foreign inspectors It cani | BURIED ALIVE } water. Couple Rescued After 55 SKOPJE, Yugoslavia (AP)-- A Belgian and his wife, dug from the ruins of the Hotel Ma- cedonia Sunday 55 hours after Skopje's killer earthquake en- tombed them, said they had about abandoned hope and were ready to commit suicide, "If we were not rescued in a few hours, Serge and I were go- ing to cut our wrists and die to- gether,"' said Suzanne Jacque- imart, 32, as she told from her 'Says Slavery | WEATHER FORECAST Still Exists WNDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Negro| islavery still exists in the United! States and must be elim ted] before 'world peace can be achieved, the widow of Mississippi integration \Medgar Evers said here day Mrs. Myrlie Evers was guest The heat wave speaker during emancipation|Southern and central sections of Day celebrations. She spoke tothe province was drawing to a about 150 persons--mostly Ne-|close this morning as cooler and lgroes--who barely fi the drier air began to move in be- ifirst two rows of an amphithea-|hind a weather front lying just tre in Jackson Park. east of Lake Huron. A few show "In Mississippi -- where half °"S and scattered thunderstorms the population is Negro--colored "ere occu ring in the vicinity of people cannot even drive a nis front, Dut fan © aot WE . truck They are not seasonable temperatu $s may: lowed to hold state jobs. It's one ne nee ot ee all right for a Negro to dig 4 co : at ditenne, but only with Bg * ws presen' nt Akt eer nis Watching seaha Gate east of Lake Superior is caus-} oe ie the hin ane tee ball ng much cooler weather with oein We ea still in sta eacel' or skies and mon oma ' } 5 area Of rain in northern sec due to the color of our skin tions of the province. Tuesday TELLS OF HUSBAND Should be considerably warmer The 30 . year - old mother of/{" these parts but another low three children described life|Pressure s y stem approaching with her husband. Miss Lake Superior from the Prair field secretary for the N ie threatens showers ¢ Association for tt Lake St ment of Colored People since -@ke Huron, Niagara, La 1954, who was killed by a snj-/{@70, southern Georgian is Halibtrton regions, Windsor, , London, Hamilton, Toronto Partly cloudy with a few show ers and scattered thunderstorms today but turning cooler anj ess humid. Mostly sunny with seasonable temp ures Tues day. Wind southwest 15 to 20 becoming northwest by evening Northern Georgian Bay, Ai goma, southern white River, Timagami regions, North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: Cloudy with a few sunny inte>. vals and cooler with scattered "In Jackson they're always showers today. Mostly sunny around--not for protection--but/with seasonable temperature to intimidate negroes," she/Tuesday but with increasing jSaid cloudiness late in the day. Wes! slain| leader} TORONTO (CP) Sun-\issued by the weather office at 3 am : Synopsis in l s "Before that assassin's bulle had taken his life he had given it to the cause anyway," she said. "He believed that by help- jing his people to be free he would be helping the country" Mrs. Evers said she had re * from the arrival in Canada. "J | DIXON'S OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER SO YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 Geing Fishing ... WEEK OF AUG. Sth f RENU-TEX PROCESS RINKERS CLEANERS "THE BEST IN TOWN" Phone 725-1191 Mostly Sunny During Tuesday --Forecasts erly . ist , Peterborough winds near 15 becoming northwest 20 today Cochrane: Cloudy and cool with occasional rain today but clearing toward evening. Mosiiy sunny and warmer Tuesday bu with. increasing cloudiness in the afternoon. Northerly winds near 20 becoming light tonight Northern White River: Cloudy and cool with showers today but clearing during the afternoon Partly cloudy and warmer Tue; day .with afternoon showers Northerly winds near 15 becom- ing light this -afternoon Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Tuesday Windsor 65 St. Thomas.. 62 London ... 60 Kitchener ... 60 Mount Forest.. 55 Wingham 55 Hamilton : 62 Catharine 62 Toronto .. 65 58 60 50 55 55 55 50 52 45 45 40 45 Trenton ... Killaloe . Muskoka North Bay Sudbury Eariton ... f Sault Ste Marie... Kapuskasing . White River... |Moosonee . {Timmins a) Se Ry AD 4g 4g ag « Ot OT St Ot Ot wt OG ;to be pulled out. Hours hospital bed a story of horror apparently pigeon-holed Khrush. man and giving me and maddenng thirst. Her 35-year-old biologist hus- band, Serge, lay beside her, covering from shock At Red Unity MOSCOW (AP) -- Premier | Khrushchev apparently has been |rebuffed in an effort to weld his |European Communist allies into |a co-ordinated economic unit controlled from Moscow. The Council for Mutual Econo- jmic Assistance, or Comecon, jafter a meting of Communist }party and government officials jhere during the last week, is. sued a communique Sunday that chev"s proposals for a Kremlin. based central planning organ. Romania opposed the plan to sion of the summer conference of. the Canadian Institute on Public Affairs The opinions came chiefly from a Roman Catholic priest of German Jewish birth; a phil- osopher; and a Scientist. The priest, Rev. Gregory Baum, associate professor of theology and director of ecu- menical studies at St. Michael's College, Toronto, saw God as continually working throug aning to man's life The philosopher, Vivas, a native. of Colombia of Dr. Eliseo and Curtail its heavy industry devel-/ Venezuelan parentage and now bruises. Mrs. Jacquemart's in-|9P™Ment in favor of light indus-\a professor of moral and intel- juries were minor Doctors and rescue workers said it was a "miracle" that anyone could have survived in the tomb of rock and mortar under the levelled four-storey hotel. Officials estimated that nearly 300 guests wcre in the popular tourist hotel when the walls came crashing down early Friday. Mrs, Jacquemart was the first Barely con- scious, she gasped out that her husband and others were still alive lower down. Then she | fainted Just then a hand poked out of a crack in the piles of shattered stone and voices in French cried out "Water! Water!" Oxygen tanks were rushed to the opening near where woman was found and air was pumped in under high pressure. Two hours later, Jacquemart was rescued. In an interview with the As- sociated Press, Jacquemart weakly described how he and his wife tried to quench their thirst by drinking their urine and sucking pieces of broken glass Jacquemar, said the quake struck moments after they awoke Friday morning. "I was just rising from the bed and my wife was sitting op- posite me on the edge of her bed." he said "Suddenly, everything started shaking. I grabbed my wife and held her tightly in my arms, Everything collapsed around us. We fell two storey. Fortunat- ely two wooden beams and the g fell above us forming a small dome which protected us. My legs were pinned under bricks and I was unable to move. My wife, however, was unhurt and could crawl and imove about our prison "We could see daylight. We had given up hopes of being saved. We never slept but closed or eyes for minutes at a time and saw visions." the _ trial and agricultural production for it and other of Moscow's al lies. Another obstacle to agree. ment on a common planning agency was believed to be the East Europeans' reluctance to sacrifice the limited economic independence from Moscow that they now enjoy. The Comecon conference, however, approved creation of a Soviet bloc international bank to facilitate multilateral pay- mens in foreign trade. transac- ions within the bloc, beginning Jan, 1 are conducted on an unwieldy bilateral basis between Com- munist trading partners be- cause of the absence of a con- vertible currency that could be used for. settling their outstand- ing accouns Hafez Boseos New Syrian Strongman DAMASCUS (AP)--Maj.-Gen. | jAmin Hafez emerged Saturday) as the undisputed strongman of| Syria. He was named army) /commander-in-chief and chair- man of the ruling national revo-; 'lutionary council. | He replaced Louaj Attassi,! who resigned from both posts. Damyascus radio interrupted radio and television programs! jwith the surprise announcement) that made Hafez, 52, the most poweful man in Syria. Attassi had headed the army and revolutionary council since a coup March 8 that brought him and the Ba'ath Socialist party to power--and ultimately jinto a dispute with President |Nasser of the United Arab Re- public that wrecked Nasser's Arab unity plans. Hafez already held the posts of deputy premier, deputy mili- tary governor and minister of defence and interior. Sars MORTGAGES Ample Funds for Ist MORTGAGES 2nd MORTGAGES We Also Purchase Ist and 2nd Mortgages N.H.A. LOANS ARRANGED You Will Find OUR SERVICE 1S FASTER OUR COST IS LOWER SCHOFIELD-AKER Limited 723-2265 -- 728-3376 After Hours 728-3376 SHES WILL BE FOR STAFF MODERN DRY CLEANERS AUG. Sth to AUG. 10th CLOSED HOLIDAYS Drive carefully and have a happy holiday These transactions now ~ lectual philosophy at Northwest- ern University, said he believes in God but completely disagreed \with Father Baum's concept of his place in human affairs. MUST LEARN SCIENCE The scientist, Dr. Cohen, director in graduate re- search in the history of science at Harvard, remained out of the argument concerning God but said science is one of the most formidable influences of our lives and he is appalled by the general ignorance regarding it. "We cannot hope,"' he said, "to live in a world of science if we continue in our ignorance) and if we fail to give it its} proper place in our education."'| Dr. Baum said God created! men in order to join them to) himself in friendship, and has} revealed himself so that we may) know who we are and what is' the meaning of our history. { Dr. Viyas replied that he does) not believe God is the key to the understanding of history. He described changes in thinking as) "the recession of God from mod-! ern man's consciousness," or) "the shift from a society organ-} ized sacramentally to one orga-' nized in secular terms." i CHRISTENDOM OBSOLETE? He also stated: j "Christendom no longer ex-| ists. The term even is obsolete. | We now talk of the West." With he desruction of Chris-| endom went the dramatic myths Bernard) 'expressed at. Sunday night's ses-;myths, we take to be liberal jtruths, as the story of Genesis |was one taken to be. | Father Baum said that when jthe Christian Community is iblind to values of idea's of the igospels, God sometimes leaps tbeyond the borders of the )church "Was not the intention of the |French Revolution something jwhich Christians should have jcarried out? Were not the ideals jof Marxism aims for which Christians should have labored |But we were slow to act and |God permitted the movement to go elsewhere, caught up in er- rors, to become a reproach to 5" |E The conference, which opened |Saturday and ends Wednesday, has as its topic "values in con- flict." FINE SLOWPOKES BRISTOL, England (CP) -- {Port authorities here may fine ifirms that are slow in removing jgrain cargoes from dockside silos. The fine would be im- posed in increased silo rental charges. Many Canadian. grain ships have been delayed at Bristol because of the conges- tion. NOW IS THE TIME To have that carpet or chest- erfield cleaned professionally in Oshawo's Original Carpet Cleaning Centre . where fully guoranteed satisfaction is assured, Phone 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. ) LEAN TENDER LEAN MINCED BEEF RINDLESS BACON BONELESS ROLLED BRISKET 2% - 3 LB. CHICKENS TROUD! 54 SIMCOE NORTH SPECIALS TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY GOVERNMENT INSPECTED MEAT CLUB STEAKS FRESH OVEN READY TUESDAY ONLY--WHILE THEY LAST 59 '3s. $] 39 39 35 C Ib AV.

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