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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1962-09-20, Page 2Italy Has Its Labor Problems When French and Italians ttm It( sling erev. s celebrated theii momentous Meeting beneath Mont Blanc. the toasts drunk lye l . t ..e easily outnum- bered t 2 2 c. d nn. 22. champagne, fulls a third of the ''French" tunnee weee weetransplanted Ital- ians, Were the tunnel ea cant- pleted may well prove the imam aitery threa.th xhieh they - .'.,ae; n a.f thattis ds of Italians like e t major h::i..., -. ,.:e in E:.. •_ 's pest - b k. ...sive. t:c late. , t wair tC. ent,ei.e.etts a,- en indr.st;ial a 12, Italy ex - the nil. ...... . ... I.''t ..: _ '331- rsetit. 1 , Ttein rt.,. EZ5.. C.. . it.. ....,1101q Saute have 1a;,i2,tt i is:hikes,. One worker Front the aouth of Italy, trans. lilted to etertnitny", commented teseritlYi "If you cannot have the �tt�1,nshine as wo do at home, there isn't much difference between working here or in the fog of Torino or Milano,,, Because the Italian Goma- tient encourages the export of Its unemployed, it has refrained yo far from joining, or even come /nesting on, the new effort to win them back once they are trained. A French official, how- ever, sees a way around the problem Is Italy continues its econ'einia resurgence. he asserts, its ttnemrlovinent problem, and immizration prob.- disappear in a very s::4:t tine.' Just As in Canada YOU Hove fa Pay! (?r :.t.. , ..t..::1 q ,t. t c:2 t•a".sed. as tho iitvestigation hito Ply.houtii Mass., mal truok .. t urs . i.: Wille snakes urthe ..< we:: the Fed: Re- ef the. Federal States. United States Treas- ..-. ......iE':4 ..: taxpayer the :.c. was e'; route r: e:al Reserve Ea:tk in Boit_ , iro r..: ills e1. Cape Ci - .^I- will pay ...... . . eta iosi. + .t.....: c _..k said -"irt to lot raid it vittivt .ed S.s.es 1 -sae: 01iiee alt each. ---t tite. Bra,. _ ......:.. 'tines •alse have setee. ct ` 'eine. Fclosesee liaseidteeerei reservesserva IT'S TC -0 CLOS! if it's less th i sire ciir length far every 1C0 mites per hour .17:7 fir tninee V,11c_r Pitkin. A FLIER, TOO —:- P - 31 •,,:`e of Rate. toes N. 4 teems to Pesel F-ataance.s flier 'c 1 her own right. S -e is a c'ir'.. en seryl re Fitt v.ho cr,,e swarked cs a flying ;rst ucrar. She s nave i staff meriaber of o research institute. in 1958, when she talk pert in an air show as a stunt flier, s^e had legged over 800 fie;ng hairs—rare than her husband. Married in 1955, they hove o daughter, 6. REFLECT ON THIS — The winking specs m;.ceied by a blonde in reality is a new type mirror far fancy hairdos. It enables the girl to see a back-of-the-heeid reflection in an- other mirror, in order to groom her tresses. GwztvioLine P. Ci -ox My tom,:...is' istiie'r.- ins a Fhipland nest SZ e ay a sf ant • :a er.d ietturer a"• a zellege near Bath. When :ne his des: na- ..._. 2 immediatelysaid — "Bath Ch. weY.Ia.•? relatives. :n Bath., • :1t ...-. 'wonderful. - W n o and w: • do :ley. liven' Jun. • .tae and I was e:y 11 - ria. A. I ceelei remember be r was that as a girl 1 had an uneleliving in Bata whose name was Alfred Page - C:coils arra ha owned a ge <-(p. In felt: we had .els . over the $latish Isles. ..e r. c.- this one and that arid ret the ornry names I ceune give.IS.e... were ..s two fits/. Peggy and Des- .-,: Fitz-Gee:a:Oa earn of whom is aea.r._,.anti :as a small tam at._ _e as ..ng as treeteee was a 1 e I knew sa mualt about _.:r relatives. She ken :is S:nee :Hostler died wehaveapart. New w: -_n Ellieni is taking up ree- d nee: in .a.- the -'a cc _ t- ..fray WI c:..-_ tee hintfew fa" 'v ..acre_ se he watrident feel tante ..... like a .tazge. in `a strareee land. Bu is.1e- y•,Htie i�ie': • :. arra until of small - ;tebtek ane ▪ - a.. .e family :safe. .f hick ef; -ell rf 21'1 ..aa _any o`thtse :he ee-- pie ne meets h.e aset a -t ereefamily e e :here you never kenet: e _ stone - -a. v 1 . �a s' ser pun:lee which _: tne swath c'tee nt.,rite a'? ('Bra- sea. __hal the seiry ep- _. ed p::... Siefere aet. a :gli B:-. _... 2 ae' ..'$s a reel petson as the naer.e was "o ::..._.:nee a:yhappened - .- sornareein - " • ;wn Well. the : - - I we -tee a ;as• .._-: ,. _n the name was ae8:— _. heing the reataar. name no.. .art:=:3 -_ the ra .7.'7.7. ▪ - 7:.•!:- ? Tritths..t talk a't.tnr. her _ ate sate- .. ....x. - :vii: t• i that _ - • _ ... ,. .-- •Sea;. Pia. �... :.. ., areund Le 1"e/self al- t most p to the week he died. The idea Ia am really trying to get aer- ss is this: that you and I and other members of oureur families ehcu.d get busy and PITT DOWN IN WRITING as nil's:h family history as we can get teeether even if it is only ~tett- scribbler. T2" k for a minute if you are a senior member of your family father, mother, aunt uncle or grandparent — and you shonid pass away, what would the : u per members know of the.r as esters? Perhaps you May '"4-k it involves too much work; too many letters going back and firth so you don't want to bether. I admit such a prrect does take up a lot of t e especially if you get really interested and start digging into old reels:t'y office files and so on. And of course you niust be prepared for surprises — plea- sant and unpleasant: Fou may find ycu are related to those in high places. On the other hand here and there you may find evidence of a shady record, cr of illegitimacy, or of a won- derful remlance. Perhaps your grandfather married his moth- er chambermaid. You may cf elf as being of E: glisb descent and then dis- cover "nevery . gen erati.ns back au: peoplecame front Sweden __ Switzerland. Whatever the _sell I.. geerantee that once yies etart pr ng you will come up with sera .Fres ng family dare will lead you on and :.- until you find ycurself with a tare .: y tree that really a to something. And I c think :- a be:ter legacy y el le.ave to posterity So '^.0 ab::it it friends? If eeeeet;: are young start asking older members about your family „_.ck- e . Or, , `f you are get- ng -.. ira at. to get the y: ng~ones interested. And as I seta ba ^re, r:.... drwn in writ- Medical Science is doing a great deal to lengthen human life. but it will never get women past 40. 4e wit .- It :':a:S c�,>a faintlies t thea. . .. - - G . aid s — £ father",, side were n:. s-: irle..lied two • brothers and. th:•es 11/4:•ins of the girls n a.r.ed s.-.: -. oth'er two s died: .. titeir early twenties, l . ^k :y ther.las a.- t thirty—she the fa4 er of t. at tatrala to be n r.., six and tc...:.' Volatil t•t.lne1 ie Eyes Panama Canal And She Sees Red LEON 111 N 142'.IQ (lilted State:: Neal '/J ti, lii 'A,), Newspaper Enterprise analyst likeall Reds elm had a rtnul„ but PANAMA (iSta,A, Thehna .Kung, a till, den:Leer brunette, is i idc 1 (c ti , : I ii(y' partis- an 113 the C r illi; In 12111 is the only weime, ,tele. ,I + Panat eee Natures,! laeseualy. nee dedi- cated h(.. 11 11114:13: Sam out '21 the C21 !(n .,url .Subs(itutinr; a u 1,.1oi ,11133 love." The toogiesswtrllill2, j!111 1•(' turned fro:'t a,e2 llXtelPir21 trip to Cuba and Motr'r,w, 'told nuc ".m.y goal is complete Pares eitian sovereignty in tie! c alud She insisted that the 11)03 trraty which glarttt'd alie United Slates exclusive rights to the Canal is null and void "slime 1w freely elected Panamanian legislature ever ratified 1121' treaty" Panama's moat bimetal la1'1ish politician is 40-iali with a fiery temperament. She was aimply bubbling, with good will during her conversation with me. Senora Kites even agreed to let the Una -a e „th'• foot Vit. hill anti contempt fur pro-d(mo(r,.die anti ry-I]S. 1(ntIIi Anieriear2 leaden; like President Isamuto lir•eenl- ereut r 1' V(u('O('111 and Coate lti et 1 1'a,, alaa.1 1'1e: (1.311 .103(5 n u�,tcs. C t two 11 10.1. rtt(,(1 1 fin i item aitltootti1 ll( av,: ,.lie• ofl+a. 5C1(.t•;' watt hit“, I not not 13 Commur;,1%," Son. ora a. i`r,i•n :ate (aided with ft .'.(nilo: "I'iv, (1'n- 331111111 t1: ate eh ter; thee newer admit '111121 tura :n-' (/12nlntm- 1)12 .131 rurt•ivc a21/ in tc0c- lilin( ahntlt Ila2' 1',(u.i.a(i Canal (hurtle: her recoil, Jri1, to Cuba :11111 M vt' iw? C11t nu" :liar replied. "My villi., were of a purely social nature alit/ eel Castro and Pre- 1n1e1• IC1u•n:illehev did rriention the. Canal mid other Latin Amer- ican problems mer- ic Inpr(2blems casually. But only casually, you mete :tend." In 1942, during the last war, Senora King was jailed by the Pana2'manianauthorities o:stensi- THELMA KING contribute the technical person- nel for some years to the opera- tion of the Canal. But, she added. grimly, "If I have my way there will be one flag flying over the Canal, Pana- ma's flag, all authorities will be Panamanians and there will be no North American governor in the Canal Zone." Thelma King clearly repre- sents the new type of leftist leader rising in Latin America to plug Castro's and Moscow's line against the Alliance for Progress. Like Fidel Castro, before he seized power in Cuba, and Pre- mier Cheddi Jagan of British Guiana, she insists she is not a Communist. But each time she speaks she utters a Red cliche. For instance, there was no doubt in her mind that only Russia fights for peace and that the bly because she held pro -Nazi views. But in 1946 she was sent to prison again for staging a left- ist revolt in Colon. The revolt failed, but Senora King is not discouraged. "I was inexperienced in 1946," she re- marked sadly. "The next time I shall know better." She was candid in her admis- sion that she was in favor of a Cuban -type dictatorship "since Latin American problems cannot be solvedthrough free elec- tions." However, she emphasized that what she aims to establish is "a dictatorship 0f love and not of terror. I don't like to kill people if I can help it." Is Senora King indulging in a pipe dream? This :writer left her convinced that like British Guiana's Premier Jyagan she is a far subtler leftist demagogue than Castro. Just Ten Seconds Of Silent.e Not the least impressive mo- ment of "America to Europe." the 15 -minute broadcast that of- ficially inaugurated transatlan- tic television programming, was the l0 -second "moment of si- lence" with which it closed. Howard K. Smith, at the UN, in- troduced the brief island of quiet, by quoting the late Dag Hammarskjoid: "We all have within us a center of stillness surrounded by silence." Silence is a rare commodity these days, especially in the bustle of mid -Manhattan where the UN is; it was a tribute to its preciousness that a portion of so historic a broadcast, so rigorously limited in its duration by the swift speeding of a satellite from Dna horizon to another, should be given to it. And it's worth noting that the moment wasn't last; we, at least, took advantage of it to reflect on the pleasures of what we had seen, and we suspect that others did the sante. It gave the entire production an added bit of depth. And think what it could do for the whole of television program- ming—or, for that matter, far the whole of American life. A 10 - second moment of silence in Times Square, at rush hour in Grand Central or the BMT; 10 seconds of silence while fighting a bargain -basement crowd, or riding imprisoned in a taxi, or sitting in a barber chair, or watching the Twist. As a mass tranquilizer, it might even replace the cocktail hour.— New York Herald Tribune. ISSUE 36 - 1962 Art.iise ()dile and N..(lrlle, from loft hi ri11121, svow1 three ncael ,;:s — eat ineile at their teen heir, too - -ten tlx2 Chomps Llysce,s, Ports, France.