~Frol Kozlov Considered As Khrushchev Successor . ~» s 12 The Guardian, hire Pope John XXIII stands with Paul Emile Cardinal Le- Ry PRESTON GROVER MOSCOW (AP) —- The next chief of the Soviet Union sue- ceeding Nikita Khrushchev per- haps is not yet in the presidium. But if he is, it is handsome, wavy-haired Frol Kozlov. Khrushchev has already pointed to this white - haired, square-built n as his succes- sor—as of now. Whether that will be true in two or three years, when Khrushchev is pass- ing into his 70s, is not easy to Ray. Kozlov is not Khrushchev’s closest friend on the presidium, ~ that strong body of leaders who run the Communist party: and Russia The premier's closest friend is Anastas Mikoyan, the old Bol-| shevik with the b®nt nose who has stood with Khrushchev through thick and thin. Mikoyan with his darting eyes, looks like a orfe-man conspiracy, but he is liked by Westerners because with him they can. discuss im- portant questions on a free- wheeling basis. STRICT PARTY LINE Kozlov is not like that. He knows the party line and _his only departure from it during talks with Western diplomats is when he baits them with sly digs about their countries. Koz- lov is one of those curious types who have come up ‘in between the old barricades, fighters such as Khrushchev and Mikoyan, and. the new cr thé “univer- sity-educated. . * ‘Kozlov is educated, in the in- tense way many Soviet leaders are educated. That is through technical and party schools and through the hard process of sur- viving ig the ifght for advance- | tent. in the party councils. That is a tough school. It has left most of the top Soviet lead- ers without any noticeable sense of humor. A misplaced wise crack can cost @ place on the Presidium. ‘ ~ A sensé of humor has sur- vived with Premier Khrushchev and, with Mikoyan. The recent purge of old Stalin- 4 ists didm’taffect Kozlov. He was ome generation behind. He is now about the age Khrushchev was during the last war.When Stalin was purging the party by one of the most ruthless jail and | slaughter programs in Russian history, Kozlov was making his most rapid rise toward the top through the i party machinery. HI } CARDINAL HAS AUDIENCE WITH ger, Archbishop of Montreal, | during an audience granted He was born a peasant in 1908 in a little town outside Moscow and at 15 went to work in a tex- tile mill. By then the revolution had occurred, Lenin was about to die and Stalin to succeed him. At the age of 18 Kozlov was foreman in the Communist-di- rected factory near Moscow where he worked. He became a N.Y. AMAZED BY DREAM CAR NEW YORK (AP) — New Yorkers’ eyeballs all but pop- ped when they spotted a sub- way car with: Deep red, plush carpeting on the floors. Window draperies of red, blue and purple hues. Vases holding fresh red and white carnations. Subdued, pastel lighting. A bar dispensing cham- pagne. ~ - Beautiful maidens, passing the champagne to passengers. This was the scene on a “dream car,” hooked into a subway train as a_ pub- licity stunt by the city’s junior chamber of commerce. The idea was to emphasize that people ought to try to keep their subway trains as clean as their living rooms at home, or something like that. The dream car, however, pred OF muse of 2 night: iv ; ; Here's a full-size feature you | mare before it endéd its run Tantved Ay mae may that oe the kind of styling ¢hat proves don't often get in cars that me ings Extra-flexible, extra- INTERIOR CRAFTSMANSHIP t > rrangements ford Se eent you know real value when you een gent fun 4-speed transmission is E 'e | ry interiors , permitted*to ride in it, and Boy § : ; 7 see it! Long, low. strikinaly -pete—with Envoy! Full family- @. available as_an_extray. nvoy's luxury i 5 are so many-were invited-that not Chand see it! 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Widest choice of high | - ‘The public, already pretty airman, Was lo ddl r that has adults ... even the trunk is ste. 5 J ] “ Tesponse to date but stated that | color and glamou fashion color combinations — | well convinced that cattle get better .treatment on trains to market than people in New | Yérk subways, could only gawk from the outside—and snort. . “Give me some service,’ railed one..riled dniqnker. “Don't give me no flowers.”- a — enna ae SSE X Se x il | RITE- Fitaroy St. POPE ian [International Crew Works At New Biblical’ Film Story By EUGENE LEVIN ROME (AP)—An international crew of moviemakers is wind- ing up camera work on a $12 000,000 film recreating“ the {ast days of the biblical cities of sin —Sedom and Gomorrah. | Its producer, Italy's dig Tita- | Bus firm, hopes to have it in the world cinemas by the fall of 1962. The movie—called The Last Days of Sodom and Gomorrah has been before the cameras for \@ year. | Although the actual filming | was. completed in December, | weeks more will be required to cut it down to its planned length —three hours—and to fit if with the necessary trimmings, in- eluding an o.rigina! musical score by academy award-win- ner Dimitri Tiomkin and a sound track in several lan- | guages. | The film ts one of the ntost ambitious projects undertaken during the last year by an Ital- er, But it is not meant for the Italian market alone, and it has an international history. HOLLYWOOD HELPS Working with Tifanus on the film is Joseph Levine, who will distribute it in the United States ~The-director, Robert -Atdrich. is one of Hollywood's tops. The cast includes British actors Stewart Granger, as Lot. and Stanley Baker, as Astaroth: Italian actresses Pier Angeli, as Iidith (Lot’s wife wko turns to salt), and Rossana Podesta, as Shuah (Lot’s daughter): and French actress Anouk Aimee, as the pleasure - mad Queen | Bera of Sodom. Althou much of the film has ,been shot ‘in Titanus studios in , italy, all the major outdoor location in Morocco. About 3, 000 Moroccans were used as ex- tras in spectacular crowd scenes and several thousand Moroccan cavairy men were employed in battle scenes . One reason the movie makers went to Morocco was that they found there a village they con- sidered a real. existing substit- ute for Sodom. without having to resort to the usual papier- mache and plaster sets Consequently,~the city of So- dom, as seen in the picture. ac- tually is Ait-Benhaddou, a forti- fied desert village carved out of the rock of the southern. slopes of the Atlas Mountains some 4,- 000 years ago. The only ‘‘mal® up" applied, to Ait-Benhaddou was the addition of a towered wall at the foot of the village to serve as ‘Sodom’s' gate- Query Aimed At Members On Salaries OTTAWA (CP) Members of Parliament will be asked this session to debate whether theic $10,000-a-year pay is sufficient Douglas Fisher (CCF Port Arthur) gave notice. of a resolution asking ‘‘that the government give immediate consideration to the’ need for in- creasing the income of mem- bers of Parliament.” Mr. Fisher has raised the question of adequacy of pay at previous sessions without® pro- posing a formal resolution on it He said Friday he considers a $3,000 increase. a minimum. | cerned CCF Members Revive House Divorce Issue OTTAWA CP One- of .he two CCF MPs who have waged a campaign against the pariia- mentary divorce system have given notice of three separate measures of divorce reform. Arnold Peters*!CCF Timis- kaming) plans to re-introduce his bill to vest in the Exchequer Court of Canada the power to deal with divorce applications which now come before Parlia- ment from Quebec and New- foundiand, where there are s0 provincial divorce courts Mr. Peters, who teamed with Frank Howard (‘CCF-—Skeena) at earlier sessions {o slow down passage of divorce bilJs in pro- Parliament having also proposes test against to handle them, a bill to set up the office of Parliamentary proctor to over- see handling of divorce cases The proctor’s job would be to ensure that all parties con- in divorce applications to Parliament are advised tne action is pending and that there is opportunity to contest the ac- tion. He would be required to report annuatty to Parliament. WIDEN GROUNDS Mr. Peters’ third would legalize as grounds for divorce, adultry, incurable in- sanity h*4bitua! = cmmuinal- ity, drug addiction, drunken- ness for a period of two years or conviction for such cnees as rape and sodomy At present, applications for divorce from Quebec and New- foundland residents are heard by the Senate divorce commit- tee which recommends for or measure against parliamentary The committee has in the past accepted adultery as the only ground Mr. Peters’ bill provides that provinces which have divorce courts also could adopt the ad- ditional grounds if they so de sired - tries Limited of Sorel. Que., Gov't Backs Boxcar Sales To Argentina OTTAWA ‘CP) The federal government has told three Can- adian firms that it will supply the credit backing if they can win an order to supply railway bexcars to Argentina. It could run to $30,000,000 A trade department man said that _ represen- tatives of Natiomal Steel Car Company of Hamilton, Dominion Stee! and Coal Corporation of Sydney, N.S., and Marine Indus- now are in Buenos Aires negotiating for a contract spokes- “We feel the Canadian fitrins have a good chance of getting this deal,’ he said The trade department — z0' wind of the Argentine situation about two months ago and told the three companies ‘‘to get cracking on it he said. The government pledged itself to supply credit for about 3,000 boxcars. divorce LAWYER WINS ACQUITTAL Sitting on notes and evi behalf. Confident he will alse dence he compiled = during defeat a second charze of nearly two years in Canadian fraud, Rauch. 46. spent much jails. New York lawyer Sol of his time in prison delving Rauch awaits cab on his re- Into the cases of fellow prison- Tease from Don Jai!. Toronto ers who he plans to help. He Rauch won an acquittal on a Was one of four men original- theft charge when he became lv Spnienced for theft involve’ the first prisoner ever to ap ng #missing cheque for $960,+ pear before the Supreme 000 from Brilund Mines Lim- (CP Wirephote) Court of Canada on his own ited. ‘CLEANERS LTD. — | scenes were photographed on bf the pontiff in his private . library im the Vatican Palace. ae ea member of the party that year, | Two years later, at 20, he was sent to Leningrad to study at | the Polytechnical Institute. He | became a metallurgical engin- | eer, but he was pulled into | party organizational work in 1939. when he was-.31 and has never really left it. | He moved from party organiz- ations into governmental | branches and back into party posts to get a broad range of | | governmental training. He was | head of the Leningrad regional | party organization when Stalin | died in 1953. After that‘came a quick move | to Moscow, where he advanced fast. He helped draft resolutions for the 20th congress where | Khrushchev. denounced Stalin | and the ‘cult of personality.” | The next year he was chosen to the presidiym itsqf and be- | came first deputy to Khrush- | chev, a title he shared then with | Mikoyan. Last year Khrushchev clearly caesianated him as his second in command, or heir. PERFORMANCE WITH ECONOMY Envoy's outstanding Econo- Power four-cylinder engine has allthe stamina, allthe ‘‘go'' you want—combined with gas- saving economy for real sav- Special Scout | Request Parents of Scouts and Wolf |Cubs in the Charlottetown Met-| ‘ropolitan Area are asked to re-! turn the card which they retently | STYLE $ . a - T Envoy has the ‘‘prestige look’’— 6-PASSENGER COMFOR big-family size! at least one hundred more| Mothers. and Fathérs of Scouts | and Cubs are required if camp-| Chandler also stated that other interested citizens may volunteer to help by phoning Boy Scout! 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