his un-named creations on his return home for the opening of a Montreal exhibition of his Robert Roussii, a controver- sial Montreal sculptor now liv- in Paris, stands by one of ST Support Oi Diet May Hinge On Action By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP) —- Continued Social Credit voting support for the government may depend to a great extent on what key members of the party consider to be a behind - the - scenes struggle within the cabinet. Social Credit is pressing pri- vately as well as publicly for government moves in four areas affecting business and the econ- omy. On the success of these efforts may hang the ii of the min- ority Progressive Conservative government in the Commons. T ate, Social Credit votes have provided the edge which has kept the Progressive Con- servative administration in of- _ _ flee and b e aten off the com_ on business, especially where it bined strength of Liberals and °°mp°te_5 with, p“b”°_Iy ' °“”‘°d New Democrats. -companies which. enjoy tax ad- The reason behind this voting "a“ta3‘:‘5 We’ privately ‘ °“’“°d support has been described pub— "°mPem°"5' at minimum cost to finance such projects as schools, stree sewer an water serv es. Mu- nicipal projects have absorbed large amounts of investment capital from the investment market. Freed of this demand for in- vestment money, Social Credit men argue the investment market would have increased capital available for industrial and resources development. Their second objective is to ac eve a climate of easier credit for small business consumers. A systematic lowering of tar- iff barriers is a third point and fourth is the need for rapid CONTROVERTS-|Arl ARTIST ETURNS HOME and th a tax reform to ease the burden ti i work The controversial artist I described Quebec House in Paris as “a big zero." Whether the government is prepared to make any moves that would be acceptable to so- cial Credit remains to be seen. But if it does, the distinct pos- sibility exists that Social Credit will continue to support the gov- ernment with its votes in the Commons. not only for this ses- sion but for future sessions. AP General Manager Announces Retirement lie added: NEW YORK (AP) -— An-i nouncement was made Tuesdayitemplated J. ing completion. I am convinced Starzel as general manager of this is the appropriate time for successor to . d that) it is in the or- of the retirement of Frank The Associated Press. He has it been he chief executive officer . of the world-wide news service for the last 14 yea . Designation of Starzel's suc- cessor is expected to be made today by the board of directors of The AP, now holding its reg- ular October meet ere. Starzel’s decision to retire. he told the board. was “based on reasons of which the presi- dent of The Associated Press was informed three years ago. to be effective upon the com- pletion of several major pro- jects then being undertaken." vents people from swimming in Starzel the Rhine or drinking its wa- ter, industries are unable to use the water and fish can no longer live in it. . (an ganization's best interests it have the benefit of younger direction with a new approach and philosophy now, well in ad- vuuce of my mandatory retire- ment date in 1909.” REMAINS CONSULTANT Starzel remains as a consult- ant to The AP. He said he plans to retire to his farm, near South Londonderry, Vt., and will dertake no other employment. Benjamin M. McKelway, edi- tor of the Washington Star and president of The AP, said the reluctantly accepted Star- retully %onsider_e,d de- transportation of refuse to the b°‘“‘d gel» zel’s ::ca Pollution, he said, now pre- “A510”- , 58. is Iowa, where he first "began newspaper First World War on his father's semi-weekly, Le Mars Glohe- hers and other publications in with subscribers in 87 countries. subsidiary of U ournalism. February, 1929. in New York. City Press-Citizen. Des Moines “With the con- developments near- ington rm.) Pantagraph and Chicago Journal. He attended C811’? 0l‘W81‘d and the University of Iowa. but left college to concentrate on his newspaper career. HELD VARIOUS POSTS In AP's general offices. he worked successively in the fea- ture service. as night city edi- tor and as a general news su- pervisor until his appointment as chief of bureau for Ohio 1935, with headquarters in Col- umbus. Starzel returned to New York in 1942 as traffic executive, be- came an assistant general man- ager the following year. acting general manager in May, 1948, and general manager in Octo her of the same year. During Starzel’s administra- tion, world-wide services of The AP underwent record expan- during the sion The co-operative agency serves 1,749 newspaper mem- that S‘ III!- a native of work rest. Except for a short period in the advertising department, of the Universal Portland Ce-' ment Company of Chicago. a .S. Steel, he has spent all his professional life in 1 Before joining The AP in Starsel worked on the Iowa Register and Tribune. Bloom- NW9‘ Ameflun M’ D°’°“°" the University of Notre Dame/ .3 improved fighter plane to improved Fighter no The Gnardisn. Charlottetown. Thurs. 0-4. 11. 19324 in mm; ‘wet have —— ——-——- -- -——-a- for more be a need sensors Ewe mi and Aircraft \ is listed U.s.-Canada Need WASHINGTON (CP) - U.S. Gen. John K. Gerhart, chief of Command, says the United States and Canada must have U.S. hart the, United States, 2.371 U.S. ra- dio and TV stations and more than 4,500‘ subscribers abroad, including both newspapers and broadcasters. The total, exceed- 8.6m, represen an in- E’ in since 1948. The growth of AP news, fea- ture and photo services and en- terprise was. accompanied un- der Starzel’s direction by sig- nificant technological expan- sion. including photofax. a method of facsimile transmis- sion of pictures; teletypesetter, a device for transmitting news on a perforated tape fed di- rectly into typecasting ma- chines in newspaper offices, and a global system of radio- teletype circuits now linking slight AP's general headquarters here North counter Russia's growing mill- th ed tary g . Disclosing that he already has PPODOB in capable of fighting at altitudes of more ing for f to lolter for relatively long pe- riods. “It must be able to operate at high or low altitudes and crease of more than 25 per cent l;?v2°0oam'i°l:°.l.‘ lzdar capability ciation Monday. “We have posed just such a fighter to the department of defence and now are awaiting its evaluation of our stud " However good the U.S. tury series of fighters-the 101, 102, 108 and F-4D—“they still not give us the operational ad- of little help in intercepting an intruding aircraft.” ' DOUBTS DEW LINE VALUE With Russia claiming to have a global rocket that can hit the . day system ed such a plane to the He added: “However. we feel defence department, Ger- strongly that it must be main. told U.s. tained as a hold-back line to prevent un d e t e c t e d enemy bombers from approaching our an feet, rang- vital areas.” rum its base and able "'"“'— —-————- —* DISCOUNTEII EXPAND 33- 1964. the eight discount i-otailers now in the business ex- pect to have 90 outlets across 9 asso, Can da. pro- cen- do speed advantage is only E . ‘i '\‘r ’U’ AM: is" |\.\Iu I V t ,‘ ,;' , ._ \_ . . )- r ‘i . H. ,1) ' ‘. ,’* lb ‘VH0 ‘in MN!“ “ "‘ ‘Ill’!!! m~‘ "‘ ‘ . American continent from Centenary Director Appointed OTTAWA (CP)—The Canadian Centenary Council Wednesday announced the appointment of Norbert Prefontaine. 35, of Mon- treal as its first full-time direc- The council, made up of more an May 1960 to stimulate appropri- ate observances of Canada's 100th anniversary of Confedera- on in Mr. Prefontaine leaves his job as managing director of the As- sociation of Quebec Road Con- Tti-actors to assume his new po- ‘rsition Oct. 15. licly by Social Credit Leader Robert Thompson as a desire to give the government a I chance to put forward its legis-: A lative and budgetary proposals; However, Mr. Thompson may} have additional reasons based on the possibility th at some im- _ ' portant members of the cabinet} are close‘ in basic philosophy to 3 Social Credit thinking. if Soci r al Credit monetary ideas are not‘ taken into account. F"‘a“ced ""St‘;r ti’? 3'.’ gizettled Speaker Marcel Lambert E°m° ere “9eck‘Sh;n gaisthad to stand off seven opposi- fl'l’mm°:vSernment cannot gub_;tion protests Wednesday about -scigibegto Social Credit theories his stringent enfqrccmem .°f of m o n e t a ry .expansion. but C°m".‘°“5 “.195 durmg the dam’ pointedly added that both So- ‘l"°5"°“ l’°"°d- . cial Credit and the Progressive C°m"‘°"5 C“ stom dlctates Conservatives stand “fairly and squarely on the principle, of sup- porting maintenance of. private‘ enterprise in this -country." H n Four basic objectives are be-rs ‘ll’ . ing stressed by Social Credit pea 9’ ' itr_v before regular business be- gins each day must be urgent and of national importance. Roland Michener, n the last Commons, . . A this a broad interpreta- supporters, inclu ng M r . ig.ave and .-:"*°::::....‘;f.....‘"e :<"*::'* ier Manning 'me" ‘ 0 g m J” 5'' result was that there was a single opposition appeal rof any of his rulings, a rare {tribute for any Speaker who is, in effect, appointed by the gov- ernment. But with the government now in a minority. Speaker Lambert is trying to tighten up the ques- tion period so that the Com- mons can "get on with its work. But his rulings and protests again them are resulting in lengthy question periods: Wed- nesday's was 55 minutes. Speaker Lambert allowed 16 questions Wednesday by oppo- sition members but disallowed One is that some method bee": found to make it easier for mu- "0 nicipalities to borrow money Co-cling OH is O-rdered In Dock Strike NEW YORK (AP)—Federal Judge John F‘. X. McGohey Wednesday issued a temporary injunction calling for an 80-day “cooling off" period in the sus- pended longshoremen's strike. The U.S. government's appli- cation for the injunction was un- opposed by counsel for the In- ternational Longshoremen's As- sociation and shipping interests. The order is retroactive to Oct. 4. when McGohey issued I lo-day temporary restraining (ND? — formation requested wasn't ur- gently needed. PROTESTS SHARPLY The sharpest protest was de 1nIIt's application for the in- The us. strike crippled ship- the minister indicated he was I g. . “You have no right to leave ‘that questions put to the minis-. 11 on the grounds that the in- low livered by Frank Howard after the 0 JL — Bonavista - Twillingate) d Paul Martin (L -— Essex f asti. who made two each, Douglas Fisher (NDP — Port Arthur) and Stanley Knowles (NDP - Winnipeg North Cen- ttre). tJOBS IN JEOPARDY I Mr. Fisher and Mr. Knowles tasked about two civil servants whose jobs appear in jeopardy. They were ruled out of order. , “I think we will have to have is session about these matters," Mr. Knowles said. “This is a matter in which the fate of an individual is at stake, but we have been unable to get answers we have been asking in order to find out whether consideration will given to the protecting of his rights as a civil servant." Mr. Pickersgill said that in the British House of Commons "questions having to do with the civil rights‘of a subject, how- ever obscure that subject may be, are always allowed by the Speaker. . . ." Mr. Pickersgill also protested that Speaker Lambert had al- lowed a question about squid bait for Newfoundland fishermen. “I submit to your ‘honor that as the Maritime pro - raised an Mr. Pick- inces and your honor question about corn," ersgill said. I-oz. Woven lfvlpe Tlslilno. Extra durable with extra years wear woven Into it.‘leeuti- tul combination of blue and . white. with silver lures. Hundreds of Tonpoeee gelle. 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