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The Windsor Star from Windsor, Ontario, Canada • 52

Publication:
The Windsor Stari
Location:
Windsor, Ontario, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
52
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

52-T1IE WINDSOR STAR, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 1. I55 IBefiapire tiUna IF McDveaD Hun Another DRiol v. I ANC ISO Sacral Ktrls were tunntd and -(-eciil uard was knocked cold Tuesday as Thr r.ratlr-i performed amid screechini; bedlam nt their own in the Cow Palace In the first of their to shows Tuesday reporters said at least five tirls were dared when a teen ace boy ran onstage, then did a running swan due V. the stae into the audience The were lifted onto the stace and carried away in the arms of police.

Reatle Paul McCartney pleaded with the audience to "calm down things are ilettinv; dangerous The 35 minute performance went on. 'J the while carus of youn tiris attempted to climb on the te. a the one seated behind 'hem hurled Jelly beans, stuffed ammaU, but ton and other items as love offenncs to the Britons At least a doen Kirl made it on the stace past platoons of special detectives Officer John Kdwards. 43, of San Francisco, was trampled as he sIihkI tn front of the si ace and knocked cold. The audience participation performance marked the last day of the Beatles' tour of the United states and Canada Sources said they'll take back more than Sl.ooo.ooo to Britain The Cw Palace holds about 17.000 persons.

Cn i cl A wa of the wrecked tonstrction site. Eighty five persons remain trapped in the avalanche. (Associated Press W'irepltoto) TANGLED WRECKAGE UNCOVERED A bulldozer digs hydroelectric dam Siti near Saas Fee, Switzerland. Five into rock and ice to free ice-covered workers' lodgings Tues- bodies were removed from the huts before fog rolled in and day after the AUalin Glacier tumbled down on the Mattmark halted the mammoth search operations. In foreground is part Softer Divorce Rules? Drier 'n' Drier In B.C.

YOU'RE ON This girl was one of four to successfully as sault San Francisco Cow Palace's stage Tuesday as England Heatles drummed up $1,700 a minute in front of screaming teen agers. This girl made the stage, was within touching distance of one of the Beatles, background, when she fainted and was carried away by Beatle guards. (As.socicited Press Wirephoto) "5 FuH-tastiv2 was dancing in the nude. The officer said her dance went 'beyond the bounds of propriety." Judge Leahy said he was not taking a stand on the morality or immorality of Miss Rand's specialty. "1 sincerely feel that these laws must be cleared up by the legal department," he said, "I'm sick and tired of trying to interpret these laws for them." OMAHA, Neb.

(UPI) An Omaha municipal judge struck a blow for freedom of the strip tease Tuesday by dismissing indecent exhibition charges against fan dancer Sally Rami. Judge Eugene I-eahy ruled that the city's anti strip tease law is unconstitutional. Miss Rand, 61, was arrested at a night club last month by a jtolice officer who said she s-. iS iJT 7 It aFifjiircw 1 state He said authority to act on the request rests with Randolph, Gov. Otto Kerner and the Illinois Parole and Pardon Board.

"We would welcome the opportunity to be of service to our country in this moment of turmoil and unrest," the con- ids' petition said in part. "We want to repay our debt to society and get into combat in Viet Nam, allowing young students to complete their educations and letting young fathers remain at home until there is urgent need for them." PONT1AC, 111 (UPI) Fifteen inmates at Pontiac State Prison want to fight in Viet Nam. The inmates, in a petition sent to Warden Joseph Vitek, said they wanted to "repay our debt to society and get into combat in Viet Nam," in exchange for clemency. Nebraska convicts made a similar request earlier this month. Vitek said he has passed the petition on to Ross V.

Ran dolph, Illinois Public Safety Director, who is out of the tumbled down on the Mattmark hydroelectric construction site trapping more than 100 persons. (Associated Press Wire photo) VICTIM CARRIED AWAY Rescue workers carry away on a stretcher the body of one victim of the Allalin Glacier avalanche near Saas Fee, Switerland, Tuesday. The avalanche UN Back in Session To Finish 1961 Worl iVoltlt Union IJrewers Stay Strikebound VANCOUVER (CP) British Columbia's beer strike makes beer drinkers want to cry in their beer and then denies them beer to cry into. Brewery workers were still on strike Tuesday, liquor stores were still empty of beer, and the RCMP issued warnings the 30-mile stretch to the beer-rich border town of Blaine, would be heavily patrolled. Stepped-up production by one of the two B.C.

breweries still in operation was not expected to make much difference to the drought. And poverty-stricken bachelors in Vancouver's west end were faced with the most un-kindest cut of all neighborhood grocers wouldn't buy empty beer bottles until the strike was over, robbing many a bachelor of his only form of savings. Beer bottles had been selling at 25 cents a dozen. Four beer parlors were still open on the lower mainland, having lasted since the strike started Monday by limiting their hours and restricting customers to one glass of beer every four hours. The other 124 beer parlors in the area were shut, with nearly 2,000 waiters and tap-men out of work.

In Victoria, two beer parlors bad closed and more were expected to dry up during the weekend. Several of those still open were out of draft beer and serving only from bottles. At Prince George, in north-central B.C.. the Tartan Breweries Ltd. plant had taken on six extra men and was working double shifts to prepare beer for shipment to the lower mainland.

But a spokesman said it would be three or four weeks before the full effect was felt, because of the time needed to let the beer mature. The only other brewery in operation, Interior Breweries Ltd. at Creston. was maintaining normal production to supply regular customers in the Kootenays. A spokesman for the affected breweries said the companies had no intention of resuming negotiations with the International Union of LTnited Brewery, Flour.

Cereal. Soft Drink and Distillery Workers (CLC). "The breweries feel there is little point in a meeting when the union wants a 10 per cent increase and we know we're not prepared to meet it," he said. Brewery workers now get a basic wage of $2.50 an hour. Anglicans Plot Change By DENNIS ORCHARD VANCOUVER (C strict canons against remarriage of divorced Anglicans may be changed tonight by the church's reform bent General Synod.

This 22nd council of bishops, clergy and leading laymen has already taken a step toward union with the United Church and slimmed down its executive bodies for faster and better planning. These decisions were close to unanimous. Disagreement is guaranteed in tonight's debate. A commission of the church proposes a vast revision and enlargement of ecclesiastical canons on marriage, not only making possible the remarriage of a divorced person, but making provision for marriage counselling and for attempts to save marriages in danger of failure. The proposal would establish a tribunal to weigh elaborate applications for remarriage.

The Diocese of Toronto, believing these proposals are too cumbersome, sets out a much simpler system. It gives a bishop or ecclesi atical court authority to declare that a previous marriage had no sacramental validity in the church's eyes. This declaration would permit remarriage. A third proposal comes from church lawyers, who would make the decision of civil courts the basis of the church's decision on remarriage. A person found guilty of adultery in the court's ruling would not be allowed to remarry.

This judgment of guilt in the previous marriage is expected to doom the proposal to defeat. The church's deep division on remarriage turns up in the membership of the commission that formulated the canonical revisions Their statement of disagreement puts it succinctly. The majority of members believe the best way to uphold the Christian doctrine of lifelong marriage to carefully define the exceptions to the rule prohibiting remarriage during the lifetime of a former partner. Th's majority interprets New Testament teaching as saying that marriage ought not to be dissolved other than by death, although it may be terminated otherwise under certain conditions. The keywords are "ought not." The minority group says the bond of marriage cannot be dissolved any human authority.

The key word is "cannot." The group believes the marriage bond is best upheld by recognizing no Britain's stately houses, castles and gardens. One of the founder members is I'Cird Montagu of Bealieu, whose stately Hampshire Abbey and car museum has been the top attraction for tourists this year. Historic houses in Britain are estimated to attract 6.000,000 visitors a year. LONDON (Reuters) A new trade union is to he launched in Britain a union of 600 dukes, marquesses, earls and other historic house owners wh. have opened their homes to the tourists The purpose of the union, which will have its first meet ing Oct.

27. is to plan new means of attracting visitors to luvss-l Out? lii Masted Union Aim For Cabbies In Toronto TORONTO (CP) Pierre R. Ingels launched a drive Tuesday to organize Metropolitan Toronto's 4,800 taxi drivers into an alliance by claiming many drivers are forced to steal from their employers to make a living. Mr. Ingels, 57, who describes himself as a business consultant, also made other claims at a meeting attended by 12 drivers.

A Dutch born immigrant, he spent the last year driving a taxi while doing research for a master's thesis at the University of Amsterdam He claimed many Toronto cabs are mechanically unsafe; that full time drivers work 10 hours or more each day, six days a week, earning 79 cents an hour; and that they have no hospital or medical insurance plans. He said his eventual aim is to form a Canada wide body called the National Taxicab Alliance. In an interview later, Louis Friedman, chairman of the Metropolitan Toronto Taxicab Conference, which represents operators of 1,200 of the area's 1,750 cabs, said conditions were never better for taxi drivers. He said the average driver earns S80 to $85 a week. "One of our problems is that we haven got enough drivers." Mr.

Ingels charged the commission was a kangaroo court, giving unfair hearings to drivers accused of rules garian, in 22 moves in the fifth round. "The game was a inastcr-i iece," said Saul Rubin, president of the Marshall Chess (Tub Fischer is cabling his moves from the club to the tournament headquarters in Havana. The state department refused to grant him a visa to visit uba NEW YORK (AP) U.S. champion Bobby Fischer won his third lone distance game of the Capablanca Memorial Tournament Tuesday night in a game that one expert said "will go down in chess history." The 22 year old U.S. grandmaster beat his opponent, Gueorghia Tnngov of Bul 81,000,000 Could He Settlement LAS VEGAS, Nev.

(UPI) Songwriter Alan Jay Ix.rner's fair lady getting married in the morning. She's divorcing him in about three weeks with an estimated $1,000,000 going away present. Mrs. Micheline Lerner said Tuesday she expected to get her divorce decree from the Broadway lyricist about Sept. 29.

"My husband has been very-generous." said the beautiful blonde former Parisian lawyer. But she declined to say how generous I-erner was in his settlement. Other sources reported unofficially that Ieruer agreed to give her about Sl.ooo.ooo. Mrs. Lerner and the songwriter separated and then reconciled last year.

She took up residence in Nevada earlier this month. Mrs. Lerner and the couple's son, Mike. 7. are staying at a hotel here.

"We are still very good friends," Mrs. Lerner said in discussing her relationship with her husband, whom she locked out of their 19-room mansion in New York City in May of last year. At the time she sought weekly alimony, but was awarded the largest temporary alimony-granted in that state history. The couple was married in 1957. She.

is his fourth wife. UNITED NATIONS, NY (UPI) The General Assembly meets today to conclude the work of the session. The United States has agreed to let peace-keeping debts of the Soviet Union, France and others slide by without penalty. The 14 nation assembly had been in recess since early this year when it was forced to suspend because of the deadlock created by Washington's insistence that a dozen countries, refusing to pay peacekeeping assessments they held to be illegally levied, lose their assembly votes under UN charter regulations. On Aug 16, however, Ambassador Arthur P.

Goldberg, in his maiden UN speech, announced a reversal of policy by the United States. Obviously lacking voting strength which had dwindled away during negotiations sought by Russia on the financial issue to enforce the penalty. Goldberg announced that the United States no longer would insist on forfeiture of votes by the dozen delinquents. Goldberg also announced that the United States reserved the right to refuse to pay in the future for UN projects of which it might not approve. The U.S.

reversal opened the way for the assembly to close its 1964 do-nothing session and prepare hopefully for a more fruitful 1965 session set to start Sept. 21. A 33-nation committee on peace keeping finances, which for most of the year sought to solve the financial impasse, sent up a consensus report on which the assembly was expected to act at its 3 p.m. session. The consensus, announced Tuesday by Foreign Minister Alex Quaison-Sackey of Ghana, outgoing assembly president, stated that: The assembly "will carry on its work normally in accordance with its rules of procedure." The cjuestion of applying the charter vote forfeiture penally will not be raised with regard to the UN emergency force on duty in the Middle East or the Congo peacekeeping operation.

The UN financial difficulties amounting to an estimated overall $230,000,000 deficit "should solved through voluntary contributions by member states, with the highly developed countries making substantial contributions." Although eight countries Britain. Canada, Sweden. Norway, Denmark, Iceland, Jamaica and Ghana have pledged such contributions, there was no indication of when the Soviet Union would fulfill a long-standing promise of such a pledge. A U.S. delegation spokesman, asked if the United States, which earlier curtailed its voluntary contributions to various UN funds, now would "unzip its purse" for such a pledge, said: Dishetivtenlntj shortens my breath, something that isn too good for my health." Temperatures last year in Kapuskasing, about 95 miles north of Timmins, hit 48 below in January and warmed up to between 34 and 35 below in February and March.

Mr. Grant, who has been living with this kind of weather since when he moved here, will retain his position as mayor until Dec. 31, although he will be living in Toronto. KAPUSKAS1NG, Ont (CP) Mayor Norman S. Grant has had enough of "that 30 and 40 below zero stuff during winter and is moving today from this Northern Ontario community to Toronto.

The decision came partly on the advice of his doctor, who suggested a move because the 66-year-old mayor has a slight heart condition. He will retire to Toronto, he says, because "the cold air WEDDING BELLS SAN CARLOS, Calif (AP) Judy Garland opened a six-day engagement Tuesday night with an announcement to a packed audience that she will marry Mark Herron Sept. 19..

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About The Windsor Star Archive

Pages Available:
1,607,646
Years Available:
1893-2024