1 r m PIRATES TRIUMPH IN '60 WORLD SERIES The Pittsburgh Pirates used the New York Yankees' iavorite weapon, the home run, to win the 1960 World Series today....... A solo* blast by Bill Mazerowski in the bottom of the ninth inning, gave. the. Pirates.a 10-9. victory in the seventh and deciding game of the series. Mazerowski blasted the first pitch from Yankee pitcher Ralph Terry into the left centre-field stands after the Yanks had battled back from a 9-7 deficit in the top of the ninth. The Yankees came back again in the top of the ninth to tie the game. Bobby Richardson led off with a single off Bob Friend and pinch-hitter Dale Long kept the rally going with another single. Harvey Haddix replaced Friend and gave up a run-scoring single to Mickey Mantle and a run-scoring sacrifice to Berra. That set the stare for M"�v-owski, and he wasted no time in blasting the Yankee hopes. Haddix received credit for the victory, his second in the series Pittsburgh took a 2-0 lead in the first inning on a two-run homer by Roger Nelson. They stretched their lead to 4-0 in the second on a two-run single by Bill Virdon. The Yanks fought back and a solo homer by Bill Skowran in the fifth and a three-run blast in the sixth by Yogi Berra gave them a 5-4 lead. The Yankees scored two more runs in the eighth to go ahead 7-4 but the Pirates exploded in a fantastic eighth inning to score five big runs, Smith's homer. three on Hal The Only Daily Newspaper Serving North-Central British Columbia Phone LOgan 4-2441 Vol. 4; No. 199 PRINCE GEORGE, BRITISH COLUMBIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1960 7c a.Copy BV CARRIER $1.50 per Month while Terry suffered the loss. SEVENTH GAME: R H E New York 000 014 022 � 9 13 0 Pittsburgh 220 000 051 � 10 11 0 Turley, Stafford (2). Shantz (3), Coates (8), Terry (8) and Blanchard; Law, Face (6), Friend (9), Haddix (9) and Burgess, Smith (8), HRs � Nelson, Smith, Mazerowski (Pitt); Skowran and Berra (NY). SHOE FOR GAVEL UN Has Wildest Session In History as K Erupts UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CPI � The UN General Assembly, swep with disorder by Communist ii suits and the wildest scenes i its history, tensely awaited mor Ilareups today as delegates pre pared to vote pn colonialism. At one point Wednesday nigh during ^criticism by the Philip pines of the plight of East Eu ropcan peoples under Communis rule, Soviet Premier Khrushchc glanced at Foreign Minister An drei Gronjyko, then pulled hi shoe off, waved it over his head and started pounding his des with it in disapproval. The assembly was delaye Wednesday by: � Three Khrushchev trips t the rostrum, during one of which he cailedLSenatqr, Lorenzo Sumu long, a Philippine delegate, "this jerk" or "this .joker" and "stooge11- or "boot- ticfibr." m {Camxnunl*1 lury ttiaf ex plod'ed when Sumulang, speaking oh the question of colonialism said the debate should be ex panded to include nations o Nikita fo Return To Russia Tonight NEW YORK (AP) � Russiar Premier Khrushchev, who threw the United Nations into wild dis order Wednesday night, an nounccd today he will leave for home tonight as originally scheduled � after another appearance at the United Nations. He said he planned to make a speech. Eastern Europe, deprived of their freedom by the Russians. � Repeated and stormy interruptions by Romanian delegate Eduard Mezincescu and Khrushchev on what they called points of order. They accuse assembly president Frederick Boland of the Republic of Ireland of partiality toward the West. � The final climactic moment when Boland, beet-red and glaring, bangd his gavel till it broke while suddenly adjourning the session "in view of the scene we have just witnessed." All of this arose out of a procedural question � whether to put the Soviet call for a declaration against'colonialism- before the full assembly or whether to consider it first in the political committee, the usual UN procedure. US. jdele&ate Francis- C/^-Wil-. eox ��aiilT" �ost-war period of uncmploymci liis winter. To tackle the problem hea >n, the 1,100,000-membcr CL ailed for a special session o 'arliamcnt � a plea also mac ast week by Liberal Leader Le er B. Pearson. SEW RECESSION The congress, parent body o lie country's organized labo lovemcnt, coupled a flat warn that Canada has alrcad lunged into a new rcccssio Now Hear Thi w � � � Civic dignitaries and guests a the head table for last night's board of trade dinner sang Goc Save the Queen with their backs to the picture of Her Majesty hanging on the wall at the end ol the Simon Fraser banquet room Teh, Ich . . . Well-known gal about town "confessed" she is making a spot of Christinas gift money by writing "confession" stories for one of those slushy-type magazines Radio I'd Boss-man Hob liar-kins has been working hard but in vain to bring W1FU game broadcasts to the north this season. But Bob doesn't give up easily. He now has proved to the sponsors of Empire Stadium broadcasts that people up here are solid football fans and would enjoy hearing the games, so now there's a good possibility that playoff games will be carried locally . . . As if police haven't enough to contend with in the older generation, even the preteenngers are on the rampage now. Cop shop received several complaints last night of rowdies, all in the l<)-to-12 age group, in the 400 stone, and all that type of so called larking. Perchance an om inous forecast of what to expec come Halloween . . . Photog Hal Vandervoort has some advice for those jokers who go out hunting with nough ar tillery for an anriy and come back empty handed: throw yom guns away. He came back from a little jaunt out near the Don) inion Experimental Farm yester day with a nice, fat grouse, and he didn't have a gun, cither. With a wing that any Yankee pitcher would be proud of, he nailed the bird with a rock, knocking it dcader'n a door nail . . . Anybody who watched Mayor Garvin Dczell listening to the World Scries game this ayem would have shed a tear, not only because His Worship was betting the wrong way, but because as an old baseball catcher he was eall-ng the Yankee pilches so well lo predicted the hurd fast one {own the middle which Hal Smith cnocked out of the park for three irate runs in the eighth . . . Fred Walls people, who have an id in today's issue saying the lew Comet won't arrive for a- block Gillette and Burden ahdjwoQk, phoned to say ih'o car will the 1200 bloefc FrcOmuu-.1 Tog&hitf' bo in Friday* -after all .-. v..... with a major labor manifesto on full employment. The manifesto, issued during a three-day session of the CLC high-level executive > council spelled out how labor wants al levels of government, plus man agement and unions, to aim fo full employment as the country's No. 1 political and economic ob jeclive. The policy statement bluntly portrayed the job outlook in tilt months ahead as bleak. It said production is fallin while the labor force is growing � and will grow even faster heavy post-war birth rates are reflected in the labor market. On top of this, employment had never fully recovered from the last recession. "The result has been that unemployment this summer was the worst for any summer since the war," said the CLC whose ranks nclude workers in 91 interna-ional unions, 13 national unions and some 230 directly-chartered ocals. "Unemployment this winter vill undoubtedly be the worst or nny winter since the war." business drive only yielded an average donation of 60 cents. Country To Boost Ihe North PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. (CP)� P r i m e Minister Diefenbaker Wednesday issued a fresh challenge to hjs countrymen to get behind the Conservative vision of northern expansion. The challenge came during a 21-hour day that stretched from his Ottawa office to his home constituency of Prince Albert, where he took part in ceremonies officially opening a new bridge built expressly to help open up the north. "There can be no delay in making accessible Canada's northland, containing mineral and petroleum resources which more and more will be needed to assure the preservation of the free world," said Mi1. Diefenbaker. UNDLIIAXCK MARK In atendlng the opening of he 1,000-foot-long, $2,500,000 bridge .spanning the North Saskatchewan River in Prince Albert, the 65-year-old prime minister established some sort of endurance mark. He was up at 1 a.m. to breakfast anil pilt in .some work on. his mail before his plane left Ottawa for the west at 6:30 a.m. On the plane, he had a lengthy talk with his hew trade minister, George llees, who left the flight at Retina to open a new airport terminal there�his last act in his old position of transport minister. LEAVES COVER SILENT SUMMIT . Autumn leaves are falling near Summit Lake and when they alight at the Pacific Northern Railway's % marshalling yards not a foot disturbs them. Crews, along . with their equipment, deserted the site Sept: > 29 pending a Publte. Utilities Commission hearing, which subsequently, ruled the commission has jurisdiction over the PNR. The railway plans to appeal the PUC decision but, like the leaves, it's up in the air.. Also inactive are the beavers who actively waged a, campaign of survival against workmen. Their pond is slowly ebbing, with no apparent effort on their part to dam the water's exit. A road paving and sur facing program costing ai estimated $130,000 is being mapped out by city counci for 1961. Mayor Garvin Dezell saic today these estimates � cal for no increase in taxes, or borrowing, for road purpos es. "By the . mere fact we have an increasing assessment in Prince George, this means that there is a continuing demand for increased services," he said. The city's pay-as-you-go pav in program resulted in 70^blocks of permanent hardtop on streets this year. Next year, the mayor said, "We propose another 30 blocks of permanent paving plus up to 80 blocks of pulvimix." NO OIL Mayor Dezell said he is proposing the use of pulvimix instead of dust-layer oil which is a waste of money because the surface doesn't even stand up the entire season. He said, the cost of pulvimix is about equal to oil and provides a road surface that is good for four to five years; similar to the Cariboo Highway. It.is calculated that by:the end of the season in 1961 no re,s4denees in the city will be nt6re than two. blocks from a paved through street. ii .The street surfacing estimate la being1 "prepared- now .as .part; of the clty'a 1901 budget. It could be affected, however, by the unknown quantity of the school budget. i President Eisenhower \ 70 Years Old Tomorrow President Dwight D. Eisenhower of the United States �celebrates his 70th birthday tomorrow. Mr. Eisenhower, born Oct. T5, 1890, recently became the oldest president in the history of the U.S. He passed the record set by another military figure, Andrew Jackson (Old Hickory),-who was 09 years, 11 months and 19 days old, when he left the country's highest public office. The Second World War figure is not eligible to run for re-election in November as he has served the maximum term allowed by U.S. law. PULP MILL DROPPED IDC Group Mcy Take Chips Plan to Coast A Prince t George delegation will likely . travel to. trie doast soon to talk with pulp mill operators h $ Wl i pp p on, ,tije feasibility �if deveJpp$ng a market foi Weal "wood ^fffbs'1^-'- ,'----------:------------------1�:�� - � � The Industrial Development tommission will meet Wednes-ay to complete briefs to present 3,000 Windows To Be Replaced VANCOUVER (CPI�Every one of the 3,000 windows in the .$6,500,000 B.C. Electric building will have to be replaced, because the sealing has failed on some of the double-plated windows. Fog patches have appeared on DON'T DECENTRALIZE them tion. as a result of condensa- '61 LICENCES 'SHRIMP PINK' VICTORIA tCPI � It's "shrimp pink" and maroon for B.C. auto licences in 1961. B.C. auto licence designers have come up with this combination for the plates to be issued motorists starting Jan. 2. The figures will be maroon on a shrimp pink background. G 1 o u d y periods overnight. Cloudy Friday with rain in the Bulkley Valley region in the morningy spreading to the-eastern parts by afternoon. Not miich change1 in teraperalure. tight winds in the [morning, souih-20 in - the afternoon. Low tonight and high .tomorrow at Quosnel and Prince George, 28 and 52; at Smtthers, 32 and 50. Peace Kivoi1 Itrgion Clear overnight. Sunny ami warmer Friday. Winds light at night, changing to west 15 tomorrow. Low tonight and high tomorrow at Grande Prairie, 25 and 50. Lnst 21 Hours Lo Hi Precip. Prince George.. lil IS __ Quesnel .....29 Help Students Attend University: MacKenzie A system of financial aid to enable deserving students to attend university is preferable to decentralization of the university throughout the province, Dr. Norman MacKenzie said here Wednesday. Dr. MacKenzie, president of the University of B.C., told some 200 persons at a board of trade dinner it would be far too costly to spread full university facilities into even such populated areas as Prince George. Terrace .......... �11 -19 .05 Smithers ........ 3!i 51 trace Kaniloops ...... .'{:: 59 � Dawson Creek 23 �13 � Fort St. John.. 25 43 � ' Fort Nelson .... 23 �H � Whitehorse...... 30 �10 � NAME FOR SASQUATCH: Tom, Dick, Harry? NELSON CP) _ Nelson Chamber of Commerce has moved to give a tall, hairy abomination with a flat face a name more suitable to this mountainous area in B.C.'s southeast Kootenay district. The chamber served notice Wednesday that the creature will no longer be known as Sasqualch, the name of a log-ndiiry monster of B.C.'s lower1 mainland, or Abominable Snowman of Mount Everest fame. But it did not surest a new name for the creature reported by John Bringsli, a veteran outdoorsman, who said he spotted it last month near the headwaters of Lemon Creek, six miles east of here. Mr. Bringsli, who has spent most of the last 35 years roaming the Koolcnays, said he was paralyzed by ihe sight of the "animal,!,! � , > r � �-� "It had very wide shoulders and a flat faco with cars flat against the side of its head. It was seven to nine feet tall with long legs and short powerful arms with hair covering its body," he said, adding that it had hands instead of claws and there was a bluish-grey tinge to its hair. Mr. Bringsli and several armed friends returned to the area and discovered a footprint between IB and. 17 inches lontf with a sharp t6e imprint. "I grant this is discriminatory as far as students are concerned," he said. "It costs them more to attend university than it does a student living in Vancouver. "But the way to deal with that problem is to provide equalization grants to make up the difference," he said. "The senior governments should do more in this respect than they are do- | "This , Is a"n ., age in- which science, and ',technology, must be [developed if we are to keep up :'with the rest of the world," he :said., "We must provide.facilities 'for research if'we arc to attract the teachers and scholars needed to meet world requirements. LESS COSTLY "This can best be accomplished by building our university near the greatest concentration of population. It is infinitely less costly than trying to bring such facilities as our library and laboratories to each area of the province." Dr. MacKenzie expressed approval for what Prince George is trying to do toward establishing some higher education facilities here, such as its invitation to Professor Ron Baker here to teach university English. But he stressed that "decentralization of education should be considered only in light of: (a) Is it good education; (b) is it suited to the individuals; and (c) can we afford to pay for it. "I would be distressed, however, if too much of the revenue, for which there is a never-ending demand, were spent in decentralizing higher education at the expense of the university." Decentralization, he added, should be thought of as a basic solution for a specific need, and no,t. as a substitute for a great university. to the coast operators, Chairma'n Harold Moffat said Wednesday. BEFORE LONG "I'm sure there will be chips going out of this area before too long," said Mr. Moffat. He said hopes of the establishment of a pulp mill in the area have been shelved. """" And the Commission will how concentrate its efforts on finding markets for chips, he added. $1,000 in Goods Taken from Store VANDERHOOF (Staff) � An estimated $1,000 worth of goods was taken by thieves who broke into the Fraser Lake General Store early Wednesday. Police said today no clues were left by the intruders. The loot was made up mainly of work clothing and power saw chains. Entry was gained through a side door. It was the first major break-in in the town in more than two years! RCMP said. Skin Preliminary Hearing Adjourned BURNS LAKE �The preliminary hearing into the charge of murder against -17-year-old Robert Skin was adjourned here Wednesday to Oct. 21. Some 13 witnesses testified during the two clays. Skin is charged In connection with thn death of Jlmmle Andrew, 70, of nearby Soiithbjmk, Andrew died Aug. 2S from head .Injuries police nllew were Inflicted by the uccused. . � � � BOARD OF TRADE President John Morrison welcomed Dr. Norman MacKenzie to Prince George last night.in the Hotel Simon Eraser lobby. Dr. MacKenSfej president of the University of B.C., spoke to about 200 people at a board of trade meeting. Hl VandervojartphotOi