FAITHFUL FOR^JFEI V^I^ ! • .1 I. ¦ • tola Ptrtr »W!o*» ti? \ J^ ' ^, 4 «*«, flrife 7. »nt-72ityj ¦ ¦¦¦ - • - ¦ ¦¦ -¦ 1 (WJ iUe, Wines from the Loire Valley) /- 7; . POUiL&gfFl^f ^ ¦ -¦ ' 1 ¦ ¦ - SANtERfC W^ > • ! f 50**8 CORHT A SOWS. LTD. mittfftno. puiicn r. »no«-72ft*7\ minp ^thk Week -A ^ ^ fej -r,^- .--- .' . From: • " . a boHls • *2 . 12/ 6 a bottle ¦ M I T CH E L L S Kildare St ree t, ". " . ¦ : • 62377. Tel. Dublin. ' f ..- I.T.A. men J OINT CONTR OL FOR resume picketing i MANPOWER PO LIC Y i C7 Irish Times Reporter & EVERAL members of the t S Irish Telephonists' Associa- j Setting up of national agency tion, against whom the DeBy Our Political Correspondent partment of Posts and Telegraphs recently obtained an the past year, the injunction restraining them IN spite of advice in reports which it has received in Government has decided against the complete operation of the new Manfrom picketing, resumed picket duty Sot a time in Dublin last power Authority by one Department — a Department of Labour, perhaps — night, according to an associaand has divided the functions of the new Authority between the Department tion spokesman. Members of the association not named in the High Court proceedings had been, and still are , picketing. However , the a ssocia t ion spokesman stated yesterday afterns*/-\*t f ho it m^mf"» *fcy e a fffl» nct tt /hnm the High Court had made the inju nction order, had decided " not to surrender their right lo picket the Du blin telephone exchanges in the curren t trade dispute and to resume picketing. " " While we realise," the spokesman said . " that we are in contempt of court bv so doing, we ateo realise that we bave a right of free association as guaranteed in the Constitution of the Stale. Tn pursuance of this righ t and other maior gri evances, we have decided that our vioht to strike and picket is so morally ju stified in this case that we cannot surrender it . " Much as we appreciate the finding of the court and wish to -onform to its finding, we know {hat in the prevailine cti cum stances out dutv U to continue our fieht for j ustice , which transcends other incidental considerations. " APOLOGY Bing Crosby and his wife, Kathy, on arrival at Dublin Airport yesterday. He said that the association wished to apolog ise to the pub lic for the inconvenience caused by the strik e, which is in support ol efforts to have the association rer.opnised as a negotiating body. "We wish to explain that this is a dispute between the T.T.A. and the Depa rtment of Posts and Teleara phs, an d not an tnter-umon dispute as has been stated. We arc sorry that one union has seen tit of Industry and Commerc and the Department of Social Welfare. A Whi te Paper published yesterday on Manpower Policy states that overall res ponsibili Sv should be assigned to the Minist er for " indus try and Commerce and that a National Ma npower Agency had been established within that Department under the control of the Parliamenta ry Secretary to the Minister. It states further , however, that the placement Facili ties of the Employment Service must be expanded and that the operation of the expanded services and guidance facilities should be operated by the Departmen t of Social Welfare on an agency basis for the manpower agency. I uc iTiut c i ajj &i aia ito uifi i utt '\ — Tt i A \ l f t - i i* .v Dn nar r t fi tf j K r . * I* n » 4^ « main dements of its manpower j policy are: the forecasting of ! changes which arc likely to occur j in the supply of. and demand foi . ; 'ahour. arrangements for the training and retrain-ing of worker s and ! the provision of a suitable scheme fnr p ayments of redundancy workers: the provision of a suitable scheme of financia l assistance io unemploy ed workers who must seek job s outside their normal place of abode: the development of the emp loyment service . The manpower agency will have overall control and direction of all ' elements except with regard to the \ employment agencies but for this ! it . wi![ ' oc responsible foe the j formula tion of policy, j A- big programme is set in front ; of the employmen t service. It must j info rmation about j have wide vacancies and about persons j available to fill such vacancies, j Greater collabora tion of employers j . '— . ... - - -- ¦ - . . . : WILSON WARNS: : jj lLDX DANGEROUS ! TO THE WORLD New talks urged M R . W [LSON last night told the Br itish nation results of Mr. fan Smith' s policies in Rh odesia dange rous not only for Rhodesia but for a tar gre ater Africa—the y may ex tend even wider and involve the that the may be area of world. I he Prime Minister told the .i served the right to take that indenation of the "very grave situation "' i;¦ pendence by unilateral action. ii! Rhodesia. He sa id he had been j '"The British Government made and workers must be •sought. I IP touch with 20 heads of Com- i it clear that for the Rhodesians io Employers must be induced , so tar monwealth Governments , and last !! seize their own independence would as is possible, to notify the service ni ght a message had gone from him j be illegal , an act of rebellion well in advance of likely changes to the Rhodesian Premier pressing !! against the crown. " in their requirements and to seek Mr. Smith to agree to a mission of i Ai the Commonwealth Prime to go over to the Department 's side the help of the agency in meetin g senior Common wealth P r i m e I Ministers ' Conference in July. 1%4 , and try to obliterate us." Persons seek- Ministers lo see if agreement could Britain had stated and the whole r e d undan cy problems . The Department of Posts and ing employment for the firs t time be reached withou t bloodshed. j Commonwealth endorsed the view Telegraphs was granted a tem- or i that sufficientl y representati ve inunemployed becoming on Mr. Wilson urged Mr. Smith to :, st iiutions would be a cond ition of porary injunction on September " should come to fee! that the " think again. '" 25th. restraining certain named service independence to offer considerable *i!l Speaking io the naiion in a ; the gntni of persons , including officer s of the assistance to them in finding i B.B.C. Television Broadcast. Mr. : Southern Rhodesia. " association , their servants or agents. emp loyment to their j suitable ! "' That has hee n the guideline of the Hig h qualifications." New and improved ji Wilson said: " I want ;o repo-i io ; she British Government , whether and in picketing, from ' you to-nighi about the very grave i t Court las t Friday. Mr. Justice Budd < j ? Irish Times Repo rter special trainin g ;II situation in Rhodesia . ' g rave / be- ¦ Conservative or Labour , from that premises ari d ' injunction , continuing which are not quite co~ granted a r> Y one of those coincidences , for staffs will have to be :< cause, even as. 1 SDeak to von to- ; day to this. " . Mr. Wilson said. P ROPOSALS for the appo intment of a Parliamentary Com- pending the determinati on of an facilities I i incidences , the Mayor of Galway, Councill or Brendan JL missioner for Administration — compa rable with the action for a permanent injunction. provided , the collection and dis- ni ght , there may be steps taken I " From then on—fo r nearly a H olland , and his wife, Mona , happen ed t o be at h an d aroun d Scandinavian Ombudsman — were announced by the British To-moTrow the matter is expected, semination of information will along a verv dangerous road. b ave to be organised. ! " And the results of these policies ; with the Rhodesian Government , Dublin - Airport yesterday afternoon when Bing Crosby and his Government in a White Pap er yesterday. to come before the High Court i may be dangerous not only for j wuh Mr. Smith, lo see if we could FORECASTING U N IT «ifc. Kathy, arrived to begin two or three days* holiday in f ' odesia but for a far greater I work oui an agreed basis for indeThe Government is to place a between the private person and again. According to members of the ireiand. The crooner, of course, has inescapable associations Bill before Parliament during the the Central Government. "' area of Africa : they may extend ! pendence. The Whi te Paper says that a even wider There are a nu mber of exclu- association on picket duty at the, special next session for the appointment of and involve the world. " I '" What we have been try ing to v*ifh Cialwav Bav. up will body advisory be set exchange in Exchequer street He recalled ho * successive i do was to reach an agreed soluhelp sions, and among them are matters the Commissioner who would from and will have representatives The Crosbys had come h ere so 7 h r, *- , ifT an insranf. the singer , , Du blin, last night, two of their the Federated Union of Employers Briti sh Governments had given ! tio n on ihe basis of five principle s ** ventilate grievances of the concerning the safety of the State to -. .-. . r^sed beside the Mayor and that Mrs. Crosby could see Ireland citizen " against the Central Govern- relations with and independence to i on which we felt, and on which we other countries, colleagues named in the injunction and the Irish Congress of Trade freedom > , .- v r of -office had appeared ;• for the first time, and in fact much ment . administration ot colonial terri- proceedings did two hours picket Unions. It wil l be known as the aboti! 20 countries with 700 million ¦ feel, we must insist. •-. - ' ..- ¦; -Kj necU .' of Mr. Holland. of their meeiing with the press conThe The Commissioner would be tories, and powers in relation to ' duty, f rom shortly after 5 p.m. Advisory Committee and p eople since the war. "' Fi rst , i f we were to break with "> v -:-;riplcic the piciure- Mr. 1 sisted of statements by Mrs. Crosby authorised to consider any com- j nve sligatiang crime or determining n/imrimeni n( PnsK and Telecraoiis Manpower the every case Brit ain bad acted IJ every previous case and give -them from chairman in ave a ¦¦'' ¦¦f> ; proceeded '.o Mng the ! in terspersed with ironic asides from h will, the plaint sent to him by an M.P. fro m whether a matter* shall go to the had no commen t to make about DepartmenV of Industry and Com- as trustees for the people she had independence based on their exist• ¦ ¦• -;' . "' ?o her husband. She is a star in her anyone in courts, and order and discipline associati on 's declaration on picket- merce. " law fu lly ' resident A manpower forecasting, ruled , for the majorities and lor ing Constitution , then we must he < ¦ • '¦ ' *av Bj v - '~ 1 own right, and her professional acti- Britain," or , so far as matters con- in the armed services. make ing, while the gardai did not established within the minorities. " That must be our being were discussed to the exclui vities unit is 1' c SJ^yor. his wife -> ri-i. v. .i 5. !c an official function short-term forecasts in regard to clared. ¦ rity rule . night, ! last exchange street Exchequer Ireland. NEW INVESTMENTS1 as informal as possible. Legal '• Enzland bv: v. na.i conceded j changes in the supnlv and demand He outlined Rhodesia 's history '"Second, we had to be sure that Wholly independent of the representation will be the exception however, and accordin g t o picketers, for labour. '. hit he h.id been well acquainted and said that after 40 years of t r.ee they had their independence , j Horse-racing. inevitably. also I Government and a ppointed bv rather than the rule . Lecal aid will gardai have been t aking their names limited self-government , control lay ;; !)6 no longe r subject-to the Briti sh authotraininz , industrial A new thp " rVnui tVic Rrtti sh "n^nn perle * no! be available. :-=- .G '%r: 'iom meeting zhc Mayor. ; racing. " Of the possibility- thai he ; tha t his constituent do not suffer vement in the Court. High and the themselves I h e Commissioner will have ! Mr. Smith has demanded that we ; pol itica l status of the four million ¦ j association th at the needs of the economy for j now confer independence ' • Galxav . the crooner e.Vraordi- I might invest further in Irish race- I iniusticeof the spokesman A discretion to pursue a case where on the i Africans—w e did not say. as in -k r \ .ves;erd3v afternoon a 'so en- i horses, he commented : " We 're I .All complaints will have to be j skilled workers arc met and that he thinks there are insufficient later last n ight stated that two fh/» h o c i c r»f xr .rcrsd :he kind of thing which I going lo look around a Httle. _ I've ] lodged through M.P's. and the grounds If he finds nothing wrong, members mentioned in injunction redundant workers are , where neces- R h o Hp s iun rvnnlp nn I every other case "one man one . And *i/i*- i umit .u! aLciy — uui we aai - a friend came up so . him : Were they going to buy an Iri^h will persuade a Government DeIf he finds justi fiable cause for another in St. Andrew street. wards the cost of this service. British Parliament, by an Act of towards ending the racial discrim- . :c7 him i''--a< the Customs wished I cottage? This was not the case. p artment to right a wrong, if not complaint, and the Departmen t con- They would do another shift or And we have ination, which has developed under Legislation for this purpose is our Parliament. .v-: whc'v 'r.er he had a licence j the crooner said, but svent on: he will merelv record the matter in vti uc u icspunub 10 ins lrrv nauon picket duty to-day, he said. i.-^ never granted independence except th<; laws and practices of the being prepared . ¦" ¦• ¦¦• ¦- ¦ his report to Parliament, and then to put it right , he will tell the M.P. : ¦¦» - :;m . Ou i came a Spanish • '"You can never tell . . . if we find The Government has made its on the basis of democratic majority Rhodesian Government. j rnnre sshe 'coking a pretty one and its at the right the M.P"s. will take any necessary his findings . ?.c ~ .' c-- - "an own decision regarding the pro- rul e. ¦ '¦¦¦ Mr . Crosbv cailed it. j price. "' ""Why not?" said his wife. acti on. "Fifth, we insisted , as our p r e : : •; .:-r.cr. -. "So far as the Commissioner is I "This. Mr. Smith and his col- decessors insisted a year ago. thatvision of redundancy payment to ¦ .-.pp .i:e n:1v 'ia< no: -sufficient. j "'.Speak ?\> ihe boss.*" said the husThe Government savs that the concerned, this will be the end of workers. A special committee re- leagues of- the Rhodesian National before we could proceed to rccom¦ ¦ ¦ ; cluichine a wafting st ick. ) Commissioner «:!! be concerned the matter , save for a possible referpresenting employers, unions and Front resolutely reject. '. ';« ¦; end - oi :hc resumed ;n!er- band Not in i mend R'hodesian independence to .<. i:h ¦ ;: ' faults in administration, and ence to the case in his annual reporl the State was unable to reach their lifetime, they have said , will Parliamen t , we must be satisfied ~¦ ¦ =c and his w;fe had 10 re- I with a green whippet s head handle j 'ii will no; be for j him to criticise to Parliament." ¦ - - :. ' -he Custom 's hall lo S'^n -' which she had bou aht for him in i a greement on this point. The they allow it to happen. " that the conditions propesed for I -lolicv . As a start on\\ comp laints -"\-"'.:r <. ;-]por d. 'cumc ms for I¦ Paris. But if the Department does noi )%4 ''In Government now slates that the the summer of . more jI independence were acceptable to the There v\crc . by the way. and in i igainSi the Central Government arc act to his satisfaction, he can report I •¦ -c i.;n- . "!:•_ j un.v he ' exp lained. . About 100 workers engaged on cost will be met through appro- than a year ago. i hey made it • people of R hodesia as a whole. . "'In due course" lo Parliament on this issue alone- ?rc - "" :hrec 20 gauge shot-guns for ; ca.^e anyone believes :ba t ihe j mpo^ J ¦*o He considered hf * o n PT 'j 'n c i nn f -v r t r V \ rt r ?!i*Tf» m^ l \ < the Tynagh Mines development priate contribution by employers clear that if the then British Gov- { "These "w ere the principles—the * at leasi two j okes Parliamen t itself will decide action • ' "Ti z r^rrr> d2e. pheasan' and I sible happened, *--¦ ¦ •¦ and workers . ernm ent under Sir Alec Dou glas- ! minimum princi ples — we laid : ¦ ! "ic!ds. '• on reports from the Commissioner. programme went on strike yester. a! Bob Hope's cxr*ense! ' -:- '-. :-d of SlU t f . " The White Paper in it* intro- Home, refused to give them indeAlthou g h al first—to a\oid a ! I: will noi be a matter for Icg isla- day after a demand for a bonus erf (Continued in page 11) duction says that Government pendence on their terms , they re- j .lej uae of trivia ! cases—the Com£20 each had been turned down. 1 tion. missioner wilj lim it h i.s activilies The dispute started when Wim- policy in relation to manpower to Government Departments, hi s j pcy s, the contractors installing will aim at the institution of 14,000 CASES 3mbit could be widened later tn i machinery in the mill, at Tynagh, measures which will help workers include other Government bodies. • No decision ha« been mad e about Co. Galw&y, brought in 40 exlra to benefit from the employment Big local authorities may in due I the salary of the Om budsman (who men from Belfast in order to help opportunities which "will follow course appoint their own Ombuds- ! is likely to be a lawyer), but it complete the job by October 22nd, from the achievements of the man or Commissioner. i may be in the region of £10.000 a the scheduled date for the offioial targets set out in the Second ProThe Government stales : "We do year. One estimate is that perhaps opening of the mines by the gramme for Economic Expansion. Growth in the industrial sector not wa rn 10 create anv new institu- 14.000 cases a year of alleged in- Taoiseach. tion which would erode the func- justice will be referred to him. The strikers claim that the men is vitall y important as the major tions of Members of Parliament bin that the great majority of these brough t in are being paid a higher increase in employment is antici;n this respect , nor to renlace will turn out 10 be unjustified. rate per hour. Company officials pated in this sector and industrial The Government 's proposals were declined to comment on the will have favourable remedies which the Briti sh Constipossi- development 1 "interesting and important, " Sir bility of the strike effects on employment in the tution already provides. interfering with "Our proposal is to develop those John Hobson. Conservative spokes- the official opening plans. An agricultural and services sectors. man on legal affairs , said in a i remedies still further. We shall give atten dance of 600 has been invited MOVEMEN T OF WORKERS Members of Parl iament a better statement last nighl. to the opening and a banquet He added, however, that it was instrument which they can use to Apart from the decline in agriprotect the citizen."" according to important that Britain did not set tural employment there may cul "" up a new bureaucracy to watch i f hp Whit< > Ps ivr . also be substantial changes in over the bureaucrats, making pubemployment in individual industIN DE PENDENT OFFI CER lic administration more intricate ries as a result of the freeing of and dilatory . trade and the introduction ol The Commissioner will be an Mr. Hric Lubbock. Liberal Whip LEADING ARTICLES .. Page o l equipment and independent officer, secure from said: "Liberals welcome any move more efficient dismissal, except by Parliament ary t'hai will help to safeguard the lib- j LETTERS TO THE EDITOR : become m ethods. Some skills may j { motion. He will repon 10 Parlia- •nrties of the ordinary citizen . ! j Peers of Ireland : Griffith ! f obsolete while new skills may be ment eaci year, and otherwise as " There is no disguising the point, j ; White M an 's BurBarracks i in short supply. Many workers I! den : Ireland' occasion requires. He will act however, that the Parliamentary s Waterways : i j may have lo move to newonly on a complaint of personal Commissioner of Administration , I The Card ; Backwa rd Srep : i localities. j An American Butterfly : Drug i injustice suffered by the com- as now proposed , is little more than ' The manpower authority has 0 ; j / Prices plainant. a longstop for the ineffective membeen set up in response to many AN IRISHMAN 'S DIARY .. 9 J demands. The Irish Congress of It wj ll be for an M.P. to decide ber of Parliament." whether the complaint is apLONDON LEJTER Trade Uni ons was the first to raise (See in page 4 ''Ombudsman for 9J propria te . A com plainant will the problem with the National WEATHER U not be restricted to approaching North unlikely") Productivity Committee and sugihe Member for his own conSPORT 2, 3, 4 1 gested the setting up of a special 1; . stituency "Most complaints will ¦ ¦ FINANCE t ;, 13 j Department of Labour. This the BEff . . Quarry worker killed IIBBBBIe^BHeBH wbh Bhp^^*^bHBBBHHbB3K [ j come private individuals, j from Productivity Committee agreed Ek co 0RC 25 Ra diant with Ekco 'Fandair' Heater Type F82-. Mo dern, versatile FEATURES : j but companies and other corporate 1 Robert Neil! «>£ Dcrrycorbin , j with. An Inler-Departmental. Comroom heater.ca n bs used either at floor level or eonvecteri and radiant j bodies—other than Can the West be. Won ? (6) ; I (hose under Lisnaskca. Fermanagh, lost his life mittee however, believed that the 1 Dub liclv Records : Cruiskeen Lawn .. 10 warmth. Automatic control suspended from wall bracket. Producing a smooth elected Or appointed in a quarry at Stushill. near Lisemployment service should be Book of the D ay 9 silent 1 the turbo fan is pre-set flow of area, maintain air over a wide thorit y—wil l au not be excluded." naskca , yesterday when he was *cts to operated the Department ol ll ffl by CARTOONS in use and has a remarkable efficiency. £12.15.0. 15 j; The White Paper uives a list of j caught in a conveyor belt which tem perature. £14.7.6. Social Welfare - - but recommended 151 Ministries and Departments it carries stone f rom the quarry-f ace TV and RADIO 15! trial the operation of the service ector co anvec or > combined Fan and BgBB £8B!BBSBBBBSS portable heater. T de-luxe I will be proposed should be sub- I to a crushing plant. He was aged ^e& ^ ' should be reviewed. CROSSWORD 15 is a BHS ^Bj ^BSHHB^SBB Conv ] j ect to investigation over "th e j about 43 and leaves a wife and j I whole range of relationships famil y. (Continued in page 6) TWO MEN WITH A ! AN OMBUDSMAN COMMON INTEREST I FOU BRITAIN Bing Cros by meets Gahtmy^s mayor jjI ji I Government proposals welcomed by Tories I j i V^^ I Ji fl 1 tlI l\^ ll L V^ I L ^**J t*j m» » * ^ — - - %j - - A .. _ ..... . I *< . . — !« r*A . ^ IV. ^1 1 l« . • » t V C 1 .T *1 f i j 5 I * ^X 1 A t fVS r>^ it >l fit ( A l l ! W *» > >« - h * ^ # «*« ^ Workers strike nine days before mines' opening NO TANKS NO BUNKERS NO PIPES Just clean economical , effective heating. it' s Ekco. There 's a model for every need. Safe, dependable. That's Ekco. I ! I j ; \ In to-day 's issue bWBSIIit^ t Bb^^^mHbH iHBB ^^^ H every enrnm of the room by built-in ^gB tangential fan. Thermostatic control m^^^^^^^^^^ ¦ tempera- ^^^ K^^^^^^^^^^^^^p^HH maintains any desired room FROM ANY GO OD ELECT RICAL SUPPLIER i^ ^ l Distribu te d by KELLY & SHI ^L LTD., : P.O . BOX 171. DUBLIN 3. TBU. 371621. T^J hS *d SYMBOL OF SERVICE Dublin Showr ooms : 48 Fleet St., Tel 3T1 62I. Cork Showroom s: 23 D raw bridge St., Tel 25238 I EIGH T SOCCER PLA YERS BANNED F OR LIFE FOR DRUNKEN NESS , EIGHT star soccer players ha\ e , been banned from the game j for 'ife by the Soviet Soccer ; Federation because of " systematic drunkenness."' According to the youth newspaper. Moskovsky Komsonilets, they were also deprived of the Master of Snorts title, which is awarded to outstanding athletes. The newspaper declared th at similar action would be taken against other athletes if necessary, and urged sports club executives against laxness in penalising drunks. The newspaper asserted that footballers, who were idolised b y many young people, had to set a g ood examp le or be driven out of ' the game. It added that Tbilisi Dynamo, las! year 's League champions, had gone to pieces this season because they had begun to believe they were "some sort of supermen who can do anything." Jreatment and computeory labour, with part of their earnings going to their families and part to pay for their room and board and treatment . Provision for compulsory treatment already exist in some of the Soviet . Union's 15 republics, and a Moscow city prosecutor, writing in Izvestia, the Government newspaper, has suggested nation-wide application. which is normally free in the Soviet Union. Social security authorities have been urged to refuse payment of benefits to habitual drunks and courts have been told to regard drunkenness as an aggravating, rather than mitigating, circum$2iv mpmhprc r»f thrf* tan 'nri in^inHirtu stance i n the commission o f a crime. several stars, "do not shine by their exemplary conduct." Among other measures nrnnnserl The Soviet authorities are conis the right of policemen to fine drunks encountered cerned about the rising rate " of in pxiblic juven ile delinquency, and have conplaces. Jt has even been suggested j centrated increasingly on drunkenTt has also been suggested in the that the performance of a factory press that drunks pay for losses of be judged according to the numness as a key factor . leading ¦to ¦ .; production caused by their absence ber of cases of ' crime. drunkenness among It has been proposed ' that ona from jobs _ because of drinking. workers , as well as its economic way to curb drunkenness is to send Under such ' circumstances they are achievements. — . (New York Times '¦%drunk s to special institutions for- to be charged for medical care, News Service.) V*r f J ^ 1 ¦• Wl > A W^ J ^ \S J . t *A^ bvr« .«l 4 4 % A4-4 WA .UV * IA4IU §a mm Send for our bookle t 'Saving in Safety 1. It will pay you to read it. raj Ira