2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, July 14, 1960 'SENATOR KENNEDY WINS DEMOCRATIC NOMINATION FOR PRESIDENCY the Los Angeles Sports Arena as he gets the traditional dem- onstration after he was nomin- ated Wednesday night to be the ONE OF Sen. John F, Kenne- "dy's sisters and the wives of his two brothers form an ani- mated group in the gallery of id i Kennedy and Mrs. Eunice Shriver, --AP Wirephoto Democratic party's presidential candidate, Left to right are: Mrs. Robert Kennedy, Mrs, Ted INTERPRETING THE NEWS Among Dem By DAVID ROWNTREE | Virginia, South Carolina, North |Carolina, Florida and Arkansas, The Democratic party's bold Until now, these states have campaign statement on how it/exercised a veto over the Dem- plans to protect the rights of|ocratic party's candidate for Negroes ami other minority president and the party's elec- groups in the United States un-|tion campaign platform: Both derscores an important change had to be acceptable to the that is taking place in American|south; both had to skirt strong politics. positions aimed at improving] Increasingly in recent years, education, voting rights or just- the population pas been moving|ice for Negroes. from the northeastern part of| the country to the west. Cali. SOUTH BYPASSED fornia is expected to pass New| Now, with the growing voting York as the most populous state advantage of the northern and] Canadian Press Staff Writer {decade. |for the Deep South--Louisiana, { Mississippi, Alabama, in the Union by the end of the Western states, some leaders in| the democratic party feel that| This trend, apparent in nearly|they can safely ignore southern, ie Pacific coast and western|feclings on the explosive civil states, has particular meaning rights issue. Thus, the party this year is Georgia,l saying that if its man is elected search without wastefully dupli- Commons defence expenditures Democratic presidential nom- ination in Los Angeles Wednes- day night. SEN. SPESSARD Holland of Florida put the name of his . colleague, Sen. George Smath- ers, into nomination as a fav- orite-son candidate for the ON PARLIAMENT HILL Broadcasters Under Fire By KEN KELLY Mr. Pickersgill suggested the Canadian Press Staff Writer |government and the board go OTTAWA (CP)--The Board of|slow on authorizing the establish- Broadcast Governors underwent ment of a private television net. a baptism of fire in the Commons|work to compete with the pub- Wednesday with reflections on its|licly-owned CBC whose revenues independence and criticism of its|migh' suffer. TV licensing recommendations. Douglas Fisher (CCF -- Port The board was given a rough|/Arthur) called for a 'punch on mauling at the hands of Libera!/the nose" instead of a slap on - and CCF speakers but Revenue|the wrist for private broadcast- Minister Nowlan, who reports tc ers who break the BBG's broad- Parliament on broadcasting mat-| casting regulations, ters, entered a spirited defence| The greatest heat was gen- of the two - year - old regulatory|erated over the Chevrier-Pickers- body. 3 gill criticisms of the BBG. Mr. Nowlan, maintaining tha |=, Nowlan, contending most 3 call i Mn i Bg Tr pe the attacks on the BBG were i inspired by innueno and rumors 1f sharply at odds with opposi-| i fon S ankors on all the following|SP-e2d by disappointed licence | applicants, denied their attack in charges: | detail, 1. The board's recommenda: tion of licensing TV applicants| 8& MISINFORMED "vith non-Canadian financial back-| He said Mr. Chevrier was mis- jug represented a deperture from informed in stating one-third of wthe principle of Canadian owner- the ownership of the successfu! "ship of the air waves. |Ottawa applicant--E, L. Bushnell 2. The board had made a dan-|"clevision Company -- was held gerous departure from previous|bY Britain's Granada TV net policy in recommending licensing| Work and National Telefilm Asso- of a TV station controlled by 1 |Ciates Tncorvorated of New York. Toronto Telegram when there Mr: Chevrier said he under. were non-newspaper applicants of equal merit ready to operate a Toronto outlet, 3. Political payoffs to support ers of the Progressive Conserva tive government seemed implicit fm recommendations for the li- censing of TV stations at Toronto end Halifax. Mr. Cheyrier maintained that AND OTHER MATTERS if the government licenses the Besides these expressed and Bushnell apolicants and a Hali- $§mnlied criticism from Lionelifax group that includes backing Chevrier 'L-Montreal Lauriex)|from Canastel Broadcasting Cor- and J. W. Pickersgill 'L--Bona-|poration--a wholly - owned sub Vista-Twillingate) the broadcast-|sidiary of Associated Television ing debate during study of the|(A™™ of England--the Conserv- BBG's 1960 - 51 spending plans|atives will not be heeding their ganged over a variety of related 1957 and 1958 election campaion matters. criticisms of American influence --AP Wirephoto Canadian publisher Roy Thomson in England. Mr. Nowlan said the voting- _|shar~ ownership was 24.9 per cent with non-Canadian interests, eign ownership. Defence Research Tops In Canada OTTAWA (CP)--Canada is do- raised this year to $23,900,000 ing as much as physically pos-|{from $21,900,000 last year. sible in the field of defence re-| "One of the main reasons we cannot do more is the lack of the|scientists who are available to us," he said. "We lost a number of them and it has been difficult to get the right type of men into In reply to Mr. Winch, Mr, this field." BIOLOGICAL WARFARE Pearkes said that Canada's re- search in biological and chem- ical warfare is all on the defen- sive side. , . . Seeing how to minimize the effects of chemical attack on humans and livestock." Dr. Barrett said that there were U.S.-U.K.-Canadian meet- ings every year on chemical war- fare research to avoid duplication and "our relations in this field are closer than in any other." cating the work of its allies, committee was told Wednesday. This was the summation of Defence Minister Pearkes and Dr. H. M. Barretf, chief of in- stallations for the Defence Re- search Board, in answer to crit icism on both points by opposi- tion members. Harold Winch (CCF -- Van. couver East) expressed fear that Canadian defence research is be- ing duplicated in Britain and the United States, and asked re- peatedly what Canada is doing or could do that cannot be donc by the richer countries, Paul Hellyer (L--Toronto Trin- ity), opposition defence critic,|®'§ , said his fear was the opposite] Ihe work we do in Canada is --that Canada Is too restricted in|Put in a common pool," he added. its military research and de-| The United States has a $150, velopment program. He sug. (100,000 program, with increased gested the DRB may be starved emphasis on chemical and biolog- for funds. ical warfare this year. We have Change Emerges oN IN THE tradition of wild and wacky demonstrators, support- M: tts mill through the isles of the Los Angelés Sports Arena today after he was nom- inated as the Democrat's pres- iOpen Verdict By Coroner's Jury Rapped KIRKLAND LAKE (CP)--As open verdict by a coroner's jury is deplorable and tantamount to an improper decision, Eric Silk, assistant attorney-general, sald' Wednesloy. ; i He told 40 coroners attending a regional Suilistence there was no limit to verdict a may bring in, to its a ations or the time taken to reach the verdict. 3 He disagreed with Dr. D. Gun-) nell of Stratford who suggested inquests could not be held where technical language in testimony was beyond the grasp of the jurymen, MEXICAN URANIUM MEXICO CITY (AP) -- The biggest uranium ore deposit yet discovered in Mexico has beem found in the state of Durango. The Mexican nuclear energy commission figures the deposit contains at least 150,000 tons. [ IMPORTANT NOTICE! Professor Niagra WILL SE AT SWAN'S HARDWARE idential candidate, --AP Wirephoto ers of Sen, John F, K dy of 50 wydeze senate-credit julyldd OTTAWA (CP) -- The ladies-- consumers and welfare workers --are rallying behind Senato: David Croll and his bill to have the cost of credit buying clearly ' : disclosed. president in November, legisla. "wo on from the Canadian Wel- tion will be introduced so that|r, o'sCouncil and the Canadian every school district which was), o0iation" of Consumers swept first ordered to desegregate inlinto the Senate banking commit- 1954 must submit before 1963 3tee Wednesday to tell the sena- p an om tw it Is going to carry tors how much they liked Sena- out that order. | wi Hg federal attorney - general WriCriLs bill Liberal senator Yili be Instructed b Seelt_ court has proposed legislation which | Pe po i TT force finance companies are ' grounds of race, creed gh Solor | retail stores, dealers and others It also should be noted that|t¢ disclose in writing the total ln ch DIE tl id into account the troubles of e-| 5 groes, Puerto Ricans and other|the simple annual interest rate-- minorities outside the south, (or face criminal charges. "If discrimination in voting, While the women asked the education, the administration of Senators to favor the bill, the justice or segregated lunch-/Canadian Retail Federation lam- |counters are the issues in one basted its provision for setting area," the statement says, "dis- out the percentage cost as "con- erimination in housing and em-|fusing, perhaps deceptive and loyment may be pressing ques-/very possibly inaccurate." A Ro elsewhere," y .. Toes ais Chamber of Commerce Papers Taboo For Business VICTORIA BEACH, N.S. (CP)|by boat to Saint John for dis- W. Doyle said here Wednesday |tinent. modern business had learned from politicians of the past 'to TAUGHT CO-OPERATION keep its hands off newspapers."| Mr. Doyle said the pony ex- 4 Doyle, managing editor of{Press "taught publishers their The Halifax Chronicle - Herald |first lessons in co-operation. and Mail-Star, spoke at a cere-| "Out of these lessons," he mony here commemorating a|said, "grew The Canadian Press brief period 111 years ago when|yip its 100-newspaper member- world news stories were hustled across Nova Scotia on horse ship, The Associated Press, with back. its membership of many times Edna Anderson, a granddaugh-|that number. . . , All their news ter of one of the two brothers|is poured into a common pool who operated a pony express|just as, in the beginning, all between Halifax and this sprawl- ing Bay of Fundy beach near news brought across the Atlantic Digby, unveiled a plaque at a|Was carried by pony express for ceremony attended by news and|the use of all co-operators." Ladies Rally Behind Croll's Credit Buying Legislation Halifax newspaper editor Frank|tribution to the rest of the con-| OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE brief said the proposal would] hearby increase business costs. TELLS OF ILL EFFECTS Mrs. D. L. Ross of Montreal, Friday Evening and Saturday Morning To answer all questions and give advice about bugs on plonts and control of weeds. EVERYONE IS INVITED Did You Know... In the main Dining Room of the GENOSHA HOTEL you can have a Full-course . Dinner for ONLY 95c. re he chairman of the fAmily and child welfare division of the Canadian Welfare Council, told the sena- tors of broken homes, nervous breakdowns, ill-fed children--all largely caused by families up to their necks in debt, she said. "We believe it is their right to have full information about what their total indebtedness will be, {and that the costs should be ex- pressed in simple terms which |they can understand," she said. A Retail Federation spokes- {man called in Frederick P, Var- {coe, former deputy minister of |justice, to give a legal view on |the bill, Mr, Varcoe said he thought it {was not within Parliament's com-| petence -- that Canadian courts) would invalidate the law if it was passed. The committee decided to hear more from Mr. Varcoe later. bold Le | = TT MARKET PRESSWOOD'S BONELESS -- READY TO SERVE SMOKED HAMS . 85° 22-3 Ib. Av. : Binh -- 46 SIMCOE ST, N. ® OSHA) LUCAS SKINLESS -- 2-LB. CELLO BAG NU-WAY < RUG CLEANERS 4 ® Dyeing and Repairing ® Binding and Fringing © Mothproofing Wall to wall carpets cleaned in your home mA §-4681 174 MARY STREET WIENERS 2 - 79° | LUCAS -- RINDLESS Le. 55° B ACON BREAKFAST PORK CHOPS . 59° HOME GROWN -- HOT HOUSE -- NO. 1 GRADE TOMATOES 39° ONTARIO GROWN -- LARGE HEADS 10° CABBAGE ONTARIO GROWN -- FRESH NO. 1 GRADE EN WAX BEANS w 19° LB. EACH The pony express operated for nine months in 1849 when there was no telegraph link between Halifax and Saint John, N.B. The ~verseas news was picked up from boats in Halifax, rushed at access to all this work going on Mr. Pearkes said the Defence|in the United States in return for Research Board's budget was our investment of $1,000,000." a 12-mile-an-hour clip through the Annapolis Valley and relayed |stand- that Granada is owned by| } below the BBG requirement of| [no more than 25 per cent for-| Resort hotels in the Canadian Rockies provide an ever-popu- lar source of summer jobs for university students. Days off becomes occasions for hiking, swimming and mountain climb- yields $400 in salaries and tips for hard - working waitresses, chambermaids, busboys and bellthops. Busy setting a table at Chaleau Lake Louise are Among them: in Canada. | (left to right): Pamela Peake, ing, and the suseaer usually | 19, a student from Dalhousie » a RING VACATION historical authorities. THE ARISTOCRAT OF R PRIME Cut from Red & Blue Bro OASTS nd Beef TROUD' FOOD MARKET," 94 SIMCOE ST. NORTH e HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS o B Ge LEAN MEATY BLADE ROAST BONELESS BEEF (POT ROAST) BRISKET STANDING 6th or 7th PRIME RIB PEAMEALED COTTAGE RO University, Halifax; Jennifer Stanley, 21, McGill University, Montreal; and Maxine Slater, 122, University of British Col- | umbia, (CP Photo) TURKEYS AV FRESH KILLED OVEN READY 6-8-1B. LLS ERAGE ALL AT THIS EXTREMELY LOW PRICE 49 PKG. GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS oa th, Je PEEK FREAN DIGESTIVE Biscuits | Ge V2-LB. GRADE "A" pe Eces 25 45c Loose or In Your Container CHRISTIE'S BROOKSIDY (Ox. BREAD 2 LOAVES 35 d Delivery Service Shop for your $20 and over FREE end have it $10¢to0 $20 -- 25¢ delivered. . op 4 410... 35¢ Under $5. -- 45¢ anywhere in Oshawa