3 16 THE OSHAWA Times, Thursday, July 6, 1967 * | Prone Babies Most Quiet By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Topics this week: Babies, hay fever shots and strange noises in the ears. QUIETER BABIES Babies placed on their backs cry twice as much dur- ing the first four days of life as babies lying on their stom- achs. And those placed on their stomachs had much less dia- per rash, and fewer self-in- flicted scratch marks, a team of pediatricians reports. ONE HAY FEVER SHOT Instead of a series of shots to immunize against hay fe- ver, allergists have been ex- perimenting with a single in- jection. The hay fever material or allergen designed to produce protection is imprisoned within tiny water droplets sur- rounded by oil. This way, it is released slowly as the oil is absorbed within body tissues. Now Dr. Samuel J. Prigal of New York Medical College tells of a new way of prepar- ing the oil emulsion within five minutes. And he has de- vised a simpler test to make sure the oil will be released slowly. He says among 95 persons tested, only three had any re- actions. These were limited to short periods of excessive sneezing or mild wheezing, and anithistamines or other drugs took care of that. SEA WATER WARNING Claims for sea water cures are making the rounds again, says Medical World News. The national Better Busi- ness Bureau, it says, is warn- ing "that a number of pro- moters are blanketing the country with claims that con- centrated sea water is good for arthritis, palsy, cancer, diabetes, Parkinson's disease, leukemia, multiple sclerosis, anemia, grey hair, baldness and lack of virility." EAR NOISES Noises in the ear come in a great variety of sounds, and from a variety of causes. The noise may resemble the sound of escaping steam, whistles blowing, the ringing of a high-pitched bell, running water, roarings, or buzzing or hammering sensations. Among causes, says Dr. Noah D. Fabricant of Chi- cago, are the pressure of wax against the eardrum; fluids in the middle ear cavity from al- lergy or infections; excessive use of tobacco and alcohol, reactions to drugs, various forms of anemia and other ailments. Name Of Novel Cold War Word LONDON (CP) --- What hap- pens when you write a novel and suddenly find its title has become a Cold War catch phrase? That recently happened to] Eddy Gilmore, a star reporter| of The Associated Press. He| wrote his first novel, a Russo- American love story based on| his own 'experience in Stalin's/hut with the vast difference in| Moscow--he married a Russian ballerina--and called it Troika. No sooner was the book on sale in British bookshops, than Nikita Khrushchev put the word "troika'" into the headlines with| f » {the Communists. It's Russia, his three-man plan for repre}, , mother Russia. What must senting East, West and neutral countries at international con- ferences. Khrushchev named it after the traditional three-horse Russian sleigh, incidentally giv- ing author Gilmore free public- ity for his book. But was it such a lucky break after all? William Connor, the Daily Mirror's peppery column- ist who writes under the name of Cassandra, mythological Greek prophet of doom, says he| feels sorry for Gilmore. 'DIRTY WORD' "Troika," he says, "now is a dirty word in the West, and an object of grave suspicion." He pictures the author open- ing The Daily Telegraph to read: "Lord Home calls for Re- jection of 'Troika.' " Newspaper man Gilmore, who of quiet fun out of the situa- tion. | "It's great," he says. "Gets the word around." | ike Gilmore, the hero of the | book hails from Alabama, but he is a diplomat, not a journal- ist. In his love-affair with the Russian girl Tanya, he tangles not only with the secret police, | their backgrounds, with the pri- {meval tragedy of Russia itself. | "Russia's troubles aren't as| {simple as Stalin," says Tanya. "You can't blame them all on| other nations think of us? Our land is the broadest, the longest | .. . and our agony is the deep- | est." 'GOOD STORY' The London Evening News calls Troika "a good story, told | with occasionally brutal frank. | ness, by a man who has an ob- servant eye." Author Gilmore's byline is one of the best known in the world news agencies. Since he was| transferred to London in 1954, | he has covered most of the big| events in Europe, and still lec-| tures regularly on Russia in the United States. | A big, burly man with a shin- | ing bald head, a taste for vivid braces and with a trace still of southern drawl, Eddy Gilmore won a Pulitzer Prize for his re- porting of the Moscow scene|three daughters in a penthouse during his 12 years as AP cor-| perched high over north Lon-| respondent there, is getting a lot! don. lives with his wife Tamara and Waste Inspired Socred Candidate QUEBEC (CP) -- Real Caou- ette, candidate for the leader- ship of the Social Credit party, began his search for a new poli- tical philosophy during the 1930s when he saw surplus food being thrown away while thousands were hungry. hy thought it was senseless," gnwe tha son whasa famite Waa supported the Liberal party. At first he looked to the co- operative movement and to voluntary action by private en- terprise to solve the problems created by the Depression. "I saw nothing was being solved." In 1939 he read a book on Social Credit by the move. ment's founder, Maj. C. H. Douglas. He decided to join im- mediately. He was 21 at the time and a commercial travel- lar. Now, at 43, he is one of the party's most energetic workers. Mr. Caouette announced sev- eral weeks before the July 4.7 convention in Ottawa that he planned to be a candidate for the national leadership vacated by Solon Low. Others are Dr. Robert Thomp- son of Edmonton, president of the Social Credit Association of Canada, and former MPs from British Columbia, Rev. Alex- ander Patterson and George Hahn. ENERGETIC CAMPAIGNER Mr. Caouette, 160 pounds and five-foot-eight, has driven hima self hard for the Social Credit cause. He sold a half inter est in his automobile agency at Rouyn, Que. to six of his employees to give himself more time for party affairs. He has made five trips to Ontario and Western Canada. In Quebec, where he has been Social Credit leader since 1958, he has appeared on 94 televi- sion programs within the last year and has presided at 15 of the 18 conventions the party has held to choose candidates for the next federal election. The party intends to contest all the province's 75 seats. In his speeches--he speaks both French and English flu- sntly--his lavorite targets are the Progressive Conservative and Liberal parties. "The government is like a car," he says. "A driver with a cap of different color periodi- cally takes the place of the dri- ver at the wheel. But the same old car remains. What is needed is a new car--Social Credit." EURMBSS Sak Mr, Caouette can claim one first. He is the only Social Crediter ever elected to Parlia- ment from Quebec. He won a 1946 byelection in Pontiac-Tem- iscamingue but was defeated in the 1949 general election. "If the Communists have suc- ceeded in giving security to their people without freedom, | why can't we do the same | while assuring individual free- dom?" he asks. "If capitalists want to save their «skin they had better smarten up. Cuba is not far away." A native of Amos, Que., Mr, Caouette took an advanced commercial studies course at the Sacred Heart Brother's Col lege in Victoriaville, Que., and subsequently worked for a bank, contracting firms and as a commercial traveller before going into the car business. He is married to the former Suzanne Cure of Amos. They have three children, Roger, 22, Gilles, 21, and Andree, 11. Bank Swindle Brings Charges MONTREAL (CP)--Jack Le- derman, 45, of Toronto, was ar- raigned on charges of conspir- acy to print bogus bank drafts that, it is alleged, would have netted him $5,000. 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