ee ie ly me He WEF hee ee toe Vice-Regal State Dinner Postponed EDNA BLAKELY 'AWA (CP)--For the sec- ond time in a row, the vice-re- gal state dinner and reception that usually precedes the open- ing of a new Parliament will not be held this year. The gala affair was not held before the 25th Parliament opened last September because' of renovations to Rideau Hall, official residence of the Gover- nor-General. This year, it has been post- until the opening of the fall session of Parliament be- cause Governor-General Vanier still is recovering from-a mild! heart attack. The two main social functions connected with the 26th Parlia- ment's opening Thursday will be receptions tendered by the the Senate "Man Mecneagtioa, lan Macnaug' govern- ment nominee for Commons speaker, is expected to receive about 1,000 guests including members of the diplomatic corps, the Senate, the Commons and their wives. About the same number are expected to meet Senate Speaker Maurice Bourget in his chambers. The rooms will be decorated with red roses, Eas- ter lilies and cascades of white hyacinths in crystal containers. Manitoba Girls Claimed Less* Sex-Conscious WINNIPEG (CP)--The dean of women at the University of Manitoba says her girls appar- ently are not as sex. i hi 8 Oe re ey --Aielie ea bibdate be? %¢ ah wee ' Mrs, Lester B, Pearson, wife of the prime minister, has cho- sen for the receptions a white satin gown embroidered with red carnations designed by Bo- ronkay of Montreal. With it she will wear a white satin stole lined »with red, Mrs, John Diefenbaker, wife of the opposition leader, plans to wear an emerald green satin sheeth with pearl jewelry. Mrs, Robert Thompson, wife of the Social Credit leader, was expected from her home in Red Deer, Alta. It was not known if the wife of the party's deputy leader, Mrs, Real Caouette of Rouyn, Que., would be here. The wife of the New Demo- cratic Party leader, Mrs. T .C. Douglas, will return here Thursday but too late to attend ek ad oe ga we Federal Surcharge Refund Claims Up OTTAWA (CP -- Claims against the federal government for refund of tariff surcharges neared the $1,000,000 mark Tues- day. The law firm of Gowling, MacTavish, Osborne and Hend- erson filed 20 more claims in the Exchequer Court, seeking recovery of surcharges col- lected by the former Conserva- tive government as part of its austerity program. The firm filed its first claim last week on behalf of a wom. en's wear chain -- Reitman's-- seeking the return of $112,000. The petitions contend that the surcharges were wrongfully im- posed and collected under an in- valid order-in-ouncil. The 'last of the surcharges was abolished March 31, MANY VISITED Since the beginning of the fourth century, Christians of Panel To three-man presidential pane || has laid down broad guidelines for gradual removal of most firemen from freight and yard trains, central issue in a work- rules dispute that threatens a rail strike across the United States June 12, The salient proposal was that safety be the determining fac- tor in elimination of jobs and that the cuts be subject to nego- tiation, with provision ofr arbi- tration if that is required. In a report to President Ken- nedy, the panel said the issues between the railroads and the five operating brotherhoods have been narrowed and an agreement can be reached in the next 30 days if both sides will bargain realistically. The central issue is the rec- ommendation of an earlier pres- many churches have visited the the opening. Holy City of Jerusalem . OO ee er err a & elite pane, SE IS NOC A a es ; ' . ' vd tee a ad ve oe 4 yee 'hea aie, Let a © es be Ath Leah 5 Guide Firemen Removal WASHINGTON (AP) -- A former president Eisenhower-- which proposed eliminating 40,- 000 firemen from freight and yard trains, / The railroads contend out- moded work rules cost them $600,000,000 each year. They call these rules "featherbed- ding." The railroads accepted the pro; of the earlier presiden- tial commission, which called for substantial benefits for the eliminated firemen, but the un- ions rejected them. OPEN NEW PLANT GRANBY, Que. (CP)--A Mas- sachusetts firm, Alfax Paper Engineering, has announced plans to establish a plant here. The company makes paper of electro-magnetic quality, used te ee ee a 'Doctors Said Giving Birth Control Help VANCOUVER (CP)--A Van- couver gynaecologist says prac- tically all Canadian doctors pay no attention to the federal law regulating the sale of contracep- tives and. daily instruct women in birth control. Dr. Gladys Cunningham said the principal exceptions are Ro- man Catholic doctors. Dr, Cunningham, one of four members of a panel on popula- tion planning, said she cannot understand "why, considering all the publicity birth control DOP ee ee ore Ow ye OF Ore One tne op eH SVS OCH Ove' oO DW NT I TW * " THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, Mey 15, 1963 J "Despite all the efforts of the medica! profession and popula: publications," he said, "many in the 19-to-25 age group are even married and still believe that babies can be born through the belly button." IMPROVE SHORE CLUB REPLAY TONIGHT GLASGOW, Scotland (Reut- ers)--Hampden Park is all set to accommodate another crowd of 130,000 for tonight's (2:30 S p.m, EDT) Scottish soccer cup final replay between the Glas- gow rivals, Rangers and Celtic. The two clubs met at Hampden May 4--the first time they had opposed each other in a Scot- tish final for 35 years--and tied 1-1, The replay would normally have been held the following Wednesday but was put back an extra week because of the inter- national match between Scot- land and Austria May 8. ACADIAN CLEANERS Odourless Cleaning Shirt Specialists HALIFAX (CP)--An Atlantic naval command club with im- proved shore facilities for young navy ratings is opening here shortly, It will provide a centre for sailors to meet and enter- tain friends in an informal at- mosphere. receives, people are so abys- mally ignorant of contracep- tives." "Tf it would help these people to have birth control clinics, then they should have them." Deryck Thomson, executive secretary of the Vancouver Family Service Agency, said a idential commission--named by in meteorological research, third of the city's married cou- as those at the University of British Columbia. But Audrey Huntingford made it clear in a Tuesday interview that the Winnipeg co-eds were! just as sexy. She commented on a claim by Prof. Helen MacRae, UBC's dean of women, that sex was foremost on the minds of female students there, Prof. MacRae was speaking at Kingston. 'I'm not naive enough to be- lieve that many of our girls don't have sex on the mind, but! it isn't a problem we're contin- ually meeting," Miss Hunting. ford said. "The big difference between our university and UBC is that most of our girls live at home and a Jarge percentage of the UBC female population lives on the campus. "T'm not saying our girls are not as sexy but they just don't have the same opportunities, though living at home." EDMONTON (CP)--Sex is not _ the foremost thought in the minds of girl students at the University of Alberta, two fac- ulty members said Tuesday. The two were Dr. Walter Johns, university president, and Mrs, Grant Sparling, dean of women, "It is evident that Alberta girls are seriously interested in their studies," said Dr, Johns. "However, this (sex) aspect of life is probably part of their concern, just as it is in all peo- ple of that age. It is not just confined to university students nor just to girls." Welland Canal Bridge Named TORONTO (CP) -- Highways Minister MacNaughton an. mounced Tuesday the official name for the $20,000,000 bridge over the Welland Canal at St. Catharines will be Garden City ay. Mr. MacNaughton said St. Catharines has long laid claim to the title, the Garden City. The bridge, to be completed this - fall, carries the Queen Elizabeth Way over the canal, replacing a drawbridge. GAMBLING WAS LIMITED DALLAS, Tex. (AP) -- Com- missioner Pete Rozelle of the National Football League said Tuesday the big thing to come out of pro football's gambling investigation was the fact that nothing bigger came out of it. Here to attend the first meet- ing of all the coaches in one city at the same time, Rozelle declared that he was very defi- nitely relieved that the intens- five search had not turned up more than the findings that Paul Hornung of Green Bay Packer and Alex Karras of De- troit Lions, plus five other play- ers onthe Detroit club, had placed some bets on football games. "It was a painful experience to all of us," said Rozelle, "but the big thing to come out of it was that the situation had not grown more serious." MORRISON IS ILL OTTAWA (CP)--Arnie Morri- son, 54, quarterback of Ottawa Rough Riders of the Big Four football union in the 1930s,, was reported in fair condition in hos- pital Tuesday after suffering a stroke. Morrison was the Ot- tawa quarterback when Riders dropped the Eastern Canada {i- nals to Sarnia Imperials of the Ontario Rugby Fooball Union fm 1936. He is a former winner of the Jeff Russel Trophy-- awarded annually to the Big Four player who best combines clean play, sportsmanship and promotion of team spirit. * Published by The Osh This is news from Australia An electronic impulse, flashing at the speed of light, brings news of a major news event from "down under" . . . and other distant places. As it arrives, the story iscoded onto a tape that is dupli- cated by wire in newspaper offices across the country and fed into their typesetting machines. You get the complete story--on the pages of your daily newspaper. The Teletypesetter that prepares this tape is used by The Canadian Press, the clearing-house for news from within Canada and from the outside world. It's one of the many fascinating ways in which your daily newspaper gets you the news, swiftly and authoritatively. 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