@ THE OSHAWA TIMGS, Seturday, August 17, 1963 B icisco asked Nehru for sugges- § \Indian boys and girls write to FINANCES DOZEN PUPILS Nehru Answers World Letters BOMBAY (CP)--A nine-year. old Canadian girl from Vancou- ver recently wrote to Prime Minister Nehru inquiring whether it was true that he was "the greatest of all maharajas,"' A boy of eight from San Fran- Nehru manages to Ma to most letters personally, He is particularly careful with the letters from foreign countries, Those he cannot tackle him- self he passes on to his daugh- ter, Mrs. Indira Gandhi, herself the recipient of innumerable letters from her father when she was a child, Nehru's secretaries are under instructions not to refuse re- quests for simple gifts. These range from pencils, notebooks, cricket balls, caps and auto- graphed photos to Indian sweets, "pocket money" and toy guns, Many youngsters write to him about their school home work. A boy from Boston asked him to explain space problems -- Nehru was a science student and reads at least one book a tions for a name for his ex- pected sister, 'Please also give some boys' names in case she happens to be something other than a girl," he added. From Sweden came a request for "books on Gandhi, a pretty elephant and two hooded co- bras," These were among the 20 let- ters a day the Indian prime minister receives from kids overseas, In addition, scores of him with various requests, ques- tions and pleas. WORK PROGRESSING ON NEW AJAX HOSPITAL floor of the four-storey brick week carpenter strike, Work- ed into the building's up- and concrete structure is men say the preset should rights in preparation for the nearing completion and work- be back on schedule shortly pouring of the concrete for the men are racing to make up as they were ahead before the _ first floor, the time lost during the three strike, Concrete is being pour- ~Oshawa Times Photo Frigidaire Lid. | . *. | President Retires TORONTO (CP)--W, Carl Cannon, 63, president and gen eral manager of Frigidaire Products of Canada Ltd., a sub \sidiary of General Motors Lid., jwill retire from that post, effec tive Sept Edward V. 'Rippingille, ge eral manager of General Mo-| |tors Diesel Ltd,, London, Ont jhas been appointe manager of Fri )Snow, general man The race to beat the win- ter weather is being slowly won at the site of the new million dollar Ajax-Pickering General Hospital, The first Sterilization Of Unfit Aussie Doctor's Plea SYDNEY, Australia (Reuters); He looks upon human being;medicine and surgery. degrees An At lian psychiatrist says'as one would consider ani-/13 years ago and psychological he ¥ s Western aid to Asian/mals,"" Dr. Murray said "Who; medicine dipioma in 1954, s to be made strictly|is going to say what would bejc aimed to have the support of} t 1 on evidence of prog-/the qualities which would con-| his colleagues at Western Aus » birth control stitute a person in Dr. Bignold's|tralia's Clarement. Mental Hos- The views of Dr. B, Bignold| category of 'gifted'?" pital where he is deputy super- erth were widely publicized nrerRoy ROOTS intendent leral. Motors. Euclid division, its from a letter to The The president of the Method: ONLY ONE CRITICAL |Hudson, Ohio, has been ap 1 Journal of Australia. ict conference, Rev, C. F, Grib-) Of all. the mail he received Pointed to succeed Mr, Rippin. addition to conditional) pie. said: since the controversy began, |Sille at London n . Dr, Bignold also) "you might get a more bril-/only one letter was critical, he iOS lization of the un-jjiant intellectual or physical said, His views on eugenics ruses to "gifted" Cou-'peing but the roots of every-| were blunt, heir babies thing of importance to man) In The Medical Journal, he/Kathy Ells of Indianapolis -es- porters, particularly; would be destroyed. This was! declared that unless reduction of tablished a world's record for redical field, preferred proved in Germany this cen-'disease and war and 'the cam-the 100-metre butterfly event n anonymous, .but his tury,' paign to alleviate hunger were Friday in the women's Amateur ments were far from reti-) Spokesmen for other major accompanied by a limit on con-' Athletic Union swimming cham. cent. Dr. W..E, Murray, a Ro- religious groups were non-com-' ception, Eastern countries "will pionships. Miss Ellis, 16. was a SETS RECORD HIGH POINT, N.C. (AP)-- 2G lj \/three-bagger to bring in the On- jtario club's only. run month on science, Occasionally a poor Indian boy unable to pay his way through school seeks financial assistance, Such requests are met on a priority basis, FINANCING DOZEN Valleyfield Little League Canada's Best wont newspaper here reported ehru is financing the educa- VALLEYFIELD, Que, (CP)--|tion of a dozen poor students. Left-handed pitcher Dennis Mc/'As soon as the prime minis- Sween gave up only four hits|ter's pay bill is cashed, a sec- Friday as Valleyfield downed) retary quietly fills out a dozen Fort William 6-1 for the Cana-| money orders," the paper said. dian Little League baseball} Obviously encouraged by their championship, parents, some children write The Valleyfield youngsters are|/about the "grievances" of their Giant Radio Telescope Nearly Ready CAMBRIDGE, England (Reuters)--A giant radio tele- scope nearing completion on its site near Cambridge Univer- sity will enable British scien- tists to "see" farther towards the boundaries of the universe than man has ever probed be- fore, The telescope, being built for Cambridge radio astrono. mer Martin Ryle and his team, is likely to be the most power- ful in the world for several years to come, The instrument, which will cost less than £500,000, should be finished by fall and will start work next spring after its equipment has been tested, It is not nearly as impressive- looking as the huge dish at the famous Jodrell Bank Research Station in Cheshire, northern England, But new design tech- niques make the Cambridge telescope just as effective. The telescope will be able to "see backwards" in time universe, Just how far backward Is uncertain, but it should be con- siderably farther back than the four-fifths of 'th seteimenie the beginning of the universe which has been claimed for earlier observations. Such a range, in round figures, encompasses events which have taken more than 7,000,000,000 years to make themselves known to observers on earth. toward the beginning of the} tp, Grounds For Hope In Leukemia Fight WASHINGTON (AP) -- New and dramatic advyances have been made in the last two years against acute leukemia, the in- curable blood-cancer disease, U.S, government cancer fight. ers say there are grounds for hi That additional major ins will be achieved in the' ag ahead in prolonging the le of victims of this strange every year to the approxi- mately 800,000 Americans suf. fering from all forms of cancer at any given time. : Leukemia, for reasons un known, has been on the ine crease in the last few decades, Even with the new drugs, life-prolongation in acute leu. kemia still averages less than two years, But there have been malady, which occurs in vari-/notable exceptions of victims ous forms in both children and/surviving up to 13 years after adults, the initial diagnosis, Drug ben- efits are limited largely to chile made| tron. rgely Lesser gains are bei against chronic leukemia, Chronic leukemia, is fortu- nately, a somewhat less press- { roblem than its acute fellow - traveller -- and ad: vances in treatment in the last decade or so have made life more comfortable for many of its ultimately doomed victims, Three new drugs have been developed since 1961 against acute leukemia--two of them in the last year, This brings to six the number of drug weapons against the malady, "That (the new drugs) is the first hit we have had in years, I suppose," Dr, Kenneth M. Endicott, director of the Na- tional Cancer Institute, recently told a congressional subcom- mittee, KILLS 14,000 Fifteen years ago, victims of acute leukemia almost invari: ably died within three or four months after the initial diagno- sis. Some died within a few days. Chronic leukemia, while also ultimately fatal is much slower to kill, The average survival is three to five years, but a few victims may live 10 years or longer, Notable cases have sure vived almost 40 years, Drugs are not as consistently effective against acute leu- kemia in adults as they are ig children, ee MAPLE CLEANERS 504 SIMCOE ST. S, OSHAWA Cosh & Carry -- 4 Hr, Service 8 Hour Service Free Pick-Up and Delivery Leukemia kills about 14,000 people in the U.S, annually, and "Your Family's Friend" PHONE 725-0643 to represent Canada in the Lit-| fathers, tle League World Series which} Many descend on Chacha) starts Wednesday at Willlams-|(uncle) Nehru personally, Each) port, Pa, week he meets several deputa- Turning point of the game,jtions of children from across watched by 5,000 fans in Sauve/the country, <, Was a two-run homer by|. "I suppose I am one of the Robert Phillie in the top of the|major tourist attractions," UR 4 aaa DANCE PARTY BOB MINNS seventh inning, |Nehru said recently, McSween struck out 10 and See walked none 3rian Vescio,| pitching for Fort' William, al} Ronald WwW. Bilsky, D.C. lowed 10 hits, struck out four) CHIROPRACTOR and walked two 2 Dennis Chuckmuch @ BURSITIS @ SCIATICA 100 King St. E. 728-5156 | hit al & HIS ORCHESTRA DANCE ~ THE INTERNATIONALLY DARRYL F. 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Including Sundays POeSSSSOSSSSSCSCHOHOSSOSSCCSSSEE RED BARN Presents PeSSeVSeSeoescea os ORCH, LOGE 1,50 2.00 2.00. 2.50 "THEY TREATED BEAUTIFUL WOMEN COUNTRY HOLIDAY STAGE uled for completion by June,| 1965, and will add 300,000 square feet of floor area to the uni- ; versity, The site, now being exca- 4 4 The Qe BEACH HOUSE 3 OSHAWA-ON.-THE-LAKE So you want a RAISE! Do you honestly deserve one? man Catholic church spokes-/mittal after stressing that prob-/outbreed us, overrun us anditimed in 1:065 bettering the man, declared in Sydney that)lems of morals and ethics need'submerge our race." mark of 1:07.38 held by Mary he did not think many people| special consideration, Dr. Bignold said he favoredistewar; of Vancouver, would take Dr, Bignold seri-| But Dr. Bignold, 48, former}the maintenance of 'reasonable! ously iveterinary surgeon who won his! racial purity, which had nothing : "to do with the myths of racial - > superiority, He proposed the de- Mc Gil i Enteri t lg based on positive eugenics. The first nation to apply the principles of genetics to man hd lo would transform its people as Expansion erTr1o dramatically as stockbreeders altered animal species, he said Dr. R, J. Walsh, professor of University is entering its great-/expansion era early this cen. sity of New South Wales, op- est period of expansion since/tury, posed Dr. Bignold, the beginning of the century in When university offi. 'Positive eugenics designed an effort to meet the increas-\Cials speak of McGill entering) t© improve the human race is ing flood of enrolments. a great period of expansion and/ Not possible," he said, "because With registration expected to growth in the 1960s, they don't|We have such poor criteria at rise from its present capacity,Mean it only in a physical sense/Present for deciding what hu- 00 by 1970, work has begunjaspects such as incrased en-|We all have some character- ag tg an stage of a muti. thusiasm and advances within|!stics which others will judge million - dollar expansion pro-/the new surroundings, undesirable, sinicmnanc ac gram The expansion will occur in} McGill is best known inter-/stages laid out and linked by a| nationally for its graduatejcomprehensive master plan.| schools in the sciences: phys-|The next three years will see Buildings and improved facilt-lincludes a 16 . storey medica!! ties for these were the mainicentre, a humanities and socia! Th purpose of a $14,000,000 gift to/sciences building and a stu-| e eseinan dents' centre, : EME Churchill Not ox wxcums...,¢ EMERALDS e largest single project is Admisst the McIntyre (medical) Sci lon $1.00 Al In W tyre (medical) Science Dencing 8:30 to 12 one orry Classrooms and McGill's inter-\ Jaana nationally known medical li- Over Nazis brary and museum. It is sched. LONDON CP)--The legend only man awake to the Nazi menace while England slept). e during the 1930s is slowly giving| ated, is off the main campus, way to fact. in effect adding a separate A number of recent books by C@™Pus to the downtown Mont- prominent civil servants ang Teal university, The two com- ists shows that a sub-|Plexes will be linked by a 1,500. ported Churchill. Work has already begun on The latest, called Focus, the site of a nine-storey Human- takes its name from a non./ities and Social Science Building party organization of influential/ that will double the space avail- businessmen and politicians able to students in the century that was formed in 1935 to give old Arts building, itself sched- Churchill a platform tromjuled for extensive recondition-! policies of Prime Minister Stan-/02 Campus, a 648-seat audito-| ley Baldwin, jrium, will be built linking the * The author, Eugen Spier, ar-/0ld and new arts buildings,| ranged the financing for Focus./Tis project is expected to be Tirelessly, the organization pro.|"e@dy in time for the 1964-65) jected Churchill's image and/Session, lobbied Parliament until, in! vious choice as the 'nation's! leader. Despite his efforts against Hitler, Spier, a Jewish busi- nessman of German extraction, was shipped off as an "'undesir- able alien" to spend the war camp, Although Churchill has indi-/ cated he would rather Spier's book were not published in his/ lifetime, Spier apparently bears) mo grudges. "When the wheels of the war) things happen," he told Church. ill when the two met after the war. / "Very noble, very mobile," Churchill is reported to have) replied. Yet he forgot to men-| tion the activities of Focus in velopment of an elite race MONTREAL (CP) -- McGilljthe university for its first great} human genetics at the Univer- level of 9,500 to an estimated but also refer to less concrete/mMan types are advantageous, ics, chemistry and biology.|completion of one stage, whicn |Building housing laboratories, that Winston Churchill was the ial body of opinion sup-| 'ort tunnel, which to fight the appeasement!ing. The largest lecture room) 1940 ,Churchill became the ob-) in a Canadian internment machine are set in motion these any of his many hort OPENED BY PHILIP i A l2storey addition to the women's residence, Royal Vic-| toria College, will help bring! women's living facilities up to the level of those provided for male students. Three new men's residences) and a dining hall were opened here by Prince Philip last! Spring, one of the first phases/ of the expansion program to. reach completion. i New biology and chemistry, buildings are slated for con- Struction before 1965, and a) new research centre and addi-| tions to others have already| been completed. The site of the University) Centre, which will replace the/ Old Students' Union, has been! levelled and working drawings prepared, and the university is awaiting a@ building permit be- =» construction starts there LJ ating Stationary Ensinesting cea tetail Merchandising You can learn while YOU Earal Study ia the comfort of your own home «@ your own time... at your own speed. ENROLL Ws never too late te learn! Write or phone SCHOOLS home study courses SS Chartes St. W_ ToronteS 20.577 eae Preis A SOL C. S1EGEL Production of COLE PORTER'S LES GIRLS... ~ AS IF THEY WERE FAST CARS EGLINTON THEATRE tis 400 EGLINTON AVE. WEST, TORONTO RU.S-4715. KU 84101 * HENRY FONDA CAROLYN JONES ° DRIVE OUT * TONIGHT * ALWAYS A COLOR CARTOON! YUVAL CUVHOTE + HOE KHOI - NICTVN TEV ELI WALLACH - JOHN WAYNE OPEN AT 8:00-- SHOW STARTS ' AT 8:35! | # "48 PATHECOLOR © > ES=" | 7H YOUNG god Play Girts) are butt for laughter! in CINEMASCOPE and ACERS. ADDED ATTRACTION DANIELLE DARRIEUX GENE KELLY- MITZI GAYNOR KAY KENDALL-TAINA ELG costarring JACQUES BERGERAC Samson & the 7 Miracles of The World COLORSCOPE » DRIVE-IN THEATRE * Es] Death at - their heels} CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE! FREE KIDDIES' PLAYGROUND * 723-4972 y"" MICHEL AUCLAIR - | Last Oay!2 BIG HITS plus BOWERY BOYS SHOW and DANCE Country Music Radio and Recording Stars © Don Gibson @ © Graham Townsend (Canada's 1963 Prize Winning Fiddler) © Gordie Tapp Presented by © Tommy Hunter Showtime 8:30 P.M. TUESDAY, AUGUST 20th This show is to be broadcast Coast to Coast on C.B.C. Radio ADULTS 1.50 -- CHILDREN 75c RED BARN