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Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Aug 1964, p. 15

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! i -Many Volunteer -For Foreign Job M. McINTYRE HOOD to The Oshawa Times ' LONDON -- So many young 'pe are applying to give help developing countries in many a of the world that the 'oluntary Services Overseas or- ; tion is chartering B.O.A.C. Comets to get them there. In- its first year, 1958, this started its work by sending 16 boys to Sarawak. This year several hundred school leavers and graduates are going abroad. A spokesman for the Volun- tary Service Overseas says: "We have had a tremendous number of young people ap- plying this year to do social and welfare work in developing . They have been most- ly school-leavers, but next year we expect to have twice as many graduates." What kind of work will they be doing? One girl is going tol Kenya to teach poor farmers correct methods of bee-keeping. An 18 year old boy will be) helping to build an airstrip on the G and Ellice Islands. And a young man of 21 is going to teach students in a technical high school in Jamaica. | Plea Rejected | A plea made by. the Lambeth borough council to the Home| Secretary to change the name of Civil Defence has been re- * jected. The request was made on the ground that this name "grossly misleads the com - munity that there is a defence muclear attack." In a resolution, which was sent to} the Home Secretary, the coun-| cil pointed out that in their i there was no defence to nuclear attack, adding that it was a great moral wrong that the community should be misled on this vital issue. It asked Mr, Brooke to substitute a name which would accord more closely with reality. It asked Mr. Brooke to substitute a name which would aecord mre closely with reality. The Home-Secretary replied that he * saw no reason for making any . Change in the name 'Civil Defence." Rall Link Closing British Railways is considet-| line at St. Pancras, and goirg underground to Moorgate. The' Transport -Users Consultative Council will hear any objec: tions to the this direct line. NEW TOWN GROWTH Two of Scotland's new towns are in the news. The first of these, East Kilbride, has MOW|the first time in the United opened its 79th industrial es- tablishment, and land's secretary. of state, Mich- ael Noble, was present to open the latest factory, set up by one of the largest paint manufac- turers in the United Kingdom, the Berger Jenson and Nichol- son group. The other new town in Scotland, Glenrothes, in Fife, is to construct a grass airstrip, and will become the first new town in Britain to have this) facility. Air taxi service will run between Glenrothes and the major airports in Britain. STUDENTS DIGGING Hundreds of students intert- ed in archaeology are out in the fields of old England digging for archaeological relics of by- gone ages the long-buried re- mains of 30,000-year-old hyenas which lived in the hills near Weston-Super-Mare are being unearthed by a team from the British University Spelaeological Society. On an important site at Fishbourne, Sussex, another group is. uncovering. more of the remains of a Roman Villa of the first to fourth centuries of the occupation. The Romans are also yielding up their se- crets to diggers at a Roman Villa at Ewhurst, Surrey, and to a team at Harlow, Essex,} where a Romano-British temple) Quarter Of is being excavated. Near Kilden- hall in Suffolk, a team from the} British Museum is delving into the Old Stone Age, at a lake- side settlement believed to be one of the oldest in the country. And schoolgirls from Barnet Grammar School are helping to explore the ruins of a Norman Castle at South Mimms, Middle- sex. TALES OF DR. SYN Tales of Dr. Syn and his ad- ventures with the Romney Marsh smugglers whom he led roposed closure of now has the EnglishJangua s ge --., err aaa wore be effective throughout the "without chan ing closing the direct rail link|are likely to be revived when from Laton in Bedfordshire to'two of the most famous smug- London as part of the Beech-)glers' cottages in Kent are up ing econémy-plan. This link was|for sale next month. he cot- established in Victorian times|tages, now known as White to enable' city workers living in| Walls, Aldington, overlook Rom- Bedfordshire to get to their jobs|ney Marsh and the Channel. In trains at St.j)days gone by a beacon would ' The direct/be lit on Aldington Knoll as a trains, -diesel-hauled, run bo bin to smugglers of the ap- at'rush hours, leaving the main!proach of the excise men, Argentinian Sect Believes In Liturgy - ST. LOUIS (AP) -- Joseph Cardinal Ritter, host prelate for the 25th annual National Liturgical Week, sees today's opening session as publicizing changes being made in Roman Catholic worship without dis- turbing doctrine. Key feature of the four-day meeting of some 15,000 dele- gates--from bishops to parish- ioners--is celebration of the |mass late today in English for Ottawa Gets Umpiring In By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (CP) -- After 10 frustrating years aS an wun- thanked, sometimes cursed, umpire in Indochina, Canada is getting a little fed up with it all. It has offered to stay on if the 14 nations that created the truce commissions in 1954 feel a useful purpose can be served. But, as External Affairs Min- ister Paul Martin told the Commons external .affairs com- mittee July 9, "we are not anxious to carry on an under- ltaking if it is thought that the operation is not a useful one." | States. mass U.S. Nov. 29. Other countries will be able to celebrate it in| "ang early in August he re- their own languages too. jected a British effort to widen . The conference will discuss in|the responsibilities of the truce |a workshop atmosphere|.uneryisopy powers -- Canada, changes in church reform and\tndia a Poland--by having progress, They range from re-|them try to get the three in- placement of Latin by English|ternal parties in Laos to meet in the mass to new concepts'of outside the country to settle church art and music. ltheir differences. | Some present Catholic actions| pow did Canada get involved jduring the mass "are confuSing|in this situation? jto the people," said Cardinal) The associated states 0 fIndo- Ritter, Archbishop of St. Louis.|ching -- Viet Nam, Cambodia |Non Catholics seeing it. say,/and Laos--were part of the old 'What are they doing here?'|French colonial empire which Our actions don't really indi-|pegan to disintegrate after the cate what it is we are doing."|Second World War. | Cardinal Ritter said: "'We are! In 1956 the Communist Viet- going to have in the mass more|minh opened a civil war which scripture reading. Probably welreached its climax in the dis-) will have (eventually) two epis-|astrous French defeat in the) tles--one from the Old Testa-|battle for the fortress of Dien-| jment and one from the New|bienphu. Testament. You can't under-| The Geneva conference of stand the New Testament with;|1954 put an end to the war The out the Old Testament." 114 nations including Communist The liturgical conference is|China agreed to the partition- the formal Roman Catholic|ing of the area into four units: body concerned with Christian|Communist North Viet Nam, worship. It comprises educa-\non - communist: South Viet tionists, Bible scholars, music-/Nam, neutral Cambodia, neu- jians, artists and others involved tral Laos. in church liturgy. OFFERED HELP | | | Canada had taken part in the) [phase o the Geneva conference dealing with Korea, and Lester Pearson, then external affairs |minister, let it be known this lcountry was willing to help. in the Indochina situation. } U.S. Colored Said Jobless 2 Waa tiem suan WASHINGTON (AP)--About/letter signed "Anthony Eden, one out of every four non-white|V, Molotov." It was an invita- boys in the United States labor|tion from the then British and force, and one out of. every|Russian foreign ministers -- three girls, was unemployed in|Britain and Russia were C0- the first half of 1964, the la-\chairmen of the conference--to bor department has reported. (Canada to participate with In- "Their problem of finding/dia and Poland on the three jobs is still very serious," the}international truce supervisory department said in a recent re-|commissions for Viet ~ Nam, port on the employment situa-/Laos and Cambodia. | tion. It took the Liberal | Both whites and non-whites|ment of Louis St. Laurent a have benefitted from the im-|week to. make up its mind proved employment picture inl whathior to accept. It did so, re- the U.S. as a whole, the de-|luctantly, July 28, but has often partment said, "'and-in a num-|repeated the feeling that it ber of instances, non - white|would have preferred the truce gains have been -greater than|commissions to have ben set those shown by. whites. up under the United Nations. "Nevertheless, the over - all) Seventy Canadian Army of- job situation for non-white re-|ficers and men are still serv: mains markedly worse than|ing on inspection teams in Viet that of whites." \Nam, Laos and Cambodia and| It noted that the unemploy-|about 30 members of the ex- govern-|! N 8 t' R ® s | ment rate for non-white men 20) un Christ's Reincarnation | °".2"2 2°" By ALFONSO MAURI 11.3 in 1962. country: and her home was vis- ternal affairs department par- ticipate in the civilian control of the commissions. The cost to Canada has been $8,052,715 so far. Fed Up . Indochina fer of about 1,000,000 refugees from North to South. (There was also a refugee but it was small, involving about 5,000 persons.) nority statement attached to the 'commission's fourth report, the Canadian delegation told how the Communists obstructed the commission's mobile inspection teams as they tried to help refugees get to South Viet Nam. -- Communist soldiers had been stationed in the houses of Roman Catholics to pre- vent them from getting in touch with the commission teams. -- Would - be evacuees were grouped in village churches and the Communists tried to keep the teams from entering church grounds on the excuse that services were in -pro- gress. --In many cases the local clergy had been intimidated and, in some cases, subjected to forced residence and im- prisonment. --In at least a dozen in- stances, people wanting to leave: were physically mo- lested by hostile crowds and sometimes dragged away be- fore they had an opportunity ofmeeting the team. ELECTION NEVER HELD Under the Geneva accord, North and South Viet Nam were to be reunified through general eelctions in 1956. The Commu- nists obviously believed they could take over the netire coun- try this way, and President Ngo Dinh Diem of South Viet Nam blocked any election. The situation in Cambodia re- {mained quiet during this tim and there wasn't serious trou- ble until the last year when border quarrels broke out be- tween Cambodia and South Viet am. By 1958 the situation in Laos appeared fairly stable and the commission there adjourned in- definitely, at Canada's insist- ence, on the grounds that the Communist Pathet Lao had been assimilated into the na- tional government as set out in the Geneva agreement. But no sooner had the com- began again. The United States, which did not sign the Geneva agreement, tried to install a ightist premier in Laos. The move backfired. The upshot was a new Geneva conference on Laos which dragged on through most of 1961 and 1962. Finally a new agree- ment was reached which. was ittle, if at all, better than the 1954 one. Despite the efforts of Howard Green, then Canadian external affairs minister, the revived movement from South to North) In December, 1955, in a mi-: mission packed up than trouble} Today's Toronto S rig Net change from previous board-lot ciczn= sale.) INDUSTRIALS 11 Net Stock Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge Abacon 2000 70 70 670 Abitibi 1685 $1S% 154 15% Alta Gas - 320 $34 33% M4 Alt Gas B pr z5$108. 108 108 Atta Gas w 300 940 940 940 Algoma $74 Tha 714 + Ve Alumint 31% 31% + Alum 4% 4a 4Ava B% WA + % 26 2B +M% 13% 13%-- "ve 1% %--% 244 175 125 ws 894 69% 77% 11a-- Ve $56ye S6¥e 56% hh 7% 370 370 MA i 3% N% 24% 24a + Ve Va 462 282 28Y2 %6 2% +% 70% 10%+ Ve 1 BC. Forest Cal Pow 1753 Can Cem 150 Can Cem pr 7218 BAiAw 3% B AI Bw 100 1 Dredge 225 Found pr. 231 Hydro 120 tce M 1 Imp Bk € 154 ind Gas 3170 300 $694 6 At $10% 104 10% + Ye $20Ve 20%e 20 $47%_ ATHe 47% -- Vo $13% 13% 13% $38 88 435 100 250 300 200 CPR Cdn Pet Cc Tire A Chemcel| Clairtone Con Bidg 5% 39% 9% -- Du P Emp Lite Exqsite pr 2100 $1) Husky 2525 $10%4 10% imp Olt 392 $50% 50% imp Tob 330 $13% Inland C pr 888 $162 Inland Gas 600 $8 8 Int Nickel 220 $85¥2 852 85/4 Int Util 430 $272 27% 272 + Ve Int Util pr' 210 $54%4 54% 54% Inter PL " Inv Syn A 100 ITL Ind pr 100 Jockey € 100 Labatt 250 LO Cem w 400 Laura Sec 715 Lau Fin 150 LobCe B 350 $9 Lob. Inc 100 $8 Ll a -- Ve Loeb M 600 $10% 10% 104-- Vv 10% -- Ve 50% 3% 13% 164 16% 8 $65%4 65% 654-- $22 22Va 22a-- Va 410 410 410 +5 $20%e 20Ye 20% 44 «44 OMA $21 m2 $15% 15% 15% + Ve 9 truce commission was gived little authority to arrange and oversee ceasefires among the right-wing, neutralist and Com- yaunist factions in the state. Fighting goes on in Laos and there have been new calls, par- ticularly from China and France, for a new 14-nation Geneva conference. 'Canada sees no point in it but will go if one is arranged. Mr. Martin has said an agreement exists and that the main thing is for the parties to live up to it. Canada regards Viet Nam as the key to the Southeast Asia situation. It feels there can be no peace in Laos as long as the North Vietnamese use Com- munist-conquered eastern Laos as a military supply route to South Viet Nam. After an election failed to materialize in 1056 the Commu- nist guerrillas opened a civil war in South Viet Nam and this war has gradually mounted in 'ury. The U.S. military buildup in South Viet Nam began in De- cember, 1961. In 1962 the com- mission criticized both the U.S and North Viet Nam, Washing- ton for its arms buildup, and he Communists for directing Viet Cong subversion in the south. DELEGATES BICKER There was frequent bickering among the Canadian, Indian and Polish delegates. Mr. Mar- te eJuly 9 that "lack of col- laboration from time to time" by India and Poland had made an already difficult assignment more difficult. Constant Polish siding with the Communists made unani- mous findings by the commis- sion all but impossible. And by and targe, the Canadians haven't had much use for the sometimes tortured attempst by the Indians to steer a middle course, although these attempts tended to decrease after China's invasion of northern India. By May this year the Cana- dian government was talking more and more bluntly about the situation. After France sug- gested neutralization of South- east Asia, Mr. Martin told the NATO council meeting in The Hague that such talk seemed likely to weaken South Viet Nam's resistance to total Com- munist takeover. A Communist victory in South Viet Nam, he said, would jeop- ardize the stability of Thailand and Malaysia and undermine the neutrality of Laos and Cam- bodia. BLAMED REDS On May 22 Mr. Martin 'told the Commons the civil war in South Viet Nam was being "supplied, directed and in- spired" from Communist North Viet Nam. 'Political solutions seem hardly possible for Viet tin told the Commons commit- Now Showihe er Nam as long as the present militant Communist interfer- ence in. South Viet Nam con- tinues."" ai ac vere eee Fe " THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, August 24, 1964 5 Stock MB PR Shell | pr Shell | wts Slater Stee) Sales High Low a.m. Ch"ge) 100 $31% 31% 31% + % 250 * 500 $285 282 2BYe-- V4 10 $1411 141%4 141% 2600 M45 340 345 +5 5 834% We U-- 4 1100 $64 6% 6e-- 745 185 iy 185 760 $10% 280 $144V9 143 700 600 595 $52 52 100 9 9 9 2000 220 210 210 4400 $15 14% 15 6 $79 799 79 Hi* Ne he 2 OUD 7 7 3 at $12%4 12% 12% $19% 19% Wat $28¥e 28V%e 28% + Ve 625 625 625 $i82 182 Bat % 225 100 300 10 1000 215 Silat Stele pr z12 y $8994 89% 89% -- 14) - Turnbull A Un Gas Un Steel Walk GW: Well Fin te W Suppl A Westfair Weston A Weston B West A wis Scurry Rain Spooner Teck Corp Triad Oil Unispher U Canso W Decalte Advocate Akaltcho Am_ Larder A Am Mily Ang Rovyn Ansil Area A Arcadia Atl C Cop Base Mets Bethim Bibis Bralorne Brunswk $58%4 58% $13% 13% i $40% 402 40% $19% 19% p75 20 20 Z10 $24% 24¥0 200 480 480 570 $36 «35% 5% 200 $64. 6% 6% 00 $12¥e 12¥e 12% 50 $374 372 372-2 600 $18 188 100 $18% 18% 18% 915 970 950 970 OILS 2000 55 «55 4500 13% 12 100 3000 +0 55 13% +1 423 200 875 875 v7 1% 1% $20% 202 204 -- Va 815 815 815 --5 rie liar jie $1 non Si0 510 +5 3° 22 2 305 305 +5 0100. 55055 +2 33914 %4 1000 14% 14% 14e-- V2 300 520 -520 520 3600 200 197 200 3335 4 2° 24 200 300 300 $00 214 214 MINES 2250 670 655 655 30 6 6 80 5500 15 5 100 145 51 13% 79 9% 10: ---™% +2 +1 300 214 15 M45 50. 50 --1 13% 134+ % 1799 179 +2 19¥2 194 -- 4 9% 104 +5 16 Bot #5 690 695 +10 4 2 (4 390 390 390 10% 10%4 10% 21% 20% 21 160 150 1530 --8 2 32 +i% 17% --1% 12 -% +6 3 -1 +1 we WT WT mh 18% 13% 1342 +1 2znwn-_ mW Wt tock Market Listings ue Siock = Sales High Low a.m. Ch' te lth A ht gBchss, Begece8 88 = BES sBgubges id vy Int Heliym lacobus Joburke 1% 1M 18 174 174 ht & ma 16 15 16 + M 590 gagestedasedeeacns8 seeds Moneta: 200 148 Mt Wright 22500 59 Nat Expl 5500 18 Nealon New Cal Noonex w 6 65 1300 480. 475 2000 250 200 965 965 965 1000 11 10%2 1Dl4-- Ve 1000 44 440 kB Raglan 5150 19 Rio Algom 959 *" 1 2 2 Que Chib Quemont Quonto Radiore Rowan Con 3000 Ryanor Sheep Cr Sherritt Sigma Sil. Miller Sil Stand Siscoe Starratt 140 435 440 400 44 45 Wh 1h Wht 2 102 12 +2 15 163 185 (+2 th, 6h th 1 We 1 Ras 565 555 65 +8 3.13 «138 +h 1 1% Ut? 108 108 «(108 Territory % 1S 4+ Thom & 56 54 SH Tombill 136 135 135 = 192 19% 19% 163 «(162 «163, ae ey Zulapa 18% 18% 18) Sales fo 11 a.m.t 737400 - FOREIGN TRADING per re a NOES OE Aap ae a MEE BUENOS AIRES (Reuters)--|ited by a stream of pilg-ims| Some 100,000 paople in Argen-|anxious for relief of their spir- tina believe fhat at the turn of|itual and physical pains at their worst when the 'dog lem was Viet: Nam. The first) the century Christ was reincar-| 'Dear and beloved children,| star" Sirius rises with the sun--|main task of the commission nated in the person of a hum-|I want you to be united'in an|the so-called "dog days." \there was to oversee the trans- ble woman -- known as Sister|embrace with God," was her A AA An i 4 NOW P2ZAING 4 q Mary. theme. Today, 36 years after hei} Sister Mary's home has been YOU'LL GO FOR A LAUGHTER RIDE death, her tomb is the most|turned into a sanctuary by one visited of all those in Buenos|of her disciples, Sister Leoni- Aires' Chacavita cemetery.|das, to whom she left the home. 4 Every day, summer and win-|The drawing room has become ter, it is-covered with flowers.|the sanctum of the initiated, WHEN YOU SEE.., aa CARRY CABBY" -- STARRING -- RAGWEED DAYS MILLION REFUGEES Ragweed pollen sufferers are) From the start the chief prob- "THE LONG SHIP" Starring: Richard Widmark -- Sidney Portier -- PLUS -- "BYE BYE BIRDIE" Starring: Janet Leigh -- Bobby Rydell SAVE Profitably -- with-- CANADA PERMANENT DIG UP YOUR FUNNY BONE AND TAKE IN TO SEE... "In The Doghouse" -- STARRING -- On certain days, crowds block! who flock around Sister Mary's| the approach streets. |70-year-old heiress. and keep| Every Saturday her followers|the place packe] with wreaths | stand by the tomb and take/and heirlooms, in:luding a huge} turns addressing the audience. doll on the bed where she died. | Thousands of offerings ranging, But, like most other religious |¢ from models of bronze limbs|movements, the cult of Sister) and stone hearts to silver/Mary developed its own) crutches--presented by people in thanksgiving for "miracu-) lous" cures--give her tomb a} weird appearance. When she died in 1928 at the age of 73, tens of thousands | walked in tears to the ceme-| tery. For. months, her tomb was a mountain of flowers. | Now her fame, although less' spectacular, is probably more! solidly established. Her follow-| ers registered their faith and their church, and had it listed) among the official denomina- tions in the country. They built chapels and community halls,| and produced a doctrine. | MARRIED TWICE ~$ister Mary came from Spain) schisms. Sister Leonidas inherited Sis-| estate But!§ ter. Mary's small Eleuterio Cueto, one of her dis- ciples, inherited her spiritual authority. CLAIM KNOWLEDGE Consuelo Quinteros, widow, and Sister L Cueto's +4 LESLIE PHILLIPS PEGGY CUMMINS | SIDNEY JAMES HATTIE JACQUES RY 1:30 P.M. PHONE 725-5833 A\_F SAT. & SUN. 7 each claims to possess the whole truth about Sister Mary's mission. CLEARS LAND More than 4,000,000 square miles of fertile land in Af- rica, previously the domain of the dreaded tsetse fly, is being cleared, for human occupation. METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER sess asa child Her name was Maria 'Salome Laredo. She was| marfried twice but left no chil-| dren. 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