Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Jul 1965, p. 1

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NT een ™ CO OP OE POF PE Pr FF i a aes ll ll me eal die Sk ae ll ae ae oh een a ales ol i a a le A a Weather Report _ Sunny and cool today, Friday sunny, but warmer. Winds northerly. Low tonight, 52, High tomorrow, 75, Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres' in On- tario and Durham Counties, VOL. 94 -- NO. 176 00 Per Wesk Tome Delivered Ex-PM Gains | Support To | Down Novas | | ATHENS (AP)--Enough Cen-| With the 143 Centre Union tre Union party deputies today|deputies against him, plus the committed themselves to vot-|bloc of United Democratic Left ing against Greece's crisis gov-|(EDA) party deputies, Athana- ernment to kill its chance of)siadis Novas has no chance of winning a parliamentary confi- getting the required 151 - vote dence vote. majority in the 300 - member Ousted premier George Pa- parliament. pandreou lined up 143 deputies) 4 Centre Union spokesman against Premier George Atha- said 23 deputies not present nasiadis Novas, whose 14-day-|were unable to get to Athens old "government goes before'from Salonika because their parliament Friday to request/nlane developed engine trouble. endorsement. The spokesman said they sent Centre Union deputies met ata telegram accepting the cau- a caucus with Papandreou. _{cus' decision and two others Afterward a spokesman said/who were not present at the 118 deputies attending the ¢Cau-|caucus because of illness also cus, plus 25 others, adhered to telegraphed support. He said a protocol calling for opposition|129 were at the caucus, with to the palace-backed govern-'118 signing the protocol. ment. | The crisis began when King Papandreou called the caucus Constantine refused to approve to plan Strategy for a confi-/b,yandreou's dismissal of the dence vote. The centre union/ defence minister for resisting a deputies met in-a tense atmos-| urge of right-wing and pro-| ind Pe ictetis the mncot:| 7 ancist officers in the armed] lemonstrating tl tore ing hall and police throughout|°TCeS- siciaa | RESULTS OF A VOTE downtown Athens alerted for| Papandreou resigned. Bot trouble he and the new prime palniater : ; : All of the 20 ministers in the|belong to the Centre Union| action by Toronto's mail Athanasiadis Novas govern-/Party which holds 170 of the ~~ ment are Centre Union mem-|900 seats in parliament. bers, but they were not invited) Rallies backing Papandreou bd e e to the caucus. Wednesday they|were staged Wednesday night) iE ar 1 erslis said they would attend anyway. lin Athens, Salonika, Heraklion Papandreou's followers saidjand Corfu, while about 3,000 TWENTY-TWO PAGES 7 issn eee se astern renee eee TO END WALKOUT agen 11,500 Postmen Still Out, But 5,800 Return To Jobs By THE CANADIAN PRESS jish Columbia where more than More than 11,500 employees!g00 clerks and carriers in Van- in 45 Ontario and Quebec posticouver voted to return by a 27- offices were still off the joblyote margin. early this afternoon, the post) wos other postal workers in office department in Ottawalip,, province immediately fol- announced, lowed their lead, with those in About 5,800 workers in 79)/New Westminster hol out to other centres had heeded sug-|Wednesday night when they de- gestions by the national Postal|cided to go back today. Workers Brotherhood to return] In Ottawa, Joe Belland, pres- to work and await the recom-lident of the Postal Employees mendations on pay increases|Brotherhood, said Ontario mail expected from federal commis-|workers were back on the job, sioner Judge J. C, Anderson ofjor ready to return this morning Belleville, Ont. in St, Catharines, Hamilton, In Toronto, believed by union|North Bay, Clarkson, Port leaders and government offi-\Credit, Niagara Falls, Fort cials to be the key to the strike,/Erie, Kirkland Lake, St, balloting began at 12:15 p.m./Thomas, Sault Ste. Marie, Nap- on a vote to see whether thelanee, London, Port Colborne, area's 3,400 postmen will re-|Welland, Belleville, Oakville, verse Wednesday's decision and|Newmarket, Guelph, Sudbury, return to their jobs. Kitchener, Owen Sound, Kapuse After an all-night session|kasing, Timmins, Brantford and Toronto's 12-man joint strike/Cornwall, committee told the mass meet-| A spokesman for the Feder- ing that it was recommending|ated Association of Letter Car- an end to the strike, riers in Toronto said the return Besides Toronto and its sub-jto work by Cornwall employees nce ee a TWO CARS, A YACHT /BUT DAN'S NO SNOB LONDON (AP)--A British subsidized by the Port Talbot businessman with a yacht and county council, The house is two cars today defended his in his mother's name, right to live in a government- Complaints about a "rich subsidized house that costs man' living on the housing him only $7 a week. estate began when Tobin was "Of course I could afford to granted permission to build a buy a big house with a swim- garage beside the house for ming pool and a double ga- his two cars. rage," said Dan Tobin, 44, LIVED IN COTTAGE "but I'd feel uncomfortable in Housing manager T. A. Col- such a place." lins said Tobin and his mother Tobin, a former bus driver, previously lived in a cottage started in business with a that rented for 74 cents a capital of $2.45. He now owns week. a string of bingo. parlors, 'Mrs. Tobin is the tenant. "TI know that. people in this It is no legal concern of the town have been upset about council how much money her where I live," he said, "but son has." I'm happy where I am and Said Tobin: I think I've a right to live "I like sailing. I like my there." cars and I'd like a rich ex- Tobin and his widowed pensive meal occasionally, mother, 79, live on a housing but my tastes are generally estate in which the rents are modest. I'm no snob." serene neni ney ap 1,475 to 933 will continue the walk-out despite urgings of union leaders that they re- turn to work. (CP) carriers and inside workers is tallied at Teamsters' Hall Wednesday. The vote of favoring continued strike vetted nt er ey would be thrown out bod-|pro - government workers and! i lintellectuals demonstrated in 6 had They did not attend the meet-|the capital. All the meetings| ] cd S Tre orce ing after police warned them,|went off without incident. | informants said, that friendly elements" the caucus was held. "un- small industrialists. Mars' 'Surface Like Moon', Last Mariner Shots Show ' 'TON (AP) -- Lat-|released pictures of the red } of the planet Mars disclosed today that the planet may be pockmarked by up to 10,000 craters, and that it ap- pears to be more like the moon than the earth in its surface features. This was revealed by space agency scientists in a report to the White House. The report covered findings on 18 previ- ously. unpublished photographs taken by Mariner 4 on its epochal voyage to the planet. The scientist who made the main report said that the find- ings "'will profoundly affect sci- entific views about the origin planet reveal 70 craters rang- ing in diameter from three to 75 miles. He said that if the rest of the planet is like the area photographed by Mariner during a period of 25 minutes, there must be "more than 10,- 000 craters compared to a mere handful on the earth." Leighton said evidence from the photographs "neither dem- onstrates nor precludes the pos- sibility of the existence of life" on the planet. But the fact that the photos indicate Mars never had any oceans or significant quantities of water makes the prospect of of the solar systems," and spe- cifically may shed new light on the history of the earth. Dr. William Leighton of the finding life on Ma4s " less |promising,"' he said. | The report was presented at a White House ceremony in Earlier Wednesday the town) were|jof Heraklion was paralyzed by' massed outside the hall where/a strike of workers, traders and wacuINGTON (CP)--A ma-|total of 125,000 men bolstering] By ARCH MacKENZIE 50,000 new troops: will make a jor United States buildup in the|the sagging South Viet Nam Vietnamese war was announced war effort. by President Johnson Wednes-| This compares with 23,500 in day. He refused to predict|Viet Nam at the end of 1964, whether it will last for "months|forecasts of perhaps 200,000 by or years or decades." the end of 1965 and a peak "We are going to persist, if/Korean- War commitment of mere we oe ee --_ and) 400,000 U.S, troops. desolation have led to the con- ference table where - others|RAISES DRAFT CALLS could join us-now at a much| Johnson's ~ 4 main news, smaller cost," Johnsen told ajgiven following a week of high- press conference carried on tel-jest-level reviews of the Amer- evision and radio across Northlican position in Viet Nam: America, | U.S. draft calls will gradu- Another 50,000 American com-| ally be raised to 35,000 men bat 'troops are being sent al-| a month from the. current most immediately to South Viet; rate of 17,000 and the cam- Nam, he said, and more will) paign for voluntary enlist- be sent as they are needed. The| ments will be stepped up. UN Will Make New Efforts To Talk Reds Into Parley UNITED NATIONS (AP) om "Your efforts in the past to Secretary - General U Thantifind some way to remove that promised 'most serious con-|(Viet Nam) dispute from the | Congress will be asked im- $1,000,000,000 or more-- and | additional allocations when a sumes next January. --More military and civilian aid for South Viet Nam is planned. Trained U.S. military re- servists, as opposed to draft- ees who have to be trained, won't be called up at this time at least. REJECTS EMERGENCY Johnson indicated he feels the U.S. can continue to have what one questioner called "both guns and butter" rather than guns or butter, Johnson said prosperity continues in its 52nd month and he has rejected at this. time any decision to de- clare a national emergency. His words conveyed an im- pression that, desirous of keep- ing Congress and the public firmly behind him, he is shift- jing into a higher military gear \with caution but that prepara- \tory moves for marshalling |greater strength are proceeding | quietly. | Johnson 'coupled his news of Ontario PCs Plan Revamp urbs, the main areas where|could be considered important mediately for more money-- Of Party's A OTTAWA (CP) -- The na- tional Progressive Conservative new congressional session re-|party's Ontario organization has almost completed plans for a revamping of party machinery in the province. Richard Thrasher, party na- tional director, said in an inter- view: the Ontario federal com- mittee of the party, meeting here Wednesday, agreed to di- vide the province into four ad- ministrative regions. The regions will be: Metro- politan Toronto, western On- tario, likely a combined east- ern-central region and a north- ern region, At present the party conducts all organization in Ontario from Toronto, in co-operation with the. provincial Conservative party organization. Mr. Thrasher also said Ian Campbell, Ontario federal party organizer for the last two years, resigned July 15, Paul Martin Intervenes, dministration Wednesday's meeting of the Ontario federal committee of the party was the third on or- ganization, J. Waldo Monteith, MP for Perth, is chairman. Committee members met Party Leader Diefenbaker to talk over the planned changés, Mr. Thrasher said. "We have selected one new organizer and are considering names for the other three," He said the committee will meet again, "likely within two weeks,"' to complete its work, MONTREAL (CP) -- Quebec Progressive Conservative MPs will meet in Ottawa next Wed- nesday to prepare their strat- egy for the next general elec- tion, Georges Valade, chair- man' of, the Montreal Island Conservative co - ordinating committee, said Thursday. Conservative Leader John |Diefenbaker is to attend the session, workers were still on strike in Ontario were Windsor, Sarnia, shawa, Kingston, Cobourg and Brockville. In Quebec the strike was still affecting three main districts-- the Montreal area, the town of Levis opposite Quebec City and the Lake St, John region. In Montreal, William Houle, president of the Canadian Postal Employees Association, would remain on strike. Wednesday b 'further substantial" creases, Mr. Houle said: go (back to wo ures, no action." Judge Anderson recom- mended Wednesday in an in- terim report that recently an- nounced pay increases for Grade 1 postal clerks, carriers and handlers be boosted to $360 annually from $300 to bring them into line with the $360 an- nual increase already approved for Grade 2 postal clerks, Mr. Houle's group set a $660 annual increase as the require- ment for their return to work was adamant that his. workers|neau, and Hull, In commenting on. suggestions Anderson Judge that all workers could expect ay in- "We want precise figures. Without firm a we don't ). No firm fig- because of its closeness to Montreal. RETURN IN QUEBEC Mr. Belland said that in Que bec 12 centres had decided te return to work, They were: Bellevue, Trois-Rivieres, Vale leyfield, Shawinigan Fails, Grand'Mere, Quebec City, La Tuque, Cap de la Madeleine, Sherbrooke, Chicoutimi, Gatir Strike-Right Vote Sought By Customs TORONTO (CP) -- Customs and excise officers here Wed- nesday rejected a work-to-rule program and voted to ask the Customs and Excise Officers Association for permission te hold a strike vote to back dep mands for a larger pay ine crease, The customs officers, along with postmen, were among the Ste. Anne de. Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pa-|which Johnson remarked that sadena, Calif., said the latest/he was "a little bit relieved sideration" today to President|battlefield to the negotiating |», "i 'oop reinforcements Johnson's bid for more UN ef-|table are much appreciated and| other request for efforts to- with an- a demand that precipitated the|100,000 civil servants recently strike July 22. a - |granted increases of from $300 Canada Leader In Road-Deaths TORONTO (CP)--The Cana- dian mileage death-rate on the highway is higher than that of the United States, the Ontario Safety League announced Wed- nesday. A press release said the Cana- dian death rate was 9.2. last year, compared with 5,7 in the U.S. The death rate is the num-| ber of persons killed in 100,000,- 000 vehicle miles. The reason, said league man- ager Fred H. Ellis, is that Ca- nadians are not taught to drive properly. "In the U.S., half the high schoo!s have been giving driver education courses for decades," he said. ANOTHER SET BORN IN SWEDEN, BUT TWO DIE your photographs didn't show more signs of life out there.' At another point, Johnson again alluded to the increasing skepticism about the possibility of life on Mars, saying: "It may be, it just may be, that life as we know it with its jhumanity is more unique: than many have thought." SOME FROST-RIMMED Leighton: said one of the photographs revealing craters is "one of the most remarkable scientific photographs of this century." Referring graph to another photo- covering -an area forts to get the Communists to|highly valued by my govern- negotiate for peace in Viet Narn. | ment. I trust they will be con- | Johnson made his request in, 'tinued. Be ge ee ew Americ Evacuations From Canton jnew American chief delegate to ithe UN presented his credentials Ito Thant. | | A U.S. spokesman said Thant| jtold Goldberg he' still believed! |the Viet Nam war must be! jsolve "by eaceful means,| , ieee ag either by "ae revival of the| Communist Chinese authorities 1(1954) Geneva conference or|in Canton today were reported some other agreed form of dis-/to have encouraged the evacu- ation of women and children j/from the South China city. | " jcussions." | Some UN diplomats expressed wards a peaceful solution by the United Nations, any of its 114 members or any nation. He said he wanted to pay tribute to the efforts of the Common- wealth delegation which failed to get permission from either North Viet Nam or China to visit them for peace-seeking talks. \forts and those of "the distin- guished prime minister of Great Britain (Harold Wilson) and others from time to time," HOPES WON'T ENLARGE He told one questioner: "I Mars' south polar regions, he|munists to the conference table|countryside in the northern partjin mind that should arouse the said some of the craters "ap-|since Red China and North Viet|of Kwangtung province, travel-| distrust or provoke any violence|ceived regular cheques Wednes- pear to be rimmed with frost." Leighton said Mariner's pho- tographs of the planet disclose "no earthlike features such as mountain chains, great valleys or continental masses" and there is no evidence of clouds. |Nam have already rebuffed his|lers said. jefforts to launch negotiations.| They added the Chinese au- |But some felt Johnson's supportjinorities did not publicize of Thant's peace efforts would|/move, but they believed it make peace moves by the sec- part of preparations against retary-general easier. Johnsonjany extension of the Viet Nam wrote Thant: war, on the part of the Soviet Un- jion."" He hoped the war could North Viet Nam or China may do in reaction to the greater 'U.S. troop commitments, Gets Strikers WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Paul Martin intervened in the strike by Windsor area postal em- ployees Wednesday. His action allowed a number of striking postal workers, and other postal employees not in- {volved in the dispute, back pay HONG KONG (Reuters) --|, He also mentioned Indian ef-\for work completed before the \strike began here July 22. | Donald M. Jeannette, sor postmaster, had ordered |the pay cheques be made avail- lable to employees still on the |job and to postal workers either in|doubt Thant could get the Com-| Thousands have moved to the/know of nothing that we havelclaiming sick or vacation pay. | A number of those who re- \day were strikers on_ picket duty who had money coming to the|he contained and declined to/them for work completed be- was'speculate on what Communist/fore the strike began, Those be- | ing paid who were on strike have been told that money cov- ering their non - employment Wind-| Back Pay during the strike will be docked from future pay cheques or from retroactive monies they will receive at the conclusion of the strike. Mr. Jeannette said earlier he had received a call from Mr. Martin that the cabinet minis- ter was about to phone national Revenue Minister E. J. Benson on the matter of releasing the cheques, Mr. Martin, a Windsor area MP, said here Wednesday night that he "intervened," following a call from William Hartlen, head of the Windsor branch of jthe Federated Association of |Letter Carriers (CLC), Mr. Jeannette said that al- though the issuing of cheques "would apply on a national ba- }sis" on this occasion, "'all fur- |ther cheques due would be} |withheld from. strikers." | In Toronto Wednesday night, executive officers of the Postal Employees Association, the Federated Association of Letter Carriers and the Canadian Rail- way Clerks Federation, all Ca- nadian Labor Congress affili- atts met with local strike offi- cials, MAY HOLD KEY Their mission, it is believed, was to convince the Toronto workers, who now are believed to hold the key to the walkout, to return to work, The back-to-work move got to $360 retroactive to Oct, 1, 1964, They want the same. $660 increase the postmen are de- manding. Their national association passed a "no-strike-vote" pol- icy resolution at its convention last October. and the Toronto men asked Wednesday that a national referendum be held to allow local strike votes, They turned down a work-to- rule program under which they could have jammed all customs traffic coming into the city by rigidly applying the rules for inspection and investigation of it's start Tuesday night in Brit- persons, mail and goods, Communist regime is plannin. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Reds Plan 'Sunken' Wall For Berlin BERLIN -- (AP) Refugee soldiers say East Germany's g a sunken wall around West Berlin that will be less notceiable and more effective, Such a barrier already is taking shape along the frontier between West Berlin's Zehlendorf districtand East Germany. Denis Not Ready For Aug. 19 Hearing OTTAWA (CP) -- Louis Assaly, counsel for former minis- terial assistant Raymond Denis, said in magistrate's court today that he will not be ready to proceed with the prelimin- - Hormone Responsible In Quintuple Births ary hearing of his client on the scheduled Aug, 19 date. Denis FALUN (Reuters)--A Swed- ish woman treated with hor- mones for sterility gave birth fo quintuplets here today but two of them died She was the second hormone mother in a week to give birth to quints The Swedish quints were three boys and two girls. It was two of the boys who died. \fter their birth this morn- ing the quints were put into an oxygen tent. Their weights were between two and four pounds The birth came two days after the birth of quintuplets in Auckland, N.Z:, and press re- ports in both countries said both women had been treated with a drug to counteract a de- ficiency in the pituitary gland which prevents women becom- ing pregnant. The duty doctor here said the mother asked that her name should not be published. She was in good condition, he added NOT NEW METHOD The duty doctor said the quints' mother was treated by Professor Carl - Axel Gemzell, who first investigated the pos- sibility of treating women--and men--with hormones 15 years ago Last year the 54 - year - old Swedish gynecologist treated a 30-year-old sterile woman with human hormones so that she became pregnant and gave pre- mature birth/to seven stillborn babies, The women asked for more treatment, Gemzell said. He said the patidnt suffered no ill effects, He said if the woman had not had a miscarfaige in her fifth month, the chances of a normal birth would have been quite probable Gemzell said it was theoret- ically possible for as many as seven babies to be born at the same time and live normally: Aseptuplet birth had oc- curred only once before, in 1894, but all the babies died, ex- perts- said. In September, 1961, Mrs. Anna-Stina Blank gave birth to quadruplets after treatment by Gemzell -- but one baby died after a week. The others pro- gressed normally, OTHERS T'ORMAL In other cases, twins and trip- lets have been born normally. About 40 women are under- going treatment at the univer- sity clinic of Upsala, where Gemzell has his 'headquarters, "The Sydney, Australia, Sun reported today that Mrs.. Law- son, the mother of the New Zealand quints, also had been given doses of a hormone de- veloped by Dr. Gamzell \ Melbourne, Australia, doc- tor who furnished the hormdne extract to the Auckland hospi- tal at which The Sun said Mrs, Lawson was treated com- mented: "The dosage of the hormone is so critical that too much can cause multiple births."' The National Women's Hos- pital in Auckland, where Mrs, Lawson's babies were born, re- fused comment on the reports, Statistically, quintuplets are born once in every 40,000,000 births. Four other sets of quintuplets are known to be alive: Four boys and a girl born to Mr, and Mrs, Felizberto Man- tagua in Mozambique Nov. 16, 1964; four girls and a boy born to Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Fis- cher in Aberdeen, S.D., Sept, 14, 1963; five boys born to Mr, and Mrs, Efren Lubin Priesto in Venezuela, Sept. 7, 1963, and two. boys and three girls born to Mr. and Mrs, Franco Dili- genti in Argentina July 15, 1943, Canada's Dionne quintuplets, all girls, were born in Callan- der, Ont., in 1934 but one of them died in 1954. Then last Tuesday four boys and a girl were born in Auck- land to Mrs, Lawson, 26, The Sydney Sun's report said Mrs. Lawson volunteered to take the hormone a year ago after she had experienced dif- ficulty in becoming pregnant and was one of 15 such volun- teers in a research unit at the National Women's Hospital. REPORT PREPARED The Sun quoted a professor of obstetrics, and gynecology at the hospital, B, G, Bonham, as Saying: "We are under instructions not to discuss any medical as- pect of Mrs>\Lawson's case. Therefore I canhot confirm she has been receiving hormones but I do not deny it. We are writing up Mrs. Lawson's case as a matter of urgency for pub- lication in the medical journals of New Zealand and Australia and in The Lancet in Britain," The Sun said the hormone treatment given Mrs, Lawson was pioneered about four years ago by Professor Gemzell, The hormone, it said, was extracted from human pituitary glands at the base of the brain, The Sun quoted an expert on hormone treatment in' Sydney as saying it was successful in about one of 10 cases of infer- tile women and that it caused depelopment of an increased number of ova. "If it causes development of two ova,' the expert said, "twins are -possible.' If exces- sive doses cause development of three ova, triplets are possible, And so it goes on... "The dosage required for in- dividual women varies and there is no. certain method of determining exactly how much hormone is required to produce anova." is charged with attempted bribery and obstruction of justice in alleged attempts last summer to obtain the release on bail: of suspected narcotics conspirator Lucien' Rivard. 4 Iraqui Plane Strafes, Bombs Turk Town ANKARA (AP) -- An Iraqui Air Force planebomibed and strafed a Turkish border town Wednesday, killing a man and wounding 10 other. persons, the Turkish interior ministry said, A statement said the bomber released five incendiary and four fragmentation bombs on Chukarcha near northern Iraq, ...In THE TIMES today... Citizens Committee Opposes Valley Expressway--P, 11 Apartment, Shop-Centre Complex For Rossland Roed--P. 8 Peterboro Erns Upset Brooklin At Home--P. 6 : Ann Londers--14 City News----11 Classified----18, 19, 20, 21 Comics--~17 Editorial--4 Financial--21 Obits--21 Sports--6, 7, 8; 9 Theatre--15 Whitby News--5 Women's--12, 13, 14 Weather--2 a ENR NAMEN cE

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