Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Dec 1965, p. 13

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a De i ee ce A SHE NOW SEEKS MATE'S FREEDOM Aleka Diamantis, who complained to the immigra- tion department about her Greek immigrant husband and had a deportation order hearing in Toronto today. She poses with photo taken on their wedding day. issued against him shortly after their marriage in 1964, now is seeking his free- dom. The matter is to be heard atia habeas corpus (CP Wirephoto) Teacher Group Supports "Stacking" Of Pensions TORONTO (CP) -- Delegates from the Ottawa area won a) duce, not just better teachers;included family obligations, a in a broad technical sense, but| desire to seek further education Ss =e C Accura BERKELEY, Calif. (AP)-- All that men need to control the world's rainfall is money and incentive, a weather expert said Tuesday. Dr. Charles L. Hosler of Pen- nsylvania State University told the annual meeting of the Amer- ican Association for the Ad- vancement of Science his group had achieved 100-per-cent ac- curacy in predicting when cloud seeding would bring rain. Expansion of the technique, which involves detailed analysis of the temperature and moisture of clouds to pick the right time for seeding, could hasten the day when scientists will be able to modify weather, Hosler said. Dr, Morris Neiburger of the University of California, Los Angeles, who appeared with Hosler at a press conference on weather control, suggested met- eorologists start "thinking big." NEEDS MONEY "If we were to make it a |matter of national prestige to |beat the Russians in modifying of the money now going into the space programs." Archie Kahan of the U.S. Bur- eau of Reclamation at Denver jsaid the bureau's 1965 budget for weather modification was ioud Seedin the weather, we might get some} ae ie ape A EE a a ae 7 cy Seen able to forecast accurately whether clouds could be made to release rain. In most rain-making attempts, clouds are seeded with particles of silver iodide around which rain drops form. Occasionally these particles may be lifted from the surface back into the atmosphere by evaporation and cause rain by accident, Hosler said he used rapidly dissolving dry ice pellets to avoid possible holdover effects. The reason rain - making has been so unpredictable and, therefore, controversial, Hosler said, is that not enough has been known about any particu- lar cloud prior to seeding. MEASURED DROPLETS In the experiments, aircraft went up to sample temperatures throughout the cloud to be seeded, and radar measured the size of its water droplets. Since rain occurs only when tempera- |tures are low enough and when | droplets are large enough, Hos- ler could predict the time to seed the cloud and ensure rain. If the temperature and drop- let size were not just right, no rain fell despite extensive seed- |ing, he said | "Our analysis of data from) clouds currently is too slow to lless than $3,000,000, compared| have practical value. But if we| | with $5,000,000,000 for space ex-| had large computers analysing | ploration. /a constant flow of information| | Hosler said in seven tests in|from clouds around the world, | the last three years in Pennsyl-| we would know when and where | vania his group each time pyas! to seed, to get rain."' Conciliation Board Report | TORONTO (CP) -- The joint)week with gradual |bargaining committee of the|during a 3'4-year contract. | |Teamsters Union Tuesday night The conciliation board favored) | Teamsters Union Rejects reductions | ~ i ag gh ag Nae ma ES seretare SPSS EOE Eee WIFE BLAMED resigned today as Italian foreign minister. Italian Premier Aldo Moro rejected the resignation and begged Fanfani to stay on. (AP Wirephoto) U.N. General Assembly President Amintore Fanfani, blaming his wife, above, for "thoughtless initiative' in throwing a party where anti- American views are voiced, WILL RETIRE TOGETHER |mind him--his pit-pony. Sandy LYNEMOUTH, England (CP)| was due to be put out to pas- ---- | rejected conciliation board rec-|the employers' stand in a re-| cogi-miner Jim Graham, due to| ture so the mine authorities de- jommendations for resolving a port from Judge J. C. Anderson | retire in March after a life in| cided to give him to Graham, jeontract dispute with Ontario's'of Belleville published Friday. | the trucking industry and set the In October, more than half weekends of Jan. 9 and Jan. 16|the Teamsters went on strike to | land, will keep something to re-| can enjoy reti Northumber-|his master for 12 years, so they nt together. coalfields of for strike votes. protest an agreement memo | The International Brotherhood | signed by their local bargaining of Teamsters, Chauffeurs,| committee. Warehousemen and Helpers of} The agreement accepted a} America (Ind.) and the Motor; week of 46 hours in 1965 and Transport Bureau, representing; 43 hours by 1968, and a 53-cent |/85 trucking firms, were to hold) pay increase over 2% years. bid Tuesday to have the Ontario] better teachers of mathematics, Secondary School Teachers'|of English or of shop work." separate meetings to decide on the recommendations. The union committee, repre- land a heavy class demand. The survey "was conducted Judge Anderson retained these as part of his recommen- | dations. | Federation press for "stacking" of the Canada Pension Plan} with existing pension schemes. | No sooner had the federa-| tion's superannuation commit | tee reported that the national| plan would be integrated with|new provincial colleges of ap-| The federation recommended | Kenneth McDougall, preside other pension schemes than the|plied arts and technology prob-|Ontario establish bursaries for|of Toronto-based Local 938 and Ottawa delegates moved a res-jably come from high school|all teachers who retrain them-|chairman of the joint commit- olution from the floor asking for| stacking--a series of pension) plans instead of one over-all | scheme. | I, M. Robb, federation gen-| eral secretary, said the federa- tion already had agreed with| the provincial government to) integrate the plans. | But the resolution was passed and it will be presented Jan. 8 to the federation's board of gov- ernors. n other matters before the four-day conference that opened | Monday, Mr. Robb proposed that the federation should press on with a large-scale, expensive program of development for its member teachers. TALK A LOT "For a good many years this|of the survey showed the ma-|fects from food preserved by/ttq said Tuesday his com-|_ federation has operated as a! very successful protective asso- ciation and has talked a lot about professionalism and pro- fessional development,' he said. "Yet the efforts in these areas have been sporadic and often|tween the teacher's first school) effects of any kind due to the) have failed to come to grips and the school he attended as irradiation of food _they CON-| interview with the basic problem of pro-|a pupil also caused frustration) sumed," Dr. Ferdinand P. originally fessioalism --the development of a positive program to pro-| The assembly approved a re-jlast June in schools at Owen port that proposed all teachers|Sound, London, Windsor and in community colleges should|Kingston. Mr. Gibson said 107 be members of the federation. | teachers were examined in the Leonard Smith of Collingwood | study and 44 left their jobs at said most of the teachers at the|the end of the school term. jobs. "We felt that because of their level and their background training they would fit in very! well with our organization," ™ Radiation Food Seen Dangerous A survey conducted by G. x, Gibson of Kingston warns that) teachers leaving the job are} and supply, presented the sur-| NATICK, Mass. (AP) -- The vey at. the meeting. man in charge of the U.S. He said 3,000 of Ontario's sec-} Army's food research program |selves and seek further educa- ition in their respective subjects. threatening to create a profes- sional shortage in Ontario schools. Mr. Gibson, chairman of the| committee on teacher training | jondary school teachers left the|said Tuesday night some 10} profession in 1964 compared | years of extensive testing have with 5,000-who joined it, Results| failed to show any harmful ef- jority of teachers quitting were | nuclear radiation. unqualified. "The United States Army has He attributed the situation to| spent millions of dollars and run heavy lesson preparation, large| tests on thousands of animals lclasses and too few spare pe-| through four generations, and) aqq's riods. Extreme differences be-|we have found no detrimental Mehrlich said. Three Cornwall University and a series of dropouts. Mr. Gibson said other reasons jscientists cautioned Tuesday | that food preserved by nuclear | radiation might be lethal. Their report on a series of |senting locals in Toronto, Ham- ilton, Kingston, London and |Windsor, is scheduled to meet| jagain Jan. 18 if the members| |yote in favor of strike action. | nt} Pair Escape East Berlin BERLIN (AP)--With the aid tee, said there is,no doubt that|of stolen American uniforms | the members will favor a strike.|and U.S. army licence plates, He said the union is prepared|an East German man and to resume negotiations, but the; Woman escaped from East Ber- employers would have to make| lin Dec. 19, a U.S. Army spokes- concessions on the issues in dis-|man said Tuesday. -- | pute. _ The be geri an a About 10,000 union employees |J0}Ce W2 OSE. WHO succeeN. > are represented in the locals. |fleeing from oppression but They are after a 40-hour week, |,,"© cannot condone either the THE MIRISCH CORPORATION puma BURT LANCASTER LEE REMICK JIM HUTTON. PAMELR TFFIM o JOHN STURGES' THE a 'WES M7 ee tdiin boss hayes THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, December 29, 1965 13 LS = << aan NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) Although 'one drink for the road' is good for some drivers, taking it can be dangerous, says Dr. Marvin A, Block of the American Medical Association. Dr. Block, chairman of the AMA committee on alcoholism, said Tuesday it is a scientific fact that a nervous motorist has better control of his vehicle after taking a sedative such as alcohol. However, he warned delegates to an annual youth conference on alcohol problems, that one drink may relax a driver so much that he wants more and this coukf lead to impairment. "This is why we never advise the tense driver to take a drink," he said, 'It's a danger- ous practice." In his speech to about 600 teen-age delegates, Dr. Block said that one of the best ways to combat the increase in al- coholism is to ostracize drunk- ards and make the alcoholic stand out by his behavior. On teen-age drinking, he said the average child today drinks at age 14. |DRINK ANYWAY Children make a farce of| legal-age statutes because "de- spite all laws they're drinking anyway Parents should train their children by exam- Danqarane: For Tense Auto Drivers Margaret Norquay told the conference sponsored by the On- tario Temperance Federation that young girls are constantly being pressured to "snare a man" by society and the adver- tising worlta However, they never tell "the poor girl what to do with him when she gets him." Mrs, Nor- quay said. Another speaker, Rev. Gordon Winch, a Unitarian minister from Toronto, said society en- courages -and allows people "'to get tight' on a national scale. He flescribed Grey Cup week- end in Toronto last November as a 'grand national drunk." Mr. Winch said he expects that teen-agers drink because its part of the adult world. 'The four-day conference ends Thursday. SOLO WITH ALL OF THAT MONEY Jacksonville, Fla. (AP)-- Larry Hanson walked into a suburban Jacksonville bank intending to cash a cheque Monday--and found himself alone, It was closed and supposed locked. He tiptoed out,being care- ful not to set off any alarms, and called police. Patrolman D. J. Crews, ple," he said, | who investigated, reported In a later session, a Toronto| that-apparentis: 'the ° fect sociologist said teen-agers are| FG oe 8 & door had been unlocked | being pushed into : 1 activi-} gp SeSUAL ACU YA since Friday but that noth- ties at an earlier age than ever) * : |before by the adult generation| ing seemed to be disturbed. jand the advertising industry. | { THIS 1S A BIKINI MACHINE we.ns62035 4 2 2, _ Just push the button anditil 60-G0-60! ? oben, 00" oo ee ea rou AMERICAN INTERNATIO | ot NOW PLAYING! 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Spevack said in an the $30,000,000 plant was designed to pro- duce 400 tons of heavy water) | a year, and although the Atomic| | Energy of Canada Ltd. contract | was cut to 200 tons a year, | |many 400-ton capability com- | ponents have been built in. NEW YEAR'S NIGHT ONE PERFORMANCE ONLY! DOORS OPEN 11:15 @ SHOW STARTS 11:30 Brrveesvvescces Aaron Rosenberg Martin Melcher Predvetion 'Alea Starring HERMIONE BADDELEY - SERGIO FANTONI Prodwend ty AARON ROSENBERG & MARTIN MELCHER irneed iy RALPH LEVY Serempley by MILT ROSEN & RICHARD BREEM GinemaScope Color by DE LUXE 2ND HIT RIO CONCHOS with Richard Boone -- Tony Franciose -- Color DRIVEcInN @& PHONE ~ TORONTO -- 282-3969 -- WHITBY BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:00 P.M. (including Sundays) SAT., JAN. Ist REE ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS Government Insurance -- "sf on sinew Mahar sal ce | plications for the U.S. defence) ple process to extend the plant's| $250.00 in Valuable Prizes On Cars Is Proposed TORONTO (CP)--A case for compulsory, government - run auto insurance, and for a sys- tem of compensation to motor- ists regardless of fault, is made in a booklet published by the Ontario Woodsworth Memorial Foundation: The author, Desmond Morton claims a government plan could save Ontario motorists from 25 to 30 per cent of their premium dollar. He advocates a program similar to a government-oper- ated plan in Saskatchewan. . Mr. Morton, a director of the foundation, also is assistant pro-| vincial secretary of the Ontario New Democratic Party. The foundation is named in honor of the, late J. §. Woodsworth, founder of the CCF party, fore- runner of the NDP. Mr. Morton accuses auto in- sufance companies of making) their financial situation look} worse than it really is in order to---justify--premium--rate_in- creases. A source. of income rarely mentioned by these companies, he says, is interest derived from the investment of the large fund of premiums paid in a lump sum. ACCUSES COMPANIES Although the income from this investment is considerable, | companies do not consider jt in| their profit and loss account," | he writes. "This helps to ensure | that the financial situation of car insurance companies. looks worse than it really is." Mr. Morton says the number of car insurance companies-- 300 in Ontario, employing 4,000 | | department and the food indus- | try, both of which have been testing radiation as a preserva- capacity to 575 tons a year and| erhaps even the 600 tons re-! quired by the Crown corpora-! DIANNE BROOKS agents--results in a good deal of the extra cost of insurance A government-run scheme would eliminate the promotion costs of competition. It would eliminate agents' commissions ;--124% cents on the dollar--and reduce administrative costs. A system of compensation without fault would save mil- lions in legal fees, as well as freeing the courts for other tive. tion, he said. The scientists pointed to sugar; q+ would take two to three as the dangerous element in any years for a second heavy water such enterprise. 6 } nine plant to go into production to When exposed to sufficient) supply all AECL needs, He was radiation, they said, sugar) commenting on the negotiations breaks down and can transmit) petween AECI, and Canadian lethal effects of radiation to liv-| General Electric for establish- ing plant cells and probably to ment of a second plant animal and human cells. Currently Deuterium has a The biological consequences) contract for 200 tons of heavy should be known before there ts| water a year for five years, It widespread use of radiation-|js scheduled to begin operation LITTLE JO ANNE JACK HARDEN plus ALL SEATS .. Buy Tickets Now ! | | TO PATRONS IN THE AUDIENCE HATS! HORNS! BALLOONS! af VO ae | The Sensational } SILHOUETTES | Dancing 9 p.m. to 12 Admission $2.00 A Coa 2 Aaw-re rich in the scientists warned, "Tf there is the slightest pos- sibility of transferring harmful effects from irradiated foods to man, there should be little ques- tion about the need for exten sive study." The defence department, through the army quartermas- ter corps, has been experiment- ing during the last few years with the preservative properties of gamma radiation. Prescribed business, says Mr. Morton. At sugar," the begirining of 1965, 33 per cent of the cases before the Su- preme Court of Ontario, and 40 per cent of the cases before the county courts, were related to auto accidents. The writer claims auto insu- rance companies are deter- mined to make their business rofitable, no matter what the cost to the driving public. The| result will be a steady increase | doses can retard development in premiums and an increase in| of bacteria that promote spoil: the number of people forced into} age. high-priced assigned risk insu- sterilized foods, especially those| next summer, | NEW YEAR'S EVE DANCE Old Time-- Modern Dancing ® HATS © HORNS ©@ BALLOONS @ NOISEMAKERS e FUN GALORE 9 P.M. TILL? rance, he says. NEW YEAR'S EVE BALL FRI., DEC. 31, 1965 9 P.M. 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