Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Nov 1963, p. 32

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$2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, November 27, 1963 By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (CP) Canada, along with many other coun- tries, is seeking in its scientific laboratories the proper ingredi- ents for a pill that would pro- vide protection against man- made radiation. Dr. Paul Vittorio, 48-year-old biochemist at the Defence Re- search Board's chemical labor- atories at nearby Shirley Bay, has made a significant contri- bution to this search with the development of a rapid method of determining the amount of damage caused by radiation to the different organs in the body. This method can also be used |to test which organs are pro- itected' by anti-radiation drugs. |Requests for information. on Dr. | Vittorio's work are pouring into ithe Defence Research Board from scientific laboratories all over the world. Kachins Want Own Republic (Reuters)--The who stead- MANDALAY Kachin tribesmen, fastly fought for the Allies jagainst Japan in the Second j . 4 2%," \World War, are trying to break DEBONAIR SPY IS MOVIE HIT | away from the Burmese gov- Master spy James Bond, ernment and establish their own republic. | Their demand has led to a played by Scottish actor Sean preliminary and_ inconclusive Connery, samples the wine jround of talks. Government cir- aboard the Orient Express in Showdown F OTeECASTL Pri inner. . ; They are a warlike people,| ' |short of stature, with high) packs Mi internal troubles. He ni o fades out of the picture, the/of iritations pointing to diffi-|may still: be pre-eminent in the rigor ye ae wie arg poll world may again be brought to|culty for the Soviet premier. /central committee, but there|came here for negotiations The Khrushchev's attitude toward] existence ies, Berlin still is! |mand the N | s jexistence policies. Beriin still is\duction or |mander of orth West Bur-| the. United States and the West|a sore point in the Communist|ravor of sinc til ainsi ty |mese Army Tegion which in-| seems to be toughening. The|world, although he promised) ' ™MY-/cludes the Kachin state. cles doubt whether there will be |further talks unless the Kachins | give up their uncompromising| demands. The Kachins in Burma, be-| lieved to number between 200,- 000 and 400,000, oceupy a large By WILLIAM L. RYAN |: month. On Dec. 9, the fulljsharp Khrushchey setback in cheekbones, who did not. have AP Special Correspondent {Communist party central com-|foreign affairs could mean his|@ Written language of their own Premier Nikita Khrushchev|mittee--apparently the source|downfall at the hands of|Until some 60 years ago. seems about to exercise another|of Soviet political power these/the conservatives -- unrecon-| Included: in . their demands ghost. This time it's "'the spirit}days--meets to hear Khrush-|structed Stalinists or potential] 2° possession of Ae ia gy ep of Moscow." chey report on his proposed/new Stalinists. ai ae area adjoining their When that ectoplasmic phe-|cure-all for the woes of the) The cold. war spateviees A: the brink of war. Khrushchev admits failures in|apparently is a lively argument! Revolutio ; i The spirit's days appear to belagriculture, although he has going on with the conservatives iron beng sl a ey numbered because Khrushchev|been the czar of Soviet farming.|who resist changes forced by| Duwas (chiefs) Laring and| is inolved in a tense debate,/Khrushchev's war with the Red/popular pressures, lZau Dan of the "Kachin Inde-| sparked by domestic and Com-|Chinese over how to advance] The conservatives probably /Pendence Army" and five oth-| munist-world problems' which Communist expansion has hurt ' foretoken a showdown, perhapsithe world movement. symptoms: five years ago to solve it by| ocvet internal quarrels in the| The Kachin rebel leaders im- --Soviet blockades of U.S./ousting the West from the city. [bast sori had heavy impact on| mediately demanded the right military transport on the auto-| jt has been the experience of tn vc cons war: rhe Pulls. andjof self-determination, the right bahn to isolated West Berlin.|the cet on Ra hat ae tugs have been reflected in sud-|of 'secession, and the establish-| Wille some U.S. sources havel' st-s vat waenidenly changing tactics toward|ment of an independent Kachin' , te |Khrushchey- found himself inthe Wes . laid these to a 'low-level Rus-|not water at home, he heated| eo 'republic. chi, The film, currently break- ing box office records in Britain, is due in Canada at Easter. --CP Photo the movie From Russia With Love. His glamorous compan- ion is Russian Tatiana Roma- nova, played by Daniela Bian- horseshoe-shaped territory ex- tending. along the Chinese and - temperature. nomenon, conjured up by the|Soviet domestic economy. In\chart often follows Khrush.p, -0CY, made, these demands on Moscow limited test-ban treaty|the background will be an array|chey's Burma's ruling Revolutionary Be. PD Anditary brass, can be expect talks here in September with next month, over his Commu-|Khrushchey has little in the way reject the idea that the reer hy Col. Lun Tin, member of the| nist party leadership. of trophies to show for his co:\can safely cut its military pro-| Revolutionary Council and com- Pupils To Play Canadian Music i wie TORONTO (CP) -- "Crazy,{of Toronto and now resident! ous agricultural difficulties, | : _ man!" |musician at Memoria! Univer-| by; Khrushchev's own admis.| -- last deliberately engi-| 'This was a high school stu-|sity, St. John's, Nfid., nd Now. sion. He has given the TTS vad crisis was over Berlin,/dent's response to a rather bi-|man Symonds of Toronto even thé melancholy "news -that the Sete the wall was built in 1961. z.-re modem bitonal composi-|experimented with chance mu- Soviét Union must negotiate for| = 'at was just in advance of the|tion his school band had re-|sic in suburban North York wheat from the United States|22"4 Soviet Communist con-|hearsed for the first time. |schools. and the West to tide the country|2"°°*: with Khrushchev's lead-| The piece, called Fanfare,| 'We used a string orchestra over a serious shortage. jership under critical scrutiny.|had been composed the previ-\and a choir, getting the orches- ' The crisis brought a nose-to-|ous night by Samuel Dolin of|tra to play random notes in WHY THE SWITCH? nose confrontation of U.S. and|Toronto for the Humberside! different rhythms," Mr. Shafer Why should Khrushchey's at-)Soviet tanks across divided Ber- Collegiate band. explained, 'We persuaded the | tidpe toughen now, after he/lin's sector border. Mr. Dolin was one of 15 Ca-|choir to make sounds, not nec- made such big propaganda out} Today, there remain highly,"@dian composers who visited |essarily musical ones, in a sort of 'his purported efforts to les-iplaced people in Moscow who several Toronto-area schools,in|of counterpoint to what the | sen international tensions, with|can be regarded as "old mid-November to become ac-|strings were doing. At first they | soft talk and smiles? guard," and who see Khrush. %ainted with music programs.|were hesitant. Then they began! a i ing"? f , Coos eneete ieee Pron up the global political war at that the stoppages were delier (Some convenient place in what ate on the at at th * = iin, seemed an attempt to divert ~The eh el subsequent|ttention while he rallied forces reibase--ot a prominent US|'? us 'fence. scholar, Prof. Frederick C.| Now the international atmos- Batghoorn of Yale University,|Phere is becoming heated as:a spy. again, +The Soviet Union is in se-/NOSE-TO-NOSE CHRISTMAS SPECIAL eee) A asked which country or he answer could come withinichey as a wild-eyed radical. A 2%, composers have been|to enjoy it." ganization devoted to making|who had five or six ideas for B Vi |Gmades 4 to 9. [brother, of Saskatoon; Clermont| Vy letnamese jable for use in schools will be Kunz, Kitchener, Ont., Robert tary of the centre. "Today Ca-/Talivaldis Kenins, Hanry Freed- namese officials were dedicat-crtaed by a supernatural Bud- Long-term aim is to build an all of Toronto. other Vietnamese were staring a mountain 12 miles from the SM er dren can be taught to appre-| New Zealand Ul out of position address followers, according to'they are young, the frosty re- in:a row to watch the pred: ' predicted ities declared they had tested|might be totally overcome." WELLINGTON (Reuters) -- the miserable fate of Vi - € of Vietna-\Fock to' the stream, conditioned, will accept and en-|country's defence forces are that the sun has bi a lar, i 5 6 begun tumming|® latge group at Linh Soni ionds on teacher co-operation,|!ooked to for military support, Dark mysteries and reports/have wept. As usual with suchimusicians, and composers) These are the findings of despite the invasion of ideas, powers, The: government notedjers. But finally banriers are for the newspaper the Auckland! Politics, religion 'and war all! Buddhist opposition leaders)music for the Scarborough|not they considered the defence The nation has been in a\miracles, although they have|the composers was "a major| friends, and full defence against fuicide of a Buddhist monk This is also important to mu-/ one. SETS TRI! ATE the events that followed oe they | thought "New ). -- Alble but there has' to be evidence | Zealand should look to for mili- Some of the monks present atidate for trial of Byron -- pales. iat commissioned by the Canadian | Other composers taking part " " Music Centre, a non-profit or-|are Francois Morel of Montreal, | Miracles Awaited (irri Simi raha a to compose works for use in|week; Murray Adaskin, John's | We hope that in five years|/Pepin, Outremont, Que., Anne| 25 per cent of the music avail- Eggleston, Ottawe, Alfred ; iby Canadian composers," says Fieming, Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Saison, Viet Nam (AP)--At/mountain town' of Dalat, to John Adaskin, executive secre-iQue., and Louis Applebaum, about the same moment Viet-\drink water s , se. : : 1 water supposedly conse nadian content is only about one|man, Harry Somers, William| ing their Nation's atomic! dhist. nun known as "the Saint."|Pet C&M: McCauley and John Weinzweig, Feactor recently, hundreds. of, "The Saint," who came from audience for contemporary| po hog od igen. 3 for a Bud-|town, appeared miraculously in Gar cn br ae eo miracle to shake the sun other parts of the country to ciate contemporary music when | Crowds gathered at corners RSs thfoughout the city for five days the spreading legend. ception the native living com- Looks To US. | Although government author-/poser has received in the past} celestial miracle, "Even the sun is protesting|*%¢, Water and found it badly) He is confident that children,|More than two of every three . ,.|polluted, followers continued to, Whose attitudes have not heen| New Zealanders believe the) mése Buddhists," one of the sun i | watchers said. "I have heard) On Oct. 15, police broke up J: modern music. But the suc-|inadequate, and two of three cess of the program also de- | feel the United States should be in small circles in the sky, as|p: i apr ng bee sd sky, 4s/pagoda here, where a stone) "pn the past, teachers have|either alone or in combination : Buddha statue was' reported to|looked askance at professional| with other countries of 'mi ; i bo aca Lag bi ye shad-|legends, the tears were said to,adopted a bit of ivory tower|a country - wide survey con- : a land,|/have had miraculous healing snobbishness toward the teach-/ducted by a public opinion fizz | popice and gadgets from the that it had been raining that|/breaking down." Star. . night Keith Bissell, supervisor of But all groups, whether or = ng with mystery in shaping| themselves have never claimed|Board of education, says the|forces adequate, agreed New nts. outright that recent events were|Week spent in the schools by|Zealand must rely upon its bear civil war since the flaming| tacitly encouraged belief in holy|tep" in winning acceptance missiles, nuclear weapons, and miracles. om the teachers. so on, is not practical for any- Juhe 11 in a Saigon intersection, ---- --o Many believers say the suicide sic publishers. Wh "Dp Saleen _ . am-| A lbatrmnd . JACKSON, Miss (AP Publishers can take a gam-| countries |judge has set Jan. 27 as the |that there is some chance of|tary support, 67 per cent of the burning of monk Thich| packwith pal Fy ote la/financial return," says Bailey|those questioned said '"Amei- 4 assin-| Bird, ating a Negro leader. The for-| (Canad mer marine head of Leeds Music/ica," either alone or in combin- ja) Lad. By the end of the week, seven i Duc said they could see| the Buddhist lotus throne un-!| folding in the flames STREAM POLLUTED n is charged with' September € & YAY € '9 NAA s & § DVDR € i € € & ® € é VAAL A AL: fr Quang | ation with other countries. | iN , Forty-three per cent said Aus-| murdering Medgar Evers, Mis- short pieces had been com-|tralia, 41 per cent said Britain! : sissippi field secretary for the posed, copied and duplicaied|and a few per cent said either| 35 : foliowers National Association for the Ad-\and sent out to schools for use.|the Commonwealth, Japan or] flocke* '9 @ stream near the'vancement of Colored People. | R. Murray Shafer, formerly | Russia. Canadians Seek Radiation Pill About 2% years ago Dr. Vit- torio read in a scientific paper| that young, rapidly growing tissues in the body contain more chromium than older tissues. ORGAN REPAIRS ITSELF At about the same time he had made the observation that € & & a Sen A Shoe Guild of downtoun Osha € & = & including many of the high milj-\¢?S held the preliminary peace| & SVE E REY The Better radioactive chromium injected into the bodies of healthy ani- mals was distributed to the dif- ferent organs in consistent amounts, "If an organ suffers ra- diation damage, and the animal has not received a lethal dose of radiation, then the organ imakes an effort to repair the |damage by producing new cells to replace the damaged tissue," Dr. Vittorio says. The fact that young or newly formed cells take up more chromium, combined with the knowledge that radioactive chromium is-taken up by the! organs in a consistent pattern, led Dr. Vittorio to conclude that this element might be used as an index of damage, repair and recovery in irradiated organs. Using radioactive chromium, Dr. Vittorio has been able to show the amount of radiation damage suffered by different organs, how long it takes them to repair the damage and the value 'of anti-radiation drugs in protecting these organs, TEST FOR DAMAGE "It is a rapid method of as- sessing radiation damage and recovery, simultaneously, in a variety of organs from a large number of animals," said Dr. Vittorio. : Dr. Vittorio, a native of Corn- wall, Ont,, has advanced his re- search one more step. He is using his method to assess ra- diation damage in human kid- ney cells grown in the labora- tory, His radioactive chromium method is used not only to measure radiation damage and repair but also to evaluate anti- radiation drugs. S» far. tests have been run on variables of tive compounds synthesized as anti-radiation drugs. Dr. Harry Sheffer, chief su- perintendent of the !aboratories, said drugs have pen developed that provide some pro'eetion in animals against radiation but they are too toxic for use in humans, Though many countries, in- cluding the Soviet Union, are working on the problem it' probably will be a long time be- fore an effective ant:-radiation drug for human use is found, he said. Downe make a hit WwWhN at Christmas For MOM.. DAD.. and CHILDREN NO aso me A GIFT CERTIFICATE from ony of the 'Three Better Shoe Guild Oshawa. Stores in Makes 2 e+ 80 simple. ula Downtown Christmas shopping easy, economical and DANCEY'S 18 SIMCOE ST, S. 31 725-1833 Your best gift bet for the family our selection styles, and shades will put everyone from tots to teens, Mom and Dad all winter long. Slip into easy givi Too PAVAAAVRAIRAVINMAVIAIAIAAAVALUAUALAALARAARAAAARA ADDIS Stipe F) Pt P| is slippers, and of sizes, shapes 4 4 too, in the best slipperwear Christmas slippers! 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