2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Soturday, April 4, 1964 GOOD EVENING -- By JACKGEARIN --. Hospital Tactics Blamed For Death tal said the child died from LIQUOR LICENSE BOARD TO SIT MID-MAY? Best guess seems to be now that the Liquor Licensing Board of Ontario will sit at Peterborough in mid-May to hear applications from Oshawa for new liquor outlets here (cocktail lounges and dining rooms with liquor). The Board met in Toronto last February 7 "'for the con- sideration of preliminary applications" for liquor licenses in Oshawa, Details of such meetings are not available, but an Osh- awa lawyer said Friday he saw at least four such applicants in Toronto that day. ('There were likely several more from Oshawa," he said.) Applicants will be notified soon by the Board whether they may make "formal application" for such license at the TORONTO (CP) -- After de- liberating for more than two hours Friday, a coroner's jury found that errors in judgment, inadequate procedures and care- less chart preparation contri- buted to the Dec. 3 death of three - year - old Christopher O'Kelly, who died about eight hours after removal of his ton- sils and adenoids. The jury, after studying two) days' testimony regarding the| death of the Toronto boy, also said there was lack of contin- uity and communication among members of St. Michael's Hos- pital staff. Dr. Terence J. Maloney, the ear, eye, nose and throat spe- cialist who performed the oper- heart stoppage resulting from loss of blood and accumulation of bloody mucus in his wind- pipe and bronchial tubes. Mrs, O'Kelly, who was a nurse at St. Michael's Hospital until last August, said she took her three children, Sean, Chris- topher and Michael, to hospital to have their tonsils removed Dec. 3. "About 3:15, (two hours after the operation) Chris started vo- miting and two kidney basins were partially filled," Mrs. O'Kelly told the inquest. "I told the nurse about his condition, and she replied: 'I'm surprised at a nurse worrying about this. We get it every relations Union and Red China drama- tizes what is surely an epochal -- it seems 5 watershed of change in which) politica! of J. William Fulbright, chair- INTERPRETING THE NEWS Fulbrigh By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer The new malevolent turn in between the Soviet moment in history. The rush of events in the last 10 years has brought the world y--toa gospels are being chal- lenged everywhere. British observers were deeply impressed by the recent speech man of th United States Sen- ate foreign relations committee, Impresses British ; &F v1 f ae . a a t Speech 4 * S « * . ® example of Communist oppres: sion. Now it is hailed for its independence of spirit in the Communist context. 4 "Budapest, rather to its own surprise, suddenly finds itself regarded as some sort 0" Paris of Eastern Europe," says the London Daily Mail. "It has be- come the most cosmopolitan of all capitals in the Communist bloc. It is also far and away the gayest." 4 ANTI-WHITE DRIVER ' It seems only yesterday that the Soviet Union was seen as the sole seducer of new coun? mid-May meeting of the Board in Peterborough. Applicants who eppear at Peterborough must advertise publicly three weeks in advance, Cocktail lounges and dining lounges with liquor could day." tries of Afri ; The juny recommended that of Africa and Asia. Now at the first sign of bleeding, the nurse in charge of the floor should be responsible for noti- ation, said he was critical of hospital doctors for failing to notify him until the third time his patient began hemorrhag- ing--about six hours after the who said his own country is\coviet delegate says after. a clinging to old myths in the) afro . ans Plose ee Fi | face of new realities. Communist China is trying to Perhaps they are even more| unite the yellow and black races be here by mid-Summer. CITY WELFARE NET COSTS UP 21.3 PC. "Employment in the City of Oshawa is stable, but there is certainly no boom. The number of job applicants has de- lined, but there are few layoffs." : JOHN HANEWICH, employment branch supervisor, Osh- awa National. Employment Office, Reflections on the 1964 City budget (Chapter Two): Departmental budget in- creases are the rule, not the # exception, even in City Wel- | fare where the net costs will jump by $38,578 (21.3 percent) from $180,864 in 1963 to $219,442, Oshawa's gross total wel- fare budget for 1964 will be > $495,622, less grants from the Province, etc. § Relief payments § (sub- sidized 80 percent Provin- cial) will jump to $76,920 from $70,720 and City relief administration will jump to $58,522 from $47,060 (24.4 percent -- part of the in- HERB CHESEBROUGH crease of the latter item is $4,000 rent for administration office outside City Hall. Auxiliary service costs (hospitalization, training schools and Children's Aid Society) will jump to $84,000 from $63,084 (up 33.2 percent.) Oshawa currently has about 719 people on welfare, about 'the same as last year -- Welfare Administrator Herb Chese- brough says only about 15 males of this group are "sound of body, healthy, able to do manual labor." Why the across-the-board hike in Welfare costs in the midst of stable employment conditions? ; One prime reason, says Mr. Chesebrough, is increased grants for Welfare assistance effective April 1; for instance, these are up $10 monthly for single persons. For married persons, shelter allowance will be up from $52 to $75 monthly, an increase of $23. Shelter allowance is in addition to regular relief allowance. Another reason is a population increase. City Welfare grants were previously pegged at $180 monthly maximum for a family of seven (including parents)-- this has been raised to a maximum of $225 monthly. "We're not budgeting for any more people, than last year", says Mr, Cheesebrough, who added that general Wel- fare increases will average 20 percent. Provincial allowances are also up 20 percent. "Welfare grants are bigger because recipients simply couldn't live on previous grants, with the high cost of living today," he concluded. WHATEVER HAPPENED COUNCIL'S AUSTERITY CLUB? Perhaps it is judicious for City Council to drastically re- strict circulation of the 1964 municipal budget, The fewer people who see it, the better for Council. The shock of even a casual reading could seriously upset thousands of slumbering taxpayers -- it could also upset cer- tain councillors at the polls next December much quicker than the Ward system. Council is pretty secure. about one thing -- not many citizens will bother to trek down to City Treasurer Frank Markson's office for a hard look at the budget, as they can legally do (Section 216, Ontario Municipal act). Whatever happened to Council's sparsely-populated Aus- terity Club, president of which was once Mayor Lyman Gif- ford? Was the project doomed from the start, despite lip serv- ice, because Council is over-populated by too many conform- ists, yes-men, committee room orators, politicians who' con- tinually bow to the pressure groups instead of protecting the people's best interests? Whether Mr, Gifford could yet legally qualify for mem- bership in the Austerity Club is open to debate, but he made a strong stand for months as an Austerity champion with little support. Remember his January 6, 1963, inaugural speech carried under a four-column news headline? "Mayor Gifford Asks Cut In Expenditures". A news story quoted His Worlship, in part: "The 1963 tax rate must be held to a minimum to encourage new industry and to relieve tax bur- dens on commercial establishments and taxpayers on a fixed income, Careful study must be given to City financing." The life of an Austerity champ on Council, or the Board of Education, is an unhappy one because Austerity is an unbleasant word, RIDING LIBERALS TO MEET APRIL 9 NOTES FROM THE HUSTINGS:: The Ontario (Federal) Riding Association will hold a meeting in Whitby April 9 to plan a membership drive. Sam Hollingsworth, newly-elected president (who is also head of the Department of History at the Dunbarton High School) made the announcement. He said such party stal- warts as Dr. Claude Vipond, Norman Cafik, John Lay, and William Lawson will attend, LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE VISITORS IN TOWN DEPT.: R, G. Everson, Montreal public relations executive, was here this week to see his mother, Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Everson of 171 King street east, She was 96 last December 24. He also visited with his brother, Stan F, Everson, Oshawa insurance agent and raconteur. . . . William Michaud, the Oshawa artist and night Art teacher at OCVI, was interviewed on CBC-TV Channel 6 this week by Elwood Glover on his recent painting, "'Mem- oriam to the President". The picture shows Muskoka Pines weaving in the wind. It depicts the feeling of national sad- ness, grief following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. : fying both the attending physi- operation. Dr. Robert E. Greenway, spe- cialist at the University of West- ern Ontario at London, told the jury Friday that errors ap- peared to have been made in estimates of the amount of blood the child had lost. HAD HEART STOPPAGE Pathologist Hugh Van Patter of Toronot St. Michael's Hosvi-| cian and the resident staff. It also recommended that at the first indication of primary bleeding, a blood sampling for cross - checking and typing, should be taken; that a post- operative tonsil room be made' available for children and that it be kept under constant sur- veillance. impressed by reaction to the speech, which indicated that some of what Fulbright said-- particularly regarding Russia-- the U.S. except in official pro- nouncements. SAID. BEFORE They are aware that Ful- bright wasn't speaking for the U.S. administration -- it would be more true to say he was U.S. Panama 'Resume Ties WASHINGTON (AP) -- Thejagreement that protects the in- United' States and Panama are/|terest and recognizes the needs moving quickly to restore nor-jof both our nations." mal lomatic relations and} are Bee to open talks soon| CONTACTED CHIARI on their differences over the| After the agreement was Panama Canal. |signed Johnson spoke by tele-| A new agreement' pledging phone with President Roberto! them to work out a "just and|Chiari of Panama. fair" settlement was concluded; A few hours later Panama) at a meeting of the Organiza-/named Miguel Moreno Jr., its| tion of American States Friday.|ambassador to the Organization) It finally brought to an end/of American States, as its new the crisis in U.S.-Panama rela-jenvoy to Washington. cu Leppard is learning the art of making stained glass win- dows -- a craft that has been LEARNS THE TRADE handed down from father to son in his family for more than 300 years. He has been working in-his father's studio Eighteen - year - old Ronald at Bedford, N.S., for. three years, but has another, seven years to go before he.is a fulledged glazier, AnonymousTory Critic Cuts Into U.K. Party LONDON (CP) -- Lively dis-;monwealth charade' and urges} ssion has been aroused in\a "patriotism based on reality) tions which began three months} Johnson is expected to an-|Rritish political circles by a se-|not on dreams." ago with an argument over fly- ing flags in the Panama Canal| Zone and erupted into mob vio-} Panama in a.day or so. The new agreement provides \ca vered Jan. 17. President Johnson said thejfair agreement which would bejan |\day of agreement was "'a great|subject to the constitutional pro-|a jday for the American pzople,|cesses of each country." in jfor Panama, for all the west-| In the case of the. United| With an election pi {ern hemisphere and for all free-|States, that means that if revi-|two months away, the anony-|and technical power rather than) Herald that the articles consti- |dom-loving people everywhere." |sions in the 19083 canal treaty|mous critic -- signing himself.a world-wide one. The critic/tute a political event of the first and wide simply "a Conservative' -- cri-/comes down on the side of Brit-|importance. Foot says he wond- |we are confident," Johnson told|changes have been demandediticizes Tony policy in housing,|ain joining Europe rather than/ers whether former prime min- jLatin§ American ambassadors|by Panama--they will be sub-|poverty and other spheres, de-jof seeking a Commonwealth al-jister Harold Macmillan is not | "Panama can b confident, as|are agreed on | and U.S. officials at the White|ject to action by the U.S. Sen-|b House, "'that we each desire an/ate. WEATHER FORECAST Little Milder u nounce a new ambassador tolries of articles pungently criti-| WICHITA FALLS, Tex. (AP) This northwest Texas city, its The author hits out at Brit-| 1 of Conservative policy. jain's determination to maintain) What makes the series so ar-|the pretence of being a world|/ment, internal attack" on Tory lence that cost more than ajthat the U.S. and Panama arejresting is that it is published in}power, saying that these com-|policy. It 'says that with the gen- score of lives. Relations be-|to begin immediately "the nec-|The Times, often regarded by|mitments tween. the éountries were se-|essary procedures with the ob-|foreign commentators as prac-/mum chance of \jective of reaching a just anditically a pillar of government,/embarrassment, "combine the maxi-| involvement, | expense and/ it is the handiwork of|/humiliation with the minimum} party member obviously high|effect on the course of events." the Conservative hierarchy.| . Britain remained a power, but ossibly only|a European power, an industrial id that nks what he calls the "Com-|ternative. -/Tornado Leaves 7 Persons Dead hie B, Bentley, 30, grocery store} owner who saved his wife and) speaking to it--but, as one .pe- riodical put it: "The nub of what Mr. Ful- bright had to say about rela- tions with European commu- nism--namely, that the Com- munist countries are diverse and need to be treated with dis- crimination--had been said pre- viously in February and March by Mr. Dean Rusk, the secre- tary of state, and at least two other officials of the state de- partment." Meanwhile, Soviet Premier Khrushchev is visiting Hungary which only eight years ago was regarded as the most squalid The Daily Mail says govern- ment ministers and members of parliament are trying to find out who launched this "vehe- eral election looming, the "tim- ing of the onslaught on the pil- lars of Conservative home and foreign. policy could not be more damaging to the party's 'hopes Michael ' Foot, Labor , MP, writes in the pro-Labor. Daily the man "behind the dagger." Iain Macleod, former Con- servative cabinet minister who declined to serve under Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home has already served: notice that people should not blame him for the articles. Writing in 'The FOREIGN LEGION METER OFFICERS TORONTO (CP) -- Bylaw enforcement officers, sporting modified French Foreign Le- gion style caps and _forest- green uniforms, will soon be scooting about Toronto hand- ing out parking tickets. The officers will take over issuing of tickets from Met- ropolitan Toronto Police in May, Chairman C, O. Bick told the Metropolitan Police Commission Thursday. About 80 men will be hired initially but-the force will lik- ely grow to about 350. Sic- cessful applicants will be given a one - week training course at the police college in Toronto, followed by an- other while learning to ride three wheel motorcycles. Scooters will likely be ac- quired later, Mr. Bick sald. Use of the forest-green uni- Spectator, the weekly magazine of which he now is editor, Mac- leod says the articles could only have been written by two peo-| ple, whom he does not name, form was approved after one was modelled for the com- mission Thursday by Howard Atkins, a police department clerk. TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts| jissued by the weather office: | | Cold Arctic air continued to)" ling the night and the cold was|i jwinds, Skies were clear. t For Sunday and milder Sunday. High today) mangled, c and low tonight at Sault Ste, today from a tornado that killed} Marie 25 and 10. |flow southward into Ontario dur-), struggled to recover} seven persons, injured scores White River, Cochrane, west- and left hundreds homeless. rn James Bay: Variable cloud-| ness today and Sunday. Slowly |ficially at $2,000,000. oday and low tonight at Tim- by many standing in downtown Lake St, Clair, Lake Erie, mins, Kapuskasing, White River) <ireets and watching local tele- Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On-|4nd Moosonee 25 and 10. tario, Windsor, London, Hamil- ton: Sunny and cold today. Clear tonight: Sunday variable cloudiness and not quite so cold.' |High today and low tonight a ;Windsor, St. Catharines |Hamilton 35 and 20, St. Thomas) |London and Kitchener 32 and 1/15, Mount Forest and Wingham |30 and 10, Trenton 32 and 18, [Patertoroc 30 and 15. |day, Clear tonight. Sunday var- jiable cloudiness and not quite); |so cold. High today %5 low to-| jnight 22. | | Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Ti-| magami, North Bay, Sudbury: | Clear and cold today and to-! night. Variable cloudiness and| not quite so cold Sunday. High} today and low tonight at Killa-| loe and Muskoka 30 and North Bay, Sudbury and Earl- ton 25 and 10. Algoma: Clear and cold today and tonight. Variable cloudiness | WINS. COMPETITION | FORT WILLIAM, Ont. (CP) Richard Ferch, 18, a Grade 13 student who hopes to become a nuclear. physicist, has won the Mathematical Association of {America and the Society of Actuaries annual high school mathematics competition. He topped 5,000 competitors in On-) Windsor ...cccccers tSt. Thomas .. {London ..... soeeeee and) Kitchener «+« Wingham .... St. Toronto: Sunny and cold tol Serve 12,!"P vision, drilled through the city's) suburbs and nearby Sheppard Air Force Base. An estimated 240 homes were l¢-molished in a half-mile swath lcarved by the funnel, its form) |weaving like a snake against |patches of blue sky. Cars were hurled through the jair. Bed springs, mattresses Forecast temperatures: Low tonight, high Sunday 2 38 15 15 15 10 | Mount Forest Do and household furnishings lsoared among debris into the jstreets, HANGAR FALLS At Sheppard, the walls of a hangar collapsed around a mo- mentarily trapped 300 airmen. The funnel lifted as it ap-| poached Sheppard school, where children h»ddled in halls| |while debris rained about the building. "T just can't believe we man-) Hamilton .... Catharines ..... 2 eterborough Trenton ..... Killaloe ... ee Muskoka .. ° | North Bay Sudbury Earlton Sault Ste. Marie .. Kapuskasing .. White River Moosonee ... immins suburban fringe grotesquely|two-year-old daughter by push-\and that he is not one of them.| ing them into a walk-in ice box. | Governor John Connally] lcalled out 100 National Guards-|tary secretary in the ministry ae f.|men to help keep order afterjof aviation, Damage was estimated unof-|1,. .torm. One hundred menjthat Britain's general election } ni | i -|will be held June 11. jemphasized by fresh northerly|moderating temperatures. High) The twister, viewed in horror|2"4 vehicles patrolled the de-| une vastated area, estimated by the) department of public safety to) include 50 to 80 city blocks. Sixty-nine persons were jured, 46 remaining in hospi- tals. Twenty-nine were. person- nel from Sheppard. in-| | The tornado, sparing the) ~~ downtown area, made its lethal jelection. against whites. : FOMENTING HATRED "The national socialist propas is regarded as commonplace in| ganda of the Chinese is not only dangerous for the Soviet Union but for all countries of Europe and elsewhere. It is hatred they are fomenting." Can anyone imagine the term national socialist -- Nazi--being usd between Moscow and Pe+ king during their love affair only a few years ago? But that insult is . milder than Peking's denunciation of Khrushchey who ts leading th@ Soviet Union on the road back to capitalism. 4 So vast are the changes that some observers are already talking in terms of a future struggle. between Russia and the U.S. on the one hand and Red China on the other--a qon- cept earlier mentioned by Pres- ident de Gaulle. Anthony Wedgwood Benn, British Labor member of Par- liament, writes in the Manches- ter Guardian: "We shall gain nothing from a new cold war between rich, militarily strong whites led by American and Russia and the non - white majority of the world's population pledged, un- der Chinese leadership, to glo- bal revolution. ' "Yet that is just what will inevitably happen if China con' tinues to be isolated, and the basic problems of racial oppres* sion, and world poverty are not effectively tackled." a aes é Es CHARLES RANKINE Son Gus sat Mr. pre- rty speciolist, nos spent 12 ac- CHIPPING NORTON (Reut- ers) -- Neil Marten, parliamen-| THE KEY predicted Friday} To The SALE LIST WITH PAUL RISTOW REALTOR 728-9474 197 KING EAST, He told a Conservative rally the Conservatives would win the The election must be held be- fore the end of November. Prime Minister Douglas-Home ive youn in the real estate field cat g to the Pho peterpan ot ie! va a tial customers. His broad exper- id will prove of g you, whether you are planning to buy or sell. Bolahood Brothers Limited, Realtors 101 Simcoe North 728-5123 has not yet announced a date. gare areorermppreaeese Fe edb RE. oie ee appearance in the nearby com- a : abandoned cars. Ronald W. Bilsky, D.C. CHIROPRACTOR Slipped Disc Nervous Stomach aged to come through it," said| 100 King St. E. 728-5156 || HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS World Health WORLD HE \tarid, Quebec and Newfound-) jland. TUXEDO RENTA SYD SILVER'S formal weo accessories for all occasion Free Booklet on formal wea wedding procedures. sopy to-day! 2314 Simcoe South Open Fri. Evening Until 9 i aie gestae We Carry a complete line of Pick up your "A Name For Fine Clothes" "No Truce For The World Situation Today -- LS boring the 'tubercle bacillus in r ond Ss. r and HEALTH AS CASE FINDING « Monthly Chest Clinics * Tuberculin Testing « Mass Surveys 728-7974 P.M OUR GOAL To find all cas - To shorten the THE ANNOUNCES APRIL 7th with its 1964 theme deaths per yeor; 1,500,000,000 persons of all ages ore har- YOUR CHRISTMAS SEAL ORGANIZATION THE ONTARIO COUNTY TB AND directs a yeor round programme of PLUS SPONSORING YOUR LOCAL REHABILITATION COUNCIL ~-- By control measures check the spread of TB Organization ALTH DAY Tuberculosis" 15 million TB cases; 3 million their bodies, SOCIATION HEALTH EDUCATION SOCIAL SERVICE AND REHABILITATION TB RESEARCH es of TB in its early stages time of treatment munity of Pleasant Valley. Dip-| | ping and twisting, it swept)® across the base, hitting nurses; | quarters, barracks and the civil engineering base. Startled resi-|* dents took refuge under street] and highway underpasses. Some}; 'IT'S NO BULL... country, you'll No matter where you travel across the have to admit... there is no fiN@f Roast Prime Ribs of Beef served anywhere than at the Genosha Hotel, right here in Oshawa. Why not drop in this Sunday and judge for yourself GENOSHA HOTEL AMPLE PARKING