20 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Th ursday, Mey 4, 1967 NIGHT LIFE JUMPING IN OTTAWA THE ENTERTAINMENT may not be top-drawer, but ! 'Ottawa's after-dark action is at least in evidence -- a condition that didn't exist a few years ago. Most night spots have live music and the acts include gogo girls and bunny girl waitresses. Mining Industry Requests Chance For Competition ' SUDBURY, Ont. (CP) -- The] Management had a moral ob-jshops or closed - shop agree- ining industry must be per- itted to change to meet com- tition, the Rand commission|right to operate during a strike|ynion locals defended their d on labor disputes in Ontario|/with supervisory personnel Or/cision not to cross picket lines was told Tuesday. R. P. Riggin, chairman of the|the wages and under the con-jthe Algoma Steel Jabor relations lligation to keep competitive. | Companies should have the ments. Representatives of railway others who agree to work for during a bricklayers' strike at the Ontario Mining Association, |he said. said Sudbury area mines "are Mr. Riggin, an official Corp. in committee ofjditions offered by management,|Sault Ste. Marie last Dec. 15 to Jan, 15 before the Rand Royal of/Commission on Ontario labor getting closer to death every/Noranda Mines, said his com-| disputes. day." pany will not permit union CRITICIZE RAILWAYMEN MONTREAL (CP)--There is violence, color, serenity and passion packed into Expo 67's $35,000,000 "international fine arts exhibition, but only a small portion of the huge crowds mill- ing through the fair's turnstiles seem to be interested. Museums, galleries and pri- vate collectors in 20 countries have sent some of their most prized works for display at the art exhibition. The 200 works, on view at a two - storey gallery near the main entrance, date from thou- sands of years. ago. Officials of the fair estimated Tuesday night that about 33,300 persons have visited the gallery since Expo opened April 28. The displays are insured for $35,000,000. The exhibition ranges in sub- ject matter from a classic self- portrait done by the: 17th-cen- tury Dutch master Rembrandt in 1669 to the wild portrait of a woman done in a grotesque anl slapdash spirit by the contem- porary United States painter William de Kooning. From the Egypt of 2560 B.C. comes a plaintive dual statue of a man and woman seen side by side in enduring partnership; from the France of 1894 a study of war by the "primitive" painter Henri Rousseau. Among pictures sent from the Soviet Union is Cezanne's fa- mous Mount Ste. Victoire, with the mountain's brute form loom- ing massively toward - the viewer. The effect of such realism is OTTAWA (CP)--Growing con- cern is evident in some parts of the medical profession over un- fettered use of drugs to treat illness without sufficient safe- guards against their harmful ef- fects. A variety of warnings were given and some solutions sug- gested at a two - day annual meeting of the Canadian Society of Chemotherapy which ended Tuesday. Dr. J. M. LeClair, youthful professor of medicine at Sher- brooke University, told the meeting that too many drugs are being used on patients with- out adequate knowledge on the part of doctors of the side- effects. Dr. W. B. Spaulding, profes- jsor of medicine at Hamilton's ponent University, cautioned doctors to pay more attention to ©-\the risks of suicide, addiction and physical and mental im- pairment in treating psychoso- matic illness with drugs. Dr. LeClair said half the pa- tients taking drugs shouldn't be receiving them. Doctors were becoming too complacent about how much is known of harmful Algoma president P. A. Mac-|effects. | Medical Concern Grows On Unfettered Use Of Drugs mated that the number could be cut to between 500 and 1,000 since many drugs were only variations of each other. Dr. LeClair said this reduced listing should be made part of a national drug formulary which would give full information about what drugs were per- mitted for medical practice. The proposal for such a for- mulary, he said, was turned down by the ommons drug prices inquiry because of drug- industry lobbyink and fear of economic dislocation that would result from a limitation of div- ersity of drug products. Dr. Spaulding's cautions about drug therapy related to treat- ment of psychosomatic illness, imaginary illnesses which can produce serious physical symp- toms. He noted that 45,000,000 pre- scriptions for barbiturates in 1963 were written in the United States and as many for minor tranquillizers. The suicide rate for barbiturates was 30 times greater than for tranquillizers. ANIMALS AT EXPO The children's zoo at Expo 67 has 200 young animals --lion Violence, Color, Serenity Packed In Expo Art Exhibit offset by the dazzling colors and intricate geometries of a 1951 work by Fernand Leger. This depicts the pneumatically-swol- len figures of puppet men, typi- cal of Leger, at work in a maze of scaffolding. The gallery offers peaceful moments too, with the serenity of its Oriental exhibits, the gen- tle, sunlit touch of Pierre-Au- guste Rodin and the ingenious playfulness of painters such as Paul Klee and Joan Miro. VAN GOGH PROMINENT The tempestuous world of Vin- cent van Gogh is on display. too, as well as the exoticism of Gau- guin and the saintly intensities of Georges Rouault and El Greco, Weird African and New Gui- nea masks abound as do crea- tions by ancient Mesopotamian and Sudanese sculptures which, despite the millennia that have passed since their creation, have a decidedly modern ring. The ability of works to go on shocking was exemplified by the half-frightened gasps of a few gallery visitors as they ap- proached a picture painted in 1892 by Edvard Munch, The picture's title is deceptiv- ely serene--Spring Evening in Karl Johan Street, Oslo. The work in fact portrays a procession of death's heads through a quietly sinister thor- aa of the norwegian cap- ital. Code Not Answer To Housing Curb TORONTO (CP) -- Amending the human rights code is not the best way to eliminate hous- ing discrimination ggainst fam- ilies with children, Ontario La- bor Minister Dalton Bales told the legislature Tuesday. The code established certain rights that were absolute and on which there could be no devia- tion, Mr. Bales said. But a landlord's decision to rent space to a family could be based on the amount of space available and the number of persons he wanted to use that space, Mr. Bales said. Mr. Bales had promised to consider amendment of the code after a group of housewives marched on the legislature ear- lier this year to protest housing discrimination. Two New Democratic mem- bers suggested during the legis- lature's night session that On- tario's Human Rights Commis- sion should start educating the Anglo-Saxon majority on minor ity rights. GORILLA CAME TO TEA TORQUAY, England (CP) -- Customers scattered in a Devon seaside restaurant when a gor- illa staggered in and told the manager he quit. The animal's head came off to reveal Leslie Thomas, 57, who had been tramping the town to advertise the cabaret. The costume was 'so tight he could not see through the eyeholes and had been hit by a car. f / / / Plat iy) 140 BOND ST. WEST . : z CHEVROLET © CORVAIR © CHEVY OLDSMOBILE © CAMAR ONTARIO MOTOR SALES TELEPHONE 725-6501 STOC TORONTO 10:40 A ted & Toronte Stock Sxch Quotations in cents u z--Odd loi, xd--Ex-di crights, xw--Ex-warrants from previous board-lo Brampton Herd of Holsteins sit sz..." vex: neven lcrossing picket lines. urged that each hospital . 7 | A. R. Gibbons, vice-president |°¢t up a professional committee and national legislation repre- Brings $167,675 At Auction s.r: is cubs, tiger kittens and baby llamas and ostriches. 30% OFF to review the use made of drugs in hospital treatment just as is done by the hospital's surgery Firemen and Engineers, said 5 | OAKVILLE, Ont, (CP)--The)safe Citation R., that averaged|he advised members to' fulfillcrnnsce, " TesPect {0 Sur- on ist TIRES Holstein herd of J. E. Houck/$5,650 to start the sale off. One|their contract obligations. ' LINE and U. G. Hallward, Brampton,|of these went to R. R. Dennis, Pee $167,675, for an average|Oakridges, Ont. at $7,800; one! $2,620 on 64 head at the Oak- le auction Tuesday. 'This is the third-highest aver- age ever achieved at a Cana- dian Holstein herd dispersal, éxceeded only by a $3,154 aver- age made in 1960 by the Shef- eld Farms herd at St. George, ary and $2,648 in 1964 at the artial dispersal of the Roman- e herd at Unionville, Ont. ! 'The pride of the herd, Clover Acres Citation Bess, excellent and honorable mention all-Ca- madian cow of 1966, sold for top price of $27,000--fourth highest amount ever paid at auction for & Holstein cow in Canada. She Was bought by a syndicate of Qntario breeders composed of laude Picket, George Town, Robert Lowe, all of Maple; Russell Rowntree, Woodbridge; ind Dr. G. Stirk, Brampton. ONE OF NINE 'She was one of nine cows to A. Ladina, Cremona, Italy, at $4,200; and three to Richard Schleissner, Jerseyville, Ont. at $3,000, $2,950 and $2,000. The five-year-old birth sire Romandale Reflection Com- mander, brought $15,000 on the bid of Nosawa and Co., Tokyo, Japan. R. R. Dennis paid $12,000 for a daughter of Seiling Rockman, while Romandale Farms, Un- ionville, bought a daughter of Romandale Dividend for $11,- 500. Twenty-one were sold for ex- port--16 going to Italy, two to Japan, one to the U.S. and two to unnamed foreign buyers. Of the 64, 44 brought at least $1,000 and nine $4,000 or better. Seven bulls averaged $3,364 each; 37 milk cows $2,967; 11 bred heifers $2,345; five open heifers $670 and four heifer from the Class Extra Sire Ro- But when a member is in- a idated,- Mr. Gibbons said, the decision to cross picket lines rests with the individual. Cc. W. McLeod, general chair- man of Lodge 606 of the union, testified he and a small-truck- load of other workers were told by the picket line captain not to enter the plant or their legs would be broken. He said he would have had to tun down pickets with the truck, so he returned home. About 25 of the 211 rail em- ployees crossed the picket lines and the representatives said they were not aware of any threat of violence to them. Marshall Pollock, counsel for the commission, reminded the railway representatives that about 6,000 steelworkers crossed the picket lines. 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