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The Oshawa Times, 13 Aug 1959, p. 4

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She Oshawa Tres "Published by Canadian Newspapers Limited, 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ont Page 4 Thursday, August 13, 1959 Has Russian Something Important To Tell Ike? US. Columnist Joseph Alsop argues that in getting an invitation to visit the United States, Nikita Karushchev has obidlied what he wanted dll slong, "1agi¥he kind of summit meeting he is novwksgoing te enjoy a face to-face médfihg with President Eisenhower, with "no lesser nations represented at the gable." Hel notes that Khrushchev first put this , proposition to promnent persons such'as Mrs. Roosevelt and Aneurin Bevan when they visited Russia a cou- ple ¢f vears ago. These unofficial am- bassgdors made sure that the Soviet lepddr's ideas got to official ears, of colirge, but nothing happened In Wash- ng particularly there was a thun- ddrous silence, becauge at that time Mr. Dulles was opposed to simmif! deals and especially summit talks that excluded allies of the US Me. Khrushchev made an open bid on-New Year's Day, 1958, at a celebra- tion attended by the whole diplomatic edlony in Moscow. He bluntly proposed # conference between himself and Mr. Eisenhower. 8till there was no reaction in Washington Then Khrushehey over West Berlin and shortly there- after, under pressure from both the United Kingdom and a large bodv of opinion in the United Staces. Mr. Dulles began to slacken his opposition to the summit idea. That meant, of course, that Mr. Eisenhower also became less op- posed Now Khrushehey with Eisenhower, States and later in Russia "The American ambassador to Mos- cow, Llewellyn Thompson, has all along maintained that Khrushehev had some- thing important to say which he wish- ed to say only .in person and to Eicen- hower alone," Mr. Alsop reports. "Many others feel as Ambassador Thompson feels: and if Khrushchev has this cial something that he wants to it is surely worth hearing. That justifies what it now happening." started the fuss will first set talks United his in the spe- say, alone 'More For The Money {Those planning to start studies: at a usiversity next month may think that advice about the need : hard work is warnings about good grades in high schoo] not necessarily ensuring good grades at university are rether stupid. A} the same time they should not ignore the hard figures concerning university failures continued and that for unnecessary, Acgording to published 27 per cent of first-vear at, the University of they had their figures science students Toronto failed al- obtained 64 per cent matriculation exami- At Queen's all students and most of them first year. Accord- Bureau of Statis- 100 children w ed junior lation in 1957 and only 10 or 100 reached their though or in nations the vear University 40 per failed to get a degree dropped out in the ing to the Dominion ties, 30 out WV entered res better before cent ol ho matricu- 12 out of mairicu- ot school every lation sealor It is true that not all the drop-outs in high school or university are quitting bacause of low grades. It is also true that many who enter not be there and that many school are just wasting the time and faking up valuable space But the drop-out figure is still shock- ing, coming as it does at a time municipalities are beginning to sag un- der the burden of education d more and more demands .nd appeals aré being made education We agree that go to the vital jot also think tha should go into the money mused by cation should in high teachere' university when CO8ts al for more mone) or should But thought more money of education 1ard we more manner w € } in which the ie spen become the vague ideal o when the harsh 1 that education is a failure S No more equality of intellectual capacity than physical capacity There are vongsters who should not others there same situation exists in the We shall not be getting the of our system of education until vise some means of sorting out the do- ers from the do-nothings, ave mass edu- act mass there in nigh sc be there and ther not who should be universities most out we de- Municipalities' Voice problems Cdnada is long overdue, the Vancouver full-scale of the in investigation of municipal 'government Sun argues. "No settlement of tax other relations between the feveral provincial powers will give lasting isfaction until the place of the rities and towns and villages in our complex scheme of government is studied and safeguarded," the Sun observes, and continues: The U.S. Conference of Mayers has 8 similar idea about their own problems. Two proposals which should interest Canada's mayors and municipalities are being bandied about down south. One advanced by Democratic Senator Jo- seph Clark of Pennsylvania would set up a department of urban affairs in the US. federal cabinet. The other, brought up by the mayors themselves and en- dorsed by Democratic leaders, is for a study of metropolitan problems of a scope and nature similar to the vast study conducted by Herbert Hoover info federal government organization. The mayors favor this over the Clark scl eme as easier to get. But the idea of hdving a cabinet minis'é; responsible for municipal affairs is too _.ttractive to let go for good The U.S. mayors may they believe a cabinet 'post of this sort Bible Thought If we speak of sttong.--Job 9:10 That strength is available: t6 us we have the faith, to appropriate it. dhe Oshawa Times 1. L. WILSON, Publisher and Genera! Manege €. GWYN KINSEY Editer The Oshtwe (imes combining The Oshawo Times {edtoblished 1871) and the Whitby Gozettd end Cheonicle (established 863 s published daily {Sundovs ond statutory holidays excepted) Members ot Conadion Daily Newspapers Publishers Association. The Canadian Press, Audit Buréeu eof Cifeulation end the Ontario Provincia! Dailies Asso- ¢idtion The Canadian Press is exclusiv fo the use for republication of all news inthe paper credited to # or te The Press or Reuters and also the therein All rights reserved Offices 44 King 640 Cathcart Strest and and sat be wrong, but strength, lo he is if sociated local news published of spacial despatches ore ae West Str Montracl PQ SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier mn Pigkering Bowmanville Albert Maple Grove Liverpool, .Taurton Orbno eskard Toronte Ontarig; Jshawe Whitty Brooklin Port Perry Homptor Frenchman's tyrone Dunbarton Brougham . Burketon Claremont Cdlumbus, Fairport Beach Greenwooe, Kimafe Rdglon. Blackstock, Manchester Cobourg Port Hope Pantypaol ond Newcostlé net over 45¢c per weak By mail (in orovince of Ontario) outside cerriery delivery ereos 12.00 elsewhere | oer veer Average Daily Net Paid Publisher's Statement as of March 31, 1959 16,260 A ax Prince Bay Ermisk (Men would give them a spokesman in the government similar to those who speak for agriculture and businessmen that ie to say, similai t¢ our own ministers of agricultire and trade and commerce Such a ministry, in the words of Sen Clark. would 'listen to representatives of groups (representing muricipal terests), understand their problems and flect that undersianding in the policy- forming processes the braneh." Whether sueh a ministry could flou isk at Ottawa under the Canadian con- stitution is problematical. In our svstem the municipalities are the creatures of the provincial governments Would a federal ministry of "urban affairs" be any better? Perhaps a royal commission gt 1dy of municipal problems would offe a clue n- vithin executive Other Editor's Views ORPHAN PROVINCE ? (Sudbury Star) How much longer is the res ada expected to support land? Why is it 'that Newfoundland. under Liberal government, has not been able to find its own way ? Is gov- ernment policy such that it ic not con- ducive to self-help and independence ? There are provinces in the Maritimes that would give anvthing to be handed the same sort of assistarce that has been given to Newfoundland. The road to independence for Newfoundland is to shake off its reliance on the Federal treasury through a special! deal because # came into confederation. If it wants to be regarded as an equal with other provinces Newfoundland must show some proof # is raore than a penniless orphan without mear« of sup- port of Can- New found- CHINESE CITIZENS (Vancouver Sun) B.C. ean warmly back the plea by the Chinese Benevolent Association for an end to immigration restrictions against Chinese coming to Canada. These discriminatory bars are with- out justice or justification. The Chinese, as thé association tells Immigration Minister Fairclough, have proved over many years that thev become the fin- est of citizens That ought be the only ap plied to decide who can come to Cana- da and who can't CALLED UP EARLY (Cornwall Standard Freeholder) Answering a notice, a four-mor th-old boy was wheeled to the draft board ir Bonn, West Germany his father where the mistake was straightened out and the "drafiee" given 2 lollipop and sent home, to test by was SHADOW BOXING GALLUP POLL OF CANADA Outright Gift Of Grain To Asian Areas Opposed Sv CANADIAN INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC OPINION Cannda"s mult milion b vheal surplus should nof be mide I a st sift te nnderfed ns o a ke OVE helming itv of Canadiar The 1 heat wry-over in Ce on surplos in Asi presented (¢ Coy Canadian terms possible As you kno Canada wheat surplus. Asia a population surplus. Shonld ( ida give whe fo he for out of faxes a populs vot has a pa! reduced to con ries adult <olnfiom is prices it of Cana to #t reduced prices prices, 66 per hvions ay. 16 per per cent 1 cent opinion, 1? per ol 00 per cent alified an wer s such renlies a shonld f to Commu I vice i included nof i areas in Asia" t ton low." and surprising to find that percentage in favor ! <omething tor our wi xvorte comes from the rural arefis of Canada Here, 70 the st of being pai FOR BETTER HEALTH New Part-Time Diets Produce Good Results HERMAN N. BUNDESEN MD Here S a way a litle easier to make A part-t or sten-wise reducing take & } the drastic w rt it may 8 equally Just periodic vac skimp: as importa tion rather diet meal PSYCHOLOGICAL The psvehologics such a par torr he through to El FEA rs me dir fic Ip in ca the end duweing plan The any are ohesze most problems in weight 1 persons, pa overeating is psyvehological origin ganie seriou reduct co-operat rogram poor on tienlarly partially vhen even of and (2) « dicturhances during he health diet leading «ible eomplicatic to pos CONSULT DOCTOR Now hefore | say let's get ar [3 ord one thing abont dieting aq ght: don't embark upon any prolonged reducing program without consulting vour doctor. Tf ir up to him to decide how much von chould loce or, in fact, wheth er von shonld shed anv weight at an him plan vour diet. A may he hest for Then, let part-time diet vou RESULTS OF PROGRAM Dr. C. M. Young reported re- cently in Nutrition Reviews the results of his step-wise reducing program In his experiment he provided several obese men with a mod- erate fat diet (50 per cent of calories) furnishing 115 grams of protein. 1.0 gram of caleiom and 1.5 grams of phosphorus daily Mean weight of dieters was 32.4 pounds The experiment began with an 18-day weight maintenance pe riod followed by a 24-day reduc tion period. During thie period calorie intake was limited to 1900 calories daily During the weight maintenance period 3664 calories per dav was allowed This 24.day diet schedule was maintained for a total of 107 days. The resulis a mean loss of 24 8 pounds EVERYTHING DECREASED And as the weights decreased, the maintenance requirements excess the 18-day-off As parks and fences hetween highway lames don't keep some drivers from hurtling aerc colliding anc with oncoming cs Is suggested that the separated by an excavation feet wide and 2 feet deep lanes br Iso dropped until. at the end the dieting schedule, the daily rie needs had dropped to At the Dn ) pro Young s &d those y had participated. The. vast majority said they preferred this on redneing plan and found it much easier to maintain han the uenal contimious dieting 1e€ wise ' . Sounds good to me, too QUESTION AND ANS Mrs, H, J.: What can veins? Is there anything I use to control the itching spread of varicose eczema? s vari- ose and Answer caused and hy Varicose veins are through infection or clots, valves in the defective veins eczema de- upon control of the such measures as injections, liga fripping I'he" eontrol of the pends chiefly by varicosties tie support, elastie tions or surgical You should be under a doe- tor's care for this condition QUEEN'S PARK favor of selling 62 per cent in 100.000 popu per cent voted it it. compared large cities of ov lation vith Carryoves of "wheat into the 1959-1960 crop vear, is expected to he almost 511 million bushels. down from the 615 million bushels car wer the previous year This "ear according to Wheat Board estimates exports will the 290 million hushel mark compared with exports of 316 mil lion bushale in the 1957-1958 crop year pass From time to time, the sugges tion has been made that Canada make this surplus available to distressed areas of the world, either ag a gift, or on éredit, or at reduced prices PARAGRAPHICAL WISDOM A cooling-off period that rarely mentioned is the one that follows the honeymoon 'What is quince?" some one acks. It's a pear with warts 'Permission to buy all the clothes she wants may cure ner vousness in a wife," says a psy- chiatrist. And # may cause her husband to have compound jit- ters and perhaps running fits - "Every morning when you get up you should laugh heartily for several minutes," advises a psy- che st. If we had that much acting ability. we'd achieve fame and fortune. 'It's easy to explain the uni verse," says a scientist. "All matter sprang from a single atom." Thanks. And now. please tell us where that single atom sprang from A man's belief that a four-leaf clover brings luck was weakened considerably yesterday when he bent over to pluck one and a hee stung him where his pants were tightest 'Mom' Whyte Case Sparks Dead Summer By DON O'HEARN TORONTO This is the slow est summer here in years Premier Frost is spending a great deal of hie time at his cottage Opposition Leader Winterineyer ie doing the same Even CCF. Leader Don Mac Donald ie vacationing near Of- tawa--though it is reported he drops into the national CCF of- fice regularly ONLY MOM! This is partly an aftermath of the hectic spring. First the session. Then right info an election. And finally the Roval Tour festivities This lefi practically every- body out of breath-and ready for a rest even the unesteemed press gallery Then. of course, there. are no select committees meeting as there have been in other years. In fact except for Mom Whyte it seems at times they might as well have closed the buildings OPINION LOST Referring. to vould no Mu Whyte it to be confirmed A noted earlier, that (finally public opinion has turned against her. 00K Melodramatic as it may have appeared to some, little if any public disagreement seems to have been voiced with the wel fare department's action in abruptly taking the children out of the Whytehaven establishment The opinion generally ex- pressed was that in view of the continued defiance and the pre- vailing sickness there was no athsr choice. Now, at the time of writing, the courte will be deciding the whole matter PARENTS RESPONSIBLE? Once again, however. in this space we would like to stress that the attitude of the department here throughout has heen one of concern for the children, And along with this the further feeling that everything possible should be done to encourage par. ental responsibility It is accepted that there must be 'havens' where parents in real distress can have their chil dren cared for But a haven where ve left almost! indiscriminately with no regis jon or control by authority contributed to irrespon- sibility. they could REPORT FROM U.K. Free Speech Attack Seen BK By M. McINTYRE HOOD Special To The Oshawa Times LONDON A new Issue, in volving the freedom of the press to report the proceedings of mu- nicipal councils, has arisen as an added highlight to the print ers' strike which has caused sus! pension of publication of regular editions of provincial and local newspapers. Councils in var- fous parts of the country have resorted to the expedient of ban ning press reporters working for newspapers which were publish ing emergency type: of news papers in varied forms The coun- cils involved have been Soeialist- controlled. and their actions have aroused a heated controversy. The Daily Telegrapt. of London, commenting or this in a strong editorial say: 'The Socialist ma- jorities of certain provincial town councils have entered the stimggle in = way which i« bot legally and morally indefens- ible . . . It amounts iv a deliber ate attack ov free speech and upon the freedom of the press. Suppression of information by politiciane ever by local ones is a sinister practice. There is a dictatorial whiff about it which should put democrats on guard." guard." REPORTERS SHUT OUT Liverpool cit council started the ball rolling when it shut re BY-GONE DAYS 3 YEARS AGO Lake Ontario claimed four lives in the most serious drowning tragedy in the history of Oshawa. on-the-lake. A party of four per sons went out in a row boat and failad to. return Mr. and Mrs. James Preston, Thornton's Corners, suffered in- juries when their horse ran away on Simcoe St. N. They were driv- ing in their buggy when the har- ness broke, causing the horse to holt. The buggy collided with an ice truck. throwing the couple to the ground Two Air Force officers paid an unofficial visit ta Harmony, when two Moth planes from Camp Bor den landed on the Farewell farm in order to re-fue! An interesting gathering was held at Lakeview Park when 160 members of the Leask family held a family reunion An urusual dahlia was revert ed grown in the garden of C. A Well, 140 Clark St. It was actoal- Ir three flowers in one. It had three stems and three flower heads all joined together ani blooming -at, the same time The parks commission and the police department said that de- spite the fact they had not re- ceived a request to grant per- mission for the holding of a Com. munist Party rally, which was widely advertised, in Lakeview Park. they would not interfere with the meeting. They said, however, that police would he standing by in case rioting were to break out, porters out of its monthly counefl meeting in order that mo report of it whould appear in the city's newspapers. Journalists who come to cover il were hounded out of the council chamber with cries of "Blackleg" and '"Seab'" from the councillors. The Leeds City Council, hav- the ing thought better of a plan to ban reporters from its ecounci from two Yorkshire newspapers, which are carrying on limited publication, mus! not be told any- thing abou! wha: goes on at coun cil committee meetings. It also ordered that these two news papers be withdrawn from coun cil reading rooms. Birmingham City council has followed the ead of Liverpool, along with some others, in deny ing information to the press. At Stirling, in Scotland, an at tempt to ban the press from the Labor-dominated public health committee of the Stirling County Council was defeated by a vote of 7 to 6. The Labor sponsor of the motion to exclude four jour- nalists who were present claim- ed that as there was a dispute tions and principles. * COVERED BY LAW Under British law, the press at: tends public council meetings un- der the expres: provisions of an act of parliament. They can be excluded, temporarily, if the business discussed is bet- ter kept confidential in the pub- lie interest. In the cases in which the press was excluded however, The Liverpoo: city council man- aged to. comply with the law by doing all of its business in com- mittee of the whole, from which the press can tegally be SPEE-DEE WINDOW CLEANERS Windows cleaned, Floor. weshed end waxed. We Specialize in Office and Fectory Work FOR FREE ESTIMATE CALL RA 8-6221 \ BEGoodrich FOR NEW TI INSTALLATION 28 KING W. 12 RES New tread safety, BIG economy from . BEGoodrich SAFETY- SIZE 6.70-15 or 6.00.16 BLACKWALL TUBE-TYPE ond your recappable trodes The BETTER your used tire The BIGGER your allowance RA 5.4543 3 = 53 KING EAST FRANK MEAT MARKET RA 8-6521 NO CUT OF BEEF OVER 89. SIRLOIN . T-BONE ROUND STEAKS 89 LEAN GROUND "> VEAL LOIN CHOP PORK CHOPS END CUTS 59 "PORK LIVER . ... Ib 19 "LUCAS" WIENERS . lb. 47c Wide Selection of "Cold Cuts" PS. -- FREE PARKING AT REAR OF STORE

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