Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 3 Jul 1963, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, July 3, 1963 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN CLAUDE VIPOND HAPPY TO BE. HOME The last time we heard from Dr. Claude Vipond, eight or nine months ago, he was living with his family in Penang, Malaya, the tropical isle 500 miles from Singapore which has at least one claim to fame -- more than 20 people are killed there annually by falling coconuts, . Dr. Vipond returned here seuss With his family last weekend from Penang where he has mt been for the past two years mwith a Canadian medical team of five Canadian doc- tors and one nurse headed by Dr, J. D, Hermann of Ottawa under the Colombo Plan. How did it feel to be back home in Oshawa? "It's the most wonderful feeling imaginable. I never realized that I loved this City so muchsand the people in it." He tipped the scales Tues- day at 175 pounds--the same weight as when he left-- and there was little to dis- tinguish him physically from the Dr. Vipond who led such an active life in Oshawa pro- fessionally, politically, social- ly. He looked healthy, happy, and he made one point clear -- he has no political plans of any kind for the future. After two years of fighting malnutrition and snakebite in Malaya, he was more determined than ever that more could be done to help the people there. "Millions are in need of food and medical services,"' he said. 'There: is still an acute shortage of both doctors and medical equipment, particularly in the rural areas of the new Southeast Asia states. The primary medical problem is malnutrition resulting from a lack of protein. People suffer . DR, VIPOND | By DON HANRIGHT | OTTAWA (CP)--The minority/ation last weekend, Liberal government survived by} The roll-call vote was taken ja 115 to 75 vote in the Commons|shortly after Finance Minister /Tuesday night a Conservative Gordon reitenated his promise to jnon-confidence motion that al-|clarify the sales tax by next jleged "'confusion and chaos' ex-|Monday at the latest, Defending list in Canada as a result of the|the tax as absolutely necessary budget proposals. lif the goveimment is to put Can- The motion, by Opposition|ada's affairs in order, he added: |Leader Diefenbaker, was aimed| "If the people of this country jprimarily at clarification or/are not willing to back a govern. leven withdrawal of the 1l-per-/ment which has a program, and loent manufacturers' sales taxjare. not willing to pay more lapplied by the June 13 budget|taxes in the interim, we shall to building materials and pro-/have to go on drifting and inev- duction equipment, litably, sooner or later, we shall | Prime Minister Pearson was/end up on the rocks." 5 {not present for the vote. An aide} Mr, Gordon said he is sure jimmedijately phcned the result/that Canadians generally will jto him at Harrington Lake,' the accept the new impost, once it js jprime minister's official sum-jclarified, as in the country's imer residence, where he is re-ibest interests. 'Socreds To Meet Over Leadership By KEN KELLY the Commons as an independent OTTAWA (CP) cial Cred-|Social Credit MP, expressed dis. it's governing council meetsjapproval of the way in which here today to seek a final solu-/the Quebec party handled the tion for the uneasy leadership case of six MPs who signed-- relations of Robert Thompscniand later repudiated--a pledge and Reali Caouette. to support a minority Libera! The national council's meeting government after the April 8 coincided with the return to/election, Parliament Hill of Deputy) what action was taken over Leader Caouette, ordered [t0/the six MPs--all still in the jtake a rest early last month for House as Social Credit MPs -- what he described as "a kind Of never was made clear except nervous breakdown." that Mr. Thompson said three But Mr, Caouette's return were "disciplined." Tuesday to Parliament, were ia : iting t National Leader Thomspon has oe Gee -- hs Mar. been the sole captain of the/couy 39 . year - old Beauport, 'Liberals Survive New. Non-Confidence Vote jouperating from a minor oper-; 2 atta Ree Te tinea The vote was on this motion jby Opposition Leader Diefen-) | |baker: | "This house regrets that the igovernment, by its failure to clarify many doubts and uncer- tainties, has created and contin. ues to create confusion and chaos in various sectors of the economy, thereby contributing to a lamentable slowing-down of expecied expansion and growth."' The Liberals, as it turned out, needed no help to survive the test. With 96 members seated, the party had the largest single voting bloc in the House. | Eighteen Social Credit MPs and a single New Democrat, |Frank Howard (Skeena), voted jwith the government against the ;|motion, Joining the 61 Conserv- latives in backing it were 13 other NDP members and Guy Marcoux (Ind, SC -- Quebec Montmorency). |VOTE ON SUPPLY The voting came on the tradi- tional government supply moti --as always, a time for general apposition as well as individual MPs' grievances, The griev- ances wil! be heard today. Mr, Diefenbaker, in a bitter attack on government budget said the Liberals'| promises of expansion had |proven to be "a great hoax per. petrated on the people." The hope had been for ex- jpanded investment in Canada this year. "But today industry is in the \doldrums, fearful of the conse quences of acts' of legislative as sassination that it faces." Describing Mr. Gordon as j"'the self-appointed tribune of jthe people," Mr. Diefenbaker| al |proposals, Dick (Night Train) Lane smiles at jazz singer Dinah Washington after the couple's marriage Tuesday in Las Vegas. It was the second mar riage for the Detroit Lions halfback, 35, an dthe sixth for DINAH WASHINGTON WEDS INTERPRETING THE NEWS Action E I yea tem SE xpected 'On Credit Laws | OTTAWA (CP)--Advocates. of |water-tight laws are con- ' jsumer credit in Canada are }confident that 'with an opposi- jtion prod to the government, action will be taken by this session of Parliament. Representatives of all parties have urged legislation, ranging from a requirement that the true rate of interest or the ac- tual interest charges on credit purchases be listed on the price tags, to limitations on the rate fof interest that can be charged. Legally, there is some doubt SS |that the Parliament of Canada 'ican pass laws in this field, which touches on the property 'jand civil rights clauses of the constitution which are re. ' istricted to provincial jurisdic. jtion. "3 | But the advocates of consu- "J {mer credit reform -- notably Senator David A, Croll (L--On- Talks Started To Head Off Sudbury Strike TORONTO (CP) -- Govern. ment-nitiated ings will begin today in the hopes of averting a strike at the Sudbury and Port Colborne plants of International Nicke! Company of Canada. Key issues in the dispute be tween the United Steelworkers of America (CLC) and INCO in clude the camprny's proposal to change its pension plan and sup- plement it with a contributory security fund, and a union de- mand for the compulsory dues jcheck-off, -- Miss Washington, 37. The wed- ding came as a surprise to many. in the sports world. Their honeymoon was expect- ed to be delayed by Miss Washington's singing schedule. -- (AP Wirephoto) said the government couldn't} | Tuesday, the union announced mediation meet-; tario)--say the big boom in time-payment plans and other fonms of consumer credit since the Second World War needs some form of policing, if only a requirement that the interest changes be made known to the buyer at the time of purchase, anc not hidden or disguised. Senator Croll is sponsoring a bill for disclosure of interest charges in the Senate this ses- sion for the fifth time. Nine bills in the same field have been introduced in the Com- mons by members of the other parties. WANTS * COMMITTEE Last week, Solicitor-General J, Watson MacNaught tabled a motion to establish a special ljoint committee of the Senate and Commons to study con- |sumer credit and the statutes of lCanada affecting it. The sponsors of legislation welcome the. solicitor-general's move, eve) if it means delaying faction now on their bills until the committee has been formed and bas completed its study. They say the government's step in sponsoring the copmit- tee means that the government jwants the advice of senators and backbench MPs, 'vd 'the sponsors also say that the committee is certain to recommend legislation for gov- ernment sponsorship which the government can hardly avoid putting forward either late this jsession or at the outset of the jnext session of Parliament. As one parhamentarian put it: "A member who has served on this committee will not be able to go home. to his constituents and say that the committee de- cided after all its study to do nothing." from anemia and infestation of parasites; and while malaria is largely controlled, especially in the cities, leprosy and tu- ebreulosis are fairly common," party's 23 MPs for @ nee physician, voiced addi-jblame the finance minister for may not extend over MANY/tigna) objections to the conduct| its current'troubles. The opposi- days of party affairs especially dur-/tion leader went on: | its members had ratified an agreement with Sheritt Gordon Mines Limited, a nickel pro-) River Divides EMPLOYS 3,700 The 54-year-old MP for Ville- i told he will ing the last election campaign "I feel sorry for him some- ducer at Lynn Lake, Man. He said many lacked "'proteins, vitamins and minerals." The Penang area where he lived is infested with ven- omous snakes; although he used to bring snakes back to the Penang anti-venom institute after visits to district hospitals in the villages, he had no untoward personal encounters with them. Many of his patients were rubber tappers from the plantations in. the interior, workers in the rice paddies nearer the coast. He used an interpreter to overcome what he termed "triple language barriers' -- 40 percent of the population spoke Malay; 40 Chinese; 15 Indians and the bal- ance English NO ANTI-WEST FEELING IN MALAYA Dr. Vipond, who once received more than 8,000 votes in a local race for the Board of Education, ran into no anti-Western fecling in Malaya ustee "I don't want to create the impression that it is easy or simple to help these people,"' he explained. Most of the people in the government are anxious to run their country them- selves, though the senior people realize they need outside help." He said much "outside help' was needed for the people of Malaya (which gained its independence five years ago), but that it was also important for the natives to learn to help themselves more if these problems were to be solved. Malaya was doing "very well" in comparison with some Southeast Asian countries, he said, although President Sukar- no was making a "poor fist of it' in Indonesia. He felt that the troubles in West Irian and Brunei had been. created to divert Indonesians' attention from the shortcomings of the Sukarno regime The Viponds visited India (Calcutta, Benares, Agra, Delhi, Kashmir), Hong Kong and Japan enroute home. He felt that the people of India were afraid that a war with Red China could not be avoided. In places like Kashmir there were many outward evedences of war such as troop mobilizations, large Jet planes and UN observer stockpiles of arms military teams (with Canadian personnel) NOTES ON ROTARY INTERNATIONAL Dr. Vipond maintained 100 percent attendance at Rotary clubs while in Penang -- he was a member of the club on the island and affiliated with the Pukit Mertazam club on the ma He has a lengthy color film on the 1962 installat incoming president of the Penang He will show this at an upcoming meeting of the Osh- later be lation of the club awa club, of which he has been a member for several years he Viponds stuck close to their regular Canadian diet while in Penang -- important meats from Australia, fresh fruits such as bananas There was a pleasant surprise awaiting the Viponds Sun- day when they arrived at their Oshawa home, the same one they occupied before their departure -- a large painted cloth sign had been placed along the front of the house by neigh- bors. It contained but two words: "Welcome Viponds"'. K OF C LITTLE LEAGUE BLOSSOMS OUT *Did you know that the Little League -- sponsored by St. ne K of C for baseball players, Gregory's Co rrently starting its 10th. year of li 13, operation? to W. L. "Bill" Powers, the commissioner, has been with seomsomen the LL for eight years. This 4 (five Little League and six "= in the Minor League -- 24 eight to 10, inclusicve). This ; represents a total of more >= than 200 boys to superivse _ and outfit. : Commissioner Powers has 25-30 men currenilly coach- ng and umpiring, but he says more help is needed -- also, he would welcome more "moral support' from the parents. The League performed in the early days at Alexandra Park. Three years ago it moved to its own park, a spacious flatiand on Farewell avenue, south of King street east, where four diamonds have been instafied. The Farewell avenue park project had the biessing of the 'City -- it also became a reality because of much hard work by members like Val Mette, Russell Murphy and Jack Bawkes. The league was or tarted by a group headed by Ray Manerell, "Red R Rev. Monsignor Paul Dwyer, the late Albert Love, McRae and others. is W. L. POWERS Kea neuve Peporters He suggesed that the Quebec jtake another three or four leadership was projecting a rete oe po Poco alse image of Social Credit doc- affe by stre $C €0+\t rine oe on _: m nine' His accusation, in which he months, sls not 8 goed 4° accined' To place responsibilty lhis Rouyn, Que., home on the shoulders of any individ yn ss : ual, echoed criticisms. voiced Relations between the swe privately by Social Credit work men reached a fina a ers outside Quebec that Mr. Ca with the comenaion for Pb ouette's free-wheeling style of 've Bh gagged sic i campaign hurt party candidates : i Pagel ney tac S$ _90°lin other -provinces cial Credit whip in the Jast Par- ie cn: = reported closer} While the national . council, to Mr. Thompson than to Mr, 0Verning body of the party be- Caouette, who also is the party's Ween Conventions, was aimig Quebec chief at a solution of internal prob. lems at the federal level, MARCOUX DISAPPOINTED ports from Quebec MPs of other Dr. Marcoux, now sitting in parties indicated that Mr, Caou ($20 Million 23 Cost Cited launch his Quebec wing into the In Uranium Queen's Principal provincial p cal.arena The national council meets be hind closed doors until Friday. nforn said a. statement may be issued Thursday. OTTAWA (CP)--The federal Raps Semesters government's stockpiling of ure- Sea nium in the next 12 months may) KINGSTON (CP)--Dr. J. A cost. $20,000,000, Trade Minister Corry, principal of Queen's Uni- Sharp' said in the Commons Yersity, said Tuesday that sum Tuesday mer semesters will not be much The exact cost, he added, 2d solving the university would depend on. how much Population explosion uranium is produced. The gov-- "Many who speak of a year. jernment will negotiate with the round system of university op- uranium producers on the ques- eration do not know. how tion of the price. to be paid 3 Mr. Sharp, wswering ques-| sity m the period after the regu tions asked last week when lar session closes," he said Prime Minister Pearson an Dr. Corry said that nounced the stockpiling pro- 2.200 students will be at Queen's gram, said purpose ts toiduring July and August com- maintain employment in the pared wth the winter registra mines at least until next July 1. tion of about 3,400. In this period government' Dr Corry was speaking to 215 ill cover the mmes' operating nin school teachers attending a five-week course for high *k' Mc , a'. Suan 4 " a ie (PX Swift | <chool principals being held at rent - y ade' mele er eae Maple : reek) asked the university by the Ontario de- whether any precautions have partment of education been taken to spe that no prof. ' = os a. ee wer lly alle yaaa MADE ON SHOESTRING Mr. Sharp said the stockpil- NOTTINGHAM, England ing costs are just to cover the (CP)--A movie made on a £100 cost of operations and should ($300) budget by student Rimos not affect the dividend position. Vainorius has been accepted for He also said the governmentithis year's Edinburgh Festival. hopes torecover the money and It is titled "City Be My Over interest at some future time. cpat." "WEATHER FORECAST Sunny, Cooler Weather Seen Forecast temperatures Low overnight, high today Windsor 7 St. Thomas . London .... Kitchener .. Mount Forest re- in its th th costs Forecasts by the weather of- fice at 4:30 am Synopsis: A cold front sweap- ing southward through Ontario Tuesday finally brought an end to the past week's heat wave. Cool sunny weather is fore- cast for most of the province * today and Thursday Wingham .... Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Niagara, Lake Huron, Lake On- tario regions, Windso7,- Leadon Hamilton, Toronto: Sunny and much cooler today and Thurs- day. Winds light Thursday, Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Al- goma, White River regions, North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste Marie: Mostly sunny and much cooler today and Thursday Winds light Thursday Timagami, Cochrane regions Sunny and not quite as cool Thursday. Winds westerly 15 Thursday Peterborough Killaloe .. Muskoka North Bay . Sudbury ... Eariton S Kapuskasing .. White River . Moosonee . EYE EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by eppointment F. R, BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH , 5:30 P.M. te 8 P.M. Hotel Lancaster . quested $20,000 some fall iby jtimes because one would think} ihe was to be made the scape.! goat REPRESENTS LEADERS "Nothing of the kind. He rep. Canadian Press Statf Writer resents the leadership given to) There is no m the government, They followedjthat the Zambesi River By CAROL KENNEDY is him. They know where they are Come the frontier between)s now." In his reply, Mr. Gordon said ¥ he might have given his clarifi.that rigid color blocks will cation of the new sales taxes|!eave little room for "long since" had it not been that soodwill he had become tied down "side issues, alarms and excur- sions," Rb Mr, Gondon said that to listen held black Africa and white Africa an ever-growing prospect in of ietoria to House debates on the June 13 F yuiner cesia 1S are budget, "aie would think that be Canadians had no real idea of rule the trouble we are in, of the N absolute necessity of doing © something about our present sit. Dffi uation." Br It was imperative to raise more federal revenue b'ack life ruled ern Rho- he so 8.000.000 Ne territories The purpose of is not tribute the conference lit up and dis- ponsibiliti Dog Control Program Stays; No CAS Fund SUDBURY (CP) -- Board of ROCKY START control rejected a suggestion But soon after Tuesday that it suspend its dogigg North emtrol program and give the | nounced $19,000 it would cost to the Chili, do w dren's Aid Society, The 'CAS re- of am but t began June erm Rhodesia an would have nothing the an hermn Rho pater nalistic white prer "Everything has been cut to/Field, for a * said Mayor William'common market can't see where the) (Authoritative sou going to come from ported 7 unless we delete or curtail some /to the conf other project." to forma Controller Max Silverman/er I could not get support for his motion suggestion the money be tra alloted ta the CAS N He said other projects can be ne dropped and suggested deleting wh the dog control program its ir W. J. P; Thompsm, CAS di-jname t rector for the district of Sud-/it would bury, who announced last weekiand ce bank and wants jthat the society may have to "no links with Field's carry on the protective services pragram which, it contends, has also attempt to patch up family differences foster homes and imstitutions. trom PHONE 728-4681 take in 300 to 300 children un- while reactionaries.' der its protective services pro kept hundreds of families to- gether in past years, "The society does not wish to break up the families, but we OSHAWA'S NU-WAY gram, said he was disappointed) The service is a travelling have no other alternative," said 174 MARY ST. th Sout African rees re delegates have agreed dissolution of the fed up its oWMm currency BONELESS ROUND ROASTS OR LEAN MEATY BLADE SHORT CUT (ist 4 ECONOMY--6 & 7 BONELESS ROLLED BRO Gai the board's failure to find ithe funds KEEPS THEM TOGETHER - The CAS wanted the grant to family counselling program un- der which workers go to homes! to make certain children are be- ng cared for properly. They Mr. Thompson. "We cannot con- tinue the service without the money to pay for it." The children will be taken into at Nu-Way, corpet ond brood- loom hes been a specialty for 18 years . with thousands of yords on display to select Whites, Blacks y;Was. reported in the Salisbury |* ~/newspaper Rhodesia Herald as racial | the the rn ¢ 3480,000,000 Winston S Murray Cotterill, public rela- tions director of the union, said jthe agreement provides 20.5 cents an hour in benefits for a three - year contract, covering pproximately 1,000 employees Settlement terms inlcude a re. duction » the work weck to 42 from 44 hours; a 2% per cent increase for all employees in 1965; an adjustment of five cents an hour for some trades nd an additional! statutory holi- day next year. Labor Minister Rowntree called today's meeting. regarded as a moderate by British liberals,} Kaunda himself, ying '"'Zambia" also would rbid landing and overflying shits to Central African Air ays--at pr subsidized: by! federal government--if ns services to white-/ South Africa and Portu- colonies of Angola and yzambique sent AS 'rn Africans to approach even most functional of economic} Lesage Hesitant mks without bringing politics Ld aa "On Pension Plan TALKS TOUGH QUEBEC (CP) -- Premier Kaunda from the Jean Lesage of Quebec has told Strength of Northern Rhodesia's;Prime Minister Pearscn a con- rich copper revenues -- some/tributory old-age pension plan a year-- was re-/proposed by the federal govern- ported in the same paper as|ment could interfere with pro- adding vinecial plans. "I hope the two Rhodesias| He said, in a letter dated will be able to exist together June 27, that Pal et Barto bo eee reservations" about the federa! Hf Southern Rho-lnian and he asked that the desia should become rude or|House of Commons hold off impudent we would put the eco-/study of contributory pensic nomic squeeze on her. I know /egisiation until after a proposed two can play at that game but/federal-provincial conference we are the more powerful." The conference, Mr, Lesage It is possible that both North-)S@id, should go "to the heart" ern Rhodesia and Nyasaland of the question. are relishing Britain's promises} Mr. Pearson proposed the fed- independence and thus/eral-provincial meeting in a let- y have the edge overiter June 20. No date has beer n Rhodesia's white gov-'set ernment Field has been told by Brit- ain's Central African Affairs Minister R. A, Butler that in-/ dependence for his country is out of the question unless he widens franchise to more early the esis speaking as friends DIXON'S OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER $0 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 @ Commercie! end industriel Sites @ Leesebock @ Development Paul Ristow | 187 King St. E. 728-9474 REALTOR | e HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS e STEAKS 75 59 AM cw wy 3 FRESH PORK Shoulder FRESH PORK BUTT DEVON RINDLESS BAC MAPLE LEAF BOLOGNA: C Ib 49 39 e Cc Ib CELLO PKG. Cc Ib sO Foe 2%-3 LB. § CHRISTIES BROOKSIDE BREAD 2 tor ' EXTRA FEATURE : FRESH KILLED 2 Oven Read) Moscow University has some 3,700 professors, lecturers and jscientific workers on its staff. II CREAM SHERRY Four years ago, after twelve years of trying, we were able to put on the market a small offering of Brights Canadian Cream Sherry, There is no wine we make and sell today of which we are prouder. You may not like this type of wine. It is not one that appeals to every taste. But if you are a lover of Cream Sherry as many people are, may we suggest you try it? it costs more than most Canadian sherries but con- siderably less than comparable sherries, whatever theircountry of origin, We hope you will agree with our assessment of it. Because of the problem of supply Brights Canadian Cream Sherry is available only in Ontario, 'Brights fine Canadian Wines ; SINCE 1874 TROUDE 30 SMGRE ST EXTRA FEATURE > GOLDEN } YELLOW ' Bananas FIRST GRADE CREAMERY BUTTER } DUNCAN HINES DELUXE REG. 47e Mix 39- 37 AVE.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy