THERE'S ONLY ONE sens- ible thing to do to get relief from the current hot, humid spell, as the citizens in the above picture illustrate -- get to the beach or to a swimming pool. The above photo was taken Friday by a Times photographer at the water- front on the east end of Lake- view Park; the lower photo was taken at Somerset swim- ming pool, Such scenes are Research Done On Monkeys OLEVELAND (AP) -- Scien- tists here have kept isolated Fleas ia wueahors "they y hope will lead to answers on the transp! The research is being done by faculty members of Western [Reserve University's medical school. Since a monkey's brain was isolated from its body suc- cessfully at Cleveland Metro- politan General Hospital a year ago, 35 such brains have been kept alive for short periods. Dr. Robert J. White, 37, a Draws Fine For Smashing Door An 18-year-old Oshawa youth convicted of wilful damage by King Koin Laundromat, Bond street west, July 17, was Fri- day fined $25 or 30 days in jail. Stanley Wallace, 745 Lauren- tian street, pleaded guilty to the charge. Acting Crown Attorney John Humphreys said police arrested Wallace after he and another man were seen loiteritg in the laundromat. Magistrate F, S. Ebbs order- ed the accused to make restitu- tion to the owner. A charge of trespassing, laid against Wayne G. Fox, 76 Col- borne street west, was adjourn- ed until Aug. 19. 'Looted Cottages 'Due To Hunger being duplicated across the province in hundreds of pools as citizens, young and old, seek sanctuary from the ex- treme heat. --Oshawa Times Photos British Tories and Labor See Liberals Losing Ground By FRASER WIGHTON LONDON (Reuters) -- Brit- hind the Conservative and La- for a fall general election, ex- ain's politicians, now keyed up pect the summer months to chow an increasing swing be- bor parties, at the expense of the Liberals They base the this assessment on mons. Conservatives Labor. 260, Independ- ents two and there are 'hree| vacancies, all former Conserva- tive seats. Liberals made a poor show- ing at Devizes, in southwest England, and Bury Saint Ed munds, in Suffolk, East Eng- lost their deposits, which are forefeited by anyone who fails to gain one-cighth of the total votes cast in the constituency. While they did slightly better in a third byelection at Winches- ter, in southwest England, their vote of just over 4,500 was only sufficient to save their candi- date from losing his deposit. For nearly three years now, ©! the Liberals, the so-called "mid- die party," have been bedevil- all Conservative byelection calculations. NEVER EXPLAINED The reasons for the Liberal upsurge have never been fully explained, though many people believe it demonstrated the dis- satisfaction of some voters with the two main parties. It hit the Conservatives hard- est, and most signally at Orping- ton, Kent, where, in 1962, Lib- | A 17-year-old Panoka, Alta., youth who looted two cottages on Little Falls Island, July 16, told Magistrate F, S. Ebbs: "I jdid it because I was hungry." | Brechin OPP Constable J. H. Speirs said Steven Shaw was jarrested after two cottages were broken into. The loot: a sleeping bag, canned food, binoculars, mir- ror and a flashlight. Shaw was placed on' one capturing this Conservative par- liamentary stronghold. During the Liberal '"'revival," the Labor party has, on several : occasions, fund isin the ig ats suspended sentence, and etal in ramonap plane 1aitniT: James, who operates a byelections. |factory. in New Toronto, told , y|the magistrate: ae Pbccgreeiypoli a, Preal "T'll put him to work and I hy ven higed si wea se manent guarantee he'll not want to. be byrtad Mae 3 permanent) iy late after a day's work at ral revival, Its leaders have the plant." gone furtier still, and told vot- Court Issues ers that by voting Liberal, they Bench Warrant Commons seats at the general) were merely helping to retyrn| a Labor candidate. The Liberals have been cred- ited with an intention to contest about 400 of the 630 House of) election. | A bench warrant was issued The Liberals' last big attempt|against Robert J. McLean, 214 to increase their parliamentary|Bloor street east Friday when strength was in 1950, when they|he failed to show up in Oshawa put forward 478 candidates. Of|Magistrate's Court to answer a smashing a door frame in the|Ph director of neurosurgery at the medical school, started trying to isolate the monkey brains five years ago, Recently he has been working with two other faculty members--Dr. Maurice Albin and Dr. Javier Verdura. The isolated' brain's activity is recorded by an electroence- jalogram. How is the brain kept alive? "This is done in two ways," said Dr, White. "First the brain is isolated, so that it could be hedl in one hand. Then it is hooked to another blood supply, using an artificial circulation, or another monkey. DONORS WEAKEN "Although the brain probably could survive for several days hooked up to another monkey, we have to stop because the donons get weak." Dr, White said the time limit using an artificial heart has been six or seven hours because an artificial kidney has not also been used, and waste products continue to circulate in the brain. Can the brain think or feel anything? Dr. White. said that is not known. However, he added, the brain responds to certain stimuli "If we ring a bell, or holler at it (the brain), or stimulate the little optic nerve that re- mains, we can actually see that it is transmitted to the same area as if the animal were alive." Claims Blow Unintentional A charge of assaulting a po- liceman, laid against Donald Bint, 21, 172 Mitchell avenue, was. adjourned until Sept. 11 when the accused said Fnday he needed time to round up a lawyer and witnesses, Constable Alan McLaren told Magistrate F. S. Ebbs he and another officer were arresting a man July 18 near the inter- section of Ritscn road and Olive avenue, when Bint "'hit me on the right side of the head with his fist." "He had been drinking and was very disorderly,"' Constable McLaren said of Bint. "T didn't do it on purpose," the accused told Magistrate F. land. Both Liberal candidatesjerals shook the governmen: by these, 319 lost their' deposits. | | No Casualties For Canadians By GERARD ALARIE | cers, Fawzil Kuchuk, vice-presi-| NICOSIA (CP) -- Canadian ite of Cyprus and leader of its Turkish community, said it pf ane d in grb Ng acase of mistaken identity. the United Nations military; The main concern of the Ca- operation in Cyprus without) nadian troops seems to be that | Monique des Saules, Que., is) one of the most unusual. '"'cas-| ualties" you would find in any military operation or canpeien | One day, while was on! patrol between Greek and Turk-| ish positions in the hills around) the Kyrenia pass, shots landed| close to him. Within hours a| radio station back home was| reporting that he had _been| killed. : His wife suffered so severely from shock, on hearing the! bradcast, that Sgt. Larocque| was sent home for two weeks! casualties, |the folks back home will worry They have been fired upon|unduly about their situation. now and again but are always|The troops themselves do not} told that it was a mistake and|Consider it dangerous. Morale) that the shots were really in-|is, by all appearances, quite) tended for somebody else. |high. For example, soldiers of the; 'The danger must not be ex- Royal 22nd Regiment's first|aggerated," Lt. - Col. Andrew. battalion came under particu-| Woodcock of Sarnia, Ont. com-| larly heavy fire in May from) mander of the Royal 22nd Regi- Turkish Cypriots entrenched in| ment's first battalion, told re- the mountains north of Nicosia.| porters. Apologizing to battalion offi-' Sgt. Julien Larocque of Ste.! ally holding the higher ground. CHILD'S FOOT GRAFTED BACK INTO PLACE BY DOCTOR Suzanne Lafontaine, 8, of Bouchet, Que., lies uncon- scious in Ottawa General Hos- pital, after her left foot, cut off by a hay mower, was grafted back in place Thura- on compassionate leave. | Col. Woodcock said the Cyp-| riots fighting in the Kyrenia sector "'shoot almost any time at heaven knows what, but I am certain they have never de-| liberately fired on Canadian) soldiers." | Both Turkish and Greek com- batants have had entrenched} positions in the Kyrenia sector for some time, the Turks gener-| charge of having liquor. Theft and possession of stolen Ms goods charges against Wayne McConnell, of Peterborough, were remanded until Aug. 21. Charges were laid after six bat- ometers were allegedly stolen from GM. A charge of non-payment of wages against W. Rankine, 374 Verdun road, was withdrawn. Peter Giardino, a_ plasterer, claimed Rankine owed him $190 in-wages. CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- wishes to the following resi- who celebrates her birthday Sunday, July 26. Mrs. Arthur Wray, RR 3, Oshawa. Phone 723-3474. day. With her are Dr. Fergus Ducharme, a member of the surgical team that performed . Ebbs. "My hand just went out and hit him," Bint testified. Battery Stolen Took Replacement A 21-year-old Mactier, Odt., jman told Magistrate F. S. Ebbs |Friday he stole a battery from a car July 22 because some- {body stole the new battery from his car. |. "Somebody left me with a dead battery so I had to do something," said Gerald B. Baskey in Oshawa Magistrate's \Court. | "I'm going to do something |too," said the magistrate. \'Twety-five dollars or 30 jaavs." } NEWS IN BRIEF 'She Oshawa Time SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1964 SECOND SECTION OSHAWA, ONTARIO, t PAGE NI Reds Face New Test In Kerala ers). e disruptive impact of the. Sino-Soviet ideological con- flict may cheat Indian Com- munists of victory in the next lelections in their main strong- hold of Kerala. The inhabitants of the pictur- esque. state on the southern tip of india's west coast will vote early next year to elect 126 members to the state legisla- tive assembly. The Communists made _his- tory in Kerala five years ago by being elected to power for the first time in open and free election. They now are pinning their hopes on the great multi- tude of educated unemployed and the poor pro - Communist agricultural laborers to vote them to power for the second time. But the Moscow-Peking ideo- logical rift has had its repercus- sions in the ranks of the Indian Communist party. The Kerala wing of the party is considered largely pro - Peking, although the national leadership of the Communists is held by more moderate leaders supporting Moscow's "peaceful coex- istence"' line. WON POWER The Communists won power jin ie general election five years ago and, with 60 of the 126 assembly seats and the support of five independents, ruled the 15,000 - square - mile coastal state for 26 months be- fore being dismissed by a presi- dential decree following an anti- Communist "revolt" in the state, Another election was held in the state in 1960. when all the non-Communist parties joined forces in a united front against the Communist candidates. The Communists lost, win- ning only 29 seats in the legis- lative assembly against their previous strength of 60. Never- theless, the total number of Communist votes polled showed an increase of 44 per cent com- pared with the previous elec- tion. Both the ruling Congress party and the non-Communist opposition are apprehensive elections. The Communists ap- pear to have strengthened their following during the last five years by concerted exploitation of the peoples' grievances. False Pretences Judgment Delayed Judgment on a charge of false pretences laid against Harry Newdorf, of Toronto, was re- served until July 27 in Oshawa Magistrate's Court Friday. Magistrate F. S. Ebbs was told that on May 1 Newdorf issued an NSF cheque to G. S. White and Sons Ltd., 1300 Sim- coe street north, in payment for horse saddle, rein and bit. Newdorf told the magistrate that on April 27 he depostied a $130 cheque in his Toronto bank account but it proved to be worthless. Magistrate Ebbs said he would reserve judgment on the matter to give the accused time to settle the account. PASS BILL LONDON (Reuters) -- The House of Commons has passed a bill providing for the inde- pendence of Malta. The Medi- ALLOWED TO SIT LONDON (AP)--The British defence ministry made it offi- cial Friday--from now on the toasts to the Queen sitting down, The concession, from honor of the 300th birthday: of the corps. HEADS ASSOCIATION TORONTO (CP) -- Fred Po- land, medical reporter of the Montreal Star, Thursday was elected chairman of the Cana- dian section of the National As- the section's fifth annual meet- ing. The meeting, held to coin- cide with the fifth congress of the International Diabetes Fed- eration, re-elected Ben Rose of the Toronto Star secretary- treasurer. 18 CHANCELLOR EDMONTON (CP) -- Newspa- per publisher Francis Philip Galbraith of Red Deer Alta., has been elected by acclama- tion as chancellor of the Uni- versity of Alberta for a six-year tenm, it was: announced Thurs- day. Born in Guelph, Ont., Mr. Galbraith moved to Lethbridge in 1906 and to Red Deer in 1907. CATHOLICS ARRIVE MONTREAL (CP)--About 100 Trinidad Roman Catholics headed by Most Rev. William Fitzgerald, Auxiliary Bishop of Trinidad, arrived in Montreal by ajr Thursday night to start an il-day tour combining reli- gion and sight-seeing. They will the operation, and nurse Mary Louise Schaal. leave for Toronto July 29 to visit a number of Ontario ~--CP Wirephoto shrines. Royal Marines will drink their] , Queen Elizabeth herself, is in| > sociation of Science Writers at|' terranean island is expected to become independent in Septem- ber. . y V. M. NAIR i TRIVANDRUM, India (Reut-| . about the outcome of next years), ABE TAYLOR Tree-Stump Fire Reported A smoldering tree. stump in Rotary Park had Oshawa fire- fighters cut Friday night. Seven routine ambulance calls were answered through the day. Osh- awa General Hospital reported only routine cases. Three car accidents were re- ported by police: involved in intersection collisions were Jeremy Glassey, Stone street, and Loretta. S. Gates, Simcoe street north (King east and Al- bert street) and Edward Kar- tisch, Ritson road south, and Victor Marchildon, Minden street (Ritson north and 'Ade- laide street east). Drivers Norman L. McBride, Arbor Court, and Paul Welych- ko, Montgomery street, were in collision at Hall and Simcoe streets. Total estimated dam- age to cars in these accidents was $975. Ont. Govt. Plans Ahead On Education TORONTO (CP) -- Education Minister William Davis of On- tario said Friday the depart- ment of education has set up a special division to plan the shape of future schools in the Local 222 Unit to A special meeting of the Gen- eral Motors Unit of Local 222, UAW-CLC, will be held in the Oshawa Armouries, Aug. 30 when contract amendments be- tween the Local and General Motors of Canada Ltd., will be discussed. Negotiations between the com- pany and the union are sched- uled to begin in September. Contract proposals by Local 222 hav been under discussion by high-ranking officials recently and a meeting will be held Aug. 14 by committeemen, alternates, the executive board and inter- ested stewards. Meet mands will be discussed and ironed out at the' mi h Local 222 will meet Aug. 20 to discuss and -- contract de- mands on pensions, 'suppemen- tary unemployment benefits and insurance. mi In a recent statement to the 222. membership, Presi+ dent "Abe" Taylor said that he hoped tha' ment" States locals of the UAW and employers would be made by Aug. 30. "If they do not have a peaceful settlement by that date," he said, "we will attempt to have a report of their ne; The detais on contract de- tiations by then." By HAL BOYLE NE WYORK (AP) -- Mem- ory is the golden bonfire by which we warm our hearts in chill times. The more you have to re- call the warmer is the glow. Nostalgia is an interior stove that keeps away the outside cold. It kindles the spirit to look back now, for example, and remember when-- You couldn't put on your shoes without an instrument called a buttonhook. No one could judge a wo- man's age for sure, but half the male citizenry were con- vinced they could tell how old a horse was by looking at its teeth. The favorite two-line joke was this: "Who was that lady I saw you with last night?" "That was no lady, That was my wife." Elizabeth Taylor was a promising child actress, and Hamlet had never heard of Richard Burton, Repair costs around the house were negligible, as the only mechanical gadget that province, avoid ence: and control costs. Mr. Davis said in a statement the new. division will investigate facilities needed to house new teaching techniques and techni- cal training aids, and study quality control of school build- ings with specific reference to materials and methods of con- struction in relation to cost. The division will also see whether greater use can be made of school buildings for community facilities. Robots Snag Strike Talks TORONTO (CP) -- Negotia- tions between the three Toronto daily newspapers and their idle printers ran into a snag Friday as both parties left the bargain- ing table for a weekend recess. Government conciliator Louis Fine said: "We have been un- able to resolve a particular is- sue concerning computer opera- tions." He added that negotia- tions will resume Monday morn- ing. The dispute, which led to 680 members of the International Typographical Union (CLC) leaving their jobs July 9, was centred on computer operations. The issue was union jurisdiction} over computers used to perform composing room work normally ever ded fixing was the well pump in the back yard. The doctor would some- times give you a nickel if you fed and watered his horse while he was making a house call, And if he really liked you, he'd let you ride in the buggy with him to the next stop on his rounds. BAD NEWS FOR SURE Anybody who got a long- distance call on the telephone knew at once some relative must be dead or mortally ll ill. No kitchen was complete without a rolling pin or a basement without a tub and washboard. Air - conditioning was sim- ple. On hot summer days a housewife could always cool Convicted In Bicycle Thefts Gerald §S. Mills, 126 Atha- basca street, was convicted of stealing two bicycles and remanded in custody until July 27 for sentencing. Magistrate F. S. Ebbs was told the 17-year-old youth stole bicycles from Don Brown, 111 Eastlawn street and Ed Choj- nacki, 68 Athabasca street. In a statement to police Mills said he stole the machines to) provide parts for his own done by printers. bicycle. Memory Is Termed "Golden Bondfire": off by taking her chair down into the po and doing her darning there, A girl risked her reputation if she sat with her boy friend in the last row of a movie balcony, Christmas shopping for da@ was no problem, If his necktie was still in shape, he- could always do with a new pair of suspend. ers. | i No schoolteacher who wanted to keep her job would think of smoking a cigarette in public. " You were a real sport if, you wore a pair of pear. grey spats, and gave the bat. ber a dime tip when you a two-bit haircut. Any teen-ager who had t6 ask his parents for spending money was regarded as shift* less, and it was felt he was -- to come to\ no good end. ; Those were the days. Rez member? fed Brooklin Bull . Superior Sire The Jersey bull, Brampton El Acme, Excellent, a Silver Medal bull, has just beyen des- ignated a Superior Sire by the Canadian Jersey Cattle Club, on the high average production of his daughters. 46 tested daugh- ters have an average produc- tion of m.e. of 9,726 lbs. milk, 4.88 per cent fat, 474 Ibs. fat, BCA 128-116. He has 51 classi- fied daughters that average 85.72 per cent. This bull is own- éd and was proven for the most part in the herd of W. F, Batty and Son, of Brooklin, and was bred by B. H. Bull and Son, Brampton. He is a son of Brampton Acme, Senior Superior Cent Sire, a Gold and Silver Me bull, with 102 daughters that average 9,386 Ibs. milk, 516 per cent fat, 484 Ibs. fat, and 118 classified that average 87.06 per cent. His dam is Brampton Ella Basilua, Excellent, a daughter of Brampton Basileus, winner of two Gold Medals and two Medals of Merit, and a Ton 'of Gold cow. She made a Medal of Merit record at nine years of age in 365 days of 17,522 Ibs. of milk, 990 Ibs. fat, 5.65 per cent, and she is a full sister of the Superior Sire, Bramptoh Premier Basil, with 29 daugh+ ters that average 8,933 Ibs. of milk and 492 Ibs, of fat. i Angie Monkman Winnipeg stenographer and Indian Prin- cess of Manitoba, was given well-wishes in Winnipeg this week prior to her departure for Garden River, Ont., where she competes for the princess- 'of-Canada title next week at INDIAN PRINCESS OF MANITOBA SEEKS NATIONAL TITLE an annual meeting of the Na- tional Indian Council. She was given the name Red°*Wing at & pow wow. Here, chief Frank Merrick adjusts her headband while. chief "White Buffalo" Bob Stewart looks on. agi --CP Witephote