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Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Aug 1964, p. 18

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ae a, ra | #1 SAN FRANCISCO (AP ieMale or female: Ap uncer- 2 ony. oecurs more often than| the chancel- **4or of the University of Califor- ' say medical centre said Thurs- 18% vg Ment of physical dom come to * a venga J. B. Saunde : sed rd their privacy, an "hate letetnrs are required to protect it, Dr. Saunders ex- »"plained, Bu: He said that sexual mixups rim e many forms, that treat- abnormalities Mi \ if , and that psychological we are best prevented or "treated in childhood. - Qne rare example Dr. Saun- ders cited is the patient with normal external female sex or- gans but lacking a uterus and other female internal organs, She may be happily marrisd but cannot bear enilaren. = The chancellor released a statement on sex differentiation ** problems in response, he said, to "%inquiries from the press. qf oul be started in in- rprgitoms 40? ov ANOTHER MORE COMMON More common that the first example is Klinefelter's syn- ® *: Industrials ~ Sent Lower, " Late Selling we TORONTO (CP)--Late selling ik 90 light volume sent industrials »» lower in sympathy with a be New York stock mar- Ket Fursday be; After spending most of the «Session on the upside many key stocks hed their gains erased near the close. Interprovincial 'Pipe Line dipped 1% to 881, b ; while Moore Corp. and Imperial ; Bank of Commerce were off 1 each, to 55 and 67%, respec- tively. CPR was hit with a % loss to 4454, Massey-Ferguson 54 to 27%, Algoma Steel 1% to) 73%, Dominion Stores % to 22, Walker Gooderham % to 36% and Toronto-Dominion Bank '% to 68%. ' After being ahead as much as 2, Distillers Seagram closed with a 1% gain at 625%. Union Gas was up % to 24% and 1 Royal Bank % to 7914. i ve mining - situations were quiet for most of the day. '|. However, they too were hit by late selling. Raglan dipped 34 cents to $2.81 and traded in a $2.80 to $3.20 range. Its largest * \shareholder, Canadian Dyno, , also gave up 20 cents, at $1.90. WINDFALL DOWN Windfall, which lost favor last week, slumped eight cents to 65 | cents, Glenn was off five cents to 14 cents and National Explor- ation ene cent to 2314, after sell- ing as high as 20 cents at one point. Senior base metals hung onto & modest gain. Hudson Bay ad- vanced % to 66 and Rio Algom), 15 cents to $9.20. Noranda was)' off % to 47% and cominco % to 36%. Golds made a modest ad- vanee with Kerr-Addison and La Luz up 15 cents each, at $7.20 and $6,95,respecivtely. On index, industrials were down .50 to 157.97, western oils 06 to 96.26 and the exchange Index 43 to 147.34. Golds were ahead .46 to 132.27 and base metals .10 to 64.54, Volume for the day was 3,725,000 shares c red with 4,150,000 Wed- n y. Crisis Causes Mart Nosedive NEW YORK (AP)--The stock market took a nosedive late Thursday as anxiety over the Southeast Asian crisis. Key issues lost $1 or $2 a share, Steels, motors, rails, util- ities, defence stocks and other groups fell, The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials plunged 9.65 to $23.40, This was its steepest loss since it fell 21.16 after the as- sassination of President Ken- nedy Nov. 22. The Associated Press 60-stock \ average declined 2.8 to 312.7. Of 1,334 issues traded, 728 de- clined and 352 advanced, The New York Steck Ex- change ticker tape fell behind floor transactions at the ciose but volume totalled only 3,950,- 000 shares, compared with 6,210,000 We y. Couple Want Child In Czechoslovakia TORONTO (CP) -- A former Czechoslovakian couple, who ». Sought asylum in Canada in 1962, have started several peti- tions aimed at getting. public support to have their 13-year- { old.daughter brought to Canada. Mr. and Mrs. Miloslav Bincik of Toronto left the. child, Ga- briela, behind when they went to Cuba for a holiday in 1962. The Binciks left their plane at Gander, Nfid., on the return trip from Cuba. Czeehoslovakia has refused to * grant an exist visa to Gabriela, ' who has been staying with friends in Bratislava. ' The petitions will be sent to External Affairs Minister Mar- > tin in hopes he will make rep- t resentations to Czechoslovakia on behalf of the gir). More Often Than Realized drome, associated with genetic ity. Severe cases may' produce marked breast develop- ment in the male and unusually small or imperfectly developed} external sex organs.-In milder cases, the patient appears to be a normal or nearly normal male, Dr. Saunders said. The patient is usually but not al- ways sterile. Most common error of sex differentiation is adrenal vir- ilization or; to use the long term, hyperadrenocorti- of an unborn female result in a baby girl with masculine ap- pearing sex organs. If treated early by hormones and surgery, she can eventually marry and have children, Dr. Saunders said, True hermaphroditism is much less common, he noted, Here the patient has sex glands of both male and female. Much can be done to help most pa- tients with intersexual develop- ment live as relatively normal] members of one sex or the other TORONTO (CP)--Old Masters --or fakes? That is the dispute between a Calgary broker and a Toronto art historian concern- ing 200 paintings stored in a dis- used Calgary night club. Keith Grafen believes the col- lection may include works by El Greco, Van Dyck, Rubens and Hogarth. "I'm no art expert, but I felt that perhaps a dozen in the col- lection might be genuine Old Masters. by endocrine hormone therapy cal female pseudohermaphrodit- ism. Overactive adrenal glands and surgery, Dr. Saunders said. G. §. Vickers, professor of fine artat the University of Art Historian Claims 200 Paintings Are Fakes -- Toronto, weticves that those he has seen are copies. Mr. Grafen is in Toronto with eight of the paintings, secking authentication. He is acting for the owner, Clifford Harris, a former Calgary bar owner who collected them in the hope of starting an art gallery in the Prairie city. CALLS THEM COPIES Prof. Vickers studied the eight, then. pronounced: "I'd say they were all 18th j out of county In England by th dunes. They're all rela- tively amateur -- journeyman copies, I once sew a whole col- lection of copies like this in He said the 'English aristoc- racy often had copies made of Old Masters they had seen while touring Europe. To this, Mr. Grafen said: "This was the type of com- ment I was expecting to get. I think art experts are always ultra-conservative." However, Prof. Vickers was less positive on one of the pic- turse, a portrait of poet Robert Burns, "It may be an original por- trait by a competent painter, perhaps around 1830, But its certainly not by Goya." century copies, They're the sort of copies that you can rummage He has advised Mr. Grafen to send photographs of the t- ings to the National Gallery. "If anything catches their. in- terest they'll probably send someone to take a look." Clifford Harris says he ob- tained several of the pictures from a girl friend, whose: fam- ily comes from Coventry, Eng- land. ; Another, which he says Archie Keys, former head of Calgary's Allied Art Centre, thought might be a genuine El Greco, was obtained in exchange for some Sevres porcelain vases. OLYMPICS SATELLITE Syncom III the satellite to be utilized for live trans - Pacific television broadcasting from Ja- pan's Olympic Games, will be launched Aug. 18. Rival Papers Plan Joint Supplement LONDON (Reuters) -- Brit- ain's newspaper readers soon see the nation's biggest ad- yertising medium, a colored newspaper supplement with an 18,000,000 readership, it was forecast Thursday. Biggest surprise to Fleet Street, centre of the national newspaper industry, was the re- port that it would be published as a joint venture by two of London's biggest rivals -- The! Daily Express and The Mail. 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THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, August 7, 1966. > it was expected would set up a t company to publish magazines and sup- plements for both newspaper The first colored. supplement in a British newspaper was pioneered by : ke: born newspa! le ° son in he weekly Sunday bn Thomson's success prompted his rival, The Observer, as well as The Daily 'aph, to.start plans for pub! 'o own ap spy sections. are due in the fall. Mail editor liam Hardca: Daily Express would jointly a Daily|duce an 'impressive' supple- ment with a strong appeal. te women, Exceptional CLEARANCE BUY! "Bradford" Stereo - Radio- Phono Consolette PLASTIG COVERED LOUNGE WHILE THEY LAST Exceptional Buy ! CONSOLE ORGAN 37 full-sized ivory white keys. 24 touch button balanced chord section, Permanently tuned Swedish stainless steel reeds, Instant knee-action volume control. Music rack. Convenient on-off switch, Prize-winning spinct design in satin walnut finish, First Come, . . First Served! REG. 129.99 - DOWNTOWN SIMCOE ST. SOUTH

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