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Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Dec 1964, p. 8

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@ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thuredey, December 31, 1964 CP Diary of Headline News of Ye as U.S. ambassador to' employment. George Hees, former Conservative trade minister, named president of Montreal and Canadian stock ex- 8. 10--Panama suspends rela- tions with U.S. after 20 killed in in student inva- sion of Canal Zone. RCAF Negotiators reach agreement on Columbia River hydro and © flood control project. "4-- ne Chevrier. ap- pointed Canadian high com- f missioner in London, succeed- _ ing George Drew. Sgt. Maj. Walter Leja, injured in 1963 while defu: FLQ bomb in Westmount, ue., awarded George Cross. 20--Prime Minister Pearson shuffles cabinet; Maurice Sauve becomes forestry min- ister, J. W. Pickersgill moves to transport and Guy Favreau to justice department. Separ- atist Marcel Chaput ends 63- day fast and resigns as presi- dent of Le Parti Republicain de Quebec. 21--Seventeen die as Tan- ganyika troops mutiny in Dar se Salaam over pay and con- ditions. ' 22 -- Prime Minister Pear- son and President Johnson at Washington meeting agree to set up committee to study trade policies. -- France establishes diplomatic relations with China, 28 -- Soviet fighter plane forces down U.S. Air Force trainer in East Germany, kill- ing three officers. Film star Alan Ladd, 50, dies. 30 -- Les Fusiliers Mont Royal Arm in Montreal robbed of 100 weapons and 20,000 rounds of ammunition, FEBRUARY CLAY BEATS LISTON 3Queen Mother Eliza- beth enters London hospital for emergency appendectomy, cancelling visits to Canada, Australia and New Zealand. 4Dalton of Toronto elected nati president of Progressive Conservative As- sociation. Yuri Nosenko, ex- pert with Soviet delegation to Geneva disarmament con- = one to West. nm Balcer accepted b John Diefenbaker as Seihee Conservative lieutenant. Que- bec legislative assembly ap- proves bill to set up education ministry. -6--Cuba cuts off water sup- ply to U.S. Guantanamo naval base in retaliation for Amer- iean seizure of four Cuban fishing vessels off Florida coast. 7--Canadians win Olympic four-man bobsled gold medal. -8 -- Russia defeats Canada to win Olympic Hockey gold medal; Canada finishes fourth. , .9--Princess Irene renounces 'right to Dutch throne, decides to live in exile and marry THESE ARE some of the personalities who made news in 1964. They are from top left: U.S. president, Lyndon B. Johnson, who scored land- slide victory in U.S. election Don Carlos of Bourbon- Parma, a Roman Catholic, 16--Mayor Willy Brandt of West Berlin elected West Ger- man Socialist leader, succeed- ing late Eric Ollenhauer. 17--Secretary - General U Thant proposes formation of international peace - keeping force in Cyprus. 20--Bandits overcome care- taker and two soldiers at Shawinigan, Que., artillery regiment, escape with arms. Ottawa orders 24-hour guard of all militia armories. 25--Cassius Clay wins world heavyweight boxing crown with seventh-round TKO of Sonny Liston at Miami Beach, MARCH ALASKA EARTHQUAKE §--Actress Elizabeth Taylor anted Mexican divorce m Eddie Fisher. 6--King Paul of Greece, 62, dies, succeeded by his son, Constantine XIll. Lyall Dagg's B.C. rink wins Cana- dian curling championship in Charlottetown.: 10-- Queen gives birth to fourth child ,a son. U.S. re- connaissance plane shot down by Russians over East Ger- many. 12--Teamsters boss James Hoffa sentenced at Chatta- nooga, Tenn., to eight years, fined $10,000, for jury tamper- ing; appeals. 13 -- Parliament approves plan to send 1,150 Canadian troops to Cyprus as part of UN force. 14--Jack Ruby sentenced in Dallas to death for murder of Lee Harvey Oswald, accused assassin of President Ken- nedy. Revenue Minister Jack Garland, 46, dies in .Ottawa. 15 -- Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton married in Montreal. U.S. and Panama resume diplomatic relations, begin talks to resolve Pan- ama Canal dispute. 16--Finance Minister Gor- Mouse Cancer Find May Work On Human Leukemia MONTREAL (CP)--A chance finding by a bee expert in Guelph led to the discovery in a Canadian government labora- tory of five compounds that in- hibit the growth of mouse can- cers, an Ottawa doctor reported lay. Dr. Susan Tolnai, teacher and researcher in histology at the niversity of Ottawa, said there ' no evidence the com- Pounds, would work against hu- man cancer. "But the possibility does exist that in certain human cancer-- leukemia--they could be tried with benefi: effect," she toid the closing session of the week- long annual congress of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Dr. Tolnai, wife of Ottawa pathologist George Tolnai, sin- gled out leukemia as a possible object of trial treatment be- cause that blood cancer is eas- ier to detect in its earlier stages than some other cancers. RESULT FROM FINDING Experiments on 10,000 mice during four years at the na- tional laboratory of hygiene re- sulted from a finding:in 1957 by Dr. Gordon Townsend, a bee ex- pert at the Ontario Agricultural College in Guelph. Studying royal jelly, an excretion of queen bees, Dr. Townsend no- ticed that it reacted against cer- tain leukemia mouse cells. He reported the fact to Dr. Tolnai and Dr. Joseph F. Morgan through the federal department of health and welfare. The tip led to the testing of acid compounds which pre- vented the growth of cancer cells injected into live mice and destroyed mouse cancer cells in test tubes. Dr. Morgan, who moved late last year to Saskatoon to direct the cancer research institute there, is continuing the re- search. Dr. Tolnai now is doing research into bone metabolism at Ottawa University. In the Ottawa experiments, they extracted two fatty acids from royal jelly, known as 2 decenoic and 9 decenoic acid, and tested them along with three that occur in natural foods such as butter and eggs--lino- lenic, linoleic and oleic acid. The acids were tested against three kinds of cancer cells both in living mice and in test-tube tissue cultures. AFFECT ALL KINDS Three of the acids--linoleic, linolenic and 2 decenoic--were effective against all three kinds of cancer, a mammary tumor known as TA3, another named Ehrlich Carcinoma and a lym- phatic cancer called Gardner. Oleic acid worked against TA3 and Gardner, but not Ehrlich, and 9 decenoic worked against the cancers in only part of the test-tube trials. in November; Queen Eliza- beth, visited Canada in Octo- ber; Roy Thomson, named baron in January; from bot- tom left: Pope Paul, visited India in December; Sir Win- don presents federal budget, providing $10 - a - month fam- ily allowances for students 16 and 17 years old. 18--Hal C. Banks fired as president. of Seafarers Inter- national Union of Canada. 19--Ontario government in- troduces legislation empower- ing police to arrest persons in secret and jail them indefin- itely if they refuse to answer questions. Lyall Dagg's B.C. rink wins international curl- ing championship at Calgary. 20--irish playwright Bren- dan Behan, 41, dies in Dublin. 23--Ontario legislature mod- ifies controversial police leg- islation; Attorney - General Fred Cass resigns, Actor Peter Lorre, 59, dies in Holly- 'wood, 27 -- Earthquake in Alaska flattens main street of Anch- orage' and damages other communities, killing 178, and tidal wave hits Kodiak; dam- age estimated at $350,000,000. 28 -- Tidal wave following Alaska earthquake etrikes Port Alberni, B.C., and other Pacific Coast communities, APRIL COPPER STRIKE : 2 -- Joao Goulart, deposed Brazilian president, flies to exile in Uruguay. 5 -- Gen. Douglas Mac- Arthur, 84, dies in Washing- ton. 8--Two-place Gemini space- craft with no occupants fired into orbit on first test at Cape Kennedy. 12 -- Wallace (Bud) Wer- ner, top U.S. skier, and Barb- ara Henneberger of German Olympic team killed in Swiss avalanche. Arnold Palmer wins his fourth Masters golf championship. 15--Toronto Dow Kings win Canadian basketball title, de- feating Winnipeg Buffalos. 16--Texas Gulf Sulphur Co, of New York announces huge deposit of copper, zinc and silver ore found near Tim- mins, Ont.; more than 16,000,- 000 shares traded on frenzied Toronto Stock Exchange. 17--Record 28,704,000 'shares traded un Toronto Stock Ex- change in wake of Timmins copper strike. 20--Prime Minister Pearson announces terms of revised contributory pension plan and government's offer to give provinces greater share of personal income tax. 22--Ross Thatcher's Liber- als win Saskatchewan elec- tion, ousting CCF after 16 years, 23--Social Credit MPs Ger. ard Girouard and Gerard Ouellet join Progressive Con- servative ranks. 24--Ralph K. Farris of Van- couver, president of Northern Ontario Natural Gas Co, Ltd., sentenced at Toronto to nine months for perjury. Report of royal commission on bank- ing and finance recommends abolition of statutory six-per- cent interest ceiling on bank loans. 25 -- Toronto Maple Leafs win third consecutive Stanley Cup with 4-0 win over Detroit Red Wings in seventh game of final series. 28--Vasily Vasilievich Tar- asov, Izvestia correspondent in Ottawa, expelled from Can- ada for espionage. 29 -- Prince Carlos and Dutch Princess Irene mar- ried in Rome. MAY | NEHRU DIES | 1--Princess Margaret gives | birth to daughter, ston Churchill, retired from politics in July; Harold Wil- son, elected British prime minister in October. (CP Photo) 2--Northern Dancer, owned by E. P. Taylor of Toronto, wins Kentucky Derby. Lady Astor, 84, dies in London. $--Hal C. Banks, deposed president of the SIU of Can- ada, sentenced in Montreal to five years for conspiracy to injure rival union organizer in 1957, 7 -- Winnipeg Maroons de- feat Woodstock Athletics 5-3 to win Allan Cup and Cana- dian senior hockey title. 9 -- Toronto Marlboros win Memorial Cup and Canadian junior hockey championship with 7-2 win over Edmonton Oil Kings. 16--Northern Dancer wins Preakness Stakes at Balti- more. 17--Prime Minister Pearson roundly booed at Royal Cana- dian Legion convention in Winnipeg when he discusses proposed new flag for Can- ada. 18--Eighty-five arrested in Montreal during anti-Victoria Day demonstrations. 21 -- Federal cabinet ap- proves proposed flag design, three red maple leaves on white background flanked by vertical blue bars, 22--State of emergency de- ciared in British Guiana as racial violence and arson in- crease during sugar industry strike. 24--Riot at soccer game in Lima, Peru, kills 328. 26 -- UN Secretary-General U Thant, on two-day visit to Ottawa, addresses joint ses- sion of Parliament. 27--Jawaharlal Nehru, 74, prime minister of India, dies of coronary thrombosis at New Delhi, -- 31--Bands of Negroes riot in Brooklyn subway trains, smashing windows and rob- bing white passengers. Ty- phoid epidemic in Aberdeen leaves 160 dead. JUNE FLAG DEBATE STARTS 2 -- Ruling Congress party chooses Lal Bahadur Shastri as India's new prime minis- ter. 5--Commons approves Co- lumbia River treaty. 6 -- Quadrangle wins Bel- mont Stakes in New York with Northern Dancer third. 9--Canadian - born _ pub- lisher Lord Beaverbrook, 85, dies in London. International commission of jurists ab- solves U.S. of charge of vio- lating human rights during January riots in Panama. 11 -- Canada and Hungary agree to raise diplomatic rep- resentatives to level of am- bassador, 15 -- Commons .begins de- bate on new flag design. Greek - Cypriot government conscripts 19-year-olds for full-time army service. _ 19-- Report of Hall royal commission on health . serv- ice recommends comprehen- sive medical care program fi- nanced by taxes, premi- ums and, if the provinces wish, lotteries, Civil Rights Act, outlawing discrimination in public accommodation, passed 73 to 27 by U.S. Sen- ate on 83rd day of debate. Senator Edward Kennedy suffers broken spine in air crash on way to Massachus- etts Democratic convention. 20--Norsthern Dancer wins Queen's Plate in Toronto, Ken Venturi wins U.S. open golf championship at Washington. 22 -- White gangs attack white and Negro integration- ists in St. Augustine, Fla. 23--Henry Cabot Lodge re- | signs South Viet Nam to return home and help Pennsylvania © Governor William Scranton in lican presidential 30--United Nations forces leave The Congo; Premier Cyrille Adoula resigns, JULY RIOTS IN NEW YORK 2--President Johnson signs strongest U.S. civil rights law in nearly a century. 6--Nyasaland becomes in- Malawi, ending 73 years of British rule, Moise Tshombe named to form new Congo- lese government. Roland Michener appointed Canadian high commissioner to India. 7--Former world eki cham- ion Charles Bozon among 14 led by avalanche in French Alps. Former NATO official Georges Paques sentenced in Paris to life for treason, '9--Commons approves leg- islation extending Canada's coastal fishing limits to 12 miles, 10--Tony Lema of U.S. wins British open golf champion- ship. 11 -- French Communist leader Maurice Thorez, 64, dies en route to Yalta. 12 -- Russians launch twin space stations into widely separated orbits from single rocket. 15 -- Senator Barry Gold- water of Arizona nominated Republican candidate for president at San Francisco, 16--James Powell, 15, shot dead in Harlem by police lieutenant who said Negro boy advanced on him with knife. 17--Canadian railways and unions agree to 19.l-cent pay increase for 100,000 non-oper- ating railway employees, 19--One Negro killed and scores of persons, including police, injured in riots dur- ing funeral of James Powell, 21 -- President Johnson or- ders FBI investigation of Harlem rioting. 23--President de Gaulle of France proposes withdrawal of all foreign forces from In- dochinese peninsula as way to end fighting in Laos and South Viet Nam. 26--Riots in Negro district of Rochester, N.Y., take four lives as National Guard troops sent in to help 1,000 police, Organization of Amer- ican States signs declaration condemning Cuba on charges of aggression. 28--British House of Com- mons pays farewell tribute to Sir Winston Churchill, retir- ing after 64 years in politics, 29--Yves Gabias, Union Na- tionale member for Trois-Riv- ieres, barred from Quebec legislature for three years for bringing unsubstantiated charges of corruption against Attorney - General Rene Hamel. 31 -- Ranger 7 spacecraft sends first close-up pictures of moon's surface. AUGUST INDOCHINA VIOLENCE 2 -- North Vietnamese PT boats attack U.S. Navy de- stroyer in Gulf of Tonkin. 3--Negro youths hurl home- made bombs, bricks and ag at police in Jersey City, 4 -- Nine miners rescued after eight days in lime- stone mine at Champagnole, France. 5--U.S, planes attack North Vietnamese PT boats and shore emplacements in retal- jation for attack on de- stroyer; U.S. tells UN Secur- ity Council blow struck to head off Communist conquest of Southeast Asia. : 9 -- Sixty-four Turkish jet fighters attack coastal vil- lages in northwestern Cyprus, killing or wounding 300. 10 -- Cyprus and Turkey agree to UN call for cease- fire. Pope Paul's first ency- clical proclaims his readiness to mediate for peace among nations, . 12--Author Ian Fleming, 56, creator of James Bond, dies in London. 14 -- Three Negro children enter Lopez elementary school in Biloxi, Miss., ending total segregation of state's public schools. 17--Teamsters boss James Hoffa sentenced in Chicago to five years and fined $10,000 on each of four counts in un- ion pension fraud. 20 -- Syncom III satellite fired from Cape Kennedy placed in stationary orbit 22,- 300 miles over Sumatra to tel- evise Olympic coverage from Japan. UN police force de- molishes three Turkish - Cy- priot gun positions along Nicosia truce line. Roose- velt Campobello International Park in New _ Brunswick opened by Mrs, L. B. Pearson and Mrs. Lyndon Johnson. 21--None of 18 entrants fin- ishes 32-mile Canadian Na- tional Exhibition swim across Lake Ontario. Palmiro Togli- atti, 71, Italian Communist party leader, dies at Yalta. 24--David Cowlishaw, pro- testing that Calvin MacDon- ald had not been recognized by RCMP for undercover work, throws container of cow's blood on floor of Com- mons. 25--Hurricane Cleo kills 138 in sweep across Caribbean to- ward Florida coast. 27 -- Lyndon Johnson ac- cepts Democratic presidential nomination at Atlantic City, -»19 -- Andrew Thompson OTHERS HITTING head- lines in 1964 were, from top left: U.S. chief justice Earl Warren, ieleased commission report on John F. Kennedy assassination in September; Ross Thatcher's Liberals win Saskatchewan election, in N:J. Gracie Allen, 58, comed- ienne wife of George Burns, dies in Hollywood. SEPTEMBER COLUMBIA GO-AHEAD 1-- Prime Minister Pear- son and provincial premiers meet in Charlottetown to commemorate Confedera- tion conference of 1864. 3--Lenore Modell, 14, Sac- ramento, Calif., becomes youngest person to swim Eng- lish Channel. 4 -- Eduardo Frei leads Christian Democrats to land- slide victory over Commun- ists in Chilean election. 9 -- Rey. Ernest Marshall Howse of Toronto elected moderator of United Church of Canada at St. John's, Nfld. Quebec announces it will bor- row $100,000,000 from British Columbia. 10--Deadiock in Commons flag debate broken with deci- sion to place question in hands of 15-man committee. 11 -- Florence (Big Fanny) Storgoff, 56, Sons of Freedom Doukhobor leader, dies in Vancouver. 14--Pope opens third ses- sion of ecumenical council in Rome. 15 -- Archbishop Makarios lifts food blockade against Turkish-Cypriots at Kokkina. 16 -- Prime Minister Pear- son, President Johnson and B.C. Premier Bennett sign Columbia River treaty at Blaine, Wash, 18 -- King Constantine of Greece marries Princess Ann-Marie of Denmark, elected leader of Ontario Lib- eral party. 21--East German Premier Otto Grotewohl dies. 23--Finance Minister Gor- don introduces legislation to guard against foreign take- over of Canadian financial in- stitutions. 24-- East and West Ger- many sign new pass agree- ment allowing 1,000,000 West Germans to visit East Ger- many beginning in October. --Country-wide strike by 350,000 auto workers begins against General Motors in U.S. 27--Warren commission re- port says Lee Harvey Oswald acted independently when he assassinated John F. Ken- nedy in Dallas, Tex., Nov. 22, 1963, 28--Australia regains Davis Cup with 3-2 tennis victory over .U.S. Comedian Harpo Marx, 75, dies in Hollywood. OCTOBER KHRUSHCHEV. FALLS 1--Hal C. Banks, ousted Ca- nadian SIU leader who fled Canada in July to escape jail sentence, found aboard yacht in New York by Toronto Star reporter. 5--Queen and Prince Philip arrive in Prince Edward Is- land. West Berlin officials an- nounce escape of 57 East Ger- mans through tunne] under Berlin Wall. 10 -- Separatists demon- strate during visit of Queen and Philip to Quebec City; 32 persons arrested and several injured by CGlub-wielding po- lice, Comedian Eddie Cantor, 72, dies in Hollywood. 1l--Queen receives jubilant welcome in Ottawa. 12--Three Russian cosmo- nauts sent aloft in first multi- man space flight. 13 -- Federal government and provincia] attorneys-gen- eral. agree on formula for re- patriating British North April ousting CCF after 16 years. Justice Minister Guy Favreau announced inquiry into alleged bribery case in November; from bottom left: Barry Goldwater was nom- inated Republican presiden- tial candidate in July; Cas- America, Act. Russian cosmo- nauts land after 16 orbits. 14 -- Rev. Martin Luther King, U.S. Negro leader, awarded Nobel Peace Prize, 15--Nikita Khrushchev de- posed as Soviet leader; Leo- nid Brezhney named Commu- nist party secretary and Alexei Kosygin becomes pre- mier, Labor wins British elec- tion with 317 seats to 304 for Conservatives and nine for Liberals as Harold Wilson be- comes prime minister, St. Louis Cardinals win World Se- ries, defeating New York Yankees 7-5 in seventh game. Canadians George Hunger- ford and Roger Jackson win Olympic gold medal in row- ing at Tokyo; Harry Jerome takes bronze in 100 metres. Gomposer Cole Porter, 71, dies in Santa Monica, Calif. 16--China explodes atomic bomb, becomes world's fifth nuclear power, Canada's Bill Crothers wins. silver medal in Olympic 800 metres. 20--Former U.S. president Herbert Hoover, 90, dies in New York, 21--Joseph Bonanno, Cosa Nostra leader, kidnapped in New York day before he is to a before a federal grand 22--Canadian Doug Rogers wins silver medal in heavy- weight judo class at Olym- pics, 23 -- Northern Rhodesia gains independence, becom- ing Republic of Zambia. 27--Art Arfons of U.S. sets world land speed record of 536.71 m.p.h. in jet-powered 'auto over Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, 29 -- 'Commons committee, by vote of 10 to 4 with Con- servatives opposed, re'c 0 m- mends Canadian flag design of single red maple leaf on white background with verti- cal red bars at either end. NOVEMBER JOHNSON WINS 1--Forty-four Cubans defect at Gander, Nfld., from Cuban plane. 3--Defence Minister Hellyer announces mass reorganiza- tion of army reserve forces. Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson scores landslide victory in U.S, election over Republican Barry Goldwater. 4 -- Bolivian Army over- throws 12 - year regime of President Victor Paz Estens- soro. 6--Northern Dancer retired to stud. 7 -- Ten countries extend $1,000,000,000 aid to Britain through International Mone- tary. Fund to assist in bal- ance-of-payments crisis. 9--Canada Pension Plan in- troduced in Commons, ties old-age security: pension to cost-of-living index. 12 -- Ontario' Water Re- sources Commission reports radioactive pollution of water in Elliot Lake district. 13--Rev. Russell D, Hors- burgh, United Church minis- ter in Chatham, Ont., sent- enced to year on charges of contributing to juvenile delin- quency. Quintuplets, four boys and a girl, born to Clara Matangua in Mozambique. 18 -- New Zealand's Peter Snell runs record 3:54.1 mile at Auckland. 20--Quebec royal commis- sion on education cails for radical transformation of classical college system. 23--Conservative MP Erik Nielsen charges in Commons that Raymond Denis, former sius Clay won world heavy- weight boxing title in Febru- ary; Northern Dancer won Kentucky Derby and Preak- ness in May and retired to stud in November. --CP Photo executive assistant to Citizen- ship Minister Tremblay, of- fered lawyer $20,000 bribe to get him not to oppose bail for Leo Rivard, facing Montreal extradition hearing in U.S. dope-peddling case, Quintup- lets, three boys and two girls, born to Mrs. Raymond Sam- bor in Paris, 2% -- Justice Minister Fav- Teau 'announces judicial in- quiry into his decision not to prosecute two former minis- terial assistants for alleged interference in Rivard dope case; Guy Rouleau resigns as parliamentary assistant to Prime Minister Pearson after admitting he made represent- ations in the case. Belgian paratroops land in Stanley- ville, rescue some white hos- tages from Congo rebels; at least 38 hostages including one Canadian killed. One of | Sambor' quints dies. 26--Premier Smallwood of Newfoundland says power from Hamilton Falls, Labra- dor, will be transmitted to U.S. via Newfoundland in- stead of Quebec. Israeli cruise liner Shalom collides with Norwegian tanker off New Jersey coast; 19 aboard tanker lost. 27 -- Government agrees to widen terms of judicial in- quiry into charges of bribery and coercion in Montreal dope hearing. 28 -- British Columbia' Li- ' * Montreal com panies that sub- sequently wei it bankrupt. 9 -- United Steelworkers found respons ible for actions of its local in 1957 strike against Gaspe Copper Mines Ltd., Murdoch ville, Que.; dered to pay $2,359,319 in damages and j nterest. 14 -- Govern ment imposes closure on fliig debate in Commons, motion carried 152 to 85. Bandits seize nearly $100,000 in gold! bullion and other valuables at Montreat International Ais-port, 15--Commons votes 163 to 78 for Canadian (flag with red maple leaf on white back- ground flanked by vertical ted bars, debati: ending at 2:12 a.m. 16 -- Prime Mi'nister Pear- son' sends memorandum to bribery inquir;y explaining that he first hearti of bribery charges Sept. 2 rav'her than in Nov. 23 report from Justice Minister Favreau. Duke of Windsor undergows operation in Houston, Tex., s'or dilation of abdominal arter:y wall, 17 -- Prime miaaister tells Commons memory {apse was reason for discrertyancy be tween his two stater nents con- cerning bribery charges; Commons votes 122 to 105 to uphold Speaker's riiling that proposal to have ¢:ommittee examine prime mini ster's po- sition is out of ordei:. 18--Commons adjo urns un- til Feb. 16 after recor d session of 214 sitttg days. 19--Survivors reach ing Leo- poldville from rebel area of Congo report slaying of Ca- nadian missionary Rew. Ches- ter Burk 'at Bafwasencle. 20--British House oi' Com- page Berg 355 to.170 &> abol- ish ith 'penalty for murder. Supreme Court of ( anade rules immigration nmiiniste! lacks unlimited powers to or- der deportations. 23--Labor dispute that shut down Montreal La Presse set- tled after 202 days, Hun 'Ireds killed as cyclone and tidal wave sweeps over soui'hern India and Ceylon. 27--Floods in Oregon, ¥7ash- ington, Idaho and California teave 17,000 homeless, cause billion dollars damage. 28 -- Giuseppe Saragat, 66, Democratic Socialist lead er, elected Italy's president on i'1st ballot. ~ @ HOLIDAY HOURS @ NEW YEAR'S DAY... JAN. Ist OPEN MORNING -- 10 A.M, to 1 P.M. EVENING -- 6 P.M. to 9 P.M. 28 KING ST. EAST EW YEAR GREETINGS PHONE 723-4621

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