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Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 May 1966, p. 10

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10 THE OSHAWA Times, Pridey, Mey 27, 1966 "THIRST A Sikorsky CH-3C_hell- copter gulps fuel from a modified HC130H Mercules in air-to-air refueling tests conducted recently at Cherry Point, N.C., to deter New Federal Department | 'COPTER DRINKS IN mine the feasibility of re- fueling helicopters from fixed-wing _ tankers Lock heed officials in Atlanta, Ga., said today that the tests proved successful and the Sa FLIGHT planes are for use of Rescue and vice of the Command (AP modified Aerospace Ser- Airlift being the Recovery Military Wirephoto) Supplies Education Aid By RONALD LEBEL OTTAWA (CP)---Federal to ducation is being brought under one roof for the first time A small branch is quietly tak ing shape in the department of State Secretary Judy LaMarsh to plan and co-ordinate various programs to assist higher edu- cation, Ottawa spends $250,000,000 annually in this field, but the money goes out through a maze of specialized programs run by about 20 de- partments and agencies Now three senior officials headed by Under-Secretary of State Ernest Steele have been assigned the task of analyzing federal aid to universities government on future needs, They are busy preparing ma terial for the federal-provincial conference in Victoria June} 16-18, when Prime Minister Pearson will propose increased federal aid to univers ties, Mr. Pearson announced in January that per-capita operat ing grants will go up to about $100,000,000 in the next academic! Te Tha 4V £40 more than Back year from $39,000,000 last year aid He called this an interim step) trative land a permanent aid formula will be proposed at the Victoria talks PROMISE, MORE AID The prime minister also promised during last fall's elec tion campaign that his govern- ment would distribute $10,000,- 000 annually in university shol- arships and increase the $40,- 000,000 student Joan fund These programs and others will be co-ordinated or adminis tered directly by a $20 000-a-year official to be ap pointed soon by Miss LaMarsh He will be assisted by Christo pher Gill, formerly on the staff of the Association of Universi ties and Colleges of Canada and a research assistant to the com-| mittee of experts headed by Dean Vincent Bladen that last fall recommended a massive boost in federal aid to post-sec ondary education Jean-Mare Hamel, a career civil servant, is working with the education section on a tem porary basis The section is seeking to cut Barracks After 19-Year Desertion LONDON (AP)--Pte. John Hollingsworth has reported for army duty after being AWL for 19 years 'Ll just wanted to get the matter cleared up," said Hol- lingsworth now 38, "It was on my conscience." Said a defence department spokesman "It's one of the tricklest cases of AWL we have ever known,"' Hollingsworth was drafted into the General Services Corps in 1947 and asked for a transfer to the Signal Corps This was granted, but he never showed up Instead, he changed his ad- dress, laid low and later be came a vegetable seller in north London, He married and had three children Last weekend he walked into a London police station, told his story and voluntarily went to the signal depot al Catter- ick, Yorkshire STANDS ERECT Walking into the guardroom, he came to attention and an- nounced 'I'm Pte worth out 1947.' "Well, what do you know£" said the sergeant, "And I thought I'd heard everything." Hollingsworth was issued fatigue denims and assigned | to the unit's bedding store- room until his case is decided, He is not under arrest Capt, John Nealon, the sig- nal regiment's adjutant, said the command had asked the army for permission to dis pense with a trial It's quite possible that he will be released,"' said Nealon He's no' use to the army ' now," John Hollings. I've been absent with leave since February, jlosing an on and apply adminis standards to aid pro carried out by the Na- Research Council, the Canada Council, Medical Re search Council, health depart ment, technical training branch and other federal agencies This was recommended by the Bladen commission, which found duplic: grams tional |that uniform procedures and ac- PRA curate, up - to - date statistics were almost non-existent in ed ucation assistance, Soviet Develop Bone Transplant MOSCOW (AP)--Doctors have developed a new method of transplanting bones, Pravda re ported today The Soviet Communist party newspaper said the method can save some victims of bone tu mors and other ailments from arm or leg through amputation Pravda said the method, un der preparation since 1946, had been worked out by doctors of the Sitenko Orthopaedical and Traumatological Research In atitey nan -city-of Kharkov One basic problem was given as biological incompatibility be tween the bone be trans planted and the -bone to which it is joined on the patient, The newspaper said this was over come by deep freezing of the bones to be transplanted at a temperature of minus 70 de grees centigrade and preserving them in this state ite in-the-Uk lo The problem of actually join ing the bones was solved by so-called "lock method," Holes are cut in the preserved bone and it is fitted into the local bone so firmly that no fixing material is needed. The bones heal together, much as a normal bone would heal after a frac ture Pravda said this method of transplantation has been carried out successfully 250 times GOVENMENT FOOTS The U.S. government nance nearly 80 per cent of American colleges' $2,500,000, 000 research budget in 1966, BILI will fi Mises YOU EARN $4,000 'Allied Military Reduction Sought By CARL HARTMAN spending of American and Brit RONN (AP\.--~After mcve than ish troops in West Germany. 20 years in Germany the armies ae | that defeated Adolf Hitler--Brit BOTH HAVE DEFIC ITs ish, American, Soviet and The United States and Britain French--are coming under pres- Have deficits in their balance of sure to pull out or at least to international payments and lthin their forces neeA to sell more goods abroad Experts have fought for and Chancellor Ladwig Erhard of against such a move over the|West Germany was in Britain years, Now it may be coming of this week, trving to do some | itself, thing about the problem, He and The United Siaies rieeds more' Prime Minister Wilson failed to of its trained troops in Viet *#'°* |Nam,.Fifteen thousand men are One obvious remedy: "With: Iheing withdrawn »but that still 4°@¥ troops, so that there will leaves 215,000. official figures P® less British and American | show, spending, and less need for | Britain also is feeling the West German spending to off strain of its military obligations) **t, '! : in Africa, the Middle Kast and) President Charles de Gaulle | Southeast Asia. There has been|'* threatening to pull French} talk of reducing its 51,000-man '"00P8 out for a different rea-, lArmy of the Rhine son: His quarrel with the rest There are about 9.760 Cana-\0f the Atlantic Alliance over dian servicemereir West Ger unified commands. He is with- |many. There has been no pres drawing from these commands sure for reduction of Canadian He his forces, officially forces, however 72,000 men, will leave Germany Both the U.S. and British Altogether if the West Germans governments say the West Ger don't want them, or if the two mans are not living up to their| Countries can't agree on the pledges to buy American and status of the French in West British goods. These purchases Germany were promised to offset the viets are believed to have about Architect sie s0steittav Lack Scored Medical Wonders crrews (Cr) --ane tendeney! Around Comer of. some architects to think of NEW YORK (AP)--A Nobel their work as the creation of individual masterpieces and the) prize scientist said today it isn't inability of others to furnish {die day dreaming" to expect reasonably - correct cost esi mates are criticized in a special report prepared for the Royal Architectura| Institute Can ada A special committee headed by Herbert Moody of Winnipeg was commissioned by the insti jtute in 1984 to study "those jareas in the building indusiry jwhere the architect should be 'and is not now, effective," The report, compiled from in terviews with architects and) Dr contractors in major cities in|!er all provinces, was released thi Tatum won a Nobel Prize ir week, It Is to be studied at the 1958 for a vital discovery in institute's annual meeting in|molecular biology--that genes Jasper, Alta., next week regulate certain specific chemi Architects interviewed said cal processes in the body design and estimating costs ar He is one of four Nobel Prize areas where, the profession was winners speaking at a sympo most in need of improvement.'sium on the future of medicine sponsored by Columbia Univer sity and the Merck Sharp and Dohme research laboratories The company is dedicating new research facilities Friday Tatum said the time wil come when genes---the units of heredity--can be made to order With that, and some additional knowledge, 'genetic engineering will then be just around the corner," RAYS There is even pressure on the Soviets to get their troops out of other countries, This comes notably from Romania, The So The conquest of most all viral diseases the preven tion of congenital birth defect effective prevention and cure of cancers and effec tive new treatments of mans bodily disorders The key is moecular biology particularly in the genetic code that determines al! inherited characteristics and the way liv ing molecules often behave, said Edward Tatum of Rockefe! University or of SELVES "Remarks, from the mildly deprecatory to the openly scath ing, were made on the tendency of some practitioners think of their work as the creation of individual masterpieces or arch itectural aesthetic," said the re port "Not only the public but arch itects and contractors are crit ical of the architect whose de sire is to erect a monument to himself, and the architectural schools were chided for the Deaths Of 1] tendency to engender, however to | aor the egocentric Caused By Play Architects who have able to furnish reasonably-cor rect information on estimated) q,, costs "have led to frustration killed and irritation on the part of the client, and embarrassment and Joss of reputation for the arch tect,"' says the report The report made a number of rec ommendations the. insti tute including a code of profes sional conduct, greater uniform ity in provincial architects acts a program of continuing educa tion for architect and standards of performance a fee structure should be form across Canada been un PARRY SOUND, Ont. (CP) coroner's jury sald Wednes- that a fire April 2 that 11 persons on nearby Parry Island 'Indian reserve was caused by children playing with matches Survivors sald the children were playing in an unused hed room where a syrup can full of naptha was stored The jury recommended that suppliers of naptha be required said to ensure the oil Is in suitable and labelled as to the un nature of the eon to containers flammable tents 'Lunar Surveyor Shot Ready years late of a lunar surveyor| help ' ' nas { WHEAT CROSSES GLOBE {food grains crossed national More than 56,000,000 tons of borders in 1964 Following Three-Year Delay PASADENA, Calif. (AP) ---, ter spacecraft, This technique of One of the shakiest shots in U.S.\ studying both close and long space history--the launch three| range pictures is expected to experts pick the safest witae fae Anaiin acted pee pygeet wt $0 5p rocket, landing craft and man-| nauts agement--is set for next Mon- Orbiter, designed and built by day a different industry-government If it works it ean do \ittle|team, is scheduled to he more than duplicate a feat the launched into orbit around the Russians pulled off three months| moon In the next 60 days--re- gardiess of the fate of Surveyor ago: Settle gently enough on the if Surveyor fails U6 sein moon for s television camera to tists could -find themselves in the position of having to use Russian closeups for comparison with Orbiter's photographs The National Aeronautics and Space Administration's level of confidence in Surveyor is indi- win = survive and send closeups of the surface back to earth If it fails the industry-govern ment team that designed and built Surveyor may face an em- barrassing situation One of the goals for the Sur-|cated by the fact it has sched veyor program is to produce de-\uled seven identical craft for tailed photographs for compari-|launching during the next 18 son with high-altitude photog-|months in the hope that one or raphs to be taken by lunar orbi-! more will succeed Lady GOLFERS! fe you ere wearing the concen thoughts turn te golf ore fashionable golfing , by most fogs thit season viciting Black's Ladies' Weer Sporteweor Department Ter doy. 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