THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE | OSHAWA Combining The Oshawe Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle WHITBY | EDAILY TM>OAZLTIE. Plan To Buy Property Jn meee FOr New Collegiate 11 Acres Stevenson Rd. To Be Bought By Board: At a price of $27,500, Oshawa|Collegiate and Vocational Institute Board of Education authorized|in the north and Central Collegigte | purchase of 11 acres on Steven-| Institute in the south. r SER | Verve, Gusto, Clarity Mark Macbeth Showing . = By NOEL BROWNE least with power, and always pleading, tortured or gay, but al- son's road north to be used as the, The board has just asked. If the talent shown to the citi-| With point. |ways, even in the extreme depths site of a fourth collegiate. | council to approve the 1 zens of Oshawa on Saturday night| It was not a mature, considered, | of horror, in full command of her-| The land, valued at $2,500 an|debentures to cover coi 3 {is any indication of the quality of| interpretation. It couldnt be. The self and the audience. And that is acre, will be bought from Herbert| of a new 800-pupil collegiate on {similar groups throughout th e|actors were too young. But they what matters. * |Schuermann of Thornton's road Harmony road south to serve the | country, then Canada is a fortun-| carried such a spark of enjoy- FINE DIRECTION : north. The site is on the west east end. Council will not give its ate nation and it's only a pity ment with them, delivered their; Douglas Campbell was a curious|side of Thornton's road, slightly to| answer until the beginning of 1956. these groups don't come this way lines with such punch, that in the mixture of the jolly publican and the north of Marian street. | cosT $931,000 t more often. {second act when Frances Hyland, | prosperous merchant, in his lighter, A new collegiate may not be, It is estimated that the east end It could be dome. Oshawa has the 25 Lady Macbeth, knocked a stage moments, but when tragedy was built on the site for five years, but| collegiate may cost $931,000 and heaters. th ig Chstoirers and| fing on to the floor of the theatre, | called for, acted beautifully, his the board felt it wise to reserve might be ready for occupancy by { theatre, 1 e pov g sense to see| it sounded like a pistol shot in the face falling into the harsh lines! the land now. | September 1957, but not before. jzbove = os e 2d Tot the ulti.) Silence. |of grief so deep that words seem- IS FARMLAND | The purchase of the 1l-acre site | inate In highbrows, the preserve of SHOWS PROMISE jed almost unnecessary. He is also| While it is farmland at present, from Mr. Schuermann solves the {ithe intelligentsia but a playwright! AS Macbeth, William Hutt, show- to be congratulated on his direc- there is considerable building going problem of finding a site for the l'who can give you "story--if you|©d promise. He has a powerfully- tion, and the apparent freedom he on in the area. Trustees feared | collegiate which will eventually be ® | want that, power--if you want that,| musical voice, a great sense of| allowed the cast, in their inter- that if they delayed longer, the required to take care of the grow- Paty Lp and high tragedy- if| timing and the intelligence oto see Pretation of their lines. | site might be bought by. commer- ing population in the west end. ant those: or, you are like| that Macbeth is not the introspec-| John Gardiner, a well-cast, youth-| cial interests and subdivided. Present indications are that a SN everyone else, the whole| tive schemer-dreamer, so well-lov-| fully-unperceptive, Malcolm, and| The move fits in with the board's| school will not be built on the site Mthog. in ory brilliant. fascinating, &d by the "Little Theatre" Mac-| George McGowan, whose transi- over-all plan to have collegiates in| for five years, but it is possible bundle. that can shake, shudder, |DPeths, but with the slow crumb- tion from a young Banquo to a the north, south, east and west of that it might be needed sooner. move. and above all grip- On Sa. ling of the strong-weak man, mo- gnarled, tough Old Siward, were the city. |It depends on the rate at which TUMBLING IS PHASE of many-sided program of physical education in Oshawa public schools. This photo was | taken at Queen Elizabeth School with teacher Lloyd Weiderich supplying the instruction to boys | of grade 5. The city wide pro- EE ESSER | Physical Program Helps Students You don't have to learn how to elementary school level are under- skip, play volleyball or dance the|going a period of rapid body lka to get through public school growth Be Osnawas but it helps. | "During this time, says Mr. It has long been recognized by Cotie, "they are required to spend education officials here that considerable amount of time in| schools which are' content to con-ithe classroom where the training centrate on "the three R's" aren't|in discipline and organization re- fulfilling their obligation to "the stricts their physical movements eitizens of tomorrow." {These repressed energies must In today's Jrogram 10 help Oste find an outlet. awa boys and girls adjust to the .y j¢ a¢ this time that the physi- demanding pace of the modern." 4 ation period can be used world, a very important part is| o =" elo" noe | being played by the physical, TWO PERIO bn . health and safety education de-| DS partment of the local' public; "But rather than allow all the schools. pressure to escape uselessly, we This aggresive program to de- harness this edergy so that it | velop young people irected |» great the drive used in learning * : " | mentarily deluded, but nearly al-| excellent. At present, there is, Oshawa'the city expands. ada sight bore =" row, of CosiLL, Joidch Bl Bent mg) mana Hal Tet me telng 1 Pr Players gave a youthful, vigorous, {0 him, and accepting it with ajwanted to see a great deal more ° and fast-moving performance of SPark of exhausted humor that was| of her. Small in statue, she gave a . jong jas almost wry, and the physique to! tragic poignancy to the expectant- 1S T1C CO & po) * match this interpretation. And |ly-fearful Lady Macduff, From the comments of some of William Hutt has another valuable! Roland Hewgill, extremely com- the crowd as they filed into their| ati jhyte he can sweat. On Satur- Petent as Duncan and Seyton: Ted n WwW seats, it seemed that very few éx- day night, he not only sweated, but! Follows, a likely Ross but little- onor re | (pected anything more than "a gig all but froth at the mouth, and Seen First Murderer, and Bob n {good try" at this difficult play. | (as did Douglas Campbell) ham- Gibson who raised moderate ap-| ; Never was a crowd more Wrong.|mered away convincingly with his plause as the drunken porter, were! St. Andrew's Day -- which is| Mr and Mrs. J. W. Heath, Mr. . rom {he first curtain to the jst, sword when the need arose. | also worthy of mention. next Wednesday ing Selebrated and Mrs. J. B. Paterson, Mr. and JUST ONE ram has had outstanding suc- |the entire company, all, (wit y 1 The only real criticism one might! Friday night at the 8th annual | gray in helping the pupils to |excention of Macbeth) doubling in| OFF CRITICISM f th | make, was that the costumes ght Ball of the Oshawa St. Andrew's Mrs, Alex. Shaw, MF; and Mrs. | develop physically, mentally and |other parts, swept into their work|, ice Po Tore Orin | arab to the point of monotony--as Society in the Hotel Genosha. |Jack Gaskell, D. Fisher, G. Cuth- socially. The four boys on the [with a Yorve 2nd gusto that pre puit the " downwards-progress of | Well as badly made; and the light-| The hotel echoed with the skirl{bert, Mr. and Mrs. A. Chalmers, mat are, left to right: Robert |sented Mae e 25 ou a . Lady Macbeth from a somewhat ing so fierce that the three witch-|of the bagpipes as local Scofs,|Mr. and Mrs. G F Gilmore, Mr. | Huber, Lewis McLean, Sydney |presente murder, bloody ug scratchy beginning, when her voice! ©S» With their beautifully manicur- young and old alike, joined in the|, 4 npc T D. Thomas, MPP, Gordon and Bruce Hutcheon. [most foul, and the delivery o {had a tendency to warble on the €d hands, smoothly powdered and|Grand March led by Mr. and Mrs. Guy Wils Mr Times-Gazette Photo | Shakespeare's lines in a manner, | 440 registers, to a grey-clad lipsticked faces looked as convine-| Jack MacGregor and pipers Guy Mr: and Mrs. Guy on, "Mr. | if not always orthodox, atch 0-0 = somnambulist whose IDE as a trio of Little Brown Rid-| Wilson and Don MacLellan. and Mrs. Don McLellan, Mr. and end could only be death. I have ing Hoods in deep disguise. Sure-| The William Burnett Orchestra; Mrs. Peter White, Mr. and Mrs. only one criticism in her masterly 1V. if no means of controlling the of Toronto played the traditionall Wm. Fowler, Mr. and Mrs A =. handling of the final scene, and| lights were possible, then plays Scottish folk dances, and the So-|Craig, Mr. and Mes Jakes mith, perhaps I've been spoilt. And that| With the gloom content of Macbeth, | ciety secretary, Dr. Walter Bapty|Mr. and Sa, Da Hou don, is "her delivery of the "Who'd, Would be better served under con- could be seen dancing about in|Mr. and Mes A A aud, ri an have thought the old man had so|ditions of half-darkness than spot: his tartan kilts and gay red jacket.|Mrs. Claude Vipond, and Mrs. much blood in him," line. {1it brilliance. And the meagerness' Present on this colorful occasion|Murray Macleod, Mr. and Mrs. I say personal, because I saw| Of the props, would grate less on were Mr. and Mrs. M. Kerr, Mr|M. Starr, MP. Diana Wynyard on her Australian| fhe eve, ¥ Dey Jete fucked deay and Mrs. Jack MasCregor 3. * tour with Anthony Quayle several Pend a little less electricity. |Fraser, Mr. and Mrs. J. Cruick- | years ago. When A a to _that| The acoustics of the OCVI LL Sam Grant, Mr. and Mrs. COMING EVENTS line. with eerie blue stage lights|ditorium had the reasonance of af R. Thom, Mr. and Mrs. G. D.| outlining her throat, and her head concert hall in some positions but Lees, Mr. and Mrs. C. Skea, Mr.! Rs. R. 8. MCLAUGHLIN WILL OPEN in deep shadow, the entire au. Were blurred and foggy in others.!and 'Mrs R. Munn, Dr. Walter bazaar and afternoon tea at St. An dience gasped together, and shud- Each word whispered. or shouted Banoty, Miss R. B. Young, Mayor drew's United Church, 3 o'clock, No- dered with her. |bounded around like the rubber and Mrs. Norman Down, Mr. and| vember 29. Nov.24,26,28 But that is not detracting from ball. Margot Blavey, as Macduff Mrs, Norman Ness, Mr. and MIS. xysrrr STREET® UNITED CHURCH Frances Hyland. She, too, had Child, thought necessary to bounce W. A. Forbes, Mr. and Mis. D. W.|Annual Fall Bazaar, fancy work, home presence: She could be regal or Some hundreds of years too early, Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. James | cooking, and tea room, Wednesday, No- I - = MacGregor, Mr and Mrs. J. Reid |vember 30, 2.30. se |E. Heath, K. Matthews, A. Heath,|;up ANNUAL ST. ANDREW'S BALL, S. Furey, Mr. and Mrs. Art Tay-|Genosha Hotel, § p.m. Friday, Novem. ov. Bouenaih, Ms D. Kerkpatrick,| Mrs. Catherine Horack, Mrs. J. H. | Hipkins, Mrs. N. Dicker, Mrs. E.| LADNER, B. C. (CP)--A pheas- Jerney, Mrs. E. Hann, Mr. R. ant weighing four pounds six Krolewiki, Mrs.M. Shanwalt, Mrs. | SUCCES, believed the largest ever | C. Kay, Mrs. S. ; s (Shot in Britis "olumbia, was | C. Cackburn Ms. inaryk. Mrs. brought down here by Bill Clark | NIKE PRINCIPAL DEFENCE |East Grou. El Mrs. M. Baxter, Mr. and Mrs. D.| ool = | WASHINGTON (AP) Army|BINGO -- MONDAY, NOV. 2, § P.M. §'Bradd, Mrs. C. A. Naylor, Mrs. | SAVE§ HOEING Secretary Wilber Brucker said Polish Hall. 219 Olive Avenue. 20 regular W. MacDonald, Mrs. C. Bell, Mrs.| AGASSIZ, B. C. (CP)--Hoeing of Monday night the Nike guided eames $5.00, 4840. Jackpots. 7a { Wm. A. Heron, Mrs. Eric Taylor, weeds may be out of date. Potato missile "can seek out and destroy|yn pr DARROCH, NATURE LECTUR- Mr. and Mrs. F. Johns, Mrs. Leo plots at the experimental farm any aircraft, no matter how high|er for Toronto See ary Schools will Callahan, Mr. and Mrs. A. Blair, here, treated with chemical weed- or fast it may fly." This missile be guest speaker at the Oshawa Natura- Mrs. E. Salmon, Mr. and Mrs. killer and otherwise untendéd all now is the "major army weapon' list"s Club Jegular mony mae ting, G. R. Thexton, Mrs. C. T. Woods, | summer, yielded a better crop than for the anti-aircraft defence of the|Tuesiay, November 2: poade 2 4.5 Mrs. C. Bolton, Mrs. R. C. Bolton, |plots that were hoed, BIG BIRD lor, Mr. and Mrs. Andy Mowat, ber 25th. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Calder. RUMMAGE SALE -- NOVEMBER 1 P.M. Centre Street United Church. mentally and socially" is directed/a great many skills which aid the! by T. M. Cotie assisted By James pupils' physical, mental and social B. Henderson. | development." They are. the first to point but It is recommended that public, that the program could not have|school pupils have two 30-minute! : the ts present highly Jue. iperiods of physical education a § gs 4 | cess! status without the fullest|week, though a few schools offer! ER ia 3 indie vik 9 ea io 1 4 cooperation from the leachors more and Se an thea end ; GETTING Jove POINTERS | Sista ty of Divsieal, ! periodic Sis Of Mesers. 25° \¥ 3 said hort-| principal cities and industrial areas cited. Subject of address "Reptiles." i 3 y ! on how to serve volley S 3 | Pi - 3 * | Mrs. A Jors 8 i 8 2S, id. Who Nave dally eontect with the standard. Carolyn Lee, grade 7 | Oshawa public school. Interest- | Ordinarily, the physical educa- he Is ary Hogan, Lloyd Corson. iculturist Jack Freeman of the United States he said ' i rly, Kits $300 public schol puplls. Outdoor activities for the boys | DORFIS Duké of Edinburgh ed observers are T. M. Cotie, | tion classes are handled by the | 4 ! | [i / I | reached ershoes nN ' f 14 / 0 1 | pupil of : r ( CREpIT ig, 70 due, they point aud ele inlide Soup semen School, finds that learning can director of the city, Drogram, snd teachers in each | out, to T. R. McEwen, inspector ball and touch football. Indoor ac- Pe fun. Giving the Justruetion is James Was, lead) ssbb did of public schools, and to the Osh-|tivities are chiefly rhythmical and James B. Henderson, left, as ' was taken during i awa Board of Education. Thanks include tumbling, exercises, folk to the board's support, plenty of!and square dancing. equipment is available to carry - out the ambitious physical educa- tion program in the 18 schools It used to be that when a teach er was asked to show how she taught physical training, she | individual school. | --Times-Gazette Photq Business College Teachers / I would line the class up and say "Let's play softball! Who pitch ed yesterday?" She tossed them that was fit. the ball, and The new concept is very, very different, Mr. Cotie explains that '"'physi- cal training is only one part of today's much broader treatment of the subject, "We realize that growing chil- dren should have experience in all phases of this program quiet and active games, individual § and team games, tumbling, folk and square dances, exercises and rhythmical games." He adds that three distinct di visions are made in the program in the Oshawa public schools. JUNIOR DIVISION "The junior diviston includes kindergarten and grades 1, 2 and 3." Mr. Cotie says. "The inter- mediate division includes grades 4, 5 and 6 and the senior division takes in grades 7 and 8. "The activities are chosen so that the child will receive the most benefits by doing the things his experience and learning capacity will allow." Thus, the youngest pupils might be learning a singing game like "London Bridge Is Falling Down' while their older brothers and sis- ters are being taught how to properly serve a volleyball or glide gracefully through a Vien- nese waltz, As early as grade 4, pupils are introduced to square dancing. Each school has a record player and several albums of records. ONE PHASE And this represents only one phase of a complete course of study, which is carried out with the blessing of the Ontario De- partment of Education. The pro- vincial department has. in fact, recommended the Oshawa pro- gram as a model to be copied by other communities "Today physical education is a recognized subject on the school curriculum," emphasizes Mr Cotie. "It is not a recreation, but It is a subject in the same sense as maths and science." : Mr. Henderson elaborates 'Marks are given for physical education, and this vear it is on the rd which goes home to the All boys and girls must take the instruction unless 'they have a doctor's certificate which excuses them." VITAL REASON One of the most important rea sons that a complete physical edu- cation program is necessary is he cause the boys and girls at the SAFETY PROGRAM w ector, University Extension, Uni- versity of Toronto, and director of the Division of Public Safety will be the guest speaker Tues- day night at the annual dinner of The Oshawa Safety League in the Genosha Hotel. He was appointed in 1946 to take charge of the newly-formed Division of Public Safety as director--a part of the University Extension, Uni- versity of Toronto. The date co incides with Safe-Driving Day December 1--and an attempt will be made to make that day com pletely accident-free Arch Bryce, associate dir- LET US WASH YOUR CAR while You shop Downtown! Ir A Real Good Job in the time it takes you to shop . Fast Mod ern Method ! COOPER'S SERVICE STATION Corner of Bruce & Albert RA 3-9632 The Oshawa Business College played host to parents of students recently One classroom was devoted en- tirely to displays of students' work, Miss Edna Goode, secretary of the College, was in charge of this room and was assisted by Misses Margaret Douglas and Sheila Bradd. On Reception was Miss Vera Mandryk, president of the TASC club, assisted by Miss Sylvia Cov erly. Miss Mandryk is president of the College Social activities and is responsible for all college extra curricular activites rs. M. C. Barnett was n charge of the typng and business ma- chines ADDRE S GROUP The principal, M. C. Barrett, addressed the group on the subject "Help Your Student Get The Most Out of Business Training'. Mr Barnett stressed the need for close co-operation between parents and the college. "It is not sufficient, stated Mr. Barnett, 'that we train young people to be merely stenog- raphers, clerks, and secretaries, we must develop citizens as well Young people need confidence and a real sense of responsibility when they accept positions in industry. As well as developing technical skill and knowledge, we must place equal emphasis in personality de- velopment. The only way this can be achieved is to maintain close | TEA SERVED Tea was served by a committee | of students after which parents were interviewed by the principal Mr. Barnett. The following were present: Mrs K. McManus, Mr. and Mrs. A Coverly, Mrs. A. Wren, Mrs. Mary Green, Mr. R. Green, H. Zilinski, MacDougall, Mrs. R. relationship with the teachers | whose job it is to develop favour- able personality traits, continued | Mr. Baanett. "The best way for | parents to assist their students and teachers is to know what is going on, hence the purpose of Parent's Day I Mrs CITY OF OSHAWA TENDERS FOR DEMOLITION Sealed tenders addressed to Chairman, City Property Committee, c/o City Clerk, and endorsed 'Tender for Demolition will be received until 5.00 P.M, MONDAY, DECEMBER 5th, 1955 for the purchase, for the purpese of demolition of the building located at 26 Athol Street West, in Oshawe. Tender Forms and further information may be obtained at the office of the undersigned. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. F. I. CROME, P. Eng. City Engineer. 12 King St. East vehler' Meat Specials! Tues. & Wed.! Phone RA 3-3633 FRESH MADE COUNTRY STYLE SAUSAGE 5 1.00 SLICED BEEF LIVER 21:4): BACON w. SLICED BREAKFAST 3 9 Cc SPECIAL! WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON ONLY! 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