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The Oshawa Times, 13 Oct 1959, p. 2

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- | Student's : Visa Case 'Under Study | HAILEYBURY (CP) The immigration department is con- sidering the case of Euret All- der, 23-vear-old nursing student from Barbados whose 10-month student visa expires Thursday. Allder, taking a training course at Misericordia hospital here, criticized working conditions .at the hospital. His superiors have refused to apply for an extension of his visa. | V. R. Brown, an immigration officer from Timmins, said All- der "will be allowed to remain /in Canada without status" until {the immigration department | comes to a decision. 1 Mr. Brown said he had a two-| hour meeting with Allder during which the West Indian filled out a report to be "sent imme- |diately to Ottawa." Allder said he would like to go personally to |Ottawa for the hearing. Mr. Brown said Allder reiter- ated statements that hospital of- |ficials had refused to allow him Ito continue his nursing studies {after he criticized working con- |ditions, food and religious pres- # | sures. THIS MODEST hou-e in the Montreal suburb of Pointe ; Claire literally has is roots tangled in four centuries of Canadian history. Rene Plourde took over the house two years ago because of an interest in early French-Canadian history and so far has dug up from its basement tomahawks, chipped stones that could have been ar- rowheads, and the general plan of an old fort. He has asked 'Homestead Yields for a government archaeologist to assist in further digging. Mr. Plonrde is shown here with some of the tomahawk stones. --(CP Photo) | Hospital comptroller Clayton Dunn said Allder would not be retained at the hospital midnight Thursday. "Had he been a Canadian he would have been dispensed with a month after his arrival," Mr. Dunn said. after Preparation Ancient Treasures the first French-speaking settlers.|tion he admittetd with pleasure MONTREAL (CP)--The house at 210 Lakeshore Road in subur- ban Pointe Claire is unobtrusive, white-fenced and from the out-| 'side is no different from hun-|ets. .dreds of others in and around| Montreal. But it literally has its roots| tangled with centuries of Cana-| dian history and legend. Their enemy was the Iroquois. the house started to yield its sec century by an unknown builder, may eller Rene Plourde who recently|of the old fort revealed. called in a government archaeol-| Mr. Plourde took over the ogist to help him untangle the roots. Under the modern porch and fixtures are the remains of an is interested in early French- {Canadian hi:tory. Pacing through the massive early fort, once used by some of archway of the cellar fortifica- STAY ALIVE LONGER! Will You Live . To Enjoy Life? EDITOR'S NOTE: Is mod- « ern man killing himself to pro-.. duce a better world for his - wife and children to enjoy? Why do five times as many men die from heart attacks today as did 25 years ago? To what extent is a wife re- . sponsible for her hushand's untimely death? How can every woman help her hus- band stay alive longer? In a highly-provocative series of 20 articles, Lelord Kordel brings new hope and en- couragement in dealing with * these major problems of . modern living, Don't mi-s even one of the 20 install ments, of which this Is the Only in the 1ast two years has ered by several layers of earth|yalyable, I to have a gov- since it wes laid down in the 17th Bape Io have RL is being dug up. So far toma- {hawks and chipped stones that| : | be arrowheads have been Now it is owned by city jew-luncovered and the general plan house two years ago because he|® For A-War "this is more than I expected." In Canada "I have stopped the Sposiet | SEATTLE, Wash. (CP) -- De- -/tion because I'm afraid of de-|/fence Minister Pearkes of Can- The basement floors, cov-|s'roying or damaging something 2da said Monday plans are be- ing prepared for emergency |overation of transportation facili- |e in event of nuclear attack on {North America. 2 of curiosity Plourde sifted| In a speech to the National in Corgi ol = Se cellar. He Defence Transportation Associa- imuch Jower: 'Tlie doorwas on. | tion here, Mr. Pearkes said Can- tes: y |ada now has ready facilities from necting two lower rooms, for ex- 3 . Ioerale. "wah. 100 1 to let {which a central corps o! the gov- Zbie, 5 sma » i 4, ernment could carry on outside an pass In comiort and INC Gitawa under nuclear war condi- door leading outside was covered tions even if there were serious past its bottom hinge. radioactive fallout in the capital FORTIFIED CELLAR area, Clearing away the earth hel "What we have tried to do In found holes for bars that pre- my country is to plan an organiz- vented forced entry and at the ation which will preserve some same time made an escape en.|degree of governmental and eco- trance. The cellar also had two nomic organization during the oun slots. Under one of threp|initial period of a nuclear war," hidden in soil he found three he said. bullets that may have been| Recent studies of the probable dropped during an Indian raid. [economic situation arising from Research may uncover relics of conditions of nuclear attack in- a trading post used after the|dicated that the problem of pro- Lachine massacre of 1689. viding and distributing essential The house was later uced commodities for both military farmers, It remained a home: and civilian purposes would stead for generations. A relic of critical and complicated. Ithose days ean be seen in a sink| The flexibility and widespread of the kind used for washing veg- distribution of transport would etab'es. An oven was covered up, be of major importance. by plaster and wallpaper, but in| For civil aviation, the main time it too may be uncovered to|task during the survival period fit into the jig-saw and give a would be preservation of air- more elaborate picture of early craft, airfield equipment and Canadian life. {operating personnel. Later still the house wes taken| *Plans for the use of air trans- over by Protestant missionaries port after the initial period o° at- and became the first mission and|tack will be based on the princi- school in Pointe Claire. A piece|ple of pooling resources in the |of stained glass from this period national interest," Mr. Pearkes has been found, | said. Shortly before the start of the| Ajreraft contaminated bv {century a family was killed when radioactive fallout "may be re- {the original flat roof of the build-|fyelled, rearmed and flown with- |ernment archaeologist continue »/the work soon." ing eollapsed during a severe out undue hazard to the ground| storm. The present sloping roof|or air crews." If time permitied, FRED PRICE, 42-year-old Montrealer who heads the Can- COMIC STRIP BLONDE RETIRES LONDON (AP) -- The mest famous--and probably the most freouently undressed --blonde in Britain has retired after 26 years in the public eye. She's planning to get married. Her name: :Jane, She was a character in a comic strip in the tabloid Daily Mirror. A glamorous, leggy pin-up who never aged a day during those 26 years, she be- came a sweetheart of fighting men in the Second World War, She was known as the Queen of the STRIPS--as much for the number of times she lost most of her clothes as an?thing else. There was a wartime rumor that the day that Jane ap- peared cowletely nude, the Allies would' invade occupied Europe, Sure enough, on June 6, 1944, Jane appeared without a stitch on, After 26 years of waiting for her bov friend, George, to pro- pose, Jane popped the question herself Saturday in the strip's last appearance and bowed out of the paper to head for the altar. Why? All the Mirror would say of the strip, turned out by a serles of artists over the years, was: "Jane is being honorably re- tired. Mirror has pried into her private life long enough." No Political Events Stir In Ottawa By DAVE MCINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--The dog days of summer have lasted well into the fall in the capital. Since the last session of Par- adian Conference on Education feels that co-operation of the many organizations forming the conference can lead to im- pt ¢ in Canadi a tion. A company administrator on loan to the CCE, Mr. Price By CAROLYN WILLETT Canadiaz Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) -- A lanky, sil- ver-haired Montrealer is the new director of the 1%-year-old Ca- nadian Conference on Education. Fred Price, 42, a company ad- ministrator who is the first full- time conference director, said in an interview he expects his job to be an interesting challenge. A parent and former teacher, he steps into the job when educa- tion is on the minds of more than educationists. The conference, sponsored by 19 major national organizations, now is planning a second mass meeting on education in 1962 to follow up its first, 850 - delegate 1958 meeting. The first conference dealt heavily with financial problems shadowing education. One confer- ence consensus was that there's not much wrong with education that more money can't cure. "1 think the first conference did a good job," said Mr. Price, who attended as a delegate. "The sec- ond conference may be more spe- cific." Co - ordination plans for the 1952 meeting is one of his major tasks. It is expected to deal with the aims and purpose of educa- tion. Like the first, it would bring together representatives of busi- ness, industry, labor, the profes- sions, women's groups and educa- tion. "As a multiplicity of organiza- tions with conflicting interests it is amazing that they can work |so well together," said Mr. Price. But at the first conference he found "an encouraging willing- seemed to work under a severe financial handicap and often with- out public moral support, "Universities," he says, "are becoming more and more the preserve of the well-to-do . . . something our education philoso- phy is opposed to in theory." He says undergraduate scholar- ships are generally so small "many students from low income groups can't afford to use them." He sees some possibilities in the recently - established United States national 'merit scholar- ships, a non - government sup- ported plan which provides siz- able scholarships based on a stu- dent's need, - It is the sort of plan the Cana- dian Conference could initiate be- cause the conference draws its| support from a cross-section of the community, he says. Education problems, financial or otherwise, cannot be solved by legislation alone, said the direc- tor. Governments, all employer, groups and the public share in the task - The public's attitude toward education was important, In the face of a shortage of qualified teachers, he says, there needs to be a community feeling that chi'dren must be taught by well-qualified teachers. "No parent would think of send- ing a child to an unqualified doc- tor," he adds. Brchhishop RCMP Probe Scheme In Immigration OTTAWA (CP) -- Two RCMP officers have arrived in Hong Kong to help investioztion de- periment officials investigate an alleged scheme by which Chinese were smuggled into Canada through fraudulent marriages. RCMP and immigration de- {partment spokesmen say the two |officers are helping close the "se="sla in perviations which -al- lowed the scheme to work. Iden- . os of the policemen were not available, Thirty - five persons, including two Cenadians, were arrested in Hong Kong last month after the practice was uncoyered. The two Canzdians have been convicted of perjury and sentenced to two years in jail. ' The scheme worked this way. A Chinese man, holding a valid Canadien passport, was paid to go to Hong Kong, marry a Chi- nese woman and return with her and one or two boys posing as her sons. The racket was exposed in Au. gust when a Chinese woman told Hong Kong police she nad been anproa~hed to marry a man and go to Canada with him, bringing probably will spend about a third of his time away from his Ottawa office visiting in the various provinces, One of his first major tasks will be or- ganizing a second mess meet- ing in 1962, The first such con- ference was in 1958. (CP Photo) three boys posing as sons. ORGANIST EVERY NIGHT 9 P.M. TO 12 P.M. HOTEL LANCASTER Sees Ilo Union Ahead TORONTO (CP) -- Archbishop Howard H. Clark of Edmonton, Primate of the Anglican Church |% of Canada, says there is no prac- tical way of achieving union be- tween Anglicans and the United FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL New Director For Education Church of Canada. The United Church Observer, reporting on an interview with the Archbishop, says in its cur- rent issue, "Those who understand the po- sition of the United church and of the primate could come to the conclusion that there will be noj interest in education. He has just|union in our time . It could be| resigned as president of the Que- achieved quickly only if United] bec Federation of Home and Church people were ready to beé-! School Associations. come Anglicans." Father of an 11-year-old daugh-| Archbishop Clark says that An- ter, he finds schools doing "an|glicans feel they cannot compro- effective job with the money at'mise on apostolic succession. hand." "We must seem Intolerably But Canada's stiff." | educationists OUR SEASONS TRAV 4 | RA.86201 GOOD FOOD BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH HOTEL LANCASTER It gives double the wea EXTRA PREMIUM BROADCLOTH a It out-performs all others! § Je3:33 ¢ | EN ORIROIN It's safe in bleach! ring life! i iW wv # Safe in bleach! This exclusive fabric is safe in ach--resists yellowing or discoloration and deterioration in laundering. Stays white and new looking. was added when it again was put i n ina- | i " first. g: putia large portion of the contamina liament ended July 18, there have, 1€SS to pitch in and do the job." By LELORD KORDEL . Installment One LELORD KORDEL Once on a tour of a world- renowned cemetery in Genoa, ilo something about the remain! "stopped before a large, imposing|ing three decades by recharting| *statue of a little old woman. |his whole life. | "Who was she?" I asked, with] He goes into a middle-aged re-| & touch of awe. "What did she|volt. Fearful of getting old, he do?" {worries about his love-life, But "She sold flowers the sterility and impotence are not street," said my guide. {the results of age. They stem « "But that statue in her honor--'| from nutritional disorders or from of insisted, "she must have done|PSychological blocks. Sexual something heroic." |vigor can and should last many * "Heroic, maybe. Foolish, more Years past middle life. Even| likely." The guide shrugged. "She prostate difficulties are now treat- sworked hard ajl her life selling ed Without loss of fertility. flowers, saved every penny, had Don't go into the proverbial, 0 fun, not even enough to eat, tailspin. Don't try to be a play- 80 she could have a big monu- boy without the talent for it, a ment built in her honor when she Don Juan without the fervor for swouldn't be here to see it". it, nor an athlete without the| The scene changes from the build for it. Moderate excercise, graveyard to the noisy, frenzied certainly, But don't try to outdo pace of New York. But the pat-the lads on Muscle Beach. tern remains the same. | It isn't old age that brings dis- I was having dinner with a case. Rather, it's dizease that friend of mine, {brings old age. Bob Swanson is a busy, suc-| cessful executive whose company STOP KILLING YOURSELF manufactures business machines.| Suppose one evening you pick-| These machines are designed to ed up your newspaper and the) operate with ease and e'ficiency. headlines screamed: ONE MIL-' A husky former all-American LION AMERICAN MEN ARE Bob iad forsotien that the yp anism of his own y was the| "Fantastic," . most delicate and efficient ever "What ee you nuit Man Soncelved, He wouldn't have|from Mars' hoax?" ought driving his..car with- out gas and oil, yet he continually Rik no hoax. It Is precisely : | nearly a million American pushed his body to the breaking'y, on" a0 vearly. Trey kill th point without giving it the proper, y ary. rey , em. | food to keep it overating. |selves Just as surely as if they! "Funny thing" -- he managed jumped into the East River, play-| a feeble grin -- "the office is run- ed Russian roulette, or swallowed | ping fine without me, Just goes" ron { to show you, no man is indispen-| Their suicides, while less spee-| sable." |tacular, are more tortured. They Bob was one of the lucky ones: Sufer the crippling pain of| he recovered. His heart attack|strokes. Or they allow coronary was a warning which he was wise| thrombosis to choke. off the blood] enough to heed. He put himself on|SuPPly to their hearts. | a five-day-week schedule, learned] What are the reasons for this| to delegate authority, bought a Mass murder? This national trag-| cottage by a lake, and snent every|€dy that leaves millions of widows weevend there with his family,'and orphans in its wake? "I'm learning to relax," he| Ignorance is one. | told me later. "I was a damn American men have learned to| fool. For years I'd worked as build pathways through the skies, | though there'd never bea tomor-|0 manufacture atoms for peace] row. And you know something?|and hydrogen bombs for war, but There almost wasn't!" {few bave learned the proper re- spect and treatment for the most THE MIDDLE-AGED REVOLT . complex creation of all -- the "Death begins at forty!" {human body. That's what Dr. Clive M. Mc- Neglect is another reason. Tool Cay, of Cornell University, tells many men neglect to have physi- us. He says it's around this age cal checkups, neglect proper nu- that a man looks back over his trition, until it's too late. Diseases first far decades, then decides to/that might Lave been prevented' » in | | | i {into use as a house. take their toll, and lives that could have been saved by early diagnosis and treatment are lost. Periodic health checkups are the best guard against serious ill- ness. Failure to have them is the greatest contributor to man's un. timely death in middle age -- or at any age. BIG BOYS DON'T CRY The male premature death death rate is 36 percent higher| than that of the female. Why is this? Women generally escape the tion could be washed down with water. Ships in probable Canadian tar- get areas would have to be evacuated and directed to a safe anchorage. An organization for receiving and dealing with ships seeking refuge in Canadian anchorages and with ships evacuated from Canadian ports "is being built up within Canada at the present time." Control planning would take into account preservation of the canals and locks on the St, Law- consequcnces of worry and frus- ence Seaway. tration by exploding their feelings] It likely would be necessary to through tears and other emotional evacuate railway equipment outlets. But under our social| from target a=eas as soon as mores, men are not permitted Warning was received. this relief. From the time he is a li'tle boy, the male child is told,/makes many important business "Big boys don't cry." So the big|decisions while he gulps down a boy grows up holding in his ten-| heavy meal that overloads his jit- sion -- and becomes a victim of tery stomach. The higher he ulcers, high blood pressure, or climbs up the ladder of success, coronary disease. the more pressed he is for time. The average executive in the] More than half the businessmen United States -- there are some who come in for checkups at Bos- thirty thousand with incomes of ton's famed Lahey Clinic are so $50,000 or more -- gets up early, | keyed up that they must be warn- rushes to his office by train or|ed by the doctors to slow down-- auto, stays there until at least or face heart disease, colitis, high 6 p.m. Then he rushes home. blood pressure, or any one of a eats a quick dinner, and dives into/host of other diseases. a briefcase full of homework. He| But it's not too late! If you'd may try to combine his social like to look, fell, and act 10 years evenings with professional din-y -- and who doesn't -- ners, conferences -- and other if you'd like to repair the damag- work, ling effects of accident, illness, When does he relax? Certainly strain, ignorance, or neglect, it's not during luncheon, where he in your power to do so. IMPORTANT NOTICE Would the persons who witnes- sed the accident on Highway 401, at Whitby Cloverleaf, be- tweed a car transport and two automobiles on October 6, at approximately 11:30 a.m. please contact H. S. Ogden at Oshawa RA 5-1123 or RA 8-8767. been no major political develop- ments here to take the public's attention away from the heat of August or the fall return of fav- orite television programs. There is a preoccupation here with tight money but this sub- ject, generally speaking, has not apparently impinged on the pub- lic consciousness to any great ex- tent though it bas probably infur- jated the person trying unsuccess- fully to get a bank loan. The political party leaders and there across the country but in this period mid-way between general elections their efforts have seemed almost perfunctory to the public. There were two byelections last week but no turnover of seats-- the Progressive Conservatives re- tained Hastings - Frontenac and the Liberals Russell--and hardly anybody outside the ridings con- cerned got excited. The Young Liberals tried to warm up the political atmos- phere last month at their con- vention here and the Young Con- servatives will try to do the same at their Ottawa convention Nov. have been making speeches here; "Now it is a matter of harnes- sing that willingness." TO VISIT PROVINCES Fluently bilingual, he expects to spend about one-third of his time away from his Ottawa of- {fice, on the road visiting prov- linces and harnessing willingness. His new job, he says, is an ex- ample of ihc new and growing concern and interest in education on the part of business and other groups. He has leave of absence {from his employer, the Bell Tele- phone Company, where his most recent administration job was in office organization, The fact that employers may he feeling the shortage of quali- fied employees may have sharp- ened an awareness of education's importance. A McGill graduate with a mas- ter's degree in education, he taught high school before the Sec- ond World War, served with the army overseas and was demobi- lized with the rank of major. Returning to teaching after the war, as a married man by then, he found "the financial future of teaching looked pretty poor." He joined the telephone com- 30 and Dec. 1. pany in 1946 but retained a keen CITY OF TRAFFIC GENERAL MOTOR Cn Thursday, October 15th, 1 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15th VICINITY OF Twice the life! Especially woven fabric for Perma-Tex collar and cuffs actually doubles the wearing life of your shirt . . . really resists soiling | No-iron conveniencel You simply wash... drip-dry... requir pays f The greatest buy in no-iron Try one and you'll buy the Forsyth NO-IRON forever after. Discover for yourself why Forsyth is acknowledged leader in NO-IRON shirts . . . get the fine "'feel," the true wash-and-wear convenience, the style, the quality Forsyth tailoring «+ » at a remarkably lcw price! CSHAWA SURVEY Imported Extra-Premium No-Iron Broadcloth S SOUTH PLANT 959, the City of Oshawa will bc conducting a traffic survev on the roadways in the vicinity cf the General Motors South P to all divers passing certain lant. Postcards will be handed check points from 6:00 A.M, to 6:30 P.M. on that day. Very simple questions will be out- lined on this card ond all drivers are requested to fill in the Specific answers should be given and if a driver answers, receives wo or more cards whi wear | There is little or no ironing ed. The Forsyth No-Iron or itself in laundry savings. shirts today Ne-=IREMN Washable NO-IRON Amel tie--$150 Cuff links and tie bar--$5%0 All by Forsyth ».588 © BLACKS MENS' WEAR LTD. 74 SIMCOE ST. N. PHONE RA 3-3611 ile making several trips, he is requested to return all cards, even though the origin and des- tination s the some in each case. Emplovees in the General Motors South Plant shall dep osit their cards at collection centres to be provided in the plont. All others are requested fo drop the card in a mail box. The postage has been prepaid bv the City. The co-operation of everyone time now to complete and return the cards will ensure a suc- is urgently requested. Taking DOVER'S MEN'S OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE WEAR PHONE RA 5-0712 cessful survey and will enable the City to design and construct adequate traffic routes in the future. ALDERMAN A. V. WALKER, Chairma Troffic and Tionsportation Committes. CANNINGS LTD. 14 KING ST. W. PHONE RA 3 7652

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