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The Oshawa Times, 12 Mar 1960, p. 9

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MISS ENID WALLACE, head | group of junior bookworms who of the Children's section of the | meet every Saturday afternoon McLaughlin Library, with her | to review* and discuss new RadioPark JF Bookworms Will Open Review Books books coming into the library. | Left to right are Margaret ! Bryant, Barbara Cross, Sharon "Wet|have their interest in reading| some-| widened. They are always given Stata, Barbara Mosier, Caro- lyn Faint, Karen Mosier and Miss Wallace. --Oshawa Times Photo Donevan Wins COSSA Title By KATHRYN LEARMONTH The powerful Donevan Col- On June 11 Magic" could have had Members of the Radio Park Neighborhood Association, at Ithing to do with a group of | junior bookworms that meets every Saturday afternoon in the children's department of the McLaughlin Library. new books to read and review. Miss Wallace has never had a soiled book brought back, TEACHES RESPECT | their meeting this week, set June" yr, "o "0 two vears ago that| She firmly believes that handl-| legiate Institute senior basketball {team was triumphant last Satur-| {day when it won the Central On- |tario basketball championship in| { Peterborough. This was a great victory which was realized only after our team Youtharama Ends Today The final event of Oshawa"s four-day Youtharama will take place in Central Collegiate Insti- tute Auditorium at 8 p.m. today. Culminating a week of Youth Varieties which included the full feature film, "Wiretapper", teen musicale, and a giant funspiration, tenight's Western Round-up Rally will twilight the four-day panorama. Included in the variety program will be the Western Choralettes from Toronto, Canadian youth |favorite, John McHardy and local western favorites. In an. auditorium completely transformed into a western scene, the rally will highlight western apparel, talent, and atmosphere throughout. A grand prize will be awarded the best dressed west- erner. Local youth leaders and busi- ness men, interested in the future of Oshawa Youth have made possible Youtharama. The public is cordially invited, and admission is free! Cabs Use Taximeters Every Oshawa taxicab must now have a taximeter to register distance, record trips and units and. compute fares. This bylaw went into effect last March 1. This is from Bylaw 15 of the Board of Commissioners of Po- lice for the City of Oshawa, pass- ed at its regular meeting, Friday afternoon. It was passed to amend tylaw number 5 by adding a section 9. This section also states the meters shall be submitted for testing, inspection and sealing, before being used as well as in May and November, each year. It also says they should be lighted between dusk and dawn. They should be in plain view. They are to be used only during the seven months after testing land sealing; and only while the seal is intact. They are to be adjusted according to the rates set out in section 36 of the The Osharn Ses SECOND SECTION OSHAWA, SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 1960 PAGE NINE Opposition When a deputation of citizens opposed rezoning of city-owned land on the north side of Conant stheet, east of Ritson road south, last Tuesday night, it wasn't the first time. At least three times in the last three years citizens have shown their displeasure at plans to build a city yard in the area. The latest request came from city council, which on Feb. 15 of this ear requested the planning board to hold a public hearing. |nant street and west of Myers {street extended was zoned M2 from R3 on Dec. 16, 1959. | Now city council wants to re-| |zone the westerly portion of this land -- a portion of which is bounded on the west by Ritson road south and on the east by the west side of Myers street extend-| ed. The area is now R3. Ald. Finley Dafoe argued the Tuesday heari that A section of land north of wn) at| the; General Motors of oi GM Spending $465 Million Mark Hits Oshawa Gets $130,386,304 Spending in Canada on goods, services, wages by last| Toronto {year pumped more than $36,~ {000,000 over 1958 spending, the company announced today. E. H. Walker, GM president, | said thte company's total Can- |adian spending in 1959 hit a: rec- o lord $465,000,000 compared with © '$429,000,000 the year before. | * | Mr. Walker said the increase * was due to a higher wage bill, M. N. VUCHNICH Will Discuss Profit Sharing The president of Lincoln Elec- iric Company of Canada, M. N. Vuchnich, BSc., will be special { 3 itional | Guest speaker Tuesday, Mar. 15,/¢a] spending went to Toronto and hoard of works Deeded audit ile in Hotel Genosha at the regular! pghawa, {more taxes, increased cost of | materials and to the construction {of GM's new 10-acre Corvair plant in Oshawa. The money was spent in every province and went to more than 4500 businesses, governments and service organizations, an in- crease of nearly 300 from the pre- vious year. BIG EMPLOYMENT GM paid out $65,000,000 in wages and salaries, $30,000,000 more than in 1958. Employment at GM currently is 15,500. More than two-thirds of the to- GM spent a record Montreal Galt and Preston .... Stratford St. Thomas London .. Belleville .. Orillia Brantford Barrie Newmarket .. Oakville Sarnia Tilsonburg Welland ... Sherbrooke . In additon, General Motors spent between $10,000 and $99,000 in each of another twenty-two cities and towns. In all, GM spent money in nearly four hun- dred and fifty cities, towns and villages from coast to coast. {monthly 6 p.m dinner meeting of $130;386,304 in Oshawa plus a | 11 as the date of the park open-',.. hoaq of the department,|ing new books must teach a child ing. It is planned to hold a draw| yjie; Eniq Wallace, noticed afrespect for books. ners. Section 36 was repealed and|acted as spokesman for the group; |of Industrial and Cost Account-| for 'a camera and a $25 SPOTMS|jine girl who asked week after| "I enjoy our meetings and I The march to top provincial|the following rates were substitut-'he told the planning board that|ants of Ontario, vouchre are part of the opening| i... for E. Nesbit's book "Wet/know they have made the girls|honors, however, ended on Wed-jed: one or two passengers, 50 homeowners in the area Wers; Anyone in management or ac-|y...de and of the District's day program. Rocko Esposito, nragie Finally Miss Wallace|feel at home in the library," she nesday at Thornhill, when the|cents for first hall mile, or any afraid of property devaluation if| counting is welcome to come and go emets Club, and of the Em- president of the association, pre-| ao apie to save it for her and| says. heavy schedule of the past week part, 10 cents for each additional the area north of Conant street/hear a well qualified 'authority! Jove Welfare Service Fuad. sided. found her name was Karen| Begides discussing reviews with finally took its toll. Our boys|one-third mile, 10 cents for each|were zoned M2 to take a city explain the application of profit Reports from the rifle club,| Mosier. | them. Miss Wallace has also ex.|Went down fighting. two minutes waiting time while|yarg. \sharing or incentive manage. He is chairman of the Cana- bingo and sport committee chair-| Miss Wallace, by the way, plained how books are ordered, 10 addition to the basketballlunder engagement, and 10 cents" Firt proposal to rezone this ment in' industry. dian Standards Association Weld- men were presented. The mem- thinks as much of E. Nesbit's|apoyt the different publishing €X¢itément, Donevan was favor-|flat trip charge for each addi-|and came from the city as this| oo ooo ional} 5 Electrodes sub-committee, bers were informed that the Pee books as Karen and they be- houses and generally, the process| Sd with a visit from the Air|tional passenger; atest one did. In 1057, the ity} 'I- Yuchnich, a professional a director of the Canadian Elec- Wee hockey team were fo play came acquainted. Between them! nat a hook goes through before| C'ce Band. This splendid organ-| By time, the cost shall be: $4 yanted to rezone the easterlylengineer ana manager, has|trical M re he oe their play-off game at 7 a.m. to: |they hit on the idea of starting reaching its place on the library| Zan00 is a musical treat whichifor the first hour, $1 for each portion, between Myeers stheel,served the progressive Lincoln!tion and a member of the Ad: is | additional 15 minutes and an ad-|aytended and Nelson street ex-|Electric Company for over 25 OFF Commities of Ryerson Ins ; ye de étain th os 4 5 always is received enthusiastical- ae nd grey park colors. | |new books coming. into. the| Sel The girls have also learned iy 'at Donevan. It played selec- ditional 75 cents per hour for|iended years, fitst in the United States, Al, Cox, in his report on the library, something about repairing books. |tions such as St. Louis Blues, each passenger over four passen-| Because of opposition and a pe-[then in South Africa and since| The Society of Industrial and Central Council of Neighborhood | A SPECIAL INSIGHT some classics, and tunes from gers, tition presented by people in ithe 1940 as president in Canada. He|Cost Accountants is fortunate Asigtiations,, stated a dance will 308 BOOKS RECEIVED There have been treats for| 5h ; It shall cost 50 cents for each|gistrict, the city withdrew Wsihas given outstanding leadership|and honored in being able to] wavelengths of sunlight as they be 'Ht ie OnA-building. on) Karen' undertook to get the|them too, Miss Wallace was able|, -) Students sincerely hope the trunk and 10 cents for each plece|application. in many fields of endeavor, is a bring to the area a speaker of pass through the earth's atmos- March 19 for park members. * fmembers and Miss Wallace told|to order records of authors of| nC. Wil Pay us another visit iniof hand baggage, handled by the| According to William Metcalfe, past president of Rotary Club in'such high merit. Plans were laid for a dance them what she wanted in a book, driver, in excess of two pieces.|,f 810 Myers street, who led the 4 : the near future n 3 children's books chat { : to be held this Saturday at the review, Since then the group| Se ug dt A "drive-self car", for five pas-| opposition group in 1957, Mayor "Harper, Sylvia street, |the local chapter of the Society| substantial part of the $65,000, had defeat i in-| bylaw. ed other sectional win-|bY: 000 wage bill. Eclipse Of Moon Visible 2:41 a.m. By THE CANADIAN PRESS, The moon will wear a strange coppery-red cloak early Sun- day. It will be passing through the earth's shadow in a total eclipse of the moon beginning at 2:41 a.m. and lasting until 4:15 a.m, The earth's shadow is nof strong enough to blot out the moon, but the moon assumes & weird red color, caused by bending of the longer er red During the evening Chris each review has been carefull Mason, of the Central Council, kept by Karen Mosier in ;! explained the park point system |gpseleaf folder. The orginial and answered questions. group has changed a little, one|ahout the books they read. When- or two members have moved| ever there is a sudden demand away and new ones have joined.|for a new book, she knows that Younger sisters have graduated|one of her girls has been at the gasoline, will cost 25 cents per mile. A seven passenger car, with gas and oil, will cost 35 cents per mile. Application to have a taximeter tested in compliance with this bylaw shall be made to the Chief Constable at the Police Building, with their reviewing. | She has discovered that the group can be relied on to talk| ' their books which have gi | clubhouse, has reveiwed over 300 books and h have given the . vessel sur lor te ves 'ovonition, grove ie 157, Mager Red Radio that no more attempts would be {made to rezone the . The mayor was then chairman of the board of works and an alderman. Mayor Gifford told The Times Friday that he was in favor of rezoning the land but not for pur- group a special insight and help| Denounces Six Plays In Drama Festival DEEP RIVER (CP)-Six plays including three by Canadians will| into the group, but there is still | beginning of the grapevine, | Crime Rate Kept Pace 10 and 13. | Every Saturday afternoon the group meets with Miss Wallace round an old dining room table| in the shipping room of the children's library. The members read the reviews of the books Own Service LONDON (AP) -- Radio Mos- cow's home service put on the air Friday a denunciation of its programs by Pravda, the Soviet Communist party newspaper. Broadcasting to millions of Rus- sians, the radio offered not a word in its own defence. they have read durin gthe week, be shown next weekend at the| discussion of each one follows Eastern Ontario Regional Drama "Our broadcasting is blighted Festival. The winner will be considered with the best entry in the east- {and if there is still some of the {hour left, they read aloud. And lit"s often out of "Wet Magic". The girls start their reviews With People OTTAWA (CP Canada's crime rate has kept pace with| |by a great deal of monotony, |colorlessness and dullness," the |station said in quoting Pravda. "Only a few of the concrete shawa. Welland Highway To St. Catharines ST. CATHARINES (CP) highway design engineer, called Friday for an immediate start on ing Welland and St. Catharines. He told an Ontario Municipal Board hearing here that the al- Arthur E. Read, a traffic and a controlled access highway link- poses of city yard. "I don't want to break faith with the people in that area," he said, "in view of the controversy, I think it would be bepet, if we dro the whole situation." [4g I of 1958 the board of works came back with a sec- ond proposal. The board still wanted the easterly portion of land rezoned for a city yard but plans included a "residential de- velopment" consisting of a row Conant street between Ritson road and Myers street. of houses along the north side of| This is the fourth of a series of six articles deal- ing with the Oshawa school system. By PAULINE VAN EYSSEN On the home front, 1940 saw the Oshawa Board of Education battling to get enough money to keep its schools going. Dr. S. J. Phillips, Dr. F. J. men teachers left and in 1943 were followed by Miss Madeli Had Bitter Battles contributing factors were over- ded cl the conduct of Kelly, the first lady teacher, who joined the RCAF on leave of absence granted by the Board, REPEATERS IN ARMY In 1941 too, in their budget de- bate the city council was re- lieved to hear that the repeaters at the OCVI had been "scared out of school into the army." outside organizations that had constantly used school buildings during the war years, the effects of the war, the slackening of parental control, parents' ap- parent indifference to the pro- gress or lack of progress on the part of their children, and a ten. dency to evaluate curricula -in ready approved highway should have connections with Thorold, Merritton and this city's busi- the population increase, theland vivid facts, in whi a . | y ich our re- RCMP anmial report said Friday ality abounds, are presented. in a report of operations for the|Haphazard material without any ern Quebec and the New Bruns-|with the name of the author, the ; : terms of economic value. wick zones for sending to the Do-| publisher and date of publication, Another teacher at the meet- Donevan, Dr. Hartley Lewis, Dr. H. M. Cooke (chairman), Mrs, As early as 1942 the board asked the property committee of the city council to hold a lot in A strip of trees, 25 feet wide, would be planted behind the minion Drama Festival in Van-ithe price, and say which age couver in May. group they think would enjoy the World Worth the Winning by | book most. | Winnipeg - born Robert Gardiner| peddlers, Sons of Freedom Douk-| will be played March 19 by the/CHILD'S OPINION USEFUL |hobors and homebrew distillers| Kingston theatre group. | "They make some really astute|Were all up, it noted. Down were| The afternoon of March 19, remarks about the hooks they|offences under federal statutes three one - act plays will be/read," Miss Wallace says. "A|and driving while intoxicated or| shown. They are The Rowley child's opinion can be very use. impaired, decreased by 303 at Band, presented by the Ottawa|ful to us." [6,250 "after an alarming in-| Civil Service Recreation Associa-| i : : | tion 24 wv Hen ay Canadian! their" practice al hil vear previous." Charles . Wright, embroke | : widens. | Little Theatre in Rise and Shine, |{~'" Ihe 8irls to be discriminat a Canadian play by Ella Cadogan °,™ y ley read and Anton Chekov"s The Boor by| y. the Trenton theatre Group. Phi You have handled books Mr. Gardiner, 31, is an editor-| 10a! are well written, well pro-| The report was tabled in the| jal writer with the Kingston duced and well illustrated the| Commons by' Justice Minister] Whig - Standard. Two years ago|Shoddy type of book will look|Fulton and covers RCMP work be directed the Domino theatre !®ITibly uninteresting," Miss Wal-|federally throughout the Domin- group of Kingston to first place lace maintains, ion as well as in the eight proy- in the regional festival with the} She also thinks that by listen-inces where the force acts under | play The Plough and the Stars.'ing to reviews of books the girls'contract as the provincial police. | Children Better Read Now Than In Past Eras Children of today are reading better than any generation before them, Miss Gwen Horsman MA, year ending last March 31. | Offences by juveniles, narcotics| crease of approximately 1,000 the| | | Investigations by the force were| {up 2.7 per cent on the previgus! | year, said the report. This was al {mild increase compared with the| 1958-59 jump of .19 per cent. cannot do anything and talk] "Let's not be snobbish about about those who can," she said|levels of capacity. We must teach energetically. everyone to his capacity but not supervisor of reading for Detroit schools, told more than 100 pub-| lic school teachers in the audi-| torium of the North Simcoe School, Friday evening. Teachers in the area from Pick- ering to Cobourg are attending a two-day conference being held in Oshawa by the Oshawa and Dis-| trict Council of the International Reading Association. "I am not going to listen to|aloud regularly. Children were the story that children of today cannot read," Miss Horsman de- clared. Many parents sounded sancti- read well orally. Miss Horsman said that had to read a report to a council or community group, he should be able to do it well, and many were unable to do so. | "It is a wonderful thing if a father reads aloud to his chil- dren," she said. Every teacher should read not being read to at home be- {cause parents were too busy {doing other things, Miss Hors. man said. Children should be taught tobe academic snobs," she said. Forcing a child who learned if a 35-year-old man|gowly to do what was beyond his capacity was Je telling him to {run round a block if he had suf- {fered from polio when he was |younger, she said. | In teaching the language arts, reading, writing and spelling, Miss Horsman said they should not be taught so rigidly that a child's spontaneity in expressing himself was destroyed. "There are a lot of awfully smart peGple around who cannot ispell," and looking hard at the : i Speaking about teaching the § e To as Show the quality ofl hree different streams in a class|teachers: "I cannot tell you how school, but they were not as good|-- the very bright, the average|many teachers mispell recom. as the good readers in the schools|and the retarded .-- Miss Hors-mend -- you know, two c's and today, she said. man said that 80 per cent of the one m," she said smiling. {children that are thought to be| pASIC SKILLS STOP TALKING {retarded or slow learners could| ; . "But you never talk about|come into line with the brighter| Saturday morning, Miss Hors- them, you talk about the ones children in the class if they were man will discuss "Teaching basic who are slow at school. We have| taught properly. reading skills in the Junior complained so much we have] As to the really retarded chil- grades". turned the whole populace dren, Miss Horsman said: "If we! The president of the Oshawa against public school," she told could have the right attitude to.and District branch of the IRA, the teachers. them, you would live ten years) Mrs. Marjorie Hodges, is presid- + Stop about those who|longer and look 20 years younger. ling at the conference. a - GATE abs great significance and without any interest for the listeners is frequently broadcast." Pravda reported Russia's cen- tral radio administration gets 500,000 letters from listeners every year, but their correspond- ence rarely is broadcast and their musical requests are ignored. Instead, "monotonous readings of texts, artificial reporting with stilted words, and music which only irritates the listeners are often heard." What Russian 'radio needs, Pravda said, are more top actors and performers, more outstand- ing public figures. ness section. Mr. Read suggested develop- ment of a four lane arterial parking authority. cation for amalgamation of St. Port Dalhousie and Merritton. PACIFIC SALMON 25 pounds. street pattern for the city and Grantham Township as well as advocating the setting up of a The board ended its fourth day of hearings Friday on an appli- Catharines, Grantham Township, The coho salmon is one of the largest Pacific fisheries salmon, reaching a weight of more than houses in an attempt to screen the 'intended city yard. PROMISED ALL Area residents wanted to know who would buy a house in such a location; that is, looking out on an M2 area. : "They promised us everything but a banana tree at the time," said William Metcalfe. "And there's nothing there yet And now we find out part of the land has been rezoned since December, 1959." A planning board hearing was called for Jan. 13, 1959. All with- in 200 feet were notified. With some opposition appearing, the supervisor of reading for De- troit schools, is shown address- ing members of the Oshawa and District Council of the In- _ ternational Reading Association 'at North Simcoe high school. ign he HL TIN SISTING gh NIN Speaking to the group Friday evening, Miss Horsman said (again that children should be taught to read well orally. She said that every teacher should read aloud regularly because chil dren were not being read to in the home. board decided to delay its deci- sion. There was some difference of opinion between council mem- bers on the planning board (Branch and Dafoe) so the plan- ners referred the matter back to the board of works, which met in committee on March 9, 1959. A motion was moved by Ald. Dafoe "that the planning board uested to rezone the area proposed as a eity . . . from residential to in- Sore The motion carried unanimous- ly. The next day planning board met and recommended rezoninz of the property as modifed (with row of houses and strip of trees). City council made it official at the March 16th meeting. The On- tario Municipal Board was slated for Dec. 16, 1959. But first the OMB requested that all within 300 wy rather f 200 feet, be notified. he Canadian National Rail- ways, Claire McCullough, six homeowners on the north side of Conanat street and two residents of Myers street were notified. No minutes of OMB meetings are kept by the city so there is no record to show that anyone appeared in opposition. LOSE CONFIDENCE The OMB approved the rezon- ing, and bylaw 3665 came into ef- fect Last month, the eity council in made a request for rezen- ing, this time the portion to the west of the recently rezoned prop- erty. Again opposition by the resi- dents. : Planning board is still studying the situation. G. Colpus, E. A. Lovell, 8. G. Saywell, E. Marks, C. C. Me- Gibbon and W. J. Naylor were members of the board. One city alderman . with pre- budget queasiness introduced a motion before the city council to have the provincial government give boards of education the power to exclude repeaters from schools. He charged that 300 students at the Oshawa Collegiate and Vocational Institute were "para- sites in the Old Folks Home for Youths" and worst of all cost $55,000 to keep them there. : BOARD ASKED A budget of $219,000 was re- quested by the board, an increase of $28,000 over the previous year's. It was too much for one of the oldtimers on the council in a joint meeting with the school board. He denounced night classes, vocational training, kin- dergarten classes and music as unnecessary frills and declared that the lot should be abolished. Only "wildcat spending" could pay for them, he charged. Told his plan to abolish voca- tional training would leave 750 students without schooling, he replied: "If they wan't it, let their parents 'pay for it," and later during the same meeting: "Cut out all those who are learn- ing trades, let them go to work." Finally a joint resolution did go out from the board and coun- cil asking the Ontario government to pay 80 per cent of education costs. RELIEF FROM PROVINCE By the following year some relief came and the Ontario government paid 50 per cent of school costs across the province to relieve the heavy taxation on property. A major expense was war emergency classes, Although paid for largely by Federal and pro- vincial grants they were never- theless an extra strain on the Board's resources. During 1941 the first group of officers and men arrived at the OCVI for courses in carpentry and as engine artificers and motor mechanies. The armed forces made inroads the north east ward, south of the Downsview golf course, for a future school. There was no thought of immediate building or even immediately after the war. School enrolment was now con. stant but the school inspector, T. R. McEwan, and the trustees could foresee a time when another school would become necessary, HOME ECONOMICS ADDED Development in the schools was mics and manual training classes were being added to the schools throughout the war years. In 1941 they were given an extra boost when itinerant teachers of home economics and manual training were appointed. Two opportunity classes were slarted, the Oshawa Ministerial Association began their work in religious instruction and in 1945 the first art supervisor was hired. By 1943, Oshawa was no longer depression struck but a city en- tering new days of a wartime boom. Again the board talked of the school proposed for the north east ward. SAW CHICAGO SCHOOLS that the first school to be built since the depression should be the very best the city could pro- vide, that a small group went to not at a standstill. Home econo-| So concerned were the trustees| ing pointed out that the staff at the OCVI worked 51 of 52 periods a week out of a total of 55. Need for the long planned school was obvious. A modern, one-storey building with the quivalent of 26 st d class- rooms was designed for the six- acre site. The city council was asked to issue the debenture for the school which was to cost $495,000. PROPHET OF WOE Council said no. One prophet of woe, Alderman F. Dafoe, in- sisted that with the changeover from wartime to peacetime pro- duction, between 2000 and 3000 families would be forced to leave the city because of unemploy- ment. . "I think the board has gone haywire if .they propose to build a schoo! costing half a million dollars," and "aren't you going to throw the city to the wolves again", greeted the Board when they met with Council for the issue of the debentures. Trustee A. E. Lovell reminded the Aldermen that some years previously when the Board asked Council to put money aside for the school it was told: "Let the A pay for it." Meeting followed meeting be- tween the board and council. The ii tor, Mr. McEwan, explain- Chicago and toured new school for suggestions and ideas. Then in May, 1945, the war came to an end. Speaking on behalf of the board, Trustee S. G. Saywell said: "As a board of education, it is our responsibility and privilege to have a part in making sure that the generation of youth now in cur schools shall be prepared in- tellectually, morally and spiritu- ally to benefit by the sacrifice of those who gave their all." WAR LEFT MARK The war had left its mark in many ways, At a meeting of the board and teachers, H. E. Murphy, then a member of the staff of the OCVI, told the trustees that discipline had become an increasingly dif- ficult problem in the school. He spoke of increased truancy, stealing and marring of school property. He suggested some ed that the school program was being seriously curtailed by the lack of space. Council just dug their heels in, TWO-SHIFT SYSTEM In the OCVI overcrowding reached emergency proportions and the school was forced to ge on to a two-shift system with classes on Saturdays as well. Finally, the voters were asked to approve the school, They too turned it down. ' The one big chance that the city might have had to keep abreast of the rising school pop- ulation was lost, moreover at a time when building costs were not yet excessive. One addition was built before the decade was out, to Ritson School, and negotiations for a new collegiate on the Bishop Bethune site held out a measure of hope for the fifties. Cv Tal Np Bi Ea ea armen people who are going to use it

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