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The Oshawa Times, 17 Sep 1960, p. 2

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3 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, September 17, 1960 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN MEMORIAL IN ISRAEL TO ALBERT LOVE The late Albert Love had a fine capacity for friend- ship, one that extended far beyond the world of the Osh~ awa Seperate School Board where he labored so long and well as business administrator. There was further evidence of this recently when 20 members of Oshawa's Jewish Community, all business~ men, peid a final tribute to Mr, Love. They took up a collection to establish a permanent memorial for their departed friend. The money collected will be donated to the Jewish National Welfare Fund -- in return, 10 trees will be planted as a memoral to Mr. Love in a forest in Israel, the site to be marked by a plaque bearing his name, dates of birth and death, 5 Only rarely are non-Jewish persons so honored by a memorial in this forest. The late Mrs, R, S. McLaughlin also has 10 trees in this forest dedicated to her memory. Mr. Love was chairman of the Oshawa branch of the Acquitted Of Murder Of Father Trooper Wayne Boyes, 3 long sigh of relief Friday as ar Ontario Court ac Supreme quitted him of murder in the £, shotgun slaying of his 37-year-ol |" go "told" (he Graphic Arts In- father, justries convention that Canada The panel, which included twc) facing highest women, had deliberated more]. the oho pita in the ing capita wo an than three hours before reachin| HEH BEF CARA Tv ont is "|5ecoming not a temporary prob- ustier lem but a serious disease, "We have unemployment be- oe Je government has re. u support secondary man. uf ," he said, Gen, Simonds said European manufacturers, who invested in Canadian industry five years ago, now are turning to real estate, waiting for a speculative capital gain, are doing this, he said, because Canada offers no Canada Selling Land For Upkeep WINNIPEG (CP) -~ Canada, hanks to government policies, is selling off its real estate so that wesent-day Canadians can enjoy he high life to which they have )ecome accustomed, Lt, - Gen, Juy Simonds, former Canadian wmy chief of staff, said here Friday nigh! fea 5, si i= §=F ident | Middle East, He said the ¥ American and Canadian policies are tied, either the Congo East, Gen, Simonds changed his mind when he said Canadian dollars being spent on the mare anti-aireraft missile should it i their finding, To Boyes he sald: "You have had sufficient shment as it is, but this would be a wonderful lesson to you. It should show you where drink has led you and your family, too, g i § Hi ¥ Canadian Brotherhood of Christians and Jews, LET'S NOT DROP ORAL FRENCH CLASSES Dr. Claude Vipond feels that the Board of Education acted with |"unnecessary haste" this week in discarding its course in oral French classes for certain public school students after a two-year try-out, The doctor (a trustee for several years) can sympa= thize with the board's pro- blems up to a point, but he believes any effort to re- sume the classes would be well worth while, and he has written a letter of pro~ test to the board to this effect. Benefits to be derived from oral French would be invaluable to students, not only in high school, but in later life and certainly the time to get started with languages is when the stu- dent's mind is young and more flexible. Dr, Vipond admits that competent (or bilingual) oral French teachers are not easy to come by, but DR. CLAUDE VIPOND he points out that there could be some alternative schemes -- for Instance, why couldn't high school teachers be used to instruct element ary teachers in a sort of in-service training plan ? There's no easy solution to this complex curriculum problem, but the board would be well advised to re- consider the classes, especially in view of Dr. Vipond's strong plea. Dr. C. M. Elliot, public school superintendant, has pointed out some of the difficulties encountered, but his proposal for an after-school French club leaves much to be desired. SPEAKING OF FRENCH LESSONS Speaking of French lessons, Mrs. T. J. Grosart was recently appointed chief of the French Department at Donevan Collegiate, Mrs. Grosart, on of the best-qualified French teach- ers to be employed by the Board of Education in modern times, was the centre of a storm of controversy here back in 1952, '(hat was when she was head of the Department of Modern Languages at OCCI, when the Board served notice that her contract would be terminated the follow= ing June because she had married during her term of employment. The "No Married Women Teachers" ruling haa a Yong and tempestuous history dating back to 1932 when unemployment was high in the profession -- there was much mumbling about it around Ontario but no official dction was taken by any board until the Oshawa group stepped in with the Grosart dismissal, Mrs. Grosart was more than an efficient and popular teacher -- she was a tenacious and courageous fighter when she thought her rights were imperiled. She applied to the Ontario Department of Education for a board of reference -- a court to rule on her case -- on the grounds she was wrongfully dismissed, The late Judge F. J. MacRae presided at a two-day hearing in Whitby. The result was a compromise judge= ment under which Mrs. Grosart was to be retained for two years, She won strong public support for her inde~ pendent stand in refusing to bow before the wishes of the board, which was assessed court costs of $005. The late Arthur Greer represented Mrs. Grosart The case sparked strong resentment against the board, but Mrs. Grosart was released after two years and the married women teachers ban continued until January 26, 1959 when it was rescinded after being endorsed in previous years by the narrowest of margins. One of the great outspoken champions on the board for the employment of married women teachers was Dr, Claude Vipond, a trustee for more than six years, who charged that the ban cost the city many good women teachers, Mrs, Grosart, during her absence from Oshawa, was director of Moderns, at the Winston Churchill Collegiate in Scarborough. She is the former Dorothy Wilkins, WHAT'S THIS ABOUT HOUSECLEANING ? So, terrible-tempered Keith Ross wants to bring Pierre Berton (that other columnist) down here to do some municipal housecleaning ? Keith, with his usual fine display of ambiguity, doesn't say why, and we certainly hope he won't keep us guessing too long. Perhaps our professional jealousy is showing, but guch public pronouncements by Keith, especially at this time of year, can be expected just about as regular as Indian Summer, and the falling of the first chestnuts, dnd are but another grim reminder that the silly season #8 upon us once again. 13 NEW BUSES WILL ARRIVE HERE SOON Thirteen brand-new GM buses are scheduled to arrive here from Detroit Sept. 25 to start service on city routes early in October, after they have been serviced with appropriate paint jobs and other minor renovations. The vehicles will be delivered by senior members of the PUC bus union and will cost a total of $173,268 -- 20 per cent of this amount has already been levied for and the balance, $138,624, is to be debentured over a 10-year period. . . . Add convention notes; Alderman Gordon B, Attercley, vice-chairman of the City's property commitee, and Fire Chief Ray Hobbs left by train Friday for Cal- gary Alta, to attend the five-day meet of the Canadian Fire Chief's convention. . . . Ralph Found, assistant city assessor, is bombarding friends here with postcards from California where he is enjoying a brief holiday, ... A Toronto newspaper, in announcing the appointment of Charles H Chaytor as industrial commissioner for the Township of Scarborough, has this to say: ". .. He comes to Scarborough after more than seven years successful work as industrial commissioner of another Ontario Municipality." Why don't they come Han out and admit | ception givne in his honor Fri- day at Prime Minister Diefen- Zenturo Kosaka, Japan's for- eign minister, attended a re- » HONORED AT RECEPTION baker's residence in Ottawa, Shown here left to right, Mr, Kosaka, Mr, Diefenbaker " and "I am sure Jou will never for- get what has happened and that you will think several times be- fore you take another drink, The length of time spent in consider- ing the verdict tells how close ft was for you, Now you are free to go." ; i The father, John Morris Boyes, was slain in a shotgun duel with bassador to Canada | bo Hagiwara, Japan's am. ~CP Wirephoto Beaverton Lawyer Impaired, Fined TORONTO (CP) --- Beaverton lawyer Remington White, 57, was fined $75 Friday for im. paired driving. He was arrested Thursday by Toronto police on a bench war- rant, issued when he failed to appear on a charge of illegal pos- session of an offensive weapon, He faces three other liquor charges, scheduled to be heard Sept. 23 MONTREAL (CP) -- Seamen on 100. ships plying the Great Lakes have rejected a wage in- crease recommended by a con- ciliation board, opening the way for possible strike action, But the Seafarers' Interna- tional Union (Ind) decided against setting an Immediate . strike date, White will appear in suburban| Several spokesmen for ship: Lambton Mills court Sept. 21 to|ping companies here expressed answer the offensive weapon doubt Friday that any strike date charge. would be set at all this year, * THIRD DUPLESSIS SUCCESSOR Yves Prevost, provincial sec- | party leader to replace Antonio retary in Quebec's Union Na. | Parnette, who suddenly resign. tionale government that was | ed. He is the third successor to defeated in the June election, | Maurice Duplessis, founder of shown after he was chosen | the party, who died a year ago. ~CP Wirephoto Mr. Chaytor was employed by the Town of Whitby for that period ? Is there anything wrong with Whitby ? WINTER WORKS PROGRAM UNDER STUDY President Herman Kassinger of the Oshawa Home- builder's Association will attend a one-day meeting in Kitchener next week of Ontario builders to discuss cur- rent problems in the trade, su¢h as marketing, He will be accompanied by Al Banfield and Lew Pantelo. , , . Harry Chapman of the Pilgrim Players is busy making plans for the group's initial presentation of the current season, It will be a comedy, "My Three Angels," and will be presented early in 1961 at the McLaughlin Library. . , . Chairman Walter Branch of the Board of Works has set the wheels in motion to determine what can be done immediately to implement the winter works program, effective Oct, 15. He has requested the Board of Parks' Management to look into the problem of providing work at the earliest date and to confer with him then, Mean« while, he is investigating a possible program from his own department, VON'S FUTURE IN WHITBY UNDECIDED There will be an important public meeting at 8 p.m, Monday in the old Town Hall Council Chambers at Whithy. Key question to be decided is this -- what is to be« come of the 46-year-old Victorian Order of Nurses service provided for the town of 10,000 ? VON directors want a clear-cut answer as to why the town suddenly has decided to shun the services of this organization, the only one that provides home nurs- ing care in Canada, They want to know whether to con- tinue operations. Seamen Delaying On Strike Date They felt that, if a strike were in prospect, the call would al- ready have been issued, Others said the situation may change after the port of Church- ill, Man,, closes, probably around Sept, 30, Grain traffic usually in- creases on the Great Lakes be- tween the time Churchill closes and the end of the inland ship- ping season, The "official SIU attitude was that "we feel that business will pick up soon and we will review our plans then." REJECT 40-HOUR WEEK The conciliation board under Montreal lawyer H, Carl Golden. berg recommended a 12-per-cent wage increase, spread evenly over three years, provided the SIU dropped its demands for a 40-hour week. The board sald the 40-hour week is impractical for shipping operations. The SIU asked for an immedi- ate 10-per-cent wage increase and defended the 40-hour week by saying that American lake seamen already have it, The Lake Carriers Association, a group of five big lake shipping companies negotiating for the in- dustry as a whole, offered a 10- per-cent increase spread oye: the normal contract period of three years, The association's com- bined fleets total nearly 100 ships, Current basic wage rates of Canadian lake range his son outside the family home, The episode started at a drink. ing session when the younger Boyes went to visit his family after completing basic training at Camp Borden, Pile Of Stone Being Reduced ERIEAU (CP)--A 4000-ton pile of crushed stone, left by a legal hassle athwart a main intersec- tion in this village, began dwindl- ing Friday as trucks hurriedly carted it away. The mound, brought into dock Thursday night by the vessel Ben E_Tait, was dumped on the street Friday morning after Reg Lachine refused to allow the Blame Boarder For Shootings OTTAWA (CP)--Police were| further convinced Friday that a boarder did all of the shooting that resulted in the deaths in a blood bath of himself and three members of an Ottawa family, X-rays taken of 34-year-old Bruno Maddalena, the only sur. vivor of the Monday gun battle, strengthened the theory, Police at first thought Madda- lena was shot by his father-in- law, wielding a shotgun in the confusion of the battle, but the x-rays taken Thursday revealed no shotgun pellets, They now believe his wounds-- be used to finance of compulsory milita y ora "A well . disciplined force Is never obsolete," he added. Called Liar |2 Khrushchev By Magistrate [Demands Seen KITCHENER (CP) -- A court| LONDON (AP)--British diplo- witness was called "an out and mats express belief that Soviet out liar" who should wind up in| Premier Khrushchey will de- Jall for six months by Magistrate mand two changes in the United Alan Barron Friday, Nations--a new ldcation for its Robert Earl Valens of Galt|headquariers and a new secre testified In a case involving Wil.|tary-general, liam Barthop of Galt. Both Val.| These sources say that when ens and Barthrop were charged |Khrushchev goes before the UN with speeding and racing, Police|General Assembly next week he sald they were driving abreast|is almost certain to {insist on at 80 miles an hour. moving the headquarters off U.S, Valens, called as a defence wit-|soil, unless Washington relaxes ness, said Barthrop was not the|its restrictions on visiting Com. man driving the other car, who|munist leaders' travels, sat with him in the police cruiser giving information after their ap- prehension, Barthrop was also charged with fraudulently obtaining a driver's licence and unlawful pos- session of a permit, The driver's licence he gave the officer was pitestion for 2.3 Malacturess, are § money a nadian plants, | made out to William Thorpe, Galt, After Barthrop was convicted on all three counts, defence coun- sel Paul Dufresne of Galt told the court he did not put his client his right shoulder and left thigh were almost completely shot away--were made by the ,30-30 rifle of boarder Johannes Abom, The police theory is that Abom killed the other three persons, shot wildly at Maddalena, and then turned the gun on himself, Maddalena is expected to be in hospital for at least a year, Abom, 40, was buried Thurs. day, following a brief service at- tended by his widow, Villy, and a few friends, Maddalena's father-in-law, Gi. useppe Sacilloto, his wife, and Maddalena's wife were buried Wednesday, cargo to be unloaded on a prop- erty he leases, e shippers had earlier been told, apparently in error, they could store the rock on the prop- erty in this town 16 miles south. east of Chatham, After several hours of consulta. tions, involving Mr, Lachine's lawyer, the rock suppliers, On- tario Hydro and municipal rep. resentatives, the intersection was selected as a compromise site, Permission was granted to re- move electric wires to obtain ac- cess to the site and the suppliers of the stone agreed to make good any damage, The stone is urgently required at the site of the Ontario retarded children's school near Chatham, where Premier Frost is sched. uled to lay the foundation stone Thursday, $460 for chief cooks and $479 for electricians, Earlier, Hal C. Banks, Cana- dian director of the SIU, sald the bership voted 5 to 1 in favor from $296 a month for cabin por- ters and $313 for deckhands to Reeve Edward G. Stass sald an alternative site will have to be found for unloading future car. of rejecting the conciliation board report, INTERPRETING THE NEWS goes of stone destined for the school, Permit Latest Berlin Tactic By ED SIMON Canadian Press Stalf Writer When the Russians first at. tempted to isolate West Berlin 12 years ago, they employed the crude weapon of a total block ade, The West's answer was an airlift that the Communists were powerless to halt without incur. ring the risk of war, They chose to back down, lifted the blockade and left many west- erners under the illusion that the showdown had guaranteed the permanence of West Berlin as an anti-Communist island in a Com- munist sea. The intervening years produced their quota of minor in- cidents and major threats but the continuing serenity and prosper- ity of Mayor Willy Brandt's oasis has bolstered the belief In its in vulnerability, OTHER WAYS The blockade certainly estab- lish western willingness to fight any overt attempt by the Kremlin to throitle West Berlin, But there have been clear indi cations In Nikita Khrushchev's recent policy that he knows more than one way of skinning a cat. His first move was to create the fiction that Russia was no longer directly concerned with the Berlin problem by elevating his East German satellite Into the semblance of an independent state, 5 The newly-created puppet was an implausible creature that bore a striking resemblance to its cre- ator in speech and action, But its most important feature was that it spoke with an undeniably Ger- have NEW FACILITIES New space and facllities be- came available in 1959 for labor- atory research on salmon and trout at St, Andrews, N.B, GULF WINDS APTS. - * Germans have made the decep- tively mild demand that West Germans acquire a permit from them before crossing into their territory, Permits are being readily granted to all applicants. The objectionable feature to the West of the new permits is the implication that East Ger- many, in defiance of four-power agreements at the end of the Second Werld War, is a sover- eign state, able to exert ind h. [] ® oO > » on the stand because he admitted driving the car. Barthrop was fined a total of $160 and costs or 48 days.His car was impounded three months, COMING EVENTS BINGO CORONATION ORANGE TEMPLE SAT, SEPT, 17--8 P.M. 20 gomes -- $8 SHARE THE WEALTH 4 -- $40 Jackpots To Go 1 -- $150 Jackpot To Go KINSMEN BINGO FREE ADMISSION -- TUESDAY, SEPT. 20th 20--$20 GAMES $150 Jackpot--$20 each line plus $50 Full Card 5--$30 Games; 2--$250 Jackpots JACKPOT NUMBERS 51 and 50 Extra Buses-- JUBILEE PAVILION Monster Bingo Bond Market Tested Early By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadian bonds markets were tested early this week when the Canadian National Railway came to the market with a $250,000,000 issue 27 and 6'% year bonds, The long term section of the issue was 5 per cent bond due Oct, 1, 1987, at $97% to yield 5.17 per cent, while the short term issue was 4% per cent due Oct, 1, 1967, to yleld 4.68 per cent. There was feady demand for both issues with good institutional or- ders and both long and shorts were at Issue price bid at the close on Friday, dent authority over its own af fairs, Apart from its political effect on the West Germans, who cling to the hope of reunifying their divided country, acknowled- gement of East German sover- qinty by the West would give the Russians a legal basis for forcing the withdrawal of allied troops from - West Germany as well as West Berlin, In this light, the apparently in- nocent border « crossing permits take the shape of the thin end of a dangerous wedge, which the west is no longer able to blunt as easily as it could neutralize the clumsy weapons employed in 1048, Near fishing, golf, shopping, w= Cuisine & Lounge. Reasonable color brochure, rates, write: Beach, Fla, ® Mothproofing x 200 luxurious apartments attractions, Imperial louse rates for 1, 2 bedrooms with o wd 771, Carr, Gulf Winds, P.O. ST. PETERSBURG BEACH ® Dyeing and Repairing Wall to wall corpets « Gulf of Mexico's widest beo kitchenettes, Bring family, For Be ox 6218-1, St, Petersburg © Binding end Fringing cleaned in your home 16 PRIZES OF $10 1 EACH OF $20, $30, $40, $50 SHARE THE WEALTH SATURDAY, SEPT, 17th ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM SIMCOE STREET NORTH ADMISSION 50 CENTS 2 EXTRA GAMES AT $25 CHILDREN UNDER 16 NOT ADMITTED DRIVE TO geauValley TONIGHT t 8-4681 174 MARY STREET din dn 7 man accent, The Russians now are in a sition to argue that the Berlin dis- pute is a dispute between Gers mans. Without carrying out his oft-repeated threat to formalize the situation by signing a peace treaty with East Germany, Khrushchev has achieved its ob- ject by making the East Ger- mans the instigators<of the cur- Jem pressure against West Ber- n. THE THIN EDGE The character of the new cam- paign also illustrates the change in Communist tactics, The East Not Enough Men For Hydro Strike TORONTO (CP)--The United] Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners (CLC) called a strike |against Ontario Hydro Thursday, then called it off Friday because there wasn't enough men to strike. The union threatened to strike because Hydro refused to give) employees clearing land at Little Long Rapids in Northern Ontario MRS. MITCHELL the same status as loggers, OVERSEAS IN 1961? Sailing dates now available-Book Early Donald Travel Service WHITBY-----OSHAWA---BROOKLIN--Ph, MO 8-3304 TORONTO EM 3-8958 THE SOCIETY OF INDUSTRIAL AND COST ACCOUNTANTS OF ONTARIO R.LA. Evening Lecture and Correspondence Courses cond by Universi jon, University of Torente WHITBY BRASS BAND BINGO CLUB BAYVIEW, BYRON SOUTH, WHITBY Wednesday, Sept. 21st, 8 p.m. Bus Leaves Oshawa Terminal--25¢c Return SPECIAL GAME OF $200 (Must Go) $20 each horizontal line; $100 a full card $25 ADDED EACH WEEK, NOW WORTH $125 IF WON IN 51 NUMBERS 5 games at $30; 20 games at $20 ° TWO $250 JACKPOT GAMES 15t--56; 2nd--53; $30 Consolation $1.00 ADMISSION INCLUDES ONE CARD Door Prize and Free Admission Tickets Proceeds Go To Building Fund Lecture courses in first and second year subjects leading to the degree of Registered Industrial and Cost Accountant Rial None commencing October 3rd, 1960 will be held ot O.CV.I Courses include: First Year «= Accounting | Industrial Legislation Siluatainl' Comaenisad end Management For those unable to attend evening lecture classes instruction is given through correspondence courses conducted by Me- Master University and University of Toronto, Registration Nights == 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. September 20th--Hotel Genoshe at "Student Night" meeting of Oshawa District Chapter, S.1.C.A, September 22nd and 23rd----Monteith, Monteith, Riehl & Co. 135 Simcoe St. N., Oshawa For Additional details write: BURT R. WATERS, C.A., REGISTRAR 135 Simcoe St. N., Oshéwe or telephone RA 5.3527 S d Year S WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE MONSTER BINGO MONDAY, SEPT. 19, 8. P.M. $1,300 CASH PRIZES--$100 DOOR PRIZES TWO $250 JACKPOTS ONE $150 JACKPOT (MUST GO) 20 GAMES AT $20--5 GAMES AT $30 JACKPOT NUMBERS 53 - 55 Plus free passes on right of every regular winner, 1,00 admission gives you a card and free chance on $100 Door Prize, RED BARN BUS SERVICE TO DOOR

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