NN WHITBY And DISTRICT AT ANDERSON HI GH Technical Wing Will Be Ready In 1963 ' As the result of a school | expansion program in Whitby, started during 1962, technical 1 gtudents in both 'Whitby and | Whitby Township will be able to take their technical training at Anderson Street High School early in 1963. Construction began in the spring of 1962 on a new $882 wing, with equipment pe, more than $200,000 to provide a technical education centre, ex- panded cafeteria facilities and a new nasium. When the addition is com- pleted, it will accomodate an estimated 560 students, of which more than 400 will be enrolled in technical ciasses. In addition to providing shop facilities the new two-storey wing will provide nine standard classrooms, A dozen new shops will be provided, Federal and provincial government grants, Douglas Thompson, secretary-treasurer of the Whitby and District High School Board, said will pay the cost of building the technical wing, with the exception of an 000| estimated $50,000 clothing shop. Mr, Thompson said the new wing will necessitate the hiring of six additional teachers. How- ever, he said the six teachers will not fulfil the staff compli- ment, but will be sufficient for several years. He added the new wing is not in yt to be filled for at least two years. The opening of the new An- derson High wing will provide secondary school facilities for 1,600 students fn the Whitby area, The technical wing will in- clude draghting, auto, carpentry, electric welding, clothing 1nd machine shops. In addition, a typing room for Commercial students will be provided. Ordinary chemistry labs and an advanced chemistry lab will be installed in the technical wing. The new gymnasium will pro- vide Anderson High with its third physical education class- room, The provision of expanded classroom facilities will elimi- nate students from having to carry out their studies in the same room where they eat their lunches. At present, students, because of the lack of class- room facilities are now holding classes ':, the cafeteria. New Attempt To Organize House Affairs By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA (CP)--A new con- certed attempt to organize the buginess of the Commons will be made by the government when the parliamentary session resumes, cabinet sources say. The object will be to have the Commons devote more of its time to concrete legislative ac- tion and less to rambling and inconclusive debates. There also may be an effort to make substantial changes in the Commons rules, if govern- ment and opposition parties can agree on conflicting suggestions from the two sides of the House. The first part of the current session, which started Sept. 27 and spent 60 working days be- fore its Christmas-New Year re- cess, has been described as un- productive. Only 27 days were spent on government- sponsored legislation. BLAMED GOVERNMENT Opposition groups have blamed the government, saying it has been disorganized in its scheduling of Commons busi- ness, Each day's program is an- mounced at adjournment. the evening before by the govern- ment's House leader, now i erans Minister Churchill. But tend gap is, not the government's alone. ie. BOv- ernment House leader draws up the daily agenda in consultation with opposition whips and House leaders. They rarely are in unanimous agreement. it was learned that in the last two weeks before Christmas, Mr. ----r Page! up a he gece program for louse and s mitted it to the Liberal, Social Credit and New Democratic Party leaders and whips. On virtually every point there was some disagreement. Some prominent members of the op- en geg asked the government not to bring forward particular measures on some days they were going to be away. PROPOSE LONGER AGENDA One proposal being discussed is for the government to draw up a detailed program for the period between Jan. 21, when the session resumes, and early April, when Parliament would normally adjourn for its Easter recess --assuming a general election is not called or preci- pitated before then. This program, some yovern- ment members think, should be announced in the Commons and an appeal made to the opposi- tion to try to follow it, assuming that each member is, as the rule book says, "bound to attend the service of the House, unless leave of absence has been given him by the House." Members would then be ab- seems, ladies' day. They began making news a split second after midaight when they gave birth to at least four babies--all boys -- who added their cries to Auld Lang Syne and the laughter and shouting of New Year's revellers. And they continued making news when eight of their num- ber, all housewives, and a 14- year-old girl attended Governor- General Vanier's levee in Ot- tawa. The levee traditionally is for men only, except for women in the armed services or public office. "It's all right, isn't it?" smiled one, innocently, over her stirrup cup filled with the traditional Government House hot rum and brandy punch. An aide shrugged his should- ers. The refreshments were served in a House of Commons com- mittee room after the guests were introduced to the governor- general in the red « carpeted Senate cham er. HAD BROAD SMILE ryone welcome with a smil- or Srestiog and handgh: Diane MacKay, 14, attended the levee with her father to see what it "was like." Ottawa Mayor Charlotte Whit- ton and two women diplomats were also present. The levee of Lieutenant-Gov- ernor J. Keiller Mackay of Oa- tario, so to speak, was a more New Years Day Seen Ladies Day By THE CANADIAN PRESS | New Year's Day 1963 was, .it)nor never once winced. their host. The lieutenant-g6ver-| Weather, another New Year's Day newsmaker, forced cancel- lation of the lieutenant-govern- or's levee in New Brunswick, but levees were held on sched- ule in other provinces, Born at midnight, local times, were a seven-pound, eight-ounce boy to Mr. and Mrs. Bergeron Vanier Claims Peace Starts In Individual OTTAWA (CP)--In a New Year's message to Canadians, Governor-General Vanier says that peace among nations must start in m4 heart of each in- dividual. This was sometimes forgotten he said, when individuals look to world leaders to solve prob- lems on their behalf. Peace must begin in the family and among neighbors. ~ The text of his message said in part: "The coming: of a new year gives me the opportunity to send my warmest greetings to all Canadians. I pray that in the months ahead fears will be dispersed, hopes confirmed, and, that each one of us will find despite the hustle and bustle of daily life that per- sonal, inner peace which the world alone cannot give. . , . "The tensions of the world in recent years make us mindful as never before of the necessity for understanding among na- tions. This causes us to look beyond our homes to the lead- ers of the world for action on our behalf. We are inclined to forget, however, that the seeds of peace cannot flower among nations unless first planted in the hearts of each one of us, nurtured on the strength of the family and the love of our neighbor. "One must not think, how. ever, that the road to peace is a smooth one. To take it re- quires courage, will, sacrifice jand, above ali, complete convic- ion, absolute confidence that the shining goal can be reached. This is no pilgrimage for the weak, the timid and the ere but for the strong of mind, of heart and of soul: Let us lift up our hearts and resolve to face the future girt with the| ----_-_= armor of God and having on the breastplate of righteousness." of Ottawa; a seven-pound boy to Mrs, Lioyd Guenther in Cal- gary; a five-pound, eight-ounce boy to Mrs. Florent Verreault at Roberval, Que., and a seven- pound, 10-ounce son to Mrs. Richard Bureau of Cap-de-la- Madeleine, Que. Several others FREE Have your furnace cleaned free and guaranteed trouble-free all winter, if you purchase "White a unified fuel oil from Western DIAL 725-1212 were only seconds behind. POLAR BEARS ACTIVE New Year's Day had its zany side as well. In Hamilton, six members of the Hamilton Polar Bear Club splashed among the ice floes ip Lake Ontario as a shivering crowd of 500 cheered em on. In Vancouver, 70 swimmers, including 85 -year- old Mrs. Catherine Went swimming in English Bay. There was one casualty. Tom Morgan, 16, broke his leg as he ran into the water. Icy winds and snow that brushed across much of Canada earlier in the weékend glack- ka ana 1963 begari with rising temperatures, few snowfalis an) warm breezes. Newfoundland's east coast reeled under remnants of a storm that raged through the re. gion during the weekend. Winds reached 65 miles an hour at St. John's but temperatures shocking affair. As guests shuf- fled across the carpet of the vice-regal suite at Queen's Park in Toronto many built up charges of static electricity which dispensed mild jolts when they shook hands with each week. It has also sug- gested a one-hour time limit on the daily question period, which has been running 40 to 90 min- utes a day, and has noted that private members' hours take up five hours a week. Opposition groups in the past have complained about any ex- tension of sitting hours. They say their members'. correspond- ence, committee meetings and speech research chores take up so much time that the 25%4-hour work week for Commons sit- tings is only part of their bur- en, A Liberal source suggests an alternative may be found in amending the rules to reduce duplication in debates and thus accomplish more in the time the Commons now sits. One idea is to end duplicate debates on the lution which pr intro- sent for speaking eng nts} = or private or political business in their home areas on their own responsibility, without as- surance the government would hold up business for their return to Ottawa. CAN'T AGREE Conflicting suggestions have been made for rule changes. The government has hinted at extending the hours--now 2514 in the Menday-to-Friday sittings duction of a money-spending biil and on second reading for ap- proval in principle of the bill itself. The Liberals, it is said, sug- gested this when they were in government, but the Conserva- tives then were suspicious of the move to curtail debate. The Lib. erals now think the Conserva- tives, after five years experi- ence in government, may be willing to consider the idea. climbed to around 50 degrees. A weekend blizzard in Quebec abated and temperatures rose to about five degrees above zero in Montreal and as high as 30 de- grees elsewhere in Quebec. Family Monuments Created To Individual Requirements STAFFORD BROS. MONUMENTS 318 DUNDAS EAST 668-3552- Used SKATES 1.97 Pair Plus Your Exchange Sportsman's Corner 103 BYRON ST, $. 668-4511 One bieck west of 4 Corners, turn south. Automobile Said Suicide Weapon HAMILTON (CP)--The auto- mobile is being turned into a suicide weapon, Inspector John Robinson of the Hamilton police said Tuesday. Se said police in Canada and the United States have noted an increase in deaths where the driver is alone in the car and it swerves into an abutment, tree or post for no apparent reason. Police also suspect that at- GENERAL ELECTRIC SALES & SERVICE Serving Whitby, Oshewe end surrounding eree, @ FREE PICK-UP @ FREE DELIVERY Independent Sales (Whitby) Ltd PHONE 668-2081 tention-seekers deliberately in- vite injury, either as drivers or pedestrians, he said. Studies in some U.S. communities show that many victims of fatal acci- dents were despondent before the crash It can't be proven, he said, but suspicion of suicide in many cases is getting stronger. TAWNY PATIENT LONDON (CP)--Among_ oui- patients at a London hospital is Linda, a four - month -: old lion cub. She goes there at reguiar intervals to be treated for a neck swelling. Animal hospitals aren't equipped with the neces- sary isot detectors so the wuirsy Feature BRO Cc KEvenins Shows Start 7 and 9 p.m. 2. 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