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Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Jan 1963, p. 4

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4 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, January 12, 1963 'Company Executives Back To Schoolroom By KEN SMITH jas they do ours, everyone will MONTREAL (CP)--A confer. get along much better." ence room of a modern indus-| The program has proved so trial giant hasn't much in com-|successful in its initial results mon with a schoolhouse. But|that the company is bringing a twice a week top executives of|professor from France, trained Dominion Tar and Chemical Co,|in giving special crash courses gather in such a room to bejin speaking French, to work taught French. {fulltime with Domtar officials All in all, they are about as/for at least a year. : unlikely a looking bunch of) The firm has a long waiting students as you could imagine--| list 0 some are greying, some arejin the course. : : balding, some are battling a And now Domtar is consider- middle-aged spread. ing applying the same_ tech. But all are intensely enthusi-|niques used in_ the French astic, course to teach English to its "We started the program be. French-speaking employees. cause we felt people living in) The courses used by Domtar Quebec with French-speaking|were developed after y persons and working with them|study at the Ecole Normale f persons anxious to enrol|speaking French, But what the ears. of|mand of 3,000 words--enough to _ exchange from 1014 to Closed-Circuit Telephones Aids Children MONTREAL (CP)--Quebec's first closed - circuit telephone system. for children has gone into operation at the Rockland Avenue school for handicapped children in Montreal. The circuit consists of 20 work- ing telephones connected to an old magneto switchboard that until a few mont' ago was used lin the telephone office at Ste. |Martine, Que. company considers important is) The school's |that they lay the groundwork |carries a small cable connect ifor making a man effectively|ing telephones on the three bilingual, floors to the small fry switch- Professor Gilles Bibeau, now board. The school building is no teaching the courses, says they|stranger to telephone systems. can give a man a working com-\It served as Bell Telephone's week sessions of two hours each |for about 30 weeks. | The emphasis is on conversa- tional French, teaching correct pronunciation and emphasis. MUST PRACTISE How good are the courses? No graduate would be taken, at leas{ at first, for anything |but an English-speaking person | laundry chute get by. May Place Ban On Duck Hunting By DON HANRIGHT OTTAWA (CP)--The prospect of prohibiting duck hunting for one or two years may not be as remote as some hunters think. The ornithologists making such proposals are no mere alarmists. They are regarded as expert and responsible men who know what they are talking about, These men. say the ducks are in danger. And these are the men on whose recommenda:|yp "a terrific fight." tions the shooting laws are) made from year to year--the) Piveawod = Bs lad drought men who had the bag limits) hack and ruddy ducks. 'They jnest in the yegetation around reduced last fall. A shooting ban would be an'the ¢d, i extreme step. But within the Some of the even bei» 3 last few years it has been seri- ducks such recent speech to the Montreal Audubon Society. by Roy E. Coy, a naturalist from Mis- souri. He said duck hunting in North America should be pro- hibited for a couple of years. EXPECTS OPPOSITION _Mr. Coy said conservation so cieties favor abandoning shoot- ling. But vested interests--he singled out the manufacturers and sellers of hunting equip- ment--could be expected to put sowmanyy ing kasi sy i Ata ceabipongmense's | More important, he says, tha should learn to speak their lan- Superieure at St. Cloud, near t f is a foundation on which guage as they have learned to Paris. to tems one of the' ously considered at least once by the Canadian Wildlife Serv- ice, the federal agency within Teachers find magneto sys- * therapeutic tools available because young- { as mallards may nest a mile away, but still need water to rear their young. This situation has given fresh the resources department. limpetus to a save-the-duck idea For three years low water|borrowed from the United levels on the prairie breeding States. To prevent farmers grounds have gravely reduced/from draining their ponds and the duck population, The de-|sioughs, the U.S. government cline can be traced back fur- jakes an easement in return for ther, to 1958, though there was'a cash settlement on contracts a slight recovery in 1959. ranging from 20 to 99 years, NEED MORE SNOW In effect, it is a farmers' Dr. David Munro, chief orni- pli ge Ay egy el |thologist for the Wildlife Serv-\Dreduee the' continent' duck - swabs an agro! hg if population, j the situation gets worse the out- * vine | right abolition of hunting will pa ue Piles bene By again be "very seriously COn- heavily applied in North and sidered. _ South Dakota, Ohio and Min- However, he stressed that it nesota. This area once produced still is too early to predict how|a large share of the North next fall's shoot will be con-|American duck population but trolled, This will depend onjnow, due to drainage, turns out several factors. less than 10 per cent. 1 Ghee LOST EAGLE RETURNS TO ROOST snatched from its perch in tion or who returned it. In the front of the W. H. Brown Im- above photo a 'bystander at: ca Re tempts to loop a rope around plements store on New Year's the eagle so that it will not eve. Town Police are unable be spirited away again. to say. who took the decora- --Oshawa Times Photo speak ours," says Domtar per-- Two courses are used--an build. i sonnel director D. M. Matheson. eight-week crash program in, "'If the pupil wants to learn, sters use superhuman efforts "Tf we can do them the cour-/which the student attends|and is willing to talk with lifting receivers av" turning | "Practice and usage is essen- replaced in a sehon' for handi- |tial if the courses are to be capped childrex caught the really effective. But at least he youngsters' attention before it lorganized by a cubmaster inPoys needed from those who) The toughest test for several 1931 to keep depression - era|Show up," Brown said. _ Officials who. have completed youngsters out of trouble has| After that sports director Ken|the courses or are well along trey and Frank Peden instruct eg. ee : |through the efforts of Henry ae eats pe meg branch out rhe eengpe te ENROLLED : Dent, newly - elected chairman) quck inventory in the south, re- TRY U.S. IDEA |White: has helped develop such, 2 ee ee eros that Seceuse of pote ahead Boles of se gare mig lower sults of which will be known| If the same thing happened on National Hockey League play-/.oiq. ' ' r courses,| mainland committee of the New\this month. Another is thejhe Canadian Prairies it could and the possibility of other funds} sion. a trip to Cuba as the guest of) til) another factor is the next two " . : : ; : . § s years. Federal lawyers 5 ns leoming from the Edmonton and! The courses use visual im- | Fidel Castro. amount of snowfall the Prairies\already are tryi s KS; "| Distni jati i ' ' rying to work out Chicago Black Hawks; Ken Mc-/njistnict Hockey Association wejages and tape recordings to| He said Mr. Cox should be|get this winter. "So far ita draft easement that. will be ltesy of speaking their language'classes full time, and twice-a- French-speaking people, read |cranks to" operate the phones ae Posies -~|French newspapers and listen and switchboard, D ion Spawns will know how to pronounce the could be moved out. words so he can be understood NDP Chairman |proved to be an efficient spawn- McAuley and three coaches take/in them came «recently when ling ground for they held a press conference junior A ranks," lers of the present and past as|pacr Nothing concrete has|they could handle most of the|/Democratic Party, announced) hunter-kill survey carried out in/be disastrous for the ducks, Norm Ullman, Bruce MacGre- a oa eePherees 8 be able to proceed in this plant words and how to pro-/expelled from the party. doesn't look good at all," Dr.|acceptable to farmers--a sort \for ' , | direction. nounce them in the student's! x4 Dent said he will oppose| Munro said, of lease. If water levels went ito French radio or teievision, Small fry telephone systems Pro Hockey Squads --that's something you cannot professional | Ve! |hockey players. done bui with the increased) questions, except for some tech: |Friday he will contest the nom-/most of the provinces and all! To forestall such a develop- gor and Billy McNeill of Detroit 'former Montreal Canadiens de- Th lanned ansion is de-|mind. Only toward the end is i oO , , : ; ' e planned expansion 1: | . : e 1S\Mr. Cox for the nomination in| Typical of the way in which down anyway, farmers. still programs, he can increase his originated *~ 'mw A'borta ability very quickly. when an old switchboard being By WALTER KREVENCHUK |cruit. 'All we do is advertise Our Jearn just by studying verb EDMONTON (CP) -- A club|teams' practices and pick the! forms from a book." : reson pot yoi ee with French-speaking reporters Of Castro Pal * jjuvenile squad and Gordon But-|in Quebec City. : The Edmonton Maple Leaf ' ; , . . 3 Ne Laese Association, founded VANCOUVER (CP)--Norman| One of these is the mid-winter \fund-raising campaign brought|nical ones, sufficiently well in| ination of Burnaby MLA Cedric]of the states in the U.S. That/ment. the American i | paign {nl y well r aby : states he U.S. That| ment, an idea will be Red Wings; Johnny Bucyk of On by the Detroit withdrawal|French to make a good impres-/Cox, now under party fire for] result will appear in the spring.|tried out, perhaps within the Missing since New Year's {Boston Bruins; Len Lunde of) eve, Bowmanville's four and a half foot high cast iron eagle has been returned to its robst. \fenceman, and brothers Neil | The 400-pound bird was | LP a A S_vel\signed to give local youngsters|an attempt made to delve into ,n,. n : i » si is ' The 400-p _ bird wa land Mac Colville, former Rang-|>hetter chance to make a jun-|the complexities of grammar any future B.C. election. the situation is Tegarded is alwould be able to use the land. Silence Draws Reward In Tiny Leichtenstein By LOYAL GOULD VADUZ, Liechtenstein (AP)-- There's no railroad station in| this capital of the principality) of Liechtenstein. International) jers stars. ; hockey. 1 and word forms. Mr. Cox in a telephone mar | A host of other players have egies Moe on Edmonton Oil) Persons now taking the view with The Sun from Cuba jmade their mark in minor pro-|nj,,. : F ' |Friday, replied to the criticisms jmad . Pro-\Kings are the only junior team| Courses sound like a Who's: Who) o¢ k b ina fessional and amateur ranks) and they don't seem to take/for Domtar. t party spokesmen by saying: after starting off with the or-|vepy many loca! players,"'| The list includes Wilfred N. ; a none of their business | ganization. Hnowd eat slats what do in my own time. ling three hockey teams -- two) : ; Hall, president; James G. Wy-| Ye said h | This year the club is sponsor- lie, 'vice-president of finance:|s meorerentetive of the Vereen midget and one juvenile--with 60 players. Several years ago it ° Ralph M. Collins, vice-president| yer Fair Play for Cuba Com- Non-RC Marriage and Chisnivai ype poolegh gar mittee. The committee, he said,| j also provided financing and or- L ] J d S lesion aS taumk viessinten\t not "Commutrist' 'and' it was| § east to west at its widest point.|ment, which his grandfather set| ganization for soccer, baseball ega ' uw ge ays land managing director of Dom-|ton the ba got off the Red) | The Austrian princes of Liech-jup in 1921, sees to that. Aside! and football teams but withdrew] MONTREAL (CP) -- A mar-|tar Packaging Limited: E. A aiting tack. tees tenstein bought the territory/from opening. and closing Par-|trom these to concentrate On| riage between two Roman Cath-| Thompson, vice - president and | from two other bankrupt noble-|liament, signing measures &P-|hockey, olics cannot be annulled just be-|managing director of Domtar CAESAR'S MONTH jmen and founded the state in proved by Parliament and ap-| Operation of teams this year|cause it was performed by a|Construction Materials Limited;| July was originally the sev- trains pass through the country/1713. : proving the legislators' choice of | wit) cost $4,500 and club person-| Protestant minister, Judge J. P.|H. E. Mason, vice - president\enth month of the Roman cal- but don't stop. Liechtenstein has} Switerland ane Austria are ah er _-- pena are holding cribbage tourna-iCharbonneau of Quebec Sup-!and managing director of Dom-|endar and was called Quintilis,| no daily newspapers, no a neigh te eine paces -- N€/ments and raffles, selling pro-|rior Court ruled Friday. tar Pulp and Paper Limited; |It was later named Julius to| ports, no customs officials, no) The Swiss supply ned ats grams and soliciting business-| He rejected a petition from|and the personne! director, Mr.|honor Julius -Caesar--born in} July. army. | guards, diplomatic representa-| The prince controls a large|men for donations. Mrs. franc , 39, to s With 17,125 residents, Liech-|tion abroad, and use of their/share of the wine adiatey | -- posge Belge Pa hast tenstein is a cozy country that|currency. From the Austrians|which produces red and white|AID CUT OFF nulled on grounds that it wast j r pp has survived the wars and tur-|come most of the legal system) Vaduzer. Little of it is left to} "We were forced to get off not legal. BEGINS WHERE THE OTHER BIG ONES LEAVE OFF! moil that have swept Europe for|plus rich pastries and meat/send abroad after Liechtenstein|our complacent backsides this} Evidence was that the couple |had been married in Kenogami, centuries. dishes swimming in cream'consumers buy theirs--at $2.50|)year when Detroit, with whom The Liechtensteiners have no|sauces. a bottle. we had a verbal agreement, i 2 Unite developed tourist attractions. The ruling monarch is Franz) the income the prince de-|Stopped a $2,500 annual payment| Gharch "minister." Riv. erat "You're welcome to come|Joseph II. A shy, retiring man rives from industrial and farm|they had made for the last eight| Milley : here," said farmer Gunther Vo-|of 56, the prince lives in a castle/ holdings in western Europe is|years," Vice - president Don) Mr. Justice Charbonneau said geli, "but we don't go out of our/atop a hill on the outskirts of! substantial but not enough to let| Brown said. all appropriate authorities may way to get you here." Vadus. He owns the castle and)him jive extravagantly. The association recently an-|perform marriagse "'irrespec- Liechtenstein lies in the centre) the surrounding | acre or 80 Of] 1 i ntenstein's specialty is/Mounced it had severed relations|tive of the religious beliefs ol! of Europe. Covering 62 square|land, plus vineyards Liech.|the registration of foreign com- with Detroit Red Wings. \the parties concerned." miles, it stretches 17 miles north His rights are ors ee "| panies whose directors need not} 'We don't have any unusual! He cited jurisprudence estab- to south and about seven miles'tenstein s 15-member Parlia-| cide in this country of reason-|ttaining program," Brown said.|lished 50 years ago to support|= a io 5 able taxes. No list of these is|"! guess the best players turned|his finding. The 50-year-old rul- e e ff ever published, discretion being] Out in the vast number of young-|Napoleon Charbonneau, his fa- UX. Tories Stiffen Market Attitudes part of the service offered. Gov-|Sters that have played on ourjing was made by Mr. Justice By FRASER WIGHTON based on a major Common-|ing Swiss neighbors are Protes- pursue its current negotiations the last few months. istry occupy the ground floor.| result of "proper firmness in ference last fall that Britain}ens Party, The other party, the| eign Secretary Edward Heath, RED BARN ernment officials say 5,000 tojteams."' Napoleon Charbonneau, his fa 6,000 such firms are signed up| The association doesn't re- ther. LONDON (Reuters) -- Signs|Wealth initiative." tants, but the Liechtensteiners, are Gooden here that a grow-| Political observers said the like the Austrians, are largely sr the European Common! _ Observers also said, however, The infrequently used jail is in| 4 Faery ries ies that the aim of some Of the|the basement. epta "sj would go into Europe "on al- Union, is likewise Roman Cath-} ad pbs ony pein Rnanoml most any terms." olic and conservative. Britain's chief Common Market negotiator, on his latest Brussels ADMISSION--$1.00 THURSDAY | MAR | CONTINUOUS SUNDAY FROM 1:30 | : ELIS HAL oF a x ' smu STEVENS: sur SLATE: ue GOOOWN. TECHWICOLOR™ "ssa al gent | FEATURE DAILY AT. . . 1:40-- 3:35 -- 5:35 -- 7:40 -- 9:45 DAILY FLIGHTS DIRECT TO HAWAII Every day Empress service . . . complimentary champagne ... special 23-day fares! This Is the wonderful new way to sunny Hawaii! Fly to these "Pleasure Isles" any day you choose. 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Government House is a three- ; Supporters are toughening their}over the way negotiations are storey building. The' 12-man po- PROUD LM attitude on how Britain should|g0ing: had possibly doubled in lice force and the interior min-| ? help the government by offset-\of three full-time government| fone eeceety Oe Sealy uae the impression after the) ministers, is a member of the| Me ee "tecemnition" that the| Conservative party annual con-| country's largest party, the Citi- Significantly, this came hard on the heels of a progress report to Parliament by Deputy For- | 1] Old Time -- Modern DANCE PARTY PAT RICCIO & HIS ORCHESTRA n . = a, PAVILION *7 B, F OSHAWA y | here for an annual fee of $100.) t7.U stead © 2-BIG HITS! ing number of the Conservative| motion suggested the number of Roman Catholics A parliameniary_ motion signatories might be merely to} Premier Gerard Batliner, one) voters ogg tea Mt. talks with the representatives of the six Market nations--France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg. The liamentarians headed by Sir Donald Kaberry, in their motion congratulated Heath on his "'fi . . « in_resisting) proposals which would precipi- tate a rise in the cost of food and prejudice the methods avail- able to Parliament for safe- guarding the living standards of} those engaged in agriculture. The motion said equal firm-| ness would be required in deal-| ing with proposals of the Six] affecting sovereignty, the Com-| monwealth and the British-led European Free Trade Associa-| tion. The motion urged the govern-| ment "to formulate as soon as possible an alternative policy 4 "ey 2sr ynusvh WOW...ADD A MOTION PICTURE TO THE WONDERS OF be HAROLD HECHT Prodetion TARAS BULBA SAM WANAMAKER BRAD DEXTER GUY ROLFE PERRY LOPEZ macresty Windsh Sataiot | Fete toe CHRISTINE KAUFMANN WAL00 SALT KARL TUNBERG alte Gets tnt ene | 1 L LEE THOMPSON HAROLD HECHT PANAVISION EASTMANCOLOR woetaunce | | TODAY! SUNDAY! PLEASE NOTE TIMES! 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