Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Jan 1963, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, Jonuary 25, 1963 GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN DON BROWN WINS JAYCEES' PLAUDITS That was a well-deserved tribute paid this week by the Ostiawa Jaycees to their colleague, Jaycee Senator Don Brown, one of the founders of the organization locally more than 15 years ago. It would be difficult to amply repay Mr. Brown (he re- ceived the rare honor of a Jaycee senatorship in 1956) for his uhique contribution to the Jaycees, to civic life, generally. Tt takes a lot of time and hard work to get an organi- zation of this type func- tioning effectively, but the potential of such a group, especially in the way of ren- dering public service, is enormous. Oshawa's Jaycees have done an effective job in by- gone years, if at times their ranks were thin and the club treasury almost de- pleted. What local organization can surpass, even equal the ach- jevements of the Oshawa Jaycees in the specialized and highly important field of "effective services render- ed in the promotion of pub- lic interest in municipal poli- tics."" (with their highly suc- cessful Town Hall Forum)? It isn't the fault of the Jaycees that the popular vote last December in Oshawa's municipal election skidded te-the appalling figure of 46.9 percent (as compared with 51.7 percent at the previous election in 1960. Without the Jaycees (and the Oshawa and District Labor Council which also presents a municipal election forum) this figure would undoubtedly be a lot lower; aside from the Oshawa Rotary Club (with its impressive Civic Day Luncheon annually), few local organizations, officially at least, attempt to stimulate any interest in municipal politics, which is one of the key reasons so much apathy exists today. DON BROWN LABOR COUNCIL, ODBA BUCK PUC It is a hopeful sign to note these days that the executives of the Oshawa and District Labor Council and the Oshawa Downtown Businessmen's Association are united once again in a common cause, as they were last year when several groups banded together to put up a united community front for the removal of the King street CNR tracks. The ODLC and the ODBA are up in arms this time against a common enemy, the Oshawa Public Utilities Com- mission which recently refused to install street-lighting on the facing of buildings (as requested by the aforementioned.) The ODLC and the ODBA want the lighting to synchronize with the King street clean-up plan -- they are especially indignant because the PUC has suggested, among other things, that the plan was unworkable as some of the down- town buildings suggested for the lights have been condemned. Excessive cost was another PUC reason given. The ODLC complained to Council this week that the PUC handled the request in an 'unsatisfactory manner." WHO ACTUALLY OWNS THIS PUBLIC SCHOOL ? School trustees can, and do, find themselves with some knotty legal problems, ones that could easily test the skill of a battery of Philadelphia lawyers. If you don't think so ask the Oshawa Board of Education, several of whose members are in a bit of a tizzy (to put it mildly) over this question:: Who owns the old Thornton's Road Public School, the two-storey, red brick structure adjacent to the old Thorn- ton's Corners Sunday School ? Does it belong to the Board, the City or the old East Whitby Township Board of Education, all of whom seem to have some reasonable claims on it? This much is known: The Oshawa Board of Edu- cation acquired the school conditionally in 1951 on amal- gamation with parts of East Whitby Township, the con- OTTAWA (CP) -- Canadian trade with Communist nations is "suicidal stupidity," says So- cial Credit Leader Robert Thompson. "We are so blinded by the profit motive or by political ex- pediency that w eare digging our own graves," he said Thurs- day in a Commons foreign pol- icy debate which Opposition Leader Pearson will continue oday. "We will trade ourselves into defeat and slavery," Mr. Thompson said. The issue was more critical than the question of nuclear arms. Mr. Thompson, along with Paul Martin (L---Essex East) and T. C. Douglas, New Demo- cratic Party leader, pressed the government for a statement on nuclear policy. But neither of the govern- ment's two spokesmen -- Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Green jand his parliamentary §secre- jtary, Heath Macquarrie-- {touched on nuclear weapons policy in the day-long debate Mr. Douglas, again urging a non-nuclear policy, said it is |shameful that the government |has not yet made a clear-cut statement on the issue, "T urge the government to {come out from behind this screen of doubletalk and take a stand,' said Mr. Douglas. 'I }say to the government; 'If you |have made a mistake in giving commitments, then be honest jand renegotiate those commit- }ments both in NATO and in | NORAD. | "The Canadian people will |forgive you if you have made jan honest error in judgment Both Groups 'Sit Tight' On Spending By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP)--Both govern- ment and opposition groups adopted "'sit tight" attitudes to. |day in the impending crisis lover parliamentary approval of {the government's spending pro- | gram. The cabinet met for several {hours Thursday, apparently to Red China Trade Called Suicidal But they will not forgive you if you make a transparent at. tempt to deceive them by re- fusing nuclear arms with one hand and buying them with the other,' " Mr. Green dwelt mainly on Canada's role in disarmament negotiations. He said Canada is involved in this question because "we just happen to lie between the two great nuclear powers." In a nu- clear war Canada's cities would be destroyed. Mr. Green said he believed Oct. 27 at the height of the Cuba crisis 'that before morning Ot- tawa might be demolished as well as Montreal, Toronto and my home city of Vancouver." Mr. Green said the United States acted with firmness and moderation in the Cuban epi- sode. U.S. ON TOP | "No longer is it a question | of two great equal nuclear pow- ers," he said. 'I suggest that jat the present time the U.S. is |beyond any shadow of doubt) preponderant in power." | The minister added that he| § U.S. will not adopt a policy "of) getting tough with their allies." Mr. Martin said President Kennedy displayed firmness in |the Cuba crisis but "I do not believe the same can be said |for the government of Canada jin that same situation." } The government's record in lthe crisis justified public con- cern over direction given by the | government. Mr. Green's tele- |vision statements at the time : had contributed considerably to| Clears a passage through ice lack of public confidence. in the Kingston, Ont., harbor Mr. Macquarrie ee | to allow the ferry Wolfe Is- x y a | Geen as saving at that time: | lander to. continue crossing | we are standing by them." He said that if Mr. Green had) said anything to increase panic| he would not have been dis- | charging his responsibilities. YEAR FOR TRADE Mr. Green said 1963 will be n extremely significant trade year for all parts of the world and particularly for Canada. | There ws great shifting in) opPraAWA (CP) --Three doc- Europe and the Commonwealth| tors said in a report made pub. was ina state of flux, The woFld|jic Thursday that Canada's con- had moved into a new era. trol - Mr, Martin said there was|basically good, but needs more nothing in the minister's state-| stare more flexibility, and a ment to indicate any orientation| wate' ¢yg committee to. keep jof Canadian foreign policy to} check én it. The tug Salvage Prince a y of new wonder drugs is in sane re CFA Asks Special By DENNIS ANDERSON WINDSOR, Ont, (CP)--Estab- lishment of a vocational train- ing program geared to the spe- cial needs of agriculture is urged by the Canadian Federa- tion of Agriculture. Delegates to the CFA annual meeting capped off three days of policy-making Thursday by endorsing this and a host of other resolutions submitted by pound on butter be in the support price. port for resolutions 3 compulsory cooking of: fed to hogs and stricte: ures on inspection and of movement of feeder through community auatio markets, The a Training Program dations were that the present federal subsidy of 12 cents & with a four-cent cut to 6 cents Hog producers received sup- to Wolfe Island, three miles across the St, Lawrence from Kingston, where residents face their toughest winter in years. The ferry operates on an erratic schedule because CLEARS PATH FOR FERRY of the ice, The tug costs $500 a day and islanders are ask- ing the Ontario government to increase it 66 2/3 per cent subsidy to 100 per cent. --(CP Wirephoto Watchdog Committee For Drugs Requested mittee of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, said all the risk of using new pharmaceuticals can never be completely eliminated But new drugs should be en- couraged rather than restricted by: law. d discuss whether to attempt|trance into the new era. -- through a formal motion to sus-| There was no appreciation by pend Commons rules and thus|the government of the conse. obtain rapid passage of the pro-| quences of Britain failing to get gram, However, ministers de-| into the European Common clined to talk about any deci-| Market. Such failure would sions taken. mark a very significant retreat | A new election was being|in the opportunity to advance freely forecast in discussions on| world peace and western unity. Parliament Hill with dates! Mr. Green said there will be ranging from Monday, April 1,| More peace-keeping work to be or Monday, April 8, to the first}done by the United Nations, if two Mondays in May--May 6 disarmament measures were and 13. achieved. Canada was ideally Meanwhile, Veterans Minister situated for such a role. |Churchill, the government) ag, House leader, and Stanley -- ergy Min- Knowles (NDP--Winnipeg North . ' j At ister Diefenbaker had given a Son ae ees oe ae particular commitment to the |take into account Canadian en-| The doctors, a special com- The committee was heade INTERPRETING THE NEWS 'Paris-Bonn Pact ~Misgivings Felt By ALAN HARVEY ! Canadian Press Staff Writer |France, with the tacit if reluc- History revels in perversities.|tant approval of Chancellor It did so this week. Adenauer of Germany, appeared Ever since the Franco-Prus-|to be sian war of 1870, advocates of|Paris-Bonn axis concerned less la United Europe have yearned with Atlan'ic solidarity than {by Dr, F. S. Brien, head of the medical department of the Uni- | versity of Western Ontario, and | included Dr, E. A. Sellers, head |of the pharmacology depart- |ment, University of Toronto, and Dr. R. Roger Dufresne, di- rector of the medicine depart- 8 | ment, University of Montreal. Health Minister Monteith, ta- bling their report in the Com- supports the conclusions, It had already moved to increase the staff of the food and drug di- rectorate examining and ap- proving new drugs. ASKS FOR INQUIRY The minister last May invited the Royal College of Physicians President de Guulle forjto form a committee to look) into Canada's drug control sys- jtem after a number of mal. formed babies were born to setting the seal on a|mothers who took the tranquil-| |lizer thalidomide in the early Stages of pregnancy. mons, said the government fully} provincial member tions. ranging from support of in- creased import of manufac- tured goods from Communist China to approval of the prin- ciple of a national authority for the dairy industry. The more than 150 delegates endorsed with only one amend- ment the policy statement and resolutions adopted by the Dairy Farmers of Canada at its meeting last week. Among the dairy recommen- organiza- From the 90 resolutions co3- , the ting committed the CFA to policies * tributed to two hog cholera out- breaks in the last two years, were approved unai a bbe ye ores rvs sty urged to consider possibili of a contributory self. fund which would provide ° tary exports credit for countries wishing to buy Canadian wheat. The meeting also asked the federal government to "accord reasonable access to the Cana- dian market to goods of Chinese manufacture," a move backed by western grain growers as a necessary ene if Communist China is to continue buying Ca- nadian wheat. Two-Part By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA (CP) -- There is nothing quite so frustrating for a politician as losing his voice, as External Affairs Minister Green did in the Commons) Thursday. | But there are many prece-; dents for delivering Commons speeches in two or more parts. Mr. Green laboring with a cold and husky throat when he opened the two-day debate on foreign affairs and defence. Fi- nally he had to sit down, prom- ising to complete his speech later. The rules limit remarks to 30 or 40 minutes, under varying circumstances, for back-bench MPs, But the prime minister and leader of the opposition, ministers introducing measures and opposition spokesmen mak- ing the initial reply, have un- limited time. Prime Minister Diefenbaker, making his first major address in the parliamentary session of 1960, spoke for the best part of two days. Tales of long-winded speeches are a favorite of all politi- cians, especially those yziven to 'making lengthy orations themselves. One that Mr. Diefenbaker tells frequently is about the politician who, after speaking for two hours, said: "I have spoken about the generations past, and about the present generation. Now, I would like | to say something about the unborn generation." - "You better hurry up," says WELL MATURED DREGS Green Delivers Speech a voice from the audience, "or they'll be here before you finish," One of the shortest speeches in parliamentary records was |delivered by Sir William Baker, a London alderman, after @ blistering attack on him by Wil- liam Pitt, who accused him of making immense sums by frau- dulent contracts. "Prove it," said Sir William, and sat down. Explorers Group Formed At Audley By MRS. FRED PUCKRIN AUDLEY -- Ten ladies at- tended the first meeting of the Audley UCW, in the church re- cently. Mrs. G, Astley conduct- ed the business. Mrs. Bob Par- ion was named as supply set- retary, to replace Mrs. 5 Cowie. Mrs. Bob Pardon led the worship service, assisted by Mrs. F. Murray and Mrs, Bert Guthrie. Mrs. Fred Puckrin gave a story 'New Year Re- |solution" from the book "In the |Shadow of the Nine Dragons". The president led a discussion on UCW activities during the past year and the possibilities for this year. An Explorers group has been organized. The first meeting s held at the home of the er, Mrs. Fred Puckrin. All ls in the community from @ 12 are invited to attend. Mr. Kenneth Thompson, Van- couver, called on his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. G. K, Pratt on Sunday. Many from here will remem- the fact that the $6,048,214,650| ©2"adian people to introduce in spending program has come so| close to the end of the fiscal) year without getting approval. | Mr. Churchill said the pro- position co-operation, within! three weeks. The time that should have been spent on it, he} charged, was consumed by the opposition in debating additions to the original spending esti- gram could be voted, with op-| | the UN a resolution condemning |for a reconcilition between the Soviet -imperialism. This had! not been done. Mr. Thompson said Canadian forces cannot be "sitting ducks' lat each other across the |Moselle, the French with their for an enemy armed with supe-|febrile genius diluted by dogged rior weapons. However, he did|individualism, the Germans re- not say definitely whether he|lentlessly collective, waiting thinks Canada should obtain nu-|herd-like to be led. into the clear arms. slaughter of Verdun or Pass- Both he and Mr. Martin urged|chendaels or E! Alamein. with Franco-German hegemony a '"'francocentric' communit turning its back on the ne world, | Similarly the London Daily|@sreeing with an absolute pro |Mail said it now has alarms| hibition on the drugs for clinica land misgivings about a treaty| "esearch. th. before de Gaulle's keep-Britain- recommendations 7 detailed with | Thalidomide and lysergic acid two great continental powers. |in Europe: or as one London|diethylamide, used in mental Instead they sat there glaringjpublication puts it, with/health research and treatment, were banned later by an act W/of Parliament. The doctors said : ithey would not go that far, dis.|?US- Archeologists found a large at only a week or so ago--| The doctors' committee made} for NICOSIA (Reuters) -- Sedi- ment of wine believed to be 1,700 years old was found re- cently during excavations at an- cient Paphos, in western Cyp- ber Joseph Henry Madill Windsor who died, at the age o! _|heap of potsherds on the mos- j/aic floor of a room. 'recent years. 91, on December 31. Mr. Ma- dill was born in Audley, and re- tained his interest in this com- munity. He had been back to worship in the new church in |\that Canada join. the Organiza-| This week in Pari- two eld- | | |tion of American States. erly statesmen signed a treaty,| Mr. Thompson called for ajapparently fulfilling the old] Commonwealth trade confer-|dream of Franco German) out press conference -- would|changes in departmental regu-| have been welcomed a 'great! lations governing the introduc-| achievement." tion of new drugs. It said there|EUCHRE, Fernhill Park Clubhouse, TEEN-AGE DANCE |should be more flexibility forjevery Friday, 8 p.m. sharp. Freeze out. dition being (some trustees believe) that the property would revert back to the old mates for 27 days. "Utterly false,' cried Mr Knowles. For 16 months, since Sept. 28, 1961, the government East Whitby School Board when the building was no longer needed for school use. The Oshawa Board oper- ated the school for 18 months but closed it in September, 1953. It has been used by "various groups. since (in- cluding those of the CRA) i for meetings; but confusion Increased recently when the Special Committee of the Board, unaware of the old agree- ments and believing the school to be the Board"s property, granted a Boy Scout Troop permission to meet there. "You can't grant such permission," protested one trus- tee, "because that property doesn't rightfully belong to the Board." » "Then who is the rightful owner?" asked another trustee. Trustee Margaret Shaw insists that it belongs to the Board. Nobody seemed to know, but J. Ross Backus, Board administrator, suspects that the City was the rightful owner (Board of Works yard crews have kept the weeds cut in recent years). He will contact City Hall to get the matter settled. Meanwhile, Thornton's Road Public School remains the perfect example of a school without an owner. J. ROSS BACKUS TOO MANY "OBSERVERS" CAN SPOIL THE STEW Alderman John Dyer rightfully moved in Council recently that the next vacancy on the seven-man Oshawa Planning Board should go to a Labor representative (and the Council went along with it). ; i Mr. Dyer struck home with another sound suggestion, one that will not endear him to many -- that was when he suggested that there were currently too many "observers" 'on the Planning Board, people with credentials to meetings, but lacking authority to vote. Mr. Dyer tried to be diplomatic about it all, but it was easy to see what was on his mind -- too many "special interest" group representatives are admitted under the "ob- server" status and some of these people serve as a deterrent to free expression by regular Board members who desire (and rightfully so) privacy when. discussing highly confiden- tial matters. ('Some Board members point-blank refuse to discuss important business under such conditions, Can you blame them ?" asked Mr. Dyer). "Observers" are not permitted to such privileged muni- cipal atmospheres as special committee meetings of Council. It may be advisable to admit "observers" from such groups as the Board of Education, the Separate School Board and the PUC, but what about those representatives from the Real Estate and Building worlds? Are they legally entitled to such privileges ? The seven-man Board is composed of four appointees by City Council, two councillors and the mayor. a had been financing itself by temporary grants from Parlia-! ment. | And though it placed its spending program hefore Par- liament Feb. 11, 1962, the gov- ernment--which controls what business is brought into the House for debate--hadn't asked the Commons to deal with the estimates except for three days last fall, after which the gov- lernment switched the business to other matters. It has been estimated the |government needs approval of} |the spending program by March |8 so as not to default on its | debts. In the Commons, Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker told Mr Knowles there will be no clo- sure on debate applied by his |government. Mr. Knowles had |inquired about use of closure-- a device to limit debate--"in }any form." J. W. Pickersgill | vista-Twillingate) has decribed }@ government proposal to waive ithe rules so that the spending |program can be dealt i |quickly as a form of closure | 'Crash Kills Boy, | Police Lay Charge | TORONTO (CP) --One boy| was killed and another seri- |ously injured Thursday when a | Station wagon ran on to the sidewalk and smashed them 50 |feet through a chain-link fence behind a Toronto home. Michael, Charkow, 8, son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Charkow of Toronto, was killed. Myron |Szezur, 7, son of Mr. and Mrs | Konstantyn Szezur, was taken | to hospital with serious head in- (L--Bona- | ence and exploration of the pos-|friendship. It should have been sibility of a common market/a great occasion, but there with the U.S. were disturbing undertones. | | WEATHER FORECAST Partly Cloudy _Weather Seen Forecasts issued by the Tor-| very cold. Winds westerly 15 to onto weather office at 4:30 a.m.|20. : ; EST: | Algoma region, Sault Ste. 'Began |Marie: Partly cloudy today with Synopsis: No major break inja few snowflurries or snow- the cold is indicated, However,|Squalls near Lake Superior. winds will gradually diminish|Mainly cloudy Saturday with and temperatures will show) Scattered snowflurries, continu- |some moderation through today|ing cold. Winds westerly 15. on in southern On-| Forecast Temperatures |Low tonight, high Saturday Lake St. Clair, western Lake| windsor 5 Erie, southern Lake Huron, |st. Thomas. |western Lake Ontario, western||ondon Niagara regions, Windsor, Lon-| don, Hamilton, Toronto: Sunny | Wingham sees with a few cloudy intervals to-| Hamilton ......... day. Partly cloudy with slight!st. Catharines..... moderation in temperatures pes Saturday. Winds southwest 15 to 25 today, southwest 15 Satur-)Trenton day. |Killaloe Eastern Lake Erie, eastern|Muskoka ......... Niagara eastern Lake Ontario, |North BAP, civasen northern Lake Huron, southern|Sudbury .. . Georgian Bay regions: Variable|Earlton cloudiness, scattered snowflur-| Kapuskasing . ries and local snowsqualls with|White River.. drifting snow today. Partly cloudy with a few snowflurries Saturday. Temperatures mod: erating slightly: Winds south- west 15 to 25 today, southwest! 15 Saturday. Haliburton, northern Georgian Bay, Timagami, White River, seeeee Mount Forest..... Timmins juries. Donald Campbell, 49, of Tor- |onto was charged with criminal| negligence causing death. | NEED FUEL OIL... | DAY OR NIGHT Cochrane regions, North Bay, Sudbury: Mainly sunny today. Partly cloudy with a few snow-| flurries Saturday, Continuing GOOD FOOD Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12-2 P.M. Hotel Lancaster REAL ESTATE -- INSURANCE 728-6344 -|secret Voicing a common British ;Suspicion, the newspaper asks |whether the new treaty has a f clause enabling Ger-| |many to become a clandestine} jnuclear partner of France, | |the health minister sale when such action is needed the Reporters who covered the) the drug's real effectiveness. signing of the treaty felt there was something disturbing about| MAY TAKE YEARS the way in which principals at| 'It. may be many years be- the first press conference brus-|fore any unanimity of opinion quely refused to answer ques-| exists on the value of a drug," tions on British relationships the report said. with Europe. "Thus with a new drug, it is ee desirable to continue some form FRENCH IN CHARGE |of surveillance for a longer pe- | There is another irony about)riod than at present, when a jthe Franco-German pact. It is|notice of compliance with the widely felt that for the time) laws of the country releases the being de Gaulle is the dominat-| drug for sale." ing partner, forcing a reluctant! Mr, Monteith said the report Adenauer to go along with the| would be a valuable one for the idea that Britain should be/\Commons committee on food barred from the Common Mar-| and drugs to study, and that ket. |he. would dea! with it in detail Adenauer regards the Paris, before the committee. Treaty as 'the great achieve-| The new Commons committee ment of his long life, and he|Thursday mapped out a series doesn't want to imperil it by|of hearings on the public-safety opposing de Gaulle's present aspects of pharmaceuticals and anti-British bias. But he is/ pesticides. under great pressure from the! Als inciuded would be inves- |political parties in Bonn to do tigations into the use of '"'addi- just that. |tives" in baby foods, the effects It would be the final irony if|on wildlife of forest spraying, it took a German chancellor to restore the entente cordiale| with hormones and drugs de- sce i Beko. hi re ib SursS CARPET CENTRE $ | MORTGAGES at Nu-Way, carpet and broad- ff) Ample Funds for Ist MORTGAGES 2nd MORTGAGES : We Also Purchase loom has been a specialty for ib ans We | 'st and 2nd Mortgages of yards on display to select from, PHONE 728-4681 N.H.A. LOANS ARRANGED | NU-WAY | RUG CO. LTD. | You Will Find 174 MARY ST. OSHAWA'S OUR SERVICE 1S. FASTER OUR COST IS LOWER SCHOFIELD-AKER Limited 723-2265 -- 728-3376 After Hours 728-3376 H | i to move/Admission 35c. Tea, coffee and cookies jquickly to withdraw a drug for|seux the extra TV set you aren't using All drugs have side-effects, seriousness of which have|Classified ad that brings you rash buy- |to be considered in the light of |ersin_@ hurry. and even the injection of cattle | SRES | U.A.W. HALL 1 P.M. SATURDAY JANUARY 26 NO SLACKS OR JEANS __ADMISSION_ 25¢ and have extra ash instead. Dial 723-3492 today to start the inexpensive BINGO |} ORANGE TEMPLE SATURDAY, JAN. 26th 7:30 P.M. 20 Games -- $8 seh ag ed Saturday, Jan. 26th 4 -- $40 Jackpots to go Next Regular Bingo 1 -- $150 Jackpot to go FEB. 9th. 7:30 p.m Children Under 16 Not Admitted. a ae a MONSTER BINGO Over $500 in Prizes SATURDAY, JAN. 26th AT 8:00 P.M. ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM SIMCOE STREET NORTH ADMISSION 50 CENTS Includes tickets on 20-2 Ib. boxes of chocolates to be drawn Feb. 16th. CHILDREN UNDER 16 NOT ADMITTED REHABILITATION CONFERENCE GENOSHA HOTEL FEBRUARY 27th to MARCH 1, 1963 WATCH FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PUBLIC MEETING SIMCOE ST. UNITED CHURCH | THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28,-8 P.M. SPEAKER: DR. GUSTAVE GINGRAS Executive Director, Montreal Rehabilitation Institute CANCELLED THE U.A.W. BINGO FOR | | |

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy