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Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Jan 1964, p. 2

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® THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, Jonuer 28, 1044 GOOD EVENING -- By JACKGEARIN -- Low Pay Housing Need Is Growing BOARD HAS A DUTY TO THE PUBLIC : The Board of Education is within its rights at times when it closes its doors to the Press,: but where should the line be drawn? Where should such censorship end? Does it not place an unnecessary cloud over the Board, perhaps create suspicion where no suspicion should exist, the Board's majority is unyielding on such matters, when it enforces such regulations too rigidly? Is this not especially so when the subjects under discussion, despite an official blackout, gain widespread publicity via the rumor grapevine': . Despite rigid adherence of trustees to the Board's "no comment" policy on certain of these occasions, details con- cerning important matters do leak out -- this is especially so when such matters seriously affect some outside the trus- teegphere, It is inconceivable that any trustee could be to believe otherwise, The same hard-bound to every duty-elected public body from the Par- of Canada to the Cobourg town council, Although the behavior of some trustees would seem to indicate otherwise at times, the Board of Education is not a private corporation or company, such as General Motors of Canada or Houdaille Industries Lid, whose directorates are responsible primarily to the shareholders, The Board, like City Council, is an elected municipal body, the servant of the taxpayers; therefore, it has a respon- sibility to keep the public reasonably well informed, even on- eensitive matiers concerning "personality" disputes between salaried personnel which could have widespread repercus- sions, The Board has admitted the Press to some of the afore- mentioned meetings, but many important questions remained unanswered, perhaps the most important of which is this: Did Trustee Harold Armstrong, the long-time member and chairman of Property, submit his resignation to the Board this week in a letter? Did he, later withdraw the resig- nation? If so, did he give any reasons for such action? The taxpayers have a right to know, NEW POSTMASTER-GENERAL TO VISIT OSHAWA NOTES FROM THE HUSTINGS: That gala Liberal banquet and dance scheduled for Osh- awa February 8 is beginning to take form with an impressive roster of party VIP's promising to attend, The guest speaker will be Hon, John R. "Jack" Nichol- aon, former Federal Minister of Forestry who was recently ehifted to a new Cabinet post. as Postmaster-General. The 63 - year-old New Brunswick-born (Newcastle) grad from Dalhousie Univer- sity (in Arts). was a Gold Medalist in the Law class of 1923, He was admitted to the N.S, Bar in 1923 and to the B.C, Bar in 1924, He has lived in Vancouver most of his adult life, where he has practised Insurance and Cor- porate Law, He was named Deputy Controller of Supply in the Department of Munitions and a Supply, Ottawa, in 1M1 -- P . he later played an important | ' role in the establishment of ' the Polymer 'Corp, Lad, He HON. NICHOLSON W®S made an Officer of the " ee Order of the British Empire in 1081 for his war-time services in Canada, He headed the operations in Brazil of the Canadian-controtied public utility écompeny, Brazilian Traction Ligh and Power. He returned to Vancouver to practise Law in 1957. SPEAKING OF THE CAHILL REPORT -- (CHAPT. (8) There were some touching farewells Monday night at City Hall. This was in the corridor of City Council Chambers at intermission with Alderman R. Cecil Bint as the centre of a Uttle ceremonial, + Mbp, Bint was departing on hig annual Winter holiday to sub-tropical climes, down around Fort Lauderdale, Fiorida way where the towering palms wave in the breeze, where the mercury hovers in the mid-80's, (where the Cahill Report isn't even mentioned in whispers). There is no desire herein to discourage Wintertime holiday travel by elected municipal representatives, at their own expense, but there was one disappointing feature about Mr. Bint's departure for three or four weeks -- it preceded by about 48 hours a most important inner-Council caucus, the prime purpose of which was to discuss the not-too-recent findings of the Director of Operations, Mr, Kevin Cahill, in his report on the Board of Works Yard operation One point can not be overemphasized -- City Council must not be pressured into releasing the report prematurely . before it has had time to discuss it behind closed doors, before all aspects of it are carefully considered, By the same , Council must not relax inte its age-old habits where ard is concerned and allow the report to be pigeon a question naturally could be: "How could City uct an intelligent caucus meeting on the Cahill one of the principals wes absent? Mr, Bint is the Board of Works committee and one of the bilities of this municipal bedy is to supervise 'ard's operation and administration. Would councillors we questions to ask him, as well as Mr, Cahill, the Im fairness to Mr. Bint, he was co-operative in answer questions from this department last week about the re- . but has he net an equal responsibility to the Council, its members are anxious te take a good hard look Yard's operation and efficiency standards, al long not continue to bury their heads in the African the proverbial ostrich at the approach of danger? ill, : Hi "pz z i TORONTO (CP)--Provision ofjdividuals and nies en. housing for people in lower in-/gaged in land development, is come groups was described as/responsible for at a growing social problem. by/|least $50,000,000 of daveleed speakers at Friday's annual/land yearly, which in turn pro- duces at least a further $100, meeting of the Ontario division of the Urban Development In- po tead annual investment in ' conference, Mr, stitute, Ad, 5 . | Ata aa aaa scla tooek = Scott and Mr, Grant and other tario municipalities discrimi-|institute spokesmen said there ig no easy answer to supplying low-cost 4 various ways nate against these groups th vision agreem rough sub-di n ag' ents eae ut sent a va hg economies We . dewalks and soning bylaws that prevent ever, such as fewer si pool ge of ge ha a price such families can a \ . on ancillary or loop streets and Tn some cases, however, mu- taster action by all levels of government in dealing with nicipali use of an al chale tax system--could not act land development projects otherwise without their mill! The institute also fayors rate going sky high, larger regional groupings 80 In Metropolitan Toronto, Mr, that excessive educa costs Scott sald, "lower = income" | won't fall upon a residential means 300,000 families getting municipality which is home to lone than 98,080 yearly. workers in another municipal: A, R. Grant of Toronto, the ji 'G, C. Eliott, associate treas pecan | nore ; fee Fl oe proportion of the population is : ; completely ignored in the pe tN A Nagra Be = vision of homes and services!ency for local and provincial and future efforts of the instl-/aythorities to insist on exces- tute would be towards satisfy-!cive standards, : |WILL GROW ing "the realms "of the nog Mr, Elliott said Canada will lected," He added: "In many areas we. have con-/continue to grow at an acceler- flict of public housing and pri:jating rate, especially in the vate ownership or we have mu-|middie and late 1 as a nicipalities who, having sup-/bumper crop of young people reach martriageable age, This would swell the demand for plies in the past an over-abun- dance of low-assessment prop- housing and increase demand for all types of property, | erties and faced with mounting Nevertheless, he saw wu jschoo) costs, must bar the door |to lowerincome groups," | Mr, Grant. sald -he institute's! practices of past building cycles! jmembership, made up of in-ibeing repeated toay. ety { | Kan Wall (left), and his daughter, Jennie, acknow- ledge applause after perform. ance Friday at opening of Shrine Circus in Detroit, The two were the only returning WALLENDA'S APPLAUDED members of the Wallenda growp ot the scene of tragic accident wa years ago when fall killed two and seriously crippled a third member of seven-man pyramid, At right is @ new member of troupe Louls Murillo, Troupe per- formed three-man pyramid on bicycles with 16 men holding net below, (AP Wirphoto) WINNIPEG (CP) -- A head-| on cla#) is shaping up between) school authorities and the par. ents of 21 Roman Catholic chil-| dren kept home from class since Noy, 12. The parents in neighboring) St, Vital withdrew their chil-| dren from Ste. Emile parochial schoo) to protest a public school) bus transportation fee, / Letters from an attendance} officer began arriving at the) parents' homes Friday, threat: ening prosecution if the children/ are not returned to school, | Mrs, William Schick, the par.) ents' spokesman, said they plan| to ignore the letters, } "We are quite prepared to go) to jail," she said, "if this is the) only way we can get freedom and justice." | LINKED TO RIEL | Mrs, Schick is a great-niece ot Louis Riel, 1th ~ century champion of the rights of Man- itoba Metis -- people of Indian) and white blood. Six of her eight! children are involved in the bus dispute. She said the parents under.) stand that prosecution under the Schools Attendance Act) could result in either a small) fine or jail for up to 20 days.) Delivery of the letters fol-/ lowed a warning Monday by) Bducation Minister George) Johnson to the heads of the six) families involved to return the) children to school to avoid pros-) ecution, i Up to that time provincial of) ficials, evidently expecting the) | i | | | | | For Children Triggers Battle iChildren's library books de-/for five years, Those on hand, jnounced as 'garbage' by a pro-/he said, are not being replaced, jnesday will be discussed at a/none of the series. jWaterloo public school board) There are 43 books in the | Walter Hougham, superinten-;Twing and 40 in the Nincy tdent of Waterioo public schools/Drew series, {Beckman for keeping books like/Ont., wrote the first Hardy iBobbsey Twins and the Hardy /Boys mystery stories under the jment until the meeting, | Mr, McFarlane, now a televi- Mrs, Beckman, a member Oficion writer and a member of ishe was appalled when 'her/ t books were i) idaughter Susza, 10, brought| aid, "but certainly egy jbooks. cerned, not badly written," | She said the books--a series) He began the 'series in 1926 ten under the pen name Car) lete teem = are toe wee ee | Controversy over Mrs. Beck-| Lioyd Dennis, principal of a a insistence that the books/Toronto public school, said Fri-/ jest across the province where/by Laura Lee Hopes "were jthey appear in school libraries.jclearly not written to meet ja lot of children don't readjinstructional texts, They were j}books when they grow up," said/written to be enjoyed." jber of the University of Water-jsaid: "While in adult terms 00. jthese books may be 'garbage' the Waterloo public library has'the kids want to read them." | WEATHER FORECAST Little Cool Forecast issued by the Tor-/day, Winds southeast 25 shifting! 5:30)/to west 25 to 40 this afternoon) am: and decreasing to 20 tonight, Synopsis: Cooler air will 'Garbage' Boo ge B | WATERLOO, Ont, (CP) --jnot purchased any of the books fessional librarian here Wed-| The Kitchener library has imeeting Monday, Hardy series, 56 in the Bobbsey j--attacked by Mrs, scaceul Leslie McFarlane of Whitby, [Boys series -- declined COM-ipen name Franklin W. Dixon, jthe public library board, saidithe Whitby public school board, home one of the Nancy Drewla. the Hardy boys are con: jot girls' mystery stories writ-lang his 19 books sold about 13,- jten and bore children stiff, |TO BE ENJOYED | be banned has aroused interday the Bobbsey Twins series) "They're one of the reasons/standards set by educators for iMrs, Beckman, a faculty mem-| Toronto writer Ralph Allen Librarian James Brown said/they still have the virtue that Sunny Sunday, onto weather office at | Algoma, Timagami, Sault Ste. cover all of Ontario by this)/Marie, North Bay, Sudbury: evening onding the rain and/Overcast with wet snow and promising partly cloudy wea-/fain or freezing rain tapering ther with temperatures near to snowflurries and turning their seasonal average Sunday./Cooler this afternoon. Mainly Heavy snow with extensive/Cloudy Sunday, Winds south- taper off this evening leaving|#® this afternoon and decreas- mainly cloudy weather with ing to 20 tonight scattered snowflurries for Mon-)| White River, Cochrane: Snow day heavy at times with extensive Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie drifting today. Cloudy with southern Lake Huron, Windsor, S®owfturries Sunday. Milder to-| Police seid Friday a0 antegey tederalty London: Mainly cloudy, windy/@ay. Winds east 20 to 38 today and cooler today. Sunday sunny Shifting to northwest tonight, with cloudy intervals. Winds rere . southwest 25 to 33 decreasing r hadpeaae ee to 15 to 2 this evening ows tonight, Highs Sunday: Niagara, western Lake On. Windsor ssaeeeccese 18 tario, Hamilton, Toronto: st, THOMAS ssoeees Mainly cloudy, windy and cooler ithis afternoon. Sunny with cloudy intervals Sunday. Winds southeast 20 shifting to south: jwest 26 t) 38 by noon and de. creasing to 15 to 20 tonight. | Bastern Lake Ontario, Hati./ Pete jburton: Rain tapering off totter' showers this afternoon. Vari. Killaloe ...csccscses able cloudiness and cooler. to. Muskoka ........5 night and Sunday, Winds south. North Bay ........ west 20 shifting to southwest 29 Sudbury te 3 this afternoon and de Barton ........005 creasing to 15 tonight Sault Ste, Marie ... Northern Lake Huron, Geor/ Kapuskasing ...... gian Bay: Cloudy windy and) White River ....... cooler with a few snowflurries|Moosonee ......005 this afternoon tonight and Sun-|Timmins .......... 5 Mount Forest ....., Wingham .....0..5 Hamilton .....0.00. St. Catharines ..... Toronto SS Saeeesens seaee SEBO eee eens SASSO eee ees SSSteESESZESESSSLLSSS 1%" SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industriel and Commercial The eatedbiaded. reliable Gee Decker im veer arte. 31 CELINA ST. (Commer et Atmel! HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 30 YEARS | There is some | Young Woman | drifting in northern regions will/¢@st 25 shifting to west 25 to) | Det.Sgt. Frank Christie said the women's clothes, scattered 'around her, showed no sign of) money would body bank, parents to give up fhe fight, jhad all but ignored the truancy) even when the children paraded before the legisiative a battle of the bus is an isolated skirmish in a larger behind-the-| scenes fight for public aid to! separate schools RECEIVE NO GRANT | Mrs, Schick says: "Manitoba ally-chartered British Columbia is the only Canadian province Man Sought In | Death Of LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- A) man who may be in Vancouver) is wanted by police for question | ling in the death of a young Lon: idon woman, found half naked in covernment would become ation and the TUC wou a field here Thursday, revealed Mrs. Margaret Sheeler, 20, had been dead since) Dec, 28, when she was reported missing from her home about) 1% dlocks from where her body jwas found, She was five months) nt, ja | Det.Insp. Len Hamilton saidjal 'the nature of her injuries" in- dicated foul play. He would not jelaborate. H jtears or a struggle, The iwas clad only in a blouse la new, independent. daily, jis that we should encourage { J Pupils Boycott School: Receive Warning Note Ontario Firm Says: companies were (old they would not get business of government business if-they / . concentrate side Quebec. ceive no government grant, no share of education taxes ool- lected from all ratepayers, "We pay the same taxes as other residents in the area, "T feel we are entitled to the same transportation and text- books provided for public school pupils, even though we're ready to pay extra to have our chil- ren receive spiritual education we want through attendance at a parochial school." Mrs, Schick tackled the text- book issue in 1962 when she had her children register at public school, collect their books and bring. them home, then regis ter the next day at the parochial school, That case got to the) Manitoba Court of Appeal, which ordered the books seized! and returned, { King Publishing Drops Try For Daily Herald LONDON '(CP)----Cécil_ King's giant International Publishin: Corporation has abandon plans to buy the Trade Union| Congress shares in the left-wing} King took over the Herald, a Daily Herald and turn it into/financial liability, along with jnumerous more pee Pas Negotiations to this end broke/cations, when he acquired Od- down Thursday night, However,/hams Press in 1961, At the time IPC announced it will continue|he also agreed he would con- its alliance with the Congress/tinue the Herald for at least jseven years, no matter what ' |the financial loss. This agree- Plan For New 2o.Srsrnene jturn the Herald into "a viable left-wing newspaper, Minister Gordon expressed ap-| proval Friday of a new feder-/ TURNS DOWN OFFER His offer, turned down by the ment still has 44 years to run, [without which the t polit: Federal Bank jical imbalance ed an Bittick TUC, was £75,000 ($225,000) The truant pupils have been riding to school gor tel charge on a private bus rented by the St, Vital schoo! board, A board statement published in the St, Vital Lance, a com- munity weekly, said the bus company raised its rates last {fall and the board decided to impose a $6-a-month fee for each parochial school student jusing it, Additionally, the board said the Public Schools Act prohi- bits. the spending of pubic money except for public schools purposes, for which the paro- chial students do not qu " Rather than pay the fee, the parents kept their children home, Mrs, Schick says the par. ents cannot afford the charge. ton officials into co-operating in a scheme to remodel the Herald and rename it the Sun. But several months ago he de- iclared his intention to buy the VICTORIA (CP) -- Finance|etearen "Oven mare sig: bank, lin which separate schools re) Mr, Gordon was quoted byjcash or £101,000 ($303,000) in Provincial Liberal Leader Ray/instalments if the new paper Perrault as saying: jrea a certain circulation "J don't think there is going/level. The TUC held out for to be any federal opposition, Ot-/£100,080 ($300,248) cash, |tawa is not going to Oppose any! Earlier in the. long negotia- Thom: jtions both publisher Roy Ison and Sir William Carr, chair more Canadian-owned banks." [man of the News of the World, Mr, Perrault said Mr, Gor-ja London } paper, ex. don told him in q telephone call/pressed readiness to print the from Ottawa he was in favor|Herald for the TUC if it took of such a bank. jover the paper, The throne speech, read at) However, neither is believed the opening of the legisiature|to have been prepared to do here Thursday, said the B.C./more than the printin << ~ ve r" in a new/been lef with responsibility for bank to be the paper's financial loss, establish ead offices In/ Vancouver, | LASTS CENTURIES Government SOUTCEeS SUR) Teak, an extremely durable gested Friday, however, thatitimber, has been used in India while the government will be aifor 2.000 or more years, and "timited shareholder" it will be/teak beams 1,000 years old have egal, sound propsal, My view "timited sha most $275,000,000 in cash from INTERPRETING TUT Abas Star we NEWS By ALAN HARVEY The impression that Britain will see a change of govern. ment this year seems to be growing stronger, Financial and sporting circles are apparentl reed that the Labor party, phe by Harold Wilson, is almost contale to win the general election and break 2-year Conservative mono- ports from captains of fi- nance in the City, the London eltadel of private enterprise that keeps such a sharp eye on political de ts, indicate hat there has been heavy bet- in the last few weeks on a catch the elector at the on time in the year when there might be a little sunshine, lulls} ing him into a more ' tible frame of mind it out to the bitter porters of the last-ditch ie argue that. favorable economies Odds Strong For U.K. Labor Win schools of thought within the Canadian Press Staff Writer|Conservative party, all about evenly matched, One section would like Sif Alec to get the misery over in March, fearing that local elec- tions in April will show a swing to Labor and tend to create a bandwagon effect if the country... wide vote is delayed,. Others favor a June vote té* ' t " And finally some want to stick? end, socialist victory, This is confirmed by the b bookmakers, who have instal Labor as overwhelming choice, conditions, coupled with recent' Tory legislation, may combines to transform the present glum' outlook for the party in power: and hopes to talk the trade un-| major depositer, B.C. will getipeen found there. i You have to put up £5 (815) to make £1 ($3) it on Labor, whereas £1 will return £3 ($9) if you favor the Tories. On the Liberals, the sky's the limit, The election must be held by early November at the latest, All the signs are that Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas- Home, still seeking to make an impact on voters, hasn't made up his mind on the date. There appear to be three ui years, seven of the nine gen eral elections have fallen on a, Thursday. In a book just pub-» Amid all the a ween " point seems fairly solid. ever riod is chosen, the votes ably will be held on a" ursday, Over the last 40, \-"" shed, Guide to the General, Election, author R, L. Leonard) says that Thursay is "generally. considered to be the least convenient day of the TORONTO (CP) -- The Quoe- bec government successfully threatened to boycott a Hamil ton firm which sells 36 per cent of its products in Quebec after it announced plans to move all its operations to Ontario, the legislature was told Friday. George Kerr (PC -- Halton) said the company, believed to be a steel foundry, planned to move its operations -- some of which are in Quebec--to a 60- acre site in Burlington, near Hamilton, speech, said; "Last year, when the company started to with these plans, representa- tives of the Quebec government indicated that the company's products would be boycotted if the move was -carried out," cific or have their names . he said provincial government's that tariff walls between inces could be disastrous. panies should be compete anywhere in on Mr, Kerr, making his maiden P planned m representations to Quebec, he said Ontario. would leave it to the good sense of provincial governments te, see that such parochial atti- tudes are stopped. Blacklist Exists in some areas manufacturing out / "But no one wants tobe a Mr, Randall said it was the feeling Eom. allowed to. Canada @ quality and cost of their roduct, ? if his department aking " The Burlington agent acting for the firm was instructed to sell the land, Economics and Development Minister Stanley Randall said later he knew nothing of the re- ported blacklist of Burling- ton firm or of other companies. However, he said, he had re- ceived. complaints that some | Soviets Show Interest In Arms Control Harold Ni gun was jCharles Pupich, 40 the stomach, ' Bank Robber = Gets 9 Years TORONTO (CP) -- William: alias Hotel owner. , was shot int GENEVA (AP) --_ Negotia- tions to halt the ion of plutonium for weapons may be the first concrete re- sult from U.S, President John- son's arms control plan, west- viet Union, anxious to reduce its military spending, has pressed an interste In Johnson's idea to shut down weapons re- actors under "mutual inspec- tion." The Russians mentioned plutonium reactors, In private talks with western delegates at the 1?-nation dis- armament ' conference, Soviet negotiator Semyon K. Tsarap- kin also has said he is willing to discuss a possible limitation! of miltary budgets by mutual agreement. Such an ment was not specfically referred to in John- son's five-point plan released this week. But American offi- cials were interested in the idea, Tsarapkin told the confer- ence earlier this week that the recent cut in the U.S. defence budget created a favorable at- mosphere for resumed disarm- ament jations, 4 Tsarapkin and other Soviet | j { posals put forward by Johnson, Such as a verified freeze of the! production and improvement of ---- to deliver nuclear war- S. A MOTION PICTURE YOU MUST SEE! (Question oe WINNER OF TWENTY-TWO INTERNATIONAL AWARDS?- PICTURE WHE BE SHOWA: AT THE Salvation Army OSHAWA Friday, Jan, 24 Saturday, Jan, 25 8PM, : a the United States by Oct. 1 un- der terms of the Colum River treaty agreement, When asked Thursday whether any of the Columbia go into the new Mr. Bennett 'said it wouldn't be "for shares," * WANTED 728-9441 CUSTOM MADE DRAPES 15 King Steeet.East Phone 725-2686 samen = VOT Simeve North, Ovdewe ere on 'AT 2:00 GUEST SPEAKER: of Toronto, Director of Probotion invites you to attend their ANNUAL MEETING Simcoe Hall Settlement House VO FISHER STREET, OSHAWA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3rd MR, D. W. F. COUGHLAN THE WOMEN'S WELFARE LEAGUE OF OSHAWA PLM, Services, Province of Onterin fe

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