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Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Aug 1965, p. 17

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oe and a loyal pooch to watch over the children and house- Everyone wants a furry, friendly pet to bring in the afternoon paper, drag his master's slipper into the den on a cool fall evening hold possessions. That's what graduates of the Dog Obedience School of Osh- with awa can do, Mrs. Morley Lake of .23 Parkway cres., Bowmanville, eft, "Nikita," a month-old) Samoyed who pp penpllgeme-- ¢ sk shia in aioe Td fads Hea Pd graduated last night at the Dog Obedience trials held in Alexandra Park. Nikita, like any proud graduate, clutches his diploma obedi- ently, Nikita is. the pet of poses nine- a a ee ee & ee ee es Mrs, Lake's two-year-old son: Randy. President Dr. Helen Bathie admires two other obedience trial stu- dents, '"Marcia,"' left, and "Charlie W." The two mini- Ce ee ee ae TO UAE gk kM Sako hes oak At ae sal tied dial sand TE ccs aah chats ni it cae ith ci tlh ch ink ted nh al cet cE la el kl a il he Oshawa OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, AUGUST 12,-1965 " Tr Amid charges by Trustee Wil- liam Werry that there would have. been less cost to city tax- voy Pa if the Oshawa Board of cation held direct negotia- tions with its maintenance staff, the board ratified the two-year contract with Local 218 of the 'Canadian Union of Public em- iployees, last night, "As a taxpayer and a parent I congratulate the union for the settlement they received but as a trustee I feel differently," he said, "I didn't approve of a profes- sional bargainer initially since I feel there's no room for a third party and we have capable peo- ple on the board who could have negotiated a settlement at less cost to taxpayers," he added. $1,500 FEE He told the Times later that a $1,500 basic annual retainer is paid to the negotiator who at- tended four meetings prior to conciliation services, two meet- ings at conciliation officer level and one other prior to the con- ciliation board hearing at the end of July. Negotiations began in Febru- ary. 'We spend more time discuss- ing what flag to fly than that,' said Mr. Werry. > Shouldn't Have Hired Pro Bargainer, He Says of Education negotiating team which called for a 42-hour work with maintenance personnel," he are smarter than teachers?" he He said on July 12 the Board ontract OKd, | erry Dismayed rejected an offer by the union week and a $470 salary increase over two years. Last night the board ved a 40-hour work week and a two- year salary increase of $500, 'WHY HIRE HIM?' "Assuming that the profes- sional n ator was hired to save the board money and the opposite is true why did we hire him?" the trustee asked, : Mr. Werry suggested a settle- ment also could have been reached much sooner if the board negotiated with the jani- tors directly as it does with teachers, "When I ask why an industrial relations consultant is hired, I'm told that the trustees haven't the experience in bargaining said, 'JANITORS SMARTER' "The board has no trouble ne- gotiating with teachers. What are we afraid of -- that janitors added. Mr, Werry concluded that 'it smacks of discrimination and contributes to poor relations be- tween the board and its em- ployees when a third party is brought in to conduct contract negotiations." ature poodles are owned and handled by Mrs. G. W. Sager of 490 Adelaide st. e. and Gwyn Roberts of RR 2, Oshawa, respectively, --Oshawa Times Photos Make Money, Travel World By Learning How To Fly Representatives of American|and several are going for their those far-away places you readjand Australian airlines are re-|commercial licences. The shortage is described as a release from the Oshawa Fly-|having developed suddenly and has forced Brazilian, Over 80 student pilots are|Swiss and German airlines to now training at the city airportitake young men from high school and teach them to fly. Main reasons are growth of the industry and fewer former air-force pilots turning to com- mercial work. Most airlines are said to look for men between 18 and 25, and who hold a commercial licence. Grade 13 schooling is preferred. e E ( Syd Cowley, chief flying in- will be mailed to city high|said'this recommendation of the|structor at Oshawa Flying Club,|the 8th Oshawa Sea Scouts, will the Depart-jprincipals committee was aP-lestimates it costs $2500 for alfly to Bermuda Saturday for| person who has not flown to\two weeks in the sun. jany embarrassment to students./optain a commercial licence. However, it is believed that a student who is "guaranteed" an said Mr.\airline job (that is, has some of If you want to see some of about on the travel pages, may- be flying an airliner is the job for you. The money is good. And right|ing Club. now there is a world-wide short- age of commercial pilots. Grade 13 Exam Results Will Be In Mail Monday Grade 13 examination results} Board Chairman Ted Bassett cruiting in Ontario, according to | schools Monday, ment of Education announced|proved by the board to- avoid today. . The schools in turn will mail! The committee felt the results| them to the students the same|are a private matter between day. {school 'and student, This year only the honor stu-| Bassett. dents' names will be published) The Oshawa Board of Educa-|students who only wrote two or policy not to publish examina-|embarrassment when honor students 'mainder. is 33, The three R's will be taught in a different light in the Albert Street School this fall. There will be more of it. Oshawa Board of Edu- cation last night agreed to install new lighting fixtures and blinds. Building and Maintenance Supervisor R. H. Lunney British, toraievttieatesctn tearing pitt Eighteen boys, members 'of a student pilot}CAMP IN BERMUDA Association) group celebraté their 50th anni- versary. iscouting is They will be accompanied py|the boys see how others live, four leaders, including Derek|gives them an interest in travel Hewitt who has been in boys'|and enables them to meet per- * } A ee work for more than 25 -years.|/Sons from all over the world. requirements) could get a | He added that before, when|bank loan to-finance his tuition. Bees fons ig dE dh ig in the Times. jall results were published, some/Tuition fees are tax deductible. ' ° In Canada, tion early this year adopted ajthree Grade 13 exams suffered|may qualify for a $100 govern- | readers|ment subsidy if he obtains a tion results other than those of|assumed they had failed the re-|private-pilot's licence before he|muda Boy Scouts their hosts with a challenge tro- |phy made of Canadian. Maple jand Bermuda cedar, symbolic of these|the Hillcroft: st. The lads, between 11 and 16\the jthe summer the young sailors years, will camp at the Ber-|two groups. The boys are paying their own|train . on training site and help the latter|way ($124) on this junket andicutters said the $5,000 budgeted for school lighting would ade- quately cover the cost of new fixtures and blinds which could be salvaged if the school were replaced. He said only the labor, estimated at approximate- ly $800, would be lost, and "Dr. C. C. Stewart, medical LUC Mo Mr. Hewitt says international important. It Oshawa scouts will friendship between ~ LIGHT IN THEIR DARKNESS officer of health, told me children's eyes must be af- fected by poor lighting in the school', Business Administrator Ross Backus said the grow- ing number of pupils has prevented destruction of the old building until a replace- ment can be built, UM Two Weeks Sun For Scouts Paid By Sales, Car Washes are supplying their own spend- ing money (a $20 limit), Money for food and tours was letsjraised by the boys themselves by candy sales, car washes and other projects, ; Sea scouts differ from boy scouts in that they receive boat presentitraining in addition to. the regu- lar scout training. In the winter it is knot tying, rope splicing .and signalling at Scout Hall. In the water' in three Martial music will vie with waltz strains in a varied concert selection to be presented tonight at the McLaughlin Bandshell, The Band of the Ontario Regi- ment will be under the direc- Affleck Off To US. Again Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck travels 'to Mackinac Island, Michigan, Aug. 25 to participate in the National District At- torneys' Association convention. Mr, Affleck will be among well over 1,000 District Attorneys from every corner of the U.S. During the convention Mr, Affleck will take part in a panel discussion on prejudical news reporting entitled "Free Press - - Fair Trial'. He will represent the Cana- dian viewpoint in a_ subject which is 'causing increasing controversy in American law circles. Other members of the panel will be newspapermen Martin Haydon, editor and publisher of the Detroit News and Mark Ethridge, assistant editor of the Detroit Free Press, Two mem: bers of the: American judiciary will) make up the 'panel, During the five day conven: tion the attorneys will range over a wide variety of subjects, including police interrogation, electronic eavesdropping and other topical subjects. LAUDS AMBULANCE SERVICE, PERSONNEL TRAINING Dymond's Impressions Of Trip To Russia Following a recent visit to the International Hospital Congress in Stockholm, Sweden, Dr, Matthew B. Dymond took a side trip to Russia to take a look at accorded on graduation from Medical School. To specialize in a particular field of medicine, one must very thoroughly described to us. bered: that DIAL 03 ; By calling the number 03 any- where in Russia, we were told, an ambulance can be 'had: -It Each there are private cars which can be used in many instances. ambulance fewer carries a similar goals in psychiatry, are facing the same problems and difficulties and that each has much to teach and to learn from the other, It was revealing, too, like and In public health the responsi- bilities of the cities are quite those allocated to the cities health units here, The situ- Martial, Viennese Music Vie Tonight At Bandshell tion of Captain George Quick, Donald Allman will be master of ceremonies, The concert will start at 8:30 p.m, Opening the show will be the march 'Pendine'"', followed by the waltz "Grenadiers", Soloist musician Austin Wilt- shire will play bass solos "Forty Fathoms" and 'The Bombastic Bombardon"'. "Swing of the Kilt', a patrol, will precede vocal solos by Ross Cotton, including "Thine Alone", and "I Believe". Musicians William, Zan, David and Paul Whitsitt form a brass quartet and will play "German Dance", "All Through the Night" and "Jubilate". "Oklahoma!", from the musi- cal of the same name, will be followed by the waltz 'Vienna, City of My Dreams", and "Can Can" from Orpheus. Mr. Cotton then returns to sing "My Mammy" and "Caro Mia"', . Then come the' march "Great Little Army", a group of "'Brit- ish Sea Songs' and the 'hymn 'Aberystwyth', The concert will 'close with the band's regimental march 'John Peel') and..'"God ' Save the Queen". 4 HIGH JINKS High jinks on the high wire for these two. felines who were snapped by 'a Times photographer as they took a chance with those proverbial nine lives. on a Ritson rd. s, hydro polg..No one knew where they, came from or who, they belonged to. Soon after. this, picture was taken the cats .scram- bled 'clear and disappeared. The topmost cat nestles' on the cross piece while, down below a friend-rushes to. the Tescue,; ; Oshawa Times Photo ada, will adorn the Centennial celebrations of.. the 2 m0. One of her main duties during of carefully cultured beards that the ssentolk last few weeks, - Other celebrations during this, |in Miss Dominion Of Canada To Visit Blackstock. Fair The W. Bar L Riders, also of historic|Oshawa, will again, put. on, their slechstet Country Fair Aug./fine, display . of. western , horse- anship. and. games. Prizés are being offered this a crowded day of activities willlyear for displaye of antique be the judging of the display|farm implements. There will be an award too of Blackstock have|for the best dressed couple in been patiently nursing over the/old time costume. A fine program of horse show- ig, racing, livestock judging the 100th, Blackstock Fair, have|make up the rest of the day, "what was being done there in the various fields of health care." Dr. Dymond, Ontario's Mini- ster of Health, said he was most impressed with two things: the great emphasis put on the train- ing of personnel and the organ- ization of the ambulance service. On' The Times' request, Dr. Dymond put together some of his observations which he de- scribes as necessarily "super- ficial" because he had only two weeks in Russia. Here is an edited version of those observations: I was much impressed with the great emphasis put on the training of professional per- sonnel, The figures we were given showed one doctor to 550 population, as against the ratio for Ontario of one, doctor to 776 population. However, it was im- possible to judge the quality of medical education. Ten years elementary and secondary school education are required for entrance to the Faculty of Medicine, which un- like our country, is not associ- ated with any university. Then six years general medical edu- cation follow before graduation. In the case of those who choose to follow "sanitation" (public health) Specialist standing is take further training after grad- uation as a doctor. This may be effected by doing a two-year interneship; such a Doctor may then work as a_ 'Practical Specialist", or he may do a three-year course of post-gradu- ate study and on the successful completion of this, he may then practise his speciality and also engage in special research work. From questioning the repre- sentative of the Health Ministry of the Ukraine, I got the impression that all doctors have to practice general medicine for from 3 to 5 years before speci- alization, This is something I have personally advocated here for a long time, because I believe it to be essential to the development of goed practi- tioners. Continuing education is. com- pulsory for all practitioners, and after five years in practice, every doctor must enroll in some refresher course. In a state where everything is con- trolled, the mechanics of this are. relatively. simple. The doctor is just transferred to duty at the centre where the refresher work is given. In the city of Kiev, the third largest in the Soviet Union, with a population of some 1.5 million, we saw the ambulance service in operation and had the system is not necessary to pay for such calls. They are free. In Kiev this number connects the caller with the central ambulance office. Every. call is' tape- recorded. The essential information is secured and the ambulance dis- patched, either from the central headquarters or one of the six sub-stations throughout the city. It was stated that in _almost every case, an ambulance\would reach the patient within' five minutes. It might be well to note here that there is not 'the volume of auto and other street traffic in Russian cities that we encounter in Ontario, AMBULANCES AVAILABLE At the Central Headquarters special ambulances are avail- able to deal with particular types of emergencies such as: patients in shock; patients with heart attacks; cerebral acci- dents; acute psychiatric cases; pediatric cases and maternity cases. Altogether in Kiev there are 100 ambulances, 12 of which have a specialized function, and 1200 to 1300 calls are answered daily. Judged by our practices and standards there is a very great overuse of ambulances in Russia. But it must be remem- staff of three in addition to the driver, namely: a doctor, a feldsher and a nurse. A feldsher- is a person with more training than a nurse, but less than a doctor. The physical equipment, vehicles, stretchers, judged by our standards, all appeared to be poor; but emphasis here, too, is on the functional, which, of course, is or should be of para- mount importance. NOT ABANDONED In psychiatry, the concept in Russia is very: much like that in Ontario. The mentally dis- turbed patient is il] and is treat- ed as such, But they have large mental hospitals for their. pa- tients and gave no evidence of abandoning them. It was impos- sible to glean from thdse to whom we spoke, if psychiatric units in general hospitals were in the current program. We did conclude, however, that in Russia, as here in. On- tario, the problem of mental health and disturbance is a very great health and social problem, that many questions remain unanswered, but health workers there, as here, are searching and seeking for these answers, It was interesting to learn (though not unexpected) that they and we are aiming for to note that the same sort of stigma attaches to mental ill- ness there as we see here still, in these days of enlightened in- formation In mental retardation and emotional disturbance in chil- dren, the problems are just as great and perplexing as they are here, As in Ontario, mental retardation is the combined re- sponsibility of health, education and welfare, with health the co- ordinating agency Like ourselves, there is diver- gence of opinion as to how the emotionally disturbed should be dealt. with; although there ap- pears to be a greater tendency to institutionalize in Russia, This may have something to do with their way of life, e.g. most mothers appear to work outside of the home and so cannot pro- vide the care and attention needed by those children, NO EASY SOLUTION It was generally agreed that no easy or pat solution is fo be found for those problemy, but the education and medical au- thorities with whom we talked, all emphasized that hope only could lie in continuing study and research, and that they. (at least) were not impressed with the few who believe that there is an easy solution to the com- plex problems involved, * ation in Moscow, however, dif- fers quite greatly in that testing of materials, drugs, clothing material, plastics and such is the responsibility of the Depart- ment of Sanitation and Epi- demiology. In Canada, this responsibility lies with the federal govern- ment, I was impressed with the responsibility in public housing given to the Department of Pub- lic Health and. the authority given the department. No building can proceed till it has been approved by the health department and if the develop- er should choose, as sometimes happens, to ignore the recom- mendations of the Department of Health, financing of the pro- gram will be stopped imme- diately..and not begun again until the health department is satisfied with the project, and that its recommendations are being followed. This, of course, is more possible in a totalitarian state, than in a free society, Medical research in Russia is, directed and controlled by the U.S.S.R. Academy of Medical Sciences. This body was estab- lished in 1944, was given re- sponsibility for research, co- ordination, long-term planning of. medical research and train- ing of research workers in med- icine and the related sciences. been carefully planned, At the end of the day there The Oshawa Antique C-arrjwill be a big barn dance to the Club will display their vehiclesimusic of Roy Godfrey. 4 |

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