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Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Jan 1966, p. 15

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SENATORS AND MPS TOUR 1967 FAIR SITE the Senate; Trade Minister Robert H. Winters; Hubert Badanai, MP for Fort Wil- liam; Pierre Dupuy, com- missioner general the tour of the site of the 1967 Montreal World's Fair Sat- urday. From left: Senator bdoeads Smith, Speaker of Senai-ors and members of Parlianient examine a model «of the Czechoslovak- jan Pa vilion polos a of 'Prince's Course Rough At School In Austraha By JOHIN FITZGERALD ,130 boys of 15 years or older. MELBOURNE, Australia|They select their own leaders (AP)--When Prince Charle's|and change them frequently to ends his thisee-month term atigive as many as possible a Timbertop sethool he will be ex-|taste of leadership pected to swing an axe with the MUST DO CHORES authority of ia lumberjack, run} The boys live in groups of 15 six miles up iand down a moun-|in bungalow-type living quarters tainside with no strain, land ajeach containing a dormitory, trout with little fuss--and pass/living room, small pantry, all his scholastic examinations.|shower room, changing room} He will rise at 7:20 a.m., take|and boiler room. They must a cold shower and make his own; maintain their own living quar- bed before bre akfast. And at the|ters, sweeping the floors, mak- end of each da-y in class, he will |ing beds, keeping the area tidy| take an hour's cross - country|and chopping firewood run | Residents in the area of Timbertop is: the school in)Timbertop have been screened acrobat" thundered Wyatt in Australian ski country 150 miles|/by security officials and local|/London recently. 'In the name northeast of Met bourne that | farmers have been asked not to|of humanity, what are they do- claims to make self-reliant, in-|lay dingo (wild dog) traps injing to the boy' i dependent, practical and physic- \areas where Timbertop boys go| Charles is not pictured as an ally competent roen out of boys. | walking intellectual or scholar. But his It is a branch of the Geelong) Masters at Timbertop will call\grades at Gordonstoun are Church of Engfand grammar|the British heir Prince Charles|above average. He has none of | school at Australia's Corio Bay | but to the boys he will be sim-|his father's gift of lightning | Queen and Prince Philip have {shown they want to emphasize physical toughness--along with scholarship--in preparing their son for the throne Some Britons scoff at the idea but many approve, London re- porters have found QUESTIONS EDUCATION Woodrow Wyatt, a member of the British ment, questioned whether the Prince was getting the right kind of education in this highly technological world 'Is he going to be a lumber- | jack, a steeplejack, or just an Labor Parlia- | in Dracantc Se Ce ee ra a oe and it has ties wii!li Gordonstoun |ply Charles repartee but has a sensitive and| school in Scotland, which the 17-| On weekends, the boys hike imaginative mind. The young year-old future king has been off with 40-pound packs on their|prince's leanings are more to- | attending since 19432. backs and sleep in the woods.|ward English and history than Charles leaves London Jan. 28/Often weekend hikes cover 60|to science and he is regarded and starts at Tim)jertop Feb. 3. | miles. jas one of the best actors in the}! The operations .wt Timbertop! In sending Prince Charles to) idramatics classes at Gordons- | are left almost _entéirely to the|Gordonstoun and 'Timbertop, the|toun | revolution education . and Poverty Ghettos Hit training we just cannot con- |tinue to operate the industries on which our national well- s being depends." By Quehec NDP Chief | Prof. John S. Morgan of the | University of Toronto told the conference that the best solu- TORONTO (CP)--Mfillions of|said that Canadians "are seri-| tion to the problem of the poor} os ber a on] ously under-educated and un- i a Pacmag | government - sponsisred med-| : ion 0 nada's wealth ical care and public housing toe" wained operate the The program Prof. Morgan} make up for a century of ne- kind of technological society envisions would be based on a| glect, says Robert Cliche,|W® are developing. . | guaranteed - income policy, he leader of the New Idemocratic| Mr. Sharp also said that "'to|said. A fair income for all Party in Quebec. meet the need of 20 years hence| would be set, and earnings "Indifference in the face of; . we are practically unpre-| would be _ distributed _accord-| poverty and deprivistion has|Pared,"" and that "without a ingly. created ghettos throusphout Can- panes svg i < ada," Mr. Cliche told, the clos- in session Saturday. of a two-| day conference on poverty and planning sponsored by the! ' Woodsworth Foundaticiwn minacp auet"'sin oof Mir. Bonney's Showcase |. nounces his name Kieesh, said that the poor have become in- visibel to the majority of Cana | dians who have not felt the s effects of poverty and: misery. | This Week He said that the poor live "in| a cruel solitude'? and that it is! > the auty of ive beiter-or to; Ha -s6 4 #& 7 4 = make them a part of ime maint =A RE BeAUTIUML & aienie stream of Canadian life. Mr. Cliche said, however, the f poor must, become architects of their own economic progress. The war on poverty, be said, || must be.fought on the base of the power heirarchy by the sol- | diers and not the generals. SHARP WARNING Also speaking at the confer: | ence Saturday was Finance Minister Mitchell Sharp who ORICON OOOO GOA INTERNATIONALY KNOWN Ukrainian Canadian Singers MICKEY »» BUNNY FIRST WITH THE EXCITING NEW SORIND : OF HALF UKRAINIAN HALF ENGLISH SONGS AND MUSIC --------= Present a ---------- UKRAINIAN xs ENGLISH CONCERT FEATURING THE FASCINATING SONGS, @ COMEDY, AND MUSIC OF THE VERSAPILE = D-DRIFTERS-5 DNIPRO UKRAINIAN HOME WED-JAN. 26 8:00 P.M Adults $2.00 ALL GIRL QUARTET APPEARING NIGHTLY The CADILLAC HOTEL Call 728-1676 for Ricksha Chinese Food regeunpttanseittin gts under 16 Si No Advance Rush Seots Canly Civil Servants' | Protest March a a et See Se : TODAY Rete Set SLLOLS T s By PETER BUCKLEY LONDON (CP) -- Parliament gets back to work Tuesday af- ter the Christmas recess 'to find a dramatic change in the poli- tical climate since it last met. The Opposition Conservative party is being given its first reai opportunity to bite into the Labor government' hide- since Edward Heath was elected leader of the Tories last July. On the domestic front, there secms to be nothing but trouble for Prime Minister Wilson. The forecasts Sunday were for a --_ i "ss ASL opinion since Labor's high-fly- day. ident of his position in discuss- Tory no-confidence motion was early as Thursday. age of ammunition with the cur-| rent crisis in gas supplies in the industrial Midlands, a threat- ened national railway strike There is likely to be no short-| Wilson to handle. cutbacks in London's bus. serv- ice starting today, | over the goverfiment's land incomes policy. Thursday, voters in Hull north will take part in a byelection \to replace a deceased Labor |member of Parliament political observers see the byel-| ection as a make-or-break event lfor the government |SHOW VOTER TREND Labor holds 314 seats in the) current House, against 303 Tor- ies and nine Liberals, with each party also contributing a mem- fair; J. A. Mongrain, MP for Trois-Rivieres; and Jean-Charles Cantin, MP for Quebec South --CP Wirephoto House's hierarchy. A loss in} Hull North would reduce La} LONDON. Ont. (CP) -- Civic|0r's majority to one seat and| employees from across Ontario| Teflect a | major change in voter will -- at the Ontario | amet legislature against "dictatorial"' labor legislation within a matter] 2 COLOR HITS TODAY of weeks, a union official said | Wednesday night. Mrs. Grace Hartman of Tor-| onto, president of the 40,000- | member Ontario division of the | Canadian Union of Public Em-| ployees, said the action was| in the heroic role of Horatio | prompted by the provincial gov- | }ernment's order-in-council to in- tegrate the Canada Pension Plan| with the Ontario municipal em-| |Ployees retirement system. if SYSTEM LONG UNUSED | The metric system has been! legal in Britain for more than) | 100 years 1ZZA telephone 728-0192 Pi's Charles Vine is only No. 2... § That's why he tries harder... and loves more dangerously! in the whole wide world" co.or AM EMBASSY PICTURES RELEASE TODAY at... 1:30 - 3:30 - 5:15 - 7:20 - 9:20 [" NO. OME MAY ENTER Abi ENTERS HER BATH | L FABI WAXIMILIAN SCHELL + SAMANTHA.EGGAR seen INGRID THULN we ERBERT LOM "TEE THOMPSON" ULUS ESTER + MUBERT MONTEL bee FEATURE TIMES -- 1:30 - 3:30 - 5:30 ~ 7:30 - 9:30 P.M. and disputes | rich export orders, this verges} prices! on a crisis. Some |s0n in in turn blamed Tory inac- | ber to a non-voting role in the | OPEN DOORS PLAZA*® PHONE 723-2845 1 P.M. | So OR THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, Jenucry 24, 1966 4% bo] + o Resume Tuesday tion before Labor came to! power in October, 1964. | The proposed railway strike is| a direct result of the controver- sial prices and incomes policy. | Railway unions object to their wage increases being kept down to conform with a national pol- ing days before Christmas. Domestic business is. not likely to be the main item Tues- Wilson is expected to out- line his government's next moves in its efforts to over- throw Ian Smith's rebel govern- CLUB OF OSHAWA TEEN TALENT SHOWCASE CLASSICAL --- POPULAR --- FOLK SINGING WED., JAN. 26, 1966 8:00 P.M. O'Neill Collegiate end Vocational Institute TICKETS: ~-- Henderson's -- on banal and swey College Music DB Len ROTARY l ment in Rholesia. Wilson can feel more confi- icy that, the government hopes, will tie increases in wages and prices to boosts in productivity. Figures indicate that wage in- creases since the policy came into effect have been about dou-| ble the rate desired by the gov-| raised serious questions about|}ernment, and the railway men} Heath's leadership. | can't see why they should be ex-) The problems on the home) ¢ front may prové tougher for ing Rhodesia. The question of sanctions and other moves against the Rhodesian regime has split the Tory party and In London, there is discontent | jover negotiations for a reduced work week for the men who) drive the city's 7,000 double- decker buses. | They have voted to ban over-| time, starting today. To counter | the ban, the London Transport | Board is prepared to cut off 84 | bus routes so the rest can carry | SWAP ACCUSATIONS on as usual. The Conservatives were quick| The MPs are not like to have) to blame the government. Wil-|their humor improved by wait- ing aroun! in the cold for buses. | The gas shortage in the Mid- lands has caused numerous in- dustries to send home thousands of workers. For the automotive industry in particular, with its APPEARING THIS WEEK VIKI BAKER AND "The NOTABLES HELD OVER! by popular demand at the BLUE HORSE LOUNGE SMILEY BATES °c "NORTH STAR RAMBLERS" @ Rose-Mary St. John @ Leroy Come visit with us for an evening of fun end frolic. Bring your friends end really enjoy yourself in the friendly atmosphere of the Blue Horse Lounge, HOTEL LANCASTER "The Friendly Spot"' pre Hotel KING ST. W., OSHAWA e Finest In Nightly Entertainment ===, Proudly Presents THE PRODIGAL SONS AM MOTOR HOTEL 5@x Thornton Rd. South and Champlain Ave. Phone -- 723-4693 Visit Our New DINING ROOM @ SPECIAL @ Businessman's Lunch Daily GO-GO-re Harry's Hideaway HELD OVER | The MARQUIS Featuring Linda with beautiful, exciting GO-GO GIRLS! entertainment . nightly VARIETY and COMEDY AT It'S BEST ON TOUR FROM NEW YORK OSHAWA'S FINEST @ Enfertainment Nighily at 9 P.M. @ 3AM LOCHRAN, Meneger The BOBBY DEAN REVUE | This Week Only STARRING: Peggy Jackson ---- Curvaceous Exotic Dancer, Cepia A-Go-Go Mary Anne -- Vocalist, Dancer LOUNGE & DINING LOUNGE For the Finest Entertainment in the Area OUR FRENCH BUFFET IS ON DAILY Luncheons .....---.. 12 p.m. to 2:30 -- 1.45 Dinners to 9:00 --- 2.75 Saturdaye s sivessesms to 9:00 -- 3.00 Sundays ...eeeesse5- 5 p.m. to 8:00 --3.00 Cold Buffet -- Fri. & Sat. After 9 p.m. -- 1.25 We Cater to Weddings, FOR RESERVATIONS CALL WHITBY 668-3386 5 p.m. eee eeeeenoae 5 p.m. Banquets, Parties, ete, &

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