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Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Sep 1967, p. 15

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» vacant as the prisoners e gradually parolled and » families move away. (CP Photo) lan idents lable for language instruc- in Toronto and found them ing. The strange environ- t of the night-school class+ } and, sometimes, unsym- etic teachers discouraged ents and they dropped out, f you can't get the student chool take the school to " Mr. Bertacchi decided | education-on-the-job was e workers' appetite for \ing on their own ground is iable. vs a pleasure teaching because they're so eager sarn,"' says Rev. Edmund ams, a teacher at DiWalt. e factory program is hav- the effect night schools - meant to have, Learning agates itself. e worker takes his new- nd knowledge home and ests his family in learning ish. Some men' repeat each ; lesson at home for the fit of their families. er only a year. the fledg- program is a lusty infant ing all the time. Within or three months mathemat- and blueprint reading will dded to the curriculum at es, egitimate rths Increase ZLLINGTON (Reuters) -- increase in illegitimate s in New Zealand has led tempts to obtain just treat- _ for unmarried mothers their children. 1966, affmost 7,000 illegiti- children were born, orts the child welfare rtment, and there is a age of people willing to | such chiNren, especially of mixed racial vrigin. tice Minister Dr. J. L. on recently urged the need revision of New Zealand's relating to illegitimate ren and better provision nmarried mothers. 1e Jaw might well place er responsibilities on the rs of children born out of ck, while. at the same giving greater rights to who take a genuine inter- | their children," he said. s. K, J. Rangiaho, presi- of the Solo Parents Society ellington, argues that ille- ate children have fewer ; than others. believes more responsi- for fathers and, in select- ses, more rights, as well tter financial provision for 'gg mothers should be a ys t year, a private mem- bill was introduced into ment by Dr. A. M. Fin- who sought to amend the ute Persons Act to give er financial security to tried mothers by putting e responsibility on the s for the support of their en. bill was not passed. OBITUARIES 'UR THOMAS COLBARY hur Thomas (Skip) Col- of Newcastle, died in an nt near Port Hope, Sept. > was in his 28th year. deceased was born Aug, ), the son of Mr. and Mrs. Solbary, of Oshawa. On 15, 1960, he married the ' Miriam Yvonne in wood, N.S. He was an ac- ember of the UAW, an yee of General Motors for ast year, and had pre- y served for six years he Royal Canadian Air is survived by his wife, rents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack y of Oshawa; three sons, Alan and Jack; three : Mrs. Howard Kellock eline) of Brooklin, Mrs. Gray (Beatrice) of Pick- and Mrs. Robert Dawson of Oshawa; and three 's, Victor, David and Gil- ll of Oshawa. memorial service will be | 2 p.m., Sept. 18, at the 'ong Funeral Chapel, ted by the Rev. Dr. H. ellow, of Northminster Church, Interment will Groveside Cemetery, ns iday afternoon FRED MacDO) Julie, Si FINE A The second of two lex the Fine Arts course ¢ this year by the Unive Toronto will be given th at 2 p G. §S. Vickers: at the ( Art Gallery. Mr. Vickers is the of the Department of Fir at the university and will cuss the academie and art tory aspect of the course parents and' advan PROFESSOR C. T. Morey, director of studio | | Sanitone. Certified Master Drycleaner be Dry Cleaners an 434 Simcoe South ART EXHIBIT HAS WIDE APPEAL tE-RACE STRATEGY SESSION WITH ! Are Loyal h ; OURSE. ADVANCES con-/dents underst yn Poms Three years ago Fred Mac- Donald went to a local car wreckers and bought him beat-up Mini Cooper. Sinc« he has used it to win 13 tr phies and earn 12 first | finishes in Class 5 sedan ing -- mostly at Mosport and : iis CHILDREN an airport circuit at Harewoo i Mr. MacDonald, of RR 2 sh Whitby, used to race moto Oshawa Times Photos cycles but the urge to t _ cars hit him after Wats {them race when the mote {events were completed. LONG HAUL He spent a complete t} table post-graduate|preparing the Mini and by n li n take posts in -univer- jtime he was finished th Pa 5 art galleries and mu- little of the original ca - Greek Roman and } is: He said a wide knowl-|Today the engine bloc! ,,were studied in the f fi ral history would/ parts of the body are al Renaissance 'and Mor an advantage in other Original. The engine has Fans When It Comes To injof art in hn past and pre rN in the. second and third uch as government|12 complete motor jobs course' During the fourth ibroad {transmission has been rey dents- are encouraxt ivrent exhibit at the| and the suspension exte: centrate on optional t : Art Gallery is particu-| modified, The 1,000-cubic their special field at ; teresting | | metre engine takes the I teresting to students sag 1 tte} Professor Mc a career in art. The|(? 110 mph on the strai { ence that many § side: 5 pew 00 at Mo » stu-laudience that many yvides a visual inter-| Harewood and 1 Mr. MacDonald would like try racing the 'bigger, fa cars or even become pro sional but he realizes his { cial limitations make it im ' at Ager sible. He has spent over § : Bgpecrooe by A eg on the Mini, The big advan "tnouudes pte his by of the sedan racing, as he s¢ eM. J. Dewhirst it, is that it is cheap and s Berger, Rochelle. Glad-|/0 his first year of racir an Johnson and Natalie MacDonald .had_ severa 1 : ' dents and rolled the car once 5 but was never hurt Oshawa Art Gallery at) He said his wife worries mecoe St. S. is currently|about him, "but doesn't mii ig an exhibition by Mont-|the racing as long as I don and Calgary artists featur-|SPend too much money." fatty If anyone is to share in M ulpture and water colors. MacDonald's success, it is } 0 interested in attend-}chanic Max Egli who had don S. Vickers lecturela lot of work and charg¢ afternoon should)jittle. Mr. MacDonald Hery at 576-3000, |does most of the labor té | ~~ |things apart himself but Mr | Egli does the fine work of r | f BA Art Gallery placing and putting together. | 10 TIMES YEAR Di ] Usually he races | Has Isp ay thing, he said, is to try and The Oshawa Art Gallery is|¢atch the motor before it blow 'ting the latest circulating) 'If it ran good at the last race hibition from the Art Insti-;|we don't bother about it too ¢ it of Ontario until Oct. 1, |much but if it didn't we | 'This is an exhibit by the Re-|to rebuild it. of art history and vurses available from of T Department of Fine e drawings, ~prints, itings now on display the ca ulery entitled 'Four ry Watercolourists and Montreal Artists'. The N ak « ary Watercolourists ew ibition of 20 paintings, ge five works by Stan- rrott, Rolf *Ungstad, Re orted ord E Blodgett and ' George Angliss. All. of these truct at the Alberta Col-| HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- Edi of Art and work in many|Head reports a renaissance beside watercolours. |off-screen glamor in Hollywoox exhibition gives the Osh-| once with its Greta Garbo : public a chance to see} Joan Crawford, the glamor ca talk on art courses offers ings and art influenced by} ital of the world. at the U of T this term to ch Canada, being produced| "Suddenly the teen-age . group of interested } one of the -Western provy-} let no longer wears tennis at the Oshawa Art ¢ It is interesting to judge| and mini-shorts,' says last Sunday. I { there is a regional dis-/Sprightly winner of s¢ was 16-year-old 1 n that transcends the ere-| Oscars for cos tume de Collegiate student, Ct r ks on display. Sculp-| Now it's 'in' to be wel Shewring, shown her ( by Yves Gravel, litho-| dressed.' miring a work | I by Pierre Ayot and| She had seen one actres Prentice now at the 4 ' Robert Wolfe form | foot at a formal evening --Oshawa Tim ) nt vi facet of the show./another at a premicre x -- --|jeans and seatshirt and an flat a cocktail party in blac jleather pants, jackets, boot 'and cap, But that sort of ti | now is out. | To honor filmdom's be dressed actors and actre jthe Costume Designers Guil {of which Miss Head is pre ident, holds its 'ond annual | awards ball Sept. 29. | Miss Head, whose bangs an {horn-rimmed spectacles | almost a Hollywood trade | was asked if off screen jis dead. | GLAMOR DEAD >| "It hasbeen deader thai | proverbial doornail, exce s|a small group of extre aordin ri ie jly well-dressed women, not a _ |of them actresses. "Now the glamor look of Ho! lywood has become importar again. Why? Because of a 1 aissance of glamor and beaut) | in many of our new motion pic | tures for the first time in a dec- | ¢2\ade. Year after year, we've hac |documentary, stark 1 realism." NELLIS» LOOKING n : ae Arms Apurtments -- IMPROVEMENTS e GENERAL REPAIRS 745 STEVENSON ROAD NORTH Painting For Brochure or Information Papering Remodel- Phone or 723-1009 "All Work Guaranteed" For Free Estimates Call... 728-2061 128-9724 about 10 times a year. The bigjs mo king, a TAD HOBB ® vs 2m & J ean k A f ' I hy HOS 5) + . a I in 1 S me ils, since} bro starling » Monday P report sae. Motel, et pp thas " y no. one under 25] mind that the dud roupe and also smokes a clone martiv ach Arly: 1 Pattridge and Buy ting! PEAILTY for i EALT 4 f I ) s H ° j ; ( @ Lt ¢ en 16 | ; 5281 | IN HOTEL 1 stast her » week Mon- . the Spruce Villa acts as nies, and routines in g act. sings, i plays the elec. is partner during the features h dancer, TEL 1 Quartet nttraction 10usse, Julie ractions features 1 Rush . sure to. NGE | take t at the of the »k. He er. He 1@ and Robert Hide- lounge ia, will Pipers N' Roll Monday 1 at the awa for he says. trument m Sego- ~~ to see the enjoy his © rather than - music, osophy, ye thing r use of iru that t come I do not drinking. o come are obviously ~

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