Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 21 Jul 1961, p. 2

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x VITE GUTIAWA YIrvew, rrewy, swry Si, veer September : Likely Date Let Children Decide For Election Teachers' Group Told MEDICINE HAT (CP)--Fed-| eral Works Minister David Walker says that if Prime Min. | ister Diefenbaker decides on an for responsibility in this sense." Rev. J. H. Conway of Ottawa thought students should be al- lowed to make "rather serious the challenge teachers must first admit they do not really want to educate for responsibil- ity. SASKATOON (CP) -- Cana- dian teachers were advised Thursday to let Johnny and Mary think more for them- election this year Parliament] selves, make their own deci- would probably be dissolved when it re-assembles Sept. 7 and an election called for early November. Asked in an interview Wed- nesday night for comment on rumors of a November election he said Mr. Diefenbaker might decide on a June, 1962, election date. He gave three reasons: The New Party would by then have had an opportunity to es- tablish itself--and to sap or weaken Liberal strength. A drought year, even for a sions -- and suffer the conse- quences of their mistakes. Dr. George E. Flower of the Ontario College of Education told the Canadian Teachers She said pressures to main- tain the status quo came not from the top down but from so- ciety all around and "we must recognize this before we can ac- cept the challenge of education Federation that teachers them- selves must break with tradi- tional views and set a pattern for "education for responsibil- ity. He said this aim is vital if many -- or any -- of today's youngsters are to survive to usher in the next century. His challenge brought a re- Shot In Head Man Jailed mistakes" in areas where the consequences of such decisions would not be "extremely bad." In the address which sparked the discussion, Dr. Flower said it is not enough merely to preach at youngsters about free- dom and responsibility while hemming them in with rules, regulations, prescriptions and requirements. SHOULD TRUST THEM He doubted that youngsters |are really trusted enough. | In Ontario, senior high schools still send reports home for par- Ten Years government which provides sponse from Miss G. L. Getty |ents not only to read and sign that too TRAMWAY IN THE SKY Crews work to complete framework on an aerial tram- way designed to service one of the 42 stations in a new $25,000,000 microwave link be- er Saturday. The link, pushed through 1,200 miles of rugged mountain country, is the larg- est single microwave project yet built in Canada. tween Grande Prairie, Alta., and the Alaska-Yukon border. The system will be officially opened at Whitehorse, Y.T., by Prime Minister Diefenbak- Times Says Senate Into Freight Plane Of The Future OTTAWA (CP)--Picture a Ho-|only on a relatively smooth sur- vercraft skimming over the face such as level ground or prompt relief and aid, is not al year for a government to seek re-election. Introduction of a retail sales tax by the Conservative Ontario government might react against federal Conservative candidates although the measure is outside federal politics. of Valleyfield, Que., {many teachers. are 'afraid to | resume responsibility, afraid of |principals and afraid of public lopinion, particularly as ex- |pressed by Home and School groups." Delegate Miss Sybil Shack of | Winnipeg said before accepting 'Honest OTTAWA (CP) -- The first SIMCOE (CP)--A man with a| bullet buried in the back of his| head was sentenced Thursday to 10 years in penitentiary for his part in a $2,000 robbery at the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce at St. Williams, 10 | John On The Way decision is not imminent. On Honest John artillery rockets military grounds alone, it can will be delivered to the army be put off until the warhead in early September, informants carriers are in position and in say. full operational readiness. This First deliveries will comprise date likely won't come until six launchers and training rock-|next year. ets, which have neither conven-| Provision of nuclear warheads tional nor atomic warheads. for the Honest John and CF-104 Two of the launchers will g0/in Europe would have to be cov- to the Surface-to-Surface Mis-lered by a bilateral agreement sile Training Battery at Camp petween Canada and the United |Shilo, Man. The other four will [go to the Operational Missile | Battery at Picton, Ont. When the latter battery has been fully trained onn the wea- pon, it will join the Canadian Infantry Brigade Group in West Germany. The Honest John will be the first weapon with a nuclear ca- | pability to be taken into the in- |ventory of Canada's armed forces. States. The same would apply to nu- {clear warheads for the Bomarc and the CF-101. A separate agreement would be required to cover provision of nuclear wea- pons for American interceptor squadrons based in Canada. The self-propelled--or truck- borne--Honest John is 27 feet long and its 762 - millimetre rocket weighs nearly three tons. It is a free-flight rocket and not miles south of here, June 26. Thomas Ritchie, 47, of Wind- sor, pleaded guilty. George Powell, 40, of Langton received |a similar sentence last week for |the same charge. | Police said Ritchie was found| to have a shattered revolver {bullet under his scalp but that {he had refused to explain how! |it got there. |but to fill in an estimate of the number of hours the pupil ordi- narily spends on homework, he said. "Why not ask the youngster, instead of the parent?" Dr. Fowler asked. While admitting the need for fact-learning, he said students should not be forced to accept a correct answer until they had been given freedom to explore the facts and try a tentative an- swer, Dr. Flower sald teachers would have little success teach- ing others to be more free and responsible if they are not so themselves. Big Battle Other such weapons to follow 1118 i 4 a guided missile. It has a range of 12 miles, equivalent to med- ium- to long-range artillery. | By the time the army gets the Honest John it will be almost exactly three years since the government announced a wea- pon of this type would be ob- tained. LONDON (CP)--The Finan. Mackenzie River at 60 miles an|water where the waves are a| JIN. é : : Hoy : are the Bomarc anti-aircraft cial Times says the Canadian| hour, carrying 15 tons of Jreigin imited BRIG ils land surf. missile. CF-101 jet interceptor Senate, by rejecting the bill to|to some Arctic destination. and CF - 104 low - level jet fire James Coyne and by its| It's a distinct possibility, (aces are largely treeless but ex-|, pep amendment to the customs tar-|says J. R. K. Main, senior Ca-|tremely rough. A path would "whether they will actually be iff bill, has thrust itself into a nadian representative on the In-|have to be cleared of all ob-|armeq with nuclear weapons major political fight for the first|ternational Civil Aviation Orga- jects over a few inches high. |remains to be decided by the time since the 1920s. nization. But the machine's fu-| . government. The Senate has thus invited ture is still in doubt. PROSPECT EXCITES vs ottep) Defence officiais new "threats of reform," the| Mr. Main has touched on the|the most exciting prospect for newspaper says in a story from Hovercraft potential in a paper using this device," Mr. Main! its Ottawa correspondent which dealing with northern transport-| says. A is devoted mainly to the history ation problems, written for the| Ope projected Hovercraft| «=@f the chamber. : [resources for tomorrow confer-|would have a weight of 55,000] The correspondent writes that|ence in Montreal Oct. 23-28. The|pounds--15,000 for the vehicle] the senators, by giving Coyne a paper was made public here and 40,000 for its load. | committee hearing on the gov- Thursday. |" "Given a payload of 15 tons] ernment's bill to dismiss him as| pe Hovercraft, or ground re-|and a speed of 60 knots, such a |sistance machine, glides along|device, working 4,000 hours a governor of the Bank of Can-| ada, "enabled the country 10/40, or three feet off the ground year, could move 2,500,000 ton-| y ] 2 h on a cushion of compressed air|miles a year . . . There should |under recommendations of the|printed--and that foreign peri- hear a full expose of the dis- graceful struggle between thei, vided by engines in its body. be appreciable savings on pack-|foyal commission on publica- odicals carrying Canadian do- It still is an experimental craft.|aging, inventory and spoilage, |tions would be to quit publish- mestic advertising be barred government and the bank which| the government majority in the "pooauce it can never get far|all of which engender heavy|ing in Canada or ask its 1,100, entry to Canada. The first recommendation Commons had smothered under i | : | i ibers t y Mons off the ground, Mr. Main re- costs in moving goods to the|000 Canadian subscribers to pay a shabby cloak of half-truths 1 "tne Hovercraft can move!Arctic." perhaps double the present would strike directly at Read- and insinuations." : | ---- |price for the Canadian-printedier's Digest, printed in Mont- Coyne subsequently resigned. | | product. real, The second would land on of Le love Tun 4 may prove! WEATHER FORECAST | Present newsstand price in Time magazine's Canadian edi- Vor aot atompt to Gig: Canada is 35 cents an issue.|tion which at present is printed Hot And Stick indicate a Magazine Faces Narrow Choice OTTAWA (CP)--The Reader's business to a foreign - owned Digest said Thursday its choice|periodical -- no matter where | CRANK 'ER UP DAD Paul W. Gockel, right, of Cleveland, Ohio. Adding a ve : Mail subscribers get a lower in the U.S., although plans had miss the bank governor by leg- rate. been announced for switching islation should have been de- The Digest's comments on the i feated," says the Financial g the printing to Canada. The flappers add color, but Ti ; st But the i di royal commission's report were | imes' story. "Bu e immedi- issued in advance of their ap- pearance in the August Cana-| BLOOPER BRINGS tion U.S. magazine, which will e on the newsstands July 25. | FREE PARKING to the report tabled in the Com-| controversy over doubling mons June 15 by Prime Minis-| parking meter rates to 10 |under the chairmanship of M.| Spite Thursday by a red-faced of City council. an an hour behind closed ) t} dian issue of the mass-circula- Said The Digest, in reference VICTORIA (CP) -- A civic ter Diefenbaker and prepared| cents an hour got a brief re- City council sat for more and- found: there no to make the increased gal and the new dime ate effect is less than that of the Senate's amendment to the customs bill. | Rebels Oust Pirate Chief RIO de JANEIRO (AP)-- Six months ago, Capt. Henrique Galvao was the darling of the Poridgade' fevolutionaty 'niove-| ment. | Lake | ther office at 5 a.m. EDT: Synopsis: picture o . oF aays Erie Forecasts issued by the wea- Scattered showers|thunderstorms and thunderstorms developed/and Saturday. over Northern and Central On- tario Thursday Little change is| Variable winds 10 to 15 knots.|Grattan O'Lear resident foreseen in this current weather Fog patches at night and scat- 4 Y._presice ver Ontario during the tered thunderstorms today and| Lake Huron, Niag- Chance Of Rain | b 15 knots today, variable 8 fo 12 tonight and Saturday. Scattered this afternoon Lake Huron, Georgian Bay: | Forecast Temperatures He had seized the Portuguese|ara, Georgian Bay, Haliburton) Low tonight, high Saturday: liner Santa Maria in a daring|regions, Windsor, London, Ham-\wi gor ,. ........ Partly cloudy,| raid to strike a blow against|ilton, Toronto: the regime of Premier Antonio tered afternoon and |warm and humid with scat- evening London ...... 65 63 85 85 St. Thomas «eevee Salazar. Thursday Galvao and two col- leagues were kicked out of their ber of the council of the Iber-|Light winds jan Revolutionary Directorate| change in temperature. said Galvao,| | Souto Maior, a Spaniard, and a : 11 Junqueira have been of Liberation, } Prof. ejected. {thunderstorms today and Satur- Kitchener !day. Winds generally light but up to 30 miles an hour or more {Wingham «........ {Hamilton «...o00ues North Bay ... Sudbury . Marine forecasts valid FLL : .00 a.m. EDT Saturday: {White River .oeee. Lake Erie, Lake Ontario: Moosonee ssvennane |South to southwest winds 10 to|S.S. Marie ........ not |the Ottawa Journal: "The Reader's Digest hopes it! {will be perinitied "to 'abidé by| | 0 the course favored by its Cana- ho 4 dian readers. The Digest wants) meters to continue to carry Canadian| advertising. tha 5 $ will have to be free until Tuesday. Then hastily- ; amended bylaws can come "It does not want to withdraw| into effect. from Canada. It does not want, mhe doubled fe s insti . Bi i pr pe was insti- to ask Canadian subscribers to} tuted in the hope of keeping pay perhaps double the present] traffic moving and stimulate rate for the magazine. the development of private WOULD BAN Parking Jaciies in the down- Main commission recommend- 3 ' ' |ations: were that advertisers' Merchants have become : | alarmed at the number - exemptions for tax purposes not| tomers attracted to of fu be allowed when they gave their| shopping centres, where there New Type Wednesday five merchants Penicillin picketed city hall. | Pawn broker W. A. Scott | said motorists here have fed parking meters more 'than $1,250,000, "sufficient to have made Victoria a centre for this Reo was old stuff by the {ime the Roaring Twenties ar- rived. Built in 1912, the red and white antique belongs to little extra effort to the crank are (left to right) Linda and Nora Thompson of Toronto. (CP Wirephoto) Movies Now Rid Guides In Ottawa {tures were added to the touris |attractions on Parliament Hil |and procedures of the Parlia- ment of Canada, based on the {Queen's visit in 1957 when she opened a new session. OTTAWA (CP)--Motion pic-| tl 1 | Thursday, partly as a measure] |{to ease' the burden on hard- |pressed House of Commons | guides. | An official count of tourists visiting the Centre Block so far| this year showed a one-third in- crease over last year, 294,300 to| Wednesday night. | House of Commons officials| said the six-times-a-day showing | of a 30-minute version of the Na- selection in Oshawa tional Film Board's The Scep-| Discounts up to 50% tre and the Mace which started | NU-WAY Wall-to-Wall Broadloom! Choose from the largest Thursday would ease the crush| during the peak hours. About| 100 can be seated at each show-| RUG CO. 174 Mary St. free parking if the money had | been used to privide off-street facilities." ing while others are taken on| the guided tours. | The Sceptre and the Mace is| a documentary on the history! Clitf Mills 48 Hour Special 1961 VAUXHALL VICTOR SUPER 2-tone brown & beige. New car guarantee. -~ $1795 CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. 230 KING ST. WEST 725-6651 | Discovered {| LONDON (Reuters) The --_ Ji British Medical Journal an- : nounces the discovery of a new form of penicillin which would {permit the drug to be extended _ Ito use in fighting "a wide range | {of infections." The Journal says the new | |drug, called penbritin, could be {|used to fight infections hitherto | beyond the healing power of {| penicillin. {| "It is assured of popularity (§ both by the wide range of its ac- tivity and by its ease of admin- |istration," the journal says. | The new drug is free from side-effects and has 'very low toxicity." The discovery was made at {Beecham Research Laborator- i lies following the discovery at Beecham two years ago of a ..i |method of manufacturing the {penicillin nucleus, the Journal reports. ' WIDELY SCATTERED SHOWERS PREDICTED

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