Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Dec 1961, p. 22

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1 ' | * , Wheat Farming Kemi More Uniform Pattern 'Efficiency Need Reading Public Of Education Urged CALGARY (CP) -- Western| The minister said Canada The most comprehensive ; iCanadian farmers will have to also will need coarse grains. He|study ever made of the daily, OTTAWA (CP) -- Steps for|Brown, business administrator|:iculum with a common basic jincrease their wheat producing|said the increased wheat pro- newspaper's reading public in evolying a more uniform pat-|of the South Peel board of edu- core of subjects for each grade: lefficiency by 11 per cent to|duction should not be at the ee U.S. was shown in New tern of education across Canada|cation, Port Credit, Ont regular surveys by labor, come jmeet' market demands, Agri-jpense of coarse grain produc-| ork recently to leading manu- were suggested Thursday 'in a\Uses MANY SOURCES merce and industry on the re- jeulture Minister Hamilton saidjtion, ng pam result from arog ee a ae report on the citizen's role in! jt js based on information /@tionship of vocational training |Thursday. creased efficiency. ies, by ureau of Adver- education. i " j./to job requi ts; keepin safe ws ea . : = ' supplied by some 100 authori-!'¢ } quirements, keeping | He said in an interview that Official statistics released at ek ee it Neuen Saying the layman now exerts Gee inchoding school trustee as-;Secondary school instruction in jat least 500,000,000 bushels of|Winnipeg by the Board of Grain Representatives as co-host. The little influence over the school|sociations, univer sity presi-|line with the rapidly changing |wheat a year will have to be/Commissioners covering the pe- survey was conducted in con. Cu!ticulum, the report proposed|dents, newspaper editors and of-|Science of farming. |produced during the next few|riod Phe ioe 29 Pe maggie Bi Pale with Audits and Survey the survey commissions, simi-'ficers of other associations. |RAPS TRUSTEES jyears. He added that 350,000,-|Cana SUEY SURE ®"/Co., and was financed by six|/2t in status to a royal commis-| T've study says that the most! School trustees come in for j000 bushels of wheat a year | wheat in store or in transit as major Canadian newsprint man-|°10P. to assess periodically the'effective liaison between the)some harsh comment. | would be exported during the 381,600,000 bushels. This repre- ufacturers; comprising . the ¢ducational scene. public and education depart-| "In certain provinces the |next two years. jsented a \drop of 41,900,000/. rint Information Commit. , It also urges higher standards|ments now appears to be in qualifications for school trustees pcertrsnemaes bushels from the level on the!) 'Among the significant facts fT School trustees with a sug-jihose provinces which have ad-'do not even include the ability |same date in 1960. indicated in the Tadg: gestion that trustees might be} visory committees to the edu- to read or write," it says. "Too Shell Oil Lid | Mr Hamilton also predicted) Of the 54,000,000 households in freee from negotiating teach-/cation minister con.posed of rep-|frequently trustees concern that the first round of negotia-|continental U.S., 86.4 per cent tS' Salaries. jresentatives of different seg-'themselves solely with the fi- 4 LJ tions for Britain's entry into the|read at least one newspaper on , Tlese proposals are offered as;ments of society. nancial and material aspects of Fellowships _ |European Common Market willlan average weekday: 80.4 per 'Pics for discussion at the Ca-| As a means of increasing}school administration and ig- 'not succeed. Agricultural trade|cent of homes buy and read at "@dian Conference on Educa- such contacts, the report asks nore the academic or curricu- TORONTO (CP) -- Shell Oil|policies would be the stumbling|jeast one paper each day, and tion in Montreal March 4-8. whether advisory commit ees jum requirements." Company of Canada Limited|block, because the present|/another 6 per cent read one or| 'the study paper, sixth of a should be established at both; University governors, too, re- said Thursday it is offering 10| members would not agree with! more papers on a_pass-along Series prepared for the confer-|provincial and local levels to ceive a measure of criticism and fellowships for summer study at'British insistence that the ECM | basis. ence, was compiled by H. J. A.|meet once or twice a year with'are urged to take a greater in- Cornell University, Ithaca, | provide access for Common-| Four out of five adults (21 'the department or local school terest in academic operations. N.Y., and Stanford University,/wealth producers. : and over) and 72 per cent of the to get along without TV and board ? ee Stanford, Calif. to Canadian} Mr, Hamilton said Germany|country's 13,000,000 individuals without newspapers. The re-| Such committees could include high schooi science and mathe-\has the highest tariff rates and| between the ages of 15 and 20,'sponse, "I would feel quite lost/"epresentatives from home and| Expectant Mother matics teachers and supervis-\refuses to lower its protection|read a newspaper on any given without it," was said by 49 per | School and parent-teacher fed- ' ors. of German farmers, British en-|weekday. In the course of a cent in the case of newspapers, |¢rations, women's groups, Gets $15 000 Bail Each fellowship will provide|try under these circumstances|five-day period, 88. per cent of and by 28 per cent in the case SChool trustee associations, os z exenen : se , full. tuition, fees, board and!would raise the price of import-|adults read a newspaper on one of TV jteachers federations, commerce, TORONTO (CP)--Lydia Ann I'M READY LET'S GO lodging in university facilities,,ing Canadian wheat to Britain/or more days. Americans use their news-|and industry, labor and chur- os an 18-year-old Bar- P a transportation allowance and|by 40 cents a bushel. |. Total newspaper readings by/paper in a number of ways: 53 Ches. : id ea ae her third Simonik. 7, one of 35 Eski- | illon, seemed eager to go! the Frobisher Bay area | Stipend of $500 to compensate) However, the long - range/adults on every weekday are per cent report they have clip-|' A second stage might be es- bail f 5.0 yAipgt ha ei Boe boa : ited ef ray area yartially for salary which might|trend as the European standard 125,500,000 and by teen-agers, ped some item other than ad-'tablishment of a commission, |ai! of $15,000 on a charge of mos from Frobisher Bay who home as the group was wait- twice delayed their departure have 'heen earned: during the| of living rises will be for the another 12,750,000 vertising out of the paper in the Similar in status to a-roval com-,non-capital murder in the death were cured of tuberculosis at | ing to travel to Malton Air- from Toronto : summer. population to eat more meat| Newspaper reading is about|past three months; 27 per cent/mission, in each province to|of her husband, John Richard, Mountain Sanatorium in Ham- ! port near Toronto. Storms in --(CP Wirephoto) phe fellowships are availableand convert grain fields intojas high in the suburbs as it is/still have the clipping at home; |meet every 10 years and ex-|at Barrie Sept. 25. agin : ~ to high school teachers and sup-\pasture land, said the agricul-|in the metropolitan areas, where|18 per cent have sent or passed amine in detail the educational) Mr. Justice D. R. Morand COURTESY DRIVE courtesy and respect among/September, and now proposes a ervisors who have had five\ture minister. This would give|it ranges from 89 to 93 per cent. |along a recent clipping to some-|system. granted bail to Mrs. Crawford, WARSAW, Poland (AP) -- A residents of Warsaw. It spon- committee to persuade pkople to,years' experience and have/Canada an opportunity "to| People were asked to describe one else, 28 per cent have clip-| Other proposals are establish- who has been in custody at local newspaper urges mutualisored 'Kindness Month' during|be nicer to one another shown qualities of leadership. 'push our wheat in." how they would feel if they had'ped advertisements. iment by each province of a cur-/Barrie since her arrest. Friday) until 9 b.- f . THOR "CONTEMPRA" | seit ee ! , a Colourful Resilacrete Floorplate S. ' for interior and exterior concrete floors : i Q : c rit 7 Brighten and spruce up your basement floors; give them a hard, With porcelain enamelled top ' ESILACRE e glossy surface with new "Floorplate". Although specially re- mi y A commended for cellar and garage floors, walks, porches and patios that have been previously painted or treated, it may also pe ai } be used on wood or metal floors. 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