Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Jan 1963, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, January 8, 1963 GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN BINT HEADS BOARD OF WORKS > City Council did a pretty fair job last Saturday (at its secret caucus to select standing committees for the year) of facing up to the real issues and attempting to find a solution. Perhaps the shuffle of chairmanships for the four stand- ing committees (Finance, Board of Works, Property and Traffic) did not go nearfy far enough, but it was a good start and some major changes were made, Such changes do much to stifle inertia, smug complac- ency, make our elected representatives far more valuable ag their knowledge of the municipal set-up is increased. Alderman Walter Branch will bring a wealth of experi- ence to one of the most important posts on Council -- chair- manship of the Finance committee -- where it will be his duty to keep a close watch on the City's purse-strings in the troubled times ahead, when many demands are made for tax-dollars, Alderman Cecil Bint, who has had lengthy experience as an alderman and trustee on the Board of Education, steps into Mr, Branch's former position as chairman of the Board of Works. Mr. Bint said today that one of Council's key objectives would be to appoint a Director of Operations, as recom- mended in the recently-completed Woods, Gordon Report. "If we approach this appointment in the right way," said Mr. Bint, "I am confident that many of our adminis- tration problems can be solved. The Director of Operations, @s I see it, is the key to the success of our future opera- tions, He must be a highly-qualified man without local affil- jations of any kind and we would be well advised to set down what his duties: will be before any appointment is made." Alderman Albert V. Walker was re-elected chairman @ the all-important Property committee and Alderman John Brady was returned as chairman of the Traffic committee. When the ballots were all tallied Saturday, there were naturally some disappointed candidates for committee posts -- for instance, Alderman Gordon Attersley failed to get a chairmanship, yet he has twice headed the aldermanic polls (in 1962 and 1960). .. Alderman Finley Dafoe, who has been such a stout and consistent critic of the operation of the City Engineering Department and the Board of Works Yard, failed in his bid for Mr. Branch's former post, Mr. Dafoe ran third in last December's municipal election. He has long been an out- gpoken alderman. He will be on Mr. Branch's Finance com- mittee this year. * Cass Opens New Police College AYLMER, Ont, (CP) -- At-/82 ftom municipal forces) torney - General Cass officially|throughout the province--began opened the new $2,000,000 On-|a series of 12-week courses de- tario Police College Monday | signed to improve and stand. with a prediction that event-|ardize police techniques ually it will be turning out po-|throughout Ontario, lice officers ranking with the) Before the year ends, it ts best-in the world. hoped at least 1,000. recruits Mr. Cass, noting the college is)and older men will have been starting modestly, said soon it|trained in basic courses, said will be offering basic, advanced) Judge B. J. S. Macdonald, On- supervisory and command in-|tario Police Commission chair- struction. ; : man, "We in Ontario think this ts/ Aqvancea and specialized an important occasion, On@ Of| courses will be introduced in the most important evenis for 964 law enforcement and proper Mass Media Rid Urged By Thomson ji. OFFICIALS ATTEND High-ranking government, po- lice and municipal officials, in- cluding Works Minister Connell, attended the opening cere- monies. The college is located in 14 buildings formerly occu. ied by RCAF personnel. | Mr, Cass said the college and | its instructors provide the "'ba- sis for a province-wide police force which will be unequalled | emergent countries are "above|cult of detection, committed by all, education and national inte- or under the direction of intelli- gration." NEED EDUCATION TORONTO (CP) -- The best; Cautioning that the day is way to hurry development in|past when seniority or "know- the emerging nations of Asiajing somebody" is the criteria and Africa is to provide "mam. for promotion, Mr, Cass said} moth help in the development)|the recruits require a "careful of their mass media of commu- blending of training and experi- nications,' Roy Thomson, chair-|ence. Training is essential to man of Thomson Newspapers) modern police work," Limited, said Monday. Judge Macdonald said: 'The Mr, Thomson, addressing a'quality of the graduates from joint luncheon meeting of the/this institution will depend Canadian Club of Toronto and| more upon the quality, ideals the Empire Club of Canada,|and dedication of its instruction said: {staff than anything else and it "IT am completely convinéed will take time to ascertain' that something constructive) whether our work is accom-| must be done to hurry along the|plishing its objectives." development of these emerging) The untrained police officer peoples."' is helpless in the new, sophisti. The Canadian-born publishing|cated enviroment of a "much executive said the needs of/larger variety of crimes, diffi- lgent and frequently well-edu-| cated criminals, which show} skillful planning, preparation! "For both, mass media are|and execution." all-important weapons. In these ca wae new nations there are hundreds CHANGE TO PROFESSION | of millions of people who must needs through education comes thej|will, in the course of a growth of intelligence." to be educated andjued government support ew jyears, have changed the occu- "It has taken us several cen-|pation of policing in Ontario FEW POSSESSIONS SAVED up. The house was heavily damaged and little inside was saved. House next door also was damaged. This photo was A woman flees her burning home in Huntington, W. Va., Monday with the few pos- sessions she managed to grab taken by a passerby, Willis Cook, before firemen arrived. The identity .of the woman was not learned. --(AP Wirephoto) Staff Of Economists Needed, Glassc OTTAWA (CP) Develop: ment of a central staff of econ- omists in the finance depart-|sponsibility for formulating a| ment to help draft broad eco-|comprehensive economic policy nomic policy is an "immediate|for government. concern,' says the Glassco|) It made no reference to royal commission. he government's announce- Reporting Monday night on ment since then of plans to set) the work of the government's|Up a national economic devel | 700 professional economists and|opment board, statisticians, the commission|government interests would be also proposed greater indepen-|represented, to advise on eco- dence and powers for the Dom-|nomic policy. But it said: inion Bureau of Statistics, and first last report, power' in the bureau. |be sought in the future, the de- The commission on govern-;partment would logically serve ment organization said there is|@8 a focal point for the collec- : "To whatever extent, if at all,| He promised that with contin-/expressed alarm over "'serious/external co-operation in govern-|refuse requests that might im- We!shortages of professional man-|ment economic planning may) o Says September, |tistics," it recommended that|provincial jurisdiction. that the department have re-\the Dominion statistician hold) office 'during good behavior' \expense of the federal govern-|posted abroad--46 in subject to dismissal only for)ment to persons whose health|"'excessive," and said they cause, This would give him the/is primarily a federal responsi-|should gradually be replaced by same status as the comptroller |bilit | of the treasury and a few other|Eskimos. public officials. other special interests." cal operaions." shortage in the dominion bur-| Revision OTTAWA (CP)--A_ sweeping reorganization of federal health services, including gradual tran- sfer of veterans hospitals to community jurisdiction, is ree ommended by the Glassco royal commission on government or- ganization. As many as 9,000 jobs could disappear in the veterans treat+ ment services branch of the vet+ erans affairs department if the recommendation in the third vol- ume of the commission's report, released Monday night, ts adopted. . A further 1,500 may be af- fected in the Indian and north- ern health services branch of the federal health department: if action is taken to implement a commission recommendation that Indian and Eskimo health care be transferred to 'normal! community facilities." The commission found that segregated hospitals are an un-| justifiable expense and that "too frequently, the quality of care) jin Indian and northern health services hospitals is not com-| parable with that provided in) community hospitals in the same area." When transfer of the hospitals is completed -- 'necessarily a long-term project"? -- remaining \federal health employees should be consolidated in three direc- torates within the health depart- ment, They would administer, spectively: 1, All activities designed to support and co - ordinate the |health services operating under) | | re- 2, All services provided at the! y--for instance, Indians and Fewer than 5,000 persons The/would be employed in the three Dominion statistician shoul djdirectorates, the commission es- have 'the absolute freedom to/|timated., The commission also recom- |service personnel be transferred Referring to the manpower|gradually to civilian hospitals. | 8, All federal activities con-| Health Services Urged Acute treatment hospitals for the armed services were 'not needed in peacetime. However, th existing system of sick quartrs and infirmartes must be retained for personnel in barracks, afloat or located in isolated areas, T'e armed serv- ices must also continue to have their own medical staffs. Veterans' hosp'tals cost 850,- 000,000 a year to operate, Seventy per cent of the patients were chronic cases 'or those re- quiring only domiciliary care mostly aged veterans of the First. World War, By 1080 it was estimated that the case load will double to some 16,000 as more and more Second World War véterens seck hospital care. An addl- tional $200,000,000 would have to be spent on 8,500 new beds. It recommended that no more active treatment hospitals be constructed for veterans, that palents be transferred progres- sively to municipal nospitals un der appropriate financial ar- rangements, and that DVA hos- pitals, when cleared, be con verted to community institu- tions under transfer agreements providing preferential admission rights for disabled veterans. The commission also: 1, Called for an end to visual examination by a doctor of pas- sengers arriving in Canada from abroad. Customs and immigra- tion officials should be given the responsibility of examining immunization documents, with a doctor being on call for emer- gency situations. Found the number of Ca- nadian government physicians 196061-- a "roster system" whereby phy- |sical examination certificates of iprospective immigrants would | The public "demands statis-jcerned primarily with food and|be examined in Canada. in which non-|tical facts detached as fully as|drug control. possible from politica! and) 3. Called for release of part 5 of the Canada Shipping Act> which provides free health serv- ices for seamen, The commis- \sion found evidence of "'exten- \sive abuse" of the plan, pair the objectivity of statisti-/ mended that hospital care of} 4, Advocated increased gov- | ernment grants for medical re- search, turies of education and experi-|into a profession, with all that/qanger of 'serious failures" in|tion and dissemination of eco-| ence to develop our intelligence implies, in the way of skill,| .oiection of some vital informa-(nomic information." |to where it is today. It has/public service and dedication, |si9, because the work depends} At present, economic re- taken even longer for the world so that our people may With) aitirely on one or two key sta-\search in the. finance depart-| is to acquire its sense of na- justification take pride in these| : ' 'tig stunted by lack ofpecent years: ; : : 4 ; jtistioians. It suggested in-|/ment . tionhood and interdependence men who will be their friends creased pay to strengthen the transfer the trade department's os Canna Wain -- and longer still to inculcate in and guardians and protectors bureau's staff. economic branch was the main national payments "is actually us our appreciation of the bene-| of th r' ro Said Mis tr e ed § ppreciati 0 e "0 eir lives, liberty and prop- i t l I at ; ne ' alg sas | Commission proposals on the cent : : on a tenuous foundation."' If fits of democracy." erty." , ' the Canadian economy indivi "All these objectives must be eo |government's economic and sta- i me one individual were lost, the re-- OTTAWA (CP) -- Real Caou-)dians are- considered in the accomplished in these new na-AT RCAF STATION tistical services would involve) The report proposed no im-|port would be delayed and its|ette says he is dissatisfied with'same manner as are Ukrain- ltions in a fraction of this time,| Serious planning to locate the greater federal spending -- in mediate transfer of research quality impaired for some|the treatment of his fellowjians, Poles, Jews, Germans and lcertainly in not more than dec- college here began in 1958, soon|Contrast to its many money- work between government de-|months. If two were to Jeave,|French-Canadians in the fourjall the rest. They should be jades.... lafter it became apparent thatjsaving recommendations on partments, But it said that inithe report might have to be|western provinces, itreated on the same basis as |RCAF Station Aylmer would be|other government operations, |time it might be desirable to/suspended temporarily 'and it} 'The western provinces|/French-Canadians in the east. MUST BE TAUGHT closed and its 1,000 air forcelagen «yNpULY' LOW transfer the trade deparmen's might be years before the for-|should give French-Canadians| 'The confederate pact was If the emergent nations are to personnel relocated at more| wh NDULY' LO economic forecasing work tomer quality Was restored," |exactly the same treatment that/concluded by French-Canadians raise the standard of living and|central RCAF stations. | e report said the $20,000,000 the finance department, and to| 'The report. favored centrali-|¥& ive to Anglo-Saxons in Que-|and English-Canadians; it was lkeep pace with their growing! Until now, the only police|*"nual cost of these two serv-/switch international trade nego-!zation in DBS of all major sta.|2Cc:,. the deputy leader of the|a pact between the Anglo-Saxon |populations, he said, "their|training facilities available Aner ne trios gdegge un-|tiations from finance to trade. |tistical operations done by other|S%!#!, Credit party said in anjand Latin cultures. The Ukrain- [peoples must learn to want the the province were the Ontario! f the add : orig rg pacer On the government's statisti-|departments, and called for aj interview. ' lans, the Peles, the Jews Sin | good things of life, and to want| Provincial Police College, Tor-| required on Cone Tage Wow rice sarvices, the report said "critical review" of such ENE gyro yg ony oo ben 7 haar dl Bi ba ae al jthem sufficiently badly to be/onto, and the Metropolitan Tor-|'", : ' these must operate "with un-|grams in th ; jt volve, % : a4 | The proposal that the finance|impeachable integrity." Itransport Panne gpg 44\tioned schools where teaching|the subject of the French-Cana- eau of statistics, the report said 'good luck has been as| jimportant as good management! in preventing serious failures as 18 PUC'S KIDDIES' BUS RATE TOO HIGH 7 Alderman John Dyer brought a Brownie camera to the City Council Chamber Monday morning to pictorially record an important event -- the inaugural ceremonies. .. . Thomas McLaughlin, former industrial commissioner for Oshawa, was a guest at the Civic Day luncheon of the Oshawa Rotary Club Monday noon. . . . Stan Woods of 241 Marquette phoned this corner to voice a strong protest over what he terms "'the unfair bus rates charged by the PUC for certain gtoups of children', He says that it is unfair for the PUC to charge the adult-rate for children over 51 inches in "height, which his seven-year-old son, John, must pay, He points out rightly that the TTC in Toronto only charges the adult-rate for persons over 58 inches. Here are some other maximum heights for adult fares in Ontario: Brantford -- & inches; Peterborough -- 53 inches; Niagara Falls and St. Catharines -- 51 inches. Mr. Woods says it is '"'ridicu- lous" to charge "adult" rates for a seven-year-old. French In West : 2olic ini § | . / prepared to work to get them,/onto Police Training School. yootment conduct 'central would be in French and would{dian minorities in the west in sgins Seminars were given at Mc-| ' 'pa Th ini iatintan ls Poi ; : ' Msp jeconomic analysis" for the gov-- WOULD UPGRADE POST e Dominion. statistician)inelude religious instruction.|an address to the Railiement Mr. Thomson said this could|Master University, Hamilton, des Creditistes, the Quebec wing jernment is linked to a recom-| In order to "promote public|Should audit the statistical pro-|The teaching and school board) jof the party, at its annual con- not be accomplished without|and the Ontario Fire College,| ee bat : 4 Sha "pie : '/mendation in the commission's|confidence in government sta-\8"@ms of all departments and/posts in these schools would be modern mass communications |Gravenhurst. Metro Toronto po-| - - - agencies except for large reserved for French-Canadians. | vention in Trois-Rivieres last | August. media '"'nor can it be accom-|lice will continue to use their pa me : ; ' INTERPRETING THE NEWS ge yrayees Be ee oa aie tme be eal: in he \plished without adequate adver-|own training facilities. | - | A 5 i tising facilities, since advertis-| Research facilities for train-| me gr bE vel gel i gaa Pari deen wean " name of the Canadian Confed- ALL UAW ROADS LEAD TO MONTREAL All roads will lead to Montreal next weekend for mem- bers of the Canadian UAW Council, which is to hold a three- day convention there starting Friday. A 16-man Oshawa delega- tion will be headed by Pres- ident Malcolm Smith of Lo- etal 222, UAW-CLC, who will leave one day earlier to "attend the executive meet- ing -- Alderman Clifford Pil- ~key and Russ MeNeill will also be delegates. Why is the UAW Council »meeting in the colorful Que- 'bec metropolis for the first time ? Mr. Smith said it was be- "cause of "the increased UAW membership and activ- ,Aty in that Province which, «together with Ontario, pro- vides the great bulk of the ,,60,000-65,000 Canadian mem- bership. The two most important items to be discussed at the Montreal convention will be: Political Action. The Gill Report on the Unemployment Insurance Fund. Political Action will be an important item because of the fact that two important elections are expected to take Place within the next few months, Federal and Provincial; considerable time will be given to a study of current policies, etc., of the New Democratic Party. Wisc! 4 ¥ MALCOLM SMITH More than 125 delegates are expected to attend from Ontario and Quebec points. ROTARIANS FETE OUR CIVIC LEADERS The Oshawa Rotary Club has rendered a worthwhile public service once again in presenting its annual Civic Day luncheon, the purpose of which is twofold: To pay tribute to all within the municipal framework of government in the district - elected as well as civic depart- mental personnel. < To call attention to the importance of our government System at the local level, : The Rotarians left few stones unturned in their desire 'to make this an impressive event, and the big show went off pretty well without a hitch -- minute planning and imagina- Jion was evidenced in so many ways, but it is understand- "able why the local Rotarians do this sort of thing so well. 'Monday's show was fhe 33rd. annual Civic Day dinner pre- ented by them (Dr. Stan Phillips, incidentally, was club president when the long chain was inaugurated.) * One of the impressive features of the event was the 'presence of so many former mayors, such as Judge Alex Hall, Jack Coleman, Norman Down, Jack Naylor, Frank McCallum and Christine Thomas. * 'The general apathy in Ontario towards government at 'the municipal level is a sad thing to behold, but this situa- 'tion could be corrected to a large degree if there were more "public events along the lines of the annual Civic Dinner of 'the Oshawa Rotary Club. It places great emphasis on a part of our municipal life which affects-us all greatly. i | a | ing is a essential part of dis-| ing in the latest crime detection) tribution and distribution is the|techniques are offered at the| most effective generator of pro-|college here. Rookies will re- duction." ceive physical training, judo, training of police forces in On- foot drill and firearms instruc- 4 \tario,"' he told 64 recruits who tion and a basic education in i | attended the college's first|law and police procedures. Aca- | classes Monday. demic subjects include English, The 64 recruits--32 from prov- public relations and _ public incial police detachments and speaking, WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy, Mild Weather Seen Forcasts issued by the Tor-jlight today, becoming northerly jonto weather office at 4:30 20 Wednesday. a.m.: Forecast Temperatures Synopsis; Mild weather con- Low tonight, high Wednesd: tinues to favor southern and|Windsor .......... 28 ay 35 28 25 25 22 25 35 35 35 32 central Ontario although some St. Thomas light snow and freezing 'drizzle London are still reported in many lo-| Kitchener calities. Cold arctic air is gain.| Wingham ing strength in the Yukon and Hamilton Alaska and will begin to push St. Catharines. southward into the western Toronto Prairies today. Present indica-| Peterborough tions are for this cold weather Trenton jto reach Northern Ontario Wed- Killaloe .. jnesday and southern Ontario|Muskoka ee Wednesday night. North Bay......0. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,|Earlton a Lake Huron, Lake Ontario, Ni-|Kapuskasing agara, Georgian Bay, Halibur-| White River. ton regions, Windsor, London,|Moosonee Hamilton and Toronto: Cloudy Timmins 15 and continuing mild today and|Mount Forest...... 22 |Wednesday with a few periods Observed Temperatures of very light snow or freezing Low overnight, high Monday drizzle. Winds light today, be.|Dawson .. - |coming southwest -15 Wednes-| Victoria | day. Edmonton Algoma, Timagami regions, | Regina {North Bay, Sudbury and Sault| Winnipeg . Ste. Marie: Cloudy and mild|Lakehead .. |with occasional light snow or Sault Ste. Manie. \freezing drizzle today, turning White River.... colder with snowflurries Wed-|Kapuskasing nesday afternoon. Winds light North Bay.. |today, becoming southerly 15 Sudbury .. jtonight and north 20 Wednesday | Muskoka .... | afternoon. Windsor ..essee White River, Cochrane re- London .. gions: Cloudy with occasional Toronto light snow mixed at times with Ottawa freezing drizzle today and to- Montreal . jnight, Cloudy .and colder with Quebec snowflurries Wednesday. Winds Halifax 47 41 NEED FUEL OIL... PERRY DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 d ORGANIST 9 TO 12 NIGHTLY JOHNNY McMANN HOTEL LANCASTER | about the impact on public re- lations of the approximately 4,000 various government forms| |as though Joao Goulart }get his chance Goulart Facing Chore In Brazil By CARMAN CUMMING Canadia Press Staff Writer After a long struggle, it looks may to 'straighten out'"' Brazil's tangled economy.} While results of Sunday's plebiscite are not yet in, re- ports from Rio de Janeiro say the odds favor the 44-year-old president in his bid to restore the strong presidential powers jtaken away when he assumed office almost 1% years ago. Goulart, the vice-president, was in Peking talking trade ;|when the abrupt resignation of jpresident Janio Quadros brought chaos and the threat of civil war late in the summer of 1961. | Although a wealthy rancher, Goulart was a_ leading left- |winger and head of the Labor party. Conservative elements in army and government dis- trusted him and imposed a par- liamentary system, transferring }executive powers from the pres- ident to a premier and cabinet, before allowing his succession. |ECONOMY SLUMPED | Since then, while the economy went from had to worse and |Congress passed through suc.|* °° | cessive crises, Goulart has care- fully laid the groundwork for a |return to full power. | While retaining support from j\labor and left-wing elements, |he has appeared to move closer |to the centre of the political road and has gained support of ;many moderate and conserva- | tive leaders in the military; press. and business communi- |ties. | Congressional elections in Oc- tober further strengthened the the public must fill out--800 of them from DBS. Undoubtedly the Public viewed requests for statistical information 'as a} jig nuisance of dubious util-| Ls at | ig statistical questionnaires! a ' : ; y the government should be president's hand as an alliance |", of the Labor and Social Demo.|screened by DBS. cratic parties emerged under Premier Hermes Lima of the NURSE TO DOCTOR | Labor party. VANCOUVER (CP) -- Kath- Goulart also appealed to the|leen Robertson, a nurse at Van- Brazilian people, contending|<ouver General, Hospital cit g " g » 2 | . C ure, é s that 4 abong hand was needed) study medicine. She has nursed| to bring order to the economy. |troubled children for 10 years pee 7 jand now is doing a pre - med INFLATION GREW 'course at the University of Brit- As inflation mounted -- the \ ish Columbia in the mornings, Cruzeiro fell from 80 to the U.S.| : working nights at the hospital. dollar in 1956 to 300 when Quad- | -- : = : ros resigned and to about 500 j at present--hoarders stocked up! OSHAWA'S in hopes of a break in govern. CARPET CENTRE Food riots last July caused 11 deaths and hundreds of injuries} at Nu-Way, carpet and broad- loom has been a specialty for --while at the same time stock- 18 years . .°. with thousands piles were mounting in rural areas. of yards on display to select from, In the face of these and other problems -- including pressure for land reform and a huge and mounting government deficit--} has promised that in 24% years} PHONE 728-4681 NU-WAY velopment and begin indispens- able work toward our economic I RUG CO. LTD. consolidation and recovery." = | The task, if he is allowed to 174 MARY ST. under the presidential system | he will "straighten out this} tackle it, promises to be a tough one. | | | country . . . do away with the distortion caused by inflation organize the economic de- NOW! $100,000.00 LIST JOHN A. J. BOLAHOOD Ltd. REAL ESTATE -- INSURANCE 725-6544 AT Auto Liability Insurance PREMIUMS PER AS LOW AS 7.00 YEAR A Court Judgment can ruin your life financially . . . be safe with adequate insurance, SCHOFIELD-AKER 360 KING ST, WEST (Limited) 723-2265 @ Don Ellison @ Gerry Osborne @ Relph Schofield @ Reg Aker |bates of provincial legislatures eration, I ask the western prov- inces to extend to the French and Catholic minority the same and municipal councils and in|treatment that the Anglo-Saxons correspondence between public|enjoy here in Quebec." -- officials and French-speaking) A major French-Canadian cul- taxpayers, as well as in law/tural organization, Le Conseil de courts, lla Vie Francaise en Amerique, These are rights enjoyed by|has long expressed views simi- the English-speaking minority lar to those of the Social Credit in Quebec, he declared. MP. The 1961 census _ showed) The council's secretary, Most nearly 81 per cent of Quebec's|Rev. Paul-Emile Gosselin of 5,259,211 population of French/Quebec City, says, however, origin and almost 11 per cent/complete bilingualism in Can- English, Irish, Scottish orjada is an idle dream and even Welsh. Most' of the remainder|French schools on the Prairies were western European. jmay be 50 years away. Referring to the English-| He noted that French-Cana- speaking group, Mr. Caouette|dians are scattered across the said: "We do not want to step four, western provinces, repre- on them but we do. not want|senting six to eight per cent of them to step on us either." _|the population, In some areas, French-Canadians are treated| other ethnic minorities such as unjustly in British Columbia) Ukrainian Canadians were and Alberta, which have Social/larger. : Credit governments, as well as| Msgr. Gosselin said enforce- in Saskatchewan and Manitoba,/ment of some school laws has which haven't, he said, |been relaxed, especially in Man. "Make no mistake about it./itoba and Saskatchewan, but When we go out west we tell/French-Canadians want rights them (the Western Social Credit/ based on law, not just haphaz- leaders) flatly. ard toleration of certain prac: Mr. Caouette said he also fa- vors use of French in the de- "At present, French . Cana-'tices. <a Tender EATN ATS TRUE -TRIM BEEF \\ 0° 12 KING E, -- 723-3633 -- Meat Specials! Wed. & Thurs. | LEAN, SLICED Cc Ib BREAKFAST BACON Round STEAK'ROAST $9: RUMP ROAST vw. 7 Ot 2 ws. 89" TENDER RIB STEAKS SKINLESS WIENERS é

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