Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Dec 1965, p. 3

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am VIAN LBY Offers | TAXPAYER 3 a | Son: IY 'Five-Year NATO Pianning THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, December 15, 1965 3 -- --e-- Help-Teams nH eps F G ¥ The Miracle In Palestine was not a large country: less than 200 miles long and half as wide. Yet Palestine... water springing up into ever- lasting life." "Sir, give me this water, '| Hornig, White House science ad- To Pakistan WASHINGTON (AP) --Pres- ident Johnson, winding up talks, today with Pakistan's President Mohammad Ayub Khan, has of- fered to send a team of med- ical teachers and scientists to Pakistan. Johnson made the offer Tues-| ner honoring Ayub. He said the medical team would: be led by Dr. Donald F. viser. Raising his glass in a toast to Ayub, Johnson proclaimed a need to find peace in the world. He called for efforts to conquer "the curses of poverty, hunger, disease, illiteracy, the human and physical problems." Ayub, in his toast to John- son, thanked him for the offer of the medical mission and ack- nowledged that "our relations have to a certain extent been sore." He attributed this to "misunderstanding" and said friendship between the United | District I day night at a White House din-/ Tuesday night. PICKERING (Staff) --An elected delegation of nine per- sons laid the complaints of thou- sands of Pickering Township taxpayers at the feet of the 12- man appointed Pickering and High School Board) The delegation had presented the board with a brief contain- ing a number of questions re- garding education, transporta- tion, hours of instruction and various other questions pertain- ing in particular to the Dunbar- ton High School. The brief was presented in advance and the Board presented the delegation with a return brief answering the questions. The delegation retired for 20 minutes to study the brief and upon returning to the meeting informed the Board that they would require a longer time to study the brief and a special meeting was set up for Dec. 28 to discuss the area's high school States and Pakistan "can be-- must be maintained." After the dinner, Johnson and} "lAyub had a 35-minute confer- ence in the family quarters of the White House. They were! |joined by Vice-President Hubert |H. Humphrey. problems further. Following is an abbreviated) version of the questions and an-| swers contained in the briefs: INSTRUCTION HOURS The delegation asked why Sec- tion 7 of the Secondary Schools that Ithirst not, neither come hither to draw." "Go, call thy husband, and come hither," Hesitantly the woman said. 'I -- I have no hus- band." "You have well said, 'I have no husband.' For you have had five husbands, and he whom you now have is not your husband." The startled woman avoid- ed Jesus' gaze. After a moment's awkward silence she said, "Sir, I perceive that thou art a prophet." She also told him that she believed in the coming of a Messiah, and he said, "I that speak unto you am he." Just then his disciples re- turned from the city, and marvelled that He would speak to a Samaritan woman. Leaving her water pot the woman turned and rushed into the city, crying, "Come see a man which told me all things that ever I did. Is not this the Christ" Many followed her out to the well, and besought Jesus to come tarry with it was torn with dissen- sion among its various dis- tricts, such as Judea, Gali- lee and Perea, for so provin- cial and bigoted were the people that each area held the others in disdain. Especially severe was the animosity toward Samaria, a region midway between Jerusalem on the south and the Sea of Galilee on -the north. One day about noon as Jesus and his disciples were passing through Samaria, they paused at Jacob's well, just outside the city of Sy- char, While the disciples went to buy meat in the city, Jesus tarried at the well resting, for He was weary. oon a woman carrying a clay pot came to draw water. Much to her sur- prise the stranger waiting there asked her for a drink. She replied, '"'How is it that you, being a Jew, ask drink of me, a woman of Samaria For the Jews have have no dealings with the Samaritans." Jesus looked at her close- Earlier Tuesday, the two and Boards of Education Act jpresidents had what Ayub de-| was not being complied with in |scribed as a frank but friendly regard to number of hours of |private talk about the Pakistan- daily instruction and the school India Kathmir dispute and Viet closing time daily, The delega- |Nam. tion also asked why only 29 min- The White House made known ules were allowed in the Dun- lthat the Ayub - Johnson talks | barton lunch hour as compared were closely connected with the with 40 minutes at Pickering forthcoming Tashkent meeting and 60 minutes at Ajax. between Ayub and India's, The Board replied that they Prime Minister Shastri on So- had received authorization from viet soil and the Shastri-John-|the Dept. of Education for the son meeting to be held here double shift classes at Dunbar- Feb. 1-2. ton and that the shorter lunch Pakistan sources said the|periods at Dunbarton resulted Tashkent meeting was not likely | because the period did not fall to bring any abiding decisions. |!n main meals periods during It would emphasize, however, mid-morning and mid-afternoon that the Soviet Union has a role Ajax had the longer lunch per- it would like to play in Asian iod because most students lived affairs. within walking distance from ama "No Chances' =" On Ice-Balls TRANSPORTATION The delegation suggested that By THE CANADIAN PRESS Health authorities in Ontario in Metro schools were located in jcentres continued to take no areas of greatest concentration) |chances Tuesday as samples of of homes to avoid heavy trans- portation costs. They asked why! plastic "ice cubes" were picked jup for testing because of pos- the Board had consistently con- sible contamination. tinued"to build and add to Pick! ering High School contrary to sound business practice and majority of the students in the built up areas. sun avoided the double shift system at Dunbarton High School" The bSuard said, they had studied the use of able clasa- rooms extensively and that in the present emergency the shortage was of specialized shops and classrooms. They said portables did not lend them- selves effectively to serve as areas of vocational instruction. PENALTY CLAUSE The delegation asked why there was no penalty clause in the construction of the Picker- ing addition and what the ex- pected date of completion was, The Board replied that their architects informed them it was a rare occasion today when a penaity clause was included in a contract. They said completion date for the addition was April EXTRACURRICULAR The delegation asked why there were: no provisions for extracurricular activities at Dunbarton High School and that it was almost impossible for the students to use the library there. The Board said they regret- ted that the shift system had caused a curtailment of extra- curricular activities at Dunbar- ton but that the staff and stu- dents were to be commended for the success of the activities which they were carrying on under the difficult conditions. ADDITIONAL INSTRUCTION The delegation submitted that Dunbarton students were being discriminated against in lack of instruction time and non-ideal school attendance hours. the Zoard suggested that the effects could be minimized if the] students co-op- that the re- being that parents and erated in seeing quired home work, was carried out. They said |Grade 13 students were actually | in atiendance from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. . TEACHER ABSENTEEISM The delegation suggested that the practice of advance pre- ared lessons was. not being carried out at Dunbarton and that supply teachers during seemingly excessive teacher ab- BARONET WINS SUIT BARNSTAPLE, England (CF}--Canadian - born baronet case in a Devon court when he refused to pay a municipal bill _ | Why Pay More... SA y E a8 contrary to the welfare of the|Sir Robert Williams won his) ON PREMIUM QUALITY , gal. On Pickering H.S. System -- senteeism only performed a caretaking service with the re- sultant loss of student learning. The Board informed the dele- gation that staff attendance at the three high schools was com- parable and that in November the attendance of staff at Ajax was 95 per cent, at Pickering 96.3 per cent and at Dunbarton 95.4 per cent. The Board also suggested that it was difficult to obtain supply teachers on short demand. TEACHER HIRING The delegation asked who was responsible for the hiring of teachers and screening their qualifications. The Board said teachers were hired by them and that they del- egated this authority to the Superintendent of Secondary U.S. Idea, Canada-Backed By HAROLD MORRISON PARIS (CP) Canada is ready to endorse a United States plea for a five-year blue- print of North Atlantic military up of this force, recalling U.S. Defence Secretary Robert Mc- Namara's statement that the U.S. has more than 5,000 nu- clear warheads in Europe and plans a 25-per-cent increase dur- force goals but wants more ex- pansion in fast-moving, peace- restoring conventional groups than in nuclear stockpiling. A spokesman said Canadian Defence Minister Paul Hellyer will make this point today as the defence leaders take their turn before the NATO council to review NATO's military power in terms of future needs. Hellyer's theme, the spokes- man, said, will be "realism"-- that NATO members should consider the high cost of de- fence and to make use of what is militarily and politically at-| tainable, rather than strain to meet the idealistic goals of the |Schools. They pointed out that |30.9 per cent of the Board's Dun- 'barton teachers had four to nine jyears' experience and that 27.2 tears of teaching experience. ACADEMIC STANDING The delegation said about 200 parents were concerned about the. poor marks and asked the board what the academic stand- ing at Dunbarton was in com- parison with the other schools. per cent had more than ten) military chiefs. He believes there are more than enough nuclear warheads stockpiled in Europe. / | Canada's own military role jmay undergo drastic change in | the next few years, giving more emphasis to conventional mo- bile forces and less to tactical nuclear power. | The big Canadian concentra- tion, it was learned, is on the possible European use of the new CE-5 twin-engined ground The Board informed the dele-| attack aircraft which may come gation that from Grade 9 to 13 in off Canadian production lines in June 1965 at Ajax 85.7 per cent) 1967. This plane has only a con- of the students had been pro-| ventional role and some consid- moted, 81.2 per cent at Picker-|eration is being given to the ing and 84.3 at Dunbarton. possibility that it may eventu- mars mente ally succeed the Starfighter in SPECIAL MEETING Canadian European forces, The delegation asked that they Hellyer wants fo see greater meet with the Board further to NATO co-operation in produc- get more details on their ques-|tion-sharing to prevent costly tions and the Board promptly | duplication of sveapons produc- set Dec. 28 as the date for the tion. He also wants to see special meeting. greater standardization of Delegates included: Charles|y eg pons and equipment to W. Hann, Glendale; K. H./help reduce costs. |Anthony, East Rouge; D. San- | derson, Balsam; P. McGrath, FLANKS WEAK | Bay Ridges; D. Quick, West! He is reported to believe Eu- Rouge; Glen Julian, Fairport|ropean defence is strongest at | Beach; Mrs. K. Pentland, Rouge| the centre and weakest at the Hills and Mrs. Mary Reid of|flanks where NATO's elite mo- Ajax. bile force, including Canada's | Pickering . Township Reeve|Black Watch Battalion, is de- | Clifford Laycox was also in at-|signed to operate. Hellyer | tendance iwants more attention to build- ing the next five months, McNamara has mounted a drive to get NATO members to agree to a five-year military planning program, with annual adjustments, rather than a jumpy year-to-year calculation that involves bickering and pre- vents cost reductions available through long - range planning. Hellyer is reported ready to give McNamara full support. As NATO council delegates turn their attention to force needs, a point of concern un- doubtedly will be the split in-| FOR Ai SAnc WINNIPEG (CP) -- In the otherwise all-male, all-convict cast there were three ac- tresses from the outside. And, according to penal law against mingling of the sexes, they shouldn't have been. The occasion was the stag- ing Monday night by the Stony Mountain Penitentiary Drama Club of Arsenic and Old Lace, a comedy about two potty old- maid prisoners, Warden Fred Harris said he didn't know until the curtain went up that the actresses, coaching volunteers from the Manatoba Drama League, would be acting. He said no action would be taken over the rules infraction. side NATO over nuclear inte- gration and collaboration and the recent Soviet Union an- nouncement that its defence) five per cent, reflecting frostier| East-West relations, } External Affairs Minister! Paul Martin, presiding over the NATO council, argued Tuesday the West cannot expect to drive! the Soviet Union out of Europe by force and that NATO policy| should be to seek a voluntary) Soviet withdrawal through "ap-| propriate incentives" which seemed to suggest some form of acceptable European disen- gagement, | At the same time Martin| brought attention to the split in-| side NATO "over the value of the present NATO force struc-| ture" and the differences over| how NATO nuclear organization should be evolved. West Germany has renounced| national independence nuclear| ambitions but wants more au-| thority over the U.S. or British nuclear triggers. | budget is being increased by! : . oF, Le 148 consecutive quarterly DIVIDEND 84¢ a shore-- payable Jan. 15,1966 to shareholders of record Dec. 31,1965 GUARANTY TRUST Company of Canada A.B RAMSAY ident & -- eae THE ULTIMATE IN * PRESTIGE DISTINCTION BEYOND FUEL OIL COMPARE * UNDERGROUND PARKING * LUXURY LIVING!! A FIW 1 AND 2 BEDROOM SUITES AVAILABLE * Only By Appointment 723-1712 or 728-2911 The Board replied that about|for clearing a road blocked by 80 per cent of the transportation|4 tree fallen from his property. costs were covered by Provin-|The court upheld his claim not cial and Federal taxes and that|to be responsible for an act of presently 58.1 per cent of the| Mature. Sir Robert gave up his) |students were being transported|job as a CNR brakeman at less than four miles. Kamsack, Sask., five years ago to claim the title. ly. "If you knew the gift of God, and who it is that said to you, 'give me a drink,' you would have asked of him, and he would have given you living water." The puzzled woman re- plied, 'Sir, you have nothing to draw with, and the well is deep. From whence then have you that living water" Pointing to the well Jesus said, "Whosoever drinks of this water shall thirst again. But whosoever drinks of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst. But the water that I shall give him them. So for two days He with his Jewish disciples abode with the Samaritans. There in lowly Samaria-- which He later immortalized with his parable of the Good Samaritan -- Jesus wrought a great Christmas miracle, displacing prejudice and hatred with brotherly love. And, when He had gone the Samaritans said to the In Windsor, a laboratory re- port on samples was expected today. Dr: John Howle, medical health officer and director of the Essex County health unit, said tests on the plastic globes and cubes were made Tuesday. ADVANCE PLANNING | In Brantford, samples sold in| The original brief asked why |stores were submitted to the|/no provision had been made to -- gon 4 Wood | construct a high school in the} w "D stock. Cubes so in rantford|highly populated Bay Ridges ea a vee -- jwere made in Canada, said/area and if the Board had a for-we have heard Him our. (neath officer Dr. Aenid Dunton. new school in that area on its selves, and know that this |, Angus Millar, director of Pe-| books to serve this area. is indeed the Christ, the terborough city council health) The Board suggested that the Savior of the world." pe ge Pee bay ate get a was ying be- i of spheres made | n 'cause of its location in the cen- shall be in him a well of By John J. Stewart ware Soitaininhind. ine of ths Newnes wad Guu Campbell Planned To Quit sults will not be available for|school had followed because o After Windfall 'Eased': OSC severa Idays, but preliminary] its available services and popu- tests on several samples showed! jation. They said that the Dun-| a 'definite bacteria growth." | barton school was built to serve - the mushrooming parts of the SALES BANNED south and west end of the Town- Tests in Ontario started after ship. TORONTO (CP)--John Camp-|charges arising out of the Wind- bell planned to resign. as di-' fall inquiry. rector of the Ontario Securities) Mr. Campbell was suspended Commission after thé Windfalljby Attorney - General Arthur excitement died down late in| Wishart in August, 1964, and re- 1964, OSC chairman John Kim- signed a month later. Phone 668-3341 DX FUEL OIL Serving Oshawa -- Whitby & Ajox Districts MOST STORES IN its at canning' samme A gift for 'him' from eannings will be tops in thanks, WILL BE 124 PARK ROAD NORTH OSHAWA UNTIL Q . EVERY WEEK DAY Pure Virgin Wool Gifts, Sweeters by Worren Knit, Vests and Dine Jackets In the "Maple Leet' tartan, tlothing-by Seville, Row end Cambridge. | PURE VIRGEN WOOL } LOOK FOR THIS we gay aids | LABEL -- IT six United States cities and three states banned sale of the PORTABLES ber testified here Tuesday. Mr. Kimber was testifying at drink coolers. The detegation asked why | The imitation ice cubes are there were no portable ¢class- re-usable, meant to be frozen in| rooms available in the township a refrigerator, used to cooliand, "would these not have the preliminary hearing of two charges of breach of trust 'against Mr. Campbell. Evidence given earlier at the drinks, and then refrozen. gi 228 Royal Commission inquiry ear- lier this year into the affairs of Windfall Oils and Mines Lid showed that Mr. Campbell dealt in Windfall shares while he was director of the OSC. The shares rose to $5.60_from 56 cents and sagged again to 80 cents in 17 hectic trading days.on the Toronto Stock Ex- change in July, 1964. The rise was caused by ru- mors that Windfall had pulled a rich drill core from its Tim- mins-area property, When the rumors proved false the stock plunged more than $3 overnight AWAIT TRIAL George and Viola MacMillan, president and promoter of Wind- fall, await trail on fraud GOOD FOOD BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12 Noon to 2 P.M. DINNER 5:30 to 8 P.M. FULLY LICENSED DINING ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER 27 King St. W., Oshawe Mr. Kimber said Mr. Camp- bell told him of his plan to re- sign earlier in August. "IT told Mr. Campbell I had been informed that Mrs, Mac- Millan had given him 5,000 shares of Windfall,' he said. "T asked him if this was true and he said it was true and that it had been on his mind and a matter of concern to him. "He said he planned to resign when he felt the excitement over Windfall had died down, and that it would be appropriate to resign on the anniversary of his appointment." Norman Cox, chief investi- gator for the OSC, testified ear- lier Tuesday that there is noth- ing in the Act prohibiting an OSC em- ployee from trading in stock. Ontario «Securities | Some of the cubes are made in Canada, but complaints from the U.S. centred on cubes made in Hong Kong and Japan. The Arkansas health depart- ment said cubes sold in that state were found to contain four kinds of bacteria that could cause intestinal ailments. But a spokesman for the U.S. public health service in Atlanta, Ga., said no illness has been traced to the cubes, No illnesses from the cubes have been reported in Ontario. Nemes To Remember When Buying or Selling REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker--Presiaent Bill McFeeters--Vice Pres, Schofield-Aker Ltd. 723-2265 Good DON'T Continental Served Daily 11:30 - Che KRih Room GENOSHA HOTEL FORGET French Buffet 2 p.m. -- 5 to 8 p.m, HEAT -WITH_OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 ° SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS Fresh Christmas NUTS Delivered to Your Door AT 10 % CASHEWS > MIXED NUTS 2.19 REG. 2.19 SAVINGS | rs €.0,D, ; OUR PRICE OuR PRICE 1.89 1.89 14-02, Call Today - 725-7151 THE GOODIE SHOPPE NEED. . Fuel Oil CALL PERRY Doy or Night 723-3443 | AR. QUALITY canning's limited | 20 King St. E. -- 725-1512 Mm Ba HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS Lean Meaty-Blade Bone Removed BLADE R 34 SIMCOE OAST coe ST. NORTH C Ib POT ROAST SHOULDER Lean Meaty Economy 6 ond 7 Rib PRIME RIB Short Cut Ist 4-Rib 49 39 69 Fresh Pork C BUTT Fresh Pork LOIN END SHOULDER Mushrooms OOD MARKET, BREAD 7 Lean Tender CLARKE'S TOMATO AND VEGETABLE SOUP ZIP -- 15-0Z. TINS DOG FOOD 10-o0z. Tins 10-51 10-51 2 to 3 LB. ~ FRESH KILLED OVEN READY CHICKENS AVE, 39° | Just clip this sample. Shop et stores of the 9 pieces with Win $5.00, $10.00 $25.00 or $200. | ----EEE---- THERE'S MORE FOR YOU | UNTIL CHRISTMAS SAT. & CHRISTMAS EVE 'til 6 P.M. SHOP, SAVE AND... WIN «: °200 IN DOWNTOWN OSHAWA CHRISTMAS PUZZLE CONTEST each parasent peste them on the 'sample' end displaying 'Puzzle' Signs--Get one WATCH FOR MORE "HAPPENINGS" IN DOWNTOWN OSHAWA.. SOON being i See ils 'a iy ie

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