112 Barrir mummummuwmhuum no moi President Eisenhower demands that therebenoriseinsteelpricesua result of forthcoming wage negotiations He properly calls upon labor and man agement in the steel industrywhich has so repeatedly set pattern for wageprice rises throughout the econ omyto display atatésmanship and look the national and their own long range welfare by holding the line While takingthia strong position in his news conference the President made clear how earnestly he has tried to keep government out of collective bargaining The Christian Science Monitor com ments He believes that in free econ omy labor and management should maketheir own settlements He watch ed with disapproval federal intervention in labor disputes culminating in Pres ident Trumans seizure of the steel mills in 1952 not he has had to recog nize as he said that the whole public is affected by everything they labor and management do He recognizes too that all the gov ernments efforts to maintain stability by tightening credit and balancing the budget cannot halt wageprice inflation That is why he goes so far as to say there should be no increase in steel prices But whereas in controlling credit and budget the government has taken spec ific steps with wageprice spirals it is still relying on persuasion Only dram atic support by press and public is likely to make it effective with the steel in dustry So far there is no indication that the United Steelworkers will be as reasonable as the United Automobile Workers were in shaping their last contract And al though automation and other gains in efficiency promise good steal profits Immanuel Turn Publicity Spotlight On WagePrice Inflation there is no indication that melanin panieaarcbreparedtcabaorbnewwage demands and hold prion steady The union is talking about $00000000 package of increased wages and ben efits Marriner Eccles former chairman of the Federalï¬eserve Board estimates that an extension of this patternto other industry would boost production costs by 852000000000 If workers and management refuse to hold the line in answer to the Eisen hower plea what else can be done Mr Ecclea urges changes in antitrust laws to curb monopolistic powers in unions Others have said that return to war time wage and price controls might be required Although these are unlikely this year labor and management might well note that increasing impatience with an abuse of power to force wages and prices up is swelling demands for drastic action Additional stepsshart of such mea sures are availableand could be shaped quickly The President mentioned that his Cabinet committee on economic growth has been studying wageprice inflation He could logically empower it or some nonpartisan group to bring in factfinding report on steel wages and prices The record since 1950 is star tling enough but the public should have more information about the current sit uation There is biliin Congress to require public hearings on wage or price rises in concentrated industries All who are uneasy about compulsory controlsmlght well press for tumlng the spotlight of publicity on the major factors in wageprice inflation The Monitor concludes and its observations are no less important in Canada Opinions of Other Newspapers PROUD TRADITION Hamilton Spectator good many policemen we imagine have climbed the ladder from constable to commiss ioneer not many have gone from commissioner to constable when Commissioner Stuart Wood of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police reached retirement age in 1951 he had completed 13yeartask of making the force model of modern efï¬ciency He had one job finishedhis personal researchrinio its history Commis sioner Wood started in at the bottom again and had himself sworn in as special constable Somehow this llltle story shows the character of the men who have led the ECND through its so years From Colonel George French who look his hand of 150 men out to the prairies in 1378 lo MelonGeneral Sir James MaoBiien Wood and finally Commissioner Nicholson woo resigned his post this week they have been men whose only pride was in the force and only per aonal ambition to maintain its traditions When Sir John Macdonald created the North west Mounted Police the Northwest Territories then included Saskatchewan and Alberta wild unletlled stretch of prairie between the new provinces of Manitoba and British Columbia he announced that he wanted law enforcement body without fuss or feathers He go Just what hewanted Anyone who has watched RCMP officers handling on unruly crowd has seen that quiet unassuming conï¬dence bred of hard tram APRILI 1m With heading Who can beat these fwoI The Examiner recalled Dalton Meekiogs feat in catching 15 pound lake trout in Simcoe and stated that Norman Nicholof Gifford had caught two One of 17 pounds and another is pounds both on the hook and line and not far from where MetHag had caught his Evidently they had their own lroublain Geor gian Bay district in late March of 1989 An Owen Sound item reads The blizzard which swept the Western part of the district continued unabated throughout the night and roads remained blocked it is estimated that over 100 cars and trucks were ditched along highways and 10 to Owen Sound Manth the cars wereabandaned by the owners who came in here by sleigh and snow plow out in that issue shows wall of was not jï¬xiéd by bylaw Ilia Hattie moms second um mail Pm ow nzpnanpe mum min summon smumy Holiday Wholesaling unim log in self discipline But the Mounlles have bu more than policemen Their history has been or part of the history of Canada force was given the right to use the pre fix Royal in 1904 after the Duke of York later to he King George had become an enthusias tic admirer during Canadian visit In 1m it became the Royal Canadian Mounted Police name more appropriate to the national scope of its duties Today it is in charge of law en forcement in eight provinces It is well fhrecall theaebits ofbistory today when from some quarters the RCMP is being accused of methods completely foreign to its fra News of Former Paragraphicailyspéaking Dont too positive in your opinions and Judgments It is highly embarrasing to have to recross stream after you have burned your bridges behind you in to live within ourlncomes Is there woman whocan boast dillons became of one thing you can be sure the reputation of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police will long outlive its accusers WRONG PllACTlCE Winnipeg Free Press In future any boy arrested by the Winnipeg police willnot have to reveal his racial origin or his religion to the arresting officer It would be wrong to assume that the police have in the past used ibis kind of information to dlscrlminate against juveniles But the possi bility of discrimination is there and misused or not the practice was wrong The police are properly concerned only with offences and with facts about person that are directly relevant to the offences Racial origin and religion are not police matters Years snow 25 feet high at the side where it had been pushed backon Highway hetwcerrFergus and Arthur The regular meeting of the Town Council was enlivened when Alderman CubiftNlcbois more under the fire of DeputyReeve Mills The cause was letter published in the press Signed by the alderman disapproving of salary reuse of from $500 to $100 for MOE Dr Rogers Murray came out daily with the com ment The meanest smallmtand most con tempiihk thing We ever seen written He also claimed thatthe amount stated was not so much asfhat receiVed by two others who hm held that office and added that Aid CubittNiehnls had been present when the report was tabled The latter stated that he had no complaint with the raise but claimed that the procedure before this In these days of high prices many of us are getting claustrophobia from hav That she never burns the toast Many Mr Hyde becdmes Drlekyll whenghe gets under steering wheel aubstitutelfor blood plasma 11 been made from okraSclenee note It no doubt flows through the circulatory system minimum of friction The person crgrou Lwh assumes vie3 luhacripiioa nu barrier no weekm canal um inghuo to rum sso eix gent to month Outside and oweu usln 5f mucousu men or ushers Auociau mail 00 tory is inth bag relaer most per cent others to play chess RUNNING LOW ON Wonderful Beneï¬t To All Isrammouou Eulfrmws they new promote this huran first proposal from Canada group of Republicans and if 5E 35 i2 and House urging their govern ment to summon cold war council This conference would include represtatives from the parliaments of the nailona form ing the North Atlantic Common ily and other free calions it would explore means of streng lneniog our faltering economies andinadequate defences to ear sure world peace and individual freedom Ten years ago this week Cam ads and 11 other sovereign nolt lions signed the North Atlantic treaty The firstmentioned objec tive in that treaty is to elimin ale mutual conflict and to foster FIREWOOD Quit or Not To Quit Is Examsf Aftermath By when Barrio District Central Collegiate As iho Easier results gradu ally return to students and par onto picture of success par tisl success or defeat emerges Depending on the please the growlng decision to quit school is cancelled out or re inferred Too often the student becomes discouraged and le ceiviog no encouragement at home leaves school with defeat that may last for his complete lifetime Academic failure not me only reason for leaving schooL Problems of family arrange ments financial difficulty or other personal matters often contribute to loss of in in schoolJcilvi Barrie horriï¬ed to do so nearly totally free from clai overburdevln one arms that the main reason for drop outs has been academic failure It is therefore this phase of the situation with which we shall deal briefly TEE FAMILIAR PATTERN Teachers are continouslybe set on the one band by their peers to keep up standards and on the other band by their stu dents to lower them Failure to reach the standard reeulisin frustration for the student If this ciliae is the result of some condition other than lack ofef fan the situation is difficult one The familiar pattern un folds frustration discipline problems pressure brought on the parents by the student at home increased absmteelsm leaving school Teachers try to forestall tho dropout at stage one by an coureslns extra work through drill assignments personal ln tervlew or perhaps de By the lime stage two is ach ed the teacher has more diffllt culty especially in the higher grades in bringing the widen back on the path thrcgh fmher deteotions and other disciplin ary measures Step three takes the probl info the home where incident ally the lack of application started with statements like St dm down tan an money or studied too hardylast night absences are bona lids and in the students best interests TIMENOTTOQUIT To the educator the time to is NEVERl We do offer on other hand advice to stu dents who contemplate leaving school Just as no prize was ever awarded in race tea coolest ant who did not finish so little reward will be foimd by stu dent who goes through life ear rylng school recommendation which reads left school in February or Marcher April Thequltferinschoolisapo teniinl quitter on the job He is seldom dependable and never fully trusted to do difficult job on his own and am on utean school antenna must leave School this morning At his stage thewise parent will dlseovar the childs goal if he can and guide blm towards it through continuation of the education process at school Often talkwlth the guid ance counsellor is indicated at this point Parents are often dif flcult to convince the their child needs sterner discipline and more work if he is to be come on effecdvecltlzeu One parent who cooperated with the school perhaps with greater real than necessary re quired so much work from his child that the Math mark of 41 at Christians went up to 85 at Easter lTbe parent HAS great part to play Toadiers and parents alike can cooperate at stage four to ensure that all Prisdners Learn DancingChess VANCOUVER or Bold experiments in prison reform are under way at Oakalla Prison in nearby Burnaby The provincial prisonCanadas largest has nearly 1200 malelnrnates Nine months agonthe last of the old waysbread and water fire hillythe paddlewere abol shedu Some of the innovafions are as revolutionary the discards Women who prison officials always insisted belonged outside now are workingfas permanent staff members on the inside Six coeds from University of British Columbia all criminology stu dents spend planned social even logs with theyounger prisoners They leach some dance Warden Hughcmsoe no the new methods have brought more control to Oskaila than fhelnstllt futlon ever hadfhefore reporter whoinspe prison in 1952 and visited it gain recently desaibed the change as phenomenal rams marries fhewnrdensaidgt0akalla now is at point whereltcanatart saldythat psychiatrists and nth professional nonmemberscan they the progr Nos of the new pldns are med Libs rleoners ln Ninety derande percent are 10 as the holeg from others fucked in early the womemmeuiberl ofthe can say they belong to an or here or the Haney Correctional Institute in the Fraser Valley Classification first in Oakallas diagnostic eenire and later in Young Offenders Unit assesses each mans interest and potential and helps him into program suited to his needs The young inmates yote on their own pro gramsand operate one soccer and one softball team in outside leagues FAMILY VISITS Each boys Lfarnily adults only canth informally twice month 5th Services are arranged occasionally where the familycan sltwitlitha boy Officers are taught to antio lpate problems andmeetdhem before severe hainia arenec essary If prisoner struck guard or fellow prisoner under the old system hed expect to he paddled or receivebroadnnd waterJo detention spot known Now he gelsthe same meals as otherprlsoners but is kept in basement cell set away Few have done wells school on the outsidebut prison school ing is into vefrom am to pm Physical framing too Young theological atu dents have conducted successful study groups among the yonn prisoners gt When the wom came swear ing dropped off shirts were lh boys realized msnworking in kinds 01 wealhe brewingaf least five years ago academid mason the time to leave is at the cad of the year Credit for the full years attendance will mean great deal regardless of the failing mark as anvindicadon of loy ally and intestinal fortitude THE GRADE TO CALI YOUR can Students attend school to ob tain academic Show This is substantiated by certificate or diploma These diplomas are awarded at the end of Grades 10 12 and is on successful com pletion of the year It is therefore folly for stu dent to leave on completion of Grades only This will give the student no academic standing whatever other than Grade repgsrt from the school he at ten Studean should be encouraged to take close look atthe three levels of education Interme diate Grade 10 Middle School Grade 12 and Upper School Grade 13 if leaving school is contem plated leave under the best pos sible circumstances leave with certificate or diploma nesums coon mqu Parents and students should realize that many teachers use examination results as lever to obtain more work In Grade is this is especially true as the deadline to meet is the one in June only In other subjects where average marks decide the mark for the June report the teacher does not allow himself the same amount of leeway Avstudent who is in doubt as tohls ability to continue should consult with his teacher or guidance coimsellor before de ciding to leave school Regardless of results it in mm ally best to complete your year LETTERS T0 rmron rumors sr mm ourrmcraoar HALL Barrie March 81 1059 ToThe Editor VTbe Barrie Sir When read of the City Fathers thrusfing fhaSf John Ambulance Corps from he little room they have in th basement ohthe City Hall my blood boils Dldanyone stop to think of the free volunteer time these men give teaching first aid to ourchildren and adults super vising hockey skiing skating swlmming and all other kinds of amusements that go on inand arcundlour oily How manyvof our City Fathers collaboration among the allies in trade and economic matters The second mentioned objective is muiual tummy no Thus this un ique international alliance pro vides for mutual help in lhe cold cconomlc war as well as fary help in any hot shooting 31 THE CANADIAN IDEA This unprecedented peacetime partnership was suggested by Canada The clause in the treaty providing for an end to interah lied economic warfare is the fam ous Article now generally known as the Canadian Clause its like has ueverbeeb seen in any treaty before One of the parents of that bril llant and far sighted ldcé was our than foreign minister Hon Pearson He predicted soon after its birth that this Canadian Clause mightbo expected to lead to the motion of an economic and even political common wealth of the western world Some of you may think this too visionary he declared in speech But in this jetpropelled atomic age he warned his aud ience nothing less than that do gree of economic and political collaboration would dc Britains bulldog prime min as still inadequate We had to upon the deterrent of the hi lead in atomic bombs held by the USA And in those five years all our governments had done abso lutely nelhhig to implement allied rivalry in trade and indust rial resca rcb bud weakened us is ammc urmr At that time in 1960 large group of uneasy citizens in nine of the NATO nations urged our governmcnis to act upon the ig nored Canadian Clause In The Declaration of Allende Unity those private citizens urged comprehensive mutual program for long tanfls freeing cur rencies and eliminating trade restrictions so that we might cro ale an adequate economic basis for the Atlantic community and associaled nations Such action it was urged would give or bet ter defence at lovfer cost and also raise the standards of living in all the allied nations had the honour to be inviled to organize depulaiion to pre sent that declaration to represent olives of the NATO governments assembled in Polls Among the Canadians wboslgned it were John Dlefenbaker the late Sid ney Smith Gordon Churchill Millard George Burt isalad Percy Bongough Ex pres ant Truman and General George Marshall Plan Marsh all algned it Nothing happened But now after another five years of economic inaction six of our NATO allies in Europe have stolen the Canadian picnic form the European Common Market other of our European aillu want to loin that new ec onomic project American con gressmen urge the need for an international conference whose objectives would be time pro bosed in the Canadian Clause In fact all our NATO allieshave positively or possibly sold our idea while we con to lg nore it Where do we go from here lurrnpnrrim no news Brutal Tibetan Crackdown Spreads Chili ay JosnrnMacswnaN Canadian Press Staff Writer The crackdown on Tibet by the Red Chinese was so brutal and apparently so blind that it has spread sort of chili mysdflca lion around the world In the abscaof direct reports from the remote mountain coun try the story is necessarily in complete But the Red Chinese themselves have tacitly admitted the exent of the rebellion by an nouncing that 4000 prisoners were taken The harshness of the Chinese Peoples Republic with its popu lation of 600000000 in dealing with Tibetwhlch has popula tion of only about 4000000 has caused shock endsurprlse oven in ruthless age Diplomats see the move as an incredible mistake before millions of watching eyes in Asia and Africa Peiping has ccntunptu ously thrown aside the 1551 agree ment which gate Tibet autonomy in internal affairs mom sunken Despite Prime MinisterrNehrus hands off policy Peiping has pointed an angry accusing finger at India which has been carefully walking middle road in tha ideological struggle between East and West Above all the Communists have deposed the Delhi floors the godking venerated by the Tibetans over everything else Some sources sec in all this evidence of unknown stresses and fears in Peiping The one clear symbol emerg ing from theconfused reports out of Tibet is the Dalai Lamsgthe nyearold living Buddha who now has been replaced by the rival Pnnchen Lama 21 STRONG FAITH Although the Chinese subdued Tibet in 1950 it has been appar out that the mountain people Tibetanview The dangers of 117 log in upsetauch concept are obvlous The Comlnunisfs have been trylnsiflrlo so years hence the Panchen lama considered athelr puppet Hlmflbyah untry say resl trouble began herb ilroiind World doctrinaiing the young with Pel ping principles and denouncing Buddhist monks as passengers on the road of progress Buddhismin the form of La maiamia the predominant inflm ence in the Tibetan theocracy where one son of every family becomes monk and all worship ihevDalai Lama DALAI ORIGIN The Dalai Lama no of no3 line was bornio the Chinese frontier province of Chingha and is regarded as the reincarnation of Chen Re Zi god of mercy Millions of Bilddhisfs aroundthe world also consider him an in camafion of Siddharatha Gau lama founder of the faith 2500 years ago TheflfthDalalLamawastbeV first to he recognized as the spir itual and in effect temporay ruler of Tibet He later an nounced that his teacher was the reincarnation of Chen Re Zis spiritual in and therefore made him the grand lama of Tea hllilmpo Monastery starting the line of insbi or Paocheu Lamas The Punched Lamasalso livlt log Buddhasara thus spiritual leaders with considerable power but rank second to the Dalai Lamas Both are regardedas rex incarnations of their predecessors the spirit passing from the old lama to the newat the instant of death The Dalai theni7 and the Panchen ismet first in 1953 when the Panchen arrived in Lhasa to assume his office under the 1951 ChineseTibetan freelyI relations Cstenslhly this ended feud be tween their predecessorswhlch resulted in the banishment in 19 of the previousniothPan chair to China The present Pan chenwas brought up under Chl whiclz enjoined them to friendly hose Communist sponsorship but has been reported he would break clear of Red influence if he ever bad the chance 1BmLETHOIIGHTlt They shall coho hc cufi down an areal and wither as the nims ale prayityds the cuistanding char teristlc of our human li but wears heirs of eternity INTERESTEDMUFHER when the Communists began ln lano