y, 4 will collaborate with one Cana- | posal that Shatin amalgamate EDMONTON (CP) -- Joe| In the speech, Mr. Winterme-|With five suburbs as a prelude ee nt ete aii aah Sapadien' otwration! SM Atte. MO cdst i deal aetiraies chloe PaLIOn Ohl dees eh nn nee eens ee tee so eprarebioinndtan: Fea (rine "ay brine oO ma Uarey Sefton, atrct direc management seminars that will eer and of its profaund|g! guidance, Ontario education subject examination of the edi-|Avions Fairey of Belgium and" jnterview following his rel oon ae ave tnere ev-|power to amalgamate with Laa- I tl clan ueder pres |ey Counc hopes the semit-dg™ not "have, sufficient of the|208,Q1 for"le' Canadian Edu Caton. lane dhings "tha are being dove che Ieee, Chae naelaeaed iM agora andre) The proposal recommends says in a statement. jemployment. He says Se cee lEbe 1 We Tod to Montrenll an pete een eee ere ns ae Wels U . : y e : \ Vesion | Des Proposal Prelude ia_macmna me ron ems ~--|Paper Urges Planning ¢cnet Pama Ryan To Awai ape Contest Planned dian and threé European air- : craft producers in a NATO com-|Ryan, general manager of the yer said Mr Ryan was associ-\t° total amalgamation by 1970 lec ; tej ; i : : ; : ; ; "As far a3. the camp is con-/Harold Menzies said Thursday g Ae. : h and|of education built-in devices for determining| on this type of aircraft for sev-|crime in Ontario before taking) "As fa I ' : h ti says organized labor has no in), pe pupLIsHED mien we vents reseerc jsound directions of suchjeral years, will work: on thelany legal action on allegations cerned," Mr. Ryan said Thurs-\they will present the motion tention of supporting increased The letter is intended for pub- not popular social pressures,) Other contributors are Stanley ' y y leg : ; J i 7 hag ; i Swansea and York "as the ini- : i to the future of so-/department; Bert E. Wales, di-)cational ladder from Grade I to)Nord Aviation of France. __|trin in the United States. _ Mr. Wintermeyer, challenged|5 r tor of the United ton Sere next year by the government- pe vaperage edhe Pesach of adult education, Van-jthe end of university, an inves-| The winner of the competition) jearjier he had threatened to\in the legislature to step Rat | tial step for the eventual amal of America (CLC) from Ontario) ished National Productiv- , ill " , i | oath ' i i ' i i ing|i § the Jegislature|read the speech before agroup|that the first step should be WA ars will "'spur Canada's produc-/facts, the understandings or in-|\.ation Association, comments} Relation of research tolin the name of maintaining|in a speech to S Pear aeaetiventic of Cana-|tivity to a heights"--but of-|sights which arise from re 'that socia, pressures, while|teacher education, guidance and| standards. Nov. 2 of newspaper men. completed by Jan. 1, 1965. . j i " i +l ari inno- termine cri- Pika pride cil, which does not include a|March 4-8, urges what it de-| ists to promote many inno search can help det r Bak coe duit eppctites spokesman for the industrial un-| scribes as 'action research" to! vations. oe feria for the' selection of suit- | . . | 'To Amalgamation | ivity H hod | Productivity Hike By Scientific Met y petition to design a transport)Kdmonton Eskimos football |will come before Metropolitan ; .| change." I j vi Havilland i j day, "It is a commercial enter-|urging Metro to apply to the productivity without guarantees) |: 3430) in the union press be-| Says a new study paper. ic. T. Clarke, executive secre-/Chang NATO project with de Havilland) made against him. 1 igati i izati i . $ i i f the other seven to British Columbia, disputes| oo incil "We must have facts. We)couver schoo! board. jtigation into organization pat-is expected to be announced) <0 Ontario Liberal Leader John|from under parliamentary im-|Zamation 0 0 " ity Cou ' dian workers defies all con-|fers his own opinion that eveh|search, to guide us." |keeping education in balance|counselling, and adult education ; ider|assess future educational re-| « e have people pro-jable personne! for specified and creating in them fictitious|!°"5- would do well to consider) assess "Today we p | ower arr ate" Probe Outcome _ 2% = 4 Fought By Labor OTTAWA (CP) -- The future|of educational psychology; John|Mr. Clarke, who says "'the trou-/plane which can make vertical/ciub, said Thursday he wit'|#ted with a hunting camp in} of job security, more leisure fore the beginning of labor-|,. lt says "the delay in recogni-|tary, Alberta Teachers' Associ-| Listing priorities for research,| Aircraft of Canada, Hawker Sid-|" yy Ryan made the statement|Ptise." The awners did not in-\Ontario Municipal Board for the view that Canadian indus- must base judgment on these} 4 foreword by Dr. C. P. Col-|terns and an appraisal of effec- = year. ' Wintermeyer for $1,000,000 if he| munity and repeat uel in the . 'Metee sumption and all waste," he)present productivity is resulting] The study, written for the Ca-/ with changes in society, haye injis outlined by Mr. Coutts, Mr. tieeds." the possible effects of its objec: | quirements. moting teaching machines, lan-|guidance jobs At times many i i . | ) Y f atori - cir-/ guidance personnel, with only .jtives on Canadian workers. |COVERS RESEARCH AREA | Buage laboratories, closed cir- gui y pe er aeetiae end sitet: "There is no particular virtue} The 5l-page ag rod ob etch getlerga iy Bd |e "Pg mg prscacrbe: in w i king," says|of a series, includes papers on| mathematics, : 3 I ods, ' , eas = Shar on ne ai Betton, Kade trom banger | vaca aspects of research in|teachers and many other things,|into rather formal studies of ed ucts to mi -|Mr. . As i iversi hi y |ucati roblems. able' demands for sales and|the acquisition of wealth was|education by three University of/not all of which have been/ucational pro rofits. : Mr. Sefton's views are out-'tive for working harder. BURNS | Res eb : te i :ationists: roven worthwhile, | A hard look also should be rea te Gerking tae oan coarman PS This theme is expanded by!ken, Mr. Clute says, at some of CREDIT JEWELLERS | | | | | Next to the Tree BULOVA says 'Merry Christmas' best! Capture all the excitement of Christmas with the one gift that says "I love you"' best . . . a fine quality Bulova . . . a watch that will be treasured and worn with pride for many many years. for the taste switch to CANADIAN Exquisitely carved end pieces hold two shimmering dia- monds. The DIAMOND DREAM, 17 jewels. $39.95 Stylish bracelet watch. High fashion motif is carried through to a perfect blend of case and bracelet. The Rhapsody, 23 jewels. $59.50 Graceful, feminine teardrop de- sign. The FIRST LADY has 23 jewels for flawless perform- ance and h ! Exciting! The BULOVA DUCHESS, 10 fiery diamonds, 14 karat gold case, 23 jewel movement. $175.00 From Canada's most fashion BULOVA DIAMOND LA PETITE. 4di 23 jewels. $79.50 Designed and styled for today's man of action. The slim, trim SEA KING is Tapered_and tasteful. Adds just the right modern touch. The CANADIAN EAGLE with 17 jewels and expansion The watch that has everything--the famous BULOVA SEA KING, 17 jewel Leader in precision accuracy, leader in watch styling. This is the BULOVA - ') q shock movement, certified waterproof*, "30." The movement has 30 jewels, is has luminous hands and dials, $39.75 band. $49.50 shock-resistant, luminous hands and Self-winding and shock-resistant and dial, $59.50 the pve "30" is certified waters Proo $115.00 this week pick up a case SS Z | of FOR $ - Give him the MINUTEMAN ... hy AS LITTLE 2 fine 17 jewel dress watch AS A WEEK wiriaron tuere cy tf Molson's Canadian sistant. Unbreakable maine | lager beer spring. Give her the ELIZABETH . . . mod. ern, youthful styling--precision Bulova quality throughout. YOU CAN GIVE A PRECISION-CRAFTED BULOVA And NO DOWN PAYMENT : Only CREDIT JEWELLERS LT 32 KING W. |woLSON's --INDEPENDENT BREWERS SINCE 1786 723-7022 | : oe