Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Apr 1963, p. 2

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g D EVENING By JACK GEARIN -- THE SHOW MUST GO ON AND IT DID What happens in. the world of the theatre three hours before curtain time when a leading character, without an understudy, becomes seriously ill and is taken to hospital ?- Harry Chapman, director of the Oshawa Little Theatre's production of 'Dirty Work at the Crossroads", which ended a three-day visit at the McLaughlin Library Theatre Satur- day, knows. He got word at 5 p.m. Friday that Bert Heaver, his vil- lain lead in the hilarious musical lampoon of a frontier town in the Gay 90's, had been taken to the Oshawa General Hospital with ulcers and would not be released for at least two weeks. Never one to permit such an unexpected development i in the theatre to confuse him * or to sideline his produc- tion, Mr. Chapman quickly came up with a solution pro- : posal that seemed destined for failure because of its complexities. He decided to personally play- out Mr, Heaver's role on stage, but to go through the performance "in mime," without actually speaking out any of the words-- this latter part was to be per- formed by Norman Edmond. son, QC, (who performed so creditably in the recent OLT performance of Christopher Fry's "The Lady Is Not For Burning") unseen from the wings. The dangerous experiment worked to perfection, so much so that. sell-out crowds gave the cast a solid ovation, one of the heaviest heard local- ly in many moons. : What surprised the audiences most was Mr. Chapman's co-ordination efforts with Mr. Edmondson (the son of Mr. Byron Edmondson of General Motors of Canada) -- also, Mr. Edmondson's sense of timing, and clear diction was a "> lovers of good theatre. Mr. Chapman had a busy time of it (what with his directorial duties and doing a high-effective mime job), but he appeared outwardly composed at all times, even if he had a few "'butterflies". In one of the comedy highlights of the night, an on-stage character tells Janet Stevenson "a railway is coming this way," to which the latter replies, "A railway coming to this dump ? Who wants.a track down the main street, anyway?" WELFARE OFFICERS PLAN BIG MEET HERE When the Ontario Welfare Officers' Association holds its Annual Convention here June 10 - 12, inclusive, some NORMAN EDMONDSON *. highly-topical subjects of the day will be up for panel- ussion by local and visiting delegates, such as: The Aged and Their Prob- lems (with W. Douglas Johns, superintendent of Hillsdale Manor). Residence (with Herbert G. Chesebrough, City Wel- fare director, dealing with the problem of where relief recipients lived and which government will pay for their assistance, Provincial or Municipal). Desertions. The Increasing Cost of Drugs to Indigents (Dr. Os- -car G, Mills of the Oshawa Clinic). Delegates will include the Hon. Louis Cecile, Provin- cial Minister of Welfare, James S. Band, Deputy Min- ister and W. G. Manning, clerk-treasurer of Ontario County (who will be on a panel to discuss The County fe Welfare System). Guest speaker at the opening banquet June 10 -- which is to be a civic affair -- will be Michael Starr, MP for Ontario riding. i Mr. Chesebrough said that the City no longer had a Problem with "deserting husbands", although the odd case was reported. "There is too much 'full employment' here at present," p Bcscmorged ad tg many wayward husbands -- also, wou! afraid of not getting emplo: ie deeded Os cose." g ig employment elsewhere if "Mr. Chesebrough expects more than 300 delegates (rep- resenting more than 900 Ontario municipalities) to attend this convention. HERBERT G. CHESEBROUGH LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE Oshawa's Polish community has been saddened by the announcement that Rev. Felix Kwiatkowski will leave soo for other fields. He made a remarkable contribution to the Polish community in the past eight years. Thanks to his guidance and inspiration his parish, St. Hedwig's, has a new church for its 460-odd families, also a convent for the Felician Sisters, and a 10-room elementary school. He will direct the new Queen of the Apostles Retreat House, Port Credit, Ont... . The 1963 Military Ball' of the Ontario Regi- ment last Friday lived up to its reputation for being about the most colorful social event of the local season. The decora- tions of the Armories were superb and who could forget that colorful picture of Col. R. §. McLaughlin, still spry at 91, leading that Grand March to the .spirited strains of John. Peel? He's the honorary colonel of the regiment. strengthening omy this year is expected by a velopment in Saskatchewan strengthening in basic steel and try. Canada's penetration into for- markets and--as one pub- put it--"the basic solidar- ity of the Canadian people" were expected to provide aS scarcity of woestra) sca indus skills and we Md of avtoma- tion cancelling out employment gains merited by business ex- pansion were seen as possible trouble factors. hoe agit Pee ogee the growth nada's gross na- tional product--value of goods and services produced--to top last year's eight per cent, a few thought it would be less. But most expected the fading months of 1963 would see some zip in the economy. GIVE THEIR VIEWS The newspaper men, here for the annual meetings of The Ca- nadian Press and Canadian) Daily Newspaper Publishers As- sociation, were asked for their views on thé 1963 economic out- look for their provinces and the country as a whole. Generally, the publishers found their own industry in a healthy state. Aurele Gratton of Ottawa Le Droit looked for a rate of na- tional growth keeping pace with 1962 and a turn-up at the end of the year, but he found the Tate of house construction far below last year's. The outlook varied among Dublisherss in indutria] Ontario. T. E. Nichols of the Hamilton Spectator expected that at the current rate, the GNP increase cauld awracd 1h nae nant PD A Perr Cent, = Graybie] of the Windsor Star'| figured the pace at about the same as 1962 without any pro- nounced strengthening. Neither was optimistic about any increased rate of national growth bringing a progressive reduction in unemployment. "Technological advances in industry indicate that the em- ployment rate will not keep pace with over - all national growth," said Mr. Nichols. As a possible cure, he urged sharp tax reductions to release funds for expanding secondary indus- try. Mr. Graybiel was doubtful whether growth can reduce un- employment "until there is a more rational approach to pro- duction on a continental basis." The Windsor newspaper man said Canadian firms must have access to U.S. markets to achieve volume necessary to Newspaper Men See Better Year TORONTO (CP) -- Somejabout in Canada's econ-|He said expansi th rate, The city ges reduction lishing executives setharing, oo for their 1963 meetings butja reduce unemployment. Mr. Nichols was optimistic bov gar swan ion is above na should see marked in its own list of jobless because of heavy year in Windsor, an centre, after a period when area had lost industry to the Toronto area. % SHARE IN GROWTH J. R. H. Sutherland of the New Glasgow News, in Nova Scotia's re east, share in the national growth rate but mentioned that like the rest of the Maritimes, it has a i way to go. ¢ saw the only solution to unemployment as a long- educational program, especia! ae vocational and technica! ines, * Ruling Awaited On Textbook Test Case ST. BONIFACE, Man. (CP)-- Judge L. H. Benard of St. Boni- face county court says he will deliver in two or three weeks a verdict on a test case involv- in his own area. This is the late - model sta- tion wagon in which a woman died in a violent crash at a REGINA DEATH CAR Regina intersection Monday. Eggs and cream are scatter- ed about the crash scene and + QUEBEC (CP) -- The profes- sion of ctic was given chiropra: the legs of the dead woman are visible in the car. (CP Wirephoto) a textbooks for school chil- ren, At issue is whether the edu- cation department should sup- ply free textbooks to students in separate as well as public schools, - Roy Gallagher, lawyer for the St. Vital school board in a case involving three St. Mital fami- lies, said in court Monday the school board "'only loans texts to students." Public school chil- dren were not guaranteed free textbooks. Mr. Gallagher said "'it is not the law's fault that Roman Catholics are compelled, by the teaching of their church, io send their children to private schools and so lose the advan- tages of a free public educa- tion," Defence counsel Joe O'Sulli- van said the school board was practising discrimination in re- claiming books issued last fall to five children of the three families. St. Boniface and St, Vital are cities in metropolitan Winnipeg. NEEDS STUDY Judge Benard, expected to de- cide whether the. youngsters had a right to keep the books, said the case requires intensive study and interpretation of the Public Schools Act. The children of Mr. and Mrs. William Schick, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Cebula and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Noiseux enrolled in public schools last fall, then transferred to St. Emile paro- chial school with the texts they received at the public schools. WEATHER FORECAST Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5 a.m: Synopsis: Strong northwest winds and much cooler temper- atures will reach southern On- tario late today. Cool, sunny weather will prevail Wednes- day. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On- tario, southern. Georgian Bay, Haliburton regions, Windsor, London, Hamilton, Toronto: Cloudy and turning colder this ers. Wednesday mainly sunny and cool, Winds. shifting to northwest 20 to 3 this after- noon. Northern Georgian Bay, Ti- magami, Algoma, southern White River regions, North Bay, nesday Sunny with cloudy pe- riods and cool. Winds northerly % to 35. Northern White River, Coch- rane regions: Mostly clear to- night. Wednesday sunny. Winds northerly 15 to 25, Forecast Temperatures Low Tonight, High Wed. Cooler Weather For Wednesday afternoon with scattered show- D Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: Wed- . Earlton ...+. Kapuskasing White River Mogsonee Sault Ste. Marie Mr. Forest ....++. Timmins 1 Observed Temperatures Low overnight, a Menten oe a SRSaRSRSSSE seeeeeseee 3 Lakehead .seserese White River ...... Kapuskasing «se.» North Bay .eoscoss Anti-Picketing Injunction Against SIU TORONTO (OP) -- A perman- ent injunction was granted Mon- day to Upper Lakes Shipping Limited, enjoining the Seafar- ers International Union (Ind.) from picketing any of the com- pany's vessels anywhere in On- tario, Mr. Justice James F. Don- nelly 6f Ontario Supreme Court granted the injunction when the union failed to present a state- ment of defence against an in- terim injunction granted prev- lously. The injunction restrains SIU President Hal Banks of Mont- real and the union' membership as well as their agents, serv- ants or any person acting un- der their instructions from set- ting fire, damaging or other- wise injuring company prop- erty. It is also designed to prevent the union from inducing ¢om- pany employees to breach their contracts and from interfering with the employees, from pick- eting, watching and besetting or trespassing. The injunction warns against interference with employees, suppliers or custom- ers of the company. The interim order had effec- tively stopped SIU picketing in Ontario against Upper Lakes, during the union's bitter dispute with the cémpany after the Ca- nadian Maritime Union (CLC) became bargaining agent for Upper Lakes employees. An SIU official had said ear- lier that picketing in Ontario would be carried out by mem- bers of the port councils of the maritime trades department, a section of the American feder- ation of Labor-Congress of In- dustrial Organizations. Emergency State On Jordan Border AMMAN (AP) -- Jordan de- clared a state of emergency along its borders Monday and warned that illegal crossers would be 'shot. No reason was given for the decision, believed aimed at preventing infiltrators from slipping into the country. HAD SURPLUS BRANDON, Man. (CP)--The city council's finance committee Says the city had a surplus of more than $2,000 on operation during 1962. The city collected $2,833,462 in revenue and spent $2,830,921, SSTSRSSSERRS BAAS scsstcvssee: OF Windsor ...esseose St. Thomas . London ...+. Kitchener ... Wingham ... Hamilton ....se000 St. Catharines .... TORONO oseccevsee Peterborough .... "OIL FURNACE? CALL PERRY DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 SANITARY REQU CITY OF OSHAWA -- DE Qualification: C.S.1. (C). 36% hour week. Excellent INSPECTOR IRED - PARTMENT OF HEALTH Salary Range -- $4,571.00 to $5,367.00. employee benefits. Go Too...! TO: INTERPRETING THE NEWS By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer Spain's 'slow, sidelong prog- ress into the 20th century is bound to suffer a temporary check with the execution of: Communist leader Julian Gri- mau. Western versions of what happened in Madrid agree that the trial was a mockery of jus- tice, with Grimau punished mainly for alleged crimes com- mitted in the savage days of the civil war a quarter-century ago. One popular conclusion is that grizzled Francisco Franco, Spain's perennial dictator, is still dwelling in the past, still eager after all these years to wreak vengeance upon the low- liest of his civil war opponents, Nearly everyone of mature years remembers the civil war with a thrill of horror, It cost 1,000,000 lives and left a mark upon the Spanish soul; nobody wants to see it happen again. But it may be wrong to sug- gest that Franco risked turning Grimiau into a national martyr merely for the sake of re- venge. Franco is a man of ice who seldom acts on impulse. He comes from Galicia in northwestern Spain, an arid re. gion whose people are known for their dour, calculating qual- ities. Blast On Thresher Said Impossible PORTSMOUTH, N.H. (AP)-- Vice-Admiral Hyman G. Rick- over, director of nuclear propul- sion for the U.S. Nayy, said Monday it is impossible for the nuclear plant on the ill-fated submarine Thresher to explode. Rickover told a naval court of inquiry: 'Nuclear reactors in submarines and surface ships are designed to minimize haz- ards under any conditions. 'It is phygically impossible for nuclear plants on ships to explode like a bomb." The Thresher, first of a new class of nuclear powered attack submarines, sank April 10 with Spain Execution Delays Progress It can be argued, therefore, that in ordering Grimau's exe- cution Franco was less inter- ested in settling old scores than in deliberately reviving the memories of 1936 as a means of intimidating restive Span- iards. For the last decade, Spain has been moving in reluctant, crab-like style away from her old isolation and toward a ten- tative understanding with Eu- rope and the West. Admirers of the Spanish people -- and they are legion--welcomed and en- couraged the trend. For a time, Franco himself seemed reluctantly ready to condone the new liberalism, as long as his personal power re- mained unaffected. Perhaps the pace hag become too. fast. During a wave of strikes last summer, the Spanish church showed sympathy for workers whose minimum wage was only recently raised to 60 pesetas a day from 36~or to about $1 in Canadian terms from 65 cents. The church went so far in its tacit support that it was re. ported Franco's ministers pro- tested to the Roman Catholic primate of Spain, Cardinal Pla y Deniel. The church and the army are the two main props of the Franco regime. With an Ibe- rian version of something ap- proaching liberalism apparently taking root in «the church, Franco may have felt a drastic move, such as Grimau's execu. tion, had to be made to show he still is the boss. medical profession to a one- unanimously criticized the fession. Heavy Criticism : man royal commission almost/of ' For Chiropractic -- neuro - Bg oven ews said the . theory chiropractic -- that; - 'manipulation of the spinal col- * umn could cure certain ailments . --was oversimplified and dan-\ ~/ ion from the disgnostic point > lew. : Dr. Jean-Marc Lessard, an, professor at La 2 might be mitted as a technique to medical control in its cation, but not as a science allowed independent diagnosis. - "aa OR BP ty sicians and Surgeons at Quebec, the Laval Unive: faculty of medicine, and several special- ists at the university. Dr. J.-B. Jobin, gg of he college, said medical in Quebec does not recognize the principle' of chi- "het e Laval brief concentrated on the qualifications of chiro- practors compared to those of r s, ' Medical students spent three years of nearly exclusive clini- cal study, while chiropractic students spent four years on theory. Schools of chiropractic, the brief said, were lacking in la- boratories and research facili. ties. They could not turn out persons competent to make a diagnosis, Also, Laval said, no univer- sity in the world has recognized a school of chiropractic. Dr, Rosaire Gingras, dean of medicine at Laval, said chiro- practic is based on "false, un- thinkable theory incapable of standing up to even a superfi- cial analysis in the light of ele- mentary biological knowledge,"' Dr, Guy Lamarche, a Laval Destroy Israel Said UAR Aim UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- Israel protested to the United day against a stated goal of the new Arab. Federation as "'noth- ing else than the aim to de- stroy Israel." Citing the April 17 federation declaration of the United Arab Republic, Syria and Iraq, Is- raeli Ambassador Michael Co- may said "it is unprecedented for a constitutional document of member states of the United Nations to proclaim the destruc- tion of another member-state-- =| Landing Fee Nations Security Council Mon-|' Protested At Airport OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana- aon svete oriet 10 Iaapal ation sent a brief to Minister Meliraith Monday pro- testing against a $1 la fee to be imposed from May 1 on small aircraft landing at Mont. real, Toronto and Vancouver in- ternational airports. William N. Peppler; * of the 4,200-member 'issoclation, = said in an interview that trans: . port department officials have ~ indicated to him that some changes will be made in the - new ruling but he did not know what these would be, The association also is : testing against a new m of. calculating fees for rie Bool craft at transport depaftment- _ operated airnorts, which it con siders may increase rates up to 50 per cent; and possibly more, for small aircraft, ' Mr. Peppler said the brief, which dealt mainly with the $1 landing fee, suggested it was a bad step for the department to take and would seriously af-' fect the livelihood of aircraft supply companies which set up shop at the three major air- ports. The landing fee would" discourage small aircraft from deprive these firms of. prospective customers. ; TORONTO (CP) - A 50-cent.. fee each for. landings and take-* offs will be imposed soon on. itinerant small aircraft using an island airport in Toronto's ? bor, an official of the harbor . commission said Monday. ; Airport Manager Ian Me-~ Quaig said the fee will apply to all pleasure flights of planes © under -5,000 pounds which are: not based on the island, * which is one of the avowed aims of the new federation." He noted that the declaration called for "the establishment of a military unit capable of lib- erating the Arab homeland from the dangers of Zionism." Comays'. protest was in a let- er. we LIST ONLY TO- SELZ BOLAHOOD REAL ESTATE -- MORTGAGES 725-6544 NOW To have that carpet or chest- erfield cleaned professionally in Oshawa's Original Carpets" Cleaning Centre . . . wheres: fully guaranteed satisfaction is assured. Phone 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. 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