Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 Jun 1963, p. 4

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4 Lied OSHAWA TIMBS, Seturdey, June 1, 1963 EDITOR INJURED © Canadian Press editor Jack his wrecked sports car after it rolled over near Orono, Ont. Tracy lies on ground beside Friday a few miles east of Toronto. Mr. Tracy was taken eral Hospital with undeter- mined injuries Austria Offers Chance to Toronto's Scarborough Gen- | EDMONTON (CP)--A sociol- ogy professor has questioned whether modern education help or a hindrance to Canada's far northern Eskimos and In- dians Dr. "Charles Hobart, assistant professor of sociology at the University of Alberta, suggested in an address to a service club here that some aspects of mod- ern education might be hind- tances. Dr. Hobart spent a week in the Inuvik area of the North- west Territories and _ inter- viewed 40 educationists and ad- minstrators workng with the natve population at the mouth of the Mackenzie River. He returned with the impres- sion that the modern curriculum and ultra modern facilities planned in good faith and based on real concern for native wel- fare are conditioning natives to an environment irrelevant to their way of life and makng re- turn to ther native environment -- and sometimes unbear- able. Native children are brought from up to 1,200 miles away to spend 10 months a year in an ultra-modern hostel situation at Inuvik, learning the equivalent of an Alberta school curriculum. DETECTS REJECTION There Dr. Hobart detected a tendency by students to reject their native culture while gain- May Hurt Eskimo ° ing an education with no bear- ing on ther natve envronment and probable future lving con-| ditions. Young natives from the age of six are spending the great- est part of their lives far from home, family and environment, preparing themselves unrealist- ically for, ultimate return to primitive condtions wh ch, through long educatonal exper- ience, have become unreal and unacceptable, he said. Native parents had been known to respond to educational advantages given their children with the accusation: "When our children come back, they are no good to us anymore." Dr. Hobart feels their educa- tion should haye enough of their past and heritAge to assist them with current) conditions and enough of the\culture of modern civilization to\prepare them for the future. Breaking up t the children spend awa home, rotating semesters having a six-month school year\, woul dhelp the children learn from their home relationship and be better prepared to ad-) just to it again once their edu-|¢ cation is over, Br. Hobart said.) As an alternati _ suggests they study closer to their homes) or live in small groups run by} an Eskimo woman so their for- mative years would be pas ~ CP ae | By, GARY COOPER | There was little activity or a Gauiatea bons tation So | | CANADIAN BUSINESS Stock Markets | Rising Slowly "SE ants Lawyer | is Records WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--A cit- jizens' group which claims lirregulardities in convention ex- lic Utilities Commissioners will ask city council Monday night to appoint a Windsor lawyer to| inspect the records and ac: counts of the commission. The request asking appoint-| ment of Angus R. MacMillan was contained in a brief sub.) mitted Friday to City Clerk) Jon Adanac by Sau! Nosanchuk, solicitor for the Windsor Rate-| payers' Association. The 17-member group had) been refused access to the ac- counts of the commissio un- less $602 was paid first to the commission. Of that amount, $300 was a deposit to cover the expenses involved in a search; pense accounts of Winsor Pub.| _ ny ene ter Bro feted anak ea Modern Education ie Group |'Cut Income Tax Chamber Urges By ALAN DONNELLY OTTAWA (CP)--Income taxes should be reduced--but not nec- essarily in next month's budget a delegation from the Cana- dian Chamber of Commerce told Prime Minister Pearson Friday. Chamber officials said that | was the gist of the delegation's |references to taxes during a 90- minute get-acquainted meeting with the head of the new Lib-| ;eral government. One source said that the posi- | tion taken on tax cuts was softer than that set out in a formal | brief last January to the for- mer Conservative government, |At that time the Canadian jchamber, representing boards of trade and chambers of com- merce across Canada, called for a "substantial reduction' in per- sonal and corporate income tax. In Friday's meeting with Mr. ng periods) $302 was to cover a previous| Pearson, the delegation headed rom) examination of the records con-|by President Victor Oland of r| | ducted in. 1961 by another Broup. | | Halifax _ set out _the disadvan: DAYS! Y/ and AY > > Alfre: 4 Hitchcock's R [LE 4 , Tervifying q Adventure JAMES STEWART GRACE KELLY IN COLOR BOTH FIRST RUN! Helen Shapiro in "PLAY IT COOL" pias -- "Some People' -- Color ISTARTS MONDAY BILT MOR E pibiatdaieaa ( : y Award Winner AUDREY HEPBURN nies "ROMAN HOLIDAY" with-- \PLus'C income tax, It urged that lower income taxes should be the objective, with a shift if necessary to fur-| ther taxes on expenditures--a) broadening of the sales tax, The delegation said that an- other budget deficit, though lower than last year's, would realistic under present condi- tions. i The views were presented) orally to Mr. Pearson, and one tages of present high levels of ¢ The delegation's visit followed one earlier in the week from ithe Canadian Manufacturers' ssociation, which said that in cpme taxes should be cut st ey "as soon a condition } The 'aan expressed cone cern with the rise in govern- iment expenditures in recent years which it said had outdis- tanced the growth in national production. It called for more emphasis 'on increased savings, capital in- vestment and productivity, and less on new welfare programs. LAST ve DAY lala SO eT ANATOLE LITVAK'S <=> FIVEMLES OON" and SHORT; ADULT ENTERTAINMENT "TROUT EAM" Feature Times 1;35-3:35-5:35-7:38 LAST COMPLETE SHOW 9:20 PPPS DRIVE O UT Canadian Press Staff Writer (price fluctuation among western Canadian stock markets crept|9ils. Even the more active slowly ahead on quiet and selec-|penny issues such as Quonto * TONIGHT ALWAYS A COLOR CARTOON! To Find Cave Treasure By KURT VON TROJAN VIENNA (Reuters) -- Austria is offering the chance of find- ing a fabulous treasure to cave- minded tourists this summer. If the treasure fails to turn) up, at least the tourist should enjoy the breath-taking beauty) of the caves close to Lofer in| Salzburg Province. This subterranean wonder-| land, the only one of its kind in Austria, is named the Lamp. rechtsofenioch -- Lamprecht's Stove-hole--after a dynasty of] medieval knights. They lived in a castle on the mountain above and were the jing to legend, most feared robber barons ofa family dispute some 600 years |their time. }ago. | Today, the castle, the fortress) Sir Lamprecht had two daugh- |Saaleck, lies in ruins. Accord-|ters, one of whom was blind.| i the riches|Her sister cheated her out of jamassed by the Lamprechts|/most of her share. In punish- q|Still lie hidden somewhere in/ment, the sister was later seaied jthe caves below. into one of the caves with her jentire wealth. But no trace of the treasure has ever been found. Explorers have also searched in vain for a secret passage from the ruins of the fortress down into the caves. |TOURS DANGEROUS The caves themselves are es- HUNTERS DIED When explorers first entered| the caves for scientific. purposes early last century, they. found the skeletons of 108 treasure huntrs who had perished there. The treasure, it is said, be- longed to the last Sir Lamp- recht, who was killed by his) brother-in-law in a duel over Hot-Rodder Not Wild Teenager t By JOH NWARREN EDMONTON (CP) -- Must the term "ho-rdoder" be syn- onymous with 'reckless driver"' tom car club, And they have evidence that a group of hot- vod fanatics can gain the good- will and respec tof the public. Among boosters of the El! Caminoes are officials of the St. John Ambulance, Highways Minister Gordon Taylor and members of the Edmonton po- lice force. "One of the aims for which this club has bee nformed is ta acquaint the motoring public with the true meaning of 'hot tod'," says the back of the club's business card. The front bears the motto "Safety is a yirtue."' "We are devoted to public service and to hot rods,"' says' John Sutherland, 21 - year - old club president, a and the club' soldest member. Formed last November, the El Caminoes, with the co-oper- ation of radio station CJCA, raised more than $200 to stag a Christmas party for bed-rid- den children at a city hospital. At Easter they treated 60 chil- dren in hospital to another part ythat had wheelchair drag oistrate that he is a courteous steelworker| timated to be about 2,500,000 years old, created by water eat- ing into the limestone of the mountain. So far, some four miles have been explored, but ae all is accessible to the pub. ic, For visitors, 387 steps have been cemented into the cave \floor and 800 yards lit with elec- tric light, illuminating walls of reddish marble, strange coral formations and pearly stalact- ites. Cave tours are often ih ous in summer. Especially treacherous are a number of| 'syphons'" --- u-shaped depres-| sions in the cave floor which| can suddenly fill with water, cutting off the way back to the entrance. These syphons almost cost the! pleted a 10-week St. John Am-) bulance first aid course. Each member must have a '"'clean" driver's .licence and demon- driver. Membership is open to youths 1 8to 23. Policemen have been invited|' to show safety films and give) lectures at club meetings. While members have directed much of their energy toward public service, the common in- terest that got them together|lives of three West German ex- remains hot rods, usually old-|plorers and 17 volunteer fire- jmodel cars wtih new or rebuilt}men eight years ago engines. : Members are happiest when| working on their cars, testing) VAN PELT IS THROUGH them or using them to do some-| WINNIPEG (CP)--Jim Van one a favo r. Pelt, a former football star with) For example, when a radio|the Western Conference Winni-| station was asked to help find) peg Blue Bombers, said Friday! someone to drive a girl 90 miles|his Playing days are over. He to Red Deer where her brother| ended Bomber hopes of a come-| had been injured in an acci-|back in a long-distance tele. dent, a club member volun-| phone interview with the Winni- bana too kher at his own eg Tribune from Washington, | ; é __ , |Where he is stationed with the The El Caminoes (Camino is/air force. Van Pelt said he plans| the Spanis hword for highway)/to take an accounting job in his| are mostly students and all own|home town of Chicago when he} their own cars. Each weekend|is discharged from the air force they split up into groups tolin a few weeks. work on several hot rods. _-------------- There are nine ca rclubs in| Edmonton and the highways! |should be made by each in-| minister has set aside a stretch|ternee without pressure from| races as one feature. All El Caminoes have com- of highway east of the city each| outside. - Sunday. for drag races. The Indian government has, Chinese In India Courted By Reds By RUKMINI DEVI Canadian Press Correspondent BOMBAY (CP)----The Commu- nist Chinese government has been trying unsuccessfully to win over the Chinese minority in India. Despite strong anti-Chinese sentiment that has developed here since Peking's attack on India last fall, fewer than 1,000 of the 20,000 Chinese nationals in India have accepted repatri- ation to their homeland, Two Chinese ships recently port of Madras with 900 Chinese nationals, including 300 Two Chinese ships recently led from the south Indian port of Madras with 900 Chi ------~ | however, permitted officials of the International Red Cross to inspect the internees' camp. The! |Red Cross reported conditions| in the camp were "quite satis-| factory.' |nése 'Association of India has |reaffirmed its loyalty to India and denounced the Chinese in- ? jnationals arrested soon after|vasion last October. _jdustry showed an increase Meanwhile, the Overseas Chi-| tive buying this week. \a A few major industrials ad- vanced rather sharply, pulling the Toronto index to another record high on Friday. With financial news almost nonexistant, investors had little to go on. Nor did Wall Street \provide any leadership. At Toronto, the industrial in- |dex--a compilation of 20 se- |lected issues--advanced 2.21 on the week to a new all-time high of 647.96. A rise of 2.67 Friday |wiped out a fractional deficit |created in earlier sessions. Although daily volume, hov- ering around the 3,000,000-share |mark, were unimpressive, a |few major industrials stood out. Index stocks such as Distillers) Seagram advancing two points and CPR and Canadian Celan- ese rising healthy fractions were influencial in the climb into record territory. Refining oils and pipelines, closing on a mixed note, were among the more active issues. All major banks suffered losses, ome falling a point or more. Food tended to ease slightly, taking a lead from from sugar) refineries. One exception in the} group was Loblaw, which re- jcorded a new 1963 top on mod-! i turnover. |UTILITIES ACTIVE Certain of the utilities group \featured fairly heavy turnover, lincluding CPR and Consumers' Gas, both advancing fraction- ally on the week. Most others, such as B.C. Power and Shawin- igan, remained steady. Papers did fairly well on the basis of -a report that the in-| in April of 4.8 per cent in the pro- duction of ground pulp wood over the previous month. Among these, Great Lakes Pa- |per was active and moved to a. jnew high for the year. | Most motors were on the up- | | ] and Northcal showed only mod- lest change in price. On index at Toronto, indus- trials advanced 2.21 to a record high of 647.94; golds slipped .03 to 87.30, base metals dropped 10 to 215.00; and western oils fell 1.78 to. 124.55. Total volume at Toronto was| 15,206,968 shares worth $41,663,-/ 953 compared with 43,240,479) THIS HAPPY bag PELING shares worth $39, 398 021 last week, On index at Mantreal, indus- trials dropped 0.2 to 128.2, banks| slipped 1.4 to 129.3, combined dropped 0.1 to 127.4 and papers dipped 1.5 to 111.5, Utilities ad- vanced 1.2 to 123.6. Volume at Montreal: Indus- trials 1,278,708 shares compared "BOWERY BOYS" "HAROLD LLOYD'S WORLD OF COMEDY" "PIRATES OF BLOOD RIVER" with 1,027,691 last week; mines 2,116,782 shares compared with 1,507,923. SIGN TRADE PACT MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet || Union and Libya signed their first trade agreement today,| news agency a, Libya, exchange primarily of Libyan || agricultural products for Rus-)) sian machinery, metals, build-|| jing materials, industrial goods'; and food. | TONIGHT | Old Time - Modern | ADMISSION----$1.00 RED BARN DUE TO swing with Chrysler and Gen- jeral Motors both advancing to new highs on modest trading. Steels and construction issues |were mostly lower and dull. Base metals investors steered jaway from speculatives again this week and senior issues took over the spotlight. The big pro- WOR WIDE PICTURES |ducers were generally stronger. | | SORRY! SOLD OUT w ps PAVILION 5 OSHAWA OSr ynusw they were rounded up for pro- Communist activities. Many are| said to be asking Indian author- ities to give them another chance to remain in India. REFUSE DEMANDS The Chinese government has been pressing New Delhi to pro- vide it with exact information about the number of Chinese internees wanting to be repatri- ated and their full names. The Indian government has refused It has pointed out that since some internees have changed their minds about repatriation the invasion, about half have| refused to be repatriated though Things to ao: TENNIS oR RELAXING Things lo enjoy: COMPANY CHILDREN' Things OUR LOW, nationals, including 300 chil- dren. The adults had been in- terned by the Indian govern- ment for pro-Chinese espionage activities. Another 700 Chinese are to be repatriated and New Delhi is in ee tere with) ry ee on shipping facilities. the nearly 3,000 Chinese jical affiliations. The eo ot St. Jovite. Quebed, C it is not possible to give Peking) to consider their names in advance. Another Chinese demand In-| dia has rejected is that officials of the Chinese embassy in India} be allowed to interrogate the! internees to find out their polit-| | a GOLF (The only 18 hole In the area) BOATING & CANOEING e WATER-SKIING AQUA-CYCLING @ DANCING @ PLAIN SUPERB CUISINE e IMPECCABLE SERVICE ELEGANT DINING @ INFORMAL COCKTAILS LUXURIOUS ROOMS @ MAGNIFICENT VIEWS @ MOUNTAIN AIR e BEAUTIFUL LAKES @ THE LAURENTIANS e SELECT SUMMER INNOVATION: A SUPERVISED IN THE SPRING AND EARLY SUMMER Interested ? Please write to GRAY ROGKSINN IDING e SWIMMING @ SAILING or TRANQUIL PRIVACY ¢ A S$ PLAYGROUND , LOW OFF-SEASON RATES te. has been that the choice ? BARROWS "GET" THIS WEEK EXAMS EVEN GREATER ON THE in a full color dramatic feature anny | MUSICAL oh aida ms sing-along fun? CLIFF = GED. evens repp = BON SHEA = SMITH -WUSTAD FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH 419 BROCK ST. NORTH WHITBY TUES., JUNE. 4th 8:00 P.M. ALL ARE WELCOME |WITH LAUREL AND HARDY, IGREATS, iecaltucsail \CHAPLIN AND MANY OTHER SILENT A DELIGHTFUL SHOW FOR THE FAMILY e¢* GIANT BAY RIDGES SCREEN! MERSTLIN OKLAHOMA ORION act - LOR GIMME SHIRLEY JONES + GENE NELSON CHARLOTTE GREENWODD - EDDIE ALBERT ~ AMES WHITIMORE » ROD STEIGER "30 YEARS OF FUN" | CHARLIE ISTO "STARES 9: BOX-OFFICE OPENS A 0--"" Tonight 6 Sunday~e Monday WALTER PIDGEON fan THE es pred JOAN FONTAINE & . STORY OF A BOY AND PETER LORRE IN HIS HORSE . Cwnemascore COLOR by DE LUXE as oavio LADD ARTHUR O'CONNELL CHILDREN UNDER TWELVE - OSHAWA DRIVE-IN THEATRE FREE! PLUS HIT NO. 2 Rock Hupson - GINA LOLLoBRicIDA SANDRA Dee - Boppy Darin - WALTER SLEZAK 1 ( september") eat STARTS SUNDAY HOW FRENCH CAN THE SCREEN GET? The 1 story of a hand -) husband whose wife arranged his love affairs! No wonder the French government didn't want yeu to see It! ASTOR PICTURES presen ROGER VADIM'S MASTERPIECE! "DANGEROUS LOVE 3 ot. Les Liaisons nh ha » | ME PROGRAM | JEANNE MOREA «EPROM PIPE creas TWO PIRST RUN SCORCHERS t DN THE § JEAN "BREAT, WES i A FAMOU | e TODAY "AND ) SUNDAY ONLY ® CONNIE FRANCIS @ RUSS TAMBYLN FOLLOW THE B is sbanpeal

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