4@ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, February 25, 1964 TOMORROW'S TEEN-TALK REPORTERS Pupils in Grade 5 at E. A. Lovell Public Sch: 1 are print- img their own newspaper under the guidance of teacher Ron Phillips. In order to get an idea of how : daily news- paper operates, the class re- cently toured The Oshawa Times. Three of the girls paused in the editorial room to see how the efforts of high Henry Girls Win Grade 9 'B Tourney By KATHY CUDDY Henry was represented by two basketball teams in a Grade 9 tournament held at OCCI on Feb. 21. Each team from Henry played in a round-robin with teams from MCVI, OCVI, OCCI, and Clarke. The Henry 'B' team emerged as the victor of its round-robin; the 'A' team was defeated. Henry's 'A' team played Mc- Laughlin in the first game and won by a score of 20-3. In this match, Beth Barter tallied 10 points. The second game, this time against O'Neill, was lost by the Henry squad by 2-1. Jan McGrath- neted the lone point for Henry. The 'B' squad from Henry de- feated O'Neill 9-3 in their first game. Susan Read scored 7 poins for the winners. The next match, against Mc- Laughlin, was also won by Henry; the score was 7-4. Val- erie McCoy of Henry picked up four points. Since the 'B' team won the first two games, it had to play a third match, this one against Oshawa Central. In this contest, the Henry girls were again vic- torious over their opponents. The guards, who all played a good defensive game, greatly aided the forwards in the 9-3 win. All the Henry girls who par- ticipated in the tournament -- players, coaches, scorers, timers 'and officials -- deserve credit for the effort put forth to make this tournament a Suc- cess. f school students have tuted out the weekly paper, Teell=~--Phillips Talk, Seated, I-ft to right, are Cindy Kemp, 11, and Gloria 13. Standing are Mr. and Christine Robert- son, 1", --Oshawa Times Photo Gibbs, WRONG NUMBER ? Susan Peacock, Donevan Colu giate Institute student, rovides a perky bit of pub- licity for one of her school's plays to be presented Friday night. "Sorry Wrong Number"' directed by A. Gibbons plus "Pedlar's Progress", directed by J. Engel, are expected to draw large crowds to Done- van's auditorium for the one- night stand. Curtain rises at . 8.30 p.m, --Oshawa Times Photo LONDON (CP) --Britons are getting to know President Lyn- don B. Johnson almost as well as Anericans do, though in- evitably from a different angle. ain is how he will shape as which John F. Kennedy had begun to fire Europe's imagina- tion. Like anxious doctors, the political commentators con- stantly take the new president's pulse ---- reporting his staff changes, watching him at work, trying to assess his future weight in the world. Kennedy had achieved a wide- spread acceptance as "presi- dent of all the west' partly because of his own outward- looking European tempera- ment. Johnson with his all- American background may lack the same affinities, but some observers hope he may prove even more able to sell an inter- nationalist policy to his country- men. Johnson was far less known here than in North America when he was thrust into the saddle Nov. 22. It was generally expected that he would bring the same po litical skills to the presidency as he diq to his formidable Senate career, and that power might broaden him beyond all existing appraisals. SWIFT AUTHORITY But nobody foresaw that he would take charge with such swift authority or muscle in so uncompromisingly on civil rights. Liberals here, as else- where, feared that the master- mind of Capitol Hill might find it necessary to mend fences with his fellow-southerners. In British eyes, the Texan president gained new respect and someone typecast him in a popular paper as the 'good sheriff.' But a few inevitable doubts remain. Some observers feel that in the world context Johnson's attitude to the presidency may lack a certain perspective, and that he may consider it just another big political job for which he is eminently fitted. Kennedy, sensitive to the global power ar glor:; of the role as he saw it, succeeded in project- inz a new dimension of leader- ship which the world now ex- pects from the U.S. There is a general sense of pain in the Washington dis- patches at a loss of personal grace and brilliance. Murray Kempton, who writes weekly in The Spectator magazine, de- scribes Johnson as '"'a coarse instrument where Kennedy was a refined one, a complacent man where Kennedy was a cur- What primarily concerns Brit- |, leader of the West, a role in| British Watch LBJ's Progress ious one." The Scotsman . cor- respondent says new frontier idealism has been replaced by a system of '"'giving the people what they want." Perhaps (the crucial doubt concerns Johnson's inner judg- ment on matters of world policy. Godfrey Hodgson' of The Obser- ver puts it in a nutshell: "How will he react where there are no guidelines to follow?' JUDGMENT OF PEOPLE 'It is noted that his judgment of people if not situations, nas sometimes lef him down. What happens when he has to shape a lonely decision out of a mass of conflicting facts and opin- ions? Th; Sunday Times says there is evidence he does not reflect upon information in the Ken- nedy manner, weighing it within a fraework of far + reaching purposes... It is more likely "pitched in to do duty on some immediate problem" thrust upon him by events. Dietary supplements for young 'and old... 1. PARAMETTES 2. 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