TORONTO Manuel Domingues wasn't actually lying down on the job. He was resting during his lunch break HE COULDN'T DO IT TODAY couldn't do it today. A storm, with winds averaging about an hour, dumped yesterday after a hard morn- ing tearing down houses along the route for Toronto's east- west subway, But Manuel 40 miles Story Of Alfred P. Sloan, Jr. helped to build the world's largest indus- trial corporation -- he created the organizational system. that has made it run as efficiently and effectively as any organiza- tion 'in the world. He tells the remarkable story lof haw General Motors evolved 'in "MY YEARS WITH GEN- 'ERAL. MOTORS" (Doubleday |Publishers) which is as the dust jacket states: '"'a distillation of half a century of intimate ex- 'perience with the largest indus- trial complex in the world. It is a story of. ideas as well as events." 4 The story is a must for any- one even remotely associated with the automobile business. It takes the reader behind the scenes into many operating |phases of the corporation; its specialized staffs, non-automo- tive divisions, and specific man- agement problems. HOLDS ATTENTION Mr. Sloan's lifelike narrative holds the reader's attention throughout, is well punctuated with lively quotations from the record as he describes some of] the most dramatic events in} Americai industrial history. | about eight inches of snow on the city. --CP Wirephoto Will Drop School Guards | Whitby Man If Finance Plea Ignored Oshawa Safety League is threatening to withdraw school crossing patrols if the Board of Education does not answer very soon to their: request for finan- cial support. George. Martin, chairman, said at a League meeting, Tuesday night: "If the school board turn us down I will personally see the patrols come off the same day. | "I feel very strongly about! this, We are responsible if the| patro] children are knocked down or catch pneumonia from| the. cold." Belts, raincoats, and caps, | used by the 900 children wholwill probably appear on the\the chocolate bar selling to be|would help to avoid this situa-/ NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)--A form the road crossing patrols, are now badly worn and need replacing. The League asked the School! Board and the Separate School! Board for financial aid. Oshawa! Kinsmen Club who know about the situation have donated $500 to the project. The Board of Education was asked about a month ago for) $1,500. So far they have made} no indication about their deci-| sion to the League. | James Feltis, a League mem- ber, told the meeting he was| 'present when the Separate| School Board was asked for| $500. He said it took them 17 to, vote on it and award the money to the League. WHY 80 LONG? Mr. Feltis said: "'Why does it| Tu take the Board of Education| more than a month to do what| the Separate School Board can| handle in 17 minutes? | "There can. be no excuse for delay when the safety of our children is at stake." | Said Mr. Martin: "W. two-thirds of his 609 foot Sim-|45 acres, with about five given reached the pnt I lla (SO street frontage. He will be|over to gravel. He said he has patrol children are ill-equipped: | We have had tremendous sup-| port from the Kinsmen but: this] . =, big a job for one service club. Mr. Feltis said: "Every tax-| payer should 'be paying for the patrols. They have been proved to cut down accidents." A motion that League withdraw patrols if sup- port is not forthcoming from the Board of Education was tabled until next meeting Last word on the subject came from Mr. Martin: "We must have new equipment right away. Whatever we have asked for from the Separate Schoul. Board we have received." George Drynan, chairman of the Board of Educatio., heard about the threat to withJraw patrols shortly before The Times went to press. Speaking off the cuff. Mr. Dry- nan said: "The Board of Edu- cation have been spending fan- tastic hours on Board business and negotiating teachers' sal- aries and the budget "The application for funds has been considered and the initia! recommendations made. It is our understanding that the Kins- men Club has previous'y sup- plied funds for equipment and to some degree administered the funds. PLAN TO CO-OPERATE "In the middle of this busy time the Board has been asked to supply funds and take over administration. The finalization of these matters takes consider- ation and consideration takes time. It has been consitered at two meetings and I am certain the final result will be satisfac- tory to all concerned "IT do not know why it should be necessary for the League to use such violent language. We have a business administrator who could have been consulted HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS his land for chairman Louis Hyman, |sion got approval from the On-| at the present time. the Safety) The chairman of management, they do through the year In the, could have been consulted or I,|past the League has sald choco- as chairman of the Board, could|late bars to raise the money for have been consulted. the trip. "I have heard of no inquiries) This year however, they are land this seems to me to be an-/trying to have the money other example of the unhappy|donated from industry. propensity of people to shoot) The meeting was told there first and ask questions later." |were no developments on rais- He added: "'As hitherto wejing this money. -- will give full co-operation to the) Mr. Martin said he would league in its excellent work andjrather. they did not sell choco- continue our own careful inter-jlate again to raise the money. est in the safety of our school|/But he said they had 'to send children." eS the children to Ottawa no mat-| Action on these matters can|ter what. : only be taken at regular. board) League member Mrs. G. Rein- meetings. Mr. Drynan said it/ders said: "As a teacher I found agenda next Monday. nerve wracking. It was a real Each year the school crossing ordeal. patrols are taken on a trip to; "'It involved: so many heart- Ottawa as a reward for the work|aches and so much tension Ranching Not Farming? invoked because gravel is taken from a part of Mr, Con- lin's. Mr. Conlin said last. night about five acres is used for this purpose. The assessment de- partment spokesman, Gerry) Meredith, argued '"'at least 10) (acres) and probably closer to} 15 or 20." Chairman Hyman and W. §.| Is ranching a form of farm- ing, an agricultural use? No, says the city ent. At least, not the "Conlin uses i + drover® a "business". Yes, said Court of Revision Qc, esday night. The answer was important to Mr. Conlin. If the court rules ' his 42 acres were not used for| Pogson came up with the. two- agricultural purposes he would] third to one-third ratio. 3 lose his watermain frontage| Under questioning from Gil-| charge exemption. bert Murdoch, PUC lawyer, Mr.| Mr. Conlin was exempted on|Conlin said he "ranches" about) | | | \tario Municipal Board last De-|. 'I had different numbers of} cember to double the installa-|cattle there during 1963," said | tion charge to 30 cents per foot|Mr. Conlin. "I buy and sell.' for watermains, retroactive to| Said'Mr. Meredith: "He is not} Jan. 1, 1963. |a farmer; he is a drover. He} charged 15 cents per foot per|had '30 to 40 head" (of cat- year on the rest. tle) on the land, although he The Public Utilities Commis-|has only one cow and one horse jdeals in cattle. He buys and INSTALL MAIN ' sells. He is a: businessman." Installation of the Simcoe} (Mr. Conlin admitted to Mr main took place before this) Hyman that he was a drover) date so the charge will be at) 'You don't run cattle on 45) the rate of 15 cents lacres,"' added Morley Parfen-| The two-thirds exemption was!iuk, senior assessor. "All he does is hold cattle on the land, waiting for beneficial market DEATHS prices." | Eight Champlain aig homeowners, seven in a joint By THE CANADIAN PRESS | appeal, complained the rate is| Toronto -- J. N. M.- (Jim)|too high and that, in any case, Brown, 73, a veteran newspaper) the rate should not have been} man who worked on newspa-|invoked until this year. } pers in Vancouver, Calgary and| | Toronto; after entering hospital; APPEALS DISMISSED with a stomach ailment | The eight appeals were dis- Pembroke, Ont. -- H. L. Har-| missed. Mr. Hyman explained vey, 75, veteran wireless opera-|the Court cannot tamper with tor who said he copied the first| the rate, can only vary feet of; message from the sinking Ti-|frontage on which the rate will tanic in 1912, jbe charged, Stratford, Ont. Theodore) Mr. Murdoch said that al- Parker, 61, a Liberal candidate| though the bylaw amendment for Perth in the 1945 federal| doubling the rate got OMB ap- election and an_ independent proval in December, 1963; the candidate in 1958. amendment is retroactive in. ro eee ~ithat the new rate covers be |watermain construction as 0 oe jJan, 1, 1963. | The Oshawa Fire Department) Herman Goldstein, Ritson answered one fire call Tuesday) road north, Mrs. C. M. Michael, when a clothes dryer at 203| Harmony road south and P. L. Oshawa boulevard south over-|Levine, for the Isaac Levine heated. There were also ninejestate, Wilson road north, all routine ambulance calls andj|were given three year exemp- one accident call. 'tions on these frontages Assessment - Attendance Officer THE OSHAWA SEPARATE SCHOOL BOARD re- quire a combined A and Attendance Officer for Full Time Duty. . Applicants apply in writing stating, Age, Marital Status, Qualifications and Salary expected to:--_ Frank E. Shine, Business Administrator THE OSHAWA SEPARATE SCHQOL BOARD P.O. BOX 396. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, This is the authentic, inside story of how modern manage- ment techniques enabled Gen- leral Motors to triumph in the jroaring 20's and emerge strong in the depression 30's;.to con- vert swiftly to war productions in the 40's and go on to break Hicer In Garage Group sir: posi, is TORONTO (CP) -- The Gar-|No other businessman could tell age Operators Association of|this story. Ontario Tuesday approved the| Sloan was born in 1875 and idea of regular safety inspection|graduated from the Massachu- for cars and trucks, despite|setts Institute of Technology at some minority opposiiton. |20. Four years later he was gen- The garagemen also voted at|¢ral manager of the Hyatt Roll} their annual meeting to seek aj central registry for liens against) cars and, subsequently, certifi- cates of title to car ownership. | Spokesmen said it is a com- mon occurence for a garage to} Toronto Man be caught with an unpaid bill} Stole From | aot artnet Mt! Hank Snow | and a central registry for: liens| tion. \Toronto man who posed as a Robert Taylor, treasurer' of|priest pleaded guilty in criminal the association, said there are|court Tuesday to charges of 47 lien registers in Ontario at/theft from two Grand Ole. Opry present, -- , personalities and was sentenced Regarding the promotion of|to a year and a day in prison. ja so-called ideology, it is, I sup- pose, that I believe in competi- \of life. It should be recognized the safety inspection idea, he| said garage operators could ask the government to require all vehicles be inspected periodic- jally or the association could }launch a- safety campaign through local member associa- tions and garages. Opposition to the idea came from a few operators who said they feared that customers would believe the garage oper- ators were promoting work for themselves under the. guise of| Police said that Ralph Ed- ward De Laval, 33, stole a pair of cowboy boots and a watch from Opry Star Hank Snow while wearing a priest's garb and using the alias, Father Jack Miller. . De Laval also pleaded guilty to stealing a wallet from Mrs. Ramona Jones, wife of Opry star Grandpa Jones. A companion, Garrick Thomas Anger, 30, leaded guilty to abet- jting and attempting to commit a public safety appeal. | i sentenced to George Stratford. of Toronto|', Cn ncus in the workhouse. was re-elected president of the| Police said De Laval and An- association. Verdon Yoemans of|,¢. visited the homes of several Sault Ste. Marie and H. Ed-\G1anq Ole Opry stars during a ward Grainger of Perth were|trip here in January. They were elected vice-presidents. larrested a few. days later in Other 6fficers include: Robert Mem his Taylor, Whitby, treasurcr; Rob-| coma ert Wilson, Cobourg, secretary; | and Arnold Donohue, Renfrew; | s Charles Russelle, Peterborough Priest Says | and Ronald Tolton, Stratford, | directors. H 5 "| Homosexuality Lawyers Seek | 'Not Crime' . . re $5 Millio TORONTO (CP) -- Homosex-| | uality between consenting males) ought not to be classed as aj In Le al F crime, a Roman Catholic-spon-| g ees |sored panel unanimously de-| ided here. | WILMINGTON, Del, (AP)--A ane at a joint meeting| lengthy legal battle between) Monday night of the Catholic| Chrysler Corp., its executives|tegal and Medical Guilds at and some of its shareholders ap- Osgoode Hall, Jesuit theologian pears to be over. Rev. E. P, Sheridan said homo- A final decree and judgment)xexyal acts between consenting was entered Monday in court,| males are a sin in the eyes of| putting into effect an agreed-|the church. upon settlement of the 3\4-year-| But he added, since they) old suit. harm' no one they ought not} Referee Collins J. Seitz said|to be a crime. he will call a hearing on law-| 'fhe four other members of years' fees if there are on @p-|the panel, psychiatrist Dr. E. peals from the settlement within| Turner, internal medicine spe- a 60-day period. |cialist Dr. David MacKenzie Lawyers seek $5,800,000 in| and law researchers A. K. Cig- fees, and Chrysler is expected| aroff and Dr. Mark Macguigan to oppose this strenuously. | agreed unanimously with Father The settlement provides that) Sheridan. All are of the Toronto) suits against the automobile con-| area. cern by Detroit lawyer Sol Dann| Homosexual acts at and Judge James Gailo of New|are outlawed by the Criminal Castle County and his wife be) Code. dropped, along with counter-| Father Sheridan said that in suits against Dann by Chrysler.| England, both Roman Catholic The settlement provides also|and Anglican churches had pub- that the incentive compensation|licly taken the view that homo- plan for executives be changed. sexuality should not be illegal. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS WILL SAY The Rosary FOR Brother Don McDougall WEDNESDAY EVENING 8:45 P.M, MACINTOSH FUNERAL HOME OSHAWA Grand Knight: T. MERRINGER Fraternal Chairman: AL. ROBINSON | present Sloan Tells GM er Bearing Company, and when Hyatt was combined with sev- eral other auto suppliers to form the United Motors Corporation, Mr. Sloan was named president of the new company. In 1918 United Motors became part of GM and Mr. Sloan joined GM as a director and vice-president. He was made president and chief executive officer in 1923 and was elected board chair- man in 1937, He has been honor- ary chairman since 1956. He founded and has endowed the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation of which he is chairman, and was co-founder of the Sloan-Ketter- ing Institute of Cancer Re- search. ' EVOLUTION DESCRIBED ' When Sloan joined GM in 1918 it was a sprawling loosely or- ganized company heading to- ward severe financial and man- agement crisis, Two years after the resignation of president and founder, W: C. Durant, Mr. Sloan and the Duponts assumed management responsibility and began to develop the delicate balance between centralized pol- icy control and decentralized} operational responsibility - that! has made GM competitive in policy as well as in produce. He describes the evolution of the company's basic manage- ment policies and strategic con- cepts; the organization policy; the concept of financial contro! and the product policy which revolutionized the automobile market long dominated by Henry Ford's Model T. In the WHITBY MAIN STREET SNOWED UNDER Such scen' as the above, taken on Dundas street west, Whitby, were commonplace during the peak of Tuesday's big snow storm. Hundreds of cars were stalled 'and many were late for supper. Buses were delayed by stalled cars, It was the biggest snowfall of the current winter, but the district was digging out from under today with the aid of a rising temperature. --Oshawa Times Photo early 1920's he recognized the importance of offering the pub-. lic "a car for every purse: and| purpose" and upgrading cars for an increasingly prosperous consumer-oriented society. Writes Sloan: "If I have ex- pressed or implied in this book tion as an article of faith, a means of progress, and a way that competition takes various forms; General Motors, for ex- ample, has competed with other enterprises as a type of organ- ization (decentralized) and in its long-range way of doing busi- ness (upgrading the product), as well as in the usual day-to-day business activities. The elder Henry Ford, on the other hand, believed more in centralized or- ganization and in a static car model. Such competition in basic policy has at times been decisive. We proceeded, too, with a belief in progress, which is evident in our forward invest- ment planning. We set out to produce not for the chosen few but for the whole 12th Boy Scouts, Cubs The 12th Oshawa Boy Scout Troop and Wolf Cub Pack held its annual Father and Son Ban- quet at Harmony United Church Hall, Saturday, March 7, 1964. The crowded hall was brought to attention when Patrol Leader Peter Crowe broke the colors and First Class Scout Richard Bartlett welcomed the fathers to this yearly event. Reverend N. T. Holmes said grace for the enjoyable turkey dinner that was prepared and served by the 12th Scout Moth- er's Auxiliary. A toast to the Queen was made by Queen Scout Robert McConkey in keep- ing with the older scouts assist- ing with the festivities. The banquet chairman, Queen Scout Grant Bennett did a fine job in welcoming all the guests, introducing the head table and lic on the assumption of a con- tinuously rising standard of liv- ing. Our interpretations of the significance of the rising stand- ard of living marked and impor- tant difference between us and others in the formative years of thé modern market." keeping things running on schedule, Wolf Cub Robert Rut- kay thanked the mothers on be- half of all cubs, scouts and fathens for the fine dinner. Group. C Chat Mr. G. McLaughlin, CM, the Cubmaster's report for "B" Pack, both telling of the many activities that await young boys 7-11, in cubbing. Both the Cub- mastens also thanked the Senior Scouts who assisted them dur- ing the year. "Scouting is changing," said Mr. Ernie Jukes, Senior Scout- master, as he explained the de- velopment of a Senior Section of the Troop and the modern pro- gram designed for boys 14-17. The boys in this group are First Class and Queen Scouts, and Rescue, Public Service, Expedi- tions, Pursuits and Projects and Pitysical Fitness all play a part in their new program that may At Father-Son. Banquet received their Gold Cords for coveted a highest award for and outdoor scouting. A condensed version of a typi- cal Cub Pack Meeting was pre- sented by Mr. Gord Bell assist- ed by Mrs. G. Deegan and Mrs. ° G. Bell followed by an educa- tional film of Niagara Falls from the early ice age through to its present harnessing for electric power. The busy and succéSsful eve- ning was brought to a close with Flagdown and a prayer by Rev- erend N. Holmes. eventually be carried across Canada The activities of the Junior Section of the Troop were re- ported by Mr. Chuck Dafoe, ASM, who told of the camping, canoe trips and sports enjoyed by the boys in the past year DOLLARS DOWN UNDER WELLINGTON (AP) -- New Zealand's new decimal coins, to be introduced in 1967, will be known as dollars and cents-- under the direction of Mr. John Maiel who has now retired due Lawrence Crowe thanked the fathers who assisted these groups in various ways during Builders Irked By Communities WINDSOR (CP) -- The pres- ident of the Canadian Construc- tion Association Tuesday criti- cized governments and local bodies that carried out construc- tion work with their own work forces. Speaking at a meeting of the Windsor Contractors' and Build- ers' Exchange, Donald Jupp said work should be carried out by private enterprises, "There is no valid reason why governments or public bodies-- whether local, provincial or, fed- eral--should. be engaged in con- struction work with their own forces," he. said. Tenders should be called pub- licly and opened publicly and the contract awarded to the lowest competent bidder. Mr, Jupp said offenders were some provincial bodies and mu- lations to the leaders of the 12th the year and was followed by Reverend N. T. Holmes offer- ing his thanks on behalf of the to illness. Mr. George Yule will now lead the Junior Troop which meets every Tuesday night at 7 p.m. assisted by Mr, Defoe and Mr. Gerry Deegan, A number of badges were pre- sented by Mr. Jukes to Senior sponsoring body to all leaders of the 12th Group for their serv- ice to the youth of the com- munity. : Guests from Scout Headquar- ters were Assistant District Commissioner for Scouts, Mr. Fred Sturch and District Com- missioner for Cubs, Mrs. D. Harman who extended best Scouts, Richard Bartlett, David + aa and Queen Scout John all. Cub Instructor B. earned by David cone Ralph od bole Robert McConkey, s son » Wotton, Qo QS, and John Queen Scouts Robert Mc- Conkey and Ted Coulson both wishes from Headquarters and gave their respective congratu- for their excellent job in the face of growing numbers of two cub packs and a Junior and Senior Scout Troop. Mr. Gérd Bell, CM, presented his report for "A" Pack and EYE EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by appointment F. R. BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. 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