Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Nov 1964, p. 22

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CHRISTMAS SEALS ARE MAILED OUT Ontario County TB and Health Association members will be mailing Christmas seals to County residents Nov. 16. The seals are the only source of income for the As- sociation and more than $30,000 is needed to carry out their work in the coming year. Two hundred volunteers are working to prepare the seat , "Lik Cl, el sae Sai es en es a ti tes Nuclear Subs Protested By 8,000 Students tors were arrested on charges lities are opened to children ! of obstructing police. after-school on both nights to allow them to do homework or read, On the third Tuesday of each month, the Junior Fish and Game Club meets there. After school Wednesday is craft time for the younger seg- ment, and the evening is set 22 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, November 7, 1964 Boys Club Busy Place see le ct The gathering point for a|poline, along with supervised) Wednesday after school large number of Oshawa's|badminton: again Boe the evening. ee al B msinag pas pene chool finishes} Non-athletics, are) Archery classes, superv' ag) a ins (a the Simcoe "Hanjconaucied § with|by Frank Bail and attended by| "aval base to protest scheduled Simcoe Street South Boys' Club,|¢ sports, and these includejup to 125 youths are The y lear subma: rowy " aad Ls '| woodworking, stamp -collection,|Friday evenings, and two bas-| 4 clash occurred after the Commoniy-known as the Sim- i demonstrators -- carrying CREAM coe Hall Settlement House, the drawing and painting. ketball leagues function Satur: "Yankee go home" placards-- A Z 3 : recreation-guidance centre apen-| Chess and Checkers are super- day mornings. marched up to the main gate Canedian ed 36 years ago. In 1951, gym- vised by Alvin Tilk and Ralph of the Yokosuka base and be- ; nasium facilities were opened on|McNeel. ; BUS PLUNGE KILLS 22 | gan burling rocks, placards and 'noon suey winTtD Fisher street. Police Boys' Clubs operate) SEOUL (AP) -- Twenty-two|shoes at police stationed there. sonbow eontane Each week supervised prog-|Monday evenings, under the|persons were killed and nine) The police charged the mob CAMS rams are implemented daily.|direction of Roy Duncan andjothers badly injured Friday|swinging their truncheons, These include both after-school] Pat Marlow. when a passenger bus lost a| Several demonstrators were and evening activities. On Tuesday, the Teen-Age|front-wheel tire and plunged 300| clubbed to the ground, but there Athletics include basketball,|Badminton Club takes over the/feet off a cliff near Kwesan, 70)were no reports of serious cas- . |floor hockey, gymnastics, tumb-|gyms. miles southeast of Seoul, South|ualties. ling plastic baseball and tram-| The Children's Library Faci-\Korea, national police reported.| Authorities said 34 demonstra- OLD WORLD TRADITION or crafts LONDON NEW WORLD PERFECTION envelopes for mailing. Shown left to right are Mrs. H. T. Nichol, Whitby, D. L. Crozier, Port Perry and Mrs, John Payne, Oshawa. --Oshawa Times Photo. Superb Book On Europe Kai Curry-Lindahl, a leading preserved and re-read. It de- zoologist, economist|serves a place on the shelf of and conservation expert hasjevery modern library. written an admirable, superbly| yOLCANIC ERUPTIONS illustrated book "EUROPE -- A NATURAL HISTORY" dom House of Canada Ltd.). Did you ever wonder what (Ran-| causes volcanic eruptions, earth- quakes, tidal waves, avalanches, The continent of Europe is/mudslides and dust storms? astonishing! still ly rich in wild- life and natural beauty, despite man's immemorial and some- times destructive occupation of it, Kai Ourry-Lindahl, a director of Natural History at the Nor- diska Museum in Stockholm and an advisor to many govern- ments on the preservation of wildlife, hetaogedg hd --" unique places. As he points out, only a few hardy naturalists know at first hand how great is its range of landscapes; from subtropical Mediterranean lands to frozen tundra, from vast boz to Alpine peaks, from fjords to boundless steppes, from coastal marshes to the conifer forests of the great taiga. The book's great beauty is en- hanced no end by 264 illustra- tions, including 108 in color -- these ere stunning photographs by 86 of Europe's leading na- ture 4 tions are printed in the finest The reader -|of waves on seacoasts, the for- .|mations of rivers of ice, called deep| astonishingly alive; -| caves, springs, wells and ore de- geysers, meteor craters, fjords, petrified forests formed? Dr. Kirtley F. Mather dis- cusses some of these subjects in an authoritative and con- vincing manner in his new book The Story Geology"' Fascinating (Random including. many rare never before published. changing | constantly and sometimes with} cataclysmic violence. Dr. he tells how it is affected by) wind and weather, by the heat, of the sun, by frost and running water. The life cycle of great rivers is traced from infancy the eons in which they cut deep gorges, and on into} their old age. | The reader learns of the effect glaciers, and of vast icécaps, how coral is laid down and such underground phenomena as posits. One of the most fascinat- ing sections is' devoted to vol- canoes, earthquakes and. tidal waves. Dr. Mather has done a superb, scholarly job. He has taught geology at various universities, including 30 years at Harvard, where he is now Professor' Mather deals with the develop-|- "It is ment of the earth's crust; then|- Elderly Laycock TORONTO (CP)--Elderly per- sons have been exposed to "too many fragmented and partial' approaches in the provision of community services, Prof. J. E. jLaycock, of the University of How are deserts, glaciers, |Toronto's school of social work, said Friday. "The increasing interest be- ing shown in income provisions, in health, housing, residential and institutional care . . . pro- vides a basis for confidence "THE EARTH BENEATH US--|that our society will be able to of|provide the acceptance, recog- House of|nition, sense of oneness and be- Canada Ltd.). Wustrative photo-|longing for the aged without graphs from every corner of the|which the best organizational world are an added attraction,|patterns will yield few lasting i views/results,"" he said. Prof. Laycock addressed a For those who think the earth|Conference of superintendents of is static, this book shows it to be| homes for elderly persons spon- sored by the board of evangel- ism and social service of the United Church of Canada. = extremely important . . to emphasize an individual approach to the needs of the aged in our society, to see old} people as individuals, each with} a valuable life experience of his own," he said. | But modern society tends to look upon old age as a series of social problems of increas- ing dimensions, and because of| this "we experience difficulty in maintaining perspective on the place of the aged in our society and how society can best inter- vene to provide helping serv- ices." Emeritus, He is a distinguished figure in the world of Science, has been president of the Ameri- can Academy of Arts and Sci- ences. | This is one of the best books | of its kind to come along in many months. 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