Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Oct 1965, p. 22

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y Mr. Sauve was instrumental) It is expected therefore that,dia. was added to the Liberal|that may have some bearing on in bringing three top moderate|Mr. Frenette would. reflect the|leader's campaign retinue. speeches by Mr. Pearson. spokesmen of the "new Que- so-called quiet revolution that is| His role, as a press officer| One prime ministerial aide bec' into the Liberal fold a8|pushing for a greater a with emphasis on the French-|says Mr. Frenette "knows the MAURICE SAUVE'S PRODIGY Quebec Advisor For PM's Staft 22. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, October 12, 1965 candidates in the Nov. 8 elec- role in Canadian affairs language press and Quebec com-| Quebec situation very well." On tion. They are Pierre Elliot) : munications, is more technical|this basis, it-appears he will Trudeau, Jean Marchand and| Farlfer, Serge de LaRoch-|than Mr. Frenette's. The latter|/have more than passing im- Gerard Pelletier. lelle, 3, another French-Cana-|is also expected to do research! pact. | Britain Asked By UN | Curb Rhodesia Pian day but Stanley Haidasz, a Ca- Ai By BORIS MISKEW UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- Spear-headed by angry African delegates, the United Nations Monday night ganged up on Rhodesia and urged Britain to use force if necessary to pre- vent that minority-ruled coun- try from carrying out a uni- parliamentary secretary to Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Paul Martin, told the committee a few days ago that it had been made clear at two previous Commonwealth prime minis- ters' conferences that: the General Assembly Franco Nogueira, foreign minister, gates. The demonstration While the debate was taking place in the trusteeship confer- delegate to the UN andjence room, many African and Asian delegates walked out. of Portugal's approached the rostrum to address the dele- was OTTAWA (CP)---Prime Min- ister Pearson has bolstered French - Canadian representa- tion on his elecNgn campaign staff with the adWition of a youthful representalive of the Liberal party's reform-minded Quebec element, The new arrival is Claud Frenette, 29, a lawyer who has been executive assistant to For- estry Minister Maurice Sauve as ministers they serve, almost in the nature of an alter ego. In Mr. Frenette's case, this|* has linked him to the views of Mr, Sauve, regarded as a ma- jor, if impatient, spokesman in Liberal circles of the reform spirit in Quebec politics. Mr. Sauve has been classed as "new guard." His publicly enunciated aim is to make the Liberal party structure more lateral declaration of independ- "Rhodesia should proceed to against Portugal's policies in|for 114 years. ence. The UN's trusteéship com- mittee voted 95 to two in favor of a Guinea-proposed resolution calling on Britain to "use all ciently and whites. independence only when suffi- representative tions come into existence" to give equal rights to both blacks institu- Angola and Mozambique, but the foreign minister responded by declaring that criticism of his country's policies was base- less and unfounded. he has been Pearson's office foi possible measures" to block Rhodesia's proposed unilateral It is expected his d Although Mr, Frenette's pre- cise role is not clear, jt is known loaned to Mr. r the dura- tion of the campaign, at least. uties will be democratic in Quebec, The expectation is that the move away from machine-style politics will bring better men into the Quebec wing of the party. The hoped-for result is a greater role for French-speak- partly advisory on Quebec mat- ters. Executive assistants tend to reflect the views of the cabinet Chair Of Modesty, Comfort For 'Short-Short-Skirted' LONDON (AP) -- Found at| Explaining that he and his as- last, a chair in which the girl|sociates had dispensed with the national pride, tarnishing the| With the short-short skirt can legs entirely, Sandberg said: idealism that inspired him to on in comfort, Lgl sig that : Hal -- a gt a A : sweep aside old enmities -along| She isn't exposing large areas|ha emisphere of glass fibre eee or on hos bc 8 lwith the rubble of the Second|of epidermis. ae. and then upholstered it with and British Foreign Secretary | "nues his pursuit of the afflu-) World War to clear the way for| With some hems hiked three, foam in 12 petal-shaped sections atichast" Siawatt steed at alent society, seemingly indiffer-|_ "New Europe." four and five inches above the| covered by a fabric woven es- press conference in New York| en to storm clouds at home and = He has closed the book on the/knees, looking decent while sit-| pecially for us, last week that Britain would ex.| abroad. : war and its horrors and, cone | ting down has become a feat of The chair is weighted on 'one pect other Commonwealth coun-| The Common Market may be| vinced that Soviet aggression is acrobatic proportions. |side so the sitter will know how oe wars miles cae | virtually paralysed, the Atlantic} no longer a direct threat (al-| But no longer. -- 5 ; and where to get into it. Rhodesia, @ land of 4,000 9| Alliance strained and parts of|though German reunification re-| Designed by Robin Sandberg, The designers also sell a rose- : poargs the revolutionary chair has no| wood base to anchor the chair, ; Asia aflame, but life in the Eu-/ mains a tinder-box), he has lost| Negroes and fewer than 250,000 | llegs, and it looks like one half/The sitter can swing about in as freely as in a swivel : : lrope of the Six remains relaxed|the sense of urgency that fos-| A pha ge se ei in theland {ree of tension, tered the North Atlantic Treaty of a giant honeydew melon, b it hold the Phage of independ 'The average European, 1)Organization (NATO) with its I am an advanced sitter," | chair. : ence until some. arrangement|*™ afraid, is behaving like an| American nuclear umbrella, To-|Said Sandberg, explaining him-; Model Ann Norman, who ld b hed. aiostrich with its head buried in\day, he hankers after a less|self and his chair. 'People like demonstrated the avant garde Soul tas tn avarvuas ASSUTe/the sand," an Asian diplomat) subordinate role in the Atlantic|to move when they're. sitting,|sitting apparatus, said: Canada voted in favor of the/accredited to the European} partnership and a closing of the|but at the same time they like) "It's super when you get the A Community (France, West Ger-|breach between Western and|something static to support hang of it, and you're so near resolution, while Britain an-|yony Jtaly, The Netherlands,| astern Europe. ithem, the ground it's very difficult to "Getting into this new chair|look indecent." q nounced teat it Par gt Seis elgium, Luxembourg) ob-| eH aE eene to participate in. the voting.| carved in a private conversa-| SEEKS INDEPENDENCE can be a bit tricky. It can tip} The makers think their uphol- | With the European Commu-|yoy out if you're not careful, but/stered bowl has a great future South Africa and Portugal voted tion aeainet the. resolution. | "He is preoccupied with his|Rity expanding at a creditable once in it's amazing relaxing|--especially with skirts going 'higher all the time. move toward independence. iio wet Life Relaxed For Europe Ignore Cloud sion of the 117-member General By RUSSELL ELMAN Assembly. | The resolution came up for a BRUSSELS (CP)--The Euro- pean this fall nonchalantly con- ing Canadians in the central government and more national unity. vote in committee after a day-| long debate, following the} breakdown of talks in London) between the British govern-| ment and the government of Prime Minister Ian Smith of Rhodesia, | Britain has stated repeatedly that a unilateral declaration of Dont Miss Out On The 'Ready - to - buy' Market Right this minute more and more modern businessmen are aim- ing their sales message right to the BEST prospects, with fast- acting TIMES CLASSIFIED ADS. Every day, hundreds of the best prospects your business has, are turning to the TIMES CLASSIFIED SECTION. These are people who have made the decision to buy, they already want a product or service and are voluntarily seeking, out offers to help them decide where to buy. To get started on your way to more sales and profits, by effective use of the TIMES CLASSIFIED COLUMNS call today. An exe perienced Ad Writer is waiting to help you. ' ever-fattening wage packet and Roman armor access to easy credit, he feels it more important to keep up with the Schmidts and the Du ponts than to bury a nest egg under the floor .boards, As widespread poverty fades into__history, -Europe's streets are clogged with newer and big ger cars; its cities are spilling over into the countryside; its department stores are ringing up impressive sales of television sets, refrigerators and fur oat to men and women with money to. burn. SHUNS POLITICS Many of the shoppers are the younger set, who find an outlet for their new-found spending power in sports cars, transistors and the latest fashion fads and for their unused energies in the cult of yeah-yeah, James Bond and St. Tropez In these good times, the Eu ropean' infinitely prefers an afternoon drive with his family All the. nominees are easily identifiable. There's the hood- lum who tramples over every-| body including his best friends;| Commercial fishermen in On- the homosexual, Britisher; .the|tario caught 18,435,000 pounds, flag-waving. movie he-man; the! worth $2,145,000 during the first alcoholic old-time actor and-the:half of 1965, FISH COMES CHEAP jown well-being which he takes! oss national product, the Eu-|------- _.|ropean economic co - operation Continent, assails the dollar's)movie out of the best-selling/reason why the industry is ac- ter Ian Smith of Rhodesia had|try, we shall have failed in our) yarket, lof the Academy of Motion -Pic-\9f, not pictured. Whitehall. of apartheid, South Africa's ra-) cup of tea afterwards." tends to keep it." 1965-66 THE OSHAWA BOARD OF EDUCATION 1965-66 The vote was taken after amore and more for granted, and te natant - ropean only occasionally, and . ' PB Joe Levine Won't Bite The Hand pee that helped to lift him from the pedestal in international mone-|novel The Oscar. lcepting the' movie version. one thing in his favor while ne-|Policy of trying to make a place)' During the 20 years since|ture Arts and Sciences. "Frankie Fain, the hoodium- "We found him very British,")cial segregation policy The only-thing out of place in| A head-on collision with the number of countries, including that is dangerous. , then perhaps begrudgingly, ack- That Feeds Him Making 'Oscar' PM S ith Of Rhodesia jabyss of post-war despair and \tary affairs and balks at sub-| But producer Clarence) "We 'just scrapped much of gotiating with the British gov-|for the white man." 1945, the individual European| Here's how: character as played by Steve said a government official at "No African (Negro) rule in Smith's otherwise British ap-|British government committed The Oshawa Board of Education is keenly interested in the educational needs of all of our citizens. To meet the requirements of those who are not in the J Soviet s ity § rit the United States and the Soviet} The prosperity and security 0 hoWiedwed' hie" Indebtedness to defeatism. HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- Every-|pillar of the community who More British Than Hosts |merging his national identity in|Greene, director Russell Crouse the book and rewrote it into our ernment in London. He. ap the end of the abortive London my lifetime," he once said pearance is his accent, a twang|to ensuring ultimate self-rule regular school programme, a special night school or adult school has been carried on for a number of years. for those interested in upgrading their edu- POWERFUL SUPPORT |four-per-cent annual increase in| and comfortable." Union, had spoken in support of| the 1960s have dulled the Euro- ; : the resolution. |pean's memory and refired his the Marshall Plan and Eu- Today, he frequently chafes at body in town wondered how ajreally is a roue on the side. American investment on_ the|Hollywood studio could make a} Producer Greene gives the By GRANVILLE. J. WATTS _~ that "if ate rag ges aN the supranational superstructure|and Joe Levine-Paramount areown script, All the other nomi- LONDON (AP)--Prime Minis-|African majority in this coun-|o¢ the Brussels-based Commonjdoing it--with full co-operation|nees are there but only spoken : I Rov: ANY 8 NG TIES has experienced a deep psychol-| ,.... 4. a/ eny,| Boyd, is there gutsy as ever but ee ayed almost more British| MANY TRONG TIES logical shahen witch wan tant! First of all, the Richard Saleipg gets his come-uppance. pe y | The links between Smith and) ang A jnovel was about as devastating than his hosts in his manner-|c.ith Africa are numerous, |formed his way of life. He has|, 104. niow at the movie Os-| We couldn't do a' movie the : isms. | Apart from his education|stopped yearning for the good)... a¢ can be imagined it/way the book was written, How Although born in Rhodesia,|there, he married a South Ar.jold days and now deliberately! i ctured how a hoodlum - 'like Could we attack the industry Smith is the son of a Scottish|rican girl, Janet. One of his) Puls the present and himself hes! actor used blackmail, coercion,|that feeds us?" butcher and he was a Second/three children, a 21 - year - old|fore a agi sr an inherit-| oy set-ups and about a half-|" : . : World War hero as a fighter pi-| dg ' t ¢ 'ance for his children ee ee cua : lot in the Royal Air Force ' one" in 8 stadent in: SOU canal ot employment in a/dozen other felonies in his quest UNIFORM HAS HISTORY society whe vorker: _|for the best-actor award, The: frilly white kilt of the In appearance Smith, six feet} And Smith has refused in the|Soclety Wwhere- workers gener : ' tall, cool, dogged and seldom| past to rule out the possibility ally are scarcer than jobs, of| It was more like: a battle for|Greek royal guardsman is sup- smiling, looked at home inlof one day resorting to a policy| Steadily improving cradle - to -|control of the Cosa Nostra than|Posed to have developed from . -" | grave social welfare benefits, an/the annual Oscar race, the tunic worn under Greek or talks on Rhodesian independ-|"'The white man is the master) | e | e ho a eC j ' e 4 é : ence. "We all had a friendly|of Rhodesia, has built it and in- redolent of the wide - open/for the country's 3,800,000 Ne- spaces of Rhodesia groes, was inevitable GLASSES cation, acquiring new skills, or learning an art or craft, Detailed information may be obtained on registration nights at the schools listed. ARE TO ANYONE NOT ATTENDING DAY SCHOOL SRY Millionaire farmer Hoss Lil- NEVER_TIPS HAND ford, who is recognized in Rho Smith, 46, is a difficult man desia as the power behind the to assess. He can be a subtle/Rhodesian Front and _-- King politician and he plays his cards| maker, told the party when he close to' his chest advocated Smith as the man to Part of his poker-face look 18) cucceed Winston Field: 'This due to a skin-grafting operation) nan has steel in him." for injuries suffered when he was shot down in the war SELDOM BENDS Smith is Rhodesia's first. Steel has shown in all Smith's home-born prime minister since political dealings, both within the central African colony|the Front and in international achieved internal self-govern-| affairs ment in 1923. His father came) It was from Scotland as a_ pioneer the last Rhodesian Front con white emigrant to Rhodesia inigress when party extremists, THIS AD FOR REFERENCE much in evidence at GRADE 13 COURSES These classes are now in progress. For further informe- tion consult the appropriate school. See left. McLAUGHLIN C. & V. I. TECHNICAL COURSES O'NEILL C, & V. I. ACCOUNTING (McMaster Extension Course) Tu, Night Night 1898. whose campaign to push Smith ~. to attive participation in the do AUTO MECHANICS - BASIC teense Wed. Smith -was-borr ApS <linto a unilateral declaration of Selukwe, a small farming|independence had failed mtser+; town. He took aniably in private session, were economics degree at Rhodes baying for blood during a de University 'in South Africa and|bate on a proposed multi-racial mestic _ political He content (still largely generation) scene at and mining run by the govern fo Tet" thé government older reserving for election day his democratic ART BOOKKEEPING SUSINESS MACHINES DRESSMAKING FRENCH - BASIC ALGEBRA ("Old" Math.) - 12 - 13 ADVANCED .. UNIVERSITY EXTENSION COURSES FOR DEGREE CREDIT AT M.C.V.I. Spanish 001(A) Introd: y Spanish ---- Saturday Morn- ings 9:30 to 11:30 a.m, - fornightly - beginning Sept. 25 Spanish N20C1)Flementsry Spenish - Friday nights 7:30 AUTO MECHANICS - INTERMEDIATE ,,,... AUTO MECHANICS - ADVANCED .... BLUEPRINT READING ; BUILDING CONSTRUCTION DRAFTING - ARCHITECTURAL Tues, Thurs. . Tues. . Tues, . Tues. enlisted in the RAF in 1941. teaching hospital in Salisbury FRENCH - 13 to DRAFTING (MECHANICAL) - BASIC .- Mon, He was twice shot down as a Spitfire fighter pilot, first in the North Africa campaign jater over Italy, The second time, after bailing out, he joined Italian partisans and fought the andi Smith, with a two - minute quiet speech on "irresponsibil * not only silenced the crit- ics but forced public withdrawal of a hostile motion (often obligatory) right to test as did the Belgian voter in May or to endorse as did the West German é¢lectorate in Sep tember GEOMETRY ("Old" Math.) - 11 - 13 PHYSICAL EDUCATION PRACTICAL DRESS DESIGN RED CROSS HOME NURSING . Tu INDUSTRIAL LEGISLATION (McMaster Extension) OFFICE PRACTICE Tu. & Tu. & Tha. Thu. Thu. :30 p.m. - fortnightly---beginning Sept. 74 Geography 020(4) Introductory Human Geography - Saturday Mornings 9:30 to 11:30 - fortnightly - begin- ning Sept, 18 Philosophy 610(2) Logic, Ethics, Theory or Knowledge - Friday nights 7:30 to 9:30 - fortnightly > beginning Tu. DRAFTING (MECHANICAL) - ADVANCED .. ELECTRICITY (INDUSTRIAL) ELECTRONICS (RADIO & T.V.) - BASIC Mon. & Thurs. ELECTRONICS (RADIO & T.V.) - INTERMCDIATE Tues. LAWN MOWER & OUTBOARD SERVICING Thurs. Mon, & Thurs. Tues. In his spare time, Smith can He atill pays lip service to-the SEWING Tu. & Thu. Sept. 17 MACHINE SHOP - BASIC Tu MACHINE SHOP - ADVANCED Wed. REFRIGERATION - BASIC & INTERMEDIATE Wed. HEATING, VENTILATING & AIR CONDITIONING Tues. WELDING - BASIC er : Wed. WELDING - ADVANCED . Tues. ADVANCED TECHNICAL Evening Courses Theory courses, requiring Grade 12 or equivalent, now in progress. For further information consult the school GENERAL INTEREST COURSES Night BASIC INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT -- COMMERCIAL FOOD PREPARATION ........ Wed. GOURMET FOODS : its Wed. INTERIOR DECORATING (Fall Term) ........ Wed. MERCHANDISING : Ss . Tues, MUSIC (Instrumental) PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT (Winter Term VOICE IMPROVEMENT : BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION: ~ RYERSON POLYTECHNICAL INSTITUTE "Accounting | - Monday, 7:00 - 9:30 Economies | - Wednesday, 7:00 - 9;00 ideal of a United Europe, though not committed to its final shape He has grown used to a Fu rope bereft of colonies and to his own country's loss of big power status but, taking for granted the unlikelihood of in volvement in war or depression, he susceptible to Gen. de Gaulle's concept of a European Europe which settles its own problems The Ti-year-old French dent, although bitterly criticized as isolationist and. anachronis tic, undeniably appeals to the emotions of more than French men when he envisages.a "con structive entente" of sovereign states from the Atlantic to the Urals, an independent Europe Auditing is permitted in all Extension Courses REGISTER WITH THE DEPARTMENT OF EXTENSION QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY, KINGSTON, ONTARIO OTHER COURSES Other classes (including those in co-operation with the Whitby Boord) will be offered if fifteen or more applications are received HOURS Classes ore normally held between 7:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m. CREDIT CARDS Credit cords will be issued to students who meet the required standard of proficiency. All Others Except University Exten- FEES: sion courses, $10 per course to be poid at time of enrolment. No refund at end of term. Material tees will be charged in some subjects. be seen at plays, at the circus l(ike Sir Rov Welensky, he loves circuses) and all sporting occasions In London Saturday doned everything to watch a trughby match in the London sub- urb of Twickenham, home of! sport ee ee He has. a daughter, WAS POOR SPEAKER two sons, 18 and. 20. His wife In 1948 he was elected to the says he is no heavy Southern Rhodesian Parlla- panded father. lay ng down the ment: But he was a poor ji, speaker and came t nence only when, in 1961, he QUIET AT HOME walked out. as whip of Prime Said Mrs.. Smith: "We: al Minister Sir Roy .Welensky'si\have our own ideas but the Federal party ideas of each one are respected Smith was 'protesting against|Everyone is able to speak here a new constitution that he feltland will listen to each other ; : favored the Negro majority never heard lan swear eSuUming In the world a. Tole HISTORY - 13 With other dissidents or seen him lose his temper. He |Worthy of its resources . and PHYSICS - 11 formed the Rhodesian Fr S a very quiet man, not at ail capacities TYPING - BASIC party and it swept to power a showman, but morally fear- 1982. British-born Winston Field less CAME FROM ABROAD became prime minister "He has been called dour and, About 60 per cent of all the In 1964, Smith replaced Field|domineering, and this is al? immigrants to Canada since the] as prime minister. The 1961 con-|completely wrong. He's a very Second World War have been stitution, which ensures white/reasonable man, with a tremen-| Women and children minority rule for an indefinite dous ae . s | period, ironically became th Mrs PUBLIC OWNS LAND cornerstone of his racial poli- Smith's opponents will go on About 8&9 a | SHAKESPEARE STENOGRAPHY .~ Basie' - Advanced TYPING - Basic - Advenced CENTRAL C. I. Conversational FRENCH - Basic ENGLISH for NEW CANADIANS Basic - Intermediate - Advanced ENGLISH - Practical ENGLISH - 12 - 13 MILLINERY SEWING - Undecided . Tu. & Tho. Tu. & Thu. Night Maw Germans for five months be fore rejoining the invading Al lies in France Back in Rhodesia after the war,,Smith became a farmer He stil] owns a 4,500-acre farm and a 6.000-acre cattle ranch He also took an interest in pol itics he aban - Advanced is the 21, and Janet Basic - Advanced oes DONEVAN C. I. ALGEBRA ("'Old" Math) - 12 ART - 13 and GENERAL ART BIOLOGY - 13 wit oe CHEMISTRY - 12 .s DRESSMAKING ~ Advanced -. . ~ GEOGRAPHY - 13 pe ciek presi 0 prom English tor New, Canadians and Home Nursing: NO FEES. 7 I have of 0 20 ge ge Ge Re ge Re oe cS SSeS SS 2 O'NEILL COLLEGIATE AND VOCATIONAL INSTITUTE -- 301 Simcoe Street North Telephone 728-7531 CENTRAL COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE -- 240 Simcoe Street South ; Telephone 723-4678 DR. F. J, DONEVAN COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE -- Harmony Rood South Telephone 728-7315 | Classes Start Monday, October 18 : m. R. S. MeLAUGHLIN COLLEGIATE AND VOCATIONAL INSTITUTE -- 570 Stevenson Rd. N. Telephone 728-9407 'BOARD OF EDUCATION, OSHAWA E. A. BASSETT, Chairman i J, R. BACKUS, Business Adminstrator : : Y { x \ REGISTER in person at the appropricte school Tuesday, October 12 or Wednesday, October 13. sense of humor . Smith is a loval wife of pe ent cies yon alling him dour and domineer-/tario's forested land is publi Since then' he has repeatedly|ing for a long time yet. lowned

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