She Oshawa Cimes Published by Canadian Newspapers Limited 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario T. L. Wilson, Publisher E. C. Prince, Associate Publisher OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1967 Full House Held By PM, At Least 'Til Next Shuffle The return of Walter Gordon to cabinet ranks increases the numeri- cal strength of that body to 27, in- cluding the Prime Minister. It is a far cry from the MacKenzie King cabinet of 15 in 1939 or the 18 of Bennett in 1930. The St. Laurent cabinet also numbered 18. When he was prime minister, John Diefen- baker had a cabinet of 20 members. It will be acknowledged that Prime Minister Pearson has to keep a careful balance. He's open to criticism if he has too many of those $37,000 ministers and equally vulnefable if he does not have suffi- cient to conduct public business effi- ciently. One of the problems posed for Mr. Pearson is noted by The Ottawa Journal. "When will Pearson get moving on his idea of copying the British and having what might be called inner and outer Cabinet mem- bers? The inner circle of senior min- isters would make the main decis- ions and call other ministers as re- quired when the business of their departments was under consider- ation. Today too much of the time of Canadian ministers is wasted, not least in protracted Cabinet meetings on subjects in which only a few de- partments are concerned. It would be better if all Cabinet ministers were not required at all cabinet meetings and were left freer to get on with departmental duties. It would also help if they were re- quired to be in the House for the Question Hour only on fixed days.' In the reorganization reportedly planned by Mr..Pearson of his cab- inet he may do a bit of paring. Whether or not the number is re- duced productive performance will be the criterion on which Canadians will be judging those he has cast in such important national roles. ...On Modern Miracles Radiology is now making spectac- ular but little-publicized break- throughs in both the diagnosis and the-cure-of-disease.. Without. fan- fare this specialty has surged for- 'ward perhaps faster than any other branch of the medicine due largely to better machines, ranging from giants housed in special buildings to 20 pound portables that carry their own radioactive thulium. Today the body holds few secrets from the peering eyes of X-ray, re- ports the current Reader's Digest. Routinely, films record blood flow- ing through a working heart pin- pointing - for surgeons - faulty val- ves, clogged vessels, holes in par- titions between heart chambers. X-ray diagnosis now saves lives by enabling surgeons to repair dis- eased arteries in time, by locating brain tumors with astonishing ac- curacy. She Osharwn Fines T. L, WILSON, Publisher & C. PRINCE, General Monager C. J..McCONECHY, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES The Oshawa Times combining The Oshawa Times (established 1871) and the Whitby Gazette and Chronicle (established 1863) is published daily (Sundays and Statutary holidays excepted), Teil Di Publish= Mi 3 0 aily ers Association, The Canadian Press, Audit Bureau Association, The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use of republication of all news despatched in the paper credited to it er to The Associated Press or Reuters, and also the local mews published therein. All rights of special des- patches are also reserved Offices: Thomson Bullding, 425 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario; 640 Cathcart Street Montreal, 'P.Q. Delivered by carners m Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Pickering, Bowmanville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Albert, Maple Grove, Hampton, Frenchman's Bay, Liverpool, Taunton, Tyrone, Dunbarton. Enniskillen, Orono, Leskard, Bi ham, Burketon, Manchester Pontypool, and Newcastle not over 55c r week, By mail in Province of Ontario carrier delivery area, $15.00 per year. provinces and Commonwealth Countries, $18.00 per yeor. U.S.A, ond foreign $27.00 pe year, One of the most elusive of radi- ology's goals has been to show the lymphatic. system - the _ body's "white bloodstream," a frequent site of cancer, yet a means of "illumin- ating" the lymphatic has now been achieved. A needle is inserted into a lymph channel in the foot, and an iodine dye is injected. Once the dye has seeped through the body, the lymphatics are visible to the X-ray's eye. Equally striking progress is un- derway in utilizing X-ray's cura- tive powers. Dr. Jean Bouchard, of Montreal's Royal Victoria Hospital, recently reported on a large series of breast cancers beyond the reach of surgery. Following intensive ra- diation treatment 40 percent of the women were alive after five years, the period usually accepted as rep- resenting cure. The future for radiology is bright with promise for ever sharper diag- nosis and higher rate of cure. As the Digest article says, "The de- velopment that lie ahead will almost certainly dwarf the achievements of the past." Other Editors' Views PRIDE OF SCOTLAND (Ottawa Journal) An Edinburgh paper is having a competition in honor of the Cana- dian centennial and expects a good many people to know Scotland pro- vided the first man to cross Can- ada by land, the first prime min- ister and a novelist who became governor-general. Had Scotland ever an emigrant who failed? TO meoerreneycai sant qingtninnennrgatnn att FIRST PENNY 1,200 YEARS AGO OTTAWA REPORT Many In News Once Delivered It By w | By PATRICK NICHOLSON OTTAWA--Automation is de- stroying many jobs previously performed by human _ hands; but affluence is removing the incentive to perform many re- maining jobs for which no mechanical substitution is pos- sible; One of these, of course, is that once much-desired job as a newspaper carrier boy, escorted by the neighborhood dogpack as he pulls his loaded sleight along snow-covered streets early in the morning, or after school rides his bicycle through spring- green sub-divisions, with his loaded bag hanging from its handlebar. Today fewer of our schoul- boys seek to win this character- building job; the welfare 'state has removed the incentive to earn the valuable few dollars a week, plus the bonuses given by householders at Christmas, In the past, this income was certainly a yalued contribution to many a Canadian household; in this era of affluence, boys seemingly lack the energy or the spur to earn a few dollars to pay for whatever the current fad or need might be. MPs DID IT Yet Parliament Hill today is densely populated by MPs who included a period as newspaper carrier boy in their upbringing. Tommy Douglas, for example, now national leader of the New Democratic Party, once deliv- ered the Grain Trade News in Winnipeg during his early teens. Looking back 'on that then valued job, he told me: '"De- livering newspapers is a good training ground. Reliable news- boys make reliable men. De- pendability is not something we are born with; like muscle, it has to be developed, and a newspaper route is one place where it can be developed in youth." Prime Minister Pearson was once. a newspaper carrier boy. More than half a century ago, he delivered the now extinct Toronto World on a route in Hamilton. Remembering those long-ago days, he commented: "There are few school-day vo- cations that offer such a com- bination of training, experience and discipline." The most storied and most reported career as the Mercury of the day's printed news was of course that of former prime inister John Diefenbaker, The description of how he once sold a newspaper to prime minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier in the dawn's early light at Saskatoon railway station now is an integral part of Canadian folklore. It is pers haps better known than the possibly more significant en- counter ~between a newspaper workhorse and a lost explorer at Ujiji in darkest Africa, when newshound Henry Stanley greeted his quarry with the famous, laconic salute: "Dr. Livingstone, I presume?" HARD-EARNED DOLLARS John Diefenbaker explained to me the subtle distinction be- tween a newspaper boy and the more humble carrier boy. In Saskatoon, half a century and more ago, the young Dief ob- tained a licence as a newspaper boy, and that entitled him to sell newspapers on the street. It called for less initiative to fill the unlicensed job as carrier boy, merely delivering papers as ordered at homes on a regu- lar daily route. Dief doubled as newsboy and carrier boy, but there was a stark contrast between the re- compense for the two jobs. He used. to meet the CNR's trans- continental express due at 5.15 every morning, and pick up from it 125 copies of the Winni- peg Telegram. He paid % cent each for these, and sold them at a nickel each -- to itinerant prime ministers and other hap- hazard customers on the street or even in the Chinese diner ('Dogs and newsboys keep out."') Thus he cleared more than $5.50 when he sold his last copy, which he did on most days, before 7 a.m. Then he delivered the Saskatoon morn- ing Phoenix to about 100 homes, completing his route in time to get to the collegiate by 3 a.m. After school, he delivered the Saskatoon evening Star also to about 100 homes, between 4.30 and 6 p.m. He was paid $2 a week by both the Phoenix and the Star. Thus he added no mean sum to the weekly family budget. Looking back, Dief's comment to me was apt and pithy: "Being a carrier boy teaches initiative and self-reliance--and the value of money." Burly But Jovial Brezhnev Number One In Russia By JOHN BEST MOSCOW (CP) -- External Affairs Minister Paul Martin of Canada was impressed with the self-confidence and the authoritative bearing of the burly, rather jovial man sit- ting opposite him. On his way out of a 1%- hour talk with the man here in November, Martin re- marked to another Soviet of- ficial: "He must be one of the two or three top men in the Soviet Union, isn't he?" By way of reply, the official raised his right index finger, describing the figure 1. This little gesture eloquently defines the position of Leonid Ilyich Brezhnev, general sec- retary of the Russian Com- munist party, No. 1 wielder of power in this land of 230,000,- 000 people. Since taking over the leader- ship from Nikita Khrushchev two years ago last October, the onetime metallurgist, long- time party organization man, has gradually fastened his grip on the levers of state control. In Soviet Russia, effective power is vested in the party-- 'the one and only party. Brezh- nev has demonstrated that it is he who runs the party--in fact as well as in name. HEAPED WITH TRIBUTES A striking testimonial to the position he has carved out tor himself was the fanfare stirred by the celebration of Brezhnev's 60th birthday Dec. 19. For one brief, memorable day it looked as though the cult of personality had re- turned to the Soviet scene. All the big national news- papers, and probably the pro- vincial ones too, blossomed forth with large-scale, front- page portraits of Brezhnev along with gushing tributes from the party and govern- ment ... . 'dear friend and comrade." nor crass TIRED JOKE Revolt Looms Over Decimal 'Bamboozle By JOSEPH MacSWEEN LONDON (CP) -- A revolt is in the air against what one financial journal termed the great decimal bamboozle. Britons appear generally content that their country is getting in step with the rest of the world and going deci- mal in 1971. It now is a tired P joke that Britons--after 150 years of agitation--have at last come to see the point. They are resigned to giving up the stubborn old system of spending money in 12-pence shillings and 20 - shilling pounds, Or are they? The first Eng: lish penny was struck nearly 1,200 years ago. The shilling dates as a coin from approx- imately 1500, while its origin as a "money of amount" goes back to Anglo-Saxon times-- from "scillingas," or cuttings from gold rings or armlets. The pound, which first ap- peared as a coin in 1489, also goes back to Anglo-Saxon days, having evolved simply from a pound weight of sil- ver. The penny, with a new, bigger value, and the pound would survive under the new decimal system proposed by James Callaghan, chancellor of the exchequer. But the shilling: and various coins based on it would disappear. POUND WOULD REMAIN Callaghan's plan is that the und would remain the ma- unit of currency with un- changed value--$3 Canadian. The new penny (three cents) would be worth 2.4 pennies in liament, which will debate the project early this year. The 10-shilling unit would have higher prices. Because a new penny would be worth 2.4 pence of present coinage, the old coinage, and the new half- penny 1.2 pennies, The pound would be worth 100 new pennies, rather than the present 20 shillings or 240 old pennies. Other coins would include a new two penny, a new five penny (equal to. one old shill- ing or 15 cents), a new 10 penny and a new 50 penny (equal to 10 old shillings or $1.50). It is natural that the new system would cause some pangs, but it is not for tradi- tional reasons that the deci- mal changeover has aroused broad opposition. Critics ar- gue instead against Cal- laghan's particular system under which the pound, in effect, would become a heavy- value dollar. They maintain this would cause endless con- fusion and tend toward in- flation. : "We're hoping for a change of heart in the government,"' said a spokesman for the Consumers Association, which - with 42,000 members repre- serig.a big part of the Brit- ish shopping public. URGE SMALLER UNIT The association is one of more than 20 organizations campaigning for adoption of a basic unit of 10 shillings ra- ther than one pound. The As- sociation of British Chambers of Commerce sent protest let- ters to every member of Par- _ 100 cents and coins compar- able to those of Canada. One of Callaghan's argu- ments is that any withdrawal from the pound might have a dangerous psychological ef- fect among financiers in the world's leading money cen- tres. A citizen replies in a letter to the editor of The Fi- nancial Times: "Does he really believe that -- international bankers are so stupid that their assessment of the strength of sterling would be influenced by the size of the unit?" Australia, which went deci- mal last Feb. 14 with 10 shill- ings as the basic unit--or dol- lar--has, in contrast, a simp- ler system. Its five-cent, 10- cent and 20-cent coins equal exactly the value of the old sixpence, shilling and florin. Its new notes parallel those of Canada. Callaghan spoke in ringing tones of establishing a coin- age that would last 1,000 years, his words evoking vaguely patriotic feelings in defence of the pound, so har- ried in recent years. He pre- dicted the awkward new half- penny would vanish in the march of time, the way the farthing vanished from present coinage a few years ago. PRICE RISE FEARED Opponents saw Callaghan's road leading straight ta tendency would be for retail price increases to be rounded upward." Callaghan said that, subject to parliamentary approval, the .government decision is firm, but there are signs of division even in the govern- ment. The post office and ministry of social security, for instance, have spoken in fa- vor of the 10-shilling unit. The Consumer Council, guardian of Britain's shop- pers, joined other groups in support of the 10-shilling sys- tem. The council said this would involve fewer hybrid units, would be simpler for monetary calculations, more associable with present coin- age and have less effect on prices. Consumer repr esentatives do not discount the psychol- ogical importance of such an institution as the pound. They say there is no reason why the pound could not be retained at its present value, worth twice as much as a new basic 10- shilling unit, which could be called "noble,"' "royal" or simply half-pound. PRESTIGE LOSS DENIED They refuse to believe the so-called "international argu- ment"'--that such a solution would cause sterling to lose prestige as a reserve cur- rency, in which one-third of the world's international trade is conducted. Uf ff) My THEY'VE HAULED HER FO nin nent FOREIGN NEWS ANALYSIS if lilt \| wnat R REFIT -- I'M FILLING IN gy gn nt RE TEENA i nnn \ \\ \ on WANS . \ ABE od" BY PHILIP DEANE Method In Mao Madness Madness, exhibitionist and re- pugnant, seems to be. sweeping China; the children-of Liu-Shao Chi, the country's president, are made to denounce him in print as a traitor. A vice-premier is hounded in public by a mob. Yet there is sytem in such mad- ness for Mao Tse-tung or those who speak through his mouth, if he is now a puppet of army men. They must have the madness because they are attempting the impossible, trying to change human nature. China's prob- lems are so immense, her ma- terial deficiencies so vast, that she must use to the utmost the only resource she has in abund- ance: htman effort exerted daily with no letup and no hope of reward for the present gener- ation to make its grand-children masters of the world. MAO OUTVOTED : It is a great deal to ask; too much, in the opinion of Mao's colleagues in the central com- mittee who have outvoted him TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS Jan. 10, 1967... The League of Nations held its first meeting at Ge- neva 47 years ago today-- in 1920--after its planning by the Treaty of Versailles. The treaty had not been ratified by the United States and was passively accepted by the defeated powers of the First World War so thes€ countries were not represented. Some of its subcommittees, such as the International Labor Organization, are still flour- ishing, but it failed in its main task, to prevent an- other big European war. 1776 -- Tom Paine pub- lished his manifesto, Com- mon Sense. 1910 -- Le Devoir, the French - language news- paper, first appeared at Montreal. First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1917--Greece bowed to the terms of the Allied ulti- matum to give up her neu- trality in the war; British units advanced near Beau- mont Hamel in France and encircled Kut - el - Amara, Mesopotamia. Second World War Twenty-five years ago to- day--in 1942--the Japanese approached Kuala Lumpur, the main city of northern Malaya; Japanese troops made their first landing on Dutch territory at Tarakan; Churchill recalled Duff Cooper, his special emis- sary in the Far East, to London. POINTED PARAGRAPHS Technicians are promising us a push - butnon age, but can't they do better than that? Can't they arrange things so that we won't have to go to the trouble of pushing buttons to get our work done, but would have merely to point at them? v You might try this response to an illogical statement made by your opponent in an argu- ment; "I think you've got some- thing there -- and I believe you ought te get rid of it." twice to our knowledge. But the formal votes at the top mattered perhaps-less than-the collective response of the people, even of the ordinary Communist~ party members, the faithful who fought under Mao's banner to take China. These hundreds of millions, Communist or not, took it upon themselves when- ever they could, to let up from selfless dedication. They have sought to rest, to accumulate comforts, to hoard something against a rainy day, to work for themselves a little and not just for the glory of China in the next century. They were only human; but by so being human, they per- petuate the poverty and weak- ness Mao hates and dreams of eradicating. He thinks not in terms of human lifetimes but of historical eras, being not only a zealot but a dreamer. So, he had to turn to other dreamers and only the adoles- cents, in search of excitement and self affirmation, can dream such inhuman dreams, Mao is not the first to use youth this way. The Nazis did; and the Arabs in their current feud with Israel use the youthful refugees, not the old. And advertising uses the young as models because in conjunction with youth, no claim seems impossible. CONVERSION TECHNIQUES As for the techniques of mass meetings and public denuncia- tions, these'are old instruments, indeed, part of the evangelist's arsenal. The Chinese use a text- book on conversion written by John Wesley, the founder of the Methodist Church in which are prescribed mass meetings, con- demnations, exhortations, until the sinner confesses, is con- verted and saved. Mao, an evangelist of his own faith, has always used these techniques-- we've yet to learn if he will again be successful this last time. He would think us odd for finding his ways repugnant sincevin his view he must sacri- fice the present generation to save the future of China. Heroic Struggle By Borden Took Canada Into League By BOB BOWMAN When the First World War ended in November, 1918, the Allied powers and other coun- tries began organizing the League of Nations. Its purpose was to prevent future wars, as is the object of the United Na- tions today. Canada became a member of the League of Na- tions Jan. 10, 1920, but not with- out a heroic struggle on the part of Sir Robert Borden. It was one of his final achievements before resigning as prime min- ister. There was a good deal of op- position to the British dominions having separate seats in the League of Nations. Britain had always done the negotiating for them and other nations be- lieved that Britain would have five votes instead of one, if the dominions were regarded as separate powers... The United States led the opposition. Sir Robert Borden was furi- ous. In a note to then British prime minister Lloyd George he said: "It is now proposed that Can- ada should become party to a treaty by which she shall un- dertake to engage in active war- like operations against Germany in case that country at any time in the future should be guilty of aggression against France. I am not aware that any similar undertaking is proposed for Spain, Brazil, Greece, or Bel- gium, or for any of the smaller states whose representatives are not debarred from the coun- cil to the league." His contention was that the U.S. was trying to pack the League of Nations with South American countries which had taken little or no part in the war against Germany, while blocking Canada from member- ship although Canada had suf- fered nearly 250,000 casualties in the fighting. Canada was ex- pected to be in the first line of battle but not even have a back seat in the League of Nations. The Big Three of the negotia- tors gave in. They were Lloyd George, Woodrow Wilson of the U.S., and G. Clemenceau of France. Finally the U.S. did not 'join the League of Nations at all. L MAN RULES WATER Africa's Lake Victoria is the world'g largest man-made lake, > cL] OTHER JAN. 10 EVENTS: 1815--Britain prohibited citi- zens of the U.S. from settling in Canada. 1817--Lord Selkirk's men re- captured Fort Douglas on the Red River. 1831--King of the Netherlands arbitrated dispute about the boundary between New Bruns- wick and Maine, The U.S. did not accept his decision and Brit- ain later rejected it. 1875--British Columbia Legis- lature sent petition to Queen Victoria on its grievances against Canada. 1910 -- Henri Bourassa pub- lished Le Devoir, Montreal. YEARS AGO 20 YEARS AGO, January 10, 1947 Eric Heustis and Robert Davison, born in the Oshawa General Hospital just five min- utes apart on New Year's morn- ing, are the winners of the First Baby contest in 1947. Two hundred and seventy-five employees of the Robson Leather Co. have been laid off indefinitely due to the shortage of hides. : 35 YEARS AGO, January 10, 1932 One hundred and twelve Osh- awa vocalists made application for membership in the newly formed Oshawa Choral Society. The eighth annual minstrel show of the St. George's AYMC will be presented on Feb. 2, 3 and.4. QUERN'S PARK Odd Cents In Tax Hike Petty Poser DON O'HEARN YORONTO -- It may make cents, but it doesn't make much sense, All pennyhaters--those of us who never seem to have a cop- per cent in our pocket when we buy a 5l-cent package of cig- arettes yet find a dozen in our small change every night--can take umbrage at the Ontario liquor control board. The only pleasant thing about the price of liquor has been that we have been spared pennies in change. The prices have come out at an even dime. Now the board is taking away even this small pleasure. In providing for the new fed- eral sales -tax its prices will work out at $5.53, $4.62, $7.04 ... everything but a nice zero. You have to be suspicious of the board's motives. It could-easily have absorbed the tax. This probably would have cost about'a million dol- lars, and last year it showed a profit of $125,000,000. Or it could have worked its new prices out to an even nickel which no one would have minded. Is it possible they wanted to create a nuisance so people would be annoyed at the federal tax? It even is annoying itself. For all its change machines will have to be remodelled. At pres- ent they can't make change in pennies. Thanks to Dr. Morton Shul- man, Toronto's chief coroner, our provincial coroners may be out to top each other in reform- ing the world. Dr. Shulman has _ become noted for expressing himself on many facets of safety--particu- larly on highway safety with the emphasis on guard rails. When..NDP-. Leader. Donald MacDonald appeared at the in- quest into the fatal accident in which he was involved the cor- oner concerned seemed deter- mined to out-do even Dr. Shule man. Coroner Dr. A. E. Noble, in his charge to the jury, talked of guardrails. But he also noted that in some jurisdictions across the border the medium area be- tween lanes on highways was as much. as 1,000 feet. They are in some placés in Ontario too, of course: Tope ography decides this, as it does in the United States. The next coroner perhaps will suggest we should have double- deck roads. At time of writing the Crown hasn't decided whether charges should be laid against Mr. Mac- donald. In view of his political prominence it is on a spot--it could be damned if it does and damned if it doesn't. Syria Raids Seen Plan For Tension TEL AVIV (AP) --- The new flareup of attacks from ia along the border with Israel ap- pear to be planned efforts to stir up tensions, with the Da- mascus government kept closely informed, Israeli sources charged today. There has been firing almost daily since Dec. 28 along the 45- mile border. Two Israelis were- wounded near the Sea of Gali- lee Sunday. Premier Levi Eshkol warned: "We will not tolérate develop- ments likely to impair our sov- ereignty or the security of our citizens," Foreign Minister Abba Eban said the Israeli delegation to the United Nations has been in- structed to provide the UN Se- curity Council with details of the latest incidents and to in- form foreign governments of the tense border situation and the serious view taken by Israel. BIBLE "And there are many other things which Jesus did, the which, if they should be writ- ten every one, I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that should be written." --John 21:25. The things that He did in person He is still willing to do for the poor and the prominent. "Jesus Christ the same yester- day, today and forever." 725-6553 RENT-A-CAR DAY -- WEEK -- MONTH 58.00 PER DAY 725-6553 RUTHERFORD'S CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS PLUS LOW MILEAGE CHARGE 14 ALBERT ST. Oshawe WHITBY Coun Abou WHITBY (St just missec when his car | feet of being an express ft the Dunlop Dri ing, said Counc wards at Mon Whitby Town ¢ Councillor E council to wr complain _ bitt! danger causet crossing gate | ly. He said | Mayor F Mayor D has been chos alists in the project to find. ing Young Me! ed by Whitby of Commerce. The purpose reward Ontario outstanding; their chosen | such activity Resident Because of « "Peeping Toms south end of South and Hig by, town cour Monday to in the corner of the service roa The request old D. Rowley. Centre Street was very dark Town Town counci meeting agree Whitby Yacht acres of town- for $10 per a starting Octobe erty is in the area. The yacht cl ing an L-shape Goverde Adrian Gove! chairman at the ing of the \ Bchool Board. opened with } K. Driscoll of | angelist Chure Mayor Desmo1 administered th to the newly | Morgan 0'Co! to the office of K of C Co The Knights Council, N started its Cent numerous sug made regarding of the council Several chai pointed to cart now being set retreat, to Mar Feb. 3 to 5. | Miller is the made a strong bers to try to t other candidate Catholic Acti Maurice O'Con that a corpor and super wil after the 5 p.m. The council's ner meeting wil at Columbus hi with Brother Ri lins chairman « Scou Blair Park V known as the 8t Troop, now t Troop, held a bottle drive. In conditions and « day, the boys k and received a Blair Park Communi "Renewing t was the them munion meditati United Church, when the Sac Lord's Supper The choir, u tion of Gordon WE Blair Park \ held its first so new year with R. A. Hutchisor ing the 'Bad event was muc ners of spot da Zimmer and J Mrs. Ray Haw Shaw. Winner o Steve Nichols. Chaperons w Mrs. Michael P Femia, Mrs. R Mrs. Raymond Council Board I) WHITBY (Sta council, at its ing Monday ni: laws to make ; various municir appointments w Whitby High D.. .ten Hobbs ning Board -- for term ending old Brown, for term; Whitby Board -- Mrs. ] one - year term Lee for three Council resolv John Majcher te of Adjustment f