'ae THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, Merch 30, 1967 3 Reinstate Landymore ell mee : ittle Th P Students V : D; Little Theatre Presents Students Veto ase | | 2 ' : iefenbaker Demands 'Teahouse 0f August Moon' Aid To Dodgers " eahouse Ui August Moon | as w i WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Uni- ell OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition|towards unification so that Ca-|tion hill will come up for debate) gy JANET STEVENSON |Den Berg, Fred Bryant, Cheryl|Versity. of Windsor students ial Leader Diefenbaker said Wed-|nadians once more will be able|as soon as possible after the| AND GAIL BURROWS Weeks, Phillis Weeks, Gavie|Voted 84 per cent Wednesday res nesday it would only be fair to|to live in the traditions of their|\Commons reconvenes Monday.| of Oshawa Little Theatre |Kahn, Dale Robinson, Marion|28ainst donating money for the| is reinstate Admiral William!past and the greatness of their) Mr. Diefenbaker touched on a| 'Teahouse of the August|Fisher, Gwen O'Regan, Clare|¢Stablishment of an advisory 000 Landymore into the navy. Services." wide variety of topics in his|Moon" ends Oshawa Little The-/Keith and Richard Erman. An|and aid centre to lure to Can-| In a CBC free-time telecast,, The admiral was fired as|15-minute taped broadcast, butlatre's first season at Eastdale|extra curtain call should be|@da students from Michigan| = he charged that Defence Min-jcommanding officer of Mari-|did not refer in any way to the|with their most colorful produc-|given for the set which adds so|Wishing to avoid the United! ister Hellyer is rushing his un- ification bill through Parliament 'in a bid to. seize the Liberal leadership, "regardless of the consequences." "You recall that the minister 'attacked Admiral Landymore, almost stating he has been treacherous to his country. He 'had to apologize. " "Tt would be only fairness |today to reinstate the admiral, time Command last July after clashing with Mr. Hellyer over the unification of the three ser- vices. Mr. Diefenbaker said senior retired officers who testified before the Commons defence committee all warned that uni- fication will be detrimental to morale and effectiveness of the armed forces. Mr. Pearson told a press Conservative leadership conven- tion in Toronto Sept. 6-9. He has still to declare his intentions in) this connection. | WANTS NEW LAWS The 71 - year - old chieftain called for new laws. to ban the possession of the drug LSD and the slaughter of baby seals on the East Coast. Switching to the case of Mr. tion to date. A large cast in- cluding children, and even a goat, bring John Patrick's prize winning comedy to life under the capable hands of Harry Chapman's direction. Sakini, the play's narrator, is| excellently characterized by Ray Langridge, a veteran of many OLT productions. In tell- ing the story of the postwar U.S. occupation of Okinawa, much color and beauty to the entire production. Credit here; Fox and certainly to Jim Gum- mow,. who designed the tea- house. The whole happy mood rounded off by the gay cos- tumes and authentic musical! background, States draft. In a campus-wide vote among belongs to Eric Lloyd, assisted/the 3,000 students, the referen- | by Harry Chapman and Kay' dum drew 1,141 votes against \233 for the motion that funds be advanced by the student} is|council to maintain the centre) here. A second vote late Wednes-| In the words of Sakini, "Con-|day by the Graduate Society | to put an end to this rushiconference Tuesday the unifica- res A Seco erecta ga Poi Sakini sets each of the nine|clusion -- Most. pleasant eve-|censured its own executive| ' Supreme Court for alleged mis-|SCeD€S and brings the actors ning for whole honorable fam-|committee for advancing $100) i co] eondact he chinted' that hele". life by a clap of his hands. jily. towards the centre, dubbed! i riest Nun Newl eds favors the judge's request to| Norman Edmondson in his Info 67 : ' v ' yw appear before the bar of the role of Colonel Prudy III, Com- i : Commons to make a final plea manding Officer, displays once U K 7 0 d | But an Info 67 spokesman -jagain his abundant talents in a . 0 T OT saia the student committee's A text of Mr. Diefenbaker's address was issued to the press. Men Needed jactions and plans would not be | affected by the vote. "It by no means kills us. The vote shows that there are 233 students committed to aiding characterization and comedy. The plot unfolds around the central character of Captain Fisby, and here we have Jim Sabyan, who, we feel, has - 'But With Special Conflict PEWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) -- Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Kurth U.S. Planes Largest, Most Modern sion that they were "running have begun married life with problems common to newly- weds and with a special con- flict: He is a Roman Catholic priest who violated church doc- ,trine to marry a former nun. Kurth, 35, said he still con- 'siders himself to be a priest, that he and his 34-year-old wife will continue to be devout Ro- man Catholics, but that he ac- knowledges the assumption that a priest's violation of celibacy means excommunication from the church. "But I have not asked for a release from my. vows," he said. "I could not freely give up my priesthood." He and his bride, having avoided reporters with a secret wedding ceremony at 1 a.m. Saturday, met with them this AWARE OF PENALTY avoid further violation of Ro- man Catholic church rules. concern away" from reality. Aware of the shadow of ex- communication, they were mar- ried by a Protestant pastor to As newlyweds, their initial is making a living. Neither has a full-time job al- though both are certified teach- ers. They acknowledged that as Roman Catholics, excommuni- cation represents an emotional concern, But Kurth's superior, Very Rev. Harold Liebl, provin- cial of the Pallotine Order in this area, said Wednesday he has no comment on the situa- tion at this time. Kurth and his wife, the for- mer Shirely Weis, who was a nun until 'ast year, said each As Teachers TORONTO (CP) -- Dorothy Campbell, an occupational schools instructor, said Wed- nesday that a lack of male teachers and the fact that boys do not have the same muscular co-ordination as girls at a young age often are reasons for boys doing badly in primary She told a meeting of the On- tario Education Association that primary schools lack men who can portray a strong father image. She also criticized teachers for not considering that boys at the ages of five and six are 18 months behind girls in muscular co-ordination. Paul Bennett, director of the topped any of his comedy roles. Lotus Blossom, portrayed by Cheryl Weeks who gives a de- lightful debut on the OLT stage. through into Rex William's por- trayal psychiatrist, Captain McLean. school. unique charm is veloped by the large supporting east. This play indeed proves there is no such thing as a small role as such bright individual perform- ances as Tony Castaldo's Ser- geant Gregovich, Carol as the Old Woman, Kay Fox as the Old Woman's daughter, Richard Erman's Mr. previous Romance is brought into the picture by the beautiful geisha, performance in her The play's comedy is carried of the confused army the production's really de- However, evidenced by Hatton Hokai- son's government to go on play-| LONDON (AP)--Britain in- swing-wing fighter - bomber to} nearly $1,000,000,000. American treasurer of Info 67. students avoid the tends to order today 40 more|draft. We expect to continue | American F-111 aircraft, bring-|collecting funds on Friday," ing her total expenditure on the|said Brian Kappler, secretary- BOOK STORE The decision, confirmed Wed-} nesday night by government} sources, packs far-reaching im- plications for the country's de- fence and political relation- ships. 1. It will inextricably link Britain's air power and strate- gic planning with the Ameri-/ cans at least until the mid-| 1970s. | 2. It will underline the re-| solve of Prime Minister Wil-| ing an active military role east | of Suez in defiance of rising de-| mands from within his own La-| bor party for a pullout. Poplar Plywood UNDERLAY Vx 4x 4 sheets Regular 1.50 CASH and CARRY The above was advertised in- ++» Tues. March 28th, . 1.28] correctly as % x 4x 8 sheets || Featuring % Latest Paperbacks % Complete Magazine MILLWORK & BUILDING SUPPLIES LTD. 1279 SIMCOE ST. NORTH Art Institute of Ontario, said art teachers should encourage the main student body as well as art students in fine arts. Roger Allan of Sudbury, mid- northern area superintendent for the department of educa- tion, said school guidance offi- cials in Sudbury's high schools, public schols, English sepa- da, John Francom's Mr. Suma- ta, Bob Elliott's Mr. Seiko, Eileen Chapman's Miss Higa Jiga, Des Bailey's Mr. Keora, Avi Rosen's Mr. Oshira, and Gary Hatton's Mr. Omura. More enthusiastic support is given by Andrew Crook, Jean Crook, Shelley Fisher, Gail Mc- Williams, Ronald Newell, Arn- had doubts about some -church rules -- including celibacy for priests--before they decided to marty. | Remedy In Labor Restraint 3. It will provide President) de Gaulle of France with an- other argument that the British are so close to the Americans that they do not yet rate mem- bership in the European Com- mon Market. -week in their rented lakeside cottage in this resort commu- nity west of Milwaukee to offset 'what Kurth called an impres- Selection %* Greeting Cards | i zs SSE ERE Reeae _Chamber of Commerce -- Rand Commission Told WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Re- straints on labor were among suggested remedies to alleviate some of Ontario's labor prob- lems at the close of public hear- ings before the Rand commis- sion Wednesday. The one - man commission, conducted by former Supreme Court justice Ivan C. Rand, heard a single brief at the sec- ond day of sittings. The hegre ndi- cated its approval of a limited use of injunctions and picketing and calling for greater discipline of union rank and file. Lawyer Leon Z. McPherson, speaking for the chamber, sug- gested union members be pre- vented from taking alternative employment after they had gone on strike. "A few pickets can halt an employer's production entirely," Mr. McPherson said, "while the Que. Natural Gas Shares Offered TORONTO (CP) -- Northern and Central Gas Co. Ltd. said Wednesday 2,927,000 shares of Quebec Natural Gas Co. have been offered following North- ern's bid to buy 2,150,000 shares of Quebec Natural and the of- fered shares will be taken up on a pro-rata basis. Northern said this means 73.4 per cent of the shares offered by each Quebec Natural share- holder will be purchased at the offering price of $14. Quebec Natural closed at $11.13 on the Toronto Stock Ex- change Wednesday. rate schools, bilingual and pri- vate schools have formed the province's first integrated guid- rest of the workers move to other jobs." He was supported by Charles J. Clark, vice-president of the chamber, who sought more ex- ecutive control over union mem- bers when a strike occurs. Mr. Clark said union leaders offer the 'universal answer" when an illegal strike takes place that "'they have no con- trol over the membership." He suggested making unions legally responsible for their ac- tions, enabling them to sue and be sued "'in the same manner as any other person before law." The possibility of a law suit against a union would deter it from unwarranted strike action, he said. The Chamber of Commerce brief also came out in support of injunctions for smaller indus- tries only. "Large - scale industry could not hope to hire strike breakers in sufficient numbers to continue its operations," he said. He suggested that if such a ance service. Four Children Die In Blaze KAGAWONG, Ont. (CP) -- Four children were burned to death and their mother injured Wednesday afternoon when fire frame home in this farming land in Lake Huron. | Dead are Benedict Robert-| son, 8, Randall, 8, Kenneth, 4 and their sister, Lisa, 3, chil- dren of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Robertson. Mrs. Robertson, 27, is in hos- pital with a dislocated hip. She jumped from the second floor of the home in a vain attempt to summon help. The children were also on the second floor of the building. Mr. Robertson was at work when the fire broke out. Cause of the blaze is unknown. situation was true, then it fol- lowed that picket lines also were of limited value--'"'since strike breakers would not enter the plant." The two days of hearings, at which three briefs were pre- sented, were shorter than had been anticipated in this auto- manufacturing city. h AMATEUR HOUR CONTEST One observer said a of briefs expected to have been presented by the United Auto Workers Union were to be sub- mitted at Toronto hearings later. The commission will continue its inquiry into the province's labor situation until May. Any ever 21 wishing to audition, PLEASE CALL 723-4693 MR. STREET Alway fun to be with, int elligent to talk to, Sally is a man's kind of girl. She delights in the tingling taste of Jordan Valley Crackling Rosé, and adores its high-spirited gaiety. So will you. Try Jordan Valley Crackling Rosé anytime. You'll enjoy it. 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This op- portunity is being offered from 7:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M. from now until June 2, 1967. Registration fee for the season is 2.00. All partici- pants must appear suitably dressed with gymnasium shoes This teenage recreation details call the Oshawa 725-1111. program is being offered by Northminster United Church in co-operation with the Oshawa Recreation Department. For full Recreation Department at Everyone welcome --- Come and meet your friends. % Best Selling Hardcovers good enough? improvements. And that 'never' is probably the most important word in our vocabulary: because it means that we are constantly on our toes--looking, searching, planning for Improvements in methods and equipment --to give you even better service. Our engineers--at Bell, at Northern Electric good enough? good enough? never! 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