"Teen ee © al a Graduating Nurses Hear President WHITBY (Staff) The Ontario} Registered Nurses Association! President A. Wedgery told 26 graduating nurses at the On- tario Hospital in Whitby that it was like coming home. Mr. Wedgery graduated from the hospital in 1941. "Its a great year to grad- uate', said Wedgery in his address to the new nurses," "In 16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, June 26, 1967 SS ee ee eS ae een ee oe ee BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE - Stiff Penalties Levied month driving suspension, Johnjconviction, Magistrate Dodds Charles Kusiar, 21, of 137 Cle-|decided to suspend the passing ments Rd., Ajax, made the mis-|of sentence for a period of six take of driving a motorcycle on| months. the night of June 4, When stopped by police for |$200 FINE speeding he made a_ second| Edward H. Taylor, 91 Moss- error when he produced his|bank Dr., Scarborough, plead- brother's driver's licence and|&d not guilty to the charge of claimed it to be his own. |drunk driving: but changed his Magistrate Dodds convicted|Plea to guilty when the charge a reassuring"', did not approve of graduation and felt that nursing was a progressing art. He said the graduation should be considered a well earned pause where the young nurses were standing on the edge of the past looking towards the future. Mr. Wedgery said nursing was still new in 1867 and that be- fore the Crimean war of 1854 only members of religious or- ders were dedicated to the sick. He said in those days it was a disgrace to send people to a hospital and the death rate was very high. THE ONTARIO HOSPITAL nade at the ceremony went year standing; and Miss The speaker related that a Rt Whitby graduated 26 to, from left: Mrs. Mary Ruth Juntume, Silver Medal hundred years ago women pris- nurses Friday afternoon in Ruth, Bronze Medal for for the highest standing in oners were often forced to take a graduation exercise that highest first year standing; the second year. care of the sick and that in one filled the hospital's recrea- Miss Karen Trivett, Gold hospital the pay was $5 per Medal for highest -- third --Oshawa Times Photo | month plus seven gallons of tion hall. Class awards beer per week. ; in obstertical nursing P was| Wedgery said the medical pro- awarded to Mrs. Marie Potor-!fession had been generally op- Dr. P, G. Lynes Speaker ski of Shelbourne, Nova Scotia.|posed to the institution of nur- The Prize for the new gradu-|Ses and little was expected of . ate who has shown the greatest the nurse 100 years ago when a t professional development during they were not even allowed to urses Ta ua 10n her three years in school was|take a_patient's temperature. awarded to Linda Marie Slack| The RNAO president told of the complexities of change in WHITBY (Staff) -- Ontario|awarded to Miss Karen Trivett of Oshawa. } : i Hospital Director Dr.' P. G.jof Oshawa The prize for the highest)DUPsing Bort = eee ad Lynes expressed pleasure Fri- The Silver Medal, for highest standing in peadiatrie nursing Adega phim a or et day that a substantial rum- standing in second year was\was awarded to F. Marjorie SBP isan tah ge oubling ber of nursing graduates have awarded to Ruth Junture and) adams of Bobcageon. every My to: 12 years. decided to remain in the field of Mrs. Mary | Ruth received the The Prize for the student who Ped te te akc ees psychiatric nursing. Bronze medal for the highest has demonstrated the highest ;, 9067 and P sing Standing in first year. By d tae suggested there The Superintendent's Prize for) Wality of nursing care through would be a greater emphasis Dr. Lynes in his address to the highest standing in psychi- out the three years was awarded, public health nursing, He the 1967 graduating class said the ae cone go iy atic: fivelie Wak' awatded 'to to Marjorie Simpson of Downs- said some diseases will have a f 'the hospital's contribu. |Christine Dockman of Bramp- '" : disappeared by then and_hos- el Lledo /ton Mrs. Marie Potorski. was the pitals may have been eliminat- tion to Canada's Centennial eobensent. The nurses were told of the Whitby Mayor Desmond New- jimpact automation is making ; i s |; . ree hog cat aated Deis «se Visitors Register Beefs s"st'tatsl'nesasws The prize for highest standing!1967 Valedictorian. ed entirely. this time of violence and dis-|Kusiar of driving under sus-|W@S Teduced to the lesser of- cord the lovely picture before US/pension and presenting a ji-|fence of impaired driving. He cence not his own. When con-\WaS Convicted and fined $200 e Nurse Wedgery told the grad: sidering Kusiar's record Mag-|@nd- costs or 20 days. uates that Florence Nightingale jistrate Dodds stated that Ku- INTOXICATED \Siar's offenses were getting Cyril Casy, 378 Elgin St. E., worse. "'He may be a menace/njeaded guilty to the charge of| jon the road." | erg ped, hers licence sus- pended for a further six months) i and was fined $200 and costs or| ee 40 days on the drive under sus-|FINED $25 pension conviction, On the} |charge of presenting a licence jother than his own Kusiar was |fined $50 and costs or 10 days. \10 DAYS' JAIL terpreter, Jean Kurdat, /299 Kawartha St., was convict-|5 days. ed of being intoxicated in a public place when he pleaded GROCERY THEFT |guilty to the charge. | | When Magistrate considerable record for type of offense, remanded in custody Pickering Court for a pre-sen- tence report on an assault con-| of 218 Celina St. For Major Traftic Charges 9: cm =, With a month to go on a six-)for the phone calls since his| being intoxicated in a public} |place. He was fined $25 and) woyq War With the assista - -- i Emperor Claudius." Carlton St. E., Toronto, plead- 4 ed guilty to a charge of being|"€W biography of the Tory jintoxicated in a public place.|!eader by British author An- Patrick M. Kennedy, 18, of He was fined $25 and costs or| A plea of guilty to the charge Millan too much." Dodds Cf theft of $3.53 worth of groc- INCREASED SUSPICIONS learned that Kennedy has al@ties from the Loblaw Super-) A this|market on Athol Street result- and is being/4 in a fine of $100 and costs|famously with U.S. Presidents from|0r 20 days for Rudolf Urgasc|Risenhower and Kennedy. But ve yew Simmanee Had on For His U.S. Relations By HAROLD MORRISON {commentators and cartoonists, had his own formula for getting jalong with Americans -- treat |them as the ancient Greeks |treated their Roman masters. "We are Greeks in this Amer- ican empire," Harold MacMil- lan is reported to have once advised a colleague long before he became prime minister. "You will find the Americans much as the Greeks found the Romans -- great big, vulgar, bustling people, more vigorous |than we are and also more idle, | with more unspoiled virtues but also more corrupt." | As quoted by Richard Cross- jman, now a member of Prime Minister Wilson's Labor cabi- net, MacMillan, resident minis- ter in Algiers during the Second suggested: '"'We must run A.F.J.Q. (allied forces head quarters), as the Greek slaves ran the operations of the The quotation turns up in a thony Sampson (Allen Lane), who says that "the idea of be- jing Greeks in the American 'empire was to fascinate Mac- MacMillan, whose mother hailed from Indiana, got along jthis close association with Magistrate Dodds said at one| Americans increased French} lviction, he decided to sentence |P0int shoplifting was a consid-| President de Gaulle's suspicions in the |etable . " County. problem in the youth to 10 days He went county. jail. LENIENCY Ontario|about the Anglo - Saxons and \Cou on to say,|may have been one of the rea- Finally the courts raised the/sons why de Gaulle slammed When Magistrate Dodds was/{ines to $100 for shoplifting and|the door against Britain's bid told James McCullough, 67, of it has dwindled since that|/to join the European Common} 82 Lloyd St., has been informed|time."" He added that '"'the mer-|Market in 1963. by his doctor that he has a leg Chants of this country have lost|* Of the crises he faced in his condition: which will result in his leg being amputated in the|/ars through consumer," 0 FINE show leniency in sentencing him. $5 McCullough had pleaded guil-| ty to and been convicted of im- paired driving but Magistrate {Dodds decided to adjourn the}; ; 4 nae case for a period of six months| {28 laid against William H and then reconsider it on Dec. age 61, of 840 Simcoe St thousands and thousands of dol- r shoplifting and| lvery near future, he decided to|this adds to the expense of the An accident at Athol Street| STOCK RANCH jand Centre Street resulted in a jcharge of impaired driving be-] HORSEBACK RIDING seven years as prime n.inister, says Sampson, MacMillan was hit hardest by de Gaulle's de- nial of Common Market mem- bership. From the heights of popular- ity in 1959, two years after he became prime minister, Mac- Millan plunged down the scale of misfortune to a final with- drawal from leadership in 1963. It was an exit marked by phys- vee oo ws ical illness aggravated by the howls of party wolves battling over the leadership carcass. Sampson suggests that for his political misfortunes, Mace |Mitan has partly himself to 'blame. He was an actor cast in many roles, played with incon- sistency and ambiguity. IZA | - Phone 723-0241 or 728-0192 EPI'S The STIOE DOOR Zany CHEERY-O'S ARE BACK !! Brand New Show Music and Comedy Entertainment Nightly--Saturday Matinee Whithy Hotel DUNDAS ST WHITBY \ V-BAR-S | STABLES sees Now Playing WALT DISN 160 Acres of Land /18. g e | i Whe Magis SUSPEND SENTENCE bnhpaed that Bwitess Pol ond : bg ep iT; James Fines, RR 2 Portitrom a heart condition whichif " isheceropanaied 94 Perry, was appearing for sen- caused him to -take several! @ Western and English Style Riding tencing on a charge of telecom: drugs on the day of the offense, | © Trl! Rides munications services resulting i ; rts H Rentals -- ¢ : he decided to impose the min-|f ® slain aes ce Daily, Week "4 = |many nurses graduating Friday {rom a number of long dis-/imum sentence of a fine of $50. Monthly Basis -- Special Rates. Also on the | AND THE Seven Dwarfs' INDOOR- OUTDOOR THEATRE --4 All Color Show EY PRESENTS White same program beautiful graduates the hospital was giving to Canada. At the graduation exercises rte atvefnt set vee) At Soviet Pavilion Tour awarded prizes for proficiency and scholastic standing. By GAIL SCOTT The Gold Medal for highest) MONTREAL (CP)--The So- standing in third year was viet pavilion at Expo 67 is gar- |could be still working and that|tance phone calls made at the! Magistrate Dodds told Swin.| data processing computer would|¢xPense of the Bell Telephone son that he was taking his age, be used as frequently as as- Company. health, and clean record into |prins are today. |, When Fines produced a re-|consideration and warned him. vnering comments galore about) Wedgery said that with com- ceipt of a money order showing|'yoy'ye had all the considera. | its massive display--the reac-/puters ordering, reports and that he had made restitution tion that this court can allow| tions running the. gamut from|schedules would be automated] \you." \ "masterful" to "propaganda." land nurses would have to learn} The pavilion, packed with ar-|to use the computer. He said| | ae HANCOCK RD. N., | DUEL at COURTICE ! 1 mi, North of Hwy. No. 2 } DIAELO" 728-7768 | Starring James Gardner and Sidney Poitier rays of technological exhibits, |nurses would be in a strategic \has half a dozen books in which | Position to make full use of | visitors can register their-com-jautomated equipment but ad- | ments. |ded that direct patient care |" The dome - shaped United could never be automated. States pavilion, situated not far| In his 'adress Mr. Wedgery away, has no such outlets for|told the new nurses that their comments but reactions arejeducation would never be com- j easy to come by through per-|plete and that knowledge would sonal interviews. }continue to unfold throughout These show a similarly wide their lives. He advised the range of feeling among Expo/graduates to keep abreast of tourists as they emerge from|developments in their profession the big U.S. structure. and asked that they care also At the Soviet showhouse, the about salary and working con- comment books are installed on|ditions and the standards of each of the three exhibition|their new profession. floors, A visitor from Alberta called BOUGHT NEW RING jthe pavilion "a masterful dis- i | " VANCOUVER (CP) -- Maria play of your country." A 5 3 : : French visitor said it is "one | Dratsch, reunited with her hus- 'of the most beautiful. at Expo." |band 'ibys 23 ERTS: marched A Scot wrote: "It is 100-per-|S'Taight to a jewelry store and cent greater than the U.S, pa-| bought a new wedding rin. She | vilion."? jarrived by air from the Soviet But then there was this re-|Union. Her husband came here mark directed to the Soviets| i" 1944. _ sak Ud MIGUEL 12355 OW 5 - co t we \ Lan Evening -- Starting at 7:30 Premier States, BROCK One complete program each | Box Office Opens at 7:30, Show Starts at Dusk, | ' Quebec's Needs) ws | Anthony MONTREAL (CP)--Premier Quinn Daniel Johnson said today Que- F \bec must have the freedom to Michael \negotiate international agree- Parks iments as a condition of equal-| Marthe | ity and cultural survival. Hyer | | Mr. Johnson was speaking at Quebec Day ceremonies at Expo 67, coinciding with the French - Canadian holiday, St. Jean Baptiste Day. He said equality is not possi- ble for the French cultural com- jmunity in Canada "if Quebec 'cannot negotiate freely the 'agreements necessary for pres- ervation of its particular heri- tage." Mr. Johnson's reference to such agreements follows by two days a speech by a Quebec cab- inet minister who said Quebec wants international treaty-mak-| ing power. COLUMBIA PICTURES and SAM SPIEGEL present "THE HAPPENING" "28%. / | ALSO_-- SECOND FEATURE ATTRACTION "SEE YOU IN HELL DARLING" in COLOR with Stuart Whitman, Janet Leigh Recommended As ADULT ENTERTAINMENT | a (AT ap 4SY PAYMENTS 4] Many people thought the exhi- bition too scientific for the av- erage person to enjoy. "It lacks the human touch," write one visitor. "I would like to see more native costumes, art and everyday life,' re- marked another. 'Too technical y the ladies," commented a)|---- | payments become impossible had seen the pavilion three times and thought it one of the best in the fair. But he ex- NOW PLAYING t " from an American: "You get an 'A' for propaganda." SENTA BERGER: YUL BRYNNER TOO ROSY | The JACK HAWKINS OMAR SHARIF (4g ; "You show your people| TEXAS STARS MARCELLOMASTROIANNI A= j Porpy Wh ¢4 9 one a, Pan gape glass ANGIE DICKINSON ( v¥ | IS ALSO A. ) en easy \fe less beautiful thea yo have) COUNTRY & WESTERN [ RITAHAYWORTH 4 FLOWER |painted it," said a Waterloo, MUSIC HUGH GRIFFITH 4 Myer | Ont., visitor. - TREVOR HOWARD ¢ u THE ESTABLISHED HOME Of Country & Western MUSIC THE WILDEST COMEDY OF THE YEARI WOODY ALLEN'S tiger Lily? "COLOR IN OSHAWA 2 whats lip % pressed the wish to the Soviets | that "vour country would open THE its doors to Canada and the U.S. We would like to see your coun- try." At the U.S. pavilion, an of-, | ficial was asked whether his es- | tablishment had comment books along the lines of the Soviet. | |The answer was no but the of- ficial added--as if the thought had just. occurred to him--that idea. 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OSHAWA PHONE 725-6531 DNIPRO HALL 4 « g FOR FREE GUIDE MAP OF EXPO '67 4 CALL AT ANY ASSOCIATES OFFICE MON., JULY 10 : Children 1.00 q FEATURE TODAY AT: 2:50 - 5:06 - 7:20 9:35 | » Adults 2.25 With BOB FRANCIS DOUG ROMAINE & DENNIS BARTLETT KING ST. OSHAWA Central Hotel | SPRUCE THE VILLA HOTEL WHITBY RESERVATIONS 668-3386 Thy DON'T DARE MISS Beverly Hills Motor Hotel Stagemen LAST FINAL WEEK DIRECTLY FROM in Toronto The Fabulous with Vanilla Thomas A Truly Beautiful Voice Cleveland Bombshell or Spur of the Moment Walk In. EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION The BLACK PANTHER Back. by Popular Demand Exotic Frolics DI Saturday Matinee 4 to 6 p.m, French Buffet Daily 12-12:30 and 5. Sunday Dinners 5-8:30 p.m, Now Licensed under L.C.B,0, for Sunday Banquets -- Weddings -- Parties end Dancing Nightly NERS CARDS HONORED Dinners SOREL LOE He's Back ! ENTERTAINMENT NIGH EPI IA He HH IAI A HAIDA IE IE ISIE IASI A A SACSACSACACSA GL FORK OK ok kK RON McLEOD. Channel 11 -- Scaturday Night Jamboree -- Arc Recording Star SATURDAY AFTERNOON MATINEE TH GENOSHA tore OR OT TLY & SAT. AFTERNOON OOOO OOOO OO PIII IAI IAAAKS SETS ES leh vlan. a Na a ect ise, Neth MaRS > iFe WILL } A 100-1 chestra,, | Folk Fes! ceremoni Civic Auc Choir from mat frchestra Oshawa local gro the dire Reesor, } The we officially Hood, fo editor ar ment offi Hood ret his home ceremony CITY GR "Oshaw Mr. Hood Week in |! tennial yt will not b munity o Canada." "We ar people to land whic blessed w said Mr. to celebrz hood, eve try must the great handed d who have "They | PAR THE SPORTS gram, held Sa Ajax, attracted number of cont THE RECENT! ized Ajax Kiwanis first prize for comic float in tt