Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - November 20, 1967, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Coffee break by Bill Trebilcox . Marquardt was just another name and an other picture in a list of Long service employees in the november Issue of the Bay news. He and g. Manson were two. Employees who have just completed 30 years with the Bay. But because it s almost Grey cup time again there s More than a commercial career Story behind the name w. P. Marquardt for Many who will see the item and picture. Try attaching the nickname Bud and you replace the picture of the merchandising executive with the image of a Man who played end with the Winnipeg football club Back 32 years ago at Grey cup time. The year was 1935 and Bud Marquardt caught one touchdown pass As Winnipeg beat the Hamilton Tiger cats for the West s first Victory in the fall football classic. Now it s Grey cup time again and or. Marquardt has been 30 years with the Bay and he along with All the other members of that team and the fans who remember must sometimes wonder where the intervening football seasons have gone John Graham of 1154 Betournay Street St. Boniface advises me that a memorial Trust fund has been set up in Honor of the memory of the late Rev. Paul Gories who died at 46. The late father Gories was the driving Force behind the setting up of the modern Villa Maria Retreat House in St. Norbert in 1959 a temporary Refuge from everyday life and care that has been used for meditation purposes by Many thousands of roman catholics and non catholics. Objective of the memorial Trust fund is and it will be administered by five permanent directors Joseph c. Stangl Francois a. Muller Gene Ruczak Timothy fur Gale and Conrad Wyrzy Kovski. Income from the fund will go to train Lay missionaries. Home and school week a provincial proclamation designating this As Manitoba Home and school week bears the signatures of two of the contenders for the leadership of the Manitoba conservative party both of whom know first hand the problems of running the department of education. The proclamation is signed by the education minister George Johnson and by provincial Secretary Stewart e. Mclean a former minister of education. Both men agree with Manitoba Home and school presi Dent v. S. Dotten that the federation is an organization whose main Endeavor is to enlighten the citizens of our province on educational needs and procedures with the purpose of providing the Best educational Opportunity for All Manitoba both men probably wish that their own educations had equipped them to predict the outcome of the voting in their party leadership showdown on saturday. A turned on approach the turned on approach to politics is influencing Young Liberal thought in Manitoba at least if you pay attention to the Agenda for their youth conference to be held saturday at Vincent Massey collegiate Dowker Avenue at pen Ina Ron Kristjansson a Young Liberal vice president says they la have a Flower Power dance to indicate their commit ment to humanity. For guests they la have the bedlam four who change their costumes several times throughout the act and who will have Complete psychedelic equipment at both dances. Sounds As though it could be for members of Parlia ment but it s not the bedlam four is a group from Minneapolis Minnesota. Our town president de Mosley of the Gateway club is a Happy testimonial for the Type of persons who join in the social functions of the group which has been Active in Winnipeg for 12 years. The Gateway club is a social organization for unattached men and women Ages 35 to 50, and or. Mosley met his wife at one of their parties eight years ago. The Mosley Are the Only married couple in the club which meets weekly at the elks club and they stayed on As members at the request of the general group who presented them with life memberships. The Mosley of 1061 Parker Avenue Are the Best source of further information about the Gateway club s weekly sessions. Weather report synopsis valid until Midnight tuesday mostly Cloudy skies covered Manitoba and Alberta this morning Southern Saskatchewan was mainly sunny. A series of minor disturbances will move across Alberta and Saskatchewan today and tonight bringing Cloud and a few Light showers. A few Snow flurries May be expected in the Foothills. A cold front is expected to reach Southern Manitoba this evening and to push South West Ward across Saskatchewan tonight and tomorrow. Snow flurries Are expected along and North of the front. Colder air will remain Over the Eastern Prairies for at least the next two Days figures on the map indicate expected High temperatures today forecast clouding Over this afternoon with Light Snow overnight. Cloudy again tuesday. Colder. Winds South at 20 m.p.h., becoming cast at 15 tuesday morning. Low tonight for Gimli Carman and Winnipeg 20, High tuesday 25. Temperatures for the 48-hour period which ended at 6 . Monday Wax. Min. Prec. Ottawa 33 22 .07 Toronto 35 23 Montreal 34 25 Halifax j7 36 Chicago 41 32 Miami 78 59 los Angeles 67 61 Minneapolis 32 26 new York 46 34 min. Calgary 44 27 .41 28 Regina Brandon the 20 .29 18 30 Winnipeg fort 20 28 Kenora min. Nov. 19 16.8 last year 1.0 Normal 13.0 .01 .09 .55 comparisons highest on record 57.8 in 1917 lowest on record .28.7 in 1896 in note 2 of ii i 1 to j 1 woo s Job sports will bring All Western foot j Ball Olav off Frame to football Fane and Job sports will bring All Western foot Ball play off games to football fans and the Grey cup came on december 2nd. By Carrier soc per week monday november 20, 1967 authorized As 2nd class mail by the . Dept., Olla a and for payment of postage in Cash. It v r the riverbanks of the Assiniboine and red Rivers May get a major cleanup this Winter because of Low water Levels due to the dry autumn. Winnipeg and St. Boniface Harbor com Mission officials arc Louring the Rivers to plot obstructions. This is a View of the Assiniboine near its Mouth East of the main Street Bridge. Wasted time beaten West Bank meet ing called off by president unlike most greater Winnipeg municipalities no member of West Kildonan Council is pass ing time until the new Council officially takes office. A charter amendment rules that elected officials take office within two weeks of election. The inaugural meeting was held nov. 7 when mayor elect Saul Miller assumed official duties. A West Kildonan official said his municipality and Transcona hold inaugural meetings on the first tuesday in november about two months in Advance of the other cities and municipalities of greater Winnipeg. Civic elections Are held on the last wednesday of october. The official said the change is anyone who is Defeated could sit in for two months and be of Little or no use to he suggested that Defeated officials might be so disillusioned they might even refuse to appear in Council. The end result would be a slow Down in important municipal business. Talk topic Bay Plaza metro chairman Jack Willis and officials of the Hudson s Bay company will address Charleswood residents tuesday concerning the Bay s proposed s14 million regional shopping Centre. The meeting sponsored by the Charleswood chamber of Commerce will be held at 8 . In the Charleswood motor hotel and is open to the Public. By Egon Frech the Bank of Western Canada has cancelled its annual meet ing of shareholders scheduled for dec. 13. Bank president w. Thomas Brown in a letter to shareholders said the Power of the Bank s directors ceased nov. 15 with the signing of the winding up order and the appointment of a provisional liquidator. Now that a winding up order has been made the meeting will not be wrote or. Brawn. Under the winding up act. The court has sole authority to the cancellation foils plans by i Canadian finance and invest ments Ltd. And its president Sinclair Stevens of Toronto to re verse the shareholders decision to wind up the Bank. Or. Stevens and Leslie Bodie an Edmonton Alderman and a Rowland decision possible wednesday Centennial body to meet Here tuesday the National committee on the Centennial of confederation will hold its last meeting tuesday and wednesday in the Forti Garry hotel its main task will be to make final recommendations on -1 jets organized by the Canadian i Centennial commission which. Are to be carried out in the future i on its will be the Community improvement Gram town twinning youth travel the athletic awards scheme and Amateur and professional performing arts. The Winnipeg police commis Sion wednesday will discuss in closed session free press re Porter Wade Rowland s Allega Tion that two City police Detec Tives beat him the night of aug. 16. This will be the first time the five member commission has considered or. R o w 1 a n d s charges brought before the commission in hearings oct. 12 and 17. Mayor Stephen Juba commis Sion chairman said monday he Hopes commissioners can reach a decision on the matter wednesday. But he could l predict what the result of the closed session discussion would be. Commissioners received copies of the hearing transcript two weeks ago. At the time they said they needed at least a week to read them. Aug. 29, the commission unanimously decided to hold a hearing into or. Rowland s charges filed in a formal complaint to the commission in a letter from free press lawyer Frank Allen. Because of an agreement Between the City the commis Sion and the Winnipeg City police athletic association the commission said it Felt compelled to hold the hearing in closed session. A clause in that agreement stipulates that hearings into charges of questionable conduct by police personnel should be held in camera in a closed meeting. The commission s decision was made final oct. 11, after a letter from police association counsel Roy Gallagher indicated the association would t waive the in camera clause. The hearing ran 12 hours and 11 witnesses testified including or. Rowland and the two detectives allegedly involved. Oct. 25, the commission decided to Render a verdict on or. Rowland s charges before deciding whether to make the hearing transcript Public. Since the hearing the com Mission has notified the police association in wants to renegotiate the in camera clause i when a now agreement is drawn j next year. The association represents the City s police in dealings with the commission and City Council. Director of Chi served notice in a newspaper advertisement last tuesday that they intended to introduce a motion at the annual meeting to reverse the decision and another Resolution instructing Westbank s directors to take no further action towards winding up the Bank. Or. Brown s letter to the shareholders mailed Friday was written after the Manitoba court of Appeal backed a court of Queen s Bench decision that the Windup was Legal. It does not mention or. Stevens intention to take the matter before the supreme court of Canada. Included in the letter is a court of Queen s Bench notice from or. Justice r. J. Matas advising shareholders that a permanent liquidator for the Bank will be appointed at 10 . Nov. 27. Or. Brown says the winding up of the Bank is a most regrettable conclusion for an Effort which started with such High Hopes and enthusiasm. Perhaps the one Bright spot is that shareholders will probably receive Back after All expenses of liquidation something near their original investment. The real losers arc the members of the excellent staff which had been assembled. Most of them came from other chartered Banks where they had established enviable reputations and careers which they left to accept the Challenge of establishing a new banking institution in Western Canada. They have worked hard and earnestly and have developed into a real team for free press meetings meetings to be held at 8 . Tuesday in the free press building Are Board room Winnipeg Council of women club room. Free press Bridge club. United Way off goal at deadline but fiery campaigners say Money s there they la get it by Arlene Billinkoff the United Way Campaign s official deadline for raising million arrived monday. The fund was still 3.3 per cent Short of the goal but Campaign officials said the drive s not Over by a shot. The Campaign total stood at 94.7 per cent of the million goal. The United Way s final achievement luncheon was to be held monday afternoon but Campaign chairman Peter Hunkin said efforts have not stopped. We re not closing the Cam he said at a conference at the Way offices. We know the remaining is there. The returns saturday showed More than was turned in saturday. There is tremendous Enthus said or. Hunkin. He said late givers were not necessarily Low givers. Four returns saturday had shown substantial increases. I want to emphasize we re not flogging a dead horse. We re just giving a Little More rein to a fiery Steed. We re carrying on because we think there s every Chance of he estimated the Campaign would end in 10 Days or two weeks maybe but refused to worry about meeting a deadline if you re More than 10 per cent away from goal you should worry but if you get within five per cent there s no the emphasis is on getting the goal not on meeting a deadline agreed the United Way president a. J. Kirkness. He said there had been a High degree of Community involve ment and was confident the goal would be reached. Failure to reach it within the i allotted time might Hurt the United Way image or. Hunkin said but this was secondary. I d do anything Short of mayhem to get this Campaign Over the would they change the format of the Campaign there s always need for change or. Hunkin said. Campaigners were submitting re ports about the various aspects of their work and were being asked to recommend changes. Or. Hunkin did t want to see the Campaign become so lengthy that enthusiasm flagged. How did the Winnipeg Campaign compare to others in Western Canada. The Edmonton and Calgary drives had gone Over the top but their goals were considerably lower. The Vancouver Campaign for million was Short. But the United Way s executive director Here Douglas Dewar said Vancouver has included projected returns of More than in its total. We re not putting in Esti or. Dewar said but he expected the needed to show up. Average increases of United states and Canadian campaigns had been four to five per cent. Winnipeg was keeping Pace. We have a greater amount of Money raised at this Point in time than in any previous or. Hunkin said. Manitoba mishaps claim two lives two traffic fatalities were recorded in Manitoba during the weekend one of them in an apparent hit and run Accident. Dead Are Paul Gerylo 63, of East Selkirk. Archie Norman Jackson 27, of the the Pas District. Or. Gerylo died in Selkirk Hospital at 7 . Saturday about an hour after he was found lying on St. Peter s Road in East Selkirk by a passing Motorist. A subsequent investigation by the ramp showed the Man had been on his Way Home from work in Selkirk on his bicycle. His injuries and the damage to the bicycle were consistent with a car bicycle collision. Police and the ramp have termed the Accident a hit and run incident and Are looking for the Driver of the car. An inquest open d sunday but was adjourned to a later Date. Or. Jackson died at 4 . Sunday in a one car Accident on Highway 285, three Miles East of the Pas. No decision on an inquest has yet been made. No further details were available. N Hospital treats three a Man and woman Are in satisfactory condition in Misericordia Hospital and a 21-year old woman was released from Winnipeg general Hospital after three traffic accidents sunday. In Hospital Are Ronald Eric Johnson 22, of 666 school Road Assiniboia and Doris Alberts of 165 Burrin Avenue. Released was Iris Briscoe 754 Westminster Avenue. She received forehead bruises when a car driven by her husband Gordon 22, went out of control at . Sunday on Portage Avenue Between fort and Garry streets. Or. Johnson was in a car driven by Dennis Victor eld Jarson 19, of 669 Ingersoll Street when it went out of control at . Sunday at the South approach to the Pembina High w a y subway under the Canadian National railways tracks. The car hit the curb bounced Back across the Road and hit the guard rail Centre divider. T the Impact threw or. Johnson from the car he has a Cut lip and head bruises. Mrs. Alberts was Riding South on Osborne Street in a car driven by her husband Law rence 59. As he turned left to go East on Brandon Avenue he was in collision with a northbound Auto driven by James Fraser 35 Temple Bay fort Garry. Both cars veered off the Street onto a service station lot. One collided with a parked car the other with a sign Post. The Impact sent a three Inch piece of Metal hurling through the air breaking the Windshield on a southbound car on Osborne Street. The car was driven by Carl Kurnyk 29, of 603 Walker Avenue. Mrs. Alberts received head injuries and possible broken ribs. Clergy ill equipped in psychiatric Field a psychiatrist told about 50 clergymen sunday night they arc ill equipped to Deal with their parishioners mental Dis orders. The psychiatrist. Or. W. G. Lambert a. Associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Manitoba and chief psychiatrist at the Deer Lodge Hospital spoke at an interfaith working conference on the role of the clergy in helping people with emotional and mental health i problems. It was sponsored by the Canadian mental health association and held at 330 j Edmonton Street. Before to addressed the ses Sion. He jokingly warned the ministers he had come to them As a lion among the Chris 1 or. Lamburd said ministers i often lock the necessary train ing to treat emotional disorders and refuse to co operate with j psychiatrists. I there is Little the Clergyman j can do to prevent mental i disease because there is no evidence that religion is a safeguard against mental Dis orders. But a Clergyman could inter Fere in a situation that is Likely to cause mental disorders such As a marital breakdown. To interfere in crisis situations it is important for a minister to learn the technique or. Lamberd said. But he wondered whether the traditional education of mini sters is of much help in dealing with crisis situations. I i wish you d Stop using things from psychiatry that Are j25 years out of or. Lamberd told the clergymen. He said All clergymen should j receive More up to Date training in the Art of listening to what is said and what is not said to notice personality disorders Soj they can be treated in time. In the matter of treatment of mental patients there should be More co operation Between clergymen and psychiatrists. For example in dealing with patients who have a neurotic sense of guilt clergymen could provide psychiatrists with much useful information. Psychiatrists know relatively utile about the problem of Guili. They could learn a lot from ministers on the subject. But clergymen seem to have a problem communicating with or. Lamberd said later during a question period that the phenomenon of clergymen set Ting themselves up As professional counsellors is
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