My tyong EA NEE ON EY si pansion ere Sh eNAA HAAR aaa LA APA RNA Doarnmenaningtans ogee gs Mea Ph ECE PRU ope * RAP BRAD Pap Rig Age ew: oe peed ieee gah iy yards PENIS EAE . . Me : . ‘ : : my 4 S a ! : : . An independent newspaper “devoted. to the upbattaing’ a of Prince Rupert and Northern and: Central ‘British: Columbia. : A-member-of the Canadian Press — Audit. Bureau of Circulation . oes Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association ~ : Le ; Published bY, The Prince Rupert Dally News Limited | _ opera, as, the Canadian Opera Com- . JOHN FF; MAGOR. President oT IR: ‘AYRES = ‘. Managing Editor ae aOR Ie BD A Authorized — as. Second Class Mal) by the Post office, Department, Ottawa. wie Sep mM Prince Rupert’s. first experience with -pany’s “Orpheus in “The Underworld” casi " demonstrated to a large segment of : the ‘population. that opera can be entertaining, fascinating and ‘fun. "The -Prince Rupert opera commit- | tee, a group of local residents who ha a ‘chance to provide. something. new | for ‘the city, is proud of Prince e Rupert © today. * ported the project and to all those who wee helped’ and contributed in any way to- . wards: its success. The | ‘committee, is _ that, others missed the opportunity to hear § some: magnificent. singing. and a great many aughs. ‘There’ were. quite oa number, of residents who “went. ‘to. the O purely and simply to sup- situation that. definitely calls: for \, n munity project a and. not he- “more of the same, oe RE ‘DRAMA, “ACTING “FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1961. x en. between 950 and 1, 000 persons” | horoughly enjoy ‘themselves and, the east of a group entertaining: : a crowd also. enjoys. itself im- - - aly, then a project can be called: -. truly: successful. That is the story ‘0 ‘The committee members. are e grat ae ful. tothe organizations which. sup-~ “es ‘cause “they, wanted to. Before ‘inter: mission time, they knew their money had been well invested. For their sup- port. the opera committee is sincerely “grateful. ‘Without. wholehearted . com- munity, support- such major. projects, back here anytime. and: will: find a warm ‘welcome. awaiting it. ‘ The yeceptiveness of. the “Gadiete : communicated: itself to the east almost immediately. and. despite. a: ‘rugged. grind of. one-night stands through the north country. and a nine-hour trip. by ‘bus - from. Smithers -yesterday, . the talented ‘cast! members, by their own admission, gave one of | its best: per- formances. The cast. of “Orpheus” was terrific. With such rapport established and. : : such support given an unknown “first”. by. city residents, we can only hope ' “that this. is just’ the beginning of. Ca- | shadian Opera Company visits. It isa 10t' only cannot be made a success but annot: ‘be. continued. So far as. last. “night's performance is concerned, the | thought their Pri irice ‘Rupert. audience es also: proud | and happy that so many - os people. enjoyed themselves-and sorry : amd FINALLY (2)... * ob THE Twist’ 98 Sa we a = 7 - Business, conferences prime entertainment 3 mae _ By HAL BOYLE eee "Associated: Press Staff ‘Writer " NEW YORK: — One. of. the. great rituals of,” “Item” for item,. there's a lot bigger profit poten- a tite is the business conference. ; tial in bowling balls than tiddlywinks.” These conferences are’ ‘usually held behind ‘closed doors:'to’. give: them an air of. ‘secrecy. - This is a great’shame.* oye ‘They - ‘shouldbe thrown: open’ “and. ‘tickets “sold “tO the public..;For: the: ‘average. business | ‘conference has better. acting and far more: ‘Procrastinating Phil —- When his turn comes . . “hie -looks mysterious. ‘and Says, “TI. pass for, now... rm working: on something. iL. think: will solve call our problems, ‘put“I ‘haven't’ got. Atiin fina form.”: ‘Phil. has. ‘used this “same” “line so many’ times he is beginning: ‘to believe it himself. . 56 per cent ofr CITY HOUSING, REPORT DETAILS: | fee spalalion ‘tell surveyors ation not. adequate to needs ci ity accommod ( aX Wide = GFF canapes ” Clk little an “Te ot cakes. It do.not recall. having . drama than an off-Broadway production of - + ~ + PART nr OF. AS SERIES “We conclude. ‘that “over: a: apartments. were. carried out It is often At ane ee encountered commercial sand- 7 “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” or “Bast Lynne”. Whereas Wilbur — The company lawyer’ ~° For the purpose of this draft’ - period of several years about. involving 278 -persons. 883. side noe in ay On en wiches of*such tastiness in a : If you have ever attended one of these office “never makes a suggestion himself.:; He is ‘there | report we have selected a:num-: 200 units of: bachelor * accom= -houses were surveyed. and 91: oe third. o . vourth biggest. years. They were like the - matinees, you probably. remember some. of these. for one purpose: To arise and’ announce why. _ per of ‘tabulations ° from the modation - must be- re-built or - interviews with “their occu- here must be some mech. sandwiches you get at home. ' typical characters: ‘ the suggestions anyone else in the firm makes . survey. which | we: think con- newly built. This: number | pants conducted, involving 306" e) v vathematical ratio The bread was fresh, the ham + Bw -.-“are legally impossible, plus being against public tain relevant information and - would “not~ replace~ the: 274 . persons. —_. outween. size An as raul’ moist and . flavorful, the gels. Statistical Syd — He shows up with an arm- - policy. for which sufficient responses units rated not‘adequate, but = =The’ replies to the mail ques- AL * oe on b tiv : cheese superb; the ones. with 4 ful of charts to prove his points. Halfway - Doodling Dan — The boss's nephew sits’ and’ : the questionnaire: were - if is assumed that families~. tionnaire were tabilated | to seven going various spreads had — the | through his presentation, he discovers he has silently draws pictures of- pretty girls on the ~ ‘would no .longer live in bach- ven going . is given on which” .type of - fo-oul. of our kitehen that he motherhood. table.” Hye a on Een ot ‘provided the demand for dwelling is desired. We assume roe alt a doesn’t see first. He's an Gilbert the Gambler — “So we're losing The session is over. The executives march - the pbuilding including . fire Tooms in rooming: houses may that this demand can be taken wished them, and at the other, awfully proud man.’ money on tiddly-winks,” he argues. ‘Let's di- out, firm confidence in every face, hazard as surveyed by the: decrease. as ‘equivalent to” “wish tO” coffee, In. between were the ‘The waiter was a proud sort : ‘ versify. Why not start making howling balls? Industry. marches on! building inspector, condition of |’ The inventory:. of . “apart- (Continued on Page 8); ‘hung the charts upside down. This makes no ‘real. difference to, Syd. His: ‘figures: read the ‘Same, forward, backward, upside down, or side- . “WAYS,” Bulldozer. Bert — “What this firm needs ‘ts some real: -down-to- earth aggressive thinking!” he cries, thumping the table. Everybody nods. They’re all in’ favor, of aggressive. thinking, whatever that is. They are also in favor of pad before him. His plans. are all made. AS soon as he inherits the business, he intends to. fire everybody and sell the firm to its biggest competitor. ° Omnipotent. Oliver — exactly nowhere,” says the boss, winding it all: up. “The next time I call you boys in, you'd better show up with some real ideas — or . there'll be some new faces | at this conference “This confab got. us Le . available, elor units or. in ‘houses. OA considerablé portion. of the ~ demand. for bachelor units ° would be needed in the form of accommodation for... ‘the ' aged. Also’ it is expected ‘that when more ‘accommodation for transients and visitors can be For, the .area of; the: inter- rooming view survey there is an inven-’ | ! _ tory of. housing:: houses, ap- . -artments and: accommodation ,° of ‘persons living in rooming. houses, by a rough classifica- tion into “adequate” and: “not - - adequate.”.The rating was ar- - the. interior ‘of dwellings.as ye. ments shows a total of 135 un- _ correspond with the’ vepantes to interviews. It will be neces- sary to evaluate these replies ‘on a.separate basis, and there- fore only one category of de- mand has been included here: it. is replies where present ac-~ .commodation is reported un- . satisfactory and. information away party. give at a hotel that j not the largest 1 town, the buffe along one side of the large room was set up only agg -few minutes «be- fore the first gues plates “and trays of sand-. grandma touch. The same was | and . true of the tiny cakes- cookies. So I Spoke to one of the waiters -behind the buf- fel. (They did, nol go wander- ing. in the crowd, peddling.) “Well.sir,” he said, “I guess — it's on ‘account of our chef. Not a single thing can head .of man too, 4H t ‘ll ported by'the interviewer, and’: - its, Of these 13. units were: not uate ce | sufficlene of sanitar facill- rated because the survey of ; s - uman na ure wi out. ties, Y , 7 “building. conditions was not. Of all the attempts of the lawmakers to to some extreme idea — in this case - white For every. “factor by itself, a completed. 35 units or 25%, : legislate. people into “goodness”, surely the most extraordinary: is South Africa's Immoral- ity Act. Its purpose is “to prevent any admixture of blood between whites: and non-whites”, In the decade of the law's existence, over 4,000 people have been sent to jall and the number of convictions is increasing every year. The convicted represent every. stratum of so- “-plety — government officials, actors, farmers, clergymen, laborers, directors of companier, people of mixed blood, Unless South Africa's - period of time when code on~ of 76 houses. pf ene 4a. housewives, lawyers and young people of both Juwmakers believe in the stork, this alone foreemonts will be carried out, | houses Wei no ( tn r a . 90. sexes under the age of 18, should have tipped them off that their logiala- Of the total.of 439 persons ouses, wilh o Lolal 0 Only a lenisiator with a fanatic attachment TEMPEST OF SEOTION z The Bdltor, : The Daily News: 3. : For some years. ‘you. have published ‘the ‘Prince Rupert Dally News under a variety of ‘difficult conditions, On many occasions your Yand Nne communications have eon disrupted, Quite often, power failures delayed ‘or inter-. rupted your presses, For most of your tenure, Vvou hve suffered from Inadequate or untrain- ‘ed Rtnff, and on most ovenslona T have defended you againat critics, On the “tompont of Beation 2", however, you have, earned a roprimand. ; Although you regard ench of the casily ob- ‘tained police court. items as “news”, you did not print ohne comment.on the Section 2 by-law. untd] after the open hearing, Since your papor “he day after the public hearing, Mr, T. M,- ‘Caracadden telephoned your news - ‘editor Mr, Pain to offer the Dally News a copy:of the re- __struetion of an apartment, ‘did -print the Jogal notice ndvortising ‘the pro- | “posed amendment, you cannot plead ignorance, | ‘supremacy — would attempt legislation in this field, As. the alcohol prohibitionists on this © continent found out, there are certain areas of human. activity just not susceptible to legisla- tive contro] From the classic Othello and Desdemona through to the Canadian fur trader and the Indian Squaw, the story Is always: the same, Human nature will win out. me -In South Africa itself thore are LB million tion would never work, — The Financial Post: ‘. bet TER BOX your editorial of November 22 was written with -., tongue In check, But do your readers know? Tho picture you conjure up of auch well wdu- cated, dominant” mon as Messrs, Martinugen, Black, Scholten and Stothert being “trotted on: stage and cucd to say thelr little pieces” Is. slightly ludicrous, Mr, Hditor, who do you Buy ‘pore would be tho puppetdor behind the stage? « If you had heen. at the meeting, you would perhaps apprecinio that each of the Bection 2 aponiors had something relevant to way In ‘aup- port of tho oxlating by-law, Each of the spoak~ ora have an investment of $25,000 10. $40,000 to “ protect, Your editorial, like Mr, Harrison's thlks,- » contains a half truth, While It is true that ronal: eatate values may be Inoronsed py the" con the desivaliiity, and The architect cited the Woat Md of Vane Over ns an example, How mnny $80,000: Hi nen ‘WW , 4 al heen built in that dlatriot in the past 10 breI8 yours? ase “| ' A the values of the nearby houses will: boot . with a total of 95 rooms, were ‘rated not adequate and 8&8 -units with a total of 248 rooms ; were rated adequate, In addl- | tion there are around 70: apartments In the down town ’ area which were not surveyed . and are assumed to be ade- : quate. The inventory shows a total rating of adequate or’ not-ade~: quate was: determined, Where for a dwelling,. two or three of the factors were deficient, the dwelling was: rated not ade- - quate. This :is obviously a pre- liminary rating sorting out the worst dwellings, It. is assumed that these would be either de- molished or. re-built. over oa. . -yooms,. were rated adequate, and six houses, with a total of: 19 rooms, were rated not ade- quate, - ated in. the interview survey - as living: in rooming houses, 105 or 44% have adaquatea ac commodation, and 244 or of per cent have not nadaquate accommodation, Sample — in- terviews. were conducted with 28 parties involving n total of 53 persons, The sample‘ ap pears to cover an approximate “reproroniation of. the ‘differ. ent typos of rooming . ‘ound | + oocupania: In expandirig the sample Toe. tables of demand for housing wore prepared according to ro- ‘ponses to questions in the Family S¢hedule and in the: Housing Preference Schedule: Demand: is, clarsified in two’ calogorioss “wily to” and “in- toreat“In,” ‘Tye ‘firat was api. see aT en a teapot garding demand for housing o” dissntistnotion present, we. find. that 180 single ‘ere Accommodation Were OXPrOss~ | Hons ‘would be satisfied with ed.. thelr accommodation. at an .- , average rent of $36 por month,: | 190 single. persons would like. ‘to move And “ront necommo- dation: mostly. jn. the - downs: town. ‘teen at an avorago. rent of $40 por month, Soven frm- :- Mos would Wke..to move and! -yont a howse at an Average: ‘yont of: $08, four families, ‘would Wke to move and, ront | 1 Apartment vb. an average | ‘whore: the doslra to. stay. in: present accommodation of. aatiafaction: were | expressed, . “Dut. Informntion’ ors Coxired: wa. prepared | roaponnt | ‘bantenaing antl act no nya Saving no Information Oy ab« aired housing, We namie thynt . |. if Wow honsing and constrives , Hon Tinasding would he AVAL. Yrom tho Interview survey Tho second was ‘applicd | | Housing wah ano vor, A table’ | “Trily-a ‘most travelled ru Mr, Lemon t Tart’s 4 at home and abroad. Lemon, Hart. Rums. a rums travel for a reason, © Made in the heart of the West Indies. fon a - are then sent to England because the moist are alrs of England are.traditionally the finest in pt “the world for maturing rums,- After quiet cara in England they are perfectly blended, ottlecl and shipped to Canada and through 7 _ out the world, These expensively brought © oo 1 Up tums, fullof light-hearted charm and + flavour, are happily available to Canadiana au). i aidents’ brief, Mr. Pain: replied that ho had the Like Ange ‘cities ‘{ivoughout | re: world, : vont of $70 and one aig i) Whle more: frooly, whd whon _ Alave: i ood rum jor meeting “on tape” nnd. did. have the typed Prince Rupert will eventually have only, aparte mf rant of 9 pind one at gode onforoomont wil: ha hte , § f your money | HART ROYAL NAVY. ‘statement os. well, If this, was the dase, why: ment housda, dlose to jts city contre. . ‘Until that -> dation, Mvo familias indiontod | ried out, the domand of tin . DEMERARA. : | DE MEKAA WM) wore’ there at‘jenst. two. flagrant “¢F oy In the day comes! pordinna In 60 or 60. yoars rat ‘integer In buying a houss, nt." frat, category would become. ~ Lg ht in flavo I Sd) BY ei yopart.of the. meoting?: Not. only ou not the Section '2:rprldente onjoy: thoi, grhbloun, an ‘average’ price of $15,000, | active. pe | wr oss datk ¢olour a ; " onumerate the ames ofall ‘ape rere, Ub You » secluded living, ‘Those of ia W o ehhh hfford’ = Thenha ura: ownors of rooming ‘27: The dntorview. survey covers PP a we ' printed the nome of one porkon who was Not. ‘oven prosont, “"Now" Mr, Helter, yet know, ‘aiid’ r wow, that”. ' x ye ental oe Match eee Cn Cye SEE RTE a aecond ont, wily live alagwhore, me iM. ACOTT,: “f hat ‘Prince Hunort, ‘ . ey tee Oa . boy Bag oo ' é a ‘gomo time in the future, roy 4 tae anne prosiirt Porn EWE OrIWTY Ty Wve TY ty ter | WR ne LOS SAEED Sere ened Po gp (btn , houses and, therefore, . their’ _ Interest, would : only ply ny iy ‘pdn. total: of 188 wpartments | . oceupled. by. 356 peraona.,00 Ine _forviows with. “accupants of An Sy aerial a (lindas RIC VL al gr) hie “Advertinemnont Is not Publishod or Displayed’ hy the La Rovermmonst. ‘of nied ¢ Hawor, Comtrat 1 t 4 ae oe aie one aa) atu tithe Columbia tala a imei: lah hk toned, or hy te ana wee