Ontario Community Newspapers

Weston Times (1966), 1 Aug 1968, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ha! -'W.odllhn hull typo: 'sis'yfttrrstttrre Mom-rm Controller Hurlburt also told Coun- eil that the automobile is a land waster requiring far more space than public transit. He is right on this score too. Cars are like pampered brats and Public transportation is also far safer. For every 100 persons in Metro killel or maimed by the automobile, killed or maimed by the automobile, less than a handful are injured by Unlike streetcars, subways and GO transit trains which are comparatively clean forms of transportation auto- mobiles dailv belt out millions of cubic feet of poisonous gases that shorten the life spans of thousands of Metro citizens. Despite billions of ‘post war dollars spent by Metro an the Ontario govern- ment to eliminate rush-hour jams along, Weston Rd., Jane, Keele, Law- renee, Wilson, Eglinton and other arterials, traffic congestion is just as bad in Metro 85 it has ever been. Mind H. Herman B.A., O.C.. lurk...- . Solicitor Notary Putriie Evenings bv appointment 1933 Wu?” Rd. (nt John St.) When North York councillors Mon, lay debated the merits of extending Avenue Rd. north of Highway 401 into Willowdale, Controller Gordon Hurlburt said that in the transporta- tion field, public transit should be given priority over the private auto- mobile. The car, particularly in the centre of urban Metro, will soon be out- moded said Hurlburt. In our opinion the sooner that is recognized by all borough politicians, the better. Second: since the neod for a vastly enlarged achool is chiefly due to large apartment structures at the corner of Jane and Woolner, has anyone con- sidered building the required school right into this complex? -tiisu" Upttqhtertng Ltd. IAIIIITIIS m so'ucrrou MM q. Wm. IA. Cart W. Cum, EA., tt.C 1m LAWIINCI AVE. w. (am Won " Wm... Rd.) WESTON, ONT - 247-6677 The typical working class homes in.. volved in this case are on Mariposa. Pritchard and French Avenues. The need to tear them down, we are told, stems from a drastic increase of the school age population which is largely due to a rash of high rise apartments being constructed in the area. The first question that comes to mind is, is it really necessary to ex. propriate so many homes to enlarge George Symes public scl,tool and its grounds? Has school board seriously investigated the feasibility of building I high rise school to reduce the amount of land required? New York City, we understand, has had a great deal of success in its high rise school building program. UPHOLSTERING The news that some 40 families will be forced to vacate homes be- cause their land is required to build a new school again raises a number of questions that demand answers. Fraser & Simms 1964 WM"! Ind Opposite John Street M. OM. CH Hm Iarrlsnn . “Heifer: BARRISTERS rqrttb.er_ -m.t"68Xt0t'q_8--_r.Aaqtmtt,t%0 C. 4-5!” Professional-Business Directory Now school board expropriates Public transit is first priority “mum and, mm Publbhod at 2169 Weston Bd., Weston by Principol Publishing Ltd., ovary Thuudty V. J. Hellman, President and Publisher J. M. Jordan, General Hunger B. M. Holmes, Editor Telephone CH 1-5211 Authorized u Second Clua Mail, Pout Office Dept. Ottawa, Oat., ond for payment of pause in cash SUBSCRIPTION RATES $7.00 pot you in advance to my addrou in Canada Other countries $9.00 George W. Bull Mt, Full l guarantee on motor. automatics, Free scone check with tunaqlp. free wheel alimment chock Ind esti- mate. Courtm car. WN Juno It Walter's Garage CH 4-5547-8-9 Innis?" and Seminar Suit. 202 The Wail-w Bldg. 1920 Wcuon Rd. Weston, Ontario Piano Tuning And Repairing aa; - ""G' sko Were Gun-mood Win A. Ring 11' no. “no GARAGES MUSIC When the last Metro transportation study was published about a year ago, priority was again given to roads and expressways. In supporting public transportation, Gordon Hurlburt and Warren Heenan are on the right track. We hope there are many others who will agree with him. With these points in mind, we sub- mit it is high time that Metro and borough planning boards and councils established public transit as priority number one for this urban area. A former president of the Toronto Real Estate Boar], Warren Heenan, point- ed out some time ago that the Yonge St. subway, as short as it is, sparked a billion dollar development boom. Realtors are now predicting that the same thing will happen along the new Bloor-Danforth subway route. As Heenan also stated: “Subways pay for themselves a thousand fold even if they don't earn a dime." The automobile, in fact. has become such a greedy land user in recent years, it now threatens the aesthetic and economic life of our great metro- polis. Countless millions of dollars in essential tax assessment has been buried under concrete and ashphalt because of the four-wheel monster. need 10 to 20-Iane expressways, in- creasingly wider roads and thousands of acres of city and suburban parking lots. Trains, streetcars and subways on the other hand only need a pair of double tracks to be in business. When York council decided a year ago to expropriate IM homes to re- place parkland being lost to the Spa- dina expressway, homeowners raised such a howl and stink over it that they forced council to back down and adopt alternate plans. We hope however that Chairman Dr. Ronald Christie and his school hoard will reconsider its decision to grab these people's little homes. The public as a whole views with great. distaste a council or a school board that expropriates a, house on one block so that a developer may line his pockets by building an apartment on another block. Third; since York council and school board obviously were warned that the Jane Woolner complex site would generate an enormous number of school children, why didn't they require the developer to provide the school site since he is the one who is making the financial killing? If the unhappy victims of Mariposa, Pritchard and French hope to save their homes therefore. they too had better get on the telephones and start hollering. CH 7-6590 Searlat Albright, O.D. optometrut _ 359 Kulo St. Jun an"! d Dundn " ”Quinn " Abnolnfmom 1894 Weston Rd, Weston J. R. Currie, 0.0. For Appointment Call CH 1-0701 Pruidom W. J. GALLICHAN OPTOMETRY STANDARD SECURITIES llMlTED OpOomMrisO 7662944 us' ttiGliitGir. 17:43:," 6358:» Phonon 20-6“! in. 241-2091 Member Toroplq _ Stock, Exghnnne W. J. GALLICHAN mt. REAL nun I msuunc: 7664134 ”gums Mom “men INVESTMENTS REAL ESTATE J. "tur/v-rr-ora,"";;"-, LSD-more problems than answers Its discoverer. Dr. Albert Hofmann describes it this way. " had to leave my work in the lab and go home because I felt strangely restless and dizzy. Once there I lay down and sank into a not unpleasant delerium which was marked by an extreme degree of farr tasy. I saw fantastic visions of extraordinary vividness ac- companied by a kaleidoscopic display of intense color swirl- ing around me. It lasted two hours," he said. A POTENT DRUG LSD is a drug, extremely potent in small amounts. says WII'on WOI'OVI what it would be like taking LSD? One headache that was less prevalent years ago was the use of drugs among teenagers and especially the latest drug By MARION GUNDY When you hear of the prob. lems parents are having with teenagers in boroughs of North York and York and else- where in Metro today. you look back to when you were an llryearmld yourself and wonder if adults then worried mnuch about their off spring as parents do today! Have you ever wondered Marsh, Goulding & a. Chartered Account-M: 1969 Wong» [and ACCOUNTANTS Chartered AuounMM 1730 Weston Road C. W. LEASK I!” WISTON " TORONTO " “Now get with it, mob! Two slips and you're OUT!" CH 1-1129 CH 4d06T Drugs and teenagers The Borough of North York In. doeluod Monday, Avon" 5, "" I. to 'tte CIVIC HOLIDAY hr PM cum!» you and toque-h um all elm-m Those who use LSD don't want to wait for the Answers, they want to know now. Current concern. is focused on the hippy sub-culture in Yorkville, says Dr. Smart. Every deviant culture evokes scorn and disapproval within the larger community. These sub-cultures tend to threaten and undermine the values, customs and morals of the larger society. Older hippies probably re join society and resume con. Many people would like to see the area razed and its in- habitants dispersed into the army. work camps ete. There is the assumption that the hip, pies are merely lazy. dirty and socially delinquynt. WHY TAKE LSD But this does not answer the question of why all these young people go there, why there is a need for Yorkville if all is well in society. Why do they take LSD and other hallucinngens? The Yorkville population is a young one with the major- ity between " and 23. Most hippies have a limited stay and leave within I few years. A SEARCH FOR MEANING Some teenagers say that it is part of a search of mean- ing: to find out "Who am I," "What am I here for" and "Where is the World going" _- also: "How can I fit into it or change it." What makes drug-taking so prevalent among young people today: Dr. Smart reports the ma- jor effects of LSD are tart- able depending on the per- son's mood, expectations and previous experience with it. The main effects are visual and emotional. Most people feel numbness tingling, chills, nausea and physical weakness, especially in the early stages. Dr. Reginal Smart, a research psychologist with the Addic- tion Research Foundation, Tor. onto, in an article in Canada's Mental Health Journal. rom ‘Ohmnclvn "aaki. Borough of North York PROCLAMATION CIVIL HOLIDAY MONDAY, AUGUST s, 1960 1."... D. “who, SHOWS LITTLE PROMISE For the most part LSD pro- vides more problems than pro- mise: any: Dr. Smart, The risks of taking LSD seem very great. particularly if they ob. tain only a few hours of htl. lucinations and illusion from it, he said. No one is able to guarantee a safe dosage. Many cases are reported in which I single moderate dose of MD led to a profoundly adverse reaction in otherwise normal persons. Suicide and psychotic reactions sometimes occur. Another novel suggestion for MD reselrch concerns its use with terminally ill pl!- tients. ISD researcher E. Rut believes that many ter. minal cancer patients become depressed and isolated in their last few weeks of life and that LSD might give them some sort of training in prep-n- tion for death. He said that explicit pain was considerably reduced and a happy, oceanic feeling was usually obtained with LSD. These are the facts. How an we impress on our teen. agent the dangers of experi- menting with LSD. It may be that it will prove useful in developing or foster. ing creativity. It might allow people to approach aesthetic problems with fresh and uni, que attitudes. ventional middle class values. Perhaps Yorkville provided a place for monastic withdrawal with an emphasis not on the- ology but on self-understand- ing and social philosophy. What is most disturbing is the "tippy emphasis on drug-tak- ing. Prolonged adverse reac- tions from IBD and from STP have occurred in Toronto. It is obvious that hippies are cttl. ling for stronger wine and louder music, nys Dr. Smart. Doctors have been expert menting for 20 years trying to find a medical use for LED, without success. GARBAGE (OllECTION LSD EXPERIMENTS There will be no collection of garbage on Civic Holiday, Monday, August 6, 1968. Pick up will be made on your next regular collection day, Thursday, August 8, 1968. Commercial are“ receiving night pick up are requested to hold all waste indoors until the Tuesday evening following the holiday. BOROUGH OF NORTH YORK The main concern is naturally prices. anyway. Mrs. Ron Milsom said that if her husband didn't get the price he wanted. she would act like Mrs. Kate Bur, Res. and force the bulldozers to go around her. (Mrs. Burgess re. fused to give up her home in Tor. onto for high-rise apartments several years ago, and Cadillac Conan. Ltd. had to build around her). The York Education Board feels that this step is imperative. Over 300 children from the apart. ments on Woolner Ave. have no place to go to school. since George Syme can't pven accom- Three residents of Mariposa Ave. have recently made addi- tiong to their houses. and now complain that they should never have been issued building per- mits, since they will be torn down anvway. They are not very confident of victory. however. They seem to echo Mrs, Swarbick when she says: "We should furht it be, cause its silly, But who can fight the government?“ MIXED REACTIONS Mm. Tony Cimarilli says she ian't really upset about the. pro- ceedings. Her husband bought the house in November. and its the first house they have ever had. Still being a young couple, they won1 find it too hard to settle down elsewhere. provided they get their price. Although they are no newcom- erg to the area. the Lewises of 56 Maxims: Ave. don't mind moving either. They say they will join the ratepayers in their efforts to stopping expropriation, but after 25 years in the same place they any that they don't mind a change. They and their two children hope to go to Rexdale after the expropriation comes into effect, probably in spring. Albert Oakes, of 29 French Ave., has lived in his home for over 35 years. but says he will not fight against the order very hard. "DeveUpment is development", he declared, "and how can you Miss Isa-bells Robinson and her niece have lived in their home for 19 years. and are doubtful they will be able to get another one that suits them like the one they have now. They're not sum of what they will do. fight that?" ing for September, at which not only prices will be fought over, but the whole idea of expropria- tion on their block. Criminal . . . Irving Paisley believes that the Downsview base is a hazard to the residential areas that surround it. Serv. iced by Highway 400, 27, 401, the Don Valley Express. way, and the future Spadina Expressway and rapid transit system, Paisley thinks it is the best spot in Can. ada for the games. Another site that had been mentioned is Eglington flats, between Jane and Scarlett Rd., but this idea, too, has been ruled out as unfeasible. Allen threw cold water on this idea by chiming that the federal government won't make the site available. He will attempt to convince Metro Toronto that fac- ilities for the games should be incorporated into Metro's massive waterfront plans which include a jet-port and I. string of man-made islands which are to be complet- ed some time in the 1970'a. Allen has teen working months of overtime In at. tempting to convince the Canadian Olympic Auocia- tion that if this country gets the games, they proper] belong in Metropolitan Toronto, rather than in Hamil! ton or Montreal - two other centres making' bids. Former North York controller Irv Paisley his been attempting to convince Allen and others that tho best site for the games is the RCAF Downavlew hue. Metro chairman William Allen yesterday ruled out the pouibility of the 1976 Olympic amen being staged at either Downaview airport or the Keele St. eempu. of York University. _ CRAMPED FACILITIES Olympic: at Downsview hare, York U. are ruled out: Allen PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT BOROUGH OF NORTH YORK Trustee Norm Harris, chair. man of the property committee. says that the size of the lot is justified if you think of future needs. "At first I thought that the expropriated area was some- what large." he agreed, "but York has always suffered by ac- quiring scimpy lots. We have " ten been blamed for not getting them at cheap prices when they were available, so we have to ex- propriate at higher prices later on when the need developed. So now we are stuck with a lot of postage stamp schools, and have to expropriate some more." Although no date has been mentioned for the erection of the building, the board hopes to have it completed as soon as possible. Metro will help in providing funds, since the building of I new school comes from a com- mon pool of money, and will be built by a co-operative effort. or whether addition; win" iii made to it. A new school is also neces- sary to accommodate the stu. dents at St, Clair Ave., which will be torn down. The projected enrolment for the new school is 1100 students, almost double its present number. George Syme School WIS re- habilited a few years Mo, but the improvments were only au- perficial. No verdict has been given on whether all of the exist- ing structure will be vtorrt down, Residents on Pritchard Ave, at the far end of the block, feel that there is no need to expro- priate " far " their houses. since its a large block and they think the area will be superthr ous. (Continued from page I) module their own 592 childtcn adequately. Expropriation is the first step in a long range plan of upgrad- ing the school system. NO TARGET GATE The existing recreational Neil. ities are already very cramped, with each individual child hav. ing 42 sq. feet to play in. com. pared to the required 150 sq. feet proposed by the board. 248-1821 MEDICAL BUILDING 2160 Wench Rd. (at Church St. Traffic Light) DISPENSING OPTICIAN NEIL J. MOREAU Ocumt . Prescription: Complctad . Repairs . Duplication. & Fitting: Shut-In Service Weston Times JUSTIFIED SIZE more people read the week before each week than the

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy