Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Sep 1967, p. 9

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sERMAN WINS LIN (AP)--West Ger- pitalized on a first-half ch left France with 10 and trounced the visit- ichmen 5-1 Wednesday an international soccer | West Berlin. splay tee . AWA TV PLY Lid. » Rd. E., Oshowe ROYAL INTRE Rd. $., Oshawe tario ction men- tered . and EVEN STORM BROUGHT OUT COLORFUL ARRAY OF UMBRELLAS .-. Sandy Langmaid, 13, Grade 9 Student At McLaughlin, Had Red, White Cover re eaeaaeapnarntann RAIN CAN'T STOP DAILY STROLL .-»Mrs. Jan Joniec And Son Adam Undaunted Kurelo May Oversee Auditorium Complex Board of control Thursday ap- proved a recommendation from the Civic Auditorium board of management that William Kurelo, manager of the Civic Auditorium, be designated direc- tor. They also agreed that, under the board, he should be in charge of the whole complex, taking in the new recreation centre and swimming pool, with a higher rate of pay. The recommendation now goes to city council for endorse-| ment. | Moving the recommendation, Con. Frank McCallum said that} Mr. Kurelo would be taking on} nile as BAN Spring Date For Parade 'The Ontario Regiment's cere- monial parade of "Trooping the Guidon'" will likely be held néxt spring, says Lieutenant Colonel L. P. Tiggelers, CD, commanding officer of the rez- iment. The regiment postponed the Sunday, Sept. 24, ceremony be- cause of training commitments outlined in the regiment's new tasks. Col. Tiggelers said the reyi- ment is "'so heavily committed to centennial celebrations' that it has been unable to 'squeeze in" the trooping. a big job. "I would not like to have it for the next six months," he said. "I think we are very fortunate in having a man of Mr. Kurelo's ability to run the auditorium." He said Mr. Kurelo had re- ceived a call at home at 2 a.m. that every available light was on in the new recreation centre and swimming pool, and had had to turn out of bed to put things right. "We need somebody in over- all authority," said Con. Mc- Callum, "and he is the man to do the job we expect him to do." SAVING Mayor Ernest Marks said he} imagined with the new appoint- ment there would be a saving in costs, and Con. McCallum agreed this was so. On the question of a revision of prices at the pool, he said he did not think the charges were out of reach at all. The committee had: to cope with increases in the wages of staff, and unless the city was in a position to decide it was going to foot the bill, it would have to leave it to the management committee to deal with the situation in the best way pos- sible. : The full recommendation of the board of management, which was approved, read as follows: 1. That the Oshawa Civic Auditorium complex and arenas be placed under the jurisdiction of the board of torium, 2, That the bylaw estab- lishing the board of manage- ment be amended according- ly. 3. That Mr. William Kurelo's new post be designated as direc- |tor of the auditorium complex }and arenas. 4. That the man- | agers of the arenas be directed to report to Mr. Kurelo. 5. That Mr. Kurelo be directed to re- port to the board of manage- ment. Open House Attracts 600 To Pine Ridge Festival BOWMANVILLE (Staff) --| Regiment guard at 3:30 p.m. Pine Ridge training school for) The, at geese en oo Hoc' SEAN a 17-gun salute from the Sher- boys received about 600 guests hat talks ana the: uand: and at last night's opening of its marching guard will take part centennial September festival, | in the parade. which continues today and to-| Others in the parade are: morrow. | majorettes, wagons, horses and Douglas Penfold, assistant/ riders, clowns, a cadet march- deputy minister of reform in-)ing group, about 30 antique stitutions, represented Reform cars from Orono and Oshawa, Institutions Minister Allan Gros-|@ band of Curve Lake Indians sman, who was unable to at- R CANT KEEP PEOPLE INSIDE FOR LONG SCHOOL CROSSING GUARDS ON JOB IN ALL TYPES OF WEATHER ste Rs Licata «+» Reflections Of Homeward-Bound School Children Mirrored On Wet Pavement Jaycees Will Sponsor Public Election Forum She Simes |OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1967) Three Oshawa Candidates Invited To Participate Three candidates aspiring to;than 43,000 in Oshawa and WHITBY OPP ISSUE WARNING win Oshawa riding in Ontario's Hhnger beovee + ot os inp ng of Ontario South, loca' provincial election are expected) immediately: west: of CUE to match political strengths Oct.| Advanced polling in Durham E T RS IN AREA }11 at a public election forum. riding will be held Oct. 12, 18 CHILD MOL S$ E Oshawa Junior Chamber of|and 14 (standard advance pol- WHITBY (Staff) -- Poten- tial child molesters are known to be active in Ontario County according to a spokesman for the Whitby Detachment of the Ontario Provincial Police. Constable Gary Chapman, detachment spokesman, re- vealed that attempts by strangers to pick up children with cars have taken place, especially in the Oshawa, Whitby, and Pickering area. At least three unsuccessful attempts have been made in the past week and a half and possibly more unreported at- tempts were made, according to Constable Chapman. He said that so far the chil- dren concerned have been wise enough to refuse rides but "parents are urged to give frequent reminders to their children of the serious dangers involved in such uc- currences."' | # ep |Commerce announced today it\ling dates in the election) with ce 'ae | will sponsor the event at Hotel|polls at Bowmanville and Port een aon oactiod 'fe geuteancen Genosha, in a reception room| Hope town halls and Millbrook's they shouldn't even "atop 16 with a capacity to hold about| Orange Hall. Times for advance talk: Hat head straight fo anh 300 people. polling are from 8 a.m. to 5 adult they are familiar with," |, The forum program will al- Pim. and 7 to'10.p.1n, Tie entire aiid the police officer: \low 10-minute introductory ad-|election will run on standard He asked that if possible, dresses by each of the candi-| time, meaning early voters must children should be advised to |4ates -- James Potticary, Lib-/advance these " try to remember the appear- |€t@l, Albert Walker, Progress-/ an hour, a5 the area will: sit ance of the driver and car or |iv@ Conservative, and Clifford be on daylight saving time until Pilkey, New Democratic Party.|the end of October. from the stranger and to re- |the actual vote, will begin at the licence number. However, : The political event, which Rain Halts port the incident to the |/8 p.m. parents. Parents in turn should contact police immedi- ately to enable them to make a swift search for the sus- pect." Constable Chapman there may be more than one potential child molester in the area, Three different descrip- tions have been given thus far he said. and three floats of "Uncle tend the open house. |Bobby" TV animals from Bow- A } for. the depart-| manville. In City Crash | Gwendalyn Mitchell, 312 Wil-| son Road South, was transfer- red to Toronto General Hospital early this morning after she was injured in a two-car col- lision at Ritson Road and Olive Avenue. Mrs. Mitchell's condition was described as fair today. She suf- fered compound fractures of the skull. Christine Ann Mitchell, 2%, 'daughter of Mrs. Mitchell, was also injured in the accident. She is listed in satisfactory condi- tion today in Oshawa General a aaa with a fractured right eg. i The driver of the second ve- hicle, Antoni Magda, 343 Arthur St., received a cut head in the accident. Damage to the Mitchell car was estimated at $1,500 while the Magda vehicle received | Woman Injured?" in Saturday's par-|Shows are also scheduled for J ade and inspeet the guard of| tomorrow. and_ aerobatic ment said Mr. Grossman will] Skydiving the Ontario Regiment at the) Five bonfires will be built school. jon the school grounds. About Kingsway College Band and|150 elm trees, diseased earlier Cobourg's _ Brookside school/ this year, will be used for "The choir entertained guests with|Burning of the Elms" at 7:30 selections from the 'Sound of/P.™m. Music" and songs like '"This| Thirty Curve Lake Indians Land is Our Land," and "Can-| Will stage a pow-wow and a ada." The band will perform| fireworks display, starting at at Expo 67 in October. |9 p. Exhibits by some of the 140) a boys who attend the school and) TWO IN HOSPITAL local institutions were shown in) BOWMANVILLE (Staff) -- the school's "tent village'. on|Two women were taken to Osh- the campus and in the gym-jawa General Hospital with in-| nasium. Fourteen marquis tents|juries suffered in a _ two-car have been set up and will be}crash on the Macdonald-Cartier on display today and Saturday.|Freeway, two miles west of Five high schools in Darling-|Courtice, at noon Thursday. ton Township will participate/The accident, which took place in the festival events. jin the eastbound lane, resulted Dormitories, shops and aca-|in the driver of one car, Mrs. demic classes will be open for| Helen Burgess, being taken to public inspection during the/hospital with facial injuries and three-day festival. ja dislocated hip. A passenger in A large parade will begin at |the second vehicle, Mrs. Kath- 2 p.m. tomorrow from Centraljleen Cook, 20 Rock Ave., Kit- School and end at Pine Ridge management for the Civic Audi- $850 in damage. PORT HOPE - Ontario Lib- eral leader Robert Nixon told about 200 persons here last night that farmers and other groups must be given the opportunity to effectively air their griev- ances. He was speaking in sup- port of E. Richard Lovekin, Liberal candidate in Durham Riding ernment in Ontario would re- vitalize the legislature's all- party standing committee on agriculture and make it into a forum for discussion and action. mind would be unlike anything we have had before. It would have a permanent chairman elected annually by the com- mittee members, a competent research staff and the com- plete co-operation of the govern- chener, received undisclosed in- for an inspection of the Ontario| juries. ment to call farm groups, indi- Mr. Nixon said a Liberal gov-| "The committee I have in| Ontario Liberal Leader Would Revitalize Forum vidual producers and _ expert witnesses, The hearing would be open to the public and last as long as necessary. With a per- manent chairman the commit- tee would be free to meet when- ever an emergency arose and session," he said. Mr. Lovekin said the Robarts' government had failed the people in the basic fields of food and housing. '"'The Tory ship of state is suffering from a dry rot, a finger could be poked through it," he said. "The Liberal Party, as in the | past, stands for reform. It does not represent any. faction but is for the greatest good for the greatest number of people. The Conservatve government has spent astronomical sums on edu- cation yet no one is happy," Mr. Lovekin said. |will be subjected to screening said |by a three - member Jaycee} men Club's light bulb selling | not when the legislature was in the officer felt that "the main | According to plans for the 2 forum, candidates would face 1g t ale thing is for the child to get would bring election campaign- away as quickly as possible jing to a height six days before questions from the floor follow- ing their speeches, Questions Rain has temporarily put the damper on the Oshawa Kins- committee sn z |program, but members plan to The junior commerce group! continue their door - Peo door plans heavy advertisement of! j the event and it could result|Gay Monday and Wednes- in a full house. West Rouge Ratepayers' As. sociation is sponsoring a public} forum, Oct. 10, at West Rouge " . rs Public School, for three candi-|Selling in the two evenings dates in the Ontario South race-| Scheduled -- Wednesday and Thomas Edwards, NDP, Wil-|Z/ursday. But in that hour, he liam "Bill" Newman, PC, and|S2id, "We sold 15 per cent of Alban Ward, Liberal. The bulk| Ur bulbs, and two out of three of that meeting, starting at| homes were buying. About 65 8:15 p.m., will be based on a|members were out. question-and-answer format. | Bill Leask, chairman of the project, said the club has man- aged to put in only one hour of Profits from the "bag of Meantime, all three Oshawa|bulbs" sales will be used for aspirants began the day can-|such Kinsmen projects as Hills- vassing morning work shifts of|dale Manor, and various sports the city's industrial work force) Programs. and (weather permitting) had) Members hope to sell 2,500 plans for a full day of door-|bags at two dollars each, for a knocking or canvassing in bus-|total income of $5,000. Retail iness areas. No public engage- value of the bulbs is $2.05. ments were scheduled for to-| If the weather improves, day or tomorrow, and all will|Kinsmen are hoping to have 125 break off campaigning Sunday| members out next week. but will resume Monday. In Durham riding, running TO RESTORE CHURCH off Oshawa's eastern shoulder,|) ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--The returning officer Lyall Lowery|Newfoundland Historic Trust, announced about 23,600 constit-|formed a year ago to preserve uents will be eligible to vote.|the province's historic build- The figure represents an in-/ings, has raised $6,000 for resto. crease of some 1,640 eligiblejration work on the 133-year-old voters since 1963. There are/Anglican church at nearby some 21,208 names on voters' |Quidi Vidi. The trust hopes to lists in Ontario riding (coveringjhave the church turned into a most of Ontario county); more|museum. WHAT DOES ARP MEAN TO YOU? SOME ADMINISTRATORS ENDORSE PROGRAM Retraining Duplication Possibility Bothers Board Chairman (This {is the fourth in series of articles on the On- like a a about the fact that he comprehensive __re- would a new school?" tiplicity of things that go into 'Is this the best way to imple- ment the program? Will it be Similar views were expressed by other members of the voca- tings Ltd., the pattern department at Fit- and editor of The ings" as to whether the pro- gram. is properly administered concerned, but not as many as this." tario Manpower Retraining Program, especially as it af- fects Oshawa and district to- day.) By JACK GEARIN of The Times Staff Long range planning today is difficult for the Oshawa admin- istrators of the Ontario Man- power Retraining Program. Some maintain an optimistic front. They vow that OMRP has a rosy future, that it will be a continuing thing. Others express more caution about its future, but strongly en- dorse OMRP in principle. Chairman Stanley E. Lovell of the board of education, an avowed champion of OMRP, is typical of some officials who openly ask pertinent questions about it. Mr, Lovell makes no bones appraisal of the entire technical training set-up in Oshawa and district. Trustee T. D. "Tommy" Thomas has similar views, but he would like to see a federal commission look into the sub- ject on a national scale. Mr. Lovell wonders if OMRP is being operated as "econom- ically' as it should be. He asks: "If we open the proposed new manpower centre, will it not be duplicating certain of our facil- ities in technical retraining at McLaughlin and Eastdale, not mention the new Durham Tech- nical College? "T wonder if we won't be duplicating such things as mor- tar and bricks, building insur- ance, . expensive machinery, caretaker service and the mul- The board chairman did not say that there was duplication, or that there will be in future, but added: "The thought of possible duplication disturbs me greatly. It would represent a grave and costly error. There are many things urgently needed today' in education, especially primary education and facilities for the physically handicapped, to name two. We are tending more and more to educate the under- educated and it can be a costly process." Mr, Lovell is emphatic on an- other point -- he would like some official assurance from the two senior governments that OMRP will be what he calls "a continuing process"', "I believe in the program, but we should ask ourselves: the least-costly way for the tax- payers while giving the best re- sults?' " The lengthy delay of the two senior governments in reaching full accord on major issues, such as who will pay for the centre, has had a_ frustrating effect on some trustee-planners. There is also the gnawing possibility that OMRP could be drastically reduced in size and scope overnight by the federal government, which currently pays all bills. OTHER VIEWS H. C. Andrews, a labor repre- sentative on the board of, edu- cation's 12-man advisory voca- tional committee, said without equivocation that OMRP was here to stay, regardless of whether it was in a state of flux, a tional committee, an advisory group to the board without vote powers, such as J. J. Giasson, chairman John Larmond, and Gordon Wilson. Mr. Andrews said it was most essential today, with technology changes taking place, to con- tinually upgrade the standards of workers. "I think some major mis- takes were made when the adult retraining program was launched, but wasn't this to be expected in such a vast and ambitious program?" he asked. "The most important thing is that it is settling into a pattern now which reflects a more def- inite and concrete program. Great progress has been made in ironing out the rough parts of the program," he added. Mr. Andrews, an employee in Steelworker, said he would like to see the proposed new OMRP centre at the Durham College of Applied Arts and Technology. "If we procrastinated about building the centre, the provin- cial government would take it out of our hands altogether and get somebody else to administer it here. This has happened in other Ontario centres," he added. Mr. Andrews said OMRP's most important achievement to date was that it kept many off the relief rolls. He was con- vinced, he said, that most of the graduates were working. MIXED FEELINGS Trustee Leo Glover is another strong supporter of OMRP on the Oshawa Board of Educa- tion, but he has "mixed feel- today from the level of the two senior governments. "I think the entire adult re- training concept was a political bandwagon at the start without too much idea as to how it could be effectively implemented," he said. '"'Nobody today at the local government level seems to know where they stand." He referred to the proposed new OMRP centre here as an example of the "confusion" that exists. "We don't even know what the exact cost will be," -he add- ed. "You try to plan something concrete and you run into all kinds of roadblocks. There are similar difficulties, of course, in planning any school building where government grants are Mr. Glover said many people were critical because OMRP had not progressed "'with leaps and bounds', local administra- tors and officials were slowed down by official indecision "higher up". "For example, the depart- ment of education, Toronto, suggested that the proposed new centre may be of factory design," said Mr. Glover. "Some of us naturally took this to mean it would be so designed so that it would not be obsolete if the' program was disbanded and would be serviceable for other' uses. The department didn't say this, but why would they propose a factory design for an adult retraining centre?" SEE ADULT RETRAINING Contiued on Page 13

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