Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Dec 1965, p. 5

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age a ame eRe | Dunbarton Shift Plan Seen Ending In April PICKERING (Staff) --A spe- cial meeting of the Pickering and District High School Board was held Tuesday night to answer questions by an elected délegation regarding the shift system at the Dunbarton High School and future high school planning. At its meeting two weeks ago, the board answered a brief from the delegation regarding the high school problems in Picker- ing Township but the delegation felt its questions had not been adequately answered and asked for a special meeting to discuss its grievances further. | Delegation Spokesman Donald Quick, of West Rouge, told the board the entire problem in per- spective stemmed from the shift Schools would have a capacity of 3,200 with a forecast of 2,700 students. He said he could not tell precisely how long it would take to finish the proposed Ajax High. School addition but that architect's drawings were almost completed and that he believed agreement from muni- cipalities was forthcoming. Pickering High School had been scheduled for completion by Cfiristmas but that due to the strike last summer the date for completion had been set ahead three months. PORTABLES UNSUITABLE Mr. Quick asked the board that if portables had been con- structed in May could they not have alleviated the shift prob- system at Dunbarton High School and asked when it would | be terminated. | TO END IN APRIL | Board Chairman Gordon Bray) said the shift system at Dunbar-'| 'pn had been beyond the board's | lem? | Chairman Bray said _ that yocational classrooms and shops were not adaptable to port- ables. Mr. Quick asked where the proposed 1969 high school would Gordon Bray said that the) (Pickering. )---~\ Monroe said he hoped Mrs. Pentland was wrong about the number of dropouts and failures and that this was not indicated jto date. He said the school had | not lost any staff because of the 'shift system, CONCERNED WITH PLANNING Glen Julian, of Fairport Beach, said he was concerned about board planning and stated the board had consistently not put high schools where the need is and the board had been reluc- jtant to place a school west of | Pickering Village, south of High- jway 401, where the population jis. Mr. Julian said he did not |see the planning in constructing |a 57-room school in a village of / 1,600. | Chairman Gordon Bray said | the board was not and never had been oriented to the Village of Mr, Juliafi said that, in consid- ering a location for an admin- istrative building site, some Bins to avoid and that the/he located and was informed|thought would be given to plac- ift would end on April 1 when that it would be placed in' an/ing it where the people are. the Pickering District High School is completed. | The board was asked if it could by some means terminate the shift system earlier and if a shift system would again be necessary because of the exten- sive expansion in the high school | system. Mr. Bray informed the dele- gates the board would do every-| area where. development and probable development warran made the site of a future high school public knowledge the pub- lic would haye to pay for it. Mrs. K. Pentland, of Rouge Hills, said she believed that the number of failures and drop- outs would cost the taxpayers more then if they had spent! E. P. MeCormack asked the t-| board if it was aware that the! ed it, Mr. Bray said if the board| Planning board had approved an| 'application for high rise apart-| ----- ments at the foot of French- man's Bay and had approved the zoning changes allowing 45 units per acre instead of 20. The board said it had been unaware of the high rise apart- ments in.the Bay Ridges area but that it would look into the thing in its power to avoid an-|some money on portables. She matter other shift system occurring in| the future. Vice Chairman David Word-| ley said that by next September | the Pickering District High' said she was sure that would be many more repeaters and dropouts because of the shift system at Dunbarton. Dunbarton Principal, K. D BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE Magistrate Tells Accused | there | __ Hockuy Clinic Attracts 450 -- About 450 BOWMANVILLE | boys attended the minor hockey/new year of municipal ace clinic, sponsored by the Bow- manville Recreation Depart- | ment, Monday, at the Bowman-|11 a.m. the Whitby Town coun ville Arena. The clinic con- Ali-round cords are diffi- cult attain. When a Girl Guidé company has one award) winner it is an achievement; but when there are three winners of | |opening days. Both town coun-} the Public Utilities Commission and the Whitby Community Planning Board, hay inaugural meetings to open the} | tles. Monday morning, Jan. 3, at| cil will hold its inaugural meet- Pp. the Whitby Public School Board| meetings this coveted award at the same time it is little short of a miracle. The First Whitby Girl Guide Company had this distinction: recent- Thitby Council Plans Its Inaugural Meeting WHITBY (Staff) -- January|cial meeting of the new year\ing the inaugural the council onter and theft, and attempted is expected to be an exceeding-|with standing committees an-| will hold a short business meet-|nreak and enter. lly busy month, at least in its) nounced. |BOARDS TO MEET On Tuesday evening, Jan. 4, e scheduled| School Board will hold its in augual meeting at the Anderson) carry over into the second week | High School, beginning at 7.30 of J3 4 b nm } Wednesday evening, Jan. 5, ----e WHITBY GUIDES RECEIVE GOLD CORDS ly. The award winners, from left, are Sandra Rycroft, Sue Read and Sarah Ink- = Mann. OR Oe jp eee SST sy Se BEFORE THE MAGis 5 Silinis WHITBY (Staff) -- A charge of failure to feed impounded animals, against Whitby pound keeper George Chase, was with- drawn Tuesday at the request of Crown Attorney Bruce Affieck. Mr. Affleck said the charge had been laid under the Pounds Act, and under this act there was no provisions for dogs. Mr. Chase was charged by Humane Society Inspector Al Davidson, after an incident at ti: Whitby pound Oct. 28. A police officer with the town of Whitby, Robert Gray, was remanded to Jan. 18, after ap- pearing on charges of common assault and causing a dis- turbance. The charges were laid by Wil- liam Hatch of Whitby. No plea was taken. A year-old Oshawa man was sent to reformatory for 12 pen. ~--Oshawa Times Photo jing to wind up any loose ends} and prepare for the new year. PUC INAUGURAL Inaugural meetings will also of January grith the Public Util- ities Commission and Whitby Community Planning Board scheduled for the swings into the lime-light with! evenings of Jan. 11. months, after being convicted of | possession of stolen property. | Keith Howard was also sen-| jtenced to six months indefinite. | Howard, the court was told, | sold a stolen television set to a} }man for $50 after meeting him jin the Cadillac Hotel cocktail j lounge. | Three Port Perry youths were jremanded in custody for sen- | tence until Jan. 5 in Port Perry | after being convicted of break, Robert Peterman, 19, Scott | Rollo, 16 and Gordon McGowan, 18, the court was told, tried to | Pry open the door of a house | WEBSTER | Lumber & Supply Charge Is Withdrawn Against Pound-keeper belonging to Mrs. Ira Bentley returned to the house, forced their. way in and stole $300 and had been scared off. Rollo and McGowan had later worth of R Peterman said he had gone home after the first attempt and had gone to bed. McGowan was also sentenced to 12 months definite and six months' indefinite when he ap- peared for sentence on a charge of car theft. For driving while under sus- pension, Kenneth Finch of Mar- mora, was fined $150 and costs or 30 days in jail. Finch, the court learned, was stopped while driving his car on) the Third Concession. The fine was made peremptory. Bail in the case of Roland H. Steane, 63, of RR 3, Stouffville, who was charged with posses, sion of stolen property, was re- duced to $2,000. The original bail was set at $20,000. CATTLE NEED RANGE In arid parts of western Texas, it takes 25 acres of land | V.-La Cinke ear eo wwers In Rough Seas MIAMI (AP)--Fourteen Bim- ini-bound skin divers, most from the Chicago area, took a pre- mature swim Tuesday when their 75-foot yacht sank in rough seas about 17 miles east of here. Logan LaChance of North Brook, I), ,near Chicago, owner of the vessel and organizer of the cruise, said the bottom of the craft apparently was pounded out, : The 12 men and two women were picked up by the tanker, AMOCO Delaware, after spend- ing about two hours in life rafts. One-Stop DECORATING SHOP @ Wellpaper end Murels Custem Draperies DODD & SOUTER DECOR CENTRE LTD. 107 Byron St. $., Whitby PHONE 668.5862 to support one cow. NOW AS WE APPROACH THE NEW. YEAR IS THE TRADITIONAL TIME TO 4 a Not To Press His Luck BOWMANVILLE -- When two) chain right in front of the police men both claimed ownership of; station. two bottles of rum the officer' Both youths had been drink- charged both with 'illegal pos-|ing. Thompson was charged session. Harold Lloyd Cornish,|with dangerous driving and 23 Temperance st., Bowman-|Greenley with public intoxica- ville, pleaded guilty in Magis-! tion. trate's court here Tuesday.| Three prisoners were occupy-| Albert Ernest West, Orono,)ing the men's cell so the two pleaded not guilty. new arrivals were placed in the} tinues through Thursday of this|ing in the town office with}an inaugural meeting beginning) The puC meeting will be in) week. |Mayor-elect Desmond Newman/at 7.30 p.m. at the Kathleen) the PUG building, Brock st. s.,| Carl Brewer, a former de-| taking office. Two new council-|Rowe school on .Athol Street) while the planning board will| fenceman vith the 'Toronto|lors, Mrs. Ileen Moore and Hugh) Norman Edmondson is the only) meet in the planning board! Maple Leafs, was on hand to| O'Connell will also take office| new trustee taking office. lroom at the town hall. conduct Monday's clinic. He|on the 1966-67 council while the) Saturday, 1 p.m. at theWhit-) wy. fret scheduled public| was kept busy from 8 a.m, tojincumbents, Reeve Everettjby Township Council | Cham! chool board meeting of the new) 2.45 p.m. teaching hockey funda-| Quantrill, Deputy Reeve George) bers, an inaugural meeting will ear ilowing the inmieunl | mentals. He will be back Thurs-|Brooks and Councillors Bobbie) be held with Reeve John Dry-) in be hold at the het inte : »| day to review the fundamentals| Attersley, Vernon MacCarl, Har-|den. again presiding. John} in} taught during the last three old Slichter and Tom Edwards|Batty will be on hand as the oe Rowe school January] West, a poolroom employee, | ladies' cell. This was surround-|42¥S and to put the various explained that he had lent his\ed with heavy gauge pire|8toups through a series of make ready for another term in| newly elected deputy reeve. office. Two new councillors, Ne il car to Cornish to go to Oshawa! screen instead of the customary SC™mmages. Swinging back into the coun-|Grandy and Jim Brady, will to buy him two bottles of any-|steel bars. During the night A number of minor hockey thing from the liquor store. |league coaches are involved in 701 Brock St, N., Whitby PH: 668-4451 See us today for... inum Doors and Windows sulation, Weether Stripping, In feet -- Everything te Win- terize your Home. REVIEW THE PAST LOOK TO THE PUTURE YOU SHOULD REVIEW YOUR WILL TO PROVIDE FOR THE FUTURE OF YOUR FAMILY BROCK -- One Complete Program Each WHITBY _ Evening -- Starting At 7:30 Our long experience in the planning and handling of Estates can be of great value to you. » ban "diene neecemetaeeenetieel SONGS AND SORCERY! vw. ¥ Mirthfull Magical!" 308 DUNDAS §T. W. Begins at 9:20 P.M. Starting January Ist all farm employees join 2,000,000 other Ontario workers with complete protection under Workmen's Compensation 'WHITBY DISTRICT BOWLING SCORES: cil chambers around 8 p.m. ng Ben ph ogee h get Bw cown il will hold its first offi-| around the council table. Foliow- they manave k it council w Cornish returned and parked in ing in tig tatoee, wicket down the clinic. They big , -- mee the alley near the pool room.}a plywood panel in an outer) ' fO9IG) WE 5 é 2. 8 When the officer entered and| door and escaped. jstone, Harvey Webster, Bob rinity omen ect asked who owned the two} ler; ening 'Thwmeon_ ned ns lets, J0,Fawle K ath : West said they were his. Cor-|elient was essentially a good ee ee A dg nish insisted they belonged to|lad and blamed the exuberance Aan Doug Brough ~ Bud eW 1cers or him. He sald he had only enough| of youth and the consumption of| Petfect and Doug Parkin. | cow, oe ae em ogi a Rae ENE Soviet Plan ficers for 1966 were installed vod bog nef bhag eee Ae f coe | Rev. G. Ward at the meeting to help w' S expenses on| for himself. : The Crown noted that neither! of the Trinity United Churchja lecture tour in Ontario. | Magistrate R. B. Baxter fined youth had a previous record,| Wonen. The éiticare ave It was announced the congre days, and dismissed the charge) the parking lot and to the police| Unchan ed | -- -- |cell be estimated and paid be-| Ward; past president, Mrs. Stu-/at 8 p.m. Jan. 31. "But don't press your luck| fore final disposition of the case. art James; president, Mrs. Nel-| Mrs. James expressed a ° ie | 7 d 8} b » Mrs, Nel-| Mrs, J : 8! ppre-| and come back again, warned, Magistrate R. B. Baxter ad- son Osborne: first vice-presi-|ciation to. the members for happy to have the police seize, dent, Mrs. Ken Sumersford; re-|their support during the past two your car, sell it and turn the; A 20-year-old Newcastle man pooh over to the Province of} was placed on suspended sen- ny gral Joab feig news anal- assistant secretary, Mrs. A. Ia) ~ ntario."' tence for two years following|yst for the official Soviet news | : Apecannia re. | his conviction for assault on a/ agency Tass said Tuesday there mo0ey; corresponding aecre An Enniskillen youth was con-| 16-year-old girl. Bond was set at; will-be-no-change in basic So-|tary, Mrs._E. Laird; treasurer, | ne cli peed pos to yA witness fees ere ona a ' ter. (Uteh Miss Mary Jewell. ave his licence suspended for) amounting to $31. Analyst A. Sovetoy-character- . ; i . three months. | Judy Mclean, Alldread's for-|ized as "'wishful thinking hopes picaranggii yp oid ghey He was also charged jointly| mer girl friend, had accepted a|for a radical reappraisal of the|Prostam and_ literature, Mrs py geting with Mi af dam-| Bowmanville with several other gag naw igh Fine eg geal press, Mrs, Stan McMurter; age to the Bowmanville police} young people. They took the, Soviet leaders who took over ards >ruiti cells and with escaping custody./ wrong turn and found them-|from premier Nikita Khrush- stewartabip : ane Nebigg te Both pleaded guilty to the|selves on the Lakeshore rd, | chev last year kept peaceful co-|Mrs. Brooks; friendship an epee ay ne Thompson, | Be ---- a car following] Policy, Tyr they ant inter-|Mrs. S. James; social, Mrs. with Greenley as his passenger,|them. The driver of the lead) preted it to-mean that relations ' had tried to enter the 1GA| car took a corner too fast and|With the United States had to stg ome fe oo 26r parking lot after hours. Their| the vehicle slid into the ditch.|freeze because of the Viet Nam ra - an ee les ion, Mrs. L. Mason; finance, chain anchored to the steel top| dread, in a jealous rage, had| Sovetov, in an article for the|M of a water catch basin. The) tried to kick in the car window.| January issue of the magazine|K, Hutchison, canvener; Mrs. chain caught on the car and| When she attempted to stop|International Affairs, summar-|S. Morrison and Mrs. L. Me- pulled the 250-pound steel top| him he struck her ized Monday by Tass, wrote: |Feeters; nominating commit-| away and proceeded west the|tion the difference in your|peaceful coexistence with the N. Reynolds; archivist, Mrs. C.| steel top, dragged by the chain, ages," stated Magistrate R. B.| Soviet Union are vain if the|Inez; missionry and Christian) whipped across the street strik-| Baxter. "You are to make no|leaders of some imperialist education, Mrs. Jack Dunn. | ng the north curb : s Representative to the official} At the next corner the ve-) this girl and if she tries to com.| Steps against any other socialist board, Mrs. N. Osborne; repre- hicle turned north and stopped. municate with you your bond Country." : \sentative to the .committee of Thompson and Greenley leaped| will immediately be termi-| In Soviet terminology, the stewards, Mrs. Waters and Miss| out and tried to loosen the| nated." United States is an imperialist |Mary Jewell; Christian educa-| ja socialist country. jmittee, Mrs, C. Morris and Mrs. ~ =i arson ce FE Dippell; missionary and | maintenance, Mrs. J. Dunn and | Mrs. A. C. Jennings, Saska-| Christmas Day in Toronto. They Cheap Water |Mrs. I. Munday. toon, Sask., is spending the win-| were dinner guests of Mr. and A NEM ter months at the home of her) Mrs. Ian Munro daughter and son-in-law, Mr To Be Scarce man, 105 Mary st. e., were Mr... BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) --| Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Minto and| and Mrs. Fred Stacey and chil-|/he United States "will never making a special application to the Workmen's-Compensation Board. And his Family? If they work on clude all medical expenses and pen- sions for permanent disability. How about the worker's family? With the co-operation of farm em- ployers throughout the Province, the Ontario Workmen's Compensation R. D. Humphreys, QC, repre-| Majarieson, Sam Snowden, Don bottles of rum found in the car,| , ; i | | money for two bottles and,|alcoho!l for this stupid episode. | ROWMANVILLE (TC) -- Of-) A donation was voted to the Cornish $20 and costs, or five | but insisted that the damages to} Honorary president, Mrs. G.|gational meeting will be held His Worship, "'or I shall be! journed the matter to Jan. 11. Next Year icording secretary, Mrs. Puk; |years. victed of dangerous driving.| $1,000. Alfred Alldread was or- viet policy toward the West in|Mrs. Waters; assistant treas-| with Michael Greenley, RR 4,|ride home to Newcastle from|interpretation of peaceful co-|Jackson; flowers, Mrs. Crago; charges. which leads to Port Hope. 'existence as the hasis of their |visiting, Mrs. Collison; supply, progress was barred by a link} Miss McLean told the court All-| war. Mrs. J. Munday; kitchen, Mrs. loose. When the car backed] "I am taking into considera-| "The hopes for a possibility of tee, Mrs. K. Squair and Mrs. | jattempt to communicate with\pOwer undertake aggressive pr ie _ - power and North Viet Nam is |tion, Mrs. J, Dunn; manse com-| and Mrs. W. L. Bradley, 404 M Holiday guests at the home of r. Ontario st. and Mrs. Matthew Bow- Thursday Nite Section their tsro sons, Christopher and/ dren, Carol, Jimmy, Janice and|'U" Out of water--but we will Dean, Minden, spent the holi-| Christine, of Janetville. run out of cheap water," an ex- | day weekend with Mr. and Mrs, pert sald today, Matthew Kerr, 204 Byron st. n. Holiday weekend guests at In coming years '"'it will cost| ° the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. A, | fantastic sums" to make water Mrs. H. C. Munro, president} Smith, 909 Bayview ave., were available where needed and to} of St. John the Evangelist}/Miss ena Riley, Barrie; Mrs.| Maintain quality, said Harvey! Catholic Women's League, visit-|A. E, Cousins and Grant Cou-| 0. Banks, a San Francisco con-! MEN'S BOWLING LEAGUE | December 23 results Legion Old Sweats 3, Post Office 0; County Bow! 2, Legion No. 2, 1; Ken! Smith Construction 3, Ottenbrites 0; Red Wings 2, Knights of Columbus 1; Firemen "A" 3, Legionnaires 0; Goold's Furni- | ture 3, Firemen "B" 0; Firemen 3, Wal- don Bros, 0; Jets 2, Lucky Strikes 1. Second Section Winners -- Ken Smith Construction. High Triples Bill Jordan 715, Marty ed Fairview Lodge and present- ed residents with gifts. Miss W. M. Boys has return- ed home after spending' the holiday weekend in Oakville as ; Donald Blake, student at Ed-|to set up "'integrated, over-all | the guest of Mrs. Albert Rankin.| monton University and his sis-| management of their water re-| ik | e Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bown, of Smiths Falls' were holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bown, 112 Kent st Miss Beverly Blucher is} spending her holidays at Osler Bluffs in the Blue Mountains attending the race schon! for skiers Mr. and Mrs, H. ©. Muny and daughter, Patricia, spe | sins, Brampton; Hofstead, Acton; W. D. Smith, Toronto and Mrs. J. K. Messer, of Abbington, Pa., U.S.A. Miss Janet ter, Miss Barbara Blake, a} nurse in training at' Edmonton University Hospital, spent the Christmas holidays with their parents, Mr, and Mrs. Gwilym} Blake, 1102 Henry st. They have returned to Alberta to resume their studies. spent the Christmas weekend in Sharbot Lake as guests of Mr.|are some steps in this direction, | u and Mrs. Lindsey Burke. | sultant on water resources de velopment Speaking to the American As- | sociation for the Advancement of Science, Banks urged states sources, hoth surface and ground water." . "States must act to protect their own interests in water for drinking, industry, recreation and fish and wildlife mainte- nance," he said, but only a few are doing so yet At the federal' level there is body & here of water law nor over-all 'policy,"' but there now he added Jordan 7037 Doug Allen 755, Merle Ree son 76), Dick Adams 782 Family Monuments =: 3 Created To Individual Requirements | STAFFORD BROS. : LTD. MONUMENTS 318 DUNDAS SAST 668-3552 Board is now able to provide full compensation protection starting January Ist. Protected how? With benefits up to $86.54 a week if an employee is In death cases there are allowances for funeral expenses and pensions for widows and children. Is this the same Workmen's Compensation that 2,000,000 men disabled for more than two calendar days by an on-the-job accident or related disease happening on or after January 1st. What about permanent disa- bility? He's covered. Benefits in- and women in other lines of work have protecting them? Exactly the same. What about the Farmer? He and his wife also can be covered by Workmen's Compensation, by The Workmen's Compensation Board, Ontario 90 Harbour Street, Toronto 1, (862-8411) District Offices: Kitchener (576-4180) Port Arthur (DI5-6509) North Bay ie ee (412-0200) Otia' wa. (720-3148) Windsor (256-5464) the same farm and get a stated wage, they are automatically covered, as is the Farm Employee. Is there a charge to the Farm Employee for this? No. Farm em- ployers provide this protection through assessments based on their 1966 payroll, payable in August. For full information, explanatory booklets and forms for reporting accidents, write or telephone:

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