2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, August 13, 1962 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN 'US. ToHear | WY; 1 toh ad Nineteen People Die | e e WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres-| nt Tl Hi ident Kennedy may offer an ad-| ' vance peek at his plans for a 1963 tax cut when he speaks to-| ki MUNICIPAL SURVEY READY FOR COUNCIL os ! The long-awaited study of Oshawa's civic administration set-up has been completed, but no early release date is antici- pated. j S Woods, Gordon and Co., the firm of Toronto municipal consultants that conducted the erty 4 -- an present their of 60 pages) to City Council. pres seclennsade pee) "This will require two or three meetings with Mayor night on taxes and the lagging United States economy. Most observers in and out of government were convinced he would reject suggestions that a quick tax cut offers the best chance of averting any early re- cession, | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Ontario had half the traffic jdeaths and more than half the total number of fatalities re- |ported across Canada during the weekend: A Canadian Press survey in- dicated that Ontario was the scene of 19 of Canada's 38 road Robert McLaughlin, 18, of |touched a 4,000-volt hydro line Penetanguishene, after his car) while climbing a tree in Niagara went out of control on the Pene-| Falls Saturday. tang road and turned over in a| Boris Lambross, 35, of Tor- ditch near Midland Fridayionto and his son Randy, 6, night. drowned in Murray Canal near |. Bruce York, 20, of Nobel and|Trenton Saturday, afler the \Julig Noganash, 20, of Shawa-|father, dived in to save the son jnaga, when their car swerved|who had fallen from a cabin through guard rails while ap-|cruiser. proaching a bridge, jumped 70) Richard Bastien, 9, and his feet across the Shawanaga brother Douglas, 8, of Sandwich |River and hit the bank on the|West Township near Windsor, lother side Saturday. drowned while fishing at Ojib- Paul Emile Prudhomme, 27,,W4Y, near the Detroit River his wife Fernande Margaret, 29,"/Sunday, ) and their two children Mare, 3,!, Angus Chapais, 49, of Longiac. and Carol, 18 months of the ot. | Indian Reserve, after he was |tawa suburb of Eastview, when) Struck by a car near Longlac, itheir car was struck by ag 4bout 170 miles. cast of the freight train at a level crossing Lakehead Saturday night. two miles north of Carlsbad Gerard William Sewell, 18, of Springs, about 10 miles east of|Kenora, when the car he was Kennedy was likely to give|/deaths and +29 of the 56 fatali- attention in his 7 p.m; |ties in the period from 6 p.m. television-radio address to his!Friday local times to midnight stalled requests for stand-by au- Sunday. thority to cut taxes and launch) Besides the traffic deaths, On- a public works program in the/tario had seven drownings and event of a recession. If Con*ithree accidental deaths from gress should approve these pro-| other causes. y : posals, the door would be kept; The survey does not include #\open for a possible tax cut later industrial accidents or known this year, suicides. Strong recommendations for Sonya Gremer, 4, of Peterbor- #\quick tax reductions have come ough, run over when she from such diverse quarters as jumped out of her father's the AFL - Thomas and councillors," said a spokesman for Woods, Gordon, who explained the routine to be followed from herein with the report. "We have a good deal of work before us now in ex- plaining the report to Coun- cil," he continued 'Council must be fully informed of our reasons for any proposed changes. It will be entirely up to Council whether such changes are made, or if the report will be released at all". Woods, Gordon has had six people working on the report since last March when it was started -- a charter- ed accountant, two engin- i eers (mechanical and indus- : "" trial), an Office System ex- pert, included. The group spent more than 680 man-hours to date on the project under the direction of D. B. Watson, who attended several Council meetings here with associates. The study, in part, has embraced City Council, standing committees of Council and the following boards or depart- ments; Clerk, Treasurer, including tax collector, Engineer, Solicitor, Assessment, Personnel, Purchasing, Industrial Com- mission, Planning, Welfare, Parks, Oshawa Recreation Com- mittee, Dog Control, Community Centre, Board of Health, Library Board and Cemetery committee. : The study has also covered the organization and function- ing of Council and its standing committees with reference to the establishing of policy and the direction and control of de- partment activities implementing policy. There are seven major terms of reference in the study. Council voted 9-4 last March to spend $10,700 on this "de- tailed" study of civic administration, which was $3,200 more than the cost of a similar study which Council promised to underwrite last January 15. Endorsation of the study, or survey, was one of the most progressive moves undertaken by the present Council; al- though there was some bitter opposition to it (especially from Aldermen Dafoe ahd Dyer) the majority went along with the plan because they felt that it could not but have a beneficial result The present civic administration set-up was designed for an era long since past and places a heavy burden on the shoulders of councillors, department heads and civic em- ployees alike. Finance Chairman Edgar F. Bastedo introduced the mo- tion recommending the study last March and steered the pro- ject over some "'rough" courses in Council. HAWK-EYES TO BOW IN TUESDAY NIGHT When local mention is made these days of the Toronto Argonauts (regardless of how irreverent it may be), the fact is often over-looked that the Scullers have an Oshawa affiliate. They are the Hawk-eyes, the local entry in the eight- team Junior Football Conference (along with Invictus, Tor- onto; Balmy Beach; Lakeshore Flyers; University of Tor- onto; Burlington; Niagara Falls and Scarborough). Quite frankly, the Hawk-eyes (while operating under the name of 'The Imps") never did get the support they de- served from local fans in bygone years, despite a deter- mined conscientious effort to put a strong team on the field. This is unfortunate, not only because the team is doing much to keep the game alive, but because it constantly pre- sents a high calibre of football that would surprise many of these stay-away fans who won't even grant the Hawks the courtesy of their attendance for one game. The point of the story is this --- the Hawk-eyes will make their 1962 debut at Kinsmen Stadium Tuesday night in an ex- hibition tilt against Kitchener-Waterloo Juniors. They richly deserve support. Manager Joseph Bosco says that the "Hawks" have "'a New Look" and that the squad had been trimmed from 60 to 35. U.S. SHIPS DUE HERE WEDNESDAY All roads should lead to the Oshawa Harbour Wednesday afternoon and evening. Not only will visitors have an opportunity to visit the new harbor developments -- such as the marina boat enterprise, the 500-foot cement wharf on the east side and the new junior clubhouse of the Oshawa Yacht Club -- they can also inspect two visiting U.S. Navy vessels, which are small escort ships (the U.S.S. Whitehall and the U.S.S. Amherst). The Oshawa C of C is playing the host role for the visiting U.S, Seaman, who are actually Summertime Reservists. They will be conducted on a tour of the City and be guests at a special luncheon in their honor -- everything possible is being done to give them a good impression of Oshawa. INSURANCE PICTURE IN SHARPER FOCUS Last May 24 this column complained that up-to-date facts and figures on the City's insurance coverage set-up were hard to come by. The situation has been remedied to.a great extent, thanks to a recent statement by W. B. White Insurance Ltd., the firm that handles the great bulk of the City's insurance. Here's what it says in part: The city carries approximately $5,019,941 worth of insurance with their firm this year, premiums for which total $27,530.30-- coverage includes such things as Buildings and Contents ($3,749,444), Comprehensive Liability and Property Damage ($100,000), Comprehensive Dishonesty Within Premises and without ($83,100 and $77,200), etc. W. B. White does not handle City-owned properties at the Oshawa Airport, or City property at 264 Park road south, 318 Gibbons street and 513 Howard street -- also, it has nothing to do with the City's Pension Insurance, but the statement was important because it put the local insurance picture in sharper focus., ; The city paid out a total of $20,061 in premiums last year to the same firm on three major policies; Building Protection -- $5,300; Fleet Policy -- $6,100; and. Public Liability -- $8,461 (which represented only 80 per cent of the City's insurance. "The increase over last year was due to the fact that the fire insurance expired and was renewed and the City paid an annual premium of $6,549.16 for this coverage," said the spokesman. Remember the fuss that was created in other municipal- ities, such as Toronto, in bygone years when influential editorial pens underlined the fact that many local insurance agents were getting a slice from the City's insurance al- though they did nothing to earn it (outside of being tax- payers and members of the local agents' association)? The same situation exisis in Oshawa -- W. B. White collects 10 per cent of the above premiums and then pays back "a major portion" of this fee to fellow agents who are City taxpayers and members of the Oshawa and District Insurance Agents Association (which includes 30 firms.) These same ODIAA members also share in another piece of City insurance cake, although they do nothing to earn the privilege -- this is from the insurance carried by the Oshawa Board of Education (handled by Schofield Insurance Associates Ltd.) and the Oshawa General Hospital (handled by H. G. Roughley Ltd.) "Arrangement with the Agents' Association, "said a spokesman for W. B. White "allows the offices handling this business to retain a small percentage of the commission to reimburse them for office expenses, the balance of the commission is paid to the treasurer of the association, and HER POP'S IN SPACE. Russia's fourth cosmonaut, | picture supplied by Soviet pic- | fellow cosmonaut Lt, Col. Pavel Popovich, | ture agency Novosti. Popo- | Andrian Nikolayev in traded smiles with his daugh- | vich, 1!auneched Sunday in | around earth. ter, Natasha, 6, in this family | spaceship Vostok IV, joined ---AP Wirephoto Russians Given Censorship Diet Felix R, McKnight, vice- president and executive ed- itor of the Dallas Times- Herald, is one of 12 U.S. ed- itors who recently went on a 23-cay tour of the Soviet Union. Following is a con- densation of a series of ar- ticles he wrote on his find- ings. Maj. orbit Canada Peace Meeting Urged VANCOUVER (CP)--A Van- couver woman who attended one peace congress in Moscow and walked out on another in Tokyo says Canada should spon- sor a world peace congress. Mrs. Olive Johnson, said on her return from Tokyo Sunday Canada would be an ideal set- ting because it is flanked geo- graphically by the United States and Russia and has no nuclear weapons Mrs {the United States and he will go the limit to reach Amer- ican levels, He spoke of it in his conference with us, Khrushchev is pushing, threatening, and goading to get their sagging agricultural pro- gram into some semblance of orderly production. "What interests us most in America?" the premier asked DALLAX, Tex. (AP) -- The in his July 13: conference' with Soviet Union I saw is a waste- us. "It is organization of farm land of suspicion -- simply be-| production. In this field you cause it has never been told have a great experience worthy the truth about the United of being studied. And the or- States. ganization of agricultural work It is buried in doubt and dis- in the United States is better trust, 'thoroughly propa-jthan in the Soviet Union. You gandized to view Americans aS have a better range of machin- greedy war profiteers uncon-jery, especially for stock farm- cerned about .peace. and the jing." jrights of man. But, of course, he added "we The Russian reads only what will surpass you." they want him to read and he ------ - cot a ieee: & "E'pozen Heart' group of editors left an old NORTH BAY, Ont. (CP) --paralysis, allowed the heart to Johnson, 33 - year - old mother of three, said she left the Tokyo session because it was Communist - led and re- fused to protest Soviet nuclear testing while condemning Amer- ican tests, She said the earlier meeting at Moscow was a free exchange of opinion and Russian dele- gates were flexible and concil- iatory. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Here are comparative statis- tics on the successful manned Box Score Given On Space Flights Chamber of Commerce. ;day night, | Deported Sailor _ Returns Legally TORONTO (CP) -- A Greek sailor deported last spring for illegally entering Canada is coming back--this time legally. Anthony Gaitanis, 29, wrote to friends were that he has re- ceived an immigration visa from the Canadian consulate in} Athens and expects to arrive here some -time this week. |sex, and Ronald Marvin Adams collision involving a car, a sta in Sandwich West near Windsor late Friday. Two People Die Near Peterboro' PETERBOROUGH (CP) CIO. and the U.S.|parked car after it began: roll- ing down a sloping driveway tion wagon a: " a tractor-trailer} William H. Greenfield, 43, and Ottawa Saturday. riding his bicycle on an over | Martin Pare, 18, of Riverside Highway 2 near Windsor Satur: day. Mrs. Violet MacLean, London, Saturday iplunged from when "My prayers have been an- his mother, Alice Greenfield, 70,|Saturday in Hamilton of swered--I have never been so|b0th of Scarborough, a Toronto|overdose of narcotics. happy," he wrote. suburb, were Gaitanis and a companion, James Dimitrios, surrendered to authorities here. last after more than two years in| hiding after jumping ship at Montreal in 1959. Dimitrios also has-applied for 10 a visa but no decision has been da announced. ways 7 and 7B, east of here. India Willing "" To Hold Talks | NEW DELHI (AP) -- Prime Minister Nehru said today In- dia is prepared for preliminary talks with Communist China to try to remove tensions and cre- ate a climate conducive to) eventual discussion of their boundary dispute | But he repeated India's stand that actual border negotiations cannot take place unless the Chi- nese withdraw their troops from the 12,000 square miles of the |Ladakh area of Kashmir which |they have occupied. Editorial critics had said In- dia's note to China July 26 and }Nehru's statement in Parlia- ment Aug. 6 opened the door to concessions in Ladakh be- cause they seemed to permit negotiations without the with. : drawal of troops. Nehru told Parliament this) © was a misunderstanding and a} j misconception of the govern-\ ~~ ment's stand. Nehru. said a recent state- ment by Chen Yi Red Chinese foreign minister, that the Reds would not withdraw from areas 8 killed Sunday) when the small car in which\q they were riding collided with) the January|#" automobile at Fowler's Cor-|miles northeast of Woodstock, ners, the intersection of High-| seven miles) William Tipping, 22, of Lon Innerkip Quarries, Grant Whitty, 17, of Swastika lditch Saturday night. after a car in which he was Township| cing smashed into a ditch on 57, of she the eighth floor of Victoria Hospital in London where she had been a patient ey -- since Wednesday. Ann Basilio, 31, found dead on, Ont., drowned Sunday in| eight \driving rolled into a ditch near ; I veway| Kenneth McCaughey, 8, when Upsala, Ont., 9C° miles west of while she was playing on it Fri-/he was struck by a car while/Port Arthur Sunday. Ambrose Copegog, 24, of the William Simpson, 45, of Es-/pass over The Queensway in Christian Island Indian Reserve, | +|west-end Ottawa Saturday. |22, of RR1, McCure, O, in a ° ed |believed to have drowned early Saturday while boating on Georgian Bay near Christian Island, 15 miles west of Pene- tanguishene. Ronald Wayne Miller, 19, of Uxbridge, when his car left Ontario County road No, 1 and struck a tree near Udora, 12 |miles north of Uxbridge Satur- Cecil George Pannell, 56, of Ottawa in a two-car collision about 17 miles north of Almonte, 35 miles southwest of Ottawa Sunday. Harvey Foster, 22, of Hamil- ton drowned Saturday in Lake Huron near Gobles Grove, 1% miles south of Port Elgin. William H. Greenfield, 43, and after a car in which he wasjhis mother, Alice Greenfield, 70, Morley James, 55, of Omemee,|#_. Passenger crashed through|both of Scarborough, Ont., when miles east of here, and his|Suide posts on Highway 66,\their small car collided with ughter, Muriel, 35, who were|three miles west of Kirkland) another car at. Fowyler's Cor- in the other car, were under ob-|Lake, and rolled into a deepjners, the intersection of High- servation in hospital with mi- {ways and 7B, seven miles | George Kokoshka, 14, after he west of Peterborough Sunday. | WEATHER FORECAST they occupy in the bleak moun- tain region torpedoed chances of negotiations at this stage. Nehru spoke at the opening of debate on the government's 'Ladakh policy. Official forecasts 5 a.m.: issued by|a t the Toronto weather office at}morning, Mainly Cloudy With Some Rain brief thundershower cooler. Winds south- erly 15 becoming west to north- Synopsis: A disturbance north| west 15 to 25 this afternoon. jof Georgian Bay this morning) Timagami, Cochrane regions, | Sudbury QUEBEC | Forecast temperatures |Low tonight, High Tuesday {Windsor cecesscese 62 80 {Hamilton )St. Catharines. | Toronto this Peterborough jTrenton .. |Killaloe | Muskoka North Bay. jis moving eastward and will lie|North Bay, Sudbury: Overcast|fariton .. western Quebec Rain will and 56 minutes)in |morning. in four hours with a top speed of 17,532 miles an hour in the 4,200-pound space end orbital shots by the United craft. but will persist on Tuesday in Tuesday|with rain changing to showers this}on Tuesday, cooler. Winds east- morning north of Lake Superiorjerly 15 today light tonight and northerly 15 to 25 Tuesday. } Kapuskasing , |White River....... 50 Tass, the official Soviet news |the wilderness near Tashkent. U.S. embassy four days later. hood activities. jwhich lay almost still in its viet Union--although we were!139 pounds, Before the opera|from school since 1958, Arthur ible contrast. It is vital and pro-|17, a medical examination| ror in the Soviet Union. Khrush-|ergy and mows the lawn -- all! and determined. He stands tall|Heimbecker began the delicate : agency, reported the following DC-3 type plane in the central Asian area of Samaekand, clutching rosary beads and say- Six 4 Ki 1! z Pisce ep ihee --e shy The boy who two years ago was|be cooled to three degrees vived. But not a natn word the object of Canada's first|above freezing within five min s pees "frozen heart' operation. now/utes instead of hours. Russians had not even been) Arthur Perry. of North Bay, | practically frozen state. A heat jtold about Telstar, the magnifi-| since the age of seven a victimlexchanger designed by Dr. jcent American achievement in|of a defective aorta, the main|Heimbecker kept the boy's blood constantly needled about join-tion, 'performed when he was ing the Soviets. in "atoms for!y5. la' outed 90. has taken _ correspondence peace." Rheumatic fever and the Courses at intervals. : gressive in the impressive fields| prompted doctors to tell Arthur! of science and technology--butihe can play any except compe- it is pathetically primitive in the|titive sports. chev deadened the fear of thejactivities denied him until the midnight knock from thejoperation in Toronto General NKVD. Hospital- * , )Gate: and firm as premier of the|task of mending Arthur's heart.| Dae te ad laren : : : ? . | April 12, 1961: Soviet Maj. figures for the two newest space U.S.S.R and is likely to remain/The operation had been re-jy 00. : | sho 8 there for eoria Tink, \quested by the boy's parents in| uri Gagarin completed one or-|shots as of a.m. Moscow ing prayers because of a mis- was printed in the newspapers. gwings a heavier, featthler| A heactdung machine took international communications artery carrying blood from the!at normal body temperature. The Soviet Union is a mas-/heart condition had limited his} ~~~ area of living Today he swims, climbs Nikita Khrushchev is wily,) On Oct. 18, 1960, a team of Now he has the people with|the full knowledge that chances| Dit in Vostok I travelling 26,000| time. jthe Timagami and Cochrane re- Algoma, White River regions,| gions. i ..,/Sault Ste. Marie: Cloudy with! | It will be mainly cloudy with, few .showers today. Sunny! scattered showers today and) with a few cloudy periods Tues- Tuesday across southern On-| day, little change in tempera-| tario with a chance of a feW/ture, Winds north to northeast peauValiey IS GROWING! jbehaving right engine, it fell in We learned of it through the | ody through most normal boy-\over the work of the heart satellites, when I left the So-jheart, now weighs more than Although hé has been away sive conglomeration of incred-| physical capabilities. Now, at No longer is there visible ter-|stairs, fishes, frolics with en- cunning, shrewd, tough, able--|specialists headed by Dr. Rayicuates and the Soviet Union to 'lin, miles at altitudes of 110 to 187.5} Aug. 11, 1962 -- Soviet Maj. He has improved their lot tre-' mendously in recent years through housing and the gen- eral elevation of living stand- ards. Master politician who plays a tough game of international pol- itics, Khrushchev acts like a man who doesn't want war. But) operation." not for.one minute does it mean he will abandon the pressures that have kept the world off- balance. The big goaf is still there-- chilled to decrease the amount of blood in the area. world domination The man is wildly jealous of at the end of the year it is dispersed to all member agents on an equal basis," The City paid out a total of $20,061 in premiums last |craft. year to W. B. White on these three major policies: Building : | Protection--$5,300; Fleet Policy--$6,100; and Public Liability-- |C™dt. Malcolm Scott Carpen- | $8,461 (which represented about 80 per cent of the City's total coverage.) BUSY TRAFFIC The International Air. Trans- port Association estimates there are 150,000 scheduled airline flights a day--five every three! | seconds } SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gas i Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 | | | | of success were slight. miles which took one hour and PREPARED FOR WORST '48 minutes with a top speed of "IT was told to expect any-|17,400 miles an hour in a 10,460- thing and be prepared for the|pound space craft. | |worst," says Mrs, Perry. "But} Aug. 6, 1961 -- Soviet Maj. Arthur's health was getting)Gherman Titov completed 17 or- worse, if anything, and . . . I bits in Vostok II travelling 435,- saw the only possible thing 1/000 miles at altitudes of 110 to could do was ... to allow the/159 miles in 25 hours and 18 1 minutes with a top speed of 17,- A nine-hour operation made|750 miles an hour in a 10,430- Arthur the beneficiary of Can-| pound space craft, adas first heart surgery in which the heart itself was Lt.-Col. John H. Glenn Nr, com- pleted three orbits in' Friend- ship 7 travelling 81,000 miles at altitudes of 100 to 162 miles in four hours and 56 minutes with a top speed of 17,500 miles an hour in the 4,265-pound space The method, called ice-chip May 24, 1962--U.S, Navy Lt.- ter completed three orbits in jAurora 7 travelling 81,250 miles| at altitudes of 99 to 164.4 miles} DAY SCHOOL COURSES: 1--Clerk-typist 3--Secretary 2--Stenographer. 4--Accountant's Assistant _ 5--Business adminstration FALL CLASSES STARTING SEPT. 4th, 1962 SUBJECTS: 29 different business and secre- tarial subjects are offered in the courses mentioned above. Please phone or write for FREE catalogue about our day school or evening classes. THE CANADIAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS $21 SIMCOE ST. NORTH PHONE 728-7081 Feb. 20, 1962 -- U.S. Marine = Adrian G, Nikolayevy was launched in the Vostock III, He neared the end of his 31st earth orbit and journeyed more than 776,000 miles since his Saturday blastoff. Aug. 12, 1962--Soviet Lt. Col. Pavel Romanovich Popo- vich was launched in the Vos- tock 1V, He orbited more than 14 times and covered about 366,000 miles. EYE EXAMINATIONS appointment PHONE 723.4191 F. R. BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH -|west to northwest 15 to 25 today | becoming light tonight. gian Bay, Haliburton regions: Cloudy with occasional showers today and Tuesday. Chance of isolated thundershowers in east-|east 15 to 25 becoming light ern Ontario this morning. Lake St. Clair region, Wind- sor: Partly cloudy today and Tuesday, cooler. Winds north- west 15 becoming light tonight. Lake Huron, Lake Erie, west- ern Lake Ontario, Niagara re- gions, London, Hamilton, Tor- onto: Cloudy with sunny periods today and Tuesday. A few show- ers this afternoon, cooler. Winds tonight. Marine forecasts valid until 11 a.m. Tuesday: Lake Huron, Lake Erie: Winds west to northwest 15 to 25 knots today and northwesterly 15 tonight. Cloudy today and Tuesday morning. Showers to- day. Georgian Bay, Lake Ontario: Winds southeast to east 15 to 25 knots becoming northwest 15 knots this afternoon. Cloudy Eastern Lake Ontario, Geor-|with occasional showers today and Tuesday morning. A few isolated thundershowers this imorning. j Come and see our-1962 "Dream Homes" now under construction. DRIVE UP TONIGHT Salesmen On Location 7-9 P.M, Daily |] 'A PLEASANT PLACE TO LIVE | OSHAWA BLVD. N, Uust East of Simcoe) ON ROSSLAND | SCHOFIELD-AKER | LIMITED 360 KING WEST 723-2265 BORROW MONEY WHEN YOU BUY A CAR? It pays to finance through your dealer. He can tailor the terms to fit your budget. And his service ig immediate! Ask your dealer about his IAC TIME PURCHASE PLANS ae You can have oil furnace installed for $10 a month! ° your new p less than Just @ small deposit is needed, and you can spread the payments over the next 5 years. OD. 43 KING STREET WEST, OSHAWA 9 |f your present furnace is Id and inefficient, now is the time to have us re- lace it. A smart, new, en- closed model will give you more usable space in your basement; improve the value of your home and ive you better, more ec- onomical heating. Let us q uote you on the unit of your choice. Tae PHONE 725-3581