Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Sep 1964, p. 9

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Members Convinced School Must B Township, adjacent to Oshawa, it was decided to locate the school in the west, said Mr. Reynolds. From Darlington Township only nine per cent of the stu- dents took vocational courses, while 38 per cent of Port Hope's students took this. course in Grade 9. The difference shows that stu- dents prefer a short trip to their school said Mr. Reynolds. Al- though Port Hope draws voca- tional students from all parts of the district, the percentage de- creases in proportion with the distance from the school. Reeve Everson said that Port Hope had become concerned with school requirements in the west, and demands on the tax- payers here. He asked repre- sentatives of Cavan Township, Millbrook and Hope Township for their opinions. Lloyd Hooton, reeve of Cavan ownship, said "I'm not con- vinced we are going to gain any- ». tive of the eight-member Dur- Coun' District High left a meeting with secretary W. B. Reynolds, week, satisfied that a new 000 composite school at must be built. . Reynolds explained the ment spoke for themselves. method of financing the ies' share of con- $362,735, will be de- by the councils of the 14 es, deputy reeves and coun lors, ve Robert Everson of Port , chairman of the meeting, foposed establishing a commit- tee to consider splitting the dis- trict into east and west in the face of increasing costs and en- relment in the west. At present = school district covers the gest area in the province and ise4th largest in member of stu- dents NEED EVIDENT + As Mr. Reynolds produced) s showing a rapidly in- asing school population in} the western area of the county, need for the school became evi- dgnt. As 'the greatest growth was evident in Darlington) thing by separation unless I can see figures to prove it." The member municipalities are working well together now, he said. He argued against disrupt- ing the district board. e Built SECOND SECTION She Oshawa Gimes FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1964 PAGE NINE Millbrook reeve L. .R. Gibson said he agreed with Reeve Hooton. Reeve William Lightle of Hope Township said he did not know if separation would be| ' good or not, "But something has to be done'. : Hope Township deputy reeve, George Finnie, pointed out that the township will 'soon be re- quired to go into a public school building program. "If Port Hope and Hope Township asked the United Counties for separation, would] ; South Cavan and Millbrook ap- prove?" asked Reeve Everson. It would require more study. "'It is doubtful unless more figures) 2 can be shown," said Reeve Hooton. P Two earlier attempts were) gam made by the eastern municipal- ities to separate the district. The) » district high school board was formed in 1951. Reeve Everson read a report from James R. hompson, assistant superintendent of sec- ondary education. The Reeve, together with Reeve Lightle of Hope Township and Mrs. Rey- lds, interviewed Mr. homp-| son in Toronto in July. | $1,500 Raised For Green Gaels £ tA total of $1,500 has been raised for the Oshawa Green G$els Minto Cup final. This is half the amount set up as the Jack Greer, president of the club, was reported as saying in Oshawa Wednesday night that) the club was $3,000 short of $10,-/ target for the appeal. 000 needed to cover team ex-| Hundreds of Oshawa citizens|penses for the Canadian junior} and many company names will|lacrose championship. He said be listed on a giant Victory/he had appealed to Oshawa res-| Telegram that will be sent tojidents to pay $1 to put their| the team in New Westminster,;names on a giant telegram to} B.C. before the deciding game. | the team. . The Gaels have won their first} Bishop estimated {t will cost} two games in the best four out|the team between $9,000 and} of: seven series and are hoping| $10,000 to cover expenses while | they can take the Western Club] playing a best-of-seven final in. four straight games. jagainst New Westminster eo | Reports that have come back monbellies for the Minto Cup. from New Westminster and Van-| The clubs play the third game| couver are very favorable re-|tonight after 15-13 and 10-7 Osh- garding the image the Oshawa|awa wins in the first games. boys are creating. Many organ- izations are playing host to the hr lipo Chnadinn Ta: Oshawa players in conducting crosse Y paeactiiion paid the toprs gas loncheoss ro raid train fares for 18 members of ae of the pawl his team and pays living ex- es G sda Har: Gay penses for these members at} Lh reet a Ty "@Y)/the rate of $7 a day as long as both members of the executive) -- are here ofthe club, are flying west to) "x," deficit between gate re-| LIBERALS PLAN OPINION POLL A public opinion poll spon- sored by the Ontario Riding (Federal) Liberal Asso- ciation will be conducted in the riding and is scheduled to begin in Oshawa Sept. 24. The poll is to cover all communities and_ will con- duct interviews at shopping areas. Oshawa shoppers at the Oshawa Plaza and at the corners of King and Simcoe will be approached Thursday and Friday eve- nings and Saturday after- noon. Alban Ward, chairman of the committee, states the When you are the lieuten- ant governor of a province about the only time you see soldiers is during ceremonial parades. Not so with The Honorable W. Earl Rowe, LIEUTENANT GOVERN 1 * Lieutenant Governor of On- tario, shown here visiting Canadian Army tank training at Camp Meaford. Left is Colonel S. V. Radley Walters, Commandant of the Armour-. OR VISITS TRAINING AREA | r BY WILLIAM LOWTHER jl Staff Reporter A great step forward for ed cation in Oshawa was Thursday night when five dedi- cated members of the Board of Education met collegiate p cipals to talk about Grade 13. For more than two hours they discussed problems and hunted for solutions, No one shouted or ed Corps - School, Camp Borden, and right is Major- General George Kitching, General Officer Commanding, Central Command. (National Defence Photo) pose of the poll is: "Government at all levels is increasingly regulating the individual, yet at the same time the complexity of it often leaves him bewilder- ed and apathetic. Govern- ment is the tool of the in- dividual. We are going out there and talk to him. We want to know what he thinks. We want to hear what he has to say -- and when we know, we are going to shout it out.' | | view the games on Friday and) 394 "| ' pts at the games and the ex oney ran seoked to cover|Penses paid by the Canadian expense of the trip and can Lacrosse Association will be Jett at the following loca-|"orered, BY 8M Oh em achawa ons: Wilson Men's Wear,| rover ee ony | tg, Bade Ritson Drugs, contingent numbers 25 nor a »°\himself, a manager and two Harleigh _ Supplies "lie kon trainers. He said the team-must| Centre); Greer ~*~ thd wae cover the travelling and living) stteet), Johnston ad CKLB *! expenses of the additional seven) Jim Bishop Sports an * lteam members. ad a (COUVER (CP) -- Coach The coach said one the ad-| iil Bichon of Relie Green| ditional team members has a) Gaels lacrosse team said Thurs-|broken leg. "He's no good to} day there is no danger of his\us out here, but we couldn't) team not being able to return leave him home . . . this is a} ; Ontario beca of lack ofjonce in a lifetime trip." . " pag Bishop said the $3,000 bor-| mM Coach Bisnop said reports|rowed by the team will cover from Oshawa that the team) additional expenses, including needed $3,000 to get home made|the return trip home. it; appear that "We are: desti-| He said the Oshawa fund-| tutue out here and starving to|raising campaign was for $3,000) "-He said this was not|to pay off the loan. He sai =. $1,800 of this amount was raised "#We borrowed $3,000 to help|in Oshawa this week through a edver our expenses." 'radio appeal. Service Plan Auto Museum Adds Exhibits The Canadian Automotive Mu- | seum, 99 Simcoe street south, {has recently added more ex- Complete "*:. Two additional' cars have) ' : come in, namely, a 1920 Mc-| op "Dn. " Laughlin, loaned by Ross Elliott) This Saturday is uf Day" br of Port Hope and a 1934 Gra-| Unit 42 of the Canadian Corps/ham, loaned by Ron Harnden, of| Association as it holds its fourth Hillsburgh, Ont. annual Drumhead Service and| To the rubber display has Parade. All roads will lead to! been added a section showing : |the process involved in the man- Oshawa as units, bands and) yracturing of synthetic rubber other organiations converge to which is widely used in today's honor the dead of past wars. age ; ee Bilt 7} e€ museum continues to at- The: pores en " = tract visitors from distant Harry Wood. Unit 42 with its| points. Some of the visitors this color party and band will head) week have been from England, thé parade which will move off|Italy, Denmark and Holland, as from Alexandra Park at 2.30/well as most of the provinces of p.h. and proceed down Simcoe] Canada. | street past the reviewing stand| Hours of operation for the fall ' ' season are Monday to Friday, at 'the armories. "4 Bank Act Revisions Seek Grant For Flood Control Plan} ' Provincial government grants toward a flood control scheme on Whitby's Ash Creek and ac- quisition of a 20-acre property in Darlington Township, and provision of a stream-flow re-|! for' Oshawa|' cording' gauge Creek will be sought by the Contro] Lake Ontario Conserva-) tion Authority. |policy committee -- than at a lpresent. They were later joined bellowed biased opinions -- as happens at most meetings in the board room. There was no witch hunting or sarcasm. / But more actual progress and understanding can result from the meeting -- it was of the dozen of the other kind. FIVE MEMBERS ATTEND The meeting opened with George A. Fletcher in the chair and Stanley Lovell, Robert Nicol William Werry and Leo Glover by S. G. Saywell and E. A. Bas- sett. The four collegiate princi- They began taken|faults. All agreed that relations pals and vice-principals were' also present. by admitting between the board and teachers are terrible. Mr. Fletcher said: 'The situa- ition between the board and teachers was bad two months ago and it is infinitely worse today." He added: "We are here to- night to jearn." Said Mr. Lovell: "Tonight we must try to help Grade 13." SERIOUS PROBLEM Mr. Werry said: "We have a serious problem -- let's try to solve it." Mr. Nicol said: Let us progress." As a result of these bad rela- tions it is impossible to attract experienced teachers to Oshawa and other good teachers who have been here for years are thinking of leaving. If the board members can ful- fill their aims to right this situa- Principals And Board Discuss Grade 13 a classroom. Lockers in Snothes sual Se Ste oe espite repeated complaints nothing has been done. that useless | ' board room had tol to" Weashine: O0 wanting to work in Oshawa. 'Then principals moved The real problems of educa- tion were touched upon -- what do you do with students who do not want to learn? What hap- tion -- to keep the presentipens to students who. want to jteachers and attract new ex- jperienced ones -- schools will improve and more students will pass the grade exams. | Principals and vice-principals s Ladies Hold Gala Day jexplained the little things that \build up to bad relations. One The last Ladies' Gala Day ofjteacher waited two years to the season was held Wednesday|have an electrical outlet put 4 | draws The authority will get pre-| engineering cost estimates on the flood control work. Project at the Oshawa Lawn Bowling) Club. There was a good attend.) ance, including a number of out- side rinks. Mrs. May Price assisted by T. D. Thomas, was) in charge. Three 14-end games were) played. First prizes went to Vi) Norris, Helen Andergon and Mary Pirie who had a%score of 56 plus 8. In second place with) three wins and a score of 44 were Flo Lott, Emma Lovelock and Mid Muir, of Whitby. The Tottenham rink composed of Mrs. -D. Anderson, Mrs. H. Walker and H. Sinclair, who had a score of 50, were high for two wins. The Oshawa rink com- posed of Nettie Brown, Dorothy Bentley and Ethel Ward also won two games. Topping the one-game winners was the Oshawa threesome of Alice McDiarmid, Meta Good- man and Nina Reed. | conducted by Mrs. Price, assist- ed by Mrs. Brown. Refresh- ments were served between the second and third games. Lucky were held and sou- venirs were presented to all the players. At Markham, on Tuesday, an Oshawa rink skipped by Dorothy Bentley was high for two wins in a fillies tourney. Mrs. Bent- ley had Velma Cain and Ethel Cay as her players. On Saturday of this week a mixed doubles tournament for the Clarence Hopps Trophy will tackle Grade 13 but don't have the capabilities? These and @ host of others cropped up. Full co-operation from board members and principals was promised to The Oshawa Times for a series of 'articles concern- ing the city's educational sys- tem, Club Was Busy During Summer For some service clubs the summer months meant a big sag in activity but for the Kiwa- nis Club of Westmount activi- ties went on as usual. During the summer, the club entertained the Junior Fish and Game Club from Simcoe Hall where some 50 boys caught everything but fish -- old tires-- boots and a few colds. The club held its fifth annual picnic at the Darlington Provin- cial Park which was well at- The presentation of prizes was tended AID SWIM CLASSES Some 150 man hours were spent at the Boys' Club Pool, helping and guiding children's swimming classes. Or was it the children helping with the men's Classes. Anyway, @ lot of time was donated. , In the newly formed Oshawa Lacrosse league. two club mem- bers coached and managed a midget tem but to no avail. Neither member knew anything about lacrosse. Both though! a be held on the greens of the Oshawa. Club. There will be draws starting at 9 and 11 a.m.| A full entry is assured for this} lacrosse stick was something you sift gravel with, However, they were there to help out. to a fishing derby et Belleville): Rre Cited | Banking in Canada as seen) by the Royal Commission on Banking and Finance was the topic of a speech given by John Bradstock, credit manager of the Toronto - Dominion Bank. He spoke Thursday night at a meeting of the Lakeland Chap- ter, Administrative Manage- ment Society, at Hotel Genosha. Mr. Bradstock said that the report had outlined the progress of banking in Canada during which several gaps in the SPECIAL SPEAKER |terms spelled out at Thursday night's CLOCA. meeting in Osh- Rev, S. C. H. Atkinson, of |@Wa's city hall mean Whitby Toronto, a former pastor of |Will pay 95 percent of the the church, who will be the |@uthority cost of the scheme-- special speaker at the morn- jwhich is 50 percent of the total. ing and evening services this The other half will be in the Sunday in Albert Street United form of a government grant. Church. The services mark | Whitby town council has ap- the 57th year since a Sunday |prove the CLOCA's undertak- School was organized and the |ing the project. 50th anniversary of the erec- | The authority approved a tion of the first church build- |$3000 bid for the 20-acre prop- ing. Mrs, Jan Drygala wil be jerty close by the authority soloist at the morning service. |forest on Concession 9 in Dar- The choir from Grace United |lington Township. Discussions Church, Toronto, will assist in |are also going on concerning an the evening service. adjacent 30-acre piece of land. aa _ - ~~ | Application will be made to the hDepartment of Energy and Re- sources Management for a 50 framework of regulations which protected the public had appear- ed. "Some important modifica- pain nulla ee cations in its laws and practices | are necessary to ensure that it . may adapt to the evolving econ PAVING TaClose omy along safe and constructive : paths,' the report read. I Bees The speaker said that tbe ANtersection commission favored a more open and competitive banking) The Oshawa City Engineer's| system, subject to suitable leg-/Department announced th is| islation. The report also favored| morning that paving operations) the extension of the Bank Act,|will be'carried out this Satur-| under" which chartered banks|day at the intersection of Park are policed, to all institutions}roac and Gibb street. As a re- performing a banking function. jsult traffic 'will be detoured Mr. Bradstock added that this/from the area for one day. | extension would mean_ that Southbond traffic on Park banking powers would be avail-|road will detour west on Elm-! able to savings banks, trust and/grove, south on Montrave and loan companies. "A major ef-/east on Marland. Northbound fect of such a step," he said,|traffe will follow the reverse} "would be to give these organ-|route. | jations the power to compete) Westbound traffic on Gibb} for commercial and personal street will detour north on Burk} lending business. street and west on John street) "The commission favors a to get around the construction omore open and competitive] VOrk- banking system," he continued, = "and it recommends that the 6) f°" percent grant A brief will be drawn up for application for the Oshawa Creek automatic stream-flow recording gauge. Installation costs would be paid by the CLOCA. CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS - Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- dent of Oshawa and district who is celebrating his birth- day today: Walter J. Fowlie, Fairview Lodge, Whitby, who is 81 years young today. Phone 723-3474. OCVI GRADUATE Ronald Andrew Nelson,: son of Mr, and Mrs. Ron Nelson, Jasmine crescent, 'who leaves Sept. 28 to attend General Motors Institute at Flint, Michigan, . where he will take a four-year engineering course. A grauate of O'Neill Collegiate and Vocational In- stitute, he attended West- mount and Wood¢rest Public Schools, Active in hockey and baseball, he was also a mem- ber of the OCVI band and is | a bandsman with the Ontario Regiment Band. He has one | brother, Dean William Nelson. | 8 Negroes Guilty | Of Sabotage Plot PRETORIA (Reuters)--Eight {South African. Negraes were found guilty here Thursday of jcommitting and conspiring to jcommit sabotage in Pretoria \between June, 1962 and Jan- luary, 1964. They were charged with bombing government buildings lin Pretoria, planning to bomb \the residences of cabinet min- listers, plotting to kill two Ne- |gro detectives and planning attacks on 10 other buildings. Sentence will be passed to- iday. | day substantial expenditures will|of his letters: | Of-course, the blood clinic is final tournament of the season./held on the first Thursday of eseR each month and 12 members provided transportation and a To Exp and general helping. hand of each Tobacco Research lationship a strong feeling of satisfaction has developed be- clinic, Robert Stroud, who is OTTAWA -- Russell C. Honey,|/tween the members and young clinic chairman, is a charter member of the Westmount Club. FOSTER CHILD WRITES Letter to and from the club's Foster Child in Columbia were plentiful and, through this re- | | | |MP for Durham Riding, said to-| Pedro. Here are contents of two be made in the next two years| April, 1964. in the tobacco research facili-| ties at the Harrow and Delhi| Dear Foster Parents, "T greet you affectionaftiy Research Stations. Both stations|wishing you and the children buy things we needed at school. I am in my 3rd elementary and I am one of the best students. 'Receive many greetings from my parents and brothers from me a special hug.' July, 1964. "I greet you. affectionately wishing you to be in good health as my heart wishes you at any time. : "I received $8, That God pays you. With money bought me a pair of shoes and something more. "Foster Parents, I tell . you that we are stolen. The 15 of July we will have the National Census. The 29 of July was my Saint's day. "IT have been very sad be- cause my parents have been very illness, : "Now receive many regards irom my parents and brothers."' aad --PEDROM PABLO ORTEGA. Funeral Home Addition Gets Board Approval _ Armstrong Funeral Home Lim ited has won the Oshawa Com- mittee of Adjustment's approval to build an addition to its King street east quarters which will come within 17 feet from the street line. The addition will contain two "reposing rooms" and a small office, The Cl zoning calls for a 30 foot setback. However, the committee's ap- proval decision was based on four things: proximity to the downtown area; nearby estab- lishments such as the theatre, are in the tobacco growing area! of southwestern Ontario. The announcement follows closely on a recent report of the House of Commons Agricul- ture Committee, headed by Mr. Honey, which made sweeping recommendations for improv- ing the tobacco research facili- ties. A new laboratory office build- ing will be constructed at Har- row costing an estimated $2 mil- lion. The plans for this build. ing will be ready in the 1965-66 fiscal year and construction will be completed the following year. At the Research Station in Delhi $100,000. will be spent on a tobacco curing building and the Department plans an expen- diture of $150,000. in 1965-66, on greenhouse facilities. much happiness. I received in' the Plan, the donation of 80 pesos which I invested to pay my tuition and to buy some books I needed at school. God will pay you. "We also tell you that we have a new baby sister who was born on March 8. "T send my greeting to all the members of the club. "Receive a thousand greet- ing from my parents and me." May, 1964. "T greet you affectionately along with my dear foster moth- er and the children. I received the letter you sent me .I was glad to know that you were in Panama; we would be very happy if you would be able to come to my country someday. "T received 80 pesos, God will pay you for your goodness to me. The money was invested to insurance office and service sta- tion are close to the street line; the sougth side of King street has a similar setback; the committee felt future appli- cants would require similar set- backs, The move was opposed by Terence V. Kelly of Greer and Kelly in the adjacent building to the west. SUGGEST. STUDY The committee recommened that the city planning board do a study of this section of King street to determine an '"'ap- propriate setback." W. Zygmont of Drew street will be allowed to replace a store and apartments destroyed by fire provided an adjacent lot is developed for. parking. Seven of the Stacey avenue apartments, plus eight not de- stroyed in the fire last Janu- ary demand 18 parking spaces. Ten more for the store means a |per cent ceiling on bank interest) | The service in Memorial Park|? '° 5.30; Saturday 10 a.m. to total of 28. Mr. Zygmont. will 9 p.m. Evening guided tours can be .m., and § wih be la deere of fev. 9 p.m., and Sunday 12 noon to t craned by appointment. Weolcock. For the service at the Cehotaph there will be tri-serv- ica armed escort. | Commodore Taylor, the guest speaker, will be greeted at the/ unjt's clubrooms by a tri-service | honor guard of 12 men, under thé direction of Lieut. Ron Davis Brin Bl ast of the Ontario Regiment, at ap- g proximately 1.30 p.m. Other) OTTAWA (CP) -- Former guests will include Michael/transport minister Leon Balcer| Starr, MP for Ontario Riding: |said in the Commons Thursday} Albert V. Walker, MLA for Osh-|that taxi monopolies at major| awa Riding; Mayor Lyman A-Jairports provide poor service Gifford, Provincial President/and charge exorbitant rates. Les Crooks and Dominion Presi-|The government should break} dent A. Heeraker. up the limousine - taxi mono-| Following dispersal at the polies and open all airports to Armories, where President A. |free competition. King of Unit 42 will address the} Maurice J, Moreau (L--York-| gathering, the Royal Canadian|Scarborough) commented ac-| Sea Cadet Corps Band will en-jidly that Mr. Balcer himself set tertain. The event will lude/up limousi polies when with refreshments at the unit|he was fransport minister from clubrooms. A dance will be held|1960 to 1963. later in the evening. Mr. Balcer = said exclusive| The co-chairmen of the serv-|contracts with limousine com-| i¢é -- Frank Davis and Albert/panies were justified a few Mosier -- with the co-operation'years ago, but the companies of many members of the unit)lad taken undue advantage of} have worked hard to assure the|their monopoly position and the} @uccess of the event. practice no longer was justified. Rirport Taxis | NDP To Elect |rates be removed, as well as the | mortgage prohibition. ' "On the basis of the evidence| | presented there is no doubt} | about the advantages of allow- ing the financial institutions to compete- more freely. There) | will be changes in. banking in| | the next few years," Mr.Brad- stock concluded, "and they will contribute to Canada's economic progress."' 15 Executives | A meeting will be held in Hotel Genosha this Sunday at 7.30 p.m, to elect an executive} for the Oshawa Provincial Rid- ing NDP Association. Previous- ly the. NDP had only a federal association in Ontario County. Louis Munroe, president ° of the NDP Federal Association for Ontario County, said today that 15 executives are to be One man. went to hospital elected Sunday night in the Cor-| after the crash pictured above vair Room at the hotel and that) which occurred Thursday a.large turnout is expected. | afternoon at Solina road and AUTO: HITS TREE Highway 2. Police will not re- lease the names of the driv- ers of the two cars involved AFTER COLLISION and it is not known who the injured man is. Both vehicles rolled over after crashing 'and Paper Fights Rhodesia Ban SALISBURY '(Reuters) -- Af- rican: newspapers -- the com- pany owned by the group con- trolled by Canadian-born Lord Thomson -- challenged in the appellate division of the South- ern Rhodesian High Court here Thursday the validity of the government banning The Daily News. The company sought a ruling calling on the minister of law and order, Desmond Lardner- Burke, to show cause why the banning order should not be set aside. Judgment was reserved until hext week. The Daily News --\which sup- ported Southern ia's Af- rican nationalists--was banned on Aug. 27, hte day after the banning of the country's two one, as can be seen,ended up |African nationalist parties, the around a tree. --Oshawa Times Photo the Zimbabwe African National | Union. Peoples' Caretaker Council and/Dolishny for Colborne rebuild the store, one basement apartment and two upper ficors of apartments. The committee, which rarely allows creation of, or extension of existing, non-conforming uses, ruled the fire resulted in an "interrupted" use. It was noted the proposed building will cover 'much less" than the original building. SEEK VARIANCES Variances the applicant ask- ed for included: non-conform- ing use store; coverage of 60 per cent when the bylaw calls for no more than 25 per cent; insufficient lot area; insufficient front and side yards; and in- sufficient parking space. Other applications allowed: L, Ocenas, for Olive avenue, lot to have insufficient frontage and area; Mrs, A. Sullivan, for 718 Cordova road permission to add to a non-confirming use; F. Baron, for Colbome street east, house 'to have insufficient front and side yards; J, Street east, house to have three foot roof overhang.

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