Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Apr 1965, p. 17

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ich RY Spin gate tpaie pea ponte pow BOE HT: "BIG-HEARTED EFFORT" Easter Seal Effort To Top $1 Oshawa's Easter Seal cam, paign which raises funds tor! crippled children will exceed last year's total. Lloyd Magill, chairman of the Easter Seal committee of the Oshawa Rotary Club, said today that the 1964 total of $14,000 will be passed before the campaign closes Apr. 28. "We are really pleased with the result. The people of Osh- awa have once again proved themselves to be really big- hearted," said Mr. Magill. He said that the campaign is conducted in co-operation with the Ontario Society for Crippled Children and that all proceeds are shared equally by the society and the crippled children committee of the Ro- tary club. A BEAMING 'TIMMY' abilities are caused by muscu- One of her prize pupils is , lar Sey. cerebral palsy,|Peter Boyko -- a bright ten- or brain accidents. NO POLIO CASES mage caused inlyear-old who is the "Timmy" mascot for this year's Easter Seal Campaign in the city.' "We don't have any cases}|DESIGNED CREST now of children disabled by poliomyelitis," she said. Peter recently designed a ¢ "Our| crest for the school which shows children range in age from twol|a rising sun at the base of a to 12 and there aren't manyjroyal blue shield. The sun is fF, youngsters in that age group/fianked by two crutches and who have caught the disease." |the name of the school is in- Lessons and treatment at the! scribed in the centre. 'school are managed by six fully- 'qualified . teachers. workers also give a hand in It took Peter a week to get Volunteer] the design completed and, as he says, it marks a milestone to- the running of the school and in| wards realizing his ambition to of the operation. _ the nursery which is also part/jecome an abstract artist. This year's Timmy' has ap- The teachers give training in red 2 pea at the Rotary Club open speech therapy when the chil- ing luncheon of the 1965 Easter dren lack speech co-ordination. Occupational therapy is admin- istered for difficulty in using Seal campaign, among other duties. At the luncheon Alderman zak " gf . aie FEE = BS oe : . . . AND HIS CREST ment since he began to attend "They finance fine summer' More than. 16,000 children are] there." Robert has also played his -| The Oshawa school, on Bloor|the hands and physical therapy 4 tal for siniied naares inte. st., cant of Harmony rd., pro-|as a general body treatment. Pia Bey ee Ria currently aided by the society, oe a ublicity for the ronto,'" Mr. Magill added. "Welvides. teaching, physical ther-| 'Some of the children are im- th "p20 aie fer aA Ray Auld, the society's execu-/pa J soged oungsters who suf- help some of the children finan-|apy and occupational. therapy -- = . ~ aS chiieen go y ea ate se hg ogg ber all ong us vagy Bon poh ase, Misabittties by cially. and give support to thejfor approximately 30 children.|can hardly be to a y tari Haclaty or Crippled Chit eeecaah" wenatseeeade Oe cies 1b On Pree Bod ri ildren|Lynne Avery, school: co-ordin-|fer from a physical disability," 1 I ' eae ce ot yoy oar said that the pupils' dis-|said Miss Avery. dren was organized. Oshawa children ate among|campaign in Toronto The Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1965 ' "BOBBY" TUNES IN A WORLD OF HEARING Emergency Numbers Hospital 723-2211 Police 725-1138 Fire 725-6574 Second Section City and district features, social and classified advertis- ing. Park, Street Names _ | Remain Unchanged REZONING APPLICATIONS | Polish Plea CRITICIZED BY WANDLESS | Rejected A fee may be imposed on Planning board last night rezoning applications to agen i i cg potato" back Oshawa's planning board. ¥ 'The board vesedian '" G. A. Wandless, planning council that no city --_ or director, said last night pro- park be named in honor of any cessing applications costs specific segment of Oshawa's money and when a public population. ; And that leaves the United hearing is held the cost rises to $30 or $40. Council of Polish Organizations in the city right back where it He said a fee might also started -- be a anything eliminate "frivolous" appli- apaon Pegg ye ae ie cations to the board, The matter will be discussed further at a later meeting. group asked if a street or park ray § be named Polish Millen- It was noted 'that fees for © minor variances to the zon- ium or as an alternative, Polo- ing bylaw, made to the com- nia, as many Polish people in the city will peor iy 8 = = brating their native land's mil- Mr. Kovacic dialed the unlist-|way in 1856 made staging obso- mittee of adjustment, ig ed number in the Pickering Fire/lete in this part of the country. amount to $25 per applica- Department and received no an-| Records show that an out- 4 ; j tion. e's 8. hot potato," said Ald. ewer since the department's|break of cholera took several i sed A phone number is at the Oshawa'lives at the tavern in 1832. : 2 check Nemexieniiisorad hon going the | Science Seeking Cure For Pothole Jostling 150-Year-Old Inn Survives Birthday Fire PICKERING (Staff) -- The)Fire Department which triggers Old Post Inn here, celebrating| the village siren. its 150th birthday this year. whitby Fire Department was marked the occasion with a fire cajjeq and arrived first at the | yesterday. ; Iscene. It was joined minutes | The fire, confined to fourliater by the Pickering Village rooms at the rear of the build: |and Pickering Beach volunteer ry iy te in an estimated) outfits, A lamage. ; : Poor electrical wiring was\,im guts living at the. Post blamed for the blaze by resi-'tan were not at home at the dent af te od om WC, Det ine a ie A fire wall between the added <r" started between the|fear section and the main build- walls in an apartment occupied ing ad the flames from Frank Pohacan and Slovko|spreading. ae The Post Inn was built by the A mixup in phone numbers|George Washington Post way almost caused the fire to be|back in 1815 and was a staging disastrous. \post until the Grand Trunk Rail- G. A. WANDLESS ++. an anti-frivolous fee Polish lenium and suggest- ed that the Polish group pur- chase vacant land and develop it as they wish. "T appreciate the fact that they have a historical occasion Whitby, Pickering Village and Pickering Beach fought the blaze. --Oshawa Times Photos Two members of the Whit- by Fire Department, pre- pare to enter the rear of the Post Inn on Highway 2 to Clifford Pilkey last night. s P lanners Tell Builder The rear of the 150-year-old other picture smoke can be The board felt it would be unwise to create a precedent seen, curling out of windows inn was partially destroyed and the roof of the building. by naming a park or street Three fire departments, His Plaza Too Small Plan big and build big. That is what Oshawa's plan- ning board last night indicated that John Riznek of Riznek Construction Ltd., should do with his shopping plaze proposal on King St. E., at Townline Rd. by a fire that broke out yes- Science is working on a cure. "Tf this plaze goes in I can commercial)' and King St., is a main traffic artery in traffic lights," said board orse a to sores aeons! PPEEWAY DEATHS AVOIDED happens we might have to rut! QUIGK THINKING' PRAISED "Our men have filled thou- sands of potholes this spring,' | CANADIAN CLUB TOLD mgr ong A ks " motorists. Russians "Babes | ssp ws sn" |superintendent, "and they'll be The board agreed not to|/member W. A. Woodcock. WHITBY (Staff) -- A head-on car-truck crash on the water table rses after heavy water table rises after heavy autumn rains. Winter frosts pen- etrate the road surface, the sub- base gravels of road construc- tion and on into sub-grade soils. Mr. Crome says in the city frost has been measured up to 54 inches below surface. but we could find ourselves changing street and park names for all ethnic groups in the city," said Ald. Pilkey, Ald. Richard Donald said he would like to see all small par- cels of city-owned land pinpoint- ed on a map and offered to any filling them all summer." : In Computer Age inenains: except] Waters saturating sub-grade cy ee 1 sige lin low-lying areas where therejsoils adhere to the frost level Meations 'set dawn ty te ay. "But in the field of comput-|has been a lot of water, havejand freeze into pockets known He indicated he sata are welllheld up "reasonably well" thisjin the road building trade a8)i1) iden at a city council parks, grant "at this time' Mr. Riz- nek's application for rezoning of land to commercial at the northwest corner of the intersec- Macdonald-Cartier Freeway near Brock St. §., last night sent two persons to Oshawa General Hospital. Ontario Provincial Police in Whitby said more serious Shopping Plazas When it comes to computers and the uses to which theyjers the Americans ion lene: tion. Mr. Riznek proposed to build @ plaza containing a supermar- ket, bank and about eight other commercial stores on one and one-quarter acres of residen- tial-zoned land. ; Noting the growth of Oshawa! and Darlington Township, May- or Lyman Gifford said if the proposal had seven or eight acres or more of land it would Dubbed 'Eyesores' Neighborhood shopping cen- tres took a verbal beating last night from several members of Oshawa's planning board. "I'm not happy with the small centres," said Mayor Lyman Gifford. "They haven't panned out . . . many are untidy and paper gets injuries and possible fatalities were averted by a "'quick- jare put, the thinking" transport driver. Louis Bettel, Toronto, was travelling west in the east- bound lane, police reported, when his truck collided with a car driven by Robert Cunningham, Peterborough. Transport driver Gerard Benoit, Rougemont, Quebec., who was following the car, swerved off the highway to avoid smashing into the car and truck. "Tf the transport hadn't swerved someone could have Americans arejahead. I would say that they)winter. far, far ahead of the Russians,/are five to ten years ahead. "Roads which have had only Dr. Arthur Porter, head of the) "Compared to the Americans|a surface treatment, (asphalt University of Toronto's Indus-|the Russians are just babes injhas been sprayed to keep the; \frial Engineering Department,|arms." dust down and hold the road to- told the Oshawa Canadian Club) Dr. Porter was outlining the|sether), have taken a real heat- last night. | ing," said Mr. White. "Everyone knows of the Rus- development and future of what Although research has shown sian achievements in the space|ne called the "third industriallthat a new system of road con- race, and they are tremendous,revolution" -- the age of the/struction (insulating sub-soil indeed," he said. 'computer. from frost penetration) prevents : potholes, work is still in the be "great". . . but it's small blown all over the place." Ald. Clifford Pilkey said some} and I think you will be cramp-|of the centres look like they are ed." 'deteriorating. been killed,"' said Constable Andrew Templer, who witnessed the accident. Mr. Cunningham and his sister-in-law, Mrs. Rose Ris« chuc, Kirkness, Manitoba, were injured in the crash. Mrs. Rischuc suffered a fractured right heel and undetermined in- ternal injuries and Mr. Cunningham suffered lacerations: to Costly Homes, Apartments early stages and it will be sev- eral years before car repair funds can be converted into Eas- ter bonnets. TORONTO (Special) -- Ap- proval of a provincial grant of $5,040 to the Metropolitan To- ronto and Region Conservation Authority has been announced by the Hon. Matthew B. Dymond, MPP for Ontario. Claremont Conservation Area Receiving Provincial Grant The grant is for capital im-| provements in the Claremont; Conservation Area, some 397 acres in Pickering township. It! was acquired by the Authority the face and multiple abrasions. Truck driver Mr. Bettel and a passenger were not in- The transport truck clipped a car driven by Robert Bearden, Willowdale, when it swerved across the highway MH 4 | "It's a fairly expensive propo- Considered Poor Neighbors sr sitiew a'r Expensive homes and an|R-1A to R-4 to permit a 41-suite|the new construction method to apartment building on Simcoe} ist, n., would make poor neigh-| [bors, city planning board mem-jin \bers decided last night. | $40,000. tries to replace as much bad | The board recommended to} Board member W. A. Wood-/soil (frost-susceptible) as pos- jcouncil that no change be made|cock said he did not feel the|sible. This increases construc- in the zoning of land at 808 Sim-|board should call a public hear-|tion costs by about 20 per cent, jcoe st. n. Albill apartment building. compare it costwise," said Fred It was noted that one home|Crome, city engineer. the area is assessed at} At present, he said, the city lin 1958. Investments|ing on applications the board'he added. \Ltd., asked for rezoning from|feels do not have merit. | Sub-grade soils become satur- As these ice lenses build up they force the sub-grade gravels against the pavement causing the asphalt to heave. Come spring and the ice lenses melt. The sub-base gravel _ settles loosely back on to the silty clay soil. It no longer firmly supports the pavement. A heavy truck passes over the pavement. The pavement cracks and -- pothole! : The principle of the solution is insulating the bad sub-soil, con- taining potential ice lenses, from frost penetration. The insulator used is a light- weight blown material known as polystyrene, being produced by Dow Chemical of Canada. The City of Sudbury, along with Dow Chemical and the Na- tional Research Council, is ex- perimenting in Sudbury and al- ated in the fall when the natural though a complete report is not due until next winter a 100-foot property and recreation com- mittee meeting. | During the past few months the board has investigated sev- eral areas of land which might be renamed, but none was con- sidered suitable. Auto Museum Open Easter Jack Mann, manager of the Canadian Automotive Museum, announced today that the Muse- um will be open each day dur- ing the Easter weekend, ours of operation are Good Friday 12 noon to 6 p.m.; Sat- urday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Easter Sunday, 12 noon to 6 P.m. With the Museum being open all during the Easter weekend Oshawa residents will have an opportunity to bring their week- stretch insulated by polystyrenejend guests on- a tour of the shows no indication of heaving. Museum. ROUNDUP OF EASTER SERVICES City Churches Prepare To Celebrate Resurrection Congregations in many city gather to cele- churches will long service -- The Way of the Cross -- will be held at 2 p.m. brate the most joyful occasion in the Christian year -- Easter Sunday -- when the resurrec- tion of Jesus Christ is commem- orated. Services have been held in Oshawa's Anglican churches in observance of Holy Week and at St. Peter's,.on Cedar st., the In- stitution of Holy Communion is observed today--Maundy Thurs- day--as it is known to Angli- cans, The 6.30 p.m. service marks what Rev. Leonard Ware calls: "One of the major days in the church year." On Good Friday at St. Peter's the litany and ante-communion will be held at 10 a.m. An hour with hymns and meditation. Other Anglican Churches will have similar services. St. George's Church begins a three- hour long service at midday on Good Friday when the last hours of Christ on the Cross are remembered. ; St. Peter's will have Holy Sat- urday evensong and in common with sister churches will cele- brate the Easter morning serv- ices at 9 and 11 a.m. A cantata 'Olivet to Calvary" will be presented Good Friday evening by a choir and soloists at King Street United Church. Rev. W. L. Herbert said that the work, by J. H. Maunder,. is part of Easter services which will continue at 7.30 a.m. Sun- day with a Sunrise Communion service sponsored by the Hi-C group. King 'Street Church will also hold services at 9.30 and 11 a.m. Sunday. Other Protestant denomina- tions in the city will be repre- sented in an inter-denomination- al service held by the Oshawa Ministerial Service on Good Fri- day. Westmount United. Church will be the venue and the preacher will be Rev. Winnifred Bridges, minister of Columbus United Church Rev. G. W. C. Brett said that services will be held as usual at Knox Presbyterian Church Faster Sunday, He. stated that Presbyterians will participate in the Ministerial service. an Church Easter Sunday will attend a sunrise service of holy rament to the Altar of Repose is held. Association's normal Saturday worship will be held as usual. Christian Sci- General Frederick Coutts, of England, will speak at the Services of '"'Music and Medi- tations" will continue Sunday at First Baptist Church when the cantata by the 17th century German composer, Buxtehude, "Jesu, Joy and Treasure" will be sung at the evening service. Rev. N. F. Swackhammer will end his series of Easter sermons at the morning service. Roman Catholic churches in Oshawa will begin Easter ob- servances Holy Thursday. Mon- signor Paul Dwyer, pastor of the Church of St. Gregory the Great, said that special masses will be held at 8 am., 5 p.m. and. at 8 p.m. when the Procession of the Blessed Sac- The sacrament remains on the altar until 3. p.m, Good Friday when a Solemn Communion Liturgy and Veneration of the True Cross takes place. The Sta- tions of the Cross, a sermon and Veneration of relics of the True Cross take place at 7 p.m. The solemn Easter liturgy be- gins at 11 p.m. Holy Saturday, said Msgr. Dwyer, which is fol- lowed by a solemn High Mass of Edster at midnight. Easter Sunday masses will be held at 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 a.m. and at 1.15 and 5 p.m. Msgr. Dwyer stated that sim- flar services will be held in other local Roman Catholic Churches Worshippers at Grace Luther- communion at 6 a.m. and later at 11 a.m. A congregational breakfast will be served follow- ing the dawn service. Rev. Phillip Fiess, pastor of Grace Church, said that a com- munion service will also be held . today at 7.30 p.m. A Good Fri- day service will be held at 10 a.m. Oshawa Jehovah's Witnesses, ' in common with members of the sect around the world, will hold commemorative services Friday after sundown. The Witnesses will share water and wine in memory of Christ's Last Supper before the Crucifixion. Seventh-Day Adventists do not observe Holy Week services and entists in Oshawa will also go ahead with services as usual Sunday and have no plans for Easter worship. Oshawa's Salvationist will also hold a sunrise service at the Salvation Army Citadel Sunday at 7 a.m. Later in the morning the SA band and choir will hold a March of Witness downtown to be followed by the regular 11 a.m, service. No Good Friday services' are scheduled by the SA this year as the Padre, Major Fred Lewis, and other salvationists, will attend meetings in Toronto marking the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Army. Thursday and Good Friday serv- ices in Toronto. ° Churches following the East- ern rites will celebrate Easter one week later than those of the West and this year it falls on April 25. Rev. Rotyslay Pan- czenko, pastor of St. John's Ukrainian Greek Orthodox Church, said that many Osh- awans of Ukrainian descent will wait for a week before holding the holy day. Rev. J. C. Pereyma, pastor of St. George's Ukrainian Catholie Church said that in line: with the traditions of the Ukraine this coming Sunday will be cele- brated as Palm Sunday by his congregation. :

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