Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Apr 1966, p. 5

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WHITBY DAY - BY - DAY Whitby Planning Board Opposes Ro WHITBY (Staff) -- Whitby _Isn't ready for raw type hous- ing. This fact was made clear to local developer who appeared before the Whilby Planning Board, Wednesday evening. The proposal included a 36- unit multiple housing project to be erected on the north - west corner of Mary and Garden sts. The development consisted of six individual building blocks, each block containing two and three - bedroom units. Further attraction for tenants residing in the units was a pro- posed swimming pool and child- ren's play area. Underground parking facilities were described on a draft pian of the project w Housing designed by Bell and Beau- champ Ltd., Oshawa. All - electric heating for each unit added to the appearance of the buildings by avoiding the necessity of installing chimneys on the roof tops: The planning board advised the developer, R. Bibeauy of Whitby, he would be wise to appear before town council should he wish to proceed fur- ther with the project. The devel- oper will be required to apply for an amendment to Zoning By law 2585 which is yet to be approved by the Ontario Muni- cipal Board. The previous by law still in force, by law 1946 mde no provision for this type of development. Group To Attend Rally The Ladies' Auxiliary to the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 112, Whitby, 'held its meeting fn the Legion hall April 26. The meeting opened with President Phyllis Norris in the chair. The discussion on the bazaar was left until the next meeting. A letter was read from Osh- awa Legion Branch, No. 43, thanking Whitby for attending its social evening. A letter of thanks will also be sent from Whitby to Oshawa on their en- tertainment of auxiliaries April 12. It was announced that the rally will be held in Bowman- ville May 2. A bus will leave Whitby Legion Hall at 6 p.m. sharp. Members are reminded to be on time. Members were pleased to learn that Mrs. Shirley Hicks is home from the Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital, that Mrs. Jean King and Mrs. Fallon are also progressing. They were wished a speedy return home, Mem- bers were sorry to learn. that Mrs. Ann Stanlick had been ill with a second attack of in- fluenza. The meeting closed with the usual ritual and the "Queen". Lions Plan Charter Night Whitby Jaycees met April 25| at the Spruce Villa Hotel. The| meeting was chaired by Jaycee Jim Waterfall, second vice- president in the absence of President Dennis Stevens who was attending a district meeting in Toronto along with First Vice-president Dick Conrad. Jaycee Craig Loyst introdu- ced the guest speaker, Counci- llor Bob Attersley, who spoke very convincingly on the advan- tages of living in the Town of Whitby. The speaker was thank- Shrinking Violets The Whitby Shrinking Violets TOPS Club held its weekly meet- ing at Dundas school Tuesday evening chaired by Dorothy Gardner. Twenty members and one visitor were present. | A loss of 26 pounds was re- ported Rose Fudge was named "Queen" for the week and Jean ed by Jaycee John Latulipe. Charter Night will be held May 4 at 6 p.m. with a dinner at St. John the Evangelist par- ish hall. Charter Night will be held May 4 at 6 p.m. with a dinner at St. John the Evangelist par- ish hall Out - of - town guests will be from Georgetown, Eto- bicoke, Scarborough, Toronto, and Cooksville. The leader of the New Democratic Party, Donald MacDonald will be the guest speaker. Lose 26 Pounds Jaynes "April Queen". Jean was presented with a crown broach. The winner of the draw was Florence Edwards. The winner of the games was Rhea Andre- chuck. Members are reminded of the arrangements made re- garding the non + attendance at meetings. Wants Grads To Teach Before Summer Course NEWCASTLE -- Port Hope|man of the reading committee High School's retiring principal P. J. Bigelow recommended to the Durham district high school board Wednesday that it send a resolution to the trustees coun- cil calling for the department of education to scrap the eight- week emergency training course at Ontario College of Education for university gradu- ates. He advocated that graduates be allowed to start teaching im- mediately. He proposed university grad- uates teach for one year and then take the college of educa- tion course for one year. By doing this, Mr. Bigelow) of OCI and Mrs. Frances Poles- chuk, reading consultant for the board of education, North York. The Durham area has been set up as one of five demon- stration centres in the province. E. F. Witty, a Port Hope High School teacher, will be sent by the board to Syracuse University this summer to take a special reading demonstra- tion course. It is the intention of the board to set up a pilot demonstration class in Port Hope. feels the schools would have screened out the deadwood from those who really want to teach. Much of the time of the meet- ing was devoted to a study of the recommendations arising from the three reading sem- inars held in Durham County. The board Jearned it now had the services of two reading ex- perts from the Ontario Curri- culum Institute for three days) a month. Assisting with the| Durham county reading pro- gram is Dr. Alex Turner, chair-! FIREMEN LOSE EQUIPMENT ST. PETERS, P.E.I. (CP) Firemen in this northern Kings County Village had no equipment to fight a fire to- day. The equipment, including the village's two firefighting trucks, was all inside the firehali which burned. =--=--|parenis have their THE WORK OF the Child- ren's Aid Society of the County of Ontario and the City of Oshawa was re- viewed at the annual meet- ing Thursday night in Whit- WHITBY (Staff) -- The Prov- ince of Ontario has 150,000 emo- tionally disturbed children of whom at least 90 per cent can be helped back to a normal life. This was the theme of an ad- dress given at the annual meet- ing of the Children's Aid Soci- ety of the County of Ontario and the City of Oshawa. The meet- ing was held in All Saints' Par- ish Hall, Whitby, Thursday eve- ning. of the . organization, Residentiat Treatment Centre For Emotionally Disturbed Chil- dren, Toronto, held the audi- ence spellbound for well over half an hour. High point of the speech was the emphasis on a desperate situation centring around the child who finds he cannot fit into his surroundings. One of the main problems of the child was described as his in- ability to communicate with his family, friends and around him in daily life. COMPLEX CAUSE "The child, who is emotional- ly disturbed, is not especially a bad child who cavorts and causes trouble for no reason at all. On the contrary, the child has a very excellent reason or reasons,"" The speaker said the child has strayed from the nor- mal path for some reason that lies buried in his back history. One or more minor things could have caused the problem or it may have been one major disturbance at an early age. Each child comes into the world with a complete lack of knowledge of his surroundings. This is natural enough. The child is influenced, however, by small events or happenings and it is these things which form the basis on which the child will either thrive normally or, fall at the wayside as an emotion- ally disturbed being, the speak- er suggested. rendale Treatment Centre allows the child to drop back to his normal pace, an area where he feels the most com- fortable. "We take the child back to where he deviated from the normal stream then, back a little further to give him an opportunity to begin functioning properly," Mr. Brown said. "One of the mian factors in the creation of the emotionally disturbed child is the fact the ow prov- Addressing over 150 members| John L.| Brown, director of Warrendale} others} In treating the child, the War-! by. Seen here from left, are Barnard Lewis, local dir- ector, Mrs. R. E. Sims, president and John L, Brown, director of Warren- lems which keep them from providing a normal home for the child," Mr. Brown explain- ed. Lack of proper environ- ment for any number of rea- sons is the greatest cause of this problem. "Every one of these children seriously wants to be normal and function like other people but they fail at every turn through lack of knowledge and the deviation in their lives at one time," Mr. Brown. said. Citing an instance, Mr. Brown referred to a man who comes home tired and sits through the dinner hour amid an _ atmos- phere of confusion and distur- bance, Leaving the house at the end of the meal, the man may find the weather discomforting and this further adds to his emo- tional disturbance. The man, however, has the knowledge that tomorrow or one _ hour from now things will be better and he can easily re-adjust. "The child cannot do this, how- ever, since at an early age he lacks the knowledge that things can be better," Mr. Brown explained. The speaker said that signs of emotional disturbance can show up in the early years of elementary school. He suggest- ed that teachers in this cate- gory must be taught how to detect the signs of a problem and deal with it before the sit- uation grows worse. Faulting various institutions and organizations plus the de- partment of welfare, the speak- er suggested the efforts put forth are less than useless since they do not strike at the heart of the porblem. He said one organization set up a program where a mother and father came to the institu- tion and attempted to correct the child's condition, Another organization took the treatment out to the home itself and this also failed, Warrendale Treatment Centre has a summer camp among other helpful methods. There is a nursery school program where the child, regardless of age, can begin to find where he is the most comfortable. Gradually he progresses. Next comes classroom treatment where a child who cannot operate at the norma! rate of treatment is the stage where the child begins functioning normaliy either at the centre's special school or in @ community -sehes!, Jy It's the best way to find out what people really think do they like it when they don't know which brand they're drinking? If you've tried Bonded Stock yourself, the playback won't Stock is a great Canadian whisky. You can conceal the label but you can't dis- Bonded Stock on a friend letting him see the label about a whisky: how surprise you. Bonded guise the flavour. It's an extremely mellow whisky with a deceptively smooth flavour. The other thing that's deceptive about Bonded Stock is its price. But the price doesn't fool people with taste. Bonded Stock's sensible price is a sort of bonus you get for good judgment. And what could be fairer than that? Gooderham's have been distilling fine whiskies since 1832, - pla Goodorkams dale Residential Treatment Centre for Emotionally Dis- turbed Children, Toronto, who delivered the address. (Oshawa Times Photo) Disturbed Child Said A Complex Problem The speaker said there are 50 families connected with the centre who work with the chil- dren in the atmosphere that surrounds the private home and family, From this point the child may gradually develop to the stage where he returns to his own family and can react in a normal manner and live a full life. "Costs of this rehabilitation are high," Mr. Brown stated, |*But the costs of no treatment are much higher", He said the Warrendale Centre has a daily rate of $24 per day which is far below that of reguiar hospitals. The centre does not receive as a normal schoo! would nor is it classed on the basis of a hospital. In closing his address, the speaker said two things can be of assistance to a community: cold hard cash and, the reuni- ting an emotionally disturbed child with his own family. He suggested the latter can be of more lasting value in the long run, The meeting opened with a musical prelude supplied by Miss Margaret Squires who al- so. played the National Anthem. Invocation was by Rev. John BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE ' $200 Fine Is Imposed For Fourth Conviction © AJAX (Staff) -- His fourth conviction on a charge of driv- ing without insurance brought Kenneth Frost, 113 King's cres., Ajax, a $900 fine Thursday in magistrate's court. Magistrate Jermyn suspended Frost's licence for 30 days and fined him an additional $25 for failing te notify the department of transport of the purchase of the vehicle. An Oshawa man was fined $25 when he was found guilty of careless driving. David Earle Johnston, 46, of 334 Stevenson rd., Oshawa, was charged after his car collided with the rear of a parked car Mar. 26 on Har- wood ave, The parked car was owned br Peter Evans, 157 Hill- crest dr., Whitby. Damage to- talled $350. An Ajax resident was re- manded in custody for two weeks when he pleaded guilty to charges of abduction, false pretences and breach of pro- bation. Charles Wilfred Belanger, 19, of Cedar st., was charged with abducting a 15-year-old Ajax girl on April 16. He and a com- panion were picked up April 20 by Whitchurch Township police. The accused was also charg- ed with cashing a _ worthless cheque at Kemp's Pharmacy in Ajax. Probation Officer Kenneth Rose said that the accused was placed on probation for two years on May~27, 1965 when he was found guilty on two charges of breaking and entry and theft and one charge of possessing stolen property. Belanger broke the conditions of the probation on Mar. 24 of this year when he was convicted of causing wilfull damage. An Ajax resident was placed on suspended sentence of six months when he pleaded guilty to a charge of causing wilfull Nurses Dispute Progress Seen WHITBY (Staff) -- County Clerk William G. Manning said this morning progress is being made toward a settlement of the dispute between the nurses of the Ontario County Health Unit and the county. He said that with Bradford Paulin, the labor representative for the health unit, he had met the nurses in Toronto yester- day. A meeting of the county health board was held at the county building last night. The nurses, employed by the unit, resigned about a month ago when they were refused K. Moffat. REPORTS PRESENTED | A short address of welcome to the community 'was offered to the society and its member- ship by Whitby Mayor Desmond Newman after which the presi- dent's report was given by Mrs. R. E. Sims who chaired the meeting. The local director's re- port was presented by the So- ciety Director Bernard Lewis. Both the treasurer's report sub- mitted by Ken Purdy and the secretary Whitby Reeve Ever- ett Quantrill's report were re- ceived. The nominating committee's report was presented followed by the announcement of appoint- ment of auditors. Reeve John L. Dancey, Township of Brock, introduced the guest speaker with Mrs. Christine Thomas voicing appreciation to the spea- ker at the termination of his ad- dress. bargaining rights by the for- |mer board of health. al amounting to less than Thomas Goldring, of Kings- court apartments, admitted knocking out the ventilation win- dow of a car. Magistrate Jermyn gave the suspended sentence when he learned Goidring had co-oper- ated with police and had made restitution for the damage. Radio Network Demonstrated COBOURG -- Under the d- rection of EMO Co-ordinator Gordon V. Wright, the counties- wide radio network was demon- strated at the Wednesday meet- ing of counties council. The base station was set up adjacent to the Golden Plough Lodge. Testing stations were set up in Bowmanville, Orono, Millbrook, Campbellford, Port Hope, Cold Springs, Colborne and Grafton. The EMO committee wants council to approve the expendi- ture of $18,000 to install the net- work permanently. Counties Clerk Ken Symons said he did not think the ex- penditure would be approved at this council session. ONTARIO MEDICAL SERVICES INSURANCE PLAN AUCTION SALE at the Whitby Community Arena 1 P.M. SAT., APRIL 30th Auctioneer -- AL CURTIS Sponsored by .. . All Saints Anglican Church Proceeds te... Cover Cost of Churches' Centennial Year Progrem. @ MISCELLANEOUS AUCTION HAND SEWN ARTICLES. @ HOME BAKING AND THE OSHAWA TIMES, Priday, April 29, 1966 5 Westerns On TV Confuse Toddlers LONDON (AP) -- An Indian psychologist says television westerns give some little Brit- ish palefaces wrong ideas--they think Red Indian bad guys on the screen are the same breed as Indian immigrant children in their classrooms, "In the westerns, the Red In- dians are shown as rather poor and bad," Mohinder Cheema, |j 39, a researcher at London's Institute of Education, told a teachers' conference. "So the white child feels he must fight with the immigrant, who must also be bad. They can't tell that the westerns are just an artificial creation." Cheema said he once asked a white child what he wanted to do when he grew up. The reply: "I'l fight Indians, They're very bad." 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