Co Kitchen "Rip Out" Required A board of healh inspection of O'Neill Collegiate cafeteria whic ™m Ghe Oshawa Gimes SDAY, MAY 31, 1966 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUE suet e tS A Education Board Approves puter Investigations Board's Share "Cheap" Says Chairman Lovell Oshawa board of education itrustees last night agreed to | $500, which has already been re+ | jected. |participate in an initial study) Original discussions were held to determine the feasibility of] by officials from five organiza- |data processing. City separate tions within the city -- city coun- |school board trustees earlier|j], Oshawa General Hospital, WELSH WEARING WHAT calls for major renovations of "turned down a similar proposal. Flowers Add C'olor Help Beautify A staff of two full-time em- ployees will mainain the new Nothing adds more to the beautyof a city than a profusion : of colorful flowers decorating its! greenhouse and a third will as- parks and landscaped areas. sist during busy times, Mr. Ken- To help make Oshawa beau-/'nedy said. tiful the city spends an estimate; Each year in the fall before $25,000 each year to grow and/|freeze-up, cuttings are obtained transplant 80,000 plants for city|/from city geranium plants to be! flower beds. used to produce next year's "This may seem like a large|crop. amount of money to spend on| These along with new seed- flowers," says Allen Shank, gar-|lings are transplanted from dening foreman, "but when you seed beds during the winter to consider how it increasespri-|specially constructed shallow consider how it ncreases pri-|boxes to provide more growing vate property value and how it! space. provides relaxation to many! The flower: peopie, it's not much," edin ci Oshawa now grows its own) Victoria Day hoiiday to flowers ina leased greenhouse|frost damage which but facilities there have become | cause the loss of the so overcrowded that tenders are| crop. now being prepared to construct! 'Before the flowers are trans a city-owned greenhouse this planted they must be well ad summer. vanced," says the parks com- "The site for the new green-|missioner, "so they can pro househas not yet been decided/duc. a better display early in on," said P. J. Kennedy, parks|the year and throughout the commissioner. "We grow our|summer." own flowers because to buy them| Additional help is required dur- from a commercial greenhouse! ing the planting season and this would cost too much." is obtained from the parks, Growing facilities will almost|property and recreation de- be doubled when the new green-| partment. house is completed, he said. "The city city # city f might entire grows border Steelworkers - Company Given Month To Agree A department of labor con- ciliator who met representatives of the steelworkers' union and Ontario Malleable Iron on Mon- day has given the two sides un til the end of June to settle their differences. Keith Ross, Local 1500 USWA International Representative and head negotiator said today "The officer instructed us to g0 back into direct negotiations before the end of the month." Mr. Ross said if no settlement could be reached by then, the local would be legally entitled to strike within seven days. Local 1500 negotiating a new contract for its 550 mem- bers working at Ontario Mail eable replace the old one which expired May 1 The union wants among other things to replace the present system of three-year contracts with a one or two-year contract Union and management will is to he kitchen facility, came to light at last night's board of edu-! cation meeting. Stanley Lovell, board chair- man said the board of health) recommendations mean 'we'll! have to rip out the whole kit- chen facility." Harold Robinson, an inspector with the board of health, said to- day that following an inspection of the school last December he} recommended four changes -- a| refrigerated display counter,| ventilation for cooking . equip-| ment, stainless steel or plastic} trays for storing cutlery instead of the wood variety now used, and discontinuance of display-| ing cream-filled desserts in areas that are not refrigerated. | He said the board of health cannot condemn schools or or-| der the board of education to| rectify undesirable situations in schools. "Rather, we try to gain the| co-operation of the board and re-} commend that these changes be made,"' he said. Mr. Robinson said some of the perishable foodstuffs which] should be refrigerated at all times, is left out. of cafeteria's ] two hours.. | The matter was brought up by |Mr. Lovell during discussion on jtenders of operation of secon- \dary school cafeterias. | Ross Backus, board adminis- \trator, recommended the con- tract with Frank Manos be re- newed for another year. Trustee T. D. Thomas dis- greed and suggested the con-| tracts be diivded between Mr. | who -also tendered for the job. | He said this was also the recom-} mendation of George Roberts, | superintendent of secondary| FA schools. | A committee composed of iC it Trustees Thomas, Leo Glover) and E. A. Bassett will investi-) gate the cafeteria matter fur- ther and report back to the 7 not geraniums, petunias, fo-|board at the next meeting. }}4age and a variety. of other) }polants to Teas saya. Remedy. "vel ~ DAY REMAND : areview Part, FOR WHITBY MAN them to Memorial }°ark, city hall, J Blillsdale Manor and other city- «owned structures." WHITBY (Staff) -- A father | No experimental work is done|. of four children Frederick | Courtney, 39, 1003 Centre st. n., was remanded one week in custody today when he ap- by the city but some studying ts performed on the length of peared in Whitby Magis- trate's court charged with time taken for flowers to ma- { ure. Greenhouse and gardening is 11 branch of the 'parks depar-| non-capital murder in the | shooting death of his wife | May. 15. It was Courtney's third re- | jinent operating under the di- rection of Herb Bathe, parks dent and Richard mand he. was arrested || hours after Helen Courtney, 35, was found dead in the | couple's modern bungalow | home An autopsy showed she was shot to death and died in- stantly. Courtney May 17, May 24 and today. | Master Plan For O'Neill rnittee, said toda; A recommendation by George ($125,000 has been collected Roberts, superintendent of sec- "It's certainly 'not the fastest|ondary schools, that could cost }¢ ampaign in hisfory,"' he said, | Oshawa board of education "one i. 'but there isn't a day that goes|or two thousand dollars' for a |toy that we don't get something."| master plan to determine future The blitz has been on since|development of O'Neill Colleg- 'ebruar' iate, was approved last night. 1'ebruary. The plan will be drawn up by The new centre will be On| the board's architect. Mr. Rob- the location of the current one,|erts said it will deal strictly iin old red-bricked, one-room! with interior redevelopment and sichool house at the corner of! could involve the moving of par- 1 3loor and Harmony rd. titions Mr. McNab said that Eaton's Mr. Roberts was granted per- «of Canada Limited will be do-|mission by board chairman ajating $1,000 in furniture in the! Stanley E. Lovell to hold his re- ext few days and a $500 dona-| port on the proposed addition to { ion on the way from the/OCVI until a committee meeting! {Soroptimist Club of Oshawa. which followed last night's re- Students at Central Colleg-jgular meeting and was closed general "parks fore | 7 nan | Drive Passes Half-Way Mark A construction of a new drive to raise $250,000 for crippled t hildren's school and treatment centre has passed the half-way tnark Ian McNab ¢:ampaign's public chairman of the ions com- st |to the press | cillor in Abertillery, Wales, as domestic refrigerators for about, was remanded |, Wales and bring the Welsh in line, "According to all my read- ing and education I've never seen or heard of a Welshman with a kilt on,' exclaimed Mrs. Andrews. She said it was bad enough for a Welshwoman to show her knees let alone a Welshman. "T admire the kilt,"" Mrs, An- drews says, "but it is the Scots who originated it and they should wear it." Mr. Evans claims the Welsh A Welshman wearing a kilt? "Preposterous"', says Mrs. Browyn Andrews, 216 Burk st., president of the Oshawa St. David's Welsh Society. "Can you imagine a Welsh coal miner going underground with a kilt on?" she asked. Mrs. Andrews, who married an Irish Canadian, was com- menting on a recent article in Th. Oshawa Times which cited Brinkley Evans, a local coun- wanting to bring the kilt to pment HOUDAILLE CANVASS STARTS $133,000 For P are of Celtic origin and there- fore have full authority to wear the kilt. But Mrs. Andrews says, "'We are Anglo-Saxon not Celtic -- at least that is what they taught us in school. "Let the Scots have their traditional wear," she said, "we have our own." Welshmen jpvear_ trousers, Mrs. Andrews says, '"'and the women wear white blouses and skirts, a stove-pipe hat, a little apron and a Welsh flan- nel shawl. roject Collected In 13 Days The 13-day old drive for $500,- ¢ 000 to help finance the city's | ennial project has rolled up | $133,000 in pledges and cash do- | nations, g Spread over the next year, the |campaign is being conducted to- collect roughly half the cost of building a diverse recreational addition to the Civie Auditor- ium, General Motors workers have been coming forward in throngs to contribute. To date some 16,000 of 20,000 have pledged ; donations for the next year (at a rate of 50 cents a week) or donated cash, Terence Kelly, finance committee chairman said today. Houdaille Industries jumped into the money-raising scheme today. Enlisting support of the employees will be Richard Fair- thorne, industrial relations man- ager, William Rutherford, chair- man of the company's Local 222 unit of the UAW, and Kenneth Arbuckle, controller, who will handle payroll deduction. $12,000 EXPECTED Mr. Fairthorne estimates that more than $12,000 will be con- tributed. by Houdaille workers. About 750 workers at the com- pany were donating in the ear- lier three-year public subscrip- tion blitz for $1,300,000 to buiid the Civic Auditorium, That cam- paign ends this year, and during it Houdaille had 91 per cent par-| When the campaign steps out- ticipation from employees, the! ide the realm of plant employ- highest for any single company.| % & pare jot of rk Mr, Kelly said that of 25,000|f5 "ao. with, doctors Se ssible donors who work at]. ., a y plants, about 16,000 have gree ade Kelly added. joined in the latest scheme. Last Friday, Robert Wilson at Canvassing at GM is expected Campaign headquarters on King to end this week St. W., presented the idea of the _ |blitz to passers-by and came. up j : with another $170 in cash' con- Chamber Talk: tributions. Law, Pollutio Topics for discussion at the 'We hope to have the greater 54th annual Ontario Chamber of Commerce convention, now in{P8tt of the campaign completed its third-day at North Bay, range|by June 30," Mr. Kelly said. p drive, as opposed to the last n one, is that only $25 a head is needed, instead of $50. An attractive feature of this| |dents Chairman Stanley Lovell said jthe board's share of $800 for | the first part of a two-part study "is a cheap and perhaps the only way we will be able to dis- cover the feasibility of comput- ers." Total cost of the initial study by DCF Systems Ltd. of Toron- to has been estimated at $5,000. |Second stage of the study, con- tingent on the outcome of the feasibility analysis, would define the systems and procedures for the major applications machine ijrequiremnts, personnel require- ments and organization for the data processing centre. Cost of the second stage of the study has been estimated at a further $5,000. FIVE GROUP § Original discussions were held by officials from five organiza- tions within the city -- city coun- cil, Oshawa General Hospital, board of education, separate school board and Public Utilities Commission. City council's share of the ini- tial study would be $1,500; hos- pital board, $1,000; PUC, $1,200; land the separate school board, | Only 50 per cent of the stu- in Oshawa secondary lschools who completed the On- \tario Motor League driver-edu- _ |cation course would be "ready" KENNETH ARRUCKLE Grandview Group | Speaks To Council Residents of Grandview ave. appeared last night before a committee meeting of city coun- cil to protest the elevation drop from a new road to their front \lawns. A ruling of council prohibits reporting of council-in-commit- tee meetings -until the matter discussed is dealt with at a regu- lar meeting. City clerk Roy Barrand said today he could make no comment about any- thing that occurred at last night' committee meeting. for the Ontario department of transport driver's test. This was disclosed in a report from the OML which was dis- cussed at last night's board of jeducation meeting. | "J would have thought it would |have been 100 per cent," said | board chairman Stanley E, Lov- jell. | "So would I," agreed George |Roberts, superintendent of sec- | ondary schools, "but apparently some of them need more actual driving experience." | The board approved an expen- iditure to the OML of $5,100 for \the first of three driver-educa- jtion courses this year. Another |course is planned for this sum- | mer and the third during the fall | term. | Mr. Roberts also reported that the OML has increased its cost to the students by $5 to $25 "and we are now registering students for the summer course on that' basis." He said boys who take the course would receive almost that much rebate on their first-year insurance premium as a result of taking the course. The report, submitted to the board by Frederick C. Nash, co- ordinator of the driver-education course, indicated that 138 stu- dents enrolled for the first course and 136 completed it. The over-all average of class- room tests and final examina- tion was 71 per cent with a 69 per cent over-all average for in-car instruction. The report states that several students were enrolled against their will by their parents, Eight per cent of the students enrolled in the course will not receive the dilpomas, while a similar num- board of education, separate school board, and Public Utill- ties Commission. City council's share of the ini- jtial study would be $1,500; hose | pital board, $1,000; PUC, $1,200; and the separate school board, $500, which has already been rejected. A letter to Ross Backus, board |administrator, from R. C. Car- |roll, manager of the consulting firm, explained the charges are based on time spent by himself at $23 an hour; W. H. Sanders, a former manager of the com- puter applications of the plan- ning department, Hydro Elec- tric Power Commission of On- \tario, at $21 an hour; and E. M. Elliott, a former computer analyst with the Manitoba government, at $18 an hour. The first stage of the study is expected to determine which of the organizations, if any, should work further toward a common data processing facility; what |jobs are candidates for mechan- ization and what sequence these jobs be converted to machines; and costs, benefits and disad- vantages of a mechanization pro gram. Only 50 Per Cent 'Ready' Following Driving Course ber will not receive them until they complete assignments. Mr. Nash reported that of the 68 pupils rated by the in-the-car instructors. as being ready for the department of transport test, 20 have tried it and have been successful on their first try. "Some difficulty was expe- rienced becaus pupils found it inconvenint to kp Friday and Saturday in-th-car appoint- ments," the report said. "This resulted in a wide variation of pupils behind-the-wheel time to- ward the end of the course, but much of this was corrected dur- ing the Easter vacation," Department Backs Trips The Ontario department of education is offering an incense tive to school boards across the province which may enable stu- dents to make field trips to various parts of the country during next year's celebration of 100 years of Confederation. Oshawa board of education last night received a letter from the department which informed that the board may include for grant purposes the attendance of pupils on such field trips on eschool days provided the trip is school or school-board sponsor- ed and is supervised by suitable staff provided by the board. This information came from H. E, Elborn, assistant deputy minister of education. He wrote that it is expected a number of a the ap- proval of boards rustees and as part of the schol program, will visit certain historical sites, centennial projects, Ottaw and Expo 67 in Montreal next year as part of Canada's cen- tennial celebration. from pollution to respect of law enforcement Jack, Mann, manager of the Oshawa chamber and Gordon Riehl, a past president, who was elected one of 15 Ontario direc- tars, are attending the conven- tion "An item of particular inter- est,' said a chamber official, 'is the proposal of the Ottawa Transportation Commission. It has prepared a brief outlining the need for financial relief for transit systems." Other provinces have removed meet again Friday June 1 RECREATION OFFICIALS COMMENT 'fate Institute have kicked in $ or reduced fuel taxes and licence \fees but Ontario has been slow {to do this, said the officials Teens' Rowdiness More Swim Pools Necessary More swimming pools in Osh-at Sommerville Park, open July awa, in addition to the centen-|and attendance is expected nial pool plans, are not only de-jincrease this year. Last year's sirable but necessary, according | record number of swimmers who to recreation officials ised the pools was 58.000 "The continual increase of lei sure time brought about by the shorter working day, makes a demand on our recreation facili- ties and our pools are over- crowded,"' said Bruce Holds- worth, assistant director of creation. The attendance of swimmers at the three outdoor pools is not expected to be affected by the opening of the recreation centre next year. In fact, Mr. Holdsworth says there is need for many more pools in Oshawa.| pyttdoor pools and an. addi The two municipal pools at) tional indoor swimming pool Rotary Park and the Somerset) within the next 10 years. TREMENDOUS "Swimming participat increased tremendously past two years said Mu Red ( water chairman. 'Our five courses are filled Mr. Mudd said Oshawa's first job is the indoor centennial pool but he said there is a growing need for other pools P. J. Kennedy, city recreation commissioner, said he foresses the coming of four "walk to" over the George ro ufety re- tole? The recreation centre employs|structors be at least 17 years of persons: 18 women and four/of age and hold a bronze medal- for the three pools, Alljlion, be a Red Cross water safe- hold their bronze medal- ty leader, or have a senior or instructor' badge from the safety training is YMCA Mr. Holds- nen inust lion More ivecessary,' 3 vorth The first { raining ljardize ining water = said Oshawa's ouldoor pools will 'have three levels of swimming guard instruction and awards: the Osh-| Stan-|awa recreation committee methods|awards for four to eight year} or guards and instructors," jolds, the Red Cross Society} rays Mr. Mudd. The R oyal Life|awards for youngsters up to 13, Saving Society, the YMCA, and|and the Royal Life Saving So- tlhe Red Cross will work together|ciety awards for older swim | tio provide a 36-hour program mers i "We hope to restock the area} The recreation committec vvith life guards having the Red|plans to sponsor family swim Ctross Water Safety Leader Pa-|ming this summer. "Such exer t rol aid Mr. Mudd ises would benefit adults wi A recent provin I rulir lave ample leisure time," 'y lates that life guards and in-'Mr. Holdsworth, national ram our | Stops Amusement NEW YORK(AP ) -- An esti- mated 4,000 teen-agers went on a rampage at Coney Island Monday night, letting off steam as the U.S. Memorial Day week- end drew to a close Police said the teen-agers both girls and boys between the ages of 14 and 18 -- engaged in fist fights, threw bottles and forced rides and booths to close early at the amusement centre The rowdiness lasted about} an hour before 200 policemen,} neluding 150 reinforcements, | broke up the milling, laughing youngsters. At least eight persons were arrested on charges of disorder- conduct and another was d with felonious assault allegedly striking a mount d policeman, ' More than 125 persons from all over Ontario hon- ored Leon E, "Pop" Osier at a testimonial dinner Mon- day. Mr. Osier (right) has retired as manager of the Biltmore Theatre after more than 50 years in the theatre business, most of them in Oshawa. Frank Fisher, vice-president, Odeon Thea- tres Toronto (left) and Donald Fleming, president of the Oshawa Kinsmen Club are shown chatting with Mr. Osier. Mr, Flem- ing was chairman of the dinner sponsored by the Kinsmen Club. Gordon Gar- rison read a review of Mr. Osier's* life and presented l FRIENDS HONOR THEATRE PERSONALITY with a billfold filled money. Mr. Fleming also presented Mr. Osier with a specially made lea- ther bound folder containing the story of his life and the signatures of all present. , him with