INSTRU! Goshin-Jitsu Karate Training CTOR DELIVERS KICKS KARATE CLUB FORMED IN CITY...ONLY ONE OF ITS KIND IN CANADA LEAPING TOWARD BERT PERRY GENEAU JUMPS INTO ACTION Offers Courage, Way Of Life A way of life, the courage to walk away from unwanted situ- ations and the ability to face every day activities. _Goshin-Jitsu, Karate, a new club that has been formed in Oshawa, offers these things. The only one of its kind in Can- ada, it differs from Joshu, Karate in its training. "Joshu, Karate is more for showmanship and exhibitions," said Art Geneau, instructor and holder of the coveted black-| belt. "We don't go around bre: boards and bricks. This is all right, but a brick doesn't move like a person." To most people, rate means that you have at your disposal, a way to not only sub- due an opponent, but cripple him. This Karate is capable of, but it is not the purpose of Goshin-Jitsu, Karate. RIGID RULES "We have rigid rules that must be obeyed," said Mr. Geneau. "'We train to walk away or talk our way out of undesirable situations, The club rules do not allow beatle-hair- cuts or drinking while train- ing, Cleanliness is a must, We demand it. "There is also a spiritual side to the art that is little known. It isn't introduced fully until the black-belt stage. In the brown-belt stage, it is intro- duced to a certain degree. This is when the going really gets rough, "Only three belts are re- quired to receive the black- belt," said Mr. Geneau. The Centennial Fund Still Expanding Oshawa's $1,000,000 Centennial project -- the "we need it'let's build it" recreation centre -- grew by $5,467 this week, audi- torium director Robert Wilson said today. So far, $909,467 has been col- lected, said Oshawa's man - in- charge at fund raising head | quarters on King St. E. | He said a further $100,533 is) still needed to build the $1,010,- 000 addition to the Civic Audi-| torium. | Today Louis Allard, president! of Local 397 United Broterhood of Carpenters, gave a $100 cheque to Christine Thomas, an Auditorium director. Last weekend a group of Osh- awa professional men donated $14,000 and last week the fund increased by $13,000. KING-COURT Mr. Wilson said a three-man King and his Court -- the Har- lem Globetrotters of softball-- will play in Oshawa on Septem- ber. 7. They tour North America chal- lenging teams and at the end of each game they stage virtu- oso stunts like the Globetrotters. "T've seen them three times and they're out of this world," Mr. Wilson said Proceeds of thier performance will go to into the campaign fund. Two - thirds of the centre is being financed by the outside grants, The city is contributing most -- $440,000 with $120,000 coming from federa] and provincial gov- ernment grants and $100,000 from the winter works program. This left $350,000 to be don- ated by the people of Oshawa who so far have given over softball team, known as_ the ALD. THOMAS, $249,000. | people. LOUIS ALLARD novice is given a white-belt and he works with this for three to six months, depending on abil- ity, then he receives his green- belt. This is finished in junior and senior degrees, "From the green, he goes to the brown, and this is com- pleted in three stages before he| can receive his black. The whole process takes about three| years.' | The club meets every Tues- day and Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m., and Wednesday and Fri- day afternoons, 1.30 to 3.30 p.m, Membership is $3 per year and $2.50 a week. Meeting place is the Simcoe Hall Boys Club. Oshawa's Bernie Guindon will be slugging it out with Jim Neil Canadian Welterweight champion and Golden Gloves champion for two consecutive years, when the Oshawa Boxing Club visits St. Catharines Fri- day. Guindon will be featured in the main bout while his brother Jack, battles Terry Summerha- yes, Golden Glove lightweight champion for 1966, in another five - round, semi - main event. Brothers Ernie and Jim Mc- Phee, also of Oshawa will take part in three-round welterweight preliminaries. Two Sets City Brothers Boxing In St. Catharines Guindon has had 38 fights with only five losses. He has never been knocked down and has had 10 knockouts. His op- ponent, Neil, has been in 278 fights losing only 14. He is pre- sently on a tour with the Ca-| CITY POLICE ANNOUNCE PICNIC TRAFFIC ROUTES Police Chief Walter Johns- ton has announced the follow- ing traffic conditions for people attending the UAW an- nual picnic Saturday at Lake- view Park. Due to the construction of the new bridge crossing the Oshawa creek on Simcoe St. S., the temporary bridge now in operation at the present time will allow for one lane traffic only. Due to the vast amount of traffic expected to descend on Lakeview Park the tem- porary bridge will -be open southbound only during the hours between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. All vehicles leaving the Lake view area during these hours will have to use Henry St. and Lakeview Dr. to Valley Dr. and then north to Thomas §.T. Starting at 5 p.m. traffic crossing the temporary bridge will be reversed. Between the hours of § and 7 p.m. traffic will be north bound only to speed the flow of traffic, \ Persons wishing to get to the lake area during these hours will have to go west on Thomas St. to Valley Dr., south on Valley Dr. to Lake- view Dr. and east on Lake- view Dr. to the park area. This alternate route will be open, to the public during the entire day. Throughout the day 30 po- lice officers will be on duty directing traffic. Ohe Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1966 New Public Houses Boost Total To 83 Seven new subsidized public houses on Carleton Ct., are now occupied and an additional 16 houses on the court will prob- ably be occupied by the end of August. H. G. Chesebrough, secretary of the Oshawa Housing Author- ity, said today there will be 83 public subsidized houses in the city by the end of August. | At present there are 42) hi at Christine Ores., 18 at nadian Olympic team. Guindon| met Neil for the Golden Glyoves championship two years consec- utively but lost both times. / win for Guindon will give him a chance at becoming a mem- ber of the Canadian Olympic boxing team. The fights will be held at 111 Church St., in St. Catharines, beginning at 8 p.m, More than 2,200 people from Ontario and Quebec attended the annual Seventh-day Adven- tist summer bible convention at Kingsway College last weekend. President of the Canadian Union conference of Seventh- day Adventists, J. W. Bowes opened the convention with a talk stressing the importance of the church members living up to biblical standards as found in holy scripture. Associate of the radio staff of the Voice of Prophecy, Los Angeles, H. M. S. Richards, program speaker, addressed the young people and told them of the important task that they had in standing up for their rights as good christian young Mr. Richards emphasized the responsibility of youth to set an example for teenagers that are inclined to go astray. Five Dancers Win Medals Five members of an Oshawa ballroom dancing club received awards in examinations conduc- ted by the Canadian Dance Teachers' Association in Hamil- ton recently. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Williams, Mr, and Mrs were also aw- f medals in the waltz égory. The five are members of the North Oshawa Ballroom Danc- cing Club which started as an off - shoot of ballroom dancing instruction sponsored by the Oshawa recreation department. ' i said deputy recreation The tests were taken in Ham- |ilton June 25 in the presence jof Canada's leading ballroom Secretary. of public affairs and religious liberty, M. E. Loewes, said church members become good citizens and that they are obligated to learn more about the liberty that they as citizens and christians are entitled. During the convention, A. G. Rogers, administrator of Bron- son hospital, Toronto, owned and operated by the Seventh- day Adventists, announced that] g the hospital now has over 500 beds. Its previous capacity was 168 beds Mr. Rogers said the church operated 274 hospitals around the world and are presently treating, 3,479,009 patients Quebec Girl Travels Home After Visit With Pen Pal Nineteen - year + old Jacqe- |line Tremblay today begins a More Than 2.200 Attend _ Summer Bible Convention 600 - mile journey back to her native Quebec after spending a) week at the home of her Osh- awa pen pal But it'll be tomorrow before) she gets hume | That's because it's 22 hours} by train to JonquiereKenogni| a twin city of 48,000 people 100 mile north - east of Quebec! City. Jacqueline has been staying| with 18 - year - old Rhonda} Byrant, 249 Kindsor St. a grade} 13 student at Donevan Collegiate Institute. It all began two summers ago when Rhonda and about 30) other 15 - and 16 - year - old} Oshawa Students visited Quebec} as a part of an exchange pro-! ram. Rhonda stayed with Jacque-| line, her parents, two sisters and} one brother. This year Jacque-| line paid a return visit | LANGUAGE Rhonde =sid Jacqueline, who now works as a secreatry and! yearly. who wants to be a social work-| er. 'speaks better English than I speak French." She said if Jacqueline made a mistake in English she'd cor- rect her then ask how to say it in French. Rhonda, who wants to be a teacher, says apart from learn- ing each other's language, "the main purpose" of the exchange was "to get a closer relation between French and English Ca- nadians."' "I had no idea how' things were before I went to Quebec," she said. LIKES CITY Jacqueline said: 'I like Osh- awa very much. The people are very friendly." While she was here Jacque- line went with Rhonda and her parents to Peterborough and stayed in the family trailer at Buckhorn lake. Rhonda also gave a party in her honor. The girls have been writing to each other off an on for \two years in each other's Jan-| | guage. But in future they'll write/ will be aboard the first flight, in their own language. "This way we'll write more often,' Rhonda said. Lomond Cres. and there will be 23 at Carleton Ct. He said the Ontario Housing Corporation is trying to acquire an additional 32 houses on Cyprus St. -- eight quadruplex- es -- which will bring the total number of public subsidized |houses in the city to 115. Rent in these houses vary ac- |cording to a scale formulated| by the province and runs ac- cording to the families' gross income. It may be as low as $37.50 a month. The average rent is around $80 or $90 a month, he said. For welfare families living in these houses the city pays $75 a month rent, Credit Union Group Travels To Europe | More than 300 Oshawa resi- dents -- members of the UAW Credit Union -- will spend a month in Europe this summer. For many it will be the first |journey home since coming to |Canada. They will travel in two \chartered DC8-F jets from To- |ronto to London, England. One hundred and eighty-three jscheduled for July 29. The re- As an example of how the houses are rented, Mr. Chese- brough cited a family of five-- three children and two adults. "If they earn a gross income of $380.2 month (not including baby bonus) they would have we pay $84 a month rent," he aid, The rents are reviewed every 12 months and if the income varies the rents will be charged accordingly -- up or down, he said. Subsidization by federal, pro- vincial and city governments, he said, may be as high as $50 a month depending on the fam- ily's situation. Ald. Christine Thomas, who was instrumental in introducing public housing to the city when she served on the board of health in 1957, said the houses are good rental accom- modations. "But the rents are much too high and the houses don't serve the purpose they were intended for," she said. The original purpose of this type of housing in the city 'was to provide families (averaging three or four children) with moderate incomes with reason- able accommodations. "This low - rental' housing has never been subsidized by the city but is being subsidized by the people living in the proj- ect who are paying above aver- age rent," said Mrs. Thomas. To correct this problem she said: "If there was uniform rent applicable to this type of housing, with no fluctuation be- cause of increased salaries, families would be able to save money and go out and buy their own accommodations." Increased earnings means in- creased rents, she said. The annual picnic for the blind of Ontario County was held at Lakeview Park yester- day. The picnic was sponsored by the Oshawa Advisory Board to the Canadian National Institute for the Blind; the Whitby-On- tario Advisory Board and the Bowmanville-West Durham Ad- visory Board. Throughout the afternoon a variety of contests were held with prizes presented to win- ners. ¥ Armando Del Gobbo, Mrs. Tillie Oakes and Lester Davies outmatched everyone to win the ring tossing event. Bean bag toss was won by Miss |maining 140 will leave August 25. Grace McConnell, Mrs. Annual Picnic For Blind Held At Lakeview Park Tillie Oakes and Harold Bate- man. Birthday prizes went to Miss Freda White and Harold Bateman. The »all roll (in which each blind person tried to roll a ball to a given point by listening to a signal from that point) was won by Miss Grace McConnell, Miss Ada McDonough and Mr. G. Eastwood. Ninety-year-old Mrs. Gatchell Sr., and 76-year-old Mr, H. Batemen received a prize for being the oldest blind man and woman at the picnic, Gary Cross and Elizabeth Buechler were the youngest blind boy and girl there. Oshawa Lions Club members assisted as volunteer drivers for the Oshawa blind. REPLY TO ANTI-PARKWAY SUBMISSION "Grossly in error, incorrect The report stated the entire 1,030 vph depending on the sec- work's report states. Brief Called Incorrect, Mislead its Cc ing onstruction took several director Gerry Gellette, and misleading." These were comments con- tained in a department of pub- lic work's report on a Centen- nial Parkway brief presented to council recently by Dr, Brian Doherty The traffic and public safety committee asked 'the -- works department and Damas and Smith Ltd., engineering, .consul- tants, to make a, study of the brief. An analysis of the 15-page Doherty brief revealed certain incorrect prieces of informa tion Centennial Parkway con struction costs were indicated (in the brief) to be $6 million per mile. This is '"'grossly in error' and all calculations based on this are "incorrect," the department's repost "eoun- tered. "we estimated cost of the 6.21 mile parkway is $19,294,000. This results in an average cost of $3,100,000 per mile, half the figure used in the brief SURFACE STREETS Cost of work on_ surface streets which would have been required even if the parkway was not constructed is included inthe total estimated cost, the report shows. The Doherty brief stated that are given to understand the capacity of a four- lane highway is approximately 6,000 cars per hour." This understanding is "in- correct" the report states Average weekday traffic vol- umes and not Friday. peak volumes as expressed in the brief indicate a 1981 traffic volume (2 lanes) as varying from 2,170 vehicles per hour to at tial tion of the parkway. Dr, Doherty in his brief at- tacked the estimated cost of the parkway construction which increased from $6,419,000 (in the 1962 traffic planning report) to nearly $20 million (in the 1966 parkway report). The difference, the report States, is due to a number of significant modifications to the extent of the work included in the 1962 cost estimates, the limits of the project and the general. increase...of . construc- tion costs between the years 1961 and 1965 MISLEADING ais @ statement in Dr. Doherty's ief charged that "'the longest stretch of the expressway will reveive no. particular subsidy or assistance." This is "misleading to say the least" the department of public It is expected that the normal 33 1-3 percent subsidy of the cost of the section of the park- way north' of the central busi- ness district will be assumed by the department of highways. Page three of the brief indi- cates that 'the taxpayers of this city will be rather reluc- tant to assume the financial burden of the largest known capital expenditure in the his- tory of the city." The report emphasized that the construction of the parkway is a part of an integrated road development program for: the city' and will be constructed over a 13-year period. It stated if regarded in the ou Same way the entire road net- work or sewer system for the city might be construed to be the largest project ever to be undertaken by the city although ¥ decades. The maximum 'mill rate re- quired to finance the parkway on the basis of the 13-year pro- gram is 1.45 mills in 1978. Debenture payments would continue to decrease each year with a resultant decrease in the mill rate until the payments are completed in 1989, the report stated. In summation the report in- dicated that Centennial Park- way is required to be con- structed in the location pro- posed and is an essential part of the road development pro- gram of the city, needed to carry traffic volumes of the future. Council agreed, Monday, to thank Dr. Doherty for present- ing the brief and moved that it be received and filed,