"eg: a eae: een anna iP aaa, eee ee ---- a a il Ta eet ee oe en 18 ONTARIO SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS AT O'NEILL COLLEGIATE BRIAN LATTA ARIS BIRZE KATHERINE HAMILTON 80.1 percent 90.2 percent 87.9 percent SUSAN PRETTY SHAWNE MURPHY HEATHER DAVIS 86.5 percent 86.1 percent 80 percent Aris Birze Top Student The results of Grade 13 departmental examinations at O'Neill Collegiate and Voca- tional Institute for all stu- dents who have obtained first class honors (75 to 100 per- cent) were released today. The following students ob- tained the Ontario Scholar- ship: (awarded to students who have obtained 80 percent or better in English and any six other credits): 1, Aris Birze, 90.2, son of Mr. and Mrs, Leopold Birze, 301 St. Eloi Ave. 2. Katherine Hamilton, 87.9, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Hamilton, 399 Simcoe JANE COLLARD ERIC HOOEY St. N. 3. Catherine Normoyle, 86.8, ae vee PS perce daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robe ert Normoyle, 968 Mohawk St. 4. Glenn Sacks 86:6, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Sacks, 359 Simcoe St. N. 5. Susan Pretty, 86.5, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Pretty, 532 Colborne St. E. 6. Shawne Murphy, 86.1, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Murphy, 1042 Hortop St. ) 7. Joy Knott, 85.8, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Kenneth Knott, 300 Grenfell St., Apt. 309. 8. Judith McLean, 85.3, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence McLean, 607 Hortop St. 9, Jane Collard, 83.8, daugh- er of Dr. and Mrs, Charles Collard, 773 'Law St. 10. Eric Hooey, 82:6, son of Mr: and Mrs. William Hooey, 97 Brock St. W. ll. Madeline Lovell, 83, daughter of Mrs. William Cane, 55 Connaught St 12. Pamela Miller, 82.5, daugh- DARRYL LEACH LESLIE TOWNSEND $1.9 percent $1.8 percent CATHERINE NORMOYLE JUDITH McLEAN PAMELA MILLE MADELINE LOVELL fon Aug. 29. ] tained. JUDITH HAROLD CHMARA ter.of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth| Miller, 129 Alexandra St. | 13, Darryl Leach, 81.9, son_of| Mr. and Mrs, Donald Leach,| 776 Grierson St. 14. Leslie Townsend, 81.8, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Mur- ray Townsend, 695 Masson St. | 15. Judith Macdonald, 81.5, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hay- den Macdonald, 426 Simcoe St. N 16. Harold Chmara, 81.2, son of) Dr. and Mrs, John Chmara, 464 King St. E. 17, Brian Latta, 80.1, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Latta, 19 Patricia Ave. 18. Heather Davis, 80, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Davis, 180 Division St. HONOR STUDENTS Listed below are the honor students: FOUR DONEVAN SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS ; fire arms, Department of Lands | jand Forest, will conduct classes 1. Joan Weir, 81.6, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Weir, ee eee 665 Jasmine Cresc. 2. Karen Thompson, 80.7, : daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thompson, 547 Mary St.} DAPHNE HART ELIZABETH WHEELER 3. Judith Cunliffe, 79.9.) 83.6 percent 82.9 percent daughter of Mr. and Mrs.} -- Cunliffe, 537 Grierson} i: cent Banter: oh aes 4, Crystal Adam, 79.1, daugh- Girls Rate Top Marks |Mrs. Douglas Cadillac' Ave. S. ter of Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Adam, 853 Masson St Wilton, 1513 Simcoe St. N 6, Terry Bassett, 78.6, son of} The Dr. F. J. Donevan Col- , Mrs. Douglas Clemens, of 128 | Oshawa. Mr. and Mrs, Edward Bassett,| legiate Institute has had four | Cadillac Ave. S. | Linda Ogden -- 79.3 percent--| ss honor student |pgughter of Mr | glish plus five jald Ogden, 134 Harmony Rd. S 834 Bessborough Dr Ontario Scholarship winners A first ¢ 7. John Lancaster, 77.5, son} im the recent Grade 13 de- | must have E of Mr. and Mrs. Charle:| partmental examinations. other papers with an average Oshawa. Lancaster, 106 Alexandra St They are of 75 percent and over. Be- Douglas 8. Janice Tierney, 77.2, daugt Daphne Hart--83.6 percent | low are the first class honor elit cas ter of Mr. and Mrs. Bernar | _qaughter of Mr. and. Mrs. Students at Donevan Thomas Hallet Tierney 162 Colborne St. E William Hart, of 1083 King Elizabeth Wheeler -- 84.0 per-| Ave. Oshawa. 9. Naney Pearse, 76.9 daugi St. E cent --Daughter. of Mr. and ter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Mrs, John Wheeler, 854 Regent Pearse, 70 Sherwood Ave Dr., Oshawa 10. Hugh Popham, 75, son ¢ Daphne Hart -- 83.6 percent Elizabeth Wheeler -- 82.9 percent -- daughter of Mr Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pophan ne yp Wheeler of 804 --Daughter of Mr. and Mrs Oshawa. 717 Grierson St ee William Hart, 1083 King St. E | Leonard Shirchenko -- 76.0 11. Lorne Rich, 75, son of| Nancy Stewart -- 81.3 per- |Ochawa I Son Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rich, 57/| cent -- daughter of Mrs. E Nancy Stewart -- 82.9 percent|Shirchenko, 871 Ritson Rd. § Fernhill Blvd VABMUIEEG Stewart, of 1036 | _pnauchter of Mrs. E. Winni-| Oshawa. 12. Louis Levine, 75, son ¢ eaufort Ave fred Stewart, 1036 Beaufort! Othmar Telep -- 75.1--Son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Levine, 47 Sharon Clemens -- 80.1 per- |Ave., Oshawa Mr. and Mrs Miller Ave. i cent -- daughter of. Mr. and! Sharon Clemens -- 80.3 per-|179 Harmony Rd. N., Oshawa, NANCY STEWART SHARON CLEMENS ORC Parade nesday Lydia Ciglan -- 79.9 percent--! "sidance waren eo, wwe! TY Grade 13 At Donevan -- azn Steve Ciglan, 829 Ritson Rd jannual closing of the Beverley cent, daughter of Mr Roy Morris. st. | Street to the McLaughlin Band judged according [the winning entries Ghe Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1966 'Hot Tires', Speeding Irk Citizens tem and streets under con- done to remedy the situation. north-south one-way street sys-|/ UAW Plans Talk With Nicholson Proposal Asks GM, Ottawa Ease Impact Of Layoffs The United Auto Workers Aug. 24. The meeting was announced In Ottawa the union will meet The meeting has been fixed Sitting in a nine-hour emer- | Major areas of concern to|jgency session, the Local 222 '\motorists and pedestrians were|top executive issued last night _.\the sharp curves on the south- a statement on the measures |; fa. thete |bound route, council learned. |it will take to protect the 2,600|10" I" tne | It was suggested that flash- workers who will lose their ing amber lights be installed|/jobs in the GM lay-off. in these locations warning Yesterday afternoon. an ac- drivers of the possible hazards |tion program was put before ahead. |GM officials. A traffic and public safety| "The program," said -- the committee spokesman said his|statement, "was presented to committee was aware of the|second-line GM officials, Top/T@ problem and is looking into it.|management executives were Concerning road construction |not available. in the city, Ald. Margaret Shaw) "We sought without success said the public was at "its wits-|to get GM to agree to ask the end." Canadian government to cover "Everywhere they turn|the 2,600 victims of this present; ™4Y motorists are confronted. with|lay-off under the Transitional "¢W la bottleneck," she siad. [Assistance Benefit plan pro- | LIVE WITH IT But all the city can do is! |States Auto Pact. "liye with it" Robert Richard-|TAB BENEFITS son, deputy commissioner of} works, told council. Reconstruction of ajor streets in the city had |Comsider ; ; ; ees 4 rf $15 million a year impact which| unit of Local 222. the lay-off means to the economy of the city. been co-ordinated so that suit- able alternative routes would |be provided during periods of work, he said. But council's recent decision }to reconstruct Harmony Rd. in |front of the new Eastdale Col- \legiate, ahead of schedule, has Tenders for the reconstruc- tion will close Aug. 25, Mr. 'Richardson told council, and the contract will be awarded Work on the street is ex- pected to last nine weeks with jthe completion date tentatively set for the end of October, he said. i Three bylaws concerning the debenturing of money for jschool purposes were repealed by council last night because of incorrect dates they con- |BYLAWS The same number of bylaws jwere then passed with the ;eorrect dates. | They provided authorization for the issuing of a debenture jin the aggregate principal amount of $815,000 for various school purposes. This included $415,000 for |secondary school purposes and /$400,000 for public school pur- "This would have meant jearnings of $75 a week for the atl in| several |Workers on lay-off and would|the Oshawa Civic Auditorium is) «phe: ynion is not overlooking , derably have lessened the}a mass meeting for the GM the tactical advantage to the "Instead, General Motors, richest of all the auto com- panies, is taking the same stand as other Canadian com- panies. "To date, of 1,600 workers DAVID RILEY $4.2 percent having been laid-off because « union will take its lay-off fight|the auto trade agreement, on The traffic situation on the|to0 the Federal government 38 Canadian workers he actually received TAB benefit "In spite of GM's lack struction received considerable|!ast night in a joint. statement|response, the UAW is urgi discussion by city council last|issued by George Burt, Can- night. adian Director of the UAW, Several aldermen told coun-|and Albert Taylor, president of|Oshawa Unemployment Inst cil they had received com-|Oshawa Local 222, _\plaints from residents on the south-bound route concerning|Wwith Labor Minister Nicholson, tire squealing and speeding. |Manpower Minister Marchand One resident, an alderman/and Industry Minister Drury. 4|Said, told him he was going to '\move unless something was/for 10 a.m. Aug. 24. every laid off GM worker - japply for TAB benefits at t ance Commission office. "The union itself. will app to have the GM workers ce tified as eligible under th regulations "The UAW also proposed t the company yesterday _ the they .agree to permit worke! 60 years and over to retir without' any actuarial reduc pension. It i lestimated that as many as 11,000 jobs might be retained if the company agrees. "Under the terms of the present contract with the lunion, which expires on {October 31, 1967, workers may tire at 62 with full pension. | 'The union plans to ask the |Federal and Provincial govern- }ments to immediately set up a |job re-training program in Osh- |awa so that the laid-off workers prepare themselves for employment. | "Ontario will be asked to vided under the Canada-United| advance' the date of completion of its atomic energy plant at | Pickering and to institute other | public enterprises in the dis- | trict."" Fixed for Thursday at 1.30 in | 0 years by glowing and re- vated assurances of more and ppier days ahead by General stors of Canada spokesmen, cluding several who were not ailable yesterday. A good any of these young people id top dollar for their homes a tight housing market and | 'w stand to lose their equity | a market suddenly gone ack. | "In the UAW's view, both | oor and belated planning and | disregard for Oshawa's wele ire are involved in a situation hich sees upwards of 2,600 aid off here while some 750 sec- ond shift new hires are to be aken on at Ste. Therese, Que. yeneral Motors spokesmen tell he union that Ste. Therese uses acrylic jacquer in its paint shop, permitting its cars to be sold in the U.S. where GM also uses this process, whereas Osh- awa uses enamel. The weak- ness in this argument is that GM could have made the changeover here two years ago when it was building the Ste. |Therese plant, instead of wait- ing until now, as it has. done, Besides, GM trucks in the U.S. use enamel, so the matter is not }as open-and-shut as GM makes out, | company in weakening the | At the meeting union officials} strongest GM local in Canada in | will report to the workers on preparation for next year's pat- what action has been taken ON|tern-setting contract negotias the lay-offs. tions. The move, additionally, Commenting on the lay-offs} cives General Motors a linger the joint statement read: ing advantage on wages since "Direct victims of the layoff|the UAW still has the task of are young heads of families!pringing Ste. Therese rates up SANDRA FRY 82.6 percent poses. | Courses Set For Hunters On Sept. 1 R. J. Heard, instructor in |Sept. 1 for those wishing to obtain a hunting license. Any person, 16 or older, who has never held a hunting license in Ontario, is required by law to take the course," said Mr. Heard. and Sandra, are honor students Five Students Get Honors created additional problems. | certified by the government as!lured to Oshawa over the pastltg those paid at Oshawa, Gem jeral Motors may have deluded itself into thinking its Quebec workers are willing to go janother full year as second- {class among the company's |Canadian workers. Or it may {think the Oshawa layoff is worth whatever monetary ad- }vantage it can gain at Ste. | Therese. | "While the company blames |a 'slight decline in the new car |market', a good many Local | 222 members are laid off be- }eause of the company's deei- | sion to transfer production of its |big Buicks, big Olds and heavy |trucks and Corvairs from Osh- jawa to the U.S. This latter '| move completely ignores the }company's commitment under the Canada - U.S, Automotive Trade Agreement to increase its production in Canada by $212 million over its 1964 figures. It is adding insult to injury for General Motors to take advan- tage of the Canada - U.S. pact at a time which coincides with a decline in the market." | Parking Bylaw At The Central Collegiate No 4466 Amended Two students at the Osh- awa Central Collegiate won Ontario Scholarships in re- cent Grade 13 examination results. They are: David Riley, 19, of 742 Lakeview, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard J. Bailey; and Sandra Fry, 19, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert H. Fry, 131 Tresane St Three others, besides David (obtaining an average of 75 per cent or more). They are: Walter Silk, 19, with 79.7 per cent. He is the. son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Silk, 92 Wilkinson Ave.; Doris Chromej, 19, with| 78.3. Her parents are Mr. and Mrs. Iwan (John) Chromej of 77 Grassmere Ave.; and George Bolotenko, 19, received Parking bylaw No. 4466 was amended last night by city council to prohibit parking on three Oshawa streets. The no-parking bylaw now bans parking on the south side }of Ridgeway Ave. from Steven- son Rd, to a point 160 feet west of Elizabeth St. On the east side of Simcoe St. S. between Olive Ave. and a point 110 feet south of Olive an average of 78.1 per cent.j;Ave. parking will be prohibited | Mr. and Mrs. George Bolotenko live at 273 Bloor St. The course consists of six to seven hours of instruction, a written exam and approximate- ly three hours in the field. "The hours are divided into two night classes of three hours each and a_ three-hour field course, usually on Saturday morning," said Mr. Heard. "The course will consist of: ighting of weapons, difference between shot guns and higt vowered rifles, various types of amunition used and proper methods in the field," he said "Various methods of huntinr jeer, bear and wolf will br iven, as well as instruction or mall game such as fox, pheas int and rabbit," he said. "There is also instruction i ame laws, management, an urmer, hunter relationship an istruction in revolver training, 1e said. Last year, approximately 60 tudents were put through tl vaces and only 85 of them fai d course. "One thing that I have note n particular, is that a bo: | vhose father has taken him o unting trips generally teache im bad habits,' said Mr jteard, | TWO MCVI WINNERS THE R. 8S. McLAUGHLIN Collegiate and Vocational nstitute had two Ontario Scholarship winners, Miss Sharon Smith, above left, jat any time. | And parking on the west side lof Prince St. between Bond St. West and a point 60 feet south of Bond St, West is now banned. YOUTHS RETURN WALLET, $33 Mrs. J. R. Otto of 543 Mary St., has reason today to believe in the honesty of young people. She left her wallet contains ing $33 in. cash Monday at a Simcoe St. N. self-serve care wash She discovered the loss one hour after her departure and returned. 'Two young men, not eme ployees, were waiting at the car-wash with her wallet in- tact. "In all of the excitement, I forgot to get their names," said Mrs. Otto, "but their honesty is to be commend- had an average of 82 per cent. Christina Szulka, right had an average of 81 per- cent,. ed." (There are no employees at he establishment.) aso Raper ee poker <i mS