Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 Aug 1966, p. 3

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A Full-Time Ma yor Red Tape Gets Blame. re FSS Urban Renewal Delay MRS. M. FLEMING MISS OLIVE FRENCH JOHN FORD or could work with the board Qoraydon Rd., Whitby, "I think and know exactly what is so. Oshawa's population is big going on in the city, rather enough for a full-time mayor than hearing it thorugh the and a board of control too. grape vine." The. matters that ate confron- Marjorie Soules, 351 Wilfe ting the council could be st., "We've sure got a prob- brought clearly into view." lem with. the counci] that we Miss Olive B. French, 38 have and I don't think that Lloyd St., 'I think that the is would hurt to have a full city should have a full-time time mayor. Maybee he would mayor but with a board of have the time to see to it control on a full-time basis, I that the city gets what it think that the cost would be needs." too high. But full-time mayor Mrs. Margaret Fleming, 109. is definitely needed." stupD MARJORIE SOULE mayor can't possibly do. a complete job." Carrol Hooker 92 Bond st., "I think so, Oshawa is big enough for a_ full-time mayor. It's still growing too and a full-time mayor is need- ed now and will be needed even more in the future. I think that it would be wise to institute it now." Wayne Studds, 157 Gibbon St., "I believe that we should have a full time mayor and a board of control. The may- CARROL HOOKER WAYNE De you think Oshawa should have a full-time mayor. and a four man board of control? Six people were asked this question during a man on the street survey. They said: John Ford, 107 Jonson Ave. Whitby, "Yes, the city is large enough to warrant a full time mayor and board of control, I think that it would do the city a great deal of good, A part time Inquest Called NDP Joins Party Battle in Humber erals of being in power so long \that their leader -- Mr. Small- | wood--"'is no longer the servant | |Mr. Normore said the NDP will | "fight an all - out political war" HAMILTON (CP) Dele- gates at the Ontario Municipal Association's convention Mon '|day criticized the provincial and federal governments for delays in endorsing urban renewal schemes, David Rotenberg, a Toronto alderman, told the 700 delegates that planners for the two levels of government make lengthy re- views of schemes, which have already been studied in detail by municipal planners. and local councils, Often, because of time lost in this duplication, the cost of the Jand in question goes up and there are changes in ownership leading to further delays, Mr. BANFF, Alta. (CP) -- The wrong men have been leading many of the countries of Asia since their independence, a for- mer Burmese diplomat said Monday night. James Barrington, former Burmese ambassador to Ot- tawa, Washington and the United Nations, told the Banff conference on world develop- ment that'many Asian countries have been led since independ- ence by men who are basically revolutionaries, He said that while revolition- |aries played an essential role in the inuependence struggles, they are often unfitted 'emotionally jor psychologically" for the. sub- | sequent task of administering a | nation, | The revolutionaries have }made poor administrators. Mr. Barrington said this has been a factor in the lack of progress many Asian countries independence. "In most of Asia, I would |say, the material plight of the jat the moment of independ- ence," he said, 'Gas Drives Off | In Buenos BUENOS AIRES (AP) --Ar- |gentine students launched fresh |anti - government demonstra- jtions Monday night, scuffling j with police and storming a dean's office before police drove them off with tear gas. About | 1,500 students were' involved. | About 45. students, including Pasi co-eds; were arrested in | clashes with police. | The new outbreak of violence jcame as the University of Bue- Revolutionaries Cannot Keep Up Pace: | ment. Diplomat NEW LEADERS COMING Mr. Barrington said a new generation of leaders is coming to power in Asia--in some cases military men, in others men trained as administrators, These men could be expected to do a better job of leading their countries out of economic backwardness and of communi- cating to the affluent West their needs in areas such as economic aid. Mr. Barrington said more fi-| nesse is needed in Western aid/| | programs. | The pride of Asian leaders |might well be hurt less if aid} |were channelled through inter- | \national agencies instead of be- jing dispensed on the primarily bilateral basis used currently. Ivan Head, professor of inter- national law at the University jof Alberta, participated with Mr. Barrington in the session. In his address, Prof. Head said the principal Western er- Mr. Normore's first speech of}have made in improving the|ror in post-war relations. with| the campaign accused the Lib-| welfare of their people since| Asian countries has been failure} |to listen to what Asians want. "The West has sought for cen- turies to remake Asia in its own |but the master of the people."| population is worse than it was|image," he said. This kind of} approach is winning only resent- Students Aires Rioting protest resumption of classes without the university's tradi- tional autonomy, cancelled July! 28 when the government took ove?, saying the country's nine state universities had become Communist infiltrated. | Rector Luis Botet of the 80,- 000 - student university said jclasses at the remaining five jcolleges will he resumed later this week, despite a loss of pro- |fessors, More than 1,000 of them) j-~-more than half the faculty Ib Rotenberg said, Homer Borland, director of the urban renewal division of the Central Mortgage and Hous- ing Corp., said the federal gov- ernment insists on analyzing the Sehemes because it is putting up 50 per cent of the cost. Delegates turned down a Tor- onté resolution which would have trimmed the power of boards. of control in awarding tenders. ASK MAJORITY VOTE The proposal was that,a ma- jority vote of council, instead of the now-required two-thirds vote, reverse a board's decision in awarding a tender, The 'convention approved a second Toronto resolution per- mitting zoning inspectors to en- New Anti-Loitering Bylaw Nabs Town's First Lady AURORA, Oni. i0Fj--Tecn- agers were the target of Au- rora's new anti-loitering bylaw but one of the first victims was the mayor's wife and son, Mrs. William Davis said she and her son," , were standing with some friends on the main street Sunday when Children's Day Was A Washout TORONTO (CP) -- Rain washed out Children's Day at the Canadian National Exhibi- tion Monday, but there will be another to make up for it. L. C. Powell, €NE general ed shortly ter a building at all r times without the consent of the owner or occupant. Charles E. Onley, a Toronto lawyer and an expert on zoning bylaws, told delegates that mu- nicipalities are 'flying blind without an official plan, "You are opening the pro- verbial Pandora's box if you carry on development without the guide-lines of an_ official plan," he said. "It is up to the municipalities to lay the guide-lines, not wait until they are "faced with a fait accompli and the building is On welfare, H. H. Dymond, executive director of the Asso- eties of Ontario, said that the day is past when Ontario should have to put collecting boxes in Dr. Dymond was defending the increased amounts of money that children's aid societies are requesting from municipal councils. He said the societies are faced isturbed children, "There are a large number of solely because they need treat- ment for emotional disturb- ances," he said. "This shouldn't be the job of the CAS. It's a health responsi- ility."" Earlier, civic leaders across the province voted unan- imously to lift the assessment ceiling on Bell Telephone Co. .of Canada profits. At the moment, under the terms of a_ federal-provincial agreement, municipalities can levy only up to five per cent of the company's gross receipts in any year. children in the care of the CAS | | with paying $15 to $26 a day | ip get treatment for emotionally | from |, after one of several pelting rainstorms during the day that children under 12 will be ad- mitted free again Tuesday, Aug. 30. 'The rain didn't speeches, though. Today's youth needs construc- tive. and responsible instruction stop the and communication from older} generations, John F, Bassett, production manager of the Tor- onto Telegram, told a directors' luncheon, Many parents are unable to keep up with their children be- cause "they have lost the un- derstanding of what it means to be young, and their best inten- ciation of Children's Aid Soci-|tions are rebuffed because they have little idea of how to com- municate,"" Nothing impresses teen-agers liquor stores to raise funds for| more than an adult embodiment emotionally disturbed children.\of their own aims, he said. iney WEL. ASKG iG. move along by Constable Lowell McClenny. "The bylaw states they shall not loiter and we must enforce it," said Police Chief William Langman. | Weekend crowde of teen-agers prompted the new bylaw, pro- posed by Coun. Richard Tlling- worth, chairman of the police committee, and passed by coun- cil. last Monday, : Coun. Walter Davis, no rela-' tion to the mayor, had com- plained crowds of young people- were "creating havoc on our main street. The bylaw forbids anyone 10, "lounge, loaf, loiter or stand as~ an idler to obstruct the proper use of public property," Chief Langman said the prob- lem could have been. handled by more police officers and fa- cilities for teen-agers. His eight- man force is not enough to pro-- vide an adequate foot patrol for Aurora's 10,000 persons, he said. "How would the chief like his wife to-be moved along as 1 was when she's stopping to talk with friends," asked the may- or's wife. ' "If this is the way the chief is going to handle this matter, we dare not go to shop or stop to chat with our friends." Her husband promised to bring the matter before council. "The bylaw wasn't drawn up. just for a set of teen-agers," said Chief Langman. "The by- law covers everyone and in our cyes everyone is equal." UNITE LAW GROUPS Delegates from 18 countries, formed an Asian Law Associa- tion, mre eoammat and 4 bedroom homes in session or 30 days. Cash HOUSES BUY or RENT LARGE FIRM TRANSFERRING PERSONNEL FROM QUEBEC AND NORTHERN ONTARIO. Desire 3 H. KEITH LTD. 723-7463 this area; immediate pos- poyment arranged, | Cobourg Mayor J. A. Heenan, chairman of the OMA resolu- tions committee, declared a number of Ontario municipali- ties consider the rule '"unreal- istic." The OMA will ask the prov- ince to lift the tax limit. Counterfeit 20's Found On Street NORWICH, Ont. (CP) -- A paper bag containing $560 in counterfeit 20-dollar bills was found on the street Monday by a 17-year-old youth. | The bills are believed to be of | the same type as' seven coun- OSHAWA HOME SHOW THURS., FRI., SAT., SEPT. 15th, 16th, 17th. PLANNING FIXUP ~ | | | | | SEE terfeit 20s found in Simcoe and five found in Woodstock in the last week. % CALL OR SEE DIXON'S FOR OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS an ei ay ase agar |looks somewhat like the French |blow open a safe in their home. |Mils Road and Eglinton Ave-| Simca." Chief Ennis would not identify 44-HOUK SEKVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 Persie ra urd OL 47014 It's time to See Your... Quebec City to Mount Provi-|the total after three days in der the OHC, they will be set ees Hospital outside Mont. 1965. by income level of the families. real, KHON i APR nett r eR ART) A ga Special sets from the Bell Tel- ephone Co. of Canada were used Mary Hemingway for the transmission. \ quoted as saying: c The recordings were received | "No, he shot himself. Shot|in Montreal on separate chan- himself. Just that. And nothing |néls of the same machine, the | else. For a long time I refused electro-encephalogram or brain-| to admit it even to myself... wave recording machine, by by pretending it had been an | neurologist Dr. Fernand Poir- accident. Admitting the truth|ier, who approached Bell with would've snapped my nerves,|the idea, and by technician; split open my brain." Marie-Noelle David. | In the same article, Mrs.| The machine, known as EEG,| Hemingway disclosed that her|was connected to the patient) husband had turned down a So-|and then was connected to the viet offer to pay royalties onjregular tele phone network his books with the comment: through a Data-Phone data set, "I'll be happy to accept when| A telephone call was placed you grant the same treatment to the receiving data set at the to all American writers." diagnostic centre. |down on the rostrum where she | $1,000,000,000 authorized must/Electric Co.--were to acquire | five other towns. TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario Mr. Machae said in an inter-|and the United States resulted 'The bank is located in Manila, /¢duipment." sitting near the back of the| housing development in Canada. | «we gig not receive any cars|18. ese ot Pislend deposited their! | caped because the toppling roof| against public-housing tenants "However, we und er stand | Canadian silver coins taken by "g¢ |wWave recordings were trans- Widow Admits |distance telephone system. TORONTO (CP) --Attend:|ment are not affected by the| (cated. |St. Michel Archange Hospital in days, attendance is 13,500 below| from $135 to $175 a month. Un- acknowledged publicly today for s ' In Smith's Falls 1, Newfie Election Fray An inquest has been called into| ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--Lib-| Mr. Smallwood, premier of| The NDP held its Newfound- School at Smiths Falls, the sec-) ting unbroken, unveiled his|booklet which he says will be|Vin Normore, a Coroner Brook Donald Richard Carroll, 18.) Monday as the. New Democraticlers what his government coe ay West Sept. other patients at Seeleys Bay, | | youth, who was retarded and| = As Revival Service 0 nevival yervice Upens Gananoque, Ont., said Monday! he could be helped. No date has|roof crashing down Monday! | 54 Y;' One fireman thought he last legislature. The body of Felix Wayne Rob-| Church of God in Christ. Falling| oj i | '4 XA S}cials said they had detected N0| the Pregressive Conservatives, "The United Baptist disappeared from the 2,400-bed} € for a time as a small fire that/said elder Henry Jackson, 32. wit copter': mil 43 'weats: At dis: CHINESE DRINK MORE | seats and the Conservatives six. e jfloor out of the building and Stanfield Raps then the top caved in. in 1965, the government pre-) ' then I fell back in the chair|a series of ambitious proposals bottles this year. | HALIFAX (CP) in a| Mrs, E, N. Givens, wife of | and Labrador and to build Development said a capacity crowd of | insular Newfoundland with Lab- j said his government '"'disap- or more filled the church ing a week-long revival, andbuild or rebuild 500 schools andjfive of its colleges under gov-| government intervention. of Canada to gain control of hte | USED CRANE |here would be built and the} |mally, except at Cordoba, where The Asian Development Bank) ne premier said this dis- ; mud 'left by two days of rain| fr school construction would be} Czech Cars land the United Nati clash. A group of 72 students and gave the United atlons| their offer to the shareholders | of the roof. jand income from development} f ment's action. . tia might very well compel the! neath timbers which crashed| gram. " ting the agreement into force,|time)." | Was sitting. : OHC M k liae, president of Skoda Jawa| Raids Uncover i) An important factor was the fiocked to the ibe hgh pbb a es "previously fulfilled were that 10 duce Czechoslovakian built | scribing 65 per cent of the|the equipment-making Northern |ulances came from at least/ December. of weekend police in Ontario be included. \control of Maritime "'the com-| Doctors kept 28 of the injured| Housing Corp. has purchased all| joy 'that his firm, the Cana-|in the recovery of all of -the share is $5,000,000. decision in acquiring telephone| lewis and his wife, who were|Tated as the most up-to-date) 144: 599 cars a year, rom a retired couple here May | ited: Ek. Meiteeapout: wen: cub | --|church at the opposite end from| The purchase price was esti-| at all in 1965-66 because Czech-| Police Chief W. James Ennis Heft of Canada and Max Jakob.| | Lewis said many persons es- there will be no discrimination | porders," he said. |$200 in U.S. gold pieces and } |lodged about five feet above the|in the use of the park's golf|that this season we will be get-|two masked men who tied and eral U Thant in this UN office, monTRRat. ery | mitted Monday for what was be- a Shows Decline | |apartment units in the develop-| and Quebec. | s 8 . as Suicide Death | The recordings were simul-|ance Monday -at the Canadian | purchase from British Com- - |Institute in London, Ont., and|!ast year. In the first three Rentals in the units now range 0 $ H A WwW A P U & L | ¢ SC x 0 0 L $ Nobel Prize winning author, the first time that her husband Drowning Death : ia By DON McLEOD Party gathered its forces to|done and what it plans for the SMITHS FALLS, Ont. (CP)-- é liane it a three - way fight. | future. the drowning Aug. 13 of @ pa-\eral Premier: Joey Smallwood, ine inde: os : ra-|land founding convention here ; 'tall v5 ' province sincé Confedera-| ang e tient from the Ontario Hospital| .seking to keep his 'umbeaten| tion in 1949, released'a 42-page|Monday night and named Cal- ond patient to drown in the Ri- government's platform for' the| mailed to every householder in| Papermill worker, as its first a River i th | eau 'eiver ihm Monta. Sept. 8 Newfoundland election| Newfoundland to show.the vot-|leader. He will oppose Mr. drowned while fishing with two < 8. youn aie ner ceariet +s] Blast Levels Texas Church an epileptic, had been staying) 2 at a cottage operated by the) Coroner Dr. Kenneth Gray of Carroll slipped from a rock into} p,AINVIEW, Tex. (AP)--A,in the concrete block and frame|in an attempt to oust the Lib- deep water and drowned before) thundering explosion sent the | building. erals. The NDP held no seats in the been set for the inquest. {night on 20 worshippers in the '| | 4 PP |smelled natural gas but offi- Also in the campaign. are erts, 22, was found July 20 in|debris killed a woman ahd in-|eyidence of a leak. the river, five days after he had | jured 53 other persons. | Choir|h@aded by Dr. Noel Murphy, hacia' Twelve persons were trapped| was singing when it happened," | 2"¢ PCs"'have announced: they spital. 7 : | broke out was quickly quenched | 'The lights went out, then there seats an the Liberals held 38 a ae a | was an explosion that blew the | There were three vacancies. r g out Formosans | drank 30,000,000 bottles of beer| PROMISES PAVED ROADS "It blew me up in the ceiling,) The Liberal platform outlined dicted consumption of 36,000,000 ] Bell Takeover |where I had been sitting and|--including a plan to pave 3,000 | | turned over backwards," ;miles of road in Newfoundland a strongly-worded _ statement is.| the pastor of the Negro congre-| road connecting--by a tunnel-- i ation, sued Monday, Premier Stanfield So vada proves of the attempt being| {or 4m all-musical service open-| The government promises to/nos Aires resumed classes at resigned in protest against the made by the Bell Telephone Co. Bank Formed by P there were 65 in the choir loft|"wipe out illiteracy." A newjernment control. The new stu-| In the provinces, the univer- Maritime Telegraph and Tele- alone. Her husband was injured.| campus for the fisheries college|dent demonstrations were to/|sities have been operating nor- UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- } ? | | jan De 2 phone Co, Ltd Rescuers plodded through|Present $4,000,000 annual grant) lcladsea:-wens. aishentad' a a4 came into formal existence week after a student - i Monday when Canada and Fin- Ser ccsise betare yo pitied to sift the wreckage, using aj 'ubled. nt - police halk hist tb of ratifiesti ; truek crane to hoist big pieces! He said increased' federal aid| |there are staging a hunger their instruments of ratification iti " i | \strike protesting the- govern- of the agreement to establish that the lentibotera ot tore bos. BO a found the body of Mrs.|of the province's natural re-| For Market F yearn |Ennis A. Dukes, about 45, be-| sources will pay for his pro- ht ope eateeminninneigi Canada's action fulfilled the| pel Telephone Co. to relinquish last of three conditions for put-|any shares it acquires (in Mari. TORONTO. (CP)--John Mac-| mame, ae 15 Fsatagenareal = Hundreds Motors Ltd. of Montreal, said} rat a ie two conditions 8 Monday his firm will re-intro- | 4 question of telephone equip-| north side of Plainview, a West! s¥%e . | Stolen Bonds of these must be from the Asian|ment. Mr. Stanfield said if the|Texas farming centre. Many| $7 Million Bu Skoda cars on the Canadian| , region and that coyntries sub-|Bell company--which controls| helped remove the injured. Am-| Y | market in either November or| WOODSTOCK (CP)--A series A : i spi i 24 garden court and townhouse} ,. Set et 1$125,000 to $150,000 i Canada's share of the capital| pany would not long be free to '" hospitals overnight. ae ; ,|dian distributor for the Czech |?449, © $150,000 in non-nego- is $25,000,000 and Finland's| exercise any independence of|_ A falling beam pinned David|Units in Flemingdon Park, once| ,utomobiles, usually handles sng stocks and bonds stolen jthe pulpit, but they apparently|mated at more than $7,000,000. | ia? i | cluded last Dec. 5. | . | " he 5 , 4 OUW \oslovakia's .policy was to ex-|of Woodstock said Monday the Laiiaiite Games. lone Brainwaves jescaped serious injury. The transaction provides that| port to countries closer to its|raids recovered everything but s countries' Instruments of ratifi-| Go Ov W i i ete Son ae ones | CF WATE floor on the front side. |course, tennis courts and swim-|ting the new Skoda model, the|gagged Mr. and Mrs. Innes El- a | ming pool in North York Town-) mB 1000, a four-door sedan that |liott and weed nvtraclycorin LX Attendance |nue. : Tee Ee : ie : : . | ' _ | He said the distribution of the|the other departments involved hes gine ry oe ae. | More than 1,200 high-rise|cars will be limited to Ontario |or where the bonds had been lo- |taneously transmitted from the | National Exhibition was 136,500,| mercial Properties Investment NEW YORK (AP)--Mrs, Er-}Childrens' Psychiatric Research down 31,000 from the same day| (Canada) Ltd. nest Hemingway, widow of the committed suicide. In an interview published in Registration of all pupils who are new to the city or who have The 4 C's of Saving CONFIDENCE ! CONVENIENCE ! COMFORT ! CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST CONFIDENCE -- knowing that you are receiving. the best rate of interest -- paid more often. CONVENIENCE -- longer saving hours daily and all day Saturday, COMFORT -- dealing with friendly people -- with a community Trust Com- pany, SAVE WITH... moved and will be attending a dfferent school than the one they You Need For Your Home Improvement PLUS SOUND PLANNING _ ADVICE. The courteous staff et Hol- land Lumber take pride in providing individual .atten- tion end assistance to their tustomers. No matter whet your needs, consult those et Holland for the best. attended in June should register at*the new school on Thursday, September Ist, 1966 9:30 A.M. to 11:45 A.M. Principals will be at their schools to accept registrations and assign pupils to classes in readiness for school opening at 9:00 A.M. on Tuesday, Sept- ember 6th. < << Continental French Buffet Pupils will be admitted to Kindergar ten whose fifth birthday is not later than December 31st, 1966. : Hwy RECOMMENDED Birth Certificates will be first time. . ' Che Bih Room Will Be Closed Sundays For The Summer Served Daily 11:30 - 2 p.m. -- 5 to 8 p.m. GENOSHA HOTEL required for all cRildfén entering school for the ¢ Free Home Delivery ¢ HOLLAND LUMBER LTD. R.R. No. 1, Oshawa at 5-Points Ph: -- 725-4709 , Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation BOARD OF EDUCATION OSHAWA, ONTARIO 4. ROSS BACKUS, Business Administrator ond Secretaty-Treosurer 19 Simeoe St N. Oshawa, 723-5221 23 King St. W. Bowmanville, 623-2527 C. M, ELLIOTT, Superintendent of Public Schools S. £. LOVELL, Chairman

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