Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Jun 1967, p. 9

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ity Plans ent Study seful in dealing with the 1d problem. : > study, being made under 385 National Mental Health , will examine different bles that enter the punish- procedure. He will re- h the number of punish- s needed, the timing of the hment, the effectiveness of hing the symbolic repre- tion of a response. experiment involves auto- Pewee nmr estrangement | QUEE The Oshawa Board of Edu- cation Monday had to deal with two different requests on the same matter from. two differ- ent locals of the same union. Local 218, Canadian Union of Public Employees, consisting of about 125 custodial staff em- ployed by the board, requested a holiday be granted "on Mon- day, July 3 in lieu of Saturday, July 1 as it appears that most Dominion Day celebrations in this centennial year will take place on Monday." N'S PARK RULE AWAIT About 35 office girls of Local 251 requested they be allowed a holiday without pay on the Monday. The board of education first moved that July 3 would be called a holiday without pay if the provincial government de- clared a holiday. After discussing this, it was decided that such a holiday could be taken only .on a vol- untary basis, and it would then be difficult to determine who had worked and who had not. mnie =" The motion finally passed read: "July 1 will be retained as the holiday in accordance with the contract and July 3 will be accorded a day off with pay if the provincial gov- ernment so declares -- for this year only." Chairman of the board, Stan- ley E. Lovell, said, "This is a one-shot centennial year af- fair." The contracts with the board do not take into account holi- days falling on a weekend. 1 apparatus in which a sit- 1 is presented to the sub- in a systematic manner he responses are recorded. Beach, a specialist on be- ' therapy and human ng, has published a paper anagement of human be- in. disaster. nvr Mn win LL nn HANH | ote Local 222' Picnic ice Set For June 24 ~~ |Damp Ground Makes Park unretonieitnnt ie Eastdale riate Band!.. PO 67| | am i Bee Fanfare trumpeters from nial show will be marked by 6 p.m. until 2 a.m. The Pipe e e e piate Band back, supervising the trum- Al Cooper, and Bill Whit- 4 eh the Band of the Ontario the lighting of the Centen- Band of the Ontario Regi- peters is Captain George sett. The concert is free. e ? Regiment rehearsed last nial flame by Mayor Ernest ment and a 120-voice school Quick, bandmaster of the Hayward Murdock, Centen- ; night for the opening of this Marks and one of Oshawa's choir under the direction of Band of the Ontario Regi- tennial Committee chair- season's summer band con- senior citizens. This is the Mr. Wallace Young will ment. From left to right man, will officiate at the $ | - certs at Memorial Park, band's 26th season of con- also perform: from the Mc- are: Frank Heaton, Russ lighting of the Centennial nsuita e or vent Laughlin Band Shell in Me- morial Park. Shown at the Entwistle, Tom Broadbent, Gord Munday, Ray Walker, Flame ceremony. --Oshawa Times Photo certs. The torch is _ elec- Thursday at 8:30 p.m. The trically-timed to burn from opening of the big centen- IN PICKERING TOWNSHIP OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JUNE, 13, 1967 PONY EXPRESS STOPS HERE ne Change In Bylaw Asked -- Next Saturday's annual picnic|Marks, had all been notified or jof Local 222, UAW-CLC hasjwere about to be notified of the been rescheduled for the fol-|rescheduling of the Picnic at lowing Saturday, June 24. which they were to be guest Heavy rains have soaked the| speakers. grounds of Lakeview Park,! Among the groups informed e € vd making it difficult to hold the/of the postponement are the q Ratepa ¥ eT S Pp etition To Cut B arking Spaces 'ON LONG CENTENNIAL TRIP Picnic this Saturday. <epiyp»|f00d and beverage concessions, UNE 15 } | : age Bin some ba the police, radio and press, the f e Oshawa is in danger of losingythat 2.5 spaces per doctor in| A weather-worn piece of former Canadian now living | Tech. 299 farther bain cheld Conklin Company, which was to the 1 a proposed medical centre that|other cities was common. | rawhide with a message to in California. Representatives |~o456 a second postponement have provided the rides and or e 10] Kel u could mean approximately $22,- Answering a question as to| Queen Elizabeth scrawled on of the 20,000 horsemen in | or 4), picnic. The long range Pcs as well as all the bands C i 000 a year in taxes to the city,/whether three parking spaces| it was received Monday by Mexico (known as charros) [forecast is for more rain be|pcrcaued to take part in the g entre according to a spokesman forlper doctor would cause' conges-| Mayor Ernest Marks at City gave him the message and |i ¥en now and June 24 Picnic, Re PICKERING (Staff) -- Thejcial government for a regionaljtions of the township. He said| the centre. tion at the centre, the spokes-| Hall from one of a group of he used 13 horses while | picnic was rescheduled| "tush, no Detroit union = _ four major Pickering Township|survey study to incorporate the/a precedent had been set at] At last night's joint meeting}man said, "I personally ob-| Tiders representing the horse- ee i it ea eye scrol! |Monday afternoon when City ere ae ~ a sre 4 ratepayer associations petition-|feasibility of amalgamating|the county level. He suggested|o¢ the traffic and public works|Served the traffic at the clinic ye emt handed onto tb plone gnk Mexicali, |Parks Commissioner Patrick| felt that there' is ae possibility at King St. W. tonight, which I understand is one of their busi- est nights, and at this clinic which supplies 2.5 spaces per doctor I observed no congestion whatsoever."' The spokesman said that the medical centre people cannot pick up an option to any land in the city until the parking situa- tion is remedied. He said they have been delayed since last Kennedy informed Mr. Harding that the rain soaked grounds of Lakeview Park would be '"un- Suitable' for the 25,000 persons expected at the picnic. It has been estimated that it night have cost as much as $10,000 to repair the damage to the grounds if the picnic had been held on the soggy turf this Saturday. Mr. Harding said that this ed township council, Monday}Pickering Village and Ajax with|costs of the study be shared night, to get a regional study|the township. |30-50 between the county and of the area under way. Mr. Kruger also suggested|provincial government. West Rouge Ratepayers'|the study look into the possibil-/| Mr. Kruger said he realized President John Kruger askedjity of creating a boundary be-jequalization payments would council to request the provin-'tween the rural and urban sec-|have to be made to the village Board Requests one or two of the American UAW leaders might be able to attend on the new date. He said there will definitely be a UAW picnic this summer, even if rains force a postpone- ment until July. committees, the spokesman said that an Oshawa parking bylaw "made it difficult from an eco- nomic stand point to build the centre." The spokesman urged that a city bylaw be amended to re- quire three parking spaces per doctor at a medical centre in- stead of the present six. Traffic committee recently recom- mended four, but this is un- Mexico -- a trip that took him eight and one-half months. When he arrived in Vic- toria, he contacted the British Columbia Horse Association and the pony express ride was organized, "The horse riders average about 10 miles an hour under ordinary circumstances," he added. The objective is to make Harvey M. Ambrose, Taun- ton Rd., a member of the North Oshawa Riding Aca- demy, one of the volunteers carrying the message on its 6,000-journey to Expo 67, in Montreal, from Victoria, B.C. In 13 months, 2,513 riders have carried the message which wishes health and pros- perity to the Queen. It is hoped it can be presented to OUDLY PRESENTS | Messer's lee Show 'T., JUNE 17th No. 1 TV Show in Person urs of family variety gamation. He said it would take two years to complete the study and a further two years to finalize it. He said that, at that time, Ajax would need a study $20,000 GIVEN with e as well acce! i initi ee ptable to the medical centre|August, when the initial. survey lly in July. eople aware of the number i ime i q TY AND THE BUCHTA DANCERS Architect | lere North Pickering Ratepayers') planners who state they have to|was taken, and still could not ggg dese aes was a see and horsemen in Mo Bcoghge dag pF) dered CANCER SOCIE tal Cast of 22 Association President Hugh Mil-|have a minimum of three before| choose a site because of the by- developed by Al LaGate, a Canada. la "postponement 'had been nec The Oshawa branch of th | / : ; o shawa bran e ler, speaking in favor of the re- gional government study, said a broader look at municipal problems was needed. they can build. | The spokesman said that tak-| ing into consideration land value, grading and paving costs, essary. He added that the muddy condition of the park would have required the pres- Cost of the architect and the new building will be borne en- tirely by the Federal and Pro- Canadian Cancer Society re- ports that it has received to date $20,000 in the current Oshawa Board of Education passed a motion last night to ask the Ontario Department of STIVAL CANADA THE CENTENNIAL COMMISSION YANVILLE Education for permission to vincial governments. A . ence of a tow truck to remove = 5 8 Lovell Travel Agency hire an architect to further in-| A new retraining centre has| West Shore Ratepayers'. As-jeach parking space would cost cars stuck in the mud at the objentien hg ping Mg er ed sy vestigate a new manpower re-|been under discussion for a|S0Ciation President A. C. King an estimated $2,000. Multiply plenlo alte ?s erotik i oy ' ra itby Arene supported Mr. Kruger in his re-|this by four, the spokesman ' Sort ai "i gion Sn - 2 is on- year and a half now. The board of education is present- ly conducting retraining in training centre. ALL NOTIFIED He stated that the reschedul- ing was unavoidable and that said, and it's a tremendous bur- den added to the rent structure. Oshawa is one of the few quest for a regional govern- ment study and said ratepayers in his iation had fr ey is still coming in. Centre Smoke Shop Ontario County officials re- For Drop-In Chest Clinic 4 s Y } ---- 8:30 a building on Albert Street q j n T, " i R SHOW j ownship which is too small. Consequent-|!¥ @sked when a study would] cities in Ontario, the spokesman all those directly concerned De ar koe sabes cae ly, retraining classes must be|»e Started. stated, that has such a high Trying to measure the results; "Nobody knows how manyjit's extremely difficult to keep ue "gh ago had _ noti-! $50,000. : ied of the postponement. David M. K. Davidson, pub- licity chairman for the Osh- awa branch, was hopeful to- day that the objective would parking standard. He mentioned Man Guilty ships will be saved by the warn-jon top of. "'We have an execu- ing light," said Mrs. Collins,|tive that is extremely good and "We can only count the fail-jthey have managed to keep ures." tests and x-rays active, as well Pat McGrath, representative of the Bay Ridges Ratepayers Association, backed the other ratepaper representatives in held at night in McLaughlin and Eastdale Collegiates. Preliminary plans call for a 250-foot square building of fac- of tuberculosis prevention is like trying to estimate the value of a lighthouse, Mrs, E, A. Collins, executive secretary, Ontario Mr. Harding stated that it was '"'quite a headache" to re- schedule the program for the picnic but that this was being aie ra RiumM NS ~~ To Buy Boat [bse HR PICKERING (Staff) -- Pick- le 4 r ry y tive, as 3 A i 'y construction covering an/their for a r C Tuberculosis and Health nd re-/@S run the association," she } i be met in both ca i ering Township Council, at its| area of 57,000 square feet. _|government study. Mr. Me- Aeabetalion, saat Meedig. ao ag i ae |accomplished despite the added ee meeting Monday night, narrow)" 4° cafeteria and commercial,|Grath also asked council to u port of the TB association ae ies teenenae ingnival day night at Westminster Unit- ed Church, guest speaker, Dr. Floris E. King, Program Direc- seen ? pen If a second postponement is With a new 'drop-in' chest/necessary Mr. Harding feels clinic that we are hoping to/that the Local may consider ly passed a motion to spend $4,225 to purchase a boat for the Pickering Emergency Res- take action on a 945-name pe- tition pr d to council last month asking for more aid and administrative rooms will all occupy the same _ buildi Other facilities will include MARRY AND ESCAPE NORMAN, Okla. (AP) -- A new university rule requiring Two Charges Thieves Foiled ' : cue Unit. machine shops, welding shops|from the provincial government|_ WHITBY (Staff) -- Lorne i have by 1968 -- we plan on hay-| Alexandra Park for the picnic; n RIVE-IN The motion to spend the).q -- small engine repair room.|in the field of education. Nelson Murray, 56 Colborne . tor, Canadian Tuberculosis As- is 'bs fon all . espiratory| Ut he added that the Lakeview|¥"™arried undergraduates un- THEATRE money, plus trading in the) L. Roberts, superintendent| Mr. McGrath asked that|Stteet W., Oshawa, was found B Safet Pin sociation told a- gathering of|'"8 s TESPITALOTY| ite ig preferable for a picnic/d¢t 25 to live in university existing police boat valued at guilty of break, entry and theft, y Y jabout 185 that the objective of| diseases. ithe size of Local 229's. housing prompted this adver- council present the petition to the government before its sum- mer recess in July. Reeve Clifford Laycox told of secondary schools, said the building will be designed to accommodate the minimum number of students expected to enroll. In periods of maximum|the delegations a regional gov- enrolment the school could be/ernment study was not within opened at night and its capa-|the financial scope of council city doubled. land suggested proceedings At present the cost, location|might have to start at the tisement in the university's stu- dent newspaper: "Escape from university housing. Marry us." Mike Metnick, 19, and Don Serkins, 20, said they placed the ad as a dare--but they have had quite a few phone calls. |the association was to erradi- cate TB. Dr. King also told the associa- tion that during the centennial year -- "Let us take from the altar of the past, not the ashes, but the fire." In her talk, there are approximately 5,000 g "Emphysema -- (trouble with breathing) is a respiratory ail- ee ae Donald Mc- ment that has caused a great Donald, the main speaker, deal of alarm -- in the past 10)Mike Starr,*MP for Ontario years, it has increased from 400| Riding, Albert V. Walker, MPP to 500 per cent," she said. for the same riding, and Mayor Monday, at the General Ses-/ sions of the Peace at the On- tario County Court House. The jury deliberated for one hour before returning their ver- dict on two charges, break, entry and theft and possession of stolen goods. On July 1, 1966, Murray en- $2,000, was passed by a four to three margin with Deputy Reeve Mrs. Jean McPherson and Councillors Ron Chatten and John Williams opposing the An attempted break-in at the Auto-Magic Car Wash on Bond St. W. was foiled when the thieves encountered a_ safety pin on the locked door after successfully removing a pane of glass from near the lock on the door. EN AT 8:00 move. Reeve Clifford Laycox said that after a meeting with the town solicitor last week he had NINGS she said that . eels and probable date of completion|county level. P been advised that while it was|.+. unknown. The main delay, tered the home of Mrs. Minnie|, 4 second break-in at the)ther rly in Canada-- ; iJlegal for the township to set ' 4 Murphy Oil Company building,|active cases yearly 8' Wilde SaaCUE Uniethe tawne according to Mr. Roberts, is Oak, 150 Bloor Street West, also on Bond St.. saw thieves|of these, 1,000 may become re- | ship could purchase a boat for|8€ means of financing. This Delegates Named Oshawa, and stole a sewing/eiter the building by smash.active. The doctor went on to | ship could purchas must be worked out between the machine and transistor radio,|°Mer LS agate say that 200,000 people require follow-up care from the disease, annually. "The real problem today is that no one is afraid of TB any more," said Mrs. Collins. "A ing a window. Nothing was reported stolen. Another case of gas stealing occurred when gas was stolen from a GMC pickup truck on Madison Ave. Det.-Sgt. Powell the safety of the township resi- dents. The reeve said the 'vessel would be under the direct con- trol of the township council and that the PERU group would together valued. at more than $50. Oshawa Police testified that on July 1, 1966, they received a report of a stolen vehicle and bai and provincial sey NDP Convention our delegates from Ontario Boy, 14, Hurt [sine were recent het {riding were recently elected to ; attend the New Democratic|stopped the reported vehicl 4 a operate the boat as agents of |Party federal convention to be ig a_ high apeed chage of the city police reported that/person who has contracted the hicseatre - _-- Pigg Phe In Collision |held in Toronto from July 3 to|through the city. there is still a great deal of gas/disease, ge Dacia oat ownsiip lawyer nag advise S i i siphoning going on in the Osh-|who hav en s |6. They are Marg Klym, Mur-| The sewing machine and|SsipP' ig going tive and before you know it, you $ him it would likely take a year for a bill or amendment to a bill to be passed by the legis- lature. Reeve Laycox said the rescue|boy to hospital with unit had verbally agreed to re-| juries. awa area. A set of 1967 licence plates were stolen from a car belong- ing to William A. Dickson, 174 Athol St. E. Det.-Sgt. Powell believes that the plates have transistor radio were found on the rear seat at the time and Murray told police that the ar- ticles belonged to his mother. The charge of auto theft was later withdrawn when police have an epidemic. "Just recently, a Nova Scotia high school reported such an epidemic, no less than 30 of the students had contracted the An accident on Ritson Rd. §.|"8Y Wallace, Pat Ferren, and at Olive Ave. at 5:40 p.m., Mon-| Joyce Read. day sent a 14-year-old Oshawa facial in- The NDP will carry out a massive membership campaign during July and August. Ten thousand pieces of literature RS and , SHOW D ampion ampion BROWN ORE E 18 iN ZED BARN LTD. nildren 1.00 orescence eae is pee Mt ret Be ee ee gale ale will be distributed in a door-to-|were notified that Murray had|been stolen for future use on| disease. ay ace i ot : a anadible facial feuotiixe when door canvass which will get/received permission to drivela stolen car. The licence num-| 'This is what we are trying to babar dara ae underway in the next week. the car. 'ber of the plates is J-83-718. prevent in Ontario County--but Deputy Reeve McPherson said that the township had al- ready contributed $2,000 to- wards the PERU (the old po- lice boat) and suggested coun- cil wait until the group pay at the bicycle on which he was rid- ing collided with a car driven 395 King St. E. The boy is in satisfactory con- dition in Oshawa General Hos- least some of this money back. pital. Two Schools Remain Open For Retraining Courses Most Oshawa schools will close for the summer on June 29, but two high schools will continue to be centres of ac- tivity. > : Mr. G. L. Roberts, superin- tendent of city secondary schools, announced today that Eastdale Collegiate and R. S. McLaughlin Collegiate will both be open for at least five weeks. He said retraining courses for the unemployed would be offer- ed at both schools. McLaughlin school will also be used for sum- mer programs for the training of apprentices. In addition, Simcoe Street school will be used for the teaching of academic subjects to students in the Oshawa and district area who must make up subjects in order to pass their year. The number of students at the three schools will total about 800. Dr. M. Elliott, superintendent of public schools, said that many school playgrounds will remain open and will be used in co - operation with the Osh- awa Recreation Committee. In a few special cases washrooms would also be kept open. In both public and high schools, a program of cleaning and redecoration will be car- ried out during the summer months. Dr. Elliott was pleased to re- port that the danger of van- dalism seemed to be no higher in the summer months than dur- ing the regular school year. F. W. Humphries, superinten- dent of seperate schools, said that none of the schoo! facili- ties in his system would be available during the summer. by Douglas Alfred Topping of| PROPOSAL DEFEATED A joint meeting of the public works and traffic committees last night heard submitions from two citizens delegations support- ing and opposing the construc- tion of a sidewalk on Regent Drive, in the Harmony Rd. N. area of the city. The joint committees, after hearing the delegations, voted on a Board of Education recom- mendation that a sidewalk be built on the north side of Regent Drive to increase the safety fac- tor for children travelling this route to and from school. The vote ended in a 4-4 tie and automatically defeated the recommendation. A report will now be submitted to city coun- cil stating that the public works committee is not in favor of constructing sidewalks on Regent Dr. Bruce Mackey, chairman of the public works committee said after the meeting last night, "the matter isn't closed. If the council votes for sidewalks to be put in, they will be. If they up- hold our recommendation then we will look into alternative ways to try to remedy the situa- tion." J. B. Stone, 842 Regent Dr., led the delegation opposing the construction of the sidewalk. He stated that 100 per cent of the tax paying residents on the north side of Regent Dr. and 72 per cent on the south side had petitioned against the sidewalk. He said, '"'my personal con- cern is what the' installation of a sidewalk will do to the ap- pearance of my property. Pride in home ownership is one of the reasons I am against it." He also pointed out the citi- zens on Regent Dr. would bear the added tax burden in provid- ing the sidewalk. BACKS PLAN Robert Walker, supporting the construction, presented a ten- page brief outling both the pros and cons of the sidewalk and making suggestions for com- promise. . BY WORKS COMMITTEE Sidewalk Plan Strikes Snag One of the brief's recommen- dations, agreed to by both sides was that a curb and gutter be installed on Regent Dr. and that bus service on the street be sus- pended at certain times in the day when children are travel- ling the. route. Fred Crome, city engineer, said that to build curbs and gut- ters along the street, each citi- zen with property adjoining Regent Dr. would have to pay approximately $60 a year for ten years for the service. It was also pointed out that the times for the bus removal were the busiest times in the day for the PUC in this area. It was felt that the PUC commissioners wouldn't favor the removal of buses at the times recom- mended in the brief. Constable William Moring, a safety officer in the area strong- ly supported the addition of a sidewalk. He said, "as a safety officer the ultimate to me is to have a sidewalk on both sides of every street in Oshawa." DR. FLORIS E. KING, Program Director, Cana- dian Tuberculosis Associa- tion, right, glances through the annual report magazine of the Ontario County TB Association, with president, Dr. M, R. Braund. Dr. King was guest speaker at the It annual meeting and report for 1966, held Monday st at Westminster United Church. One of the items discussed at the meeting, was a "drop-in" chest clin- ic to be located in the city, is slated to be opened in 1968. The president's report ated that it was hoped that tests for other illnesses such as glaucoma and. dia- betes will this clinic. be available at --Oshawa Times Photo

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