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Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Jan 1962, p. 13

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es re si a 63 ' lites fk ok RETRAINING CLASSES AID NEEDY OF 0 helping hand. The class is | iel supplied by Gene ral making slip covers for chest- | Motors will be made during | erfields which are distributed | the course. The class trains | by the welfare department to | girls to do sewing in factor- | needy families. About six new | ies. Caught by the camera as Ask Council Leadership In Drive For New Arena Oshawa City Council will be)43, Royal Canadian Legion and) According to Mr, Mason, after asked to give leadership to ap-|other organizations in the city|juvenile hockey, there is no point a committee to conduct aj|will be approached for support|arena to support the higher lea- drive to erect a new arena for/of new arena demands. gues teams. This, he said, is Students attending the power sewing class at O'Neill Col- legiate and Vocational Insti- tute, which is part of the re- training program, are giving the welfare department a SHAWA from left, are Donna Strie, Sharon Kimmerly, Ruth Kirk- patrick, Mrs. Tremble, the teacher; Barbara Clark and Mary Versluis. Oshawa Times Photo D. Fallaize Judo Club Champion After 20 minutes of fighting, blue belt holder Doug Fallaize whipped brown belt holder, (a Oshawa. Commissioner Wilson explain-/an urgent need in Oshawa, Children's Arena Commission-| ed the reason for asking for an} He said the overflow from the higher category) holder Albert i\Stadtke, to merge over-all _|Avenue Pentecostal Church and er Robert Wilson who heads upjadult arena instead of a Child-|Children's Arena could easily|monthly champion of the Osh- the Central Council of Neighbor-/ren's Arena is because the Osh-|he accommodated in a new awa Maple Leaf Judo Club. hood Association's arena investi-|awa Children's Arena Commis- gation committee( and repre-|sion feels it is taking care of sents CCNA on the arena com-|the children. mission) told the Central Coun-; However, he said, an addition- cil Wednesday night his com-| mittee is planning. a "mass|the arena could be used. meeting" of all Oshawa resi-|, ee ee dents to get the. machinery in "Gu we san paites cud i ' d arena ? ' . : . ee 8 Day eeeees & there are 31 industrial league in the city. : : - Commissioner Wilson said it is hockey teams in the city who adult arena. NORTH OSHAWA RINK Jack Cook, a North Oshawa gate questioned whether any |consideration had been given to }completing the North Oshawa |Park outdoor artificial ice rink j}to convert it into an arena. | Commissioner Wilson explain- his committee's aim to "wake|@re all going to Whitby, Port) oq that ever since the Listowel | Gary Edwards whipped Roy |Gallant to take the green belt jelass championship for the jmonth. Bill Fallaize defeated al eight to 12 hours ice time at|Neighborhood Association dele-|Pay| Kyle in the contest for erange belt champ. Yellow belt holders Ray Oli- ver and Herman Vanderveen eliminated all |pionship in this category. Oli- ver eliminated Vanderveen. contestants to wrestle for the monthly cham- the city up to the apathy of|Perry or Bowmanville to play.| arena tragedy, municipalities) Florence Edwards defeated having no adult arena in a city| He said the city owes these tax-)«can't just put tin 'roofs over|"'Scottie"' Sunderland to win with a population of 60,000--and| Payers an arena to permit them) ,in¢< and convert them into|the girls class championship. with being without an adult|t0 play. here where their tax), ena." Bill Buffett, a junior, won the arena in a city of this size for dollars are being spent. _ He said the estimated cost of|iunior orange belt class cham- nearly nine years." According to the Committee aoind: & proper job'at North Osh-| \chairman, if Central Council \dard . 2 ; ».|awa would be $121,000--the same|"* Pha " ASK LEADERSHIP went out for another Children's amount it cost to build the Child-| Emery Breau defeated Ger- Ih addition, he said, it is the| Arena, it is doubtful it would be|#™° ' ald Bourgeouis to claim the commmittee's intention. to wake| successful in achieving its goal, ages: aia 'is qjjunior yellow belt class cham- cit ncil up to show leader-jbut if it goes after an adult ommissioner Wilson warned) yi onchi d David Brooks dl |CCNA delegates that it must eco a et Ma ship--to\demand leadership, to] arena it should get one. whipped Terry Lee to claim t pionship by defeating Jint Sud:| Prayer Week Services Arranged Resnonding to the. invitation of the Department of Evangel- ism of the Canadian Council of Churches the local congrega- tions, led by the Oshawa Minis- terial. Association, will take part in the annual Week of Prayer, Jan. 8 to 12. The gen- eral theme for the week of services will be, as suggested by the council, "Personal! Christianity'. The services will be under the direction of the president of the ministerial association, Rev. W. Dickson, minister of thee Centre Street United Church, The preachers on each occasion will be from local congregations. It is the prac- tice of the association to select a representative of each de- nomination to bring the mes- sages and to select the latest one to have received a call from a local church. | The Monday evening service} will be held in the First Baptist Church, with Captain R. Pullar of the Holy Trinity Anglican Church speaking on the theme "The Salt of the Earth'. Tuesday's service will be held in the St, Paul's Presby-| terian Church, Wilson road, when Pastor Ernest Winter, as- sociate at Calvary Baptist, will preach and his theme will be "The Light of the World'. On Wednesday the place of meeting is the Free Methodist Church; the speaker is Rev. George Carroll of the Byng | two men were convicted and \to the accused's car was esti- She Oshawa Times SECOND SECTION OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JANUARY 4, 1962 PAGE THIRTEEN Convict Two | Of Traffic Offenses One case was dismissed and fined a total of $175 and costs on vabeians driving cherges, Wednesday, in Oshawa Magis- trates Couri. Robert Swan, 21, of Oshawa, was fined $25 and costs or three days in jail when he pleaded guilty to a careless driving charge, which was laid after his car knocked over a hydro pole and a mail box on Ritson| | road north, Dec, 11, Damage mated at $2,000. Terence V. Kelly, counsel for the accused, said his client had| : spent some time in hospital after the accident and had also suffered financially and asked the court to take this into con- sideration, A Toronto man, whose record was not available but who told the court he had previously been convicted of careless driving in June, 1961, was fined $150 and costs by Magistrate Dnieper on conviction.of his second offence. «Paul La Rush was charged after a rear-end collision on Highway 401, Dec. 10, which \the theme is "When Personal |Faith is Challenged'. | The new Westmount United) \Church will host the Thursday) night meeting and the preacher jthen will be the Rev. J. W. Goodswan, of the Christ Mem-! orial Anglican Church. The climax of the week's) meeting will be held in the St.| |George's Anglican Church when| the past president of the min- isterial association, Rev. R. B. Milroy, of Knox Presbyterian Church, will be the preacher and ite theme will be 'The Fonutain of Christian Personal |Experience". | This week of services will city an opportunity to express) oneness in Christ and our es-| will understand each other bet-| ter after we worship God to- gether. On Monday, in preparation for the services Rev. Dr. George Telford will lead the ministers in a time of meditation in the St. Luke's Presbyterian Church, Officers Of Chapter Are give every churchman of the|' Liverpool road cloverleaf. Andrew Scott, of Scarborough, gained dismissal on a similar charge when a crown witness failed to appear for the hearing. "It is up to the Crown to make sure the witnesses are in court', Magistrate Dnieper said after passing judgment. caused an estimated $455 da-|? mage to the two cars involved.) | |The accident occurred near the QUICK PAYMENT ASSISTS CARRIER Weekly collections by your Oshawa Times Carrier are timed to provide you con- venient service and to meet his school and study sched- ule. He may begin collections Legion Branch Has Open House The traditional welcome of 'Happy New Year" was ex- tended to members of Oshawa Branch 43, The Royal Canadian jsential unity in his church, We|Legion, and their friends on) New Year's Day by President Don Iverson and President- elect Harry Brown. More than 500 visitors attend- ed at the Legion Hall on Cen-) fre street for the colorful recep-| on Thursday and 'continue through Friday and Satur- day. Your thoughtfulness in paying him the first time he calls will encourage him in prompt service. Your carrier is an_inde- pendent merchant and like all merchants, he must be sure of his collections be- fore he can enjoy the full profit of his labors. Charles Healy | | | | | RECRUITS PREPARE FOR SURVIVAL COURSE em, tion, at which several officials) extended "greetings" in speech- es of welcome. The guests brought greetings from many walks of life, Lt.-Col. J. Warnica, *cémmanding officer of Ontario Regt.; Major W. Paynter, Ontario Regt.; Sgt. J. Drygala, Ontario Regt, Sgts. Mess; Honorable Michael Starr, 'Installed federal minister of labor; T. D. Thomas, MPP; Alderman G. following distinguished} le have a Po oor arena in the city. CCNA Chairman Chris Mason A : | he mand, with a certain amount of junior white belt class cham- He said it is only through city|said he felt the council should council that supporters of a new] support its committee in its de- arena will be able to "'go after|cision to try for an adult arena. big business," to assist in an|He said when the arena proposal arena project. was discussed, in committee, it According to the committee|was felt the present Children's chairman, all minor hockey|Arena was serving its purpose, coaches, trade unions (especial-|but, an arena with a larger ty Local 222, UAW-CLC), Branch| seating capacity is needed here. NEED GREAT | Blood Clinic Is Open Tonight "Can you spend just 30 min-facing a new year, where the utes of your time?" If so, that;\demand for blood goes on and is all the time it will take tojon, if we are to meet our quota donate blood at the first Blood|of blood, we will need the sup- Donor Clinic in 1962", states R.|port of each and every person H. Stroud, chairman of the Red!as a blood Donor'. a Donor Clinic in NO DISCOMFORT | "ate ' Anyone who is "This 30 minutes that you canip eal th between spare in your busy day includes|of 1g and 65 years the time taken for testing, reg-!nate blood. However istration, rest and refreshments. | F The actual giving of blood takes only four to five minutes"', mented Mr. Stroud. The first Red Cross Blood in average the ages may do- 4 of donating an experienced] COM-'nurse will take your donation.| [There is no discomfort in do- pore nating blood and every phase Donor Clinic of 1962 opened it's) of ho program is et pro- doors this afternoon in St./fessional supervision. Gregory's Auditorium, Simcoe) Qnly three-quarters of a pint, pages gpg rag rey that is to say, only one-twentieth Clinic this month, and with the fine average oor Moy mada need for blood in our hospitals} jjare¢ ) : reaching an all time high, more and more donors are required to keep the supply flowing to those in need. are used in many ways. Blood NEED LARGE QUANTITY may be used to control hemorr- A total of 555,000 bottles of) age. to combat shock, to speed blood will be needed this year|"ecovery, to prepare patients for for patients in Canadian hospi-SUtsery and to save infants tals, which when broken down|born with blood or heart defects. amounts to one bottle of blood| Possible the best known use for every 15 seconds to be donated|Whole blood or blood products by Canadians. These Red Cross/iS to assist accident victims, as placed within 24 hours. It is important that blood is available to our hospitals, and whole blood and blood products to make) sure that the donor is capable| Clinics are the only way to keep|this use has _ been associated the supply meeting up with the! With blood clinics because of the demand. " many accidents on our high- Probably one of the biggest" ays: reasons for an increase in the, OPEN UNTIL 9 P.M. demand of blood is the fact that) This first Red Cross Biood| more and more open heart oper-|Donor Clinic of 1962 is in ur- ations are being performed. It/gent need of new donors, and takes 25 bottles of blood to per-jclinic hours are from 6 to} form one of these operations,|9 p.m. at St. Gregory's| and from this you can see that|Auditorium today. | the "'life blood"' of the Red Cross} Fred Roberts, president of} free Blood Donor Service de-jthe Oshawa Branch of the! pends not only on the continuous|Canadian Red Cross and Mr.) support from former donors, but|Stroud, Blood Donor chairman, | also on the finding of newjurges each and every citizeén| donors, who have never before|to register at this clinic on} given blood at a Red Cross|Thursday. 'Support: the Red/ Clinic, Cross Blood Donor Clinic and} Mr. Stroud announced that,)you support your fellow man in! "The Oshawa Blood Donor need" Committee has been very satis clinics. However, we are now/cidents do not take a holiday. | strength that city council give) leadership to its electorate and} start a drive to get an arena) erected. The committee received a| unanimous vote of endorsation) for its type of action and the} style of arena it proposes to fight for. Suicidal Fish Litter Beaches In Australia SYDNEY (AP) -- Australian scientists are baffled by the case of the suicidal fish. For four days beaches on the northern coust of New South| Wales were littered with hun-| dreds of theusands of dead or} dying fish. When people threw} them back into the water the fish struggled to shore again in a vertical position with heads! out of the water. A reporter who went to sea a trawler to observe the: phenomenon said later: "I saw the amazing sight of fish swim- ming in an upright position, gasping for breath--then dying. They swam crazily on their tails! round and round in small cir-| cles--an inexplicable, spiraling death dance." The main death area was Clared in an interview that he) Evans Head, 512 miles north of Sydney, but the affected area! covered 180 miles of coastline.} One trawler working half a mile off Evans Head and in 180 feet of water hauled up 200 pounds of dead fish in two} drags. The fish included snap-| per, mullet, break, jewfish, yel- lowtail, mackerel, whiting and pilchards, | Some people ascribed the mystery death wave to bomb- ing practice by the Australian Air Force, but experts pointed out that a bomb blast would kill fish only in the immediate area.| A marine biologist suggested three possible explanations-- chemical contamination of the Evans River. which flows into the sea at Evans Head; an out- break of disease peculiar to cer- tain species of fish: and a form of plankton that preduces chem- icals poisonous to fish. The curator of invertebrates) at the Australian Museum, Miss} E. Pope, said the fish probably} had been poisoned by "red tide'--a floating mass of or-| ganisms that consume oxygen} in the water and force fish to surface. After four days the fantastic episode suddenly ended. Fish in their lives when caught, pionship. Krista Burda defeated Shirley Salway to win the girls over age 13 years class champion- ship and Karen Salway defeat- ed Vallery Ayling to win the girls under age 13 years class championship. CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- dents of Oshawa and district who are celebrating their birthdays today: Lynn Fetchison, 130 East- mount; Norman Creamer, 215 King St., East; John Van Keimpema, 473 Mont- rave Ave; George Reid, 441 Marion Ave; Brenda King, 355 Ritson Rd., North and Beverly Andrews, 72 West- mount, Phone 723-3474. Journal Claims OSHAWA NA Police Officer Aided Dorion MONTREAL (CP)--Le Nou- veau. Journal says a former Quebec Liquor Police officer de- worked in Bellechasse riding in the 1958 federal election cam- paign for Hon. Noel Dorion, now secretary of state and president of the Privy Council. The newspaper says the for- mer officer, Rene Mercier, said he "saw the future member of Parliament several times." Mercier now lives in Montreal. His name appeared in a letter signed "Noel Dorion" -- the newspaper published a photosta- tic copy Tuesday -- thanking eight men for election serv- ices, Le Nouveau Journal repro duces the signature "Noel Do- rion" from the photostat and the signature of State Secretary Noel Dorion from a letter "'sent to a journalist " It says it leaves it to readers to compare the signatures and draw their own conclusions. Mr. the letter and has said he will sue anyone who publishes it or uses it for pdlitical purposes. He also has said his secretary wrote and signed the letter when asked te do so for an unnamed person. NEW TYPE LONDON (CP) -- A British firm has started design work on a hovercrafi which is estimated ; i The need for blood goes on|the area again swam horizon-|to. be capable of carrying 150 fied with the results of the 1961/year in and year out, and ac-itally and again struggled for, passengers from London to | Paris at 300 miles an hour. Dorion denies he wrote/ | $195 In Fines For Traffic Offenses | Attersley, Alderman John Bra- ture of the officers of Pental-|/Frank Hughes and Ernie Bell, Masonic Temple, Oshawa, \dian Legion, and Fire Chief ed by Ex. Comp. W. E. Me: ter, R. Ex. Comp, A. W. Wat-| Li or ena quor Penalty iting past principals from Bow- sented the past principal's jew-|cnarge of consuming: while a lron 'and badge of office sare peared in Oshawa Magistrate's leoarman, - accused had admitted drinking |the gavel of office was pre-|he was a passenger, was in- Smale by his sons in an im-|bottle', Magistrate Dnieper The installation and investi-jdy,;»Ed Zalewski, Polish Vets.; pha Chapter, No. 28, Royal/Canadian Corps; Ab. Mabin, Arch Masons, was held in the|zone commander, Royal Cana-| Tuesday evening. Ray Hobbs. The installation was conduct- <8 |Kinstry assisted by the past $10 A Bottle |principals of Pentalpha Chap-| ins, grand superintendent of| Ontario District No. 10 and vis- H Wayne Dennis Sharpe, 19, of manville. ees i Ex. Comp. F, L. Smale pre- Oshawa, pleaded guilty to a 7. ' . minor and was fined $40 and el to Ex. Comp. W. F. Boor-| costs or 30 days when he ap- jman, i?Z. The principal's ap : i Court Wednesday. presented to First Principal F.| pojic idence showed the \I.. Smale by Ex. Comp. W. F TARA ty | ' four bottles of beer, while being At the close of the evening,|questioned after a car, in which jsented to the incoming first)/volved in an accident, Dec. 11. principal, Ex. Comp. F. L.| 'That will cost just $10 a pressive ceremony. said in passing sentence. es ns Sa ie mare site Oe TIVE | Professor Gets Research Grant | VALPARAISO, Indiana -- Dr. |Waldemar C. Gunther of Val- | Paraiso University's department} such irradiation could be a fac- | of biology was awarded a $31,000)tor in mentai disease, since all grant by the Neurological Dis-| life is constantly exposed to it. }eases and Biindness Council of] Fertilized chicken eggs will be the National Institute of Health,|exposed to 'he rays of the uni- Public Health Service versity's subcritical atomic re- Di, Gunther is the son of Mr./actor, and the behavior and and Mrs, G. A. Gunther, Rich-| brain construction of the chicks mond street east, Oshawa. He/will then be studied. visited his parents during the} Dr. Gunther uses chicken eggs Christmas holidays. for his project because the sim- The largest research award|ilarity between the incubation of ever made to a Valparaiso} chicken eggs and the period of faculty member, it will finance! gestation in the human being investigation oi the effects of ab-| makes comparisons easy. normal temperatures and ir-| A 1949 graduate of the Uni- radiation on the unborn. versity of Chicago (Ph. D., 1956) As the result of pilot experi-| he also studied at the University ments in which he produced the! of California. As a visiting scien- symptoms of human mental re-|tist under the Indiana Academy tardation in chickens, Dr. Gun-jof Science program, Dr. Gun ther theorizes that many mental|ther addresses Indiana high diseases, @specially. mental re-|school students and teachers in tardation and its associated] an effort to bolster science cur- crippling effects, originate dur-| ricula. ing embryonic development. A recently elected fellow of Some of the crippling, he|the American Association for |believes, may result from ab-|the Advancement of Science and jnormal temperatures . which/recipient of National Science damage brain tissues during in-| Foundation grants, he has pub- cubation. He will therefore ex-|lished several articles in the }pose chicken eggs to various|fields of endocrinology, temperatures for different time| anatomy, embryology, and neur- periods and study the behavior! ology. | of the hatched chicks. Dr, Gunther, a member of the The second phase of Dr. Gun-| university faculty since 1954, is \ther's project will concern thejactive in Faith Memorial tensity irradiation on mental de- velopment, Dr, Gunther believes |three lamps; John Napolitano, ' Area Doctors 'Is Mara Reeve BRECHIN -- In a poll, which observers say was "average", Mara Township voters Monday elected Charles Healy as their reeve. Irvie Orr deputy reeve elected to the seats. James Murphy topped the council poll with 476 votes, Basil Harrington with 421, and Muir Dack with 417. Mr. Healy, last lyear's deputy-reeve, polled 494 | votes while his rival, 1961 Reeve was acclaimed and three were vacant council |Irwin Cowie had 394 supporters. Defeated in the council polls were: Melvyn Wood 333, Archie R. McDonald 316, and Earl Joyce, 232 votes. The following fines, totalling af THERE IS MUCH activity at the Oshawa Armories this week. Over 100 uniforms are being fitted on the men who have already been sworn in for the second course of the Special Militia Training Pro- gram, which gets underway next Monday. In the upper picture Tpr, S. E. Luke is try- ing on a pair of boots, with the assistance of Cpl. I. Cos- tello. Fitting a greatcoat is Tpr. R. Knight, under the ex- pert hands of Cpl. T. 0. Love. ' In the lower picture WO? L. R. Costello fits a jacket on Recruit Trooper D. H. Han- nah. It is expected that the quota for the course, 150 men, will be filled by the end of the week. Processing of re- cruits will probably cease next Saturday. The course is the second of fout six-week courses held by the Canadian Army Militia. Its purpose is to train men in national sur- vival procedures. --Oshawa Times Photos $195 were levied, Wednesday, by Magistrate Robert Dnieper in Oshawa Mazgistrate's Court. Leo Florimond, Toronto, $50 and costs, or 10 days, over- loading; Burgess Hathaway, $50 and cosis or 10 days, over- loading; James M. Moore, Osh- awa, $10 and costs or three days, speeding; Harold McKel- lar, $5 and.costs or three days, tail tight; Martin Dobat, Osh- awa, $10 and costs or three days, $5 and costs or three days, flares; Percy Parrish, Scar- borough, $5 and costs or three days. signal lights. Frank Rossi, Pickering, $10 and costs or three days, three lamps; Donald Simon Watt, Whithy, $5 and costs or three days, clearance lamps; Enos L. Ringer, Pickering, $10 and costs or three days, failed to produce owrership; Anthony Gallant, Whitby, $10 and costs or three days, failed to produce driving licence; Jean Paul Deaubriel, Whitby Twp., $5 and costs or three days, no name on side. George H. Pawis, Pickering, $10 and costs or three days, spccding; Odilon Kenny, Scar- borough Twp., $5 and costs or three days, identification lamps; Kazys Karpas, Oshawa, $5 and costs or three days, tail light on trailer. Pass Tests Three Oshawa district men are among the 179 doctors who! will be admitted as fellows of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada in To- ronto Jan, 18, The convocation will be held in conjunction with the college's 3ist annual meeting Jan. 18-20. The new fellows have all suc- 17 PERMITS Little Bu city engineer's department in December, 1961. Total value of all permits issued was $61,415, | This total is far below those of the previous three Decembers when value of construction in the end-of-the-year months aver- aged over $500,000. | For comparison: December, 1960 ($731,478); December, 1959) ($331,181); December, 1958) ($462,914). | 8. Jackson and Son, Arthur) street, received an $18,000 per-| mit last month for a new King! street east bank, | A $10,000 permit was issued to Castle Homes, Yonge street, To-| ronto, for an order office and) agency on Simcoe street south. Henderson Concrete Products, | Nelson street, got a $3,000 per- mit for an autoclave for con- crete block manufacture. One single family dwelling) permit 'was issued last month --' to P. Johansen Limited, Law) street, $13,500, Also, one garage permit, to J. Hurst, Park road/ south, $500. | A permit for interior, ware- house work, valued at $2,600, was issued to Russell Transport, Ritson road south. G. Wetherup, Taunton road east, received a $3,000 barn ad- dition permit. j Castle Homes' model home, erected on Simcoe south, neces- sitated a $1,000 permit for erec- tion after moving. cessfully passed the ~examina- tions of the Royal CoHege. The successful candidates) from this area are: Mills, Oshawa; logy, Hugh 'effects of chronically low in- Church, Valparaiso. Oshawa. ANCIENT AREA died with and is operating a dream fac- provincial ilding Here In December Only 17 permits, 10 of them covering repairs, alterations or additions, were issued by the A. $600 permit for a lumber yard lean-to was issued to Pea- cock Lumber Limited, Ritson road north, There were eight repair, al- teration and addition permits issued: F. Brewster, Florell drive, home cellar alterations, $500; H. R. Rowsell, Jasmine crescent, home cellar altera- tions, $600; M. Pearson, Patri- cia avenue, home addition, $1,- 500. T. Taylor, William street east, dual dwelling repairs, $900; W. Lubbelinkhof, Harmony road south, cellar alterations, $500; L. West, Phillip Murray avenue, cellar alterations, $500; R. Stu- art, Grierson street, home cel- lar 'alterations, $500; Cenfral Hotel, King street west, hotel repairs, $700. Gardiner Rapping 5-Man TTC System TORONTO (CP) -- Fred Gar- diner, retiring chairman of Met- ropolitan Toronto Council, Wed- nesday called for the scrapping of the five-man Toronto Transit Commission because it is "rid- immature thinking ory. He also warned in an inter- view that Metro Toronto is head- ing for "'a terrible tragedy" be- cause of council's refusal to build the Spadina expressway. He said it was unlikely the government would CAPE TOWN, South. Africa|pay 50 per cent of the cost of é : (AP)--What officials described|the General Surgery--Fred Kahn,|as the first complete dinosaur|proved recently by council -- Brooklin and Douglas George) fossil ever found has been un-|from Highway 401 to Lawrence surgery uro-|earthed in Cape Province. Re-|Avenue -- because "they won't Aird Richmond,|mains of a few Lwere found. reptiles also Ps shorter expressway ap- go for six - lane expressway from nowhere to nowhere,"

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