" Mrs. Bertha "Mom" Whyte and her family pictured out- side her Youth Centre in "MOM" WHYTE AND HER FAMILY from left to right are, Carrie, Ruth and Cathy White. In the back row, from left to right Her family has remained be- hind in Africa while she seeks to raise funds for her IN BUFFER ZONE Oshawa has increased its resi- dential area by 574 acres over- night. City council Tuesday: night approved a buffer zone study creating six new residential land parcels around the edges of the city. FORESEE 7,200 PEOPLE | It is estimated that full de- velopment would see more than 7,200 persons settled in these areas; 1) area bounded by Thornton road south, King street west, Waverly street and Gibb street extended, Contains 56 acres. 2) area extends to one-half the) distance between Thornton road north and west city limit on west side, north to south limit (exténded) of Oshawa airport, east to within 150 feet of Waver- ly street and south to within 150 feet of King street west. Con- Me AMS Canad tad a closed meeting. study, which examined the last 13 years of city development: "The period between 1951 and 11963 clearly indicates the vital growth which has occurred in this city. "Population projections indi- cate that, within the next seven years, all lands currently legis- lated for residential develop- ment, will be completely occu- pied. "It is emphasized that most of jment is controlled by builders or developers; it is also evident that this situation will continue no master to what extent rural areas are rezoned for full scale development. "In the 13 year period follow- tains 280 acres. Robert; her daughter, Jane; daughter-in-law, Beatrice and her son, Ronald, .and Linda tending 150 feet north of Glover road and 150 feet east of Ritson ing the 1951 annexation, approx- 1,500 vacant acres, currently {zoned as residential, remain. which were drawn up by the city planning staff and approved by Planning Board Jast week at Here are excerpts from the! the land now zoned for develop-| ET GL nH. New Residential Areas Approved By Council tial will be completely filled by 1975. The remainder of sewerable buffer. zones should |be rezoned prior to 1975. "Based on our growth rate of the past 13 years, it is clearly evident that the city boundaries within the next 20 years; al- ternatively, a solution may be |found in some form of regional | government," the} , will have to be further extended : THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, June 3,1964 3 CITY AND DISTRICT INTERSECTION CLOSED Tunneling operations for a |storm sewer have closed the |Bond east - Prince street inter- jsection for three to four days jand it may not be reopened juntil next Monday. Bond street jwill be closed from Simcoe to \Church and Prince street will 3) area north of Taunton roadjimately 2,500 acres of residen-|be closed from King to Rich- east, east of Simcoe north, ex-|tial land have been developed; | mond. SMOKE ALARM The FISHING PROWESS IS REWARDED Peter Kuzik, 128 Stevenson Lake, May 23 and 24. Seen road. south, is seen,- right, taking the award at Simcoe Aijetoro, Nigeria, shortly be- fore her return to Canada. _ BYLAW PASSED road north, Contains 73 acres. "It is evident that the time is'| Oshawa Fire Brigade 4) area east of Wilson road| opportune to rezone some of,the|answered a fire call Tuesday! north, north of Rossland road,|areas now zoned as rural; it|from The Oshawa Times press- extending to 150 feet east of Wil-| appears desirable that sufficient|room where ink fumes, settling son road. Contains 62 acres, |land should be rezoned to ac-|near an electrical control.panel, new project. In the front row, are, Mrs. Whyte, her husband, White. | 'City Council To Seek Air Pollution Officer "Now that Oshawa has an ved pollution bylaw, what is going} to be done with it? | examined by the committe and, in at least one case, forwarded to Brad Drowley, head of the rovincial branch. | Suspend Term For Reporter On Theft Rap NAPANEE, Ont. (CP) Napanee. newspaper man, was could also: be a bylaw strong Siven a three-month suspended point). EMISSION LIMITATIONS jextended, |by east city limit, --jlimit is one lot depth south of} Wayne McLean, 28, a part-time|Olive avenue extended, sentence Tuesday after a county|in order: R2A, RIB, RB, R1p,|Presently zoned for residential, court jury found him guilty of RIA and RIB. 4) area between road north and Grandview|within the next 15 year period,|E north of Parklane "i avenue. Contains 62 acres. |574 ACRES 6) area bounded on the east) } extending, been recommended for rezoning south| Contain a fotal of 574 acres and| will house a population increase} amounting to 7,230 (density 13.2 |persons per acre). Adding this figure to the 20,200 which can now be accommodated in areas one-quarter mile west; from Grandview to east city limit. Contains 41 acres. Zoning for these six parcels, |we arrive at a total of 27,400. "At sur present growth rate, | is Harmony |commodate anticipated _growth|caused through a fence and ditch, Tuesday, avenue, The driver, Mrs. Mor- tense Mikalaukas, 224 Edward | street, was not injured. The» car suffered $25 damage and there considerable fire dousers smoke. lectrical were jused to quell the smoke. Three be I 3 |routine ambulance calls were The six parcels which have|also made Tuesday. CAR DAMAGES FENCE An out of control car skidded into an estimated $50 damage to on Champlain) receiving the Newcastle Sportsmen's Club junior tro- phy for catching the largest pickerel at the club's annual fishing tournament at Pigeon Hall Boys' Club (Eastview) Tuesday night is Fish Com- mittee Chairman Robert Middleton. --Oshawa Times Photo | Jail Driver PETERBOROUGH Two men found intoxicatedd in a parked car early Monday morn- For Seven Days $125 AND, COSTS PETERBORO! --Michael Gumbinger, 29, of Oshawa/was fined $125 and costs after being convicted of impaired driving. Evidence was that on May 26 at about 1 a.m., Const. Paul Frise stopped Gumbinger after seeing him driving in an erratic "We are not going out to per-/p breaking into a house and re- TWO-HOUR STUDY the land for which rezoning has|the fence ing near Apsley were changed manner. The motorist had a gecute or prosecute people,"| says Ald. Walter Branch, chair- man of city council's AP com-) mittee. "We will advertise right away) for an AP control officer. He is) Oshawa's apartment building) allowable discharge per hour, a/P©ace. to help people, make them fam- iliar with the bylaw." | Adds Mayor Lyman Gifford:| "We should clean up our own) nasty mess right here (at city hall) and set an example be- fore we go out and ask _peo- ple to live up to the' bylaw." »Council has money in the bud- det this year to make changes the city hall heating system to'relieve air pollution. The fed- 1 government has told the i changes will be made at the' Post Office. no discussion. Sever- led up draft bylaw which had to have|danger t the province's approval. "This comes from the Air Pol-| Se it ealth. After first reading in council, aldermen had several weeks to examine the bylaw. Copies were available to the public at city hall. Briefs from industry and the gue public were invited. Ald. Branch said six were re- ceived -- one each from Osh- awa General Hospital and Fit- tings Limited and four from fesidents. © Suggestions in the briefs were forbid same when the result) outdoor atmosphere of any a contaminant in quantities that to|may cause discomfort to, or en- pers damage to property or to pl: or animal life." so wide open as to make the/ants | other than products Basically, Oshawa's bylaw fol-| In addition to. definitions and} lows the model suggested by the|density ratios (measured with a| province. One section which Ald.|Ringelmann chart), the bylaw} Branch says could be conten-|contains a table on emission| tious concerns incinerators. limitations based on maximum boom underlines a_ potential) section on the powers of the con- problem: with most apartments|trol officer, a section on appeals) equipped with incinerators, willl and the appeal board, and pen- smoke nuisance result? _ lalties. One builder has told council] Conviction on a first offence he has installed '"'smokeless"' in-| could cost up to $100. Further cinerators. Some city fathers|convictions have a $300 limit. say there is no such thing. |Kach day an offender fails to Two sub-sections dealing with|comply with bylaw terms "'con- incinerators and "open fires"|stitutes a separate offence', The bylaw says the AP offi- "causes air pollution'. leer MAY enter any premises BYLAW FLEXIBLE jat a reasonable time, the owner There is plenty of flexibilityjor occupant SHALL aiq him in that phrase, as there is in|with "'all means in their power'. the bylaw's definition of air pol-| The officer MAY require in- lution: "the presence in the/stallation of, or alterations in, irjequipment and may set time limits for the changes, He can also permit deviations from the he health or safety of,|bylaw. 'ons -- or that may cause| Ninety days after the bylaw ant\is published the sections on combustion come into effect. One alderman believes this is|Articles dealing with eager c tion come into effect two| years after publication. The bylaw will not be publish- ed. until the city has found an} officer. whole bylaw less, (Air contaminant, incidental-| ly, is defined as "any solid, liquid or gas, or combination of them in the outdoor atmosphere moving photographs. Judge J. C. Anderson of Belle- over the recommendations cant land now zoned as residen-| ville also required McLean to post a $100 bond to keep the McLean, a reporter for the weekly Napanee Beaver and a local fireman at the time of the offence, was accused of break- ing into a private home and stealing eight photos of a woman whose body was be-! lieved found in nearby Sharbot Lake. Charles Cooper of Camden East, from whose home the photos were taken last Nov. 29, testified earlier that the wom- an's body pulled from the lake | Folk Festival Plans Reviewed ies are Hon. Michael Starr, MP; Albert V. Walker, MLA; Mayor} Lyman A. Gifford and Leon Kossar, chairman of the Toron- to Folk Arts Council. Parade Chairman T. K. Sim- mons reported the parade will get under way from the Shop- Council spent two hours going been recommended, and the va-) Oshawa Man Wins Shopping Spree How many dollars worth of grocieries could you grab off the shelves of your favorite grocery store during a five- minute shopping spree A. Stone, 886 Simcoe street south, Oshawa, is going to find out at 2.30 p.m. June 4 at the Loblaw Groceteria, Athol street east. He won the opportunity from the shoppers' sweepstakes, a ten-week promotion currently being conducted by the bottlers was not that of his wife. Provincial police Constable Ronald Roberts said at Tues- ping Centre at 10.30 a.m. Rain will be mo deterrent. Sports Chairman Barclay Law of throughtout Canada. Pepsi - Cola and Teem Bill Smith, president of Smith day's session he went with Mc- Lean to the basement of the Beaver office where the re- porter produced a package of photos. Marie Hamilton, 18, who worked in the newspaper's busi- ness office, is also charged with theft of the photos. A separate jury is to be sworn in for her trial. Napanee is 20 miles east of Belleville. | that contributes to air pollu- tion," ("You could go round-and- round interpreting this small part of the bylaw," snorts a city father. But he admitted this CAPSULE NEWS GREENWOOD ENTRIES THURSDAY, JUNE 4 FIRST RACE -- Purse $1900, ($2500 Claiming). Maiden three- and four-year- Os, foaled in Canada. 7 Furlongs. Little Lonesome, Leblanc 115 Broad Minded, No Boy 115 Heartwood, No Boy 110 . Ornery Fioe, Leblanc 110 Gantina Royal, No Boy 118 Jazz Round, No Boy 110 King City, Dittfach 115 Round Chance, No m5 River, Walsh X110 Tudor, Fitzsimmons 110 High Mahan, Freed XXX105 L., Harris X105 Algo Eligible: Caesar's Niece, Gordon, 0; Teo K., Rogers, 110; Knight 0' Glin, Walsh, X110; Big Boots, Fitzsimmons,! 115; Sun Gleam ,Turcotte, XXX100. Also Eligible: Sunny Dice, Rogers, 124; Esprit De Mae, McComb, 124; Bingo Suds, No Boy, 115; Come On Champ, Tur-/Sowby, principal of Upper Can- cotte, XXX114; Wanless Park, No Boy, 115; Town Invader, Hale, 115. jada College for the last 15) years, announced Tuesday he} |will retire at the end of the) jnext school year. Dr, Sowby| |was born in Lincolnshire, Eng-} jland, in 1902. SERVICES STUDIED TORONTO (CP) -- Counsel-| jling services at the University| fof Toronto, unknown to more SIXTH RACE -- Purse $2,700 aliow-| than half the students accord- TORONTO (OP) -- Dr. C. W. FIFTH RACE -- Purte $2,400 ($6000) claiming, three-year-olds, one mile. Tanwood, No Boy 122 Cecilia Bender, Rogers 114 Careless Kate, Walsh A-X101 Stithering Sam, Walsh A-XX104 Boy Lost, McComb 116 Blow Your Top, Fitzsimmons 116 Falls Way, Freed XXX106 A--Bill Beasley entry (QUI NELLA BETTING) | Principal Of UCC Resigns In Fall HON. J. KEILLER MACKAY All committee members of the |Oshawa Folk Festival met Tues- |day night for the last time as a major body to discuss their present plans for the festival to be held on Dominion Day, July be It was announced the Hon, J. : Keiller MacKay, former Lieu- eral counselling services, Last/tenant Governor of Ontario and February a survey showed that|current chairman of the Prov- of 400 students, 75 per cent of|ince of Ontario Council for the the men and 63 per cent of the ay will be conducting the offi- women did not know university ro Gurateees wo 00h how counselling services existed. C, Hall. WEIGHT A PROBLEM Other dignitaries who have CALGARY (OP) -- Problems informed the committee they of overweight have left today's said his sports program includ- ing the 20-mile Canadian Cham- pionship Walk will get under way at 1.30 p.m. sharp. Other events during the afternoon per- include karate folk baton twirling, tug-of-war competitions formance will and judo demonstrations; singing, fitness display, and ethnic dancing in full native costume. During the evéning, ethnic singing and dancing displays will dominate the program along with quartets and bands, | A precision drill team from |the Ontario Regiment, under ithe command of Lieutenant N. M. Hall, will be putting on a ries of displays throughout e day. Another major event at Alex- andra Park will be the roasting jof an 480-pound steer. Set in a jcorral atmosphere with cow- |boy and cowgirl attendants, the |steer will be barbequed on an jopen spit above ground by a |}professional from Toronto. It will take 14 hours before the steer is ready for consumption and it is planned to start the fire pit (15 bags) late Tuesday evening. Forty gallons of sauce will be used. The guest of honor, The Hon. Keiller MacKay, is slated to cut the first slice. se E Beverages Limited, will sound the whistle and Mr. Stone will }romp around the store until Mr. Smith sounds the final whistle. in magistrate's court here to- day with having the care and control of a car while intoxi- cated. Walter Maryniuk, $2, of Osh- awa, owner. of the car, was sentenced to seven days in jail by Magistrate W. R, Philp after pleading gui Ity. He also ple ad- ed guilty to ha ving liquor in a place other than a residence and was fined $15 and costs, After evidence, the charge of j|having the care and control of ithe car against Aaron Rose, 49, lof Madawaska, was dismissed smell of alcohol on his breath and was unsteady on his feet. He admitted having drunk six or eight pints of beer in down- town hotels between 8 p.m. and midnight. NEED... FUEL OIL? PERRY Day or Night 723-3443 There ¢ DEATHS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto -- Jack Reppen, 30, Toronto Star sports cartoonist and a promising painter; of cancer. Toronto Joseph Stanley Will, 90, professor emeritus of languages at the University of Toronto. Montreal -- Louls M, Benja- min, 78, Montreal lawyer and Yiddish writer. : New York -- Matthew M. (Matty) Fox, 52, a pioneer in pay television. Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With Little Worry Eat, talk, laugh or sneeze without fear of insecure false teeth oe slipping or wobbling, FAS holds plates firmer and more com- fortably. This pleasant powder has no ummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. sn't cause nausea. It's alkaline (non-acid). Checks "plate odor" in CANADIAN RYE W Y, (denture breath), Get FASTEETH at drug counters everywhere. ire 29 great whiskies Adams Private Stock HISKY \will be attending the ceremon- North American male "open to} death or disease," says Dr. Thomas K. Cureton of the Uni-| | CSECOND RACE -- Purse $1900, (32500, 2CeS three- and four-year-ol fillies, one) ing to a recent report, are un-| versity of Illinois. Dr. Cureton Claiming). Four-year-olds and up, foaled mile. jder study by a special commit-|said in an interview the aver- jtee, Dr. Claude Bissell, presi-|age man eats and drinks 500 dent of the university, an-|calories a day more than_he nounced Tuesday. Dr. Bissell|/should, so that by middle age said he had appointed an advi-|he is from 30 to 50 pounds over- in Canada. 7 Furlongs. Padre's Scamp, Walsh X117 Fort Strome, Hale 122, eter Wrack, No Boy 116 y Fruit, Leblanc 114 int Page, Gordon 122 Cushion, Fitzsimmons A-105 Humber Broom, Leblanc 117 Kissy Missy, Walsh 105 |Newshen, Freed XXX105 |Windiehsam, No Boy A-105 |Green Goddess, Shuk 110 The Great, No Boy 116 Mencheval, No Boy 122 Navy Ruler, Harris X109 Miss Bassano, Harris X109 Mr. Yo Te, Freed XxX106 _ THIRD RACE -- Purse $2200. Maidens, year-olds. 4% Furlongs. ega Bega, Walsh A-XtI5 if, Gomez 120 Reetwait, Bill's Red, Shuk B-117 Cafiisteo, Remillard 115 usin 8--W G Campbell and Mrs. * entry $ Hoover * FOURTH RACE -- Purse $1900.. (32500 Giaiming). Maiden, three- and four-year- is, foaled in Canada. (Divn, of First).! Furlongs. ley Rouge, Burton 115 ell Oiled, No Boy 115 Take a Gander, Harrison 115 Prince Sied, No Boy 115 Butch Princess, No Boy 119 4 Bright Button, Leblanc 110 Vietement, No Boy 110 Menette, Waish X105 Royal Poppet, Fitzsimmons 115 {sory committee to study gen-! weight. Devil Lecom, Walsh X105 El Brillo Way, Dittfach 107 A--Windfields Farm entry SEVENTH RACE -- Purse $2900. Allow- ances. Four-year-olds and up. Fillies and Mares. 7 Furlongs, Cesca, Harrison A-119 Royal Spirit, Walsh A-X116 Touch of Magic, No Boy 105 Golden Turkey, No Boy 112 Free Trial, Fitzsimmons 115 Menedict, Shuk 121 Dark Fairy, No Boy 115 A--Statford Farms entry EIGHTH claiming). Mile, Malucina, Armstrong 108 Brown Ruler, No Boy 116 Parkside Drive, Potts 122 Sir Dernijohn, Gordon 119 Enonymous, Freed XXX112 Prince Tour, Leblanc 119 Bomar, Cosentino 119 D. Seven Deal, Shuk 119 RACE -- Purse $2000. ($2500 Four-year-olds and up. 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