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Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Jan 1965, p. 9

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Emergency Numbers Hospital 723-2211 Police 725-1138 Fire 725-6574 The Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JANUARY 9, 1965. Second Section City and district social and classified ing. features, advertis- OSHAWA SEPARATE SCHOOL BOARD FOR 1965-66 Incoming members of the ing this week. They are 1965-66 Oshawa Separate back row, left to right, School Board are shown Ernest Marks, QC, Terry after their inaugural meet- O'Connor, Frank Baron, Dr. George T. Sciuk, Ivan Wal- lace, Anthony Meringer, Lawrence; front row, left-to Progress Forecast Great progress in education during the next two years was forecast Friday by Oshawa law- yer Russell Murphy. Mr. Murphy and John Larmond this week were named Oshawa Separate School Board representatives on the Board of}. Education. "The Board of Education is a solid board and has a number of excellent members," said Mr. Murphy, who also represented the Separate School Board in 1961 and 1962. "I think it is one of the strongest Boards of Edu- cation the city has had in many years ...1 look forward to great progress being made." Mr, Larmond, an engineer at General Motors, said he was looking forward to his two-year term on the Board. "T hope I can make a@ con- tribution to the education sys-| tem in Oshawa," he said. Mr, Larmond, born in Mani- toba, received his education in and near Ottawa. He is a regis- ltered engineer and graduated lfrom the General Motors Insti- 'tute in 1054. right, Mrs. Winona Clarke, Chairman William O'Neill and Michael Rudka. Central Colleg Releases Honor List. The Honor List for the fall) Grade 13, Five-Year Arts and examinations at Central Col-/Science -- Hedwig Grabowski, | legiate Institute was released)79.4 per cent. E, Marpy. The following students obtain-| P STUDENTS led first-class honor standing in| The following students headed their respective courses: their respective courses: Grade 9, Five-Year Arts and Grade 9, Five-Year Arts and Science -- John Bradley, Nijole Science -- Walter Petrowsky,|/Butkevicius, Donna Frankiw, $4.4 per cent. iGeraldine Galka, Laurette Grade 9, Four-Yerr Arts and|Grzeskowiak, Ann' Kupnicki, Science -- Gail Miller, 81.1 per/Charlotte Kwiotek, Tony cent. \Labriola, Eugene Laszkiewicz, Grade 9, Two-Year -- Sherian|George Lees, Gail Moak, Peter Kirby, 78.0 per cent. |O'Boyle, Walter Petrowsky, i |Anita Roter, Mary Seto, John Grade 10, Five-Year Arts and|Staraynski, Jurij Storoshchuk, Science -- Andrew Cherkas, 89.2|Maureen Sullivan, Shirley Tay- per cent. |lor, Susan Tozer, Bill Zyla. Grade 10, Four-Year Arts and) Grade 9, Four-Year Arts and Science -- Linda Manser, 77.9|Science -- David Fischer, Helen per cent. |Gagnon, Rose Mary Gesteiro, Grade 11, Four-Year Business|Gail Miller, Germain Vachon. and Commerce -- Barbara| Grade 9, Two-Year -- Sherian Herne, 82.1 per cent. Kirby, Vivianne Vachon, | Grade 10, Five-Year Arts and ~.. Grade 11, Five-Year Arts and|Science -- William Angus, Gary Science -- Lydia Skochko, 88.9/Archer, Sandra Babij, Joan per cent. \Brennan, David Calder, Andrew Grade 11, Four-Year Arts and|Cherkas, Sharlene Claus, Alayne Science -- Richard Bilinski, 78.0) Filiott, Gail Elliott, Edwina per cent. Gorny, Beverley Hainer, Dennis Hercia, Dianne Jarvis, Donald Grade 12, Five-Year Arts and|Kellar, Attilio Labriola, Eric Science -- Sandra Fry, 86.4 per|Lockwood, Joan McMaster, cent. |David Marlowe, Jaclyn Mitruk, Grade 12, One-Year Special|Murray Newman, Teri Nor- Commercial--Valentina Puntus,|moyle, Georgina Pawlenchuk, 85.6 per cent. |Rosina Ruffo, Lorraine Smelko, iate He has lived in the city and CHRISTIAN SCIENCE -- |worked at GM for the past 13 SUBJECT years. Mr. Larmond, 35, is mar- The spiritual demands ot oe vas ben, ne "Sacrament" will be brought! sducated in New Brunswick and out in the communion service to be held this Sunday at all Christian Science branch churches and societies. Bible verses to be considered include has lived and practiced law in Oshawa since 1956. He was ad- mitted to the bar in Ontario in 1952 and practiced law in To- rontd before moving to Oshawa. Joan Smith, Margaret Smits, Olga Turowec. | Grade 10, Four-Year Arts and that ye also love one another" i s | Sei pan Ke 13), Friday by Principal Harrison oNoR STUDENTS | Science Ronald Greenough, | (John 13) Ex Church Moderator Linda Manser. Grade 10, Four-Year Business| and Commerce -- Linda Grant,| Barbara Herne, Gail Hubbard, Deborah Newman, Pamela Rob-| inson, Patricia Smith, Donna Trelinski, Jeanette Trudelle, Joan Wilson, Grade 11, Five-Year Arts and| Science -- Lucille Bak, Susan} Mr. Murpliy, 38, is married and has one child. He is a mem- ber of the Knights of Columbus and the Oshawa Curling Club. the 'new commandment" given by Jesus: "'as I have loved you, | Election To Speak At Speaker at the Rotary Club Brown, Irene Chromej, Paulettejof Oshawa next Monday noon Gulenchyn, Carol Hamm, Ed- ward Helcoe, Lucy Kaczmarek, Christel Kleitsch, Susan Love- lock, Paul Maunder, Christine Naylor, Brian Pollock, Lydia Skochko, Teresa Tomaszewski. Grade 11, Four-Year Arts and Science -- Richard Bilinski, Jo- anne Harman, Carol Middleton, Grade 12, Five-Year Arts and Science. -- George Bolotenko, Merina Cappuccitti, Doris Chromej, Sandra Fry, Janet Hubar, David Riley, Walter Silke. Grade 12, One-Year Special Commercial -- Linda Bedding, Sharon Branscombe, Irene Kuri- anowicz, Richard Newman, Val- entina Puntus, Judythe Waddell. Laxdal. Rev. Albert E. Larke Has Moved To Ottawa Rev. Albert Edward Larke re- tired recently as minister of Al- bert Street United Church to con tinue his ministry as assistant at Woodroffe United Church, Ottawa. Mr, Larke was ordained in 1928, After serving the Method- ist Church in southwest Ontario from 1920-25, he transferred to the Alberta conference of the newly formed United Church in 1925. While in this area of west- ern Canada, he became a de- votee of mountain climbing.' He enlisted in the army as chap- lain in 1940. He went overseas | in 1942 with the Fourth Cana- dian Armored Division. When the African campaign was launched, he was transferred to that theatre in the fall of 1943. He remained with the army until 1946 when he returned to civilian life and became minis ter of Magrath, Alberta. He re- mained there one year and moved to Ontario, He was in- ducted as minister of Gore's REV, E, LARKE Springville from where he mov ed to Oshawa. |will be Dr. James R, Mutch- Rotary Of Officers Albert street. Lawrence O'Neill, president of the Lo- cal (on left) looks on as Keith Ross, International representative (second from LOCAL 2784 of the United Steel Workers of America this week honored four re- cent retirees at a ceremony in the Steel Workers Hall on left) presents long service certificates to three of the four union members who are retiring. They are Andrew Frolick, centre, C. Nichol- . son, second from right, and Samuel Trummonds, right. Absent when this picture was taken was Alex Luczka. Oshawa Times ODLC Plans 4 Retirees Total Four veteran employees of Pedlar People Ltd, with a i }combined work record of 136 Elections will be held at the|years retired recently. first 1965 meeting of the Osh-| ; : awa and District Labor Council] sce ati cal Mion Tuesday for a new executive] and Samuel Tummonds. and conmmnition members. Mr. Luczka came to Canada Keith Ross, ODLC secretary, |from. the Ukraine in 1913, and said today that all nominations|joined the Pedlar People com- lmay be made at Tuesday's pany in 1926. He retired after Grade 13, Five-Year Arts and Science -- Irene Cherkas, Hed- wig Grabowski, Lawrence) Horne, Peter Kilistoff, Cheryl mor, one of Canada's promin- ent churchmen. , Dr. Mutchmor is the author of several newspaper articles, various annual reports, and "The Christian Gospel and Its |Witness."" He was the Secret- ary of the National Religious Advisory Council of the Cana- dian Broadcasting Corporation for twenty-four years, being responsible for: the United \Church broadcasts on Religious \Period and Church of the Air, \Sunday afternoons. | He was the secretary of the |United Church's Committee on \International Affairs from 1938- \1964. During the Second World |War, he was chairman of Chap- laincy Services and Secretary of its War Services Committee, which organized more than one thousand Church and Red Cross Units in the pastoral charges of The United Church of Canada. | DR. MUTCHMOR MAGISTRATE EBBS RETURNS Magistrate F. S. Ebbs re- turned to the bench Friday for the first time 'since suf- fering a stroke last July. He presided over a full Oshawa court docket last- ing about one hour. Magistrate Ebbs said his return was prompted by a large number of cases which have piled up and to relieve some of the pressure on Magistrate Harry Jermyn, who has been handling all courts in Ontario County since Mr. Ebbs'. stroke. As a judge in juvenile and family court, Magistrate Ebbs was active in the latter part of December. the first Canadian chosen by The Upper Room, Nashville, 'Tenn., (Methodist Church) to receive the 14th Annual Upper Room Citation Award, October, 1962, for his contribution to world Christian fellowship. In September, 1962, Dr. Mutch- mor was elected Moderator of the General Council of The He was a member of the former Federal Council of Churches' Commission on "A Just and Durable Peace", of which the late John Foster Dulles was Chairman. Dr. Mutchmor has appeared frequently' on such television programs as Inter Com, Front Page Challenge, Fighting Words, and not infrequently on the CBC news. Dr. Mutchmor has organized preaching missions across Can- ada with distinguished Ameri- can and Western European leaders; also responsible for the organization of Conferences on Evangelism in Ontario. He was ing in London, Ont. active life in Toronto, United Church of Canada, by|Schyndel of Buena Vista avenue the 20th General Council, meet-jis in satisfactory condition in Now living a retired, but still|morning after being hit by a Dr. and/car. Friday night at Gladstone Mrs. Mutchmor have four chil-| dren, Mary, James, Anne and) Jeanne, all of whom are mar-| ried, and eleven grandchildren. meetings for all the top posts. "No radical change is fore- seen in this year's leadership," he stated. He stated that the president, Clifford Pilkey, two vice-presidents, Thomas Ed- wards, and Frederick Beck- stead, and four executive com- 38 years service. He is a member of St. John's Greek Orthodox Church and a member of Local 2784 United Steel Workers union since its inception in 1943. Mr. Luczka became a widower in 1959. He has two daughters, one living in Oshawa and the other in Grimsby. Mr. Frolick was also born in the Ukraine, and he too came to this country in 1013. He began work for Pedlar People in 1917, and chalked up 47 years service. \HAS TWO SONS He is a member of the Greek Catholic Church and Local 2784 since its inception at the Ped- lar People plant. Mr. Frolick is matried and has two sons and two daughters. Mr. Nicholson was born in \England and came to Canada in 1922. He was employed at the Pedlar People company in 186 Years Service 1930, He is a member of the Anglican Church and Local 2784 since 1943. He is married but has no children. Mr. Tummonds was born in Reach Township and has lived in Port Perry most of his life. He began work at the Pedlar People plant in 1947, and also worked for the company during the Second World War in the production of munitions. He is a member of the United received his 50-year jewel from the IOOF Warriner Lodge, Port Perry. He is also a member of Local 2784 and has two sons and two daughters. mittee members, Patrick Mc- Closkey, Dennis MacdAuley, Douglas Lindsay and Wallace Sudsbury, and Mir. Ross, would all be eligible for re-election. The Political Action Commit- tee, Strike, Resolutions, Audi- tion, Farm-Labor committees will also be up for election. | To Close Results of the polling should) be known by the close of the meeting. The ODLC, with some 23,000 members from 32 unions, has been the voice of organized labor in Oshawa and district) since its foundation in 1942. Boy, 6, Hurt BOWMANVILLE (Staff) Powell Chemical Company Ltd., will be closing the doors to their Bowmanville plant Jan. 15. | In a letter to Town Council, the company | personnel in the industry to certain jobs H. Powell Chemical Company Limit as read at Council: Six - year - old Richard Van ond rool Oshawa General Hospital this avenue and Bond street. hi a police cruiser, His injuries The following is the letter to Ld council. n CCl ent The following letter from the yi "Tt is with much regret that I have to announce a decision from the Board of Directors of the Fidelity §Pharmaceuti- cal Company, Limited, the par-| jent company of Powell. Due to quite recent Canadian Food and | The lad was taken to hospital|Drug rulings limiting certain personnel in our industry to District Plant Doors specific jobs, we have found that it is no longer economic- jalky feasible to continue our |plant on Simpson avenue. 'Consequently we are moving stated that recent|back to Toronto into a ware- lrulings in the Canadian Food|house close to our head office, and Drug Act limited certain|and are contracting all our manufacturing to other finms still large enough to survive. Our plant in Bowmanville will be closed on Jan. 15. Had we known al! of this a short two ears ago when the plant was constructed we would have acted much differently. STUDIES CHIMPS The English scientist, Baron- ess Jane Goodall van Lawick, is making the first comprehen- sive study of the lives and hab- its of chimpanzees in Tanzania, East Africa, Board Cancels Its Meeting Last night's scheduled meet- ing of the Whitby Separate School Board was postponed fol- lowing the sudden death Thurs- day of Board member Real Jo- seph Robitaille. five small children, died when a hydro pole he was working on collapsed and crushed him, The Board has rescheduled its meeting for Monday night at the Denis O'Connor School. CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- dents of Oshawa and district who are celebrating their birthdays this weekend: Patti Fice, 489 Juliana drive, who is celebrating her birthday today. - Phone 723-3474. include a fractured left shoul- \der, head cuts and abrasions of ROBARTS, ROWE 'TO VISIT CITY Ontario Lieutenant Gover- Appoint 2 PUC Chairman 'Ts Baldwin Henry F "ed chairman of Landing in 1947 and served|dent of the Bay of Quinte Con-|inaugural meeting. there four years. The next 10|ference of the United Church of years were spent as minister at|Canada Statement Is Released On Address At Board George K. Drynan, last year's of Education today issued ation and high cost, Mr. Drynanieg to the Commission last dase ;. saj)\which will span southern On statement to The Times in ref- said "my point was that to ac-| month. ve cr yal gent ag le gro erence to the report of his ad-complish anything, education| : 1960. Mr. and M H .|donald - Cartier highway, it dtess to the inaugural mecting|must be for everyone even| Mr, Baldwin, vice - chairman) | i) ii, ef oe tired *lwas learned Friday rs of the board. though education of the less for-|of the Commission during thelr erean te and sh daughter ae He said he regretted that the|tunate and unwilling student|past two years, traded chairs) aah at 930 Somerville street, ea Rob C " reporter and headline writer)was much more costly thanjat the meeting with Commis-| sheesh i anes ¥ rele ntario/dent. had not dealt with his remarks educating bright and ambitious|sioner E, F. Armstrong, chair-| Mr. Russell was born in To-|Will announce the change Mon-|---- about the exaggerated concern students" over the "high cost of educa-, 'I thank tion" rather than lifting his opportunity statement on thrift out of con-/pression in the story of my) mie . aan thai ean ; eo) hi text. Thursday speech which is harm-| Mr, Baldwin, a 16-year Com-| career has been in tool and die renaming will also honor Si He said too great stress wasjful to "me and _ possibly re cocaananilety previously sekved 8S) .noineering. He has served as|Georses Etienne Cartier, xd 'termed inic i sli change chairman in 1957, 1958, 1961), ,,) ove "engi Quebec leader in Confederati placed on what was termed injothers in public affairs," he). 14 1969 tool designer; 'tool engineer,| r in Confederation, : |chassis division; and senior de-} the news story his "'flaying ofjsaid the advocates. of thrift". Mr.) Drynan's comment was that he/by board officials and is being Armstrong for the chairman- was "suspicious that some of typed. I will be glad te supply the advocates, of municipala transcript to The Times or/declined. Roy Fleming is thrift have their tongues injany interested person," their cheeks." |Drynan said. sion, -------|William Boddy, from the Commission this year Mr. Baldwin paid tribute t who retire after 27 years service. "The one item he always ha lin the forefront was the citizens lof Oshawa," said. Mr. Baldwin. rt was an honor to serve with) him.' Baldwin was elect- o the Oshawa{have been announced by F. E. bic' Lane sexe as , |Public Utilities Commission this|Conlin, vice-president and direc- Mr. Larke served as preSt-\this week at the Commission's tor of manufacturing. Both posts GM Posts Appointments of W. J. Howard| nor Earl Rowe and Premier John Robarts will stop brief- ly in Oshawa Monday en as manager of production plan-| route to Kingston celebra- ng d of C. C. Russell as| tions marking . the -- 150 ming and ¢ q ' birthday anniversary of Sir manager of ffeilities planning; John A, Macdonald for General Motors of Canada The pair, accompanied by Cabinet Ministers, former premier Leslie Frost and Dr. Donald Creighton, his- tory professor and author of a Macdonald biography, will arrive in Oshawa about 11.30 a.m, at the Canadian Na- tional Railway station. are newly created and _ reflect o the steady expansion of GM ioperations at Oshawa. Mr. Howard and Mr. Russell will re- port to Mr. Conlin, ithe leg and face. | Driver of the car was listed jas Richard. B. Lewis, 20, of Sun- set avenue, It is believed the boy fell from the curb at the intersection and was hit by the car as he got up. | The boy's mother told police |she had sent her son to a Park jroad north store so he would not jhave to cross any busy Streets, |He was on his way back from a {Bond street store when he was jhit. | | Harold Lambert of Beatrice \street suffered a whiplash in- jury to his neck Jast night when the: car he was driving was!* |struck from the rear by a car \driven by Murray E. Whyte of}: Elgin street east. ; d Mr. Howard, a native of Ham- jilton, joined GM's purchasing |department in 1940, Following World War Two service with the} RCAF he has served in the pur-| chasing department as material Name Change For Highway The new chairman also wel-|expediter, supervisor of follow- In reference to a statement)comed Frank McCallum, former|up chairman of the Oshawa Board/reported on democratic educa-|Oshawa mayor, who was elect-|visor and assistant manager 0 jman for the past two years,jronto and received his higher | The Times for this}who was elected vice-chairman education at the General Motors | to correct an im-|yesterday the' gineer Mr.\iourth member of the Commis-|/Mrs, Russel] live at 827 Somer-|government is to pay for ajof a park between city hall and lrestoration of the facade of the|the Rideau Canal. assistant material super- \Institute, Flint, Mich, He joined|% Sir J ; \the company in 1935. His entire|@4a's first prime TORONTQ (CP) -- Highway|damage to cars driven by Wil- ¢|401, the multi-lane expressway|jiam J. Malnick, Wayne street,| . tario, will be renamed the Mac-| Anthony Scott, 20, of Hills A government official said|observation following a car acci- day at a dinner marking the} 150th anniversary of the birth) John A. Macdonald, Can-) . } rts minister, The|tival takes place in Britain in the Of dancers, singers and musi- At the same time, Mr. Re | The accident occurred on Sim-| ° leoe street south, just south of| | |Hall street. Total estimated \damage to the cars was $450. | © | An intersection crash at Ross- j\land road east and Mary street llast night did more than $800 "land Calvin Crowell, Haig street. jroad, Ajax, was admitted to Oshawa General last night for CULTURE FOCUS The Commonwealth Arts Fes- r| the fall of 1965 when thousands |cians will arrive from all parts f the Commonwealth for the first festival of its kind. "My entire speech was taped| Mr. Baldwin nominated Mr.jsigner, machine tool and pro- barts is expected to a e | : ana bactgy deo "pat | jeessing. In 1954 he was appoint-|a joint federal - provincial pro-} ship but the former chairmanied chief tool and process en-jject to revamp the Kingston|city hall while the federal RPV: north plant. Mr. andjcity hall area, The provincia iville street, Oshawa. Two technicians with the Oshawa branch of the Cana- dian Red Cross Society per- form their duties at a recent | Blood Bank Clinic in St. ljernment pays for construction AT OSHAWA BLOOD a Gregory's Auditorium. They are shown as they take blood specimen from a donor, Mar- garet Kite is left and Jane McKenna right. The speci- CLINIC IN ST. GREGORY'S mens are sent to the Red Cross Laboratory in Toronto for testing. Every donation is tested prior to use by the Red Cross' Blood Bank. Church of Canada, and has: f Mr. Robitaille, the father of -- recrrcpnreernae ns a

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