Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Dec 1965, p. 21

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

as ane eT ees a -SaFSS. OSHAWA DAY - BY - DAY Continued From Page 7 15--Seventeen leading Holstein- Friesian cattle breeders from France visit Roybrook Farm at Brooklin. 16--Oshawa Golf Club asks city council to authorize a siudy to find an alternative route for Centennial Parkway. 18--Oshawa police department discovers phoney $20 bills. 20--Greater Oshawa Community Chest tops objective--raises $308,968, 22--Santa Claus visits Oshawa by helicopter. 23--Michael Starr reappointed to post of House Leader -of the Progressive Conservative Party. BRAY 225 ae sper Thinks Metre Pian' From Robarts In January TORONTO (CP) -- The Globe and Mail says Premier John Robarts may announce next week a six-district civic admin- istration for metropolitan Tor- onto that would come into ef- fect Jan. 1, 1967. The six-district system would be: District 1, Toronto and Swansea; District 2, York Township, Weston and Forest Hili; District 3, Leaside and East York; District 4, North York; District 5, Scarborough; 24--Oshawa Police Chief Her-nistrjct 6, Etobicoke, Long bert Flintoff, who retires at Sranch, New Toronto and Min. the end of the year, honored); a at a banquet. oe 27--Santa Claus parade in Bow- manville draws 35,000 spec- tators. 29--Elections called for six area municipalities. 30--Oshawa board of education turns down proposal from Oshawa and District Labor Council to set policy to refuse to purchase goods from a strike-bound company. DECEMBER 1--Fire destroys interior of Bowmanville restaurant. --$1,700,000 civic square pro- yeni unveiled by architect at city council. 4--O shawa institutes cross- walk system. Desmond Newman elected mayor of Whitby. 8--Building permits in Oshawa top $25,000,000 yalue mark for| second consecutive year. | 9--City planning board turns down rezoning bid to permit five major apartment de- velopments, 10--Coulters Manufacturing Co. Ltd, announces $150,000 indus- trial building on Farewell ave. 11--City's four taxi companies | granted fare increase by Osh- | awa Police Commission. 13--Weekend ice storm. snarls traffic in Oshawa and dis- trict 14--Oshawa Harbor Commis-| sioner Fred Malloy announces a 10-acre reclaiming project for next year. |15--City Industrial Commission- | er James Williams says city's Rangers Musi~ Wait For Czech COLORADO SPRINGS, Cole. (CP) -- A spokesman for the Czechoslovak national hockey team said Thursday that star centre Vaclay Nedomansky . may be allowed to attend New York Rangers training camp following the Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France, in 1968. But, the spokesman said, he doubts Nedomansky will be al- lowed to attend the National Hockey League Rangers' camp next year. Karel Bures, Czech newspa- per man acting as a spokesman for the Czech team, said the Rangers want the 22-year-old Nedomansky to attend training camp next year. But there was an important tournament in , Czechoslovakia next September and he ithe Czech star would be al- lowed to come to North Amer- ica. then. Buying or Selling! GUIDE REALTY LTD, @ LLOYD CORSON, President @ DICK YOUNG, Vice-Pres. @ LUCAS PEACOCK, Sec-Treas 16 SIMCOE ST. S., OSHAWA PHONE 723-5281 Ont, gave birth to a six-pound, five-ounce baby girl -- in the back seat of a Pickering 'Town- ship police cruiser as it ar- rived at the Ajax and Picker- ing Genera! Hospital, Ajax. 3--High winds toppled a large tree and it fell on the roof of the Oshawa home of Mr, and Mrs, Walter Goudie, 375 Ritson rd., causing heavy damage. 4--Durham New Democrats met at Port Hope and se- lected high schoo] teacher Anthony Ketchum as_ their party candidate in the Noy. 8 federal election. He lost to Liberal Russell Honey, re- elected. 5--Passenger car assembly line workers at GM plants in Oshawa worked short shifts for the second day in a row because of a wildcat strike in- volving truck drivers in the city. 6--Canadian leader of the New Democratic Party T. C. '"Tom- my" Douglas, was in Oshawa putting in a plug for Ontario riding's NDP candidate, Oli- ver Hodges, in the Nov. 8 general election. 8--Six hundred striking employ- ees of Fittings Limited voted in Oshawa in favor of a 44- cent package deal -- spread|° over three years -- offered by) the company to end the four-| month long dispute. l1li--Five persons were injured in a four-car crash on Mac: | ~~ donald-Cartier Freeway at the} Whitby - Pickering Township line today, Thanksgiving Day; six cars were involved in a separate afternoon crash in the same area only 15 min- utes later. 18--Oshawa Jaycees celebrated the 50th anniversary of the Junior Chamber of Com- merce, started Oct. 13, 1915, in the United States. 14--A bomb scare--that proved) false -- stopped a meeting-of| 200 striking members of Local 938, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, at the UAW Hall where issues in a dispute) were to be hashed out. 16--It was deadline day in Osh- agra, and all other communi-| ties in Canada, for posting of voters' lists for the Nov. 8 ' as ro re: Some M employees in| Oshawa who staged a wild- nr on facts is in huge ts » Oc work, The strike was epurred|* Mayor Lyman - Gitford| by the suspension for an un-) toes bid for a policy not to -- period of a fellow-| iu. from strikebound com- rker, | ; : : : panies. 19--Steps Oshawa would take to) 04 "nemocratic right wing fac- sitablish (8 minimum stan-\" tion in Local 222, United Auto | ard housing bylaw were dis-| workers, sweeps election of | cussed at a two-hour meeting delegates to Oshawa and dis- | of government, city council, trict Labor Council. planning board and health de- 22--Mrs. George Telford, tne | ttle Cnt ee, tor of the Oshawa General| _ Hospital school of nursing, | 16,000 Squamish , F honored by hospital's board of | Canada, said in an Oshawa) governors after 25 'agi, interview that Indian agents | service to the hospital. for the government were gain-| 23--Ontario County council an- ing nothing but disrespect, nounces it will study the | jcisa recip on Canadian) feasinility of a regional type| 4 3 of government or govern-| |21--A $26,000 budget was ap-| proved by the Central Ontario ments early next year | M. And M. Fund | Secretary Named and vital programs were be- Oshawa Board of Education. |U Jnited Church of Canada. Mr. Joint Planning Board and ing introduced into local night |, TORONTO -- Rev. H. Eger- 27--The Oshawa area got the newspaper says, also prob- ably will include: ---AM etro council enlarged to 32 members from 24 with reduced Toronto representa- tion; --A four-year term for direct election to metro council and local district councils; --Metro assumption of a number of basic services, in- cluding full responsibility for the municipal cost of educa- tion and welfare, and the creation of a single, equalized tax rate for public schools costs. Metropolitan Toronto now is made up of 13 municipalities, each with its own local gov- ernment and representation on metro council. PAINT MAKES NYLON NET PERFORM LIKE CATAPULT TORONTO (CP).-- Nylon cord netting allowed a shot to | netting, hardened by 25 coats pass through it and a Toronto | of paint in five years, nearly goal was not allowed during a | cost .George Armstrong of Stanley Cup playoff game at | Toronto Maple Leafs the win- Maple Leaf Gardens. ning goal in Wednesday It was Armstrong who fired | night's 3-2 victory over Mont- that shot, too. real Canadiens in the Na- The nylon cord was in- | tional Hockey League. stalled and has lasted five | Armstrong's goal, which years compared to an aver- | broke a 2-2 tie in the third age of half a season for the | period, hit the hardened ny- old-fashioned netting. But the loncord and whipped back nylon picks up dirt easily and out of the goal. The score is spray painted about five was clearly seen by officials, times a season. | so there was no question that In Montreal, NHL Presi- | the puck went into the net. dent Clarance Campbell said But Frank (King) Clancy, every club is responsible for | the Leafs' assistant general its own equipment, including | manager, is worried that it netting. enuld happen again from a But he said that in his goalmouth scramble where opinion the nylon netting is | the play is not as visible. better than the cord netting. The nylon net was installed "It reduces the amount of re- five years ago after the old bounds." The newspaper says the synected announcement would follow the basic concept out- lined in the report of royal commissioner H. Carl Golden- berg, a Montreal lawyer. The premier's announcement, INVITATION TO A KILLING IN THE STREET National Palace on Sept. 27. test the presence of U.S. The student and others had troops in Santo Domingo. come to the palace to pro- --AP Wirephoto Army guard shot and killed a student participating in a demonstration outside the Associated Press photog- rapher James Bourdier made this picture at the in- stant when a Dominican FOR SALE SAVE $ $ ON AUTO INSURANCE If you are an Abstainer you save up to $26.00 on your auto insurance, Sue JOHN RIEGER 597 KING ST. E., OSHAWA DIAL ie 728-7567 In braemor gardens Come and inspect Oshawae's most convenient community at Stevenson Road North and Annapolis, You'll like j what you see ! ---------- leader of ndians in| THE DEAD, A FEW QUICK AT US. EMBASSY Dead and wounded Viet- rorists. Man moments. before the blast. famese are strewn on the looking for his child who --AP Wirephoto street néar the U.S. Em- was left in the area | LAST YEAR FOR THREE GREAT MEN | bassy in Saigon on March standing {is 30 after a huge bomb was exploded by Viet Cong tér- Oshawa was to get 62.5 per cent or $16,190 of it |23--George Roberts, McLaugh | lin CVI principal, announced in Oshawa that several new schooling programs. on Young, 57, minister of York- 26--An employment study that poh United Church, Willow- would probe into the private dale, has been appointed sec- | lives of high school dropouts|Tetary of the Missionary and | received the green light from| Maintenance Department of fa its first warning that Old Man 4S "soon as the Yorkminster con: | Winter was stirring when a pregation can find a repiace- sprinkling of snow fell and ment, a spokesman said today. | temperatures dipped to the| Mr. Young was born at Mal- low 30's. ton, Ont., in 1908, the son of| 28--A' report the Oshawa) Rev. Egerton Ryerson Young | Public Utilities Commission|and Edith Allen. He repre: | showed the city's bus deficit | of his family to have entered | slipped $5,076 during Septem-|the ministry. Mr. Young's fa-| ber, boosting the total net loss for the year to $30,986. NOVEMBER to lther was the first white boy | born at Norway House in| Northern Manitoba, Mr. Youn raduated from | |1--Municipal development and Victoria Calées, Toronto, dale Collegiate and Vocation-| lyear and went as a missionary | al Institute. to God's Lake, Man., 2--City council hears Toronto) pride, former Helen M. lawyer call creek-valley ex-/paies, Reg. N., a graduate of pressway "height of foolhardy) Towns General Hospital. In| extravagance." 942, Mr. Young became a chap- | 3--Oshawa's gross debenture| ate in the Canadian Army and | debt climbs to $19,101,579, an| served in the European theatre | with his the SADNESS IN TORNADO'S WAKE Elam Smith, 66, was the picture of dejection Faster Sunday as he sat amidst the rubble. of what had beer home in Alto, Indiana. entire community j Was Nnear- Don Davidson ls Quebec Golfer-'65 MONTREAL (CP) ~ Don Davidson of Ottawa Glenle Club Wednesday was named Quebee Golfer of tha Year hy ly destroyed when tornadoes ripped through the area. The winds did not spare even the church, and there was no place to attend Easter serv- ices, (AP) the Province of Quebec ation. Davidson, 30, who Hull, Que., across the River from the capital, won the Hilles R. P: Quebec amateur: golf crown in' Award, fin 196e. He won the current award events Associ-;ing of any golfer in eight tour- naments sponsored by the lives in; PQGA in 1965. Ottawa; Davidson, who wins the kens Sr. Memorial hed the eight with a 75-stroke aver- ton the basis of the best show-jiage. Recognize 21 'World Records i credit 'naconds. The world was shocked into sadness three times during ; 1965 as three of its greatest citizens died: Sir Winston Churchill, who may well be the man of the cen- tury; Dr. Albert Schweitzer, who sacrificed all to bring the healing powers to the natives of darkest Africa; and Adlai Stevenson, Amer- ican ambassador to the UN, and one of the tragic fig- ures in the national politics of the United States. (AP) TOKYO (AP) -- American| |}women and East Germen men |accounted for a major share *) the 21 world records. officially recognized Thursday by. the In- ternational Swimming Federa-} | tion American. girls received) for seven of the 12] women's marks. .The East Ger-| mans, headed by Olympic star} Frank Wiegand, accounted for six of the nine men's marks. | Dan Sherry of Hamilton was} recognized aS record holder at} 110 yards butterfly with 58.1) i ! increase of $434,579. 4--Fire destroys Oshawa Rec-| reation Centre on Gibb st. 5--Jan Drygala named presi- dent of Oshawa Folk Festival] succeeding Mrs. Aldwinckle. Josephine | 6--Whitby council approves| anti - smoke legislation pro-| posed by County council. 9--Michael Starr re-elected MP for Ontario Riding; Russell) Honey re-elected in Durham Riding. 10--Oshawa area affected by) major power blackout. 11--City planning board mem- bers support Centennia) Park-| way project after a meeting| with the Ontario department of highways. ety store on Simcoe st. s. and escape with $330. | 13--Three city collegiates honor their top students at mencement exercises. com- until the end of World War I. | | On his return from overseas, | he was appointed district sec- retary of the Canadian Bib le| Society in Toronto, serving a | this post until 1955, when he was | jealled to be minister of the new | |Yorkminster United Church in| suburban Willowdale. He is a| member of the Marriage Guid. jance Council of the United| hurch, a member of the Board | f the Missionary and Mme pd Deartment, and ferme Chairman of Toronto aaa |Presbytery (1963- 65). in| loan board in Ottawa ap-|in 1937. He was ordained by hd proves $789,847 loan for East-|»onto Conference in the same | PAINTS ON EGGS WINLANTON, England a Jack Craig, a 51-year-old miner, 12--Two masked men rob vari-| has painted 16,000 pictures in 16 years, all on egg shells. Mr.| | Craig says religious pictures are| the most popular but the Bea-| jtles are much in demand by odo i 'ontario data pr For fast Emergency OVERLOAD KEY PUNCHING SERVICE 299 Simcoe St. S. his customers. | | } 725-0397 WE forward to serve you again in 1966. W.B. BENNETT PAVING 1290 Somerville, Oshawa NEW YEAR IS GOOD TO YOU! We thank you for your patronage in 1965 and look HOPE THE LIMITED 728-4661

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy