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Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Apr 1966, p. 5

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Many Area Residents Receive Citizenship WHITBY -- Sixty-three resi- dents of Oshawa and Ontario County received their certifi- cates of Canadian Citizenship Wednesday at the County Build- ing. Those receiving the certi- ficates were: Albert Josef Karel Bardoel, Whitby; Jan and Mrs. Hilde- gard Barna, Oshawa; Willem Bruins, Oshawa; Michelle and Mrs. Maria Colavecchia, Osh- awa; Christos Courlas, Whitby; Josef Johann De Giorgio, Ajax; Uiltje and Mrs. Greitje Dyk- stra, Oshawa; Mrs. Johanna Gassmann, Oshawa. Stefan and Mrs. Bozenna Grinski, Oshawa; Emil and Mrs. Elfriede Harlos, Oshawa; Oshawa; Walter and Mrs. Elea- nore Hengstberger, Oshawa; Mrs. Frieda Katharina Henne Bay Ridges: Bernardus Petrus and Mrs, Theodora Maria Hui- nink, Whitby; Fred Paul Heinz and Mrs. Elisabeth Jaerschky, Bay Ridges. Alfons Theodore Kern, Osh- awa; Hendrikus Gertrudis Ber- nardus Klein Nienhuis, Oshawa; Miss Gemma Maria Liduina Koenen, Whitby; Karl Fredrich and Mrs. Loretta Marie Martin- olich, Oshawa; Nikolaz and Mrs. Ana Novak, Oshawa; Mrs. Selma Peter, Oshawa; Mrs. Ana Pilepic, Whitby. Anthony Ruscitti, Cannington; Andreas and Mrs, Elisabeth Robert and Mrs. Eva Hauke, Schmidt, Bowmanville; Mrs. Plan Training Centre For Retarded Adults WHITBY -- An Ajax-Picker- ing-Whitby training centre for retarded adults is in the mak- ing. Frank Signoretti, president of the area association for retard- ed children, says the centre would be "a sheltered work- "' to relieve retarded adults of a boredom burden. AIMS CITED The aims are: 1. Provide mentally retarded adults with training to enable them to function in a socially acceptable pattern of daily liv- 2. Help retarded youths make the important transition into adult living through training in work situations. 3. Provide facilities within the community for young retarded adults as an alternative to in- stitutional care. 4. Prepare trainees who have the potential for placement in competitive employment. GOVERNMENT BIDS Mr. Signoretti said the gov- ernment's move in early 1965 to shoulder some of the opera- tional responsibility of retarded children's associations in On- tario alleviated some of the work locally and _ provided enough free time to step into another problem. A typical week in the train- ing centre might consist of 30 hours over five days. About 40 per cent of the time could be spent developing social, recrea- tional and. motor skills; the balance would go on work training, responsibility, and the likes, he said. School Amal gamation Meeting Draws Blank BROUGHAM (Staff) A meeting held Thursday night, in mating the township, Pickering Village and Ajax Boards was safety,| Daria Sereda, Oshawa; Johan- mes Antonius Willebordus and Mrs. Adriana .Catharina Jose- phina Sillius, Whitby; Mrs, Olga Snelgrove, Oshawa; Kurt and Mrs. Susanna Ursula Stege- mann, Bay Ridges; Heinrich Wilhelm and Mrs. malie Stork, Whitby. Salvatore Stravato, Oshawa; Johannes and Mrs. Grietje Tiemes, Oshawa; Joze Tomsic, Oshawa; Demetre Valkanas, Oshawa; Nicholaos Valkanas, Oshawa; Mrs. Neeltje Van Der Luit, Oshawa; Adrianus and Mrs. Johanna Bertha Maria Van Der Voort, Port Perry; Hendrik Gerhart Anthonie and Mrs, Ansje Hendrika Van't Slot, Whitby. Istvan Vanya, Oshawa; Jeno and Mrs, Magdolna Vari, Osh- awa; Mr. Wilhemus Maria Ves- ters, Whitby; Antonius Petros Nicholaas Vorstenbosch, Osh- awa and Mrs. Waltraud Wieser, Oshawa. Minor Hockey Officers Named BROOKLIN (TC) -- Officers and conveners for the 1966-67 season were elected at the an- nul meeting of the Whitby Township Minor Hockey Asso- ciation, The officers are: Edwin Down, president; Curtis Brown, vice-president; Jerry Colleran, secretary; Everett Coedy, treasurer, Executive members WHAT Montreal longshoreman Jean Paquette shows how he beats the problem of parking, for his_ fellow workers, along the water- front. Some 3,500 dock- workers have been out since Tuesday over their lack of parking privileges. Jaycees Plan Safety Drive WHITBY -- A safety cam- paign and membership drive will get underway Saturday mor- ning when the Whitby Junior Chamber of Commerce meets at the Odd Fellows Hall, Brock st. s. It is the Jaycees first major project. Literature, relating to the role the Junior Chamber of Com- merce plays in municipal life, will be distributed at the cam- paign headquarters. The newly formed organization is sponsor- ed by the Oshawa Jaycees and has 25 members, It is hoped the membership drive Saturday will boost this figure to an anticipated 40. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, April 22, 1966 § Hamburg, north Germany, to ROAD. CROSSES CONTINENT |Basel, Switzerland, without It is possible to drive from Any young man, between the ages of 18 and 40, can qualify as a member of the organi- zation which is devoted to the betterment of the community. Meetings are held on the sec- ond Monday of each month at the Spruce Villa Hotel. "1 do all of my saving and borrowing at the credit union." PARKING PROBLEM? Paquette parks his car somewhere nearby the wharf area, gets out, opens the trunk of his vehicle, lifts out a 75-pound motor- cycle and rides it to his job. Board Members Are Appointed BROUGHAM Pickering | Township Council this week ap- --CP Wirephoto are: Joe Howe, Mark' Lockyer, Walter Haines, Bob Kyle, Tom Briscoe, Steve Cosgrove, Alvin Church, Walter Fishley, Peter Rice, Bob Marshall and Alex) Escholtz. | The fee for boys will be in- | creased to $10 for the first two boys and $5 each for each addi-} tional boy. atoms, Steve Cosgrove; senior atoms, Bob Petch; Alex Escholtz; bantam, Howe; midget, and juvenile, open to volunteers. Mrs. C. Kydd was hostess for the meeting of the 4-H girls. Donna Daniels read the min- Joe}i boys wishing to play atom and pee wee baseball as well as lacrosse. been asked to report at Mem- Summer Activities Registration Started BOWMANVILLE -- Prepara-;tion. Boys 11 and under 13 years Group conveners are: junior|tions are being made by the/as of Jan. 1 of the current year) Recreation Department to ini-|are eligible for pee wee teams.| pee wee,|tiate its summer activities. Reg-| strations are under way for Atom baseball players have are also asked to register at the Lions Community Centre. Novice pee wee bantam and midget teams are planned. boy must be eight years and pointed by resolution the mem- bers of the Brougham Com- munity Centre Board, Clare- mont Community Centre Ath- letic Board. If you don't have a credit Members of the Brougham| union, you can help start board are: Ross Knox, Grant} one. Phone: Johnson, Robert Miller, William Bayles, Kenneth Pascoe, Coun-|f There © Credit Union in Oshows cillors D. Beer and H. Spang. Fer information Cell The Claremont Hall and Ath- OSHAWA letic a members are: Ro- CENTRAL STUDY GROUP bert Madill, Mrs, Irene Rennie, George Pearsall, Robert Hock- CREDIT UNION ley, Mrs. Thelma Hockley, Cou- LTD. neillor D. Beer. and Deputy! ene ee ad Reeve Mrs, McPherson. Boys interested in lacrosse} ge iota Fe gahad ee T BROCK Evening Prograins at 7 and 8:50 WHITBY Feature Storts at 7 and 9:20 PARAMOUNT mas HOWARD HAWKS: TECHNICOLO eet PICTURE Starring: James Caan -- Laura Devon SATURDAY MATINEE ATTRACTION ONLY "BLUE HAWAII" in color Starring -- Elvis Presley and Joan Blackman To be eligible for novice, the| orial Park at 9 a.m. this Sat- urday. They should bring their gloves and running shoes. No under 10; for pee wee, 10 years | and under 12; bantam, 12 years | and under 14; and midget, 14 utes. The members were re- minded to complete all samples and have them ready for the defeated. It appeared that only the the mmunity Hall, to con- sider the possibility of forming Township of East Whitby a board of education to take in all township school boards as well as the boards in Pickering Village and Ajax, ended with- out concrete results. No further meetings are planned. It was suggested, how- ever, that each board appoint a@ member to sit on a study - committee. Forty representatives from area public school boards, the Pickering District High School Board, Ajax Public School Board, Pickering Village Public School Board and the Separate School Boards in Pickering Vil- lage and Ajax attended the meeting. Ed. McCormack, a high school trustee, chaired the meeting. A motion to appoint a steer- ing committee to look further Pickering Township Area No. 2 Board favored amalgamation because of its high school rate. Most representatives said they were present only as observers. Area No. 2 Trustee Don Quick outlined the reasons for amalgamation. Ajax Trustee Jack Reid suggested the mat- ter be placed in the hands of the Ontario County Education Consultative Committee o which he is chairman. It was also suggested by sev- eral representatives that a thor- ough financial study be made} of amalgamation possibilities. There is a wide divergence of school rates in the township. Area No. 1 has a rate of 13 mills; while Area No. 2 set an Ontario record this year with into the possibility of amalga- a rate of 35 mills. Inbalance Seen For Education MONTREAL (CP) -- Educa- tional opportunities across the country show serious imbal- ances and most Canadians want them corrected, the opening ses- sion of the Canadian Education Week committee's annual meet- ing was told today. A survey indicated Canadians want uniform school standards offering broader programs and teachers with improved qualifi- cations, Sidney Katz of Toronto said in a summar of the sur- vey's findings. Mr. Katz, a science writer, was commissioned by the com- South Forces Up By 11 PC CANBERRA, Australia (Reut- ers) -- Despite desertions the South Vietnamese armed. forces increased by 11 per cent to 570,- 000 last year, Supply Minister Senator N. H. D. Henty said to-| day. Replying to a federal Senate questioner, Henty said: "It is clear the majority do not go over to the Viet Cong." Many deserters returned to their homes for harvesting and the majority of desertions have occurred in the popular and re- gional forces, not the regular services, Henty said. The questioner, Opposition La- bor Senator S. H. Cohen, said a report from Saigon published in the New York Times said there had been 113,000 desertions from South Viet Nam's forces last year. Norwegian Ship e Declines Aid SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- A Norwegian freighter with a fire in her hold declined U.S. Coast Guard help early today and said she was proceeding to Los An- eles. The Holthill, with a cargo of toys and clothes, said it was being escorted by the Liberian ship Hadjitsakos and that the fire was under control. Earlier the Holthill had asked help and the cutter Dexter was sent from San Francisco Bay. mittee and its 75 sponsoring or- ganizations to prepare the sum- mary for the meeting. Several outside organizations were polled in the survey. Geographical differences were strongly reflected in the sur- vey's results, Mr. Katz noted. Expenditures for each pupil at elementary and secondary schoo] levels in different prov- inces ranged from a high of $378 to a low of $141. The result was reflected in the number of students who stay in school. Rural students 'are being short changed" in most parts of the country, he added. A two-year study in Alberta showed rural school failure rate was double that of urban schools and only 18 per cent of rural students went on to university, compared to 33 per cent of ur- ban students. Results of the survey also in- }discriminated against |students, Mr. Katz said. Teachers favored upper-class students who were better moti- vated, more interested in their work and less of a problem that students from '"'deprived, lower- class" homes, Financial status of a family influenced a stu- some lice. |dicated teachers uncon sciously.| Achievement day. The mem- bers practised judging their) dresser scarves, throw cush- ions, hair pads, gafbage pails and bedspreads, Mrs. R. Thompson and Nancy Thompson took the worship Debbie Bagg read the minutes. Projects were handed in for display. The older group is making a quilt for the bale. Attendance at the Sunday School and church services was | Mundy took the church serv- 8. House and Garden plants will be auctioned at the horticultur- | + al society's annual auction spikes will be permitted. |ball may register at the Lions Community Centre, ave., from 8.30 a.m, to 5 p.m. Boys between seven years and under service at the CGIT meeting.|10 years as of Jan. 1 of the current year are eligible atom play. ers will gather at the Vincent | Massey. School at 9 a.m. this Saturday. They are also asked low due to the flu. Mrs. G. A.|/to bring gloves and |m ers as in the atom classifica- Boys interested in atom base- 26 Beech Monday through Friday years and under 16, of Aug. 1) of this year. rockets tween 1953 (the Redstone) and 1964 (Saturn V.) for |= SRAM PERILS ELIE ROCKETS RISE HIGH The power of American space) increased 100-fold be- Requires Immediately A Building Inspector and a By-Law Enforcement Officer. The pee wee baseball play- running hoes. No spikes will be per- itted. The same period of registra- ion will prevail for these play- April: 27. Rose bushes as well as shrubs are usually in great demand. The Brooklin Spring Fair Board meets April 26 to plan for this year's fair. The possi- bility of having a dairy prin- cess as a special guest will be discussed. Mrs. A. Fraser read the scrip- [OVER SO VRS. IN BUSINESS | STEPHENSON'S GARAGE WHEEL ALIGNMENT PROGENERAL REPAINS 725-0522 725-0560 15 CHURCH STREET Applications will be considered for each position er both eom- One-Stop DECORATING SHOP Wellpeper end Murels Custom Draperies Broadioom C.1.L. Paints and Varnishes Benjamin Moore Paints the clerk. j : | DODD & SOUTER DECOR CENTRE LTD. 107 Byron S¢. $.,!Whitby PHONE 668-5862 bined. These are port time positions. Remuneration to be negotiated. Applications should be sent to the elerk stating: age, qualifications and remuneration wanted giving references. Applications must bein the honds of the clerk by 5:00 p.m., April 27th, 1966..Fuether information «an be obtained from M. W. Goldie, Clerk -- Columbus, Onterie PH. 655-4511. tu Mrs. A. Fraser read the sc ture lesson at the UCW meet- ing. The theme was 'Easter'. Mrs. R. Holman gave the medi- tation. The devotional was taken by the Sunshine Unit, The program, presented by the Lend-A-Hand Unit, was a dra- matic presentation of the Eas- ter Story. Discover The Swinging World OF | YAMAHA RO-DON Sports TAUNTON RD. 1 MILE EAST OF SIMCOE 87, Service to all makes end models of bikes. Drop by end inquire e@bout SUPER TUNING for your present bike. dent's ambitions. BOAC can save you time. A (Example: a 21-Day Econ Rome will cost you only "Subject to government approval. p> otf /f you're planning a trip to Europe... THIS SMALL ADVERTISEMENT CAN MEAN BIG SAVINGS about BOAC first. This summer there are a record 29 transatlantic jet flights a week from Toronto. How's that for.choice? Jet direct to London by magnificent BOAC Rolls-Royce 707 or Air Canada giant DC-8 jet. From April 1, air fares to Europe are the lowest ever, and save $40. See your Travel Agent. BRITISH OVERSEAS AIRWAYS CORPORATION WITH AIR CANADA nd also money. So find out omy Excursion Toronto- $465* return.) Plan now BOAC Itsaves you froman overdose of sales tax. Because of the low price. Either new or used, Of course, even our low price Is still susceptible to scles-tax. But you get a milder case of it. The same with the cost of running a Volkswagen. When you get around 38 miles to the gallon, you don't spend much money on gas. Or on gos sales-tax. The same with ports. have to replace half the When you average 35,000 to 40,000 miles on one set of tires, your tire sales-tax ts hardly more than @ pin-prick. And you're immune to anii-freeze sales-tax. The SABYAN MOTOR SALES LTD. 334 Ritson Road South Tel: 723-3461 We're celebrating eur prectest sales yeer, ceete Deol". 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