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Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Feb 1967, p. 9

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hing pro- slles pon- olo- hild eets its iren ible, ible, cre- lone ugh dian the lure not 208 "TAMMIE" HELPS LAUNCH EASTER SEAL CAMPAIGN . «Chairman F. S. Wotton, Mrs. May Wallace Rotary Sets $18,000 Target To Help Crippled Children Con. Frank McCallum, who,trude Colpus Public School, who Ernest/has been selected to act as the Marks, officially opened the|"Tammie" for the campaign. Rotary Club of Oshawa's 2Ist|The object of the local apepal is annual Easter Seal campaign} $18,000. Monday. He purchased the first sheet of seals from Hanna Eli-|chairman of the building com- zabeth Kosub, a pupil at Ger-|mittee of the Oshawa Crippled represented Mayor Mr. McCallum, who is also CHAIRMAN COMMENTS School Grant Increase Will Assist Taxpayers An increase in provincial grants for school buildings will "certainly help city taxpayers," board of education chairman S. E. Lovell told The Times today. "It is certainly going to mean some extra funds to help the taxpayers, but how much I can't tell you yet," said Mr. Motorist Remanded An Oshawa man was remand- ed to Feb. 28 on two charges of criminal negligence and one of failing to remain at the scene of an accident when he appeared in a Toronto Court Monday. Marcel Thisdelle, 29, 234 Dearborn Ave., was arrested following the deaths of two per- sons in traffic accidents Feb. 18. A pedestrian, Brontislaw Du- bicki, 39, of Toronto, was killed when struck by an automobile. The car continued six blocks further and crashed into an- other vehicle, killing Mrs. Carol Cornell, 24, of Toronto. Raymond Cornell, 26, riding in the car with his wife, was criti- Lovell, who had read only the press reports. The proposals seemed to be helpful, although perhaps not as much to a metropolitan school board like Oshawa as to smaller rural ones, he said. The new grant system, an- nounced yesterday by Education Minister William Davis, takes actual building costs into ac- count far more than did the previous one. Mr. Davis said grants for elementary schools would increase by 50 per cent and for high schools by even more. Instead of paying a per- centage of an arbitrary cost figure as in the past, the prov- ince will pay a percentage of the average cost of providing school accommodation. Figures to be known as approved costs-- 90 per cent of the average costs -- will be the base on which grants will be calculated under the government's Foundation Assistance Plan. The cost of building a high school is about $2-244 million, said Mr. Lovell, and the Osh- awa board receives a grant of about 35 per cent of this, spread over the whole repayment per- iod, not as a lump sum. G. L, Roberts, superintendent of secondary schools, called the cally injured and r in hospital. Thisdelle, who has been em- ployed by a city firm for four years as a truck driver, was taken to hospital to receive treatment for a broken arm and then transferred to jail. Bail has been set at $10,000. it "good news in- deed." Grants paid towards Oshawa school buildings now bare little relation to the actual construction costs, he said. The new grants will apply to all school building projects given the green light by the established in the city about five year. The salary scale had been Childrens' School, endorsed the work being done among crip- pled children by the service club and expressed apprecia- tion of its support of the school building fund. "We have realized enough money to complete the school but we are short of some money needed for equipment," he said. He said the children had moved into the new school last week mins that he does not John Diefenbaker will run STARR SAYS DIEFE Ontario riding MP Michael Starr said last night in Tim- think test the leadership, again for the leadership of the didate. Progressive Conser vative The PC leadership convention Party. is scheduled for Sept. 6 to Sept. Mr, Starr has said several 10 in Toronto. co I She Sines OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1967 A General Motors delay in expanding manpower on as- sembly lines in Oshawa is the prime cause of a vast number of vehicle defects that go by unnoticed, says the president of Local 222, United Auto Work- ers. In an interview, Monday, Albert Taylor said if 'adequate manpower was placed on assembly lines there is no question about what kind of product" would be produced. He said men on assembly work now do not have the "proper time" to do a "100 per cent, A-1 job" and that it will be up to management to elimin- ate the problem. 'Our men are doing the best that can be ex- pected of them." SUGGESTION Mr. Taylor made his com- ments in connection with a sug- gestion made to a recent meet- ing in Ottawa of the Commons' committee on justice and legal affairs that the committee call on production workers to get the reason why so many cars are being re-called because of defects. The suggestion was made by Russell Honey, Liberal MP for nearby Durham riding, who told the committee in the last few months "I have had a con- siderable degree of evidence from constituents who work in the Oshawa plant that they are not satisfied with the quality Taylor Notes Man-Shortage control process on the produc- tion line." Mr. Honey says he has indica- tions also that a greater work load has been placed on em- ployees in the last year or two and they sometimes do not have the opportunity to do their work as well as they felt they Starr) will be a leadership can- sev Ng A Re teenn Te he (Mr. that he plans ship. Meu A Tn un CON. ROBERT NICOL . +. "Terminate Work" NBAKER times in the past year that if Mr. Diefenbaker does not con- Mr. Starr, former minister of labor in Mr. Diefenbaker's gov- ernment, reaffirmed last night Asked if he would run if Mr. Diefenbaker does, Mr Starr re- plied, "I wouldn't, but I am of to seek the leader- Mr. Starr The controversial Centennial Parkway is back in the hands of city council's traffic commit- tee. The move came last night after Con. Robert Nicol pre- sented a three-point proposal calling for: --council to terminate work on the Centennial Parkway and any other major capital works related to it as proposed in the 1961-81 traffic planning re- port. --a transportation study of the Central Ontario Joint Plan- ning area be undertaken under the Highway Improvement Act (75 per cent subsidy); --the Central Ontario Joint would like to in all The UAW claims there are only periodic inspections of cars coming off assembly lines of major Canadian car manu-, facturers. INTERESTING Mr. Taylor said a study of the problem by questioning pro- duction workers: would be "a very interesting survey" and that he has no 'opposition at any time to the building of a better car." GM _ recently announced Zero Defects (quality control) program in Oshawa--and other centres -- and it relies greatly on the will of a worker to do a better job, "the first time' around, Every car that comes off an assembly line in Oshawa is not inspected, union sources say, and one official of the UAW adds that when the government places a vehicle order at GM here the company makes a thorough check on each product. "It should apply to every automobile," the union spokes- man said. "Every car should City Seeks Amalgamation Information communication it receives Township. The OMB that it had negotiations between municipalities and advised that no application has yet been re- ceived by the board. It suggested Oshawa notify the town and the township that the city wishes to have notice of any application made to the board, Letters have been sent to the municipalities, said Roy Barrand, city clerk. Con. Robert Nicol suggested have a 100 per cent check on it "before it leaves the plant." and that an official opening will |be held later. Mrs. May Wallace of Toronto, director of case services for the Ontario Society for Crippled Children ,said 230 service clubs across the province have joined forces to raise this year's ob- jective of $1,400,000. This is $200,000 than was raised last year. She said the OSCC employs 34 nurses and operates 19 dis- trict offices as well as five summer camps where 1,200 crip- pled children were given a holi- day last year. The society als) operates 18 travelling clinics in remote sections of Ontario as well as 20 treatment centres. Mrs. Wallace said that a young man from Columbus is Eric Neilson, MP for the Yukon, will be guest speak- er at a dinner Monday to mark Brotherhood Week, (Feb. 19-27). Sponsored by the Inter-Serv- ice Club Council of Oshawa, the Feb. 27 dinner at the Gen- osha Hotel will be attended by about 300 persons from service clubs in Oshawa. Brotherhood Week is now in its 20th anniversary in Can- ada and is endorsed by the YUKON MP GUEST SPEAKER AT BROTHERHOOD BANQUET that a delegation go to Queen's position before the OMB. be considered impertinent by a case before the trial. governor-general of Canada, the prime minister, all 10 pro- vincial premiers and several mayors and reeves in the country. The celebration is a pro- gram of the Canadian Coun- cil of Christians and Jews, which aims to foster under- standing and respect for mankind, It also intends to dramatie practical things that people can do "to rededi- |qustry Minister Charles Drury John Nicholson by Oshawa outlining the detrimental effects the auto- cate themselves to the ideals of brotherhood". receiving training at Variety Vil lage. Seven Oshawa and district young men have graduated from the school since it was established. Rotarian F, S. Wotton is chair- man of the Easter Seal Com- mittee in the city. Mental Health Clinic Starts a mental health clinic. A mental health clinic was years ago but for the past three years it has remained defunct because suitable staff was un- obtainable. City council last night ap- proved the appointment of Dr. D. M. Webster of Brockville, as psychiatric director of the Osh- awa mental health clinic at a salary of $20,000. His employ- ment will start April 1, this directors today welcomed a proposed study to determine the land needs of municipalities from Oshawa to Oakville in the next 20 years. conducted by the Central On- tario ment Council which covers On- tario, York, Peel and Halton Counties. director of the Central Ontario Joint Planning Board, told The Times today the Oshawa area would benefit people from outside the area taking a look at the land situa- tion and that people in the area will be able to see the Oshawa region situation as part of a City and regional planning The massive study will be Regional Develop- William McAdams, planning from having Ontario government this year. approved by the 1965-66 council. larger study. Planners Welcome Study Four - County Land Needs director, said "another person's viewpoint is always of benefit. see Oshawa but I've lived here for 20 years; a person coming the council's study "would not duplicate what we are already doing." He said a similar study is being carried on by the re- gional planning board which covers Oshawa, Whitby, manville and the townships of Whitby, East Whitby and Dar- lington. that he felt the regional develop- ment council could make use of the different planning boards in order to co-ordinate the study and avoid duplication. G. A. Wandless, city planning "T look out my window and from outside might be startled." Mr. McAdams said he hoped dorsed a four-point proposal presented by the special com- mittee on employment. and Ottawa Marks, committee on employment and the Oshawa business and in- dustrial development commis- sioner; --the committee be expanded to include representatives from the Oshawa and District Labor Council and the Oshawa Cham- ber of Commerce, to sit on the committee, sented by the United Automo- bile Workers, to the Ministers of Labor and Industry on Feb. 8. Council Backs Brief On Pact City council last night en- The proposal included: --a brief be presented to In- Labor Minister pact agreement is having on the city; --representation be made to Ernest the by Mayor board of control, in an capacity; --concurred in the brief pre- The Ontario Municipal Board has been requested by city coun- cil to inform Oshawa of any in respect to the proposed amal- gamation of Whitby and Whitby informed council received council' letter of Jan. 31 with respect to the two shelving the project and called pressway and added that coun- cil should discuss the problem with the Department of High- ways. had substantial warning from advisory GOOD FAITH Ald. Alice Reardon felt it had dealt with the park- way in good faith. Planning Board to petition the Minister of Highways for such a study with council's support. 12-5 VOTE The decision to refer the pro- posals was made in a 12-5 re- corded vote. Centennial Park- way was studied by the traffic committee of the 1965-66 coun- cil which decided to proceed with its construction. On record as opposing last night's move are: Mayor Ern- est Marks, Con. Robert Nicol, Con. Margaret Shaw, Ald. Ern- est Whiting and Ald. Norman Down. Immediately after Con. Nicol made his proposals Ald. Bruce Mackey moved they be tabled until another council meeting. However, he withdrew his mo- tion, along with a similar one later in the meeting, to permit discussion on the issue. Ald. Mackey said the Centen- nial Parkway, more than any other in the past two decades, has caused more emotion, more press coverage and more con- troversy. PREMATURE He said Con. s Nicol's council has had several. the board since it is like a court; Ald. Mackey said he was sur- of law, and one doesn't present/prised that Con. Nicol suggest- matter over to another body (COJPB) ed council pass this for study. "The city should control its own destination," said the alderman. He warned of the danger of for public meetings on the ex- Ald. Down said council has the citizens of Oshawa on the expressway and should hold off constructing it until such time as it was forced to do so. He suggested the problem could be somewhat alleviated if more people would ride city buses and take the "odd car off the road." Ald. John DeHart said there were too many. unanswered questions on the parkway and that the traffic committee was best equipped to handle the issue. He proposed also that the committee meet with the min- ister of highways to find out "where we are going." As part of the past council said she Mr. Starr made the sta while in Timmins for a Royal Canadian Legion dinner. In his address to the group, "We should be building more ag rO- Park arid present Oshawa's\posals were premature since the present council has had However, Ald. Gilbert Mur-jonly one meeting on the ex- doch, said such a move would|pressway while the previous the opinion that he will not run." + but i vocational schools are filled to capacity IN LEADER RACE schools, All the +, ernm ernm said: Hami Noemi "It has been said that people got elected to council this year because they opposed the ex- pressway -- but I think there were other reasons as well," she said. Ald. Gordon Attersley said the previous council discussed the parkway with full knowl- edge of what was going on and reached a decision. He said, on one hand we have traffic specialialists such as Nicholas Damas, Fred Crome, Robert Richardson, and on the other, 9,000 petitioners, START CUTTING Ald. Ernest Whiting said he didn't think Oshawa could af- ford to build an expressway. If it did, then the new city hall, the police station, proposed hospital and an old age home would have to be sacrificed. "If we're going to build this let's get out the knife and start cutting," said the alderman. Con. Margaret Shaw referred to "the people' and said she would listen to them. "In the midst of regional gov- ernment, amalgamation or an- nexation. are we going to pro- ceed with the expressway? Is it in its proper place?" she asked, The controller said further that Mr. Damas (the engineer- ing consultant who designed the expressway), only mentioned the "cheap part of the express- way" from 401 to Colborne street, during his recent re- view. "He didn't mention how much the rest of the express- way was going to cost," she said. Con. Shaw added that. the expressway from Colborne Street northerly would not only take land but homes and busi- nesses which would result in a the drain." he was opposed to having th COJPB handle the problem an traffic committee. ment of highway officials that afternoon and they said they would be prepared to come to Oshawa to meet with council and discuss the expressway. Con. Robert Nicol told council last night that a plebiscite had, in effect, been held on the ex- pressway. Outlining 15 points why the parkway should be scrapped Con. Nicol said Mayor Ernest Marks was put into office with a majority of two votes to one because he based his campaign against the expressway. "This, in effect, was the pleb- iscite that was requested," said the controller. Other points outlined by Con. Nicol for terminating the proj- ect were: (HSU ESL NA lot of "assessment going down|wasn't He said some members of|/was convinced council had met with depart-/should be located where it was d of accelerating gov- ent aid, the present gov- ent has cut it off." Other major contenders for the Tory leadership are Davie Fulton, George Hees and Alvin Iton, sagt a | City Councillors Delay Proposal To Terminate Expressway Work Traffic Committee Study Supported By 12 Members s ALD. BRUCE MACKEY ««. "Proposal Premature" Con. Ralph Jones said he op- posed a '"'quick motion' like Con. Nicol's because it would mean a lot of past study would go down the drain. He said money is available for the expressway and the cost would always remain within the four mills set up for traffic department operations. Build- ing the expressway would not increase taxation, he said. Ald, William Paynter said study the expressway and con- sult the COJPB. While Ald. James Rundle, traffic commit- tee chairman, said it was '"'quite logical for the expressway to be handled by his committee." He said he ran for council on the basis that the express- way issue be re-assessed and as chairman of the traffic commit- tee he would see that it re- ceived serious re-evaluation. Ald. Gilbert Murdoch called it a question of need and said he satisfied that' Mr. Damas told council where the Ald. Charles Mcliveen said|expressway should go. e| "They took a policy decision djon themselves and never pre- preferred that the expressway/sented alternative routes," he be handled by council's own/|said. Ald. Russell McNeil said he the parkway planned to go. He said that since the government is pre- pared to pay 75 per cent of the construction and maintenance cost council could handle it. Plebiscite On Expressway Has Been Held, Says Nicol those existing or forecast in 1961; --recent major developments including the CNR complex, the LASCO steel plant in Whitby Township and imminent com- mercial development in the cor- ridor area of Whitby Township, all of which are likely to cause a shift of emphasis on trans- portation to the west of the limits of the city; --the metropolitan Toronto Regional Transportation Study was established by Order in Council of the provincial gov- ernment in 1962, after comple- tion of the Damas-Smith traffic --the population of Oshawa has increased by 25 per cent since 1961 and the existing settlement patterns and future development trends differ from planning report; --a _ significant development of this transportation study has been the proposed GO transit commuter train; Bow- Mr. McAdams also indicated WELFARE LEAGUE SPEAKER PRAISES NEW SYSTEM Legal Aid Called Best In World Ontario's new legal aid sys- tem will not be the panacea of all ills -- but it will be the fin- est of its kind in the \world. That was the view expressed Monday by William B. Com- mon, QC, former deputy at- torney general for Ontario, who was guest speaker at the Women's Welfare League of Oshawa annual meeting at Sim- coe Hall Boys' Club. Mr. Common's legal back- ground includes the chairman- ship of the joint committee which investigated the estab- lishment of legal aid in On- tario. j lost of the ecommitice's recommendations have been accepted in principle by the provincial government. These were embodied in the Legal Aid Act of Ontario passed a year ago. Mr. Common outlined the present scheme, introduced in 1951, and explained the need for a new one, The joint committee sent out more than 500 questionnaires to every organization which might be interested in legal aid, and sent members to Cali- fornia, New York, Chicago, England and Scotland to exam- ine their systems. the American '"'public defend- er" system. The lawyers con- cerned were dedicated young a "hopelessly inadequate" sys- drew up recommended that the province' be divided into 46 areas, at present encompass- ing the counties and organized districts of Ontario, Each area would have a part-time direc- tor, in most cases a lawyer. mittee, composed of members of the Bar in the county, would 'ibe under the control ef nobody! Mr. Common was critical of men but were bogged down by tem, he said. The scheme his -committee 1 The director and area com- except the Law Society of Up- per Canada, said Mr. Common. scheme will be borne by the Ontario government," he con- tinued. much this is going to cost the taxpayers . the figures are going to be astronomical." mended tariffs means test under the scheme, but people would pay what they could. The job of establishing a person's eligibility for legal aid would fall to the local wel- fare offi "The entire cost of the "I do not know how . . I do not think The committee has recom- of fees for lawyers, There would be no cer. | An advisory committee would be set up to see that the scheme did not get out of hand in some areas, said Mr, Com- mon. He stressed that a per- son would have some choice of counsel. "We are going to make mis- takes, and there are going to be glaring nature being what it is -- but I do urge that everyone give this scheme a chance," he said. injustices, human Mr. Common was introduced by George Drynan, QC, legal aid . director County, for Ontario LEGAL AID was the sub- ject of guest speaker Wil- liam B. Common, at the an- nual meeting of the Women's Welfare League of Oshawa at Simcoe Hall Boys' Club Monday. Mr. eae (left) chats with Mrs. H. F. Millen, retiring president, Mrs. John Chmara, the new president, and Harold McNeill, execue tive director of Simcoe Hall. --Oshawa Times Photo /

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