. TIMES," 1907 GE BECKER er in Masters' ionship Play): iInerabie, © RTH 3 084 cQ5 uae. ' 7 \ Siés3 @82 '@ $AQ103F UTH QT K 1097 B64 North East 1@ Pass 3NT » six of 'spades. tain amount of i from time to , of the cards. y often that & perficially ap- azardous turns ection, to be or less than @ al play." take this hand to defend we ract. He led a rer won East's ueen. : ount eight win- nt and his only for a ninth trick So he cashe ng the queen hen it didn't, my with a dia- 'the jack of » the. queen. yn led the king | East followed > (the highest spare to. signal tion), West led 'ast cashed his result was that m two. hift has all the being a lucky k, but, actualty, well reasoned. sady shown up spades and A-K points -- at the jest made the of the. king of urther that de- yt have the ace that would bring points -- impos- ght of South's ing. And, most all, West knew d nine running spades, three r diamonds) un- ce could grab t. ' p 'safe' pades 'was there- > question, since ount to a con- contract. West's vas to lead the and hope to: find enough club eat the contract. ill's Jar Dies ORP, South: Af- lolf johannes de captured young chill during' the i here today. He suffered a stroke farm where he ure of Churchill, pondent, he once ger was on the | was ready to _ Englishman re- was trapped and t up slowly. am Churchill." I who he was.and I ested. To me- he ther Englishman. r enemies and 1 1" rer escaped from » in Pretoria and oring. Portuguese on the East Afri- injured 00 Visit (CP) -- George date for the fed- sive Conservative iffered back and Saturday when he a small delivery siting Expo. 67 at ing with a friend boulevards when >eled up and ran Hees said today. pent the weekend to home, 'moving ches, but said he able to get around yy Tuesday. . week, the former ter of trade: and lans to begin a ur of Ontario and et with PC riding other party: sup- ie two province3, blood taste in my alth is good except : 90 per cent of ng from all thrée ns something is t, blood from any is sufficient warn- mined and find out mptom of fatigue igh to warrant in- "TIME OUT" AT HEARING «.« » Whitby Mayor Newman Officials Study Retraining Plan A decision to hire an archi- tect to prepare plans for a new retraining centre in the city was delayed last night when several board of education trus- tees feared the board mie get stuck with an 20,000 still uncertain. G. L. Roberts, superintendent of secondary schools, and J. R. Backus, board business admin- istrator, were authorized to in- vestigate the governments' fi- architect's fee. The board received a letter} E. L. Kerridge of the On- Manpower retraining pro- gram giving the board permis- sion to hire an architect to. pre- pare plans for a new centre. But, trustees had only re- quested the hiring of an archi- tect to further investigate a new centre. In discussing Mr. Kerridge's letter, trustees decided it was premature, since the financial arrangements between the fed- eral and provincial govern- and determine if it is safe for the board to 'invest the money in hiring an architect. A-new retraining centre has been under discussion for more than a year. Retraining courses are conducted in an Albert Street building which bas been called "too small", Classes are also held at night at McLaugh- lin and Eastdale Collegiates, Preliminary discussions on a new centre have indicated a need for a building of factory- type construction, covering about 57,000 square feet. City, District Students Will Visit Newfoundland Twenty - four Oshawa and erea students will get a whiff of salt sea air when they visit Grand Falls, Newfoundland be- tween July 15 and July 23. A highlight of the visit will be an excursion to a fishing village in the area and a free afternoon at the beach. House Chairs Art Subject Twenty Canadian artists in- lerpret the beauty of the house- hold chair in 'Chairs and Vari- ations," which will be exhibited at the Art Gallery of Oshawa starting today. Each artist gives his concept of a chair in the exhibit pre- pared by the Ontario Society of Artists. _ The June showing by Oshawa and area artists drew over 1,000 visitors to the gallery at 7% Simcoe Street South. The gallery is open Tuesday, 'Thursday and Friday, between 6.30 p.m, and 10 p.m. and on Sunday, Wednesday and Satur- day from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Ad- mission is free. The Youth Travel Program, sponsored by the federal and provincial governments and as- sisted by local groups, g-i-v-e-s high school students an oppor- tunity to travel during centen- nial year-and meet people of different provinces. A group of Saskatchewan stu- dents visited Oshawa last week, on the same program. The Oshawa youths will also) visit a logging camp at Miller- ments for a new centre are! Town, Township Officials OMB Will App Merger Plans Outlined; Hearing Continues Today WHITBY (Staff) -- Most offi- cials of Whitby and Whitby Township are optimistic today that amalgamation of the two municipalities will be approved by the Ontario Municipal Board. The officials base their opti- mism on the stand taken yester- day by the City of Oshawa, ex- pected to be the major objector, at the OMB hearing in the Whit- by municipal building. Toronto lawyer J. J. Robin- ette, representing the city, con- fined his remarks to "sounding a warning note," asking whether the amalgamated mu- nicipality would be able to fi- nance development of the corri- dor area between Oshawa and Whitby and noting that amalga- mation is not a "long-term solu- tion' to the regional problem. Mr. Robinette said yesterday he did not intend to call any evidence but might speak later in the hearing. He left the hear- ing before it concluded. The second day of the hearing opened at 10 a.m. today with in- dividual objections expected tol. be heard. DETAILED DATA Toronto lawyer J. T. Weir, | representing the town and town- ship, told the OMB yesterday that no application before the board had ever had such de- tailed information. He asked the OMB to approve amalgamation as of Jan. 1, 1968. Various offi- cials were called to discuss the results of amalgamation. Also appearing in support of amalgamation was lawyer Don- ald Steele, representing the County of Ontario. Township clerk William Wal- lace was questioned by Mr. Weir on all aspects of the appli- cation and read into the record most of the submission by the town and township for amalga- mation which was passed by both councils last Wednesday night. | Town Clerk John Frost out- lined the five-year projected Sanitary sewer staging program which included local sewers in the corridor resi ial area in pe offset by a reduction in the cost of electricity when the new town takes over the rural elec- trical system from the Ontario Hydro at a cost of $900,000. WARD SYSTEM The town and township sub- mission included the proposed four ward system for the new municipality with one ward north of Taunton Road and three wards in the south, each including part of the town and township. Two councillors would be elected from each ward along with a mayor, reeve and deputy reeve to be elected at large. PLANNING The planning boards of both municipalities recommended to- tal amalgamation for the best and most economic use of the land, the integration of the major road systems and the more economigf extension of trunk services, that on amalga- ards be dissolved to establish a planning hoard consisting of the mayor as a member ex-officio and 10 mem- bers, two of whom shall members of council. LIBRARY The public library boards of the town and township submit- ted that the new board under amalgamation be "The Whitby Library Board" and that the board be composed of three ap- pointees of council, three ap- pointees of the school board and two by the separate school board along with the mayor ex- officio. The board also recom- mended that the new board re- flect the present members of both boards and that a fully qualified librarian be hired to act as chief executive officer of the combined libraries. be| arenas in jand would be comprised of nine ere rove Amalg ptimistic amation MORE THAN 100 PERSONS ATTEND AMALGAMATION HEARING IN WHITBY COUNCIL CHAMBER « « . Whitby Township Reeve -- Down (Centre) Listens To Submissions Ghe Oshawa Times both municipalities members including two council- lors, It was recommended that the existing three community centre boards in the township be maintained and that a single board of management be ap- pointed to have jurisdiction over the existing town community centre and the proposed Brook- lin community building. GARBAGE The existing garbage collec- tion agreement between aa township and an_ individual is expected to continue until December 1968 while the town hopes to maintain its present garbage collection by municipal employees. FIRE DEPARTMENTS Councils decided that present the town's volunteer fire brigade| should continue to function as separate entities with liaison to) be established between the chiefs and deputy chiefs with Council Passes Insurance Plan RECREATION the town does not. The munici- ttee be the third year of the plan, the Corbet Creek trunk sewer in the fourth year and _ the Corbet Creek water pollution contro! plant in the fifth yer Financial expert.E. A. Jarrett who contributed all the' titnawetal aspects to the Faludi Report said amalgamation would mean a slight increase in the tax rate for both municipalities but that the higher township rate would by | city gi Many years ago, when he was basis. ELECTIONS Councils decided that two volunteer fire) brigades in the township and the | the provision that they continue | to operate on a mutual aid| and injured his shoulder while| Nov. 20 between 7 and 8 p.m. Palities proposed that a new|out on council business with the|The election date proposed is council to ensure the continu-| duties. ance of the established recrea- tion programs and to provide|healed," he said at city coun-| poll be held in the new munici- for the logical developments of|cil last night, "and I didn't get/pality, The inaugural meeting in ac-ja peney back from any source. bi tad for the new council would parks and _ recreation cordance with the requir on Saturday, Jan. was of the new municipality. The/in support of a recommenda-|11 a.m. submission also suggested that/tion by the Board of Control a sub-committee of parks be/that the city purchased personal created by the new council. The new arena board would|/mayor, members of the Board) the/of Control have jurisdiction over Leads To Sha A motion asking for approval of an additional $35,000 expendi- ture for completion of North Oshawa Arena led to some sharp exchanges between mem- bers at last night's city council meeting. Board Accepts Revised Bid A bid of $39,900 from Franki Construction for the piling for the special vocational school to be built on Gibb Street for open- ing in September, 1968, was ac- cepted last night by the board town, tour a paper mill, port facilities at Botwood, visit a mine at Gull Pond and attenc a picnic and dance. The students leave the city Wednesday and the trip, includ- es guided tours of Ottawa, July 12, and Montreal and Expo '67, July 1 They return to Oshawa July iS = BIBLE SCHOOL Vacation Bible School is be- ing held at Northminster United Church at 9.30 a.m. every weekday until July 21. There will be no registration fee nor charge for craft mate- rials. For more information, aoe Mrs. W. Mittler, 576- Franki had submitted two bids, both of which neglected to in- clude certain specifications laid \down by the board. The low bid was raised from: $32,870 when the cost of survey- ing and excavating was in- cluded. The second bid by Franki, $51,690, was for the regular con- struction method, while the low Dipping Into Reserve Fund Con. Frank McCallum Making the proposal on be-} of education. spending." A of the bid was de-| Ald. Ernest Whiting interjec- layed ~ from Friday, since|ting angrily, "I notice that rp Comments half of the board of control, said the extra money was needed to decorate the building so that it did not look like a barn. In reply to Ald. John DeHart, he | said that the $35,000 would come from a reserve fund. Ald. DeHart: "What about this reserve fund? We keep dipping into it. Can you tell me how much was in it originally and how much is left now?" Con. McCallum: "It was $663,- 720 originally and now there is} $266,200 remaining." Ald. DeHart: "So we have spent $400,000. What about when it comes to replenishing it? We seem to go on spending and Ald. DeHart always makes a fuss when money is spent in certain sections of the city. We have done this job in the cheap- est possible way. If we had not done it now we would have had to spend another $20,000 next year and continue doing this. | We have done it in the best way possible and we have a beau- tiful building. 8 bid was for a special tubular piling method patented by Franki and used exclusively by them. The board had anticipated an expenditure of $50,000. of the piling, which is expected to take about six weeks to com- plete. No date was set for the start) J to his feet, Ald. De- Hart said he was only interested in protecting the taxpayers' {money and was entitled to make |a protest. Council passed the motion and Con. McCallum said afterwards the extra money was neded to put in flower beds, a good front and a canopy. | ronto. accident insurance for the and city council, while acting in their official capacities, at $15 per annum per person. Council adopted the recommendation. Licence Exams Not Disturbed The Oshawa branch of the department of transport is not being affected by the work-to- rule policy which is upsetting licence 'examinations and auto inspections in Metropolitan To- According to J. W. Mclean, a spokesman for the department of transport in Toronto, the work-to-rule policy is having an effect only in Metro Toronto and offices in the rest of the province are operating normal- ly in respect to examinations and inspections. A spokesman for the Oshawa branch said, "Our office is just as normal as it has ever been." Pioneer Village Tour For Students PICKERING (Staff) -- More than 1,350 students under the jurisdiction of Pickering Area 1 School Board will travel to Pioneer Village in the Black Creek Conservation area, as the board's Centennial project. At the rate of 500 a day, from Sept. 20-22, the pupils will be escorted through the village in groups of 20, and instructed in the history of Pioneer Vil- lage. Tenders for a one-room addi- tion to the board's school at Audley will close tomorrow. The addition is expected to be EDUCATION For the new municipality, the councils proposed that the pub- lic school boards of the town and township be dissolved along with the present high school board and that a board of edu- cation be established. The new board would consist of two members from each ward elec- ted at the same time as council plus members appointed by the separate school board and the County of Ontario. That part of Saturday, Dec. 9 from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. The councils also sug-| "It cost me $400 before it gested that no advance election 6 at the township in union school section with Pickering will be) detached from the present un-| ion. PUBLIC UTILITIES It was proposed at the hear-| ing that the Whitby PUC be dis- solved and that a new PUC consisting of five members be established for the and control of the waterworks and hydro electric systems of the new municipalities. Residents Protest Sidewalk Lowering A deputation of seven resi- dents from Rossland road west, led by Mr. M. Kanuk, No. 372, was met by the public works committee at city hall last night. against sidewalk: lowering in the road, to allow road widen- ing because they feared it would increase the 'grade of their driveways and sidewalk. F. E. Crome, Commissioner of Works, said the road would! a be widened at the intersection of Nipigon Street and Rossland, where a median strip was being constructed to divide east and west bound traffic. Any neces- They were protesting! OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 Temporary Parking City night debated for nearly anj|be decided that night. hour over a proposal to use alis no place at all for residents|there was an accident?" section of Alexandra Park forjon the west seide of Simcoe parking while Simcoe Street is|street to park unless they are} closed for reconstruction, all llowed to use » Alexandra Council had before it a/Park," he said. recommendation to amend a Ald. Ernest Whiting protest- parking sider while the work/ed. ."The ground will is in progre: Con. Robert "Nicol said it was|a danger to the ball players Sites Suggested For Art Gallery An art gallery estimated to[struction should tie in with the cost between $150,000 to $200,000) city's latest _tri-million-dollar --windfall gift of the McLaugh-|civic square development. lin family -- has put archi- Yesterday, board of control tects and city officials to work|debated two possible sites for considering possible sites. Early in June the family an- nounced its intention to build a gallery and suggested that con- 800 Workers the art gallery in the civic complex area which were recommended by a_ Toronto architectural firm, Allward and Gouinluck. The recommendations on sites were presented to the board by E. R. S. McLaughlin, }an executive of General Motors For Seminar At least 800 volunteers will] be needed to man the 20 de- partments which will be re- quired to operate the Jehovah's Witueceet "Disciple - Making" Bible Seminar, which will be held in Oshawa's Civic Audi- torium, August 10-13. According to Alexander M. Didur, who is helping to pre- pare and oversee arrangements for the Seminar, this will be the largest Bible Seminar ever con- ducted in the Oshawa area. Mr. Didur stated that all 800 volunteers manning the depart- ments will be unpaid represen- tatives of every trade and pro- fession, who will be using their own vacation time to help out. The main lecture of the con- vention is entitled: = Armageddon". It will be livered by Arnold W. Mac- Namara of the Watch Tower Society, Sunday, August 13 at) 3 p.m. sary adjustments of re-soddi or re-paving would be made. -- The committee tabled the} completed in time for school opening in September. protest for further considera-| tion. GOVERNMENT GRANTS AIRPORT DEVELOPMENT City Has Tentative Approval For Purchase The department of transport lengthen two runways and build in Ontario and ascertain the He says t here will be a need made a recommendation to city has tentatively approved an Oshawa municipal request to buy the federally-owned Osh- awa airport for $56,000, airport peg hg George A. Slocombe, sai The deal has been in the works for about a year, and, if given final consent, would en- title Oshawa to qualify for sub- stantial federal grants under a local cirports' improvement fund. Mr. Slocombe says that be- cause the airport is leased from the federal landlord at $1 a year (a grant in itself) plans te more parking spaces are being stymied. However, if the city is grant- ed the right to buy the airport, it will get a crack at a share of the $1,000,000 Ottawa fund. Whether the department ac- cepts the city's bid for purchase now hinges on a city report to the .government which must prove a need for airport re- development and expansions. Yesterday, board of control took an initial stride in proving its case by directing Mr. Slo- combe to approach several air- port-oriented consulting firms A cost of drawing up the report. Mr. Slocombe would not name the firms he has in mind. LONGER RUNWAYS He told the board the air- port's major need is for a 5,000- foot runway to handle larger aircraft now replacing smaller ones in the field of commercial flying. The longer runway would amount to a 1,500-foot extension to a 3,500-foot landing strip the airport now has, but which Mr. Slocombe suggested is becom- ing obsolete. for an extension of a 2,600-foot runway to 4,000 feet in the fu- ture, and more parking spaces, He could make no cost esti- mate. Mr. Slocombe said if the city hires a consulting firm for an analysis on the airport the re- sulting report to the federal government may incorporate approximate improvement fig- ures. Mr. Slocombe says that once the changes are made "it may attract other people in (to the airport) to build hangars'. Board of control has alse council that a "recreation build- ing and an old house" on the 485-acre airport property be de- clared surplus and ordered re- moved by the federal govern- ment. There is some indication the airport's surroundings may warrant consideration 'as a po- tential industrial base. James Williams, Oshawa Business and Industrial Commission chief, told the board a study should be done on an "'economic basis" with consideration given to pos- sible industrial park develop- ments, | Outdoor Show Tuesday Night Oshawa residents will once again get an opportunity to relax outside, while listening to orchestra music, on Tuesday night at 8.30, when director Bernard Tierney and his 13- piece group present the second of six outdoor concerts at the McLaughlin Band shell in Memorial Park. Their first performance, last Tuesday evening, was well re- ceived by the several hundred who attended. This week, the group will have Jack McLean, a come- dian, as the guest star. He has just returned from a tour of the Yukon. The concerts are sponsored by the Toronto. Musicans' Association through a _ grant from the Radio and Transcrip- tion Trust Fund, and by Gen- eral Motors of Canada Ltd. "Rescuing | Great Crowd of Mankind red of Canada. One proposed site is just jsouth of the present city hall on Queen Street and the other is the south-east corner of Bagot and Centre streets, NO DECISIONS There was no final decision. The board found several draw- backs in both proposals and left the matter of a definite site to be settled between archi- tects of the civic square, the gallery, civic and McLaughlin family officials. Mayor Ernest Marks told the board he thought the city could find a "place for the gallery in the city hall complex' and that it would do '"'justice to the gallery." Both the mayor and Mr. Mc- Laughlin favored the. Queen Street site while city con- trollers fell into a general de- bate on drawbacks. | OBSCURE | Con. Ralph Jones suggested the gallery would be obscure jon the .Queen Street location. | There would only be one route to the gallery -- along Bagot} Street, Queen Street is even- i tually to close as a part of {civic complex planning. He also suggested that John Street, just to the south of Bagot, should be considered for future civic development. Con. Robert Nicol agreed but said if money was going to be a problem, then the "architect should go back to site three (Queen Street)." planned school yard expansion |near the proposed gallery site on Queen wouldn't do much to enhance the exhibition centre. Another problem? If the now defunct plans for a parkway in the Oshawa Creek Valley are suddenly revived, the gal- lery would be partly sitting on expressway territory. Heaviest burden over the Bagot and Centre streets site would be a lack of oarking and expectations that it would cost expectations that it would cost more than $100,000 to ex- propriate several properties to clear the way. "There Con. Nicol pointed out that a! Permitted In Park the| At present the township has|mayor of Oshawa, Con. Frank| nominations for election be held a recreation committee while|McCallum slipped on some ice|at the Anderson Collegiate on council accept patie ag if council members last,an urgent matter which had cl the park. Would "SHEMOZZLE" pce cat Con. Margaret Shaw' said tt should be left to the individual motorists to' find parking for fon lg as chad happened get churned up and there would be/@Uring other construction work. "Let them find their own," she said, "and end this shemozzle." Insisting it was a matter which had to be decided be- fore council rose, Con. Nicol suggested the park could be used subject to suitable control by Fred Crome, commissioner of works, Anoiher council member pointed out that disturbance and damage might be caused by some motorists "roaring" into the park at a late hour. MAYOR'S MOTION At this stage, Mayor Ernest Marks rose to submit a tempo- rary motion which he said might meet the circumstances. This read: "That temporary parking be permitted for the residents on the west side of Simcoe Street from Alexandra Park to Buck. ingham, in the area west of the fence, subject to details being worked out by the commission- er of works, Mr. Crome." After further debate, in which it was suggested police would have difficulty in con- trolling the situation, council adopted the mayor's temporary motion. Land Gift Appreciated A special letter of thanks is to be sent to Col. R. S. McLaughlin by city council for his gift of land worth $25,000 at the corner of Adelaide and Sim- coe Streets, used for road widening. Council adopted the motion, put by Mayor Ernest Marks, after a recommendation from the public works committee for replanting, etc., of the front lawn after the work has been completed. "T don't think this generous gift has been sufficiently ac- knowledged," said the mayor, "and we should let it be known how we feel." Injured Cyclist In Good Condition CLAREMONT (Staff) --, An eight-year-old Claremont cyclist was reported in good condition at the Oshawa General Hospital today after he collided with a dump truck east of the village yesterday. Whitby Ontario Provincial Police reported that at 10 a.m. Monday, Larry Ward was cyc- ling east of the village, on Con- cession 9, when an empty dump 'truck, driven by Hugh McQuaig of Iroquois, Ontario, collided with the bicycle. The boy received a broken collarbone, broken pelvis and a concussion in the accident. No charges have been laid. Con- stable Donald Simmons investi- gated the accident.