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Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Aug 1967, p. 9

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ke sts eduction to 40 from w get $2.60 an hour. yrkers are demand- -stage increase of ir over a two-year nging their hourly re present $3.63 to y 1, 1968. n, they want the reduced from 40 to school trustee said yeek that school ex- been set back a ronstruction strikes. 1 are highway and iction and. comple- extension of Tor- west subway, first yr the end of this w set back at least uckland i Seats mselves. To date n maintain that the need separate rep- in Parliament to he special interests ROVISIONS Maori leaders are » admit that the sys- full integration of into the community. iajority of other dis- provisions in the ng since been abol- ce all four Maori been held for many ie Labor party. The 1e party in a some- ard position. Its pol- gly against any form iscrimination. But it whether the spread otes over the whole uld. win it as many as the four it would ping out the Maori ----? ce -DOTRICE aa WYNN KAY AATCOKLEC RL 7;:20--9:35 IY \ Ss . Y, "ay "KING ST OSHAWA --_ anne aie) RE ea et POLISH VETERANS HOLD $ POLISH VETERANS HOLD OUTDOORS MASS AT GENERAL SIKORSKI PICNIC GR OLDIERS' DAY CELEBRATIONS OUNDS 3 Ae "4 *= commanding f Me & Held In City officer of * ceremony at Sikorski Polish Veterans picnic 4, Srounds Sunday. _ Mr. Giera outlined the _his- Day" to a large crowd. Rey- rend Emil Pagacz conducted a hurch service at 11:30 a.m. and orical importance of "Soldiers' | Kelly-Ann, 2. He is also The Gen. W. Sikorski Polish| German Ohe Sunes 4/OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, AUGUST 14, 1967) sustained in a Friday 338 Masson St., ing in a water ng show Fri day at Lake Kashagawigamoz pact of the diving board. He was rushed to Haliburton transferred to Ross Memorial Hospital, Lindsay, accident A radio spokesman said to- day Mr. Crysdale was ployed by CKLB for the past 4 }music and congeniality {morning listeners. The spokes- jman said Mr. Crysdale was a jpopular radio man because of his lively sense of humor. | Born in Montreal, Mr. Crys- \dale lived in Toronto before icoming to Oshawa four years | Soldiers Day 2":.*...curstcs ' Ceremonies Mr. Crysdale is. survived by lhis wife, the former Elizabeth | Hiliary Bennett and a daughter, sur- | vived by his mother, Mrs. Helen Crysdale of Port' Credit, land a sister, Mrs. Penelope was assisted by Reverend| McLeod, of Toronto. Antoni Rabiega, M.O.I., who| ---------------------- 923 translated the sermon into English. Douglas Gordon Crysdale, 28, was participat- ' when he hit a diving board. A life-jacket took some of the 1m- Red Cross Hospital and later | where he died, about 19 hours after the | em- for Veterans' Ladies Auxiliary held an open-air luncheon. Sports events for children and dancing were other highlights of the day. gelers, C.D., Ontario Revi~ent; Fire Chief Ray Hobbs; Y" liam Stacey, representing the United Council of Veterans' Associa- tions, Oshawa and district and ' Earl Myers, president of the Canadian Naval Club, * among the special guests. "Soldiers' Day" is also known as 'The Miracle of the Vistula Battle." isfactory condition at Oshawa General Hospital today. After the attack, Cindy was in the operating room at the tors fought to save the sight of was then stated as critical. Constable Robert Roy of Port Perry police said the girl lhad serious injuries to her left ripped. The dog also bit her on i arms, hands, In Oshawa ":. girl's mother, Mrs. Oshawa is home to one of the|/to clean the family car when «most unusual dogs in Canada. |she heard the screams of the) Mrs. Harold Hoard, Garrard| child and the dog growling. Road North, returned from the| With a neighbor, Mrs. Chris .,|Barrie Dog.. Show which took|Buller, she ran to the adjoin- |place recently to report that herjing field where the dog was two-month-old dachshund was/|tied and, as Mrs. Buller at- e centre of attention. tracted the dog's attention, she Most dachshunds are either|Pulled her daughter clear. chocolate or red in color, but! Con. Roy said Mrs. Heurkens |Mrs. Hoard's dog is of an ex-|told him Cindy will need plastic tremely rare silver hue. surgery at a later date. Officials at the show said| He said the dog's owner, Rob- there were none of the type injert Sutcliffe, was away on Sat- | Ontario and that the only breed-|urday and did not return until er was in Trois Rivieres, Que-|early Sunday morning. He was bec. shocked on learning of the acci- een HONORED GUESTS PARTICIPATE IN PICNIC LUNCH Shepherd Dog Mauls Three-Year-Old ' \ of had never previously given any) their four-day convention. superinten- Ernest Marks; Col. L. P. Tig-| was savagely mauled by a Ger-| ; }man shepherd dog Saturday| which has afternoon was said to be in sat-|antine for Were |hospital for 24 hours, as doc-| her left eye, and her condition} » | s vas badly! 'Grade 13 results will prob- Unusual Dog: ane na Fos algo bit her on|ably be in the hands of Osh- cheeks and|awa students Wednesday,' {Joseph Heurkens, was helping | educated City Man Dies Water Mishap A morning announcer at Osh- awa's radio station CKLB died Saturday of internal injuries he water-skiing accident in the Haliburton area | A | DOUG CRYSDALE | ... Fatally injured Mrs. Crysdale attended the The late Mr. Crysdale is rest- ing at the Armstrong Funeral |Home. Rev. R. J. Barker of Christian and Missionary Alli- ance Church will conduct the funeral service at 2 p.m. to- morrow. Burial will be held at Mount |Lawn cemetery. Albert V. Walker, MPP for f Oshawa riding; Con. Robert} Cindy Heurkens, three, ' Nicol representing May orj|Simcoe Street, Port Perry, who|trouble. been placed in quar 14 days so that it jean be tested for rabies. A report of the incident is to o the Crown Attorney. n Marks 'Wednesday | g g' Exam ' | Arthur Woods, secondary school jinspector, said today. But he |admitted he was only taking an guess" since he more than he had |read in the newspapers. |knew little UAW Will Apply For Conciliation Burt Says Strike Vote Not Planned In Canada The United Auto Workers| Mr. Burt answered with a flat junion, bargaining with four Ca-|"no" when asked if there was jnadiar. subsidiaries of Generaljany chance that a_ possible {Motors for new working con-|UAW strike in the U.S. could jtracts, is set to file for con-|be restrained until such time as | ciliation procedure, : Canadian workers could legal- | George Burt, Canadian UAW|ly strike. He said GM had been jregiona! director, says UAW|/asked» 'to 'open bargaining in |bargaining proposals will be|Canada July 10 to coincide with |totally tabled within 10 days to|the start of contract talks at |two weeks, and in about the|Detroit for U.S. workers. las rangi i jsame range of time the union He added: "We are not satis the way negotiations {expects to apply for concilia- tied at 'are going over there, The com- tion. Bargaining between GM and pany has not moved in any di- \the union, representing more i . \than 23,006 Ontario and Quebes|tnins for yg os Pond 'an sxwibas et ind] 4 5 rN, iets avert into its third) Ford and Chrysler)." Mr. Burt says the union in-| LOCAL TALKS tends filing for conciliation in-| volving local talks at Ste | Therese Que., where GM has a car-producing plant, no later |than the end of the month : This week Canadian bargain- ing will be strictly on local agreements at the six union locals -- meaning that meeting |schedules have been re-ar- | «6 : : eye 7 : ° ° fetta te Be SOCGer, 2 att | ane for the first time since ys *|bargaining opene we will be filing for conciliation) y,), 31 @ Cheney tn: Carade, jin both provinces," he said. vanes ea! ; re Six union locals are included), GM and UAW officials had in Ontario - Quebec bargaining] initially set aside three days a sessions -- Oshawa Local 222 is| Week to talk on a master agree- lthe largest involved, with a|ment (general set of rules) for |membership of some 12,000 ouis) locals; Plus two days for |hourly - rated workers. Other| 4 death on area contracts. locals are in St, Catharines,| Albert Taylor, Local 222 pres- |Windsor, London and Toronto, |ident, said on the weekend |STRIKE VOTE meetings had swung to local In a telephone interview, Mr.|levels of talks because of a planned meeting of Canadian | race |Burt said the Canadian division jof the UAW has no immediate|and U.S. GM officials. plans for a strike vote though; He said he was given to U.S. members of the union have/yunderstand the corporation's been asked to take one, |management was having the The Canadian UAW contract| meeting on the American side, Zbigniew Giera, a former|ago. He attended the Christian} water-skiing show with her hus- with GM ends Oct. 31, while in};But a GM spokesman in Oshe the|and Missionary Alliance Church|pand but did not see the acci-!the U.S © Polish 10th Dragoons, was guest|and was a member of the Osh-| 4 "speaker at a "Soldiers' Day" |awa Junior Chamber of Com-| the General W.|merce. the deadline is Sept. |awa said he could not confirm 6, meaning U.S. workers could|if there was such a meeting in \legally strike Sept, 7. 'mind. Civic Auditorium Packed; Four-Day Convention Ends {oa ow, supervisor of Witnesses' MacNamara, officejed the earth and allowed only the Jehovah's|eight to survive, and this could Toronto head-jeasily happen again." Osh- Con. Roy impounded the dog,} quarters, complimented awa's "fine facilities and good co-operation'"' after 6,780 Wit- nesses crowded Civic Audi- torium Sunday for the close 0! Ross Dahmer, dent of Civic Auditorium, said, \"The place was pretty well jpacked. People were sitting on jrailings and steps, and many jsat on the grass and listened to loud speakers, which were |placed outside." He said the only larger |crowd on record was a Gen- jeral Motors ratification meet- ing of two years ago, when more than 7,000 were present. However, he said, this was the largest attendance for a multi- ple day event. Attendance on Saturday was 5,563, bringing the four-day total close to the 20,000 mark. | Mr. MacNamara said he had jexpected 4,500 at most would {be at the auditorium, which nor- jmally seats 3,400, on any one The results are expected to/day. | arrive at Oshawa high schools on Tuesday and will be mailed directly to the students, he said, This year, Mr. Woods said, the marks are also being sent directly to universities through- out Ontario. A computer sys- tem will make these marks available to any university in Canada. This year, 374 Oshawa stu- dents have written about 3,000 The Sunday crowd, largest of the four days, gathered primar- ily to hear a public address} and closing remarks by Mr. cuing a Great Crowd of Man-} vided the theme for the con- in recent years. Mr. MacNamara grade 13 papers. The number of students is an increase of 36 over last year. Mrs. Hoard describes her/dent and said that the animal .». Guest Speaker At Annual "Soldiers' Day" Was Zbigniew Giera (Bottom Left) dog, which was born on the day of the Oshawa Dog Show, | PISSED rT ENC ee Satan's Choice President Sells Browning Street House "= \the litter which is not grey but! : A 24-year-old laid-off auto|summer as leader of Satan'sjclub; they are at a 40-acreymember has escaped being|Which she is keeping for at} worker who is president of the|Choice. farm at Nestleton, Ont., near| charged by police with one vio-| least. six.months because of the| Satan's Choice Motorcycle Club] He claims to be a_ chief|Peterborough. lation or another. |Possibility that it might turn in| in Oshawa says he has been|spokesman in the Satan's} Guindon says police harass-| 'Police say when I move, {color. ; | forced to sell his Browning|Choice movement in Canada}ment of club members who/they'll move. Which means|. She hopes to discover a grey! Street house because of "policejand says his bungalow was|come to visit him at Browning|they'll stop bothering me \female dachshund to breed| never headquarters for the localiStreet is so bad that not one|Police threaten all the guys on|With her animal. If this could | --------ltheir bikes . . . 'Either get out|@ done, it would be possible} of the club or we'll take away for her to find a market for the| "Idogs in that they would be a! harassment." Bernie Guindon -- leader of) the 25-member cluh -- says his) 480 Browning St. residence} could no longer be used as a} "railying point" for cyclists. | Guindon, a welterweight fight-) er with a record of about nine} losves in 42 fights, says he has} sold his bungalow because he can't have "any friends come; the police will write. tickets." A painting and decorating) syndicate in Whitby bought the home July 31 and Guindon, his wife and one child, must va- cate by Sept. 15. Some residents in the area who went as far as the city council level to quell noisy club activities at Guindon's home are still skeptical he is actually going | But Guindon says he has "had it up to here' and is defi- nitely moving out. OUT OF CITY He says he is negotiating to buy a home on a one-acre plot but would not disclose the loca- tion othe: than by saying it was about "a half-mile out of town." Guindon and family have lived in the bungalow about six years and he is in his third' CARS START MONDAY 9,000 Recalled By GM As Truck Lines Rolling General Motors in Oshawa an- nounced today about 5,000 hour- ly-ratea workers are back on the job and that a total of 6,000 may be working by mid-week. Truck assembly lines began rolling this morning for the first time since the end of June and most workers are em- nloved at material handling, maintenance and production of car-truck components. A GM spokesman told The Times recalls will continue at a clip that would be based on the unpredictable influx speed of production materials. He said »rodvctiorn forces might be up to about 6,000 by the middle of the week if materials flow in rapidly. Meanwhile, there is no change' in GM plans to resume car as- sembly line production next Monday. The spokesman could not say how many workers were called back for today. The summer production re- cess -- in preparation for pro- duciion of 1968 model cars and trucks -- started for most of some 12,400 hourly-rated work- ers July 24. Only about 3,000 workers stayed at work during the changeover period. Some employees who work at truck cab construction or mak- ing parts for cars and trucks were recalled last weck. The production force is expected to reach a peak '"'sometime in Sep- tember", jyour licence',"" says Guindon. | One resident says he will be- lieve Guindon is moving out "when I see them out." He |says the value of his own home |will shoot up about $2,000 when Guindon vacates. | The resident said Guindon |would have the odd party at his bungalow when he first moved in, then "they got wild- er and rougher. The language started getting rough." At least one Browning Street resident sold out because he had enough, recalls one resi- dent. He described parties at Guindon's place that kept peo- ple up all night and most of the morning -- some breaking up as late as 3 and 4 a.m. "They were drinking outside and inside." He says he has no personal animosity towards Guindon. "I talked to him the first year he was here. He was alright af that time." Tue resident' said cycle gatherings sometimes amount- ed to a get-together of 20 to 30 bikes at a time. |point of interest. On Simcoe Bridge Traffic using the Simcoe Street South bridge over Osh- awa Creek will be re-routed from § a.m. Tuesday for three days while construction work is undertaken to raise the ap- proaches on either side, the traffic department said today. Vehicles will have to travel via Thomas Street, Valley Drive and Lakeview Park Ave- nue. MINOR INJURIES Four persons received minor injuries in an automobile acci- dent on the Macdonald - Cartier Freeway early Saturday after- noon, about one mile east of Ajax. Four cars were involved 'rear-end collisions in the eastbound lane. All of the in- jured were in a car driven by William Phillips, 74, of West Hill, Ont, | Traffic Re-Routed | Italian Consul to Canada, Mario Carosi, second from right, congratulates Franco Politano, left, newly elected president of the recently founded Oshawa Club for OSHAWA ITALIAN the Italian Community, to be known as '"'The Oshawa Italian Recreation Club." The club is a result of the official amalgamation of two former clubs for Italians the CLUBS ing the wickedness of world. Other features of the con- vention were the baptism of about 80 Witnesses in the Carousel Inn swimming pool \Friday, and three "Bible jdramas" directed by profes- sional actor Scott Peters. Two were presented Saturday and one Sunday. Mr. Peters used a technique which required the voices of the actors to be pre- recorded and then synchronized with their movements and ace |tions on the stage. Witnesses from four prov- inces, 12 of the United States and seven countries attended the convention. Boy, 2, Dies By Drowning vention, the biggest in Oshawa|Catholic Church at | Tuesday discussed] will sing the mass, Interment how God is dedicated to fight-|will be in Resurrection Ceme- the) tery. Mark Huculak, 2, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Erast Huculak, 165 Lilac Court, died Sunday by drowning, near Fenelon Falis Besides his parents, he is survived by a sister, Roma and MacNamara. His speech, "'Res-}a brother, George. The deceased is at the Arm- kind Out of Armageddon," pro-|strong Funeral Home for mass in St. George's Ukrainian Greek 10 a.m., Rev, J. C. Pereyma Prayers will be recited at the "God," he said, "once flood-! funeral home at 8 p.m, today. Oshawa Italia Club and the Italia Social and Recreation Club. Also in the picture are Dan lannuzzi, chairman for the amalgamation meeting, second from left, and Tony AMALGAMATE Paolozza, right, president of the former Italia Social and Recreation Club. President Politano was also the presi- dent of the former Oshawa Italia Club.

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