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Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Dec 1967, p. 13

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itendents of larger schou. across Canada. Eventu- 1 material will be ed in a book. 1m most anxious," said yigetts, 'that our findings t be interpreted as criti- f the teachers. We prefer us upon course content partmental policies." h ) J@ P.M. ON CBC nced by rd 3000 IN THE CHRYSLER PRESIDENT R. W. TODGHAM (RIGHT) PRAISED ACHIEVEMENT PROGRAM «.- William Brennen, Chamber President George Roberts, Program Chairman George Fletche: Junior Achievement Program Described Oshawa Jaycees were on their feet with eager questions after a speech last night by Ronald W. . Todgham, President of Chrysler Canada Ltd., asking them to back a "Junior Achievement" program in Osh- awa. "Junior Achievement", or JA, is an organization in which high school students set up com- panies to manufacture products or perform services for profit. The organization sells stock, its products and services in order that the students involved can have a business experience. "That," Mr. Todgham said, "is one of the great character- istics of Junior Achievement -- the understanding of how busi- ness and industry operate, and the enthusiasm for participa- tion in business, that it evokes in young Canadians of high school age. "Today in our country," Mr. Todgham, who is also Chairman of the Board of Junior Achieve- ment of Canada, continued, "there are more forces working to undermine public faith in the free enterprise system than per- haps at any other time in our history. The whole business of ing a service for profit seems to be suspect in the minds of more and more people every day . . . the minds of our young people are beset with argu- ments against the very sysiem that has given them so many opportunities. UNDERSTANDING "Many of them," Mr. Todg- ham continued, 'falling for that old idea of government-provided pie-in-the-sky, are being turned against a system which they do not understand simply because they have never had a chance to understand it." If Canada's economy is to grow and prosper, Mr. Todg- ham said, Canadians must lay the groundwork for a continua- tion of faith in the free enter- prise system through teaching young people how it works. "We must accept the job of convincing the young people of our country that it is a good system -- that it can and does work." Junior Achievement is one way this can be done. Personal, first-hand experience is essen- tial, Mr. Todgham pointed out, yet the day of the family busi- ness, in which teen-agers could producing product or provid- learn a business from their par- Several Strange Santas Emerge In Color Contest "Anytime but Christmas," the postman pleads every day as he dumps a batch of 50 or may- be 100 colored Santas on the desk of Mrs. M. M. Martin, business administrator of the Oshawa Shopping Centre. "But who wants to color Santas in July?" is her jovial reply. Since the shopping centre started the 'Color Santa" con- test Nov. 22 Mrs. Martin has received about 700 entries and expects to have 1,000 by the Dec. 13 deadline. Most of the youngsters join- ed the dots to form just Santa's head but some found a head and shoulders and others dis- covered almost the whole body. The nose, which was always the standard fire engine: red, pre- sented definite difficulties to the younger group Some have it long and pointing to the left, others are somewhat stubby and aimed right while many were content to give Santa no nose at all. The beard was the outlet for the children's imagin- ation. Some flowed with fiuffy cotton batting, others glistened with sequins and others droop- ed with several layers of thick white paint. To win the $10 first prize, $5 second prize or one of eight prizes of $2 for third, children have to join a series of dots to form the outline of a Santa and then paint or crayon him. Entry forms were printed in a shop- ping centre circular published in The Times Nov. 22. The prizes will be awarded in three age categories, four to seven, seven to 10, and 10 to 15. POSTMAN WILL DELIVER ESTIMATED 1,000 ENTRIES ents, is over, and "today's young people normally don't get a chance to learn what business is all about while they are receiving their schooling." OBJECTIVES 'All too frequently," he said, "the only objective in school is to pass the examinations and get out of school. The important relationship between work and study -- the need to develop a broad background of learning in preparation for the demand- ing assignments of adulthood in the world of business and indus- try -- is often missing." But a teen-ager working in Junior Achievement would be able to relate what he learns in school to the world of business. "Gentlemen," Mr. Todgham concluded, "if you should undertake to -establish Junior Achievement in Oshawa, I be- lieve you will be doing some- thing that in years to come you'll look back on with a great deal of pride and satisfaction.' MEMBERSHIP DRIVE Junior Achievement plans to open a campaign for member- ship in Oshawa schools early in 1968, a spokesman for William J. Brennan, executive vice-pres- ident of Junior Achievement of Canada told The Times. There are over 4,000 "Achievers", as they are called, working in 10, centres in Canada. Winnipeg has 700, Montreal 500, London 100 and Vancouver 1,000. Junior Achievement was founded in 1919 by Horace A. Moses, then president of the Strathmore Paper Company in Springfield, Mass. It was plan- ned as the city youth's equiva- lent of the rural 4-H Clubs. In) 1929, it was introduced to New York City, and its present oper-| ating format took shape. Jun-|ties for motor oil and gasoline, was ior Achievement sells stock at one dollar a share, and all Achievers are _ stockholders. They form companies of about 20 youths who decide to produce a specific product or service. One company makes coat hang-| ers, another dinnerware and kitchen utensils, while another goes into photography -- por- traits, school functions, dances -- and another films television programs to sell for a profit. Each company keeps its own! books and does its own selling. é Police Network © Tracking Harris She Times | OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1967 | aoe | Oshawa Times Photo ICY SURFACE ON BRIDGE BLAMED FOR CAR SMASH WHITBY (Staff) -- Icy road conditions on the Ritson Road bridge caused a car to spin out of control on the Mac- donald-Cartier Freeway yes- terday afternoon and resulted in $800 damage to the auto. A Whitby Ontario Provin- In this case the Freeway was generally wet but not frozen. On the bridge it was icy and slippery, Husejn Dragic, 28, of Lea- side, had been westbound on the Freeway when his 1965 cial Police spokesman said auto spun out of control and the accident demonstrated slammed into the bridge. A one of the lesser known Whitby OPP officer agreed with Dragic when he said he probably would have been killed in the crash if he had not been wearing a seat belt. dangers of winter driving. He said a bridge can cause at- mospheric differences which will: result in freezing which would not otherwise occur. 'Program Planned For Co-op Buying _It might be possible to estab-|sider the areas in which we lish a program of co-operative|should get involved and those} buying for some commodities among buying agencies in the| Also discussed was the possi- city by the spring of 1968, says|pility of printing other depart- beh --* city puUr-/ment's letter heads and forms chasing agent. in the city's printing depart- He said that at talks be-/ment, Ailes wi lenia tween the two boards of educa-| tion, the public utilities com- mission and the hospital board a considerable amount Of eN-| ation and hospital board were thusiasm was shown by all fj "doggy groups and it looked as if the = exemptions in different idea had been favorably ac- cepted. | All these matters had to be "I think we shall make pro-|Clearly defined and _ seriously lgress," he said. considered before a full scale He said that in a certain de-/Program could be drawn up. gree the system was already|cayve MONEY working for fuel oil where the] « ie city and the public utilities wueaen Par ee shall deft commission had combined their nitely save money," ib added buying, and the school board|«not° only on the cost of the had Ragen a gp age S8V-\larger volume of buying when ing in this area also. prices are reduced somewhat. "Tf in fuel oil why not in| ; lother fields?" he asked. tlgplhtbatg Sqediigg feicna ded There were also possibili- Ge és Listing some items which It which all authorities used. discovered were _ being "We discussed common com-|USed by the various agencies modities that could possibly be|#@ Said that the hospital board co-operatively purchased in the|#"d the 'city were using the pote oi he ede jsame brand of fertilizer, and commodities like toilet tissue} RIGHT TRACK varied only in size and texture. | "Several areas were covered Mr. Crompton said he reports) and most were of the opinion|to the board of control after| we were on the right track./each meeting. "'We are going to We are going to submit lists|try and establish a program Mr. Crompton said that sales jtax may present a_ problem, because the city, board of edu- purchased in this way. "There are lots of things to|by the spring. | der, such as quality, pric-| 'As time goes by -- it may| , |pany "= |remote corner of West Came- A -|roon in Africa to study his fa- -|some 60 apartment units. The ;|Rounthwaite and Dick, of To- . | ronto. * | city. ing and warehousing. We will/take a couple of years even.--| start with the lists submitted|we hope to develop an overall by each group and then con-/program of co-operative buy- He said the idea had been in} Loan Approved vx, ons, rad For Housing buying agencies took place in The Oshawa Housing Com- November. Limited received ap-| 3 proval, Wednesday, from Cen- tral Mortgage and Housing Cor- poration for a loan to assist in the erection of housing for sen- ior citizens on Dean Avenue. The firm, which operates Hal- liday Manor, Bond Street East, and Westmount Hall, on West-| ; mount Avenue, plans to erect| § site, overlooking the southeast section of the city, will eventually accommodate about 120 apartment units. Tenders for the project are expected to be called shortly by the architects, Marani, Ninety per cent of the cost of the structure will be covered by a loan from Central Mort- gage and' Housing Corporation, five per cent by the province and a similar amount by the STUDIES GORILLAS BOURNEMOUTH, England (CP) -- The 20-year-old son of a Hampshire lawyer is going to a two-day banquet for 4 A members of the Retirees' vorite hobby--the habits of go-| att ene ' rillas. William Crichley'said, "1] Club of Local 222, United have been fascinated by gorillas) Auto Workers Union, «ee Shopping Centre Administrator Mrs, M. M. Martin > since I read my first Tarsan| wound-up yesterday at the book at the age of nine." local's administration and ® approved the cost structure and a "final" application for fi- nances to construct a proposed $3,350,790 special school on Gibb Street west of Cshawa Creek. plication is ceive we had better leave alone." | industrial park. Special Cost Approved yesterday|of the soft-soil site has already | Offices in March. been completed. | Board of control The board of education ap-} council approval next) week. | Before the board the application Con. Shaw complained the board of education should have submit- ted a detailed review to con- trollers of the proposed method of financing. She called for education reports to include the number and the cost of building indi- vidual classrooms along with an outline of the governmen- tal grants the city is applying for. The cost application appear- ed on the controllers' agenda yesterday in one sentence that read: Making final application for funds in the total amount of $3,350,790 for the construc- tion of the new «snecial voca- tional school. PILING WORK Meanwhile, a_ preliminary $41,000 contract to sink con- Piekarz, said in an interview)! . following yesterday's f vocationallthe project is running months|i behind but he hopes building will start almost immediately. i The schoo! -- which doesn't/ahead\ of international police. expected to re-| yet approved|780 students who would work Margaret|out of some 40 academic class- Chase Expected To End ' When Finances Depleted John E. Harris -- now be-|invalid Canadian passport or he lieved to be in a Communist}may have a fraudulent one," }country -- is given about six|says Det.-Sgt. Grubb. He confirmed a report by }more months of running by an/ C OO Ontario Provincial Police anti-/Oshawa manufacturer David . |rackets branch spokesman. Henry that Harris was in Syd- f man faces | Oshawa Acceptance Corporation The former Oshawa Business laey; Australia, in October. eight charges of|Henry, president of a swimming raud and one of the:t by con-|pool company, told The Times version. The charges were laid|this week he met with Harris following a police raid of his|briefly in a Sydney hotel, Oct, 12. Det.-Sgt. Grubb says that Detective - Sergeant J. E.|based on information he has, The school's principal, C. K.| Grubb, a chief OPP investigator) Interpol landed in Sydney about have a formal name -- should be opened in 1969. It will have a capacity for roughly rooms and 24 practical train- ing areas. FEATURES | One feature will be a horticul-| ture course, including a green-| house, landscaping and garden-| ing instruction. | The school's interior equip-| ment will cost some $360,000. A Brampton firm, Mitchell Construction Company of Can- ada Limited, won out over six other bidders last month for construction rights at a cost of $2,895,000 -- the lowest tender. The company anticipates it) could complete the project by the end of 1968 -- but stipulates that work would have to start now and progress without inter- country without a valid passport) Philippines. 'In and is only days at a time|was throwing money around like n the case, told The Times|four or five days too late to meeting|from Toronto today that Harris|pick up Harris and that by this s jumping from country tojtime he was somewhere in the Australia, he it was going out of style," Sgt, Within six months, Det.-Sgt.| Grubb says he expects the Grubb said. An undisclosed party in Osh- "large chunk of money" Harris|awa told the investigator "the took with him when he left Can-| other day" that. Harris was in ada in February will have run|a Communist country. A Cana- out. dian Press spokesman says "There is no doubt about it,"| there are no Communist . coun- said the police officer. "He will|tries in South America -- an turn up."' CREDIT CARD Det.-Sgt. Grubb says Harris has run up a $14,000 bill on a credit card that an international company is futilely attempting to cut off. A trail of Harris' credit account bills keeps Inter- pol about 30 days behind him. Harris' passport ran out about the time he left the country and his name is now on the "watch- ing list' of the immigration de- partment which will not renew his travelling. rights. As a result, Harris is using an area that Harris apparently likes very much, according to Det.-Sgt. Grubb. REALTY FIRM The OPP detective also says that the Oshawa firm of North Shore Realty Company Limited -- one of some 14 subsidiaries of the acceptance corporation is to hold a creditors meeting in a downtown hotel Sunday afternoon. The inactive realty firm has assets and the meeting is to de- termine what is to become of them. ventions. Government grants are ex- pected to cover $2,500,000 of the total cost. crete piling into the foundation Jobless Registrations jtered for employment did not show a substantial change dur- ing November, says J. W. A. Russell, manager of the Can- ada Manpower Centre in Osh- awa. About 3,600 persons were un- employed last month. A 'Change Little In Month The number of persons 2 About 355 persons are regis- opportunities more their skills. King Re-elec ted President Ontario Corps Association 1 | Alan King of Oshawa has been | returned for his second term as |president of the Ontario Cana- jdian Conps Association. He was elected by acclamation. And another city man, Ernest \R. Bell, is once again the asso- ciation's Ontario command ex- tered at the centre although ecutive officer. He previously they are employed. Mr. Russell|peld this office several years jsays they are waiting for jobjago and was president of the in line with|local unit, number 42, in 1961. Mr. King, 427 Bernhard Cres., was president of the Oshawa There was little demand for) init 42 in 1963-64 ,_ moni neW agricultural workers last month| sae system of maintaining records/tn¢ report shows, but skilled) The association, at the centre presents comparl-/tradesmen were in demand. sons with previous months. However, the December report! will contain figures to compare} November and December un-) 'employment. City Backs Land Option Final steps for the signing} of a six-month option on the} 100-acre property of former) mayor Lyman Gifford at the) lakeside are under way today.| A special meeting of city) council was held last night! and accepted a Ast commis | tion of the industrial commis- sion relating to the option. | The press was barred from) the meeting but Mayor Ernest} Marks, in a statement issued/ today, said a decision should| be arrived at within the next) and his solicitors. James Williams, industrial) commissioner, said the Gifford property is zoned industrial and appears to be prime land for would have to be made if the option is finalized. | The property is on Farewell | Avenue and adjoins the nie Construction work in the city during November "maintained steady production" causing a decrease in the number regis- tered at the manpower centre. A number of vacancies for sales clerks existed. Qualified persons were need- ed in occupations like account- ing, programming and adver- tising display, Multilith opera- tors, short order cooks, dairy hands, auto mechanics and body repairmen, offset press- men, carpenters, stationary en- gineers, mechanical engineers, physiotherapists, - social work- ers, nurses, waitresses and housekeepers, 407 Blood Donors | Recorded At Clinic The Oshawa Red Cross Blood Donor Service fell short of its of the Matec grape welin 1968," he said. 'Our next| few days as to whether the!500-pint goal at its clinic yes- buy an ecide which can €'meeting is in January and we|terms of the option agreement|terday in St. Gregory's Audi- hope to make certain decisions are acceptable to Mr. Gifford! torium. Only 407 donors gave a pint each. Robert Stroud, chairman of the service, said this figure included about 50 new donors."" Last month it col- ing." |this purpose, although soil tests) lected 439 pints of blood. "T think a lot of people who intended to come in the last few hours of the clinie decided not to because of the rain," said Mr. Stroud. assembly hall on Bond Street East. The annual af- fair may lose its exclusive- ness next year because of an expected large jump in the club's membership fig- & : oe) = 1,000 MEMBERS OF LOCAL 222 RETIREES' CLUB ATTEND ures. The event may bé@ blended with the local's an- nual Christmas party and summer picnic into one big celebration at Civic Audi- torium. Officials at the clos- / we some 450 members in the city, jthe whole of the province. The |organization is dedicated to fur- |thering the interests of veterans from as far back as the Boer War right up to the Congo and Cyprus operations. The main target at the moment is the raising of the $2,760 annual 100 per cent dis- ability pension which has been the same since the First World War era. "We feel it should be much more than that," said Mr King. The association is also trying to get a more generous agree- ment over hospitalization for veterans, Directors of the association from Oshawa are Mr Bell, Wil- liam Judge, Mr King and George Paterson. | TWO-CAR CRASH One person was taken to hos- pital when two cars received damage estimated at $1,850 after a collision at Wentworth Street and Park Road South jearly this morning. Mrs. Elaine |Krauss, Buffalo, New York, a |passenger in a late model con- vertible driven by Edward Dale, also of Buffalo, was taken to Oshawa General Hos- pital where she was examined jand released. The second car, a station wagon which received $1,000 damage, was driven by Ernest Turner, Apt. 4, 485 Rit- which has has several thousand throughout ALAN KING e+-Second Term Tribute Paid To Magistrate PICKERING -- Tribute to Magistrate Francis Simon Ebbs who died Dec. 5, was voiced by Magistrate Donald Dodds dur- ing the session of the magise trate's court here Thursday. "T believe, in terms of years of service, he was the senior magistrate in the Province of Ontario," Magistrate Dodds said. "'He administered the law in Ontario firmly, fairly and with compassion. He adminis- tered the law in a democratic manner as is suitable and justi- fiable in a democracy. "He was a gentleman, a fine lawyer and a good magistrate. I am sure that all citizens of Ontario and especially those who administer justice will join with me in extending sympathy to Mrs. Ebbs and her three daughters." ing day of the event get together. They are, left to right, Thomas Simmons, first vice-president of Local 222; Albert Sargeant, club secretary; Mrs. Clifford Pilkey, president of the oY TWO-DAY BANQUET local's women's auxiliary; Sid McCormick, club presi- dent, and William Harding, secretary - treasurer of the local. The club now has more than 1,000 members. (Oshawa Times Photo)

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