The Lucknow Sentinel, 1973-06-06, Page 15DAY, JUNE 6, 1913'
THE LUCKNOW SENTINEL, LIICKNOW, ONTARIO
CRAWFORD MOTORS
TH
CHRYSLER - DODGE PLYMOUTH
WINGHAM ONTARIO
PHONE 357-3862
OR Rideau 500, 2 door hardtop, 8 automatic, power
sting and brakes and radio
RONET 500 4 door sedan, V8 automatic, powersteering
and brakes and radio
LYMOUTII Fury II; 2 door hardtop, 8 automatic, power
steering and brakes
STANG, 8 automatic, power steering and radio
RD Custom 2 door, 8 automatic, power steering.
nd brakes •
OR Rideau 500, 2 door hardtop, 8 automatic,
power brakes and steering
DGE-Dart 4 door, A automatic
II
V.% ton V8, with radio, van type box
RD 3. ton pickup
ani
V 4 door sedan
ONARCH 4 door sedan, power brakes and steering
and radio
RIPLEY HItITES
TION DAY
umped several months
ture on. May 31 as
students from Ripley-
tral School joined the
students, as they will,.•
mber, in Orientation
hies. All pupils went
in which they plan to -
this fall:' As the public
des headed for the build
oor with Mrs. Hender-
Armstrong, and Mrs.
e senior levels Occup -
und' floor and went
e hour-long periods ,of
d semester system, an
next year at RDHS•
three and four were .
NLOUGH.
Mrs, Albert i?dwards
urst spent a few days
d Mrs. Frank Moulder'
On Wednesday the
ccompanied them to
eh return trip.
er the week end with
a.Hodgins were Mr.
ony Redford and Dani '
on of Toronto, Ezra
ucknow and Darryl
Huron,
received here of the
Joseph • Charpentier
ke just a few months
ath of Mr. Charpentier,
ympathy to the ber`-
y'
Gillespie has been a
e Wingham and Dist -
We wish her im -
h;.
and friends honoured
S. Fralik Currie of
d formerly of conces-
ni on the occasion ,Of
eddin$ anniversary at
held in the Legion
Wine on. Saturday
ge Graham will be
e Anglican Church
et home next. Thurs-'
'n (June 14th).
ood Women's inti
et on Thursday (even.
at the home of
Boyle,
devoted to giving the elementary.
students a taste of RDHS's enjoy-
able moments. Wielding ham-
burger patties and
barbecue utensils outside the
school's .kitchen and cafeteria area
were Mr.' Brian Esch, and the
level five students who worked •
diligently to provide the noon •
hour meal.
A baseball game followed in.
which the teachers, took on the
students in; another tooth -and -
claw battle. RDHS, famous for
its student -teacher rivalries in
the field of sports, had previous-
ly
'seen a volleyball and a
basketball game , of this type
earlier in the year.
On hand as umpires for the
game was the famous trio of
Winkin' Blinkin' and Nod, alias
Joan. Ferguson. Margie MacKay
and Shirley McCreath while
clown Anne Stanley, plunged
fielders into avid despair with
her antics.
The .game -resulted in a tie in
favour of the students.
FILM FEATURES
An assembly at RDHS on June 1,
•featured slides from the audio-vis-
ual department of the Bruce Coun-
ty Board of Education. Mr. Jim
Coyne, a representative
from Chesley, explained that the
slides were presented in order
to• give the students an idea of how
visual stimuli. enhances `verbal
explanations or music. ,.
The first series of slides in
which pupils from the W. E.
Thompson public school in Kin-
cardine
in-cardine demonstrated puppet con-
struction, showed a simple arrange
ment. The second one viewed
was a product of Mr. Coyne's
own imagination..
This subsequent performance
was entitled "Joseph and his Tech-
nicolour Dream Coat" - and the
music was produced by the same
group of artists who made "Jesus
Christ, Superstar" so popular. The
slides that accompanied it, were,
selected by Mr. Coyne and these
featured not only Middle East
scenes,' but ones from the Canad-
ian Arctic as well.. Mr. Coyne
received the inspiration of us-
ing Eskimo pictures from his
observations of that race's diffi-
culty to perceive Christianity.
REPORT FROM
QUEEN'S PARK
BY MURRAY GAUNT
M.P.P. HURON - BRUCE
The Ontario Hydro Committee
continued its hearings this week.
In a document tabled as an ex-
hibit, Ontario Hydro was told five
weeks after it agreed to have
Canada Square Corporation build
its new headquarters , by . its senior
financial analyst, that the agree-
ment did not ensure , as had been
thought, that Hydro would share
in any savings on construction
costs.
• The cost reductions would be
passed onto Hydro in the form of
lower rents only if the
appraised value on. completion
adequately reflects that reduction,.
"Since the basis for
appraisal is still subject to some
doubt, there is no assurancethat
the saving will be passed on, any
difference clearly bei ng a'surplus
to Canada Square."
The document was a
confidential memorandum to Mil-
an Nastich, Hydro's assistant gen-
eral manager - finance, dated
the -4th December , 1972, nearly
five weeks after the agreement
with Canada Square was executed
by Hydro.
Under the agreement, Hydro
could require the developer to
retain a firm of cost control con-
sultants to determine whether the
project cost less than.
$44,400,000..
In the event the building cost
less , 75To of the savings would
accrue to Hydro in the form of a
reduction in the proposed rent
of $4.84 per square foot.
Mr. Lamb's analysis noted that
the estimated construction cost of
$34 per square foot "is slightly
above an average value for office
buildings today', and was the high
i
PAGE FIFTEEN
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est of the proposals submitted by
developers."
Hydro Chairman George Gather
cole., questioned about the Pro-
jection of Commission architect
Ken Candy's calculation that
Canada Square's "net cash flow
per year" on the project would
be $192,283" , .replied that this .
was a.venturesome effort. "I
look at it' as being rather a shot
in the dark" , he said. I •
Plans for regional government
for Norfolk and Haldimand coun-
.ties were tabled in the Legisla-
ture.
Treasurer John White said -he
will require full discussion .of
.these plans in public before imple
mentation.
An Ontario Legislative Commit-
tee has called for a mixture of
laws and education to protect
other people from snowmobilers,
and to protect snowmobilers from
themselves.
The Committee called for re-
strictions on their. use on roads
or by children, large numeral id-.
You
Lower Cost
Beef. Feeds
entification, and exemption of
snowmobilers from the protection
of the Petty Trespass Act.
Most use of roads would .be
phased : out by July 1975, with the
Province providing alternative
trails on public land.
Altogether there are 47 recom-
mendations which would impose
many restrictions onsnow mach-
ine owners and operators similar
to those for a car.
Any operator who was on priv -
ate property would . be foiced to
stop if requested by the owner" or
occupant and produce identifica-
tion, licence and written permis-
sion to be on the land
Even where a snowmobiler had
permission to use., land, the owner
would not be liable for injury' un-
less he caused it maliciously , or
unless he was .charging a fee for
the use of the land.
The Committee received .more
than 300oral and written presen
tations .
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LUCKNOW — PHONE 528.2026