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The Huron Expositor, 1975-04-03, Page 5nds Ill '44 in . ' • • CLINTON, The University of Western Ontario plans to offer• Evening and bay, SumMer School Courses in English, ,Psychology, Sociology, Physical Education and Politics for degree credit: Classes will meet in Central H-uron Secondary SOlool EVENING SUMMER SCHOOL DAY SUMMER SCHOOL t'• July 2 - August 12, 1975, Mondays through Thursdays Examinations. August 13 - 15 10:30 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. *P.E.. 020 (Introduction to Physical Education) Faculty of Physical Education 10:30 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Politics 131 (International Politics) *Afternoon Hours P.E. 020, labs 1:30 - 3:30 p.m., Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays NOTE: NEW 'Students applying to begin University work at EVENING SUMMER SCHOOL must apply by APRIL 4th. Are You Interested in Beginning Work Towards a B.A. Degree? Miss Angela Armin, the Director of The Summer School and Extension Department, Univeraiti of Western Ontario-, will be conducting interviews. DATE: Thursday, April 3rd, 1975 • TIME: 4:00 to 8:30 p.m. PLACE: A Central Huron Secondary Scheel, Clinton Ttig EXP(41TOR :Npait, Z.1075. rt4 journals and on cigarette packs. You probably heard cigarette tobacco contains cancer-producing agents. Did you "''"know that about 6000 Canadiansi die of lung cancer every year? ' • You probably read that nicotine contained in cigarettes is a dangerous drug that attacks the lungs, h ears and brain. it can also lead to smoking dependence which has been li nked to • Smokers, if you want to. gamble with, your health, that's your business. But,' when your habit jeopardizes my health, it becomes my business, too. I 'won't giVe a lengthy lecture on the''3, personal hazards of smoking. 'You hear them oil the TV and radio; you read them ' in newspapers, hiagazines and medical smokers, endure scratchy•throats, watery, ' stinging• eyes -and coughs. For years we thought we had to put up with this. But 'why should we? Non-smokers' have rights, too. Most smokers oblige a person sC'ho explains she is 'allergic to tobacco smoke: They quickly. extinguish their cigarettes, ' cigars or pipe&. However; a non-smoker, who finds th smog merely irritating; sometimes r eives less consideration. "' other forms,of dependence, such as heroin.• Many.srnOkewontend, "Why shouldn't and alcohol. I itriOke whenever and wherever I want to? .Perhaps you read that cigarette smoking • It's ' a free • country," That's true. But is as dangerous to our generation as the, epidemic diseases of typhoid, cholera and tuberculosis were to previous generations. You probably know emphysema is almost exclusively a smokers' disease. However, did you know the cigar and cigarette smoke exhaled from your mouth and lungs can cause illness to the people around 'you? Recent medical studies support the contention of many physicians that tobacco smoke has harmful effects on non-smokers. '. Tobacco smoke is a major air pollutant .Thousands- of tons of ' tobacco are "combusted" into ,the air every year. Last year Canadians bought over 54 billion cigarettes and more than 612 million cigars. 19 million pounds of tobacco were purchased in other forms. That causes a lot of air pollution! ' In a Crovid0 Mtn, tobacco, smoke fills the air with catb9n monoxide, the deadly poison found In automobile exhaust. We non-smokers are subjected to the saute dangers as you smokers. , .I4lon-smokers are often' out-numbered at meetings ..and in offices, restaurants, theatres and adult education clasSroOrns a's well 'as on airplanes and trains. s One million to,3 Canadians are sensitive to tobacco smoke. They,stIffer uncomfortable and sometimes serious' reactions to it. , • • While in a ,inoky.roomy, most non- by, Townshend Fully Processed ,SIDE of BEEF PrOc'essed lb.69' SIDE of PORK•••••••••••••• * . ••• •••••.••••• • 10 lb. BEEF PATTIES ••••.•• ... ••••••••••••••••• -7.90 .10 lb. TURKEY WINGS ••••••••:••••••'•••••••Sw 2.90 FreSh SPARE RIBS Mciple Leaf SIDE BACON' ••••••0900114•••• sliced Store Sliced SIDE BACON ____00,0.,•••••••••••••••••••••••••,14. BABY BEEF LIVER ••••••••••••••••••••••.“ Burns Sweet Pickled COTTAGEROLL •••••••,•••••••••••••••••••• ib. Sliced' ' MINCEDHAM'- 0.••••:••••.•.....••••••••.••• lb. 79' ANOTHER INJURY An instructor, points put how to do it as Harry Hak bandages a classmath's leg at St. John's Ambulance course exam at SDHS Monday night. A number -of Seaforth firemen and other interested people were participants• in the first -aid • course this wint er. M (Staff Photo) non-smokers are citizens of, this free country, too. Why should we suffer while you satisfy your habit?' I've heard some smokers explain, "I'll go crazy if I Can't smoker' 'I sympathize with you, because you're hooked on a habit that's dangerOus and .hard, to break. Several of my friends and relatives smoke ; When they read this"column, they'll show varied reactions. A feW will argue with, me; others will dismiss the subject' , lightly. I trust !tone of, theirn will blow smoke tp• my face. • I acknowledge the prerogative of you smokers; to puff on your cigarettes. In • return, I expect you to acknowledge my right to breathe%clean air. ' • ,Smokers, before you 'light that , next cigarettes, cigar or Pipe, please 'think about' your health - and mine'. HENSALL ONTARIO MARKET Abattoir 262-2041 Visitors are COrrespondent Mrs. C. Geddes Mr. Norm McLeod of Set of 4 Tea Plates Regularly 17.40 Set 10.99 Set of (Fruit Dishes Regularly $13 Set 7.99 Franciscan Casual Coloured Crystal . Complement your dlnnerwate patterns .. . and save 28%. 'Sale prices available in 4 colours, E, Plum F, Citron G. Cornsilk H. Smoke J. 4-pieces of a kind and colour, either goblets, sherbets, or wine Juice glasses. Regularly $18 Franciscan China Dinnerware Orders could be taken for sets of 4 stemware In J. Ice. K. Blue. L, Olive. SAVE 25% 47% London in Egmondvilie spent the Easter 'weekend With Mr'. and Mrs.. Jo6 Murphy. -Mrs. John Boshart and family Remember you saw it in the Expositor A THE OR 50 ALBERT STREET CLINTON IT'S NOT REALLY BROKEN — Tom Phillips waits' patiently as a first aid classmate applies a sling to his "injured" armNdu'ring exam night for the St. John's Ambulanoe,first aid, The course has been running U. .,..Jorseve6I weeks at the High School. ' (Staff Photo) e • Egg carton gardens By J. D. Scott Mac Is aac Nothing teaches more about nature than nature herself. These simple planters will give a child a chance to see the growth of a plant and thereby begin to take all forms of natural life seriously. Materials 1 • - cardboard egg box (for a dozen eggs) with the top cut off - enough clean rich soil to fill all of the egg carton - - a package of seeds (pansies or any small flower will do,„ sweet peas are good to use) 12= popycycle sticks Instructions 1. Fill each of the slots for the eggs with the clay making • sure that the clay is clean. Do not pack it down too •hard. 2., Take two or three seeds and place them in the soil. Bury them approximately one inch below the ,surface. When you are covering them over do not press down so hard as,to prevent to water from seeping in freely. Place one of the sticks at the side of each of the slots. They will be used to tie the- plant off. You can also date each of the sticks or perhaps plant different seeds in some of the slots and identify the seed with the stick. 4. Place the carton on a large plate near a window. Water regularly and watch the seed spring to life. Nature holds many, mysteries for man. Perhaps one of the greatest of these is the season of spring. Civilizations since time began have held festivals to praise the coming of mild fertile weather and the end Of winter. As with most christian rites, the' festival of Easter has its origin in the pagan ritual of spring celebrAtions. Spring is the season of re-birth, of. buds bursting into leaves, of melting banks of snow, of promise of things to come. And yet as adults, the only thing that spring comes to mean is added trouble. Whether it be mud in which children play or the annual obstacle course created on highways from potholes. Canadians as a whole ignore the beauty of spring and further, take.-for granted the wonderful natural environment we live in. . One only has to compare the way in which Europeans appreciate what little unspoiled nature they have left, to see just exactly how much we are blind to our country. In most European cities, Sundays and holidays are times devoted to going out into the country or for walks in parks. As an indication of how precious they value their natural settings, in Paris parks, it is° against the law to sit or walk on the grass in any of the numerous parks which dot the city. The old saying "you don't miss something until it is gone" should be applied to the Canadian situation. The,days of endless open spaces and pure sparkling rivers is gone. With growing populations demanding a place outside of the city and in turn creating huge suburban developments, to say nothing of the destruction caused by pollution, we must quickly begin to take our countr'y's native beauty seriously. Children who see their parents ignoring nature or worse, destroying it by littering cannot be expected to learn to love-and respect natural beauty. A little interest on the part of a parent will go a long way when it concerns something as strange and wonderful as there-birth of nature during springtime. One of the best opportunities to develop an appreciation of nature comes every yeatrwhen the snows have melted. Usually what is revealed after the snow has gone are heaps of garbage left by litterers. Simply by having a family outing to pick up garbage on the lawn and conversation about the little green sprigs in the ground or the buds on the trees, a child's interest will be kindled,This spring take the time to let your children see the wonder of nature in this beautifull country of ours. from Kitchener spent last week- end with Mr. and Mrs. Howard James. . , • Mr. and Mrs. John Watt and ' Jennifer spent. Easter, with Mr, and Mrs. David Lewis and family of Buffalo, New York, uncl of Mrs. Watt. • Mr. and Mrs. Charles Geddes • 'and family spent Easter with Mr. and. Mrs.. Ja'mes Cameron in ' • GEM DIAMONDS- As long as three thousand ' years' ago, man bent down to pick up a glistening pebble and by some chance found it to be different from other w, stones. From that time, diamond began to acquire magical powers and to be regarded with .awe, worship and avarice. Man began to collect diamonds, treasure them, build legends around them, trade them, treat them as . gems; fight over them, and eventually to give them as symbols of love and trust. The name Diamond is derived from the old French diamant, itself derived from the Latin and the Greek adamas, meaning "un- conquerable". Diamonds` eifeet on social history has been mainly because they are possibly the greatest ' con- centrated form of wealth which is negotiable almost anywhere. They have .played a part in many 'upheavals and during recent world wars paid the 'way for the escape of refugees from totalitarian tyrannies. . From at least the fourth century B.C., India traded in diamonds, taxed them and exported them. There had long been tra_ste between India and Babylon; Syria, Ceylon and Arabian coun- tries. Diamonds that reached the western part of the Roman Empire were prized for their magical powers. All, gems have three common attributes - rarity, beauty and durability. The luster, fire, and brilliance of diamond are so unique, that diamond‘ is cnsidered in a IA class by it , 4part frorii all other gem After diamonds were discovered, they were not worn in jewellery at all, and if they were, it was as talismans. At some point they acquired value in exchange for, other goods or services and became a badge of rank or wealth. Later. diamonds were used specifically for jewellery purposes by royalty. And still later, it is no wonder, then, that this ,, jevkl of such beauty aod such meaning is the symbol of the single most important ' emotion known to man. To be continued next week David C. Anstett G.G. Graduate Gemologist G .1 . A'. ). Clinton, OriE I lk 1 Choice of 4 China Pattern's A.Floral — bright purple, orange & yellow floral design B.Sundahce — a colour spotted design in sun yellow. - C. Reflections — colour drops of olive, yellow, and coral. D, Honeycomb — yellow mustard and brown tones. • (Because of the hand crafted nature of the patterns,' there will be some variations of colour and design). This English table ware Is oven and dishwasher detergent safe, highly chip resistant and it, won't fade or craze. The 20‘plece set consists of 4 each: dinner plates, cereal soup..bowls, bread and butter plates, tea cups and saucers. Regularly 59.95 Set 44.44 Special completer set consists of one each : oval vegetable dish', gravy boat and stand, round salad bowl, 3 pint covered casserole and six cup covered tea pot. " In patterns A & B vegetable dish has two sections Regularly 63.30 Each 43.95 Set of 4 12.99 I Evening and Da ummer School Courses xv)--4K1 The UniversitY of Western Ontario N , . . May 6.-July 17,-1975; "Ti:iesdays and Thursdays . Examination4s, July 22 and23 5:15' p.M.,' -:" 7:45, p.m. **Psychology 342 (Develolprnental Psychology: Exceptional" Children ) J.G.Murray, Ph.D. 5:• *15 p.m. - 7:45 p,m. English 020 (General Literature and Composition) - .-... R.Krieg,M.A. 7:45 p.m.,s 10:15 p.m. Sociology 249 'a/ 2531) (Criminology! Sociology of Corrections) ., /*--\,- . • "F. DesrOches, M.A. **The prerequisite for Psychology 342 is Psychology 36 or 56 or 140 or 236 or 241 or equivalent.