HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1980-01-30, Page 5•
irons from the audience.
While questions may, be,,dir-
ected 'at a specific candidate,
all candidates will be given
the opportunity 'td respond to
each question.,
;Merle Guriby, President of
the Huron County •Fed.will
introduce the candidates
Lueknow Sentinel, Wednesday, Innuoy 30, 1950--Pnge 5
ederation kits all-candidates''ineetin
The Huron CountY Federa- present They are; Tony
tion df Agriculture has MOQuail, NDP; Graente .
scheduled its All Candidates Craig; Liberal; and.'Murray
Meeting for 8.39, Thurs. Sardiff, Conservative, •
Feb. 7; at the Hilllett .Central The 'format ,will be similar
School, east of Lonaesboro. , to past meetings. FaCh Can-
The: thre.C—..eaahlafes,...rnnz.,,Ldtdate_will
ning Pori' election in this ' 'utes in which to speak and
Haion-Bruce, will be then they will answer qUes-
"I don't -think about him." - Angela T.,Ockridge, 13.B
"I think the price of eggs in China is more interesting..",.
-Anonymous
"Clark?" "I don't like his beans." • - Kemp Currie,, 13A -
"I, like his suits." -. Anne.. Kernaghan, 9D -
"He'.i a backwatds kind of guy." - Brett Bauer, 9T
"The budget's too strict" -,. Shiela Ariderson; 10A
"Ash a Man. I feel sorry *for him, as a ,Prime Minister he
deserves everything he's getting." - Nancy Stuart,. 120
"Not much." Michael. Chambers, 10B
"I though the prices were_ supposed to be lowered, but:
instead' they were raised." . - Kevin Kellington,. 9D
The Most common answer to this week's question was "Joe. Who?"
Carpentry and Cement :work
CALL
:Alex Chisholm 529-7714
OR .
Blocker. 5244147
' PFIONE AFTER 6 P.M,,
pfluppiqkwilvtilpirpi.
Snow and cold temperatures didn't deter this little fellow's
love of ice cream. Never mind that winter has' finally
- arrived; Jason tautinf-Exeter, was in Lacknow-on Sunday
afternoon to see his father play hockey for the oldtimers
and he couldn't pais by the ice cream parlour without a
couple—of scoops of his favourite,, pineapple orange.
[Sentinel. Staff Photo]
School show back
for another time
Working together works ...in the-family...in the community.
The School Show, Ted
Johns' hilarious look at the
school system and the 1978
Huron. County teachers strike
will return to Memorial Hall,
Blyth February 25 and 26
before departing for a three-
week tour of southwestern
Ontario that will end,up in a
four-week run in Toronto.
The School Show was first
performed at the 1978 Blyth
Summer Festival and proved
the hit of the season. Johns'
virtuoso performance was so
popular that the show was
brought back for another
week in September 1978.
• Johns, a former school
teacher himself, wrote the
show after doing a lot of
research into not only the
facts Of the situation but
peoples' . feelings about the
strike and the school system
in' general, The fads and
feelings are portrayed in six,
characters. Johns plays them
all and creates an evening of
outstanding entertainment.
There's Mrs. Healtwtight
the old-time. school teacher
recalling the days of the
one-room school, there's Bill
MacDonald the young Eng-
lish teacher agonizing_ =over-,
the current state of education
and there's Roxanne Dupuis,
a rnOther of high School
students Who's had enough
of the strike, calls Prettier.
William Davis for action and
reminds him, "We pay your
bills, Bill."
The play ;won praise not
only from audiences but from
critics near and far.
Jim Fitzgerald in the Clin-
ton News-Record said: "Un-
derneath all the comedy and
tragedy that Johns puts
wholeheartedly in his play is-
a distindt theme, that soine-
' Where along the line our
education system, like our
society, has become an as-
sembly line, fraught with
hostility, polarization and an
almost total lack of commun-
ication."
Jamie Portman of Sontham
News; writing in the Mon-
treal Qazette said the School
Show would be popular any-
where not only "because of
Johns' dexterity in tickling.
our funny bones at one mom-
ent and treading on some of
our more sensitive prejudices
• the next moment, but be-
cause his two-hour entertain-
Mein touches on concerns •
that extend far 'beyond the
borders of Huron County."
Taking the show far be-
yond the boundaries Of Hur-
on County is the Blyth
Summer Festival's first maj-.
our tour throughout the prov-
inCe. f
The farm family is like a miniature
Co-operative.
Each.person has his niche and his
job to do. When everyone works
together . . . things get -done.
Over 65 years ago the Original
Co-operatIve movement was an
extension-of this spirit of co-operation
from family to community.
When neighbours helped neighbours,
. . . barns got built
. . . fields were ploughed
. . crops were harvested.
Then when farmers had problems
getting the things they needed . .
fertilizer, feeds and seed , , from
existing sources, they got together
and formed their own organizations
to purchase and distribute the
supplies they required — and to
market the food they produced,
And it Worked!
Today, CO.OPs are more than ever a
part of the community and of the
family, providing a wide variety of
goods and services such as home
heat, hardware, appliances, lawn and
garden products, work clothes, •
animal feeds, seeds, fertilizers, farm
and building supplies . as well as
helpful staff with lots of know-how.
And white anyone can shop at a
CO-OP, you benefit more by
becoming a member of
the Co•ope'rative'family',
In the past 10 'years, for
instance, 80,000-members have
shared close to $16 million in
patronage returns.
We're proud of this record and
our service to the families and
communities in Ontario.
WORKING TOGETHER
CONTINUES TO WORK . . .
JOIN YOUR COOPERATIVE.
FREE FRAMING PRINT .
A limited number of high quality
reproductions Of this original 'Farm
Family' painting ate available tree,
• on request, at participating CO-OP's.
The prints are sized to fit a standard
16" x 20" frame.
Offer IlmIted while supplies last.