The Lucknow Sentinel, 1984-07-11, Page 1•
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• Printed in tueknoar, Ontario, Wednesday, July 1,1914 •
20 pages., '
_Plan meeting sewage proposal
West Wavicanosli Townshipcouncil has'
requested a meeting with Lucknow Village
Council to discuss the propose& sewage
treatment facility to be located in • the
township when the Lucknow sewage works
project is constructed.
Lucknow Council has : replied . to the
request in a letter saying they believe_ a
meeting, at this time is premature. Lucknow"
council . suggested they will calf a public
meeting `once the technical aspects of f 'the
project axe• resolved and the West Wawa -
nosh: site: isapproved by .the ministry of
.enviroment for the project . •
• Lucknow Council is presently waiting. for'
the ministry approval 'oftheir application
based on the,:specificapons of a site in. West.
Wawanosh Township, just east of Huron
County Road .1.; south of • Lucknow •on
propertyowned by. Chester Finnigan of
Lucknow.Lucknow's, engineer B. M. Ross
and A .sociates of Goderich submitted a final
reporf on the West Wawanosh site to the
ministry •. last month and the. ministry '
decision 'is expected shortly.
West Wawanosh, council .requested Luck -
now Council attend a meeting with council,
township ratepayers, Chester Finnigan, the
ministry of the environment, ' the Huron
County Health Unit, B: M. Ross and
Associates, engineer aid the Huron County
Planning. Department.
Sixteen' residents of West. Wawanosh and
Ashfield. Townships have signed petitions
objecting to the location of the weeping bed
system to service the Lucknow sewage works/
in West Wawanosh neartheir homes.
rove Lilek. ow cable TV
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'Following a•public. hearing , in •.Hull, '
Quebec,oxr ;February 14; the Canadian Radio,
Television Teleconmmtncations 'Commission
has approved the applications' by Kincardine
. Cable TV Ltd. for licences to provide cable
TV ,:service: to the villages of Lucknow; •
Teeswaterr' Ripley and Tiverton.,•
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The commission.considers the approval :of
the Kincardine Cable applications repres-
ents tire most suitable means of 'extending'.
service to Lucknow, Ripley, Teeswater and
Tiverton. eco 14" `e.�w cont`' fission x dei
M eS a �competin 1caiotn
9rr w.. .. .. 1
igsbridgeman
presumed drowtied.
Wayne Joseph Courtney • of Calgary,
Alberta, is missing and, presumed drowned,
after his.kayack flipped over on Sunday, July
1 in the Kicking Horse River, 10 kilometers
east of Golden, British Columbia. He was 28
years of age.
Wayne is the second son of Joe,and.Teresa'
Courtney of R. 1, Dungannon.: He'was born
August 1, 1955..
Besides his parents, he is survived by five
brothers, Gary of Blyth, Brian. of Cochrane;
Alberta, Eric of Mississauga, Ployd and Carl
• at home. .
he was predeceased by fan infant brother,
'Joseph in 1958. .
A memorial mass was held July 9, 1984 at
, . St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, Kings-
bridge.
New doctor
D.r. David Massel has joined the staff of
the Lucknow Medical' Centre in association
with. Dr: Mel Corrin and Dr. Jack McKim.
graduate of the University of Western
Ontario with a•bachelor:of science degree in
chemistry, Dr.• Massel graduated with
honours from the University of Western
Ontario medical school in 1983; He has just
completed his medical internship • through
the university of Weatern ' Ontario • at
University Hospital, Victoria Hospital and
St. Joseph's Hospital, London.
Dr. Massel' is a native, of Ottawa.
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Ward aiid Saugeen Telecable Ltd., Fergus -
Elora Cable TV • Ltd. and ' CUC Ltd.
representing a company to be incorporated:.
In arriving at this. decision, • the commis-
sion • has taken into account the geographic
proximity of these communities to the
• applicants' existing cable system at -Kincar-
dine.
At the time of the application in February,
Brian Walden: of Kincardine Cable saidif his.
application wasaccepted, Lucknow resid-
ents would receive four. American channels
and four Ontario atis ' : as : well' as, TV
Ontario. �f3 �BpR St3
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Three Year old Tracy ,Danis fotmd•the Lucknow Traitor Pull•a little noisy for her sensitive ears '°
when she watched the 9,000,modifed class on -Sunday with-° her parents, Roland and"Cindy
Danis of R. 1, Gadshlil.. Tracy was just one of more than 5,000 people who attended the two
day ,event this'•weekend. whick included a night pull Saturday evening..
' (Photo.:by Sharon, Dietz]
Liickhow. area girl to sail wit:
A Lucknow' •area .girl will . have the
opportunity • to experience the beauty and
romanceof the tall ships when she
participates in an at sea sail training
program on. board one of the historic ships,
visiting. Lake LOntario for Rendezvous. '84...
" Chris Gibson . of Ashfield Township was
nominated by Donna' Van Osch tobe chosen
as { one of the 100 young people who, will
particpate in the program while the tall ships
visit Lake Ontario this ,summer. Chris : is
.eligible as a •winner of the Shoot to Score,
Lottery Tall Ships Second . Chance Draw.
which • was made July 2. • •
Donna Van Osch, purchased her Shoot; to
Score ticket at -the 'Mayfair Restaurant and'
submitted Chris' ;name on the' :lucky Tall
Ships Second Chance Draw . coupon; as
particpants must be between the ages of 14 -
idea of,sailing on a tall ship. when Donna put
her name on the coupon. She . says . she
• thought at the time it would be interesting. to
sail on one of the tall ships but she never
thought she would win. • p .
Chris has been notifiedshe will fly to the
destinatitm of the tall • ship where she will
take hertraining cruise and following the
week's cruise, she;will fly home.' The tall
ships are currently in . Toronto harbourto
celebrate the 150th: anniversary of the city of
Toronto and they set , sail for a .race. to
Rochester on Wednesday. Chris hopes to
sail with them the first week of. August. She.
will receive further details' including the
name of the ship,'• the date she sails and
where she is to meet the _ship,. later this..
week.
'While on the sail training program Chris
will be a member of the crew which will have
Chris says she never really entertained" the responsibility for running the ship. She. will
be, sails, manouevring, cleaning, ,: ..
scrubbing decks; and `cooking as well as
taking look out ' duty, anchor. watch, and
learning helmsman skills.
The phenomenon of .'the tall ships has
generated steadily increasing public interest.
and money making capability in the 28 years
since their first modern day assembly for an .
England,: Portugal race. ' •.
The. current public ,fascination with the
windjammers began after a retired London ! ...
solicitor, Bernard Morgan, decided to try to
bring young sailors of different countries to
gether in a friendly rivalry to creat what he
called a "brotherhood,of the sea". Morgan
gained the ' support of Earl Mountbatten,
then •the- First Sea• Lord 'of " the " British'
Admiralty. '
Mountbatten encouraged the ' establish-
ment of a committee to organize a race
Turn to. page' 5'.
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Ottery to raise funds for hospitaladdition
By Henry Hess r .
The fund raising committee for Wingham
and` District Hospital hopes to '1=aise almost
$80,000 for the nese building program
through a special lottery, hospital board
'members were told at their meeting June 20.
Mary Lou Thompson,reporting for the
public' relations committee, said plans. re
. underway to sell , 5,000 for tickets at %20
each,. The lottery would award monthly
priies of $1,000 for` the' first 11 months, with
a grand prize of a $10,000 car to be drawn in
the last month. •
:After the expenses have been deducted,
this should . leave a, profit of $79,000, Mrs.
Thompson. reported.
She noted that both .Teeswater and
Lucknow have ; had. good success' raising
money for community projects in this fashion'
and, "If we could raise that 'much money in
one fell 'swoop it would be good."
She also showed the board plans got ' a
brochure to be used .duringthe fund raising
campaign. A bulk mailing of 5,000 copies
together. with pledge cards will.go out':n late
August or early September, she said, with a
door-to-door canvass in early October.
The committee has set a target of $400,000
to be. raised locally toward the $1.75 million
cost of the new emergency and 'outpatient
wing.
,Rules of Procedure
The hospital board plans to adopt, a set of •
rules of procedure to follow during its board
and committee meetings. • In a motion passed
by the board at its meeting, June 20, the
management committee was instructed to
review texts recommended by the Ontario
. Hospital. Association and select one which is
suitable"for use.
Archie Hill, in .his final meeting as a
member of the board, again raised the issue, •
saying, that some "dramatic . errors of
procedure" during recent meetings had
pointed out the nee such a set of rules.
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He added that in his opinion the procedure
followed at the May 17. meeting, at which the
board was asked to vote for a second time on
the motion awarding the contract for the new
building : project, was still . wrong since no
discussion of the motion was permitted.
Chairman Mary Vair' said she had already'
asked Administrator Norman Hayes to get a
list of books on procedure for the manage
, ment committee to study. Hayes reported he
had done this and ordered a number of texts
suggested by the Ontario •Hospital Associa-
tion (OHA).
He, added- that, according to the OHA,
Robert's Rules of Order, . to which he had.
occasionallyreferred theboard in the past, is
hot appropriate• for' use in Canada bause it
is based' on the American Congr, csional
system rather than on the Parliamentary
system.
Cost of Operation Exceeds Funding. •
The cost of operating all the hospitals in
Turn to 'page 5'