The Citizen, 2001-11-14, Page 21k
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The Citizen
THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2001. PAGE 21.
E. Wawanosh students win
The following students placed in
the top 10 at the Regional Cross
Country Meet at the Wingham Golf
Course on Tuesday, Oct. 2: Mite
Girls, Brittany Appleby, second;
Tyke Girls, Tammy Freiburger, sec-
ond, Alicia Appleby, fifth, Nancy
Hiebert, sixth, Ellen Cook, seventh;.
Atom Girls, Lacey McArter, seventh,
Anna Hiebert, ninth, Bantam Girls,
Ellen Procter, seventh; Mite Boys,
Tyler Stevenson, seventh; Tyke
Boys, Greg Dodds, fourth, Dallas
Pennington, sixth; Atom Boys, Krys
Campbell, fifth, Johnathon
McDowell, sixth; Bantam Boys,
Brett Mason, fourth, Andrew Procter,
tenth.
These students had the opportunity
to participate at the Avon Maitland
District Meet at Upper Thame
Elementary School in Mitchell on
Friday, Oct. 19.
A GOTCHA program is running at
East Wawanosh Public School this
year. When a student is found doing
something nice for fellow students a
GOTCHA paper is posted on the bul-
letin board outside the resource
room. Then their name is placed in
the "GOTCHA" draw ticket box in
the office. At the end of the month 12
names are drawn and those lucky stu-
dents receive a free lunch of two
Continued from page 9
ing landmine survivor assistance to
post-conflict countries around the
world.
This event is a grassroots reaction
to terrorism. Every year 26,000 peo-
ple are killed or maimed by land-
mines, 10,000 of them children.
Nearly 70 million landmines are
buried in 70 countries that were once
ravaged by war. The United Nations
has identified high priority sites for
slices of pizza, a drink and an ice
cream. Winners for the month of
October were Brittany Haines, Nick
Frischknecht, Sean Cook, Kyle
Jamieson, Margaret Vincent,
Christopher Shiell, Blaine Hallahan,
Andrew Procter, Staci Dunbar,
Bradley Haines, Tyler Stevenson and
Adel Dodds.
The winners of the, family pumpkin
carving contest are: Scariest, Liam,
Emma and Caleb Brohm; Funniest,
Lindsay, Andrea and Christopher
Shiell; Most Lifelike, Ronnie and
Brooklyn Vercruyssen; Cutest,
Logan and Elisabeth Singh; Most
Unusual, Caroline, Michael and
Johnathon McDowell.
Each year the legion comes to the
school to videotape children in
Grades JK/SK, 4, 8 and any new stu-
dents. The videotaping will take
place Monday, Nov. 26 at II a.tri'for
kindergarten A and on Tuesday, Nov.
27 at 1 p.m. for kindergarten B,
Grades 4 and 8 and any new students.
The school will be hosting the
North Huron. Girls' Volleyball
Tournament on Wednesday, Nov. 28.
Additional information will be sent
home with the students participating.
The boys team will be competing at
Wingham Public School the same
day.
On Friday, Nov. 9, the staff aIld
students welcomed seniors and other
guests to the resource centre for a
social time before the Remembrance
Day service. Brittany Weber, Melissa
Leishman, Jaime Pollard and Cody
Stute assisted principal Shelley
Blackmore.
At 10:30 a.m. the classes assem-
bled to sing 0 Canada. A choir of
Grades I, 2 and 3 shared the songs
The Soldiers Went to War and
Remember and a poem called Can a
Little Child?
The Grade 5/6 class recited In
Flanders Fields and Why Wear a
Poppy. An acrostic poem created by
Grade 4/5 was presented next.
Several Grade 7/8 students read
appropriate passages including For
the Fallen. Taps and Reveille were
played as the assembly observed two
minutes' silence.
An honour guard of Sparks,
Brownies, Guides, Beavers, Cubs,
Scouts and Cadets stood at attention
as two representatives from each
class pinned poppies on a cross. Mr.
Campbell representing area seniors
laid a wreath, after which all sang Let
There Be Peace on Earth.
Car scratched
OPP were notified of a vehicle
being damaged in Grey Twp. while
parked in a parking lot off of
Molesworth Line.
The victim told police that a 1998
Pontiac was parked at the
Molesworth Bowling Lanes Nov. 9
between 4 p.m. and 9 p.m. Upon
returning they found obscene words
scratched into the trunk lid with
other scratches down the left side of
the car and on the hood.
Anybody who has information is
asked to call the Huron OPP or
Crime Stoppers.
Togetherness
It was bring a friend night at Blyth figure skating on Friday.
Courtney and Kylea Middegaal stayed together as they took
a spin around the ice. (Vicky Bremner photo)
Donations make difference
clearance of mines in Bosnia,
Herzegovina, Cambodia, Croatia,
Mozambique, and Vietnam or for
current emergency clearance efforts
taking place in Afghanistan.
It costs $3 to plant a landmine. It
costs $,1000 to remove it. A dona-
tion can make a difference.
All donors will receive a tax
deductible charitable receipt, direct-
ly from the Canadian Landmines
Foundation.
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