HomeMy WebLinkAboutTimes-Advocate, 1986-04-02, Page 10ore 10 Times -Advocate Aril 2 1986
WIN K O — The 'B' c ampions ip of the recent Knights o Co um • us junior hoc ey tournament
was won by Our Lady of Mognt Carmel School. Back, left, coach Doug Regier, Chris Oliver, Mark Glavin,
Jim Dietrich, Shawn Gillespie, Paddy Morrissey, Nathan McCann and Philip Carey. Front, Andy Glavin,
Marty DeBruyn, Craig Glavih, teff Glavin, Jim Ruffen and Bill Hodge. T -A photo
*** ••.
MT. CARMEL SENIORS WIN — The Mount Carmel school team won the senior "A" championship in
the recent Knights of Columbus hockey tournament. Back, left, coach Doug Regier, Jamie Wulterkens,
David O'Connor, Steve Arnold, Chad Arnold, Clint McCann and Chris Foran. Front, Shaun Glavin, Steve
Vandenberg, Steve Glavin, Pete Conlin and Kevin Glavin. Missing was Larry McCann. T -A photo
TripIe grades out in Huron•Perth
first secondary teachers for its new
secondary school starting this year at
St. Micheal Secondary School in Strat-
ford. Sister Elaine Carr of St.
Catharines will teach religion,
history, while Colleen Nagle of
Fergus will teach both English and
art.
Also hired were two teachers to
teach. yipo, ,lmmersion at St.
Mar's Woodin GGtTen"th 4at'cel
St. Arneault and Lorraine Kingsley;
while Francine Quesnell of London
will teach French Immersion at St.
Aloysius School in Stratford.
Twenty-eight members of St. Col- prepared to make a recommendation
umban Parent-Teacher Association for the Kindergarten where it is
(PTA) were jubilant Monday night to reported the cost of educating a pupil
have their request accepted for the is $3,400.
discontinuance of triple grades in one Trustee Ronald Murray of St. Col -
classroom in the Huron -Perth Coun- umban stated St. Columban is a
ty school system. "good school" and made a motion
For several years triple grades that there be no triple grades there or
have existed in two small schools in in any of the separate schools in the
the system -- St. Columban and St. Huron -Perth system. I don't think it
Joseph's•Sttlobtut KNigsblldge. is fair for St. Columban students to
At St. Columban, the 61 students
have been divided into three classes
in the four room school: grades 1,2
and 3, grades 4,5 and 6 and grades 7
and 8. Kindergarten childrenin the St.
Columban area have always attend-
ed St. Patrick's school at Dublin.
These three class groups were
established in September 1978 in St.
Columban.
A month ago 45 members of the St.
Columban Parent Teacher Associa-
tion attended a board meeting and re-
quested the board to have a
kindergarten in their school because
"Kindergarten children should not be
sent out of theparish"At that time the
board accommodation review com-
mittee was asked to study the group-
ings and the Kindergarten question at
St. Columban.
The committee now reports it is not
The readers write
To whom it may concern in regards
to dogs running at Targe in this town
of Exeter. I am provoked and angry
at a number of dog owners who make
a habit of this.
It seems they let them run so they
will mess up their neighbours' lawn
so to keep their own clean. These peo-
ple are either ignorant or are ignorant
of the dog laws in town.
It should be strictly enforced.
C.B. Hohner
Spread
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PRESENTED BY THE
OPTIMIST CLUB OF
EXETER AND DISTRICT
1•"
have triple grading when two grades
are better.
Murray's motion passed easily With
a nine to four vote.
In other business the board hired its
Young Parkhill man
wins park awards
A young Parkhill man who turned practical work," said Scafe, and that
to horticultural training because he appealed to him.
was "interested in outdoor work" will A graduate of North Middlesex
take away three awards when he District High School in Parkhill, Scafe
graduates Thursday from the has had precious jobs with the
Niagara Parks Commission School of Ausable-Bayfield Conservation
Horticulture at Niagara Falls. Authority.
Robert John Scafe, 23, son of Mary He will be working with a landscap-
and Donald Scafe of RR 4, Parkhill, ing compnay in Cambridge after
grew up on his parents' mixed form, graduation and hopes one day to own
but chose horticulture because it was a landscape maintenance or construe -
"more specialized" than general far- tion business.
ming, he said.
When the Niagara horticulture Stewart re-elected
school holds its 44th graduation •
ceremony Thursday, Scafe will be
presented with a botany award, the
James N. Allan award for the best
landscape model and the C. 11. Henn-
ings award for excellence in plant
identification.
Scafe poured about 250 hours of
work into the half -metre by metre (1.6
foot by three-foot) model of a land-
scaped residence that won him the
Allan award.
He chose the three-year Niagara
school, from which 10 students will
graduate this week, because it is "one
of a kind." The school "reall stresses
William A. Stewart of London, MPP
for Middlesex North for 18 years and
provincial agriculture minister for 14
years before he retired in 175, has
been elected to a second term as
chancellor of the University of
Guelph.
The new three year term begins Ju-
ly 1, university president Burt Mat-
thews said.
Stewart, 70, sponsored legislation in
1965 that created the University of
Guelph. He also holds honorary
degrees from that university and the
University of Western Ontario.
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BEST IN STEPHEN SCIENCE -- A winner in the recent Step en en-
tral Science Fair was Susan Ratz with her project on nail reaction to
liquids. T -A photo
4
Taik about opposite sex
Date advice for Granton 4-H girls
ey MEL E. sirs
The sixth meeting sof the Granton
41I club was held at the Prince An-
drew School. Our president, opened
with The 4th pledge, tve then wrote
down questions about etiquette and
the opposite sex.
After that we discussed how to ask
for a date, and how to turn down a
date. Then we read our books and
discussed the invitation given in the
book.
Afterwards we entered and discuss-
ed our own questions, then wrote
down what we had down before, then
we ate our snacks brought by Mary
Holden and Syliva Beatson, practis-
ing our proper ettiquette.
We would like to thank Deanna
Beatson and Mavis Harmsworth for
leading us in a very interesting and
informative meeting. Sec. and press
reporter Lisa Moore
Church news
At the Granton United Church the
Rev. Bruce Pierce was in charge of
the Good Friday service, the Easter
Sunrise service, and the 11:15 a.m.
service on Easter Sunday morning.
Mrs. Doreen McRobert and Mrs.
Audrey Harloff were in charge of the
Legion ladies
win in bowling
The Ladies Auxilary to the R.E.
Pooley Branch 167 held their regular
meeting Monday March 24 with 45
members present.
President Esther Hillman chaired
the meeting. -
Bill McDonald was the winner of
the 50/50 draw for March.
Peg Hunter Duvar was the mystery
prize winner.
Congratulatons to Esther Hillman's
team who placed first out of 40 teams
at District bowling in Preston March
8. They now advance to Provincial
bowling in Georgetown April 26.
One team participated in Provin-
cial euchre March 22 in North Bay
placing ninth out of 40 teams. Gladys
Beirling and Isa Smith won the
doubles. Five invitational bowling
tournaments have been accepted.
They are Goderich, Strathroy, Kin-
cardine, Woodstock and Seaforth.
Wednesday April 2 is the date to
play bingo with the verterans at
Westminster Hospital.
A donation of $50 was made to the
Canadian Diabetes Association.
The summer trip is planned for
Wednesday June 25.
A penny sale for Bunny Bundle was
held at the conclusion of the meeting
and $150.50 was raised.
The next meeting is Monday April
28.
Easter Sunday Servioe breakfast. All
three events were well attended.
Flowers were placed in the church
from the funeral of the late Fred Fit-
zgerald by his family.
"The Teen for Christ Youth Group"
from St. Thomas Anglican Church,
Granton, St. Paul's Anglican church
Kirkton, and St. Patricks' Anglican
Church Saintsbury, under the direc-
tion of the Rev. Peter Derrick,
assisted by Dave Inchley, Cathy
Blackler and Brenda Suchard started
their 36 hours of starvation, after their
Maunday Thursday Seder meal.
Following their good main meal at
St. Thomas church the Seder meal
recalls for us the roots of our heritage
and is the new covenent which our
Lord Jesus instituted.
The Rev. Derrick explained the
�4
4 y s
of Q024"/
significance of the Festival of the
"Kiddish" which is the first cup of
wine. The Karpas is parsely and
represents the rebirth and renewal.
"Yahtz" means sharing the 'Matzah"
which in unleavened bread. Maror is
horseradish, symbolizing bitterness;
"Horoset" a mixture of apples, spice,
wine and nuts, symbolized the mor-
tar that the Jews used for Pharohs
labor.
Following the meal, Geoffrey
Holdsworth of Kirkton described a
painting of Jeruselem that he had
reproduced, also showed a film entitl-
ed "One foot in Heaven", which was
enjoyed by all.
The Youth Group and their leaders
spent the night in the United Church
basement on Good Friday to wind up
their (ast.
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