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Times-Advocate, 1983-08-10, Page 11HPSSB info compiled on cards and cassettes By Stephanie Levesque Row upon row of pro- grammed cassette tapes and neatly filed language arts pro- grams are the net results of the Experience '83 program by the Huron -Perth Separate School Board. Eight students from across Huron and Perth counties have been working out of the board office in Dublin and " l SUMMER WORK - Doug Denomme of Zurich has been responsible for producing programs applicable to the Huron -Perth separate school system. Here, Doug operatesoneof the Commodore PET computers during his Experience '83 work. ,. LARGE EGGS FRESH �r CANADA "A' GRADE ALL WHITE SPECIAL 97. ___ 169 Crest - Crest rest'..)- CREST TOOTHPASTE REGULAR OR MINT 150 mL TUBE SPECIAL . ------------11.1.-..k.'- -- r' ' -CRUSH • S • - •• ( I t ' �J DRINKS CRUSH ORANGE, CR. SOOA. SUGAR FREE ORANGE. HIRES ROOT BEER OR SUGAR FREE ROOT BEER. PURE SPRING GINGER ALE PLUS OR SUGAR FREE FOR 30C GINGER ALE DEP. 750 mL PER BOTTLE . . t FRENCH FRIES FROZEN CRINKLE CUT VALLEY FARM 21 1 kg PKG. SPECIAL a% e e ms I� CASA kte cut �N Cft GRANDMA MARTINS APPLE -BLUEBERRY -CHERRY LITTLE PIES PACKAGE OF2 I 25 gN1F 2 UPATO 60C PKG GRANDMA MARTINS COUNTRY HEARTH MINI - 198 g TART SHELLS 12 s • GRANDMA MARTINS COUNTRY HEARTH PKG. OF 12 TART SHELLS 255 g'j?9 GRANDMA MARTINS COUNTRY HEARTH GARTON OF 3 � PIE SHELLS 454 g II 59 DEODORANT SUPER CANADA PACKERS STAYFREE MAXI PADS 3" 3.79 TENDERFLAKE PURE LARD 36kq 119 ASSORTED FLAVOURS across the street at St. Patrick's school. Under the leadership of co- ordinator Denise Lane of St. Columban, the students have been putting computer pro- grams on cassettes from disks, cataloguing library cards and compiling various language arts programs. Specifically, Anne Marie Kelly of Dublin and Mary Lee Jansen of Seaforth have been working in the media centre at the board office. The two girls have produced library cards for the board's library consultant Edith McCarroll. Materials from past profes- sional development days has been compiled by the pair for distribution among the 19 separate schools in the system. "Kits" for the junior and in- termediate reading programs have also been pieced together under the Ex- perience program. A similar kit, following the philosophy of Bloom's Taxanomy has also been prepared for the board's recently approved program for the gifted. Bloom's Taxonomy develops creative thinking with knowledge, comprehension, application, analysis, syn- L2 hamburg buns it L.vr1a thesis and evaluation. The remainder of the Ex- perience students are over in the gym at St. Patrick's. There the gym is filled with programmed cassettes and 11 computers. The students, Stephen Lem - mon of Mitchell; Peter Frehner and David Bleiker both of St. Marys, Jayne Delaney of Dublin and Doug Denomme of Zurich have loaded the cassettes with about 4,000 programs. Taking the programs from disks already at the board of- fice as well as from program catalogues from across the province, the objective is put these tapes on the cassettes to be distributed around the separate schools in the two counties. Each school has had an op- portunity to order these cassettes at $1.25 each from 1,000 possible programs. The decision to make the casset- tes available to the schools is simply economical as the cassette attachments for the computer are cheaper than the disk drives necessary for the disks. There are about three to four programs per cassettes and by the end of July the students had completed about 1,200 to 1,300 cassettes. Not only do the students program the computers to "DLoad", the term used for the transferring of the pro- gram from disk tocassette, but they re -check the cassettes, label and file them for each school. Doug Denomme has even prepared special programs specifically for the students in Huron and Perth. He has adapted a geography pro- gram prepared on Huron County and has done com- parable work in subjects such as history, math and spelling. Denise Lane, who has beert working in the Experience program offered by the board for about six years, has organized the project since May. Doug started working in June, while the rest of the students started in July. The project will end on August 19. As in all other Experience programs, this one financed by the Ministry of Education, the students receive minimum wages. For those under 18 the minimum wage is $2.65 and over 18 the minimum is $3.50 per our. All students work at 35 -hour week. LEMONADE SEALTEST READY TO SERVE 1 LITRE CARTONS FOR SPECIAL APPLE JUICE S MARTINS RECONSTITUTED 48 OZ. TIN SPECIAL 79C WIENER ROLLS a/ OR HAMBURG ROLLS WESTONS PKG, OF 12 .. / SPECIAL /URNS CRUSH TENDERFLAKE SOFT DRINKS HAM T NSmis. 99 CASE 184 9 1.19 VENETIAN ICE CREAM • t 91 CIGARETTES ALL POPULAR uCANADIAN BRANDS ,J59SW-ann w�a N,An CAnu,. 20's OR 25's =In PECIALREG. OR KING SIZE 3 VARIETIES CANADIAN SMITHS ROSE GARDEN PICKLES COCKTAIL 500 ml 1. 39 48 oz 1.59 NEILSONS 6 VARIETIES 1 LITRE TUB SPECIAL 6 FLAVOR CHOICES QUENCH CRYSTALS 276 9 1.29 NO NAME SALAD DRESSING 1.49 NO NAME COFFEE WHITENER 2.99 YORK /RAND PEANUT BUTTER 5CC199 NO NAME McCAINS CHOCOLATE GARBAGE FIESTA BAGS CAKE 40.2.99 21 oz 1.99 [.0. SMMTN TOMATO CLAM COCKTAIL 1.79 48 or SIZE 12 L LAUNDRY SUNLIGHT DETERGENT 4 8 kq 79 • Of URGENT SUNLIGHT LIQUID 500 mL f�9 PINK OR WHITE DOVE BAR BATH SOAP 69° 140 ALL PURPOSE FIVE ROSES FLOUR £99 6 VARIETIES 10 kg WHITE. /EICE. YELLOW CAPRI TISSUE 1.29 4 8011 WHITE SWAN WHITE OR RAINBOW SERVIETTES 7 VARIETIES TENDER VITTLES �4 f.S9 300 SH 2.29 POPULAR PET FOOD PURINA DOG CHOW 8 kg 8.99 PURINA CAT CHOW ORIGINAL 2 kg 3.39 MEOW MIX CAT FOOD THESE SPECIALS AVAILABLE ONLY IN: 1 kq 1.89 COUNTRY HARVEST 1 GRAIN. PRAIRIE /RAN STONE MILLED 100'. W. WHEAT BREAD 79' 675 q MEILSONS FUDGESICLES DREAMSICLES 2.99 24 s COUNTRY 4V N SPECIALS COUNTRY OVEN DELICIOUSLY FRESH RAISIN BREAD 16 or LOAF 1.19 COUNTRY OVEN PROTEIN BREAD OR GRANOLA BREAD 16 or LOAF S9' COUNTRY OVEN CRUSTY OR 60•. 7Q WHOLE WHEAT ROLLSFR/t 79°001 IHIGHWAYS #4 & 83 EXETER SCHNEIDERS MEAT PIES 25°a 1.19 1 LAYS OR RUFFLES POTATO CHIPS A200 g 1 29PKG 00q. • UNIVERSAL UM RED SPRING SALMON 7 75 or 1.89 �TLEBONNET MARGARINE 1 Ib. 1.19 �iiNU1S BUTTER TART$ *2.1.69 SAM COLBY MOZZARELLA OR HAVARTI CHEESE 227 0(0 BAVARIA CHERRY, LIMOM, RASP. DANISH TWIST VW SLAgYYLE YOGURT 175 g 2/89° MONDAY, TUISDAY & WIDNI$DAY 9.6 P.M. TNURSDAY & FRIDAY 94:00 P.M. SATURDAY 0:306 P.M - 475A 1.99 Times -Advocate, August 10, 1983 Page 11 CATALOGUE MATERIAL - These two students are part of the Huron -Perth Separate School Board's Experience '83 program. The two, Mary Lee Jansen of Seaforth (left), and Anne Marie Kelly of Dublin are spending the summer in the board's media centre cataloguing various programs. Stanley sod -turning this week Members of Stanley township council spent some of their civic holiday atten- ding their regular August meeting. Part of the session was spent looking over the detailed final architectural drawings for the new • municipal complex. All were very impressed, agreeing with reeve Paul Steckle's remark that "the building will be quite a place". Copies of the plans have been given to various com- panies who manufacture pre- engineered structures so they can provide quotes on cost of materials. A sod -turning ceremony on Thursday August 11 will in- itiate construction of. Stanley's new headquarters. Clerk -treasurer Met Graham met recently with Melanie McLaughin, a con- sultant on cornmunity pro- grams with the Hanover of- fice of the ministry of tourism and recreation. Graham enlisted her help to make sure his applications for a $62,000 Wintario grant and. a community centre grant of $46,900 were properly filled out. He was assured there is an excellent chance the Win- tario grant will be approved, and he's keeping his fingers crossed about the other one. In other business, council accepted two tile drainage loan applications totalling $35,500, and passed a bylaw authorizing a tile drainage loan of $14,500. The Stanley recreation committee has been ap- proached to being planning now for a homecoming celebration when the township marks its centennial in 1986. Council endorsed a resolu- tion originating with Southwest Oxford to end the appeal procedure after mat- ters have been given a thorough, proper and costly hearing before a joint board under the Consolidated Hear- ing Act. They voted against a sug- gestion from Toronto asking for a lengthening of daylight saving hours. The meeting adjourned two hours after it had begun. Members of Stanley. township council spent some of their civic holiday atten- ding their regular August meeting. Part of the session was spent looking over the . detailed final architectural drawings for the new municipal complex. All were very impressed, agreeing .with reeve Paul Steckle's remark that "the building will be quite a place". Copies of the plans have been given to various com- panies who manufacture pre- engineered structures so they can provide quotes on.cost of materials. A sod -turning ceremony on Thursday August 11 will in- itiate construction of Stanley's new headquarters. Clerk -treasurer Mel Graham met recently with Melanie McLaughin, a con- sultant on community pro- grams with the Hanover of- fice of the ministry of tourism and recreation. Graham enlisted her help to make sure his applications for a $62,000 Wintario grant and a community centre grant of $46,900 were properly filled out. He was assured there,is an excellent chance the Win- tario grant will be approved, and he's keeping his fingers crossed about the other one. In other business, council accepted two tile drainage loan applications totalling $35,500, and passed a bylaw authorizing a tile drainage loan of $14,500. The Stanley recreation committee has been ap- proached to being planning now for a homecoming celebration when the township marks its centennial in 1986. Council endorsed a resolu- tion originating with Southwest Oxford to end the appeal procedure after mat- ters have been given a thorough, proper and costly hearing before a joint board under the Consolidated Hear- ing Act. They voted against a sug- gestion from Toronto asking for a lengthening of daylight saving hours. The meeting adjourned two hours after it had begun. DIPLOMA - Kathy Steckle, head cook at the Blue Water Rest Home, displays the food service supervisor's diploma she received after successfully completing a correspondence course through the Canadian Hospital Association and the Canadian Dietetic Association. The final 11 days were spent in Ottawa with classes and exams. Varna BY MARY CHESSELC Ralph and Mona Stephen- son and George and Doris Cantelon had a great three- week trip through the Maritime provinces. return- ing by way of the nor- theastern . states. Temperatures in the mid-70s and very little rain made travelling pleasant. Florence Elliot had hip replacement surgery on July 29 in Orthopedic and Arthritic Hospital, Toronto. llappily, her doctors expect she will be able to walk Netter and more comfortably than she has in several years. Rev. Wilena Brown is ex- cited with the news that her niece in Sutton had twin boys And big boys they are, too; one weighed over seven pounds, and the other over eight. REDI•MIX CONCRETE MTC Approved ALL TYPES OF CONCRETE WORK REDI-MIX CONCRETE & FORMWORK PRi ..AST PRODUCTS MANGERS STEPS SLATS CURBS McCann R.df-MIx Inc. Dashwood, 237-3647 Exeter 233.0338 Emmanuel United Church REV. 8. LAING B.A. B. Div. Organist Mrs. E. Grace Martin Sunday, August 14 10:30 ons. Zurich congregation will join Dashwood members for a worship service. August 21, 28 10:30 a.m. Outdoor service out- side the Dashwood church. Everyone welcome Zurich Mennonite Church Pastor CLAYTON KUEPFER Sunday. August 14 8:45 a.m. Worship Service 9:45 a.m. Sunday Church School 11:00 a.m. Worship Service Speokers- Joe Nighswander and Mel Weber 7:30 p.m. Ropp Brothers in charge of the service Wed. 8:00 p.m. Adult and Youth Bible Study and Prayer Service Meditation • "Give me to know Thy will, 0 God And may 1 see today, A light from Heaven upon my road To clearly point the way. That 1 may speak the timely word And timely silence keep.' Thomas MacKellar St. Peter's Lutheran Church REV. KARL SCHUESSLER Vice Pastor (345.2683) Organist Mrs. Christine Eagleson B.M.A. Sunday. August 14 10:00 a.m. • Worship Service 10:45 o.m. • Sunday School There is a nursery for small children which is supervised dur- ing the worship service. Everyone Welcome