HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1979-09-06, Page 219'
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STRATFORD FALL FAIR
SEPT. 19 • 23
-COOPER BROTHERS -
FRIDAY, SEPT. 21
$5.00 PER PERSON INCLUDES GATE ENTRY
GODD
SATURDAY, SEPT. 22
$5.00 PER PERSON INCLUDES GATE ENTRY
LIMITED ADVANCE TICKETS FOR ABOVE SHOWS
AVAILABLE AT STRATFORD COLISEUM & MUSIC,
SHOPPERS RECORD & TAPE MART
M & M ST. MARYS
THE FOLLOWING EVENTS AREA FREE WITH
GATE ADMISSION
CAMPBELL AMUSEMENTS - OVER 24 RIDES
HORSE SHOWS WED. - THURS. SEPT. 19-20
TUG OF WAR THURS. SEPT. 20
TRANS CANADA HELL DRIVERS SAT., SEPT. 24
DEMOLITION DERBY SUN., SEPT. 23
ENTRY FORMS AVAILA LE AT STRATFORD
FAIRGROONDS.FIRSt 4 CARS ACCEPTED,
p
40
central /won, chronicle.
(Mich!?Ile Cilrbett: editor)
secondary school news
•
e Chronicle needs help
by Paul Newland
Topping the list of
complaints was a sweetie
about . The Chronicle
having too much that
appeals only to Grade 12
students. Well, the fact
that , The Chronicle was
Welcome back. Okay,
let's get to the point. The
Chronicle has received a
lot of criticism about its
material last year.
Big Brother's back
Big Brother is back,
more watchful than ever
and ready to report on the
latest of the latest at
CHSS.
In the midst of G.O.s
welcome back speech,
several Grade 9 students
were seen sneaking out of
the gymnasium. It seems
ti)ese individuals had
become misplaced in the
shuffle, mistaking the
gymnasium for the
cafeteria.
D.L., a Grade 9 student,
was caught in a daze on
Tuesday searching for
her locker and her
classes. It's funny how
those things seem to
disappear right before
your eyes.
Mr. B. was found to be
•filling out a seating plan
incorrectly in one of his
English classes. Thanks
to R.M.'s quick thinking
the situation was quickly
remedied before any
further damage could be
done.
That's it for this week.
But remember, wherever
you go, whatever you do,
even when you least
expect it, Big Brother Is
Watching!
three-quarters Grade 12
students may have had
something to do with it.
All right, maybe not 75
per cent, but the majority
of contributing members
of The Chronicle were in
Grade 12.
This is nothing new.
Two years ago The
Chronicle was dominated
by Grade 13. It seems
that there isalways. one
group dominating the
paper, and this has got to
stop. After all, The
Chronicle is supposed to
be a STUDENT paper,
not a SENIOR paper. So
it's up to you guys in
Grades 9, 10 and 11 to
reverse this trend. If you
were thinking of joining
the paper, don't hesitate
to come to the meetings.
If you hadn't thought of
joining the paper, think
about it. It's up to you to
make your student paper
more appealing to all
students.
PROGRAM SCHEOULE
September 6 to September 12
EXCLUSIVE TO SIGNAL -STAR PUBLISHING
WEEKDAY LISTINGS
MONDAY—FRIDAY
MORNING
5:45 THE CHRISTOPHERS
• (Mon.)
THIS IS THE LIFE
(Tue.)
U. OF M. PRESENTS
(Wed., Fri.)
AMER. RELIGIOUS
TOWN HALL MEETINGS
(Thurs.)
3:15 U. OF M. PRESENTS
(Mon., Tue., Thurs.)
FARM. AND HOME
SHOW (Wed)
WITH THIS RING
(Fri. 6:15-6:30)
SCOPE
6:45 MORNING NEWS
7:00 TODAY SHOW
7:25 MICHIGAN TODAY
7:30 TODAY SHOW
8:25 MICHIGAN TODAY
(LA, tODAY SHOW •
9:00 MOVIE FIVE
THURSDAY, SEPT. 6 "UMC
(Operation Heartbeat)"
Edward G. Robinson,James
Daly. Two doctors win the
battle of a successful heart
transplant-- but then face the
legal wrath of the donor's
widow. The courtroom
climax underscores .the
•difficUlties of modern
medicine.
FRIDAY, SEPT. 7 -
"MEDICAL STORY" Beau
Bridges, Jose Ferrer, Carl
Reiner. An idealistic intern
jeopardjzes his career by
opposing a noted physician
who performs a questionable
hysterectomy. This was the
pilot for "Medical Story"
series.
MONDAY, SEPT. 10. - "ON
THE WATERFRONT"
Marlon Brando, Eva Marie
Saint. A waterfront union
bucks the efforts of a crime
committee to break up its
rackets, but a dock worker
testifies after his brother's
death.
TUESDAY, SEPT. 11 -
"DESIREE"Marlon
Brando, Jean Simmons,
Merle Oberon. About
Napoleon and his first love,
the daughter , of a silk
merchant. Also how their
later meetings' change the
course of history.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 12 -
"THE APPALOOSA"
Marlon Brando, John Saxon.
A cowboy tries to retrieve a
rare horse which has been
stolen from him and taken
into lawless Mexico at the
turn of the century.
1100 HIGH ROLLERS -.
Tues. & Fri. only.
11:30 WHEEL OF FOR-
TUNE
12:00 N'EWS FIVE AT NOON
AFTERNOONS
MONDAY -FRIDAY
12:30 PASSWORD. PLUS
1:00 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
2:00 THE DOCTORS
2:30 ANOTHER WORLD -
Tues. & Fri. Only.
THURSDAY, SEPT. 6
AFTERNOON
4:00 MOVIE FIVE: "THE
OLD MAN AND THE SEA"
Spencer Tracy, Felipe
Pazos. Ernest Hemingway's
story of an aged but in-
domitable Cuban fisherman
and his battle against the
sea.
5:30 THE NEWLYWED
GAME
EVENING
8:00 NEWS
6:30 NI3C NEWS
7:00 BEWITCHED
1: 30,FAMILY FEUD
8:00 NEWS 5 GOES LIVE -
"Schocile
9:00 OUINCY
1000 MRS. cot.umnO
11:06 NEWS
11:30 TONIGHT SHOW
I :00 TOIV1ORROW
2:00 ALL-NIGHT MOVIE
t4
"THE GODDESS" Kim
Stanley, Lloyd Bridges.
4:00 ALL-NIGHT MOVIE
"CHARLIE CHAN AT :THE
OPERA" Warner Oland,
Helen Wood ,
FRIDAY, SEPT. 7
AFTERNOON
• 4:00 MOVIE FIVE "THE
FORGOTTEN MAN" Dennis
Weaver, Anne Francis. A
soldier who was believed
killed in action, returns after
5 years in a POW camp to
find his wife remarried and
his business sold by his
partner.
5:30 THE NEWLYWED
GAME
EVENING
6:00 NEWS
6:30 NBC NEWS
7: 00BIONIC WOMAN
8:00 GARY COLEMAN
SPECIAL, - "THE THING
MEETS CASPER AND THE
SCHMOO
8:30 FACTS OF LIFE
9:00 ROCKFORD FILES
10 : 00 EDDIE CAPRA
MYSTERIES
11:00 NEWS
11:30 TONIGHT SHOW
1:00 MIDNIGHT SPECIAL
2:30 'ALL-NIGH'T MOVIE
"HEALERS" John For-
sythe, Susan Hubley.
4:30 ALL-NIGHT MOVIE
"CHARLIE CHAN AT THE
CIRCUS" Warner Oland,
Keye Luke.
SATURDAY, SEPT. 8
MORNING
6:00 FAMILY AFFAIR -
No. 3
6:30 BUFORD AND THE
GALLOPING GHOST
7:00 FABULOUS FUNNIES
(7 DB)
8:00 DAFFY DUCK
8 30 CASPERS ANGELS
9:00 FRED & BARNEY
MEET THE THING
1 0 : 0 0 SUPER
GLOBETROTTERS
10:30 THE NEW SCHMOO
11:00 NEW ADVENTURES
OF FLASH GORDON
• ' 11:30 GODZILLA
• 12:00 BONKERS No. 5618-1
. . '
. AFTERNOON
• '12:0 SOULTRAIN"
1:30 THIS WEEK IN
BASEBALL
2:00 NBC BASEBALL
5:00 JACQUES COUSTEAU
- "Hippo! !" •
' EVENING
6:00 NEWS FIVE AT SIX
6:30 HEE HAW
7:30 GONG SHOW
8:00 DISCO MUSIC,
'AWARDS
10:00 MISS AMERICA
PAGEANT
12:00 NEWS FIVE
ELEVEN
11:3.0 CINEMA FIVE
(TBA) .
MONDAY, SEPT. 10
AFTERNOON -1
"ASYLUM FOR A SPY"
Robert Stack, Felicia Farr,
Martin Milner. When an
American spy (harboring
top secret information)
suffers a physical and
mental breakdown, a
counter -spy gets himself
committed to the asylum and
attempts to uncover the
secret.
5:30 THE NEWLYWED
GAME
EVENING
6:00 NEWS
6:30 NBC NEWS
7:00 BEWITCHED
7:30 RADIO SHOW
8:00 HOLOCAUST (Pt. 1 of
4)
11:00 NEWS
11:30 TONIGHT SHOW
1:00 TOMORROW
2:00 ALL-NIGHT MOVIE
"FRANCIS GARY
POWERS: THE TRUE
STORY OF THE U-2 SPY
INCIDENT" Lee Majors,
Nehemiah Persoff.
4:00 ALL-NIGHT MOVIE
"BE MY GUEST" David
Hemmings, Andrea Monet.
TUESDAY, SEPT. 11
AFTERNOON
4:00 MOVIE FIVE: "KEY
WEST" Stephen Boyd,
Sheree North. An ex-Cia
security chief (who has
retired to his hometown in
Key West to relax) becomes
the target of a revenge -
maddened tycoon who
launches a macabre plot on
his death -bed that eventually
claims the lives of three
important people. "
5:30 THE NEWLYWED
GAME
EVENING
6:00 NEWS
6:30 NBC NEWS
7:00 BEWITCHED
7:30 SHA NA NA
8:00 SURVIVAL ANGLIA -
SHARKS
9:00 HOLOCAUST (Pt. 2 of
4)
11:00 NEWS
11:30 TONIGHT SHOW
1:00 TOMORROW
2:00 ALL-NIGHT MOVIE
"STOLEN HOURS" Susan
Hayward, Michael Craig.
4:00 ALL-NIGHT MOVIE
"THE BAIT" Donna Mills,
Michael Constantine.
12:30 SATURDAY NIGHT WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 12
LIVE AFTERNOON
SUNDAY, SEPT. 9 4:00 MOVIE FIVE:
MORNING "RUSSIAN ROULETTE"
6:45 DAVEY &GOLIATH • George Segal, Christina
7:00 OPEN CAMERA Raines. Russian Premier .
7;30 CARTOON CARNIVAL Kosygin is on' lis way to
8:00 REX HU,MBARD Vancouver, Canada. An
9:00 °RAI:ROBERTS assassin (a dissident KIIG
9:30 TELEVISED MASS agent) f is awaiting his
10....p0 ABBOTT & arrivalc and the Canadian
COSTELLO • . authorities have to act fast to
10:30 LITTLE 4ASCALS prevent a tragedy Of' glo4a1
11:00 COMEDY CLASSICS ' importance.
"BABYTAKES A BOW" 5:30 THE NEWLYWED
Shirley Temple. The famed GAME
child star once again cap-
tures the hearts of the nation
in this early film.
EVENING
NEWS
AFTERNOON 6:30 NBC NEWS
12:30 MEET THE PRESS 7:00 BEWITCHED
1:00 NFL FOOTBALL - 7:30 FAMILY FEUD
Houston at Pittsburgh 8:00 REAL PEOPLE
4:00 NFL FOOTBALL - 9:00 HOLOCAUST (pt. 3 of
Oakland at San Mega ' 4)
5:30 (approx) NEWS 5 11:00 NEWS
HALFTIME EDITION' 11:30 TONIGHT SHOW
EVENING I :00 TOMORROW
7:00 THE WONDERFUL 2:00 ALL-NIGHT MOVE
WORLD OP DISNEY" tioNg OP OUR 0W1¼r'
8:00 13IG EVENT- "GI-10,St . George Peppard, Zohra
OFF IGHT 401" Lampert.
' 10:00 PRIME TIME SUN-, 4:00 ALL-NIGHT , MOVIE
DAY , "ORDEAL" Arthur Hill,
11 : 00 NEWS FIVE. AT, Diann muldaur,
C1/INTON NEWS-RgCORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1979—PMg 21.
The entry from Yogi Bear Campgrounds won first
prize in the commercial float category at the
Bayfield Fall
Record photo)
Fair parade on
Saturday. (News -
New school year forrnat at CHSS
By Michelle Corbett
For those of you who
are already starting to
worry about December
exams at this early stage
in the school year, fret
not. As far as the students
of CHSS are concerned
they no longer exist.
This past Spring an
Evaluation Committee
made up of teachers from
CHSS drew up a list of
recommendations
regarding the structure
of the coming school
year. These recom-
mendations were adopted
by the school and wp1
cause a number of
changes. Now, the school
year will consist of two
terms. Term one starts
September 4 and runs till
January 22 with January
23 to February 1 being an
exam period. Term .two
will begin February 5 and
end June 8 with the exam
period being the time
between June 9 and June
17.
Four formal report
cards will be rfeceived by
students, one each on the
dates November 16,
February 15, April 18
with the final one being
given sometime in June.
Recommendation
marks have also been
changed and will vary
with the level of subject.
Level three (130, 230 etc.)
coi)rse R marks will drop
9
five per cent from 60 to
59. Level four (140, 240
etc.) R marks will
remain the same but
Level Five's magic
number will jump five
per cent to 65. Year five
and special ed marks will
be subject to each
departments choice.
It is hoped that these
changes will bring about
more class time and a
greater emphasis on
term work.
More supervision for students
1) Students will no
longer be classified ac-
cording to their year in
high school. Instead they
will be classified ac-
cording to their year.
This change was made by
the Ministry of
Education.
2) According to new
school policy, Grade 11
students with spare
periods ' have been
timetabled into regular
classes where they will be
expected to spend the
time studying. Grade '9,
10 and 11 students , wh`O
drop courses will still
have to report to that
class, but they will not
have to continue taking
the course.
3) The students' lounge
has been moved to Room
20:7 (the old music room)
from 201. This change
was made because extra
classroom space was
needed and the music
room does not have -
blackboards.
4) Beginning this year,
teachers will supervise
the cafeteria during
lunch periods. Mr.
Phillips and Mr. Fox will
continue their super-
vision.
Jack's jottings from Queen's Park
BY JACK RIDDELL,
M.P.P.
There has been much
discussion in recent
months ahout the im-
balance in the labour
market,- resulting from
available opportunities
and the skills or training
of people who are looking
for work. Undoubtedly,
our educational system
has a major respon-
sibility in guiding young
people and helping them
to recognize and cope
with the realities of life
today.
The changes which
affect female members of
the labour force are
particularly significant.
Here in Ontario, more
than 50 percent of all
women are now working
"outside their homes".
Some 40 percent of the
entire. labour force is
female, and women earn,
on the average, a little
more than half the
average male wage.
Indeed, a study made in
1976 showed that a
woman with a university
degree earns less than
$10,000, on the average
for full-time work, while
men with a degree earn
an average of $21,854.
Ontario laws require
equal pay for equal work,
and we have a Human
Rights Code which
specifically prohibits
discrimination on the
basis of sex, with respect
to all hiring, training or
promotion. Yet women in
Ontario do not really
have equal job op-
portunities. More than 60
percent are in low-paying
clerical, sales and ser-
vice jobs, while only
about 25 percent of
working men are so
occupied.
Difficult as it is to
believe in this modern
age, there are still a
number of myths which
persist with respect tor.
"working women". Some
people continue to
believe, for example, that
women work for different
reasons than do men. Yet
several studies have
shown that the main
motivations are the same
for both sexes: economic
necessity combined wit
a basic need fir person I
sa tisfaction .
The notion that women
work only for ,pin money
has little foundation:
Some 40 percent, of
. working,,women are
breadwinners. It has
even been said that
women really don't need
as much money as men.
What logic can be found
in such a statement? A
single woman has the
same expenses as a
single man: She pays the
same rent, food bills and
taxes. Not a14 married
won -ten have husbands to
support them: often they
are the main if not the
sole wage-earner.
Thousands of women are
struggling against great
odds to raise their
families as single
parents, trying to be both
father and mother to
their children.
In recent years, with
high unemployment, . it
has even been charged
that women are taking
jobs away from men who
have families to support.
However, according to
Ontario's Minister of
Labour, if every Ontario
married woman handed
her job over to' an
unemployed man, there
would still be about,
800,000 jobs left over,
mostly jobs which men
are not trained to do.
- Studies Rave demon-
strated all too clearly
that there is no validity to
the idea that women are
unsatisfactory employees
because they have .high
absenteeism and tur-
nover rates. There is no
significant difference
between either rate for
men and women at
similar levels. One major
Canadian study actually
showed that while women.
may have slightly more
short-term absences than
men, men have more
lengthy. absences.
Have you ever heard
statements such as
"women fall apart under
pressure", "they simply
aren't temperamentally
suited to hold down
respohsible jobs"?
Studies carried out in the
United States have come,
up with some very in-
teresting findings in this
connection. Male em-
ployees lose their tem'
pers twice as often as
fernale employees. When
they do so they shout,
bang their , desks, slam
doors and drive
1.
erratically.Wnien IOtI
the other hand, when t ey
lose their teMpers sell m
do any of thbse things,
although they have been,
known to cry. Are a
woman's tears a greater
indicator of lack of
control, of
"emotionalism", than a
man shout;ng, banging
and driving erratically?
What about the idea
that it's a waste of time
training or giving extra
responsibility to a woman
employee, because she'll
probably get married
and -or pregnant, and the
employer's investment
will have been wasted?
The fact of the matter is,
of course, that women in
the thousands are
working full-time during
their child-bearing and
child -raising years. At
this moment in time,
almost 66 percent of
Ontario women between
the ages ,of 20 and 44 are
in the labour ,force. Some.
62 percent of them are
married. In fact, more
than 50 percent of all'
Ontario wives work.
. Ontario's Minister of
Labour has defined what
his Ministry considers to '
be the •goals of the
women's moveinent,
including the need to
t dent cards'
Every year the need for
a student card is
questioned by many
people. As students, what
do we get out of these
cards?
Most people are aware
Of the fact that the money
used to purdhase a
student's card goes.
directly to students
council. 1J is used for a
variety of student ac-
tivities.
The card itself can be
used several different
ways. It serves as a
reliable form of iden-
tification for those
students who have not yet
obtained a drivers license
or an age of majority
card. A mor g profitable
way to use the students
card is to take ' it to
dances. Reductions of 50
cents are usually given to
those students with
cards. Also, many city
transportation systems,
Toronto not included,
have cheaper rates for
students withspecial
cards.
If a student is willing to
take the advantage of all
the epportuni.ties
presented by the students
card, and he -she doesn't
mind supporting the
school, a students card is
a worthwhile investment.
18TH ANNUAL
PIONEER THRESHER
• AND HOBBY
ASSOCIATION REUNION
September 7, 8, 9
• Blyth, Ontario
STEAM ENGINES - TRACTORS - THRESHING - SAW MILL -
OLD FARM MACHINERY - GAS ENGINES - SHINGLE MILL -
HAND FED SEPARATOR - HAY PRESS - ANTIQUE CARS -
ENTERTAINMENT etc.
JOHN ELLACOTT SIMON HALLAHAN
President R.R. 3
London; Ontario Blyth, Ontario
VAN EGMOND
increase the options for -
women, and consequently
for men, the importance
of removing the labels
"male" or "female"
from certain jobs.
The Ministry's
Women's Bureau is a
resource centre, offering
individual counselling, as
well as support and en-
couragement to com-
munity .agencies.
4'
lderf:est
Cider, Arts, Crafts, Demon-
strations, Flower Show and
Art Gallery
SUNDAY, SEPT. 30
12 - 5 P.M.
at
EGMONDVILLE
Flea Market space is still
available for antiques and crafts
Phone 482-7249 to reserve
LL STAR TOURS
PIONEERS OF ESCORTED MOTOR COACH TOURS
"OUR BUSINESS 15 GOING PLACES"
FALL FOLIAGE TOURS
3 DAY TOUR
CLEVELANDS HOUSE
In the Muskoka Lakes
DEPARTS SEPT. 23
EACH OF 2 - '145.00
Meals Included
3 DAY TOUR
fHE GATINEAU HILLS NEAR OTTAWA
SPECIAL DEPARTURE: SEPT. 28
EACH OF 2 - '109.00
3 DAY TOUR
THE 1000 ISLANDS
DEPARTURES OCT. X& OCT. 9
EACH OF 2 - '135.00
Some Meals Included
* * * * * * *
TpIE ADIRONDACKS
Featuring scenic Lake Placid
DEPARTURES: SEPT. 24, 26, 28
4 DAY TOUR
* * * * * *
THANKSGIVING WEEKEND
Nashville or Wheeling, West Virginia
SPACE STILL AVAILABLE
PASSENGER PICKUPS IN CLINTON, SEAFORTH, GOBERICH
ON ANY OF ABOVE TOURS
IMIDAY W‘ALD
Winghant, 357,2701
• OUT OF TOWN CALL COLLECT
ALL STAR TOURS
1400 Bishop St., Cambridge
We 4E
623-3030 or toll free treat y=
1-800-265-8620 roYanY