HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1971-03-18, Page 12Qi►, ' OPERIC $iG. I;ALLSTAAR, THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 19Th
40.1 the Distaff We
fake a bow 60(1.
The Madwoman of C-haiitot presented
•by GDCI drama club Was not the kind of
a play which the ordinary Joe off the
street of Goderich ` could readily
+." understand and fully appreciate. Maybe
that's because the presentation see.n at the
Huron -Perth Collegiate Drama Festival
was just, the second•act of The Madwoman
Chaillot —: _artd_ drastically reduced
. Version Of that Second act to boot.
According - to director :warren
Robinson,' it is permissabtg at a' drama
festival to produce;, only part of a play,
just' as 'long as the performance doesn't
And, accordifi'g.to Robinson, one of his
Major concerns at the outset wase to-`
involve the 'largest number of students
possible in the GDCI production — which
is commendable.
But whether the.audience did or did
not . appre+iate The Madwoman' of
Chaillot, it -Wan -Tremendous achievement
on the part of the Goderich and district'
students ,to win the award for the best
play . in the- festival. It was a major
undertaking and everyone connected with.
the' production may take a well-earned
bow. •
Congratulations must also be accorded
to Al Pirie, the versatile young man who
seems equally at home on- the basketball
court, the football field or front' and
cgntre, on surge. Young .Mx_ Pixie. served.
GDCI well last Saturday, having '
participated in 'a WOSSA basketball ,
tournament, ''ear=lier ' in the 'day ' in
T i l I'son bu rgo
And while we're at its the
congratulations of, the wljole community
should ,be accorded to the GDCI
basketball team who rose to}° the
Huron -Perth Senior Championship this
Year.
GDC,I may not have had a planned
program involving all parents ..:to mark
Education . Week, but , tn' students
certair4 came through' with flying colors:
during Education Week to show the stuff
of which they are made.
IODE members to, pay fine
for leaping pins at home
The February meeting of
Ahmeek Chapter oI.O.D.> teas
held at home of Miss ,.L,
McVicar.
The Regent conducted the
meeting. Roll call 24 members
were present.
. Reports of committees were -
given and adopted. Thank"=you
,,,notes were read- from 'the 'sick
and the bereaved.
Correspondence included
notilce of the. Spring Convention
of 1.0.1 ;E. to .be held April 14'
in Han}llton. • •
A letter..k asking,. help in
banishing. the ._..Attawapashot
project resulted` in a motion to`
send a sum of 8'10..
A communication from the
figure skating cltib`. asking for
assistance was tabled and will be
discussed ata later meeting. 4
A small fee is being imposed
on members corning tc the
meeting without wearing their...._
I.O.D.E. pins.
' It was agreed 'to remember .
members who are sick or shut in
with Bards- and in case of
bereavement, to send a donation
to a worthy cause iiistead of the
usual flowers.
,, • 1A • program committee
composed of Mrs.,Holmes and
Mrs. Sitter was appinted.
:firs. Henderson, 'finance
convener, reported the following
actin ides for 1971: -
March 26, rummage sale in
Mr:K.ay Hall;
April 14, dessert earl party
and bake sale in the Legion Haiti
In May, the 70th anniversary
of Ahmeek Chapter;
In 'July, a table in the art
Mart in Court House Park.
°
The next meeting is to . be
held April 5 at the bottle of Mrs.
Ciaigie, Montreal St.
The flag was , brought
foreWa a and ' the neetieg
brought to a close. A social half
hour was spent with
refreshments,
Miss McVicar was thanked for
her • hospitality by,
Stahghan, '
Ho Im�svlile UC
stuclv of the
Mrs. James Lobb, was in
charge of program for the March''...
meeting. The, theme -was "Let us
take time for all things." --
Following the singing- of a
hvmn• the scripture was read by
Mrs. Lobb. Pat' Norman led in
...pr. kir. Mrs. Wm. Porter read the
• devotional talk. ,.,..
A Skit presented by Mrs, 0.
(;inn and Mrs. Wm. Norman
suggested ways to make.the best
else of our time.
roll call was.s.nswered by
••Som:thi I would like to do
V, he + ave time."
Mrs. Lobb introduced the
new study on the Americas, She
gave information on the
location countries included,
origins of the • .. ple, religions,
dress; etc... of Cee f tial America.
Lucille Bond of 1-Iolmesville
hopes to be accepted to do
Secretarial work fox the Literary
programme in Nicaragua.
The members of the U.C.V..
have'voted to make their Live,
Love project in Central America.
It was noted $100 ,has been
sent for allocation. Articles were.
•brought for. ,the"Baby Bale to be
sent.to .Hong Kong. Some of the
knitting and.' sewing . for
Children's Aid was turned in.
PORK LOIN QUARTERS CUT INTO
NOTICE
• Members of Alexandra Marine and General Hospital of
Goderich Corporation and other interested parties, are urged
tg attend the annual' meeting which will be held on'
Morxlay, March 22, 1971, at 8:00 p.m. in the Ladies'
Auxiliary 'Room of the hospital, at which time we will
receive the financial statement, the auditors' report, the
report of the Board and elect members to the Board of
Governors and conduct other business. ot. .
It is the intention of the Board of Governors to submit
for approval, New Medical Staff By-LawS.lf any member is
interested in reading the 'By -Laws, to be submitted at the
meeting, they are available at the hospital.
•
'MEMBER OF THE CORPORATiO•N
,• The following persons shall be, Members,upon resolution
of the Board: r
w..pea..w.hst...bas..donai,ad_ ac uvEra donates $1(}II in �._-.._
any . one year to the Corporation Shall be a life
w.w ... mehiber'rn r,.
(b) the president or' thief, officer of a corporation or
organization which pays the, Corporation $25 in any
year shall be ex•.officio a member of the Corporation
for that -year;
, (c) a person who pays the annual' membership fee of
'$1.00 to the Corporation in any year shall be a
- member of the Corporation for that year;
(d). a member -who pays' his fees annually shall, not be
entitled. to 'vote' at any meeting of the Corporation
unless his membership +fee was paid in full, at least
thirty days prior to the date of th'e meeting,
James W. Rinne)),
Chairman of the`Board.
,
4
w
1y
fi
°
With ,Shirley .J. Keller
'`As ' I have been making my' immediately sense Txudea ' . F`� ~n'e sex` k, no•.w living' in-
rounds these .days as acting plight ,and•�,lnew ie .— Vii, •Columbia, describing his
editor oNf e : d ch i _ b ii 5ii ' lrn'ng'-'�at.` orr Jackson, South
em_to ve' :', .r or•t, like arriving .back in Carolina, tells' of actually being
iienng the , at h- 'of o r -t.t_awa: wit. a bride by his side, taught to _string prisoners
s
women , around tow.. who radiantly happ and obviously together_ with a charge of
wiz. , low`busy. 1r lus-tie-. I . adored, and quipping; "sleet mt explosive round their necks. and
ti ='then- Interest'-and•'of-- girlfriend."" then to "accidentaily-' trip up,
r`se, 1 assure them all that I " They said when Trudeau was thus in - a second disposing of
-- - amindeed very, very busy. elected that Phe could become m-. ten to one ' hundred
• - I 'had 'a brief` chat` the other Canada's 'version' of the late John prisoners..
'' day with a newspaper editor in F. ; Kennedy who became- an It is hard to forget accounts
Exeter = Bill Batten —.,who was international legend because of given by American servicemen of
a school mate of niine way back his" personal; and dynamic appeal orders riot to take any prisoners,
when schools were just schools. ' to people. By golly , I, think they of Vietnamese prisoners dropped,
I explained- to Bill that for a ' were right: . _ - from helicopters, -dragged beh i n d
short while, F was' to be at the x x *-, ' military trucks, imprisoned in
helmof The Goderich: tiger cages: American news
' 4 � Speaking of the�L-Wiled Brazes
Signal -Star , and • that I was in a roundabout way. -brings me services have . photographed .
enjoying my newfound, freedom to a subject which-horrifies.pme many ' examples. A Canadian
to - mak somewhat. --hat subtec:t is tine-:doctor—has reported treating the
decisions. -- • -- ietnam `Var. same prisoners several times for
I' have received a release from torture injuries. This harsh
"You will soon tare of it.,,treatment" has been blamed om,
retorted my friend Batten. the Ontario Voice of women
and ' it�deals with a lecture rgiy en the-Saigpnn , - oopsz `abut
I ad to thateI Was looking by• lea', `Macpherson on a I otogr prh � ften ;, ,show.
forward to the end of March , . -- �.. r. � _ � '�-•� - ��•-�
when our new editor would progrs.ni . called .kiewpoinr .5See:n. mencans ash onlookers., ;Ltnder''
on CBC in mid-Janrtjar '�. ;; "' Ge seta .F Can e bon, the
arrive, but in •. the-
,
meantime.,..we11.9..' .It presents. ideas that r ha''captures the
"not thought of.. before" and ,lp" sorte-S e•n ains'r p` nsi,ble for
tncltide= them this week 1•or`u ;.the�`1%nen:"; ��`: . TM . .:,.
Of coii3se, the really big news' .a. or
,-
of ' the decade is the recent perusal and comment, Let " k•��o:
• e "� of Pierre Elliott,. The stony' of the American •closely at wh daces tag r
m prisoners in North Vietnam has American , piisone ln" .Ith
Trudeau, prime minister : of= en much in the ne ,s lately.'
.V:ietrtarN,And`trk't-understan
Canada. This just wouldn't be a y-' ' "R
This Hanoi has been thye'Object of an ;what:-.is.,� behind the •,cu u
woman's' column '' if some t�
mention of PFT's wedding .was intense propaganda barrage from ogtetN... ' ,�.
not made, the Pentagon. which seems' to • President Nixon —main -tains.'
aim at escalating hatred for the that 'the names of the prisoners
For the life of me, I cannot 'Vietnamese and so justifying have been withheld, that they
.3.11I I' � n - -''Q t escalation of the bombing. are not allowed to communicate
so terribly upset,by -�. Mr. The stories' told ,,by the with their families . and each . M
'l rudeau's marriage. Te man is reel d prisoners interviewed other. and that they are badly ., ; ,
flesh and blood like the ,rest of wit the Pentagon spokesinan on treated; About a year ago,. a
us. Surely he•is entitled to marry;. CB television last Week, were Liaison .Committee was set up
if he chooses ....and whether se different from .the stories those . by American peace workers to
like it or not, to a wofnan matey same ex -prisoners told 'to the - provide channels for information
years his junior if he is fortunate ,• New York Times shortly after and communication between
enough to be able to attract her. ' their release in August 1969. prisoners and their relatives. The
You know, I have a sneaky One of them had ; had his navies supplied -by Hanoi to that
shattered. elbow treated and' his ' coinmitttee last April,' and again
arm saved by ,Vietnamese A in August, tallied , with the
Surgeons, and all reported that information recently given'•
they were well-treated in prison, Senators Kennedy • and
and that their diet, while Fulbright.
unappetising, was adequate: Requests for information on
Later. —Major Overly told the specific prisoners has also been
Boston Globe, "I could -supplied. Over. 3200 letters have
understand why those people been received by the families of
would want to kill me." the 339 • prisoners since the
Three years ago, when I was committee was set up, and
an observer in North Vietnam , parcels received bythe prisoners
for Voice of Women, I 'went to have contained requested items.
Nam Dinh, North Vietnam's ranging frons air mattresses to
Meg, by fooling even his closest third largest city, and saw the 'Modelling clay, chess sets, and
• associates, he has endeared destruction ,Of most of the strawberry jam. All this and
himself avail more to the other buildings there, - including • the 'more information is available.
`loners' in the coup whose ,, Catholi'c Cathedral and the Why then the emphasis" on brutal
.M� children's cinema. I talked te��he- treatment.
No Centre Slices Removed
No fine meats sold anywhere •... at any price!
emir
DR‘VN w'n 106 A It Club,
Sliced Town Club. Sliced
IAMB CHOPS
SAUSA6
OLQGN
WIfIE
1-Ib.vacQkg 5.uum_
Frozen,. `1?nported, New
Zealand Spring Larnb'�
Burn;,- Store Pa.c"k,
Beef & Pork
Burrs, •$y iiia Pece,
Any Weight Cut, Vis
Nary,.
8
Prices i&Gu-rariteed Quaky
END CUTS CENTRE CU
There's nothing like it!
Take a linht, flaky Jane Parker -,pie crust —
fill it. "wit'h apples, .pineapple, peaches, cherries.
and orange- puree. and what do,you`have? You
have one of the fint,st tast°•
-
i.ng pies you'll ever•eat. e
"New'!" Jane Parker
Dail ' Dated
FIESTA, PIE.
'Full 8 24 -oz size
491
.R'egutarly 59c"
vct�n
feeling in'the back of my head
that the reason many people are
upset. about PEI's wedding is
the fact that ,his image — his
• personal rating with the people'
—• is skyrocketing beeause of it.
It's true, you , know.
Someho* the man generates
masulinity, and now- that he is
• married, he is 'suddenly , more
virile than ever before. Everyone
knew he was a 'romantic type of
• man, but ' now` by secretly
plotting to marry the lovely
ranks are in the millions!- .
I believe people are jealous of parents of some of the-seeventeen P r e s i d e n t. N i x b n s
Mr. Tirudeau's siyl'e, of his teenagers killed when American Vietnamizatidn program is
tremendous , ability to be the Planes bombed their school. ',aimed at replacing. American
prime minister of the country When Vietnamese civilians ground combat troop?; by
find an .Americanpilot in their Vietnamese. It is. not a plan to
and at the same time, one of the end the war, nor a^ program to
most excitingmen of our times. midst, they know that he is one
' . What's more, I believe people from, the hundreds of bombers withdraw all U.S. forces and to.
rre`gettin a feeling that Pierre. which have blown up their negotiate an end to the war. The ,
' I lot dean is gaining in houses and factories 'and killed afoirr,ces remain gists and supply
,pularity, not because of what and wounded their ' children.
he says but .because of what he. How would we react? •Perhaps it ,-Ttaditi bilall y, prisoners) are
does ... like courting'his is the restraint of the ., repatriated when.iiostiljities end..
bride -to -:be for months right Vietnamese Iwhich is remarkable. If ,there is no plan .to end the
1iet the eyes of the hostilities; ,hen the future for i '
Since the Canadian those prisoners in Vietnam is
eve` .present press who government maintains thatgloomy.
swallowed• •'rrudgu's baited oda is, neutral in 'this `war, The prisoner issue has.•,. "
hook •like the suckers iiia" Mae' .. masked arid' atzo tried to lustily
•perhaps we should be the ones an escalation of the war,
e.ortt.. sae; like "saying, :ask r,� ``What, about the
•y�y.yi��y,), rhyyr�$�y���jsi � �'� �ij� {� ,�y ,G",�/�i���Jp�. r. ,V �a,�.� y�.,�,t +�i_� �yyL'j,� C 'ctiLi�,� �Yle.?�'eti� trlt�jrc
tidal Y7.�:liL.[C t''�". l!.g'�' '"'P:t' / [!dari:01 nig efiliiii 62. tbktbotilk', r + r',"'. ,e, , �'4 d�. Y
.,1 ' trio `" in the al of his P")rtfi^ 'lei tri: .;w.
�entlt�e iii paint sides. 17o the Vietnamese in fact ,.
hand.... C`a .tom :C !erryaf1e ..cottjd ever read prison?", Please turn to Page4Ar •
Look-t.These Prices!
ECO MY _.
ed :Rose Tea Bags pkg of 90 6 9
JELLY DESSERT
Shirriff Powders 3-0; pkg 1 Oce.
4NSTAN1 MASHED
Carnation Potatoes 12 -oz pkg 49c
FRIED
Rice -A -Boni
SWEET MIXED
Rose Pales
Florida Grown, Canada No. 1 Grade, •Fresh, Crisp,
Large Bundles
8 -„az pkgs $1.00-
1541-oi'jar 3 9c
CRY HEARTS
Ontario Grown, ._No
ONIONS
each 3 5 L
O 1 Grade, Yellow Cooking
•
546 cello bag 29c.
PREMIUM, PLAIN
OR SA,,,TED
k
Orist1e Crackers 146b
COFFE.E__.. P g 3 9!1
Chase � Sanborn
oro 1-11? bag 8 9c
IN TOMATO SAUCE , h •
Heinz Beans 5 14 -fl -6z tins $1.00
FOUR MAIDS BRAND, HALVES '
14 -•f1 -oz tins
$1.00
Apricots' 4 -
MEAT FLAVOUR
Chum Dog Food 415.0,tins49c
WAX OR GREEN
A&P Beans 61441_0, tins $1.00
A&P
KETCHUP,
7 VARIETIES, CAT FOOD
Puss .'N- Boots •
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Frozo Brand, Frozen
FRENCH FRIES
.00
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CANADA DRY Quarts.
GINGER /,LE - WINK
ROOT BEER ORANGE
N,
•