Clinton News-Record, 1985-11-27, Page 22Plans
By Stephanie Levesque
Plan.. for the new Catholic high school in
Peet!) ;ounty are starting to take shape, less
than a year before the school's opening date.
The Huron -Perth Roman Catholic
sr.parate school board is submitting a detail-
ed plan of its high school to the planning and
implementation commission which was con-
sidered at the board's Oct. 28 meeting. At
the same meeting, it was announced that the
school's principal will be in the area for a
week in November.
Daniel Bishop, the mann who will be prin-
cipal of St. Michael's secondary school in
September of next year, will be visiting area
schools from Nov. 18 to 21. He will spend the
days visiting with the students in their
schools and hold evening sessions to meet
CLINTON NEWS -RECORD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27,1985 --Page 5A
e shane for Catholic high school
the community.
Bishop officially starts as principal of the
Catholic high; school on Jan. 1 of next year.
He will spend the first six months preparing
for next fall.
Bishop will be at St. Michael's in Strat-
ford, currently a Grade 7 and 8 school, on
Monday Nov. 18. On Tuesday he will be in
Kinkora and on Wednesday he'll be in St.
Marys. On Thursday, the principal will visit
Dublin, St. Columban and Seaforth Catholic
schools with a community meeting in Dublin
in the evening.
Superintendent of education John Mc-
Cauley and the current St. Michael's prin-
cipal, Larry Cook, have been spending .some
time preparing the Grade 8 students for high
school. Along that Mir, director of educal loll
William Eckert has sent a°memo to all prin-
cipals, which cuts off access to Grade 8
students in Catholic schools from the public
high schools.
While Eckert says there will probably be
exceptions in Huron County, where there
won't be a Catholic high school until at least
1988, the traditional visit to Grade 8
classrooms by guidance counsellors will
end.
The director indicated that for the past
number of years, information has been
given by the public schogl board in evening
programs. tae suggests that the evening pro-
grams continue or the Catholic students
receive the information during professional
development days at their school.
And, as September 1986 approaches, the
school board is working on plans to adapt St.
Michael's to a high school. McCauley said
renovations to the Stratford school have
been estimated at $70,000.
The Superintendent said the planning and
implementation commission has asked for
the needs of the school board and the
renovation project is the main need. He said
the board's accommodation review commit-
tee will be looking further into the project
following the municipal election.
Initially, the plan calls for a kitchen -
cafeteria complex to be built on the mez-
zanine floor above the gymnasium. Now,
that space is empty.
Also, plans call for a family studies
classroom and an arts room to be put in a
separate building already on the school pro-
perty. The building is a tomer lodge hall.
For the future, the board is projecting that
by 1989 it will need to build a new high
school. This, said Mr. McCauley depends on
enrolment and capital funding from the pro-
vince.
Other assumptions made in the board's
submission to the planning and implementa-
tion commission, is that by 1989, the French
Immersion program will have expanded so
that one whole school will be needed for this
program. This means the four remaining
schools, including St. Michael's, will con-
vert to Kindergarten to Grade 8 schools by
September 1989.
"The key word is projected," commented.
McCauley when asked if he was sure this
would all fall into place.
London hospital serves as co-ordinating centre for Canada -wide study
University Hospital in London is the co-
dinating centre for as Canada- wide study
r0m
determine whether imunosuppressive
herapy is effective in the treatment of pro-
gressive Multiple Sclerosis t MSI.
The three-year study, which has . just
. begun, was made possible by a grant of
more than $800,000 to MS researchers and
members of the Canadian Apheresis Study
' Group by the Medical Research Council
IMRC ) df Canada. Dr. John Noseworthy, a
University Hospital neurologist, is serving
as principal investigator and director of the
study.
- Multiple Sclerosis, which primarily af-
fects adults between the ages of 15 and 50, is
a serious disease of the central nervous
system which can lead to severe disabilities.
The cause of alb is not known, and, although
treatment with cortisone -like drugs may
shorten acute attacks of MS, nothing cur-
rently available will prevent its progres-
sion. There are 50,000 Canadians and 250,000
Americans known to be suffering from MS.
Research has indicated that abnor-
malities of the immune system play a role in
the development of progressive MS, and re-
cent findings suggest that the disease may
be stabilized or improved in some patients
by modifying their immune response
through the use of immunosuppressive
nosuppressive
drugs in conjunction with other treatments.
There has been evidence that a brief, inten-
sive course of treatment with
cyclophosphamide, an immunosuppressive
drug frequently used in chemotherapy
treatment of ' cancer, together with pred-
nisone, a cortisone -like hormdne, may inter-,
rupt the progression of the disease. A longer
course of treatment with these two drugs, in
combination with plasma exchange- a pro-
cedure in which plasma is removed and
replaced with a suitable replacement fluid
( human albumin )- has also shown promise.
"The current study, titled Canadian Co-
operative Study of Cyclophosphamide and
Plasma Exchange in Progressive MS," Dr.
Noseworthy explained, "is a full-scale ran-
domized prospective blinded trial designed
to evaluate these treatments." The study in-
volves Multiple Sclerosis Research Clinics
in 10 centres across Canada including Van-
couver, Calgary, Saskatoon, Winnipeg, Lon-
don, Hamilton, Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal,
and Halifax.
Although MS researchers from Canadian
research clinics have been working together
in an informal way for several years, this
study will be the first formally organized
large-scale collaborative clinical trial,, Dr.
Noseworthy said. Each research clinic, Dr.
1
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BAKERS MINI CHIPS OR SEMISWEET
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BAKER'S'SEMI•SWEET
BAKING CHOCOLATE
DORDENS EAGLE
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450 g 3.39
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200 g
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75 s•100s
225 9
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DESSER1 TOPPING
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THESE SPECIALS
AVAILABLE
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BROKEN PIECES
McNAIR WALNUTS
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McNAIRS
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375 g
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WHITE
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ROBIN HOOD
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OCEAN SPRAY
CRANBERRY COCKTAIL
CRANAPPLE
CRANGRAPE
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750 mL BOTTLES
19
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3
JELLY POWDERS
ASSORTED
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FOR
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MAPLE LEAF
500 g PKG. •
ROBIN HOOD FLOUR
ALL
PURPOSE
10 kg BAG
8.29
LIGHT BULBS
99'
PHILIPS
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PKG. OF 2
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1.59
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250 g PKG.
WE RESFRVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT PURCHASES TO REASONABLE
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WEEKL
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CHECK THESE EVERYDAY LOW PRICES AT ZEHRS
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BLACK MAGIC
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OMPARE THESE!
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ASS r'0.
4.69 CHOCOLATES
POT GOLD
5.99 CHOLATES
POT OF GOLD
MILK
1.99 (CHOCOLATES
NO NAME WITH PORK
170 9
McCORMICKS
•c_
FOA EXTRA VALUE AT OUA EVERYDAY PRICES
ZEHRS
199
89` COFFEE CREAMER ''' 9 .
NO NAME FANCY 3.99
KERNEL CORN V
NO NAME 4't DELUXE' n 5 q 2.29
PIZZA (� �/
NO NAME FANCY II r 1 AO
APPLESAUCE '7v
ZEHRS 10't inn a
HOT CHOCOLATE 1.4�
LAYS OR RUFFLES
ASSORTED VARIETIES
POTATO CHIPS
200 g
PKG.
WESTONS
"FIBRE GOODNESS"
WHITE OR 100% W. WHEAT
675 g
LOAF
BREAD
LANTIC
BRILLIANT
YELLOW SUGAR
2 kg
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LIBERTY
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SEALTEST LIGHT N LIVELY
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Noseworthy explained, serves a fairly well-
defined geographical area. Combined with
the relatively stable population of the cen-
tres involved, this creates an ideal setting
for this type of population -based research,
he added.
Three different treatment groups have
been established for the trial, including a
control group which will receive placdbo
medications and sham plasma exchange- a
control procedure in which plasma is
removed and then recombined with the
blood cells and returned to the patient un-
changed. A total of 200 patients will ,be
studied over the three-year period.
Other key peof>le from across Canada in-
volved in the study include co- director Dr.
T. Peter Seland, Calgary General Hospital,
Professor Michael Gent, McMaster Univer-
sity, Hamilton, Dr. George Ebers, Universi- '
ty Hospital, London, and Dr. Kenneth
Shumak, Women's College Hospital, Toron-
to. The main participants in the London trial
include Dr. David Hollomby and Dr. George
Rice of University Hospital, Dr. William
McInnis and Dr. William Clark of Victoria
Hospital and Mr. Wayne Taylor, Robarts
Research Institute. The study co-ordinator,
based at University Hospital, is Peggy
Vanc rvuort.
How they
scored at cards
CLINTON - Mary Dale and Jean
Henderson were the draw prize .winners at a
card party held at the International Order of
OddfelloWs (IOOF) Hall on November 21.
Other winners were: high lady, Irene
Heipel; low lady, Olive Ball; high man,
Florence R'outzon; low man, Bill Caldwell;
lone hands, Helen Sootheran.
The next card party will be held on
December 5 at 8 p.m. '
David Smith
David Smith, Son of Fred and Cathy Smith,
of 359 Huron Rd., Goderich, graduated from
the University of Waterloo on October 25:
David received a Masters of Applied
Science degree in electrical engineering. He
studied at the university with a scholarship
from the Natural Sciences and Engineering
• Research Council. David, a graduate of
GDCI, is now employed by L AISA Inc. in
Waterloo.
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