The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1975-06-26, Page 4Oh, the joys of teaching
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AROTIIEK FEATURE.- 1T VOT.51“ REQUIRE F0E.I. OF MY VOW/.
Need area promotion group?
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Our response to now
By ELMORE BOOMER
Counsellor for
Information South Huron
For appointment
phone: 235-0560 or 228-6291
A hug for Canada
Decision shapes future
question of just what extent the residents of
Exeter want to see their community grow.
Some will consider the present size to be
most favorable, while others may opt for a
small, but continued growth each year.
Cost is certainly another of the major
considerations. The initial cost of piping
water from Lake Huron is almost triple
the cost of adding two new wells in Usborne
Township. In addition, borrowing money at
today's rate of interest actually doubles the
initial cost by the time it has been paid.
In effect, that means that the two new
wells in Usborne would cost $802,000, while
the water from Lake Huron would cost over
$2,300,000.
Operating costs are also much higher
with lake water,
Another factor is the quality of water.
At the present time, there is no question
that the fresh water from the wells in
Usborne is much more enjoyable to the
palate than the water from Lake Huron.
On the other hand, the supply from the
lake has to be classed as guaranteed, while
there is no indication of whatvariance may
appear in the future from the wells.
In addition, shallow wells are more
susceptible to contamination from
pesticides or accidental oil or, gas spills
than Lake Huron water. But, nuclear power
development along the lake could increase
risks of contamination for that supply.
Another point is the question of how
long Lake Huron water may be available to
other communities beyond the present
customers.
If the present facility reaches capacity
it would be questionable if a second outlet
would be provided at the same location
which- is as close to Exeter as any lake
source could be.
While the community may assume that
lake water would be available if required
for any reason in the future, this"may not
actually be the case.
No doubt there are many other con-
siderations, but the foregoing are ample to
point out the complexity of the decision
now before the community.
That is a decision that must be shared
by many people because it appears too
weighty for only three men who sit as com-
missioners on the Exeter PUC.
The planning board, industrial commis-
sion and council should be consulted for
their opinions, because it is a decision with
which they will have to adhere in the years
that lie ahead.
It appears important enough to call a
meeting of all those involved and concern-
ed before the final decision is made on the
community's future water supply,
andering Jew
artist, and the best mower of
lawns you have hired in years.
You are buddies.
Cynthia, one of the few familiar
faces last September, because
you had taught her the year
before, hasn't changed at all,
She's just as sweet and lovable
and full of fun as always, and you
think of her almost as a daughter.
And Joe, the other familiar
face last September, because you
had also taught him the year
before, hasn't changed a bit
either. He's just as slippery,
conniving, lazy and genial as
always, and while you've grown
to accept him, as you would a
member of your family with the
same faults.
It's the same every year, You
start out with caterpillars, and if
you are patient and tolerant and
allow people to find their way out
of their cocoons, you wind up with
butterflies, Some gray and dull,
others brilliant and many-hued,
but all of them fluttering with
life.
And you keep track ofi, yolk
butterflies, as best you can:
Here's a doctor who didn't know a
dangling participle from a
ruptured appendix when you
were trying to teach him
Shakespeare, 10 years ago.
And there's a university
MMEMMtnaffl.
Amalgamated 1924
you registered as Hot-Lips
Houlihan type back in Sep-
tember, has turned out to be a
sweet child who blushes if you
ask her what time it is.
Conversely, that angelic,
straight-looking girl with the big
honest eyes and the good man-
ners, whom you spotted as a
potential prize student last fall,
was hauled into..cpurt last winter
for being drunk and disorderly, a
nice way of saying she beat up
two cops.
That little ratty guy with the
dirty hair and the sides falling out
of his sneakers, who looked like a
refugee from a Dickensian or-
phanage, has proved himself a,
track star and a whiz in grant
mar.
Mouthy Mary, whose
vocabulary would scorch the.
skull of a sailor, writes tender,
lyric poetry,
Jeff, whom you put down as a
hockey bum in January, who
missed three days a week from
exhaustion has emerged since the
„ice melted as one of the most
sensitive writers you've ever
taught.
Alan, the belligerent guy you
tangled With on the first day of
school, and the second, and the
fourth and the eighth, a real hood,
has come out of his surly cocoon
as a football player, a pretty fair
• "
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We rather hesitate to muddy the
eters on the subject of Exeter's future
ater supply, but there is one major point
kat perhaps has been overlooked and
iould be brought to the attention of local
.sitients because it directly affects the
iture growth of the community.
A Couple of years ago,it was pointed out
y ministry of environment officials that
he future growth of Exeter would be
mited by the capacity of the Ausable
Liver to handle the town's sewage effluent,
At that time, it was noted that the
:apacity of the river had almost been
eached and probably would be when the
,resent extension of the lagoon is corn-
detect to handle the balance of the com-
nunity now being readied for sewer ser-
rice.
In simple terms, Exeter is nearing the
imit of its growth potential, and similar to
nany communities in Ontario, will be ad-
lised by government officials in Toronto
hat no new development will be permitted
lue to the lack of stream flow to handle
yf fluent.
So, how does that relate to the present
iebate over acquiring new water sources?
Actually, it may relate very closely,
)ecause the present proposal of the PUC is
;o pump an average of 159,500,000 gallons of
water per year over the next 20 years.
All that water is coming from sources
which are located upstream from the
lagoon site and are therefore not available
for use in the flushing of effluent down the
river.
If that amount of water was pumped
into the stream, it is quite conceivable that
Exeter's growth could be extended beyond
that which is now possible.
The only way, of course, to provide that
extra stream flow is to hook into the Lake
Huron water supply system and make that
other 159,500,000 gallons of water available
for stream flushing.
It should be clearly understood that
the preceding is strictly an opinion and
would obviously require more expert ad-
vice and consultation to ascertain if in fact
the suggestion is plausible.
If it is, then a most important decision
rests with Exeter council and PUC. In fact
t could be the most important decision
ever made in this community because it
will basically determine its growth poten-
tial.
Hinging on that decision will be the
development of new subdivisions, the es-
tablishment of new industries and jobs, and
the extension of present industries,
There are many factors, pro and con,
which must be given consideration.
First and foremost, perhaps, is the
One of the things I like about
teaching is that you are not stuck
with the same old stupid faces
year after year, as you are in
most jobs.
In teaching, you get a whole set
of new stupid faces every year.
They come in every Sep-
tember, an entire new gallery of
mugs, and sit there looking at
you. They look pretty dumb, like
any other representative group of
people, and you have a moment
of despair.
It doesn't help much when
some of the faces are closed and
sullen, and others are sneaky or
inslent or just plain devised for
hellety,
"Oh, boy! This is no bumper
crop. More bumptious than
bumper. Looks like a rough year
ahead,"
But some strange alchemy
goes to work during the year, and
by June, if you're lucky, those
faces are no longer strangers, but
a host of new friends and
acquaintances.
You have discovered all kinds
of things, in the give and take of
the classroom, about these
bodies, and now you know them
as aspects of the human spirit,
however blurred or bent, in some
cases.
That girl with the big bust and
bum and the pouty mouth, whom
4 '5'
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Committees to study com-
mittee reports?
That sounds akin to one of the
senior government's make-work
programs, but actually it was a
decision of Exeter council
regarding the action to take on
the town hall and street num-
bering proposals.
There is no quarrel with the
procedure, be-cause both reports
submitted by the committees
were for consideration only and
not for immediate decision
without further study by council.
However, there is an argurrient
over the fact neither of the
council committees was handed a
deadline. Council, in their
wisdom, gave the original
committees deadlines, and
should have followed the same
procedure for themselves.
A suggestion that it may take
up to a year before the town hall
committee comes back with a
report is ridiculous. The question
has been delayed too long now,
and requires 'more expedient
action than indicated.
While no one expects members
of council to spend the hot
summer months debating such
important matters, a report by
the end of September does not
appear beyond reason.
Council should set guidelines
for themselves as they do for
others and set a target date for
the reports while the original
presentations are basically fresh
in people's minds.
'+ + +
The writer recently joined a
bunch of card sharks for their
annual golf outing at Pike Lake
near Mt. Forest and while there,
we ran into a rather interesting
family.
Sharing our lodging for the
weekend were members of the
Smith family. That's the actual
name, and not one chosen to
protect the identity of the people
in question.
The original Smith family
consisted of seven sons and seven
daughters, and similar to many
families got together only for
funerals.
On one such occasion, the
brothers decided that they should
gather to renew acquaintances on
less austere circumstances and
so they decided on the Smith
family golf tournament.
That started about 15 years ago
and included the brothers only. It
was then decided to include
brothers-in-law, nephews, etc.
and at this year's reunion a
second generation was instituted
when one of the brothers brought
along his teenage son,
professor, one of the swift, eager
minds you touched on her way
through the system.
John has become an artist, and
is going to marry Trish, and you
think it's a great match and hope
the best for them, because you
knew them away back then, when
they were kids,
And another John and a Bill are
journalists, and Betty is a fine
nurse, and Florence is going to be
a lawyer, and Mike takes off your
storm windows and Betty works
in the travel agency, and gives
you the best of service and Pete is
going to take you fishing to a
special trout stream as soon as
school is out and Rosemary has
had four babies, every one a
beauty.
It's like pulling teeth to make
them admit it, but most teachers
become pretty fond of most of
their students over the course of a
year. A few Of them, of course,
only a mother could love,
I can think of no fate more
horrible than being a teacher who
doesn't like kids, and no better
life than tor one who does,
Splitting Wood is easier if the
position of knots and grain are
considered.
Shade from trees delays snow
melt.
Also included in the gathering
were some "friends of the
family" and the aggregation
numbered about 35, attracting
Smiths from as far away as
Florida and New Brunswick.
We're not certain all families
could get along quite as well as
the jovial Smiths, but they were
certainly having themselves a
real ball as they played cards,
golf, shuffleboard, horseshoes
and sat around reminiscing with
relatives and friends whom they
hadn't seen since last year's
reunion.
Now, we know some distaff
reader is immediately going to
ask what the womenfolk were
doing. Well, they apparently
choose the weekend to get
together as well, although not to
the organized degree of the men.
However, we were advised many
of the wives congregated for
an outing to a play or a night out
on the town.
It's a most unusual family
gathering, but one that was ob-
viously being enjoyed to the
fullest. It sure beats funerals!
• + +
Community spirit is still alive
and well throughout the district
and one need only read through
the entertainment pages of this
newspaper from week to week to
prove that fact.
The first big event of the
current season was the Grand
Bend Buffaloburger Fest,
followed closely this past week by
the Fiddler's Contest in Hensall
and the spring fair in the same
community,
Plans are already underway in
Dashwood for Friedsburg Days
and the Lucan Fair committee
are also hard at work on
arrangements for their gala
show. The Kirkton Garden Party
is on tap for next month.
In Exeter, we've got Canada
50 Years Ago
Sunday and Monday were red
letter days for the members of
the Elimville Church, the oc-
casion being 'the fiftieth jubilee,
followed on- Wednesday by a
-great picnic for members of the
Sunday School.
When the news reached Hensall
Sunday, that Doctor Peck had
died in St. Joseph's Hospital,
London, a shadow of gloom was
cast over the whole community.
Centralia has every reason to
be proud of their cattlemen,
Byron Hicks and William Colwell
who since Christmas have
handled in the nieghbourhood of
4,000 cattle.
Archie, the eleven-year-old son
of Mr. .& Mrs. Albert Etherington
had a'narrow escape from death .
Monday afternoon while driving
a team on a cultivator. The team
bolted when frightened by a
motorcycle and became tangled
'in a fence. Neither the boy nor the
team Were hurt.
25 Years Ago
Bob Weeks, RA 4, Clinton, who
was engaged by the Exeter
Legion to advertise their frolic by
means Of his loud speaker
equipment, won, the neW car in
the raffle,
Huronia Male Choir held their
annual supper picnic at the home
of Mr. & Mrs, Emery Desjardine,
Grand Bend.
Ivan Hunter-buvar ,Was one of
the seven graduate radio officers
who received their wings at
Minton Radar School last week.
Street signs for Exeter have
been received by the Lions Club
and will be erected soon.
Mr, Ed Westeott has purchased
the brick residence of Mr. &
1VIts.Thornas Coates, Andrew
Street,
*eV, R.A. Brook, -minister of
tlensall and Chiselhurst churches
for the past 12 years was honored
by the congregation prior to his
departure.
Week celebrations coming up this
weekend, followed by the rodeo
on Labor Day weekend, while
over in Zurich they'll soon be
scrubbing the pots for this year's
Bean Festival.
Add to the list the hundred and
one "smaller" events throughout
the area in one year and you
come up with enjoyment and
excitement for all ages.
Sooner or later, it may be wise
for all the area groups to get
together and form a general
council for promoting all these
special events on an overall basis
as well as the individual ad-
vertising that accompanies each
event.
Many people have been over to
Frankenmuth for that com-
munity's festival, which attracts
thousands and thousands of
people, and there's no reason to
doubt that this area could get
together to pack 'em in as well.
Combined advertising of all the
special events in this area would
indicate that on practically any
given weekend it's a good place
to hit and all the local events
would probably benefit from the
overall package promotion.
It would be a type of area
tourist council, and while those
organizations have never been
overly successful, they've only
been attempted on a much wider
basis.
Using the small base from
Lucan to Hensall, Grand Bend to
Kirkton, it may prove more
successful and turn the area into
another Frankenmuth.
It's something some keen
members of the organizing
groups could well consider, at.
least to the point of staging a
general meeting to see if the idea
has any merit,
15 Years Ago
Rev. Edgar Roulston, pastor of
the Lucan and Clandeboye United
Churches is retiring from the
ministry at the end of June and
settling in Exeter.
Construction of Thomas Street
from Carling to Marlborough was
started this week by Sam
Sweitzer for John Burke realtor.
The street will provide access to
the lots in the centre of the
subdivision.
Mrs. Franklin Skinner en-
tertained at a trousseau tea in
honor of her daughter, Mary,
bride of Saturday.
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Dixon,
Betty and Jim leave today by
plane for Vancouver from which
city they will ,.visit Victoria,
Seattle, and othr points,
The biggest holiday in history
flooded into Grand Bend and the
Pinery Park over the July 1
weekend.
love like W
A year ago a friend gave me a
shoot of Wandering Jew which .-
proved to be the most prolific-,
thing to hit this house in ages. In
no length of time that tiny slip
had grown to fill to overflowing
the pot I'd planted it in, I finally
divided the clump into four,
broke off slips by the dozen and
startedthem in whatever jar or
container I could lay my hands
on. Friends, neighbors, relatives
,were invited to help themselves
to the ever increasing tendrils
and start plants for themselves.
As a result many houses have
Wandering Jew trailing inside
and out in great verdant abun-
dance,
The strange thing about that
plant is the more I give away, the
better and healthier it grows. And
it needs little encouragement
from me,,.a bit of water now and
then is all it seems to require.
One small piece inadvertently
fell into a pot that already had
another kind of plant growing in
it. Almost like magic it rooted
and is now producing strong,
shiny tendrils three feet long
which drape themselves
gracefully over the side of the
jardiniere threatening to take
over from the original plant
which was a rather finicky hard-
to-get-along-with piece of foliage
anyway.
Love is like Wandering Jew.
The more we give away, the more
there is to give. We can't kill the
source by taking too much from
it; a tiny bit of it will often
produce amazing results.
Many people seek love but are
unable to find it, or having found
it are unable to keep it. Most tend
to look for love from others
rather than find it within
themselves to share with others.
"Love me first and then I will
love you in return," is their
motto,
Eillen Gruber, in her book, To
Live in Love, says the search for
Canada Week - June 24 to July 1
- gives us an opportunity to af-
fectionately salute "our home
and native land".
Canada has been cast in the
role of a conciliator in our world
today. While Canadian forces
certainly made their mark in
various wars, it has been in
peacekeeping efforts that a place
has been found for our country.
This is not by accident. Finding
a place has been a Canadian
preoccupation. And such a search
has been pursued by compromise
and conciliation.
One of the marked diffe.'ences
between the evolution of Canada
and the United States is the lack
of violent revolution in the for-
mer, and its presence in the
latter. It may be that violence has
remained part of the United
States culture while compromise
characterizes Canadian society.
This may be one reason for
American draft-dodgers finding a
home here,
GeograPhy has played its part
in the Canadian compromise. Our
fathers came to a wilderness and
hewed out farms from the
forests, Many opine that
Canadians have a fortress
mentality.
Our compromise with nature is
one of degrees. The small
clearing has given way to the
broad fields of agricultural life.
This latter has in turn given Way
to urbanization. Farmers •in-
creasingly make up, less and less
of our population.
Population has become con-
centrated in the Arable parts of
the country. Most Canadians live
within forty miles of the
American border, Population.,
wise we are the Chile of the north,
One of the compromises being
forced upon us is the need to
expand our population base in
such a way as to save our
agricultural land.
Climate is one of the
geographical elements that has
shaped our life style and forces us
to live carefully.. The far northern
reaches of our country is
developed only on the basis of
tremendous expense, The ten-
dency has been to stay where it is
warm.
ut this Compromise is fltkid.
The call of the north is upon"•us.
There are resources to be
developed. There IS quietness to
be enjoyed. There is a frontier to
be explored, There is a territory
to be claimed, Iron the south
there is the ,t1Sift to the north
which will ever' be stronger.
Geography has fast its
determinations over us in other
ways. We are a fiction over
against the American fact. The
compromise of nationhood was
forced upon us by the American
aggressive acquisition of all
empty land,
Nor is this all, We would not be
making plans for the north as
:27,C46Z.S
10 Years Ago
Hon. C, S. MacNaughton and
Mrs, MacNaughtori attended the
opening night and presentation of
King Henry Part One at the
Stratford Shakespearean
Festival:
Grant Walker, son of Mr, &
Mrs. George Walker, of 104
Queen St., Hensall, Was Scrat-
ched by a stray cat Wednesday
evening and has begun receiving
anti-rabies inoculations Thur-
sday for 14 days.
Mr. & Mrs. Wallace Seldoe
celebrated their 25th Wedding
anniversary Saturday in St,
Catharina with family and
friends.
Barbara Ann Gardiner,
Cromarty, has takers a position in
the Stratford General Hospital as
nurses assistant,
Mr. & Mrs. MeX MeBeath of
'Xippen were taken by surprise
Monday evening by about BO
neighbors, friend8 and relatives
Who gathered at their home to
celebrate their 25th wedding
anniversary,
SO
love is a desperate game of blind-
„man's bluff. Each person has his
„'own little bucket, empty and
waiting to be filled with love, but
with no love of his own to pour out
for someone else.
She goes on to say that for
Christians the pcture should be
different. "God loves us. lie has
poured out His love upon us, not
with a careful and measured
hand but with incomprehensible
generosity, splashing and
overflowing our tiny containers.
Enough so that we can channel
that amazing love out to other
thirsty people.”
"Look," we can cry to the
world, "my bucket is full! God
loves me, see what He's done for
me:' And there's more, for
everyne...all you can hold! Come
and see how wonderful it is!"
How come they don't hear us?
What must we do to make them
listen? Perhaps one reason they
don't listen is because they see no
evidence of love in our actions to
others. So they doubt we have
anything to share with them.
They can't see our love for God,
but they can see how we act
towards our friends, our families,
those who may irritate or in-
convenience us. And they judge
how much we love God by our
actions.
Another reason they don't pay
us much attention is that we may
be trying to pass off something
that's fake for the real thing. We
may be trying to replace personal
pity for love with endless talk
about how spiritual we are, etc.
Personal piety is all turned in-
ward; love is all turned out-
ward,
Love is the real thing-it grows
and multiplies by the bushel just
as my Wandering Jew plant. All
substitutes are like the plastic
version...nice to look at perhaps
but with no life, or warmth or
growing shoots to share with
others.
quickly as we are if there was not
just as aggressive a giant just
over the pole. Russia is ready to
explore and claim any empty
land or untravelled sea. So to
maintain our place, we deploy
our resources to make the nor-
thern emptiness Canadian.
Anyone would think that we
have enough compromises and
conciliations in the above list. All
of these add up to one of the
highest expense accounts just to
keep the country'viable. No other
people pay as much per capita
just to be a nation. The deter-
mination to be Canadian is ex-
pensive.
One tremendous compromise
worked into our very life is
bilingualism. Two peoples
basically different in culture,
language, attitude and religion,
have to sit down together. There
have been overt battles and
running provocations. The 1970
crisis reminds us of the delicate
balance between different
peoples. Amazing as it seems,
this compromise has been suc-
cessful in some degree at least up
to this time.
Our founding fathers stretched
their imaginations to form
another compromise. Different
colonies had to be united in such a
way that each one would be
satisfied and so that enough
power would be available to
make the central government
effective. This federation has
many strains and almost break-
downs— but here we are a nation
of ten provinces.
The art of concilation is the
supreme Canadian charac-
teristic. It turns out to be a fact
that every compromise agreed
to, every resolution accepted
becomes an enrichment to the
nation, a gift to the world.
The challenges go on apace.
The native peoples are making
their claims, Any fair judgment
between the first peoples and the
colonizers will enlarge Our
sympathies and strengthen us
greatly.
We are still making our place
against American presSure. This
time it is not a matter of empty
land but a smothering, dominant
culture, This struggle for a
Canadian uniqueness whilst
maintaining a generous spirit is
bound to be a matter of
maturation.
The list of compromise and
conciliation goes on apace, The
developer must face the con-
servationist; management must
work with labour; freedom and
bureaucracy . must find a
balance; the east and the west
must know each other.
The Canadian identity then is
bound up in finding credible
answers to all sorts of competing
pressures, it will demand basic
changes from all of us.
It is exciting to give Canada a
special hug at this birthday time.