The Lucknow Sentinel, 1996-03-27, Page 8ftse $ — Luc ow atilt
ieduesday, March 211„ 19
Van Alen w Kennedy.
Are & Mrs..Uva Van
Allen of Havelock, Qat.
and Shirley and the
late Haul Kennedy of
•Lucknow, Ont are
happy to' announce the
engagement of their
-children Catharine.
Marie Van Allen and
George ItongKennedy4'
The Marriage will tak?
place Aug.1 7, 1996 . at
Havelock United
Church,, Havel,.;ck
March 30th
Steve Alton
r�-
ie' T/kes
H�Iy Week an et Services
.
South Kinloss , Lucknow
Presbyterian Cb.xrches'
Thursday,: April 4th-
Maundy Thursday Service..
7 30 paint:
at South Kinloss. Join us at
the 'I.ord's•Table as we .
remember the Last Supper.
Friday, April 5th:
-Community Good Friday.
Service 7.30 p.m. at
Lucknow Presbyterian
Church. The Cross -
Ornament or Imprint?
Sunday, April 7th
Easter at South Kinloss,
begins with breakfast at 8:3o
followed bg family service at
9.30, Easter at Lucknow
Presbyterian begins with
breakfast at 9:45 followed by
family service at 11c00.
Makeworship part of your
Easter celebration.
Ronnie Coaurn*s
SCOT,tglyDD .�
Ths belt In Scottish Entorla(ttnn (ment
111esdayr•.April 24, 1906
LuCkrtow CommUfity,CO ltre
b0p.m,
TTISH VARI
Former editor writes, stars n• coedym.
You'1lsing, you'll dance, you'll laugh until your sides
'duet Music plov�eirR2 "baby boggy mcrs," and a? amateur slourtahs
won't want to 'miss. ,'tome_Bavk to the Gym, Mary Lou,
Mary Lour on May .3 and 4 ;at, the Birth Memorial
Cor turi ti ani ity Hall,
Written by Rob Bundy with music arranged by Arlene
t)arnbrouugh, "Mary Lou, Mary Luv!" is the story of prom.
queens Mary Lou Connor, who •disappeared from the 1956
Blyth High School dance, Now it's 40 years later, and the
graduates of Blythe :High have. gathered together for a
schoolreunion. Speculation and rumors still. abound'. Did
Mary Lou run away? Was she hiding. some terrible secret?
Will Mary Lou evencome home?
These questions and more will be raised to this wacky
and mysterious adventure that has more twists than a
Chubby Checker tune. Watch for special` guest appearances
Lr0 Co,t
bi .wig
ouncii
ave input on MOX fuel
by local, favorites: Bary Haist (Clinton), Rob Bundy
(Goderich), Floyd Herman (Goderieh), Kira Stuckey
(Winghar), Anne Elliott (Blyth), Stage managed by Fran
Cook, "Mary Lou, Mary Louua4, will also feature great lire
.music from the `5O's by Arlene Darnb ,.'ugh, Kim .Souch,
•and Travis Teed.
Cone dressed as you were in High School and get ready
to join in the cheers, sogn js,.dances, and shenanigans of the
Blyth High Reunion, The fun -filled evening begins with a
traditional 50s. "comfort food" dinner at 6 p!m. followed by
the performance at 8 p.m,
Dinner/theatre packages are $25 each (all inclusive).
Tickets for the performance only are $15 each.
For tickets,please calf` the Blyth Festival Box Office at
(519) 523-9300,
Fuel from• U.S. : nuclear bombsmay soon be rolling
'through Huron County. •
Terry Squire from Ontario Hydro was on hand at the
March 7 meeting of Cpunty. Council to ask for some public
input and support for further study regarding the transporta-
tion of radioactive material along Canadian public high-
ways.
ighways includingHuron County roads. a
Squires request centered On a proposed pian to transport
plutonium from .U.S, nuclear weapons to • fuel the reactors
at the Bruce Nuclear Power Development near Tiverton.
According to Squire, if the proposal is. approved, the
plutonium.. from. US, nuclear weapons would be mixed
with other materials to reduce it from a.90 per cent :pure
weapon's grade to a two per cent reactor grade fuel level.
Squire said consideration should be given to the propos-
al because the MOX fuel is 104 5 per cent more efficient
than the present uranium fuel used at BNPD, and would in
turn create less waste and mean a 10-15 per cent reduction
in the amount of material transported through the region.
The council` agreed to hold: a public. meeting to seek
input from residents prior toany recommendation being
made.
Ca ty a tnalgatrimatioin
To- address concerns and provincial economic pressures
four .area municipalities to amalgamate and for Huron
Learning
by Pat Livingston
Teachers at Lucknow
Central Public School
- learned about the theory of.
multiple intelligences as
first put forward in 1983 by
Howard Gardner, a .brain
researcher at Harvard. This
was one of the many work-
shops teachers
ork-shops"teachers participated
in .during professional.
deevelopment,days.
`Shirley Bierman, .a Grade
6 and ,music teacher at W:E.
Thompson in Kincardine,
was the facilitator. Dietician
explained that Gardner's
theory was:.taken, by educa-
tors in>• the states who then
developed his ideas into
teaching materials
Gardrier's theory is that
there is no such thing as an
IQ; each person possesses
seven a intelligences:
verbal/linguistic, visual/sp.:a
tial;. musical/rhythms; bodi-
1Y/kinesthetic; -logical/math-
ematioal, intrapersoinal, and
interpersonal. Bieman said
it is believed there.are as
County itself to restructure,, the County Council has set
March 26 as the day, it wants to get together with local
councils and administrations to discuss ideas for principles,
guidelines and strategies for, restructuring within, the Huron
County,
The meeting will be held at the Central Huron High
School in: Clinton and ideas from the meeting wilgive the
County's Strategic planning Committee what it needs to
develop a draft set of principles, directions and procedures
for use by local councils in any restructuring discussions
they may wish to undertake with neighbouring municipali-
ties:
The Strategic Planning Committee would then bring their
proposals to another Strategic Planning day of all local
councils for theirreview, approval and discussion of how
local municipalities might wish 'to use them if they decided •
to enter into restructuring discussions, °
Urban road rebates to be eliminated over three years
With the reduction of provincial money for road mainte-
nance, Huron County has decided to phase out its 15 per
cent portion of the road urban rebateover the next three
years. -
Traditionally, Huron had rebated. 40 per cent of nth.
money urban municipalities paid for county roads.
tiarrn 10 page 11
about multiple intelligences
many as 35 other intelli-
gences - subsection' compo=
rents of the original seven.
The newest development is
. the naturalist intelligence:
Bieman. first "came across ,
the theory whenshe was
working on . research " papers
for her Masters, "I read
many things. It was the first
thing inmy30years' of
teaching that made sense,"
says Rieman. "It explains
why •kids :can excel at hock--
ey. and riot : academically.
[As ;teachers] we have to tap
into their strengths and
teach .to their. weaknesses."
Bieman says teachers
tend to teach from their own
strong intelligence, sector::
Traditionally this has- been
verbal/linguistic and yogi-
cal/mathematical:
"As teachers," :says,
Bieman, "we must become°
aware that these exist and
target all ;,intelligences
sometime,' somevvhere."
This is the first workshop
on this theory that Piernan
has conducted in the county.
THE OF SCOTTISH
1 k : • 11 11;1
LIVE ON STAGE!
NJ Y A •LEAi ?l.PFEI PI9h
child to Iec
++ • $ nsowd by PM oUnt PIp• & drum Eland
Tickets and'th+ a�rrdrlcrAt+r;�toni Clubw
Advance:Adults $10,0( students $8,1x Frim tions, or sand Memboit
At Door; "Adults $13.00 Students $10.00 Limited Seathq
PaRftIPa i tt
Th nlevem ht fit active, healthy t�Yih
t.CPS teacher. JoAOt i..
-Sicott•:adts.°put one: f;
the , • • sathOte
bodily/kinesthetic intei-
ligence• words (yammer)
mer) at" one !of the.
teachers' professional
development Work-
shops • last Week.:'
Olnset), Shirley Kiernan,,
the facilitator, acts out:
another word deniono
strating.how to. learn
ocabulary . ;words
through movement.
(Pat Livingston photo) :