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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1972-04-20, Page 6The Goderich Little Theatre° group will be presenting a special bonus production on May 4, 5 and 6 at MacKay Hall. The • show will be an extra, bringing the number of productions during the 1971-72 season to fours rather than the traditional three. - Under the capable direction of Mrs. Marjorie Dunlop the Show, called "What's Yer Fancy," will l;eature musical selections from nine different Broadway musicals such as Oliver,. My Fair Lady, Brigadoon, Fantastiks, South Pacific, HMS Pinafore and Annie Get-You-r--G.un d , _ Paul Baker will provide musical accompaniment for the cast of nearly 30 With choreography by Mary Lynne Telford, • Dianne Haworth and Marj°'Robinson. Ernie Niblock is in charge of producing the various sets to be used in setting the scene themes, Pat Reinhart does drake up, Sharon Atkinson lighting,. Ron Shaw stage manager and 00 costuming by Muriel and. Lynda Reinhart. Mrs. Dunlop is more than well experienced to direct the musical having received her ARCT from the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto and belonged to the Toronto Opera School. She has appeared in eight operas, severar stage productions and toured Canada as a performer- The director has alsp appeared on television and has been heard in countless homes via radia. Originally the play was set to run four full days but due to the hall , having beep- booked •. in advance by the local Senior Citizens Club the show had to be cut to three performances. The Box Office will be open at Reg Bell optometrist from Thursday April 27 elery afternoon' between 1:00 and 6:00 p.m. until the play closes May 6. Goderich Little Theatre members are reminded to contact Mrs. Betty Cochrane and pick up their tickets for sale. Lowering boom on fish As an experiment to help stop the inflow and remove millions of dead fish expected 'along the shoreline of Ontario Place in early summer, a series of floating booms and nets will be installed May 1' With the approval .. of . the Toronto•Harbour Commissioners and advice from them, the Department of Lands and 'Forests, andDr, Robert W. McCauley of the Biology Dept., Waterloo Lutheran ,University, it was decided to float 50 ;foot booms in. various water locations .at Ontario Place.,The booms will be marked at the ends anti midway with an orange buoy and 'a flashing white light. Giant nets obtained from the Department of Lands and Forests will be placed along the outer Wet Island shores and under the inner ,bridge of the. marine. Early last sum, mer, millions of small dead fish, identified by fisheries experts as shad or "alewiu.es", were washed ashore at Ontario Place, and 'visitors sdon became . aware of ..their presence when • they sniffed the air. Tons' of the dead fish were. removed from the water's edge around the site, and,eventuallythe Ontario Place ,Shoreline , was cleaned up. The alewives phenomenon is almost an annual occurrence along the Toronto waterfront. Fisheries and Toronto Harbour Commissioners officials point' out that the alewives do not die en masse because of lake pollution. The fish ,,cousins .of the herring and sardine family, are ocean fish Over the years the fish are believed to have found their way up the .St. Lawrence and other waterways to the Great Lakes, , and have been able to reproduce and multiply in giant numbers, But apparently the shad, a cold water fish, .cannot adapt to _the • thermal changes of'Lake Ontario, If there is a sudden rise in thedake. temperature as it warms for the summer, pe alewives die in huge numbers—almost half of them each year --arid are washed ashore. The booms and nets will not be _ rid in the, Nay cif __navr ,tion passing or 'lysing` the mtario Place marina. The waterfront`. exhibition showplace opens May 20 through , Thanksgiving Day, October 9. BOX 79 1,LISTOWEL Ph. Coll 291-2637 SWING INTO - SPRING CASJ.lAL JACKETS' 995up ALL WEATHER COATS 19.95 °P WASH 'PANTS & JEANS 7.95 SPORT SHIRTS — T-SHIRTS 6.00 up Pickett& Campbell Unita .The Store For Men CLINTON GODERICH - KINCARDINE Incentives program cleanup operation on lake hank 'drawing criticism eiti aleTdosport By KEITH WILLIAMS y The Goderich Lions pee -wee president; John Bakner, all-star hockey' team, the "rink- treasurer and Sandra Kisch, rats" .who worked at the area secretary: The -new executive during . Young* Canada Week 'an'd takes over from the old executive some local referees who Ken Crawford—president, John officiated" at the';\ tournament Evans -•-first vice president,` attended the Lion's dinner last' , Laurie Marshall—second vice Thursday at the Harbourlite Inn president, Frank Clements - as a final .wrap up to the 1972 treasurer, Clem Wolterbeek- -t urnarment,• secretaryLeffective April 30. The at the guest speaker The Goderich di ner Indu trial ' , Bob Howes . (public Softball League held its first relations -London .Free Press), meeting of the season last Sunday indicated that the Free Press at the Town Hall and was informed wants to take back its trophy and that two new teams wish to, enter replace it with the Stan Stokes the.league: Those new teams are Trophy in honour of Stan's Brindley Plastering and Fisher dedication to the tournament, 16 Custom Building. Cord's Sports, • years as Referee -in -chief.' Gower4 Garden Centre and The Goderich minor hockey Discount Centre did not know if association wound up this season that will -field teams this year, with a banquet and meeting to Games will again be played on elect a new executive last Friday Monday and Thursday nights.. The night (April 14) at the Saltford next meeting, is a week from this Valley Ha11. After the dinner, the Sunday April 30 tit the Town Hall trophies were given out. ., 'at 2:30 p.m. The individual trophies were GoderichNursing Home trophy to Rick Ryan as most improved Mite goalie; Fred Thorndike•Memorial Trophy to'Brian Shewfelt as most improved squirt goalie and the Gerry Fritzley Memorial trophy, to \Letoy Meriam as the most improved pee -wee goalie: There are 2 `Warren Moland trophies: the most valuable JuVenile and Midget players. Winners this' year' were Stu Asher .(juvenile) and Paul Kelly (midget). „ After the banquet, the election of officers was held-.,Jim,...Reters is the new President; Ernie Niblock, first vice president; Bruce.Crew, second vice L I You Shop Say.,.. -IT IN THE' SIGNAL MATERNITY WEAR at the SEPARATE SHOPPE Main Corner Clinton Open 2 - 6 Closed Weds. • THE PERFECT GIFT ar• A From The Family Family Ring f- r.. iId en, el vii of each'o he t� r .d t. . The birthstones pAa� �� Y� ,fo�AAmost anji. zlttra+ctNe-gol��rltrB. ?`hred'etylr�r�ta�dmoare r m,� thcnightfuI and lasting gift, sure to be cherished for years to cbirtrs. from44. Availablein 10K white'or yellow liold Why* 1s is the final date for Mother's Day YUel very Canadian Safety Council's "Ghi1d Safety Week" National Child,Safety Week is sponsored by the Canada Safety Council to' focus attention oh the high loss of life, and health of children caused by accidents. -Nearly 2,000 children under the age of 15 die each year as a result of accidents in the streets and highways, in the home and at play." James C. Thackray, .President of the Council said in his Child Safety Week message. Thousands more are. seriously injured, many of them, becoming permanently disabled." "Accidents are by far the major cause of death by children and these tragedies are accentuated by the knowledge that most of them can be prevented." Mr. Thackray said. In 1970, the last year for which • figures are available, accidental deaths of children aged one to 14- amounted to 160 percent of •the total of the next three leading causes of child deaths. There were 1,597 killed in accidents, 457 by cancer, 310 by congenital anomalies or defectsat birth and - 177 by pneumonia. - John Munro, Minister ° of Liao cL: tleai'tlt and> W fare,- Jets -showed' -TB - spread to -disease Com -had mo n to rima s an �h ..X.' i. xrrress ,e .r :_ a s n l r i a� 4-'6 v i n deer" :�� . �.' , � ..,,.., fly+': ii�'I"�'. #vl- � .� . �-. �:.i _ � soil$ _ , 4 d ,`� two J.. t IA .4.. TB .� e w .r.k. lke%:,. we�dtr.�tr,' .�h1i1� .SiAp�. ..r•tYr t � 'm c. V�htrw.tllecl_-'�uit7,.,.c;. et.t�e�Ooa, . ,.�, , ?���,,u-. Y _ "�l'sret y _ , , g � � , oT� . ,,.. ., �: , this needless slaughter of the being tranquilized 'tor an eyelid' or. three times ,;year. Anda glass innocents?" tuberculin test. partition had been 'placed between "Akdults—not just parelrts and TB testing of zoo personnel the primates sand the public. teachers --must assume the showed that four had positive If either animals or people have responsibility for the safety of reactions to tuberculin tests, live TB germs in "their sputum, our children," he said. which 'indicated that TB germs, they can spread the disease just . "We must train them from were in their bodies. X-rays by coughing or sneezing. And birth to avoid dangers. We are showed nolungdamage, though. anyone—monkey•'or, man—may • also' committed to keeping One of the zoo Workers who had°a have active disease with no dangers out of their way, to • negative reaction to the symptoms at all. _Prigearn- r wirer fieya lto"t" ube.rcullntests;TioweVer,.hac a—SuM' f#tr vrrspmptems pir"otect'therrnse1vely. Children are positive react of *when , he wash of TB—when there are any—are not • naturally imbued with retested months later, 7t can take coughing a lot, feeling tired all the protective instincts but they are from two to ten weeks after the, time, spitting blood, and losing naturally iv ,bued with trust in the infection before a positive weight3 Any one or all of the adults who surround them." reaction shows. TO germs can symptoms can mean TP. The story told by fatality statistics, unfortunately still the only meaningful national figures gathered on child accidents, is a "jolter," • Children are the main victims in pedestria'n accidents. • Of the 1,287 pedestrians killed in 1970,, 493 or 38.3 per cent were under the age of 15., Of the 1,173 drownings, 360' or 30.7 per cent were children under 15. Of the 634 fire deaths, 208 or about 33 per cent were children. The statistics point out with great clarity that more boys live dangerously than girls. Of the 493 child pedestrian deaths, 303 or '61 per cent were 0 boys. Of the drownings, also under the age of 15,270 out of 360 deaths on 75 per cent were boys. In. lesser, causes of death the difference really' sticks, out. In the category of death by being struck by objects or, striking against objects, 26 out of 31 child deaths_ or 84 per cent were boys. Naturally, the percentages evened But in accidents in which the child was a passive victim—in fires and automobile passenger deaths. , Council points out that these figures show children, especially boys, suffer .more than ' their„ share of accidents. The figures are grisly but point out the great need -to `Guard their. Lives." T.B. in primates * TB outbreaks can happen in the' also lie low in the body and then strangest places'. • become activated whenlhe body's At a Tennessee zoo,;recently a defenses are down. female rhesus niotikjy, who had . As a result of the episode— been nursing her young infant, which was reported by Di;,„,Luther , died. Tests later showed' the Fredrickson at the Midwest mother monkey had ha TB. Other Interprofessional` Seminar on” ry M1ty. d 0 TRENCHLESS METHOD • o alliwid Ldratns • Your field surveyecl'and grade controlled electronically by laserplane no trenches tope back filled - fewer stones worked. to the surface to be picked up. For free estimates Phone 238-2313, t► Hodgins& HayterLtd :HWY 81 AT GRAIVDBEND AlR"ORT. RR 3,PAR KHILL, ONTARIO I.CREEABLE 011115 44014tter • • • • • •' •• • DURIN FORD SPRING GODERICH 4. MQTQRS ` MAKE AN AGREEABLE DEAL NOW! OUR SPRING SELECTION INCLUDES... PINTO • fTORINO [MAVERICK LGALAXIE J1MUSTANG LILTD 07• 35 SOUTH ST.. ,a evolo• 1111 VO ON A USED 1 CARS '70 PLYMOUTH FURY II '69 BUICK LA SABRE 2 -door hardtop, V-8 2 -door hardtop, V-8 automatic, power automatic , pow! S 2095 steering, power brakes steeling, aadio. 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