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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1982-09-01, Page 20P• PAGE 4A —GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1983 INFORMATION FOR G.D.C.I. STUDENTS School reopens on TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7th MUMS Wiii run at the regular time on Tuesday morning, ondwlll leave at the Fermium. time (3:53 p.m.) Tuesday aftarnoon• Students front the Goderich district attending Central Huron in Clinton will leave by bus from South Street at 1145 a.m. Students from the Godarich district attending G.D.C.I. will report to their Home ROOMS no later than 515 a.m. Home Room Ilsts will be posted as follows: Grade 9 - East Gymnasium Grade 10 . Technical Corridor Grades 11, 12 & 13 West Gymnasium Students who have not registered should do so mediately by telephoning the school office (524-7353) between 5 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. , Students are asked to bring either a Dudley com- bination lock or $3.00 to purchase a new lock. Grade 13 students should bring fundi to purchase tex- tbooks. Grades 9, 10, 11 and 12 students will be supplied with all textbooks by the Huron County School Board. Ladies' Slowpitch G. W L TP Sifto Bluewater Goderich Insulation Meneset Champion Nile All Ages Standing for season 15 15 0 0 30 1 17 13 3 1 27 2 17 8 8 0 16 3 18 7 9 2 16 4 17 5 11 1 11 5 18 5 13 0 10 6 18 4 14 0 8 7 Playoff Schedule: All games start at 6:30 p.m. Date September 1 September 2 September 7 September8 September 9 Teams (According to Standing for Season) • 2 & 7 3 &.6 4 & 5 6 & 3 5 & 4 7 & 2 Diamond Bluewater St. Mary's Meneset Victoria North St. Mary's Victoria North Meetings: 1. Executive and team reps - Wednesday, September 15, 8:30 p.m. at Rec. Centre; 2. General Meeting - Tuesday, September 28, 7:30 p.m. at Rec Centre. Goderich Raceway Entries Entries tor Thursday. September 2, 1982- posttime 7:45 p,m. Race Against MS PACE NO. 1 Purse 1850 YOUNG FERRIC R. Windsor JAY BEE SCAMP R. Henry SPRINGTIME SETON W.R. McLean SUPER SWEETHEART G. Darnell RUSTIC VALENTINE G. Woodburn CARPET SLIPPER. SPANGLER GUY AE1 MLSS JANES RIP AE2 COLTNIELLA RACE NO. 2 C1NDA MEADOWS BENMILLER BUDDI JOLLY KILLEAN CLAYBROOK KAOLA DIRECT DOMINION CLEVER ANGIE REAL BAY AE1 MR STATE HILL AE2 MISS DAWNGLO C. Fisher G. Girodat J. Duckworth J. Muir Purse $850 H.O. Jerry R. Vanstone L. Arbour C. Cranson J. Muir R. Battin D. Jewitt R: Battin R. Battin RACE NO.3 Purse $850 THOMAS WHITNEY K. Coates BENNETT LANDING G. Roebuck R TOPLADY D. Jewitt SPRING CHARGER G. Darnell MIGHTY GOLDEN ARC F. Sadler BOLD SNUFF F. McClennan DALLAS DAY R. Windsor AEI MISS JANES RIP AE2 COLTNTE L LA RACE NO.4 COFFEE TOGO AMES SHADOW WISE N FAST EASY FASHION J R FREE FLASHY COOKIE J. Duckworth D. Kennedy Purse 8900 R. Taylor R. Henry F. Maguire G. Darnell G. Darnell TBA POPLAR LYNN 11. Elatdri AEI ENSIGNDUKE B Batft AE2 ARR.00HAR R. Henry RACE NO. 5 Purse $758 BIGSMYr CHARLIE F. Sadler DONELDA DODGER D. Jewitt HILEA DUKE K. Coates CHIPWOOD MUFFIN C. Fisher F M MEADOWS , V. Vanstone ACE MATHERS R. Mathers LISSAS GIRL W.R. McLean AE1. RUSTIC HELENE G. Roebuck AE2 BILLY SKIPPER R. Battin RACE NO.1 DUCHESS DYNAMO BLAZING SHOT EDWARD E FROST JUNE FLIGHT PETER WAVE DEEP RUN SUPER ARGEES ITTLIST AE1 JAYS CLIPPER RACE NO.7 SLICK FERRA K T JUDGE SHI FRENCH GIRL R. Daer SUNRISE BINGO R. Henry TAYBROTARKA R. Windsor „YVONNES JEFF F. Sadler KAWARTHA NAVAHO J. Muir AE1 BENMILLER FLASH AE2 AMES SCAMP Purse MO R. Hodgins J. Duckworth F. Sadler R. Rundle R. Battin W.O. McLean G. Woodburn R. Hodgins Purse$750 R. Mason W. Burns RACE NO. 8 SHIAWAY RED HILEA RAY SPARKLE SHADOWS ENSU/TE VALLEYCREEK TRAMP PRINCE BYE BYE DEEP RUN SKIPPER R. Vanstone' R. Henry Purse 8950 W.R. McLean J. Muir M. Borland W. Ozinga D. Jewitt R. Henry W.O. McLean AE1 JAYSCLIPPER RACE NO. II R J DIRECT GOTTA MINUTE UP FRONT BILLYS PROMISE MR. JON BOB ROBRA JOLLY RACE NO. 10 LINLOR LIZ FANNYSSMARTIE COLLEENS BABE TERRIFIC ANN FLINTY SUE HUGHAMES SANDY KAY SKIPPER AE1 MARLYSS CHECK AE2 LISA MARIE MISNER Coolers: 1. Local 1883; " She Trans.; 3. H&R Block; 4.!. mixt Auc- tioneering; 5. Walbob Stables 6. Lakeport; 7. Lakeport; 8. Heatherholrne; 9MS R. Hodgins Purse MN F. Maguire R. Battle R. Hodgins W. Burns F. Sadler C. McKee!) Pune PM B. Vanstone J. Lester J. Muir W./hinge R. Henry R. McLean R.Battin R.qattin Team wins at. Sportsfest A make-up men's slowpitch team from Goderich and area won the B championship at Sportsfest held in Hanover the weekend of August 13-15. . After losing their first game on Saturday, the team won four games Sunday, defeating Owen Sound in the final game 16 to 14 for the championship. Members of the team were Brian Stanley, Greg Hurn- phries, . Rick Powell, Dave Sleightholm, Fred Exel, Gary Powell, Ron Hunking, Larry Riehnhart, Chris Exel, Earl Pennington and John McGinnis. Tykes win Goderich Tyke No. 3 won the tyke tournament held in Vanastra August 28, winning alltiree of their games. ' The team members are: Mark Armstrong, Jason Christopher Lee -Peter -Cushing FT; OcVREIEESp:IN., -DuRreaknw-o-r-pt - Sean 9–Amitrig—P4A,00YTIMTEIE :IM Cook,. Jason Duckworth, Mark •Kinahan, Wesley Brennan; Bart Drennan, Jennifer Hainilton,. Angie Harrison, David Vriend, Jason Dempsey, Shannon Lawrence, Ryan Lawrence ,and Richard Desjardins. Coaches are. Lana Fagan and Doug Harrison. Scorekeeper is Mary Ann DemThe,pseea txn y.was presented with a trophy. m tv5 Sept. 1 to Sept. 7 DAYTIME MORNING 5:00 RELIGIOUS TOWN HALL (Wed.) 5:00 A BETTER WAY (Thurs.) 5:00 CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP (Fri.) 5:00 THIS IS THE LIFE (Tues.) 5:30 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRESENTS (Tues. - Fri.) ARM AND HOME (Wed.) 6:00 TV -k, AND YOUR COM- MUNITY (Thurs.) 6:00 SCOPE (Fri.) 6:00 JERRY LEWIS TELETHON (Mon.) 6:00 HEALTH FIELD (Tues.) 6:30 EARLY TODAY (Tues. -Fri.) 7:00 TODAY (Tues. -Fri.) • 8:00 JERRY LEWIS TELETHON (Cont'd) (Mon.) 9:00 DIFF'RENT STROKES (Tues. -Fri.) 9:30 WHEEL. OF FORTUNE (Tues. -Fri.) 10:00 JERRY LEWIS TELETHON (Cont'd) (Mon.) 10:00 HAWAII FIVE -0 (Tues. - Fri.) 11:00 HOUR MAGAZINE (Tues. - Fri.) AFTERNOON 12:00 NEWS (Tues. -Fri.) 12:00 JERRY LEWIS TELETHON (Mon.) - 12:30 SEARCH FOR TOMORROW (Tues. -Fri.) 1:00 DAYS OF OUR LIVES (Tues. -Fri.) 2:00 ANOTHER WORLD (Tues. - Fri.) 2:00 JERRY LEWIS TELETHON (Cont'd) (Mon.) 3:00 CH1Ps (T.ues.- Fri .) 4:00 JERRY LEWIS TELETHON (Cont'd) (Mon.) 4:00 MOVIE (Tues. -Fri.) 5:30 M.A.S.H. (Tues. -Fri.) WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 1, 1982 BACK TO SCHOOL DINNER special Fresh ,Hamburger 6 French Fries with the works. Deliciously prepared for the young discriminating taste tester. DAILY PREPARED HOMEMADE PieseTarts•Buns ALWAYS FRESH Adult COLD PLATE Special Saturday September 4 Only This special plate includes potato salad, coleslaw, cottage cheese, beef. turkey, tomato. potato chips with fresh roll and butter. soup or juice. • what .on earth would make anyone drive way out on Huron Road to a restaurant that looks like an old corner warehouse; stand in line to get served, and sit at an arborite table without even a tablecloth? Owners Diana Llittic, Sarah Wain September3-4 Only Bacon,' ham or sausage, 'toast, 2 butter fried farm fresh eggs, home fries or pancakes. bottomless col fee. Start thc morning right. corner Huron Road -Cambridge St. Highway No. 8 beside L.C.11.0. Log feats The Molson Lumberjack Jamboree is one of the new attractions at this year's Western Fair. Using the traditional old- time skills of the woodsman, participants will compete in a fast-moving series of events including log chopp- ing, cross -cut sawing, axe throwing, log birling, chain saw contests and log jousting. A heart -stopping high rig- gers' race up and down an 18 metre (60 foot) spar tree is just one of many competi- tions designed to keep spec- tators perched on the edge of their seats. The 30 -minute family -style show includes world -champion log roller Phil Scott from Nova Scotia, whose attention -getting speciality is roller-skating on a spinning log! Other performers on the Molson Lumberjack Jam- boree crew are Canadian, North American and world champion log rollers, chop- pers and tree climbers. The show, presented courtesy of Molson's Brewery Limited, is free to fairgoers three times daily on weekdays and four times each Saturday and Sunday during the 1982 Western Fair. EVENING 6:00 NEWS 6:30 NBC NEWS 7:00 P.M. MAGAZINE 730 BEWITCHED 8:00 REAL PEOPLE 9:00 THE FACTS OF LIFE 9:30 LOVE, SIDNEY 10:00 QUINCY 11:00 NEWS 11:30 TONIGHT 12:30 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN 1:30 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT THURSDAY 'SEPTEMBER 2, 1982 DAYTIME MOVIES: 4:00 "ATTACK OF THE MUSHROOM PEOPLE". 'Akiro Kubo-Niki Yashiro EVENING 6:00 NEWS 6:30 NBC NEWS 7:00 P.M. MAGAZINE 7:30 BEWITCHED 8:00 FAME 9:00 GIMME ABREAK 9:30 TEACHERS ONLY 10:00 HILL STREET BLUES 11:00 NEWS 11:30 TONIGHT 12:30 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN 1:30 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 3, 1982 DAYTIME MOVIES: 4:00 "ATTACK OF THE PUPPET PEOPLE". John Agar -John Hoyt EVENING 6:00 NEWS 6:30 NBC NEWS 7:00 P.M. MAGAZINE 7:30 BEWITCHED 8:00 NFL FOOTBALL 11:00 NEWS 11:30 TONIGHT 12:30 SCTV NETWORK 2:00 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT 3:00 MOVIE: "IN HARM'S WAY". John Wayne -Kirk Douglas SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 4, 1982 MORNING 5:40 LAUREL AND HARDY 6:00 VEGETABLE SOUP 6:30 NEW ZOO REVUE 7:00 VILLA ALEGRE 7:30 SPORT BILLY 8;00 THE FLINTSTONES 8:30 SMURFS 9:30 KID SUPER POWER HOUR 10:30 SPIDER -MAN 11:00 DAFFY -SPEEDY 11:30 SOUL TRAIN AFTERNOON 12:30 BIONIC WOMAN 1:30 THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL 2:00 TIGER'S PRE -GAME 2:15 BASEBALL 4:30 ADAM -12 5:00 SHA NA NA 5:30 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN EVENING 6:00 NEWS A6:30 HEE HAW 7:30 YOUNG PEOPLE'S SPECIAL 8:00 DIFF'RENT STROKES 8:30 THE FACTS OF LIFE 9:00 MOVIE: "THE STRANGER AT JEFFERSON HIGH". Stewart Petersen -Dana Kimmel' 11:00 NEWS 11:30 SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE 1:00 BENNY HILL 1:30 MOVIE: "FATE IS THE HUNTER". Glenn Ford -Nancy Kwon SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 5, 1982 MORNING 6:45 DAVEY AND GOLIATH 7i00 SOCIAL SECURITY IN AC- TION 7:30 IT'S YOUR BUSINESS 8:00 DAY OF DISCOVERY 8:30 REX HUMBARD 9:00 ORAL ROBERTS 9:30 SUNDAY MASS 10:00 PETTICOAT JUNCTION 10:30 BEWITCHED 11:00 MOVIE: "DR. GOLDFOOT AND THE BIKINI MACHINE". .041 Vincent Price -Frankie Avalon ,„ , - -• AFTERNOON 1:00 SOCIAL SECURITY IN AC- TION 1:30 ADAM -12 2:00 MOVIE: "LI'L ABNER". Peter Palmer -Julie Newmar 4:00 MOVIE: ' "THE GREAT HOUDINIS". Paul Michael Glaser -Sally Struthers EVENING 6:00 NEWS 6:30 WILD, WILD WORLD OF ANIMALS 7:00 BORN TO THE WIND 8:00 CHIPs 9:00 JERRY LEWIS TELETHON 10:00 JERRY LEWIS TELETHON (Cont'd) 12:00 JERRY LEWIS TELETHON (Cont'd) '- 2:00 JERRY LEWIS TELETHON (Cont'd) 4:00 JERRY LEWIS TELETHON (Cont'd) MONDAY SEPTEMBER 6, 1982 DAYTIME SPECIALS 6:00 JERRY LEWIS TELETHON 2:00 JERRY LEWIS TELETHON EVENING 6:00 JERRY LEWIS TELETHON 6:30 NBC NEWS 7:00 P.M. MAGAZINE 7:30 BEWITCHED 8:00 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE 9:00 MOVIE: "MADAME X". Tuesday Weld -Eleanor Parker 11:00 NEWS 11:30 THE BEST OF CARSON 12:30 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN 1;30 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 7, 1982 DAYTIME MOVIES: 4 : 0 0 "BIRDMAN OF ALCATRAZ". Burt Lancaster - Karl Malden EVENING 6:00 NEWS 6:30 NBC NEWS 7:00 P.M. MAGAZINE 7:30 BEWITCHED 8:00 BASEBALL 11:00 NEWS 11:30 TONIGHT 12:30 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN 1:30 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT Take-out restaurants experience 18 percent decline in sales - blame tax Take-out restaurants in Ontario experienced an 18 percent decline in sales dur- ing June, 1982 compared to June of 1981, according to Statistics Canada. The sharp decline in sales coincided with the intrOdtiction of Ori- tario's seven percent sales tea on all prepared meals and take-out foods which tikik effect on ;lune 14. The Ontario Restaurant and Foodservices Associa- tion says that the decline in take-out sales was due almost entirely to the provin- cial tax. Sales for all foodservice establishments during June increased 8.5 percent over the same period a year ago. Prior to June 14, prepared 'meals under $8, and all, take-out foods were exempt from pro- vincial sales tax. Association President Or- ville Rose says that the sharp drop in sales comes as no surprise to 'the foodservice industry. "We warned Ontario Treasurer Fran Miller in the legislative hearings that this sector of the industry couldn't withstand a ,seven percent increase. Take-out restaurants serve a market which is being squeezed by inflation, unemployment and a decline in real incomes. The consumers patronizing these eating establishments are low and fixed-income earners who can ill -afford the seven percent inflation imposed upon them by the Government of Ontario." Rose said that the "Fight the Bite" campaign launch - ea by the Ontario Itestatirent and Foodservices Associa- tion to Oppose the tax on food is still generating a high level of public response. The association is receiving an 'average of 1,000 protest coupons per day from citizens who support a rollback of the tat. "The Goxettment of OW taria believed that this issue would blow over in a matter of weeks", says Rose, "but they were wrong. The public find the tax imitating, in- convenient and inflationary and they're reminded of it everytime they buy a cup of coffee. The overwhelming support from the publie has encouraged our association to continue to fight for a tax exemption on restaurant meals."