i The Canadian Statesman, Bowmanviilc, Wednesday, November 23,1994 15 m Df hotary Dr. Paul Hardy, a surgeon from Memorial Hospital Bowmanviilc, was welcomed to the Bowmanviilc Rotary Club on Thursday, November November 17th, where he showed slides from his travels and practice in northern Canada. Before coming to Bowmanviilc, Dr. Hardy was a travelling doctor, taking care of the sick and injured from communities on Baffin Island. The one hospital on the island has 32 beds and serves a population of 10,000 people. Outlying communities communities have permanent nursing stations where medicines can be dispensed and travelling doctors can see patients. patients. Serious cases are sent by plane to the local hospital or all the way to Montreal. Rotary Club member Dr. Mohinder Angl (left) welcomed guests Dr. Paul Hardy (centre) and Chris in January, on the southern por- Kooy, from Memorial Hospital Bowmanviilc to the Thursday November 17th meeting. Dr. Hardy de- tion of the island, there was only scribed the new laparoscopic techniques now in use at the local hospital for abdominal surgery. As Nurs- two or three hours of daylight, the ing supervisor, Kooy thanked club members for their continued support of the local hospital. In the past doctor said. Further north, the sun the Rotary Club of Bowmanviilc has donated defibrillators and chapel furniture in addition to on-going never came up at all during January, found it. They had many hours of daylight for their search at this northerly location. Other trippers they met along the way were also looking for lost canoes. Dr. Hardy also spoke to club members about laparoscopic surgery. surgery. Using slides, he described how the new technique using miniature cameras inserted through tiny incisions incisions allows surgeons to operate via television monitors. Cameras and surgical instruments arc mounted on small tubes and can be passed belly-button, thus avoiding the large scars typically associated with abdominal abdominal surgery. Laparoscopic surgery surgery is now being performed at Memorial Memorial Hospital. Present applications include gall bladder operations. Future uses, still in the experimental stage, include treatment treatment of peptic ulcers, hernias and intestinal repair. The guest was thanked by Rotari- an Valeric Gardiner and presented with a token of appreciation on behalf behalf of the club by President Chuck through a small cut in the patient's Cattran. Largest Psychic Fair Headed For Metro East Trade Centre support. Local Resident is Featured Performer at Jubilations '94 Looking Newcastle resident Doreen Carpenter Carpenter will be one of the featured performers performers in the upcoming Jubilations *94 event hosted by the Scarborough Showstoppers, a non-profit seniors performing arts group. Jubilations '94 will be presented Sunday, December 4th at 2:00 p.m. at Parent Finders for Public's Support Parent Finders, a group dedicated to helping adoptees search for their birth parents, is urging all the public to alert their MPPs about the importance importance of Bill 158. Bill 158 proposes to grant adult adopted persons unrestricted access to their real birth registrations. This means that adoptees would be able to apply for their original birth certificates certificates showing birth name, date, place, weight, time and the names and addresses addresses of the birth parents at the time. The bill further proposes to institute institute a contact veto registry for birth parents who do not wish to hear from the person they gave up for adoption. This veto would not prevent the adopted person from receiving birth information. However, birth certificates certificates would be issued with a warning not to directly contact the birth parent. The'Sill was originally expected to have its third reading in November but it has been postponed. "I hope it doesn't get lost in the shuffle or traded off on the floor," says Jan Sullivan, spokesperson for Parent Finders. She is urging adoptees, adoptive parents and supporters to call or write their MPPs asking them to support for the bill. Sullivan states in a recent press release release that the issue has been studied for 20 years in Ontario and that all reports reports have called for more openness in adoption. One family out of five is affected one way or other by adoption, she says. Parent Finders has a registry of 33,000 people in the Greater Toronto Area seeking their birth parents. Stephen Leacock Collegiate, 2450 Birchmount Road in Scarborough. The unique variety show for seniors seniors - by seniors, stars the popular Showstoppers along with performances performances by guest artists Kaye Weingartcn, Markham's Kick Up a Fuss Cloggcrs, the Westminster Chimes and Newcastle's Newcastle's own Doreen Carpenter. Popular radio personality Bill McNeil, the Voice of the Pioneer, will host the afternoon of entertainment complete with exciting door prizes. Singers, dancers, musicians and comedians, comedians, along with the many behind- the-scenes organizers, prepared for months for the production of this annual annual event highlighting seniors' talent, energy and performance skill. Jubilations is a province-wide community-based program designed by the producers of the Royal Bank Seniors' Jubilee Concerts and present- , ed annually at the Roy Thomson Hall, while on the trip, remarking on the Now in its fifth year, the Jubilations unclimbablc cliffs, the rock struc- program gives seniors the opportunity lure, hot sulphur baths and breath- to produce-and stage entertainment taking lookout points over falls and and there was only a brief twilight to mark day. "But, by March and April the place really starts to wake up," Hardy told Rotarians. Once the weather started warming warming up, he joined a canoe expedition along the Nahannai River in the Northwest Territories. He showed a spectacular series of slides taken events in their own communities with professional production and performance performance guidance and instruction. The Jubilations '94 events are sponsored by IDA Drugstores. canyons. Along Hardy's river journey, journey, the group lost one of its canoes down the current and spent six hours searching before they finally Durham's largest psychic fair will be at the Metro East Trade Centre, Brock Road and the 401 in Pickering, on November 25, 26 and 27. Over 50 exhibitors from across Canada, the U.S.A., China and Europe Europe will be at the exhibition. Offering Offering their services to the public will be top professional psychics, mystics, clairvoyants, palmists, tarot readers, spiritualists, and holistic healers. The fair also features a large book and gift store, crystal and jewellery displays, hourly door prizes, and vendors vendors of varied New Age products. Ongoing free lectures and demonstrations demonstrations range from Past Lives, The Haunted Houses of Ontario, and Meditation Techniques to Creative Visualization, Crystals That Heal, and Communicating With Loved Ones in the Spirit World. Another highlight of the fair is The Museum of the Paranormal, the world's first psychic museum. At the museum, which is free with admission, admission, fair goers will be able to test their own E.S.P., gaze into a genuine crystal ball, ring a Tibetan wish bell, rub Aladdin's magical lamp, find out what the shape of their nose reveals about them, and meditate in a healing pyramid. Admission is only $5. Children 12 and under arc admitted free with an adult. Parking is also free. The psychic psychic fair will be open to the public on Friday, November 25 from 4 p.m. to 11 p.m.; Saturday, November 26 from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.; and Sunday, November 27 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. St. Joseph's Parish Hall Hosts Brotherhood Night The 16th Annual Bowmanviilc Brotherhood Night was held November 15th at St. Joseph's Parish Hall. Members of participating clubs joined in an evening of fellowship and fun. Pictured above are guests seated a the head table: Back row (1-r), Jack Gordon, Noble Grand of Florence Nightingale Lodge #66; Rev. Harold Leahy, Pastor at St. Joseph's in Bowmanviilc; Dave Ferguson, Foresters Canadian Club; and Donald Wilson, of the Loyal Orange Lodge #2384 Bowmanviilc. In the front row (1-r), Alfred Connolly, Grand Knight, Knights of Columbus, Clarington Mayor Diane Hamre, and guest speaker John Willoughby. THE CORPORATION OF THE MUNICIPALITY OF CLARINGTON PUBLIC NOTICE REGULATIONS FOR 1994-95 WINTER SEASON DECEMBER 2,1994, TO APRIL 2,1995 Area residents are hereby advised of the Provincial and Municipal Regulations applicable to the 1994-95 Winter Season, December 2, 1994, to April 2,1995, as follows: The Highway Traffic Act (R.S.0.1990): Section 170 (12) prohibits the parking of vehicles on any highway in such a manner as to interfere with the movement of traffic or the clearing of snow from the highway. Section 170 (15) provides the authority for the removal of any vehicles, at the owner's expense, found to be causing an obstruction on a highway. Section 181 prohibits the depositing of snow or ice on a public roadway. Municipality of Clarington By-law 91-58: Section 4-6 (i) prohibits the parking of vehicles on any highway for a period of longer than three (3) hours, and is also applicable to overnight parking on any road under the jurisdiction of the Municipality of Clarington. ____Don Patterson, C.E.T. ' S?\ MUNICIPALITY OF (clarington ~ ONTARIO Manager of Operations Municipality of Clarington 40 Temperance Street Bowmanville, Ontario L1C3A6 Dates to be published: Wednesday, November 23, 1994 Wednesday, November 30, 1994 CS-Ind. 3992B MUNICIPALITY OF CLARINGTON APPOINTMENTS PUBLIC LIBRARY BOARD The Council of the Corporation of the Municipality of Clarington will be considering appointments to the Clarington Public Library Board pursuant to the Public Libraries Act. The Board that is appointed will be responsible for the administration of public library service in the Municipality of Clarington. Service is voluntary citizen participation and there is no remuneration. COMPOSITION The Board will be comprised of up to 9 members to be appointed on the following basis by the Council of the Municipality of Clarington: a) Two members shall be persons recommended by the Northumberland and Clarington Public School Board. b) One member shall be a person recommended by the Peterborough-Victoria-Northumberland and Clarington Separate School Board. c) The remaining members shall be persons nominated and appointed directly by the Council of the Municipality of Clarington. Applicants must be at least 18 years of ago, be a Canadian Citizen and a resident of the Municipality of Clarington. If you wish to be considered for appointment to the Clarington Public Library Board, as one of the members nominated and appointed by the Council, application forms are available from the Clerk's Department, 40 Temperance Street, Bowmanville. Completed application forms must be received by 4:30 p.m. on Friday, November 25, 1994. If you wish to be considered for appointment to this Board on recommendation of one of the School Boards, please contact the applicable office noted below. Petorborough-Victoria-Northumberland and Clarington Separate School Board 459 Reid Street Peterborough, Ontario K9H 4G7 705-748-4861 Northumberland • Clarington Board of Education 834 D'Arcy Street Cobourg, Ontario K9A4B5 905-372-6871 Mario P, Knight, A.M.C.T., CMM Deputy Clerk Corporation of the Municipality of Clarington 40 Temperance Street Bowmanville, Ontario L1C 3A6 S7\. 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