Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 1 Jun 1983, p. 4

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PAGE 4 â€" WATERLOO CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1983 RANGER HOME SATELLITE SYSTEM RANGER SATELLITES 893â€"2260 e 10 ft Fiberglass Dish e Polar Mount e LNA e Power Supply e Satellite Location Indicator e Power Actuator e Polarotor e Cook Series III Wireless Remote Tuning Stereo Receiver e 1 Year Warranty e 75 ft. Cable 54 BEASLEY DR. KITCHENER Many Shriners to coverge on Twin Cities Over 6,000 Shriners from Windâ€" sor to Kitchener to Sault Ste. Marie will converge on this area this weekend for the 1983 Mocha Spring Ceremonial. Various activities will take place throughout the weekend including a gala parade which will form a‘ Mutual Life at 2 p.m. Saturday and makes its way to downtown Kitchâ€" ener. Reginald A. Haney, Q.C., M.A., LL. Albert L. Ostner, LL.B. J. David Linton, B.A., LL.B. Lorraine E. Beagan, B.A. LL.B Hospitals form liaison committee Kitchenerâ€"Waterloo Hospital Commission and the Board of Trustees of St. Mary‘s General Hospital announced last week the formation of the Kitchenerâ€"Waterâ€" loo/St. Mary‘s Joint Board Liaison Committee. The 10 member committee will be made up of five senior Board members from each hospital. The formation of this committee will introduce a broader planning comâ€" ponent to the delivery of hospital services in which the total reâ€" sources available would be utilized in the most effective manner to serve the needs of the communiâ€" ty. The announcement is the culmiâ€" nation of discussions which have been ongoing between the two Boards during the past several years. Local student gets scholarship from Mt. Allison The Joint Board Liaison Comâ€" mittee will be assisted in its work by a KW/SM Joint Steering Comâ€" mittee which will study the feasiâ€" bility of shared services and deliâ€" very by the two hospitals and make recommendations on those studies. The Steering Committee will include the Chairman and Execuâ€" tive Director of each hospital, and two medical representatives from each hospital; representing the Waterloo Region District Health Council will be Louise Demers and Mr. W.E. (Bill) Curry will repreâ€" sent the community and sit as the nonâ€"voting Chairman of the Comâ€" mittee. Selection of the medical representatives has yet to be finalâ€" ized. Stephen Haff of Waterloo will be attending Mount Allison Universiâ€" Haney, White, Ostner, English and Linton Subjects to be addressed iniâ€" tially by the Steering Committee include obstetric, gynaecology and paediatric services. Computer system applications will also be considered a priority. are pleased to announce the formation of a partnership for the practise of law under the firm name News digest Reginald A. Haney, William H. White, Albert L. Ostner, Hilde M. English, and J. David Linton 45 Erb St. E. Waterioo, N2Jâ€"4B5 Phone 886â€"3340 ..._ o ‘W» / . ) / 4 ““/‘/,“ 1 ty in Sackville, N.B. this fall as a recipient of a $2,750 Mount Allison University Entrance scholarship which is renewable for four years. Local architect Lobban â€" elected to College of Fellows At the 76th Annual Assembly of the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada in Quebec last week, Bill Lobban, a Waterloo resident for the past 20 years, was one of 14 Canadian architects elected to the College of Fellows. The convocaâ€" tion ceremony for the installation of Fellows took place in the ballroom of the Ritz Carlton Hotel in Montreal on Friday May 27. Lobban, a partner in the local architectural firm of Rieder, Hymmen and Lobban, has been active in the affairs of the Ontario Association of Architects for many years, serves as the Ontario Repâ€" resentative on the R.A.L.C. Certifiâ€" cation Board and was elected Chairman of that national body earlier this year. A mixture of drama, worship, music and business will occupy delegates to the 59th Annual Meetâ€" ing of Hamilton Conference, The United Church of Canada, June 3â€"5 at the University of Waterioo. Among the conference highlights are a Youth Musical Saturday at 9 p.m., report on education cutâ€" backs, Bonhoeffer play Sunday at 11 a.m., resolutions Sunday at 10 a.m. and discussion of Peace Tax Funds as well as the traditional Ordination Service culminating with the commissioning for men and women entering the ministry Sunday at 7 p.m. 59th annual United Church conference The theme speaker at this year‘s meeting is the Rev. Dr. Harold Wells, coâ€"author (with his wife, Patricia) of a major new United Church study book, Jesus Means Life. Dr. Wells, minister of East Plains United Church in Burlingâ€" ton, has recently been appointed to teach theology at Emmanuel Colâ€" lege, University of Toronto. Jesus Means Life, which will be a central focus of study at the meeting, is a startling examinaâ€" tion of Jesus the man â€" partyâ€" goer, feminist, revolutionary, peaceâ€"maker . Hamilton Conference comprises about 450 delegates representing 350 congregations in the region, stretching from Lake Erie to Tobermory and from Mississauga to Kitchener. William H. White, Q.C., LL.B. Hilde M. English, B.A., LL.B. Alexander R. Mcintyre, LL.B. Mary Anne Haney, B.A., LL.B

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