Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 30 Oct 1991, p. 6

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It is now 11 years after Terry‘s of Hope, and each year more I involved and more money is cancer research. I would like to thank the Waterloo Chronicle for its contribution to this year‘s Terry Fox Run. The Kitchenerâ€"Waterloo run was a terrific success. Everyone had a great time and we raised a record amount for this area (approx. $25,000). This is a significant contribution towards the $3.45 million raised in Ontario. Terry Fox run a terrific success Waterloo Town Square 75 King St. South, Suite 201 Waterloo, Ontario NJ 1P2 Chronicle Did, Dig »xCepti Whe Hey, when did Halloween become such a big deal? And «rtting bigger every year And more sophisticated. Years ago it was the ghosts, goblins and monsters who scared you and now it‘s Bob Rae. Brian Mulroney and their respective (if hardly respectable) tribes Even Halloween is feeling the tougher times. I know a Dusinessman who‘s great at bobbing for apples. His every day problem is keeping his head above water. may, with the holidays coming so close together it‘s no wonder some youngsters are confused Like, yesterday I ~i% a sprout light a candle inside a plastic turkey and nobody k vell. "Merry Christmas!" reason. Dream Stuff; Wow! Brian Mulroney as UN secretaryâ€" How‘s general. What a thought! It‘d be like every Canadian election winning the 649 provide â€" On the Ballot: The returns aren‘t all in yet, but some of _ pause da ‘ne candidates are. Talk to them as they trudge door to Well, s Soor. and vou Il pealize haw muich Hima: Wiftu lg 200 1 . Research i Telephone News Line Fax. No. usted or when there was so much mutter ‘hether this will translate into upsets is It‘s always hard to say. Some cadidat Mulroney to the UNâ€" a Canadian dream come true 1 T somuen en esns ceptance By the way, in most elections, the incumbents have a 4. big advantage. The school board elections may be the nent ns L Noi alin mt ol n re Ahis â€" Rbdicline it i+ Bs 2. They, the most vocal of whom have been merchants Mall, feel the Manulifeâ€"Markborough mail will "kill" C. and Uptown Waterloo. They feel the competition will b nandle, and feel there simply aren‘t enough retail . around Council says the dollars are there. But it just so happe f those dollars are leaving Waterloo and making their hands of retailers in Kitchener and other cities. Waterloo city council has made a gutsy move. There are scores of squeaky wheels about town, maligning council‘s decision to support the Manulifeâ€"Markborough shopping mall proposâ€" al, But the horseshoe crew has not buckled â€" not even a bit. The easy choice â€" the popular choiceâ€" the electionâ€"time safe choice â€" would have been to support the Conestoga Mall expansion. Those who support that expansion are saying it is the city‘s safest bet. Thas aka u4 ced e w A . T nd Gutsy move PAGE A6 â€" WATERLOO CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1991 recalil a is making rapid progress and io oome omm ces ies u‘ll realize how much time, effort and money gain recognition by the voters. Let alone time when local trustees were less re was so much muttering about them. ranslate into upsets is something else to say. Some cadidates lose because 886â€"9383 ~ arkborough mall will "kill" Conestoga Mall They feel the competition will be too much to : simply aren‘t enough retail dollars to go y‘s Marathon re people get is raised for whom have been ffi'e'rchants of Conestoga uds ts Mocuellt: ET Display Advertising: Maureen McNab Teresa Clemmer Gerry Mattice Don Steeves Pete Cudhea (Sports editor) Deborah Crandall News Editor: Melodee Martinuk Our organizing committee appreciates your efforts to help make this run so successful and hope that we can count on your support in 1992. Your contribution demonstrates one of the values that people most respected in Terry Fox; an unselfish dedication to helping others. much of the work is being per in Ontario, All the money ra the Terry Fox Run is usec research, and is administe National Cancer Institute Every year discoveries are extend the lives of cancer p often provide virtual cures it just so happens that most 1 1j o latetatihons Abastd 3 in B awiiead wl it i The flipâ€"flop on Sabbath commerce has been described as a modest Christmas gift to retailers, but surely it cuts deeper than that. Even if you impute to the socialists only a modest sense of principle you‘d given them credit for more than a turnâ€"around like this. _ Well, state car insurance was canned weeks ago, and now we‘re going to get Sunday shopping for December. TL M: m mos 1 1 How‘s Zat Again? Let‘s tapâ€"dance across that NDP election platform one more time. Wasn‘t it going to provide stateâ€"operated auto insurance and a common pause day Besides, having tossed the prir.\ciple overboard, they might as well have adopted Sunday shopping holusâ€"bolus since it‘s inevitable anyhow. It‘s as certain as the Maple 1 nafe metal c Je n 4 Ts Leafs missing thepl;ynfl' way into the nobody knows what they‘ve done. Others win for the same he money raised through Run is used for cancer is administered by the is being performed here Organizer, Kâ€"W Terry Fox Run nstitute of Canada. ries are made that cancer patients, and Mark Sikich Publisher: Rick Campbell Circulation: Mary Baycroft Andrea Auernigg Circulation Manager: Greg Cassidy Major Accoum; Bill Karges ONCE OVER LIGHTLY New hydro poles are being erected and the trees on this beautiful side of the road have been shorn clean, leaving many to try to survive with only their canopies Meanwhile, the other side of Weber St. N. is already an "eyesore" because of the heavyâ€"duty power lines. Why not just add to that existing mess, rather than having a magnificent show of old woodland edge, with healthy hanging boughs, decimated? I am shocked and totally dismaye devastation wreaked/$n the natui line on Weber St. N., between Bly and Albert streets _ opposite th entrance to Waterloo Inn. New hydro poles are being erect the trees on this beautiful side of t P t . Dismayed by tree devastation 0 mm Waterloo Chronicle is published every Wednesday by pomnammemy /n the natural tree .. between Blythwood â€" opposite the back The Fairway Group Incorporated 215 Fairway Rd. S., Kitchener, Ont. President: Paul Winkler Have fun? Mbs;t_::'f'u.s“;;)uld settle for having them work damn hard for a change. So now we have a government in limbo. All it‘s doing is simulating activity by launching study groups, task forces and other makeâ€"work. And the legislature activity will be just so much warm air over MPP tonsils until the legislature recesses again. Recesses? That‘s what they call it when they all go home to goof off officially. Fall from grace: This is a sad time of year what with the trees shedding their leaves and so many baseball teams shedding their managers. It may be a surprise to some, but Cito Gaston has survived. helt e e oe e ovey Who knows? With a whole new season of interviews he may yet say something more substantial than that he‘d lil-r_e his boys to have fun. When that machine splutters and incomes and tax revenues falter, the socialist New Jerusalem quickly becomes an even more distant mirage, and the leftâ€"leaners prove even less able to cope with a recession than the freeâ€" enterprisers who know what creates jobs. And please make another note of this: Socialism works badly in good times; it works even worse in bad. Every thinking person knows that tax money doesn‘t grow on trees, that it comes from people who get their money from the privateâ€"enterprise machine. , d at the The Chronicle welcomes letters to the editor. They should be individually signed with name, address and telephone number andwillbeverifiedforaccm-acy.Nounsxgped letters will be published and the Chromcle‘ reserves the right to edit. 1 have already contacted a Waterloo councillor â€" anyone who can do anythiny to stop such travesties will certainly be given my vote. Don‘t our trees have enough with which to contend via pollution from traffic emis sions and acid rain? Letters policy I--c-'-pâ€"-:um. Subscription rates $35 yearly in Canada, $40 yearly outside Canada +G.S.T. E. McLellan Waterloo

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