Ontario Community Newspapers

Weston-York Times (1971), 18 May 1972, p. 3

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At Massey Hall, on Tuesday and Wednesday, May 23 and 24 on the B-BI series, and on May 26, on the Friday night'series, all concerts - a: 30, The Toronto Symphony will present the Verdi Requiem on the final program of the regular season, featuring a New York Metropolitan Opera Company cast comprising, soprano Elinor Ross, can- tralto Lili Chookasian, tenor John Alexander and bass The operation of dual fuel systems using natural gas, both as a compressed gas and in liquefied form, will be explained in the paper as You ean't really argue about incineration when it involves the preservation of Canada's economy or National security. By generally speaking, incineration is not the ideal answer to our cities' garbage disposal problem. It's ex- But Canada's money makers, while they are in terested, are not yet ready for recycling. Security is the main consideration, they say, and nothing is as safe as Similarly, the RCMP insist on incineration for the classified secret papers they have to destroy. I don't know what their Canada-wide load is, but their Toronto offices burn about 80 pounds of paper a day. The use of natural gas for operating the internal combustion engine is not new, it's been used to operate stationary engines for more than 50 years. Canada bums about ts tone of dirty, used paper money every month. TheFederal Reserve Bank in Dallas. Texas, is trying to out down on waste and air pollution by recycling its paper money into building materials. Natural gas as a vehicle fuel? This will be one of the topics in papers presented at the International Conference on Automobile Pollution to be held at Toronto's Royal York Hotel June 26, 27 and Opera at Massey Hall Ftit Ottering courus tor you and your family July " - August It, 1972 Arts & Crafts Education Driftwood Sculpture Children's Courses in Art. Freetorm Sculpture Drama. 5 Dance Enamelling on Metal Ceramics Photo ra h I It a m Creative Writing tor Beginners y. p Y ' . Drawing and Painting I A ll Tie Dye & Batik Design Weaving I t " Drama Workshop Writers' Workshop For turttror lnlorrnatlon. write no. lo: 339, Molliwrton. on. or phone mm “1-100 hymn.“- In Ottawa, the Bank at The. burning question No wonder fuel tttre Hal/hurlon Schoo/ of Fine Arts " a mag/am or Sir Sandwld Atrotirto Comm; HALIBURTON SCHOOL OF FINE' ARTS it dun ICAP is being sponsored by the 32,000-member Association of Professional Engineers of Ontario in observance of its 50th an- niversary and to focus at- tention on the emerging role of the professional engineer in combatting en- vironmental problems. Eminent authorities in the fields of pollution control, public health and other related areas from many parts of the world will be attending the conference, the first of its kind to be held in for i new: Canada pensive and incinerators need careful dulgn and efficient controls to ot its" own: It has tdbe away from homes. Nobody wants a And in the immediate neighborhood at a growing, city there aren't that many low-cost landfill sites that will not contaminate ground water or streams. So recycling - finding some use for the half ton ot garbage each of us throws away every year - seems like the only real solution. well as a summary of the pros and cons of natural gas vis-a-vis gasoline. _ Two of the originally scheduled soloists were forced to cancel their ark pearance on this occasion; Ljiljana Molnar-Talajic, soprano, because of the fact that she is now an expectant mother, and tenor Ludovic Spiess, due to illness. minimise pollution. ontheotMrhand, burying waste. while it is gang-ally Bonaldo Giaiotti. The con- certs, conducted by Karel Ancerl, will also feature the Toronto Meddelssohn Choir, direpted by Elmer Iseler. You could say that kit. chener set up a recyung project when it decided to build a llo-toot ski hill from the city's waste. That's reusing garbage. But Kitchener can't use household garbage or waste that decays in the hill, because decay generates heat and there would be little point in a ski hill that melts all the snow that lands on it. Drama, & Dance Ceramics Creative Writing tor Beginners Drawing and Painting I a " Design Drama Workshop But a lot of development work is being done and there's a bright future for recycling if this and a few other stumbling blocks are overcome. Mechanical grinders and sorters, while they are steadily improving, are still not to the stage whee they are completely reliable. the householder to aori his own waste They have met with "prying degrees of turned into paving material or building blocks. Metals can be re-used, and to some extent are recycled. And the organic waste that remains has countless potential uses. It has been used as compost a Id ex- perimental uses include the production of natural gas, crude oil_, and animal fodder. Right now, waste is a problem and the aim is to minimize its harmful effects on the environment. mammoth: We In so many who - “when mam. wood, up". glam, can - that is has to be sound to be rocychd. Mon recycling when now under way involve volunteer labor and rely on The Department of the Environment'g Waste Management Branch is keeping abreast of these developments with an eye to the future of garbage minimize its harmful effects The appointment of 15 on the environment. members of Canada's new But more and more it is Environmental Advisory becominganatural resource Council, was announced by to be used to benefit all of us. Environment Canada. It's only a matter of time. The members of the To deliberately relax from today's fierce pressures from time to time is necessary, but to turn the blind face of lethargy towards common human problems is to freeze any incentive to feeling and to action, and therefore to court trouble eventually. Paper canbeusedtomake new paper, card, pressed board and other products. Glass can be re-used or The virus of lethargy in. vades the minds of most people on earth at one time or another, sometimes remaining for a short duration, sometimes longer, sometimes for a lifetime. Its dangers are many, one of the most insidious being that of camouflaging issues and concerns that should be paramount, and investing a person with a sense of well being and security wholly at variance with the true nature of the problem confronting them. In giving our un- derstanding and support to the nationwide activities of the Canadian Mental Health Association -- or in its short form Mental Health-Canada - we are helping to sustai- and to promote objectives which, in one way or another, must touch the lives of us all. St. John Ambulance is the recognized authority on first aid teaching in Canada and provides instruction on this subject to the public, the Canadian Forces, the RCM- P, civil defence workers and municipal police and fire departments. Mental Health-Canada strives in every area to improve many existing and static attitudes towards mental illness and the mentally ill; to improve the treatment and caring ser- vices for the mentally ill; and to work unremittingly for the prevention of mental illness and for the promotion of mental health. Its areas of deep concern are many and wide ranging, not the least of which is mental and emotional disorder in Canada's children. There are at present no less than one million children in this country who are emotionally Do not refrigerate To withhold understanding and support of Mental Health-Canada in its un- ceasing efforts on our behalf, is to woo a dangerous lethargy that could blind us eventually to the welfare and happiness of those around us, and to the supreme op- portunities the possession of physical and mental health, and life itself, can offer. handicapped and disturbed, many of them seriously. This is of great concern to Mental Health-Canada, as well it should be to all of us. While the association's more explicit concerns lie with mental and emotional illness, it is impossible today to separate this from the pressing, sometimes shocking, social issues facing us at the present time, including those stemming from poverty, drugs, crime, violence, poor housing, unemployment. Their will he no coliectio" of gnrhuur on Virturin "e Mummy 22ml- I972. pith kt, w'ill he made on the nut rrgulnr roller- tlon day. Thur-day Mn) Mth - "'P: _ _ (Inmlm-rrinl aria: {reviving night pick-up arr rrtptentrd In hold all - ill-doom until the Tm-ulny rverting {allowing the holiday. DON'T FLIGHT YOUR TROTH UNLESS 7 YOU MEAN IT V After 9 years of success in guaranteeing the weather tor wedding parties who rent their formals from us, we admit we've made a bad mistake. Much better we should have been guaranteeing the marriage. TIN-1’ " “(ll Mir', IN" TR Vi" FIND“ SI I " HUI TIN. " “I" I.“ Ulll’l‘ tttun " " F, "Ll-N (”I‘LHI THU "N “Im- tho. M", 22nd. will he orlhwuui nu \unr "roretrttl"r rho. The "tr-"l"t"tiott at Ilw rilin-u- i. n-upvnfnlh roptvovd. '1‘ hi" - _ A _ l Lrlirt 'bscdrtrset _ _ My ' aluminium-r “I Work, Rv.idetu.. of Ilu- Bnruuuh of York uill plum- mm- llun lln'rl' will hr nu I'th-rliml "I galrlmur nr mm. in the “Imirilmlily "" BOROUGH or NORTH YORK GARBAGE COLLECTION GARBAGE COLLECTION Environmental council to plot coursgwA MONDAY, MAY 22nd. 1972 BOROUGH OF YORK VICTORIA DAY HOLIDAY KEN JOHNS MEN’S WEAR 4 JOHN STREET WESTON PUBLIC WORKS OEPL BOROUGH OF NORTH YORK Mr. Davis said: "the Canadian Environmental Advisory Council (C.E.A.C.) will be advising me on four general areas: the state of the environment and threats to it; priorities for federal or joint federal-provincial government action; ef- fectiveness of Environment Canada's efforts to restore, preserve or enhance the quality of the environment; and other. matters which I will refer to it as the need arises." council represent a cross- section of groups involved in environmental protection and conservation, including government, industry, universities, the physical sciences and voluntary organizations. Council Chairman is Dr. Arthur Porter, head of the department of industrial engineering, University of Toronto. Dr. Pierre Dan- sereau, vice-chairman of the council, is scientific director of the Centre de Recherches Ecologiques de Montreal. Permanent secretary is Dr. R.R. Logie of Environment Canada. Br. Logie is the former assistant deputy Minister of Fisheries. Members of the council are: Mr. Norbert Beaupre, chairman and president of Domtar Limited; Dr. Noah Carpenter, of Edmonton: Dr. Donald A. Chant, professor and chairman of the Department of Zoology, University of Toronto; Miss Moira Dunbar, earth sciences division, Defence Research Board Establish- ment Department of National Defence; Mr. Louis-Edmond Hamelin, director, Cente D'Etude Nordiques, Universite Laval; His Worship Mayor FIA. Horton, Borough of Etobicoke; Dr. Joseph B. MacInnis, Undersea Research Limited; Dr. Ian McTaggart-Cowan, profe- ssor of zoology and dean of the faculty of graduate studies at the University of British Columbia; Mr. Donovan Miller, president, The Canadian Fishing Co. Ltd.; 'Dr. Norman Morse, chairman, department of economics. Dalhousie University; Mr. Robert F. Shaw, deputy minister, Department of the Environment; Mr. Michel Slivitzky, director, water resources institute, University of Quebec and Mr. F.F. Todd, president. Mining Association of Canada. D eaat PUlfCHASE Monufocturers Clearance Imports from .Sumy Pharigla your FAMILY ALLOWANCE CME0UE. , . . Mm vow do": buy: mow! , permanent press cottons, Stretch Nylons, Denim Look, Nautical Look, Cartoon Look and many other "LOOKS" to delight the eye and the pocket book! INFANTS to 24 months, TODDLERS 2-3x BUYS and GIRLS 4-14. An exciting selection of imperfects and samples from FIVE MAJOR CANADIAN MAKERS Fashion-Right Playwear Bathing Suits, T-Shirts, Pants, Shorts, Pyjamas, Dresses, Scooter Sets, Infants' .Sunsuits, Play Suits, Pant Sets, Sizzlers, Terry Housecoats, Boys' Suits, Hot Pants . . . YOU NAME IT . . 3 trt/co,, Children 's Week MNMMNWM.Mb “Mullah“ ttmttttmt"thtt'Mtmtmt" ON SALE NOW. . FUN-lN-THE-SUN STUFF.“ S-T-R-E-T-C-H S Open Monday May 22, 9.30 am to 6 pm fashion scoop Ladies' all feather o/ ' Stretdt Terrry I Sandals Mnnulnrmron Fnrl n6 ling r nnrnnr- un_1._ -1 -e_---i_ AL, -, - Monufacturqrs End of Line cram-once for Teens and Juniors, Short Shorts, Jomoicos, mnkl Tops, Pants, Jump Suits, Long Drossos, REGULAR " to $20. 94$ka NEE OPEN MONDAY VICTORIA DAY 12 NOON ht 6 PM. THOUSANDS OF CHOICES AVAILABLE IN FIRST, WEOOND AND SUBSTANDARD QUALITIES. GREAT SAVINGS ON NAME MMO CARPETS FROM 33.99.... yd. To 316:; EXECUTIVE INTEREORS 1009 ALBION RD. (AT ISLINGTON) 742.1023 in crimps, terry and FACTORY CARPET CLEAR-OUT _ . 37 ARE/2347 RO"jt",D"" 1973 Lawrgmae Ave.) White of count Aha Brown or Natural, 2O lovely styles, Sin: 6-10. Emporium " .. Price ‘9 I . Emporium PRICE F "any tub" waTGiiGi . PRICE LESS a. y.d. or

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