. 197 3 objective $3,800 for area cancer branch A 1973 goal of $4 million has been announced by the Ontario Division of the Canadian Cancer Society. This sum, to be raised by volunteer workers during the Society's annual April cam- paign for funds, will be used to support cancer research in Canada as well as finance the volunteer work of the Society in the fields of public education and services for cancer patients. The support of cancer research in Canada is large- ly dependent upon public donations collected by thousands of Cancer Society volunteers once a year. Speaking to the 500 volun- teer campaign chairmen in Toronto over the weekend, Division Campaign Chair- man Bill Morison of Toronto said, "A fund-raising campaign of such magnitude as ours doesn't just suddenly happen. It takes months of careful planning and hard work, but in the end, our success is ultimatedly dependent upon the support of the people of this country. Indeed, past campaign records show that the Cana- dian people believe as we do, that '""Cancer Can Be Beat- (<4 MEND-N-FIT THEYRE AS CLEAN AS A WHISTLE AS NEAT AS A PIN, FOLKS ALL TELL WHO'VE CALLED USIN Am RELIABLE PLUMBING & HEATING For Information Phone Bert Faber 985-2012 en'. Delegates from all across Ontario were attend- ing the two-day conference held at Toronto's new Four Seasons-Sheraton Hotel, January 20 and 21, to plan their upcoming campaign. Sessions at the meetings included tips from veteran volunteers on how to organ- ize a community campaign, and featured an instructional film on the three important aspects of 'planning, recruit- ing and training'. "It is through well informed canvassers and campaign workers," said Mr. Morison, "that we are able to inspire the kind of public confidence in our work that enables us to reach our goal." A panel of doctors from Toronto's Princess Margaret Hospital discussed cancer research and its impact in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer patients. Ontario Division's 'Miss Canadian students assess mass media Forty per cent of grade 6 students in Canada spend at least 20 hours a week watching television. But by the time they get to grade 13, only fiver per cent allow themselves this luxury, while 32 per cent watch the tube less than four hours, during an entire week. The information is con- tained in one of a number of tabulations and charts pub- lished today in a Statistics Canada education service bulletin, giving some of the results of a student census undertaken last year as an adjunct to the 1971 Census of Canada. When it came to reading newspapers, 72 per cent of the grade 6 children, 70 per cent of the grade sevens and 65 per cent of grade eights preferred the comic section above all else. Interest in TRAVEL NONQUON SERVICE 160 Queen St. -- Port Perry 985-2336 Special to TOTAL COST PER PERSON WWVA JAMBOREE (Wheeling, West Virginia) DOC WILLIAMS SHOW HELEN & BOBBY SCOTT * THE HECKELLS February 16th to 18th, 1973 4 to a room $46.00 3 to a room $48.00 PRICE INCLUDES return transportation by air-conditioned, washroom-equipped bus, first class accommodation in down- town Wheeling at the Downtowner Motor Inn and special reserved seat for the Jamboree. Tour departs Friday night. 2 to a room $50.00 Single room $57.00 EASTER WEEK-END SPECIALS April 19th to 22nd Washington, D.C. Nashville, Tenn. New York City 1973 Summer Brochures Availabie Now! CANADA, ALASKA, EUROPE, the WORLD All Free for the asking. Hope of Ontario - 1973" was presented lo the delegates. She is a nursing student chosen from among repre- sentatives of the Society's districts to serve for the next year as an ambassador of the province's cancer workers. Miss Hope will make personal appearances and will be interviewed on radio and television. Attending the conference from this area. was Mr. Arnold ~~ Roach, Branch Campaign Chairman. He said, *'l am certain that with the knowledge gained from this meeting and with the past record of co-operation that we have had from the citizens of Port Perry, we shall be able to reach our 1973 objective of $3,800. Eliminating cancer is every- one's business, but the work of science is expensive; every citizen can help by supporting cancer research. The Canadian Cancer Society's Miss Hope of Ontario -- 1973 was named January 20 at the Society's Campaign Conference at the Four Seasons-Sheraton Hotel, Tcronto. She is Jillian Heaver (left) of Mississauga who represented Central Counties District and is a nursing student attending Credit Valley School of Nursing. Congratulating her is Linda Downs of Orono, a student at St. Joseph's School of Nursing, Peterborough, who was representing East Central District in the local and world news province-wide contest. The winner was chosen from 13 nursing students who had successfully competed in local contests. They each represented one of the society's districts increased sharply at the grade 10 level, where 41 per cent of the students ex- pressed interest in local news and 36 per cent in world news. The comic pages, however, were still in first place, interesting 45 per cent of the audience. In Grade 13, world news covering Ontario. second at 43 per cent and comics third at 41 pet cent. Editorial pages were read by 18 per cent of those in grade 13. and financial pages by seven per cent. correspon- ding figures in grade 12 were: world news, 43 per orials, comics, 45 per cent; edit- financial pages, six per cent. Students were also asked how many books they read, on an average, per month. (Text books, assigned read- ing and comic books were grade 6 students and almost 20 per ¢ ent of those in grades eight through 12, reported reading no books. A fairly consistent 40 per cent of students in every grade from eight to 13 read one or two books a month and an equally consistent 17 to 18 finished first, with a 48 per cent readership, local news cent; local news, 44 per cent ; excluded.) Ten per cent of per cent read three or four books. MOTORS LIMITED 1250 Dundas Street East RALPH FAIRMAN 1972 VEGA GT 2 DOOR HATCHBACK coupe, 110 h.p. 4 speed, radio, electric rear defogger, custom -interior, tinted glass. and has a shadow grey exterior and black stripe. $2795 Lic. #16207A. 1969 CGLDSMOBILE 442, 2 DOOR hard top, 400 cu. in. V-8, automatic, p.s., p.b., radio plus all Oldsmobile 442 deluxe features and handling packages. Mist green exterior with dark green vinyl roof and matching interior. 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