Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star (1907-2001), 29 Oct 1970, p. 1

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QPP plainciothesmen, who searched lockers at Port Perry High School for drugs Friday, went away empty handed but they'll be back. -- The raid, conducted as an execution of a search werrant, was made after police presented schoo! officials with a list of names of students they suspected were using drugs. Vice-principal Ray Litt said the school administration Nas Deen aware for sometime that some students are using A PROBLEM "We know we have a problem," said Mr. Litt, "but Our main interest is that we don't want these students to feel they can use the school as a sancturary for pushing drugs." The search was made by three out-of-uniform officers about 1 p.m. prior to the school dance that evening. Mr. Litt said he believes most of the people selling Grugs at the high school are outsiders but he admits a few may be within the schoo! itself. The vice-principal said the OPP made a "thorough" search but apperently the students in question were "wo smart" this time. A spokesman for the OPP Whitby detachment confir- med no drugs were found but said another seerch wil! be conducted in the near future. He didn't specify when. CARTWRIGHT GARBAGE BRIGADE: Susan Thompson (left), Chery! Wright, Janis Dorrell, Bill Clement, Alice Carnaghan and Kathy Gunter. - OPP Search But Find No Drugs At Port Perry High School Mr. Litt said detection of drugs on school property has been difficult because each student has an individual locked locker, However, no student has appeared in class under the influence of drugs, according to Mr. Litt, and he believes that, with the exception of the pushers, most students who have used drugs have done so only to experiment. The vice-principal adds that while drugs are a problem the trend towerd alcoho! has increased. (Continued Port Perry, Ont., on Page 13) Thurs., Oct. 29, 1970 ~ No. 1 Road Condition Cancels Due to the poor condition of gome of Port Perry streets the local branch of the Royal Canadian Legion has decided to forego the "parade pre- ceding the annual church ser vice, Sunday, Nov. 8. The members will iggtead enter two DeNure bute at the Legion Hall and will be taken to the United Church for the service at 10 a.m. Fall in at the Legion Hall at 9.30 a.m Remembrance week act- ivities will begin with the sale of Poppies on Thursday, Nov Parade 5 and continue day, Nov. 7 The annual Remembrance Day Banquet will be held in the Legion Hall on Saturday at 6.30 p.m. with Robert Jeffries, second vice president of Provincial guest speaker Following the Church ser vice, wreaths will be laid at the Memorial plaque in the Library and the new Cenotaph in front of the Legion Hall Receives Degree until Satur Command as Cartwright Students Versus Pollution Te The entire student body of Cartwright High School, about 100 abandoned school desks Friday afternoon to fight poll- ution in the Township The idea prompted by Val- erie Frew, Yearbook editor was endorsed by the principal, other interested provided trucks and when the project was completed about 4 p.m., some 30 truck loads of beer and pop bottles, garbage of every description including mufflers, cardboard boxes, old tires, etc. had been coll- day was to help finance the printing of the Year Book The financial result will not be known before the many hundred of beer and pop bottles are disposed d, but no doubt, quite a few dol- lars will be realized from the and reported the students had been successful enough to collect $120. in donations and} $33. from the sale of beer and/ pop bottles for a total of | $153 The money is a good start Woman Dies, te Crash 26-year-old Uxbridge woman was killed instantly Tuesday when her car slam- med into a tree on Centre Gordon Paisiey and Ron Min- |ected effort. However, what money | towards the printing of the Road just north of Uxbridge shall, president of Students' Several farms and private| the students may derive from | Year Book, and according to Dead is Marilyn Beare of Council. The three mapped|homes were visited where the|the anti-pollution campaign, | Mr. Paisley, the students in |205 Maple St out Cartwright Township into |girls and boys picked up gar-|they certainly deserve, but tend to make a second at-/in the car when the accident 12 sections and divided the | bage, raked leaves and cleaned |the greatest and even more tempt of collecting garbage | occured students im groups of nine. |up the grounds for a donation.| important part of the drive|'" 'he Township A Parents of students and |The moneys made during the | was the awareness they show ed and the initiative they took Top Student Donald M. McCaig received OPP Graduate F Vil to help in the fight against gravel road. The car skidded | his B.A. degree at the Twenty rom i lage pollution Grade 1 Piano off the read and plowed | first Convocation of the Uni She was alone } Police said the woman ap | parently | lost control of her 2 vehicle while driving on the * * . | through a ditch before hitting | versity of Waterloo, majoring . Ontario Provincial Police Miss Diane Barr, daughter | the tree in English and Psychology Constable T.W yen has Collect $153. of Mr. and Mrs. Wm Barr, | Constable L.D. Larocque| Donald is the son of Mr i a ne tenn rom a Seagrave received the highest} of the Whitby OPP invest and Mrs. Marshall McCaig io Provincial Police Col Cartwright High School|mark in Grade I Piano, for! gated | Greenbank lege, Toronto, after successful completion of the "Recruit Orientation Course" Upon graduation Constable Hockin was posted to the Downsview Detachment, No 5 District Downsview He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hockins, 35 Sim- coe Street. Mr. Hockins is also « constable but with the Whitby detachment of O.P_P. Mr. Hockin is married and resides with his wife, Gail at 208 Seugog Street HOCKIN TW principal, Gordon Paisley call ed the Star Tuesday morning Hospital Report Week Ending October 24th Admissions 35 Births 3 Deaths nil Emergency 90 Operations 14 Discharges. 26 Remaining. 7 Visiting Hours - 3 - 8 p.m 200 BIRDS STOCKED Where To Hunt For Pheasants Roast pheasant has been on the menu in some Port Perry area homes these days specially those with a hunter im the family The birds, for the most part, have been taken from the 450-acre Provincial Hunt ing area at the northwest tip of Seugog Island The fish and wildlife div ision of the Department of Lands and Forest has stocked the area as an experiment to! aVract hunters | Upwards of 200 of the birds -- cocks and hens -- have been released and « Depart ment spokesman says more vide excellent protective cover for the birds Hunters in pairs or three somes, or alone with a good will probably be let go during} 40g. have a better chance for the remainder of the pheasant season which closes Dec. 15 The birds can be found al most anywhere on the reserve but especially in the long grasses Several fields inworked since three farms were brought to make up the sancturay, pro since the must be scared up for a good shot And they practically have to be stepped on before they 1! rise success pheasants The pheasants have been banded and hunters are asked to notify the Department of kills. This will help produce students of Oshawa and Dist rict in the music exa minations of the Royal Con of Music of Tor dune servatory onto Diane played at a Prize Winner's Recital in Oshawa Tuesday, given by the Oshawa Branch of the Ontario Reg istered Music Teacher's Ass ociation, where she received her prize Diane is a student of Mrs jd E. Jackson A.T.C.M R.M.T an accurate tally of the taken number Hunters are Permitted o limit of three birds regardless The only requirement is a Provincial hunting licence In future, if the experiment of sex proves successful, hunters may be required to get a special licence as is now required in some Provincial hunting area Birds stocked by the De partment on Scugog have been brought from pheasant farms SSS SSS ST SESS SSS SSS SSS SSS SSS SSS ESSE ESS -- eee eS SSS SSS SS SSS SSS SST SET TET Help Save A Goblin Kids love gettifig dressed up for Hallowe en and what ould be more enjoyable than sweing ther thew cos turnes as witches, ghosts ar goblins shellir out Unfortunately, some get so involved they forget traffic en. it is up to you, the safety also applies on Malloy hildren by keeping a special look Make this Hallowe'en @ safe and ac t fre casion. This motorist, to help our but and taking extra prec s on Hallowe en essage is from the O.P.P. Whitby detachmer SS SSS SSSSSESSE SESS SESS SESE SESS ESSE SEES S S&S

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