Ontario Community Newspapers

Terrace Bay News, 27 Jul 1983, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Page 2, Terrace Bay-Schreiber News, Wednesday, July 27, 1983 Terrace Bay Recreation News North Shore Directors' Sport-Fest This one day program is for boys and girls age 8-10 years. The sport- fest will be held in Manitouwadge on Wed- nesday August 3rd from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Ten boys and ten girls will be selected by a draw method, from each North Shore commun- ity. There is no cost to the participant but each child is asked to bring their own box lunch. Sports featured dur- ing the day will be soc- cer, tennis, baseball and track and field. The children will be divided into 12 teams. Registration forms are available at the Rec- reation Office and at the Swim Pool. Please re- turn your form by Aug- ust 1st if interested. Caramet Family To- getherness Perform- ance This family entertain- ment show is scheduled for Sunday August 7th at 7:00 p.m. in the Curl- ing Club. Advance tick- ets will be available at the recreation office. Furhter details will fol- low shortly. Swim Pool News Water Polo Jamboree There will be a North Shore Directors' Water Polo Jamboree at the Pool on Saturday Aug- ust 6th and we need your involvement. This jamboree is open to boys and girls from 10-15 years of age. Talk to Kathy Lang or Curtis Evoy at.the pool or call the Recreation Office for further information. August Swim Lessons The August session of swim lessons will start on Tuesday August 2nd.: Please check the lists at the pool for times and classes, etc. The list will be up by Friday July 29th Swim Pool Schedule es Diving and Synchro Swim Classes have been cancelled due to lack of registration. Water Polo will start Tuesday July 26 and will run Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thurs- day from S-6 p.m. Fun Time, schedule for Wed- nesday 7-8 p.m. has been cancelled and Adult Open Swim will take its place. Fall Fair 83° Let's make Fall Fair 83 bigger and better. Space is now available if you wish to reserve your space call 3542. Last Fall there were 30 displays and to date they are going very quickly. Don't delay book your space today. A new twist this year will be the plaque awarded to the Top Three Best Deco- rated Booths. A panel of judges will determine the Top Three Best Decorated Booths. We are also hoping that C.F.N.O. will be in at- tendance to perform 'Live'. There will be more news on the Fair in future issues. Martin Downs Tented Circus This Circus will per- form in less than. five weeks. Main Show tick- ets are available at the Recreation Office. Ad- vance Tickets are lower in price than what you will pay at the tent entranceway. One of these tickets would be a perfect Birthday gift for someone. Fall Courses - Confed- 'eration College The Terrace Bay Rec- " reation Department in conjunction with Con- federation College will be offering the follow- ing courses, providing sufficient registration is teceived. Advance Microwave Cooking: Tentative Date: Satur- day, October 1 This popular work- shop will be offered again due to popular de- mand. Learn how to pre- pare many tasty, new recipes. Further de- tails will follow. Paper Tole Workshop Tentative Date: Saturday, October 15 Paper Tole is an old art dating back to the 18th and 19th centuries in Europe. It is a three- dimensional picture cre- ated by cutting three or more identical prints and layering them to- gether using silicone. The student will be cut- ting each print in a different manner, and sculpting and laying them to produce a di- mensional effect. Relaxation Workshop Tentative Date: Saturday, November 12 -- learn to provide a sense of deep relaxation -- the everyday stress of mind and body dissi- . Children's Services. - (Thunder ily & Credit Counselling) Misr of Commit and Socal Serves < Income Maintenance - (Rita Kozy). . Zen. 21370 SOCIAL SERVICES DIRECTORY (Submitted by Community Resource Office) EMERGENCY: Ambulance. Kinna-Wehya Clinic - Legal Aid available to Native and non-Native persons of low income LaPeer ate ea RAPES Or tn SO ES, 6s 1-229-1493 826-9585 Ministry of Northern Affairs - (Jane Greer, Marathon)................... Zon. 1 33180 t Ministry. of Community & Social Services: MN eS... .. 225s, es Rae for all call Zen. 21370 | Senior Citizens Consultant - (Kathy Scherban) = oe bj ee: Probation & After Care Services - (Vic Cashaback) Gene 1-623-9596 - Kimberly-Clar Femi nd Chia Seres of th tit of Tn By foray Ciro Ad Sosy - (Dan Brown and Cam Todesco, Nipigon). for all call Zen. 37610 CLIP & SAVE FUTURE REFERENCE " o "a " ae ow pates, and you enter a stress-free world of limitless potential -- participate in the act of consciously creating your life as you want it to be -- learn to release and feel the healing flow of your own energies Fall/Winter Programs Now is the time to start arranging courses for this coming fall. If you have a skill you would like to share with others by instructing a program, call us and let us know. Also, if you have ideas on courses! you would like to take, let us know that too and we will do our best to offer them. Your sug- gestions are welcome! Open Bowling The Bowling Alley is open for your entertain- ment, on Wednesday from 7-10 p.m. and Sun- day from 2-5 p.m. This activity is open for members and _ non- _ members. Check at the Mainstream Canada office for rates. Tot Lot News The Tot Lot program this week included many games and creative crafts. The highlights of the week were a movie called, "A Visit to the Hospital" and one titled, "The Rise and Fall of the Great Lakes." We also toured the hospital with the 3 to 6 year old group. The following day, a visit to the beach provided a lot of fun and enjoyment for all. We hope to see all of you kids again next week and bring along some friends to join in the fun. The Tot Lot staff would like to extend a special thanks to the hospital staff. We had . a great time! We would also like to thank the Chief of Police for his assistance in helping us get the children across the highway safely. Tot Lot Staff -- Governments are distorting the system by W. ROGER WORTH When the politicians and government bureau- crats get as deeply in- volved in' planning and running the system as they are now, distortions arise that have horren- dous effects on the hard- working farmers, manu- facturers and small- time entrepreneurs who really make the economy tick. Two recent, unrelated incidents highlight how serious the situation has become. ¢ With more than 1.5 million people unem- ployed in the country, Canada's farm com- munity reports that hun- dreds of acres of berries have been left to rot in the fields because pick- ers aren't available. The reason? Potential workers fear they will lose unemployment in- surance or social assist- ance support if they work for only a few days, which is common in the berry picking game as employees move from one farm to another. So rather than sign up for farm work, the un- employed continue to draw benefits, while the berries rot. To add in- sult to injury, farmers were required to play the government's red- tape game: forced to fill out extensive govern- ment forms, even if the individual only worked for a few hours. Effectively admitting its mistake, Ottawa be- latedly backed off, relax- ing some of the stiff new regulations. But by that time, the berries. had rotted. There is always next year. © Across the country, governments at all levels are spending money they don't have to provide so-called "job creation" grants to new or expanding business- es, all the while forget- ting about the jobs that will be lost as unsubsi- dized firms have diffi- culty competing with those accepting the handouts. In Hamilton, Ontario, for example, a Winnipeg Major Appliance Repairs Servicing done in your own home on: Ranges, Washers; Dryers, Dishwashers, Fridges, & Electric Hot Water Tanks. Bill Campbell Electric 824-2743 or 824-2574 FOR 'company plans a 302- room hotel that will cost - $15.6-million.. The fed- eral and Ontario govern- - Ments are providing the company with $3.9- million as an outright gift, or a full 25 per cent of the cost of the pro- ject. What's more, the City of Hamilton is spending $1.6-million to build a subbasement and park- ing lot, and another $900,000 for a street overpass. The question: how will other unsubsidized hotels in the city com- pete with the newcomer that has received so many free taxpayer dol- lars? The simple an- swer: they'll have a rough time indeed. If this type of govern- ment largesse was. a single incident, it might not be worth men- tioning. But similar deals are being con- cocted daily in all re- gions of the country as one business after an-' other hops on the gravy train. . The politicians take credit for the "new" jobs, but fail to accept the blame for layoffs at competing forms. The sad fact is, governments are dis-~ torting the competitive, free enterprise system, creating a remarkable advantage for the com- panies that get grants. As Patricia Johnston, senior vice-president of the 64,000 member Canadian Federation of Independent Business said in a recent speech: "Every single meet- ing of small business people I have ever at- tended breaks out into hostility at the very mention of grants. Most of them have suffered from the subsidized competition of a rival. In an environment of 150,000 annual busi- ness start-ups, no grant- ing authority can as-: sure itself that it isn't funding one guy to put another out of busi- ness."' Ontario Home by J.B. (BEV) YOUNG The Ontario Home Renewal (OHRP) is available to home owners in unor- ganized communities. Loans of up to $7,500 are You Are Not Alone - a film of the Canadian Foundation for the Study of Infant Deaths will be shown on: Monday, August 8, 1983 8:00 p.m. Terrace Bay Recreation Complex Conference Room "Peggy Lyons" - national co-ordinator of the Foundation will be present to answer questions and provide information. Sponsored by the Northshore $,!.D.S. Chapter, a local support group for the famlies of $.1.D.S. victims. All interested people are welcome to attend. For further information contact: Pat at 825-9196 or Laurie at 825-9516 Program. | Renewal Program made available to owner-occupants who wish to bring their homes up to standard, covering such areas as repairing structural faults, and rehabilitat- ing plumbing, insula- tion, heating and elec- trical systems. A portion of the loan may be forgiven, de- pending on the recip- ient's income. Interest rates vary from zero to eight per cent, again depending on income. For applicants, the maximum annual quali- fying income, after al- lowable deductions are made is $15,500. In communities with- out municipal bounda- ries, OHRP is adminis- tered by the Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing's housing pro- grams division in con- junction with the Minis- try of Northern Affairs. For further informa- tion please contact your nearest Ministry of Northern Affairs Office at 428 East Victoria Avenue, Thunder Bay - telephone 475-1425 or Zenith 33160.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy