Durham Region Newspapers banner

Whitby Free Press, 6 Mar 1991, p. 10

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

PAGE 10, WHITBYREEPRESS, WEDNESYMRE,11 PRÃ"ÙPAGE1There Io FR OM AGEibut àfter' De ie erly opstion to are, morei Canaa Pool?. progaom of con- pols hw tracting-out somte services, Wells of satisfaci said the public bas accepted it. Scott ,of Unwheiw. can put retail ser- corporatloii vices into a businep.elthat i., open - privatizati( earli ' r~the ioning and later H.ei ~~at ~ I Z gt uth ogrnit the..letter- eqùates to-btter ýservice," Wells, transfert. ô nlaine& - gj. nc, toclose Whitby 'post fie tb ' BlPart@fths boelim& uë iitial opposition teo it DDetrylt ciut they tfled. Independant Iere. is a hlher rate ursebmoans the rsrcturing' and acheme. jobs we-elost when rtng opération wus fomn Oshawa te and predicts more t, corne. «Rlgt-ow -nOshawa they're> dnga.,restructuri' f postal wakifs estimated w. could- loe'. 10 tô 16-letter carrier posi- tions," sidScott. SH. said ýCUPW ha a liêèd for court ,izïjufictidrns and MIiri- vancso'agaiM tCanada, Post or, similar pianselsewhere, but.has, not beeSî uccessfil. Stili, the union did force the corporation te delay plans to contruot-out mail deUiver-y in the Newcastle communlty- 0f Cour-, tice. Scott . mid the "precedent-set- tige proposai came up- durlng contract nogotiations now under way inu.Ottawa and wasvigô-r- ouslyopposed by the union. "TheVrve put a laold on it for now,» sald Sètt. "WNNER'S,CIRC4E"l Major .devel oprnent FR OM PAGE 1 fromn residents upset about thé Prrutx1beexpocted at" tastagé, Snid Batten'. "ltes hard' for anyone te cail when w. don't know what were douling with - at this point," Sad Batten. While he could not; prodict what will ha onp with-"Eriii Mills aplcation,, Batten s " i'ay lieybe referred te .Whiitbys officiai plan review# now under wïay. "It still has tog o,<through the plnnn proceis .but I. assume that"'wat'well 'do, that's pro- bably. what they're loolking for alqso, said Batten.' Commttereect8sstaff'àdvic RMPA GE 2 SCunilorjoS Drumm said thIat o,,Pwin te the number ol property owners -involved, thbe wasm osblt of a walking trailjb nbin iithelarea. ,"W. le never put in a frail syste from Columbus Rd. ý o Ashburn Rd.," said Drumm.' "If w*e had 'nychance Of form. nga trail Mytmr I would nol mmudif counc,-Iereta approveéaucquigtheo1nd, it wo iuo have te Ihudget for a "B all dz people a, year Id )f il 0 could wul thirough it," suid,ý Drumm Councillor Lynda Buffett said there w*as -little lkelhood of- acntland ever bein de-velo- ped, so the-land co1ld romain undisturbediprivatehands a;,ý .-I don't>lke wh:t Ia.. orher frm"adan anryBrunelle. "TA.Regon fDuham-r" oo- nizes'the n.eed te ýýprotect -tIns eek'valley. I caut understand why Peoq say wont gt tere." eeomn BrunellWpireicted-that- evon if the' recommeudation 'Ils thatcouncil" 1neit week, e<t aoetve uwallIa chance of getin*g trugàeialcoun- Counclor Ros Battncern- mnitto. charman, terme auýy sggestion te mikel adpb lic ÈrOperty "bsoutly u-r Ouse 6711a8 la not an urban aea, il?. arural urea. .There ' not a chance of thia aîrea ,being develo-ý ped "muid Battenie 'd1,àmu3id'tue streazu was oly a "arnalltrlbutary» of Lynde CÊeek' sud- the actual creek 'cornes nowhere near the site. ,VIf you)re golug te- folbew tii. valley -l-and coutext through I4yndé Creek you wouldn't corne near thiàiproperty,"! muid Batteni. Followýin rthe meetMig, -a >ViSi- bly: upsot Brunelle'eeFdht tcomment flirtiier Loreporters. However, hi. did promis. te, pursue, the matter at next weoks's cuncëil meeting.> Marh At reaýk inBrooklin Thé.0OptirniatClub of BrooIdin lhas d:Ma ...ed their 'cod' annualMarh Art' Break sto'be held mi Brooklin, Mharch il te 14. ,,Ihe. 1pro gram ,fleatures .throe das 0f i-lassessions. und a' fiell d to ethe Ontario Gvallroi f Art inTonto. Si" professional' artists ýfrom- Brooklin, Oshawa, Toronto, and Moncton,ý N.B., will instruct, the, students in the use cf.avuriety àfý médiumns froi pap er and wo ýcoàltructo te prinit mlngr Poteypcartooning' u Ti. instructors are aui very Active in their fields. John- t.omnard i. a .well-known painiterý who has-taugut progams at Ti.: Station Gallery..1 , Carl' Weins filustrates covers, for Toronto -esuad ,bas. tauight for ehuilàam ýBoard of Education visual arts prqoam Ron ýWard works fbr the Moncton-Mfmes Transcript; as-,a PrssBa oahr~ . BU KimbaU.Stove.P'ranc sud Buill Fraer are veay activein the' community: , ,teachiing ' azd exhibiting .They have aIse or ked. with Durham Board of Education at thir visual arts 16 (second 'hild -in a family is'- camp. 2 3) mbe fé. Includes materials, Aswell ,as' touring, ii a- lnhduiy, ndatptothert, Oalr fOntarlo, the tdotGallery of Ontario. wl .involvred' in a hna-n To lreister, cia Brian pr-KSlth prograzu ,Wik ut 6-44x, or ck upa foitrtor the four-day form from CTf. Vdeo mag76, cam i *0 erstudeut aged 6 to Baldwiti St, 'roklin (655>3306), Mart"inls landscapesshown at McLauhin Giery Luandscape in Mto Art, the work ýcf T. Moweér Martin, 1838-1934,ý and E.Ma Martin., 186541957, Willbe hold until MaY19atàt. ; Rdiert McLfaughlixi Oehawa. o paintlng feuturea 21 worksin the. gallerys permanent collec-ý tion. 'Thé. pantinguare on, PriMaent bau fim the Ontarlo Fou.,- natin.be Emmna May Mrln v coatrtibut.d te tthe way oe,. view*ou lindaae TPis;gatgl Gnred 'Lru. by T.' Màwer Martn uakes a scene, mqjestic that ould "namafllybe b5Flr=ýd whuile the vantgle -Point C .ay the, relativ e -in.aignlficance cf mun lu thé face of tru. grandeur. T. îMower -Martin wm - born lu Lonadon, England lu 1838 and studied art at ,the .Soeth, Kreidngton Schoclé. e came te Canada lu 1862 with bis -wife<ý Emma, sud after fammng (az atternpt that fafled),> opened an art studio lu _Toronto arcund 1880. He travelled on. numerous occasions te tth. west cf'Canada lu order to, paint. Hie.wasaa founding member 'of bth the. Outario ocety f ýArtist .a and the.. tinn MaMartin waa born inuý 1865,- the. eldest' daughter:-of the',,Martin, family. , Her early~ artistlcnidlawere taught teher, by hèr father as well by the eminent Canadian, . painterw Manaùaduke Matthewu. and GLA Reid. -Early paï intings by Maii are marked -by th e oft colour and, welldefiued det;ails, while li. later workesah, achieves a mueè romuantic effeét that hélpo tet deflue themu as erene. THIS WEEK . .CRAFTrWORLD PRESENTS.., & CoLu2hry eoffsdtgfa FINE ART 0 BEST IN CANADIAN CRAFTS 0 SOLID OAK FURNITURE 0 CHILDREN'S, MENS AND WOMEN'S CLOTHING 0 COUNTRY COLLECTIBLES CHOMEMADE BREAD- 0 PORCELAIN DOLLS 0 GOURMET SELECTIONS 0 LEATHER & SHEEPSKIN O JEWELLERY 0 CHILD)REN'S.TOYS ,& STAMPS 50 OMUCH MORE METRO- EAST TRADE.CENTRE BROCK ROAD NORTH - PICKERING FR1. MAR. 8"4-10 PM SAT. MAR. 9,ý11-9 ,PM SUN. MAR 10, 11-6 ,PM aflUimifN t2 -f> UNDÊËRý cast -'Extemtes' Durham, Shoesfting Pertoranerso. l7th season "Who sid 11lf, was fuir?" continues . with William Matrosimones Extremitiea,'an intene édrama'te hé performed, April 5,,S 2 ud13y e prn,.,-, tii. arts reource centre, Oshaw~a City hbaiR comilleIL emWinrof- an award for d"stiguihed achievemeut lu the 1982-.83n New York- theatre season, 'Extremitios' explores the effeàbtne,, atrgp.attempt on its lutededvlctmasdher two roommates. The Shôdstnln Peifore rouction, directe« by- Chris i~bocats Susan Lwa as ealn. the, inteudedvictim -of STEV OE (Rtau!) chokes uua LOwery <ajre uigrehearsal -for Shoestring Plaviers' uroduetion (if gbl FREE !L--- t r

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy