wp" 14 -- Scugog Citizen -- Tuesday, April 9, 1996 Zz £2 DAVID BISHOP Advisor April 10 - April 16 ARIES: (March 19 - April 20) You ay experience a depressing influence on your feelings which is i ing self ion and Pp You may have strained relations with a woman (regardless of your sex). Shrug off guilt and pessimism, they are unhealthy. . TAURUS: (April 21 - May 21) Conflicts may overlap both at home and at the workplace. Your restlessness may make you strike out on your own for more freedom in your relations with friends and colleagues, 50 try to loosen up and not take everything so seriously. Avoid conflias with associates where the 'good of the company" is involved. i GEMINI: (May 22 - June 21)' It is best Ww engage in work which requires little risk of financial things 'dirty' details that others (or you) have neglected to do. Get ready for you may experience a shattering spiritual insight that will rock your base. CANCER: (Juge 22 - July 22) Your attitudes.and beliefs will be experiencing some big evolutipn, consciously ar unconsciously. These will be challenged as one is ripe for sorte sudden and abrupt change in the normal routine of family life. This experience will be a range of death and rebirth, from a person to an idea. LEO: (July 23 - August 22) Your sensitivity to others is intensified and provides you with an . increased physical attractiveness. Your desire for intimacy and love with a partner is great, with the expression of affections being most satisfying to you. This is an excellent time for social activity. VIRGO: (August 23 - September 22) You may be experiencing some discouragement and doubts about your ability to succeed. You may receive necessary help from a close friend unexpectedly.in the next 12 - 14 days. Do not hesitate to get to know new people for love is in full blodbm and it will be useful to demonstrate the depth of your affection. . LIBRA: (September 23 - October 22) 4 Once again you are experiencing a pleasurable case in your day-to- day living. Friends prove their importance to you as you come to realize many new things about yourself and just what you can dream of and complete. This is a good time for growth in your relationships as there is harmony in your realism. SCORPIO: (October 23 - November 22) 'There is a strong desire to free yourself from the 'chains' that you see yourself (or society) having placed on you. You may react suddenly against things which previously seemed the normal way to do things. It is a good time to take the lead on a project, for your originality is unusually heightened. SAGITTARIUS: (November 23 - December 21) Tribulations may pop up unexpectedly at work. You may face criticism from co-workers or your boss, particularly about a project or idea of yours. Stand by your guns and don't be afraid to hear depreciating remarks. You are restless to finish the job at hand and get on to more important things. CAPRICORN: (December 23 - January 20) Your energy is high and your creative juices are flowing, ready to be applied to the work at hand. If you give your best effort now, considerable success may follow and you may unconsciously'help a close friend through your efforts. Intimacy with a loved one transcends existing bdundaries. AQUARIUS: (January 21 - February 19) You will show your tendency for hard work and your ambitions on the professional level. You may tend to ignore others or 'use them' to achieve success. It is important to develop a 'team attitude' so as relationships for good or bad. PISCES: (February 20 - March19) . 'A chill may be put in your heart due to an unpleasant experience or estrangement from a loved one. If YOU keep things in perspective and don't turn the pain inward, your heart will be stronger for it. It's atime for great insight into yourself and how you fit together. Enjoy some renewed faith, it's rewarding. All dates for astrological signs may vary, depending on the year. | EMM ERSON 193 QUEEN STREET, PORT PERRY ONTARIO L9L 1B9 76005985-7306. * All Types of Insurance loss or original thought. This is an excellent time to do all the little - not to alienate fellow workers. You are assertive and it intensifies LETTERS TO THE EDITOR > Landfills versus incineration? To The Editor: Dr. Landry (Citizen, Mar.5) states that he hates both landfill and incineration, however his preference for landfill is Jypical of the NIMBY syndrome which results in permanent destruction of our most precious asset - prime farm land. A 1991 Ministry of the Environment document listed 1,398 active and 2,334 closed landfill sites in Ontario, all of them classified as potentially hazardous to humans and/or the environment. . Recent additional studies indicate that these closed sites are only a small Berries wanted To the Editor: May I send the following letter to your readers? 1 am looking for a source / supplier for the following wild fruits: elderberries, wild grapes, chokecherries and mayapples. If you can help with my search, 'please call 1 - 705 - 944 - 5692 and leave your name, number and best time to return your call. If anyone has any of these products available now, please call to discuss remuneration. Many thanks, Linda Lawrence RR.1, Fraserville, . Ontario Herder Sales 166 Reach Park Rd. (905) 985-3885 Quality Used Cars 41990 DODGE DYNASTY 145k... $4,995. 1992 BERRETTA 88k ... $6,995. 1991 FORD TEMPO 87k. ... $ Sas, 1990 JEEP CHEROKEE Laredo ... $9,495. 1990 CHEVY CORSICA V6 ... $5,99. 1991 AV UNDA SONATA 102 km . ,995. 1990 CORSICA $3,495. 1992 DODGE SHADOW $4,495, 1986 OLDS CIERA . $2,995, 1991 DODGE SPIRIT + 1991 HYUNDAI EXCEL 3,995, of 100s FORD Soen2 IOSRPHENS SoRSIcA 1992 o806E S SHADOW $6,995, 1986 PONTIAC 6000 $9,905. Quality Used Trucks 1989 DODGE PICKUP 4X4 78 km. ... $8,495. 1987 FORDAXLT LARIAT $4,995. y 1991 CHEVY S10 EXT. CAB $6,995. 1984 DODGE D50 with Cab $500. We have 30 Cars in Stock! All Prices include OME. TRADE-INS WELC! Financing Avallable Call us at ... 985-3885 fraction of the actual total. Landfills are forever. The land is not'only.lost for any useful purpose but constitutes a perpetual menace to future generations through its emissions of gases into the atmosphere and toxics into the water supplies. The lost production and tax revenues as well as the costs of 'perpetual monitoring and control far outweigh the costs of incineration with energy recovery as is confirmed in the above M.O.E document. With respect to health matters, an example of comparison is that shown in documents recently issued in the 1994 progress report on the Canada - Great Lakes Basin Ecosystem in which is shown that the major source. of mercury in Ontario is landfill gases released from rotting garbage. Once in a landfill, mercury and other nasties are continuously released for centuries into our air and water. The 1995 report also states that the most significant gource | of contaminants, 'e.g. dioxins, in Lake Ontario is from the Niagara River. Remember the Love Canal and Hyde Park. 1 suggest Dr. Landry take a trip one day to the Brock 'Rd. dump in Pickering and examine the millions of tons of rétting combustibles that could have been safely incinerated, producing large amounts of electricity while saving non- renewable fossil fuels. He could also wonder what is 'in the massive plumes of gases and vapours swamping the landscape from the flares burning the small fraction 6f the gases 1 captured ffom the emissions into the atmosphere as well as the leachates emigrating underground into nearby Duffins Creek. Incidentally, those underground gases were the same ones which entered the weighscale building at the dumpsite and exploded, killing one operator and severely injuring his fellow workers. Recycling is an important part of an integrated waste management plan but to ignore another part - Energy-From-Waste. - is to pass on the problems and their associated costs to future generations. "Edward R.'Fox, Tormie? Union boss challenges Hydro chief to debate Editor's Note: Pillining is 'a letter to Wm. Farlinger, Chairman, Ontario Hydro, from Power Workers' Union President John Murphy. Dear Mr. Farlinger: As the Chairman of the Board of Directors of Ontario Hydro, you dre the chief spokesperson: for management, which has proposed breaking up Hydro, selling off "its generation assets and allowing open access to the province's transmission Design Our Logo and you could win a 1 Year Membership Golf 5 Country CLuB + ANGELINE STREET, South of KENT ST., » LINDSAY (705), 324-5662 Submit enfries no later than May 15th, 1996 to: Box 111, Undsay, Ontario K9V 4R8 or hand deliver to our Pro Shop. Angeline Sk and distribution systems by any supplidr of electricity in North America. Similarly, I am the chief spokesperson for the Power Workers' Union, which represents 70% of Hydro's workforce and which holds, as you know, very different views on this matter. : The time has come for the two of us to publicly debate the future of Ontario's electricity system. There is . heightened d public awareness of the to the PORT PERRY DENTAL OFFICE 462 PAXTON ST. (Across from the Hospital 985- 8459 privatization issue and interest in such a debate' would be high. We would also be performing a public service appropriate to our positions by helping the people of Ontario better. understand the issues in dispute, the facts surrounding them, and the arguments both for and against privatization and deregulation. Indeed, as one of the highest-paid' public servants*in tfie.. province, 1 suggest you ple of Ontario pid your nd intentions regarding the disposition of public assets under your directiog and control, and be prepared to defend your © views in an open forum. It would be especially helpful to have this debate before the Report of the " MacDonald Committee is issued, at the end of April; so that the public will have , more knowledge with which to evaluate the report's conclusions-and x recommendations. I know from your recent public speaking appearances that you are anxious to defend your position on the fate of Ontario Hydro, I have taken the liberty of forwarding a copy of this letter to selected broadcasters around the. province, urging them tq invite the both of us to" debate these issues, on aif, sometime during April. Given the recent surge in, media interest in this | subject I am sure we will * get several such invitations and I hope you" will respond favourably. ~ Sincerely, JohnD. Murphy " President Power Workers" Union of Ontario . §