Oakville Newspapers

Oakville Beaver, 11 Sep 1994, p. 1

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

As a result, as of press time Friday the fate of Kuntz â€" who had held both positions since 1989 â€" remained ambiguous. Those hospital Board members contacted by the Beaver were either unavailable or refused comment on the record. Although the Board has According to a hospital source, last week‘s special meeting was held to review Kuntz‘s fiveâ€"year contract. As a personnel matter, information stemming from the discussions was deemed confidential. By HOWARD MOZEL Oakville Beaver Staff Future of hospital president in doubt Oakvilleâ€"Trafalgar Memorial Hospital, hangs in limbo this weekend following a closedâ€"door Thursday night meeting of the OTMH Board of Governors. T he future of Dieter Kuntz, president and CEO of SPECIAL SUPPLEMENTS Food City, Canadian Tire, Maytag, Walâ€"Mart, Hy Zells, Biway, AP, No Frills, Home Depot Canadian Publications Mail Product Agreement #435â€"201 A Metroland Community Newspaper sis«. Vol. 32 No. 108 100% Government Guaranteed Strip Coupons Matunng in 2004 Mark Slipp (416) 359â€"4633 BURNSimitep ‘Canada s B est Conmuntiy /Véa/a;ogaef _ CCNA Befter Newspapers Competition 1993 *Rates subject io change â€" For years OTMH had been helmed by Lillian Parsons. In April 1987, she was replaced by Frank Chalmers. Kuntz, a certified member of the Canadian College of Health Service Executives, came to Oakville in September 1989 from Winnipeg‘s Victoria General Hospital. He has a Master degree in _ Health Administration from the University of Toronto and a Business Administration degree from Andrews University in Michigan. Thursday night‘s actions came hot on the heels of a stormy Tuesday Board meeting which saw Kuntz come under fire for his support of a $100,000 electronic library for the hospital. He was also taken to task for comments he made at the June annual general meeting indicating that a balanced budget and no layoffs were expected. In August, however, OTMH laid off 16 employees after it announced a $437,000 deficit incurred over a three month period. was not returned. safe Days Dieter Kuntz SEPTEMBER 11, 1994 28 Pages 75 Cents (GST included) yet to receive formal notice, the Beaver has learned at least one _ member plans to resign over the episode. A call placed Friday to Kuntz at his OTMH office ~~ ow does one go from minor soccer coach to authorâ€"inâ€" demand in less than one . year? _ Well, first of all the minor soccer coach must also be an elementary school principal and secâ€" ondly, he must be so deluged with educational queries from parents on the soccer field sidelines, that he decides to write down a few pointers. Then he takes the manuscript to a Speers Road printing shop, discovers the exorbitant cost of printing a few copies and is directed to a small publishing company by the name of Trilobyte Press on Willowdown Road. The result is a book that instantaneously grabs parents‘ attention and in less than a year, 5,000 By KATHY YANCHUS Oakville Beaver Staff Munn‘s School principal Greg Anderson with copies of his two books â€" I Don‘t Want To Go To School Today and I Want To Go Home. (Photo by Barrie Erskine) SAEFETY FIRST Principal has the ‘write stuff Mastercraft Smoke AIarm de Mastercraft Smoke Alarm detects the earliest stage of fire. Emits a loud, piercing sound to help save your family and protect your home. With testâ€"button, lowâ€"battery signal and 9â€"volt battery. Stock up at this great low price! 46â€"0082â€"6 As far as Anderson knows there are no books like his on the Canadian market nor have there been. And the beauty of writing both was that they didn‘t require much research. Most of the inforâ€" mation he had at his fingertips. For embellishment on his second book â€" a bright yellow paperback with a child‘s drawing on the cover â€" he turned to wife Debby, a primary school teacher and former kindergarten teacher as well as four other kinderâ€" The overwhelming success of his first book prompts Anderson, the new principal at Munn‘s Public School on Sixth Line and former principal of W.H. Morden School, to pen a second and equally as informative book specifically for parâ€" ents of kindergarten children, I Want to Go Home. copies of Greg Anderson‘s book, I Don‘t Want to Go to School Today, are sold across the country. (See ‘Clear‘ page 2) Sales Representatives BIG ON SERVICE

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy