- V~ -~ k ~ OronoHockey Notes Saturday night may be hockey ý-igcht ln Ca1ada but Friday night .s hockey night in Orono. This is juite evident every Friday even- igat the Orono rirnk wheni the acition starts at 6:30 and contin- -ies until 10:30. The Orono hockey club are a- gýain this year showin.g the ad- anaeof having artificial ice wvith their play being much more agressive than in'forr years. Both the rono Bantanis and the ,,rono Mideets are proving to be :1ard-hittinig teainis wth ýplenty of cGindition 'and hockey 'skill. Four Orono te«mý saw action last Friday eveni.ng at thp Orono ink with neighouring teanS an'd )f the four, two earned wins. The Orono Atom hockey club .ook a three to one victry over a- Bowimanville club in the same groi. Niekie van Seggele'n s Parked the local boys with two goals while David Walton netted 'lie other taily. T-he Port Hope Pee Wees shut aut the Orono boys by a score of The Orono Bahtams paced a -Bowmanville beam by a score of 4-1. The Orono goals were scored by Briani Black, Terry Luecyk, Steven Boyd and Warren Johnsoh Assists vient tu Bob Tennant, Ted Robison, Nico de Jonge, Brian Black and Steven Black. A nuni- 'ber of the Oro g oals were scor- ýad off good plays by the teâm' and were certainly a teani effort. The Ôrono Mlidgets lost their edgI;e in a g1an1e with a -Bowman, ville teamn and gave the game up jy a 4-3 count. Oronn held an arylead as well as an early edge in the gamie. This, however, t.urned over ta Bowmanville t-hrougli som-e poor defensive vork and two easy goals. The Or- -)oI- oals were scored by David imercer an:d two by Kenny Part- ri-dge,- Kenti Partridge also pieked uip one assist with other assists going to Steven Black and Dean ýORONO PEEWEES MINGLE -WITH TORONTO MIAPLE LEAFS Memnbers of the Orono PeeWee Hockey Club ha-d the rare honour onMonday niorning to mine withl the Toronito Maple Leaf Holckey playeirs. The local boys travelled to the Maple Leaf Gar- densý for the outing whfere they wvere able te watch thec Maple Leafs pDractice and also to talk with the pljayers and receive their autog-raphs. For thiis younggru of boys it was a real pleasuire- and a Set ForHg A new, national gradihg pro- ýgram for hogs goes into effect Deceniber 30th in an attempt to provide leaner meat for the'con. sumner, but the improvement may be an illuIsioni. The necw grading systemi de- vjelop.ed by the hog producers, the p)ackcrsF andi the Canada De- par'tment of Agricufltuire is an atte t rntelu pay produicers ini pro- portion to the amount of lean mpeat on t 'heir hog.s. Followýinig studiesý that invol- ved thiemesren of thon- sands of hiog carcasses, the three Mroups settled on two indicators of the probable yield 0f lban Vea Evel 3IRONO WEEKLY TIMES, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3lst, 1968 THEODOBE BIKEL winds, orw ENTERTAINS ON CBC Folloing SHOW CASE JANUARY 12 parel to irc] Lo- cng u ind, If there is such a thing as a Most slacks manyisided man, Theodýore Bikel resistanit bue Rolph is the octagonal man, at least in warmth in terms of talent. ý 'i.-.-.rl Mýrs. Vera Evelyn Roiph died suddenly at the Memorial Hos- pital, Bownianville, Th'ursday, December 19Ùh, 1968. Her illness was a duration of 13 years. Mrs. Rolph was ber~n ini Wel- lington, Prince Edward County, idaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Macdonald. She attended Albert College; Belleville for number of years. In 1920 she marrlil Mr>. O. W. Rolph and resided in Orono for fifty years. Prior to comiig to Orono she resided in Toronto where she taught at Havergal Ladies College. She was a memiber of Oono United Clurch,, an active meniber of the Orono Women's Institute; a life nieniber of the Orono ilor- ticultural Society and an active C.G.I.T. worker. She aso belong- ed to the Women's church groups Director of many operettas and plays. A past President of Wo- men's Canadian Club in Bowman- ville and a mn-mber of the Bow- manville Hlospital Board. She was a member of Ontari o Association of Agricultural Societies Branch, ture and Food, Parliament Build- Ontarie Deparftment of Agricul- ingcs, Toronto and a nieniber of Orono Agrcultural Society. Leaving to: mourn her passing is her husband O. W. Rolph, befr daughter Barbara (Mrs. Wnl. Car- man) Orono, Ihree grandehildiren, Michael, Mark and LydiaCarnian. The funeral was heid Peceni- ber 2lst, 1968 from the Orono United Church with Rev. B. Long of Orono and Rev. John Kitchen of Niagara Falls otficiating. Pal bearers were Messrs. Victor Rob- inson, Carl Billings, Win. E. Armnstrong, Roy Sawyer, Wm. Reid, Orono and Gordon Cotteir, Don Milîs. Many floral tributes' and donations to the Ontario Heart Association w.ýere received. Internient Orono Cenietery. Bi4kel won his greatest renown ffl On actor (The Russians Are Coming, MY Fair Lady, Moulin Rouge, Mfrican Queen) but he is also known as an author, college leeturer, politician and photo- grapher. He sings in the native languages 0f twehity lands and speaks six tongues fluently. The songs of Theodore Bikel will be heard on Part II of CBC Showcase, 'broadceast on the CBC radio network January 12, at 4:03 p.m. EST (Part I consists0,of a revue for radio, produced ln Halifax - I Said It And I'm Gliad.) Bikel1 perfornied recently before an audience of Montreal university students. He demonstrates his versatility by singing: a, FrenchCanadian folk scig; a l5th Century song, Peat Boy Soldiers; a Hebrew sang; a coniedy song, When the Rabbi Sings. Canadian foqksinger Alexander Zeikine joins hdm in Those Werce the Days and a Rus sian Gypsy song, This edition of CBC Showcase was -'roduced lui Montreal by Ramona Randall, In buying ski clathing, utility not, fashion, shouid conie first, says the federael health depart- ment publicaltion, Ski. The wrong choice can make the difference b ctweèn pleasure( and discom 1fort on the siopes. Ynour cothes should be able to withstand. intense ýcold, strong vet snow. During 1968,, Ontario Hydro was launched into the largest expansion programn in its history at an unprecedented cost of $2 billion. In the next 10 years, aine Power stations, sevea of which are under construction, will more than double the gener- ating capacity of Hydro's existing 73 stations. Because Ontario lhas ample supplies of uranium, but no coal, nuecear generatien is preferred ecenomicalîy. End shields (lower right) and other reactor parts were delivered te Pickering, a nuclear power station east of Toronto. Evecn though lmest fuel must be imported, operating flexibility requires coal-fired stations. A giant bucket wheel (centre) provides the 1'teeth" of a computerized conveyor systemn whjch will deliver up te 2000 tons of ceal an heur at the two-millien-kilowatt Lanibton station, near Sarnia. Aubrey Falls (lower left), a hydraulic plant on the Mississagi River, begins operation in 1969. During 1968, Hydre pioneered a technique of tighteaing live transmission liues to enable them te carry more power (upper right). The precedure saved building a new hune. The year's prize for ingenuity, however, gees te two Hydro employees whlo used a mouse with a string attachlecite its tail te hlpl thread a cable througlh an inaccessible duct at Douglas Point nuecar station. Ontario Hydro Photos I Rowmanvîlle, Ontario