Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 18 May 1988, p. 29

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> 7 Underprivileged Children Bene fit from Donation Thompson-Vice Wedding The marriage of Susan Faye Vice and Andrew Steven Steven Thompson was solemnized solemnized at the home of the bride's parents on Friday, November 27th, 1987 at 7:00 p.m. by the Reverend Nancy J. Knox. Æ Hr > x^/VSlBV^] 40 LOVEI FOR HEALTHY LUNGS. Support your local Lung Association 436-1046 The bride's parents are- Mr. and Mrs. Murray Vice of R. R. #2, Blackstock and the groom is the son of Mr. Howard Howard Thompson of Long Island Island New York and the late Mrs. Renee Thompson. Mrs. Ronald Vice played the wedding music and the maid of honor was Miss Katherine Vice. Best man. was Larry Thompson from Connecticut, brother of the groom. Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a 2- piece fine knitted wool dress, with sweetheart neckline and lace detail. The bouquet contained red roses and white gladioli complemented with baby's breath and white fresia. A reception was held at the Murray House Restaurant, Restaurant, Port Perry, Ontario following following the ceremony. The happy couple will be making tneir home in New Jersey U.S.A. Camp Northern Lights, a camp for underpriviledged children near Halibur- ton, recently received a $2,500 donation from the Bowmanville Knights of Columbus. Columbus. It is the second year that the group has made a generous donation towards towards the facility. Father Bill Moloney, of St. Stephen's School, gladly received the cheque from Grand Knight Vic Auger. Father Moloney reports that several students from Bowmanville will be working at the camp this summer and anyone anyone interested in counselling can contact him at 987-4301. LETTER TO THE EDITOR From Page One cusses only the safety of nuclear nuclear reactors. A whole shopping shopping list of hazards is seen when the problems inherent in the whole nuclear fuel cycle cycle are addressed. An editorial editorial in the Toronto Star (August (August 4th, 1987) reports that the federal government estimates estimates there are 131 million, tonnes of uranium tailings in Canada! These radioactive elements and their potential for leakage into the air and water will last for centuries. What's to be done with the existing thousands of dangerous dangerous spent nuclear fuel rods in "temporary" storage at our reactor sites? The very lifespan of a reactor itself is limited to about thirty years. Entire nuclear reactors eventually eventually have to be decommissioned decommissioned or buried because they are lethally contaminated. contaminated. Who wants one of these radioactive architectural shrines on their street? Or next to their children's school? Our current nuclear mess will punish far into the future. Forty years into the nuclear nuclear power program, we have yet to find a safe and permanent method for the disposal of nuclear waste. (Society has yet to throw away anything safely, because because there is no such thing as "away" -- we merely "store" our garbage, usually in somebody else's backyard if we can get away with it!). Quite clearly, one wouldn't embark on a skydiving endeavour endeavour with the expectation expectation of inventing a parachute on the way down. Yet thib is. how we seem to have Golucci & Gon é Pools //v. s ^£ 19 x 34 KIDNEY 21 x 34 LAKE WITH 6" NON-SKID COPING SPEAKING OF SPAS Soak your stresses away with one of our bubbly spas -- we have a large selection, many colours and the shape that's just right for you! All pre- aa j-qj- aa plumbed, starting at only STABILIZED CHLORINE ,00 with this coupon ■ : , Vi "* HWY. NO. 2 WE ARE HERE » KMART PLAZA Æ §§§§11 Golucci & Son {Pools DIV. OF GOLUCCI & SON EXCAVATING LTD. F m Simply Heaven. 221 Kmndaluiood Road, Whitby 433-0061 or 723-2062 (mis)managed our nucleai* fuel cycle program. The nuclear nuclear estabishment seems to be spending a lot of our dollars dollars making grand promises of a forthcoming miracle for the safe disposal of nuclear waste, yet no solution seems to be visible on the horizon. Is this the kind of uncertainty we want to leave to our children? children? Plutonium, for example, is' a cancer-producing radioac- ; .five element. It takes an eternity eternity tolose'half of its radioactivity radioactivity (24,000 years). After 24,000 years what are we supposed to do with the other other naif? Plutonium is a byproduct byproduct of nuclear power manufacture, and is also an ingredient used in nuclear bombs - two things many people feel we could use less of - unless; of course, one is living off the avails of the nuclear industry. The author asserts that if opinion polls are a true indicator indicator of public sentiment against nuclear power, half the towp of Newcastle should have been protesting against Qntario Hydro's proposed proposed transport and sale of tritium. Good point. That's where Durham Nuclear Awareness comes in handy : Our job is to encourage concerned concerned citizens to exercise greater responsibility and participation in the democratic. democratic. process. Everybody who is truly committeed to seeing a h alt to nuclear power power is contributing something to the battle. Street demonstrating demonstrating is only one avenue for peaceful public expression. expression. Arnijes are working behind behind the iscenes, organizing and educating. We all have talents, and people are encouraged encouraged to work at whatever whatever level they feel comfortable - as long as they do something something useful to help the environment. environment. More than anything else in the world, we want people to express their concerns about nuclear power beyond the scope of the opinion poll and election ballot! Many countries including Sweden, Denmark, Phillipines, Ireland, Ireland, and Holland are phasing phasing out or reconsidering their nuclear power programs. programs. In Austria and the USA, public opposition has resulted in the scrapping of completed nuclear reactors that haven't even been fired up. Canada'lags far behind this significant and welcome global trend away from nuclear nuclear power. If other countries countries have the common sense and courage to stop nuclearization, nuclearization, so can wef We won't encourage workable nltena- tives unless we seriously look for them. An all-party House of Commons Committee recently recently suggested that Canadians Canadians should come to a common common agreement on the safe storage of nuclear waste before before more reactors are built. (Ths report, called High Level Level Radioactive Waste in Canada: Canada: The Eleventh Hour, is available from your MP). Public opinion is the greatest single threat to nuclear power! power! Everybody who is inclined inclined should write Ontario Premier David Peterson and Mr. Mulroney to demand a moratorium on nuclear power. power. Let's not live with this unacceptable unacceptable risk now - and let's not hand down a legacy of radioactive waste to our children. Finally, if the nuclear industry's industry's product is as safe and economical as they tell us, it would sell itself, like any other product in the marketplace -- without our tax dollars, without the current current lavish, PR campaign, without secrecy, cover-ups and deception, and without the solf-protoctivo Nuclear Liability Act. Yours truly, Anno Hanson, Jeff Brnck- ott CLOSED VICTORIA DAY - MONDAY MAY 23RD We reserve the right to limit quantities to normal family requirements. m GREENHOUSE OPEN Sunday 10:00 AM HOLIDAY MONDAY 10:00 A.M. REGULAR OR DIET (PLUS .40 PER BOTTLE DEPOSIT) Pepsi-Cola or 7UP 750 mL BOTTLE (UNIT COST 79c PER 100 mL) i r I , 0 PRICES EFFECTIVE MONDAY MAY 16TH THRU SATURDAY MAY 21ST 1988. 0 Pepsi-Cola or 7UP case of 24-280 mL tins (Unit cost 89 e per 100 mL) Q HUMPTY DUMPTY Potato Chips 200 g bag FROZEN, BANANA, CHOCOLATE, LEMON OR COCONUT Farm House Cream Pies Vz PRICE » LIMIT: 4 PKGS PER FAMILY PURCHASE CHOCOLATE CHIP, CHOCOLATE FUDGE, BEST ASSORTED WITH THIS COUPON SAVE 30 BONUS PACK, TOMATO Heinz Ketchup 1 LITRE SOEEZE BOTTLE LIMIT: 1 btl per coupon. One coupon per customer. OFFER VALID May 16th thru 21st. 1968 (Feature price without coupon 249) S.C. #622j JANE PARKER, HAMBURGER OR pkg of 8 Hot Dog Rolls FINEST QUALITY MEATS FROZEN, 4 TO 6 LB AVERAGE Canada Grade "A" Ducks 2.18* 9 j LIMIT: 1 case per coupon. One coupon per customer. OFFER VALID | May 16th thru 21st. 1968 (Feature price without coupon 699) S C. #642j LIGHT 425 g. DIET 701), LEMON OR TROPICAL CONCENTRATE 667 mL. LEMON OR TROPiCAL Nestea Iced Tea Mix jsl 2.99 ASSORTED VARIETIES INCLUDING GARLIC Kraft B.B.Q. Sauce 455 mL SQUEEZE BOTTLE WITH COUPON BELOW MACARONI & CHEESE Colonial 1 QO Kraft 40 Cookies ^g 9 I aOv Dinner 225 g pkg ■Ow WITH THIS COUPON SÀVE M ASSORTED VARIETIES INCLUDING HOT DOG Bick's Relishes 375 g^JAR 3 LIMIT: 1 jar per coupon. One coupon per customer. OFFER VALID May 16th thru 21st. 196& (Feature price without coupon 1.29) S.C #623 JANE PARKER Rhubarb-Apple Pie 625 g xSV: DELI PARTY TRAYS lb 6ANADA GRADE "A" FROZEN, EVISCERATED, 6 T012 LB AVERAGE, A&P OR Butterball Turkeys I/kg lb P FRESH! CANADA NO. 1, PRODUCT OF FLORIDA, GREAT ON THE B.B.Q. Sweet Corn-On-Hie-Cob m QUALITY CANADA NO. 1, PRODUCT OF CHILE, THE NATURAL SNACK Red Emperor Grapes 2.18 kg - - lb WITH THIS COUPON ORANGE PEKOE Tetley Tea Bags coupon"" ŒÏW SAVE .30 ASSORTED VARIETIES INCLUDING GARLIC Kraft B.B.Q. Sauce PKG OF 72 455 mL SOEEZE BOTTLE I I 1 LIMIT: 1 pkg per coupon. One coupon per customer. OFFER VALID f 1 ,LIMIT: I dll per coupon. One coupon per customer. OFFER VALID I May 16th thru 21st. 1988 (Feature price without coupon 229) V.C #0818177 H j ^ May 16th thru 2lsl, 1968 (Feature price without coupon 129) VC. # 3-109305

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