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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 6 Sep 1989, p. 2

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I t i The Canadian Statesman, Bowmanville, September 6,1989 Strathaven Residents Enjoy Hawaiian Night Last week, Hawaii came to Bowmanville via the ;Strathaven Hawaiian Dance held for residents and ■their families. Jennifer McGillivray, co-ordinator, is Tykes Lose Title by Only One Run The Ontario Baseball As- bor Day weekend. Though sociation (OBA) Tyke "B" the Town of Newcastle Tyke championship tournament All Stars were runner up, was held at Bowmanville's their two losses were only by Memorial Park this past La- one run and the end result Happy 25th Anniversary Jim and Marie I H ' I ■ 1 • ( '* : V ' * ■ <- . ■ /-■ t $k I •/ \ ; ,4| " Happy 25th Horn and Dad ' ' A JUtb % , AS Love, from Scott, Hike, 3Cim cmcC JCelly could have easily gone in their favor. Tournament Synopsis: Game 1: Greg McMurter pitched a 4-hit, 4 to 2 complete complete game victory for Newcastle Newcastle over Blenheim. Shane Cowan drove in two runs and Richard Baker added an important insurance run to provide the hitting heroics. Game 2: Returning champs, Kingsville, defeated Port Colborne 11 to 8. Game 3: Kingsville had no problem with Owen Sound's pitching and came away with a 20 to 1 victory. Game 4: Newcastle's pitchers, Steve Newman and Colin Galinski eliminated Port Colborne from further play by limiting them to three hits fpr an 11 to 4 win. Jason Vickery banged out a single, triple and home run for the home team. Game 5: A strong Blenheim Blenheim team dominated Owen Sound and' eliminated them from further play with a 14 to 2 win. Game 6: The last game of the first day of play had Kingsville playing Newcastle. Newcastle. Kingsville came out swinging and pushed two runs across in the 2nd inning inning and then hung on for a 3 to 2 - win. Kingsville's Wharpham gained the win while McMurter absorbed the loss for Newcastle. Game 7: Sunday was do or die for the town's team as they started their ace Steve Newman. Steve didn't let the team down as he'retired Blenheim in order over 4 2/3 innings before Colin Galinski Galinski came in to finish the game for a 1-hitter and an 8 to 1 win for Newcastle. C. Galinski's single and two You are invited to Ontario Hydro's Darlington Nuclear Generating Station OPEN HOUSE Sunday, September 17,1989 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Everyone is welcome. There will be bus tours, walking tours, displays, and refreshments, and it's all free! Exit 425 MAP TO DARLINGTON G. S. To Oshawa Highway 401 South Service R )ad tr nformatlon Centre To Port Hope Exit 431 South Service Road E Parking Entrance For more details call the Information Centre at Darlington at 623-7122. Tidbits from Around the Region WHITBY -- A plaque was unviclcd in Whitby last week at Intrepid Park where the famous "Camp X", a spy training base, was located during World Wat- Two. The plaque honours Canadian Sir William Stephenson, the man who headed Britain's spy network network in the Western hemisphere during that war. In an unvieling ceremony, a Second World War Two veteran of the Royal Navy and Mayor Robert Al- tcrslcy talked about Stephenson's work during the war and about a visit the Mayor had with "The Man Called Intrepid" in Bermuda in 1984, the year the - park was dedicated. "Intrepid" was Stephenson's codename. He died in Bermuda in January of this year. Capsule to Record Debate WHITBY -- Durham Region will ask the province to test a Whitby woman's well after she claimed it went dry because of construction in her neighbourhood. The Garden Street resident appeared at a regional works committee meeting last week to ask for their help in getting her clean water after her well went dry in mid August. She said she was without water and the only reason she hasn't had to leave her home is because her neighbour has given her water. shown with some of the residents and volunteers who enjoyed the evening. There was a tropical buffet and fruit punch served to refresh the hungry revellers. WHITBY -- Guards at the Whitby jail have tentatively tentatively reached a wage settlement with the provincial government that will increase their salaries in a one- year contract by 6.5 per cent. The contract, that expires expires at the end of this year, raises the guards' hourly wage to $17.81. The guards at the jail have been on a work-to-rule campaign in Whitby in protest of contract contract talks and overcrowding in jails. triples, McMurter's double and home run and Bryan Landry's two RBI singles provided the necessary hitting hitting to carry the team to victory. victory. Game 8: Once more, Newcastle Newcastle had to face Kingsville and it looked like the home team was going to prevail until three errors by our usually reliable players, allowed allowed Kingsville to score four runs in the last two innings innings to clinch a 5 to 4 victory. victory. McMurter was charged with the heart-breking loss. McMurter was the hitting star for Newcastle with two hits while Jason Vickery chipped in with a late inning inning RBI double. It's been a while since Bowmanville (now the Town of Newcastle) has had a team advance to the OBA finals finals and all members of the Tyke All Stars: Jason Vickery, Vickery, Colin Galinski, Bryan Landry, Greg McMurter, Shane Cowan, Paul Drummond, Drummond, Mark McCarthy, Steve Newman, Julius Snei- der, Richard Baker, Curtis Kortun and Nick Vickery are to be congratulated for their successful season. For the record, this team won 23 out of 36 gantes they played this year, won the Eastern Ontario Baseball Championship Championship and were runners up at a Walketon tournament, besides besides being runner up at this tournament. Note to new players:The Memorial Park Tyke All Stars were successful with only one returning starter from 1988 and six first time All Stars. If you're 9, 10 or 11 next year and have baseball baseball experience, and want to play for a championship team, come out the second I weekend in April for | tryouts. New Season for Mixed League Friday Night Mixed League Bowling will begin on Friday September 8th at 7 o'clock sharp. Team 1 Barry Henning, Donna Page, Tom Simpson, Cathy Labrie, Lew Welsh, Joan Engley Team 2 Marilyn Flintoff, Ted Cornish, Cornish, Flo Land, Ken Wright, Marg Welsh, Bob Mitchell. Team 3 Bob O'Neill, Ruth Mitchell, Mitchell, Ray Labrie, Marg Jack- son, Jim Hicks, Terri Morgan. Morgan. Team 4 Pat McArthur, Ray Van Meer, Janet Big Canoe, Fred Tippins, Althea Chaffey, Alf Connelly. Team 5 Arnold Van Goor, Mary Brien, Lloyd Heard, Kim Henning, Don McArthur, Sandy Green. Team 6 Rita Van Goor, Ranee Ritchie, Deneen Henning, Andy Big Canoe, Dave Morgan, Morgan, Helen Connelly. Tenm 7 Ken Barrie, Jean Harness, Harness, Gary Cooke, Eleanor Van Meer, Reg Land, Carol O'Neill. Team 8 Ruth Wright, A1 Wray, Ginette Hicks, Tom Harness, Harness, Marcel Swetzloot, Rose Ritchie. Team 9 Doug Sleep, Cheryl Wray, Bob Flintoff, Helen Simpson, Simpson, Terry Jackson, Debbie Brunt. Team 10 Pattie Barrie, Stan Green, Marg Tippins, Randy Henning, Ruth Wray, Cecil Macasie. Team 11 Larry Brunt, Sandra Cooke, Mike Brien, Donna Heard, Mark Townsend, Diane Swetzloot. Team 12 Fran Sleep, Bert Engley, Judy Townsend, Dave Mnc- Dougall Natalie Macasie Greg Chaffey. WHITBY -- The Brooklin Red men lacrosse team is on its way to British Columbia to meet the New Westminster Salmonbellics in the Mann Cup championship. championship. This is the fifth trip to the Mann Cup for the team, who took the eastern Canadian championship championship after beating Peterborough last week. The team left on Monday and will play their first game there tonight. A monument to mark the start-up of Darlington Generating Station and the debate surrounding nuclear energy energy will soon be erected. The monument will contain a time capsule with essays outlining both the arguments for and against nuclear power. The capsule is to be opened seven generations from now, in the year 2129. Jeff Brackett, from the Nuclear Awareness Project (the group organizing organizing the project) said the purpose of the monument was to "let future generations generations know about the debate that went on". The-group has received permission from the Town of Newcastle to erect the monument on municipal property near the entrance of Darlington to mark inauguration of the $12 billion generating station. Inside the monument will be a time capsule containing essays written by a number of people regarding the nuclear nuclear debate. The idea to do something like this took shape about four years ago, Mr. Brackett explained. "It evolved with the realization that they will be producing nuclear waste there (at Darlington). It will remain lethal lethal for centuries," he said. He added that the area will be left uninhabitable and stated that the Nuclear Nuclear Awareness Project wanted to leave some monument to let people know the events surrounding the con struction of Darlington. A plaque that will be left on the monument will contain the following inscription taken from The Great Law of the ITaudenosaunee (Six Nations Iroquois Iroquois Confederacy): "In every deliberation, deliberation, we must consider the impact of our decisions on the next seven generations." generations." The time capsule in the monument will be opened in the year 2129, seven generations from now. Sue Stickley, community relations officer at Darlington, said she doesn't know if Ontario Hydro President Robert Robert Franklyn, who was asked to provide provide a submission to the capsule, will accept the invitation. She said Mr. Franklyn's office Had just received a letter regarding the capsule from the Nuclear Awareness' Project on Tuesday, August 22, and the president had not had time to read it. Ms Stickley said the Ontario Hydro president will likely want to review the matter further before he takes any action. Along with Mr. Franklyn, a number of organizations and individual have been asked to provide a submission to the capsule. Mr. Brackett said he doesn't know how many people have confirmed their submissions as of yet and added that the group tried to get a balanced perspective perspective in the capsule. OSHAWA -- Residents in a north Oshawa neighbourhood neighbourhood will be meeting with police and their landlord to try to clean up an area in their neighbourhood that they say has become a teen hangout. Residents in the townhouse complex at 120 Nonquon Road say broken bottles and syringes litter parks in the neighbourhood neighbourhood and that the noise from the teens keeps children awake. Police say there is little they can do about the teens because when they appear the teens vanish. A police spokesperson said some of the complaints the police can't do anything about. Happy 33rd Birthday, Donna ; Sv - I ?-W,> , , . ' !• ) "iXM ■ " V:\ ' V ,• . . • ■ - /Smm v é ê W. v* itsmsfcg <• Mom, Dad, family and friends Read All About It! In the Pages of The Canadian Statesman A subscription to The Canadian Statesman keeps you informed of all the local news, sports and advertising specials in your community. Subscription Order Form Name: Address: New EU or Renewal EU Postal Code Telephone No.. 12 months-$20.00 6 months-$11.00 Foreign - $60.00 Please pay by cheque, VISA, Mastercard, or money order. "VISA/MO Number Expiry Date - I Please clip out and return this form with your payment s&t Canadian Statesman P.O. Box 190, 62 King Street West Bowmanville, Ontario, L1C 3K9 623-3303 Your Community Newspaper Since 18S4 Ay ■ x A sale for people who love their Country. - If you've always longed for the look of pure and simple Country, your search is over. These cozy heartwarmers capture nostalgic charm In clear oak and soft-spoken mini-prints. Each one priced so you can afford to make yourself at home In the Country, wherever you live. 'ft wl tlT k T At our annual SEPTEMBER SALE House of Brougham Roxton (Whitby store) Temple-Stuart Jamestown Sterling Clayton Marcus Dixie, and more. Whitby 507 Brock St. N. (Ihvy. 12) 2.11 km N. of 401 on Ilwy. 12 068-4231 PIONEER Making the legacy of Hours Mon. - Wed. 10-6 INTERIORS our past part of your future. Thurs-Fri. 10-9 Snt. 10-5:30 Mississauga Home & Design Centre Just East of Winston Churchill Blvd. on Blindas St. 828-1212

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