Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 4 Oct 1972, p. 3

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hd TE IR Ay A AS oo Artario '72 opens Oct. 12 Artario 72, a unique pro- ject in art education will be launched = throughout the province on October 12, 1972, by the Ontario Arts Council. A collection of contemporary sculpture and prints, artario 72 is produced industrially in large editions, as unsigned objects of multiples. twen- " ty-one artists living in Can- ada, mostly in Ontario, are represented in the show. The complete exhibition package includes 21 art pieces, catalogues, educa- tional material and study guides and specially de- signed fold-up display ped- estals. Originally, 50 artists were invited to submit works which would be suitable for. mass production, Thirty-four artists responded, and 42 pieces were submitted. Each artist was asked to select one of his own pieces, plus 14 others. The only criteria for selection of the pieces was that they had to be manu- facturable and transport- able, The cost of a complete artario 72 package is $200 and it will be shipped to all subscribing schools, institu- tions, corporations, and in- dividuals in the province in' time for all exhibitions to open everywhere on October 12. The viewing audience may buy mail, any multiple- they want for prices ranging from*$2 to $15. Responsible for co-ordin- ating artario 72 are Peeter Sepp; visual arts officer, Ontario Arts Council and Bill- Poole, a consulting indus- trial designer. Lane Prentice, art teacher at Port Perry High School is responsible for the Artario 72 when it goes on display here on October 12 in the High School Auditorium, nstallations Renovations Pump Repairs| Call To-day! 'Murray Burnfield is pleased to be associated with Consumers Gas and would be happy to quote prices on installation of gas to your home or 'business. Murray Burnfield PLUG HAT LETHE SPL Act, 1971. cipal Offices. A. H. JOHNSON, Regional Registrar, Signed: 'NOTICE RESPECTING Assessment Appeals Township of Cartwright 'The assessment roll may be inspected during business hours, at the municipal offices located at Blackstock, Ontario Any complaint with respect to any assessment on the assessment roll may be brought to the Assessment Review Court pursuant to section 52 of The Assessment Act, R.S.0, 1970, c. 32 as amend- ed by section 10 of The Assessment Amendment Notices of Complaint mustbe made in writing either by letter or on forms available at the Muni- For purposes of identification, please include your name and postal address, and the reason(s) for complaint. If possible, note also the assessment roll number, the street address, concession and lot numbers, and the municipality in which the pro- perty under complaint is situated. Any Notice of Complaint shall be mailed by ordinary mail to the Regional Registrar named below, and, in addition, by registered mail to any person whose assessment is complained of, not later than the 31st day of October, 1972. Assessment Review Court, 405 George Street South, . PETERBOROUGH, Ontario. Doreen M. Van Camp Clerk, Twp. of Cartwright. Airport decision final "The decision, right or wrong, has been made, and 1 don't think you can get anyone to change it," War- den William Gillespie told Ontario County Council in answer to plea from Reeve Tom Edwards that the council ask senior levels of government for a reconsid- eration of the Pickering airport decision. The reeve said that in light of economic and : social deterioriation recently re- ported at the Ste. Scholast- ique, Que. airport site by the Montreal Star, council should reconsider its- endorsement of the airport site and should urge other governing bodies to do so as well. Both the council and mem- ber municipalities had voted in favor of the site, he said, because of the affluence it was expected to bring. In the case of the Quebec airport, he 'said, expropriation of land had resulted in unem- ployment, vandalism and social * disorientation. Such could also be the result in the case of the Pickering air- port, he added. Warden Gillespie said, however, that despite the fact that elected representa- tives might be susceptible to News (continued) presently visiting with rela- tives in Boston, Sympathy is extended to Mrs. Ed Thompson and family on their recent berea- vement, Mr. and Mrs, Harvey Deaborne opened their home for the meeting of board of stewards of the church, Tuesday evening and ended with delicious lunch. - Pleased to see Mrs. Harold Holtby of Nobleton who visited several folk one day last week. Mr, and Mrs, Les Beacock . surely enjoyed the largely attended corn - hot dog, music and fun made possible by Mr. and Mrs. Stan Feasby which was held at their other farm in Goodwood Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. J. Brown of Guelph enjoyed a weekend with her parents Mr. and Mrs..C. Love and John. pressure because of upcom- ing elections, he doubted that council would be able to effect any change, and so no action was taken on the request. RL REAR, Re ath A mn) Keeping it clean Your small share . . . with Bill Dodds If we divided the world now, your share would i EA ' "Did you find any Indian Arrow heads, Clayton? ROXY THEATRE | (90.4: 123 0 €] uy: LY RC T0 Kk kk Thurs, Fri, Sat, Sept, 28-29-30 "MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS", Venessa Redgrave, Glenda Jackson, nightly at 8 p.m, Sun, Mon. Tues, Oct. 1.2.3 - "WATERMELON MAN" Godfrey Cambridge, Estelle Parsons, Howard Caine. Nightly at 8:00 p.m. Club Annrene Saturday, Sept. 30th Music by "METRO SOUND" A change in music, and this is the last dance until Ocotber 28th, due to our going on holidays. include four acres of farm, four acres of brush and forest and four more of mountain and waste. You would get four pounds of uranium, 70 tons of iron, 200 pounds of copper, 50 pounds of lead, 30 pounds of nickel, 4,000 tons of coal and 40,000 gallons of oil or natural gas. Queen's University professor Reginald Clark worked out the figures for more than 200 high school students attending the second Environment Ontario Straight Goods conference in Kingston August 28 - 30. "Think of this as all there is for you, your children and your children's children and you'd probably use it carefully," Dr. Clark told the teen-age delegates from across Ontario. Provocative ideas, challenging questions and the tough, 'Show me" attitude of the young delegates -- That's what makes The Straight Goods work. The students were invited to draw on the information resources of three dozen representatives of government, industry, education and action groups. And they were advised from the start not to take anything for granted--not to be little robots taking a party line back to their schools. They took that advice. Instead of just listening, they did some thinking and came up with their own viewpoints. They challenged industry and government for not doing enough. They challenged a Pollution Probe spokesman on Probe water tests that disagreed with Ontario Health Ministry tests. They challenged the university for providing throwaway plastic cups and adding to waste. On this one, they tried to work out an answer on their own. A note on the informal bulletin board urged students to bring the glasses from their rooms instead of using the throwaway cups. They heckled each other for using the throwaways. And they learned that solving problems is not always simple. The next coffee break, they found glasses were too hot to hold. And the students who used paper napkins to protect their hands were reminded that napkins can be a garbage problem too. Three days of digging into environmental issues from them convinced that it was not enough to just recommend action on specific problems such as pollution cleanup. They recommended across-the- board change. Oneresolution concluded: 'We affirm the need for drastic change toward a societal rather than an individual way of life." dP day oa §% 3 mile RENTABUG! Brignall's 985-3322 machinery for another And before they left to share what thev have learned with their schools, they voted to set up the conference next year. ONTARIO TRUST COMPANY in Oshawa ed Sl : Guaranteed Investments other terms 1 yr. 6% ,2 yrs: 7 , yrs. 7% and 4 yrs. 72 Monthly interest available on certificates of $5,000. and over. 42% Growth Savings interest calculated quarterly. Executive Savings Minimum amount $1,000. Interest 5% calculated monthly Member of Canada Deposit Insurance ONTARIO TRUST COMPANY 19 Simcoe St. n., OSHAWA, Ontario DON IRVINE Manager Phone 123-5221 -

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