Vol 8, No.22 SUMMER RECREATION PROGRAMMES FOR NORTH SHORE ANNOUNCED The Directors of Recreation along the North Shore towns of Red Rock, Terrace Bay, Marathon and Mani- touwadge recently met in Terrace Bay to discuss rec- reation programmes for the coming summer . The Swimming, Water Safety and Playground pro- grammes in each community are directly administered by the Recreation departments while other programmes such as baseball, fastball, track and field, tennis -- and lacrosse are sponsored by service clubs, private organizations or a combination of the two. The first event scheduled (tentatively) is the North Shore Ladies Fastball Tournament at Red Rock on Sunday, July 4th. The Second Event is the North Shore Minor Poe ball Tournament at Terrace Bay on Thursday, July 8th, for both boys and girls. The divisions will be 12 years and under and 16 years and under. The Third Event is the Minor Baseball Tournament in Manitouwadge on Wednesday, July 2lst. The divisions will be 12 years and under and 16 and under. The Fourth Event is the Junior Baseball Tournament at Red Rock on Friday, July 23rd. Players in this Tournament must be 21 years or under. The Fifth Event is the North Shore Junior Tennis Championships to be held in Marathon on Saturday, August 7th. The divisions will be 18 years and under, 15 years and under and |2 years and under. Each division will consist of Singles, Doubles and Mixed Doubles for both boys and girls. The Sixth Event is the Track and Field Champion- ships (Playground level) at Terrace Bay on Tuesday, August l0th. Divisions will be 8 years and under, 10 years and under, 12 years and under and |4 years and under. Each individual will be allowed to parti- cipate in three Track and Field events. The seventh and final event will be the North Shore Swimming & Diving Meet at Red Rock on Satur- day, August l4th. Divisions in rhis Meet are 10 years 12 years and under, 14 years and under, 16 years and under and open. The events will be Breaststroke, Backstroke and Free Style. In the open division there will also be the Butterfly stroke. There will be two divisions--open and 14 years and under for both boys and girls. Contestants will be allowed to parti- cipate in a maximum of four events, including relays. The Swim Meet this year will allow entries from Cameron Falls, Nipigon, Geraldton, Beardmore, Long Lac, Red Rock, Schreiber, Terrace Bay, Mara- thon, Manitouwadge and White River. Swim Meet entries will close on Saturday, August 7th. It was also reported at the meeting that several courses are being conducted in Northwestern Ontario communities during the summer .... Continued P.5 Serving the District After years of talk and little apparent action, The Anticipating confusion over the designation given JOINT PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT FROM THE ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA AND THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA (Toronto) Anglican and United Churches have produced a docu ment which forecasts "one or ganizational structure" for the two Communions . The document entitled: "The Principles of Union Between The Anglican Church of Canada and The United Church of Canada," is the work of two Com- mittees of Ten of the parent or ganizations, and will be presented to the General Synod of the Anglican: Church which meets in Vancouver in August of this year, and the General Council of th e United Church which will meet in Waterloo, Ontario, in September of 1966. The report begins by announcing that the two Com- mittees have reached "full and unanimous agreement" on the principles of faith and order, and on the principles that should govern union. It points out that if the two churches are agreed in principle, there is nothing to prevent them from coming to- gether in fact. The report concludes with a recom- mendation that "the two church es enter into a golemn and formal commitment to proceed imme- diately to prepare pgris and detailed plans for organizational union. Spokesmen for the two churches Hire hailed the report as a major break-through in the long struggle to bring the two communions together. They spoke with pride and gratification about the thoroughness of the report and the precise phraseology used in spelling out the principles upon which such a plan must be built. They pointed to the following paragraph as one of the main keys to the breakthrough that has been achieved. "We are united in our intention to bring into being, not a merger of two existing eccleias- tical bodies, but rather a new embodiment of the One Church of God. It is-our intention not to create a new church, but rather to seek a new visible expression in structure, in worship, in life and witness, for the Oneness of the Church which already exists." United Church by the Committee to the new organization (united church with a small 'u' in the first word) spokesmen explained that this was the b est and simplest term the Committee could think of without pre-judging the name of the new Church. If this report is ac- cep ted the next step will be to appoint a Joint Commission which will settle this and many other questions. Copies of the report have already been mailed to all clergy of both Churches. (Cont'd P .5