-PAGE 2 TERRACE BAY NEWS OCTOBER II, I973 Go to the CHURCH of your cee TERRACE_BAY ST. MARTIN'S CHURCH - Rev. A. Greengrass SUNDAY MASS = 8:30 and T0:30 A.M. SATURDAY MASS - 7:00 P.M. CONFESSIONS = 6:15-7:15 P.M. and after evening Mass on Saturdsy. COMMUNITY CHURCH - Rev. P. McKague SERVICE OF WORSHIP - II:00 A.M. CHURCH SCHOOL - 9:30 A.M. - Grades 5,6,7, & 8 11:00 AM. - Kindergarten - Grade L Care for Babiez and Pre-Schoolers. ROS.S.FPOR.T ST. BERCHMAN'S CHURCH MASS - Sunday 1:00 P.M. - SCHREIBER HOLY ANGELS CHURCH - Reve F.J. Meyer DAILY MASS - Mondey, Wednesday, Fridey =- 5:00 P.M. Tuesday end Thursday 7:30 P.M. Saturday 9:00 A.M. & 7:15 P.M, SUNDAY SERVICE - 9:30 and II:00 A.M. CONFESSIONS - Saturday 4:I5-5:I5 P.M.; before Saturday evening Mass; before Sunday morning lass and before all daily Messes. RACE BAPTIST CHURCH - Rev. R.L. Dye MID WEEK SERVICE - 7:00 P.M. - Wednesday SUNDAY SCHOOL = I0:00 A.M. WORSHIP SERVICE - II:00 A.M. EVENING PRAYER - 7:00 P.M. ST. ANDREW'S UNITED CHURCH SERVICE OR WORSHIP - Every second Sunday - II:00 A.M. CHURCH SCHOOL ~- Every Sunday at II:00 St. John's Anglicen Church a A11 Children invited to attend ST. JOHN'S ANGLICAN CHURCH - Rev. Donald Landon Holy Communion Service - October 14 - 11 P.M. P.E.O.P.L.E. = continued iv...» Jackfish's past is in a form that can be used in a learning kit - not, of course, by kids in Don Mills, who wouldn't give a damn, but by kids in Terrace Bay and what's left of Jack- fish and all that long lonely shore, to give them a sense of what went before; which means a sense of self. The Jackfish kit is only one of 25 the sum- mer produced in the P.E.O.P.L.E. program. Ea- ch one is worth a story, and it is the sort of thing educational TV might do to pick some out of the 25 for examination in depth for a specific audience. As it is, each school board will receive a copy of its own project; so will the education department's regional offices; and so will Queen's Park. On profess -ional development days for teachers, some boards plan to bring in their P.E.O.P.L.E. project people to explain to the teachers how the kits might be used. So that kids in Fort Frances, for instance, will get the benefit of the beautiful research job done on tourism in the area; kids in Pembroke will learn, from voices of people who were there, and photos, about the log drives and roistering rivermen. of their past; kids of Casselman, near the Quebec border, will hear the old folk songs collected in the P.E.O.P.L.E. project there. The whole display will be on view in the "Huron room of the Macdonald block today, I '-ing the bridge on the Nipigon River," p.m. to 5 p.m. That's just off Wellesley near Bay. The 25 young Ontario people who managed each six-person project will be there. What they have done is often magnificently capsul- ized history of our time. "Here is one of the old steam engines cross the commentary for No. 9 of the 80 slides from Jackfish says. "A bridge similar to this was constructed on Jackfish curve. It is now all filled in." No. II: "When Jackfish became a coal depot (for the railway) a huge coal dock had to be constructed." No. I#: "A shot of the docks showing the trestle, 600 feet long, 60 feet above the water." No. 30: "A group of men struggling to rescue two work horses which fell continued page 3 ....... ATTENTION LADY CURLERS Bay Ladies Curling a SEMI-ANNUAL MEET The Terrace Club will hold -ING TUESDAY, OCTOBER I6th in the Curling Lounge at 8 p.m. All curlers please attend and new curlers expecially welcome. | ! p