us d A ie s hic 4. will be adequat~s chilled hef being <~‘d over the counter customers. Convevor rest rails line both sides of the retail area as a convenience for customers. A rdr'â€ntm,;m;';).r.‘, #talled directlv behind â€" area will hold annr employed to advantage in such items as the buffâ€"colored brick exterior, aluminym â€" framed winâ€" dows, automatic doors, terrazro flooring, and acoustic tile ceilâ€" ing. Fluorescent lighting has been installed to â€" accent warmth reflected by the area‘s pleasant contrasting scheme. area . will hold apnmximï¬}ï¬r 3000 cases of beer. thus ensurâ€" ing that all !rewers‘ products mm l 1 The rear wall of the retail area is walnutâ€"colored Formica panelling _ with â€" apricot â€" colored splines. The stainless steel â€" topâ€" ped service counters are also faced with Formica panelling Planned with an eye to strucâ€" tural detail, the new one â€" storey building reflects the integrated planning that has gone into its design, construction and furnish ings. Approximately _ 65â€" Waterloo residents toured the new Brewâ€" ers‘ Retail at 70 Weber Street Tuesday when Brewers‘ Wareâ€" housing Company Limited sponâ€" sored a reception to introduce the new store and its staff to the Watcrloo community. The store is the 299th to be opened by the Company since it began operations in 1927. # f Ra /o _ _ 4 ® v 0 /% otniIng BU aces Vn REOW w |ty o U n Cl er â€" Pss w> #t Lk > j Sa % . # FJ e y ‘ * £:%~" * ® ? § Ns t %; : 4 PR }1 4 | o k t w v " #V > i 2+ ï¬ 5 a >A V i es 2 1W 4 lns : o 4 s * & 4 * s P \ w# in &2 ' e * 1 M 2 " 4 & € y e e HAROLD PAIKIN DONALD SNIDER VINCENT ALVIANO HAROLD W. WAGNER # ROY BAUMAN RONALD BUDDELL ARTHUR PALECZINY r:ru‘srewut Weber St. at Lincoln Rd. And finally a story with a bappy ending. Mrs. Anna Kavâ€" ulish was worried when her upâ€" per teeth became loose and had to be removed last spring. Her eight brothers and sisters had always had perfect teeth and Anna, herself, had never had a cavity. The problem however has been solved. Mrs. Kavulish, 58, has just cut her third set of upâ€" pers. should be reduced to eighteen years. We wonder if it could be that the purpose of this proposâ€" ed reduction in voting age is to bring the average mental age of the voters down to the averâ€" age mentai age of the politicâ€" lans. on Sunday, Please admit." Now that we have Sunday Movies, all we need is a theatre. Perhaps they will issue each of us with_little buttons which we could wear into Kitchener on Sundays. They would read " I am a citizen of Waterloo and am It seems to be the unanimivus view of politicians that the minâ€" imum voting age in Canada New Brewers‘ Retail Outlet Opens We know of at least a few peoâ€" ple who are sorry that Ron Budâ€" dell gained a seat on council. The members of his bowling team are not really all that pleaâ€" sed about it. It seems that Ron was bowling Monday night while the results were coming in. in the first game he scored 235. During the break, however, he received word that he was elecâ€" ted. He then proceeded to bow! his second game . . . 131. Modern materials have been SIDE GLANCE 108 chilled hefore _ box inâ€" the sales also the retail color to _ In determining the location of the new outlet in Waterloo, conâ€" sideration was given to the proâ€" vision â€" for adequate . off â€" street parking. Store customers will find parking no problem at the new store as they drive on to an illuminated asphalt covered parking lot with space for apâ€" proximately 40 cars. ‘ Co. Ltd. It is not reported w het her or not the mayor‘s expression is due to sampling the new store‘s product. Additional _ storage â€" facilities _ Manager of the new store behind the refrigerator box wnll,.lack Kneller formerly mana hold an additional 6,500 cases. |of the Company outlet in O _ Dr. Norman Alcock‘s Canadâ€" ian â€" Peace Research Institute has a new head office in Clarkâ€" son, Ont., about fifteen miles west of Toronto, comprising 4,000 squareâ€"feet in a concreteâ€" block building on Highway 122, about 112 miles from the proâ€" jected Ontario Research Comâ€" munity where CPRL will ultimâ€" ately be housed. Thanks to a $10,500 grant from the Ontario Economic Council, a study of the probable consequences to the Canadian economy of international disâ€" armament has already been started with the Canadian airâ€" craft industry to be used as a Peace Institute Moves To New Home WATCHING, as the Deputy Returning Officer drops his selection of aldermanâ€" ic candidates into the ballot box, is Waterloo‘s Mayor, Jim Bauer. The OFFERING CONGRATULATIONS to Mr. Jack Kneller, manager of the new, Waterloo Brewers‘ Outlet, is Mayor Bauer. Looking on is Mr. R. W. Hillmer, President of the Brewers‘ Warehousing ed hours to 9:00 p.m. on Thurs day and Friday, Store hours will be 10:00 a.m to 6:00 pm. daily with extend Manager of the new store is Jack Kneller formerly manager of the Company outlet in Owen Sound. The Waterloo store is a unit of the Kitchener stores group in charge of Phil Schapâ€" pert. District Manager is R. Herâ€" rington Hamilton. ‘ Another study, well underway, will concentrate on the general effects to the entire country‘s economy in the event of interâ€" national disarmament. Final reâ€" sults of the attitude study CPRI finished last year have been anâ€" nounced, also. These deal with the attitudes of a selection of business, _ labor â€" and _ political leaders towards war, peace, dis armament, defence and foreign policy. CPRI‘s Abstract Service, headed by Drs. Hanna and Allen New:â€" combe, a compilation and coding of all literature on peace and war sample study. which _ already _ contains \ mayor, however, did not have a chanee to vote for himself this year, as he had previously been granted a third term by acclamation. WATERLOO, ONTARIO, The International Nickel felâ€" lowship was made to the univerâ€" sity to support a graduate stuâ€" dent doing research in magnetic materials. Hutchinson spent last year in industry and came back to university this fall. His reâ€" search inâ€"magnetic materials will be supervised by Professor J. S. Keeler, of the electricai engiâ€" neering department. . $2500 Scholarship Lets U of W Graduate Continue Studies The graduate is D. Bruce Hutâ€" chinson of Brantford, who stood first in his class in electrical enâ€" gineering, when he was a memâ€" ber of the first graduating class of the university‘s coâ€"operative engineering program in 1962. Sparked by the work in Canâ€" ada of the CPRI, aiready more than 100 projects concerned with Peace Research are planâ€" ned or underway in at least 18 countries. In the United States alone there are more than 50 groups of various types includâ€" ing government agencies, univerâ€" sities, private institutes and proâ€" fessional _ associations, . actively pursuing several hundred proâ€" A $2,500 fellowship awarded by the International Nickel Compaâ€" ny has enabled a University of Waterloo engineering graduate to return to university for graduate studies and research. ‘ CPRI has formed an interâ€" national scientific advisory comâ€" ‘mittee to help advise on the choice of the institute‘s research committee include such interâ€" projects. New appointees to this nationally renowned figures as; Otto Klineberg of the Sorbonne in Paris; Rev. Father Noel Mailâ€" loux, Centre de Researches En Relations Humaines, Montreal; Karl Gunnar Mydral, Institute for International Economic Studâ€" ies, University of Sweden, Stockâ€" holm; J. Tuzo Wilson, University of Toronto; Philip Noelâ€"Baker. House of Commons, London England; Charles E. Osgood, Inâ€" stitute of Communications, Uniâ€" versity of Illinois, U.S. more than 8,000 titles, has been chosen by 15 nations to be the international centre for peace research abstracts. (Continued on page 7) Experience seems. to .be the key to a position on council in Waterloo judging from the reâ€" sults of Monday‘s election. Forâ€" mer Reeve, Harold Paikin, reâ€" turning after an absence of 4 years headed the polis. Don Snider, moved up from sixth position two years ago to nab the number two spot. Also back after absences from council are exâ€"aldermen Ron Buddell and Peter Stewart The Rev. Francis K. Wagschal known throughout the Lutheran Church m America for his creaâ€" "I want to go sleighing then," he said. "If I can‘t go skating, then I want to go aleighing," he repeated, twisting my arm around to somewhere in PAIKIN HEADS POLLS AS ONLY 37° TURN OUT ‘"Really David," I explained patiently, "Just because there are a few flakes of snow doesn‘t mean that the pond is frozen over." Now how David ever expected me to know where his skates were when he was only visiting for the weekâ€"end, and when snow was the last thing l\‘ve had expected this weekâ€"end, I don‘t honestly now. "Look, Uncle Tom. It‘s snowing!" my eight year old nephew screamed excitedly in my ear while jumping up and down on the couch on which 1 was dozing. ‘"You don‘t say," I enthused. "It is! It is!" (children that age have a habit of repeating themselves) "It is snowing." He landed on top of me, only causing slight fractures to three ribs and a vertebra. "Where are my skates." W.L.U. to Install New Pastor Stewart, Buddell Returned Members of last year‘s coun: REV. F. K. WAGSCHAL Service Toâ€"morrow The installation will be perâ€" formed by Dr. Albert W. Lotz, president of the Eastern Canada Synod of the Lutheran Church in America. The service will take place at 10 a.m. in the university amphitheatre in the new arts wing, where Pastor Wagschal conducts chapel four mornings a week. But Seriously . . . by Tom A Flurry of Excitement A native of Fort Plain, New York, Pastor Wagschal received his Bachelor of Arts degree from Wittenberg University, Springâ€" field, Ohio, in 1941 and his B.D. degree from Philadelphia Luthâ€" eran Seminary in 1944. Before taking up his appointment at Columbia University in 1959 he served in Lutheran parishes in New York and New Jersey. tive work as a preacher and campus pastor, will be installed tomorrow, as university pastor at Waterloo Lutheran University. Pastor Wagschal was formerly Executive Director of the Luthâ€" eran _ Student Foundan’on! of Greater New York and Lutheran pastor _ at~Columbia University. He came to WLU this fall. Only 37% of the regular votâ€" ers and 17.5% of the resident voters went to the polis in an exceptionally light vote. The four members of the P.U.C. were returned with James Uffleman claiming the most votes. cil who lost their seats are Verâ€" non Bauman and Neil Harris who finished 9th and 10th. The Sunday movie question Brantford Lodge Presents Cheque shall be." "Swell" he said, joyously gouging out my eyes. "Let‘s go." With that he tore outside to prepare a barrage of snow missiles. Me . . . I headeq for the kitchen for ice cubes. I wasn‘t taking any more chances. "Let‘s build a snowman," David suggested, disâ€" playing a handful of hair that kad ten seconds preâ€" viously adorned my sealp, "Or else an igloo." "Perhaps, if it snows continuously for a week" I reasoned, "there might be enough for an igloo." ‘Or a snow fort" David added, pummelling me in the stomach, "Or a castle". as my wifes‘ prize lamp broke over my cranium. "I tell you what, Une, let‘s have a snowball fight." "O.K." I finally agreed. "A snowball fight it c av io 5) the vicinity of my shoulder blades." "But David, we haven‘t got a sleigh" I explainâ€" ed, "and even if we did, there certainly isn‘t one tenth enough snow to let it slide." A $50 CHEQUE was presented to Mr. Peter Voss, owner of the Sunbeam Home for retarded chilâ€" dren, this past week by the 38th chapter of the Amos Adonis lo dge of Brantford. Making the presentation was Grand Monarch, Norman "Scotâ€" tie" Boyd, while looking on were D. Cairneross, M. Burnett, M. Olenuk,. J. Dinsmore and George Milton. Sunshine Home Receives Gift Official Returns Of Election Bauman, Vernon HSFTHS _L..smmcness: Hamel ... DoOley ................... RAfZ ..lullll22222. Unwin .........2... TOA ssmssmnurmincs Alviano . ........... Wagner .._....... Bauman, Roy Buddel! 3 Paleciny _ ......... Paikin COUNCIL by Tom Evans 1,758 1,747 1,502 1,109 1,077 3.109°~ 2,572 2.43 * 441 Eligible Voted Percentage Scheifele Herter PUBLIC UTILITIES SUNDAY MOVIES TOTAL VOTEs 12,930 â€" 4575 2,.98 2,481 2416