Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 19 Nov 1970, p. 5

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He and his wife have two daughâ€" ters, students at Waterloo colâ€" legiate. A newscaster for Radio Station CHYM, he is the author of the recentlyâ€"published Waterloo Counâ€" ty Diary. He is chairman of the Waterloo County Human Rights Association and a member of the Waterloo Historical Society. He is a former member of a continuâ€" ing education seminar committee in Northwestern Ontario. Bill Moyer to run for board seat William (Bill) Moyer of 256 Thorncrest Drive, said this week he will run in Waterloo for the Waterloo County board of educaâ€" tion. Last year, the society invesâ€" tigated over 10,000 serious comâ€" plaints of cruelty. Our inspectors visited slaughter houses, riding stables, kennels, zoos, municipal pounds, livestock sales barns and other premises where aniâ€" mals are used commercially. Nov. 1530 is a time for kindâ€" ness. During this 14â€"day period the Ontario Humane Society is campaigning for funds throughâ€" out the province. â€" M. W. TURNER, secretaryâ€"manager, Waterloo Chamber of Commerce civic affairs committee. You have a moral as well as a civic responsibility to see that (1) your interests as a taxpayer, and (2) the interests of the chilâ€" dren of our city, are well and capably served by the selection of dedicated and capable candiâ€" dates. You alone have the power to chooseâ€"and the power is vestâ€" ed in your ballot. Dec. 7 is the dayâ€"between the hours of 10 a.m. and 8 p.m. We urge you to do your duty; Get out and vote for the candidate of your choice. __ _ _ ____ tant date for each and every voter in the City of Waterloo. It is a date to be noted on your calendar. It is a date that calls for action by each and every one of you. It is the date when your candiâ€" dates for the public and the separâ€" ate school members on the Waterâ€" loo County board of education and for separate school memâ€" bers on the Waterloo County comâ€" bined separate school board are to be chosen by your ballots. | Readers‘ letters to the editor WATERLOO‘S ONLY SERVICE SHOP a @;’@j ~ Often our expert factory trained J% specialists can fix your ailing TV set right in your home. For prompt, dependâ€" able service, just call. Black and white and color parts in stock. , Dec. 7, is an imporâ€" s LOUOP SDLCIKISIS KLAASSEN TV Color Is Our Specialty We Service All Makes Call Anytime 745â€"4048 A professor of psychiatry at the University of Toronto, he was a consultant to the commission on residential treatment and a Guest speaker at the event will be Dr. Quentin Raeâ€"Grant, chief psychiatrist at Sick Children‘s Hospital in Toronto. Candidates‘ night planned Waterloo County branches of the council for exceptional chilâ€" dren and the mental health asâ€" sociation are sponsoring a pubâ€" lic meeting at Cameron Heights collegiate, Kitchener, Nov. 24 to discuss the Celdric report onâ€"resâ€" idential treatment. The report was prepared by the commission on emotional and learning disorders in children. Presto! Your Picture‘s Back Two Waterloo representatives on the Waterloo County board of education will not seek reâ€"elecâ€" William â€"Pugh and Dr. Helen Gordon both said they will not contest the election. Dr. Gordon had served the old Waterloo board for one year prior to her election to the counâ€" The former was chairman of the old Waterloo public school board on which he served for seven years before his election to the county board two years ago. . ty board. 2 decline reâ€"election A â€" meetâ€"theâ€"candidates night will be held at Room 2006 of the mathematics and _ computer building of the University of Waâ€" tegrloo, Nov. 25. It begins at 8 p.m. and will be open to candidates for public and separate school board elecâ€" tions and to the general public. We prosecuted in many instanâ€" ces of deliberate cruelty or severe neglect; 29 convictions were obâ€" tained in 1969. Many animals in distress were rescued and animals that had been neglected were seized. These animals were takâ€" en to the modern animal shelters which we operate in different parts of the province. The society constantly camâ€" Psychiatrist to speak here member of the Ontario committee of the Celdric Report. Nothing shakes your belief in heredity like watching the unsuâ€" pervised behavior of your own youngsters. The Canadian public realizes that the longer these members spout off some of their silly amendments, the longer the War Measures Act has to be in force. It seems that opposition memâ€" bers of parliament are blocking Mr. Turner‘s duplicate bill by playing petty politics. Members of the medical, psychâ€" ological, social work and educaâ€" tional professions will attend to discuss the relevance of this reâ€" port to the Kâ€"W area. The meeting is open to the pubâ€" lic. Refreshments will be supplied by Laurel vocational school. Even if the organizations in question had sent members to Quebec during the crisis, the information returned would not be adequate. Therefore, they place themselves in the ridicuâ€" lous category of ‘"armchair deâ€" tectivism"" which at best acâ€" counts for nothing. The most tiresome reading in today‘s newspapers is the critiâ€" cism levelled toward the federal government regarding the War Measures Act by minority politiâ€" cal organizations. We operate 11 animal shelters and four outdoor, .unique cat sanctuaries. There were 36,182 unwanted strays or abandoned animals sheltered by the society in 1969. A large percentage of these animals were either restorâ€" ed to their owners or found new homes. T. I. HUGHES, general manager, Ontario Humane Society . in i the society was sucâ€" cessful in persuading the Ontario government to introduce laws for regulating PMU farms, public pounds, prohibiting the use of snowmobiles to harrass, chase or injure animals, and to drasâ€" tically amend legislation conâ€" trolling the use of animals in scientific research. paigns for new and better animal protection laws at all levels of government. The Dominion Life Assurance Company announces the appointment of G.A. Coyne as Secretary and J. W. Mahn as Treasurer Mr. Coyne joined the Securities Department of Dominion Life in 1956 after graduating from the University of Toronto where he won the Toronto Stock Exchange Prize in Corporation Finance. He was appointed Assistant Treasurer of the Company in 1960 and Assoâ€" ciate Treasurer in 1965. In 1968, he was appointed Executive Assistant, a position he has held until his present appointment. Mr. Mahn has served the Company for over thirty years. He was appointed Assistant Supervisor, Mortgage Services in 1951, Assisâ€" tant Mortgage Manager in 1958, Assistant Treasurer in 1959, Associate Treasurer in 1963 and Investment Executive in 1968. In his new position as Treasurer, Mr. Mahn will accept wider corporate management responsibilities in the Investment Division RG. Paul, Secretary and Comptroller, has retired from the Company after more than forty years of service. Mr. Paul joined Doâ€" minion Life in 1930 as a Branch Secretary. He was appointed Branch Auditor in 1936, Assistant Secretary in 1948, Associate Compâ€" troller (Branch Offices) in 1959, Comptroller in 1962 and Secretary and Comptroller in 1967 G.A. Coyne, F.L.M.! NORMA SANGOI DOMINION LIFE APPOINTMENTS Mrs. Doreen Thomas of 370 Warrington Drive, said this week she will contest the Waterloo County board of education elecâ€" tions, Dec. 7. Mrs. Thomas is the wife of a local physician and the mother of two teenâ€"age boys. She has lived in the Kâ€"W area since 1965, when the family moved here from Winnipeg. She has been a partâ€"time student at the Univerâ€" sity of Waterloo for the past four years. He and his wife have four chilâ€" dren. A professional engineer, he reâ€" sides at 390 Tamarack Drive. He was born in Toronto but has livâ€" ed in Waterloo for eight years. Mrs. Thomas seeks seat Fred Quigley, 45, seeks reâ€"election Slate includes Dennis Eaton He is a former viceâ€"president of the local chapter of the Asâ€" sociation for Children with Learnâ€" ing Disabilities. Dennis Eaton, a 34â€"yearâ€"old adâ€" ministrator in the University of Waterloo‘s centre for continuing studies in marketing, will be aâ€" mong Waterloo candidates seekâ€" ing election to the Waterloo Counâ€" ty board of education. He served in the RCAF from 1942â€"1946 and the Canadian Ofâ€" ficers Training Corps, from 1947â€" 1950. He qualified as a captain in the Canadian Army Service Corps. Trustee Fred M. Quigley, 45, of 253 Albert St., will seek reâ€" election to Waterloo County sepâ€" arate school board, on which he has served since April. A runnerâ€" up in the 1968 election, he is comâ€" pleting the term left vacant by the death of Michael Paleczny. Before establishing â€" Quigley Containers Ltd., of which he is president, he worked with the Canada Life Assurance Co., the A native of Toronto, he receivâ€" ed his secondary education there. He graduated in arts from the University of Toronto and has completed post graduate courses at the University of Waterloo and Waterloo Lutheran University. J.W. Mahn, A.A.C.1 Watorg Chmn_.do Ttlunday, November 19, 1970 § She is a former committee memâ€" ber of the Ontario Teacher‘s Federation, former executive member of the Ontario English Catholic Teachers‘ Association and the Regional and Unit Parâ€" entâ€"Teachers‘ Association. Mrs. Sehl is a lifelong resident of the Twin Cities and the mothâ€" er of two children, a boy and a girl. She is the immediate pastâ€" president of St. Agnes Catholic Women‘s League. Eagles have a permanent way of doing things. They mate for life and, once a territory has been staked out, return to use it as a home base year after year. Former Twin City teacher, Mrs. Ann Marie Sehl of 173 Washâ€" ington Ave., will contest a seat on the Waterloo County separate school board. Mrs. Sehil to contest separate seat Class visits from area schools are planned for the week. Tim Neeb and his groupâ€"the 27th Letterâ€"will be on hand to enâ€" tertain the youngsters. Magician Bob Breadner is also featured in the day‘s events. Elementary school children are invited to two programs that day, the first at 2 p.m., the second at 3 p.m. To mark Young Canada‘s Book Week the department is presentâ€" ing a "rock festival". However, they‘ve assured us the music will ‘‘not be too wild stuff." He and his wife, Leila, have seven children, attending St. Michael‘s and St. David‘s schools and Waterloo collegiate. Mrs. Maureen Williams, childâ€" ren‘s librarian, and her staff have plans for livening things up Nov. 21. Ontario Hospital Assurance Asâ€" sociation and Canadian Internaâ€" tional Papers. He was a member of the old Waterloo separate school board for three years. Library plans ‘rock festival‘ R.G.Paul

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