eWaterloo Chronicle â€" _ The summer of ‘71 e yoe mb up Miah Tt 3. gi dn a¢ on / + Willow Streets and Laurel Creek, would make an ideal has ample parking all around and is close to the Mennonite stable, where neighboring farmers have been housing their buggies for years. expired in 1965) on a spankâ€" ing new threeâ€"acre downâ€" town site has been proposed by Ald. Charles Voelker. The site he has selected is smack off King Street, ‘‘Can we play cowboys and Indians tomorrow and can the Indians beat the cowâ€" boys?"" the youngsters yellâ€" ed as they tumbled out of St. Louis gym. They tugged at Robert Zettel, a Resurrection Colâ€" lege student who had spent bours that day organizing a â€" variety of â€" activities ranging from floor hockey to arts and crafts. Gohl, Chilton get principals‘ posts From 30 to 60 youngsters of elementary school age and some in their early teens use the gym facilities from 1 p.m. to 10 p.m. daily. It was all part of a proâ€" gram organized in conjuncâ€" tion with The Place, a dropâ€" in centre located at the YWCA. Two â€" appointments â€" afâ€" fecting Waterloo schools were made this week by Waterloo County board of education. Ronald Gohl, viceâ€"princiâ€" pal of Waterloo collegiate for the last four years, has been named principal of â€" Waterlooâ€"Oxford disâ€" trict â€" secondary _ school, effective Sept. 1. The Place remains open till midnight and caters to the 13 â€" to 19â€"yearâ€"olds. Both are run with the help of seven salaried young people and a few volunteers. Robert M. Chilton, viceâ€" principal of Forest Heights collegiate in â€" Kitchener, will become principal of Bluevale collegiate, effecâ€" tive Jan. 1. Mr. Gohl came to the Twin Cities in 1960 to head the science department at Kâ€"W collegiate. In 1963 he was appointed viceâ€" principal of Eastwood colâ€" legiate and came to WCI in a similar capacity in Mr. Gohl graduated from the University of Manitoba in 1949 with an honors bachelor of science degree. A year later he got his specialist certificate from the Ontario College of Edâ€" ucation and his secondary school principals‘ certificate in 1965. Prior to coming to the Twin Cities he taught at Port Perry high school and West Hill collegiate in Searborough, for _ five year periods in both cases. 3 The Place is where swingers dropâ€"in are perturbed at the proposâ€" als and are rumored seeking another site. . Ald. Voelker became inâ€" terested in the Waterioo loâ€" mittee this week. The proposal came on the heels of a furor over downâ€" town development in Kitche ner which calls for demoliâ€" tion of its city hall and faâ€" make way for a $15 miltion The leaders looked worn out after their day as they ushered the youngsters out of the gym for the night. The latter were still burstâ€" ing with energy and hairâ€" raising plans for the next day. Married with five chilâ€" loo _ community _ affairs dren, he is active in Waterâ€" â€" where he is involved with Inside there were pool players, sing songs, and youthful conversation. Up at The Place a barbeâ€" cue was in progress. ‘Robert Zettel found enâ€" ergy to play the accordion and the young people imâ€" provised dance steps to the folk music. A bus, painted psychedelâ€" ically, pulled up outside and a teenâ€"ager with a guitar strung about his neck got out and strummed his way over toward a cluster of his peers. â€" What‘s a dropâ€"in centre for if not for dropping in? July 22. Waterloo Ghosts had a 7â€"6 victory over Ohsweken in the first game of the provincial Women‘s Softball Union intermediate A playdowns at Centennial Park. July 23. The student federation at the University of Waâ€" terloo called for a referendum on the compulsory student fees attacked earlier this year by graduating engineering students. * July 24. Directors of the Dominion Life Assurance Co. announced the appointment of John Acheson as successor to the retiring president, E.G. Schafer. July 25. Waterloo Tennis Club fought to a 3â€"3 tie with the Guelph Church of Our Lady Club in interâ€"urban men‘s leagâ€" ue matches. July 26 Ald. Charles Voelker proposed council acquire a threeâ€"acre site downtown for revival of Waterloo‘s market which went out of operation six years ago. About 17 tons of paper were collected in the third and last experimental collection of waste paper sponsored jointly by the city and Kâ€"W Probe. July 27 About 300 youngsters taking part in the summer playground program picknicked in Waterloo Park, where they were visited by an etherealâ€"looking bird that defied all attempts at capture. July 28 Forty four 11â€"yearâ€"old delegates at the Children‘s International Summer Village camp at Conrad Grebel Collâ€" ege entertained visitors at open house. Many market vendors Week in retrospect (See photos Page 3) wenlleey _ TTHWeHY _ UNxIp Ts . TRe old CNR freight building at 1% Herbert St., is planning to consolidate its operations agreed it would be wise to investigate the costs of acâ€" gave Ald. Voelker the green light to approach the comâ€" pany. â€" The alderman planned to meet with the city‘s adminiâ€" strative â€" committee â€" this morning to discuss the matâ€" YOUTHFUL AUDIENCEâ€"Hundreds of younF- sters attended a performance of Old King Cole by Tem’g) Theatre Studio at Moses Springer Arena. The presentation is part of the summer Sabat 24008 AlfRcgh icle. "I think it‘s time we did a little more downtown ‘‘The market would be a real drawing card for the Asked if he envisioned the city constructing a building for the market, he said this would be something which would have to be worked out with the farmers. the Lions Club service work, boy scouts and commuâ€" nity hockey. He is a memâ€" ber of the Masonic Order and an elder at First United Church. Mr. Chilton, who will head the collegiate curâ€" rently under construction on Bluevale Avenue, is a former WCI\ teacher and viceâ€"principal. He is 38 years old, marâ€" ried, with two children. In 1955 he graduated from the University of Western Ontario in honors French and Spanish. A year later he graduated from the Onâ€" tario College of Education and subsequently underâ€" took educational adminisâ€" tration studies at the Onâ€" tario Institute for Studies in Education. He taught English for a year at a school in Biarâ€" ritz, France, and taught for two years at Malvern and Jarvis collegiates in Toronto â€" before _ coming to the Twin Cities in Sepâ€" tember 1959. Heâ€" taught French and Spanish at the Kâ€"W colâ€" legiate and later at Waterâ€" loo collegiate before being appointed vice â€" principal at the latter in September 1963. In 1967 he was namâ€" ed to a similar post at Forâ€" est Heights collegiate in Kitchener. t edany frame Ald. Voelker pointed out that Waterloo is closer to the Mennonite country than is Kitchener. "If they (the Mennonites) are yunhappy witkr the way things are * going in Kitchener, maybe complex. . . It depends on how the farmers feel their stalls should be laid out. and the Mennonite facilities playground program and aims at getting the youngsters involved in the play. A second perforâ€" mance, Indian Captive, is scheduled for Aug. 4 at the same location. _ (See other photos, Page 12.) The existing oneâ€"storey building on the 10â€"acre The Kâ€"W Minor Track and Field Association is hosting the Ontario relay championships at Centenâ€" nial Stadium, Kitchener, July 31. The event gets under way at 10 a.m. Lutherwood plans $283,000 addition The structure will house educational, _ recreational and administrative faciliâ€" ties, including five classâ€" gymnasium â€" and offices. Furnishings, in â€" addition to construction costs, will bring the total cost to an estimated $283,000. _ The province will contribute $185,000. Construction will begin early next month on a $283,000, oneâ€"storey addiâ€" tion «to Lutherwood, the residential home north of Waterloo for emotionally disâ€" turbed boys. The _ $263,898 building contract has been awarded to Don Riehl Construction Ltd. of New â€" Hamburg. Target date for its comâ€" pletion is November. Relay meet in i \inl. WATERLOO CHRONICLE THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1971 from Waterioo Square. As Ald. Voelker put â€"it ‘‘The property has natural boundaries, is approachable from allsides and the Menâ€" nonite horse barn is close ates there, it could provide The idea for the home orâ€" iginated with the Ontario district of the Lutheran Church â€" Missouri Synod which contributed $92,000 ing spaces normally occuâ€" pied in Waterioo Square durâ€" (See Page 2) ' site â€" accommodates â€" 14 youngsters. The addition will not add to the centre‘s resident capacity but is expected to provide day care services for about 10 boys as compared to the present three. The Kâ€"W Minor Track and Field. Association is seeking two coaches, male or feâ€" male, for Tuesday and Thursday evenings, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., at Seagram Stadium. Interested persons can have further information by contacting the associaâ€" tion‘s head coach, Mike Fenton 745â€"3735, or Huâ€" bert Stumpf, 745â€"9068, or seeing either of the two men at the stadium during the above hours. Track and field seeks coaches Rev. Theodore Meibohm is the centre‘s director. toward its erection. He also noted that parkâ€"