WOO SQUARE ",,a.-.a, to moo - CONESIOCA Mm "qet.orri.-a:Mttq 0; new ftttrf Mart) lttfgleeP' moo mm (Near (m than u too '-"'ii'ii"iils,stt, _,;ii;i'iUcrr7s'5aii"i'i a74rpa'oa'i'Gi"iss Offer good " Water! Stores Only - r ", - Otter Ends ' __ - August 29, . 'll%P an qlIlllIllllllllllll. . L AC Lt, “5:39 i'iit',fi1i,;jt lhlbodStain I Iain.» 3.5.3791 e "t.-.6atttotv." a v. l New “‘6 _)',f,,',i,ii::',',"i,i'iciliii; no 1982 Imports! Solid Vinyl a... _ . Wallpoverings .wmwmam . “6-2789 reg. n95 Police keep close watch w 'coo"""'""'"""", nil-uni be p “awakens a†“We‘- no - “My“ and; not that� M's . alt',' of such au' an“ residents some nc a tension coll y M38 . (hvolwdhthelncj-uv 'iaTii;i"rfthti"e-aored my" nigh "ood un- . W,henruud - . _ / She thttar% Human that the indium re A public new“ ts 'ttgtttsCMetpaitras volvg any! only one b.eintr, heal gm Pt bathtub! byJ'olice neigtuottrhood-wide die '- star death," he said. - "If the new: media wouldn‘t keep playing; 1n the meantime. iw specter Rheia "td "ive're'certainiy giving extra attention in that area and checking more thoroughly." 7 Last Friday, the Mennonite Central Committee's commu- nity mediation service held . meeting with city hall omcuis, po- lice and are: residents to discuss the prob- Themeetingresutted t,t plan to establish a eighbourhood Watch Program. scheduled to get. underway this The program will im- prove the link between " Woodside was the boyhood home of William Lyon Macken- zie King Canada's prime minister for nearly twenty-two years, Restored to represent the period of the 1890's when King lived there, it tetleets the taste of the middle class in Ontario late in the nineteenth century, [lrliiiiriiriiilzEfjg Discotqr mheritage NATIONAL HISTORIC PARKS Kitchener Parks Pans _-. _-_--- -"- "-_"_""_" All n". WIHIOIILS is? unity Tttlr. m in managed "a. 'iiiiiriiiirttre “In. l “I thttar5o Htmtan was. "-------c" The and. Hum-n A public meeting is WWI-Inns being had this lun- has: his†by pike day,m10-1Put- an the and“ at last side public “bury as month's tkeidemts. jobs. and more mun 84.8 per cent obtained employment in areas directly related to their course of study. The success achieved by Ontario community college graduates in finding employment tel-ted to their field of study has been ttut- standing. warding to a recent study. Of the 16,270 gradu- ates hom full-time pro- grams at Ontario's 22 community colleges who sought work last year, more than I! per cent (14,849) found College grads successful The annual Graduate Placement Report tor community go!leg_es mm! iayty.trvue "MiitistrrUt _cfou’ege§ and Universities and the College at Applied Arts and Technology Placement Group for the academic yen 1979-1900‘ shows that oh to tinker education. reported by the work- ing grads was between $12,000 and $13,000 per annum. That is an across-the-board cal- culntion which includes all graduates from one, two- md three- year programs. Canada L301 fa