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The Gazette 1989-01-04 - 1989-12-27
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Date
1989-07-05
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Page 16 The Gazette Olds Class of 1989 by Anthony Connolly Graduation is a time of sadness, remembrance and rejoice, David Stephenson told his classmates this week. For 76 students it was a Moment In Time they waited years for as Olds Junior Senior High School's Class of 1989. Now, fellow classmate Wade Richardson said, they are Future Bound , with memories intact and ambitions forthright. ' In a ceremony to mark their time, the graduates with family, friends and teachers celebrated the passing rite in the Olds Sports Complex on Thursday. At the banquet, graduate Candice Hammer toasted the parents while her mother, Bev Hammer supplied the parental reply. Donita Dyer toasted the teachers, while Tom Christensen served up the instructor's retort. A clan of Olds Junior Senior High School teachers volleyed praise and puns with their toast to the graduates, which the Grad Executive dutifully replied to. Ceremonies were em- ceed by Class of '89 members Brian King and Lorraine Dredge. The Mayor of Olds, Robert Armstrong, addressed the graduates, as did Linda Buchan, and Rufus ScheUenberg. Kirsten Craven bid farewell to the school and friends as the graduating class's valedictorian. Following the graduates Grand March , Principal Tom Craven addressed his former students and presented each with their graduation certificates. Two poems will serve as this class's This year's Glenda McRae Memorial Award is presented to Terry Schroeder (right) by Carol Johnson (left). The award goes to a former student of Reed Ranch with the highest standing in Grade 12. garbage pilot fails to fly Town council failed to give a waste composting pilot wings at its recent council meeting saying they need more details. On July 27, Round-Up Waste Management, of Canmore, will try once again to show council how the group will compost 50 percent of the town's garbage. Round-Up wants to build a composting machine inside Olds' proposed transfer site, Fred Zillinger, an electrical engineer with the group said in a telephone interview. The composting assembly line machine will compost roughly 50 percent of the town's garbage, he said. The town would not have to pay for the machine's construction, but would be charged, by the ton, once in operation Zillinger added. Round-Up figures it will cost the town 20/ton for the composted material compared to the 28/ton waste hauled off to Calgary. The pilot, the first of its kind in the provinces- would not be constructed to make money for Round-Up directly. Indirectly, Round-Up could benefit financially by launching their composting project in Olds, he said, because smaller towns will want a similar system. Round-Up wants the whole County of Mountain View, Dr. Dieter Rempel of the group told council recently. Olds would be the first step. Zillinger said the pilot comes at a good price considering there are no capital costs to the town. It will cost Round-Up 160,000 to build the composter and another 100,000 to operate and maintain the system, Zillinger said. Round-Up's accountant, Siegfried Beckedorf, told town council that financial statements would be provided for council's scrutiny. Beckedorf also said the group had a network of financial backers. Town council turned the group away initially, but agreed to meet with Round-Up again for more details. Zillinger said the first presentation, given at the recent council meeting, was too much of a soft-sell , the second presentation is going to be more specific and pressing. Over the telephone Zillinger said Round-Up wasn't doing anything new with their pilot. We're not reinventing the wheel, it's a pretty basic principle, the electrical engineer said. The compost system, which would be housed inside the transfer station, would be a conveyer belt, a drum and grinding system similar to hundreds of other composting machines. The difference with the Round-Up system being that theirs is small scale, composting five to 10 tons a day, he said. So the town council's decision has set the pilot project back a month, he said, but Round-Up understands the reasoning. They want to make sure someone writes the 680,000 cheque for their transfer station, Zillinger said referring to the cost of building Olds' transfer station. Making sure that the transfer waste station is paid for by the provincial government was the major stumbling block the Round- Up team faced, Zillinger said. And Mayor Bob Armstrong said the town would not abandon the Regional Waste Management Committee by taking on Round-Up's pilot. The July 27 presentation, while providing details, may also bring Round-Up into the Regional Waste Management Committee fold, he said. testament, one Wade Richardson read at the ceremony, while the other, read by David Stephenson, came at dinner. The ceremony was followed by a Grad/Parent dance. The Olds Junior Senior High School graduates for 1989 are: Trevor Adair, Jennifer L. Aleock, Shawn Bennett. Kim Burk, Marcy Burnett, Andrea Coupal, Dani-Lynne Craig, Kirsten Craven, Kevin Cullen, Douglas Dirks, Lisa Dobush, Lorraine Dredge, Donita Dyer, Carl Engman, Jennifer Evans, Kevin Fischer, Jacqueline Ford, Travis Gallais, William (Ric) Gardin, Stacey Giesbrecht, Majeed Goldrick, Kimberley Gould, Marcia Griffiths, Connie Grover, Shark Halverson, Can- dice Hammer, Jodi Hauck, Heidi Hauken- Wednesday, July 5, 1989 frers, Lori Hodgkinson, Neil Holmes, Lana llcisin, Michael Imbery, Brian King, Darcy Kirton, James Klimek, Trevor Krall, Carolann Lanz, Scott Leather dale, Salena Lee, Kim Mabbott, Cara McCullough, Jacqueline McFarlane, Denny McLean, Melody Minor, Ronald Mudry, Kevin Mundt, Greg Newton, Douglas Newton, Andrea Olsen, Miles Peters, Gregory Potter, Kris Qually, Gordon Reber, Wade Richardson, Sheri- Lynne Rinas, Leanne Rivera, Tracy-Anne Roberts, Daniel Sarty, Terence Schroeder, Elinor Smith, Todd Stauffer, David Stephenson, Kevin Stromsmoe, Stephen Sych, Graham Scott Thompson, Loralie Thornton, Pamela Toews, Cindy Tran, Todd Vadar, Virginia Whitehair, Phil Woytuck, Darren Wright, Jeffrey VanBrunschot, Susan Winkelaar, Kevin Zinn, Lorraine Zinn. Sun lull Slim Down I lie percentage of elderly people from Ihe Northeast and Micl- *vc*.l lleading to llie sunny South began dropping between l9Rtland 1985. alter steadily increasing from J955IO 1980. DYE - HAMILTON - KARY INVESTMENTS Phone 556-3271 30-179 Days 12 1Year 11 5 Year 10l/2 00 Hawaii 299 Commencing Sept. 9 limited Space and Departures Don's Worid Travel TRAVEL PERSONAL CARE WORLDWIDE OMs - 556-8451 Having acquired all the shares of Neil K. Leatherdale Norma I. Leatherdale through Leatherdale Holdings Ltd. Leatherdale Publishing Ltd. has made the following appointments BRIAN G. LEATHERDALE Publisher Sales Manager MARY JANE HARPER Business Manager Editor LESLIE ROY LEATHERDALE Plant Manager Production Supervisor We have inherited a Proud Record of Service to the community. It is a tradition that we cherish and upon which we will continue to build.
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Image 559 (1989-07-05), from microfilm reel 559, (CU12514416). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.