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Image provided by: Lee-Whedon Memorial Library
Pinewood Derby For Pack 31 Pack 31 held its Pinewood Derby - recently - at - the Presbyterian Church. Craig Tuohey placed first, David Yates, second and Ken Johnson third in this popular event for the tiny model automobiles. Jeff Holt was champion of the den chief's race. r The meeting opened with the Pledge to the Flag, followed by the denner's report. Mr. Fuller presented Patrick Dieter and Joe Maiorana with Bobcat pins and J. Bukiewicz, Kevin McKeever and John Blount with Wolf badges. Golden Arrow on Wolf badges were presented to J. Bukiewicz and Kevin McKeever. Kevin'McKeever, Ken Goerge, Randy Wickham, Dale Short, Patrick Blount and Craig Tuohey received Silver Arrow on Wolf badges. ; -- Bear badges were presented to Patrick Blount and C. Tuohey. Jeff Stear received a denner's ° bar. Kenneth Blount reported on the sale of tickets for the Scout-O- Rama. Nineteen boys received badges for selling five tickets. Craig Tuohey and C. Sanderson each received a first-aid kit for UNEXPECTED COMPANY? Don't Worry __ We'll take care of it COME AS YOU ARE! W (uve cn selling the first five tickets. The law of the pack was repeated for the closing and each boy who entered the derby received a car. __ It was announced that the pack would host a round table scout leader meeting on May 10 and the theme for June will be \Backyard Adventure.\ Also scheduled is Webelos-Dad week end June 30, July 1 and 2. , Hoijood Film Shop HOLLYWOOD - (UPI) -Next television season will see a new series based on producer- director William Castle's theory that people love to have the hell scared out of them. \Ghost Story'\ is the title of the new offering with Sebastian Cabot, of the sonorous voice, as host. Castle is a past master at fmghtenmg audiences. \Rose- mary's Baby\ with Mia Farrow was one of his chillers. Among the others were \House on Haunted Hill\ and \Homicidal\ -all movies. Now the silver-haired show- man is tackling television. \Producing a real thrillee-a shocker-is almost like | a ballet,\ Castle said. \It amounts to manipulating the audience, getting it to react the | way you want it to. As Advertised in House and Garden Better Homes Kennedy HARDWARE \If ~ you're successful, the audience does the work for you. Imagination Matchless \Nothing can be conjured up in a script or on a set for sheer terror to match the human imagination. It's what the audience doesn't - see scares the hell out of them. ' \Almost everyone is a little bit afraid of the dark. It's the unknown the unseen that sets 153,11 to prickling.'\ ecent movies made espeécial- ly for television have. been gaining in poptflarlty if there is ED TIRES? A FLORAL ARCH in the Vatican gardens frames St. Peter s Basilica The gardens are open to public tours now for an indefinite period. object to the title, that in a mystery or occult theme involved. Castle believes the trend is just beginning. \No doubt there is a resurgence of the occult,\ he said. \Look at the success of 'The Exorcist.' That book was on the best-seller list for a year or more. ''The best part about a horror thriller is the technique doesn't require brutality or sex and vulgarity. It is what you don't see, what you imagine that fires the audience. \People go to see a ghost story for the same reason they ride a roller coaster. It's a different kind of thrill. Takes You Away \Audiences enjoy the feeling of immediate release after a terrific amount of tension or anxiety. It takes you away from the humdrum of daily life and into all kinds of excite- ment.\ Some of the NBC exeuctives '\'Ghost Story,\ Castle said. The net- work brass figure each episode won't involve a ghost. But then viewers don't always see smoke \Gunsmoke.\ \I am making miniature movies,\\ Castle said. \Each segment will have a different cast and setting. All will be contemporary because I think the occult in'a modern setting is » more finghteamg than that old' stuff 'about vampires in Mike's Arco Bought A Truckload To Save You 0 EY Plastic Refuse Found _ In Sargasso Sea SCIENCE TODAY By JOSEPH L. MYLER WASHINGTON (UPI)-Many tales are told of the Sargasso Sea, that vast region of the North Atlantic which lies between the Azores and the West Indies. It is a warm and relatively still area bounded by ocean currents which have little effect upon it except to impart a slight swirling motion which tends to concentrate floating objects toward its center. Columbus encountered it on his way to the New World. It was covered, or seemed to be covered, by mats of sargassum, a seaweed. In legend and science fiction, this mat was so thick at the center that ships could not Transylvania. \We are also different from horror stories. Inthose you see a monster or creature. In my stories you do not. Once the monster is seen the fright disappears. “‘Ghost Story' will terrify viewers and then let them off the hook with a sigh of relief- maybe.\ THURS., FRI., & SAT. MAY 11, 12, & 13 PRICES START AT 59.95... | Factory Blem's - Fiberglass Belted Whitewall's G78/15 +21\ 178/15 +31\ * Plus Tax & Trade in Tire FREE PEPSI With Tire Purchase FREE MOUNTING Don't Miss This Opportunity To Buy Tires At Wholesale Prices. MIKE’S RCO South Main St. . Medusa, N.Y. 798-9814 move through it. Many a derelict, sails still hoisted but the crew long since dead, has been found intact among the imprisoning weeds. But all that -is myth, or fiction. Actually, the seaweeds don't constitute an impenetra- ble mass on the Sargasso Sea surface; they occur only in drifts. No Myth It is no myth, however, that the Sargasso Sea has accumu- lated many things, including marine creatures not found elsewhere, lumps of petroleum floated in from other quarters of the great ocean, and, now, concentrations of bits and pieces of refuse from the new Age of Plastics. It may turn out that this strange sea in the ocean is one source of the polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) which have contaminated a host of plants and animals throughout the Atlantic. PCBs are DDT-like chemicals widely used to make plastic materials plastic, that ‘:.ooo‘0&.§ MEDINA JOURNAL-REGISTER 1 1 WEDNESDAY MAY 10, 1992 Holley Central Honor Students - HOLLEY-The following honor rolls have been annpunced by Holley Central Elementary 'Schools for the last marking period: SIXTH GRADE High Honor Roll - Debbie Brown, Brenda Case, Amy Gi- faldi, Elizabeth Lehning, Lollie Logsdon, Laurie Maxon, Shawn 'the is, flexible. Discovery that the Sargasso Sea is polluted with plastic refuse was reported in Science magazine by Edward J. Car- penter and K.L. Smith Jr. of the Woods Hole (Mass.) Ocea- nographic Institution. While sampling the western Sargasso Sea with tow nets, the scientists found plastic particles in numbers running more than 9,000 per square mile. They appeared to 'have lost, perhaps by weathering in the sea, the substances that made them plastic in the first place. IF the plasticizers were PCBs, ' presumably they have long since become part of the marine ecology. Larger Ones Identified Most of the netted plastics were brittle pellets, Some of the larger ones were identified as such things as a syringe needle shield, a cigar holder, a button snap, 'and parts of Junk jewelry. Where did the pl SthS come- from? From dumping of wastes by cities or| by ships? Some of the sampled areas were within major shipping lanes. The sampling station closest to land was 145 miles northeast of Bermuda. The nearest to the continent was 559 miles southeast of New York City. . The scientists found that the little plastic pellets had provid- ed a surface for growth of far tinier marine organisms such as diatoms and hydroids and perhaps bacteria. What will be consequence of this? Nobody yet knows. But since the world has been mass producing plastics for only a little more than 25 years, the discoveries in the Sargasso Sea provide a ro idea of how little time it takes for man to mess up his environment. for ra forest begins in _ a ~greenhouse. Tim- ber is one natu cal re- source that is renew- able, with the process starting . in research: centers where geneti- § cally improved strains are developed. Greenhouse babying of seedlings encour- ages dramatically in- creased growth after transplantlm, Potter, Joe Romagnola, Nancy Smith, Lisa Strong, Marion Tay- lor. _ Honor Roll - Lori Andrus, Larry Berardi Pauline Blank, Bruce Blossom, Gerald Bonk, Edwin Bower Raymond Brice, Joya Burgio, Lisa Cady, Merri Kae Campbell, Jean Dale. Laura David, Debra Denning, Carol Diotte, Mark Ellsmore, Ted Fiorito Rhonda Flemming, - Debra Fortunato, Dan Harris, Kevin Knapp, Charles McAllis- ter, Margo Passarell, Gerald Quaranto Joyce Root, Holly Shaffer, Barbara Steldle Karen Syck, Joanne Totter, David Wahl, Eric Weatherbee Bernice Wright, Jim Zambito. FIFTH GRADE High Honor Roll - Harold Hefke, David Mogle, Michelle Passarell, Shelly Potter, Linda: Schrith, Pamela Streit, Nancy West. Honor Roll-Diana Brien, Lisa Bower, Kim Cook, Randy Finne- frock, Terry Germeo, Rebecca Knapp, Valerie Knapp, Peter Logsdon, - Amy Lusk, Deborah - Maw James McAlllster 4 Kim Novak, Robert Passarell, Judy Pratt, Jim Rocco, Mimi 0 Santoro, Angela Stephens Jo- seph Stettner Bernard Ward, Eric Wohlers, Tammy Wood, | Crystal Yingling. Commendation - Phyllls Con- - | LOOKING 'er, ' Tamara Asmuth Patrice yers, Theresa Morehouse, Dol- ores Petterson, Philip Spano: FOURTH GRADE High Honor Roll -> Martha Harris, Kathy Mignano, Eliza- beth Strelt Leisa Wood. Honor Roll - Timothy Altan- Beadle Robin Bootes, Lisa Bubb, Michael Buzard Jeff Campbell R o bin Crawford, Howard Diehl, Lisa Dupre, Douglas Engert Rodney Finne- frock, Lynn Gundrum, Lisa . Kemp. Jane McAllister, Marjorie Mc- - Lean, Charles Moore, Terri Moy, Louise Passarell, Michael Pas- sarell, Robert Patton, Mary Porter, Laura Ruggles Jodi Sumney, Stanley Toote, John Totter, John Welch, V1kk1 ng -: Commendatmn—Chfford ton, Paul Quaranto. THIRD GRADE - High Honor Roll - Geoffrey Above, - - ovan, B.J. Dragert,] -_ Mary Beth Formicola, Susan - Bonk, Christine Br Brown, Kimberly Burns, Janine Sevor, Brian Shaffe Buell, Connie Buzard, John Don- ebra Dupre, Heath, Tina Hilner,| Dwayne Ir- win, Sarah Lehning, Susan Mark Sandra McAllister, Krista Rich, Donna Rodas, Michelle Romagnola, Andrew Smith, Stephanie Zehler. _- Honor Roll - Bridget Baker, Jody Baker, Lisa Behnke, James ks, Carmen Coccitti, Joanne eth, Paul Greer, Duane Hughson, Patrick Kyle, Leroy Lovette Eric Lutes, Mar Beth yMartin, Thomas Mar- tin, Modesta Martmez, Amy Maxon to Deborah McFarland, Tina Moble, Paul Moore, Robert New, Kevin Novak Humberto Obes, Cynthia Patton, Lori Perma, Jed Pilato, Lance Potter, Robert Roeck Peter Schroth, Chnstme r, Everett Saver Eric Unterborn, Janet Wadams Emestine P llhams Commendatlon -| Theresa Daly, Karen Herring. 5757274774; For all the information you need about your new. com- munity, call i DIANE: KEIM 798-2632 00A «! do ece. °c'o ReZer ’0':’o' ':': s seedlings are planted by hand in logged - over at 9215. Above left, a stand of young timber is ferti- lized l) v Left, a mature heli¢opter. stand. Photos illustrate a massive 1971-72 re- forestation project of a major producer, ©Weverhaeuser} dur- ing: which so . million were planted 12 lings in two some. seed ~ Pacific Northwest- - Washington and Ore- (3 gon-and five ern States-A South- abama, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Mississippi and North Carolina. |