" . ( ,ourses Available as, Saturday, October 19, 1985 BY CHRISTINE REABURN Additions and improvements were f-ee-er-Lee-ie---- Of The Observer added regularly, such as single desks --------"-=----'-"the1ue, WESTMEATH - Keeping in touch and a well stocked library which made I with all levels is an essential part of SS 3 a fairly well aprippai nual Internation I Women's Institute life. And so it was at school. q , . the November meeting of the West- At the end of 1950 the Bromley Line meath branch hosted by Myrtle school, Lapasse PS, ss No, 4 and I I . Bromley. Pleasant Valley PS, sf No, 5 were institutions n Reports were given on the Eastern joined into the Township School Area W _ Ontario Women's Institute Convention No. l and from then until the students _ held in late Octoberby delegate Myrtle were transferred to Westmeath PS in I . [ Bmmley. The members were in- 1964 a board of five trustees ad- S en e alonde formed on courses, workshops and ministered thethreeschools. . seminars which wiilbe available over Three men held the position of 'T,,,-,-,,-.,:-,,-------------------, the next months. One workshop of in- secretary (an? mfg ymlis, S/il',) The Canadian Press tenest will be held in Ottawa March 6 John Wri , avi rom e an is TTC,,-,-,,,;,-.,-,-.,.-,.:-:---,---,-.-,-.--.-,------ _ and 7, on business ownership for son MillDE, y . International Economic and political institu- women. s The sehuol was sold to Ambrose tie such asdthe Uinted Nations have become _ . . Laderoute who in tum sold to Joe and s agnan an s eri e" and now serve as little wdtl,r,tln/,it21'tr1egh2,1tgnwgi,ttiiit Louise Norlock who still reside in the more than places for countries to vent frus- farm couples at Glen House in lead red school house on the Emmley trations, former Liberal finance minister 1 Gananoque organized byd Ontario Line. Marc Lalonde said Friday. MiteM,rgsrieet,ht sigh?“ ed about . tLalonde told delegates to a conference on 1 an agricultural resource kit available In ernational law the weakness of the UN and l 1 for use in schools and wps will be the ascendancy of smaller regional centres of , looking into this to see that schools in power around the world means further frag- 1', their area have actessts.stll.is kit, mentation of international institutions is inevi- it The outcome of resolutions presen- table, a ted were, given and the area convenors ' _ ' l reports were given to the branch con- These large institutions such as the UN, the s venom Comments ftom the addressof General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade tt 2,tur1gigld'2,1ti'h frmgr,l/s'ttt (GATT) and the International Monetary Fund I o nson s ess enee or s l merthandise the batefitsof joining the (£1,132;affwuanrtgercgressuri»“on“? the world by , WI, they havetosellthemselves Mem- . nserva Ive va. ues, regional- " bership in WI is no longer purely from ism, and decentralization, he said, ,; Elie ggéiculltural selftOZl-i' the? his a l The big powers can choose to ignore the in~ 1’ row t1rDartrmm0erst1mWhic can . ' . . ' . l be further expanded. Th: president tirggfional institutions with little fear of re- i also mcutraged members to develop p ' Kierkfshopls Im/eh", affectirig women; A report prepared by a UN official criti- , e army, e commum y, wor . . ' . V . . skills. Mrs. Johnson challenged the tc/ez/iii/he/r/Toe/ii/gl, is: being ineffective m _ mmibership to be competitive and l f h g. ' n .10 S e ween Countries and 1 stakeirplaceinthefuture, or ailing little Impact in international aid DistrictDirectorChristineReaburn and Third World development. Only 6.5 per 0"."in the highlights ofthe Directors cent of the world total for aid is administered , meemng streyint the importance of by the UN, and that total is funnelled through 1 the community sponsmship in Haiti. 30 agencies. This district Can Save project is sup- ported tityyeially by the 16 branches, Lalonde said he wouldn't even talk about 'le,sis,p,igyts, the peasant:k to plant UNESCO, the UN's education, scientific and _ varieties t,"r12"isryrury1fl'r12.vvii1si cultural age.ncy: The organization has been in four years, The matured trees am under Siege for its alleged pro-Soviet political reduced to charcoal which is sold and tilt and its questionable effectiveness. ' used asiile1. The United States has withdrawn its heavy ' The, members supported the financial support, chopping more than 25 per distrjft s decisioy to sponsor a public cent from UNESCO's current budget. speaking competition and suggestions will be taken to a committee meeting And two other key UN agencies, the World to tee/ter C r t N Health Organization and the International La- Desjardins spoke on $1213wa 1?fifl her Organization, “have become little more Bromley Line sci-i100] SS No. 3 which than big bureaucracies, Lalonde said. had alon . . _ 'lll'dllff/"12itiig" :31)“: Itl1t The development of the so-called UN years, James Bromley gave an acre of land such as the international Year of the Child I fully cleared and soon a pine log and International Year of Youth, turned out building with windows on the east and to be "make-work programs for international t west and a porch was completed. A bureaucrats that were dumped on the home t home made table, chairs, doubledesks governments with little reference to domestic ', and a cupboard were the furnishings roblems PT l 'ttef To the eagt stood the newly p . _ erec teachers ome, a one room And while some useful work is being done lr, gtafr’tgf and the first teacher was by such organizations as GATT and the IMF, For fortyyears thisbuilding served they. have evolved more into managerial or> the community, however in 1881 it was ganizations 'and that's not where the action replaced by a biiék'structure. As time is," Lalonde said. passed, more and mmore land was cleared along the Bromley Line and ' school attendance reach seventy lp studaits. Salaries also rose from the $100 paid to the first teacher. to the $1000 being paid in 1925.