She believes that some of the problems of Ward 2 would appear to be insuffic- ient parking control and fac- ilities in the area bordering the town park and the hotel, broken sidewalks and lack of sidewalks. traffic flow and noise pollution. She inâ€" \‘ites residents of the area to bring other problems to her attention and promises that if elected she will serve the taxpayers to the best of her ability, energy. know- ledge and experience. A candidate for the Rich- moml Hill Ward 2 Council seat. Mrs. Phyllis Hawkes, 95 Roscview Avenue has lived in Richmond Hill for the past 26 years. Born and ed- ucated in England. she has a wide experience in busi- ness and is at present em- ployed as a real estate sales agent. If elected she intends to become non-active in this .field and devote her full time to council matters. she told “The Liberal". Mrs. Hawkes ran for coun- cil nine years ago and (was defeated by William Lazenby in her bid for a council seat. She served a term on the town's parks board and then was elected to the Richmond Hill ‘Public School Board on which she served until the county board was formed in 1969‘ prepare himself for the Dec- ember 4 election of trustees for York County Board of Education. For more than five months he has been reg- ularly attending meetings of the board, Farquharson. 31, is one of Farquharson. 31, is one of 12 candidates standing for the five seats open in Mark. ham. A graduate from the Uni- versities of McGill and To- ronto. he holds masters de- grees in scoial work and ed- ucation. He is at present an intructor and member of the academic council of Ryerson Polytechnical Institute. He is also a volunteer counsellor and group leader for Mark- ham Family Life Centre. In an interview, Farqu- ha‘rson said his concerns are that the trustees should be responsive to the concerns of community members and should be persistent in seek- ing adequate justification for the decisions of professional educators. He is also anxious to see that the community has maximum use of school fac. ilities outside of school hours. Andy Farquharson of Un- iom'ille started last June to and gn ham 1 heading parents A member of the Canad- ian Council for Social Deâ€" velopment. the Canadian Mental Health Association. Metro Social Planning Coun- cil. and the advisory council on early childhood education for Sheridan Community College. Farquharson con- siders the needs of excep- tional children an important sidel tionz issue Having tires that are al- most bald means a vehicle is unsafe and can result in a court fine. according to a case in Newmarket Court last week involving Gray Coach Lines and a multiple injury crash. The bus company was fined $75. Markham Candidate A maintenance official from the company admitted the rear tires of a bus were- n't up to regulations before an August 23 accident on Highway 400 near Newmarâ€" ket that sent 25 people to York County Hospital. Two were seriously injured and 10 others ware admitted to Ward 2 Candidate Bald Tires Meant Public Bus Was Unsafe In Crash It was admitted the tires were almost bald and re- treading hadn't been done. Since then all safety. main- tenance. inspections and at. tention to regulations have been intensified by the bus company. the court was told. The Toronto to Sudbury bus was carrying mostly peo- ple on the way home from the Canadian National Exhi- bition when it went out of control near the Holland MRS. PHYLLIS HAWKES ANDY FARQUHARSON roup sessions for THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Thursday, Nov. 23, 1972 curve ago and .was liam Lazenby council seat. term on the ard and then he Richmond ool Board on ed until the as formed in that some of of Ward 2 ) be insuffic- )[1‘01 and fac- ‘ea bordering .nd the hotel, 5 and lack of ‘ic flow and . Shc inâ€" of the area problems to md promises he will serve to the best nergy. know- 'ience. Ihankyou for. keepmg our promlses. This is no ad. _ It’s a love letter to the most important people we know. Our Loblaws staff. We made a lot of promises to our customers in recent weeks. A lot of pretty big promises. We promised them helpful people. We promised friendly people. We promised eflï¬cient people. And you came through. In the ï¬rst few weeks of our new advertising campaign, business increased dramatically. More new customers than ever More than the price is right. have been pouring into Loblaws on the strength of the promises we’ve been making. Thank you. every single one of you... store managers, assistant store managers. stock boys. meat and produce managers, cashiers. everybody. and Loblaws people all over the province. ' They’re cdming back, on the strength of the promises you’ve been keeping. A We promised. And you delivered.