Waldorf School First Open House May 10 - II After working through the fall and winter on the roof and interior finishings, and making an horioic effort at landscaping, the parents and staff are helping the chil- dren of the Toronto Waldorf School prepare for its first open house and exhibition in its new building, 9100 Bat- hurst Street north of High- way 7. this weekend. Visitors will be welcomed Friday from 7:30 to 9:30 pm and Saturday from 10 am to 4 pm. Set in more than 13 acres of valley and meadow, with winding path and hills, woods and a stream, the school will continue to grow physically as its enrolment grows. When the school moved into the building. designed by Architect ‘Denis Bowman, admitted its first pupils last September, it was barely “Skin and bones" graphically describes the English Pointer female pictured above. She was picked up in a very nervous and pitifully emanciated condition recently by Canine Con- trol in the Steeles Avenue area and the above picture was taken after she had had malnu- trition treatment and had been well fed for 10 days. The dog appears to be between 18 months and two years old and has a black mark on its neck as if it had been chained. From its condition when picked up by Canine Control men. it is felt that it had been lost for Starving Dog Find: Haven At Control K enne/s THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Wednesday, May 8, 1974 Every slice is ï¬lled with the natural goodness of toasted wheat germ. Honey, unbleached wheat flour and reconstituted yogurt. Treat yourself and your family to the better slice of life. Available fresh daily at ï¬ne food stores near you . . . from the bakers of Hollywood Bread. “It’s a great new taste. ready for use. Volunteer crews have completed the skeletal structure of the building, and roosm on the lower floor are finished for present pre~school and seven grades. The school is adding one grade each year, and will eventually take students all the way from pre-school to the end of high school in the same building. An independent, co-educa- tional school. providing an alternative in education with curriculum and philosophy developed by European Edu- cator Rudolf Steiner. In physical aspect. the building is circular. The auditorium is in the centre with the classrooms around it, each opening inward to the central meeting area and also outward‘ A system or earth ramps and landscaping around the building will make it possible to exit straight outdoors from all classrooms on two levels. For open house. the chil- dren's work will illustrate the balance of artistic and academic activities, and the film. “The Experience of Learning At. Waldorf Schools" will be shown, a1- some time. If anyone is missing a dog of this type, Canine Control Officer James Ryan would be pleased to hear from him at 887-5012 or at the kennels on the Gormley Road just east of Bruce's Mill Conservation Area. He describes his charge as a loving, friendly dog, after the first nervousness wore off, with every indica- tion of being a good hunter. He warns, how- ever, that the dog will require special attention until it has completely recovered from its brush with death from starvation. "" """l\,\\’ llUngll/UUM ' g BREAD t “Enjoy 3‘! {Q Slim": Hollywood SAVE UP TO 331/470 HRIHY RENT-A-CAR TOWN AUTO BODY 173 Yonge Street N. Richmond Hill 884-2139 ternating with a show of colored slides of children at work with narration by fa- culty members. All rooms will be open to the visiting public, and each classroom has developed its own character from the dis- plays and arrangement of the room by the class teacher and the children. (Photo by Susan Samna) Somethingterrible is happening in Canada, and everywhere else for that matter; we're get- ting more and more accuslomed to things not lasting very long. We accept it as a fact of life. Shirts seem to rip easier. Shoes fall apart foster. There are lighters v0u throw away when work in turn is inspected bv over 500 inspectors who do nothing but inspect the inspectors. When it gets done, it gets done right. One reason why we‘re not afraid to lavish more hand-work on the Super Beetle than exists on almost any other (tar in the world. Big or Shirts seem to rip easier. Shoes fall apart foster. There are lighters vou throw OWOV when you're ï¬nished with them. Furniture iu‘st seems to be nailed together, Croftsmonvship, it Would appear, is lost be- coming 0 corny,ou1-of-dotevideo. And it doesn‘t look like things are gelling any better. Yet h0w many 7 or 8 year old LCH'S do you still see driving around these days/.3111 kxct. 110w many 4 or 5 veo: old ones’.> N01 too many. Unless they're Rolls-Royces or Vo|k5wogens. (There are over 200,000 Volkswagens 4 years old and older driving around in Canada}. At thirty or forty thousand dollars, it's not unreasonable to expect 0 Rolls to lost indef- initely. But at o mere l/lOth of the price, why Volkswagens of all the other cars in the world? Toke cars, for example. A cm is the second most expensive ponchose (after a home) that most Comdions‘moke, It's 0 big decision cmc money. So you'd SUle like to item thofwould IOSL In spite of the fact that few things in lile are made the way they used to be, we still make Our cars the way we used to. With a kind of insane thoroughness. So tharough, that the editor ol a famous American motoring magazine wrote, "I cannot pretend to understand the Walfsburg mentality." Which is understandable. Since we have never understood the mentality of "planned ob- solescence" as it relates to a large part of the auto industry. As phrased by a noted businessmon/ authOr, among others, it states “...maximum sales volume demands the cheapest canstructiOn far the brielest interval that the buying public Wil tolerates" InCredible, is around. Our reality is equally unreal. But in a little mare comloning way. It starts with the way we painstakingly make a cor. From the moment its ï¬rst two parts come together, 6t Starts to be poked, eagle-eyed, tested and re-tested by a gr0up of the most uncompromising people in the world. The 8,749 “Some people think we’re crazy.†* HURON SQUARE SHOPPING CENTRE it WARDEN SHEPPARD SHOPPINGGENTRE * [1‘00 SIMGOE ST. N. * FINCH WEST MALL * 579 MARKHAM ROAD * 330 YONGE ST. N. * RIVERDALE PLAZA inébéctorrszrsrif 'vhot weren't enough, their “Qualigy keeps goilgg down yet pmes keep going up." 3467 Weston Road, Weston All Shoeworld stores open 9 am to 9 pm every weeknight Hwy. 5 and Hwy 10‘ MISSIssaugn it costs u lot of think that it's one «WK ‘ ‘ s‘ep’in whne. Scavbovough \z‘r can vas O’dmds 5.10. W. & P. Motors Limited 10440 YONGE STREET /339-7701/334-6661 small In this throw-away society, we also throw things away Except they‘re parts that can't meet our olmcst inhuman quality standards. For example: Our shock absorbers are made to absorb an actual 3,000,000 shocks. (if they lose more than 10% of their "spring", the entire shipment being tested is thrown out.) And on and on it goes for every lost port “10? goes into every lost Super Beetle. A little crazy maybe, but the only way we know to make something as close to perfect as is possible 0131 the has! expeï¬ï¬‚yâ€"Biih iurs inrthie world. FOr the 105125 years, we've done somelhing else nobody else 1hough1 of doing. We didn't spend all ol our money working on looks. We've worked 0n the works. (Who wants to be driving a cor thol'll look 0 c0uple of years old in a couple of years, onywov’?) ' poured right bock imo the car. So vau'll find intelligent and desirabie things on 0 Super Beetle that you won't find on many more expensive cars Like: A sealed bottom. McPherson strut front suspension. 15" wheels for longer tire life. Neg- ative steering roll radius. {H causes 1he Super Beetle :0 move straight ahead as y0u brake, when one side of the cor is riding on ice or snow.) “Why do they keep bringing out new can each year? Is something wrong with last year’s?" $5. “3 Ports that are interchangeable 3307 Sheppard Ave‘ E, Agincoun Red, naVV' TheVW Super Beetle. frivolous new styles eoch yeqr geis ht back into the cor. Richmond Hill om year 461-463 Carlaw Avenue, Toronto Our madness doesn't stop with the way we make the car. It extends ri’ght into the way we service it. The mechomcs who work on our cars are somethan else ogoin, lHokesoMeoyflveeyeomtobecomeone TheyVeloaoryrromed,ond whentheyWe not worbng m1VoWswogens,weWe worhng on thenr At even nrore VVV Foct0rv courses that we send lhenxto regulody so 1hey can even lunhenpedecnhenlechmquesondknOMAedge Tololly or Our expense. (When you work 05 hqrd os we do On perfecting o cor, you work equally as hord or perlecving the men who work on lhe cars l “The lot when on boo In it? y glllWllIy should you go" 9 so little when you sell :1?†We call it the VW Owner‘s Security Blanket and again, it gives you a package unlike any other in the world. A l2 month 20,000 mile warranty including a 24 month, 24,000 mile extended warranty for internal engine and transmission components, electronic analysis with four free check-ups, ex- press care and a dealer repair guarantee. ll a warranty repair takes Overnight, we'll even lend you a free car by appointment for as long as it takes. 10 year. Materials and worksmonship 1hot are the best money can buy. ‘ Strangely enough, one of the nice things about Owning a Super Beetle is selling it. Since they're built to hold up, depreciation is held down. In a sense, the older it gets, the more valuable it gets. Look around and check the prices of used Super Beetles. Because they rarely look used, the prices are generally high. (Quite often a 5 year old Beetle will be worth more than some 5 year old cars that cost twice as much to begin with). Common sense again. When y0u make something that lasts, everything ob0ut it will last. Which might help to explain why more Beetles have been sold (Over 16% million) than any other single cor model in the history of auto monulocturing. And why more of them are still on the road. . ll you're looking for o‘cor thot's proven ll can actually deliver what it promises, yeor olter yeor, drop into your nearest VW dealer's and look very carefully or the Super Beetle. If nothing else, it'll at least re-ossme you that semebody's still or0und who believes making it lost, comes first. Wumlnties and se_rvi¢e or ""‘rWiiéié’iié’fhey now the! I need them? & com‘Y 5.10. Oshawa Buck: |QH ! (TH -\RGE.It IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII