Loading...
The Brussels Post, 1974-11-13, Page 2aITTAILIOND tin Brussels Post WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1974' BRUSSELS ONTARIO Serving Brussels and the surrounding community. Published each Wednesday afternoon at Brussels, Ontario by McLean. Bros.Publishers, Limited,. Evelyn Kennedy - Editor Member Canadian Community Newspaper Association and Ontario Weekly Newspaper Association. Subscriptions (in advance) Canada $6.00 a year, Others CCil" $8.00 a year, Single Copies 15 cents each. Second class mail Registration No. 0562. Telephone 887-6641. voiitnEo i-Apacu,NnoN St 18 61 building at Beechwood Sugar and Spice By Bill Smiley • 4e/ V,/ 4.<" .4. • ..., , , 41, rznv, y ,Z260 ' 1:70AV The population puzzle TOP Brus Beef Ach i of 15 of the ea..*:Mr010-:094x.:01(AMW:4AAMOte'>,katathZ,9:Malitiiia Sir: Enclosed please find $6 for a subscription to The Brussels Post. M y Aunt and Uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Nichol sent me the Oct. 23 issue which had the writeup of their 60th wedding anniversary and I was impressed with the quality of the paper. I work for the daily newspaper in Thunder Bay and we have two weeklies, neither of which come near the quality of your paper. Congratulations. Don Smith R.R.#2, Thunder Bay, Ontario. A bits and pieces column. First item shows a malicious delight in "catching someone out" as the phrase goes. It is one of the less pleasant aspects of the human character, but at the same time has given a great deal of pleasure, over the centuries, to the human race. There is nothing people enjoy more than somebody else's feet of clay. How we all secretly rejoice, if not openly, when a cabinet minister is caught with a blonde who is not his wife, or a prominent judge is nailed on an impaired driving charge, or a teacher is discovered nurturing marijuana in his/her window boxes. Disgusting, and definitely not Christian, but it's tun. I've been a victim myself. Sent out a questionnaire to elementary school teachers of English last year. There was one spelling error in it, and I didn't do it, a secretary did. But about 50 per cent of the questionnaires returned had the mistake circled, and some gleeful little remark attached. Now, it's my turn. I have before me a list of. novels and plays sent out by the Educational Communications Authority, a fairly Sacred cow with the Ministry of Education. The Authority wants English department heads to tick off a list of the books most used by students in our high schools, with a view to buying the movie rights to the 20 most popular, so that they can be video-taped and made available on a wide basis. A laudable plan. It was when I started to scan the list that I t hought it must be a put-on. I re-checked the accompanying letter. No, it was real, it was official. I looked over the list, a fairly comprehensive one of most of the literature used in our high schools, and started ticking off the obvious ones: Macbeth, Hamlet, Romeo and. Juliet, Death of a Salesman, Huck Finn, The Great Gatsby. Everything in order. Then I turned to Page 2 of the list arid nearly fell off my chair. I came to two conclusions. Either the chap who had dictated the list had failed to proof-read it, or the secretary who had done the typing had finished Page 1 and gone out and had a large liquid lunch before taCkling Page 2. Don Quixote came out as Don Otiiote. This must be an animal story about a coyOte Called Don. Emily l3ronte must be twirling in her grave on the Moors, to see her magnificent Wuthering Heights described as Withering Heights. Thomas Hardy Will be having a celestial .seizure when he realizes that his great Tess of the D'Urbervilles has a new title: Tess Of the D'Umbervilles. D'Umber than what? A science fiction novel, The Chrysalids, has a new life as The Chrysslids. The Luck of Ginger Coffey has been transformed to Lack of Ginger Coffey. Probably some sort of rationing'. A fine western novel, The Ox Bow Incident, has changed shape. It is now the Ox Box Incident, a rather square title, if I may say so. A Grade 11 standard, To Kill a Mockingbird, has become To Kill a Mocking Bird. Can't you see that bird, just sitting around mocking the old lady who owns it? But perhaps the greatek blow to Canadian literature, and certainly the one that nearly bust a gut in a number of English teachers, was the updating of that fine, old novel about French Canada, cMhaarpiadeCihaianpe.delaine. It is now called Marve That is an obvious backlash by some male chauvinist pig to the entire Women's Lib movement. But I'd certainly like to read the new version. I can just see Marve up there, in the Quebec backwoods, bringing in the kindling, worrying about wolves, and having babies under primitive conditions. Poor Marve. It was OK for Marie. She had guts.But Marve doesn't sound as though he could hack it, with a name like that. I imagine he'll die in childbirth, or be eaten alive by mosquitoes, or drop a pot of scalding soupe aux pois on his foot, or something like that. Now I know this entire column is completely unfair to the poor guy who made up the list. But I got so much pleasure from it, purely malicious plea sureit on. I couldn't refrain from passing And the sheer joy of it is that it cod from an Educational Authority. In capitals. It would be no fun at all if it came from as illiterate bookseller. It's interesting to learn that your n eighbour is going to have a baby, after l5 years of sterility, or that your Uncle George had an affair in Singapore when he.\va thech merchant echaindternavy, ,arid before he became a thaBtutsoitni'seosnheeerawgaleye awbh6evne you you d snc o tve h el' boa h b i er.atohoy has Committed a monstr°115 We all have clay feet, bitt Most of Us keep our shoes tightly laced, or at least ("t r socks on. Nothing can be as discouraging as to give long speeches on the need for population control to a conference whose delegates 'know that, for the time being at least, they are fighting'a losing battle. Yet that is what occurred at the August World Population Congress held in Bucharest, Romania. Some delegates implored. Others warned. Quite a number didn't turn up because inflation had eaten into travel budgets. And none who came had a meaningful solution to what is probably the most pressing problem in the world today. Unless the people in poorer lands tend to follow the example of more affluent nations, where young people are beginning merely to replace themselves by having no more than• two children in many cases, future generations face a grim prospect. The recent floods in Bangladesh, for instance, which covered almost half the country and which took thousands of lives, are a form of population control that was accepted by humanity for centuries. If the land had to support too many souls, vast numbers starved to death, or died of thirst, or were killed and drowned in storms and floods. Mankind, with its new technology, today can overcome the cruelties of nature on most occasions. But will we conquer nature if we grow from today's figure of 4 billion to 8 billion by early next century? Will the massive international relief operations that were mounted in drought-stricken Ethiopia or flooded Bangladesh be enough? Will the hundreds of millions of unemployed wandering the world by the year 2,000 be content with degradation and deprivation? Clearly, one must answer NO to these questions. And therefore daily the need to search for meaningful solutions to the population puzzle becomes more urgent. (Contributed) To the Editor Quality of Post impresses reader GATE best Fred Hal lal Dairy LL ere ridE rah, eaf uck