Times-Advocate, 1978-08-31, Page 4 (2)Page 4
Times -Advocate, August 31, 1978
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Next logical' step
What about seat belts in school
buses?
There has been a recent murmur in
the Ontario Legislature to have
regulations made requiring the in-
stallation of seat belts in school buses
and making their use compulsory.
As most of us know, substantial
reductions in deaths and injuries on the
highway have taken place as the result
j of . seat belt legislation passed more
N than two and as half years ago. Now the
question isbeing asked: should not
these benefits be_extended to the 600,-
, 000 -school children in Ontario who are
transported each school day in buses?
• There is -no doubt that school buses
ave hada good safety record across
the Province; but it is pointed out that
safety habits, including the use of seat
belts, are formed at an early age. The
absence of belts in these buses breaks a
habit which may contribute to in-
difference concerning their uses when
the young later become drivers and
passengers in automobiles.
Seat belts"atfd padded safety seats
in school buses would appear to be the
next logical move in the advancement
of highway safety in our Province. It
seems unfortunate that the segment of
our population being by-passed in this
regard is the young and im-
pressionable. -
Let us hope that action to over-
come this is introduced and adopted'
Soon.
.Changing emphasis
On of the hardest things with
which a•, graduate of a community
college or university has to cope is the
prospect of not finding a. job.
The practice of a student selecting
a course simply because it suits his or
her fancy has resulted in large
numbers of graduates in areas where
there are very few jobs.
The teaching profession is one
-Which has had its ups and downs. In the
past decade or so. large numbers of
general arts students at universities
have- opted for the world of teaching,
citing excellent pay and good working
conditions as reasons for their choice.
The time has come. however, when
there just isn't e demand for
teachers that there o ce was. The On-
tario" Public School en Teachers'
Federation knows this and is looking
outfor its members who can't find
work in their profession.
• . At its annual assembly, being held
This week in Toronto. the federation
will debatea resolution that would see
establishment of a service to provide
legal and employment assistance to
jobless members. -
Theservice would also distribute
information on teacher vacancies
across the province and would help
teachers trying to relocate in an6ther
area.
Federation president George Meek
doesn't feel entirely comfortable in his
new role, but knows something has to
be done.
"We have a responsibility to all our
members, not just those in the
classroom now," Meek says. "Obvious-
ly we would prefer that this type of ser-
vice wasn't necessary. But surplus and
redundancies are a fact of life and we
have to help teachers cope with them."
And while the men's federation is
• doing its .part, the ministry of colleges
and universities is taking action to en-
sure that student numbers are limited
_in programs for which there is limited
employment'potential.
"Enrolment quotas are being
strictly enforced for these popular
programs whale places remain un-
filled in other programs," according to
a committee reviewing college ad-
missions, policies, standards and selec-
tion procedures.
WE can only say that the actions by
the men's teachers' federation and the
ministry are moves in the right direc-
tion. After all, its a waste of a valuable
resource to have a qualified, trained
person in the unemployment line when
a little foresight might have prevented
the situation.
Peterborough Review
Experience should help
There's an old saying that used to
hound Richard Nixon - the famous;
"Would you buy a used car from this,
man?" It's a saying that Frank Miller,
Ontario's new provincial treasurer, has
also heard on occasion before he
entered tie legislature. Mr. Miller
used jro make his living selling used
cars.
The used car business is credited
with teaching -Mr. Miller something
about survival 3r1 the real world. Sur-
., " viva) skills are probably the major
prerequisite for anyone who tackles the
responsibility of handling the
government's pursestrings, on, either
the provincial or federal level.
In the past. finance ministers have
tended to have shorter feigns that their counterparts in the other 'portfolios.
.• Remember the Honorable John
.Turner.the man touted as Canada's
next prime- minister? Well. although
„his political career is hardly totally
eclipsed yet. ,Mr. Turner's stint . as
Minister of Finance .led to .his
withdrawal from the political arena in
order to salvage some of his populari-
ty.
Then of course there was Donald
McDonald, another veteran member of
the House of Commons who decided to
retire from politics after a period of
handling Canada's finances. Only: time
will tell whether Jean Chretien will be
able to survive the cabinet post any
better than his predecessors.
On the provincial level. Darcy
McKeough has fared a little better The
Chatham -area politician managed to
survive a conflict of interest scandal
some years ago and bounced right back
into politics. He was the man most peo-
ple hailed as the successor to Premier
William Davis.
In the last two years however, even
things in Canada's wealthiest province
haven't been quite so rosy. Mr.
• McKeough had to withdraw his original
proposal for a hefty O.H.I.P. increase
and the municipal tax .reform he had
been advocating for some time has
been temporarily abandoned., ap-
parently at the urging • of Premier
Davis.
McKeough. who might easily have
waited another decade in the wings
before William Davis steps down from
Ontario's top job has decided to pursue
his fiscal policies in the private sector.
Frank Miller is a brave man to step
into the breech. The finance portfolio,
even for a former car salesman, can't
help• to create headaches in these days
of inflation and a shaky economic out --
look.
If Frank iller can survive the
duties of Treas er of- Ontario, then
he'll prove hi a better man that
many of the other veteranpoliticians
who havetackledthe job.
Huron Expositor
T,mes Estabinhed 1873
Advecote Esiabl.shed 1881
dyocateAmes
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BATT'N AROUND ... , ..: g with the editor
There is a place to stand
A place to stand and a-- place to
grow...and they call that place On-
tario!
If you happened to be among the
throngs at the Toronto CNE or even the
Zurich Bean Festival over the past
week, you may dispute the words of the
provincial song, but for those of us who
spent the time roaming around through
the hills, lakes and forests near Elliott
Lake, there certainly was plenty of
space in which to'stand.
One's inbred pioneer instinct rises to
the surface in the wilderness and you
soon reach the conclusion that- .while
you are not the first person ,by any
means to set foot in the northern bush.
you no doubt walk on ground over
which no other person has traversed.
It's a great place to get away from it
all. despite the fact we were only 30
minutes from Ontario's fastest grow-
ing community. However, there were
no 'telephones, no newspapers and
perhaps best of all, no television.
This naturally required some pre -
trip planning in view of the need to
entertain five kids for a week. but it
was found that some lively games of
cards. Monopoly and a couple of good
"boolss.did suffice to pass the evening
hours and even one full day of rain
when getting out of the cabin was im--
possible.
An added treat was the discovery of
a nearby blueberry patch and meals
were finished off with a large bowl of
the sweet delicacies in amounts that
are-impossible•at the going rate of 99e
per half pint.
From the -foregoing. readers no
doubt will assume that the Battens and
Fullers had nothing short of a great
tithe in the bush. Well, not quite.
First of all, our cottage whsequlpped
with a humus toilet. The technology in-
volved is supposed to break down the
refuse through the introduction of
bacteria and heat. We say supposed to,
because our humus toilet was nothing
less than an outdoor toilet sitting in one
room in the cottage, which unfor-
tunately could only be entered through
a doorway which also provided an es-
cape for the odors.
Our 40 -year-old summed it up quite
well when he said it had all the advan-
tages (?7) of an outdoor toilet except
• the benefit of the fresh air that keeps
those one-holers tolerable for their oc-
cupants.
When we arrived home. everyone
quickly headed for the john and spent
several happy moments merely
flushing the toilet.•
Another near catastrophe was a visit
to Cobre Lake, a spot where we had
been assured the speckled trout would
be eagerly awaiting our bait.
What we found were a large number
of minnows who delighted in stripping
worms from our hooks in quick order.
After a fruitless hour of feeding min-
nows and snagging fallen timbers. it
was decided to continue the march
along the path around the lake. That
appeared to be a reasonable suggestion
at the time. but the problem was that it
was soon determined that the path in
fact did not lead all the way around the
lake.
The happy band of flikers was soon
confronted with the slippery terrain of
a northern bush, being forced to slip
and slide through, around and over
dense vegetation. To say that the task
was ma more difficult by carrying
seven -f t fishing poles. tackle boxes
and ca s of worms would be un-
derstat ment.
It wasn't long before our seven-year-
old rebelled. He politely sat down and
announced he was going no farther.
While 'father suggested we tramp on
and force him to follow,' his kind-
hearted mother decided she would not
force the issue and would retrace her
steps back to our original point of
departure. Father reluctantly joined
in. climbing a mountain along the way
in the hope, of finding a track. There's
nothing like mountain climbing to
prove oneself to be extremely out of
condition.
So, we trudged the three miles back
along the lake, while our more adven-
turesome chohorts continued the other
way. ending up traversing a two -foot
path along a rocky 30 -foot cliff that led
to some rather white faces. Their
reward was a tour of a deserted mine
shaft, where an abundance of ice was
discovered along with a few interesting
rocks that Weighted them down on the
Sugar and Spice
Dispensed by Smiley
It's been a losingbaftle
For the past three years, I've been
fighting (and losing) a war which I all
the Great Battle of Necktie. I believe
in a neck unfettered by the choking
confinement of a chunk of silk or
polyester. These useless cloth appen-
dages cramp my style, not to mention
my fragile esophagus.. They drag in my
goulash at dinner, flap in my face while
I'm humming aldng on my ten•speed.
and offer an open invitation to
whichever one of my 6'5" students
wants to garroutte me for the g -term
test I've just returned to him. -
Unfortunately, my employer and his
superiors don't agree with my views on
the liberated neck. I walked naively
into work on the first day, collar been,
,spirits_ high.__atld__was__prompUy__Jn---
formedof the Eleventh Commandment
— Thou shalt not offend mine eyes by
allowing thy throat to appear ungar-
nished in my presence; nor shalt thou
sport turtlenecks, which vex me sore-
ly', and lest thou wish to feel the fiery
lash of Unemployment, tbou shalt not
allow the blashemous blue -denim to
adorn they person. This accompanied
by the roar of thunder, the slash of
lightning, and a horrifying vision of my
Lovely contract in flames.- The score -
after the first skirmish: Haberdashers
— 1, Hoge( {bloodied champion of
human rights) — 0.
This whole thing smacks of the re-
, appearance of the great god and teller
of falsehoods. Outwardshow. I thought
that the bluejeaned, longhaired troops
of the Youthandtruth Army had laid his
hideous corpse to rest after the hard-
fought Battle of Hippie Junction, in the
late 1960's. But it appears that he has
risen, phoenix -like, and is slinking
about the land, appealing to the conser-
vative and the normal in all men. His
insidious message is simply this:
Clothes make the rpan. He of the •
neatly-coiffed head and the smartly -
final leg of their journey.
Father's lone reward was the
knowledge that he had not died,
although he was looking about for some
• birch bark at the top of the mountain on
which to write his last Will and testa-
ment.
•
Another of the problems encountered
was during a stop -over in Sudbury,
when the family van was broken into
and the thieves made off with Lossy
Fuller's luggage. as well as Jeff's.
This wasn't discovered until we
reached our destination and Lossy
started looking for a change of elothes.
Actually. readers would assume that
such a.misfortune would be a terrible
blow. but strange as :it may seem.
Lossy,tias a penchant for losing her un-
derwear in Sudbury.
On a trip a couple of years agQ,:her
son dropped a few: unmentionables -
while they were leaving a laundromat
and the loss wasn't discovered until it
was too late to retrace their steps. '
However. most of their belongings
were located this time by police and
the daijy chore of heading for the pile
of rocks in front of the cabin to rinse
out clothing was ended.
To top it off. the fish weren't biting
very well (our lone entry was tossed
into the minnow bucket and actually
dwarfed by some of them) although
Jack and the boys did manage to get us
one bountiful feed that made the trip
worthwhile. -
The north is truly a place to
stand...to stand and •enjoy nature's
bounty.. Even on rainy days, the clouds
drifting on the tree tops and the mist
rising from the distant hills is a spine -
tingling sight. .
The sunsets are colorful and ever-
changing, heralded by the woeful cries
Of the loons and the gentle lap of the
wavesipon the shore.
Perhaps the loons aren't really a
crazy as their name implies!
worsted suit,- a pair of neat suede.
shoes, and an expensive tie with a tidy
Windsor knot. Jesus, in contrast,
sports only a simple cotton caftan, has
dusty feet and open -toed sandals, and
has (gasp — call the cops!) long hair
and a beard. With me so far? If you
adhere to Outwardsho'r's dictum -orna-
ment is everything, character nothing
— Jesus will end up eating burgers at
• McDonald's and you'll have a dinner
.guest who admires your lampshades
tailored-for-tbday's man -on -the -go- and seems ungrateful when you tell,
three-piece vested suit is superior and him you don't like pork.
pteferable_to he_of.the..unkempt-mane---:-Gan- you--beneel•ve-- the - -id lot ie-
. and tieless torso. The .multitudes will situations the Appearance' Is Reality
respect the former, and he shall rise to belief might spawn? To be considered a
dizzying heights; the latter will be as worthy cleaning lady, Mrs. Magoo
loved as a pint of prune juice in a would have to do your hardwood floors
in an evenings gostn. Local sanitary
engineers would sling festering piles of.
refuse into .the back. of their Rolls
Royce, being very careful not to get
any -on their tropical -weight leisure
sults. The mechanicfit your favorite
garage might be adverse to fixing the
transmission in your jaunty jalopy for
fear he might sully.his velvet tuxedo.
dysentary ward and be will gdnowhere
fast in the World of Big Business,
Pardon me, but — bunk!
Let's follow that line of reasoning for
awhile. Imagine the following scene:
Adolphe'Hitler and Jesus Christ show
up one night at ypur house, uninvited,
for dinner. Adolphe is handsomely at-
tired in a new $900 pinstripe wool -
Thlnk smali
byJim Smith
Beggar your Neighbour
A long time ago, the well-
known Fathers of Confedera-
tion agreed that. in future, all
of Canada would stand to-
gether', sharing equally in the
good and the bad. But some-
thing went wrong along the
way and now the impover-
ished Maritimes are part of
the same Confederation as
wealthy Alberta and Optario.
Increasingly - and quite
aside from the well-known
sovereignty issue in Quebec
- Confederation has become
a matter 'of every province
for itself. The noble concept
of one for all and all for one
has gone by the boards.
One example of the course
we're taking can be found in
Quebec where, by provincial
decree, it has been specified
that construction workers
from outside Quebec will not
be permitted to work in that
province unless it can be de-
termined that workers with
similar skills are not available
locally. -
Quebec's action invited
immediate response from
Ontario which has introduc-
ed legislation barring Quebec
tradesmen. Other regions can
be expected to follow suit..
But let's not dump all the
blame on one province. Last
year. for example, Ontario
went shopping for new pub-
lic transit vehicles. The
lowest -Old came from MLW
Worthington, a Quebec -based
outfit - but the contract
went to Ontario's Hawker-
Siddley at a higher price.
Alberta, meanwhile, gives
preferred status to its own
contractors for pipeline con-
struction. Outside contrac-
tors get work only when
there aren't any local firrlrs
available.
-Manitoba stipulates that
only Manitoba -based consult-
ing- engineers be employed
on nuclear generating plants
there. Competent engineers
from anywhere else in Cana-
da are out of luck.
Then there are the inter-
provincial trucking wars
where vehicles with out -of -
province license plates are
pulled off the road by police.
The examples of beggar -
your -neighbour policies with-
in Confederation are almost
endless. It's impossible now
to ignore the fact that Con-
federation just isn't working
out the way the Fathers plan-
ned it. The provincial leaders
are io blame - but so is Ot-
tawa, which has failed to de-
velopa comprehensive na-
tional development policy.
The provincial ploys are born
out of frustration with an
economy that has stagnated.
There is an important les-
son here for Canadians. Al-
though we operate one of the
world's most open economies
(more than half the goods
coming into Canada pay no
duty whereas the U.S., for
example, taxes more than
90% of its imports), our
trade representatives in the `
Geneva trade negotiations
are talking about cutting ta-
riffs even further in exchange
for non -tariff concessions
from other countries.
But agreement on tariffs
is a relatively"easi(y attained
state, being nothing more
than a matter of arguing over
easily defined numbers. Non -
tariff barriers, on the other
hand, are far more subtle and
less readily defined. So, if we
can't cope with trade barriers
within our own borders, how
can our naive "boy scout"
approach to international
trade in Geneva accomplish
anything of value? There's a
lesson on international trade
to be found in our own inter-
provincial affairs.-
"Think small" is an editorial
message I rom the Canadian .
Federation of Independent
Business
4a rn memo
. 55 Years Ago
Mr. Ed Harness left
Wednesday for Windsor
where he is opening up a
retail produce business. .
Workmen are engaged in
making alterations and
redecorating the interior of
-the Jackson Mfg. Co.
Mr. D. Watson & Son, of
Wingham, are opening a
grocery store in Exeter
North in the old McTaggert
store on the Lake Road.
Mr. Fred Wells had the
misfortune to have the
middle finger of his left hand
come in contact with a saw
at the Ross -Taylor factory on
Saturday last. He will be laid
off work for a couple of
weeks.
30 Years Ago
Exeter Rutabaga Com-
pany's new $80,000 plant at
Exeter north will be ready to
handle turnips this fall.
A new four -cent stamp
commemorating the_ .100th
anniversary of the
a hievement of responsible
government in Canada has
been issued.
Elmer Campbell, R.R. 1
Exeter, of E.D.H.S. was
awarded the school tuition
scholarship up to $125 a year
for two years for the County
of Huron.
From a 75 -Ib. bag of
potatoes sown in the spring,
Alpe Sanders has harvested
17' bags.
Astubborn bushifire which'
for three days menaced
thousands of acres of choice
resort property in the Pinery
has been quenched.
20 Years Ago
Over 60 applications for
subsidies on construction of
farm ponds have been
received by the Ausable
River Conservation
Authority, secretary Hal
Hooke revealed this week. So
far 30 have been constructed.
Sixty children at Huron
_Park._ _RCAF_ Stati.on,_Gen _ _
traiia passed their "tadpole"
test recently..,'
•)
•,
Grand Bend Reeve James -- .
' Dalton says the summer
resort is , "definitely in:
• terested" in the city of
London's proposal to build a
pipeline frond Lake Huron.
Town Council moved
Monday 'night -to meet the
Ontario Water Resources
Commission to begin an
investigation- iitto a sewage
system.
t5 Years Ago
Frank Sheere, tailor at .
Walper's Men's Wear, was
back on the job Monday
following a dinner which
marked the completion of 60•
years at his craft, and all of
them in the same shop. He
started learning the trade
when he was 14 in the haber-
dashery then owned by W.W.
Taman. -
The SHDHS board finally
approved culottes but only
after considerable difficulty.
The board had a ruling
requiring that all girls must.
wear skirts so when sbme
students showed up with the
split skirts, Principal H.L.
Sturgis requested. the girls
not wear Mein -again until
the board had a e rice to
discuss the matter. •
The summer' crisis over
a shortage of n ses at South
Huron Hospital 1 ore or
less" over but th situation
will continue to be difficult,
Superintendent Alice
Claypole reported. She
revealed at the Hospital
auxiliary meeting that the
four beds which had been
closed due to the shortage,
would be reopened.
Bill Trickey, Exeter, was
driving 'merrily along on his
tractor pulling a load of
baled straw to his farm. A
neighbour tried in vain to
call to him from "a field
alongside. 13ut it wasn't lbng
before he felt an unusual
warmth on his back. The
load had caught fire; how, no
one knows. Firemen.. were
.. called to extinguish the -blaze - -
and the grass fire which.
resulted.
(A positive offshoot — schools which were troubled by
:Vandalism would have only to hang a tie in every window
and not only would vandals not destroy the place, they'd
rake the lawns and trim the hedges.)
Yes, folks, as much as I hate to admit it — it brings a
lump to my throat to say it — old Outty is alive and well. I
do however have a new battle plan for the upcoming
round of hostilities — my friend Chenier, the artist, is go-
ing to silkscreen a tie,on my hairy chest.' No problem
really, I'll just pretend it's mohair.
•