Times-Advocate, 1982-02-03, Page 4f3
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Times Established 1873 Serving South Huron, North Middlesex
Advocate Established 1881 & North Lambton Since 1873
Amalgamated 1924 Published by J.W. Eedy Publications Limited
LORNE EEDY
Publisher
JIM BECKETT
Adsvrtising Manager
BILL BATTEN ROSS HAUGH
Editor Assistant Editor
HARRY DEVRIES •
Composition Manager
•
DICK IONGKIND
Business Manager
Published Each Wednesday Morning at Exeter, Ontario
Second Class Mail Registration Number 0386.
Phone 235-1331
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
Canada $17.00 Per year: U.S.A. $55.00
C.W.N.A., O.C.N.A. CLASS 'A' and 'ABC'
Sacrifice the holiday
There's a movement to drop Remembrance Day
from the list of school holidays. Good idea! But, it
should be dropped as a holiday for everyone now
receiving it.
In recent years, local Remembrance Day services
have been moved to the preceding Sunday and there
isn't anything staged on November 11 for school
children to attend to mark the observance of remem-
brance for those who fought in the great conflicts.
It would be far more meaningful to leave students
A
in school and stage special programs on Remem-
brance Day.
The current practice does nothing to honor those
who paid the supreme sacrifice, nor does it help in any
way to educate those new generations about the torch
that has been passed.
Making people give up the holiday would perhaps
be beneficial in impressing upon them that such a
sacrifice is small indeed in comparison to that which
was made on' their behalf by so many.
Change is warranted
The Exeter PUC have terminated the questionable
practice of extending the grace period for only a por-
tion of their customers who were late in paying
monthly utility bills.
Although the bills clearly state that they must be
paid by the 20th of the month to avoid a penalty, the
practice was to extend the deadline to 11:00 a.m. on
the 21st.
There was obviously no validity in such a move.
Why should someone arriving at 11:00 a.m. be given a
benefit that was not extended to" a customer arriving
with payment at 11:30? Both were clearly beyond the
stated time limit.
The result of bending rules is that they soon have
to be broken. Now the PUC have extended the payment
deadline to the 21st and hopefully the bills will show
this change and the PUC will strictly enforce it to be
equitable with all customers.
Unless the change of date is noted on the bill, the
argument will continue that some customers are being
given preferential treatment by being allowed to pay
one day late, while those who pay two days late are
denied.
The PUC would still be in an untenable position by
having the bill say one thing and the office staff saying
another.
Feeling the pinch
Canadians should have a great deal of sympathy
for the thousands of entrepreneurs operating small
and medium sized businesses that are in financial trou-
ble.
While many bankers, accountants and government
experts suggest mismanagement is the major reason
for business failures, there is little question high in-
terest rates are playing a prominent role.
In a recent survey, for example, the 63,000 -
member Canadian Federation of Independent
Business found 78 percent of respondents had shrink-
ing profits, and 10 percent actually lost money.
Another 32 percent had already laid off workers
when the survey was taken last fall and a full 56 per-
cent said they had curtailed expansion plans because
of the high rates.
But that's not the whole story.
The evidence that small business is in bad trouble
was underscored recently when Ottawa reported
business bankruptcies reached a record 8,055 in 1981,
up an astounding 22 percent over the previous year. In
addition, at least that many companies were placed in
a holding pattern called receivership, and another 8,-
000 or so simply closed up shop.
That's the good news. The bad news from the
economic forecasters is that the situation is gong to
get worse before it gets better`. As more firms go
broke and expansion plans are placed on the back
burner, job creation will grind to a halt. And these
small and medium-sized businesses have been
creating a clear majority of new employment oppor-
tunities for years.
This is why Canadians should have compassion for
entrepreneurs in trouble. Without them, unemploy-
ment would be much, much higher than the one million
people now seeking work.
We'll all become dullards
If all work and no play makes dull peo-
ple, then residents of this area are ob-
viously on the verge of being declared
totally dull.
For four weeks in succession' people •
trudged off to work as usual on Monday
morning and returned faithfully ,through
to Friday, and then just as they were set
'to gear up for a weekend of play, Mother
Naure put an end to their plans.
Most activities from Friday night
through to Sunday night were cancelled,
only to have the weather break in time to
resume normal workingschedules on
Monday morning and hrough to the
following Friday night.
The only people who benefitted
dramatically from the consistent
schedule forced on us by the weather
were members of the clergy, some of
whom didn't have to preach a sermon for
three consecutive weeks.
Given the assumption that they only
work one day in the week to begin with,
it was hardly necessary to bestow such
added benefits on them. However, it may
give rise to speculation that more is pro-
vided through prayer than some would
suggest?
If the weather pattern continues in its
consistent pattern for the balance of the
winter months, some thought should be
given to changing the normal weekly
schedule by putting workingdays on
Saturday and Sunday and aving the
weekend activities staged on Tuesday and
Wednesday.
Winter makes most of us dull enough,
without taking away all the pleasures of
the weekend!
The writer was among the group of 46
Exeter hockey players and parents
stranded in St. Marys by Sunday s blow,
and while intense rivalry always
features any hockey competition
between the two centres, it ended on the
ice and our foes became gracious hosts
for the night.
1
With Police Chief Bruce Cowan direc-
ting affairs, all the players and their
parents were soon settled in for the
night, and judging from the comments on
the bus on the way home most of the
lads who were staying with their adver-
saries found they were actually human
once they got off the ice.
There are some team officials who
don't want players fraternizing with the
opposition! especially during playoff
time, but it is a sad commentary on the
BATT'N
AROUND
with the editor
game when the players can't leave the
ice and have some fellowship together
and enjoy all the' benefits that should ac-
crue through minor hockey.
Have no fear that the local players will
lose their intensity or desire to win when
the playoff series resumes, or that they
will be any more gentle in their body -
checks.
Everyone returned home having made
some new acquaintances and it may just
increase the . rivalry between the two
centres, although it may enjoy the added
benefit of being on a more friendly note.
Players and fans alike will probably find
that it is even more fun.
So, the ill wind may blow some good
again!
While storms tend to curtail the news
events available to cover, it is often
replaced bysome unusual stories that are
uncovered s the community coffee club
meets for prolonged sessions or friends
and neighbors gather to chat while the
wind makes jaunts elsewhere impossible.
The writer doesn't have time to attend
such sessions, but the advertising
manager has provided a couple of tidbits
that readers may find of interest. I can-
not attest to their veracity, other than to
say the informant is, with some excep-
tions, normally reliale.
His first story pertains to an enterpris-
ing student at the local high school, who
apparently disliked regular class atten-
dance and decided to enjoy some holiday
time.
Seems he concocted a story of being in-
volved in a training program as an em-
balmer with a local funeral home, ad-
vising that he may be called out of class
at random to assist whenever a death oc-
curred and required his assistance.
The bluff ended after suspicions were
raised when the enterprising youth ap-
peared to be answering calls through his
premonition of death and not calls for his
assistance over the intercom. A check
with the funeral director ended the
escapade.
The second story is more hair-raising,
although it again involves a large degree
of initiative. A repair man was called to
a honhe to fix an electric stove and was
greeted by an unfriendly dog. After call-
ing off the animal and setting the repair
man to work, the home owner departed.
MI went well, until the repairman at-
tempted to retrieve his shoes. The un-
friendly dog had positioned itself between
the man and his shoes at the doorway and
every movement was greeted with bared
teeth and an unfriendlyrowl.
Finally, the resourceful repairman
managed to inch his way to a nearby
phone and called police to come and help
him out. The police in turn, recruited a
person well known to the canine to com-
plete the rescue and the repairman was
off to his next job...after wiping his swea-
ty palms, it is assumed.
"Then he said he was so happy the car started in this cold he could kiss it."
There was some comic
Looking back over the
last year or so is enough
to give a chap a bit of
depression, to say the
least. about the condition
of the country andthe
world. Let's hope we can
all win a lottery, or a
Nobel prize, or even a
game of bingo, in the year
ahead.
It was a year of the
shooting of a Pope, a
president, and thousands
of less eminent persons.
Fortunately, the two Big
P's survived, but most of
the little ones didn't. •
Despite the, dread
threat of, sanctions,
economic and otherwise,
the Russians are still in
Afghanistan, and it serves
them right. They are fin-
ding it about as easy to
conquer those crazy
Moslems as the Yanks did
to subdue those crazy
Viet Cong communists.
It was a year in which
Poland hit the headlines,
and stayed there, with a
big. black question mark
looming up for 1982.
The Irish, of course,
• kept knocking off each
other with the gay aban-
don that has been their
trademark for years.
In Central and South
America, dictatorships
continued to slaughter
and torture anyone who
disagreed, while the
world looked on calmly,
and in some democracies,
benevolently.
In Canada, things went
from bad to worse. A
massive economic slump
began that is not going to
improve much this year,
according to most
analysts: Inflation
proceeded merrily.
Thousands upon
thousands lost their jobs
as plants closed, small
businesses went bankrupt
under crushing interest
rates. and the same fac-
tor brought to an almost
absolute halt all types of
building and expansion.
But never mind. We
now have an oil company
all of our own, and a
quarter of one in Ontario,
even though the big -
companies are heading
out of Canada for greener
pastures as fast as they
can load up • their equip-
ment.
Despite • the best -laid
plans of all the mice in
ed Forces grew steadily
more pathetic. Personnel
of about 90,000 to defend
one of the largest coun-
tries in the world. More
than half of them not
fighting men, but people
pushing paper around, or
cooking, or doing
something equally
glorious. Practising war-
fare with obsolete
weaponry and low
morale.
Our defence budget is
lowest of any country in -
Sugar
and Spice
Dispensed By SmUey
Ottawa, the massive
national deficit inr
creased, and everyone in
a position to do so, from
town councillors to
M.P.'s, voted himself a
substantial 'increase in
salary.
The bickering and
squabbling and in -fighting
over the patriation of the
constitution revealed 'the
littleness and insukarity
and regionalism of our
country, with everybody
wanting to get his nose
into the trough, but
nobody wanting to pump
the pump or dump the
swill.
This final agreement on
a patchwork constitution
sent Rene Levesque home
in a sulk. Not unusual, but
he was badly shaken
when his own party
dumped on him and
demanded independence
for Quebec.
With the neglect of
years building to a
climax, the Candian Arm -
volved in NATO, with the
exception of Luxemburg.
Maybe we should declare
war on that tiny prin-
cipality, to show the
world that we are still a
proud and gallant nation.
Trouble is, we might get
licked.
And just to top off a
great year, along came
that blackbudgel covered
with whitewash, that
promised more equityin
taxation. For "equiy"
read: the rich stay rich,
the poor stay poor, and
the middle-class get a
punch in the paunch. The
budget is a deliberate in-
vitation to invest in your
country's future.
Let the government do
that for you, with its oil
companies, its hefty aid
to industries that are go-
ing down in the quagmire,
its taxes on everything
but breath. Not death.
Death is taxed.
I could go on for weeks,
but so could anybody else.
relief
Let's turn to the sports
scene for a little comic
relief. Montreal Expos
blew it again.
Ferragamo, the
millionaire quarterback
for Montreal Allouettes,
was a fat flop. And Les
Canadiens were blown out
of Stanley Cup playoffs by
a buncli'of kids from Ed-
monton.
Toronto provided more
comic relief. Once again
it had the worst baseball
team in the pros, the
worst football team In
Canada. and one of the
-.poorest teams ht the
N.H.L.
Again, I could go on. It
was not a bumper year.
But• -there were some
bright spots, and let's
remember them, to cheer
us up at least to the point
where there isn't a
national orgy of
wristslashing.
Like a shining star in
the shoddy charade of the
so-called National
Hockey League was the
performance of Wayne
Gretzky. At 20, he played
with a grace, skill,
finesse and strength that
had even our morbid
sports scribes raving.
Hope he scores a 100
goals and adds some of
his class to the sorry
spectacle pro hockey has
become.
Our skiers had a great
year internationally and
both men and women are
now in the top ranks. Our
swimmers grabbed many
a medal in international
competition.
Finally, let's hear it for
that great junior hockey
team, who put some
tinsel on the year's end by
winning a gold medal and
beating the Europeans at
their own game, and
cleanly.
Dealing with winter woes
During the last mpnth
Southern Ontario has
been hit with a series of
cold days that have set
new records all over the
place as the mercury has
plunged to -20 degrees
and more. Then when you
add a 50 or 60 mile/hour
wind you come up with
startling wind chillfac-
tors.
Here in this part of the
country we tend to forget
the domestic effect that
severe cold can have on a
car, cutting the battery's
efficiency down to about 5
o 10%, making the oil so
thick that it acts like
hardened glue in the
engine, literally paralyz-
ing it.
In the western part of
Canada such
temperatures are
common -place and people
there learn how to deal
with them. •
I can remember one
trip we made out to
Manitoba at March
break. When we drove
through southern
seats in the car • were
frozen as hard as boards.
The icy slush stuck to the
bottom of the car had to
be chipped out with a
Perspectives
By Syd Fletcher
Michigan we hit a rain
storm. That rain froze
into great ruts on the road
which made the car
swerve all over the place,
and then give up. We
stayed in a motel over-
night in Duluth,
Minnesota and came out
in the morning to find
that the temperature had
dropped to -35 degrees. It
was so cold that the vinyl
hammer and screw-
driver in pieces about the
size of a dime. If it hadn't
been chipped out it would
have cut the tires to
shreds.
For us, it .was
something new but the
westerners took that
weather as casually as we
do the heat of summer.
For me, I couldn't believe
that it took my car almost
two days to thaw out in a
heated garage.
All the people who
drive cars there have as a
minimum night protec-
tion a Klock heater. Most
daces of work have plug -
ins for the workers' cars.
It was strange to see all
the plugs in a hospital
parking lot.
My host had a heater
for his battery plus a
heater -fan inside to keep
the ice off the windows,
and of course the block
heater. And to top it off
the car was inside an un-
heated garage. He seem-
ed to have a healthy
respect for winter.
Then again, he thought
nothing of driving 50
miles, one Arctic -like
night, to take us out for
supper.
1 guess it's all in what
you get used to.