Clinton News-Record, 1984-01-18, Page 6•
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Incorporatlng
THE NINTH STANDARD
J. HOWARD AITKEN - Publisher
SHELLEY MCPHEE - Editor
GARY HAIST - Advertising Manager
MARY ANN HOLLENBECK - Office Manager
MEMBER
Molar Adverilsins rotes
available on request. Ask for
mos Carl. No. 11 efhmthre
October 1, 1.1113.
What can the general public do about drinking and driving&
The Ministry of the Attorney General believes that alcohol abuse on the
highways con be reduced •by establishing awareness committees in local'
Imaletter_lo_Clinton counca, the,Attorngt General's office e)5.piatne4thatsjorn-
mittees could- work to reduce drinking and driving accident statistics. Using
ministry resource materials and information from various agencies, the commit-
tees could help to change attitudes and educate people on the tragic endings that
drunk driving can bring.
Many people are finally realizing that drinking and driving does not have to be
an unfortunate fact of life. Through re-education people are learning how to
reduce Canada's number one kilter. Through strict police enforcement drivers are
realizing that those few drinks for the road aren't worth the penalties that must
be paid.
Already the re-education program has begun. Over the Christmas holiday
season the government and Ontario Safety League released thought provoking
media presentations. These television, radio and 'newspaper releases made
many people aware of the dangers of drinking and driving.
Local prevention committees could carry on this work by keeping the problem
in the public eye as a constant reminder.
As Exeter and Strat.hroy have done, student -police discussion groups could be
set-up in an effort to bring about a better understanding and communication
beTWeen- the two graUpST PubtieetThmeetings could -be -held -to -crcidress the -problem --
and alternatives to such familiar activities as gravel running, bar.hopping and
• booze parties could be worked out. •
What can you do about drinking and driving?
•First, allpeople must realize that this unecessary horror concerns them, that
• there is no guarantee that you or I will not be tomorrow's latest statistic.
• The Ontario Safety League believes that support and encourgement of strict
• drunk drivinglaws will help reduce the problem and a personal sense of respon-
sibility will help to keep drinkers off the highways., •
You can start by developing, a greater awareness of your own alcohol 11 -Mita -
tions and by helping to keep your friends from becoming another death statistic.
You can also volunteer your timeor suggestions to Clinton Councilin on effort
to establish and drinking and driving committee in this community. 7 By S. McPhee
• •
Behind The Scenes
By Keith Roulston
Media domination
For a Canadian, ft : impossible to
imagine what it must be like to live in a
• totally dominant culture like the United
. States where nothing matters but what
matters to America.
• Canadians have always been irked bv the
fact that Americans know practically., •
• nothing about our country or the rest of the
world while we knew s� much about their
country. We recently were given a graphic
example of the inward looking American
way oflife. When a minor American political
• ' figure Rev. Jesse Jackson went on a mission
• , to Syria' to get the release of one lone
• American: prisoner of war he was given pro-,
minent 'Coverage on every newscast in the
• United States (and of .course in Canada as
well). Yet when Prime Minister Pierre
. Trudeau visited Washington' as. phrt of his
world-wide peace mission, a mission to try
to save millions of lives from the certain
death of. a nuclear war, American media
either ignored the visit or ridiculed it.
- American influence through the media is
• so powerful that nothing matters unless the
American media pays it does and if the
American media,says it's important, it
immediately becorealniportant around the
world. •
• Other empires throughout history have
had such influence but they've. had to
physically subjugate people to leave their
• mark. . The Americans have remoulded the
world in their image simply throughibodern
communications. For Canadians, living
beside this modern, media giant, more
:dominated by-Americ an-televisioaonovies,
• radio al Magazin-4,A than anyone else iirthe'
world, it can often warp our perceptions of
ourselves. We. start to think that something
isn't important because •the Americans
• haven't thought it was important. Thus the
Trudeau mission lost credibility at home
because the Americans didn't pay attention
and, on a less serious note, Canadian actors,
singers, writers and painters are not con-
sidered important until they leave Canada
and become recognized in the U'S.. . •
This American perception • can go to ex-
tremes that are almost laughable. For in-
stance, when Canadians stormed ashore at
Dieppe in 1942 they tooka handful of
American Rangers with them, the first
Americans to .see action in Europe since
America's belated entry into the war. That
was . all that made the headlines in the U.S.
even though there were only 50 Americans,
and 5,000 Canadians. Look at the records of
air aces of World War One in American
books and you'll think there was only the
great • German Von • Rialithofen and
American Eddie Rickenbacker whose puny
26 kills would not list him among the top
dozens of British, Canadian and French
• fighters. •
The irony is .that this media domination
even ignores huge portions of the United
States: Think now, when you imagine the
United States, what visions do you get?
Chances are the images you have are either
in California or New York. Ainericans living
in Iowa, North and South Dakota, Alas a or
istiti
. any of the other places well out • e the
media centres, might wonder if they . ed in
the same country pottrayed on television, in
the movies or written about in magazines.
Through the power of the media, we have,
actually, a_yv.orld dominated not by the.
• •- perFeptions 'kik of .Aiii—ericankTliiit of • a,
selected group of Americans in New York,
Washington and Los Angeles.
Surely, even the American's cannot benefit
from such a blinkered vision.
."••••
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Hockey horizons built here by Shelley McPhee
Sugar and Spice
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Coping with changes
Next to a death in the family, marriage
breakdown is often the most devaAtating
• crisis a couple may have to face in a
lifetime.
• Often shattering a lifetime of hopes and
dreams, a separation or divorce can trigger
endless emotional, psychological and prac-
tical problems with which many people are
totally unprepared to deal in today's fast -
paced society. -
However, as with all other major changes,
the eicperience may be turned into a positive
one, with endless opportunities for personal
• growth and fulfilment as a human being, op-
portunities which may not have existed
within the framework of a restrictive mar-
• riage. - •
The problems of separation and divorce
will be the major focus of a workshop to be
presented in Clinton on February 1, spon-
sored by Women Today, the self-help and
advocacy group tor Huron County wornen.
Guest speaker will be Nancy McLeod,
counsellor for the Huron Centre for Children
and Youth, a woman who has gained wide
respect in her work with young people and
their families throughout the county.
Topics will include how to decide when to
leave a relationship, surviving the separa-
tion, helping the children through the crisis,
how to avoid marriage breakdown, and op-
portunities for personal growth. Group
discussion will be encouraged, and par-
ticipants will have the opportunity to share
ways in which they have dealt with major
changes in their lives.
The workshop, called "Coping with
-Change"; - will beheld at 730 p.m.,
February 1, at the Wesley -Willis United
Church, 52 Victoria St., Clinton. Admission
is free. For more information, call Women
Today at 482-9706.
Lastember please
January is a trying time. For one thing,
it's so dang sudden. There you are, tottering
along a day at a time,thinking you must get
the snow tires and storms on one of these
Saturdays, and throw some firewood into
the cellar, and get some boots and replace
the gloves you lost last March.
And then— bang! — you look out one mor-
ning, and there's January, in all it's
unglory: a bitter east wind driving snow,
and a cold chill settles in the very bones of
your soul.
Winter, wind as sharp,as a witch's tooth
sneaks in around uncaulked doors and win-
dows. There's a terrible draught from under
the basement door. You investigate and find
one of the basement Windows has been
• blown in_and smashed on the woodpile. You
clamber up over the wood, knocking pieces
off shins and knuckles, and jam some card-
board in the gap..
Creep cautiously outside, and nearly bust
your bum. There's ice under that thar snow.
Make it to the garage, and find that your car
doors are all frozen solid shut. Beat them
with your bare fists until the latter are
bleeding and your car is full of dents. Final-
ly get them open with a bucket of hot water,
and a barrel of hotter language.
Slither and grease your- way to work, ar-
riving in a foul mood and with bare hands
crippled into claws, bootless feet cold as a
witch's other appendage.
• Come out of work to go home and find a
half-inch of frozen rain and snow covering
your car, and no sign of your scraper, and
• another deep dent where some idiot slid into
your car door on the parking lot •
By Bill Smil
I could go on and on, but it's only
salt in the wounds of the average Canadian.
Get home from work and find that the fur-
nace is on the blink, and the repairman is
tied up for the next two days:
• Surely there is 'some way around this sud-
deness of January. Is there not some far-
seeing 'politician (if that is not a contradic-
tion in terms), who would introduce a bill to .
provide for an extra • month between, let's
say, Nov. 25 and Dec. 5? • . • .
rwoUldn't care wheelie called it. It could
,tnig„Lasteniber,- referring. to, your fast -dying
hope that there wouldn't be. a. winter this .
year. Or Last Call, or Final Warning, or
She's Aconiiii! Anything that gave us a good
jolt. •
. •
• It would be a good thing for merchants. _.
They could have special Lastember sales of
gloves and. boots and snow tires • and ear
muffs and caulking guns and weather strip-
ping and antifreeze and nose -warmers. •
• It would be great for the .Post Office,
which could start warning us in June that all
Christmas mail. must be posted by,the first
day of Lastember if we wanted it delivered
before the following June.
It would make a nice talking point for all
those deserters and traitors and rich people
who go south every year. Instead of smirk-
ing, "Oh, we're not going south until Boxing
• Day. Hate to miss, an old-fashioned Caua-
dian Christmas,'' they could really shove it
to us by leering, "Yes, we thought we'd wait
this year until the last day of Lastember,
'you -know. Avoid the pushing and vulgarity
' of the holiday rush." ,
If nothing. else, it would give us a break
ieidoscope
from the massive nauseating volume of pre -
Christmas advertising, which begins toward
the • end of October Mid continues,
remorselessly, right into Christmas Day.
Best of all, perhaps it would give dummies
like me a chanceto avoid looking like such a
. duinmy. Procrastinators, who flourish dur-
ing a sunny November, would have no more
' excuses. All their Wives would have to di) is
point to the calendar and"say: "bo you
realize it's only three days until Lastember.
Isn't it time you did your Lastember
chores?" •,
In fact, if that fearless politician who *
going.to introduce the Lastember Bill in the
house wants some advice, here is a codicil
for him. Soniewhere inthe Bill should be the
warning, in bold type:. "Procrastinators will
be, -Prosecuted! Jeez, why not? Theynpre-
secute you foreverything else!
If such a month were added to the calen-
dar— maybe we could ,start it with Grey
Cup Day — people . like me wouldn't go on
• thinking that Christmas is weeks away.
Instead, • on the last day of Lastember,
with all their winter chores An hand, they'd
know that Christmas was practically on top
of them,. like a big; old horse blanket, and
the,7-'d leap into theproper spirit, lining up a
Christmas tree, laying in their booze, t
ing.up their pipes for the carols.
As it is now,we know that Chris
like a mirage. It's way off their som where,
and no need topam ....D'hen, with t sta
ing Suddenness, it er.-22., all e
Christmas trees have been bought, the y
• remaining turkeys look like vultuna, • d
the liquor store is bedlatn. Who's for
Lastember? •
s
Perhaps people are using more sense
when it comes to drinking and driving. Over
the Christmas holiday season Clinton Police
Chief Lloyd Westlake reported fewer cases
of drunk driving.
It's a fact that most people do drink. Ac-
cording to the Ontario Safety League seven
out of 10 Canadians do indulge. However
with a little extra thought and responsiblity
it is possible to avoid drinking and driving.
Party hosts should be prepared to look
aftertheir guests, even if they do have a few
too Many.- By. Offeritig 164- non4itolialle
drinks, a ride home or a place to spend the
night, hosts can show the true sprit of
hospitality and caring for their fyiends and
other people on the road.
For some, pub crawls or bar _hopping is a
fun wayto spend a Friday night. In this area
a typical pub crawl can involve quite a few
miles, from the Blyth Inn to the Duke, from
the Elm Haven to the Queen's, but drinking
and driving still can be avoided.
Some bar hoppers are already taking
positive action to reduce drunk drivers, by
choosing a sober driver to transport "the
gang" from bar to bar. The sober driver
position rotates on- each excursion, thus
allowing everyone a chance to get ham-
mered at some point and at the same time
making sure that they and other drivers all
remain alive.
Recently one young mother told me that
already she worries about „gravel runs,
booze parties and the tragedies that can
result. If and when the time comes, she
hopes to be aware that her children may be
drinking and she will encourage them to in-
vite their friends to spend Friday nights at
home, with their- beercontained to the rec
room.
What are your thoughts on drinking and
driving? Are you aware and are yOu con-
cerned?
By Shelley McPhee
My alternative to drinking and driving is
basic, I'm always willing to offer.overnight.
accommodation and make sure I have my
tooth brush and room pre -booked at a
friend's house if I'm out for the night.
+ + +
Driving in winter can be treacherous even
whenyou're, "sober as a judge."
Turning or changing lanes can be real
tricky when it's- Slippery. One afternoon,
• when snow banks were particularly high in
Iowa 'opted tO'hnlymalte right-handtnrn,si
but sCiiiii found this theround 'abu't 'wttf
get anywhere.
The best way to drive in winter is simply
to take it easy and forget my theory about
avoiding left turns.
A commerial driver with years of ex-
perieft told people to drive the same way
they would walk on an icy sidewalk. .
"Slowly put each foot down firmly and
When you turn go even slower, sort of edging
around, pointing your feet a little more with
each step.".
+++
Arie Verhoef, an employee with the Clin-
ton Public Works crew did some unexpected
winter driving at Christmas.
In the Clvistnia§that almost wasn't, Arie
was on call for the town. He received a plea
of assistance from Huronvlew to help
transport staff members to and from the
h o urns ndgu rthei n
tothwne slUritracni and with permission
from the clerk and the OPP, Arie managed
to safely transport staff members. His ef-
forts earned him a vote of appreciation from
Huronview and fro+m Tet -'town. ..
In recent guitar examinations, local 'must-
cians,tstudents of Paulflevenson earned top
honors.
Darryl Levis was given the highest stan-
Have your say
Dear Editor
Marmalade light
Dail' Editor: .
On the assumption that my opinion will be
shared by at least some other people in
-town, I would like to comment on the.plan to
replace the present street lights with.
sodium lights.
Considering the cost of purchase and in-
stallation of the new, and the removal and
disposalof the old, the eventual saving on •
electricity with sodium lights will surely not .
amount to much. But what you get for your, •
money with sodium .is a radical departure
frem,the nOili;141 wit e light te•which our vi-
sion.and theseeing,,of colours is by. nature
adjusted.
Merchants who display goods in their win-,
dows might well consider the effect of. the
orange -pink sodium light on the colour -
fidelity of their merchandise. The main.. -
street of Exeter is illuminated by sodium •
lights, and to my mind the effect is to pre-
sent life as seen from the inside of a jar of
. orange marmalade: .
Why have orange -pink light when,you can
have white light? It is like rushing out to buy
a grass retardant that will forever end the
expense of maring the lawn only to findthat
this wonderful product has a minor side-
effect: it turns the grasspermanently
orange!
• Perhaps the plan to have sodium is an im-
• pulse to be as modern as Goderich and Ex- •
• eter. Some • ambition! Why don't we buy
their old • fluorescents, install them where
more light may be needed, and let Clinton be
an island of white light in a developing sea of
nightly marmalade. And probably. save, a
good bit of money at the same time. •
Sincerely,
Gerry Fremlin.
ding with first class honors. Also receiving
first class honors were Jeff Hoelscher,
Dwight Caldwell, Donny Dale, Holly and
Chris Reeves. Mary Ann Pickett earned a
pass standing.
+ + +
Euchre continues to be a favorite winter
pastime in this area.
On Jan. 11 there were eight tables in play
at the Knights of Columbus match, held at
St. Joseph's Church. Winners were: ladies'
high, . .Margaret men's high, The recent -legal fnahtfetiVre byr ManjtotNi -
Flynn; men's lone hands, Mike Moriarty;
ladies' low, Eva Etzler; men's low, Ida
Wright; lucky chair, Olive Goldsworthy;
door prize, Henry Klaver.
Right To Life
WINGHAM - Notwithstanding the
numerous projects successfully completed
by the Wingham Voice for Life group in 1983,
President John van den Assem's assess-
ment of the situation as a whole, i.e. in North
America, was less that optimistic.
At the present time, the group feels that
anti -life forces are very powerful. Evidence
of an ever-increasing disrespect for life is
seen in a new law, recently proposed in the
United States. If adopted, it would allow ex-
perimentation with unborn babies. Recent-
ly, aborted babies were found in a storage
area in Los Angeles. As burial was not per-
rnitted, the babies were destroyed by fire as
"fetal tissue".
•
iloytt Stftart-', lone— hands, Rita ''''IttortieSrGerieral, -Roland Penne ;WAS also • '
deplored by the group. In the original hear-
ing, held in October, 1983 to consider
charges against Henry Morgentaler, Dr.
Morgentaler was accused of conspiracy to
procure a miscarriage. Dr. Morgentaler,
although attempting to set up abortion
clinics in Manitoba, as be has done suc-
cessfully in Montreal, had not actually per-
formed an abortion in Manitoba. Thus the
Attorney -General's re -wording of the
charge aginst Dr. Morgentaler to read:
"procurement" of an abortion (instead of
merely conspiracy) plays into the hands of
his defence. The trial is to be held in
February.
On May 2, the Wingham Voice for Life
chapter will celebrate its tenth anniversary.
Dr. Hart Besner has been suggested as a
possible speaker. Instrumental in founding
the group, he is a physicist at Sir Wilfrid
Laurier University.
Alliance, for Life will hold its annual (na-
tional) meeting this year in Hamilton. The
meeting, to be held -during the second week
in July, may feature Mr. Borowski as a
guest speaker. Mr. Borowski, a former
member of the Manitoba cabinet, is
challenging the constitutionality of laws
allowing abortion, as they stand in conflict
with the basic "right to life".
+++
Winners at the Jan. 13 card party in Sum-
merhill were: ladies' high, Lorna Ellis;
men's high, Bill Gibbings ; ladies' lone
hands, Marianne Colclough; men's lone
hands, Keith Tyndall; ladies' low, Vera Gib-
bings; men's low, Grant Snell.
Door prize winners were Earl Blake, John
Lions and George Colclough.
+++
Katimavik still needs your help. Already
many local people have already donated to
the youth group, but still some furniture and
utensils are needed.
The Clinton group is looking for living
room furniture, especially chairs, tables
and a couch if possible. They could also use
some lamps, any kind of paint and shelving
units for bedrooms. Kitchen utensils, such
as baking pans, large 'bowls, pots and serv-
ing spoons could alSo be used.
If you can help, please call Katirnavik co-
ordinator Michelle Leigh at 482-3960.
They have a big house to fill over their on
High Street and every donation vvilthelp.