The record, 20 juillet 1982, mardi 20 juillet 1982
Tuesday Hydro lines Ste-Edwidge is planning an information meeting on the Hydro export lines, but they don’t know whether Hydro officials will be there or not/3 Expos The Expos fell to four games out of first place after dropping a 2-1 decision to the Los Angeles Dodgers last night/10 Births, deaths .7 Business.5 Classified.8 Comics .9 Editorial .4 Living.^ Sports.10 My country doesn't understand me.” Relief Weather, page 2 Sherbrooke, Tuesday, July 20, 1982 20 cents Controversy at BU over profs’ non-raises By Michael McDevitt LENNOXVILLE - There’s a controversy brewing at Bishop’s University between faculty and administration, and both sides appear to be telling different stories.According to Professor Bill Shearson, the president of the Association of Professors of Bishop’s University (APBU), the trouble started on July 1 when the University failed to come up with pay raises that were called for by the collective agreement between the two parties.Shearson says the university made its decision to hold back the pay increases unilaterally, and never discussed it with the union.Shearson says that this was a clear violation of the collective agreement.Speaking on behalf of the University, Comptroller Jean-Luc Grégoire, says the school was only following the directives of Bill 70, the recently-passed provincial law aimed at taking back pay increases to public and para-public employees.Grégoire also says See ADMIN Page 3 N.B., Que.i reactors step closer to production OTTAWA (CP) — Controversial and troubled nuclear reactors in New Brunswick and Quebec came a step closer to production Monday with approval of initial operating licences from the Atomic Energy Control Board.The board ruled that a reactor at Point Lepreau, N.B., may reach minimum operating levels as early as today.But it said a reactor near Trois Rivieres, Que., must wait until its owners hire more supervisory staff and operators.The federal nuclear regulatory agency last issued an operating licence in 1976 for an Ontario Hydro reactor near Kincardine, Ont.Monday’s decision brings to 13 the number of power reactors licensed to operate in Canada.But neither the Hydro Quebec plant nor the New Brunswick electric power commission site will be able to swing into full production for at least several months, a board spokesman said.Both must gradually build up their power capacity, with board approval needed at each of five more stages, the spokesman said.The Quebec and New Brunswick Candu reactors took years to reach this minimum operation stage.The plant, called Gentilly 2, has suffered serious construction difficulties.A reactor approved earlier at the same site — Gentilly 1 — has been permanently mothballed due to con-, struction problems.At Point Lepreau, the reactor was originally expected to cost $468 million, but mushroomed to $1.4 billion as the government and the electric commission were condemned for mismanagement.Last year, two heavy water storage tanks at the Lepreau reactor site buckled because of bungling by workers putting in air valves.Much of the power from the New Brunswick reactor will be exported to United States markets because demand is down in Canada.The slump has lowered uranium prices and turned many provincial governments toward hydroelectricity for development of immediate power needs.a 4 Iraq rolling on as Syria blamed for week’s fight Beating the heat RECORD/PERRY BEATON There were only a few ways to beat the heat yesterday — either stay in the air-conditioned office if you were fortunate enough to have one or get right out there and enjoy it as these North Hatley residents did.The best is yet to come — cooler but sunny weather will be with us today and tomorrow.Micmacs suing Quebec, Ottawa Gentilly II.ready to go QUEBEC (CP) - The Micmac Indian band at Restigouche in eastern Quebec announced Monday they are suing the federal and provincial governments for $1,370,540 in alleged damages arising from police raids on the reserve last year.On June 11 last year after negotiations on salmon fishing quotas broke down between the Restigouche band and the provincial government, Quebec provincial police came to the reserve to seize fishing nets and arrested 11 men.There was a second raid June 20, 1981.The suits, which have been filed with Quebec Superior Court, are in the name of the 1,600 band members.In addition to the two governments, Quebec Justice Minister Marc-Andre Bedard and Lucien Lessard, minister of fish and game, as well as officials of their departments are named as defendants.A report prepared for the National Indian Brotherhood was used to draw up the suits.The report alleged that police roughed up Indians, called them "savages” and urinated in public during the first raid.A spokesman for the Mouvement québécois pour combattre le racisme, which is supporting the suits, said the Micmacs also allege that by sending between 300 and 500 riot-equipped police on to the reserve, the Quebec government had resorted to “excessive force.” The federal government is named in the suit because the nets seized were taken in the name of the Queen During the June 11 raid, nets in the Restigouche River were confiscated and Quebec fisheries officials came on reserve land to take other nets The men arrested were charged with obstructing the police and resisting arrest.After a court appearance their case was postponed indefinitely.Police did not enter the reserve in the second raid, but blocked the entrances to the reserve and erected a sand-bag barricade on the interprovincial bridge connecting Restigouche with Camp-bellton, N.B.Assisted by two helicopters, an airplane and an armored tug, police and Quebec fisheries officials seized and destroyed Micmac salmon nets.There were no arrests during the second raid but police fired tear-gas cannisters.It is also that alleged rubber bullets were used.Reporters who approached police lines during the raid were warned: "Stop or we’ll shoot.” Despite the raids the Micmacs continued to fish salmon and the police did not make good their threats to raid the reserve again.This summer the Micmacs and the government came to an agreement on salmon quotas, although disputes over salmon fishing between Quebec and the Montagnais Indians on the north shore of the St.I^iwrence River continue.Earlier this month a town bordering on the reserve was the site of a fatal car accident which occurred after a brawl between groups of Indians and local whites.Among those killed in the accident was the owner of a nearby bar which was the scene of racial confrontations during the salmon fishing conflict.Iraqblamed Syria on Monday for the week-long fighting between Iraqi an Iranian forces and Baghdad claimed it had regained control of the southern front in the war after a series of counterattacks against the Iranians that left “thousands of enemy corpses littering the battleground.” But Iran insisted that its troops were consolidating their positions on Iraqi soil and preparing to “eliminate the enemy forces.” Iraqi Vice-Premier Taha Yassin Ramadan said Syria had sent its aircraft over northern Iraq at the time Iranian forces were pouring into Iraq on July 13 and 14 “to relieve the Iranian front.” Ramadan told a news confrence in Baghdad after visits to Saudi Arabia and Kuwait that had the Iranian invasion succeeded, Tehran would have launched “a big operation to destabilize the (Persian) Gulf countries.” Ramadan also accused Syria of being "the ally of the United States and Israel in Lebanon, against the Palestinians and the Lebanese.” In the complicated politics of Arab states in the Middle East, Syria is considered a staunch ally of Iran while Iraq is allied to Arab moderates such as Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Jordan.All Arab states, however, are opposed to Israeli’s invasion of Lebanon ostensibly to drive the Palestine Liberation Organization out of Lebanon.In Geneva Iran lashed out Monday at a United Nations committee reviewing its human rights record, declaring human rights a myth and describing as insignificant the number of people executed since the Islamic revolution.Tehran’s ambassador to the Vatican, angrily responding to tough questions put to him last week by the UN Human Rights Committee, accused the 18-member body of twisting the facts about the situation in his country.“What on earth gives you the right to ask us any questions?” Hojatoleslam Seyyed Hadi Khosroshahi, a cleric, asked the committee.“Our people have decided to remain free, independent and Islamic and not be fooled by the imperialist myth of human rights.” As for mass executions that com- Whelan won’t ask CDC’s Choquette for resignation Starving natives ‘subtle genocide’ REGINA (CP) — A festive opening of the World Assembly of First Nations was overshadowed Monday by a reminder from a 61-year-old chief that indigenous people are struggling to survive around the world.“Indian people in North, South and Central America are being oppressed by governments,” said George Manual of the Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs.Natives living in Canada and the U.S., he said, are subtly being oppressed.“When you find 90 per cent of our Indian people in Canada who are on welfare — people who are starving in a very rich country, Canada — is to me a form of subtle genocide,” said the chief, who helped establish the World Council of Indigenous People in 1975.Native problems in the U.S.are similar to those in Canada, Manual said, noting the situation is dramatically different in other countries, In South Africa four million whites govern 16 million blacks, while the 12 million Indians who live in Peru don’t have the right to vote and have no involvement in government, he said.Manual’s hard-hitting talk received warm applause from the crowd which had dwindled to about 500 people at the Agridome, home of Regina Pats of the junior Western Hockey League.During the peak of the opening ceremonies for the week-long conference, more than 1,500 people watched colorful performances by a barechested Navajo dancer from the U.S., Sami singers from Norway and a Bolivian instrumental troupe.Manual accused the Canadian government of helping the Chilean regime liquidate Apuche Indians by not stopping helicopter sales to the South American country.He said that under a 1979 decree signed by president Augusto Pinochet the government of Chile would “terminate, assimilate and exterminate” the Indian tribe.The seven million Indians in Guatemala are also being exterminated by a military junta, Manual said.“They are using the same techniques the Nazis used on the Jews.” The chief didn’t elaborate, but added the Guatemalan government is torturing Indians who try to defend their aboriginal rights.Manual attacked the U.S.and Canadian governments for not recognizing Indian land claims.OTTAWA (CP) — Agriculture Minister Eugene Whelan refused a New Democrat suggestion Monday to ask the head of the Canadian Dairy Commission to resign while the RCMP investigates the commission’s marketing practices.Whelan rushed to the defence of his former executive assistant Gilles Choquette, commission chairman since 1976, telling the Commons no one should be condemned or fired until proven guilty.“The inquiry will go on, and if there is any wrongdoing then those who are guilty should be penalized,” the minister said.“That is the procedure I am following on legal advice.” Whelan called in the RCMP after receiving a report from Auditor General Kenneth Dye listing examples of “profoundly disturbing practices,” including alleged favoritism by the commission in extending financial assistance, free trips and accommodation for senior commission employees and virtual giveaways of hundreds of tonnes of dairy products.New Democrat agriculture critic Stan Hovdebo accused Whelan of sitting on the report for 2'-a months before asking the RCMP to clear the air, but Whelan said the police were contacted soon after he received the report in late May.Hovdebo, MP for the Saskatchewan riding of Prince Albert, urged that the auditor general’s report be referred to the Commons public accounts committee for study.The commission administers federal dairy policy, controls industrial milk production of Canada’s 50,000 dairy farmers, administers levies collected from the farmers and distributes about $278 million in subsidies annually.lugene resign.H he/an.C IK head won't mittee members had asked about, the head of the six-man Iranian delegation dismissed the dead as murderers and other corrupt elements whose number was insignificant compared with the 150,000 who, he said, were killed during the 18th-century French Revolution.The human rights organization Amnesty International says more than 4,400 people have been executed in Iran since the 1979 Islamic revolution in which the late shah was ousted.“If it were not for Islamic clemency and tolerance, how many agents of the former regime would have been executed?” he asked the committee, which periodically reviews application of the international covenant on civil and political rights.“If our people — after offering 70,000 martyrs and 100,000 crippled (in the Islamic revolution) — were the avenging type, they would have made rivers run with blood.” QUESTIONED VALUE He also questioned the value of UN inquiries when the former shah’s sister often headed Iran’s delegation to the UN Human Rights Commission and once chaired its plenary meeting.The ambassador, who almost walked out of Thursday’s session, then praised the Soviet and East German committee members whose questions centred on the Iranian legal system rather than other issues.U.S.meeting key to end Beirut siege The focus of diplomatic efforts to end Israel’s siege of West Beirut swung to Washington with hopes pinned on a meeting today between U.S.President Reagan and the foreign ministers of Syria and Saudi Arabia.Despite occasional flare-ups, a ceasefire between Israeli forces and the Palestine Liberation Organization guerrillas they have trapped in the western part of the Lebanese capital remained intact.Both sides refrained from major artillery assaults while awaiting the outcome of the crucial Washington meeting.Israeli leaders stressed Monday that PLO guerrillas must leave Lebanon but said there is still hope for a peaceful outcome of the siege of West Beirut.Israeli Defence Minister Ariel Sharon met U.S.presidential envoy Philip Habib near the encircled city to discuss Israeli concern over lack of progress in talks to obtain a peaceful evacuation by the PLO."We still hope that a peaceful solution can be found and we are doing everything to achieve this," Sharon said later.Sharon's words were echoed by Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir, who told the Israeli parliament in Jerusalem: "There is still hope that a peaceful settlement will be found.But the terrorists must understand .they will have to get out of Lebanon.” In a speech to ex-servicemen, meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin said PLO leader Yasser Arafat is simply posturing “and it won’t take long before we will eliminate him.” Reagan is to meet Syrian Foreign Minister Abdel-Halim Khaddam and the Saudi Arabian foreign minister, Prince Saud Al-Faisal, at the White House today for talks on the Lebanese crisis.STOPS SHIPMENT In advance of the talks, Reagan stopped the shipment of U.S.cluster-bomb ammunition and parts to Israel while he reviews the Jewish state’s use of the devastating weapons in l>ebanon.And U.S.State Secretary George Shultz scheduled a Monday Washington meeting with the visiting foreign ministers to discuss the impasse over the negotiations to evacuate the PLO, t I 2—The RECORD—Tuesday, July 20,1982 Palace prowler won’t be prosecuted; guard resigns over incident LONDON (CP) — The government announced Monday that Buckingham Palace intruder Michael Fagan would not be prosecuted for sneaking into Queen Elizabeth’s bedroom, and in a raucous court appearance the prowler shouted that the monarch’s name must not be besmirched.Crown prosecutor Stephen Wooler announced three other charges against Fagan — including an earlier palace break-in — but said there was “no evidence” to support criminal charges against the 31-year-old drifter for carrying out the biggest breach of palace security in modern history.Within hours of the hearing, a new facet of the scandal emerged when it was announced in Parliament that the Queen’s personal bodyguard, police Commander Michael Trestrail, had resigned from the force after acknowledging a homosexual relationship with a male prostitute.The break-in and reports of police blundering prompted a top-level Scotland Yard investigation of palace security.EXPLAINS DECISION Explaining the decision not to prosecute Fagan for invading the Queen's bedroom July 9, Wooler said: “The director (of public prosecutions) has considered the evidence and takes the view that there is no evidence of any state of mind of this defendant which would render his trespass a criminal offence, and he proposes to bring no charge.” Trespassing is a civil, not criminal, offence in Britain.However, Fagan was charged with breaking into the palace June 7 and stealing a half-bottle of wine.He also was charged with stealing a car June 16 and assaulting his 13-year-old stepson on June 26.Bow Street Magistrates Court ordered Fagan held in custody for later trial at London’s Old Bailey Central Criminal Court.Bail was denied.In a loud courtroom appearance, Fagan, shoeless in the dock, yeUed at his lawyer and claimed to be the son of Nazi war criminal Rudolf Hess.Hess has been imprisoned since he flew from Germany to Britain in 1941.In court, Fagan lashed out at his lawyer, Maurice Nadeem, when the lawyer said the charges under consideration were unrelated “to the later incident when my client was in the Queen’s bedroom.” DON’T MENTION QUEEN “I told you not to mention anything about the Queen’s bedroom!” Fagan shouted."I don’t want her brought into it! I would rather plead guilty than have her name mentioned in court!” Nadeem told the court Fagan was “an unbalanced young man” with “severe domestic problems.” Wooler said the first palace break-in “was one of a series of irrational acts on his part connected with a deterioration in his matrimonial situation." Fagan entered the palace on the morning of July 9 by scaling a drainpipe and pulling aside wire mesh on a window intended to keep pigeons out, said published reports confirmed by the government.The reports said he slipped into the Queen’s bedroom and sat on her bed, chatting with her about his personal problems for about 10 minutes, before a startled chambermaid arrived and summoned a, footman.Woman falls to her death during Reds ball game News-in-brief Summer theatre popular in Que.Clark attacks Feds’ request Citizens army formed in Jordan CINCINNATI (AP) - A 21-year-old woman fell to her death from the upper deck of Riverfront Stadium during a Cincinnati Reds baseball game Monday night.The Hamilton County coroner’s office identified the dead woman as Lora Schneeman, 21, of suburban Montgomery.She was pronounced dead at hospital Monday night with severe head injuries.Schneeman made a “head-first dive” from the red level during the third inning of the Reds’ 5-4 National League to Pittsburgh Pirates, said a Reds’ spokesman.She landed in the first row of the green deck of seats, some 10 metres below.Paramedic Clay Cornish said she didn’t land on anyone.“She apparently had been drinking and left behind a container of liquor,” said Reds spokesman Jim Ferguson, The woes of who said the information came from fans who were interviewed about the incident.The woman lay on the concrete for several minutes while unsuccessful efforts were made to restore her heartbeat.Cornish said two doctors who had apparently been sitting nearby were trying to revive Schneeman when the rescue squad arrived shortly before 9 p.m.EDT.“She had massive head trauma and no vitals (vital signs),” Cornish said.The woman was removed from the stands on a stretcher.The ballgame continued uninterrupted, although the Pirates left their seats in the dugout to look back at the scene during a pitching change while doctors were working on the woman.The fall occurred in an area behind the visitors’ dugout.being Gucci: Paolo’s suing family MONTREAL (CP) — Demand for summer theatre in Quebec appears to be growing despite the proliferation of summer stock companies and the financial risks involved, says Manoir Richelieu summer theatre director Yvon Dufour.With about 40 summer theatres operating in the province this season — nine out of 10 of them unsubsidized — Dufour says the demand is still growing.Marjolaine Hebert, director of Theatre de la Marjolaine in the Eastern Townships, agrees with Dufour.“We have 20 per cent more theatregoers this year than last.” Gourd will push for artists MONTREAL (CP) — Liberal MP Robert Gourd said Monday he’ll push for a national authors’ royalties board for songwriters.Gourd, chairman of the House of Commons communications and culture committee and MP for the western Quebec riding of Argenteuil, said at a news conference that after talking with a number of artists “one realizes the frightening (financial) loss to creators, especially the small ones.” Gourd said he hopes members of the arts community, rather than civil servants, would be included on any federal board.Mtl.will pay sculptor $15,000 NEW YORK ( AP) - Paolo Gucci has filed suit against five of his relatives, alleging that they harassed him, withheld his salary and physically attacked him at a board meeting of the family-owned high fashion designers, Gucci Shops Inc.Gucci, vice-president of Gucci Shops, asked for $13.3 million U.S.in damages in the suit filed Monday in state court against his father Aldo, brothers Giorgio and Roberto, cousin Maurizio and uncle Rodolfo.Paolo Gucci, 51, left the company in 1980 because of “business disagreements” to become an independent designer, said his lawyer, Stuart Speiser.He returned in February, 1982, as vice-president at a yearly salary of $180,000.The suit alleges the family rehired him as a “ploy” to “harass and humiliate him.” The designer says his relatives told company employees not to obey him and advised customers that he had no authority to transact business.The suit says Gucci’s relatives gave him no staff or office and withheld his salary and business expenses.Gucci also charged that at a board meeting in Florence on July 16, Roberto, Giorgio and Maurizio assaulted, battered and beat the plaintiff.When he took out a tape recorder to record the meeting, because he was not allowed to see minutes, said Speiser, the three “pushed it into his face” and punched and kicked him.A spokesman for Gucci Shops, Abbye Hamra, said the family was in Florence and unavailable for comment.Speiser said that Paolo Gucci was also in Florence “under a doctor’s care.” Preservationists quit Alligator Alley deer shoot THE EVERGLADES, Fla.(AP) -Animal preservationists, dispirited after accidentally crushing a young buck, abandoned efforts Monday to relocate starving Everglades deer as hunters thinned the herd for a second day.At least 650 does, small bucks and fawns had been killed by noon EDT Monday on the south side of the Alligator Alley highway.The preservationists, working on the north side of the road under a court settlement, were able to capture only 18 of the deer, which are starving because high water has covered their food.Weather Becoming sunny this morning.Sunny tomorrow.High both days, 26, low tonight, 12.The Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission had hoped that 1,500 deer would be taken from the 125,460-hectare (310,000-acre) southern tract, but officials said Monday they would be pleased if the flood-imperiled herd of 4,000 was reduced by 1,000.One hunter was cited Monday for bagging an oversized buck, the first such incident of the hunt.Hunters were warned to shoot only deer with four-pointed antlers or less.The buck confiscated Monday had six points.MAKES DEAL In a deal made late Saturday after a federal judge dissolved an injunction blocking the hunt, the anti-hunt forces had until noon EDT today to rescue 100 deer from the 76,900-hectare (190,000-acre) northern tract to support their contention that relocation could be used to thin an overpopulated herd.The anti-hunt forces gave up after a deer was killed when run over by a rescue team’s airboat.“Go home, we’re finished,” Cleveland Amory, a leader of the Fund For Animals, told some 50 volunteers.—_____fagl KBC0X11 George MacLaren, Publisher .569 9511 Charles Bury, Editor 569 6345 Lloyd G.Scheib, Advertising Manager 569 9525 Mark Guillette, Press Superintendent 569 9931 Richard Lessard, Production Manager .569 9931 Debra Waite, Superintendent, Composing Room CIRCULATION DEPT.-569 9528 Subscriptions by Carrier: 1 vear $65.00 569 4856 weekly: $1.25 Subscriptions by Mail : Canada: 1 year $49.00 6 months $28.00 Smooths $19.00 1 month $11.50 U.S.& Foreign: 1 year $88 00 6 months $5100 3 months $32.00 Back copies of The Record are avail able at the following prices: Copies ordered within a month of publica tion: ,50c per copy.Copies ordered more than a month after publica tion: $1.00 per copy.Established February 9, 1897, incorporating the Sherbrooke Gazette (est.1837) and the Sherbrooke Examiner (est.1879).Published Monday to Friday by Townships Communications Inc./Communi cations des Cantons, Inc., Offices and plant located at 2850 Delorme Street, Sherbrooke, Quebec, J1K 1A1.Second class registration number 1064.Member of Canadian Press Member of the Audi4 Bureau of Circulations MONTREAL (CP) — The City of Montreal was ordered to pay $15,000 to a Quebec sculptor for allowing three wood sculptures he loaned the city to fall apart.Quebec Superior Court Justice Samuel Bard said the city should have respected an agreement with artist Robert Roussil and advised him that his works were deteriorating.Roussil recently returned to Quebec after living in France for 25 years.Three sexual assaulters sought MONTREAL (CP) — Police are looking for at least three men who have sexually assaulted young girls in the last few weeks.One man sent two girls to the store, then raped and beat them when they returned with his merchandise.Another man is being sought for breaking into an apartment and assaulting a five-year-old while the child’s guardian was asleep in another room.Police are alos seeking a third man who donned a hood before he kidnapped a 12-year-old girl in a park, and abused her at knifepoint in a wooded area.Drapeau’s 1st vacation in years MONTREAL (CP) — Mayor Jean Drapeau, hospitalized after suffering a stroke last Thursday that left him partially paralysed, is taking his first vacation in 25 years, the mayor’s right-hand man told reporters Monday.Yvon Lamarre, chairman of the city’s executive committee, broke a five-day silence on Drapeau's sudden entry into hospital last week, saying in a news release that the 66-year-old mayor had suffered “an unaccustomed malaise” Thursday morning.Summer French program a flop MONTREAL (CP) — A plan to attract children illegally enrolled in English-language schools to summer French school has been a flop, a spokesman for the Montreal Catholic School Commission said Monday.Robert Attar, who heads the board’s welcoming classes, said promotion of the summer courses for children illegally enrolled in English schools hasn’t attracted any new students.Jewish charity to Lebanon MONTREAL (CP) — For the past week, young Vietnamese refugees, Boy Scouts, have been working for the B’nai B’rith Jewish charity preparing cases of food and clothing for Lebanese refugees displaced by the Israeli invasion of Lebanon.“We’re doing it because there’s a need," says B’nai B’rith regional president Leon Graub.“The fact that we’re Jewish shouldn’t stop us from helping.We’re faced with an unhappy situation and we hope to ease the distress of the victims.” Mirabel victims to get hearing QUEBEC (CP) — Quebec Agriculture Minister Jean Garon has called on individuals and groups who believe they were victimized by Ottawa's expropriation of land for Mirabel International Airport, to submit briefs to his department for a national assembly hearing into the matter.Garon said in a news release Monday that the goal of the hearings is to allow those “who have been living like dispossessed persons in their own village" to explain what they have gone through and help Quebec learn why 97,000 acres were expropriated for the airport 13 years ago when only 17,000 acres were needed.Garon added that the federal government has adopted a “feudal” attitude in its plan to return some of the unused land to the farmers.CTC should stay out of battle OTTAWA (CP) — The federal government says the Canadian Transport Commission should stay out of the airline pricing battle and let carriers decide whether to offer low-priced flights.In a harshly-worded brief to be presented this week at hearings on deep-discount air fares, the Consumer and Corporate Affairs Department says the commission shouldn't interfere with decisions that are better left to the airline industry.OTTAWA (CP) — The federal government’s request to borrow an additional $11 billion to cover anticipated debts should be pared to $5 billion until the Liberals learn to practice restraint and stop wasting money, Opposition Leader Joe Clark said Monday.The government has no moral right to ask for $11 billion — on top of a previously granted $10.1 billion — when it has demonstrated it is “absolutely incapable” of managing money, Clark told the Commons.Rather than having the affrontery to ask for more, government ministers should be dressing in sack cloth and begging forgiveness for their financial ineptitude, Clark said as debate opened on the government’s request for more borrowing authority.Abitibi-Price’s profit drops TORONTO (CP) — Abitibi-Price Inc., the world’s biggest newsprint producer, reported Monday its six-month profit fell 32 per cent — the result of a severe U.S.recession that has depressed sales of forest products.The privately-owned Toronto company reported it earned $45.3 million or $1.95 a share in the first half of the year, compared with $66.7 million or $3.07 a share in the corresponding 1981 period.Sales in the first half of this year fell slightly to $831 million from $877 million in the 1981 period.Axworthy makes landing THUNDER BAY, Ont.(CP) - The failure of one of two engines on a Transport Canada Canadair Challenger forced federal Employment Minister Lloyd Axworthy to make an unscheduled stop at Thunder Bay airport Monday morning.Axworthy was en route to Edmonton from Ottawa when the engine failed, forcing the pilot to make what was decribed as a "very smooth landing.” “We don’t have any word on exactly what hap pened to the engine,” said Eugene Coyle, duty airport manager.“We know there were mechanical problems .with one of the engines.” Feds will pay share for crash VANCOUVER (CP) — Without conceding liability for a 1978 Pacific Western Airlines crash in which 43 people died, the federal government has agreed to pay $2.5 million as its share of a settlement package totalling $9.8 million.The federal contribution, according to an agreement approved Monday by Justice Harry McKay of the British Columbia Supreme Court, amounts to about 28 per cent of the total paid in settlement of most claims.The jet crashed at Cranbrook, B.C.when the pilot attempted to abort a landing on a flight from Calgary after spotting a snow-clearing machine on the Cranbrook runway.Reagan to update U.S.broadcasts WASHINGTON (Reuter) — President Reagan said Monday that country after country has fallen prey to Soviet ideology and that the overseas radio stations beaming U.S.broadcasts to the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe will be modernized.He said equipment used by the Voice of America, Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty is old and deteriorating and will be upgraded.He told a White House audience that the tragedy of the 1980s is that communism’s self-proclaimed goal of dominating the world has been widely achieved.Use of insanity as defence limited WASHINGTON (AP) - The Reagan administration endorsed Monday a proposal to limit drastically the use of the insanity defence in federal criminal cases, holding the defendant responsible if he “knew he was shooting at a human being to kill him." Without directly mentioning President Reagan’s assailant, John Hinckley, U.S.Attorney General William French Smith said the bill is designed to all but eliminate mental illness as a defence for criminal conduct.“The criminal justice system has tilted too decidedly in favor of the rights of criminals and against the rights of society,” Smith told the Senate judiciary committee.$18,000 ransom for cat HARKERS ISLAND, N.C.( AP) — The case of two women charged with trying to extort $18,000 from two brothers by kidnapping their pet tomcat went before a grand jury Monday.The owners said they were prepared to pay the ransom for the safe return of the cat, who they said is like a member of the family.The victim, Cry Baby, is identified on arrest warrants as "one domesticated male cat, white in color with yellow tail.” Japanese will spend on defence TOKYO (Reuter) — Japan plans to improve its military capabilities over the next five years so that it can defend its territory alone against limited aggression, government sources said Monday They said that starting next year, the Japanese defence agency intends to spend up to $18 billion U.S.on equipment for its 240,000-strong armed forces.Total defence spending during the period will be about $63 billion, they said.Defence Minister Soichiro Ito on Monday outlined the plan to Prime Minister Zenko Suzuki before the National Defence Council formally approves it on Friday, they said.AMMAN (Reuter) — Jordanian Prime Minister Mudar Bedran announced Monday the formation of a citizens army to face what were described as Israeli expansionist plans on Jordan, the Jordanian news agency Petra reported.Petra said the national army will be formed of all Jordanians capable of carrying arms and would be supervised by a higher committee of the regular Jordanian armed forces Collapsed awnings kill kids NEW DELHI (AP) - Ten kindergarten chUdren were killed and 30 others seriously hurt Monday when the awnings of a school building collapsed and fell on them in a small village in southern Kerala State, the United News of India reported.The collapse, in the village of Kuriachira some 480 kilometres southeast of Madras near the Arabian Sea, occurred while the children were eating lunch, the news agency said.Car bomb near Hyde Park LONDON (AP) — A car bomb exploded near the army barracks in Hyde Park today and at least one person was killed, spokesmen for the army and Scotland Yard reported.London’s Independent Radio News said the blast occurred while a unit of the Queen’s Household Cavalry rode past, and quoted witnesses as saying dead horses were seen in the area, about one kilometre from Buckingham Palace.The Scotland Yard spokesman said no further information was available.Prince William’s birth registered LONDON ( AP) — The birth of Prince William of Wales, the blue-eyed baby son born June 21 to Prince Charles and his wife, Diana, was legally registered Monday.Registrar Joan Webb of the Westminster Registry visited the couple at their Kensington Palace home to record the birth of William Arthur Philip Louis, second in line to the throne after his father.William wasn’t present for the registration, which took half an hour.Commercial whaling ban advised BRIGHTON, England (AP) — The International Whaling Commission’s technical committee recommended Monday a ban on all commercial whaling beginning in 1985, delegates said.The recommendation — an initial victory for the U.S.and other conservationist countries over such whaling countries as Japan and the Soviet Union — now goes before the 38-member commission for final action later this week.The commission was established in 1946 to set quotas for whaling and take other steps it considers necessary to benefit the industry and protect endangered species.Canada is no longer an IWC member.Crackdown on Polish print-shop WARSAW ( AP) — Police in the Baltic port city of Szczecin have uncovered an underground printing shop that produced “illegal, anti-state publications,” Polish state television reported Monday.It said five people, ranging in age from 18 to 35, worked in the print shop.Military prosecutors in the Szczecin district were conducting a further investigation.7 Salvadoran defenders slain SAN SALVADOR (AP) - Leftist guerrillas killed seven civilian defenders in a pre-dawn raid Monday on the town of Santa Clara, 70 kilometres east of San Salvador, officials reported.A civilian commander said the guerrillas and the defenders fought at close range in a seven-hour battle in the town, used as a staging area against rebel attacks on the nearby Pan-American Highway The rebel forces retreated at noon after firing automatic rifles and bazookas at military outposts.Pakistan fears Israel KARACHI (Reuter) — The government-controlled news agency Associated Press of Pakistan quotes Information Minister Zafar-Ul-Haq as saying Israel has raiding plans to destroy nuclear projects in Islamic Pakistan.The APP quoted the minister Monday as telling progovernment workers in Karachi that the planned raids are part of an Israeli plan to attack Moslem countries throughout the world.U.S.envoy walks out MASAYA, Nicaragua (Reuter) — The U.S.ambassador walked out of ceremonies marking the third anniversary of Niacargua’s leftist revolution Monday as junta chief Daniel Ortega accused the Reagan administration of trying to topple his government Ambassador Anthony Quainton left a rally in Masaya, where the first popular insurrection of the revolution against rightist dictator Anastasio Somoza began in 1978, when Ortega launched a series of accusations against Washington for alleged support of rightist commandos raiding Nicaragua.Contin leader of radical party BUENOS AIRES (Reuter) - Radical party president Carlos Contin was confirmed Monday as leader of Argentina’s second-largest political force in the first party convention held after a six-year ban on political activity.Contin defeated a attempt to appoint former Argentine president Arturo Illia as party leader by 37 votes to 23 after three days of stormy talks on the Radicals’ attitude toward the military government.\ l The Townships The RECORD—Tuesday, July 20, liisi!_;î «*¦_____tKc_i mam Administrationsaysprofs’salary cuts needed to meet cost reductions Continued from page 1 discussions were held prior to July 1.Shearson says that Bill 70 does not come into effect until December 31, and that in any case does not necessarily mean that professors must give up increases in the present collective agreement.“No one has done any study on the effects of Bill 70 at Bishop’s,” Shearson says, “and besides, the bill says that “The parties to a collective agreement in effect on May 26, 1982, must, within fifteen days of the enactment of this law' attempt in good faith to negotiate an agreement.to make modifications permitting a reduction of costs similar to that which result from pay cuts in the public sector.The money doesn’t have to come out of our pockets.” Shearson wants the University to adopt a 0-Base accounting system whereby the school’s costs can be evaluated more easily, and areas can be found where spending might be reduced.“Right now” says Shearson, “there’s no way we can tell whether there’s a deficit or not.Were just supposed to take their word for it.” Shearson denies Gregoire’s statement that discussions have been held saying “I’m not aware of any discussions, and they can’t have taken place without me knowing about it.” Grégoire says the university has to hold back the salary increases because it has to make cost reductions, and is not even sure how much money it will receive from the government.“Usually we know by now how much we’re going to get, but this year I doubt if we’ll know before October.” Shearson says he’s not sure what action his association will take, and will have to study the situation, but would like the university to defend its claim that withholding pay increases will even actually reduce the university’s expenditures to the required 18 5 per cent.“We’re willing to talk about this,” he says, "but the school is going to have to provide some answers before we'll agree to anything." / * Hydro’s not on the line for information meeting organizer RECORD/CHARLES BURY Ste-Edwidge Mayor Denis Desourcy.Hydro won't return calls, but we know what our opinion is.By Charles Bury STE-EDWIDGE - Mayor Denis Desourcy can’t get Hydro on the line, but he and his fellow village councillors are going to hold their information meeting Wednesday anyway.Desourcy has been trying to reach officials at Hydro-Quebec to confirm their presence at the meeting, scheduled for tomorrow night at 8:30 at the parish hall, where citizens will have a chance to learn first-hand of the public utility’s plans to build a huge power-export transmission line through the area.But he has been unable to get through on the phone.“I keep calling, leaving a message for them,” he says, “They are supposed to return my calls, but they don't.They don’t seem to be in any hurry to get back to me.” “The only thing I’ve heard is at our MRC (regional county municipality) meeting, when they said it might be possible to have a meeting — maybe —- in August.But the people don’t want to wait — it might be too late then.They want it now.” Desourcy says the Hydro experts will be replaced by local citizens who have been following the debate.“There will be a lot of people there who are — shall we say — au courant.” He says several members of a committee called Estrie Vie set up to monitor and oppose Hydro-Quebec’s plans will be present.“Some of the people from Bulwer will be in the hall, and I and a couple of my councillors have been to information meetings about the lines.” But Hydro “hasn’t been very co- operative up until now,” Desourcy says.“Every time I phone, I seem to get a standard answer.The person at the other end is not even the secretary of the right guy.She just says she’s not his secretary, she is only taking messages.” At 4:10 yesterday afternoon, there was no answer at the St-Hyacinthe phone number of Jean-Marie Pelletier, Hydro-Quebec public relations officer in charge of the project Desourcy says he thinks most of the residents of this Compton County village about 10 miles south of Sherbrooke have already made up their minds — they don’t want the high-voltage line anywhere near them.“My impression is that the people have decided.They are against the line, so far.We will probably be confirming that Wednesday night.” Townships talk GRANBY, Que.(CP) — Journalists and office employees at the daily Granby Voix de l’Est voted Monday 72 per cent in favor of a new three-year labor contract that will give a reporter with seven years experience $565 a week by July 1, 1984.The 13 journalists will earn $450 a week as of last Jan.1.Office employees will earn $300 as of January, and will get a $15-a-week raise every six months.The union, affiliated with the Confederation of National Trade Unions, succeeded in getting another editorial staff member hired as of September, so that journalists will have to work less often on Sundays.The French-language paper has a circulation of about 12,000 in and around this town about 70 kilometres east of Montreal.It belongs to the Gesca Corp,, which also owns Montreal La Presse • FARNHAM, Que.(CP) — The trustee responsible for the sale of Métallurgie Famham Inc.held out little hope Monday that the insolvent company will be put into operation again, since he has only received one “insufficient” offer for the firm.Georges Marchand, of Price Waterhouse and Associates, said the sale by tender has expired and it only attracted one buyer whose offer was “so insufficient that it wouldn’t have paid (Métallurgie Farnham’s) secured creditors.” Marchand said the decision of what to do with the auto parts company’s assets is now up to the agent representing the secured creditors, adding: “would you accept $500 for a car worth $2,000?” .Suffering in the heat RfcCORD/PFRRY BEATON Some Townshippers suffered more than others during the recent hot, muggy weather.Members of road crews will be relieved that, for now at least, temperatures will be slightly cooler.Record, Sun, Campus, CUP, Bishop’s named in complaint Record News Services SHERBROOKE — The Quebec Human Rights Commission is investigating a complaint by a local women’s-rights advocate about treatment she calls ‘sex discrimination’ surrounding an incident on the Bishop’s Univer-sity-Champlain College campus almost two years ago.Sondra Corry, well-known member of the Eastern Townships women’s movement, has accused Bishop’s University, The Record, The Townships Sun, The Campus and the Canadian University Press of depriving her of her human rights in connection with the incident and subsequent newspaper coverage.She claims her reputation was damaged, that she was wrongfully fired from a clerical job, that the newspapers gave inadequate coverage to her story, and that ‘deliberate misquotations’ caused her to lose her part time work as a supply teacher for the Eastern Townships Regional School Board.At the origin of the complaints is a poster advertising the Hollywood film ‘10’, starring alleged ‘sex-symbol’ Bo Derek.The poster shows Derek, clad in a scant bathing suit, with a tiny middle-aged man hanging from her necklace.It was displayed in a glass case in a university building during early October 1980, to draw attention to a chowing of the film on campus.Corry affixed a sticker to the front of the display case, claiming the poster was offensive ‘to women’, She also threatened to return later and remove the ol-lending poster herself il it remained on display.The poster later disappeared Corrv was temporarily denied access to the campus, where she was apparently preparing a master’s thesis on women’s rights.Contacted at her home in Sherbrooke Monday, Corry refused comment on the complaints except to say she thought it was “wrongful use of the press” to report the matter while the Commission is studying it.Commission des Droits de la personne investigator Normand Tamaro said in an interview that Bishop’s University is the main object of Corry’s complaint “except that Mme Corry functions all through the complaint as if it is five cases.” Tamaro has sent letters to the five alleged offenders asking them for further details on the matter.“But we have taken no position in this,” he says.“We will study the matter carefully before making a report." Once he has heard from all sides and has completed his investigation, Tamaro says he will present his findings to the commission at a meeting “probably in mid-August”.The commissioners will then decide if they will pursue the case further.If the commission decides to proceed, it will then determine if, in fact, there has been discrimination according to Quebec's Charter of human rights and liberties, patterned after the United Nations model.If the commission decides there has been a violation of the Charter, Tamaro says, it then has two choices It can "make recom mendations on damages, etc.,” and refer the matter to the Provincial or Superior Court, depending on the extent of damages, or it can simply “make a general recommendation, for future conduct." Twist and shout.Move it all about.Fitness is in.Fatness is out.For busy investigator Tamaro, the Corry dossier is “one of more than 100 cases I have in the works right now.” He says that of the cases he looks into, "a lot, maybe half” are dismissed because they are “frivolous.” Bishop’s University principal Christopher Nieho! is out of the region.Other university officials were unaware yesterday of the human rights investigation.They had no comment.Ironically, none of the three newspaper editors named in the complaint is still at the same job.James Duff, then-editor of The Record and currently a CBC television news reporter for CBMT-6 in Montreal.He is on a sailing vacation and could not be reached for comment.Duff was recently named winner of the Freedom Award of Quebec's Freedom of Choice Movement, for his work at The Record, at the same time as the poster incident arose.Claire Deslile was editor of The Campus, the Bishop’s student paper, at the time of the incident A long-time acquaintance of Corry, she is now working in Montreal Charles Bury, current editor of The Record, was the editor of The Townships Sun at the time of the H.Gordon Green •ri .Iiwm # { Jm controversy.Corry claims back pay is owed her from then until now.She worked as a typesetting machine operator for four-and-a-half days at The Sun during the time of the incident.She complains she was ‘wrongfully dismissed’ after Bury was ‘influenced’ by the university.Bury says he is “surprised Corry still has this on her mind." He says it makes him feel “a little bit funny.1 always thought 1 was supposed to be working for human rights, not against them." He says the matter has been “blown out of proportion.” “On a scale of one to 10," he says, "this is a ‘1’.Now you take those black Haitian taxi drivers in Montreal being fired by the dozen.That's a ‘10’.” Are we robbing our children?There’s a droll little story in one of the Indian magazines which comes into our house about the wily old chief who volunteered to act as truant offi cer for the community’s school.Not on a permanent basis of course, but to help with a particular case of absenteeism which seemed almost hopeless because the parents of the children in question made no effort at all to see that their youngsters got to school Indeed there was ample evidence to prove that they often did precisely the opposite.There were three children in this family, tw o boys and a girl and all were absent more often than they were in class.And the parents, whenever they had been contacted by the teacher, offered neither excuse nor apology.It was apparently just too much trouble to get the kids off in the morning.Ur may be there were rabbits to skin or wood to pile The old chief, when he went to see the parents, was in no hurry to explain the reason for his visit.For a long time he sat by the stove and just kept looking, first at one parent and then the other “Thieves are very rare in our Reserve,” he said finally.“I’ve just come to see what a thiet looks like.” The parents were astounded.“We are thieves9” they asked.“But you must be joking.In all our hves we have never taken anything that wasn I ours! Who did we steal from?And what was it that v.e are supposed to have stolen?" “You are stealing from your own children!" the chief said quietly.“You are stealing from them every day you keep them out of school.' ’ The father began to get angry.“But I teach my boys myself!” he said.“They learn from me the same as I learned from my father?Docs a boy need more than that?” “\es! the old chief said "A boy does need .nuire than what his father has to teach him May he there was a time when that was enough but that day \ .as many years before yesterday.The world has something more than Indians in it now, and any man who doesn’t let his children learn about this other world is robbing them! Now look, the duel said as he got up to go, "unless you want your kid to grow up as stupid as yourself, I want to.see'them in school every day there is school !" By an interesting coincidence the same mail that brought me this little story also brought me the weekly paper from my old hometown in Ontario.And in it I note that several of the public schools which have been serving south-western Ontario for generations may soon have to close, not because there are no longer enough pupils to fill them, hut because the growth of so-called "t’hri turn ¦hools" in that area is now gathering in a growing p.< n tage of the school -age children there These children are mainly of Dutch descent whose parents adhere to one of the Reformed Churches which have mushroomed in that part of the province ever since Dutch farm families began to buy land here after the last war.(It is the Re formed Church incidentally which is so prominent and so powerful in South Africa and which hacks Apartheid.) Seems to me that the government committed a supreme folly when it allowed the establishment of such schools.Indeed it seems to me that the day of all religious schools should now be over.Not because the pupils enrolled in them are being deprived academically, for often these pupils leave these schools with very high marks.But the prime pur pose of these institutions is to ensure that the child shall grow up firm in the belief that the faith into which he was born is the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.And he will he shielded often fiercely shielded from any teaching which might present an unbiased look at other faiths He will be taught that to ever question that faith is heresy, that logic is the deadly enemy of faith.He will, in brief, grow up with a spiritual horizon as narrow and limited as that of his father and his grandfather, and equally prejudiced If the old chief of my story were to learn about all this, I am pretty sure that he would; declare that these children too are really being robbed It is at least an attempt at robltery an attempt to rob defenceless children of the most priceless of all our freedoms —- the freedom ol thought.Ace Hunter is the Ultimate Super Hero! '/mmm pnnTinnarrtnn .his job.steal it! ( Imi I' itsIwntMl III riivlnv • l AruiUND IVotliR I | h‘H s« ivt‘M|il,iv l)\ Alr\ I ,iskn c\ Wrmh ll WHIn I’IIkIiIi »q| ,1)1(1 hilt ( ti ll ll\ ('lint KitslNMHMt Ol lUllkll ttlllNH < MiiHHisi-il ,iihI I imhIik li'iMis Mam R v / M.iir’s mu -lui IV 2ND WEEK 6:45, 9 20.Cinémas CARREFOUR Sherbrooke 565-0366 % W Chevy has the P0lv R/ to make thu Holiday Seaton g x the (unmest ever! * «•' L "V's* y^'vv- .'v \ Y m• mmmm+Mmm Running times: Week Day Problems: 7:30 p m : Megatorce 9:30 p.m Sunday Problems: 1:30 & 7 30p m Mokilorce 3 30 & 9:30 p m.'¦»* * ’ * !l " ’ •"-•f • M'T* ?V* *’*•- Up-¦ r 4—The RECORD—^-Tuesday, July 20.1982 Editorial The Voice of the Eastern Townships since 1897 Genocide begins at home Chief George Manuel told the World Assembly of First Nations in Regina yesterday that “subtle genocide” is being practised on Canada’s native peoples.Manuel pointed out that persecution of natives takes much less subtle forms elsewhere.He said, for example, that Canada’s selling of helicopters to Chile’s repressive Pinochet regime was helping “the liquidation of the Apuche Indians” in that country.He said Canada ignores a 1979 Pinochet decree under which Chile announced its intention to “terminate, assimilate and exterminate” the tribe.Manuel pointed out that the North American situation is dramatically different.“Ninety per cent of our Indian people in Canada are on welfare — people who are starving in a very rich country.“This, he said, is “a very subtle form of genocide.” As if to prove Manuel’s point, Quebec’s Micmac Indians yesterday announced that they are going to sue the provincial and federal governments over an only-slightly-less-than-genocidal incident at their Gaspe reserve last summer.The lawsuit stems from a pair of brutal raids on the Micmac’s Restigouche reserve where 400-odd Quebec Police Force riot squad members seized nets and boats, beat up the Indians, gassed them, and threatened to shoot reporters trying to cover the event.The police were armed with two helicopters, an airplane and an armored tugboat as well as their guns.At issue in Restigouche was the earth-shaking issue of poaching.Who can take how many salmon from the river and when.Quebec Minister of Leisure, Fish and Game Lucien Lessard is quoted as saying with a smile at the time that it doesn’t hurt Indians to pull their hair “as long as they’re standing up when you doit.” Since no similar anti-poaching action has been undertaken against white people, Manuel must be right to accuse Canadians of discrimination.And we must be right in assuming that genocide — even the subtle kind — begins at home.CHARLESBURY |PLO still waiting for ‘the blow that breaks my back’ EDITOR’S NOTE: The Palestine Liberation Organization stands at a fateful crossroads in Lebanon.Here is a look back at the long and bloody road that took it to the siege of Beirut.By Charles J.Hanley The Associated Press The squalor of the camps, the desperate dreams of going home, the steady flow of Arab oil dollars — all gave life to the Palestine Liberation Organization.But it is the Middle East’s endless wars that have given it shape.The 1967 Arab-Israeli War put the PLO in the hands of Yasser Arafat’s guerrillas.The 1973 war forced it into a more moderate mould.And the latest conflict, climaxing in Israel’s siege of the guerrilla core in Beirut, has pushed the PLO to the brink — either of devastation or, ironically, of a political victory from the debris of military defeat.“There is a saying in Arabic,” Arafat is fond of recalling, “ ‘The blow that does not break my back strengthens me.’ ” The PLO has never taken such blows as now.Whether its cause will emerge stronger is the unanswered riddle of Beirut.On Dec.31, 1964, four commandos of Arafat’s tiny Fatah band — led by Arafat, according to guerrilla lore — slipped into Israel and bombed a water pumping station, opening a new era of unconventional warfare in the Mideast.The Israelis dismissed the guerrilla threat.But the PLO grew into a powerful organization with a budget said to be more than $1 billion a year, with an estimated $500 million in subsidies from Arab governments and with a fighting force of 60,000 “fedayeen,” or martyrs.It left a bloody trail along the way and came to be reviled by Israelis as a gang of terrorist murderers.It became, in many ways, Israel’s most dangerous enemy.FLED FIRST WAR Many of the estimated four million Palestinians for whom the PLO claims to speak — including 1.3 million in Middle East refugee camps — are members of Arab families that fled Palestine in 1948-49, when the first Arab-Israeli war erupted as the territory was carved up to form the Jewish state.In the 1950s, the Egypt of Gamal Abdel Nasser sponsored Palestinian militancy, training refugee soldiers who went on to fight in the 1956 war against Israel.One of them was Arafat, a 26-year-old engineering graduate of Cairo University.Three years later, in Syria, Arafat and a few nationalist comrades founded Fatah, an Arabic acronym for Palestinian National Liberation Movement, one of a collection of small groups dedicated to driving the Israelis from old Palestine.On Jan.17, 1964, Arab heads of state, led by Nasser, approved the formation and financing of a Palestine Liberation Organization, with Ahmad Shukairy, a Palestine-born diplomat, as its chairman.The Arab governments said the PLO would enable the Palestinians “to fulfil their role in liberating their homeland.” But the Arab leaders had another goal as well: to put a rein on the aggressive Palestinian nationalists.TURN TO GUERRILLAS Israel’s swift triumph in the 1967 Six-Day War evaporated any faith the Palestinian refugees had in the Arab governments as their redeemers.In the scores of camps from Gaza’s sandy plain to the Syrian hills, new générations turned instead to their own guerrilla chiefs.The guerrilla groups had remained aloof from the PLO, but in the aftermath of the war they gained control of its “parliament-in-exile,” the Palestinian National Council.Shukairy was out as chairman and by 1969 Arafat was in.The new Palestinian leader sought aid everywhere — including the Soviet Union.But he strove to keep the left-right divisiveness of ideology out of the PLO.The PLO creed was simple.“Peace for us,” Arafat said in 1970, “means Israel’s destruction, and nothing else.” Breaking with Arab governments, the PLO rejected UN Security Council Resolution 242, which called for a Middle East peace based on recognition of Israel’s right to exist and on settling “the refugee problem.The Palestinians insisted theirs was not merely a refugee problem, but a problem of a people robbed of its homeland.OUSTED FROM JORDAN Although the PLO’s headquarters were in Cairo and later in Damascus, PLO influence over Jordan’s mostly Palestinian population threatened King Hussein’s power.The friction exploded into civil war in 1970, ending with the guerrillas’ flight into Lebanon.During the 1970s the PLO struck at Israel through such notorious attacks as the 1972 massacre of 24 people at Tel Aviv’s airport, the bloody assault on the 1972 Munich Olympics, in which 11 Israelis were killed, the 1974 Maalot schoolhouse massacre, in which 21 children were killed, and the 1978 seizure of two buses near Tel Aviv, when 35 Israelis died.Arafat’s men waged their grim campaign from the outside, having failed to ignite an uprising among the more than one million Palestinians of the West Bank of the Jordan River and the Gaza Strip, small regions seized by Israel in the 1967 war and unsuited to prolonged guerrilla war.The Israeli-Egyptian peace accords of 1978-79 called for negotiation of some form of autonomy for the West Bank-Gaza Palestinians.In January 1979, the Palestinian National Council forbade the people of the occupied territories to take part in such a plan, and they obeyed — some for fear of reprisal, others because they wanted Palestinian independence, not the Israeli-supervised halfway house of autonomy.The Lebanese civil war, in which the guerrillas helped Lebanese leftists fight rightists to a standstill, distracted and weakened the PLO.But in its aftermath the guerrillas built up their forces in Lebanon, fighting repeated duels of strike and counter-strike with the Israelis.In 1978, the Israeli army occupied southern Lebanon briefly to drive the guerrillas away from the border.And six weeks ago it struck again with its mightiest blow yet, boxing the PLO leaders into a battered enclave in Beirut.But from this box the PLO now dares the Israelis to strike the final blow, bargaining in this 11th hour for international sympathy, U.S.recognition and, if all else fails, martyrdom.\\ W-D UOffTco \\ Eyewitness: Impressions| can distort the facts EDMONTON (CP) — Canadian court experience is proving seeing isn’t always believing.Eyewitness testimony, one of the courts’ most relied upon and honored forms of evidence, has been proven time and again to be extremely fallible.Some high courts have examined the need for judges to warn juries of the danger of convicting an accused solely on uncorroborated eyewitness evidence.Crown Prosecutor Michael Allen says the biggest problem with eyewitness testimony is the fallibility of human memory.“If we had testimony from witnesses right after the event they could probably give a fairly accurate account,” Allen said.“But there is always a delay in getting the matter to court.” Psychological tests have found that methods by which eyewitnesses are questioned can lead to dramatic differences in descriptions of crimes; that there is no relationship between a witness’s confidence and the reliability of his testimony; and that juries place great faith in eyewitness testimony, even after it’s been proven largely false.“Memory is not a videotape,” said Don Read, a University of Lethbridge psychology professor.“It doesn’t play back exactly what you saw.“Memory is a highly reconstructive process.You build a framework around it.People tend to reconstruct memory based on new information and try to fill in the blanks with what seems plausible.” STORY DIFFERS During a recent murder trial in Edmonton, an eyewitnesss to a shooting said at the preliminary inquiry that the accused “cracked open the rifle” before shooting the victim.But at the trial, several months later, she said the accused did not “crack open the rifle.” Under cross-examination, the witness admitted she had recently read a book about firearms and realized the gun in question could not be “cracked open.” That new knowledge changed her recollection of the incident.Studies conducted by Gary Wells, a University of Alberta psychology professor, also show the relationship between witness confidence and accuracy is weak.“Highly confident witnesses may be 60-per-cent accurate and less confident witnesses 58-per-cent accurate,” Wells said.He is part of a team working with the Law Reform Commission of Canada establishing guidelines police should use in pretrial investigations.The guidelines, among other things, advocate better police identification lineups and questioning techniques.No one wants to eliminate eyewitness testimony, Wells said.But safeguards are needed to protect the innocent accused.50/ .L : !X'V >:v.j7 mV ^tjVK We Letters Bell in both languages Editor: Last June 29 you published a letter under the heading “French only in English paper ”, which was signed by Mr.Allan Banfill.I would like to make the following comments concerning this letter.Bell Canada did in fact publish in the Record an ad concerning a new method for the processing of long distance calls, three times in French, that is, on June 18, 22 and 29, and three times in English on June 14, 26 and July 3.Furthermore, all customers of the area received with their telephone bill a bilingual insert containing the same message as the ad.Bell has always strived to inform its customers well, and consequently, due to the strike at Sherbrooke's French daily paper, we thought it appropriate to join a French ad to the English one in order to reach the greatest number of customers possible.As for the June 21 ad, it was intended for a limited group of customers, thoseof La I’atrieand Chartierville, most of whom are French speaking.It was only meant as sup plementary information, since these customers received a bilingual insert with their bill which announced the change involved.This ad had been prepared for La Tribune exclusively, so was therefore in French only.However because of the strike we decided to try to reach through the Record La Patrie and Chartierville customers, unfortunately deprived of their daily French paper.I would like to point out to Mr.Banfill that Bell Canada, like the other companies operating in Quebec, has com mitted itself to francization, which in no way hinders its administration and still less relations with our customers, who at all times have the advantage of bilingual information available to them when necessary.I believe that Mr.Banfili, as a Bell employee, need not feel embarrassed with respect to readers of the Record, since the company has never encroached upon their rights and they can communicate with us in the language of their choice.GUY CHAREST, Commercial Manager Bell Canada Sherbrooke Emergency calls Editor: I would like to clarify certain points concerning your editorial of last June 22 entitled “No change”.Bell Canada has the responsibility of handling emergency calls as quickly as pof"-),',-\ whether they come from a private or a public ‘“lei .e.The operator who answered you last June 2^., Knowing that it was an emergency, should have routed your call without delay to the number requested, and discussed long distance charges with you only after the call.The charges for your call to Coaticook could then have been billed to a third number or charged to a Long Distance Card, thus it is not necessary to have change available to pay for the call.Furthermore, the Quebec Police Force confirmed that they accept collect calls in cases of emergency.I regret that the operator with whom you spoke did not handle your call promptly, and I assure you that we will take the necessary steps to prevent such a situation from occurring again.GUY CHAREST, Commercial Manager Hell Canada Sherbrooke Begin gains strength from Lebanon crisis By Marcus Eliason TEL AVIV (AP) — Far from weakening him, the war in Lebanon and its related domestic controversy have made Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin stronger politically than ever before.Opinion polls show overwhelming support for the June 6 invasion of Lebanon and a quantum leap in Begin’s electoral strength.From a candidate who barely grasped power in last year’s election, he has become a leader with popular backing second only to that of the late Golda Meir.Begin’s popularity was evident on the weekend at a mass rally in support of the war which drew over 200,000 Israelis — the largest crowd ever to attend a demonstration in the Jewish state of approximately four million people.Throngs of men, women and children deliriously chanted “Begin king of Israel,” as the frail, 68-year-old prime minister mounted the rostrum.“God bless you, Menachem Begin,” said some of their posters.One man sounded a shofar, a ram's horn blown on festive occasions.The prime minister clearly relished the moment.He began his address by declaring: “There are no more Katyusha rockets on Kiryat Shmonah and there will be none,” referring to the Soviet-made rockets the Palestine Liberation Organization guerrillas have used to shell Israeli settlements.CROWD GOES WILD The crowd went wild.For a year since Begin promised to end PLO attacks on border towns such as Kiryat Shmonah, his followers had suffered the barbs of Begin critics who ridiculed the promise as an unattainable piece of election propaganda.But with the guerrillas removed from artillery range of Israel, it was now Begin’s turn to scoff.“There are no shells on Kibbutz Letavot Habashan .of Mapam, and there won’t be any more,” he shouted.Mapam is a left-wing faction in the Labor opposition and played a major role in organizing an anti-war rally of 50,000 to 70,000 people in the same Tel Aviv square where the pro-war camp was now massed.Having stung Mapam and its kibbutz movement, Begin turned his guns directly on the Labor party, accusing it of failing to stand behind “the fighting Hebrew soldier,” and of giving encouragement to Israel’s enemies.He cited an opinion poll projecting 61 seats for his Likud bloc and 39 for Labor in the next election — an outright majority in the 120-member parliament which no party has ever won.“When elections come in one or three years,” Begin vowed, “we will demand from you (Labor) the whole public, moral and political price of your escapades during the height of the war.” Begin was not entirely fair, since the bulk and leadership of the Labor party has firmly backed the invasion, expressing reservations only about a full-scale attack on Beirut The only opposition has come from Labor’s dissident leftists.As the newspaper Maariv observed the day after the rally: “It proved what did not require any proof: that the government has more support now than ever before, and that opponents of the war, who question its necessity and justification, are a minority in the nation." Meanwhile, almost unnoticed in the heat of the war, Begin has been busy building up a solid majority in Israel's parliament, the Knesset.On the eve of the war, defections from Likud had reduced his coalition to a minority.His gove’.iment was being buffeted by constant no-confidence ir Aions, and it faced imminent collapse.But the war has sent a new spirit of unity through the right wing factions that previously would have nothing to do with Begin.The premier has restored his majority by bringing the (wo man TELEM faction into the coalition, and he is negotiating for the support of the three-member Tehiya party.If Tehiya joins, Begin will have 64 seats — a strong bulwark against future no-confidence motions. Farm and Business #¦___ftgi necara The KECOKD—Tuesday, July 20,1982_5 Magog youth finds the grass is no greener on the Calgary streets The statistics on the current recession are all too familiar — unemployment, inflation and interest rates are high.This story, part of a series on the human cost of the recession, looks at job hunters who have headed west.By Jeff Adams CALGARY (CP) — The men standing along the curb anxiously scan every passing vehicle.A pickup truck stops, its horn blaring, and a race toward it begins.The driver invites the first three men to haul themselves into the back and they quickly oblige, smiling triumphantly.For at least a day they have joined the ranks of the employed.Only a couple of blocks from the glass-and-steel office towers that are a prominent sign of Calgary’s petro-prosperity, this growing lineup for work is a daily sign that all is not well in Stampede city.The men who gather in the hope of earning $40 or $50 a day moving furniture, pouring concrete or other odd jobs say there are fewer offers all the time.“Last year, I used to stand here and there’d be 20 cars stopping every day,” said Pierre Rudge, of Magog, “Now, maybe two cars at the most will come and pick somebody up.” Rudge, 19, arrived in Calgary about 15 months ago, part of the exodus from Eastern Canada of the unemployed.He left his parents in Magog, “because there’s no jobs there.” there’s no jobs there.” “1 mean nothing.All the young people have moved away.” He received school training to work in a print shop but Rudge has no tradesman’s papers.He fits into Calgary Mayor Ralph Klein’s now-famous “bums” category — easterners who came to the city with high hopes but no friends, family or specific skills.Rudge doesn’t like the label and argued: “Just because we’re standing here on this curb doesn’t make us creeps or bums.” However, he admitted a trade would make life a lot easier and might keep him off the jobless rolls.Bernie Gibney, manager of Canada Employment's Calgary offices, said there have been 40,000 applications for unemployment insurance in the city so far this year — about twice that of January-June, 1981.Gibney said the economic recession which hit the rest of Canada more than a year ago has finally arrived in Calgary, meaning layoffs for both the skilled and unskilled.More unemployment has meant more curbside job-seekers along 12 Avenue S.W.Rudge said at one time only a half-dozen men would be standing around most mornings.“Now that the economy’s going down, we re shoulder-to-shoulder some days.” For some along the sidewalk, the secure, high-paying jobs they hoped for in Alberta have become a dream.All they can hope for now is a day’s wages cutting grass or hauling roofing tar.Jarvis Cormier, 19, from Cape Breton, N.S., answered with a shrug: “It’s a long trip just to find the same situation back there.” m m- J The only shock will be phone bill OTTAWA (CP) - The Canadian Standards Association wants to make sure people are not subjected to electrical shock or ear-splitting whine when they get the long-distance feeling and pick up a telephone.The Toronto-based organization has for the first time set safety standards for telephones and now is developing equipment to be used for tests that will likely begin within a year, association officials said in interviews last week.The association describes itself as a non-profit, nongovernmental organization developing nationally-recognized standards for products, funded through the sale of its product standards and by memberships.Officials of the standards association and the Consumers Association of Canada say they are unaware of any complaints about safety hazards in telephones.The need for testing arises from the entrance into the marketplace of telephones manufactured by companies other than Bell Canada and its sister operations, the standards group says.There is “a reasonable fear” new telephones being produced for over-the-counter purchases could pose safety problems, said Jim Quail, a standards administrator.Such problems could include electrical shocks from insufficient grounding and insulation or “acoustic shock” leading to hearing damage.Companies struggle, but refuse business consultants’ aid VANCOUVER (CP) — Recent bankruptcy figures indicate many companies are finding it hard to survive in the current recession, but few seem to be seeking help from management consultants.A year ago the Canadian economy was percolating along fairly well, apparently oblivious to the high interest rates that had peaked at more than 20 per cent.When the plunge began in September, there was no time to sit down and plan new strategies.It was — and continues to be — survival of the fittest.Vancouver-area consultants say management techniques that apply in good Livestock quotes OTTAWA (CP) — Slaughter cattle and calf receipts at public stockyards last week were up 250 to 14,400, the federal agriculture department said today.Feeder receipts rose 3,500 to 6,825; sheep and lamb receipts were up 500 to 1,800.MONTREAL D1,2 and D3,5 cows $54-60.50 and $40-54.Good veal calves $85-100.Good replacement type dairy heifers under 300 lbs.$80-108.TORONTO Al,2 steers 1,000 lbs.and over and Al,2 heifers 850 lbs.and over $84-88 and $75-80.Dl,2 and D3,5 cows $56-61 and $47-57.Good veal calves $68-88.Steers 700-900 lbs.and heifers 600-800 lbs $79-85 and $72.50-79.50.Steer calves 450-650 lbs.$78-82.A and B lambs 80-100 lbs.$85-95.Index 100 hogs $93.65.WINNIPEG Al,2 steers 1,000 lbs.and over and Al,2 heifers 850 lbs.and over $77-81 and heifers $70-75.Dl ,2 and D3,5 cows $51-55 and $49-54.Steers 700-900 lbs.and heifers 600-800 lbs $71-78.and heifers $65-72.Steers 450-650 lbs.and heifers 400-600 lbs.$70-77 and $65-71.Index 100 hogs $91.50.SASKATOON Al,2 steers 1,000 lbs.and over $76.75-79.75 and heifers $71,10-75.75.Dl,2 and D3,5 $52.50-54 and $44.25-48.25.Steers 700-900 lbs.and heifers 600-800 lbs $76-80 and $71-74.10.Steers 450-630 lbs $78.50-79.60 times are the only way out of the hard times.“Companies should use the same principles that they would when things are going OK, but even more so,” said Paul Higgins, partner in charge of British Columbia operations for Price Waterhouse Associates, the management consultancy arm of the accounting group.His comments are echoed by Morris Carley, a director of Western Management Consultants, who says keeping a tight control over costs and maximizing output, as recommended for a company in difficulty, are of paramount importance in the current economic climate.“In the present economic situation it is frequently a question of getting a company into a survival mode if it is in difficulty,” Carley said.“If we can get the company into a position in which it will survive, then we can start to take the steps that will lead to recovery and improved performance.” Carley said the reduction in management consultant activity is probably because some businessmen believe they can’t afford to employ a management consultant.“I believe that’s a false view.With interest rates and the level of economic activity the way it is, it is very difficult to run a business profitably.Professional advice might make the difference between survival or failure.” Higgins said Price Waterhouse Associates’ business has turned down as well although to varying degrees.“A year ago executive recruitment represented about 15 per cent of our total business,” he said.“That’s way off and is now no more than two or three per cent of our work at present.” “Computer consultancy work has slowed a little, and the swing has been towards computer-effectiveness studies.In this work we advise clients on how to get the best bang for their buck out of a computer system.” As for advice to businesses in trouble, Higgins says the best tool is still a sharp knife.“Accdünts receivable have to be trimmed to the bare minimum.Inventory has to be reduced to the point where any further reduction would start to affect sales.“A careful watch has to be kept on people in order to ensure that the company is getting the best ixissible effort.” StatsCan numbers on unemployed ignore those execs who are fighting back The statistics on the current recession are all too familiar — unemployment, inflation and interest rates are all high.This story, part of a series on the human cost of the recession, looks at a an unemployed manager.The tests, at least initially, will be on a voluntary basis.However, Quail said there is a proposal for the provinces to make telephone testing mandatory by 1985.The telephone standards will be monitored by an association committee including representatives of government, consumers, manufacturers, the telephone networks and regulatory authorities.“The telephone is the last remaining electrical device in the home to carry the CSA certificate,” said Peter James, an association information officer.“Provincial laws across Canada say that everything electrical must be CSA certified and the telephone has always been exempt from that.” By Joel Ruimy MONTREAL (CP) — Meet George Del Motte, a statistic.Statistics Canada’s computers churn out depressing reams of numbers on the unemployed, but fail to tell the whole story about those who are fighting back — like Del Motte.A 51-year-old former vice-president, Del Motte has been without a regular job for about a year.His management contract with a multinational company expired last year and wasn’t renewed.Prior to that, he was a corporate vice-president for one of Canada’s 50 biggest companies.Then a merger resulted in a new management team which saw no room for him.But unlike many soldiers in army of the unemployed, Del Motte isn’t waiting for Manpower to call with vague job prospects.He and other unemployed managers have banded together to form Executives Available, a self-help association that has found work for 275 of its 350 members since 1978.The group exists on donations from local businessmen, churches and, until last March, the federal government.RULES TO JOIN “We have three rules for membership,” Del Motte said in an interview from the Executives Available office on the second' floor of a suburban Pierrefonds shopping centre.“A guy has to be over 40, he has to have been in a middle or senior management position, and he has to be unemployed.“We won’t touch a guy who’s working, though we might stretch it for someone on his last month of severance pay But if he’s still got six months of severance left, forget it.” In return, members get to use a 1,000-square-foot (93-square-metre) suite of offices rented “cheap” from which to make telephone calls to prospective employers.“We also help them market themselves — we find the things that make them sellable and we emphasize that.” Members are encouraged to arrive at Executives Available no later than 9 a.m.in the same suit and tie that they’d wear to work.They hit the telephones all day and any prospects that aren’t right for them are passed to someone else.“When a guy finds a job, we usually expect a $100 donation after he’s had time to start working again and pay some of the bills that have piled up.Once in a while, we get someone who drops in out of the blue a few years after finding a job and he brings a $500 cheque.” But it’s been far from encouraging.ANGRY OR DEPRESSED “There are a couple of reactions that come up when you lose your job,” Del Motte said.“First, there’s a sense of disbelief and THE VILLAS at Domaine Des Soeurs St-Elie -Æk_- then there’s either anger or a what-did-I-do-wrong feeling.” But when a churchman in the elegant suburb of Beaconsfield organized a meeting between Del Motte and four other unemployed executives, “we realized there were a lot of people in our situation .it wasn’t our fault.” The executive saysuJie’s known other unemployed managers “Who take the commuter train every morning with a briefcase and lots of quarters.“They pretend they’re off to work — they don’t tell anyone they’re out of a job — and they spend the day making calls from phone booths.” For Del Motte, unemployment has meant reexamining why he left the Canadian rank of major to go into business because the economy was going way up.” Now he spends much of his day on the phone hustling for work and he’s sad he hasn’t been able to help his two children through university.“My daughter is in Vancouver looking for a job while my son works and goes to university at night — he has to do it on his own.” His savings have just about run out and Del Motte figures he’s lucky he was able to pay off his mortgage during the good years.“Although I’m no economist,” admits Del Motte, he can explain why he is jobless today.“What happens in a tight economy is that the accountants take over and look at cost effectiveness.“If the cost of sales has always been 10 per cent (of revenues) but all of a sudden it shoots up to 15 per cent, then rather than put more people on the road, they cut back and do it by telephone.“They tend to retrench instead of finding new ways.It’s something I’ve never been able to understand.” Another problem was with the wave of corporate takeovers and mergers that crested last summer.In the reorganizations that followed, firms found themselves with twin sets of managers and a “winners-and-losers syndrome” developed.One group emerged triumphant, the other left.A third major disadvantage was the westward flow of capital.Once, Montreal or Toronto were the principal sources of qualified employees for expansion to Western Canada.Now, cities like Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver have their own pool of talent and “with the large number of head offices leaving Quebec, there just aren’t any jobs here.” To make his point, Del Motte cites the response to the 4,000 copies of his group’s monthly bulletin listing executives available for work.“We used to get 100-odd replies to each one.Now, we get maybe 25 or 30.” m it doesn't happen often, but it can happen.You see or hear an advertisement that seems to be throwing you a pitch that's misleading, even false.But you're just not sure.To know, you need a copy of the rules.They're the Canadian Code of Advertising Standards.And every advertiser has to play by them.The Code is set by us, the Advertising Standards Council - an organization of industry and public representatives set up to establish and enforce truth, honesty, accuracy and fairness in advertising.if any advertisement bends or breaks the rules, we make sure it is revised or discontinued.Should the advertisement in question not contravene the rules, we still notify the advertiser of your concern.So if you have any questions, comments or complaints about advertising, direct them to us.And if you want to know what's fair or unfair in advertising, write for your free rule booklet Advertising Standards Council 1240 Bay Street, Suite 302 Toronto, Ontario.M5R 2A7 TO KNOW WHAT’S RIGHT IN ADVERTISING, WRITE FOR THE RULES.MORTGAGES 13.5% -5 YEARS MONTHLY PAYMENTS $305.00 For lurther information visit our model home, everyday 2:00 - 9:00 p.m., Saturdays & Sundays 1:00 • 5:00 p.m.1979 du Printemps, 8th Range North, St-Elie d’Orford Tel: 566-5846 or 569-8627 Developed Large choice of wooded lots.HOUSE OF COMMONS IftSSP CHAMBRE DES COMMUNES by IjlUA^O ;nc SPECIAL COMMITTEE on Standing Orders and Procedure The Special Committee, consisting of 20 Members, has been appointed to consider the Standing Orders of the House and procedure in both the House and its committees.TheCommittee is authorized to include in its interim and/or final reports, drafts of proposed permanent or temporary Standing Orders.Such Orders are to be drawn to give effect, if concurred in by the House, to any permament or temporary change or changes proposed by the Committee.The Committee will be holding meetings and individuals and organizations who wish to make written submissions to the Committee relating to its Order of Reference may do so in French, English or both official languages.If possible, submissions should be typed on 28cm by 22 cm paper with margins of 3 cm by 2 cm.All written submissions should be submitted by 5:00 p.m.Tuesday.August 31.1982.Submissions should be addressed to: Clerk, Special Committee on Standing Orders and Procedure, House of Commons, Ottawa.Ontario.K1A0A6 * t/j. 6—The KECORL)—Tuesday, July 20,1982 Living HecorH Jim Smiths tell tales of mistaken identity, motel clerks’ laughs OTTAWA (CPI - When Jim Smith holds a convention, the fun is in the name.Signs reading “Welcome to Jim Smith Country” greeted the 40 namesakes from across Canada and the United States who arrived here for the 13th annual Jim Smith Society convention during the weekend.‘It’s sort of like a big family, we just happen to have both names the same instead of one,” explained a delegate from Southgate, Mich.“There’s a complete cross-section of people here,” added the delegate from nearby Nepean.“The only thing we have in common — apart from our name — is the desire to have fun.” And there was plenty of fun to go around.A Jim Smith baseball tournament — which could have given Abbott and Costello enough material to rewrite their famous who’s-on-first routine — kept everyone busy rooting for their favorite Jim Smiths.Of course, the tournament was won — and lost —- by Jim Smith’s team Another highlight of the weekend was a J.S.dinner and dance, which would have confused any conscientious dance-card holder.And between events — including jimgo, an adaptation of bingo — the delegates visited and talked about the problems of having a common name.“You’d be surprised at how many problems we Jim Smiths have,” said a delegate from Holland, Mich.“When you sign in at a motel, the clerk always gives you a second look, thinking that you’re operating under an alias.” And if that isn’t bad enough, there’s the case of Jim Smith who went to a hospital suffering from a sore throat and almost had his appendix out.It seems another patient with the same name was slated for an appendectomy.The fellow with the sore throat spent half an hour convincing hospital staff it wasn’t him.The society, formed in 1969 by Jim Smith from Camp Hill, Pa., now has more than 1,000 members worldwide and has been holding conventions since 1970.Those conventions are something special, said Bonnie Smith, who, with her husband Jim, has attended the last five get-togethers.“It’s a chance for everyone to be themselves,” she explained, “whatever Jim'Smith they may be.” Ann Landersr What being poor is really like Dear Ann Landers: My husband had a very good job until 11 months ago, when he joined the growing number of unemployed.Since then we have learned that willingness to work, a good education and one’s best efforts are not enough.We also learned what it is to be poor.I must admit I didn’t really know what it was like until now.For those who don’t know, let me tell them.Being poor is watching your dog die because you can’t afford to take him to the vet.Being poor means not being able to go to your father’s funeral.Being poor means having teeth pulled because you can’t afford to save them.Being poor means feeding your kids lots of jelly sandwiches for supper.Being poor means a constant state of panic because you never know when things are going to get worse.Being poor means watching your friends disappear because nobody wants to be around a loser.-Kude-Awakening in Atlanta Dear Awakening: Your letter was very poignant until I got to the last two lines.REAL friends don’t disappear when you’re down on your luck.Those folks who have dropped you were not friends.They were merely acquaintances, and fifth-rate ones at that.Dear Ann Landers: I reàd all those catty comments from readers who criticized your hairdo, your taste in clothes, your mouth and your jewelry.How come nobody mentioned your eyes?They are loo close together.I hate to be petty, but this has been obvious to me for quite some time.Are you aware of it?-Just Inquiring.Dear Inquiring: You are right.My eyes are too close together, but I haven’t been able to figure out how to move them farther apart.Any suggestions?Dear Ann Landers: I am 28 years old, in excellent health and have two daughters, seven and four years of age.My husband and I both want another.I wouldn't mind having a third girl, but I am sure my husband would be thrilled to have a son.My in-laws have six granddaughters and although they have never said anything about it I am certain they ’d love a grandson.My husband has no brothers so there is no one else to carry the family name.I’ve heard it said that if a woman sleeps on her left side during the first two months of pregnancy she will have a boy.Right side-a girl.I know this sounds crazy but two of my friends said it has to do with the ovaries and it worked for them.Please advise.-E In Oshkosh.Dear Osh :The sex of the child is determined at the moment of conception.The only thing I can tell you for sure is, if you want to get pregnant you must sleep with a man.Dear Ann Landers: I heard a speaker at the New School of Social Research in New York tell a wonderful story about President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.It seems the president had long suspected that people paid no attention to what was said to them as they passed through a formal receiving line.He decided to prove it to Eleanor.When a highly placed dignitary grasped FDR’s hand, the president said, “I shot my grandmother this morning.” The response was, “How lovely! What a splendid celebration!” Do you believe this could have happened?-Portland, Ore.Dear Or: I certainly do.If you doubt, do an experiment of your own the next time you go through a receiving line in a noisy room.Dear Ann Landers: This may seem like a petty complaint but it bugs me like crazy.I am thoroughly fed up seeing gourmet cooks and food experts on TV who are loaded with jewelry.This morning one had three rings on one hand, a bunch of bracelets with charms dangling and a heavy gold wristwatch.My mother, grandmother and three of my aunts are all excellent cooks.Not one of them wears jewelry of any kind while preparing food.A really first-rate cook or pastry chef will tell you that jewelry gets in the way.Dou you have any thoughts on the subject, or am I just nuts?-Wausau, Wis.Dear Wis.: I haven’t done any serious cooking or baking for a long time, but I always took off my jewelry before I went into the kitchen.Most cooks wash their hands frequently, and rings, watches and bracelets are a nuisance.OPEN HOUSE Mr.& Mrs.Roy Cillis of Rock Forest will be guests of honor on the occasion of their 50th Wedding Anniversary at Gertrude Scott Hall in Lennoxville on Saturday, July 31st, from 3:00 -7:00p.m.EVERYONE WELCOME Best Wishes Only R.S.V.P.569-6641 or 864-6492 They said it was impossible, but mother gives birth CALGARY (CP) — A young Calgary woman who wasn’t given much chance of living beyond her mid-teens gave birth last week.Shawn Todd, 19, was told by doctors she would probably die yoiing from incurable cystic fibrosis.And so when she became pregnant she was advised to have an abortion because of the risk to herself and the baby.But Shawn defied all odds and gave birth last Wednesday to a six-pound, 11-ounce boy at Calgary General Hospital.Both mother and son are doing fine, although doctors won’t know if newborn Kevin Colin Jason Todd has the genetically-transmitted disease until they test him in a few days.“To our knowledge, (Shawn) is Alberta’s first CF mother,” said Kay Corns, nursing co-ordinator of the Cystic Fibrosis Clinic at the Alberta Children’s Hospital.Corns said neither she nor Dr.Richard Kennedy, a specialist in chest diseases who’s been treating adults with CF at the clinic for several years, have heard of another CF mother in the province.“It’s a pleasant rarity,” she said.Corns said doctors will conduct a “sweat chloride test” in a few days to determine if the baby has inherited CF.The test will check for unusually salty perspiration, a symptom associated with CF babies.Most of the damage inflicted by CF is caused by abnormally functioning mucus glands which secrete a thick, gluey mucus that clogs bronchial tubes and makes the child prey to bronchitis, pneumonia and other lung infections.The mucus also prevents the flow of digestive enzymes from the pancreas into the small intestine.Severe malnutrition can result.AWARE OF RISK Shawn and her 19-year-old husband Dave said they were aware of the risk and “talked about it a lot” before deciding to have the baby.“I wasn’t going to say too much,” Dave said, sitting by his young wife’s side at the hospital.“She was the one who had to go through it.I was sure glad when she said yes, though.” The birth had to be induced after two and a half hours of labor because she was “getting short of breath,” Shawn said.“I’m not a long-distance runner.” There was some mucus build-up on the baby’s chest at birth, but it has since cleared up, she said.Doctors have told Shawn she won’t be able to breast-feed due to the high salt content of her milk.Asked if they plan to have a big family, Dave replied with an affirmative giggle, but Shawn had other ideas.“This is the only one we’re going to have,” she said."Once is enough.” Shawn was born with CF and has to maintain a regimen of daily medication and rigorous exercise which includes pounding on her chest to break up the mucus.As recently as 10 years ago, most CF children died before reaching school age.However, Corns said early diagnosis and better treatment are improving the life-expectancy of CF victims.Leaving it all behind for the VANCOUVER (CP) — The Slater family of nearby White Rock has sold the house and the car and paid the last utility bill.Next week they’ll step aboard their 11-metre sailboat and embark on a trip around the world.After 20 years of getting up and going to work every morning, Tony Slater, 39, decided he wasn't going to take it any more.The decision meant cutting all social and economic ties and opting for a more flexible way of living which the Slaters hope will broaden life’s choices for their three teenagers.Contrary to what most people think, says Tony, they are embarking on the cruise on a shoestring budget.The catalyst for their determination to leave it all behind was seeing other people successfully tackle a world cruise with their children.“We realized you don’t have to be super people,” said Irene, 38.“You can be ordinary, and do it.” The trip will take them from White Rock to San Diego.Then it’s Hawaii for Christmas and, when the Kona winds are over in March, they sail on to French Polynesia.New Zealand in time for Christmas, 1983, is their next stop.WEATHER POOR The real shakedown, they feel, will come between Vancouver and San Diego, along the Oregon coast where the weather is notoriously bad.Stepping aboard the Islander Manitou is like walking into anyone else’s family room.It has shelves of books lining the galley, a wood-burning stove in the corner and a litter box for Sally, the cat.An aroma of chili wafts up from the galley.Every square inch of the vessel is taken up with much-needed storage space as the five Slaters cram in for dinner.Tony, a former British Merchant Marine seaman and longtime instructor with the White Rock Power Squadron, says the vessel is adequate.Manitou has already proven herself offshore, logging more than 24,000 kilometres, and Tony is confident the craft can weather any storm.His greatest fear in open waters is not weather but being run down by merchant ships, so Manitou will always have someone on watch and is equipped with an Emergency Position Indicating Beacon, sea a battery-operated radio beacon which can be picked up on airline frequencies should the vessel be in distress.The voyage is a dream that has been 12 years in the making, although the Slaters admit the hardest part was to actually set the wheels in motion and name a departure date.But the decision continues to haunt Irene during the small hours of the night, she says, when she rolls over in her berth and thinks, “My God, how can we do it?” Taking her children from their stable environment and exposing them to something so different has left her agonizing over the advisability of spending the next two years living aboard.But Roger, 14 and twins Patty and Tim, 13, are completely enthused about the prospects of life at sea.“Only one out of 100 kids gets such a chance,” says Roger.“When I tell people they say, ‘Ah gee, you're lucky,’ or else they think we’re rich.” Their next year’s schooling will come out of two 27-kilo boxes in Manitou’s hold as they keep up correspondence courses with their mother, a secondary school math and science teacher, coaching them.ocial notes Congratulations Mrs.Josephine Girardin will be celebrating her 94th birthday today, July 20.She is residing at the Foyer in Waterville.Congratulations and best wishes from her family and friends.Christening The christening of the infant son of Mr.and Mrs.Bradley Beattie took place at the morning service on Sunday, July 4 at St.George’s church, Lennoxville, Rev.Awcock officiating.The baby was given the name Daniel MacLeod.His godparents were his aunt Mrs.Betty Anne Wood, Allan Cameron and Daniel’s father.Daniel wore a lovely christening gown, a gift from his great-auht in England, also a shawl worn by his uncle Bill at his christening.After the service Mrs.Grace MacLeod maternal grandmother, served a buffet lunch at her home on Belvidere St., Lennoxville, for members of the family, relatives and close friends.School prevents total assimilation CALGARY (CP) -One of the last places one would expect to find students on a Friday evening is in the classroom, but for 40 Chilean children living in Calgary these classes are a way to preserve their heritage.At their school, Escuela Salvador Allende, the dark-eyed younsters speak Spanish and learn about Chile — a homeland many have never seen.Financed by the Calgary Chilean Association, the school, which operates for two hours each Friday evening out of rented classrooms, is their guarantee against total assimilation into Canadian society.After a military coup d’etat in 1973 ended the South American country's long tradition of democracy about 11,000 people fled to Canada to start new lives.About 7,000 live in this city.School director Noelia San Martin said the school has two priorities.“First, I want the children to respect this country as much as what is — or what was and may yet be — their own country,” she said.“And we want them to learn the history of Chile and understand how to read and write correctly in Spanish."The second thing is that .now I am a happy woman because I am doing something useful.” HOPE TO RETURN The children, who speak a kind of Spanglish — a mixture of Spanish and English — when they finish their lessons, have adapted to life in Canada.A few may have recently visited their homeland, but most do not remember Chile.Those who do have only vague memories of life there.Eugenio Martinez, Chilean association president, said it is important that Chilean families preserve their heritage for the children.“Many of us hope to return to Chile one day, and if we do our children must be able to fit in,” Martinez said.Many educated Chileans — even some physicians, engineers and lawyers — have been unable to pursue their professions in Canada.Raul San Martin — Noelia’s husband — was a civil engineer in Chile but because of his poor command of English has been unable to work in this field in Canada.The language tests administered to persons who must be licensed before they may practise their professions here are demanding, he said.Consequently, those persons whose professional skill may be excellent, but whose English is poor, must find other kinds of work.Most have gone into construction and other industries.Despite cultural differences, most Chileans say life in Calgary has been satisfying.“There has been no discrimination against us,” says Alan Gonzalez.“And we have the freedom to be ourselves.If we were in the United States we would have been swallowed up by the enormous community of Latin Americans — Puerto Ricans, Mexicans and Chicanos living there.” FESTIVAL INTERNATIONAL — ORFORD 1982 July 23rd Cantabile Group, dir.Bruno Laplante 8:30 p.m.Salle Gilles Lefebvre July 24th Eric Wilner Flute Davis Joachim Guitar 4:00 p.m.Abbaye St-Benoit-du-Lac July 24th Eugène Plawutsky Piano 8:30 p.m.Salle Gilles Lefebvre July 25th Ireneusz Bogajwick Group, Tzigane music 5:00 p.m.Centre d'Art Lawn July 28th Alvaro Pierri Guitar 8:30 p.m.Beaulne Museum, Coaticook July 30th James Thompson Trumpet Madina McKie Bassoon Eugène Plawutsky Piano 8:30p.m.Salle Gilles Lefebvre July 31st Bernard Lagacé Organ 4 00p.m.Abbaye St-Benoit-du-Lac July 31st Claude Hellfer Piano 8:30pm.Salle Gilles Lefebvre CENTRE D ARTS DORFORD J MC («19» 843 m\ Eastern Townships Autoroute (10) Exit 118 (800)567 6155 RONALD MCDONALD CIRCUS Frank Curry Production CARREFOUR DE L’ESTRIE (Sherbrooke) Friday, July 23rd 8:00 p.m.Saturday, July 24th 12:00, 3:30 p.m.and 7:30p.m.Sunday, July 25th 12:00, 3:30p.m.and 7:00 p.m.Tickets on sale at Carrefour de l'tstrle Your participating McDonald s restaurant offers you a $2 rebate applicable' on each ticket purchased for children (12 years of age and under} Ask for your rebate coupon the next time you visit McDonalds McDonalds TICKETS ON SALE AT THE DOOR.Children (12 years of age and under] $6 50 (tax included) OR $4 50 (with McDonald's rebate coupon} Adults: $ 7.50 (tax included} this inhale is not valid Saturdays and Sundays in Metropolitan Monti eat.Metropolitan Quebec as well as in Ottawa Obituary ALMA HELENA GEORGE of Inverness, Quebec The community was saddened to hear of the death of Alma Helena George on June 8,1982 at the age of 60 years and nine months.She had been hospitalized for three weeks and three days in the St.Sacrement Hospital, Quebec City.Alma was born at her parents home on the eleventh range of Inverness, August 28, 1921, the eldest of eight children.On September 12, 1944, she married Clifford George who lived on the neighboring farm.They had one son, Goldwyn, who married Linda Testaguzza.They reside in Sherbrooke and have two children, Tina and Andrew, whom Alma loved and cared for dearly.Alma spent most of her life on the farm except for a period of thirteen years when they resided in Asbestos.Alma and Clifford were both employed by the Johns-Manville Co.They returned to the farm in 1965 to help care for Clifford’s mother, who was in faijinj^ health In the spring of 1980 they sold the farm and bought a home in Inverness Village.Alma was on hand to help care for her mother and father or anyone who was in need She never asked for much in life, but was always ready to give her best to others.Alma was a loyal and hardworking member of the Ladies’ Orange Lodge which she joined on September 12,1938, and will be greatly missed by all the members.Several L.O.B.A.and L.O.L.lodges gathered for the Orange Memorial Service.With Sister Joy Nugent as organist, the members sang two hymns, "Only Remembered by what we Have Done” and "Abide with Me”.The funeral service was held on Friday, June 11 at 2:30 p.m.in the Anglican Church of the Ascension, Inverness, with Rev.Harold Brazel and Mr.Grant Johnston officiating.The hymns sung during the service were "Amazing Grace” and "The Old Rugged Cross” with "Beyond the Sunset” as a solo, a special request made by Alma.It was a record sung and played by the late Hank Williams.The bearers were Alma’s five nephews: Lloyd George, Vernon White, Garry Derusha, Terry Derusha, Stanford White and a cousin, Terry Lowry.Honorary bearers were Elwin Lowry and Havey Tardif.Alma was laid to rest in the George-Greenlay cemetery just a few hundred feet from her birthplace.Left to mourn the loss of a loving wife, mother, grandmother, daughter, sister, and aunt are her husband Clifford, son Goldwyn and wife Linda, grandchildren, Tina and Andrew, parents Roland and Ethel White, sisters and brothers, Verna, Alger, Mildred, Winnifred, Sydney, Victory and Winston, sisters-in-law and brothers-in-law, Herbert and Gertie George, Rejean Chainey, Jean White, Gerald Derusha, Damien Trepanier, Allison White, Judy White, Joan White.Nieces and nephews Vernon and Judy White, Garry and Diane Derusha, Cathy and Ron Kelso, Debra and Jeffery Stafford, Stanford White, Terry Derusha, Tammy, Esther and Angela White, Cindy and Marcel Martineau, Kimberley White and Lloyd George.Alma was also a great-aunt to Jeffery White, Mark Derusha, Tiffany and Scott Kelso, Steve Martineau and Chris George She was also godmother to Winston White, Cathy Kelso, Debra Stafford, Stanford White, Tina and Andrew George.After the committal service a community lunch was served in the I.O.O.F.Hall, arranged by Jessie Patterson.The number of floral tributes and In Memoriams to charities were a silent token of the esteem in which Alma was held by all her relatives and many friends.Out of town relatives and friends attending were from Bristol, Conn., Ottawa, Smiths Falls, Ont., Montreal, Beebe, Stanstead, Sherbrooke, Richmond, Lennoxville, Danville, Thetford Mines, Leeds, Kinnear’s Mills, Pontbriand and St.Pierre Baptiste.Now that you have gone before and left us to finish with the scroll Please walk slowly down that long lone path and wait for us to follow you, For some day we know that you will call our name.God be with you Till we meet again.The RECORD—Tuesday, July 20,1982—7 —_____ftgl tfccora St.Cajetan’s Roman Catholic Church in Mansonville celebrates 100th anniversary MANSONVILLE (BN) — The 100th anniversary festivities of St-Cajetan, Mansonville’s Roman Catholic Parish is in full swing.The welcome mat is out to friends, relatives, former residents and anyone interested in helping the parish celebrate the two-month long series of events.Lawns and houses are decorated with big “100”s and colorful banners flutter in the breeze.On occasion residents are seen in old-fashioned clothes to honor memories of early settlers.Among the activities so far are : an old time mass in Latin at 4 p.m.June 24 followed by a turkey supper in the church basement.On Saturday, July 3 an automobile rally was held and on July 9, 10 and 11, excited crowds attended the softball tournament at the local ball grounds.A lively dance at the airport took place on July 10, sponsored by the Brome County Fish and Game Club.Many enjoyed a picnic at Chateau Brook Camping Grounds Sunday, July ll.An evening of music and song for the young people was held in the church basement July 16.Sunday a very special mass was said at the Ra man Catholic Cemetery.The initial event at the St-Cajetan Church in Mansonville was mass solemnized in the ancient Latin manner.As people entered the lobby they were welcomed by young couples who presented them with a souvenir ribbon which noted Father Maurice Domingue’s 25 years as an ordained priest.Many worshippers, whether members of the Roman Catholic Church or, the Anglican, Baptist or United churches - wore the popular 100 anniversary pins, sold to promote this memorable occasion.Quiet organ music filled the air as Handel’s Largo was played by Elaine Caron.The church was filled to seating capacity.With the ringing of the bell at 4 p.m., the Solemn Mass of Sacre-Coeur Diacre and Sous Diacre began with a long processional which included the officiating priests, altar boys and visiting dignitaries - relatives of Father Domingue and several nuns.The combined celebration of 100th and 25th anniversaries was evident during the afternoon and evening.At the front, high over the altar, at either side, the numbers “100” had been conspicuously placed.A little lower were the numbers “25” in silver to honor Father Domingue.In addition, four candles were glowing, two on either side of the cross, streamers of brown, gold and blue decorated the outside of the church as well as the altar area The choir loft facade was ornamented with the words ‘ ‘Dieu Est Amour’ ’ ( God Is Love ).A bilingual welcome was delivered by Jean Maurice Laliberte, presidsent of the centennial committee.The mass followed in Gregorian Chant style - except in this instance both female and male voices were heard.The rituals were also performed in the old-fashioned way with the priests’ backs to the congregation.In the absence of the Anglican Church minister.Rev.George Campbell, Gilda Clark, lay reader in the United Church, read the first lesson M.le Cure Denis Lapointe gave the second reading.The sermon and gospel reading were delivered by M.le Cure Paul Fluet, uncle of Father Domingue.Two priests administered communion as Clement Caron sang “Panis Angelicus” accompanied by the choir creating an echo effect.Mass closed with the singing of “Je Suis Venue” (I Have Come).The choir was directed by Ginette Beaudoin with Elaine Caron, organist.Members of the choir were: Clement, Benoit, Rita and Christine Caron; Ghys-laine Dahlstedt, Eddy and Rodolphe Lessard, Clair-val Labbe, Reola and Raymond Parent, Louise Patch, Aline St.Jacques and Ernest Waters.The 12 altar boys who assisted were: Michel Maheux, Erix Rouillard, Rejean Champigny, Marco Laplume, Felix Caron, Dominique Bouchard, Billy Woodard, Michel Coutu, Stephan Labbe, Guy Hackett, Stephen Gaulin and Stephan Champigny.Immediately following mass, Rejean Champagne greeted everyone on behalf of the anniversary committee and invited all to sing a song written by Rita Caron entitled Centennial Theme Song.He then introduced Julienne McDuff who gave a HIDEAWAY REOPENING COME VISIT BOB & CARON ENJOY THEIR NEW RE MODELLED BAR Happy-Hour 8-10 p.m.(Fri.-Sat.) MUSIC OF ALL KINDS Rock-Country Western-Disco & Big Band Music Tel: 562-9544 — 314 Queen St.Lennoxville F.L.RESTAURANT WEEK END SPECIAL COMPLETE MEAL ROAST BEEF — VEGETABLE COFFEE — TEA — MILK HOME-MADE RASPBERRY OR STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE WEEK-DA Y SPECIAL Complote Moal $3.25 Pogo Sticks — Small Pizzas Etc.Strawberry Shortcake $ 1.75 Special Breakfast $ 1.95 HOME-MADE PIES TEL: 562-9544 314 Queen St.Lennoxville Golden Age Club meets MANSONVILLE e married in Winnipeg on July 31.It was decided to hold a Fall card party and Food sale at the Towtll Hall on Friday Oct.22.' There will also be a drawing on two boxes of groceries at this time.Following the meeting a delicious lunch was served by the hostess after which a social hour was enjoyed.Card of Thanks LOISELLE, Charles E.— I wish to thank relatives, friends and neighbours for their kindness at the time of the death of my dear husband on June 23, 1982, also many thanks to those who visited the funeral home, for the flowers, cards and donations.All were a great comfort at this time.VERA (his wife) Blaney Family reunion held GRANBY — On July 11, the Blaney family gathered for the second year at the home of Frank and Rita Blaney of Granby for a reunion.This was the first time in ten years that the Blaney brothers and sisters had all been together at one time and many cousins were meeting for the first time.The day was warm and beautiful and soon the younger ones were in swimming, while the older ones were catching up on news of the ones who were absent.The gathering was smaller than last year, but as each family arrived carrying hot and cold dishes we knew we would have a good crowd and plenty to eat.The following families were present.Mr.and Mrs.James Blaney, and granddaughter Miss Deanna Winterkorn, all of Alliston, Ont., Mr.and Mrs.Ethan Blaney, Stittsville, Ont., Mr.and Mrs.John Blaney, and Mr.and Mrs.Randy Blaney, all of Richford, Vt., and their sons Dennis, Tommy and Kevin.Mr.and Mrs.John (Timmy) Blaney and daughter Jennifer Jean ; Frank and Mildred (Blaney) Butcher, and Denise Butcher and daughter Angela all of Waterloo, Mr.and Mrs.Brian Elston (Donna Butcher), Knowlton, and daughter Miranda, who was the youngest member present; Mr.and Mrs.Guy Gatien (Deanna Butcher), Waterloo; Mr.and Mrs.Frank Blaney, and Mr.and Mrs.Yves Lallier (Lynn Blaney) and daughters Julia and Annie all of Granby.Mrs.Ruth (Blaney) Sweet and Mrs.Dorothy (Blaney) Clark all of Cowansville; Mr.and Mrs.Douglas Vaughan and Darcy and Kelly Vaughan all of Dunham; Mr.and Mrs.Lewis Grubb, Miss Brenda Grubb, Valerie and Steven Grubb, all of East Famham.There were 44 members present, with others absent from each family unable to attend because of distance or work commitments.The group was much smaller than anticipated, we missed you.Everyone was disappointed that we could not welcome the youngest member of the clan, Jason Thomas, four-months-old son of Deena (Vaughan) and Tom Shaw of Brock-ville, Ont., grandson of Mr.and Mrs.Douglas Vaughan and great-grandson of Mrs.Dorothy Clark.In the late afternoon a large cake in the shape of a book was cut and served with drinks.By late afternoon the little ones were tired and the families were heading home, the few left enjoyed visiting until dark and the mosquitoes decided they had heard enough and drove us to our cars and home.Thank you Frank and Rita for once again letting us use your home and grounds.God be with you all till next year Submitted by Dorothy Clark Cowansville, Que.Deaths CUTTS, Effle C.(Williams) — At Ottawa, after a lengthy illness, on Friday, July 16,1982, in her 78th year, beloved wife of the late Ralph J.Cults.Survived by her son Donald of Ottawa, brother Elston and sister Kay ( Dwyer), brother-in-law and sister-in-law, Bob and Winifred Cults, Sherbrooke.Funeral Monday at 10:00 a.m., from Tubman Funeral Home, Ottawa.Interment Capital Memorial Gardens, Ottawa.HUFF, Edna Mary—At the Sherbrooke Hospital on Monday, July 19, 1982, Edna Brown, in her 68th year, beloved wife of Clarence Huff, dear mother of Cynthia and her husband Ronald Drew, Kenneth and his wife Glenda, loving grandmother of Michael, Barbara, Robyn, Trevor, D’Arcy and Craig.Resting at Webster-Cass Funeral Home, 6 Belvidere St.Lennoxville where relatives and friends may call on Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.Funeral service at St.James Church, Compton on Wed.July 21 at 2 p.m., Rev.Ron Smith officiating.Interment in Compton Cemetery.MITCHELL, Marjorie Spier — On June 22, 1982, beloved wife of William Gordon Mitchell.Memorial service at St.Paul’s United Church, Magog, on Sat., July 24 at 11:30 a m.In lieu of flowers, donations to the Memphre-magog Library, Magog, would be greatly appreciated In Memoriam WINSLOW, Odell — In loving memory of a dear husband, father and grandfather who passed away July 20, 1980.The tears we shed will wipe away But the ache in our hearts will forever stay Sadly missed by ARLENE (wife) MILES (son) TRUDY and BRIAN (daughter and son-in-law) WAYNE and ODELL (grandsons) BEAN — In sad and loving memory of my dear husband, who so suddenly passed away July 20, 1979.Without a last farewell Sweet is your memory dear to my heart And all through my years Be they many or few Will be years of sad remembrance.Sadly and fondly missed by his wife.EMMAM.BEAN Birth MARCHAND — Sandra (Wighton) and Beat joyfully announce the arrival of Cameron on July 14, 1982, a grand-person for Martha, Rene and Doug All’s well.Deaths BALL, Georgina (MacFarlane) — At Napanee, Ont., on Sunday, July 18, 1982, beloved wife of Sidney A.Ball, (former residents of Sherbrooke), dear mother of Arthur W.Ball and Robert G.Watson, of Napanee, sister of Mrs.Robert J.McMurdo (Mary), Strathcona, Man., Mrs.Jack L.Nixon (Elsie), Waterdown, Ont., sister-in-law, of Mrs.Grace Watson, Winnipeg and Lawrence W.Ball of Sherbrooke.Resting at the Wannamaker — Tierney Funeral Home, Napanee, Ont., for service in the funeral home on Tues., July 20 at 2 p.m.Interment in Riverview Cemetery, Napanee.Donations to the Cancer Society would be appreciated by the family.CASS1N, Maurice — At Centre Hospitalier St-Vincent de Paul, Sherbrooke, July 17, 1982, age 75 years, husband of the late Fleurette Desautel, resided at 889 Bertrand, Sherbrooke.Funeral service on Tuesday, July 20, leaving Brien et Monfette, 716 Short, Sherbrooke.Tel.565-9393, Romeo Quintal, Pres.Robert Dumas, Manager, at 1:45 for service in St.Joseph’s Church at 2 p.m.Interment in St.Michael’s Cemetery.He is survived by his children Gerard and Doris Langlois, Lennoxville and Robert and Henriette Lupien, Three Rivers.CLARK.Mrs.Sterling — At Hotel-Dieu Hospital, Sherbrooke, July 18, 1982, age 73 years, Mrs.Sterling Clark (nee Bessie Anderseon).Funeral service on Wednesday, July 21, leaving Paquin et Paquin Funeral Home, 56 Laurier, East Angus, Que.Tel.832-2323, Romeo Quintal, Pres.Robert Dumas, Manager, at 2:15 for service in the United Church at 2:30 p.m.Interment in Westbury Cemetery.Funeral arrangements by Brien et Monfette, 33 Bowen South, Sherbrooke.c^qss 8 son ltd MH funiPAl DIMCTORS SHERBROOKE 300 Queen Blvd N Webster Cass 819 562-2685 AYER S CUM STANSTEAD 819-876 521.3 lENNOXVIlli 'é Belv.dere St R.L.Bishop & Son Funeral Chapels too h 819 562 9977 ^ Gordon Smith Funeral Home SAwvioviuE 819 562 2685 / 889-2211 cooksmioe All of the following must be sent to The Record in writing They will not be accepted by phone.Please include a phone number where you can be reached during the day.BRIEFLETS (No dances accepted) BIRTHS CARDS OF THANKS IN MEMORIAMS .50c per count line Minimum charge $3.00 WEDDING DESCRIPTIONS/SOCIAL NOTES: No charge for publication providing news submit ted within one month,$10.00 production charge for wedding or engagement pictures.Wedding write ups received one month or more after event, $15.00 charge with or without picture.Subject to condensation.ALLOTHER PHOTOS: .$,0 00 OBITUARIES: No charge if received within one month of death Subject to condensation $15.00 if received more than one month after death.Subject to condensa tion.All above notices must carry signature of person sending notices.DEATH NOTICES: Cost: 50c per count line.DEADLINE (Monday through Thuisday): 8:15 a.m.Death notices received after 8:15 a m.will be published the following day.DEADLINE FOR FRIDAY RECORDS ONLY: Death notices for Friday Records may be called in at 569 4856 between 10 00 a m.and 4:00 p m Thursday, and between 7:30 p.m.and 10:00 p.m.Thursday night.Death notices called in Friday will be published in Monday 's Record To place a death notice in the paper, call 569 4856.If any other Record number is called, The Record cannot guarantee publication the same day. 8—The RECORI>—Tuesday, July 20, 1982 Classified (819) 569-9525 INDEX r^IlREALBrATÊl V EmPLOYiïlEfÏÏ «20-O9 lAUTOmOTIV^ »40-»39 fÿllmiBCHAnpinl «60-^79 |~l|fTM[[AnEOUr RATES 10c per word Minimum charge $2.50 lor 25 words or less.Ad will run a minimum of 3 days unless paid in advance Discounts for consecutive insertions without copy change, when paid in advance - 3 insertions-less 10% 6 insertions-less 15% 21 insertions-less 20% #84-Found - 3 consecutive days - no charge Use ol “Record Box' lor replies is $1.50 per week.We accept Visa S Master Card DEADLINE 10 a.m.working day previous to publication CE GRAND 5 pieces tout recent, pas cher, vous plaira.En plus vous aurez droit a des subventions.Tel: 566-0595 -562 0070.7 19-23 SPECIAL JUILLET — Superbe 6 pieces, terrain boise, a vendre sans faute.Prix $35,000.Hypotheque 12Vj pour cent.Mensualité $295.00 par mois.Tel: 566-0556.7-19 23 MAISON MODERNE, économisez, terminez vous-meme certains travaux.Je demeure disponible pour vous conseiller.Tel: 566-1226 569 7133.7-19-23 LAC DES MONTS - Chalet habitable a rannee, 4 pieces, très beau site, chauffage électrique, $27,000.R.Desnoyers, 565-8205.7-20 23 COMPTON — 20 minutes de Sherbrooke, grande maison de ferme, renovee a la moderne.Belle vue, tranquilite, prix aubaine.R.Desnoyers, 565-8205.7-20-23 VIEUX NORD — Foyer d'acceuil pour 9 personnes plus 3 logements de 4 pieces.Grand terrain paysage.Revenue très intéressant.R.Desnoyers, 565 8205.7-20-23 4.Lots for sale LENNOXVILLE - Large lot on Prospect Street.Tel.566 4274 after 5 pm.7-15 22 7, For Rent ROCK FOREST — 4Vj rooms, electric heating, hot water furnished, wall-towall carpeting, vacuum.$220.per month.Available May 1st and July.Call after 5 p.m„569-2982 .5-13 t.f.OUEST — Grand 3Vj, immeuble moderne, endroit beau, tranquille.$175.et plus Tel.569 169 5 OU'843 9703.7.14-8 14 7.For Rent 1.Property for sale ST MATHIAS — Bungalow en brique, 6Va pieces avec 100 acres, $40,000.Tel.(819 ) 889-2745.6-30-7-29 A VENDRE OU a louer, 8500 pi.ca.quartier centre (932 Federal).Bâtisse 2 etages.Entree chaque plancher.Bureau - entrepot - industrie.Location partielle ou totale.569 9156 6-28-7-27 DEPANNEUR licencie avec maison, très bon chiffre d'affaires, aucune concurrence, situe dans un quartier résidentiel.Tel.569-9853 apres 6 p.m.Pas d'agent.7 15-8-15 FURNISHED ROOM to rent, 812 Place Bergamin.Ideal for student.Tel 569 •5743.7 20-h.COOKSHIRE, 4 Va room apartment.available September.1st.Phone 819 875-3956.7 20-22 APPARTEME NTS ST- VINCENT — 185 3ieme Ave Sud - 1 Va meuble libre juillet, 3Va meuble ou semi meuble libre immédiatement 563-7965 ou 864 2070.6-17-7-19 NORTH — 3Va, $210., 4Va $269., 5Va $373., studio furnished $211., heated, exterior pool, playground.565-6778, 610 McGregor, Apt.38, from 9:30 a.m.- 5:45 p.m.or nights by appointment 566 6891, 670 McGregor, Apt.308.569 6711, 620 McGregor.5-14-t.f.720 PLACE DES OR MEAUX — 4 and 4Va rooms, unfurnished, available immediately, Tel.567 7358 and 567-1920.7 9 8 6 750 BUCK — 4 pieces, non meuble ou semi meuble, libre 1 juin et 1 juillet, Chauffe.567 3562 OU 567 5711.5-27-t.f.IMMEDIATEMENT — logement a louer Grande 4Va semi-meuble si desiree, chauffe, eau chaude fourni.Commodities proches.Tel.567 4003 5-4-t.f.OUEST — Grand & comfortable, 3Va pcs.meuble, près du Centre d'Achat Dunant, tranquille, système de sécurité, autobus a la porte, stationnement, pour personnes a leur retraite ou travailleurs.Libre 1 juillet.565-8029.5-31-t.f.APPARTEMENTS LUNIK — IVa, V/2, 3Va, 4 rooms, interior swimming pool, elevator.566-6778 or 566 2461.5 14-t.f.QUEST — Pres du Mont Bellevue • 2Va, 3Va meuble, tranquille, frais peinture.569-2873.5-31-t.f.JUILLET ET AOUT GRATUIT! 4Va près du centre ville, Con struCtion 81, tous les services.1er ou 10 juillet Tel.563 8891, 10 ou 17 juillet Tel.845-4735, 17 au 31 juillet Tel.563 8891.7-2 30 OUEST — 1998 2008 rue Dubreuil, 4Va, 4, 3 pieces, meubles ou non, chauffe.Libre Juin et Juillet.563-5663 ou 563 3943 5-6 tf WEST WARD — 3Va, 4Va, rooms, available Immediately, June, July, August, Tel.566 1911 or 569-4977 6-16,t.f.7, For Rent *1 les appartements BERGAMIN 3 112, 4 1/2, 5 1/2 pees washer & dryer outlets — entrée laveuse-sécheuse SHERBROOKt LENNOXVILLE PISCINE-SAUNA V Réservea Maintenant.”567-9881 566-1951 Bur.: 2061) Beivpdçrs sud.7.For Rent LES TERRASSES LEN-NOXVLLLE — New apartmlnts, 3Va, 4Va, 5Va rooms, hot water, parking, no taxes, very modern.Available immediately, June, July, August.Tel.569-4977 or 566- 1911.6-16-t.f.478 KING EST, 2 pieces chauffées, semi meublees, propre, libre, concierge, $175.00.S'adressez apres 5 p.m.Samedi et Dimanche.7-7-8-7 EST — 3Va, 4Va a louer.Libre immédiatement -juillet et août gratuit.567- 1051.7-2 30 L'ERMITAGE 1120 JOGUES — IVa, 3Va, 4Va, insonorise, poele, réfrigérateur, tapis, draperies inclus.Buanderie sur chaque etage, piscine inferieur, sauna, billard, stationnement intérieur -voisin piste de ski.Jour 563-4500, soir et fin semaine 562-0545.7-12-8-12 LENNOXVILLE — Queen St., 2Va room apartment, heated, available now.Call 562-2165.7-16-20 11TH AVENUE SOUTH, 3Va room, $165.monthly, one month free.Call 569-1273 after 6p.m.7 16 20 505 LAVIGERIE — 3, 3Va meuble, 4Va non meuble, libre immédiatement et 1 juillet, chauffe, stationnement avec prise, piscine.567-3562 ou 567-5711.5-27-t.f.EAST — 415, 13th Ave.North 3Va $194.(furnished $244.), 4Va $282., heated.566 6778, or 563 1107.5-14 t.f.t.f.178 WELLINGTON NORD — 1,2, 4Va, semi-meuble, libre immédiatement et 1 juillet, chauffe.562 9412 ou 567 5711.5-27-t.f.SHERBROOKE (Centre ville) —6 pieces, 2 salies de bain, premier plan cher, chauffe, endroit tranquille.Retraite.Tel.567-2969.6-15-t.f.FLEURIMONT, près du CHU, location 4 pieces et 5 pieces, libre immédiatement.Tel: 566-0555.7 19 23 UN MOIS GRATUIT, quartier est, près Centre d'Achats Quatre Saisons, 2Va meuble et 3 pieces non meuble.Libre immédiatement.Tel: 566 0555.7 19 23 2715 — 12ieme AVE NORD — voisinedu CHU —2Va, 3, meubles, libre 1 juillet, chauffe.562 6912 ou 567 5711.5-27-t.f.109 WELLINGTON NORD — IVa, 2Va semi meuble, libre immédiatement.Chauffe.567 3562 OU 567 5711.5-27-t.f.478 KING EST, 2 pieces chauffées, semi meublees, propre, libre, concierge, $175.00.S'adressez avant 2 p.m.ou apres8:30p.m.7-7-8 7 LENNOXVILLE — 4Va room unfurnished apartment, available August 1st or September 1st.Call 566 2321.7-15-19 LENNOXVILLE 174-E Queen, 3 rooms tenement, frig stove, monthly $165.available July 15, apply Roland Blais, 562 6622.7-15-22 MODERNE 3 pieces 8, IVa, meuble, electricite, chauffage paye.Tel.562-4944 6-22-7-22 SUTTON — Spacious elegant 4 bedroom, 2 bathrooms, modern kitchen, dining area, large living room, fireplace, panoramic view of mountain, den, fully furnished, and equipped, available September 1st, 1982 to September 1st, 1983 or by season.Call 538-3526.7-15-19 ST ELIE D'ORFORD new 3 room apartment, washer and dryer outlet, electricity, hot water and heating furnished.Possible use of pasture and barn if desired, situated on large quiet lot, contact 567 9751.' 7-15, 16,19 LENNOXVILLE, 3Vi and 4Vj room available July 1st.Tel.566-2106 .7-15-t.f.OUEST — Grand 3Va, 4Vj, libre immédiatement, juillet et septembre, tranquille, près de tout.566-2679 et 565-8522.5-31 t.f.QUARTIER EST — Grand Spécial - 3, 4, 5 pieces Construction béton - 100 pour cent insonorise, a l'epreuvedufeu, etc.563 7737 ou 864 4738 .6-21-8-19 NEAR WOOLCO — 4801 Pavillon - 3 rooms furnished or not.564-0276.6-22-t.f.WAREHOUSE FOR RENT — 429 Galt West, en trance 120, 240 8.550 volts.567-0776.6-22 t.f.A VENISE, sfyle Swiss, 3 chambres a coucher, tapis mur a mur, foyer franklin, libre en Septembre, $375.accès au bord de l'eau.Tel.843-0084 864 6288 .7-13-8-13 NORD — IVs spacieuse, meuble, chauffe, eau chaude fournie, 2615 Porfland apt.2.Pour renseignements 563-3021 apres 5 p.m.7-19 23 8.Wanted to rent WANTED TO rent apart ment in Sherbrooke in the West, Vh unfurnished, for September 1st, not in basement.Call after 5 p.m., 567 1395.7-7-tf 9.Room & board PRIVATE OR double room available In comfortable residence.Apply Sherman Residence Inc,, Box 159, Scotstown JOB 3B0 or phone 657 4416.7 7 8 7 10.Resthomes ROLLING HILLS RESIDENCE, Lennox ville Private rooms Deluxe room and board for retired people.Tel.562 2147 or 567 5234.7 6 8 3 LADY FOR light housework and preparation of meals, approx.4 hours per day.Tel 563 5448.7 19 21 LIVE IN MAID for Brome Lake Estate, non smoker please, references.Call: 514-243-5822.7-19 20 0i Sales reps • Wanted GRADUATE STUDENT, 17 years old looking for steady summer work.Tel.837-2962 after 5 p.m.Ask for Danny.PAINTING, lawn work, gardening and car simonizlng.Tel.563-3656 - 567-4340 .7-8 14 ROOFING WORK wanted, estimate free.Call 562-5606.7 7 20 25.Work wanted WILL WASH windows and walls, mow lawns.Call 563 3902.7-15 19 RESERVE NOW! Complete lawn service.Special - residential.25 years experience garden (roto tiller).Tel.569 6096, 837-2090, 566-1564 .4-21 t.f.26.Courses LEARN TO DRIVE TRACTOR TRAILERS (18 Wheelers) 24 Hr.DAILY Message Receiving Centre CALL: 613-933-7113 C.l.0FT.T.T.LTD.150 EDWARD ST.Cornwall, Ontario K6H 4G9 Prolessional Services LAWYERS HACKETT, CAMPBELL, TURNER, BISSONE TTE, BOUCHARD 8.DESPRES, 80 Peel ST., Sherbrooke.Tel.565 7885, 40 Main St., Rock Island.Tel.876 7295 314, Main St., Cowansville.Tel.514 263 4077.WILLIAM L.HOME, NOTARY, 121 Lome St., Lennoxville, 567 0169 and Wednesday, R.R.2, Georgeville 843 8921 or by appointment.40.Cars for sale 1972 DATSUN 240Z, 60,000 miles, new Tirellis CN36, fog, Konies, front spoiler, special exhaust, never winter driven, garaged, $4,200.00.Tel.562 4236 7 16-20 1981 HONDA ACCORD, 4 door sedan, very clean Tel.843 5437.7 15 19 1968 CAMARO, very good condition, 396 cu.In., loaded with high per formance, engine option, $3,500.Serious buyers only.Call 819 876 7226 after7p,m.7 15 22 ANTIQUE CARS — 1951 Plymouth Cranbrooke convertible also 1954 Chevrolet, 4 door coach.Both restored and original.Tel.569 7627 or 562 9084 7 13 20 Card party REPRESENTATIVES NOW BEING In terviewed for building products & estimation division.Training provided experience not essential - car required.Mr.Carter 1 514 697 8463.7 20-22 SUBSIDIARY of established building products company requires estimator trainees for regional expansion program.No experience necessary, car required, Mr.Davidson 514 697 8463.7-12h CARETAKER — We are seeking a responsible couple to look after a hobby farn: in Sutton area.Duties Include: chores, iawn main tenance and house cleaning.Remuneration includes: 2 bedroom home plus salary.This position will appeal to those who enjoy country living and could be ideal for retired couple.References required.All inquiries treated confidential.Reply fo Box 904, c o The Record, Box 1200, Sherbrooke, Que., J1H5L6.7-19-21 HELP WANTED — Middle aged woman to keep house for elderly gen fleman, who is able to care for himself but whose activities are restricted due to ill health.Good home, age to be discussed.Must be capable and respectable.Write to Record Box 903, c o The Record, Box 1200, Sherbrooke, Que., J1H5L6., 715 16-19 40.Cars for sale H60.Articles for sale ¦82.improvement 1978 PONTIAC Acadian, 40,439 km., 4 Michelin radial tires, 6 months use, best offer.Call Louise, evenings, 843-2532.7 19 21 41 .Trucks for sale 1976 G.M.double cab truck, in very good condition, price $2,200.For information call 567 3076.7-16 AIR CONDITIONER, 5,000 BTU, only 2 years old, window model, $140.00 Tel.838-4681 evenings.7-15 19 Articles for sale c ” longer DOSS DNS The KEl'OHU—Tuesday, July 20.1082—!* AMD SDOiFRTHAJO Sou suspbctT' X3 O ÛÛ >» n iT) LU Z cc Q z < * z < cr OpftopTUN'TY Witl- NÉVEp^J / iCNocK At PVY poo^.T vV THE wolf WON'T LÇT HIM NEAP IT.'fMAVfSl-lO X WANT A 'BI6 ICONa" AN OBPSS OF TAY WEAY FFIfô," A BANANA 6HAtCS, ANPAU-VOUfe —iMON&Y/ THI5 IS A HOuOUP' ANY DFôôflST TO 60 WITH MAY 1 TAtCF YOUB OBpro, 5I&?that, sie- ?-a TTrrrTrirm V 1 I'HESE Giant OVSTEBS MAVg V .b's PEASL9 A5 BIG- A vtfCK W /BABBIT?) 4 S A9 BOWLING- $ l BALLS, I C^UESe THAT'S WHAT'S KNOWN AS THE OUT HARD SELL.WHY SHOULD I WANT TO BUY YOUR TACKY OLP BOX I NO OLOVESR BBFAUeE IF YOU BUY THEM, I WONTOIVE YTJ A FREE BOXING LESSON .PK»= cavAU HI.DOUU WHXHOW SWEET OF rouHAKOU?.' GEORGS" I'VE BROUGHT YOU A BUNCH OF FORGET-ME-NOTS.' m m.^ s Ik > -Û UJ LU 2 LU LU WHVDOWT W FIWDA VICE mA(\k) /MOD SETTLE WHO MET WAUJi I'M MOT THE 1MPE ! I'M A LOWER .A DRIFTER.I MEED MV SPACE .VkJJOWJ, GCTTA SLAV LOOSE.ICO MARYcTMlUGS ID DO .PEOFLE ID MEET.PLACES TO GO.gotta keep mo/hu: Sbc/cz/ notes from around the Eastern Townships SOUTH STUKELY Myrtle Hilliker 297-2535 Mr.and Mrs.V.Moore of Orford Lake, Mrs.Helen Mizener of Knowlton, Mrs.Audrey Marcotte of Waterloo and Gordon Muncy of Montreal were calling on Mrs.Blanche Martin, Mrs.Eileen Martin and Miss Marjorie Swett.Mrs.lola Sherwood of Sarasota, Fla., is a guest of her sister, Mrs.Myrtle McLellan.Miss Marjorie Sw^t called on her friends, Mrs.Lottie Jenner and Miss Lily Parfrement in Sherbrooke.Mrs.Eileen Martin has returned home after a pleasant holiday with Mr.and Mrs.Harlan Martin and family in Kingston, N.S.Mr.and Mrs.Leo Delisle and daughter of Penn., were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Russell Savage, Miss Jo Ann Savage and Mrs.Winnie McIntosh.Mrs.Lucy Wright has returned home after visiting her daughter and son-in-law, Mr.and Mrs.Roland Blampin in Maniwaki.Mr.and Mrs.O.Guertin of Burlington, Vt., were supper guests of Mr.and Mrs.Clifford Wright.Friends were sorry to hear that Ross McLellan had passed away.Sympathy is extended to his wife and family, also to Myrtle McLellan and family.D1TCHF1ELD V.M.Slater 583-0501 Bilingual church service held A bilingual service was held at St.John’s Anglican Church on Sunday morning, July 4, following the Centenary celebrations of the founding of the Municipality of Dit-chfield and Spaulding, now known as Frontenac.The church was filled to capacity with Rev.Linton Westman officiating, Catholics and Protestants alike partaking of the Holy Communion.Mr.Hall-Beyer of Scotstown took the French part of the service and Monique Schultz was organist.After the service a picnic lunch was enjoyed in the church grounds and hot coffee was supplied, warding off the chill of the coldest July 4th on record, after an early morning frost which damaged low area gardens.GOULD Mrs.Roscoe Morrison 877-2542 Mr.and Mrs.Benny Jacklin of Picton, Ont., were visiting at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Jack O'Brien Visiting at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Gilbert Wintle were Mr.Win-tie’s brother, Gerald Wintle and son Richard, of Kingston, Ont., Miss Melanie Wintle of Lennoxville also spent the weekend with her parents.Overnight guests of Mr.and Mrs.Roscoe Morrison were Mr.and Mrs.Wesley Beattie of St.George, N.B.Others visiting at the same home were Mr and Mrs.Wayne MacAulay of Lachine, Mr.and Mrs.Ronald Rowland, Miss Betty Rowland and Yves Laflotte of East Angus.Weekend guests of Mr.and Mrs.Douglas Beaton at their home on North Hill were Mr.and Mrs.Bob Bell, Lennoxville.Mrs.Beaton has been regularly visiting her mother, Mrs.Mary MacAulay of Scotstown, who is a patient in the Sherbrooke Hospital.Mowing your lawn is a lot cheaper than joining a health club.paRnapacnon rionP.PEP RESTAURANT LENNOXVILLE W/SHES TO THANK ALL OUR CUSTOMERS FOR MAKING OUR 15th ANNIVERSARY A SUCCESS 262 QUEEN ST.LENNOXVILLE TEL: 569-2411 TRY OUR FAMOUS FRIED CHICKEN presents by Antonine Maillet (in Hngiish) translated by Luis de Ccspedes 1 or more than two hours, the old Acadian charwoman shuffles, talks, rocks and moves us to laughter and tears — La Sagouine is "a triumph of the demanding art of monologue .with Viola Léger July 21 — July 25 FOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATION CALL US AT (819) 563-49(>6 FACTORY OF Rowe Co - Victoriaville- Large selection of last production on Sofaschairs SUPER SPECIAL Corner sectional Sofa set in tan corduroy Material Reg.$1398.spec.$598.With the purchase of this special you can buy an arm chair reg.$390.for only $89 Heath Co.-, Mattresses and box springs Size 30”, 36”, 48" or queen plus large selection ot wood and brass finish Head Boards Super special Re-possessed from well known Motel Complete bed outfit 54" with solid maple 2-post head-board tor only $139.00 L*I'J 1 W—The ItKCOKÜ—Tuesday, July 20, I9H2 Sports Anvil Expos run into hot Dodger pitcheri LOS ANGELES (AP) — The way the story goes, the first thing A1 Campanis, vice-president of Los Angeles Dodgers, said to scout Mike Brito when he tried to sell him on veteran Vicente Romo, was: “He’s a little old isn’t he?” And when St.Louis Cardinals cut Romo this spring, the way the gag goes, they decided to keep Jim Kaat, 43, over Romo, 39, because Kaat was younger.On Monday night, after Romo, who won as a starter for the first time in 12 years, combined with relief ace Steve Howe on a five-hit, 2-1 victory over Montreal Expos, Jim Fanning, the Expos’ manager, said: “Give him the credit.He pitched a fine game.He fooled us all night.” Whether Romo really is 39, or merely holding at 39, is debatable, but of no concern to the Dodgers’ manager Tom Lasorda.“Compared to some people, he’s not that old,” said Lasorda.For a time it appeared the Expos might not be the only ones fooled.His first four starts for the Dodgers after they had purchased from the Mexican League player May 24 were, at best, so-so.“But tonight, he pitched the way he was pitching in Mexico, when I saw him down there,” said Brito, the scout who signed him.“He showed me tonight what I told Mr.Campanis he was doing in Mexico.ALLOWS THREE HITS Romo allowed the Expos only three hits, two of them infield singles, and when he encountered his only trouble of the evening, he did not cower in the least.Facing the NL’s leading hitter, A1 Oliver, in the sixth inning with the bases loaded and two outs, Romo got him on three pitches — two fast balls that were fouled off, then a changeup that was popped up.“He threw great,” said his catcher, Mike Scioscia.“He used all his pitches and that means about seven or eight of them.But it was in the seventh inning, ironically as he was striking out the side, that his left knee gave way slightly, and he left for a pinch hitter in the bottom of the seventh.Howe preserved the win with his eighth save, but not before allowing a run in the ninth inning.Singles by Bill Russell and Dusty Baker produced the Dodgers’ first run in the fourth inning off loser Scott Sanderson, 6-8.And in the sixth, after two were out, Steve Garvey’s bunt single brought him Pedro Guerrero with what developed as the deciding run.FIRST VICTORY For Romo, 1-2, the victory was his first with the Dodgers, it was his first in the majors since July 16,1974, when he was pitching for San Diego, and it was first as a starting pitcher since April 27, 1970 when he was pitching for Boston.Since his release by the Padres in 1974 Romo has been working in Mexico.Last year he was 16-6 with a 1.48 earned run average last year at Coatzacoalcos.And that’s where he was again this year, after he refused the Cardinals’ invitation to go to Triple A.He was remarkable there — seven starts, seven wins, five shutouts, a 1.98 ERA when Brito happened by."I had given up ever coming back to the majors,” Brito said, having resigned himself to pitching in the Triple A Mexican League.“But I’m happy.In the second game of the series tonight Charlie Lea, 7-5, will start for Montreal, Jerry Reuss, 9-7, for Los Angeles.Braves 4 Cardinals 1 Joaquin Andujar walked home the tie-breaking run with the bases loaded in the eighth inning and Bob Horner followed with a two-run single, leading Atlanta over St.Louis.Red Sox 9 Texas 5 Carl Yastrzemski capped a five-run eighth inning with a three-run homer as Boston rallied from a five-run deficit in handing Texas its seventh consecutive loss.Jim Rice had put Boston ahead 6-5 with his third hit before Yastrzemski hit reliever Jon Matlack’s first pitch into the Texas bullpen.f-/ ¦Æ RI CORD/PI KkV HF A IO! Gary Carter connected for rbi number 60 last night Vilas could be number one BROOKLINE, Mass.(AP) - A relentless authoritarian in complete charge on the tennis court, Guillermo Vilas turned into a thoughtful diplomat in the interview tent.Is he playing as well now as he did when he won 13 tournaments in 1977?“It’s very difficult,” Vilas said Monday night after rolling over Mel Purcell, 6-4, 6-0, for the title in the $200,000 U.S.pro tennis championship.“How can you compare?“It’s so complicated.” Should he be considered a better player, at the moment, than Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia, who lost here in the quarter-finals to Purcell, or American John McEnroe?“That’s a disrespectful question,” Vilas said."You’re talking about such great players.“Lendl, who won eight tournaments, McEnroe, who won Wimbledon when he was nine years old, drinking milk.I’m not going to answer that.” Vilas may have answered those questions on the tennis court in easy straight-set victories over fourth-seeded Yannick Noah of France in the semifinals Sunday and then Purcell.Purcell, seeded seventh in the tournament and ranked 30th in the world, stayed with the top-seeded Vilas in the first set.But, in the second set, Purcell’s speed was no match for Vilas's strength and deft touch as the Argentinian mixed deep topspin lobs with sizzling passing shots to bury the underdog from Murray, Ky.“You have to play great to beat him, and I played great in the first set and he still beat me,” said Purcell, who is still seeking his first title in a Grand Prix tournament worth at least $200,000 after failing in three finals since he turned pro in 1980.TIES WITH NASTASE For Vilas, ranked second in the world, the conquest was another milestone in the brilliant career of the 29-year-old lefthander.It was his 57th Grand Prix title, tying him with Hie Nastase for second place.Jimmy Connors leads with 91.His first prize of $32,000 lifted his winnings for the year to $324,300, third in the world behind Lendl and Connors.Vilas said a lot of hard work is responsible for that income.It was a night from the past WASHINGTON (AP) — Now that was a baseball all-star game.Imagine, if you will: — Hall of Famer Bob Feller of Cleveland Indians, exponent of the first 160-kilometre fastball, versus Willie McCovey of San Francisco Giants, most prolific left-handed home run hitter ever in the National League.— Or, Bill Mazeroski of Pittsburgh Pirates, whose heroic ninth-inning homer off Ralph Terry in the seventh game of the 1960 World Series vanquished New York Yankees, versus Don Larsen of the Yankees, who in 1956 became the only pitcher ever to throw a perfect game in the World Series, Monday night, these and other equally nostalgic confrontations took place in the first Cracker Jack Old Timers Classic, played before 29,196 baseball-hungry spectators at RFK Stadium.The stadium had not been the site of anything resembling a major league game since 1971, when Washington Senators moved to Texas, so this game was a welcome tonic.Only six days earlier, these oldtimers’ younger counterparts had participated in their 53rd all-star game.The National League won for the 11th straight time.So what.It was boring These folks in Washington had come to see some real all-stars.GETS TWO STRIKES In the third inning, Feller got two strikes on McCovey, who had hit a mammoth blast off the facing of the press level in right field during batting practice.Feller had retired from playing after 1956 ; McCovey was still active in 1980 It was time for experience to prevail, and that could have been the theme of this game, after Luke Appling, 75, a Hall of Famer from Chicago White Sox, had homered in the first inning to pull the American Leaguers into a 1-1 tie.Feller threw McCovey a breaking ball, low and Christoff signs multi- | year pact with Flames ^ inside.How uncharacteristic of this man, who fanned 2,581 in his 18-year career, primarily with his dreaded fastball.But the pitch had McCovey on his heels, and his swing missed wildly for strike three.In the bottom of the third, the American Leaguers broke the tie with four runs, started by Jim Fregosi’s solo homer, and with two out in the top of the fourth Larsen and Mazeroski met.Larsen already had been traded to Kansas City by the time Mazeroski handed the Yankees their World Series defeat of 1960.Perhaps, this confrontation would prove the Yankees wrong in trading the tall right-hander for a fellow named Roger Maris.Larsen had retired Ernie Banks on a pop foul and Ralph Kiner on a fly to centre when Mazeroski stepped into the batters’ box.HELPS OPPONENTS Mazeroski launched Larsen’s first pitch — it looked vaguely like a fastball — toward the left-field wall.It didn’t appear to have enough on it to get out of the park — despite there being only 82 metres between home plate and the left-field fence — until left-fielder Bob Allison, a former Senator and Minnesota Twin, got a glove on it.The ball bounced out of Allison’s glove and into theseats for ahome run, making the score 5-2.The American Leaguers got two more in the fourth, and the game ended after its appointed five innings with the AL ahead 7-2.Lew Burdette, former Milwaukee Braves pitcher, was the loser, giving up four runs in one-third of the third inning.Feller was the winner, or one of them.The others were the left-outs — baseball’s down but not forgotten men.The Association of Professional Baseball Players of America, which helps indigent players and managers, was guaranteed $50,000 from the proceeds.Scoreboard CALGARY (CP) -Steve Christoff, 24, has signed a multi-year contract with Calgary Flames, the National Hockey League club announced Monday.The 6-foot-l, 180-pound right winger, came to the Flames from Minnesota North Stars along with Bill Nyrop and a second- 3444 TILDEN fcAH tfWTAl * MOVING $ HUCmI [ WErKENOSPECIAVTY VI ff* round draft pick in a June 7 trade for right winger Willi Plett He was entering the option year of his existing contract with the North Stars.The Springfield, 111., native scored 26 goals in 69 games last season and was an integral part of the United States gold medal team at the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, N Y.Christoff underwent surgery on his right shoulder April 13 to repair a dislocation which hampered his IIV .«.• f ! - - .-, BASEBALL NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division w L Pel.( GBL PhtlRdelptila ’il 19 587 — St Loul» 51 41 554 1 Montreal 47 43 522 4 Pittsburgh 48 41 517 4V* New York 42 49 462 94 Chicago 38 56 404 15 Weal Dlvlstoa Atlanta 55 34 618 San Diego 50 41 549 6 Lot Angelea 49 44 527 8 San Francisco 43 49 487 134 Houaton M II 444 154 Cincinnati 34 57 374 22 Allants at St Louis N Pittsburgh at Cincinnati N Montreal at Loa Angeles N Philadelphia at San Diego N New York at San Franc taco N Oliver, Mtl Knight, Hou Landreaux, LA Pena, Pgh Carter, MU Madlock, Pgh McGee, StL Baker.LA Jonea, SD LoSmlth, StL AB R H Avg.SS2 5a 107 322 344 M 110 320 237 42 74 312 2M 30 90 310 306 M 94 SUS 323 S3 99 307 193 22 59 3M 312 36 96 304 299 56 91 304 339 74 103 304 Monday Reaalta Chicago 6 Houaton 5 (10 Inning* » Pittsburgh 5 Cincinnati 4 Atlanta 4 St I/nila 1 (.os Angeles 2 Montre*! 1 Philadelphia 7 San Diego 6 Today* Gome* Houston at Chicago Pitt*birgh at Cincinnati N Atlanta at St.I^ouia N Philadelphia at San Diego N Montreal at l^os Angelea N New York at San Franc taco N Wednesday Game* *» si h’-4 c*o Doable* Kennedy, San Diego, 26; Madlock, Pittsburgh, 22; Knight, Houaton, 22; Oliver.Montreal 21; Dawaon, Montraal 21 Triple* McGee, St Lout*, 7; Templeton, San Diego, 7; Garner, Houston, 7 Home runt Kingman, New York, 25, Murphy, Atlanta, 24; Carter, Montreal, 20 Ran* baited la Murphy, Atlanta, 67; Kingman, New York, •4.Oliver, Montreal.S3 Stolen boaea LoSmlth, St Louis, 43, Moreno, PlttRbugh *3; Alto an, ».Vilas handled Purcell routinely in the second set in which Purcell got just 10 points.NO WINNERS Purcell said one turning point came in the first game of the second set when he hit several shots “that would have been winners against other players.” Vilas took one of those shots and hit a topspin lob to break Purcell’s serve at love.“I just couldn’t get to it,” Purcell said.“When a guy can hit a lob so well it got me down mentally.Another turning point, Purcell said, occurred with the score tied 3-3 in the first set.With the seventh game at deuce, Purcell double-faulted after fighting off two break points, then dropped the game whenVilas uncorked a forehand passing shot down the line.Vilas used two aces to hold his serve at love and take a 5-3 lead.In the doubles final Monday night, the eighth-seeded team of Steve Meister, of North Miami Beach, Fla., and Craig Wittus, of Bloomfield Hills, Mich., beat the unseeded team of Freddie Sauer and Schalk Van Der Merwe, both of South Africa, 6-2, 6-3.Jr RECORD/PERRY BEATON y Has is good but most experts still like Ivan Lendl as the top tennis player in the world Dufferin Heights to hold junior golf tournament By Bobby Fisher STANSTEAD PLAIN — The Dufferin Heights Golf and Country Club will be holding its first annual junior Field Day on Thursday, July 22.The tournament offers A, B and C classes to boys and girls between the ages of 12 and 18, although tournament organizer Bill Anderson says he will ac cept players even under 12.Anderson, a special education teacher at Sunnyside Elementary School in Rock Island, has taken over the development of the junior program at the 60-year-old golf course and has doubled the number of young members at Dufferin.He says he has about 10 volunteers — “all from the club” — helping him with the tournament he has been planning since March.Anderson says he got the idea for the event last year and he explains why he is putting it together.“When I grew up in Granby I was at the golf course in Granby and there were some gentlemen golfers who were very good to me.Since I have the sum- Pitching (12 decision*): Loi lar, San Diego, 10-3, 769, 2B5, Roger*, Montreal, 11-4, .733, 221 Slrlkeottt* Soto, Cincinnati.160, Carlton, Philadelphia, 152 AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pet.GBL 53 36 596 - 53 37 589 ¦* 47 40 540 5 44 42 512 7* 45 43 511 7^ 44 43 506 8 Milwaukee Boaton Baltimore New York Detroit Cleveland Toronto 42 47 472 11 Weal Division California Kanaaa City Chicago Seattle Oakland Texaa Minnesota 52 39 48 41 46 42 46 45 38 55 35 51 30 82 Monday Resalts Toronto 4 Kansas City 2 California 6 Baltimore 5 Cleveland 5 Oakland 4 Boston 9 Texaa 5 Oticago 8 Detroit o New York 5 Seattle 3 Minnesota 6 Milwaukee 4 Teett'ita tiaee 871 - 539 3 523 4V* 505 8 409 15 407 14Vfc 326 22 >4 mer off I want to help thekids.” The expected turnout for the one-day tournament is roughly 75 players but Anderson says anyone who wants to apply late can just show up at the golf course on Thursday morning.“W'e will be taking late entries and there should be no problem getting players off the tee around 10 o'clock.” Anderson has taken the junior program, which according to Craig Grieves, the bartender and a longtime member at Dufferin, had “maybe 15-20 juniors three years ago,” and has raised the number to almost forty.Anderson has not been out recruiting — but many members feel it is the time he spends with the youngsters giving advice and tips that encourages them Al Passinham, a pilot for Air Canada and a member at Dufferin, says Anderson has made the difference in the junior program.“My boys play here in the summertime and they have benefited very much from the time Bill has spent with them.My youngest son caddied for him Kanu* City at Toronto California at Baltimore Oakland at Cleveland Teexa* at Boaton Seattle at New York Milwaukee at MinneMta AB R H Avg.214 23 74 346 281 36 96 342 342 71 113 330 309 49 102 230 235 44 77 328 342 61 112 327 261 44 85 328 348 60 112 322 281 34 89 317 340 50 108 312 Kama* City, Gantner, Mil Wilton, KC Harrah, Cle Hrbek, Min Parrish, Det Yount, Mil Bonnell, Tor Cooper, Mil Paciorek, Chi McRae, KC Doable* White 28 Lynn.California, 28 Triple* Herndon, Detroit, 9; Wilson.Kansas City, 9 TRANSACTIONS RA8EBALL American Lragae Clilcago White Hoi suspend out fielder Hon LeMore for three days without pay New York Yankees name Sammy Ellla pitching coach; move Clyde King from pitching coach to a front office position, handling special * HAM i v* in a couple of tournaments last year and he came home and told me, ‘You know, Mr.Anderson told me I was such a good caddie that 1 could call him Bill from now on.’ That’s the good thing about Bill — he takes the time to talk to the kids and help them out.” Anderson doesn’t take all the credit for the new-found success of the Dufferin junior program.“Charity Henderson deserves an awful lot of credit.She puts in a great amount of time — she always has.She has done a lot of work for this tournament we are holding.’ ’ Anderson is in his third year of membership at Dufferin and has been teaching for four years.He says of his fledgling program: “We don’t have as many good players here as some of the other courses but the kids get to play a lot.Most players in our program are quite young.There are some golfers here who do show a lot of promise.We will just try and bring them along.” Anyone wanting to take part in the Junior Field Day can call the dub at (819)876-2113.ClncbmsU Reds option pitcher Ben Hayes to Indianapolis Indians of American Aaaodatlon Han Diego Padres call up out fielder Tony Gwynn from Hawaii of Pacific Coast league BASKETBALL NBA Phoenix Hun* sign forward-guard David ThirAUl to a multi year contract New York Knlcks sign centre Scott Hastings and forward Vince Taylor.FOOTBALL CFL Winnipeg Blue Bombers cut quarterback Steve Plaarklewtcz NFL Green Boy Porkers announce retirement of centre Charlie A ne New F.ngland Patriots sign offensive tackle Darryl Haley and linebacker Roy Douglas Pittsburgh Hteelers announce retirement of tight end Randy Grossman Han Francisco 49er« sign tight end Charle Young HOCKEY NHL Cnlgary Flame* sign right wing Steve Christoff to s multi year lirait Sport shorts LEXINGTON, Ky.(AP) - A son of celebrated sire Nijinsky II was sold Monday for a world record $4.25 million at the Keeneland July selected yearling sale.The winning bid was from Tom Cooper of British Bloodstock Agency-Ireland on behalf of a syndicate headed by Robert Sangster.“He’s a very nice colt and I knew he wouldn’t be thrown away,” Cooper said.• ROME (CP) — A competitor from the Soviet Union at the world fencing championships was critically injured Monday during competition in the men’s team foil class, eventually won by the Soviet Union.Vladimir Smirnov, a gold medallist at the 1980 Olympics, is in hospital in a coma after an opponent’s foil broke, passed thorugh Smirnov’s face mask and struck him in his left eye.• NEW YORK (AP) - If the National Football League players go on strike this fall, network television viewers in the United States may be getting a look at a wide-open brand of football Canadian style.NBC has contingency plans to televise Canadian Football League games Sundays this fall in the event of a walkout by NFL players The CFL game, while quite similar, can be a shocker for first-tune viewers.It is, however, in its third year of being televised by ESPN, the all-sports cable network.DETROIT (AP) — Manager Tony LaRussa of Chicago White Sox suspended outfielder Ron LeFlore for three days without pay Monday for missing a workout and showing up late for a game.LaRussa was upset because LeFlore missed a special practice last Wednesday, the day after the all-star game.The suspension will cost LeFlore approximately $10,900 of his estimated $625,000 annual salary.• BAST AD, Sweden (AP) — Mats Wilander won his second Volvo Grand Prix tournament by defeating Henrik Sundstrom 6-4, 6-4 in an all-Swedish final of the $75,000 Swedish Open tennis tournament Monday.9 NEW YORK (AP) - Slugger Dave Kingman of New York Mets was named National League player of the week Monday, after a long ball surge that gave him the major league home run lead In four games last week, Kingman smashed four home runs, pushing his total for the year to 25 He drove in nine runs and scored five, batting 500 with 7-for-14 after the all-star game.• ATLANTA (AP) — Atlanta Hawks centre Wayne (Tree) Rollins filed suit in superior court Monday charging M.L.Carr of Boston Celtics with verbally and physically abusing him during 40 National Basketball Association games.The suit, which names the Celtics and Carr as defendants, seeks a total of $4 million in damages $1 million for physical and emotional injuries, $1 million in punitive damages, $1 million in vindictive damages and $1 million for negligence.• ORCIERES MERLETTE, France (AP) -Frenchman Pascal Simon won the 15th leg of the Tour de France cycling race Monday, beating out countryman Pierre-Henry Mentheour in the last 200 metres of a tough 204-kilometre climb up the Alps • SAN FRANCISCO (AP1 — San Francisco 49ers have signed tight end Charlie Young to a contract for the 1982 season, bringing every member of the National Football League champions under contract.The terms of the contract signed by the nine year veteran weren't disclosed.DID YOU KNOW THE FAMOUS Canvas Center Ltd.Has All You Need In: AWNINGS—TARPAULINS BOAT & TRUCK COVERS We have the Best Quality at Competitive Prices.168 Queen St.Lennoxville, Que.Tel: 566-5744 If Busy: 565-0955 Former Tel, Number of E Î.lent K Awning Co.Ltd.k The RECORD—Tuesday, July 20,1982—11 —___9*1 mam Spooner Pond Women’s Institute members hold July meeting SPOONER POND -Members of Spooner Pond branch of the Q.W.I.met on July 8 for their regular meeting, at the home of Mrs.Gladys Biggs, assisting hostess, Mrs.Andrey Samson The meeting was opened in the usual way by the President, Mrs.Florence Ignatieff.Roll call: “How to prevent accidents in the home”, was answered by ten members.Some of the hints were: Don’t leave articles oon the stairs, use the hand rail when going up or down stairs, regardless of your age, use a step ladder when washing windows or painting high places, don’t use a chair or other make-do's.Use double sided tape to hold down edges of rugs at doorways so that no one trips on loose edges, do not use scatter rugs on highly polished floors.Minutes of the June meeting were read and Jacoby's bridge Rule of ace and king NORTH 7.20-82 ?AQJ10 VAK2 ?73 ?10 7 5 2 WEST EAST ?873 ?9652 ¥J 10 963 VQ75 ?5 ?Q J 6 2 ?Q 9 8 3 464 SOUTH ?K 4 V 8 4 ?A K 10 8 6 4 ?AK J Vulnerable: North-South Dealer: South West North East South !?Pass !?Pass 39 Pass 3V Pass 3 NT Pass 4 NT Pass 6 NT Pass Pass Pass Opening lead: Vj By Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag Some 50 years ago the champion Four Aces team discovered a most valuable bidding principle.We named it the rule of the ace and the king Specifically, the idea was that any time you held a full king more than you had already shown you should consider a higher level for the final contract than your partner had suggested With a full ace extra you should make some positive move.With an ace and king extra you should make the move.North has a full ace over a minimum spade response.He would have reached game over a minimum rebid by South When South jumped to three diamonds North was ready to invite a slam.His three-heart call started his move.South just rebid three no-trump.Now North decided that four no-trump (a no-trump raise, not Blackwood) would be enough since he only held four spades.The four no-trump was enough to get South to six.He won the heart lead in dummy, led a diamond to his ace, returned to dummy with a spade, and led dummy 's last diamond.Then he made the safety play of the eight to guard against the possibility that East might hold his exact diamond holding (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN ) approved after a correction.An appeal from the secretary of the Richmond Expo Community School Fair was read, and a donation is being sent to that worthy cause.It was decided to try to have a speaker in the new civil laws as regards families, at the November meeting.Mrs.Laurie Walker had been in contact with members of other branches concerning attending a play at the Lennoxville Festival.Several branches were to reply on July 29, this Astro will be decided upon.In the absence of Mrs.Stella Parkes, Treasurer, that report was given by Mrs.Grace Taylor.Conveners reports were called for.Agriculture, Grace Taylor, announced that there is to be a Garden Contest again this year, with an entry fee of $5.00 being charged.Anyone planning on entering this contest is asked to make their entry by July 15.Grace read an article on various kinds of flies.Citizenship, Gladys Wednaaday, July 21 Bernice Bede Osol cYour ‘Birthday July 21,1982 This coming year you will begin to see an improvement in your economic conditions.The changes may be slow in coming, but they will constantly inch upward CANCER (June 21-July 22) It you hope to Increase your earnings, begin as of now to think in larger terms.Setting higher goals will add to your impetus.Predictions of what's in store for you for all four seasons following your birth date and where your luck and opportunities lie are in your Astro-Graph.Mail $1 for each to Astro-Graph.Box 489, Radio City Station, N Y.10019.Be sure to specify birth date.LEO (July 23-Aug.22) You have good leadership qualities today If you choose to, you could get others to do things which they would rather not do, and show them how to enjoy it in the process.VIRGO (Aug.23-Sapt.22) An old obligation can be cleared up today by dropping a few hints to the party indebted to you.Make your pitch using a sense of humor.LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.23) Hopes can be realized today if you do not put limitations on your thinking.Be a realistic dreamer.Visualize yourself succeeding in a big way.SCORPIO (Oct.24-Nov.22) Do not be intimidated by challenging developments today.In situations which offer opposition, the odds are tilted in your favor SAGITTARIUS (Nov.23-Dec.21) You have the ability today to take matters with elements of small promise and turn them around into something really worthwhile.Find ways to use it.CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) Dealings today with persons who were lucky for you in the past should work out equally as well now.Associate with winners AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Fab.19) Even though you may have good relations with co-workers, as ol now try to improve upon them Opportunities will come from those who labor at your side.PISCES (Fab.20-March 20) Don't be afraid to make changes at this time if they are well thought out, and you feel they can better your lot in life.What you have in mind should be lucky tor you.ARIES (March 21-April 19) Serious situations can be concluded successfully today if they are conducted in a congenial atmosphere.Make your points, but try to do so with a light touch.TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Spend some time today on projects which will beautity or make your surroundings more pleasant, whether they be at home or at work.GEMINI (May 21-Juna 20) An opportunity might present itself today to make a situation in which you are involved even more profitable It'll take some masterminding on your pari.(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.) Biggs, has the knitted articles ready to send to CanSave.She announced that the Ways and Means committee plan to hold a garage sale at her home in October, tentative date being Qctober 2nd.Education, Mrs.Vera Hughes, showed a booklet sent out by an Insurance Company, which lists where all a person’s important papers, etc., are kept.Instead of the usual books for sale, Vera had a quantity of colored sheets of paper for sale, this was a good quality paper, and suitable for writing paper, etc.Home Ec.Mrs Florence Blanchard, reported that the August picnic for families will be held at the home of Mrs.Parkes, if the weather is fine.If not, Florence is to inquire as to getting permission to use the hall of the Trenholmville church for the picnic.She will look after the ice cream, etc.While Vera Hughes and Andrey Samson will look after the games, prizes and so on.Lun- ches will be pooled as usual.Publicity, Mrs.Dorothy Oakley reports all meetings to the County Publicity convener and to the press.Correspondence was read, consisting of the appeal re the School Fair, a card of thanks for a sunshine basket from Mrs.Beatrice Rodgers, who is making FOSTER - What better time to celebrate a family reunion than the Canada Day weekend?Katie and Fred Marsh of Foster kindly opened their lovely home on Saturday, July 3rd, for a happy get-together for the “Marshs”.Visitors were present from Bishops Mills, Ont., Dollard des Ormeaux, Ville St.Pierre, Cowansville, Brome, Knowlton and West Bolton, Que.It was an extra special occasion, in view of the fact that it gave each and everyone an opportunity to extend a very satisfactory recovery from her recent surgery; an invitation to attend the 35th anniversary meeting of another Branch; and a renewal notice from Canadian Consumers.The Hymn of All Nations was sung and Pennies for Friendship collected.As this was Welfare & our kind wishes to Janet and Douglas Lousley, their son, Scott and daughter, Cheryl, who have been transferred to Dallas, Texas for three years.They are arranging the loose ends of their move and will be in Dallas for the beginning of August.The clear sun shiny day was welcomed by all.The children renewed acquaintances while participating in lawn sports.Cheryl Lousley made her day by reaching her self-imposed goal- she not only rode one of the Palomino horses in the neighbouring pasture Health meeting, the convener, Mrs.Blanch portier introduced her guest speaker, Mrs.Alice Beaubien, who, in her usual pleasant way, gave a very interesting talk on the work being done by the volunteers in connection with the CLSC.This is a much appreciated service for the elderly or handicapped persons, and but succeeded in also riding the one which was only halter broken.Kathryn Marsh, as the youngest at age 3 enjoyed playing with Ryan Dixon (5), Cheryl Lousley (7), Scott Lousley (9), Anne Gallop (10), and Jamie Johnston (11).All sport was not physical.Even the children, true to their Marsh blood, played cards.Granted, there was one game of 52 pickup! - but “once bitten, twice shy." Parents participated in many a hand of cards.The old favorite, 500, is giving way to Bridge was started in 1980.Mrs.Beaubien was thanked by Mrs.Fortier, and presented with a samll gift.Mrs.Beaubien was also the winner of the regular drawing prizes Lunch was served by the hostesses and a short social time enjoyed.August picnic on the regular date, at Stella Parkes, if fine weather.and much thought was dedicated to applying the rules judicially.Boy - there always seems to be more to learn! A pleasant afternoon passed quickly.Everyone then enjoyed a buffet of homemade sandwiches, pickles, squares and cakes as well as tea, coffee and juice while relaxing in the living room and sun porch.Visiting and cards were so pleasant that it was well into the evening before we finally broke up.Everyone had a wonderful day to dream of that night.Marsh Family reunion held at Foster GOODYEAR THETIRES YOU’RE LOOKING FOR ON SALE NOW SMART SHOPPiR SALE Washer & Dryer Special Starting from $749 $t * œs Micro-Wave Oven Special *459 4 FLOORS OF SPECIALS TO THE END OF JULY Prices reduced on refrigerators, electric ranges, freezers, de-humidifiers, dishwashers.Qjrl Meubles Lennoxville Furniture m 153 Queen — Lennoxville — 566-5844 TIRES TO FIT MOST CARS SIZE OUR REGULAR PRICE SALE PRICE Eagle P185/75R13 $103.95 $ 89.95 P195/75R14 122.95 109.95 Our Best P205/75R14 127.95 113.95 Summer Radial P215/75R14 P225/75R14 137.95 149.95 122.95 133.95 P205/75R15 129.95 115.95 P215/75R15 141.95 126.95 P225/75R15 149.95 132.95 P235/75R15 165.95 146.95 Viva & Viva II P155/80R13 $ 68.95 $ 59.95 P185/80R13 79.95 69.95 A Popular Price i P185/75R14 85.95 75.95 Radial P195/75R14 87.95 79.95 P205/75R14 91.95 81.95 P195/75R15 93.95 83.95 P205/75R15 97.95 86.95 P215/75R15 103.95 92.95 P225/75R15 108.95 96.95 P235/75R15 123.95 109.95 Non-Radial A78T3 Cruiser $ 55.70 $ 39.95 E78T4 Polystreak 59.95 49.95 Dependable Quality G78J5 Polystreak 64.95 53.95 Price of all tires includes installation LIGHT TRUCK TIRES Save 20% or more SIZE OUR REGULAR PRICE SALE PRICE Tube type 750-16 8PR Traction Hi-Miler (Rib Design) $116.15 $89.95 750-16 8PR Traction Sure Grip (Traction Design) $127.00 $99.95 Price of all tires includes installation CUSTOM WHEELS Save $25 on a pair.Save $60 on a set of 4.We feature Keystone Wheels and other leading brands.If we don’t have the wheels you’re looking for well do our best to get them for you.Installation included.Lugs and Caps extra.GOOD-YEAR GO CENTRES 2025KingSt.W., Sherbrooke BUSINESS HOURS: Mon.-Fri.7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.Sat.7:30 a.m.-l 2 noon Tel.: 569-9288 * 12—The KECORD—Tuesday, July 20,1982 From the pens ofE.T.writers MERRY-GO-ROUND OF LIFE There is life and there is death.We are born, they call it a baby.We grow up a little, we start school We work very hard in school Then one day we become a teen-ager.We still go to school to learn.Now we are teen-agers we don’t play dolls or trucks Now we discover the difference between boys and girls.We go out on a date with each other now Soon we finish school.Then we go out into the world Now we are grown up.Now we are men and women.W'e get a job in the big world and we work hard at it.After a while we fall in love and get married.After two or three years we have a child Now we are mom and dad.Then soon, our children grow up.They become men and women and get married.They have children and now they are mother and father.Now we become grandfather and grandmother Now we are getting very old, sooner or later we will die We live, we love, we are happy, we are sad sometimes and then we die That is the whole thing about the merry-go-round of life.When you get to the end you have to get off.Written by BEVERLEY BOOTH A POEM WRITTEN YEARS AGO TO MY CHILDREN Children with your youthful faces Some in laughter, some in tears If only mother’s love could be with you Only makes your sweet lips pout For it so very important To know what is wrong and what is right But so often mother’s counsel Only makes your sweet lips part.For there is one above, dear children Who will guide you, if you may If you will but listen to him Listen to him now, today For he loves all little children And it grieves him when they stray He is always glad and happy When’ they choose the better w-ay Many mothers’ prayers are given Many mothers’ prayers go up, So dear children, won’t you listen Just be good and kind and just.JESSIE HODGE Wales Home, Richmond, Que.OLD AGE CAN’T HAPPEN Old age is very very fine but we hardly improve like rare old wine.Some acquire varicose veins and suffer many other pains.New lovers know the way life feels when she is learning to cook your meals.How to only touch her feet would make me think of things we cannot eat.Just to hear her sing a song nothing she could do was wrong.Musical chairs and skipping rope she washed my back with baby soap.W'hat is wrong my charming pet how I hate to see you fret.Come closer closer that’s the way I want to love you night and day.A truer more charming loving kind nowhere on earth could you ever find.We could dance till sunrise once a week no other lover would I seek.If a guy danced with you I would sit and fret how dare he touch my charming pet.The world belonged to you and me remember when 1 climbed that tree.The way that you were always there when I got hungry as a bear.You belonged to me and I to you no other couple could be more true.In winter we were always warm and always in the best of form.The golden years are long since gone along with your charming morning song.We drank egg nog all the time and table-cream and the best of wine Life is so short and then we’re gone never more to hear our old love song.Remember you young loves this is your Golden Years take care of one another and you need not have years And don’t think of all the tomorrows lined up in the heat and the cold of all the summers and winters that one day you too will be old.TED WRIGHT Dunham, Quebec Townships’ Crier COURTESY OF AYER’S CLIFF The QFA club annual picnic will be held jointly with other QFA clubs at the Experimental Farm in Len-noxville.Lunch at noon.Entertainment.July 25.SAWYERYTLLE Mrs.John Hoffman, nee Rev.Nettie Wilson will be in charge of the Service in the United Church here on July 25 at 11 a m.Pot luck lunch after the service.News of church or chanty events will be carried as a free service (ONE TIME ONLY) on Tuesday and Thursday each week.Mail information to: "The Crier, c/o The Rec ord, Box 1200, Sherbrooke." All notices must be signed, carry phone number of the send .'rand received at The Record 2 days previous to pub lication.No brand nr manufacturer names or dances ar.cepted.No admission prices will be printed but "Adm Charged" may be used Senior citizens group meet in Coaticook SAWYERVILLE - A special thanks was given to Rev.Gordon Simons by way of a plaque and an Eastern Townships plaid scarf for all his devotion to the residents and friends of the Tuesday night Bible Class at the Home.He will be greatly missed by all who attended.Miss Vivian Miller spent a few days in Hatley with her brother and sister-in-law, Mr.and Mrs.Dale Miller.While there they took her to Richmond to visit her aunt Esther at the Wales Home.Mrs.Alex.Reichert of Edmonton, Alta., visited her grandmother Mrs.John Me Burney while she was home for a few days with her parents.Craig McBur-ney of Bulwer and infant daughter came for a visit so that greatgrandmother could see the newest member of the family.Mrs.Ellis Waldron of Montreal also visited her mother Mrs.John McBurney.Friends of Lilia Kerr were saddened to hear of her death after such a short time at the Rosemary Home in Scotstown.Mr.Howard Seale, formerly of Island Brook has taken up residence at this Home.Among his many visitors have been Mrs.Dorothy Ross, Mrs.J.Patton of Cookshire and Mrs.Patton’s sister Vera, Mrs.Dorcas French, Sherbrooke, Kenneth French, Mrs.K.Morrow, Blanche and Aubrey French, Mrs.Franklyn Kerr, Mrs.Maple Westgate, Mrs.Garnet Lister, Mr.Melvin Thompson, all of Island Brook, Mr.and Mrs.Justin Morrow, Florida, Mr.and Mrs.Douglas Parker, Ottawa, Mrs.Helen Johnston, Bulwer, Henry McBain and Mrs.Mickie Povey, Len-noxville, Mrs.Muriel Watson, Scotstown, Mrs.Brian McDermott, Cookshire, Mr.and Mrs.Lloyd Hume, Belmont, Ont.Mr.and Mrs.H.Nugent, Flanders, Mrs.A.MacLeod, Ruth Riddell and Roy Westgate.Some also visited other Residents.Mr.and Mrs.David Mackay and son Bruce of Belleville, Ont., were visiting Mr.Seale, also Mrs.M.Brown and AYER’S CLIFF -Mrs.Beverly Schoolcraft was hostess for the Card Club held at her home on Friday evening July 9.500 was played at three tables and prizes won by Mable Cooper, first, second, Opal Smith and consolation, Rose Valliere.others.Mrs.Eleanor Massey, West Newton, Mass., visited her mother Mrs.Lulu Murray, also Mrs.Agnes Scott.Mrs.Murray accompanied Mrs Massey to Windsor where they were overnight guests of Mrs.Donna Doyle.Mrs.Ruth Wilson had several of her family call on her for her 85th birthday on July 13, and was a guest of her son Eric Wilson, Mrs.Wilson and family in High Forest.Mrs.Mary Borden and three children of Winnipeg, Man., visited her mother Mrs.Verda Gilbert.Mrs.Dewar Scott was a patient in the Sherbrooke Hospital for minor surgery.She is home now and in good health.Mrs.M.Ladd and Mrs.Mayhew of Scotstown were visitors of Mrs.Scott.Following the games, dainty refreshments were served by the hostess assisted by friends in the club and a pleasant social period enjoyed.Flora Astbury played as a sub for Jeanie Cass who was unable to attend.Club meets ¦ National Museums Musées nationaux of Canada du Canada NATURAL HISTORY NOTEBOOK PRESENTED BY THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF NATURAL SCIENCES, OTTAWA TUNDRA MUSKOX Ov/bos mosc/raTUs The speoes onjmjfej in ïiurasiû'prùbûblLi retthinq Norlh imeTiCd Vid ftie 11 fi&lnq l$1hmus"dunnq second-last qlaciation- When most of Canada ms cove-red bq ice, aboutto.doo qears oat), fados herds survived ifi unqlaciated refuses m Alaska i /ukon Temtorif, in the northern li t % possibly danks Is- •rr-.r^ 'ivYwj* Or'/vdos (or ' Ommqmak / the.tnut call it) is superbly adapted to Arctic conditions by ts compact build,hek pelt flonq guard hairs wilh thick underwool), furry muzzle, well-muffled ears and short fail In Canada,'fossils are knoion from both territories, the prairie provincesand Ontario - tundra mu$ko>cen presentlu h/e m northern Canada and Ûreenlûnd and have been introduced to other counties- Canada FOR FREE REPRINT WRITE TO THE MUSEUM WAREHOUSE Au Bon Marché WAREHOUSE 121 Depot Street i BANKRUPTCY STOCK SALE * of Lodies' Better Quality Shoes K Stock of IGI Enpg., Galeries les Quatre Saisons Inc., 900 Thirteenth Avenue North, Sherbrooke.Ladies' High Fashion Dress and Sport Shoes CHECK THESE BIG, BIG SAVINGS, THEN HURRY TO THE WAREHOUSE FOR BEST CH0ICEI r ¦ worth of Sale Starts Tomorrow, Wed., 9:30 at the Warehouse
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