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The Westmount examiner
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  • Montreal :Examiner Publishing Company, Limited,1935-2015
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jeudi 25 avril 1991
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[" NM a A \u20ac I a ace QE « a jo i 9 No more steamies Mark Shinder\u2019s fast- food restaurant is out of business after 22 years.See page six.By LAUREEN SWEENEY Making all of Westmount your home Vol.LXIII, No.17 The north side of Summit Circle BE R¥\u2019 N will be enhanced at the request of citizens rather than closed to create a vast urban forest, as proposed by Councillor Peter Trent.Recommendations for increasing street safety made by citizens at last J .Thursday's public consultation session appear reasonable and should be easy to implement this summer, Mr Trent told THE EXAMINER Monday.These include creation of a walking and jogging path along the north side where no sidewalks exist, addition of a second curved barrier to deter bicycle and car racing, as well as closure of the Summit Circle access to Oakland avenue.The changes were proposed by citi- § zens at the meeting after Mr Trent agreed to kill his largely unpopular plan to consolidate 50 acres of wild park land and reduce traffic in the area.The plan, would create too vast a wilderness citizens protested, down the back of the mountain that The ve plan to make a jogging and walking path on the north section of Ingrid Azimov, a resident of St George's Place.She was nearly hit by a car last week.Continued on page 18 Westmount, Quebec, Thursday, April 25, 1991 56¢ + 4¢ GST = 60¢ Summit Circle (at left) sounds like a great idea to jogger Seats up for grabs in fall election Now is the time for Westmounters to start finding candidates for council\u2019s eight seats in November's municipal election.With six months to go, only two council members are definitely planning to return, an EXAMINER survey revealed this week.Rhoda Vineberg and Joan Roth- man said yes without hesitation and there\u2019s a strong possibility Mrs Roth- man will go for mayor.She says she's \u201csounding out people.\u201d Veteran councillors Sally Aitken, Peter Duffield and Paul Fortin are calling it a day and Daniel Tingley will not run either.Peter Trent, the remaining councillor (Stuart Robertson's seat remains vacant), says it\u2019s possible he'll run for mayor if he has strong support but he won't oppose Mayor May Cutler if she runs again, and she's mum on the matter.By LAUREEN SWEENEY \u201cI'm not ready to state my positon,\u201d she said.\u201cI've still got a lot to 0.\u201d Mr Trent, who has been a prime mover in bringing in the city\u2019s new director general and streamlining city finances, said it \u201cwasn\u2019t likely\u201d he would run again as councillor.So if the mayor makes a bid for another term, it would be on a council without Mr Trent at the financial helm.Mayor Cutler has previously stated she might run again if her agenda were not completed or if there wasn't a \u201csuitable\u201d mayoral candidate.Taking into consideration the vacancy and Mr Trent's position, it appears that six councillor seats will not be contested by incumbents in the Nov 3 vote while the number Gfo [Le Transition) Your home away from home.INSIDE.8 People & animal traffic BFirecalls.BW Policelog.destroy shrubs in Summit Park .BSeniorsSay.\u2026.(corner Victoria) Open Sat & Sun5pm 4858 Sherbrooke St.W.486-2742 (48-MARIA) - CLOSED MONDAYS rises to seven if Mrs Rothman seeks the mayoralty.Who else may run, along with Mrs Vineberg?Three who have expressed interest are Corinne Sévigny, John Lehnert and Herbert Bercovitz.\u201cI'm thinking about it,\u201d said Mrs Sévigny, who masterminded the political campaigns of her husband, Col Pierre Sévigny, who was associate minister of national defence in the Diefenbaker cabinet.Mr Lehnert, a lawyer with Bell Canada, ran in the last election and was narrowly defeated in ward 7 by Mr Fortin.\u201cI'm certainly intending to but we live in rather strange times and anything can happen.\u201d As a director of the Westmount Finance Action Committee, he has remained active in local politics.Mr Bercovitz, president of CLSC Metro, called THE EXAMINER to say he has been encouraged by Sally Aitken to run in her ward and it was possible he'll take up the challenge.Of the four councillors who know they won't be back on council, three will have fulfilled eight years in office and all feel it\u2019s time to hand over the reins to \u2018new blood.\u201d City clerk Marie France Paquet is planning a full-scale city enumeration in September along with a citywide census at the same time.¢ The reasons councillors chose to run again, or not.Page 16.City information package points to narrowed Cedar By CHARLES ABRAMOVICI The city no longer wants to divert traffic on to The Boulevard from Cedar avenue, but is still considering narrowing Cedar.\u201cThe final design for the reconstruction of Cedar will be made such that the speed of cars travelling along the road will be reduced while maintaining the capacity to handle present traffic volumes,\u201d it states in a recently released information package from the city.The three-page package was to be delivered to 300 area homes yesterday afternoon and this morning, said Bruce St Louis, Westmount's manager of operations.A public meeting on the proposed narrowing of Cedar avenue is to be held at city hall on Tuesday at 7:30 pm: The city, in an experiment last October, narrowed the entrance to Cedar avenue with barriers to divert traffic on to The Boulevard because Cedar residents complained of dangerous, speeding traffic on their street.Residents of The Boulevard opposed the proposed changes because they said it would divert traffic on to their already busy street.City officials and councillors now all agree that the goal has changed.It is no longer to divert traffic on to The Boulevard but to make the area safer.Further experiments, including computer simulations, will be carried out by the city to make sure that no additional traffic will be diverted on to The Boulevard.The information package states that no final plans have been prepared for the reconstruction of Cedar Continued on page 10 : Vancouver .Drama for children Two shows designed for and produced with the help of children are in town this week.See page 11.11.Æ Mrs.Bazar, 76, has been active ; for many years as a volunteer in the \u2018field \u2018of internati 2 tions; human.Tigh é ment.cr \u201cLast year, she was appoihted te td ; the Canadian Institute for Peace: ; and Security, a three-year seat on; \u2018 the Crown agency.As a young woman, she opened\u2019 the Beatrice Millman pre-kinder: garten, on de Maisonneuve and Grosvenor, which was one of thé- first recognized by the Quebec government.She also ran the first day camp on the site of the now-de-.funct Maples Inn in Pointe Claire: in the late 1930s.She said her interest in international relations may have beguñ when, as a child, she perused a- collection of art books her parenté.\u2018had, depicting battle scenes ih \u2018phfhting throtgh the ages.In the 1950s, as a result of the Korean War, Mrs Bazar became interested in the United Nations and the possibilities through working with related agencies, such as UNESCO.Mrs Bazar became president of the UN Association in Canada in 1972.She has been appointed to UN committees on human rights and refugees.Mrs Bazar was part of a delegation to the first environmental conference in Stockholm in 1972.She was part of the 25th anniversary committee of the UN universal declaration of human rights and of the Federation for International Training in Third World Countries.Mrs Bazar is married to Bernard Bazar, former owher of Pharmacie Bazar on Greene avenue.He is now working as pharmacist at Dorval airport.Their sons Leonard and Ronald, as well as six grandchildren, converged in Montreal to celebrate Mrs Bazar\u2019s investiture in the Order of Canada.Leonard recently received his PhD in clinical pathology from: Georgetown University.*.Ronald is-now a publisher and : co-author of children\u2019 s books im: 5 .- BEATRICE BAZAR LE meat - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 25, Next Scheduled City Council Meeting Monday, May 6, 8 pm Date de la prochaine séance du conseil municipal Le lundi, 6 mai, 20h00 a WESTMOUNT TO INTERESTED PERSONS BY A MODIFICATION BY-LAW CONCERNING DISTRICTS C-5 PART 7, C7 AND R1 PART 1, A DETAILED DESCRIPTION AND A SKETCH ARE CONTAINED HEREINAFTER IN THE NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given by the undersigned, City Clerk of Westmount, THAT the Municipal Council of the City of Westmount, at its meeting held on Monday, 15th April 1991, adopted by resolution, a draft by-law 1075, entitled ''BY-LAW TO FURTHER AMEND BY-LAW 613 CONCERNING BUILDING LINES\"; THAT the said draft by-law is a by-law to further amend the Bylaw 613 of Westmount entitled BY-LAW CONCERNING BUILDING LINES\" in its application to Districts C5-Part 7, C7 and R1 Part 1; THAT the said Districts C5-Part 7, C7 and R1 Part 1 are bounded as follows: District C-5 Part 7 the immoveable properties on the north side of Sherbrooke bearing civic numbers from 4779 to 4855 Sherbrooke inclusive, those on the south side of Sherbrooke bearing civic numbers from 4780 to 4866 Sherbrooke inclusive, those on the east side of Victoria bearing civic numbers from 339 to 397 Victoria inclusive and those on the west side of Victoria bearing civic numbers from 350 to 392 Victoria inclusive; District C7 Bounded on the east, by the eastern limits of the City and by the eastern boundary of lot 378-62 (being a lane); on the south, by the rear lot lines on the south side of Ste.Catherine and by Tupper; on the west by Gladstone; and on the north, by Ste.Catherine.District R1 Part 1 Bounded to the east, by the eastern limits of the City; tothe south, by The Boulevard; to the west, by the rear of lot lines on the west side of Lexington; to the north, by the northern limits of the City.The whole as illustrated in the following sketches: TRE Sioa] [EA R3, ry a Pa 3.3 a CLAREMONT 0 Gi DISTRICT Rl.THAT the object and purpose of the said draft by-law is as follows: 1.Grosvenor Avenue at Sherbrooke Street To modify the building lines on both sides of Grosvenor at the corner of Sherbrooke from 14 feet to nil.2.Ste.Catherine Street \u2014 East limits to Gladstone To modify the building line from the east limits to Gladstone Avenue from 3 feet to 10 feet.3.Belvedere Place To modify the building line on the south side from 25 feet to 15 feet.THAT, in accordance with the provisions of Section 123 to 130 of the Act respecting land use planning and development (R.S.Q., Chapter A-19.1), the said draft by-law shall be submitted for public consultation regarding the object and the consequences of its adoption, at a public meeting called by the Council and chaired by the Mayor, said public meeting to be held on Wednesday, 15th May 1991 at 7:00 p.m., in the Council Chamber, City Hall, 4333 Sherbrooke, Westmount, Quebec, H3Z 1E2; THAT, at the said public meeting, the Mayor will explain the said draft by-law and the consequences of its adoption and will hear the persons and bodies wishing to be heard; THAT the said draft by-law is available for inspection in the Office of the City Clerk, 4333 Sherbrooke, Westmount, Quebec, H3Z 1E2, from Monday to Friday inclusive, during regular office hours, 8:30 a.m.to 4:30 p.m.GIVEN under my hand, at Westmount, Quebec, this 23rd day of April 1991.Marie-France Paquet City Clerk F2 WESTMOUNT AUX PERSONNES INTÉRESSÉES PAR UN RÈGLEMENT DE MODIFICATION VISANT LES DISTRICTS C-5 PARTIE 7, C7 ET R1 Suite à la page 18 Today, April 25 Art exhibit at Galerie Westmount, 4912 Sherbrooke street, of oil paintings by France Trudel until May 5.484-1488.Art exhibit at Galerie Dan Delaney, 318 Victoria avenue, To Everything There is a Season, recent collages on handmade papers, by Evelyn Gold, until Tuesday.484-4691.Saturday, April 27 African Dynasty dinner and tashior@ show at Victoria Hall to raise funds for the Sickle Cell Society.Fashion Outrage features Montreal Black Ebony models, special presentation by Black Designers of Montreal.$40.486-6542 or 482-7493.Children\u2019s activities: Trading fun with baseball cards at Oink Oink!, 1361 Greene avenue, at 11 am.484- 0252.Overeaters Anonymous meets every Saturday at 3:30 pm at Westmount Baptist Church, 4755 Sherbrooke street.Non-smoking.499-3940.Sunday, April 28 Children's theatre: Mirage Magik presents The Quest for a King, written by instructor Wayne West and directed by Fabienne Le Panse, at Victoria Hall at 3:30 pm.Free.Ikebana: Exhibition and demonstration of Japanese flower arranging at Atwater campus of Dawson College, 3040 Sherbrooke street, 5th floor from 10 am to 5 pm and Monday from 10 am to 1 pm.Demonstrations today at 11:30 am, 1:30 and 3:30 pm.484-1644 or 933-2210.Lecture: How to make friends and keep them by Lee Lubin, public health educator, at a luncheon at the Leisure Institute of Congregation Shaar Hashomayim, 450 Kensington avenue.12:30 pm, $2.50 members, $3 non-members.Monday, April 29 Concert: Chorale Nouvelle de Montréal, directed by Brock McElheran, An evening of opera in concert at 8 pm at Westmount Baptist Church, Sherbrooke street at Roslyn avenue.Tickets $10 and $7.486-3669.Montreal Camera Club meets at 7:30 pm at Westmount Park Church, 4695 de Maisonneuve boulevard.Print of the year and nature slide of the year competition.Guests welcome.Use rear entrance.Tuesday, April 30 Children\u2019s theatre: The drama classes of the recreation department present two one-act plays, Hoff the Cat-Dealer, by Andrew Davies, and an excerpt from Winnie the Pooh.Performed by children aged five to 14, directed by teacher Collette Micks, the plays start at 7 pm, and are suitable for all ages.Free.Public consultation: Meeting regarding the narrowing of Cedar avenue at city hall at 7:30 pm.Wednesday, May 1 SWAG meeting at 10 am at a new location: Community Room, 80 Hillside avenue.Guest speaker is Miriam Green, director general of Ville Marie Social Services, discussing services of the agency.All welcome.Thursday, May 2 Student theatre: Students at Selwyn House present Arsenic and Old Lace this evening and tomorrow at 8 pm at 95 Céte St Antoine.General admission $6; students and senior citizens $3.931-9481.Antique show and sale at the arena, 4675 St Catherine with 60 dealers, until Sunday.Daily from 11 am to 9 Pm, except Sunday, when it closes at 5pm.$4.486-7195 or 481-1741.Erratum Due to un error in a schedule released by the Quebec Drama Festival, the title of Westmount\u2019s Eliza Berry's play named in the April 11 issue was.incorrect.It should have been Up and About in an Illegal State.THE EXAMINER regrets the error.me DOOD vs g #5 QF#4oos wv + trave trip may (r ie TR Cp EE Pe of Please contribute to: Canada | (613) 234-6827 7724 BREAK THE PATTERN OF POVERTY IS ( Yh 56 Sparks Ottawa K1P 5B1 Thursday, April 25, 1991 - 3 Children here sympathize with Kurdish children, and those at © estmount Park School have oved it by bringing their pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters and loonies to school to give to the Red Cross effort to help Kurds trying to flee Saddam Hussein\u2019s rule.The \u201cSave the Children\u201d campaign began in Helen Kanaras\u2019 Grade 2 class.\u201cThey do current events every morning,\u201d she said.\u201cEven though they're young, they understand what's going on, the suffering and the pain.\u201cThey've been following the news and were so touched by the plight of the refugees.\u201d The children debated how to help, suggesting clothes are needed, discussing writing a letter.Others said no, that they need food and money.So the class decided to do some fundraising.One student thought the whole school could get involved, and they have.Hopes of raising $200 to $300 were quickly surpassed on Thursday, the first of two fundraising days.By Friday at 10 am, exactly $578.56 sat in piles of coin and a box of mainly small bills in the Grade 2 classroom.On Monday, the cut-off, $713.47 had been raised.Some parents donated $20 or so, but the bulk was brought in by students.\u201cWe asked for pocket change,\u201d said Ms Kanaras.But children have been bringing in jars filled with pennies, piggy banks and other symbols of their life savings.The effort is doubly pleasing to the teacher; her children have just finished a unit on counting, and tallying up the change is terrific practice.Children raising money for Kurds Childrenir ina a Grade 2 class at Westmount Park School triumphantly show some of the money their school raised to help Kurds in Iraq.A cheque was to be presented to the Red Cross Tuesday.Readers who also wish to contribute may send cheques made out to the Red Cross and marked \u201cKurdish relief\u201d to 2170 René Lév- esque boulevard west, Montreal, H3H 1R6.Mayors meet with Ryan over transfer payments Mayor May Cutler was expected to travel to Quebec City for a one-day trip yesterday with other suburban mayors to oppose the reduction of transfer payments by municipal affairs minister Claude Ryan to municipalities.The group was scheduled to meet - Office located in Westmount EFFICIENT AND PERSONALIZED SERVICE 24 HOUR SERVICE AIRPORT RESERVATIONS DELIVERIES GLADSTONE MEDI-CENTRE Médecine Familiale \u2014 Family Medicine Spécialistes Consultants \u2014 Consulting Specialists With or without appointment Avec ou sans rendez-vous 4095 Tupper St., Westmount (next to the Reddy Memorial) 935-1860 ATWATER with Mr Ryan as well as members of the caucus.The trip was planned to underline the common front of the mayors against the Ryan reforms, according to Yolande Laurin, director general of the group.Your car is an important investment! Why not have it repaired by someone who cares! Since 1939 \u201cSpecialists in insurance - estimate repairs\u201d 21 Somerville, Westmount 486-0785 WFAC says city opting for an outdated computer system The Westmount Finance Action Committee says the city will purchase a dinosaur if it follows a consultant\u2019s recommendation to spend $200,000 for a new IBM AS 400 computer.À press release by the WFAC states the AS 400 is a dinosaur because it is not compatible with any other equipment or software but IBM and consequently doesn\u2019t offer accéss to the \u201cenormous library of software packages designed for Quebec municipalities.\u201cThe WFAC urges the new director general to acquaint himself with the present basic systems and procedures and to compare them to what is being done elsewhere,\u201d the April 20 document states.Once that is done, \u201che should be in a position to rationally propose a solution which will not merely patch up a crumbling edifice.\u201d The WFAC says the recently released $50,000 consultant\u2019s report by LGS Group didn't give enough consideration to a cheaper alternative to the AS 400 \u2014 \u2018\u2018a third party turn-key system.\u201d This means an outside consultant would sell and maintain the city\u2019s hardware and software.Councillor Peter Trent said at an April 2 council meeting that the city would delay deciding on a new central computer after hearing the WFAC's argument, which he said had merit.The city intended to meet with Dynobec Ltée which has 300 From the finest European breads to the best deli.That\u2019s why | stop at Hannah and Jerry's fe Van Home Bagel 5205 Sherbrooke St.W.corner Marlowe 482-2435 48-BAGEL subscribers, including Outremont and Côte St Luc.John Lehnert, president of the WFAC, says that in the long run this system would be cheaper.The LGS report states the IBM 400 would be cheaper over a period of eight years.The press release says that the cost of an IBM RISC 6000 computer, nec- cessary for a turn-key system, would be about the same as the AS 400 but the yearly software licensing fees would be cheaper than hiring an additional employee for West- mount\u2019s management information system/data processing department (MIS/DP), as the LGS report recommends.Jerry Dolar, director of MIS/DP, had recommended buying an IBM AS 400 two years ago, but Mayor May Cutler opposed the request, saying the high cost of the new computer, then $400,000, had to be justified to the taxpayers.Bo) æ LUMBER AND PLYWOOD To HOME AND INDUSTRY ORDER ee WHEKDAYS 7:30 AM- 5: SATURDAYS 8:30 AM-4 PM Call 748-6161 SHEARER-BOCK RUTHERFORD INC.50 STINSON BLVD.TWO BLOCKS EAST OF NATIONAL FILM BOARD SEE NOW FOR ce Treated Wood Patios Patio Doors Landscaping UniLock Brickwork Treated Wood Fencing PVC Chain Link FREE ESTIMATES PO re od to + sms 3 as de A « + D x = A A SHOWROOM/SALES OFFICE 4718 St.John\u2019s Rd.Pierrefonds, Que.696-6011 LR UE E Examiner Making all of Westmount your home Published every Thursday by Publications Dumont (1988) inc.[| COGECO Media Group 155 Hillside Avenue, Westmount, PQ H3Z 2Y8 CTR, DIA om ant mM UNI» Editorial and Circulation 932-3157 Display and Classified Advertising 931-7511 FAX: 932-5700 Publisher & Editor: Don Sancton Director of Advertising: Louise Wolman News Editor: Alison Ramsey Staff Reporters: Laureen Sweeney, Charles Abramovici Typeset by Adcomp Inc., Westmount Printed by Richelieu Roto-Litho Inc.St.Jean sur Richelieu, Quebec Second class mail registration number 1760 Publisher's liability for error: The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement.The publisher's liability for other errors or omissions in connection with any advertisement is strictly limited to publication of the advertisement in any subsequent issue or the refund of any monies paid for the advertisement.Mail subscriptions in Canada, $25.92 per year, 2 years $46.44, 3 years $62.64.Subscriptions of fess than one year, 65 cents per copy plus $2 handling.Sixty-five cents a copy.Outside Canada, additional $60.00 a year.Prices include 7% GST and 8% Quebec sales tax 4 - Vol.LXI!, No.17, Thursday, April 25, 1991 .man Seeing through glass darkly Member Membre Association of Quebec Regional English Media Association des Médias Régionaux Anglophones du Duébec CONSULTATION?The word is getting bandied about carelessly in Westmount these days and we must ask if the complainers about its alleged absence really know what they are talking about.The Westmount Municipal Association vice- president, Mr Stanley Baker, dumped on city council at last week's municipal meeting for what he said was the taking of decisions in advance of asking citizens what they thought, in this instance on three particular subjects.We have several questions.First, why do the citizens of Westmount elect their mayor and councillors?We always thought the prime purpose was to delegate to representatives the responsibility formaking decisions in the citizens\u2019 behalf.Part of that role is an assumption that solons are chosen because of their knowledge of the city, of the general wishes of the residents, for their known good sense, honesty and fairness in weighing any conflicting interests, and for ultimate decisiveness.Generally, another qualification is to recognize major questions which require more than ordinary deliberation, such as surveying those likely to be affected, seeking outside advice and even consulting formally with the interested public, whether or not such action may be required by law.In view of this, we are in quandary over Mr Baker, and others, complaining because they felt council had made decisions with regard to closing part of Summit Circle, narrowing Cedar avenue and re-seeding two park dog runs.The first matter actually proves the opposite.Councillor Peter Trent had an idea about closing the little-used bit of road and floated a trial balloon.He then chaired an excellent consultation meeting and already action has been taken on what citizens at that meeting requested.The Cedar avenue thing has been beaten to death.Our complaint is the untoward prolongation of the issue and now, heaven forbid, council's decision to hire outside consultants! And since when is maintenance work in parks, particularly dog runs, a capital issue?The only thread of justification for public complaint, and that only for dog owners who may be temporarily discommoded, is that there appears to have been no announcement of the work.Indeed, it isin the realm of communications, not consultation, that the city administration can be faulted.Announcements of the city\u2019s intentions are inclined to be hit and miss.Professional public relations went by the board here some years ago in a misguided economy measure, leading Westmount in- toall kinds of avoidable embarrassments.Officials close to situations tend not to be conscious that it is the little things, not the major ones, which promote complaint.Also, some solons have the capacity for misspeaking.For example, Councillor Paul Fortin did no one any good, particularly his own reputation for good sense, by blurting out on the Cedar issue that his mind was made up; this when, clearly, council as a whole regrettably had not and has since proved it by consulting \u201cexperts.\u201d There would be a good deal less demand from the citizenry for \u201cconsultation\u201d if there were more resolution and clear public communication of such decisions to everyone.A Hall of Westmount Fame A number of persons who were privileged to attend the recent Victoria Hall ceremony imaginatively honoring distinguished former residents of Westmount apparently have had a similar idea.It is to have some permanent result, beyond the satisfaction of knowing that a grateful city remembered those whose lives have had an important impact on the community, the nation and even the world.Simply put, it is tocreate a \u201cHall of Fame,\u201d a room or place in the city which could house an on-going exhibit of memorabilia which could be visited by citizens, visitors, researchers, and specially children learning their city\u2019s and country\u2019s history.The portraits, the decorations, the mementoes, the uniforms, the videos and the other artifacts thoughtfully gathered and presented in the concert hall last week for the guests to admire would make an excellent start for a permanent exhibition.With all the planning afoot for more refurbishing of the hall and of the public library, provision should be made for a suitable room or rooms for such an exhibit.Right now, one of the smaller, un- der-used rooms of Victoria Hall might be put to use to remember the 10 distinguished Westmounters honored so far, and those who must in the future be added.There is no doubt that some of the items on view last week were merely loaned for the occasion.However, most families and friends would be honored to be asked to provide these and other items as gifts or long-term loans if they were assured that there were to be suitable care and use for them.Heritage, in our view, is more appropriately preserved and honored in this way \u2014 involving people \u2014 than some of the efforts to prevent renewal of notable but old properties.our Mayor Her Worship May Cutler says.Ridiculous accusations MOZART once said that to give a concert before a Salzburg audience was like playing to empty chairs.It seems that speaking in the presence of Councillor Joan Rothman is like speaking to anempty chair.Not only does she not appear to have listened to anything I have ever said, she doesn't seem to have read anything, either.How else to explain the goofy attacks made on me in her column last week in THE EXAMINER?Where once, in all said or written, have I suggested turning Victoria Hall into a \u201cproper\u201d theatre?I have always proposed a multi-use hall.Where again, said or written, have I suggested turning our library into \u201ca copy\u201d of the Côte St Luc library?The Côte St Luc library is a model in how it reflects the needs of that community.I have always urged the restoration of our Westmount Library to its former splendor, adding what is necessary tomake it easier to use and easier to work in.When did I ever say the citizens of West- mount are more interested in \u201csweat\u201d activities than in the arts?It's our city councils that have concentrated on athletic activities.The 1987 budget (just before I was elected) allocated only $5,000 to \u201ccultural\u201d activities in contrast to $1,319,000 for ath- letic-related activities.Now, as populations grow older, cultural activities, especially those that people create themselves, have grown in importance, and it\u2019s time to pay attention to them as well.This is going on in cities right across Canada.Why would I want to \u201cbuy\u201d old cast-iron fire alarm boxes as sculpture for our parks?We already own them.I just want to see them installed.Cities less affluent than Westmount have sculpture in their parks: Lachine, Verdun, Montreal North, Montreal East, LaSalle, Ste Anne de Bellevue.We have none.My suggestion was that we recycle our 80-year-old cast iron fire alarm poles as the beautiful antiques they are, veritable objets trouvés that are also part of our heritage.Another way of getting sculpture into our parks without paying for it.And when did I ever suggest bringing a symphony orchestra to Westmount?Now, for Councillor Rothman\u2019s crusade to buy chairs for Victoria Hall and her accusation that I have put that \u2018\u201c\u2018deteriorating\u201d building on hold.our M.P.David Berger says.6 Chrétien\u2019s proposals SPEAKING to a group of Liberal MPs and senators recently, Jean Chrétien said that he had the feeling that enough had been said about Canada's constitutional problems, that it was time for him to speak his mind.He did just that in a speech in Montreal on Sunday.\u201cWe do not need any more Green Papers and White Papers,\u201d said Mr Chrétien.\u201c\u2018Canadians in all parts of the country want to put constitutional issues behind them and want their politicians to get on with the very serious problems of the economy, competitiveness, the environment and social justice.\u201d Mr Chrétien invited the prime minister to make public a detailed and concrete constitutional package by June 1, and set out in detail the kind of package Liberals would support.To begin with, Mr Chrétien asked for a declaration of the nature of Canada.This would set out the will of Canadians to live together in a federal state, the operational principles of that state, the values which we Victoria Hall as a building is not deteriorating.One of the problems with it is precisely that it was built so solid, it is structurally almost impossible to change inside or out, even if we wanted to, which I doubt.It is a monument.What it needs is the addition of technical services to make it more useable.Ihave been trying to get them since I came into office.When I was given no budget to work on it in 1988 or 1989, I did what I had done earlier when I wanted to get some art into our bleak city hall.I looked around for what I could get free and was able to convince the Council of the Arts of the MUC to lend us without charge their specialist on community halls.The resulting report of Pierre Bertrand dated Oct 16, 1989, still stands as the best recommendations for making Victoria Hall multi-usable: air conditioning, a sound system, a screen, a lighting system and a lowered stage to bring audience and speakers/ performers closer together.It also recommended the purchase of 500 new chairs that would be comfortable to sit on while at banquet tables and while attending meetings, lectures, dance, music, theatre and anything else that might go on from a stage.The council did not see fit to go ahead with these recommendations but it did buy - 50 new chairs for the hall last year and has budgeted to purchase another 50 this year.(Is Councillor Rothman unaware of this?) .The council now feels that the library is the most urgent priority and should be done first.Victoria Hall is on hold because it will probably have to serve as a temporary library during renovations to our main library, with other activities being moved to schools, churches, etc around town.Not exactly a time to do major refurbishing and refurnishing.\u2018 It has taken a lot of work to get the council to the point of undertaking any major project.If the council now wants to do the library first, so be it.Since I came into office, I have tried to get things done, not postponed.To make a big issue of chairs as Councillor Rothman is doing at this point is not quite the equivalent of moving them about on the Titanic.It's worse.After all, they didn't know it was going to sink.We presume Victoria Hall will be there for a long time.I do wish Councillor Rothman had used the chairs she has sat on for the past three years at council, committee and public meetings to listen more carefully, that she read my writings more carefully, so that when she sat down to write a column attacking me she would be accurate in her facts.Oris it that she has made these ridiculous accusations so often privately that she no longer realizes they are of her own manufacture?share, our commitment to two official languages, a recognition of our diverse cultural heritage, a recognition of the distinctiveness of Quebec society, a recognition of the role of aboriginal peoples.His proposals also includes a commitment to the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the free movement within Canada of people, goods and capital, and a reformed Senate.With respect to the division of powers between the federal government and the provinces, Mr Chrétien believes that powers should be exercised by the level of government that can handle the matter best.The essential focus must be an arrangement which best serves the needs of people, not governments or bureaucrats or politicians.Any new arrangement must provide the flexibility.to meet\u2019 the changing demands and challenges of the future.The Liberal leader believes that such a proposal should be referred to a joint committee of the Senate and House of Commons.The committee should hold wide- ranging public hearings and report back to Parliament by the end of year.This would enable the federal government to present the proposals to Canadians in a national referendum early in 1992.Randolph Churchill once said that the duty of the opposition is to oppose.Mr Chrétien rose above the role of the leader of the opposition.He took the lead in outlining detailed proposals for dealing with Canada's constitutional problems.1Say! I have learned to seek my happiness by limiting my desires, rather than in attempting to satisfy them.\u2014John Stuart Mill @ The Westmount Gxaminer Forty-five Years Ago April 26, 1946 \u201cAfter four long years of limited activity the Business Association of Westmount are launching a gigantic post war program to regain the important part they played in this city previous to the outbreak of war.At the present time several new projects are on the horizon, and it is the intention of the Association to not only encourage more home shopping but to instruct merchants and their employees in good public relations between the firms they represent and the consumer.\u201d Headline: \u201cEarthquake!\u201d Story: \u201cSingle rumbling tremor, first earthquake shock felt here since the Cornwall million dollar disaster in September 1944, lasting less than a second, was felt with most intensity by residents of Notre Dame de Grâce and West\" mount shortly after midnight Saturday.Many reported pictures had been set swinging on walls, chinaware in cupboards upset and beams in roofs had creaked threateningly.The rumble was believed by many to be merely that of a heavy passing truck.\u201d Thirty-five Years Ago April 27, 1956 Advertisement: \u201cQuebec leads the world in educational development.In the last 10 years through Quebec's financial aid 3,023 new schools were built, with 11,676 modern classrooms, which means 6 new schools per week or one new school for every working day.This is only part of what the Duplessis government has done for 10 solid years in education \u2014 a tremendous benefit in which every group and every area had its share.Sustain the government which set this world\u2019s record in education.\u201d \u201cVisitors tothe \u2018Y' Monday night saw that dog training pays off.The occasion was the graduation night for the Westmount Y.M- .C.A.dog training classes.Dogs that attended the classes gave a demonstration of their skills.\u201d Twenty-five Years Ago April 28, 1966 \u201cKids always get a bang out of firecrackers.Usually it's a bang on the back of the head from an elder.But, sometimes it's a bang in the face from the cracker.Firecrackers are against the law in Westmount, as they should be in any well-run community.\u201d But children at St.Leo\u2019s School had some, and were interviewed.\u201cSure I got some, you want one, mister?\u201d \u201cNo sonny, 1 don't want one.But tell me, where do you buy them?\u201d \u201cOh, we get \u2018em on Atwater, you're not allowed to sell them in West- mount, you know.\u201d \u201cLook, tell me how you light the crackers.\u201d \u2018\u2019That\u2019s easy, l use wooden matches.\u201d \u201cAren't you a little young to be playing with firecrackers and matches?\u201d \u201cHeck no, there's nothin\u2019 to it, you light the match, then the cracker and throw both of them.\u201d Ten Years Ago April 30, 1981 \u201cA 15-year-old Westmount boy has made restitution for more than $700 damage he and two out-of-town friends caused to seven properties in eastern Westmount north of Sherbrooke street March 28, according to police.\u201d \u201cA young girl was shot in the hip at 3:20 pm yesterday in Selby Park, east of Greene avenue near the Ville Marie Expressway.She was transported to the Montreal Children's Hospital for treatment.\u201d \u201cA 60-year-old resident of the apartment building at 235 Clarke avenue was apparently \u2018cleaned out\u2019 by drinking pals during a night-long party last Wednesday, police said.after the party was over, (he) discovered the loss of close to $2,000 worth of goods.\u201d One Year Ago March 29, 1990 \u201cWestmount\u2019s failure to bill 11 companies at 2 Place Alexis Nihon for business taxes until it was too late to collect has cost taxpayers at least $200,000 in lost revenue and may be only the tip of the iceberg, it was revealed yesterday.\u201d The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 25, 1991 - 5 PUBUC CONSULTATION STAPLING OF Crrf eens REPORTS TS OPTIONS SENSITIVE , IN AN ELECTION YEAR, TO CRITICISM ABOUT NOT CONSULTING CMZENS, COUNGIL ROLLS OVER BACKWARDS FOUR STAPLES! WHY DIDN'T You CONSIDER FOUR STAPLES !?ER\u2014 Richard B.Holden says eee à A question of privilege LAST week Robert Libman, MNA for D\u2019Ar- cy McGee and leader of the Equality Party, rose in his seat in the National Assembly and asked the minister of energy if she could confirm the fact that certain aluminium smelters had a sweetheart deal with Hydro- Québec whereby they paid only 1.5 cents per kilowatt/hour for electric power while it cost Hydro 2.4 cents to produce it; and the same amount of electricity is sold to ordinary consumers like you and me for 4.5 cents.Mme Bacon, the minister, refused to confirm or deny Mr Libman\u2019s assertion and she walked out of the house in a huff.The reason she was so annoyed is because Hydro had promised to keep these arrangements secret and the companies involved had gone to court to obtain an injunction to prevent the media from publishing the information.But none of them had considered the question of parliamentary immunity.Under the National Assembly Act, no member can be sued or arrested or threatened for what he or she says in the National Assembly and what is revealed in the house can be reported on with impunity.Consequently, Mr Libman\u2019s question was widely reported and commented upon last week by him and by the media across the country.Then wham! Later in the week Mr Libman received a threatening notice from lawyers representing the huge aluminium companies.The gall of trying to muzzle an elected member is almost without precedent.We immediately went on the offensive.I moved a motion to bring the offending corporations and their lawyers before the bar of the National Assembly.At the time of writing I don't know what the outcome will be but I rather suspect that the government will side with Hydro and move to protect the beneficiaries of this incredible generosity.Stay tuned \u2014 it could be an interesting contest.Hydro-Québec vs Robert Libman.My money is on my leader.You Say Cedar residents state position on proposals Editor\u2019s Note: This letter is much longer than usually accepted by THE EXAMINER.The exception is made because this is the sole letter on the Cedar traffic question we have received from Cedar residents while we have published many, taking a large amount of space, from those on The Boulevard.It is time that the residents of Cedar avenue state their position.Firstly, to reply to Mr Hoppenheim (*\u2018You Say\u201d last week), the Cedar avenue point of view presented to the city is not that of Judge Greenberg alone.On June 12, 1987, Judge Greenberg prepared a petition concerning the terrible speeding-safety problem on Cedar.It was taken around by another Cedar avenue resident, was signed by persons at 24 of the 34 residences on the Westmount portion of Cedar (we have included the two houses on the west side of the Cedar-Mount Pleasant intersection, which have their civic numbers on Mount Pleasant) and submitted to city hall.(It should be noted that only one resident approached refused to sign.Having no young children, he said he liked the speeding cars.The others simply could not be found at home.) Again in June 1988, a second petition was circulated and then presented to the city, this time signed by 28 Cedar residents.In 1989, having learned that Cedar was scheduled for reconstruction in 1990 as part of Westmount \u2019s normal road-rebuilding program, a meeting was held on Nov 6, 1989, at which were present 26 Cedar avenue residents.At that meeting, 11 persons were selected to form a steering committee, the CATSC (Cedar Avenue Traffic Safety Committee).They are the signatories of this letter.(We could well have gathered 30 signatures, were it not for THE EXAMINER's publishing deadline.) Some people have suggested that there was something improper about forming a committee and meeting with city authorities.Not at all! When the question of Gros- venor avenue being designated an artery in the Westmount development plan was a live issue before city council last year residents of that street were advised to form a committee.That is precisely what Cedar residents have done, in keeping with a longstanding tradition in Westmount.The issue to be addressed at the April 30 public meeting involves three things: safety, safety and safety; that is, for Cedar, for The Boulevard and for the other streets in the area.A resident of Cedar is worth no more, but Continued on page 17 Consider Montrose too in pondering traffic We should like to bring the following to the attention of Westmount city council and its traffic director.Free traffic flow means the ability to move from one point in the city to another in a reasonably direct fashion.It does not mean large numbers of commuters taking the same short cut through residential areas twice a day, five days a week, in order that they may avoid traffic lights or cut a couple of minutes off their commute.Montrose avenue, parellel to The Boulevard and Cedar avenue, enjoys neither the width of the former nor the one-way nature of the latter to limit the effect of through traffic.It has a park on one end and a girls\u2019 school on it.Its residents, and the children who walk along it, incur the dirt, noise and traffic hazard of its being used as a commuter throughway.The spillover of this adversely affects people who live on Forden, Aberdeen, Argyle, Mountain and, via Rose- mount crescent, the Priests\u2019 Farm area.The residents of Montrose avenue and adjoining streets are unhappy with the traffic situation as it is now.A complete and permanent narrowing of Cedar avenue, diverting further traffic along our streets, can only worsen a situation for which a remedy is already overdue.Please be aware that this is not a Cedar/ Boulevard problem.It is a Montrose/Cedar/ Boulevard problem.Dr Richard Lalonde 4312 Montrose avenue Constance Carleton 4322 Montrose avenue WESTMOUNT H3Y 2A9 6 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 25, 1991 Storm creates small mud slide which takes out city bathroom While this weekend\u2019s rain and wind storm did not cause a major blackout in Westmount, it did cause a mini-mud slide which damaged a wall at the Glen power house.A soil expert is being called before repairs are started, said Fred Ca- luori, Westmount\u2019s director of public works.There are no cost estimates yet.\u201cOur biggest concern is that more material might come down,\u201d he said.The mud slide cracked a second- floor bathroom wall at the southeast end of the Glen road power house.\u201cNeedless to say, it's out of order,\u201d light and power director Danny Pon- zo said of the bathroom.The incident occurred sometime between Sunday night and Monday morning.The last time there was a mud slide on the slope was in 1975-76 when new garages were built atop, at the Corporation Yards.The embank- VALERIE = Ta & - SERVICES À B.Com., B.CL.LL.B.(McGill) NOTARY AND LEGAL COUNSEL 4141 Sherbrooke St.W.Suite 240 ment was too steep and had to be modified, Mr Caluori said.Mr Ponzo said this incident caused a minor inconvenience to the light and power department.Concrete light pole bases which were stored in the area of the mud slide had tobemoved.Only two homes were temporarily without power Sunday during the storm which had winds of up to 100 kilometers per hour, light and power officials said.There were no wide- scale blackouts.The high winds felled a ham radio antenna at 652 Lansdowne which also cut the power line into the home.The power line was repaired that night, as was one at 4470 St Catherine.Also, two sets of traffic lights were damaged by the high winds, one at The Boulevard and Grosvenor and one at Park Place and St Catherine.TEROUX 933-7264 BH « Keith Nesbitt Sales Representative Res (613) 837-2486 CALL TODAY for your FREE RELOCATION KIT.Referrals honoured.RE/MAX metro-city realty, Its.118-210 centrum blvd.orleans (ottawa), ontario K1E 3V7 op MOVING TO OTTAWA?We help families find the RIGHT home in the RIGHT area at the RIGHT price.CR Delice Nice, FRI Sales Representative Res: (613) 830-2816 Over 22 years in req! estate soles.24 hr pager: (613) 837-0000 FAX: (613) 837-0005 Advertisement Taxes take a bite out of hot dog joint Neighborhood restaurant folds after 22 years Don't believe the sign on the door.Mark's is closed \u2014 for good.After 22 years, restaurateur Mark Shinder of Le Restaurant Metcalfe (Metcalfe Coffee Shop) at 4458 St Catherine street has called it quits.He put a \u201cclosed for renovations\u201d sign on the door Friday.Monday and Tuesday people could be seen looking through the door of the ultimate greasy spoon.They knew something was up.Mark hadn't renovated in more than 20 years.The sign should have read: \u201cEnd of an era, closed for good due to hard times.\u201d It should have read: \u201cMark has put 22 years of his life into this joint and due to the recession, taxes, rising expenses, rent and the GST he has to close because it's just not profitable anymore.\u201d \"It also should have read: \u201cAnd it hurts Mark an awful lot to talk about it so please leave him alone and let him go quietly because that's what he wants.\u201d While he never said so, it was clear Mr Shinder didn\u2019t want a story written about his departure and it pained him to talk about it.When later told he was a Westmount institution he was genuinely surprised, and laughed.There was not even a tinge of anger or bitterness or anything but sincerity in his story.There were no bad guys and no complicated excuses, just \u201cthat\u2019s the way it is.\u201d Nothing fancy.It just wasn't profitable anymore.Case closed.\u201cI worked too long, too hard for too little money,\u201d Mr Shinder said.Colleen Thatcher, a regular of four years, said she noticed a considerable drop in customers at the eatery in January when Mr Shinder had to apply both the GST and provincial sales tax to his prices.Mr Shinder said he knew three months ago he was going to close.He told the waitresses, Rita and Edith, one month ago and the customers at the very end.\u201cI tried to keep it a secret\u201d Mr Shinder said Tuesday.\u201cI didn't want to hash everything out with everybody.I couldn't take it.It\u2019s very upsetting.\u201d The closing is also upsetting to many customers.There was a lot of hugging, kissing and tears when he told those he was closing, Mr Shin- der said.Ms Thatcher described Mr Shinder as a very warm, friendly man who will be missed by many.She said the eatery was always full of regul who seemed to rely on the people the restaurant.\u201cIt was an important place to a lot of people,\u201d she said.\u201cIt\u2019s a loss for the immediate neighborhood.Many people will miss the restaurant as a regular part of their day and lives,\u201d she said.\u201cAnd we'll miss the people who work there in particular\u201d Former EXAMINER editor Kathleen Hugessen wrote in a 1989 story that Mr Shinder hadn't changed a thing in the \u201cquintessential greasy spoon\u201d in 20 years.Ms Thatcher said that was part of Mark's charm.Used books and lottery tickets were sold along with steamies and french fries, with Mr Shinder using his booming voice to give and check on orders.Customers came from local businesses and schools.\u201cI met a lot of wonderful people, interesting people,\u2019 Mr Shinder said.\u201cI made a lot of friends.l'm 64 now.It's time to pack up.\u201d His lease ends April 30th.He will leave the equipment there because it might help the landlord rent the eatery.Tuesday afternoon he was in the restaurant taking inventory.He wil} try to return some stock to suppliers.Customers looked through the window and waved at him.He waved back with a smile.In 1989 he told THE EXAMINER, \"I can see the end in sight.I would like to retire.I haven't given it much thought but it's in my mind.It's like people waiting for the 6/49.You'll know when the store is closed, I've won the 6/49 and I'm gone.\u201d Tuesday Mr Shinder said, \u201cAfter 22 years in business I'm retiring.| don't feel that old but I'm going to take my pension.Everything comes to an end.\u201d il: Mark Shinder has rung up his last frites at his fast-food business at the corner of Metcalfe avenue and St Catherine street.This photo was taken in 1989.\u201cReal Estate A PARABLE OF THREE MEN Thirty vears ago cach of three friends had $10,000 to spare.The first man locked his money in a steel box and buried it.If he digs it up today, he will sull have his $10.000, but it will be able to buy about as much food.clothing and other things as he could have bought for $4,000 30 years ago.The second man put his money in a savings account.With interest added.he has some $18,000 in his savings account today.and the purchasing power of perhaps $9,000 in 30-vears-ago dollars.The third man put his money to work in a conservative real estate invesiment.With this $10,000 cash and a mortgage loan.he bought a small apartment building.He lived rent-free in one apartment, and the income from the others more than paid off his morigage and maintenance costs.He could sell his property for at least $50,000 on the present market.At least one of the three friends lived happily ever after.By Reg Morden * * * Anniversary Sale 486 Argyle: Stonefront townhouse circa 1896.Very special cachet.Priced to sell at $329.000.507 Victoria: One of Westmount's finest gardens offered with this unique home.Reduced to $489,000.24 Willow: Perfect street for kids! Great place to raise a family.Asking $349.000.528 Lansdowne: Estate sale! Reduced to $289,000.TLC and paint will do wonders.Golden Mile: Sophisticated townhouse at Richelieu Place with garage.Tastefully appointed, sensibly priced.Asking $425,000.The Linton: Westmount living in the heart of downtown.Reduced to $289,000.We mean business! To view these or any other fine Westmount property, please call me: Reg Morden, RE/MAX Westmount inc, 1330 Greene Avenue, Westmount.Telephone: 933-6781 or 937-7061 RE/MAX Westmount inc.broker Crackdown on summer antics starts Monday Local Montreal Urban Community police will launch their annual summer parks campaign Monday with special emphasis on excessive noise, alcohol, bicycles, skateboards and dogs.Since the two-month program focuses much of its attention on Summit Park, it has called its operation by that name this year, according to crime prevention officer Gaston Ber- nier.\u201cWe will give special attention to speeders on Summit Circle, spinning of tires and people who drink alcoholic beverages while sitting in parked cars.\u201d Such offences bear $300 fines for the driver on the first offence and $200 fines for each passenger.The fine for spinning tires is $30.Westmounters are reminded that a midnight curfew can be imposed if police feel questionable activity warrants emptying a park.Bikes and skateboards cannot be ridden in parks and dogs must be leashed at all times except in designated dog runs where they must be accompanied by their keepers.Neil M for the past 30 years.a ay oo (> 392-1363 \u2014 Representing leading International Insurers When you need Insurance, call us.We're friendly and efficient 4795 ST.CATHERINE ST.WEST, WESTMOUNT, QUEBEC H3Z1S8 J WINDOW WASHING HOMES e OFFICES MONTREAL WINDOW CLEANING Serving Westmount for 87 years _\u2014 Inc.937-3939 a: oa =H lag fai fro tio; hou was inl PA | a Silence on the phone | may be the only clue about vanished girl By ALISON RAMSEY Top former ECS student Supoorna Chattopadhyay turned 18 this February.But there was no celebrating at her father\u2019s Victoria avenue home.She disappeared 15 months ago from the Allan Memorial Institute.Her father, Paresh, has reminders, including a medicare card which arrived after she vanished.\u201cI don\u2019t have that much hope\u201d that she will return, he said, though he thought she might show up after she © the freedom of being an adult.\u201d ( ere is no sign of her, except perhaps, in the intermittent telephone calls he receives.\u201cThe person doesn't put the phone down right away.They wait, maybe 10 seconds, then hang up.There is just silence.Only once, a month ago, I heard a faint noise of an elderly lady in the background.It certainly was not a public telephone.\u201cI suspect it could be she.\u201d He did not know why she would fail to talk, \u201cunless she is prevented from speaking.We had a good relationship.I think she liked me very much, though I used to restrict her hours.She liked absolute freedom.\u201d When she disappeared, Supoorna was 16 years old, weighed 120 pounds DONALD STEWART REAL ESTATE BROKER $235,000 53 COUNTRY CLUB PLACE, BROCKVILLE {A Registered Townhouse Condominium) Across from the 18-hole Brockville Country Club, this home should suit you to a tee! Features: * Waterfront location on the St.Lawrence River with a superb view of the Seaway * Sunny living room with marble fireplace » Deck off dining room + Well designed eat-in kitchen + Cozy ground floor den - Ground floor powder room * Three large bedrooms * Two full bathrooms + Finished playroom with marble fireplace * Playroom opens onto outdoor patio » Additional powder room in lower level » Laundry room * One-car garage * Security system and air conditioning roughed-in * 2,000+ square feet of liveable area July 1st Occupancy (613) 345-2787 Or Pager (613) 345-5791 9 SUPOORNA CHATTOPADHYAY and was five feet, four inches tall.She liked mixing with older people, and would lie about her age.She was rebellious and had run away before, once to Toronto.\u201cShe was taken with the hippie thing,\u201d said Mr Chattopadhyay.Her rebelliousness landed her under Youth Protection but she escaped, used a different name, colored her hair and began working in a shopping centre.Discovered, she was brought back by police, placed again under Youth Protection and later released to her home.After drinking tea laced with drugs she said someone had slipped her, Supoorna was taken to the Montreal Children\u2019s Hospital then transferred to the Allan Memorial.She was on medication, back at home and under the care of a doctor, when she left again, saying she was kidnapped for $5,000.Her father knew that to be false.Once again under Youth Protection, once again at the Allan Memorial, she walked out and hasn't been heard from since.The house is empty now that Su- poorna is gone.Her mother was killed in a traffic accident in 1988.Mr Chattopadhyay, a teacher at the Université de Montréal, is philosophical.\u201cThere\u2019s nothing I can do.It's outside my control.\u201d Even though Supoorna is now an adult, she continues to be sought by Child Search, and police in both the U.S.and Canada.Only when she has been missing for five years will the official search end, according to police.Six judgments in Westmount Municipal Court reveal hefty fines levied in March and April against owners of local residential and commercial buildings regarding violations of fire, building and sanitation regulations.Former owners of the apartment building at 339 Victoria avenue were fined $1,200 plus costs for failure to maintain the building clean and free from the accumulation of garbage.They also failed to provide the required storage bin for garbage, city records reveal.The ruling was rendered by West- mount municipal court judge William P.Shaw against 116581 Canada Inc which owned the building when court proceedings were initiated April 26, 1990.The case took nearly a year for resolution.Previous fines of $900 were handed down on Jan 13, 1990.One of Westmount\u2019s newer condominium buildings also amassed a total of $600 plus costs in recent rulings for violations of the city\u2019s fire by-laws.Westmount St Catherine Street Condominium Association, c/o Mr G.J.Turner and Promanac Ltd, pleaded guilty to all charges concerning the building at 4476 St Catherine.These were failure to provide an inspection certificate for the fire alarm, failure to maintain the alarm in proper working order and as per approved plans and failure to maintain the garbage area free of combustible materials.At the time of sentencing, the inspection certificate remained outstanding, inspectors said.Problems with the fire alarm and combustibles had been corrected, however.In another case, Les Investissements Peniche Ine, of LaSalle, and Armel Corporation of Toronto were fined $400 plus costs for sanitation infractions at the apartment/commercial building at 389 Claremont/ 4968-72 Sherbrooke.They pleaded guilty to failing to maintain the building and premises clean and free of garbage as well as failing to keep all garbage sealed in plastic bags and stored in the garbage storage bin.Conditions were reported as satisfactory prior to sentencing.Mr A.Luxenberg, owner of 4560 St Catherine street, was fined $300 plus Stolen car found A stolen car was recovered last Friday outside 4016 St Catherine street, police said.The 1978 Pontiac Phoenix was reported stolen the previous day in Lacolle near the U.S.border.Young lovers hide from rain beneath trap door Some people will smooch just about anywhere.This is a story about \u201clovers and other strangers,\u201d according to public security reports.It all began Saturday afternoon when a public safety officer entered the comfort station in Westmount Park about 1:50 pm and encountered a man in his late 30s seated on a bench.The man, who struck him as acting strangely, reported that there were lovers in the workers\u2019 section of the comfort station which is normally kept locked.The man was ushered outside and the officer proceeded to the employees\u2019 section which, as he anticipated, was all in order.On a whim, before leaving, he opened the trap door in the floor where he found two very surprised \u2014 and embarrassed \u2014 young lovers.The couple wanted to get out of the rain and what better place than a filthy furnace room, commented the officer.\u201cDid he kick them out?\u201d asked one young man hearing the story.\u201cWhat a shame!\u201d The lovers were described as a boy from Town of Mount Royal and a girl from St Henri.Their ages were not recorded.No damage was reported to the building and it was not known how they gained entry.The Westmount Examiner, By LAUREEN SWEENEY costs for failing to maintain the apartment building's required emergency lighting system in proper working order.He pleaded guilty as charged and all was reported in order at time of sentencing.In one of two municipal court rulings April 16 by Judge A.Keith Ham, Gustav Levinschi Foundation, owners of the apartment building at 52 Academy road, were fined $300 and costs for failure to obtain the re- Thursday, April 25, 1991 - 7 Building owners fined for infractions quired building permit and plumbing permits priorto renovating.They pleaded guilty as charged.Permits were reported to have been issued prior to sentencing.In the other case, 151040 Canada Inc, which owns the private dwelling at 558 Roslyn avenue, pleaded guilty to not obtaining the required permit for installation of an exterior exit (fire escape) at the rear of the building.No building permit had been obtained at time of sentencing, according to inspectors.RECESSION?WHAT RECESSION?Life can be great now! Via The chance to be creative thru appreciation of the Antiques and Collectibles world, by ignoring that awful word, Recession.And as for that G.S.T.Forget that worry too.Let Shirley do the worrying for you, as she is used to that too, and therefore will pay the G.S.T.for you! Until May 31, 1991 Always the exotic & interesting items in Orientalia, etc.Shirvtey Geess ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES Le Cartier Bldg.1115 Sherbrooke St.West RE/MAX was designed by top producers for top producers.RE/MAX offers experienced, full-time professionals the highest compensation possible, as well as all the support and services today's million-dollar producers need to become tomorrow's muttimillion-dol- lar producers.RE/MAX\u2019s innovative programs are the keys to our agents\u2019 selling and listing success.That's why RE/MAX Sales Associates across North America average three times as many sales as other real estate agents.Get the Facts! Contact RE/MAX today and make sure your next step is a step in the right direction.Joyce Faughnan Broker-Owner If you'd like to soar with us \u201cabove the crowd,\u201d calime ot 933-6781 for a confidential meeting.~ REMY Westmount 1330 Greene Ave.933-6781 REMIX Westmount inc, broker 1330 Greene Avenue, Westmount FOR CURRENT MARKET Bb ANALYSIS OF YOUR HOME, call 933-6781 AR QUE 8 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 25, 1991 Continuing meter thefts not investigated Was a mysterious car accident related to the latest rash of parking meter thefts?Police said they did not know any of the details related to the hit-and- run incident last Thursday about 3:35 am on Dorchester boulevard in which a double-headed meter was knocked over and one of the heads taken.Though the accident has been turned over to the Montreal Urban Community's hit-and-run squad, the meter thefts are not under investigation at this time, police said.They are believed to be related to last .IRR F] MARTIN KIELY CO.LTD.937-8975 year's thefts in which a suspect is still before the courts.It is unlikely that the disappearance of a meter head in the traffic accident is related, said Lieutenant- Detective Jean Lafléche.A 1983 Volkswagen car fitting a witness\u2019 description was recovered soon after on Grey avenue.It is registered to someone living on the west side of Claremont avenue in N.D.G.Meanwhile, meters continued to be broken into last week for a loss of about $464, police report.Coin cylinders servicing 11 meter heads were stolen in the west end along Sherbrooke street near Victoria and Claremont avenues as well as in the lane behind the Pascal store.Apartments raided Two Plaza Tower apartments at 4000 de Maisonneuve boulevard were broken into last Friday by someone using either a lock pick or a master key, police said.A JVC video machine was reported stolen along with a telephone from one apartment on the 25th floor while jewelry was taken from one on the 27th floor.Another unit on the 27th floor also was broken into, without signs of forced entry, on April 8.e Industrial C.HOWARD SIMPKIN LTD.MASTER ELECTRICIANS \u201c\u201cServing Westmounters for 45 years\u201d e Residential e Commercial FAST & DEPENDABLE SERVICE KEN LARSEN - President TEL: 481-0125 FAX: 481-0128 5800 St.Jacques W.Member, Corporation des Maîtres Électriciens du Québec The following calls were answered by the Westmount Fire Brigade during the past week: April16 2:06 am: 716 Grosvenor, first responder unit for medical assistance; 10:44 am: 4141 Sherbrooke, code 3 automatic mutual aid from Côte St Luc and Outre- mont cancelled at 11 am, sprinkler alarm accidentally activated by workmen cutting pipe on sixth floor; April 17 10:34 am: Melville and Sherbrooke, smoke scare in Westmount Park (see story page 12); 11:57 am: Melville and de Maisonneuve, spilled flammable liquid (see above); 10:22 pm: 250 Kensington, first responder unit for medical assistance; \u201c April 18 1:00 pm: 4350 St Catherine, Westmount High, first responder unit for medical assistance for teenager with breathing problems; ) 8:51 pm: 5475 Westminster, code 2 automatic mutual aid to Céte St Luc cancelled at 8:58 pm; 11:11 pm: Redfern and de Maisonneuve, for gas leak from car, overfilled gas tank; April 19 9:11 am: 4300 de Maisonneuve, first re- sponder unit for medical assistance; 11:19 am: 5 Douglas, smoke detector accidentally activated by painters; April20 April 21 1:25 am: 239 Kensington, first responder unit for medical assistance; 3:11 pm: Opposite 4769 Sherbrooke, car accident (see story page 8); 5:30 pm: Opposite 79 Bruce, service call, light standard broken in storm; 5:44 pm: 4556 St Catherine, code 2 automatic mutual aid from Céte St Luc cancelled at 5:52 pm, burnt food; 6:28 pm: 597 Victoria, service call, broken skylight in storm; 7:52 pm: 652 Lansdowne, antenna fallen on power line in storm; 8:18 pm: 4998 de Maisonneuve, flood from storm; April 22 7:47 am: 4873 Westmount, first responder unit for medical assistance; 11:16 am: 729 Upper Belmont, strange odor, emptying of stagnant water from pool; 1:40 pm: 6 Park Place, person locked out with pot left on stove, entry gained by firefighters from ladder; 2:37 pm: 7 Renfrew, smell of gas, none detected; 4:22 pm: 4646 Sherbrooke, first responder unit; 6:22 pm: 5725 Côte St Luc, code 3 automatic mutual aid to Hampstead cancelled at 6:28 pm.Nil; cuisines multiform kitchens INTERNATIONAL INC.5525 UPPER LACHINE RD, MONTREAL Fax: 483-1442 Tel: 483-1800 \u2014 KITCHEN CABINETS - SHOWROOM DISPLAYS FOR SALE We are making room for our 1991 models 2, SAVINGS OF 70 % OR MORE ON ALL FLOOR DISPLAYS OPEN SATURDAY 10-3, SUNDAY 10-3 poggenponl STUDIO 5525 Upper Lachine Rd.Montreal, Quebec HAA2A5 483-1800 Fa Pharmacist Henry Goldenberg, 67, is celebrating his 40th year in Westmount A] { i today.He invites his customers to party with him; refreshments will be served.Mr Goldenberg says his secret to success is giving personal service.Cars collide in heavy rain A woman was taken to hospital by Urgences Santé after the car she was riding in collided with another at Roslyn avenue and Sherbrooke street during heavy rain Sunday, police said.She is a 26-year-old resident of 1 Wood avenue, The impact occurred in high winds and driving rain about 3:05 pm as a southbound Porsche was hit in the front by a westbound Mazda.Both sustained more than $500 damage.The Porsche was driven by a 36-year- old resident of 1 Wood, the Mazda by a 17-year-old boy from Kent avenue inN.D.G.REZCON Renovation & Design ADDITIONS KITCHEN & BATH MAKEOVERS SUNDECKS 481-1955 Fully licensed » insured - all work guaranteed Photo by CHARLES ABRAMOVICI ~ CHRISTIE PLUMBING LIMITED \u2018Complete\u2019 plumbing service Fast \u2014 efficient RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL 24-hour service 484-2010 5545 Upper Lachine Road our current affair! Te: 935-1131 Fax:1939-1414 Better electrical work heating conversions, security lighting, alarm systems, residential and commercial electrical repairs, modifications and new installations.Contact us for BREMER , 1 ELECTRIQUE ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR 1198 William The following are some items from the police files at Montreal Urban Community Station 23, which covers Westmount: Boy, 15, charged in holdup A 15-year-old boy from Dol- lard des Ormeaux was charged in connection with an armed holdup of a 17-year-old boy at Place [lexis Nihon last Thursday afternoon, police said.A knife was seized.The victim was approached at 4:30 pm by two teenagers.One produced a knife and asked for money.The victim handed over $3 and alerted a building security guard who arrested two suspects.One managed to get away when the guard asked the pair to follow him to the office to await MUC police.Questionable man offers girl ride A man in a red pickup truck offered a ride to an 11-year-old Westmount girl last Thursday morning as she was walking to school along Montrose avenue at Mount Pleasant, police said.When the girl said nothing, the driver told her he would pick her up after school.He never showed up.The incident occurred about 7:45 am.The man spoke English, was aged about 35 and described as Asiatic.STATION 23 LOG By LAUREEN SWEENEY Rest stop not the best stop A woman ended up paying about $70 to sit on a bench at Sherbrooke and Victoria last Friday, according to police reports.She sat down at the bus stop for a few moments to rest while taking a walk and left her wallet on the bench when leaving.It contained credit cards and $30.The wallet was valued at about $40.The woman lives downtown.Car out of control A car was reported to have rolled backward across the street from 4700 St Catherine street last Thursday.The 1990 Volkswagen sustained less than $500 damage, police said.The mishap occurred about 10 pm; it caused no other damage.The car mounted the sidewalk on the north side of the street, according to public safety officers, who called police to the scene.Jewelry shoplifted A 39-year-old woman from Queen Mary road was charged with shoplifting jewelry worth $112.88 from the Pier 1 store at 4823 Sherbrooke street last Thursday, police said.The suspect was reported to have been followed into the Pascal store next door where an arrest was made.Stolen car in hit-and-run A Toyota that hit a Ford on St Catherine at Wood and fled the scene Wednesday last week turned out to have been stolen the day before in Verdun, police said.The car's licence plate and description were recorded by the victim, an N.D.G.man.His own vehicle, a 1990 model, sustained light damage.The hit-and-run car remained on the loose.Bus hits Mercedes A 1987 Mercedes was struck by a bus while parked Wednesday last week near the Pascal store on Sherbrooke street east of Victoria, according to police.It sustained more than $500 damage.The car belonged to a woman from Shorncliffe avenue.The bus sustained less than $500 damage.Car stranded A 1970s-vintage green car was dumped without licence plate or serial number on Cedar avenue Monday last week, police said.The car was spotted by public safety officer Louis Leger and taken to thecity\u2019s pound.It looks as if it stalled once too often and was simply abandoned, commented crime prevention officer Gaston Bernier.The Westmount Examiner, Compost bins may now cost twice as much Composting bins otherwise.The allotted 324 subsidized bins had all been sold by Tuesday, said Fred Caluori, director of public works.The operational and environmental services standing committee will recommend to council that it should no longer subsidize further purchases of composting bins, Mr Caluori said, but continue to sell them at $50.\u201cWhich is still a bargain,\u201d Mr Ca- luori said.Retail price is about $90.Council, at its May 6 meeting, could decide otherwise.In the meantime, residents who want a bin will be asked to pay $50 and, if council decides tocontinue to subsidize more bins, the money will be refunded, Mr Caluori said.The city pays $45.07 for each composting unit.The city intended to subsidize 216 units but took an additional $2,500 from its contingency fund for another 108 units.purchased | through the city will now cost $50 |; 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THE AMANA HEAT PUMP | Sen, dpndabl perform | to | Experience superb air conditioning this summer ol lay: Postal code: economical heating next winter with the Amana heat pump.| Telephone (res.! e Ulira-efficient, silent forced air unit (bus.) | e Superior air conditioning I ! © Rugged construction | [ Di oy | * Functional, attractive design | | J LATIN es dues cg 10 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 25, 1991 Vandals hit seven houses Civic numbers were ripped off houses, porch lights broken and flower planters overturned in a wave of vandalism that hit at least seven houses early Saturday, public safety officers report.A group of rowdy teenagers were seen in the area about 1:23 am but it was not known if they were responsible.Homes affected were located on Cote St Antoine road as well as Arlington, Strathcona, Roslyn and Grosvenor avenues.A car also was damaged outside 26 Arlington avenue, police said.The 1985 Volkswagen Jetta sustained damage on one door as well as the licence plate cover and the mirror on the passenger side.Professional Cards pe ME ALBERT LAB 6575 Somerled, Suite 4 Montreal, Quebec H4V 1T1 ND Lebrèche Er As.NOTAIRES - NOTARIES ME GUY MEURY, B.A., L.L.L.RECHE, B.A., L.L.L.Tel: 486-3680 Fax: 486-6026 architect RESIDENTIAL ADDITIONS RENOVATIONS RESIDENTIELLES 849-0848 STEPHEN A.EDEN Summit meeting Mast councillors waiting for public meeting to make up minds on Cedar a model for Cedar avenue Traffic changes should not be made in Westmount unless they have majority support from area residents, Councillor Peter Trent says.That was the criteria he used in burying the plan to close Summit Circle and he hopes the same policy will be used by city council to decide the proposed narrowing of Cedar avenue, he explained Monday.\u201cThe onus is on us to prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that changes will not materially affect people on otherstreets.I don't think we should dump one person\u2019s problems in another\u2019s back yard.\u201cI'm watching this one (Cedar) like a hawk.\u201d Mr Trent, said he was \u201csitting on the fence\u201d in the Cedar-Boulevard issue which will be submitted to public consultation April 30.The Summit Circle consultation meeting was a model for others, said Maureen Kiely, a resident of The Boulevard who is spearheading opposition to the Cedar plan.She told THE EXAMINER she had attended it last Thursday to gain insight into what might be expected at the Cedar meeting.\u201cI was very impressed; it was a very civilized.Peter Trent was very open right from the start and told everyone if they weren't happy with the plan then we won't do it.That was very reasonable.I don't think anybody went away unhappy.\u201d Services Offerts * Taxe sur les Produits et Services * Planification Fiscale » Examen de Planification Fiscale CLEMENT A.ROUX COMPTABLE AGRÉE - CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT 3 Westmount Square, suite 1015 933-2242 Consulting Services Offered * Goods and Services Tax * Income and Estate Planning » Corporate Tax Compliance and Planning Reviews CORNFORTH PHYSIO SPORT/SPA INC.PHYSIOTHERAPY Specializing in o (Insurances, CS rthopedics and sports therapy ST, RAAQ, DVA are accepted) Spa Department Massage therapists: Swedish massage, Loufa Dietician: Nutritional Counselling Kinesiologist * Physiotherapist « Exercise classes 5730 UPPER LACHINE RD (in N.D.G.ACUPUNCTURE CLINIC Abraham Member of the Physicians of Q 4098 St Catherine W.suite 302, Westmount kept by the Professional Corporation of 489-2135 Bensimon, Dr.Ac.Register for Acupuncturists uebec.959-6428 TODD & DURSO NOTAIRES - NOTARIES CONSEILLERS JURIDIQUES - TITLE ATTORNEYS 4635 Sherb Westmoun rooke St.W.t H3Z 1G2 931-2531 J.E.Todd A.E Durso V.Casoria Cedar avenue meeting Tuesday Continued from page one avenue, but lists eight design changes being considered.Mr St Louis said it is not a final plan but a report of where the city is at now.\u201cBut it tips our hat in the direction we're leaning,\u201d Mr St Louis said.The information package clearly shows a tilt towards the narrowing of Cedar avenue along its entire length.Designs the city is considering include widening the sidewalks from 1.4 metres to 1.8 metres, narrowing the overall width of the road from 7.5 metres to 6.6 metres and \u201cusing streetscape changes\u201d (such as peninsulas) to restrict moving traffic to one lane.Mr St Louis explained that this would result in the road being further narrowed about 2.1 metres, fora total one-lane width of about 4.5 metres.By comparison, Dorchester boulevard, with parked cars, is about 5.1 metres wide, Mr St Louis said.Other design changes outlined in the information package include: realigning the layout of Cedar on the approach to the Mountain avenue intersection to reduce accidents; flattening the street so that the south side is the same height as the north side to prevent vehicles from sliding on to the south sidewalk; maintaining the stop sign at Mountain and Cedar and adjusting the traffic lights at Mount Pleasant to control speeding or, \u201cas an alternate solution,\u201d install traffic lights at Mountain and interconnect them with lights at Clarke and Mount Pleasant to control speeding, with tests to be carried out on traffic lights on The Boulevard, which have been desyn- chronized to reduce speeding.Mr St Louis said council will make the final decision as to what changes are made on Cedar avenue.The information package states that area residents will be kept abreast of all developments, including design changes and the results of future traffic surveys.Mr St Louis said that process might take two to three months.Cedar avenue is scheduled for reconstruction this year.Five of seven Westmount city.councillors are undecided on the issue of narrowing Cedar avenue, two are for it while Mayor May Cutler is dead set against any traffic changes.\u201cThe whole matter should have never been brought up,\u201d Mayor Cutler said Tuesday.She said Cedar avenue residents knew when they bought their homes that they were in a high-traffic area and it's almost impossible to change one street without affecting others.\u201cYou can't move on Sherbrooke and ask for less traffic,\u201d she said.\u201cIt\u2019s best to leave the streets alone.You can't move a stop sign three inches without someone getting upset.How are you going to change a whole street?\u201d Councillors Paul Fortin and Daniel Tingley both said they are for the proposed narrowing of Cedar avenue unless someone could convince them otherwise.Mr Tingley said Tuesday night the primary concern is safety on Cedar avenue and he hasn't heard a better solution than narrowing the street.He said traffic experiments showed a minimal diversion of traffic on to The Boulevard.The other councillors said they wanted to hear what citizens have to say at the public consultation meeting Tuesday evening before deciding.Councillor Peter Duffield said he supports the new objective of maintaining the same traffic volume on Cedar avenue.\u201cWe have learned that no matter what you do, people will still use Cedar\u201d He said he didn\u2019t think narrowing Cedar would shift more cars on to The Boulevard.An experiment narrowing the entrance to Cedar showed aminimal shift.Purchasers knew Councillor Joan Rothman, while undecided, said the people who bought homes on Cedar knew of the traffic situation.She believes narrowing Cedar along its entire { would indeed shift traffic to Boulevard, where there are three schools.Councillor Sally Aitken said that something has to be done about the corner of Mountain and Cedar, which she said is unsafe.Narrowing the street is a possibility but she wouldn't be for it if it meant traffic would be diverted on to The Boulevard.\u201cCouncil heard the message loud and clearly that that is not acceptable because of the schools,\u201d she said.Councillors Peter Duffield and Rhoda Vineberg are both firmly sitting on the fence on the issue.All are awaiting the public consultation meeting.CHILDREN\u2019S THEATRE DOROTHY DAVIS VIOLET WALTERS \u201cPINOCCHIO\u201d F.C.SMITH AUDITORIUM, LOYOLA CAMPUS SAT.AFTS.APRIL 27th & MAY 4th ORDER NOW: 484-6620 C 3) on board services\u201d Travel as an on-board courier PARIS $ 350° (admin.fee] 8, 14 & weekend trips Carry on baggage only Contact: Monica tel: (514) 633-0740 14:00-17:00 Monday-Friday Tickets 510 & $7 (= chorale = nouvelle = de = montréal I &J Brock McElheran, musical director AN EVENING OF OPERA IN CONCERT Monday, April 29, 8:00 pm Westmount Baptist Church Sherbrooke West (corner Roslyn) Info: 486-366 at DA IKEBANA Japanese Art of Flower Arranging EXHIBITION Sunday, April 28, 10 am-5 pm Monday, April 29, 10 am-1 pm DEMONSTRATIONS Sunday, April 28, 11:30, 1:30, 3:30 SON COLLEGE Atwater Campus 3040 Sherbrooke street west 5th floor, Multi-Purpose Room For information call: 484-1644 Two theatre offerings for children at Vic Hall Knights, sorcerers, cats and bears will take the stage By JANET COUTTS Uther Pendragon, the king, has been killed in a great battle.Two boys and their sidekick sorceress overhear an evil knight plotting.He plans to take the throne.So off the three young people go, on a quest for the true king.The script, The Quest for a King, is @:itten by teacher Wayne West for Sunday's presentation at 3:30 pm by Mirage Magik at Victoria Hall, in the first of two student performances for the whole family next week.Mirage Magik, the bilingual musical theatre school run through West- mount\u2019s recreation department, will present The Quest for a King in English.Mr West and Fabienne Le Panse, who directs and does the choreography for the show, are working on a French translation to be presented at a later date.The eight teens of Mirage Magik will have their numbers augmented by a few adults, notably René Bernardin who, like Mr West and Ms Le Panse, is a graduate of John Abbott College's theatre department.Mr Bernardin, a gifted comic actor, plays Sir Percival, a loyal Pendragon knight.Four flautists from the south shore, a mother of one of the young actors and her medieval flute ensemble, will provide the music.Stephanie Belding and Suzin Schiff, two more of the adults who have given time to help Mirage Magic students, will dance to the medieval tunes and provide interludes between the scenes of the play.Magician Mark Littman likely will not be present, but it is he who taught the cast how to perform the magic in the play, and who provided the equipment needed for special effects.Costumes have been borrowed from Lakeshore Players.One-act plays \u201cThe kids have come a long way in the past two years, and so have 1,\u201d says Mr West.He particularly likes the idea that his francophone actors are capable of performing in English.The youngsters on their quest travel great distances and fight evil knights and wicked sorcerers.In the end, their quest leads to King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table.Tuesday at 7 pm, two days after Mirage Magik, Victoria Hall will once again be visited by student actors.Children from the drama classes of the recreation department, taught by Westmounter Collette Micks, will offer two one-act plays.The younger children, those from five to nine years old, will present Hoff the Cat Dealer by American playwright Andrew Davies.They tell the story of Mr Hoff, who finds a talking cat.Mrs Hoff wants to be rich, and feels the cat will provide the means.The cat offers a choice: would the Hoffs rather learn the magic word that controls all cats, or would they choose a lifetime friendship?This show has a cast of more than 20 youngsters, and the littlest ones are the cats.The second play, with actors aged nine to 14, is a scene from Winnie the Pooh.The cast of eight will tell the story of what happens when Kanga moves into the forest.You remember that all the other toys are frightened of the new creature, the quintessential mother.She makes them all clean up and gives Piglet a bath, because she wants Roo to have the correct kind of friends.Ms Micks has a BA in English from McGill University and has been teaching drama part-time for four years.The rest of the time, she is a nursery school teacher.\u201cI have been with the kids for a long time,\u201d she says.\u201cI used to be a playground leader in the Summer Fuu program, \u201cIt\u2019s tough, because we have classes only once a week, but my philosophy is that the children should have as much fun as possible, and some have been with me all along.\u201d If the actors for both Sunday and Tuesday are half as enthusiastic as their teachers, both events should provide a good time for the whole family.Admission on both occasions is free.Benefit dinner, fashion show at Vic Hall On Saturday at 6 pm African Dynasty will hold a dinner and fashion show, Fashion Outrage, at Victoria Hall toraise funds for the Sickle Cell Society.The fashion show will feature the Montreal Ebony Fashion Models in the most outrageous 1991 spring and summer wear and accessories of top Quebec and international designers.There will be a special presentation by the Black Designers of Montreal.Cuban trumpeter and jazz singer Barbara Araya and South African singer and dancer Lorraine Klassan will perform.Adoorprizeof atrip fortwotothe Caribbean will be drawn.Fashion show co-ordinator and commentator is Gemma Raeburn; Dale King is the choreographer.The goal of the evening is to raise $10,000; tickets are $40 and can be obtained by calling 486-6542 or 482- 7493.Cast for Oz being sought Rathbone Theatre School is holding auditions for next year\u2019s production of The Wizard of Oz at Victoria Hall in the spring.Auditions, open only to registered students of the school, will be held at the Dorval Community Centre, 1335 Lakeshore drive, Dorval on May 5 from 2 to 4 pm.For more information call 636-5248 or 486-2876.Opera evening Chorale Nouvelle de Montréal, directed by Brock McElheran, presents An Evening of Opera in Concert Monday at 8 pm at Westmount Baptist Church, Sherbrooke street at Roslyn avenue.Tickets are $10 and $7.To reserve call 486-3669.Band plays The Westmount-based pop band Oliver's Army will play Station 10, 2071 St Catherine street west, tonight.On the same bill is Corpus.For | information call 934-0484.The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 25, 1991 - 11 Sparling at the library Westmount novelist Sharon Sparl- ing will be giving a short reading from her new novel, The Nest Egg, at Atwater Library at 2 pm on Saturday, April 27.She will also be available to talk about the book and sign copies.The reading is free.{| 17 J) WR] A.LE CLUB du Village DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS Elegant party room available for up to 24 people Assortment of freshly baked cakes available upon request Tues-Fri.NEW SUMMER HOURS 11 am-11 pm Sat & Sun 5 pm-11 pm CLOSED MONDAYS fe) re 4 Somerville (corner Victoria) \u2014= 485-2502 1304 Greene Ave Cuisine Italienne * Business Luncheon * Nightly Table d\u2019Hôte * HAPPY HOUR: 2 for 1 \u2014 4-7 pm * Michael D.\u2019s BISTRO-BAR * Business Lunch * HAPPY HOUR: 2 for 1 \u2014 4-7 pm * Serving 50 assorted imported beers from around the world \u2014 draught beer available 939-2222 Clie Café salad (reg.size) and receive a FREE HOME-MADE MUFFIN with this coupon A.L.Van Houtte Westmount \u201cNot just a great place for coffee\u201d Susan Stern Owner Welcome to the Bistro from: N.D.G.Meats * Can-Am Vegetables * Empire Crockery * Somerled Fish * Omron Cash Systems NOW OPEN A new café on Greene Avenue ($400 on the Genus You've welcomed us to your community.Now we would like to welcome you with Bistro recipes from around the world.Come and meet our happy and friendly staff.We look forward to seeing you soon! OPEN: Monday-Saturday 11:30 am-midnight.Closed Sundays.1362 GREENE AVE.939-6451 All major credit cards accepted Fully licensed Thinking of selling your BOOKS?I am always interested in purchasing hard-cover books in many fields and EC C\u2014O IC - YOUR FIRST IMPRESSION \u2014 You never get a second chance : LACK of ENERGY or OVER-WEIGHT U Self-image cannot be will visit your home to see them.x over-emphasized Please ring for an appointment.Call RON MARTELL Wilfrid M.de Freitas, Bookseller U for free product brochure Box 883, Stock Exchange Tower h 1] U * 683-1914 or 683-2105 Montrea:, Canada H4Z 1K2 yo 9041 LOGAN, PFDS., H8Y 284 12 - Thursday, April 25, 1991 12 min.from Downtown Fem ee ee a 935-9581 (24 hr.answering machine) ve : yo imal teeth it shrub i i; Feet and animal teeth harming Summit shrubs Mysterious u do Stubborn people and animals are ible for the damage to | hit b believed responsible for damage to By CHARLES ABRAMOVICI oad all along the ths W | e su stance per fences and newly-planted shrubbery But citizens, who didn\u2019t want to In other areas, some newly-plant- where the dogs are walked.No dogs ate in Summmit Park.walk an extra 10 feet, cut the fence ed shrubs were clearly chewed by were seen chewing at branches.b = fie Temporary fences designed topro- intended to protect the new shrub- some animals.Ms Savaria said she Duri furth .ursts into am ; tect newly-planted shrubbery were bery, to give it a chance to grow to didn\u2019t know what animals caused Juring further restoration this 4 cut and some shrubbery was clearly block that path naturally and pro- the damage, perhaps racoons or dogs pring.hile secondary paths willbe 4 damaged by animal teeth, a walk tect the trees.who are seen along the summit paths ¢ Seed w da eo ars wi e Dropped in par k sev through the bird sanctuary in upper \u201cThose plants aresupposed tonar- daily.hd ; 96 amaged fences will be re- bin Westmount with Claudette Savaria, row that path,\u2019 Ms Savaria said.\u201cIf Officials and councillors are loath P'aced.sp Westmount\u2019s horticulturist, showed destroyed, it\u2019s not going to do the to blame dogs for any damage be- \u201cI hope people will understand By LAUREEN SWEENEY | Friday afternoon.job.\u201d cause of the strong dog lobby in the purpose of those fences,\u2019 Ms irefi ; : pla One fence along the path near the The city has already spent more Westmount.No official said the dogs Savaria said.welrefight rea tutes sa bec Summit road and Summit Circleen- than $200,000 to renovate and restore ing last week when a mysterious one trance to the park had been pulled the park.The final phase of the pro- white substance that had been mi back and tied.New shrubbery plant- ject begins this spring.Ms Savaria spilled on the ground ignited sponta- T ed there had been almost totally said contractors couldn\u2019t be asked to neously in the gazebo area Cap destroyed.replace the damaged trees.The incident sparked a search for thei The shrubbery was planted to \u201cIf people still walk along the someone who might be carrying a block a small path.It was being paths what is being done becomes dangerous chemical in the park M closed because overuse had compact- useless,\u201d Ms Savaria said.\u201cPeople where many children were playing ed the soil so hard the roots of trees have to make an effort to give the fire officials said \u2019 couldn't breathe.So the soil had shrubs a chance to establish them- No one was found.wd been aerated near the trees.selves.Identification of the substance has of N not yet been received from the Mont- held A real Urban Community arson squad F where samples were taken for labo- tivif 4 ' clecor marie: paule Specialists in home decorating and custom-made drapes and bedding.April special = 20% off all SANDERSON fabric and wallpaper.wa ratory analysis, Fire Chief Jim Adams said Tuesday.\u201cMy concern was that someone might be running about the park with a large amount of corrosive substance.\u201d He said a trail of the white substance led along a park path to the gazebo area where some was spilled on the metal trap door covering access to underground water pipes.The trail disappeared in the grass.The chemical had already eaten its way into the cover and was bursting into flame spontaneously.When burned, it left a rust-like residue, he said.The firemen were first called for fire in the park at 10:34 am but they found only condensation on the top of the two-foot-square metal trap door.They were called again at 11:57 am for flames from paving stone.It was then that a white substance resembling pigeon droppings was seen igniting.Chief Adams said numerous emer- 4918 Sherbrooke W 1090 Laurier W.OGILVY k inf d i Westmount Outremont Sth Floor : 3 Ee vos able vonks health @ \u201c56-7305 273-8859 842-771] : = » pr, Bo So 5 and aera environment offi- Claudette Savaria, Westmount's horticulturist, surveys damage in Summit Park.cials.Nin Haupt 3 p.1285 Boutique LARD TMR 342-3447 {oy CD Tux 7 RASE LIE a Birding is a great recreational activity for seniors.It widens your horizons.Through enjoying birds you become more aware of the natural world.As you marvel at the diversity of species that have evolved you begin to understand the need today for conservation measures.Another big plus of taking up birding is that it gets you out of doors.Birding doesn\u2019t have to be an expensive hobby.You can buy a moderately priced pair of binoculars and a field guide and bird anywhere.Most ple start in their own backyard or $= park to get a feel for the size > birds you're seeing magnified seven or eight times through your binoculars.Soon you know what's sparrow-sized, crow-sized or larger.Then you can enjoy field trips to places like Cap Tormente below Quebec City where, in the fall, you'll see one of the greatest spectacles of bird migration.The greater snow geese stop off at Cap Tormente to feed en route from their nesting grounds in the Arctic to Birding offers an ever-changing landscape #5 their wintering grounds in the marshes of Delaware.As they wing their way up the St Lawrence in wave after wave, you're astounded by their sheer numbers and the beauty of their white plumage glistening in the sun as they come in for a landing.You can also see birds in faraway places like the fabulous birds of paradise in the jungles of New Guinea or Darwin's finches in the Galapagos.The unexpected is what makes, birding exciting at any level of expertise \u2014 you never know what you're going to see any time or anywhere.Then there's the thrill of seeing \u201cour own\u201d warblers, that come here to nest every spring, among the Maya ruins in Palenque.You look at these small colorful birds and wonder how they are going to make it across the Gulf of Mexico and then most of the length of the continent to their nesting grounds.\u2026-\u2014Of course, some of them don't make it.There are so many man- made hazards.That's what the Christmas Brid Count and nesting studies and bird banding and also MGH Auxiliary raised $ 10,500 The 39th annual meeting of the Westmount branch of the Auxiliary of Montreal General Hospital was held April 23.Funds raised during 1990 from activities of the branch were reported at $10,500, and are earmarked for patient care, to help buy special equipment and for the Auxiliary Research Scholarship Fund.Guest speaker was Westmount resident Joan Winser.taking part in the Feeder Watch program are all about.To find out what\u2019s happening to our bird life.According to one long-term study on songbirds in Ontario, of 56 species, 12 showed significant decreases.White-throated sparrows, for instance, were down to almost half of their numbers in 1961.That's another plus for birding.It's one of the few sciences today where amateurs can make a contribution.But birding as a hobby is fun.There's many a laugh when you bird with congenial people.Try it.You won't be alone.The bird watching population across North America has increased from eight million 25 years ago to between 20 and 30 million today.\u2014 Elsie Mitchell Editor\u2019s note: The supply of contributions to this column has run low.If submissions do nat increase soon, the column will disappear from these pages.We are on the lookout for submissions by seniors on any topic or experience, past or present.Maximum length is three typed, double-spaced pages.Please include full name and phone number for verification.Send to THE EXAMINER, Seniors Say, 155 Hillside avenue, Westmount H3Z 2Y8 or fax it to 932-5700.|] COMING EVENTS EVENEMENTS Notices for this column should be sent in writing to: Coming Events, 155 Hillside avenue, Westmount H3Z2Y8.Text should be accompanied by payment of $7.00 plus GST for maximum of 50 words.Only announcements of specific events sponsored by non-profit groups permitted in this column.Super Rummage Sale Westmount Park Church, Friday, April 26, 7-9 pm and Saturday, April 27, 10-1 pm.4695 de Maisonneuve West (corner Lansdowne).Bargains galore, clothing, footwear, kitchenware, books, records, linens, etc.Bou- tique of collectables.Tell all your friends to come.Westmount for recommended Did you know that right here in your own neighborhood of Westmount there exists a top rated auto body shop, serving over 40 years and by the C.A.A.?DARMO AUTO @Fpecialists in insurance estimate repairs ALBERT DARMO, OWNER If your insurance company tells you to go to their garage, tell them you want to go to Darmo Auto, a quality body shop with reasonable prices.We provide free loaners and have the most up-to-date welding and frame straightening equipment.Your car is an important investment.Why not have it repaired by someone who cares?Darmo Auto SINCE 1939 21 SOMERVILLE 486-0785 Westmount The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 25, 1991 A.MILLAR SERVICES LTEE.PERSONNEL Para-Medical, Domestic, Bonded and experienced.Live in or out.15 yrs of experience.24 HR SERVICE rt mr, SEER 4 TL ] a\u201d, DEFLATED PRICES ON NEW TIRES When it comes to savings, service and selection, the competition just doesn't stack up! Our SUPER SPRING TIRE SPECIAL is now on! Drop by and let us help you! Service d\u2019auto WESTMOUNT Auto Service 4780 Sherbrooke St.W.[corner Grosvenor) 932-1554 14 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 25, 1991 Sally Ann sends goods to Kurds The Salvation Army will supply 100,000 blankets to Kurdish refugees.They will be air-dropped to the Kurds in Iraq by the U.S.Air Force.Those wishing to assist in the re- We offer you 3 hairdressers lief effort with cash donations may send a cheque to the Salvation Army, 2050 Stanley street, suite 400, Montreal H3A 3G3, 288-7441.& manicure, pedicure and other services.OPEN 7 DAYS 344-0508 BY APPOINTMENT B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation gives awards at annual meeting The B\u2019nai Brith Hillel Foundation holds its annual meeting Wednesday at 8 pm at the Faculty Club, Concor- dia Unversity, 1455 de Maisonneuve boulevard west, seventh floor, room 765.Guest speaker is Joe Schwarcz, science editor for CJAD, chemistry teacher at Vanier College and adjunct professor at McGill University.His topic is Sense, Nonsense and Science.Hillel will honor alumni.The award for contribution to the foundation goes to Barney Grosser, past- president and volunteer.The second award goes to broadcaster Joe King who has made an Self-defence course offered À- \u2018TheWestmount YMCA is offering a self-defence course for men and women starting Monday, May 6 and running for 6 weeks.It starts at 8 pm and lasts until 9:30 pm.The course will be taught by Jack \"Ng.Registration deadline is May 3.Cost is $20 for members, $40 for nonmembers.impact as director of public relations of Allied Jewish Community Services.A third award goes to film producer Pierre Lasry for contributing to Canadian culture.Student leaders Shmari Dergel, president of McGill Hillel; Rhonda Lehrer, Concordia Hillel president; Johanna Elhadad, president of Centre Hillel; Stephanie Margolese, president of Marianopolis Hillel; Doron Goldstein, president of Dawson Hillel; and Mordechai Brodt, president of Vanier Hillel, will be recognized for their contribution.The meeting is open to the public and friends of the awardees.For more information call 845-9171.For book lovers Book Lovers Forum II Sunday Series of Temple Emanu-El-Beth Sho- lom will present Prof Morton Wein- - feld reviewing Member of the Tribe: on the road in Jewish America by Ze'er Chafets on Sunday, April 28 at 2 pm, at the temple, 4100 Sherbrooke street.The $5.50 admission includes GST.Coffee will be served after the review and everyone is welcome.For intormation call 937-3575.SCHRETER'S OFFICIAL CAMP LIST FAX US YOUR ORDER FOR BASIC MERCHANDISE ie.PENMAN'S SWEATS, T-SHIRTS, DUFFLE BAGS, ETC.[J Penman\u2019s Sweat Shirts ceerecnceess 13.00% [J 40\u201d Duffle Bags cenen 25.00% Pet of the Week Tyler is a year-old male collie who is available for adoption at the SPCA, 5215 Jean Talon street east.He is very friendly and good with children.The adoption fee is $95, which-inctudes a medical examination.New free mag for gardeners City Gardener is a new, non-profit magazine for amateur gardeners, meant for sharing techniques and ideas.The quarterly publication will cover a range of topical issues, from compost to pest control, from hydroponics to rooftop gardening.It will feature a kids\u2019 section and recipes for gourmet garden meals.The publishers hope most articles will be written by readers.City Gardener is free; the first issue will be available May 1 and sent to anyone who asks for a copy.Send your name and address to 4815 Queen Mary road, suite 5, Montreal H3W 1X1.(adults S-XL) .[J Penman\u2019s Sweat Pants (adults S-XL, no pockets) .15.00* H Penman\u2019s Hooded Sweat Shirts (aduits S-XL).18.00* [J Penman\u2019s Sweat Shirts (youth) .*11.00* J Penman\u2019s Sweat Pants (youth) .*12.00* O Penman\u2019s T-Shirts (adults S-XL) .000000000000.15:25* [J T-Shirts (oversized, 100% cotton) .*6.00* OJ Underwear (boys) .[J Sport Socks (girls, boys) « « + « + + « .3/*3.00* U] Sport Socks (men\u2019s).\u2026.3/°3.00* [J Slouch Socks (women\u2019s).O Polo Pyjamas (boys, Canadian Made).11.50* [J Boxer Shorts s\u2026\u2026\u20260u0000.3.00% 0 1 pc.Thermal Long Johns .*18.00* [1 1 pc.Fleece Long Johns .\"25.00* OO Lumber Shirts .*15.00* U] Swim Shorts (boys) .7.50* [J Sweat Shorts (men\u2019s) .»10.00* [J Sweat Shorts (boys).8.00* 0 Bicycle Shorts (boys).10.00% D] Baseball Caps .2.50* 0 Suspenders .coronene t6.00* O Bicycle Gloves .*10.00* O 36\u201d Duffle Bags .\u201822.50* O Life Jackets (under 90 Ibs.) .\u201822.50* OO Camp Blankets .\u2026.12.50* {J Sheets .veeaneseess 11.00% _J) Flannel Sheets.\u201812.50* (O] PINOWS.08000000000000 ( Pillow Cases .\u2026.2/°7.50* D Beach Towels (muiti-colour) .*7.50* [1 Mesh Laundry Bags.4.00* À) Mesh Sock Bags.\u20182.00* [J Canteens (insulated) .'8.00* U Waterproof Flashlights.\"4.00* DO Knapsacks .\u2026.\u2026.°87,50* D Money Belts .'4 UFannyPacks .'5.00* UJ Reversible Ponchos (boys) .'14.50* 0 Reversible Raincoats (boys) .*13.50* 0 Sleeping Bags .*25.00* D Beach Sandals.1.00* O Billy Boots (boys).*10.50* OJ Ducky Boots (youths) .\u201818.00* [J Running Shoes (canvas) .» 36.00* ©) Leather Belts (boys) .\u20184.00* (] Cotton Dress Pants.\u201817.50* D) Boy>s Jeans .\u2026.\u2026.»15.00* CO Used Army Pants.\u201822.50* D Name Tapes .100/5.00* (Plus many more items) *PRICES MAY VARY DEPENDING ON STYLE, SIZE OR QUALITY Personal cheques accepted.4350 Boul.St.Laurent (corner of Marie-Anne) MON.TUES.WED., FR.9 AM.- 6 P.M, THURS.9 AM.§9 PM SAT.9 A.M.- P.M.LS [ - Open until 9 p.m.Thursday Night Fax: 845-2825 845-4231 Imasco makes $500,000 gift Westmounter Purdy Crawford, chair of the board and chief executive officer of Imasco Ltd, has announced a donation of $500,000 to the Share the Vision campaign for the Université de Montréal, the Ecole Polytechnique and the École des Hautes Études Commerciales.The donation is in the name of Imasco and its companies: Imperial Tobacco Ltd, Pharmaprix/Shoppers Drug Mart and the UCS Group.The three educational institutions estimate their most urgent financial needs at $75 million.The minimum objective of the Share the Vision campaign was set at $50 million.Donations to the campaign may be sent to 3750 Jean Brillant street, Suite 480, Montreal H3T 1P1, 343- Complete Center Sales & Service all year round » Repairs + Parts & Accessories for all B.B.Q.s + Propane Tank Filling Len Les Services Joey (Div.Lasko Ind.Ltd.) 12320 Gouin Bivd.W.Pierrefonds 684-3211 The Westmount Examiner, And you win - oh On Friday, May 31, at 7 pm, the Greene Avenue Community Centre, 1090 Greene avenue, will host A Special Spring Evening \u2014 a flower-filled fundraising dinner to help put a new roof on the centre.A neighbor and friend, René Pankalla, will cater the dinner.There will be floral door prizes ranging from flowered tablecloths from La Cache to gardening books from Double Hook.Project LIFE (Leisure Involvement and Fulfillment for the Elderly) is part of the quality of life program run by Jewish Family Services, now in its ninth year.Project LIFE is headed by a music therapist, a social worker and a re- creologist.Student animators lead recreational activities with seniors.Thursday, April 25, 1991 - 15 Dinner to raise the roof at Greene avenue centre The City of Westmount will match - donations for capital improvements to the centre.Entertainment for the evening will include a mariachi band and, perhaps, flamenco dancers.The dinner costs $50 and tickets are available at the centre, or by calling 931-6202 or 937-9741.Tax receipts are available.Those who are unable to attend the dinner are asked to send a donation.Volunteering diploma earned through LIFE ing in group foster homes and allows students to participate on a part- time basis.The project runs June 24 to Aug 16 and will give participants interested in the health or helping professions practical work experience.À weekly training session with guest lecturers will cover different aspects of volun- The climax of the annual fundraising raffle by the Air Cadet League of Quebec took place Friday evening at the Royal Montreal Regiment armory on St Catherine street with the drawing of winners of four Mazda automobiles.From left to right, André Halley from Cellulaire Canada, retired car dealer Harold Cummings who organized the raffle, Air Cadet league president André Courville and Yves Allard from Mazda Canada prepare to draw the four winning names.The winners are from around the city, and the country.None are from Westmount.Photo by OWEN EGAN Israeli street festival to draw 20,000 front of Cummings House, 5151 Côte St Catherine road, followed at 1 pm by the street festival on Westbury avenue between Côte St Catherine and St Kevin street.More than 20,000 people are expected to take part in the annual March to Jerusalem and Israeli Street Festival on Sunday, May 5.The march begins at 7:30 am in H.GOLDENBERG, Pharmacist CELEBRATING 40 YEARS 1951-1991 Join us for refreshments Thursday, April 25th 4451 St.Catherine W.(corner Metcalfe) Co-sponsors are the YM-YWHA and the Jewish Cultural Association.Theme of the march is We are one people! We march together! Funds raised by the march help support special projects by youth in Israel through the cultural association.The theme of the street festival is With love to Israel, and it will include many new activities, live entertainment and Israeli food.There will be an arcade of rides and games for the very young.In Children\u2019s Village, youngsters will be encouraged to make gifts to send to Israel.Weather permitting, rides in a hot air balloon will be provided by El Al airline.Sponsor forms for the march are now available in schools, synagogues, major Jewish organizations, and at AJCS, 5151 Cote St Catherine Rd.For information on the march call 345-2626 or 735-1725 for information on the street festival.Maison Mariette Hfuenaents HAUTE COUTURE We will create the most elegant custom-made clothes for any occasion, as well as + x your wedding dress.High-quality, high-fashion imported fabrics.4505 Cote des Neiges suite 103 739-6073 RECYCLE THIS PAPER Please do not destroy this paper.Put it in your blue recycling box or bring it to a recycling depot.pr mm me er sr 20% off with this coupon ON ANY LAMINATION 45 Westminster N.Montreal West 489-4151 rm == == = = = hme et mee Zn teering.At the end of the project, volunteers will be awarded a project diploma.To register call 485-1112, ext 311.Project LIFE is said to be the only community volunteer program that offers direct contact with seniors liv- AJUSTEMENTS, ALTÉRATIONS GÉNÉRALES, MODIFICATIONS, COUTURE DE TOUT GENRE POUR VÊTEMENTS HOMMES ET FEMMES FOR YOUR GENERAL ALTERATIONS, MEN'S AND WOMEN'S CLOTHING Yves Tremblay TAILLEUR COUTURIER: Tel: 933-3970 4253 STE-CATHERINE OUEST WESTMOUNT - 1er étage Custom drapery, wallpaper, upholstery Personal attention, Fine workmanship Wendy Dodge and Daphne McLaren 482-0126 SHOP-AT-HOME SERVICE 324 Victoria Ave.(upstairs) Monday through Saturday 10-5 Salon Hélène de Grandpré Couture et prêt-à-porter GRADUATION DRESSES À collection of one-of-a-kind dresses designed especially for the graduate 2127 Guy Street Montreal 933-4476 TUESDAY-SATURDAY 16 The Westmount Examiner Thursday, April 25, 1991 Estate Furnishings Liquidators A personalized service for the private sale of estate furnishings on the premises, after professional appraisal in consultation with the vendor.Many satisfied clients; 30 years experience.Small commission.For details call: Lucie Olsen or Yvette Stephens 739-9448 CANADIAN FRIENDS OF EZRATH NASHIM EZRATH NASHIM-HERZOG HOSPITAL 4 3 U S A j 1 13 Because We Can't Forget About Alzheimer\u2019s Disease 2340 Lucerne Rd., #32A, T.M.R.H3R 2J8, Tel: 739-6635 VIDEO SECUR.RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL BONDED VIDEO SPECIALISTS FIRE * THEFT * VANDALISM * Is just being insured enough?* Is your home & business (interior & exterior) and valuables recorded on videotape?Will you remember exactly what you had after a fire or theft?Reasonable rates.Call today: David Goodis \u2014 Lawrence Zarr 485-9885 PO.Box 551, Station Victoria, Westmount, PQ.H3Z 2Y6 EYE-OPENING VALUES Contact Lens ; Special Daily Wear Extended Wear \u2026°149% till May 31/91 NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER SPECIAL OFFER SAME-DAY SERVICE ON MOST PRESCRIPTIONS 4 £0) RH.Dawson n Dispensing Opticians 4154 St Catherine St.W.931-3131 (corner Greene) Grocery HAINES sto Pick up your breakfast on your way to work! Fresh Brewed Coffee and Toast Sandwiches and Assorted Salads Wine and Beer FREE DELIVERY 4466 Ste Catherine St.West 937-9455 (corner Metcalfe) Why councillors are, or aren't, running in election Hereis what councillors had tosay about their positions in respect to standing for re-election Nov 3: Sally Aitken \u201cNo, I'm not running.I don't want to get stale,\u201d Mrs Aitken said.\u201cI knew what it was I wanted to achieve.Now it\u2019s time to move sideways.\u201d Mrs Aitken, who has served as councillor since 1983 in Ward 4, said she has always believed one should have an objective when seeking municipal office and leave when the mission is completed.Hers is a proud record in the social service field, changing zoning to permit nursing homes, fighting for seniors\u2019 residences, bringing seniors together, introducing the Healthy Cities concept and encouraging environmental concerns.Peter Duffield Mr Duffield, who was acclaimed without opposition in Ward 8 for each of his two terms, announced in the last election he would not seek a third term.He explained his reasons again last week: \u201cEight years is enough on council because council needs someone new with a different perspective and be- The following building permits were issued at Westmount city hall recently: April15 424 Lansdowne: for L.Boucher by 2849865 Quebec Inc, fireplace, $2,500; 340 Victoria: for Mr Anglin by N.D.G.Plumbing, install two plumbing fixtures, $1,000; 4999 St Catherine: for Immeubles Réalité by Creccal Trust, renovation of suite 227, $1,000; 4999 St Catherine: for Timex Canada by Creccal Trust, renovation of suite 310, $1,500; 41 Devon: for Thibodeau and Dupont by J.P.Lambert, seven fixtures, $4,500; April 16 60 Oakland: for Mr Marois by Roger Chaver Inc, water entrance, $900; 4150 Sherbrooke: for Jean Silver by Benoit Lavallée, three fixtures, $2,000; April 17 372 Kitchener: for A.Isaacs by Beacons- field Construction, interior renovations, $5,000; 455 Roslyn: for D.Schouella by Les Dével- opements Abitec, interior renovations, $70,000; April 18 252 Kensington: for R.Chodos by Great- bear Building, bathroom alterations, $7,500; 454 Grosvenor: for D.Paquet by Plomberie Verdun, roof drain repairs, $200; April 18 4141 Sherbrooke: for Globe International by Developcan Management Inc, office renovation, $60,000; 4216 de Maisonneuve: for Manoir Olivier by Mydec Construction, repairs to building, $130,800.Goodwin House Nursing Home WESTMOUNT Quality nursing care for all stages of autonomy.Professional medical attention in a home atmosphere.You are cared for while keeping in mind respect and individual dignity.Private, nourishing food, garden, etc.466-9785 By LAUREEN SWEENEY cause councillors themselves need a certain degree of freshness to be responsive to the public.\u201d He felt it's time for someone else to give of their \u201cvolunteer time\u201d and would be \u201cdelighted\u201d to discuss the work of a councillor with anyone who might be interested in running, he said.Paul Fortin \u201cNo, I won't be running again,\u201d said Mr Fortin, who represents Ward 7.\u201cIn a way I'm sad because it (council) was a good group to work with.I would like to continue my association with the city but doing something that doesn\u2019t have as fixed a schedule.\u201d Mr Fortin, a lawyer who specializes in writing mining laws for Third World countries, is out of the country for long periods at a time and says the regular council commitments are difficult to fit into his agenda.He's taking on other \u201cvolunteer\u201d responsibilities with more flexible timing but hopes to be able to continue his liaison with the city in some other less demanding way.He has served most of his time as commissioner of public safety and fire and chair of city council's traffic committee.Joan Rothman \u201cI'm going to seek another term on council and when I make a decision about the mayoralty I'll probably discuss it with THE EXAMINER,\u201d said Ward 6 councillor Mrs Rothman.\u201cRight now I'm sounding out people.\u201d She said she wants to be on council for a third term because \u201cI'm truly interested in the welfare of the city and I'm concerned about the future.\u201d She said she is worried about the impact of Montreal's increasing economic problems on Westmount.Mrs Rothman said the timing of this year's election is \u201ca political bombshell for anyone seeking election\u201d since it will come soon after deposit of the new valuation roll by the Montreal Urban Community.\u201cYou'll have to be very brave.\u201d Daniel Tingley \u201cAt this point in time, I don\u2019t think I'll run again,\u201d Mr Tingley said.\u201cI don't have the time it takes.\u201d Mr Tingley, a lawyer who now chairs city council's recreation and community services committee, is in his first term representing Ward 3.He is also a member of the finance and administration committee and has served as commissioner of administration.He has been a strong supporter of city hall staff.\u201cYes there's a possibility of me running for mayor,\u201d Mr Trent said, \u201cand I stand behind the statement I made about a month ago that I'll never run unless there's strong support for me.If I don\u2019t run for mayor, I'll pursue other directions so I think it will be unlikely that I'd run as councillor\u201d He also won't oppose Mayor May Cutler, he said.\u201cThat still holds.\u201d Mr Trent has represented Ward 2 since last January when he was acclaimed to fill the vacancy left by Phillip Aspinall\u2019s resignation.Peter Trent Rhoda Vineberg \u201cYes.I'm running again,\u201d Mrs Vineberg said enthusiastically as if there shouldn't have been any doubt that she would.Though she first won her seat for Ward 1 in a by-election during March 1985, defeating Allen Nutik, she was unopposed in 1987.Having been fire commissioner, public works commissioner and then light and power commissioner, she has recently taken over the responsibility of chairing city council's operations committee.£3 i} (The Lamp Room) Specializing in A LAMPSHADES È vour lamp for proper fitting).Full service 2000 Fac .in stock at all times Custom-made hades available (bring in lamp remodelling, mounting and repairs.Decorative finials.lamps.occasional furniture.580 St-Croix Blvd.St-Laurent | 744-6632 (Metrodu [3X S141 A Mon.-Wed.9-6.Thurs.-Fri.to 8.Sat.to 4.flege).Papeterie Westmount.A complete selection of wedding invitations, albums, guest books pe CHOOSE FROM OUR LARGE SELECTIC FOR ALL OCCASIONS, GIFTS, WRAPPING PAPER, ETC.)N: OF CARDS 4887 Sherbrooke St.W., Westmount 481-2575 ê; Continued from page five no less, than a resident of The Boulevard or any other street in the area.School children who walk along and cross Cedar are as deserving of protection, no more but no less, than those who walk along and cross The Boulevard.Atthetimeofthe 1987 meeting at Victoria Hall, The Study was a particular concern.Later, when traffic lights at Braeside.were installed to enhance the safety of those children, you heard not a word of protest from Cedar avenue residents, even though the resulting slowing down of traffic on The Boulevard inevitably diverted some traffic onto Cedar.That is because we are in favor of safety.St George\u2019s Elementary, further west on The Boulevard, gets all the traffic both ways.Aside from the traffic tie-ups there, from a safety standpoint, they have no problem, being protected by the traffic lights at their corner and a crossing guard.Remember that the current test is two- pronged.Most people appear to have lost sight of the second one.They are, as noted in the letter of Mr St Louis of Sept 18: 1, Entrance to Cedar narrowed toonelane; 2.Traffic signals on The Boulevard between Sydenham and Mount Pleasant interconnected at 40 km/h.Also, the Edgehill- Sydenham and Aberdeen lights are set out of sync in both directions.They are always opposed.This has considerably slowed traffic and enhanced safety on The Boulevard.There are some undisputed facts about Cedar avenue traffic.When THE EXAMINER reported on April 9, 1987, on the April 2 meeting at Victoria Hall, the article led off: \u201cCedar avenue is a traffic zoo, most speakers agreed at last Thursday's public consultation meeting.\u201d Let us tell you, it still is a traffic zoo, and a dangerous one.It has been and still is a speedway, a racetrack.There is a psychological factor of a one- way street, with no inhibiting effect of oncoming traffic.They speed, two abreast, and they race.This phenomenon is exacerbated by the fact that the sight line eastward from Mountain is a straightaway till Ramezay, also widening after Daulac like an inverse funnel.Thus, because of the configuration, downhill from Clarke to Mountain, the sharp curve there and the inverted banking of the curve and beyond towards the south with the slope of the terrain, cars frequently lose control and go off the street onto the south sidewalk and lawns on that side.This occurs mostly in winter but also in summer.It was more so before the stop sign was installed at Mountain in September, 1987, but it still occurs.Remember also the well-known sports figure killed in an accident at Cedar and Mountain some years ago.The worst two victims of this phenomenon are 3274, at the southeast corner of Mountain and Cedar, and his immediate neighbor, 3270.The family at 3274 has resided there since 1976.In that time, there have been more than 15 accidents involving that property.Some examples: a truck over- turned with a load of lumber on the lawn; one time, a car flipped onto the lawn; trees planted by the city along the front of that property mowed down by cars coming onto the lawn; once, his car parked in his driveway, more than 15 feet in from the street, hit and run by a car which lost control; another time, his car parked on the north side of the street, opposite his home, hit and run with more than $3,000 damage; more than once, cars have lost control, have come onto and across his lawn, across his driveway, and through the hedge and onto the lawn of 3270; \u201c and once, the family came home from the country after a winter weekend and saw traces in the snow which clearly indicated that a vehicle had come onto their property and then been removed and found blood stains on their front door handle and knocker and around the doorbell.Members of that family never walk on the sidewalk (south side of Cedar) in front of their home because they consider it too dangerous.Itis that sidewalk where many children of ECS walk to and from school, between 8 and 8:30 am and about 3:30 pm.It is very dangerous and the board of directors of that school are very concerned about the safety of their -children.As well, children going to St George's Secondary and to and from other schools south of Cedar also walk along and cross Cedar.When the Rev Murray Magor was principal of St George's, he wrote to the city in April 1986 to complain about the danger to his students who walk along Cedar.The student entrance to that school is on Rame- zay between Cedar and The Boulevard.Hence, their students use both those streets.Another danger point is the intersection of Cedar and Mount Pleasant.When Dr Maureen Keily, a principal activist for The Boulevard residents (3200), met at our request with Mr Cleghorn (3234 Cedar), she was honest in admitting that her young son, who attends Selwyn House, crosses Cedar at Mount Pleasant and not The Boulevard twice each school day and that she is very concerned about his safety.A third hazardous point is at the very entrance to Cedar.One of the residents of the five Cedar avenue houses west of Clarke, a physician, has frequently been called out of his home in the middle of the night to tend to accident victims there.Cedar was not reconstructed as scheduled in 1990 because of the differing opinions then among the residents.Thus, instead of rebuilding and then seeing the results, the city prudently decided to first run a test.Now, the Cedar residents are in agreement and prepared to accept the city\u2019s proposal as acompromise.As to the five houses on Cedar west of Clarke, prior to the test, they have not access by car to Cedar, they never could park on Cedar and during certain hours they were not even permitted to stop their vehicles in front of their house, even on the north side.Every resident on a residential street is entitled to have parking on at least one side, for the residents, service and repair people and visitors.The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, Yousay | Unlike some years ago, when orthodoxy in traffic management was to widen streets and create speedways, currently, for urban residential municipalities like Westmount, the accepted concept across North America is to narrow streets and choke traffic, thereby controlling speeding.This concept was not invented for Cedar.When Côte St An- - toine was rebuilt, the 4.5 feet sidewalks were widened to six feet on the south side and much wider along most of the north side.When Argyle and Metcalfe were rebuilt last year, the sidewalks were also widened to six feet.That is the new standard which West- mount adopted a few years ago, applicable to residential streets when rebuilt.The result of same is to narrow.the roadway by three feet.It is the same for Cedar now and will be, likewise, for The Boulevard when it will be reconstructed in 1994 or sooner.Hence, we are dealing primarily with a widening of sidewalks and the consequent narrowing by three feet of rebuilt residential streets.The city has planned to rebuild 27 residential streets over eight years, starting in 1990.The Boulevard was originally scheduled for 1994.However, at the April 9 meeting at city hall, the councillors were in favor of accelerating that schedule.Grosvenor is slated for rebuilding in 1991 and Victoria as well one year soon.Cedar can serve as the prototype for all those streets and therefore enhance safety for all.When The Boulevard's turn comes, we will not oppose what the city will plan to enhance safety there.When Cedar was totally closed for July and August 1989, for the installation of water mains, all eastbound traffic was on The Boulevard.Since there was no school then and generally lighter traffic in summer, instead of 7,400 cars per day (as counted in the test from 8 am to 6 pm), let us say there would have been only 5,000 per day.If The Boulevard had carried that many cars, it would have been more than double the usual load.Yet, there were no problems and no complaints.The reason is simple: a good part of that traffic shifted away to other routes, such as the expressway.After Cedar re-opened, they all came back.It is well known that at least 70 percent of the Cedar-Boulevard eastbound traffic originates from west of Westmount, and even west of Decarie.If Cedar and The Boulevard are each reduced to one lane of moving traffic eastbound, this would be a 50 percent reduction of the pre-test capacity of four lanes (two on Cedar and two on The Boulevard).That would reduce the total traffic volume because traffic, like water, seeks and finds its own level.If traffic is forced to go through more slowly, many drivers would opt for other routes downtown, such as the expressway.For The Boulevard residents, would it not be better to carry 35 to 40 percent of 4,000 cars per day rather than the pre-test 31 percent of 7,400 cars per day?In absolute terms, there would be fewer cars for The BUY ONE STRAWBERRY/RHUBARB PIE April 25, 1991 - Boulevard and fewer cars for Cedar.As to the \u201cwaste of taxpayers\u2019 money\u2019 being decried by The Boulevard residents for this \u2018\u2018unnecessary project\u201d (Mr Hop- penheim last week), surely they are aware that the Cedar roadway is literally falling apart and must be rebuilt.There is absolutely no difference in cost as between rebuilding 22 feet of street plus 12 feet of sidewalks as against 25 feet of street plus nine feet of sidewalks.It is 34 feet total either way.Also, the cost figure of \u201cseveral hundred thousand dollars\u201d for the peninsulas as suggested by Mr Burke (\u201cYou Say,\u201d March 28) is totally off base.The true cost is well below $20,000.As to the peninsulas proposed, they are needed to create a visual boundary in order to keep traffic to one lane.Only if kept to one lane can the speed be controlled, no racing or passing, and safety enhanced.In the current test, traffic is choked to one lane ~ from the mouth of Cedar until Clarke.Then, once east of Clarke, they fan out into two lanes and speed and race.Even this only increased the eastbound traffic load on The Boulevard by four percent.This is truly insignificant.If the peninsulas, as proposed were on the south side west of Clarke, the north side from Clarke to Mount Pleasant and again on the south side from Mount, Pleasant- to Daulac, there would be two advantages: a change in the sight line from a straightaway and the possibility of protected no-parking loading and unloading zone for six cars on the south side of Cedar next to ECS.The same concept of protected no-parking loading and unloading areas on each side of The Boulevard near each of The Study and The Priory can be implemented when The Boulevard is rebuilt.Some Boulevard residents have expressed the fear that if Cedar is limited to one lane throughout, it will put more traffic onto The Boulevard.That fear is unfounded.The choice by each driver is made at the fork.Once chosen, left or right, the car is committed.Thus, one lane for the rest of Cedar will simply keep the 65 percent who choose that street in single file and hence controlled and slower, instead of two abreast and racing.We do not consider the residents of The Boulevard to be our enemies and we hope they donot see us as their enemies.We donot seek to simply shift our traffic and safety problem onto them.We want to promote safety both on Cedar and on all adjacent streets.If, in order to improve safety on Cedar, which has the most serious speeding and safety problem, worse than any other street in the immediate area, if the net result is to cause a four percent increase of the traffic on The Boulevard east of Clarke, this is truly insignificant.Richard Howson and 10 other Cedar residents The Cedar Avenue Traffic Safety Committee 536 Mount Pleasant avenue WESTMOUNT PQ H3Y 3H8 BANANAS.qe AT REGULAR PRICE 100% PURE BUTTER LARGE BREAD AND GET THE SECOND PIE OF YOUR CHOICE CRESCENTS 6/#)59 (DOUBLECRUSTY 309 rom Honduras 45° Ib.= 1/2 SEO OUR CHOICE We bake them daily CAMPAGNE ea.HOT HOUSE PINK [LARGE SzE EUROPEAN STYLE EUROPEAN STYLE Ar vou concerto your et?TOMATOES COOKED B.B.Q.1 n CHICKENS SIRLOIN-TIP 5% ROAST BEEF FRENCH 79 BAGUETTE BREAD 1% SIX-GRAIN 09 From Ontario, Canada #1 3 to 3% Ibs.before cooking Canada grade \u201cA\u201d beef White or whole wheat BREAD FROM FLORIDA FRESH SELECT FROM OUR FISH DEPT.FARM STYLE FARM HOUSE PINK Size 36 CALF GRAPEFRUIT ¥449 LIVER From Quebec Medium size FRESH BAY SCALLOPS CRACKED Ib.120z.WHEAT BREAD 4 DOUBLE CRUSTY BREAD ea.White or whole wheat ea.me A A0 GMA AM ew ee RE SI RE FA en tN LBA BL CA aD HE A Ania age 18 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 25, 1991 Suite de la page deux PARTIE 1, DONT UNE DESCRIPTION DÉTAILLÉE ET UN CROQUIS SONT CONTENUS PLUS LOIN DANS L'AVIS AVIS PUBLIC est par les présentes donné par la soussignée, greffier de la Ville de Westmount, QUE le conseil municipal de la Ville de Westmount, lors de sa séance du lundi 15 avril 1991, a adopté, par résolution, un projet de règlement 1075, intitulé «RÉGLEMENT VISANT À MODIFIER DE NOUVEAU LE RÈGLEMENT 613 CONCERNANT LES ALIGNEMENTS DE CONSTRUCTION»; QUE ledit projet de règlement est un règlement visant à modifier de nouveau le règlement no 613 de Westmount intitulé «RÈGLEMENT CONCERNANT LES ALIGNEMENTS DE CONSTRUCTION» en ce qui a trait aux districts C5-partie 7, C7 et R1 partie 1; QUE lesdits districts C5-partie 7, C7 et R1 partie 1 sont limités comme suit: District C-5 Partie 7 les immeubles situés du côté nord de la rue Sherbrooke portant les numéros civiques du 4779 au 4855 Sherbrooke inclusivement, ceux situés du côté sud de la rue Sherbrooke portant les numéros civiques du 4780 au 4866 Sherbrooke inclusivement, ceux situés du côté est de l'avenue Victoria portant les numéros civiques du 339 au 397 Victoria inclusivement et ceux situés du côté ouest de l'avenue Victoria portant les numéros civiques du 350 au 392 Victoria inclusivement; District C7 Borné à l'est, par les limites est de la ville et par la limite est du lot 378-62 (ruelle); au sud par les lignes arrières de lot sur le côté sud de la rue Sainte- Catherine, et par la rue Tupper; à l'ouest par l'avenue Gladstone; et au nord, par la rue Ste-Catherine.District R1 Partie 1 Borné à l'est, par les limites est de la ville; au sud, par The Boulevard; à l'ouest, par les lignes arrières de lot sur le côté ouest de l'avenue Lexington; au nord, par les limites nord de la ville.le tout selon qu'il est illustré aux croquis suivants: CLAREMONT R3.GROSVENOR Westmount POHSZIE2 930-8531 Monday-Friday DISTRICT RI.& QUE ledit projet de règlement a pour objet: 1.Avenue Grosvenor à l'angle de la rue Sherbrooke De modifier les alignements de construction des deux côtés de Grosvenor à l'angle de Sherbrooke de 14 pieds à aucun.2.Rue Ste-Catherine \u2014 Limites est jusqu'à Gladstone De modifier l'alignement de construction des limites est jusqu'à l'avenue Gladstone de 3 pieds à 10 pieds.3.Place Belvedere De modifier l'alignement de construction sur le côté sud de 25 pieds à 15 pieds.QUE, conformément aux dispositions des articles 123 à 130 de la Loi sur l'aménagement et l'urbanisme (L.R.Q., chapitre A-19.1), ledit projet de règlement sera soumis à la consultation publique quant à son objet et aux conséquences de son adoption, lors d'une assemblée publique tenue par le conseil et présidée par le maire, cette assemblée publique étant prévue pour le mercredi 15 mai 1991, à 19h00, à la Salle du conseil de l'Hôtel de Ville, 4333, rue Sherbrooke, Westmount, Québec, H3Z 1E2; QU'au cours de cette assemblée publique de consultation, le maire expliquera ledit projet de règlement et les conséquences de son adoption et entendra les personnes et organismes qui désirent s'exprimer; QUE ledit projet de règlement peut être consulté au Bureau du greffier de la Ville, 4333, rue Sherbrooke, Westmount, Québec, H3Z 1E2, du lundi au vendredi inclusivement, durant les heures d'affaires, soit de 8h30 à 16h30.DONNÉ sous mon seing à Westmount, Québec ce 23e jour d'avril 1991.Marie-France Paquet Greffier de la Ville CITY HALL / HÔTEL DE VILLE 8:30 am to 4:30 pm Fire (business calls), 19 StantonSt.935-2456 Continued on page 23 SUMMIT.Continued from page one would soon be controlled by robbers, drug dealers and mountain bikers.Passing traffic on the back side of Summit Circle now gives a feeling of security, explained Louis Vogel.Even at midnight, he and his wife feel very secure walking along the circle \u201cbut no way I'd feel secure with it closed on the north side.\u201d Others said closure of the north side would inconvenience their travel, limit access by fire and patrol vehicles and increase traffic along the south and west sides.Though fire officials did not attend the meeting, Chief Jim Adams told THE EXAMINER the closure would have \u201cadverse impact\u201d on the fire department.It uses the isolated area for wet drills and hose-testing, and wants access into the park fn fight bush fires such as the one A; 4, A petition of 17 families favoring the plan as a means to reduce overall traffic in the long term was presented by lawyer Sydney Sweibel, who lives on the east side of Summit Circle who feared for the safety of young children.But he was prepared to consider any method of reducing the \u201chorrendous\u201d volume of cars, warning, \u2018the worst thing we could do is leave this meeting tonight and take no action.\u201d Mr Trent, who chaired the session, said he would not proceed with his closure proposal without strong support from a majority of residents in the area.It was important, he said, that a decision on the street be made now before the the city's two-year plan to refurbish Summit Park is complete.\u201cWe'd rather have the noise (from traffic) than the robbers,\u201d declared Jack Brenhouse.\u201cCars aren't the issue,\u201d said lawyer Peter Hall.\u201cMurders, rapes and assaults are the issue.\u201d Nellie Wright, an Oakland resident, said closure would create more cul-de-sac areas which are already a problem in the area backing on to St Joseph's Oratory.Harry Bloomfield, of Surrey Gardens, feared racing cyclists would move over to Surrey Gardens.He also complained there were already too many ignored stop signs.\u201cWe're breeding a generation of stop sign jumpers.\u201d After listening to many of the 45 or 50 attending the meeting, Mr Trent told them he had been under the \u201cmisapprehension that everyone would favor\u201d closing of Summit Circle.\u201cCommunication with citizens is the worst problem faced by city council members,\u201d he said.\u201cWe sit here dreaming up things.\u201d He then agreed to bury the closure idea to hearty applause.\u201cDemocracy works,\u201d concluded Irving Teitelbaum, of Lexington avenue.Mr Trent then solicited solutions to ease traffic problems and straw votes were taken on some items.Suggestions were turned over to city operations manager Bruce St Louis for consideration.The list includes better parking enforcement, larger parking signs, one-way traffic, speed bumps, strate- gically-placed flower planters and a resident-only thoroughfare.Citizens agreed the curved barri on the north side of Summit Circi.had been very effective in reducing use of the circle as race track.They asked it be put in place for more than the summer months.Noise and nuisance also had abated considerably since closure of the lookout parking lot last summer.When Mr Trent asked the group to choose representatives the city could contact \u201cevery time we get another flaky idea,\u201d residents suggested a few names but then decided they'd be happy to return for more consultation sessions.As the crowd dispersed, one man was overheard asking another what the problem really was concerning Summit Circle.\u201cThere is no problem,\u201d answered his friend.\u201cExcept where to park when you have a cocktail party,\u201d they agreed. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING PETITES ANNONCES WORDS MOTS Goo 2931-7511 1006 Monday-Friday 8:30 am-5 pm lundi-vendredi 8h30-17h 8 ate le mot supplémentaire Phone in your ads early.Deadline: Box ads 4 pm ol liners 10 am Wednesday.Veuillez ne pas tarder a placer votre annonce.Date de tombée: Annonces encadrees: les mardis à 16h00, Petites annonces: les mercredis à 10h00.Classified ads may be placed in weekly newspapers across Canada.Call for details.Une annonce classée peut être placée dans les hebdomadaires à travers le Canada.Appelez pour informations.The Westmount REAL ESTATE / IMMOBILIER 100 Property for Sal 1 Property Ward fronts demandées 82 Country Property [or Sal / Proprités de campagne à vend 109 Gary ery Wanted / Propriétés de campagne 104 Country Property to Let / Maisons de campagne à louer 108 Country Houses Wanted / Maisons de campagnes demandées 108 Holiday Resorts / Centres de villégiature 107 Lots/Land for Sale / Terrains à vendre 108 Farms / Fermes 189 Space to Let / Espaces à louer 110 Space Wanted / Espaces demandés 111 Offices to Let / Bureaux à louer 112 Offices Wanted / Bureaux 118 Stores to Let / Magasins à louer 114 Stores Wanted / Magasins demandés 116 Apartments to Let / Appartements à louer 116 Apartments Wanted / Appartements demandés M17 Condos fos Sale / Condos a vendre 118 Condos to Let / Condos à lover 119 Sublets / À sous-louer 120 Houses to Let / Maisons à lover 121 Houses Wanted / Maisons demandées 122 F to Let / Duplexes à louer Accounts may be paid by telephone by Visa or MasterCard or by cash or cheque at the West- mount Examiner office, 155 Hillside Avenue, West- mount, the Town of Mount Royal Weekly Post office, 233 Dunbar Avenue, Town of Mount Royal, oratany branch on the Island of Montreal of The Royal Bank of Canada or the Bank of Montreal.Advertising not paid in advance of publication is subject to a $2.00 billing charge.Advance payments without invoice cannot be accepted by banks but may be paid at either of the above newspa- = per offices.Les comptes peuvent se régler par téléphone grâce aux cartes Visa et MasterCard, ainsi que par chèque ou en argent comptant aux bureaux du Westmount Examiner: 155, avenue Hillside, Westmount, ou du Courrier de Ville Mont-Royal: 233, avenue Dunbar, Ville Mont-Royal; ou encore à n'importe quelle branche de la Banque Royale du Canada ou de la Banque de Montréal de l'Île de Montréal.Toute annonce qui n\u2019est pas acquittée avant la date de parution est sujette à des frais de facturation de 2,00$.Les paiements réglés à l'avance mais sans facture ne seront pas acceptés banque.Ils pourront, par contre, être effectués à l'un des bureaux ci-haut mentionnés.123 Flats/Duplexes Wanted / Duplexes demandes 124 Share Living Quarters / Logements à partager 125 Rooms to Let / Chambres à louer 126 Rooms Wanted / Chambres demandées 127 Room & Board to Lat / Chambres et pensions à louer 128 Room & Board Wanted / Chambres at pensions demandées 129 Garages to Let / Garages à louer 130 Garages Wanted / Garages demandés 131 Parking Space to Let / Stationnement à loue: 132 Parking Space Wanted / On demande statonnements 133 Nursing Homes / Maisons de santé 134 Senior Citizens' Residences / Résidence pour personnes âgées 135 Business Opportunities / Occasion d'affaires 136 Investment Opportunities / Occasions de placement 137 Open Houses / Visites libres 138 Houses for Sale / Maisons a vendre Examiner, Thursday, EMPLOYMENT / EMPLOIS 200 Careers / Carrières et professions 201 Help Wamed / Personnel demandé 202 Work Wanted / On demande emploi 203 Nursing Services / Service de garde-malade 204 Domestic Help Wanted / Aide domestique de mandée 205 Domestic Work Wanted / Travail domestique demandé 208 Babysitiers Wanted / Gardiennes demandées 207 itters Available / 208 Mother's Helper Wanted / Aides maternelle demandée 209 Mathers Helper Available / Aides matemelle disponibles 210 Employment Services / Agences de placement MERCHANDISE / À VENDRE - ACHETER 300 Articles for Sale / À vendre 301 Sporting Equipment / Articles de sport 302 Camping Equipment / Équipement de camping 303 Musical tnstruments / Instruments de musique 304 Photo Supplies / Articles de photographie 305 Stamps & Coins / Timbres et monnaie Antiques / Antiquités 307 Articles for Rent / Articles a louer 308 Wanted to Purchase / On demande 309 Garage Sales / Ventes de garage 310 Moving Sales / Ventes de déménagement 311 Auctions / Encans 312 For Sale or Exchange / À vendre ou à échanger 313 Swap / Échange 314 Cars for Sale / Autos à vendre 315 Cars Wanted / Autos demandées 316 Boats & Motors / Bateaux et moteurs 317 Motorcycles / Motocyclettes 318 Bicycles / Bicyclettes INSTRUCTION 400 Day Care & Nursery School / Garderies 401 Educational / Éducation 402 Tutoring / Leçons particulières 403 Children's Camps / Camps pour enfants April 25, 1991 - 19 GENERAL / GÉNÉRAL 500 Personal Services / Services personnels 501 Domestic Pets / Animaux domestiques 502 Boarding Kennels / Pensions pour chiens 503 Auto Services / Réparation de véhicules 504 Travel / Voyages 505 Income 7ax / Déclarations d'impôt 506 Dressmaking / Services de couture 507 Photography / Services de photographe 500 Catering { Traiteurs / 509 510 Computers Le coin de l'ordinateur 511 Personals / Annonces personnelles 512 Companions / On demande compagnons 13 Lost/ Perdu 514 Found / Trouvé 515 Moving & Cartage / Transport et déménagement 516 Transportation / Transport 517 Legal Notices / Avis légaux 518 Alcoholic Anonymous / Alcooliques Anonymes 519 Obituary / Nécrologie 520 Counselting / Conseiller HOME IMPROVEMENT / TRAVAUX 800 Security Services / Services de sécurité 801 Building Trades / Rénovations 802 General Repairs / Réparations diverses 603 Building Services / Services immobiliers 604 Maimenance / Entretien 805 Gardening / Jardiniers, paysagistas 606 Snow Removal / Enlèvement de la neige 807 Household Services / Services domestiques 608 Appliance Service / Services électroménagers 609 Floor Covering / Recouvrement de planchers 610 Home Repairs / Réparations de la maison 611 Pest Control / Extermination/Fumigation 612 Piano Tuning / Accord de piano 613 Radio & TV Services / Radios, télévisions 614 Uphotstering / Rembourrage 615 Fumiture Stripping / Décarage de meubles 616 Sewing Machine Repairs / Réparation de machines à coudre I 11 IE | 205 ASE 300 EN 401 EDUCATIONAL ÉDUCATION OFFICES TO LET BUREAUX À LOUER DOMESTIC WORK AVAILABLE TRAVAIL DOMESTIQUE DEMANDÉ ARTICLES FOR SALE À VENDRE NEED AN OFFICE?500, 900 or 1,400 square feet available for sublease at SOMERLED & CAVENDISH Available immediately Corner location \u2014 bright & clean Call Alphy Alongi: 481-1741 Le Permanent Québec Inc./Courtier Membre du Réseau Immobilier Canada Trust GE 100 M IE 115 PROPERTY FOR SALE APARTMENTS TO LET PROPRIÉTÉS À VENDRE APPARTEMENTS À LOUER BUILDING for sale: former RCAF Quildin , 4450 Sher- 4435 Sherbrooke St.W.rooke Street West, corner Metcalfe, Westmount.Zoned near Westmount Park assembly building: for service Completely renovated 4' clubs, for purposes of meetings and auxiliary uses.Can also be converted to residential: single-family homes, condominiums, apartments, townhouses.849-0831.Bettina or Ralph.Brokers protected.PROPERTIES to be soid for unpaid taxes.Crown Land availability.For information on both write: Properties, Dept.CN, Box 5380, Stn.F, Ottawa, Ont.K2C 3J1.04 IES COUNTRY PROPERTY TO LET MAISONS DE CAMPAGNE A LOUER TWO-BEDROOM waterfront cottage on a beautiful pine- treed property, on Lake Mem- phramagog in the Eastern Townships.Four miles from the U.S.border.Rental by the season.Telephone during days, Mon.-Fri., 731-9466, 486- 3899, 653-6867.After 5 pm, 486-3899, 653-6867.Weekends 802-326-4448, 486- - 3899, 653-6867.QO: large house, residential area, beautifully decorated, fully furnished, microwave, dishwasher, linens, etc.Summer $800 a month.Monthly $1000.Walking distance to lake and Chantecler.683-5923.LAKE Memphramagog: 3-bed- room house for rent, 1-year lease or for summer.Call collect 212-213-3984.EE 115 IN APARTMENTS TO LET APPARTEMENTS À LOUER Westmount Luxurious 2 + 3 bedrooms, 2 bath.Next to Westmount Park.Doorman service, swimming pool, all amenities.932-9424 Mon-Fri9 am-5 pm Sat 10 am-3 pm room apt., high ceilings, open fireplace, new kitchen, stove, fridge, freshly painted, varnished floors.New inter- Spring Cleaning! Most of the snow is gone as the sun shines between showers.It's Spring! Call us and our team of professionals will help rid you of the winter blahs with a Spring Cleaning.Guaranteed.cal: 486-4770 171M 1d) MERLE] For the Shine in You! HE 119 I.HE 200 HE SUBLETS CAREERS À SOUS LOUER CARRIÈRES ET PROFESSIONS SUBLET 5!/2-room apartment, LEARN auctioneering at the 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 2 balconies, 2 indoor parking spaces.4 floor westside, doorman, other amenities.4800 de Maisonneuve West, West- mount.From June 1 for 14 months.Rent $1205 negotiable.Call 932-6554.UE 124 IN SHARE LIVING QUARTERS LOGEMENTS A PARTAGER TM.R,, large 41/2 to share or room with own bathroom.Walking distance to metro and phone security system.shops.Serious female prefer- \u201c1 month free rent with red.Non-smoker.731-4322.immedaieoccuparcy\" M 135 IN 935-8060 931-1866 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES OCCASION D'AFFAIRES Château Redfern Westmount near Greene avenue 44-52-64 1 month free, fuily equipped, stove, fridge, dishwasher, heated, hot water.| 935-8060 | IS 116 IN APARTMENTS WANTED APPARTEMENTS DEMANDÉS TWO bedrooms, 2 baths, fur- UNLIMITED Income Potential.Manufacturer now accepting applications for provincial distributors of \u201cJuiceworks\u201d, the amazing new fresh juice vender.Call Action Assemblies 416- 873-7806, for information package.HE 300 HE ARTICLES FOR SALE À VENDRE ATTENTION doll collectors Madame Alexander Bo Pee (8-inch Storyland series ie 1970) Southwestern Ontario School! of Auctioneering.Next class: June 8-15.Information, contact: Southwestern Ontario School of Auctioneering, R.R.#5, Woodstock, Ontario, N4S 7V9.(519) 537-2115.I 201 IES LIVINGROOM & diningroom sets, grandfather clock.Excellent condition.635-0931.BICYCLE, Miele, men's tour ing/racing, Shimano-600 components, like new.937-0569.EE 306 IEE.ANTIQUES ANTIQUITES | ANTIQUE mahogany round table, 60\" diameter, plus 5 executive armchairs.273-1514.HE 308 IN WANTED TO PURCHASE ON DEMANDE BOOKS TO SELL?We will come to see your hardcover books and offer best possible price.Westmount Phoenix Books 320 Victoria (upstairs) Ruth Portner 937-3419 Robert North STORE HOURS: Wed.11-2 Thurs, 4-7; Fri.7:30-9 Due to the increased demand for Nursing Aides in hospitals, convalescent homes and geriatric centres, WEST ISLAND HOME & COMMUNITY SERVICES and ALL-CARE SERVICES have expanded their Nursing Aide Course.Classes (and related field work) are now being offered at the Julius Richardson Convalescent Hospital, in the Côte St-Luc area.For more information, please call: 630-7450 from 8:30 am to 4:30 pm, Monday through Friday.Enrolment is limited, so please register early.NURSES\u2019 AIDE COURSES For the great need of Nurses\u2019 Aides in the West Island area and due to opening of many centres, we have decided to continue our \u201cNurses\u2019 Aide\u201d courses.Next classes in English starting April 23rd and in French on April 29th in Pointe-Claire.We are very proud to announce that Nurses\u2019 Aide and Patient Transfer courses are now available at Le Manoir, Verdun.Next classes starting April 29th.Come and register now! Places are limited.Placement service available.For information please call Laurette: HELP WANTED Sat.11-5 PERSONNEL DEMANDE Tel.484-4428 *BE Rich and Famous* FT $100,000, PT $25,000.Com HE 309 IN mission.Market Canada's Hottest Music Video Vacation Pro- VENTES LE GARAGE gram Booklet.Protected Territories available.24-hour information fine.1-800-263- 1900.I 206 IEEE BABYSITTERS WANTED GARDIENNES DEMANDEES \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 WANT to learn French?Live-in au pair, 3 children, non-smok- ing.932-8988 I 300 EE ARTICLES FOR SALE - A VENDRE ONE-DAY Book Sale: all school subjects, all grade levels, good condition; from 50¢ - $2.per book.Saturday, April 1-4 pm only.4631 Sherbrooke St.W., suite 7.Teachers welcome.4390 Mayfair, Saturday, April 27th, 9:30-3:30 pm.Housewares, kitchenware, camera, something for everyone.I 310 I MOVING SALES VENTES DE DEMENAGEMENT STEEL buildings \u2014 Factory Direct - thousands of satisfied customers have bought from the best for less.30X40 $3,797.Other sizes available.nished air-conditioned i i ; t in box.Pioneer/Econospan 1-800- equipped, June 15-September min 15.933-1952.= 308 668-5422.CONDOS FOR SALE WANTED TO PURCHASE CONDOS A VENDRE ON DEMANDE LE CHATEAU Sherbrooke/Mountain.Prestigious building, excellent location, spacious, bright units, iceal for executive.Heated, fireplace, separate dining room.Security.Parking.Buy orlease.For appointment, Mon-Fri, 9-5: 849-1214 Sell it! 931-7511 CASH feb & used furnitue, paintings & pictures, bronzes, clocks, objets d'arts, etc.complete estates.V.G.C.Inc.735-4286 4056 Jean Talon West PATIO furniture, coffee tables, T.V, collectables.Saturday, 9 am-2 pm, 61 Thornhill Avenue.I 401 IN EDUCATIONAL EDUCATION COME & practice your French with francophones.Club Half & Half.465-9128.L'ÉGLISE des premiers Chrétiens où adoraient les disciples de Jésus existe encore au- jourd'hui.Aimeriez-vous vous en renseigner en étudiant La Bible gratuitement chez-vous?1-800-361-7917.THE church where the first Christians worshipped exists still today.Would you like to find out more with free Bible studies in your home?1-800- 361-7917.GUITAR lessons, B.FA.in music, $20 hourly.Call Sean, 481- 6430.CARE 630-7450 between 8:30 am and 4:30 pm West Island Home & Community Services Inc.TUTORING CATERING LEÇONS PARTICULIÈRES TRAITEURS WILL tutor math and physics.All levels high school through CATERING a hop Perienced teach- {for | unches - Brunches NE 500 pe Dinners & Cocktail Parties PERSONAL SERVICES ALSO: Cooking for SERVICES PERSONNELS freezer available PAINTING of your pet.Tableau 486-5943 de votre animal préféré.523- 9786 ____\u2014__\u2014 IHN 509 IN VARIETY of opportunities will ENTERTAINMENT help you beat the recession.Call 24 hours for more informa- SPECTACLES/DIVERTISSEMENTS tion (613) 726-5030, ext.C4.Add a new twist to your WORD PROCESSING next party or convention Fax Olivetti Westmount Examiner .Documents, resumés CARTOONIST * Transcription of cassettes lable d « Rental of dictating units avaiable to do «Translation ens, your Dictate you letters over .the phone, pick up later Call Ferg: DACTYLOGRAPHIE 842-1553 NDG.TYPING mm 514 HEE 482-1512 roo TROUVE ifi CHILD'S watch, King G Certified Masseur hark vicinity April 16th.pri Therapeutic Massages * Relaxation Li jacket in Roslyn schoolyard, April 18th, pm.486-1165.LJ + Athletic injuries * Pain reduction * Anti cellulite We'll come to you a ey For info & appt: C.McKenzie, B.Sc.Quebec 482-5535 20 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 25, 1991 511 \u2014_\u2014_\u2014\u2014 HE 603 | I 607 I VIVEZ UNE EXPERIENCE I ; RENOVATIONS ETCETERA.CULTURELLE es ENRICHISSANTE! Mc Intosh\u2019's oe Nous recherchons des familles francophones ayant une bonne connaissance de l'anglais pour accueillir un(e) éludant(e) en langues.CUSTOM RENOVATIONS Pour de plus amples informations: MS.MARTIN Quality craftmanship with over 30 years 499-0364 of experience in home renovations.L'ÉCOLE DE LANGUES DE MONTRÉAL CARPENTRY + ELECTRICAL * PAINTING Es 3 a BATHROOMS * KITCHENS erpeed Ve TILING + DECKS * EXTENSIONS HES NEAT AND TIDY, PROFESSIONAL \u201ci B HENRI-PAUL RAYMOND: 484-2504 PAINTING ?¢ Kitchens e Bathrooms Famil | ior desi REMODELING?ENRICH YOUR FAMILY LIFE + Family rooms e Interlor design Call the experts! \u20ac | WITH A FOREIGN STUDENT! « Free estimates me Montreal Language School ne 424-4900 ey AOU TAR Tr Vor 3 5 is looking for Montreal's perfect hosts.=== en Cul ue FREE ESTRLATE for inferior andl exterior yr If you are able to provide room and renovalions, painting, idichens, bathrooms, ofc, half-board, please call us at 49 BLVD DE LOTBINIERE, VAUDREUIL @ MRAZIK Loue 747-1464 | = 499-0364 1 ask for MS.MARTIN i FREE ESTIMATE - ESTIMATION GRATUITE HULL MASONRY ji 515 mr 931 -0456 BRICK \u2014 BLOCK \u2014 STONE i TRANSPORT ET DÉMÉNAGEMENT \u2014 shingles + bardeaux PATIOS & SPECIALTY FIREPLACES is brickwork brique Contact Ron: 3 NOOK.metalwork « métal & M UNES [S ! chimney * cheminée 1-264-2376 & Over : slate » ardoise i years serving , - the community Enterp rise CLIFF THOMPSON Fanovations 4 Local, long distance and office moves RENOVATIONS COMPLETE à Overseas and international specialists « DECKS RENOVATIONS 3 NEW MODERN FACILITIES FOR STORAGE i ; - + BALCONIES SUNDECKS i * Reasonable rates * Free estimates COUVREUR HOME EXTENSIONS 631-4824 - 481-1550 ROOFING ! Wood: Fibreglass Bathrooms, Kitchens, AGENTS ATLAS VAN LINES \u2018 oncrete Basements Members of Canadian Moving Association « FENCES All types of repairs MONTREAL ROOFING * PAINTING Ceramic tiles EN 602 BUILD NG Interior/Exterior Free estimates/ GENERAL REPAIRS Pr ; references RÉPARATIONS DIVERSES Building Services Inc.RESTORATION * KITCHENS 698-2581 * BATHROOMS - IE GAS LINERS INSTALLED All roofing - EXTENSIONS à FREE REPAIR & | ML CIO SOU Slate & chimney ESTIMATE SERVICES RL EYE EY: Tg experts 48 4 6 497 RSA 3 ; RETR ge = INTER- CORBO REG\u2019D.CREE Eee 0e) Free estimates, area 21 years\u2019 experience CITY Pointing \u2014 Brick \u2014 Chimney a pli des on Bi 97-1489 MENAGE Sidewalk Repair \u2014 Balcony \u2014 Deck u hd 6 Carpal Jao FRI EG FLOOR 933-2094 aulking \u2014 Fainting CRC Ea dT FIR): EE 604 SANDING Ru À | MAINTENANCE - Call BOB: 699-4366 ry Ny ENTRETIEN Hardwood floor renovations.5 9 5 7 6 7 6 o, ; ; = Finishing in crystal and 15% discount for seniors or de detre PAYSAGISTE polyethylene.[An NTT R01] MS 607 MMS IN 607 EEE.© 24 HOUR SERVICE MARINO INC.35 years\"experience WRITES TN HOUSEHOLD SERVICES HOUSEHOLD SERVICES A M DONT HAVE TO SERVICES DOMESTIQUES SERVICES DOMESTIQUES NE 605 re op Dressi , Landscaping PAINTING \u2014 ' CARPENTER SPECIALIST JARDINERS, PAYSAGISTES IMPROVING Rock Garden plasteains | |, PAINTING Fully ualfied and experienced in Crack & foundation NORTHERN fruit trees, deco- YOUR 0DDS Cement Work ; WALLPAPERING | interior or exterior painting.tons.Interior or extern.a Hagsione.pointing, silicone, ' Soediings nut \u2018trees.and AGAINST Call Joe or Franco: treme attention to deta, highest In home painting since 1956.References available.asphalt, uni-stone.raraflora.Guaranteed delivery.HEART CANADA'S 695-2821 quality workmanship and materials.For free estimate please call FREE ESTIMATES Reasonable prices.Mail order AND STROKE Guaranteed satisfaction Mr.Elias 733-3067 Call.only.Catalogue $1.Golden {FOUNDATION # KILLER.Santé et \u2019 Reasonable rates 069 - Leave message anytime 489-1693 e 489-5998 Bough Tree Farm, Box 31, ere ia i 937-6491 341-6 à : Marlbank, Ontario, KOK 2L0.| Mes \u2014 ; e EE 601 BUILDING TRADES RÉNOVATIONS BELGRAVE BUILDING RESTORATIONS ING.ROOFING oF ALL TYPES -geivem patos x WO , - Chimney's - Caulking e Fireplaces e Bathrooms .Pointing - Cement finishing ® Drywall e Family Rooms - Galleries - Aluminum e Waterproofing -® Kitchens For Free Estimate, Please Call e Foundation repairs e Chimney\u2019s (repaired/rebuilt) e Painting (exterior/interior) Westmounter honored for b0 years in priesthood Westmount native Msgr Matthew Dubee was honored recently for 50 years in the priesthood.| Msgr Dubee, 78, is a former rector of St Patrick's Church, who served there from 1971 to 1985.He was born in Westmount in 1913, of an Irish mother and French-Cana- dian father.He studied at Loyola College then social economics at Georgetown University before entering Montreal's Grand Seminary.He has been chairman, chaplain or director of several English Catholic institutions, including the Father Dwod Home.He was known, as a young man, for his interest in drama, going to 607 Have an apartment for rent?Use Examiner classifieds.Call 931-7511.ROOFING Specialist: Tar, gravel, chimney repairs & painting.669-579 9 MrIntosk SOLID WOOD DOORS Beautiful panel and French doors in a variety of styles.Available in your choice of woods.Finished or ; unfinished.Ask about our custom ; design doors.Buy direct from the manufacturer.Free estimates.424-4900 49 BLVD DE LOBTINIERE, VAUDREUIL Baseboards - windows & door trim \u2014 crowns \u2014 covers - panel moldings - base caps New York to see plays when possible, and a \u2018\u2018debonair and so active\u201d man, according to friend Mae Nadig.\u201cEvery girl in Westmount wanted to marry him,\u201d she said.\u201cHe was leading scorer in football for Loyola.\u201d According to Ms Nadig, Matthew Dubee was taken on a trip around the world by his father to see if he would change his mind before becoming a priest.His father was secretary-trea- surer of the Montreal Tramway Company, whose signature was found on all streetcar tickets.Msgr Dubee was honored at a mass April 6.HOUSEHOLD SERVICES SERVICES DOMESTIQUES ian cook.933-2662.8 HANDYMAN: odd jobs, indoors & out.Small repairs, cleaning, painting, housesitting, plant & pet care, landscaping.Vegetar- The Westmount Examiner, Unlocking key to symbols at St A-D-D Symbols are everywhere.In early times they aided communication with a pre-literate society.Today images still have a language of their own, whether it is a company logo or McDonald's golden arches.In the church, the cross, the fish and many other symbols convey visual messages.This Sunday after morning service at St Andrew\u2019s-Dominion- Douglas Church there will be a mini- workshop on the theme of Symbols in the Church and in the World.Everybody, all ages, is invited to bring a bag lunch and participate.For more information call 486-1165.G.0.Renovations inc.INTERIORS & EXTERIORS Specializing in Sundecks - unistone, cement « brick pointing, foundation leaks + aluminum doors & windows extensions \u2014 basements \u2014 bathrooms \u2014 ceramics & general repairs 485-1479 687 2429 HOME IMPROVEMENT AND HOME REPAIRS APEX REG'D Complete Home Cleaning Windows * Painting 20% Free Estimate Devon L Wyre MIJO ROOFING \u201cSpecializing in Victorian Style Homes\u201d Asphalt Shingles \u2014 Slate Roofs \u2014 Tar & Gravel \u2014 Metal Work \u2014 Skylights iat Ee FREE ESTIMATE BY QUALIFIED ROOFER 597-8454 24-hour emergency service 685-2665 IAN THOMPSON RENOVATIONS We do painting, tiling, decks, fences.Any other repair \u2014 don't despair! Call lan Thompson at: 484-5342 FREE ESTIMATES High Quality Workmanship in Residential & Commercial Renovation * Plastering - Painting request.@ MrIntosh's WOODEN MOLDINGS We have a variety of wooden moldings from % inch up to 12 inches wide in any thickness required, from Victorian to Modern styles in a variety of woods.Any size order, whether for the «do-it-yourselfer», «contractors\u2019 quantities.» Sample available on fm 424-4900 mmm 49 blvd de Lotbiniére, Vaudreuil 292 +» Basement finishing + Bathrooms limited quantity or 486-1504 WESTMOUNT Specialist in plastering Plastering repairs.We remove wallpaper with steam.30 years\u2019 experience.Call L Pelletier: 659-1576 after 6 pm Master Carpenter Specialist: Kitchens, Baseboards - windows & door trim \u2014 ©) crowns ~ covers \u2014 panel moldings - base caps decks, stairs, floors, mouldings & joinery Meticulous work - Reasonable rales Relerences - Free estimales Thursday, 1991 - 21 Les Soeurs de Ste-Marcelline Une célébration regroupant toutes les jeunes filles du secondaire de la Villa Ste-Marcelline a eu lieu la semaine dernière en l'église St-Léon.En même temps que les fêtes pascales, y était commémoré le centenaire de la mort de Soeur Marina Vidémari.Co-fondatrice des Marcel- lines en Italie, cette femme exemplaire reste aujourd\u2019hui encore un symbole de charisme, de culture et e foi.Depuis 1959 à Montréal, les Soeurs de Ste-Marcelline représentent un pôle important de la vie paroissiale.Tout d\u2019abord, leur institution est connue pour offrir une éducation religieuse de premier plan.Ensuite, les soeurs et leurs élèves participent aux événements de la communauté.De plus, l\u2019une des Soeurs de Ste-Marcel- line fait partie du comité de liturgie et contribue à embellir l\u2019église St- Léon.April 25, Qui n\u2019a remarqué, chaque dimanche, la créativité et le goût artistique dont font preuve la décoration florale et la symbolique visuelle de la liturgie?On doit à cette même religieuse l\u2019ordonnance des cérémonies et leur bon déroulement.Enfin, deux autres membres de la Congrégation appartiennent à l'équipe de la St-Vincent- de-Paul qui distribue vêtements et nourriture aux nécessiteux.Qu'elles soient toutes remerciées pour leur dévouement.ATTEND RELIGIOUS SERVICES WITH THE CONGREGATION OF YOUR CHOICE ANGLICAN CHURCH OF THE ADVENT Corner of Wood and de Maisonneuve, Westmount Sunday, April 28 Easter 4 8:00am Holy Eucharist, Said 10:30am Holy Eucharist, Sung Church school and nursery facilities During the week, the Holy Eucharist will be celebrated on: Wednesday, May 1 11:15am Rector: The Rev.Eric Dungan Organist and Director of Church Music: Mr Henry Abley SYNAGOGUE CONGREGATION SHAAR HASHOMAYIM 450 Kensington Avenue Sabbath Services Sabbath Eve: Mincha Kabbalat 6:45 pm Sabbath Day: 8:40 am in the Main Synagogue Sabbath Twilight: 6:50 pm Daily Services Mornings: Sunday, April 28, 8:45 am Mon-Thurs, April 29 - May 2, 7:30 am Evenings: Sun-Thurs, April 28 - May 2, 8:00 pm (Metcalfe and Céte St Antoine) (24-hour answering service) 8:00 am Holy Communion Preacher Canon P.Bristow 4:00 pm Choral Evensong Jones in A; Wednesday St.Philip & St.James 7:30 am Holy Communion ST MATTHIAS\u2019 CHURCH 10 CHURCH HILL \u2014 Phone 933-4295 Office open Mon-Fri 8:30-12 & 12:30-4 pm EASTERTIDE 28th April 10:30 am Choral Mattins, S.School & Nursery \u201cDevelopment Grants & Partnership\u201d Discussion Group after Service Smith Responses; Wesley, ascribe unto.FA.Rector: Rev.Paul James; Curate: The Rev.Alec Cameron onorary Assistant: The Rev.David Oliver; Director of Music: Graham Knott ORDINATION 7:30 pm in Cathedral Wednesday, 1st May St Andrew\u2019s\u2014Dominion-Douglas United Church The Boulevard at Lansdowne \u2014 486-1165 BUSES 66 and 124 STOP AT DOOR SUNDAY, APRIL 28 11:00 am Morning Worship \u201cEXPRESSING LOVE\u201d Rev.Robert J.Shank Sunday School Crib Corner and program for tots Coffee Hour following Service Ministers: Rev.Robert 1.Shank, Rev.Ruth Brown Director of Music: Margaret de Castro Staff Associate: Joyce Schaaf THE CHURCH OF St.Andrew and St.Paul PRESBYTERIAN Sherbrooke Street West at Bishop SUNDAY AT 11 am EASTER V Sermon: \u2018AND THE GREATEST OF THESE.\u201d The Minister & Church School, Créche and Nursery J4.S.S.Armour, Minister - Interim Director of Music, Wayne Riddell 481-8870 22 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 25, 1991 Free classical music festival at Marianopolis The Montreal Classical Music Festival, sponsored by Alexis Nihon Corp, is continuing at Marianopolis College, 3880 Côte des Neiges road, until Monday.The festival's purpose is to encourage and develop the love of music in participants; to give the community the opportunity to enjoy free concerts and become aware of a large range of classical styles.First, second and third-place awards will be given in 16 age groups, and special awards will be given for best interpretation of a Canadian composition, best interpretation of a work by Mozart and best overall performance.Participants range in age from six to 28.Gala concerts will be given Tuesday and Wednesday, April 30 and May 1, following the festival, by all first-place winners, who are expected to number about 20.The concerts, like the festival, are free, and seating is on a first-come, first-served basis.Both concerts are at 7 pm.The nine first-place winners from eight to 16 years old will have the opportunity to perform in the Discovery series of the Montreal International Music Festival at Place des Arts in September.Reading help is available Figures for illiteracy in Quebec are shocking, but there is help available for those who need to improve their reading or writing skills.Anywhere in Quebec, persons needing such help can call toll-free 1- 800-361-9142.Free private tutoring or classes are available.In the Montreal area, a number of groups will provide help and information.Among them are McGill Literacy Council, 3480 McTavish street, Montreal H3A 1X9, 398-6826 and RECLAIM (Reading Council for Literacy Advance in Montreal), Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal, Adult Services, 3449 University street, Montreal H3A 2A8.Westmounter Rose Goldblatt is artistic director of the festival; adjudicators are Westmounter Laure Fink, Francine Chabot and Dagmar Rydlo of the Royal Conservatory of Toronto.Fashion show benefit tonight at Centennial Centennial Academy students are holding a fashion show to benefit the Lamplighter Foundation, which helps children with cancer.Called Rap \u201891, the show is tonight at the school, 3641 Prud'Homme avenue, starting at 8 pm.Admission is $8 and tickets can be bought at the door.Students from all grades will be modelling formal, casual and beachwear fashions from such stores as Le Chateau, La Cache, Jacob, Classy and Body Glow.The students have been working on the show for several months.It will last about an hour and a half.SHAAR HASHOMAYIM £5 GID 450 Kensington Avenue, Westmount of Registration now in progress for September 1991 Ages 2/7-4// WE OFFER: & Low child/teacher ratio £ Qualified and highly motivated teachers & À caring and nurturing environment 2x French Judaica Music = Gym & Cooking & Trips & Arts & Crafts REGULAR PROGRAM 9:00 AM-11:30 AM EXTENDED DAY PROGRAM 9:00 AM-1:30 PM Transportation available For further information call Susan Frank: 937-9471 Affiliated with the Jewish Education Council of Montreal sp 09 Bay of Quinte.and friendly atmosphere.Saturday, May 4, 1991.Admissions Albert College 160 Dundas St.West Belleville, Ontario K8P 1A6 613-968-5726 Fax 613-968-9651 For more information contact: 7 REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD CONSIDER ALBERT COLLEGE FOR YOUR SON OR DAUGHTER: * With an enrolment of 215 students from grade 7-OAC, Albert offers small classes averaging 14 students and a wide variety of course choices within a core curriculum.* Albert College is located on a lovely 25-acre campus facing the beautiful - With over 125 years of co-educational experience, Albert offers a warm * Albert College stresses personalized attention and keeps parents informed on a monthly basis as to their child\u2019s progress.+ Over 95% of Albert\u2019s graduates go on to the College or University of their choice in Canada and the United States.* Scholarship Exams valued at full tuition and board to be written on * Albert College is a member of the Canadian Association of Independent Schools (Ontario) and a founding member of the Canadian Educations Standards Institute.Weekend workshops at the Visual Arts Centre The Visual Arts Centre, 350 Victoria avenue, offers two workshops on the weekend of May 4.The first is called Renewal Through Art, and it requires no previous art experience.Montreal art psychotherapist Jacqueline Wilson will lead a group to celebrate renewal and resurgence of life by offering a guided approach to personal symbolic expression, emphasizing image-making through a broad Jungian approach.The three-part workshop starts Friday evening from 7:30 to 9:30 pm; Saturday it runs from 9:30 am to 5:30 pm and Sunday from 10 am to noon.Cost is $130 and includes materials.The second workshop, Making Slides of Your Artwork, is more pragmatic: on Sunday from 10 am to 4 pm, Kay Aubanel will give a demonstration session on taking success- The Study artsale - May 3to 5 The Study is holding an art exhibition and sale with a by-invitation- only vernissage on Friday, May 3.It is open to the public Saturday, May 4, from 10 am to 5 pm and Sunday, May 5, from 11 am to 3 pm at the school, 3233 The Boulevard.The vernissage will include a silent auction to sell work by Marion Dale Scott, Ethel Seath, Bruce Le Dain and Ann McCall.During the exhibit there will be a silent auction that allows the public .to bid on works by Robert Bateman, Mary Anne Winterer and Ethel Seath.More than 100 paintings, sculptures, photographs and prints will be on display, representing the work of established artists from The Study community as well as the works of senior arts students still at the school.Proceeds from the sale are for the benefit of The Study School Building Campaign.For information call 935-9352.Y youth dance Friday evening The Westmount YMCA is having another of its Friday Night youth dances on April 26.The dance is for youngsters between the ages of nine and 12.The dance begins at 7:30 pm and lasts until 9:45 pm.Cost is $1 for Y members, $2 for non-members.Deejays provide the music.The Y is located at 4585 Sherbrooke street west.ful slides of two or three-dimension- al artwork.The course will cover film choice, pointers for natural and artificial light, controlling framing and exposure and how to avoid mistakes.Examples will be shown and discussed.Participants are asked to bring their 35mm cameras.Cost is $35.To register for either course, call 488-9558.Firstfruits a compilation of young writers à Firstfruits \u201991, an anthology of more than 100 works of art and creative writing by high school students throughout Quebec, including students from ECS and St George's, will be launched at the Jewish Public Library on Wednesday, May 16 at 7:30 pm in the auditorium, 5151 Cote St Catherine road.More than 500 works, written in English, French, Hebrew and Yiddish, were submitted by students from more than 20 schools.Author W.O.Mitchell will be the guest speaker of the evening.His Who Has Seen the Wind?has been required reading for high school students since the 1950s.Two awards will be presented at the evening, the Igelfeld Award for Yiddish writing and the Editorial Award for excellence in more than one language.Prizes for excellence in categories of prose and poetry in English, Hebrew and French will be awarded.Firstfruits \u201991, edited by Marcia Mermelstein, Howard Richler and Michael Tritt will be on sale at the launching and at the library for $7.For more information call 345-2627.5, Royalmount 3 ° ° 15 Christian 5 GX : Academ \u201cFA Private Christian Elementary Day School! {Operated by the Montreal Anglican School Society) + co-educational day school * full academic program.grades 1-6 * extended French * low student/ teacher ratio * privately funded * Christian instruction daily * datly devotions * weckly Church services * dress code letter of eligibility not required * centrally located - Town of Mount Royal For further information please write to: Royalmount Christian Academy 900 Laird Blvd., Town of Mount Royal, Quebec H3R 1Y8 {Pending MEQ approval) CHEMISTRY JUNE EXAM WORKSHOPS CENTRE LANSDOWNE « CENTER WORKSHOPS ONE TO ONE TUTORING ACADEMIC ASSESSMENTS MONTREAL 487-6516 WEST ISLAND 620-4921 et \u201crene SES mitt: - LL yd p= nd \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 Mons still die every year from unsafe water supplies.Through our water projects, CARE Canada helps improve health conditions in developing communities.Please support our work - give to CARE Canada now.CARE c A MN A 0 A P.0.Box 9000, 1550 Carling Avenue, Ottawa, Ontario K1G 4X6 1-800-267-5232 Women planning softball games A group of young women in West- mount, from 25 to 35 years old, are é- to organize softball games in tmount Park.e games are intended to be friendly, and organizers wish potential players to know that the teams are being formed to create friendships and maybe organize other activities, as well as for softball.There are currently eight women in the group.If you would like to join, contact Kathy at 365-4575 or call 937-2678.Locals earn yellow belts Westmounters Anthony Joseph, 10, and Anthony Dewar, 9, passed their Kyokushinkai Karate yellow belt exams on April 17, a recreation and culture official said.Stephen Guy, a Westmount sports supervisor and brown belt, said 24 hours of courses are required before taking the exam, which consists of basic punching and kicking techniques.The test includes performing |.the first kata, a set of form movements, against an imaginary opponent.The first belt is white.The others, in ascending order are, yellow, orange, green, blue, brown and varying levels of black.The department's karate program, 23 - Thursday, April 25, 1991 Jazzing up ballet ayer taught by black belt Manuel Tadros, will continue next fall.Avenue Community Centre.A student shows graceful style learned in the jazz-ballet class given at the Greene CITE CYCLE 6714 Fielding Avenue 484-BIKE (2453) \u201cSPECIAL OF THE WEEK\u201d 10% OFF all used bikes $35% + Up Racers, mountain bikes + kids\u2019 bikes Valid from April 24th until April 30th Helpers needed for Family Day The Westmount department of recreation and culture needs volunteers for Family Day to be held May 25 at Westmount Park.\u201cWe need help,\u2019 said Peter Wallace, Westmount\u2019s recreation administrator.Volunteers are needed to staff carnival booths and help out during various races.To volunteer call the recreation department at 935-8531, local 212.Bikes stolen Two bicycles were stolen from the back of a car parked overnight last Thursday behind 4800 de Maisonneuve boulevard, police said.Both had been chained to the car.One was a Kawasaki, the other a Rockport.TUNE-UP * ALLEN DIAGNOSTIC BRAKES ® FULL SERVICE TIRES AND BALANCING 4780 Sherbrooke St.W.933-8556 e 932-1554 SERVICE D'AUTO WESTMOUNT AUTO SERVICE SPECIALISTS: CORNER GROSVENOR New local runners\u2019 group participating in fun run The 12th annual YMCA fun run is taking place on Sunday, April 28; it is the first organized run for West- mount\u2019s Runners Anonymous.Whether or not you sign up for $13 at the downtown Y the day of the race, you are likely to have some contact with the run, if you are out and about that morning.The run begins at the downtown Y but loops through Westmount.The route runs along de Maisonneuve boulevard to Redfern avenue, heads north to Sherbrooke street then east back to Stanley street downtown.The fun run is a 5K, 10K or 20K run, depending on how many times you want to run the route, once, twice or four times.The registration fee includes a runner's buffet and T-shirt.Day care is provided at no charge.The run starts at 9 am.More than 800 registered last year.Registration is only at the downtown Y, 1450 Stanley street, by 5 pm today or on the day of the run.Runners Anonymous is the name fora group of about eight people who are members of the local Y and meet in front of the building for early morning runs.They started up in the first week of March and are seeking more members.The group runs for about an hour Tuesdays and Thursdays at 6:15 am, Wednesdays at 6 am and Sundays at 10 am, except for this Sunday, when the fun run is on.After the runs Wednesdays, the runners can join in a meeting on topics such as nutrition, training, getting fit, etc.SALMO TECH FAX/PHONE/TAS (514) 481-2451 5883 SHERBROOKE ST.W.MONTREAL PQ CAN H4A 1X6 + Fly Fishing Pro Shop + Salmon & steehead tackle + Finest in outdoor wear + Angling books % Fly Tying materials MACK STRATHDEE - owner 10h-18h Mon-Thur 10h-21h Fri / 10h-17h Sat EORGE ARAG DOING IT RIGHT FOR 33 YEARS GENERAL AUTO REPAIRS SPECIALTY: BRAKES TUNE-UP AIR-CONDITIONING 3815, RUE ST-JACQUES OUEST MONTRÉAL, QUÉBEC TEL.935-8456 CLOSE TO ATWATER AVE.& METRO Continued from page 18 Municipal Court, 21 Stanton St Police (business calls), 21 Stanton St Other Times 935-8531, local 351 or 352 280-2223 Victoria Hall, 4626 Sherbrooke St.W.935-2066 Municipal Yard, 14 Bethune St Light Department, Glen Road Public Security Unit Lundi au vendredi 8h30 à 16h30 Incendie (bureau d'affaires), 19, rue Stanton Cour municipale, 21, rue Stanton Police (bureau d'affaires), 21, rue Stanton Autres Heures 935-8037 935-2456 935-8531, local 351 or 352 280-2223 \u201c3 Hall Victoria, 4626, rue Sherbrooke ouest Voirie, 14, rue Bethune Service d\u2019éclairage, chemin Glen Bibliothéque Sécurité Publique EMERG ENCIES/URGENCES Fire/Incendie Police Ambulance Pa RE RE Av wT \u201cen \u2014\u2014\u2014 mm ns nee Examiner, Thursday, April 25, 1991 24 - The Westmount Antiquités Westmount Fabulous array of fine furniture, glassware, porcelain, giftware.We specialize in sterling silver cutlery by Birks, Wallace, etc, sets and single pieces, all at half price and less: we can match your set.We are happy to purchase single items including Oriental rugs, silver, Royal Crown Derby, etc., as well as complete estates.4932 Sherbrooke St.W.484-9395 OPEN: Tues-Fri 10:30 am-5:30 pm; Sat 10:30 am-5 pm RESTORATION REPAIR \u201cA good old fashioned family-run business where service and craftsmanship count.\u201d \u2014- Smart Shopping Montreal + ALL TYPES OF FURNITURE + CUSTOM-BUILT FURNITURE + KITCHEN CABINETS REFINISHING * UPHOLSTERING \u2014 CANING Quality refinishing and repair ALL TYPES OF PROFESSIONAL FINE FINISHES AVAILABLE OUR WORK IS FULLY GUARANTEED 683-0502 VISITORS ARE WELCOME TO OUR WORKSHOP 1430 HYMUS BLVD.Hours: Mon-Fri 8:00-5:00 FREE ESTIMATES DORVAL, QUEBEC Sat 9:00-12:00 PICK-UP & DELIVERY (1.8 km east of Sources Blvd.) MARK OF QUALITY SINCE 1970 Strathmore Antiques 4928 Sherbrooke St.W.(upstairs) Westmount 488-5122 The source of fine antique furniture, accessories and gift items imported from England.OPEN: Tuesday-Saturday from 11 am 1 Antiquaire BUY - SELL ENT & RESTORE ALL KINDS OF ANTIQUE FURNITURE o\\ °F 1510 NOTRE-DAME W.(east of Guy) 937-0057 UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT 90/ \u201c Ponante Design Inc.Pntiques & Gifts Pntiquités & «Cadeaux Giftware from England and Italy Candles, frames, boxes, etc.Antiques: silverware, candlesticks, glassware, perfume bottles, etc.at AVANTI 8475 Décarie Parking at rear Reina: 345-0707 À visit to our place is a Montreal experience not to be missed.Three floors of fine antiques with an accent on chandeliers and unique creations in lamps, executed on premises with the care and skill reminiscent of old-world traditions.HENRIETTA ANTONY INC.Member of the Canadian Antique Dealers Association 4192 St.Catherine Street West [southeast corner of Greene Avenue) 935-9116 Open Tuesday-Friday 10-5:30 and Saturday 10-3.Closed Monday."]
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