PAGE 4, WEDNESDAY, JULY, 4, 1979. WHITBY FREE PRESS whitby PbihdeeyWdeda by!...Publlshing and Photography Inc. Volco of the County Town Michael Ian Burgess, Publiihor - Managlng-Editor 131 Brock Street North, flue only Whltby newspaper independently owned and operated by Whltby residents for WhItby residents. P.O. Box 206, Whitb ,Om 91 Betier Business ~t. Bureau ai Toronto Whitby Chamber ai Commerce Conimunity Editoi Contributlng Editor Production Managef Print & Promoiioma Manager Classif lad Ad Mailing Pei Mémbe -Brian Winter *Jim Quaîl r-Marj Burgess Robin Lyon *Carole Bertin rmlt No. 460 or ai the: Areader's tri bute to Pierre Trudeau Dear Sir: Cedabra, MpleLeaf, G-ardens, Toronto Domi- nion Centre and Whitby, I arn pround to say I have seen our Prime Minister oneach occasion. t am a confirmed believer in PIERRE TRUDEAU. If there is a man more quatified for the lob, if there is a man more capable if there is a man more. Intelligent, let himn corne forth. He mnust be a very great man. At Cedarbrae, the place vval; p-icked wlth hecklers. ut' , irds of prey just w.ý tinig to swoop down on. their victim. Their vic- tim- f ught back.. Tru- deau, "tonighf I.arn not in mY gunstinger: Position. "heckl'ýr"-,weII'.you must. have run out.of ammuni- tion". Trudeau fired back, 1I arn careful with my ammuniti-on; I neyer shoot before I1 aim."1 1Later talking, to. .a, friend up the street, hbe rec.koned that it was pro- baà bty a prepl 'anned setup. Mill I cou Id see hispoint, but the truthof the 'Mat-, fer was that the heckler was a classmate, of mine, Steve ýBone, the newly elected President of -George Brown Coîlege, Casa toma Campus. <At Mapte Leaf Gardens i1 ,was a good .show of> s upport fromn party faith- fut but the. P.M. had to sfraln to be heard over the throng of, Tory heck- lers that were up in the greys. Joe Cark stated, that it was nothing more than a towly rock'conicert,' b ut the bands played be-! fore Pierre spoke so any- body was free' to teave if they had just tornie to see1 the music, few if any tef t.t Joe fought back, (for1 once) now he was going to have a show of his own. In a crowd moved under-c ground and panderno- c niurn broke loose in Tory r Toronto. *The P.M. countered f, witfh his own T. D. ratt y. I had a great time. The p Good Brothers ptayed s reat good. A'young black è guy wearing a basebaîl 1 cap cimbed a frêee with a IE placard reading 111t's oit nr over Joe", even he coutd i see the writing on the from out west some- where. Amongst the party faithfut that were there, Anne Cool, Frank Caccacia and Paut Cos- grove, former mayor of Scarborough were the ones I recognized. The 'Whitby ratly for, me was la Piece de resis- tance. Trudeau was bnil- tiant. The Mayor of Whit- by toasted the P.M. by stating that he was only the second Prime Minis- fer to ever honor the town 'with1 his Presence. The first was the first, 112 years ago,_ Sir John A. Mac DonalId.- The Honou- rable Norman, A. Cafiký acting Minister of Stateof Mufti culturism, acted on behatf of the P.-M. as a char acter witness having known the P.M. for 1 years. Norm claimed 't 'he' first time he'ever 'met him he was shy'and res'er- ved. He attested to'the P.M.'s, intelligence and compared him to a Spar- tan, a man. thatý cant mouîd steel. 'Pamela Petly, a folksinger was there; a touringý member with Anne Murray 's band and' was 'in very good form and played very nicely .indeed 1 Pierre gave us atl a lesson in la francais and the music of. the French language rng through the audito- rium of Henry Street High School. There were more cha- racter references. Sam Hollingsworth a retired hist'ory teacher frorn Dunbarton High School and quite 'a speaker him. self as well.as being a wee bit of a rascal1 had this to say "Pierre Trudeau is the one man that can pilot us over the troubled wa- ters of the next few 4ears*". Another etder lady compared Pierre Tru-* deau with Louis St. Lau- rent and John Kennedy. A.s for Joe Clark, "lie is for the birds". A hockey player com- Dared Trudeau's leader- hip abilities to Bobby îark, captain of the Phi- adelphia Flyers, whose eadership and spirit iade the f lyers champ- ons . Other adjectives ue woutd be an 'overflow, crowd even thoughtelevi - sion monitors were set up in the cafeteria. He.was. right. Monsieur Trudeau *est un homme tres popu- lai re!1 Gary Adamachie, M inte mCnd 114 Woodview Drive,.E da Pickering, Ontario. Oul .Our. article got needed volunteers Dear - Sir: On behaîf of the chiîd- ren at Durham Centre.for the Developmentally Handicapped I wouîd tike to thank you and your paper for your article on ourday carnps. Because of that publi- city, we now have the minimum number of votunteers needed to staff the camps. With your het p and the assistance of those mem bers of the comrnunity .who have given time to the chitd- ren, this should be a happy, successfut sum mer. Yours truly, Evelyn Sparks Volunleer Co-ordinator for day camps Durham Centre ther Canada should bave lot- terles, or who should control themn. Lotteries and gaines of chance have become a way of life, particularly since Ottawa set up Loto Canada to, help finance the debt left froin Montreal's Olympie debacle. In addition, the fInancial support for amateur sports and community projects pro- vided by the proceeds of pro- vincial and federal sweepstdoes has been helpful. S1111, the systein seens <o, have gone berserk. Adverdisiag budgets for virtually ail of the lotterles have rocketed as the market peaked. Now, federal government promoters are attempting to, squeeze the small businesses who made the schemes so suc- cessful. Supermarkets are ai- lowed to sel Loto Canada tickets, pulling business away fromn the corner store. The basic question, though, is why Canadians are beselged with nuateriat promotiag the instant millionaire. In their, ciaims, few of the advertise- nents mention the fact (bat oaIy one buyeriln eveuy 62S5Mo (the best odds) is a winner. 1Gerald Roberts was a win- r. You an bet Loto Canada Mît not b. uslng bis naine ln ipcoming Promnotions. recently when 32-Year-old New- foundiander Gerald Roberts, an alcoholic, died after appar- ently consuming too much booze. Roberts, who Ieft a wife and three boys, became a mil- lionaire littie more <han a'year ago when his numbers came up ln the Loto Canada draw. Rager Worih h Dfrector, Public Affairs, Canadian Federation of Independent Business. While Robert's sad demlse is perhaps uni1nportant in the overaîl seheme of things, it raises questions about the methods Canada's bureaucrats tumned hucksters are using to flog their Iottery wares across the nation. Here's Bonanza veleran Lorne Greene, for example, front and centre on the nation- î al television network, cajoling V Canadians go buy the $10 tick- i ets that h ave created more c miflionaires (han due Klondike n Gotd Rush.0 The provinces and regions ( of the country, followlng Ot- tawa's Iead, are spending mil.-el lions of dollars on higb-priced, w hlgh-poweretg advertislng to u Promodng:the Ga'Mes By W. Roger Worth win business away from their Canada rèc*orded lis first féderal counterparts. known lottery-irelated fatalit-v - The argument ls not whe.