Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 3 Aug 1976, p. 4

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1331119 EX EIIlIIIIPI Published by Canadian Newspapers Company Limited to Bayfiold Street Barrie Ontario Robb Publisher General Maiiagoi Walls Editor Emeritus 4The Barrie Examiner Tuesday Augi Honshaw Managing Editor i313 l976 The few once again mess it up for many Its happening again The louts among us are once l1 again going to cost us some privileges useful tool The provincial government is seriously considering ban on it quor in provincial parks The reason few louts have been using pro vincial parks for beer basis So the majority of campers who go to have quiet good time will probably be told dont bring liquor It is yet another eample of what is going terribly wrong society The idea that the goon behavior of few should dictate what happens to the many is not what is meant by democracy The crowds at provincial parks on weekends are ample proof that amping either by tent or trailer is popular And great many of those who camp along case of beer bottle of wine or bottle of liquor And most of those who do dont get drunk dont get rowdy and dont misbehave very few of course do The solution is not to ban liquor from parks The solution is to crack down hard on those who use the parks as beer bust sites means throwing them out of the parks and taking every step nec essary to ensure they dont get back in that season It also means that those bothered by the antics of the few will have to complain to park officials to make sure act ion is taken The radio boom of the itis is the Air hay disco Angus radio ltlit tiil lranspoit We lransport But doubt with our Ottawa bu And Essa iliittl For most people the tlt radio is pleasant hobby But to some the ll radio is an cellciit method of dodging the law lfssa lowriship councillors ereil this Drag races are being field lll rid the dragsteis are warned ot approaching police by lownshii council has the whole thing to taiiiida really know what tanada will do about it less there is some civil sery ant high in the foggy reaches of rcaucracy cackling with glee as he draws up legislation to them so di from sight roost with the so As mem tions in tli radio clubs in the area ban tB radios Or make the using of fficult that they will fade Once again the louts rule the The unfortunate thing is that all radio operators have been tarred me brush bers of many orgaiiixir is area know there are such as the Base Borden Emergency Radio Team which provide valuable HilltlltltOtlttl service for agreat many even And that something more louts is But because Essa Council wants done about dragsters all radio operators are HOW SllSpl By all means stop the outlaw But for the law radio operators dont operator as person with no regard paint every radio Pollution affects Med coast UN attempting to save area lAltlS chtcrl Tthch tcrrancaii is the most popular holiday lakc in the world but it may not stay that way for long The mo tiiillioii tourists who flock thcrc each year will find thcir favorite playground more uninviting and in some areas downright dangerous as an bridled pollution builds up in the sea and air The regions coastal popii lation of too million doubles each summer with the tourist invasion and the resident popu lation is expected to reach 201 million by the year 2000 That means more human sewagc and industrial waste bcing dumped in the sea killing marine life and ruining oncc beautiful beaches ln an attempt to stivcthc area for future generations and clear tip the damage already done NT YOlh lllNlON Letters submitted for publication must be original copies signed by the writer Please include your street ad dress and phone number although they will not be published Letters which can not be authentrcatml by phone cannot be published For the sake of space public interest and good taste The Examiner reserves the right to edit coir dense or reject letter Elri flintm Exaiirriiiir lfi Hayfield Street Barrie Ontario lelephone 726 $3er Registration Number Niti Second Class Mail Return postage guaranteed Daily Sundaysaiid Statutory Holidays excepted Subscription rates daily by carrier Rty cents weekly $44 2e yearly Single copies 15 cents By Mail Barrie $44 20 yearly Simcoe County $3400 yearly Balance of Canada $36 no year ly National Advertising Offices 63 Queen St West Toronto RH 1710 Ho yathcart St Mon treat Member of the Canadian Press and Audit Bureau of tir culations The taiiadian Press is ex clusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches in this paper credited to it or The Associated Press or Renter and also the local news published therein The Barrie Examiner claims Copyright in all original adver using and editorial material created by its employees and reproduced in this newspaper opyright Registration Number 203815 register 61 the lnitcd Nations Errvi rorrriient lrogram ilYNEli is trying to trtlldltltllO illlllAptillll tioii action by the scas ltt coastal states major conference in Barce lona in ltebrnary set the scene for UNEPs efforts and the body has just held meeting of experts here to find out what needs to be done and more inir portantly what can be done thREASEI DISEASE representative from the World Health Organization iWHOi told the meeting that cases of typhoid and similar in testinal diseases were ltliltns mg each year round the shore of the Mediterranean Much of this increase is hit to inicrobiological coir tammation of the water said WEIR regional director for Europe lctcr Thatcher Many existing sewage systems iire not adequate arid others arciiist not keeping pace with population growth Already in sortie areas of the Mediterranean certain kinds of fish can no longer be eaten arid beaches are unusable tor tour ists he said lNEl is trying to help goy crnmcnts control pollution with thrcerstagc Blue llan laun ched at the Barcelona coir tcrcncc The first stage will take two years to amass de tailed picture of all kinds of pol liit ion throughout the Mediterranean SEEK GOVERNMENTHELP Then lNEl with the hpr of other agencies and national institutions will draw up pro iectioiis of future tolerable icy clsot pollution and finally try to tie goyetiiiiwlils to enact coir crctc proposals tor soly mg the problem The whole region is incrcas ineg seen as an entity That cliei said But it seems clcar that very few goycrnrnents tiic the ability to integrate their planning lhic of the Hullll iiiiits flit laris experts meeting was to discuss coordination of scpa rch nat tonal industrial dcyelopirieirt programs one of the hornies problems tfic Blue lltiii faces There is definitely going to be industrial deyelopiiieii ii olll hereby arc giyeti unto us eceeding great and precious liiiiiiifiiiioi proiiiises that by these ye might be partakers of the dryiiie Iiatme haying escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust Peter The promises or the Father are given for His children not only to ttitlliOlllt but to exer cise tliimi them now He said le word shall not return unto me void In the name of Jesus be healed Get the ote out tor the Lord Attend your church Pray for the scry ices and tiods servant previously untouched parts said lhatchcr There is change in the pattern of import mg labor into Europe as the global cost of immigrant labor becomes prohibitive so iii diistry will tend to go where the manpower is SEE llll4llllllti llNEl officials see the prot ess of persuading governments to tailor their industrial plans to what the environment can support as incvitably long and difficult Another major problem they face is the risk of major oil spill disaster as tanker traffic through the rcopcircd Sucy ca nal increases Already 200000 to totiiiiio tons of oil are dumped in the llcditcrranean each year mostly from tankers cleaning their tanks Statistically wc are bound to get an accident sooner or later lhatcher said Rcccir tly there was nearly disaster with Titttilil ton tanker off Malta They werclucky The London based lntcr governmental Maritime ton sultaiivc Organization lltO is opening regional ciiicr gency ccntrc iii Malta this sum mcr to help reduce the damage caused by any eventual oil spill But an lMtO coiiyciitioii which obliges states to provide tanker cleaning facilities iii harbors has only been signed by two of the ill Mediterrancaii coastal states and the con vciition can only be applied to stopduriipingyyithinthctcirito rial waters of thirst two court tries Dr Styiepan Keckcs lNEls program co ordiriator said ttierc were no scicirtitii groun ds for talkingot the death of the sea in the coming dccades But the coastal ioircs areal ready highly polluted and it doesnt help it the iiiiddlc clydti llt lxcckes stiitl llii liitei we take iict iot the more it costs to clear up CAPSULES IIZI ER liritORD LONDON rsena soccer club said lriday it paid close to the British record tron ster fee for striker Malcolm MacDonald 28 oi ewcastlc lniied The remrd tee is 1334i one then Skilily paid for player iii 1974 The player col lects fiye per cent or the fee Terms of the deal were not dis closed SlllORT ilIS KINGSTON Ont tl Frances Gregory and Francie Wyland say women should re ceive ages to break the cycle of poycrty hich surrounds them because they are women The two womci ere speaking at the omcns centre here on beth of the inter national organriatron ages for Housework Distortion caused by heat waves from the gas tl on planning machini gives an almost ptiiirtinglikc texture to this photograph The machine in the foreground is sharp and clear while the yoga BUSINESS background is similar to the brush strokes of an artist The planer is being Used on Inflation destroys planning for various pension programs By thIINI EGAN Business and oiislimcr Affairs Analyst Thomson News Service Of the many compelling rea sons to check inflat ion one that is usually overlooked is the way that it can destroy the value of pension planning The combination of rising in comes and declining securities markets has badly shaken the foundation on which millions of anadlans have built their re tiremcnt plans and hopes At the 1971 census there were 17 million anadians over the usual retirement age of 65 By the end of the century dc mographics show that figure will have doubled And if the retirement age were to be reduced to so the figure of it million people on retirement would be reached six years from now thrc will the money conic from to pay for the pensions As usual frequent suggestion is the government greatly expanded govcrn merit pension system would have to be supported and paid Ior somehow probably through general increases or large in crcascs in the regular pension deductions from cmployccs monthly salaries writes Keith MtlrtOll in the current issue of anaditin onsumcr One might wonder if the younger employees would co operate in such payrasvyou go pension schcmc today on the understanding that they in turn will be supported by de ductions from the salaries of younger workers when they rc lire lNlllthNlClll PLANS main types of private plans callcd unit benefit plans cover about threcquarr tcrs of all pensionplan mem bers anada The formula used to deter mine the actual retirement pcn sion is to apply an animal unit usually per ccnl in one of these ways wTo final earnings or salary at the tinicof retiring wmm Maybe other life in universe can help With earths DTOblems Hy JOH ll RBHO Foreign ffairs iialy st Thomson cws Seiy ice While yyc probe the planet Mars 315 million miles from us on earth learn about its atnios plicre and Nb suitticc we still are powerless here on earth to control great earthquakes It is possible that the worst earthquake in this century has taken place in the People He public of hunt and specifically in that ast nations coal pro ducing city of Tang shan There are stories that nearly all its population of about 12 million are dead or ltlllllttl and that the city and its ital coal mines have been destroy cd Because of the iiiassiyc ccn sorship from lckmg we do not know for sure it Tang shim and the spread of the earthquake ii to hundreds of ancillary ll lages and tow ns outpaces Guatemala earlier this year San Francisco iii WT and the worst recorded iiiic of all it Tokyo ll lttLt The ditiiiiatrc irony tor lllt toiiirizuiiist iliincsc that they did not forecast this rimssiic disaster eyeii though their tll thqtitikc ltitttill coir sideted to be the orltts best hr the past thinesc scisziio logists haye been able to pin point these natural catastrophes iliiiosi to the trout both iii their own huge country and abroad Whet her ey er hear the full account of death and destruc tron frorii the northwest thina earthquake it isyct another re minder in year of may curious weather patterns and books about the future of china tology of world really do not control IRRISOHE THER The weather patterns are worrying the experts along ith changes in some of the mayor currents in our world oceans The trend began with the change in titer tcrnixiratures of the Humboldt iirrrerii winch runs deep in the lacitic Ocean off the South mcrican coast and drastically Lillttitd lll lb chovy output beginning in in Peru was the worlds major supplier of the tiny fish which is used more as protein source than as direct food item The reduction in inchoy res put grcatcr protein demand on world soy abcan output making it air expensive and scarce coin modity by late hm nd why for example has there been frost ltl tropical Bra xii deyastatiiig droughts in Britain and France affecting mirror agrariar regions here summer rainfall is anticipated ti cooling trend throughout Nor 1h nicrica during its summers and ltlltl hrch has iiictuit permanent rcdin tioi in the mean temperature of two degrees in thc iast cars lhat tigure and literally more chilling prognoses are found rr ii new book by an iiririciii lrlilllitllgt who has checked his data ill the wot li leathiig iriccorologists ATo fliral average earnings the average salary for stated number of years such as the last five years To average best years 507 lected highest annual salaries such as the best five out of the last 10 years before retire mom To career average earnings isalary earned in each year of service such as two per cent of each years salary To level percentage of earnings tfor example 25 per cent of the salary at stated year or on starting work Another 15 per cent of private pension plan members are en rolled in schemes that provide fixed pension such as Sit mon tli for each year of service or flat monthly pension such as $100 month The other it per cent of plans fall into these two categories Moneypurchase plans in which certain percentage of the employees annual salary is set aside monthly and used with accumulated interest to 8K HITK ROUICRSI Well who knows and who will bc around to tell Perhaps we lllSTORTlON GIVES PAINTINGLIKE QUALITY TO PHOTO Dunlop Street in Barrie to remove layer of pavement from the street before new purchase an annuity on retire iiicirt lrofitsharing in which the employers contributions to the pension fund are related to cornuanv profits NO STANDAHIIIAIION The variety of techniques for financing pension plans is one of the weaknesses of the privalc pension industry Contributions by employees vary widely from zero for fortunate minority to more than to per cent of earnings for others On average says Mr McLeod two thirds of all pen sion contributions are tirade by einploycrsi Wide divergence also can be found among the rules covering cmployecs eligibility to join pension plans and the age at which vest mg takes place tWhen pension plan is vested the contributions of both the cmploycc and thc cnr ploycr belong to the employee after specified number of vcars should rcioicc in the erirergiiig discoycrics from the rkmg lirsiirolic QUEENS PARK Ethics missing from courses By oiitiii Queens Park Bureau Thomson ew Service TORONTO Yesterday in talking about deputy ministers being provided with personal automobiles mentioned that one of the justifications for doing this iii the mind of the Loyertrinent would be that it common practice in private employment to pioiidc cxccu tiyes with cars And in this we probably hayi the nub of most of what l5 THE PICK OF IlNtH ere in luck Joe theres vacancy wrong with our civil service and There is great deal wrong with it it is common to weigh and compare the conditions and practices of the goycrnrncnt scryrce with priyati employ merit and to ignori the very dis tinct difference there should in between the two THE llltl The key to this difference that governments eirrployccs irescryantsot the public This is distinction which if properly appreciated and more and more it tends not to be means that goyciiriricii employment is of qufii tlti ltftlll character than priyaie employment This differenci breaks down into two key points he is that in all yltt isioiis in the public sector from the low cst leycl up lllt public interest figures as prime fat tor it is or should be the main motiyaiing factor it profit 15 in the private field The second difference lgt that government employees deal with public money not money which is yoluntarily invested as in the private field but which is taken from the public through taxation ETHHS HSSI These differences are the mar reason why people coming into top jobs in govern ment from the private or the academic sector seldom hac succwded They either havent been able to adjust their thinking to coir sider the public interest or have been frustrated when their ministers who being politicians are more scnsrtiyc level layer is put down The csl minted cost of planing and re paving the street from CANADAS STORY Hudson worked for Russians By BOB BOWMAN Henry Hudson was an English navigator who worked for Russia and Holland before be explored the river in New York and the huge Arctic bay named after him In Hill the Muscovy oinpany of Russia hired Hudson to try to find passage through the Ar ctic to Asia In fact it washopcd that he might go by way of the North Pole He was stopped by ice in llavis Strait and tlicii tried the Spitlhergcn area without success However his exploration led to the founding of whaling industry at Spitz licrgcn Hudson then tried again for Holland but his crew mutinied as they were sailing along the coast of Norway so he changed to southwesterly course It was on this voyage that sailed up the Hudson River to Albany in his ship Half Moon In 1611i Hudson found English trackers who provided lilin with the ship Discovery and he made another effort to find North west lassage He had maps made in 1605 by George ch mouth who had got as far as Mistaken Strait which now is Hudson Strait The sea was very dangerous and Hudson again had to cope with nail mv Finally he persuaded his men to continue and they sailed to James Bay after disCovering Hudson Bay Aug lino Hud son believed he had found the Northwest Passage and he and his men were greatly dis to the need have insisted that they do so lhe fad of the moment that there be interchange of ex ccutiyes between government and business Us fascinating theory but it followed ill most probably mean further drop in quality in the cry ll service When we get to the question of executive automobiles and high living generally the fact of plllillt money enters Put simply you have quite driftrent obligation iii spending money you take from person THE High to Mulcastcr streets is by $65000 Kraikeri tlhoto Holf appointed when they learned that they were in huge bay lhcy wiiitcrcd at the mouth of Rupert ltivcr and suffered from scurvy and lack of food When spring came Hudson was determined to continue his exploration but his men muti nicd again This time they cast him adrift in small boat with his young son and five men who had scurvy They were never seen again Strangely the mutincers were acquitted when they returned to England One of them was ltobcrt Hylot who became famous Arctic exr plorer OTHER Al 7Zf EVENTS 1527 John ltul English ex plorcr arrived at St Johns Nfld Ifitti Sir Humphrey iilbert arrived at lt Johns to claim Newfoundland for England lint Iroquois attacked Huron canoes on Richelieu River and took Father Jogues as prisoner 1751 First printing press in present day anada was used at Halifax 1K1 Telegraph service opened between Toronto and Montreal litiiii Joseph Howe became premier of Nova Scotia 1x71 Treaty with lndians was signed at Fort Garry tftix St Paul and Pacific Railway was given running rights to Winnipeg ititi important money rcgu liilltlllb were Hillflllllftd for the public good than in han dling money he gives you to spend in your wisdom And this is an obligation which doesnt allow for perks such as personal automobiles Today government adminis tration has be time profcs shill Along with this there are uni yersrty courses and other train mg PICK OF PUNC You should see it complete with its optional extras

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