the Born Examiner is at The Cutodinn Pm CP and Audit lunou oi COMPOSIIG ROOM this ADC On the cm Pro may npobhlh rim storm in EDHORS ADVE QTSNG BUSINESS Jack Kemev loreman UD snedda Cmem as Roman orA aFrancaPnuO Ctr Isan manag ed to Leo SthCk manag Mala GOUQ atcountant 6mm KW 35 oreman Sunday and W90 fidiOd to CF The Anogsnd we can hodTIoniaxantm la Mutgrew cttv eanor 8121 Don Saunders statute noitaavs mellow new mom puth Sgixycapfégge Wire MAO Stine Hay Connie Hart 03 3353 WE Ktzéfgarrler the Demo hammer claim copyright on all original news and advertising material not mpio land blishodinthisnw serving borne and stmcoe county Caw 3° SST Jean Stan Wrav YEARLY by Carrier SEpnen NUOHS eve inner Rat0 $49 40 to tv tic nWmtSJogbmbl daY AUQQSt 27 1979 Dennis Lemme garb ammo Ron Glder BY MNL aarne Copying rogu PUbIIShed by Canadian Newspapers ompany Imt Nancy Figueroa Calvm Feleacnuk CIRCUL ATION Ed Allenbv 549 AD moodvortnnr agree that the publisher shall not boliobhtor Working out Boyï¬eld Stree Barrie Ontario L4M 4T6 can at lHalkeS man 199 Jame 5MCOE couNTy otmn inodeiuoms b7006 the omnipoid tor the ipzcdamoély occupied Wham homas susan en lift advertisth in which 0h rot occurr whot or such ar 5mm Gaue CLASSIFIED stavewnute assstar manager Nome slaps $39 00 l° mm om and Bruce Rowland publlsher PE Che II su rvsm BradHnwcrott VOI is due to mtgoc Orv om Bet Army camera opeaor F736 Sh nheer De Awe LoPlante 555 MOTOR THROW OFF IlOblllY to non insertion of any advertisement beyond the mount paid tor such Terry Ftcld Al Hanson toreman 50 advertmom pave HSU DanaHomewood psa Warm Colby Heather Jane Morton Elaine Porter EfgaNfralgczss orema ELSEWZï¬ Sosayegr the Publisher rourvu tha right to edit visa cloudy or ropct an advarm 7266539 7266537 7282414 7266537 chem Penman tintv an Your 7266537 Tough stand on road signs lnnisfil Iownship ountil is to be commended for its stand on roadside signs ountil last Week said it would get tough in enforcing bylaw against unauthorized signs along township road allowances llie offending signs are the kind put up by individuals often on temporary basis for advertising purposes Innisfil already has bylaw against this type of signs and township workers regularly knock them down The trouble is THAS RIGHT YASSER lM LIFIIN All SECURIW FROM ANY AIRPORT THAT ANDY YOUN was ouror AND SENDIN YAtl Acow or H18 SCHEDULE Powwow in Jasper JOHN HARBRON the sign owners come along just as fast and put them right Fink Mm Analyst back up 39 Thomson News Service Now the township is seeking to add an amendment to its existing bylaw that would provide for lilies against the of fenders Ihats good Visually the signs clutter the landscape and if their numbers are great enough can actually be an eyesore tut theres greater concern Ihats for road safety Ilaced at or near intersections the signs can be traffic hazard by blocking vision or being distraction To be fair some businesses may need roadsigns for their business survival Such signs should be allowed but only through the proper channels and under close regulation Iltltollllollttl roadsigns are mess and dangerous too They shouldnt be permitted in lnnisfil or anywhere else for that matter tr imce vestewer Picture of young mens bible class at St Georges Church Allandale like ly taken between I895l897 Teacher was Miss Clark or Clarke who taught for many years at the church Back row right is an Ernest Bone Does anyone recognize any of the other persons business By VINCENT EGAN Business and onsurner Affairs Analyst Thomson News Service Although New Years Eve is four months away its 1980 already in the automotive world This is the time of year when automakers are unveiling next years shiny new models few years ago new nearly always meant longer lower and wider Not any more The emphasis in 1980 more than ever is on efficiency and durability cars that may have smaller dimensions but contain more space for driver and passengers cars that are more resistant to corrosion and road hazards General Motors the giant of the industry introduced one of its 1980 series in the spring the frontwhecldrive models dubbed the cars They have been well received in the marketplace American Motors smallest of the four North American manufacturers is con centrating largely on invisible but im portant changes in its 1980 models NEW BREED The car buyer of the 1980s will be new breed of shopper more interested in func tion than in form in performance rather than price thinks William Pickett president and general manager of Bramptonbased American Motors Canaan Ltd To meet that interest AMt is taking number of steps to deal with the chronic and costly problems of corrosion thats associated with wnter driving on saltcovered roads One of the most important steps is the use aluminized metal rather than ordinary we want your opinion Something on your mind Send Letter to the Editor Please make it an original copy and sign it The Examiner doesnt publish unsigned et ters but it you wish pen name will be used New car models stress utility mufflergrade steel in the exhaust system the component that is usually the first to cor rode Last year the Canadian Association of Consumers estimated that the use of stainless steel would add about $8 to the man ufacturing cost of the car and triple the life of the exhaust system An American Motors manufacturing executive said he was unable to say what the additional fabrication cost of its new system would be but that the CAC figure appeared masonable All 1980 AMC passenger cars are also to contain more galvanized steel plus Ziebart rust protection applied at the factory to the rustprone nooks and crannies of the car and will have fiveyear warranty instead of three as in the past against rusting through BIGGER MARKET Pickett foresees an accelerated consumer trend toward small cars He predicts that compacts and subcompacts will account for 65 per cent of industry sales in the 1980 model year vs an estimated 56 per cent in the year just ended By 1985 he believes 80 per cent of all new cars sold in Canada will be compacts or sub compacts In absolute terms that would represent sales increase from 600000 small cars in 1980 to nearly one million in 1985 Canadians will purchase more than four million small cars in the next five years com pared with less than two million small cars in the last five years says Pickett The gaSOIine shortage in the United States resulting from the Iranian revolution and the subsequent boost in world prices by the oil cartel has reduced sales of new cars in that country by about 30 per cent The president of AMC which manufacturers Jeeps largely for export to the US is confident that this dropoff will be corrected by spring One major AMC innovation is to be four wheeldrive version of the popular compact Concord It will probably cost 313300 to $1600 more than the twowheeldrive version The 19805 are going to be good years says Bill Pickett From the legislature By DEREK NELSON Queens Park Bureau Thomson News Service TORONTO Should we have the legal right to die The Ontario Advisory Council on Senior Citizens thinks so Where recovery is not likely and where death is inevitable and imminent withholding or withdrawing artificial means of life support is justified when requested by the patient it said in its annual report The premise is that dying is now sometimes prolonged unduly by the use of heroic often painful measures former council chairman put it this way its time we took the heat off the family and the doctor to make the decision to pull the plug This would be accomplished by means of socalled living will whereby person could make legally binding opposition to artificial means being used to keep him or her alive The concept is similiar to that in bill by then backbencher and now revenue minister Lorne Maeck PC Parry Sound which received approval in principle in the legis lature in 1977 GRITS AGAINST But the election that year intervened and the bill died on the order paper The vote was close SHO with most Conservatives and New Democrats voting for all the Liberals present plus few Tories and NDPers voting against Interestingly enough since the Attorney Backgrounder ROY tIcMLRTRY Iiving will Generals ministry would have to initiate such legislation if it were government policy Roy McMurtry was one of those who voted for the Maeck bill His ministry is currently looking at the possibility of writing something equivalent although there doesnt appear to be any urgency Which is unfortunate in that 70 per cent of Canadians now die in institutions some kept Council of Senior Citizens favors Iegal right to die alive against their wishes And as Maeck noted two years ago beyond the suffering such forced life may cost patient there is the added pain anguish and concern of the patients family attending medical personnel and clergy WHY NEGATIVE Maeck much preferred to see patient meet his inevitable death with dignity and degree of comfort But opponents of the Maeck bill had their own fears They claimed it was redundant in that surveys show 94 per cent of doctors already respect the wishes of person who says my time has come just let me die But what about the remaining six per cent More importantly some critics felt the bill might cause more difficultiey than it solves physician who now feels he has discretion in terminal case might in future refuse to pull the plug unless there exists living will MORAL QUESTION That in fact is the real problem needing solution in any new bill which McMurtrys people draw up There is one further assault on the very principle of righttodie bill which the legislatures most impassioned moralist MPP John Sweeney KitchenerWilmot used against the Maeck bill Its validity is entirely up to the individual and by its nature has to be decided on totally subjective grounds Sweeney argued life is being ter minated That is euthanasia Illegal aliens smuggled into Canada MONTREAL ItPl Its peaceful night in Quebecs Eastern Townships southwest of Montreal van driving along backwoods dirt road parallel to the Vermont border slows down stops and six people four men and two women get out No one says word Furtively they start along small trail us ed in winter for crosscountry skiing At Most are from Greece Portugal Italy Jamaica Haiti or Guyana where they pro bably had made initial arrangements to have themselves smuggled from Canada into the US It is easy to enter Canada as tourist ex plains the police official Then with the help of smuggling rings in Montreal Toronto and other cities they slip across the border Smuggling rings generally are made up of four to eight people Aliens generally are driven from Montreal or Toronto to some remote wooded section of the border where guide meets them and takes them across the line Then someone else picks them up and drives them to large American city where supplied with false identity papers the aliens can attempt new life Prime Minister Joe Clarks inner cabinet powwow in Jasper Alberta this week will have so many prospective policy programs to discuss foreign affairs issues could receive short shrift This would be too bad given the fact our first impressions of him as our new Prime Minister are based so far on his personally smooth performances at two major in ternational events These were of course the Tokyo Economic Summit which discussed primarily world energy issues and the Commonwealth Heads of Government Conference in Lusaka Zambia preceeded and followed by Clarks visits to Cameroons Tanzania and Kenya The structure of the latter visit was ac tually planned for former Prime Minister Trudeau who would have made the first official visit of Canadian Prime Minister to Africa But Tory victory on May 22nd passed that mantle to Joe Clark who wore it well using quiet persuasion which not everyone ex pected from the novice leader abroad CHANGES HINTED From these visits also emerged bits and pieces of official comment by both Clark and External Affairs Minister Flora Macdonald about proposed changes in our foreign policy One has the impression they are both talking out loud about changes they would like to make in policy but which have not yet been put to the reluctant bureaucrats of the External Affairs department Nevertheless on the flight home from Africa Flora Machnald was quoted as saying the government is going to initiate new Foreign Policy Review The last one in the summer of 1970 by the former Trudeau government proposed and then implemented to certain degree some important changes in foreign policy from the time of Lester Pearson More emphasis was placed by Trudeau on trade relations than on the purely diplomatic and functional ones between Canada and the Third World The policy to recognize The Peoples Republic of China was well in the works before the 1970 Foreign Policy White Paper was released But it was part of the Trudeau concept of diversifying our foreign role from the over powering USCanada relationship This later became Trudeaus Third Op tion It proposed greater diversification of Canadian trade from the dominant American market to Japan and the European Common Market and the Third World And while some Tory leaders are now downgrading the Third Option including Finance Minister John Crosbie in Washington last June what Flora Macdonald and others are saying indicates the Third Option will not be junked easily by the Tory Government Miss Macdonald Marcel Asselin with his new portfolio as Minister in charge of CIDA Canadian International Development Agency and Secretary of State David Macdonald have all said our foreign aid program must change towards more trade and less aid All this certainly sounds like an extension of Trudeaus policy DELAY 0N MORE AID The major difference between Liberal and Tory policy on aid was revealed during Clarks African visit where he held fast on more aid to Tanzania our major African recipient Mr Clark is committed to policy of reducing government outlays Whereas Mr Trudeau on the same tour would undoubtedly have promised more aid to Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere who is an ideological supporter of Trudeaus concept for social change Interpreting the news Blunt refusal was called for By BRUCE LEVETT LONDON CP Humphrey Atkins Bri tains minister for Northern Ireland is being damned because he didnt and damned because he eventually did Critics are divided on his rejection of ro posal by Gov Hugh Carey of New Yor to discuss the Ulster upheaval with Republic of Jresland and United States politicians in the Atkins turned down the proposal when it was made about month ago but he didnt do it firmly It was only after he had chance to check with Prime Minister Margaret That cher that he penned blunt refusal Some commentators here are saying Atkins has embarrassed his government by not re acting the suggestion out of hand immediate Others are saying that any sort of rejection makes it seem that Atkins is not able to argue his case convincingly Where the commentators are united at all it appears to be in the suspicion that such US lt rear 2200 ille al aliens are estimated But staff Sgt George Rugenius head of the politicians as Carey and Senators Daniel Include your telephone number and address iglï¬gï¬ï¬ï¬‚gflï¬zikliérgizlfle 101va crossed the Eoundary from Quebec Montrealbased 19member RCMP team that Moymhan and Edward Kennedy are using the oswe have to verifyletters bl ht thev head gm mewoods and make their or those about 1400 were caught by US investigates illegal immigrants says many issuetodrum updomesticlnsh votes Because of space limits public interest and bl OUQ Waugh the thick underbrush for about 3a border patrols The other 800 went through people come to Canada with little moneyand DUBBED AOREEABLE good taste The Examiner sometimes has to kilometre undetected despite sophisticated network sell their passport to help pay for the trip to ï¬kmts lsfragarded as an agreeable man edit denor elem leners Ilc as in the world and the world as Eventually the reaeh 3mm narrow mad 0f eledroni Sensqrs deSgned to monitor theUS meriffoguï¬is 90b E12erWhm paracmar Edior New day he tirade by him and the oild knew him not He Where large latemOdQI Car awaits lhem bordercroslng 39mm th b0 dd ject without Jans 23m co to me Sub editorial 9099 came uitto his own and his own received him Fl members 0f the group got the car ONLY T0 ROSS 0ft ncgt eey 82555 dr fir elam mey perience prevous ex Send yours to not But as manv as rccciwd him to them 0195mm talks briefly to the derer the darts some people com to canada lhthe ex enthavlotllleso $333 ï¬drry more He is Reported to be embarras ed th jaw he power to become the sons of lod bafklnmlhe WOOdSr presg purpose 0f 055mg the border no the an ec ac sit ut an to nor ven lolh br These people known to authorities as ll US says John Anderson chief of the US Butthe number of illegal aliens apprehfmd on aware had hoped to be hammer lHq ltt on us lllllll in legal aliens Have paid between $500 and border patrol for the 275 kilometres of boy ed by authorities has actuauy declmcd allowed to make the trip to use the platform P9 om 37° dustlook at what we can become bv onlv 52000 9110 It hit themsolVes smuggled into d3 known as the swim secmr meh recently nicoum mean that elther we gee am the US pth that IrISh BARR Ont believing and reconmg lusmwr mil the US where they will live clandestine ex takes in New Hampshire Vermont New pllletafre trying lï¬icross the border or stmply senlszn 122 toiusymrtpatelhllets there are may come lhmk nuratlps istence probably in New York City York and part of Maine are mg caughl P90 nonsm