373 fly mar new mine muggyElqu a¢aex Ellie Barrie Examiner Published by Canadian Newspapers Company Limited to Boyflold Street Barrie Ontario Robb PublisherGeneral Manager MI Walls Editor Emeritus DM Honshaw Managing Editor dTha Barrie Examiner Saturday July i976 THUMBS UP To Barrie Planni backing Wayman tacked by developer To Larry OConnell years and not had an accident If he can do it with bus then we should all be driven bus for 20 able to do it with car To the city fire de artment which in its search for type of material which burned and Board for airweather when he was unreasonably at holding who has starting year caused womans death has shown that firefighters do great deal more than To Georgian College which is motocycle safety course put out fires Monday With the num ber of motocycles on the road such course is necessity To Kim Kennington chosen Barries top safety patroller of the THUMBS DOWN To County wastewatchers County Council told for three years that its accounting system is costing the taxpayer money which has refused to do anything to change the situation To the Chamber of Commerce committee which attacked the post office for using advertisements to announce new rates and policies for mail to the US and not press release which would have cost nothing Which is why most editors wont To the powered To the followed PARLIAMENT HILL Max Saltsman feeling sad about outcome of issue By STEWART MacLEOD Ottawa Bureau Thomson News Service Politics aside have great deal of respect for Max Salts man the New Democratic MP from WaterlooCambridge who has that rare ability to steplout of heated debate detach im self mentally from rty viewpoint and immediat ybe come an im rtial observer of his own partisanship All parties have individuals like this Crawford Douglas the Liberal member from Bruce tends to keep fairly im rtial eye on events and flea Mac arrie the Conservative MP rom Hillsborougb is seldom swayed by his own viewpoints when discussing issues pri vately And there are othersall god people to know when you ve trouble putting things in perspective Anyway knowing Mr Salts mans relatively reasonable ap proach to issues was sur prised to pick up newspaper and see that he was quoted as saying got the feeling people arent going to wait for Quebec to separate theyll kick them out now This was in the wake of the air strike When sought out further ex planations fro the 55yearold er airman found some what sad MP Its shame if are losing patience he aa butthereseemstobea fairly violent reaction building Pi OPTINGOlT MOOD There is general alien ation People are saying they dont care whether Quebec goes or stays And its not just question of these people being antiFrench think its much broader than that My feeling is that people are tired of com plications There is an opting out mood buildin up which goesfarbeyond the ili gualis sue Its also reflected in our at titude toward the United Na tions The air strike focus for the bilingualism issue The public is tired of hassles and man EnglishCanadians feel they ave reached the end of the rope in making accom modations gree with this We provided dont havent done that much and think we have been very suc cessful in relation to ex eriences in other two anguage countries It really is shame that people seem to be losing patience at this time If Mr Saltsman is feeling sad about this he is downright angry about the way the strik ing pilots and controllers be haved during the walkout And he is even more outra ed that the government knu led un der to their demands particu larly in agreeing to free liamentary vote on the marge port by an inquiring commis sron he said with unchar acteristic annoyance is an ab solute disgrace Who is running this country the government or pressure groups What do you think would ha if Steelworkers or rail roa workers made the same demands know what would happen the government would COMMONS CAPSULE Trudeau hails concession as bilingualism victory 53hr Barri Examinir 16 Hayfield Street Barrie Ontario WW Registration Number om Second Class Mail Return geguaranteed Dar Sunda and SiatutoryH idays excepted Subscription rates daily by carrier 85 cents weekly gear Smgle copies 15 cents ail Barrie 8441 yearly Simone County 00 yearly Balance of Canada moo year samassat5aasltssxrs National Advertising Offices Queen St West Toronto memo Cathcart St Mon treat Member of the Canadian Press and Audit Bureau of Cir culauom The Canadian Press is ex dusivdy entitled to the rue for republication of all news dis tches in this paper lted to it or The Associated Press or Reuter and also the localnews published therein The Barrie Examiner claims Copyright in all original adver tlsmg and editorial material created by its employees and regroducedintlusnewspape ogeyrright Registration mlsregister61 Bum horn the Ottawa Bureau of Thomson News Service OTTAWA It could only be regarded as humilitiating dc feat but for inexplicable rea sons our prime minister hailed it as victory With its back to the wall on the issue of bilingualism in air traffic control the government conceded on almost every point the controllers and airline pi lots associations were demand mg It even ranteed free vote in the ommons when the time comes to consider gov ernment bill move con sidered be some parliamentary observers to be needless con cesion When the settlement was an nounccd Mr Trudeau who was returning by air from the eco nornic summit conference in Puerto Rico stunned newsmen by claim it was victory for bil But PM gave an in dication later that he may have erred He was asked in the Com mons by Sinclair Stevens PC YorkSlmcoe why he did not intend making statement con cerningtbeconference am following my habit of not making any statement after my travels abroad Mr Trudeau replied because find that enerally this is count wproductlve use press releases theyre just free advertising turkéys in small over outboards who make swimming at Centennial Beach about as much fun as dodging trafficon400 romoters of the Miss Nude Nort land Contest who set new standard for exploitation of women in this area standard which hopefully wont he tell them to go to hell LIKE DOCTORS But you see the pilots are like doctors They are the ex perts the public looks up to them Doctors tell politicians to keep the hell out of medicine because only the know what its all about an pilots tell us to keep the hell out of the air And they gave us all those scare stories about near misses It was like Medicare in Saskatchewan The doctors were telling us how we would be dying in the streets if the gover nment brought in the plan But they are the rofessionals and the ppblicl up to them Some of the statements made by the pilots and con trollers during the strike were gross and most misleading Those near misses they talked about often had nothing to do with bilingualism am not sure they realized what they were doin Mr Saltsman sai he was on the governments side through out the dispute because it is far too important for partisan litics and at this moment in tory it is terribly important for people to have confidence in their government agree with the prime min ister that the strike created crisis but am not sure he or perhaps any of us fully under stand it But do understand the im portance of the government ac cepting its responsibility to run the country And if other pres sure ps are going to be allowed to dictate these deci sions then it will be anarchy really do feel sad about it Earlier Quebec MP Eudore Allard SCRimouskii at tempted to solve the messy is sue by suggestin return to unilingual air traf ic control He presented motion in the Commons to establish French as the sole language of control at Canadas airports Opposition drive to volve the national airline in controversy has sputtered and died The Conservatives have done their best to embarrass Supply and Services Minister Jean Plerre Goyer with the revela tion that he once asked for and an Air Canada pass for riend he dscribed as his cum moolaw wife Former prime minister John Dielenbaker accused the gov ernment of promiscuity in the issuance of passes and re ferred to commonlaw wife as fan expression which of course nonexistent except in the vo cabulary of certain The issue died shortly after it was learned Mr Goyer had reimbursed the airline for the cost of the pass By FISHER It Is not customary for me when am at Home to watch Channel but on Munday screening of meetin of the City Council su by far thlngoffered yCKVR here were moments when the eloquence of the teachers trustees rose to parliamen tary level and found myself hypnotized with interest Many things were said which have not been aired before and It was astonishing how dramatic the debate became without any of the ac com anylng violence pro vld by the rival outlets The privileged position of physical culture In urban communities was contrasted with the secondclass position of the fine arts and in sense it was pointed out more than once that footballs and rmIricrav READER FOR UM Footballs and fireballs hockey arenas take pro cedence over histrolc buildings even fireballs As the debate proceeded It came to mind how often Bar rie Council has rushed In to save falling arena or build new one or plan swimming pool or tennis court but how demure councillors become when the word culture is mentioned Su erflclall coul be rega ed as con frontation between the Greeks and Barbarians SOME LAPSES Viewers robabl became so absor that tey failed to notice the lapse in parliamentary procedure that occurred more than once but Ald Nelson Garret although no Demosthenes was quick to point out one of these when he got the op the show portunity Much as am in sym thy with the prlncl lo the Friends of or rat or Fl More for the Fireball found dif ficult to come to conclusion over the debate which was decided by majority of one that of the mayor Preservation ls becoming almost as sacred word as motherhood but aomctlmcs we are so illInformed so ready to utilize grunts ex tended by openhundcd governments who are not above bribing the taxpayer with his own money but we think with our hearts and not ourhcuds Architects who recommend restoration of buildings are not wholly objective there is fee In question and the classic principle Cui Itono is invariably involved Local historians have way of overemphaslzlng the importance of local object because of Its age as thou an old fiddle could be made Into Guarncrlus or Amati vlolln Occasionally in the history of Barrie distinct period lccc has been demolished by and developers one such as the Brown House at Cundlcs Road and only few have wcpt at Its pnsaln It was few realized that less money would have rescued more had it been municipally owned But the fireball is dif ferent matter and it has become political football of prime entertainment value In fact as each debater presented his or her argu ment on Monday night realized how much CBC is TODOi 1T0 9JN Signs of recovery are showing at midyear for Canadian economy By VINCENT EGAN Business and Consumer Affairs Analyst Thomson News Service At mid1976 this is shaping up as year of weak recovery Its weak because the unem ployment rate remains stalled in the neighborhood of seven cent of the labor force and ause business spending on new plant and equipment which could create new jobsis hardly growing at all Yet its recovery because industrial production has been on the increase since the fourth quarter of last year and will probably soon reach record rate So far complete returns are in only for irstquarter 1976 In JanuaryMarch our Gross Na tional Product iGNPthe value of all goods and services produced in the country showed an annualized growth rate of 27 per cent after the ef fects of seasonal factors and in flation had been taken into ac count Forecasts of professional economists more or less agree that GNP for fullyear 1W6 will exceed last years by five per cent in real terms as Finance Minister Donald Macdonald THEKPICK OF PU Closer to earth the highfly ing MP5 and cabinet ministers this week were debating the governments bill to adopt maritime code for Canada predicted in his May 25 budget speech That would mean that our in dustrial output would be rising at rate considerably in excess of five per cent by yearend PRIME PROBLEM Inflation which was threat ening an economic breakdowu at mid1975 remains Canadas most troublesome economic problem midway through 1976 Des ite the AntiInflation Boar pointingwithpride and organized Iabors crybaby complaints the restraints are exceedingly mildand therefore all far short of restoring anything like stability of prices Even the federal govern ments hopes as expressed lay Finance Minister Macdonal are merely to bring the in flation rate down to eight or nine per cent by the end of this year Modest as that goal may be its attainment over the next few months is doubtful Wage restraints vir tually guarantee that labor in comes will rise by at least two totour percentage points more than the inflation rate and by much more in exceptional CH rmi Its got possibilities cases Government spending which accounts for twof if ths of all spending is growing dis proportionately At the federal evel expenditures will prob ably be 19 per cent higher than last year Administered prices of host of goods and services from oil and gas to postal serv ices are rising by 20 to 30 per cent or even more lnterest rates which affect the costs of almost all business operations are likely to go up over their current nearrecord levels STICKING WITH IT The federal finance minister served notice in his budget speech that the govemmeni would continue its antiinflation policy such as it is until some more tangible results are achieved He went to considerable lengths to asure Canadians that the government wouldnt capriciously chan its course intheforeseeable uture riding in the public sector is ing trimmed here and there and ceilin on in creases One of iggest of such chan is an extention of the eligibi ity period for unem ploymentinsurance benefits counterbalanced by an increase in employmentcreating pro grams At the same time the govem ment imposed new limits on corporate profit margins Ef fective this month they must be at least is per cent less than they were in the base period To soften these new reint tions the government made slight cmcession on corporate taxes payable by small busi nesses Largely because of the con fused profit outlook says sen ior economist Baguley of the Royal fBank of anada ts or an upsurge In $33 capital spending in 1977a key prereqursite for productivity gainsare not very bright Many business people arent confident as to what the precise rules of the game are going to be lNEVEN JUSTICE The TrudeauPepin antiin flation approach is an inter esting experiment in preferen tial treatment While putting squeeze on corporate profit margins thereby taking big gamble on higher unemploymentthe government generously allows wage and salary earners to keep well ahead of inflation As result labor incomes in Canada continue to show sub stantial increases piled on top of the substantial increases of the last two years In manufacturing for ex ample latest figures show average hourly earnings in Canada running i28 per cent higher than year earlier vs 76 per cent yeartoyear in crease in the United States where the government brought in antiinflation measures years before Ottawa did PARITY SIRPASSED This will be the first year says the Royal Banks Dr Baguley when labor costs per unit of output will be higher in Canada than in the US Antimflation restraints have been in effect for nearly nine months now They have had some slight effect on inflation but not muchand so they will remain in force for many more months to come Despite the prime ministers repeated expressions of distaste for controls he and his government show little in clination to get in touch with the pioinflation forces to trim the fat from public spendin and to stimulate business industry to be more uctive and more competitive in temational trade privater owned and losin in not filming council meet rigs Nor was it onesided ar ment as the wellchosen ut few remarks of Ald Archer madeevident In my fascination recalled our experiences of last April May when we circled the Adriatic Sea on three weekscrulsc IIOW DIFFERENT We departed from Venice 11 city containing more riccloss artifacts than are contained in all of Canada It Is sinking into the sea and it is doubtful that the nation of Ital will be able to afford suf icient taxes to rescue it from the tides of time At Rhodes We saw an ex tinct Acropolis which re quires little imagination to understand the splrit and the beauty of Hellenic Greece We left the port of Haifa to bus into the Sea of Galilee Notions have contributed to the beautiful basilica erected but recently to commemorate Christs lowly prenticeship asaca nterin azarcth Over ooking the Sea of Galilee is chapel donated by the Italian people in Mussolinis time to com memorate the Sermon on the Mount Architecture at its best it holds in the lights of the cupola the lines of the Beatitudes in Latin lines but rarely translated into the ver nacular Everywhere we went we Saw evidence of living creativity as well as relics of thepast Amazing story started in 1754 By BOB BOWMAN One of the most amazin sto ries in Canadian history evel oped from an event that took ace July 31754 While George Washington was leading military force from Virginia to attack Canadians building Fort Duquesne Pittsburgh he was intercepted and defeated at Fort Necessity He was allowed to return to Virginia after leaving Captain Robert Stobo as hostage Stobo was held in Duquesne but made secret map of the fortifications and got friendly Indian to take it to Virginia The British then mounted an other attack on Duquesne led by Gen Braddock with Wash ington secondincommand It was also defeated and Brad dock was killed Stobos map was found among his papers Now Stobo was spy not hostage and was put in risen in Montreal He ma in fluential friends there and man aged to escape He was recap tured after large award was offered and sent to prison in the Citadel at Quebec Once again he was given great deal of freedom and made number of friends In fact there may have been rd mance because there are de scendants living in Quebec to day In any event he and some other risoners managed to es cape own the river in canoe QUEENS PARK The labor tie won With DP By DON HEARN Queens Park Bureau Thomson News Service TORONTO The New Democratic Party had to face moment of truth perhaps the most testing since the party was formed at the recent session It was faced with blunt choice between its alliance with labor leadership and its social ideals And when the tri to the altar was over it was labor tie that was carrying the bouquet LABOR WON The incident the passage of the Environmental Protection Act has been mentioned here before The NDP hada hard choice It could continue its allout campaign for protection of the environment and particularly its attack on litter it could to bat for the three thousa or so workers who probably would be out of jobs if nonreturnable mntain ers the nub of this dispite were banned The two were incompatible And thou the party in the house stic handled through to what might appear to the public as com ormse in the end there rea was no question where it had wound up it had opted for labor BIBLE THOUGHT Bettertaadrymaaeland tptletness herewith than an laxe hill sacrifices with utormmnn Many person could giriliriblywishfgrtaie hflflmï¬ in axitrastto tapocketfulld cashhasbmight dalav The allied harbor of ancient Ephesus in Anatolia was balance the remarkable efforts in Irrigation sustained by the government of Israeli Ihosc poeple are concerned by the fact that there is something more important than the wnservatlrm of old even historic buildings and that is the conservation of water In land the founthead of world religions but not blessed with pure fresh water the pen le are not satisfied with du nous devices such as Aswan dams or arm que irrigation screws but have moved mountains fig uratively to preserva and reserve water The Walling Wall may as cinatc tourists but it is the tr ri tion ipe that so iea the li cb of the Holy and Water is the prime necessir ty in the Near East where historic buildings and their ruins greet the visitor on every hand The Canadian beatitudes are in the water which we possess so abundantly and which we pollute so careless ly Time will level any building no matter whether it ranks with the Temple of Artemisoranouthousc But water undefiled we must have as long as human beings exist on this planet Even as we move to make Barrie and Kcmpcnfelt Buy more attractivcby filling in part of it may its citizens be as sensitive to this as they are to their herita in the preservation of the irehall After number of narrow es capes they stole fishing boat and got to Louisburg Stobo arrived there just few days after Wolfe had sailed to attack Quebec When the Brit ish commander of Louisburg heard his story be arranged for Stobo to be sent to join Wolfe So Stobo layed part in the capture Quebec and claimed later that he showed Wolfe the path to the Plains of Abraham Eventually he returned to Virginia as hem OTHER JULY EVENTS mosQuebec was founded by Champlain PINFrance began construc tion of Fort Louisburg WinLaw Society of Upper Canada was formed IBMUS force captured Fort Erie I854Horsedrawn tramway opened between Erie and Chip pewa raftsHouse of Commons gassed Electoral Franchise 1893Kamloops BC was incorporated as city 18976 Lancaster dis covered gold at Eldorado Creek mosFire at Cobalt Ont left 2000 ple homeless 1942 anada and US for med joint navy army and air staff rimCanada and US signed agreement to conserve Fraser River salmon Though this incident has been commented on its deep signifi cance has not been brought out And there is deep significanv ce for it stem the NDP as dominantly la party Not capital Labor party as in the United Km om but la bor partysmal And it illustrates succinctly the great weakness of the On tano NDP This weakness could be cited as saying it is blind in one eye The provincral party simply cant see the Ontario economy except as it applies to workers andtaxes It never has shown any knowledge or at least aware ness of the other side of the economic cornsuch matters as the relatiomhip of costs and the need to be co titive productivity the for in vestment and generally for the need for healthy productive economy if there are to be healthy wages and benefits The Labor rty in Britain of course does ve an awareness 11 these factors hue it is primarily devoted to the interests of the working man but it not blindly an and it traditionally has had in its ranks economists and spokesmen with knowledge of industry andcommerce Htstoncally the party has lacked such re tation in itsrankshere nthemalnlts membership has come from educators and trade unionists and the has bear that its position have bear taken after consideration that has been lamentany onesided Until this Is corrected and withitarelianceonlaborltla difficult to see how correction can be achieved the party can hardly be expected to be re gged as other than factlonal