inside story One million in poverty Over one million Canadian women are liVing in poverty according to recent statistics Their plights range from the unmarried mother to the mother of three deserted by her husband to the elderly woman who is afraid to buy toothpaste or any other product that she cant eat See the Lifestyle page Stargell sinks Reds threerun blast by Willie Stargell in the 11th inning gave the Pittsburgh Pirates 52 victory over Cincinnati Reds last night The Pirates lead the best of five series one game to none with the second game set to go tonight The California Angels have healthy pitching staff as they get set to play Baltimore Orioles in the American league playoff See Sports pages Schoolaged fantasy Rock Roll High School caters to fan toa nonstop roc concert The adults in this film are moronic and the students are just nice kids trying to have good time See review on todays Entertainment page Learning fire safety Little Jimmy Rogers is no fool with fire Jimmy grade student at Hillcrest Public School is holding two reels of film that are part of Wally Russells presentation on fire prevention Russell is the fire prevention officer for the Barrie fire department and he expects to have visited all 15 elementary schools in Barrie by Oct ll Ex aminer Photo Honor for Rynard Former MP Dr Rynard of Orillia will receive an honorary doctor of laws degree from Wilfrid Laurier University ilII during the schools Simcoe County convocation October 20 at Georgian College Barrie In all some 50 students are being graduated by the Waterloobased university that has been operating an extension pro gram in Simcoe County for 16 years George Cooper teacher with the coun tys public school board and member of the Siiiicoe College Foundation is also be ing acknowledged by the university for his work in the area of postsecondary educa tion VILI expects some 700 people will attend the ceremony which is scheduled to begin at 2ttlpin Dr Rynard served several terms as MP before stepping down when the last federal elect ion was called Pact settlement sought The Inited Steelworkers of America will ask the Ontario Labor Relations Board to impose contract settlement in the dispute between the union and Radio Shack when hearing into charges of bargaining in bad faith by the company continues Thursday It would be the first time the board has imposed settlement in management union conflict Gaye Lamb representative for the strik ing ISWA members at Radio Shack says it is within the boards power to impose con tract through binding arbitration although she would not speculate on whether it would be done Jerry Colella vieepresident and manag ing director of Radio Shacksays he prefer red not to comment because it was legal matter Three still missing TOBERMORY Ont tCPr Police divers continued their search Tuesday for the bodies of three men believed drowned in boating accident Sunday on Lake Huron in which three other men died Weather hampered the search Tuesday for Robert Divine 19 Norman Michael Ritchie 16 both of Cambridge and Paul William Little 21 of Kitchener The bodies of Robert Joseph Segiun 18 John Mason 16 and Jeff Spielvogel 16 all from the Cambridge area have already been recovered police spokesman said the divers will be searching today in the area where the groups overturned boat was found about one kilometre off shore of nearby Cape Hurd Two of the victims drowned and one died of exposure in the 16degree water All three were wearing life jackets Tobermory is about 90 kilometres nor thwest of Owen Sound Touch of chauvrnism INITEJD NATIONS Reuteri UN proocol officer demonstrated touch of male chauvinism and wrongly identified permament delegate while introducing 4w tasy of every 13 earold to turn school in ra Nickel and dime support Francophone supporters of the need for French secondary school in Penetan guishene have been sending dimes to pay the Simcoe Board of Education for the building of new school Estimates on the number of envelopes received varies but between 2000 and 3000 have been received to this point in the campaign launched several weeks ago by the committee co ordinating the fight to establish the school The objective was to badger the board says Raymond Desrochers head of the Penetanguishene committee For the full story see the Today page index today lifestyle entertainment 26 lifestyle sports micsTV guide 27 classified 2830 supplements Loblaws pages Adair Vol pages Dominion 12 pages Georgian Mall 12 pages more than 200 diplomats to Pope John Paul at reception Tuesday The incidents occurred when Flora MacDonald approached the pontiff Acting protocol chief Ali Ismail Teymour of Egypt told the Pope Your Holiness the Foreign Minister of Canada and Madame am the foreign minister Miss MacDonald broke in Teymour also introduced William Barton to the Pope as Miss MacDonalds husband Barton who is Canadas permanent representative to the UN responded would be glad to have her for my wife Drinking maior concern LONDON Ont CP Ontario Health Minister Dennis Timbrell unveiled $600000 campaign against alcohol abuse Tuesday saying drinking is major con cern as the province moves into an era of preventivemedicine The campaign which starts later this month will be aimed at the public and students as young as the Grade level Tim brell said We want people to see that the leaders in todays society the people who do well in any situation are not those who drink to excess but rather those who know when to say no Timbrell said deaths directly attributable to alcohol account for 22 per cent of all deaths in Ontario There are about 250000 alcoholics in the province more than double the number 15 years ago Cruisers unmanned SAULT STE MARIE Ont CF highlypublicized OPP trafficcontrol program is being used to mask manpower shortage says Bud Wildman NDP member of the legislature for Algoma The program involves parking unmanned cars beside the road to slow weekend traffic Wildman says the real reason for the unmanned cars is that there are not enough policemen to fill them Fire damage $100000 WATERLOO Ont CP Damage to building housing hairdressing school could exceed $100000 following fire early today in the citys downtown core the sixth in as many months No one was in the building at the time and it took firemen just 10 minutes to bring the blaze under control Fire and police of ficials are investigating the cause Roger Auger director of the school estimated the value of the contents at more than $100000 Five previous fires all on King Street have caused almost $2 million in damage and destroyed 10 businesses Two of the fires are still under investigation two were caused accidentally and arson charges have been laid in the other Radioactive steam leaks RED WING Minn AP Radioactive steam emissions from ruptured tube at the Prairie Island Nuclear plant apparently did not endanger the environment although the steam spewed into the air for about 27 minutes the Nuclear Regulatory Com mission says The total radiation exposure at the plants site boundary has been estimated to be less than onetenth of millirem well within permissible limits Jan Strasma commission spokesman said Tuesday night Radiation monitoring teams from the state and plants owner Northern States Power Co detected no increase in radiation around the plant following the rupture Strasma said Cabbie fined $l50 OTTAWA CPI blind union official says the recent conviction of an Ottawa taxi driver who refused him and his dog ride will help publicize Ontario laws protecting the blind The legislation is relatively recent Homer Leblond of North Bay Ont said Monday of the Blind Persons Rights Act passed in 1976 Only when the blind begin to stand up for their rights and the public becomes aware of the law will it serve its purpose be said after the trial of Patrick Hall 26 of Ottawa who was fined $150 or the alternative of seven days in jail Hall said in court he refused ride in June to Leblond and his friend Robert Smith of Hamilton Ont who is also blind because they were with Leblonds guide dog Hall was unable to produce doctors certificate to back his claim he is allergic to dogs In an interview after the Monday trial beblond said he told Hall of the law which states guide dogs for the blind cannot be barred from public places The law carries maximum fine of $1000 weather Mostly cloudy with few showers today and Thursday Highs today l6 to TB Lows tonight near Windy and cool Thursday with highs l0 to l2 Come hoine to The Examiner Call 7266537 for home delivery Torsos found BANGUI AP President David Dacko says dismembered human torsos and limbs trussed up and prepared for roasting were found in freezer at villa used for private parties by deposed emperor Jean Bedel Bokassa The Central African Republics new president said judicial commission is preparing an indictment against Bokassa including charges of ritual cannibalism mass murder an unknown number of in dividual killings and embezzlement of millions of dollars in public funds We are asking the government of the Ivory Coast to extradite Bokassa so he can stand trial for his crimes against his coun try said Dacko in an interview Tuesday Dacko the first president of the former French colony was ousted by then Col in exemperors freezer May face charges Bokassa on New Years Day 1966 Bokassa proclaimed himself emperor on Dec4 1976 crowned himself year later and was ousted by Dacko on Sept 21 with the help of French troops while Bokassa wasin Libya REMAINS SAFE The deposed emperor was given asylum in the Ivory Coast another former French colony on the south side of the West African bulge after the French govem ment refused to admit him to France His host President Felix HouphouetBoigny has said he will not surrender him for trial Dacko who was reconciled with Bokassa in 1976 and became one of his ad visers said the human remains were found in large freezer at riverside villa 115th year No 227 Wednesday Oct 1979 the exam BRAMPTON Ont CP Peel Regions 126 elementary schools will be open today despite teachers strike that began Tues day the Peel board of education has decided But trustees said Tuesday it will take several days before volunteers to replace the 2600 striking teachers can be checked and trained Without certified teachers in classrooms the board will provide the regions 52000 public school students with day care and recreational activities instead of regular educational programs John Fraser director of the Peel board of education said the board will review on schooltoschool basis whether to keep all or some schools open and whether to keep school buses running Fraser said earlier that about 10 per cent of the regions public school students showed up for class Tuesday But while some of the teachers were picketing in Mississauga Brampton and Caledon west of Toronto only handful of pupils were at school in the afternoon he add Fraser said the board has received number of offers of help from people wanting to tutor students and will notify parents when study programs can be organized In the meantime he said parents and pupils should try to make do with study kits for homework The kits also suggest where parents can take their children in the Toronto area for days outing Textbooks can be borrowed There is very little sense sending them to school until there are programs organized Fraser said Well let them know Contract talks between the board and the two teacher unions broke off Sunday after 17 months of negotiations The teachers in their second year without contract want an overall salary increase of 215 per cent plus fringe benefits over two years The board has offered 145 per cent Annexation mediation refusal recommended By DENNIS LANTHIER Of The Examiner There will likely be no annexation media tion between Barrie and Innisfil Barrie general committee recommended in secret Tuesday to refuse the mediation offer following advice received from its annexation lawyer Tuesday It will have to be ratified next Monday Aldermen Jim Shirley Meg ODonal Doug Jagges and Gord Mills wanted mediation but were voted down by the rest of the commit tee Aldermen Ed Thompson and Bill Knowles were absent from the session The city is now looking at an annexation delay which could run to January 1981 Ald Gord Mills said Tuesday Ald Gord Mills said he voted for mediation because the delay affects longterm planning and that it does no good in the long run to have continuing battle between two municipalities Being an optimist still think we could resolve it he said OVER FINISHED But now all discussions with Barrie and In nisfil are over finished said Ald Mills Ald Alex Arthur told The Examiner Mon day he had gone into the session with thoughts of voting for the mediation But after hearing round table discussion he said he changed his mind Ald Arthur said that at the end of media tion Barrie would be labelled as the bad guys as we have been by the Innisfil Chamber of Commercewand its Barrie af filiate The city has been set up as the fall guy by the provincial government to save it from embarrassment said Ald Arthur Its the biggest setup Ive ever seen he said The alderman also said theres already been an arbitrated settlement and this would be backward step We moved twice on our position Innisfil hasnt moved once he said NOT SURPRISEI Bill Gibbins Innisfil reeve said today the move by Barrie does not surprise him The reeve said he had been in touch with the ministry of intergovernmental affairs and was expecting call from Tom Wells But there will be no point to that now he said Actually had some idea wed be labelled the bad guys said the reeve But we were prepared to take that chance Innisfil and Greater Barrie Chambers of Commerce urged both sides to seek media tion following press conference in early September George Taylor MPPSimcoe Centre con firmed the ministry of intergovernmental af fairs was standing by with mediator to in tervene in the dispute Innisfils appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada is expected to be heard sometime in the new year Lottery aimed of fairness in hunt licence selections By RICHARD THOMAS Of The Examiner The ministry of natural resources will hold lottery Thursday to select some of the hunters for the first managed deer hunt in Simcoe County spokesman from the ministrys Midhurst office said today Alex Smith fish and wildlife supervisor said I900 applications have been received for the possible 1960 licences but only 1500 hunters are like to participate in the hunt The county has been divided into seven units each accommodating certain capaci ty of hunters but five of these have been oversubscribed Smith said Another lottery next week will decide whether some of the hunters can transfer to the two units which still have vacancies he said but it will depend on whether the hunters second choices include one of these units Many of the hunters have not done this however and are all going after the busy units Smith said He said unit 80 which includes parts of Tosorontio Adjala and Essa Townships is the most heavily oversubscribed The capacity is 100 hunters but 383 have applied Unit 78 which includes parts of Innisfil West Gwillimbury and Tecumseth Townships is next Smith said with 336 applicants for the 100 licences alloted Also oversubscribed is unit 82 the Mines ing Swamp unit 79 which includes parts of Kledonte and Oro Townships and unit 76 hich includes CFB Borden he said hit 77 however which includes parts of Rama Mara Matchedash and Orillia Townships and can accommodate 600 hunters has only 267 applicants Smith said Similarly unit 81 which includes parts of seven townships making up most of the north half of the county has capacity for 700 hunters but has received applications from 439 Smith said the number of applications were less than expected which should make the hunt more successful He said surprisingly large number of calls have been received by the ministry from farmers in the county who want to par ticipate The hunt which is the first in the county since 1973 has been planned by the ministry for almost six years Smith said and represents change from the traditional for mat in that access is being controlled and trespassing laws will be enforced Both the Simcoe County Council and the Simcoe County Federation of Agriculture have opposed the hunt because of concerns for safety and because they consider the cur rent Petty Trespass Act supposedly under revision to be too unsupportive of farmers interests Smith said however that the deer hunt will be no different from the small game and water fowl season which opened last weekend There were 5000 or 6000 hunters here and we only received one complaint of trespass ing he said you have to give the hunters more credit 20¢ Per Copy in Kolongo eight kilometres south of Bangui which Bokassa used for private parties All of us in his entourage long suspected that he practised cannibalistic rites said Dacko One indication of this wasthat he often talked about the meals he took in secret at dead of night with on ly his most intimate companions pre sent Bokassas close associates either are under arrest or have fled and no one has claimed publicly he saw Bokassa eat human flesh Several members of Bokassas household staff told friends and relatives before they fled from Bangui that he often ordered all the servants to leave the Kongolo villa when he wanted to be alone Peel Region teachers strike but 126 schools remain open AfSlt earrickns NEW YORK CPI Pope John Paul keeping up his relentless pate encourag ed packed prayer service of religious professionals today to embracethe world in love in service in heaiing and in reconciliation In familytype gathering of priests and nuns in midManhattans St Patricks Cathedral he said that through prayer it is possible to share with Christ the travail and hopes of all humanity Through Him he told the more than 2500 church workers each can bring with us the anguish and hopes the joys and sorrows of all our brothers and sisters in the world The Pope began the morning service on the front steps of the church standing in steady drizzle to lead an estimated 8000 people gathered on Fifth Avenue In the name of the Father the Son and the Holy Spirit God come to my assistance He was greeted by cries of Long live the Pope which prompted the pontiff to grin and reply He does The service marked the start of third gueling and hectic day for the Pope day that will end in Philadelphia the third of six US cities he is visiting In whirlwind first day in New York the Pope met and prayed and sang with New Yorks poorest and proudest Again and again he pleaded Share the wealth with those in need You must never be content to leave them just the crumbs from the feast he declared Tuesday night to more than 75000 worshippers packed into Yankee Stadium for pontifical Mass At the stadium the 59yearold pontiff was gentle and wearylooking teacher in tall glittering miter and golden cloak We cannot stand idly by enjoying our own riches and freedom if in any place the Lazarus of the 20th century stands at our door he told the throng surrounding him in the stands and on the field In his accented English he spoke of the biblical parable of the feasting rich man condemned for spurning the begging of Lazarus for table scraps saying of the story It must form our consciences Christ demands openness to our brothers and sisters in need openness from the rich openness to the poor College support staff OK on pact offer deemed likely TERRY FIELD of The Examiner provincial offer made to support person nel at 22 community colleges was passed along to the membership Tuesday and while the actual vote on the pact is scheduled for text week both sides say acceptance is like six per cent wage increase retroactive to September and hourly increases of 25 cents May 1980 and 32 cents January 1981 will result in 147 per cent increase on per gmployee basis during the life of the twoyear ea Norm Hannon president of the Georgian College local of the Ontario Public Service Employees Union said key clause provides workers with seniority more rights and more protection against layoffs However the Council of Regents the governing body of the provinces community colleges was not prepared to write into the pact any clauses pertaining to the contracting out of work major concern of the union Its mediocre offer Hannon told The Examiner today But its the best were going to do without going on strike He said the 110 members of Georgian local 349 are not prepared to strike so soon after Februarys threeweek walkout Harley Smith of the councils bargaining fcannibalism Carrier Home Delivery 95 Weekly iner serving barrie and Simcoe county Embrace world Popes messag with close friends Within hours of Bokassas overthrow angry crowds looted the villa and destroyed part of the building But they did not get into the locked freezer for 24 hours By then the contents had begun to decompose because the electricity had been cut off the day before IDENTIFIES BODY Albertine Kettego tfryearold stu dent told reporters she identified one of the bodies as that of her uncle Gaston Wengue worker in local aluminum factory His head arms and right leg were cut off she said but recognized the body because of tattoo on his chest that in cluded his name and that had often seen before Pope John Paul ll lifts up little girl as he arrives at New Yorks Madison Square Garden today Cheering crowd of l9000 high school students welcomed the supreme pontiff to Youth tn Con cert With Pope John Paul ll AP Photo team termed the offer reasonable dont anticipate any problems with it Smith said Meanwhile factfinders report on the talks between the 4000 teachers at the col leges has been given to both sides and media tion has begun Two meetings were held last week and two more are scheduled for the next two weeks Hannon said discussion on the contracting out of jobs will continue even if the contract is ratified The union is concerned that college may hire outside people to do particular job and lay off regular personnel as some schools have Harmon said The majority of the 4300 clerks technis cians and maintenance men receive between $428 hourly and $860 hourly Hannon said Those at the bottom of the scaie will receive approxrmately 19 per cent more money if the pact is accepted during voting Tuesday Those at the top will get some 12 per cent he added While the results of the poll will be known by Wednesday it will be several more days before the college relations committee makes the count final Also included in the offer is dental plan in which the college will pay 50 per cent and assorted benefits totalling some one per cent yearly Hannon said