Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 13 May 1971, p. 2

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commas “mum. .V. mm. W muc mo “5,” w w, u, -_ admirably for women for kitoh - . ------ v vâ€" ----- i ............. we.” en and wait~ u . . work be taken into court for lgisss figT’rnanager of The. Globe and options he charges only.a nom- penalty and to release the do pregnant pait . - AURORA: Approval for an- n i swppeu Uuu IV]. we gieouuuuuo, u i...._.. crimination or will it be th - al ’ Observes that In some in- 1981 feev and for ‘1 conSIderable back to its owner with only a aftef all Shes had firsthand ex‘ other 60 senior citizens units scurried up to us and said: “Hey Harold, look at this i e news- stances male applicants have out. “me afterwards he keeps 1n few kind words of caution. Perlence as the "mm" 0f “W0 and 10 family units has been rose.” It was pure white and fringed with the tini- Daper that carried the advert' ‘ ~ ~ - - - . . 1se« numbered female a 1' t f much “‘11 he 15 qmte Sure Mr. Ryan’s Well equipped lovely little glrls- aiven to Aurora. Mayor Dick - - I - 1 1 ment? pp man s or ad- that the do and h. own. a . , Ma I throw a “laurel” to the e _ est bit of pink. t was quite ove y. It was my g 18 er re flI‘St ald wagon can be seen y Illmgworth annwnced the chance to hear the “rose-king” of Canada give his ver .i ' ‘ ' ' . . . t sed pOSItlons that indicated a in accord, in other words have many times and in many places; Curtaln Club members and 5213’, agreement had been reached . . - - . expert opinion and compare it With mine. As he Do women reallv w . ant to - - » . garbage trucks and road ganysqy‘xgfl pl‘gel‘alllce for women. . settled down satisfactorily. and of course he has patrolled “Carry on chaps, you’re doing a by tovm officials with Ontario _ _ . e - n e other hand, he ponits out, To be even more certain con- Richvale. I have often seen him marvelous job and to you Housing Corporation and Do- held it between forefinger and thumb, Harold Mills said, ‘Say, that’s really pretty.” I liked him. the “’ -‘ - . . 7 - , be giggfigtgebd aéiod géécelxltayfls tllmons many people have been wasting time cerning this hip. Ryan re-‘there, and so have many otherigeoffrey Mitchell, several partment of Trade and Dev- prentices? p emae dp- and carfare they can 111 afford to Sires an) rould-be purchaser people. Any statement to the Darts .N elopment heads. Invitations for Incidentally now tha,E your garden is bloomin Th 1 . . . . . apply for pOSitions that they have 51%“ a §a ement piomismg contrary is both uniust and un- MR5. WILLIAM BUNKER, proposals op 'the pl-oJoot “on u . ‘ g e aw speclfles that mdwlduals no chance in the world f ft, that lie (01~ she) Will not part founded. 190 May Avenue, be issued Within a few days, he Why n0t enquue at KlngCIaftS 01' the YWCA about 0 8'8 mg- mm the animal to anyone else, Yes, we are all suffering Richmond Hill. said. the flower arranging classes? trlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllflllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\lllllllllllllllllllllllllllll l l llllllllllllllll\lllllllllllll“Illlllllllllll“\“llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllull““lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\lll\\l\llllllllll |llllllllllllllllll“lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\\lllllllllllllllllllllllllllll“llllllll“lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllullllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllll“lllllllllllllllllllllll\lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllmlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\l“Illll\llllllllllllull“llllll\llllll\lllllnlllllllllllllllllllllllllllll“llllllllll“lll\lllllllllllllllllllllmllllll!-F “I Am Tired Of The Tyranny 0f Spoiled Brats ” â€" A Middle-Aged Professor Speaks Out On Campus Rebels ‘ tana, appeared in the Bill- ings. Montana Gazette. It has since been entered into the Congressional Record. and because of its relevance to“ parents and our children, in Canada, it is now repro- duced here. Excepting Am- erica’s achievements in their Space Program. substitute the word. “Canada” where Dr. Toole refers to Ameri- can, social, industrial and medical advances these past 150 years. And he's fed up with the noise and nonsense from (The following by Dr. Ross Toole, professor of History at the University of Mon- Should Heed Voice Of Peeple The mayor has explained that this is the first step in turning the several unsightly scars on the face of the Town of Vaughan’s landscape, left by sand and gravel mining oper- ations, into things of beauty and that the profits from the Highway 27 Operation will be used to create Apparently only Councillors Gordon Risk and David Fraser have opened their ears to the voice of the people. for they were the only two elected officials to vote against the proposal at a meeting May 3. While the law places the onus on the newspaper to ensure that job opportunity advertising does not dis- criminate, many advertisers find the law hard to live with. Since “The Liberal” has for many years had only one “Help Wanted” column, we did not anticipate any real problems. When an advertiser asks for an experienced teller, a homemaker, a building superintend- ent, a licensed mechanic, 3. cashier, a full-time cook or experienced hair- dresser, it is not our business to determine whether the employer is looking for a man or a woman. The Women’s Equal Employment Opportunity Act, which came into force in Ontario on December 1 last is making life difficult for people employed in the classified advertising department of provincial newspapers. It has become quite evident in the last few weeks that the majority of members of the 1971-72 Town of Vaughan Council have lost sight of the basic rights of the people who elected them. Mayor Garnet Wil- liams,. Regional Councillor Albert Rutherford, Councillors Fred Arm- strong, John Gilbert and Dalton Mc- Arthur are determined to carry through their decision to establish a sanitary landfill site (garbage dump) in the Connor Gravel Pit on Highway 27. This despite determ- ined opposition by the residents of the area involved and a petition which bore 1,000 signatures at last report with many more being added every day. But when the advertiser wants a “Girl Friday”, a “commission sales- man”, a “young man” to cut grass, a part-time “saleslady”, or “waitâ€" ress” or ‘x‘smart young lady”. it is quite a task to try to convince the party at the other end of the tele- phone that this is illegal. The Women’s Bureau of the De- partment of Labor would like all newspapers to establish “neutral” help wanted columns, and there have been rumblings that newspapers that do not conform strictly to the rule may be taken to court. It will be interesting to see what happens. how companies will react when women start lining up for jobs as automobile spray painters, welder- fitters, or kitchen cabinet installers. r‘~r-- "a a secret ballot to carry out the wishes of the majority of the people. When an elected body fails to realize this and fails to act with the wishes of the people as its guideline, it is no longer a democratic institution. It then becomes a dictatorship, border- ing on totalarianism. -.----.v.. L\'wJA;V~u Jun uuucL 0. Will the golf club that advertises for women for kitchen and waitress work be taken into court for dis- crimination, or will it be the news- paper that carried the advertise< ment? Do women really want to work on garbage trucks and road gangs? Will the plumbers’ and bricklayers’ unions be persuaded to accept female ap- prentices ? Democracy is government of the people, by the people, for the people, a fact which legislators at all levels should keep in mind constantly. These legislators are chosen by the people by the democratic process of A LL 4 Subscription Rate $5.00 per year; to United States $6.00; 15c single copy Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Member Canadian Weekly Newspapers Association Published by Richmond Hill Liberal Publishing Co. Ltd. W. S. COOK, Publisher “Second class mail, registration number 0190” THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Thursday, May 13, 1971 Classified Dilemma An Independent Weekly: Established 1878 whiz liberal some of his students and others of the younger gen- eration. His solutions? First- ly he‘d expel all students who don‘t obey the rules. Here's what he says â€"- Ed- itor.) I am 49 years old. It took me many years and consid- erable anguish to get where I am -â€"- which isn’t much of anyplace except exurbia. I was nurtured in depression; I lost four years to war; I am invested with sweet; I have had one coronary; I am a “Liberal,” square and I am a professor. I am sick of the "younger generation," Women’s Burea " Director Dr. Lita- Rose Betcherman, oresees no immin- ent prospects of prosecution. She regards the act as educational rather than militant in its intent, a vehicle for ensuring equality of opportunity for women in fields where they are already accepted, but underpaid. It is no secret that many comp- anies deliberately re-classify jobs and lower the wage scale when hiring women in positions formerly held by men. And many a businessman has admitted privately, if not publicly, that he prefers women for certain jobs, arguing, “They don’t have a family to support, we don’t have to pay them as much”, even though the woman is as efficient, as productive, as conscientious as her male counter- part. Professional organizations, such as teacher groups, and many whiteâ€" collar unions, have been successful in eliminating this type of discrimin- ation, but in many areas of organized and unorganized labor, the male workers have been just as guilty as the employers. The concerned citizens of Vaughan are willing and determined to fight this project to the end. We assure them of our support and believe that somewhere along the line they will meet with those in authority who will recognize that government in a democracy is the will of the majority â€" not of a few elected officials. Some of the more militant women’s liberationists have gone a bit far â€"- too far even for the liking of the average women, but it is interesting to note that in some instances the new law is proving that it is not only women who have suffered from dis« crimination in the labor field. who breach provisions of the act are liable to prosecution and to a maximum fine of $800 if found guilty, and that corporations, trade unions or employer groups are sub- ject to a maximum penalty of $3,000. Harry Outhet, classified advertisâ€" ing manager of “The Globe and Mail”, observes that in some in- stances male applicants have out- numbered female applicants for ad- vertised positions that indicated a preference for women. Although experts have given asâ€" surance that pollution of ground water and/or of the Humber River is not likely, as long as the least sus- picion of doubt remains on this point, unless definite assurance can be given that there will be absolutely NO pollution, the project in an area of many homes depending on indi- vidual wells should not, indeed MUST not be approved. 7 7 And particularly would you do so when you knew that a public- spirited citizen (Leslie Erlic'k) has offered to buy the 27 acres at the present market price and turn them into a beauty spot at his own expense? We think not. The project is a worthy one â€" but should it be achieved at the expense of the people who live in the area of the Connor Pit who will be exposed to the stench of decaying garbage, the flies and vermin it will attract. the hazards of greatly multiplied road traffic and the pollution by dust, odor and noise for a period of at least a decade. but more likely to be at least two decades, to acquire the doubtful blessing of a hundred foot high mountain of garbage? Honestly, men, would you exchange places with the people in that area â€" would yOu welcome a mountain of garbage based on 100 acres of land in ex- change for a present hole occupying only 27 acres? these beauty spots in other areas of the township. I am a professor of history at. the University of Mon- Lana, and I am supposed to have “liaison” with the young. Worse still, I am a father of seven children. They range in age from seven to 23 â€" and I am fed up with nonsense. I am tired of being blamed, maimed and contrite; I am tired of tolerance and the reaching out (which is always my fun- ction) for understanding. I am sick of the total irration- ality of the campus "rebel," whose bearded visage. diny hair. body odor and "tactics" hippies, yippies, militants and nonsense. I read with amazement, in your April 29 edition of “The Liberal,” a letter containing a most unwarranted attack on the integrity of our esteemed James Ryan! I have no hesita- tion in stating that I don’t beâ€" lieve a word it contains, and neither do a good many more people with whom I have con- versed. It is crammed full of inaccuracies which, I hope, spring from misinformation and not from malice. To call Mr. Ryan merely a “dog-catcher,” would indeed be a misnomer, because actual “dog-catching” is only part of his wide-ranging job. His cor- rect title is “Canine Control Of- ficer" â€" and right here it might be well to assure your correspondent that the word “canine” means “dog!” Mr. Ryan’s duties include dog-cat- ching of course, but in addition he seeks out and reports cases of sickness, neglect or cruelty. He picks up strays, takes them to a warm clean shelter where they can be fed, and he tries to find their owners. Dear Mr. Editor Failing that, he keeps them in his hygienically conducted kennels until that original owner turns up, or a new one is found. Even then he only allows his proteges to go to homes he considers suitable. For such adâ€" options he charges only a nom- inal fee, and for a considerable time afterwards he keeps in touch. until he is quite sure that the dog and his owner are in accord, in other words have settled down satisfactorily. Of course, until school is out in June the stud- ents’ time is limited to evenings and Saturdays but I feel sure now, if he makes a success of the jobs he has taken on and I’m sure he will, he won’t have too much idle time this summer. I had the odd query as to the reliability of a student. To this my only reply could be, “Give him a chance to prove himself.” So far, everyone who has interviewed him has agreed to do so. u There is money to be earned this summer if young people will look for job opportunities. Of course, before summer arrives, there’s another job that has to be well done to ensure a summer-long contract. An ad placed now will give good openings for students and a job well done will, I am sure, reward them with lots of work this summer just by the recommendation of one employer to neighbors and friends. Tire- morning after “The Liberal” appeared I had to cancel the third week of the advertisement because of the terrific response he received: Dear Mr. Editor: "MW" I read with very keen interest the letter of suggested programs for teenagers written by Mrs. Rita Rosenfeld in a recent issue of “The Liberal”. In the same issue our son ran an advertisement for the second week seeking employment for the summer. v are childish but brutal, naive but dangerous. and the es- sence of arrogant tyrannyâ€"- the tyranny of spoiled brats. I am terribly disturbed that I may be incubating more of the same. Our household is permissive. our approach to discipline is an apology and a retreat from standards â€" usually accom- panied by a gift in cash or kind. It’s time to call a halt; time to live in an adult world where we belong, and time to put these people in their places. We owe the “younger generation" what all “older generations” have IN DEFENCE 0F JAMES RYAN SUMMER EMPLOYMENT! mt WINK . w: 50w.» 3mg “3ka 9 mm“; “me 1 11 3051' OPENED! WMT Tim I 1!“ wwr A Let’s Not Make Maple Another Pollution Crisis!! Roosevelt Drive, Langstaff. MRS. ENA LUNAU, but, should circumstances arise when it was impossible to keep the creature, it will be returned 130 the Ryan Kennels. This, please be assured, applies only to dogs Mr. Ryan has found homeless, and when he has not been able to locate any owner. Mr. Ryan is certainly not in business “raising and selling dogs” as your corres- pondent stated. If Mr. Ryan charged anybody any sort of fee for picking up stray dogs, he would indeed be wealthy, but to my certain knowledge he does no such thing. That he considers part of his duties as canine control of- ficer, which also include side- lines as going to and fro in all weather and at all hours trying to alleviate the distress of crea- tures than cannot help them- selves. If on the other hand some owners deliberately allow their dogs to stray, or neglect to buy the requisite dog-licenses â€"- both of which are offences ag- ainst the law â€" and Mr. Ryan becomes aware of it, then he acts as a loyal servant of the municipality should. For any owner to retrieve such a stray a penalty is required, and often a fine. Yet even then, in some in- stances where the lapse was inadvertent, and the persons genuinely distressed, our cont- rol officer has been known to waive his right to the fee or penalty and to release the dog back to its owner with only a few kind words of caution. owed younger generations â€" lOVe,’protection to a point, and respect when they de- serve it. We do not owe them our souls, our Pl‘iVacy, our whole lives â€" and above all, we do not owe them im- munity from our mistakes, or their own. Every generation makes mistakes, always has and al- ways will. We have made our share. But my genera- tion has made America the most affluent country on earth. It has tackled, head- On, a racial problem which no nation on earth in the history of mankind had dared to do. It has publicly " w‘wwr I wonder, as I am certain many do, where we would find anyone in public service who would, without remuneration (for his rescue service is free) leave his bed to rescue a woun- ded dog on the roadside at 4am on a cold January morn- ing. Recently Vaughan, Markham and Richmond Hill’s Canine Control Officer James Ryan has come under some fire from misinformed quarters. In his defence, there is much to be said. Where too, would we find a man who would face a large, frightened, snarling dvog. When a policeman stopped, James Ryan went forward and armed with only a leash took hold of what was, for all we know, a rabid animal. ,from higher taxes â€" Mr. Ryan among us or so I suspect -â€"â€"- but I hardly think that patient and much maligned gentleman can be blamed for such 21 cal- amity! It is high time we got be- hind Mr. Ryan and gave him the support he needs. His worrk Whom may I ask is the “an- cient” critic who writes the Curtain Club reviews? (April 29 issue, first section, back page). I saw “Generation” myself on closing night and found it a refreshing change indeed. Rich- mond Hill has lived in the past too long. “It’s wonderful to see some new young faces on stage talking without “phony” British accents (to set the record straight I, too, am British). It amazed me how much your critic knew about pregnancy. You would swear he had been through nine months of expec- tant motherhood himself. I quote, “Her carriage is all wrong for a pregnant lady.” It is to be hoped that your correspondent is the victim of an alarming series of misunder- standings, and that she did not intend her letter to be as vit- uperative as it sounded. Dear Mr. Editor: on ralbies control saves the lives of people, particularly of children, every day. We all need him! Let’s show him we’re not ungrateful for the fine job he does and has done for 11 years Dear Mr. Editor May I throw a “laurel” to the Curtain Club members and say, “Carry on chaps, you’re doing a marvelous job and to you Geoffrey Mitchell, several Bonnie Sheppard carried the pregnant part admirably â€" after all she’s had firsthand ex- perience as the mother of two lovely little girls. declared war on poverty and it has gone to the moon; it has desegregated schools and abolished polio; it has pres- ided over the beginning of what is probably the greatest social and economic revol- ution in man’s history. It has. begun these things, not fini- shed them. It has declared itself, and committed itself, and taxed itself, and damn near run itself into the ground in the cause of social justice and reform. Its mistakes are fewer than my father's generation â€"â€" or his father's. or his. Its greatest mistake is not Viet- nam; it is the abdication of MORE ABOUT CANINE CONTROL Trayborn Drive. Richmond Hill. BRIAN MacNAMARA, ANCIENT CRITIC? EMMA HALL, 89 Rockport Crescent, Richmond Hill. Dangerously Premature It may be that future, more detailed, studies will prove that fears about marijuana’s effects are unfounded. But as of now. sufficient doubts have been raised to lead most reasonable and mature people to conclude that legislation of marijuana would be a dangerous move, in that it would give society's blessing to a drug that could cause grave harm to the bodies and minds of users. llllllllllllll1lilll“Illllllllllll1lllllIllllllllllllllllllllll\lllllllllllllllllllllll GEORGINA TWP.: stricter en- forcement of sanitary regula- tions could condemn 1,000 homes on the south shore of Lake Simcoe within the next two or three years, warns Councillor Bob Pollock. The problem lies in the numerous undersized lots, the high water table, sandy soil and surface drainage conditions. Regula- tions call for minimum lot size Delegates to the White House Conference on Youth at Estes Park, Colorado, Voted 403 to 156 last week to urge legaliza‘ tion of marijuana. Another weeky publication, American Medical News, re- ports in its April 12 issue: “Four scientists in Oxford, England, making the only ma- jor laboratory study of mariju- ana in Britain, have found strong evidence that the drug is unsafe and in some cases may be highly dangerous. Wil- liam Paton, PhD., professor of pharmacology at Oxford Uni- versity, and a member of the‘ research team, said that one major question that still re- mained was whether m:.rijuana had a thalidomide-type effect on pregnant women. He said the possibility could not be ruled out.” There is little likelihood, for- tunately, lchat government of- ficials will be influenced by the recommendation. Rather, they will await the results of scien- tific studies as to the effects of marijuana on the human body. of 7.500 square feet for one municipal service (usually water) and 15,000 square feet for lots receiving no municipal services. In the current issue of the Journal of the American Medi- cal Association, two psychia- trists say that their study of 38 of their patients, ranging in age from 13 to 24, “demon- strates the possibility that mod- erate-to-heavy use of mariju- ana in adolescents and young people without predisposition to psychotic illness may lead to ego decompensation ranging from mild ego disturbance to psychosis.” The average person may not know exactly what “ego de- compen‘sation” means, but he recognizes that what the psy- chiatrists are saying is that the use of marijuana may lead to adverse psychological effects. its first responsibility, its pusillanimous capitulation to its youth, and its sick pre- occupation with the prob- lems, the mind, psyche, the raison d’etre of the young. Since when have children ruled this country? By vir- tue of what right, by what accomplishment should thou- sands of teenagers, wet be- hind the ears and utterly without benefit of having lived long enough to have e'i’cher judgment or wisdom, become the sages of our time? The psychologists, the ucators and preachers the young are rebelling Richmond (Virginia) Times- Dispatch ag- Height/1 Of Your Ambition We walked down into the greenhouse again and Harold Mills pointed out his favorite species of the thirty-two indoor varieties they produce, the red American Beauty. As we strolled I noticed an un- canny resemblance in some of these species to young tomato plants; ‘Oh yes, well some of my boys have them all over the place.” (Mr. Mills has seventy employees and they work in shifts seven days a week 24 hours per day). “We also have a banana tree, some fig trees and two or three lemon trees. But aside from that â€" roses are the only thing we Near the conclusion of our talk Mr. Mills still hadn’t said something that he wanted to say, and finally he blurted it out. “I’m afraid we may not be in Richmond Hill very much longer, we’re phas- ing out.” High real estate taxes and Mr. Benson’s white paper are the reasons. And he was sincerely disappointed. He drew a picture out of his breast pocket to show me and it depicted his father at nine- teen standing in his first greenhouse at Centre and Pugsley. It was dated 1907. I might add and the rejects are thrown on the floor. They looked fine to me). Once graded and bunched, the roses were quickly shipped out by van to the client or Wheeled into the refrigeration units. A freshly cut rose can be stored for three days without being shipped out. grow.” As I stepped out ’of the greenhouse, a man scurried up to us and said: “Hey Harold, look at this rose.” It was pure white and fringed with the tiniâ€" est bit of pink. It was quite lovely. It was my chance to hear the “rose-king” of Canada give his expert opinion and compare it with mine. As he held it between forefinger and thumb, Harold Mills said, ‘Say, that’s really pretty.” I liked him. I walked through the main greenhouse with Harold Mills. Thousands upon thousands of bloom- ing roses produced a fragrance that defies words. A young man was loading great bunches of freshly cut roses into white bins on a dolly. We followed the dolly into a large room where men and women were placing these roses, one at a time, onto a Scooped out conveyor belt. Each rose was automatic- ally cut to the desired length and dropped into the appropriate bin. From here, ladies picked away the outer petals of the roses, cut away unwanted leaves and graded the roses. (They grade ruthlessly By BONNIE SHEPPARD “Hey Harold, Look At This Rose!” It’s spring all right! D’arcy (lite-year-old daughter) just nipped into the house with her first bouquet of dandelions the other day. Perhaps if I felt more industrious I’d start another batch of dandelion wine. (Last year our front lawn pro- duced ten gallons!) In any case flowers bring joy into any season. H. G. Mills Limited in Richmond Hill is in the flower business and last week (Mother’s Day) they brought joy to people three hundred thousand times over. It’s the biggest week of the year for them, mind you, but fully three hundred thousand roses left their greenhouses. Harold Mills explained to me that they are the largest exclusive producers of roses in Canada and I believe him. They have twenty-three greenhouses in Richmond Hill at three locations on Pugsley Avenue and they’re all linked together by great long tubes. These tubes transport the steam necessary to heat each green- house. If you’re at all statistically minded, note that it requires eight hundred thousand gallons of oil a year to generate the heat which produces that steam. ' ainst our archaic mores and morals, our materialistic ap- proaches to life, our failures in diplomacy, our terrible ineptitude in racial matters, our narrmmess as parents, our blindness to the root ills of society. Balderdash! Society hangs together by the stiching of many threads. No 18-year-old is simply the product of his 18 years: He is the product of 3,000 years of development of mankind â€"â€" and throughout those years, injustice has existed and been fought; rules have grown outmoded and been changed; doom has hung over men and been avoided; In 1119 Spoilighft The world is vast and you are in it. We strive to make our lives worthwhile First of all, we must love each other, And greet your neighbor with a. smile. Then again, we must consider What it is you want to be. Then mark the height of your ambition Make your choice from what you see. Don’t look for something that is easy, Set your goal, and fight it through. The many jobs we call skilled labor Just may not be meant for you. So the higher your position, Will cause less grief and strife. Give it careful thought while choosing What it is you want from life. The world has many things to offer, So choose wisely while you may. Don’t turn back, keep marching forward, To win, you must go all the way. unjust wars have occured; pain has been the cost of pmgress -â€" and man has persevered. As a professor and the father of seven, I have wat- ched this new generation and concluded that most of them are fine. A minority are not â€" and the trouble is that minority threatens to tyrannize the majority and take over. I dislike that min- ority; I am aghast that the ma- jority “takes” it and allows itself to be used. And I ad- dress myself to both the minority and the majority. I speak partly as a historian, (Continued on Page 14) VIDA WILLIAMSON, Richvale. 53 Edgar Avenue,

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