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The Westmount examiner, 1986-04-10, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" vhite, ars of aring ~~ es AE City financial statement: 1985 surplus brings reserve to $3.3 million By LAUREEN SWEENEY operating surplus of $1,148,971 nhs by the City of Westmount fol 1985 brings the city\u2019s total accumulated surplus to more than $3.3 million, according to the year's audited financial statement adopted by city council Monday night.Citizens can \u201crest assured\u201d their city is financially sound, said Alderman Phillip Aspinall, finance commissioner, who announced that West- mount had maintained its AA bond rating, the highest level in Quebec.This standing, based partially ona municipality's debt service ratio and ability of citizens to pay, is shared with only two other cities in the province, Beaconsfield and Mount Royal, according to statistics released last month.Highlights from the 1985 financial statement show the city\u2019s total expenditures for the year amounted to $31,815,793 against total revenues of $32,964,764 million.Total revenues exceeded budget by $277,364 while expenditures were below budget by $871,607.Among unexpected windfalls singled out by Alderman Aspinall were increased revenues from short-term investment interest, amusement and business taxes and increased building activity.Beyond Westmount's Borders .10 Building permits .14 Classified advertising .22-24 Coming Events .Community calendar .Co Editorials/We Say .Education .Entertainment and eating Examining the Files .Fire calls for the week .Home improvement .Judy Yelon'scartoon .Letters/You Say .Official Notice Board .2 OurMPsays .Our MNAsays.0202020202 5 Professional cärds .Realty .cocina.~ Religious news .21 Social and women's interests .16-20 Sports and recreation .26,27 ERS : The city also received a credit of more than $200,000 in water cost adjustments relating to prior years and saved another $250,900 from the budget by not undertaking several projects such as street lighting and traffic signal installations.Manpower shortage A shortage of manpower in the Public Security Unit and recreation department as well as a light snow last year also helped the treasury.On the other hand, the city had to pay out unexpected tax refunds of $367,600 plus interest to property owners winning valuation appeals from previous years.Legal fees also were more than expected as were payments for improved pensions for firefighters and bad debts.The total current surplus level of $3,354,028 reported by Alderman Aspinall includes $700,000 to be appropriated from surplus to balance the 1986 budget.In 1985 the city established a new fund for parks and playgrounds development of $270,000 from cadastral operations income and interest.The city\u2019s electric utility netted $856,475, less than the anticipated profit of $872,700.After adopting the 1985 financial statement and appropriation from \u201c surplus, city council again appointed the chartered accountants\u2019 firm of Thorne, Riddell and Company as auditor for 1986.\u201cSure | know what a double play is.That's when they squeeze in two commercials between innings.\" NEXT WEEK'S WEATHER By Capt Eric Neal April 10to 17 This first quarter of the moon usually brings blustery winds with snow and freezing rains then conditions improve generally for the full moon period.Night and day temperatures range during the week, -7°C to 15°C or higher.Stormy in the north and east, but pleasant (n the south through the middle of the week.Cool but mainly sunny for the weekend, with occasional flurries or spotting rain.Cold moonlit nights.St.Catherine St.W.at Greene Friendly, Personalized Shopping - Ample Parking: ©\u201c ET I Ce wt Making all of Westmount your home Vol.LVHII, No.15 ARE YOU FOR REAL, MISTER?: Insurance company employees Claudine Leteb- vre, right, and Paula Cortina lean over a rather stiff and statuesque newcomer to Westmount outside the Westmount Life Building on Sherbrooke and Greene, in order to sneak a peek at the latest news.See item on page nine.Westmount PQ, H3Z 2Y8, Thursday, April 10, 1986 Council meeting caressed 35¢ Dog run decision backed By LAUREEN SWEENEY Alderman John Shingler stood firmly behind the decision to move the dog run out of Westmount Park despite an appeal by some dog owners at Monday night's city council meeting for reconsideration of the plan which is tied in with relands- caping of the park.Emphasizing that council had made its decision \u2018very clear\u201d that \u201cthe centre of the park was not appropriate for a dog run,\u201d he said the city was committed, however, to maintaining a number of runs for dogs licensed in Westmount and to permitting them to walk in the parks on a leash.\u201cWe all believe dogs are an intrinsic part of contemporary life,\u201d he said.The plan for Westmount Park, however, was to \u2018\u201c\u2018parkscape\u201d it creating \u201can idyllic pastoral retreat\u201d for the use of the city's \u201cbipeds.\" He was supported by a number of the 50 citizens who attended the city Continued on page 25 by spring air: no nasty encounters \u2018 City council dealt with so many potentially explosive issues at Monday night\u2019s statutory April meeting attended by some 50 citizens, that one city official described it as \u201ca powder keg.\u201d But that powder keg never blew up.Despite some opposition, an atmosphere of spring thaw \u2014 perhaps heightened by open doors which let in the spring air \u2014 prevailed right to the end as council maneuvered through 32 agenda items, imposing a parks\u2019 curfew, banning bicycles from the parks entirely, implementing a bold daytime parking plan and holding firm on its decisions to move the dog run out of Westmount Park and proceed with the latest Greene avenue tower (see separate stories).Mayor Brian Gallery, who kept the question period going beyond the 30-minute limit so all could be heard, later called the session \u2018\u201cthe most productive, democratic and informative meeting of this council.\u201d Extra seating had to be provided inthe foyer outside the council chamber to accommodate the unusual number of citizens, leaving standing room only forstaff.Most members of the public stayed until the end, about 10:30 pm, with the notable exception of outspoken council opponent Allen Nutik who quietly left partway through.Most came out on the dog run question and many expressed con- and littering was called for.cern about not only dog droppings Twice when Alderman John but all kinds of litter left behind ) after the winter snows.Shingler was interrupted during Greater enforcement of dog laws Continued on page 19 +\u2014.e00.e.eeeee6e606060660606666660À Missing the rush?Spring has sprung, The grass has riz, I wonder where My business is?IS the spring rush passing your business by?Now that the snow has gone, people are out buying for spring: those bright summer fashions, items and services to spruce up the house and garden, food for the first barbecue, summer holiday trips, even a new house or car.But can every local merchant and businessperson say they are getting their full share of this happy season\u2019s buying spree?We'd venture there are one or two who wouldn't turn down a little extra business.But how to get it?Well, we can help.Every week, THE WESTMOUNT EXAMINER provides local businesses the ideal vehicle to get their advertising message to the residents of this consuming community.Then, once a month, we produce a shopper called BUYS which we send to all the homes in Westmount that don\u2019t subscribe to the regular paper.For just a small surcharge on our regular rate, advertisers get their message into every Westmount home, in individually addressed newspapers delivered by mail and surrounded by interesting news residents want to read.That\u2019s Total Market Coverage, which can produce Total Spring Satisfaction.Deadline for both the regular paper and BUYS is 2 pm Tuesday.Call 932-3157 right away to book your space. WESTMOUNT ldo PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given by the undersigned, City Clerk of Westmount, that the Municipal Council of Westmount, at its meeting of 7th April 1986, adopted by resolution, a draft by-law, entitled *'BY-LAW TO DIVIDE THE CITY OF WESTMOUNT INTO ELECTORAL DISTRICTS\"\u201d; That the object of the said draft by-law is to divide the territory of the said city into eight (8) electoral districts, in accordance with the provisions of the Act respecting elections in certain municipalities (R.S.Q.c.E-2.1), as amended and to rescind By-law 918 of the said City; That the boundaries of these eight (8) proposed electoral districts are as follows: Electoral District No.One: Bounded on the north by the northern limits of the city from the western to the eastern limits of the city; on the east by the eastern limits of the city from the northern limits of the city to Cedar; on the south by the middle line of Cedar and the middle line of The Boulevard from the eastern to the western limits of the city; on the west by the western limits of the city from The Boulevard to the northern limits of the city; Electoral District No.Two: Bounded on the north by the middie line of The Boulevard from the western limits of the city to Aberdeen; on the east by the middle line of Aberdeen from The Boulevard to Montrose, thence in a westerly direction following the middle line of Montrose from Aberdeen to Church Hill and thence in a southerly direction following the middie line of Church Hill from Montrose to Cote St.Antoine; on the south by the middle line of Cote St.Antoine from Church Hill to the western limits of the city; on the west by the western limits of the city from Cote St.Antoine to The Boulevard; Electoral District No.Three: Bounded on the north by the middle line of The Boulevard and the middle line of Cedar from Aberdeen to the eastern limits of the city; on the east by the eastern limits of the city from Cedar to Sherbrooke; on the south by the middie line of Sherbrooke and the middle line of Cote St.Antoine from the eastern limits of the city to Church Hill; on the west by the middle line of Church Hill from Cote St.Antoine to Montrose, thence in an easterly direction following the middle line of Montrose from Church Hill to Aberdeen and thence in a northerly direction following the middle line of Aberdeen from Montrose to The Boulevard; Electoral District No.Four: Bounded on the north and east by the middle line of Cote St.Antoine from the western limits of the city to Clarke; on the south by the middle line of Sherbrooke from Clarke to the western limits of the city; on the west by the western limits of the city from Sherbrooke to Cote St.Antoine; Electoral District No.Five: Bounded on the north by the middle line of Sherbrooke from the western limits of the city to Melville; on the east by the middle line of Melville from Sherbrooke to de Maisonneuve, thence in a westerly direction following the middle line of de Maisonneuve projected through Westmount Park, from Melville to Lansdowne, thence in a southerly direction following the middle line of Lansdowne and the middle line of Glen from de Maisonneuve to the southern limits of the city; on the south by the southern limits of the city from Glen to the western limits of the city; and on the west by the western limits of the city from the southern limits of the city to Sherbrooke; Electoral District No.Six: Bounded on the north by the middle line of Sherbrooke from Melville to the eastern limits of the city; on the east by the eastern limits of the city from Sherbrooke to St.Catherine; on the south by the middle line of St.Catherine from the eastern limits of the city to Wood; thence in a northerly direction following the middle line of Wood from St.Catherine to de Maisonneuve; thence in a westerly direction following the middle line of de Maisonneuve from Wood to Melville; on the west by the middle line of Melville from de Maisonneuve to Sherbrooke.Electoral District No.Seven: Bounded on the north by the middie line of de Maisonneuve projected through Westmount Park from Lansdowne to Redfern; on the east by the middie line of Redfern from de Maisonneuve to St.Catherine, thence in an easterly and southerly direction following the middle line of St.Catherine and the middle line of Dorchester from Redferd to Bruce; thence in a westerly direction following the middle line of Dorchester from Bruce to Hallowell; thence in a southerly direction following the middle line of the northern part of Hallowell, its southerly projection and the middle line of the southern part of Hallowell from Dorchester to the southern limits of the city; on the south by the southern limits of the city from Hallowell to Glen; and on the west by the middie line of Glen and the middie line of Lansdowne from the southern limits of the city to de Maisonneuve.Electoral District No.Eight: Bounded on the north by the middle line of de Maisonneuve from Redfern to Wood, thence in a southerly direction, following the middle line of Wood from de Maisonneuve to St.Catherine, thence in an easterly direction following the middle line of St.Catherine from Wood to the eastern limits of the city; on the east by the eastern limits of the city from St.Catherine to the southern limits of the city; on the south by the southern limits of the city from the eastern limits of the city to Hallowell; and on the west by the middie line of the southern part of Hallowell, its northerly projection and the middie line of the northern part of Hallowell from the southern limits of the city to Dorchester, thence in an easterly direction following the northerly and westerly direction following the middle line of Dorchester and the middle line of St.Catherine from Bruce to Redfern, thence in a northerly direction following the middle line of Redfern from St.Catherine to de Maisonneuve; the whole as shown outlined on the following sketch: LEGENDE/LEGEND .1437 8 2079 2 7?3 igs TOTAL 13762 WESTMOUNT 4 2072 AvG 172 s 1893 415% (076 8 150 13% 146C » 1347 THAT any \u201celector,\u201d within the meaning of Section 3.6 of the said Act may examine the said draft by-law at the office of the City Clerk, City Hall, 4333, Sherbrooke, Westmount, Québec, from Monday to Friday inclusive, between the hours of 8:30 a.m.and 4:30 p.m.That, within the meaning of section 3.6 of the said Act, an \"elector\" is a person entered on the electoral list made pursuant to the Election Act (R.S.Q., c.E-3) for a polling subdivision, or part thereof, comprised in the municipality, as well as any other natural person who is: 1) entered on the valuation roll, on the roll of rental values or on the collection roll of the municipality and who is 2) entered on the electoral list of the municipality or on the schedule to the assessment roll, or would be entitled to be entered under the act governing the municipality if the length of time during which that person has been entered on the roll contemplated in paragraph 1 were not taken into account.That, within ten (10) days from the publication of this notice, any such elector may inform the City Clerk of Westmount in writing of any objection he or she has to the said draft by-law; That any such written objection must be addressed to: The City Clerk of Westmount, City Hall, 4333 Sherbrooke, Westmount, Quebec H3Z 1E2; That the Municipal Council of Westmount shall hold a public meeting for the purpose of hearing the persons attending, on the matter of the draft by-law, if the required number of electors within the meaning of section 3.6 have informed the Clerk in writing of their objection to the draft by-law.The required number is at least: 1) twenty electors in a municipality having a population of under 20,000; 2) one elector for every thousand inhabitants in a municipality having a population of 20,000 or over but under 100,000; 3) one hundred electors in a municipality having a population of 100,000 or over.That, in the case of Westmount, twenty (20) such written objections must reach the City Clerk within the delay prescribed by law, in order to require the holding of a public meeting on the said by-law.GIVEN at Westmount, Quebec, this eighth day of April, 1986.R.C.Wilkins City Clerk WESTMOUNT AVIS PUBLIC est par les présentes donné par le soussigné, greffier de la ville de Westmount, que le conseil municipal de Westmount, à sa séance du 7 avril 1986, a adopté par résolution le projet de règlement intitulé \"RÈGLEMENT SUR LA DIVISION DE LA VILLE DE WEST.MOUNT EN DISTRICTS ÉLECTORAUX\"; Que l'objet dudit projet de règlement est de diviser le territoire de ladite ville en huit (8) districts électoraux, conformément aux dispositions de la Loi sur les élections dans certaines municipalités (L.R.Q., SD et ses modifications et d'abroger le règlement 918 de ladite ille; Que les limites de ces huit (8) districts électoraux proposés sont comme suit: District électoral numéro un: Limité au nord par ia limite nord de la ville à partir de la limite ouest jusqu'à la limite est de la ville; à l'est par la limite est de la ville à partir de la limite nord de la ville jusqu'à Cedar; au sud par la ligne Suite à la page 25 middle line of Dorchester from Halloweli to Bruce, thence in a The following events are scheduled in Westmount this week: Saturday, April 12 D Music and comedy: \u201cA Breath of Scotland\u201d touring company will perform at Westmount High School Auditorium, 8 pin as Sunday, April 13 authors on the rights of authors library system, Westmount Pub Library, 1 pm © D Concert: À musical afternoon with the Golden Age Orchestra of Temple Emanu-El - Beth Sholom, in the temple\u2019s Grover Auditorium, 2pm qu $ C) Symposium: Pesticides Task Force, Victoria Hall, 2 pm D Tea, bake and handicraft sale: To benefit the Sign of the Theotokos Church, 310 Clarke avenue at de Maisonneuve boulevard, 2- 5:30 pm wy O Concert: The Kantus Chorus Choir, St Andrew's - Dominion-Douglas Church, 687 Roslyn avenue, 4pm QG D Round table discussion: or A Monday, April 14 D Meeting: Roslyn School committee, at the school, 7:30 pm m D Meeting: Westmount High School committee, at the school, 7:30pm mm Tuesday, April 15 O Nearly new sale: Sponsored by Pioneer Women's Organization Carmiel Group, in Webster Hall of Westmount Park Church, 4695 de Maisonneuve boulevard, 9:30 am - 3:00 pm - D Meet the author: With Author Alice Parizeau, Westmount Public Library, 7:30 pm a, D Vernissage: Landscapes of Pierre Huot, Kastel Gallery, 1366 Greene avenue, 7:30 pm Où uf Wednesday, April 16 D Meet the author: With Author Hugh Hood, Westmount Public Library, 7:30 W Weekly / Monthly m ® Public meeting / Annual à ® Religious / Cultural event \u2018O* + Forchildren / Sportingevent © & All welcome / Sale @& Nosmoking / Phone for details ® »# Free / Admission charge $ ® Offering / See advertisement | \u20ac Membersonly / .Byinvitation 53 \u20ac=- Members and guests NS Over 35 years serving Westmounters FINE PAINTING AND WOODWORKING All types of renovations FREE ESTIMATES MRAZIK General Contracting Ltd.731-6640 Member Membre WANTED! For information call your sales representative or Louise Wolman at 932-3157 ml April 10, Thursday, 1986 - ie Pesticide forum Sunday attracts minister, top experts and public Where were The following calls were answered by the Westmount Fire Brigade during the past week: Aprill 5:34 pm: Roslyn and Westmount, first responder unit for car accident (see story); 6:55 pm: 21 Stanton, MUC police station 23, first responder unit (see story); April2 11:20 pm: Rear of 610 Clarke, tree burning from rubbing electrical wires; April 3 3:07 am: 263 Melville, first responder unit; 8:28 am: 3035 St Antoine, Aviron Technical School, sprinkler alarm activated by surge in water pressure; 8:00 pm: 4476 de Maisonneuve, burnt food in oven; April4 9:02 am: 331 Clarke, apt 8, first responder unit; 12:50 pm: 4290 de Maisonneuve, burglar alarm (see story); 3:33 pm: 637 Argyle, flood in basement from broken pipe; 6:12 pm: 316 Côte St Antoine, strange odor, probably from drain; 6:33 pm: 637 Argyle, to clean up more water from drain (see above); 7:58 pm: In front of 603 Lansdowne, electrical problem (see story); April5 3:53 pm: 81 Belvedere Circle, grease pot fire in Montreal (see story) 3:53 pm: 81 Belvedere Circle, first respond- er unit (see above); 6:37 pm: Westmount Park centre maze, fire in leaves (see story); 6:56 pm: 221 Clarke, apt 4, first responder unit; 10:12 pm: 4310 Montrose, burglar alarm; 10:33 pm: 4150 Dorchester, defective smoke detector (see story); April 6 4:09 pm: Tupper and Atwater, firebox 126, false alarm; April 7 10:37 am: 400 Lansdowne, apt 402, first responder unit; 1:26 pm: Rosemount and Sherbrooke, strange odor, roof work at Clarke; 2:17 pm: Front of 460 Grosvenor, spilled mable liquid (see story); { pm: 455 Grosvenor, service call (see 0 ry) 8:25 pm: 594 Côte St Antoine, flood from dishwasher, clogged drain.Thief flushed, forgets light A burglar who broke into a house on Westmount avenue near Carleton Saturday night fled empty-handed, leaving behind even his own flashlight, according to police who said the burglar was believed to have been disturbed.Entry was gained by breaking a basement window sometime between 9 pm and 9:15 pm, causing All damages cw rrrooraoctT vw The first-ever Pesticides Task Force Symposium takes place this Sunday at 2 pm at Victoria Hall.The brain-child of Westmount resident Esther Goldenberg, the symposium is proving unique in its ability to attract leading authorities from government, industry and the academic communities to discuss the increasingly controversial issue of pesticide use.\u2019 The list of speakers includes Clifford Lincoln, provincial minister of the environment, offering an introductory welcome, and continues with Dr Donald Ecobichon of McGill University discussing \u201cPesticide awareness in the community.\u201d Other speakers include: Dr Albert Nantel, MD at the Centre Hospitalier de l\u2019Université de Laval, on \u201cMedical awareness of pesticides\u2019; Dr Pierre Lajoie of the département de santé communautaire on \u201cThe impact of pesticide use on public health\u201d; Dr Roland Saint-Jean of Environnement Québec on *'Legislation controlling pesticide sales and use\u201d; and Dr Stuart Hill of Macdonald College, McGill University, Contest entries flow in A good flow of entries is coming in to THE EXAMINER office in response to our contest announced last week.The idea of the contest is to guess what John Turner might have been saying to Jean Chrétien when the two rivals were photographed at Don Johnston\u2019s recent book launch.The photo, with an accompanying \u201cballoon\u201d to be tilled in, was published in last week's issue.Those planning on entering the contest are reminded that all entries must be received at our office, 155 Hillside avenue, Westmount, H3Z 2Y8, before noon Monday to be eligible for one of the three prizes offered: a three-year, a two-year and a one-year subscription to THE EXAMINER.All entries must bear the contestant\u2019s name, address and telephone number.Winners will be published in next week's issue.TAXI 24-HOUR SERVICE plus service on \u201cEffective alternatives to pesticides.\u201d Admission is $2 for adults and $1 for children.There is free parking and a separate entertainment program for the children.Simultaneous translation is to be provided.Doors, windows don't restrain fire crew efforts Westmount firefighters had to break through the locked doors of three homes during the past week to check out calls for assistance, fire officials report.MUC police were called to the scene each time.An alarm call Friday afternoon at a house under renovation at 4290 de Maisonneuve boulevard turned out to be a burglar alarm after emergency crews entered by breaking a basement window.All was reported in order.A window in a back door was broken Saturday at 4150 Dorchester boulevard when a smoke detector was heard beeping shortly after 10:33 pm.The detector was found to be defective and the building was secured.The same evening, an apartment door held by a security chain at 221 Clarke avenue was kicked in by the first responder crew when no answer could be obtained from inside.A woman was subsequently taken to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital by Urgences Santé.Anthony\u2019s VARIETY STORE post office » greeting cards Open 8 am to 8 pm, closed Sundays 4500 St.Catherine W.at Abbott MUCIC BUS TICKETS FOR LUMBER AND PLYWOOD 3 HOME AND INDUSTRY ORDER @ DEPARTMENT @ WEEKDAYS 7:30 AM-5:30 PM SATURDAYS 8:30 PM-4 PM Call 748-6161 SHEARER-BOCK RUTHERFORD INC.50 STINSON BLVD.TWO BLOCKS EAST OF NATIONAL FILM BOARD Your car is an important investment! Why not have it painted or repaired by .Since 1939 \u201cSpecialists In Insurance Estimate Repairs\u201d\u2019 ga Asserting right to road earns cyclist a punch A 19-YEAR-OLD Montreal cyclist sustained a bleeding and swollen nose after being punched by a taxi driver in front of 1308 Greene avenue late Friday afternoon, police report.Although the cabbie apparently fled the scene, a licence number was recorded and the incident related to police by the victim and two witnesses.Police said the cyclist told them he had been pedalling east on Sherbrooke at about 5 pm when a taxi slowly started to ease him off the road, finally cutting him off completely.As the car turned south on Greene, the cyclist followed and spoke to the driver at a stop sign, reportedly telling him that he too has a right to use the roadway.The cab driver yelled something the cyclist couldn't understand, police say.The cabbie then left the car and approached the cyclist but left the scene after a man intervened.Soon after, while the cyclist was talking to a woman, the driver came back on foot.The cyclist was grabbed by the shirt collar, punched directly on the nose and yelled at in a language no one could understand, described as possibly Iranian.The witnesses were described as a man working in an office building on Greene and a Montreal social worker.LESLIE M.KATONA B.Comm.Investment, Tax Planning, Income Tax, and R.R.S.P.s Le Groupe À Investars #202-1303 Avenue Greene / Westmount, Que.H3Z 2A7 ° 935-3553 5105 Côte St-Luc Road, Apt.328 / Montreal, Que.H3W 2H5 * 487-5843 Tel.: 341-3031 CLINIQUE VÉTÉRINAIRE PLAZA VETERINARY CLINIC sur rendez-vous by appointment 5333A rue Ferrier Montreal, Que.H4P 1M1 Dr.George Zafir, BSc., DVM Dr.Kathieen Hugessen, BSc., DVM * BIG COYOTE SEASON * PREMIERE Your ticket to our main event 931-5900 931-5900 This ticket entitles you to buy a MILKSHAKE | for only $1.50 | .draz le Ef KLE EY TE LE TE SF ent Ent lls onde Sand ole ll el cle Soh inl Bh\u201d lll ill alle mn.J \u2014\u2014_| a com > pt MUNI J 2 [aS Exa FE \"a aminer Making all of Westmount your heme Published every Thursday by J.W.Sancton & Sons Ltd.155 Hillside Avenue, Westmount, PQ H3Z 2Y8 ig rh yw.Editorial, Accounting, Circulation, Display Advertising Departments 932-3157 Classified Advertising, 8:30 am to 5 pm weekdays to 8:00 pm Mondays and Tuesdays 931-7511 The Examiner aims to be an independent, clean newspaper for the home, devoted to public service.Mail subscriptions in Canada, $15.00 per year: 2 years $26.50; 3 years $38.75 Subscriptions of less than one year, 35 cents per copy plus $2 handling.Thirty-five cents a copy.Outside Canada, additional $20 00 a year.Member of the Canadian Community Newspapers Association, Ontario Community Newspapers Association.Second class mail registration number 1760 4 - Vol.LVIII, No.15, Thursday, April 10, 1986 CCNA // VERIFIED CIRCUL ATION Pain Biggest bang for tax buck WESTMOUNT, as we've often noted, is fortunate in the wealth and variety of top talent upon which it can and does draw to make it such an excellent community.We were reminded forcibly of this once again by an EXAMINER interview last week with Ald Phillip Aspinall.Here is a Westmounter who favors city council by being one of Canada's top chartered accountants (presidency of their professional association) and thus, logically, our finance commissioner.Mr Aspinall recently concluded a heavy but, he says, absorbing 15 months leading the team which produced the 21-volume study of federal government programs for the Nielsen task force.What he has learned is the extent of the inertia which seems to prevent government eliminating or even changing programs and practices even when their purpose or usefulness is diminished or even past.He translated for our reporter his findings in the federal sphere to the microcosm of local government, reinforcing his longstanding view that the City of Westmount could shrink the size of government and its cost to the ratepayers by contracting out services which might be carried out better by the private sector.It is not a new concept, of course.Unfortunately, it not always has been contemplated in Westmount with favor, perhaps as much because of the innate conservatism of our citizens as the nature of bureaucracy, of whatever proportion, to reduce its size or scope.Westmount, rightly or wrongly, tends to prefer things to remain essentially as they are, even asit is imagined they used to be.Which attitudes, of course, fly in the face of experience, beneficial innovation and changes in society.Garbage removal, which Ald Aspinall specifically cites, at oné time was regarded as an essential municipal responsibility.Entrepreneurs \u201chave discovered profit in garbage; already Westmount also has gained by awarding collection service in the more dispersed areas to a private contractor.Maybe we never will see our public works department without its familiar com- \u2018pactor trucks; but there is every reason to explore making the picking up of all of our city's refuse a matter of a simple contract.One of the reasons Westmount operates a conservatory is to provide plants and flowers for parks and occasions.There is every likelihood that important dollars might be saved by buying floral needs from commercial sources.But when this was hinted at a few years ago there were howls which induced council not to pursue the idea.We never did find out how widespread the protests were, or whether those who could not conceive of a conservatory without gorgeous displays were few but well placed to gain city hall's ear.It would not require 21 volumes to study Westmount's ways of doing things, uncovering those which need not be done and determining what might successfully be hived off to private sector services.The city's own payroll could, over time, be reduced sharply at all levels.It perhaps is too much to hope that this prospect was kept in mind when, commendably, council recently went outside to seek a new director-general.While new style, particularly in communicating with citizens, was mentioned in the advertising, nowhere did we read that one of the skills should be shifting city services to private enterprise.Administering contra¢ts is something else beside adminis- te g a large staff in many departments.If we \u2018are not too hopeful that Ald Aspinall can influence greatly the thinking of enough of his colleagues on the present council, we all should be grateful to him for bringing these thoughts to the attention of those who pay the taxes, If the solons of their own volition donot take bi suggestions seriously, perhaps the citizens themselves will mount the necessary pressure, which is recognized in the advertising for the new city manager as \u201cincreased municipal interest on the part df the citizens of Westmount.\u201d hs ver wrote or inspired that ad expressed ality not always present at city hall deliberations, This week's relatively subdued statutory monthly meeting should be regarded as exceptional.Getting the biggest bang for the tax buck is likély to become a growing cry which city hall will ignore only at its peril.IT IS possible to disagree with someone about the ethics of nonviolence without wanting to kick his face in.Sere ogete \u2014Christopher Hampton VEE YER 59 Di 0M TRIN Travel Via incompetence A LONDON, Ont, woman visiting relatives here last week has vowed that she never again will make the trip by train.Or perhaps she will if the politically- appointed chairman of Via Rail is fired along with as many down the chain of responsibility necessary to render the publicly-owned passenger train service reasonably reliable and customer-mind- ed.Readers will recall the recent bad experiences of a local couple travelling to London \u2014 yes, the same family connections \u2014 recounted on this page.Despite the subsequent assurances of Mr B.Eldon Horsman of Westmount, Via's executive vice-presi- dent, nothing much seems to have changed in inculcating his personal dedication in lower management echelons.We suspect patronage office holders at the top affect attitudes all the way down.The London lady was travelling with a three-year-old child, vainly thinking rail would be less of a hassle than air and also to give her daughter her first train experience.London, it should be noted, is one of the prominent cities on Via's vaunted Windsor - Quebec City \u201ccorridor\u201d This key route does not have, as one might expect, any through trains.To travel its length one must make changes in Toronto and Montreal.The corridor might better be described as a loose chain with the two principal cities its weak links.Therein lay the roots of this incident.The Windsor - Toronto train was 15 minutes late out of London, had lost another five minutes by the time it got to the Ontario capital.A chronic ailment of Via seems to be lateness, something which even Mussolini did not tolerate on Italy\u2019s raiiways.Hanigan & Co do not seem to have got a handle on this basic, elementary fault which, in turn, is at the root of their many other woes and complajnts from the public.What happened at Toronto\u2019s Union Station beggars the imagination.Many of the passengers were making connections, onward to Ottawa, Montreal and east.Most of them transferred successfully.Except for six persons, including an older couple headed for the Maritimes and the mother and daughter coming here.As these last would-be passengers reached the gate for the Montreal train, the gate was closed and the attendant took down the sign, declaring their train had left \u2014 without them.No one seemed to give a hoot.Indeed, no Via Rail functionaries seemed to know anything beyond their immediate job, and couldn\u2019t have cared less.Certainly, the conductor of the London - Toronto train provided no information as to whether or not the Montreal train would be waiting and offered no advice (let alone assistance) to the elderly couple or the young mother.It was a free-for-all scramble, The next Montreal train was two hours later.The Maritime couple missed their Montreal connection.By coincidence, the London woman and child returned home last Friday, the day of a CN derailment near Cornwall which fouled up all trains, including Via*s.The passenger service, however, still managed to mess up its passenger information function.It took four phone calls that morning to learn anything useful about arrangements which, as it turned out, proved incorrect.Via's \u201ccorridor\u201d is an obstacle course littered with incompetence.His Worship the CN director + ' i WE'RE not quite sure what t§ make of the appointment of Mayor Brian O'N.Gallery to the board of directors of Canadian National Railways.Co Having made known our thoughts on political appointments at the top of Crown corporations (above, re Via Rail) it safely can be assumed that we believe proven expertise which might contribute to the welfare and success of the given organization should be a prerequisite.This applies particularly to chairpersons and presidents and othr! officeholders with direct responsibility, less so perhaps for other directors.In ry we would support the argument that'the board of a railway benefits from a judicious mixture of railway people and othe from outside the industry.i It somehow would be: breferable if announcements of the filli g of vacancies in top offices of government owned corporations, such as CN, were ade by existing officers rather than fade political masters.After all, this is the practice of non-government companies, regardless of whom their principal shatcholders may be.We suppose it is the nature Lot politicians that they feel they must have their names associated with anything; within their purview which might be construed as good news, including new appointments.Thus the transport minister, Mr Don Mazankowski, was moved to name Mr Gallery, immediately bringing forth the coupled (and to many, obvious) information that our mayor is also a long-time devoted member of the Progressive Conservative Party and an intimate of Prime Minister Brian Mulroney.Aha! Political yeah stingy ad VOGUE.appointment! It surely would be far better, more dignified, more appropriate for all concerned if new directors were announced by the chairmen concerned, in CN\u2019s case Mr Gallery's fellow Westmounter, Dr J.Maurice LeClair.We cannot see that the government of the day gains from hogging the kudos.Rather, the PC crowd have raised the hackles of the citizen-electors by elevating patronage to an even worse-sounding level of practice than did their Liberal predecessors.Politicians have this compulsion to self-inflict damage to their image which otherwise might be pointed to with satisfaction by the public.Governments get themselves defeated, despite accomplishments, by the perceptions they give off of venality, corruption, payola and the like, even when at root the truth is otherwise.Having taken the opportunity of this appointment of a prominent local figure to lecture the appointers, we cannot condemn the appointee.Mayor Gallery is perfectly entitled to hold whatever offices he chooses so long as they do not impair his effectiveness or dignity as our chief magistrate, which is not in any case intended to be his sole preoccupation.He already has a long list of other directorships, which do him credit.On the Canadian National board he may be expected to bring valuable viewpoints to his colleagues there, as an elected public office holder and, in particular to the waterborne side of CN's activities through his long association with the shipping world, as publisher of two of its principal organs.In short, s we congratulate him.« 2HISAIDGSU'E san: 54 4 Tire Westmaum Examiner Forty-five Years Ago April 10, 1941 \u201cDescribed by co-chairman J.A.C.Colvil and D.A.Hanson as a \u2018truly amazing\u2019 response, the sum of $31,268 was the City of Westmount's share in the Dominion-wide drive on behalf of the six Canadian War Services, according to figures released last night.With several more contributions still to be collected, the total as it stands is 116 percent of the original $27,000 objective, proving once again that Westmount residents are second to none in answering a call to give their country financial aid.\u201d Thirty-five Years Ago April 6, 1951 \u201cSergeant Alban Carlin, of the 2nd Battalion Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, arrived at his home on Claremont avenue Tuesday morning, having come by plane and train direct from the fighting front in Korea, via Tokyo and Vancouver, he said.Sgt Carlin is a son of Mr and Mrs Thomas Carlin, well-known local residents.Needless to say the returning veteran of two wars was received by his family in a tearful and joyous reunion.\u201d \u201cVincent Auriol, President of the French Republic, will pay a fleeting visit to the City of Westmount on his way to Dorval Airport Monday afternoon, it was announced today.The chief executive's visit will consist of a drive through Westmount led by a motorcade escort from the Police Department.\u201d Twenty-five Years Ago April 7, 1961 \u2018Westmount City Council Monday night approved commitment of $42,000 to cover the cost of reconstruction of the roadway and sidewalk of that portion of St Antoine street within the boundaries of the City of Westmount.\u201d \u201cDr David Robinson, 36, son of the Honorable Mr Justice Benjamin Robinson of the Superior Court, and Mrs Robinson, 36 For- den crescent, was recently appointed to the staff of the U.S.Scientific Committee.His new post is in Washington, D.C.\" Fifteen Years Ago April 8, 1971 \u201cMayor Peter McEntyre was greeted with stoney silence for the first time in many months when he closed Monday night's council meeting and asked for questions from the audience.Fernand Leclaire, head of the Lower Westmount Citizens\u2019 Committee, who usually bounces to his feet at the first opportunity, sat as if glued to his chair, as did Joseph Baker, another vociferous speaker at council meetings.\u2018Wow,\u2019 said the mayor, \u2018this must be a record.\u201d The audience broke into laughter.\u201d Five Years Ago April 9, 1981 \u201cWestmount residents awoke to the news of tragedy yesterday with the shooting death of a well-known and \u2018extremely popular\u2019 17-year-old local girl in an incident here which sent a 19-year-old boyfriend, also shot, to hospital where he was listed in critical condition.Police continue to investigate the circumstances surrounding the shooting at the home of Patty Forbes, 484 Mount Pleasant avenue, a prefect and a top graduating student at the Convent of the Sacred Heart.\u201d \u201cCity of Westmount Engineer Bruce St Louis was promoted by council to the post of executive assistant to the director of services, second-in-command to Frank Davis.The 27-year-old engineer has been with the public works department for the past five years and was chief architect of the parking survey which formed the basis for council's recent amendments.\u201d The Westmount \u2018Riff-raff\u2019 defended as democratic word Sir: 1 would like to apologize to those people who were upset or offended by my use of the word riffraff in a recent letter to this paper.(March 20).I would especially like to apologize to the six charming gentlemen with the safety pins in their ears and spiked chokers around their necks who were able to give a whole new meaning to the word \u201cobscenity\u201d whilst smashing empty beer bottles against the trunk of a tree and hurling same into the watercourse.I would also like to apologize to that delightful group of young people who were kind enough to share with residents as far away as Metcalfe avenue their tapes of Strike stance clarified I AM pleased that as the days pass more attention is being devoted to the policy options I outlined in the second part of my book.Again of course, I am sensitive to thoughts being taken out of context less they be misunderstood.For example, in a column of The Globe and Mail this week I am quoted as being against the right to strike by public servants.Taken as a simple statement many readers will interpret my view as regressive and anti-union.The reasons underlying my opinion are in the book and I believe support the withdrawal of that right.In public sector negotiations market forces are not present.A strike is only a useful device for the union if the public can be held hostage as in the case of postal workers or air traffic controllers.Ultimately if the strike takes place the union must be legislated back to work.Alternatively an unreasonable settlement will be made to buy peace.Experience has shown how that quickly translates into higher settlements in the private sector.Public sector employees who cannot hold the public hostage see little benefits through the strike option.I believe there is a better method to provide for settlements and protect the public interest.Twisted Sister and Black Sabbath whilst getting high on more than the fidelity of the recordings and showing an astounding ability to use a certain four-letter word as almost every part of speech in both official languages.I must not forget the families who, in spite of a lack of picnic tables, bring their lunches to the park and leave behind for all of us to enjoy hundreds of little chicken bones, fried chicken hoxes, styrofoam containers, apple cores, candy wrappers, empty juice cans and wine bottles scattered decoratively here and there around the park for everyone to share.There are many, many more, but time and space do not permit a detailed enumeration.To those writers of last week who were under the mistaken impression that riffraff is synonymous with poor, I can only suggest that you consult your Oxford dictionary for the correct meaning.This is a word that respects no divisions of race, creed, color or income.You might say it is a truly democratic word! Joan Cartwright 376 Redfern avenue WESTMOUNT PQ H3Z 2G5 (Editor's Note: Our Oxford defines riffraff \u2014 with hyphen \u2014 as \u201cthe rabble; disreputable people.\u201d) Meeting appreciated by high-rise opponents Sir: Last Wednesday members of an ad hoc committee of citizens concerned ahout the proposed new highrise development at the corner of Greene avenue and St Catherine street were invited to city hall to meet the mayor, some of the aldermen and members of the architectural and planning commission and the architect of the project.We appreciated the opportunity to discuss our concerns and have written to the mayor to thank all involved in the organization of the meeting.While over 450 people (including most of the merchants) who live and work in the area signed our petition of concern, a highrise will be erected as the property is zoned for such a building.Itis tobe hoped that this, and the highrise to be erected at the corner of Wood Avenue and St Catherine street, will be the last built in Westmount.We should all be on our guard that this is so.Judith Mappin 598 Argyle avenue WESTMOUNT PQ H3Y 3B7 Examiner, Thursday, April 10, 1986\u2018 - 5 TT MAKES A LITTLE SMOKE BUT You PONT HAVE TO CLEAN UP AFTER IT / WESTMOUNT PARK PS Creranp By 0 Recreation money better spent on pool A copy of the following letter has been sent to THE EXAMINER: Alderman John Shingler, Commissioner for Parks and Recreation, Westmount, Quebec Dear Alderman Shingler, 1 am in agreement with a recent WEST MOUNT EXAMINER editorial concerning Westmount Park.I don\u2019t believe that any Continued on page 20 our M.N.A.Hon.Richard D.French says.Towering queries MANY of you have mentioned to me your concern about the plan for a tourist tower to be erected on Mount Royal.You have told me that while you have no particular objection to the current communications tower or to its repair or reconstruction, the very much larger and more ambitious Montreal version of Toronto's CN tower is incompatible with your vision of the mountain.The company which is promoting a tourist tower, SNC, is a responsible and credible enterprise which has done a great dea) for Quebec and for Montreal.Its corporate citizenship is unimpeachable.Its integrity is unquestionable.The ineluctable reality, however, is that a large and very tall structure on Mount Royal, a structure which is intended to attract a considerable flow of people, would change the mountain in important ways.As Minister of Communications, J am to some degree involved with this question.The tourist tower proposal is sometimes described as a \u2018communications tower.\u201d I'am advised, however, that a tower of that height and dimension is not required to meet communications requirements.It is not even certain, I am told, that signals from a tower of that height would not interfere with navigational communications for Dorval airport.Two things are clear.First, the tourist tower proposal must he accepted or rejected on its economic merits as an attraction and on its impact in social and environmental terms.Second, there must be a thorough debate of these issues before any irrevocable steps are taken. RTE AS © 6 - The Westmount Examiner, pais; Montréal Trust WESTMOUNT $249,000 BEST BUY LEFT! In prime location within walking distance downtown, this sophisticated stone front combines high ceilings, mouldings and charm with modern conveniences.Updated features include large eat-in kitchen, 2 new bathrooms, 2 powder rooms, electric heating.Parking.To see call: Peggy McMullan 933-9440 , 934-1818 Thursday, April 10, 1986 Plea to hush noisy park bipeds prompts announcement of curfew Bothersome \u2018bipeds\u201d have achieved such a level of cacophony in one Westmount public park, they have driven one family to plead with city council for the imposition of a 10 pm curfew.Instead, they were told West- mount will experiment with a midnight curfew in parks.Michael Lally, a resident of Windsor avenue which borders on Prince Albert Park, told city council during the regular question period Monday night that he and his wife \u201chave called public security at least two or three times a week\u201d to complain about rowdiness in the city green- space.He described the nocturnal users as \u201cbeer drinkers, Frisbee-throwers, football players and marijuana smokers,\u201d whose activities have cut into the sleeping time of residents adjacent to the park.WINDOW WASHING HOMES e OFFICES MONTREAL WINDOW CLEANING a (2 2811589 1904-1986 Serving Westmount for 82 years He asked that the city impose a curfew of 10 pm and that public security officers be directed to step up their enforcement of violations of the public peace.The public security unit and the MUC police have requested a park curfew in Westmount for some time.Mounting problem Ald John Shingler, commissioner of parks and recreation, told Mr Lal- ly that it is understood that \u201cthe love-smitten and lovelorn,\u201d among other types, tend to congregate in city parks, and that hooliganism in parks is a mounting problem.He said the matter of a curfew had been discussed at great lengths in view of the fact offenses of one kind or another are occurring in city parks \u201cevery 20 minutes.\u201d He took the occasion of the question to announce that an experimental midnight curfew is to be imposed in city parks.Mr Lally and several others in the gallery asked aloud why the curfew was to be so late, one hour later than in Montreal, whence Mr Lally said most of the late-night noise-makers originate.Mayor Brian Gallery said the curfew would be the first step in the process to stamp out noise and abuse of facilities in city parks.\u201cIf 12 is not the magic number, we will change it,\u201d the mayor said, noting that Westmount is the only major Quebec municipality to not have a park use curfew.Bike walking rule flops; city opts for total ban Cyclists are to lose the right provided by the city last year to wheel their bikes through Westmount's parks as city council Monday night announced its decision to revert to the previous ban on bikes.\u201cIt has not worked out,\u201d said Alderman John Shingler, commissioner of parks and recreation, noting that bicycles were still presenting a hazard.He said bicycles would no longer be allowed to be parked or pushed in the parks but would have to be left at the edges with the exception of the east-west bike path proposed in the relandscaping plans for Westmount Park in the area of de Maisonneuve boulevard.When Alderman Sally Aitken Sue Andrews Pauline Bates Edith Berman Françoise Bibaud Nicole Boyd Dulcie Carnell Shirley Cohen Rita Anne Conn Audrey Culver Georgette Drummond Micheline Dupont-Dancosse Holly Haber Lois Hollinger Pat Homa J.J.Jacobs Irma Kerner Haagen Kierulf Eda Kistler Guy Labreque David Lenkorn Olga Maxwell Patricia Mongeon .Reg Morden Wayne Pavey .Harry Quart .Joan Samuels .Paul Robert 5.4.r.r.1.c.r.s.Manager 1367 Greene Avenue 935-8541 ROYAL LePAGE Real Estate Services Ltd.LePAGE = John Aird Jane Allan Lila Aved Barbara Besner-Kitmag Nori L.Churchill-Smith Joann Colby .Julia Daniels Michèle Elizondo Helen Forbes Brien Foster Aubrey Kinsman Eva Klein Valerie Kyle Josephine Lantier Joan McCallum Brian McGuigan Joan McGuigan Les McLennan Brigitte Meagher Jean Murray 288-1428 Debbie Newton «+.289-9082 937-7061 935-1591 .483-3388 933-2446 849-5458 Gerda Spies Broker IT'S GOOD TO KNOW SOMEONE WHO KNOWS Aurore R.Ouellette Elizabeth Paul .Yvette Perras .Mehdi A.Salehi .Fay Steinberg.Georgette Strous James R.Quinlan r.r.1.Manager 4145 Sherbrooke St.W.932-1112 asked about mothers with young children wanting to walk bikes through the parks, Ald Shingler said the city was not after tricycles but rather the motocrosses.The parks by-law had been modified last year at this time to try easing the previous restrictions in the hopes that cyclists would get off their bikes and push them through the parks if the two-wheelers were not totally prohibited.Man burns hand putting out fire A 34-year-old man Montreal man living just outside the Westmount border at 81 Belvedere Circle was taken to hospital Saturday after burning his right hand while extinguishing a fire caused by a grease pot, fire officials report.Westmount firemen called initially to the home at 3:53 pm and treated the man for second degree burns to the right hand before Urgences Santé crews and Montreal fire crews arrived.The victim, who had been cooking french fries when the pot ignited, put out the fire on the stove using wet rags.LOgCK-IT storage inc.|.m you store it mu you lock it E you keep the key self-storage m secure & private um from $4.75 weekly m sizes to fit every need open 6 days a week 934-0386 Ste-Catherine Glen St-Jacques | Notre Dame 595 St-Rémi, Montréal Pit bulls bully retriever Two dogs running loose on Greene avenue Tuesday afternoon last week were taken home to Redfern avenue after they were reported to have attacked a dog being walked by its owner, public safety officials said.The dogs, pit bull terriers, were identified by licence tags.Their owner was told he would be responsible for any medical expenses resulting was a golden retriever.Arts festival, seniors granted funds The Westmount Senior Citizens\u2019 Centre and Arts Westmount have been awarded grants from the city for operations in the upcoming fiscal year.The senior citizens\u2019 centre has received a grant of $22,500 towards its operating budget for 1986, an increase of $2,500 from last year.Alderman Sally Aitken praised the increased grant as \u201csupporting some very important and worthwhile projects\u201d carried out by the centre.In a contribution designed to ease the pain of Arts Westmount's 1986 Festival budget of $20,000, the city donated $5,000 towards the annual event.The grant remains identical to last year\u2019s (disregarding an additional $900 given last year to cover the cost of Arts Westmount\u2019s representation at the Rimouski Art Festival).Both grant motions were passed unanimously at the Westmount city council meeting Monday evening.A tenth of one percent of the city's annual budget is set aside for such grant expenditures, Alderman Phillip Aspinall explained.After the combined total of the recent donations, there is little left of the original $33,000 budgeted for this year.While the Senior Citizens' Centre and Arts Westmount say they are grateful for receiving the grants, spokespersons from both groups said they had hoped for \u201ca bit more of a commitment.\u201d \u201cWe could have used more,\" said Edythe Germain, president of Arts Westmount.\u201cBut since we don\u2019t have it, we'll just have to appeal to the public that much harder and have a lot of garage sales,\u201d in order to finance all that is planned for the annual fall festival and make it a success.Valuables taken from Cedar home Items valued at $2,500 were taken from a house on Cedar avenuggast Thursday after it was broke to through a window in the front door and opening the lock from inside.A video machine, camera, gold bracelet watch and gold brooch with pearl were among articles stolen.Entry was gained sometime between 10:15 am and 1:30 pm.Reception fans cause noise Two large fans at the rear of the RCAF building at 4458 St Catherine street were reported as being \u201cvery loud\u201d by public safety officers following up a noise complaint Tuesday night at 10:52 pm.The complaint was referred to the building\u2019s carétaker who said they would be turned off shortly at the end of a reception.from the incident.The \"2 l Lansdowne and Sherbrooke: Rumors \u2018ridiculous\u2019 that condo firm broke; developers now wait second project nod Nasty rumours circulating about the status of a condominium project at Lansdowne avenue and Sherbroooke street have been squelched soundly and bemusedly by one of the developers.THE EXAMINER received a \u201ctip\u201d last week from a resident of Manoir Westmount, across the street from the project, casting aspersions on the financial health of the development.The source whispered that only two condos had occupants as of April 1, the assumed date of occupancy and that no work had been done of late on punds surrounding the eight-unit cture.These facts added up to something fishy in the eyes of vigilant Manoir residents, monitoring the progress of the project, the source said.Could THE EXAMINER investigate this sus- vicious circumstance?A phone call proved rumors of imminent financial collapse were naught but codswallop.\u201cThat's unbelievable, ridiculous,\u201d an incredulous George Syrovatka said when word of the whisperings was broken to him.Mr Syrovatka boasted that not only were all condo owners present and accounted for in his ledger, but he and his partner Calder Spence \u201ccould have another 10 people\u201d lined up for a chance at owning one of the luxury dwellings.The architect-developer confirmed that while only two parties have settled into their units to date, \u201cmost of the people who signed up Purse gone A Montreal woman lost her purse March 21 at Westmount High School, police report.It contained $150., By PETER BLACK will be in by the end of the month.\u201d He says that \u201ceverybody who bought a unit made a lot of money,\u201d a statement he supports by referring to one recent case of an owner who was offered $20,000 over purchase price for the condo \u2014 and turned it down.He explained that while it may look like work has stopped from the exterior, interior construction is \u201c95 percent finished.\u201d He added that landscaping work has had to wait for the spring thaw.Boosted hopes The immodest success of the Lans- downe project has boosted the developers\u2019 hopes for their most recent undertaking, a 24-unit, six-storey structure at 4480 St Catherine, between Metcalfe and Abbott avenues.Mr Syrovatka says four units in the building, designed by his father, Westmount resident V.J.Syrovatka, have been sold already.Units are selling for an average of about $160,000.He noted that \u201clots of offers are floating around,\u201d but the developers are \u201cholding firm\" to their asking prices.\u201cWe feel the market is very good right now,\u201d Mr Syrovatka said.Plans still must be finalized for the project, having been sent back three times by the city\u2019s architecture and planning commission for refinement.The Spence-Syrovatka duo originally had hoped to start excavation for the project as of this week.Mr Syrovatka estimates construc- PUT YOUR HOME UNDER OUR HOME MARKETING PROGRAM da N.THE PROFESSIONAL WAY TO SELL Like a big roof that gives protec- | tion on a rainy day, the exclusive Royal LePage Home Marketing | Program covers every aspect of selling your home.om careful market analysis of your area, open houses, exposure | of your home through the Royal | LePage network, frequent progress reports of buyer interest, right through to our professional approach to negotiating of the final sale.You may want to take advantage of our unique Pre- Approved Mortgage feature as well, to make your home more saleable.If you are thinking of selling your | home, do it the professional way.Come under the cover of the i Royal LePage Home Marketing | Program.We have sold more homes to more people than any other real estate broker in Canada by taking the professional approach.It brings results.ROYAL LePAGE = For more information call or visit us at THE WESTMOUNT BRANCH 4145 Sherbrooke St.West 932-1112 Ly yy 4 ese ee da Set RR AoA ! Lu, édedre =.Prec eve cme tion costs at $2.5 to $3 million, up from the $1.3-million estimate reported in THE EXAMINER Jan 30.The developers are to submit their structural engineering plans to the city\u2019s board of inspectors April 17 and, allowing for further alterations, a building permit could be issued a week later.Faria Grover Marle Andrée Robinson all price ranges; .| REC CAO RE PRES VERT NIET Examiner, Thursday, April 10, 1986 - 7 Bike found An orange 10-speed bicycle with 4858 Sherbrooke street by public flat tires was found Wednesday last safety officers.It was taken to local week about 12:30 am at the rear of MUC police station 23.ANDY DODGE enr.REAL ESTATE CONSULTANT specializing in Westmount tax valuation appeals C.P.472, Succ.Victoria, Montreal H3Z 2Y6 932-6495 The Westmount CS Montréal Trust Congratulations to our 15 TOP PERFORMERS IN MARCH Anne Marie Larue We have a long list of serious about yours in strictest confidence.An update of recent sales will be provided to enable us to establish a realistic market value.This team will work hard for youl Rod R.Quesnel, Manager Annie Armstrong .932-1240 Betty Firstbrook .482-7706 Nicole Powell .932-0016 Philip Berman .482-8515 Alice Gagnon .937-2491 Dorothy Raich .931-7190 Herb Bourgeois .484-0605 Farla Grover .482-2326 Marie André Robinson 487-3189 Julie Bourne .989-9475 Patricia Hamilton .482-3246 Elizabeth Ross .931-3181 Jacqueline Brault .932-0566 Paul Harrison.488-5727 lan Ross .932-7351 Terri Brault .486-0932 liona Hussar .488-8906 Maria Santini .486-9125 Mika Brisson .937-2288 Alice Kennedy .935-9046 Bobbie Tilden .842-5717 Ursula Clabon .733-6745 Gracia Kristof .482-0678 Georgette Tremblay .845-3525 Sylvia Cosh .935-9517 Marie-Claire Lalancette 288-7720 Ginette Tremblay .843-7876 Sonia Collins .287-1504 Anne-Marie Larue .483-2177 Mary Ann Turner .765-0331 Alison Cosgrove .931-1230 Barbara Leiter .487-4836 Martha Tsadilas .489-0631 Betty Cross .934-1634 Peggy Marsh .935-4488 Pauline Vickers .937-7993 Claire Duhamel .484-8924 Peggy McMullan .933-9440 Sheila Whitzman .481-0139 Juanita Etcheverry .931-3095 Jules Millian .731-8048 Montreal Trust Westmount Office 4150 St.Catherine St.W.Westmount, Quebec (514) 934-1818 & ST y Save Sonia Collins Peggy Marsh > A Pauline Vickers Shella \\Whitzman Ginette Tremblay buyers for homes in call one of our agents listed below rerrrp rr er gr or rer row.EE EER xr an; BEA AT S Arm por A Watch out \"CHRISTIE 53 A resident of Metcalfe avenue lost MBING- & a silver Seiko watch in Westmount Pp Park March 29, according to police 8 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 10, 1986 LIMITED reports.The watch was valued at HOME IMPROVEMENT d = complete * | \u2014 DE AIR @ >) SOVEREIGN P RINTEMP sil Paseo | CLEANING Applicateurs se agrées PATA EST ARRIVE ne - ÉÉMMERCIAL B S&D L'HUMIDITE STOPPEE SEC \u201c24 HOUR SERVIC ren SOVEREIGN ET LA PROTECTION DES FACADES cleaning contractars inc.4253 St.Catherine St.W., Suite 3 POURQUOI LAISSER DETERIORER WHY LEAVE YOUR BRICK, STONE OR RME 933-1935 BRIQUE, ÉSIDEN OU MACONNERIE DE MASONRY WALLS OPEN TO \u2014_ VOTRE RÉSIDENCE?DETERIORATION?.LES OUVERTURES + Un 4 | [ EES IDEA L INC.Humide Papier décalé À DOORS WINDOWS RENOVATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1977 Mur froid Mur chaud We cordially invite you to visit our showroom and take advantage of our early spring specials on all YDR -SC E L | N C .types of windows and doors.TREAT PROTECT WATERPROOF EES PF Sa es BRANCH WE ALSO TREAT ALL HUMIDITY PROBLEMS IN YOUR BUILDING INE i CALLNow! 632-5221 APPELEZ MAINTENANT! 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showing\u2019 for youth discussion attacks lack of youth input to study By THOR VALDMANIS Approximately 100 people, many representing concerned organizations, crowded into a small conference room in Victoria Hall Tuesday night to hear the results of a recent government survey on non-geriatric concerns in Westmount and discuss its impact in terms of the city\u2019s youth.Organizations in attendance seemed to come from all sides of the societal spectrum.Representatives rom city council, city hall, public @-.MUC police, Westmount rary, hospitals, universities, recreational organizations, churches, social services, community groups, and even from environmental and peace groups, all came together for the first time in more than five years to present information and have the meeting act as catalyst for further co-ordination.After preliminary introductions, however, the Consultation on Community Services for Westmount Youth and Young Adults was soon challenged.Dissatisfaction with the sample in the subsequent survey presentation seemed to kill the initial upbeat mood of the meeting.Last summer, a small working committee was established to suggest ways in which the Centre Local de Services Communautaires (CLSC) Métro could successfully integrate their new \u2018pre-65\" programs in Westmount.A survey was proposed because \u201cwe wanted to obtain as much information as we could about this specific target group,\u201d explained Joan McCrimmon, co-ordinator of the Westmount branch of CLSC Metro.In carrying out the study, the CLSC incorporated the aid and expertise of the McGill School of Nursing.Target group left out The irony of the study, participants noted, was it sought out only the opinions of a few dozen West- mount professionals, while completely neglecting the perceived concerns of those directly involved in Tuesday night's meeting, the \u201ctarget group\u201d of youth.Ann Lynch, a McGill student in the Nursing Master\u2019s Program and Reader unmoved by Gazette news It should have been a THE EXAMINER and it almost was.American sculptor J.Seward Johnson Jr's creation, \u201cCatching Up,\u201d skims over The Gazette, when, in reality, he would have much preferred perusing an EXAMINER, Angela Lipper of Scorpio Art Consultants, explained.\u201cWe originally sent down an MINER to be bronzed but it was too small for the pre-cast mold, so we had to settle for a Gazette,\u201d she said.A year ago, the owners of the West- mount Life Building, reportedly the Bronfman Empire\u2019s Seagram'\u2019s arm, approached Mrs Lipper to find a statue that was \u201cwhimsical and fun.\u201d Soon enough, Mr Johnson's bronze creation was chosen and finally delivered last week.Rumored price tag on the work is $10,000.Mr Johnson has another \u201ccatching .Up\u201d reading in Atlanta, but reading another newspaper of course, explained Mrs Lipper.\u201cMr Johnson specializes in highlighting ordinary people doing ordinary things,\u201d Mrs Lipper said.\u201cThis statue really makes everybody smile.\u201d one of the authors of the study, defended the survey and its conclusion that family related problems were of prime importance.\u201cThe survey does not pretend to represent the youth of Westmount, but to solicit the opinions of experts, or key persons, in a particular community,\u201d Miss Lynch said.Using the Delphi method (essentially a two-part questionnaire), developed by the Rand Corporation, the CLSC study found, that in the opinion of the 39 professionals who answered the first questionnaire and 41 who answered the second, there was a distinct need for supportive programs for families in the community especially in such trying circumstances as divorce and separation.Miss Lynch\u2019s explanation seemingly did little to satisfy many who seemed to completely reject the methods by which the surveyors reached their conclusions.\u201cI question the statistical value of this study.\u201d said Dr Mireille Boutry, director of the Montreal Children\u2019s Hospital for adolescent and youth medicine.\u201cHow representative is the study of the consumer group?\u201d she asked rhetorically.Just platitudes \u201cThe results are just platitudes,\u201d Bruce Garside, director of the Ville Marie Social Services Centre City, added.\u201cYou could have forgotten the study.\u201d Seeing the meeting degenerate to some extent, chairman Ald Sally Aitken tried to reach higher ground by initiating discussions on poten- YOUTH PARLAY: Among the participants in Tuesday night's youth consultation session were, from left, Bruce St Louis, Westmount's director of services, Alderman Sally Aitken, who chaired the session, Robin McMillan, the city's community service director and Joan McCrimmon, co-ordinator of the Westmount branch of the CLSC Métro.tial programs with a benefit for youth.Acting on a suggestion made earlier in the evening by Westmount youth Dan Sweeney, Ald Aitken recommended a committee, headed by Mr Sweeney, be established to look into creating a community center for youth.This proposal immediately brought a strong reaction from Dr Boutry.\u201cYou must break away from the paternal attitude of herding children into'a safe place.\u201d Maxime Faille, a representative from Students Against Nuclear Extermination (SAGE), said that from his own experience, he has not found community centres terribly effective.\u201cThere are rarely more than five people at the N.D.G.community cen- 250\u201d $5,000-599,999 .moneyfor investors is our Interest calculated daily, credited monthly.Rates adjusted weekly in relation to 91 day Government of Canada Treasury Bills Minimum balance $5,000.Maximum $500,000.TT Central Trust Rates subject to change without notice.Montreal \u2014 1130 Sherbrooke St.W.Tel.842-8362 Westmount \u2014 4825 Sherbooke St.W Tel 933-1122 10.00\" $100.000-$500.000 tre,\u201d he said, \u201cwhile everyone else is hanging out at the Ville-Marie Métro station.\u201d Mr Faille, when addressing a parent\u2019s concern that dépanneurs were Preview: Friday, April 11, 10am.to 10 p.m.Saturday, April 12, 10 a.m.to 6 p.m.Sunday, April 13, 10a.m.to 6 p.m.sR Thursday, April 10, ET IMPORTANT CATALOGUED AUCTION SALE OF FINE ART, ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES IN TWO SESSIONS APRIL 1986 sale.Marc-Auréle Fortin, \u2018\u2018Ste-Rose\u2019\u2019 Watercolor 22\u2019'x30\"\u2019 Sale Tuesday, April 15 at 7:30 p.m.precisely: Canadian and European art by L.Ayotte, J.M.Barnsley, T.H.Beament, B.Bobak, |.Bonheur, L.H.Bouchard, J.A.Browne, C.Bouter, E.Ciceri, O.Clare, S.M.Cosgrove, M.G.Cullen, B.de Hoog, R.Duguay, M.A.Fortin, T.H.Garside, A.W.Holdstock, C.E.Huot, F.lacurto, R.Jack, A.Y.Jackson, M.Katz, O.Leduc, C.Le Sauteur, J.G.Lyman, J.E.H.Macdonald, H.L.Masson, L.Muhistock, A.Noeh, L.P.Perron, G.Pfeiffer, R.Richard, J.P.Riopelle, A.Rousseau, G.H.Russell, H.Sandham, A.Sherriff-Scott, P.H.Surrey, M.Tanobe, A.Villeneuve, F.A.Verner and many more.Sale Wednesday, April 16 at 7:30 p.m.precisely: General session including important furniture such as three 18th century French armoires, a Boulle style Napoleon II! bureau plat; 19th century Louis XV, Louis XVI and Empire style living room sets; decorative pieces such as a Regency period giltwood mirror, an Empire period pair of Ormoiu andirons, a Charles X period set of fire implements, clocks, a good collection of sterling silver including English and French 18th century pieces, an important choice of 18th and 19th century Chinese and Japanese porcelain; lamps, crystal, a large variety of porcelain; Paul Beau brass pieces, bronzes, carpets, jewellery and much more.inneys Ville Mont-Royal, Quebec H4P 2M4 731-4312 David Kelsey and Olivier Leroy, Auctioneers.1986 - 9 selling alcohol to minors, seemed to garner support from the audience in the final minutes of the meeting when he urged that one \u2018look at the root of problems, and not at the enforcement of laws.\u201d This brought the assembly back to the troubling notion that perhaps the root causes of adolescent problems may not have been adequately identified in the CLSC report.Another survey At the recommendation of Ald Aitken and others, Mrs McCrimmon said there was \"a possibility\u201d that another CLSC survey could be done, this time focussing on the perceptions youth has of itself.As the meeting broke up after two and a half hours of intense discussion, no tangible decisions had been made.Ald Aitken remained optimistic, however, citing the large turnout of individuals concerned about West- mount youth.\u201cI'm very happy that so many took an interest in our youth.Hopefully, we can create an on-going (youth) committee to get the most mileage out of the resources we have available.\u201d Ald Aitken expects a second meeting of this nature to take place in a month's time.Tuesday, April 15, 7:30 p.m.precisely: Canadian and European Art.Wednesday, April 18, 7:30 p.m.precisely: Antiques, furniture and collectibles.Les Encans Auctions 10 - The Westmount Examiner, 1986 Thursday, April 10, Beyond Westmounts in the bigger city surrounding us Montreal West Mikado A number of amateur groups present Gilbert and Sullivan productions this time of year, but the local granddaddy of them all is the Montreal West Operatic Society, which next week will celebrate its 47th anniversary with a production of The Mikado.Shows are Wednesday through Saturday, 8 pm, at the West Hill High School auditorium.As usual, the proceeds from the production will be given by the group to the cardio-vascular surgery department of the Montreal Children\u2019s Hospital.Over the years, the group has by RICK KERRIGAN A random sampler of things to see or do Borders donated some $40,000.For ticket information, call the box office, 695- 6383.Concordia double bill With the end of the university year approaching, it\u2019s a busy time at theatre departments as year-end productions are mounted.Two different plays are being presented over the next week at Concordia University.Arthur Miller's The Crucible will be presented tonight through Sunday and again next Thursday through Saturday at 8 pm at the Chameleon Studio on the Loyola campus.There Animated by: SHIRLEY-ANN KENT AND JACK GRAYSTON DISCOVER your STRENGTHS Use your POTENTIAL! A weekend workshop of individual and group interaction, relaxation, self-hypnosis and coping skills designed to: * Acknowledge your strengths « Reach personal goals e Remove blocks to achievement Human Potential Consultants 3981 Boulevard St-Laurent, suite 100 COME JOIN US! Friday, April 25, 7:00 p.m.APRIL 25, 26, 27 For more information: 845-3972 FAMOUS | PAM PAM CAKES XS you'll LOVE os 50s the least expensive of 2 meals 5 p.m.to 8 p.m.HAPPY HOUR: TACOS 99¢ 4914 SHERBROOKE West (between Victoria & Claremont) , ance.Mad u0 SAUNA also will be 1:30 matinées tomorrow, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.The play is a classic about the Salem witchcraft trials in Puritan New England in 1692.Admission is free but the studio seats only 42 so reservations are required by calling 848- 4741.At Concordia\u2019s major theatre, the D.B.Clarke in the Hall Building, 1455 de Maisonneuve boulevard west, the theatre department will present Moliére\u2019s probing comedy Tartuffe.It will open Tuesday and will run each evening through next Sunday, April 20, at 8 pm, with matinées Wednesday and Thursday at 1:30 and April 19 at 2 pm.There's a modest admission charge for this one.To reserve, call 848-4742.Café has Knack Over at McGill, the Tuesday Night Café Theatre is winding up its season with a production of The Knack by Ann Jellicoe.The play\u2019s about the different approaches of three young men to the chase of women and \u201cjabs asatirical finger at the more disturbing aspects of sexual politics and macho posturing by taking ludicrous attitudes to their logical \u2014 and hilarious \u2014 conclusions.\u201d Performances are tonight, tomorrow and Saturday at 8 pm at the Morrice Hall Theatre, 3485 McTavish street.For tickets, call 392-4637 or get them at the door.This play sensitizes Any play conveys a message, but a number of groups in the city are at work on a play that aims more to sensitize people to a particular issue than entertain.The issue is domestic violence and the Association of Producing Artists, the Playwrights\u2019 Workshop of Montreal and numerous social agencies are in the process of putting the production together.To find out how they're doing, the play will be presented in workshop form today, tomorrow and Saturday at 8 pm at the Playwrights\u2019 Workshop, 4001 Berri street.As a workshop production, the play will draw considerably on audience reaction to help shape and finalize its form and content before presentation to a general audience later this year.A discussion will follow each perform- Admission is free but reservations are asked by calling 843-3685.Spring music has sprung The St Lawrence Choir will give a spring concert of French and Canadian music tomorrow at 8 pm at St Jean Baptiste Church, 309 Rachel street east.Along with the 85-voice choir there will be solo performances by soprano Colette Boky and bass Jean- Pierre Couturier.Dorothy Slapcoff on piano and Scott Bradford on the church\u2019s organ will accompany.For ticket information, call 276-2694.Choral concert Les Chanteurs d\u2019Orphée, under the direction of Bernadette Donovan, will present a choral concert of \u201cMusic Early and Modern\u201d Sunday, 8 pm, at the Church of St John the Evangelist, 137 President Kennedy street.The program will contrast traditional pieces with expressive modern pieces.For ticket information, call 761-3218.Creation at church Haydn's The Creation will be presented Sunday at 8 pm by the choir of the Université du Québec à Montréal and the orchestra of the Montreal Philharmonic Society under the direction of Mikl6s Takécs at St Jean Baptiste Church, Rachel and Henri Julien streets.Soloists will be Colette Boky, soprano, Guy Bélanger, tenor, and Claude Corbeil, bass.Tickets are available at Place des Arts or at Ticketron counters.Beaux Arts for ladies The Beaux Arts Trio will perform for the Ladies Morning Musical Club Sunday, 3:30 pm at Pollack Hall, 555 Sherbrooke street west.The piano, violin and cello trio will perform works by Beethoven, Ives and Dvorak.For information, -call 932-6796 or 738-2132.Tribute to Amadeus The McGill Chamber Orchestra under Alexander Brott will present a special \u201cTribute to Amadeus\u201d concert Monday, 8:30 pm, at Christ Church Cathedral.The concert is open to the public free of charge and no tickets are required.Piano soloist will be Pierre Jasmin, dean of music at the Université du Québec à Montréal, performing Mozart's piano concerto in E flat major.Another feature of the program will be the Oboe Concerto in G major, with soloist Theodore Baskin, first oboe of the Montreal Symphony.Ancient music The orchestra of the Studio de Musique Ancienne de Montréal will present a concert of works by Bach, Telemann and Handel Sunday, 8 pm, at Pollack Hall, 555 Sherbrooke street west.Tickets are available at Archambault, 500 St Catherine street east, or at Lettre-Son, 1005 Laurier avenue west.Music at McGill Highlighting the concert schedule at McGill University this week are two presentations, tomorrow and Saturday at 8 pm at Pollack Hall, of Haydn's The Creation, featuring the McGill Chamber Singers, the McGill Concert Choir and the Symphony Orchestra.There is an admission charge of $5 to raise money for the McGill scholarship fund.Free concerts at Pollack Hall next week include two chamber music concerts at 5 and 8 pm Monday; a recital by the jazz improvisation classes at 8 pm Tuesday; Suzanne Purtee on organ at Redpath Hall Wednesday at 12:15 pm; the McGill Conservatory Jazz Bands Wednesday at 8 pm; and Paul Berkowitz, piano, next Thursday.Israeli café The Israeli dance group Harimon will be the featured attraction Saturday, 9 pm, at Café Hora in the Grover Auditorium of the Snowdon YM- YWHA, 5480 Westbury avenue.There will also be a sing-along, ballroom dancing, disco and Israeli dances.For ticket information, call 737- 6551.Films for kids Three classic films for children will be shown Sunday, 2:30 pm, at the Jewish Public Library, 5151 Céte St Catherine road.The films are Win- nie-the-Pooh and the Blustery Day, Winnie-the-Pooh and Tigger Too and Walt Disney's Peter and the Wolf.Admission is $1 and refreshments will be available.Children under 7 must be accompanied by an adult.For information call 735-5911.The children's library at the JPL also has free story-telling sessions for children age 3 and 4 every Tuesday from 2:20 to 3 pm and Thursday from 10:20 toll am.Learn about blacks A series of weekly workshops about the English-speaking black community of Montreal will be presented Mondays, 7 to 10 pm, from April 14 to May 12, by the Mona- chanin Cross-Cultural Centre, 4917 St Urbain street.The goal is to sensitize participants to the black value system.Topics will include the history of black Canadians and West Indian blacks, community organizations, family values versus school values and common cultural heritage.There is a charge.For information, call 288-7229.Exhibitions around town Highlighting the exhibition scene in Montreal in the coming six weeks is the much-anticipated \u201cPrecious Legacy\u201d show at the Montreal Muse- ne mm a A mA Ae a \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 ir 1 em Babb Lee a > me om a me Ee TERETE M AE DENT AREA VAT NE um of Fine Arts, featuring the religious and cultural treasures of European Jews from the Czechoslovak state collections, objects seized by the Nazis with the goal of founding a \u201cMuseum of an extinct race.\u201d The exhibition opens tomorrow and continues until May 25.The 24th exhibition and sale of the Versalle Art Group will be held this weekend at the Dawson Boys\u2019 and Girls\u2019 Club, 666 Woodland avenue, Verdun.Hours are 7-10 pm Friday, noon-10 pm Saturday and noon-5 pm Sunday.\u2026 Tapestry works of French artist Claire Rado are on view until April 27 at the N.D.G.Maison de la Culture, 3755 Botrel street.Hampstead School and Montreal B'nai B'rith Women, Balfour Chapter, will hold an art show and sale Wednesday, 7:30-9:30 pm at the school, 83 Thurlow road.Admission is free and works will range in price from $10 to $10,000.Recent works of Jean-Paul Jéréme are on view until May 2 at Atel Galerie Nouvel Age, 350 Sherbro®¥: street east.Paintings by George Boyer are on exhibit from today to April 23 at Shayne Gallery, 5471 Roy- almount avenue.The vernissage tonight is from 7:30 to 9:30.The exhibition is titled \u201cHigh Realism.\u201d The lecture tour Prof Hillel Kieval of the University of Washington will speak on \u201cThe Jews of Prague: A renaissance at the end of the Renaissance\u201d next Thursday, April 17, 8 pm at the Jewish Public Library, 5151 Côte St Catherine road, in conjunction with the \u201cPrecious Legacy\u2019\u2019 exhibition.Justice Minister Herbert Marx will speak on \u2018\u2018Equal and minority rights in Quebec\u201d Sunday, 10:30 am, at the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue, 4894 St Kevin avenue.Canadian Cultural Programs presents lectures by novelist Matt Cohen on Monday, 1:30 pm at the Royal Bank Auditorium of Place Ville Marie and cartoonist Terry Mosher (Aislin) next Friday, April 18, at 7:30 pm at the Mount Stephen Club, 1440 Drum- mond street.Both are free but to reserve for the latter, call 937-7937.Prof Kurt Gottfried of Cornell University will speak on \u2018The unity of the physical world\u201d tonight, 8:30, at Concordia\u2019s Hall Building, 1455 de Maisonneuve boulevard west.An expert in fundamental particle physics, Prof Gottfried is also author of a recent book, The Fallacy of Star Wars.More lectures Self-made millionaire E.Joseph Cossman will discuss \u201cHow to make money in your own business\u201d at seven free lectures next week sponsored by the Canadian Institute of Management.He'll be at the Sheraton Centre Sunday, Monday and Thursday and the Pointe Claire Holiday Inn Tuesday and Wednesday.Sunday and Thursday lectures are at 2 and 8 pm, on other days at 8 pm only.\u2026 Cecile Steingart, a journalist and member of the Jewish resistance in France, will speak in Yiddish on \u201cRescue, martyrdom and heroism of Jewish children\u201d at the Montreal Holocaust Memorial Centre, 5151 Côte St Catherine road, Sunday at 8 pm.À discussion will follow in Yiddish, French and English.Bits \u2019n\u2019 pieces \u20ac \u201cHome entertainment of future\u201d will be discussed at a free public meeting of the McGill Young Alumni Tuesday, 8 pm, at the Stephen Leacock building, room 232.John Banks of the Audio Centre will be the speaker.\u2026 À spring display of orchids is on view from 9 am to 6 pm daily at the Montreal Botanical Gardens.There is an admission charge.A first-aid course will be given by the Red Cross starting on April 16 at 2170 Dorchester boulevard west.To register, call Nicole Dicaire at 937- 7761, ext 286.Two free workshops on \u201cVision and Aging\" will be given tomorrow and next Friday from 10:30 am to 12:30 pm at the Fraser Hickson Library, 4855 Kensington avenue.To register, call 487-1311 or 489-0667.danse vas sua Baan sin ambi w ee Pa ey 0) Nr roy 280 Ino rge to oy- 1ge hi- v- Tera STRUMMING UP A STORM: The Senior Ukulele Group of Montreal plan = entertain with a feature performance at St Andrew's School on Hillside avenue tomorrow at 10:30 am.Groups in the past have included a number of West- sch-Csano encourages parents to consider the ukulele as a musical instru- = under the tutelage of St Andrew's teacher Ursula Gullasch-Csano.Ms vent which is learned easily and is versatile.Pictured are members of last year's ensemble.s to so hard.\u201d Admission is free.Spring Recital brings musical to Victoria Hall DUE to popular demand, Westmount 's annual Spring Recital is being spread over a two-day period with Victoria Hall performances April 18 at 7:30 pm and again on April 19 at 2:00 pm.This yeara cast of 175 Westmount boys and girls, supported by the 26-member Westmount children's choir led by Harriet Coyle, will perform the musical South Pacific.Under the direction of Beverly Adams, girls\u2019 recreation supervisor, and assistant girls\u2019 recreation supervisor Lana Romandini, 20 volunteers are involved in the organization of the production.Rehearsals have been taking place for the past two months.\u201cIt is going to be a fantastic show,\u201d Miss Adams said.\u201cIt would be great to see a full house for both performances.The kids have worked Garden of literary delights for National Book Festival An extravaganza of literary delights have been lined up for National Book Festival week which gets under way Saturday.A number of events in Westmount are included in the activities held across Canada in libraries, bookstores, café-bars, schools and other locales.On Sunday, Westmount Public Library plans to sponsor a round table discussion on the rights of authors in the library system.Planning to attend are Westmount literati Allan Hibbert, Michael Harris, Edward Phillips and Madeleine Ouellette-Michalska.The session begins at 1 pm.The library is to sponsor encounters with authors Alice Parizeau at 7:30 Tuesday, and Hugh Hood on Wednesday, same time.For more information on library events call Brenda Smith or Lysanne Ferron- Godin at 937-2486.The Double Hook bookstore is to host author Ray Guy next Thursday at 5:30 pm who plans to discuss the work of Newfoundland authors.For more information on the Guy appearance, call Judy Mappin at 932- 5093.Organizers of the festival remind | of the Dial-A-Poem s e, available by calling 843- Selwyn presents Three Musketeers Selwyn House school plans to present a production of The Three Musketeers next week, Thursday through Saturday, April 17-19.The school\u2019s senior players have been working hard in rehearsal to bring the swashbuckling piece, penned by Alexander Dumas, to the stage.Curtain time is 8 pm in the sanctuary in the Macaulay Building on Stanton street.Admission charged is $2 for students and $3.50 for adults.Tickets can-be-obtained-througb the sehoolr - - 7636.The rhyme line plans to feature poets from across the country during the book festival.Kastel shows Huot's works Galerie Kastel, 1366 Greene avenue, is to present an exhibition of Ottawa-born Pierre Huot's landscapes, from Tuesday until April 26.Most of Mr Huot\u2019s works are painted outdoors with a subtle composition of light and shadow, with a contrast between the figure and the environment.A vernissage is to be held Tuesday at 7:30 pm with the artist in attendance.auction, sale April 18, 19 The Rotary Club of Westmount is seeking donations for its much- anticipated annual spring sale, now in its 11th year.This year's sale will be next Friday and Saturday, April 18 and 19.As in the past, the sale will be in two parts, an auction and the regular sale.The auction portion is to commence at 7:30 pm Friday, with a preview inspection starting at 6 pm.On the block are many interesting items, including a car.It is to be conducted by auctioneer Harold Walsh.The regular sale is planned for 10 am the following day, featuring new and used items.Organizers urge bar- gain-hunters to get out early for this chance to scoop some unprecedented deals and help out a worthwhile cause.Proceeds from the sale contribute to the Rotary\u2019s community projects, both in Westmount and surrounding areas.Donations of saleable items will be accepted until April 18.Pick-up can be arranged by calling 935-3344.UN envoy Stephen Lewis to be speaker Stephen Lewis, Canada's ambassador to the United Nations, is the scheduled speaker at the Wednesday meeting of the Montreal chapter of the Canadian Institute of International Affairs at noon at Le Chateau Champlain.Mr Lewis plans to address questions such as: \u201cIs the current criticism of the role of the United Nations justified?Are its deliberations relevant in an era of polarized superpower relationships?\u201d The ambassador is expected to argue that the UN is not appreciated properly for what it does achieve, and that its vital role in world affairs is being overlooked in a wave of destructive criticism.Tickets for the talk are available by advance sale only at $20 for CIAA members or $22 for non-members by calling 744-7523.Swag meets The annual meeting of Seniors of Westmount Action Group (SWAG) has been set for May 7 in Victoria Hall at 10:15.Assistant Professor Dept.of Obstetrics & Gynecology McGill University 1200 Pine Avenue West.McGill Cancer Centre vy: SRY .Public Lecture Series Cancer Research: 1986 Dr.Abraham Fuks Associate Professor, Dept.of Medicine, McGill University Panel: Dr.Gerald Stanimir Dr.Edward Tabah Dr.Michael Whitehead Associate Professor Dept.of Surgery, McGill University The final lecture on cancer presented by the McGill Cancer Centre will describe the types of cancers that are successfully treated today and the exciting prospects in cancer research for the near future.This will be followed by a panel discussion by cancer specialists from the areas of surgery, hematology and gynecology.A question period will follow.Wednesday, April 16, 1986 8:00 p.m.Palmer-Howard Amphitheatre McIntyre Medical Sciences Building All interested members of the public are invited.There will be no charge for admission.For information, please call 392-3036.Associate Professor Dept.of Pediatrics & Medicine McGill University The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 10, 1986 - 11 aa a rR Israeli UN envoy at Temple Monday Dr Israel Singer, secretary general of the New York-based World Jewish Congress, will address a Montreal audience at a free public lecture Monday, 8:00 pm, at Temple Emanu- the Canadian Jewish Congress's Quebec Region, Temple Emanu-El - Beth Sholom and the World Jewish Congress.Dr Singer's talk is to focus on current Jewish issues.El - Beth Sholom, Sherbrooke street west at Wood avenue.The talk is jointly sponsored by If you health d bet CHILDREN'S you are healthy and between A gift me tod! ve the Dorothy Davis, Violet Waiters donor.\u201cJACK\u201d la galerie and the Beanstalk ARTLEN DERS F.C.SMITH AUDITORIUM, F LOYOLA CAMPUS ine Sales SATURDAY AFTERNOONS FRAMING .LAMINATION pril 12th, 19th & May 3rd.318 avenue Victoria ORDER - Westmount 484-4691 now 484 6620 Jewellery Repair Service We will expertly RESTYLE your outdated jewellery, repair that broken necklace or \u2014 replace a missing stone in your ring.Members We also buy and sell jewellery Inter national Appraisal, Liquidation and Restoration Centre 368 Victoria Avenue, Westmount Appraisers 487-4898 seturdey 530s Antique jewellery a specialty \u2014 pearls and beads restrung UEEN LIZABETH FOR ONCE IN YOUR LIFE, LIVE.This year the legend continues as the Queen Elizabeth 2 makes 22 trans-Atlantic crossings.Beginning in April, you can experience the five-star quality of Cunard Line at the start of your European vacation or as a relaxing finish to your continental holiday.The QE2 is the perfect blend of Old World tradition and luxurious contemporary facilities.Special fly/cruise rates make your six day holiday a surprisingly affordable reality.Intermediate season prices begin at just $1,425 US per person, double occupancy.And, with Cunard\u2019s exciting fly/cruise/tour options, you can continue to enjoy Cunard\u2019s personalized service on your European vacation! Cunard and you.is there any better way to experience your dream vacation?For more information on Cunard\u2019s Queen Elizabeth 2, ask for your free copy of the 1986 European brochure.Ask an expert.ASK ALLEN! GARTH ALLEN TRAVEL INC.1350 Sherbrooke Street West Quebec Lic.288-9136 12 - The Westmount Examiner, 10, 1986 Thursday, April Point cars north, asks Bruce group Parked cars on Bruce avenue should point north rather than down into the dead end street to facilitate Silver stolen Silver flatware valued at about $15,000 was believed stolen from a house under renovation on Roslyn avenue sometime between March 8- 29, police said.The 183-piece set had been left in the basement.It was reported missing Monday last week.their removal in the event of a fire, city council was told Monday night.The suggestion by Mrs Takeishi on behalf of the Bruce Avenue Residents\u2019 Association was lauded by Alderman Paul Fortin who said he would look into the matter.\u201cIt appears to be a good suggestion, very sensible,\u201d he said.\u201cIn case of fire,\u201d she explained, \u201cpeople would have to get their cars out quickly and turn in mid-block.Why not have them point up?\u201d Departing health officer Nugent urges action for youth, seniors By LAUREEN SWEENEY Dr Terry Nugent, who leaves West- mount shortly for the United States after five years as the city\u2019s medical officer, departs with two unanswered questions: Where can Westmount seniors live in this community on limited incomes?And, where can the youth of the THE PRECIOUS LEGACY JUDAIC TREASURES FROM THE CZECHOSLOVAK STATE COLLECTIONS APRIL 11 To MAY 25, 1986 The exhibition is being made possible in Quebec through the generous support of the ministère des Affaires culturelles du Québec.The exhibition is organized by the Smithsonian Institution Travelling Exhibition Service in cooperation with Project Judaica and the Ministry of Culture of Czech Socialist Re Foreign Affairs of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic, the National dommittee of the Capital of Prague and the State Jewish Museum in Prague.Through the courtesy of Czechoslovak Socialist Republic, the exhibition is circulated in Canada by the Glenbow Museum on behalf of the National Museums of Canada and is supported by the Government of Canada, Department of Communications and the Seagram Company Limited.ublic, the Federal Ministry of SERIES (free entrance) APRIL 17,8 p.m.Jewish Public Library Cummings House University of Washington The Jewish Public Library University of Washington Sponsored by: Eastern Canada Region Auditorium Sponsored by: MAY 11, 3:30 p.m.Auditorium 5151 Cote Ste-Catherine Road The Jews in Prague: A Renaissance at the End of the Renaissance Professor Hillel Kieval Department of History, Sponsored by: The Janie Cooper Fund of APRIL 20, 3:30 p.m.The Montreal Museum on Fine Arts Saidye Bronfman Centre - Moe and Freda Levine Institute of Public Affairs The Consortium of Organizations The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts 1379 Sherbrooke Street West LECTURES MAY 20,8 p.m.Jewish Public Library Audio Visual Room Cummings House 5151 Côte Ste-Catherine Road Readings from his own Works (Author: The Engineer of Human Souls) Joseph Skvorecky Sponsored by: The Consortium of Organizations MAY 25, 8 p.m.Berman Auditorium Auditorium Cummings House 1379 Sherbrooke Street West 5151 Cote Ste-Catherine Road Caught between Competing National An Evening with Survivors from Identities Czechoslovakia Professor Hillel Kieval, Department of History.Sponsored by: Montreal Holocaust Memorial Centre The Consortium of Organizations\u201d United Synagogue of America, The Consortium of Organizations APRIL 27, 3:30 p.m.The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts 1379 Sherbrooke Street West Kafka and the Literary World of Prague Ernst Pawel, noted author *Participants in the Consortium of Organizations: Coordinated by Allied Jewish Community Services, with B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation Canadian Jewish Congress Canadian Zionist Federation - Eastern Region Golden Age Association Jewish Community Foundation of Greater Montreal The Consortium of Organizations Jewish Public Library Living in Prague before, during and after the Nazi Period Professor Amost Lustig, Department of Literature, American University, Washington, D.C.Sponsored by: The Canadian Zionist Federation - Eastern Region The Consortium of Organizations Jewish Education Council Jewish Public Library Jewish Studies Department of McGill University Montreal Holocaust Memorial Centre The Saidye Bronfman Centre The Shaar Hashomayim Congregation The United Synagogue of America, Eastern Canada Region The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts 1379, Sherbrooke Street West Information: 285-1600 Tuesday through Sunday from 11 a.m.until Sp.m and Thursday until 9 p.m.The Museum is closed on Mondays.THE MONTREAL MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS Saket ales a EE , .Sb Sw eA th i Sete ee Sadr RT ad Ow sam tree hen .AMP Brn HBT.city congregate on a year-round basis?The 39-year-old family physician, who also served as medical consultant for the community health clinic on Stanton street until his resignation March 31, identified the needs of seniors for alternative housing and care as the most pressing social issue in Westmount.The psychological and sociological health of the community's youth also needed to be addressed, although to a lesser degree than seniors, he said, a matter taken up at Tuesday's night's consultation meeting on services for Westmount youth (see separate story).He also hopes steps will be taken by the city to supply secretarial assistance to the Stanton street clinic, now a module of the CLSC Metro.This would make possible the reinstatement of the travellers\u2019 immunization program suspended by lack of personnel in January which he considers to be a worthwhile service.As Dr Nugent heads south to continue practicing family medicine and enter a new field of underwater medicine, he is turning over his private practice here to another local physician, Dr Paul Lysy.No successor yet A successor to Dr Nugent has not yet been named by the city or the CLSC.\u201cI've enjoyed the various opportunities given to me in Westmount,\u201d he told THE EXAMINER in an interview last week.The position he held in the public health field here was unique in the way it was connected to so many organizations, he felt, allowing him to \u201cmake inroads as the needs arose.\u201d He worked closely with city departments, and in particular with Alderman Sally Aitken, commissioner of community services, in the adoption of a by-law to permit nursing homes in Westmount, the formation of a seniors action group, home care for seniors and the organization of a youth forum.\u201cI have appreciated his support encouragement and initiative in addressing these issues,\u201d she said, noting that such matters tended to be shunted aside as being not legally a municipal responsibility.His term of office came during a period of upheaval in the community health field resulting from changes brought by the provincial government.Dr P.T.Nugent He became the city\u2019s liaison with the Urgences Santé network after the conversion of the fire department\u2019s ambulance into a first responder unit in 1984 and oversaw the evolution of the health clinic into the CLSC system from its previous status as a module of the community health department (DSC) of the Montreal General Hospital.Even now as Dr Nugent leaves, the location of the clinic is uncertain as new quarters are being sought for it by the CLSC Métro which, he says, wants a more store-front location in an area such as Victoria avenue.In his role as the city's medical officer, Dr Nugent encouraged physical fitness among city employees, one of the first areas he tackled after his appointment in September 1980.Dr Nugent, who also served as medical adviser to Manoir West- mount, was affiliated with both the Reddy Memorial and Montreal General hospitals and this past year was staff health physician at the Montreal Children\u2019s Hospital.City\u2019s lost-item auction a boon for bargain-buffs By THOR VALDMANIS Westmount arena could well be the land of opportunity for fans of eclec- tica, bargain-buffs, the curious, the avaricious and the sociologist.The city\u2019s public auction is coming May 8 and for those in search of oddities such as red crow bars and Taymor flasks, the arena may just be the bric-a-brac paradise stocking whatever one may be seeking.Asis the case every year, city \u201clost and found\u201d bins are overflowing with carelessly misplaced, and subsequently unclaimed, gems.The current stock includes 43 bicycles, 23 pocket books and an espresso coffee maker.How some of the items up for auction reach the city's warehouse is a complete, and sometimes disturbing, mystery.: Take the case of the \u2018\u2018assorted lingerie\" item on the list.Is this collection a product of overzealous love in Westmount parks?Or is it, as a worst case scenario, indicative of a return to the days when streaking and Nixon were both in?And how about the two lonely electric typewriters, now being sold to the highest bidder after they vfs.found loitering aimlessly about city streets earlier this year?One can only hope they will be able to leave their grizzly pasts behind in the hands of a more appreciative owner.The list of approximately 150 unclaimed objects is a bizarre combination of treasures to say the least.The inventory is a must-see for those who desire an unadorned peek at the Westmount psyche.Just try to avoid asking yourself what our Victorian forefathers would have said about the assorted lingerie collection.Shrouded with guilt, the images could get ugly.If you are healthy and between age 18 and 65, remember to give the gift of life.Be a Red Cross blood donor.TE er rt- WW to \u2018Bold\u2019 parking plan now becomes the law By LAUREEN SWEENEY A three-phase parking program previously announced by city coun- cilto alleviate problems in the southeast and southwest sections of West- mount received official sanction at Monday night's city council meeting with amendments to appropriate legislation.The changes include the limiting of 18 streets to residents\u2019 parking during evening hours and the designating of others for alternate side of the street parking.Permits also are being issued for extended on-street daytime parking at a fee of $30 a th.d Paul Fortin described the idea of designating residents\u2019 parking only as \u201ca bold plan\u201d and emphasized it would be carried out on an experimental basis for one year.Asked by a resident of Metcalfe avenue how the city intended to enforce the regulation, Ald Fortin said it would be monitored closely by the Public Security Unit.Caution notices would be issued at first during a transition period followed later by tickets and fines.\u201cThe weapon is the ticket.\u201d Citizens of 18 streets so designated for residents\u2019 parking between 6 pm and 10 pm would be informed by mail, he said (see story and map March 20).Seven streets in the southwest section have been chosen for alternate side of the street parking (see story and map March 6).Noise complaint The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 10, 1986 - 13 Cat-savers distinguish city: mayor A person trying to sublet an apartment on St Catherine street Sunday afternoon called public safety officers to complain about excessive music from one of the other tenants which was scaring off prospective renters.Officers said the music, which came from the third floor, could be heard in the ground-floor lobby.No downzoning possible for burnt-out Greene stores City council was asked Monday night to look into the possibility of downzoning a section of Greene avenue to preserve the village character and prevent four fire-struck buildings adjoining the Royal LePage building from being rebuilt into six storeys at civic numbers 1355-1363.The facades are at present three storeys high.\u201cIn this case it\u2019s too late,\u201d replied Alderman Peter Trent, commissioner of planning and redevelopment, answering questioner Alan Bull, a WMA director.Mr Bull said he understood there was \u2018\u2018some pressure\u2019 to erect new buildings on the remaining shells of the buildings up to six storeys.Ald Trent explained that council had made known its views favoring reconstruction of the row as it was.The facades and lower floors of the buildings were preserved in the fire Jan 19.Several shops and businesses, including Togo\u2019s Restaurant, were forced out of the premises by the major blaze.The Westmount fireman and two public safety officers honored last month by the SPCA for saving the life of a cat overcome during a fire here last November received local congratulations from Mayor Brian Gallery at the start of Monday night's city council meeting.Fireman Robert Mills, Sergeant Mario Testa and PSO Robert White were officially introduced by His Worship who related the story of the rescue.\u201cIt's because of men like this that the City of Westmount is a very unique place,\u201d he said.Pong, the Siamese cat, was found by firefighters on the stairs of a house at 625 Côte St Antoine road Nov 15.The cat was revived by Fireman Mills using oxygen and CPR, then rushed to an emergency animal clinic in a Public Security Unit car.Certificates of merit were presented to the men by the SPCA at its annual meeting in the Queen Elizabeth Hotel March 11.Golden Age Orchestra |.SUNDAY APRIL 13, 2 p.m.Temple Emanu-El Beth Sholom © 4100 Sherbrooke St.West © Sponsored by the Social and Cultural Group of T.E.B.S.Everyone Welcome Tea $1.00 A SEARCH SERVICE FOR OUT-OF-PRINT BOOKS old\u2014new\u2014hard-to-find\u2014rare No charge for searching * Returnable * Free mailing or delivery Mail your want list or call CHAPMAN\u2019S BOOK SERVICE Box 263, Westmount H3Z 2T2 932-8621 À 20 yr.SAVES ET CONGREGATION SHAAR HASHOMAYIM The 1986 \u2018Betty Rudnikoff Memorial Lecture\u201d will be delivered by \u201cDR.SHLOMO AVINERI former Director General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Israel and Professor of Political Science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem on WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16th, 1986 at 8:30 p.m.TOPIC: Politics and Ideology in Israel\u201d in the Kensington Avenue Hall 450 Kensington Avenue, Westmount ALL ARE WELCOME Sponsoring Bodies: Adult Education Committee, Congregation Shaar Hashomayim Sisterhood, Congregation Shaar Hashomayim Herman Abramovitz Chapter of Hadassah SPIN POD E SDI DD NATIONAL SIDI D FESTIVAL 2000 No PPO ANP OID DODDS DEAD COPTIC OPO SOD BODO ODD DDD ODD DD a TE TOTO TE Ore EON PIRI PIRI Also: consolation prizes.Celebrating the National Book Festival April 12 to 19 THE DOUBLE HOOK BOOK SHOP will feature Newfoundland writing and publishing SPECIAL EVENT: Thursday, April 17 at 5:30 p.m.Reading by well-known Newfoundland writer RAY GUY music \u2014 refreshments, Newfoundland style Humourous take-home quiz on Newfoundland \u2014 first prize: The Dictionary of Newfoundland English, donated by the publisher, Breakwater Books of St.John's.The quiz may be picked up at the book store.FESTIVAL NATIONAL DU PIPPI OPPS 20000 IDD A POPPIN PION SOOO ODED.d ee SOOILLLDLL DOOD.OPPO NPN 1235A Greene Avenue Dust off your hob-nail boots.Don your favorite jeans.Throw on your calico frock.3\\Srab your partner and get ready to JUBILEE centaur COMPANY It'sa presented by & do-si-do at a down-east style wing-ding! 2 JAMBORE | MOLSON 178049856 TUESDAY, APRIL 29 at Centaur.453 St.Francois Xavier, Old Montreal Tickets: $65 (a portion to be tax deductible) available at Centaur box office visa/mastercard accepted including phone orders: 288-3161 proceeds go to Centaur Theatre Company 6:30 cocktails 7:30 Montreal premiére of ~&_DON MESSER'S JUBILEE_% Donald K.Donald presents the Neptune Theatre production of the smash hit musical by John Gray Plenty o\u2019 eats! René Pankalla 9:30 Same supper created by the renowned door prizes free beer from Molson wine on the house from Seagram Québec cash bar available (for the hard stuff) country tunes spun by the incomparable Jacques Bisaillon free Bloody Caesars - Mott's Clamato & Premium Vodka courtesy of Seagram Québec flowers by Le Pot de Fleurs/The Flower Pot Cee IYO eT 4140 fs CC ed ANIA Cosd g3ky ni.bry, IXIA 14 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 10, 1986 Summer jobs goal of student centre The Canada Employment Centre for Students is now open.The office serving Westmount is located at 5250 Ferrier street, suite 102, two blocks north of the Namur Métro station.The centre has two main objectives: first, to try and help the student find work for the summer months; and secondly, to assist employers who are interested in hiring a student for the summer months to fill positions temporarily left vacant as regular staff goes on vacation.The centre invites students to come and register for summer employment and invites commercial or residential employers to call at 739-2791 or 739-2792 if they are interested in hiring a student for the summer.The staff of student placement officers at the Ferrier office is available for both the employer and students, Area residents sign petition against construction of tower A coalition of several groups has been rallied to the aid of opponents of the proposed tower project at the northeast corner of St Catherine street and Greene avenue, says one anti-tower activist.According to Christiane van Renesse, a key organizer in the battle against the 20-plus storey development, groups such as the Westmount PESTICIDES TASK FORCE presents PESTICIDES: People and Policies Speakers representing government, industry and the scientific and medical communities Topics to be discussed include: ® Pesticide use in Quebec e Legislation controlling pesticides e Pesticides and public health e Alternatives to using pesticides Introductory welcome by Mr.Clifford Lincoln, Minister of the Environment EVERYONE WELCOME Sunday, April 13, 1986 at 2 p.m.Victoria Hall, 4626 Sherbrooke St.West, Westmount, Quebec ® Free parking ® Simultaneous translation will be provided e Separate entertainment program for children Admittance Fee: Adults $2, Children $1.For further information call 488-9167, local 1913 Endorsed by: The Montreal Children's Hospital and the departments of community health of Hôpital Ste-Justine, Montreal General Hospital, and Lakeshore General Hospital {centre antipoison) Thanks to our sponsors: Data Courier Service Ltd.; Kodak Canada Inc.; Montreal Trust; Royal Bank of Canada; Royal LePage Services; HS Graphics By PETER BLACK Dog Owners Association and the Westmount Initiative for Peace (WIP) have jumped into the fray along with the Westmount Municipal Association, Greene avenue merchants, Westmount Square tenants and residents of the area.The movement against the tower has been spearheaded to date by an ad hoc committee of concerned citizens led by Greene avenue merchant Judy Mappin and Mrs van Renesse, a self-appointed city council watchdog.Mrs van Renesse says tower critics have collected 456 signatures on several petitions circulated in the vicinity of the project site.Sixty-three inscriptions were gathered from Three Westmount Square and 26 from Two Westmount Square.The Westmount Square petition, dated March 7, was circulated by Square residents Allen Nutik and Niki Papachristidis and demands through Mayor Brian Gallery that the city provide \u201cmore information regarding the construction to be permitted at the corner \u2026 before the city grantsa building permit to the developer.\u2019 Full account The petition continues: \u201cIf the rights of tenants, owners and West- mount citizens have been prejudiced or restricted by failure of the council to act in their best interests, then Westmounters will require a full account of procedures which have resulted in the granting of a permit to construct such a building without consultation of all interested parties.\u201cIn light of the acrimonious debate which took place 10 years ago and of the city's new positions vis-a- vis urban development, not to forget the importance of Westmount Square as a landmark as well as the rights of tenants in deciding zoning matters, it is our feeling that proceeding with this project without new consultation of all interested parties would be a grave injustice.\u201d A meeting was held last week between city officials and project \u201cGood God, ! just ( had to wait in line for 2 hours to have my Subaru | serviced.And my | wife had to wait | | almost as long to | park at a place | where she picked | up a part last | week.Can you \\ imagine?\u201d a LASALLE L owoul TTT TN ee, TT TT y \"Obviously, you didn't buy or lease from Rallye Subaru.They pick up and return my Subaru for service anytime | need it.In fact, I've never even seen their place.They just come to me.\" CLEMENT AT LAFLEUR IN THE PROMENADE SHOPPING CENTRE 10 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN MONTREAL 364-1 230 (Free pick-up and delivery service line 364-5076) SHOWROOM OPEN SATURDAY, 10-5: MON.-FRI.9-10 ./ Call us and make us prove it.Rallye\u2019s prices on a brañd new '86 Subaru are simply the best you'll find anywhere! Over 1300 smart Subaru buyers went out of their way since 1978 to make Rallye their Subaru centre for parts and service.And yourather be?Only Rallye Subaru offers you first rate authorized Subaru service that | comes to you anywhere in the Greater Montreal area .Laval and the south shore.Rallye arrives at your home or office by reserved appointment to pick up your Subaru and brings it back to you | fully serviced and cleaned up.The clean up, pick up and delive | solutely free.No other Subaru dealer offers this unique service across the board, and at no extra charge.| Plus Rallye has Montreal's lowest lease and purchase prices! Rallye's selection of brand new '86 Subarus is never over abundant due to on-going restrictions on Japanese cars.Nevertheless,we always have 30 in stock and when you order one,Rallye guarantees prompt delivery due to monthly shipments from Subaru Auto don\u2019t forget, Rallye =r gives you free pick- Canada.Call us to-day.i | up and delivery on ALIEN à with the same low price.all including is ab- nefit opponents.Mrs Mappin, Mrs van Renesse and Mrs Papachristidis attended.Mr Nutik was not invited, according to one source privy to the behind- the-scenes planning of the meeting, because Mayor Gallery had indicated he would not attend if his outspoken nemesis was there.Organizers from the citizens\u2019 group and the city separately told THE EXAMINER that the presence of the two mayoralty rivals in the same room would have led to fireworks.Since the mayor's attendance was deemed essential, sources say, Mr Nutik was shut out.3 Mayor Gallery, for his part, JM THE EXAMINER that he was not involved in setting the list of invitees to the meeting.\u201cThad nothing to do with it,\u201d he said.The Westmount Municipal Association, while having discussed the issue at length, never has lodged formal opposition to the tower.Rather, it has asked the city to ensure the proposed project, Château West- mount Square, respect \u201cthe integrity\u201d of the architectural features of Westmount Square.The Westmount Dog Owners Association had earlier pledged its support to gather petitions at the latest meeting of the Westmount Municipal Association.According to Mrs Mappin, the offer of assistance was made, but turned out to be unneeded.As for the WIP endorsement, none of several group members was able to identify any official connection with opponents of the tower.\u201cIt\u2019s really not a peace issue,\u201d one said.DES INSPECTIONS A APPROUVE UN UCTION POUR QUE DES TRAVAUX DE TON SOIENT EFFECTUÉS SUR CE CI INSPECTIONS HAS APPROVED MIT FOR WORK ON THIS SITE DATE D'ÉMISSH DATE OF ISSUE doing what?The following building permits were issued at Westmount city hall during the past two weeks: \u2019 Aprill 333 Elm: for Peter Rose, by Goodman Plumbing, seven fixtures, $12,000; 605 Clarke: for Lewis Dobin, by owner, alterations to bathroom, $14,000; 524 Argyle: for Douglas Avrith, by owner, deck, $10,000; April 2 21 Surrey Gardens: for Mr Delbiquet, by owner, alterations, $25,000; 489 Argyle: for G.Rutzer, by owner, deck, $2,000; 485 Roslyn: by Gordon Berger, by owner, install windows and insulation, $10,000; 734 Upper Lansdowne: for R.A.Weinberg, by Plomberie Europe Inc, change plastic drain to copper, $100; 549 Lansdowne: for J.P.Mongeau, Cerf Plumbing and Heating, gas conversi¥a/ $2,980; 625 Victoria: for Dr Daly, by Plomberie Dudemaine, replacement of two fixtures, $1,500 4696 Westmount: for Dr B.Hillgartner, by owner, alterations, $7,000; April 4 484 Strathcona: for Brian Sanctuary, by owner, alterations, $13,000; 4378 de Maisonneuve: for J.Kil- bourn, by Celebrité Plumbing, water entrance.Doors open Two doors were found open Mon: day last week at a computer store on St Catherine street near Greene avenue when police answered a call fora burglar alarm at 10:20 am.All was reported in order. ABET Of INaA VENIVIAT eld haart\u2019 (cuol IA ANA VS snd hog 1aimerd inane aL anT QR IP CF The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 10, a 4 th E 4 gi - À Ë 3 À of : 151% p 3 É f _ PERSONAL SERVICE FROM THE STAFF AT LES 5 SAISONS.From left to right: Lindon, Celine, Lyle, Micheline, Joe, Marc, Jean-Pierre, Yves, Phil.Marc Petit and his team are proud to offer Montrealers good old fashioned service.Shopping at Les 5 Saisons is truly unique and enjoyable - an experience you cannot afford to miss.| Enjoy our warmth, courtesy and wonderful selection of fine @ foods: beautiful fruits and vegetables, fresh fish and meat, an excellent assortment of cheeses and deli, oven-fresh breads and pastries baked daily on the premises.A full selection of national brand grocery items will help you complete your shopping list.So much more than an ordinary food store.SA LLIN 5 Noms 34 NURSES\u2019 AIDES HOMEMAKERS 875-4517 Lise Aylmer AYLMER-MUST NURSING SERVICES INC.CARE FOR THE ELDERLY REGISTERED NURSES Eda Must FOR THE CHILDREN: Organizers for the Montreal Children\u2019s Hospital nearly new sale May 1 include, from left, co-chairperson Pat Noel, MCH auxiliary president Ellen Lank, a Westmount resident, and Doreen Wiley, co-chairperson of the sale.Children\u2019s Hospital auxiliary to hold \u2018Nearly New\u2019 sale All are invited to come to the \u201cNearly New\" sale being held at the Montreal Children\u2019s Hospital in the Ross Lounge on May | from 10 am to 4 pm.On sale are many different collectibles, decorative pieces, jewelry, glassware, toys, housewares and much, much more.À baked goods sale of loaves, squares, pies and other delicious goods is also to be held in the Ross Lounge at the same time.This event is sponsored by the hos- Tofu is topic of osteo group The Osteoporosis Society of Canada, Quebec chapter, is planning a presentation on tofu by Goldie and Chloe Fox of Au Naturel store.The talk is to take place at 2 pm April 13 at the YWCA, 1355 Dorches- ter boulevard west, room 25.Admission is $5 and refreshments will be served.For more information call 334-5796.but a Majestic Upholstering pital\u2019s auxiliary and all proceeds go directly to the aid of children.For further information, call Valerie Preston at 934-4400, local 2384.Donations to the sale will be accepted up to and including May 1.The auxiliary reminds that \u201cone person's discard is another's treasure.\u201d Exhibition shows Quebec glass An exhibition of contemporary glass in Quebec opens tomorrow at the Centre des Arts Visuels, 350 Victoria avenue.The exhibition will give a review of the most recent trends in glass art created by Quebec artists.Techniques include blown, cold and hot, flat and sculptured glass fashioned into functional and non-functional pieces.The exhibition will continue until May 3.HEAR A GOOD WORD out a COOD WORD makes it glad.\u201d in the heart of a man weighs it down, \u2014 Proverbs 12:25 A | SERVICE WITH CARE SINCE 1964 | ESTIMATES e SHOP-AT-HOME SERVICE \\ PICKUP AND DELIVERY Discounts up to 25% on fabrics e reupholstering e remodelling e antique restoration MOST COMPLETE LINE OF UPHOLSTERY FABRICS 16 - Thursday, April 10, The Soviet people seem caught up in an air of contentment and optimism, Westmounter David Angell said on his recent return from a 12- day series of discussions with Moscow and Leningrad university students.Mr Angell, in undergraduate studies at Yale University, was chosen for the trip out of a field of approximately 200 candidates from the Ivy League university, the only non- American on the 15-student contingent.\u201cThe universities there bent over backwards to accommodate us,\u201d Mr Angell told THE EXAMINER.As the Yale delegation arrived at the University of Moscow on the first day of their tour they were greeted by the university rector, who delivered a presentation that Mr Angell said was like \u201cnight and day\u201d compared with the party-line rhetoric given to his predecessors the year before when Yale first embarked on the exchange program.Under Politburo chief Mikhail Gorbachev, it appears that constructive criticism and ideas of reform are welcome, provided they remain outside the realm of politics, Mr Angell said.\u201cThe rector, a very powerful man, seemed quite candid about certain deficiencies within the university system,\u201d Mr Angell said.For instance, \u201che critized management and tenure practices,\u201d instead of hiding behind the unconvincing pretence that everything was perfect, as they had traditionally.Hosts kind The visiting contingent also found their hosts, mainly first- and second- year graduate students, extremely kind and, as the days progressed, increasingly warm \u2014 one of the advantages of meeting with the same group over an extended period of time, Mr Angell said.During the course of his visit, Mr Angell, who had developed a mild case of laryngitis, was asked to make a short speech.\u201cAfter that,\u201d he recounted, \u201ceveryone in the room was aware of my illness.That same day, many of the Soviet students gave me recommendations on what to take for it.And, the next morning, one of them even brought me some medication.\u201d Mr Angell also mentioned that he and his colleagues were given a surprising amount of room \u201cto breathe\u201d from hosting officials.Often the students went to coffee houses \u2018for ice 1986 Openness, optimism found by student on Russian trip By THOR VALDMANIS cream and conversation\u201d and were allowed easy access to the city sights.An avid reader of late 19th-centu- ry Russian literature including the works of Tolstoy and Dostoevski, Mr Angell found Moscow culturally rich and intriguing with a seemingly ageless quality.\u201cTheir living standards, materially, aren't as high as ours of course.One of the things about the Soviet Union is that everywhere you go there is a lineup for something.But it was nice to some extent to see the commercial side of things de-empha- sized a bit,\u201d Mr Angell said.He noted that the city was conspicuously absent of the flashing neon lights and risqué billboards that are generally synonymous with the character of our major cities.Mr Angell said that in his walks around Moscow he was \u2018\u2018struck by the contentment of the people and their excitement with the perceived mood for change.\u201d He added, however, \u201cthe one frustration of a trip like this, is that it is impossible to tel! whether the picture we saw fit into the larger picture.Meaning, does the individual citizen's optimism and quest for change reflect that of the government's.\u201d Was there any trace of dissent?\u201cOh sure,\u201d Mr Angell replied.\u201cYou can find it if you want to.But (to seek it out) would be similar to a Soviet student travelling to learn about the U.S.and spending all his time in Harlem, \u201cThe people obviously want changes, but the majority want them within the system.\u201d Mr Angell said that it is likely the Soviet students will visit Yale in November, as this exchange seemed to be labelled a success.He also mentioned that there is a desire by both parties to institutionalize faculty exchanges as well.Suicide hotline seeks volunteers Suicide-Action, the only suicide prevention centre in the MUC, is seeking English and French-speak- ing volunteers for its intervention phone line team and other activities.Registration and interviews for the next two training sessions are to begin this month.For more information call 522- 4916.BY APPOINTMENT an ma Sana Sis Quality Invitations Personalized Social Stationery Party Accessories 488-5639 ADVERTISER TO FILL THIS SPOT! For information call + your sales representative £ or Louise Wolman at 932-3157 A Île COMING EVENTS EVENEMENTS * dk kk RUMMAGE SALE Rummage sale at Knox Cresce| Kensington First Presbyteri Church, Grand and Godfrey, N.D.G.Friday, April 11th, 7 to 9 pm, Saturday, April 12th, 9 am to noon.RUMMAGE SALE Church of St.Columba, 4020 Hing- ston Avenue, Friday, April 11th, 7-9 pm.All welcome.ANNUAL BOOK BROWSE Montreal West United Church Annual Book Browse, Thursday, April 17th, 2-9 pm, Friday, April 18th, 2-5 pm.We have books, magazines, toys, patterns, puzzles, sheet music, remnants, games, estate jewelry.Montreal West United Church, Cur- zon corner Westminster Avenue.MEETING Westmount Historical Association, Victoria Hall, 4626 Sherbrooke street west, Monday, April 14th, 1986, at 8 pm.Speaker: Julia Ger- sovitz, architect.Topic: Restoration and decoration of older homes \u2014 how and when.For further information call: Allan Raymond, 489-8741, Publicity Director.Members and guests welcome.A SPRING DESSERT CARD PARTY Will take place on Wednesday, April 16th, at 1 pm in Webster Hall, 4695 de Maisonneuve Blvd.West, Westmount.Please bring your own cards.Tickets are now available at the Westmount Senior Centre or call 932-2326 to reserve a table.NEARLY NEW SALE Sponsored by Pioneer Women's Organization Group Carmiel.Will take place on Tuesday, April 15, 1986, 9:30 a.m.- 3:00 p.m.Webster Hall, 4695 de Maisonneuve Blvd.W., corner Lansdowne.Merchandise for entire family.Bargains.Admission free.TEA & TAROT CLAIRVOYANT Pamela Kristen invites you for an afternoon of music, refreshments, conversation and fun.Guitarist David Gee will provide live music, there will be a cash bar available and everyone will be offered a tarot reading by Miss Kristen.This will be at Le Shangrila Hotel, Salon Camus, corner Peel and Sherbrooke, Sunday 0 13th from 2 to 6 pm.Admission 10.RUMMAGE SALE St.Augustine Parish Hall, 3785 Marcil, N.D.G.April 12th, 9am to 5 pm.April 13th, 10 am to 1 pm.A TEA BAKE AND HANDICRAFT SALE Will be held on Sunday, April 13th, 1986, from 2:00 to 5:30 pm at 310 Clarke Avenue, (corner of de Maisonneuve), Westmount, tog benefit the Sign of the Theotokoy Orthodox Church.For details please phone 481-5093.Give the gift of life.Be a Red Cross blood donor.STUDIO GENTILLESSE Special # ai 30% off all esthétique treatments Tuesday to Thursday from 11 to 3 Opening hours 9 to 6 Monday to Saturday PHONE: 931-2189 \u2014 2eme Sheila Ratigan at Rotary: Seniors need self-esteem most Manoir director tells sponsors Self-esteem and dignity are essential ingredients for a sound mind, body and soul, Sheila Ratigan told the Rotary Club of Westmount this week.The activities director at Manoir Westmount senior citizens' residence, drawing on past experience, said she has noticed that generally the \u201cinstitution\u2019s main focus is on the (welfare of the) body,\u201d forgetting entirely the ancient Greek notion of an equally proportioned, three-sid- ed model of man.ua.working as a volunteer with Dr vid Gayton at the newly- opened Royal Victoria Hospital geriatric ward, Mrs Ratigan witnessed \u201cwonderful medical care, but something was missing,\u201d she said.Recently, hospitals and other institutions have begun correcting past deficiencies, she said, by recruiting recreational therapists and other professionals to build a more stable balance between mind, body and soul for their patients.To simply cure the physical disorders of senior citizens is often to dismiss the psychological aspects of old age, she said.The aging process is usually accompanied by a \u2018damaging circle\u201d of isolation, poor nutrition and loneliness, Mrs Ratigan said.As family leave the nest, friends fade away and physical deterioration sets in, many are overwhelmed and depressed and this, in turn, produces diminishing self-esteem, she explained.The damaging circle can begin as early as when the son beats his father at golf for the first time, Mrs Ratigan warned the Rotary Club members.The club originally built and manages the facility as part of itscommu- nity service activities.Deinstitutionalizing At Manoir Westmount, Mrs Rati- gan said, \u201cWe try to deinstitutiona- lize the institution\u201d and rebuild lost self-esteem and dignity so that the Alzheimer Society to hold workshops The Alzheimer Society of Montreal is planning a series of workshops for family and friends concerned with Alzheimer and other related diseases.The session closest to Westmount istobeheld at 4333 Cote St Catherine road at Legaré avenue.There are to be evening and afternoon sessions weekly, for eight weeks, commencing April 14 for the afternoon groups and April 15 for the evening gatherings.Donations of $20 are suggested but, the society notes, no one will be refused for inability to pay.For more information on this program call 871-9944.Catholic services spring program on Catholic Community Services, 1857 de Maisonneuve boulevard, west is again offering a full array of spring programs.Programs include: a discussion group for newly separated and divorced persons; parent effectiveness training; parents and pre-school children; youth program development; activity program for seniors; camping services; and volunteer development.For more information on the spring round of community programs call Catholic Community Services at 937-5351.resident may experience a truly healthy lifestyle.When a new resident enters the Manoir, in theory, they're supposed to be self-sufficient.However, the trauma of moving and unfamiliar surroundings must be taken into account.\u201cGenerally, it takes six months to improve (the newcomer's) health substantially,\u201d said Mrs Ratigan.The atmosphere of the Manoir is crucial to this rehabilitation.The residents are offered support, Mrs Ratigan said, but at the same time allowed to maintain their autonomy.\u201cThere are 120 people at the Manoir and at least 100 different lifestyles,\u201d she added with a grin.An example of the Manoir philosophy?If a diabetic orders a piece of rich chocolate cake at dinner, first she'll be warned it\u2019s not good for her.Should she still want it, then it's served, immediately.\u201cIt is her risk to take,\u201d Mrs Rati- gan explained, adding that taking full responsibility for one\u2019s actions is tantamount to dignity and subsequent physical health.\u201cThe eroding away of self-esteem (often a by-product of old age) is halted through autonomy and programs.\u201d The most popular of all events, Mrs Ratigan said, is the birthday tea.Many also enjoy \u201cresident-initiated\u201d activities such as bridge and cocktail parties.Location paramount Mrs Ratigan praised the \u2018\u2018foresight and struggle\u201d of the Rotary Club for situating the Manoir at its present location beside Victoria Hall.Its location is \u201cparamount\u201d for it provides the seniors with easy access to their community.Whether it be a stroll in the park, a look in the library or a visit to the Westmount Senior Citizens\u2019 Centre residents of Manoir Westmount are within a couple of minutes walk.The director also thanked Rotary members for their continued activity in the Manoir, citing in particular Ray Valliéres' frequent \u201clong chats\u201d with residents, Bill Page's chauffeur service and Andy Dodge's ever-popu- lar dog, Henry.\u201cI'm proud to be associated with the Manoir Westmount, and through it with Rotary,\u201d Mrs Ratigan concluded to enthusiastic applause.The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 10, 1986 - 17 ya Fabrics Specialists A 2 re rembourrage upholstering 460 St.Jacques, Ville St.Pierre 364-5657 * 363-1461 first bite! is w= Hannah and Jerry's pode JE] Van Horne Bagel \" 5205 Sherbrooke W.CORNER MARLOWE 482-5943 CHAMY corner Claremont Spring has finally arrived, and so has Chamy, with all its new colorful coordinates to carry you through another fun and sporty season! all spring merchandise upon presentation of this coupon 5006 Sherbrooke St.West 483-3453 OPEN: Mon.-Wed.9-6; Thurs.-Fri.9-9; Sat.9-5 Di - 18 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 10, 1986 Have a pleasant stay.At Home.Our experienced nurses, aides and companions are carefully selected for their professional commitment and caring attitude.They do everything to enable our elderly clients to live comfortably at home and maintain their independence.Full or part-time care is provided at your convenience.* Free Assessment by our staff R.N.e No minimum hours.FOR A FREE BROCHURE OR MORE INFORMATION CALL: C ENTRACARE SERVICES DE SANTE {Incorporating We Sit Better) 482-9090 NOW 24 HOUR SERVICE miniature enthusiasts of montreal I 98 6 sixth annual dollhouse and miniature exhibit and sale RAMADA INN AIRPORT, 6600 Cote de Liesse, St.Laurent Saturday, April 12, | to 9 p.m.; Sunday, April 13, |! a.m.to 5 p.m.Admission: $3 per day $1.50 for children under 12 and senior citizens Information: 684-1290 Children under 12 must be accompanied by an adult ® NO STROLLERS PLEASE Public transportation: Bus no.100, Crémazie metro Women\u2019s council to sponsor midwifery discussion The Montreal Council of Women plans to meet at St George's Church Hall, 1101 Stanley street, at 1 pm Wednesday.\u201cLegalization of Midwifery\u201d was the subject of a resolution at the CJC urges Seder sharing Canadian Jewish Congress (Quebec Region) encourages individuals wishing to join a family for a Passover Seder and families which would like to open their home to a Seder guest to identify themselves so that they may be matched.According to Jeff D.Kushner, executive director of the Quebec region, \u2018For many of us, it is hard to imagine a member of the Montreal Jewish community with neither the family nor network of friends with whom to share a Passover Seder, yet there are many in that situation.We would like to help ensure that everyone has an opportunity to participate in a Seder.\u201d Those interested in participating in the Share-A-Seder project may contact Fran Gutman, Canadian Jewish Congress (Quebec Region), 1590 Docteur Penfield avenue, Montreal, Quebec, H3G 1C5, or call 931- 7531.Junior debate tourney at ECS Miss Edgar's and Miss Cramp's School is to host the junior provincial debating competition championship match tomorrow.Starting address is slated for 9 am, with the debates commencing at 9:30 am and running to noon.The championship debate is to take place at 1:30 pm.Schools from Westmount have teams rumored to be strong contenders in the square-off.annual meeting of the National Council of Women, Canada held in Montreal last May.It was referred for further study and is coming back to the meeting in Halifax this year in a new form \u2014 first to ask the federal government to recognize midwifery as a health care discipline and second, ask the provincial and local councils to study and address their respective governments what role and education should be approved for the best care of the mother and baby in the birthing process.The program is to bring two well- qualified people to speak about neau, a Quebec nurse and graduate of a college of midwifery in Scotland, has worked in several countries in Africa and Asia as well as the United States.She feels that the midwife can give the best care to women awaiting the birth of a baby and has returned to Quebec to see the service established here.Ann Usher, a Montrealer who has worked in the community for some time to improve the care for citizens of the city, will speak about the health care system, and the integration of midwifery into it.The hostess group for the event is these aspects of care.Lise Cousi- the Lachine Women's Club.Annual 9 Rotary Auction and Giant Garage Sale new and used, at Quality household goods, reasonable prices have made this a perennially popular event, and this year we will have a car up for bids.Pick up a bargain and support the Rotary Club of Westmount programs for youth, senior citizens, and those in need.AUCTION April 18 from 7:00 to 10:00 p.m.PREVIEW 6:00-7:00 p.m.SALE April 19, 10:00 a.m.to 3:00 p.mat Westmount Arena, 4675 St.Catherine St.West P.S.: It\u2019s not too late to make a donation.Call 935- 3344 any weekday morning to arrange for pickup or delivery.5 S NOW OPEN! KENSINGTON VIDEO 934-0428 Conveniently located next to Cantor\u2019s bakery at 4419 St.Catherine St.West (next to Kensington Ave.) OPENING SPECIAL Free Membership with rental of 2 movies ALL THE LATEST RELEASES e Commando ® Return of the Jedi e Real Genius ®* The Goonies e Prizzi's Honor ® Weird Science e My Science Project ® and many more Adult © Comedy ® Horror Science Fiction * Drama ¢ Children\u2019s OPEN 7 DAYS 10 AM-10 PM e BLANK TAPES e Same day service on film developing.Bring in before 10:30 a.m.and they are ready by 6:30 p.m.(#110, 135, 126) Black & white - 48 hours.ox NET We use Kodak paper.Our price defies competition! Fr JA NAN ATA CAT A ate ot- ies the ive the i to ed as me ens he rat is is John Dealy tapped to head top fibre research society John Dealy, a resident of 305 Gros- venor avenue, is scheduled to become president of the New York-based Rheological Society in October 1987.A professor of chemical engineering at McGill University for the past 22 years and a Westmount resident for all but two of those years, Prof Dealy is an acknowledged leader in his field of plastic fibre research.Rheology is a science which concentrates on the deformation and flow of matter.Prof Dealy was the founder and first chairman of the Canadian Rhe- ological Chapter.Currently, he represents Canada on the International Committee for Rheology, a body that meets every four years to compare change research findings.ntreal is an exceptionally MEETING.Continued from page one pronouncements on dogs and parks, he quickly asked Mayor Gallery, as chairman, for \u201cprotection\u201d to continue and questioners complied with little objection.At one point Westmount Municipal Association President Stuart Robertson was asked by His Worship to apologize for calling the city \u201cslipshod\u201d in making available proposed by-laws, but Mr Robertson persisted in the matter despite explanations from the city clerk.City council found a new friend, however, in Ramzi Ferahian, acitizen long known for his persistent questions.Mr Ferahian ended up commending the council for its stand on the dogs.And when the 45-minute question period ended to bring the meeting to a close most agreed it had been a good meeting even if all did not agree on the content.active area in this field,\u201d Prof Dealy said, adding that McGill University is a leader in rheological studies world-wide along with the University of Grenoble in France and the University of Wisconsin.Prof Dealy plans to attend the latter university as a visiting professor next year.The professor mentioned that Westmount has an illustrious group of scientific researchers living within its boundaries and, in particular, noted the significant contributions of a colleague with a long-standing PHARMACIST H.GOLDENBERG, B.Ph.L.Ph.Pharmacien/Pharmacist (METCALFE) SERVING WESTMOUNT FOR 35 YEARS international reputation in rheology at McGill, Dr S.G.Mason.Dr Mason devoted much of his life to the study of pulp fibre suspensions.\u201cHe is a former Bingham Medal winner for his outstanding work,\u201d Prof Dealy said.Prof Dealy was elected as vice president and president-elect of the Rheological Society last fall.The organization consists of leading North American scientists and engineers and is responsible for publishing a semi-monthly technical magazine, The Journal of Rheology.It\u2019s easy to place a classified ad in THE WESTMOUNT EXAMINER.Simply call 931-7511.BIG enough Small enough FREE DELIVERY 933-1155 4451 St.Catherine, corner Metcalfe! to Serve you to know you The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 10, 1986 - 19 Restore It! Mirrors: Antique Picture Frames: Boxes, etc.Reap the Rewards of Restoration & Re-leafing a 631-6569 Also eves & weekends.By Appointment La France Antique 1350 Greene Ave.Westmount 935-7054 ® Specialty furniture & French objects ® Repairs by qualified persons e Experts in insurance \u201cEmilien Gonzalez\u201d Expert agréé Authorized appraiser Auprés C.E.A.Paris (Compagnie Expertise en Antiquités) X .+ © + + - e .e a ° re à > A ° > 2 ry = = = A 2 2 Ne 3 LN =.= x A, \"> SB F MA » Per ITN - sors Se SORT NE : a \u2019 e WE ARE OPEN AT LAST! Come and see our beautiful and refreshing collection of Spring and Summer cottons Q 1353 Greene Avenue 935-4361 ae mmm meee 20 - The Westmount Continued from page five more money than is absolutely necessary should be spent on landscaping the park, which is very beautiful as it is and enjoyed by many people.May I suggest that what we really need in Westmount, as far as recreational facilities are concerned, is an indoor swimming pool.While we are very fortunate to have a splendid outdoor pool (which 1 would not be in favour of covering over), more and more people like to swim all year round, and the pool at the West- mount Y is totally inadequate.While I appreciate that the building of a swimming pool would cost a great deal more than the $175,000 which has been allocated for the park \u201cimprovements,\u201d I think it is an expense which many West- mounters might feel justifiable.As a possible location, the old curling club on Hillside avenue has been vacant for a long time now.Could it be acquired for an indoor pool?Its proximity to the high school introduces the possibility Examiner, Thursday, April 10, Bo gm en UG c > Ls FOIE en Tr 1986 that it could be used by the students, as well as those of other Westmount schools.I should be interested in your comments on this idea.Yours sincerely, June Paterson 359 Melville avenue WESTMOUNT PQ H3Z 2J7 \u2018Veuillez continuer a prendre le parti des humains\u2019 THE EXAMINERK a reçu une copie de la lettre suivante: M John Shingler Hôtel de Ville Westmount Monsieur: À propos du réaménagement du parc Westmount et spécialement du déplacement de la \u201ctoilette publique\u201d pour chiens, veuillez continuer à prendre le parti des humains avant celui des chiens.Malgré les préjugés qui affligent certains citoyens et leurs porte-parole, vous ne pouvez vous tromper en donnant priorité Domicare nc.WESTMOUNT, QUEBEC Going on holidays?Away for the weekend?Extinguisher works prematurely When firemen were called to a home at 455 Grosvenor avenue for a small explosion Monday afternoon, aux gens, quitte à reléguer les fonctions hygiéniques des toutous en périphérie.En outre, les concentrations actuelles accumulées rue Wood, tant en urine qu\u2019en matière fécale, à cause des chiens, créent un problème qui se sent de loin.Il nous semble qu\u2019il ne faudra pas attendre que la santé publique soit dégradée avant d\u2019y voir.Mario Lalanne ing.M.B.A.Hortense Michaud-Lalanne ing.M.B.A.19 chemin de Casson WESTMOUNT PQ H3Y 2G9 Children refused service at shop Sir: À recent article in THE EXAMINER whetted my appetite for yet one more place to indulge in coffee, tea, pastry, lunch, ete in Westmount.I filed the information in my cluttered mind.A friend and I went for a walk today with our two young children.At 11:00 we entered a completely empty Pâtisserie Genève.We were immediately and firmly told that we were not allowed to sit with our children (Why do I have the fecling I have joined the ranks of dog owners!) The fact that our two SPRING/ SUMMER children are well-behaved and that we are conscientious mothers is irrelevant data yet in the face of such a rebuff one is reduced to such defenses.We were both stunned.My intention of having a pastry and café au lait and purchasing other things from the tempting display was frustrated \u2014 but only temporarily.We went to Nick's on Greene Avenue which by comparison, welcomed us with open arms.In 16 years, I have been many places with my children.I have simply not encountered outright refusal to serve children.Moreover, in Westmount the reception has always been warm and friendly until today.What a sour taste! I will not return to this place.This policy must be illegal \u2014 it\u2019s certainly poor business.Fortunately my indulgent nature will be happily accommodated in other places in Westmount.Georgina Howick 462 Strathcona avenue > WESTMOUNT PQ H3Y 2X1 (Editor's Note: The pastry shop confirmed to THE EXAMINER that children generally are not allowed in the café section of the store because \u2018of the extra costs of cleaning up messes which may result.) 86 PROGRAM A md a wm am ; Cd ; they found white powder sprayed tk Why not take advantage of our unique house-minding service?throughout the kitch \u20ac Let us water your plants, feed your indoor pets, check your ON I of the mess turned out STARTING L' 19044 OF MAY 5th d home and furnace and pick up or forward your mail, etc.to be a 21/2 pound powder ABC fire 1 For information please call extinguisher accidentally dis- 8-WEEK COURSES : 3-4747 charged by a woman, fire officials Co .483- report.The powder resembled bak- ° TEXTILES: Painting on silk, Katazome, felting, E Susan Jamieson ing soda.quilting, printing on fabric, etc.\u20ac * CERAMICS: Wheel, glazes, Raku, etc.I \u201c M Re , * DRAWING/PAINTING: Drawing - figure, landscape, u 1 was failing.1 just couldn't keep up.Now, .24e .t at Westmount Learning Centre, | get all the pastel; Painting - watercolor, oil, portraiture; s calligraphy; jewellery, etc.special attention and support I need.My grades are back up and I'm looking forward to college.\u201d At Westmount Learning Centre students are individually assessed.Good study habits are promoted.Individualized instruction is available in a wide selection of elementary, high school, and CEGEP level courses.Summer make-up courses for credit are offered.as well as special courses for students in French Immersion.Westmount Learning Centre is open year-round and is recognized by the Quebec Department of Education.For more information please contact the Registrar at (514) 932-4109 \u201cI WAS FAILING?INTENSIVE WEEKS AND WORKSHOPS A wide range of new and exciting subjects in the applied and fine arts.YOUTH * 6-WEEK COURSES for children (4 to 16 years old) e SKETCH AND STRETCH - Day camp > July 7-August 29 (6 to 13 years old) INFORMATION: 488-9558 T ~~ WN Ine Westmount 350 Victoria Ave., Montreal e Learning Centre metro Vendome) H3Z 2N4 bi 245 Victoria Avenue, suite 500 ofi EN an Ti Westmount, Quebec H3Z 2M6 is er Perrot Nes 749-544 category permit no.749536 Private Education Act du Ne pi SPECIAL PRICE, 2, PUMPKIN PIE SPECIAL PRICE 2.99 ça BLUEBERRY PIE SPECIAL PRICE 3,99 za.STRAWBERRY/RHUBARB sPEciat Price 3.99 ex.PECAN PIE SPECIAL PRICE 3,99 ç, HOT PRICE ONE OF EACH (5) FOR 15.99 BONELESS FRESH PORK SIRLOIN TIP ROAST SPARE RIBS CANADA GRADE \u201cA\u201d BEEF 3 RANE AT 2 RE TNT EY pS SPICES VALID FROM APRIL 332 ICEBERG LETTUCE BEST PRICE IN TOWN FROM FLORIDA SIZE 24 2 ron 99¢ FRESH STRAWBERRIES FROM FLORIDA 1 PINT BASKET FRESH ASPARAGUS FROM CALIFORNIA PURE BUTTER CRESCENTS § ,,, 229 | HOME MADE 2d RAISIN BUNS LJ] PKG OF 6 FRESH HOME MADE a EUROPEAN STYLE BAGUETTES ¢ BREAD 99 a.FARM HOUSE DOUBLE CRUSTY BREAD ¢ 12 oz 99 .MILD CHEDDAR CHEESE BREAD 69: pa V3 =r FW we bd ed ~~ 0% Te tw Te Te we Ul REE NE Campagne de financement l\u2019école hondurienne réussit Les responsables de la pastorale à Saint-Léon ont le plaisir de vous communiquer le résultat final de la participation des paroissiens au projet de carême \u2018\u201886\u201d\u2019.Les deux classes de l'école des Barrios Unidos au Honduras pourront être terminées et meublées.Les 200 enfants de l\u2019élémentaire reçevront le matériel et les vêtements nécessaires qui leur permettront de fréquenter l\u2019école.Les 700 autres personnes qui constituent la clientèle de l\u2019école en après-midi et soirée profiteront aussi des lieux nouvellement aménagés.Cent soixante personnes ou familles ont participé au projet en versant la somme de 10 119$.Les étudiantes de la Villa Ste-Marcel- line gil leur repas de la faim et leur ma Lhon, ont réuni la somme de 4 288$.Leur objectif de 13 500$ est donc dépassé, puisque la somme totale de 14 417$ a été recueillie.Au nom de l'équipe pastorale de Choluteca et de soeur Jeanine Coudal, qui est la responsable de la vie communautaire des Barrios Unidos, les responsables du projet expriment leur vive reconnaissance à vous tous qui avez perçu le Christ à travers ces enfants., À funeral is to be held this morn- EASTER Il Des nouvelles de Tegucigalpa ing at St Léon s Church for Claude- Panet Beaubien, a city alderman for Sermon: AN OPEN DOOR, AN EMPTY Le 22 mars dernier, soeur Ama- bilis Deveau, nous écrivait de Tegucigalpa pour informer les paroissiens de Saint-Léon que depuis cinq mois un \u201ccomedor\u201d (réfectoire) pour les enfants sous-alimentés a été ouvert dans le Suazo-Cordova de Tegucigalpa au Honduras.Soixante-quinze enfants font partie d\u2019un programme d\u2019alimentation de vitaminisation.Les mamans de ces enfants doivent accepter de préparer les aliments une fois par semaine.Une association paie les aliments qui leur sont servis et les vitamines sont fournies par le projet de vitaminisation de Saint-Léon.Les enfants qui sont Anne Pomeroy dies at age 86 Funeral arrangements had yet to favorisés par ce programme ont déjà pris du poids, sont en meilleure santé grâce à la générosité des membres de cette communauté chrétienne.Soeur Amabilis adresse sa reconnaissance et ses meilleurs voeux de joie et de paix à l'occasion de Pâques, à tous les membres de la communauté chrétienne de Saint-Léon.De nombreux grands-parents sont souvent inquiets, interpellés, bouleversés, souvent malheureux parce que leurs petits enfants ne sont pas baptisés, ou parce qu'ils ne reçoivent pas d'éducation chrétienne.Le Conseil de Pastorale, ayant identifié un besoin au niveau de notre communauté chrétienne, a prévu une rencontre d'information et d'échanges le mardi 22 avril à 14h00 à la salle Saint-Léon.Cette rencontre sera animée par Abbé Louis Dicaire.C'est une invitation pressante et chaleureuse pour le \u2018thé des grands- parents.\u201d Parsons to speak on Mission work At the coffee hour after the 10:30 am service next Sunday at St Matthias\u2019 Church, Harold Parsons is to speak about the work being done by St Michael\u2019s Mission.The Mission, founded in 1915, operates out of the basement of the Churchof St John the Evangelist, 137 President Kennedy.Phone number is 844-8127.A joint project of the Diocese of Montreal and the Parish of St John the Evangelist, the Mission provides a drop-in centre and food depot for transients and families referred by agencies and churches.A mid-day meal and a hot shower are both available for those who want them.The drop-in centre is open from 8 am to | pm each day, and Mr Parsons is on hand from 8 am to 4 pm.Members of the public are welcome to come to hear Mr Parsons.Information can be obtained through the church office at 933-4295.Claude-Panet Beaubien, former alderman, dies one term from 1963-1966.Mr Beaubien died Monday in Raw- don, Quebec.Mr Beaubien worked his way up through the Alcan organization to achieve the post of vice-president for public relations and advertising in 1972.He was active in the Montreal Board of Trade and the Canadian Chamber of Commerce.Other highlights of his career included a stint with the Canadian trade mission to Australia and New Zealand in 1962 and as a member of the 1956 royal commission on publications.Mr Beaubien was an engineer trained at MIT in Boston, Mass.He is survived by his wife Jeannine (née Charbonneau), sons Claude Jr of Outremont, Luc of Boston; and daughter Jeannine Duque of Jon- quière.Six grandchildren also survive.Claude-Panet Beaubien The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 10, - 21 St.Andrew\u2019s\u2014Dominion-Douglas United Church The Boulevard at Lansdowne\u2014d486- 1165 Sermon: SERVICE THROUGH PURER LIVES Rev.Dr.Norman Slaughter preaching 4:00 p.m.\u2014 Kantus Chorus Choir concert BUSES 66 and 1234 STOP AT DOOR Sunday, April 13 11:00 a.m.\u2014 Morning Worship Ministers: The Rev Alexander J.Farquhar; The Rev Donald Burns Organist and Choir Director: Margaret de Castro, M.Mus.CRIB CORNER and SUNDAY SCHOOL; COFFEE HOUR FOLLOWING WORSHIP ALL ARE WELCOME THE CHURCH OF PRESBYTERIAN St.Andrew and St.Paul Sherbrooke Street West at Bishop SUNDAY AT 11 A.M.TOMB, A PROMISE.John Blaine Taylor, B.Th.& J.S.S.Armour, Minister CHURCH SCHOOL Nursery and Créche Wayne Riddell, Director of Music Ray Drennan, Assistant I.SUNDAY, APRIL 13 EASTER II 8:00 am Holy Eucharist 10:30 am Mattins Sermon: Mr.John Hall 10:30 am Church School and Nursery WEDNESDAY be finalized at press time yesterda; .for Eliza Anne Pomeroy (née Pugh), AT THE CHURCH 10:00 am & 7:30 pm - Holy Eucharist who Hed Monday at Queen Eliza- a OF YOUR CHOICE ospital a .Pall dod bia The wife of the late William ST.MATTHIAS\u2019 CHURCH .| ANGLICAN SYNAGOGUE George Pomeroy, cartoonist with ANGLICAN he Montrer: Star for many years, CHURCH OF Rector: Lt.Col.The Rev.R.S.Wood, C.D., L.Th.: lergy: Rev.Cedric Cobb, Rev.Murray Magor, Rev.David Oliver chemist, published poet, mother of a THE ADVENT Cergy Re Aster: yo bullfighting daughter, and to staff of Comer of Wood and CONGRECATION i Choirmaster: Stephen A.Crisp, B.Th.ARCO THE WESTMOUNT (XAMINER, an de Maisonneuve, Westmount HASH iN 131 Cote Amon es mount \u2014 13425 endearing and entertaining presence YIM Equipped for the Hearing Impaire during her employment hers for PTE TE onion Are A seve years io owing er retire- Sunday April 13 Up until her 85th year, Mrs Pome- 10.30 0m fo Bachar sabbath Day.8:40 am in the main synagogue roy was an active volunteer for the The Book of Alternative Services will be used ath Twilight: 6:40 pm THE MOUNT ROYAL CEMETERY COMPANY Queen Elizabeth Hospital.She at both Sunday Services._ Daily Services AND CREMATORIUM INC.resided for many years on Irvine Church School & Nursery Morning Services: Sun Apri 13, 8:45 am; avenue and then in the Hillside ave- Wednesday April 16 Event Service San Th oY 11317.6:40 nue housing project, where she lived 11:15 am Holy Eucharist ng services: Sun Thurs Apri 8: with Ellen Pugh, one of her surviv- ist and Director of Music: pm ing sisters.! | Mr.Henry Abley, FFAC.CH.M., FT.C.L, She is also survived by her sister ELC.M., AR.CM.Emily of Vancouver, and predeceased by brothers Thomas and UNITED ughter Vivian lives in Mexico 2 where she is a well-known WESTMOUNT PARK CHURCH artist, actress, writer and former Lansdowne Avenue and de Maisonneuve Blvd F bullfighter.a The Rev J E Munson, BA, BD, MDiv EN Organist and Choir Director: Gordon White, B.Mus., L.Mus.A SERVICE OF HEALING SUNDAY APRIL 13 1297 Perost Rd., Outremen * Praise and 3rd Sunday in Easter Quebes HIV 2P9 tel: 279-7358 Thanksgiving Anniversary Sunday YOU ARE INVITES CONSULT ONE OUR STAIT © Times of silence 11:00 Morning Service TD CHD SRD CD m5 qu Gr Sm\") \u2014 au Qu LJ CD FED cage se ms cn (un * Teaching from God's Sermon: Remember the Future 1] BEFORE NEED.CREMATION AND BURIAL ARRANGEMENTS 1 .Nord diavi Speaker: The Very Rev.Lois Wilson, O.C., B.A., M.Div., (1 MEMORIALIZATION: MONUMENTS.MARKERS.INSCRIPTIONS AND BRONZE | Ee EE ying D.Div., D.C.L., D.Hum., L.D.D.L) NICHES AND CRYPTS INDOOR PREMISES) : 7:30 pm Social Hour Crib Corner i ; Sunday.13 April Sunday School ADDRESS er I St.Stephen's Church = ALL ARE WELCOME ee SE (Dorchester/Atwater) a L PROPERTY FOR SALE 1 Montreal.RIVER FRONTAGE New listing.1.5 acre treed, beautifully landscaped estate overlooking Chateauguay river close to Ormstown.40 minutes from downtown Tastefully renovated 1860 two-storey brick home, 3 bedrooms, living room with fireplace, garage and workshop.Ideal for commuting executive.Asking price $87,900.McKinnon Realties Inc., broker 878-2226, 1-247-2704 J.M.LAURIE - 22 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 10, 1986 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING \u2014PHONE YOUR ADS\u2014 931-7511 10 words $4.50 15 cents each additional word, $2.00 each line heading =» Adtakers on duty Monday to Friday till 5 pm REGULAR DEADLINE WEDNESDAY 10 AM; T= TOO-LATE-TO-CLASSIFY 2 PM For best service, phone your ads early.Accounts may be paid by telephone by Visa or MasterCard.or by cash or cheque at the Weekly Adservice and Ex \u201camer office.155 Hillside avenue, Westmount, the Monitor office, 6525 Somerled avenue at Caver.dish.NDG.= the St Laurent News office, 842 Ste Croix, St.Laurent: the Town ot Mount Royal Weekly Post office.233 Dunbar I avenue.or at any branch on the Island of Montreal of the Royal Bank of Canada or the Bank of Montreal È Advertising not paid in advance of publication 15 subject to a $2.00 billing charge.Advance payments without In- : voice cannot be accepted by banks but may be paid at any of the above newspaper offices APARTMENTS TO LET WANTED 50 1-247-2406 APPARTEMENTS A LOUER 2 1 DEMANDE COMPANION WESTMOUNT Townhouse Condominium Fabulous property in perfect location with excellent views 3 bedrooms.balcony, 2 bathrooimns.2 open fireplaces, air conditioning, security system and \u201cpièce de résistance\u2019 stars to private root garden with deck and planters.Garage.Early occupancy.Exclusive.Please call Mrs.Volesky 486-6809 486-1016 Isobel Hulme Realties, Broker CONDO.Penthouse Old Montreal, luxury plus: 7 rooms plus green house.$360,000.Mary MacDonald, Mtl.Trust, 735-2281, 386-0802.COUNTRY HOUSES TOLET 5 MAI DE CAMPAGNE LOUER KENNEBUNPORT MAINE Furnished luxury 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom condo on beach.Heated pool Monthly: June or September, $1.300.July or August $2,200.Call 697-4841.COUNTRY HOUSE EE WANTED MAISON DE CAMPAGNE DEMANDÉE \u2014 COTTAGE WANTED July or August.Quiet location.Eastern Townships.For responsible adult family.Call 937-7376 after 5 pm.SPACE TO LET ESPACE À LOUER 15 AxAxXA DOWNTOWN PRIME RETAIL SPACE \u201cPROMENADES DES BOUTIQUES\" 1155 SHERBROOKE STREET WEST 600 to 4,000 sq.ft.immediate occupancy CALL: DON ROTER 282-1155 + Brokers Protected + OFFICES TO LET BUREAUX A LOUER 17 PRIME OFFICE SPACE WESTMOUNT TRIPLE 1 TURNKEY REASONABLE 376 VICTORIA AVE.Modern, comfortable offices built to your specification.1,000 to 20,000 sq.ft.Call Don Roter: 282-1158 OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT 250 to 1,100 sq.ft.* HEATING + AIR CONDITIONING * ELECTRICITY * CARPETING, DRAPES, ARE ALL INCLUDED IMMEDIATE INFORMATION CALL: 481-0125 from 9 am-5 pm HOLIDAY RESORTS CENTRES DE WACANCE FRENCH family, university profes Domaine des Plantées, Biviers, F- 38330, St-Ismier, France.OOAO-SQE GROSVENOR Luxurious, spacious newly renovated 2 bedroom apartment, parking included, second parking space available.Immediate.Victoria Large 5'.Near all conveniences.July 1st.Call: Mrs.Quig, 861-2225.DORCHESTER near Greene.Four apartments available July 1st.41% $480.-$500./month.Call between 9 am - 5 pm for appointment.933- 0022.AVAILABLE June-July 1st, 42, $480.to $550.Dorchester near Greene.Call 933-0022.LARGE 73% to sublet furnished: 456 Pine, 3 bedrooms, fridge, stove, 2 min.from McGill.May 1st to Jus 31st.$700.per month.286-8279.43 morceaux de plywood, 3' x 342\", épaisseur V2\" pour $200.381-9085.ABSI-QBA garbage services.WALDORF APTS.High rise building near Vendome metro station.Clean large 34, bachelor, studio including heating, hot water, stove and fridge, laundry room facilities, Electricity bachelor and studio apts.Please call Adnan 488-4352 indoor/outdoor garage, included in FLATS & DUPLEXES TOLET DUPLEXES ww 24 CARTIERVILLE Facing Park UPPER DUPLEX Spacious, bright, 3 bedrooms, living room 18'x14'6, kitchen/dining room 20'2x13, with closed off washer/dryer space in kitchen.Newly decorated.18 balcony with awning.rear balcony.Heated own thermostat, hot water included, near transportation for Metro connections.Parking facilities.Adult cou- ple preferred.Available immediately 331-8839 DWELLINGS TOLET BROSSARD secteur secteur S, nouveau, 3 vendre ou 3 louer avec ou sans option d'achat.cottages détachés ou semi-détachés.$725./mois, non chauffés.Libre 1er mai.671-1641.ROOM & BOARD TO LET In your home or mine for SENIOR CITIZENS The best in T.L.C.(482-5307 À PARTAGER HOUSE TOO BIG?it you have sunny, pleasant furnished spaces possibly 2-5 years for McGill grad student and Roslyn grade two son with great references (local) and aspirations.We are bright, quiet, happy and need home Mon.- Fri.Share chores, children, house-plant- pet-sit in absences.Suggestions welcome.Very adaptable to proper atmosphere.Micro, VCR, sat.dish ant.to contribute.Only serious offers please.1-227-6231.ROOMMATE wanted to share large 7142 apt downtown.May 1-Aug 31.456 Pine across from Currie Gym.2 mins.from McGill.286-8279.Cindy.Le CARS FOR SALE = 1982 Jetta, 4 door, sunroof.105,000 A VENDRE kilometres, green, very clean.935- pret after 6 pm and weekends only se.oN 3, ir = ~ fC, I Ce Ae aS ar CARS FOR SALE AUTOS x 36 CORVETTE WANTED Cash for your car - no dealers.937-2270 933-6647 RIDE WITH THE BREEZE AT EASE ANTIQUE CAR SERVICE 481-5448 am.3] A ANNES Available, capable, reliable and honest person to take care of elderly lady during the day.Write to: Box 815, c/o Weekly Adservice, 155 Hillside Avenue, Westmount, Quebec, H3Z 2Y8 UNIVERSITY student seeking summer employment.Available May to Sept.Responsible, hard working.Interests a 487-2927.MATERNELLE \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 MOTHER'S helper, 16-year-old girl, experienced in babysitting and day camp activities.looking for summer employment with family going abroad or cottaging.Can help enter tain young in creative endeavors, loves animals and sports.Bilingual.GARDIENNES Katherine 487-2927.DEMANDEES 54 GARDERIE Complexe Guy Favreau, 1179 de Bleury.Ouverture 7 avril.DOMESTIC WORK Madame Ngo, 875-4584.RAL ours 56 CLEANING LADY PROBLEMS?Call MiniMénage.Our supervised cleaning teams will save you personnel! problems and clean your home weekly or alternate weeks at a price you u can atford! Call iniMénage today: _\u2014_\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 Ss HELP BABY SITTERS WANTED 486- 4770 NOT, AN AGENCY: NO FEES CHARGED 2/ UNIVERSITY student looking for job mid-April to mid-June.Extensive experience with children.References available.Responsible, loves kids.482-2349.BABY SITTERS AVAILABLE GARDIENNES DISPOMIBLES CARS WANTED FOR SCRAP PRIVATE SCHOOL ANY CONDITION ECOLE MICHELINE P 338 JANDKE ENR.Call us for a price General instruction.D&N SCRAP True family atmosphere.Hydraulic Platform Primary grades.indergarten, year olds.8amtollpm Pre-school 3-4 years old.Mi of Education permit TRALERS nistry #729509 rOuors 38 Immediate enroitment 766-2223 \u2014 ROULOTTE 1975 Marque Puritan, 20 pieds, 2 essieux, poêle, frigidaire, toilette, douche, eau chaude, auvent, parfait état, prix discutable.482-4909 E INFIRMIÈRE autorisée.bilingue avec expérience, offre service de soins privés aux domiciles et hôpitaux.374-2117.\u2014 EY WANTED TRAVAIL DEMANDE secon vew >=\u201d 60 13 room piece ue room set, solid oak.antique, bevelled mirrors.appointment only.486-5075 po o pm.COLONIAL dinette set, seats 4-6, grogjient condition, $100.Call 483- ire 03 - 2 .$10.each.Call 486-6566.nos, 5e ' Pa ts to YY >a wd - ah MTT nh SARS ITI TTT SALES VENTES 65 FORT CHAMBLY rom old house, early grandfather lock.St Jean pottery lamps, some ina, some cut-glass, odds and pu \u2014 658-1383.Ar M.R.complete household.household.furni- - phone 342-3910, Fri.5-9 pm.Sat.1- 5 pm.Sun.9-4 pm.OR the real collector \u2014 stereo hi-fi th vacuum tubes, \u2018Dynakit\u201d amplifier, superb \u2018\u2019Space-sound\u201d © remote 12-unit speakers, Garrard turntable, all custom built.Tel.931- 4847 FOUR-seater sofa and chair, brown.$100.; folding bed $15.; table-top humidifier $10.; wooden TV stand $15.Call after 4 pm.738-4217.USED TIRES 20,000 in stock.From $9.95 and up.Call 364-3149.NEW TIRE BARGAIN Pirelli, Michelin, Goodyear, Uniroyal, Goodrich TA and more.364-3611.BEDROOM set, girl's, 6 pieces, double hide-a-bed sofa.cedar chest; full size office desk, swivel chair, plus walnut chair: wood easel.747-2202 LIVING room furniture, fine quality, unused, also velvet stools, oak chair, brass, Chinese screen.Good prices.932-7732 or 738-1670.ANTIQUES, master bedroom set including queen mattress, box spring, children's furniture, kitchen set.Call 487-4157.FILTER Queen, avec balai électrique, trés propre, $300.321-1800.TWO snooker tables for sale, 1 year INSTRUMENTS old.514-429-6711.DE MUS eus 67 PIANOS Dan TT grand, 5'8:\", black satin, immaculate, private.$6,250.Mr.Caron, 365-9216 or 382- 0780.68 TABLE, mahogany, mahogany, drop leat, Duncan Phyfe style.932-0665.ANTIQUE B.G.CASH FOR YOUR Antique & costume jewellery, furniture, brass, bronze, prints, china.Also complete estates.We do house MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS ANT QUES ANTIQUITES it you are having a yard sale, garage sale, porch sale, attic sale Contact the professional first.We pay more for oddities, antiques and such.Call: Rich Man Poor Man 6250 Sherbrooke West 488-4221 Oriental Rugs Wanted Used Any size or co 2 PETER GREGGRY Call with confidence 731-7161 Day or Night 13 CHOIR AUDITION The Ron-An Choir under the direction of Alexander Brott immediately seeking enthusiastic voices in all ranges to prepare for concert in June.931-9512.FLUTE LESSONS Music theory, coaching in composition and improvisation, beginners.Don Druick, 488-5997.EXPERIENCED French or English tutor, M.A.degree, gives lessons at home.739-3794 after 8 pm or Sunday.GERALD PEDROS FRANCIS CAPRAN now giving drawing classes in their studio.For more information cali: 481-4917 after 4 p.m.FINE ART and FASHION Courses in fashion drawing.portraiture, fashion design, creative dressmaking and drawing for teens, starting mid-April.Also summer day camp for teens Limited registration calls of ali kinds 285-6331 5879 Sherbrooke W.486.6100 _~ J4 MAGICIAN Centraide Specializing in children\u2019s birthday Montréal parties.The Amazing Todsky.342- 5380.EDUCATF 1972 CSN Np» Cr.\u201d\u2014- EDUCATE THE MONTESSORI WAY La maison des enfants MONTESSORI The children's house offers a program of learning experiences for your child's total development HEAD OFFICE: 4020 Grand Bivd., NDG REGISTER NOW FOR SEPTEMBER '86 FULL-TIME, PART-TIME SESSIONS Children 2% to 6 years old.French, English and bilingual classes TRANSPORTATION « LARGE PLAYGROUND ) NUTRITIOUS MEALS For further information please call: 486-3012 e 486-6361 A FEW PLACES AVAILABLE NOW CE FHS SCENT EE as 62 LEEE ND SBT PET ETP WIE CL Jay ?4 RY ce 13 ION he direc- nediately as in all ncert in NS COMPOSI: eginners.English ssons at 1 or Sun- \u2014 {ION wing.sign, and rting teens ion : Ras | The Westmount FREE ESTIMATE 931-0456 ESTIMATION GRATUITE shingles * bardeaux brickwork e brique metalwork e métal chimney ¢ cheminée slate e ardoise BRICKWORK Pointing Cement work Waterproofing Gallery repairs Ceramic tile work Vinyl tile work 24 Hours Service ROOF REPAIRS AND MAINTENANCE UNITED BUILDING SERVICES 487-3030 ALTO BLDG.SERVICE ROOFING * BRICK POINTING + STONE & CEMENT WORK e CHIMNEY FIREPLACE * WE ALSO DO SMALL REPAIRS » 40 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE AT YOUR SERVICE * FREE ESTIMATES * ALL WORK GUARANTEED Tr 8828 GARAGE DOORS | LASALLE GARAGE DOOR REPAIRS + INDUSTRIAL & RESIDENTIAL.« SALES \u2014 « REPAIRS We sell and repair all types of wood and steel ee doors.Also Electric operated.+ 24-HOUR SERVICE « SEVEN DAYS À WEEK 1328 BERNIE, LASALLE .\u2026 363-7537 ROOFING REG'D.DANCOR TL MAINTENANCE INC.Provides you with professional services Gyproc Plastering e Painting e Floor sanding e Carpentry & repairs e General home maintenance Our track record over the years shows that we are in business to save homeowners money, while at the same time \u201cWe do a better job\" 489-3839 THOMAS & THOMAS CUSTOM & GENERAL CARPENTRY KITCHENS.BALCONIES.FAMILY ROOMS.DECKS.BATHROOMS.FENCES.CABINETS.2 GYPROC.WESTMOUNT 935-1297 WEST ISLAND 620-7548 Fully licenced and insured PAINTWELL LTD WE ALWAYS WASH FIRST Residential & Commercial * Int.& ext.Sico paint * Gyproc, plaster, stucco « Wallpaper removal * Spray painting * Scaftoiding for heights * Insurance work Free estimates, clean work ANDREW ANSON 486-4615 LICENSED AND BONDED BRICK WORK SPECIALIST * shingle roofs * brickwork e chimneys repaired and rebuilt * tuck pointing brick and stone « foundations and basement repairs * silicone waterproofing Don't delay\u2014 call today! Gordon's Home Repairs 932-5262 CLIFF THOMSON RENOVATIONS ONE CALL DOES IT ALL e KITCHENS e PLAYROOMS e BATHROOMS CERAMIC TILING e PLASTERING e PAINTING e DECKS e FENCES e BALCONIES 484-6497 PAINTING WALLPAPERING PLASTER REPAIRS e Quality work e Sensible rates e Fully insured GREG W.LITTLE 481-1450 All work guaranteed GILES REG'D.SINCE 1951 PAINTING INT.-EXT.e ALSO SURFACE REPAIR WORK 637-5023 CARPENTRY.Kitchens.Playroom, etc.Call Donald, 363-8279.RENOVATIONS RAAEN ENRG.Carpentry, balconies, plastering, gyproc, qualified ceramic tile setter, cement repair.Free estimate References 487-0748 INTERIOR painting and wallpapering.Top quality work.Very reasonable rates.Excellent references.Phone Bob on 483-5699 or leave message.WATER damage, expert plastering, painting, tiling, stucco, gyproc, roof: ing.Perfect job.738-3062.RENOVATIONS EXPERIENCED IN ALL INTERIOR & EXTERIOR RENOVATIONS * CARPENTRY « GYPROC « PLASTER & PAINTING WORK « WINDOWS & DOORS » TILES « FOUNDATION PROBLEMS, ETC.G.0.RENOVATIONS Reg'd.FREE ESTIMATES 342-9454 WESTMOUNT Specialist in Plastering Plastering repairs.We remove wallpaper with steam.30 years\u2019 experience.Call L.Pelletier 659-9440 or 659-1576 after 6 pm CONSTRUCTION RENOVATION HAYNES REG'D « General renovation * Painting interior & exterior * Brick repair * Major plastering Floor sanding & refinishing ROBERT HAYNES .672-2560 PROPRIETAIRES ATTENTION Nous faisons la rénovation de vieux logements Expert en sinistres 761-2133 HANDYMAN Examiner, Thursday, April 10, 1986 - 23 [Tomo o\u2014\u2014esy TTT TTT 7 | Building Trades | | Mousehold Services | | société immobilière i Services domestiques | \u2014\u2014 CC Jd eee PLUMBING All kinds ol plumbing repair SANDING FLOORS work at low, low price : OLD FLOORS Qualified plumber PLOMBERIE MADE NEW Ouvrage de plomberie à prix SANDING très, très avantageux ERAMELLE INC.937-5142 SANDOR'S RENOVATION & DESIGN BATHROOMS, KITCHENS, BASEMENTS ALL CARPENTRY & FINISHING WORK 487-7856 CLASSIC RENOVATIONS OF MONTREAL Home improvements.Kitchen, bathroom renovations.Doors, windows, roots and siding.Work guaranteed.932-1768 PAINTING Save money.Top quality work.Inten- or, exterior, plaster and repairs.Rel- erences.Free estimates.Steve, 733- 4326 after 5 pm.Building Services ] | Services immobiliers | SPECIAL OFFER ON SUMMER MAINTENANCE For information please call: WESTSIDE LANDSCAPING Up to 10-20% off 363-5996 NATURE DESIGN Complete and personalized landscaping service.Residential and commercial.Ask for a professional at competitive prices.PLASTIC FINISH GUARANTEED WORK FERNAND CLOUTIER: 321-1069 CARPET DOCTOR TRUCK MOUNT CLEANING 2 rooms cleaned, deodorized $39 WORK GUARANTEED VISA/MASTERCARD 367-0649 24-HOUR SERVICE 522-2877 TREE SERVICES Services d'arbre complet.Spécialité arbres fruitiers.766-8817, 1-827 | Household Services | Services domestiques call for total pest control.336-6110 \u2014\u2014\u2014 a \u2014\u2014 \u2014\u2014 Moving and Cartage | Déménagement at transport | RAMSAY'S MOVING & STORAGE * Local & long distance » Packing, crating and storage *FREE ESTIMATES Under new renovations 631-1501 631-1506 FOSTER'S MOVING AND STORAGE LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE MIAMI & FLORIDA 24-hour service 7 days a week 937-4517 2003 St.James St.W.Reliable \u2014 Reasonable MOVING & STORAGE » Fully insured GARY COOPER 337-7557 ADMIRAL MOVING CO.LTD.« BACK HAUL RATES.ALTA., B.C., SASK., ONT.& MARITIMES.* FREE ESTIMATES.695-1577 937-0170 A bas prix, déménagements.entre posage, boîtes vides, estimation gra tuite.Pierre Panneton.Déména geurs Atfiés.937-9491 , WINDOW Msn ine has, transe Car ia30.\"page Dos El mélaue avant (UT 7777777 q DIRECT ROOFING REG D 637-9708.PAINTING.For fast, efficient, reliable 'NduStriel.Porte à partir de 535 ! Personal Services | .! * CLE ANING interior or exterior painting, since 5660404.Services personnels | For free inspection by professionals, : SPECIALIST 1956, 0, homme ng Fo ee FAITES nettoyer et dismdecler vos L \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 J call one of the most reliable firms 10 years experience estimates Cal Ee 0 te Domander Jean 3630157 _ in the west end « EAVESTROUGHING !N any cerient work, MONSIEUR ALL TYPES OF ROOFING + TUCK POINTING cracks in founda: FLOOR sy MONSIEUR TWILL TYPE YOUR SHINGLE ROOFS OUR SPECIALTY - CARPENTRY tions; stucco; stone; SANDING TERM PAPERS oo \u201c ; brick pointing; in- The name you can trust in for 75\u20ac per page * tar and gravel « brick pointing Book with 2 neighbors ; te.per pag gra terlocking bricks; Hardwood floor renova: Floor SANDING You must supply your * asphalt shingles ® cement work for the So dy an asphalt; silicone and tions.Finishing in crystal $70 per room o own paper.y * roof repairs » chimneys repaired & rebuilt 5 % OFF caulking.Free| [and pobetivlene.Plastic Or Heavy Duty Crstal Fish.Contact: Felicia ALL WORK FULLY GUARANTEED PRO SE RVICES estimate.All work Guaranteed wis ON 363-3484 _ 489-1693 35 years experience 280 Suarar ee between 3.2 and 4pm For free estimate call 937 1 363 483-5930 489-5998 363-4293 486-1744 364-0400 I | | 24 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 10, 1986 GARDENING aubin gardens ; GARDEN CENTRE The largest in the West End SEED \u2014 FERTILIZER \u2014 PEAT MOSS BY METERS OR LOADS SPECIA 6 BAGS FOR $15.FINEST TOP DRESSING AVAILABLE OR GARDEN SOIL + SOIL IN BAGS $3, » PICKUP ONLY TOPSOIL \u2014 TOP DRESSING \u2014 BLACK SOIL & HUMUS YOU NAME IT \u2014WE HAVE IT MAPLES \u2014 BIRCH 013°043 FOR YOUR LANDSCAPING ALL KINDS OF DECORATIVE SHRUBS Roses, evergreens, soil in bags, pots, flower boxes, sod, patio blocks, sand, gravel, marble chips, bark, redwood fiower boxes and pots\u2014 all sizes available.EVERGREENS * CEDAR + SCOTCH *GLOBOSA PINES * HAITZI + MOUNTBATTEN * JAPANESE » ROCKETS YEW + SPARTON PT Moving and Cartage q | Déménagement et transport | SNOOK'S TRANSFER VAN LINES LTD.7 5 YEARS SERVING THE COMMUNITY * LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE MOVES x * ANTIQUE SPECIALIST x GOING AWAY FOR A WEEK OR YEARS?NEW MODERN FACILITIES FOR STORAGE * SPECIAL DISCOUNT AND FREE STORAGE FOR 1 MONTH Call for details e REASONABLE RATES FREE ESTIMATES 631-4824 \u2014 481-1550 AGENTS ATLAS VAN LINES MEMBERS OF CANADIAN MOVING ASSOCIATION INCOME TAX RETURNS TAX RETURNS COMPLEX?If you have: + Capital Gains * Foreign Tax Credits + Commission / Professional / Business Income & Expenses Call the Personal Tax Specialists at: Kerr Financial Consultants Inc.1253 McGill College, Suite 195, Montreal, Que., H3B 2Y5 TELEPHONE: 871-82 13 BULBS: DAHLIA \u2014 GLADIOLUS \u2014 LILIES GOOD SELECTION OF PERENNIALS TE os] WOMEN IN SMALL BUSINESS Would you like the public to know about the work you do, for possible inclusion in an advertising booklet?Call after 6 pm.937-5603/937-3824 Fa II TRAVEL VOYAGES \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 GUIDE YOU TO BRITAIN Capable, reliable male (38) with considerable experience in travel through the UK available to accompany older person/couple as guide/driver for 2 week trip, in May or June, to Lake District, Cotswolds, Scotland, in exchange for airfare and expenses.Call Trevor after 6 p.m.A 16-year-old LaSalle boy was arrested by public safety officers Monday night after a chase through laneways near St Catherine street and Metcalfe avenue following an attempted robbery on the southeast corner, police report.One of two victims, a 38-year-old Montreal man, sustained a bump on the head and was described as bleeding slightly from the lower lip, left eye and one hand.TE ANIMAUX DOMESTIC DOMESTIQUES DOBILINE CANINE MOTEL Free pickup and delivery Youth, 16, arrested after attack, chase The incident was spotted about 10:14 pm by Public Security Sergeant Robert Stringer who was patrolling on St Catherine street when he noticed two white and two black men yelling on the corner.One white man was seen being kicked while another man began hitting his attacker with an umbrella.Other swipes were taken with the umbrella until one of the white men began waving \u201cfrantically\u201d at the officer.Sgt Stringer called for back-up and took off on foot following one of the black men east toward Kensing- ton and around lanes by the Timynins Campbell garage.é While the foot chase was ir-ssfo- gress, public safety officers Peter Harper and Mike Godon arrived and apprehended a man in front of 235 Metcalfe.The man was handed over to MUC police car 23-21, which had been summoned when the fire department dispatcher heard what had been going on, officials said.- Boarding for cats Police said the victims related 931-8401 & dogs they had been approached initially as they walked along St Catherine by three persons, one of whom was not WANTED 457-5051 involved.One of the victims was asked for money and then pushed.ON DEMANDE 100 girls 7-15 campetistaff 3:1 WANTED in the Laurentians Used Furniture Antiques & Appliances CASH $$ V.G.C.INC.735-4286 For further information call FRED Welcome to our garden 6125 St.Jacques W.484-5198 RESUMES REG'D A 14-year proven job-finder.Quality print.IBM word processor, in-depth consulting.Guaranteed.488-5694.DRESSMAKER, high fashion, any kind of repairs and alterations.Call Mrs.Di Battista, 365-6083.ML HAIR removal, hot or cold wax, very reasonable price.Women only.West- mount area.484-7071 from 9 to 5.AVIS DE QUALITÉ Succession de PRATT, Kathleen En son vivant de 4800 boul.de Maisonneuve, app.417, Westmount Décédée le 19 février 1985 Le soussigné donne avis, conformément à la Loi sur la Curatelle publique (1977, L.R.Q., c.C-80), qu'il est curateur d'office à cette succession et qu'il recevra, à l'adresse ci-dessous, le paiement de toute dette envers la succession et la preuve de toute réclamation contre elle.Camp Ouareau 65th year ENGLISH camp in July.BILINGUAL PROGRAM in August.* 4 children / tent or cabin individual programming in camp activities.FOR ILLUSTRATED BROCHURE: owner-director: Madelene Ferguson Allen 29 Summer St.Lennoxville, Que.JAN 464 819-562-9641 (call collect) ACCREDITED MEMBER OCA & QCA WE BUY - WE SELL EVERYTHING WASHERS, DRYERS, STOVES, FRIDGES WE ALSO REPAIR WE PAY CASH A.B.MEUBLES 931-9271 MILITARY COLLECTOR PAY CASH * WAR SOUVENIRS * MEDALS * SWORDS * UNIFORMS * FIREARMS, ETC.| 466-1942 | CANOE WANTED 16-foot fibreglass Phone: DICK MEYER 01:488-2519 Home: 488-1963 WANTED: OLD ORIENTAL RUGS any size or condition Ararat Rug 288-1218 BUY old Japanese tea set, porcelain, pottery, furniture, Satsuma, etc.Also Louis Icart prints.After 4 pm, 487- A-A-A Have you anything to give away?We pick up almost anything.Récupération C.D.989-1971.WHY not sell your children\u2019s clothes when they do not fit anymore?From 0-5.627-5369.hy ro \u2014\u2014 ~~ AN ADVENTURE FOR BOYS 7 TO 15 YEARS OUR 62ND SEASON NOMININGUE 120 miles north of Montreal & Ottawa.X A PERFECT WATERFRONT x % mile sandy beach ~ safe ~ clean swimming canoeing - sailing- windsurfing - water games Beach Fun.X FUN-FRIENDSHIP-FREE CHOICE * daily instruction in a choice of 18 activities: ~ tennis, archery, riflery, woodworking, nature amp cooking, orienteering and more.Plus softball, soccer & dozens of other great games.x GOOD FOOD ~ GOOD HEALTH * Resident doctor & registered nurse.Professional chef Large experienced staff- ratio | 1 3% boys.ADVENTURE ~ safe wilderness canoe tripping.2,345& 7 week periods.Brochure and slide show PETER &JEAN VAN WAGNER directors.119 Cragmore Road, Pointe Claire, Que.HOR 3K7 CALL ~ (514) 694-4020 COLLECT Accredited member QUEBEC & ONTARIO CAMPING ASSOCIATIONS a Sa Mn STN SB OVS a ie tn N.S'Y4TS LEA RE RESTE DOG RUN.Continued from pageone < .hall meeting overflowing the council chamber.Several of the dog owners present called for greater enforcement of the stoop-and-scoop by-law and condemned the failure of citi- Zens in general to respect property.Mayor admits mistake When Elizabeth Loggie reminded Mayor Brian Gallery that it was he, as an alderman 10 years ago, who put the dog run in the park, His Worship replied that it had seemed like a good idea at the time but \u2018it was a mistake.\u201d Beryl Parker, president of the Westmount Dog Owners\u2019 Association, asked that the city consider moving the dog run to an alternate site {gil e one chosen by the city at St calc street and Lansdowne avenue, Fraser Lindsay, of Metcalfe avenue, suggested that fencing in the present run in Westmount Park would solve the problem while Mary Pat Hébert, a resident of Lansdowne avenue, felt enforcement of dog laws in the park had been \u201clousy.\u201d ; Andy Dodge, her neighbor, even went as far as to report that an inventory of park garbage over the weekend showed paper droppings far outnumbered dog excrement.Ramzi Ferahian, of 4998 de Maisonneuve, applauded the move, stating that he had never noticed dog excrement in London's Hyde Park.A resident of Bruce avenue who called herself an animal lover described the condition of her street as \u201can absolute disgrace\u2019 from dog walkers who failed to clean up.Such persons \u201cneed to be kicked around a little,\u201d she said.\u201cYou are saying publicly what many citizens have been telling me in private,\u201d stated Ald Shingler.When Stephen Jarislowsky told Mayor Gallery the city had had an agreement with the Dog Owners\u2019 Association on consultation, Ald Shingler replied that consultation had been carried out with not only dog owners but also other citizens.He added that consultation is a concept open to interpretation and joked that he found it \u201cdifficult to walk anywhere in Westmount without getting into a \u2018consultation\u2019.» Revolting place Corinne Sévigny, a dog owner on Wood avenue, also spoke about the filth on streets saying, \u201cOur dog walk is the most revolting place.\u201d She added that people also had been littering garbage and; throwing paper over the fence into Dawson College.It had not been cleaned up since last October when she had phoned city hall.\u201cIt's not the dogs but the people,\u201d she said.Her complaint prompted Mayor Gallery to instruct city staff to attend to the problem.\u201cEight thirty tomorrow, I want action,\u201d he said.Perhaps, suggested ône citizen, some of the city\u2019s $3 million surplus could be used by Ald Shihgler to hire someone to help \u201cpickup the mess.\u201d \u201cHe\u2019ll have to come tome on bend- ed knees if he wants money to pick up that stuff,\u201d replied: Ald Aspinall, finance commissioner; to which Ald Shingler added, \u201con all four feet.\u201d pela Kozlowski, whose ques- tio garding the safety of the replacement dog run at St Catherine and Lansdowne concluded the meeting's question period, saïd he feared dogs might chase each other into the street causing traffic accidents.Mayor Gallery answered that a fence was being installed for exactly that reason.Leak flushed Fuel oil was found running down the hill outside 460 Grosvenor avenue Monday afternoon when a small amount had leaked from an oil tank removed from the house, fire officials report.It was washed away with rain flowing down the street.The tank was taken away.L._ prendre connaissance dudit projet de règlement au B Hôtel de ville, 4333, rue Sherbrooke, Westmount, Québec, du lundi au vendredi inclusivement entre les heures de 8h30 et 16h30.Continued from page two médiane de Cedar et la ligne médiane de The Boulevard à partir de la limite est jusqu'à la limite ouest de la ville; à l'ouest par la limite ouest de la ville à partir de The Boulevard jusqu'à la limite nord de la ville; District électoral numéro deux: Limité au nord par la ligne médiane de The Boulevard à partir de la limite ouest de la ville jusqu'à Aberdeen; à l\u2019est par la ligne médiane d'Aberdeen à partir de The Boulevard jusqu'à Montrose, de là en direction ouest en suivant la ligne médiane de Montrose à partir d\u2019Aberdeen jusqu'à Church Hill et de 1a en direction sud en suivant la ligne médiane de Church Hill à partir de Montrose jusqu'à Côte Saint-Antoine; au sud par la ligne médiane de Côte Saint-Antoine à partir de Church Hill jusqu'à la limite ouest de ta ville; à l\u2019 ouest par la limite ouest de la ville à partir de Côte Saint-Antoine j jusqu \u2018à The Boulevard; District électoral numéro trois: Limité au nord par la ligne médiane de The Boulevard et la ligne médiane de Cedar à partir d'Aberdeen jusqu'à la limité est de la ville; à l'est par la limite est de la ville à partir de Cedar jusqu'à Sherbrooke; au sud par la ligne médiane de Sherbrooke et la ligne médiane de Côte Saint-Antoine à partir de la limite est de ia ville jusqu'à Church Hill; à l'ouest par la ligne médiane de Church Hill à partir de Côte Saint-Antoine jusqu'à Montrose, de là en direction est suivant la ligne médiane de Montrose a partir de Church Hill jusqu'a Aberdeen et de là en direction nord suivant la ligne médiane d'Aberdeen à partir de Montrose jusqu'à The Boulevard, District électoral numéro quatre: Limité au nord et à l'est par la ligne médiane de Cote Saint Antoine 3 partir de la limite ouest de la ville jusqu'à Clarke; au sud par la ligne médiane de Sherbrooke à partir de Clarke jusqu'à L linjite ouest de la ville; à l'ouest par la limite ouest de la ville à partir de Sherbrooke jusqu'à Côte Saint-Antoine; i District électoral numéro cing: Limité au nord par la ligne médiane de Sherbrooke 3 3 partir de la limite ouest de la ville jusqu'à Melville; à l'est par la Jigne médiane de Melville à partir de Sherbrooke jusqu'à de Maisonneuve, de là en direction ouest suivant la ligne médiane de de Maisonneuve, projetée à travers le parc Westmount, à partir de Melville jusqu'à Lansdowne, depuis là en direction sud suivant la ligne médiane de Lansdowne et la ligne médiane de Glen a partir de de.Maisonneuve jusqu'à la limite sud de la ville; au sud par la limite sûd de la ville à partir de Glen jusqu'à la limite ouest de la ville; ét l'ouest par la limite ouest de la ville à partir de la limite sud de ville jusqu'à Sherbrooke; i District électoral numéro six: Limité au nord par la ligne médiane de Sherbrooke a partir de Melville jusqu'a la limite est de la ville; a I'est parila limite est de la ville à partir de Sherbrooke jusqu'à Ste-Catherine! au sud par la ligne médiane de Ste-Catherine à partir de la limité est de la ville jusqu\u2019à Wood; de là en direction nord, suivant la ligne médiane de Wood a partir de Ste-Catherine jusqu'a de Maisonheuve; de i en direction ouest suivant la ligne médiane de de Maisonneuve à partir de Wood jusqu'à Melville; et à l'ouest par la is médiane de Melville à partir de de Maisonneuve jusqu'à Sherbrooke.District électoral numéro sept: ) Limité au nord par la ligne médiane de de Maisohnpuve projetée 3 travers le parc Westmount a partir de Lansdowne jugqu'a Redfern: 3 l'est par la ligne médiane de Redfern à partir dè Maisonneuve jusqu\u2019à Ste-Catherine, de là en direction est et sud! suivant la ligne médiane de Ste-Catherine et la ligne médiane de Dorchester à partir de Redfern jusqu'à Bruce; de là en directiôn buest suivant la ligne médiane de Dorchester à partir de Bruce jusqu'à Hallowell; de là en direction sud suivant la ligne médiane de la partie nord de Hallowell, son prolongement vers le sud et la ligne médiane de la partie sud de Hallowell à partir de Dorchester jusqu'à la limite sud de la ville; au sud par la limite sud de la ville à pa ir de Hallowell jusqu'à Glen; et à l\u2019ouest par la ligne médiane GejGlen et la ligne médiane de Lansdowne à partir de la limite sud de 13 ville jusqu'a de Maisonneuve.; District électoral numéro huit: ! Limité au nord par la ligne médiane de de Maisonneuve à partir de Redfern jusqu'à Wood, de là, en direction sud puivant la ligne médiane de Wood à partir de de Maisonneuve jusqu'à Ste- Catherine, de là en direction est suivant la ligne médiane de Ste- Catherine à partir de Wood jusqu'à la limite est de là ville; à l'est par la limite est de la ville à partir de Ste-Catherine jusqu'à la limite sud de la ville; au sud par la limite sud de Ja ville à partir de la limite est de la ville jusqu'à Hallowell; et à l'ouest par la ligne médiane de la partie sud de Hallowell, son prolongement vers! ile! nord et la ligne médiane de la partie nord de Hallowell & partir de 13 limite sud de la ville jusqu'à Dorchester, de là en direction est suivant la ligne médiane de Dorchester a partir de Hallowell jusqu' Bruce, de là en direction nord et ouest suivant la ligne médiane de Dorchester et la ligne médiane de Ste-Catherine à partir de Bruce jusqu'à Redfern, et de là en direction nord suivant la ligne médiarje de Redfern a partir de Ste-Catherine jusqu'à de Maisonneuve -: Que tout \u2018\u2018électeur\u201d au sens de l'article 3.6 de: ladite Loi peut dreau du greffier, Qu'au sens de l'article 3.6 de ladite Loi, un \u201cla eur\u2019 est une personne inscrite sur la liste électorale faite en vertu dejla Loi électorale (LR.Q.c.E-3) pour une section de vote, ou une partie de celle-ci, comprise dans la municipalité, ainsi que toute autre personne physique qui: 1) est inscrite au rôle d'évaluation, au rôle de valeur logative ou au rôle de perception de la municipalité et qui ! LR Ste EE 0 00 00 AE 8 20e 0 00 00 A0 0 0 av 0e mm The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 10, 1986 - LEGENDE /LEGEND 11037 a 2070 \u20ac 772 hr.ze, 3s aps OTH 13702 + 2072 avc nie PRES 31803 cam vers \u201cTA ; r 8 1510 15 5 146C WESTMOUNT 1567 2) est inscrite sur la liste électorale de la municipalité ou sur l'annexe de son rôle d'évaluation, ou aurait droit de l'être en vertu de la loi qui régit la municipalité s\u2019il n'était pas tenu compte de la durée de la période pendant laquelle cette personne a été inscrite au rôle visé au paragraphe 1; Que, dans les dix (10) jours de la publication du présent avis, un tel électeur peut faire connaître par écrit au greffier de la ville de Westmount son opposition audit projet de règlement; Qu'une telle opposition écrite doit être adressé au greffier de la ville de Westmount, Hôtel de ville, 4333, rue Sherbrooke, Westmount, Québec H3Z 1E2; Que le conseil muncipal de Westmount tient une séance publique aux fins d'entendre les personnes présentes, au sujet du projet de règlement, si le nombre requis d'électeurs, au sens de l'article 3.6, a fait connaître par écrit au greffier son opposition au projet de règlement.Ce nombre est d'au moins: 1) vingt électeurs dans une muncipalité de moins de 20 000 habitants; 2) un électeur par tranche de mille habitants dans une municipalité de 20 000 habitants ou plus mais de moins de 100 000 habitants; 3) cent électeurs dans une municipalité de 100 000 habitants ou plus: QUE, dans le cas de Westmount, il faudrait que vingt (20) oppositions écrites parviennent au greffier de la ville dans le délai prescrit par la loi, pour exiger la tenue d\u2019une séance publique relativement audit projet de règlement.DONNÉ à Westmount, Québec, ce huitième jour d'avril 1986.R.C.Wilkins Le greffier de la ville CITY HALL/HÔTEL DE VILLE 4333 Sherbrooke Street West 93 b-8 B3 1 Westmount, PQ H3Z 1E2 Monday-Friday, 8:30 am to 4:30 pm Fire (business calls) 19 Stanton St.935-9696 Police (business calls) 21 Stanton St.934-2223 Municipal Court, 21 Stanton St.935-3528 Saturdays, Sundays and holidays Victoria Hall, 4626 Sherbrooke St.W.935-2066 Municipal Yard, 14 Bethune St.935-8037 Light Department, Glen Road 935-8218 lundi & vendredi, 8h30 a 16h30 Incendie (bureau d'affaires) 19, rue Stanton 935-9696 Police (bureau d'affaires) 21, rue Stanton 934-2223 Cour municipale, 21 rue Stanton 935-3528 samedi, dimanche et jours de fête Hall Victoria, 4626, rue Sherbrooke ouest 935-2066 Voirie, 14, rue Béthune 935-8037 Service d'éclairage, chamin Glen 935-8218 Next Scheduled City Council Meeting Monday, May 5, 8 pm.Date de la prochaine séance du conseil municipal Lundi le 5 mai, 20 h O0.EMERGENCIES/URGENCES 911 935-1777 INCENDIE 911 Ambulance Police 911 PUBLIC SECURITY SÉCURITÉ PUBLIQUE ese eseansvrsacenwe CAMPBELL & CAMERON nc.Volkswagen dealer for 30 years JETTA\u2014GOLF\u2014SCIROCCO 4050 Verdun Avenue, Verdun 767-9173 767-9961 SALES\u2014 SERVICE PARTS 26 Thursday, April 10, A Your downtown NS ; q MERCURY-LINCOLN A Dealer D z \\N ND ) TRUCK CENTRE Light, medium and heavy-duty trucks 1986 FORD E350 DIESEL PARCEL DELIVERY VANS from 14\u2019 to 17° For information, contact: Michel Bellerive o> Director of Sales, = INSTOCKFOR Truck division NS / IMMEDIATE DELIVERY or \u2014 Guy Morin WW enri Caron A | Sales Representatives J N 6435 St.Jacques Street West (near Cavendish) 489-3831 CLOSE TO YOU .CLOSE TO EVERYTHING! LS PRY 7 (a re > PCV III RIANA CARRIE IIR I PERF INT OTS Y SPORTS and RECREATION : = 1986 TUNE-UP ¢ ALLEN DIAGNOSTIC re SERVICE AUTO WESTMOUNT AUTO SERVICE SPECIALISTS: BRAKES ¢ FULL SERVICE TIRES AND BALANCING 4780 Sherbrooke St.W.CORNER GROSVENOR 933-8556 * 932-1554 City beats Estrie in hockey at Forum Westmount novice and atom all- star hockey teams faced-off against rivals from Lac Mégantic Sunday at the Montreal Forum.Ronald Corey, president of the Club de Hockey Canadien and a Westmounter, organized the cultural exchange between Westmount and the Eastern Townships community.There was a large turn-out of family and friends from both areas in the Forum stands, as the Westmount teams rode to victory in two close and nerve-wracking matches.The novice all-stars won 5-4, while the atom all-stars had to turn it on in the closing minutes and come from behind to win by a score of 7-6.After the games refreshments were provided and served by the Forum staff.\u201cThey (the Forum staff) were so Girl to hospital after hitting car An 11-year-old Westmount girl was taken to hospital Tuesday last week after running into the side of a car heading south opposite 611 Roslyn avenue in front of the school playground, police report.She sustained a bump on the head and pain in the right foot.Two other girls on either side of the street apparently yelled at the victim warning of the car but the girl kept going, police said.She lived nearby on Grosvenor avenue.The driver of the car, a 32-year-old man living in Côte St Luc, was reported to have slowed down, honked the horn and stopped suddenly.The car\u2019s mirror and radio antenna on the right side sustained less than $250 damage in the impact.The fire department's first responder \u2018unit was called to the scene and the young victim taken to the Montreal Children\u2019s Hospital by Urgences Santé.Wallet lost A wallet containing $50 cash and a cheque for $275 was lost at 1267 Greene avenue March 29, police report.nice to everybody.It was a ry ass act,\u201d John Garland, Super fn of parks and recreation, said of the event.Hard-surface courts open on weekend Westmount\u2019s hard-surface tennis courts are scheduled to open at the end of this week, parks and recreation officials say.Last week, the junior courts across from the arena, together with those at Devon Park, were the first to reopen for another summer of intense tennis activity.\u201cThat's the beauty of the hard surface.You can appease the avid tennis players almost immediately after the snow disappears,\u2019 an official said.The clay surface courts, located in Stayner Park and beside the greenhouse in Westmount Park, are not expected to open until the end of this month.\u201cThings are still too wet right now to do any work on those courts.We want to open them as soon as possible.But, I mean, we can\u2019t even run trucks on the fields to remove the hockey boards because everything is so damp,\u201d the official remarked.Escalator nips boy's fingertip A three-year-old boy was taken to the Montreal Children\u2019s Hospital Tuesday last week after catching his finger in an escalator at Alexis Nihon Plaza police report.The tip of the right index finger was reported severed in the mishap about 11:40 am.The boy, who lived on St Denis street, was taken to the Montreal Children\u2019s Hospital by Urgences Santé, whose doctor told police the tip of the finger could not be saved.A DEPENDABLE NAME SINCE 1937 [ AVI \u20ac MONTREAL LTD LOW COST DAILY RENTAL DAILY \u2014 WEEKLY \u2014 WEEKEND SPECIALS LONG TERM LEASING All models include service, insurance, license, snow tires, replacement car.We will purchase your present car.489-4994 LONG TERM 489-6885 DAILY RENTAL Conveniently located at 5333 St.James West at Decarie We fully maintain our cars during the lease so we always have exceptional used cars for sale.See our large display at the above location.Vert ERTL A TIGRE EX IRS IY PEER ation spring programs takes place at the arena Friday from 9 am to 9 pm and again on Saturday from 9am to 5 pm.The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, April 10, 1986 27 rép à * Va ik: Parks program registration on the quality of our programs,\u201d a parks official said.\"But their success depends, to a large degree, on the quality and commitment of our vol- refereeing positions are encouraged to register at this time also.A coaching clinic will be conducted by the recreation department again this year.\u201cMany people compliment us on Registration for Westmount recre- New volunteers for coaching and unteers.\u201d HH wa RS eS ga DIVING DUO: Lansdowne avenue resident Gudrun Lock, right, hugs in triumph chum Carrie Pascal of Hampstead at the Quebec age-group diving championships held last weekend in Dollard des Ormeaux.Lock plunged to scoring heights adequate to boost her into the Canadian senior championships this summer.Pascal won the gold medal for one-metre springboard.Lock is a Westmount High student who trains at the Pointe Claire swim club, five days a week.es Westmount Ville de Westmount Recreation Service des parcs Department et loisirs REGISTRATION L'INSCRIPTION POUR FOR SPRING LES PROGRAMMES PROGRAMS DU PRINTEMPS will take place at the aura lieu à Westmount Arena, l'Arena de Westmount, 4675 St.Catherine St.West 4675 ouest rue Ste-Catherine Friday, April 11, 1986 Vendredi, le 11 avril, 1986 9:00 a.m.to 9:00 p.m.9h00 à 21h00 Saturday, April 12, 1986 Samedi, le 12 avril, 1986 9:00 a.m.to 5:00 p.m.9h00 a 17h00 LES PERMIS DE LOISIRS SONT REQUIS AU CURRENT RECREATION PERMITS ARE MOMENT DE L'INSCRIPTION REQUIRED AT REGISTRATION e Soccer e Balle-molle e Volleyball © Baseball , « Cours de premiers soins ot \u201c© Boulingrine e Soccer ® Softball e Volleyball « Baseball e St.John's Ambulance First Aid ~ e Lawn Bowling PRE-OWNED CARS 380 SL.85 Roadster, black with tan interior, 2 tops, 18,000 KM, balance of guaranty.#6052A 380 SE94 85 Smoke silver metallic with sierra leather interior, sunroof, heated seat, 13,000 KM, balance of guaranty.#7404A 300 SD 85 Turbo diesel, black with tan interior, sunroof, heated seats, 8,000 KM, balance of guaranty.#6451A 380 SE 84 Anthracite with grey leather interior, sunroof, heated.eats, 56,400 KM, balance of guaranty.#7422A 380 SEC 83 Coupe, anthracite with grey leather, sunroof, 55,000 KM, balance of guaranty.#6353A 300 SD 84 Turbo diesel, lapis blue with grey velour interior, sunroof, 34,000 KM, balance of guaranty.#7390A Mer des-Benz Canad 672-2720 845 Taschereau Boul.(Near the Champlain Bridge) 735-3581 4815 Buchan (Near Victosis and Jean Talo a elegance driving more Get into a Scirocco and get a whole new outlook.Fully contoured sport seats.Leather-wrapped steering wheel.instrumentation \u2014 sportingly complete, elegantly clean.Now turn it loose on a road.Feel the thrust of its fuel-injected engine, the thrill of its road-clinging ride.$13925° * Based on manulacturer*, suggested retail price Options, freight and pre-delivery mspection eats Dealer may sell for less Sdrocco & CAMPBELL & CAMERON INC.VOLKSWAGEN DEALERS FOR 30 YEARS 4050 Verdun Avenue, Verdun 767-9961 767-9173 For those who think fun.@ Try one soon. t- 28 - Thursday, April 10, 1986 Imposter bilks citizens with Tiny Tim Fund guise By THOR VALDMANIS A \u201cSMOOTH operator,\u201d to quote one of his victims, has been canvassing the N.D.G.area, collecting money for \u201chis own, personal Tiny Tim Fund,\u201d Richard Jack, principal of Westmount High School, said last week.Alerted by David Birnbaum, information director for the Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal, THE EXAMINER was told a young male Caucasian, approximately 58\" and 140 lbs, has been actively canvassing in the area around Royal and Cassidy avenues in N.D.G., allegedly raising funds for the Tiny Tim Fund on behalf of Westmount High School.The Tiny Tim Fund was established approximately 35 years ago to enhance patient welfare and comfort at the Montreal Children\u2019s Hospital.A spokesman at the Children\u2019s noted that \u2018the hospital never uses door-to-door solicitation for fund-raising.\u201d According to Mr Jack, Westmount High School has \u201creceived five orsix calls over the past two weeks\" from people asking how the fund- raising drive is going.The school has no such drive in progress and the police were subsequently notified.\u201cHe's a real smooth operator,\u201d one victim said.\u201cHe's clean-cut, polite, wears nice clothes.He posed as a high school student, but now that I think about it he was probably more like 19 or 20.\u201d Got signatures Although the money gleaned was a nominal sum, what disturbs the victim is the imposter carried a binder in which he wrote names, addresses and then asked for signatures.\u201cWhen I asked for a receipt he replied it would be coming in the mail,\u201d the victim said.\u201cNow he has got my signature and I don\u2019t know what else he'sup to.\u201d : As an added incentive to make a donation, the poseur told his victims that, should he raise the most money at \u2018his school,\u201d he would be rewarded with a VCR.\u201cSo I guess he's won that VCR,\u201d Mr Birnbaum concluded.Arson again suspected in Greene fire By LAUREEN SWEENEY The MUC arson squad has ruled out the possibility that the fire in the Boutique Tendresse, at 1263 Greene avenue, March 10 started through an electrical problem, Westmount fire officials said Monday.The squad is now working on the original theory advanced by West- mount fire investigators that the fire was suspicious and might have been deliberately set, explained Lieut Inspector Barry Coates.A piece of electrical cable had been taken away for testing by the arson experts after sifting through the debris March 13.They were called in to help determine the cause narrowed down by local fire officials to a possibility of arson or electrical malfunction.The fire was believed to have broken out in a stairway immediately inside the front door.It was estimated to have caused at least $100,000 damage to the two-storey commercial building whose sole occupant was the clothing store.The blaze was not thought to have been related to the Jan 19 fire further up the street which spread to four row buildings at 1355-1363 Greene.The cause of that fire was attributed toa faulty electrical panel at the rear of civic number 1357 occupied by the Cornell Trading Company.The possible rebuilding of those three-storey buildings into six-floor buildings was brought up at Monday night's city council meeting (see separate story).Monogrammed Someone carved a letter A on the rear trunk of a black 1986 Mercedes overnight Friday-Saturday while it was parked outside 699 Upper Belmont avenue, public safety officers said.It was not known how much damage was caused.ESP: STUART PARKER 43: Personal Financial Consultants Estate settlements ® estate and retirement planning ¢ business and divorce valuations ® tax preparation * annuities ® term deposits © RRSP\u2019s Bo ri Station E.STUART (JAKE) PARKER Westmount, Québec H3Z 3B6 Telephone 932-8874 GEORGE FRANKLYN BISSET® NOTARY, TITLE ATTORNEY 1 Westmount Square Suite 740 931-4242 TODD & DURSO NOTAIRES \u2014 NOTARIES CONSEILLERS JURIDIQUES \u2014 TITLE ATTORNEYS 4635 Sherbrooke St.W., 3 Westmount H3Z 1G2 931-2531 J.E.Todd 4 A.F.Durso V.Casoria of Quebec.\u2018CONGRATULATIONS J.J.Jacobs Quebec\u2019s No.5 Agent Paul Robert, manager of the Westmount Greene Ave.office of Royal LePage Real Estate Ltd., is proud to announce that J.J.Jacobs was the No.5 agent in the province She is also a Chairman's Club winner, given only to the top 1% of all agents in Canada, and received the President\u2019s Gold Award.She is pictured here with Mr.George C.Cormack, president of Royal LePage Residential Real Estate Services Ltd., at the awards presentation.935-8541 Paul Robert B.A.FRI.CRB.Manager 1367 Greene Avenue IT\u2019S GOOD TO KNOW SOMEONE WHO KNOWS 486-3680 NOTAIRES * NOTARIES 6575 Somerled, Suite 4 486-1211 ; Labreche, Meury Montreal H4V 1T1 Me Albert Labrèche, BA, LLL Me Guy Meury, BA, LLL Me Gilles Legault, LLL, DDN (514) 288-8544 Telex: 05-826725 Bohbot & Homoff Assoc.Avocats \u2014 Attorneys |=] 31, rue St-Jacques Rik bbol 4iéme étage B Montréal, Québec Élayne Romotf H2Y 1K9 COMPLETE & OBJECTIVE PLANNING HELEN MAHAR \u2014INVESTMENT PLANNING \u2014RETIREMENT PLANNING \u2014TAX SERVICES \u2014SELF-DIRECTED R.R.S.P.AND R.L.F.Stak e \u2014 INSURANCE \" ee NATIONAL FINANCIAL Telephone: 932-5841 BROKERAGE CENTRE "]
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