Durham Region Newspapers banner

Whitby Free Press, 16 Sep 1981, p. 9

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Asthma course There is stili time to register for the Durham Region Lung Associa- tlon's Better Breathing Coure, scheduled to begin on Tuesday, Sep- teniber 29 at the Dr. J.O. Ruddy Hospital, Whit- by. This free program, of- fered to aduits with eni- physema, chronic bron- chitis, asthma or other breathing problems, being ht wiil run for eight twice- weekly sessions, onn Tuesdays and Thurs- days from 7:00 to 8z30 P.IT. Participants wili be taught simple self-help WHITBY FREE PRESS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 16, 1981, PAGE 9 ld atRud.dy techniques to improve the quality of their daily lives, with Instruction in correct breathing techniques, controlled coughing and tolerance exercises provided un- der the direction of Lung Association staff. More information on this can be obtained from Durham Region Lung Association, by calling 723-3151. Reside nts of WbibySave on phonecails tio Nowyoucancut the cost of phone caîls to Toronto with Bell Canada's Optional Calling Plan. Here's how it works. If you pay $5.60 per month, you can get up to $9.35 worth of Whitby ta Toronto calîs for your $5.60. Business customers pay $13.75, and get up ta $22.95 worth of calling. If you cail Toronto frequently, this plan can save you money Savings apply ta cails ta Toronto you dial yourself without operator assistance.The minimum charge for this service is $5.60 per month for resi- dence customers and $13.75 for business customers even if the total charges for these calîs are less than that. These charges will be included with your regular monthly rate, which is billed in advance. v Call your Bell Canada Business Office, 433-3391 ............ ........... .................f o r fu ll details. *Service available only to people with telephone numbers beginning with 666 or 668. The RCMP Peace is not oniy better than war, but in- fiitely more arduous. - George Bernard Shaw What a week this bas been - heavy skies, low cioud cover and spits and spats of ramn. Not a good week for news either here or abroad; nothing to uplift or inspire. Writing in a superficiai and hurried way as the deadline draws near, minute by minute, I would like to put down a few thoughts about a current issue. The R.C.M.P., The Royal Canadian Mounted Police, have been known as one of the best police forces in the worid. At this Urne it is being sadiy discredited because of reported undercover- ac- tivities.1 I arn not, of course, referring to the "man on the beat"' type of thing or the officer behind the wheel of a vehicie but to the security division of the Force. Within the Force there are well trained men who are highly specialized in their own field. Neediesa to say there is a chance as there is i any profession that there can be a rotten apple in thé barrel. Ini the case of the police we could say there are some who make very poor judgments, are over-zealous, foolish and 50Ofl. However, on the whoie the segment of the police force which deas i undercover surveillance bas been very highly thougbt of and trusted to carry out their duties in a proper manner. "Dirty tricks,"1 oh yes and of course! How else could they perform their duties, some of which are difficuit to say the least. How i the world couid their work be productive and well done if there was flot any cover or very littie? It certainly is not reaiistic to think it ail has to be above board. On the surface the ordinary citizen has no idea of what it is ail about when it corne s to security operations, and it is a peace time operation as weli as war time, a constant, daiiy one. A police state, hardly. I don't think Britishers and Canadians would toierate such a thing or even the beginning of one. When people make judgments about this do they reaily know what it is ail about? I doubt it. Can undercover work be an open issue for the public to be privy to? That would be ridiculous. There has to be secrecy and when certain conditions prevail others have to be sometimes brought into the circle with the understanding that secrecy is of paramount importance and the cover must neyer be biown. This means that the person or persons con- cerned must deny any knowledge whether by false- hood or any other means. Why are some people so paranoid about the mnen- tion of files and so on? In the case of ordinary citizens there should be great aiarm and something done to remedy the situation. But are these or- dinary people? To be on a police file there must or shouid be a reason. MoÏt often there is. I can weli understand why at times and for good reason medicai files and revenue files are needed to fi in the picture. So the line is fine, where is it drawn and this 1 think is where the paranoia sets in. I rented an apartment in a police state oncevwhen -travelling abroad. There is terror associated with this and a great awareness set in; it is not a hidden thing. Tis, 0f course, is an internai thing and bas nothing to do with security as such. A country without a good security agency in regard to outward influence for want of a better word would soon fail by the wayside in more ways than one. It is weli known that every country in the worid bas its own agency for security and undercover sur- veillànce, to name a couple, the CI.A. in the States and the K.G.B. in Russia. It therefore becomes a necessity to bave similar agencies established to for all wehbear and read, alweiland good. If this is part of an undermining we bad better thlnk twloe. If we doubt ami mistriat aur security fores we must be sure why. It's somethig to thlnk about. Bell 1

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy