Page 16, News, Tuesday, May 8, 1990 Notes from a country cook- continued from page 5 of Jamie Kennedy of Toronto's Palmerston Restaurant when we ate there last spring. The aspara- gus was perféction. Kennedy had merely steamed it, then served it to each diner swaddled in white linen napkins. A small bowl of hollandaise sauce was placed in tl2 centre of the table as a dip. We used our fingers and relished Peel the bottom of tough, older stalks. Stand them upright in a deep saucepan with 1/2 cup or so of water. Cover and quickly bring the water to a boil. Reduce the heat and steam for 3 - 5 min- utes, or until the asparagus is bright green and still a little crisp. While it is steaming prepare a Hollandaise Sauce in your 1/2 cup butter 3 egg yolks 1 1/2 tbsps fresh lemon juice 2 tsps water 1/4 tsp salt 1/4 tsp freshly ground pepper 1 tsp Dijon mustard OR 1/2 tsp dry mustard Melt the butter in a small saucepan until bubbling, but not blender as follows: browned. SUPERIOR NORTH BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CENTRE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING Tuesday May 8, 1990 Conference Room, Terrace Bay Recreation Centre 7 p.m. every bite. Retired Anglican Archbishop Ted Scott was named as the neutral Chairman. Wally McKay, a for- mer grand chief, was appointed by the Nishnawbe-Aski Nation. A retired doctor and former Zone director of the Sioux Lookout. Zone Hospital, Dr. Harry Bain, was appointed by the federal gov- ernment. The inquiry opened offices in Sioux Lookout and Toronto, and hired staff. Formal Agenda will include: *President's Annual Report * Financial Report * Appointment of Auditor for the coming year F ? hearings opened in Sioux Appointment of New Directors Lookout on September 12th, 1988. This meeting is open to all residents of the area between the Steel River on the east, the Dublin River on the west and 30 miles north and south of Highway 17. Refreshments available. Four of the five original fasters came back to Sioux Lookout to make a presentation to that first public hearing. Josias Fiddler, the spokesman for the group, made headlines with shocking TOWNSHIP OF SCHREIBER THE EXPROPRIATION ACT R.S.O. CHAPTER 148 In the matter of an application by the Corporation of the Township of Schreiber for approval to expropriate land, being more particularly described in Schedule "A" detailed below, in the Township of Schreiber, in the District of Thunder Bay, for the purpose of widening a municipal road and related facilities. Notice is hereby given that application has been made for approval to expropriate the land described in Schedule "A" below. A plan showing such lands may be seen at the Township Office, 608 Winnipeg Street, Schreiber, Ontario. Any owner of lands in respect of which notice is given who desires an inquiry into whether the taking of such land is fair, sound and reasonably necessary in the achievement of the objectives of the expropriating authority, shall so notify the approving authority in writing. (a) Inthe case of a registered owner, served personally or by registered mail within thirty days after he is served with the notice or, when he is served by publication within thirty days after the first notice of publication of the notice: (b) In the case of an owner who is not a registered owner within thirty days after the first publica- tion of the notice. THE CORPORATION OF THE TOWNSHIP OF SCHREIBER PER: A.J. GAUTHIER, Clerk - Treasurer NOTES: 1. The Expropriations Act, RSO 1980, Chapter 148 Provides that, (a) Where an inquiry is requested, it shall be conducted by an inquiry officer appointed by the Minister of Justice and Attorney General. (b) The inquiry officer, i) shall give every party to the inquiry an opportunity to present evidence and argument and to examine and cross-examine witnesses, either personally or by his Counsel or agent man. ii) may recommend to the approving authority that a party to the inquiry be paid a fixed amount for his costs of the inquiry not to exceed $200 and the approving authority may in its discretion order the expropriating authority to pay such costs forthwith. 2. "Owner" and "Registered Owner" are defined in the act as follows: "Owner" includes a mort- gagee, tenant, execution creditor, a person entitled to a limited estate or interest in land, a com- mittee of the estate of a mentally incompentent person or of a person incapable of managing his affairs, and a guardian, executor, administrator or trustee in whom land is vested: "registered owner" means an owner of land whose interest in the land is defined and whose name is speci- fied in an instrument in the property registry, land titles or sheriff's office, and includes a person shown as a tenant of land on the last revised assessment roll; 3. The expropriating authority, each owner, who notifies the approving authority that he desires a hearing in respect of the lands intended to be expropriated and any owner added as party by the inquiry officer are parties to the inquiry. This Notice first published on the first day of May, 1990. SCHEDULE "A" All singular that certain parcel or tract of land and premises situate, lying and being in the Township of Priske, in the Municipality of the Township of Schreiber, in the District of Thunder Bay, and Province of Ontario, arid being composed of part of Block "A", Plan M-55, Walker Lake designated as Part 1 on a Plan recorded in Registry Office for Thunder Bay, as Description Reference Plan 55R-8229. Place the egg yolks in the blender or food processor con- tainer. Add the lemon juice, water, salt, pepper and mustard. Blend on low speed for 5 - 10 seconds. While the machine is still running, pour in the hot but- ter in a thin stream. When half of the butter is added, increase the blender speed to high and incor- porate the rest. allegations of inhuman health care treatment. The story that shook people up the most went like this: according to Fiddler, a woman neighbor came to his house, asking for help. She said she was going into labor, and wanted assistance to got to the nursing station in Sandy Lake. Fiddler took her to the nursing station, even though it was the middle of the night. According to Fiddler, a nurse examined the woman, then told her to go home, saying "the baby's time has not yet come". Later that night, according to Fiddler, the woman gave birth in her outhouse. It was 25 degrees below zero, and the baby died of exposure. According to Fiddler, he wrapped the body in a blanket, and took it to the nursing station. You could hear a pin drop in the hall where the hearings were being held when he said he told the nurse, "I guess this baby's time has not yet come." That story rocked the inquiry. Archbishop Scott seemed particu- larly distressed by the story, and by the headlines it made on the CBC, and on the front page of the IN MEMORIAM WELLINGTON - In loving memory of James Wellington. It's lonesome here with- out you Beetle I miss you more each day Somehow life does not seem the same Since you have gone away My heart still aches with sadness, My eyes shed many a tear; God only knows I miss you As this ends another year. Sadly missed & remem- bered by his wife, Shauna Wellington. Serve immediately as a sauce to be poured over the asparagus or as an elegant dip. Makes 1 cup. (©) ecnenfo menos Northern Insights- continued ane page 5 Globe and Mail. Two days later, he read a statement to the inquiry, giving a response to Fiddler's allegation from Health and Welfare Canada. According to Ottawa, Fiddler's story was not exactly accurate. According to medical records, the woman in the story never came to the nurs- ing station. She hadn't even told the nursing station she was preg- nant. The first indication the nursing station had about the inci- dent was Fiddler showing up with the dead baby. Nonetheless, Fiddler struck to his version of the story. The pub- lic and the media were left won- dering who to believe. The ques- tions surrounding that incident seemed to hang over everything else the inquiry heard from then on. Were health care services as bad as the native people were saying? Or were they just exag- gerating to make headlines? The inquiry continued holding hearings, travelling to 22 remote communities in the far north, from the Manitoba border as far north, from the Manitoba border as far north as Hudson Bay. Hearings were also held in Toronto, Thunder Bay, Winnipeg, and Ottawa. Months later; in May 1989, the health panel released its final report. That report, called "From Here to There; Steps Along the Way - Achieving Health for All in the Sioux Lookout Zone" was a major disappointment to the polit- ical leadership of the Nishnawbe- Aski Nation, In the year that's gone by since, health care ser- vices have not been overhauled, as the Inquiry called for, Instead, the Nishnawbe-Aski Nation has gone back to the drawing board and come up with its own plan to restructure native health care, from the bottom up. PART 2 NEXT WEEK wake SAFETY" Northshore Child Development Pogram and the Reading Rising Adult Learning Program are recruiting for the position of: RECEPTIONIST/TYPIST (part-time) Schreiber, 30 hours/week, starting at $10/hour (summer hours flexible) Responsibilities include typing letters, reports, filing, answering telephone. General office duties. Qualifications: Good typing skills, good organizational skills, good people skills, ability to work independently. Qualified candidates are invited to submit a resume to: Northshore Child Development Program and the Reading Rising Adult Learning Program c/o P.O. Box 847, Schreiber, Ontario, POT 2SO No later than Monday May 14, 1990