_ ‘ -v-.- wry—:51?- 'l i r TR. ihlontyl Montgomery. and a Civil Servant since hill. Court Reporter's Record For Accuracy Renowned By GERARD Mi-XETIL QUEBEC tCP' —- Oscar Bot...- joly shatters the image of in; courtroom reporter as an unoh trusn-e figure. His spectacles are adjiiistel by his choice. so that he can hunch a few inches from his notebook as he takes up it 273 words of testimony a mm‘c‘e. i'sually. all that can be seen of him is his brown hair on the horn rims of his spectacles. out when s e v e r a 1 persons legin talking at once he has a ge tiirc that stlences even judges He springs erect, hands i i .‘e Ihis head his long black can looking as if it might spit it- ning at the first person to :tcr I soon .' During the Brossard royal commission inquiry into the (lof- fin murder case. Mr. Boisjoly's magic gesture sometimes stopped savage fusillades tween witnesses and lawyers. That was the effect he had on the commission, and it made him a memorable figure in the panorama of striking personali- ties in the case The effect the acrid inquiry had on him was that for the, first time in his 20-year (‘at‘t‘t‘l‘ he had a tape recorder :niltL‘ to back up his own record of the testimony. Careers hinge on this con‘ flit-ting record and the 45-year- old reporter though! his accu- racy might be questioned at some point It wasn't. TOPS IN FIELD "We lived on our reputation for accuracy." he says. Errors are sometimes iiiadc. particularly since court report~ ers must cope with dozens oi at» ' cents and inflections and the oc- casionally rambling testimony of people who are nervous or evasive. There has the reporter who thought the jury foreman said 'rnille," the French word for thousand. instead of “nil” in an» nouncing damage in a civil suit The jury had to be called back to swear it had aiiardcd nothin: instead of Milo". Despite any tears frcc-lan-er Boisjoly may have. his repiita for accuracy is unclial Recognized as too in his field. he usually major asignments such the Brossard inquiry, thi- rnyal commission on St. Law- rence pilotage and important murder cases. To ease tension while working and to avoid the professional hazard of writer's cramp. he i. constantly tells himself "Dont ' squeeze the pen" But he. never relaxes. if for no other reason than that he finds I himself doing three things at once: “i listen to what is being laid. i write what has boon said. and i read what I have written." If one Monogram—«the code of curls. dots. dashes and other marks that make. tip short 42 YEARS or SERVICE Will ‘. i replaee car Boisjoly doesn't think so especially after listening to the v . " 'tapes : quiri. "When there was no cough- lghtch PM it Verbatim “‘9 “flt'lfl The Guardian. Charlottetown, Tues” Nov. n. ,____--. "m, the tape recorder eve. the live reporter? 0s- he took during the in _ WARSAW ‘RPlitfii‘i‘ \\‘iadv chair-scrapmz. and 0-H.» yslaw Gomulka. Polish (“ammu- . luotgdivrvirulkahzvdas i ls Satisfied With Ouster ment state he met the new Rus- sian leaders on the Polish-So Polish border last week with viet border last week. ms He “'35 addressmg ‘3 P°ll§h"Brezhnev and Premier Alexei Kosycin. who have been trying He said the Kremlin changes to reassure the restless Eastern were brought about in accord- bloc. ' Mongolian friendship meeting. 3. 1964.i-nc0 liar-16y ice ting Khrushchev’s he said. with 11 Pl‘S , . 0 ichev after his .viet the. world Oct. 15 party Assurances Lcntnllt. princtpiu.i Id good reason for ac- resigna- one of the lead- praised Khrush- downfotl as So- leader was announced to Gomulka met at the Soviet- secretary Leonid were given cesium normally“ the wt!» do-sulintuttoo rot mutt c tting delegation trom Monlotin,’the people. Gomulka declared: ‘ emu“, n. The 33nd conno- promised Addreuing a rally for a via-incur emphasis on goods tor Gomulka declared the main “i wish to state here with a,power of the Communist bloc is full satinlnction that the generalithe Sci'iet Union and the 'nr-e ilinc of the Soviet party as de- of I . itined by the 20th and 22nd So-in unity o‘lactton. viet party congresses will be u i- “T h e biggest the bloc consists prlnf‘ln’l‘v responsihi‘ 't_v held and that it fully agreesdor that .unity lies with the it. ‘Wltll our party. our governmentyiet Union and China." our country. 'muika said. “This has been reaffirmed . during our recent meeting with Thirty the Soviet partv leaders." Th 20th congress launc’ied 4‘ . ~ ~ has retired at the age of Ti. the many received by "Hon- 'l‘rihuies i'roni Prime Minister Pearson and Opposition Lead- er llietciihakcr \\ere among ty" on his retirement. ((Tl’ \l’ircphotol tool.- a tun-month \aratioii that, i hand isii‘l clear. a mental nlitf‘ made at it and it is cur rniizerl i‘rnm the trout \ialrt'- til i rerted at the First pause (“ape Breton to the salmon PAYS WELL stream: of the Gaspe. f CW“ “Wm”: “NM” ”‘ h‘ PREFERS THE BEST l on? “f those "(m5 “'"h shml He turned the Jaguar over hours and shorter pay. but ac- during a race m (clasp? _‘ not [URH‘VHHY “.a :momn: 1mm“: takcs along his own mechani: . g. . K ._ 5m" :dl' \ (‘1: hmi-L 5“ but plans to replace it with ‘3‘” a "3‘ ' -‘°(‘ 3'” "m an .\lla>Romco. an expensive rewards. lialian sports car. A convivial figure. he smokes imported Dutch cigars. Ameri- can cigarettes. wines atid dines at Quebec's bciter restaurants.i and narrates rib-tickling court- room tales. in the Rrossard inquiry he not only took as much as seven: hours of testimony daily biit then read it back into a 'apc recorder and saw that typists ‘ got the record into a hound voi-. Fhmenggmxashe C mm'g‘mn gm On first - name terms tvtthl e -’ most judges and lawyers in “9 “Wk "lo-‘1 0‘ the eastern Quebec. he was called 18.000 pages or testimony, at a tee about $1.50 a page. the typisis getting 25 cents a page. The more than 60 volumes fill the trunk of an auto. e worked 20 hours on days that produced up to 400 pages of testimony. But bOSides the SIM a iiage he also owns rights to the sale of the transcript. Copies go for into the (‘ot'tiii case it yeat‘s‘ ago when prospector Wilbert (Toft'in was found criminally re- sponsible by a coroner‘s jury in Gaspe for the deaths of three Pennsylvania hunters. He later recorded testimony at (‘oi‘lin's preliminary inqu't‘y. at his 195-! trial in Force and the Accompanying perjury trial of Jean-Guy Hamel. a de- :1 3 cents a page to ta\\')‘(’t‘$.tl(‘n('f‘ tigure. witnesses and others interested Burn: the (Shay~ murder in the case trial \\lilt‘il resulted in three The income enables him to executions tor the placing of a bomb on an airliner—Mr. Bois- joly not only took testimony 1 French but translated it into English for the Toronto Star ilive like a two vivant. When ‘the commissmn adjourned .luty 3, he and wife Rachel climbed into their $6.500 Jaguar and Should he Ordered by Noventber 15th _________... Canada Savings Bonds start tocarii interest for the purchaser on November 1st, but they may be bought up to November 15th without the addition of accrued interest. Alter this date accrued interest trout November tst to date of purchase is added to the price of the Bonds. It you have not yet placed your order for the 1064 issue, we suggest you do so im- mediately. Telrphmte or write our mam! nfli‘re. \Vood, (iundy 8° (‘unumn y 5413 spring Garden ani. Hawaii Telephone: 422-9088 ————-——-—-————-—-——‘i g Part of all you cam is yours to keep. . . The best way is through PERMANENT PERSONAL POLICIES of Life Insurance which may be converted to income you cannot outlive! lTXCfiliF‘ilOR LIFE Adora/war Cfvyaw/y ‘ ing or one person talked at a time it inist party leader. told .a rail)" did an excellent joby ere that quarrels inside the Otherwise he saw u m.“ Communist movement "must he duced a garble of voices and MN Come." sounds. It was his first public stale- : rm .. w . .a .. exp067 (and Mrs. and Miss) “Average / Reader”. And we’re talking to tinkers. tailors, butchers, bakers. And we’re talking to the president and the sales manager of the Monumental Giant Corpo- ration, Inc. , We want anybody with a worthwhile prod- uct or service to write us so they might benefit from EXPO ’ST—The Universal and International Exhibition at Montreal, April 28 to October 27, 1967. This great, history-making enterprise in which Canada will act as host to the world offers YOU 3 once in a lifetime opportunity to play a role commensurate with your importance in the Canadian community. ,We’re talking about: , 1. Products and services that could bear the emblem or name of the. World Exhibi- tion and be sold or distributed throughout Canada and the world. For these the market is bounded only by the reach of your imag- ination. To make and distribute them you must have a license. We are anxious to Inward these licenses. 2. Products and services that' mold be sold about World Exhibition. For these there Will be a market of 30 million people we’re talking to you, Mister (in. overseas nations. among the total of 64. exhibited at the 1964 Leipzig trade fair. o '—the estimated total attendance of the Exhibition. To sell them, you must make arrangements for a Concession at the Exhibition. These we are anxious to grant. What products? What services? Concessions cover four broad fields: Restaurants; Transportation and Parking; Amusement area; and a wide range of Gen- eral Concessions including souvenirs, handi- crafts and general merchandise to be sold in shops and boutiques, to Services such as shoe-shine parlors, lockers, hairdressing salons and other facilities which must be provided at a World Exhibition. , Most of all we’re talking about products and services that we haven’t even thought of yet—but maybe you have. Naturally we are interested in the BEST products and services and in those whose experience and knowled e in their respective fields will help us e most. We’d like to hear from all those who one interested right now. We won’t be able to act immediately in every area, but we promise to reply immediately, and discuss the matterfurther just as soon as we can. Please write to Mr. Nathan Steinberg, Ad- ministrator of Concessions and Licensing, Canadian Corporation for the 1967 World ,4 Exhibition, 1 Place Ville-Marie, Montreal, Quebec, to learn more about our concessions and licensing program. Or write your nearest regional director: Maior Cornell the Hon. Edward Chester How, Regional Director, Atlantic Provinces, Canadian Corporation for the 1967 Wodd ambition. loom 206, 11!! 50cm Shoot, Haitian, "5.. Hr. Alton lanai-Leg, Regional Director. Ontario. Canadian Corporation for the‘ 157 World ‘ ' 950 Yonge Street. rm 5, Out: L—w Ml. A. x. Stephens, Regional Director, Prairie Provinces, Canadian Corporation for the 1%7 World Exhibition, 322 Moonrise Street, Winnipeg 9, Month-h. Mr. T. L MocKii-moo, Regional Director, British Comm Camdinn Corporation for In 1967 World Exhibition, Room 416, 510 West Hastings Shoot, W, [6. CANADIAN corrounm eon on 1967 WORLD mnemon g“ lmwmmwmmmw (my