The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1977, Blaðsíða 40

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1977, Blaðsíða 40
38 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN AUTUMN 1977 in the book. They are as delightful for us as they must have been for Tolkien’s children. Any child would be happy to receive letters and drawings such as these each year from the North Pole. Few, however, have a parent like Tolkien who could write them. For those who do not, this book will do much to make amends. It can be read to children or read by chil- dren and the drawings can be enjoyed by all. It will make a marvellous Christmas present for children and an equally good one for adults who have not lost the ability to take pleasure in such things. Parents who do buy it for their children will certainly want some time to read it themselves before it goes under the tree, and they will just as certainly return to it themselves many times in years ahead. —Winnipeg Free Press DRAFTER OF LAWS ASSIGNED TO HELP SAVE CONFEDERATION Thorson . . . new constitutional advisor. OTTAWA(CP)—The man who has written most of the federal laws since Pierre Elliott Trudeau entered federal politics in 1965 now has been assigned by the prime minister to help chart the constitutional future of the country. Trudeau last Thursday named Donald Scarth Thorson his special con- stitutional adviser, saying this signified to Quebec that “we are willing and able to discuss contitutional change.” If anyone in the country is able, it should be the 51-year old Thorson, who has been deputy minister of justice since 1973 and a federal lawyer for 20 years. He has been chief draftsman of the Canada Pension Plan, the present Divorce Act, The Official Languages Act, the major tax changes of the early 1970s. He was chief legislative counsel in the justice department while Trudeau and John Turner were justice ministers. As such, he advised them on dozens of constitutional problems involving the law, including his own father’s unsuc- cessful assault on the language law. His father is J. T. Thorson, an 88- year old who made legal history by win- ning the right to challenge the consti- tutional validity of the Official Lang- uages Act. Representing former Monc- ton, N.B. Mayor Leonard Jones, now an independent member of Parliament, the elder Thorson fought the language law to the Supreme Court of Canada and lost.

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