Page2, The Herald, Thursday, March 27, 1964: daily herald Ha Published every weekday at 2010 Kalum Street, . Terrace, B.C. by Sterling Publishers Ltd. Authorized as second class mali. Registration Number 1201. Postage pald in cash, return postage guaranteed = Circulation: - Terrace: - 635-6957 635-4000 Publisher - David Hamilton’ _ Editor: Advartising Sales: ' Brian Gregg Nick Walton Staff Writers-Photegrapher Sports: Ralph Reschke Holly Olson * Raception-Classitied: - Circulation: Claire Wadley Sue ‘Booten NOTICE OF COPYRIGHT - The Herald retains full, complete and sole copyright in any advertisement produced and-or any editorial or photographic content published in the Herald. Reproductlan Is not permitted without the written permission of the Publisher. . The Terrace-Kitimat Daily Herald ‘Newspaper Is : ‘politically indepandent and a member of the British ColumblaPressCouncil, |: fy Perey Soca ey hey " Letters to the Editor To the Editor, This Is to all former cadets of No.1 Cadet Corps of Portage Ja Praire, Man. Mayhe you didn’t know it but your former cadet corp will be 76 years old in 1995 and we have formed a committee to try and reunite all former corp members. We have set a tentative date, 7-14 of July 1985 to tie in with the Portage Fair for a few days and the rest of this week with activities for our own people. Tf you would be interested in returning home and taking part in this celebration, please contact: Reunion Com- mittee, P.O. Box 1985, Portage La Prairie, Man. RiN 382, Thanking you in advance, I remain Roy Montgomery, _ Chairman- Reunion Committee. it All About PEOPLE LOS ANGELES (AP) — Gina Schock, dnimmier fo the a ori ar 1 Go‘Go's rock group, is “doing very well" after surgery. to . correct @ small hole in her heart, a spokesman said Wed- nesday. “The doctor says the operation was a complete success," said Paul Bloch, Schock’s publicist. She is doing very well and recovering normally.” Bloch said the surgery was performed Tuesday, a week after the problem, which’ dates from childhood, was discovered during a routine physical. BARDWELL, Ky. (AP) —. Butterfly McQueen, who played the plantation slave Prissy i in Gone With the Wind, said she was nat happy the first time she viewed her most famous movie, “T thought they should take that thing out and-bury it,” the actress sald. “We were going ferward in those days. We weren't going back to slavery days.” McQueen, 73, spoke earlier this week after visiting a classroom of third-graders in Bardwell. MOSCOW (AP) —~ Actors at the avant garde Taganka Theatre are strongly opposed to replacing artistic director Yuri Lyubimov, recently fired and expelled from the Communist Party, with Anatoly Efros, but Efros will be get the job anyway, an informed source said Wednesday. Efros met with most of the company of 90 actors for two hours Tuesday and sought their support as the theatre’s new artistic director, sald Danish Radio reporter Samuel Rachlin, who has good connections with the theatre. But the meeting was stormy, with several actors ob- Jecting to Efros as Lyubimov's replacement, Rachlin said. Lyubimov, 66, founded the theatre 20 years ago. He en- Joys the personal loyalty of moat of the theatre’s actors but has frequently clashed with Soviet censors, whom he has accused of lacking the artistic background needed to do their jobs, ALUM BRIDGE, W.Va, (AP) — Country singer Waylen Jennings has donated $1,000 to help a young namesake, a five-year-old boy who suffers from a usually fatal form of bone cancer. The check for Waylon Rose, of Camden, W. Va., arzived Saturday at the child's elementary school along with a letter asking it be spent on toys and clothes, said principal Opal Marsh. Residents set up a fund for Kose in mid-December to help defray the boy's medical bills. Jennings responded to a letter sent by a third-grader at the school, Marsh suid. ‘The boy was named for Jennings andhis whole family are fans of the singer, said the principal. WILMINGTON, N.C, (AP) — King Kong producer Dino De Laurentiis has announced he Is building up his North Carolina studio to mammoth proportions, including up to 10 movie production stages for year-round use. His studio complex already houses two sound stages, 20 production offices and wardrabe and property facilities, But De Laurentils, 61, says his company will spend $25 million to $50 million in the Wilmington area in the next year by producing a new film and through studio expansion. GLENDALE, Calif. (AP) — Magician David Copperlield {a using a cane to get around after nearly being impaled. when an underwater escape trick being taped for television went awry, his publicist says. In the stunt, Copperfield, 27, was bound with chains and submerged upside down in a tank of water, his wrists handcuffed to the tank's frame. “A IDfoot, 500pound spike hanging from above was timed to drop two minutes after he was submerged,” spokeawoman Dawn Bridges said. ‘The chains got tangled up, and because he was handcuffed he had trouble getting out,”” Hyperventilating and in shock, Copperfield was taken to hospital, where he was treated for scratches and pulled tendons on his arma and legs, ° Gary Hart is enjoying rs money-raising boom and turning. his attention back to: iriendly New England while Walter Mondale, trying to sustain his U.S. presidential candidate’ campaign's recavery, faces’.néew. worries that. federal spending limits may. soon give his rival da advantage, ; - Mondale also is unteashing a ‘sireng new- aitack on President Reagan, saying his administration has a “sleaze factor”. anda “tawdry record of unethical conduct,,.."" ‘The ‘two leading Democratic presidential contenders .: were campaigning on opposite coasts today — Mondale in | California after a series of fund-raising events ‘Wednesday night, Hart in New York City and Connecticut, am The third Democratic contender, Jease Jackson, cam- paigned in Richmond,. Va.,. where he complained that . whites havin’t backed him in large numbers because they don't view blacks as viable candidates, ~. Hart, who lest to Mondale in crucial Illinois tn Tuesday, cancelled a money-raiaing trip {o-California to spend-his time in the Northeast — a region where he has won five state contests, - Mondale; stopping in. Albuquerque N.M., of “his way west, sald his 96-delegate victory. in nt wasn't ‘enough to restore his leader's label. -. “Delegates are important, popular ‘support together vention,” the former-vice-president sald. to want me to be president," monday al Also has Won : ‘Michigan’ 'B caucuses in the. last wee . ’ As Mondale was enjoying the: company of people who pala “4 Harrod Ss. bomber “in court — - LONDON{(AP)—A Northern Ireland man was arraigned under heavy guard today in the Irish Republican Army bombing of, Harrods department store in London at the but [ want the legitimacy’ of. - want the: people. “i ’ height of the. (Caristmas shopping season. The: blast ‘Milled, six people ‘and wounded $4 others: About 20 policemen, some with trained dogs, ‘stood guard outside magistrate’s court in the Lambeth district as 29- year-old Paul Kavanagh was escorted: inside. Police kept watch from rooftoops and 10 other policemen were stationed in the courtroom. Kavanagh Is the first person tobe charged in the Harrods bombing. Kavanagh, of Belfast, entered no plea during ‘his 15- minute court appearance. Magistrate Ralph Lownie or- - dered him jailed for one week pending a further hearing. Kavanagh made no application for bail. Scotland Yard said Kavanagh WAS charged Wednesday night with six terrorist-related crimes between Oct. 6, 1923, and Jan. 25, including conspiring with others in the Dec. i car bombing outside Harrods. The outlawed IRA accepted responsibility for that explosion. Kavanagh appeared in court with another Belfast ‘man, Thomas Quigley, 28, who was arrested in December: in connection with a 1991-IRA bombing campaign in London. Quigley, who faces 10 terrorist charges, also was ordered held. Under British law, suspects held in custody must appear . in court periodically, usually once each week, for remand hearings prior to full trial. y, British-preas.reparts said;palice arrested Kavanagh ina’ ‘commando-slyle raid Friday on his home in the Beechmont ‘area: of, predoininaitlyRotiat Catholic West" Belfast and that Kavanagh was flown to London on Saturday, The mainty Catholic IRA is fighting to drive the British - from Northern Ireland. It wants to.unite the predominantly Protestant province with the overwhelmingly Romaa Catholic Irish republic under socialist rule. There were four bomb attacks in London in the petiod covered by the conspiracy charge against Kavanagh — an explosion at an army barracks at Woolwich i in southeast London on Dec. 10 that injured four soldiers; the Harrods bombing; an explosion Dec. 25 that injured two People, and the mheovery of an imexploded bomb Dec. 13. with delegates “at that -con-°": ee vty ‘st California money-raising showed that Hart has’ been‘ raking in the cash.* Hart ralsed {eos than half sniliion dollara during thie firet two months of this. year, bit he took in $1.8 millien in the | first-20.days of Mareh — ‘Immediately ‘after, his Surprising New Hampshire’ primary. triumph. Mondale’s campaign, which ralsed $1.2 million diiring the first two months of 1984, expected to pull in up to $1. § million. during March; records filed with the Federal Elections Commission. showed, be The records also showed that Mondale, who ‘has outapent Hart better than 4-to-1, is likely to bump against federal~ spending ceilings if their race for the goes down to the wire. - Mondale le rsported spending #104 million, more than half ‘Join him Teports: madé public in: Washington - -raising b F » the $20.2-million limit 0 on 1 speniling | before the conventia by the end of February. Hart, by contrast, had spent less than $2.3 million — leaving him“free to spend $16: million _ more. in the remaining primaries, if he can raise it, . troveraies. 7 That presents the posalbility that if It's atill'a race by: the © * fina} round of. primaries, including California with iti 345 _ delegates on June 5, Hart could be able. to vantly. ourspendl “hia opponent on television ads. _ Mondale blasted Reagan while in the president’ ce home ; state and earlier while in New Mexico. He listed fast year’ 8 turmoil. in :the- Environmental. Protection’ Ageiicy,’ the '. current furor over the nomination of presidential counsellor Edwin Meese a for attorney general, the sale of federal jands at’ “fire-salé prices,"' and CIA director William Casey's much-criljcized ties to Wall Stréet, as’ well BS other, con- ~ Pulp. ‘community hurting POWELL RIVER,. B Lc. (CR) _ MacMillan Bloede! Ltd,’s cavernous pulp and paper mill in this south ‘const: com-: . munity has been silent since Feb, 2 wheri the, industry-wide . lockout began and the ‘community, jike many other mall towns in British Columbia, is hurting. : Waitresses sit at restaurant tables and ware ouit windows” * into the rain. The marquee at one nightotub reads: "\Closed’ for the Lockout:", - But the Canadian Paperworkers Union vows s that the mill will stay closed. along: with the other ‘19. mills aeross the - * pravince until the companies remember what they owe Ellis Jones.” - Jones, 79, worked for MacMillan Bloedel for 43 years, The, ; - eoinpany nows pays him a pension of about:31,800 a year. Calvert Knudsen’ was the company's chief: executive: officer until last year. For elght years’ service, the j com- pany: rewarded Knudsen with a “company benston that Y exceeds $150,000 a year. Jones is one ‘of about. 300 surviving paperwotkers' union - benefit level, including various company pensions ‘that , exdated prior to 1966, is $208, and their average length. of meriibers. who retired before the current. industry penslori | plat came into effect in 1075. There are about 200 members of the Pulp, Paper and Woodworkers of Canada in the same. predicament. . COVERED BY PLAN “service to the industry was.31 years. ‘An employee wiih 91 years’ service under the. 176 plan : ‘receives an average of 434 a month. The union has sét no epecific figure for imprevementi to . the 1966 plan, but says its goal is to match the benefit levels: of both plans, nd the companies can afford to do it... “They're forgotten people,” said.paperworkers’. leader Art Gruntman.: “Nobody, does anything for them ‘and they've got nobody to speak for thein." ‘ Attention hais focused on the term of the contract and the pulp unions’ -Aparring with the. International Woodworkers * of America, which fatified a three-year pact late last year, but the demand for better pensions is an issue that will hot go away this’ time, Gruntman vows. ; — MADE RULING hes . Ithas been 4 démand the paperworkers union has been putting to the Companies without much progress, since. 1"? when the'B.C. Labor Relations Board ruled the union could strike‘on behalf of the pensioners. - Dick Lester, chief negotiator for the Pulp and Paper. Industrial Relations Bureau, says bluntly; “There. will be . no negotiated agreement on the 1066 plan.” eotegt The “oldtimers,” as the unions call them, are covered by the first industry-wide pension plan, negotiated in 1968, Thelr remaining income.varies, according to their federal Old Age Pension benefils and Canadian Pension Plan | benefits. The companies say heir obligations to the retirees ended years ago. - The paperworkers’ union estimates that the average age _ of the 1966-plan pensioners i is 78, their Gverage monthly European summit’ | _ Lester said any pension concessions would have far- reaching costs, because they likely would have to be. eo tended to other unions in the industry. During contract negotiations, the pulp companies, Haye » used a. similar argument in their opposition to unlop proposals for a -three-year contract that inchides cost-of- woodworkérs ution, which agreed to a three-year pact without cost-of- of-living Provisiong. ‘ Co ane Thatcher may block payments BRUSSELS (Rebter) — British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, pitted against European Economic Community leaders after the collapse of a vital summit Wednesday night, has signalled she may block her comiy’ ‘a payments to the trading ‘group. rebate to Britain of $675 million, whi which Tha thine wag, Political sources sald ghe woild ‘deste’ next, ‘Wes eat ronilaéd with'nto strings abtiehed dl ther t . ke Britain the | ‘teprehensible.” eRe SRS, i Ri. ‘fst to continue the payments, Which in second-largest contributor to comnitmity’ ie . Diplomats said recrimination over British demands to’ iu | the could threaten the future of ‘the 26-year-old organization. _ Calls for excluding Britain from the community, or al least from some of its activities, have come from groups such as farmers, who feel thelr livelihood is threatened by its attempt to restrict spending ina. year. expected to produce: a $2.5-billion budgét deficit, . West Germany, which’ helped bring Britain: into the comunity, moved to cool tempers when Foreign Minister are yet Hans-Dietrich Genscher warned Wednesday’ teyin wa » living adjustments, The companies say that would tile the _. ein dta ‘aaaind isolating Britain, while criticiZing it for blocking agreement ‘at the summit.: France and Italy have. blocked the senmniyy 1963 aH rey wel uit, sib _ CAN'T IGNORE iT reform the community budget and reduce ils contributions “1 don’t think one ‘can @o on as though nothing ‘hes a pened,” she said. : Diplomats said Bonn was hiso pressing for an “early, meeting of community foreign ministers, probably early. next week, to try to blunt the impact of the aummit deadlock. But Italian Premier Bettino Craxi, speaking at a news conference, blamed what he called Thatcher’ s obatinacy for the summit’ 8 failure and the paralyals of the comunity. ~ Federals criticized for salmon decline VICTORIA (CP) — The federal Flheries Department is managing the British Columbia fishing industry into a state of decline, a conference on chinook salmon was told Wed- nesday. The chinook is threatened by overfishing and reduced spawning escapement, and this will be the trend for future depletion of fish stocks unless the federal Zovernment takes Steps to nurse the Industry back to health, said Don Cruikshank of Seafood Products Ltd. of Port Hardy, B.C, Chinook 84, aponsored by the Association of Professional Biologists of B.C, and the Pacific Trollers Association, also heard that federal fishing policies have been the reason for the decline of chinook stocks. Over the yeara, the department has introduced various policies to either improve the industry, protect the species or meet the needs of user groups, be alt things to all people, Cruickshank said, The department should concentrate instead on restoring British. Columbia's chinook fishery with such steps as ironclad feet replacement rules, removal of subsidies, over-capitallzation and exhorbitant licence fees, he sald. ‘Superintendents meeting but it should stop trying to VANCOUVER (CP) Superintendents of British Columbia's 75 = school districts will decide this week whether to step into a power struggle that has left the public choo] system in “eritical condition.” : Aposition paper urges the superintendents -and their deputies, who are meeting here this week, to get’ in- volved before a growing hostility between teachers — and the provincial govern- ment gets out of hand. The = 185-member Association of B.C. School Superintendents will decide © Friday whether to adopt the proposed position, which Crilielzes the Education Ministry for making “sudden -‘and sweeping changes” to the school system in the past year. The draft position paper accuses the Education Ministry of tightening its control over a resistant school system hy imposing a centralized policy “with obvious haste and a ‘ minimum of consultation." The changes are causing unprecedented stresses and creating a climate of heavy- handedness that could do lasting damage to British Columbia's ayatem, says the paper, prepared by top officials in - nine Vancouver-area school districts. They biame the govern- ment for turning the B.C. Teachers’ Federation into an active political force with growing suspicion of the’ government’s motives - and a silffening resistance _ Its objectives, “The - present critical condition of publi¢ education in B.C. resis in . large measure on the fact that power and - control issues have displaced developmental and educational (tones}," paper says, education - Other ways to restore the depleted chinook stocks would be to set catch limits, continue the salmonid enhancement programs and allocate the resource between native Indians, sports and commercigl fishermen. As well, the federal goverament could reduce the catches 1 Of the commercial fishery by imposing quotas and size of the fishing fleet by numbers of gilinetters, seiners and { trallers, said Crutkshank, Ray Hilborn, a University of British Columbia biclogist, ; Said it is widely accepted that overfishing is the dominant ; Cause among all the reasons for. declining stocks; citing the “Strait of Georgia’s chinook eacapemeént drop over 15 years to‘less than 50,000 from 150, 000. Hilborn sald Fraser River pollution does not. affect.the salmon, because spawning salmon on the Fraser produce more offepring each year, not-less.: Member of Parliament John Fraser (PC—Vancouver ’ South), said that a recently-publighed statement by Hilborn, in which he indicated that some stocks have in- creased through good management, could be used as an ' argument against continuing the salmonid enhancement program. . “But Hilborn side was pointing out that enhancement ‘t help the plight of fishernten now ‘on spending thday the verge o al failure because of higher fuel costs li bn} tt and id mortgage. ‘payments. . LETS START MY = CAMPAIGN OFF WITH - s UA BIG BANG..T'LL ok a BOMB’ WINSTON S? A+ xt litt 2B; | : ' we ; ae £ | hy : Et” ' wal . TORONTO | o - Wad) AG a a“ ats nts