9 AEE AT ERE iene Ea he green) ce rapemayerme non oo ne ners ere ge me mata Ma Ny tata ty He Sgt? Se Pet kd roe eee feng ater eT este y en aig 7,000 sine eon, The British a Tote 8 1 auginented by, ‘ ay 4 | BRUSSELS: Us tein = The Falklgnds: , ConEllef. will tench: NATO. planners, more: “tha they ‘sould hope té have-learned: yeard ‘ol. Intehslye- a “investigation: unit: that “will stage’ un- - dercover: oberations’ is being formed in Alberta, and: § . officials ‘in Banff. and‘ Jasper.-national’ parks are: vs ellen in, front. ot: ‘them: : _ With the weather i improving somewhat, + Bitian ‘planeg:on Sunday. dropped more: leaftets on Argentine positions urging the | lroops to surrender. ‘The Argentihians ‘ responded with sporadic, poorly aimed artillery fire, -the British reports said. _. Argentina said its air force and gunners at Stanley bombed, strafed and shelied the . -- British, but the: British Defence Ministry was not giving out. any ‘information about | operations in‘the Falklands... . Michael Nicholson; a correspondent for. Independent Television News, reported admirals ‘and: F generals who ‘plan } 2 strategy | say-the conflict between Britain’. 2 /and Argentina will, provide axperlerice'to-* -.. improve the allianve’s military readiness. © ' - NATO plans to undertake detailed “evaluations of. all aspects of the Anglo- __ Argentine conflict as soon as it is over and British ’ officers - are _ Available - for. debriefing, ; “Not since the. Vietnam war, and the: ‘ Teraell- Arab conflicts. have military: planners hadsuch an opportunity to assess the impact of modern technology," a ' senior NATO officer said, “It's. likely. to have a lot of ‘consequences on our future. that'-the . Britisti- “forces were already- : equipment and tactical operations. " . . . @arrying.out “extraordinarily daring + NATO officers are reluctant to disdyuss operations’ which, if successful, “will the progress of a conflict in which Britajn, “bring an end to'the war that much closer.” _ WNATO ally, is atill Involved. In any cgbe, —- He. Eave no details due to o military cen- Britain. has made little infor ati sorship. - available 60 far. ‘ An Argentine communique: reported a Privately, the ‘offige clash with British marines west of Stanley, leasdn to be drawsis that some allied and said the British forces were routed. ; navies must i ink their warship. The-Argentines said. they suffered ho ~ J a wildlife. * . Regulations have recently been’ adopted i in British’ # Calumbia and the Northwest Territories that require 3 : hunters to affix permanent identity tags to bighorn & sheep heads. Sheep are the poachers’ prime target. me Wildlife officials say- the measures are riecessary &- because poaching has become a. big business run by & organized criminals. - 9 Jasper park warden John Steele said some 8 poachers. will photograph big game animals in. the. 8 . parks, (hen'shop around for foreign hunters willing to & pay up to $35,000 for the privilege of taking the trophy: & ' ‘Once a contract is signed the hunter and his guide 3 ‘will slip into a. park or wildlife preserve, shoot the | : protected animal and spirit away. its head before 3 wildlife officials know what has happened. : Steele said Jasper can.expect to lose about 12prime & animals a year to ppachers. * ~ : FEW SUCCESSFUL .~ Bill Wishart, an Alberta : research biologist specializing in sheep, said that q Protection agai ir attack. oe casualties from British artillery fire. They expressed surprise at..the ef-— Nicholson reported that (he. - British fectiveness of .the French-built; Exocet Gurkha troops, (he knife-wielding soldiers ~~ " “missile “— whose ship-to-ship version’ from Himalayan Nepal, were moving back equips several NATO navies — and also at and forth across East Falkland, looking the extensive ‘damage caused to British for A¥gentine troops wha were overlooked ships by free-falling bombs. as the main body of the British force Officers in Brussels and at the Supreme § moved westward, Headquarters Allied Powérs in Europe The Gurkhas are part of the second wave Said the sinking of the British destroyer of British troops on the island. They landed Sheffield and the subsequent loss of ships about a week ago at ‘San Carlos after by the British task force indicated onetype leaving their transport ship, the of anti-aircraft missile was not ot enough for requisitioned liner Queen Elizabeth 2, with “one ship.’ ; the rest of the 3,500-man Sth Infantry “Some western ships are wonderful Brigade. platforms but too lightly armed,’ one The QE2 picked up 700 crew members. general said. “On the other hand Soviet | from ships sunk by Argentine forces and is ships are just ‘good platforms but very well . bringing them back™ to England, the , armed,” Ministry of Defence said: The port City of world, only about five-per cent of Canadian hunters : are successtul. For. non-residents; who must be & guided, the rate climbs to about 50 per‘cent.. — on Alberta's sheep population ‘“‘but it's cheating.” § The ‘evidence left behind is usually clear — a & headless carcass and a few emply cartridges. : The poachers, say wildlife officers, have contacts with unscrupulous big game guides who will-sign § mata ¥al district. fs Canadian enforcement officials are trained to deal fe with wayward hunters and fishermen, not hard-coré. ‘ criminals, Steeje said, Ee “They're just watking.a all over us," he.said of t the : poachers, believed to be 1 mostly U.S.-based. “We're just’a great big resource area for them.” : eS a <= iene aetna ‘Comparable Soviet ships generally have Southampton was preparing a tumultuaus - % and Wildlife Service, agreed that some highly- three complementary systems — long. Welcome for Friday. % organized poaching operations are reaching into vat v8.9. Although Stanley is expected to be the decisive battle of the war, it may not be the. - last one, Kim Sabido of Independent range, medium-range and short-range air Canada to snatch trophy- animals. defences, he said.- : “But-poaching everywhere is’ a very significant Matahatet, ens starting to brand thelr big-game animals so customs & officials and - others. can instantly identify’ park a ‘although Alberta has the best.bighorn hunting in the He said poachers aren't having a biological impact” : papers saying the animal comes from their hunting : in ‘the puibs. and” al’ ‘back: yard barbecues: - } st D f favorite ‘cg date ‘throughout’ ‘the® 45-day ‘ ‘campaign. Cale owner. Arthur’ Gipvinaz: onfined ° as. it. ‘is, to. ‘mostly: ‘young people - last few daa, nS “Ifthere issuch a thing ag morientum, in politics, the NDP has lost theirs," he said. The surprise is the PCs are not con- sidered sure Winners despite the Yukon’ 8 history as a Tory bastion, _ . - Residents of the Yukon, a. wedge of | _terrltory thrusting north from B.C. bet: - ween the Northwest Territories and _ Alaska, have been electing Tory Erik- Nielsen to the House of Commons since 1957, oa : The Tories: also held 10 of the 16 seats in the Yukon legislature at dissolution. The _ NDP had three,- the ‘Liberals two, and there was one independent. ‘. Resentment of the Liberal govertiment in Ottawa is as apparent here as elsewhere: “in the West, almost dooming the chances of.. _ Liberal leader Ron Veale, a 36-year-old lawyer . from Ontario.” . And the free-enterprise spirit that had ’ Klondike gold prospectors trampling over one another in’ 1898 endures — a difficult _ Psychology for NDP leader Tony Penikett to overcome, — "Yet government leader Chris Pearson, head of the Conservatives, has rin a desperate campaign. ° . "Just as he has railed against the Ottawa . Liberals for the last four years, partly out of frustration that Ottawa ultimately still controls the territory, Pearson has bombastically Portrayed | the | NDP as | _veermmunist:” _ ‘ Cartoons stuck to the’ wall at PC verputting theif rioney fet the Progressive’ . a ‘.° ukor “with a taste. for: cumncumber and, ve . The Herald, monday, dune 7, 1982,. Pome | wee elections 2 are held. WHITEHORSE. (CP) ~ ~ Cautious. bettors: : ‘headquarters’ shave ‘Penikett cna ithe Subs leader rover Canto. By then native land claims had emerged as the major substantive issue because of the millions of dollars in federal money a settlement would bring to the calamity- _ Stricken. Yukon economy, which is based on mining. Mineral prices are down, the large lend- zinc mine at Faro closed for the summer on Friday and: hundreds of miners and transport’ workers’ have been laid off, leaving majestic grondeur. and can-can girls the chief source of the Yukon's in- come via the tourist trade. . The racism charges were brought on by nine people who sponsored a newspaper ad and called themselves. concerned long- time Yukoners; most of them identifiable as Tory supporters, . : The ad suggested Penikett. would capitulate on native land claims at. the expense of white Yukoners, although the federal govewrnmient has mare influence in'negotiations. than the Yukon. - The ai cited the NDP slate which in: cludes David Porter, a vice-president of the Council for Yukon Indians untl{ . recently, and David Joe, the council's . chief land-claims negotiator nomination day. ; Letters to the editor expressed outrage. - An open-line radio. show. extended its until i: anager, “Fraser? - . Green, says | if. Tithe oe had 2Omore votes | ; in the right Tidings - last. time, the: NDP . “ "gould have formed a Rovernment,- we soe Campaign: was” qiiet “until last” "Wednesday. when it erupted in charges of | * racism against the Tories. eee ..« scheduled - -time, ‘airing: ‘cullers Who" were 7" - ‘sickened by the ad and callers who agreed ™ with it. Army evacuates climbers ranger who is directing the ANCHORAGE, Alaska. — They were being cared for (AP) — U.S. Army rescue effort. by a team .of medical helicopters dre attempting Poor: visibility Sunday researchers who had Another conelusion reached by NATO experts is that the Falklands conflict, like the Iran-Iraq war and the military aspects of the crisis.in Poland, had proved the . ‘worth of airborne radar systems that can. J . see beytnd Are hottagn: ee “ae ‘ a “landings on West‘*Faliland, ‘the Yess A. fleet. of. 18. airborne-wdrning-and- Television, News. reported . from East Falkland. He said 40-50 residents of Fox Bay, on West Falkland, are being. held. prisoner by Argentine trogps there. "sp tS orfar, the British have announced no. “i inhabited of the: two: rhain-tslands“ The | tt Pa oii ce oe problem, not just in Canada,” he said, ~ Bob Adams, Alberta fish and wildlife enforcement co-ordinator, said the province is setting up a special - unit to.tackle the most serious poaching problems, & He said undercover operations in the U.S. have by aeee loyd Zersan, "executive director of the US, -based worked and will’ be e undertaker here: more Foundation’ for North: Ameri¢art Wild Sheep, said‘his Scott Pearson, a special agent with the US. Fish wi 3 E te evacuate today two Japanese climbers who ‘suffered serious head in- juries after they fell: while climbing ‘Mount McKinley, forced two U.S. Army rescue helicopters to turn ‘back during an attempt to carry the Japanese off the’ -4,300-metre level of. the ‘spotted the climbers at the 4,875-metre level of the €,200-metre mountain. The doctors had been con- ducting altitude tests at the ~ ‘control-systems planes being delivered to alliance forces will give the West an extra 15-minute warning ofa potential attack frem: ‘the East." ~ “Argentine. ‘planes would have found it’ difficult to evade British Harrier planes if the task force had been able to deploy: AWACS aircraft around the Falklands, they said:: wo islands are. thousands of kilometres away : from the NATO “treaty. area, their geography and climate is similar to that of northern Norway. British marines who took part in the amphibious landing in San Carlos Bay-are, along with Canadian and U.S. brigades, earmarked for reinforcement of northern Norway in a crisis. With a heavy fog finally lifting and fresh troops arriving, British forces are ready to ~ launch an assault on the Falkland Islands capital of Stanley ‘‘within hours,"’ say ~ British correspondents at thé-battle front, The British. spent Sunday: consolidating Defence Ministry declined te confirm or: deny the report. Diplomatic’ efforts to. end thie conflict were virtually abandoned Sunday as the _ UN Security Council turned its attention to * a’ new ‘problem,. the Israeli invasion..of. Lebanon, The three Argentine inililary leaders. who had flown to New. York-to participate... NATO planners said’ that ‘alttiough the-~~in Secretary General ‘Javier Perez de Cuellar’s second mediation effort returned, _-empty# Shanded to Buenos Aires on Sunday. - Their leader, Brig:-Gen. Jose Mirel, said © Argentina would: not “humiliate itself ’ before United. Kingdom arrogance.” ’ The Argentines got diplomatic’ support from the meeting of non-aligned countries in Havana, which adopted a resolution of “solidarity with Argentina in all ‘its struggles to bring an. end to the colonial presence in the Malvinas Islands," using - the Argentine name for the islands. The resolution also attacked the United Stales for supporting Britain. - . The Argentine newspaper Clarin reported thal Cuba has offered: ‘weapons Lo their grip around the capital'of the South’ — help resupply: Argentina, but the military — Atlantic archipelago . and probing © “Argentine: defences; the dispatches said.” On Saturday, for the first time in several chill fog lifted enough to ‘give them a look , at the town, defended by an estimated ‘EDMONTON (CP) — Judges and not the parole “board ‘should decide when. a prisoner is ready to be released, says ‘Edmonton's police chief, ° “] think the same people responsible for assigning. punishment in. the first place ought to be responsible for sentence ” review,’ ngtgsLuandy said. . His proposal is one of several prison- a police, law and civil Fights, officials in interviews. : 7 Linney. said having judges: decide ‘when > a convict is eligible for ‘release. may méan “ inare work for. the courts but it. “would .” eliminate. ‘the: ‘enlire “bubeaeracy, “of. ‘the :. parole board”: 7) i. Parole now ig fog liberally. extended, ind — less” than five yeurs,. he said, Roy think.the eurrent process i is flawed in 8 that it provides for a continuing series af” v hearings most often! hefare the same board members. . “IF you see somedne ona’ ‘regalia hasis , "the inclination of any human being is to * Say Syoner or later feeling for this individual. . o- 0 nembers are extremely youd people who are bing thers jobs ta The: best of (heir “ability, the prevess used is sill wrant! * release options suggested.’-hy various. days, the correspondents said, the dense, " 7 should nat he #ranted to convicts serving, “ ‘We've + aevelopel a: tes: take a - risk ow him” 7 7 Coe Linney said ‘that although parole hoard te - junta would neither confirm nor deny the ‘story. -In Versailles, the leaders.of the seven industrialized counlries issued a ‘Statement pledging “complete. solidarity: wilh Britain. ae : “T don't - ‘think their judgments ‘ean be made as efficiently. as from’the bench." Brad Willis, an Edmonton lawyer and _ former Crown prosecitor, said’ the " responsibility for punishment of criminals . has swung from judges to the parole béard | “since board members and” nol. judges determine how long a criminal remains in + _ prisan. “There is very little: relation to what the - ~ judge says in sentencing and whal actually . happens to prisoners,”’ Willis said. He suggested: judges are betler suited to “determine “when.” a ‘criminal “should be . - yeleaséd- because’ of their knowledge ‘of - law, awaréness of the victim’s plight. and ; “need to see the ¢ elfécts of incarceration.” ‘ public so we: would have -Publie seruliny,”: Willis said. Willis believes his plan’ is oth firactical "and econdmical:- The: cost Wouldn't be. ‘greal because the? prucess would siinply “replacé one ‘form af judge ‘with: another.. Civil rights advoéate Burke Horker said - “parole should. be, abolished because: it- “operdles on the assumption that you ean. make predicting about the hehavior of” “ifdividuals ‘ant you cannot, |? LE governments are fooking for \ ways ti reduce expenditures. | SUB ON the parole , System should be Shul down. We woultin’t . hiss il. moe . on “Whatever happened would happen in E poachers. | organization welcomes any news ofa a crackdown on Shaeoy SE ees ry hard fighting, but. neither . side has mentioned - the number" of casuallies in the Israeli ground offensive thal began Sunday. In Israel, USS, presidential envoy Philip Habib arrived overnight on a peace mission amid fears the fighting would escalate despite Israeli claims the massive assault had the limited aim of. driving the ~ Palestinians northward out of artillery range of Israel. A major risk of the Israeli invasion was that it might lead to full-scale fighting with-the estimated 30,000 Syrian troops in. Lebanon. In Beirut, at least two rockets hit the’ ' Embassy. An‘ embassy: spokesman said. the’ em: bassy was: damaged but + there wereno “casualties: He? - said there was “no_ in ‘ dicalion’- who — Lt.-Gen.-Raphaéi Eytan, the top: Israeli mititary ‘officer, was quoted on Israel ’ radio-as saying his (raops had thrust ‘north {o take zone on the Lebanese coast -. nerth. of Sidon, some 40 . kilometres south of. Beirut... "PLO commiuniques and lanks and infantry | ringed” “Palestinian énelaves at (he. sen ancient porl city of Tyre on: “the * Meédilerranean: The PI P) said Istaeli forces had” pushed ‘ "into “‘theinkand :. “imatkel town of Nabatiyeh ‘a ‘also: ad © +; captured “Hashayah; a Palestinian " stronghold In ihe foothills of Maint Herman. abut vight kiloieires from the Syrian ~bardery) and had been shelled from the direction of | “Syrian - Fares Masbayah, Western | durtespondents along “the | ‘prong af the norte of S-hilpmelre was - responsible for the ‘attack. and.“hand-lo-Hanid . combat, ‘ iB raging in-the streets.” °° | ‘Kylan said Israeli forces: “ easternmost - a from page J “Flomning results. unknown. invasion front reported that dozens of mud-camouflaged trucks filled. - with Palestinian guerrillas were - - Seen streaming north “into the Bekaa Valley, where Syria has SAM-6 anti- aircraft missile batteries, The Syrian command in Beirut said Syrian long- range artillery pounded Israel's forward. positions for (he second day. .., tt said an’ unspecified - nultber ' of. Syrians were killed or wounded-by - shelling. from --Israel's neWly-established positions around Jarjowa and Arab Salim, 19 kilometres north o.._of he border in the centre of U.S." the invasion front. sracli leaders have said they would - not ‘fight . the Station said Syrian and * in dogfights over the Bekaa | ‘Teport:. = ate eaten alta Topuneee"" Gere ag MORRO ea ~peak, ‘n‘centfal Aldska! Japanese were being teat gar “The ‘weather’. is treated. .. ° The “pair ‘Suifeted ' head +, clearing.” . said Bob me, _ injuries after a fal] from the _ Gerhard, Denali National The climbers’. were -West Rib route, Gerhard identified © a5 Takashi saidin an earlier interview. Par k chief mountaineering Kanda, about’ 30, of Tokyo, and Mamoru Ida, ‘about 40. ‘Ida's home town was not avail One of: them also was reported suffering from frostbite to hands and feet. he said. . . . ANTIQUES os QUALITY FURNISHINGS - AUCTION . PLACE: Lakelse Motor Hotel . - 4620 Lakelse Ave., Terrace | PREVIEW: Sun.,. 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