; Page 10, The Herald, Friday, April 3, 198) pug eRe co talaaaabin TUS iat nh acini ee meeeriantrrart ests tien ricer geet tet ey tere Pee les a ee A ee T i yy SN NS SAAS SAAS ASUS EASES ER ESAATAAA RAR DALARAN ARR RAR RNAS ANAS NARA here 4 b.-4: CHARLOTTE TAYLOR — ; ANTAL NENA AAAI | Catholic promote MONTREAL (CP) Andre Charbonneau winced as the dynamite went off a few dozen metres away. "tts awful,” he muttered, putting his hand to his brow as the windows shook in his office in the old Grand Seminare, headquarters of the Action Catholique movement. . Contractors were ex- cavating the site of a luxury condominium on a slope on Mount Royal which was part of the seminary gardens, dating back to the 17th century. The developers who bought the historic piece of downtown property from the Sulpicians represent. every thing Charbonneau and Action Catholique detest. — profits and big business.’ The! Juxury homes being. built E there will cast up to $300,000"! , each. Charbonneau says all this . oes. against what the Roman Catholic lay movement is trying to ; promote — justice in the world, especially for the poor. : Action Catholique's 12 full- time staff are most at home working among the seedy tenements in Montreal’s east NEED TO KNOW SOMETHING ABOUT YOUR NEW - COMMUNITY? Call flor ci Phone NANCY GOURLIE 635-7077. 635.9282 Our hostess will bring gifts and gieetings, along with helpful community information, NNAS AA RAN SRN SANA RENAN ASR NSA NAAR AR RRR AAR SANA NANA laymen justice cor xen sty poor have a gospel,'" ‘declares the 82- year-old father of three, who recently took over as direc- tor of Action Catholique. “Someone who works only for profit doesn't work for justice.” The movement has changed since Quebec Liberal Leader Claude ‘Ryan, currently fighting to become the premier of Que- ‘bec in the April 13 election, ‘was its director between 145 and 1057. Charbonneau says the movement is less “Catholique” and more Action. Aare is composed of six sbaBabate groups — high schoo] students, college and “uinWersity students, young workers and unemployed, adult workers, adult in- tellectuals and professionals and the movement of Christian women. Charbonneau _— estimates that more than 2,500 people ~ meet regularly. in teams of seven or eight to “define the problems of their milieu and get invelved for justice, with _an option for the poor. They identify the presence of the Lord in the poor who are liberating themselves.” They might hold a weekend for working and unemployed young people, lead boycotts of companies which leave Quebec for another province throwing . people out of work or én- courage middle-class members to reflect on ‘the collective’ advancement of society rather thao using their knowledge for their own self-advancement,”’ , ‘Some teams are sup- ’ porting Quebec lumbermen striking against major forest companies because they ~ want to work for salaries rather than piece-work. Charbonneau, . slight and * qiilel Spoken,” is indignant with the present system which he says causes, the men to work too hard and _ preferential place in the - - Kelth h Keating draws winning 4 ticket in Billy Joel Contest, sponsored by New Quadra Travel, CP Alr and the Terrace-Kitlmat Dally Herald. Elizabeth Ruminski,. from CP Alr (lett), presents Zina Stranger of Terrace, with air ’ fare and tickets to the Billy Joel Concert in "Vancouver April 7. Cambodian benefit concert album. released — A year of contractual - Clearances now settled, the fast in a dangerous job in~ order’ {o make a living, leading to needless deaths and injury. Atlantic Iabel has just relensed on record the long- awaited. British benefit concerts in aid of Cambodian refugees. Concerts For the People.of Kampuchea (SD 2-7005) brings to the world a fragment of the powerful performances enjoyed by British audiences in Decem- ber, 1979, when the cream of Britain's rock industry — in- cluding The Who. Paul: McCartney and Wings, Rockpile, The Clash’ and Queen — donated time and talent for the rebuilding of war-torn Kampuchea, formerly Cambodia, Proceeds from the four- night event, as well as from the tworecord set and a 90- ° ‘minute special now under negotiations for TV broadcast, are being chan- nelled toward the effort: through the United Nations’ UNICEF agency.. From record sales alone, UNICEF ~ will receive almost 20 per cent of receipts, the rest golng toward production and administrative costs. A record company spokesman stressed that the effort was a now-profit venture, CHURCH _ OF GoD Reverend R.L. White 3341 River Drive Terrace, B.C, 630-151 10:00 a.m, Sunday School Reverend R.L. White 11:0 a.m. Morning Worship 7:30 p.m. Evening Worship Wednasday 7:30 p.m. Prayer Service CHROST LUTHERAN ‘ CHURCH Rev, Herman Hagen - B.A., M.Div, 635-5520 635-3485, 2229 Sparks Street (corner of Sparks & - Park) 9:45 a.m. “Church School (Kin- - Sunday dergarten adit} . 11:00 a.m. Regular Worship Service {Holy Communion first’ Sunday of each month) Confirmation ; Youth & adult classes through , . * | Altend the Church, of Your Choice . sACREO 7TH DAY HEART. ADVENTIST PARISH 1306 Gritiiths ' 85-713 Pastor Henry Bartsch 40345traume 635-3232 635-7442 Terrace Services: Sat. 9:30.8.m. - . Sabbath School (Sunday 7:4) p.m, School) Saturday evening 11:00 a.m. Worship Sunday Masses Wed. 7:30 p.m. Adult 9:00 a.m. Bible Study 41:15 a.m. CHRISTIAN REFORMED HOUSE CHURCH ‘OF Reverend $. Van Daalen PRAISE Sparks Street and Straume Avenue 3404 Eby Stree! 435-3015 635-3457 | 10:00 a.m. . Sunday School - Terrace 10:30 a.m. ' 1:00 p.n. Sincey Worship . ; Worship Service Education & Instruction 5:00 p.m. Actassfor allages 'Worshla Service . UPLANDS THE BAPTIST: SALVATION CHURCH ARMY Pastor Bab Lasyk QRH 197 Wale Ave. 615-2007 . 635-246240r Corner of Halliwell . 635-3446 and N, Thomas 9:45 a.m. SUNDAY SERVICES Bible Teaching 6 7: a.m. - Sunday school | | Sunday School B for all ages 11:00 a.m, B1t:00 6.m. - Family | Morning Worship Service’ worship 73pm. - 7:3 p.m. Evangelistic Singing and Bible Study Salvation Mtg. - Wadneaday 8:00 Home Bible Studies WEDNESDAY “Vou Are Welcome 7:3 p.m. - Ladies’ Home ot Uplands’ League Fellowship KNOX UNITED ZION * CHURCH. BAPTIST - 4907 Lazelle Ave. CHURCH ° = [635-6014 Pastor Paul Mohninger | Rev, David Martyn, Homed35-508 8 8 =| B.A,, M.Div. Corner Sperksand Kel bsunday Worship 11:00 ark, 9:45 a.m Fern Stng 10:50 a.m, Sunday Schoo! Sunday School 14:00 a.m. Gre. $+ 10:00 a.m. ‘ Morning Worship Nursery-Gr. 5 11:00 a.ny BARA SEANANDSESN SAS AAA RY wT SSS SNA SS NN SSSR SAN NN ST. MATTHEW'S ANGLICAN CHURCH . 4726 Lazelle Avenues 5-909 Sunday Services 9:30 am Holy Communion 10 &.m. Adult Discussion & Church School - 11 am Family Service . Holy Communion except ord Sunday 7:30 pm Informal Service Wednesday, 7:30pm Holy Communion AANA TERENAS SEE ANEE ANAL SEESN SEAN ESE NESE NN SENN HENNE AA NT NNSA NSN A CAT SANSA NAN ASA The idea for the ‘Kam the. Wreckage is a atrong puchea performances ™ “de ~ piece, which Dave Edmunds, reported to have originated ‘from consultations between former Beatle McCartney. and Kurt Waldheim, UN secretary-general, who termed the decade of Cambodian suffering a “na- tional tragedy, proportions of which may have no parallel in history." Theresulting four nights of sold-out concerts, fram Dec. 2-29 at London's Ham- mersmith Odeon theatre, assembled top names in the Nick Lowe. and ‘company follow up with the tune Little Sister, with Led. Zepplin’s *Robert Plant handling the vocal. ‘ Not surprisingly, Me- Cariney is heavily featured on the final side of the set, first with his group Wings and later as concert master a his “Rockestra,” which - assembles dozens of the Tock, new wave and reggae" music for a splashy event reminiscent of George Harrison's Bangladesh fund- ‘raiser and the MUSE “No -Nukes’’ series. The album _ itsel€, providing only a smattering of tunes from just some of the performers, has its moments but is largely fragmented — undoubtedly the reault of technical wvariainees over: tour days: of et ee oe The irst night — a ‘solo concert by Queen — is capsulized on album in one only track, Now I'm Here. On the other hand, Pretenders, who shared the bill thesecond night with The Specials and The Who, are allowed three cuts for their particular brand of tedium, " hindered by the lacklustre - vocals of Chrissie Hynde. The Who are given the entire first side df the album — deservedly — with four cuts, the most notable being Behind Blue Eyes and in- cluding yet another rendition al See Me, Feel Me. Rockpile's Crawling From musicians who tock part In the concerts. Given the number of ar- tists involved, the three, Rockestra numbers must have been a recording engineer's nightmare, But with the exception of the rocking Lucille, which at times comes off as muddy, the Rockestra contributions are both powerful and ex- citing, Included is Mc- Cartney's Let It Be. Stacked against the album that resulted from the No Nukes performances fecorded 3% months earlier ~ Kampuchea comes off somewhat as a hodgepodge effort. But, like the MUSE package, it nonetheless is a must for serious collectors of Even as those benefit per- formances. were being recorded, American singer. adon McLean was sitting on a completed product, his latest, And although it was ‘released two years ago in Britain, McLean’s Chain Lightaing (Mil-lesniom, BXL 1-7756) altracted littie, if any, interest unt? now. His single Crying, a super: mellow cover of the Roy Orbison hit, currently is enjoying extensive airplay both here and overseas, and undoubtedly will encourage asecond consideration of the album from British markets. If he doesn’t bowl the listener over with hig per- formance, McLean at least inspires rapt attention. The proven standards he gives here — including mild, versions of Hank Willlams’s Your Cheating Heart and Paul Anka’s It Doesn't Matter Anymore (a big hit for McLean's hero, the late Buddy Holly} — are heavy’ on appeal, And the originals, including the title tune, feature the kind of poetry that made McLean one of America’s most important - ‘folk halladeers of the early "70s. The cut it's a Beautiful Life,- an introspective monologue in which all but the title line is spoken,- doesn't quite shape up. This one McLean should have’ ' kept to himself. Hamilton rockers Teenage Head, whose firat album for Attic has passed the _ Canadian gold mark with: 70,000 unita sold, enters a Toronto studio in April to . work on a new LP. Expected for June delivery, the album is being produced by Lee DeCarlo, who engineered John Len- non’s Double Fantasy. Alberta politics always changes “The history’ of polities in “Alberta is algo the history of social change and in a new book, The Golden Province, Ernest: Watkins atternpts to chart the forces that shaped | that last 75 years. The book traces the proy- ince’s political development © from the first administration of Alexander Rutherford, a Liberal whe was appointed premier by. Sir Wilfrid Laurier, fo the present Conservative regime of Peter Lougheed, who ended an era by effectively eliminating the Social Credit party in the province. In between, Watkins looks at the social and political events that formed Alberta. He’ tollowi thé Econothic'and “ weight . social growilitiiit'turied the “'Depredaliin’ tC wala timd of “ann rts’ ‘desperate measures, province from a sparsely populated land cf cattle and wheat to the booming oil giant of today. . ‘Watkins, a Calgary Jawyer, is himself a politician.. He sat as a Conservative member of the legislature from 1957 until; 1964, while Ernest Manning and the Social Credit were in power, and has a practised eye for detail that makes for interesting reading for the polites buff. The key to the book is the section on the rise and fall of the Social Credit party, . In the 1930s, the West . labored in despair under the letanataleteloibla ore se ae, OO A RESO 1 ' Fromagic Romnage Porras =85'| Tuesday Wednesday Thursday | Friday ? 8 9 10 10-5 10-5 10-8 10-8 SHOPPERS DRUG. MART 4635 Lakelse Terrace, B.C. Saturday We. 105 of-~ the: Great’ of mortgage foreclosures, plummeting wheat prices, -and “Bennett buggies.” In the midst of this economic crisis, Albertans fastened their hopes on William Aberhart, schoolteacher and radio preacher. Aberhart had become fascinated with the exotic economic theories of a Scottish engineer, Clifford Douglas, and broadcast them as the new economic Gospel. In three years, Aberhart and his disciples, including young Manning, turned a newborn political movement into a government, wiping “out ihe established United Farmers of Alberta — who had ruled the provincé for more than a decade. The Social Crediters ran Alberta for 36 years under Aberhart, Manning ~- whose 25-year tenure was the longest in provincial history —~ ant Harry Strom; who came to power only to find the movement had ex: hausted itself. a. Watkins’ ”” ‘Pooks # Be ‘eonibtes character, his troubled relations with an imruly caucus and with Douglas, whose theories of social credit never jlbed with those © of the Alberta politician. The book ~ outlines Aberhart’s fight with the Social Credit caucus over the implementation of Douglas's economics, a fight which ended with Aberhart secure in the political driver's seat. Watkins also recalls the era - of “funny money," the Social . ' Credit effort to ease the im- ' pact of the depression by is: suing scrip called Prosperity Certificates. The whole idea caved in when people refused to accept the scrip. Aberhart's legislative efforts ‘to redesign the economics of the province failed. Court challenges and _ disallowances by the federal Bovernment scuttled much of the program, including the savagely repressive press: law, euphemistically known ae “an act to ensure publication of accurate news and information.” + KERMODE Friendship Society has moved to 3313 KALUM ST. (Former Health Spa) © (Telephones will not be in order unttt May), Need Assistance! If you are new to thecity, ‘looking for a place to have rio friends, and lost, live or just tonely, 9° Terrace’s rural Indiah Friendship Centre will support, understand and assist you. . Callus: 635-4906 or come for coffee 95 daily , Kermode’s Fifth Annual held May oth, + Assembly will be. 1981 fo begin at 3:00 PM | Agendas wil be sent at a.later date.