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Editorial ‘As local vic benefits run out for’ people formerly employed in the local logging Industry: and welfare lines grow longer the news of the pulp mill opening at Watson, Island comes as - good news, although local reaction is mixed. -B.C, Timber’s decision to start up tha.“A’.~ = pulp mill in Prince Rupert on ‘a limited: production basis at 60 per cent of total capacity . sometime during the next month Is one-‘more over, Due to the low price of pulp on the market the. that. the worst Is now company has to: use the. lowest. cost: logs available and it will start wlth round logs, which are those logs lying In the water ‘In front: of the mill.- They will. also continue with local inventories. - There are no immediate plans to open any: sawmills between Terrace and Hazelton and - B.C. Timber and the union will have to put thelr energies Into getting the cheapest. possible sawlogs to make chips from. The only way to do this is to get the ministry - of forests to allow loggers to cut only good saw logs out of the woods: At present the ministry. ° policy:demands a clear cut policy. of taking everyting In a glven.area. - The news from 8.C, Timber Friday may row. dispel! the view that the light at the end of the tunnel Is really another. train heading. on a collision course. Gamble leans right OTTAWA (CP) — The photographs on the walls of John . Gamble’s office show why he worked so hard to force. the- Progressive Conservative leadership race which he entered Sunday, There is a large photograph of Sir John A, ‘Macdoriald, two of John Diefenbaker and none of Joe Clark. “YT have never had a picture of Mr. Clark," the MP from.” - York North sald last week as he prepared. to launcha long- shot bid for the party's top job'as.a voice ‘for’ the far right - wing... - more than three years ago, blames Clark, his advisers and “red Tory” aliles for ignoring the parly’s grassroots by _ adopting misguided policies based on what they thought would get the Tories elected, — Rather than argue with detractors who call him a right- wing dinosaur, Gamble contends ‘they would find wide public support for his views if they had the courage to ask: The 49-year-old tax lawyer puffed on his pipe.and ran down the list of beliefs that often. made him and his, ideological. allies in caucus a thorn in Clark's side. He js anti-bilingualism and anti-metric, He wants to bring . back the noose, keep prisoners behind bars longer, chop | limits on ‘foreign investment, lower. taxes and cut govern- ment spending by — among other things — stopping forelgn ald except during national disasters and ending support for ‘ the CBC; | All that flows from an underlying belief government, especially the “goclalistic regime" of : Prime: Minister .. Trudeau, has intruded too far into Canadians’ lives, Government’s role is no. more than creating ‘a climate ’ where “the harder you work, the more you produce, the | . More remains for you,” "he argues. And most Canadians ’ Clark: and f + dolences to agree, he adds. “Let’s find out what the people i in Canada genuinely want. Let's ask them. When have we ever done that?" The Tories must listen and map: clear Policies based on the public will, he says, ._ “The people who decide policies for parties largely are paid individuals who are alleged experts in the area, ad- visers who concoct schemes they think they will sell. I think it’s important to go to the public, ‘and ask the public. what . they believe,” - Born in Perth, Ont., Gamble grew up in St. ‘Catharings and Niagara Falls. Alter university and law school in. Toronto, he joiried the federal public service for four years ‘asa tax lawyer. for the National Revenue Department, then - went into private practice. i i After: moving to Markham, he made his first run for a Commions-éeat in 1979 and beat former defence i Barney Danson for the right to represent York North on the northern border. of Metropolitan ‘Toronto. - . He grabbed ‘media attention for his efforts to el rid of blocking a Corhmois motion to ‘Send con- ‘oko Ono afler John: Lennon was shof In, 1991. - Lennon was a good musician, Gamble argued, bul he WAS also “leader of a drug culture” that Pulned thousands of’ lives," s Gamble ‘was ‘arhong. a " group of MPs that started a movement te draft Peter Lougheed. Ui Registration « . - i ‘Morenn 1201. Postage pale In cath, retuen postage | * - disco HOM: -- rather see.the good Buyé than the bad guye doing it wl ‘department 8 S Don. chaffer a: Gamble, the first MP to call for a leadership convention . discounting) this, year, up from 62,000 last yéa ek: everybady's « best. interest _ — except, the’ ~but we'd.” [ BIGHT H HUNDRED DOLLARS A DAY (in). Donald Macdonald isric ight; he does deserve #800a day yl ! ers opting for tax alpeounting ere: they collect only 85 r cent of pels “ane ncompanies: weil more thai triple this year. Department of. Consumer and..Co mates. ‘about 200,000: taxpaye iT “it 1g. tera'— not to discount thelr income tax.’ sald a. spokesman, we gf ddgt: year, received their: T4U' slips at th - Cand many companies § sent 7 slips to employees = Febii28 ‘deadline, Har ; \ ha ae eran heal; central Toronto manager. "The Department of National Revenue ‘has advised tax> ° “payers nat.to. expect refunds before the end of April. The: al could, bep Privileg ( of we, 1 Hu ” And'go does the plumber, the grocery Clerk,thekid 2). ee o delivered this news yaper dnc urlocal'friendly ct rikey Kong repair ot, We all > beesusethen Ww We. ed.right \ - Soviets. spy on. Erope- “LONDON (AP) —'A crop of Soviet agents has sprouied in Western Europe recently — evidence, intelligence experts claim, of a Kremlin campaign to ° steat the. Wea’ technological secrets and details cat: ‘its newest’ ante BS leat, Soviet, spi expel cola be re a many w anne Laal Bn at-least"3 - ‘were ordered oul.” : EN. The total could be higher because some Soviet agents: lite quietly shipped home after they ‘have been ‘discovered, say | . Western’ European intelligence sources, who agreed to ‘interviews on condition they would not'be nanied. They sald, the main espionage targets appear to have been high-lech hardware and the secrets of the West's most sophisticated supersonic. strike planes; the . General _..Dynamics F-16 Falcon and the Panavia Tornado developed jointly by. Britain, West Germany and Italy: ‘The Sovlet‘apies are alleged to have launched the high-, ~tech hunt after President: ‘Reagan — saying Moscow. was . " responsible for repression in Poland — cut off.th ‘export ¢ of. advanced technology. to te U.S.S.R; on Dec. 29; 1981, . _ Although the ban was revoked in- November, .1982, western high-technology: ‘sales to tha East bloc continue to exclude equipment that would contribute significantly to - Soviet military potential. "U.S. technology, whether it's military or “purely in- dustrial, is apy target. No, ¥ for foreign Intelligence operations,” sald William: Webster, director’ of the US. Federal Bureau of Investigation. * “T don’t think there's been another time in. ‘our history «When our country has been - wider. such a ‘Bophistlealed . espionage assault.” me thoritative sources: giestioned by: The Assoctated; Préai dald they believe that ag many as 40 per cent of the Soviet diplomats and:trade mission officlals in the West: work secretly for the KGB, themecret police, or its military , counterpart, the GRU. - | Much.of the Soviet activity’ in the U.S, caniree on Silicon: Valley in northern California - _ nated after the silicon micro-cireuitry important - to- computer +hardware, the’ _ sources said, Many of the~11,000 tompanies dealing in clagsified technology.are based.in the valley, But the Soviet Union is also making’a'determined drive to galn access to technology. through U.S, subsidiaries or . Telated ‘companies in Western Europe. Denmark was described as one such target. One highly- placed intelligence source in Copenhagen, the Danish . capital, .claimed ‘Soviet operatives: there. have become markedly more active and. “more: serlous” in _Fecent . Months. ; ~-He éaid their acilvities include “political blackmail” — ‘an apparent - ‘reference té efforts by Soviet officials to’ compromise - political and industrial 1 Agures to obtain technologies} secrels, a ~ Hopson has golden dreams | TIMMINS, Ont. icp) — When his friends take oft in the * ‘summer for a weekend of fishing, Dick Hopson goes looking. for gold. He packs a change of clothes; his prospector’ 8 haromer, a few tools, and heads. into the bush to one of wo mining - . claims’ he: has staked | about ad ‘Klometres outside’ this" Northern ‘Ontario city, - dreaming of the one big. find that everyone: else has - ’- somehow overlooked: . t “Some guys jike to go fishing and ‘they’ ve got. to pay - money to do it, but I get. money from. prospecting and. do. ~ something I like to do,” says ‘Hopson, who has been chip- — ping away at the Canadian Shield since he Bot ‘out of the”. ‘army. 7° “Tdidn’t know what to do with myself 80, I took off for Val @Or, Que., and started’ prospecting In the spring of;'58. . "* “I started with a few old guys, doing all the dirty work, .- but that’s how you learn. I’ve been at it ever since.” 2. | In a good year, Hopson makes about $10, 000 from “working” ” weekends and part of his summer holiday, says Hopson, a “father.of, three, “ varies though. Sometimes it just] pays, beer money and . Things haven't changed much. for freelance prospectors * . since the gold rushes of a century ago, he says. i “Nowadays, guys might ‘have ‘More education, but iva still one guy out.in the bush, -laking sanipies, digging - ‘trenches. The companies that use: “helicopters and: ‘com: puters aren't real prospectors.” ‘Hopson, a heavy equipment operator at Kidd Creek’ Mines. Ltd..in Timmins, how works two properties. Ore ‘18 Baven ‘claims — a claim Is generally 16 hectares (40 acres) = ~ and» the’ other: is. nine. He maintains. control of the claims as long. ab he works , : them. tach year, bul they: revert to the province it a- _ specified amount of work is rot done, .-" Pe _ These days he’s looking-for gold, he says, bul It ‘could be " any of the precious or base metals duritig beriods when the . ‘e¢onomy is belter: . And it’s not only a big find that can: ‘be profitable, se! > dust? ‘showing some potential in ‘a: “property: Means: a” ‘tieing’ company might be interented in buying the claim, : : * Hopson | bays. ". off-the area, » : “the: “oppression of. women." Staking aclaim ona rumor that 0 one a of the big companies " wants to expand can also be profitable because it costs only $10to file a claim after driving in four corner posts to mark Psy Most of the propérties | he works in the region have been “ eavered before,. “bist you can't let ‘that. discourage You," “ Hopson saya; _ Hopson, 61, {8 one’of niany pact. time prospectors who earn a little extra money developing ralning claime while “You've just got to find a new technique, anew idea. ‘They | a ' (darli¢r prospectors) couldn't have seen ‘every inch,"” = A bookcase at-his Timmins home filled with hundreds of . ~ mining ‘Manuals and” reports” ts: evidence’ of. just how. " Serlqualy Hopson. takes his hobby, - "You've got to keep up; anyone who doesn't will go: ‘the. “way of the dodo bird,” - It costs only $6.a year for a prospéctor’ 8 Heence and being! " arr insidex‘can help ofthe stock market ab well, he says. ” * “T-work for myself when it comes to mining ~- inex and ‘the stock market. noe Women. demonstrate ~ Thousands of womén across Canada took to the streets - during the weekend in demonstrations marking, the start of. s weeklong celebration of International Women’s Day. sometimes it pays quite a bit.” nares - In Tofonto,a crowd estimated by police at 6, ,000 wound its * “way through the centre of ‘the ‘city Saturday: chanting - - slogans and brandishing plagards that:- deiniandéd free: “abortlon ‘clinics; better ‘pay. ‘and: riore ‘day, care, ott demonstrators also were protesting what theysitd was ; It was. the sixth: mareh ii ihe: ‘city 16 Sate lnter-'| national Women’s Day and otganizers sald it. exceeded “those ‘of; ‘previous ‘years because, oF: “concern. abou! the” an “economy, * Montreal, a colorful procession of aboiit 7, 00 women, / ‘men and children protested the déleriorating conditions in the. public sector, where most: of: ihe workers:are women. - “Lealle Lee, a teacher’and one’ of the'march organizers, “ “sala govetriment slashing of public-sector’ budgéts was a ’ direct altack on women, who. are acelng their salaries and. ; benefits cut. “They want usto 60 back homé,”* she anid. “They want iis 7? “to ga. ‘back 20 years.” - Organizers said the ‘event waB- a huge. aticcess! with boeteptin more than’ ‘double last: year's 4 march. attering tax discounting | for the ff first tim al - ‘offices across ‘the country, . , cs the 15 per. “cenit: hesurgel in. the discounting business is ita ge many people who were’ ‘unemplo, reparer Hand R Block (Canada):Ltd., sald hl going ing extol ait 3 mostly, people “on welfare. t pent rebates. ‘Now we're into:the ual to.a 62. Bper-tent annual rate. "ER ORE Hetrigan said’ despite. ‘conipetition “fn the’ field no - discounters have offered more than the 65 per cent required by law because the profit margin {s not large anda heavy business volume is required to make it worthwhile; . ‘Tha 1978 Tax Rebate. Discounting Act was brought In to help. ‘the government ‘crack down on ‘discounters who “sometimes kept up to 50 per cent of expected tax:refunds. - . \‘The’ Nattonal -Antl-Poverty Organization has asked. the " ) federal government to.also watch the number. of people | . "choosing to discount whose refund comes salely from the “child tax credit. ; “Organization axecutive director Patrick Johnston ‘sald: ; ‘the. concern. is-lowdncome people, who.can claim the maximum child tax credit of $443 a child, are. handing’ “an inordinate amount" of money to discounters, ==, : a _ se “Abou PEOPLE _Adter digging up half of Montreal, four men found $40,000 __. worth of diamonds by following the clues in a: treayure hunt that led them to a flag pole in Old Montreal, . . Brothers Guy, Yves and Lue Sanscartler and | a: » friend, ; Alain Pilon; all in thelr 208, listened daily for two months to the clues broadcast by two local radio stations, searching ” along with thousands of others in the promotional scheme, They eventually came to. the flag pole in. the . Place Vauquelin, near city hall, where they found the treasure. “For two months we.dug up practically everything in the centre of town,” said one of the brothers. .“We even looked inside the hoarding posts in Old-Montreal and emptied the dirt from the big tree pot that. the city sets out here and there... ” “People latighed at us “because they didn't understand ". “what was happening. But now we have the last Jough.” . A 95-year-old Toronto woman, robbed by two iesnigers last week, is still not afrald to walk the streets of downtown Toronto. erty Edith Dench, who is, neatly blind, has a bad heart! and " lungsanda.soresight foot, wenttomorning:church set¥vices. Sunday and. the Wrestling matches at/Maple3¥af Gardena at night — just as she has been doing for. nearly 30 yeara. Last week's robbery was the third time In three years Dench had been robhed: The teenagers stole her bank book, ‘hospital card, wrestling tickets and $53. cath. as: ‘she: was ‘coming home from the.bank. After people read about the'robbery in the cawepapere, ; “about $200 was donated to Dench. And when she went fo the Gardens. about the wrestling tickets, she recelved. three passes, ~ ; “Empress Nagako of Japan, a poet, musician: and artist, ‘turned 80 Sunday, making her and Emperor Hirohito the . : -first imperial Japanese couple to reach that milestone in nearly 2,000 years, ' Hirohito will be 62 in April. They. have been married 59 . _years. tN. The empress has reduced her public eppearances aitice j a hip ailment in 1977 but is In stable condition: ‘and Hnod health, says the imperial household. | — ‘Comedian John Belushi had "an obsessive © problem of: overindulging,” iis widow says, but “the: image of him asa . party animal is Incorrect.” « Judy Jacklin Belushi also said she feels her husband’s drug death in a Hollywood bungalow one year ago caused many people to re-evaluate drug use at parties. Belushi was found dead March 5, 1962, from 4 drug overdose, ° She said frienda and fans have told her during the last: year that Belushl's death has caused them te take a look al thelr awn actions, “ - “A lot of people have told me they" ve gone into. both Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics APanynons because of John.” ° ; intone Outsiders have always told jokes about Deg Moines, lowa; but now a native who fears residents 1 ay take the: city too seriously has. written a booklet asking insiders to laugh at themgelvés. : Let's Keep Dea Moines. A Private Joke is the title of Dan ; Hunter's 30-page look at the funny side of Des Moines. “Culture abounds in Des Moines, especially if you include: Mexican restaurants and do-t-yoursell tar washes,’ the 29- year-old Hunter:writes, “The denizens and doyennes of tht — - arts have banded together to form’ bowling: leagues and other. associations to ericourage the arts," a Hunter says it's absolutely imperative that neweomers master focal weather phrases such as “Well; it’s good for caiamaite the, corn,” and “Bet‘it’ S hot out at the fair today. oer “He Jumped over 1 Bie buses