7 Page 4, The Herald, Tuesday, September 19, 1978 TERRACE/KITIMAT daily herald , General Office - 635-6357 Circulation - 633-6357 PUBLISHER Terrace, B.C. Authorized as second class 1201. Postage paid In cash, GEN. MANAGER - Knox Couplan CIRCULATION - TERRACE - Andy Wightman KITIAAAT - KITIMAT OF FICE 632-2747 Published every weekday at 3212 Kalum Street, A member of Varified Circulation. NOTE OF COPYRIGHT — The Herald retains full, complete and sole copyright in any advertisement produced atd-or any editorial or photographic content published In the Herald. ‘Reproducilon is not permitted withoyt ihe written yer t . Publis aby, Sterling Publtiner - Laurie Mallet ae | Pat Zelinski mall, Registration number return postage guaranteed. woe LONDON, Ont, (CP) — Small Canadian towns and villages are a growing meeca for young lawyers. An‘unprecedented number uf law-schoul graduates in Canada are setting up practices in small cuom- munities, and deans uf a number of Canadian law schools are predicting a growing trend. "The number of applicants for admission to law schools has more than doubled during the last decade,” said Dean D. L. Johnston of the school of law, University of Western Ontario, ‘'Cun- sequently the number of graduates is also increasing to the puint where there is a slight oversupply. - “The situation has nut yel reached the crisis stage but graduates nuw are looking at smaller communities. Not only is there upporlunity there but the close contacts in a smaller town and a lower cust in housing and cost of living have an al- traction for today's gradu- ates," Of the 1,100 graduates emerging frem law schuvls in Ontario each year, 140 are from Western. Concern over the in- creased number of ap- plicants for admission tu Canadian. law schouls—... Western*fiad"9,650 lakt: year ‘enabled the French-speak nsiaht 4 ence for ‘tu the cummmon law sysiem *however, 53 per cent ‘iF fur ex- paper published by The Gazette, publication uf the Law Society of Upper Can- ada, last winter. In an imterview, he suggesied that Canada _ permission of the Publisher, = \- 150s:places— s reset Beto tan ‘in a” might follow the same course as the United States and England where many graduates from law schvols turn to law-related careers. “Law-related careers develup as the pressure- increases," he said. “Both in lhe United States and England only about half of students who obtain law de- grees go into practice. “Here there are positions available in governments al federal, . provincial and municipal levels. There are positions .in law reform commissions, in the legal research field. . “Unions are beginning to employ lawyers. Bilingual Jaw'sludents are in a beiter posilion to advance tu Crown alturneys in many areas today.” Encouragement will be given bilingual students at Western by a new student exchange program with Laval University in which two students from each” university will attend classes al the other for a term. .A prugram launched by lhe federal department of justice in which 30 French- speaking law studenle al- tended an eight-week course at Western fur two summers was highly successful the dean said. The courses not, only ‘ee “ggudents tw have gn si in Englishspeaking Canada bul cunvinced many of them who were separatists that separatism is hot nec- essarily the answer to Canada’s problems. Hooliganism called just harmless fun OXFORD, England (CP) Fuviball hvvliganism provides a "‘harmiless"’ outlel for aggression which could take more violent forms, says a psychologist at Oxford University. “Baltles between rival groups un soccer terraces are an artificial form of violence rather than Lhe real thing and few peuple really get hurt," writes Prof. Peter Marsh in his book, Aggro: The Iiusion of Violence (Dent, Londen). “By trying tu eradicate aggro we end up with something far mure sinister. Instead uf sucial viclence, we get non-sucial viclence that manifests itself in random, gratuitous injury. ... “By learning to live with aggra, we begin tu see that ilEusions of vivlence are much preferable lo the real vielence which maims and kiils."* Marsh sees displays uf soccer ‘‘aggru” as a stylized performance in which the participants, wearing buuls, searves, denim jackets and team colours, follow a ritual of prevecative behavior and insults Jeading ta clashes. It seems like a recipe for a blovd-bath, he says, but really it is far from that. The blows land on protected shoulders or backs of heads and kicks are aimed at the builocks, not stomachs or genitals. “Tt is almost as though the patlicipants are acting a scene of violence in a film. without charge, fo enable welcome signed eftars fo the reserves the right to select and edit ihem for brevity, libel, jaste and appropriateness. Pubjication does not mean editor, staff or publisher of tha HERALD share the views of the writers or accept responsibility for thelr accuracy or statements, or associate themselves with the causes espoused by the writers. The Letters columns are provided as 4 needed public forum, wholly life, races, reflgions and levals of education 10 express their personal convictions on matters of general in. terest. Publication of their letters does not absolve them from legal action if they are libellous, slan- derous, fradulent or outside the bounds of decency. They put an a show that is convincing and we are fouled by it.” Marsh sees ‘‘aggro"™ between rival gangs as an equivalent of tribal warfare in less developed societies. “On the foutball terraces, fans have discovered just one way of being tribal. They don’! tive in tribes; in fact - the housing esLales on which many live are about as far removed fram the image of a communily as you can get.” Many schoolteachers were critical of the professor’s talk of a “harmless wutlet for aggression.” “This is just anviher way of saying that self-discipline and self-coniral are aut of dale," said = Winifred Leathers, who teaches in a secondary schuol near Manchester. . “Whal is the use of calling ourselves a civilized sociely if we behave like hooligans and say it is just a harmless uutet. for our feelings? This all started wilh Ihe Freudian nonsense that you mustn't smack children when they need it because they will he repressed and frusirated. “Experience shows thar children whe get smacked when they du wrong are much happier mentally because they Know inwardly that sumeone cares about them. And it’s much the same in sehood students like to think the teacher cares enough about them to eontrol their behavior and help them become useful cilizens.” itor but persons from alt walks of king } Ve pee 1 | Libe MONTREAL (CP) — An opinion poll released Sunday says that if a provincial election were held today the Quebee Liberal Party would garner 45 per cent of the vale, compared with 43 percent for the governing Parti. Quebecuis. The poll, conducted by the Institut Quebecvis d’Opinijun Publique fur the weekly tableid Diman¢he-Matin,. shows that the Union Nationale would receive four per cent. In the November, 1976, general election the PQ received 44 per cenl, ihe Liberals 34 per cent and the UN 17. the Liberals; respondents said they were. generally satisfied with the. present government, while 4) per cent were either dissatisfied or very dissatisfied. Of the 721 respondents, 26 per cent favored either “independence’’ | or Despite the narrow prefer-;; “96:5 percent: would, “The rémainirig 24-9 per cent*' “Oh, oh, I think I peaked too soon!” “sovereignty-assiciation.” 35 per cent wanted a _“renewed federalism,” and 24 per cent favered the current federal system. The other 15 per cenl were un- decided. Phe results seemed in line with other recent polls showing that mure Quebecers favur a reformed ‘aderalism than favor in- dependence, Bul ihe respon- ses varied when the question was pused jin anyther manner. ; Asked how they would vole in a referendum if the PQ government asked for a “mandate” to negotiale suvereigniy-association wilh Oltawa, 38.6 per cent said SAN nieve 3 were undecided. Premier Levesque has been critical of past polls which phrased the choice in lerms of “separation.” a term the premier dislikes. Volers have generally ex- pressed more sympathy for “sovercignty-asseciitan,” ACCORDING TO POLL | rals up in Quebec the PQ’s term for political independence coupled with continued econumic assucialion with Canada. ‘kh is generally agreed that the phrasing uf the question will play a major rele in the referendum, and the PQ came under heavy allack from Liberal Leader Clatide Ryan last week when some ministers suggesied that. ihe question would centre on provincial tax powers rather than outright independence. The Liberal party appears to have made gains amoung English veters al the ex- ‘pense of the Union Nationale since November, 1976. Oniy 9 per cent uf the 104 English-speaking Quebecers they Would, vule_yes,, while, .whu. responded said ihéy. ney tev le not eweuld ‘Gute for the Parti-. Qlebecdis} while 72 per ceni:' would vote Liberal, and none al all for the UN. Among the 617 French- speaking persons in- terviewed, 39 per cent said they would vole PQ, and 40 per cent Liberal. Environment | Minister - Marcel Leger, one of the ENVIRONMENTALISTS SAY ‘than 5) per cen ’ French vote would have to be ministers charged with preparing sirategy fur the independence referendum, said Sunday the prepon- derance of English uppo- sition to the PQ may create serious problems in the referendum. Leger said that far more of the won to balance the negative English vote. Ryan neted that although the pull indicates a rise in his pariy’s popularity, ‘we attach a lot more inportance to the organization of the party in view uf the elec- tions." Union Nationale Leader Rodrigue Biron blamed the. ether ee = WASHINGTON: AP) Libergls and; PQ < Se confusion they have thfown: into the = constitutional debate,” and said the polarization between (he two major parties is dangerous. The Institur Quebecois d'Upinion Publique is a Mon- treal-based firm which often conducts: political opinion polls within the province. Dam questionable economics VANCOUVER (CP) New dams and generating plants envisioned by British Columbia Hydro chairman Robert Bonner will became muney-losers when the exporl market dwindles in the next quarter century, the » head of B.C.'s major cun- servatlonist group says. “Bonner is assuming we can sell power to the United States—bul Americans have a stated policy of getting away from external sup- x pliers of energy,” says Chiff’ Stainsby, executive director uf the Canadian Scientific, Pollution and En- vironmental Control Society (SPEC), headquarlered in Vancouver. ’ The long-Lerm losers in the veniure is B.C.’s forestry, fishing, and agricultural industries, and: the natural environment, he said. As well, more dam construction would not dent B.C.'s unemployment figures, while Hydro. would be sad- dled with enormous’ cash- flow deficits. Stainsby, and his assistant Terry Chaniler were com- menting on Bonner’s statement Friday thal construction of new dams and gencraling plantsin B.C. should be speeded up su the province can beceme a ma- jor exporter of electricity. Bonner told the legislature’s Crown cor- perations committee that if California continues its policy of not building major new power projects becuuse of environmental objections, the market fur B.C. eletricity is “a simplé exercise in uptimistic imagination.” But Chantler says a report commissioned for the U.S. Department of Energy this year indicates that virtually all California dumestic energy needs could be met wilhin 25 years by renewable entrgy suurees such as solar and wind... _ “Bonner is, relying on the sale of power i provide ihe cash Mow for afthis new dam projects hut i isa Iremendous vamble he's Another case of LANDON VAP) Rock ‘drummer = Keith |= Moon cooked himself a steak breakfast, ale it in bed heside his Swedish flanece and then tank ain overdose of sleeping pills whieh killed him, a eoroner’s court heard today. Pathologist: Prof. Keith simpson testified that he fuund about fwiee the maximum safe devel of che sedative Hominevirin in Moon’s Ida. Moun, the drimimer lor the rock dam ‘The Whi, wis heed dend Sept. 7 ine his Hamdan apartment, Westaiinsrer Coroner Gian ‘Thurston said he evidence did ot pusify tontehisien ot suicide Sy weed g Simpson, who said that he found the remains of about 32 Heminevirin tablets in’ the Weyear-old drummer's stomach, seid thas death was due to the massive overdose af dhe sedative, Annentt® Walrer- Lx, ‘hi siete “When will Th AVIV (Remar 7alesoniin guerrilliis (brew a grenade ara tnis carrying Israeli soldiers in ile ca cupied Wes: Bank ooday in their first aacaek following news a) he Camp. Dhivid aceotth, Atimhiary QeeKesinan sand Heonde Wats nat I ean taking with B.C.’s resource industries al stake," said Chaniler. The Crown corporation, according tw SPEC spokesmen. is. already $4 billion in debt, accounting for 69 per cent of the province's tatal direct and puaranteed debi, Chaniler says Borner is wrong in arguing new Hydro dam prajects will pravide needed jobs. “The Edison Electric Institute in the U.S. estimates thal il) lakes $170,000 10 create ane job in the eleeiric uridities industry. Conservation and small- seale renewable energy projects provide more jobs per dollar." The SPEC officials said Bonner “assumes Uhal the best and only pewer com- nudity is electricity,” a concept which they say the US. has long age disvarded, “Bonner is White 15 years behind ihe times.’ said Stainsby. “He's still talking ideas that) the U.S. has thrown aul as either tod expensive ar environmen: tally unacceplable.” ' Sainsby said Hydre has been foreed to modify us annual growth projections ie 6.6 per cent from 10 per cent forecast two years ago. He added that B.C, already produces more power than it needs and B.C. residents are becoming intolerant of plans for fulure electrical energy development, “Hydro has plans for 45 mure projects, proposals for every major river in B.C. including the Fraser. . . but in the Koutenay's where there are 120r 11 Hydro dams, the residents are plain fed up with losing their valleys and wildlife so more and more power can be shipped south. “The B.C. Energy Com- mission has suggested to the provincial government thal we spend as much effurt ut conservation as we de on new. supplies taf energy? Bul that recummendati¢n is being ignored by Hydro." misuse of drugs engaged to Mam the day before his death, testified that her longuime boyfriend sumelimes exceeded preseribed doses of sleeping pills but said Moon would not take nore chan he know was sale. . they stop cident inthe town of El 'Bireh, north af derusaben, The grenade botniced off the Ines and exploded onthe proud. Isract security forees are ub the alert for guerre attacks aimed at sabacaping the planted! Meyptian-lsratel peace (ready Moon's dovior, Geoffrey Dymond, said he had warned Moon about taking ton many of the pills but said the drummer was itt exeeltent health and usually cheertul. Miss Waltor-Lax, 238. testified that Moun had taken sleeping pills befure going to sleep and woke up at about TUL, to prepare himself a stoak She said shit Moos then went back ia sleep but she dil not see him fake any more sleeping rablets. She said that when she woke up ithe lace aflernaos she ogotild vet heat Meet breathing amet vould per feel Haas Wace: Dean Dr, . Writer claims MOSCOW (Reuter) Sovier writer - Yulian Sem: ‘nov says Lee Harvey Oswald was a Chinese agent and his assassination of President Kennedy was planned jointly by Peking and the Mafia. cos Semyanuv says the link- man between China and’ the U.S. underworld was Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby, who shat Oswald two days after Ihe president's death tu prevent him from revealing the plot The Spviel versiun, one of several thal have been pub- lished in Muscow during the last 15 years, appears m the first of a Series of articles by Semyonuv in the weekly Ogonyuk, © Publication of his theory, which he partly bases ‘on information gathered during a visit to Dallas, marks the first allempl by the Soviet Unien to impli¢ate China in the assassination, which Soviet commentaturs have previously put duwn to a right-wing plut. The appearance ‘uf the theory cumes as the Suviet Union is intensifying denunciations of China and warnings tv the Wesl nol tu Irust Peking, Ii alsu ‘coin- cides with new hearings in the U.S. Congress un events surrounding . the assassination. Semyonov says Oswald mighi have visited China or made contac! with Peking agents while serving as a marine in Japan and Taiwan in the late 195"s. A recent British bouk un the Chinese Secret Service, the Suviel writer Says, recards that Peking in- ‘elligence officers in 1869 gave a dossier on Oswald tu the U.S, Central Intelligence Agency. . “If Oswald was never in the Chinese peuple's republic and was never linked with Mid-east ‘Chinese invelligenve, then how ¢uould the (PekiS) secret service have a dussier of him?” Semyunov asks. Oswald's arrival — in Moscow in 1959 and request for Soviet citizenship, Semyonov suggesis, was rt of a long-term plan lo link him with the Soviet Union in the minds of U.S. citizens. Entries ina diary, written -in Minsk. where Oswald worked for a year before re\urning !uthe U.S., praised the idea of communes, which the Chinese were then developing, and used Chi- nese language in calling the Soviet Union imperialist, the writer says, Semyonov, whose series is 1o-be continyed in Qgunyuk | during the next few, weeks, nutes (hat While in-the early 1960s President . Kennedy was calling fur .a new relationship with Muscow, China ‘‘was mure and more insistently talking uf the inevitability of war.” China in 1963 refused 20 sign the partial nuclear test ban treaty and denvunced the | U.S. President's speeches as “insane, raving,” the Soviet wriler records, leaving the reader tw draw his own conclusions abuut Peking’s pussible cuurse of action. The Chinese, Semyonuv says, were linked w the Mafia through the narcolics trade. Hawaii, he says, is une iransfer point from where the ‘“Mavist secret services” - sent hard drugs to the U.S. and in Las Vegas, he adds, “Mafiusi linked with Peking - also trade in heroin.” Ruby, Semyanuv says, was a key figure in the narcotics business and may himself. have visited Hawaii or Las Vegas when he disappeared y frum Dallas brie five weeks befure the as- sassination. peace said possible re Ae gerrkoaer Peace between Egypt and Israel by Chrisimas. A vision, perhaps, among men of goodwill in’ ihe Middle East, bur nut a rational expectation until Presidem Anwar Sadat flew to Jerusalem last November, And then, as Sadat and Begin drifted inte acrimonious disagreement over succeeding months, te more than a vision again, But now, after the 12-day Camp David summit. peace berween Egypt and Israel is a real possibility - within theee months, in fact. if they van sede ihe remaining - ISSUUS. The thorniest, perhaps. is whether Jewish settlers are «renin in Sinai after the errivory is) returned to Egypt. ‘The tramework for peace neguliated at Camp David dues not provide a solution because Sadat and Begin might not agree on one, Allowing Jewish settlers to stay will clash with Sadat's notion af Arab sovereigmy. Dismantling the outposts might tarnish Begin’s image wt home as protector af settlers there and oun the West Bank of the Jordan River. ‘The problem now is in the, hands of the negotiaturs and the Israeli Knesset (parliamentt, ta whom Begin is deferring. oh past Christmas 8 teh An‘even greater prublem isthe uncertain future of the West Bank and whether Jurdan’s King Hussein is satisfied enuugh with Israel's concessions there tu support Sadat. To take the final step of concluding a peace treaty, Sadat mighl need at ‘least Hussein on his side. Sadat's overture to Israel last autumn prompted Syria, his ally in the 1973 Yom Kippur war, to break relations and led to strong Arab condemnation of the Egyptian leader. The Egyptian presiden! faces renewed allack now that he has agreed ww the uutline of a settlement, The rancor is certain to ring oul at a summit meeting of rejectionists, including Sytia. Algeria, Libya and the Patestine Liberation Organization. [1 opens Wednesday in. Damascus. For the moment, (hough, the obstacles that remain are dwarfed by — the achievements ai the summit and the chanee of ending the 30-year-vld conilicr between Israel and-its Arab neigh- bors. For President Carter there may be dividends, tn. “Mr. Presidem,"' Begin said, “you inseribed your name forever in the history wf iwa ancient civilized peoples, the peuple of Egypt and the people uf Israel." WASHINGTON (AP) — The highlights of the. ducuments signed by U.S. Presidem Carter, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat aud Isracli Prime — Minister Menachem Begin following Whe Middle Kast sun teed ng al Camp David, Md.: Egypt-Israel peace agreemeat: A framework fur a final treaty, To. be signed by the two coun: iries within Ciree Qionths, - —Kgvypo ota regain severcignty areughout ihe Simiti. Israel is) entitled: to ask for “security zones" and tpypt is limited to. cryilian ase of aivtields in ‘he Sunn, ‘Three (a ttine noni ator The creary is signed, Iseael must pull back its forees tram oa "sub: sae portien at the Summit at a glance “which “may” serve as an bepresbaialives Sinai. Thereafter, diplumatic relations ta be established, Final Israeli withdrawal two to three years afler the treaty. Sill unresolved is the question of the fate: uf Isracli settlements in (he vuceupied Arab areas, The Middle = East framework: A set of broid general principles nuitine tor a final peave, —Calls for a five-year (ransithm period in the Went Bank and Gazi, leading to full auronony tor the people there, who are preduminanily Pale- stinian Arabs. —Istiel agrees ul to establish new settlements turing nepatations. -Inhibitants of both reas are ie elpet aw par: Leper cain he peace pratt USS. eben