Te ee --Further defafis on the following fobs ara fo be obtained by calling the Terrace office of the Canada veorment Centre at 635- 4. _ Hook Tender - IWA rate, Kleanza. Permanent full time. Must be experienced. Transport from town pro. Baker - $7.00 per hour to start, Terrace, Permanent full time. Must’ have ex- perience, Dining Room Waitress - $3.75 per hour. Terrace, Per- manent full time, Ex- perience preferred. Clerk Typist- Terrace. $893 + 52.80 per mo. Permanent full time. 4 wpm typing essential. Some experience required. H.B. Mechanic - I.W.A, rates. Juskatla, Permanent fulltime. TQ or fully ex- perienced. Waiter-Waltress - $3.25 per hour, Terrace. Permanent fulktime. Over 19 years of age. Stock work, cash register and balancing. order Rigging Slinger - LW.A. Terrace. Permanent full time. Working on tower. Must be experienced. Rigging Slinger - [WA rates. Kleanza. Permanent fulitime. Must be ex- perienced. Afternoon shift - transport from town pr, - Waitress - DOB. Terrace.: Must be experienced in general waltressing duties. General Line Painter - $7.26 hour. Terrace. Permanent fulltime. Excellent -op- portunity to energetic person. Some background and knowledge of heavy equipment, Millwright - IWA rate, Terrace. Permanent full time. General duties in local mill - shift work involved. Heavy Duty Mechanic - $10.51 houer. Terrace. Temporary full time (2 months). Certified HD Mechanic Heavy Equipment © repair oe weet Clerk Typist - $831 per month. Terrace. Tem- porary (2-3 months) could be extended. Must have 40 wpm typing, reception work, invoices. Chambermaid - $3.75 hour. ce, Permanent part time. Afternoon shift. Experience preferred. Pump Jockey - $3,00 hour. Terrace. Permanent part time. Counter sales, - cashier. Some heavy work inyolved. Sheetmetal worker - Union rate. Terrace. Permanent full time. Cutting and in- stalling sheet metal for plumbing and heating - Must _be JM and prefers some experience, “Keypunch Operator - $740 month DOE. Terrace. Permanent full time. Ex- perience with IBM equip ment preferred. Childeare Worker - 140 week. Terrace. Permanent full ‘ime, Experience working with children and. ability to deal with public. Registered Nurse - $1124 month. Terrace, Care of patients in ICU maintenance of equipment. Responsible to head nurse. Shift work 8 percent VP. Room and Board provided at cost. Executive Secretary - $1,000 month. Terrace. Typing 60 wpm, filing, transcribing, shorthand month end reports, exp with public. Cook - $3.00 hour, Terrace. Cooking and some clean-up. Shift work. D8 Tractor Operator - Union. Nass & Stewart Cassiar. Permanent full time. Looking for experience in road building. Room and board included. . Live in Housekeeper - $350 per month + R&B. Port Edward. To care for 7 children age 7 and 2 - some. housekeeping, cooking, childcare. — Fallers - LW.A. Queen Charlotte. Permanent full time. Coast experience. Camp job. a. Clerk Typist - $893.00 per month, Terrace, ° manent full time. Must have 40 wpm typing. -Must have office experience. Radiator Repairman - Negotiable salary. DOE. Terrace. Permanent - full time. Must have experience or related radiator ex- perience. Some light mechanic work.’ TV & Radio Repairperson - $800 per month to start. Prince Rupert. .Permenant fulltime. Good knowledge of repairs especially radio. Drivers licence preferred. Manager-Suprv. - Stereo Dept. DOE, Permanent full time. Must have retail sales experience knowledgable about stereo equipment. Musthavegood management skills, Pump Jockey - $3.50 hour. Terrace. Permanent full time. Drivers licence Class § Front end service work. Counter work and deliveries. Some heavy work - lifting. Stenographer- 8-9,000, year. Terrace. Permanent full time, Typing, dictaphone. Be able to deal with public, General Office Clerk - DOE $3.50 hour, Terrace. Per- manent full time, Invoicing through a cardex inventory system, Accurate typing. Registered Nurse - Clinic - $5.50hour, Terrace. On call. ouly - for relief and for emergencies. To assist in clinic. Stand Tenders - DOE. Usk. Temporary full time. 3- 6 months experience in saw work. Must have own chain saw, Hard hat, boots etc required. Child Care Supervisor - $180 week, Terrace. Permanent fulltime. Must be registered nurse or have successfully completed to early childhood education cou. Stock Clerk - $5.00 hour DOE. Terrace, Permanent full time, Clerical position. Office experience would be helpful. Shipping - and receiving, p pricing, warranty claims, i ins Leaders go abroad, we stay home By DOUG SMALL OTTAWA (CP) — Prime Minister ‘Trudeau and Op. ’ position leader Joe Clark plan to mix politics with pleasure in. Europe next month while other Cana- dians are being sold on the joys of summer holidays at home. Trudeau attends an economic summit with other: Western leaders in Bonn July 14-16, then spends some time with his friend Helmut Schmidt, Weat German chancellor, inthe mountains, Clark, meanwhile, will be holidaying on the beaches of southern France where he hopes to brush up his French. Maureen McTeer, his wife, will be with him. Clark's July holiday—he 9% returns to Ottawa July 20, Trudeau returns July 23— will fellow a three-day visit in-Londen, where he'll meet Commonwealth officials and his British counterpart, Con- _ servative’ leader Margaret Thatcher. NDP leader Ed Broad. bent’s summer plans are not yet fixed, but he plans to take a break in the last two weeks ‘of Jul iy. Clark and Breadbent have left their schedules open in the latter half of August, preparing for the possibility of fail election campaign. Trudeau has played down talk of an election then, although his summer itinerary ia sprinkled with ‘events that could be politi cally helpful. —- ‘WILL WAVE FLAG Prior to his European ex- cursion, the prime minister plans to open the month by celebrating Dominion Day paradewatching with his three young sons in Ottawa and taking in other July 1 events in Toronto later in the Mp Then he is off to the West for a July 6 speech in Van eouver and opening events at the Calgary Stampede the following day. He returna to Alberta in early August, giving a dinner for the Queen and taking in parts: of the Aug. 3-12 Commonwealth Games in Edmonton, Pe: . munity College. adge Selwyn Romilly, his wife Lorna and their children Jason and Charts left Terrace yesterday for Burnaby after living in town far the past three years. The Romillys lived in Smithers before coming to Terrace, and Mra. Romilly said the reason for the move isi that they “wanted a change. We want to try the city again for awhile.” Judge Romilly, who presided in Terrace and Kitimat will be working at the Burnaby courthouse. Mra. Romilly, director of the Osbourne Guest Home, was active in the Terrace Women’s Organization and the Women's Studies Adviso! ry Committee at the Northweat Com- Environmental law topic of Terrace meeting by Donna Vallieres When an individual has a suspicion that en- vironmental abuse is taking place, there's nat too much he can do about it. But nevertheless, it is our responsibility to learn as much- as we can about protecting the environment. That was the message that came through when representatives from the West Coast Environmental Law Association were. in Terrace earlier this week. Barry Williamson and Gary Little, two University of British Columbla Law students who are members of the association, spoke at a public meeting Monday night to a smail group of interested people and then with The Herald the next morning. The two spoke at length on freedom of information and the difficulty of getting in- formation from the various government departments concerned with the en- vironment. two . They cited examples in the ’ new forest legislation which has provisions for dismissing an employee for disclosing departmental information and the Pesticide Control Act which. _—ihas similar | provisions. “In view of — those provisions there's a real need for focus of public concern on ‘freedom: of in- formation,” Williamson said. An individual has to have information to have reasonable and probable grounds to get a case into court, and even then the Attorney-General has the power to stay procedings the two pointed out. : “Tt's very difficult for the ordinary citizen,” Little stated. The law students pointed out that a lot of information which is classified as con- fidential should actually be released. In many cases releasing such information would dispel rumors and allay people's fears. : Bad time for gas VANCOUVER (CP) — Now is.a bad time te increase natural gas prices, the Council of Forest Industries of British Columbia (COFI) told the B.C. Energy Com- mission on Tuesday on the ICBC goes to US. VANCOUVER (CP) — The Canadian insurance industry says it is normal practice to look to the United States for casualty actuaries because there are less than 10 qualified casualty actuaries Canada. Carl Wilcken, chief ac- tuary and general manager of the Insurance Bureau of Canada, said no Canadian insurance official would find it odd that the Insurance Corporation of British Co- Iumbia is advertising in the US. for an actuary. Wilcken said in an in- terview from Toronto that he only knows of = six Canadians—including himself—who are fellows of the Casualty Actuarial Society. All six are working in Ontario or Quebec. “With so very few in Canada, I don't imagine they (ICBC) will find a Canadian fellow,’ he said. “They have . to go out and ask everyone but I'm quite happy in my | job and I’m sure the others — are too.” He said it takes a minimum of four years of training in the insurance industry’ after receiving a university degree, usually in commerce, to become a fel- low of the society. Most ac- tuaries specialize in life and pension insurances rather than automobile and fire casualties, which is a relatively new area, he sald, Ron Kassel, president of the Insurance Agents’ Association ‘of B.C. said ICBC might haye difficulty finding a casualty actuary in the U.S. as they “are at a premium everywhere.” HE WAS DETERMINED DURBAN Paralysed American writer Lane Flint has written a book on R. F. Botha, South African minister of foreign affairs, Flint said his latest. book was his’ greatest achievement, He typed the 600 pages with a stick clenched between his teeth. (cP) —.,. last day of a three-week hearing into oil and gas pricing. , “Natural gas prices in B.C. are one of the few competitive advantages that the B.C. industry has, and any effort to formulate gas price policy in isolation of other cost components may . do more harm to the provincial economy than any short-term gain that may be made for provincial reve- nues,"” COFI said in its brief. “We do not suggest that continued natural gas price increases will, by them- selves, make the industry non-competitive,’’ Pi Desjardins sald in an opening statement for COFI. He is vice-chairman of the board for Weldwood of Canada Ltd. “Taken together with all the other cost increases that mills have had to absorb, and those we are still facing, any possible natural gas rate increase has a significance we cannot ignore,” he said. WANTS GUIDELINES The council urged that the energy commission “establish clearly defined guidelines for the expected level of future industrial gas prices within reasonable bounds, on a minimum planning horizon of five. years,” The energy commission now makes recom- Law reform is one of the major goals cf the Weat Coast Environmental Law Association, and one of the most important services is providing information to environmental groups of information, and doing preliminary research to determine If there is a case. The association seldom gets Involved in court ac- tions, but on occassion, a volunteer pane] of lawyers do assist environmentalists with court cases, Some of the issues discussed by Williamson and. Little at the two hour public meeting in Terrace were flyash from woodburners, the possibility of forming a forestry advisory com- mittee, pesticide control and the Federal Fisheries Act. Williamson and Little continued on in their nor- thern tour this week with a visit to Prince Rupert before returning to Vancouver, — increase mendations on gas prices every year to the B.C. government. COFT said that forecast prices should be based on the weighted average cost of gas, both old and new gas,- and the commission’s targets for industrial ‘con- sumption should be based on a 10-year period. In earlier testimony, the Crown-owned = &B,C.. Petroleum Corp. said “that it took no issue with the principle of a heat equivalent value being established for the pricing of natural gas, - however, the comparison should be with the equivalence to all energy alternatives available in ” The point that gas pricing should be based on the cost of alternative fuels in B.C., rather than on the world price of crude oil, also was advocated by COFI, ‘Oil producers throughout the hearings said that gas should be priced at 85 per cent of the price of world crude oi! prices. The energy commission is expected te take until about midAugust to prepare its price recommendations for the government and it probably will be September before the government makes known its decision én the commission's recom- . mendations. FOR PRIVATE USE OR BUSINE AUTOVEST ak, ‘Before you buy, investigate the advantages of this rent- to-own plan. All monies paid apply to purchase. Why Ist and fast tle up your cash or borrowing power. months rent and drive away. _ EXAMPLES . Based on 36 month lease 78 F 250 pickup) $148.00 per month lease end price $2,175.00 or simply return 7a Camaro HT $129.00 per month lease end price $7,925.00 ply raturn 78 Fiesta 3 dr. $99.00 per month lease and price } . $2,275.00 78 Econoline Van $134.00 pes month lease end price $1,975.00 or _simpl 78 Zephyr Sedan $124.00 per month lease end price 91,825.00 or simply return 78 F150 4% 4 $155.00 per month lease end price or simply return 7a c 100 Chev V4 $129.00 per mon lease end price $1,875.00 or simply return 78 Dodge Vans $129.09 per month lease end. price $1,875.00 or simply return return $137.00 per:imonth lease end price $2,025.00 or simply return FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL LARRY HAYES- RICHARDS COLLECT 987-7111 BELMONT LEASING LTD. 1140 MARINE DRIVE NORTH VANCOUVER, 5.C, D.00479A "McClelland said VANCOUVER (CP) - Contract talks between British Columbia breweries and union employees broke off Tuesday after the two sides couldn’t agree on & cost-of-living allowance (COLA) clause. A spokesman for the Canadian Union of United Courts commit VICTORIA (CP) - The British Columbia govern- ment moved Tuesday to appease critics of its con- troversal plan for com- pulsory treatment of herein addicts by putting the power to commit addicts to the plan into the hands of the court system. Health Minister Bob amend- ments to the Heroin Treatment Act should satisfy objections raised by the Canadian Bar Association, civil libertarians, and doctors throughout the province. . The amendments change a contentious part of the- bill which gave the power of committal to a government- appointed director acting on the recommendation of a panel of experts. . Under the changes, the Supreme Court of B.C. will handle the final commitment order, acting on the recommendation of the director, McClelland said. The minister sald doctors have indicated they were willing to serve on evaluation panels, but were hesitant to commit someone te compulsory treatment. Legal spokesmen have said the original plan was a denial of due process and was in possible con- travention of the Canadian Constitution. McClelland said those objections should now be erased, He also explained that if a supect is deemed to be an addict by the review panel, he may still enter the program voluntarily, Liberal leader Gordon Gibson and Progressive Conservative leader Vic Stephens - who had both stated opposition to.the bill in the past - voted late Tuesday . along with the government majority to give approval in principle to the bill by a margin of 28 to 16. However, the New Democratic Party voted against second reading, saying the amendments do nothing to change the main impetus of the bill, which is to force addicts to undergo treatment, something the party says will be a costly failure. But McClelland says the government had little choice but to go ahead with the plan, as all other attempts to THE HERALD, Thursday, June 29, 1978, PAGE 3 Brewery, Flour, Cereal, Soft Drink and Distillery Workers said no future talks have been set, and the next move is up to the companies. John Langley said the union will take the latest offer by the Brewery Em- ployers Labor Relations Association to the mem- would addicts control the province’s burgeoning heroin addict population have failed, The province, he pointed out, is home to about 10,000 addicts, representing 60 percent of Canada’s total. The heroin industry generates from $400 million to $500 million a year in illicit money, the minister said, a total which represents the provinee’s fifth business. “Surely itis to our national shame that Vancouver has an international reputation second only to Amsterdam as a major entry, holding and transfer point for heroin shipment,” McClelland said recently.. Criticism of the schem began when McClelland first outlined it last summer, and had reached a crescendo within the last month when enabling legislation was introduced in the hourse. The Canadian Bar Association said the plan deprived addicts of their right to a fair trial and in doing so constituted ‘‘an unprecendented and dangerous attack’? on the ‘ eriminal justice system. Lawyer Warren Stan- derwick said no legislation exists which provides a precedent to the original pian. He likened it to the Second World War edict which committed all Japanese people in B.C. to internment camps. Former health minister Dennis Cooke NDP-New Westminister said all other such schemes carried out in the Western world this century have failed, and MecCliand has done nothing to indicate that B.C.'s would be any different. “He's offering hope when , there’s .no., hope: to offer," Cocke said Tuesday. - -. Opposition party | spokesmen say the plan may inadvertently help the B.C.’s -heroin problem, however, by driving addicts out of the province, Government and police spokesmen across the Prairies have expressed fear their areas may be flooded by addicts fleeing B.C. “There's no doubt that quite a few addicts will leave B.C. if the legislation is passed,’’ Insp. Jim Beattiev, who is in charge of the - Calgary drug squad, said _ earlier this month. largesl - ! COLA stops beer talks bership at Molson's Van- couver brewery for a vote, but added the negotiating committee was recom- mending rejection. The association said in a statement that it presented the union with two new offers Tuesday which represent the highest wages and working conditions in the North American brewing industry. . It said that one and two- year offers made in Negotiations would mean a $9,589 per hour basic wage for a machine operator on ratification of a contract, increasing to $10.05 on April 4, 1979. In addition, the companies offered a lump-sum cost-of- living allowance payment to all regular employees and other improvements to existing wages and benefits. The union has been on strike against Carling O'Keefe in Vancouver since last month. It was locked out at Molson’s, Labatt’s in New Westmeinster and Victoria, as well as. the Columbia brewery in Creston June 8. Affected are 1,200 brewery workers, 200 distribution workers and about 2,000 hotel employees laid off as beer parlour supplies dried up. Meanwhile, a picket outside Labatt’s New Westminster brewery was jumped by guard dogs Tuesday night. New Westminster police said the dogs, guarding a warehouse full of beer at the brewery, went after Jordon Blatter, 29, of Maple Ridge, B<., Blatter’s injuries were slight and he returned to the line after receiving a tetanus shot in hospital, police said. The pickets claim the dog handlers sent the dogs after Blatter, while the handlers say Blatter crossed into private brewery property which is being guarded by Petersen Guard Dog Service Lid. 122 lbs. of grass. ENDEBRBY, B.C, (CP) — Three persons were charged with possession of marijuana for the purpose of trafficking following the . seizure Tuesday of about 122 pounds of Colombian marijuana at a home here, RCMP said. Donald Allan Kirkham, 28, of Enderby, Robert Stanley Teleske, 31, of no fixed ad- dress, and Michael Charles John Nowak, 29, of Van- couver, were scheduled to appear in provincial court in Salmon Arm today, Police said the marijuana had an estimated street value of $200,000. oo TERRACE EQUIPMENT SALES LTD. YOUR SMALL MOTOR Sales & —Service — Specialist Stihl - Husquarna - Suzuki Arctic Gat - Lawn Boy - Bolens Ariens - Yamaha - Johnson: A Full Line of Marine & Motorcycle 4441 Lakelse Accessories