———— Page 2, The Herald. Tuesday, December 19, 1978 HARDWARE e STORES ’ TV. All listings subject to change without notice. TUESDAY 5 p.m, to midnight cFTK BCTV KeTs 2013 6/40 | 9 ws :000«=—« Carol Mary Tyler Six Mister mL) Burnett Moore Mitlion Rogers 730) [News Hourglass Dollar Electric 45 «Cont'd. | Cont'd. Man Company :00 [Cont'd Cont'd. News Big Blue 1s (Cont'd. Cont'd. Hour Marble 30 Cont'd, Outdoor Cont'd. Dick ‘45 [Cont'd Education Cont'd. Cavett :00 «= [ Seattle Paper - Headline MacNeil 1S Tonight Chase Hunters Lehrer :30 {Name that Cont'd. What's My Newsmakers 45 Tune Cont'd, Line Cont'd, mt] Special Ha Special Live 45 Cont'd Daye y Cont'd. From 13D Special Rene Carpenter's The Met 45° FOnce Simard Christmas Cant'd. :00 «© [Upon Three's Cont'd. Cont'd. :18 JA Starry Company Cont'd. Cont'd. :30 Night’ The Fifth Taxi Cont'd. ° 743“ [ Cont'd. Estate Cont'd. Cont'd, + oo) | Mae Cont'd. Mac_ Cont'd, AS Davis Cont'd. Davis Cont'd, 230 Christmas Beyond Christmas Cont'd, a5 Cont'd. Reason Cont'd. Coht'd, -00.«©— «| News The cIv Elizabéth “15 Cont'd. National News Swados x” Tonight Night News Hour Cont'd. 45 Show Finai Final Cont'd. w Cont'd. Kojak Late Show Barnaby 15 Cont'd. Cont'd. ‘A Walk Jones 0 Cont'd. Cont'd. With Love Cont'd. 4) i cont'd, Cont'd. , | And Death’ _| Late Movie WEDNESDAY 10 am. fo 5 p.m. ToBe | It’s Your Electric Announced Move”. Company Mister’: ~ Definition 200m Dressup Cont'd. Cont'd. Sesame What's Nova Street Cooking Cont'd. Cont'd. Mad Cont'd. Cont'd. Dash Cont'd. 00 Hollywood News— Noon Sesame :1§ | Squares Bob Switzer News Street :30 Days of Search for Movie Cont'd. 45 Our Lives Tomorrow Matinee Cant’d, :00 Cont'd Hob ‘Banacek' 78 :15 Cont'd McLean Cont'd. Nobel :30 FtThe Show Cont'd. Prize a Doctors Cont'd Cont'd. Awards 00 Another Edge of Another Cont'd. mr World Night World Cont'd, N Cont'd Canadian Cont'd Birth & Death :45 «Cont'd Authors Cont'd Of Star :00 Movie Take Alan Over iV ‘Love Thirty Hamel Easy 230 I A Celebrity Show Book - ‘4s Ball! Cooks Cont'd Beat : 00 Cont'd Flintstones That's Sesame 15 Cont'd Cont'd. Hollywood Street :30 Cont'd Carol NHL Cont'd. 145 Cont'd Burnett Hockey Cont'd. a] daniadown quilts Filled with soft grey Goose Down and covered in fine Danish Ticking. These quilts are comparable to the finest quilts available in Europe. daniadown quilts Gordon and Anderson Ltd. MAROWAAE = SIOATS aa oe Kanes oe Temes LINK 4606 Lazelle Ave., Terrace gate Ph. 635-6576 Store Hours: Tues.- Sat. 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Friday § a.m.-9 p.m. J CHARGEX VISA > States. - -Gov’t:has rejected. Atlantic pipeline WASHINGTON (CP) — Federal energy officials have rejected a $>billion Tenneco Atlantic pipeline that ‘would have pumped imported Algerian natural gas from! New Brunswick into the eastern United Hundreds of Canadian jobs would have - resulted from the project. In rejecting the plan, David Bardin, administrator of the energy department's economic regulatory ad- ministration (ERA), said Monday he does not feel a large, long-term = com- mitment to the expensive Algerian natural gas is needed. An ERA spokesman said that under federal. regulations, Tenneco could appeal Bardin's ruling but it is unlikely the agency would change its mind unless there is a drastic change in the situation, A Tenneco spokesman de- clined comment, saying Ten- neco has not seen the complete text of Bardin's opinion. He noted. however, that al- Gree A.co-op charges the co-op pays back toll Money spent ae inn NY - . ja a ee pictures. services. directors takes place, trough | the ERA ruled eu the ew Brunswick project, it did nat reject the concept of other liquefied natural gas imports, Tenneco Atlantic Pipeline Co. (TAPCO), a subsidiary _ of Tenneco, Inc., planned to import one billion cubic feet of gas a day over a 2-year period by bringing liquefied gas aboard tankers from Sonatach, a government- owned Algerian company. The gas would have been offlaaded and reconverted in & $63¢-milllon plant at Lorneville, N.B., then shipped via pipeline to a Tapco plant in Calais, Me. From there, it would be sent through an 800- kilometre pipeline to a Tenneco subsidiary in Tennessee for distribution in a 22-state area. - The Canadian government had approved the project but Bardin said the company had “failed to demonstrate critical U.S. and regional needs for the gas” and did not furnish, contingency plans for supply inter- ruptions. Moreover, Bardin objected to the Sonatrach-Tenneco agreement's price formula because it was linked to future world oil price changes and “lacked “safeguards to protect con- sumers from the impact of sudden and drastic oil price increases.” A consumer co-operative - familjarly known as co-op, is owned by the people in the community if serves. At regular meetings of the mambership, volunteer directors are elected by the mambership fo establish policies specifically to meet the needs of | the customer-owners. No matter how many shares you have in co-op, each mamber has just one vote -guaranteelng democratic contral. Membership in the co-op is open fo anyone, where you can join together with your neighbours and take part In the community owned, non-profit enterprise. — ing price for goods, the difference Is that at the end of the year a ‘s members what a private or chain store takes as profit. Terrace co-op held their annual Senior citizens and handicapped persons evening on November 26th. Which once again was a huge success, with an evening of shoppings af a discount. The evening went on with the centennial school cholr conducted by Harriet Vanderkwack, Mr. Young from Tillleum Keyboards, The Vickle Parviainen Dancers, A Melody of songs by Joanne, Kathy and Elsie, and Christmas songs by the Co-op Choir. Which rounds off to what was a fun evening for all, as testified by these Co-operation is an oid story which simply means that if we work together we will be able to accomplish things which are tmposaibte for the individual ta do alone. The principal af democratic control serves the members of the co-operative in that it gives all members equal rights in deciding how the organizatian can best serve them asa group, A co-operative is not controlled by Investors but by people whe use the Another safe guard to Insure democratic control is that proxy voting (s not allowed, The members attend the meetings and get invalved in the objectives, policles, and decisions. The annual meetings are open to all members, where the election of During the year a record |s kept of how much business each member does with the eo. op. The percentage of net savings for the year is thena the member to determine his-her patronage refund. Pplied to purchases made by NEWS IN BRIEF ’ CALGARY (CP) - For- mer Israeli foreign minister Abba Eban predicts an ip- dependent Arab-Jordaiujn West Bank and Gaza striy region as a result of the accord reached recently at Camp David, Md. Eban noted at a news conference Monday the concessions Egyptian President Anwar Sadat has wrung from Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin to elimiate Israel's civil and military. administration in Gaza and the West Bank, and to eventually set up a self- governing Arab authority, Eban suggested _ the. Egyptian president has ’ accomplished more for Arab independence in those regions than the Palestine Liberation Organisation's bomba and guns, But he said he wonders if the con- cessions will satisfy the — Palestinians, The diplomatic history of the Palestinian Arabs is all or nothing, he said. “Well, if that is their at- titude, all or nothing, those who say all or nothing are much more l'‘ely to get nothing at all.” Eban is currently a visiting professor at Prin. . ceton University. Prison halt asked OTTAWA (CP) — All federal prison construction should be halted until a public review can determine how money has been spent so far and what the alternatives are to building new cells are, the Moratorium Committee on Prison Construction said Monday. The committee told a news conference that Solicitor- General Jean-Jacques Blais was wrong when he an- * nounced a revised program last week which he said would save $225 million in construction costs. The committee, formed last spring by civil liberties groups in Ontario and Quebec, said the actual saving would be $43.5 million and a cell would cost $110,000, ; Dennis Conly, committee spokesman, also said the re- vised program is different from one announced a year eartler. ; The original plan involved building 21 new prisons by 1684 at a cost of $346.2 million, Four alder prisons— Dorchester, N.B., Laval, Que., Kingston, Ont., and British Columbia Peniten- tiary, New’ Westminster— would have been closed when the new ones opened. Net increase in cell capacity would have been 2,159. It’s good for us OTTAWA (CP) — Energy Minister Alastair Gillespie said Monday an increase in world oil prices will make Canadian companies more competitive in world markets. Gillespie told the Com- mons that a weekend decision by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to raise prices by 14.5 per cent in the next year will mean higher prices in Japan and parts of Europe with no oil production of their own. Combined with a Canadian decision to put off a price in- crease to July 1 from Jan. }, =. -it means a competitive... -. -@. advantage in world markets for domestic manufacturers, Gillespie told Cyril Symes «NDP--Sault-Ste.-Marie). Carter on tightrope WASHINGTON (Reuter) — President Carter's decision to establish full U.S, diplomatic relations with China could lead to a spectacular diplomatic bal- ancing act, putting Carter in personal contact with the feuding leaders of the Soviet Union and China only a few weeks apart, A visit by a top Chinese official, Senior Vice-Premier Teng Hsaio-ping, was an- nounced in Washington and Peking on Friday as part of the agreement to normalize relations beginning Jan. 1. Teng will be in Washington at the end of the month. But the Carter ad- ministration this week will hold a high-level round of Strategic arms Limitation talks with the Soviet Union which, if successful, will lead fo a summit meeting bet- ween Carter and Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev, s Tories a review stand OTTAWA (CP) — The Progressive Conservatives Appeared to be altering their policy on nuclear exports Monday as they questioned sale of four Candu nuclear reactors to Communist Romania, Flora MacDonald (PC— Kingston and The Islands) told reporters that the party wants the federal govern- ment to adopt “a goslow approach”. on foreign sales until a way is found to safely dispose of radioactive wastes and to prevent their use in weapons manufac- ture, An earlier policy, cutlined three years ago, called for a complete moratorium on all foreign sales until such safeguards can be developed internationally. Energy Minister Alastair Gillespie defended the sates, saying they will bring $1 billion in spending in Canada and thousands of jobs to the Canadian nuclear industry.