so ee Page 2, THE HERALD, Monday, Auaust 21, 1978 The willows and poplars act as parted drapes for the Terrace Senior Citizens’ Apartments, ‘The Willows” on Kalum street, PEOPLE IN THE NEWS Sewer Commissioner Stole Show VAIL, Colo, (AP) — A sewer commissioner from rural Utah stole the limelight at a weekend session of the eighth annual Vail Symposium on Western state roblems. _ P Provo Canyon Sewer Commissioner RVOORT Redford—the actor—was the only VIP in attendance Saturday to be asked to eign autographs. Redford, dressed in blue jeans, told the 450 participants that he was active in romoting tte water nd sewer interests of Provo Canyon arid its 250 residents ause of environmental reasons. The actor urged an orderly approach to development. CHICAGO (AP) — Acircuit court judge ha ttnobe] Prize-winning author Saul Bellow must pay his third wife a $500,000 lump sum alimony t and $800. a month in support for the couple's son, Daniel, 15. low, 62, recipient of the 1976 Nobel Prize for literature, was told by Circuit Court Judge James Bales that he also must pay for the private schooling and medical care of his son. In the drawn-out court fight between Bellow and Susan Glassman Bellow that began in 1968, Bellow lost custody. of his son and at one point faced a 10-day jail sentence for being behind in alimony payments. CHICAGO (AP) — "Iam mad. I am not going to take it any more," said Dieter Murmann, who was held hostage by terrorists one day and apparently was robbed in his hotel room the next. -Murmann, an attache with the German consulate in Chicago, was among eight persons held hostage Thursday by two Croatian terrorists. Freed by the terrorists after several hours, Murmann retired the next night with his wife in his Chicago hotel room and awakened in the morning to find he apparently had been robbed of $150 to $160. He told the Chicago SunTimes in a telephone call Saturday that he was angry beyond his ability to explain. - “Pye had enough. You can take just so much and then it is enough. To be held hostage and then this ... well, Itis too much," Murmann said. “My nerves are OK. Mynves are always OK. | am mad. I am not going to take it anymore. But I don’t know what J can doaboutit." WERE TR FT FER BR OW ceeci ha. YD 7 Heavy Water Plant To Japan? TOKYO (Reuter) ~ Jack Horner, federal minister of trade and commerce, said are there is a good chance the Candu heavy-water nuclear reactor can be sald japan. ; Horner, who arrived in Tokyo on Saturday for five days of trade talks, said the Candu reactor is more efficient than the light-water reactors now used by Japan. The Candu, which uses natural uranium instead of enriched uranium, would allow the Japanese to choose from among several sources of uranium su) ply instead of having to rely on supplies from the United States for the enric ed product. Canada supplies about 40 per cent of Japan's requirements in uranium but almost all of r is enriched in the US. , “4 Horner also said Canada wants to export more manufactured goods to Japan. Japanese-Canadian trade was worth §2.5 billion in 1977 but only four per cent of Canadian sales were manufactured goods, he said. , Horner came to Japan from South Korea with a delegation of 15 Canadian businessmen. He will have talks with Foreign Minisver Sunao Sonoda, Inter- national Trade Minister Toshio Komoto, and the chairman of the employers’ federation Keidanren, Toshiwo Doko, During his visit, Horner will sign a nuclear-nonproliferation agreement stipulating that Canadian uranium will be used by the purchaser for peaceful pur- poses, not to manufacture nuclear weapons. China Visit Irks USSR BUCHAREST (AP).— Chinese Communist Party Chairman Hua Kuo-feng wound up his trip to Romania Sunday and prepared to continue his visit to Eastern Europe with a flight to Yugoslavia. The Soviet Union, displeased with Hua’s visit to the region it has dominated since the end of the Second World War, has suggested Hua is trying to drive a wedge between Moscow and its allies in southeastern Europe. The timing of the trip to coincide with Monday's 10th anniversary of the Soviet- led invasion of Czechoslovakia was believed no accident. Tn 1968 Romania was the only member of the Soviet-led Warsaw Pact to refuse to take part in crushing the liberal Czechoslovak regime of Alexander Dubcek. Romania and Yugoslavia denounced the invasion at the time. Yugoslavia is nota Warsaw Pact member, The S7-year-old Chinese leader held about nine hours of talks with Romania's President Nicolae Ceausescu since arriving Wednesday. He gave a Sunday night dinner at the Chinese Embassy in Bucharest for his hosts, Hua’s trip to the Black Sea was considered by Western diplomats as a further irritant to the Russians. Hua visited a shipyard at Constanta, about 400 kilometres across the Black Sea from the Soviet nava! base at Sevastopol. Western diplomats say Constanta is the most likely place for China’s first consulate in Europe. The location would make the Soviets nervous because of the proximity to the base, the diplomats said. CBC Looking At Cutbacks OTTAWA (CP) — The CBC board of directors meets here today to determine the criteria the corporation will use to carve $71 million from its spending next year in line with government cuts. It is expected the board will continue to buy as much foreign, mainly merican, program material for the next TV seasons as it will for the season starting ina few weeks. The CBC board is also expected to agree to management proposals to slow, if not stop, efforts to increase regional input into national TV schedules on the English network and to limit plans the CBC French network had for broadening its scope. This will affect fledgling TV production centres outside Toronto headquarters, where most English network programs now are produced and Montreal, the French network proguction headquarters. Most of the other production centres have just begun to produce programs of national network interest in the past few seasons. . Sources say these restraints on the CBC would save $45 to $50 million in the 1978- 80 fiscal year, for which the federal treasury has ordered a $71 million cut. The other $20 to $25 million will have to be trimmed from CBC plans to purchase new or replacement equipment, and from general administration. The cut in the CBC budget, announced last week by Robert Andras, president of the treasury board, is not expected to affect programming for the new television season opening next month. Most of the programs for 1978-79 are already com- pleted or financial commitments for them have been made. Three Senior Positions Filled in Reorganizated Forest Service VICTORIA, B.C. -- The Honourable Tom Waterland Minister of Forests today stated that his Deputy Minister Mike Apsey has filled three of the four senior administrative positions in the recently announced reorganization of the Forest Service. Pete Hemphill, Ralph Robbins and Bill Young have been named Assistant Deputy Ministers effective September 1st. The fourth position will be filled shortly through competition open to candidates from in and outside government service. Mr. Young will have responsibilities for the technical forestry activities of the Forest Service in the PJ. Hemphill redefined role of Chief Forester. He will have reporting to him inventory, research, planning, reforestation and protection. Mr. Young is a professional forester and is a member of the Association of British Columbia Professional Foresters. He has been a member of the Canadian Institute of Forestry for many years and was ils national president in 1974-75. Mr. Robbins will have responsibilities for all field operations of the Forest Service. He will have reporting ta him the Regional Managers presently located in Prince Rupert, Prince George, Williams Lake, Kamloops, ‘fp R.W. Robbins Nelson and Vancouver. Mr. Robbins is a professional forester and is a member of the Association of British Columbia Professional Foresters. : Mr. Hemphill will have responsibilities for all support services within the Forest Service. He will have reporting to him the comp- troller's office, personnel, training, systems and data ; processing, legal and ad- ministrative services. Mr. Hemphill is a civil engineer _and is a member of the Association of Professional Engineers of B.C. He is a past chairman of the local branch of the Engineering Institute of Canada WEEKLY FIRE REPORT Five new fires were reported last week bringing the total to 246 so far this year. Cool moist weather over most of the District has reduced the hazard to the low-moderate range. The only exception is in the Lower Post Ranger District where in some areas the hazard is high and has caused some minor problems. Fire fighting costs in the Prince Rupert Forest District have -risen.. ta. $5,366,300 to date compared” to $307,900 = for the corresponding period last year. Twenty three thousand four hundred and eighty five ha, (58700 acres) of forest area has been burned to date. The Kitwanga Ranger District is the smallest of the thirteen Districts in the Prince Rupert Forest District. Forest Ranger Nils Andersson and Assistant Rangers Bob St. Laurent, John Morris and Henry Hartmann and clerk Margaret Brotherston ad- minister and supervise an annual cut of 50-60,000 cunits (1 cunlt equals 100 cubic feet}. There are six major operators and two sawmills operating in the District which covers Highway 16 from 4 miles west of Kit- sequecla to Legate Creek, thet*Kitwanga River, aGranberry -River and. Kitt wanga Lake. The Seven Sisters Mountains are also within the Ranger District Boundaries. With the bulk of the District being in the tran- sition zone between Coastal and Interior timber types, the workload is heavy to Timber Administration including such things as Planning, Cruising Timber, Logging Site Treatment and Reforestation. While fires do cceur as evidenced by several large burns up the Kitwanga-Cranberry River drainages, they make up a minor portion of the normal workload, Ranger Andersson and his staff are very much involved in the Skeena Unit Planning Public Advisory Committee. A landscape architect has heen working with the Forest Service ona contract basis to minimize the visual effects of logging in the more highly visible and sensitive areas within the Ranger District. Because of the relatively small size of the District, the Ranger and His Assistants are able to maintain a good working relationship with Industry, local residents and the many tourists travelling through the Ranger District. Antarctica Meteorite is Rare WASHINGTON (AP) — A meteorite found in An- tarctica last winter has been identified as the first of an entirely new class of space rock, the National Science Foundation announced Sunday. The rare meteorite, one of hundreds of well preserved samples recovered by a U.S.- Japanese expedition, is a type cal ed achondrite. Samples of this general type comprise only abut seven per cent of all known meteorites. - Dr. Brian Mason, a curator in the Smithsonian Institution's minera sciences department, said the new meteorite has fea- tres in common with two classes of achondrites called chagsignite and diagenite. “In its mineralogy, the specimen’ examined shows resemblances to these two classes, but its overall composition is significantly different,'’ said Mason. Meteorites are chunks of stony or metallic material from space that survive the searing trip through earth's atmosphere to strike the surface. Scientists believe they are remnants of the solar system's formation 4.5 billion years ago and may - provide valuable clues to the origin of the planets. Achondrites bear a closer * resemblance to earth rocks, particularly igneous types, than all other meteorites. The new specimen is com- posed of 55 per cent olivine, 35 per cent pyroxene and elght per cent maskelynite. OKLIVINE AND PYROXENE ARE [RON+MAGNESIUM SILICATES FOUND EX- TENSIVELY IN EARTH ROCKS. Maskelynite is a form of the glassy mineral feldspar. Mason sald the conversion of feldspar to maskelynite had to have occurred in space under great pressures from a tremendous shock. He speculated thal the shack must have come from the breakup of the meteorite from a parent body, prob- ably one of the asteroids in a belt between Mars and Jupiter. The meteorites found in Antarctica on the west side of McMurdo Sound are thought to be the cleanest, best preserved specimens ever recovered. The samples were preserved under the ideal conditions of constant cold and extremely dry air, which protected against the erosion and reactions that destroy meteorites elsewhere. The new achondrite is the second extremely rare mete- ~ orite fragment to be classified this summer from the Antarctic cache. In June, experts identified a Type Il carbonaceous chondrite, one of only about 16 known to existin the world's collection of several thousand meteorltes.- chemical - . Further details on ine following fobs are to be obtained by calling the Terrace office of tha Canada Employment Centre at 435- 714. Vocational instructor - 1,727 - 2,299 mo. To Instruct ’ gtudents all theory & repair of diesel engines 6 months appointment. Terrace. DINING ROOM WAITRESS - $3.50 - $4.00 per hour, DOE. Terrace. Shift work, prefer experienced. Walter-Waltress - $3.00 hr. Terrace. Must be mature and responsible. BOOKKEEPING IN- STRUCTOR - $9.00 hour. Terrace. Must be thoroughly conversant with all aspects of bookkeeping &. able to work independently communicate. Computer Operator - $850- DOE. Terrace. Mustbe able to work Sat, and Sun. Some experience required. - 32 [BM. - Stenographer - $600 - $200 DOE. Terrace, Legal ex- perience preferred. Minimum 2 years office, 50 w.mp, typing & dictaphone. SCALER - Union. Terrace. Permanent, full-time. Must be fully experienced. Prefer coast license. Instructors - $9.00 hour. Terrace. Instructors for specific topics in home skills (nelude,handyman) Arts & Crafts, Academic, - Vocational, General interest and self help. TEACHER - Negotiable. Terrace-Iskut. Grade 6 & 7. Transportation included in salary. 1 Years probation Teacher of Hearing - Im- paired. Neg. Terrace. Must be B.C. Certified. Reglatered Nurse - $1124 month. Terrace. Care of patients in ICU maintenance af equipment. Responsible to head nurse. Shift work 8 percent ‘VP... Room and “oard provided at cost. Clerk Typist INI - $985. Terrace: To process civil & criminal documents, answer enquiries etc. Head Cook - $1,100 - $1,900 rmonth. Terrace. Must be experienced. Days and hours vary. - COCKTAIL WAITRESS - D.O.E. Terrace. Shift work, prefer experienced. BABYSITTING VACAN- CIES - Interested applicants for babysitting vacancies must be registered with Canada Employment Centre & provide at leaat 2 letters of reference. _ Job opportunities HEAD LIFE GUARD - 6.25 hour, Stewart. Must hava bronze medal, must bave national life saving award or equivalent, TYPING INSTRUCTOR $9.00 hr. Terrace. Must be fully able to teach typing at level of bacle typ! in- termediate or advance. CLERICAL INSTRUCTOR - $2.00 hr, Terrace. To teach a clerical “refresher” course. Must have . thorough knowledge of clerical fleid. Journal Clerk Cashier - $675 mo. Negotaible. Terrace. Must have 40-45 typing prefer financial background. Computer Operator - $850 - $1200 mo, DOE. Terrace. Permanent fulltime. Must be experienced on IBM System 32 - Must be IBM trained. Operate 3741 Keypuneh. Baker - $7.00 per hour to start. Terrace. Permanent full time.. Must have ex- ~erience. DINING ROOM WAITRESS = $3.50-$4.00 D.0.B. Terrace. Night shift. Prefer ex- perience. COOK SEA FOODS - Negotiable, Terrace. Must be fully ex- perienced. Evening shifts. Plumber - Union Rate. Terrace, Must be Jour- neyman & have residentlal- commercial] experience. SECRETARY - STENO - D.O.E. Terrace. Must have 23 years minimum office related business experience. 50 wpm minimum, high degree of accuracy, dic- taphone or shorthand. WAITER or WAITRESS - $4.58 per hour. Terrace. Permanent full-time. Must ‘he 19 years of age. Must be experienced and have a neat appearance. Must be mature and responsible. Cook - 4.00 Hr. Terrace. Shift work, Experienced in complete meals & short order & banquets. SHEET METAL WORKER - Union, Terrace. Must be journeyman,; or equivalent experience. First Ald Attendent- 8.01 Hr. Terrace, B ticket or better. Camp job, Free B & R. Head Cook - $5.00 per hour. Terrace, Permanent full time. . Must be fully ex- perienced and famillar with food ceasting, staff super- vision. References required. CLAIMS STENOGRAPHER = $1,014.38 per month. Must have Gr. 12, must have 60 wom dictatyping & adding machine experience. Prefer office experience & knowledge of Medical ter- minology. The New York General Post Office pieces of mail avary day. Rm handles 20 million There was one-lane traffic only on Haisla Bridge, in Kitimat, Thursday evening during shift change when this 1975 maroon Dodge caused a traffic tie-up by ending up on the sidewalk. Driver of the car was Serafin Maderios, of 73 Mallard St., Kitimat, who was said to have emerged uninjured by the accident. Onlookers said the car was a writeoff. Police are in- | vestigating. $1,200.00. ae