‘Peta iw, ; . i . wa f neg Be, the“herald Serving Terrace, Kitimat, the Hazeltons, Stewart and the Nass | VOLUME 71, NO. 29 MONDAY JUNE 12, 1977 | A a Ta MOP] There’s comics in the Herald > ‘ are i” RECORDS | 99 and up : KITIMAT ~ | RADIO & TV Lower City Centre Mall _ Come for breakfast, junch or dinner. Here, we cook with love. At the KALUM MOTEL. Hwy. 16 Wes#, Terrace 635-2362 J Price: 20 cents “ mrectety er ce ee eee aoe ce a a AM aae iT AI ot EO Vance (left) and Darin, two six-year-olds from Thornhill were part of a kindergarten overnight visit to the farm School took a second out from the fun and games orth of Terrace. Primary 632-2024 at Hart Farm last week to mug for the camera. The boys DEPUTY MINISTER Job crunch. hurts young... 3 eet lice with ce ‘= poli for By ALLAN KRASNICK Managing Editor Unemployment among io le runs at ara iwo-anda. alf times higher than adults’, a Terrace conference was told, Friday. ‘ Jack Manion, deputy minister of manpower, said two million people in the under-25 age bracket are presently in the workforce and another half million will enter before 1980. With steadily worsening unemployment for these individuals, new initiatives must be inroduced, he told the second day of the Skeena Manpower Development Committee seminar on industrial relations. Because the problem seems to lie in the transition period between school and work, Manion said that: programe of co-operative education are now tried, Eighty suc arrangements have been started, providing orien-_- tation and training for prospective workers. During his 30-minute luncheon 8 ech, Mani on exp! tha ons of Canada’s unemployment problem are often ‘‘ob- secured rather than clarified by the kind of data that has been available. on-the-job yound “We have come to look at the market in terms of the labor force survey but this is only a snapehot of what is happening,” he said. - - To the deputy manpower minister, the important statistics are those of the ‘vastly chan flow of people in the labor market, the number of changes in one labor force.” | Each year, there are between 5% and seven -million job separations; each month, four to five per cent of the work force changes jobs, he said. Manion said __—itthat Canada's unemployment oblem is not only caused by economic downturns. While cyclical. unem- ployment, that created by poor economic conditions, accounts for 85 per cent of the nation’s jobless total, frictional and structural memployment account for 45per cent, And these latter two types can be lessened by “an active manpower policy,” he said. Seasonal unemployment totals the other 10 per cent of the labor surplus. Frictional unemployment can be reduced by faster and better job matchings, structural unemployment by increased training and (More photos on page 3.) ‘ mobility, by training ople to quality for vacant jobe or helping them reach those vacancies. Manion also detailed upcoming changes in the structure of the manpower, immigration, and unem- ployment insurance jurisdictions. The integration of maa- - wer and unemploy:nent insurance functions wil provide ‘‘a happy blend of UIC and training programs by rationalizing income support for trainees.” anges include: ' -A faster system of in- come support for people out of work; . -An expansion of in- dustrial training programs; ‘Increased help in man- power planning; and --[mplementation of a national employment strategy, flexible enough to respond to market changes. JAMES EARL RAY ESCAPES Assassin still on t ' BRUSHY MOUNTAIN, Tean. (AP) — Authorities sealed off a 500-square-yard area Sunday night where they believed two prisoners, answering’ the ptions of James Earl Ray and a companion, were tra ped. . he area is about five miies north of Brushy Mountain State Prison where Fay, convicted murderer of Dr. rtin Warden Stoney Lane said Earl Hill Jr., 34, was ca tured not far from wher three men were spotted, ina valley of the New River. : , & convicted mur- derer, was alone when peared to he separaied by ap separa y several hundred parte the same area an escape, Lane said. 8 “ three have been just sort of drifting along, a rabbit in front of the s,” the warden said, e third convict was tentatively identified as Douglas Shelton, 32, 68 years for murder, He an ‘the other man, belleved td be Ray, were inside an area were closing In, ‘an would say the chances -for capturing Ray tonight are “excellent.” ; survival could Rog , et wical equal b j ition is“ - Earlier, ‘authorities ex-— panded: the search for Ray to a 25-mile radius of the prison in. snakelnfested mountainous terrain— an area of about 2,000 square miles. The communities of Wartburg, Oliver § and Caryville were in the search ares. : : In Careyville, about 20 miles northeast of the prison, police said a car was stolen Sunday m from a parking lot and a ie of clothing was taken from another car in an adjoining lot, leaving behind camera ° mee Sunday, families of the dead Puce were told their today pment and jewelry. try Hacker, who had been serving a 26-year term for robbery with a deadly weapon ard safecrac was captured inside a sects in the worl A Herald series . In the years following the death of Jesus of Nazareth, the movement he began gelled into a _ church, then divided and redivided in a cellular fashion until, today, there are over 250 Christian Over the next few weeks, the Herald. will . _ Anglicans strive t Christian heritage he run Police searchers feeling confident rural church early Sunday about four miles from the pelzon. He was believed to the guiding force behind the prison break. FOUR TO GO His return meant that three of the seven fugitives who climbed a prison wall Friday night were back behind bars. One was shot while ing and a second was captured Saturday afternoon. C. Murray Henderson, the state’s corrections commis- sioner, said speculation that authorities at the le and Henderson said the search ' ier was expanded | al- ough “we still belleve they are still contained in the area. We still believe they are travelling in circles.” He said Hacker had travelled farther in more from the prison where he was captured. Asked whether Ray, 49, would be able to survive for roots, Henderson replied: ‘T think it could be prety difficult.: An indivi who had courses in mountain SERIE ao Enjoy y SUNSELVayacSnasbsho sts sss Qitabseslasttiatarnasteceeraratuiattorotereta siete oreceltsateieneerseet NS 2, a SSPE EES aie aieratchaehe ateiniatohe' SEES SS SEEPS aatereme seen poaeeecssetat ON, * c] bis] Bs, oe ee A. rere os Mate! oan 2 television listing. Allfor Morning cheer with the Herald There's a little more fun in today's Daily Herald, = a little extra to make your breakfast newspaper: good cheer. Archie, the Wizard of Id, those funny = B.C. characters, the zany individuals from Boner’s :: Ark, these and others have joined the Herald: family. ms y's page eight features “On the Lighte “Side”, a morning diversion from the news. Horoscopes, crossword puzzles, and today’ you in your daily, = ald. ‘Now, more? 3 - r elves with the. than ever, part of Térrace and Kitimat m ae SHENAE NTN a re eS Sess ner ebetetetabaatatetetese ees REPS etenetete! ornings sees VIOLENT CLIMAX = Marines end siege THE HAGUE (Reuter) — The Dutch government moved swiftly Sunday to defuse tension with the country’s South Moluccan . minority over the traumatic end to a three-week double hostage siege. Two hostages and six South Moluccan guerrillas died at dawn Saturday when marines stormed a hijacked train and a and rescued 53 hostages. In Bovensmilée and Assen es would be retirned for burial on Tuesday. In Groningen, Queen Juliana went to the University Hospital to visit injured survivors among the hostages. Most of those re- 1 ‘spent the day at home with their families ignoring a special paychiatric unit set up by doctors who had feared the traumatic effects of their confinement. Justice Minister Andreas. van Agt and Social Welfare Minister Henri van Doorn spent five hours with leaders of the 40,000 South Moluccans in the Nether- lands discussing their future in Holland. The talks, before a joint committee set up last year to diseuss the Moluccans’ lems, was described by both sides as useful and constructive. Prof. W. Koebben, chairman of the committee, _ said that “Seldom In my life ‘have I been to a meeting which made such a strong impress in which both sides opened their hearts was moat touch- He said the meeting attended by self-styled Molucean leader Johannes Manusama, did not reach ent on every point but whee was an ding fr degree of unders ‘or the other side's point of view.” o emphasiz e the positive First local church erected in 1913 “European arrogance” was the essential cause of the proliferation of Protestant Christian sects after the Poman Church turned on itself In the 16th century, says Reverend Lance Stephens of St. Matthews Church in Terrace. All forms of Christianity were and are inpsired by the teachings of Jesus as recorded in only a few books _ of the New Testament, yet, after the reformation, oups began to form and have continued to into this century . “There was a great intellectual blas in Europe.’ All worshipped the same God but in slightly oso ferent fon on me. The way — sae 2 ie! ca a a present a series of articles touching on the Si, RATATAT ENVIS theological and methodological differences 4g | between the major denominations in Terrace. GLICAW CHURCH OF CAHADA A on 3 Drawing ‘mainly: from the clergymen who . 7 pie represent these churches, we intend to deal, at a atic mr least briefly, with the present direction and ea 2 ways, with each believing there was only one right way,’ sald Stephens. Differing Christian denominations were, he suggests, like little boys arguing over whose father was fight. Through centuries, however, they have slowly matured to present moment where they are beginning to realize “both dads were right.” i: future possibilities of each denomination. fin fo realtz | The first of these articles deals with the - forced to realize at tigi positiogs ane net air that Anglican Church. - defensible,” he pointed out. Anglicanism began in’ England during the reign of King Henry Vill (1497-1547). The split between the English and Roman churches climaxed 100 years of ill-feeling which centered around the absolute authority of the Pope and the heavy. financial burden the foreign church placed on the English. Henry (Continued on page 2..) by David Richardson I oe a amet te AT