_s ~ : : . LEGISLATIVE LIBRARY, - , | . . - PARLIAKENT BULLDINGS, en | sowe. 77/78 2 eens -.live.. because: Terrace cou " By Brian Grege : Bix Tertace teenagers walking tha streets vooking for a place to errace ; Council’ is deman- ding $4,500 in back taxes for the: Sparks Streat: group . home, . ' The home Ls-s mored bj fhe Terrace: and Distrie: parents homes. . They erage between the ages of i and 17. years and they have no other place fo live. caine of the teens have had real parents since the age af three and one 18-year-old is-year-old gays thé home has given him a family he can share experiences with 7 ” (4878 LTD. ) 28 HOUR SERVICE ces (TDCCSR) and is -aid-a-home he can. work funded by thb: ministry of towards improving. The Tamas resources, . teana are often busy around ‘The teens who live at the the house fixing up 4 garden home‘are too old for foster ome le nd chaira ~ | 99558858, 635-5050 - 635-2525 “ fe mn the list “LIGHT DELIVERY SERVICE J : Weavaeeee J “Around t town | Viki Parviainen Dane School, invol i) ie tongiht at 6p. to her Mr, Faves is a . cquneil Is asking f blic support while tudents go" from: around ‘town asking for for its danceathon to held from ‘May. 25 at 10 p.m, to May 24 at 40 p.m. The money will go towards the student council's pledge te ‘the Lions Timmy's "Christmas Telethon, . ‘Anyone who ‘ix interested Payot pledge but has ched should” onia at 635-— make a pledge on at is arllal ‘ first time in Terrace that evening at 6:30 p.m. in the arena, Tickets are available: at the the Co-op and Sight and Sound: “ine Terrace. and “Kitimat at §5 for-adults and’ ' $2.50 for children up to i6 - ihe special night us being e Planned In conjunction with “thePacific Régional Jaycees an which will be held in Terrace Thursday, May 2 to Sunday, May: zi. The - annual - meet eneral ‘item on arens. A group of 15 ung adults. will. arrive in ‘Terrace by train from fnuvik, Northweat | Territories on Tuesday, May oe until Jane.4, ‘The District of Terrace wide duMaurier Search for Stars and will recelve $5,000 cash bursury from the diMaurier council for the ort ‘Thain willalso be featured ‘on an hour-long CBC Search for Stara telecast ilve from Toronto's Queen Elizabeth ta Friday, June 1 at pm. en idan dictator Idi. fat has. heen seen in "Diplomatic correspondent ‘said Amin was witness aa. sayin aren ra sayi be off. : Phe'whereabouts of the bi Sietator has has remained a ’ the Metent of his ime Is ‘AMIN IN" LIBYA? ee trooy 5 ” Jast oath. ip ed that in. Libya Ugandan ‘forces whieh overthrew him. > . Simpson said there are. indications Amin I|s- staying at a Libyan government guesthouse’ in the desert town of Sebha, — He sald there is hard evidence that Amin un- [- derwent minor plastic surgery to romiove a wart from hie face at a Tripoli hospital where some of the, staff are British, Skylab to fall WASHINGTON (AP) — . The U8. space agency, ina , Fevieed estimate,.sald today tracking of the huge space station by the North American Alr Defence Command in Colorado on of the ex: pected time for the space a Mation’s plunge. NO paper Monday cetts convention § .and election of officers: of the Terrace * CUPE and the VICTOREA, for recreation. Another 16-year-old says he likes the home because can go hiking and fishing. “The home helps me to learn responsibility, E was alwaya steal before but I've stopped since I came here. I have a job too,” he Bays, Everyone corinected with the home agrees that it is a good place for solving the problems ‘the teens have. “It givea them a place to take time to stretch their social muscles,” says Dan Anonby, a spokesman for nel human resources, “The service We provide to: teens in the communlty " would be decreased if we dig not have the resource of that home," Anonby says. Ron Young, whe rina the group honie with his. wife, Debbie sayd that it ip the “only place‘in town that is- looking after atreet bids. It gives them something to think abottibesides hanging out on street Corners,,,We need more homes like it.” Reverend Dave Martyn says the group home was begun in ‘ gi and because it was @ facility owned b churches the TD Are assumed, that it was exempt rhe Halikvoll Receiving * ‘The we Home, the Lazelle Pro-- "School and the Tuck Avenue Apartments for senior eitizens are also sponsored by TDCCSR. David Pease, a Terrace alderman and chairman of -the finance committee which ordered the back taxes to be paid, was a member of the TDCCSR In. its . initial struggle to have. -these sponsored facilities exempt ‘to perauada it to change its mind . representatives of TDCCSR sald that. the Halliwell home was ex. pempted from taxes and’ set a precident. Council was worried that if it exempied . dy vlad Street home, wuld be set. the eomimitee inen claimed that Jall the exerapilens the | TDCCSR facilities had been recelving were really ad- ministrative ove ty. The quostion of which By THE CANADIAN PRE&5 Joe Clark said in Toronto — Thursday thet support for, ~ the New Democratic Party is ‘collapsing and predicted the antigovernment vote in Tuesday's federal election will go to his Progressive Conservatives, © In Montreal, . Prine Minister Trudeau. sald French-speaking Quebecers will be “devoured” by the - country’s Englishlangua majority unless they have: language and cultural ' guarantees written into a hew constitution. — . Ed Broadbent said in the . strike-disabled nickel city of Ont, that bis New. Sudbury Dentineratie ode | fade" _— Ed Curell, librarian, straightens books, story on 3. Doctors protest: NEW ‘WESTMINSTER, B.C. (CP) —. Delegates representing 450 doctors in- the New Westminster, Surrey and White Rock, B.C., areas have- rejected unanimously ‘a 17-per-cent fee increase over two, years . and threatened to withdraw “from the provinclal medicare program in dyear, British | Columbia doctors are holding a province-wide vote on the latest’ offer, thelr caraivge icone ea n com: on with other pay ineréases. Results of the vote sh id be ready in about two weeks, The 60 delegates were told Wednesday by district representative Dr. John O'Brien- Bell that’ ‘he Is corifident the provincial government will negotlate further rather than let the medicare system go down the'drain. . O’Brien-Bell said medical care fee increases ‘have fallen behind wage hikes In. the last eight years by 38 per cent and doctors ara forced to work Jonger, harder apd quicker to avoid losing pay. “Phe standards and patterns of medical practice are dropping,” he said, “At last the politiclans across the country are beginning to realize that all is not well with medicare." At the meeting, which in- cluded doctors in the area of the Royal Columblan, Surrey Memorlal and Peace Ar hospitals; the delegates sald they would not strike over the dispute but are ready and willing to leave medicare after the oneyear notice period. Tf the move occurs, patlents would again have to pay 100 per cent of their medical bills, In Penticton, Dr. Alex Mandeville, president-lect of the B.C. Medical Association, “blamed pollticlans for stirring up trouble over ‘the medicare issue, Mandeville ‘said the government wants to break up ‘medicare ahd make doctors the scapegoat but he added that he wants to make Bure doctors know the facts, As the two-mon ek campaign. . F into- ‘ite final weekend, ‘the - three - Jeadersp lanned ta zero in on. . crucial” - régions. Clark: headed tor British Columbia, - Trudeau to! Toronty ‘and ~ Broadbent | planned ‘ti visit Northern Ontario, New- foundland and Toronto. ; Clark told reporters while campa in Toronto that the NDP's close tlea with the. labor movement during the. campalgs will turn off voters and cause those who are unhappy with the Liberals to . to the Conservatives, He said voters now would be more attracted to him as leader because “people we “The 8s lees of a robot,” WHERE TO VOTE Residents of Terrace planning to vote in Tuesday's federal election can cast their ballots at the Veritas Hall,- located at 4836 Stra ume. Terrace voters only are asked by tha tiring Theale ceived ip receiv: federa] trmmerater if possible, Thorohill voters are requested to go to the poll located at Thornhill Elementary School, 3120 Highway 16 East. — 1 bratal r the city’s ‘voted at a m oe. in the community receive exemptions and which group shall not receive exemptions has been he petye 8 eat. Councithad been receiving requests from groupe like he curling club and fraternal lodges asking for ne exemption. In self ense, council adopted a bylaw a few months ago that defined which property would be exempt. The provincial overn- ment recently decided that it would pay taxes to the il decision s sees 6 homeless | raving ita po Instead’ of property. _fxemp- The Christian Council for ‘Rupert Steal & Salvage Ltd : sas ‘COPPER | aut wets «(CTO EY Cg MATTERS MON-SAT. OPEN TIL S ot a ‘ELECTION The teaders, _winding it up : Lecation Seal: ten Pheas 9 026-0838 loca Sat. Dick Latta in con- nection with the arrest of a Native Indian here. ult sald comments by Latta that the police don’t enjoy pleking up “‘drunken nidana'” are ue an ‘was very u e “1 shine thats a prety . 4. strong: statement,” - T sald of Latta’s cent to to ic ORR Was proteating whatrahe AnW . - possible. case ‘ ol” q treatment by: . police, “They are sup- posed fo. be the whole community,'’ Supernault sald. . Latta made his remark after a Terrace woman, plained to genlor police hs or officials here that she had geen two RCMP officers repeatedly -slam the RCMP REMARK- SAID RACIST.’ - door was smiling -at the lle car door one mei Queyras told the. . Lette, the officer - in charge of the detachment here, that the eS who slammed the. ro time. Latta .replied, . y haven't met one. -(a-. nm) yet who e- ed picking up drunken Supernault said she— would be contacting Latta about the remarks. she. termed “racist” and that’ | ithe p the pire didn't like to | areaak Indians, they. shold request ‘Sorieone @lge dodty- 7 0° % "Ty hava always felt the" Native Indian . had | problems in this. society. but this confirms that they have a special problem with the police here:" Supernault safd-’she Anew the police myst get ver frustrated ; wah with the le ey. after. ees pple. ya: for racist remarks." haste to negotiate’ VANCOUVER (CP) — Members of one ofsixunions that has halted publication of two daily newspapers for more than six months called Thursday for a resumption tiations. t 500 members of the Vancouver-New Weat- minster Newspaper Gulld to call on thelr executive to return to bargaining with Pacific. Press Lid within 24 hours, Merv Moore, a spokesman for Pacific Press, said y the Compay was bargain vith the fla w council at time.” negotiations broke off and mediator olin Kagel, a San ‘ancisco Iawyer, resigned from the Clark Davey, publisher of the evening Sun, and Buy morning yen weal be nounced then that -thé’ five : Joint, council uniéns ving nego after rece an offer that would have : raised wages by 29.66 per: : cent by Mey” 1983, There are six ‘abions : : representing the-- 1,400. acific Press workers, But : the Presamen’a “Union - out of the joint . council April 23 after a con- - fidentlal report by Kagel - said pressmen muat alter” thelr stand on -@ ‘¢on-: troversial manning clause. On Wednesday, Kagel said that both sides had agreed on the term of the contract and the final rate of $812.60 for key classifications in the guild, but there was no agreement on how pay in+ creabes | would be dis- Rupert shipping its garbage here by Linda Pursthke As the strike , hetrnen reglonal head of CUPE, said in Prince George that the union had investigated whether drivers who were trucking garbage’ fram the Prince Rupert Safeway store to Terrace for disposal were members of the teamstera union, Land wld the unton . contended that if the drivers were teamsters, they would have been carrying “hot garbage". Since the drivers are not union membera, Safeway’s scheme for garbage disporal remalns in operation, but no me in Terrace seems to know exactly where the fleet of garbage trucks are unloading. Don Morehouse, from the district public works office assured the Herald that nit farbage wan definat ing dumped at the tan Lake Hoad disposal site. Mills Meeker, aaslatant manager of the Prince Rupert Safeway who sald the gar- bage was coming to Terrace, was not avallable for comment. Another assistant manager, Gi Gary Quadros, t Safeway was in- deed disposing of their own garbage, Pout he said he “didn't know where it was going.” Bob Marcellin, planner for the regional, in Terrace was also unavailable for comment, Meanwhile, other Prines i od supermarkets are senlor staff of for freezing. Mike try ng to come P with = the city the sity of Prince Rupert. a ; ‘won mew saye oe aerrington, agelstant themselves from bein nanithayastl said caipneg | mana a manager of the store, sald. buried ureer mountains of tne stcgMneS PAE verwalten had not disposed refuse, . ; > couldn't afford of thelr garbage since the According to the Pring ~ freight rates strike began more than 9 Rupert Daily News, the . month ago. Harrington did Super Valu there tem- Overwaitea has not not elaborate on what porarily tena na the resorted ta ste methods Overwalten plans | to do when . problem garbage y o 0 run out of freezer s : collected by what asaistant major supermarkets in he sald should not Manager Kobayashi Prince ving come bloat for several weeks,: termed “the gar acs with @ more ingenious Presumably, by that time: collecting — city a in. Store staff is buslly the store is hoping for elther : minlstrators”, On Monday, bandiay alt renee nd an end to the dispute or Pres garbage from the etore was organic refuse wicked cold snep