oy j Page 1¢, The Herald, Thursday, March 19, 1981 Trudeau's plans weaken Wednesday, March 18, 1961 Prime Minister Trudeau showed a decided testiness about the pace of the can- stitutional debate, touching off fresh speculation the Liberal government will soon force an end to it. Progressive Conservative MP Robert Corbett challenged Prime Minister Trudeau to call a federal election on the constitution — an election he says would return the Tories to power in Ottawa, Former finance minister John Crosbie caHed on the “fatuous asses” in the Liberal government to bring in new economic policies to deal with the rapidly rising cost of living. New Democrat MP Mark Rose said the CBC should give its Tuktoyatuk, N.W.T., radio affiliate — CFCT — enough funds gp it dees not have to depend on bingo profits and free Soviet programming lo remain on the air. You mean even with oll the improvements on you street ou don't figure your toxes will skyrocket / ay wlan lta wy “Hey, no sweat, the guy ot the end of the block get on to city council ; B.C. police official denies he’s a crook OTTAWA (CP) — Robert Porter Bourne, who hopes a royal commission report will prove “I am not a crook,” leaves for Victoria soon to start a new job as assistant deputy attorneygeneral responsible for policing in British Columbia. The 50-year-old former ar- tillery colonel who headed a shadowy security unit under four federal solicitors- general in the 1970s, sald be had hoped the report of the royal commission into RCMP wrongdoing would be made public before he took the B.C. job. But even if It clears him from responsibility for federal “‘dirty tricks” during the RCMP war - on separatiam, British Colum- bia’s strong New Democratic Party may still have scores to settle with him. - A blacklist he circulated.to cabinet ministers in 1971 contained the names of 21 federal employees and consultants who federal solicitor-general Jean Pierre Goyer said might aid an If you're serious about exporti Export Market Development) has your success in mind. We know that for Canadian companies to really grow, they have to get to foreign markets. Our job is to help make you and your goods or ser- vices known to foreign buyers and markets. And to help show the colours, we'll help pay the costs. WE CAN HELP GET YOU TO MARKET, NO MATTER WHAT COUNTRY ITS IN. Maybe you know there’s a market out there; but not quite where out there. When you're ready to find out come to us. We can help share the cost of tracking it down. en rm pnd mer A if cae S yor markets, Ho so are we. 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We can fill you in on the protocol involved in doing business with another culture. We can provide the funds for sharing the cost of your . customers travelling from over there, over here, and their living expenses while here. If you want to expand your markets, visit your regional Industry, Trade and Commerce Otfice and mention this ad. Weil e on the things you need to know and the ways we can help. (If you prefer, write directly for a PEMD application form). It’s not our interest that's growing, It's your growing that’s our interest. Won “extra-parliamentary | op. position” to overthrow the government. ; The blacklist contained the name of at least one New Democrat, now a ranking party official on the West Coast, and resulted in a spate of lawsuits, “Clearly, if the NDP is re- elected in British Columbia, he would go,” a party official here said after the Bourne appointment was announced last week. Suspicion about the security group Bourne headed has been high since it was created. Conservative MP Erik Nielsen charged in i977 that the group was recruiting agents to infil- trate labor, political, academic and media groups. He claimed the group had two “sources of in- formation’ in Robert Stanfield’s office during his term as Tory party leader. Bourne denied these allegations flatly. He left the group in 1979, a week before the PC govern- ment of Joe Clark was elected. The new govern ment blocked his move to.a top job al the National ZOU) 1L}O30UI ap INaaese It's the Fresh One. The only ready- to-serve pudding made with dairy- fresh B.C. milk and cream. & PUDDING %& Best ofall its Dairyland 6152-2 _work of a Defence College in Kingston, Ont., and he spent a year studying public ad- ministration at Carleton’ University in Ottawa. Since then he has been secretary of an inquiry into post office security which recommended police be empowered to open personal mail under strict conditions. Bourne was born in England, and lived in Shanghai, where his father was police commissioner, until he waa 11 years old. When the family was driven out by the Japanese in- vasion, Bourne was enrolled in a private school in &. Catharines, Ont. He later attended military college, served in Korea during the 1960s and became an artillery colonel. In 1968, he joined the cabinet secretariat for foreign policy and defence. During the October crisis, be helped the government make its decision on the political about the RCMP's ability to analyse information it had on subversion, and Bourne's group was formed to fill that gap. Bourne admits there was pressure on the RCMP in the early 19708 to provide more information about separatists in federal government, and this may have led the Mounties to steal the Parti Quebecois membership list Jan. 9, 1973. He said be had no personal knowledge of lawbreaking by the RCMP but he fett such behavior was inevitable and should be permitted by Law. Sweet’s return created questions. TORONTO (CP) — The or- deal for Conrad and Frances Sweet is over'— their 15- - yearold daughter, Catherine, missing for 13 months in Mexico, has been found alive and well — but many questions will remain un- solved for days or perhaps forever. Exhaustive efforts by Mexican authorities, the Canadian embassy, the RCMP, the FBI and Interpol proved ineffective. In the end, it was the combined Canadian television crew and a Mexico City newspaper that brought the Milton, Ont., girl out of hiding as a downtown boutique worker to announce her engagement to a Mexican government of- ficial’s 18-year-old son and her desire to come home. After she spent the night at the residence of the Canadian consul, Sweet checked into a Mexico City hotel Wednesday for some privacy and sald goodbye to her fiancee’s family before ber return trip today. - Her phone message to her mother was direct: “I want to be with you, but please, I don’t want to be questioned on this. The past is over and I'm looking forward t the future.” ‘ She agreed Tuesday to come home, after the deputy editor of -a _ Mexico | City FOR BEST RESULTS Daily Herald CLASSIFIED ADS 635- 4000 newspaper wai led to her apartment by her fiancee's became interested in Sweet's case and. asked the newspaper Ovaciones for its help. On Monday, Ovaciones asked In a front-page story: “Is She Alive Or Dead?" The story was a last-ditch attempt by Canadian and Mexican reporters to find Sweet, missing since Feb. 4, 1980, when she was seen with @ boy leaving her parent's campeite near San Miguel de Allende, about 225 kilometres northwest of Mexico City. Within hours of publication, a woman phoned the newspaper to say Sweet had stayed with her family until recently and she Imew Sweet's whereabouts, Newspaper reporter Gabriel Parra was led to Sweet's apartment, and she toki him she left her family “voluntarily and was not forced.” She said that after leaving her family, she stayed in a village south of San Miguel and then hitch-hiked to Mexico City where she vine as a dishwasher in a oO and as a t boutique. *alesoirl in a After a few months, Sweet fell in love with Genaro Parra said Sweet was scared while in hiding. She officials, The Sweet family was un- available for comment Wednesday.