Pope & The Herald, Thureday, March 12, 196) “] just love the man. He is a fine person," says S2-year-old Lisa Taylor of the man she plans to marry — 61- year-old former Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace. Taylor, a country- western singer who helps run her father’s and who performed at Wallace's political rallies in 1968, said Tuesday that she and Wallace will wed . this summer or fall. Wallace, paralyzed from the waist down since a 1972 assassi- nation attempt, con- firmed the engagement. It wil! be his third marriage and her second. Wallace's ex-wife, Cornelia, from whom he was divorced in 1978, said in Montgomery, Ala., she was “upset” at the news. Mrs, Wallace said she spent several hours at Wallace's home Monday night, ‘‘confer- ring seriously about a reconciliation.” Wallace's first wife, Larleen, died of cancer in 1968. The fame dressmakers who designed the eyebrow- raising strapless evening gown Lady Diana Spencer wore Monday night will make the dress for her July wedding to Prince Charles, Buckingham Palace says. A spokesman for David and Elitabeth Emanuel of Mayfair said Tuesday the designers were ‘‘very proud, thrilled and delighted to have been commissioned to make r the wedding dress. They * are in a total whirl.” The palace spokesman said no ion had been made on the material or pattern of the dress, and coal-mining business ' ALL ABOUT PEOPLE the designers would present Lady Diana with a series of options. The audience at this year's Academy Awards show will hear a few words from a for- mer movie actor who has taken up another profession — the U.S. presidency, President Reagan will address the March 30 gathering in a speech taped in advance at the White House, thus becoming the first president ta appear on an Oscar telecast. Reagan was never nominated for an Academy Award, but he has appeared at four previous ceremonies. Businessmen needing help with security will soon be able to consult an expert — G.Gordon Liddy. . Liddy, who helped mastermind the . Watergate break-in, said Tuesday he is opening his own in- ternational security consulting firm, G.Gordon Liddy Associates Inc., with headquarters in Chicago and branches in New York, Washington, D.c., and Las Vegas. © “There is a growing concern and need in the business community for more effective se- curity,” said Liddy, 50 “My associates and I have the background and resources to meet this demand and provide clients with a valuable service.” - Liddy was convicted in 1973 and sentenced to 20 years in prison. He was released in Sep- tember 1977. Soft-rock star Christopher Cross bays it feels “pretty dan- gerous” to have edged out Frank Sinatra for a Grammy award, but "I'm certainly not gonna complain.’’ Neither is he angry that his hometown, Texas state capital Austin, has named March 26 “Christopher Cross Day.” Cross won five Grammies with his debut album, ‘Christ- opher Cross,” including best song of the year, ° -album of the year, © record of the year, best arrangement, and best new artist, “It’s a long, way from fraternity parties, I can tell you.” Jazz pianist and _ composer Euble Blake, 98, was reported in fair condition at Long Island College Hospital on Wednesday after surgery to reset a broken hip. Blake reportedly fell out of bed at his Brooklyn hame on Friday morning and underwent an operation Tuesday. Hospital of- ficials reported no ather . ailments or com- plications. Blake, composer of I'm Just Wild About Harry, had been leading an active life before the accident. On March 1, he and his wife, Marlan, attended the Broadway opening of Sophisticated ° Ladies, a review based on the music of Duke Ellington and two days . later went to see a review based on the music” of Rogers and Hart.” Roany y Whitlock hada _ dream that hewas going -few things and decided ‘Mayor Patrick Fioriill to hit it big. ; *“T couldn't sleep all night thinking about that, so ... I packed a to come to Reno,” he said. : But upon arrival, the ‘3@-yearold unemployed carpenter from ~ Greenfield, Calif., found the dollar.machine he . wanted to play was busy, He moved to ‘another machine and promptly . hit the world’s record jackpot for a 25-cent slot machine, collecting $77,335.10. When Vineland, N.J., submitted the unusual city purchase order, he assured people he wasn't kidding. He really did order six goats. “I'm ordering tive females and one male so we'll build up our herd," Fiorilli said Tuesday. “They'll eat the weeds and the trash and even fertilize’ the lawns. The goats will be exempt from toning ordinances because they will be city employees.” The goats will be chained to trees and moved around after they've cleaned up a particular area, the mayor said. “We don't have to. feed them, and they'll save us money on gas and lawn mowers, We'll | keep them in the parks department garage.” He also has a scheme that might offset the goats’ $50-$75 purchase Price, “f know two Greek fellows from Toronto who would like. to open up a feta cheese plant in town,’’ Fiorilli said. "Goats’ milk is a necessary . ingredient. We could sell the milk and help the city _ taking . rectly to . CBUIFT-35 budget.” Harp _ ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP) — The world’s biggest wild enimal bunt opened Wed- nesday as crews from seven Canadian and three Nor- wegian ships started killing Karp seal pups on ice off southern Labrador. : The hunt, originally Scheduled to begin today, opened Wednesday after sealing ship captains said seal slaughter begins they feared ice on which the seals were’breeding would break up quickly. Ed Quigley, a federal fish- eries information officer operating from St. Anthony near Newfoundland’s nor- thern tip, said the harp herd covered an area af ice floes 45 nuatical miles long. The width of the herd Best farmland frittered away * PRINCE GEORGE, B.C, (CP) ~The best farmland in B.C. is being frittered away and it’s going to get worse, pays 8 ploneer rancher. . “We keep on making more people and no one is making more land,’ Hugh Shelford of Francois Lake told the more than 100 loggers, ranchers, wildlife and government officials et- tending a seminar sponsored by the interior division of the University of B.C. faculty of agricultural sciences, - “The future depends on trends of eating and as long &s people want to eat meat it will be the northern part of the province that will provide it,’ Shelford said Tuesday. . : He predicted that in future, cattle produced in the North Central Interior will travel less on their way to the meat counter as the trend toward integration of the beef industry continues. “Now some feeder cattle, travel more than the men who produce them.” . Shelford echoed comments made by Punchaw rancher Anne Migvar and forester Bob Flinton of Williams Lake, that the successful development of ranching in north and central B.C. depend upon improved communication between all the groups wishing to use the land: farmers, loggers and wildlife and recreation Broups. Flinton complained that government regulations often slow the process of resolving conflicts between ranchers and loggers over land use. “My company now goes directly to the rancher to ar- range to lease land from him —a process that takes about two weeks compared with a twoyear walt to lease Crown land for our roads and landings,"* Flinten said. Seeding of clear-cut logging areas should be the responsibility of ranchers wanting to use them for grazing, he said, and under good management this could result In up to 15 years grazing. varied from five nautical miles at the northern end to about a mile in the south. The area, known as the Front, contains thousands of seals and is the site annually of a hunt “bigger than anything else in the world,” Quickley said. The Canadian vessels, manned mostly by New- foundlanders, are allowed to take 55,500 harps, most of them 10-day old pumps realled whitecoats, The Norwegian allocation is 22,500. Quigley sald that if the good weather conditions existing on Wednesday continue, each ship would come close to filling its quota within a few days. - After killing their share of harps, the ships will move away in search of hooded seals, a separate species that breeds on the outer fringes of the icepack. Total hooded quota is 15,00 with Canada and Norway sharing about equally. There was no sign of seal- hunt protesters in the area about 300 kilometres north of St. Anthony. The Green-- peace organization's ship Rainbow Warrior, en route from Britain, is expected to reach Newfoundland waters ‘around March 20. Greenpeace says the hoods - are in danger of extinction, a . claim denied by the federal fisheries service. INTRODUCING ‘WOODGREEN APARTMENTS 4832 Lazelle Ave. Renta! Applications are now being taken for occupancy March 1, 1981. FEATURING: One and = two bedroom -Fireplace in every unit. units. Luxury -Cistrwasher, Fridge & Stove Included, -Bright, large Bay Windows with color ca-ordinated drapes. -Undercover parking. Central Locatian -Contralled Entry -Spacious open beam bedrooms with En Sultes. -Grand stalrcase and bright halls. -Ground floor apariments with Private Gardens. -Ceramic tiled kitchen floors & bathrooms. Cablevision hock-up available. To view or for further information call Mr. William Saumure at 635-6772 , * @u Portage, VICTORIA (CP)Hundreds of angry workers, students, -. handicapped persons and natives, frustrated by their ‘ inability to get action or even -phone calls through to government ministers, are their . message the tegislature this week. - In what have become daily ‘demonstrations requiring scorecards to keep track of the participants, they have - paraded under sunny skies in front of the legislature determined that their physical presence here is the ' only way to get the govern- “ment directly involved in their disputes. ; “There's obviously | a big ’ fad on with participatory de- mocracy,"” says Stan Per- sky, a noted author and Malaspina College sociology instructor. Persky, who joined a group of about 70 students from the Nanajino-area college protesting the labor situation which has closed the vocational wing of the school and cut some ac- ademic classes, said coming to the legislature is one of the few options left. B.C, it ° Canadian Racto-televiaicn and Conseil de ls radiqdiliusion 4] des lélécemmunicalions Canadlennes notice : public hearing The CRTC will hold a public hearing beginning on 26 April 198) at the Hyatt Regency, 655 Burrard St. Vancouver, to consider the foilowing. 20. Kamloops, Terrace, Prince George, Dawson Creek, B.C.: Application (801056900) by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation to renew lis. broadcasting ileence for CBUFT-2 Kamloops, CBUFT-4. Prince George and CBUFT-5 Dawson Creek, expiring 3 Sept. 1981. The application may be examined at the Post Office in each location. How fo Intervene - anyone wishing to comment on an application must submit 3 written intervention, stating clearly and con- clsely the relevant facts and the reasons for. the Intervener's support for, opposition fo, or proposed modification of, the ap- plication, also whether or not the intervener wishes fo appear at the hearing. Daadiine -for receipt aif Interventions at = tha Commission and with the Applicant: 8 April 1981. Ta be sent by registered mall or personal delivery to the Applicant and CRTC Of fawa, Ont. KIA ON2 with proof of service. Must be actually received = on speciiled date, not merely. posted’ on this date. interventions to the CBC - applications should be addressed to Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 1990 Bronson Ave. P.O. Box 6478, Ottawa, Ont. Examination of ap- plications and documents: af local address given in: this notice and at the Commission, Central Bullding, Les Terrasses de. Ja Chaudiera, 1 Promenade Room 561, Hull, Que. and at the CRTC, Vancouver Office, Sulte 1130, 701 West Georgia St. F urther Infermation is outlined In “CRTC Rules of ’ Procedure” available for the sum of $1.50 from: The Publishing Centra, Department of Supply and Services, Hull, Que. In- formation: write to CRTC or phone 819-997-1027 or 997. 1328. (NPH-15). Canada Terrace, | “It’s much better than sitting on a picket line,” he said. ‘‘Particularly in a small city like Nanaimo where it gets so that you're talking to the.same people over and over again as they walk by.” “It's quite effective for so many unions to be arriving all together. With all the television coverage, maybe people out there will start to get the idea that something is definitely wrong.” + The college students were jeined in their protest Wednesday by about 100 striking and locked out In- surance Corp. of B.C. workers, upset over their stalled negotiations with the Crown corporation. And while those two groups’ —s took turns vociferously chanting such things as “one, two, three, four shut them in and lock the door,"’ about 20 striking BC, Telephone Co. workers sal quietly off to the side’ holding their picket signs. 4 The day before about 250 * funeral at the steps of the legislature to commemorate what they said was the death ol bargaining rights with the company. ; Their 20-person- in- formation picket line will remain up until their long and sometimes violent strike is settled. A small group of “han dicapped persons, many in wheelchairs, had begun the week of protest on Moaday, _ the first day of the legislative session. Their generally silent protest was aimed at getting more government ald. On Friday, a group of Nishaga Indians are to travel to Victoria to hold a rally-in support of their call for a public inquiry into the dumping of mine tailings’ into Alice Arm near Kitsault on the north coast. = For: your evening di ~ Protests on parade But are these vocal, at- tentiongrabbing protests any - more effective than selective strike action? "] don't think anyone can assess that,” says Fred Trotter, president of the Office and Technical Em- ployees Union which represents the ICBC workers. “But if you look at these disputes hey almost always tied up in same Way to the political arena. So where else do you go.” Trotlar said his union has been trying unsuccessfully for months to get Labor Minister Jack Heinrich to meet and discuss the issues, a situation echoed by Dan Devita, head of the students’ council at Malaspina College. “We can’t get a response from the minister and we're only 60 miles away,” he said. ng pleasure visit - disgruntled B.C. Tel workers, members of the Telecommunications 5 AVES ‘3 : please -cal Workers Union, held a mock Gage cae oie _ Bh \F p fh yUI ] [ pay are ace ; “Serving Fine Foods 7 days a week” Breaktast, lunch and dinner “" 635-6302 SLUMBER LODGE Burnett MLAS.H. KOMG Starsky Musterogtrs’ = E Lat Ws & Friends MAS.H. News 4 & Hutch Neighbourhood F Plerratey 139g | KING 5 TK Evening =| ROMO Starsky be Du Neuf 450 | News News News 4 & Hutch Contixt Ay Zoo KING $ Love Aat World News Over Jamals Deux 15 | News Bost News Hour Easy Sant. Tot 39 | NBC Nightly Love komo News Dick Boogie 45) ij News Boat New? 4 Hour Cavett Woogie ‘a7 Seattie Fantasy PM Alite Machel le Ws Tonight Island Nortiwes Alice Lehrer Report | Telejournal