x Page 2, The Herald, Monday, December 18, 1978 HAROWARE STORES se a a i MONDAY All listings subject to change without notice. 5 p.m. to midnight CcFTK BcTV KCTS 2 cine 3 (CBF) (cTV) (PBS) 00 Carol Mary Tyler Six Mister 15 Burnett Moore Million Rogers 110 News Hourglass - Dollar Electric ‘45 [ Cont'd. Cont'd. Man Company 00 = | Cont'd. . | Cont'd. News Growing = 7 ; WS Cont'd. Cont'd. Hour Years 30 Cont'd. Welcome Back | Cont'd Dick _ ‘45 | Cont'd. Kotter Cont'd Cavett :00 feat E. Capra Grand Old MacNeil 14 0 Mysteries ountry r ‘30 | Hollywood Cont'd. The Battle 145 Squares Cont'd. Waltons Line :00 Little House C, Brown Cont'd. Fall of 115 On Prairie Christmas Cont'd. Eagles :30 =| Cont'd. Super . Christian Cont'd 145 Cont'd. Special Ref. Church Cont'd oo | Mon. Night ‘Shari Vegas Ten 15 At Movies Lewis’ Cont'd. Who ‘30 ‘The M.A.S.H. Cont'd. Dared 45 Deerslayer’ Cont'd, Cont'd. . | Cont'd. OG Cont'd, News Lou x Movie 15 Cont'd., Magazine Grant 4 ‘The :30 Cont'd, Man Show . Cruel : 145 Cont'd, Alive Cont'd Sea’ :00 News The cIv "™" 4 Cont'd ‘15 | Cont'd, National News Cont'd + 30 Tonight Night News Hour Cont'd. a5 Show: Final Final Cont'd 00 Cont'd. Kojak’ Late Show Rockford 5 Cont'd. Cont'd, ‘There was Files ‘30 [Cont'd Cont'd, A Crooked Cont'd. 45 | Cont'd. Cont'd, Man’ Late Movie TUESDAY 10 am. to 5 p.m. . ; 00 _, |. The New Canadian aa | Its Your Electric - “7s "" PHigh Rollers Schools , Mave Company :30 Wheel of Mister . Definftion Zoom . - a5 Fortune Dressup Cont'd. _ Cont'd. :00 America Sesame What's Elizabeth 15 | Alive Street Cooking Swados ‘ ‘30 Cont'd. Cont'd. Mad Cont'd. 45 1 Cont'd. Cont’d. Dash Cont'd 00 Hollywood News— Noon Sesame 15 Squares. Bob Switzer News Street :30 Days of Search for Movie Cont'd. a5 Gur Lives Tomorrow Matinee Cont'd. :00 Cont'd Bob ‘Run Jules rts Cont'd, McLean Simon, and 30 The Show Run’ Jim a5 Doctors Cont'd Cont'd Cant’d } oo | Another Edge of Another Cont'd 18 World Night World Cont'd 30 Cont'd Canadian Cont'd Cont'd 45 Cont'd Schools Cont'd. Cont'd 00 Young Take Alan Gver . 115 People’s Spec. Thirty Hamel Eas i” Unieorn Celebrity Show Feeling 15 Tales Cooks Cont'd Free :00 Special Flintstones The Price Sesame re Treat Cont’d. Is Right Street :30 ‘A Piece Carol Cont'd. Cont'd, 245 of Cake’ Burnett Cont'd Cont'd daniadown quilts Filled with soft grey Goose Down and covered in fine Danish Ticking. These quilts are comparable to the finest quilts available in Europe. daniadown auilts z Zz. Gordon and Anderson Ltd. LINK MARD WARE STORIE C=C 4606 Lazelle Ave., Terrace Ph. 635-6576 Store Hours: Tues.- Sat. 9 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Friday 9 a.m.-9 p.m. ennste! . not gt CHARGEX § VISA China said not a threat WASHINGTON (AP) — US. milltary experts say they believe China has neither the intention nor the ability to invade Taiwan successfully, a senior defence department official said Saturday. The official, who asked to remain anonymous, also told reporters he is convinced the establishment of formal diplomatic relations with China will enhance U.S. security by bringing a new stability to East Asia. President Carter an- nounced Friday that he will grant diplomatic recognition to China and sever relatlons- with Talwan. But he said Washington will maintain its interest in “the peaceful regolution” of the Talwan issue, . The senior defence official said Saturday he sees no reason for the Soviet Union toreact in any military way against China as a result.of the dramatic improvement Former. convict boxer acquitted GOLDEN, Colo, (AP) ~ Ron Lyle, a former convict who emerged to become one of the world’s ranking heavyweight boxers, was acquitted Saturday on charges of second-degree murder in the shooting death of his former road man, Vernon Clark. *] am glad it's over, and T'll be able to get back to what I like, whichis boxing,”’ said Lyle, 36, after the jury of seven men and five women returned the verdict. ’ Lyle originally was also charged with first-degree murder, but Judge Joseph Lewis had granted a defence motion to dismiss that charge, The defence did not contest that Lyle shot Clark but con- fended the shooting was an. act of. self-defence. during a struggle” between : the: two men last New Year’s Eve at . Lyle's home in Lakewood, a Denver suburb. The boxer had been cot- victed. of second-degree murder in 1961 and began his boxing career during his prison term, Lyle provided perhaps the most dramatic testimony in the 10-day trial. Under cross examination Thursday, he testified how Clark had stood up as if to leave the house, then whipped out a pistol. Lyle said he struck the gun from Clark’s hand and, in the following struggle for. the weapon, shot his former roadman. Asked to reconstruct the scene with a deputy district | . attorney playing the role of Clark, Lyle had the district attorney take out the gun with his right hand and alm it at Lyle's head, With a movement of stunning swiftness, Lyle smashed the right hand and right arm of the deputy district attorney with biows that echoed through the courtroom. The gun [ell to the courtroom floor. The prosecution argued that the 6-foat4, 220-pound Lyle could easily have handled the smaller 160- pound Clark after disarming um, rather than shooting Graceful lady raised | VANCOUVER (CP) — The Lady Grace, once the British Columbia Ferry Cor- poration’s Langdale Quesn, was raised from the shallow bottom of Coal Harbor Saturday after being mysteriously scuttled earller this year. . The vessel had been destined to become a floating restaurant but its ownera ran Into fInancial difficulties: Then the ship settled on the bottom at its moorage. It took most of the day to raise the vessel from its half- submerged state and it isnot a pretty sight. The huli is rusty and windows are broken. Disputes involving ownership of the Lady Grace are currently before the courts, ° in the U.S.-Chinese relationship. Nor does he expect the development to injure U.S.-Soviet negotiations on limiting strategic nuclear weapons. The official provided details and assessments on the U.S.-Chinese agreement and the concurrent severing af the American agreement ‘end Taiwan. He nid the agreement calls for the United States to withdraw its remaining 600 U. S. military personnel from Taiwan and to evacuate installations there within four months. He also said disposition of about 8,000 tons of U.S. war reserve supplies on Taiwan- chiefly am- munition and petroleum— has not yet been decided. Other officials, who estimate these stocks to be worth about $36 milllon, have in- dicated that some of these stockpiles may be turned over io Taiwan. ~The official made these other points in briefing reporters: —The, United States will fulfill all completed agreements to deliver weapons and other military equipment to Taiwan, The Taiwanese will be able to buy additional gear, in- cluding spare parts for U.S.- supplied equipment and possibly more combat planes after the U.S.-Taiwan de- fence treaty expires at the end of 1979. —He foresees no change in the U.S. policy that has barred the sale of arms to China. Pentagon records show the United States and Taiwan closed arms sales deals totalling about $137.8 million last year, with most of the equipment yet to be delivered. As the United States has moved toward China, it has been increasingly careful to withhold from Taiwan any arms Peking might consider a threat. The senior Pentagon of- ficial said the U.S. and China agreed to disa s he put it—on at least two vital points. He said the Chinese gave no guarantees that they would withhold any attack on Taiwan but that Peking understands the U.5, expects peace to continue in the Taiwan Straits area. Also, he sald, the Chinese did not accede formally to the U.S. intention to continue arms sales to Taiwan but that the US. let Peking know it reserves the right to sell ‘arms to Taiwan in the future. In analyzing the possible military consequences oj ending the U.S. treaty to defend Taiwan, the official said Ching has neither the amphiblous warfare. capability nor the air power over the Taiwan Straits to make a successful invasion possible. The official said the U.S. is in a better position in East Asia than before and that the new arrangement with China is probably the most im- portant step in improving the US, position there. DATE SET. PEKING (Reuter) — Leonard Woodcock, head of the United States Hlalson office here, said Sunday that a Jan. 1 deadline for the nor- malization of U.S. re- lations with China was cet many weeks ago and the breakthrough came only last Wednesday when Senior Vice-Premier Teng Hsiao-ping joined the negotiations. Woodcock told a news conference in his home that normalization completed a process that was renewed when U.S. State. Secretary Cyrus Vance visited China in August, 1977, and it was wral up at four ses-' sions ‘with the Chinese vice-premier Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. A joint communique was announced by the two countries a few hours later, The announcement was followed by the ap- pearance of a new poster on Peking's “Democracy Wall" expressing the hope that U.S. President Carter and his national security affairs adviser, Zbigniew Brzerinski, ‘will be even more concerned with the human rights movement in our country in future ,"" NEWS IN BRIEF orrawa (CP) — An RCMP official say aring of smugglers broken up Canada ort week might have been selling we «pons to members of the People's Temple sect in Guyana. But Inspector Denrs Farrell, who co-ordinated 4 cross-Canada raid on Tuesday which netted more than 2,000 fire-arms, said he has found no actual evidence linking the Canadian smugglers to the ill-fated religious sect. “As far as I'm concemed we don’t have any evidence of that but I have to agree, considering the type of weapons werecovered, there could be a connection.” Peace deadline passes WASHINGTON (AP) — The deadline set for a peace treaty between Egypt and Israel passed uneventfully Sunday, the bright promise of September now dimmed, though not dead. . “You know today we should be on Mount Sinai,” a jovial Anwar Sadat told a phetographer at his presidential villa on the Nile River. The «Egyptian president wants to sign a peace treaty with Israel on the historic mountain. Asked when the current impasse in negotiations might end, Sadat said: ‘I don’t know, it all depends on Mr. Begin’s attitude.” Israeli officials, mean- while, again placed the blame on Egypt for the stalemate inthe peace talks, which were to have produced a treaty by Dec. 17, &@ deadline established by Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin on Sept. 17 atnthe conclusion of their summit meeting in Camp David, Md, which U.S. President. Carter mediated. Four Candu reactors sold TORONTO (CP) — Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. (AECL) has signed an agreement in Romania to sell four Candu nuclear reactors to that country, the first sale of nuclear reactors to a foreign country in three years. David’ Turnbull, a Spokesman for AECL, said Sunday the sale will end a lag in the Canadian nuclear industry, which employs 31,000 people. The deal could bring as much as $300 million in work orders for Canadian firms for the building of the first 600-megawatt reactor, Turnbull said in a prepared statement. Future sales | could bring the amount spent in Canada to $700 million.. ‘Turnbull said in an in- terview the company hopes to sell 12.more Candu reactors to Romania by the early 1990s, but no agreement has been reached. Fiedler’s friends sing BOSTON (AP) — Close friends surprised: Arthur Fiedler with caviar, champagne and fresh strawberries’ on Sunday as the Boston Pops conductor marked his 64th birthday ina hospital bed, Fiedler is recuperating from brain surgery at Tufts New England Medical Centre, where his wife and friends—led by assistant Pops conductor Harry Ellis Dickson—sang a chorus of Happy Birthday. to e. 4 _ a: - Anti-zionist UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The United Nations General Assembly voted three times Saturday in favor of a declaration that links Zionlam with racism. Canada voted against the declaration. Zionism is the movement for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. The assembly voted on a declaration of the UN- sponsored World Conference to Combat Racism and Racial Discrimation held in Geneva from Aug. 14 to 15. The resolution spoke of “increasing relations bet- ween the Zionist state of Is- rael and the racist regime of South Africa" and accused age din ack: ‘ference “You're all flat,’ said Fiedler, who delights in playing the curmudgeon. The maestro, dressed in a bright Japanese kimono, sat up in bed and sampled smoked fish, beer and other items. ; Fiedler unierwent surgery last Monday to relieve an accumulation of fluid on the : brain, a condition that im- paired his walking. A hospital ety nee said er is steadily im but it is not known new 7008 he will be released, Ervyh oot, vote passed” israelof racial discrimination against the Palestinians. When the Geneva con- passed the Isracli- South Africa declaration, 12 countries walked out. They were the nine E n Common Market members, Canada, Britain, Ireland. Denmark, Belgium, the. Netherlands, Luxembourg, France, West Germany, Italy, Australia and New Zealand, The 12 were among the countries casting ‘‘no” votes Sai y. The United States, which boycotted the Geneva conference, did not par- ticipate in the assembly vating. Gov't fighting seperatism OTTAWA (CP) — The federal government is stepping up its battle against Quites separatism and its "campaign to woo Quebecers to the federal way of thinking, The Journal says. The newspaper says a cabinet directive soon will be delivered to all federal departments. and agencies ordering them to first check with the Canadian Unity Information Office «CUIO}) before distributing any advertising or promotion material in Quebec. Pierre Levebvre, director of CUIO, will have the duthority to screen all such material to ensure it con- tains a strong pitch for unity and a federal presence in Quebec, newspaper says. CUIO, which has an estl- mated $1¢-million budget, hasa staff of about 50 highly- paid specialists who extol the advantages of a united Canada to Quebec. The group produces reports, sponsors caravans travelling to remote corners of the province promoting federalism and supports groups fighting in the Quebec referendum battle. Lefebvre reports to Paul Tellier, a senior official in .the federal-provincial relations office, who co- ordinates the government's unity operation. The Journal says Telller’s group, part of the Privy Council office, found it could not effectively fulfil its in- tended role using only regular government support e0 CUIO was formed to fill the gap. Both groups answer to Justice Minister Mare Lalonde who is responsible for constitutlonal and uni matters. ‘ Little reaction seen OTTAWA (CP) — There was no immediate reaction from federal energy officlals on the intended world oil price Increases. However, these increaes would have no immediae effect on Canadian consumer prices since the federal government subsidizes the coat of imported cil used in Quebec and the Atlantic provinces. The subsidy lowers the price to the frozen domestic price, currently $12.75-a- barrel. The higher price will in- crease the cost of subsid payments, but energy of. ficlals said earlier they were expecting a world price increase and had made al: lowances for it in see! money from Patliamen the subsidies. fr me of the funds for the subsidy come from an export tax levied on oil shipped from Alberta to the U.S. Tha tax covers the difference between Canadian and world prices and will increase. along with the world price. = ara re ate vie. Tat?