where: the. PLO’ fighters’: will, go : if: they. ‘ Jeave West Beirut, Lebanin radio sald U. ‘Ss. aa presidential negatiator ‘Philip: Habl - planned another round of talks today... soothe Lebanese capital: * . "(Negotiations to end the Bel ‘official: said he expec atrest, battle. ‘with: Israeli fore besiegin ‘were .Feported. -aiill: bogged: déwn 0 -Syria said lagt week it would: ot accept "PLO. fighters because ‘under ..the: prevailing circumstances, their natural © place. is where they aré now." . "This is (Syria's) “final decision de - no, circumstances - -will- it be changed," - : - Syrian Foreign Minister Abdul Halim Kbgddam saidon his arrival Thursday ata _ . mneeting of foreign ministers of the non- aligned movement in Nicosia, Cyprus. sBeirut radio stations said Syria‘’s statements were aimed at wringing a high political and financial price for an even- tual agreement to: accept the guerrillas. “In Tet Aviy, the military command sald_ _~Tsraeli troops killed two PLO guerrillas in , eastern Lebanon In sporadic fire fighta during the night. Israel radio reported that the: ceasefire, around. Beirut «is holding, except for occasional bursts of light-arms fire, 7 -: ‘While the United States urged the Arab world to help end the crisis in Lebanon, Israel warned its Palestinian guerrilla enemieg that—it- has -“‘not-returned - the sword to ita sheath.” A top PLO official - sald he still expects a street battle with the last “five days, but: Israe! still is°. i threatening to storm: West Beirut if the - Israeli forces besieging the Lebanese capital, Negotiations to end the Beirut stalemate - are reported still bogged down over where thé Palestine Liberation Organization fighters will go if they leave Beirut, but Lebanon radio said U.S. presidential. . envoy Philip Habib planned another round of peace talks today. In a speech broadcast Thursday by the: PLO -radlo Station, Yasser Arafat's top ~ security. offieer,- Salah Khalaf, sald the guerrillas refuse to “eapltulate” to Israeli - . military threats. “We are prepared to fight and shall do it with everything we have, even with our. nails,” sald Khalaf, also known ‘by the © code-name Abu lyad. “We are engeged in palltical negotiations, but a fight. remains thé foremost possibility,” Israeli Defence Minister Ariel Sharon said during a military. ceremony in | ‘Bouthern Israel. that his government. is showing “great patience” with the US.- . > bed] Peace effort. But he added: “Iti is better that everyone connected with the matter remember that - we have not returned ad wee. i oe ; sheath and won't te Hor Cu Ape n’s..warning - ‘Sehoed i in the ‘hills | outside ‘Beirut, where 35,000 to 40,000 _ Israeli soldiers settled in for a ‘jong wait. -- and their’ officers worried aloud’ that” Israel's advantage. might be dwindling as world opinion turns against the Jewish. stale. ; _Manitoba. “After a special rodeo performance of bull riding, barrel racing and bronco riding.in Brandon, the princess awarded trophies to the winners. Charlie Bear, 25, of Broadview, Sask., who won the bull- riding competition, said he was honored and surprised’to speak to Princess Anne, who is an accomplished horse rider. ‘It made me all pink in the face,” he said Inter. Another competitor, Trevor Nicholauson, said he was— . _.. impressed with her knowledge of rodeo. : “She’ 5 areal good spart, ad "he said. “She knows alot about it.” After the rodeo, the princess boarded her train for the: return trip from Brandon to Winnipeg, Just before the train - . pulled, oul, the princess was presented with a cowboy hat. “It fits,” Princess Anne said after placing it on her head. ° - On her arrival in Brandon, the.princess was greeted by ic and took a ride in a horse-drawn carriage. Looking c dol and relaxed ina simple light blue summer dress. with a : white hat and gloves, the princess stepped from a railway ” car and was: welcomed by enthusiastic: fans. ‘Western musié was provided by a band featuring country ’ singers Bill and Sue-On Hillman. The prineess was greeted by Mayor Ken Burgess and:speke to bystanders before climbing into the four-wheel carrage, drawn by six horses. The Princess; in Manitoba for a four-day visit ending - Saturday, made the one-day trip 210 kilometres west from . Wannipeg to help Brandon celebrate its 100th birthday. - Along the way, her train made a brief stop in Portage Ja Prairie, Man,, where she: was welcomed by about 1,000 . . people, In Brandon, the princess, who changed into a pant sult for . the evening, visited a farm research station and seed plant and dined at a beef barbecue with about 100.invited guests. ~~At the barbecue, Alex Matheson of Brandon, an organizer a ae’ of the western tour, played a tune on the bagpipes he called _the Princess Anne Stomp. . ' Earlier, the princess was presented with flowers by a pal . . ot handicapped _younsters and -four: ‘buffalo. wool: sweaters |. . for herself and her family made by..a-Braridon. resident. ; iat oT ' Mayor Burgess suggested the sweaters might, conie in. “handy on days cooler than. Thursday, .when the weather was - exceptionally; humid, with temperatures: close. to 30. degrees: But thatididn’t dim the princess's reception. “Tve always wished lo speak to a member of the royal family, ” said Armand Poirier, who-spoke to the princess ' briefly.as she mingled with.a crowd. During the train ride to Brandon, the princess talked with . * Manitoba Community Services Minister Len Evans, who represents a Brandon riding, and showed a keen interest in . the prairie crops visible through the railway car windows. The Princess’s schedule today calls for a trip to Selkirk, Man., 35 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg, returning later _ for, a concert at Winnipeg Centennial, Concert Hall and a dinner at Government House in Winnipeg. rw. "not asked to go to z neil the Lag Ff _ it: " ti terror Hib te Bei ‘Beirut. ah RA areal” happened to a gone ! AU mediated, ‘peadetire’ has. bee holdiig with ‘pyily. scattered. ‘violations: for: PLO’ dogs ‘not Bet out of. Lebanon’ ‘yolun-’ .-tarily, “The Israelis have refused ‘ta with-.. draw. their siege -force until. the : Palestinians leave: . The PLO says . it won't “consider . 7 _, evacuating until. multinational. force. is... deployed to stand between the guerrillas _ and the Isroelis, Khalaf. reiterated this: demand in his speech Thursday: For weeks, Habib has been trying to find a home for Arafat and the 6,000 PLO fighters trapped in West Belrut by Israeli forces that invaded Lebanon June 6 to , crush the guerrillas. refused to ‘to give t the armed guerrillas, a refuge, and no other Arab state 80 far has offered to do sa. “Now ‘is the appropriate . time for ‘the Arab community to assist in the.resolution of this particular issue," said State Department spokesman Dean Fischer in Washington. - “Tt is the major stumbling block, ” said * ‘another U.S. offleial, Who asked not to be .. ‘identified. : _Unconfirmed_reports—from—the- Syrian — capital of Damascus. said President Reagan wrote Syrian President Hafez © Assad to ask him to take the PLO, but Assad replied that the Palestinians have . Syria. There also were press reports that _ ‘Reagan wrote to King Fahd of Saudi Arabia, asking him for help in finding a haven for the guerrillas. Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak appealed Thursday for Arab leaders to forge a unified stand on the crisis in Lebanon and urged the United States to . - “start a dialogue with the Palestinians.” — “I am ready to go anywhere in the Arab nation provided that we can set aside our differences and be realistic so that we can . agree on.one line,” said Mubarak, whose country has been cut off diplomatically by other Arab leaders because of its peace treaty with Israel. . Faced with the Arab world's division, * Arafat appealed to the 94-member non- aligned - movement Thursday ‘for ‘‘ef- fective action to savenot only Lebanon and the Palestine Liberation Organization but. _ Also in order that the law of the tangle shall iy saint! Sah chit did: not “spell out what ~ action the ‘on-Bligned movement should. take. . - The group's foreign ministers, meeting. in Nicosia, Cyprus, at Arafat's request, issued a statement saying they “view with profound indignation the aggression of . ’ Israel."’. ‘Charlie Bear pink BRANDON, Man. (cP) — ‘Prineass Anne watched a rodeo, chatted with cawboys and donned a western hat Thursday evening at the close of a one-day trip to western _.Don't try diets for high. blood pressure or other treatment. you hear: about without” asking-your doctor first. ; Did y you know in one-year the. Salvation Army in Canada provided 700 despairing men with care and guidance in rehabilitation centres. Thursday: they: may: be a of layofts next fall sill ted som rb Y been drawn, on since it: was, started in. 1977, will be paid out:to aa many as 2,100 employees. \ who wete told _ November," ./ But. Dofasca , vice-chairmaa Ross Craig’ aaid the : extend of benefits from: the fund. hasn't heen deter- mined: Each worker's cage. “will be treated in- dividually, he said. ’ The impending layoffs, the higdest in’ the non-simion ' ~ company *s hlatory, would affect office and plant.’ ~~ workers with leas than three years’ service - about 19° _ per cent of the work force, The company said the cuts _are an inevitable result of the worst business period ._ “since the 19385 Depression. - Before deciding on the layoffs, Dofasco considered participating in Ottawa's work-sharing program in. which employees work’a four-day week and -get unemployment insurance for the fifth “day, a — ‘spokesman Bald. added. Dofasco’s. policy has been to consider production and office staff on equal footings based on © seniority, which might not be possible under work- ‘sharing. - Some operations, such as those in the hot strip mill, are needed on a five-day basis, he‘ said: However, ~ Defasco will look into. work-sharing again before . November, * Dofaseo’s predicament will also affect employees - who remain on the job because of reduced returns: from the company's profit-sharing plans. | —_—.The company. contributes 11 per cent of pre-tax . profits from its steelmaking operations to the two plans, open to all workers with three years continuous employment. ‘The basic $800 the company pays into the profit- sharing fund for each member will be maintained, the spokesman said, but the income earned on fund’ , investment will be lower than last year because of ” weak financial markets. Dofasco, one of the area's largest employers, had . been considered as ‘solid as a rock,” said Mayor Bill. Powell, noting that the layoff news came as an ‘especially tough blow to Hamilton, still recovering | from a bitter, 4-month’ strike at Steleo Inc. last ” year. . “The company is following the right procedure by - laying off those with the leadt seniority. But they are the ones, who have young families and are just “J - starting out, who need the jobs most," said Powell. Dofasco, Canada’s second largest steel company “and the only major one which could boast full em- ployment, had struggled since May to keep its: non- _ uniqnized workforce on the job. - Demand for. the company’s steel products is down, said Craig, and if conditions do not improve, plants _and mills may have to opérate at still lower levels for the final three months of the year and into the first quarter of 1983, Reg Whynott, executive director of the , brit District “‘Chinbeb" ot Commerce, aald, ran Y have served. as yet another reminder that Hamilton is too dependent on the steel industry. — “We've long had a saying here: ‘As goes the steel . industry, so goes Hamilton,’ and in the past six to eight months (with the Stelco Btike) . that’s been ‘ . brought home to’us," he said; . Citing the loss of 350 outside contractor jobs when Dofasco decided in May ta delay completion of a $425- million mill until next summer and a another 350-job, . reduction from its.long -standing student summer job . program, Whynott is worried about the layoff’s effect as dollars pour out of the region. __ The first-quarter of 1982: showed emall-business bankruptcies in Hamilton had increased by about 27." per cent over the same period last. year, said Whynott. Much of the blame.can be attributed to the poor condition of the economy, but undoubtedly last year 's Stelco strike had some effect, he sald. | The strike at Steleo, whese giant steelworks are across the street from Dofasco' ‘8, ended in December but about 1,200 of the company’s 12,300 production . workers are still laid off. Cleanin EASY-OFF? Tho "t nice! ‘ at your. supermarket. ” sReqistered Trade Mark Saves your Carpet... our carpets is easy with . ASY-OFF. Cleaner is light; and portabla, and fils Into the trunk of most cars. And it's a fot more mobile than the _ Rug Dactor and Staamex machines, soit at glides easily from raom to room. EASY-OFF’s* exclusive "Vibra- Sonic" action gantly spreads and: . Vibtates carpet fibres to loosen dirt, ‘|. and-the powerlul vacuum removes’ | + £933 more dirt than aver before. Sao. : EASY-OKE carpals is @ tot easier with, 7 EASY- OFF*Carpat Cleanars. a) Pick up » this Free brochure at your | EASY-OFF* display in your supermarket. EASY. OFF . Saves s you Money. - team B) “'Ditasea int, workers facing: aid” oft ‘indefinitely, oe : _ Bpokesman called the ar-. ite ; Raily . a ‘she summoned’ help. Ir the Wednesday” incident, the man a ~ tried to get over the wall near‘the south . - ~ wing of th falace, and about 50- policemen ‘and some police dogs tried vainly to catch 7 . state-run _ their protest over work _ newspaper said the plan Se ee REE NN a a | nian, : ‘Michael ‘Fegan, “tumed | up’ pin % Queen's edroom in the palace eyes him, Scotland Yard said. ‘The yard also said a’second policeman "on duty at Buckingham Palace last Friday ‘had: been transferred to a London police ~ | station: It said on Tuesday a plainclothes ‘officer has been transferred to uniformed LONDON (AP) — replace more than 20,000 striking engineers, The Daily Telegraph reported today, The financially crippled railway has threatened to shut down the 17,000-kilometre network by next Tuesday and fire ‘the. strikers if they don't end ‘elaborate. the schedules. The strike has plagued commuters and . wreaked havoc on Britain’s vacation and tourism trade aince it started 13 days ago. The Daily Telegraph said. British Rail officials believe conductors who already know routes and rules could be driving within three months of the start of the plan and that other trainees - could be driving within six months. ny The respected British Sir “would be a last resort, but It is being considered seriously,” ” . A British Rail board ticle ‘a piece of speculative reporting.” “We give no credence to It at all,’ he said. ‘We do not. - confirm a story which -is © x Tbaged ‘On: pothing | we e have 5 " a fcr “Earlier a~ ‘senior British « official, while , Police have been criticized. for acting nization of its detection equipment. \ : ; ‘Rail replacements planned - of British declining to .confirm the -But it couldn’t find a-way-to make this practical; he--§-—Rail-has last-resort plana to—report, said the railway _ Fecrult train epnductors and _ Unemployed people--. to would be prepared to go to the “marketplace” if the sirlke were not resolved. The official declined to be identifléd and would not The Daily Telegraph gald scheme was President Reagan's han-. . dling of the strike by U.S. air traffic controllers last summer, when the strikers were dismissed and fécruits were trained to take over. Peter chairman of British Rail, ‘said he expects the striking members of the! 24,000- strong Associated Society of — Locomotive Engineers and Firemen to defy the return- to-work deadline. Birchwood Apartments Adult oriented — Quiet. Ya block from arena & swimming pool oS Mat be tanitt & us “om a : ~ Attend the Church fo _ of Your Choice | ‘duty, Aa rome nd Yard sald polite” ae) ee Cyril Hunt; 64, ‘on duty: lest Friday, °° 3) hus been siepends | front ‘his duties. Hunt’. 1 ‘he otfered his resigaaticn, but it'was\ °°". refused, , He will continue to receive his pay een mie, waiting’ for” the’ “Feaults ° af a 4 isciplinary inquiry. : ' ane He refised to comiment on press reports eo that he'was the policeman: fo -whom the =. ‘ Queen “spoke by telephone. while’ théin- itruder was beside her-in her’ ‘bedroom. slowly alter. the call wap received. BBC. ‘television. said. a report. being _ £ prepared following the Friday. incldent 4 will recommend strengthening the police ~ 7 ‘detachment at the palace and moder- if Senior leaders of the Trades Union. Congress were scheduled ta hold an emergency meeting later today on the strike, Concern is growing among other labor unions about the — overall effect of the . threatened rail shutdown on -other industries, like The engineers have been on strike since July 4 in a . bid to stop British Rail from’ introducing flexible workshifts of between seven, and nine hours, The ‘railway! says it needs the schedules to save money and increase . productivity. , The union says the change will lead to layoffs. The engineers have- worked eight-hour shifts since 1919, 3 zi a { a “3 Parker, epi ec eee 2, Lo eyes) nets ee eR a Ta ee ye eee ae a NOW RENTING 15 voit building - Each suite complete with: Refrigerator stove. drapes ‘ Me wail to wall carpeting : “ TaundryTactittes ; Security entrance On premises managers _ 4 Close to downtown , ae . Feeturing: . ; t Thedroom sulte - $355, : “4 gels we Are) path bedges ci a PHONE’: har: steran yr Jud ; 8 _ a6 dian ee a ee -~&, Sunday morning each month, and the 3rd Sunday evening of each month.) : Confirmation: * Youth &Aduit Classes. Worship — 11 am. : Nursery to Grade 6— 1) am. : Grade 7 to Adults - _ 1 a am. TERRACE” . THE TH DAY . PENTECOSTAL SALVATION ADVENTIST .. ASSEMBLY ; ‘ARMY _ 2306Gritfiths Pastor John Caplin . ‘Walsh Ave. Pastor Henry Bartsch. ‘4 "3511 Eby St, . -. 635-2626 or 635-3232 + 635-7442 | 4 Terrace, B.C. : 635-5446 Services — Sat. 9:30 635-2434 SUNDAY SERVICES am. — Sabbath School SUNDAY SERVICES 933 am. — Sunday (Sunday School). ir 9:45 Sunday School School for all ages ~~, 1:00 a.m. — Worship : 11:00 Morning Worship 1:00 am. —. Family . 7:00 Evening Service Worship ; TERRACE 7:30 p.m. CHRISTIAN t HOUSE | Evangelistic Salvation - REFORMED PRAISE Mee WEDNESDAY. co tip. Pastor Arnotd Peters 7:90 pm. — Ladies’ ReverarksSteata . 3406 Eby St... ‘Home League Straume Avenue : 635-2015 635-3657 Fellowship. Sunday School —.10 §° ’ Sunday Services . 10:0 a.m. . ZION am. é 7:30 p.m. BAPTIST Worship Services. —_ n } CHURCH a.m, and 5 p.m. SACRED Pastor Paul Mohninger Listen to the Back to HEART Home 635-5309 God Hour every Sunday 9} PARISH . Corner of Sparks & at BW amon CFTK. §;; 695-2913 © Kelth " _ " Tepraces occ pe 4S ae “Sunday. QR Sat. Evan. —7:30p.m. School cop:ti‘ Tt Sunday Masses 11:00 am. — Morning Reverend R:L. White)? 8am, | Worship 341 River Drive Y 10:00a.m. j ; - Terrace,B.C. *:. &: - 77:30a.m. ST. MATTHEW'S - 638-1561. a, — ANGLICAN 20:00.a.m. - . gy CHRIST . CHURCH ~ Sunday School ao a LUTHERAN . 4726 LazelleAvenue. =| Reverend R.L- white 9 CHURCH -- f°. 635.0019. - 11300 a.m. ; eae "Rev. Herman Hagen " SUNDAYSERVICES | Morning Worship oe et B.A, M.Div... 915 am. — Holy | aa pm. a