hegislatire hibrar . | ficliament Butlel? ngs - Victoria , Bc. Lo: \ ‘Planes, resumed nd hing and-from Canadian airports ._ fic controllerrs began returning “on Wedneeday au ar to work, —— “Ray, Ferguson, enr ite services:-at Toronto Internation backlog of air traffic gradually ” Bythe canadian press manager for air traffic Airport, said -the Wednesday and that air traffic should be back to normal He said the airport was two short of a full staff of 42 air “controllers for the Wednesday evening shift and was able to handle all airport traffic. — Most ‘of the 2,200 controllers across the country. returned to. work Wedn an eend to the three-day s across the countr ‘after Parliament ordered - e that grounded air service a After passing the 1 legislation ordering the return’ to - Terrace service back to normal. _- : a Herald statt writer » Airline Vancouver and Prince George * ‘from Terrace t should d be back to. prs today. The air traffic controllers | were legislated back to work ednesday mor: after an: emergency, night meeting of par jament in Ottawa. Northern Thunderbird Air © Lowell Ritchey said -his ‘company would | start flying out of «Prince - Gearge again ‘this moraing.’ service » to : “) Since: there is no backlog of passen ers, Northern not be having any extra Air manager Peter Chettle said yesterda his: company would tat ‘resuming ar flights, The ote tht from’ + - Vancouver came in on time... and 72 of 107. seats were taken. the strike, so during . Ar had no ‘backlog. was being cleared late — - a 747: bound for Vancouver with 356 passengers. It lin a underbird ° Airlines - will ‘play ‘Harrison Airways had “heen passengers out . of’ the Terrace Airport — . : tack to normal by: early today. a summer recess interrupted by a two-day special del last week on Plans for a northern gas pipeline. an Tuesday to end the strike. Theyreturn Oct. 17. _- ‘Controllers were slow to return in Tornto, the'¢ grounded most of the day. .. Ministry. of tratisport officials seciised the contro “We are not directing guys not to go back tow ‘said “Jim Kilburn, Toronto region director of :the. : Canadian Air Traffic Control Association. ‘“The strike {s'° am ‘over as far as we are concerned,” ope The first flight to leave Toronto was CP Air’s fli ‘1:20 p.m. The first Air Canada plane to leave was eft 3858, a 747 to London that took off at 2: 34 p.m. with b if matt said ule toda: - Michael De Wilde, an Air Canada spoke airline expected to return to its:normalé It planned to run 21 flights out’ of T Wednesday, instead of the normal 2 . American Airlines’ first flight left for . p.m, and a spokesman said the airline would res “normal schedule of departures and arrivals. at. 7 aan ris across: ‘the by the end of the day but the ho! dup i in onto today. “Planes were going i in and out of 170 ai havoc with timetables. In Jn Calgary, Pacific Western Airlines recalled. 200 employees in Alberta, British: Columbia andj Notawert Territories who had been laid off during strike. Spokesman Brian on said servi resume by Wednesday nigh In Winnipeg, airline rec 600 employees . laid off ‘during ; “We're right back to being an airline with w Del Farrago, station manager for. Northwes ‘airline atthe Winnipeg airport. he _ ‘Flights began leaving ax Wednesday’ ann spokesman Paul -Emmerson: said Sperations wo "work; t the MPs and senators rake ee resum : that supervises almost all Ontario. alrspace, causing. transcontinental and international. flights, to: “remain: _ union of advising its members to disre regard the return i. _ work order, but union officials deni . : a, je aptbesan ‘for Transair - Ltd in strike and conaned. artal service. ‘Wedhoaday, in: * Manitoba and. Ontario. P » Serving Terrace, Kitimat, the Hazelions, Stewart and the Nass | Price: 20 cents THURSDAY, AUGUST 1 im) . RYOLUME 71NO..70". a errace-Kit matres dents and vis : once again take to the air when they want to © ’ ‘travel. between Prince Rupert, Vancouver ‘and here. Although Harrison Airways have ; been taking passengers out of the Terrace. rs can Airport g the strike which ‘began ‘earlier’ this week over an alr traffic . _ eontrollers dispute the familiar Boeing 737 ~.Jet was not seen here until Wednesday at 6:15 _ p.m. when these passengers arrived. . ahi . ‘ “Some ethin g wicked It's fri and Brenda Taft. person's blood. ish play _ this way comes By BRIANGREGG .. _ Herald staff writer 9.” _ mae tening when one stops to consider what Bria. & e Paisley as done With Jennifer Langiey, Helen Crowder. *- These three attractive women have been transformed into the foulest, ugliest looking hags that ever ‘chilled a - Bewarned that when they. speak: “Double double; toil ‘and trouble...Fire burn and: cauldron bubble” they are | : more than three actresses reciting lines by a well known i ywright, William Shakespeare.’ * every yar on stage. becomes sinister | and the audience may well remember the three’ witches as one of OEE «thet most memorable‘parts of the play ie." They are me aces is more re wri “Vand: Saturd: costuming takes- tering across the’ stage audience ue’ creatures . ‘nose, foreboding in front of a cauldron or wraiths out: of some : oy move with the very exsenseof th pla y iteelt. : “Macbeth, performed at the REM: Lee ay at 8 pm.: each, evening; is “a production you won't want to miss, wy etfoctt “The stage design is simple yet. very effective. The (i f ga ie ee RES action which & i take the audience, aback at the moet t gnexpectod J eatre Friday a local nidance for the very he performances. At least 18 + fit incl marries scoot were | elled. by elusswinging . What wicked deeds will Jennifer Langley (left), Helen Crowder and Brenda Taft (right) do this weekend. The performances of Macheth will reveal the. answers, See tory for more details. ; ~ bricks sand hotles at troops. "Campa . researc er, and his many tes She ig really 1 rather good ‘ooking ‘but when Jenni Langley is a Macbeth witch she deenn’t fool around) 5." ‘they hurled Troops and police block . the march in a narrow ocked . and ordered the marchers to disperse. They replied. with a barrage of ‘bricks and stones. i Then troops. screens of armored cars and gr rabbed ringleaders irecting the rioters. The soldiers fired volleys ‘of six-inch plastic bullets from riot guns and several of the young demonstrators fell sereaming to the rubble- - strewn ground, “The army Four rushed - to hospital . Herald siat writer Four persons. were taken to Mills. Memorial Hospital following a spectacular car-- truck aceldent in. Terrace “Wednesday night. At press time details were “still cketeb y. but it appeared a red Ford truck swerved into the wrong. lane while - proceeding east on ‘Keith - near the tourist bureau. © The. truck “apparently struek‘a Firebird with three octipants head-on. he car caught, fre; Te¥race [re department pePSonnel rushed to. smother the flames, ~. -A hospital spokesman said tt was too early to provide details on, the extent of injuries. - No names were relensed. Arise Republi ‘A small bomb ‘expl on the ~ route 30. without warnin marchers’. plann minutes before the riot erupted. Two persons were injured, police said. It was not known, who planted the bomb. moved in - . from three” sides’ behind The march was organized Sein Finn, the litical Pyrat rian, the Pe , to, post in ‘protest the visit which the say reaffirms Britis outed ab over, the. dis- counties, The IRA He other Catholics want.to unite Northern Ireland with the largely Catholic Irish Republic in the south, but Protest in prisons: ‘A day.of protest at ‘federal maximum-security prisons aerate Canad a ja was ghlig esday by the escape of five jiary in from ‘the peniten Prince Albert, Sask.. ‘Four of the five were cap- tured a few hours later by RCMP near Weirdale, 35 meles. northeast ‘of Prince Albert. The fifth prisoner, a convicted murderer serving al life sentence, still was at 6, , our perzons, including the -Prot oded ” xoloded in Londonderry, Weather. Wednesday: High 31 Low l4 Thursday: High mid 20's ... Low 11t015 Mealy ‘clear: Political appointee Iona Cam agnolo, 1 MF for Skeena and Minister of. State for Fi Desson, currently: a Amateur long-time: Kitimat ane ont to her “Mastera student in Carleton ort, has added a ttawa staff, University’s Institute “at Canadian Studies in Ottawa, will aid the Minister asa part-time research assistant -- goneentrating on constituency affairs.- “Yim pleased to olo said, “His have Ken aboard”, ence a8 & journalist and es in the Kitimat area, will me to give better service tomy constituents’’. ys son, who won. the reatigious University Medal in Journalism last year following undergraduate work | political science. fol at Carleton, is currently pursing studies in Metory and ‘He has lived in Kitimat since 1958. In his new capacity, Desson will keep in close. touch yith area residents directly,. or ‘through. Mrs : olo’s constituency staff, Peter Jones - an Siva icdonald, based in: Terrace. ‘north’s majori tants one nation Two: .. other: where another | rotest march was held. -headquarters reported a car bomb blew up outside an orm base in Crossmaglen e touchy border with the Irish Republic. A spokesman said TRA gunmen sho an arm Londonderry. ccd casualties were reported in Londonderry or Crossmaglen. -The IRA's violent Provisional wing had vowed .to unleash a ‘‘blitz to. remember” when the Queen | three penitentiary staff, who had been taken hostage in two stages by the prisoners were unharmed. Saskatchewan was one of six federal - penitentiaries | ‘involved in the day of protest, Prisoners were protesting — the deaths of prisoners in jails and alleged delays in mplementing rerommendations of a government report on prison reform. | Before news. of the Saskatchewan break was released a risoners’ spokesman escribed support for the 94-hour obeat as more widespread : Davi Cole, ‘a member of _the Law Union of Ontario, said “the extent of the action is indicative of the strength of feeling.” The protest. too! ‘the form of a hunger.strike at five prisons and a refusal: to out prison duties at ano er. a way of demonstrating the prisoners’ continuing con- cern to the media and the public at large, it has worked well,’’ said Cole. At theB.C. penitentiary in New Westminister, prisoners ate breakfast but en. refused to work and were locked in their. cells, sald:a spokesman. At Millhaven institution . and the Prison for Women in Kingston, Ont., prisoners refused. meals throughout Wednest we rehambault institution in Ste. Annes de “unived. ‘tot: her’ "two-day ‘ gilver jubilee visit. . The: ; hanger to | aboard ° eat royal ; yacht Britannia, escor iby’ the oat Fife: She was ten by thousands “ sup) Bella ring Suppoten and a aeun see ‘arrival: followed five days of violence. in. which a ’ British soldier and'a;Roman , Catholic teen-ager-., were ed British authorities mounted ‘‘Operation Monarch” to protect the Queen and contain the vio-- lence. More. than 32,300 police mounted security oops a the. bigges e in five years. operation? Plaines, Que., and the Laval institution in Ville de Laval, Que.,ne. similar situation was réported by prison icials. About one:third of the 350 ers .at.. the © federal nitentiary at Dorchester, .B;, refused lunch after oin.. in the er strike for‘ breakfast, prison director, Tom Te cea Frances - Fox sald Tuesday that the tests would not achieve. he prisoners’. goal: of: rats up implementation the recommenda that he needs more ti study the report's 65 recommendations, = LOTTERY “NUMBERS | “ . WINNIPEG (CP) — Five numbers worth $10,000 each were drawn Wednesday night in the Western Express Lottery. The winning numbers for $100,000 were 214M in serles 18, 10887 in serles 13, 31991 in serles 12, 78755 In series 4 and 68144 in series 25. . .. The identical numbers in any other series are worth $1,000 each. nae t core prizes ran rom 925 to 3100 go to holders of tlekets in which the last four and last three . digits correspond with those on the winnie. numeSers...