..Further detaiis on the. following fobs are fo be obtalned by calling the Terrace office of the Canads Employment Centre af 635- 7¥%., Plumber - $12.00 hr. Terrace. Must be fully experienced. Must have own transportation, = Filers - LW.A, rate. Terrace. Permanent full dime. General duties in locat mill. Must have saw fil or saw fitter experience. Auto Body Repairman - $4.00 hr. Terrace. Prefer jour- neyman. ‘ Experience in metal and light collision repair. Walter-Waitress - $3.00 hr. Terrace. Must be mature and responsible. Air Track Driller - $9.50 br. included R&B, Temporary camp job. Terrace. English Language - In- structor. $9.00 hour. Terrace. Applicants should ‘ have both teaching ex- perience and linguistics. Walter-Waltresa - $3.00 hour. Terrace. Shift work. Responsible for billing and cash register. . Computer Operator - $351 §900 DOE. Terrace. Must be able to work Sat. and Sun. Some experience required. - a2 IBM. Houseparent - Neg. D.O.E. Terrace, Full responsibility for a group of 6 teenagers (occupamcy may vary). Welder Combination = - Union. Terrace. 5 yrs ex- perience. Will be working on heavy equipment. Instructora - $9.00 hour. verre oplca in bome skill apecific topics me (include handyman) Arts & Crafts, Academic, — Vocational, General interest and self help. ‘Cook - $3.00 hr. Terrace. Shift work, Cook pizza’s, steaks, ete, Executive Secretary - $1,000 month. Terrace. Typing 60 shorthand ‘month end reports, exp with public. Draftsperson -. DOE, Terrace. Must have some experience asa draftsperson for a legal survey and engineering practice... ...... Clerk Typist IML - $985. Terrace, To process civil & criminal documents, answer enquiries etc. Clerk Typist - 4.00 hr. Terrace. No experience required, but must be ac- curate typist & able to deal with public. Graphle Artist - 650.00 - month DOE. Terrace. . Graphics (Lectro-set). Commercial lay-out, Car- tooning lay-out etc. Prefer ’ experience but will train. Cook - 4,00 Hr. Terrace, Shift work, Experienced In complete meals & short order & banquets. SHEET METAL WORKER - Union. Terrace.. Must be journeyman or equivalent experience. HEAD LIFE GUARD - 6.35 hour. Stewart. Must have bronze medal, must have national life saving award or equivalent. LABOURER (MECHANICS HELPER) - 46 hr. D.O.E, Terrace. Must have basic tools, must have mechanical experience, KITCHEN HELPER - $3.25 4.25 D.O.E. Terrace. Ex- perience preferred. Assist in preparation of food. Vocatlonal instructor - 1,727 - 2,239 mo. To Instruct students all theory & repair of diesel engines 5 months appointment. Terrace. Fruit & Vegetable Salesman - 40 percent commission. Terrace. Required to drive dne ton truck, must be bondable, & do own bookkeeping, BOOKKEEPING IN- STRUCTOR - §9.00 hour. Terrace. Must be thoroughly conversant with all aspects of bookkeeping & able to work independently — communicate. DINING ROOM WAITRESS - $3.50-#4.00 D.0.E, Terrace. Night shift. Prefer ex- perience. BIOLOGICAL FIELD WORKER - $5.35-96.30 hour, Terrace. Must have valid drivers license (Class 5). Must have al least ore year post-secondary education & some swimming ability. Night Watchman - §5.00 per hour. Terrace. Must pass security clearance. Em- ployer will train. Teller - $7,900 per annum. Terrace. Muat have teller or cash related experience. ‘ verlence, . Work experience, PAGE 2, THE HERALD, Tuesday, August 15, 1978 Job opportunities F Beker - $7.00 per hour to start, Terrace. Permanent full time. Must have ex- Housekeeper - $3,50 hr. Terrace. Housecleaning duties. Prepare supper. Pista Cook - $3.75 hr. Terrace. Must have some pizzas, pasta, spareribs. Uniforms sup- plied, Walter-Waitress - §3.50 hr. Terrace. Min. 19 years. Able to handle cash. Enx- perience not essential. Journal Clerk Cashier - $675 mo, Negotaible. Terrace. Must have 40-45 typing prefer financial background. Computer Operator - $850 - $1200 mo. DOE. Terrace. Permanent fulltime. Must be experienced on IBM System 32 - Must be IBM trained. Operate 3741 Keypunch. Advertising Salesperson - Negotiable. Terrace. Must be fully experienced. Must haye own transportation. Must be able to work in- Gependently. Housekeeper - $4.00 hr. Terrace. Must have 2 references includes general howekeeping duties. Housekeeper - $3.50 hour. General cleaning duties. Permanent position. Terrace. Automotive Instructor - Neg. Terrace. Must be Certified. Teacher of Hearing - Im-- paired. Neg. Terrace. Must be B.C. Certified, Head Cook + $1,100 - $1,300 r month, Terrace. Must experienced. Days and hours vary. Cook - 3.00 hr. Terrace. Shift work, no experience necessary. . _ Registered Nurse - $1124 month. Terrace. Care of ‘patients in ICU maintenance of equipment. Responsible ito head nurse. Shift work 8 ‘percent VP. Room and ‘Roard provided at cost. — Teletype Operator - $806 month. Terrace, Must have grade 12 and 50 wpm typing. Cook's ‘Helper - DQe. Terrace. Assistant cook, General duties. This could »’work into.a.cook position, First Aid Attendent - 8.91 Hr. Terrace. B ticket or better. Camp job, Free’B & R. Head Cook - $5.00 per hour. Terrace. Permanent full time. Must be fully ex- perienced and familiar with food costing, staff super- vision. References required. Typist - $4.50 5.00- hr. DOE. Terrace, Temporary position. Same bookkeeping duties, ie, accounts payable. . Car Hop - Min. Wage. Terrace. Experienc: preferred. Days to be arranged. Waltress - 4.58 Hr. Terrace, Shifts. Must be 19. Must be experienced, Child Care Worker - 5.00 Hr, Terrace. Experience and-or early childhood education training preferred. - LOG TRUCK DRIVER - Union. Terrace. Must have class 1 air ticket. Must have. previous experience Temporary. TYPING INSTRUCTOR - Fuly able io euch typing at a ach typing a’ level of basic typing, in- termediate or advance. CLERICAL INSTRUCTOR - $9.00 hr. Terrace, To teach a clerical “refresher” course. Most have = thorough knowledge of clerical field. Case Ald Worker - 188 wk. Terrace. Counsellor - home, visits & individual & family problems, Stenographer - $400 - $800 TOE. Terrace, Legal ex- perience preferred, Minimum 2 years office, 50 w.mp. typing & dictaphone. Babysitter - $8.00 Day Negotiable. Terrace. Care for 1- (9 month old) Babysit in you own home. Janitor - §5.18 hr. Terrace, Related experience preferred. Graveyard shift 6 days per week. 40 hour week, Mature individual. Warehouse Person - $800 per month to start. Terrace. Permanent days - Mon.-Fri. Heavy lifting required, good physical condition. Counter sales etc. after training. Bartender - $5-$6 per hour D.O.E. Terrace. Mixing Drinks, some serving in- volved. Shift work. Literacy Instructor - $9.00 D.O.E. Terrace. Will be teaching a course of basic literacy to mentally han- dicapped etc. must have related experience. BC, Almost 150 bags of garbage were picked up along Highway 16 on Sunday when Jaycees, Jaycettes the Terrace RCMP and the Terrace Fire Department joined Operation Pitch-In. Leslie Jenkinson and Tracie LeBiond, the two summer students working on the Pitch-In project, organized the clean-up which left of litter. the highway from the sawmill to the weigh scales free The RCMP won the pitch-in trophy by collecting 47 bags, the Jaycees and Jaycettes came in second with 45 bags, and the firemen came ina close third with 40 bags. Bar recommends OTTAWA (CP) — The Queen should be replaced as the head of state and the Senate, In its present form, abolished, a special com- mittee af the Canadian Bar Association recommended today. In vasa for a study on pra ox @ new con- stitution, the committee said the Queen should be retained as head of the Com- monvwealth and the Canadian head of state should be someone appointed by a Commons majority for about six years. The Senate, which now comprises only prime ministerial appointees, | should be transformed into an upper house filled by provincial government appointees, the committee recommended in a study to be discussed at the association's annual meeting Aug. 27 to 31 in Halifax. The federal government could appoint persons to the - upper house, which. would safeguard regional and provincial concerns, but they would have no vote. The recommendation on the monarchy prompted lively public debate a few weeks ago when it was leaked to the news media during the Queen's visit to attend the 1978 Com- monwealth Games in Ed- Tonton. Speaking at a news confer- ence today, Jacques Viau, bar association president, said: “Personally, T have nothing against the monarchy. Even (Quebec Premier Rene) Levesque, you saw last week, has nothing against monarchy.” ; Viau was referring to a de- fence of the monarchy given last week by the 10 premiers, including Levesque, duringa conference in Regina. The premiers were . the. replacing Queen reacting to constitutional equated with a national proposals by Prime Minister Trudeau that many ‘have interpreted as lessening the monarch’s role in favor of the Governor-General. . Trudeau also had proposed transforming the Senate into a house of the federation, composed almost equally of provincial and tederal ap- pointees, The bar association's proposal for an upper chamber. more closely resembles a suggestion by the Progressive Con- servative opposition to make the Senate a house of the provinces, containing a majority of provincial ap- pointees. WOULD REVIEW LAWS. . -The. bar association’ says the principal function of the upper house ‘‘would be to review federal legislation having significant regional impact.” The results of a vote in the upper house would be Clark could set up Quebec PC party OTTAWA (CP) - Progressive Conservative leader Joe Clark is being urged. at today's national caucus meeting to consider Conservative party in Quebec to help remedy his party’s meagre showing in French Canada. Close to 200 Conservative MPs and candidates gathered in a meeting room in the jwest Block of Parliament Hill to ‘discuss policies and election atrategy. One of the party's major concerns Ls its image in Quebec as distant and dominated by anglophones, The Liberals have 60 seats in Quebec and the Con- servatives have two— Heward Grafftey (Brome Missisquoi) and Roch LaSalle (Joliette). Caucus chairman Elmer MacKay (Central Nova) said in an interview that he and others are urging Clark to. give serious consideration to basis in Quebec. MacKay, who said it would be wrong for the Con- servatives to write off the province in the next election, also said it would not be realistic for Clark to count on Geamatic gains in French nada, Grafftiey is one of the strongest supporters of the idea of a Quebec PC party. ORGANIZING DIFFICULT “TF we're going tobe taken seriously in Quebec a8 4 na- tlonal party, we're going to need a provincial wing in the provinee,’’ he said in an interview. “Our lack of participation in provincial Cancer-causing bacon OTTAWA (CP), — The federal health department still is investigating reports about a meat preservative which appears to cause cancer, a department spokesman spid today. Laboratory tests con- ducted for the U.S. Food and Drug Administratlon suggest that the preser- yvative, nitrite, used to cure bacon, produces cancer in test animals and may in- crease the incidence of human cancer, Standards set by Canadian health officials in 1975 allow 130 parts per million of nitrite in bacon processing although US. meat processors were limited recently to 120 parts per mil- on. Department spokesmen here say they still are studying the test results and will discuss them with U.S. federal heaith officials before making further comments. Nitrite has been used for centuries as a food preservative and = is recognized for its ability to reduce the chance of deadly food poisoning bacteria in processed meat, setting up a provincial ‘organizing on a provincial . elections makes grass roots party organizing pretty difficult.” MacKay said the idea of a Quebec Conservative Party was discussed before the 1974 election when Rebert Stanfield was party leader. He said it now is being discussed with new vigor because of the apparent decline of the party's traditlonal provincial ally, the Union Nationale. MacKay said the Con- servatives had hoped the Union Nationale party’s new leader Rodigue Biron would be able to bring about a reaurgerce of the Union Nationale in Quebec, but this does not seem to be hap- pening. The party's major priority is the economy and a second big concern is the con- stitutional reform bill made public by Prime Minister Trudeatt in June, he said. consensus, A two-thirds majority in the upper house would he required to pass legislation on federalprovincial shared cost programs and general economic objectives af- fecting the provinces, The upper house would also have to approve measures relating to in- terprovincial trade and any move by the Commons. to introduce emergency legislation, such as the War Measures Act, when there is no war, Invasion or in- surrection, The new chamber would have to consent to Supreme Court of Canada ap- _pointments named by the . gavernment. , 4 Many of the bar com: mittee’s proposals are similar to those in Trudeau's constitutional package which he has said he hopes to see fully enacted by July 1, 1980. : . These include entrenching a bill of rights within the con- stitution, permitting Canadians to address their provincial legislatures in English or French and the right to education in French or English where numbers warrant. WANTS NEW POWERS The committee did surpass Trudeau in urging new powers for the provinces, - both through the new upper house and by giving the provinces greater control over cultural affairs. The committes proposed an amending formula for the constitution similar to one endorsed by most provincial governments in 1971 at a conference in Victoria. Changes would have to be approved by Quebec, On- tario, two Atlantic provinces and two western provinces. One of the western provinces would have to be Alberta or British Columbia. Justice Minister Otto Lang said the federal government will press for a formula stating that when there is not unanimity among the 10 provinces for an amend: ment, the proposal would be taken to the public in a plebiscite, FOR PRIVATE USE OR BUSINES: AUTOVEST Betors you buy, Investigate the advantagesof this rent- to-own plan. All monies pald apply te purchase. Why tie up your cash or borrowing power. ‘st and las? months rent and drive away: I EXAMPLES Based on 36 month lease A $148.00 per month lease end price $2,175.00 or simply return $139.00 per month lease and price $99.00 per month i lease end price $1400.00 or simply return $124.00 per month lease end price 78 FSO 4x4 $155.00 per month fesse end price $2,275.00 - or simply return 78 Econoline Van $134.00 per month Fa Dod $129.08 per month lease end price $1,875.00 or simply return $139.00 per month tease end price $2,025.00 or simply return, FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL LARRY HAYES- RICHARDS COLLECT 987-7111 BELMONT LEASING LTD. 1160 MARINE DRIVE NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. D.Oh79A User pay med TORONTO (CP) — The Ontario Medical Association says that if Ontario is to maintain high-quality health service, there must be a direct charge to users of the system. "The association presented a brief today to a legislative committee studying health ccats. The brief, read by association president Dr. Willlam Vail, said the association feels that desplie all government efforts at restraint, the cost of health care will continue to rise. The brief sald that after 10 years of health insurance In Ontario, there is avidence that total government financing is not the solid base it was purported to be. Tax. revenues are sHpping due to the flagging economy and it is impossible to meet the demands for increased support of existing services, let alone provide new ser- vices or finance programs to stimulate the economy, the brief said. SAYS COST BEFORE NEED It said the Ontario govern- ment’s present policies are considering cost befare need. The association suggested that in the interest of economic efficiency, charges should be collected by the doctors at the time of service, instead of being handled through the govern: ment, and should be based on ability topay. The association said it be- lieves the ability of the people of Ontarin to have access to high-quality health care could be in jeoparty under the present system The ef said “- government is engaged .. a form of rationing health plan gervices through llmiting the number of doctors and reducing the number of hwspital beds. Limiting the number. of doctors entering the work force would make senze if there already were enough doctors, but there are not, the brief aid. . POINTS TO DANGER “Until data are available on the number of pivsicians in practice and type of practice they are doing, it is sheer folly to discuss doctor- population ratios, and dangerous to place restrictlons on medical manpower, based on assumption,” the committee was told, ‘The reduction in the number of hospital beds also has been zased on cost rather than need.” . “Hosplial care must begin to deteriorate because of in- adequate funding,” the brief, sald. “The only way to en- sure the integrity of the health-care system in the face of inadequacies of public funding is to provide for the infusion of private . money into the payment of services. ; The brief said doctors should be given more im- portant roles to play in the making of decisions with respect to the management of health resources. - The exclusion of doctors from management positions in hospitals has allenated them to a considerable degree, the brief said. -“Physiclans ought to be recognized as key middle management people in sSpitals, and we urge that a major effort be made to draw physicians’ into the managerial process." « Millions to clean up Quebec water MONTREAL (CP) — Environment Minister Marcel Leger has announced. a,.$144-million program. to. help Quebec municipalities: clean up. their water effluent. The one-year program, to begin officially this week, will have the additional effect of creating 4,700 jovs, the minister told a news conference Monday. . Municipalities in the program will be able to recover from the Quebec government 60 per cent of the costs of construction and repairs of sewage treatment plants, ¢ .d between 66 and 90 perce’ of the cost of sewage dre’ networks, depending on the town’s ability to pay. Money for the program, which will cover seven of the province's water basins in mainly highly-populated areas, will come from other government departments such as industry am’ com- merce, municipal affairs ind agriculture. - Leger said municipalities are only one of three main water polluters—the others belng -"" -indistry '** cand: agriculture.}°": 5: Broke de After the 1978-79 program, future government funds to combat pollution will go to municipalities which ask for them and have the support of local citizens committees. City governments tend to put water pollution on a low priority because the water they clear ap will benefit mainly tuwns down river, and also because anti- pollution programs require unpopular tax hikes to pay for them, Leger said. To overcome these ob- stacles, the environment protection service will bypass city hall and en- courage the organization of local citizens groups to bring pressure to bear on city offi- cials and on local industry to reduce pollution waste, 296 CITY CTA. Thee Shakespearean Room ‘FORMAL DINING | Mon-Thur-8a.m.-12p.m. Fri-Sat-8a.m.-la.m, CLOSED SUN. Reservations 632-3636 DANCING Reservations at the Tudor up until 5 p.m. WED.-SUN, 6 am.-1 am.