1975 PLYMOUTH FURY Va, copper In ‘color... Good . running cénd. New batiery. ” Asking. $2,000. Phone 635 3143 atter Spm. “¢piazamar ys ey “min Ane OPEN ‘ON 1 MIRADA &. 1982 Nee ‘WAGONEER. Call: :for"..more —In- ‘formation ‘Rod or Ann at . 635-2261. . ‘ eee. (acc]0-1émar} ‘ FOR SALE— 1920 Ford Pinte?” Good candition. Asking $3500 Phone 635-4075. oN (p10-21mar) P"i978, DODGE RAM | CHARGER 4x4 Ve, -Excellent. condition. Only. 69.000. ‘km. New ‘battery. Winter tires. Please phone 635-3669. (pdé-13mar) FOR SALE 1979-%4 ton Dodge Pickup. ‘New motor. end. paint. job, $3600 OBO, ' 681396. - ‘ (sth. MUST, $eie Package: deal: 7 W7/4, GMC Jimmy 4x4''PS, PB,:75,, trailer, hitch, roof rackand roll bar, Also'1941 S$R250:-street bike. Asking. $1050.'For more Information. phone: 635-2459. | tees ery ene eer (sti) FOR-SALE— 1972 12068 3 bedroom mobile home. Fenced. yard with two storage: sheds. 2 appliances. Set-ep-and skirted in the Terrace Traller Court. Phone 635-3705. : ‘ (ps. 12mar) FOR RENT 2 bedroom tratler'on large lai. No pets. References required. 3 badrdom trailer, 2 baths. No pats. Refererices, required; ’ Phone 838; 1464s01,, 635-4894: . a , Apyo2tmar), W768 rt a BEDROOM moblle. home: Set’ up: in town. 8x10 addition. 5 sp- pilantes. Good - condition. Phone. 698-1807 after Spm. ia (pid. Tamar) FoR” SALe— ‘nxest “1974 ' Canadiana,* 3. bedroom $15,000. OBO. Phone 792- (p10-14mar) FOR’ SALE--: 1974 school bus 48 passengers. Asking $4499. Phone 635-6617, ‘ (acel0- 2amar) | FOR SALE— 1980 - 23 foot Frontler mator home. Less . than, 20,000. km. Asking 525.000, Phone 635-2568. 54 (pS. Yémar) ; _> fatlents like Brian, | . Tevolves around le: y : treatments whic “+ they wait for a trans” “plant. What they really helped us get closer to... - _ that cure. gether we. , ; free now 1-800-268-6364 . ‘ie 532. (Ia BC... 2-800-268-6364). . THE KIDNEY . FOUNDATION OF CANADA ‘ Make it ° fs your victory too! | EE LONDON. (AP) Scotland: Yard ‘said ‘today -the head of its.anti-terrorist ° obranch will meet with police. 635. . representatives from other - | western courtried ‘Tuesday _ ‘in Paris to discuss how. to. _ Improve’ surveiagce: - of saispécied Libyan terrorists; ..- 23 PEOPLE HURT ‘The _.-- announcement: followed: weekend bombings - ‘in London’ ‘and: ‘Manchester - | don; 24 people were injured - bya bomb “ina: Mayfair ‘nightelub shortly after three that . people: Poloce said. ‘the. : bowbags were aimed at opponents of Libyan: - Moammar Khadafy. © _ “The Scotland Yard sald in 8 -& statement that: Cmdr, William Hueklesby, head of capital, where. about 60 officers from countries are expected: to. meet at the headquarter o of o Interpol... a closely monitoritig- . suspected Libyan t terrorists. “Eleven Libyans’ were _ ' assassinated in Europe in 1890, including ‘three’ in Britain. Last. March 1, Scotland: Yard. issued -A warning . to - all: ‘Arabs:. ‘in: “of Britain, arid.‘ particularly pore at ‘N'Djamena . Libyans, to be on: guard against possible: attack. : One of the 1980 victims, student” Ahmed Mustafan, was!” murdered - in: the: Whalley Range district of -; Jeader:! (ol. . o Another blast : ‘damaged a . DeWwspapers, . western . government, damaging: ‘an epartinest LT block where ‘Libyang-live, © b; “There were no injuries in ©: ; that blast, but later a second. ts bomb. ‘on. a “window ledge’ — . Early: Saturday: ih Lon- Libyans were seen leaving. selling .. “Arab ‘and . three. other! bombs “were found store... its anti-erroriat. branch, “near - ‘similar. stores.. and will fly’ to. the * \ French’: detonated by a pallies bomb Squad. in: “Tripoli, the ‘Ubyan Foreign Ministry has denied. that Libya ‘was-invelved in . the. ‘London: sbombings...A , The atticers’ jlinned to > ‘ministry’ statement did not discuse - ways ‘of. more mention Sunday's blasts but said Libya ‘will riot be “held response” for. ‘events’ in Britain. At the same time, Libya denied an pllegation by - Chad that Libyans were . responaliie for the bombing. peer eerererrrcaas eT, ME ee airport that. injured 25 people: The. : Chadian which © has been fighting a force of Libyans and. Libyan-backed rebels ‘in“.northern . Chad, said -Khadafy waa the - new.: contract: - ‘agreement havei readied - derstand that we are not the \. only’ v villains: in ‘this, 4 _ he said. : printed | ‘in Britain, which | cobtain « anti-Khadafy ar- “tthe unfon has planned out -ste'actions, which will come “into effect if ‘the Metro” : Transit Operating Co. does not respond to last week's union proposal ‘by = Thur- Bday, escalation will not Involve a . ‘Kelly said. The -Shutdown of the Vancouver atea and Vietoria.. tranatt " systems, he added. - ‘The: ects Foreign Office ‘summidned two Libyan ‘diplomats. ‘Sunday, . “Undersecretary ‘Richard Transit workers: to. escalate unstrike’ os ‘VANCOUVER (CPy- - Tranait: workers ‘ieeking a a “H. they, want the things on their Agenda, they. are _ Boing to have to lock us out to'get them,” he said. While the union has given the company until Thureday to. respond, ‘ Metro spokesman George Stroppa said the company. has already given jts answer. “We told them that (the He said the union veil walt ~ until Thursday for the company’s -Tesponse, and. ~ will announce Friday any © “action it plans ‘for’ next “Monday, . _/The union bas asked the -company to remove its Hat “of. proposed - concessions, :- “which include allowing part time drivers to work up to 30 “hours a week without benefits; ‘from the bargaining table. the Brian has - failure. For ie a ” cleanse the blood while 7 : ‘peed is a cure. You have, °.. | “cad find it, ut To donate, call toll iF | Maichester in northwestern “mastermid’ _ : - DOLLARS” a ‘SENSE - with MICHAEL WALKER - The evolution — | of. Jabor laws | BR etn Cr tie a ing er D0 2 tes which poly rovers very serious consideration of Canadian lawmakers, The source of the change in a recent policy-decision by the U.S. National Labor Relations Board. ‘ Essentially, the decision holds that henceforth employers, geherally speaking, may move produc- the higher labor costs of a union contract. In the such shifts of productlon would be entirely legal as long as the companies have satisfied their obliga- . Hon tobargain with the unlon and as long as the con- . tract’ which they do negotlate does not speclfically restrict the transfér of work to other sites. In a three-to-one-ruling, the board overturned a 1992. decision against the Itinois Coil Spring Company's _ Milwaukee Spring division, | ‘ Now, of. course, the obvious’ reaction to sthis change in law will be an attempt by unions to In- clude work preservation clauses in thelr contracts, And, of course, if unions are able to negotiate auch an noth toes and firms, one might say, are silly to it then that’s fine. Enitsdeciston, - the the Nation Labor Relations Board quite percep- tively noted that “‘it isn’t for the beard, however, to - create an implied work preservation clause in ped American labor agreement. based on wage and benefits orrecognition provisions.” Of course, the implication of this change in the law is that It- will confront directly. the issue of | wages and benefits negotiated with the amount of work that the union will get to do. The fact that -employers are empowered now to move work to cholces that-are available to both sides clearly on ‘the bargaining table. And, while United Auto serlous plece of mischief” there is not question but that fit will ensure economic realities haunt the bargaining table in a way they have, until recently, simply not been doing. What js more amazing in observing the activites that it clearly exposes haw important the attitudes in sufficlently tight fashion that any labor relations board, regardless of its composition, following nor- mal judicial procedures would adjudiate issues in ‘the same basic fashion as any other and that there would be litte room for disputing the falrnesa and accuracy of their decisions, -What the reversals of past decisions by the cur- ‘rent labor relations board in the United Statea make ‘dled, is that for the most part labor. codes are not nearly tight enough to ensure that kind of judicial ‘reliability. "'That, for the most. part,-. ‘the board members become legislators in the sense that they até thaking law.as they interpret the code. ae _ boat which’ ‘governs labor law across the country. Rather, there are individual labor relations boards Ineach of the regional sensltivities and Ln some ways help the pro- cess of settling differences of view about the Inter- pretation af contract, It also places a great burden . at ronenabbiy on Individual provincial, govern- men In particular, provincial governments must be. . careful to assess whether the individuals who are in- terpreting the labor code in their province reflect the government's basic attitude toward the Issues developments in the United States reaffirm, the at- titudes and ‘perspectives of labor relation board members are clearly the most important factor in determining the evolution of applied labor law.. ; A Sterling News Service Featire , tion operations toa non-unionized facllity to avoid | view of the U.S. National Labor Relations Board, . non-union or other low wage sites puts the economic | Workers lawyers describe the decision a5 “a very |. . of the labor relations board in the United States is | of the board members are. In principle, one niight : | have thought that the labor code laid down the Law: | Ti Canada, there 1s no.natlonal Inbor ‘relations | being adjudicated. ' Because, ai the recent | fot A et _‘the eas provinces. While that may providefor [.- ‘Arrows: By Nigel E. Hannatord ig 'S hard to help the unhelpable. - Even: a Liberal cabinet minister can't be wrong all’ the time and Eugene Whelan was right on when he said _ that massive educational assistance was réquired for ‘third world farmers if massive famines were to be avoided. ’ Whelan, president of the World Food Council, ’ recently told a news conference that China wastes nearly half the food it grows because of 100-year-old storage methods, for instance. beat also cited Ethiopia as having the land base to _ become. self, audtislantsla food pre ings eunab leet gary plo because the country terateand “Seale. ‘yet apply modern ie foreaing ig mathe ¢ ona major scale “Whelan made the argument that the hungry in Al- frica and other crisis areas cannot be fed fully until there {s a major effort to teach more farmers how to in- © crease production in theirownhomelands. He called for ‘‘a massive invasionof assistance.” . So far so good. There's the will in the west to pro- " vide this kind of assistance and the money to doso, why isn’t ithappening? The answer is invariably political, We think they need this kind of assistance. They may not agree. The Chinese, for Instance, are fiercely independent, rejec- ting foreign aid even for cleaning up natural disasters. thiopia, years of clvil war have se disrupted the ' economy there that aid attempts have hitherto been to no avall. | There are cultural taboos, stich as the Indian sacred cow which Is non-productive yet wanders about eating whatever It finds, thus depriving more useful animals of feed. The commendable Hindu prohidition - on killing things also extends to rats, which, ithas been calculated, eat and spoll enough grain annually on the subcontinent to feed 26 million people. Many. other countries have doctrinaire govern- ments of one sort or another, which wish to develop agriculture according to some social theory. We are all familiar with the poor record of Russian collective ’ farms, for instance, but there are plenty of other coun- tries which apply equally potty methods to their - agriculture.. It Is widely forgotten that those African countries which are now demanding the most aid were once net exporters of farm produce while they were British col- es, ad lite as 20 years ago. Places like Tanganyika, Uganda, Northern and Southern Rhodesia, Bechuanaland, Nyasaland were quite prosperous then despite the massive population growth that ac- companied some SI yearsofstablegovernment. —s. Today, the great socialist experiments in Jand tenure in Tanzania and Zambia, the civil war in Ugan- da and the years of terrorism In Zimbabwe have made the area destitute. But when the ald hat is passed around In western capitals, the request is not for education, training and long-term development but cash to finance these inherently inefficient ex- periments. Thus it is one thing for us to stand on the'sidelines, eager to get into the game, but quite another to ac- complish anything should we be invited to do so. lust as no alcoholic can make any progress until he admits that he is an alcoholic, so the countries which most need our help are unhelpable until they make some political changes. Painful though it may be to admit It, there is really ‘little we can do for now except pick out those few places where there is a common-sense approach to development and concentrate on them. Millions may starve elsewhere meanwhile, but you can’! force a sovereign government to do what's best for its people If it’s determined to do something elee. Coachman. 7 Apartments | Deluxe apartment duatling, fridge, stove, carpeling, drapes, undercover parking,’ elevator, security system, ratidant manager. Phone manager anytime 638: 1268 ‘Union LONDON (AP) — Work -whs halted at scores,of coal ~ mines.today as almost haif of Britain’a 183,000 miners began .a. strike protesting planned closures, but many “men crossed picket lines in defiance of union leaders, . Keith Beeston, spokesman for the state-run National Coal Board, said strike . was. most widespread ini: “Yorkshire, where 55,000 miners. ~- traditionally among © the most militant — shut down ' the country’s largest field. He said’ only two of Scotland's 10 pits were operating as most of the region's 14,000 miners jolned what Erick Clarke, the National’ Union of Mineworkers’ secretary, called a “do-or-die fight.” But officials’ claimed many men tried to report for work, only to be blocked ‘by: pickets: around Scottish pits,’ REJECT ‘STRIKE CALL Beeston said seven of the “28 pits in Wales employing 4,250 were. working nor- mally, while 10: pits were strike-bound and 11 strongly picketed. The 20,000 Welsh miners Sunday. over- favored . TORONTO Progressive . Conservative Leader Brian Mulroney is the top choice of a growing number of Canadians for the job of prime minister, suggests..a Gallup poll . Teleased today. “Of 1,000 adults in- terviewed In February, 36 per cent sald Mulroney - would make the best prime minister. This compares with 32 per cent in a similar poll last August. 7 Prime Minister Trudeau . was the choice of 80 per cent, up from 23 per cent last August. The survey was con: ducted four weeks ‘before ‘Trudeau announced his resignation Feb. 29 and just - after his peace mission ” through ‘Edstern Europe, and violence ° against ‘ Libyans living here.” propasal) wouldn't. even be" entertained,”” he said. Meanwhile, 10 buses were left ‘stranded during the weekend on Vancouver area streets because Metro supervisors refused to send mechanics out to pick the buses -up, said. Gerry ‘Krantz, president of union’s local. 2, which represents ‘Lice later sald ‘p a sadn: ‘interview that Britain “will . not tolerate intimidation © ‘yenewed anxiety about the "safely of: the Queen, who inhe. explosions in Britain’ Starts a four-day state visit to Jordan on March 28. maintenance workers, Maintenance. :staff are refusing ° to perform what they - call. management duties, such aa supervising . and booking buses out, " ‘The union, which bas about 2,600 members, has been without a contract since March 31, 1983, leaders defied whelmingly rejected the strike call, an wun- ‘ precedented split in the traditionally militant reglon. Coal board © officials reported that pits in other areas of England, such as . Northumberland and Lelcestershire, . were working normally, Th 45,000.. miners. in those. " peglons: ‘are ‘scheduled ‘ta vote on whether to join’ the strike in the | next few days. The split among the miners, traditionally the most united of British workers, - resulted from leftist .unien president Arthur Scargill’s action in first balloting members, Miners have been staging : ;an overtime ban. for 20 weeks agalnst planned pit closures and losing money. Some rebels have saldthey will break through picket lines. The overtime ban is in protest of a 5.2-per-cent pay raise’ offer from the coal board.:.The union. wanted “ralses of up to 23 per cent, “The strike promises to be the. biggest since 1973-74, when aminers' walkout that ‘ started: with an overtime ban forced Britain on-to a three-day work. week and brought down Prime Minister Edward Heath’s . (cP), —_ calling the stoppage without Conservative, : goverriment, CANADIAN COAST GUARD Sealed jenders for the project listed below, — addressed to the undersigned at 7040 West Georgia Street, 9th Floor, Vancouver, B.C,’ V7¥ 1E1, and marked with fhe coniract name and number willbe . recelyed until 2:00. pm. “ Vancouver time, Thursday, Aprlii 5, 1984, , Canadian Coast Guard Contract No. cowes. 126 The Contract will comprise of _ Renovations.to Administration. Building, Canadian. 7. ~~ lomstGuardSealLCove Base, Belace Rupert -BiGyee -Performance specificatians;slayout. drawings andi tender documents may be obtained from the un- dersigned at 700 West Georgla Street, 10th Floor, Vancouver, B.C. phone 661-3196 or from Mr. N. Clare, Olstrict Superintendent ‘AMaterial Management, Canadian Coast Guard Seal Cove . Base, Prince Rupert. B.C. phone 624.9145. Plans and > speciticatlons are also on display at Construction ' & Association offices ‘In Vancouver, Prince Rupert, Terrace and Prince George. Deposit of $50.00 for, documents and specifications - must be made in the form of a cheque payable to the Receiver General for Canada, and will be released on return of the documents in good condition within one month of the tender closing date. To be considered, each tender must be submitted In dupticate on the forms supplied by the Department, — and must be accompanied by the recurity speclfled ‘onthe tenderdocument. — a ase baat Reese sonar rues The lowest or any fender not necessarily accepted. V. Poruks (Mrs.) Reglonal Superintendent Material Management Canadian Coast Guard ~ Telex: 04-53235 Canad = me [tecue Now at affordable Rates | GEE -PONPaEE | — Attractive, spacious, extra storage room ‘ Beautiful appliances, tiled showers —Lovely cupboards, double 4.s.:sinks —Large balconies with screened Patio doors —Lots of parking: récpeation court ' —Security; enter 6 -—Dra —Walking distance to down town - Family orlented - close to schools * —Hospital, convenience store, parks, Boe car wash, all In. area. |. —$200.00 move In allowance for March 1-15. Professionally Managed by trained staff who respect and care for our tenants Telephone: 635-5968" Property Stewards Western Ltd. TERRACE’S NEWEST & BEST T00 - One bedroom at "9325" mo. |e Two bedroom at $360" mo. ehrt Honiés and déadbolts .” ry co-ordinated to w—w carpets