a Pane 6, The Herald. Friday, September 22, 1978 Quake toll 9,000 [ GENEROSITY _ ASTOUNDING TEHRAN Reuters = Gullduzers pila nore bodies ILO mass graves today inthe i tov uf. Tabas, iy worsl his ‘ie iho fran century, Blure widths thin this cpaale favecRav’ een . ah 14 qe ijere with real ketchup. Hat rinks on buns. Baked ‘vise. Spaghetti and meat- aye to tum your back on these you're ona diet. With today's god Plan, youcan enjoy . Desserts, tao, tata Waidtht Watchers meeting you'll ything| yqp need to know about losing buried, their bodies shrounded in white cloth. Sume were buried in single graves, others in long, shallow pits dug by bulld- wers in a makeshift cemetery on the outskirts of the town. Do id Leawand it oH, So come toa meeting <2 of weilkung out on many of the v2, you can sit dawn and eat them. Bl ee a Losing weight never CER ty t a tasted so good, aa ben 3 ih; a : ine Auinority Ta ee aie pres et yee , (Be) TOU THIS. C_OSE TOLOSING WEIGHT fnox United Shurch EGY 2 won ide GSOd Lavelle 8 yy ty seueghy yo unk Dane naw. rah cod BMye Pil caaivend acer Tuesday 7:00 p.m. - ne IME HN SAS “FSO TAD 1 Bigrs Ruserves BAPTIST | CHURCH Cor. Sparks & Keith Pastor Paul Mohninger Office 615-2407 Home 635-5309 Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. | 3341 River Drive Terrace, B.C. 628-1561 Rev. R.L. White Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Ray. R.L. White Morning Worship am. Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. | Prayer Service Wed. 7:30 Bm, Cathar oe VANCOUVER (CP) — The ],-000-members of the Glad Tidings Temple are more generous than their pastor ever prayed. for. ; Rev. Maureen Gaglardi set oul two months ago to raise $1 million from her congregation by Sept. 10 Lo expand church facilities. “We determined thal it was God's will that we ex- pand,"’ she said. Rev. Gaglardi said she dis- cussed the fund-raising with her congregation, held prayer meetings and several days of fasting. When Sept. 10 came, she didn't get $1 million. Instead she got $2,014,000 in in- dividual pledges, “In the morning offering we got $1,943,000 and some hundreds,” she said. “We gol about another $100,000 in the evening offering.” Rey. Gaglardi said the contributions ranged frum 38 cents to the the largest of $500,000, adding thal her congregation includes. “three wealthy peuple.’”” Founded in 1931, Glad Tidings is an -independent church which sponsers 43 missiunaries: worldwide and operates various conimunily services including emer- Bency telephone lines and clinics. Extortion a hoax SEATTLE (AP) — An ex- lortion plot against an Amtrak passenger train from Seattle to Vancouver Wednesday apparently was a crude hoax, a Burlington Northern. Railway Spokesman said today. A police helicopter shadawed the train out of Sealtle Wednesday night and police monitored the train's progress. A railroad repair car escorted the train at a slow speed as crews scruti- nized the track ahead for “signs of trouble, said Kim Furman, the spukesman, When it was over, “Il lovked like just a juke or some kind of a crank call,”’ Forman said. _ Forman said an uniden- lified male telephoned a BN freight agent in Mount Vernon Wednesday morning, telling him to louk in his car for a note. The agent found a note demanding $8,500 or the ATTEND THE CHURCH Or YOUR CHOICE THIS SUNDAY CHRIST LUTHERAN Cor. Sparks St. & Park Ave. Rev. Rolf Nosterud 625-5882 Morning Service 11:00 a.m, Church School 9:45 a.m. Sunday School, Con. firmation Youth and Adult Classes railroad would “suffer the consequences.” The note said an Amtrak Irain, which was to leave Seattle about 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, was to stop where a flare was placed’ along the track. Money was to be thrown out there, the note said. Nu flare was seen un the train's northward journey from Seattle. About 20 passengers were abuard and the train arrived in | Van- couver without incident al about 1 a.m., 45 minutes late. FBI spokesman Ray Mathis said the agency was invesligaling, He confirmed that authorities kepi the . train “under surveillance” but refused’ ta say huw surveillance was main- lained. He said responsibilily for the train was turned over lu the RCMP at the in- ternational border. ~ SACRED HEART PARISH 4030 Straume Ave, Terrace Phone 635-2312, Sunday Masses 4:15 a.m. 10:15 a.m. 11:30 am. 7:30 p.m. MENNONITE BRETHREN CHURCH 3406 Eby Street 635-3015 Pastor Dwayne Barkman 10:00 a.m. Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Family Worship Service Teachers return but for how long * EDMONTON (CP) — The city's 3,800 public schuul teachers and = students relurned ta classrooms Thursday—but jit was un- certain how long the classes will remain open. : The teachers were ordered back to work by the govern- ment Wednesday, bul they went to the Alberla Supreme Court Thursday seeking an injunction against the order. The hearing on the appli- calion was adjourned to tuday. Labour Minister Neil Crawford said after the cuurt adjournment that if the teachers were successsful in ublaining an injunction, the government may recall the legislature as early as Monday to see that the schools remain upen. The teachers, members uf the Alberta Teachers’ Association, went on strike Sept. 7, only two days after the public system's 67,000 sludents had returned from summer .vacation. Il was the first strike by the city's public schovl teachers in 57 years. Crawford said the teachers’ applicaliun for the injunction is the first challenge 10 a cabinel order since the Progressive Conservative government of Premier Peter Lougheed was elected to office in 1971. While teachers have been furced back to wark, Crawford said an arbitrator . will be making binding recommendations to the parties. The leachers’ assucistion and labor leaders can- demned the cabinet's back- (u-work order, Harvest at | standstill OTTAWA (CP) — The Prairie harvest has been bruught virtually to a standstill by persistent rain, Statistics Canada repurted Thursday. . Two weeks of dry weather are needed to complete the harvest on the grainlands of the plains, the federal slatistics agency said in une uf a series of repurts un crop conditions across the country. Bad weather has reduced the qualify of the annual billionbushel grain harvest. - Own Mae Kryzanowski, the association's — pruvineial president, said the teachers are “hitterly disappointed that. the cuilective bargaining process has nol been allowed to work.” ‘Harry Kostiuk, . president ‘of the Alberta Federaliun of | Labor, said the action has made a mockery of the cullective bargaining process, . ‘ "Once again they have proven thal all school boards need fo do is tu take a stubborn position and wail for the guvernment to bail them uu," Kostink said. But, Ellinor Townend, president of the Alberta Sehoal Trustees’ Assuciaiion, supported the government's back-to-work order and expressed concern uver the Leachers’ ap- plication for a court in-' junction. - “The union has new chal- lenged the government on the right to administer their “jegislalion after challenging the right of the school hoard to represent the parents in controlling public education, sos “Taken (o ifs logical con- clusion, the result would be union cuntral of education and complete luss of control by parents through = their lucallyelected school beards ” Teacher negotiator Nick Leskiw said money is nal the central issue in the contrach dispute. The teachers wanl ihe board tu eliminate splil- grade teaching and increase the leacher-student ratio. . Buard of education lrustees, whe maintain that the the ieachers' demands infringe on the board's management rights, say the buard’s financial ability already has been taxed to the limit, Lust weckend, the - wachers yoted 92 per cent against the buard’s latest. cuntracl offer, Public reaction to the cabinet urder was mixed. On a local radia talk show Wednesday night, sume members af the public said ihe government was justified in cardering the teachers bick becaiise the education of young peuple is at stake. Others said the teachers should nut be faulted as they went on strike not because of money but because (hey are concerned with the quality of education. _ hewspapers NEWS IN BRIEF VICTORIA (CP) — The Quebec language bill is cvn- stitutional but tactless, impulite and drafted with an unnecessary .element of malice, a Canadian con- stitutional expert = said. Wednesday. - Dr. Edward McWhinney, « Special consultant to the task force on Canadian unity, told a service club he is con- vinced certain undesirabic parts of the act would in time be removed. He said these changes wuuld have to be instituted by the Quebec judiciary—not the Supreme Court of Canada. McWhinney said Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, in that regard, had shown good judgment by not asking the Supreme Court for a. ruling onthe constitutionality of the Quebec act, *It would be wrong to impose an Anglo-Saxon solution on a basically French-Canadian com- munity,” he said, - He said several clauses have already been challenged in the Quebec . courls, and some have been upheld and others declared invalid. But, he added, the im- portant thing is that such rulings came from French- Canadian judges rather than’ from the federal supreme court, Humane groups fighting VANCOUVER (CP) — A’ dispute between = two Canadian humane groups has cume out inte the open al the annual meeting of the Canadian Federation of Humane Societies here this week, The Animal Defence League of Canada placed an advertisement in Vancouver during the meeting atlacking the federation four failing to pro- tect animals. “The federation is just being used by the federal government and the com- mercial sealing and whaling industry,"’ league president Peter J. Hyde said in an interview Wednesday. In the advertisemnt, the league criticized = the federation fur nut going on recurd against trapping, for not criticizing (he govera- ment for not voting in favor of a whaling moratorium, for not acknowledging that the Newfoundland seal hunt is continued only for political reasons and for not blacklisting rodeus. “It the federation is lo be effective in preventing animal suffering (the pur- puse for which it was founded), thereby justifying its existence, it must reflect the wishes of the majority of peuple who belong to it,” the advertisement said. Federation executive director Neal Jotham said it was irresponsible for the league to place the ad- verltisement at the end of the annual meeting, adding that the statement in the ad that 10 million animals trapped and snared die in agony annually is untrue. Vacancies down 10 percent OTTAWA (CP! -- The number of available jubs in the threemunths to Aug. Jl dropped by 10 per cent from the comparable year-earlier period to 48,200, Statistics Canada reported Thursday. Despite the year-over-year decline in the average number of full-and part-time jobs, the latest figures show a 14-per-cent increase in jub openings frm the preceding three-month period. The number vf full-time jobs open In the jatest three months was 43,200, a 15-per- eent increase from 37,500 in the preceding period. Nationally, there were 992,000 people jobless in August, or 9.5 per cent of the country’s work force. For every 1,000 existing jubs, there were five jobs vacant in the latest three - months acruss the country. Provincially, Alberia had. | :. ihe highest vacancy rate, with 11 per 1,000, while in | Newfoundland there were only twa job openings for. every 1,000 jubs. Two year pact ratified . Modern, & storey, first class motor hotel. Good location - 1 block from beach, English Bay and Stanley Park. near downlown, shopping within 2 blocks. 125 attractively appointed air-conditioned tooms, studios, efficiency ree units and sues — each with private dath, calor TV and phone. Dining Room and Coffee Shap. Lounge with enter Rooms. Drive-in lobby and free parking, 1755 Davie Street, Vancouver V6G 1W5, Phone: 604-682-1821 collect Tefen: 04-51 161 a | ARMY CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH Sparks St. & Straume Ave. Rev. S$. Van Daalen Sunday School - Terrace 10) a.m. Sunday Scheol - Remo 1:00 —P.m. 11:00 a.m. Worship Service 5:00 p.m. Worship Service ST. MATTHEW'S ANGLICAN © CHURCH 4726 Lazelle Ave. 635-9019 Sunday Services: 10:00 a.m. Sunday School. Adult Discussion. 11:00 a.m, Holy Com. munion for ihe family Minister: Rev, Lance Stephens - 635- $855 SALVATION 4637 Walsh Ave. Welcomes you foworship Sunday 30 0 0=oaem. Education Hour 1:00 a.m. Famlly Worship Service 7:30 p.m, Evanglistie Salvation Meeting Tues. Night 7:2 p.m. Bible Study & Prayer Meeting Wednesday 7; p.m. Ladies Home League Fellowship Saturday 7:30 p.m. Youth Group Christian Counselling | Emergency Welfare Spiritual Resources . 635-5446 or 635-2626 ol BILL v With Clift Barrows. Geo. Beverly Shea, sRAHA SADE Tedd Smith. John Innes, Myrtle Hall. Special Quests appearing on tonight’s program: the Gaither Trio. Subject: ‘The Secand Coming of Christ.” 7:00 P.M. GFTK-TV ch 3/6 Read Billy Graham's new book — "Holy Spirit” available this fall. KAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP) — Caribuo College council and Local 900 of the Canadian Union of Public Employees have ratified a new two-year contract, ending a one- month lockout of the col- lege’s 73 non-teaching em- ployees and a closure of the college which began Mon- day. Council chairman Don Murray said the settlement, reached Wednesday at the ministry of labor offices in Vancouver, includes con- tracling out and employee tenure. “All of management's rights remain unchanged or were dropped,"’ he said. Murray said the wage issue was not resolved and the two sides have agreed to submit the matter to binding — arbitration. The new contract is retro- active to June 30, 1977, Classes al the college re- sumed Thursday, On Munday, the cullege council announced a one- week .clusure because of disruptions caused by the dispute after faculty members withdrew their services, There are about 2,000 sludenis and 100 faculty members at the college. Wve ast Famnevs Rathet the Weld “Het iin at It's time to call your Welrome Wagon hosteag, | Lynn Hickmin . 634.8427 Lois Mohnirger - 635-5309 Lievens aadboee