. LIBRA tae Qui eh es ' LEGISLA - , PARR | the™herald serving Terrace. Kitimat. the Hazeltons, Stewart and the Nass Price: 20 cents MONDAY, JUNE 6, 1977 y 4 —\ | RECORDS $4°9 and up KITIMAT RADIO & TV Lower City Centre Mall \__: 692-2024 ‘JOLLIFFE WINS REGIONAL DISTRICT SEAT ONEY SWEEPS INTO OFFICE Terrace chooses [Results Today’s pulse See page three | . Your new restaurant with fult facilities and international Culsine. At the KALUM MOTEL. Hwy. 16 West, Terrace ‘VOLUME 7 NO 24 L | _. 635-2362 , e . Mayor . cou n Cc i | vete ra n Maroney 1143 (elected By ANDREW PETTER Biggs. 412 Herald staff writer ‘Regional District Jolliffe 933. (elected) Pease 595 Dave Maroney, an alderman for five years, Was @ swept into the mayor's chair Saturday, racking up — more than 73 per cent of the vote In Terrace municipal ' year-old Gary Anweiler of A 22-year-old Thornhill from Terrace. In Thornhill. mile east of Terrace. Killed in the accident was 22- next fo the truck is the pup-trailer it was hauling. TRUCK OVERTURNS: : DRIVER IS KILLED when the truck he-was driving overturned at the junction of Highways 16 and 25, one-half mile Dead is Gary Anweiler of 23-3319 Kofoed Street Anweiler, the sole occupent, was thrown from and crushed by the cab of the overturning gravel truck as it tried to negotlate the corner from Highway 25 east onto Highway 16. The RCMP suspect that there may have been some failure in the truck’s braking system and an Investigation is presently. underway. » ~The truck was hauling a full load of sand and towing a pup trailer at the time. Thornhill. Right-side-up man was killed Sunday . SAYS BREZHNEV ” understanding “SAYS Nixon. Ford ‘racists’ UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. {AP) — Andrew Young, U.S. : ambassador to the Uni Nations, says in. an in- . terview n= Playboy magazine that former presidents Richard Nixen and Gerald Ford are “racists’’ who have ‘no of the problems of colored people anywhere.” Young is quoted in the paar eat uly issue i saying that everyone in the United States is inevitably tainted to some degree by racism and that his goal is to bring the issue of “ethnocentrism’’ out in the open and strip it of its “moral stigma.” Former presidents Nixon and Ford “did not face racism in their lives and tended to rule it out,” Young No return'to Stalinism MOSCOW (Reuter) Soviet Communist party Leader Leonid Brezhnev pledged .in a speech published Sunday that there will be no return to the ‘“}legal represssions’’ practised under Stalin, Brezhnev’s promise came in an address delivered to the party’s central com- mittee Mey 24, the full text of whi disclosed unti] now. - The speech, which dealt with the new Soviet draft constitution, was unusually frank about the late- 1930s, th had not been . were sent to labor camps or executed without trial. “We know, comrades, that some: years after the . adoption of the current when’ under Stalin’s rule millions of Soviet citizens eraser’ Se hetebeettarieset et hata ea aetna SO eR US Rana “Jail juveniles a VANCOUVER (CP)—Don Klassen, a former juvenile delinquent, says the avince should scrap its uvenile containment program. “The 19-year old Van- couver man is an expert on the subject because of many - rut-ins with the law. ‘You Jock a kid up and our're just breeding a tter criminal,’’ Klassen said in a recent interview. “You've got to get him down - on a one-to-one basis with. someone he can really. trust.” ; The institutions proposed by Attorney-General Gardom — high-security facilities for the most troublesome delinquents and forestry camps for offenders requiring medium -gecurity — are no place for that kind of trust to develop, he said. At the age of 14, Klassen had accumulated almost 100 delinquency charges and 10 ecapes from lawful custody. Between the ages of 12 and constitution were darkened y detention centre and Hane Correctional Centre, a wil- derness _ camp for delinquents. “] was a real little grease- ball — I was hard core.” Klassen was given one year’s probation for stealing minibikes when he was about 10 and continued to steal small items: until he was remanded to the youth detention centre in Van- 17 he served time in two’ residential treatment centres, Vancouver's youth Re couver, . “I was in and out of there 40 to 50 times Over the next three or four years.” He said children at the - Youn said. “Nixon and Ford did not face it because they were, in fact, racists.’” Asked whether that charge might be too strong, said the former esidents “were racists not the aggressive sense but in that they had no un- deratanding of the problems of colored people anywhere.” ong, a former civil rights worker, said the “big weakness” of former of, state secretary Henry Kissinger was his failure to understand that “racism is one of the most powerful dynamics in the world today.” Speaking. of Kissinger’s experience as a Jewish refugee from Nazi Ger- many, Young said: “1 think the horrors of racism in Kissinger’s childhood were 0 terrible that in order to function, he bad to put it behind him. Otherwise, he would have been so bilter and filled with hate that he . never could have done anything.” In. other comments: HS BELIEVED “‘that all men can be sayed.”’ But he added, “I didn’t want Hitler to be saved and I don't want (Ugandan President). Idi Amin to be saved. I want him to disappear from the face of the earth. Go home and claim his reward." VIET+American arms agreements had been “cosmetic: “Jt was the Russians and the Nixon administration conspiring to deceive the American people,” he said. “The Nixon administration bent over backward for the Russians and, in a sense, it sold out to the Soviet Union.” Memphis, Tenn,, motel where Rev, Martin Luther King Jr., was killed in 1968 said he was convinced that more than one person was involyed in the as- sassination. SEATTLE (AP) — Air pollution from gigantic supertankers may he far more villainous than possible water pollution one curring from oil spills, say two federal agencies. ““It'g incredible when you ‘think about it,” said Johnson of the Federal Energy Administration. “Oil spill questions have dominated the whole fight (against supertankers) to | dave , Now we've got data Sharon Biggs, who had been an alderman for. 144 years. Maroney and Biggs fave up their seats on council to run in the election after former mayor, Gordon Rowland, resigned in January to move to Vernon. Following his victory, . Maroney told the Herald that hen was ioverwhelmed wi @ support he received, saying that it was far greater an he had ever expected. He said that his first priority would be ‘‘to rejuvenate the committee structure” on the district council. “Tt has lapsed since Biggs and. resigned," he said. The new mayor will be sworn in on Tuesday and indicated that he will have an. announcement on the -“reorganization. -of. com... - Father A 24-year Terrace resident, Maroney is a busittessman and a father of six. Throughout the cam- ign, he emphasized his ‘five-year experience on council and pledged to bring better management to the district. “Our main job is to de a selling job on council,” Maroney said following the election. He stres need to convince govern- ment and industry to invest in the Terrace area. Regarding his opponent, Sharon Biggs, Maroney said that he was “sorry she’s ou “It would have been nice if we both could have been on council,” he said. Contacted by the Herald, Biggs said that she was disappointed with her showing in the election. saying it's air pollution we've really gof to be concerned about.” - Studies released in recent weeks by the En- vironmental Protection ency and FEA suggest ae threat of severe air pollution could prevent Washington from becoming a rane er point for ojl to be east, e studies “show you how little we really know the - sh for a boundary ex- ion to bring more in- dustrial land into’ the district, Maroney said that he plans to work with the regional district and the ovincial government to Ey to accomplish this. Asked what kind of person he would like to see in the | district administrator's post, which is presently - vacant, Maroney said that he would want “someone with a considerable type of experience - perhaps an older type of person.” He said he does not believe that the size of his majority “has any bearing" on his mandate to govern _although he conceded that it might enable him to heal the rifts which exist between some council members, especially alderman Pease and. Jolliffe. - = ~- of six “T thought it would be a much closer race," she said. Biggs said she believed. that Terrace was not ready for a woman mayor and that this was the principal reason for her loss. “Obviously a lot of people who supported me for alderman were not willing to support me for mayor,” she pointed out, She pledged that she would not give up com- munity affairs and would still attend council meetings ag a Observer. i. “And I'll be taking part in one race or another in November," she promised. Biggs said that she hoped that the new mayor would ‘“overextend himself regarding tourism.” In- creased tourism was one of the major issues in her campaign. Tanker spill air threat about what's happening in the air here,” said Johnson. “In California they’ve got whole libraries devoted to studies on what's happenin in the air. What we've go here is primitive by com- parison,’ Initial findings show that a large superport could generate air pollution levels on par with a city of 750,000 (Seattle, Tacoma, Bellevue and Renton combined). ea eSREU RS NRaRa NR latateteteTaaloteeeny PobaSevaBataPsUaabatitabatats Sates catet el tet tefsleTiTierarene tei SAYS ONE-TIME DELI nd you’re breeding c detention centre made in- stant judgments about newcomers and treated them accordingly. There were “hard-core kids’ like himself, ‘“goofs*’ who pre- tended to treat their situation lighfly and “the so- . and-go’s” who kept their feelings inside. ‘with the bars and every- thing you've got no hope, You get down on yourself and figure there’s - no future.” Klassen said that in ad- dition to theft, he began tantalizing the police in wheahtcraratnetametatatanetctotete turers toaaretalcarss tess stasarsnasetasntveeslavaserisenerereaseseroaeeseare ecmse reat yial sgh ePOOMt battbaDilelaPat tatatet state tatoesteesoueta4stssneasqiatberseventesaneeengeasesecese babobiaetataietalabelttantedetesatetetaressteLonitoletescosisnpenetesi ‘a"a"e" high-speed car chases, stole cars, including a, police cruiser, and ‘was just getting into guns.” ~ At 14 he was transferred to adult court and sent to Haney. - “Vou sit around all day, cards, watch TV and ta: “Feel like a criminal.” Th ere, Klassen said, he succeeded in holding the’ record among juveniles “for being there the most." Twice at Brannan Lake in Nanaimo and at a residential treatment centre in Vancouver he escaped STE SEele esate within hours of arrival. Klassen said escaping _ from a wilderness camp for juveniles to the city was achieved by canoe and hot- wired cars. “They put me, a hard-core mother, in with younger Kids just learning illegal stuff. predicted that juveniles in Gardom proposed forest camps wi misuse their skills. pe “Putting all those kids in the bush and teaching them survival — that'll be a field day for them,” Hah tatate tat BR sea RP SOON eS ga SS POR a SS SCOR At 16 he was referred to a Browndale Care Societ home, where one staif member was assigned to stick by his side 24 hours a day. After three months of constant attention, durin which he escaped at leas twice, he began to trust the relationship. Because of his experience with Browndale; he strongly criticized the decision by some Greater Vancouver resource boards to scrap the service, cannon oe byelection. . (li f Maroney received 1,143 mitt within ‘a week”, , itaroney reseved 1182 mitees yinin va week”, — JOILifFe tops Pease With an active. presence, Terrace's representatives on thé Kitimat-Stikine regional district can balance the strong influence Kitimat's two members hold on that board, Terrace’s newly elected director, Vic Jolliffe, said Saturday night. Interviewed just after he had convincingly defeated Ald. Dave Pease in Satur- day's regional district byelection, Jolliffe said perrace can benefit from @ -level governmen “by taking advantage of the various planning studies produced by the regional district at the expense of the partner municipalities and ar Prem + ett el ow He said the Kitimat port and industrial corridor studies are examples of Terrace having missed an opportunity, to -the detriment of the district. “If our representative communicates the in- formatio’ back ~ council, enhave a two-prong xttack on the problem,’’ he said, “with a chance of the benefits coming towards the district of Terrace.” Jolliffe will join Bob Cooper as the district's directors, HE SAID THAT HIS MAIN PRIORITY WILL BE STUDYING AMALGAMATION OF rete hat it pro e district has long sought because of dwindling industrial land with railway frontage in Terrace. This is Jolliffe's third stint ag a regional district director, He served in 1967 and again in 1970-71. the byelection at about $1,200; or holdup in handling voters was the large number lls. He estimated that here were 120 such voters, far more than been ected, “Tracdonald said that the voter turnout was 36 per cent, “exceeding anyone's wildest expectations .except my own,” = SNM oe eters aren otore: Pateteralene riminals” straight, tho in trouble with the police for a traffic accident and burglary offence in the United States. He now is living with his parents, unemployed while undergoing a series of eye operations from an injury in the traffic accident, He said that no matter what a child has done, you cannot give up on him — but locking him up makes hin feel you have, “Take it from somebody who's really had experience n ¢ A056 056,00, 8,8,0,0,0,0, 0,0, 0,0 2m rghateninatel, Pann SN, hhe has been»