Uranium price-fixing - Cartel hush ended OTTAWA (CP) — The federal government has amended. a regulation that prevented discussion of a uranium price-fixing cartel in which it was a leading member in the early 1970s government sources said Thursday night. The regulation, being challenged in the Ontario Supreme Court by six Progressive Conservative MPs, has been relaxed to allow discussion of the cartel in Canada, but to maintain a ban on shipping information to other risdictions, such nited States. as the The. sources said the | federal cabinet made the changes during a Thursday Meeting, The government passed its orl 1 regulation in the fall of 1976 after a US.. company, Westinghouse Electric Corp., ¢ arged during a U.S. court action that a cartel had. been formed to force world uranium prices upward. _ Pair will try again (CP) — “It was a mighty effort ... we'll do it again,” said Jean Reinhard as she arrived here Thursday to join her balloonist husband after he ditched at cea off the Nova otia coas . Mrs. Reinhard and irs, Steve Stephenson, wife of the balloon’s navigator, arrived on a flight from Washington, D. they followed the dramatic rescue through radio re- ports at the world weather centre. . Reinhard, 47, and Steph- enson,44, both of Colorado Springs, Colo., were plucked uninjured from the sea about 50 kilometres east of here by the Canadian Coast Guard ship Provo Wallis. The 25-metre-high craft had taken off from Bar Harbor, Me., Monday on what was expected to be a 4,800-kilometer, five-day trip across the Atlantic. Unéxpected strong south- erly winds drove them off course and finally forced them down. The Provo Wallis took. aboard their $50,000 orange and yellow gondola but t balloon was lost. A Soviet fishing vessel reported sighting it flying toward Newfoundland on Thursday. Mrs. Reinhard recounted the anxious hours. after . © ‘was about te abort the flight. “'*: Reports were bein relayed from aircraft an ships -in the vicinity, but they had no direct contact with them. 60. Tenders. * Offers for Vehicles Offers: Plainly marked on the envelope “Offer on P.T. no.103' will be received by the un- - darsigned on an Individual or lot basis up to 3:00 p.m., October 20, 1977, for the following which may or may not be complete. and located ‘as Is and where [n° at the Ministry of Highways Yard, Hazelton, B.C.: ~ 1970 International 4-ton Dump with Cab, Chassis & Box, Model 1700 (box Ilft cylinder missing}. Reference $-4196. 1969 Fargo %4-ton é-man Crew “Cab, Modal D200 Reference $-3780 To view or for further In- formation contact the Mechanic Foreman, Ministry of High- ways, Hazelton, 5.C., telephone 942-5555. - Licences and registrations are not included. Offers must be accompanied by & certified cheque or money order made payable to the MinisterofFinancefor percent of the bid. If the successful bidder subsaquently withdraws. his offer, the 10 percent payment shall be tlable to forfelture. The highest or any offer will not - necessarily be accepted, but the bearer of a suecessful bid will be required to pay the 7 percent $8. Tax. A.W, Charlton, Chalrman Purchasing Commission Parllament Buildings, ., where e “AS soon as we heard their emergency locator ‘beacon was on we how they ‘were either goi own or were down,” shee said. “We knew that Dewey would decide that there was it mo sense in risking losing everything and since they were this close to Nova Scotia that the lent thing ‘to do ... would be to save it again.’ : e@ Reinhard family, all hot air balloon enthusiasts, had worked two years with the Stephensons in preparation for the flight. “We didn’t feel that it was a failure,” said Mrs. Reinhard. “We're really proud of them. It was a mighty, effort ... we'll do it Ed Yost of Sioux Falls, S.D., who achieved the . longest balloon flight before ditching off the Azores a ear ago, designed einhard’s balloon and acted as instructor. Palestine to be included JERUSALEM (Reuter) — A three-tier conference on Middle East peace was sed ‘by Israel and t they drew Seek, Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan. disclosed Thursday night. ge aresting a debate in the Dayan said the first stage ‘would be an open ceremonial session a by a unified Arab delegation | rn nelud Arabs. _ After that, the conference would split into two-sided working | groups in which Israel would ‘negotiate separately on peace treaties with E t, Syria, Jordan and Lebanon. ; The third tier would be a larger working group com- rising Israel, Jordan, t and the Palestinian Arabs to discuss the future of the Gaza Strip and the _ West Bank of. the Jordan. Dayan said the working . aper included -another ee points: The problem of Arabrefugees anc 3 refugees to be discussed in accordance with terms yet to be agreed; United Nations Resolutions 242 and $38 should remain the basis for negotiation at Geneva; all the terms of reference which applied at the last Middle Bast conference in Geneva in 1973 should still apply unless all parties to change them. ‘These points mean, Dayan said, that Israel would not agree to a total return to the _ borders existing before the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, that the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) would not be represented at Geneva and that Israel would not agree to a Palestin/at eat , 68 Wor paper, pu together last week between Victoria, 8.6. by Dayan, President Carter and us. State Secretary ls § Cyrus Vance, was approv Lega by the Israeli cabinet Tuesday night. Notice of Application for Change of Name NOTICE Is hereby given that an application will be made to the Director of Vital Statistics for a change of name, pursuant ’ totheprovisionsofihe “Chan: geot Name Act,’ by me:-ida Marlannina Frelenbarg of 2703 South Eby St. In’ Terrace, In the Province of British Columbia, as follows: To change my name from Ida Mariannina Trelenbarg te Edith Marie Trelenberg. Dated this ath day of October, A.D., 1977. Arab governments have yet to comment con the working paper. “NEW. YORK (Reuter) — Playboy magazine has pub- lished shotographe of hudolt ureyev, ng them cat leap forward for the Russian-born ballet star. The photos are stills from a coming film starring Nureyey as the silent screen's greatest lover, Rudolph Valentino. tended - of Jewish . three pages of nude | Changes were made in the Atomic Energy Control Board regulations to prevent companies from supplying information to the U.S. courts. However, last summer _ Sinclair Stevens, Progressive Conservative ‘MP for York-Simcoe, complained in the Commons t the regulation also pre- vented the discussion or handling of documents in Canada. He complained this violated his privileges as a member of Parliament and . demanded the government withdraw the measure, Later he, party leader Joe Clark and four other Con- servative MPs began a court challenge to the regulation. . The government says it was forced to help set up the uranium cartel in the early 1970s to keep domestic uranium mines - in production. They said the bottom fell out of the world market after the U.S. placed a ban on allowing imports to its market, the largest in the world. Without measures to divide what was left of the world market and to keep prices up, the world price would have fallen below production cost forcing mines to close, The government also denies its actions sent uranium prices skyrocketing, saying the prices did not begin to rise dramatically until after world oil prices quadrupled in 1973-74, The Conservatives charge the government par- ticipation in the cartel may have violated federal anti- combines legislation. They also say companies involved were assured by Ottawa that their participation would not lead to action under the Combines Act. Those allegations now are being investigated by the consumer and corporate affairs department. _ Hijackers - German plane LARNACA, Cyprus (AP) — Qne.or more hijackers ‘demanding the “‘release of all comrades detained in West German prisons” seized a Lufthansa airliner with 92 persons aboard Thursday and diverted it ‘first to Rome and then to Cyprus. ‘The Boeing 737, hijacked after leaving the Spanish island of Mallorea ona flight ‘to Frankfurt, was refueled at Rome before heading for Larnaca airport in the Greek section of Cyprus. The plane .landed at Lamaca after the Cyprus fovernment lifted its initial landing ban in the interest of the. safety of the passengers and crew. . Police at Rome airport believed at first that’ they were dealing with one hijacker. They said later that analysis of recordings taken from conversations with the plane indicated there might be two ‘Mjackers on board, . “We believe there were two different voices,” said Alfi Lombardo, of the air- rt security staff. “We ink they are dangerous and well-prepared judging from the icy tone of their voices and their com- mands.” He said a_ hijacker threatened to blow up the lane at one point when ere was a delay on the tarmac after refueling. There was speculation the hijacking was linked with the terrorist kidnapping of West German industrialist Hanns Martin Schleyer. He was abducted nearly six weeks ago by members of the Red Army Faction, a West German terrorist group, which demanded release of 11 jailed comrades, $478,000 in ran- som and safe passage out of Germany. ; The terrorists have com- lained in letters to uropean newspapers that the West German govern- ment was stalling on their demands. Cypriot authorities said they put into effect a “prearranged plan for a situation such as this.’” They Hormone exp STOCKHOLM (AP) — Three Americans, pioneers inthe study of hormones and their effects on the human body, won the 1977 Nobel prize for medicine Thur- day e award went to doctors Rosalyn Yalow, Roger Guillemin and Andrew Schaily, and brought to five 1 i 4 the number of U.S. prize Winners in this year’s competition so far, The prize for economics will be announced today. Dr. Yalow,' 56, of the Veterans Administration Hospital in The'Bronx, N.Y., is the second woman to win the medicine ‘prize, and the first in three decades. Military rulers - in conflict | BRASILIA (AP) — The firing of Army Minister Sylvio Frota has brought into the open a serious conflict among the military men ruling Brazil, Sou America’s largest country. President Ernesto Geisel dismissed Frota on Wed: nesday, saying he acted for rather than personal political reasons. Frota said the president told him he could no longer work with him, and cited reports of the army m ecnegill € service criticizing the government. But the ismissal was generally viewed as an attempt to undermine Frota’s chances to succeed Geisel as president in 1979. Geise] is believed to favor Gen.. Joao — Baptista Figueiredo, the 58-year-old chief of the national- intelligence service. _— Frota, 67, issued = a. statement accusing the president of abandoning the anti-Communist goals of the 1964 military revolution and said ‘Communist in- filtration” has reached into the government itself. He cited Brazil’s ab- stention from a vote in the Organization of American States (OAS) on the return of Cuba to, the OAS, the government’s speedy recog- nition of the Communist- backed government of ‘ola and Brazil’s support of the anti-Zionist resolution which the Arabs pushed Tage Waa sleze gave no details of the plan, ut police and military, units . were posted at the seaside. this port clty woe a In Rome the mani thought at the time to bea sin hijacker was said to armed with a gun and identified himself both as Walter Mohammed and as “Khatoumi.” His nationality and exact urpose were not revealed. Police surrounded the plane on an isolated runway at Rome’s international airport, and negotiators tried unsuccessfully to convince the man fo re ease e passengers before being allowed to take off. . Airport police said the hi- jacker sounded nervous and airport two miles ‘west of | told them his only purpose in . coming to Rome was to refuel. ; The pilot of the plane told the control tower at one’ ‘point in the conversation that he would have to take off even if Italian authorities tried to block the plane. Police said the plane took off suddenly, without au- thorization. Romeairport sources said eight passengers on the jane were members of a anish air crew on their way f7,m Mallorea to Frankfurt. Most of the others were West German vacationers returning from Mallorca, a Lufthansa spokesman in Frankfurt said. . In addition to the 986 passengers and the jacker, the plane carried a crew of five, the spokesman said, The hijacker pulled out a gun as the plane flew over the French Riviera, and ordered that the plane be taken to Rome, police said. They said they tried to convince the man the weather was too bad to fly on to Cyprus, but he broke off communications and the lane took off a short time ater. » The German government: -had requested that the plane he delayed as long as possible in Rome to find out more about the motives for the hijacking, police and airport sources said. through the UN General Assembly two years ago with Communist backing. Frota also accused the government of “criminal complacency with Com- munist infiltration and leftist propaganda which is supported in the daily press, in the universities and in the jovernment itself.” And he id for support from the business community by accusing the government of a ‘‘process of - state domination of the’ national economy.” Frota’s candidacy for president received a boost recently when a group of politicians in -the pro- government ARENA party © ormed an informal cam- paign committee for him and made speeches in Congress urging him for the succession. That was believed to have led to his: dismissal. Frota is also believed to have considerable support in the army high command, but it is not known yet how strong that support is. Although the president will be elected by Congress, which is dominated by the ARENA party, the man they elect can only take office if he is approved by the'army. There was no immediate reaction from Frota's congressional supporters to his dismissal. Members of the opposition Brazilian Democratic Movement accused Geisel of ,inept handling of the succession. ;. The president named Gen... Femando Belfort .Bethlem, - sommander of the 3rd Army, to replace Frota as army minister. . ‘research in endocri The New ‘York-born mother of two children won half the $145,-000 award for nology, the study of glands and the hormones they produce, and for development of radio- immunoassays of peptide hormones. “This was pioneering work of the highest level. It had enormous impact,” said the awarding faculty, the Royal Caroline Institute of Medicine in Stockholm. Dr. Gerty T. Cori shared the Nobel for medicine with her husband, Carl, in 1947 for their research on car- bohydrate metabolism and enzymes. “I will not be modest. I think radioimmunoassay has been a very important Black THE HERALB, Friday, October 14, 77, page 11 discovery,” Dr. Yalow told 4 news conference Thur- sday. Radioimmunoassay is a technique for measuring various substances in the body, including ‘hormones, viruses, vitamins and drugs. The other half of the 1977 prize for medicine was shared by Guillemin, 53, dean of the Salk Institute in San Diego, Calif., and Schally, 50, of the Veterans Administration Hospital in New Orleans, La. . In independent research over the past two decades, the French-born Guillemin and the Polish-born Schaily, arrived at similar results in competitive studies of peptide hormone production of the brain. leader here OTTAWA (CP) — Joshia Nkomo, a key figure in the Rhodesian political dispute, arrived here Tuesday night to carry the message of black nationalist group to Canadian. leaders and the Canadian public. Nkomo, co-leader with Robert Mugabe of the Zimbabwe‘ Patriotic Front, said in a brief interview at Ottawa International Air- port that he believes there can be a negotiated set- tlement to Rhodesian problems. But he indicated the front remains dissatisfied with the British and U.S. plan for transition to black majority rule in Rhodesia, called Zimbabwe by the nationalist Nkomo, a guest of the Canadian Labor Congress (CLC), is here on a private visit to meet External Af- fairs Minister Don Jamieson, opposition party leaders, government of- ficials and trade union leaders. He also will speak at several public meetings in.. Ottawa, Montreal, Toronto... and. re vee uring ; jay stay. . : Canada has an important role to play in resolving the Rhodesian struggle as it is a . Their conclusions “laid es African member of the Com- monwealth and the UN, the 60-year-old Nkomo said. “We are on this planet to- gether.” The front had its story to tell in the UN and the British had. theirs and the differing views would be debated there, Nkomo said. Jamieson has said. the AngloAmerican plan for transition is the only proposal which can settle the dispute without blood- shed. The patriotic front has differed with some aspects of the Anglo-American plan. Of Jamieson’s view, Nkomo said: “I know the problem, I don’t have to convince him. He may not be aware of what I’m aware of.” t Asked whether he thinks proposal can still be the asis of a_ settlement, Nkomo refused to go beyond the front’s formal response to the plan in early Sep- ternber. Nkomo was welcomed by a handful of supporters and CLC officials. The CLC said Nkomo was invited to Canada by former CLC president Joe Morris earlier this year, erts win Nobels” the foundations » modern hypothalamic res arch,” or research oO! _ the hypothalmus giz d in the human body, th institute said. Peptides are the sub- stances built up b chains of amino: acids. | any hor- mones in the bod belong to this group, produ ed by the thyroid glan , the parathyroid glan 5, the hy- pophysis, the pl: :enta, the gastro-intestinal ract and red at his wn Diego , said his plications diabetes, i and in- od two i in the awarded ch on the tture of isordered mericans ek, 78, of . other tissues. Guillemin, rea: home in the | suburb of La Joi research has ‘‘il in the field of population contr ertility.”’ A Briton Americans shar physics prize Tuesdayfor resea electronic stri magnetic and systems. The : are John Van V! Harvard Univers y and his former studen, Philip Anderson, 55, of Princeton University and B 1 Labora- tories. They will share the $145,-000 phys 's__ prize equally with Sir } :vill Mott, 72, of Cambridge Iniversity in England. . Amnesty Int the British-based seeks freedom [i prisoners, won peace prize. The 1977 national, ‘roup that , itical the 1977 p ze foor literature went |: Spanish poet Vincente / eixandre. LOS ANGELE} Domestic film re: the science-fictio Star Wars have p million, 20th Ce Film Corp. has a Dennis Stanfill, pany’s chairman, ind Alan Ladd Jr., its presi ent, said this week th! total domestic box offic receipts from Star Wars through Sunday were $1 7,666,058. The share rec ived by 20th Century, knoy 1 as film rentals, was more han $100 million, they said, 0) a> The impact of { ar Wart receipts will ve felt primarily in the c mpany’s current third juarter, Stanfill added. (AP) — als from feature ssed $100 tury-Fox nounced. che com- ATTEND ~ THE CHURCH _ OF YOUR CHOICE THIS SUNDAY 486 River Drive Terrace, B.C. Rev. R.L. White ; Morning Worship 11:0 a.m. Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. Prayer Service Wed. 7:30 p.m. Sunday School =10a.m. —. 2 dt : St. MATTHEW'S CHURCH 6h? Anglican Church of Canada 4726 Larelle Avenue, Tarrace Revrirence Stephens - 635-5855 Churchi 635-9019 10 a.m. Wa.m. Shyrch Service Sunday School UPLANDS. BAPTIST . chuRcH Pastor 0.K. Hale 635-9398 Corner of Halilwell , and N, Thomas 10:00 a.m. Bible Teaching Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship Service 7:30 pam. Singing and Bible Study Weds. 8:00 p.m. Home Bible Studies “You are Welcome at Uplands” KNOX UNITED cHURCH 4907 Lavelle Ava. Minister Rev. Dave Martyn Sunday School Senior 12 & up 10:00 a.m. Under 12 11:00 a.m. Worship service 11:00 a.m. TERRACE ALLIANCE CHURCH Pastor Roy Taylor Sunday 9:45 - Bible School 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship 7:15 p.m. Evening Service Wed. 7:20 p.m, - Bible Study & Prayer eALVATION ARMY 4637 Walsh Captain: Bil Young 9:45 Sunday School 11:00 Morning Workshop 7:30 Evening Services Mon. Cottage meeting 7:30 Wed. Home league 7:30 Sat. Youth group 7:30 phone Captain or Mrs. Bill Young. EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH Cor. Park Ave. and Sparks St. Rey. W.H. Tatum 3302 Sparks Street 635-5115 9:45 Sunday School 11:00 Morning Workshop 7:15 Evening Services MENNONITE BRETHREN CHURCH 3406 Eby Street Phone 635-3015 Pastor Qwayne Barkman Sunday School 10:40 am Family Worship Service 11:00 am SACRED HEART PARISH 4330 Straume Ave. Terrace. Phone:635-2312. Sunday Masses B15 a.m, 1590 am. 10:15 a.m. 7:30 p.m. PENTECO ;TAL Cor. Sparksé ‘eith Pastor: Sunday School 9:4! Morning Worship 1 2m. 0 am. CHRISTIAN REFORA EC CHURC 4 Sparks St. at Stra: Rev. Arthur Hellem ne Ave, n 69§.2621 ce 10 a.m. 12:30 p.m. ervice rvice Sunday School - Terr Sunday School - Ren 11:00 a.m. Worship 5:00 p.m. Worship £ i\CLE ve, vedy 1635-5336 TABERN: 4647 Lazelle. Pastor M. Ker Office 635-2434 Hon Sunday School 10:0 a.m. Morning Worship 1° 00 a.m. Sunday Evening 7:1 p.m. Bible Study Wed. 7: 0 p.m. Youth Night Thurs 7:30 p.m. LUTHER AN CcHRis f CHURCH Cor, Sparks S1.&P rk Ave. Rev. Rolf Nosterud 35-5862 AAorning Service - 11 a.m. Church School - % 15 a.m. Sunday School, Co ‘Irmation Youth and Adult C’ sses