te we aogier Fa . ‘Artificial’ Dad ‘VINELAND, N.J. (AP) — A three-year-old baby. who was the product of artlficlal in-. semination between two friends will carry the father’s name, a Superior Court judge has ruled. boy aril will contribute rapport payments, the ya con support ents, the court ruled _ . The cage ‘waa decided last month in a closed family court session by Superior Court Judge Steven Kleiner. The man and woman were identified in court The lawyers records only as C.M. (the father) and C.C, (the mother). Lawyers for the two declined Monday to identify their clients or tell thelr occupations. in Vineland when the artificial insemination took ce, ; Kleiner rendered his decision Oct. 2 and submitted it to legal journals far publication, On Oct. 29, a Supreme Court committee appraved ef lake 6 co abe tebe a ate on p Vidrutaby rake sald both were in their 20s and lived parently at home. The lawyers said the pair were friends in 1976 when the woman decided she wanted to have a baby out of wedlock. C.M. agreed to provide semen to the woman without being pai The woman's lawyer, Philip Lipman of Vineland, sald C.C. inseminated herself, ap- A baby boy was born, the records showed, and the father sought to visit his son. When the cy for the child. obtain the insurance The records said the father found he could not icy because the child’s birth certificate sted the father as unknown. The father went back into court asking the peals birth certificate be amended to list him as the father and that the child be given his last name. wins his paternal rights mother refused, he claimed visitation rights as the father and won in a closed seaglon. In return, he agreed to make support payments and to provide a medical-Insurance po The mother had refused to consent. to the ges. In his opinion, Kleiner called the father’s motivation “laudable and is clearly in the child’s present and future best interest,” Lipman said each parent remaina single. He gald he does not think they are still friends. The lawyers said there are no plans for ap- “My client said that she just doesn't want any more hasale over this," Lipman said f- RUPERT STEEL & SALVAGE LTD. Seal Cove Rd, Pr. Runert 624-5639 WE BUY copper, brass, all metals, balteriss, ete. yy Call us - We are the judge’s report for publication. ‘a TERRACE-KITIMAT Tuesday, November 27, 1979 daily herald 20¢ ~ Volume 73 No. 228 i" : » The PoP Shoppe BOTTLE DEPOT Beer & Pop Bottles 4536 Lazalla Ave. Terrace, 8.C. Open 10.a.m.-6 p.m. dally except Sunday Fri. tll? pan. N Extreme caution was what was called for as crews worked to extricate tanker Propane caused tension By ED YUDIN Herald Staff Writer A tanker truck carrying 3750 gallons of propane, an explosive and flammable liquid, Smithers trio die in crash FORT ST. JAMES, B.C. (CP) — Three ns were reported killed and a sur- vivor ia in critical condition following the crash Monday of a single-engine plane about 190 kilometres nor- thwest of this central Inte- . 7 rior community, ; RCMP said the Otter alreraft went down near the British Columbla Railway line at Leo Creek. ‘ No identitles were available. Police said the crash of the commerciaily-owned air- craft occurred at about 4:30 p.m. shortly after takeolf from a short private airstrip. Rescue operations were held up for several hours because of darkness and poor weather. The injured man had to be taken from the crash site to hospital in Prince George by rail, Tranaport ministry In- yeatigators were on their way to the crash alte. Unclaimed ashes go VANCOUVER (CP) — A 62-year accumulation of the unclaimed ashes of about 4,000 persons at Vancouver Crematorium Ltd. will be disposed of in aix common graves on Feb. 1 if no one redeema them, crematorium director W. A. Simpson, sald Monday. “We just haven't room for therm anv more." he said. apen Mon. through Sat, Bam-Spm. | slid off Johnson Road into a storm ditch Monday morning. . Terrace RCMP quickly sealed off the area just below Merkley Road while Thornhill firefighters took precautions to ensure there were no leaks of the . explosive substance. The firefighters, the RCMP ‘5 a oad a ee AN BROOKE... Was shaking Grits win byelection MONTREAL (CP) — Provinelal Liberals chalked up another byelection vic- tory Monday as Hebert Marx overwhelmed Parti Quebecois candidate David Levine — 23,315 votea to 791 — in the riding of D'Arcy McGee Marx, a 47-year-old ‘ofessor in constitutional w at Universite de Mon- trea], drew almost 97 per cent of the votes cast in the English-speaking riding. Current standings in the natlonal assembly: PQ 48: Liberal 30; Union Nationale 9; Independent 3, and Canadian Propane hours in hand spent almost five the embankment. SEVEN BUTANE TANKS A BOMB PRINCE GEORGE, George Hartley, B.C. (CP)° A asslatant director of the derailment of seven provincial emergency butane tank cars here last program in this central Nov. 14 could have easily Interior community, told exploded and ‘been clty council that one of the followed by a Mls- tankers was perched Blaspuge-type chemical precariously on the bank disaster, a local above two others and had emergency program of- it slid an explosion would ficial said Monday. almost certalnly have The cars, carrying 620 occurred. tons of highly-flammable He later told reporters butane, were pushed off that a concussion from the British Columbia the blast would have Railway tracks by a ruptured chlorine and mudaiide along the other toxic chemical Fraser River between the tanks at the mills. Prince George Pulp and Paper and Northwood Hartley said council should take a ¢lose look at the bank. carefully Company personel on removing the truck from to evacuate any of the Pulp and Timber mills. a FRAN WASHINGTON {AP} ~— A ’ President Carter considers the honor of the United States more important than the American hostages being held by Iranian student militants at the U.S. em- basay in Tehran. “The president made it clear that the honor comes before the lives of the hoatages,’”’ Senator Bennett Johnston (Dem. La.) said after a breakfast meeting with the preaident. will take some sort of retaliatory action against Iran once the hostages are released. “All of us feel he will do something else,” the senator sald. “There are a whole range of options — not necessaril involving milllary actlon.” _ Hesaid Carter does not be- lieve “the slate is wiped clean” by simply releasing the hostages. TEHRAN (AP) — Iran stepped up military ac- tivities today after Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomelni exhorted hia followera to mobilize to fight the ‘Satanic’ power of the United States, Paratroopers in full battle dress were seen at Tehran's Mehrabad Airport, which is also a major air force base, embarking on Hercules transport aircraft for an unknown destination. Newspapers reported that Photo by Greg Middleton There was no attempt residents in the area, asa defensive operations" In the Persian Gulf, Security council debating UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The UN Security Council planned to begin Its debate on the U.S.-[ranian crisis today and Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim raised the possibiilty the Iranians might free thelr 49 U.S. hostages in exchange for an a international inquiry Into STAN BERGUNDER... thelr accusations against the wflyet thme = shah. The 15 membera of the Security Council met privately until almost midnight Monday night. see page 3 U.S. senator sald today - Johnston also said Carter — the Iranian navy “‘started . He quoted Carter as saying his first concern Is the coun- try's honor. He said the president meant that there are certain things he will not do to obtain the release of the lwostages, such as extradite the deposed shah to Iran. “There are conditlons this country will nat pay,’’ Johnston said. - Later, White House spokesman Jody Powell sald Carter, at the breakfast, “made no reference to any sort af punitive action.” Referring to Johnson's comment that Carter con- aiders honor more important than the hostages, Powell said the president merely reiterated earlier statements that the United States “will not yield to blackmail and will not . Degotlate under dureas.”’ jSenitnk—-Riissell - Long (Dem. La.) said the Carter administration should take stronger actlon, pointing out The commanders of the army, the navy and the air force all said that thelr forces are on alert, “ready to defend Iran with the last drop of their blood.” The ground forces com- MINING STUDENTS EMBASSY TEHRAN (Reuter) — Masiem students oc- cupylng the U.S, Em: bassy in Tehran today urged people to kee away from the compound, saylng U.S. agents plan to raid the mission and free the 49 U.S. hostages still held there. . “The embassy grounds, the walls and the bulldings where the hostages are held are mined or wired with explosives,” the studenta said in a communique broadcast over the of- ficial radio. The students, who seized the embassy on Nov. 4, sald U.S, agenta plan araid in the next few days during the period of Moslem mourn com- memoraling the death of the prophet Mohammed's grandson. A matter of honor Carter wants revenge he had alzo urged stronger action during the year-long captivity in North Korea of crew members from the U.S. Navy Interlligencegathering ship Pueblo. “T think all nations ought to take the attitude that to seize thelr embassles ia an act of war," Long sald. “‘! think we ought to treat it as an act of war." He stopped short of urging military actlon, saying: "There's no point In me aaying what I would do, lam not the president,” Representative John Hra- demas (Dem. Ind.) said all the participants at the breakfast ‘‘felt it was im- portant to continue to take a restrained position... because we all know any other action could endanger the lives of the hostages. He said there was some apprehension over suggest lors that hearings be held on the shah's regime. Iranians mobilizing mander, Identified only as Gen, Fallahi, was quoted in the Islamic Republic newspaper as Baying he haa ordered the alr apace over the haly city of Qu closed to all aircraft. Qum, 160 kdlometres south of Tehran, the permanent residence of Khomeini, Iran's religious and polltical leader. Outside the U.S, Embassy in Tehran, where 49 U.S. hostages are detained, the revolutionary guards and milltant students guarding . the compound star‘ed— distributing weapons-' tralning pamphlets to: hun of demonstrators : who gathered outside the : gates. Gallstone removed NEW YORK (AP) — A team of doctors led by a: Vancouver radiologist has removed the deposed shah of Iran's remaining gallstone but wants to keep him under observation for the next few days, a hospital spokesman said toda The removal of the gallstone was expected to be the last medical barrier to the shah's ability to travel, Residents want fire protection By ED YUDIN Herald Staff Writer Residents in the area where the propane-filled tanker truck went off the road Monday are in favour of some sort of fire protection service but are at a loss as to how to go about it. Residents on that section of the bench don’t receive fire protection since they are beyond the city limits of Terrace. Itis too expensive for the residents toset up a service themselves. Bob Stefanik, who resides on Merkley Road ad- jacent to where the accident occurred, says an effort was made just over two years ago to get fire protec- tion. “Itréally didn’t pan out, we just couldn’t get enough money,” he said. ‘‘We really don’t know what to do.” When it was suggested the area could eventually seek incorportation into Terrace’s boundaries he retorted ‘I would sooner not be incorporated.” Heather Gurnsey, whose husband was one of the prime movers of the petilion to buy firefighting eaminment for the unicorporated areas, says she would favor incorporation in spite of the increased taxation that would result. Another resident of Merkley Road. Rosemarie Brand, said the efforts to get fire protection started when there were two area housefires two years ago. She indicated she ‘might go for the idea’ of ir- corporation if it would bring fire protection. Cliff Best, the fire chief for Terrace, agrees something should be done for residents of North Eby, the Woodlands, Kalum Lake Road and other unin- corporated area. “There should be some type of fire protection out there, there is no doubt about it,” he said. He suggested the problem could only be solved by the District of Terrace or the regional district board. John Pousette, the secretary-administrator of the regional district of Kitimat-Slikine explained there isn't that much his group could do. “In our Instance we provide the facility, the people in the area would have to pay for the fulll service,” he SAl In other words, the regional district board could help set up the machinery for installation of the ser- vice, but the actual costs would be borne by the tax- payers. Allee Chen-Wing is the representative for the area until her term expires at the end of this month. She envisions a number of ways fire service could reach the outlying areas. She thinks the residents from a number of districts including the Woodlands and Kalum Lake Road could ge together and enter into a contract with the municipality whereby service is provided up to a designated boundary point. She says the municipality could be paid on a per job basis or on a straight yearly fee. She thinks incorportation would force Terrace to provide fire protection. “They are going to have to do that if they ever take in the areas north of Terrace," she said. Stan Kerr, who takes over as the regional district director next month, sai ' fire protection is “one of the things people have been .alking {o me about.” Kerr savs it is enmething he weld like tn Innk inta