‘ PAGE 4, THE HERALD, Thursday, July 6, 1978 Job opportunities ..-Further details on the fallowing jobs are to he obiained by calling the Terrace office of the Canada Employmant Centre at 635- 7134, Millwright - IWA rate. . Terrace. Permanent full time. General duties in local mill - shift work involved, Baker - $7.00 per hour to start. Terrace. Permanent full time. Must have ex- perience, Dining Room Waltress - $3.75 per hour. Terrace, Per- manent full time. Ex- perience preferred. Waiter-Waitress - $3.25 per hour. Terrace. Permanent : full-time. Over 19 years of age. Stock work, cash ; register and balancing ‘ordering. Stenographer - 9-9,000 year. Terrace, Permanent full time. Typing, dictaphone. Be able to deal with public. . General Office Clerk - DOE $3.50 hour. Terrace. Per- manent full time. Invoicing through a cardex inventory system. Accurate typing. - Child Care Supervisor - $180 week, Terrace, Permanent full time. Must be registered nurse or, have successfully completed to early childhood education cou. Filers I.W.A. rate. Terrace. Permanent full time, General duties in local mill, Must have saw fil or saw fitter experience. Registered Nurse - Clinic - $5.50 hour. Terrace, On call only - for relief and for emergencies, To assist in clinic. Babyaltter - $7-10 day DOE. Terrace. Care of 1 new baby. No other duties, Provide own transport, 2 letters of reference. Itegistered Nurse - $1124 month, Terrace. Care of patients in ICU maintenance of equipment, Responsible te head nurse, Shift work 8 percent VP. Room and Baard provided at cost. Executive Secretary - $1,000 4 5. month. Terrace. Typing 60 wpm, filing, shorthand month end reports, exp with public, Cook - $3.00 hour. Terrace. Cooking and some clean-up. Shift work, Heavy Duty Mechanic - $10.51 hour, Terrace. Temporary full time (2 months), Certified HD Mechanic Heavy Equipment repair, Clerk Typist - $693.00 per month, Terrace. Per- manent full time. Must have 40 wpm typing. Must have office experience. Radiator Repairman - Negotiable salary DOE. Terrace, Permanent - full time. Must have experience ‘or related radiator ex- perience. Some mechanic work, FV & Radio Repairperson - $300 per month to start. Prince Rupert. Permenant fulltime. Good knowledge of repairs especially radio. Drivers licence preferred. light Manager-Suprv. - Stereo Dept, DOE, Permanent full time. Must have retail sales experience’ knowledgable about stereo equipment. Musthavegood management skills. Computer Operator - $050 - $120 mo, DOE, Terrace. Permanent fulltime. Must be experienced on IBM System 32 - Must be IBM trained. Operate 3741 Keypunch. LA AEE 4. years in prison va ye NEW... WES ER, 1 NEW -. WESTMINST d ‘wrote a book on Canadian B.C. (CP) — Raymon Spencer Rodgers, 43, of Abbotsford, B.C., sentenced Tuesday to’ four years in prison’ for having sexual intercourse with a 13-yearold girl, faces more charges arising from his relationship with the same girl. Rodgers was to appear in Matsqui, B.C., provincial court today to face charges of breaching an undertaking and of contributing to juvenile delinquency. He also is to appear in New Westminster county court July 12 to face a charge of having sex with a girl under 16. . After being sentence Tuesday in county court by Judge David Hinds for having sex with a girl under 14, Rodgera said: “That's crazy, absolutely crazy.” In passing sentence, the judge said society demanded protection from 4 person who allows a 13-year-old girl to become infatuated with him and then becomes in- volved with her sexually. Judge Hinds said Rodgers, Trail won't end strike TRAIL, B.C. (CP) — The city of Trail has rejected a report almed at ending a 41- 2-month strike by civic workers. City council members said . Tuesday night they were un- happy with the report, prepared by Industrial inquiry commissioner Hugh Ladner, because it satisfies 99 of the workers’ original 109 demands, Council said the monetary recommendations made in thereport would cost the city $150,-000 more than what it has offered under anti- inflation controls, The union voted 54-to-five last Thuraday to accept the report. City officlals sald they are prepared to hold further dis- cussions with the workora, members of the Canadian Union of Public Employees. The strike, which has in- volved 75 Inside and outside workers, has disrupted garbage pickup and clused the local arena, library and municipal transil system, The workers, who have been without a contract since March |, 1977, had their last wage settlement rolled back 25 per cent and were seeking an ricrease of eight per cent. public’ f for sex with girl ‘a planning consultant: whe sex laws, is a highly in- telligent, articulate, ex- perlenced person who did not aceept the current laws on sex. “But rather than try and change those laws, he took . the laws as they were and deliberately flaunted them," sald the judge. ‘DIABOLICAL’ SCHEME The judge said that Rodgers admitted he found the girl attractive and that her sexual desirability had crossed his mind. “He frankly admitted that aiter she had obtained her fourteenth birthday he had attempted to persuade the girls mother to have her examined by a physician to demonstrate that she was no longer a virgin,” the judge said, “He anticipated that he would have sexual in- tercourse with her when she was 15, or at an earlier age. He acknowledged that if he had intercourse with a girl over 14 but under 16, the onus would fall upon him to prove that she was not of previous chaste character. “He believed that if he could arrange for a medical examination of her, he would have the necessary evidence to protect himself. “Such a diabolical scheme illustrates the depravity of his thinking.” Rodgers was once @ mayoralty candidate in Abbotsford and also an executive assistant to for- mer atlorney-general Alex Macdonald. transcribing, ©... > * Kenneth Van Gaalen, project manager and consultant to the Kitwanga Native Co-operative Association for the §1.8 million, 45,000 sq. ft. shopping and service centre at Kitwanga Village, told the DAILY HERALD recently, the project has been given the green ligkt. The Kitwanga Co- Op membership voted unanimously for the necessary capital money to begin construction of the footings and doundatton this month. The project cost of $1.8 milion dollars includes cost of training. $1.1 million of this will be ralsed by mortgage. ..Van Gaalen expreased himself extremely happy with the business acumen and common sense of the Kitwanga members, and thinke the village really has a winner in the projected co-op, Kitwanga Is already being referred to as the "Spence’s Bridge’ of the North, Women prisoners want PG program PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (CP} — Some women prisoners at the Prince George Regional Correc- tional Centre say they were misrepresented in a report which will result in the closure of the co-educational correctional program at the provincial prison. Justice Patricia Proud- foot's. royal commission into women's: jails in British Columbia recommended removal of women prisoners from the predominantly male institution. Centre director Barry Rafuse said Tuesday that as a result of the report, females will be removed by July 15, Justice Proudfoot of the B.C, Supreme Court had said that all female prisoners favored the phasing out of the program. She cited as reasons for her recom- mendations sexual frustrations, conflicts and jealousies, and intensified emotional depression among prisoners caused by the presence of both sexes. However, Leslie Sullivan, one of 13 female prisoners al the centre, said Justice Proudfoot’s investigation was shallow and only three female prisoner's were asked if the program should be abandoned, MIND MADE UP “7 think she had her mind made up before she walked in here," said Sullivan. “We discussed ‘sexual frustrations, but we told her we could handle them. “We told her many of us had people (spouses, boyfriends or girliriends) on the outside and relationships here were just friendships. “People on the outside seem to think we are sex maniacs who grab everything we can gét our hands on. We are adults, we are the same as those on the streets, and some of them are worse than wa are.” . Sullivan said the presence NOTICE of the other sex ana 2 busier schedule made life at the centre more bearable than at the Lower Mainland Regional Correctional Centre (Oakalla) in Bur- -naby, where the sexes are not allowed to mix, Prisoner Laura Carra said that if Justice Proudfoot “had talked to us, she would have had no reason to cleseit down because all of us like She said Justice Proudfoot had not talked to her about the future of the program. FEELINGS MIXED Rafuse said he had ‘mixed feelings” about the closure of the program. “We had anticipated Justice Proudfoot’s decision was going to affect our program, but we didn’t think it was going to be a complete closure, I was surprised and has some concern that we had no opportunity to correct ‘some of the problems.” He said, however, that he agreed with many of her rec- ommendaticns, Rafuse said the program, established in 1974, had made the institution '‘a litlle more normal.” “We were regimented, maleoriented, and the females brought a new at- mosphere. We are not 50 rigid and have let our hair down. The females bring the best out in men, draw out the better qualities.” There have been between eight and 14 females at the centre and about 140 to 190 males. The women will either be paroled or tran- sferred to Oakalla or Twin Maples, a minimum-security jail at Ruskin, B.C. MEETING POSTPONED The Public Advisory Committee of the B.C. Forest Service scheduled for July 6 at the Situation. Ranger Station, Terrace is postponed to July 13 due to the present Forest Fire $1.5 million fire in shipyard VICTORIA (Ct) — Fire fighters moved quickly early today to extinguish a Shipyard blaze which threatened to engulf an oil tank farm at the entrance to the city’s Inner Harbor area. Fire department officials said the fire caused about $1.6 million damage to the Capital City Shipyards Ltd. operation on Jamies Bay. The company lost two new seinere--valued at about $400,000 each—a machine shop and main shed in the fire, which was fought by five fire trucks, two tugs and the Coast Guard cutter Ready. No one was injured in the fire and an investigation was underway to determine the cause. ; New law could decrease Vance. Island tourism VICTORIA (CP) — A fish conservation law passed by the federal government recently will lead to decreased tourist traffic on Vancouver Island, a spokesman for area resort owners sald Tuesday. Frank Copithorne of Campbell Hiver sald the new law restricting to 25 pounds the amount of salmon which tourists can catch and can is “yidiculous, incredible and devastating.” The regulation was passed to control quick-working “\fighhogs,” Copithorne said, but will apply equally to all tourists, many of whom spend all summer on the island. “TE this law comes into effect, they'll go elsewhere anda lot of resorts will be out of business," he said. Travel Industry Minister Grace McCarthy has sent a telegram to Fisherles Minister Romeo Leblanc asking that the new law be reconsidered, he said. While the regulation has been approved by cabinet, no starting date has been an- nounced and federal spokesmen in Vancouver said it might not be enforced until 1970. Copithorne, who operates a resort at Salmon Point south of Campbell River, said it appears the regulation was designed to curtail tourista who mave in for a weekend and take hundreds of pounds of salman. He said, however, that some Americans stay at his resort from June to Sep- tember and spend as much a5 $5,000 a couple. They often take home 10 cases—al 25 pounds a case— of canned calmon, -he said, adding that he considers this asmall amount on the basla of a daily average spread over four months, “Tf someone catches a 35- pound salmon the first day out he could be finished for the whole season under this tion,” he sald, ALTERNATIVES CITED Copithorne said fish con- servation can be achleved without hurting the tourist business by any one of the Decision reserved on fishermen’s trial VANCOUVER (CP) — Province court Judge Douglas Hume reserved judgment y in the trial of seven members of the United Fishermen and Allied Workers Union (UFAWU) charged with impeding an anticombines inquiry. Judge Hume will deliver his decision Aug. 31 about the December, 1976, incident. The seven—including three officérs of the union— were .charged. under. the Combines Investigation Act after the inquiry was ad- journed indefinitely by commissioner Frank Roseman of Ottawa. Charged are union president Jack Nichol, former. president Homer Stevens, business agent George Hewison and union members David Mclntosh, Bert Ogden, Kenneth Robinson ‘and | Walter Tickson. | : Ce Sow following means: —reducing the daily catch limit to three fish from four; —selling personal fishing licences—as well as boat li- cences—to raise funds for restocking—the cost could be afew cents for a day licences or up to $35 for a season licence; —eclaring most of Georgia Strait between the island and the mainland a sport fishing zone. The federal spokesman said there have been many protests about the new regulation. He said that only five per cent of all fishermen would be affected by the regulation because most tourists only go after small catches. 78 pickup) $140.00 per month lease end price $2,175.00 cimply retura Je Camaro HT $139.00 per month lease and price $1,975.00 or sim $1,825.00 76 Fiesta 3 dr. $99.00 per month lease end price J $2,275.00 your local distributor : for Kitimat. ‘Get the paper delivered for only © $3.00 a month (% price for pensioners) to your door early every morning. Read the local news with your morning coffee! — | For your classified ads, coming events, notices or local news just call me... a at Zelinski at 632-2747 HOURS 7-9 aii. 3-5 pI. MONDAY- FRIDAY OOo e- FOR PRIVATE USE OR BUSINES: AUTOVEST Before youbuy, investigate the advantapesof this rent: toown plan. All monies paid syply to purchase. Why tie up your cath or borrowiny power, Ist and last months rent and drive away. EXAMPLES Based on 36 month lease 78 Econoline Van $136.00 per monin feaze end price 78 Zephyr Sedan $124.00 per month lease end price 78 FO 4x4 $155.00 paz month lease end price or simply return FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL LARRY HAYES- RICHARDS COLLECT 987-7111 BELMONT LEASING LTD. 4 ; 1240 MARINE DRIVE Foo" WORTH UNNCOUY The blaze was stopped in about two hours, before it could jump across a narrow open space to a Texaco Canada Ltd. oil tank farm containing thousands of gallons of fuel. “I've got to hand it to the fire department,” said eyewitness Richard Parkins. “They were here about a minute after we called them. “They converged on this place just like locusts." The two tugs fighting the fire attacked the blaze with their hoses after towing a number of nearby vessels to safely. Among the ships saved was the Sea Lion, an historic West Coast tug. Parkins said he and an associate were on the scene and were able to report the fire because they had stayed up all night working on important business. He said he noticed the fire when he went outside to buy cigarettes, —¢ . A spokesman for Capital City Shipyards said the fire would mean the loss of from 25 to 30 jobs. : The fire was in the same general area as a multi- million dollar fire last sum:ner which destroyed the Ogden Point dock facilities. 78 C 100 Chev $129.00 per mor lease end price $1,875.00 or simply return 78 Dodge Van $129.00 per month lease end price $1,875.00 or almply return ff return s $139.00 per month lease end price $2,025.00 or simply return, Ele, Bic, O.obryA) 2 * -