ces settee ee Job opportunities COOK, 1 $1,000.00 to $1,200.00 depending on experience, will . Persons wishing to apply for any of the Job Op- potunities listed for the Terrace District on this page should contact the Canade . Employment Centre at 4630 Lazeille Avenue or telephone 635- - 7134, . INSTRUCTORS, open, $5.60-$6.40 per hour, Hours will vary depen- ding on type of course any person able com- Municate a skill, trade or interest to a group of adult students. REGISTERED NURSE, 1 vacancy. $6.00 per hour depending on experience. Performing office nursing services. NIGHT AG DITOR, 1 opening, $5.13 per hour, Must BS roe handle full audit duties. Must be able to control security of the hotel, BABYSITTERS- URGENT, open, 1) In employers home- Thornhill area must have own transportation! 1 child. Alternate weeks - ’ must be non-smoker. $7.00 per day. . 2) In employers home- two references required- in Terrace, 2 children- shift work-full time $9.00 r day. 3} In employers ome-two references required-Terrace area. Must have own tran- sportation-1 child-1} months old, hours are 7:00) = a.m.-3:00 .m. General babysitting, $7.00 Per day. (4) Will take to your home, must have two letters’ of reference, in Terrace area, 1 child 9 months old, wages are $7.00 per day. 5) In em- ; Players home-live in-two e tters of reference are required. Gossin Creek area-shift work-some housework-full time $200.00 per month plus ‘room and board. 6) In employers home-two references required-in Thornhill area must have own = transportation-3 children-some housework-full time evening hours. $10.00-per ~ day negotiable. 7) ..In...repair, work on. heavy-duty: 0 sRQuipment,; 5 00., ticket” necessa employ pra: shomert references required- Terrace area. Babysit- ting duties evenings only- 1 child, 1% months old. $5.00 per day. - HAIRDRESSER, 1 vacancy, Commission, Terrace, Licensed experienced ap- plicants only. FALEDERS 7 vacancies, $135 per da¥ and bonus plus, Prince Hypert, .Must be experienced ta. West Coast Logging Two years, aaws are provid GENERAL OFFICE CLERK 1 vacancy, approx. $4.00 per hour D.O.E., Terrace, Operation ing machine (Can train if necessary) invoicing, filing, cash, general clerical duties, vacancy, | be required to manage kitchen and staff and tofunction as head cook — should be fully experienced in food costing and menu planning SHOE REPAIRMAN, 1 Opening. $800.00 per month. Must be able to eperate all standard equipment and machines involved with the trade. cooK, i vacancy, $300.00 per month. Must have experience in oriental food preparation. ELECTRICIAN 1 opening. I1.W.A. Rate. Must be certified one year sawmill expereince. HEAD TECHNOLOGIST 1 opening. $1,286.00 a menth D.O.E. Must be able to supervise lab staff, machine main- tenance program and advise duty roster. ‘SAWFITTER 1 opening. $9.60 hr Uncertified. $9.80 % hr Certified. Must have minimum one. years experience carbide an land, . LIBRARIAN 1 opening. $1,800.00-§2.300.00° per annum, Suitable professional experience- B.L.S. or M.L.S. degree with two years related experience preferrable in vocational academic institution __ LIFE ENSURANCE AGENT, 1 vacancy, $800 a month, Terrace, Must able to operate all standard equipment and machines involved in the trade, REGISTERED NURSES, 2 vacancies, $7.90 per hour, Terrace, Must be R.N, - Shift work. CREDIT OFFICER TRAINEE, 1 vacancy, Salry “Negotiabie’’, Terrace Minimal grade 12 is necessary, financial back ground an asset, excellent opportunities fer career minded person. (COMB) WELDER, 1 vacancy, $10.01 44 per hour, ‘Terrace, To *do“welding ' ry, but minimal 3 years experience ~ is STENOGRAPHER, 1 vacancy, $425.96 bi-weekly, Terrace, Dictaphone typlst 60 W.P.M. Ot WAITRESSES REQUIRED Open, (i) Four in Terrace, must be 19 years of age, one to start 5 am, other 5:30 am. other afternoon wages are $4.58 per hour. One to perform car-hop duties at $3.00 an howe must have 6 months waitress experience. (2) Out of town, if no tran- sportation available, may arrange accomodations. Must have experience, will serve liquor, must be over 19 years of age night shift from 5:00 to 9:00 or 10:00 starting wage $4.00 per hour. TODAY IN May 4, 1978 Following his disastrous Russian campaign, Napoleon ar- rived in exile on the isldnd of Elba and was given sovereignty of the island 164 years ago to- . day—~in 1814... But in February, 1615, with HISTORY Francein arestless state, Napoleon escaped. He was enthusiastically received in France and again assumed power. But his armies were de- feated at Waterloo and again he was exiled—this time to the island of St. Helena, where he died in 821. - EVERYONE Why did they leave him there to die? — Editor's Note: Stephen O'Ryan, 27, was. accosted and stabbed on a Seattle street Dec. 16. badly wounded, he crawled away, observed but ignored by people in the neighborhood. O'Ryan, the son of a Seatile Post-Intelligencer reporter, has ' recovered from his wound and plans to enter law school, No one has been arrested for the crime. Here Is his story. By STEPHEN O'RYAN SEATTLE (AP). — One afterrtoon I was knocked down on a Seattle street, stabbed in the back and left for dead while both my at- ‘tackers walked away. The wounds are almost healed, but I XWANT AN ANSWER FROM THE PEOPLE OF THIS CITY. . Why did you leave me there to die? | - Thad gotten off the bus” that afternoon to visit a friend. If it hadn't been raining, I would have waited for the transfer, and there - wouldn't be this sixinch scar up the middle of my stomach and a knife wound in my back. But that’s all hind- ’ sight. I decided to walk, and two blocks later landed on the pavement, gasping for one breath. 1 first saw them when they rounded the corner in front of me, One of them had on a greasy white raincoat, the other a shabby tweed. The | one in white had his head thrown back, shouting in- be coherently. I figured he was high and moved over to give them plenty of room. It wasn't room enough. “Well now, don’t this look - just like one of 'em,” shouted the one in the white raincoat. He was short, thin, wore his - hair ina wedge-like afro, and. had that wild look in his eyes, like a horse gets when it’s scared “A honky, a honky, a honky. I swear you can’t go nowhere but there aln't a hundred cf ’em, Jumpin’ outa the sidewatks, tellin’ you wk2n and what to do, Look out. for .me,.boy,. look eae aiaeden, HE, Mi susi tel nie by,’ 1 said, SHOVED OFF SIDEWALK He shoved me off the side- walk, and I should have moved. Instead I swung for his stomach, turned on hia patter and was stophed short by an incredible jait of pain on my left side. There was a knife in my back I staggered once before one of them kicked me in the groin, then I fell. The wound was bad. I[ could feel that cold blade all the way to my chest, Later — the doctors told me it. tore open my left lung, but I guess i was lunky. it . almost pierced my heart. His partner leaned over to take my wallet, When he pulled out the knife, 1 felt something give deep inside. I looked across the street ag they walked away and ‘saw a middle-aged man walking his dog in the rain. He must have seen the whole thing. I tried to shout, but the pain was sv bad I couldn't even catch my breath, All I managed was a drawn-out moan. He didn't see me. I moved my head and saw a woman standing at her window. For several seconds I stared at her face, then she moved away and the window was empty. She didn’t see me either. I'm dying. The realization bewildered me. People don't get ‘stabbed fo death in decent neighborhoods, not in plain view and the middle of the afternoon. This isn’t New lif York City, WAVE OF PAIN The slightest movement sent a wave of pain up my left side, but I knew if I stayed where I was it would be the last day.of my life. YVesler Way (one of Seattle's main streets) was two blocks off and crowded with traffic. Unable to stand, valle slowly to my aide, my legs up one at a time, then started crawling down the sidewalk. Every move made me sick to my stomach with the pain. If it meant anything dying, 1 couldn't have done t Maybe they thought I was drunk, but that whole nelgh- borhood watched me as I struggled in the rain. All the doors were closed, but they knew I XWAS OUT THERE. The appearance and dis- appearance of a face in a window, the movement of curtains, the studied silence of every house I passed— they . were.. there, being. careful, By the time i ga to Yesler. my atins’ ari quivering like those of an ald man. I waved at the first car, smearing my hand with blood so they could see I was. wounded, and I waited with relief. It didn’t stop. 1 waved at the next car, and the next one, and the next. Some of them pointed Trouble in the VANCOUVER (CP) — There will be no racial harmony in the Yukon unless major steps. are taken to: preserve Indian lands, education, language, and traditional hunting ac- tivities, Hugh Faulkner, Indian. affairs and northern development minister, said. Monday. Faulkner said in an in- terview that the major steps ‘likely will mean changes in the present territorial government set-up, but the federal government will not tolerate any move toward establishing a separate Indian government. Faulkner, © who is proposing a federal inquiry into constitutional development in.the Yukon, was responding to Yukon - government claims that ra- cial strife in the territory might explode because of a suggested land claim set- tlement which provides for the formation of a separate and the Indian way of life. Indian claims for - self: management-of lands and. control over traditional pastimes are not wn- reasonable, The minister said the federal government has rejected parallel govern: ments in the North based on race, but Ottawa: does recognize the importance within the existing govern- ment . framework to. less than- legs“‘were -the or stared, a back-seat full of kids laughed, but to most I was invisible. WATCHED CARS PASS I thought of crawling into the street but traffic was too heavy. All I could do was ‘ watch numbly as ,cars passed, stunned With disbelief. All that crawling. 1- might just as well have never even moved. A city bus pulled over a block away and an elderly | Jady stepped out. “Help,” I ff shouted. “I’ve been stabbed. I need an ambulance." She didn't answer, but the look on her face told me how disgusting she thought I was. When she turned away I felt only one thing, and it wasn’t panic or fear or pain. It was anger, anger that people could turn their back on a wounded man. Ishouted again, but I knew she wouldn't turn around. It was as if I were shouting at all the empty windows, the locked doors, the staring faces, It was as if I were shouting the last words of my e. ““£ XUM DYING, Doesn't that make one damn bit of difference to you?” CALLED AMBULANCE Later I found out it was an attendant at Lloyd's Rocket service station who finally spotted me from across the street and called the ambr- lance. Welcome to the Waaman race. - For those who like to keep notes on the Incidence of black crime, note this. If it was a black who shoved that - knife in, it was also a black man who saved me. You might not think my story all that horrifying, but you weren't out there in the Tain. You don’t know about the surgery and the scar it left on my stomach, the - nights: I couldn't. sleep because of the pain, and the pneumonia that resulted from that collapsed left lung. I could cite you statistics on the increase of violent crime, or yuote authorities on how to avoid being Nic... -Himized, but! you've already *. beard” thut;’ Beaides,'“that's ° bot what troubles 5 wen What troubles me is the man with the cocker spaniel, the woman in the window, neighborhaod that watched" me, crawl, the people in those cars, and the women who turned her back on me. Why did you leave there to die? Yukon rights and land base. Consultation with natives over the use of resources, including gas and oil, will be neoded in the new order, he . The CYI has made it clear it will not participate in the federal government inquiry into constitutional development in the Yukon and, instead, will pursue political development me developing ways to protect through land claim Indian culture, hunting negotiations. - TODAY IN HISTORY — May 3, 1978 — _ ‘The Wars of the Roses neared an end 507 years ago today-in 1471—when e Yorkist army of Kin Edward IV massacr ‘the Lancastrian sup- porters of King Henry VI, then in captivity, at the battle. of Tewkesbury. The only important throne was Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond. He re- turned from exile and seized the crown from Richard III in 145. * 1469 —_ Machiavelli, statesman and writer, was born, AIT agit Niccolo : Italian :§ - FO ge TS 4 u vi > 4 G be is ie ‘J ip a) : rob - z . ne Captain A.C. Furey, Director of Music, Band Director of the Canadian Forces Naden ” Band, which will perform at the R.E.M. Lee Theatre, Tuesday, May 16 at 8 p.m. “ Admission is Free. * Forces Band here May 16 | hotdin : The Canadian Forces will be visiting high schools and performing concerts in this area.. This in- ternationally known band will give a public concert in the R.E.M. Lee Theatre on May 16,1978 at 8:00 p.m. Admission is free. The Canadian Forces . Naden Band is under the direction of Capt. Con Fuey and is the only full time professional band of its type in B.C. . LONDON (AP) - A judge issued bench warrants today for fugitive beauty queen Joyce McKinney and fellow American Keith May ‘‘in the unlikely circumstances that they return to this country” ‘to face charges of kid- napping a Mormon missionary. vo Today was the day the pair wes to have stood trial at Old Bailey, London's centra: criminal court, for allegedly abducting 21-year old Kirk Anderson ofProvo, Utah, last | September. But Miss McKinney, 27, of Asheville, N,C., and May, 24, of Los Angeles skipped bail April 12, fleeing the country in disguises and posing as deaf-mites. They are believed to have flown from Naden Band from Victoria Since the band last ap- pedred:in this area it has performed for thousands of people in Northern B.C., Vancouver Island and the greater Vancouver and Victoria areas, The Canadian Forces Naden Band has travelled ex- tensively in Europe, and Hawaii. The coming tour willtake the band to Williams Lake,- Quesnel, Prince George, Smithers and Terrace. 5 weg A mutes hy . : supe ot ota gg! sta, - at sya tertere a Ireland to Canada and then to have crossed into the United States. Scotland Yard said the trail went cold in Cleveland. ‘Testimony at a pre-trial hearing alleged that the former Miss Wyoming-USA _ and May chained Andersen toa bed in a country cottage and forced him to make love to her, She once had a relationship with the young . ‘Mormon, who is in Britain for two years of missionary work, * The blonde Miss McKinney said at the hearing she loved Anderson so much that if he had asked her to she would have “skiied down Mount Everest in the nude with a carnation up my nase.” ‘IndustryTrade — andCommerce Business Centre It's as close to you as your telephone! The Department of Industry, Trade and Commerce has established a Business Centre in Ottawa to help you plan your business trips to the National Capital and Australia, New Zealand, Fiji with the Government of Ganada. A toll-free call from anywhere in Canada will out you directly in touch with the Business Centre. All you need to do i§ ask your long distance operator for: The finest. . mid-town $s 5 wot ate Ce ee oe Ke oe me ‘a aprren Tay aie C t € r ee ~4 & clean, large ra6ms** * free covered parking * indoor pool * 2 movie theatres * across from the Medical Centre * a stroll to City Hall i Gis Pr = ~~ oe wets Oe ee COMMONWEALTH'S ; Sw VANCOUVER-BROADWAY. i 711 West Broadway Ave, & Heather SL, Vancouver, 6.0., V5Z 342. é (604) 879-0511 ‘ } For fee Holidex® reservation service ‘ } oid a guaranteed room rale atany Holiday Inn, call toll tree 1-800-268-8811 surviving claimant to the Indian government. ane : The idea-ia contained in a land claim discussion paper for the Council of Yukon fo help you in your telephone contacts Zenith0-3200 FOR PRIVATE USE OR BUSINESS AUTOVEST __ Bafore you buy, Investigate the advantages of this rent- NEEDS TREES Indians (CY), although the fo-own plan. All monies paid apply to purchase. Why. council insists that the paper tle up your cash or borrowing power, Ist and last The Business Centre will provide answers on Government of Canada pro- cotacils final postion ° months rent and drive away. 24-hour answering service, recording your grams affecting your business, whether Or Jack Hitberd, Yukon ‘ EXAMPLES telephone calls in off-hours for response you're in small business or in a : tte ; Based on 36 month lease within a day. large corporation. exe eat ye eaponaible for. 78 F 230 pe — Tr 7 _ _ The Business Centre can get you Indian affairs, = haS Bi sy4g.c0 per month $138.00 per month eet per moni For your convenience while in Ottawa, the Business Centre is located at: , denounced -the paper 88 Besse end price | nd lease end price C i frightening. He said native ease end price i Level Ol (Centre area} land claims are polerizing ) 22’172:% $1,975.00 $1,875.00 235 Queen Street i the white and native com- p-crimply return | or simply return] or simply retuin | Ottawa, Ontario : , _ (1a Camaro HT] 7a zephyr Sedan] 78 Dodge Van incl. | ; ; : munlttee BUILD ‘ $139.00 per month] $124.00 per month I $129.00 per mont. ar mare: 995-5771 | "Bad feeling hag been | lease end price] tease end price] lease end prise 9. _ ; P , . . ‘ building for some time— $2,025.00 $1,825.00 $1,875.00 mr ie be There is also an Industry, Trade and Commerce Regional Office at: | people feel they re, boing or simply return] or simply return] or simply retuge a ; . British Columbia and Yukon Region * . left out of landclaim 676 Flestaddr.. [78 F150 4x 4 7a Olds Cutlasy eo ; 0. Box 49178, Suite 2743 : i discussion, he sald, te $99.00 per month $155.00 per month $139.00 per month Bental Centre, Toner Ww situation now is appraac : i ' oases Psat lena ossoe ee VANCOUVER: British Columbia V7X 1KB "Tal. (604) 6661434 Tony Abbott, Minister of State tor Small Business _ - Hibberd said the federal government is guilty of | encouraging native or simply return | or simply return, a ; a : Jack Horner, Minister FOR FURTHER INFORMATION industry, Trade and Commerce izations to pursue . : TREES... AGROWING CONCERN Oa a tet bouls, CALL LARRY HAYES- RICHARDS - Goverment Gouvemement | “Faulkner replied that COLLECT 967-7111 BS cicarocs” st Cows * there ‘will be no reolal BELMONT LEASINGLTO, — Industry, Tade Industrie harmony, in the territory without ‘ ensuring the preservation of Indian lands 1 1460 MARINE DRIVE et Commerce NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C, D.00479A, and Commerce AN CANADIAN FORESTRY ASSOCIATION AND YOUR PROVINCIAL FORESTRY ASSOCIATION ener aia