Page 6, The Harald, Friday, November 16, 1979 ANNOUNCEMENT VICTOR P. HAWES, Optometrist wishes to announce that he has moved dis office to the Skeena Mall. For appointment please phone ! i ! A l i q Trudeau spent all the money By JOHN FERGUSON OTTAWA (CP) — Prime Minister Clark sald Thur- sday he is not certain how Pierre Trudeau managed to spend nearly half the annual a +a a_i! C“nn ay 1) l WHEH YOU MARE A TOP DOG DEAL... us K I K 1 { 1977 COUGAR XR7 Va auto trans., PS & PB A 4 A rs 7 " i ' 1 1 fi M fi I i i $5395 | ’ 1978 T-BIRD TOWN LANDAU Air conditioned, slareo 8 track, power seats & windows a 1974 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE 1976 MAZDA 808 2 DR. S.W. Excellent conditlon ad Ga —— co . evi 1977 FORD E150 ECONOLINE Short w. base van, Vé auto. trans, ad ad ert 7 —) esi tf? . an cs ep er —> 1974 THUNDERBIRD - Vé auto, stereo. alr conditloning a) A .™ ann eS | 1979 ZEPHYR 4 DOOR S.W. V8 auto, PS, PB, 11,000 kilos. 1979 THUNDERBIRD 18,000 kilos. 1977 FORD F350 CREWCAB Ve automatic, 6 ft, box. $8295 | 1978 FORD BRONCO VB radio, 4 speed = ae | 1979 FORD F250 PICKUP Only 6000 kitos., V8 auto trans. cS 1977 DATSUN PICKUF 4spead, 4 cyl., short box 4° $4195 | at a a 1978 FORD VAN CONVERSION Security conversion, fridga, furnace, ai. $12,995 Only 4000 Klos. 1979 20 FT.OKANAGAN MOTURHOME $20,595 1978 DATSUN 4x4 PICKUP 4cyl., 4 speed, radio a Te] $4995 4631 Keith Terrace Totem Ford noe Sales Ltd. “Dealer Wo. 55488 | a — + el > | 1 > — > ee ~ e- 1e 1 -— —~ 625-4984 — . $7695 | budget for the prime tainiater’s office during his last two months in office. Clark said at a rare prime ministerial appearance before’ a Commons com- mittee that Trudeau spent $1.1 million during April and May, a period which corresponds with the elec- tion campa He conc portion of that amount — about $448,000 — was used for severance and vacation pay for staff in the prime minister’s office wha did not move with Trudeau into the office of the Opposition leader. But he added that “even excluding severance and vacation pay allowances, spending months averaged almost $334,000 (a month) — 70 per cent above the spending rate allowed by the estimates,” The total annual budget for the office — which includes policy advisers, support staff and a letter-writing staff — 1s $2.76 million, Asked by reporters later if he was suggesting that Trudeau had used the money on election expenses, Clark replied that he was not, But he noted that there had been a ‘fairly dramatic in- crease” in spending for con- tract ataif during the period. An alde to Trudeau said later the office was not used far extra election spending | ed that a hefty | during those two 3 Jean Thomson and Marily n McLeod of Terrace visited the construction site of the proposed Canadian Cancer Society lodge in Vancouver last week. The 48-bed, two- storey building will house cancer out-patients from areas outside of Vancouver who must remain in the . city while undergoing treatment. At present, patients from outside Vancouver must stay in hotels, motels, private homes and at Shaughnessy Manor, a senior citizens retirement facility. It is a make-do situation which does not meet the needs of patients who often mustremain in the city for as long as six weeks during a course of brief daily treatment at the clinic. The lodge, first of its kind in B.C., will open in mid-1980. Time to quit shooting LONDON (AP) — With the major political difficulties in the Zimbabwe Rhodesia peace talks overcome, ceasefire negotiations are dye to atart between black and white commanders whose armies have been Ing for seven years. Foreign Secretary Lord Carrington on Thursday secured agreement from the ’ Patriotic Front guerrilla alliance and Bishop Abel Muzorewa's bi-racial ad- ministration to Britain's plan for direct rule during prelndependence elections. The limetight in the talks then switched today to the military commanders whose armies have fought an in- creasingly bloody war which has coat more that 20,000 lives, British sources cautioned late Thursday there are still problems. But the sources said if all goes well a ceasefire can be agreed to within a week and a British. RE-ELECT governor might be on his way to the territory early in December. Lt.-Gen, Peter Walls, su- preme commander of Muzo- rewa's army, police and air force, and Josiah Tongogara, head of the larger of the Patriotic Front’s two guerrilla ar- mies, have both been in London for most of the conference that began 10 weeks ago. Tongogara heads Robert Mugabe's guerrilla army in Mozambique. Lookout Musifa, com- miander of front co-leader Joshua Nkomo’s forces in Zambla, has not yet arrived in London, officials said!” On Thor: ureday, ina 15-word amendment to his original transition plan, Carrington sald guerrillas, like government soldiers, would be under the proposed British governor's direct authority during the ceasefire. ae ad Je ate, TA LST RA Jack X To COUNCIL hot the opposite” 10% OFF ALLMEATS Beef, Pork. Lamh, Turkey, Fish & Del at 7. Overwaitea All this week Nov. 13 to 17 - not afraid to tackle controversial issues - “Council showid serve the people, - wants our recreation facilities to be etncieat and affordable = direct input trom Council to Regional District aE a, me aa Mickey Johnson = accessible al Mickey Johnson Ski Shep 4222 Lazelle Ave. 635-2714 Guerrilla chiefs said this satisfied their demands for equal status for guerrillas and government soldiers during the transition. They accepted the British plan, which Muzorewa. endorsed two weeks ago. British officials were con- fident that both sides were firmly agreed — providing that ceasefire negotlations succeed — that the governor will rule, maintaining law and order through the white- led police force. — About 800 soldiers from the Commonwealth will monitor the ceasefire. Com- monwealth observers will oversee the election amatg’ the country’s seven -million blacks and 230,000 whites, Major difficulties racing the ceasefire negotiations are the two sides’ widely differing estimates of how long it will take to implement a ceasefire, whether _ ‘guerrillas and government soldiers will each be frozen in separate camps, and whether anyone will be dis- armed. Mugabe has about 12,000 guerrillas inside the country and Nkome about 4,00. Zim- babwe Rhodesian govern- ment sources here estimate there are also at least 10,000 trained guerrillas in base camps in Mozambique, Zambia and Angola. The 80-per-cent-black Zim- babwe Rhodesian army is estimated at 12,000 men, with mainly white officers. The Muzorewa delegation - Maintains a ceasefire might be Implemented in a few days because Walls could order his disciplined army to atop shooting quickly. ; ‘The guerrilla leaders say it would take two months to implement a ceasefire. Britain estimates shooting could stop within two weeks from an agreement. The guerrillas want a long period partly to bolster their demands for a total six- month transition, ON NOVEMBER 17th ELECT JOHNSON _Michae: (Mickey) TERHACE COUNCIL national Inuit welcome the developers dewate ne eo tye with conditions | “By JOE MA EDMONTON (CP) — The president of a development ‘corporation Jointly owned by natives and non-natives in the Eastern Arctic says the Invit are not opposed to resource development, On the contrary, they wel- come it _ provided developers and governments do it right, said John Todd, president of Siniktarvik Ltd. of Rankin Inlet, N.W.T. Todd told the eighth northera development conference Thursday that Siniktarvik, with the national Eskimo brotherhood Inuit Tapirisat of Canada as a major shareholder, has been running a profitable business. He said the native people's switch to wage employment from their traditional lifestyle of hunting, trapping and fishing is an irreversible trend, The land could not continue to support such a lifestyle for a growing Inuit population. ‘ “The need is for alter- native sources of op- portunities, jobs and in- comes which, in my opinion, can only come from resource development, .. , “Companies should not accept the cliche that native people per se are opposed ta’ development, but rather seek to establish the mechanisms that ensures they derive concrete economic benefits."”’ Todd advised developers to invite Inuit equity par- ticipation in development, ventures to provide them with ‘‘a real sense of ownership and un- derstanding of corporate operation.” —. ene warned _ that “overlooking native con- cerns can lead to costly legal battles.” ~ ‘ Another speaker from Rankin Inlet, Eric Tagooma of Inuit Development Corp. which is partly funded by Inuit Tapirisat, agreed with Todd, Tagooma said the Inuit want to have some say in resource development and to « benefit from it. Settlement of | native land claims would ; help both the native people : and the companies but it is . still not forthcoming: It was announced to the. conference just after the two « men spoke that the Federal Court in Ottawa has rejected Inuit ownership of 78,000 square kilometres of land in the Eastern Arctic while recognizing native aboriginal rights to hunt and | fish in the area, The court. also lifted a temporary In-. junction prohibiting companies from operating in * the area. . Todd and Tagooma declined immediate com- ments. , — Eariler Thursday, Lone Christensen, former com- missioner of the Yukon, said the Yukon gavernment wants development but not’ development at all costa, She also said the delay in com: struction of the Alaska way gas pipeline is provi ‘ a welcome brea period . for Yukoners a8 they ” prepare for economi¢ boom. Hilda Watson of Haines | Junction, a former member — of the Yukon council, sald’ development has provided economic benefits for both the native and non-natlve | people, She said the social and environment impact had been blown out of proportion at public hearings such as the Mackenzie Valley pipeline inquiry headed by Mr, Justice Thomas Berger. Stuart Hodgson, former commissioner of the Nor- thwest Territories, said there is no turning back in northerri ‘resource de- velopmerit. He said the Berger’ ‘inquiry had : uhreaiistic conclusions three years ago about the native peopte’s ability to continue ‘heir traditional way of life. Northern Development Minister Jake Epp and former federal energy minister Donald Macdonald are among the speakers today, the dinal session of the three-day conference sponsored by the Alberta Chamber of Resources, hes pit Development and hunting approved By BILLLA. T OTTAWA (Cr) — A decision by the Federal Court of Canada on Thur- . Sday, to allow Inuit to hunt wr T fish while mineral de- iment continues Pa Boe ‘Lake, N.W.T., | hd cliuded the issue of aboriginal: rights, says the Inuit Tapirisat of Canada. Mr. Justice Patrick Mahoney lifted a temporary injunction on development in the region located abont 1,600 kilometres north of Winnipeg. And he recognized Inuit aboriginal rights to fish and hunt over a specific area, But eo Ottawa could authorize mining exploration throughout that entire area, Tapirisat lawyer John Merritt said, “It Ia unclear how Jarge that area is but it appears that mining companies will be able to operate there," he said, “That makes aboriginal title unclear and we are carefully reviewing the judgment.” The Tapirisat represents 22,-500 Canadian Inuit. Merritt said: “We have a number of options, including appeal — to the Supreme Court of Canada.” Any appeal must be made within 30 days. Luther Chambers, a justice department lawyer who represented Ottawa at the trial, heralded the judgment asa major victory for the federal government and the mining industry. “The effect of the judgment frees the federal -License to install SS ee —— — 24 HOUR => ere ~~ a 4 a tS a