Page 2, The Herald, Monday, October 22, 1979 CANADA BRIEFS MONTREAL (CP) — The Quebec wing of the federal Liberals stuck mainly to motherhood and apple-pie issues ina weekend meeting here, coming out against rlaing food prices and In favor of economic growth. They also gave ao ringing vote of confidence to the continued leadership af Pierre Trudeau. Winding up the policy cun- vention that began Friday night, Liberals passed more than 100 general policy resolutions but steered clear of discussing details of how the party would handle its unfamiliar role of Opposition in Ottawa, Some of the mations “re- solved that the federal government undertake” certain measures, a8 though the Liberals still formed the government, and one delegate spoke of the May 22 election in which Quebecers elected 67 Liberals and “eight opposition mem- bers.’’ Stevens told not so OTTAWA (CP} Treasury Board President Sinclair Stevens drew sharp rebuttala Sunday to a4 statement Saturday in Toronto that he doesn’t know of a single Crown cor- poration that is making any money, Stevens waa discussing in an interview federal plans to turn over at least eight Rene wants MONTREAL (CP) Premier Rene Levesque touched on next spring’s referendum on Quebec in- dependence, labor strife in the provincial public service and the October 1970 crisis during a busy weekend of political engagements. federally-financed com- panies to the private sector. He was _ referring apecifically to Canadair and de Havilland aircraft companies as examples of seemingly profitable com- panies whose annual financial reports he said do not provide accurate pic- tures of their performances. the mandate On Sunday, Levesque told 6-000 Montreal-area Parti Quebecois members that Quebec has reached a point where it must affirm ite “maturity” by giving the government a mandate te negotlate sovereignty- association with the reat of Canada, . Clark wants sacrifice FREDERICTON (CP) — Prime jMiniater Pete! warning that tough decislote lie ahead, has called on Canadians to make sacrifices now for the long- term good of the country. decisions to make in the field of national energy policy and in budgetary policy, we have ‘meetings with President Carter, we have a con- ference of first ministers and will be subordinating short- Court orders withdrawal JERUSALEM (AP) — Prime Minister Menachem Begin’s government was reeling today under two surprise blows the resignation of Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan and a Supreme Court order that Jews must give up a con- troversial West Bank set- tlement, The court order, handed down today, sald the government's seizure of privately owned Arab land for the Elon Moreh settle- ment near the Arab city of Nablus was illegal. It gave ine settlers 30 days to get out, The Arab landowners had challenged the government's claim that the settlement was essential for Israel's security, an argument the high court had accepted in all previous cases involving Jewish enclaves in occupled territory, Dayan had cited his op- position to the Elon Moreh settlement as one of reasons for his resignation Sunday. But his chief gripe was hia lack of Influence over the negotiations with Egypt and the United States on autonomy for Palestinians on the occupied West Bank of the Jordan River and in the Gaza Strip, Begin and other jeading members of his cabinet said the resignation won’t change their tough stand in the autonomy talks, But Israeli newspapers today predicted Dayan's departure will weaken a government already staggered by a domestic political crisis, Shimon Peres, opposition Labor party chief, reacting to the resignation, called on the government to schedule a new election, a call Begin is not likely to heed. Even before “ Dayan Dayan, who played a key role in hammering out the peace treaty with Egypt and is considered by many to be Iarael’s most creative negotiator, quit Sunday to protest his lack of influence over the autonomy talks with Egypt and the United States. “I was relegated to doing what I didn’t want to do, at- tending cocktail parties and ceremonies," Dayan told re- porters after making his an- nauncement at the weekly cabinet meeting. . . Although he was the chief architect of the original Times is back LONDON (AP) — The Times, the flagship of British - journalism, resumes publication in about two weeks after a shutdown of almost a year and wage settlementa that make its employees among the best paid. in the British newspaper industry. “Has The Times pald such a high price that it is‘going to mean trouble for all of us?” the editor of The Daily Express asked In a radio interview. After 28 hours of negotiations and within a few hours of the deadline set by Lord Thomson, the newspaper's Canadian owner, Times Newspapers Ltd, announced Sunday that it and all of its unions have reached agreement on pay scales and working con- ditions. : It said the unions agreed there will be no more of the wildcat strikes that led the Management to suspend publication of the 194-year- old Times, Its weekly slater, The Sunday Times, and three weekly supplements last Nov, 30. The company estimated it has lost &30.5 million ($77.25 milllon) in sales and advertising revenue since then, Sunday Times editor Harold Evans caid he ex- pects The Times to resume publicatlon about Noy. 13 and The Sunday Times on Hetold about 90 delegates term considerations in all of reslgned, several opposition Nov. 11 or 18. . to the annual meeting of the those meetings for the parties raised motions of no Thelast holdout among the New Brunswick Progressive longer-term interests of the confidence in the Begin elght major unions was the Conservative Association country," he said Saturday. government, primarily National Graphical that tough decisions face the = As a party, the Tories are challenging its handling of Association, © which government in setting oil prepared to plan for the the economy. Those motions demanded 4250 ($625) a prices and budgetary policy. futureofthis country andnot come up for debate Tuesday week for its 620 printers, “Your government has duck the tough decisions when parliament opens _most of them skilled, to MONDAY 5 p.m. to midnight KING " CFTK BCTV KCTS 8 2 (NBC) 3 (tec (CTV) 9 (PBS) 1 | CaUFT 2 neath ‘i ees aE HSH gerd! ane: _ x . a a - 2). natn SMR aippopSADA amen Happy Sie seen T AMteter 0} Pla Femme: 15 | Burnett Days Million Rogers Blonique 330] News Hourglass Dollar Elect-ic Cont'd 48 [Cont'd Cont'd Man Company Cont'd :00 | Cont'd C.H.LP.s News Zoom Ce Soir 115 | Cont’d Cont'd ' Hour Cont'd: Edition 130 | Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Over Pacitique 45 | Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Easy Actualites — :00 | Seaitle Fantasy Diffrent MacNall Pourquoi 215 | Tonight Island; , «| Strokes -| Lehrer men faire 19 [Tic Tac rei oe a Fast Cont'd ‘45 | Dough " a fae Forward Cont'd 100 I Little To he Cont'd Sang Terre W215 Tetouse Announced Cont'd by Humaine 0 Ton Cont'd Headline Song Tele- ‘4 | Prairie Cont'd Hunters Cont’d Salection :00 | Monday MAS.H. ‘| Monday Dial Cont'd Bas | Night Cont'd ‘Night Line Cont'd 0 fF At WEKRP In Movia Nine Coni‘d - 45 | Movies Cincinnail Cont’d Cont'd Cont'd 300 | Movie News Aad When Cont'd 15 | Baby Magazine Baby Boat Cont'd 330 | Makes Watson Makes Comes Journal 45 1 Six Report Ix In Et Meteo 00 | News The Cont'd, Running Spart 15 | Contd National News Fence L'Homme 230 [ Tonight Night Final Hour Cont'd d'Am‘dam ' 148 Show . P.M. : 1 : Final Cont'd Cont'd 00 | Cont'd . p-Late Harry-O Bal 115 | Cont'd Show Cont'd Coni'd. ° 130 | Cont'd | Outside Coni'd Cont'd 45 | Cont'd | Man Late Movie Cont'd TUESDAY aa 10 a.m. to 5 pm. :00 [New High Camera | Webster Electric Passe’ 115 | Rollers Twelve Cont'd Company Partout 30 | Wheel af Mister What's Song Bag Magazine 45 | Fortune Dressup Cooking About Safety Express ‘00 | Aindreaders Sesame Mad Discovering Au fil de 15 I Cont'd Streat Dash About You la Semaine 30 1 Password Cont’d Datinitlon Write On Enfants du ‘45 | Plus Cont'd Cont'd Caver-Cover tA io Women News Noon The La vie qui x0 Like Us Cont’d News Long nous entoure 3 Cont'd Caral ne Alan Search Les 4 | Cont'd Burnett “He, || Hamet Cont‘d Coqueluches 00 | the Today Cont'd Making Music Cont'd 15 | Doctors From Cont’d Stories of Amer. | Cont'd 30 | Another Cont'd Anoiher Trade Journalet 45 | World Cont'd World Offs Femme 00 | Cont'd The Edge Cont'd Natural Cont'd 115 | Cont'd OF Night Contd Selence Cont'd :30 | Coni'd Take Cont‘d Word Shop Cinema :45 | Cont'd Thirty Cont'd Truly Amer. Cont'd 100 | Young Special Bob Movie Speakaut Cont'd 118 | Hayburners McLean Matinee Cont'd Cont'd 330 | Unicorn Show ,. Wild Prolect Cont'd 45 | Tates Cont'd and Wooly Universe Cont'd :00 | Specias Tha Cont'd Sesame Bobino ‘15 | Treat Flintstones Cont'd Strest Cont'd 130 | Cont'd AML Inver: Cont'd Cont'd L'Agence 345 | Coni’d the Family Cont'd Cont'd Bricole maintain its traditional edge over the lessskilled mem- bers of another union which settled for &207 (3517) for a 454o-hour week. After a series of ultimatums and breakdowns in talks and 26 hours of final negotiations, the NGA agreed to &234 ($585) for a fourday 35-hour week. Next April, the work week will drop to 32 hours — and the pay will increase five per cent, . The company got some reduction in the work force in its overmanned com- posing and press rooms although not as much as it wanted, But the NGA retained a monopoly on the operation of new composing- room technologies for a year and said it remained totally opposed to automatic typesetting from computer terminals operated by the news and advertising staffs, The editor of The Sunday Times sald the productivity agreements will mean more pages, more editions and pictures of better quality. Asked whether the shut- down was worth it, Thomson said: “If it will secure the - future of The Times and Sunday Times, it will be good moneywige, frustrationwise and staffingwlse.”’ Gays claim university harassment PROVO, Utah (AP) — Homosexuals in Utah say the Mormon Church ts trying to stump them out, wing a private police force at the church-owned Brigham Young University to harass them throughout the state. The claims are denied by beth university president Daillin Oaks and the chief of the 24officer university security force. But a former Mormon minister who now serves a gay church-in Salt Lake City. — 43 kilometres. from. the univerlty's Provo campus ~: contends he saw men from the university jotting down licence plate numbers outside a gay bar, . . And a Mormon lawyer says a “lient charged with forcible sexual abuse was set up for the arrest by what he called the university's “Mormon militia.” The university. police, : responsible, ,only -ta,.church ’ officials, last: year were given investigative and arrest powers rivalling those of the state police through a law passed by the ‘legislature. as: MAYOR ALDERMAN, cordingly. proposal for autonomy for the 1,2 million Palestinians - on the occupied West Bank and in the Gaza Strip, his home-rule concepts were blunted by cabinet hard- Uners who demanded Israel retain firm control of the territorles, In recent weeks, he apoke out repeatedly against government proposals that would have forced autonomous Palestinians to rely on Israel for everything from water to use of public land. Dayan also travelled around the West Bank and Gaza meeting with Arabs closely ‘ientified with the Paleatine Liberation. Organization, which drew sharp criticism. One of the few doves:in Be- gin's government, Dayan sought far-reaching con- cessions to draw Palestinians into the nego- tiations, In a television inter- view last week, he suggested that Israel turn over ad- ministration of the occupied territories to local Arabs. In his letter of resignution, Dayan described Israel’s Telations with the Palestinians of the West Bank and Gaza as “the key question in our livea over the years, one which can be solved," “Last week I expressed my reservations on the way in which negotiations on autonomy are being con- ducted,” wrote Dayan, who called the talks ‘‘to a large extent barren negotiations.” “T believe that the foreign minister cannot perform his function properly ag long as he is not personally involved, informed and among the determiners of israel’s policy on the question.” Dayan, 64, said he will retain his seat in parliament but gave no hint of other plans for the future, The hero of thefirst three Arab-Israeli wars, he was drummed out of the government after Israel's initial losses in the 1973 war. He bounced back by bolting the Labor party to join Begin’s Likud Bloc ‘after it took power in 1977. But Da- yan now is beset ‘by un- certain health, having had operations this year for cancerous intestinal tumor and to repair vocal cords damaged in an accident at an archeological excavation i" gegin will.be bard pressed » ORIN, WIL, TG preseet ong a replacement for the man whose blunt style and black eye patch symbolized Israel's independence. Begin admitted the resignation would not help hia government, which is under intense fire for its failure to take decisive action to liold down an in- | flation rate expected to top 100 per cent this yéar. ‘No resignation helps a govern- ment,” Begin said, and, asked whether Dayan's resignation had weakened It, he replied: ‘Yes, if you force me to sey it, yes."" DISTRICT OF TERRACE NOTICE OF ELECTION PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the electors of the Municipality of Terrace that | require the presence of the sald electors at the Municipal Building, 3215 Eby Street, Terrace, B.C., on Monday, the 29th day of October, 1979, at the hour of ten o’clack In the forenoon, for the purpose of electing persons to represent them (one), Two Year Term (three), Two Year Term SCHOOL TRUSTEE (two), Two Year Term THE MODE OF NOMINATION OF CANDIDATES SHALL BE AS - FOLLOWS: Candidates shall be nominated in writing by two duly . qualified electors of the municipality, The nomination paper shall be . delivered to the Returning Officer at any time between the date of _this notice and noon of the day of nomination. The nominatlon paper may be In the form prescribed In the Municipal Act. and shail state the name, residence, and occupation of the person nominated, In such a manner as to sufficiently Identify such candidate. The nomination paper shall be subscribed to by the candidate, IN THE EVENT OF A POLL BEING NECESSARY, such poll will be opened at the Clarence Michiel Elementary School Gymnasium, 2430 Sparks Street, Terrace, British Columbla, on the 17th day of November, 1979, between the hours of 8:00 o’clock in the forenoon and 8:00 o’clock in the afternoon, and Advance Polls will be held at the Municipal Bullding, 3215 Eby Street, Terrace, British Columbia, between the hours of 9:00 o'clock In the forencon, and 8:00 o'clock in the afternoon, on Monday, November 12th, 1979, and at Mills Memorial Hospital, 2711 Tetrault Street, Terrace, British Columbia, | between the hours of 4:00 o'clock in the afternoon and 6:00 o'clock in the afternoon, on Friday, November 16th, 1979, of which every person is hereby required to take notice and governhimself ac- GIVEN UNDER MY HAND at Terrace, British Columbia, his loth day of October, 1979. > Texas when two cable. WORLD BRIEFS - TEHRAN (CP) -- A bomb blast derailed a passenger train in Iran late Sunday near the town of Shush in. southwestern ' Khuzestan province where “Arab in- Burgents earlier this year battled the regime of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Tehran Radio reported. The radio said the derailed train carried 400 pecple and the bomb caused only minor injuries. Et quoted the deputy He got his ST. ALBANS, W.Va. (AP) — Harold Mann, charged with holding 27 church-goers at gunpoint for three hours, Burrendered to authorities after he was permitted to broadcast an obscenity-filled statement over a local radio station, Brandishing a rifle and de- manding to talk to reporters, Mann burst into the St. Albans Church of Christ shortly after services began governor-general of the largely Arab province blaming the explosion on “gubverslve elements,” Kurdish rebels clashed again with the government's revolutionary guards in northwestern Iran,. said published reports, The of- iclal Soviet newa agency Tass said 74 persons were killed Saturday in the - Kurdish city of Mahabad and described “heavy fighting” in Sanandaj and the village of Bowkan near Mahabad. ’ 4 say first Sunday. He gave up about three hours later, after teading a statement over Charleston radio station » WCHS. No Injuries were reported, Mann wae arraigned and ordered held without bond on a single charge of kid- tapping, ‘Kanawha County prosecutor "James Roark said he waa taken to nearby Charleston Area Medical Centre for a psychiatric and physical examination. . Valium said dangerous IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Users of Valium should be warned that the drug could impair thelr memory, says a@ University of Iowa professor who has atudied tranquillizer for seven years, Vallum, the brand name, for the = tranquillizer diazepam, is the most commonly -preseribed drug in the United States and Canada. Itis used by people suffering from anxiety, and also is an effective muscle relaxant. hoe Dr. Mohamed « Ghoneim, professor of aneathesiology,- Carter stands t WASHINGTON (AP) — Winding up one of his most -politically upbeat weeks alnce = taking ~—_oofffice, President Carter was in such an ebullient mood it seemed he couldn't sit still. The fact that Air Force One was about to glide onto the runway at Andrews Air Force Base didn't deter him from standing In the aisle to rege wy of on. his Ait ay (c y" a : : ‘~ resident fot aaa It was unusual for a president who rarely chats with reporters on his air- Cable cars DALLAS, Tex, (AP) — Thousands were Jammed into the midway on the last day’ of the State Fair .of pluiged:=ta:. the’ killing one man, injuring at least 15 and stranding scores aboard cars suspended in the air, Fred Millard, 41, of Dallas, M. A, Macdonald Returning Officer the- said volunteers in his etudy could remember information they learned before they began taking Valium. But there was & marked decrease in the ability to recall material learned after taking the drug. a, It is not known how the drug affects the memory of patients being treated for _severe anxiety, he sald. :"The patient with severe - anxiety may not react-to the drug in the same way as the ‘normal ‘volunteer. This will sbe the subject:4f a study in + the neartfuture.”’ n gone ph riumphant plane anytime — let alone . while it is landing. For two consecutive week- ends, Carter and Senator Edward Kennedy have been in competition of sorta — . flrat in the Florida caucuses and then at the dedication of the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library in Boston. This is the week Kennedy is expected, to announce the font ation af-6, committee, gale, ls, bgRalient campaign prospects, a step that is ail but certain to be followed by his formal campaign anouncement, run amok died in surgery, & medical examiner's investigator said. His wife and two ‘; daughters were injured, 4 eificlalgspelleved Millard anid his farnily:wete on the ground playing a carnival game at the time of the aceldent Sunday afternoon. it was not known how many of the injured were aboard the fallen cars, but police sald the 15 hurt were “better than serious.” The Swiss Skyride ground to a halt when the cars fell, but it was not known whether theshutdown was automatic. About 65 persons were lett swaying aboard 41 stranded cars for more than three hours -while rescuers used aerial ladders to bring them down to safety. The cara plummeted from the cables onto a pair of Bamesconcession stands. One car crashed through the booth of a game and the second caught in the canvas awning of a nearby booth. Winds’ were gusting at 45 kilometres an hour, WANT TO HAVE A See our BUSINESS | DIRECTORY| on PAGE 7