OTTAWA (CP) — Op position critics zeroed in on government handling of the econtimy as the Commons res Monday, de- manding a new budget posi major creation measures. Prime Minister Trudeau said the government will announce during today’s throne speech some of its. By PAUL GESSELL AWA {CP) — The wisecracking and heckling traditional to parliamentary. froceedings were beamed ve into Canadian homes. Monday, the first day of continuous | filming” of Commons debates. minister John BisteBbaker, mater of the oneliner, had a special twinkle in his eye for the televyisioc cameras when he told the House:. “There has been a tre- mendous improvement in the House since we came to the conclusion that what we're doing is being listened - Progressive Conservative Leader Joe Clark opened his attack on Liberal economic policles by quipping that ‘man canadians eollnge wa proc because. they. were unem- eyed and had nothing to do t sit in front of a tele- vision. ; Aside from these oc- onal jokes, considerably . casi brighter lighting and a hse tem e ature in the Commons, it-was business as usual as the House PELEVISi ISE QUEEN Today, cameras will capture Queen Elizabeth rea one speech from Senate chamber, the third session of 8 3th Parliament. Generally speaking MPs interviewed considered the first day of. televising a time 9 Commanwealt Pint oe sinocralle acy leaden, pep ‘outsl ‘ouse that live television coverage may have a sobering effect time," he told reporters. Generally, 's did not believe the presence of the cameras created any dif- ficulties for them or that proc in the Com- mons would be affected. sauilles Canuette, interim Credit leader, a with other MPs that the bright lights necessary for the cameras made the chamber. too hot, - Outspoken OTTAWA (CP) — _ Material conditions are better than ever yet many MP’s now stars |, @8 commons | cameras roll — Commons Speaker James Jerome sald the lights had been set at too high a level and likely will be dimmed. HELP TY Finance Minister Jean Chretien said outside the - House that televising the Commons could promote national unity. Canadians will be able to see that French and English are both used in the House, he said in an interview. — Earlier Monday, a senior Conservative official said his party would be making reater efforts to use ch in the House, The party has only three members from and au Seca eee However, Roch LaSalle (JoHette), another Con- seryative MP from Quebec, will assume a_ greater visibility in the House, the official said. e was moved: closer to the front benches and promoted to the position of employment critic from spokesman on amateur sports, peartl because he is Frenc , he added, Both Clark and Broadbent spoke in French during the opening moments of onday’s session. Clark said he hopes the presence of the cameras will encourage the Liberals to improve their answers to on @€s and at- tacks, Thou hout the uestion period Monday, i Hr k and Trudeau referred -ato_each. ther at CAB. ~ bland - wit Broad ent supporting Clark. Broadbent said the overnment should take a ‘ook at manufacturers who had not kept their equip- ment up to date. Trudeau agreed this was a problem too and that was why the overnment had included centives for business in the March 31 budget, ‘Those incentives ha been criticized by Broadbent, he added, “The leader of the NDP should get his act together,” said Trudeau. “If he wants the private sector to create more jobs he should cease complaining when they make an honest profit.” communities “can only be described as sick” in terms of alcoholism, vandalism - House resumes session Wednesday VICTO. icP), — Per WelaBPORRt Ai British Columbia legislature will resume sitting at 4 p.m. Wednesday to consider legislation’ dealing wit essential services, Bennett, who made the announcement in a news release following a special cabinet meetin em- phasized that the legislature will not deal gpecifically with the current B.C. Ferry Corp. dispute ‘because that matter is already being dealt with in the mediation process. . “The matter of the whole area of essential services has been brought inte focus as a result of the ferry dig ute.” . e current session began Jan. 13, adjourned for two joumned again Sept or altse aga . 27 after a record 133 sitting days. It was expected the session ‘would not resume watil lanuary. A “Grakesman for the premier said ‘‘the govern- Ment has been preparing “ment ' Jegislation for some time covering the areas of es- sential services and he (Bennett) believes that it is in the public interest to put this legislation forewarc now rather than delaying it until a later session of the legislate this year or next ear. SETS CARN, cabin an peepet amet wih cabinet returning from a meeting with e other nine rovincial premiers and Elizabeth in Ottawa ‘uring the weekend. e ovincial govern: nbd heen acc of bending to the demands of the B.C, Ferry and Marine Workers’ Union, which ended a week-long strike last Friday. The ferry workers voted . during their strike to defy a government-ordered y coolingoff period and a Labor Relations Board trko wo mder. Defiance risked fines of $10,000 to the union and $1,000 to each union member. . plans to deal with unem- loyment, and si ic de- i s will be spelled out Thursday. The MPs, after the 11- . week summer recess, alternately cheered and jeered under the bright are of television lights. onday’s session, ending the current Parliament before Queen Elizabeth opens the new session today is the first ime the federal Parliament broadcast live, Opposition Leader Joe Clark charged that the has been tion lets fl government is. responsible or more than one million Canadians now jobless. Trudeau said it will take the co-operation of provincial and federal governments with private employers to bring down unemployment. Official statistics say 6.3 per cent of the work force an actual total of about 800,000 workers, are sibent es Bula Et Heoagbe -leader, said statistics from the recently formed federal employment department show unemployment will Throne speech today — y as troubled rise two per cent a year, ASKS TATEMENT” Clark also asked the rime minister about ederal wage and price controls. He said the un- certainty they cause is driv- ing industri ists away, and asked for a clear statement about when and how the twoyear-old controls will be removed, Trudeau said Finance Minister Jean Chretien will give an answer on Thur- sday. He defended controls, saying they have suc- cessfully reduced inflation theherald Serving Terrace, Kitimat, the Hazeltons, Stewart and the Nass from double-digit levels in October, 1975, to around 7.5 per cent now. Statistics Canada reported last week that the annual inflation rate in September was 8.4 per cent. It was 10.8 per cent when controls were impose2. In reply to Sinclair Conservative finance critic, Chretien sald the govern- ment has no intention of intervening to stabilize the Canadian dollar's value. Stevens noted the dollar's value had fallen early Weather Light southeast winds have abated in the wake of a rouge of low pressure, but a low in the Alaska Gulf will continue to bring rain for the next few days. Today’s high, 12 degrees, tonight’s VOLUME 71 NO, 116 Price: 20 cents TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 19 -, Moment of triumph for Ernie Heppner came when his shot was right on target Sunday in a weekend turkey- and social, religious and racial friction, Prince Philip said Monday. ‘It is becoming only too apparent: that it is possible for communities to achieve quite high standards of ‘ material development with, at the same time, the moral and behavorial standards of a colony of monkeys,’ he OTTAWA (CP) — Jobless rolls are going to get much longer and unemployment insurance payments higher over the next two years, says confidential govern- ment report released Monday by Ed Broadbent, New Democratic Party leader. The NDP leader released the report, prepared for the employment and im- migration department, after estioning Prime Minister Trudeau about it during the Commons question period. It forecasts a rise in average national unem- ployment from 7,3 per cent he current financial year ending next March 31 to 7.4 r cent in the next year and fo 7.6 per cent by 1977-76. said in a luncheon speech to the Canadiac Club. It was the third time the Prince has spoken to the club in the last 25 years and more than 400 members bought tickets. There weren't enough seats and some had to be turned away. While the prince was speaking, Queen Elizabeth ~ » Moral decay amid wealth Phillip spouts off at lunch ~ was having lunch with 250 representatives of almost 50 ethnic organization gathered at Parliament’s West Block. Later, the royal couple was reunited for an af- ternoon and evening of multicultural events. They visited a French immersion public school, took in a NDP report says | Jobless ranks will increase The report does not ex- plain how these figures are calculated, Nationa unemployment figuré ublished last week by tatistics Canada showed an .8-per-cent jobless rate in September and for the last six months unemployment has averaged. more than ejght per cent, However, the report confirms a steadily rising jobless trend and it adds that the outlook is for ‘a deterioration in the unemployment _ situation.”’ At the same time, unemployment insurance yments will rise to about 8 billlon in the current financial year and to about $4.14 billion in 1978-79, In the first half this year, benefit payments reached $2.19 illion, a rise of 14 per cent from the comparable period in 1976, . PICTURE GLOOMY The report paints a gloomy picture for over-all economic growth. It says the richer countries, members of the Organ- ization for Economic Co- operation and Development, will experience & tailing off in-their real economic. growth to less that four per cent from about five per cent now. Canada’s export markets will suffer and the beneficial effects of a cheaper Canadian dollar on export volume will be lost. gional disparities will worsen, and the Atlantic Previnces will be par- ticularly hard-hit. Nad 7, shoot cantest.Reporter-photographer Juliette Proom watched the action. Her report is one page 2, special silver jubilee multicultural performance and dined with 400 young Canadian achievers. PLANNING: IMPORTANT At the Canadian Club, the rince said industrialism at- ches great importance to lanning. “But there is a big dif- ference between planning By 1977-78, unemployment in Newfoundland will average 17.4 per cent of the work force, compared with a projected national average of 7.6 per cent. An average 10.1 per cent will be out of work in Prince Ed- ward Island, 11.4 per cent in New Brunswick and 11.3 per cent in Nova Scotia. Quebec unemployment will average 9.8 per cent in 1977-78, the report says, although in September Statistics Canada reported a 10.8-per-cent jobless rate there, The average jobless rates for other provinces: Ontario 6.2 per cent, Manitoba 5.4 per cent; Saskatchewan 4.5 per cent, Alberta 4.4 pur cent and British Columbia 8.4 per cent by 1978-76. ee nt reread ee CO Monda pnd asked whether to 90.4 cents U.S. as issued special in- HSH 3 Pow HELPS SALES Chretien said a chea dollar will will permit sale of more Canadian. made nd ma Canadian products less expensive for foreign countries to buy. That should help achieve a trade surplus this year and result in more jobs, He also said the govern- ment has no intention of introducing foreign ex: change controls or re- stricting travel out of the country. Broadbent said he could not accept remarks by the prime minister that opens unemployed Canadians are ing hard enough to He said the closing of an Alcan Aluminum Ltd. plant in St. Lawrence, Nfid,, and estimates that Canada is not petting 20,000 auto parts obs it should rightfully ve, were two cases in which workers were the vic- tims. He said Canadian autoworkers are more productive than U.S. counterparts but are not etting their fair share of obs. Trudeau replied that in manufacturin, generally, Canadian workers are only ‘it ger cent as 3 productive as 5. employ yet their average wages are seven Pere t highe . That Faeant nadian Costs are higher and caused problems in competing in major U.S. market. the anti-inflation Kemano Thursday. midnight Oct, 23. ega ‘Alcan, CASA W reach accord A tentative, three-year agreement has been reached between Alcan Smelters and Chemicals, Ltd., of Kitimat, and the 1,800member Local 1 of the Canadian Association of Smelter and Allied Workers, & company spokesman announced late Monday. Details of the agreement, within guidelines set b parties Tuesday, he said. The union negotiating team qupwxvecoxxsmb recommend acceptance at: ratification meetings to be held in The two-year agreement now in force expires at _ Alcan workers staged a bitter, 18-day wildcat strike in June, 1976 after provisions of their existing contra _ Alcan workers staged a bitter, 18-day wildcat strike in June, 1976 after provisions of their existing contract were thrown into dispute. by anti-inflation board regulations. In a recent out-of-court settlement, the union paid $135,000 to Alcan and made a public \ ifeeet for the strike, which they acknowledged was} be released hy bo timat and Hijackers killed From REUTER-AP BONN (CP) — A West Ggu @ mralla n squad stormed the hijacked Lufthansa Boeing 737 in Mogadishu, Somalia, early toglay surviving 86 hostages, a' government spokesman said here. the four ree of’ hijackers were believed to have been killed in the at- German _ radio quoted the interior ministry as saying the anti-guerrilla commandos stormed th ane at midnight loca Tf commando unit shot its way aboard the plane about an hour before the for things and planning for le P Statistics and percentages had taken the place of in- dividuals as the object of administration. The result G was an paternalism.” More known than ever before about science, the planet, the universe, about social consciousness, “yet we go on making the mest elementary mistakes,"' “The age of -social con- science, social justice and concern seems to have coincided with the age of crime, pornograph mugging and internation terrorism. “What started out as a liberalization of restrictive social conventions seems to have developed: into a dictatorship of licence.” The prince proposed that & new profession or agency may be needed to diagnose community diseases and to prescribe cures. Town planners, health and welfare planners, economic planners were not enough, “oppressive Atthe ethnic luncheon and hij throughout the reat of the day— the fourth in the six- day national capital visit El the Queen was given a taste of Canadian multiculturalism, and rescued the - by-commandos expiration of the hijackers’ lates t deadline to blow it up with all the hostages aboard. . The rescue squad of speciallytrained police was reported by Israeli radio monitors to have landed at Mogadishu airport on Monday night. Landing lights had been doused to de the ‘commandos’ ap- proach. The guerrillas—two men and two women—seized the Boeing 737 jetliner last Thursday after it left Palma, ajorca, for Frank- They shot and killed the pilot, 37-year-oldnJuergen umann, after taking off from Aden, South Yemen, on Monday and dumped his body on the runway when the plane touched down at Mogadishu. All of the passengers—44 menn31 women and seven chil —were urinjured in the rescue, a Lufthansa spokesman said. The action ended a five- day ordeal for the hostagef, their relatives and the Weso e whichnrefused to negotiate 8 deal for the release of the passengers and crew. RANSOM DEMANDED The _hijackers had demanded release of 11 urbjn guerrillas from West German prisons and two Arabs jailed in Turkey, and @ kansom of $15 milgion. At the Vatican earlier Monday, Pope Paug sent a telegram to Joseph Cardinal Hoefiner, head of the German Epcscopal Con- ference, saying he would of- fer himself as a hostage “‘if lt would be of use” in ob- taining the freedom of those held by the hijjckers. The 30- year-old pontiff also a pealed tonthe hijickers end their ‘cruel dertaking.” Thdre was no word on the fate of West German in- dustrialist Hanns Martin Schleyer, whose German abductors threatened to kill him Sunday unless the ackers’ demands met. Schleyer’s where- abouts were not known. even members of the kidnappers' Red Army faction were among those the hijackers want freed. un- were -