Ot ae ceo a Beene _ Job opportunities . Further detalis on the following jobs are to be obtained by calling the Terrace office of the Canada Employment Centre at 635- 744, ) Plumber - $12.00 hr. Terrace. Must be fully. experienced, Must have own transportation. Fiters - I[.W.A. rate. Terrace. Permanent full time. General duties in locai mill, Must have saw fil or saw fitter experience. Aute Body Repairman - $4.00 hr. Terrace. Prefer jour- meyman. Experience in metal and light collision repair. Waiter-Waitress - $3,00 hr. Terrace. Must be mature and responsible. Aly Truck Driller - $9.50 hr, included R&B. Temporary camp job. Terrace. English ‘Language - In- structor. $9.00 hour. Terrace. Applicants should have both teaching ex- perience ant linguistics, Waiter-W aitress - $3.00 hour. Terrace. Shift work. Responsible for billing and cash register. Computer Operator - $350 $900 DOE. Terrace. Must be able to work Sat. and Sun, Some experience required. - 32 IBM. Cashier - Neg. Terrace. Shift work. Cashler and iight clean up. Street Councellor- 138 week. Terrace. Hours flexible, must be able to com- municate with young people, Instructors - $9.00 hour. Terrace, Instructors for specific topics in home skills (include handyman) Arts & Crafts, Academic, Vocational, General interest and self help. Cook - $3.00 hr. Terrace. Shift work. Cook pizza’s, steaks, etc. Executive Secretary - $1,000 month. Terrace. Typing 60 wpm,, filing, . transcribing, shorthand month end reports, exp with publle. Drattaperveny ini ROK, Terrac (3 . * veratag es ins for a legal survey and engineering practice. Stationary Engineer - $1,400 +. Terrace. 4th class engineer. Must have ticket (4th) Typist - 56 hour DOE. Terrace. Location flexible. Must have good typing skills. Hours vary. Cook's Helper - DOe. Terrace, Assistant cook. General duties. This could work into a cook position. Street Councellor - $138 week, Terrace. Hrs. flexible must be .able to com- municate with young people. First Ald Attendent - 8.01 Hr. Terrace. B ticket or better. Camp job, Free B & R. * & Cook - $3,00 hour, Terrace, Cooking and some clean-up. Shift work. Baker - $7.00 per hour to start. Terrace. Permanent full time. Must have ex- verlence, Housekeeper - $3.50 hr. Terrace, Housecleaning duties. Prepare supper. Pizza Cook - $3.75 hr, Terrace, Must haye some amin, of 3, yoara experience as .:: Peg) Meee, Wie BC: ory ote 4 Cook - 4,00 Hr. Terrace. Shift - work, Experienced in complete meals & short order & banquets. First Ald Attendent - 1,170 per month plus, B ticket preferred. Camp job. R&B available, ; Typist - $4.50 -5.00 - hr. DOE. Terrace. position. Some bookkeeping duties, ie, accounts payable, Car Hop - Min. Wage. Terrace. preferred. Days to be arranged. Case Ald Worker - 139 wk. Tertace, Counsellor - home visits & individual & family problems. Temporary) Experience: work experience, Prepare Pizzas, pasta, baked spareribs. Uniforms sup- plied, ; Waiter-Waltress - $3.50 hr. Terrace. Min. 19 years. Able to handle cash. Ex- perience not essential. Computer Operator - $250 - $1200 mo. DOE. Terrace. Permanent fulltime. Must be experienced on IBM System 32 - Must be IBM trained. Operate 3741 Keypunch. . Advertising Salesperson Negotiable. Terrace. Must be fully experienced. Must have own transportation. Must be able te work in- dependently. Housekeeper - $4.00 hr. Terrace. Must have 2 references includes general housekeeping dutles. Housekeeper - $3.50 hour. General cleaning duties, Permanent position, Terrace, Automotive Instructor - Neg. Terrace. Must be B.C, Certified. Teacher of Hearing - Im- paired. Neg. Terrace. Must be B.C, Certified. Head Cook - $1,100 - $1,300 per month, Terrace, Must be experienced. Days and hours vary. Faller High Rigger - Neg. Terrace. Temporary. To top some jack pine at a private residence. Associate Dental Surgeon - Fee for Service. Must have Registered Nurse - $1124 month. Terrace. Care of patients in ICU maintenance af equipment. Responsible to head nurse. Shift work 8 percent VP. Room and Yoard provided at cost. Teletype Operator - §306 month. Terrace. Must have grade 12 and 50 wpm typing. Head Cook - $5.00 per hour, Terrace. Permanent full time. Must be fully ex- perienced and familiar with food costing, staff super- vision. References required, Vocatlonal instructor - 1,727 - 2,238 mo, To instruct students all theory & repair of diesel engines 5 months appointment. Terrace. Fruit & Vegetable Salesman + 10 percent commission. Terrace. Required to drive one ton truck, must be bondable, & do own bookkeeping. Graphic Artist - 650.00 - month DOE. Terrace. Graphics (Lectro-set), Commercial lay-out, Car- tooning lay-out etc. Prefer experience but will train. Waitress - 4.58 Hr, Terrace. Shifts. Must be 19. Must be experienced. Child Care Worker - 5.00 Hr. Terrace, Experience and-or early childhood education training preferred. ss . Land study kept secret KITCHENER, Ont (CP) — The housing critic far the federal Progressive Con- servative party says the federal government had no intention of publishing a land coats study leaked to The Record last week. Jean Pigott, member of Parliament for Ottawa- Carleton, said in an in- terview Tuesday from Ot- tawa that her office has been deluged with calls since contents of the report were ‘ published, | “We're sure the report was meant to he buried because we've been after it for some time,’ Mrs. Pigott said. ‘‘It was to be deliberately kept under wraps, close to an election,” The Record quoted the $525,000 federal-provincial report as saying govern: ments spent $775 million on land banks that had no effect on controlling housing prices. ‘The report was compiled by a study group set up in November, 1976, The government report attributed rising costs to a stock market slump, in- flation, rising incomes, easy mortgage money, the baby boom in the 1960s, a shortage of housing lots and recognition of housing as a good investment. especially THE HERALD, Thursday, August 3, 1978, PAGE 5 $2 billion reduction meaningless, Clark says By THE CANADIAN PRESS, Opposition leader Joe Clark says Prime Minister Trudeau's speech to the nation Tuesday was a pre-. election stunt d the economic measutes an- nouneely areal attempt to clear'the mesg_the Liberals -have created during their 10 years in office. The prime minister said $2 billion will be cut from current and planned ex- penditures, but that most of that money will be shifted to other government priorities. Clark said Wednesday the $2-billion reduction is close to meaningless because cutting planned = ex- penditures is nothing. He said political un- certainty is damaging the country and Trudeau should call an election if his government has specific proposals, Eric Kierans, a former postmaster general, said converting the post office cutting into a Crown corporation is the only possible solution to problems in the postal service, FREED OF CONSTRAINTS Trudeau said the situation in the post office was in- tolerable and that it will become ai Crown poration, free from many of 7 Postal Crown Corporation -avictory for the unién OTTAWA (CP) — Jean- Claude Parrot, president of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW), said today Prime Minister Trudeau's proposal to turn the post office into a Crown corporation could mean a return to ‘‘the kind of service we had in the past.” But Parrot warned that another postal strike this fall is highly iikely unless government negotiators give ‘ground on important non- . Monetary issues during current bargaining for a new contract. =~ .Parrot called the proposal . by Trudeau Tuesday to turn the post office into a Crown | corporation a victory for the union, which has been pushing for the change for more than 30 years. =: He said it would free bath union and management from the bureaucratic constraints imposed on the post office because several depart- ments now have a say in various parts of its op- erations. ‘resolved at But Parrot said the contin- uing issues of technological change, the use of casual labor in the post office and management. wee of disciplinary powers against union members are still to be the bargaining table. oe He charged that govern- ment negotiators had made proposals only on wages in 15 months of negotiations towards a new contract and had no mandate to deal with. the more important non- monetary issues, The union's last contract expired June 30, 1977. Parrot said that if Trudeau is really serious about resolving labor- management problems in the post office, he should give the negotiators a ‘mandate to negotiate a settlement instead of a confrontation. MANY STRIKES The 23,000-member union of inside postal workers has been involved in dozens of legal and illegal strikes and walkouts since they were’ given the right to strike in 1967, Most have centred on working conditions and the introduction of new sorting equipment, ‘Trudeau said in a nation- wide address Tuesday that the situation in the post of- fice had become intolerable and that he and Canadians were fed up. This past week, service was disrupted at the huge Toronta post office when postal truck drivers, members of the Letter Carriers Union of Canada, the other major post office union, said their vans were unsafe, Trudeau said in his ad- dress Tuesday that he and Postmaster-General Gilles ‘Lamontagne were convinced that a whole new start for management and labor is needed in the post office. CUPW has charged that the post office has failed to live up to the terms of a collective agreement— reached after a bitter 42-day strike in 1975—which calls’ for consultation with the utiion on introduction of new automated sorting equip- ment and other technological changes. Parrot said government negotiators now were at: tempting ta remove these clauses in the current bargaining. He called the money issue minor in this round of bargaining and said: ‘We will never sign a collective agreement that will take away what we struck 42 days for in 1975.” Unicn and management now are making their presentations on the issues to a conciliation board named to try to resolve the dispute, The hearings are expected to finish shortly and the board will then write a report with recommendations ‘for a resolution. The union will be ina legal position to strike seven days after the board report is handed down. Air Canada mechanics walk out TORONTO (CP) — Most Alr Canada ground service personnel at Toronto In- ternational Airport walked aif the job today, forcing the airline to cancel seven af- ternocon flights, an Air Canada spokesman said, John Cavill said he under- stood the workers, members of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, were conducting a partial walkout to discuss a ten- tative contract, agreement. The workers were in a Polio outbreak could LETHEBRIDGE, Alta. (CP) — A federal health official said today very little can be done to prevent visitors from the Neth- erlands, where there has been an outbreak of polio, from entering Canada. Dr. Ian Marriott, senior public service health con- sultant, also sald in a telephone interview from Ottawa that the Canadian “government cannot farce visitors to be vaccinated. Local health authorities Tuesday reported the first confirmed polio case in 15 years. An elghtyear-boy, a member of the Dutch Reformed Church, has partial paralytic polio. Marriott said international health regulations state that countries may demand immunization for only four diseases— smallpox, cholera, yellow fever and the plague. He said three years ago, when a Toronto woman was suspected of having con- tacted' lassa fever, the department of national health and welfare con- sidered issuing landing cards to keep track of visitors’ movements in Canada. The cards would have de- manded details about where individuals were from and where they were travelling in Canada. But the idea did not. prove to be practical. “When you think Toronto Canada-States compete forautos OTTAWA = (CP)-Canada and the United States are displaying divergent at- titudes on what should be done about competition between the two countries to attract new auto plants with ever-more-generous in- centives. . Top U.S. officials are coming to Ottawa on Friday for what Assistant Treasury Secretary Fred Bergsten is calling ‘urgent con- sultations '’ on the matter. But Canadian officials said today there is nothing urgent or unusual about the planned meeting. No cabinet ministers will attend. A spokesman for Industry Minister Jack Horner said the meeting Is part of normal economic discussions bet- ween the two governments. An industry department official said: ‘“‘Auto questions will be discussed, but as far as we're con- cerned, this is just part of the regular back-andforth that gees on all the time.” The talks come just as negotiations to secure a $400- million engine plant for the Windsor, Ont., area move into the final stages. The federal and Ontario governments have agreed to share the cost of an Incentive in the neighborhood of $75 million to persuade Ford to expand in Ontario, Details of the subsidy have not been released pending approval from Ford’s board of directors. Millions spent to boost dollar OTTAWA (CP) — It cost the government $366 million in United States funds last month to support the Canadian dollar by buying up the unwanted currency on world markets, the finance department said Wednes- day. The monthly report on the country’s official reserves says the government went to U.S. and other foreign banks to borrow $700 million U.S. to help in the dollar defence, It used $500 million U.S. to meet payments on earlier borrowings of $1 billion from Canadian chartered banks. But even after these borrowings, government holdings of U.S. dollars were $166.4 million lower on July 31 than a month earller, That means Bank of Canada traders, Under government direction, spent this amount plus the $200 million left over from the forelgn borrowing alter repayments were made. be brought to Canada - alone has 11 million Pawn eers per year it would like a snowstorm of paper and I don’t think we can handle it,” Marriott said. He. explained that once a visitor gets inside Canada, health is no longer a federal matter but a provincial responsibility, “T know of no provincial law that requires im- munization,” Frank White, Alberta’s director of communicable diseases, said the province cannot force Alberta residents to be immunized and it vuuld be nearly im- possible to demand visitors to be vaccinated. “Other than issuing alert to travellers, really nothing else can be done,” White said, Salmon ban lifted VICTORIA (CP) — The British government has lifted its ban on the sale of canned Canadian salmon, a British Columbia govern: ‘ment official said Wed- nesday. L. ‘J. Wallace, agent- general representing the province in London, said in a telex that the British government’s health and social security department had iifted the banjon B.C. canned salmon following an investigation and representation from the B.C. and Canadian governments. The British government “had warned grocery stares to remove all] canned salmon from Canada and the U.S. While they investigated the possible botulism poisoning of four Birmingham residents. The fish has been iden- tified as John West brand salmon, canned in Alaska, but there was some con- fusion over whether the can was marked “Produce of CAVallece sald th Britigh allace sa 2 government issued. "a statement Wednesday stating that Canadian salmon was not connected with the poisoning and could be sald, “The authorities seem to have over-reacted in ban- sing ali canned salmon from North America including Canada," he said. legal strike position. Cavill. said management personnel] were attempting to ‘fill in the blanks as much ag possible.” Seven flights, however, had to be cancelled and more may be cancelled if workers do not-report for afternoon shifts. “It's purely a waiting game to see what happens,” he sald. “The big question is whether the 3 p.m. and 4 pm. shifts turn up. In the meantime we're getting as many flights out a8 possible.” He said he understood that the union, which represents - about 1,700 workers in Toronto, had planned two study sessions today to discuss the tentative con- tract. Union spokesmen were not available for comment. Cavill said Air Canada may be forced to consolidate some flights ta ease operation, If two flights were leaving for Montreal within a half-hour’s time of one another, one would be cancelled, he said. ‘Traditionally we con- centrate on long-haul flights and transatlantic flights— that’s where we'll con- centrate our efforts, We'll get as many other flights out as possible.” cor-* the constraints of a govern- ment department. Kierans, postmaster- general in the late 1960s, said such a change will permit the postal service to make long-term plans instead of being subject to adjustments every time a new budget is set. Jean-Claude Parrat, president of the 23,000- member Canadian Union of Postal Workers, said the proposal could mean a re- turn to “the kind of postal service we had in the past.’” But he warned that a postal strike is likely this fall unless government negotiators give ground on important non-monetary issues, such as technological change and the use of casual labor, . during current bargaining for a new con- trach = oS Dennis McDermott, president of the Canadian Labor Congress, said he welcomed the announcement and that the Jabor movement has supported the postal unions in this area for some time. “I’m glad to see that at least some of our advice has finally been taken.” REDUCTIONS HELP He said, however, that a reduction in government spending was not going to Bennet WON'T help Canada achieve a five- per-cent growth rate and that a reduetion in the number of federal civil servants was not going to do anything about wunem- ployment. Premier Bill Bennett of British Columbia and Premier Allan Blakeney of Saskatchewan said the economic proposals made by the prime minister were part of the economic message taken at the first ministers’ conference in February and were nothing they had not heard before. Blakeney said he sup- ported making the post office a Crown corporation, but this was hardly daring since so many others had supported the suggestion. Blakeney said the speech was an altempt by Trudeau te get back on the economic offensive but, “since there were no new programs to announce, Trudeau merely announced some old ones." Sam Hughes, executive director of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, said Trudeau’s proposals were based substantially on the chambers recent recom- mendations to the federal gavernment but that they had recelved a generally favorable reaction from business leaders. claims same message VICTORIA (CP) - Premier Bill Bennett today welcomed the economic proposals laid down by Prime Minister Trudeau Tuesday, but said they have a familiar ring. “What the prime minister said is what British Columbia has been saying for some time, and his proposals are a large part of the economic message we took to the first ministers’ conference in February,” Bennett said in an interview. a) olsen 4 250 p m $148.00 per month or simply retura | or sim $139.00 per month lease end pric $2,025.00 | or simply return $99.00 per month $1400.00 $2,275.00 FOR PRIVATE USE OR BUSINES: AUTOVEST ‘Before you buy, investigate the advantages af this rent- to-own plan. All monies paid apply to purchase. 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