. : . demonstration by. “ai ; 2,000 people: NCAP) — leader Led “Walesa. cor-. °. ' fronted "Deputy. Premier -- 3h , - cheered. -by ‘his: allege, carried: Pa ‘oft twas.” In’ his:, first, ‘jave-to-face . “encounter slrice. the, “now: bullawed:, Solidarity’..was | . ‘Suspended: “Dee,” 13, “1881; - “Walesa made a 10-minuie: - ‘speech Thursday urging the. ‘government to open talks on - Teviving free trade unions, -witnesses reported. . Workers said they booed and jeered:Rakowski at the- 3%-hour meeting; held in- the same hall where ‘agreements were signed ‘three years ago ending a_ ‘two-week strike and leading ‘to the creation of Solidarity, .- ‘the first independent trade ‘movement in the Soviet bloc. : : :?, Walesa’s remirks “were his ‘longest, before “the abe a eee ,, Victory.” Gavern-:: claim f Tent. \spokesman | Jerzy, “told: “western : Rakowski’ ; -reminded” workers - “that new” trade: ~ unions” “are’.ti- existence vsined ‘the Sejm, or’. parliament; __ outlawed * Solidarity’. ‘last - Octaber. “Today, there is no room in Poland's’ * political ‘life ‘for - negotiations ‘with’ activists’ “of a‘dissolved™union,” he said. oF ' “We are conviticed ‘that - Saoner or later these. (the . new unions) will become mass unions, that members ° of what was once Solidarity will, also find their place. inside them,” he said. His remarks were aired by Warsaw Radio. 7 CARRIED BY ‘BACKERS - Aftér the’ seasion, which was closed to the western fargest audience, since his-—news media, Walesa left the - Felease last November from dn Al-month: martial law yard by the main gate, where his backers picked CeRTTLESEyS Fy RRNOS Johns Rd: ee SATELLITE VINYL Canvas & Fabric Works “4 Auto interiors Boattops, cushions & interlors : Custom upholstery — Canvas products: '.. OPEN7 DAYS AWEEK 635-418 an *INOUSTRIAL ‘*RESIDENTIAL .- .TEXTURED CEILINGS "ACOUSTIC TILES | *WALLS, ETC.” PROFESSIONAL CEIL CLEAN. AVE THE SOLUTION FOR . NICAL CEILING: CLEANING LAB (THE ULTIMATE SYSTEM FOR CLEANING CEILING "COMMERCIAL ” INSTITUTIONAL *T-BAR RAILS “Dirty Ce Ce ““*CEILING REPAIR. Remove the unsightly nicotine, tar stains, and of: fensive odors from YOUR ceiling. © ith the application of our unique Cell Clean Solution, smoke stained ceilings can be restored to a nearly NEW condition .. ment. Even the-T-Bar.will shine like new.’ ! " Waleda | ne - minister: ‘Rakowski; anid we °: believe. that ‘Rakowski Wont ernment oe gS “| But | the 5 overnmeat “Polish homeland.’ : on “Seg* you. on th Bist, ” Walesa’ shouted, -and, the rerowd - ‘dlsperséd ‘without, > incident:.. Agreements. that 7 sled to: -the' establishment-of:: | . Solidarity’ were, signed AUg:.. | “31, 1980. - Rakowski belittled ‘ call ‘by the: Solidarity un: derground for a irywide show of public “support Aug. 31, including a’ rush-hour boycott of public transport which is expected to. send union ‘supporters back into the streets. . Government reports quoted heavily.from Rakowski's remarks. They mentioned -that spoke but gave ‘no details. “Premier Speech was interrupted. by shouts, and even whistling _ by an organizéd “group which came to-the: meeting |. with Lech’ Walesa," the official Polish news agency PAP reported. : Workers reported Rakowski government refusal to negotiate with Walesa or. that other .. Solidarity leaders, and declared that the union “no longer lives i in Poland" . at a FRACTION of the cost of replace- : . § The pores and crevices in acoustical ceilings ara there to absorb sound. But they : Iso collect and retain the culprits of cigarette, cigar, and pipe smoking..< unsight- ly brown tars and unpleasant odors which linger long after the smoke has disap- LET THE PROFESSIONALS DO THE WORK CALL NOW FOR A FREE ESTIMATE. AND DEMONSTRATION "> SATISFACTION GUARANTEED ALTE DRINAL INSTALLATION LTD. aera . peared. m BSTAGT Of TERE ON THE BENCH WaLciweee AVENE , religious, ‘hymn, “urging restoration of ‘a free. coun- © broadcast . Walesa Rakowski's , - _ Tejterated - outhouse, ' in serious condition at St. ‘ Anthony Central Hospital.: condition worsened from 5 een.party. officials, ar on rAmiericdn special : ; through diplomatic: chi nels. in Damascus, the Syrian : capital, Jed: ‘to the: ‘agreement for a Patis mnéeting.. ~ been: fighting rightlst. Ctiristian : ‘militiamen. in: “Lebanon's. central" ‘Toutitains, “was,” “Feported to have’ told. ‘McFarlane hé did not Want to. . “meet in Lebanan.-: ne Jumblatt has been living in self-iniposed exile in "Syria and Jordan since he declared his opposition to: . ‘Lebanon's troop withdrawal pact with’ lsrael, signed‘: iy ‘under U.S, auspices May 17. . On, the- ‘eve of ‘his’ departure, ‘Jumblatt sent out. “orders to his leftist Druse compatriots to resist the Lebanese army: when if moves into the Chouf ‘and ” Aley mountains to replace Israel’s forces, which pn : -to pull back to southern Lebanon soon... --> ‘The rollback has given rise to fears of an ‘all-out ; sectarian war between Druse and Chris ians. The | ‘ Druse accuse the: Lebanese army of, siding with | _ Christian militias, ; Meanwhile, ‘the Israeli military: command -sald “Israeli troops: killed five Arabs and wounded three others when. two carloads of attackers shot at an ‘ Israeli checkpoint in the: war-searred Chouf moun- -y tains, which Israel intends to vacate soon. ~ SOLDIER KILLED . The attack followed two separate explosions - — one ’ a bomb — in Beiruton Thursday that left one French soldier dead and 11 people wounded, * The soldier died when.a French ammunition truck in western Beirut accidentally caught fire and ex- . Ploded, wounding ‘eight others. ‘Shortly after, three Lebanese were injured when a 10-kilogram bomb ripped through the “Air France offices in- eaatern Beirut, . »! The Israeli railitary command said eight Arabs in two cars attacked a checkpoint Thursday near the mountain village of Mukhtara, home of lef tist Druse . . leader Walid Jumblatt, ~ ‘Two of the dead attackers and. all three of the - wounded had escaped from Israel’s detention centre | at Ansar in solitherrn Lebanon, the command said, ‘identifying the attackers as terrorists, an. indication ‘the Israelis believed they all'were Palestinians. No Israeli soldiers were injured in the attack. -The Israelis intend to draw back their forces from’ the. central mountains, site ‘of an ongoing battle | between Druse and rightist Christians. ‘ . The Druse, meanwhile, have rejected what ap- - peared to hea Christian peace offer in the mountains ‘ and McFarlane said there was “no prospect” that multinational peacekeepers would be deployed in the - war-torn heights overlooking Beirut once Israel pulls out. _ Girl discovered DENVER (AP) — Two . fair because of infection and birdwatchers seeking arare circulation problems in her species in a mountain park legs, ~ sald ~ hospital heard a cry and found an abducted three-year-old girl in the bottom of.. an spokesman Randy Shook. Dr. | Henry . Cleveland, “Loti Poland, who had . in the hospital for a week to disappeared Monday, was “10 days. . “She was standing in She was moved to the in- tensive care unit when her - goetor estimated that she the outhouse water for ; anywhere from several : hours to days. Lori’s father, Richard, said: “Her feet are pretty dy = “y Qty MCCONNELL foe PAAKSIDE schoo o-ors he. . $i a 43 Ye deJONG Cres. S6z>.. ELAS SOin [ie M&CONNELL Ave. DISTRICT of TERRACE. PROPERTY. FoR. . SALE WILSON “ AVENUE | MINIMUM SET PRICES. “3+ $18,200.00 _ 3. > $19,200.00 , 13 $19,480.00 Web lta t i ‘ —Fully. serviced. with undergrolnid wiring and ‘paved streets in” .-, excellent neighbourhoods; . —Minimum lot size 8000 sq. feet. —Close to schools and parks. . oO —No building time or re-sale limitations. ae For further information, call the Planning Department, 635 6a. ". ‘swollen and don't have very leared Thursday of three eh ; Séssions’ “dae Be vjamnin ' Schecter: ; dismissed one! (charge 6f, \ corruption under * ‘4 Criminal ‘Code: ‘section: dealing: with. bribery’ “of public’ officials and two ‘charges : basis ‘of such flitasy’ evidence, " “Schecter. said-no- evidence: presented ve ‘during a three-week ipreliminary* hearing - " dn: June! guggested the MP had: done ° -anything wrong in persuading then supply“ .understood the case. a For “the Crown to lay “new “charges -and services minister Jean-Jacques Blais. -- he against Mackasey, he said, “would «not. - _ ‘to visit Les Afeliers dusinage: Hall Ltee, a "Montreal machine tooling firm. of which. om Mackasey_ was a director. - - There was no evidence thé conipany had ‘done any business with the government, he said. - Schecter described a- $400,000 loan the ; . Crown alleged’ Mackasey had received in -: réturn:-for lobbying as a'paper transaction. - ‘givén:the blessing of.a bank in’ which no money actually ‘changed hands. - “IT have looked in vain for any trace of © ‘influence peddling,” the judge sald. “Any overt act by Mackasey involved conduct that was not.only- legal and permissible, but laudable.” _ HUGS, WIFE Schecter made known. h his decision to " dismiss the charges about 45 minutes into a spokén judgment: that ran 4% hours. . _ During a break in the ruling, Mackasey’s’ eyes brinimed with tears a3-gave hia wife, Margaret, a brawny. hug.- -_ :“T’ve been very lucky as the Irish tend to be,”. Mackasey, MP for the. southern Ontario riding of Lincoln, said later. an the . " steps of the courthouse, “, in Parliament where I belong.’' At -the preliminary hearing * — which: ould not’ be reported: on at the time because of a publication ban imposed at _ the request of Mackasey’s Jawyer Raphael ‘Schachter =~ Blais testified that he visited Les Atéliers at Macknsey's: -Fequest, in’ Jantary, 19982, The company was: interested i in-winning: subcontracts on the CF-18 fighter’. plane project, but Blais said that even he had no influence. over whieh companies won |. _ contracts. head _of trauma services, - said Lori would have to Stay. some type of fluid for some . _ time," Cleveland said> The’. . could have been standing in. good circulation, and: we i, have to Keep a close eye on -her. She’s still-in somewhat | *@ little bit of shock.” — But. he. said- she was it because, “She's as strong - as the rest of us,”" - The Polands,’ from ‘the ‘town of Sheridan south of Denver, wept with relief ‘recovering and would make — - Thursday after Lori was ° found, The girl was discovered - _ by two birdwatchers who ‘heard cries from - deep - within a. pit toilet. in Stapleton Park, just north of ~ Interstate 70 near Genesee Park. ' CALLED MOTHER . Hearing Lori call for her mother, Cynthia and Steven “Gaulin of Pittsburgh, Pa., . fetched a fleshlight from 7 retrieve; 7 youngster. she was doing down there. - who called a the ‘Mrs. Poland said inter ‘that Lori told her a bit about hier abductidn. “She said she didn’t want ther there was uctor, however. Lori 8 - Lori was abducted by a from ‘the front of her house, where she had been playing’ with her -, -brother and Irlepds, ‘ _ i See tee Blais, named minister. af defence i in a cabinet shuffle two. weeks ago, added that -. Mackasey had exérted no pressure on. him. On the $400,000 loan, testimony showed showed -that a. company. owned, by — Mackesey's accountant, Robert Harrison, borrowed $400,000 ° from the Bank . of Montreal in’ November’ 931, to buy. the MP's stock portfolio, valued at only bi half _ that: amount. The ‘$400, O00 was 5 given { to the Bank of Montreal as a payment an a $625,000 debt - : owed by Mackasey: The bank accepted a... $50,000 settlement from Mackasey on the.” ° remaining $225,000, but only alter -he- resigned from. the House of Commons ° committee on banking. ! (OB x stroke. of Trish’ Tock on his and bisthiey, “og ve eteran Libera} MP Bryce Mackasey was) “ “grasping?’. ; helpless ‘pawn, a a. puppet”: in the: alfa ran “ “Mackasey was relleved of iis debt. nly”... of. ‘defrauding: ‘the. federal: ‘government - ‘grace’ of the bank. “The bank Wag “through the. sale’of ‘his: influence: - Mt: tg ineonceéivable,” said - the \dge, :*. : _ by. the’ Ghat a person should be put on trial on the: 7 > either Sent. - ‘ Schecter’ ‘s judgnient. _ treatment on page one, Its summary of the — "i schecter said the :| gtrWe, a ‘recovering the ‘money.’ “money: “changed hands: paying itself! with its:own money.” °°’ ' “Schecter was “highly critical of Crown -"Atlorney Michel Saint-Cyr, saying with a” hint of sarcasm that nelther the prosecutor a. . nor ‘the’ RCMP investigators: had. fully a - obly be manifestly unfair but would border : on being abusive.” YSaint-Cyr said he might appeal Schee- ter’s decision. He sald he will proceed with - ’ charges. against , ‘Harrison - and ‘Jean’ Bruyere,..the. former : president: of, Les Ateliers, who are ‘charged with trying to: bribe a-public official — Mackasey. - -7 ‘Their’ preliminary hearing is to’ begin availability of a judge.’ JF *° CRITICAL OF GAZETTE Outside the courtroom Mackasey spoke bitterly of. the Montreal Gazette, whose " reports earlier this year on his dealings. . with Les Ateliera‘led him’ to requést-a *. House of: Coramons inquiry into hia cone duct. Referring: to “The Gazette as “that goddamn paper,” he said he had not yet decided whether. to sue. “I'm a great believer in the freedom of the press and. - .. the press has had great freedom to pny - with my name, my reputation,’ in headlines. ’'ve counted 17 cases of “potential bel.” - _ “This ‘is one birthday.I’ll remember for - ~ the rest of my life. I will return'to my seat | ‘The Gazette taday gave its account of 15 days of evidence also began on page one - and continued for tt pages inside the first | ” section. . Gazette _ management . declined . any ; immediate comment.on the decision, —_.. The Commons inquiry by the committee: - “on privileges and elections was adjourned . May 24 when the. RCMP laid: charges. _ ‘agaifist Mackasey, Liberal Maurice Foster, the committee chairman, had no ‘comment.. Thursday | ~ when asked ifthe. inquiry would recon- . vené, but ‘several. .cémmittee. members | ’ said they thought it should, “It’s not Mr. Mackasey who is on trial at _ the committee, it’s the Montreal Gazette ” thet. Wey dre examining to * determine whether they did or did not act properly with the: information they had, 7? said Liberal Bud Cullen, cloud of suspicion’ still . -hangs over . Mackasey. While Mackasey’s actions were not found criminal, he said, they may have been improper. Mackasey was first elected tothe Howse of Commons in 1962. He has been labor’- minister, immigration minister, post- . Taster ‘general and chairman of Air ':. Canada. He was briefly a meniber of the Les Ateliers, which -had backed the $400,000 Joan with a promissory 1 nole, went ‘ Quebec national ‘assembly alter being +. elected i in 1976... had been ately “ hoping’! \ the . arrangem nt ‘vould imprve its chances of 6 or 7, depending on the. - banner-headline . New Democrat Rod “Murphy said “a - Canoe trip. an odyssey WINNIPEG (CP)— Some. people plan weekend canaé. trips. Sixty-one-year-old Verlen Kruger maps out odysseys. - The Lansing, “Mien. native is a veteran canoe racer ‘who once paddled 11,200 kilometres from Montreal to the Bering Sea, but that's nothing compared. with what he's doing now. Kruger, whose “snow- white beard makes him lock a bit, © like . Ernest Hemingway, is nearing the “end of a three-year journey that has taken him and his partner along North . America’s. .-- historic waterways, « - ‘their car and asked ‘what - . ', 1 Live here,” Lori said in. ‘a’ faint voice, said. Mrs. ’ Gaulin, - ‘voliinteer .rescue crew tg frightened to go back into the: hole ; vagain. She sald. when she “erled, he scratched her, She just -stares into. Space but. . Bhe’s coming. back. She's -fonna be OK.” |; ; Mra, Poland said she y was” insure. wh only one aby . tly referred to. . ‘both - “him” and’ “them”. - nan who Jured her away He’s been up the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, in the Great Lakes and down the major rivers'of Canada and ‘the U.S., logging’ about. 42,400 kilometres starting out April 29, 1980, - This from a man who had - never set: foot ina cance - until he was past 40. Kruger and his partner Steve Landrick, 30, say they to explore, and rediscover _ “North America “and to express our deep loveof. . freedom, independence and adventure that’ we find in téavelling by canoe.” . “They plan te end their trip in Lansing, where both are _ from, Nov. 19. » Kruger," who was. in, "Winnipeg on Thursday, said the most dangerous parts of the trip involved paddling’ down tlie Pacific Coast froin Alaska to Baja and going up the Colorado River in the” ‘Grand Canyon: : a DANGEROUS IN CANOES.- “The Pacific Océan ts. not", a place for‘a canoe,” said —e Be GA a area nan fe ‘since ~ Kruger, a | would not recommend it. - ~ “The Grand Canyon was there were times when I thought it was. There were times when we spent’ the whole day on one rapida. There were. tithes: when we ‘had to climb up straight walls.” ; Prayer helped them. get through ‘the: treacherous * canyon, he sald. -“It's that simple. It took a little help from above.” Kruger arrived in Win- nipeg ‘without Landrick, _ who was recuperating from a virus in Wyomitig. We’ re always a team, but- we're not always together, i . Lansing together or not at — ‘considered impossible and finish. ‘We'll arrive in all. m Although ‘Kruger and Landrick have. split up several times during. the trip, which begar at the .River near Red- Rock, . ‘alone. Kruger arrived in. ‘Win-- . hipeg with Valerie Fons, a . the Mississ!ppi River to top. Kruger ~ said. . “The whole thing is a team — endeavour from start fo headwaters of the Missourl Maont:, they never travel 32-yeartld cance. racer from Seaitle, -Fona logged . -almost B, 000. kilometres ‘during various stints in the ‘tourney. Fons and . Kruger have tentative plans to race down the record of 38 days. “I: know -we can ‘beat : that, * said Kruger. Flight predictable. - CALGARY, (CP) + A discovery ‘that ‘eriminels | are _predictable in the way they flee from the scene of a crime “has, helped Calgary police catch more culprits. embarked on their journey © Sgt. Rosa Macinnes, head ‘of the: polité canine unit in “fag. “Calgary, told a seminar Thursday.at the annual meeting of the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police that an "examination of flight patterns of ‘criminals across Canada ‘showed criminals who panie most often make an initial left. turn as they flee and then begin making consistent right ‘turns. - La ” The examination; conducted several years’ ago, also - ‘showed that criminals tend to run and hide along the right ‘side of roads and buildings, Thosé Working in pairs almost ‘invariably hide within.70 metres of each other, . MacInnes said such knowledge about typical behavior ‘patterns and. “old: Indian tricks’? — reading clues from --footprints and. disturbances’ in the. environment _ can be useful for police searchers, ‘A goud police tracker,. hie. said, can. give investigators clues about a suspect's. age, weight, athletic ability and: State of mind, © or . “The astute track reader can read ‘these signs and by underitanding come ta nw ‘i quarry."