~~ father W. A. - Both ‘EROM 1 Howard’s . _ harder now than-ever before. ; ‘Bennett took his Okanagan ~ South stronghold, held by his Cc, Bennett before him, by about 9,000 ‘votes over New Democrat Hugh Dendy, Barrett, premier between, 1972-and 1975, also ‘won his - Vancouver ; East rlding speeviation about Barret’ gi lon about Barrett's _ futute as, NDP chief. - Deapite his defeat, Barrett saw-a, bright note for the NDP ‘which. increaséd Its thare of the provincial vote _ to about 44 per cent ‘of the ' vote from ‘about 59 per cent in 1978, . Social . Credit collected about’ 47.5 per cent of the vote‘compared with 49 per cent in tha last election. » - The three defeated cabinet ministers were Agriculture Minlater lost in Skeena* to Frank - Howard, a former NDP MP; ‘ Tourlsm Minister Elwood | Veitch, who fell to Jim ; Lorimer, once NDP munic- ‘ipal affairs minister, and Deregulation Minister Sam Bawlf, who lost in Victoria, ‘winners. ‘in the two- * member Victoria riding. _ Were from the ND ; . Before the renlta carne in, ¥vonne Cocke, the NDP ‘ campaign manager, | Predicted .that her would take 25 seats. She gall FROM L Shelford, who. minis a redistribution ‘of. the ridings wi Increased the rmumber pf seats {057 from 68- had hurt. the NDP. Three out in that change. ©. . Progressive “Conservative defeat in his riding of Oak Bay-Gordon Head, saw his dream of his party becoming a provincial ~ferce go down the drain . Stephens: lost to Social Credit candidate and Oak Bay mayor Brian Smith. The - Conservatives bad run 37° candidates in the election, compared with 29 in 1975, Jev Tothill, the provincial Liberal leader for only two months, also proved a washout. He was defeated in North «Vancouver-Seymour - by Jack Davis, the former © bo Social Credit cabinet ter who resigned. last year after he cashed in first- class, . government-prid _Birline tickets for economy fares and Tort {he change. Stuart Leggatt, who resigned Inst year as the _ federal MP-for New Weat- minster, won his riding of Soda Sp over 1 Credit party president ee egaalt a popular 47-year- old lawyer, is. touted as a possible successor as NDP . leader to Barrett, Former NDP human re george Kerster, NDPheld seats were wiped : _ former sources ‘minister Norm Levi took. Malllardville- Coquitlam: riding™ over the Soclal. Credit car dealer who had upset Barrett by 18 votes in ’ the:1976-election, - ‘leader Vie Stephens, who ” suffered .persbnal Another Social Crediter to go down was Frank Calder, the Nishga Indian chief who had held Atlin riding for 28 of the last 30 years, Calder, a NDP cabinet milnister who switched to Social Credit in 1975, was beaten by. New Democrat Alan Passarell, - ‘ Unlike the 1876 ‘élection, when a clearly unhappy “electorate swept the NDP outof office after three years of government, tha cam- paign ,has been quiet — Bennett deserlbed it as ring. ‘When he announced the vole, Bennett tried to set the pattern for the campa saying the issue was private, ° individual. ownership ad- vorated by Social Credit ‘mig against 0 government control pe _ by the ND He bacted up his com- mitment - private en- terprise by taiklag about his. giveaway of shares of the governmentowned B.C. Resources Investment Corp. and of a Social Credit plan to aell off Crown land: to the public. The government also Trudeau vows hard ” plan, he. sald. . The people would decide the way. they wanted - their constitution changed, Trudeau was elaborating oneeth detailed 75- minute 5 bn a sketched Wednenduy - to ‘to 18,000 at Toronto's Maple Leaf Gardens, He spoke | FROM 1 im 4 con- ‘versational tone, listing methodically points for and againat enstitutional ‘orm. His 6 mainly French, with only a smat- tering of English, dyawing’ scattered, occasional laughter and applause.:: , Seemingly relaxed,” vivid contrast : with - bis fighting atyle in Toronto. the a Clark soft - - Quebec . searatien he pr “There should, be apower nationally to. redpond: tia: referendum taken in a province of Canada,” But such a referendum - would he. specifically designed toanswer a specific referendum, Conservatives. would not seek the sweeping power’ Trudeau sought in referendum legislation that dled in the last Parliament. -Asked. if he would in- troduce a referendum in a “September session of Parliament he has proposed, Clark first he said no; ,then said such action may be ouele necessary by action in FROM 1 ~ mechanism for” " MacLean, inoffice for only . ; &: week, said any move to "dai the consHtution should. seonie: alter! should follow agreement ona ” con: atitutlonal amendment, The visit was Clark's first . and only one of the federal hae onl to this four-riding Oar his visit, Clark left in the Liberal Veterans Affairs Minister Dan MacDonald, _ whois campalgning from his Ottawa sick bed. Clark drew only a small crowd, Many Islanders who might have attended were. planting. potatoes instead, Broadbent Canadian economy and leadership have been the two maiy issues in Broadbent's recent. speeches and his aides say he'll continue to atress themas the campaign: enters the final phase. He told the teachers: “One issue transcends all ‘— the questlon of resources. We are at a potential turning point and I want those -resources, Instead of. being _ processed In the United States, Japan and Western Europe, I want these. re- sources kept at home." He said this was the heart of the‘ NDP’s long-range industrial strategy and Canadians should not be tempted by short-term election promises ( ‘other parties. The NDP _—_wanted. Canadian resources ‘owned by Canadians, controlled by Canadians and turned into finished , products by nadtans,"’ “; want to bring Canada back home to Caradians,!’ On leadership, he recalled Trudeau calling Quebec § farmers 5 complatnert and telling the unem: British Cob Columbia * plored get at He also accused Trudeau of pitting Prairie wheat farmers against organized labor in Ontario by saying in Saskatchewan that big labor | was taking over the NDP. He also sald Conservative Leader Joe Clark had not reacted well under the preasure of. the electlon cam Seay he gays he will fegotiate sovérel nity: association with (Qu Premier Levesque and ‘the next day he sa 8 he won't,” eoark ave had flip-flopped tk also ip on his stands on medicare and Petro Canada, Broad- bent charged, If Clark had done so badly in an election campaign, what would he do \under the real pressures of gave! Canada, Broadbent ask “T leave you simply ith this question.’ ~ Broadbent started Thuriday by greeting rush- hour commuters in down- _town Toronto. After his speech took the rest of the prepare for: televised. debate Trudeau and Clark, — Sunday's with “can be Bue riding held by . night before, Trudeau ~opened his talk with a discussion of the long heritage of Canadian Francophones. -- He. - noted French Canadians were the first to ‘explore. and settle most areas of. Canada and he: ‘decried. ‘Separatists who swould |. . speaking. Canadians to said Quebec. . -cdnfine French- outside Quebec. ‘The federal government le eee eS win contested - brought down a budget April 2 which included a reduction in the provincial sales tax to four per cent from five per cent, increases In homeowners’ granta and renters’ tax credits; a cut in income tax and a variety of business incentives. Bennett was accused by both NDP and Progressiva Conservative . critics of to bribe the electorate th their own tax dollars. Nevertheless, Barrett countered Bennett’s - puggestion that an NDP government would reverse the giveaway of shares and would dump the Social Credit budget by saying a government led by him would proceed with those two measures, Barrett and the NDP - waged a low-key campaign ign by . in Which the former premier said if he was elected again be wouldran a more realistic government and try to avoid mistakes made during the rty’s 1972 to 1975 tenure. legislature jrababin wil ko pro called in early June te pass legislation outlined in the thrown speech in March and. the budget which waa in- troduced In early April. Bennett sald he was satlaifed with his. campaign but expressed rellef that it WAS over, FABLE PLAYED |! FOR LAUGHS Androcles and the Lion, produced by the Travellera Theatre and msored by the Terrace Little Theatre, ia a family comedy that will ba performed in Terrace on Friday and Saturday, ‘The original fable is written by Aurand Harris in the style of the Itallan Commedia del] ‘Arte and includes traditional characters such as Pan- talone, the miser, the braggart Captain Harlequin, ete, The performances on May ‘11 and May 12 begin at 8 p.m. Advance tickets ara avallable at McColl’s Realty at $3 for adults and $2 for children. Ticketa are $3.50 for adults and §2.50 for “the arginat fable tells of C) ‘able t Androcles, a slave, who has taken refuge from “bis cruel master {na cave in Africa. A lion enters the cave and shows him his swollen paw ° from which Androcles ex-. tract a large thorn, Later _ Small .. gift but great help ‘May 17 and 18 have-been ' gelected as datea for the line _, aalting us most for change . '- le sald he is not ready to the ‘ abandon Francophones are also saying 'we won't iet you change: and ‘you’ can't change without unanimity (of the provinces)’, ~ This rig’ formula requiring . unanimous federal-provinclal approval for any constitutional amendment stands in the way of aati the issue, he apo ede rnin peech himself, Aides Bay it ina key element:in the ‘final election push and ‘wants to entrench: basic: Tights such as language in the constitution and it wants ; to ensure that children of ‘all vCanagian * ‘governniente™” agree:” It. both ma rt ge groups in their own tongue, he a: said He would call Parliament within 30 days of the election and announce: its con- situtional plans in a throne speech, Within 60 days of the election, convene another federal- provincial conference on an amending formula “If we agree, we will uncork the champagne,” he said and the amending formula would be added to the joint CommonsSenate resolution. Should no agreement develop, Canada: would get ’ Ita consitution without a new amending formula, For the next two years, he anid, Canada would be” saddled with the current rigid’ need. for federal- rovincial unanimity, Ot- fi a ser approval by six of tawa would continue to the provinces In an effort to find a solution. “Outlining what he termed thefrustration of 10 attempts in 52 years to find a way to plant the conetltutlon in Canada with a universally acceptable: system of overhauling it, he snid one of the chief obstacles to the most recent federal attempt was Quebec Premier Rene- Levesque. . Failing to settle this con- stitutional issue “may be the cause of the breakup of our. country,’ Trudeau said, referring to Quebec separation proposals, "You .need tq change things, but those who are an eye on your figure - neither will anybody else! At the Diet Center, we LOSE 17 T0 25 POUNDS > IN JUST 6. WEEKS AND TEACH YOU HOW TO STAY SLIM FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE TH out AY THE LOSiNg me uffice hours: 1 Mon.-Fri. 5 nzelle AVE. After hours call Dolores - Trudeau indicated he will elaborate still further on hia constitutional plans in the last 11 days of the campaign. “But then Ottawa. would turn to" the people, asking - | their opinion. on the proper. method of amendment. How pis referendum would depend on whether a provincial plan or a federal . Proposal was offered to the Ottawa. would country. , Should the provincial proposal prevail, Ottawa and e provinces would be und by the decision of the people. Trudeau indicated his own proposal would be, based on getting regional backing in governments; . Should he find that three of the four regions, for example, accept his idea, a referendum might be held . only in the fourth region. A third possibility was a made last year the. 10 provinces. represen- ‘ing 85 per cent of the. population. . Justica Minister. Mare La-- londe, who accompanied Trudeau here, sald the four- ~ regiona idea involving the Atiante provinces, Ontario, Quebec and the West was’ preferred because it was more flexible. Under it, each region would have to approve each amendment proposed. He denled charges that his proposal is unilateral, “‘I will again seek the consent of the provinces and at the collapse Tiahue dthh jwzi will ask the consent of the population and that isn’t unilateral.” will help you be handled would — four different © areas of the country rather than through the 11 senior annual Flowers of ry campaign’ “to assist .:th mentally “re dd : Terrace area. 7 “Two local sororities, ‘thes, Beta Sigma Phi and the Xy” Beta Mu; will be canvasging local residences. and businesses for - donations. © The canvassers will be giving a small gift of marigold seeds to any persons wha wish to donate. All ‘money received In the, campaign goes to the Terrace Assoclatton for’ the Mentally Retarded and will stay in the community to support local association - projects, such as the Three, , Rivers Workshop, the Alice Olsen Home, the Osbourne Guest Home, and: the Jack Cook School. Lo when Androcles is captured . and thrown to the wild beast in the circus’ the grateful animal recogalzes him and the lions refuse to attack, caualng him to be-set free, It is a fast moving comedy In two acts and plays for approximately 79 minutes. The subject has also been used by George. Bernard Shaw for a comedy. Lend a hand Beautiful = An on-shore flow will bring cloudy skies, a few showers in the morning and a few Bunny periods in the af- ternoon. The expected high today is 12 degrees Celsius snd the overnight low is 7 degrees. The weekend outlook calls. for a slow ning up and te during a warming up The Herald, Friday, Mry 10, 1079, Page 3 , WEATHER drying cut period. Tr \ SPR e wks fee WE HAVE. Open to bid Staves Washers Calculator s t May 2 18, 1979 ‘tstHdon Disraigr aa i? Cas, Nay 18, 1979 FEL DAY Maintenence Warehouse - enn _ Kenney Street, Terrace FOR SALE AS Is Cn Gassette Tape Recorders M Thermofax Spir't Duplicator Items on display and Bids taken on Friday 18th. Successful bidders will b: notified Friday Afternoon the following miscellaneous equipment: 3 AM. to 12 Noon, Jointer Oil Furnace . ete, Iona Campagnolo has been a dedicated and effective M.P. since her election in 1974... Her hard work in Parliament and in Cabinet has won government assistance in Terrace for... Highway 37 and Highway 16 upgrading....including $1,000,000 in federal funds for new Terrace bridge. Improved television reception Improvements to the Terrace-Kitimat alrport, with plans for additional improvements underway Assistance for secondary industry and tourism expansion,..lncluding funds to help renovate Lakelse Hot Springs Funding for community projects....Hart Farm, Weewanle Crreek, Moose Hall, Tourist Information Centre, Kitaumkalum Ski Hill, Thornhill Firehall Concern for people and help in cutting red tape Keep a strong voice working for Skeena! Re-elect Iona Campagnolo} ‘ : AUTHURIZED BY THE OFFICIAL AGENT FOR IONA CAMPAGNOLO