Page 2, The Heratd, Tuesday, July 3, 1079, Joe Clar OTTAWA = (CP)--Prime Minister Clark willspend the next two weeks at his summer residence at ‘Harrington Lake in the nearby Gatineau Hills, his first real break in a whirlwind of long days that began with the start of the election campaign in late March. : “T guess we're -all_ Tillicum Keyboards AMPS It tests out in the -Lab. it works out on the street. reporters an y Saturday as he boarded his flight home from the Tokyc economic summit, - Like their leader, Clark’s inner circle cf advisers is _Feady for a respite... A few of the prime minister's closest aldes talked of the strains of the last few months on the flight introduces. PLANS HOLIDAY home from Tokyo. . "] feel as if I've been sctambling nowstep for the last three months,” sald Jan Green, locking executive assistant, _ “Firat it was the election campaign, then the tran- Bilton to power, then the embassy thing (last month's trouble over Clark's con- troversial plan to move the and offers you the opportunity to win ‘a LES PAUL GUITAR free! Aria - Fender - Yamaki - Guitars. - Fender Rhodes Pianos - Mason Risch - Heintzman - Pianos - Leslie Speakers - Cordovox Aecordians - Guibransen - Galanti Organs Tillicum Keyboards _ 4722 Lakelse Ave, 638-8463 Clark's boyish- Canadian embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusa- Jem), Hnally the summit," For Green, the ‘summit was a satisfying conclusion ‘to the list, He was the one who got much of the blame for the planning oversights which plagued Clark’s last international venture, a round-the-world trip. in January, a The trip was a teat of a dif- ferent type for the prime minister's new press relations director Andre Payette, : : Tt was his inauguration as Clark's chief spokesman. Payette left the country “struggling te match naméa with faces among the 50 newsmen who accompanied Clark, By the end of week, he still hadn't mastered most of the ° -names, but had at least honed his talent for being Somoza bombs ; k says he’s bushed _ gracious when he forgot na 68, The third top bureaucrat to share some. of his initlal In- sighta into the Clark regime was Jacques Roy, Canada’s “oHilelal notetaker in the closeddoor meetings of the Tokyo summit. _ As agsigtant cabinet secre- tary, he had done the same job. for former prime minister Plerre Trudeau. The difference in styles oa req amajor adjustmen for him, Roy said, His role under Trudeau had - been to observe carefully, but say little. With | Clark he was under orders to tell the preas as much as he soythng’ which bina any’ Ww m em- barraas the participants ‘or disclosing major decisions in advance of agreed release 68. Nicaraguan city MANAGUA (CP) — Nicaraguan President - Anastasio Somoza’s Natlonal Guard aircraft pounded the northern town of Sebaco on. Monday to start an offensive to recapture guerrillaheld northern cities, Sebaco, 129 kilometres north of Managua, controls approaches to the key cities Estell and Matagalpa, both In the hands -of guerrillas who. are bent on overthrowing Somoza's rule. The Natlonal Guard said Monday it plans to retake one by one the 12 towns in north, central and southern Nicaragua occupled by the quer 8, _ Realdents in Leon, Nica- ragua’s second largest city 88 kilometres to the north, arid {n Masaya, 40 Klometres- to the south, said both cities had been bombed Monday. In Washington, three U.S. envoys concerned witt the situation in Nicaragua conferred with Deputy State Secretary Warren Christopher on the pos- sibility of further ateps after the apparent collapse of a ‘U.S, proposal for ending the crisis. Lawrence Pezzullo and Ambler Moss, U.S. am: bassadors to Nicaragua. and Panama respectively, and William Bowdler, who is maintaining contacts with the Nicaraguan guerrillas, are due to return to their posts shortly, a state department spokesman sald, US. offictals said the am- bassadors were summoned to Washingten to discuss - policy options after op- osition leaders in iearagua reacted coolly to a Us. proposal for ending Somoza's rule. . The United . States proposed last week that he replaced by a broad- based opposition council. ) Stil more winners. Strike it rich Check your ticket against these winning numbers. If the Loto Canada pouch you buy contains one of these lucky numbers, you will be a millionaire. 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OneTicket,Two Draws,Buy Now. eee een He said Trudeau went into international forums aiming to push the discussioy to : what Roy called a “superior philosophy.” . This sometimes made the prime minister's poaltion difficult for Roy to explain in everyday language. Clark's role, by contrast, was tospeak for the man, Roy sald, He went inte the summit hoping to come to an’ agreement all the leaders could accept and all their citizens would un- derstand. He wanted’ con: | crete commitments - and specific targets. ecilc targets, on Quebec seperatism examined SHINGT ~_ Inaneditorial Modiday, the career to consider, did not say Clark's actlye per- formance at the summit surprised him. He did say, however, the new’ prime minister was more im-, preasive than many officials , had anticipated. | “BUM R. p> UPHELD SEATTLE (AP) — Pishermen preparing for the opening of summer salmon season say the Court's upholding Tap, but it won't change 8 much, A couple dozen fishermen, were mending their neta and working on their boats | Monday’ morning at - Seattle's Fisherman's Whart when word of the high court decision. came.,.through. ‘I's a bay declalon, copout,” Latry Dont S2,said, © Dontos, skipper of a four-man crew, mu! . about hanging “him” in effigy, but declined to aay . whether “him” was former U.S.. District and steelhead trout, In a 6-3 ruling, the high court also said the faderal court could continue ta supervise: fisheries ‘‘if state recalcltrance or state law barriers should be continued,” Dontos sald he would stay in the business, although ‘‘lt will juat be a little harder. Hlegal fishing is the only way to make a living. 1 don't condone it. But who would you rather face, Boldt or the bill collector?” Fishermen have fished in defiance of state reguiatlons since the Boldt decision. ho ing “Everyone was hop even if they (Supreme Court) upheld the whole decision, they would. change the. allocation," said Dontos. ; "T predict lots of | 1 fishing and- aggressive competition among the commercial fishermen. They've got to make boat payments and feed their to pull together to pool | fish." The fishing season opens later in July. Tom Galbraith, 52, has fished all his life. He said fishermen were right back where they were before the Supreme Court decision. “They (lustices) haven't made any changes, or only minor ones,” Galbraith said. He said he was “sure some effort will be made along the linea of Congress" to reetify the injustice fishermen see in the 60-50 split between Indian and commercial fishermen. But Galbraith said it would be difficult for fishermen to organize an effective campaign’ for congressional action because ‘they're a uma H, ependent group with a lot af competition. We can't even get the selners and gillnetters together.” Asked whether fishermen could not get together like. the in- dependent truckers, Galbraith quipped, “People ean do without fish.' “It they (flshermen) don't get time te go out here, they'll go up there.” common - death behind a horse, United States Supreme | the 1074 Boldt Indlan | fishing decision ia a bum |' Sin Aad | annual catch of salmon | crews, and no one Is going |. X _| NEWS IN BRIEF y THE CANADIAN PRESS - Two men and two women killed Monday in the crash of .@ light ‘plane near Vernon, B.C., were among at least 65- peraons who died ac: eldentally acrdse Canada during the holiday weekend. A survey by The Canadian Press from € p.m. Friday until late Monday night local times showed 63 trafile fatalities, 10 drawnings, five deaths in-two plane crashes, four fire deaths, two persons . Killed when struck by trains and one person dragged to The Canada Safety Council WASHINGTON (CP) — It will be 'no-snap for the separatists” to convince a majority of Quebeckers to vote for independence from the rest of Canada in the long-promised referendum next spring, the Washington ; Star predicts, redicted that between tau 88 persons would die, in traffic accidents di the Canada Day weekend. Last year, there were 45 traffic deatha during. the weekend, the lowest number on record. The worst year was 1067 with (4 deaths, - Investigatora said - the. ‘toa approach (0, V ] approach to Ver- non’s smal municipal air- port. The cause of the crash was not known. In addition to the plane _ ’ crash, British Columbia had 10 road deathe, => newspaper says the phrase “aovereignty-assccla on’ coined by Quebec Premier — Rene Levesque to describe the new relationship he wants with other } remains hazy and needs explanation. ; “Man survives blizard . SEATTLE (AP} — A Seattle man; who spent two nights in _ blizzard-like conditions on Mount Rainier, was in satisfactory condition Monday in a city hospital. An Army - helicopter . Ship search scrapped ume determined number of; _ »«FLAMBOROUGH HEAD, England (Reuter) — A team " of U.S, sclentists and divers walled off on Monday their - search for the: Honhomme : Richard, famed American flagship of Capt. John Paul. Jones. : ‘+ But the team, backed by! ‘American writer Clive “{Cussler, author of Raise the > “Pitanlo, said it will return in two years when the tides off : northeastern England are again right.and new finan- ¢lng is found. The 40-gun ship, captalned by Jones, engaged the British frigate Serapis on ‘Sept. 28, 1779, during the - Amnerican Revolution. _ ‘After a duel in which 300 " HOPE, B.C. (CP) — A raft with 12 tourlsts aboard ca Hell's Gate section of the dangerous Fraser Canyon, but all were reacued by alert passengers in two accom- panying rafts, e rafts, Cascade River Expeditions, were making a trip through the canyon similar to the one made in early May when a raft overturned and three of 11 passengers were killed.. Cascade alao operated the raft involved in the earller fatal e: tion. . An unidentified witness said Monday that one of the Sized Monday in the. owned by: airlifted Craig Hixon,” 28,.— from the 9,500-foot level of - the mountian about 8:30 a.m. Monday. Reacuers had found him earller in the day, sald Larry apokesman Service. Americans and British died, Jones: forced own shi was cut-in two by Bri carn’ nonfire and was sinking. When told to surrender early in the battle, Jones made hls famous reply: “I have not yet begun to fight. Ha travaferred command to the Serapls when the Bon: homme Richard sank. Flamborough Head, ‘A spokesman for the Marine Ag Underwater 8 , founded Cussler, aid $200,000 waa spent combing 300 square: ometres of seabed, Passerigers -dunked on raft® rafts hit a wave, rose up and was sucked underwater in whirlpool in the Fraser | ' River. . He said all that was visible at one polnt was the-top of ‘the raft’s pontoons. . e raft emerged from the whirlpool, he sald, only fwo persons were left. hanging onto the raft, The . . others were bobbing around in the water and some were floating downstream, - The survivors were taken ‘to Fraser Canyon Hospital here for examination and none were aeriously enough injured that they were ad: tted for treatment. Carter proves unpopular . NEW YORK (AP) — President Carter's popularity has sunk below e lowast rating Richard Nixon ever received during his troubled prealdency, an ABC News-Harris public- opinion poll released Mon- flay says. | : Carter’s latest rating for over-all performance in the White House job is 73-per- cent negative, 25-per-cent positive, with two per cent of those Americans polled not sure, It is the worst job performance rating ever — even a presidentin a Harris pol, Carter'a marke in a previous poll, in May, were. . 70 per-centnegative, 20-per- cent positive and one per — cent not sure. Harris said the previous — presidential low was a Tl- per-cent negative rating given Nixon in a_ poll released five weeks before he resigned in 1974. Queen’s car assaulted EDINBURGH, — Scotland (AP) — A man dashed into fhe road and oe the oils-Royce carry jugeN, Elizabeth here Monday, Police made an immediate arrest. The incident occurred during a demonstration by a dozen people whi confronted the Queen and Prince Philip . at the end of a visit ta tha Royal Infirmary, The ‘demonstrators were protesting reductions in the publicly-financed National Health Service. The group waved placards saying “Save wastecut roy- alty, not the NHS." - The car, with’ spittle dribbling down a window, was not halted by the in- cldent, Nazi commandant sentenced COLOGNE, West Ger- many (Reuter) — A former Nazi concentration cam commandant was sentenc Monday to nine yeara In prison for Involvement in the murder of prisoners of advancing Soviet copa, advan ov , ' ‘Walter Knop, 66, had heen accused of the murder of 169 prisoners from the Gasren concentratlon camp, near present-day Cottbus, East Germany, In February, 1945. But he wae found guilty only of complicity in murder ina 10-month trial, The court heard evidence from wit- Weimar nesses in Poland, ‘Czechoslovakia and France, Knop, a sergeant-major in the Nazi SS (elite guard), was in charge of the evacuation of prisoners and a four-week march te Lelpzlg, about about 136 kilometres away. Many marchers died of exhaustlon or through ill-treatment by . SS guards. y A Polish witness who gur- vived testified that 60 prisonera were shot because they were too weak to maka the {rune to the Buchen- wald death camp outside Henderson, — a. for the Park’.