PAGE 4, THE HERALD, Thursday, July 20, 1978 a Job opportunities .. Further detalis on the following jobs are ta be obtained by ‘calling the Terrace office of the Canada Employment Centre at 635- 7144. Millwright ~ IWA rate. Terrace. Permanent full dime. General duties in loca! mill - shift work involved. General Office Clerk - DOE §3.50 hour. Terrace. Per: manent full time. Invoicing through a cardex inventory system. Accurate typing. Auto Body Repairman - $4.00 hy. Terrace. Prefer jour- neyman, Experience in metal and light collision repair. Waiter-Waltress - $3.00 hr. Terrace. Must be mature and responsible. Manager-Suprv. - Stereo Dept. DOE. Permanent full time. Must have retail sales experience knowledgable about stereo equipment. Musthavegood management skills. Clerical Assistant - $5.23 hr, Terrace. 50 wpm typing, filing, photocopying, minute- taking, mail, shorthand dicta preferred. Typing teat to be given. Composing Room Foreman - Negotiable. Terrace. Must be journeyman of 4 years experience. Must have thorough knowledge of all equipment, Must be able to do minor maintenance and some repair. Carpenters - DOE union wage, Dawson Creek. No accommodation supplied. Grader Operator - Negotiable. Must have logging and road building construction experience. Plumber - Union wage. Kamloops. Must be jour- peyman or experience, — Cook - $3.00 hr. Terrace. Shift work. Cook pizza’s, steaks, etc. Chambermaid - $3.75 hr. -hr. Terrace. Own transport - typing. Cook - $3.00 hdur. Terrace. Cooking and some clean-up. Shift work. MAPLE CREEK, Sask. (CP) ~A man who helda 16- yearold girl hostage for more than 12 hours shot and killed himself today after he released the girl unharmed at an RCMP roadblock near this community about 95 kilometres east of Medicine Hat, police said. . The incident began about 9 p.m. Tuesday when two men held up a motel in Brooks, Alta., about 100 kilometres northwest of Medicine Hat and escaped with an estimated $1,-100, police said Baker - $7.00 per hour to. start, Terrace. Permanent full time. Must have ex- perience. Housekeeper - $3.50 hr. Terrace. Housecleaning duties. Prepare supper. Radlater Repairman - Negotiable salary DOE. Terrace. Permanent -. full time, Must have experience or related radiator ex- perience. Some light mechanic work. : Themen, one of whom was earrying a shotgun, forced Registered Nurte - Clinic = iy. girl, a waitress, to join $5.50 hour, Terrace. On call only - for relief and for emergencies. To assist in clinic. Computer Operator - $850 - $1200 mo. DOE. Terrace. Permanent fulltime. Must be experienced on IBM System 32 - Must be IBM trained, Operate 3741 Keypunch. ST. ETIENNE, Que. (CP) — One convict was captured today and police cordoned off a 30-square-kilometre area near this village southeast ef Montreal os they searched for another of the prisoners wha escaped Laval Institute on July 11 after a gunbattle in which two persons were killed. Police captured Andre Chartrand, 23, following a brief shootout shortly after dawn. Police spokesman Ronald Brunet said they surprised Chartrand and Ghislain Gaudet, 27, while thes were camping in a tent alongside the St, Lawrence River. The two fled into nearby dense woods where Char- trand was captured. But Advertising Salesperson - Negotiable. Terrace. Must be fully experienced. Must have own transportation. Must be able ta work in dependently. Cocktail Waitress - $4.25 hr. DOE. Must be 19, mature and reliable, Construction Labour - $4.00 and asse. Some building experience preferred. Short Order Cook - DOE. erra . Gaudet, thought to he rerre Ses ob PE oes heavily armed, eluded preferred but will train police. He was serving 11 Must bave own tran. Years for robbery with vio- sportation. , lence. _ Reporters were being kept General Office Clerk- Bookkeeping - $410 - $450 month. Terrace. Per- manent paritime. Accurate Bookkeeping - payroll, filing, reception. Experience required. Associate Dental Surgeon - Fee for Service. Must have 2,4,D OTTAWA (CP) _ Agriculture Minister Eugene Whelan said today he is Terrace. jmust have some min. of3 years experience 48 se experience. Shift work. dental surgeon with B.C. concerned here tt . cence. Execusiue-See 2§1,000-- --- cocdas'sen @¥eu.the use of the herbicide wren, filing, transcribing, shorthand month end reports, exp with public. Apprentice Baker - $3.50 hr. Port MeNeil. 2 mo. probation period. No ex- perience necessary. Clerk-Typist - $8,400 year. Terrace. 4. wpm. preferred, Security Guard - $4.50 hr. Terrace. Must have D.L. Fixed shift, transportation available from town, Ex- perience preferred. Carpenter - TBA. Terrace. Min. 1 year experience required. Must have own tools, Plumber - $12.00 hr. errace. Must be fully experienced, Must have own transportation. Apprentice Baker - $4.00 hr, to start. Terrace, Need drivers Hcence. Hot work and heavy lifting involved. Draftsperson - DOE. Terrace. Must have some experience as a draftsperson for a legal survey and engineering practice. Babysitter and Light Housekeeping Duties Terrace, Ages 1 and 2. Must have own transportation. Chainsaw Operatar - $5.60 hr. Terrace, Must have own chainsaw. Temporary only. R&B available, Filers - [.W.A. rate. Terrace. Permanent full time. General duties in local mill. Must have saw fil or saw fitter experience, Streetworker - $138,00 week, Terrace, Hrs. flexidle, must be able to work ind, and be able to commun. Mechanle Helper - Terrace. $4.00 hr. Must have own tools to assist regular mechanic. Waltress- $4.00hr. Terrace, Shift work. Prefer ex- perience. Fro regiatred “Ne "4 * to head nurse, Shift work 3 "and light howekeeping. -‘sueprvigory 124° 2,4-D. which government scientists say is safe if properly used. “There is no question con- cerning the safety of 2,4-D when used for the purposes for which it is licenced. If there were any, we wouldn't allow it to be used,”” Whelan said in a statement. Use of 2,4-D to kill weeds has been attacked by en- vironmental groups, mostly month, Terrace. Care of patients in ICU maintenance of equipment. Responsible percent VP. Room and "ourd provided at cost. Walter-Waitress - $3.50 hr. Terrace. Min. 19 years. Able to handle cash. Ex- perience not essential. Hostage taker shoots self them in a getaway car which was then driven toward Calgary on the Trans- Canada Highway. Police the car was followed by several RCMP vehicles. Calgary city police con- tinued the pursuit through north Calgary until about 3 a.m., when one of the men left the car “and walked around, the corner straight into the arms of some of our guys,” said Insp. Don Nelson of Calgary police. An RCMP spokesman in Calgary said that a 15-year- old suspect was in custody but no charges had been laid yet. Que. convict captured outside the cordoned-off area while about 50 provincial police officers using tracking dogs, helicopters and boats took part in the manhunt. No one was injured during the brief shootout, Brunet said. Chartrand, serving a life term for murder, was taken to Parthenais detention centre in Montreal. - Guard Guy Fournier, 29, and convict Jean -Lachapelle, 41, were killed during the Laval Institute escape. Three other guards * were wounded. Four convicts escaped, The other two escapers, Jacques Massey, 96, and Pierre Vincent, 35, are still at large. Massey was serving 12 years for armed robbery, kidnapping and two previous escapes and Vincent 34 years for armed robberies and a previous escape. safe, says Whelan Milfcil—an aquatic weed, The eradication program was temporarily halted by a court order but later com- pleted after protestors were eluded by provincial en- vironment officials dumping the herbicide. . Whelan said studies by agriculture department scientists show there is no danger in the proper use of the herbicide regulated under the Pesticides Control ct. Whelan said that tests on laboratory animals show that while birth defects can - $3.7 recently in British Columbia be caused by repeatedly high Riera on bust $5.75 br. recently was into the doses, “there is no realistic work experience. ‘Prepare Okanagan Lakes as part of a risk of this happening under pizzas, pasta, baked Dattle against Furasian practical conditions. ea Uniforms sup e : T Al Babysitter - $10.00 a day. : ourist ert perae. eren rh in to . ysil2children2 &4d years = YANCOUVER(CP)—The Raoul Larsen of Calgary old. Include — light ~— following persons are urged Alta. nai housework, to contact the nearest Louis LeBlanc of St. . detachment of the RCMP for Albert, Alita. Stationary Engineer - $1,400 anurgent personal message: | Mr. and Mrs. Muhl of +. ‘Terrace. 4th class = John Briggs of Victoria Cottage Grove, Minn. engineer. Must have ticket Jerry Dell of Prince Jackie Nelson of Burnaby, (4th) George, , B.C, William Echelmeyer of Denver, Colo. 8 Dianne Hudson of Golden, Maintenance Man - DOE. Terrace. Must have good mechanical knowledge and good working knowledge of carpentry, plumbing, electrical wiring etc. Instructors : $9.00 hour. Terrace, Instructors for specific topics in home skijts B.C. Lelf Rust of Port Alberni, B.C. John Wagner of Vales Mound. Ill. - Cinclude handyman) Arts & PUBLIC Crafts, Academic, Vocational, General interest and self help. Salesman - $3.50 hr. Serving customers. Stock contral _ Housekeeper - $4.00 hr. Terrace. Must have 2 references Includes general housekeeping duties. General Office Clerk - $7.03 hr. Terrace. . General clerical. Must be self motivated and able to deal with people. MP Janitorlal Supervisor ~ §4.50 hr. Terrace. Must have valid deivers licence and ability. Janitorial experience preferred. Will be working supervisor. 8: 00 . Friday, MEETING Hear ., Benno. Friesen for Surrey White Rock| pm. July 21 Terrace Hotel PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE ASSOCIATION OF SKEENA _ George Erasmus, RCMP recruited informants | by questionable methods OTTAWA (CP) — A report that uses the word “terror” to describe the slate of people the RCMP were trying to recruit as in- formants, went to RCMP Headquarters in 1972 but apparently was not acted upon. The 42-page report by MarieClaire Dube-Vani, then a@ researcher-gnalyst in the RCMP Security Service's G- 4unit In Montreal, outlines 27 eases in 1971-72 in which the anti-terrorist unit tried to recruit informants. Four of the cases were re- ferred to a royal commission into RCMP wrongdoing Land settlement no precedent YELLOWENIFE, N.W.T. (CP) — Northern native groups with unsettled land claims unanimously agree last week’s interim Western Arctic Inuit settlement with the federal government is not @ precedent. The committee for Original People’s En- tilement (COPE), representing about 2,500 Inuit in the Mackenzie River Delta area, reached a ten- tative land claims set- tlement with Ottawa last week. It still has to be ap- proved by the group's membership in a secret ballot vote, scheduled for next month, before the lengthy legislation process can begin. Under the interim agreement, the Western Arctic Inuit will own 95,330 kilometres of land and receive $45 million. In return, they will give up all of the Western Arctle which includes the resource-rich Mackenzie Delta. Of the 95,830 square-kilometre area, 82,200 square kilometres will be without full underground rights. But the Inuit . will have guaranteed access to un- derground resources there and the right to establish participation agreements with developers. ; Peter Ittlnuar, executive director of the Inuit Tapirisat of Canada (ITC), said in a news release that the COPE agreement doesn't seta precedent for any other claims in the Northwest Territories. CLAIMS, INDEPENDENT “while all native claims in the N.W.T: are in principle much the same, each one is independent of the other,” says the release. “ITC wants the northern affairs minister to be’ ab- solutely clear that a set- flement in the Western Arctic will not be viewed asa model for the Nunavut (ITC) proposal which affects the remaining 13,500 Inuit living in other parts of the Nor- thwest Territories." Dene Nation president who represents. about 8,500 Mackenzie Valley residents said his organization agrees with the ITC. “The COPE settlement proposal contradicts the most fundamental bases of the Dene position (in land claims bargaining),”” said Erasmus in another release. “oh 1974 Audie 1973 Javelin SST “We have stated repeatedly that we will not negotiate land rights in isolation of our political rights. We have also started that we will not negotiate the extinguishment of our abori- ginal rights." Near death *=" from healthbook KITCHENER, Ont. (CP) — Dr. Mario Shaw, the pediatrician who treated a Waterloo, Ont., baby who almost died fram potassium chloride poisoning, sald he tried unsuccessfully to persuade health officials to alert the public to dangerous information contained in a book on baby nutritlon. Christopher Brown almost died last fall after his mother fed him potassium chloride, a common salt substitute, recommended in the Let's Have Healthy Children, by Adele Davis. The book is being recalled by its publishers from bookstores in Canada and the United States because of the death of a Florida baby. Julian Muller, vicepresident of Harcourt Brace Jovanovich Inc. of New York said the book will be reviewed by medical ex- perls. es 4 e a peaet eat ae SES Sse Listed Here! RI a a! KD sete SPREE EE ulna ne If you wish your Business Phone = listed for your customers please call, earlier this year on the basis they involved questionable if not iegal police methads, Three more cases were added to the list later. The royal commission Wednesday made portions of the report available to reporters as well as the transcript of an in-camera hearing June 7 at which Mme. Dube-Vani testified. . A copy of her report was mailed July 7, 1972, to the deputy director-general of the Security Service in Ot- tawa. Donald Cobb, then chief of the G Section in Montreal, in an ac- eompanying letter described the informant-recruiting program as a successful one that had disrupted one group, “neutralized” some others. INFORMANT AFRAID Some excerpts from the report as translated by —Although the subject had not been terrorized by his interviewer, nonetheless he was very afraid, He ex- pected Sgt. (Laurent) Hugo to hit him.” "The subject” later fled Montreal after telling associates about the encounter, Mme. Dube-Vani said this “neutralized this —"The proposed strategy was to impress ‘this subject with the goal to obliging him to cooperate with us. Six jnvestigators in three dif- ferent cars, therefore, cornered the subject when he was going to pick up his memployment insurance. ... The idea was to give him the impression that we were going to terrorize him." Two Mounties took the “man for & 17-hour session in a motel room. “Both of us fook.turns calling bim ‘dirty’ and a child. We ‘then made him stand in a corner and “just stared at him without speaking. Following this he was left alone with one of us, either Sgt. (Laurent) Hugo or Cpl, (Bernard) Dubuc.” The man agreed to co operate ‘but later “disap- individuals and inhibited pe ared.” —“Cpl. Bernard Blier visited the subject in Trois- Riviercs wilh two false arrest warrants. He requested the subject's co- operation telling him that in exchange, the warrants would be ignored.” “The subject believed the authenticity of the false warrants and was very frightened when he was ted with them at the offices of the RCMP. ... The subject quickly consented to co-operate although he hated Bernard Blier." Lazelle Medical Genter is pleased to announce | Dr. Lennox Brown has rejoined Dr. Ron Brooks, Dr. Catherine Reilkoff and Dr: John Birbeck. t rata em eM ata Niew. Busine ii ot Wot listed in our B.C. Tel Directory. 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