. LOT No.20 Hawthorne Ave. * -Thornhelghts. Subdivision. : “Phase, Only $14,000. Phone: Dave. at 635-3278," © , oo (pio-r0feb 635-2516. “a Ase 8392... "FOR. RENT— 1700 39." ft. warehouse in Motz. Plaza, : ' untt 13010 Kalum St. $700 per month. Phone 635-2312. -/{aceroantin) "FOR SALE ' “BY OWNER Start up your own business. ‘—Sm., retall store. - any ‘—$'bamn. home: - —tge: workshop, Located on ¥ acre of fand “Hwy. frontage In Z. Thotnhil Phone 635-2540, (PEE aiah, +) CENTURY MOBILE § HOME PARK GOOD INVESTMENT ; OPPORTUNITY Small trailer court - 10 pads & 6 rental traliers.- Included. Full occupancy. Room for. expansion, - Convenlent location. Gross’ annual sincome: $25,932. Asking ‘$110,000. Phone 695-2475. | Tees, (p10-17feb) 1973: PLYMOUTH Fury II P.§., P.B., auto. $800. Phone (sti-tin) 3979 34 ‘ton. Dodge Pickup. New motor vend paint job. $3500. OBO. 638-1306. FOR ' SALE— (sth 1977 ‘FORD VAN ECONO. LINE °. Good = running condition. Asking $1000 Phone 635-4448, Ma Lote, ‘ (p5-10feb) MUST SELL! 1974 12x68 Canadiana = .3 798-2594, DG *(pl0-1éfeb) FOR “SALE— fraller park with additlon. Also outside storage shed. . Wood’ heat plus foad of wood. . Furnalshed or unfurnished. Asking $16,500 or best offer. . Phone 638- (p5-8feb) Cemolish Fire Oamaged Residence and: Warahouse, 52 Market Place, Prince Rupert. Tender documents may be obtained + from 4925 Kelth Avenue Terrace, VEG 1e7-fr0rm February V, 1784, Seated Tencers witide racelvedat the above address untli 3:00 p.m. February 22, 1966 and will be opened In public. at that time. For turther Information call W. Halt ; In Terrace at 638-8508, Ces (ace2-3,6teb) 4 bedroom — traller $15,000 OBO Phone- 1anés 2 badroom traller set up In it:'did during last year's - economic revival, but.added that there should ‘be enough .. “cash and eredit: to esp: the © “recovery going." | ‘The semiannual report to . Congress from “chairman ‘Paul Volcker ‘and his: Fed colleagues. had: ‘nothing but: _ our. comments" about’ the ‘problems - ‘created by the “Reagan . record and.-near record ‘budget . deficits — a main " presidential _ “ administration’ 5 -@lection-year worry for the White House. ““Unleds decisive action is. , _taken,. the federal ‘govern: ment deficit will continue tp”. drain off anextremely large. . - portion of -available’ : nel saving in. the economy,” ‘said the report by Fed,- the ; COLOGNE, . many (AP) — Soviet President Yuri-Andropoy is recovering from a kidney . transplant operation and © ‘has ‘been ‘working: “more” than two days a week,” West German expert on the Kremlin sald today.. -. Eberhard Schneider said a ‘well-informed’! ‘source ‘recently told “him Andropov's. condition has improved and - that: -the Soviet leader was expected to give a speech in public. before the elections of the - Supreme Soviet on March 4. “I assume, with . great. probability he will appear ¢ publicly _ before . , then, although one ‘cannot: predict ‘how’ sickness will run. its course,” Schneider told The Associated... Press telephone: ‘interview. . Schnelder, a ‘specialist in Soviet leadership, works at the -Federal-" Institute of Scientific East and Inter- “es WASHINGTON® ( (AP) : “The Federal Reserve Board. confirmed: today it will, keep a tighter’ rein on. the’ U.S. “money supply this-y year than ‘ | many. years, Soviet: wrong,” in -a- » Soviet aenneys ‘housing ‘and business - investment “ai ‘continue-: (oi, ‘operate: Well below . jalan “eaderlying economic ‘growth: me " But: the: ‘report; also had what ©. “the. © Reagan | ad- ministration, ° might: : well consider: ~ comforting economic. forecasts. And’ - “its: “targets -mbnetary - “growth, were | clearly: 1 meant. to avoid the | new, recession’ ‘that. could . ‘result from. ‘interest rates sent sharply. higher by an excessive - ‘growth ° ‘in the fj money, supe: . : : Andropov recovers Weat : Ger--- national Studies in. Cologne. He said-he did, ‘not know ~ ’ when Angropov? had: the _ operation. Fores . Schneider. “dpelined. “to "identify his source, but said. . he had talked . to the source in West Germany. ““L-have -known: him ‘for’ and he .has- ‘never, told me anything Schneider said, "I _ have agreed to identify him ‘only as a Soviet representative,” = - Schneider warned against assuming: that Andropov’s sickness hag weakened his ‘capacity to direct Soviet policy. . Andropov . has not: been seen: in ‘public sinee ast August. “IT warned . ‘about this during | the Breziinev illness as well,” he said of the late president Leonid Brezhnev, who died in November 1982. “Just because a Soviet leader is il). does not mean he has lost for *~ by communis can solve the problem. | & HOT SPOTS Kissinger report | - target for leftists” The report of Henry Kissinger’ commission on Cen- ° tral America has been under fire from both sides — from leberals and leftists who believe that there is nothing rong with having the whole area dominated and from ultraconservatives who con- tue to insist that several additional bombing ralds The debate is heating up. The seven ‘candidates {com the Democratic Pary nomination use it for their elec- tion purposes and are. trying to attract by their critique of the Kissinger comm Strange as it may sound, in Canada the report has -preduced an even more emotional reaction than that in his authority." 4 crt ant la Gero’s: J Sterling News Servic v Feature - ublic attention - on’s report. - allowing them to Americanism. the United States. A CBC radio survey on Jan. 15 show- ed that almost 95 per cent of those calling in to the pro- gram's guest, U.S. Republican Senator Nick Brady (a member of the Kissinger commission), denied any positive aspects of the report and expressed their firm. support of Marxist guerrillas throughout Central erica. However, this does not mean that either those par- ticipating in the program or CHC itseli exp the opinion of the majority of Canadians. Anti- Americanism has. been for many ‘years for CBC something like the holy stone of Kaaba for the orthodox Moslems. Yet the style in which the survey was con- ducted and the amount of hatred toward the Urilted ° States evident In the program shows that the Kissinger report and the whole situation in Central America is us- by militant Canadian leftists In order to increase anti-American feeling In Canada following the defeat of these forces on the issue of the crulse missile testing © in Canada, The report, however, is the most serious attempt ever to face the complicated problem of relations bet- ‘ween Central America and the United States. It was signed unanimously by. the 12 members of the bipar- tlean commission, people who belong to the conser- vative and liberal camps and who changed thelr mittds after Intensive travel and meetings with the govern- ments, 0 oppositions and average people In El Salvador, Guatem a, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Mexico and Hon- uras. The commission accepted as a basie premise that the United States Hes been historically wrong In su porting r fruition dictatorships such as Batista. Cuba, Tru! @ Dominican Republic, and Somosa in pees cars The major necessity in dealing in that area now Js, according to the commiasion’s findings, to , drastically | increase economic ald ~ $4 billion in five years was therecommendation. . Even more important is the recommendation to tle ‘the ald to the human rights Issue, If the report were to - be accepted by the Reagan administration the govern: ments of Guatemala and El Salvador would be depriv- | -ed of economic and military aid until the death squads are eliminated and basic human rights are guaranteed. Land reform should be carrted cut in the shortest possible time and that also should be a condl- tion to receiving the aid. . At the same time, military aid to those governments who are fighting communist guerillas should be in- creased four or five-fold if those governments once again a tobe bound by the human rights issu And that Is the essence of the Kissinger report, ‘which suddenly has become a target for Canadian leftists, exercise thelr endemie antl- ‘This Is what It looks Ilke behind the Skeenaview bulldings. new Terracevlew buildings can be seen to the right of the Construction crews are going te be tearing down the old two cement culverts. The $3.5 milllon facility will be buildings soon to. make room for the new buildings. The completed by mid-May. ‘ Eric. Middleton overcomes first hurdle MINNEAPOLIS, - * Minn. (CP) — Eric Middleton, the tiny = eight-month-old Windsor-area ‘boy whose —. need for a liver transplant \,. Spatked | a continent-wide, search for a donor, over-. ‘came his second major “ hurdle today by surviving 24 hours with the new organ. Although he was -:stifl listed In critical condition. in the intensive-care . -unit, of ‘the Minnesota . * Health officials said surviving the first 24 hours following the. operation: was , a: ‘second crucial victory for Eric. The first’ was simply surviving the gruelling seven-hour, iransplant operation, during which the Amherstburg, Ont., infant - nearly died. “He' 's still loo, critical, ifor us.,.{9: Breathe, A. SiBh AL relief," Windsor. Star. ‘This is the time where we go through each hour and say that.he’s made il. “We'll be happy . in. ‘a, couple of days wien he's oul of the woods. There’sa lot of worry ahead," Middleton said . Sunday the donor liver had yet to “kick in, bul added it is considered normal for. an organ deprived of blood and oxygen for several hours to delay functioning when it is finally transplanted. Erie received the donor organ after the parents of a brain-dead infant agreed to _ hospital's, ~ Middleton » flew _y retrieve il. Sciences Centre, _ hospital . Doug Middleton’ said in an interview with the - , more. than another. "donate their child’s liver for ‘transplant. ' DONOR- SECRET The-donor, who remains anonynious.’; under — the tule of” fidentiality, was apparently Erie's age and size. It is not known where the donor organ came from, although said: hospital's transplant : team "a. long: way” jo Throughout Sunday, Eric " remained. unconscious and — ‘on a-respiralor, where he ; was to be kept immobile during the critical, 24-hour recovery period following the. dperation, Middleton said his ‘son . may be unconscious and under heavy. sedation for . another ‘one- or. lwo days, _ depending on the speed of his, recovery. oy don't guy.” Las| week, doctors said Eric — afflicted with a liver deformity, called - bilary atresia: -. might “nol live {wo weeks unless he received a transplant, LOTS oF HELP ‘Helped’ wby friends, the Middletons launched a seareh ‘across’ Canada and ‘the United. States. -for a. donor, telephoning 1,500 hospitals and transplant procurement centres. They were aided with public appeals for a donor from con- © : result’ of ’ the khow: pow: he . nade it. T Feally. don't, guess ke’ 's just a tough ite ; ready . other federal Health Minister Monique Begin, U.S: am- bassador Paul Robinson and National Hockey League star Wayne Gret- zky. Middleton said he does not “know who the donor is or if the. donation came as a lhe publicity campaign. | . The family learned that a donor organ might be available Friday, but it was not until Saturday evening that Ihe liver was -deter- mined to be suifatile for- | transplant. The hospital's ‘transplant team began preparing Eric _ for surgery: about 6:30 pam. Saturday. At thesame time, the hospital's organ: retrieval leam was flying (o the donor's hospital to- in- spect and “harvest the gore: ; _ bl At 9 p.m., hen it was | ; ‘known that the liver would’ -be suitable, a surgical team: led by Dr. John Najarian . ji began . making’ necessary ‘incisions - the Ihat would ‘prepare Eric’ to; receive (he new liver. When Dr, .Nancy Ascher, organ retrieval unit leader, artived at- the operating — _ Toom with the liver about — 11:15 p.m., surgeons were io remove Eric's failing liver and replace il with the transplant organ. ‘Middleton and. tis wife, Mary, sat nearby in. a waiting room “holding each and holding our breath," he said, ‘The baby s heart stopped. ~ Pilot. rescues climber- ‘BANFF, Alta, (CP) - . intrepid -helicopter: vilot “risked a night flight lo pluck - an injured.climber from the "side of a frozen waterfall afler_a.snow ‘slide left ihe man- stranded with a broken leg. . "Matt Siska of Calgary was - swepl . away - an avalanche saluiday while he “and a pariner,; Paul Wierzba, were. scaling an ‘fey, fall just north ‘of this. . Rocky Mountain resort. ““f started tumbling over.’ and over and.then the rope. - caught me,” Siska said. “Et - happened in about | three seconds, bul I knew my lep - had’ been broken before 1 stopped,” ‘Wierzba scrambled down to comfort his companion and then set out for- help. Park rescue officials decided that a hazardous night ‘helicopter flight was ‘the only choice because they feared Siska would die if left on the slope until dawn. “Tt was a very, very dicey situation,” said- Keith Everts, assistant chief Diplomats expelled - NATROBI, Kenya (Reuter) -- Authorities in Marxist: ruled Ethiopia have expelled several diplomats from the US. Embassy in Addis Ababa, . diplomatic sources said toda y. . The sources, ‘contacted in Addis Ababa and Nairobi, said | the diplomats left the Ethiopian capital inthe last few days after being. given short notice 10 leave the country. The exact number of diplomats involved and the reasons for their expulsion were hot immediately disclosed. ' One source said two of the six fully accredited diplomatic staff remain at the U.S. Embassy In Addis Ababa. The embassy has. had au skeleton. slaff since 1980, when Washington.. withdrew its ambassador ut request. oe Ethiopia's The-reported expulsion marked 9 new low in relations ‘between Washington and Ethiopia, one of the Soviei Union's Closest-allles in the Third World. . Before the 1974 lefiist revolution thal overthrew the late Eniperor Haile “Selassie, the. United States held a predominant position in Ethiopia. : “Relations plunged during the 977-18 Ogaden war between . . Ethiopia and Somaila when the United States supported ” Somalia, while the Soviel Union, which had long supported Somalia, switched ‘sides and threw ils support behind . Btblopia's new: revolutionary authorities, warden. Pilot_Jim Davies agreed to chance a reconnaissance flight-while other wardens illuminated the fall from below with spotlights. —Walki COOLS GEE --Family orlented - close to schools Hospital, convenience store, parks, car wash, all in’ area —$200.00 move In allowance for Jan. 1-15" Professionally = _ by trained staff who respect Telephone: 635-5968: a Property Stewards ‘Western Ltd.) during a critical stage of the operalion as the donor -organ was being alltached. “At Lor 2 am... (Sunday) they told us there were a lot’of problems,” he said. “I don't know how to’ explain how we fell, We just did a lot of praying.” ; - Doctors used hearl massage to revive Eric. for infants, operation at the hospital. 1t is not known how long it will take him to fully recover. Regardless of the oul- come, the Middletons. said they have become com- “mitted to increasing public awareness of the need fer organ donors, particularly The American Red rosé At4a.m., Erle, described organ retrieval’ unit in as a ‘“‘little fighter". by Minneapolis estimates ‘Najarian, was wheeled oul 20,000 potential organi ‘of the operating room and into intensive care, Eric is one of the youngest patients to undergo such an for organ donations. LOOKI LOOK! Residential lots ot @ bargain: price Quiet area with a view. _ PHONE 635-2330 - _ Coachman Apartments | Dalure apartment dwalling, fridge, sfove, _ carpeting, drapes, undercovae parking, elvator, decuslly system, resident manager. Phone manager anylime 638-4268 ards, double s.s. sinks ing distance to down town and care forour tenants | - TERRACE’S — NEWEST & BEST TOO Now at affordable Rates One bedroom at $325°* mo. Two bedroom at 8360" mo, ~bURPORE —Attractive, spacious; extra storage room —Beautiful appliances, tiled showers —Lovely cupbo —Large balconles with screened patio doors — —Lotsofparking; recreation court . _—Security, enter phones and deadbolts —Brapery co-ordinated to w—w carpets donors die in the Uniled ’ States each year. Of those; only 2,000 are.actually us : Peet a Tees poreewrr erate