} _ last week ' “gountries far holidays, Sone VANCOUVER (CP) — “? Ginter said Monday he _ will make a bid by the end of January for the British ‘ Columbia wine _* operations of Uncle Ben's Industries Ltd. which have been in receivership for the past two years. Ginter said he is trying buy back - all his , company’s , B.C. nd Alberta assets, He wor court approval to match afexfer from T. G. Bright and Co. for a winery in Westbank near Kelowna, B.C. Last month, Bright's, an Ontario firm, said it would pay $800,000 ’ for the winery’s land and building and an ad- ditional sum for in- . ventory. Ginter has until March 15 to counter Bright’s offer, now before the B.C. Supreme Court. Receiver Harold Sigurdson has said the dings would be sold to ’ Bright’s unless Ginter comes up with a better offer. . Inay be back Ginter said the 4 praised value of the winery is $2.8 million. Value of the inventory, which he set at $750,000, dependf on what is available at the sale’s clofing date. h aoe ae back ne 0) uy ‘bac e Be. company's two brewerles—an unfinished one . in Richmond, B.C.,Nand another in Prince George, B.C. He said he will submit offers for both to the receiver within a month. The sale of the two breweries, Ginter said, should satisfy the com- pany’s indebtedness fa the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce and complete the receiver’s . job. Uncle Ben’s was placed in receivership at the bank’s request. Last month, the court approved Ginter's offer to buy his Alberta, brewery for $2.6 million. Closing date of that sale is Jan, 31, Foreign student could be vetoed “" VICTORIA (CP) —-The - federal government is willing to let provincial -yovernments veto the ‘entry of any foreign : student into a province, Bud Cullen, minister of employment and im- migration, said Tuesday. ' In a speech to a joint ‘meeting of provincial inisters of education ‘and manpower, Cullen said that under the new immigration act, ex- pec become law April 1, some provinces “might want to suggest _ that no student, whether they be destined to public or private institutions, be admitted to _their _ provipce. without their oP ADRESS, ADPIOy: Mi pitty : Tonwe d -be: quite prepared to include such : @ provision in any im- migration agreement with. any province,”’ Cullen said. Regulationf under the tr new law will require -forelgn students to get -gpecial authorization to study in Canada before they arrive. They will nat be permitted to change faculty or institution once they enroll, to prevent what Cullen called “shopping round among’ Canadian. institutions while they are in Cana A ; “ Thenew act is designed to match immigration movement with regional opulation and labor force openings. Cullen ‘also tied the new policy in - with his departments’s manpower | programs, ' saying more Canadians must be trained in skilled labor to reduce reliance ‘on foreign journeymen to fell jobs in Canada. There has been a recent surge of criticism in the political arena of man- power training - programs. Critics say the rograms are inadequate cause Canadian - -companies are adver- ‘sing in Great Britain id other foreign skilled workers at a time when more than 800,000 Canadians are out of work, MORE CO-OPERATION Cullen said Canadians have become a source of skilled labor secondary to foreign workers who, on the average, finish their apprenticeships at an earlier age. - “In the face of the highest unemployment rates in the postwar tiod, can this situation allowed to persist?” he asked. = Expansion _ of pren ceships will require eased ¢ ation between the two levels of vernment: 5 the fief i ministers from Eastern provinces that their share of federal funds for aining programs will mat be reduced as some had feared. But he said some money would be shifted away from “some soft spots which we must deal with if we expect to retain public idence, as well as the substantial investment of tax dollars ‘which we feel we need to do a better job.” Citing a fight against youth unemployment as a rticular challenge to é government, en said‘ various federal make-work programs for youth will soon be pulled together under one umbrella. More students should get practical work ex- perience as part of schogl programs, en said, she minister added at young people bait voung Peeple mgs or beneficiaries of a $100- million employment tax credit rogram. . schedulednio be an- . . nounced in Parliament next week, A text of Cullen’s speech was relea in advance, : nos __ Christmas Holiday Fires. 3Members of the building 996 crews have rallie ‘together to collect over - | $1200 for two co-workers _ ‘gut, and the caus of the -who-lost all of their seasions in unrelated fires over the Christmas : “Pot rebuild welder Ken . '-Hume and _ building 227. - welder Henry Amos and: famll escal ws armed fom the fires “that destroyed ‘their: - fpomes, but they lost “almost everything’ they, owned to the flames. : ’he fund was split 60-40 _ between Henry, who is! ‘married and has four’ ‘ghildren, and Ken, who is “single. :Ron presented a cheque for $753 to Henry and another for $502 to Ken last Monday. . The. Amos: ~family's ° residence is on Owekno Street in Kitamaat Village.. Henry wasn't”: home-“when f broke blaze has not yet been determined by the fire department. He and his. family will move back into their house as soon as. it is rebuilt, he says. : The fire which claimed Ken's: possessions oc- ‘curred in his Kuldo Street . apartment. “At about 5 a.m, I woke up for some reason. 1 opened the door to the living reom and by EE a an Ny he says of the and feet By the time firefighters had’ extinguished. the blaze, Ken’s furnishings and possessions were destroyed, = -. : ‘Unemployment, - The R look like some sort of eerie moonseege, but ac- tually it’s just a time exposure shot taken from the _ dobless rate will climb in "78 predicts board stood at D weion at post-Depression record levels in 1977, will be even higher this year in spite of faster economic growth in eight provinces, the Confer- in Canada private, nonprofit forecasting agency, says in its latest estimate that the average jobless rate for 1978 will 8.4 per cent compared with the 1977 avera OF — -¥ PER CENT. board says unemployment will rise in seven provinces, remain steady in Ontario and Nova Scotia, and decline in British Columbia. ; But. real economic growth will be greater this year than last in most provinces. Only Alber- fa— which had the highest growth rate in 1977—and Saskatchewan will show declines this year, Nationally the board predicts a growth rate of 4.7 per cent in 1978, compared with 2.9 per cent last year. Despite the decline in Alberta’s growth rate this Music Box TORONTO (CV) — At 16 Lisa Dal Bello is hot on the heels of international success with a debut album on simultaneous release in Canada and the United States, and a recent appearance in a plush Los Angeles club, igned to woo concert promoters and big-name ‘ managers Although she has never had a singing lesson in her -lifenher ‘career started early. Playing guitar. and singing in a chor] group, al 13 she had won a CBC talent contest and recorded four songs for radio broadcast pro- duced by Ian Thomas, then a staff producer for radio variety at the corporation. ’ Born in Woodbridge, Ont., she quickly became a celebrity in her home- town high school as she started to make television appearances and won lucrative commerciawspots. Her first. network appearance was on: Stugalong Jubilee, “and Tommy Ambrose was responsible for getting me started in com- mercials,”’ she said. with | a broa . “Remember that beer ad, ‘Raise a cheer for ...’" Well, if you do, that was Lisa Dal Bello singing the lead part. JOINED MUSIC MACHINE From Singalong Jubilee, she went on io _ Cancer make pearances _ on Muse achine along with rformers like Shawne. lackson, Wayne St. John, Roy Kenner and Doug Ri- ey. . on Music Machine, she oti on sige otf 0 Win singer- eee ten & ronto boy who made good in the. Mandalla, went ‘on with Domenic Troiano to. - join the James Gang and now is lead vocalist with - the American funk band iW : About a year ago Kenner arranged a showcase for her at a Toronto hotel and a number of record com- pany rsonnel from the «5. Hew in to hear her. Among the audience was Ronnie Hawkins, who called -her ‘“‘the. most gifted. female vocalist I've come to hear in some long time.’’ . It worked. Shortly after she signed a deal. with MCA ords and flew down to Los Angeles to record her first album with a couple of Elton John’s sidemen, L.A. Express band master Tom Scott and guitarist Larry Carlton from the Crusaders. In the near future, she’ expects to work with another Canadian- Italian, Gino Vannelli, an artist who touched her enough once in concert to inspire her to dedicate a Song to him, titled Touch e. causing — chemical The U.S, labor. depart- ment took emergency | action Monday to reduce the exposure of workers to" an alleged cancer- causing chemical used in producing synthetic The emergency order was the first under the pecupational safety and health administration’s _ new. policy ‘to reduce .. tke ey "to head of OSHA, said the action is necessary be-- worker exposure “ to cancercausing chemicals to .the lowest feasible level, - ' The order reduces the amount of. acrylonitrile that workers can exposed ‘to in factories, processing plants and other facilities to two parts per million parts of air averaged over an eight-hour period. The previous level allowed wus 20 parts per million, . fests on . The colorless liquid is blamed for causing lung and colon cancer. EXPOSURE CEILING - SET . _ OSHA also set a ceiling of 10. parts per million for any 15-minute. period’ during the eight hours. The emergency rule is effective . Assistant Labor Secretary Eula Bingham, cause information from. studies — of chemical and laboratory. mice con- clusively establish that “exposure to act- ytonitrile poses a potential carcinogenic risk to humans.” .The Society of the Plastics Industry Ine. called the emergency rule unnecessary. ’ tribute to over-all frequent -ap- - mer, :@ -To- -~--- mmediately, f workers | ’ previously exposed to the highway. In the distance is Pohle’s burner, year, the province will cent rise in the labor continue to lead the force. others, the board says. Saskatchewan, the Real growth in e province in 1974 will be 5.4 per cent, compared with 6.3 per cent in 1977. WON'T CONTRIBUTE Of Alberta’s major indusivies, agriculture and mining, including oil and natural gas pro- duction, will not con- i ‘owth this year, the board says. The province’s ' jobless rate—lowest in the coun- try—is expected to climb slightly to 4.5 per cent because of a four-ner- other province to show a decline in real growth, will have the lowest growth rate in the country at nine-tenths of rate was 17 per cent. Saskatchewan’s jobless rate will rise to five per cent from 4.6 per cent in 1977, the board says. _ Agricultural —_ produe- tion will decline by about 10 pet cent, the board predicted, to play the main restraining role in the province’s economy. Watch for hidden logs - and fence posts! _ depro ‘ammers tried to tal one per cent. In 1977, the - § THE HERALD, Wednesday, January 18, 1978, PAGE 7 Moonie claims wig ae Chg kidnapping TORONTO (UP) ~ A formerpolitical aide to Nornian Cafik, federal minister of multicultu- ralism, said Tuesday that Cafik held him against his will in a California mote] room while im into quitting Rev. Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church. John Biermans, 24, of Chesley, Ont., who is on leave of absence from the University of Toronto law school, said Cafik had ealled him at his Sann- Francisco home several times last September, urging him to take a job as his assistant in Ot- wa. He had previously worked as an aide to Cafik from 1974 to 1976. following areas: south half. a and be ( During Mark Twain's days es o newspaperman, he wes editor of ee small Missourl paper, One day he received o letter from o subuerib 7 Te stating thot he hod found a spider In his paper, andosked = if this was an omen of good er bod tuck. > Twoin replied: “Finding a aptder in your paper is nelthor mf good nor bad luck, The apider wes merely looking over our paper - will keep the spider away from your door fe | District of Terrace ‘NOTICE Notice is hereby given that a public hearing | will be reconvened on proposed Land Use Contract By-Law Project No, ADP-02-7619, The proposed contract is concerned with the Lot 1, Block 4, O.L. 360, R.5, €.0., Plan 3265 (Keith Avenve and Tetrault Street) The general intent of the proposed Land Use Contract between the District of Terrace and YOMO Management (formerly All f West Glass) is to allow for a muffler shop, a | m warehousing outlet, the cutting, installation and sale of glass and related products, and the assembly and sale of overhead doors on S the north half of the property, and C2 Neigh- bourhood Commercial activities in The proposed Land Use Contract may be J viewed by any and all persons requiring more specific information, during regular business hours at the Municipal Hall. The reconvened public hearing will be held ‘In. the -Municipal . Council Chambers on: Monday, January 23rd, 1978, at 7:00 p.m. Any and all persons having an interest in | the proposed Land Use Coniract By-Law Project No. ADP-02-7619 shall take notice governed . Biermans told a news conference, called by a University of Toronto religious studies profes- sor to discuss religious deprogrammingin Canada, that he h to meet members of Par- liament in Ottawa Jater this week to ask for legislation _ outlawing rogramming. ‘Biermans said he did not rant ihe job offered y agreed to go to Ottawa to discuss it after i received a call fresa Cafik on Sept. 22. Biermans, a former Roman Catholic, said he was surprised when Cafik called three days later and said he was in San Francisco and wanted to take Biermans out for a coffee. : the. § accordingly. E.R. Ha lisor Clerk-Administrator a . noe eee a ee ee = piste hb GTR ed + one » la - 7 : 4 of - . _ to see which merchant was not advertising so that he could i oy a _§0 to that store, spin his web across the door, and lead “ — 7 a life of undisturbed peace ever afterward.” i a pa . . | Terrace daily herald |: Phone _ " ” MO pon seated