MT Tee PROVINCIAL PARLIAMENT BLDOS VICTORIA BC LIBRARY Kitimat Pipeline Ltd. calling it quits coast but British Columbians won't have access to it. He said council had made a statement in support of the Kitimat pipeline before the Thomrson Inauiry.— Kitimat office and no longer promate » Kitimat oll port. Mayor George Thom said Priday tha that company port at Port Angeles. The company spent.three years and in excess of $5 preaident Hines Polas and Edgar Kaiser Resources 0.8 participant in the project, haveinformed million to prepare an application which has never of Kaiser e Ltd. ‘has closed its Vancouve. him that they see no polnt in spending more money In view of lack of support by the federal and provincial governments and the American decision to back an oil been submitted to the national energy board. Thom described the pipeline as a “billion dollar industrial proposal that will never be heard from because B.C. has turned thumbs down and eliminated all the potential industrial _ benefits." Thom sald the oil will be transported down the B.C. “The pipeline would haye been worth $1.6 million per year in taxes to Kitimat,’’Thom said, “The. -PoPs: ‘Shoppe N FREE PARKING ‘BOTTLE DEPOT Beer & Pop Bottles Open 103.m.-6 p.m. dally except Sunday Thurs. & Fri. till 9 p.m. Security _ tight for fune LONDON (AP) —" The British government ghtened security as ef families Mountbatten of Burma assassinated dage ago. The security operation alter police that two a He i rt ¥ Ee E ceeulpel Hf gets: tH ifs : f ld of Canada sent 4 large: delegation including two: former governors general, Jules Leger and Roland: Michener, arrive for the service,. “n with eniffer dogs’ will the huge abbey’ near _ houses of Par. B z = Ft $= F [t a f ti fl were. Fredrick Joseph Hawinkles, 41, of Van- eouver; Douglas Ray Fletcher, 34, of Delta; Robért Taylor, 47, of Vancouver and David. Nelson Mc a, 34 of Adama, 30, the pilot of the fated 10seat Grum- man Goose were also killed in the crash. . Three survivors are it Vancouver's oe General Manager of Trans Provincial Airlines, says - the ministry of transport 5 conducting an: in- ‘vestigation into the tragedy. One name has not been released yet. Va | Vf serracexrriat q Wednesday, September 5, 1979 20c . “\ Volume 72 No. 171 at ‘RUPERT STEEL & SALVAGE LTD. Seal Gove Rd., Pr. Rupert 624-5639 © WE BUY copper, brass, all metals, batteries, etc. Call as - oper Mon. through Sat., 8 a.m.-5 6 pane This may uot he the geat the Fall members are talking abeut , but this Aseeciation t was ene of the fow exhibits nt the fair, The lack of axhibits at the. held their SCHOOL CLOSED, PROTEST CONTINUES The fwo Mile School in Hazelton: has been cloeed by School District 63, despite the protests of the Students’ parents. The decision has driven some of the parents to children out ethool. . Herald, Staff Writer Ed Yudin ‘examines the qeestions of why and how the situation has ifeached a crisis point this week, See story page Clark speaks OTTAWA (CP) — Joo Clark made his first apeech in the Howse of Commons ‘Tuesday since being elected Panta ater tn the May 33 ' election, . However it was pollticlany and senior officials from 3 other countries that ap- plauded him, not the other Bey] Members of Parliament. Thay will not a rin the Commons until Get 9. The chamber was the setting for the o ning wsaion of the Worl Council, a United Nalons agency holding a weeklong conference in Ottawa. Clark told delegates as he started his 15-minute speech that it was his first in the Commons since taking over irom Pierre Trudeau. ' However he made {t from the front of the chamber, Ar African delegate dresfed in a bright blue robe sat in the chair usually occupied by the prime minister white another delegate sat in the meeting 4s being held in the govern: ment conference centra. The h was Clark's first look at the Commons which was wovamped over ; the summer to commodate 23 additional MPs added rough seat readistribution ore the ect... ‘ ‘The main change besides the increase in seats ip the removal of heavy green drapes s from the sides of the [Sati fair, the genera! lack ef suppert the fair has seen, ‘han got their gent. Soe atery page 3. ‘pists ty Gres Mikiicten’ Thousands flee from . this Hf sce bastion of the U. federacy on Tuesaday as hurricane David roared “et | More than 5,000 pertons, many from the elegant ‘Hilton Head Island resort, took shelter as the storm which had already claimed’ more than 600 lives in the ee eng the continued i sweep a Atlantic const. It was eapocted to hit Mneeldeats all alzag the Georgia wala and Routh consts§=6 Were ' About 3,000 persons fied Savannah, Ge., to the south cand thousands of others were Shenot predicted that burricane-force winds would Piped this historic city of hone of Fist Sumter viviee tre U.S. civil war began, with ides sic two to nine metres above. was latitude $1.0 north and longitude 80.9 weat, or about kilometres south: southeast of Savannah, Ga. Te was moving toward the north at 19 to 24 kilometres an hour over open water and weather officials said it = mid tntamaify. Hurricane warnings w tad from Sackville, 1 The mesatene. Forts ¢, Flori da eftieiata toted up the damage from David's strike Monday on the central Florida ibeaches near the spaceport Republic toe ea thelr to of the dead, saying at least 600 persons were The Orne hurricane, packing Con- 148-kilometre-an-hour winds," . last located near Fishermen _face trial ANCOUVER (CP) Oh _ ginbotham the fishermen Tuesday, asked Judge John McCarthy to set a trial date in late and wful entry int ‘ Ww. . 2, Fe doesn’t jurladiction for highly recognise migratory fieh such as tuna. Canadians do not fish for He just « drops in A private flyer made an unscheduled atopoff in Mike. emergency landing on High of-. way Yellowhead 16 .. West , when his private plane ran’ et Ae Injury. Afles refuelling, killed when the storm passed | Brown continued on his over that country late last Ketchecan to California | week, flight, albacore tuna because it usually doe# not enter Canadian waters on the Weat Coast, however, this year the, has initiated | tuna have come. further north and the U.S. fis crossed into Canadian repre te charts, ocnrge of tuna da each the Ue ata the $170,000 worth imported from Cana year. WASHINGTON (CPy — countries, ‘a broader import prohibition is and we will be g2 sa —] a » ec ig iH EMBARGO THREATENED Carter told that under U.8. legtalation © covering rea ea to boat sefzures f alspute is rescved. A Ue anes anid the U8. will reexamine the about the seizures. Legislation by ecg mi exempts the migratory : Fi a i g RE ge wu Ll Ned =f ty over the 200- mile ares and says this includes jurisdiction over ‘ Canada said locked in as supplier OTTAWA. (CP) economies in the We . United States and most other tries doubled since July, 1978, moving into a period or non-existent economic While they can afford to, postpone or cencel plans to mport Canadian manufactured goods, they petroleum and natural gas — Increased by 8 Der cent fox the year ending July 31. During the period, sales of equipment on machinery went up by 2.8 strength 2 a tore Terelan tales picture, a pattern which became evident early spring. Strike caused no problems Aradio weekend failed to seriously atoe’s strike at the Terrace airport this tnormal air traffic. disrup The eix members of ‘eeal 20217 of the Union of Canadian Trans throughout smali alrpor t Employees joined other workers ta in Canada and walked out to protest a recent wage ve settlement handed down by a conciliation board. Malcom Llewellyn, the shop steward of the Terrace local, says ‘only tem will ta" if there is a further walkout. ‘Tee ratio operators have been working without a contract since July 1978. Llewellyn, had no comment to make about the contract situation. Only smaller ware affected b the y elrports by he walkout, as larger airports are trollers. While the he Terrace radio operons we manned by the job, casen' management worseunel