A2 CASTLEGAR NEWS, August 12, 1981 Trudeau arrives in Tanzania By Roger Smith DAR ES SALAAM (CP) - Prime Minister Trudeau arrived today in Dar Es Salaan, the Tanaznian capital, after charming his Kenyan hosts Tuesday but rejecting calls for quick action to ehlp Canadians deal with the country's economic woes. President Julius Nyerere, ‘Tanzania's leader since in- dependence in 1961 and one of the Third World's most re- spected spokesman, greeted ‘the prime minster and his three sons, Trudeau will hold talks today with Nyerere and visit a wheat farm supported by Canadian aid on Thursday. He and his sons will then wrap up their 2%-week African safari with a visit toa remote game park, returning to Canada on Aug. 17. Before leaving the Kenyan capital, Trudeau rejected Opposition Leader Joe Clark's call for an early return of Parliament and an early budget. He told reporters there was little to be done about Canada’s current economic woes - including record inter- est rates and a slumping dollar - because they are mainly caused by high in- terest rates in the United States. “What's in this thinking that you can get men and women together in a room ag the Americans will stop Giv The prime minister earlier told the United Nations Alt- ernative Energy Conference that Canada would give an extra $40 million for energy- related aid in addition to $1 | billion in bilateral aid prev- iously earmarked for similar purposes over the next five. years, The new money would be spent on energy projects in He told reporters he would be “very surprised” if he were criticized for giving more money to foreign coun- tries while Canadians suffer under high mortgage rates and costly credit. People should realize Canada’s “economic, political and social woes are very small” compared to problems in ‘, en- courage Canadian companies to adapt new technology to needs of poor countries and to help Africa's drought- plagued Samel region. RCMP officer killed in Sask. CLIMAX Sask. (CP)- The non-commissioned officer in charge of the RCMP detach- ment in Climax, Sask. died in hospital Tuesday of woulds suffered when he was shot while stopping a car for in- spection. Shortly after Cpl. Ole Larsen, 34, died, RCMP said @ man suspected in the shooting was found dead across the border in Montan. RCMP did not release his name or details surroung- ing his death. A spokesman at the Phillips County sheriffs in Malta, Mont., said local officers were involved in finding the suspect of the Climax shooting. He also declined to give further in- _ formation. Climax, a village of 300, is 23 kilometres north of the Saskatchewan-Montana border. RCMP in Swift Current, the main detachment in southwestern Saskatchewan, said Larsen, a 14-year vet- eran of the force, was shot in Climax about 11:30 p.m. Monday. RCMP ands. authorities conducted a manhunt for the suspect before he was found dead in Montana. RCMP and U.S. authorities conducted a manhunt for the’ suspect before he was found dead in Montana. Details of the shooting were still sketchy. But Bill Tutkaluk, owner of the Climax Hotel on Main Street, said he was out on the side- walk when he saw larsen, alone in a ‘patrol car, in Picket iine cioses electrical plant NELSON, B.C. (CP) — The South Slocan plant of West Kootenay Power and Light Co. closed down Tuesday when 65 members of the site west of Nelson. The disruption marked the 12th day of work lost by the electrical workers in second- eas abot disputes this year. of Electrical Workers refused to was picketed by eae members of the Work cross an picket line set up by in foo! yet oe uate fees. ers. ~ Union. earlier this year, the. Sheet Metal Workers’ 7 International Association, local 280, said they picketed the power company because it hired a non-union roofing firm to work at its Brilliant Dam abn also refused to work when the company used a licence plate declared hot by the B.C. Federation of Labor during the current Insurance Corp. of B.C. strike. Premiers criticize Trudeau's trip continued from front page not yet an energy producer, reserves are being proved up on the east coast and Peckford has adopted a pricing stance allied to that of the current producing provinces of Alber- ta, B.C. and Saskatchewan. RELIEVE PRESSURE Bennett, whose province is an exporter of natural gas, said at an earlier new con- ference that realistic energy pricing would attract capital into Canada that would in turn relieve current pressure on the dollar. Bennett said there is great uncertainty in the country over the economy and argued the federal government will have to show leadership by ending its preoccupation with the cinstitution. “The British North Amer- ica Act is not responsible for the debased dollar, high in- terest rates, unaffordable housing and lack of energy development,” said Bennett. “The constitutional debate is not the Canadian people’s priority, that was an item pressed by the prime min- ister.”” OTHER ISSUES EXPECTED Among other issues ex- pected to arise at the meeting are fiscal arrangements with the federal government on post-secondary education and’ health care, the federal decis- ion to cut national passenger rail service, pensions, re- source revenue sharing and a prceived need for expansion of freight rail service. At a Tuesday afternoon finance workers pursuit of another vehicle. The pursued vehicle stopped in front of the hotel and the police car pulled behind it. Tutkaluk said as Larsen approached the suspect's car, the suspect got out, pulled a gun and fired several shots at the corporal. Tutaluk said the suspect was not a local resident. He telephone RCMP after the suspect drove off. Ted Rapley, an employee at the local Saskatchewan Wheat Pool elevator, also saw the shooting and gave a similar account. Larsen, who is survived by his wife and two children, was the fifth RCMP officer to die on cay in Saskatchewan since 197 SGt. Bab Schraeder and Constable Doug Anson were ki Oct, 9, 1970, at MacDowall, 30 kilometres southwest of Prince Albert, while responding to a domestic dispute. They were killed while approaching a farmhouse. The body of a suspect was found’in the Mac- Dowall district the following spring. Constable Brian King was killed with his own service revolver in Saskatoon on April 26, 1978, when he stopped a vehicle for inspec-, tion. Two youg men now are serving life sentences after being convicted of first- degree murder. Constable Roy Karwaski was hit by another car. Controllers fara os wwete legal continued from front page A decision on the action was reserved Tuesday. There were lingering effects of the boycott. In many centres, airlines found them- selves short of aircraft to fly stranded passengers to their destinations. “We had to leavé soitie™ planes where we didn’t want to Tuesday,” said Brock Stewart, an Air Canada spokesman. With some airlines scroun- ging to find vehicles for their customers, most centres were tic and inter- sw IW action air traffic caused by the Can- adian controllers. The controllers’ actions, which varied from city to city, left domestic and interna- tional flights in disarray. Ef- fects ranged from overpop- ulated airport terminals to ingly endless flight Pa those affec-'§) ted had some unkind words‘ for the controllers. z “I'm be; ing to really hate unions,"’ said Kenneth Creaser of Montreal as he awaited a flight in Edmonton. “I wish I had a few of those national flight delays of any- where up to three hours. Smith said tight hers. I'd like should continue to phone their airlines before leaving for the airport. In Toronto, the problems continued to be compounded by a broken communications line which has cut direct phone lines to one facilities since ary, onto faced lengthy waits and several short-haul flights were cancelled. In Winnipeg and Montreal, however, oper- ations were close to normal. In Calgary, service was severly curtailed when seven controllers were sent home Canada said it ill does not know when the service will be restored. In Halifax, heavy fog was causing delays. An airport spokesman said things were expected to return to normal INTINUE On Tuesday, planes sat idle or flew behind schedule and passengers continued to com- plain during the second day of in meeting held to prepare the groundwork for discussions on the economy, agreement was reaffirmed on the fiscal arrangements issue. ‘The provinces are upset because the federal government has proposed lopping $1.5 billion from payments to the prov- inces for health and edu- cation. “There is a strong consen- WAI RM house or trailer for tsth ot Sept., from Kin- narid to Fairview. We have no children/pets. Phone 365-2829 sus on Programs Financing (the fiscal arrange- ments) that it has worked very well,’’ said Saskatchewan Finance Minister Ed Tchorzenski, emerging from the meeting. 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HAIRLINES is your Redken ah Pecae ie "a Boa Pe Beth th Kaye or weor Laurel ‘ody @REDKEN' 620 Columbia Ave. Castlegar, 365-6700 ping And anyone who thinks he was been spending too much time abroad should reme- mber August is the annual vacation for MPs, he said. “If- I do a little work in re- lation to the Third World during that time, I don't think that’s too bad.” Stupich p VICTORIA (CP) — Dave Stupich is going to the bank this week to arrange a loan of about $15,000 to pay for losing to Premium Bill Bennett last month in the and cornflakes’’ Stupich, the NDP mem- ber for Nanaimo, said Tuesday he plans to pay the money himself and does not plan to ask his party for vassistance. If there are plans under foot to help him, Stupich says the organizers ‘have kept me in the dark.” He said he will go to a Nanaimo bank Thursday or Friday to arrange credit for the $10,000 in damages he owes Bennett, plus about $5,000 in additional court costs he has not yet paid. Stupich, who sald he is “disappointed in the size of the award," has paid about $2,100 in costs so far. ‘Added to the $15,000 still owing, to total cost ofhis comments in a newsletter s drinking about $17,000. LAWYERS TO MEET He says his lawyer in the case, former attorney- 4 award general Alex Macdonald, will meet with Benn ett’s lawyer Peter Butler to make arrangements for payment. Stupich says he does not expect to have difficulty arranging credit, but will wait to withdraw the funds depending on the payment scheme. Stupich announced earli- er this month he would not be eppealing the decision. Bennett said he is wait- ing until he receives the money before deciding which charities will benefit from the award. Forest bargaining continued from front page Gruntman said he doesn’t expect the pulp bureau to return today with a final offer. But the bureau's negotiator Dick Lester should show “some move- ment on the areas we've outlined”. He added. The new list tabled by the CPU contained a demand for an unspecified improvement in the wage vacation improvements and increased rates for CPU longshoremen. Finally, it wants further adjustments for skilled and semi-skilled workers which would include an increased trademen's adjustment beyond the pre-strike offer of 40-cents-an-hour, an upward revision of the curve on the union’s job ANNOUNCING A NEW LOTTERY FOR BRITISH COLUMBIANS Senior $128,00 IN PRIZES program ants an upward increase in each year of a two-year pact beyond the pre-strike offer of 14 and 12 per cent on the average-rate of $11.65 an hour. As well, the union seeks banking of overtime after eight hours, unspecified producing Se Lester declinded to comment on the CPU's de- mands but called the union's negotiating stance “rational and direct” and added that he remains “optimistic” about the talks. DIET - Eu “The Natural Way To Lose Weight” -NOW YOU: CAN LOSE 17 TO- 25° POUNDS IN JUST 6 WEEKS! AND. WHAT-’S..MORE IMPORTANT. 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Castlegar Drug Open Noon - 18 6-7 p.m: WASHINGTON (AP) — The Reagan ad: + Gander,,,Nfld., would re- tion, bolstered by the sup- Port of airlines and res sumed handling of U.S; flights by Canadian air traffic controllers, Sppests to be sume i tic flights at 6:30 a.m. EDT today. The end of the Canadian boycott and of one in New Zealand leaves only Span- hand in a strike by Bono U.S. controllers, Officials sought to re-, Store air traffic between Europe and the United States to near-normal levels today as Canadian control- lers ended a two-day boy- cott that had cut trans- atlantic flights to a trickle. Transport Canada, the government ‘agency that operates Canadian airports, said controllers throughout Canada agreed shortly after midnight to resume handling flights to and from the United States. Airline executives, after meeting Tuesday with Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis, said they staynchly support Presi- dent Reagan's handling of the crisis and his decision to fire the striking control- lers. But the executives said the stike, now in its 10th day, will have far-reaching effects on their industry, forcing layoffs, pay cuts and of ish refusing to handle flights to the United States in support of the U.S. strikers. But action by control- ers in other countries sym- pathetic to their U.S. counterparts might still create havoc for interna- I ngthening_its hand U.S. contr “ éllers losing fight over the Azores were inter- rupted, ‘‘we'd have diffi- culty, major difficulty.’” But he said he has a plan that he hopes will prevent total interruption of trans- atlantic flights should that occur. He would not give details of the plan. The protest by the Can- adian controllers resulted in scores of cancellations and delays of eight to 10 house in those flights that were able to depart. Thou- sands of passengers were tional Australian controllers, saying U.S. skies are not safe because of the strike, were seeking a court in- junction to stop flights be- tween Australia and ‘the United States. That same safety argument wes used by the Canadian controllers in their boycott. Portuguese controllers have voted for a boycott beginning Saturday and the international federation of controllers’ unions’ meets Thursday in Amsterdam to discuss joint international action. MAY BLOCK ROUTES The Federal Aviation Administration is seeking ways to ensure service on overseas flights in the routes. Some companies may haye to be reorgan- Transport Canada, the government agency that operates Canadian airports, said air traffic controllers in event P control- ers carry out. a threat to begin blocking transatlantic rout over the Azores on Saturday. FAA Administrator Lynn Helms said that if both the northern route over Gander and, the Santa Maria route ded at many airports. Flights normally going over Gander were rerouts to a new east-west route just sough of Canadian air space. The new route, how- every, could handle only four planes an hour, a fifth of the normal traffic load during peak periods. The sitline industry, which has lost about $430 million during the last 18 months, acknowledged that its attempts at economic recovery were dealt a sev- ere blow by the controllers’ strike. Industry analysts, nonetheless, said the re- duction of services might be beneficial to some cari- ers in the long run. CURSE TO “It’s not a blessing, it’s a curse to our industry,’’ sai John Casey, chairman of Braniff International. He said his airline already has cut 2,000 people from the payroll since the strike. A spokesman for the industry put losses at $25 .could not be penalized for - ened to arrest union presi- million to $30 million a day since the strike began Aug. 3, but said those figures might drop substantially once flights are stabilized and customets return. Lewis told reporters after the meeting that commer- cial flights probably will be kept 25 per cent below normal levels until next April, when additional con- troilers mighi tc i begin directing air traffic. There was little activity Tuesday from the Profes- sional Air Traffic Control- lers Organization, although the union won a victory of sorts in U.S. District Court in Washington. Judge Harold Greene re- duced a fine of $4.75 mil- lion he had tentatively im- posed against the union and said the controllers refusing to work after they had been fired. He reduced the fine to $750,000, the amount originally imposed for the first two days of the strike. A federal judge in New York City, however, threat- dent Robert Poli if he did not appear in his courtroom today. Judge Thomas Piatt, who fined the union $100,000 an hour after the stike began, wants to know where the union’s money is to it can pay the fine. A lawyer for the union said Poli is expected to appear before Platt today. Foreign controllers backing down FRENCH men 69'l By the Associated Press Canadian air traffic contro- llers resumed work today at the Gander, Nfld. flight station and backlogged flights began leaving Europe for the United ‘States at a sluggish pace. Portugese .air_controllers were still planning to walk off. the job Saturday, however,. .... in support of the striking US. controllers. This would snarl. air: tafffic handled by the South Atlan- tie: Azores tower and threaten to jam the North Atlantic route once again. ‘As soon as the Canadians re- sumed work, several flights left Rhein-Main airport, in Frankfurt, West German. to have the backlog of flights cleared by mid or late after- noon, but “there is no way to estimate how long it will take really. The end: of the Canadian agency to Los threatened to storm the plance at Gatwick Airport when told it was needed to fly home 200 Americans. The ruling “was revoked after They included Lufthansa boycott and of one in: New their protests, but the plane flights for New York and Am flight... © ae provise as information comes in on the (transatlantic) slots were pers a court injunc- day togo away and try. later.:.: available,” a Rhein-Main air- port spokesman said. Zealand left only) ATA was; still delayed pee But tion today to stop flights between Australia and the told 2,000 p Many diehards bedded down ‘ wherever there was. floor He said authorities hoped United States, Portuguese space. Fools gold found in Pass Creek Gold in Pass Creek? For awhile on Tuesday evening there was a group of Castlegar men who thought 80, In fact, they were con- vinced there was consider- able gold in the creek as their amateur gold panning efforts produced a number of nuggets. Members of the Castlegar Kiwanis Club were shown gold panning techniques by the club's incoming ptrdifrny. Members of the Castlegar Kiwanis Club were shown gold panning techniques by the club’s incoming presi- dent, Jim Ford, and its trea- surer, Bob Zanon. However, what the Ki- wanians didn't know (at least ‘until later in the evening( contro- llers have voted a boycott beginning Saturday, the international federation of controllers’ unions meets Thursday in Armsterdam to discuss joint international action, and British air traffic personnel meet Friday to consider action. Meanwhile, thousands of weary, -homeward-bound “I don "t mind being “stuck here at all,” said Christine Chapman, an 18-year-old student from Fayette, Ala. “Tve made a lot of friends already and we're going to have a big party. We have some beer, some duty-free spirits and some chocolate.” At Rome's Leonardo da Vinci airport, 2,000 delayed pass- engers were still stuck at was that the two men had Americans, some of them midnight. Flights that did hammered down lead fishing _ broke and hungry, camped take off Tuesday night were weights into small irre; sized pieces and painted them gold. ~ And that they had arrived at Pass Creek well before the rest of the club members and “salted” certain sections of . the creek bed. Needless to say there were sheepish faces around the barbeques later that ee when the term “fool's ” and its local pti a were explained. S out at Europe's airports overnight after the Canadian boycott cut up to $0 hours late. air traffic by more. than half during the peak season. Westbound flights were reduced Tuesday to fewer than 100 from about 225, the British Civil Aviation Autho- rity reported. Some British vacationers on tight budgets wept when told their fights were cancelled. «A group of 189 Britons Shooked through a travel CORRECTION BACK TO SCHOOL FLYER Reads‘ Hilroy school boxes, nests of Sian ise; should reed 7I¢ each. 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