(i Tei we re FED te re aT aa 88 Be > i ri Settlement falling apart fa i 3 i? By GARY KINGSTON Under its terms, Alaska natives received Once hailed as the most liberal settlement ever tere achieved with native Americans, the Alaska Native Claims a ne ua WLLL lid repr ee ee g il bi fl * Castleaird Plaza * Downtown im at ed } ne iat a abi ire at Open until 9 p.m. Thursdays and Fridays Prices Effective Until Saturday, February 8, 1986 - ue . -s ven nul a Arve a bis £ as ale ee i ae att i F cf us, our children and grandchildren, and those that are yet to as ail laboratories. Why not allow them to become what be born. If we do not do anything about this, that is exactly the native peoples themselves have in mind? Why not let z our future.” them evolve in their own way?" ee ze if nie ra Al un Berger said he rejected the idea of writing a In the interview, Berger said there are lessons to be - Fe An me oe conventional report that would likely get lost on learned from the Alaska experience for governments around i it bureaucrats’ desks. the world as indigenous peoples push more forcefully for afte i Mi ik “| decided that rather than write a great, long, thick land claims and self-determination. 10 Ib. package and over report with all kinds of graphs and appendices that no one The attachment to the land that native people profess — ‘ if would ever read, including the decision-makers in it isn’t 5 spurious, it isn't a kind of ritual statement that they j é Washington, D.C., that I should write an account of my trot out just to impress us. It is a deeply felt sense of identity kg 2.18 Ib. Pettit ty eeezcscrer: q 3 ry i: SOs e275 agETTRE Rapaaeee fips? vpTEPenee Hie pees i pein pues HTH H Hy faftgietae & “ee pi sig yess “OF Ht ity a a : ate Ui Mt ti = ie tee F] #8 Hilgs : ge journey that the ordinary ering could read and the native springing from the land itself.” 3 $33 oF mi ei zs it Hi se g a

) JONVEASNI JOHOD S3SNIDI1 ONY JONVENSN! saBoyso> "soesrs ir - CELL sone, in 1971, as an attempt to te Main Street on the tundra. Wang, $16.95, Se Ve | 1 ved) eove Ferrwood * white * brown Campbell's “Judge orders huge settlement § sliced tomato RED DEER, ALTA. (CP) the rest of Tammy Cunning. Kahr of Calgary swerved off $77,414. This will be in sou — A Court of Queens Bench ton's life. the runway at the municipal creased by a further three rea judge has ordered a set ‘The settlement calls for an airport in Ponoka, Alta., as it per cent annually until death. tlement that could reach $10 immediate lump-sum lan ded for a fly-in breakfast. Tammy will also receive a million for a 10-year-old Al- payment of $292,296. The Tammy, aged six at the lu mp sum of $64,605 at age 18 berta girl whose legs were monthly payments will begin time of the accident, was an nd a final lump-sum pay- 284 mL almost severed in an accident in March at a rate of $1,583 a struck by the propeller at the ment of $179,166 at age 25. 570g loat tin four years ago. month and increase gradually mi ia: point of her body, almost All paymen nts are tax-free, The award, imposed this at set intervals. severing her legs from her said Cunnington family law- week by Mr. Justice Andrew Tammy and her brother, torso. She required both sur- yer Stewart Baker of Edmon- ‘Andrekson, consists of a ser- Darey, now eight, were in- gery in Edmonton tosave her ton, an expert in personal ies of lump-sum payments jured on April 25, 1982, when legs and further treatment in injury litigation. from the tropics and monthly payments for an airplane piloted by Harold Vancouver. ‘There is a minimum guar- Cloverleaf ‘She has no use of her legs, antee of 30 years of pay- ° Id n limited use of one arm and is ments, amounting to about pink 0 e confined to a wheelchair. $2.5 million. If Tammy lives a B.C. to ex po rt The defendents — the normal livespan to age 75, 2 ‘Town of Ponoka and Kahr — the settlement will pay out a ripe b | d | are insured, respectively, by little more than $10 million. Sa mon a eag es Lloyd's and Orion Insurance. | The payments are to com- The insurance firms were pensate Tammy for pain and bananas VANCOUVER (CP) — shooting by farmers and the ordered to purchase an an- suffering, loss of earning Nine young bald eagles from use of deadly pesticides, nuity contract through Stan- capacity and costs of future 73 Vancouver Island = play a Garcelon said. dard Life and Manufacturers care. kg- Ibs. @ role this spring in re-estab- _In the last five years, * Life that would make pay- Ta ‘ammy py require con. Fy lishin ing the Uni ed States’ bald eagles have been ments to Tammy during the stant ci ll her life. : 88 eer 8 national symbol on an island leased on the island, of which course of her lifetime. “We felt she "IL be looked a cca ie ee oe Z1 'qe4 ‘Aopseupeyy 04 yBnosy 9 ‘Gey ‘Aopssny) i it reat nl ini ee F i era | Ff ia il i i Hie fei _ yonvunsni 30H09 be? o~ i) Berger desribes the wsilloss ok a passed by Congress Village Journey, by Thomas Berger. Published by Hill and ill MIIM W SAWO XIS N3dO ONVUNSNI J0HO9 soboyen> ‘y00ss Yr LZI1 = ta jit oft beg Caio coas' ets 12 still remain. = pair dee PLOTS INCREASES California grown * Caneda fancy a Macintosh ne a nest and is The monthly payments will we wou wt ave : navel can ited al rai ir own youn: total $19,000 the first year, it.” lather, Neil Cunning- n said the Van- an amount that will be in- ton, said Tuesday. “We're ec. the. ate In stitute ” for cor Island bir il .d by three per cent a satisfied and glad it’s all ile re kg 1.08 oranges Wildlife Research, based in taken from thei nests at year until age 18 when year- over.” app es cho! b. ow Alb. pkg. ie ‘ammy now is a Grade Arcata, Calif. about seven wooks: @ ly payments will rise to “Your population is Upon arrival at ae Cat $50,665. healthy and can stand the alina Island, they will be | The payments will then in moval of these birds. Tm placed three to a nest on a crease by three per cent a ler brot . who werd glad we can work this six-metre-high pation year until age 25, when the ered quickly received $3,000 pink oul Lees nest is enclosed to yearly amount will rise to for a minor injury. Te wil be th first time the nt birds. from. falling | willbe the rt time there salmon provincial Environment Min- out. tt allows them to see , istry has authorized the ex tha surroundings, but not a u S 2-5 lb. average port of wild bald e: eee to the = mans feeding them. — establish new populations At 11 or 12 weeks of age, 1-Hour Photo Finishing government in geviry tah 1949, probably because of ; as ‘id ie 2 fine gEEE3<@ [322207 R88 i ie “ny ' frozen * concentrate Admiral » floked or chunk ae Hy As | RE Te a apple Le Hal Bist ist , it Ei nit a aye rol Beem FEBRUARY 9:11 BTR” juice YY aEipe oft 3 i 8358 3t al 3° of g a Ss tesa Seef ate na i fei ilies 38 thy! aa Rune haa | ea fia ma iti ee aE, ASV3 JOINVUNSNI ONIANG IHW W 3M. ONVUNSNI J0H09 soBoysa> ‘oosss Yar - (211 doz pkg 355 mi tin Je ui Sun. thru Tues. Night 355 mi tin Hie i $7282 te 27 - ig FY Ay oy i nAYye Aaa OPEN SUNDAYS 11 A.M. - 5 P.M. iia he Castleaird Plaza Only ea: Fl He ie 365-3278 or 365-2902