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The Vancouver Sun from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada • 2

Publication:
The Vancouver Suni
Location:
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The VANCOUVER SUN: Mav 14. 1071 tnl -la mail retthtrathtn numhrr ftltft" TROOPS CHESS SITE DISPUTE SETTLED Carpenters talk with lathers Egg laid on branch MIDWAY ISLANDS White terns on the Miuwty Islands, Sand md Eastern, lay their eggs on bare branch wherever rough barW will hold them in place and That's one for Russia unable to immediately abide by the terms of the agreement negotiated Thursday on composite crews. same spot on the branch until they can fly. rjffiLKIV'S' CLEARANCE OF ODDS (r ENDS MOSTLY ONE OR TWO OF A KIND ALL FULLY GUARANTEED BY MELNY'S AND MANUFACTURERS. FREE SERVICE POLICY WITH ALL OUR APPLIANCES AND COLORED TV INCLUDED.

FREE DELIVERY EASY TERMS CHARCEX. FREE LAYAWAYS UP TO 60 DAYS. By BILL RAYNER The Russians have won the first skirmish in the Great iChcss War here. Max Euew, president of the International Chess Federation, ruled Thursday that the world chess championship quarterfinal match between Bobby Fischer of the U.S. and Mark Taimanov of the Suviet Union be played in the Student Union Building movie theatre at the University of B.C.

His decision ended two day's search for playing faeil- ilies after Taimanov rejected the TV room at UKC's graduate centre Wednesday. That room was selected by Canadian Chess Federation officials in deference to Fischer's request for a private playing area with no spectators. Euew's choice of the theatre means spectators will be allowed to watch the 10-game match. It also is a victory for the four-man Russian delegation, whose veto Wednesday forced a three-day postponement of the match. Fischer took the decision calmly.

"Let's play," he said. "I'm willing to play anywhere." Neither Fischer nor Taima nov have seen the theatre, on Sl'B's lower level. First game, originally scheduled for Thursday, will he played at 4 p.m. Sunday. By then fluorescent lighting, another condition of Fischer's, will be installed in the theatre.

First player to score 5'i points wins the match (wins are worth one point, draws half a point). He then will advance to the semi finals of the challenger's round. Winner of the eight-man playoffs will meet world champion Doris Spassky of Russia in 1972 for the title. Meanwhile, in Moscow, Viktor Korchnoi of Russia defeat ed fellow-countryman Vefim Geller in Thursday's first game of their quarterfinal match. At Las Palmas, in the Canary Islands, Bent Larsen of Denmark and Wolfgang Uhl-mann of East Germany, adjourned their first quarterfinal match in the 44th move after six hours play.

It will be finished today. And at Sevilla, Spain Tigran Tetrosian of Russia and Robert Huebner of West Germany, adjourned their first quarter-final match in the 41st move after five hours of play. It will be finished Saturday. The second match of 10 will be played today. APPLIANCES Lathers and carpenters unions' representatives today started a continuous round of meetings in a bid to resolve their work jurisdiction dispute.

The sessions began ftcr the lathers agreed at an emergency meeting with the carpenters to lift their picket lines from seven construction sites today. The emergency session on Thursday was called by the B.C. and Yukon Building Trades Council which administers the affairs of all the building trades unions in the Pacific region. Council secretary Ed Fay said the two unions agreed to meet continuously for seven days in a bid to resolve their dispute over studding and wall board work. The unions also agreed that rank-and-file workers will meanwhile work together as composite crews on building jobs.

Courtenay Burton, business agent of the lathers' Local 207, said pickets would remain today at one site Chilliwack General Hospital extension because the contractor was DISHWASHERS 1 ONI.V IM.US Undercounler, Deluxe, toil muilel, 2 eyries. Avocuiiu nAI.K nEJiL EES I ONLY CiK Undercounler. Harvest Gold NAI.K RANGES 1 ONI.V MOIKAT Gourmet. Nu. 30S25U.

Antique Cupper. Fully automatic SALE Koyal 5369 j269 5338 535? 5299 Railway considers appeal No. 30S2iiO. While. Fully hAIH 1 ONI.V Mol I AT Gourmet, automatic Slliihlly marked Continued from page 1 the armed services committee and floor manager of the draft bill.

Before he left Belgium, Gen. Goodpaster said that if NATO is weakened "it would jeopardize peace in Europe and no one could further guarantee the maintaining this peace." He joined Aeheson; retired Gen. I. amis Norstad, Alfred Gruenther and Lyman Lem-nitzer, all former NATO commanders; and such former diplomats and military advisers as George Ball, Cyrus Vance, Nicholas Katzenhach, John J. McCloy and Lucius Clay in urging support for Russia's Brezhnev made his call for talks on military disengagement in Europe during a speech in Tbilisi marking 50 years of Soviet power in the Georgian republic.

He said that instead of asking whether reduction of national or foreign forces, nuclear or conventional weapons, is to be discussed, the West should agree to start negotiations. Brezhnev recalled his six-point peace program put forward at the Soviet party congress at the end of March, which included a suggestion for reduction of forces and armaments in Europe. Some NATO countries had shown a noticeable interest, and to some extent nervousness, about this proposal, Brezhnev said today. The West German position was outlined in a statement by government spokesman Conrad Ahlers. Ahlers said Bonn would be "very worried" if developments in the U.S.

led to a reduction of the number of troops stationed in Germany. "In the present state of relations between East and West, every substantial and unilateral reduction In U.S. armed forces in Europe would have extremely serious effects on stability in Europe, on the chances for a detente and on the possibility for balanced measures to control armaments." 1 ONLY MOl KAT Kler. fully automatic Bel clemilng nven. White fcAI.H ONLY AIOI''FATElei3ijWuUy auto-3 copjitri 1 v.

hlte 'JJ HI- 'JJ SA ''K I ONLY MOFFAT 311" Eleo. Model No. 301189. AvncadoT Fully M-lf cleaning oven, rotissene KALE ON I.V EleeTHotlssei'leT Deluxe. Avocado NAI.K I ONI.V UC A noastmetei-r Harvest Gold KAI.K Ranges.

ft A I.H 3 ONLY I'lllLCO 24" Klec Fully auloinatic 5349 5279 5288 5218 5258 521! 558? 5298 5499 3 ONLY KNTKKI'ltlsK '30" Gas Ranges. Auto, cluck "couk and oven window, broiler, simmers. 1 Gold, 1 While SAI.K LAUNDRY EQUIPMENT 1 ONLY MOFFAT Gas Dryer. 16-lb. load, 3 heat, auto- nmtlc plus timed dryer.

Avocado kalis I I A I II I I F. I O. F. 3-i yc a oTWa with 2 speeds, 5 water temp, selector, stainless steel tub, 4 waler level selector and matching dryer. I'AIH, hAI.K HKNTINtillOUSti Auto.

WasherTa cycle, Perma 1'ress, 5 push-button water temp, selector wHter saver, "weigh-to-save piAl.ri I'AIH ONLY G.KrAuio7Wa"sliVr751ipeedr3Ty('le7nilnl"' washer, bleach dispenser, elc, with matching I'-speed, '-'-cycle Dryer I'AIH, HALF. MAN KILLED IN COLLISION BURNABY A Coquitlam man was killed Wednesday in a two-ear collision on the Lougheed Highway at Springer Avenue. Police said a car driven by David A. Hopkins, 43, of 2210 King Albert, went out of control after the collision, crossed the highway, went through a picket fence and came to rest in a ditch. Driver of the other car, identified by police as Floyd Brenton Walters, of 1342 Regan, Coquitlam, was not REFRIGERATORS 8 ONLY U.K.

It cu. a-door Ref.Freezer. Lett hand door. Choice of While or Copper SAI.F, ON LY MOI'F'AT 13 ruf t2-door Ref.Freeer7 Only JH" wide, frost flee. .1 White, 1 Gold MALIi Burlington Northern is not authorized or permitted and is implicity prohibited by Section 15fi of the Railway Act, the other party to it being a transportation company which is not operating and does not propose to operate as a common carrier," he said.

"Since one of the main purposes of the junction for which application No. 1 seeks leave is to give effect to the prohibited agreement or arrangement, I would deny the application. "Because of the conclusion I have reached on this point, it would obviously be useless to grant any of the two other applications and I would dismiss both." Taschereau said these conclusions made it unnecessary to decide on a counterargument produced by the SP Itail that the and project was unconstitutional. But he went ahead to weigh the question in the interest of speeding up ultimate settlement ol the contest obviously for the record with Supreme Court appeals in mind. On the constitutional point, he rejected CP's argument but pointed out it did not affect the outcome and the applications were still dismissed by reason of the Railway Act.

Summing up the jurisdiction issue, he recalled that CP Itail claimed the project was a joint undertaking with Burlington Northern and therefore unconstitutional because it went beyond provincial borders. It claimed the Continued from page 1 any further action in of the railway, Peterson said this would have to be looked into. "Whether there is anything we can do depends on the precise nature of the judgment." Crow's Nest argued that did not have to be a common carrier as required by Railway Act for a border junction because it in effect wasn't a railway at all just a single-purpose spur track Ifor delivering Crow's Nest products to Burlington Northern for haulage. "In the light of all the facts I am inclined to believe, with deference to counsel, that the idea of a spur track agreement was devised of late cover up an uncertainty as to the power and authority of Burlington Northern to operate Its trains in Canada at Roosvillc West," wrote Taschereau. "In attempting to give reality to that concept, it became necessary to treat as if it were an industry and Crow's Nest as if it were a railway company." lie said that was a "fallacy" and added that he could only conclude that the so-called spur-track split of hauling charges was in fact an agreement on tolls as if and Burlington Northern were two separate railways combining in coal traffic.

"I am also of the opinion that the entering into such an agreement or arrangement by 5299 5349 JOBLESS Continued from page 1 shouted when the prime minister said the economy had been turning around for the last 14 months. Their behaviour was not a good example for the children watching from the galleries, Trudeau scolded, to Liberal cheers. That provoked Lewis to his feet accusing Trudeau of unbridled arrogance and calling the Liberals hyenas. Stanfield called the rise in unemployment calamitous, and urged tax cuts to stimulate the economy. He rejected Benson's statement that the rise was a monthly variation.

He said that if Benson had been finance minister in 1929 he would have called the stock market crash that year a monthly variation. Trudeau said his goal was a prosperous economy, which could only he achieved by beating inflation. Lewis accused Trudeau of a "phobic notion of inflation" that diverted the government from the first priority of full employment. The prime minister replied that any phobia of inflation was started by the NDP in 19(18, when it had urged the government to take anti-inflation measures, Benson declined to tip his hand on what measures, if any, he plans. He said merely he will present a budget in the first half of June.

Stanfield told the Commons that Trudeau should not allow Benson to present another budget. He asked Benson to pay off a bet he had made in the Commons Jan. 19 and resign his portfolio. On that date, Mr. Benson said he was willing to bet that the seasonally-adjusted unemployment rale would be progressively reduced during 1971.

B.C. charter was consequently ultra vires. The applications and B.C. Attorney-general Peterson replied that itself would remain strictly within the province as required by its provincial charter. Alternatively, they argued that since the coal would be from one B.C.

point to another (line Creek to Roberts Bank) it should be a provincial project. Taschereau said that while the CTC had the full powers of a court, it was not a regular court and the charter's validity snouiti be tested in regular judical channels since that, was a question beyond the scope of railway law. In addition, he added that while it was clear would be useless without the Burlington Northern connection and also clear that its traffic would go through the U.S. "It does not inevitably follow, However, that the undertaking is extra-provincial." He cited technical reasons for casting a doubt on such a conclusion, elaborating: "It might well be, once the operation of both lines is under way, that an over-all undertaking of international character would emerge. in the absence of elements other than those appearing from the evidence, I am not persuaded that has no power to construct a railway from Line Creek to the hoarder.

"In the result, and for the reasons given earlier, I would dismiss all three applications." K. has said that it will have to start construction of the rail roul soon if it is to meet its deadlines. It is a railway on paper only. It was formed in HMifi to build the single line from Line Creek to the border. FURNITURE KIMMONS HIdeabed, foam cushioned fiALK 5199 1 ONLY MADIIINS illdeabedrwlthliliiniber Kingmal- tress, skirt, foam cushions, beautiful fabric and ttin SALE )Zl7 8 ONLY (SIMMONS 3-Seater Sellee, in lush velvet re." verslble loose back cushions, skirt, arm caps, etc.

1 MA Avocado, 2 1'ale Green. Ileal value hAI.K j07 1 ONLY SIMMONS Smart "banish style. 1 Royal lllue, 1 Avocado 3 ON I I LF.VS TF.F.L 2-preTChesierf leld Suite" salkJW hai.k 5459 Kelly Says: "No Gimmicks Just Good Prices at BEAVER" NKTN-a-pce. Vic. Art Ileifroiiin "Suite" with double mirrors 5399 SALIC 5 T.V.

STEREO 85 I ONLY lli" RCA Color TV. rr BATHROOM FANS Recess Sidewall or Ceiling Mount HOUSE WIRE with ground Ft. Walnut cabinet SALK 15 007 SI I ONLY 28" KCA Color TV. flOf) Accuculor, wal. cabinet HAI.K 4000 I ONLY KMIII Pnlnn TV 31c Vi" RIDGIO COPPER TUBING SHOWER MT50 STALLS All natal with fitting! curtain Model A'lM i.

HM.H with trade-in )60S I ONLY KCA Stereo Comb. Iteautlful Pecan cabinet, AMKM, all transistorized, 3 speed, tone control and 100 record storage HAI.K 4170 DELTA SINGH HANDLf Kin 3D r.K .00 S1A9S WATER $71 19 FAUCET Gaglardi defied HEATER 10-year warranty 174304 Established 1 years Wa Stock Everything in Plumbing Electric Open frldoy Night 'til 314 Wit Broodway at Cambia Tarmi Arranged PLUMBINU, ntAiiriu ana ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Ampl.fr.. arKing BEAVER FREE DELIVtRY Over 29 Yean at th Sam Location. Ife said rest homes should be rim hy a partnership of the provincial government and the local community instead of being left up to private Ph. 874-7222 1789 KINGSWAY oi Commercial Open Man.

I Sat. 1:30 a.m. to p.m, 571 GRANVILLE LOCATION CITY OF VANCOUVER PERMIT No. 34509 fa mm UYJ Continued from page 1 added, "They better pull the trigger 'cause I'm not monkeying around." Cause of the dispute is money. The association wants grants of $225 a month for each welfare case.

The government has offered a maximum of $174 hut reduced lhe ratio of welfare cases a home has to take in from 30 per cent to 15 per cent. Ilanrahan contended there would he no difficulty operating normally as boarding houses when the licences arc turned in. He said that the association's mainland branch would hold an executive meeting Wednesday night, which would arrange a general meeting of all members at a later date. At the general meeting, the association would decide the dale when the welfare pa-lienls would he turned out of lhe rest homes, he said. "This must be a province-wide thing," he said.

"We must all do it together." Ilanrahan said the association would probably make the move within a month. Opposition leader Dave Barrett said Thursday that Gag-lardi's threat to revoke the licences was a crass reaction, Barrett said the minister should realize he is dealing with human beings. AM Tefefunken Stereo Components up to 30 Off! Portable Radios 20 lo 40 Off! Cassette Recorders from 20 to 30 Off! Headphones from 7.95 up Mfg'l. Suif Your List Cost Mfg'. Siik Your Lint Cost AMPLIFIERS-RECEIVERS Mfg'K.

Suit Your Lint Coal Mfs'. Sua Your Li ill Con I Mfg'n. Ynur I. lot Cunt FOR ST. ROCH $316,000 restoration OTTAWA (CP) The St.

Itoch, a former RCMP schooner that became the first ship to sail around the North American continent, will he restored to its condition at a cost of $316,000, the northern development department announced Thursday. Built in Vancouver's Bur-rard shipyards and launched in 1928, the St. Roch was given to the city of Vancouver on its retirement from service in 1954. She is housed at the Marine Museum, Ogden, in Kitsilano. The three-year restoration program will recreate the ship and its interior as they were in 1944, when the vessel completed its two-year voyage through the Northwest Passage from Pacific to Atlantic.

In addition to circumnavigating the continent, the St. Itoch was the first ship to navigate the Northwest Passage in both directions and to make it through the passage in a single season. tin Die HS Whftrf- diilc WHO 159.05 00.05 SPEAKERS MA TITAN, 'JH Willi. AM KM Receiver 279.9ft CONCORD ST A 1-1 "JO VVittt Sug Your AM KM He- 1. 1st Cm.

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