A2 SPECIALS -FORYOU Monday, Tuesday and: Wednesday this week MOTTS CLAMATO JUICE am $q79 1.36 litres .....3 BETTY CROCKER CAKE MIXES $109 Mol 510 gram pkg, .. CASTLEGAR NEWS, May 15, 1983 BUDGET continued4rom front page “Since the money has been made available by government — we are hoping that ability to. pay argument will be withdrawn and we can finalize the contract,” Cacchioni said. But school board chairman George Anutooshkin’‘dis- agrees. According to his calculations, a 4.5 per cont increase for teachers would result in a $34,000 shortfall to the 1983 budget. But he says the school district could absorb the cost if the 4.5 per cent wage hike is approved by the CSP board. “Hopefully we will be able to meet that $34,000 shortfall with declining enrolment and attrition,” he said. However, he noted that the matter is out of the board's hands until the CSP board makes its decision. “We just can't say because the government has to rule on it (the increase) first,” said Anutooshkin. | MUDSLIDE MACARONI & CHEESE DINNERS 3.51 Catelll 225 gram pkg. LOCAL FRESH GradeA Medium Perdorzan.... ‘CENTRAL FOODS ot. COMMUNITY OWNED.& OPERATED 2717 Columbia. / “CASTLEGAR pag . runoff, Kalesnikoff Lumber is currently. logging in the area where the slide originated. Logging foreman Jim Markin explained that the slides originated when a smaller slide dumped into a ereek swollen with runoff. The creek overflowed’ its banks and ran down a logging road, carrying with it mud and debris. The mud-filled creek water then diverted into a culvert that couldn't contain the flow. The water from the culvert dislodged more dirt — already wet from the winter snow melt — and dragged it down the hill onto Broadwater Road. Markin said he and his crew redirected the water in the area where the slide began. “Well, we put the water back in the proper channel,” he said adding that the runoff this year is heavier than usual and too much rain has left the soil unusually wet. “It’s just full of water up there,” he noted. But Markin said that future slides in the area are unlikely because the ground “looks pretty. stable.” - When you Shop at Carl's .. Crest Toothpaste 100 mb plus 25% Bonus Conditioning Shampoo 300 mL Normal/Dry & Oily For Babies 11 - 23 lbs. 2 Boxos® Also Pampers Extra Absorbent - 60's Toddlers - 48's *10¢7 CARL'S DRUGS Castleaird Plaza closed this Sunday365-7269 an we TRUCK TIRE SALE! FOR WORK OR FOR PLAY» ° ASK ABOUT THE NEW AND EXCITING ASR RADIAL Insizes HR78-15 thru P235/85R16 ond 950R16-5 Aslowas 5104... Size 185-14 Similar savings on 15”, 16" and 16.5". RIDE WITH THE WORLD LEADER! $119... “Size 27x8.50R14 The #1 Off-Road Radial. BRUNSWICK oe Aslowas $69.95... Size 700-15 * 2701 Columbia Ave., South Castlegar (Near Central Foods) 65-3433 OPEN SIX DAYS A WEEK VANDALIZED ... Ken Turner examines the $2, 000: worth of damage left.by vandals to his, turn-of-the-century herring boat moored in an area about two km north of the Hugh Keenleyside Dam on the Lower Lake. _ —CasNewsPhoto by Cheryl Wishlow DUNCAN (CP) — Kids’ World Zoo has reinstated zookeeper Michael Cardin, less than three weeks after he was suspended following -» the mauling of an.11. ieee ,, Duncan girl he let i ” gal tiger cage... . Zoo manager "Dave Stephenson said Friday that Cardin, 20, returned to work this week. “It was a decision I made myself,” Stephenson . said. “Fish and wildlife said it was up to me.” ‘The, provincial fish and wildlife branch, following an investigation of the incident, made a number of recom- In Castlegar provincial court this week, Jason Mar- kin was fined $60 for being a minar in possession of al- cohol, * . Andy Semenoff was fined a total of $400 for two counts of mischief in relation to public property. 2; Ce ee Fred Soloveoff was given a ‘eonditional discharge after pleading guilty to a charge of theft under $200..He has been placed on 60 days pro- bation. A tha,a mendations to improve safe- ty procedures at the Van- couver Island zoo, Stephen- son said, adding he will com- ply with them. But, the: that, would, have -preyented ! nt,”.. he. added. Kids’ World, five kilome- tres south of Duncan, -has voluntarily’ made- another cluded."*pothing, , Zookeeper reinstated | rule forbidding anyone. ex- cept zookeepers from: enter- ing the animal cages, . Veronica Shel mean- | College’ Board. briets By CasNews Staff 1. Selkirk College Board will not become a maajor or ‘solo ‘tenant of the Trail Junior Secondary School..:’' ‘© Phe school will be available in September. when the : Grade Eight and Nine students will 'be moved to’ J.L. Crowe because of the declining school enrolment in Trail, where the number of students is so low that it is possible to consolidate students in fewer schools. : Trail school board chairman Jack Bryan said the board decided to give priority to educational groups, and the logical group was: Selkirk College. But the College board withdrew its intention fet four reasons; e The current economic restriction on colleges sug- gests that new program resources will be. more ‘difficult to receive. e The projected demographic conditions for. the area suggest very little change in population and, therefore, demand for post-secondary opportunities, the College board stated in a recent letter to Bryan. © The renovations necessary to some of the ‘mechani- cal and structural components may require ‘substantial .resourcés which will be difficult to acquire. © © The College board also felt that the addition of 2,700 to 8,700:square metres of space will have a substantial impact on the college's facilities budget, Bryan said the Trail board is now looking at regional ‘or municipal use of the school. In other news, the college has been informed that the following programs will be offered this year,, subject to final budget approval: @ The return of the originally deleted clinical portion ya SHEEP TO SHAWL . . . Five teams took Deukhobor Museum. "The contest was part in the annual sheep-to-shawl won by: defending champions Selkirk weaving contest held Saturday at the Weavers’ Guild. Creston vara Twisters took second in the event, while Fruit- Wedriesday Weavers (Nelson), fourth vale-Rossland Weavers were third, and Slocan Valley Threads Guild, fifth. —CasNewsPhotos by Chery! Withlow Cannes Festival encounters difficulties of the Licensed Practical Nursing program. e Granting of “A” status under temporary funded courses for the Social Services Worker program. © The expansion of the welding program from two nine-month lines to two 12-month lines of instruction. e The two classes. courses, of a third hai class. from e The granting of “A” status ‘for three ‘programs en- titled Planning Your Future, under temporary funded e A supplementary grant of $30,000 for operation capital for the C Technology program. Canadian students. The college board, es its last meeting, approved ator: eign students admissions policy, which gives priority to The policy states that the college will admit foreign students if any of the following conditions are met: gh an int . .© Ifthey are sp al while, is improving ‘after a bout with meningitis at Van- couver Chil Hospital. A . hospital spokesman. said she no longer requires intensive care. although her condition remains serious, Replica of truck used in search WINNIPEG (CP) — RCMP officers investigating the mass murder of the Bentley - and. Johnson families near Clearwater, last summer _ stopped in Winnipeg on Fri- day as part of their Canadian tour in a replica of the Ben- tley truck. Going on tips, they are travelling the route it is be- lieved the Bentley's vehicle was driven on its way to British Columbia in an effort to gain more clues. The 1982 silver-grey and red Ford truck, with a 1972 beige and white camper atop it, was outfitted over a six- week period with various: components, most of them borrowed, to represent the original truck. The charred remains of George Bentley, his wife, Edith, daughter Jackie, 41, son-in-law Bob Johnson, 44, and granddaughters Janet, 18, and Karen, 11 were found last They were in The Robson poo) was van- dalized May 7 and Castlegar RCMP are calling for public support in reporting any sus- picious ies near the the backseat of Johnson's burned-out automobile in the Wells Gray Provincial Park near Clearwater. The family had been on a camping trip. Their bodies were found in early Septem- ber, about a month after they were last seen camping in the area. Police said no motive for the killings has been es- tablished. Cpl. Laurie DeWitt and Const. Gerry Dalen of the RCMP, two of at least 12 officers who are still involved in the investigation, are travelling with the vehicle. DeWitt said that since the truck left Jasper, Alta., on Monday en route to Mon- treal, police have ‘received more than 60 calls from per- sons who may have seen the van shortly after the families were murdered. RCMP are offering a $7,000 reward for informa- . tion: on the recovery of the vehicle and $35,000 informa- tion on the persons respon- sible for the murders. student visa; @ If they are sp e If they have won an academic competition; e If they have landed immigrant status; e If they are dependents of persons who are in Can- ‘ada as citizens, permanent residents,.on-a work or through an int student cxthanke program; e If. they are attending under a separate contract be- CANNES, FRANCE (CP) — The 36th edition of the Cannes Film Festival seems to be a case ‘of “up the down staircase.” One of the festival’s odder scenes — along with that of security police hustling a naked lady into a taxi to the astonishment of its lone male passenger — was the spectacle ofa string of people d up Iti-l 1 maze which doesn't permit easy access from one section to another. Even during its early construction period, Cannes residents nicknamed the centre The Bunker. The spectacle of helmeted French security police fending off charging French medical students with tear gas and an escalator moving downward. The scramblers, several of whom tripped and many of whom are still wondering whether their tickers will ever resume a normal heartbdat, were members of the international press corps covering Cannes. And this year, that means coping with the new has been desi asa mult centre rather than as a comfortable home for the reigning queen of the world’s film festivals. Unlike former years, Cannes can no longer claim to show its competition films in the best possible cimema conditions. Technical problems have meant delays and inter- ruptions in films, buzzing ‘soundtracks and. grumpy have sometimes watched their celluloid egos mercilessly blipped and blepped:- CENTRE A MAZE Moreover, a 2,000-square-metre building — esti- mated to have cost around $80 million U.S. — is a festival quarters — a gigantic emcee complex which. spectators, not to mention even grumpier directors who . des during the festival's first week seems to bear witness to Provencal perspicacity. The striking medical students lobbed red paint bombs at the showy new convention centre and the building's salmon-pink facade now sports an artsy red “splatter” design,. which some festival-goers consider a distinct improvement. The state-of-siege mentality which took hold after the student incident only served to heighten the tensions that have been simmering since the festival opened May a Security measures have meant that entry to the centre is even more congested and time-consuming. Moreover, elevators are few and far between, stairways are barricaded off and escalators are often turned off. REPORTERS TRAPPED Thus, some members Of the press, while trying to get to the third-floor press area’ last’ Thursday for’ anils important news conference, found themselves trappédtint” ano-man's land without apparent exit amid the crowds of shoving people. The only way up was a steep escalator moving down, and despite the fact that there were people on it, the journalists — not the most physically fit group at the best of times — recklessly charged up. If the working conditions for the estimated 2,600 press members covering Cannes this year are bad, they're even worse for movie industry people working ‘in the festival’s international film market. Generally bettercheeled and under -less pressure than the press, the marketers are accustomed to being able to pop out for‘a spot of sun on the Croisette, the flashy, cafe-lined along the i Marketers now spend their days in a windowless subterranean level of the new centre which they have nicknamed The Cave, and where they are not much visited. And whereas the oviginal festival palace, built in the 1980s on the order of the Frerich Culture Ministry, was smack in the middle of the crescent-shaped Croisette, flanked on each side by grand hotels, the new palace is at one end in a much more subdued part of town: Adding to the crowded conditions at this year’s festival and the shell: shocked atmosphere are an HT of-high school and 2,500 municipal film clubs who can attend. festival secregnings: ~ and are even allowed into the press area. °” “T hate those damn kids,” moaned a middle-aged New York editor and publicist who's been coming to Cannes for almost 20 years. . This year, for the first time, he’s leaving before the festival is over retreating to Paris to take in some ballet. Some industry observers predict the end of the festival is near. ATTENDING 25th Among them is noted Canadian movie critic Gerald Pratley, who is attending his 25th Cannes festival. “I wouldn't be at all surprised if Cannes did collapse,” says Pratley, “not necessarily next year, but in the near futur . ‘It’s not just because it has become so big and disor- ganized, but also because of all the changes within the enter industry, partis the i 1 between the movie, television and video-cassette indus- tries.” Pratley says Cannes has evolved into several festivals, “There's the one for the press, the one for the cheesecake , Photographers, one for film buyers and sellers . He recalls that in the festival's earlier days it was possible to keep up with all the films and still have time to ., record interviews with the major directors and actors for.~- -his long: running CBG Radio show, Gerald Pratley AUT The . ” Movies, ~“Nowadays, I see correspondents rushing by, searing their hair out, and I'm glad I'm not covering it the same way I used to.” tween Canada and a foreign government, approved by the ministry of education and the board, and the full costs | for attendance are sponsored by a body or agency acceptable to the board. Foreign students may also be admitted if there are a small number of training spaces available in an existing course or program, and the foreign student agrees to pay. 260 per cent of the prescribed tuition fee, which college principal Leo Perra said would amount to about $1,500 per year for a career technical program. Selkirk College does not have any foreign students enroled, {student records office. ig to a in the CONCERN centinued trom fentpoge inations but he said he was concerned that test’ results would be used as arbitrary standards to mark the stu- dent's ability. In that case, he said, “If you meet up to this line in this difficult economic time you're okay, but if you fall below this line you don't make it." Cacchioni said this could effect a student’s abil- ity to get a job. As well, he said that all students should have the op- portunity to try a year at university regardless of their marks. He said that some. students don't do well in high school ‘but improve their Abortion question KELOWN (CP) — Saying that the “sanctity of life rises above all else,” the outgoing president of ee B.C. Medical pool. Furniture was thrown in the pool and police say this has happened on previous occasions. Another incident of van- dalism took place Thursday night as a street sign was torn down on 6th Ave. In other police news, RCMP say they are con- cerned over the danger of persons sniffing cooking oil from aerosol cans. One per- son has died in the Lower Mainland from inhaling cook- ing oil, a police spokesman noted. has urged doc- tors to Jory asked why so many today “rightly speak out against the horrors of nuclear warfare yet see life in its earliest forms dispatched so their posi- tion on abortion. “Is it.right that in Canada every year, 65,000 embryonic Canadians are flushed down the sluices and toilets of this country?” Dr. William Jory, a Prince Rupert ophthalmolo- gist, asked the association's annual Friday. even if in a very sanitary manner?” “History shows that the euthanasia program, the therapeutic removal of life from this world, began two years before Adolph Hitler came to power when ‘in 1931, (when) some Bavarian psy- d the ster- “Phis is a staggering total of unfulfilled human life that equals the death row in the great atomic attack on Hiro- shima and equally on the subsequent attack on Nagas- aki in 1945.” * ilization of the chronically mentally ill. From this small step arose a policy of gen- ocide.” “In similar fashion, we have to realize that policies that seem eminently reason- ‘able,- or arguabletoday, but. do not recognize the sanctity of life, (and) are policies that will not- only lead to the erosion of medical ethics but will undermine some of our most. basic principals. “To us as physicians the message is clear: the sanctity. of life rises above all else.” Jory received polite ap- plause from the - subdued audience following his Speech On another matter, dele- gates voted -almost unani- mously to ask the B.C. gov- ernment to raise the legal drinking age to 21 from 19. The resolution was fue mitted by the if marks once they enter uni- versity. “Sometimes you are really pleasantly surprised,” he commen All children should know their results on the exams by the end of the schcol year in June, and teachers are ex- pected to use the results as an added piece of information in determining a child’s final grade for the year, according to an Education Ministry of- ficial. Jerry Mussio, executive director of school programs said that in no case will the exams be used “on’a strict pass-fail basis for the whole Dr. Norman Hamilton, committee chairman, said a traffic accident occurs in B.C. every four minutes, with most of them being young drivers, There were more than 800 traffic deaths in 1981, he said, with up to 175 of them in the 16- to 20-year-old age group. “We're on top but it’s not a very nice record to hold.” ‘ : REVERSED TREND Since 1970, when most Canadian provinces lowered the drinking age, 14 Ameri- can states have reversed that trend and ‘raised minimum age, he‘ said. The result ies emergency medical services committee. en a si night-time fatal accidents in those’ states, ‘Labor takes radical stand By MAUREEN JOHNSON LONDON (AP) — Britain's Labor party, which governed for nearly half the post- Second World War era until it lost to the Conservatives four years ago, heads into the June 9 general election com- mitted for the first time to Since 1945, Labor adminis- trations have done as much, sometimes more, than Con- servatives to build and mod- ernize Britain's awn nuclear weapons and to welcome U.S. military bases. PACIFIST LEFT WING But the Labor party, with nuclear di: ment. , ‘It also wants to quit the European Common Market, slap on import and currency controls, boost state spend- ing to cut unemployment and * renationalize industries sold off during four years of Con- servative government. The radical platform con- trasts sharply to the prospect of another term of right- wing policies under Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, and a moderate platform put forth by Britain's new .cen- trist- alliance. To vanquish Thatcher's fa- vored Conservatives, Labor would have to woo away at least 5.5 per cent of the elec- torate — a monumental chal- lenge in a three-week cam- paign. If they succeed, Lab- orites say they will change Britain's foreign policy and its role in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. “We will see. that Britain plays a leading role in guid- ing the world away from nu- clear bombs,” declared Labor leader Michael Foot, 69, vet- eran anti-nuclear campaigner and peace marcher. Miss U.S.A. a dentist? The winner of this week's Miss U.S.A. contest says she will take her winnings and start up a dental office. Julie Lynn Hayek, 22, from’ La Canada, Calif., is a fourth- year dental student at the Uni ity of Cali a decidedly pacifist left wing, has a long history of internal quarrelling over Britain's role .as the only nuclear power in Western Europe outside France. - , “There are-some of us who will fight and fight and fight again," then Labor leader ~ Hugh Gaitskell declared in 1960 when the party, in op- position, voted against his wishes for a resolution calling ‘ for unilateral disarmament. He did fight on, and the res- olution was overturned a year later. The disarmers fought on too, but until this election campaign had been foiled by a@ party hierarchy that ex- punged anti-nuclear planks from its election platforms. Skeptics say the current commitments are so radical, and reached after such bitter arguments with moderates led by deputy leader Denis Healey, that Labor just wouldn't carry them out — or at least not all of them. “They're wrong,” Labor's general secretary, Jim Mor- timer, himself a moderate, told The Associated Press. “Without any question, within the lifetime of a Par- liament (five years), a Labor government will negotiate Britain's withdrawl from the Common Market. And we will remove nuclear weapons and nuclear bases from Brit- ish soil and British waters.” That would mean scrap- ping Britain’s Polaris nuclear submarines, banning U.S. cruise missiles due to be slenloyed in the country py AN Thatcher government's deal to buy U.S. Trident missiles, which would replace Polaris in the early 1990s. It also would mean expell- ing 190 U.S, F-111 nuclear- armed jet fighter planes housed at two based in Eng- land, Upper Heyford and Lakenheath, and U.S. Pose- idon submarines based on the west coast of Scotland. ‘DANGEROUS RUBBISH’ Conservatives denounce Labor's nuclear and Common Market policies as “danger- ous rubbish” and’ “surren- der.” “We would move from being one of the most influ- ential countries in the West- ern Europe to being one of the most despised,” said Tory Agriculture Minister Peter Walker. “We would provoke dis- may among our friends, delight among our enemies, The United States would conclude that Western Eur- ope no longer had the will to defend itself. It would with- draw into ‘fortress America.’ ~Labor, traditionally run by pragmatic middle-of-' the- left since losing Power to the Conservatives in 1979. Four former cabinet minis- ters, including former deputy Labor leader Roy Jenkins and ex-foreign secretary Da- vid Owen, quit in March, 1981, in protest over the left- ward drift and founded the Social Democratic Party. Running in a centrist al- liance with the small Liberal party, the Social Democrats are trailing in the polls. But both major parties fear the alliance could win enough votes to ensure no party: gets roaders, has moved mark jority in Pi Lougheed criticized EDMONTON (CP) — Pre- mier Peter Lougheed’s plea for racial and religious tol- erance in Alberta was un- necessary and prompted by outside agitators, says Jim Keegstra, a once-obscure tea- cher whose anti-Jewish tea- chings triggered a major public debate over racism in the province. : Lougheed, after three weeks on the sidelines of a growing controversy, asked Albertans on Thursday for a renewed commitment to ra- cial and religious tolerance. “It don’t think it was nec- essary,” Keégstra, who was fired last year as a high school teacher in the central Alberta community of Eck- ville because of his anti- Semitic teachings, said Fri- day. “If he had taken the time to become knowledgeable about the situation, he would rea- lize no problem exists.” Lougheed's statement in the legislature followed weeks of rising pressure from the Jewish community and other groups, including the Alberta Federation of Labor and the Edmonton Journal. He .also received telegrams from Austrian Nazi-hunter Simon Wiesen- thal and from Rabbi Marvin Hier, dean of Simon Wies- enthal Centre in Los An- geles. Keegstra said his teach- ings “were based on ideolog and political beliefs, not race and religion.” He said he is concerned about the ideolo- gical beliefs of a small num- ber of Jews and has no rancor for the majority of Jews. Keegstra said he is wor- tied about the interest Wies- enthal and other prominent Jews are taking in Alberta's political and religious beliefs. SEES ‘CONSPIRACY’ Keegstray said he has “a hunch” Wiesenthal is part of an international Jewish con- spiracy aimed at controlling the world. He said Wiesen- thal is definitely an outside agitator trying to upset the people of Alberta. “If they're, going to start listening to them, where will they stop.” On Thursday, the Eckville Chamber of Commerce asked Keegstra to resign as mayor of the community of 870 about 140 kilometres south-, west of use of Dealer surrenders BONN (REUTER) — The West German memorabilia dealer alleged to have sup- plied the fake Hitler “diaries” to the West German maga- zine Stern surrendered to police Saturday, his lawyer said., Lawyer Rolf Schmidt- Diemitz told Reuters news agency that Stuttgart dealer Konrad Kujau turned himself in at an unnamed border post “voluntarily and in full know- ledge of the arrest warrant against him.” Stern says Kujau sold the diaries, since proved by gov- ernment experts to be for- geries, toits former reporter, Gerd Heidemanh, for $3.75 million. iIn a statement issued through his lawyer, Kujau said: “I have given myself up his statements about Jews. Keegstra said he has no in- tention of resigning and hasn’t made up his mind whether to seek re-election’ this fall. “A man doesn't resign if he has not done anything wrong.” The controversy over ra- cism heightened in mid-April when Stephen Stiles, Pro- gressive Conservative mem- ber of the legislature for Olds-Didsbury, expressed doubt in an interview that six million European Jews had been massacred by the Nazis during the Second World War. Stiles apologized in the legislature a few days later. Lougheed said there is no resurgence of bigotry and prejudice in the province, but “this does not minimize the gravity of the matter.” “History shows that ele- ments of bigotry, such as the anti-Semitism in this recent case, can grow like a cancer is not challenged and vigorous- ly condemned by those in po- sitions of responsibility.” to defend myself against the accusations of fraud made against me in connection with the Hitler diaries.” He said he had always been convinced the diaries were genuine and described press allegations that he had forged them as absurd. “I.can neither read nor write old-Germanic script,” Kujau said. He also disputed the sum of money which he is reported to have received from Stern. On Friday, police and prosecutors raided the Stut- tgart shop in which Kujau sold Nazi memorabilia and military mementos, and re- moved cartons full of books and documents from his sub- urban home in Bietigheim- Bissingen. Kujau, who came to the West as a refugee from East Germany in 1957, said he re- ceived the first volume of the diaries in 1978 from a man named Mierdorf, who was selling collectors’ items from the Nazi period at cheap prices. NO FURTHER ID Kujau gave no further several years, but passed on all but $125,000 to his sup- pliers. Heidemann had made sev- eral payments directly to the suppliers, the dealer said. Kujau said he had per- sonally brought two volumes of the purported diaries out of East Germany in March, 1981, but later transactions had taken place in Switzer- land or in West Germany for safety. He quoted Heidemann as saying experts had authenti- cated the diaries he de- livered. Meanwhile, Stern’ 's owners held crisis talks Saturday af- ter journalists occupied the magazine's head office in Hamburg to protest a man- agement shakeup that fol- lowed the fake diaries affair. Staff began the sit-in Fri- day hight after giving the of Mi f nor of a man called Lauser, whom he also named as a supplier of some of the later volumes. He said he received slight- ly more than $1 million from Heidemann in the course of Vandals paint monuments SALISBURY, ENGLAND {AP) — Vandals using blue paint sprayed soccer slogans Saturday on five of the an- cient monoliths at Stone- henge, a mysterious prehis- toric circle of altar-like stones that is one of Britain's top tourist attractions, Two men were reported Being questioned by police in connection with the incident at the monuments on Salis- bury plain in Wiltshire. The slogans, in 15-centi- metre-high letters, say “PFC,” the initials of Ports- mouth Football Club; “Pom- pey,” the club's nickname, and “Kick to Kill Pompey.” A custodian at the monu- ments, which date back to 2,100 BC and which arche- ologists believe may have been built by ancient astron- omers, said only time will tell whether the paint can be re- moved. He noted that a slogan painted 15 years ago is still visible on wet days and that another painted four years ago saying, “Free the ponies,” has also resisted chemical removers. 's owner, Gruner and Jahr, until today to res- cind the appointments of Jo- hannes Gross and Peter Scholl-Latour as new editors- in-chief and publishers. The two journalists, known for their conservative views, were named to replace Peter Koch and Felix Schmidt, who resigned after taking the blame for the publication last month of the forged diaries. Staff passed a resolution by a 162-to-2 vote saying the appointments threatened the left-Liberal magazine's edi- torial independence. Gross and Scholl-Latour conferred with Gruner and Jahr executives Saturday and met an editorial council elected by the journalists oc- cupying the Stern offices, a Gruner and Jahr spokesman said. The trouble began after journalists complained that management kept staff in the dark about the diaries and insisted on publishing them without carrying out ade- quate authenticity tests.