‘ Bé CASTLEGAR NEWS, November 29, 1981 4 Protestant third force To play protective role GLASGOW, SCOTLAND (REUTER) — Northern Ire- land Protestant leader Ian Paisley told a rally Saturday Air Canada seeks increase TORONTO (CP) — Air Canada has applied for fare increase of 9.5 per cent on Canadian routes and 10 per cent on flights to the United States except Florida, the Globe and Mail says. The newspaper says the new fares to the United States go into effect Dec. 17 and ew domestic fares take effect Jan. 11. The increases have been filed with the Canadian Transport Commission. Winning Western numbers Winning Western numbers that his so-called Protestant third force would not seek out and kill Irish guerrillas. He said that the new paramilitary group's role would be restricted to pro- tecting Protestants, especi- ally those in isolated areas near the Irish republic bor- der, because the British army and police could not do so. His speech to 2,000 Scot- tish supporters was a res- ponse to complaints in Brit- The Tied member of ve British and ain and Ireland that of the force, who wear military-style jackets and masks, appeared set to take the law into their own hands, Jack Hermon, chief of the 7,500-member police force in Northern Ireland, has said he will not tolerate any illegal private armies. : “The third force is legal and nobody can do anything , about it,” Paisley said. No for the Nov. 25 draw for } $100,000 are 1736270, 1891575, 2950190, 3035624 | and 2228996. Numbers for the $10,000 prize are: 2497843, 3579798, 1754152. 1154724 and 2675583. Last six digits win $1,000; last five digits win $100; last four digits win $25 and the last three digits win five dollars’ worth of Express tickets. Prisoners may buy TV sets MONCTON, N.B. (CP) — Convicts in Canada’s federal prisons will be able to buy their own television sets from money they earn in jail, a Prison Service spokesman said. Justin Sullivan, communi- cations officer with the de- partment’s regional office, said prisoners have always needed permission, rarely, granted, to own TVs. The sets will all be stan- dard black-and-white models and only money earned in prison can be used to buy them. Sullivan said the prisoners earn wages of $1.65 to $7.55 a day before deductions. The TVs will cost about $175 each, Sullivan said the move & . Metal sculpture at Christ- mas Crafts Fair, made by Sandy Stevenson of Grace Ci an effort to give chance to live amore aera life. of Winlaw. one could be denied the right to defend their neighbors’ homes from attack, he de- clared, and Irish guerrillas already had murdered 70 Protestants in just one of Northern Ireland's six coun- tries, Fermanagh. chal- lenged British authorities to arrest him if they believed the force was illegal. Several thousand third force members have already paraded in Northern Ireland and undertaken token patrols in border areas.’ Paisley hopes for a membership of 100,000 But some major factions in the Protestant community, including the 20,000-strong Ulster Defence Association, have refused to back the new group. Paisley says his supporters will resist any attempt to join the British province to the Roman Catholic Trish republic, Makes further. inquiry TOKYO (REUTER) — The U.S. Justice Department has asked the Japanese police to inquire further into: presi- dential adviser Richard Al- len’s receipt of $1,000 and He sent of his Democratic Unionist Party to a Londonderry meeting y aeraay, of the two from a ine, the mass — The monthly magazine Shufu No Tomo's interview with Nancy Reagan last Jan. . 21 became possible only after one of Allen's friends, Pro- fessor Tamotsu Takase of Kyoto Industrial University, circulation daily Mainchi Shi- mbun reported Saturday. various P factions aimed at resurrect- ing local rule, abolished by the British in 1971. Ernes Baird, leader of the United Unionist party, said the meeting agreed to work out proposals to put to British Prime Minister Mar- garet Thatcher. Britain has ruled out a re- turn of the old Protestant- dominated Stormont Parli- ament or any local rule that does not give the minority Catholics a voice in govern- ment. Upon ig the request through formal diplomatic channels, the National Police Agency interviewd “relevant persons,” the newspaper said. Asked. by Reuters about the report, a police spokes- man declined to comment, while Foreign Minister offi- cials said: “We are not aware of such a matter. The newspaper said its own probe showed that Jap- anese and American investi- gators seemed to have learned that: Band ignores Indian MONTREAL (CP) — Carol Phillips, white and a divorced mother of three, has lived on the south-shore Caughnawa- ga Mohawk reserve for 23 years. Now she has been told to get out. Phillips was married to a ’ Mohawk until her recent divorce. But the Caughnawaga band council has over-ridden the Indian Act and declared have to leave,” she said Fri- day. Another sister, Patricia, and her Mohawk husband, Eldon D’Ailleboust, who were married ‘this summer, have also been asked to leave. The Indian Act as it stands now says that only Indian women who marry non-In- dians lose their status. The council says the inter- that women” are no pes a gible for Indian status on the reserve. The band also has decided to ignore the Indian Act by ruling that any Indian, regardless of sex, who mar- ries a non-Indian loses Indian status. The decree does not apply to mixed marriages before May 22. For the time being Phillips and her children have defie the edict and are staying on the reserve with her sister Debra and the sister's hus- band, Matthew White, a Mo- hawk. “I've even-been told that my daughters can go back to the house trailer but that I rules are needed because “certain steps must be taken in order that our future generations will sur- vive as Indian people.” FEELS HUMILIATED “TI feel humiliated,” Phillips said. “I've never asked for welfare. I've never created trouble.” Phillips said she and her sister Debra have been tar- gets of verbal abuse by the band council and have re- ceived threats from “a vigil- ante force” of about 40 Indian women. And Patricia D'Ailleboust said: “A lot of people in town don’t know about the situ- ation we are in. I don't think people here are informed Second change; somebody cared NEW YORK (AP) — A drama that began on a Bow- ery roof ledge three months ago has ende din a Staten Island family court, where the policeman who talked Michael Buchanan out of sui- cide officially became his adopted father. When William Fox met the 17-year-old in early Septem- ow ber, was a lonely, Says gene therapy has implications LONDON, ONTA. (CP) — A California scientist says gene therapy “scares the hell” out of him because of its implications. Dr. Steve Nordeen of the University of California told a conference on develop- ments in medicine that gene therapy, where the genetic makeup of individuals may be altered in order to cure them of diseases, could lead to an increase in the number of people carrying a defective ne. Nordeen also told the con- ference, held Friday at Lon- don's Victoria Hospital, that ethical guidelines are par- ticularly needed when it comes to the use of the ex- plosive new technology of recombinant DNA or gene splicing. This technique involves taking a piece of genetic material from one organism and inserting it into another to create a different one with new characteristics. Nordeen said the difficulty is that, “we just don’t know enough about what's going on yet. We don't know enough about how genes work, how genes are regulated.” The central issue in the dilemma revolves around whether to treat certain pa- who in a sense “have nothing to lose” at the risk of making their remaining lifespan even worse than it was before the treatment. He told the conference about a case where the bone marrow of white mice, after being destroyed with radi- ation, was repopulated by the introduction of cells from a gene not normally contained in bone marrow cells. Nor- deen said the same approach was attempted in humans prematurely and caused a “very large controversy.” depressed runaway perched on the edge of a flophouse rooftop, threatening to end a life that had bounced him from town to town and home to home. The crowd six storeys be- low yelled: “Jump! Jump!" But on Friday the 35-year- old bachelor and his new son were hugging and smiling on the courthouse steps as they told reporters how Michael's life had changed since Fox took temporary custody of the youth in early October. “He's going to go to college The scene was not as bright when the two met in the Bowery. As the crowd encouraged him to leap, Fox asked Michael to crawl over to him. MOST DON'T CARE “See, they don’t care about me,” Michael said, gesturing toward the spectators. “Somebody cares,” Fox told him. “I'd be proud to have a son like you.” Michael pulled back from the ledge, an the friendship began. Fox called Friday's final adoption order Thanksgiving gift for both of “Michael is doing great and is very pleased, and so am I. We're going to be a family.” “I've never gotten this kind of a second chance before,” Michael said. Fox said he received tele- phone calls from both of Mi- chael’s parents and neither bjected to the and become a pi citizen of this city,” Fox said. “He's going to high: school, he's on the bowling team and he's got a girlfriend.” “Yeah, I'll call him Dad,” Michael said, smiling. “But it’s going to sound funny.” Right to refuse hazardous work VANCOUVER (CP) — The amendments to health and B.C. Workers C Board commissioner won't take away the right of work- ers to refuse to do hazardous work, Ci issi Mike safety At least two unions, had said they would defy any at- tempt to remove that right Parr said. Parr said that workers “can rest assured that the WCB has no intention of diluting regulation 8-24, which is the workers’ right to refuse hazardous working conditions.” Parr's statement came at the end of public hearings in tients with genetic into prop: from islation giving the board authority. Two other provinces in Canada, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, now require that workers continue at their jobs regardless of whether they think the situation is hazardous while other prov- inces give workers the right to refuse to work if the job is unsafe. He said juvenile authori- ties in Tennessee told him Michael's mother left him and his father when Michael was a baby. Michael was taken away from his father after the man left his son in a car alone for eight hours while working at a carnival. Authorities also found that Michael had been abused, Fox said. The youth said he ran away from foster families in Tennessee and North Caro- lina before heading for Ohio and then to New York City in September. He arrived in the city with $6, he said. After a night or riding the subway, he drifted to the Bowery, where he washed dishes and panhanled. But, he recalled, “every- body seemed to be so caught up in their own thing that they didn’t have time .for anyone else.” Four days after arriving here, Michael was on the roof, threatening to night at the Legion Hall by jump. about what's going on.” Phillips took her case to the Indian Affairs depart- ment where an official told her that she retains Indian status despite her divorce. Through the federal Jus- tice Department, Montreal lawyer John Lemieux was eee ito represent her and the Act Lemieux sent band council chief Joe Norton a legal warning Wednesday obliging him to respect the Indian Act. Lemieux said he will seek an injunction if the council or people acting on its behalf try to run Phillips or the D'Aille- bouts off the reserve. Chief Norton has refused Mr. Allen of a big souvenir from Japan.” — On the day that Allen was appointed White House national security adviser, the day after President Reagan's Jan, 20 inauguration, he re- ceived a second wristwatch. — A figure of 10,000 was written on the envelope in which the magazine said it put $1,000 as an honorarium for arranging the interview. ‘The newspaper said the Allen case was expected to. reach’a most important turn- ing-point as U.S. authorities investigated the nature of “the big souvenir.” PAYMENTS ACKNOWLEDGED Allen is under investiga- tion for taking $1,000 from th magazine and two wristwat- ches from Mrs. Chizuko Tak- ase, wife of Professor Tak- ase, and Fuyuko Kamisaka, a critic and freelancer who in- terviewed Mrs. Reagan on behalf of the magazine. Mrs. Takase acted as an inter- preter. The White House earlier this month said Allen had in- tended to turn the money over to government, but put itin a safe and forgot it when he changed his office. he money was found in Septem- ber. Allen has said that to avoid ing the i Valley. bottom. plants. Halts operations VICTORIA (CP) The B.C. Environment Ministry has ended for the year its efforts to halt the spread of Eurasian water milfoil in Shuswap Lake in the Okanagan An underwater suction dredge operated by a five-member crew of scuba divers spent almost a.month. said. _remoying infestations discovered in three areas of.the, |...» lake, the ministry said in a news release Friday. The operation was halted because of cold weather after the divers spent 19 days scouring 5.5 hectares of lake The ministry says a new method, using tightly- woven burlap 15 metres by 30 metres and anchored with sandbags and rocks, will be tried next in an effort to stop weed growth by preventing light from reaching the he took the $1,000 as an honorarium for Mrs. Reagan to give to charity. He also said he received the wrist- watches as a personal gift from Professor Takase and his wife before the Jan. 20 Reagan inauguration. In newspaper and maga- zine interviews in Tokyo, Kamisaka and Mrs. Takase have said Kamisaka bought the the watches. One of them was delivered to Allen as a personal gift before the inau- guration and the other after the Jan. 21 interview, they ported that the two women left Tokyo for Washington on Jan. 15 for the interview planned by Kamisaka, but could not get a favorable answer from Allen. They asked Professor Takase, who was invited to the inauguration, to come to Ww earlier than he DANCE TO DE"FEET” was held Saturday About 35 people participated in the dan- the young ceto defeat cancer. —cosNewsFoto by Chery! Wishlow people of St. Rita's Catholic Church. Mainichi Saturday. atso-re-~ had planned, it said. Mainichi said he arrived in Wash- ington’on Jan. 18 and con- tacted Allen them. Katsuro Ishizuka, a direc- tor of the magazine, reiter- ated, in a telephone inter- view with Reuters, mean- while, that it paid a $1,000 honorarium in $100 bills for Mrs, Reagan. An assistant editor of the magazine, Keiko Komoto, who sat in on the interview, carried the envelope with the money, he said. Massive tax enforcement campaign OTTAWA (CP) — Job perks enjoyed by rich and poor alike will be the target of what Revenue Minister William Rompkey agrees is one of the most massive tax enforcement campaigns ever launched by his department. If you eat in a subsidized company cafeteria, get a dis- count on merchandise you buy from your employer or . obtain any other benefit from your work, you'll likely have to pay income tax on it starting next year, Rompkey said Friday in an interview outside the Commons. “We locking at benefits all across the country now to examine which ones should be taxed and it’s going to take some time to look at that in depth,” he said. The move comes on the heels of Finance Minister Al- lan MacEachen's proposals, in the latest federal budget, to close tax loopholes for a number of specific benefits such as company health and dental plans. But the cam- paign by Rompkey and Rev- enue Canada is more wide- ranging and is aimed at tou- gher enforcement of existing tax laws covering virtually all company benefits. The budget doesn’t change the law, it just reinforces it,” Romptey said. The new en- ~~-forcement police follows has, themor PUBLIC SERVANTS HIT Among those hit will be the more than 5,600 public servants, politicians, political aides and journalists in Ot- tawa entitled to eat in gov- ernment-subsidized cafeteri- as and restaurants. The total value of that subsidy in the 12 months ending last Aug. 81 was $3.8 million. And Rompkey said people using those services will have to start paying tax on that subsidy next year. The campaign, however, isn't limited to Ottawa or federal employees. It is country-wide and will include everyone who pays federal taxes. The minister said there should be no problem policing the law because taxpayers are required to declare these benefits. As well, employers will be expected to include the benefits on their em- ployees’ tax forms. For heart attack victims WASHINGTON (AP) — drug used to treat glaucoma has been approved for heart attack victims in the U.S. after tests showed that it can reduce by one-third the chances of another attack. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's approval of the new use for the drug was announced at a news con- ference by ‘administration Commissioner Dr. Arthur Hayes. Ina statement, Hayes said prime candidates for timolol treatment are the 60,000 people a year who might otherwise die of heart dis- ease within two years of their first attack. Timolo! belongs to a class of drugs known as beta- blockers and becomes the first drug of its type to be approved for such treatment, Scientists at the National Heart, Lung and Blood In- stitute announced last month that similar results had.been achieved with another beta- blocker, propranolol, which is used to treat hypertension and angina. CASTLEGAR NEWS, November 29, 1981 MYSTERY THEATRE with E. G. MARSHALL Monday to Friday at 11:05 p.m. on... 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