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Diagnosing for.depression VANCOUVER (CP) — Some people are regular lightning rods when it comes to conducting electricity, while others don't do it at all well. It’s the people who have trouble passing a serene suchas ‘eye move- ments or the brain's q of weeks of i it to a flashing light, to sup- plement the skin test. Iacono said the skin test —. which involves placing ele- ctrodes on a person's fingers and passing a weak current lop » -Tacono said. Inaddition to screening for In some cases depressives: persons .at risk for depres- suffer from hallucinations sion; Iacono said, the battery and some might attempt sui- ‘of tests would be useful in cide. telling a manic depressive Iacono said researchers from schizophrenics, who oc- used to believe manic depres- that have p searchers excited, bees they may be potential victims of clinical the showed low conductivity in 96 per cent of the patients Psychologist Bill Iacono, who works with schizophren- ics as well as manic-depres- sive patients, said recent work in his lab at the Uni- versity of B.C. and others has indicated a simple skin test can be used as a primitive Motors | MERCURY | 623Rallway,Nelson 352-7202 - Whitewater [Prone tool for depres- sion. Reserachers hope to de- velop other diagnostic tests, from de- pression. About 79 per cent of those who had suffered only a single .bout of depression showed low conductivity while 54 per cent of the con- trol grop had problems con- ducting electricity. Follow-up studies indicate several members of the con- trol group who showed low vptoms. show similar, sym- sives cycled from their manic phase — a feeling of power * “Since the treatments for_and euphoria — to their de- the two involve different pressive phase and back drugs; ; it'\wWedld be very again on a regular basis. beneficial to be able to ac- But recent findings, he curately tell them apart,” said, indicate some people Tacono said. are continually depressed ‘Researchers are still a while others exist perpetu- considerable distance from ally in a manic state. their goal at present, andsay Others who achieve both the kind of depression tar- states sometimes tell re- geted by, the tests is not the searchers that going up is average, everyday funk. “We all get cyclic depres- sions,” Iacono said, but a bout of clinical ~Y BEAVER R AUTO CENTRE Beaver Falls RENAULT soso renters 367-7355 or 367-7722 SUZUKI LADA good selection of used vehicles 364-0202 In Glenmerry, Trall GAS & GROCERY SS Roanswe Prace S GAS & GROCERY AMC JEEP JUNCTION SHELL SERVICE AND CAR WASH 1761 Columbia Ave. 365-6511 CHINA CREEK SHELL & FOOD MART Genelle 693-2265 @ @ MAIN ST. MUFFLER Located at Castlegar Turbo 1335 Columbia Ave. Ph. 365-5411 PROPANE CONVERSIONS Cars, Trucks, Vans and Campers —Lower Fuel Costs! example, the, savings lor one year on a 400 cubic inch engine In a medium pep ia Paarbearel nt lire eicgasing. 27pm li ol popene’ ion, improved engine performance, no hes! wondal& piter prot and vena pollen tect bedrieieci taed A.M. WHEELS, Highway Drive, Trail I (Glenmerey) Give us a call at 364-021 RENT-A-WRECK Located at Castlegar uresl 1335 Columbia Ave., 365-7415 “Nearly New at Half the Price” CASTLE TIRE (1977) LTD. —_ SALES & SERVICE Kon 108) 365-7145 1050 Columbia, Castlegar ERNIE'S TOWING 365-5690 24-HOURS See Us for Used Automotive Parts COUPON ATTENTION SHOPPERS»... The NEW Super 8 Motel of Spokane N.2020 Argonne & 1-90, Exit 287 "Close To Univeristy City” Special Offer 2 for 1 soo. Horusiest, Finutt Eemamy Lodging (Offer Good Until Jon. 31, 1984 COUPON #1) © Tub/Shower loss of appetite and weight, loss of ee and sex drive, loss of “general” Resets pled with extreme guilt. “This can result in a couple worth the coming down. “Some say they enjoy the manic state so much it is worth it (to suffer depres- sion),” Iacono said. But whatever the cycles, of about 40 per cent of the “edt “population suffers at least: one bout of clinical depres-~ sion during their lives. Funeral held for Berekoff. Fred Berekoff of Winlaw © Fre Also Avollable © © Non-Smoking Roome © Waterbeds Cath Valve 1/20 of 1 cent wasn cana TEL ONEA ME sce GAS & SERVICE te passed away Nov. 27, age 80. He was born Jan. 23, 1908 at Kamsack Sask., and came to B.C. in 1914 settling in Win- law. ((L_SULUELS 2 DIRECTORY) EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH — Fellowship — Worship — Bible Study Family Bible Hour :45 a.m, Sunday Worship Service 11 a.m., Legion Hall Bible Study & Prayer Tues 7:30 p.m. at 1201 - Ist Street Pastor: Tom Mulder Phone: 365-2281 ANGLICAN CHURCH 1401 Columbia Ave. Sunday Services 8:00 a.m. & 10:00 a.m. Robson Community Church and & ath noundays) Rev. chorles Balfour }-2271 SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH | 1471 columbis PAO Trail 364-0 Regular seticday Services Pastor Cliff Drieberg = UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA 2224-6th Ave. 1% Blocks South of Community Complex 9:40 a.m. — Singing 10 a.m. — Worship and Sunday School Robson: 1st Sun., 7 p.m. 3rd Sunday, 10.m. Rev. Ted Bristow 365-8337 or 365-7814 CHURCH OF GOD — ST. PETER LUTHERAN 713 - 4th Street Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Worship Service 11. a.m. Pastor Terry Detoe Office 365-3664 Residence 365-7622 Listen to the Lutheran Hour — Sunday, 9.a.m. on Radio CKQR APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF PENTECOST Below Castleaird Plaza Phone: 365-6317 Pastor: Victor Stobbe Phone 365-2374 SUNDAY SERVICES Sunday School 9:45 am poring Worship 11:00 E Fell hip 6:30 ~~ PENTECOSTAL CALVARY BAPTIST 809 Merry Creek Road Past Fireside Motel Pastor: R.H. Duckworth Family Bible Hour 9:45a.m, In 1985 Mr. Berekoff mar- ried Fanny Relkoff at Winlaw and during his life he worked as.a logger and in sawmills, and lastly for West Kootenay Power, retiring in 1968. He enjoyed gardening and making. He is survived by his wife Fanny; three daughters, Vere Pelletier of Warren, Mich., Polly Tarasoff of Thrums and Lola Harasemow of Winlaw; seven grandchil- dren, eight great-grandchil- dren, three brothers and one sister. He is predeceased by one son, Bill, in 1970. Funeral services were held Tuesday and Wednesday in Castlegar and Winlaw with burial in Perry Siding Ceme- Study & Prayer —7 p.m. Church 365-3430 Pastor 365-2808 TABERNACLE Wednesday: Bible Study and Prayer 7:00 pm HOME OF CASTLEGAR CHRISTIAN ACADEMY 365-7818 2404 Columbia Avenue Church School 9:45 a.m. 767-11th Avenue Pastor Roy Hubbeard and Bruce Greenwood Church: Ph. 365-5212 Sunday Morning Worship 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Christian Esdcation Hour 9:45 a. Sunday Evening Worship ‘Bible Stucy, Wed, r lam, Pastor Ira Johnson Phone 365-6762 OT ee GRACE PRESBYTERIAN 2605 Columbia Ave. ST. RITA'S CATHOLIC and Prayer 7:30 p.m Rev. Michael Guinan Yi 43 -71 day Night Mass Rev. Harvey Self Phone 365-3816 Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Worship Service 11 a.m. Junior Congregation Home Bible Studies p.m. Sunday Masses at 8 a.m. and 10.a.m. ST. MARIA GORETTI Genelle — 12 Noon Funeral services under the dis of Castl Fu- neral Chapel. joking for you. sation structure ce to the: _VANCOU VER (CP) — MICHAEL WALKER The happy huckster DAPHNE B) to the local RAMHAM Michael Walker is a happy poli of policy. As director of the Fraser Institute, he. hawks the research group's 24 books everywhere from university ry. For $20, he'll gladly added soon. To help the 457 individual, sell you a pure silk Adam Smith tie in a choice of two styles and two colors with a women’s line of ties being and Bennett's government. relationship.” decade,” Walker said. direction.” politicians.” ig the noses of foundation members support its $800,000-plus budget, Walker sold advertising space on a board gam Poleconomy and now sells it from the institute's office. He also gives up to 50 speeches a year to groups ranging from pension plan executives to B.C. Premier Bill e called _ Many people think his spring meeting with the Social Credit cabinet spurred the sweeping legislative changes and program cuts, all in the interest of “down-sizing” government, that caused the recent public service strike. Walker said he naturally went to the cabinet meeting hoping to influence the government's policies. But he says it isn't important to be “influencing the fine print of. government policy — if it was, I'd be a civil servant.” NO ONGOING TIE He also said he and Bennett don’t have “an ongoing “I think Bill Bennett is a politician, and at the moment it looks as if his government is going to pursue policies of the kind we have been advocating for a “We're gratified to see that, but it will not come as a great shock to me to discover in a couple of years’ time that he's changed his thoughts again and gone in another Walker said he isn’t as cynical about politicians as he is about the political process, in which he says good ,politics and good economics cannot co-exist. For a politician, he explains, the best thing in the world may be keeping a money-losing company ting on government grants. It assures the politician that the people who voted for him are employed, stay in the community and continue to vote for “The main reason we ought to be teaching in the schools is that if people haven't been trained to ‘think about the issues, they are prey to charlatans — to people who offer snake-oil remedies,” Walker said. “And the people who offer snake-oil remedies most often are economics A tall, balding man of 38, Walker delights in rent controls, Since he was first appointed director of the Vancouver-based research group in 1974, he and the institute have been questioning the accepted wisdom of unemployment boards and .was legislation. Sales Opportunity Our current sales staff must be.expanded and if you are an en- thusiastic individual who is able to pet along with others, we are If you are prepared to work hard in return for the top compen- excellent working conditions and an extensive employee benefit program, please reply in confiden- SALES MANAGER, P.O. BOX 3612, CASTLEGAR, B.C. detractors. “I go out purposely to abrade people on a continuing basis,” he said. “I like to go opt and challenge their views. One of the best ways to get people to think is to challenge conventional wisdom.” For promoting the belief that the less government interference the better, Walker has been called everything from a simplistic, laissez-faire liberal to the Social Credit government's guru to a pop economist churning out books for the masses. Recent evidence, he said, vindicates what the institute has said all along. As the evidence piles up, the institute is also being joined by some of its former Glade woman passes away Molly J. Makonen of Glade passed away Nov. at Boundary Hospital in Grand Forks, age 78. She was born July 27, 1905 in Lebederka, N.W.T. and came to B.C. in 1912, set- tling at Glade where she lived all ther life. Mrs. Makonen married John Makonen at Glade in 1925. She was a member of the USCC. She loved gar- dening, needlework and sew- ing. She is survived by two daughters, Marie Balchewski in our industry, of Glade and Lucille Soviskov_ of Grand Forks; nine grand- children; four great-grand- children; and two sisters, Tina Poznikoff of Glade and Polly Esovoloff of Salmo. She is predeceased by her husband John, one son, John and one brother, John. Funeral services are being held at 7 p.m. tonight at the « tlegar Funeral Chapel. Services continue at 10 a.m. Thursday at the Glade Rus- sian Hall with burial at 1 p.m. in the Glade Cemetery. Funeral arrangements are under the direction of Castle- gar Funeral Chapel. iveecibes 30, 1983 OTTAWA (CP)—A snap- shot, of| women behind bars would. ishow that most are 7 . unemployed, of alcohol or drug ‘abuse "and committed non-violent crimes, a work- was shoplifting goods under. $200, .followed ‘by ‘violations: of liquor’ control acts and other provincial laws, bad. cheques under $5,000, \as- saults and break and enters. A survey. conducted : last year by the Elizabeth: Fry. Society of .788 women in’ ares provincial prisons’ found °76 Jefferson told a recent voce, sponsored by the dian Association for the women’ were for non-violent offences. “The most frequent charge Bridge results The Joy Keillor Bridge : club saw 18 pairs compete at the duplicate bridge .tables \ Noy. 21 with an average of 60 ‘and’ the following winning pairs. Per cent were convicted of non-violent crimes, 87 per cent for theft’ and fraud .' alone, Jefferson said. MOST NATIVES — The survey found ‘21 per. cent of women in provincial prisons were natives — in- cluding all of: those in. the Yukon. About 82 per cent were serving sentences of one month or less, while another 33 t te! HAPPY GREETINGS see ‘Hobbit HIE Chile Be aan kta greeted marathon runner Ben Thor-Larsen wi to one to six months: she said. Both Jefferson and Mel- ~ anie Lautt, a ssirninelogy the Seattle 3 airport a greetings Monday, when he arrived at Castle rafter he ran in port to noe money for the centre. le atthe U Saskatchewan, called for coi ter educational and voca- tional training programs in prisons geared towards wom- en's needs, Both stressed the pro- grams should be preceded by. career, counselling, assertive- ‘ ness training and information’ “on workers’ rights. Moet prison programs foc- 20 and 29, serving a sentence for: narcotic’’ offences,! rob- bery, manslaughter or mur- der and is likely to be single. Recreation news the corner and the rumor has started around the complex that Santa and his wife Mrs, Claus will be making a special evening’ for adults to BH special share ideas for Christmas for the family. There will be lots of neat ideas ‘and demon- strations of activities your guest appearance at the family Castlegar Community Com- plex Saturday, Dec. 10. They are scheduled to arrive at 10:80.a.m. and plan to greet allthe kids until 12 noon. Instead of the traditional sleigh and Santa tradition and- attend the Christmas Ideas evening on Thursday, Dec. 8 at 8 p.m. in the United Church basement.” will be arriving in a more ‘modern’ locomotive: one of Castlsger’s owa fire snginss. All kids seven and under will receive free. treats and a photographer will be on hand. to take pictures of the kids. So' plan’ to stop. by.:the com- plex.and visit ‘with Santa and Mrs. Claus (on Dec.-10). They are bound to bring a twinkle ‘toryour eye and put:a smile on your face. ‘Family Focus is a new group of parents interested in encouraging erftertaining and educational activities for the whole family. The hope of the group is to enrich the par- ent-child relationship ; throtigh emphasizing and val- uing the time spent together. The group has planned a : from your friends in the Kootenay Society. for the Handicapped * Send Lark Lae paate 's Sresting’ and help the Kootenay $0 Society - I ra di 2 Reine Mil publen your name In issues of the Castlegar News just prior to Christmas. (For a donation of __ the Society will issue a receipt, if requested.) Needed The Recreation Depart--. ment is ‘still in need of in- structors for the winter pro- gram. If you are qualified to... give instruction for any of the following programs please. contact the recreation ffl. Chinese Cooking, Paper Tole,” Guitar, Greek Gooking, Dough Crafts. There will be lots of hockey’: ‘action at the complex. this ‘Saturday when the Castlegar Rebels challenge the league =. jeading Spokane Filames..: | Game time is 8 p.m. So take in some great hockey action and enjoy the game. Public Skating Public skating this week- . end is Saturday from 2:45 to 4:45 p.m. and Sunday from 2:15 to 4 p.m. lonation of more, LOCATED AT yond Bai reaeairs Castle, Caldee! 0: ink of 1, Bank OF Castlegar Credit Union, Kootenay 3 Credit roait Union. crmenove, car Drugs, West's Johi Gr astiegar News, Clay Piri p Orsenutle and Cont tral Foods. who pleaded guilty. last Sep= “sant oe n. If he fails to pay the maining $25,000, he ‘must The, judge: also, sentenced Niding to two ‘one-day. jail tember — has three months\terms, to be served concur- topay Ka ee the ee ane “rently. Niding was. released Bt. pown» Canada on 1 Potatoes Russet. Home grown, B.C. quality .. >“ B.C. grown ¢ Canada no. 1 Medium a * Home grown, B.C. quality ........5 | vOUE i “Home grown, B.C. quality: .. _ B.C. grown © Canada no. 1 ae “B.C. grown © Canada no: Carrots. Ready to eat - Partly S Skinned Ham IM) Sorion Valu Pak Sli Kraft, Dinner Sliced Brea ms D8. 99 Cooked Ham vere 099 Cod th Canada © Grade A beef. ake cay . 0Velvecta Slices Cheez Whiz: :veivests tort |.» Kratt. Your cholos. 600g, each .......005+ 6 eWhite eWholewheat ' Home grown, B.C. quality. see's Freshe sliced | Liver........ eid Drumsticks .... bg By the plece pany ‘i Ling Wiltshire Regular ‘Proulx, told‘reporters the fine “was excessively severe” but . yee be appealed. Proulx said Niding, who is unemployed, wouldn't be able to pay his fine and hoped the authorities would be un- derstanding if there were delays. INDOW BLINDS | 2 20% OFE PETITE (” VENETIANS WALLCOVERINGS, 152% OFF PAINT & WALLCOVERINGS LTD. Gl2 Columbia due. CASTLEGAR 366-14 “Th halo sasen il soon be upon ith Gowranted pounds, 1c evald Now Yeors recolctions ahowt dieting, toke ection now! ve lose 17 to: in ale week: —be slim, Simcoe Now Vest, Und exore ot ‘thon you thon you woul ADDRESS No. 1, 1233 - 3rd $t., Castlegar HOURS 7-1 p.m. Mon. - Fri. Sat.,8a.m.-9 a.m. NUTRITION CLASSES Tues., 7:30 - 8:30 p.m. FRANCHISES AVAILABLE faneta Grand Forks, Creston, Cranbrook, Fernie and Eikford. - B.C. grown © Canada no, 1 Beets Ib. Home grown, B.C. quality......... 2 ite _ B.C. grown © Canada no. 1 Green Cabbage Home grown, B.C. quality ......... Chinese Mandar 350i rang Sunkist _ Grapefruit a 18 QQ ee Beeb aa Mees) Glin Vir 733 QQ Pineapple ech ........ Jumbo Hawaiian ° Papayas sacn .. Aylmer ¢ choice MORE MEAT SPECIA | Oven Freeh. 464 g toat...........0006 Dinner Buns Oven Freeh. Dozen pkg. .........- | Super Grain Bread = QQ 20 0z., each .... “Laundry Detergent Tide, family pek. 12 Hltre box . 8.99 T-Bone or Wing Stea ‘Baron of Bee Cross Rib Roast Pork Side Spareribs :3": Shoulder Lamb Roast s-...............4.38.. 1.99 Sausage Sticks Canada Grade A beef. Top round .... Canada Grade A beef. Boneless .. Pride of Canade. 7 varieties, each .. gundwongeare 4 6.59,.2.99 wey 6.99, 2.99 O49), 2.49 | env te baOn LAY WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT SALES TO RETAIL QUANTITIES