SAFEWAY A4 CASTLEGAR NEWS. April 14, 1982 ‘ CAMPBELL’S SOUP CHICKEN NOODLE 3,91 0° ae for DUNCAN HINES CAKE MIXES JY Save 39¢ Deluxe tl. ited. Assorted. Save 506, 520g.box...... COFFEE ue $99 NABOB TRADITION Four murdered Protection requested? NEW YORK (AP) — The murders of a federal witness in a diamond company fraud case and three men who tried to help her were linked to the disappearance of another woman and seem to be the v: work of a professional killer, police say. The body of Margaret Bar- bera, 88, was found Tuesday in an alley in Lower Man- hattan, police said. Author- Forestry a ities believe she was the same woman who was ab- ducted on a rooftop parking lot on the city’s West Side by a man in his 80s who wore a ski mask and drove a white an. Three CBS in the head at close range, police said. Another CBS employee hid from the killer and saw the shootings. Chief of Detectives James Sullivan said there was no of crime who, were walking to their ears in the parking lot ap- parently the al involvement in the case, but. said “it’s not unknown for duction Monday night, then’ were chased down and shot ssociation opens Cranbrook office The Kootenay Region of the Canadian Forestry. As- sociation of British Columbia has opened an official office in Cranbrook. The office is located at the north end of Cranbrook Street, next to the overpass, at Box 845, Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 436, telephone 489-1113. Office hours will be from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., Monday to Friday, until April 30 and then 9 a.m. to5 p.m., Monday to Friday, from May 1 to De- cember 31. The Canadian Forestry Association is a non-profit organization funded by mem- berships, grants, and dona- “POWDERED DETERGENT TIDE or CHEER + Save $1.40 on Tide, Save $1.70 on Cheer. Your Choice. 3 2.4 kg. box. 2. $ Aas tions. It's and mem- bers represent all sectors of society — business, industry, thi ional miles Northwest of Canal Flats, where schools, clubs, Junior Forest Wardens and adult community groups may participate in a program that. combines outdoor activity with direct. studies of the forest. 3 Another important func- tion of the CFA is the prom- otion of Project Learning Tree. Regularly-held special teacher workshops provide guidance in the use of re- source-based teaching manu- als, Lessons get students ac- tively involved in direct studies of their own envir- onment — not only the re- lationships in nature, but also the interaction of forestry, logging, fish and wildlife, mining, water, energy, agri- g e fraternity, the professions and private citizens in all walks of life. It's objective is to promote the wise use of our forest lands for the ben- efit of all. The Kootenay Region of the CFA operates a resi- ‘CENTRE cuT PORK oar eglit 16 1b; ($2.55 ke) (GA.39kg).......006 $ SWIFT'S PREMIUM Regular. (454 g) 11b, package. . TOMATOES Mexican or * Florida Grown. No. 1 Grade, (1.74 ke) yt LONG ENGLISH CUCUMBERS B.C. or Alberta Grown. Hothouse. No. 1 Grade -dential camp at Blue Lake, approximately 16 culture, business, industry and lifestyles. The new Cranbrook office of the CFA will service the East and West Kootenay re- gion and will provide an im- portant communication link between the Association and general and specifi publics. A variety of functions will be performed, org hit men to use .22-calibre guns similar to the gun used. in this case.” Barbera, of the New York borough of Queens, and the missing woman, ‘Jenny Sue Chin, 46, of Teaneck, N.J., both worked at Candor Di- amond Corp. The business was forced into bankruptcy last year by a creditor who charged its owner, Irwin Margolies, with fraud. Chin, who was a friend of Barbera, disappeared Jan. 6. Her abandoned, blood- stained car was discovered six days later, and a. .22- calibre shell casing was found inside. Ballistics tests conducted Tuesday proved the casing was from the same. pistol with which Barbera and the three CBS technicians were -slain, Sullivan said. Barbera’s lawyer, James Coley, told the New York Times that his client had sought protection from the U.S. Attorney's office but: that her request had been refused. However, U.S. Attorney John Martin said that Bar- bera “neither asked for nor was given protection,” The Daily News reported today. Bop ANAQuEVeUIU af New Brunswick schools reopen FREDERICTON (CP) — The New Brunswick labor leaders denounced as dicta- torial the plans of the pro- vincial government to in- troduce back-to-work logisla- tion today ordering an end to a strike by 3,000 non-teach- ing staff in 460 provincially- run schools, All but 13,000 of the prov- ince’s 149,000 school children have been kept out of classes since .March 25, although some administrators were planning to reopen schools even before Tuesday's an- nouncement. Treasury Board Chairman Jean Maurice Simard told the house that all schools could be reopened as soon as ‘Thursday, three weeks after 8,000 janitors, clerks and Selkirk spring awards Students were winners last week at the Selkirk College Spring Awards Cer- emony, Thirty-six students re- ceived scholarships, bursar- ies and awards at the after- noon event on the Castlegar campus, About 60 people attended the ceremony. Castlegar campus director Jim Crom- well opened the event, fol- lowed by a message from Web Webster on behalf of the Selkirk College Board. Individual awards went to university transfer student Jenny Rudell, the recipient of the Margaret Knight Letts Memorial Award; Ted Faa, also a university transfer student, the recipient of the Diane Phillips Memorial Scholarship. The award was ee Apri Monday, ATTENTION PARENTS OF "$.H.S.S. STUDENTS Report Cards for all sodeate will be distributed | at 3:30 p.m. Friday NOTE An Open House will be held ' Tp.m.-9 p.m , 116 April 19 SPRING INTO ACTION Register for a Recreation Progrem Program Registration: Starts W.L.M. Phillips. Second year Aviation student Frank Kli- ment was presented with the Dr. J.V.G. Hall Aviation Bursary by Mrs. J.V.G. Hall. 4; The Jim Johnson Memorial Scholarship went to Eilenna Denisoff Markin a university trasfer student in psychol- ogy: The C.R.C. Press Award toa freshman achieving high standing in chemistry went to Larry Argatoff. Irene hen, of the Of- B.C. Telephone - Awards were presented to: Linda Balcaen, Nursing; Lori Price, Buriness Administration; Kavon Novak, and Jeff Zsol- taros, Electrical Pre-employ- ment; and Tim Matlock, uni- versity transfer. Harry Dyr- ndahl, manager of B.C. Tele: phone.(Nelson) was on hand to present the awards. Donald Reed, Business Administration and Denise Kishi, Computer Sciences re- ceived the I.B.M. Canada Ltd. Scholarship and the College Hairdressing pro- gram, presented Natalie Tar- asoff and Janet McCulloch, both students in the pro- gram, with. bursaries from Okanagan Beauty Supplies are Birks Family Foun- dation bursaries were awarded. The recipients . of the award were Sharon Simpson, Nursing and Wen- dy Robinson, Wildland Rec- reation. Several students received dation bur- Royal Canadian Legion Branch No. 170) Bursary went to Nursing students Linda Balcaen and Sharon Simpson. Finning Tractor and Equipment Co. Ltd. awards _went to Maureen Verigin and Georgina Argatoff, both of the Business Administration program and Kathleen Rivest of the Heavy Duty Mechanics program. Lil Nice, of the Selkirk saries. The recipients are: Irene Gretchen, Office Ad- ministration; Karen Carlson, Theatre; Damaris Heilke, Nursing; Cynthia Mangnus, Nursing; Mitch Galloway and Victor Hoodicoff, Electrical Pre-employment; Laurie Mc- Mullin, Drafting; Pat Can- non, Ski Resort and Oper- ation Management; Ted Faa, university transfer and Da-- vid Raeside, Ski Resort and Operation Management. secretaries went-on strike, paralyzing the province's public school system for the second. time in three years. The workers are repre- sented by the New Bruns- wick Council of Schoo! Board Unions, a part of the Can- adian Union of Public Em- ployees. Bob Davidson, chief nego- tiator for the strikers, com- pared the government to the Polish regime. “What they have done in Poland with tanks and guns, this government does here with pieces of legislation — the right to strike is a cor- nerstone of democracy,” Da- vidson said. “Dictatorial leg- islation only works in police states.” Union president Bill Thur- ber suggested the” back-to- work order could lead to civil disobedience. ‘ “I don't think organized labor is going to sit back and take it.” About one-quarter of the schools were to be reopened today and teachers in many others were to be called back in anticipation of the legis- lated end to the strike. About 40 schools opened Tuesday before the back-to- work legislation was an- nounced, Lands safe after struck by lightning VANCOUVER (CP) ~ A CP Air 787 turned back and landed safely at Vancouver International Airport after being struck by lightning shortly after takeoff on a scheduled flight Tuesday af- ternoon to San Francisco. “There was a slight jolt and a bright flash," said one of the 52 passengers who with th four-member crew Dah pene Rss Y z_ Were. returned with no r@- “sts ported injuries to the airpoft England yawns STOKE-ON- TRENT, ENGLAND (CP) — Canada’s fice A program have d little more than a in Trail was the recipient of the Nora Ewert Memorial Bursary and Peter Friesen, of the Music program re- ceived the Music Bursary. First year university transfer students Douglas Green and Deborah Docherty were awarded the Kootenay Savings Credit Union Bur-. sary by marketing manager dP. Kobluk and the Credit Union Foundation of British Columbia award went ot Wayne Keefe, Electronics Technology and Lorrie Brooks, Nursing. yawn from the average: Brit-° on. But factory workers near the small English town of Stoke-On-Trent, close to the Welsh border, are busily preparing to reap profits from next Saturday's cere- monies in Ottawa, when Queen Elizabeth officially delivers Canada's newly-pro- -claimed constitution. Craftsmen at the famed Wedgwood china plant, 325 kilometres northwest of Lon- don, are manufacturing com- memorative plates to cel- ebrate the cutting of Can- ada’s final colonial ties with Britain. Judith Turner, a Wedg-. wood publicist, said the com- pany will sell a limited num- ber featuring the Canadian coat of arms and an 20 minutes after takeoff. A CP Air spokesman said the: pilot and crew had a ‘ “pingside seat” when light- ning struck the plane's nose. He. sai dmost passengers didn't know the plane had been struck until it received clearance to return to the airport, ott is standard procedure to return to the airport, if ible, when 1 inscription surrounded by maple leaves. Each of the white and blue plates has a signed certificate noting it is-one of 2,500 in existence. If the $59.95 price is a bit stiff, Turner said C: strikes,” the spokesman said. “Lightning is not an uncom- mon occurrence in flight. It seldom damages the air- eraft’s frame, but it can be hard on the electronic equip- ment.” ted can spend $39.95 for a pair of ‘plates, one featuring the coat of arms and the other the Queen, REGIONAL RECREATION to another aircraft. The plane bore no visible signs of dam- age, but was towed off to a hangar for inspection. ma ay alt Moslem world out on strike By The Associated Press Much of 'the Moslem world went on strike today to pro- tect an: Israeli soldier's bloody attack in Jerusalem on one of Islam's most sacred shrines, but, Arab violence in Isracli-occupied _ territories subsided to sporadic stone- in Tehran urged a boycott of oil to “criminal America and its mercenaries in order to finish off the wicked ext of CASTLEGAR NEWS, April 14, 1982 AS Program too vague VICTORIA (CP) — The NDP will not support the B.C out in a plain brown en- velope, Kinsella opened it, wage restraint program be- cause it is too vague and autocratic, Opposition Lead- er Dave Barrett said Tues- day. Zionism forever.” ES STONED Arab demonstrators stoned two buses in Arab and the outskirts Government offices; schools and businesses were closed, air traffic was halted in several countries, some communications weré cut and business. sectors in -many cities were deserted in res- ponse to the call for a one-day 4 strike by King Khaled of . ba THIS 1s SPRING? stece Snowdrop’fights “off snow as area was hit by freakish weather this week. —LarNewsPhoto Saudi Arabia, the of Bethlehem, rocks hit an army vehicle in El Bireh north of Jerusalem, and youths set up roadblocks and . burned tires in several West Bank towns. But no casu- alties were reported today. Soldiers used cutting tor- ches to open several stores in - Gaza in a business was presented to the legislature earlier in the day by Finance Minister Hugh Curtis who said it will cost $882,000 this year to enforce. “We're not going to sup- port this piece of political puffery,” Barrett said in an interview. “It's games-playing politics at the juvenile level when this province is | in desperate it to Bill Bennett who said ‘let's do it.’ " Before being hired by Ben- nett, Kinsella worked for the Ontario Progressive Conser- vative party. Barrett said the only job the program has created is that of commissioner Ed Peck who is to enforce the program which limits wage increases in the public sector to eight to 13 per cent, and restricts increases in public sector spending to 12 per cent. RESTRICTIONS ABSENT Absent from the legislation is any indication that wage would be to eight to 14 per cent as announced earlier this year by Bennett. This is to be contalhed in the guidelines and regula- tions growing from the legis- lation. Curtis said there is no need to include the wage limits in the legislation because it is “in itself complete with the possibility of one or two mat- ters which will be discovered in the course of the next few days,” Provincial Secretary Evan Wolfe presented a companion bill rolling back the recent 11.9-per-cent wage increase for members of the B.C. ffecti need of legislature to ight per cent Jan. jobs, and direction and co- of Islamic holy places. One Saudi newspaper called for a jihad, or holy war, to liberate Islam's holy: sites from ‘Isreali occupation. , There was no shutdown in the Saudi oil industry. But Iranian President Ho- jatoleslam Ali Khamenei called on Moslem states to use the .oil weapon against Israel, and legions of Iranian ‘Air fares cut in half By DAVID GERSOVITZ MONTREAL (CP) — Faced with a depressed trav- el market, Air Canada said Tuesday it will offer a 60- per-cent discount on regular economy fares this summer for flights within Canada. Competitor reaction was mixed. Air Canada’s domes- tic rivals are having the same problem filling seats and usually match its discounts, but they won't do so eagerly this time, if at all. Pacific Western Airlines said it would stick with its existing discounts for now. It already offers smaller re- ductions. on. some surplus seats, but with fewer pur- chase restrictions than Air Canada is requiring for the half-price summer tickets. Pacific Western “does not intend to enter into any price wars of a non-compensatory level,” said the’ Calgary- based airline. However, Eastern Provin- cial Airways may match the discounts. “I don't see how we can avoid (competing with the Air Canada discounts)... and that goes for my col- leagues” at other airlines, William Verrier, Eastern ant induce many more people to ly. Air. Canada: is allocating 400,000 to 600,000 seats. at the sale price, which is good on return trips started be- tween June 19 and Sept. 7. Passengers must stay a i of seven and a P 8 P for marketing, said in an interview from Halifax. He suggested the discount program will reduce industry profit margins rather than maximum of 30 days at their. destination and reserve and pay for their ticket at least 45 days before departure in a single ‘transaction ata travel agency, atrike there, the army said. Widespread strikes were reported in the Moslem sec- tors. of Lebanon and the sheikdoms along the Persian Gulf. The Saudi radio said Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Jordan, Morocco, Syria, Sudan, Dji- bouti, Pakistan, Qatar and ‘Iran were joining the strike, There was no strike in Egypt, the only Arab country that has concluded a peace ’ treaty with Israel. But Mos- lem and Christian leaders lamented the Dome of the Rock shooting dnd Foreign Minister Kame] Hassan Aly said he will send letters to “all countries concerned about the shooting.” Palestinians in the Arab quarter of Jerusalem and in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip have been on strike ever since the soldier identified as Alan Harry Goodman emptied his M-16 automatic rifle in the Mosque of Omar on Jerusalem's Tem- ple Mount Sunday, killing two Arabs and wounding nine. Buy N OW and Save! Only While Quantities Last Because -_adishwesher — is more than | shiny pots and — ee | oe ~__ AEDRI PAPER TOWELS Save 40¢, Assorted Colours . 2 om | 09 cM SOFT DRINKS Assorted 9 $1 29 AT THE RECREATIO in the Castlegar & District CommunityComplex. *” COMMISSION #1 2101.- 6th Ave., Castlegar 365-3386 Programs for Tiny Tots (3 - 5 yrs.) Gym Energy Variety Hour Programs for Children (6 - 12 yrs.) ildren's Art Beginner Drum Lessons Games for Fun Ballet Programs for Adul Advanced Bellydancing, Volleyball Morning Classes Good Morning Stretch — Spring Fling All our Pevening fitness classes will be run on a drop-in basis, jou may come and exercise Monday thru Thur- soy" with different Instructors and programs fo get you into FREE: $1.00 per class or $20.00 Fi Pass*. Watch for these upcoming special events: Spring Golf Clinic — May 6 Kids Bicycle Safety Clinic Mey 8 Running Workshop — May 15 Tennis Clinic — May 15 St John 's First Aid Driving Tennis Lessons Adult Mixed — Ladies Children — Teens Fitness Programs TUESDAY Hall-Complex 8-9 p.m. “MONDAY _ Hall-Complex 7-8p.m, "Aerobie [THURSDAY _| ‘all Coinplex Registration Procedures starts April 19. Co- Dancercise Fliness: . All: foes: are payable at the Recreation Office Roller Skating Starts May 21 at the Castlegar coorany Complex Thursdays 7:30 - 9:00 Fridays & Sedan 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. & 9:00 - 10:30 p. Skate Rentals $1.50 Admission $1. Oop per person Bob Brandson Swimming Poo! Swim Programs (starting as early as' May 17) than $100 - LOWER than Vancouver Built-in Model Hall-Complex 8-9 p.m. able Let's Get Aeron Physical Flavors. Prices Effective ee 15, 16 & 17. Regular or Diet. IN THE CASTLEGAR STORE SAFEWAY CANAOA SAFEWAY LIMITE SALES IN RETAIL QUANTITIES ONLY Ootisch. Sch. 7-B8p.m. Hel gomplox Hall;compien hinds Doncercise tocat ane District C plex (8: Oo m. om: m.) NO PHONE EGistRA IONS ACCEPTED. reserves the right to Ootisch. Sch. Robson 7 7-8p.m. ‘5 Get Let ar Physical The cancel any oe Ya price. Senior Citizens may regites for any program for © Parent & Tot © Tiny Tots © Pre-School © Adult Public Swimming (Starting May ee © Children 45¢ — 25 tickets $10.00 * Students 70¢ — 25 tickets $15.00 © Adults $1.00 — 25 tickets $22.00 FOR COMPLETE DETAILS OF ALL PROGRAMS (DATES, FEES, ETC.) PICK UP A PROGRAM BROCHURE Available at the Recreation Office, SuperValy, Safeway, Central Food stores. Model wee, $398 HOME GooDs URNITURE WAREHOUSE "spot ess olosses.. : |More Instead the government presents “purely a political bill which hides and masks the figures and the direc- tion,” and leaves all the detail to be worked out by cabinet in secret. Barrett said the program is right out of Ontario, created by Pat Kinsella, Premier Bill Bennett's $65,000-a-year principal secretary, and Doug Heal, the gt $65,000-a-year head of infor- mation services. ONTARIO STYLE “It’s Ontario-style politics. (Premier) Bill Davis sent this OPTIONS FOR WOMEN A Conference to explore your options in work and education: April 23 & 24 Selkirk College, Castlegar. Fee $15 _ Reg Deadline Fri., April 16 ° For further information & registration call Continuing Eduction 365-7292 ICG Canadian Propane NEIGHBOUR Take advantage of these incredible savings on name-brand appliances. Sale starts Monday, March 29, ends Saturday, May 1. Don't miss it! SAVE W6G FURNACES AND UNIT HEATERS Available in high, low and counter-flow models in any size. 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