_ The Canada-wide response: toa a dramatic, a appeal was very warm and wonderful, nll Py _ meantime, the “pets everyday nes sds 1 asso tsitt Aeos THE FOLLOWING ORGANIZATIONS DESPERATELY NEED YOUR HELP — HEALTH SERVICES — FAMILY SERVICES — YOUTH DEVELOPMENT AND Arthritis Society Can. Bible Society DELINQUENCY PREVENTION Blood Donors Clinic Castlegar Libraries Cerebral Palsy Assn. Meals-On-Wheels alkene Asan Children’s Hospital . Castlegar Museum Big Brothers ; _C.N.IB. Homemakers Assn. Ba Scouts — Red Cross John Howard Society Gan Koolaree Soc. for Handicapped Senior Citizens Assn. ean Ro St. John Ambulance Robson Rec. Society : Child Care Sociéty Xmas Hampers Volunteer. Exchange Girl Guides io is When your United Way Envelope arr ives. in the mail, PLEASE SEND YOUR CHEQUE ACK TODAY with your generous donation. Vee sees WONTBERUSHED ‘4 MONTREAL (CP) —. ; The federal parole. board, swon't rush its decision on Paul Rose, currently serving ‘a double life sentence for the murder and kidnapping of former Quebec labor minister Pierre Laporte, Board official Jean-Paul Gilbert said the group won't +: be ‘swayed by any Political "\ pressure, “We will examine the case of Paul Rose with the. same detail which we’ apply’ vin all cases involving, life -sentences, but we must con- sider the attitude of the mari which’ we have before us ‘during the examination. We must take ‘account of the facts which‘are brought to our: attention.” Gilbert has been accused by some civil libertarians in Quebec of taking a needlessly hard line on past parole applications related to FLQ offences. DATELINE CANADA CASTLEGAR NEWS, October 19, 1980 A3 Mer RCMP in May.: am else a: pl i Ae >, Members of the New Bruns- wick Provineail Highway Pa- - ‘ PLAN SURVEY SUMMERSIDE, P.E.L (CP) — Cheyron Standard qutd. and Irving Oil Ltd. will trol don’t. have the gathority _ fbexin 8$1.6-million seismic to enforedithb Crimi of Canada’ Pro Judge James ruled. farper has He said Mabway. re Bee members; act solely: "ca Ni os diction of Phrévi In_ making: the sae Harper threw out a charge - against Patrick Edward Shee | iB of refusing to take a breath analysis test for a highway patrolman. Shee's ‘a-lawyer, Gary Mil- ler, contended the highway patrol was established under the New Brunswick Motor Vehicles Act and has no right , to lay federal Griminal Code -charges. The patrol “took over highway patrol duties from * says. ° Mand ‘survey soon ‘in hopes of , eld} Court stinding ‘ “ll” and natural gas reserves on Prince Edward Ieland. . Harvey. Pockrant, Chev- senior land represen- », Said the project will e underground forma- tlons. to a depth of 6,000 ahetres. for signs of porous" rock that could hold petro- us BAT geaid close to a third of roject should be done by Christmas with work ‘re- suming in the spring. é es. * CHECKING DENTISTS HALIFAX.) (CP) = RCMP have been inves gating. charges against Dal- housie - University dental school since late July, At- torney-General’ Harry How : He“ sald RCMP ° were called in ‘after allegations , were made to cabinet of dis- crimination in awarding lec- tureships' and questions about construction cditracts for school expansion¥.. There were also claims that dentists at. the school. charged pro- fessional fees for work done by student interns. |. ° How? said he. did’ not know when the investigation will end, . * * NOT IN CASTLEGAR NIAGARA FALLS. ONT. (CP) — Police fare in- vestigating a scuffle batween .. Mayor Wayne Thomson ‘and - + Ald. John Graaskamp on the city’s'main street. Graaskamp, who spent a «night in a hospital emergency ward, says the mayor punch- ed him “viclously” and bit his thumb: The.mayor says he. was. attacked and is: conatdariog laying assault charges. Give thanks for Tom By ROD CURRIE ,OTTAWA (CP) — Things.you wouldn't know if Tom Cossitt didn’t. ask: The sculpture in front of Prime Minister Trudeau's house is called Togiak. Joe Clark picked it out. _ There's a higher per- centage of Senior citizens in the constituency of Victoria than in any other of the 282 federal ridings. The prime minister's : principal secretary earns al- most as much as his-boss. And your share of the national debt is about $4,479. Cossitt, irrepressible Progressive Conservative MP for the Ontario riding of Leeds-Grenville and one of the most ‘prolific and persis- “tent C ister’s official residence to select works of art according to his personal taste and Togiak was chosen by the < previous prime minister, and installed last fall. A list of salaries for employees of the prime ister's office shows secrey James Coutts is in 4 a source says “you can {ij he's near the top end. residence thrown in, with Togiak, and other amenities. Bill Neville, who was top dog in the PMO when Clark. was PM, earned $65,000, ‘As for that debt, Pierre _Tecently got a bushel of writ- ‘ten replies tabled in the : House. Be Togiak, a six-foot-high ‘arrangement of green arches, is leased from the Canada Couneil‘art bank at $500 a year. It is policy for the oc- cupant of the prime min- minister of state for finance, said the per capita gross ‘debt is esti: mated to have been $4,479 as of last March 31, ups; $4, 169 a rear earlier: servants receiving higher salaries than MPs and, if so, whe his relies in the bundle of 446 answers Collenette tabled —: 65 per cent of questions cur- ~rently,on the order paper. 4 iMicality,” noting MPs\.do: salaries — “they smnities antl al- 4 Sprported | , by. others, - vigorously defended thesright of MPs to! put_as many questions as they wish, even if'some answers are worth “only 10 cents, if that.” has Police :a} B-tippea about the whale thing. Both men are running for their respective: posts in the Nov. 10 municipal elec- tions, 5 ° * . WANT RIGHTS . VANCOUVER (CP) — Fifteen Indian bands want aboriginal.rights tosea re- sources along the west: coast of Vancouver’ Island’ from . Port Renfrew to Kyoquot.’ : They also want rights to land resources in 40 per cent of the island — inland to the Munro. sald his depart- ‘ment will study the claim. He also told: the: Union. of B.C, Indian Chiefs annual con- vention: that’ native rights will be preserved in a new. constitution, ‘ ; . «© . STAY IN TOUCH EDMONTON (CP) .— Alberta Environment, Mini- ster Jack Cookson says he'll keep in closer touch with the Environment Council of Al- berta. But he said it will always be just an advisory group and will Island The Nuu-Chan-Nulth tri- bal? council presented the claim“dast week to federal Indian Affairs Minister John Munro. Council chairman George Watts said the claim | was made while the British + North America Act is still in effect’ because the proposed institution says noth- he g! to call the shots, The council's public ad- visory co-ordinating commit- -tee was upset with a recent government decision to build & dam on the Oldman River in southern Alberta. Committee chairman Betty Hunter’ said some council members talked of quitting but decided it would be wiser to stay and fight. She said they met with Cookman and he agreed to explain reasons for govern: ment moves in future. Al- though they weren't com- pletely satisfied, Hunter, said |, council members. will “roll,” with the’ punches.’ s * . NEEDS MONEY SASKATOON (CP) — The federal} ernment needs revenush eter ‘Canadian resc deal with pressing national prob- lems,-says Employment Min- ister Lloyd Axworthy. - He told t of porunitiés in agricultural and industrial development. en . PROTEST TERROR WINNIPEG (CP). — ,About 300 demonstrators ‘gathered in front of a syna- * {gogue to protest the recent wave of international ter- rorism. Spokesmen said the pro- fest was organized after a mmbing in Munich killed 12 people. soe . DESPICABLEKLAN_ . TORONTO ACP) — On- Saskatchewan law students that federal funds are limited and are needed to improve the national railway system, increase employment oppor- tunities and boost industrial and agricultural research and development, Axworthy said later that the key to western growth in the next decade will be more diversified employment op- tario Att 1 Roy McMurtry says'the Ku Klux -Klan ‘is a dangerous, des- picable criminal group and has ordered police to lay charges against anyone caught distributing hate lit- erature. Earlier, McMurtry . de- elared war on KKK recruit- ers who have been trying to woo Toronto high school stu-. dents, Cossitt ae he 's sharp , mestic hot water used mainly jin the cafeteria. If it works, they cal- culate they'd save about 110 barrels’ of oil a year. - * Next the works depart- ment intends to install solar heat at the. National Film Board's processing labs. and the public Servants’ recre- ation MPs oO limited to /10 or 12 questions on the order paper atany time, which would be a rrible restraint on Cossitt. ‘still has 183 outstanding al- is though he received a similar these’ professions are’ intrin- sically: different.” . Collenette took’ the op- portunity.to take issue with ‘the whole question of written questions in the House, say- ing that ‘complex questions | cost the tonperere between sete ie . imately 378" ” But Cossitt wane as fortunate .in his digging to find out if there are public Jimmy By CARL MOLLINS WASHINGTON (CP) — _ Heading into the final two * weeks of campaigning for the Nov. 4 US. presidential elec-. tion, about the -only .out- wardly comforting omens for Democrat Jimmy Carter are the early victories by Phil- adelphia Phillies of the Na-_ tional League in the World Series of baseball. For the last 30 years, through seven presidential elections, a Democrat has won the White House after a National League team had taken the series, a Repub- lican whenever an American League club took the title. Otherwise, portents for Carter's re-elec- tion are not favorable as he steps up his hitting game against Republican challeng- er Ronald Reagan, although the outward signs may be - misleading. For one’ thing, the war : erisis in the‘Persian Gulf may help the president, as foreign + emergencies tend to do, especially since administra- ° tion sources are making the- “,most of Carter's measured military precautions and the (possibility that the upheaval , could work toward release of American _ diplomatic host- the public -. ages held in Iran for almost a year. But the latest spate of opinion polls shows Reagan leading, as he has consistent- ly, except for a spell in late August and‘early September when he and Carter were rated even. Since then, in- dependent candidate John Anderson has faded. Reagan is most recently given about 43 per cent of the popular vote, Carter 35, “An- ‘derson 10 per cent, with the rest scattered in a national sampling by The Associated Press and NBC-TV. DISGUISECLUES_ - But the bald figures dis- guise other indications that the presidential contest is as wide open as is the World. Series until either ‘the Phil- lies or Kansas City: Royals roll up four victories between now and next Wednesday. First, the polls .have been wrong before. Second, they are spdt checks, not predictions. And they include margins of error that could mean the'{percentage “gaps are narrower. Further, the bare poll figures discount those who say they haven't made up their minds. Almost one- third of the potential voters Cossitt, the most fre- quent user of questions through the order paper, got number of replies in this last ~_ * They're cooking with sun to save oil over at Parliament's South Block, thanks to PUSH. .,8lophone, = pose