a2 Castlégar News Jono», 1985 U.S., Soviets agree to resume talks GENEVA (AP) — U.S. officials fanned out today to brief world leaders on the agreem it to resume arms-control talks with the Soviet Union, an agreement the Americans said was nearly derailed by a Soviet walkout. No date or place has been set for the negotiations, which the two sides — in a joint statement issued late Tuesday — said will be aimed at “preventing an arms race in space” and “the complete elimination of nuclear arms everywhere.” ‘The agreement came after-two days of discussions State Secretary ‘George Shultz and Soviet between U. Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, along with top aides, at the U.S. and Soviet missions in Geneva. Shultz, before leaving for Washington today, made no * comment but gave a “thumbs up” sign. Gromyko, who left for Moscow 45 minutes later, read a brief statement in English in which he spoke of the ahead for the two superpowers. “There is no need to speak at length that the talks were not simple,” said Gromyko, adding that the Soviet Union ‘immense tasks” that lie- Weather “will go its part of the road fully aware of the responsibility shared by the two great powers.” President Reagan, interviewed by the Dallas News shortly before the agreement was announced, was quoted as saying: “It sounds very good.” ALMOST LEFT TALKS The agreement to reopen nuclear arms } missiles, bombers and submarines. The negotiations should lead to the imination of nuclear weapons everywhere.” The statement added that the “objective of the negotiations will be to work out effective agreements aimed at preventing an arms race in space and terminating it on Earth, at limiting and reducing nuclear arms, and at which the Soviets broke off a year ago, nearly didn't come off, top U.S. officials said, because Gromyko threatened to walk out of the discussions and because of a dispute over Reagan's Star Wars research program. Gromyko “was on the verge of walking out without an agreement,” Kenneth Adelman, the director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, said Tuesday night. If Gromyko had walked out, only a “vague - stability.” The principal dispute, reported Adelman and Robert McFarlane, the White House national security adviser, was over the Star —Wars~space-weapons--program,—which Washington says is defensive in nature. ko insisted the approach has off potential, while Shultz stressed the emphasis is on research. “We agreed to disagree,” Adelman said. In a compromise, Star Wars and several controversial Soviet would have emerged from the diplomatic effort, Adelman said. Instead, the superpowers issued a joint by a Siberian-based radar system, will be taken up in one package by future negotiators. saying: “The sides believe that ultimately the forthcoming ERIES OF ~ \ WEAKENING _ FRONTS for several days. A ridge of high pressure over the province is diverting the Interior. As well, ridge is causing a strong inversion and the result is moisture trapped in most of the Interior valleys. This pattern will not change Sunrise Thursday — 7:44 a.m. LEGEND . j vocational » AQ cold Front 1 rar | MQ Ware Front training : ° Rain , ee By CasNews Staff Education Minister Jack Cloud : ED Stow Heinrich says he “has a 1 7% Thunderstorms | dream” to eventually intro- sé 1 Vv duce more vocational train- Scores. § Shovers ing in high schools for stu- NC ~/,5tdmonion | dents who want it. 3 Pacitic systems around Sunset Thursday — 4:12 p.m. “Instead of the school be- coming a holding stop for students to go into Grade 11 and 12, they would lead into a plan that would offer trades, English, communications, maths and basic science. “And there would be train- ing, truly vocational, in the area where you wish to pro- ceed. You could be a journey- man in any trade you wanted. They would have a couple of years employed in that area. “That's a dream I have.” Heinrich made the re- marks during a press con- ference held in Castlegar Tuesday. He was in town as part of a B.C. tour to meet with school boards to discuss 'CABOOSELESS TRAINS Recommendations made GARBAGE FEE By CasNews Staff Castlegar council has taken a posi. tion on the testing of cabooseless trains after all. Council agreed Tuesday to send two recommendations to the federal Rail. way Transport Committee's Jan. 14 public hearing in Vancouver on the testing of cabooseless trains. Council recommended that no test ing of trains without cabooses be carried out when trains are carrying dangerous or hazardous goods, and that no cabooseless trains should be operated within any municipality. CN Rail and CP Rail have applied to the Railway Transport Committee to test and eventually operate caboose. less trains. The United Transportation Union, which represents caboose crews, op poses the application, citing* concerns about safety. In other business, council has in. structed city staff to begin talks with RCMP about the new RCMP detach ment. Issues which will be examined dur- ing the discussions will include anti cipated space requirements, estimated cost, and site alternatives for a new or expanded detachment. Meanwhile, the city will give the Castlegar Chamber of Commerce $2,000 more this year than in 1984. The chamber will receive a total of $15,613. That figure includes $7,613 for general services — a five per cent increase from last year's $7,250. As well, the chamber will receive $2,000 for the chamber calender and $3,500 for SunFest — both the same as lagt year. This year the chamber will also re- ceive $2,500 for a new city map. How. ever, the chamber will not receive $300 for the monthly newsletter. The cham. ber has discontinued the newsletter. Elsewhere, council agreed to give $500 to the Kootenay Columbia District Council of Scouts. The money will be used to help send at least five local Scouts to the Canadian Jamboree in July concerns. The city supported a request for a crosswalk light at the intersection of Columbia ‘Avenue and 24th Street. Council forwarded the request from Tom Gibbon to the Ministry of High- ways, which is responsible for Colum bia Avenue. Council will include $13,100 in the 1985 capital budget for the conversion of 42 streetlights to high pressure sodium lamps. However, council will reduce the 1985 provisional streetlight repair and power budgets by a total of $7,500. The city has 408 other streetlights it also wants to convert to high pressure sodium lamps. Council decided Tues. day to review the method of converting the streetlights and instructed staff to research the city’s agreements with West Kootenay Power. Council also decided to amend its subdivision bylaw, requiring all new subdivisions to install high pressure “sodium streetlights. . Sex book will stay PRINCE GEORGE (CP) School trustees have decided that a controversial book, Girls and Sex, will remain in secondary school libraries even though they banned its schools Serup Workers face layoffs FERNIE (CP) Crows nest Resources is laying off 53 workers at its Line Creek coal mine north of Sparwood due to poor coal markets Crowsnest spokesman Claude Simone said the lay offs, which take effect Feb. 1 male counterpart, Boys and Sex, in May. The decision to retain Girls and Sex followed the hearing of an appeal by Julia Serup of _lues. the district superintendent's decision to leave the book in quoted from the books which she claimed indicated the author, But Dr. Wardell Pomeroy, advo- cated bestiality, homosexu ality, masturbation, premar- ital sex, lesbianism and abor- reading; it provides factual tion, played passages Man charged in CRANBROOK (CP) 22-year-old Cranbrook man was charged Tuesday in the death of a 19-year-old woman Jan —A club early Oct. 10. the ser. iousness of venereal diseases and undermined parents’ va. She said she objected to the information in the book because it was repugnant, not factual, and was provided without any moral guidance. trustees said that Serup distorted the contents by quoting out of context; the book is optional, not required leaving a downtown night Burlingham was arrested 2 and charged about optional Points of view; and the school system has an obligation to provide knowledge, but does not teach morality. A motion introduced to re consider Boys and Sex on the basis it provides a parallel Position was tabled until a later board meeting to give new trustees time to review the book and to allow for public input slaying liminary hearing in the Hughes murder. A date now is to be set Jan. 15 for a with preliminary hearing on both The ag set up two other negotiating groups. One will grapple with ways to reverse the buildup of other will try to ee and Soviet’ intermediate. nd missiles in Europe. ras hate in explaining the agreement at a news conference late Tuesday, stressed that the United States is unlikely to give up the Star Wars program, which is being researched for its defence capability against Soviet missiles. Qn :the Soviet side, Vladimir Lomeiko, a Foreign Ministry spok said“ ly this ag is just a peri nk o said “the Soviet position is that it-is-not admissible to further militarize outer space,” @ point he said Gromyko emphasized in the discussions. ; Five U.S. officials were sent to foreign capitals to brief friendly governments, ranging from Western Europe to the Middle East, the Far East and the Pacific. One potential snag is the setting of a time and site for the new negotiations. Shultz and Gromyko met for a total of 14 hours and seven minutes, in two sessions Monday and two on Tuesday. KALISPELL, MONT. (AP) — Police, acting on a tip, interrupted a tavern poker game to arrest two of the dozen people suspected in a white supremacist group's $3.6-million armored car robbery in California, author- ities said. Virgil Barnhill, 26, and Richard Harold Kemp, 22, were arrested Monday night and ordered held without bail Tuesday by U.S. Magistrate H. James Oleson. Fede: authorities have said 12 members of The Order, which they described as a white supremacist group, were involved in the California robbery. That heist has been linked with a $500,000 armored car theft in Seattle in April and a $25,000 bank robbery in the Seattle area in December. The men arrested Monday night were unarmed and did not resist when Kalispell police and FBI agents confronted them at a downtown bar, authorities said. “They were all sitting at the same table,.playing poker,” said police Chief Martin Stefanic. “You might say we called their bluff.” They face a hearing in Missoula on whether they would be returned to face charges in the Brink's armored car holdup July 19 near Ikiah, in northern California. BASED IN IDAHO The men were believed to be members of the Aryan Nations, an Idaho-based white supremacist group, Stefanic said. Authorities have said the members of The Order are either curtent or former members of the Aryan Nations. Barnhill also is charged with robbing a Continental Armored Transport in Seattle last April 23, the FBI's Montana-Idaho office in Butte said. Barnhill and Kemp are the third and fourth men arrested in connection with the California robbery. Police arrest suspects James Dye, 36, was arrested Thursday in Spokane Valley, Wash. Denver Daw Parmenter, 32, of Cheney, Wash., is being held in Portland, Ore., on weapons charges. Barnhill’s wife, Cindy Hankins, 20, was charged with carrying a concealed handgun and obstructing justice. She was held on $300 bond. The obstructing justice charge was based on the allegation that she had lived with and married a federal fugitive, Stefanie said. The 12 people allegedly responsible for the robbery have been named in criminal complaints that have been sealed until their arrests, said federal officials in San Francisco. No indictments have been issued. Among those sought in the Seattle holdup was Robert.Mathews, who also was sought in the wounding of an FBI agent during a stakeout at a Portland, Ore., motel. FBI informants have said Mathews, 31, leader of The Order, claimed responsibility for the two armored car robberies and the bank robbery. He was killed last month during an FBI siege in Whidbey Island, Wash. Gary Lee Yarbrough, 29, arrested during the motel stakeout, was also charged in the Seattle robbery. Yarbrough, a self-described “white separatist” being held in Idaho, has achnowledged he possessed the gun police claim was used to kill Denver radio host Alan Berg, but says he did not own it. He has not been charged in that case. Members of The Order are either members of former members of the Church of Jesus Christ Christian (Aryan Nations), based in Hayden Lake, Idaho, said affidavits and statements from federal authorities. Rev. Richard Butler, head of the Idaho group, has said his organization has no connection with The Order, although he knows members of the group. . eS Sreeet Fark Es MIKE WILSON ALF JANES THERE IS A new look to the Federal Business Pp Bank in Cranb with several new personnel in their branch office. Mike Wilson has recently been appointed as local ranch manager. Wilson has had an interesting and progressive career with the bank since joining in 1974. Earlier postings have been in Kelowna, Victoria and Williams Lake where he served as assistant manager before coming to Cranbrook in that capacity last May. * for more than a decade working in New Westminster, Vi and Burnaby branches before coming to the Keptenays, Lynn Seritt, with 16 yeafs of service with the bank, is their new management services officer. Seritt has had bicycle the top of Sherbiko Hill, next to Mitchell Auto Supply. WITH ALL the brouhaha about Sunday shopping, former Kinnaird mayor ‘and Castlegar alderman Cari Leeblich has his own theory. Carl says Kinnaird residents passed a bylaw permitting “wide open” shopping before Castlegar and Kinnaird were amalgamated in 1974. He pointed out that under the regulations governing the amalgamation, the old bylaw was in effect until the new Castlegar council passed a bylaw superceding it. Carl claims Castlegar has never passed a new bylaw and that all the stores in the south end — old Kinnaird — can open whenever they want. Sounds good, right? Uh uh, says Mayor Audrey Moore. Moore says Castlegar never put the Kinnaird bylaw into effect when the two towns amalgamated. In fact, the original Castlegar city council of 1974 went through the bylaws of Kinnaird and Castlegar and selected which to put into effect, says Moore. PICNIC a COTTAGE ROLL WIENER continued from front page am not totally satisfied. . . that they have justified this increase.” Ald. Len Embree suggested council write a letter to the B.C. Utilities Commission opposing the increase “in the strongest possible terms.” Embree said he can't agree with the rate hike “considering the economics.” He added later that there seems to be a “tendency” — especially with utilities — to apply for rate increases despite the fact other areas of the economy have been forced to “tighten up. Mayor Audrey Moore agreed, noting that it is an “anomaly” that only utility companies may make “just and reason able” profits during the current tough economic times. Meanwhile, council also agreed to write to Energy Minister Stephen Rogers opposing the province's plans todouble the price of natural gas by “At this time of economic problems I can't see (it),” said Ald. MacBain. “The increase is not justifiable.” Council made the decision after receiving a letter from Prince George Mayor E.W. Mercier opposing the in crease. Mercier said his council is “extreme. ly concerned about the future of in dustry and the people situated in the north-central and western areas of British Columbia.” He said his council is not protesting the premise that natural gas explor. ation companies shouldn't earn a “fair price for financial risks taken, but the companies should be able to demon. strate a need for the increased price.” Mercier says his information shows that drilling activity has dropped over the last three years because of lack of markets — not because of price. “The increases are highly inflation ary to everyone in this area. The province has placed restraints on the school district and municipality and yet every one of our facilities is heated by natural gas and our costs will double,” Assuming Wilson's duties as assistant manager is Alf Janes, who came to Cranbrook from Burnaby where he was assistant manager. Janes has also been with the bank “Some were Kinnaird bylaws, some were Castlegar bylaws,” she said. But the “wide open” Kinnaird store opening bylaw wasn't among them, she adds. LETTER TO THE EDITOR Facts clarified on fire issue Editor, News: 1 am writing in response to the letter written by Mr. and Mrs. A. Keith Waldie in the Jan. 6 Castlegar News (Fire Sparks Concern) to possibly clarify some facts for the citizens of Castlegar. Saturday, Dec. 22 was my turn at shift coverage for the ambulance ser. vice, along with the full-time attendant. In addition to my full-time occupation as fire chief at the Castlegar Airport, I am also an officer with the Castlegar Fire Department as well as a part-time attendant with the Provincial Am bulance Service. The time of 7:38 a.m. stated as the time the first call was received on the Gouk house fire was in actuality the time we had arrived at the Castlegar Hospital in the ambulance with a patient we had picked up earlier in the morning. It had nothing to do with the fire. 7:46 a.m.: While still at the hospital, I answered a telephone call on the por table radio/phone (I carry one of five of these connected to the 365-3355 num ber) from a woman in Ootischenia. She stated that there was a fire on Ist Avenue in south Castlegar, which ap peared to be the home of Jim Gouk. Approximately 7:47 a.m.: End of initial call. Chief Bob Mann then stated Funeral for Roy Crain Chapel with Rev. Ted Bris. tow officiating. A complete obituary will Roy George Crain of Chris. tina Lake, formerly of Bril liant, passed away Tuesday, he would get confirmation from the neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. George Reshaur, that it was in fact the house that was burning. This not being a rou- tine practice, it was not out of question considering that the neighbors were known, Chief Mann had the phone number readily available, and the fact that the report was phoned in by someone from across the river when there are neighboring homes. Approximately 7:48 a.m. while leaving the hospital in the ambulance, I received confirmation of the fire from Chief Mann. He then requested I page out engine companies C and D, with pumpers 3 and 4 from Hall No. 2, to respond and companies A and B with pumpers 1 and 2 to standby at Hall No. 1, which I did while enroute. 7:50 a.m. I received a second call. This was Mrs. Waldie also reporting the fire. The address was confirmed and I assured her that the fire depart- ment was enroute. Approximately 7:54 a.m. We arrived on the scene with the ambulance giving Chief Mann, who was enroute, an initial size-up; fire was extending through the windows and out from under the roof and had ignited the south wall of the home to the north. At this point the roof of the Gouk home collapsed. Approximately 7:59 a.m. Chief Mann Danial Joseph Killough, infant son of Joe and Anita Killough of Castlegar, passed arrived with the mini-pumper, with pumper 3 just behind. Total response time from initial call for the fire department was approx- imately 12.5 minutes. The ambulance arrived so much faster only because it was already manned and notification was immedaite. As the firehalls are not manned 24 hours a day, the majority of the fire- fighters were at home still in bed. Upon being awakened, they had to get ap, get dressed, clear snow from their vehicles, and respond to the firehall, contending with traffic and slippery roads. Once at the firehall, they then must don protective clothing and respond to the scene with the appar- atus, again on slippery roads. I do not feel the length of the res- ponse time (12.5 minutes) under those conditions was at all excessive. I support Chief Mann in his actions, both in conforming the initial call, as well as in the direction of command in attacking the fire. The telephone call received by Mrs. Waldie, which she stated was from the fire department, was in fact not made under authority of the Castlegar Fire Department. Gerry Rempel Castlegar Local infant died parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Killough of Castlegar and Mr. and Mrs. F. Kutzner of Gen AT CENTRAL FOODS! EEF 3 ae i OF BEEF nos... , DAMME. SHADDIESS..«.........0:0:...-bp te iiiog GAINERS. CRYOVAC HALVES. .... $199 eh me GAINERS REGULAR. 450 GRAM PACK ... bya BE PE, LE $759 S500 G. PACK ..........-...--- 220020000005 SPONGE CAKE IN PACK. 10 Oz. ..... RY the CHALLENGER. SOCKEYE. 220G...... COTTAGE CHEESE $425 SALMON $925 PALM. rYOGOURT = RQ¢ ¢ LIFESTREAM. FRUIT FLAVORED. 200 G. 69 RGARINE 69° BETTER BUY. 454G. ..........-.---05 BLACK DIAMOND CHEESE SLICES | TOMA $319) CHOICE TOES SAFLO Me SUNFLOWER OIL 3 719°\se% $6 SPAGHETTI SPAGHETTL SAUCE OR MUSHROOM. 1402. TIN... VIVA PAPER TOWELS 9.3409 79° | eee OO CHRISTIE'S PREMIUM SODA CRACKERS ; $ 1 39 450G. TOMATO PASTE «OE oe. OO. BEANS WITH PORK EGG NOODLES Qe CATELLI. FINE OR BROAD. 375G . LONG GRAIN RICE $4 79| DELTA. 907 G. .................... DUNCAN HINES. CHOC. CHIP. 350 G. $2 A i I A 69° STON BROWN. 14 Ox. TIN . CRISCO OL L DETERGENT DISHWASHER ETERGENT will be temporary The move, which affects members of the International Union of Operating Engin eers, is the second layoff in ‘seven months. Last July, 33 workers were laid off. Line Creek sells most of its coal to Korea and Japan. last October Terence Wayne Burling. ham was charged in the death of Denean Marie Worms, also of Cranbrook, found shot to death in a gravel pit outside the south. eastern B.C. town last Oct 16 She had last been seen first-degree murder ih the killing of Brenda Lee Hughes, 16, found slain in her Cranbrook home by her par ents when they returned from church Dee. 30. Burlingham had been scheduled to appear in_pro- vineial court Tuesday morn: ing to set a date for a pre charges The 30-seat courtroom was. packed Tuesday morning, mostly with young people, and there was an overflow into the hall. Burlingham will remain in custody in Vancouver until the Jan. 15 appearance. he wrote. Lawyer discounts warnings VANCOUVER (CP) — A lawyer for two Indian bands discounted on Tuesday warnings by MacMillan Bloedel that thousands of jobs are in jeopardy if the British Columbia Supreme Court orders the company not to log Meares Island until aboriginal land claims to it are resolved. “We have not brought an injunction application saying the Crown can't issue licences throughout British Columbia,” Paul Rosenberg told a B.C. Supreme Court chambers hearing Tuesday. “It is only an action by the bands on Meares Island. “There is no evidence that a single job is in jeopardy.” R g was responding to the day before by MacMillan Bloedel lawyer Duncan Shaw, who said as many as 20,000 jobs could be at risk if the Ahousat and Clayoquot bands successfully obtain an interim injunction agaginst the Vancouver-based forest products company. MacMillan Bloedel fears other Indian bands would seek similar injunctions while pursuing claims to territory amounting to 40 per cent of Vancouver—Island. However, Rosenberg cited precedents which he said show that only the federal government can extinguish aboriginal title, through treaties or settlements. “If aboriginal title encompasses the right to use the trees then the provincial government can’t come along and give those rights to someone else,” he said. Earlier Tuesday, David Goldie, who represents the B.C. attorney general, echoed Shaw's concerns about the bands’ injunction request, saying that it could affect the Crown's right to issue forest licences throughout British Columbia. Goldie maintained that if the bands had aboriginal title to the island, it had been previously extinguished or reduced by provincial and federal legislation “No Canadian court has ever found aboriginal title as superior to the rights of the Crown,” he told Mr. Justice Reginald Gibbs. The two bands are seeking an interim injunction against the company to prevent it from beginning logging operations on the 8,600-hectare island, located adjacent to Tofino on Vancouver Island, the terminus of the Trans-Canada Highway. The company plans to log about 53 per cent of the verdant island over the next 35 years. The bands want the injunction in place until a full trial is held to hear their requests for a declaration that they have aboriginal title to the land and that because of that title, the various logging permits and tree farm licences the provincial government issued on the island are invalid. Environmentalists say the island is a classic example of pristine virgin forest and should be accorded the same protection as the Pacific Rim National Park to the south. Some have taken drastic action to discourage logging on the island by driving spikes deep into some of the island's giant cedar trees. with their suit. In December, the court imposed a injunction, prohibiting the protesters from inter: MacBlo crews. However, MacMillan Bloedel was do nothing more than simple survey work on the was allowed to remove spikes from trees. The hearing continued today HEINRICH continued from front poge that percentage only barely qualified for the overcrowded f fo di ‘I found 22 of that 40 (while) they thought 25 temporary fering with ordered to island but Queried about Vancouver area sur. Educational Researe! teacher morale is lo comment “The Vancouver school board has been on a political wicket for some time now " — since the last school elections, to tell you the truth,” he said beard Jan. 8 at the age of 66. follow in Sunday's Castlegar News. Funeral arrangements are under the direction of Castle. gar Funeral Chapel. Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m., Thursday, Jan. 10 at Castlegar Funeral Time Air buys airline CALGARY: (CP) — Time Air Ltd., of Lethbridge, the second-largest Alberta-based Richard Barton, Time Air's president, said he sees no problem getting an endorse- airline, has purchased South- ment ern Frontier Airlines, a The two airlines do not smaller provincial carrier, for compete on any runs so scheduled service will not be reduced, he said. Barton does not expect the question of ownership con centration to be raised either. an undisclosed amount of cash, the companies an nounced yesterday The purchase must still be approved by the Canadian Transport Commission but Coming Soon . . . See the Castlegar News of Sun., Jan. 13 away Friday, Jan. 4 Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. Friday at Castlegar Funeral Chapel with Rev. Ken Smith offi ciating. Burial will be in Park Memorial Cemetery Danial Killough is survived by his parents; one sister, Alina of Castlegar; grand elle; great-grandmother, Mrs. L. Howe of Genelle and great-grandparents Mr. and Mrs. M. Kutzner of Arm strong; many aunts, uncles and cousins. Funeral arrangements are under the direction of Castle. gar Funeral Chapel. FAMINE AFRICAN EMERGENCY AID CAMP OFFICIALS REPORT STOCKS WILL LAST ONE MORE WEEK STOP NUMBER OF PEOPLE REACHING CAMP CONTINUES TO GROW, MOST IN BAD SHAPE STOP PROSPECTS FOR NEXT SEASON’S CROP POOR STOP GRATEFUL FOR ASSISTANCE ALREADY RECEIVED, HAS SAVED SEVERAL THOUSAND LIVES STOP FOOD, BLANKETS, TENTS, MED SUPPLIES URGENTLY NEEDED HERE STOP GRAIN MUST ARRIVE END OF MONTH OR DEATH RATE WILL SOAR STOP PLEASE ADVISE STOP In Africa, drought has shattered millions of lives. In Canada, the response has been unprecedented. To cure the basic problem will take long-term efforts — but peo- ple are hungry and ill now. 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