CASTLEGAR NEWS, March 20,1983... CASTLEGAR NEWS 71947 HOMEGOODS FURNIC: Lists : WAP&HOUSE Tag WN Sat. 9:30-5:30 oy China Creek “Drive a Little to Save a Lot” 11, T9P8-AUG. 27 1900," PERFECT: FOR. LW CAMPBELL — PUBLISH AUG. 7, 1947-FE. 15,1973 iB. HES CHRIS, " PLANT FOREMAN — Peter Harvey OFFICE MANAGER = Elaine Los ADVERTISING ‘MANAGER ral Ma: CARCULATION — Diana Warner Se a i ec er ro . ao, |i. HES. INSTANT I me sin cmlsg a youg papers corset ay a 7. aul REOOGNIZABLE! gow 1) Castlegar Ne' SA fire of unknown origin destroyed a a goodly portion of the Castle Bakery, on Lee, . seated inend betoree tle News Ltd.; provided, however, thot ight Ia that pact ond that part onty of ony fered a S53 tne caver Haar shall romain in ond Delonge the odverier iaament prepared irom repre proots, engravings, ote. provi The Dawson case Should severely-retarded Stephen Dawson be given a life- prolonguing operation or do his parents have the right to refuse their consent for. such an operation? The enormous difficulty in deciding that question wos ob- reveals the difficulty and com- plexity of the question. In this par- ticular and individual case, the ion was ruled y: " Similarly, every one of us, as members of society, was asked the same question. if we were in the same p what would we do?. vious in the two Pp! dif- ferent rulings handed down this week by our provincial law courts. Provincial court Judge Patricia Byrne ruled that the operation: It's a question that only now seems to have been asked of society as a whole. And it is a question that teaches far beyond one case of ‘a would be “cruel” and ° treatment" for Stephen and that the parents had the right to deny treatment. But four days later B.C, Supreme. Court Justice Lloyd McKenzie overturned. that ruling, saying instead that “it is not ap- y Id severely boy In Vancouver. At the same time, it is an issue which cannot be answered in general terms. Each ‘case must by addressed separately and. in- dividually as it arises. And in that context, the Stephen Dawson case propriate for an is only one qi — the It does - Emaker to. Impose his On “what consifutes a liveable ie Both judges heard the’same: evidence. Both heard the same reasons for and against the life- prolonguing operation. And yet each decided differently. It simply Dawson qi “hot y provide us answers for future cases — no matter how similar they may be. Each of those cases must be decided on their own merits, in their own unique con- text, . other views Vancouver Sun: The questions raised by the hi case reflecting onhis case, we can learn about the values our will Tiriger tong after the operation on the si: db society holds dearest. B.C. Supreme Cour Justice Lloyd McKenzie. . Will. the boy's. suffering be relieved and the ‘quality of life enhanced by the operation? 1 There are no-easy to in their grief, Robert and Sharon Dawson made a parent's profoundly caring case for letting their. son slip into a coma and die. Yet with much concern and such as-these, leading as they do to wider moral and ethical con- siderations for society as a whole. In the absence of any clearcut answers to these questions, society should be careful not to judge too harshly those charged with finding interim solutions. orem avant Star: The cose: céd@ a'terrible choice on his family and the courts and painful. reflec- tions on our whole society. Should Stephen have been given the surgery needed to save his lite or should he have been allowed to die? The dilemma was an agonizing one and it raised the most complex medical, ethical and legal issues. But choice could not be evaded, for Stephen's fate concerns us all. in of their own, the medical staff who have been caring for Stephen pleaded for the surgery that-could ease his pain and save his life. The dispute in Stephen's case was over the quality, of his life and whether it should be prematurely ended for his own good. The issue fh A IN. NORTH AMERICA Violence a way of | fe 4 By PAULKORING NEW YORK — Shock and revulsion have rippled through the U.S. in the wake of two ugly: incidents. A. multiple rape and an immolation drove home the unpleasant reality that the H un- der also produced scattered outbreaks of vigilanteism in big cities and a spate of Hollywood movies that made heroes of citizens who took the law into their own hands. : Still, for most North Americans the murder was something that concern of dened big-city dwell isn’t confined to the cities. - The two crimes resounded like an eerie and embarassing echo of what was for many the first brutal display of bystander disinterest nearly two dec- ades ago. . * In.March, 1964, 38 people, some leaning out their windows. to find out who was screaming, sat ‘idly by for 35 minutes as Catherine “Genovese was stabbed to death in a New York alley. No one ever called police. Not getting involved has’ since be- come. was.one, of.passive euthar or mercy killing, ::: jee wis cept the principle of mercy killing, who is to say where it would end or what bad judgments would be made in its name. Who would speak for the weakest among us? What tribunal would judge our value? As a caring society, we dare not render the verdict that o per- son's suffering outweighs his right to life. SRRSRAUASRNRAUUAUAAARANENUAULLNNOQAGUGSOUUOUOULSUCUCOUSASUERSSEECUCAEOCOEOOUEOEDUU LU NCAUUUNCAUU Tn eaN UNUM NNN FRED MERRIMAN Its ok, Sam, the world will probably make it through this crisis and the next. All one needed to do was sit in the audience at a Community Talent Night to be reassured that people are our most important resource. We saw and felt the energy of the. most talented entertainers that you can imagine. They were all first class. Please, please, dear homebodies, do plan to attend the next Talent Night. To be fair’ and accurate, I should speak praise over éach act we enjoyed at this most successful evening. s Let me skip lightly over them all: The Stage Band — professional. Lena Bush and Heidi Smee — heart stealing energy. Kari Sahlstrom — The musical shores of my mind. Castlegar Gymnasts Club — Wow... we sedentary types were left breath- less. Jim Chapman — a big man with a sensitive writer's heart. join their group. Talent in the name of good times. A former record holder athlete and now ‘retired electrical engineer, Pat Haley of Castlegar offered some wise words of advice a few weeks ago. He said, “We should take life less seriously and bring a little’ ‘niore humor and good fun back into.our lives.” The Community Talent Night in Castlegar March 11 did just that, Pat. We obviously have an incredible store of talent hidden away in this rather unknown West Kootenay valley. Our neighbors, their children, sales- people, housewives, somebody's boy- friend or girlfriend and local school children are just bursting with talent and energy. You need not catch the shows in Las Vegas, Vancouver or down San Fran- cisco way. You will no longer: find it necessary to watch the entertainment specials on pay-TV or any other TV, because we have more than enough valuable talent right here in a part of the world generally described as mere- Melody ional. -Nadja and Tonya Fominoff — How fortunate we are. Skip Fraser and Joe Irving — Mem- ories from the entertainer's idiom. - Kootenay Youth Choir — Instru- mental voices — our hope — our pride. Vi Plotnikoff — I am waiting for her novel. Kathy Sherlock — Just beautiful. Debra Tompkins — A most energetic teacher... this explains Lana and Heidi. Linda Hall — A Christian artist. Blazon — Wow, wow and double wow. Audrey ... just sensational. Southside Ploughboys — I wanted to ly the th corner of British Col- umbia and caught-up with either the Okanagan or the East Kootenay in the weather reports. As a moat grateful member of the audience, last night, I would encourage the organizers to plan an annual talent show. Castlegar and District C from active intervention. qe yet At the same time crime, tapectally violent crime, has steadily increased producing. an even-louder get-tough- on-criminals chorus. The aftermath of the Genovese mur- ome. ‘of ‘an urbaiimotto.. , . Police, often have’ trouble getting © “Yet if our society were to ac- © a i h d in hard-edged big cities. Yet 2 medium-sized city'and a small town got a taste of the ugliness last week. Ina seedy section of New Bedford, Mass., ‘a 21-year-old mother’ “was repeatedly raped in a bar for more than an hour while at least 15 customers cheered her assailants. The woman finally’ escaped. | and flagged down a passing car but no one in the’ tavern had bothered to intervene. \Four men have been arrested ‘and police say other patrons could be charged as accomplices. ‘ “-Hundredé'sf péople from all over the US: phoned the New Bedford women’s Jeentre.- A’fcandielight vigil was held Monday night.'The owner of the bar “:turned iti his liquor licence and work- men cut: up-the bar. with chainsaws. The revulsion seemed to stem as much from'the callousness of the bystanders as from the crime’ itslef, j Only :days © earlier in: the ‘small ‘Alabama town of Jacksonville,’a local * television station's news crew filmed a: burning. man ‘for 87 seconds befor trying to stop the blaze. ~~ -year-old” uiemaployed drunk, had called. The man, a roofer, apparent ‘the television station to say he wold set himsel ployment. * - Ina darkened tows @quare with only ablaze to protest uriem- the television ‘crew present, he poured © lighter fluid over himself and struck a match, For half a minute the camera recorded the leaping flames before his cries for help goaded. the crew into trying to stop the blaze. The man suf- fered serious burns.” f Violence has become a part of everyday North American life. . The National Coalition on Television Violence, which claims ‘scientific stud- ies show a co-relation between video. violence and the real thing, sayd the’ “average American .. . consumes an average of 12 hours of violence per week” compared to less than one hour per week before 1950. (Canadian Press) Is itall bad news? _ By AL COLLETTI NEW YORK — President Reagan's criticism of the media, particularly television, for not playing up good news along with bad smacks of subtle pressure to stage-manage the news. Looking for good news stories worth reporting is‘part of an editor's job, trying at times though it may be because of a tendency to cover human tragédy, crises and other “hard news” first. But if U.S. presidents, using they are often too abrasive, too quick to malign, -too ‘all-knowing?’ “And the media do choose to play up scandal over success, horror over the wholesome, and tragedy over attain- ment.” : Newspapers and TV ‘networks «should strive for balance in. their {coverage if they are pursuing fairness land truth, The Monitor comments, Reagan also should have the right to present his administration efforts to “sell” his policies and expect honest ful means sell their policies, monopolize print a broadcast journalism, then they are fair game for media critics. Buoyed by some favorable govern- ment statistics, Reagan is looking for an upbeat trend in the troubled U.S. economy that would snap the country out of recession. He suggested on March 8 that the. major U.S. 1 and imp: “But someone,” says The Monitor, “has to play the probing skeptic in the interests of objectivity. “The media would not be doing their jobs if they did not keep a prudent dis- tance from government and report the adverse along with the positive.” one year ago, Reagan complained that networks devote one. week to good news alone and see how their ratings fare. The networks balked at the idea. The president told a Los Angeles audience that Americszs are unfami- liar with the “truly admirable things” such as private sector initiatives going on in the country- because of the hant of ision in i to stress the negative. The Christian Science Monitor took Reagan to task for his pique against the press, saying U.S. presidents and high aides often take after the media when the news is not going'their way. “No president can have it both ways; exploiting the news media to his advantage to get elected and to shape a favorable image of his administration, ‘ and castigating them when they seem * overly critical,” the newspaper says in an edit “Itis not, after all, the newsmen or newswomen who create unemploy- ment, diplomatic crises, or a scandal at Arts Council and the Alpha Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority are to be heartily thanked for this pres- entation. Thank you, and thank you to all those people both on and off stage who were instrumental in bringing one more ray of sunshine to an otherwise downtime in the affairs of state. the Agency. The way for public Officials to’ get a good press is to provide good govern- ment.” But The Monitor also warns the news media not to hastily take um- brage. “Instead they might reflect on why journalists are ranked so low in opinion polls. Could it be that the public thinks in the press and on television “can contribute psychol- ogically to slowing down the recovery.” : Six months later, he was saying: “The picture of fear and despair they paint on the network evening blues is a picture of. where America was, not where she's going.” Sunday night. Smoke was noticed coming out of. the notived Mr, Cliff’ Wanless, partner: in ,the Bakery Co. and he turned in pie . fire alarm.; The ‘fire, department responded (ee mediately’ ‘and’ had it under control withia 20 minutes. , A + neral publiei is asked to refr ain from assisting at a fire unless ‘re- ted by the fire'chief, Inexperience hampers Brogcess Father than y night a would. be: Hel; brought The wrong end ‘of.a hose to a . coupling which caused a delay. Spec. tators helped themselves. to’ rubber “poate, and coats off the fire truck: with good. intentions. of | assisting, | but yy experienced firemen had to s° Shoat: Castlegar “Prior to the regular service’ of the "United Chuerh recently a lovely dedi- cation service was held.when the hew * eléctrie organ was dedicated-to the memory of Mrs. Colin Fraser. This lovely organ a gift ‘to the church by Mr. *' Fraser, and. was received with the greatful thanks of all the church mem- bers. * 6 ‘St. Rita's new church opened on “Tuesday afternoon with the solemn blessing and Pontifical mass, celebrated ” by His Excellency, Bishop McCarthy of Nelson. The sermon for the occasion -was delivered by Reverend J.B. Barnes of Fernie, a former. Pastor. cd The Caittegae and Disteiet Hospital will be officially opened on Saturday, April 19'at 2 p.m. by the Honorable Eric Martin, provincial Minister of Health and Welfare. s . * Vote the Pearson Plan. Put Canada back to work. Action, not eloquence. The:Pearson Liberal Plan will end the recession quickly. Immediate tax cuts will increase purchasing power... put men and women back to work again .:.. signal business to go ahead with ex- + pansion plans... get Canada humming again. 15 YEARS AGO From the March 21, 1968 Castlegar News». Cominander and Mrs. H.M. Trueman of Kinnaird were guests of honor at last _ ‘Thursday night's Castlegar and .Dis- trict Chamber of Commerce. dinner held in the Hi-Arrow Arms. Honored by Dr. C.S. Fowler, the couple were commended on their, ef- forts in instigating the first power - squadron in Castlegar. . Spring has arrived. ‘dnd ‘with it has come a brand new look. Dingy, dour winter colors have given Q way to psychedelic greens, oranges, NALD REAGAN: «>. only good news The comments aren't easily forgot- ten by critics, anymore than Woodrow Wilson's assertions to a friend: “Do not believe: anything you read in'the news- papers... Their lying is shameless and collossal.” (Canadian Press) ANH eects etree LETTERS Paper's use of metric comes into question Editor, Castlegar News: Re: Sunday's March 13 paper head- lines “Slide muddies water” and “City creek overflows and floods streets.” Words used in the articles included acres, kilometres, feet and inches. Four acres equals 1.62 hectares; 150 feet equals 45.75 metres; 18 inches equals 45.72 cm.; 24 inches equals 60.96 cm.; | % of a Km equals 250 metres; 1/8 of a km equals 125 metres; about six feet .equals about two metres; six’ feet equals 1.83 metres. Probably the sentence that really had me questioning your. use of the metric system went like this. “The road — which once led to Lion’s Head above the Robson Ferry — is now - nothing but a deep gully about six feet deep in places and 1/8 of a km. long.” ‘I know what six 'feet-deep is but I cannot relate to 1/8 of a km — but. give me two metres deep and 125 metres long and we're back in business, Pauline Marquis Robson f » hot pinks and many other almost splashes of brigh The once-whispered rumor of hemli n scotched ; indeed, some skirts are even shorter than last year's. - “” And the boys are not to be oiitdone. Manufacturers have made it a point to create this year's. male fashions: in “prints just as wild and dazzling as ever. . House wanes aeiont Castle- »gar will change soon as the town’s works department institutes. an. im- proved plan for numbering. ot homes and businesses, 5 YEARS AGO ” From the March 23, 1978 Castlegar News Dr. Nick Schmitt, director. of tho West Kootenay. Health Unit’ for the past 14 years, has announced his re- tirement from the public health ser- vice. Dr. Schmitt, 60, plans to go into the private sector, and will be a part-time lecturer with the Depert- ment of Health Care and Epidemiology at UBC. ae «“ 8 « ». Selkirk Saints ended their 1977-78 hockey: season with a 7-7 come-from- behind tie against the SAIT Trojans in * the 4-West college hockey champion- ships held in Red Deer, Alta. March 9-11. The tie gave the Saints a fifth. place finish in the standings, one place ahead of the Trojans, Both teams’ finished with identical 0-1-1 records and with the same number of goals but’ the Saints held a four-goal edge in goals al- lowed 11-15, which gave. them the fifth-place standing, : * Castlegar gymnasts improved their dings in the Ok Koot Regional Gymnastic meet last week in Kelowna by 10 points over previous local contestants with Debbie Rams- den’s fourth-place finish in the beam and vaulting event. unnnantaat Oagnnuadasanecuceusnnnanceggecaeasenunnnaegtaat ; RA tary-sponsored “National Bnergy Policy.” the’ “goals ofa. polltisian”, which includes’ ‘Stu dents were. ‘eeached by Donald Kin; let. The; winner was Martin Andrews, and his “Adventurers” from across Canada: snd to do some Sand will doubtless be expected to report on his experi- hile Martin Andrews is there. All routine matters:are being taken by the’ Citizenship Branch of the Department of State which, among other things, presents all “Adven- ' - turers’ in Citizenship” with ‘a special ~ eiueonalily cel F mee candidates were Prepared and coached by SHES einer “Leanne Smalley’ and °.1981’ winner Marilyn’ orkoff. /On ‘completing high: ‘school graduation this June,’ ‘Donna ‘Ozeroff plans ‘to. go’ tothe’ British Columbia - competition was Donna Ozeroff and Sandi Lee: Institute of Technology to take a finance and manage- “ sightseeing in the'capital city. He will return home May, ment program, with’a view to a career in accounting and computers. 0.) Sandi Lee'and Martin Andrews will go to Bolkirk rf Th Castlegar ‘club has budgeted ‘$600 for travelling College on the University Transfer Program — Sandi is xpenses and the Cttawa Rotarians will act as his‘hosts-: taking a broad spectrum of sciences and Martin the arts and sciences, a choice which gives them both a wide base and range of options, During the’ dinner meeting the Rotarians voted to : give the Bantam hockey club $200 to aid their travelling fund in the playoffs in Terrace. Jim Lamont discussed the Principal Donald King, who coached 1982 ‘hoating and. reception: of the Rotary Exchange team which arrives in'B:C. at the erid of March, ‘The Castlegar Rotary Club thanked the school, the sponsor and the students for their part in the valuable exercise in education for citizenship. lymplc ‘Sportal 1984 TIMES Tues. 5to7 _ Thurs. 7109 IN SIGARETTE SMOKING © ‘Carbon monoxide study By AUSTIN RAND “The (federal ‘Health and Welfare Department is;con- ducting annual surveys of the carbon monoxide output. of cigarette. brands because of the danger’ to health. ‘ Carbon monoxide gas: pro- duced by burning reduces the oxygen-carrying capacity: of the blood. High levels of CO in the. blood cause fatigue, deterioration of skills and in Rural hospitala without “corpnary ‘care units can do ‘almost:\as' good a job with heart attack victims as large urban’ hospitals, suggests a study of heart : attack: vic- tims:in Manitoba. .. The study headed by Dr. Andrew. Morris of St. Boni- face'\General. Hospital, com- pared the outcome of 459 ‘heart attack cases in 14 rural with 893 . extreme levels ion or even coma, A Dr. Roy Shephard of, the similar cases in seven hos- pitals’ in’ Winnipeg’ during a th ol FP medicine at the University of Toronto says the level of CO the. typleal smoker, inhales core anUw Wie U Six of the seven urban “hospitals had fully-equipped All onary care Wk Onli oe OF Bassin iaanie from: a cigarette is abode 40,000 - parts per million Appm).. 2)" fect ' rural hospitals had defibril- Jators. (for. restarting - the heart) and 12 had an elec- suggests a study of the ef- fects of color on three kinds of physical tasks. By the CO level on a busy street is about 40 ppm and the maximum al- lowable level of carbon mon- oxide in the workplace in Canada is 10 ppm. The Health Department says that of 45 brands of cig- arettes surveyed in 1981 and "82, 80 gave off slightly less carbon monoxide in the sec- ond‘ year, 10 had the same level and in five brands the level increased in '82.. The average decline in CO output for the 45 brands was about ‘Doubts now confirmed | VANCOUVER (CP) — Be- fore-tax earnings of the Brit- ish Columbia mining industry fell $410 million last year — from a profit of $215 million in 1981 to a-loss of $186 million in: 1982. yest “If there. were any doubts about. 1982 being a bad year those doubts are now con- firmed — it was a terrible year,” Tex Enemark, presi- dent of the Mining Asso- ciation of B.C., said: about information in a report com- piled for the association by Price Waterhouse, chartered accountants. The after-tax earnings re- flected the same decline, from a 1981 net profit of $98 million to a loss of $168 million in 1982. Copper mines bore the brunt of: the: recession . in B.C.’s_ second-largest. re- source industry.- After-tax, losses sustained by copper companies in 1982 were $154 million: .. There were substantial earnings in: the coal sector but these were entirely offset by losses in the metals sec- The ‘accountant's report was based on financial in- “formation supplied by 41 mining companies. . Enemark said 1988. holds GROCETERIA & LAUNDROMAT We Are Open 364 Days a Year Monday - Friday 6:30 a.m. - 10:30 p.m. ~ Saturday 8:30 a.m. - 10:30 p.m. “Sunday & Holidays 9- 10:30 p.m. 1038 Columbia 365-6534 J some. promise, especially since copper prices have in- creased, on average, about 15 per cent in the first three months of this year. “But the metal mining in- dustry is still some distance from any sort of break-even position,” he said. In. summary. the report said: e Gross _miniag revenues declined nine per cent from 1981, 'to $2.2 billion from $2.4 billion; e Net revenues were off 19 per cent, to $1.5 billion from $1.8 billion, because of in- creased costs; e Total industry expenses increased -two per cent in 1982 — somewhat lower than might be expected, Enemark (ECG) monitor for reading the-elec- trical activity of the brain. Overall, 25 per cent of the heart attack patients admit- ted to the seven urban: hos- pitals died in hospital. Of the rural hospital cases 29: per cent died-in hospital. Treatment. procedures. in the rural hospitals were sim- pler, with less use of drugs. and less routine ECG moni- toring. The researchers noted: ‘that. though the results generally fav at the Uni- versity of Colorado shone a blue, pink or red light on the wall just before experimental subjects tried tracking a spot in a rotating device, made a vertical jump or squeezed a dynamometer. The tracking task and the. jump: were wnaffected by / color, but the. ‘subjects: squeezed significantly harder - after seeing a red-illuminated wall than after seeing a blue or pink wall... ° sy “It may. be jbeneficial for partiipa ington to see red, im pital a ations whe were,,not monitored at all, The patients treated in the two groups of hospitals were similar, with an average age just over. 65 years in the ur- ban hospitals and just over 67 in the rural hospitals. Sixty- eight per cent’ of the urban hospital patients and seventy-three per cent of. the rural hospital patients were men. “te ATHLETIC COLORS Athletes in’ some events may benefit from “seeing red” when they compete, searchers Bay. “Perhaps red light should also be viewed during actual events requir- ing strength.” Insulate your House now © eae _ and Save$$$$ .. : $ $ Aug 5 O- 75 off regular see a © Old and New Homes © Fully certified & Bonded ° Working with C.H.1.P* (up to $500 gov't rebate for pre 1971 homes) “Canadian Home Insulation Program Each qualified buyer receives a$! ® LOTO aha TICKET — as our gift ~~ KOOTENAY: INSULATORS.LTD.. Phone today — REEO168: = Collect "KEN MIREAU » given a door prize. ‘Hundreds Of Dollars Of Prizes "All You Have to do is.Come in and Select the Right Key to Open the Chest "GRAND PRIZE “VALUED AT: OVER $2, 12 ft. Lund cal Marina, Kaslo. The First 500 le to come in and mee! 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The number and total | Western ticket counters or value of prizes available to be write to “Enter The Competition” won decreases as prizes are 501, 525 -11th Avenue, SW., claimed and awarded. A skill- Calgary, Alberta T2R 0C9, testing question must be correctly | enclosing a self-addressed, answered in order to win. Contest | stamped envelope. FLY THE not open to residents of the iON™, AND FLY PACIFIC WESTERN FRO! IM CASTLEGAR TO VANCOUVER WITH 10 FLIGHTS WEEKLY OR FLY TO CALGARY AND EDMONTON WITH 4 FLIGHTS WEEKLY. FOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS, CALL YOUR TRAVEL AGENT OR PACIFIC WESTERN AT 365-8488.