VANCOUVER (CP) — A freighter loaded with B.C. logs sliced through a Fraser River dock southeast of here CENTRAL FOODS 2717 Columbia Ave CA R CASTLEGA Friday evening, destroying more than half the dock and causing at least $1 million damage. The freighter, the Kyoho Maru, was leaving Fraser Surrey Docks Ltd., when it backed into the Annacis Auto Terminals dock, smashing through the structuré. “The ship went right through the dock like a knife through butter,” said Rick Pearce, port manager for the Fraser River Harbor Com- mission. “Where there was Register Now! Nelson's Newest THE DANCE & FITNESS STUDIO Instructor — Terri Rambold Background training in Los Angeles and Vancouver OFFERING: Ballet, Jozz Ballet Jaz Dence 352-1881 or 825-9501 300 Baker &. 1 MILLION DAMAGE Freighter smashed dock one dock, now there is two.” “My report, when it is written, will go to the pil- otage authorities,” he said. Vanport Shipping Agen- cies, agent for the Japanese owners, the Y.K. Sanko Line, had no details on the inci- dent. The Kyomu Maru was bound for Shanghai, China, after taking on a load of B.C. logs. The dock is built out into the river and is connected to shore by a causeway. OUT OF SERVICE The dock, one of two at the terminal for unloading im- ported Japanese cars, will be out of service for at least two months, Pearce estimated. The destruction of the dock comes when new models are just being introduced, one of the busiest times of the year for auto dealers. But dealers will not be affected, said Bill Walker, for Annacis A \ “There will be some incon- veniences to us a8 a company but fs-won't cause a delay for freighters load at the terminal over the weekend, but Walker said the remaining dock will be able to them. Sept. 17. “Why was.the decision made ‘in-camera’ and why ‘won't they tell me-tow many out of the seven trustees voted,” gays Retalaff. ‘Trustee Peter Kagis said Thursday the meeting was held ineamera because “the decision involved « par- tieular family and’ a particular ¢hild.” He said meetings that appear to be about “personal” or y” matters are held in- 7 Kagis said because it was an in-camera meeting he couldn't disclose what the vote was. “There's no doubt there's a problem,” said Kagis, who participated in the meeting. “But we have a problem ‘at our énd — sending « bus out for one child.” Dascher says ight parents in the district are in s similar position t6 the Retzlaffs, including five children in Pass Creek, ofe tit Robson, and two (attending Russian kindergarten in Gastlegar) in Glade. He said these parents have pooled together their 16 cents a kilometre compensation to hire a taxi to take their children to school. “(Retziaff) wants us to send a bus over there, and the board has said if (the compensation) is good enough for the other parents, it should be good enough for him too,” Dascher explained. The Tokyo-registered 148- metre Kyoko Maru sustained little damage. Captain H. Sakato was able to return the ship to its original berth at Fraser Surrey Docks where’ an underwater inspection was to be carried out. The harbor commission will not allow the ship to leaye until a bond-has been plated to cover the damage caused, said Peace. The impact of the collision ripped the decking up for about half the length of the 170-metre dock. Peace said a preliminary estimate of the damage is $1 million. % edges $10.99. DACRON PILLOWS Plump and soft, size 19x25". Piped Machine washable. Regular Choose from os: assorted hor $2. SCATTER MATS sorted colors. 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Compare at $24.99. under $200, and breaking and theft sentenced to three months’ probation for being a minor at large, bers by next month, down 23 from the current 58. Twelve people are being laid off while 11 are being trans ferred to other operations. Dykes would not say how much money the provincial CARL'S DRUGS Castleaird Plaze 365-7269 Super Savings on 20-Piece services for 4 Here is your chance to start or add to your set of truly fine fatware from Oneida in possession of alcohol, and was put on a six-month peace A $150 fine and six-month bond. entering. 7 2 8 unemployment in British Col- umbia. But by this year, returns on land and assets valued at i HH 1 Ti if iis + lll i a & ih nf i Hospitals reported treating seven people for said the foot of a bridge mear Marcos’ palace through downtown Manila into Divisoria, the city’s largest market. Early commuters scurried away and store owners opening for the day slammed shop doors shut again as troopers hurled tear gas and smoke bombs. Some fleeing protesters stopped to throw rocks and bottles before they ran again. RULE TO END HONG KONG (AP) — Britain and China will initial a draft agreement in Peking on Wednesday to end British rule over Hong Kong in 1997, the government said Saturday. A brief government statement said the accord will be initialied by the chief negotiators, Sir Richard Evans, British ambassador to China, and Zhou Nan, Chinese assistant foreign minister in the Chinese capital. Attending the cremony will be Honk Kong Gov Sir Edward Youde, who will return to Hong Kong the same day to announce the historic agreement to the colony's legislative council. 4 ATTACKED HAMILTON, BERMUDA (CP) — A Canadian tourist was recovering in hospital Saturday after being attacked in his hotel room by two men, one of them wielding a hatchet. Robert Foluck, 45, of Winnipeg underwent an emergency operation for wounds to the head, but he is out of danger and was later able to talk about his ordeal. Police were searching for two black Bermudians who pounced on Foluck at 2 a.m. Friday as he returned to his room from the ice machine at the Five Star Southampton Princess Hotel. RECONCILED VERDUN, FRANCE (REUTER) — Leaders of France and West Germany were to meet on Saturday ona First World War battlefield in a symbolic gesture to mark the modern-day reconciliation between two once, bitter enemies. t Francois Mitterrand and Chancellor . Presiden’ Helmut Kohl were to place wreaths and inspect war graves at Verdun in eastern France, where half a million French and German soldiers died in about 10 months of fighting in 1916. The joint tribute is seen in Paris as going some way toward unruffling German feelings over not being invited to Second World War D-Day commemorative celebrations in Normandy in June attended by Western leaders including the Queen, then-prime minister Trudeau and U.S. President Reagan. Both French and West German officials have rejected suggestions that Bonn was snubbed at the earlier celebrations marking the Allied invasion of Nazi-held Europe. EXHIBITION ROME (AP) — For the first tifne since the fall of the Roman Empire, the Colosseum was expected to be packed on Saturday for a special event — an exhibition that, while offering no gladiators, has turned con servationists and city officials into lions. A two-month bi on Italy's modernization under Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini will be held at the Colosseum, one of Rome's landmark monuments. The use of the Colosseum has pitted conser vationists, who fear damage to the structure, against city officials who maintain that the exhibit will spur popular support for restoring the 1,900-year-old amphitheatre. Deputy Mayor Pier Luigi Severi told a news conference Friday his main objective in promoting the Colosseum for the event “was to solicit awareness and funds for the preservation of Rome's decaying ancient monuments.” “Financing for the exhibition went in part to restoring the Colosseum,” he said. The Communist city government and private businesses spent $1.62 million to set up the exhibit and give the four-storey oval monument a massive facelift for the show. REPORTER FREE BEIRUT (AP) — A reporter for the British news agency Reuters abducted three weeks ago after leaving for eastern Lebanon, has been freed un harmed, the agency says. Jonathan Wright, 30, of Oxford, Engiand, was not mistreated and was unable to identify his captors, Reuters said in a statement. It said he arrived at the Reuters office in Beirut on Friday morning and left for London with the agency's chief Middle East repre- sentative, David Betts. Wright disappeared Aug. 29 as he headed for the seene of a bombing attack by Israeli planes on a suspected Palestinian base in eastern Lebanon's Bekaa valley. He was travelling alone, and was last seen leaving the Reuters office in mostly Moslem western Beirut. The statement said he was freed following the Credit government's attitude to that of the Reagan ad- ministration in the United States, which he said puts business concerns ahead of social rights. and now with the based Canadian As- for the Mentally ‘Handicapped, also blasted the Boered record, saying, “Ugly things are going on in B.C, today.” Citing the transfer of 56 mentally-handicapped pati. ents from Tranquille Insti tation in Kamloops to Glen. dale Lodge in Victoria as a “stripping” of human rights, AWARD . . . Dana Peterson (right) chairman of the United Way board, presents Judy Campbell, chairperson of the Vancouver Foundation Advisory Committee, with an award for her past service on the board of directors, and for serving as shairperson of the VFAC CosNewsPhoto September 23, 1964 likened to Reag she said the key issue is whether patients are people “or objects and possessions of governments.” Ruff said the government decision came despite earlier promises that it would con- sult with the patients and their amilies before any ac- tion was taken Fairweather, meantime, said human rights in Canada are safe under the newly- elected federal government. Although human rights were a “low profile” issue during the election cam- paigns, he said he interprets the silence as “a sign of con sensus” that the “national political liberty and human rights and the protection of those rights remain constant,” Fairwea- ther said. Job sharing needed to fight unemployment TORONTO (CP) — Unless Canadians are prepared to share their jobs with the un. employed, the country could become a class-ridden society plagued by increased crime, violence and mental break down, says the Canadian Mental Health Association. A report by the association to be published Monday says that if a fresh approach to fighting unemployment is not taken, the young, the dis abled, women and the un skilled could be permanently shut out of productive em. ployment. The report recommends that Canadians in full-time, well-paid jobs must be pre: pared to abandon the old work ethic and take extended leaves of absence while their jobs are performed by pre. viously unemployed people. A “national income” pool drawn from taxes and from existing social security funds such as welfare and unem ployment insurance would make up the lost wages of Prince Harry contusing LONDON (AP) — What's in a name? Confusion, it seems, for Prince Henry — week-old son of the Prince and Princess of Wales. Like all other babies, the newest member of the House of Windsor got a first first name — Henry. He also got a second, third and fourth — Charles, Albert and David And even though his family name is Windsor, he'll never be known as Henry Windsor. His parents said that most of the time, they'll simply call him Harry Reporters, noting that Charles is the Prince of Wales, wondered whether Harry, too, is a Prince of Wales. “Yes, absolutely,” said Michael Shea, press secretary to the Queen, on Thursday “His formal name is Prince Henry of Wales. He is a Prince of Wales. But of course not the Prince of Wales. That title is only bestowed at the sovereign’s pleasure.” § y in Wales, a principality on the west coast of mainland Britain, is traditionally awarded to heirs to the British throne Charles, the Queen's eldest son, was born in 1948. He became heir apparent when his grandfather, King George VI, died and his mother succeeded to the monarchy Charles also automatically became Duke of Cornwall under a charter issued by King Edward III — and acquired a fistful of titles in the Scottish peerage: Duke of Rothesay, Earl of Carrick and Baron Renfrew, Lord of the Isles and Prince and Great Steward of Scotland. The Queen elevated Charles to the titles Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester six years after her accession to the throne when he was nine. In 1969 he was invested with the title in a televised ceremony at Caernarvon castle because the Queen had promised the people of Wales she would present him to them when he was grown up The titles are largely ceremonial. The principal benefit from his large land holdings in the Duchy of Cornwall, a county at England's southeast tip. JUST FAMILY NAME The infant Harry has no titles. Being Prince Henry of Wales gives him no special powers in Wales. “It's a family name more than anything else,” Shea explained. The “of Wales” part is shared his brother, two-year-old Prince William of Wales. Although Henry's parents favor the affectionate diminutive Harry for their second son, palace instructions have made it clear William must not be referred to as Bill or Willy Should their father, Charles, become kind, William would become heir apparent and inherit the dukedom of Cornwall and the attendant Scottish peerages. By custom, Charles would later make William the Prince of Wales. Harry would get no title automatically, although a dukedom would probably follow when Charles feels he's ready for it. “Traditionally, the siblings of the monarch have been created dukes in their mid-20s or so,” said David Williamson, a spokesman for Debrett's, the authoritative handbook of British peerage. Diana, meanwhile, would become Queen Consort of Charles's accession. Right now, her proper name is Diana, the Princess of Wales — even though most news organizations have adopted the shorthand Princess Diana. Technically, that’s incorrect. Only those who are born royal — not royals-by marriage — can precede their names with prince or princess, the palance maintains. The Queen's husband is properly referred to as Prince Philip only because he's a prince of the royal family of Greece. Confusing? Try keeping track of it all for the world’s Charles derives from them is an independent income, mostly press. “It's horrific,” said Shea. Soviets veto jogging MOSCOW (AP) West ern running enthusiasts say Soviet authorities have told them their weekly “fun runs,” which drew dozens of participants, can no longer be held on Moscow's streets. Some of the runners, who belong to a group called the Hash House Harriers, said this week to embassies is an effort to dampen what they say is one of the few oppor. tunities for fup and recre- ation for foreigners in Mos- cow. “They probably didn't like their citizens to see ali these bappy foreigners,” com mented a runner. Every Monday at to figure out the destination. The runs are boisterous affairs, punctuated by the squawk of horns blown to keep the runners on course. Afterward, they meet at the embassy or the business that sponsored the week's run to drink beer and soda and socialize. The Hash House Harriers movement began in 1937 with a group of diplomats and foreign businessmen station- ed in the Malayan capital of Kuala Lumpur who got to gether to run. They used to meet afterwards at a local restaurant, the Hash House. One of the runners in volved in bringing Hash House activities to Moscow in April said there are similar groups worldwide, including Peking. INITIALLY APPROVED Organizers said when the running started last spring, the Foreign Ministry ap proved them. But a Moscow Hash House enthusiast said the Soviet Foreign Ministry earlier this has impeded traffie and “even led to aceidetits with serious injury to people.” As a result, it is to be al lowed only “in areas espec ially suited for them and not on roads and squares of the town.” Listed were parks, athletic fields and stadiums. Runners said there were no known accidents involving people in the group. The organizer said the next weekly run, on Monday, will be held in Moscow's sprawling Gorky Park, and the group hopes to keep run- ning yeat-round. those on leaves of absence and also make payments to the interim workers when their turn for leave came up. Instead of carrying the stigma of “subsidizing idle ness,” the income support would be a common denom inator of working life, the report said. NOT PIE IN SKY The report's recommen dations are not “pie in the sky,” says Marvyn Novick, chairman of the association's mental health and workplace committee “It's clear that economic growth is not going to pro- vide the jobs, or types of jobs, we need to have a healthy society,” Novick said. “If we don't make those changes, we're going to build a class society and that can. not easily be contained.” Novick pointed to a recent U.S. study that found sig: nificant links between rising unemployment and increased rates of mortality suicide, cirrhosis, arrests and admis- sions to mental hospitals. The association's report suggests that people on leaves of absence could use the time to go back to school, care for children at home or perform volunteer work in the community. “So many people feel out of control,” said Peter Clutter- buck, an assistant program director with the association who performed research for the study. “They are over- burdened by the demands of work and home life. “When both partners in a marriage work, for example, the stresses are tremendous. Family life suffers, people feel they have no time for anything except work and sleep, they feel they have no control.” The report demanded that governments, business and labor recognize the fact that having a job is as important to a person's sense of well. being as traditional family life once was. It said almost 70 per cent of Canadians surveyed by the association said they would continue to work even if they were financially secure and 80.9 per cent said work was a major source of pride in their lives. It follows that the unem ployed, as well as suffering economic hardship, are dan gerously alienated from the community, the report said. Joe Clark reassures United Nations OTTAWA (CP) Joe Clark heads for New York today prepared to deliver “a message of reassurance” at the United Nations that there will be no drastic change in Canadian foreign policy as a result of a new Conservative government. It is Cark's first foreign trip as external affairs min. ister and senior department officials told reporters Friday it is intended partly to deal with the concerns of those “who may be a little puzzled by what's happened here.” The officials were refer ring to the change of gov ernment that occurred with the Sept. 4 election when the Conservatives defeated a Liberal regime that had run Canada’s foreign affairs al most uninterrupted for two decades. Clark is to speak to the UN General Assembly on Tues day afternoon. On Monday and Friday he holds a series of bilateral meetings with other foreign ministers. Some of the 159 foreign ministers at the General As sembly, notably those repre senting poor and developing countries, “will be listening closely to get a first glimpse” of Canada’s attitude under a Government to create ‘confident atmosphere’ OTTAWA (CP) — Cre ating an atmosphere of con fidence and seeking areas for greater Canadian trade op portunities will be the style of the Conservative govern tion.” to Canada’s economic problems. Canadians are maintaining high savings accounts be cause they don't have the confidence to spend, he said in a weekend interview on the CTV program Question Period. “So our focus is going to be to set that atmosphere thai will get people more con fident in Canada with a sense that if they are willing to take the risk and invest the money, the Canadian gov ernment will not be frustrat ing them.” Government intervention in the past tended to damage rather than further economic growth and a “new Con servative era” would not see the continuation of that ap proach Stevens said imitial brief. ings he has held indicate the public service is “very much government this way.” Conservative cials anticipate. NO NEW ISSUES A glimpse is all they're likely to get, since officials say Clark won't unveil “a very high-profile series of is sues” at the UN before they are made public at home Currently Canada doesn't even have an ambassador to the United Nations. Gerard Pelletier retired this summer and officials said Friday they don't know when a new am bassador will be appointed. Clark probably “hasn't ful regime, offi questions, officials said, and likely will prefer to let UN delegates know “basic fundamentals of Canadian policy will remain basically unchanged.” Nevertheless, Clark is ex pected to try to “put his im- print” on Canadian foreign policy and he has a chance, just one week into the job, to meet an array of counter. parts. Among them is Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, who Clark meets Tuesday. Also planned are a dinner Thursday with U.S. State Secretary George Shultz and meetings Friday with foreign ministers from Britain, France, West Ger. many, Italy and Japan. year, as being in “a mood of transition and uncertainty.” The institution has suffered a loss of prestige as an ar bitrator of international be- havior. Since the Reagan admin- istration came to power in 1981, the U.S. has also con triputed to spreading “a de gree of disillusionment” about the effectiveness of the UN and its agencies. The current UN secretary general, Javier Perez de Cuellar, is trying to encour age members to suggest methods for strengthening