A2 (ple ) Cold sit GROCETERIA & LAUNDROMAT CASTLEGAR NEWS, June 27, 1982 Kiwanis celebrates its 35th anniversary By CasNews Staff We Are Open 364 Days a Year Monday - Saturday 8:30 - 10:30 p.m. Sunday & Holidays 9 - 10:30 p.m. 1038 Columbia 365-6534 Castl Kiwanis Club this week celebraiad its 35th anniversary of the club's in- duction into Kiwanis :Inter- national. The Club held a ladies night, a fun night set in a casino-type atmosphere, Tuesday although the ori- ginal formal induction did not take place until Aug. 19, 1947, , During the evening, Bill Waldie, the only charter member of the Castlegar Club, was honored. Kiwan- ians from the Nelson club = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = fete WWWWWWWWWWWWWW WWW WWW Department Store 25% to 50 % or Lounge Wear Sports Wear Dresses Handbags 1217-3rd St., Castlegar Ph. 365-7782 , were also in attendance. The Trail and Nelson clubs were the sponsoring clubs when - the Castlegar Club was ori- ginally inducted. Since then, the Kiwanis Club has been involved in numerous activities. First activities of the club included investigating the feasibility of a swimming pool, placing members on the hospital board, organizing a home beautification program, oper- ating an outdoor skating rink, promoting the first Castlegar and District Fall Fair, and organizing a July 1st carnival. for the Castlegar Board - of Trade. The charter was presented by Governor Don Engdahl of Spokane and he gave an in- spiring address on the objects of Kiwanis International and outlined the work being done by the Spokane and Vancou- ver Clubs. The charter was received by Cyril-Bell, presi- dent of the Castlegar Kiwanis Club. Guest soloists far the even- ing were Mrs. T. McColm, Mr. J. Graham, Mr. G. Leit- ~ner and Mr. R. Sommers. Officers of the Castlegar Kiwanis Club are: Cyril Boll, liff Wanless, vice The is an article on the Kiwanis induction from the Aug. 22, 1947 Castlegar News: “Tuesday evening some 160 Kiwanians and friends gathered at the Cornation Hall for a banquet to honor the Castlegar Kiwanis Club and accept them into Kiwanis International. The call to order was given by Lieutenant Governor Ron Burns of Trail, followed by the singing of O Canada and America. Rev. J.T. Herricks gave the Invocation. Mr. A.G. Cameron of Trail introduced Kiwanis Gover- nor Don Engdahl and Mrs. Engdahl, and Mr. L. Craig introduced Lieutenant Gov- ernor Ron Burns and Mrs. Burns, and members of the executive of the Castlegar Kiwanis Club. A hearty welcome was ex- tended to visiting Kiwanians by Mr. A. Reguson and tothe new club by Mr. S. Horswill for the Canadian Legion, Mr. O. Walker for the muni- cipalitity and Mr. A. Horswill president, R.R. Waldie, trea- surer and E.L. Stanford, sec- retary. Wires of congratulations were received from Mr. 0.E. Peterson, secretary of Kiw- anis International and Mr. and Mrs. H. Jones, Portland, Oregon. A dance followed.” Cancer campaign a success The Castlegar Unit of the Canadian Cancer Society said this week it surpassed its 1982 campaign goal by more than $2,000. Spokesman Jean Martini said the unit collected $10,022 — $2,022 more than its $8,000 goal. Martini said credited the hard work by more than 100 volunteers and the “gener- osity” of Castlegar residents for the successful campaign. GEARING UP. Bosse of the Castl tor SunFest ‘a2 are (from left) Lorry ol “Mayor Audrey Moore and imer president Mike O'Connor ‘as they get ready to hand out ‘eauphlets RS oting events taking place July 17 to 25. Pamphlets are en- closed in today’s Castlegar News. —CosNews Photo Marie Osmond marries. SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Marie Osmond, wearing a glittering gown, married a former college’ basketball player Saturday and walked out of the Mormon Temple to the cheers of her fans. Only a handful of close relatives were invited to the wedding of the 22-year-old singer and Stephen Craig, 25, a student at Brigham Young University. Although Osmond has said being a wife and mother will be her top priority, family members said she won't give up her career. So when the Osmond fam- ily leaves Monday fora sing- ing tour that runs- through August, Osmond will along without her new hus- band, said a family spokes- men. A reception for 4,000 guests was scheduled for to- night. The celebration contrasts other Osmond weddings, which have been low-key af- fairs. The time of brother Donny Osmond's wedding in 1978 was announced hours before the ceremony. Craig ‘plans to graduate from Brigham Young in 1983 with a bachelor's degree in be communications and public relations. The blond, 6-foot-3 guard played basketball for the university in 1975, served a two-year mission for the Mormon Church and re- turned to the university in 1978 to play for three more seasons, Osmond was engaged to student-actor Jeff Crayton for five weeks in 1980, but broke it off because Crayton wanted her to give up her career, she said. MARIE OSMOND ++. marries MEN'S G.W.G.. Sizes 1-4 *6 SCRUBBIES - JEANS Reg. te ia 99 $18 GIRL'S SANDALS Reg. to $14.99 NOW LADIES’ CLOGS Reg. Abe oa 99 $16 LADIES’ |, SUMMER SLACKS Reg. 312 A ite $0 oo ROBINSON'S STOCK REDUCTION PECTACULAR MEN'S & LADIES’ WESTERN: HATS Reg. A 99 $10 LADIES’ grey Reg. to $27.99 awn All Spring and MEN’S JACKETS Summer Styles... yy PRICE SLIP-ON gery Ladies’. Reg. $8.99. Now ....scenene Ladies’. Selected....--.+- DRESS BLOUSES vp PRICE WOOL SWEATERS Men's. From $65 to $110. Now. .eeeesscceee MEN’S RUNNERS *12 North Star. Reg. to $24.00. Now .... GIRLS: ORES “Runner;'Men’'s. ‘SWEAT on? Reg. $17.99.Now......seeee WESTERN BOOTS Men's. 4 Pairs Only. Reg. $87.99. Now.. Reg. to $27.99. ~ OW cecnecvcccensccese MEN'S GWG CORDS $10 LADIES’ SHOES Sandals & Dress. Selctd. Reg. to $22.99. Now .... Spring and Summer, ....e05- GIRLS’ JACKETS % PRICE 5 Only. Reg. $35.00. Now....-- TRICYCLES - Reg. $43.99. ROG. $40.99. ccsaeeae™ Reg. $48.99. TURBO TRICYCLES 14 SUITCASES : 6 Only. , Reg. to $25.99. Now .....06. LADIES’ a } Reg. to $28.00. Now.. 531 Phentex. Reg. $7.99. Now ..seseccerees HOOK RUG KITS $10 Reg. $19.99. Now ..ccevecescccee POT & PAN SETS 5 ONLY. Finlandia 7-pce. Reg. $75.99. Now.. Castleaird Plaza Monday to Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Friday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Phone 365-6400 - GOLF . ‘SHIRTS , Reg. to $15.99 i NOW RUNNERS MEN'S ALL BOYS’ & MEN'S BASKETBALL BOOT PAIR “9 SUPPLIES LIMITED. PRICES EFFECTIVE UNTIL JUNE 30 OR WHILE STOCK LASTS. ALL SALES FINAL SHOP EARLY AND SAVE. oa Shalev CASTLEGAR NEWS, June 27, 1982 A3 Shuttle blasts off again CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. (AP) — The U.S. space shuttle Columbia embarks today on its fourth and final test flight, a seven-day mis- sion that will initiate, under a partial cloak of secrecy, man- #1 ned American military oper- ations in space. The flight is to climax in a July 4 U.S. Independence Day landing ceremony fea- turing a galaxy of spaceships 4 and President Reagan's de- f; national space policy. id Tim Richards of Cosilegar foreginund) t of ded a workshop sponsored by the Exhibition Centre last week to learn Raat to care for and display ] (contra) ploy jay atten: at the Ne livery of his long-awaited Columbia’s fourth com- mander describes the flight era," added his crewmate, Hank Hartsfield. On Flight 4, there will be more testing of the Cana- dian-built robot arm tucked in Columbia's cargo bay. The arm has proved a success so far. The countdown, flawless for four days, was right on the button Saturday as launch crews prepared to pump fuel inte Columbia's tanks in the final hours be- fore liftoff. “We intend to be on time,”. said Maj.Gen. James Abra- hamson, the National Aero- SYMPOSIUM FEDERAL BUDGET continued from frent page the Nov. 12 budget, when MacEachen said he would cut. last year's deficit by $2.9 billion to $10.6 billion this year. The. new forecast is ex- pected to be in the $17-billion range as the symptoms of the recession — such as growing unemployment insurance de- mands’ and declining taxable profits in the corporate, sec- tor — have cut government revenues and boosted spend- ing costs. The budget will tell the country how Ottawa plans to raise funds through taxes and borrowing to cover esti- Ottawa was going to reap $2.6 billion from closed tax loopholes this year alone, But MacBachen has back- pedalled on some of the mea- sures and is expected to an- nounce legislation with the budget that will repeal, amend and clarify other measures. Monday's budget blossom: ed from MacEachen's prom- ise of an economic statement to the Commons before Par- liament’s summer recess. He said the recession had thrown his November fore- casts about the economy out of whack and he wanted to update ae before asking mated federal of sible billion in the current fiscal It Nya “explain how the funds are going to be spent and is expected to contain what has been described as “a psychological retreat” from the and ex. tra Tania by the gov- ernment. The $6.6 billion authorized so far this fiscal year may have been spent al- ready. * November's’ budget fore- east an average seasonablly confusion generated by more than 100 complex, wide- ranging tax measures in No- - Uvember's budget. » hat budget has -caused “eight months of trouble for the government — especially , 60-year-old MacEachen — as thousands of complaints have poured in from companies and individuals upset by closed tax loopholes that had enabled them to save or postpone taxes. ted 1980 rate of 7.8 per cent but it reached 10.2 per cent in May, or a record of 1,241,000 per- sons not counting those who have given up looking -for * work, The rate has climbed : steadily: 8.3 per cent in Jan- vary, Bu 6 in February, 9.0 in “Mareli,9.6 in April and 10.2 in May. The ” budget forecast a slowing in the rate of annual ‘inflation this year to an av- MAY CLOSE — continued from front page ing) and they are saying ‘you are not going to get anymore funding until you've got some from the locals,’ " Bloom said. And while the funding has remained the same over the past four years, operating. costs have risen phenomen- ally, Bloom said. It costs $1,800 a year just to insure the exhibits. Bloom says the museum, which has never been en- larged, lacks the space to store, build and repair ex- hibits and delicate museum feces, He would like to add ano- ther two modules to the con- crete structure, but paying the bills is his top priority. The centre now is well staffed thanks to: Canada Manpower grants which have enabled Bloom to hire three summer students-and three full-time employees whose contracts end in December. Bloom says that unless the contracts of the three full- time employees are renewed — as they have been in the past — the museum wil have to close. But he points out that Canada Manpower cannot be erage 11.7 per cent from 12.6 per cent last year. But the consumer price in- dex, used to measure in- flation, showed a rate of 11.8 per cent in May, up from 11.3 in April. The rate was 11.4 in January and 11.6 in February and March. The budget also forecast a ‘2.2-per-cent real growth in gross national product,’ the value of all the country’s goods and services after in- flation is taken into account. However, the GNP fell two per cent in the first quarter, the sharpest drop in 28 years. And recent government fig- ‘ures revealed a prediction of 0.5 per cent drop during the year. : The new budget has been’ foreshadowed by growing government emphasis in re- cent weeks of anti-inflation thinking. © A reversal of the anti- inflation policy would be a slap in the face of Bank of Canada Governor Gerald Bouey, who has suggested . more restraint is necessary ‘to: back ‘the“restrictive mon- etary policy he is in charge of implementing. The idea of such policies is to reduce inflation, paving the way for lower interest rates, by reducing spending enough to force business to cut prices and workers to, ac- cept lower wage increases. regular basis, we could make it," he said. The centre was built as part of a federal program to # provide museum and cultural Bae BERNIE BLOOM to renew exhibits to residents in iso- lated communities. The NEC offers art, history, and sci- ence shows from all over Canada, the United States and Europe. As well, it offers work- shops, tours, kits and films to residents and local school districts. There are editor of the Russian “an guage newspaper, Vestnik.. She commended the Union of Spritual Communities of Christ (USCC) for taking the initiative to organize “such a historically important event.” “Only in a world of peace can cultural growth flourish and can we obtain a better understanding between peo- ples of all nations,” she said. USCC honorary chairman John J. Verigin’ gave his greetings as well. “To exchange ideas, de- velop understanding and’ strengthen common ties for our own benefit and benefit of our contributions to ties of, all mankind,” is the purpose of the symposium, Verigin said. “Peace is certainly an idea, whose oe has come,” he added. “Either we shall dis- arm and live without war, or we shall all perish.” -Verigin said the synipo- sium was an event that would help fulfil the groups’ des- tiny. Koozma Tarasoff, sympos- ium coordinator, gave an overview of the symposium. . “We have come here to learn to share our ideas and our hospitalities and to learn how to develop a more wholesome, creative and peaceful society,” he said. Tarasoff also read tele- grams of regrets from two guests who were unable to attend the symposium be- cause of ill helath. One was Olga Birukov, daughter of Tolstoy biogra- pher Pavel Birukov. She re- sides in Switzerland. The other was from Alex- ander Klibanow, an expert in SLAMS U.S. front page told of how his great-grand- father ‘met the D The will con- tinue through to Monday with from when they first arrived in Canada. He said that as a Quaker, he has always- been con- cerned about his friends,. the... Doukhobors, who’ share the same pacifist stance and who were once outcasts like the Quakers when they had to flee to North America in the 1600s. “Once you help your brother you are forever bound by him,” he said. Eli Popoff, historian in Grand Forks and author of several books on Doukho- bors, dispelled the myth that the Doukhobor tenets were borrowed from the Quakers and he made an appeal to all churches and = religious groups to fight for peace. other academics religious groups and organizations such as Operation Dismantle, and Project Ploughshares. Representatives of the fed- “?Bral_ government's multicul- turalism ministry will also participate in panel discus- sions. At the opening of the centre Saturday a small group of people srected as the “final stepping stone” before the versatile ship be- gins satollite-deploying oper- nautics and Space Adminis- tration's shuttle director. ational missions with Flight 5 next October or November. A Telesat Canada satellite is to be deployed on Flight 5. “Our job on Flight 4 is to be the cleanup hitter, to do all the tests that have not been accomplished, for one reason or another, on the earlier flights," said navy Capt. Ken Mattingly. “We're taking a big step bridging that gap from test flights to the operational social movements in Old Russia and the Soviet Union. * The audience was given a taste of traditional Doukho- bor songs by a Doukhobor choir, consisting of combined choirs of the West Kootenay area, SLIDES SHOWN Five slide presentations were shown to the audience from representatives from various groups such as Molo- kans, Quakers and Memm- onites in order to familiarize the audience with each group of people, Two presentations were given on the Molokan com- munity. There are about 30,000 Molokans in the U.S, Slides were also shown of the Mennonites, who number 200,000 in North America and one half million in the world. A presentation on the Quakers by a representative from Argenta was shown. There are about 150,000 Quakers throughout North America. Gennadinj Adrianow, head of the Tolstoy Museum in New York and professor of Germanic and Salvic Studies at the University of Regina, showed slides depicting Leo Tolstoy, from his youth to the time of his death. Ilya Tolstoy, professor ‘at’ : Moscow State University was then introduced to the audience, who gave him a standing ovation. Tolstoy is the great-grand- son of Leo Tolstoy, who gave ‘ies from his books to placards the con- ference and the participation of academics from the Soviet Union. Calling themselves’ mem- bers of the Christian Com- munity and Brotherhood of Reformed Doukhobors, they distributed leaflets near the entrance of the cultural cen- tre parking lot. Shultz is a- ‘team player’ WASHINGTON (AP) — President Reagan and his two dozen national exhibition centres in Canada. Bloom says the Castlegar * NEC must provide services and same degree of profes- as the three other for two program coordinators and one curator because the museum oes not come under B.C. NECs, but with; half the funding. ue it doesn’t maintain the the NEC In Paelar figures, the em- ployment contracts for the six will “be “de-designated” and closed down by the federal Bloom said. amount to about $38,000. And Bloom thinks that if each municipality and schoolboard were to “We get about half the budget of any other NEC and we are meeting the same wards the contracts for the full-time employees, the mu- seum could continue to ser- vice the community. “If we had ‘the money ona asall the others, so we're doing just as much with half as much.” “I'm really proud of these people, .they’re bloody heroes,” he said. War not: Communism MONTREAL (CP) — A Gallup ‘poll published Satur- day suggests that 40 per cent of Canadians would rather fight an all-out nuclear war than live under Communist rule. Twenty-five per cent of the 1,041 adults polled early last month said they would rather tive under Communism. More than one third of respon- dents, 34 per cent, were un- decided. Respondents were asked: “Suppose you had. to make the decision between fighting an all-out nuclear war or living under Communist rule — how would you decide?” A similar poll carried out in 1962 indicated that 65 per cent of the respondents would rather fight than sub- mit, 11 per cent preferred life under Communism, while 24 per cent were undecided. Gallup says that comparing the two polls indicates that the ratio of those who would back a nuclear war has fallen to 1.6 to 1 from 6 to 1 in the midst of the Cold War. Gallup says a sample of this size could err by up to four percentage points 19 out of 20 times, The 20th time the margin of error could be larger. key aides with George Shultz while top U.S. administration officials described the state secre- tary-designated as a “team player" in contrast to Alex- ander Haig who resigned the post. Shultz’s first duty was to meet with Reagan and a group of administration lead- ers, some of whom were the figures with whom Haig had battled. After a flight from London, where Reagan telephoned him Friday and offered him the cabinet post, Shultz was flown in a presidential heli- copter to Reagan's Camp David hideaway in the Mary- Jand mountains. There he met with the president, national security adviser William Clark, with whom Haig had had differ- emphasized that Shultz's nomination would not mean any changes in foreign policy. HAIG FEUDED OFTEN The reference to Shultz’s ability to get-‘along with others was an apparentjcon--74, trast with Haig, who feuded often — sometimes publicly — with top administration officials. Before leaving London, Shultz told reporters that his nomination came as a “plea- sant surprise.” The 61-year-old Shultz is president, of the Bechtel Group, Inc., one of the world's largest private engin- eering and construction firms. Shultz would be the second current cabinet mem- ber from Bechtel, which has major contracts in the Arab world. Defence Secretary Caspar Weinberger is the other. Meanwhile, White House ences; p Edwin Meese, and White House chief of- staff James Baker. One senior foreign policy White House adviser stressed that Shultz, who headed both the Labor and Treasury departments dur- ing the Nixon administration, is a “team player” who “com- mands widespread respect overseas.” This official and others, Larry Speakes said Shultz’s nomination will be sent to the U.S. Senate “very promptly” for confir- mation. Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker (R-Tenn.) has said it is likely to be considered by the Sen- ate foreign relations com- mittee during the week of July 12. Speakes said Reagan's ac- quaintance with Shultz dates back at least as far as the 980 eae the D to come to Canada in the late 1800's. Clark raps Liberals GUELPH, ONT. (CP) — The Liberal government is planning to set the provincial 46, and Harts- field, 48, are to begin their’ 113-Earth-orbit journey with 4 blazing blastoff from Launch Pad 389A at 8 a.m. They are to bring Cojumbia back to Earth seven days, one hour, 13 minutes later — at 9:13 a.m. PDT (12:13 p.m. for Flight 4 is the first Defence Department payload ever carried aloft by U.S. astronauts. Its presence un- derscores the growing em- phasis on militarization of space by both the United States and the Soviet Union. The defence package con- tains test sensors for future spy satellites — a modest EDT) July 4 — at Air Force Base in California's Mojave Desert. Desert. They are to be greeted by Reagan and as many as 100,000 holiday spectators, Lined up as a backdrop for a presidential statement will be three shuttles: Columbia; Enterprise, a test vehicle used in early drop tests from an airplane, and Challenger, the second shut, which is to be to a program that could develop by decade's end into a for- midable American military space force of ships, pilots, satellites and out-of-this world weapons, For policy reasons, the Pentagon has classed its payload top secret, listing it simply as DOD-82-1. The as- tronauts have orders not to _ discuss it on open space- to-ground conversations or to onJuly 1 before fans taken to Cape Canaveral for its maiden launch in January. For months, Reagan's sci- ence advisers have been for- mulating a national space policy which Reagan is ex- pected to unveil at the land- ing. Among items reported under study are go-aheads for a fifth space shuttle anda permanent manned space station, both long-sought by NASA. Packed in Columbia's cargo show d pictures of it. Nevertheless, many details are known about it from U.S. Air Force congressional tes- timony and technical papers. The main elements being tested are an infrared tele- scope and ultraviolet sensors for detecting hostile missiles and spacecraft from future Defence satellites. There also is a space sextant being de- veloped to give defense sat- ellites independent naviga- tion capability, free of ground control. LETTERS Why not rent computer? Editor, Castlegar News: By now, all of us who pay taxes in this our fair city, have received their tax levy which is presented on a huge 12” x 10” spread sheet. The sheet size is very symbolic considering the increase in our taxes, Just think, if our es continue to spiral, in a, - fear or two we can expect a ‘larger sheet — say maybe around 85” x 24”, T suspect, this new tax levy statement sheet is the result of our city’s investment of a new $65,000 computer. Not surprisingly, this pur- chase still has me (and others) daunted by the very fact that streamlining our city's administration has not d the ‘The answers given appear somewhat vague and with | justifiable jargon that indi- cated council had been plan- ning the purchase for some three years — and now was the time to do it. The only satisfaction I got was it veri- fied what-I had said earlier ang that.is —.it's going to affect. our pocketbook. * Nonetheless, we have to pay our taxes on time or pay a 10 per cent penalty — just think if all the taxpayers were to forget to pay on time, in just a few short hours, the city would raise some $100,000 on penalty charges — enough pay for some of the capital projects expenses that are deemed as urgent. I but increased our cost and this is evident by looking at the tax figures noted in a recent Castlegar Newspaper release — which shows an increase of over 150 per cent in this area. A few weeks ago, I ques- tioned council, on why they p ip as for Canada’s economic ills, Opposition Leader Joe Clark ove federal Progressive Conservative leader said Sat- urday he fears Prime Min- ister Trudeau is calling the premiers together in Ottawa next Wednesday to get them to agree with Monday's bud- get measures. we the premiers don't agree pith, some of those measures, the prime minister may place the blame on them for the country's economic troubles, Clark said. Slocan museum opens The Silvery Slocan Mu- seum situated at the west end of 6th (Main) Street in New Denver opened for the summer on June 20. ° __ This well stocked museum is housed in the old Bank of Montreal building which first opened its door in 1897. Above the bank are living quarters once occupied by the bank manager and his family. Besides a lock at the gracious living of the turn of the century the museum has many exhibits that detail the rougher lives of the miners who first brought this area to prosperity and development. The museum houses a Tourist Booth ook this exp plunge and whether it would have been more cost-effective to rent a computer and use our current system, particularly at a time when all of us are finding it hard to meet our expenses. tion — is the so-called “replot area” and “paving referendum” urgent? In my -opinion the only thing that is urgent is the high cost of living. That reminds me of a statement I heard (and I quote): “Ever notice how taxes are a lot like rose- bushes. The more they are pruned the higher they Yes vote for disarmament referendum Editor, Castlegar News: I would appreciate it if you would allow me to comment ona recent item in your paper of June 23, concerning the on nuclear di - “We recently participated in the Peace Raily in New York City with over a million other people which included representatives from practically every nation on this good earth — from Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Philipines, Japan and even Australia ‘and Bangladesh. They joined in singing “all we are are saying is give peace a chance.” Over 800 clergymen of all faiths joined in a special service in the church of St. John the Divine to pray for peace, then led a parade of 15,000 followers to the United Nations to demonstrate their concerns. To quote the Minister of Municipal Affairs. “He warned that nuclear disarmament is a federal responsibility.” I totally disagree. I suggest a peaceful world and disarmament is all of the people's responsibility. It's our lives and those of our children which will suffer and die if this mad arms race to its logical i The chicken-spit suspestion that taxpayers’ money will Teal be spent on this late it would cost the average Nentsener Tes than 10 cents. Iam a poor man and a pensioner, but I will gladly pay the 10 cents to any voter who feels this referendum is unjustified. Thank you Castlegar city council for supporting this with brochures for the whole who of the K Pat Romaine Castlegar