Oe Castlégar News March 9, 1988 "tll Saturday at BIG K MUSIC COLES BOOKS FRANCINES JACK FRASER ‘PEOPLES JEWELLERS TOYS & WHEELS WILLIE WOOZLE More arrests for protesters COURTENAY, B.C. (CP) Environmentalists will keep trying to block mining exploration in Strathcona 2 aucTION BUCKS for every buck yOu spend at this week's Double Buck Merchants DO SMALL ADS ATTRACT ATTENTION? This one did! FOR MORE INFORMATION ON HOW YOU CAN BENEFIT AS AN ADVERTISER CALL Castlégar News 365-5210 MARCH SPE Oil Change UP to 44itres of oil, diesel extra % Block North of Maloney Pontiac CALL BOB OR BRAD FOR AN APPOINTMENT Expires March 31, 1968 GER CASTLEGAR CIAL trite ......,. 919% On any import car or import small truck. Includes cate | WATSON 365-7241 =) —| Mee Pass Creek &A the work will involve th 6907 or 365-7191. ATTENTION Pass Creek USCC Cemetery will be undergoing major renovations this spring in Anyone wishing to set up tombstones, please contact the cemetery board at 365-6938, 365- WANTED CLEAN COTTON RAGS a... Castlegar News rea Residents pril. Some of @ levelling of graves. 197 Columbia Ave., Casti provincial park, Des Ken nedy of the Friends of Strath- cona said Tuesday “I predict there will be many more arrests,” said group member Kel Kelly, Thirty-eight people have already been arrested and charged with mischief in their attempts to stop ex ploratory drilling by Cream Silver Mines Ltd. All 88 pleaded not guilty when they appeared Tuesday in provincial court in Camp. bell River. Trial dates were set for April 21-22, and May 5 and 9. Lawyers for 25 demon. strators will appear in court Wednesday to argue against a bail condition that those charged stay five-kilometres away from the drilling sit A four-hour meeting with Environment Minister Bruce Strachan to discuss mining in the central Vancouver Island park “was futile,” Kennedy said Strachan said after the meeting Monday night he will proceed with a publie review of park boundary changes without further in- put from the environmental group. “I don't think there is much point,” he said. “We have reached an impasse,” The Friends of Strathcona group wants a full public inquiry into mining within the 10,000-hectare “recrea- tion area” of the 19,000-hee- tare park where mining is allowed. Italso wants Cream Silver to stop exploratory drilling in British Columbia's oldest provincial park, the bound- aries of which were altered by the provincial cabinet in 1986, Strachan said drilling will continue but no further per- mits will be issued until after a public review. Staying close aides survival SIDNEY, B.C. (CP) — A Coast Guard safety officer has told an inquest here ‘Tuesday that statistically there should have been fewer survivors in the January eapsizing of two University of Victoria rowing shells on Elk Lake. Two members of the row ing team died after a squall blew up and the two racing sculls overturned on the lake in the Victoria suburb of Saanich. Coast Guard officer Mark NOTICE Variety Club Auction and Talent Show March 15 7 p.m. Hi Arrow Pub Packenham said he believes the fact that the rowers stayed together in the water contributed to the survival rate. They gave each other psychological support, he said. He also testified that rac. ing shells are exempt from Canada Shipping Act regu- lations requiring personal flotation devices for each person. Nor is there any regulation requiring the coach's boat to carry such devices for athletes — al- though he thought doing so would be prudent The team's rowing coach testified earlier that she knew little about the swim. ming abilities of her athletes before the accident Lorna Ferguson also said she never discussed hypo- thermia with the students, nor did she discuss pro cedures in the event of a ST. PETER LUTHERAN 713 - 4th Street Office 365-3664 Rev. Glen Backus Worship Service 9 a.m Sunday School 10:15.a.m Youth Group Sunday, 6:30 p.m Wed. Lenten Service 7 p.m| a ANGLICAN CHURCH 1401 Columbia Avenue Sunday Services 8:00 a.m. & 10:00 a.m Sunday School 10 a.m Rev. Charles Balfour 365-2271 Parish Purpose: “To know Christ and make Him known PENTECOSTAL NEW LIFE ASSEMBLY __ 602 - 7th St. © Ph. 365-5212 Near High School SUNDAY SERVICES Christian Education 9:45 a.m Morning Worship 11:00 a.m Evening Service 6:30 p.m WEDNESDAY 7:00 p.m. Bible Study — Prayer Crossfire tor Youth FRIDAY 7:00 p.m. Youth Meeting MA Vibroni Font PASTOR Rev. Kenneth Smith 4km. W. of Castlegar Hwy. 3 towards Grand Forks 365- Pastor Stuart Laurie 365-3278 Sunday Morning Worship 10:30 a.m Nursery & Children's church & Study Wednesday 6:30-8:00 p.m Bible teaching for all ages A Non Denominational Family Church, Preaching the Word of Faith + FULL GOSPEL FELLOWSHIP (A.C.0.P.) EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH 914 Columbia Ave. CALVARY BAPTIST D JL > > Ons aes 809 Merry Creek Road Past Fireside Motel Sunday School 10:00 a.m Morning Worship 11:00 a.m Evening Service 6:30 p.m TUES. 6:00 P.M. AWANA — Children's Program Kindergarten to Grade 8 WEDNESDAY NIGHT Study & Prayer 8 p.m Church 365-3430 or 365-7368 Robert C. Lively, Pastor CHURCH OF GOD Sunday School 9:45 a.m Family Worship Service 11:00 a.m Ladies Bible Study Friday, 9:30 a.m Youth Ministries Discipleship Ministries PASTOR: Ed Neufeld Phone: 365-6675 “A CHURCH THAT LOVES THE CASTLEGAR AREA!” ROBSON COMMUNITY RIAL CHURCH 1st Sunday, 7:00 p.m. - 2nd, 3rd and 4th Sundays, 10a.m No service 5th Sunday GRACE PRESBYTERIAN 2404 Columbia Avenue Church School 9:45 a.m Morning Worship Ha.m Pastor Ira Johnson Phone 365-6762 2605 Columbia Ave Rev. J. Ferrier Phone 365-3182 Morning Worship 11:00.a.m. Sunday School :00 a.m Below Castleaird Plaza Phone 365-6317 Pastor: Barry Werner Phone.365-2374 SUNDAY SERVICES Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship 10:30 } = NEED To KNOW SOMETHING ABOUT YOUR NEW COMMUNITY? “VWtone Wegon Phone €bnnie 365-7601 ad rr 365-3091 greetings, along with helpful community information. Our éstess will bring gifts and j Evening Fellowship 6:30 Wednesday: Home Meetings 7:00 p.m Friday Youth Ministries 7:00 p.m. HOME OF CASTLEGAR CHRISTIAN ACADEMY 365-78 UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA gov'ti 2224-6th Ave 1% Blocks South of Community Complex 10 a.m. — Worship and Sunday School Mid-Week Activities tor all ages. Phone for information Rev. Ted Bristow 365-8337 or 365-7814 SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 1471 Columbia Ave.., Trail 364-0117 Regular Saturday Services Pastor Cliff Drieberg 365-2649 5-Ib. average Campbell's * 284 mi tin vegetable . d poultry © frozen * whole roasting chicken 218m « q gq Robin Hood * 4 blends * 10kg all purpose... flour... LIMIT PRICE $5.78 limit 4 per ty soup OVER Umit rues 3/4 ; SPRING CLEAN-UP... A sure Sign spring is here is the city works crew's annual washing down of downtown Streets. Crew was out Tuesday to clean sand trom Streets. CosNews Photo. Aid worker LONDON (CP) — A Vancouver woman who lost a leg to cancer 15 years ago was awarded a prestigious British medal on Tuesday for her medical aid work among Cuna Indians in the jungles of Panama. Anna French smiled proudly as Princess Alexandra, a cousin of the Queen, presented her with the Bish Medal. One of the bronze medallions awarded each year for unusual achievements “in the face of adversity.” French is the first Canadian and only the second non-Briton to win the medal since it was first presented in 1978. The sponsoring Scientific Explorations Society, which runs worldwide youth programs, described French as “a most courageous lady who has triumped over adversity in the face of her terrible fight against cancer. French spent 3% months in Panama jungles on medical programs aimed at helping the native Cuna Indians. The 32-year-old French lost her leg when she was 17. RAISES FUNDS Her documentary film on Rick Hansen's Man in Motion wheelchair journey through China raised $150,000 gets medal Cdn for spinal cord research. She is also a community aid worker, researcher and a documentary film-maker. French remains instrumental in raising money for the B.C. sector of the society's Operation Raleigh for youth which she set up in 1984. She said in an interview before Tuesday's ceremony that her work for the society in Panama in 1978 was “a real challenge, especially walking through the jungle areas where the brush is so dense you had to clear your way with a machete.” “(There were) no home luxuries. I mean, you slept in a hammock six feet off the jungle floor and in the middle of the night would wake up and see all these little eyes looking at you. “It was really scary. (But) for me personally it was an opportunity to see how far you could push yourself and how tolerant you were — not only of the situation you were in but of the people who were around you. “That we were able to help some of these Cuna Indian tribes made it really worthwhile.” “Despite any hardships or obstacles that we're fixed with in life, we should try not to dwell on them,” she said. Pesticides questioned OTTAWA (CP) — Opposition MPs were unim- pressed Tuesday with Health Department assurances that agricultural chemi 't th C k health, Lynn McDonald and Charles Caccia, the New Demo- erat and Liberal environment critics, said they're particularly concerned about the possibility that agricultural ch could be drinking water. Ray Hickman, director of the department's environ- mental division, told the Commons environment com- mittee that Canada has one of the strongest set of guidelines in the world for drinking water quality. “Well, that may win you a medal McDonald said, “but it doesn't mean our water is safe.” Outside the hearing, McDonald said she isn't impressed with the way the Health Department assesses and controls farm pesticides. “Their testing is geared to immediate toxicity,” she said in an interview. “What about long term cumulative effects?” While it can be demonstrated that there isn't enough of any one chemical in drinking water to pose a health threat, McDonald said she doesn't believe the federal government is putting enough effort into studying the impaét the combination of chemicals might have. She is also dissatisfied with its attempts to analyse the effect of substances that might be created by chemical reactions between two or more chemicals. Vander Zalm hints at compromise in abortion law ‘By DAPHNE BRAMHAM Canadian Press VICTORIA — Government funding of abortions was reluctantly restored in British Columbia on Tuesday, but Premier Bill Vander Zalm said he won't quit trying to ensure taxpayers don't have to pay for abortion on demand. “The stance of government has been and continues to be that we don't believe it correct for taxpayers to fund abortion on demand,” Vander Zalm said on his return to the province from Saskatoon On Monday, the B.C. Supreme Court quashed a month-old government regulation cutting off funding of abortions except in life-threatening cases. Chief Justice Allan McEachern said the Social Credit government went beyond its authority and “common sense.” Health Minister Peter Dueck said in the legislature Tuesday that the government has instructed hospitals that abortions will once again be funded by medicare. For the last month, some hospitals had been demanding cash in advance from patients. Vander Zalm, a Roman Catholic who is adamantly opposed to abortion, said his government will consider a Tumber of options, including the policy adopted in Saskatchewan. The government there pays only for abortions that are “medically necessary” and only after it receives a second medical opinion. The definition of medically required includes a consideration of emotional and psychological as well as physical health. Vander Zalm said that would be “a compromise of sorts” and would ensure that. abortion doesn’t “run out of Valu Your satisfaction is our main concern bananas kg. cake der Chase & Sanborn * 369 g. ground order Prices effective up to and including Sun., March 13, 1988 PLAZA SUPER-VALU OPEN SUNDAYS 10 A.M. - 5 P.M. from the tropics * golden ripe 3 iy kg. 861. o Duncan Hines * layer * 500-520 9. i1 2 per . emily wer / mixes OVER LIMIT PRICE .99 s imit | per tomily Lal COT inn src control further than what it already has in British Columbia.” The province has the highest per capita abortion rate in Canada, with about 11,000 abortions in 1985, In the same year, Ontario, with three times the Population, had about 27,000 abortions. Attorney General Brian Smith, who recommended against an appeal of McEachern’s decision, said there was a strong suggestion in the judge's ruling that if the government were to try to re-enact its regulation in another way it would still fail under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. But Vander Zalm said he believes McEachern's ruling does leave the government an opening. “I can see where perhaps the chief justice has given us at least one lead,” said the premier. “Just how that will stand up after we pursue it more closely with the legal people, I can't say. But I intend to pursue that lead.” MEETS DOCTORS Vander Zalm said he will meet with caucus, cabinet and the B.C. Medical Association before coming up with a policy within the next week that will assure British Columbians they don’t have to pay for abortionon demand and “that we're not setting up some sort of an industry for the Dr. Morgentalers or the likes who can then abuse and use the people in the system.” Opposition Leader Mike Harcourt said the premier is heading for trouble is he continues to impose his own Personal opinions. “I would hope he would stop being an outlaw and start to obey the law like everybody else.” Purchase under review KELOWNA, B.C. (CP) — The new owner of the British Columbia government's soil, tissue and feed lab says the $150,000 he paid for the operation was a fair price. Bob Rogers was comment- PLUS MANY MORE LOW PRICES throughout our store * Downtown * Castleaird Plaza by Auditor General George Morfitt during a comprehen- sive audit of the privatization program. Rogers said Tuesday his company paid. what the facil- ity was worth and the assessed value didn’t recog- nize that some of the equip- ment is. obsolete. 1.49 Wasp used for pest control TORONTO (CP) — A tiny wasp, no bigger than a head of a pin, may be the natural pesticide that farmers and foresters have been looking” for in their battle against destructive insects. During recent tests conducted near Hearst, Ont., trichogramma wasps were released in a three-hectare stand of trees infested with spruce budworms, a major source of forest destruction, particularly in the Maritimes. The predator wasps killed 80 per cent of the budworms, effectively bringing the infestation under control without pesticides. The Hearst tests are part of a joint Canadian-Chinese project looking into ways of expanding the application of the naturally appearing parasite in agriculture and forestry. The project has important ramifications for Canadian farmers and foresters, who've faced the ire of protesters — primarily in New Brunswick — over the human and environmental risks of’ chemical Spraying. While Canadians have been aware of the one-millimetre wasp’s potential for 100 years, the Chinese have led the way in applying its use over the last 50 years. GETS HELP _ John Laing, a University of Guelph biologist, told a Toronto conference organized by the International Develop- ment Research Centre and the Canadian Science Writers Association that Canada was benefiting from China's experience in the field. Gou Xuegi, a graduate student studying at Guelph, told the meeting that the wasp proved relatively inexpensive to use — about 10 per cent of the cost of chemical pesticides. It also alleviated Chinese concerns about the long-term environmental effects of man-made Pesticides. Varieties of the wasps will lay their destructive eggs in 400 species of insects, particularly butterflies and moths. In China, it’s used principally to fight corn borer and sugarcane stem borers. A special advantage of the wasps from the Canadian perspective is that adding them to the environment appears unlikely to cause ecological damage because they don't last the winter. “It does its job and dies off,” Laing said. While the effectiveness of the wasp as a natural predator has been demonstrated, Laing said a variety of problems would have to be overcome for use in Canada. These include developing a way to preserve the moth eggs that the breeding wasps lay their eggs in, finding a cheap and efficient means of spreading these eggs in fields and forests, and integrating the wasps with methods already in use to control other agriculturally harmful pests. In terms of the egg-spreading problem, the application near Hearst was made using a helicopter, but Laing said other people have experimented using model planes over farmers’ fields. Laing added that a key advance to industrialize the use of wasps may grow out of current Chinese work to produce an artificial medium for the wasp eggs to grow in. Alderman says facilities needed By CasNews Staff Castlegar council Tuesday larger pool and a better track. ————————__ FFICIAL SPONSOR 1988 SAFEWAY sy March 9, 1988 Castlegar News OLYMPIC WINTER GAMES 7-Year and Under Winner Store Manager, Dale Bobby, pres Poznikoft of Castlegar a Congratulations Roy! ents winner, Roy Howdy Bear. Congratulations 8 to 12-Year Winner Sateway employees Geoff Cahoon and Sheryl Sookachott present winner, Jaclyn Kalesnikoft of Shoreacres, a Philips Stereo Headset. Jaclyn! Fresh Boneless Cross RIB ROAST Or Chuck Roast Cut from Grade A Beet BT kg 2.5 Deep Cove 0 TUNA Flaked © Light 170 g. Tin *1.18 0 00 x. Fresh STEW BEEF $5. 71g. 52,59 Snow Star ICE CREAM Assorted Flavours 4 Litre Pail *3.48 * VALUABLE ‘ COUPON Receive $3.00 off shopping order with a minimum purchase of $25.00 Limit 1 per coupon per customer Redeemable only in Castlegar Safeway tive Thurs., Fri FF March 10-11-12 Or rejected a request that the city hold the 1990 B.C. Dis- abled Needs Provincial Games. Ald. Lawrence Chernoff, chairman of the parks and recreation committee, said the Games cannot be held here until the city has a “We do need a swimming pool and we do need a nice track.” Ald. Terry Rogers pointed out that the request is made almost every year and Castlegar has had to refuse because it doesn't have the necessary facilities. Trend Setters Royal Pierpont Chrystal 30: March 31 at Fresh DINNER ROLLS White or Brown or Sour Dough 1.49 Imported Seedless GRAPES Red or Thompson Green Canoda No. | $1.96 is. 89° Bathroom TISSU Purex * 2-Ply 8-Roll Pkg. *2.88 Fresh Strawberries California Grown $2.18 rg. 99° 10 Ib. Flat $9.90 WHILE STOCKS LAST! Mon. to Wed. and Saturday Prices effective through Saturday, March 12in your friendly, courteous Castlegar Safeway Store. Thursday and Friday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday > 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. We reserve the right to limit sales to retail quantities. Prices effective while sock lasts SAFEWAY CANADA BSAFEWAY Ltimitreo