Cold Front Warm Front Snow Cloud Thunderstoras ~~, as e Raio * cS % v Shovers of education.” fied.” PASS continued trom front poge ents had originally had their children transferred from the school because of concerns about discipline, and “quality “There were some underlying cur. rents up here — I don't really want to go into them,” Irving said, adding that * told Irving that the board hadn't dis the problems have now been “recti The Pass Creek PTA chairman originally presented his proposal to mi ree expand the school's classes at Monday Community, night's regular school board meeting. CREEK entary. could be bused to Pass Creek Elem “We have a perfectly good school up there, with fine instruction now,” he told board members. He said parents were concerned that the school might be closed next year. Board chairman Doreen Smecher cussed closing the school. “We've done everything possible to maintain the Pass Creek school . . . be- cause we recognize it as part of your Irving said in an interview that the Pass Creek school is used “every day of Then Irving suggested that students the, week” as a community centre. from “overcrowded” classes at Robson Elementary school living in Brilliant t’s a beautiful school,” he said. “It would cost them a lot to shut it down.” she said. dents,” she said. transportation available. residence is needed. Colbert told Stoopnikoff he appreci. ated his concerns and said no decision small. was to be made yet. He added that the high vacancy rate is one of the items the board will have to take into consid eration when making a final decision. is defeated,” Colbert said it is not many new people the college will at tract because of the residences. Osterhold told the board he person ally is not yet convinced a student said Schatz also reported that the Mal aspina residence is nearly full through. out most of the school year. He said a Selkirk College student council delegate spoke to the student HOUSING continued trom front poge “but I am looking at it in a common sense manner,” he gaid. Board Elizabeth Fleet said the heéds-ofthesstudent who might like to live on campus should be considered. “I can appreciate the dilemma of people trying to rent apartments, but we have to think of the needs of stu known how But Schatz said the residence at Malaspina was designed that way be- cause it was expected that people Faculty representative Margaret would be using the eating facilities on Nickle said the residence would tend to campus. diminish the problem of lack of trans portation for some students, but at the same time, the residence would be isolated because there isn't any public _aspina. “There would have to be an emphasis placed on cooking facilities,” Schatz council at Malaspina College in Nan aimo, which has a residence operated by, Western Student - Housing. The delegate found that in most cases, stu dents will use the residence for the first semester to get to know people and then move out to find a more inex. pensive place. Osterhold said it was also found that the residence cooking facilities were inadequate and the commons room was “If they (Western Student Housing) didn’t have a good centre for cooking, then the whole purpose of a dormatory At Selkirk, he said, one of the first things identified was that the cafeteria facilities are not the same as at Mal. he said. _ be imposed, without b The three boats of the Canadian-born Hideo Kokubo _ were seized after the attack on the American base in the behind barbed wire were sent to a detention store. while under age. He camp in Lemon Creek in B.C.'s Slocan Valley. had pleaded guilty on both Kokubo's only crime was that his ancestors were coubts. Japanese. a =. S His story is just one detailed in a report entitled bombed. A *eo-day probationary yed released today by the National Her husband was sent to forced labor at a road camp term,‘and 10 of com- A ion of i in Jasper, Alta., in March 1942; Kome was sent to a munity will be carried The report details ae plight of the 21,000 centre in G od, in April and 10 days later work out by Randy Stewart, who Canadians who were interned during the Second World their 21-year-old son was sent to a prisoner-of-war camp pleaded. guilty to being a | War and had their property confiscated despite their at Petawawa, Ont., near Ottawa. . i of loyalty to Canada. Kome and her husband had committed no crimes. The Association says it is time the federal govern- Their son had tried to defy the authorities by refusing to ment offered some compensation. leave British Columbia. Their home was confiscated. The Kokubos, in order to find their eldest daughter, “Today, living alone in Toronto, Kome is reluctant to Tsuneko, who had been trapped in Japan by the war recall the long struggle to survive after expulsion from hours of community while visiting relatives, accepted “repatriation” to Japan her home in British Columbia and the nightmare of the st < ser Bim 1946, time here husband and son were taken from her. In 1972, : Six years later, the once prosperous fisherman she resided for a brief period in Vancouver and noted returned to Canada to resume his trade. wistfully that her dream house is still there.” fi . . . Christopher Postnikoff was put on probationyfor 60 | SOFA & CHAIR SETS | ‘being on the pr of a licenced . . eo 2: A $100 fine was given to ‘Harley Danvers for failing to > is A. $400 fine was given to Alex’ Brook after he pleaded guilty ‘to impaired driving. Tax for the rich OTTAWA (CP) — People earning more than $50,000 to $60,000 a year could be the targets of a new minimum tax that may be introduced in the spring budget, Finance Minister Michael Wilson sug- gested today. Although such a tax won't ie. views af those affe accept that it wouldn't be & iy MOURNING . . . Today was the end of a three-day Wash., aged 83. About 400 attended Sorokin's service mourning period for Reformed Doukhobors leader and burial in a plot in the Krestova Cemetery. A hear. While Wilson did not say stefan Sorokin, who died last Wednesday in Spokane, _se is parked in the foreground. Conttows Prove definitely that such a tax would be imposed, he said it's important for all Canadians to feel the tax system is fair. “And when you have peo- ple in a high income bracket not paying any income tax I think it raises a question that some people are getting away with something,” Wil No salary Langan wants increase? Kube's job FAMOUS BRAND NAMES som $748 Style tro $1498 51488 ts 91298 53598 son said before entering a meeting of the Conservative caucus “If we do have some mini. mum level of tax, I think there will be less of the economy going into the un derground economy where people are saying ‘well if someone can get away with it then I'm going to get away with it.” _Castlegar police file A three-vehicle accident in ‘Thrums on Saturday night sent three people to hospital and caused $3,000 worth of damage. A 1973 Plymouth driven by Peter Tarasoff, 18, of Thrums was rear-ended by a 1976 Toyota driven by Barbara Cheveldave of Castlegar at 5:05 p.m., said Castlegar RCMP. The Tarasoff vehicle was pushed forward and collided with a 1983 Ford pick-up driven by Lovie Makortoff of Robson. All three occupants of the Cheveldave vehicle were taken to Castlegar and Dis triet Hospital with minor in Charges are pending. say 7 28 « A single-vehicle accident early Sunday morning sent a Castlegar man and his A 1983 Chevrolet pick-up driven by Paul Churchill, 20, of went off Celgar Road at 217 a.m. and was destroyed, aceording to Castlegar RCMP. Also injured and taken to hospital was passenger Mark Scantland. ° 8 « Three youths have been apprehended by Castlegar RCMP in connection with a break-in at Johnny's Grocery in Robson Oct. 28. Names have not been re. leased. Charges are pending. 7 8 « Castlegar RCMP are inves tigating a break-in at Trow elex Rentals at 4450 Colum bia Ave. which was reported Tuesday A quantity of power tools were stolen. 7 . A 1978 GMC pick-up re- cently stolen from the Wes tar pulp mill was found in Midway on Thursday. The suspect is already in prison in P accord. “That's the sort of thing that undermines the fabric of not only the economy but society . . .” he said. But Wilson said the issue is not as simple as the Liberals and Bew Democrats suggest. Tiring the election cam paign ie Liberals promised ta ,imtgoduce a 13-per-cent miniktim tax on incomes in exeesd &f $60,000 a year while the New Democrats said they would impose a 20-per-cent minimum tax on total earn. ings of everyone earning more than $50,000 a year In contrast, Prime Min. ing to police. The name is being withheld pending charges. . 2 ‘Two impaired drivers were arrested last weekend, Castlegar RCMP report. Carter fined VANCOUVER (CP) — Flamboyant oilman J. Bob Carter was fined $3,000 to day on a charge of gross in decency Carter had pleaded guilty earlier this month to the charge, involving two teen- age prostitutes. Provincial court Judge Erie Bendrodt rejected a de fenee request for an absolute or conditional discharge and the Crown's submission that a suspended sentence would convictions were: obtain food and lodging by fraudulent means in 1965, two counts of forgery in 1968, and failing to ister y stopped short of committing the Conserva tives to a minimum tax saying only that it was unfair that a person not pay a min imum tax and that it should be a handsome tax reflecting the advantage the taxpayer gets out ef the country said during the campaign that a minimum tax would be appropriate, Wilson said “It's not an easy issue and I was critical during the cam paign of both the NDP and the Liberals for shooting from the hip and saying this is exactly how it is going to be,” Wilson said. Asked if a $60,000 to $60,000 ceiling after which such a tax would be A te gary was reasonable, Wilson “I think that's a veooeashls limit but I don’t want to put the pin in right now.” VICTORIA (CP) — Budgets for British Columbia's 75 school districts have no room for salary increases next year, and the Education Ministry will turn a deaf ear to districts which complain publicly, says Education Minister Jack Heinrich. It is too early to know how many teachers might lose their jobs because of budget restrictions, Heinrich told a news conference Tuesday, cautioning districts to examine their budgets closely with a minimum of rhetoric and posturing About 1,400 teachers were let go last year when the provincial government brought in its controversial restraint program. The ministry also is changing the fiscal year, previously calculated on a calendar, to a period from July 1 to June 30 to coincide with the school year. Heinrich said the total budget for the 75 districts for the interim period of Jan. 1 through June 30 will be $887 million, up from the $881 million they were told last year they would be getting, even though enrolment in most districts is down. Total enrolment dropped to 472,000 in September from 479,000 in 1983. The totals make no provision for any salary increases, Heinrich said, and any review made of any school district will be based on the quality of education offered. “Adjustments on the basis of need are one thing, but I cannot and I am not prepared to adjust budgets to accommodate salary increases or increments,” Heinrich said. GET SHORT SHRIFT He said any school board which did not exercise some degree of restraint last year when the new financial framework was imposed, and “wished to move on political grounds during the initial stage” will get short shrift if it complains. “I have no intention at all of penalizing those districts who have done their job, by capitulating to those who right now are pleading hardship, if they did not tackle the problem when it was first resented,” he said. “I am not prepared to respond to the type of pressures which will be mounted, either through the media or major groups.” Most districts have taken the issue of restricted revenue seriously, he said, but “any district which has not done so and now wants to mount s lobby or protest will not get a sympathetic ear from me. He said that once negotiations on teacher salaries for 1985 have been completed and the districts and local teachers associations can demonstrate that they have “done their level best to preserve the system as they would want it to be, I am prepared to review their ® Heinrich said his job is to “preserve services to students at an acceptable or adequate level. Hie warsed the distriste te beep their sbitiy to pay in mind when with their VANCOUVER (CP) — else in the presidency, pri Backed by two of the largest unions in British Columbia, journeyman printer Joy Langan announced Tuesday she is seeking the leadership of the B.C. Federation of Labor. Langan, 41, a vice-presi dent of the federation and the provincial New Democratic Party, is supported by the 38,000-member International Woodworkers of America and the 27,000-member Can- adian Union of Public Em ployees. Langan is challenging Art Kube, 49, who has been president of the 240,000- member federation since June 1983, and longshoreman Frank Kennedy, 49. The federation election will be held during the annual convention next week. Langan, while refusing to direetly criticize Kube, told a news conference she feels she is the person best able to unite the labor movement in the province. “I have the ability to pull people together, to work on a consultative basis, to work in a co-operative way, with all union members, and I think that's an important factor.” Jack Munro, regional pres. ident of the International Woodworkers of America, wouldn't be other candidates for the job. “It's not difficult to see the labor movement is divided at this time and in difficult times the labor movement should not be divided and we think that Joy has the ability to’ umilte the trade union Ids id 46 echenl distri wil be potting femme qh “Our union has sufficient Treason to want marily what's gone on in the last year where up until very recently he seemed to be comfortable letting Jack Munro or the IWA take the blame for all the ills in the province. “He has now rejected it but he took too long to reject that idea.” A rift between Munro and Kube developed after Munro met with Premier Bill Ben- nett to formalize an agree- ment ending an escalating public sector strike last No- vember. 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