\ 86 Castlegar News November 10, 1989 Births & Funerals BIRTHS He was 62, Mr, Brownlow is survived by BURTON — To Craig and Sue Burton of his Lillian; two sons, Colin of Castlegar, a girl, born Oct. 24 Walnut Creek, Calit.. and Nigel of Mon eae eae treal; four grande Joon Howard ond Sdne MeCreshen, beth of England de JERSEY /SPEERS — lo Foye de Jersey and Rob Speers of Samo, a girl, born Oct. 2 yaa ‘ COLLINS — Elbert (Ed) Collins of Trail JONES — To Sheila and Casey Jor died Oct. 14. He was 80. Mr Nakusp, o boy, born Oct. 30 survived by four daughters dpe Isabell, Edith and Grace; five sons JORGENSEN-NELSON — To Did Robert, Norman. Dovid, John ond Rick Tod Jorgensen-Nelson, a girl, b 2) in Calgary 4 two sisters, lrene Ward and Naomi Gowans McNALLY To Audrey McNally of Nelson, a boy and Mich To Helen and Ronald Mc HADIKIN MAH Pauline Hadikin of Krestova Trail, a boy, born Oct. 13 ed Oct 30 ot age 80. Mrs. Hadikin is Fred of Grand MIDDLEKOOP PETERS To Suz Middlekoop and Brian Peters of Ger a boy, born Oct George Perepihin of ‘ ilyn Stooshnott of To Lynn and Brian Mille | 11 grandchildren arid five rn Oct. 31 greot-grandchildren She eased by a younger sister in 1912 ner husband in 19 MILLER ssland, girl, be was MOORHEAD To Lauren and Moorhead of Trail, a boy, born Oct. 30. Edith Pittoway of Trail } at Trail Regional Hospital She was 97. Mrs. Pittaway is survived by her son William Dobbs of Rossland; tour of White Patricio Ferguson of Wartield and Joan Swanson # Trail; 12 grandchildren, 24 great grandchildren, three great-great d and many nieces and vas predeceased by her 4 husband Arthur #ttaway brothers and tw RODGE rand Mrs. Jim Rodge of locan Park three 1. stepdau: ghiers sisters: SAMOYLOFF — Peter Roy Somoylott of Ootischenia died Nov. 1. He was 58. Mr Samoylott is survived by his wite Polly of tischenia; four sons Ootischenio, Lawrence Stephanie. of Ootischenia, Stephan of Vancouver and Dwayne of Ootischenia Margaret Obedkott of Castlegar BROWNLOW e walow ste tro vieces and one nephew. He was Job openings formatic Mechanic is required in Castlegar. This contact the is a permanent’ position Canada Employment Centre several years experience on 835 Spokane Street, Trail, B.C engines. Wage'ls $16.00 per hour. ( 368 A Cortitied Well-experienced Meat ‘ail. Wage is $15.00 ctor tor o non-profit equired. Wage is $7.50 per ticket is Wage is with on A Welder 4 tor a Castlegar fir Certified Heovy Equipment Seattle elects first black mayor SEATTLE (AP) — N an R school h became a cen ul campaign call Wednesday, bout $4.5 million US in would be earmarked s to achieve L-enrolment Mayor Charle cedented He has t director of the he John F yvernment at inpr A TERRIFIC LOOK! e VERTICAL BLINDS e VENETIAN BLINDS e PLEATED SHADES Order Now for Guaranteed Delivery Before Christmas HOME Warehouse Floor Covering Centre Genelle Phone 693-2227 fie e" edece parents and o pa othe: Williom in 1970. SEIFRIT Matilda Seitrit of Fruitvale died Nov, 4 in Trail. She was 77. Mrs TELEPHONE 365-5210 Seifrit is survived by two sons, Arthur of Park Siding and Errol of Fruitvale; doughter Uihion of Fruitvale; 11 dchildren and 14 great-grandchildrer She was predeceased by her husband New insertions, copy Oto in 1973: grandson Grant and gran ddoughter Dor! WALLACE Leslie Claude Nicholas Wallace of Montrose died at home Oct. He was 82. Mr. Wallace purvived by his wife of 59 yeors, Elsie; daughter LoVonne Colussi; son Terry ie gron dchildren; brother Harold; and niece Dolores Van Tassel for the Cast will be th of December. oni id New: d up to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 28 for the oa Brian L. Brown CERTIFIED GENERAL ACCOUNTANT 270 Columbia Avenue Castlegar * 365-2151 Gordon A. Read & Co. Certified General Accountant Office 368-6471 Residence 365-2339 1250 Bay Ave., Trail K , MIGRAINE OR STIFF NECK? Call 365-5527 tor appointment HAN’S ACUPUNCTURE 2505 Coluymbie Avenue BUY or SELL by AUCTION USSELL oren mons UCTION “200030 3 199-4793 ox OPEN 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY LEVOLOR' — Carpet Cleaning CLEAN-SCENE CARPET. CLEANERS * Most Advanced System any other ¢ : . * Upholstery Cleaning Too SATSEACTION GUARENENED hy not Call Us Today! 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STEEL a Better Way to Build engineered jE f st Buildings © COMMERCIAL © INDUSTRIAL © AGRICULTURAL For more information, call your Authorized Garco Builder Midwest Construction ALL TYPES OF COMMERCIAL PRINTING * Letterheads * Envelopes © Brochures ® Raffle Tickets Castlegar News 197 Columbia Ave. — 365-7266 FAX MACHINES Just Slightly Ahead of Our Time! Call Grant DeWolf, Your Authorized Deal: 365-3760 MODERN REFLEXOLOGY ANDFOOTCARE + 2808 Columbia Ave. = CASTLEGAR FUNERAL CHAPEL Dedicated to kindly thoughtful service COMPLETE FUNERAL SERVICE Cremation, Traditional Burial and Pre-Arrangement Plan Available Granite, Bronze Memorials. Cremation Urns and Plaques PHONE 365-3222 “Did you fix. my sewing machine?" Moving & Storage Williams Moving & Storage 2337-6th Avenue, c Mike’s Radiator Repair & Sales New Location | 690 Rosstand Ave: Trait ‘Open 8:30 - 5 p.m. Monday-Friday 9:30-2, Saturday n Costiegar Mike 359-7058 Ste Pa vo revival A once-dying sport appears to be making a comeback in Castlegar... BY Leak trial The opposition con tinued to probe the Torys over the budget leak as the trial ad journed B3,A2 LOTTERY NUMBERS The winning numbers drawn Thyr- sday in the B.C. Keno lottery were 5, 8, 11, 15, 21.34, 50 and 56. Wall tumbles Free passage through the Berlin Wall is the latest development in Eastern European changes begun by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev... A3 Vol. 42, No. 91 CASTLEGAR, BRITISH COLUMBIA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1989 WEATHERCAST Tonight: Cloudy with showers, low Saturday Cloudy tapering off in the evening, cooler with a low near 6 Possibility of precipitation 90 per Cent tonight, 70 per cent Saturday 3 Sections (A, B&C RENTAL APPLIANCES & TV Rent to Own Washers, Dryers, VCRs, TV, Stereos cal 365-3388 1008 Columbia Ave., Castlegar Roofing Invite you to call them for a free moving estimate. Let our representative tell you about the many services which have made Williams the most respected name in the moving business Ph. 365-3328 Collect ROOF REPAIR * Quality Work * Exceptional Prices * FREE Estimates CALL JAMES 365-3282 Experienced Rooter Optometrist WoL Le Noy B.C. O.D. OPTOMETRIST 1012 - 4th St., Castlegar PHONE 365-3361 Tuesday to Friday 9a.m. to 4:30 p.m Saturday 9 a.m. to 12 Noon DANIEL’S PAINTING ‘Quality workmanship at reasonable rates Phone 365-6971 Plumbing & Heating 7 Bartle & Gibson The Plumbing & Heating Centre * American Standard * Valley Fibrebath : Electrical & G-E. Lighting Supplies 2317-6th Avenue, Castlegar Phone 365-7702 SILVER CREST PLUMBING 713 Tamarack St., Castlegar Call 365-3044 CASTLEGAR PLUMBING & HEATING For all your plumbing needs and supplies * FIXTURES © PARTS * SERVICE CALL 365-3388 TRAIL CUSTOMERS ONLY CALL 364-0343 * Guaranteed Work © Fair Prices * 30 Years in Business * Free Estimates JAMES SWANSON AND SONS Ph. 367-7680 ~ ROOFING © Septic Service BOY SERVICE Sump & Septic Tank Pumping Phone 365-5013 3400-4th Avenue Castlegar COLEMAN COUNTRY Planning a Wedding? We Sell Distinctive Invitations, Napkins etc COME SEE US AT Castlegar News 197 Columbia Ave. DARN! 1 COULD HAVE ADVERTISED IN THIS SPACE! Castlegar News 365-5210 still missing SURREY (CP) The hunter Wally Finnigan, Saturday in the bush near Creston, is worried time is running out for him to be found alive and are asking for volunteers to help in the search “We need help to find him,” Fin Barbara family of missing since nigan’s sister-in-law said Thursday “It’s horrible to think of someone being lost in the woods and this is the sixth day. How long can a person sur vive?" Finnigan said the family contacted a psychic, who believes he fell down a mine shaft near the British Columbia community but is still alive ‘*Personally, | don’t believe in psychics but I've heard they helped According to the psychic they brought in, little time left."* Creston RCMP Cpl. Bo Yaskia said police are taking it day by day before making any decision to call off the search for Finnigan, a 51-year-old longshoreman, but extra volunteers would be welcome LIKELY INJURED “We're getting frustrated. 1i‘s miserable conditions out there and we suspect he’s probably been injured in the bush and caii’t get to a road. He’s got no health we know but at his age anything could happen.” Yaskia said Finnigan had gone hun ting for elk and d but he wasn’t southeastern have others there’s very problems as far as etameememe reported missing until Sunday “It was a day trip so he dressed that great and had supplies for aday but nothing beyond that.”” wasn't CAN WE GO HOME? . at the Community Complex Thursday. . Two-year-old Joel Teind! would rather ride the rails than put all that effort in to skating, and mom Colleen Teind| isn't far away, so Joel just waits for a push during the parent /tot skate CasNews photo by Ed Mills Flooding forces evacuation VANCOUVER (CP) — Torrential rains produced widespread flooding and slides in British Columbia on Thursday, causing the evacuation of a Trans-Canada tiny Indian village and closing the Highway kilometres east of Vancouver The 42 members of the Oweekeno Indian band on the remote central about 120 coast were driven from their homes by floodwaters that raged down the Wan nock River The natives moved to a logging Taylor, a spokesman. REVELSTOKE (CP) The Trans-Canada Highway Revelstoke was reopened to single near Thursday after blocked lane traffic late noon after it was by a mudslide earlier year The city, received 28.2 millimetres of rain during a 24 od “There’s been a amount of rain here,”* ‘Hour pe significant’ ditections at said Darlene Slide blocks highway weather She said Revelstoke on sday got about a third of the total rainfall for all of November last The record rainfall for Nov. 9 is 33 millimetres in 1916, she said Victor kilometres west of Revelstoke. about Van Fourteen women and children taken by Labrador helicopter to Alert Bay on camp at the end of Rivers Inlet, 420 couver kilometres northwest of were a Canadian Forces office fede Vancouver Island Guard Victoria on A Canadian spokesman from Thursday that the natives would likely be taken out today Coast said night remaining by helicopter or coast guard cutter Traffic was being rerouted around a 30-kilometre Canada Highway between Chilliwack and Hope, One section of the Trans: Lake, 15 closed due to slides. slide left a pile of rocks, mud and logs as deep as nine metres on the highway In Squamish, 90 kilometres north of Vancouver, about 75-residents were told to prepare to leave their homes as the Upper Squamish and Cheakamus rivers neared flood levels. “Most of them have been through this before,"* said RCMP Cpl. Wally Petryshen MORE RAIN TODAY Forecasters continued heavy rain warnings for today, easing to showers by the weekend. More than 16 more than half an inch ancouver during the 24 milimetres of rain fellon hours ending at 4 p.m. PST Thursday +30-kitometres_cast_of Van while couver, got 97 milimetres, continued on page A2 Eye doctor was Victim, court rules VANCOUVER (CP) A Nelson eye doctor whose name was ordered removed from the medical register was a victim of bias by the B.C. College of Physicians and Surgeons, a B.C Supreme Court judge has ruled It was obvious Dr. Hachmi Ham mami was denied natural justice by a committee, Mr order college Justice an accuser or said, adding an appez favor or taboo. Hammami set against a Second film slated for Vernon VERNON (CP) — Hollywood film: maker John Stark says he will use this Okanagan Valley community as the location for a second major project early next year Stark earlier decided 19 use Vernon, 300 kilometres northeast of Van couver, for a feature film The a fictional account of 1985 About 16 months tors associated wit Medical Clinic in complained petence in the tre about t patients. The college then mami had ‘‘adeq Dispossessed, knowledge’ the Sons of Freedom, a breakaway sect »f Doukhobors His second project is a television The committee rep in British Columbia based on the Stephen Leacock Sunshine Sketches of Little said Judy and Willy Sellin, associate producers of The movie, novel Town, tsand colleagues Hammami's Dispossessed inordinate use of la Stark, whose one-man show An Evening With Stephen Leacock received worldwide acclaim, has been granted rights by Toronto publishers The McClelland and Stewart for the television dramatization, to be titled Fhe Great Election First. Choice cable television's development department will fund the project, based on Stark's first draft of the screenplay, writer Ken Lamb of Nelson coll Canadian Silvio Narizzano, whohas remove worked in England for career, will be the director Narizzano’s credits include Georgie mami Girl, starring Lynn Redgrave Emmy Award-winning BBC version of committee said, and college Hammami from the ject to certain|condit onthe temporary reg When Hammam primary conditior year of in collaboration with ophthalmological most of his complaints were the names and do: It wasn’t ur War and Peace reali Judy Sellin said The Great Election should be ready for television release tee, he by September 1990, and will be*filmed entirely inthe Vernon area and the _ pat ed one membe She said she expects to open a production company office in Vernon’ committee membe within three to four weeks and will also be staging acting and screen extra workshops in the near future cumstances before they met rela! toin plaints, Oppal said Hammami's lawyer, dner, had told Oppal the committee ir cluded doctors who had pre complained about his client's extensive ophthalmologist in Nelson in vestigation_ commilttce three doctors to determine practice to use lasers in ‘“unce his name fr Wallace Oppal said in setting asid Robert Gar iously use of laser ophthalmology “I is clear law that no person act as a judge in any cz ase in which a prosecutor, arance of b party up practice as an January three do: h Beaver V nearby Frui later, {ammami's co} appointed composed Ham uate skill and to practise medicine Ham ported tha mami, in just over two years ¢ actice ad been the sub: ject of 15 formal complaints USED LASER ser theray he was p' onvention and with questionable indicatic decided to register and on Oppal noted that whe Premiers, PM reach abe OTTAWA (CP) — Agreement has been reached for a first ministers conference on the constitution early in the new year, sources said this morning. The provincial sources said the proposal would be con sidered formally by Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and the provincial premiers this afternoon at the end of the current first ministers conference on the economy The officials were discussing the next step in the Meech Lake saga while their bosses were meeting privately on other issues this morning. Later, the first ministers began formal discussions on the environment The agreement, which could be overturned by the first ministers, promise by a federal spokesman that Meech Lake would not be imposed on dissenting provinces. Senator Lowell Murray, the followed a senior federal provincial relations, said there is no intention to impose the Meech Lake accord on any province That followed an apparent peace offering earlier from Newfoundland Premier Clyde Wells, who said he would minister for reconsider his promise to rescind his province's approval of the accord if certain conditions are met Wells wants a guarentee that Meech Lake won't be immediately imposed if New Brunswick and Manitoba, the only two holdout provinces on Meech Lake, ratify it before the June 1990 deadline “If there’s some benefit to be gained nationally by Newfoundland not rescinding the resolution now Newfoundland will not_be_harmed by it, then 1 have no quarrel with not rescinding,’’ Wells told the CBC But in an apparent contradiction later, he said he thinks it is still necessary for Newfoundland to rescind the accord and he has no intention of accepting the accord in its present form and It is necessry for Newfoundland to do it (rescind the ratification vote), if people are concerned about Newfoundland rescinding at this stage might have some other kind of adverse impact, perception or otherwise would Ne’ Jating? now, agree to be ace “Of course not prejudiced."” He went on to.say that he would consider not rescin ding it if the other provinces and Ottawa agree to an ex- traordinary second ratification vote in the Newfoundland House of Assembly The meeting on Thursday of the first ministers was reminiscent of Pierre Trudeau's style of confrontational Confederation rather than the conciliatory tone Mulroney espouses. The main event featured a few crackling exchanges between Mulroney and Wells over the accord, but that wasn’t the only scrap of the day providing Newfoundland’s position is wishes,"’ Wells said after the meeting today It was one challenge Mulroney wast ‘The object of the exercise of Meec referendums,” he said. ‘We had a refer in 1980. We don’t want any more While Mulroney sat with jaw clenched, Wells over his reading glasses directly at the government’s treatment of his province POOR RELATIONS Newfoundlanders earn little mo} Canadian average national average and yet well-to-do On delivered a denunication of Meech Lake Unemployment is m which continues tinte h Lake endum y avoid Quebec stared me minister and and the federal e than than twice the tario and Quebec In fact, the Newfoundland premier, who hasn't been to a first ministers conference before, had a challenge for Mulroney “‘If you think you're speaking for the Canadian people and you're honoring the wishes of the Canadian people, then call a referendum and I assure you I will honor their get more federal economic development money “Mr. Prime Minister, what kind of nation-building is that?” asked Wells Mulroney has often wondered aloud how Meech Lake foes would be reacting if Ontario, rather: than Quebec, was continued on page A2