tlégan tlegar Ni A2 August 14, 1985 WEA ae Sunrise 5:42 a.m. Sunset 8:07 Hearing date set Gary Allan Hemmons, the. Lethbridge, Alta. man char- ged with second degree mur- der in the déath of an 18-year-old Grand, Forks woman, will face a three-day preliminary hearing begin- ning Oct. 23 in Grand Forks provincial court. Hemmons, 31, was arrest- ed and charged after the body of Tracy Horkoff was found Aug. 5 in shallow water in the Kettle River. An autopsy was performed in Pe maison p.m. A ridge of high pressure in the Eastern Pacific is diverting systems northward around f ior then southward through Alberta. Some our region at times so there is potential for sho periods. Day: the record minim this moisture specially in will spill over the Rockies into afternoon and i itis temperatures will continue to be lairly warm but overnight lows are very close to GOVE, NT DENIES REPORT Rebels overrun town KAMPALA (REUTER) — Panic swept the Ugandan capital today amid .rumors that National Resistance Army rebels were marching on the town. The government denied the reports. Witnesses said traders closed their shops and—hur- ried to suburban homies be- cause of d reports panic. Within an hour people cwere seen rushing all over the capital, locking shops, of- fices and bars and heading out of Kampala in all dire- ctions, the witnesses said. Foreign Minister Olara Otunu denied news agency reports based on accounts from that the reb- the guerrillas were close to Kampala. They said they saw a small private car going through Kampala with the driver shouting at all civilians to leave the capital. His identity was not clear and there was speculation that he might have been a rebel agent trying to cause els had overrun the country’s third-largest town, Masaka, some 130 kilometres south- west of Kampala. Otunu said the National Resistance Army is engaged in “troop movements,” but that they are co-ordinated with the Ugandan army. He denied that the rebel army is" a threat. Bomb kill BEIRUT (AP) — At least 12 people were killed and 75 injured when a car bomb ex- ploded today outside an apartment block in a densely populated suburb of the Leb- anese capital, Beirut police said. No one immediately claim- the debris of a-devastated eight-storey building > The fate of the baby’s par- ents was not known. The bombing occured at mid-morning in the impover- ished neighborhood of Sadd El-Boushrieh, setting off fires in a cluster of industrial ed ibility for the blast. : The Christian radio station Voice of Lebanon said three children were among the dead, and that rescuers found . anine-month-old girl alive in Flying MONTREAL (CP) — The recent spate of airline trag- edies is a “statistical an- omaly” and shouldn't -raise fears about the safety of flying, says the president of the International the radio said. Pillars of black smoke loomed over the area east of Beirut. The bombing followed a night of battles between Christian and Moslem militia- men along Beirut's so-called safe say it knows so far of this week's crash of a Japan Air Lines Boeing 747 and the recent Delta Air Lines L-1011. dis- aster in Dallas. Mechanical problems are d in the of Air Line Pilots’ Associ- ations. Capt. Reg Smith, an Air Canada pilot, said his asso- ciation isn't recommending special action based on what crash and windshear — a powerful downdraft: of wind — is suspected as the cause of the Delta tragedy, which occurred during a thunder- storm as the plane was Tuesday, travellers return- ing from Masaka said the National Resistance Army had taken the town without resistance. Since coming to power in a military coup July 27, Ugan- da’s new head of state, Lt.- Gen. Tito Okello, has made repeated overtures to the National Resistance Army and other guerrilla groups to back the army that deposed Milton Obote as president. Tuesday, Okello and a large g i ner ussen. Const. Pat Willian of the Grand Forks RCMP detach- ment said Tuesday police will not release the report. Problem half solved PRINCE GEORGE (CP) — The federal-provincial fores- try agreement signed 10 weeks ago will only half solve the problem of ex-forest areas that have grown back as scruff and shrubs, the people who manage. the prog- ram said. Tuesday. The agreement covers five years but the problem will take 10 years to solve, said Ross Macdonald, regional dir- ector for the Canadian For- estry Service. “Governments operate in five-year cycles, if that,” he said. “It's been well recog- nized it will take 10 years to EXPO DISPLAY . . . Expo representative Mary Ellen Woods gives West Kootenay residents a guided Expo 86 _ exhibit visits Waneta Plaza By CasNews Staff The travelling Expo 86 éxhibit paid a visit to the Waneta Plaza in Trail Tuesday night where a large number of people, including local dignitaries and arrived in the Tanzanian capital, Dar es Salaam, for peace talks with the National Resistance Army, but the group's leaders did not show up. green line that separates the factions. Police said five people were killed and 16 wounded in the artillery and tank clashes. . Ambulances and fire en- gines raced to the bombing scene, and hospitals appealed for blood. People cried the names of relatives and neighbors as they rushed to the stricken street filled with the acrid smell of cordite. At least three other build- ings were severely damaged. pilots making its landing approach. If flying is more h: lous. today, said Smith, it’s be- cause of terrorist acts and not a deterioration in the air- worthiness of aircraft. Sabotage is widely sus- pected in the June 23 ‘Air- India disaster, which claimed the lives of all 329 aboard, most of them Canadians’ of Indian descent. Ci reforest good di site NSR.” NSR stands for Not Satis- factorily Restocked lands which have been burned or harvested, but haven't grown back as productive forests after several years have Companies and foresters in the southeast of the province, the Vancouver area, and the Cariboo have complained Prince George-is getting the majority of the funds from the program. But the program is de- signed to deal only with backlog areas and 60 per cent of the backlog on good and medium sites is in the Prince George region, said Charlie Johnson, director of silvicul- ture for the province. The management commit- tee responsible for directing the $300-million program was here to tour the area and discuss research and which situations get the money, said Johnson. Johnson and. Macdonald said the management meet- ings are required because forestry work depends on things that keep changing. Police file Castlegar RCMP. are in- vestigating a single vehicle accident on the Robson ferry Monday. ‘At about 1:30 p.m., a car driven by Bill Waldie struck the end of the ferry during loading from the Castlegar came to view the provincial display. 4 The exhibit, titled “Expo 86 —.What The World Is Coming To” is visiting some 25 British Columbia | communities over the next year. It is the largest exhibit the province has ever sent on tour and is taking centre stage in a vafiety of shopping centres throughout B.C. A busload of people also came from Grand Forks to = see the exhibit. - Jim Hewitt, minister of consumer and corporate, affairs, was also in attendance ‘at the display. a Hewitt told the: viewers that “we have to be ready and be-prepared to be. hosts of the world.” He noted 'that people who visit Expo are not just going to come and spend three days at Expo but will visit | other parts of the province as well. Hewitt, MLA for Okanagan:Similkameen, said communities should get-together to persuade tourists to take the southern route, Highway 3, home fram Expo. He said communities should make the world aware that there is another highway in B.C. “We've really got to work towards achieving that goal, he said. “I want you go go home and be a super salesman for Expo 86, to create jobs, to make people recognize B.C. as one of the best places in the world to live, to work and to invest.” The heart of the travelling exhibit is the most up-to-date model so far constructed of the Expo site on False Creek. The scale model, which incorporates all major pavilions and facilities as well as the on-site transportation systems, is drawing enthusiastic crowds to regular tours of the mini-Expo conducted by the experienced and knowledgeable guides who accompany the exhibit. Also part of the Expo component of the exhibit is a mini theatre featuring a short video presentation on the World Exposition and an information tower. Expo, however,.is not the only focus on the major exhibit. Also drawing crowds is the B.C. Transit/ALRT exhibit which features a unique animation technique. Bob the bus driver who talks to viewers about the range of transit services in communities throughout - B.C. has convinced more than one viewer that he is real. Another component focuses on tourism, building up ~ to the Exposition in 1986. All 13 tourism regions of the province are featured in the special exhibitry which is designed to provide B.C. residents and visitors a strong ASS tour of Expo 86 during display at Waneta Plaza cunhosta phase hy cosnyl Calaorbes Tuesday night.> impression of the diversity and range of tourism destin- ations the province has to offer. A second theatre offers a brief video presentation on the tourism opportunities that Expo 86 will create throughout the province. The B.C. Pavilion section of the exhibit promotes the message “B.C., It's Your Show.” model of the B.C. Pavilion at Expo and an additional information tower, it graphically demonstrates the importance and scope of the-host- pavilion. The-B.C. Ferry Corporation, celebrating its 25th anniversary this year, are participating in the tour as well. Its contribution, the Queen of B.C., simulated ferry crossing through JIM HEWITT information on the service's 25-year history on the coast of B.C. - The final exhibit Utilizing video, a scale offers a Active Pass, as well as features the C ihall: Highway project, dubbed the Expo Expressway. The new super highway is the largest highway development in North America in the past 20 years. RIBBON CUTTING . . . Zellers officially took over from the Hudson Bay Company this morning in Trail. On __hand to do the honors ‘was Mayor Chuck Lakes, (left) David d by Zellers Looking on are Alderman Al Tognotti and Marge Nadin; president of the store’s employees Bettér Relations Committee. Fraud trial begins AUSTIN, TEX. (REU- TER) — the father of one of 81 crew members believed to have died when an oil-drilling Dasher vies for crown Monica Dasher, Miss Castlegar 1984, will be among 27 competitors vying for the title of Miss Interior of B.C. in Penticton Aug. 20-24. + : Dasher will fly in from Vancouver. Tuesday after- noon for five days of re- hearsals, fashion shows, photo sessions, interviews, promotional visits, luncheons, and more rehearsals. ship sank in the South China Sea in 1983 testified Tuesday a Soviet agent demanded $74,000 to reunite him with his son. ~ Douglas Pierce, a local lawyer, told a federal court jury Bratislav Lilic, 33, claim- ed to have evidence John Pierce, 29, had been held captive in Vietnam since the Oct. 25, 1983, accident. John Pierce was aboard the Glomar Java Sea when it capsized and sank during a violent typhoon in.the Gulf of Tonkin, about 200 nautical miles off the coast of Viet- nam. The ship was owned by the Houston-based Global Marine Drilling Co. Peter Popiel, the captain of the vessel was originally from Wakaw, Sask., but had lived in Palm Springs, Calif., for several years. Petroleum engineer George Sullivan of Medicine Hat, Alta., was also re- National Transportation Safety Board concluded all crewmembers on board the ship died. Only 35 bodies were found by divers after the incident. Federal authorities have said Lilic, a self-described KGB agent working at the Soviet Embassy in Washing- ton, knew nothing about Pierce's son and defrauded the father of $46,000 between June and September, 1984. CHARGED WITH FRAUD Lilic has pleaded not guilty to three counts of fraud and one count of mail-fraud. Defence lawyer Joe Tur- ner said Lilie was only a low- level embassy employee whom he described as a “flunky”. He said Lilic, now in jail in Austin, then lived outside of the embassy and could not claim diplomatic immunity. Turner said Tuesday he has requested State Depart- ported to have been aboafd. ment documents which he when the Glomar Java Sea went down. An investigation by the said will show the Vietna- mese and Soviet " govern- ments deliberately sank. the U.S. ship because of its lo- cation near a sensitive listen- ing-post. After conferring with the State Department, Pierce, who believed his son and other crewmembers were captured by the Vietnamese, offered a $100,000 reward last summer for information leading to their rescue. The federal indictment said Lilie posed as a KGB secret service officer named Alexander Ivanov and con- tacted Pierce to claim the re- ward. Prosecutors said Lilic claimed the Soviet Embassy wanted to help reunite the family so as to expose the crews’ alleged spying ac- tivity. oe Pierce said he initially paid $46,000 but when Lilic mere- ly demanded another $28,000 and warned him not ‘to go public, he decided to co- operate with a Federal Bureau of Investigation in-_ vestigation of Lilic. He said Tuesday he has spent more than $400,000 trying to find his son. The exhibit is expected to be seen by more than 700,000 people over the next year and, according to Claude Richmond, Minister Responsible for Expo 86, is intended “to provide information on this unique international event and carry some of the excitement and spirit that is Expo 86 throughout the entire province. “The exhibit is a very tangible way to get across the message that Expo belongs to all of British Columbia and everyone in the province has a part to play in this great World Exposition.” Beg: {= .- MONICA DASHER The Sandman Inn in 939 Burnaby Ave., Penticton is again the host hotel. Anyone wishing to send WHO’S WATCHING @HOP WIE wie These food Yalues PORK BUTT = STEA GOVERNMENT INSPECTED. SPARERIB COUNTRY STYLE GOVERNMENT INSPECTED . ORK CHOP CENTER CUT GOVERNMENT INSPECTED ..kg ROASTS ces . CANADA GRADE 1D BLADE BONELESS. TEAK $198 . CANADA GRADE PPh Sal Ib. i pty 2h STEWING BEEF .,,.), ke SLICED E BACON $49 UKRAINIAN. OVERLANDER. 375 G. EA. SWISS SALAMI OVERLANDER. ........100 G ¢ 66'lw. $ FLETCHERS. ASSORTED FLAVORS. 500 G! PINK SALMON GOLD SEAL. 220 G. 35° LIGHT TUNA CHUNK. BYE-THE-SEA. 612 OZ. .-..-- FRUIT! BEVERAGE FROZEN CONCENTRATE. 355 mb $159 $119 APPLE JUICE, 51° GRAPE JUICE WELCH'S. FROZE! CONCENTRATE. 341 mt $7138) o ORANGE JUICE ee FROIEN CC CONCENTS TRAE. 341 ml. AYLMER KETCHUP 1 LITRE ss 9238 SALAD DRESSINGS| — 500 ge BULK EDAM CHEESE kg? Ip. $339 OLD DUTCH POTATO CHIPS ~ 9° PACK .............- PUREX BATHROOMTISSUE ee CHICKEN NOODLE $979 8 nou FASAGNE = SITES SPAGHETTI R MACARONI. CATeLLT READY CUT. Tkg. ..---.0-0- SPAGHETTI SAUCE $7 08 SPAGHETTI SAUCE ¢ CATELLI. TOMATO/MAINARA. 14 Oz. - 98 TOMATOES ROYAL CITY. 28 OZ. TIN......- Mareronasves.. AD CHEESE SLICES | $329 RIPE OLIVES PICKLING SPICE § $969 CATELLI. MEAT/MUSHROOM. 14 Oz. . PITTED. EARLY CALI. 398 mL ...--.-- CLUBHOUSE. 142G........ ARMSTRONG. PROC. SLICES. 500 G. . $ 599 MAYONNAISE. $] 29 FURITAN STEWS _51°° -Supnots si SEED SEED 62 G. CELERY SEED 40 G. NEGETABEE OU $ 1 49 COOKIES DUNCAN HINES. CHOCOLATE Eur, 4 ALMOND FUDGE, MINT CHOCOLATE CHIP. CHICKEN PIECES BANQUET. 2 Ib...............----- PICKLING SALT $599 KIDS CEREAL CABBAGE PATCH. 325 G. .. $929 FRENCH FRIES McCAIN. SUPERCUT. 1 Kg WINDSOR. COARSE. 2 Kg. .......--- $449 DOG FOOD BUSTER'S. BRIQUETTES CHARCOAL. NO NAME. 9.07 Kg. ..-- 299° $589 FACIAL TISSUE —...98° PAMPERS = $4.8 PAPER TOWELS... 299° DETERGEN SURF .. LAUNDRY 12...°9"° ff» IAF ide_of the river. QA UW IN XS | | = ‘ . There was no damage to ~ the ferry but damage to the only specific use, namely, that of the car is estimated at $4,500. bulk plant. No one was injured in the “It certainly makes a difference to accident. the M2 (heavy industrial) classifica- . tion,” she said. Council later approved the “after recognizing and registering the covenant.” Council also passed a “housekeeping” bylaw establishing minimum lot sizes within the downtown commercial zone and establishing a downtown commer- cial zone for irregularly-shaped parcels of land. “Several pieces of property in really haven't been devel- oped because they are essentially noi conforming,” Mathieson ‘said, explain- ing that the lots don’t meet the minimum square-footage for frontage or are odd sizes. The new regulation puts “our bylaws in order” and will make public develop- flowers or telegrams may, do so to the above address. Letters of best wishes may be given to Bev Pongracz to deliver personally. The pageant has been held since 1975. Castlegar royalty on two occasions has won the crown. In 1976 Donna Town- send was crowned Miss In- terior and Leanne Smalley won the title in 1982. | 2 carn _ati INIVersitv | IIIT UT Ulitveti of ry JOHA JIRG (CP)— An ion rocked a South charred remains of her possessions at the destroyed house African university today after a day of racial violence in the and adjoining clinic. country's townships in which nine people died. “It is the local security (police) branch sent by their Police said an explosi device dinan bosses,” Mrs. Mandela told reporters. She said the at Wil before dawn, white-minority government has “declared war on the but no one was injured. They b had no details of the device. oppressed people of this country.” There was more rioting in a half-dozen black townships Her husband, Nelson Mandela, is the leader of the Tuesday. Six blacks died and three East Indians were outlawed African National Congress and was imprisoned ier stabbed to death, bringing the unofficial death toll ina year life in 1964 on icti of plotting b of racial bloodshed to 607. Lirias has offered to release Mandela, 66, if he There has been intense i overa violence, but he has refused. keynote speech to be given by President P.W. Botha ~~ Meanwhile in London, Amnesty International said it Thursday in which he is expected to announce reforms for has reports that security forces are torturing people blacks. detained under a state of emergency, imposed by the But there is doubt about how far he is prepared to goin government in 36 black areas July 21 to quell racial unrest. appeasing international calls for change, including in- The human rights organization, which won the 1977 creasing pressure from the United States, South Africa’s Nobel Peace Prize, said there had been more than 1,400 ~ major trading partner. political detentions in South Africa since July 20, compared The biggest iti the t ili with about 1,000 in all of 1984. strong United Democratic Front, said Monday it would Police report that 1,623 activists have been detained accept nothing less than universal suffrage and the release without charge under the emergericy decree. They say 696 of all politi prisoners as a basis for a peaceful solution. have been released. The wife of jailed black leader Nelson Mandela accused Amnesty said it had begun receiving “disturbing South Africa’s security police of burning down her house in reports of torture. of political detainees.” an effort to destroy “a symbol of resistance.” Figures compiled by the South African Institute of Race Winnie Mandela, 51, returned to her home in the black 1 Relations show that at least 607 people have been killed in a|_¢ township of Brandfort on Tuesday, and walked among the year of riots over apartheid. = zee continued from front pege two members from each of the larger communities in the area and one each from the smaller communities. _ Earlier in the evening, council reconvened a public-hearing- on the rezoning of land at 2181-6th Ave. from light to heavy industrial. Kinnaird Home Heat Service applied to council for the rezoning for the purpose of building a bulk fuel plant on the site. However, council put a hold on the rezoning following complaints by area residents and pending the submission by Kinnaird of a that would allow for the construction of the bulk plant and exclude uses that are objectionable. ‘The covenant prohibits the use of the land for asphalt plants, garbage incin- eration, gravel plants, junk yards, pulp and paper mills, salvage and serap metal and sawmills. - ment of the properties easier, she said. Essentially that the covenant means, “We don’t have to give vee explained Mathieson, is that the land ion to every will be‘zoned heavy industrial but with comes along,” Mathieson said. _usT3'1 Su 99" BULK CARROTS | ,..,, 39° B.C. No. 1.. WHOLE. .........--------kg- CANTALOUPE 4... 39°| PRICES EFFECTIVE AUGUST 15, 16 & 17 WATERMELON |... 19°| BANANAS Tourist Alert VANCOUVER (CP) — following people are request- ed to contact the nearest RCMP detachment for an ur- gent personal message: Mark Dufour, Calgary ~ Gary McConnell, Prince “Talk about overstuffed!" not over priced! Come somple our selection of delicious subs. mode dotly! Newspaper ads aren't on (and then off) in 20-or 30 seconds like ‘radio and TV commercials: They'll wait while you go to the bathroom or have a.sngck (in pact yee can even take them into the “reading” room with you... Newspaper ads wait for the reader's attention. They don't disappear in seconds, never ito be seen or heard again for hours, if not days. © Murchies Teas & Coffees YOUR COMMUNITY FOOD STORE Country Harvest Deli 1436 Columbia 5414 BUSINESS HOURS Mon., Tues., Wed. & Sat. 9a.m. to 6 p.m. Thurs. & Fri. 9.a.m. to 9 p.m. SUNDAYS CLOSED Marcel and Carol Rivet, ~ Bon Accord, Alta. Tom Rouse, Vancouver James Simonton of Ore- gon. BSye a _Castlégar News