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AFTERNOON 12:00! 5:90 3 ABC NEWS: o Geant: Jacqueline Bisset. @ GROWING YEARB. 6:90 GB ONE DAY AT A TIME Guest: Linda Ronstadt. QD MACHEN / LEHRER: I=) e386; w at rr cry compu! sound od talon recog es t ot combust “atapbice, od @ SAUDI ARABIA “The Race With Time" HILL STREET Chiet Daniets tums tho precinct upside-down In a or 1 tom of the Sewers” fy Birenanonal JOURNAL @ Doctor wio © “Genesis Of The Datoke” a visit to a soap opera school_run by Bill and Bin Seaforth Hayes. :88 REPORT sealers ‘3:30 @ CHLDREN'S * uy. ‘TRE athe (ZerlgoBlamond coos Grecews @DNBA BASKETBALL, “Championship Game" ‘CBC EVENING 6:90 GB JOANIE LOVES - NBA BASKETBALL ceupeenatip cere” a oe Ingenuity & making @ wagtte ton, C8) hasty prob: jobbie Sorte sxpising the ° guidelines 3 et of his new Star officers a examiaatid iegrated predence Amdrican Paton), (Penta) Barney and his men scramble 10 cope with gang wartace I Chinatown when the mayor demands actlon. (Part 1) 12 MOVIE m Berger. A Dlackmalta the three men 10 hired him to ateal : Column : By Kristal * Bradshaw building. from: June 6 - June 10. sporting event. f; Birchbank Golf Course. OA Student Employment office opened Rocke | in Castlogar. The office will be open from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. every Tuosday and is located in os School District No. 9 Plans are underway for “Hire a Student Week", All across Canada, student employment ‘will be promoted This year, one event will be a Sport-a-Thon. Students will be sponsored by a business or householder to participate in sports events. The sponsor will employ the student 'at.a job if the student reaches his goal in the The student cari be employed as a gardener, painter or babysitter for an afternoon, day or a week. The student may choose to swim five miles if the employer will give him a job for two days. y Another event being planned is a golf tournament, It fis scheduled to take ‘place the afternoon of June 6 at the : We're looking forward to seoing many itudents and E employers in our Castlegar office. , . of golf, with on Deadline may be extended OTTAWA (CP) federal government appears, ‘ ready. to extend to Dec. 3: the June, 80: deadline for. people seeking Brants to rb. move . urea - the ‘fem 60,000 to 100,000. ‘Only* 86,000 homeowners the government and 8,000 fnoré'aré in the process of foam insulation from their homes. _ Consumer and Corporate Affairs Minister. Andre Quel- let said Tuesday cabinet is ing an ion of was told. : It ‘appears nlany’ home- owners are still uninformed about government aid avail- able to them or are unaware the deadline and he expects to make an announcement within two weeks. Quellet made the state- ment at the C health, their h tain the foam, opposition MPs said. Ouellet said the govern- ment will intensify its infor- mation Programs, possibly by welfare and social affairs committee, The foam is be- lieved to cause ‘respiratory problems, rashes, stomach cramps and headaches, Estimates of the number of Canadian homes’ insulated with the foam have ranged next fall in family allowance and old age pension cheques. All homeowners with the insulation can receive up to $5,000 tax-free to remove the ° foam. As well, up to an addi- tional $3,500 is available to low-income families. CASTLEGAR NEWS, May 25, 1983. B7 Nhy doost : —e lag? By] KEN SMITH It's not enetly news that Canada’s efforts in research and development are lagging seriously: witen compared with the international economy. Regularly, you can-count on b So the question becomes this: If Canada offers the best return for R and D spending, ‘why is its record the worst? LESSON DEFENCE ‘ Some of this anomaly can be explained, the Ontario and labor’ leaders delivering speeches ‘pointing out how Canada-is far behind other. in. this paper in by the fact that Canada puts less effort into defence-oriented R and D than other OCD countries. So. ‘crucial area of future development. * ‘A new ‘study: paper. on ‘the question of'R and D, presented with the Ontario budget, notes that the issue is not as simple as it might seem. There's more involved, for example, than simply pushing megabucks at laboratories and research centres. jMore importantly, there's the question of ensuring that people responsible for R and D know what they're doing — and then carry out their responsibilities effectively. The Ontario study, which presents no conclusions since ‘it was offered as a discussion paper, suggests that these responsibilities have not always been met. LAGGED OTHERS ‘The paper starts off by agreeing that for the last two: decades Canada’s R and D spending has consietently lager behind that of major industrial competit tors, It uses from the’ for Co-operation and Development. These show ‘that’ for selected years since 1963 Canada has consistently put a smaller f its total domestic wealth into R and D than such’ countries ‘as Britain, France, Germany, Japan, _,Sweden and the United States; Again, that’s hardly. news since just about everyone has been saying the same thing for years. ° But then the; Ontario paper. drops ‘a surprise. Despite Canada's poor R and D spending record, the country still offers a greater subsidy through tax writeoffs, direct payments and other measures than any of 11 other OECD nations reported on in a recent publication by, the Canadian Tax Foundation. is lower. Another factor is that, because of its ne makeup which counts so. heavily on resource-based industries, Canada may not have to spend as much on R and D to . achieve gains in real wealth equal to that of manufacturing- centred economies. :.’ Binee) a so ‘much of important sections of Canada's by with _ head offices 1 in other: countries, does this apparent lack of aggressive R and D spending mean that Canadian research opportunities are being deliberately overlooked? That's a standard agrument from Canadian economic nationalists, who say the- multinationals’ want to keep the advantages of R and D in their own backyard. ’ for the They say the multis will go where they can get the best break overall. Canada might offer better tax and other credits, for example, but the United States may have better facilities. The implications are clear. 3 ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT Tf Canada is serious about getting further into R and D, and -reaping the~economie benefits everyone says. are attached to the field, it’s going to-have to look beyond . offering ‘bigger tax incentives and writeoffs, One area, the Ontario paper says, where there's room for significant improvement is ensuring a supply of highly bens people who can carry out R and D, . The situation may be i improving, slowly, In ieee almost 49 per cent of the funding for Rand D Train ride worth wait came from the federal government, compared with 81 per ‘ cent from business. . This year, business spending — of a much bigger ple — will account for 46 per cent of the total, compared with Ottawa’s shrunken 39 per cent. ‘Two years ago, Ottawa announced plans to get Canada’s R and D spending up to 1.5 per cent of the country's annual wealth. ‘It had. been hanging around one per cent at the time, and this year is anticipated to rise to 1. .89 per cent. So there's a way to go. But — if the incentives in government aid are already there — why are people not exploiting the chances? SLOCAN VALLEY Institute donates $200 scholarship Dr. C. Masters of New Denver gave an interesting talk on the effects of alcoho) _and smoking at the Slocan Valley Women's Institute's latest Fegular ‘meeting. At roll call members were asked to tell their favorite color, A small charge — varied according to color — was set on'the different colors which each member paid. The funds were put into .the “Pennies for Friendship” fund. June Bell, first vice-presi- dent of the provincial Board of the Women’s Institute, will , attend the Slocan Valley W.I. meeting on June 2. Women of the World Confer- ence in Vancouver in June. Plans are being made to - help Student Council with a bake sale to raise money for their year-end dance. Members plan on having their annual supper June 11. It will be.a potluck supper. Two or three members attended a senior citizen housing meeting in Slocan. At the W.L meeting a motion was made to sponsor a senior citizen housing development. A society has been formed to get this project underway. Daphne Angus gave an interesting report on the W.L conference at Robson. VANCOUVER (CP) — It took a year and a half to set up a three-day train ride, but “the organizers who put the Okanagan Express back on the rails say it was well ‘worth the effort, The B.C. Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society saw its dream of pro- viding a round-trip train ride to Penticton come to life dur- ing the Victoria Day week- end when 300 passengers — who; paid up'to $350 each — embarked on the first run of its kind since 1959. The led’ the society’s B.C. chapter. Two of the cars were brought from State. that few. people ride trains. “Sure, I'd like to see more .” he said. “But with Denis O'Brien, a 71-year- old retired CP. Rail janitor, © was one of the first. passen- gers to line up Saturday at the usually deserted train station in downtown Vancou- ver. “I was really excited” he said. “I couldn't sleep last night.” Tracing the tracks of the Kootenay Express and the Kettle Valley Express, the train covered more than 550 in restored rail cars that dated back to the 1920s, said during the long VIA Rail layoffs and what not, I don’t kriow.” A few seats away was 84-year-old Bernie McCallum, who was named honorary. conductor by the railway his- torical society to commemo- rate his 48 years as conduc- tor with Kettle Valley Rail- way. : “It's nice to hear the click- ety-click of the trains again,” he said. “I used to ride over this area when I worked with the Kettle Valley Railway.” ig to Van-. couiver Monday. - - O'Brien said he was sad ig to Robert Had- ley, president of the travel sales for the society, pimoat alf the Ad of $200 and a from the United States. 7 The 12 members of the B.C. chapter worked for a year and a half to make the Okan- agan Express.run a reality, said director Barrie Sanford, a professional engineer. Passengers, who paid be- tween $125 and $350, for one- way or return coach tickets, were only charged enough to cover the $100,000 cost of the excursion, Sanford said. “This trip would have cost $800 to $900 on a commercial basis,” he said. * Sanford said another trip might be scheduled for next year if there is enough cookbook will be made to the Mt. Sentinel scholarship. The presentation will be made by Maria Hendrix. . Dorothy Hird will be atten- ding the A iated Country SATELLITE T.V. complete systems From * 2, 19S HI-TEK VIDEO FOR RENT 2 Houses In Robson 2Bdrm. and3 Bdrm. 365-2519 Barrie Sanford, director of service which handled ticket demand. How's your letterhead? Seems like there’s something our friend doesn’t realize. Nothing will add to the importance of a business letter (or the letter writer) like a smart letterhead design. How about you? Have you taken a good long look at your letterhead lately? 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