eA2 Saturday, October 26 1991 @ CourtNEWS In Castlegar provincial court, a Castlegar man was sentenced to two four-year jail tems for sexual assault and two four-year jail terms for sexual exploitation. All terms Darrell William Langille was fined $400, or in default of 21 days in jail, for im- are to be served concurrently. A publication ban on the man’s name was ordered by the court to protect victim identities. eee Deborah Anne Jollimore and Sandra Diane Mont- gomery were each sentenced to one day in jail for possession of a narcotic. Jollimore, 31, and Mont- gomery, 37, both of Castlegar, were "herested June 3 after RCMP from the Castlegar, paired driving. He is also pro- hibited from driving for 1 year. eree Vincent Digiorgio was fined $450, or in default of payment nine days in jail, for impaired driving. He is also prohibited from driving for three months. eee Clifford Allan Jowsey was fined $450 or in default of pay- ment, 30 days in jail, for im- paired driving. He is also pro- hibited from driving for one year. eee Gray Dion Kittle was sen- tenced to two years probation for assault. Fred Fred Salikin was sen- tenced to 18 months probation for assault. Kath Street was sen- fined $500 for contravening a waste management order. eee Glen Kanashiro was sen- Secs $0.00 Gays in jail, to be tenced to one year probation and 40 hours of community work service for failing to com- ply with a probation order. She was also ordered to pay $300 r served pos- session of a prohibited weapon. He was also sen- tenced to probation while he in not in custody. eee David Frederick Dyball was fined $300 plus a $45 victim surcharge for impaired Griv- Bradley Stewart Butula was fined $400 for driving without due care and atten- tion. las Wayne Jonker was : 15415, 39043, 12154, 6415, : 543, 212, 642 : 40, 53, 23 : 836830, 313053, : 15295, 58015, : 5691, 8767, : 674, 636, 735 : 82, 22, 33 3: 429436, 834338, + 21533, 99203, : 3101, 4915, : 028, 654, 286 14, 28, 20 iC KENO Oct. 24 1, 10, 21, 23, 36, 37, 45, 54 Oct. 23 7, 10, 24, 25, 37, 40, 42, 55 Oct. 22 4, 14, 19, 20, 31, 34, 36, 41 In the event of a discrepancy between the numbers published and the official winning numbers list, the latter ing. He is also prohibi shall p CONSTRUCTION TRAILER RENTALS Local Fritz ah a aD WO DOO CRTIOOS: CRESTAURANT) FOOL Cl DONE THE HOM Mon.-Fri. -7 a.m.-7 p.m Sat. - 7 a.m.-3 p.m. d Sundays & Holidays 1004 Columbia © Ph. 365-8155 Westar continued from front page Berry said each of the mills have just had shutd or vesting in Westar’s lumber, and high stumpage rates. are running at limited capaci- ties. Other economic factors be- hind the shutdowns are the strong Canadian dollar, which has kept Americans from in- rates have been killing us,” he said. “And the Canadian dollar has never been stronger.” Barbeques were held Thursday and Friday at the Castl wmill as ment’s way of thanking em- ployees for a job well done. “It’s just something we did as recognition for the people,” said Helmkay, who was serv- ing hamburgers on Thursday. “The mill’s down. The guys have really done an excellent job.” KOOTENAY SOCIETY FOR COMMUNITY LIVING Living (KSCL) is a non-profit direct service and advocacy organization KSCL has been actively supporting persons with mental and their in the C for y for over 15 years. We are committed to ensuring that equal opportunities exist forall our citizens. We know that all people, regardless of th eir disability, benefit from community living. That is one reason we have changed our name to The Kootenay Society for Community Living from The Kootenay Scoiety for the Handicapped. Our volunteer Board of Directors and team of trained and qualified support staff provide a variety of support and y services to p who are hanciapped and their families. Additiohnal information on KSCL and how it could assist you, your family or friends can be obtained by calling our Administration Office at 365-2624 or 365-3433. The Class of '91 Is Ready To Hit The Books. | Saturday, October 26 1991 SecondFRONT | sTREMOR TALK The word epicentre refers to the point on theearth’'s * surface above the undergound center, or focus, Giving blood isn't easy by Ed Milis News photo News reporter Thomas Bink won the battle over his nerves and did his duty Thursday night at the Red Cross blood donar clinic at the Community Complex. Thomas Bink NEWS REPORTER OK, so maybe it didn't hurt too badly. Inan to show the dedi d readers of The News that reporters here actually care about the sto- ries they write, I excitedly volunteered to donate at Thursday's blood donor clinic. What could it hurt? Me, of course. A seasoned photographer and I arrived at the Community Complex at about 7:30 p.m. We were greeted by lineups longer than the Great Wall of Chi- na, and all the tiny cups of pop in the world wouldnt erase the feeling that it was going to be a long night. I was a first-time donor. The first step was filling out the forms. It seemed to me that every question was just another way of asking if I had AIDS. Unfor- tunately, they only offered one way of saying no. After two more long lineups, which were like the lines at a bank where you snake through an invisible obstacle course on your trek to the teller, I was ready to give blood. They had reviewed my forms, deter- mined my blood type, and instructed me where to go next. I was nervous. It was like sitting on the shoulder of the highway, waiting for the cop who had pulled you over to write the ticket. It was gut-check time. Which arm do I prefer, the girl at the front of the line asked. Does it matter? Why, will one not be use- ful again? Which arm can I spare, do you mean? Why not just skip the arms and draw blood straight from my heart? “The left one,” I said. NEWS FEATURE Soon I was on a bed, which really was a like a plas- tic lawn chair lying flat. I was disturbed to find that the pillow they offer you is not for your head, but for your arm. Next time I'll donate from my head, so I could be a little more comfortable. My arm was propped up and prepared like a sa- cred lamb being readied for the slaughter. I winced. Sure, there was pain. The needle felt like a pencil jabbed deep into my artery. After a few minutes, my whole arm was beginning to feel like I had been sleeping on it wrong for a week. But seriously, Ihave to say the nurses and volun- teers there were very accommodating. I asked some pretty dumb questions, like if I would be able to op- erate heavy machinery after donating, and they hap- please see BINK page A4 __ Ase Earthquakes rumble through West Kootenay Thomas Bink NEWS REPORTER Anumber of small earthquakes that shook the West Kootenay on Wednesday and Thursday are not worth worrying about, an earth- quake expert said Thursday. “They are simply small earth- quakes that we see from time to time in the interior,” said Dr. Gar- ry Rogers at the Pacific Geo- oe Center in Sidney, B.C. ey were certainly nothing to be alarmed about.” The first tremor, with an épi- centre about 30 kilometers west of Nelson, hit at about 2 am. Wednesday morning, registering a 2.5 on the Richter scale, Rogers ‘said. Another quake of a similar magnitude hit at 7am., and a 1, i 1 o! 8 tumbled through the area Thurs- lay. “They were very small,” Rogers said, “but certainly large enough to be felt.” He said the tremors were caused by general stress in the area, not by faults or weaknesses in the earth’s crust. “The area is simply stressed overall,” he said, “and occasional- ly the weakest points fail. It’s just a general stress in the region.” Although he said there will probably not be any large quakes in the area, residents should ex- pect more small shakeups in the future. “It will undoubtedly happen again,” Rogers said, “but I don’t know when.” The largest quake to hit the area was in 1985, when a shock of 4.0 on the Richter scale was recorded in Creston. Wayling ends 33-year education career @ School superintendent and a half,” he said. “And I’ve sion offered through his pension most — the staff, the students he watched grow and develop through eduéation over the years. But on the oth- er side, the “ran- corous, stressful” says he's just plain worn.out after nine years of heading up the district And they mean business-good business. These are the new British Columbia CGAs from your area. Equipped with all the business acumen and managerial skills the designation carries. So whether they work as public practitioners, controllers, finaincial managers or presidents, they'll be standing head and shoulders above the crowd. From fellow Certified General Accountants across the province, heartfelt-congratulations and best wishes. talked openly with my family and _ plan. MH and i and “But I feel for health and family all the people around the staff here, so it wasn’t a big surprise.” The main reason behind his de- cision, he says, is he’s just plain Donna Bertrand worn out. NEWS REPORTER “I had ‘some medical concerns, Castlegar superintendent of not serious ones, that started to schools Terry Wayling is calling it crop up about three years ago. And quits after 33 yearsin education. they’re certainly under control School board chairman Gordon thanks to medication, but the ener- Turner announced Wayling’s deci- gy level isn't there like it was eight sion to take an early retirment at o Tan th Pins chanaod tnt the board’ thi; i “ e job has changed rather Moving tn amrboedly evel tha last fe os, poe Wayling, 55, will have been en years. We've gone through a cou-, with the board nine years when ple restraint periods with reduced his reti b effective on Sept. 30, 1992. That kind of wears on the He said the announcement was soul and the body as well.” Wayling’s retirement will come a long time in coming. “The decision was one that I've two years short of the “magic num- been thinking of for the past year and other things, it’s best I do pull the pin at this time.” Giving almost a year’s notice gives the board lots of time to fig- ure out what kind of successor théy want, a task Turner says will be started soon. But until Wayling’s last day, he assures it’s busi: as usual. How- ever, he admits the next 11 months will be a little different knowing they are his last. “You think, well it’s the last time you're doing something, so make sure you do it right, leave it in place for the next person coming through the door,” he said. “But certainly we'll keep on run- ning the school system and doing whatever we have to for kids to get a good education here.” He says he'll miss the people the one number, say from a magnitude of 5.5 Nance A. Henne, Dip.B.Adm., Cert. B.C.Ed. Sharon L. Sadler, Dip.B.E.A. Castlegar greater. A quake Fruitvale of 2 is the Nakusp ‘smaliest nor fet by humans. — Locoted ecross from W vorites, golf and curling, all the things he hasn't had time for. “I certainly don’t plan on closing the door and watching TV for the rest of my life, ” he said. “I’m hop- ing to get back to some of those things that we enjoy very much; more family and personal thi and recreation thi~ sas well.” 2649 Fourth Avenue Castiogar, 8.0. vin 281 385-3663 Vancouver, B.C. vats wonrsbian ber” of 35 years — when he would have been eligible for the best pen-