B8 CASTLEGAR NEWS, September 30, 1981 Air Canada expands on its air service Tourism, Inc., in conjune- tion with Air Canada, will begin a program this year of international ‘sun’ de: tion flights marking a marketing expansion by the airline. The program, called Sun Charters, involved 10 inter- national sun destinations, over 1,500 flights, involves approximately 300 thousand round-trip seats, low fares and full in-flight service. The destinations available ona direct service from Van- couver are Honolulo, Barba- dos and Los Angeles. Start- ing Nov. 8 there will be three 747 flights a week to Hawaii, rising to four a week during the peak period in December. Barbados will be served on a weekly basis, with DC-8 stretch aircraft, commencing Dec. 14. In addition, the cur- rent Los Angeles program will continue, equipment, Fares, depending on dates travelled and advance book- ing requirements, start as low as $339 for Honolulu, $530 for Barbados and $179 for Los Angeles. Elsewhere in the Western Region, destinations include Las Vegas, Phoenix, Tampa, Barbados and Honolulo out of Calgary; Honolulo and Tampa out of Edmonton, and Miami and Tampa out of Winnipeg. Special ‘add-on’ fares have been introduced in conjunc- tion with the Hawaii pro- gram, enabling passengers from Regina, Saskatoon and Winnipeg to connect at Ed- monton, Calgary or Vancou- ver. Inclusive Tour Packages will also be available. “I have no hesitation in saying that in terms of fares, service and schedule, this using B-727 Archeological site at Vallican By BARBARA BULLARD Winlaw An archeological site, lo- cated in that flat tongue of land between the Slocan and Little Slocan Rivers, consti- tutes an extensive ancient village area on the lower terrace and a summer camp above. Three groups of Indians may have used this site; the Lake Salish, the Shuswap and the Kootenays. Cultural depressions in the forest floor indicate 14 or more pit houses. Some with two or three living floors may be seen throughout this open forest setting. The deepest floor may be 3,000 years old, another one, directly above, was used in 1250 A.D., and yet another used in 1600 A.D. Old houses were the best spots for those who came later. Newcomers would clean out an old house site, throwing precious ancient artifacts on the outside. (This was only so much debris.) Still, the very oldest hearth remains are in evidence and can be dated. Storage pits and puberty huts can be seen as little depressions adjacent to the larger house pits. Possibly 35 burial sites may be left along the cut bank of the upper terrace. Some very valuable human remains would have fallen into the river within weeks of their discovery. Special per- mission was sought and ob- tained from surviving mem- bers of the Kootenay people to study these skeletal re- mains. Experts in Victoria will be able to tell the age, sex and diet of these people who lived and died in this area hundreds of years ago. The tools of the archeol- ogist, a meticulous digger, are the dustpan, a carpen- ter's trowel, a whisk broom and a screen for. sifting soil. REALTY WORLD. Castle Realty Ltd. Each one-metre-square hole, it,” is mapped every 10 em. of depth. All artifacts therein are kept in clean baggies for research. The workers this summer have been excited by the many good finds — 500 arti- facts (not counting 1,000 dif- ferent types of beads) will add up to a stunning collec- tion. The unit seems to be finished when a layer of glacial till is reached. These bottom rocks would have been deposited 10,000 years ago when Vallican was buried under miles of dirty blue ice. T can imagine a 14-year-old Shuswap boy wandering over the very place where I now make my garden, a thousand summers before my ances- ters even arrived. He may be on a vision quest, alone in the wilderness. When he returns to his village, he is a man. This experience can take a month, or possibly a year, depending on the boy and the vision. These people may have traded basketry or dressed hides for tool-making rocks: obsidion, basalt and chert, later, for beads and shells. It may take five to 10 more years to fully explore the diverse sets of clues in this choice village site. We can be grateful to the department of highways for putting off bridge construction over the top of this fascinating study area and for funding the cur- rent-research, Of all archeological sites in B.C., this ranks the best for educational tourism, access, diversity of features and rec- reational value. Someday we may be fortunate to have a resource centre on the site, including a museum, an in- terpreting staff, and nature walks throughout. First, however, we must discover this piece of heritage for our- selves, 365-3336 wae Columbia Ave. Castlegar OPEN HOUSE TIME: 11:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 3, 1981 PLACE: 1675 Ridgewood Drive, cesileger (Woodland Park) “Peek-A-Boo View”’ This home presents privacy, beauty and relaxation yet is easily accessible to all activities. Built with comfort and luxury living in mind. Spotless throughout. Very private setting with spectacular river view. This home has a personality all its own. We'll cover it all...for you. product is equal to or better than any other charter pro- gram being offered,” says Jacques Berube, President, Tourism. “It is also our in- tention to ensure that this program remains competi- tive.” The aspect of new inter- national destinations at low fares is a major feature of the ‘Touram and Air Canada as- sociation. The passenger will have extensive travel flexibility including weekend or week- day travel; regular flights; and can decide, depending upon the fare structure, of staying from. seven to 180 days. The new program is for sale immediately and full de- tails are available from travel agents or Air Canada. Touram, Inc., a subsidiary of Air Canada, will charter its aircraft from the airline. In addition, Touram has con- tracted from Air Canada for reservations, ticketing and handling services. The pro- gram will conclude April 30, 1982. Sexual behavior a problem WINNIPEG (CP) — Four behavior as anything from sal Friday that sexual behavior between psychiatrists and their patients is more com- mon that doctors will admit. Dr. Ingrid Pacey told the Canadian Psychiatric Associ- ation there is a scarcity of reliable information on the subject but there is plenty of anecdotal evidence. “It occurs more frequently than we realizo and it's a very serious problem,” said Pacey, who defined sexual $6 million to inter- course. The meeting was told a 1973 survey of 460 doctors in California showed between five and 13 per cent of them engaged in sexual behavior with their patients. Nineteen per cent of those surveyed said the crotic contact was helpful. But Pacey said such be- havior “is always unprofes- sional, unethical, antithera- peutic, sexist and destructive Research project VANCOUVER (CP) — The federal government will con- tribute $6 million for a five-year B.C. research proj- ect to evaluate the il Natural gas is environ- mentally attractive hecause its combustion produces con- to the patient who, as it hup- pens, is virtually always a woman, “Whatever beneficial as- pects may be claimed ... can be gained by other means that are not so exploitative and self-serving for the ther- apist.” WOMAN UNFREE Pacey said when a woman patient is expected to bare her thoughts to her psychi- atrist, a state of intimacy naturally is fostered. But the relationship is an unequal one and the woman is not truly free to give further consent. “Our profession has to make a strong reaffirmation that sexual behavior with patients has no place what- soever in therapy under any circumstances.” She said disciplinary ac- tions against doctors are usually hed by assertive less hy bon of using natural gas as a transportation fuel, Senator Ray Perrault announced. Natural gas.is more plen- tiful in Canada than gasoline. and is an excellent external combusion fuel in that it pro- vides extended engine life, good fuel economy and easy cold-weather starting, Per- rault said. than gasoline or diesel fuel and it tends to be cheaper than oil on an equi- valent energy basis, he said. Perrault said the money will come from energy re- search and development funds announced in the Na- tional Energy Program. The research will be done by the ind d B.C. h patients who do not normally let themselves get into com- promising situations. Dr. ‘Enid Pine said while some patients exhibit seduc- tive behavior, the psychi- atrist should not respond to overtures, any more than one would “join a violent patient in smashing windows or flinging around.” Council. She said the patient in- volved sexually with a ther- apist usually derives no satis- faction. Instead, she feels distressed, confused and helpless, “It is a situation of intense emotional turmoil, more cha- otic and destructive than the average struggle in the out- side world which brought the patient into therapy in the first place." But Pine said some pa- tients continue such relation- ships for a long time. She said most women are unable to tell a therapist that they would rahter choose a man for themselves, “any more than a child or adolescent girl can tell her father she prefers to learn with a boy her own age.” Pine said women are re- luctant to go to authorities because they don't want to stand up to the medical es- tablishment or have to face a humiliating inquiry. She sug- gested, male doctors, particu- larly those in psychiatry, should be trained to deal with their own sexual feelings. Dr. Michael Myers said psychiatrists who engage in sexual behavior with patients usually are between 45 and 60 years of age, or 10 to 25 years older than the patient. He said such psychiatrists are often socially isolated, unhappily married, profes- sionally displaced or lonely. Some have an “unconscious hostility to women — a sad- istic need to exploit, humil- jate and ultimately reject them.” Dr. William Maurice, direc- tor of the sexual medicine unit at Shaughnessy hospital in Vancouver, said attention must be given to patients involved sexually with physi- cians. He suggested a treat- ment team of men and women. Help your carrier Your Castlegar News carrier will be collecting for the paper during the next tew days. The job of your carrier is made easier if he or she doesn't have to make a second or evena third call. Please consider your carrier. He or she is an independent business person and they don't earn their profit until you've paid for your paper. That's why they'll appreciate it if you're ready the first time they call. - Woolco Pric: Walw Canadian-Made Sport Boots Leather uppers. Brown. Men's 7-11, bagless 6-9, Children’s 1-6 even. pr. Men's 54.97, te ies’ & Children’s 49.96 SAVE 18-23% ‘Lynx’ Snow Boots Men's Woolco Sale Price, pair: Your Choice 5A Ladies’ & Child s Woolco Sale Price, palr: Your Choice ‘39 Prices Effective Til Saturday, October 3rd, Or While Sale Quantities Last. Canadian-Made Pull-On Boots Leather/urethane. Brown. Men's 7-11, Ladies’ 6-9, Children’s 1-6 even. Re. Woolco Price Ladies’ & Childre: r. Men's 52.97, 47.96 CHAHKO-MIKA MALL WANETA PLAZA SHOPPING CENTRE 1000 LAKESIDE DR., NELSON HWY. 3 TRAIL Take aValue home today. tt ad = DEPARTMENT STORES VISION OF # Ww Woolco Store Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.. Woolco Store Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday: 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Thursday and Friday: 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. HANEY Nal The fate Fate of Anastasia Mystery to many historians Black Sea, reaching Con- of are 7 fies ‘nicholas Il of Russia, remains a mystery to many historians, but not John George Bruce of this Fraser Valley community. Russian authorities, say Anastasia and her family were shot by in four days. JOINED RUSSIAN SHIP Shortly afterward, Bruce and some other seamen were transferred toa Russian ship, the Volga. The day after Christmas, 1918, a small boat from the A horad on the night of July 16, 1918, and their bodies dumped in a well in a small Siberian town of Ekaterinburg where they had been imprisoned. But Bruce, now 93, says Anastasia was spared and that he was involved in a secret mission in the fall of 1918 to ferry her and another woman to safety in Con- stantinople. Bruce was a British navy driver serving in the Dar- danelles, the narrow strait cutting through Turkey from the Aegean Sea to the Sea of Marmara, when the First World War ended. His ship, the Agamemnon, was the first British vessel to iravel through the Dardan- kilometres away, pulled up alongside the Volga and handed the crew an English- language newspaper head- lined, “The Dowager Em- press Escapes the Bolshe- viks.” There was no mention of a young girl. Bruce said the Volga crew assumed they had been told of the escape because they participated in it and that the young girl was Anastasia. Severaf years ago a former 60 British navy man, William Stevens, made, headlines with his claim’ that ‘the British navy rescued Anas- tasia on an autumn Sunday in 1918, Stevens told his story to MP Sydney Irving and Propellers to make comeback WASHINGTON (AP) — Instead of using fire-spouting jet engines, the next gen- eration of airlines may be hauled through the skies by propellers. The prospect of passengers ceanie oe jets stepping back elles into the Sea of and the Black Sea, since the Crimean War in the 1860s. LED SECRET MISSION Shortly after the ship docked at the Russian port of Sevastopol, Bruce says he was chosen to lead a dan- gerous secret mission. Ahand-picked crew of four rowed a small whaler to a point about four kilometres northwest of Sevastopol. It was dark and 25-metre cliffs towered over the beach. The crew noticed four Russian destroyers high and dry on the beach. A light was flashed toeaca the whaler twice and the crew rowed toward land. Bruce went ashore and was met by about 20 men in dark clothing. One man grabbed his arm and took him to a smaller party which included an older woman and a young girl. No one spoke. - Bruce carried the women through the shallow water to ~-the whaler “and ‘took~ them*~ back to the Agamemnon, ono of the first big-gun cruisers.. The next day the entire into pi heaee is being considered feriously by aircraft design- ers and airlines, designed | turbofan jet. The big difference between the noisy, vibration-filled tur; boprop aircraft of the 19508 and the new planes is ad- vanced propeller design that allows high speed with much less discomfort, he said. Several major aircraft and engine companies and the National Aeronautics and said Tuesday. William Arndt of the Lock- heed-Georgia Co., said the new prop planes would be very different from those of the past, faster and much more pleasant to fly in. “Propellers appear about ready to make a big come- back,” he told a Lockheed Corp., technical symposium. “The new planes would have cruise speeds and com- fort equal to present jets and a big advantage in fuel ef- ficiency.” Arndt said passengers ap- parently wouldn't mind a change to props, based upon: favorable responses in a United Airlines survey. “The passengers didn't care what kind of propulsion is used if it ‘them there and saves fuel,” he said in an interview. eller aircraft, which could be operational by 1990, should get’ 20-per-cent better fuel British fleet d the than a Vowed he'd make it in society HULL, QUE. (CP) — When ex-convict Gaston (Nick) Nicholas left the Joyceville Institution near Kingston, Ont., in 1968 with $234 to show for 10 years of his life, he vowed he would make it in society and would help those he left behind in prison. Nicholas’s period of incar- ceration was accented by a . prison riot, tales of brutal beatings by guards and a final desperate plan to kidnap a prison official or commit suicide. Sentenced to six years in Montreal's St. Vincent de after a Rev. Ronald McCullough, prison chaplain during Nich- olas’ time in Kingston, said he was not surprised to learn of the convict’s decision — to help others once he obtained his freedom. “I think he was terribly’ hurt by incarceration — he came out with a chip on his shoulder. I knew. he would either use that determination to make trouble or turn it into something positive. I'm delighted at what he decided to do.” ” Nicholas's first attempt at a small furniture upholster- ing business evolved into a Paul jury found him guilty of criminal negligence in the drowning death of his wife, Nicholas steadfastly main- tained his innocence. In 1962, only months away from parole, he found himself in the middle of a riot that killed one prisoner and wounded 30 others: Accused of being a ring- leader, he received an addi- tional 14 years, which was later reduced to six, and a transfer to Kingston Peniten- tiary, then the Joyceville institution. He still rages when he re- flects on the shadow decade of his life. But he has trans- formed the anger into a re- lentless dedication to helping other ex-convicts. REHABILITATES CONS * Since his release, Nicholas has turned his energies to creating five social agencies for conviet rehabilitation and has helped arrange the early release of ds of pris- employ- ing 26 ex-cons and parolees on landscaping and mainten- ance contracts. His most recent project, to show young people the dan- gers of drug abuse and de- linquency, started nine months ago. REFERRED TO PROGRAM Teen-agers are referred to the program by judges, social workers — even parents. They spend their first meet- ing with Nicholas in a ther- apy room with a mock jail cell in the corner. “I show them a_ fairly brutal movie. we have about prison life. I'll sit in there and give them a real tough, talk — prison talk they've probably never heard before.” Quebec Provincial Judge Avila Labelle, although, cau- tious about characterizing Nicholas as “the missionary he thinks he is,” agrees that the ex-con has helped others oners. “The ex-con doesn’t need just an opportunity,” Nich- olas says. “I understand and I try to‘give a man emotional support.” He alls himself a “social reinsertion counsellor” and wryly notes that his creden- tials are impeccable. But the success of Nich- olas's projects have been hurt by inadequate financing. They ‘operated on a grant from the Quebec ministry of social affairs until 1977, but now are the responsibility of the justice department which only partially defrays costs. Space -A working on the advanced propeller, called a “propfah.” The propfan would be run by a jet engine, but instead of its rear exhaust moving the airplane, the power would be used to turn the propeller.” ) government. . asked the British 1 ‘¢ produce the Agamemnon's 1g book. etme admiralty refused, The 1976 two British jour- nalists searched Russian and German documents pertain- ing to the royal family and interviewed many surviving members of the family and at Teast one of the many Anas- tasia claimants. CHECKED EVIDENCE They. ssked forensic ex- perts to re-examine Phys of the ge. of g officials. ESCAPED KILLING The Filé on the Czar concludes that some of, the family, most’ probably Em- press Alexandra and her four daughters, escaped the ex- ecutions and were taken to the village of Pern where eyewitnesses claim to have seen them. A doctor living in Peru said he treated a young woman who had been badly beaten in published by the Russian They re- searched much of the testi- mony given by eyewitnesses Maer was left out of official aoe book, The File on the Czar, concludes that at least some of the royal family could have escaped. The book says the Czar was in a complicated political situation. Both he and his wife Alexandra were cousins of King George V. Alexandra was a member of the royal house of Germany as well, but because of the pressures of war, neither country dared offer them asylum. Some believe that King George waited for the ar- ieee then sent the Brit- 1918. The woman said she had been beaten by soldiers after-a failed escape and told the doctor, “I am the daughter of the ruler, Anas- tasia.” Another story claims the entire family was spirited from Ekaterinburg by an American-Japanese force and taken to Odessa in the south Ukraine where a British naval vessel picked them up. The most solid Anastasia claimant is a woman named , Anna Anderson, dragged from a. Berlin in 1920 after a failed suicide attempt. She speaks Russian, has the same odd-shaped foot Anastasia had and has ‘con- founded acquaintances of the family by recalling small who was alin fleet to Sevastopol to rescue the czar's mother, Empress Dow- ager Marie, without the However, Anderson has refused to reveal any details of her escape. CASTLEGAR NEWS, September 30, 1981 Cl Complaints of sexual harassment increase VANCOUVER (CP) — For 17-year-old Jane Spencer, the problems with her part-time job at a local cafe started when’ the manager began making sexual jokes, And the one night she was closing down the cafe when the manager followed her into a back room where she went to change from her work clothes. “He started putting his hands on me and trying to neck with me. Finally I pushed him out of the room and got out of there,” said Spencer. After the incident, the manager began giving the high school student fewer hours and continued to both- er her with advances and sexual comments. “I was really scared and I was really uneasy. I never knew what was expected, what he would do,” said Spencer (not her real name). “I was afraid to work alone with him. I had my mother pick ‘me up when T work lata.” She told her parents about the problem and quit the job after working there for two. months. Her parents filed ‘a complaint of sexual harass- ment with the B.C. human rights branch, THEIR turned up two other women The ladies loved ne Neville George Clevely Heath was a tall handsome former officer ‘and gentleman. He was also a charming form: sadist and murderer. P: indexing wi weird ‘individua its, who have a habit of had to admit that Heath was 32 io. year-pertod of Heath’s life commencing in 1936 and ending in 1! “Arndt safd-the new prop” ~ the South African Air Force under a fictitious He returned to South Acicay where he married, & 801 prom} deserted his young i '. ooo This, then, was the crim- inal record of Neville Heath. career was spotted with jews reaking, there is no hint of any acts of violence. e on June 1S, 1946 was the day handsome charming, errr Neville rho who Ninseit Lieutenant Ga onel, met Yvonne Sym glamorous lance in" Chel sea. Yvonne was thrilled when after the dance Neville asked her accompany, him to the ‘anama Next day Neviile and Yvonne spent the satire together. Yvonne To her way of thinking, fortune had b roposed vonne gladly accepted. When Neville suggested they prema- turely consummate the Yvonne consent ue checked into the ei Cours) 1 in press. She also had escaped the clute vicious sadists ever to 946 contains a winding strain of lies, Heath joined to be tossed out of the ‘Later Yvonne wae to reveal behind the chisel door consid Heath stayed on at the Srcrhe e Col mough pecepted. Heath's. his hotel fol lowing Thursday he accom} acareer By2 Pee the following day the hotel staf had decided Room 4 to enter dain on the ed 's body w: ae eas Boreibly mutilated. les bound together and her arms. were folded behind he her. Later an autopsy indicated that Mar- the night with him at ery had been lashed with a wi idividual Eralaed la en ned tt Sr er baa ,Her chest area had‘been cru ually al cruelly bitten. The abused her with a foreign object, but this ‘instra- ment was never found 01 joned within & He further 8 Geseribed had: made, hifi When Y' juired wi woman, ‘ieath replied, multe truthfully,’ “A sexu aniac.”” Tha ith Yvonne notoriety in the newspapers, the ty rep ereir ' what concerned ‘about ass Yvonne that he clear up any y tmisunders tif coming with. a. prime etn the hotel as Lt. handsom: sea uld do such a thing to would re tanding whieh ah might exist. heard this r fs who had quit their jobs at the cafe for the same reasons. And another female employ- ee told Spencer the manager had once threatened to fire her if she didn't sleep with him. Spencer's complaint was settled after a year of inves- tigation. The manager sent her a letter of apology and a cheque for $350. He kept his job. } Spencer says the money doesn’t make up for the cost of such an experience. She feels, however, she'll know how to handle the problem if it arises again. In 1980, the B.C. human rights branch dealt with 87 complaints of sexual harass- ment, double the number from the previous year. About 80 per cent of those complaints were sustantiated and settled, a higher per- centage than for other types of complaints under the Hu- man Rights Code: Most of the complaints handled by the branch dealt were fired or threatened with firing becausé they turned: down the sexual ad- vances ‘of the boss. NOT. UNDER BAN. * Although B.C.'s ‘code doesn’t ban sexual ment, complaints are dealt with under section 8 of the code, which prohibits em- ployment dlecrimination, However, since no sexual harassment complaints have gone to boards of inquiry, section 8 has never been tested. About 90 per cent of 203 responses in a province-wide survey by the. B.C. Federa- tion’ of Labor reported inei- dences of sexual harassment on the job, mostly in offices. Offensive staring, rude re- marks and unnecessary touching were the three most Brooke. On ‘at his hotel to ater dimer, aa otal win judge him ra an Ae a They fo sched the a's st cub, ke: cloak roo! : which "onabled them to claim che case. The man, be sane. It ma ted only 59 minutes before ty verdict: 546 Neville Heath was asked if be had i befor ast inst requests re being led led to the scaffold at Pen! a double shot of whisky.