dian EG 1% ano 629 SPRAGUE AVENUE SPOKANE, WASHINGTON 99202 (509) 535-1626 NEWT.V. ene Cen ees 8 healed vevert Welkt “ho bhes 2 ve ADULT MOVIES ON CLOSED'CHANNEL For value-minded families . . .” The Sale you've been waiting for! ortlaree- The World’s Best Selling Dinnerware Sale Ends June 30 Blue Hill Sale of Contemporary China ALSO ON OPEN STOCK r-y suggested 40% of fix Examples: [ PATTERNS ‘Suge. SALE TAHOE 5S pe. Set $ 50.00 | $ 30.00 CAROLYN 20 pc. Set 199.00 119.40 BLUEHILL | 45 pe. Set 409.95 293.97 92. pc. Set 969.95 581.97 AND The Sale of Distinction 30% off.ar" Examples: PATTERNS DORAL MAROON, VIRTUE NIGHTSONG CARL'S DRUGS Castleaird Plaza | NEW SPORT LOTTO . . . Sharon DeJong, on tory clerk at Macleods, holds ap a tuhelte? Sport bv pray three feet high. ay way to get around it is for the front guy to Select Basabell, C Canado's first national sports ; The ti t on sale May 1 in Castlegar jel —CashewsPhoto by Chery! Calderbank Sports lotto explained OTTAWA (CP) — So you gambled $2 on a SportSelect ticket to have a chance at the jackpot and help the federal government earn $200 million for the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary. Now that you have the ticket, who's going to tell you if you won anything? When, how much and, most impor- tant, how do you collect? With the completion of the first game last Sunday, offices of the Canadian Sports Pool Corp. have been deluged with calls from ticket-holders who can't figure out whether they have won. So far, no winners of major prizes have come out of the woodwork. The winning formula is spelled out on your ticket. But you have to read it as slowly and carefully as you read that little booklet they sent out with the income tax form. It helps a lot if you're a baseball fan — and im the right season a hockey and football fan as well — because winning depends on results of the games printed on the front of your ticket. There are 13 games with the dates in the left-hand column beside each and a box covered with silvery rub-off material on the right for nine of the games. The last four games have the silver material removed with a 1, 2 or 3 printed in the right-hand box. Similar numbers — 1; 3 ar Sz forges De Nee Phe 5 Pt: cegred material is removed. ‘At the bottom 4f the ticket is a section that a No. I means the home:tearh.ds "shown, above won that game by more than one run while a No. 2 sheans the visiting team won by more that One Fun. A.Nip, Giana alter toon os by einetthned rat the game was p because of the weather or another ctocapde atone minimum jackpot is $250,000 but, depending on the number of tickéts sold at the 25,000 outlets across the country, it could be. any-amount above that. With. no apparent winner of the first-draw jackpot last week, for instance, the next jackpot Deceit, a minimum of $500,000, Saneller priste‘will bigivent each week Sur-lirebigs correct results for the next'12 listed games, the next 11, the next 10, and'so on, down to the final four. No:ptines'.. are given beyond the last four listed games, But there's a bonus draw as well. Check the last four numbers that were'uncovered all the time and the silver-covered box right beside them. If the final game results match those four numbers on your ticket, you win whatever amount is shown in the box. yWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW WWW WWW WWW yWW¥ By CasNews Staff Break out those garden tools, its time once again for the Castlegar Chamber of Commerce's annual yard beautifi- cation contest. Now in its third year, the contest this season features first prize of a roto-tiller worth more than $200. The iter: ls donated by West's Dept. Store. Second prize wil be a $85 gift certificate from Chang’s Nursery and third prize will be a $26 plaque from Trowelex. WWW WWW AV WWW WY WA AV = STEP INTO edidi UMMER..STYL ‘Great Selections Just in Time for Graduation or Summer Weddings. It's yard contest time Everyone living within the Castlegar city boundary may enter — or you can enter a neighbor who may have a particularly impressive yard. Deadline for entries is 3 p.m. July 19 and judging will take placé during the annual SunFest 84 activities July 20-22. Entry forms may be picked up at tlre chamber office on Columbia Ave., or watch for coupons in the chamber's upeoming advertisements in the Castlegar News. Just clip the coupon and sent it in. only fie down, and everybody goes on both sides-of-him,*-he 4 ddiso recalls “things like ho yag crosses” de- tanks from going abi Peas Dele ‘and Rourke were wounded — but pot later that year. ars gary got we a his right leg during a German air attack near Falaise, in a field that was “bald-headed just like Saskatchewan.” “I thought, you're lucky boy, it didn't hit you some- here else.” " He was also wounded at the Leopold Canal in Belgium, where five pieces of shrapnel lodged in his leg. ‘Six months later otfe of those pieces that had beén overlooked by doctors began to work itself out of his leg. “They left a piece — I felt a piece aeichiiay into my serge pants, and I went into the washroom . :,.I saw a out.” Strangely enough, Culley was also wounded near the. ‘Leopold Canal, when he stepped on a mine that blew off his foot. “Tt was “a little anti-personnel mine — the size of a matchbox — designed to blow the meat off your foot,” he said. In 1969 Culley returned to the beaches of Normandy —along with other Canadian D-Day veterans — for a 26-year reunion to commemorate the historic invasion. He said looking at the embankment which he and his fellow soldiers had to ‘ox wade him “wonder how the hell everyone mp Culley said pel ply Be Sirmass at the top “had a clear view of everyone.” Rourke also had an experience two years ago that brought back mentories of D-Day, but it was a happier ‘one. He said the first time he was wounded, “one of ény a was taken prisoner by the Germans at the same Te ater Bisarie fnerd he fend was living in Terrtom, so on his way to visit tis daughter in Prince Rupert, he looked up his old ‘war comrade. “We had a great old reunion in Terrace,” said Rourke. “The last,time I saw him was July 28, 1944:” Rourke said hia friend was “treated pretty good” aba prisoner of war, becaue by that time the Germans D:Day is nearly 40 years old — a couple of remember the event. Normal UTES lake rise FOR YO expected Bii@ag ednes this week metres (1,426 feet) and 437.4 ametres (1,435 feet)Yby the LUNCHEON end of June. During the summer MEAT the water level is expected to be between ele- vations 487.7 metres (1,436 | 12 ral ee feet) and 440.7 metres (1,446 feet). - FRUIT OR ORANGE weather patterns and un- "AFTERNOON OR PARTY re, Toc! vom... 2 % OF. morn ing guilty to ina public establishment after guilty to supplying liquor to a minor. Jove De Oliveira Sos given. require- ments at upstream projects. a to a breathalyser test.’ All Jewellery . . Gold Chains, Bracelets & Earrings Handbags up to 4 Price Leather and Summer Styles % Price on Coats & Jackets Summer Fabrics up to 50% off sentence for fling to oubaa - 25% off MMMMMMMMMAMMMAMI! TERRY TALBOT International Contemporary Gospel Recording Artist 730 p.m. Castlegar Arena Complex Admission: By free will offering: zt Lissesha = June 7 in 0 VANCOUVER (G space in the equivalent of five raed towers — metres — of new offies t constructed last year and more than the structed in any one year in the city’s history, But Ted Droettboom, a senior city planner, says the developers might be building on false hopes that Expo will save the city’s eeononiy, LIGHTS WILL COST OTTAWA (CP) — New car prices will increase if the federal government makes daytime lights maindatory on all cars produced after September 1986, auto manu- facturers say. Consumers will pay $100 more for a new car equipped with a device that automatically turns‘on head and tail lights when the vehicle is started, David Caplan, said, a spokesman for Ford Motor Co, of Canada. CRACKDOWN ON HATE TORONTO (CP) — Federal Justice Minister Mark MacGuigan has d proposed to the Crimina) Code that he says will make it easier to convict purveyors of hate literature. MacGuigan said the amendments would delete the word “wilfully” from current legislation on the promotion of hatred (relieving the Crown of the responsibility to prove intent); shift the onus of proof to the accused to defend his actions; and eliminate the requirement that a provincial attorney general consent before a Prosecution for hate can be | BOYCOTT CHARITIES? MONTRELA (CP) — The Canadian Labor Congress is threatening to boycott charities which aceept govern- ment contracts to provide social services previously performed by public servants laid off for austerity reasons. A resolution inspired by the experience of provincial employées in British Columbia was adopted at the CLC this week, although its backers ack it will be hard to sel] the public on a boycott. People might initially view it as hard-hearted, but will eventually “see that our effort is on behalf of the community and services rather than an attack on them,” says John Shields of the B.C. Government Employees’ Union. SLOW ARMS RACE OTTAWA (CP) — Western nations could slow the arms race and reduce weapons spending without risk to their security by relying more on nuclear-armed submarines, says Admiral Robert Falls, a former high-ranking NATO officer. Submarines can guarantee a second strike in case of nuclear attack because their ocean path is difficult to detect and impossible to predict, the former chief of defence staff of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization said in an interview. UIC PAYMENTS DROP OTTAWA (CP) — Unemployment insurance pay- ments in March totalled $950 million, a three-per-cent drop from payments made i in February, Statistics Canada said. The March total was a 17-per-cent decline from the $1.15 billion paid out in March 1983. Benefits for the first quarter of this year amounted to $2.96 billion, down seven per cent from $3.20 billion paid in the first quarter of 1983. The average weekly payment rose to $162 in March, up four per cent from a year earli QUADRUPLETS BORN NEW YORK (AP) — A woman who refused offers to sell her unborn children gave birth to quadruplets in 10 minutes, her husband said. “They are four healthy girls. Each one looks diff- erent,” said Joseph Rosenberg, 28, an optician in Rockland County, said. “The doctor really did his job.” Twenty physicians assisted as Sari Rosenberg gave birth to the quads eight weeks prematurely between 11:37 p.m. and 11:47 p.m. Thursday at Presbyterian Hospital, said her obstetrician, Dr. Raphael Jewelewicz. CONVICTS CAPTURED WARRENTON, N.C. (AP) — Authorities have recaptured two death row convicts at a coin laundry, but four other convicted murderers who also escaped from death row at Virginia's maximum-security prison remained at large Saturday. Friday night, shots were fired at two officers in Portsmouth, Va., more than 160 kilometres away, and police believed the gunman may have been one of the escapees, said police spokesman Sylvia Kaiser. CROSSINGS TO OPEN BEIRUT (AP) — Lebanon's coalition government said Saturday it will reopen two crossings between Beirut’s Moslem and Christian sectors on Monday despite persistent hostilities between rival militias. Lebanese police and French truce observers will take over positions at the two gateways in advance of their opening in order to separate the militias, Information Minister Josef Skaff said after a meeting of President Amin Gemayel and Prime Minister Rashid Katami. ARMY TAKES OVER “NEW DELHI (REUTER) — The army took control of secrity in the troubled north Indian state of Punjab on Saturday, and the state was declared off-limits to foreigners starting today. A spokesman for the Interior Ministry said from now on, security forces in the state will work under orders of the army rather than the police. FRANKFURT (AP) — The German- government said Saturday it fears Moscow might inter- pret the Dutch delay in deploying new nuclear missiles as a sign of faltering resolve in NATO, and initial reaction indicated other western allies also may be worried. The Dutch cabinet agreed to accept an undecided CWURCH LEADER . - Or. Clarke MacDonald, moderator of the United Church of Canada, spoke to Castlegar. pores. 1984 about 100 church members and visitors this week in 4 % CasNewsPhoto by Ron Norman CHURCH AND POLITICS continued from front page decide whether an individual is or. dained — not up to the individual. And MacDonald said whatever de cision is made, “we have to uphold fidelty within the marriage bond.” He said that means a single man must have the same kind of fidelity as a married man and to him that means celibacy. “The chureh is concerned about the subject,” MacDonald assured the crowd, adding that he has received more than 1,000 letters on the issue, since the report of ordination of self declared h wa World Council of Churches are being funelled to Marxist causes in Africa. “We met people (in Tanzania) . . . who are not buying bullets. They're buying bread” with the funds, Mac. Donald said. He said the major problem of the church in Zambia is how to accom. modate the large number of people who flock to worship. The United Church of Zambia has a church that seats 1,600 people, he said. He added that on his visit, the ser- vice had to be held outside because the church couldn't hold all the members: He i d that some In his major address, MacDonald focused on his February trip to five African countries and East Germany. He spoke of his experiences among church members in communist East Germany where he asked himself: “Would I have the stamina and would I have the vigor of faith that they do?” MacDonald had strong words for the CBS newsmagazine program 60 Min. utes and Reader's Digest, both of which had reports that funds from the denominations have established them. selves in Africa, but instead of setting up in areas where there are no Christian services, they have located in centres where they compete with other churches, disrupting those churches. MacDonald pointed out it is not United Church policy to establish its own missions, but instead the United Church works “side by side with churches that are already there. . . They have enough churches there without another denomination.” MacDonald also ‘spoke passionately of his 12-day trip to South Africa and Namibia. He said he was driven through the streets of Johnannesburg and saw the immaculate boulevards and homes of the white population, then by contrast saw Soweta on the outskirts of the city where one million blacks live. He said the Soweto homes are cor rugated steel shacks with no trees and only a standpipe for water. Each shack houses about five families and 30 people. They take turns sleeping, he said. As well, he visited the “bantuland” — 13 per cent of the land in South Africa which has been set aside for 80 per cent of the black population. He said he was shown “acres and acres” of graves on the bantuland — all graves of children under five years, victims of the bantuland’s high child mortality rate. “South Africa is like a beautiful body with a virus in its bloodstream and that virus is apartheid,” MacDonald said. NEC not ‘crying wolf’ By CasNews Staff It's almost a tradition for Canadian museums to lament about lack of fund- ing, but this time the director of Castlegar’s National Exhibition Centre says she isn’t crying wolf. When the National Museum Cor- poration of Canada (NMC) reviews its policy on the 20 National Exhibition Centres in Canada this fall, they will “probably” cut all 20, or at least the ones that are receiving little com- munity support, says Lucille Doucette. “The threat of the federal gov- ernment cutting funds is very real. It's not a ploy to get money,” she says. “At this point, any cut in funding is going to cripple us.” The main reason Doucette says the federal government will cut back on museum funding is because $25 million has been “overbudgeted” for two new national museums in Ottawa. The cost of these two major mu- seums, combined with the added cost of number of medium-range cruise missiles in 1988. It will take 48 missiles if the Soviet Union has not resumed arms control talks with the United States or has increased the number of 88-20 nuclear missiles pointed at Europe. SAKHAROV UPDATE HELSINKI (AP) — Andrei Sakharov's stepdaughter said Saturday she has no new information about the Soviet dissident, who reportedly began a hunger strike May 2; but she believes he is being foree-fed in a hospital. “I have not had any information about my stepfather since he started his hunger strike,” Tatyana Yankelevich said at a news conference. Her comments followed reports from Florence, Italy; where a woman said Saturday she received a telephone all on Friday that she was “almost certain” was it was from Sakharov's wife, Yelena Bonner. ing will be carried by the NMC, she said. And if anything is axed, it will be National Exhibition Centres — which are low on the museum totem pole, “They're going to have to find the money from somewhere, and if they're going to cut somebody, it'll be us,” ex- plained Doucette. Even #f only some of the National Exhibition Centres are cut, the Castle- gar NEC will likely be among those betause “our community sup- port is nowhere where it should be,” “a “at least” 500 memberships, said Dou-’ cette. Donations amounted to $146 for 1983-84. Financial support from the city is also lacking, she said. The city gave the NEC $2,700 for the 1983-84 year, National Exhibition Centres’ i Fért Langley and Hazelton got more muni- cipal funding considering the size of those communities, said Doucette. The National Exhibition Centre in Kelowna got $300,000 in municipal funding. “Granted Kelown’s bigger .. . but that’s ridiculous,” said Doucette. Funding from the City of Castlegar is “simply not enough. But I sympathize with the city, they have a lot of headaches.” She also said because funding from the province is largely dependent on how much support and interest a com- munity shows in its National Exhi- bition Centre, provincial money given to the Castlegar NEC is low in com- parison to others — $7,500 for 1983-1984. Directors of National Exhibition Centres from all over Canada will meet‘ in Ottawa with the federal government this September, and they'll insist that they can't afford budget cuts, said Doucette. In the meantime, she says the Castlegar NEC will try and raise com- munity support, so “it will seem the citizens of Castlegar are waking up.” This will include a drive for 15 cor- porate memberships in the NEC at the NEC. A ctiy of this oy tooald have. $100 each. ‘ hiss also just applied for a feasibility study on the NEC to be car- ried out by & museum consultant. It will look at community support, the NEC building, the programs and exhibits provided by the NEC, and the community of Castlegar itself. Last year the Castlegar NEC had an operating budget of $75,000. The bulk +8f Vhis went towards maintaining the ing, and the rest_to bringing in exhibits, paying the director's salary (the sole full-time employee), and paying for other day-to-day expenses like office supplies, said Doucette. Federal funding — which is the same for all National Centres — ARABS APPLAUD > UN RESOLUTION From AP-Heuters Arab countries in the Persian Gulf region Saturday applauded a United Nations Security Council resolution demanding that Iran halt attacks on shipping. Iran said the demand was invalid because it failed to condemn Iraqi strikes. Iran, in government statement broadcast by Tehran * yadio, said Iraq has admitted to attacks on 40 ships in the last three months and asked: “How could the Security Council remain indiffereryt to these attacks?” The statement, monitored in Bahrain, also said: “See urity of the Persian Gulf is indivisible. Partial security is unacceptable.” The council resolution, passed in a 13-0 vote on Friday, called on Iran to halt air attacks on oil tankers in the gulf and emphasized the necessity of keeping gulf sea lanes secure and free. The resolution made no mention of Iraqi attacks against ships in the area! The six-member Gulf Co-operation Council, made up of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Qatar and Oman, had sought the resolution. APPROVES OUTCOME In Bahrain, Information Minister Tariq al-Moayyed said: “We are quite happy with the outcome of the Seeurity Council debates. “Our intention (the council) was to bring to the attention of the world the potential dangers of the war spill. over on our shipping,” he said in a telephone interview. “Now, world awareness has been created.” In Kuwait, Crown Prince-Prime Minister Sheik Saad Abdullah praised the Security Council member countries “who stood by what is right and rejected aggression.” Kuwait's foreign minister, Sheik Sabah al-Ahmed, said: “We hope that logic and reason will prevail, now that the Security Council has endorsed the gulf draft resolution.” He expressed hopes that the war, which began in September 1980, will be “solved by negotiations instead of force.” Bahrain's foreign minister, Sheik Mohamed bin Mubarak, told the Gulf news agency that the Security Council resolution amounted to a “political development that honestly expressed the will of the international community in a victory for the rights of the (council) countries.” CHALLENGE INTERVENTION In Tehran, the government of President Ali Khamenei reiterated in a statement over the state-run radio that no foreign intervention in the gulf will be tolerated. He said if exports of Iranian oil through gulf tanker routes were prevented “then this would lead to all oil exports from the (whole) gulf being disrupted.” Later in the day, an Iraqi military communique reported helicopter attacks on Iranian bases and said nine Iranian soldiers were killed or wounded. Iran was reported Saturday to be gearing up for a major offensive against Iraq on the southern front of the war, but Baghdad said its forces were on full alert and ready to repel any attack. IRELAND VISIT -Reagan slams Soviet Union GALWAY, IRELAND year-old sectarian violence in (AP) — U.S. President Rea- gan, praising the Irish and denouncing the Soviets, ac- cepted an honorary academic degree Saturday in an out- door ceremony cut short by rain and marked by protests. The president, wearing a red and purple academic robe as he spoke in the quaint courtyard at University Col- lege, criticized Moscow's “strong and aggressive mil- itary machine that prohibits fundamental freedoms.” He also complained about the Soviets’ refusal to engage in nuclear arms talks. “We seek negotiation with the So- , viet Union, but unfortunately right now we face an empty chair,” he said. The Soviets suspended the arms talks in Geneva, Swit- zerland, last year to protest deployment of U.S. medium- range nuclear missiles in Europe. But Reagan, whose ances- tors came from Ireland, had kind words for the Irish. He praised the part Irish immi grants played “in taming the wilderness of the New World and turning America into an economic dynamo beyond was $23,600 for 1983-84. Apart from just over $10,000 in funding the same year from municipal and provineial governments, the rest was raised through workshops, dona- tions, memberships, grants from the Castlegar and District Arts Council, and the United Way, and a federal work grant. The NEC brings between 12 and 20 free exhibits to Castlegar each year, provides arts workshops, films, and offers assistance to local groups who want to offer programs such as the annual Community Art Show. It also provides extension programs (museum kits, lectures) to all 44 area schools at no cost. * Doneette said ideally the NEC needs about $100,000 a year to provide ade~ quate services to the city. She said a tap priority now is to hire an additional stalf member — which would cost ‘about $10,000 annually. “This is not exactly an economically ‘Optimistic area,” she said. “The bottom line is we're doing the best we can with the money ~e h: but we have to do a lot more... CITES VIOLENCE And for the second time since he arrived in Ireland on Friday at the start of a 10-day European tour, the president referred to the 15- Northern Ireland. “We pray that men and women of goodwill in all parts of this land can, through mutual consent and consultation, find a way of bringing peace and harmony to this island that means so much to us,” he said. Reagan has refused to en- dorse any specific solution to the situation in Ireland, which was partitioned in 1921. But the president used his weekly paid radio broad- cast to say he hopes for an end to the “spiral of violence that has cost so many lives.” Before the presidential hel- icopter arrived here from Ashford Castle, a luxury hotel where Reagan is stay- ing, some 3,000 demonstra- tors marched through the narrow streets of this indus- trial city, chanting, “Reagan — Out! Out! Out!,” and “Ron- ald Ray-Gun — No Thanks.” They released dozens of black balloons into the air. They were protesting the United States’ policies on nu- clear arms and Central America. But on the motorcade route to the university, crowds waving American and Irish flags cheered as the presidential limousine passed by. Police estimated 30,000 turned out to see Reagan's entourage. BCMA to disclose names of doctors VANCOUVER (CP) — B.C. College of Physicians and Surgeons has decided to reveal the names of doctors found to be guilty of miscon- duct. Ina ial report to and public names of physi- cians found guilty of mis- conduct, and a summary of their offence or offences. The names of those found not guilty and the names of the members, the college said “a radical step was taken when a motion to publish a sum- mary of the findings of dis- eiplinary hearing was passed.” The report says the college will now disclose to the press will not be dis- closed. The college, governing body of the province's doc- tors, has come under-fire re- cepitly far its secret hearings into complaints against doc- tors. ae