had power ‘of intuition ONT. (CP) — Isaac Newton had it, oH of Tincreased coverage in family, criminal, administrative and were grossing as little as $8 to $15 an hour. These fees “come. other areas of law. nowhere close to covering their basic office administration * If any of Smith's hawkish cabinet colleagues expected costs, let alone permitting them some modest return on the imvestigation to uncover abuse and evidence of efforts expended.” jie 1 profligate spending, they were disappointed. The study Nor are they close to what lawyers collect in other released Sept. 18 which found B.C. legal group found taxpayers are getting a good return for their with similar systems. KITCHENER, and underfunded — a conclusion also reac! dollar. Ina typical criminal case, a B.C. lawyer gets an average . ‘abd it led to the discovery of the laws of motion. federal study. ’ i 4 The Social Credit government has been chopping its of $242 from legal aid. In Alberta the average is $412, in Einstein had it, and the result was the theory In making it clear the taxpayers-will not be p to legal aid in recent years and was hoping the Manitoba $348 and in Ontario $623. of relativity. any more funds for now, Smith said the public.isn't “s judy would find areas where funding could be further For a murder case, including a five-day preliminary Charles Darwin had it, and it led to the theory of 3 bottomless pit and there isn't much money ground.’ ~~" reduced. hearing and 20 days of trial, the fee in British Columbia is He wants public input, he said, because soute of the Instead the study, headed by deputy attorney general $5,920; in Alberta $13,464; in Manitoba, $11,060; and What they all possessed was the power of intuition. investigation’s findings are “quite controversial.” Ted Hughes, suggested additional funding to provide more Ontario, $10, 676. They followed thorugh on hunches and the results The report-states funding for legal aid should be services, to ensure more people are eligible for legal aid, and study also calculated lawyers in the system changed the world. doubled to provide even a basic level of service, and sug- to provide more money for the criminal and family lawyers contribute between $21 million and $25 million worth of legal Described in the Oxford dictionary as “the gests one way is to impose a surcharge on lawyers’ fees. who take the brunt of the legal aid work. services above and beyond the funding provided for this ey immediate-apprehension by the mind without reasoning, Each percentage point from such a tax would yield $2 The group found where comparisons were possible, fees purpose. intuition is possessed by all of us — some more than million to $2.5 million, and the charge would apply even to paid to lawyers in private practice here for legal aid are the The 12-member group, which included lawyers, lay others. in-house legal services available to corporations. lowest in Canada. And it warned these fees must be boosted people and government employees, said this makes for a But where do hunches come from? Do they strike, as LAWYERS UPS) by 70 per cent within the next 18 months to avoid a “major “genuine threat” to the quality of legal aid for those who many believe, like thunderbolts out of the blue? Or is Predictably, this r di has upset lawyers crisis” in the delivery of legal aid. seek and need it. there a process involved which we may not be aware of? @ Who claim it would impose burden on clients of modest In fact, said the report, fees should be boosted by more The provincial contribution to the Legal Services A clinical psychologist at the University of Waterloo = ™2ns- than 100 per cent to pay lawyers about 70 per cent of what Society, which administers the province's legal aid, dropped is determined to find out. But the legal fraternity supports recommendations that they normally would charge a person of modest means. to $13.4 million in 1983-84 when the province was facing an call for improved legal-aid coverage for native people and It found, for example, in family law cases some lawyers overall deficit of $1.2 million, from $15.7 mill ion the previous year when its deficit was $700,000. Contributions from the CHERNENKO SAYS: PUNDe COULD HELP . The report recommended the society's budget be boosted to $33.4 million. To achieve this target, the report > ‘The fund is set up on this basis: If, for example, a lawyer WABHINGTON (AP) — Chernenko's first on U.S. called Moscow's persistent beginning of the talks on receives $200,000 in trust as part of 8 Teel entate Samect Sovat President Konstantin Soviet relations-sinee-Pres- efforts to safeguard peace as testing and deployment of the money may accumulate interest until It le termerd over B.C. Law Foundation also fell to $2 million from $2.7 million. ri e : ee" that impr in the of the ri Y ) Ss a Ss 1 rs Ss e lawyers’ trust funds would provide the law foundation with - three times the money it currently receives from the fund. a third party. The interest that money acumulated is put I iil 1 il | i i i f fi allt { | i fi H al ft inl ie Hi i i] te | H fi; | al | ! | i H t ] | : : j ki i il 8 Ht if 1 i I I Hite | | | i | fil i ill $3 Hilf Hil j 2 ‘Once you've got that hunch, everything starts falling into place’ $i] i iy i i } wooses Wn ZL S3SNION GNW JONVENSNI NVWOINY — 36>) JONVUNSNI 30H siepsoupem — 68D w soyeys, f ! \ Hit} q | | i hl Backed by a $190,000 (U.S.) grant from the Spencer Foundation of Chicago — a private fund that supports ; psytholgoica! research — Kenneth Bowers has begun a ARNGIG 1 Wm @ 008) three-year study which, he hopes, will help establish scientifically the nature of intuition RESEARCHES HYPNOSIS J i | i a +t] f fi! ti Ht See H j t ——, iF 60006: ue in researcher in hypnosis, and this phase of his research will continue efforts begun with graduate student Claude Balt! i tions with Moscow can im- prove if the United States will show real interest in with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko in Washing- ton. “ Intuition is not a new topic to Bowers, who is also a= Chernenko says U.S. rela- ident Reagan met Sept.}28 “the main question for us.” space weapons.” The Soviet leader outlined what he said were four areas where “positive” U.S. steps i i ini by lawyers. A t to free: into a province wide trust fund, administered by ry Cee reine of the A large portion of this fund goes annually to the law United States and the Soviet foundation. | | { Bowers says intuition, while still a mystery, is reaching agreement on at Chernenko said that meet- could lead the two countries Union. The committee also suggested that the notaries extremely valuable — offering a headstart to the = least one major arms-control ing had “unfortunately” pro- out of the current impasse: e Ratification by the individual who possesses it. Without a hunch, someone = issue, the Washington Post © duced no specific shift in U.S. _ ¢ Opening of talks “with a United States of the “Soviet. seeking a solution to a problem may search aimlessly, = reports. policies so far. view to working out and American treaties on under. feeling almost lost The Soviet leader cited “If what the president has concluding an agreement to ground nuclear explosions” ‘As Bowers puts it, “the problem doesn't seem to = four examples which Moscow said about readiness to neg- prevent the militarization of signed in 1974 and 1976. have a handle. But once you've got that hunch, = would view as a basis for im- otiate is not merely a tactical outer space, including com o Washi 's pti everything starts falling into place.” proved relations during a move,! wish tostate thatthe plete renunciation of anti. of an obligation not to be the Bowers is convinced intuition is more tangible, 20-minute interview in his Soviet Union will not be satellite systems, witha mu first to use nuclear weapons, quantifiable and qualifiable than the mystical event many Kremlin office on Tuesday, found wanting,” Chernenko tual moratorium to be es an obligation that the Soviets believe it to be. and said: said, ibi what he tablished from the date of the have assumed unilaterally. “My intent,” he said, to have a better under. “Reaching agreement on ” . ‘standing of the mental processes leading up to a hunch to them — or at least on some of that these things aren't just written off as gifts from the them — would mean a real ” shift both in Soviet-U.S. re- Bowers contends that a hunch is actually the sudden lations and in the interna ie ATT i siay i } phil | H i hi it { ii benefits only the banks. The report recommended as well that lawyers be permitted to deduct from their income tax the difference between the fee that they receive and the fee they would charge a client in private practice or the full private fee if they are donating their services for the public good. H i § 3 Mh i! i | | t Hie fT r } i il } F i § woos 08 Ai ! i i iF { i | | | | i ul ll i f HI | il! Hl H e: j hi hi i i i i : a5 ry jg2t4 83 H WHE AL ¥Z CE ‘Aopsoupem 04 YBrosys BL 20 ‘ADPEINYL Thursday, Oct. 18 through to Wednesday, Oct. 24 Ht ith i | Wwe j Trwredey Fridey Momdey COHOE INSURANCE surfacing of knowledge already stored in the subcon tional situation as a whole.” scious. “What I'm arguing is that intuition involves knowledge,” he said. “That's something you can have without explicitly identifying it. You're in touch with certain thinking patterns before you know they're there. “That denly bursts into i and all the processes leading up to it are so subtle and so invisible that people see it as a visitation.” It's the kind of sudden insight that elicits comments Chernenko singled out his government's proposal to prevent the militarization of outer space,a mutual freeze on nuclear weapons, ratifi cation by the United States of test-ban treaties and a pledge by the United States not to be the first to use nu- clear weapons as areas where Tesedey end Wednesday INSURANCE SERVICE like “Aha” or “Eureka.” Washington could demon Nar on How does one test for intuition? strate its willingness to move MORNING One of the study's tests involves feeding clue words forward. Sconce (moon; vchtes ’ . Counermy waugac : z to research subjects, all-of whom are graduate students. ‘The Post says an uniden conte va ce mmes's 3 " Se tified senior Soviet offi ‘Those who possess intuition may = underscored Chernenko's have a more holistic approach’ stress on making progress in j 3 § i : “some” areas, or even in one of them. Chernenko indicated that such progress could open the way for resumption of suspended talks on lim itation of strategic and med- The words, given one at a time, are linked indirectly to a target word sought by the research team. Words such as moon, holes and mouse, for instance, might be clues to the target word, cheese. Hy i i fl i i i i if a i COHOE INSURANCE INSURANCE SHOP. 1127 4th Street Cathy Lee Crosby A Mon- tana ranch owner scours Loe Angeles for hie rune: way sister who nes Decome a prostitute and pewn of « big-time racket o~ 12:20 @ LATE wang wr LETTERMAN ‘The subjects are tested for their intuitive powers by determining how quickly they arrive at the target word. Other tests depend less on words and more on the understanding of pictures, which are missing significant Bowers believes, and he hopes his research will bear it out, that those who possess intuition may have a more holistic approach to dealing with problems. They are more open to things which come to them and less analyti eal In fact Bowers, whose research into hypnosis spans 20 years, has a hunch that whose who are easily hypnotized may be those who are most intuitive. ium-range nuclear arms. Chernenko was responding to written questions sub- mitted to him by the news. paper and to direct ques. tioning during the interview, his first with a foreign jour- nalist since becoming general secretary of the Soviet Com munity party following the death of Yuri Andropov in February. APPEARS FIT Annual Cook Boo for our 5th “I have a hunch intuitive people are the people the system works against. Some people may be extremely gifted in generating new ideas but unless they are given the unity, they may not be able to use that gift.” 1 : sSrcere sad biz research toam hope to test agope Y=, iva was spiced by subjects this year and about 1,000 more during the & youn ts _informal, light- remaining two years of the project. aa quips. The newspaper says the 73-year-old Soviet leader ap- peared fit during the inter. iH Deadline for Receipt of Recipes is 12 Noon of Wed., Oct. 31 14 fi HY j 5 i i F i | ! i Send in the old family favorite recipe or Desserts, Squares, Cookies, Cakes, Candy also were your newest creation."S@hd us your Fudge, Canning, Freezing, Wine, Wild Lf anchent enemy of the Lorde stirs. Part 3 of 4) | ! i} i gesy i if i | i il tH i rf | | az @ j t recipes for: Main Dishes, Bréads, Biscuits, Game, Microwave, or any other recipe Rolls, Meats, Soups, Stews, Casseroles, ideas or General Cooking Hints. Salads, Vegetables, Pickles, Relishes, Send your typed or neatly written recipes to: Cook Book, Castlegar News Box 3007, Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3H4 | i # e | tf 8 & a | | if if i il THANK YOU | To all the people from Castlegar and District, Rossland, Fruitvale, Trail and Nelson, who helped make our Grand Opening a tremendous - success: , Special thanks to Mayor Audrey Moore;the Old = : or deliver to: Fiddlers, and to the.many communify groups oa g | Boo ‘ businesses, who participated in our-big day — Satur- ey iia nett Canioge day, October 13. DOOR PRIZE WINNERS WERE. DONATED 4 2 Shock Absorbers Monroe Canoda John Russell : nemaanen: Include your nome, oddress ond telephone 2 Bandag Truck Recops Kal Tire H.Q Sam Hadikin . umber 2 Vector Hill Season Rodials Goodyear $200 Travel Voucher Yokonene JA. Auto Battery ite : Sid sender Polisher Acklonds Poul T Quortz Halogen iif | i / iH | | aii fi? { E i ry i r H ty i! wel i i Pl sie ae oy Shi Fy i i iis it | Hi af t i | ® i | i ft [-) United Way “More than ever, we need your support [| Nancy Sherstobitoft J.A. Hendrickson ij it DEADLINE: 12 noon, Wed., Oct. 31 i if it Truckline Parts y Acklands Ss b Feel welcome to submit as many recipes os you wish Snap-On-Tools Remo-Tip-Top |