D8 CASTLEGAR NEWS, September 30, 1981 MUSIC RESULT The Royal Conservatory of Music of Toronto has an- nounced the list of successful local candidates in their sum- mer, 1981 examinations. GRADE IX PIANO Pass — Eva Varibioff. GRADE VIII PIANO First class honors — Tam- my Jmaeff, Maria Kuroczik, Louise Lucrezi. Honors — Ian Sutherland. GRADE VII PIANO Honors — Ginny Santos. GRADE VI PIANO Honors — Jackie Gill, Mary Bowman, Gerald Doo- ley, Danine Geronazzo, Kim Thors. Pass — Lee Syrja. GRADE V PIANO First class honors — John Dean. Honors — Athena Chan, Glenda Dooley, Shirley Geiger, Shannon Hill, Sheri Hill, Cheryl North. GRADE IV PIANO First class honors — Den- nine Dudley, Mie-Yiang Li- ang. Honors — Darci De- Jong, Carmi Gattafoni, An- nemaeye Gruden, Shauna Hegan. Pass — Anne-Marie Nichols. GRADE II PIANO First class honors — Ed- ward Poty, Phillip O'Connell. Honors — Daniel O'Connell, Chloe Hegan, Donna Wolff. GRADE II PIANO First class honors — Lau- rene Brown, Lerae Frisby. Honors — Lisa Gerrand, Tracy Josephson, David Jo- sephson, Shelly Rebelato, Kimberley Belton, Sammy Gruden. GRADEI PIANO First class honors — Deb- bie Chan. Honors — David Romaine, Chris Gruden, Bryan Romaine, Patrick Chan. ARTC PIANO TEACHER'S WRITTEN First class honors — Corrie Campbell. GRADE V THEORY Harmony and counter- point, pass — Corrie Camp- GRADE IV THEORY History, first class honors — Corrie Campbell. GRADE III THEORY Harmony, first class hon- ors — Ken Cormier. Honors —Eva Varibioff. History, honores — Ken Cormier. GRADE I RUDIMENTS Honors — Jeanette Chan. THEORY GRADE I RUDIMENTS Pass — Beth Krug. GRADE I RUDIMENTS First class honors — Car- mi Gattafoni. Honors — Cheryl North. * « «@ The Western Board of Music announces the results of the practical and theor- etical examinations which were held in May and June at various centres throughout British Columbia. PIANO GRADE VI First class honors — Mar- jory Purdy and Marjorie Walker (equal). GRADEV First class honors — Jane Fleet and Mark Szekely (equal), Dina Poohachoff. GRADEIV First class honors — Hea- ther Jenkins. Turns in money as an example Like most people, Elias Stergiopoulos could use $1,600, but he says honesty means more to him than wealth. The 49-year-old Greek na- tive, who runs a family res- taurant in Indianapolis, found a roll of bills on the floor of a supermarket as he stood in a checkout line. He turned it over toan assistant manager, who gave it to the police. The money is still un- claimed and if no one comes calling, police say i's likely that Stergiopoulos will re- ceive it. Stergiopoulos says he handed in the money “to show my kids that money is not everything.” He has a 16-year-old sox and two daughters, 14 and 13. “I need that money more than anyone else, but I feel | that maybe the person who | lost it needs it too,” he said. THEORTY GRADE VII Senior Aural Musicianship, honors — Craig Webber. GRADE First class honors — Mar- jorie Walker. GRADE! First class honors — Fleet, Dina Poohachoff. Vandalism - down in _ Sask. parks SASKATOON (CP) — The g, cost of repairing damage caused by vandals in Sas- katchewan provincial parks was done sharply this suni- mer from previous years. The tourism and recreation department says that since April it has spent $7,595 repairing damage at 17 parks and about 175 campgrounds, recreation areas and picnic sites. Repairs cost $25,575 in 1980 and $22,600 in 1979. Spokesman Barry Tether said the department hopes vandalism has been perman- ently curbed by the depart- ment’s public education pro- gram and by increased checks by RCMP and parks officials. Dangerous profession BURNABY (CP) — When Mike Gallimore let pharmacy school five years ago, he never dreamed he was enter- ing a dangerous profession. But these day, as he counts pills and doles out pres- cription cough syrups, he keeps one eye on the cus- tomers — particularly the rough ones with tattoos. The drug store Gallimore works at was hit by burglars three nights this summer. During daylight hours, Gallimore and the other pharmacists are constantly beseiged by drug-hooked cus- tomers, trying to pass forged prescription for narcotic rugs. You learn how to spot someone holding a forged slip, he says. And you learn how to stand up to the intim- idation, the threats and the harassment. Two weeks ago, a phar- macy across the street was robbed during the middle of a busy weekday afternoon. The druggist was slammed in the mouth with the end of a weapon, GETTING FRIGHTENED “I never felt physically threatened by the break and enters,” says Gallimore. “But when they hit him for no reason... I'm 28 now and I wonder how bad it’s going to get in the future. I just don’t want to get hit over the head.” Arnold Sclater, a pharma- cist in nearby New West- minster, said his store has been broken into and robbed three times in the past 2%: years. During one robbery, his daughter was forced to lie on th efloor while the robber held a pistol on her. “It took her a long time to get over that,” Sclater said. Pharmacist Marilyn Fing- arson says she never worried Military architecture crumbling LONDON (CP) — Some of Britain's most distinguished military architecture is crumbling behind army bar- ricades. Visitors are discour- aged from entering the Wool- wich Arsenal complex of 18th- and 19th-century build- ings and all photography is banned. Marcus Binney, chairman of Save Britain's Heritage, says some of the spectacular buildings, with work by Sir John Vanbragh and James Wyatt, have their roofs fall- ing in. Munitions production stopped in the 1960s, and now most of the complex, begun in 1695, is set for demolition or sale. $ about such things 25 years ago. “Today, we feel uneasy, a little schizophrenic.” Norm Thomas, registrar for the B.C. College of Phar- macy, says drugstore rob- beries are particularly pre- valent in large cities in the U.S. and Canada. CARRY LISTS The sophisticated robbers know exactly what they want, walking in with virtual shopping lists, taking only the six to 10 narcotic and analgesic drugs with the highest street value. Others are “kooks” with more immediate nees, says Thomas. They are hooked and looking for anything available. Often desperate, wild-eyed and unpredictable, they strike out without pro- vocation. “The thing that bothers us is the pharmacist is spending so much time and effort on security,” he says. “And that’s not his role. He's there to help the public, but really, he has no alternative.” Thomas said a pharmacist should never try to be a hero. “Give them what they ask for.” “We encourage pharmac- ists to co-operate totally,” says Linda Brown, communi- cations co-ordinator for the college. “There's not much choice when you're looking at a gun.” Policing costs Dramatical VANCOUVER (CP) — The signed by the other provinces share of the cost of RCMP ‘which, like B.C., do not have services paid by British Col- their own provincial police umbia’s provincial and muni- cipal governments will rise dramatically under a 10-year agreement signed Friday. For municipalities with populations of more than 15,000, the share of RCMP costs paid locally will rise gradually to 90 per cent from 81 per cent. For smaller mu- nicipalities, the share will go to 70 per cent from 66 per cent. In unincorporated areas where the province pays what is not covered by Ot- tawa, the provincial share will rise to 70 per cent. Only the last category of Policing area was a. figure provided at the signing by federal Solicitor-General Robert Kaplan and B.C. At- torney-General Allan Will- iams. The province's cost for policing unorganized areas — $35 million in the last fiscal year — will rise 20 per cent to # $42 million this year. It will | hit at least $62 million by 1983-84. Over-all ‘cost of RCMP service in B.C. will rise to $89 million this year from $79 million in the last fiscal year, one provincial of- ficial said. Similar agreements will be CORDUROY Extra tailoring for a slim fit @ Front fully Intertaced! for a crsp look that lasts @ New cropped jacket lengihe = == =a am al Save *41 on our Marjorie Hamilton classic forces — all but Ontario and raise ment, replacing a. five-year deal which expired at the end of last March, allows the province or the municipal- Quebec. ities to opt out on’ two years Kaplan said the new agree- notice. 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