y RM a2__ Castlegar News November27, 1983 SPECIALS FOR YOU Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday this week SIRLOINTIP A. $6.18 kg. -...Ib. CATELU DINNERS . Bere 91°] 225 Gr. SFOR APPLE , WICE ttre. 99° ~- fl Flynt flaunts LOS ANGELES (AP) — Publisher Larry Flynt, who wore an American flag ‘as a diaper at a hearing in the John De Lorean drug trafficking case, has been indicted for allegedly de- secrating the flag. A U.S. federal grand jury also charged the Hus- tler magazine publisher Friday with unlawfully wearing a Purple Heart, which is pinned to a bullet- proof vest although he had never earned the medal, Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Bonner said the for the GAINES DOG MEAL Gkg. BAG CENTRAL 2717 Columbia Ave. two crimes totalled 1 years in prison anda fine of $1,250. Bonner said no one has, been charged : with desecrating the flag in the |: . Los ‘Angeles area for a decade. : Flynt was charged ‘for wearing the outfit Nov. 17 at the courthouse, where he paid an instalment of his $10,000-a-day’contempt of court fine. CASTLEGAR + the other nine provinces but e/ Ki : The a | BOLD y et Videotape re-enacts. I Catditealstotell foie elise tha jae has bees shown 4 a film of the meri free wosetesting ing. 3’ : " Justice Patrick, poor: ie tape admissible because he said it'was nom r statement in which 1an ordinary the’ accused accompanied eared Linligian at NEW WESTMINSTER (CP) — A B.C. Supreme Court jury viewed a chilling videotape Friday of a murder suspect re-enacting events in which he said he attacked and killed a young woman in a hangar at Abbotsford Airport. Filmed Jan. 8 by Cpl. Lloyd Booth, ‘a memes: of the Matsqui police dep t, the 1 ite movie ea janitor Garry Chris Simpson. : Simpson agreed: Si dona set in the x to Matsqui det vi the movie opened in the hangar in which Carole Anne Rempel, 21, was killed Dec. 12. Simpson is charged with first-degree murder in her death. Pops The murder suspect, looking directly into the camera, ps began by saying: “My name is Garry Chris Simpson. I am‘26. Iam here to re-enact the homicide of Carole Anne Rempel, which I am responsible for.” i) Providing a running commentary, Simpson demo. strated how he grabbed Rempel by the throat, beat her:with an iron clamp, dragged her into a washroom and beat; again. 4h os It was only the second occasion in the history: ‘No raiding war here, says Kube™ Operation Solidarity, trade union group’ fighting Social Credit restraint ‘leg: islation, the building ‘trades and federation representa-. 8 tives sit on committees ‘deal- “ing. with health and’ saf and unemployment isst Building trades officials ‘will | have “fraternal delegate” status at next week's feder-: VANCOUVER (CP) — The B.C. Federation of Labor will not heed the call fram Cana- dian Labor Congress presi- derit Dennis McDermott to embark on a raiding war against the building trades unions and their labor cen- tral, the Canadian Federation of Labor. ““That might be all right for PB ton ee aa ee aa MRE AB { eas SSCS UCAS oe Preparing for Pope’s| visit TORONTO (CP) — Pope John Paul will spend only 44 hours in the’ Toronto area during, his visit to Canada next September, but hun- dreds of thousands of hours work ,will have gone into preparations for the event, Already, John Wimbs, ex- ecutive co-ordinator in* charge of the Ontario visit, has 200 people working on 20° committees and 54 sub-com- mittees, along with thou- sands of volunteers offering their services, Wimbs’ job is dominated by. numbers. : Upwards of a million peo- ple — from across southern Ontario and western New: York — are expected to at- tend an open-air mass at the city’s Downsview Airport. But Wimbs doesn't just - have to make sure there's room for them. He has to worry about parking, trans- peter FIRST SNOW . . . Castlegar Pima tion and washroom fac- first snowfall of winter. season with ethusiasm. In ilities as well as making sure that a 10,000-voice children's d d ~ their igloo. v Sy, November 27,1983 CastlegarNews as Officials mum about defector's status CHICAGO (AP) — Federal “officials kept mum Saturday on the whereabouts of a Chi- nese diplomatic courier whose request for U.S. asy- lum resulted in a two-hour standoff on an airport run- * way over possession of dip- lomatic documents. The State Department re- fused to comment on the de- fector's status or his’ where- abouts. The FBI referred calls to the Immigration and Naturalization Service, but Duke Austin, INS spokes- man, was out for the day, his wife said. White House spokesman Larry Speakes said: “We will review it (the asylum re- quest) and INS will make a decision.” A spokesman at the Fed- eral Metropolitan Correction- al Centre in Chicago said, “I don't have anything on that,” when asked to confirm a PM takes plan to Peking NEW DELHI (CP) — Prime Minister Trudeau takes his East-West peace initiative to the Communist nuclear power for the first time today in a high-profile visit to Peking aimed at building a head of steam behind him as he prepares to go to Washington and considers Trudeau, holed up in the going to Moscow. Indian seaside resort town of Goa with other Commonwealth leaders for the weekend as their week-long summit en spite of ‘sri inued to build ‘ . —CosNews Photo by Chery! Calderbank choir is in place on time. On top of that, “I'm going to make sure the grass is well cut,” said Wimbs, a hay fever victim, noting that mid-Sep- tember can be a problem for sufferers. Shuttle lifts CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. (AP) — Six astronauts INDOW BLINDS 20% OFF ON ¢ LAPENITE I” VENETIANS ¢ VEADSOL PLEATED BLIN e@ LOUVREDRASE VERTICALS ALUCOVERINGS 15% OFF SME (15% ON ORDERED Of8 inisTacK. OL. oer 7 PAINT & WALLCOVERINGS LTD. G13 Columbia due. CASTLEGAR 26-614 x: ~—" “Suits, Blouses Be : Sweaters : Coats, Slacks Distinctive and Different “where service begins” For Men And Ladies... A. there's not going to be any raiding war in B.C.," said federation president Art Kube. wed The 220,000-member feder- ation and the building trades in B.C. have maintained a close working relationship despite the move by the con- gress to expel the construc- tion unions last year for refusing to pay their affil- iation fees. Besides joining together in ation convention in Vancou- ver and ‘will .be allowed ‘to: ‘speak on ‘resblutions involv- ing Operation Solidarity and unemployment. if The largest building trades ° union in B.C. — the Car- penters and Laborers —have still not joined the Canadian Federation of Labor. McDermott. accused the labor body. of “deprecating the leadership, programs and policies of this congress.” Police file A Castlegar man has been, | charged with robbery in con- nection witha purse snatch- ing that took place in the 400 block of Columbia Ave. Wed- nesday night. Michael Anderson is in custody and is expected to make a second appearance in provincial court Monday, RCMP report. s . . Castlegar RCMP are inves- b ih Wednesday. nightat Ken's Auto and. Wheel:-Alignment. Utd. at 1401 Columbia Ave. The suspect was surprised * by the arrival of the RCMP and fled without taking any- thing. * s ‘Two impaired drivers were picked up Wednesday night, RCMP report. ) notice ended ‘Thuraday. 3 Pulp whion hegotiators are sitting ri , 80-day tight in anticipation’ of. a “final. offer” uation of She from the Pulp. and. Paper Industrial Bureau expected : four pulp mille, includi the Celgar mill in Castlegar, are in & said ino indication legal position to strike as 72-hour atrike.~ was found. x ts far'as the Crown a PPWC Local 1 President Rod‘Mac- he is fit to stand trial,” he said, Kinnon said in an interview from:Van- couver Friday the union is: hear from the Pulp Bureau but the offer will be satis! “Well,.we've never accepted their final offer before,”: MacKinnon said. © 2+\ Although . the. union vis jin. a legal 2 i trike; it will-not in shut:the plants, Other: Job action such =: | “ as- imposing overtime bans taken, instead, , “It’s a bargaining tool,” MacKinnon admitted. “It keeps the company in’ © gasoline), check so that there isino way they could do damage to any one chap,” who might express his feelings on the con- tract negotiations, he said. We The union has been without a con- tract since June 30. ae ; Local 1.financial secretary Michael Babaeff says the union is looking for a “They fled, one With Carl’s Bonus Gift Cert cates —- Stretch your Christmas shopping ‘ Court news. two-year contract with improved pen- sion benefits and seniority clauses that would provide a retraining program AY ented ret pie threatened to ignite it: ( but they did not do so)”. Scotland Yard statement said, © adding: “No. shots. were fired. It's thought . they must haye: had - two vehicles to get away.” >. i ALARM About two hours after the robbers of the workers managéd to and preferential hiring for: In Castl P court Nov. 8, Ajit Dhillon was fined $400 for impaired driving. ‘ COMMUNITY his ‘head. bowed But Bruneausaid later even’ the appearance, - The ware! free himself and sounded an alarm that Unit No. 7, Police would not. specify thi Oor A Ad Phone. Nomber 365-2212 The Bay gives you the best “We can't have 200,000 of us all sneezing at the same time.” BIGGEST PROBLEM “The biggest problem will be buses and cars from out of town,” said Wimbs. He said York University is working on “the world’s first” computerized system of prebooked parking, which also will help those in charge of security. Negotiations will soon start to arrange for parking at the city's two racetracks, the Canadian National Exhi- bition and on Ontario Hydro right-of-ways. ate and slept at topsy-turvy hours as the countdown began Saturday for the longest U.S. space shuttle flight yet — a nine-day international science mission aboard the Columbia set for liftoff Monday.. ¢ At midmorning, all six sat down together for a meal. Three ate breakfast, three had dinner. After the meal, the three-man Red Team went to bed for eight hours. The Blue Team studied flight plans and attended flight briefings until their after-midnight bedtime. . The six, including the first foreigner named to a U.S. flight, have followed the unusual timetable for several days to prepare for the mission. Each team will work a 12-hour shift, concentrating on science and technology projects in a West European-built science station mounted in the cargo bay of the shuttle Columbia, which is returning to space for the first time in a year. The countdown began at 4 a.m. EST Saturday, aiming for a lunch at 11 a.m. Monday. The early hours of the count went to well that at midday the launch crew .| ,.¥as_finishing, many chores about. 80, niinytes. ahead of i area: Bob Webster: \ Wimbs spid it's logkt parking spaces for at’ least ‘| z 100,000 vehicles. He also is working with the RCMP, Ontario Provincial Police, Toronto police and the Peel Regional police force on security arrangements and traffic control during the Pope's motorcade from Tor- onto International Airport through the city and his visit to the Martyr's Shrine at Midland on Georgian Bay. To further prepare for the visit, Wimbs will leave Mon- day to confer with British and Irish organizers of papal visits to those countries. “T'm interested in not only what went right on those tours, but on what went wrong,” he said. But bad weather approaching Cape Canaveral could pose problems for the flight, already delayed twice since because of ie Webster said a low pressure system heading to Florida from the U.S. Midwest could produce clouds and rain showers in the launch area Monday. NO STORM LAUNCH The National A ics and Space Ad: would not launch the shuttle during a storm, because rain could damage the ship's protective tiles, winds could throw it off course and clouds could obscure the crew's view if they had to make an emergency landing back at the Cape. A During 145 orbits of the globe, the astronauts are to conduct more than 70 experiments in five science and project undertaken in such a: short period. The ninth shuttle mission is filled with first, besides its length: ‘ — The largest crew every toa United: States. They. cover. life sciences; atmospheric technology fields. It is the most intense space research ~ otf Monday — A record sixth flight by commander John Young, who says this may be his last. — The first flight on a U.S.-ship by non-career astronauts, with two in the crew, including Ulf Merbold, a West German physicist. i — the first: 24-hour work schedule aboard a spacecraft. © auinu = — The largest area of the world ever overflown bya manned spaceship. The main task is to test the Pressurized Spacelab, which will remain in the cargo bay for the flight's duration. z 10-YEAR PROJECT. Ten years in the making, the billion-dollar reusable laboratory is the most versatile research facility ever built for space. For the 10 West European countries that designed, constructed and financed it, and for NASA, which is providing ground facilities and launch manage- ment, the flight is the culmination of the largest and most comprehensive multinational space project. Experiments have been provided by scientists from ‘11 West..European.countries, Canada, Japan and the physics and Earth: observations; astronomy ‘and: solar physics; space plasma physics, and materials processing. “If we can do nine days up there, 24 hours a day and prove out the Spacelab and get some really good science, it would be more than I could hope for,” said Young, who at 58 already has flown two Gemini missions; two Apollo flights,.including a walk on the moon, and the maiden shuttle’ trip, also aboard Columbia, in 1981. The other crew members are U.S. Air Force Maj. Brewster Shaw Jr., 88, the pilot; mission specialists Owen Garriott, 58, an electrical engineer, and Robert Parker, 46, an astronomer, and payload specialists Merbold, 42, and Byron Lichtenberg, 36, a biomedical engineer. Merbold, a metals research specialist from Mex in some way before he leave: ters its first day, also is still hoping the summit will endorse his initiative $ for China. The leaders are to return to their discussions on peace and international security today after spending their early sessions in Goa on Cyprus and the more divisive issue of the U.S.-led invasion of Grenada in which several Common- wealth Caribbean coutries participated. heich The Peking visit has Chicago Sun-Times report that the courier, identified as Gogiang Yang by an O'Hare airport policeman, had been kept there overnight. Two Chinese couriers were aboard Pan Am Flight 72, en route to New York from San Francisco, to carry docu- ments in diplomatic pouches to China's delegation at the United Nations. After the two couriers started arguing loudly over possession of the pouches, pilot Gerald Dion decided to make an unsched- uled landing at O'Hare Inter- national Airport on Friday afternoon, airport police said. The second courier did not want to defect. After more than an hour of negotiations in the presence of State Department officials, the defecting diplomat was taken off the 747 jetliner and whisked into seclusion. The other courier kept the doc- uments, an INS spokesman said, and the plane flew on to its scheduled destination in. New York. Dr. Steve Bo of Sunnyvale, Calif., a passenger, said the two couriers’ quarrel “was all in Chinese. It was a ve- hement argument. Then he sat off by himself, the man 4” that Trudeau, already invited to Washington to meet with U.S.-President Reagan, will soon go to Moscow — perhaps who defe After the plane landed, one of the diplomats went to the on his current, tour, scheduled to run until Dec. 5. However, a visit to Moscow would be much riskier for Trudeau because it has the power to make or break the initiative. Asarelatively minor nuclear power. — but a major force be reck with — China th offers the prime minister a priceless opportunity. lavatory with ‘his briefcase and the other “took a tour of the plane rather quickly, looking for the other gentle- man . .. He wanted posse- ‘ssion of the bag,” said Dam- fen Evans of San Francisco, another passenger. He can keep his initiative in the public eye and try to build on the two Pp without having to come away from Peking with any stunning achievements. Walesa The same ‘principle applies to the Commonwealth summit. It has nowhere near the political weight its numbers would imply but it does have the power to give the Trudeau initiative a major boost. Trudeau is scheduled to leave New Delhi for Peking at about 10 p.m. local time (11:80 a.m. EST), today arriving in the Chinese capital at 7'a.m. local time Monday (6 p.m. EST Sunday) for a 29-hour visit. SEEK DENG MEETING His schedule so far calls for meetings with Chinese > Prerifer Zhuo Ziyang anda banquet Monday night at the glittering Great Hall of the People, but Canadian officials are also believed to be trying for a meeting with Deng Xiaoping, the No. 1 man in China. Trucks arrive in West Germany MUTLANGEN, WEST 2:40 am. accompanied by numerous West Germany and U.S. military police ve- GERMANY (AP) — An American truck convoy un- der tight security arrived hicles. Pianck Institute in Stuttgart, and Lich g, a bio- medical engi her at Mi h Institut of Technology, are the first of a new breed to fly the shuttle. They are not trained astronauts, but are — The heaviest shuttle payload — the 16'-tonne Spacelab built by the European Space Agency. and selected by their peers to conduct it on specific missi They are not trained to pilot the ship as the other crew members are. 8: day at the U.S. Army facility in Mutlangen where first of its new U.S. Pershing without the security. 2 nuclear missiles. Reporters watched the seven-truck convoy drive into the Mutlangen base at the Mutlangen facility. Some three hours after entering the base, the trans- NATO plans to station the port trucks left, this time it.” A U.S. Army spokesman refused to say whether the Pershing 2s had arrived at can fetch his award JAKARTA (REUTER) — Lech Walesa, founder of Po- land's outlawed Solidarity trade. uniop, -will-be allowed Peace Prize~in Norway in person if he wishes, Polish Foreign Minister Stefan Ol- szowski said Saturday. Olszowski, ending a three- day official visit to Indonesia, was asked how the Polish government views the award. “We have taken note of it,” he said. “The press published it and probably someone from the Walesa family will goand pick the prize up... If Mr. Lech Walesa would wish to go himself to fetch the award, of course he can do Polish authorities have tried to downgrade the $240,000 prize, which’ will be presented at a Dec. 1 cere- mony in Oslo, Norway. dollars with B.G.C.'s, throughout the store. available on a whole range of items Ms: Bulletin Board KINWI BELLE . deal in town on.a Seiko watch. Romania makes appeal In the Men’s Dept. © Buxton Wallets © Travel Cases © Tool Sets © Razors © All with B:G.C. CARL'S CLEARANCE TABLE ANOTHER 10% Off. NEW ARRIVAL '$1000.$100 Bell Clocks KODAK 940 INSTAMATIC 00D. DISTRICT GIRL GUIDES Are having a Christmas Tea on Saturday, December 3, from2-4 p.m. 2/95 SENIOR CITIZENS ASSOCIATION. _. ~The last business mestirig of the year will be held on - Thursday, December I at 2 p.m. 2/95 ST. JOSEPH'S C.W.L, + Will have a table at Robson Flea market on Sunday, Nov. - 27, Many articles and toys. 5 OLD-TIME DANCE On Sat., Dec. 3 from 9:p.m. - 1 a.m. at the Legion Hall, Castlegar. Music: Koot No. 9 B.C. Oldtime Fiddlers. Tickets - $4 each. Available at Castle Bowl, Bonnett’s : Mens Wear, Co-op Garage, or any member: 3/94 ROBSON RECREATION MEMBERSHIP 1s having @ pot-luck dinner and dance on Sat., Dec. 3. Dinner 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. Dance 9 p.m.’- 1 p.m., at Robson Hall. Buy a membership and ree. Ever welcome. Membership fee is Taylormaid Country. “UNDER THE GUN .. . A DISARMING REVUE” Saco 10 poneperen Thurs., Dec. 1 at 7:30 p.m. ot tivity Room, tre Company uses song, nd drama to talk about militariem here and in the Philic, pines. Tickets at local outlets and door. 493 CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH PRESENTATION : “Come to the Manger”, a church family Christmas slide. show with music will be held Sun., Dec. 4 ai, 10:30 a.m. All are invited. ¥ § ; 2/95 CASTLEGAR COMMODORE 64 COMPUTER CLUB Monthly meeting will be held Thurs., Dec.:1 af 7:30 pm. 01 3403-3rd Ave., Castlegar. 365-3506, 2/95 Coming events of Castlegar and District non-profit Sracrdtatiors me be listed here. The 1 a COMMUNITY Bulletin Board Meet your Selko atthe Bay = iw;w We think you'll be impressed with our ‘Selection. and our knowledgeable staff, Thureday and Friday 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. { Fudsons Bay Company BUCHAREST (AP) — The leaders of Communist Ro- mania have urged the Soviet Union to cancel plans to in- crease its nuclear force in Europe and repeated calls for NATO and the Soviets to rid the continent of medium- range missiles, newspapers reported Saturday. The strongly worded state- ment, carried in local news- papers, was issued by the Romanian Communist par- ty’s ruling Politburo and the State Council after a meeting late Friday. It urged NATO to give up its plans to deploy 572 Amer- ican medium-range nuclear missiles: in Western Europe and called on the Soviet Union to rejoin talks with the United States on reducing such weapons. Romania, which frequently takes an independent foreign policy line, is the only Soviet bloc country to have issued such appeals to the Soviet Union and it is the only Warsaw Pact country to urge the Soviets to reconsider the missile buildup. The Soviet Union left the Geneva talks on medium- range nuclear weapons in Europe and announced the planned missile buildup last week in response to the start of delivery of NATO's new missiles. “All the measures in the last few days push Europe and the whole world to the verge-of disaster, of nuclear abyss,” said the Romanian statement, carried by the official Agerpres news agen- cy. President Nicolae Ceause- scu in the past has called for elimination of the medium- range missiles from Europe, but the statement for the first time suggested formulas for a compromise. One called on NATO to stop deployment of the new U.S. missiles while the Soviet Union would withdraw, dis- mantle and store all the ‘mis- siles in the European part of its territory, pending an ag- reement in U.S.-Soviet talks. At the same time, the United States would remove an unspecified number of nuclear sea-based and air- borne weapons pointing at Europe. The second formula -asks NATO t give up its new deployment. In return, the Soviet Union would reduce its medium-range warheads in Europe to a number equal to that now possessed by France and Britain. In addition, the Romanian plan says, Moscow would have to dismantle and sibly deposit its missiles “at a distance from the West Ger- man border equal to the dis- tance of British and French missiles to the Soviet Union's territory.” The Romanians also called for a summit early next year between the U.S. and Soviet presidents, Man must leave VANCOUVER (CP) — An Oklahoma man who abducted his daughter, fled to Canada and assumed the name of a dead Canadian was ordered Friday to leave the country. James Humphrey must leave Canada by midnight, Dec. 16, but the notice doesn’t prevent him from re- turning. Gordon Kopelaw, Humph- rey's lawyer, said his client must leave Canada but is free toreturn at any time. He said Humphrey could then apply to Canadian authorities for landed immigrant status. With a more severe de- portation order, he would have had to stay out of the country unless granted spec- ial permission from the immi- gration minister. Crossword Lend Me Your Ears! ... answer in Wednesday paper The under PRHNDPDQEF FUWNDCC GENYWJ FPEOK GQN FRDJ,‘D'’ GNRDYWS DY ARNFURO RNGF.* ‘Today's Cryptoquip clue: F equals 8. NO. 80 Tr ]z Average solution time: 68 minutes, 8 om 12 13 fia This Crossword Puzzle sponsored by the COLUMBIA COIFFURES 180 Columbia Ave., Ph. 365-671 Castlegar 7 BEAVER AUTO CENTRE MAZDA-AMC DEALER Beaver Falls 367-7355 FRAME GALLERY Across from Beaver Auto KOOTENAY Beaver Falls 367-6279 following businesses... 368-6466 MEMBER OF TIM-BR-MARTS LTD. TIMBRMART) SCHNEIDER'S BUILDING SUPPLIES LTD. Wenete Junction TRAIL 611 Columbia Ave. ELECTROLUX CANADA SALES AND SERVICE Ph. 365-843) to collect the 1988 Nobel » a oma Case FoR naceanatnd aSeE