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We'll cover it all..ctoe sou. ~ ight, Flora tareb, a network employ ® SUPERPA PAY CARDS AFTERNOON 12 MIDDAY. DAYS OF OUR LIVES B) CMON-WED) 8:00 &) ONE DAY AT A TIME 9 DONAHUE (GB RICHARD SIMMONS @D SESAME STREET (A) @OVEREAY. Guaot: einger Hitdeparde, Mindy become Gegrued to be marted. wy WUTREST HOBO: A young female pilot (Rosemary Dunsmore) finds her life endangered lo put vice out of a MiNDY Mork and Mindy become a @ married. on the running te fn atte. oon child care @ Move Beata “op iacee the posstlly oh mitary cous. 1D MAGNUM, PL Magnum Joins @ peo foot- a8 old buddy who ts being victimized by unknown source. (A) jASNMENT TONIGHT An Interview with Atan ty o EVENING NEWS: NEWS: 6:90 @) HERE'S LUCY course In @ POINTS WEST (MON) (GB LAND AND BEA TUE) GALLOWAY'S: GALLERY (WED) 10:00 3 WOMAN'S PAGE © Love sOAT (A) TEXA SOUTH FR) @wHeRe's To Youn HEALTH (MON-WED) & Jovce DAVIDSON 10:18 3 FRIENOLY GIANT 10:30 €B Tic TAC DOUGH HARPER ‘While under hypnosis to -Castlegar Savings CREDIT UNION om Costlogar 365-7232 ENGLISH (FAN who in here bea blizzard, (R} G@miyonmusn CRUSADE @® OFF RENT STROKES Kimbatyisoltared « mod- [=] ling job in Pa im une Paychic TERM Slocan Park 226-7212 hia legendary oe pick a a in feopa and Ren! cover walters. (A) B DIK even Spletberg. Gand SD THENATIONN / JOURNAL 10:90 @2 BuBNESS REPORT 11:00 @B £9 9 NEW! Gaasen) LoRER anperienged Righe s piaer (anthony 12:01 a SATURDAY NIGHT ‘Art Garfunkel. Guest: ‘Stephen Bishop. 30DAY DEPOSIT over $2 WOU Impersonator vim Galley tio tn for Phe Otter at one of Lucy's 1G STAR TREK Cap Kick and Mr. Spock come involved In an snbllgvale computer man named a PEOPLE ‘6 COURT GARTER COUNTR) Baker and Roy are In com- etition for a better job. “Cast tron Killer Brian and bis men are skeptical of a professor who fe experimenting with a naw method of extracting the explosive from bombe. an ayo) @upatours @ CAUGHT INTHE ACT Gueat: Shari Ulrich, (A) rmed hoodiums. aq ructor goes In ry cepariment store. sore) Bs BON ICE Gue: Kiteh- een jobert kenipp. Get Patchel. (R) (2 UNIVERSE that a doctor is setting up a love neat for Terr. (9) FLAMINGO RO. Sam Gone batienss. « ie, Sheritt » 6:30 ©} @ 00 CLOSE FOR COMFORT Maurie) lnvites a ekid kage tng eee i HIDDEN PLACES: Uves 3 Went” Host “Tw Philp Abbett follows tre Rompin’ jalcomi Fonnle Hawkine Barb. Benton 10:00 €B WASNT THAT A PARTY? Oran rowsrr Wal varloua occurrences and Phenomena In the wortd of ‘OAYS ome movies scap ibe summer of ‘thea, (Part 2) 7 a Wounded gunslinger, Bily the Kid, followed {engine ee at Maverleks” be ton mission and feng her jeiping hia badly Iniured cousin Cole. (3) © ENTERT tits Ia sister's Upton Ia taken by. tor an interview jwithin’s Hospital. HATIONAL 7 the Kivopin Al Capon the bloody warehouse rival t pended animation. col @ PEOPLE's court oc Montreal Expos OF MAGIC ‘A Boy Scout Jamboren te highlighted, MILLER While a hypo! extract importa ‘Wolo’ ory, a inverter Tilee to ‘stent his own blveprints. @pP \GAZINE: REALTY WORLD. 3 Castle Realty Ltd. Wellcowyr jt all...for vou, Colma ee Castege Swithin's, bringing (- Car dealerships , VANCOUVER (CP) — Seven major B.C,.car dealer- ships have gone into receivership or bankruptcy this year, Major dealers and bankruptcy trustees predict the trend will continue as high interest rates and the recession take their toll. “The worst has yet to come,” en- Abitibi employees Ratify 2-year contract MONTREAL (CP) — Other eastern Canadian trepreneur Jimmy Pattison said Tuesday. . Pattison, who owns five’Greater Vancouver car dealerships, said he does not expect a turnaround until the forestry industry recovers, along with the mining and fishing industries, Don Henfrey, president of Henfrey and Co. Ltd., one of Vancouver's major bankruptcy trustees, said he is certain there will be more financial iapuress in the car business as for Tear of further layoffs and a deepening ‘reseaalont On Friday, Bowell MacLean Motors Co. Ltd:, was put into receivership. The company, founded in 1919, is one of the oldest in Vancouver. Six other dealerships in B.C. have failed, including two in North Vancouver, and one each in New . Westminster, Port Hardy, Trail and Vernon, Henfrey said high interest.rates and falling sales have resulted jn most of the failures. It is not unusual for dealerships to have $2 million to $3 million in car inventories on their lots, he said. HIGH INTEREST RATES “They own the inventory. from the point it leaves the factory and since they're paying between 18 to 19 per cent in interest, that’s $50,000 alone in interest payments per month," he said. "With that kind of overhead and a slump in sales, I am:certain there will be more failures.” Pattison said a major problem is the infiltration of Japanese cars into the B.C. market. This, he said, means additional pressure jon “the already slumping business of the car may have to pay more than the 22 per cent in wage increases accepted by 5,500 Abitibi. Price Inc. workers, their union says. Last week, Abitibi employ- ees ratified a two-year con- tract the Canadian Paper- workers Union wanted them to reject, They'll get a 12-per-cent increase retro- active to May 1 and another 10 per cent next year, However, the Abitibi set- tlement also reflected major improvements to the work- er's pension plan negotiated between the company and the paperworkers’ union last winter, union president James Buchanan saidin an interview Monday. Abitibi, the world’s largest newsprint producer, had been the union's target for determining a pattern settle- ment in industry negotiations for 38,000 workers in eastern Canada. models, the tradi compan- ies such as Bow Mac, where Pattison worked for 10 years before he went into business for himself. Bow-Mac’s failure leaves Pattison as the only Pontiac-Buick dealer remaining in Vancouver. But he's hurting, too. His Vancouver operation, as well as his Chevrolet-Oldsmobile dealership in Burnaby, has seen business plummt by about 33 per cent from last year, he said. Pattison, however has diversified into the Japanese car market with three Toyota dealerships. These dealerships, he said, have not seen an increase in business this year, but there also has not been much of a drop. Foreign imports account for 44.9 per cent of new car sales in B.C., according to the U.S.-based automobile statistical servide R.L. Polk, which provides industry information for manufacturers and dealers. Japanese car sales account for 70.3 per cent of the total imports. Ron Baldwin, ive-director of the A said more are their cars instead of buying new ones, resulting in a substantial surge of business for service stations, garages and body shops. “We've noticed that people who normally would have bought new-used or brand new cars are now getting their old cars repaired to last another six months to a year,” said Baldwin. His has 1,500 bers in B.C., includii car dealers, body shops and towing companies. “As far as the dealerships go, we're hoping the worst is over,” he said. “At least, we're praying.” J While other producers may offer their workers the same wage increases as arin they won't necessarily be acceptable, Buchanan warned, The revised Abitibi pen- sion scheme includes benefits indexed at a rate of five per cent annually, making it the best retirement plan in ue industry, he said. “There's a’ price on that pension plan and it may well be that the. price may be higher for other companies. . +" Buchanan said. MAY COST MORE “Abitibi could say that pension plan improvement cost them three per cent. It might cost another company six per cent to put the same type of plan into « effect because their plans are more substandard.” Negotiations are accelera- ting with these other produ- cers, Discussions haven't ad- vanced beyond non-monetary issues in the case of the Eastern Canada Newsprint Takes writing honors NELSON, B.C. (CP) — ~- First prize went to a poem 9:30 G3 TWO RONNES 10:00 €3 GD DYNASTY with him stocks ol tinned food. QTHENATIONAL / “Mountain oun (1878, Adventure Pyle, John Dena he maly. Inarantionsl louigue, ¢Part 1) (8) Guus 8 CasNews Printing * Letterheads, AW ‘The Statler Brothers and Loutse Mandeell host this Cards Brochures ee * Business EB MADE IN TAIWAN Forms NURSE (nvilations Any Printing! Atexis schemes 10 state dle her relations nd Ky D0¢ CASTLEGAR NEWS Michael moves into the ——_'97 Columbia, 365-7266 fesidence hall at St. £ Repairs while you walt ¢ Ganadion Dentel insurance Cla © Conadian Curroncy at par Processed SPOKANE, Washington — (609) 928-9337 PEERLESS ) DENTAL LAB and Relines by oppoiniment © New Dentur Dr. Orval turgnes, O.M.0. J. MacKay — Techniclens East 7204 Sprague Grace, egar Savings 5) Castl r CREDIT UNION Castlegas 365-7232 Slocon Park 226-7212 1 YEAR TERM 15 yy, % DEPOSIT Apa. Both products and profes- sors of the writing program at David Thompson Univer- sity Centre in this southeast- ern B.C. city have won top honors this year. However, the distinctions have been mixed with regret, as two Canadian poets, Tom Wayman and David McFad- den, quit the department after successfully ending a fight to keep'the program going, said McFadden. The departmental maga- zine, Writing, which accepts ‘submissions from across North America,. - first and second DuMaurier prizes for poetry in the national magazines awards. Each of the $00 small maga- zines in Canada submitted entries. 7 won both. by Michael Ondaatje of Hono-” lulu, and second to Susan Musgrave of Sidney, B.C. “This magazine has done more than any other thing to make DTUC (David Thomp- son Unviersity Centre) known,” said McFadden, cit- ing subscriptions acrass the U.S., Canada and abroad. “McFadden, the editor of the magazine, won a senior Canada Council fellowship, one of only eight awarded in Canada this year. Fred Wah, another writing ‘professor, won the second of the eight awards, However, McFadden is leaving for Toronto, and Wayman, another noted poet, is departing for Van- couver, Wayman says the first two years of the writing program Appreciation gift for Mildred Brady Members of the Castlegar Senior Citizens Two-Bit Club, held a pot luck supper Friday evening. Mrs. H.' Johnson . said then 35 members enjoyed a delicious meal, of chicken and lots of “ lies”. After supper, Molly White presented Mildred-. Brady with a gift of appreciation for all the work Mrs. Brady does behind the scenes for the centre. Mrs. Brady expressed her thanks, then she presented a gift of appreciation to Mrs; E. Newman and Mrs, R. Cor- mier. After the tables were ‘cleared an evening of Whist was enjoyed,: bringing a. happy evening to a close. (submitted) Attention Men & Boys! For (gh gia 233 Columbia 365-6761 Remember 10% | OFF for Cash are offered by Selkirk Col- lege, while the third and fourth years of the univer- sity-accredited program are offered by the University of Victoria, McFadden said that last year the Selkirk College administration had attemp- ted to cancel their contracts on the grounds that there were not enough students in the writing program. After a blitz in Writing magazine to sign up more students, the enrolment in the writing program doubled. But the Selkirk administra- tion still sought to cancel the program on the grounds of budget constraints, the magazine's editor said. However, the writing pro- gram was backed by the Selkirk Faculty Association, to which the centre's faculty belong, and both Wayman and McFadden were finally awarded the long-sought five-year contracts. NEW IN TOWN? LET US PUT OUT THE MAT FOR YOU! he Best famees fant ane we * JANICE HARDY 365-3842 Group and Canadian Inter- national Paper Co. Ltd. Meet- ings are planned soon with Domtar Inc. on pensions. * The Abitibi agreement, which runs until April 30, 1984, covers 11 mills in Quebec, Ontario and New- foundland. Workers at another three mills are repre- SHARLEEN MARTINI, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Martini of Castlegar, has achieved her Bachelor of Education degree from the University of British Columbia. Her concen- trations were in math education and psychology. Miss Martini was a Stanley Humphries graduate and attended Selkirk College. sented by other unions, Negotiations ‘broke off in mid-May when the company made what it described as its final offer. The union put it to a rank- and+ file vote with a that the The decision went the other way. Vote results weren't announced, But a majority of 19 union locals involved favored the con- tract, which was the pre- workers turn it down. basis for ratifi- cation, Canadian speaks from Falklands TORONTO (CP) — A Can- adian living in the Falkland Islands says it was “a bit noisy” during the weekend as the British bombarded the Falklands capital of Stanley. Bill Curtis, who grew up in Trail, B.C. lives on the Falk- lands with his wife and two children, He was interviewed by the CBC from Buenos Aires, Following is a text of the interview. Q What is the situation like today (Sunday)? A: It’s been a bit noisy today and last night. Q@: You're referring to gunfire? A: Yes, Q: What is the mood of the people there now? . A:T d say the spirits of the people are high very, con- sidering their situation, and they're hoping for a quick resolution of their problem. Q: Are they afraid? A: Yes. They're buckling under the tension. You can tell the people there (in Canada) it could be a hell of a lot worse. Q: Because of the great amount of shelling today are their fears greater than they've ever been? A:lIt's very difficult to say. I think the level of fear hasn't really altered too much. Q: You've said you want a peaceful solution to the prob- lem as soon as possible. Do you think that's possible.? Az I think if it was left up to the people on the islands, and that goes for everybody here’ on the islands, I think it’s very possible. CASTLEGAR NEWS, June 2, 1982 CORRECTION In the Bay's White Sale Flyer in Sunday's Castlegar News, pecale sheet sets are ad- vertised on the back page as “Save 50% and more”, The wording should have been “Save ‘4 to % and more”. The Bay apologizes for this error. ‘Hudsons Bay Company JUNE, 1957 DO YOU KNOW THIS HAPPY COUPLE? Then feel welcome to celebrate with Pastors Ira & Adeline Johnson on the occasion of thelr 25th Wedding Anniversary -at a Come and Go Tea Sunday, June 6, 1982 2:30 - 5:00 p.m. Kinnaird Church of God PHONE 365-3130 OR 365-6105 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION. heQSay 317's entire selection of cords and dnills For three days only, you can pocket some extra special savings on all your favorite cords and drills from the Bay. Choose from Big Blue, Tyme, Andre Michel, Levi's, Brittania— and lots of others. But hurry. Selections is limited, each store has its own stock ... and on Monday they all go back to regular price. Sizes 28 to 38. Our regular $32 to $36 Sale 24.99 Price in effect till Saturday, June 5 317, Trail (Second) Frdsons Bay Company