30% OFF : SM Ivory a SALE OF BONE CHINA ALSO ON OPEN STOCK d Ebony SUGGESTED camicbcts RETAIL this week Gerland © Magni Shenandoah * Willowbrook EXAMPLES: Patterns Spelibinder Brently Shenandoah S-pce Set 20-Pce Set 45-Pce Set Lalonde * Gall song and THE SALE OF DISTINCTION Also on Open Stotk 30% OFF tac * Dorval Maroon * Cumberland * Heather * Savannah * Tem ptation © Virtue * Alfection * Devotion * Elegance In Blue * ery * Ivanhoe * Ivory and Ebony * Richmond * Night FALL FAI. . . Robson's third annual fall toir good crowds Saturday at the Robson Community Hall, m ludii visitor ing Winners. Full d in results ond photos in Wednesday's CasNews. — Conttows Photo _ gallery, lands job OTTAWA (CP) — Finance Mare iranian jet hijacked immediately surrounded on where the plane landed. the Cairorunway by-security The officers. Earlier, the pilot was quo ted as saying a gun was being news agency did not identify the injured person, but Gulf News Ag- ency of Bahrain, quoting An airport official in Cairo be towed toa nearby military Walker said in an interview he Weqided to move. show because he didn’t want to. threstes the future of # _sponsored by the Begource Cesitre of the Arte: ea tive body for the LSPU Hall where the gallery i= Fair reducing payroll NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The New Orleans World's. Fair is cutting its operations to the bone and has*fired 165 workers to meet a 35 per cent budget cut ordered by Gove, Edwin Edwards, officials said. %, Fair officials have announced they are reducing the 2,300-person payroll, eliminating twicé-nightly. Mardi Gras-style parades and halving the number of shows at the popular Aquacade. 4 Edwards, who tried twice to bail out-the fair with state money, said he thinks its best hope is to finish the 184-day run through Nov. 11 on a pay-as-you-go basis. He ordered the fair’s weekly operating budget cut to $1.5 million from $2.3 million and said it was unlikely the struggling event will earn enough money to make even token payments on its debt, estimated at $130 million. Dogs join search BELLINGHAM, Wash. (AP) — Climbers with search dogs Saturday resumed a search for a climber missing on Mount Shuksan in the North Cascades while cloudy weather prevented the use of a helicopter. Four specially-trained mountain rescue dogs from Seattle, accompanied by their handlers, joined the search today, along withe three Bellingham Mountain Rescue climbers, two from Skagit County and three from Chilliwack, said Whatcon County deputy Sheriff Les Gitts. The missing man, Rimas Gyls, 26, is a United States citizen working at Chevron's oil refinery at Burnaby, near = gradual aid insidious education in this «+ University : between 22 and $3 per cent. And : e student grant progranhwas- Simon Fraser University. higher.” PROGRAMS DROPPED. Some lack of funding. others. nine districts have lost 10 per cent of their téachers. Resources, are also gone. supervisory staff. programs — such as Slavonic studies at the University of Victoria — have been dropped because of a Every one of the province's 92 school districts have been affected by cuts. Some have been hit worse than Steve Norman of the B.C. Teachers’ Federation said Vancouver lost 228 of 3,000 teachers. More than 160 supervising aids and 60 staff assistants were let go. Child care workers, supplied by the Ministry of Human Non-core courses, such as drama and band, are under pressure. Mainline courses such as mathematics and biology will be much larger and fewer extracurricular activities are being offered because of the lack of province. - students are saddled fee increases of ‘SIN. . . Students of Ruth Townsend's Grade 2 class at Castlegar Primary Schoo! are amongst B.C.’s 540,000 students who returned to “The costs of parking, books and residences are also maximum of 30 students in a class, almost every district in the Vancouver area will have more. “There have never been these kinds of cutbacks before and the scariest thing is when you speak to the government about what must be done, somehow, they just balance out the whole thing in dollars and cents,” says Norman “They don't seem to be concerned about so-called peripheral things like the education of the special needs children.” Education Minister Jack Heinrich says he will announce next month what proposals from the govern ment’s study on educational reform will be implemented in September, 1985. FORCED TO CHOOSE The proposals include tougher curriculum guidelines and the formalization of student “streaming.” Students are forced to make a career choice by Grade 10 and then school this week take the appropriate courses. m4 ai) az are finding n changes to the school system this year. Cashews Proto by Chery! Cokderbonk childcare workers could lead to more students who have serious emotional problems slipping undetected through the system. ' “In one feel swoop, education in the provinee has been pushed back a decade,” he says. Eduéation Ministry spokesman Dick Melville says classes might be larger this year but the situation is not “Sure, the of bh have d by not dramatically like the predicitons made last year. Let’s face it, there was a lot of heat and emotidn surrounding the issue and that gave rise to a lot of hyperbole.” Meantime, while public school budgets are shrinking, more and more parents are choosing to spend anywhere between $3,000 and $10,000 to sent theit children to one of the province's 250 private schools. Gerry Ensing, the executive director of the Fed- eration of Independent Schools Assication, said last year the number of students attending private schools this year he planned to retire from politics. Vancouver. Although the teachers’ federation recommends a increased by eight per cent or 2,000 students. Norman adds that the loss of home and school INJUNCTION DENIED air strip, he said. The Boeing 727 first re fuelled in Manama, Bahrain, AND CASUAL CHINA © Fiord * Tundra * Ice Flower ‘* Moontlight * Running Free der way between two un- identified hijackers and Gen. tower in the Iranian capital of Omar Hamand, commander Tehran that there were se of the Egyptian miliatry zone ven hijackers. No remorse shown MARION, NY. (AP) — the 14-year-old adopted son of a psychology teacher was charged with murder and arson EXAMPLES: Patterns Doral Maroon Stowaway boy LESSONS 5-Pce Set Virtue Nightsong 20-Pce Set 45-pce Set 92-Pce Set FOODS CENTRAL Registration Taken For Beginners Coll Boys’ DENIM JEANS Straight leg, $ pocket, style. 14 oz. pre washed 100% cotton denim. Leather novelty patch designs on back pocket. Sizes To 18. 14° one MEN'S FLEECE PULLOVERS Sele, eech Sort populer. V-neck pullovers sl ond olwoys in 100% acrylic Heece. Ri leeves. Zip front pocket. Colors: Block, Grey, Burgun- dy. Sizes: S to XL 9 Compore ot $16.99. SAVE $2.47! 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The water bombers dropped fire retardent around the perimeter of the blaze for five straight hours Wednes- day. R&R CERAMICS GREENWARE SUPPLIES & CLASSES STARTING SEPT. 10 Open Monday to Thursday We.m.- 4 p.m. Saturday, 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. (Closed Friday & Sunday) CERTIFIED TEACHER 2001 Colombia Ave., Castiegor Tourist alert VANCOUVER (CP) — The following persons are asked to contact the RCMP for urgent messages: Roy Paton of Edmonton, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Walker of California SSSSX TR & UPHOLSTERY SSS SSS SSSSSSS— UM VINYL REPAIR Our Action Ad Phone Member is 365-2212 Monday to Saturday 900 48 be 10:30 BORDERLINE TRANSMISSION 2865 Highway Drive, Trail Borderline we have the This tleman Tore transmission problem. onswer. YOU SAY THAT? KINGSTON, ONT. (CP) — Never mind about the Toney pronou: Is it MulROO-ney or Mul-ROH-ney? Everyone Lisa Van Dusen's ans wer was typical of Mul ‘ and Saturday after sprinkling lantern fuel in his parents’ bedroom and lighting a fire that killed his mother and seriously burned his father. Patrick DeGelleke, a ninth-grader, showed no remorse or other emotion at his arraignment where he pleaded innocent to charges of second-degree murder and second-degree arso DeGelleke was charged as an adult because of the seriousness of the crime, said Wayne County Sheriff Richard Pisciotti, who said the case would be turned over to a grand jury. Black killed by police DAVEYTON, SOUTH AFRICA (Reutrer) — South African police shot and killed one black man and injured another in township clashes on Saturday as the nation began burying its dead from two weeks of bloody rioting A police spokesman said the men were shot by police trying to make arrests after the mayor's house in Katlehong, east of Johannesburg, was set ablaze following a funeral for vietims of the rioting. Two guards at the house were attacked Religion allowed PEKING (Reuter) — China will allow freedom of religious belief in Hong Kong when it takes over the colony in 1997 and local churches will run religious affairs after the takeover, China's senior official for Hong Kong and Macao affairs has said The official Xinhua news agency Saturday quoted state councillor Ji Pengfei as telling a Protestant delegation from hong Kong: “Religion in Hong Kong and the mainland will be on an equal footing, with none subordinate to any other, and religious exchanges will be encouragd.” Growth to top U.S. NEW YORK (AP ) Leading indexes in six major industrial nations indicate their combined economic growth should soon surpass that of the United States for the first time since the worldwide recovery began, the Conference Board said today. The busi P d research or said tis its composite leading inidactor for Japan, Canada, Britain, West Germany, France and Italy is growing at an annual rate of seven per cent, while the U.S. leading indicator shows annual growth slowing to five per cent. The leading indicator is used to predict future economic growth aright i = Landscape artist in plane crash Onley’s wife Yukiko said in a telephone interivew from their Vancouver home that both men were being treated for minor injuries and were expected to retern to Van couver later in the day. be used in CP Air's In-Flight magazine. Handicapped to move VICTORIA (CP) — The first group of handicapped adults will be moved to Saanich from the Tranquille School in Kamloops today after a British Columbia Supreme Court judge refused to issue an injunction to stop the transfer Mr. Justice Kenneth Meredith reserved judgment. Friday on an application by the Attorney General's Ministry to block a suit on behalf of 65 Tranquille patients, who are being moved by the povincial government as a cost-cutting measure. When the plan to close Tranquille was announced in July 1983. Human Resources Minister Grace McCarthy said the money saved would be used to integrate the 323 patients into community care facilities. It costs $45,000 a year for each Tranquille patient. But last year, the Human Resources Ministry, that 56 of the patients were “medically fragile, only be care for in an institution. Parents and guardians of the Tranquille patients are suing the government to stop the transfer and to have the mentally handicapped adults put into community oriented settings rather than the Glendale Lodge in Saanich The judge did not give reasons for refusing the injuction against the transfer but promised patients’ lawyer David Vickers written reasons later. At several points during the hearing, Meredith said the move to Glendale Lidge has nothing to do with the issue of whether the Human Resources Ministry was exercising its powers correctly in assessing where the patients should be kept and the criteria used. “The move from one instituion to another is immaterial to the court's authority on the question of institu tionalization,” he said. Meredith said the first issue is whether the court has power to decide if the Ministry exercised its authority properly and if the court can substitute its view TRANSFER UNRELATED That, he said, seemed unrelated to the transfer to Glendale. Vickers contended the transfer was being made without lawful authority and against the will of the patients and their legal guardians. He said the patients were being denied an appeal and that the court has an inherent right to review the transfer. Vickers said the parents want the court to appoint person capable of making recommendations to the judge as to what should happen to the patients. Bob Edwards, lawyer for the Attorney General's Ministry, said that because the patients were not being held involuntarily at Tranquille the court had no right to review the decision to transfer them. He accused the parents of using the transfer to challenge the concept of institutionalization Relatives of the patients were quick to condemn the court decision. “There's no point in being angry, but it hurts from the bottom up,” said Mike Segeden of Surrey. “I can’t even put it into words.” Segeden's son Steve has been at Tranquille since 1964 =sShagon,Ward of Vernon said it will be difficult for any of her family members to visit her.brother Michael in Victoria Because of tHe expense and time involved. McCarthy, meantime, said government staff and community groups have “put enormous effort, care and concern into the planning and development of this project.” “I want to state that the planning and assessments that were done to determine the individual needs of each of the residents of Tranquille have been professionally and carefully carried out by highly-qualified people.” McCarthy said 17 of the residents going to Glendale will be moved to extended care beds in a community near their parents of relatives “as spaces become available.” None of the parents contacted Friday was aware of this plan. ‘The families involved said they were never consulted by ministry rep and pr Ombud: Karl Friedmann said earlier this week that a team of specialist at Tranquille told him that all but one of the 56 could be adequately cared for in community group homes. Deputy human resources minister John Noble said families had been informed as much as possible of upcoming assessments and results. Al Etmanski, executive director of British Columbians for mentally-handicapped people, said later an appeal will likely be launched once the reasons for the decision are given. Fle-also said it was a black day for those who care about mentally-handieapped people in the province, adding that they should not be kept hidden in institutions The handicapped, he said, share the right of others to be participants in society \. Westbank infant off fo: Minnesota “x KELOWNA, B.C. (CP) Fourteen-month-old Rachelle Reece and her parents left for Minneapolis Saturday where the infant will be assessed for a life-saving liver transplant. The Westbank child is to be admitted today to the University of Minnesota Medical School's department of surgery Rachelle has the same rare liver disease — biliary atresia that claimed the life of a young Ontario boy in June. The disease affects only five to 10 infants out of every 100,000 wanted in Victoria VICTORIA (CP) — A 16-year-old boy who stowed away on a Qantas Airline flight to Sydney from Honolulu almost two weeks ago and then insisted he was a 14-year-old boy from San Diego has been identified as a Victoria native wanted here for a parole violation. And the boy has applied through his lawyer to remain in Australia, the Canadian consul im Sydney said Priday. Denny Stimpson said the boy, whose name has not been released because he is a minor, ts a ward of the Ministry of Human Resources in Victoria and a warrant has been issued for his arrest. Details of his parole violation, or his history, were not from A provincial parole board spokés- man in Victoria would not release any information about the boy. The boy arrived in Sydney Aug. 26 on a Qantas flight and headed to the beach to surf for several hours. He was detained when he could not pay the taxi driver who took him back to the airport ina from his home in sydney, said the boy arrived in Australia with no money or papers and was wearing only s T-shirt, shorts and thongs. “He evidently had come looking for a good place to suft,”” Stimpson said. Authorities were at first baffled by the boy’s stories, but after 12 days of inquiries in three countries, his identity to phone someone in B.C... . investigating. The U.S. State Department contacted our embassy in A photograph of the boy was sent to various police agencies through Interpol, and Stimpson said the External Affairs Department in Ottawa contacted him Priday with the news that the boy was wanted jm Victoria. According to Stimpson, the boy is not aware that Australian and Canadian Officials now know his identity. The boy is being held in a detention centre in Sydney and his future depérids on the @ said “They could decide to deport him. | don’t think they want him around, because he’s « minor and has no money.” Stimpson said the Canadian government has ensured the boy has legal counsel. Efforts are being made to contact the boy's parents, Stimpson said. Since the incident Qantas has increased its security both on the aircraft and on the ground, Qantas spokesman Neville Kitto said in a telephone interview from Sydney. Spanish painter in MOVE PROTESTED continued from from! page day, compared to the average of $124 a day at Tranquille. She added that Glendale is another institution setting with more than 300 patients. In feet, she said McCarthy pledge in November 1961 to phase out Glendale within 10 years. Collier said McCarthy reneged on the deal for Russell and 55 others last July because her ministry .deemed them “medically fragile” and in need of 24-hour supervision. Grunerud challenges that, and points to the many times her family has taken Russell out overnight on weekends to their motel room while visiting in Kamloops. She and Collier are also critical of how the families learned-of MeCarthy's decision to sent the pétients to Glendale. Grunerud says ber family heard about it over the radie, theugh McCarthy has denied this and said the families were informed beforehand. Collier says Grunerud and others want the ministry to review the plans drawn up for Russell and others ly" “They cannot have been reviewed properly and come up with the decision they have come up with,” she says. Grunerud wrote a letter to McCar thy on Aug. 21 protesting the transfer, but has received no reply She also wrote, along with other families, to B.C. Ombudsman Kari Friedmann, who took up their case. He criticized the Ministry of Human recommended they transfer the serious condition BARCELONA (Reuter) — Spanish Surrealist painter Salvador Dali was described after surgery for burns which threatened his life A statement by surgeons who carried out the five-hour operation on Friday said the frail, 80-year-old artist was conscious but under sedation im an intensive care ward. “Hf there are no problems he will leave intensive care tomorrow (Sunday) and be returned to his room,” Dr Juan Garcia San Miguel told reporters. However, be added that Dali was not out of danger yet and infestion of the wounds was still the biggest threat Surgeons went ahead with the delicate skin graft oper second-degree . affected over 18 per cent of his body when fire destroyed his room at his castle tfPubo! on Aug. 2.