Aa, CASTLEGAR NEWS, April 10, 1983 Details not releqsed: By CasNows Stalf Selkirk College Faculty Association executive and college administration signed its memorandum of agree- ment. for a new contract Wednesday night, but details | of the: agreement have rot yet been made public, . : Faculty Association pres: ident Gordon Gibson said Friday the executive wasn't able to get written proposals to its members yct while the college administration is neg- otiating with two.) other SPECIALS . FOR YOU © Monday, Tuesday “_and'Wednesday. this week unions — the B.C. Govern- ment Employees Union and the Pulp and Paper Workers of Canada, As a result the word. processor has been “tied up,” he sald, and. the proposals haven't been printed. He noted that the execu- tive hasn't even seen the proposals yet and probably won't until the end of next week or the following week. He said: the membership would see the proposals with- in the next two to three the faculty " association “elected its new executive for the coming year at a meeting Thursday _ Right. Gibson was’. elected president, Tim Frick’ was elected vice-president with ‘Jim Howard elected as the: Castlegar campus represen- | tative and Ben Heywood as the David Thompson Uni- yrs. Centre Fepresenta- John Maddalozzo of Sel- kirk. College ’ was. elected treasurer. Member of large ANNOUNCEMENT : while Bob Dooley, . also of Castlegar, was elected _ Did you know? The following bills may: how'be paid atthe Castlegar Savings Credit: Union AT NO CHARGE! ° West Kootenay Power & Light ° © Inland Natural Gas * ° B.C, Medical Plan 2. B.C. Tel CASTLEGAR 6 * SAVINGS... CREDIT UNION 2717 Columbia inva: hee CASTLEGAR VSG L cre eeeee NIAGARA ORANGE 365-7232 DO YOU: WANT TO "LOSE WEIGHT? ‘DO YOU WANT * Inch loss? © Calm Nerves? © Satisfied Ap- petite? © Lots of Energy? & 4 Sense of ‘Accom- : plishment? ‘ Find out more about thit new and Natural HERBAL. DIET . that really et Bev Werre 365-3703 Vera ora Barisenkoft 365-5490 4 will be ‘Ted Pollard of Castle: gar while Roh Smithers:was re-clected chairman “of: the salary, and. benefits commit. r aN John’ “Adams, ‘and | Craig Andrews of: the’ Castlegar campus were elected as.rep- resentatiyes’ to the ‘college - board along with Rick Somos. of DTUC. e DY.) 4 nessman in B.C. could create ‘with: $1 million.” With: 14.7: per cent ‘of British Columbians ‘out ‘o work, Barrett said creating employment is the first step‘ to economic recovery.:: Bennett, earlier ‘in the: day in an address’ to’ a ‘forest indastry gathering,’ expoun- ded on his :theme of’ co- : fi operation: being ; the. road © ito recovery. He ‘said the caries: fight hy government,’ indus-: try and unions in the battle to. convince the U. on imported Canadian lum- : ber was a prime ‘display of not’ to . * impose countervailing duties how the spirit of co-operation | : ‘could work. aaay (4 we are to be strong, we ‘ean not afford confrontation,” .: Bennett told the group. “We “can't have labor ‘fighting msnagement, and | manage- groups fighting the govern- ment.” > b «At dissolution, Banding. ne : ‘unchanged, “since” the ‘last election May. 10, 1979. — Social ‘Credit si, NDP 26, COHOE INSURANCE AGENCY LTD. 269 Columbia Ave, Castlegar : A thom E Gambping: ‘NORTON; ENGLAND (AP) — : Rachel Ward left Bryan Brown in The Thorn Birds, but they. got-married ‘again ‘for real Saturday in’a tiny: Norman, chapel on her* family’s ‘es: tate near this Oxfordshire village... The “25-yeas-old bride met her 85-year-old hus: band ‘on’ the: set” of last month's popular TV: mini- series, in which she played heroine Meggie Cleary and he played. sheep shearer: and- cane - cutter: Luke O'Neill. In’ ‘the series, Meggic married’ Luke but ‘leaves him, because of his macho callousness,.. and» her ‘‘in- volvement with the. priest }- she has loved sincé child: h 3 REMOVAL & g WE WILL ix © Remove your winter tires © Check your tires for safer motoring * Install two summer tires. © Adjust air pressures in all tires ® High speed computer balance Ofer Expires $1 495 April 18/03 *STARMASTER: The Structural Interlok Retread ™ With New Tire Warranty nosso? $9495 E78-14.. DIAL |; . 155 - 12 and 155 - 13 ER78 -14.....604- | FR7B-14 0.0... 0.005. $45.95 GR78-15 0.00... 005 $50.95 HR78 - 15. $53.95 2701 Columbia Ave. South Castlegar near Central Foods 365-3433 ~~ TIRE RE SLASHING SALE! BEGoodrich TA? 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Judge’ Howard Calera * Judge Collerman sald'ctaff | had ‘not been told Berek was mentally retarded : had only one leg when she was admitted’ earlier~:th: month for an exaniination. ‘-: « She slipped and broke. cher hip when hospital, staff asked’ _ her to stand during ‘si Xray: session, the report’ said,:’-::) ‘After surgery to repair the. hip fracture, Bezpalok yaul fered a buildup’ of fluids ‘in | helps'drain fluids..:’:>: y Judge Collerman said she’ piratory problem and idays later. : who,was Bahai fe ley of Trail. care of the patient.” Sell crow 1cO OTTAWA (CP) — _ Michael Wilson said that if, ‘he could sell Air Canada, he would use . the money to help reduce the federal deficit, expected : to h about, $30, billion. ithis seryative MP for Toronto's - se Etobicoke Centre and a con-, tender: for the ‘Tory leader. , ship, said'on the CTV Tele- vision Network. : “program | Question Period that interest ‘rates would go down if: the government's deficit could be luced. . ; Lower interest rates would have'a positive effect across the country, he said. * Journalist Doug - Fisher posed this hypothetical ex- ample: “If you could. sell Air Canada for $8 billion, you'd , take that $8 billion and put it against the debt?” ‘ilson said: MA: -very large ‘part of it, yes.”. Wilson said he thinks com- panies -such as Air Canada and Canadian National Rail- - ways could be sold to Cana- - dian investors. There is no reason gov- ernment.resotirces should be tied up im. Crown corpor- ations that. don’t have a a continued from front page. . “AB well, D'Arcy said he is concerned that B.C. Hydro | ‘doesn't pay property taxes sere when’ it Pays. them: elsewhere. . “Clearly * that's - of : icy,” he said. i : Both candidates ‘agree: “that eed HGt6s fro'ereaal ‘thih‘yéar's ‘shortened campaign, ‘which will last- only: 3 ‘days. But Siemens says his campaign will be ‘fought on a‘ “wider:scale” of economic stability for the province:.; ;; "He -said the voters will have to choose between two ‘political ideologies but only.the Socreds can generate the dina of confidence necessary to foster’ ‘economic growth. best ‘one to represent them ++ the one that's going't to" 5 : Better ‘service: > for _ customers —0n-. ; going modernization of. the distance networks. policy fodion. che said. © : ASHAMED O) Wilson said hd like Fisher, is ashamed of: the armed forces.“ Weise NATO, only ahead of Luxem- HAND CRAFTED - 35 mm ENLARGEMENTS {N 24 HOURS! “Pickup & delivery Included. : Quality guaranteed! Call Joe at 365-5903 een 4 and7 p.m. ’ ihg in better service for B.C: Dave’ Carter said several : the utility’ chave’ improved is result-- -Carter, the company’s gen- eral operations director, sai Telephone-Co. subscribers,’ a the new measures pe in- company official told the stallation of ‘electronic’ swit- ching i ‘to service, *the 4 area's jarge’ ing area. * Because of. the, improve. ments, ‘more than 99,7. per. cent of ‘all calls measured ~ during peak dialing’ periods experienee no dial tone delay... he paid. He said the abwark im- = Tel i icati ‘commission-Friday. .° ; Testifying at the CRTC's public hearing into B.C.'Tel’s s, programs implemented by | Starts Olymple Sports in 1984 WELCOME Anyone. Getinto shope. TIMES Tues. 5to7 p.m. Thurs. 7to 9 p.m. wacnee 'S.. ‘More Info call 365-5028 mh ‘China Creek "Drive a Little to Save a Lot" provements have brought about “important cost ‘con- trols;” as electronic: switches require about 40 per.cent less’ maintenance than conven- _tional equipment. .: ‘The program to modernize ~” the toll system and mechan- ize switchboard operations i is scheduled to be completed by mid-1984,. Carter told, the. hearing: . Tues. - Sat., “Kinnaird well, I don't like to ‘be nasty.” iness ‘and industry.”. .. While the. going will’ be tough, Siemens said it will be a “clean. campaign” becaitse “Chris is a nice guy and Meanwhile, in the Nelson-Creston - riding, a: battle is shaping‘up as NDP incumbent Lorne Nicolsen”” and Social Credit challenger Howard Dirks head for the _ Campaign trail +: > Dirks .was e ‘expected to Rigel Sientens and Perty, for a joint trategy meetis : "weekend. ch, both. the! local and.’ long: : ‘two Britons in apparent wOMEeGoen FURNITURE WAREHOUSE |" New round of Soviet expulsions? MOSCOW (REUTER) — The British’ Embassy in The ‘Soviet © expulsion of Moscow has declined . to comment on further moves in London, but diplomatic sources have said. Moscow was warned that retali- atory expulsions could be imet in kind.” \ After France's expulsion of 47 Soviet diplomats and- officials this week, specu- lations circulated in the foreign community in Mos- cow about who may be - ordered out next. retaliation for British ex- pulsions of Soviet citizens could provoke London to play a néw round in the game, "foreign diplomats say. Moscow ordered on Fri- day that David Williams, assistant air attache at the ‘British embassy, and jour- nalist Anthony Robinson of the. Financial Times leave “the Soivet Union within a week. for what it termed The move was regarded as the predictable retali- « ation for Britain's expul- sion last week of two So- * viet diplomats and the cor- , Yespondent of the maga- zine Novoye Vremya. The diplomatic euphem- In isms used by both sides are designed to. imply that those: expelled have. been spying. Castlegar sraviactal : nolds was fined $400 after pleading guilty to refusing to _ Submit to a breathalyzer. : :° * . ; Harold Taylor was given a conditional discharge. and four months’ probation after . Pleading guilty to a charge of false pretenses. 9:30-5:30 ” David Babcock was. sen- tenced to.14 days’ imprison- ment intermittently ° after pleading guilty to impaired _ driving, a The ‘Associates Presse. A levee breach chased 400 Misgouri residents from their homes and rain kept falling , Baturday across Dixie, where the evacuee total rose. past 27,000 and . rising . water washed bodies from ‘ceme- teries and. displaced snakes and fire ants, “We're; really suffering here,” said: Mayor Bobby Chain of Hattiesburg, Miss., where 5,000 people fled Fri- day as the rain-swollen Leaf. and Boule rivers continued their rise to near-record lev- els, leaving only National Guard troops behind to pro- +> tect 'the empty homes. Flooding extended from Missouri to Alabama, with ° "tornadoes and heavy rain ‘Faking the Deep South and; more than 18 centimetres of rain drenching western Flor ¥da on Bey: The National Weather Ser- ; vice forecast’ more rain today from. northern Louisiana to the Atlantic Coast. © At least 10 people ; have died in floods from.a week of heavy rains in the lower Mis.. sissippi Valley — with mo "than SL eontimotres falling in beach, aes i to ie metres within minutes ‘an driving’ two-thirds of West ‘ Alton's 600 residents to high- : er ground, |” e CLEANUP BEGINS. New Orlenas was wringing itself out” after. Thursday's flooding. ; that / shut do’ ind. ’- phoni Th victims parks by people in siana and one in Tennessee. Damage in the region was putin’ the hundreds of mil- lions of dollars, with at least 41,000 homes flooded and the number of evacuees climbing to more than 27,000," author: « ities. said.” ‘ “At the farming town of. ‘West, Alton, :Mo., a. levee’ ruptured| Friday, near the junction of the Missouri and Mississippi rivers. yes roared through the U:S. journalist — bucks bail term ° PERCE, QUE. (CP) — Lynn Franklin, an American journalist and photographer, charged along with a score of others with interfering with the seal hunt, said Saturday he has decided to speak ‘on the record, even if it means contempt of court..: Franklin, who shipped aboard the Sea Shepherd when it sailed from ‘Portland, Me.,-on March 3,. said that if he's _ Sentenced for bucking terms of his bail requiring him not to speak to the press, he may get about two. weeks. But there was the larger matter of freedom of the press. Initially; when the RCMP arrested him and the others on the Sea Shepherd on March’ 27, they took his camera equipment, his tape recorder and the notes he had written about his experiences while aboard ship, he said. “I think. we ought to deal with this matter of sub- poenaing my tapes and film,” Franklin said.“That kills a free press in a free country.” As he understood it from his lawyer in Perce, “under Canadian law, a reporter's notes can be used by the Crown or the defence if the reporter is one‘of the accused, Since a reporter is usually an excellent witness, an obvious wey of getting his notes is to accuse him.” Franklin, 46, a resident of Gorham, Me., said he had sailéd from Portland as “a neutral observer” to see the seal hunt and talk to those involved in it, as well as to officials and those who annually protest it by trying | to prevent it or by interfering with it, { +. When the Sea Shepherd sailed into the Newfoundland ;: . port of St. John’s, he said he intended, along with a CBC film ! crew, to interview a sea captain, an elderly lady and others who favored the hunt. “But that was made impossible by a legislative outcry. Ed Coady of the CBC in St. John's, a cameraman and a sound man had been aboard the Sea Shepherd since it left Port- land. But when the ship sailed into St. John's, they were ordered by their chief to leave, responding to a motion from Parliament’ that the CBC should ignore the Sea Shepherd instead of reporting it from the scene and getting the inside story.” , - _, LEAVE ON PILOT BOAT They left on the pilot boat, he said. Later, he tried to go ashore himself to interview fisheries and sealing people, expecting they would have a case. “But the harbor manager told me it was unsafe for me to leave the compound, and in fact there was a horde of people there. Immigration officials said they would give me only 45 minutes. ashore.” Franklin said the ROMP have returned his camera and his tape recorder, but still have his original notes, which he hopes to get back when he and the others appear next in court as the case progresses. But, while they were all in jail, he made more comprehensive notes that he still has, parishes, 4 d: cars ‘ard lawns ‘; “ were covered with huge’ we' wads of carpet, Brown. wate! marks; more.than one-metre ; & from the ground, stained'the .. sides of homes, In ‘Columbia, Miss, dents. of “braced for a second ‘round of flooding as the ‘Pearl, River rose toward a predicted crest ’, of 8.5 metres, ‘Flash floods- earlier washed out a ceme- reat: Louisiana ‘officials ‘warned residents to, beware of the danger from. snakes . “or: fire ants displaced by: floods ‘ters. Louisiana Gov. flood areas, said he had n exact estimate of ‘the dam- age, “but I- think it's quite obvious it will be in excess of $100 million.” Treen wired President ..Reagan on Friday, telling him to expect a request that southeastern Louisiana’ he. declared a federal disaster” area, a necessary step in ob- taining federal’ loans. and grants. About 20,000 people have - . been evacuated in Louisiana, while approximately 7,000 have been displaced in Mis- sissippi and several hundred more in Missouri and south- ern Alabaia, officials said. Treen has declared a state _ of emergency in 16 Louisiana -and . Mississippi Gov. William Winter de- clared. an emergency for his entire state. onnedy peer rir Jenounces ° policy WASHINGTON (REUT- ER) — Senator Edward Ken- nedy, in a speech marking the 2oth anniversary of then- president John Kennedy's call for a nuclear test ban low-lying areas Dave ; ‘Treen, who toured his state's.‘ FUN HE SUN . . . Selkirk College’ Forestry Technology students take the challenge in hose laying - on offer AMMAN (REUTER) — Palestinian and Jordanian officials Saturday declined \ comment on an offer by the United States to try to halt Isracli settlements in occu- pied Arab territories if King Hussein would join Mideast peace \ A Jordanian official said he did not expect his govern- ‘ment to make any comment “on the move, made by the Rdet “contest during Forestry Days Friday at the college." —CosNlews Photoby Cher! Wishlow : ‘Germonies’ WARSAW (AP) —. Offi- cials laid ‘wreaths at a mon- ument Saturday ‘to open cer- emonies marking the 40th anniversary of ‘the Jewish ghetto: uprising against the Nazis, but Poland’s only sur- vivor of the’ struggle called and 1 will not approve of . somebody else's " participa- tion, no matter where they come from,” Edelman, 62, wrote in the letter, which was widely circulated in Po- land. yee ee! apaied a controversy that has reduced the number of foreign participants from an expected 3,000 to about © “1,800. The World Congress of Jewry in January endorsed the but When he was 22, Ed helped treaty, on, Friday di President Reagan’s nuclear arms policy as reckless. He also -pronounced the MX missile “a dead duck.” Kennedy, speaking at American University where his brother prop the test the and stayed away. Marek Edelman, who at the end of the uprising led dozens ‘of Jews to safety through, ghetto. sewers, wrote (& public letter con- the ban in 1963, sharply criticized Reagan for calling the Soviet Union an “evil empire.” He quoted from the 1963 speech in which his brother, the. use of bellicose As for why he went aboard the Sea Shepherd in the first place, Franklin said the seal hunt is an important envir- onmental story, but added; “I had had a column in the Maine Sunday Telegram for 10 years called Profiles of. Maine, of ” in-depth first-person accounts. I thought Paul Watson (who served as captain of the Sea Shepherd) would be a very good man. “I called Yankee magazine, which has a circulation in New England of about one million, and the editor, Tim Clark, said it’s inevitable that you'll be arrested and the fine will be $2,000 to $2,500 and ‘the bail about $10,000 with no deposit. “Clark advised me if I was going to do the story, it ” would have to be on my own.” Clark was right on the arrest and the amount of bail. The fine or some other sentence is yet to come. Franklin is waiting in Perce for the outcome. ‘More freedom for ’ French travellers court this week, James Rey- PARIS (REUTER) — The French government has - eased its controversial new. foreign currency restrictions so that many French tourists will be able to take package vacations abroad this sum- . mer after-all. The restrictions, part of an austerity package announced two weeks ago to redress France's $12-billion trade im- balance, were bitterly op- posed both by the public and by travel agents who said their industry would be des- troyed. ‘The measure limited adult tourists to $280 U.S. in for- eign currency for the rest of the year, hitting some eight million people who spend va- cations abroad. Under an agreement with the travel agents announced by the government late Fri- day night, the agents will kind now be able to pay hotels and - transport services abroad in foreign currency up to 75 per cent of the sum they spent on package tours last summer. FORFEIT ALLOWANCE But tourists taking pack- age vacations will forfeit most of their foreign cur- rency allowance. They will still be allowed to take $140 in French money to spend abroad. Jean-Claude Murat, presi- dent’ of the Travel Agents Association, said the changes will allow agents to sell about 65 per cent of the package vacations they had adver- tised for the summer and en- aure the survival of the in- dustry until the autumn. rhetoric directed at the - Kremlin, had. said: “No gov- ernment is so evil that its people must be seen as lack- ing in virtue.” The Massachusetts Demo- erat said Friday: “No gov- ernment should be regarded as so much of an ‘evil empire’ as to justify reckless policies which could subjugate so much of the world to a per- manent evil empire of radio- active death.” MX USELESS He criticized Reagan's plan for deployment of the pow- erful new MX nuclear mis-: sile, whch Reagan is reported, by senators to want to base in existing Minuteman mis- sile silos. Congress has once rejected a proposal of this -“It is time to state clearly that the MX missile in any form is a dead duck,” Ken- nedy said. . “Mr. Reagan claimed we were vulnerable because the Russians could hit and des- troy our existing Minuteman silos,” the senator continued. “So he appointed a com- mission and they want to put the new MX in old, vulner- able Minuteman silos. “It’s like having a car that is getting wet because of a leaky garage roof — and then trying to solve the problem by changing the make of the car.” He repeated his call for a U.S.-Soviet freeze on new nuclear weapons followed by which began a two-week, government-sponsored ‘com. -memoration — .he | urged others to join his boycott. “I will not take part in it rs the. ghetto rebellion in which several hundred fighters armed with smuggled . and: homemade weapons: resisted German tanks, artillery and infantry for 58 days beginning April 19, 1943. An estimated 65,000 Jews were killed. : - SPARKS CONTROVERSY The state-organized com- memoration of the: uprising, and Edelman's protest, have there ‘appeared to be no Jews, either Polish or from abroad, at the ceremony Sat- urday at the tomb of an un- known soldier. ‘A delegation of 298 Israelis defied local critics and said they would come to Warsaw next week, when most of the foreign visitors are due, for the main ceremonies, The Is- raelis included Mayor Shlomo. Lahat of Tel Aviy and Stefan reject Grajek, one of a handful of uprising survivors who live © outside Poland. Yitzhak Arad, director of* the: Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial Institute, said he hoped the group's attendance would prevent Polish author- ‘ities from presenting the re- bellion as part’ of a national resistance to the Nazis. Some of the organizers of the tw Y: 8 State Department in Wash- ington’on Friday. ‘ ~A senior Palestine Liber- ation Organization ' official, Khalil Al-Wazir, who arrived in Amman on Friday for talks with the king; told’ Reuters news agency he felt it was too soon for him to express an opinion on the U.S. offer. Washington has been try- ing to persuade Hussein to enter talks on the basis of a peace plan put forward by President Reagan last Sep- tember. This envisages Is- raeli. withdrawal from the West Bank and Gaza strip and Palestinian ‘self-rule there in association with Jor- dan, cs . Hussein is keen to take ad- vantage of the U.S. initiative but is reluctant to enter negotiations without the ap- proval of the PLO — which has. serious reservations about the Reagan plan. A series of meetings be-. tween PLO chief Yasser Arafat and Hussein and three - days of talks among Pales- tinian leaders in Kuwait end- ed Friday with Arafat de- claring the PLO’s commit- ment toa rival Arab plan for peace. . This plan, agreed at an Arab summit in Fez, Moroc- co, last fall, demands the establishement of an inde- pendent Palestinian state, something Reagan specifical- ly ruled’ out when he pre: sented his proposals, > the king on th FLO discussions i in ‘Kuwait. Arafat,. who had been ex- pected to return to Amman, went instead on a visit to South Yemen. Palestinian sources said Hassan and Abu Jihad, who are hoping to see the king today, were carrying a mes- sage for him from Arafat on the Kuwait talks. They de- clined to say exactly what was in the message but that it certainly did not contain PLO approval for Hussein to tion have said that one rea- son for the ceremonies is to weaken the anti-Jewish im- age of the Polish govern- ment, which conducted an anti-Semitic campaign in 1967-1968. P the F jans in peace talks, . Abu Jihad told Reuters on Friday the question of whe- ther to empower Hussein to speak for the Palestinians had “not even been raised” in the Kuwait meeting. Fitot pique M1 Scold oMnrs —" (asefimy @ Aluvial WNI'k GpacusJLawuU UA LUX CROSSWORD Take a Number... answer in Wed. paper Average time of solution; 62 minutes. 7 je 19 fo Tir fiz” Tis at bay zs GMJJB QB Today's Cryptoquip: a GsBQcus GUNS clue: G equals B, GalsBxX GMIJAUL This C d Puzzle sp d by the fi ing b COLUMBIA COIFFURES 240 Columbla Ave. Catilegar iC MOMENT BRIDAL SALON BEAVER AUTO CENTRE MAZDA-AMC DEALER Beaver Falls 367-7355 KOOTENAY FRAME GALLERY Across from Beaver Auto. 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