A2 Castlégar News December 18, 1983 Winning — Express Numbers The winning numbers for the Dec. 14 Express draw for $100,000 are: 1292215, at the $10,000 draw are: 1161691, 2668867, 1891722, 2119557 and 2171105. SPECIALS FOR YOU Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday this week 7-UP OR PEPSI Plus beoar .. $ 1 88 CRYSTALS ad $149 92Gr... place this week. CHRISTMAS IN TOWN .. . Castlegar city worker Ron Drazdoft Christmas tree, located between Dixi Lee and Marlane Hotel, for ear HEALTH UNIT a continued from front page two years except for very short)periods. As well, there are more older people being referred, he: said: ¢ Cameron reported that in the past three months there have been 126 referrals from the Grand Forks area, 97 from Trail and 68 from the Castlegar area. i He said in an interview that the reason for the high numbers in Grand Forks is that there is more emphasis on problems in the areas of family, marital and adolescents in Grand Forks. As well, he said there are more short-term cases than in the Trail-Castlegar area where there are hospital facilities for more chronic cases. “It (the figure) doesn't take into account any potential referrals who have reacted with frustration and anger,” he told the board. : ‘The mental health di e also suff from a ead wee wr isuccoawes tiged Geet Gill, health inspector in Osoyoos. 5 Since it is physically impossible for Clarkson and Gill to look after health insepction matters for the whole unit by, themselves, Harnadek said he has instructed the public health inspectors in Trail and Castlegar to lend assistance. ~~ “Dr, Arnott, Mr. Clarkson and I are in the process of addressing these short- and long-term staffing questions tI terparts in Victoria.” Me aoe his report, Harnadek asked that the board write to the minister and inform him of the need to fill the ition in Nelson. is i ie “My reading is that it's going to be a permanently closed position,” he said, noting that that will result ina loss in service to the puoblic. i “The programs we are responsible for won't be getting the Programs d now aren't the same as is staff shortage. Cameron said the department of six staff. members, has two vacant positions which have not been filled. One is for a full-time social worker in Castlegar. The position became vacant in March. Castlegar presently has the equivalent of nine-tenths of a position which is filled by two part-time psychologists. Grand Forks, which as has one full-time psychologist, has a vacant position for ‘a half-time social worker. The position has been vacant since May, 1982. . Cameron said he feels there hasn't been any effort by the ministry to fill these positions, 6 #Chief public health inspector Mike Harnadek also reported a vacant position in Nelson, as a result of the resig- nation of public health inspector — Linda Jacobsen. “We understand that this position will not be filled in the immediate short term,” he said. “The long term question is not clear at the mement,” he said. He said the Selkirk Unit is left with the Chief Public Health Inspector, Norm Clarkson and one-third coverage by ‘needs in the unit. repares the city lecoration to take four years ago. We don't do inspections as often, Water programs won't be possible,” he said. : Martin derpol, Area J rep’ for the Regional District of Central Kootenay, said: “We have no word on the amalgamation, yet we are effectively being amalgamated. The health program is being shot to pieces, From all of our staff we've been hearing nothing but complaints that services are going down the drain. “It’s a terrible situation," Vanderpol continued. “I am terribly upset about what is happening to health services. It’s shameful." But Arnott noted that Jacobson's resignation” has nothing to do with the amalgamation, adding that. the situation has also occurred in the Lower Mainland where there has been no suggestion of amalgamation. The board, which was without a quorum, passed a motion to write a letter to Nielsen addressing total staffing In other news, Arnott re; that he has recently become a Fellow of the Royal College of. Physicians, LONDON STORE BOMBED ‘eéntinued from front page ‘side Harrods and two inside,” the said. A Yard spoh carried out the attack. DEVASTES AREAS Vast areas of the ornate Victorian store, which covers six hectares (16 said the ALOHA MIXED NUTS By CasNews Staff Castlegar’s first New Year's baby will ride in style and safety thanks to a gift of an infant car seat from the British Columbia Medical Association and the prov- ince’s doctors. Beginning one second after CENTRAL FOODS 2717 Columbia Ave. CASTLEGAR GUITAR HEADAU OF THE KOOTENAYS 840 wld bra sic 364-2922 Carol Magaw Dianna Kootnikoff ADVERTISING SALES CASTLEGAR NEWS P.O DRAWER 3007. CASTUGAR, BC.VIN Hd OFFICE 365-5210 ALCON PAINTING & DECORATING 2649 Four CASTLEGAR TH AVENUE 8.c, VIN 281 965-3563 @ Excavating Road Building in Wetlends © RES Speciakzing i prone 389-7460 or 389-7416 25 YEARS MIKE’s YEARS EXPERIENCE RADIATOR REPAIR t 2LOCATIONS 78 Columbia Ave. Szstleger 15988 roy Hay red Ave.,E. Trail 364-1606, ces. 359-7059 Safety for New Year baby first warning to police came in a call at 1:20 p.m. (8:20 a.m. EST),’ precisely when thée!'bémb/wént off. “There was no chance whatsoever of ” he. BCMA's i committee in a prepared re- lease. : : midnight Jan. 1, 1984, BOMA will present an infant car seat to the first baby born in all B.C. hospitals where babies are delivered. “We hope our New Year's “Children should be .pro- tected in motor vehicles for gifts will set an example for the first ride home from the all parents,” said Dr. David hospital and for every ride Jones, chairman of the after.” COMMUNITY Bulletin Board EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH CONCERT : On December 18, at 7:00 p.m. The Christmas Concert, “JESUS THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD", will be presented at the Twin Rivers Hall on 3rd St. All are welcome. 3/99 (NEW YEAR'S DANCE Saturday, December 31, 9:00 p.m. - 2:00 a.m., Robson Holl. Midnight Chinese Smor. Music: The Raiders. $35.00 Per couple. For tickets call Susan 365-8357 5/99 Coming events of Castlegar and District non-profit organizations may be listed . The first 10 words are $3 and additional words are 12¢ each. Boldfaced words (which must be used for headings) count as two words. There is ne utive insertion is half-price. $3 ther ad is for one, two or three times). Deadlines are 5 p.m. Thursdays tor Sunday's paper and 5 p.m. Mondays for Wednesday's paper. Notices should be brought to the Costlegar News at 197 Columbia Ave. ' GOMMUNITY 5 Bulletin Board _A worker at: the Belfast headquar- ters of Sinn Fein, the IRA's legal poli- tical arm, said no claim had been issued by late afternoon. But he said that did not- mean the IRA was. denying it panic, wept. ACQUITTAL continued from front page he caught “Mom sneaking gifts to us.” = ‘Oiitside' the" 'coiirt, “Mrs.” Wheelock" might, ‘ isaid "Tv just glad it’s all over, dnd that’” won of lost. But with this verdict, she she expected to spend “a very nice” Christmas with her children and grandchildren. “TI think it'll be our first one, won't it?” added her son. “The first in 80 years, or as long as I can remember anyway.” VANCOUVER (CP) — A 45-year-old Oklahoma man, whose discovery in Surrey, with his abducted daughter drew national attention in October, now faces a number of charges in Vancouver. James Garland Humphrey is accused of fraudulently Term Deposits V2 % ALL DEPOSITS GUARANTEED « 3) Castlegar Savings Credit Union 605-2nd St. S., Castlegar 365-7232 Slocan Park 226-7212 Crown counsel Judith Bowers said in most cases a lawyer for the prose- might think of'a’trial as being “” with the verdict. procuring a Canadian pass- port, forgery and three counts of representing him- FOR THE RECORD The article on Christmas church services in the Wed- nesday issue of the Castlegar News reported that the United Church will have a family service Christmas Eve at 7 p.m. and a communion service at 10 a.m. Christmas Day. In fact, the United Church will have a family service Christmas Eve at 7 p.m., but its communion service at 11 p.m. Christmas Eve and its regular Christmas service at 10 a.m. Christmas Day. In another article on the new Castlegar Industrial Commission in the same issue it was reported that the pro- vincial Ministry of Industry and Small Business. Devel- opment holds a $12.8 million loan on the city’s industrial That was a typographical error. In fact, the ministry holds a $1.28 million loan, as is reported elsewhere in the acres) of floor space, were devastated, witnesses said. They said some walls caved. in and shoppers rushed to the exits, but there was remarkably little Dazed workers stood in light drizzle as smoke billowed from the roof of Harrods and some of the survivors “It was so awful . . . how could they said, everyone involved was relieved. ‘That feeling was demonstrated when a female sheriff's officer reached over to the accused woman in the prisoner's dock and gave her a reassuring pat just before the jury entered the courtroom do it?” said Gillian Aubyn, 22, shivering as she was comforted by friends. . Ambulances and army. vehicles fer- ried the injured to three nearby hos- pitals. Extra surgeons, doctors, nurses were called in to treat the injured, some of them maimed. It was the worst terrorist attack in the British capital since July 20, 1982, when the IRA set of bombs at military targets in two parks, killing 11 people. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said Saturday's attack was “just totally brutal and barbaric, but there are very evil people in our society.” Saturday's attack came after weeks of warnings by police that the IRA was planning a major bombing campaign in London, On Tuesday, bomb-disposal experts safely detonated a bomb in the city’s ;_ biggest shopping area, Oxford, Street, and last Saturday a bomb demolished a guardhouse at an army barracks. There were no injuries in either of those bombings. Police evacuated several big Oxford Street stores Saturday after receiving anonymous bomb warnings, but no de- vices were found. ‘ Oklahoma man charged self as another person. The Crown alleges that Humphrey used the name of a dead Canadian, Keith James Mackie, to procure the three counts of representing himself as Mackie in Vancou- ver, Surrey and Vernon. Humphrey left Oklahoma for Vernon two years ago, Harrods -tourista LONDON (AP) — Harrods department store, favored shopping emporium of royalty and celebrities, is Britain's “largest store.and one of London's. most popular tourist attractions, ‘ It was filled with Chri h whena car bomb exploded, hurling shrapnel and glass through the selling areas Saturday afternoon. Police said at least five people were killed and 77 injured. Th London Fire Brigade said the blast damaged 10 per ‘cent of the six hectares (16 acres) of floor space. The five-storey, red-brick Victorian building in London's Knightsbridge area has been the target of before. But Saturday's attack was the first fatal one since Henry Charles Harrod, a tea merchant, founded the store in 1849, s ‘ After its name appeared on a list of terrorist targets in the early 1970s, Harrods, apologizing, installed closed-circuit Television surveillance and took other security measures. ~In 1978, several incendiary devices went off, but there were no injuries, The following year, a bomb in a canvas bag loded in the h dep: but a warning averted any casualties. The allure of the store, which began as a small grocery shop in the year Charles Dickens started writing David Copperfield, has always been that it lived up to its motto: “Omnia, Omnibus, Ubique’ — Everyone, Everything, Everywhere. PROVIDES EVERYTHING Harrods. boasts that it provides everything from the cradle to the grave — including coffins and funerals — Sree CastliltNews as popular ttraction though it hasn't entered the car or yacht business, Members of the Royal Family often do their shopping at Harrods and, while management is very discreet about their purchases, Prince Charles's wife Diana has been spotted buying baby clothes for her son, Prince William, and waiting in line in the bakery for hot croissants. The store says it has completely furnished several palaces in the Middle East, providing enough china and glassware for 1,000 guests with the crest of the Sultan of Oman, flying kippers to Los Angeles, strawberries to the desert, rolls worth 50 cents to New York and sausages to a yacht in the Mediterranean. Harrods employs 4,000 people, but still likes to bill itself as the neighborhood corner shop where residents of the exclusive Knightsbridge district buy their.tea and biscuits, fish and chips, fresh flowers, toothpaste and underwear. Harrods will no longer rent visitors apartments on its upper floors, but it is the only London store offering customers a private lending library and the only one’ providing kennels where patrons may park their pets. For the last six years, Roland (Tiny) Rowland, chairman of the Lonrho conglomerate with vast mining and ranching interests in Africa, has been fighting — so far unsuccessfully — to separate the highly profitable Harrods from its parent House of Fraser group. f The House of Fraser has fought Rowaland’s $280-million takeover bid and snubs an Argentine store with the same name, which uses the same green and gold lettering. “There is only one Harrods,” says managing director Aleck Craddock. passport, forgery — by ma- king a false document to pro- cure the passport — and taking his seven-year-old daughter Jamie Linn Hum- phrey with him, Police file A motor vehicle accident on 7th Ave. near Stanley Humphries Secondary School at noon Friday resulted in $1,000 damage to a 1977 Pontiac driven by Beverly o tl Castlegar, morning. y Lloyd Douglas Langhorst, 23, an escaped inmate of Pine Ridge penitentiary in Maple Ridge, is in custody and will be early Saturday A second vehicle involved, a 1977 Chevrolet driven by Michael Hood, sustained $1,000 in the accident. * s ° Castlegar RCMP report an attempted theft of a battery from a vehicle parked at Maloney Pontiac Buick GMC on Columbia Ave. Thursday. A suspect has been arres- ted in connection with a break-in at Mitchell Supply Ltd. at 490 18th Ave. in to the camp to ‘ face charges. Police say Langhorst was arrested at the scene of the break-in, In other happenings this weekend, an automobile was stolen Friday night from the Marlane Hotel parking lot. The 1971 orange Datsun sta- tion wagon bears the licence numbers ENV 636. Anyone knowing its whereabouts is asked to contact the Castle- gar RGMP detachment. MON. Castlegar Store Christmas Hours SAT. DEC. 19 9:30.a.m. to 6p.m. DEC. 24 Ya.m. to 5:30 p.m. DEC. 26 CLOSED DEC. 31 - 9am. to 5:30 p.m. JANUARY 2 - OPEN 9:30 A.M. to 6 P.M. FLOWERS FOR CHRISTMAS . . . Maureen Hadikin of ” local flower shop prepares poinsettas for Christmas h The 1 Chri plants, native VANCOUVER (CP) — The Social Credit govern- ment has picked up widespread public support during its battle with 0, ‘ity over cutbacks in gov- ernment services this fall, a new poll reported Friday. The poll, commissioned by the Vancouver Sun and conducted at the end of N Mark South Africa, come in various shades of red and white. Ch MADRID (AP) — Flames swept through a basement HUH cnc nnn Socreds gain support hurt the NDP. While 12 per cent of NDP voters would vote for a Solidarity candidate, just five per cent of Socred voters would do so. In other words, a Solidarity candidate would cost the NDP about 2% points, compared with what the New D. Marketing Research Inc., found that while Solidarity. drew thousands of supporters to rallies protesting B.C. ‘government cutbacks, it would garner only meagre * backing ‘as’s political’ party in'a new election. The poll — the first political gauge of the strength of Operation Solidarity since the recent strikes — found that nearly, 60 per cent of Greater Vancouver residents f an of clergy, unions, — citizens and. tenants opposed to the OVAGACIOGEUCOEUUEDERELEEANLUNEAEERUAE.NUOEUUEUCAOESUNLONECOA.guanadacoOsaUnnaeeeeaE: governmeny’s service-slashing restraint program, will continue tq exist. The poll questioned 511 Greater Vancouver resi- dents using hni that produce figures with 4.3 percentage points up or down, 19 times out of 20. Asked how they would vote if a provincial election were held soon, just seven per cent said they would vote for a Solidarity candidate. Social Credit would attract 41 per cent, the New Democratic Party would garner 29 per cent, 16 per cent didn’t know and seven per cent said they wouldn't vote for anyone. Hl The poll found while a Solidarity candidate would not draw heavy support in Vancouver, he or she could well’ would receive in a straight fight against a Social Credit candidate. i Polls taken in September by Marktrend showed 29.6 per cent would choose Social Credit; 29.2 would vote NDP. and 24.3 choose “other” as the party for which they would vote, Ina May 5 election, the results were: Social Credit, 49.8 per cent of the popular vote; NDP, 44.9 per cent; Liberal, 2.7 per cent; Progressive Conservative, 1.2 per cent and others, 1.4 per cent. Social Credit won 35 seats in the legislature, the NDP has 22 and the other parties were left empty handed. Campbell found it significant that the large number 4 by Ne by of ided voters in were backing Social Credit. “People are saying the government got through the strike, things seemed to have calmed down. They put their support behind the government.” In another area, the poll found people are more pessimistic about the economy than they were in the spring and summer of this year, when there was wide- spread anticipation of an impending recovery. And four out of five people see higher unemployment, not rising prices, as the more serious problem for the country. Guardian says secret document was returned LONDON (AP) — Reluc- tantly obeying a court ruling expected to have serious implications on British press freedom, The Guardian news- paper said Saturday it has returned a secret govern- ment document outlining publicity strategy on the U.S. cruise missiles. The newspaper said the jh bears markings and codings which will enable security men to trace the government official who anonymously sent it to the newspaper Oct. 21. Editor Peter Preston said Friday's ruling in the Appeal Court, the second highest court after House of Lords, had “blown utterly apart” the new: legal right of British to protect the CIP program may be VICTORIA (CP) — One of the most controversial pro- grams to get axed under the Social Credit government's restraint program may fine new life in next year’s bud- get. Human Resources Minister Grace McCarthy said Friday she has requested the cabinet restore funds to allow revival of the Community Involve- ment Program, under which $50 a month was paid to dis- abled volunteers. The cabinet is studying McCarthy's sub- revived in July’s restraint package drew heavy fire from protest groups. If the program is revived, it will not come back without changes. Before it was axed, it included 2,600 welfare recipients. McCarthy said not all the volunteers receiving program money were handi- capped and the revised pro- gram will change that. McCarthy said although she doesn't expect new pro- grams to be added in next anonymity of their sources of told the prime minister the would have to That right is contained in the 1981 Contempt of Court Act. The Times newspaper said the Appeal Court ruling “is likely to have far reaching implications for journalists.” “Anyone knowing White- hall (the British bureaucracy) knows that documents stamped ‘secret’ extend even to the office loo (toilet) paper,” Preston said. In a bid to disarm critics, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's Conservative gov- ernment included a section in the 1981 act saying the only ‘circumstances in which courts can compel journalists to name sources are “in the interests of justice or na- tional security or for the pre- vention of disorder or crime.” Preston said the ruling by the three Appeals Court jud- ges has removed that guar- antee. The 487,000-circulation Guardian published the se- cret memo from Defence mission to have the prog reinstated as early as April. Chopping of the program year’s budget, the ministry will be ping its pro- grams to better meet the needs of handicapped people. y Michael Heselti to Thatcher on Oct. 81. In ‘the memo, Heseltine admit when the U.S. nuclear missiles arrived and should start with announcements about “sensitive items,” com- ing in, but never confirm or deny when nuclear warheads were installed. The missiles began ar- riving in Britain in Novem- ber. Wealthy man helps couple VANCOUVER (CP) — When a Surrey couple lost their three children in a house fire Tuesday, and were left their relati que in the centre of Madrid in the early morning hours Saturday, many of the estimated 600 young visitors. Police said 78 were killed, most of them by toxic smoke, Madrid Mayor Enrique Tierno Galvan, one of the first officials on the fire scene, said many of the sur- vivors-acted “heroically,” re- turning to save their trapped friends. — Twenty-one people were reported admitted to hospi- tal. othe fire at the Alcala 20 trapping Fire breaks disco broke out at 4:45 a.m. (10:45 p.m. Friday EST), and Officials said they think it was started by a short circuit behind stage curtains in the recently remodelled multi- level disco, which had be- come the rage in Madrid's thriving punk and new wave music scene. Several survivors said some emergency exists were barred by metal grilles. Pedestrians walking by the disco at the time of the fire heeded cries for help and pulled the grilles off several emergency exit doors to let people out, police said. : Some of those inside who Nuke study cha WASHINGTON (REUT- ER) — Congressional analy- sts on Saturday challenged a Pentagon-funded study that said there is no unusual in- cidence of cancer among former U.S. servicemen sta- tioned in Japan after the 1945 atomic bomb attacks. The study, by the U.S. National Research Council of the National Academy of Sci- ences, concluded the service- men stationed in Nagasaki and Hiroshima show no evi- dence of excess incidence of f= bone marrow cancer or mul- tiple myeloma. But the Office of Technol- ogy Assessment, after a four- month review of the aca- demy’s report, said its re- search methods were deeply flawed and its af The review gives hopes to veteran groups and others who say the Defence Depart- ment is eager to close debate said. on their claims. The review out in managed to get out returned to help’ their friends, said Mayor Tierno Galvan, 82, who went to one of the city's hospitals to see survivors. RESCUES FRIENDS One youth who gave his name only as Javier was credited by police with re- turning at least 10 times to the disco to guide others to safety. Police also said four young men and a young woman managed to escape through an air conditioning duct that led up to a manhole cover in the middle of Alcala Street. Officials said most of the victims ae of this cancer, which has an extremely high fatality rate, the congressional analysts Another major flaw in the was requested by Demo- cratic congressman Paul Simon of Illinois and six other congressmen who questioned the impartiality of the study funded by the Pentagon. UNDERESTIMATES NUMBER The office said the method used by the council to iden- tify bone marrow cancer cases probably underesti- mated the number of cancer victims since cases were ob- tained mostly through ad- anda g study, congres- sional analysts said, was its inability’ to determine how many servicemen were in the Nagaski force and what their ages were. Both facts are vital in evaluating the cancer rate. The office also said the academy report improperly compared the number of multiple myeloma cases ex- pected during a 85-year per- fod to the number of cases actually counted during a five-year period. ver vhot-line, This reflected a bias to- ward living because enacted legisla- tion directs the Veterans Administration to decide if a “cannot be supported by the council's analysis.” it failed to account for vet- erans who had already died full-scale study of servicemen exposed to atomic radiation is needed. LECH WALESA Militants criticized WARSAW (REUTER) — Solidarity leader Lech Wal- esa condemned violence by some militants of the banned union Saturday after clashes between demonstrators and police in three Polish cities during a day of anti-gov- ernment protest. The Nobel peace laureate also indirectly criticized un- derground Solidarity spokes- men whose call for country- wide demonstrations was vir- tually ignored by Poles on Friday. Trouble broke out in the Baltic port of Gdansk and the 1 cities of Wroclaw appealed to the public for help. Randy and Anna Murphy: got it, in spades: A Vv: and Poznan in western Po- land when Solildarity acti- vists took to the streets after masses were said at Roman Catholic church n a millionaire has donated the furniture from a luxury Van- couver hotel suite he uses for visiting business associates and has also offered to pay the “first few months’ rent” for the couple when they find a place to live. Criticizing the violence, Walesa said by telephone: “There is no use in getting into fights ... We have to continue our struggle but by peaceful methods. He said the huge deploy- ment of police for the dem- onstrations was normal and added: “It is a job of the police to be on the streets... that is what they are there for.” ISSUES APPEAL The appeal for demonstra- tions was issued by Soli- darity'’s Underground Na- tional Co-ordinating Commit- tee to mark the anniversaries of the killing of Polish work- ers by riot police acting on the orders of the Communist authorities. At least 45 shipyard work- ers were shot dead during food riots in Gdansk in 1970 and seven miners were killed near Katowice after martial law was declared in Poland two years ago. Walesa did not officially endorse the committee's call for marches in cities after work when it was made earlier this month although he acknowledged that the underground leadership had the right to issue it. He implied Saturday that the initiative was doomed from the start by the cer- tainty in people's minds that overwhelming security meas- ures would be taken by the authorities. “People are becoming more and more sensible and more and more aware of the implications of what is going on,” Walesa added. The low turnout of dem- onstrators was a blow for the union which met a similar!: disco their 20s — trapped and killed by the toxic fumes produced by burning plastic- ized curtains. One of the survivors, Jose Ramon Paciolama, 22, said people on the dance floor saw smoke pour from behind the curtains and began chanting, “let them burn, let them burn” as though it were all part of the action. “But then we were en- veloped in dense, black smoke and couldn't find our way out. I couldn't find my friends. Two of them died in- side. It was horrible.” Madrid provincial civil gov- 9, said at a newace turday.. afternoon that an investigation had been ordered. Mother taken away ST. PAUL, MINN. (AP) — Saying his elderly mother will spend “a good Christ- mas” in a secret location and not in a nursing home, a cab driver has vowed to stay in jail rather than tell author- ities where she is. ‘I'm stubborn and I'm going to fight,” said Dick Fingerholz, 56. “It's a matter of principle.” Fingerholtz picked up his 84-year-old mother, Ann, at Ramsey County Nursing Home on Oct. 29 for what was supposed to be a three- hour visit, nursing home offi- cials said. They haven't seen Mrs. Fingerholz since. “My mother’s wishes were not to go into a nursing home,” Fingerholz said. “I'm going to abide by my mother’s wishes. She'll be free and she'll have a good Christmas and I'll be in jail.” Fikngerholz was jailed Nov. 30 for contempt of court after he refused to tell a pro- bate court where his mother is. District Judge Jerome Plunkett says Fingerholz will stay in jail until he co-oper- ates. Fingerholz, who author- ities say was involved in an incident in which his mother was injured, wants himself or another family member to be ly tepid response last August when it sought national dem- onstrations. Its ability to mobilize popular support has been in regular decline since martial law. DISPERSE MARCH Warsaw was the only city in which a mid-afternoon march took place and it broke up almost immediately and without trouble when police ordered the demonstrators to disperse. A government spokesman said he could not comment on the number of arrests made during demonstrations or which towns were affected. ee her and granted permission to care for her. But the courts support social workers who say Mrs. Fingerholz is disoriented and confused, and belongs in a nursing home. In an interview Wednes- day, Fingerholz said he has “heard from the place she is, and I know she'll be well and happy and being cared for.” The Ramsey County Hu- man Services Department determined that Mrs. Fin- gerholz, who had lived alone for 15 years, was no longer able to care for herself in her St. Paul home.