er Castlégar News July 24, 1985 WEATHER SYNOPSIS: Aridge of Ihigh pressure is till off 1 B.C. Coast but moist and unstable air aloft will stream across the region from the Northwest giving the potential clouds and showers. SUNRISE: 5:14 A.M. SUNSET: 8:40 P.M. Hoes & Couple in court to face murder charges WELLINGTON (Reuter) — A man and woman claiming Swiss citizenship appeared in a court in Auckland today to face murder and sabotage charges resulting from the sinking of, the, Greenpeace protest ship Rainbow Warr- ior. District Court Judge Ron- ald Gilbert refused bail and ordered that the couple be held until at least Aug. 14. Alain Jacques Turenge, 33, and Sophie Frederique Clare Turenge, 36, were charged with murdering Fernando Pereira, a of ges related to the two bombs that sank the Greenpeace flagship in Auckland harbor on July 10. Portuguese-born Pereira was a Dutch citizen. The Turenges have'been in police custody for a week on passport charges and the fresh charges were laid Tues- day night. Prosecution lawyer Mich- ael Parker said the’ scope of the case went ‘‘beyond any- thing that has come. before the courts in this country.” ‘Pacific-wide investigations into the sinking are to be and Curry opposed the length of the remand and said the couple wanted the case brou- ght forward so they could “continue to proclaim their *innocence."” No formal pleas were taken before the hearing adjour- ned. - The Rainbow Warrior was damaged by two blasts at its dockside mooring. It was to have led a ‘‘peace fleet’’ to protest against nuclear-tests at Mururog atoll near Tahiti in French Polynesia. Police said they were- still the Greenpeace environmen- tal group killed when the ship sank, and with arson and conspiracy to commit arson. Police said the arson char- ‘France srs Parker told the court the evidence gathered so far would require a month- long preliminary hearing: Defence lawyer Gerard inte in the French crew of the charter yacht Ouvea, last reported to be near Noumea, capital of the French territory, of New Caledonia. Drug ring broken CHICAGO (AP) — Raids by law officers in seven U.S. states, ico has led'to the arrest of 120 people in a crackdown on a ‘Mexican connection’ authorities say has pumped _ Puerto Rico and Mex- ~ heroin into the United States for two decades. More than 400 state and federal agents took part in the raids Tuesday in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Texas, Colorado, Florida, California, Closure decision _ still up in the air The decision whether or not to close the- Crescent decision has been made yet with regard to the closure of this ‘h Valley D of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police remains up in the air.. “In this case, no news is good news,” says local Mem- ber of Parliament Bob Brisco. In a letter from the Attor- ney General Brian Smith to Brisco the Attorney General states that he has received the report on this matter and acknowledged Brisco’s con- cerns were documented in tke report. , Smith's letter states also that the recommendations in the report are still under consideration and that no In January the RCMP con- ducted a public hearing into the matter. At that time local - residents expressed serious doubts about the assurances given by the RCMP that the closure would not necessarily mean a decline in service. “I find it difficult to accept the’assertion that the closure would not significantly effect the level of policing in the area,” said Brisco, “The ex- istence of a detachment one day and the of an Puerto Rico~ and Mexico, authorities said. One of those arrested was Jesus Herrera-Diaz, describ- ed as ‘‘a chieftain of the Herrera organization in Chi- cago,”’ which authorities say is a part of a ring involving thousands of people Many of those arrested in’ Indiana “were members of the Zam- brana family, which is allied with the Herreras, authorities said. Drug enforcement Ad- ministration officals believe the Herreras have been op- erating since the early 1960s, growing opium in the Sierra Madre. Occidental around Du- rango, Mexico, refining it and shipping heroin north. The names of some of those indicted or arrested were withheld for security reasons, said U.S. Attérney Anton Valukas in Chicago. “There would be blood spill- ed if. the names of the indi in the DOUSING THE FLAMES . . . A firefighter helps put out a blaze near theHugh Risertspalgs dam yesterday. The fire broke out in piles of cedar debris, but the cause is not known. Costews Photo by Ryan Wilson a JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — Police said today they had detained 212 people in the previous 24 hours, increasing to 653 the total rounded up in the three days since a state of emer- gency was declared. The emergency measures, the first imposed on South Africa in the last 25 years, had led to *'a decrease in the number of incidents in which serious injuries or death have resulted,’’ police said in a statement. Police said two more blacks were killed Tuesday in eas- tern Cape province, bringing the death toll to at least 10 since Sunday. Police opened fire when a crowd of about 150 stoned a patrol — one of five incidents reported in the area. Pal By DARRYL GIBSON SINGAPORE (AP) —_Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Joe Clark's first visit to Southeast Asia appears: to have en- hanced Canada’s image and its potential for business opp- ortunities in the region. The’ two-week trip also seems to have boosted the confidence of the former gov- ernment leader, who is still exploring his role as Prime Minister Brian "s Also Tuesday, Bishop Des- mond Tutu pleaded with fel- low blacks to halt the killings of other blacks they view as tools of white-minority rule. About 500 blacks have died in 11 months of. rioting against aparthied, South Af- rica’s legal form of racial segregation in which - five million whites dominate 22 million blacks who: have no voting rights. A member of a detainees’ support group said deten- tions have been aimed’ at undermining local black or- ganizations that have chall- enged government-backed township councils. END UNREST President P.W. Botha im- posed the emergency in 36 riot-torn cities and towns, mainly around Johannesburg and in the eastern Cape province, to try to end’ the unrest. It is the first state of emergency declared since violence swept South Africa in 1960 after 69 blacks were killed and about 200 wounded in riots at Sharpeville. - Tutu, the Anglican bishop who won the 1984 Nobel Peace Prize, told a crowd of 20,000 who gathered inKwa- Thema 9n Tuesday for! the funeral of 15 blacks killed in protests, that. killings of blacks by blacks make it “‘difficult to speak up for your liberation.” He referred to a mob’s brutal killing of a suspected woman informer at a funeral Saturday, which was tele- vised in South Africa and abroad. She was stoned and beaten and, still writhing, set on fire. “If that happens again, I'm going to collect my family: and leave this country that 1 love,"’ Tutu said. ‘*Millions of people worldwide support our struggle, but when they saw that on TV, many said, ‘Uh,:uh, if these people can do things like that, they are not ready for freedom.’ ~ Most have been shot by police, but increasingly blacks have attacked and slain other blacks they regard * as collaborators with the gov- ernment. ~ 2 The state of emergency empowers any policeman ‘or soldier to arrest without war- rant, hold and’ interrogate suspects and use any force necessary to quell unrest. The police commissioner can Confidence boosted tries: Singapore, the Phillip- pines, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia and Brunei. At the ASEAN meeting in” ‘the Malaysian capital, Clark urged economic and. develop- mental co-operation. He. also pleaded the case of refugees and attacked the internation- al drug trade and terrorism. The ended with noted that political action can ivi in for ,ong influential Canadians of pay ¢ Caiadian companies. and exports cross the Pacific than the Atlantic; about 7.2 per cent of Pacific trade is with ASEAN countries. In- creased Canadian presence can only mean more jobs for Cc a special chairman's com- minique —— a rare event — “voice on foreign affairs. Clark visited Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore. He saw Cambod- ian refugees along the Thai border and inspected Can- adian International Develop- ment Agency projects in operation were revealed. It’s . and Thailand and a remote corner of Indonesia. empty building the next is not an insignificant social or economic occurrence.” ihe largest of its kind in the history « of the U.S. mttoraey Ss office."” areas. Jand. that ne Mni6re = FIREFIGHTING continued from front poge announced restrictions on recreational ‘access to a number of undeveloped around the Frank_Ullm: situation. of firefighting might million. At the 2,375-hectare fire was gress, and the outside the main blaze. than five per cent of tourists will be affected by the extreme forest fire He added that if current conditions continue through the summer, the cost North Bend blaze, humidity remained too high to allow an attempt to spark a controlled burn to act as a firebreak along the top of the ridge south of the village. However, fire authorities said the battle on ‘the ground against the main danger was the possiblity of spot fires developing A crew of 150 men was at work exceed 100- the resort city. And | Mike _ Tuesday, working directly against the flames, said forest servicé spokesman ight now, we're still working at it quite hard, and we're looking at the possiblity of having it contained fairly _ quickly now.” Elsewhere, officials of the Penticton Game Farm in the Okanagan were drawing up an evacuation plan‘as a fire burned 10 kilometres southwest of the perimeter of the fire He anA of Scutheast Asian Nations conference in Kuala Lumpur and held bilateral and multi; lateral talks with foreign min- isters from the ASEAN coun- Indonesia. and. an is- sue raised by Clark. He was among the strong- est voices condemning the Vietnamese occupation of Cambodia. The security-con- scious appreciated Clark's pledge to deny economic aid to Vietnam as long as its troops remained in Cambo- dia. SEES DIVIDENDS At his final news confer- ence in Singapore — he later flew to London, en route to. an East-West human rights meeting in Helsinki — Clark and more markets for Canadian products. At several stops,’ Clark noted: ‘‘Canada is not well- known here, and we must much better He pledged expanded staff . — mostly in jobs relating to trade and investment — for. Canadian high commissions and embassies in Asia. He said he plans to encourage MPs and other Canadians to spend more time in the re- gion. “l_am_._._.-_very—much concerned about the need to increase understanding am- Wreckage being studied NEW DEHLI (AP) — The tet a Z Their departure followed the Atlantic after a bomb Russell Hunter, 24, was making pro- Flats. after tar in court at Cranbrook in southeast B.C. to face four charges of wilfully setting forest fires. One of the fires forced the evacuation of Canal . The.Forests Ministry said 781 fires were -burning in B.C. Tuesday, 54 of them uncontained, and more than 6,000 firefighters were at work. - iB tion into last month's mys- terious crash of an Air-India jumbo jetliner left for Ireland today to study the wreckage of the downed plane in hopes of finding clues to the cause of the disaster. “Justice B.N. Kirpal said he was headed for Cork, Ireland, headquarters of. the rescue and salvage operations for the June 23 crash, killing all 329 people on board, mostly Canadians of East Indian ancestry. Kirpal was accompanied by S.N. Sharma, secretary of the Indian government ‘inquiry, and Dr. V. Ramachandran of the falhure to cause of the crash off the Irish coast during preliminary analysis in ‘India of the plane’s cockpit recorder and digital flight date recorder. India’s civil aviation min- ter, Ashok Gehlot, told par- liament Tuesday that no def- inite“clues to the crash, the third worst in aviation his- experts who listened and analysed date from the two recorders. Kirpal told reports last, week that examination of the recorders “neither ‘peors nor that India’s National A L y- the Boeing 747 crashed into, More of Canada's -imports- the that exist for Canada ‘in this region.” Clark said ienits Clark was prime minister in a Conservative govern- ment that lasted from June 1979 to March 1980. declare curfews, restrict news reporting and make it a crime for anyone in a riot area to give information for publication. Fire under control By CasNews Staff * A fire yesterday northwest of the Hugh Keenleyside dam is still smouldering but is under control, Robson fire chief Dennis LaHue said today. “They'll wet it down and_ bury the whole thing.” Dave Fitchett, duty officer. at the forest service field office—in-Castlegar, sajd- 25 men from Westar, the Rob- son fire department, the Ministry of Forests and Kal- esnikoff Lumber worked on putting out the blaze. He said the fire was burn- ing in cedar debris piles that had been left over from the manufacture of shake blocks. ~LaHue.said.. the. -forest- service is investigating the fire because the area is outside the Robson fire de- partment's jurisdiction. is More emphasis on communication Upon completion of his first extended tour of the. summer, Kootenay West Member of Parliament Bob Brisco says better communi- cation is what is on most people's minds — including the media. * Brisco, who began his tour of the riding on June 29, accompanied by his wife and he is hopeful that the activity which exists in these areas can be strengthened and in- creased. The government policy of fostering small business is working, says Brisco and he ~ cites Emma's Jambrosia and Forwood Industries as’ ex- amples. * Brisco’s week, which began son, said that he was often—with-a-major address to the “asked why he wasn't more visible, particularly in the press. “Clearly this is a concern which can be resolved and I intend to place more em- phasis on communications. I expect that my contacts with the media will therefore be closer than in the past,” The New Dehli high-court__Brisco said. | judge said he planned to be in Cork for one week talking to aviation experts and exam- ining the wreckage, some of which is still lying onthe Atlantic bed. The plane disappeared abruptly from the air control radar screens without the pilot giving a distress signal. Anonymous callers to Can- adian and U.S. news organ- izations claimed responsibil- ity for the crash in the name of two Sikh and one Kashmir separatist organizations. ~ One of the Sikh groups issued a statement in India denying any involvement in the crash. riseo d that he Trail and District Peace Action Committee, ended Saturday with his attendance at various Castlegar SunFest’ . celebrations. Briscb says he will be in Ottawa for a short while and will be returning to the riding before the end of the month for a second ex- tended tour. " felt it was important tha’ riding itself be given a higher profile. He means to do this “ by inviting more cabinet ministers to Kootenay West so that they will haye first- hand knowledge when deal- ing with ‘the many, many issues’ Brisco says he has raised with them. Kootenay West will. be hosting Robert Layton, Sec- retary of State for Mines, and, Health” Minister -Jake Epp next, week. Brisco who has just spent much of the last week in Slocan, Nakusp, Burton, Fauquier and Edgewood says “Touris: Alert VANCOUVER (CP) — The folowing people are asked to contact the RCMP for urgent messages: Brenton vale, B.C. Charles Boucher of sp6n- nelly, “Alta. pe _ Brian and Dianna Jaman of Calgary. Glenn Edward Kivinen of Thunder Bay, Ont. Barrett of Fruit- aot Long wait between Earls LONDON (AP) Two centuries ‘after a‘slip in the = «pedigree made_ his family plain misters, Patrick Hope- . Johnstone has become an earl. “Iam simply delighted — I always wondered why the title went wrong in 1792,” exile at the end of the 17th century,” Peskett said. “Like most of his kind, he could only -earn money. by serving as a mercenary in half the armies of Europe, so the search took me to East Germany, Poland and Den- | mark. *___._said-the-new—Eart-of Ann- “Ksked how he obtained andale and’ Hartfell before returning today to his Scot- tish estate. He came ‘to London on Tuesday to hear the House of Lords confirm his “claim to the title, years. His wife Susan becomes a countess, their son David, 13, vacant for 193 will be known as Master of Johnstone and their daugh- ter Julia, 11, is_now Lady Julia. ‘ The new earl — one of 160 earls and — hired permission to delve among state papers in Communist East Germany and Poland, Peskett said: “I — gently implied that this poor. man was the victim of British royalist repression,” Lord Keith of Kinkel ann- ounced Tuesday in House of Lords ‘that his committee examining the claim to the earldom was convinced by documentary evidence that Hope-Johnstone was the male heir of Lady Anne H of Britain's best-known geneal- ogist, Hugh Peskett, in 1979 to help in the arduous search for his ancestors. It was Peskett who proved the Irish ancestry of Ronald Reagan: leading to the U.S. president's’ visit to his the | third earl. The title, granted in 1662, expired when the fourth earl, the last of five unmarried brothers, died childless in 1792. He was the new éart's great uncle, eight - genera- tions removed. TREET “TALK . CASTLEGAR'S JOHN KAVALOFF a firefighter] stationed near Canal Flats,’ was featured in a Calgary Herald story last week fom the Spen Camp. Kavaloff is} quoted in the article by Herald’staffer David Rooney. Also included ‘is a photograph taken’ by Herald photographer John Skrypnyk of Kavaloff (putting out a) spot fire. . THE-ROYAL cee LEGION on Saturday nb: Change’ Theatre from Nelson, The group is operating] under a Challenge ‘85 student Canada Works grant. The| name of the production, Kapital Kapers, was directed by’ Castlegar resident, Chris Wanjoff, who played the part of a. mountie. i SPEAKING OF ACTING. about 400 teenagers recently turned up outside a local lhotel in Cranbrook hoping to be one of the 60 extras chosen for a new feature film to be filmed in the region later this month. Crews are in Cranbrook this week to shoot exterior scenes using the St. Eugene’s Mission School on the St. Mary's Indian band. The remainder of the film will be shot in Vancouver and the Lower Mainland region. The basic plot of the movie revolves around a love affair between a girl at a Catholic girls’ school and a boy spending time at a camp for juvenile delinquints. The film, which will feature Canadian actress Kate| Reid, will be made up of relatively unknown lead actors: and actresses. The lead actress in the movie. will be Virginia Madsen, while Craig Sheffer will play the lead male role. 5 The Canadian National Institute for the Blind, has hired an orientation and mobility instructor for the _ ENTER TO WIN GAS BARBECUE * AT CENTRAL FOODS . Your Community Food Store! FRESH FRYING GRA! UTILITY GRADE ©} kg. $437)... Ib. OF BEEF $9 ee kg. $637 /.. $989 BEEF ROUNDS. CANADA GRADE INSIDE ROUND BEEF. CANADA GRADE . Pd ad OVERLANDER. BEEF .... “100 66"Ie. Sa BACON $796 | GARLIC RING : 293° FLETCHERS. BUDGET ....... TURKE DRUMSTICKS YOUNG.. est 9° BARBECUE S| BARBECUE SAUCE HEINZ. NEW SQUI BRIQUETTES $998 County Tipperary ancestral Three earlier claims to the home in Ballyporeen last title fizzled out in House-of year. : Lords in 1834, 1844 and 1879, “The key figure “in the Peskett said. search was John Johnstone, a Jacobite rebel who fled into Premiers to talk trade EDMONTON (CP) — Al- berta Premier Peter Lough- eed and six other Canadian premiers will participate in a “trade forum at the U.S. Na- tional Governors’ Conference on international trade and * relations-early next month. PARIS (AP) — The Am- erican Hospital in Paris de- nied today that movie idol Rock Hudson is being treated for inoperable liver cancer, and said tests have not yet shown what ailment is re- sponsible for.the star’s coll- apse. “As far-as we know that report (of liver cancer) is false, and it certainly wasn't given by the doctors at the American Hospital in Paris,”’ said hospital’ spokesman Bruce Redo. Hudson's publicity agent has said the actor is suffering from liver cancer and is being treated by specialists from a Paris institute that special- izes in medical research and has da search for the cause. of AIDS. The agent, Dale Oison, “said in Los Angeles on Tues- day the actor had collapsed at the Paris Ritz Hotel on Sun- day night. “He's been in and out of a he’s a very, very sick Olson added. “My official statement is that Rock Hudson is in the A roundtable session with premiers and United States governors Aug. 5 in Boise, Idaho, will provide an’ oppor- tunity to discuss the benefits of trade between Canada and the U.S., said Lougheed. He ac call on Tuesday with the _other_premiers—who-will~ be — attending the conference Only the premiers from’ Sas- katchewan, Manitoba and Ontario will not attend. The conversation concern- ed ‘‘what our approach should be in the discussion,"" Lougheed said. ‘‘Obviously, it is not an appropriate forum “Institute, Okanagan-Kootenay region. John Stevenson has been hired to teach the skills of independent travel to the visually impaired of the region. American Hospital in Paris, where his doctors have diag- nosed that he has cancer of the liver and that it is not operable.”’ Hospital spokesman Joyce Gray told. The Associated Press: ‘‘Mr. Hudson was hospitalized July 21, Sunday, for fatigue“and general mal-. aise. He is currently under- going a series of examina- tions. As of this moment the results of these examinations have been inconclusive.”" Redo said late Tuesday that the 59-year-old Hudson ‘was.under observation and in satisfactory condition. _; — Hudson had gone to Paris to see doctors at the Pasteur said his Beverly Hills physician. Olson said: _“I believe_people fromthe Institute_Pasteur_have—been treating him. He has not been in the Institute Pasteur as a patient.” The institute specializes in research on AIDS, or acquir- ed immune deficiency syn- drome. Beginning in..1948, Hud: son’s commanding size, Hudson hospitalized strong presence and good looks led him to starring roles opposite some of Hollywood's “leading ladies in more than 50 Westerns, war epics, com- edies and tear-jerking dram- as. He later went on to star in the television series McMil- lan and Wife and Dynasty. REPORTS NOT - CONFIRMED Olson said there were in- dications of cancer in Hud- son's blood. However, he said reports that Hudson is suffering from acquired im- mune deficiency _ syndrome were speculative ahd have not been confirmed or denied by doctors. AIDS destroys the body’s immunity to infec- tion. “The doctor in Paris indi-— -cated that at this point he ha: seen no indication of AIDS,"" Olson said. Asked what Hud- son's prognosis was, he said: “I haven't been given one." He said he believed doctors wanted to wait until after sessions with specialists to- day ‘before making a prog- nosis. for us to be going to the United States and Bresent “differing-views."*~- s But he said the premiers will not present a unified position on trade. “We are going down to discuss the trading relation- ship, not in any way to present a position." anes The premiers will report on to put it in ‘the-results of their discuss- ions with the governors when they gather Aug. 21 in St. John's, Nfld., for the 26th annual premiers’ conference, Lougheed said. If all 10 premiers reach a consensus on a trade posi- tion, then that position will be relayed to the prime minister. NEW IN TOWN? LET US PUT OUT THE MAT Joyce 365-3091 * Connie 365-7601 ee eee “No idea is worth anything unless _ you have the guts black and white." Imagine your best creative ideas stripped to the bones. No sound __effects, no lavish sets; no-cute—— kids with food smeared on their faces. 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