A2. CASTLEGAR NEWS, August 21, 1983 NEW ADDITION . . . Phil Arishenkoff (left) and Mickey Hobbit wil Child n's Centre: Nazarov on si it the new $40,000 000 addition to the PUT YOUR AFTERNOONS ‘AND EVENINGS TO WORK FOR YOU Selkirk College offers credit courses for the Some daytime offerings are also available -time leamer in the afternoons and evenings. space permits. For more information, contact the campus nearest you. CASTLEGAR CAMPUS All classes start the some courses. COURSE NTH 100 PSC 100 ASTR 100/101 BIOL 218 ENGLOSO ENGL 110 ENGL 200 PSYC 100 PSYC 100/101° PSYC 230 PSYC 240° Ress $0C 120 TWC 161 week of Sept. 6 except where indicated and prerequisites are required In. TITLE Introduction to Anthropology ineeri Eng neering Drawing Introduction to Entomology Introductory Composition College Com; ‘Composition ton Su of English Literature Conte temporary French Language seat Principles ‘ond Proctice # <<: Interpersonal Communications Introductory ory Algol Intermediate Algebra © Int oaen fo calcite Introductory Ini pike restald orien ig Emotional and Social Diccedocsy Child Development #77" BS AnasngngEs EEAEAM SE Reading & Vocobula: Development Introdustory Sociol etl Introduction to Report Writing *Distance Education course. Contact the Continuing Education office nearest you for details on how to register. REGISTRATION: Part-time students who Castlegar Campus on the following dates: have not applied should register with Student Services, WeseoenY y/ Augest SI: neon te 38. Students may also register at etek cles. NOTE; Enroknent is malted: i copiatration, is ona first-come, first-served basis. Part-time stud- who have app! ease If you peel not local 259, ai ooetsslon should have already received registration infor- received any material, call the Admissions Olfice, 365- DAVID THOMPSON UNIVERSITY CENTRE All classes start Sept. 7 except where indicated, and prerequisites are required in some cour- ses. ANTH 230 (SC) AH 100 (SC) ‘ASTR 100 (SC) ASTR 100/101* (SC) Hist: 365 (UVic) HA 362 (UVic) MUSE 140 (SC) MUSC 142 (SC) MUST 174 (SC) MUSC 292 (SC! PHIL 100 (SC) PHIL 202 (SC) PSYC 100/101¢ (SC) PSYC 240° (SC) bie en, Men, cules! Change _ Herre oft Western peeciion to Astronomy Astronomy ee to Creative Writing Poetry Works! Advanced Peetry Wortahop Introduction to Economics College Composition Su of ish Lierowure Relvatceu Com Children’s iterate” Draw xa ind Compos! Inerletplinny Sa ‘Seminar Canoda Confederation Social ond eilturel History one Un E Euro ropean Ai entury Eure in Art apart me I Society —Nelson Chora! ‘Orchestra ws $> — Big Band Chamber Music Improvisation | Ensemble inreducion to to Philosophy at Art fnsdoenbe to Psychology Child Development MW. [as En #3 *Distance Education course. Contact the Continuing Education office nearest you. REGISTRATION: Part-time students ih foe. not applied should register with Student Services (Patenaude Hall) on Sept. 6, NOTE: Enrolment is limited. Registration is ona first-come, first-served basis. TION: Call the Admissions Office for Seikirk nea courses and Greg RE INFORMA tek. Soden ‘Service Otficer, tor University of Victoria courses at DTUC TRAIL CAMPUS ses start the week of Sept. 6 except where Indicated. course ASTR 100/101 FA 112/121 PSYC 100/101° PSYC 240° TITLE Introduction to Astronomy Painting Introduction to Peychology Child Development *Distance Education course. Contact the Continuing Education office noarenl Veo} REGISTRATION: Cuil the Trail Campus at 368-5236 for more information & registration details. DISTANCE EDUCA’ ENG 110 Coll MATH 100 In TION: compaslion courses are availoble through home study: jory Sony Eoleuies FOR MORE INFORMATION: Contact the Community Education office nearest you. , GosttewsPhote by Dione Strondberg économy rebounds WASHINGTON, (AP) — The Us. economy expanded y & pau P HOBBIT HILL “As it is now, there's 10 ste walt pecple and if they wants break from the kids they have to go sit in'the car,” Spilker, ‘The new addition is designed by local designer David ‘Dobie and will provide jobs for a project superviser and three carpenters for 12 weeks, Spilker said she hopes to get donations of building materials form local suppliers. Some: have already offered, she noted. “Eventually we will probably be able to open up space for a few more children so their could be an employment opportunity for another pre-school superviser in the future,” “Spilker added. Currently, about 40 children are enrolled in various director, Sandra Crossley is based in.a tiny office above West's Department Store. She provides counselling for parents and therapy for ‘85 developmentally delayed infants in the area. Spilker noted that one advantage of maintaining the infant development. program and the integrated childcare program in the same building will be to provide the parents with a sense of continuity. PAY TV continued from front pege percentage of the mares than the rest of B.C. because of the lack of ehtertajnment in this area. “In this“area there's really not that many places to- spend (entértainment dollars),” Greentree said. That, and the fact that there are shift workers at Cominco and the BC Timber pulp and lumber divisions helps push the total. subscriptions figure to 13 per cent.: Asked about the common complaint that’ First Choice repeats too many of it shows during the course of a month, Greentree defended the practice. He said that if the shows weren't repeated, pay-TV would be the same as conventional television. ‘He said rerunning shows makemit possbile for someone who can't see the program one night to see it another night. “Repetition gives the subscriber a chance to select.” ‘He pointed out that First’ Choice adds 80 new movies a month to its listings, while repeating some and dropping others. < For instance, Greentree said that in September 69 movies are scheduled, including 80 new ones such as Reds, Bladerunner and Fast Times at Ridgemont High. - “We've got a pretty good selection coming up.” ‘And where does the $15.95 subscription fee go? Greentree said Cable West pays $10 les subscriber fo part. First Choice and keeps the remaining $5. sta vala Aprikto- — as paperhsae ae the inflation-* adjusted gross national product — was 0.5 percent- age point stronger than the 8.7-per-cent rate estimated last month. He noted that pay TV is on the rede of. a tremendous boom in the next five years.” He predicted that cable will offer more and more specialty channels— things that are now offered in the U.! ‘Will Castlegar be receiving the new computer programs like Telidon and NABU? According to Greentree, those are just the kinds of services area residents will be able to buy in the:not too distant future. | : VEGETABLE SALE PEA Stone. CH Box... 2.0... EARS Bartlett, Canning 40 Ib. APRICOT. Late‘Canning 40 Ib. Box. PRUNE PLUMS italian, Canning” a 40 Ib. Br APPLES Tydeman Reds 34 Ib. Box: B.C. Extra Large 20 Ib. Case cae CORN Grand Forks Super Sweet 1 90... 5 Dozen or more. cOMOESs Vine Rippened, Canning 20 Ib. Box. Pickling Silver a 10 Ib. Bi Also available: Pickling Cucs, Garlic, HES 1 50 flan? OTTAWA (CP) — The government may have no place in the bedrooms of the nation, but some MPs just can't stay out of the kitchen. A recently published ¢ St , lection of 70 recipes fro: members on all sides of the Commons includes such deli- cacies as Opposition Leader Erik Nielsen's bear foot and Flin Flon fan from Employment Minister Lloyd Axworthy. Deborah Heggiveit, 22, s policy adviser for the Trans- port Department, started work last September on: The" House ‘in the ‘Kitchen: Can- adian. Pian ame oat! book. SPECIALS FOR YOU Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday this week 9.50 72.50 CANADIAN BRANDS CIGARETTES get. S11°° INSTANT COFFEE HOUSE 10 oz. (283g)... Dill and Canning Jars. SUNRYPE APPLE JUICE $449 BLUE LABEL 1.36 Litre (@A. o2.)...... 3 miles west of Grand Forks 442-2510 _ FRUIT D DRINKS dia? CENTRAL FOODS 2717 Columbia Ave. CASTLEGAR et 250,mt mischief in relation to prop- rty. * harks eee Daniel Stormes was sen- tenced to seven days im- prisonment intermittent after pleading guilty to im- dris ving. Stormes was also fined $800 and sentenced to seven days in. jail concurrent for driving while his licence was suspended. Walter Malakoff was sen- tenced to nine days inter- mittent for dangerous dri- ‘ving. He was also sentenced to nine days concurrent for driving with a blood alcoho! ‘count ’over .08. Malakoff was also sen- tenced to seven days impri- sonment concurrent for fail- ing to come to « stop when instructed todo so by a police officer. ose Kenneth Horcoff was sen- tenced to nine days in jail intermittent after pleading guilty to obstructing a peace officer. Warfield David Hinde was given conditional and’ placed on 30 days probation after pleading guilty to theft, under $200. oer Gerald Nichvalodott was. fined $250 after remaining in. a licensed establishment! Manuel Corderio was fined $160 for violating catch ‘res- trictions of the Federal Fish- * eries Act. ees Manuel Costa was also fined $150 for violating catch restrictions of the Federal Fisheries Act. firemen to help telethon By CasNows Staff For the sixth year in a row, the Warfield Volun- teer Fire Department will help out with the Jerry Lewis Labor Day Weckend Telethon. But this, year, fire chief Jim Nelson hopes toinvolve Castlegar, Fruit- vale, Montrose and Roas- land fire departments. the Warfield pledge centre and he hopes to have as ras. -25-. partment' managed to chalk up $8,000 in pledges from area residents. This year, Nelson hopes to raise as much as $10,000 for yse in the fight against muscular dystrophy. In past years, the War- field department ‘has raised as much as $20,000. “Last year was down of course with the recession. We hope that things’ will @ turn around this year what with the other volunteer stations being involved,” POLICE SEARCH FOR VIDEO TAPES By CasNews Staff Two Castlégar stores sell- ing video tapes, are part of a Kootenay-wide investigation into federal copyright viola- tions. Nelson RCMP, which is conducting the investigation, raided both Pete's TV and Carl's Drugs in Castlegar. Peter Zaitsoff of Pete’s TV said Friday that he received a visit from the ROMP but “very few” tapes were “af- fected.” Carl Knutson of Carl's Sgt. Eli Tetrow of the CIS branch of the ROMP in Nelson, who is heading the investigation, was ‘unavail- able for comment. Meanwhile in Trail, RCMP investigators seized video tapes from three stores there. The stores included Captain Video, Rock Island Tape Centre and Union Peters. Plenty to do at. Golden City Days By CasNews Staff More than 25 events will be featured in Rossland’s Golden City Days celebra- tions Sept. 8-11. A hugh slate of events are planned for the gala cele- brations, including the queen pageant Thursday night followed by a fireworks display. Also scheduled is the gigantic parade Saturday ah The public will also have the opportunity to see the popular male Can Can dan- cers at the Golden Nugget, Saloon (in the Co-op Building) Saturday and Sunday. The Challenge Race is back again, featuring local and out-of-town celebrities per- forming feats such as riding tricycles and — crawling through culverts. . Celebrations will also take place at the Rossland Miners’ Union Hall in conjunction with Heritage Week Sept. 5- 11. Activities get under way Tuesday, Sept. 6 with a fashion show. Fashions from 1898 to the present will be featured. There are also children’s events which include a kids’ carnival, kiddies’ sandbox, pet show, and kids’ hour at the Golden Nugget Saloon. In addition there are also many sports events for the athletic types, These include Play for Fun Softball, as well as a rugby tournament and bicycle race. The Golden City Days fall fair is being run in conjunc- tion with other celebrations, The fair consists of entries in eight sections: children's entries, flowers, fruits and vegetables, home cooking, canning and pickling, knit- ting and sewing, adult crafts including a photography section and wine, a new sec- tion this year. Those interested in placing an entry in the fair may bring their entries to the Roésland arena on Sept. 9 between noon and 8 p.m. Entry forms submitted earlier are appreciated. Forms may'be obtained at CKQR Radio in Castlegar or at downtown businesses in Trail and Rossland. impse 14 to challenge violent river PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — A 56-year-old grand- father and 18 others leave today.for a journey never before taken by mankind — a 5,182-kilometre descent through the uncharted and often violent waters of the China’s Upper Yangtze River. “It’s probably every riverman's dream to run this river,” said Ken Warren, who hopes to crown 35 years of wild rivers by conquering the world’s third longest. “It's truly the last great unexplored river.” Warren said no one ‘nas eves‘ cried to run the entire river before. If he makes it, the trip will take about 50 days, starting in the freezing cold 5,486-metres high in the Himalyas and ending on a steamy plateau 305 metres above sea leve. The journey is equivalent to a trip from Los Angeles to Detroit — 8,170 kilometres through dangerous rapids, over waterfalls and around massive rocks. STARTS AT GLACIER Warren's group — with a ground party of seven — plans to begin its trek Aug. 28 at the headwaters of the river, where it emerges from a glacier, and travel the first 145 kilometres in kayaks. After that, at an elevation of 4,420 metres, they will move to four rubber rafts. Among those along for the ride are two still photo- graphers and a movie crew of five. Warren expects to sell film rights, and National Geographic magazine has purchased first publishing rights to still photographs. Warren will man the oars of one of the four boats. Each boat will carry about 1,885 kilograms. None has been tested on rough water, and Warren says dealing with high altitudes as winter approaches will be difficult. “We're taking medication for it when we get up there to help us adjust to the elevation,” he said. “The altitude will be a problem. “We're going to have extremes of sub-freezing where we start and very, very humid climates (at the end).We're going from survival suits to shorts and fight- ing off mosquitos.” The timing of the trip is important, he said, to avoid the monsoons of summer and the bad weather of winter. “The Chinese think we're crazy,” said Warren, who worked for five years to win China's permission to take the trip. Three Chinese men are scheduled to be part of the 14-man crews. The custom-built rafts — each 5.6-metres lon and 2.46-metres wide — must negotiate water that, at one stretch, drops at 60 metres ever 1.6 kilometre. Another tretch of river, Warren said, has 40 major rapids, one after another. “T think rivers are living things,” Warren said, and that is reflected by a ritual planned to start the ad- venture. “I make what I call my peace with the river,” the graying grandfather of six said. “T'll probably go off by myself and cup my hands and drink the water and sprinkle some on my head. “T'll be talking to the river, asking her to be nice to us and be gentle to us. But she's not going to listen to me.” s of Hidden Creek Ng ee AN NED AE IN BE PETES, 4 CASTLEGAR NEWS, August 21, 1983 A3 Chad predicts more ionic N'DJAMENA (CP) — Pres- ident Hissene Habre on Sat- urday predicted an imminent outbreak of renewed fighting against Libyan-backed rebels after a week-long lull in Chad’s civil war. He issued the warning at a joint news conference with President Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire, who paid a brief vist to N’Djemana to show his support for Habre’s embat- tled regime. Western Military sources said ‘they expected Jaguar ground-attack aircraft Satur- day or today, but there was no immediate confirmation of | Paris news reports that they would be escorted by Mirage fighter planes: Mobutu, the first govern- ment head to visit Chad since the war with ex-president Goukouni OQueddei in June, arrived Saturday. GREET PRESIDENT He was greeted at the airport by Habre and com- manders of 2,000 Zairean sol- diers sent to Chad in July to’ help the government. At the news conference, Mobutu said his troops were defending Chad's sovereignty and territorial integrity. In a clear allusion to Libya, he added: ‘‘Zaire condemns any policy aimed at destabil- izing African countries.” He regretted that the Or- ganization of African Unity was divided over Chad, say- ing the split reflects badly on the honor of the pan-African body. “We are against all those who want to put the aggressor and the victim on the same Anniversary of invasion ignored PRAGUE (Reuter) — The 16th anniversary of the War- saw Pact's invasion of Czech- oslovakia went unmarked in the capital Saturday apart from a brief mention in the official press. The Soviet-led invasion took place on the night of Aug. 20-21, 1968, to suppress ‘the Prague Spring reforms of the liberal Communist gov- ernment led by Alexander Dubcek. The roads out of Prague were crowded with normal summer weekend traffic as residents drove off to their country cottages. At Prague's Wenceslas Square, focal point of bloody demonstrations on the first anniversary in 1969, there were no signs of extra police. At the foot of the king Wenceslas’s statue, boys from the Young Poineer movement, the Communist equivalent of Boy Scouts, sat licking ice cream while shop- pers listened to a trade union brass band. Czechoslovak emigres in neighboring Austria said ear- lier they expected little acti- vity from dissidents despite an anniversary appeal by the Charter-77 human rights movement. RENEW CALLS Three leaders of the out- lawed dissident group wrote to parliament, renewing calls for withdrawal of Soviet troops still stationed in the country. But, although 800 young people broke away from a recent official peace rally in Prague and chanted for peace and freedom, there were no other signs of any real opposition to the Communist government. The liberal reforms intro- duced by Dubcek are a distant memory for Czechos- lovaks. level,"” Mobutu replied when asked about recent appeals by 11 African presidents for a ceasefire and national recon- ciliation in Chad. Mobutu recently went to Washington and Paris to urge greater support for Habre’s government, and said he thought his voice had been heeed in both Capitals. France now has 1,000 sol- diers in Chad, most manning a defensive east-west line aimed at keeping the rebels in the northern half of the country. Paris press said France is building up its force to 3,000 men. $25 MILLION France had ‘ res- ponded to fs) Leste ‘it the situation’ after what he ter- med a time .of misunder- EARMARKS The United States has ear-' standin, marked $25 million for emer- gency aid to Chad, and diplo- matic sources in N'Djamena said the U.S. airlift of sup- plies, including sophisticated anti-aircraft. snissiles, might resume next week. Habre, who earlier accused France of failing to provide adequate assistance under a 1876 defence agreement, said Chad,’ he added. French military comman- ders in Chad argue the de- ployment of French troops has deterred Libyan leader Col. Moammar Khadafy. The officers — insisting on anonymity — say the week- long lull is a direct result of France's show of force. Ground and air attacks by rebel forces and their Libyan allies ceased abruptly a week ago, three days after the capture of the northern town of Faya-Largeau, and no con- tact between Habre's troops and Goukouni’s forces has been reported since then. French president Francois Mitterrand decided when Faya-Largeau fell that France could not allow Khadafy to take over Chad. Military official shot ATHENS (AP) — Two men on a motorcycle pulled up to the car of a senior PLO military official Saturday and shot him to death on a busy street in the Greek capital, policy said. The official's driver and four-year-old son were reported wounded. Authorities said the killers got away. A police spokesman said the PLO official had been posing as a Moroccan bus- inessman and had been driv- ing to a shipping office in the southern port of Pireaus. The victim, identified as Lt.-Col. Mamoun Muraish, 39, was “very close” to Palestine Liberation Organi- zation chief Yasser Arafat, the spokesman said. The PLO office in Athens accused Isreaeli agents of carrying out the killing. An Israeli government source denied the charge and implied the killing might have been connected with the recent PLO mutiny against Arafat. Witnesses said two heavily built men, between 25 and 80 years old and riding a red Kawasaki, roared to a stop beside Muraish’s car on the busy seaside road at about 10:30 a.m. They said the rear rider opened fire with a pistol through an open window, pumped four bullets into Muraish, then put the pistol back in a daddlebag and the two sped off. DEAD ON ARRIVAL Doctors said Muraish was dead on arrival at hospital. A bullet in the neck had sever- the carotid artery, one of two main vessels on either side of the neck, they said. The other bullets went into his face, shoulder and arm, they said. His son, Massaid, had a slight knee wound, and the car's Palestinian driver, iden- tified as Mustafa Ali, 48, had a shoulder wound they said. Two other sons, aged 11 and 18, were unhurt, they said. Police set up a dragnet in hopes of catching the attackers, but witnesses said the motorcycle roared off in the direction of Athens air- port, less than five kilo metres away, just after the shooting. “They got right away and most likely already have left the country,” said another police officer. Greek authorities said Muraish had been a resident for 18 months and recently moved to an apartment in the fashionable seaside suburb of Glyfada. They said he brought his wife, Sandiyeh, 29, and children to Greece from Tunisia several weeks in Piraeus and recently bought a Greek-registered vessel currently undergoing repairs near Piraeus, they said. There were reports the purchase price was the equi- valent of $450,000 U.S. The Palestinian news agency WAFA ibed Muraish as “one of the lead- ing heroes” of last year's prolonged Israeli siege of the Lebanese capital of Beirut. It said he held a position “in the central operational command.” WAFA described him as a university graduate who had attended training courses at the Soviet military academy, and said “for several years” he had been carrying out “organizational work outside occupied Palestine.” A statement ussued by the PLO diplomatic office in the Greek capital accused Israeli agents of carrying out the ra “We condemn this shame- fal murder which is part of Israeli policy, aimed at the extermination of the Pales- tinian people,” the statement said. Building collapses in Cairo CAIRO (AP) — At least 17 people were killed and 16 others injured early Saturday when a four-storey apartment building collapsed onto two small neighboring houses, police said. Police said many of the dead were children, including a one-month-old baby. But a two-year-old girl was found unharmed after spending four hours under the rubble. The 33-year-old building in Kubbah Gardens, a middle- class residental neighbor- hood, collapsed on a one- storey building and two- storey building adjacent to it. Victims were found in all three buildings, police said. Since July, 1980, at least 159 people have been killed and nearly injured in Cairo in 12 reported cases of apart- ment buildings collapsing be- cause of poor construction. in