CENTRAL FOODS Meanwhile, Kootenay West NDP incumbent Lyle Kristiansen also expressed VANCOUVER (CP) — mm 4} Sania INNS HOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO HAVE A MAID? Move into the brand new Castl di Inn Seventeen prisoners at the year-old Vancouver Pretrial Services Centre rioted Fri- day night, taking control of one of 10 living units in the It od: and enjoy a beautifully finished room with two queen-size beds, all linen and towels supplied to your room, colour satellite T.V. (HBO, CINEMAX, ESPN, MTV, CBC, CTV), a gorgeous swimming pool, jocuzzi, sounas, a special discount in our restaurant and dining room, telephone, ample parking, maid service and no extra charge for any utilities, i.e. hydro or water. ALL THIS . . , would you believe for the equivalent of only $298 per month for | person or the equi 1 of only $398 per month tor 2 persons FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT THE FRONT DESK OF The Sandman inn, 1944 Columbia Ave., Castlegor, B.C. 2 sec control of the unit. The man, whose name has not been re- leased, was taken to Van- couver General Hospital The Pretrial Centre is a holding prison for remand in mates. They have not been Prisoners take control of unit convieted of the crimes they have been charged with and average length of stay is 30 ye. The riot began at 7:45 p.m. By 9:30 p.m. the prisoners were in their cells. The cause of the riot, which was restricted to half the second floor of the six- storey prison, was resent- ment over # search for drugs undertaken by guards Friday night, says centre director Robert in. Tourist alert VANCOUVER (CP) — The following people are asked to contact the nearest RCMP detachment for an urgent personal message: William Choat of North Bend, Ore. Julie Beaver of A’ 51-year-old Campbell River man and his wife were sent to hospital Friday with undetermined injuries when their 1974 Oldsmobile left the Babakaiff services Monday Sam Babakaiff of Castlegar passed away Sept. 1 at the age of 67, He was born Aug. 6, 1916 ing for Cominco in 1961 and retired in 1962. He was an John Dugas of Dalhousie, NB. Brian Pickens of Oak Har- bor, Wash. collision on Columbia Ave. Saturday. , Pritan Uppal of Slocan was driving on Sherbike Hill at 11:10 am. when her 1975 Plymouth ran into the rear- end of a 1974 Chevrolet pick- Time to consider lack of labor VANCOUVER (CP) — La- ernment has moved to cut continued trom trom page “We are shead in terms of the number coming back for second year,” TAKE US TO COURT. MEN'S COURT FORCE NIKE WEEK AT MALLARD’S MEN'S RUNNING SHOES Nike Equator F Nike Pegasus ....... Nike Trophi Tiger Striker LADIES’ RUNNING SHOES Nike Pegasus Tiger Tigress LT TENNIS SHOES Nike Meadow Supreme: aoe. 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COURTESY FREE VAN SERVICE ~- COMPLIMENTARY DOWNTOWN, AIRPORT, on LO: MINUTES TO AIRPORT Ww 1203 STH SPOKANE, WA 99204 Right to vote OTTAWA (CP) — A penitentiary inmate, whose bid for the right to vote in the upeoming federal election ‘was | blocked by the Federal Court of Canada Friday, will get | 2 | one more chance to argue his case — in-the Court of Canada on election day. ‘The nation's highest court is to hear the application Tuesday morning, as the election polls open. If permis- sion is granted, the appeal will be heard the same day, a Supreme Court offcial said. The court made a special exception in agreeing to hear Robert Gould's case, the official added. Should the Federal Court of Appeal ruling be over- turned, the 42-year-old prisoner at Ontario's Joyceville medium-security penitentiary will be the first inmate in Canada to vote in a federal election. Coal strike LONDON (AP) — A leading newspaper reported Saturday that Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher has no immediate plans to intervene in Britain's dock and coal strikes, and believes the coal strike will collapse on its| own. The coal miners’ strike, now in its sixth month, has idled 75 per cent of Britain's 175 state-owned pits and spawned the eight-day-old dock strike, which has halted just over one-third of the British maritime trade, port employers said. Thatcher, who this week cancelled a scheduled Sept. 14-28 tour of the Far East because of the strikes, was quoted as saying in an interview with The Financial Times that she believed the coal strike would end with more miners voluntarily going to work. She refused to predict when it would end. Shoot-out NEPEAN, ONT. (CP) — An unidentified gunman was killed and two policemen seriously injured in a morning shoot-out at a suburban Ottawa shopping centre Saturday. Insp. Wayne Phillips of Nepean police said the! policemen were investigating a call about a suspicious person at the Bayshore shopping mall at 9:30 EDT when| the gunfight occurred. It was not immediately clear who fired the first shot. Phillips said in a news release the unidentified gunman died en route to Ottawa Civic Hospital. Two other| gunmen are still at large. Earlier reports said one policeman was dead, but Phillips said the two policemen involved are both in hospital, one in critical condition. Solidarity GDANSK, POLAND (AP) — Saying ii nonsense to go out into the street and get beaten by truncheons,” called trying to force its will on the world. He delivered his attack on Washington in replies to questions from the Commun- ist party newspaper Pravda. He also voiced pessimism about prospects for space- weapons talks and a renewed East-West dialogue. Chernenko’s comments were carried by the Tass news agency and state TV. But no film of the leader was shown and the formulation used by Tass indicated that he had delivered written an- swers to Pravda rather than given an interview. The 72-year-old Chernenko has not been séen in public for seven weeks and western diplomats in Moscow beleve he may be ill. In his comments to Pravda, he said foreign policy state- *ments by the U.S. leadership at the Republiean party con- vention last month had left “a depressing impression. “They in Washington are flaunting with open cynicism their great-power ambitions, (and their) exaggerated no- tions about America’s role and place in the modern world,” he said. The Republican leaders want to “dictate their will to everybody everywhere” and rely on raw force to achieve their aims, Chernenko said. “Obsessed by force, they are simply losing a sense of reality. The world has dras- tically changed. Forces can. not solve its problems.” Satellite was launched Soviet terms for the space- weapons negotiations. Such a move “would facil- itate the solution of questions of limiting and reducing other strategic armaments,” he said. Moscow gays the U.S. ap- proach to thé space weapons talks is unacceptable because Washington also wants to raise the issue of nuclear ar- maments there. The Soviet Union walked out of talks on both strategic and medium-range guclear weapons last year after the West began deployment of U.S. missiles in Europe. In his comments, Chernen- ko made no reference to the possibility of reviving the medium-range nuclear arms talks. In an initial reaction, wes- tern diplomatic analysts said they viewed Chernenko's comments more as a means of publicizing the leader's name and conveying the impres- sion he was still firmly in control despite his long ab- sence. TALKING POLITICS . . . Former prime minister Joe Clark, pictured here with Progressive Conservative candidate Bob Brisco (right), appeared before an audience of 150 party faithful Friday night at the Fireside inn. Costtews Photo by Ron Norman Death an accident? NEW WESTMINSTER (CP) — The father of a 10 year-old girl who drowned in a New Westminster pool says he is not satisfied with a ruling of accidental death by a coroner's jury “I don't know what kind of accidental death that is,” said Mohinder Bachra, whose daughter Sukhraj was found at the bottom of the pool at least 20 minutes after the pool had been cleared. “ don't see why they can call it an accident. “I am not satisfied nobody FROM SPACE SHUTTLE was at fault. If it was an ac- from an elementary school cident, who is supposed to be last June 25. responsible for the kids while Lifeguard Tara Johima they are in the swimming told the inquest she didn't pool?” see the girl lying on the bot- The coroner's jury Friday tom of the pool although she recommended improvements was the last guard covering to pool supervision and step- the area where the girl was ped-up training in procedures found. Johima said she could for finding missing swim- clearly see to the bottom mers. where the body lay. The jury's finding of acci- Asked by coroner's coun- dental death came after sel Wendy Young if she could hearing three days of often explain why she was unable conflicitng testimony. to see Bachra at the bottom Bachra was at the local of the pool, Johima said: “No, pool with six other students I cannot.” The inquest also heard two teachers from the school were playing with other stu. dents within feet of where the girl's body was found. WATER CLEAR During the inquest, pool staff testified the water was CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. (AP) — Discovery's Solidarity leader Lech Walesa y for fi with the C government in the spirit of peaceful ceremonies that marked the free labor movement's fourth anniversary. He told reporters at his apartment he hoped the peaceful demonstrations and rallies held on the anniver sary Friday would characterize the future strategy of the non-outlawed Solidarity “It's nonsense to go out into the street and get beaten by truncheons, not to fight back, say ‘thank you,’ and pay the fine in the end,” said Walesa, winner of the 1983 Nobel Peace Prize. Crash remembered WAKKANAI, JAPAN (REUTER) Watched by Soviet patrol boats, sobbing relatives threw flowers into ‘the sea near the spot where a South Korean jumbo jet with 269 people aboard was shot down by Soviet fighters a year ago Saturday. ‘The memorial ceremony by relatives of 28 Japanese vietims on the Korean Airlines Boeing 747 was held just outside Soviet territorial waters. In South Korea, hundreds of pepole turned out in pouring rain for # special service on the anniversary of the destruction of Flight 007 over the Soviet far east island of Sakhalin. Ten Canadians were among the dead Ombudsman VICTORIA ¢CP) — Ombudsman Kari Friedmann has that the provincial gover re-assess. 66 people who are to be transferred from the Tranquille School in Kamloops to other institutions. Friedmann said in a report released Friday that 48) are to be transferred to Glendale in Victoria and the other eight are to go to extended-care institutions. Friedmann, addressing the question of whether they should be institutionalized or allowed to live in the com. munity, said the main issue in categorizing the indi-}j viduals appeared to be whether or not they were mobile. The Human Resources Ministry decided that all those who could not, for instance, move independently from their bed to their chair should continue to be insti tuionalized, he said. All others, regardless of their physical or mental state were to be moved into the community, Dali burned BARCELONA, SPAIN (AP) — Surrealist painter Salvador Dali is in hospital for second-degree burns ‘suffered in an electrical fire at his castle home, doctors said Saturday. The burns cover 18 per cent of Dali's body. At a news conference at the El Pilar clinic in Bar- celona, doctors said the 80-year-old painter's right leg and lower body had superficial and deep second-degree burns. | They said Dali also is being treated for malnutrition. Previously it had been reported that Dali was| uffering first-and-second- degree burns on his right leg. land that the byrns were not serious. The artist had at first refused to leave his home for treatmerit of the burns suffered while be was sleeping ‘Thursday at his Puboi-Castle of) Spain's northeastern Costa Brava. Friends sttributed the blaze to an electric short-circuit. as! hed their third satellite Saturday, making a turnaround for a shuttle program whose image as a reliable transportation system has suffered from delays and failures. “Congratulations,” said Mission Control. “Three for three.” There was relief on the ground because the satellite, Telstar 3, employed the same kind of rocket booster that shot two similar $35-million satellites off course in February. Those failures raised launch insurance rates and caused customers to think about shifting their satelite business to a NASA competitor in Europe. Two of the three satellites deployed on this inaugural flight of Discovery used the booster, validating NASA's contention that its flaws have been corrected. Many of the satellites to be launched from the shuttle in the future several consultations with experts on the ground, he made some adjustments to the machine and reported the problem wasn't resolved, “but it seems to be stabilizing.” Walker's employer is guarding the identity of the drug and what it will be used for, but said it could benefit millions of people. In the other job, astronaut Judy Resnik raised a 10-storey “solar sail” out of thashuttle’s cargo bay in the first test of technology vital for space stations of the future. “It's up, and it's big.” she told Mission Control. “Now that it's stretched out, it’s very steady with no wrinkles or wobbles.” clear enough to see the bot- tom, but the three teachers who supervised the outing said it was too murky to see through clearly. The inquest heard that no checks were made by teach ers to ensure all the 66 chil dren in the group were gathered to return to the school at the end of the swim until Bachra's sister Dilraj, 12, reported her sister miss ing and a head count was made. Dilraj told teachers her sister was missing after the swimming pool was cleared at 1:55 p.m., but Bachra’s body wasn’t pulled from the pool until 2:15 p.m. Life guards said they checked the buildings around the pool and the surrounding park and questioned Dilraj about where her sister might have gone before checking the pool. The jury recommended a complete perimeter check be made of the pool after every swim to ensure it is cleared of swimmers. It recommended training sessions for life guards include search proce. dures as outlined in the Can. adian Royal Lifesaving So ciety’s manual, Aquatic Su pervision in Action. The jury also recommend ed that lifeguards be allowed flexibility in guarding posi tions, so they are not res tricted to remaining in the lifeguard’s chairs for 20-min ute shifts as is the practice at the pool. The jury asked that Kiw anis pool display a copy of the Health Act for swimming pools. Crossword Star Bright . . . Answer in Wednesday paper. use the same rocket to propel them to higher orbit With their money-making tasks out of the way, the astronauts turned their attention to the two items that will occupy most of their time the rest of the flight, which ends Wednesday at Edwards Air Force Base in California. MAKES ADJUSTMENTS Charles Walker, the McDonnell Douglas engineer who's on board to manufacture a drug, was having trouble with pressurization in his equipment. After Pub not allowed to sell on election TORONTO (CP) — A Fed. eral Court of Canada judge has denied an interim in jonction that would have al lowed a Toronto hotel owner to serve beer on election day, contraty to the Canada Elec- tions act. Associate Chief Justice James Jerome said in a writ- ten judgment Friday that while he sympathized with the position of Merv Frimeth, owner of the Parkdale Hotel, the emergency nature of Fri- meth’s bid — at the 11th hour before the election — was ill-suited to rulings on con stitutional questions. Mendel Green, Frimeth's lawyer, had asked that Jer ome issue an interim in- junction allowing his client to legally contravene the act. The act makes it illegal for hotels, licensed dining loung- es and liquor and beer outlets to sell aleohol during polling hours from 9 a.m. until 8 p.m. 41 Gleam Captain’ if ie i ; legisl as provided by the British North America Act Lawyer Michael Duffy of the Justice Department had asked Jerome to deny the in junction, saying “the status quo must be maintained” until a final decision can be reached by trial. “In this case, by refusing the injunction and allowing the matter to unfold in the fullness of the trial, the only adverse effect upon this ap plicant is that he must con tinue for one more day to obey the law,” Jerome said in his ruling. Jerome made his judgment based on arguments heard in Toronto on Thursday be tween lawyers for Frimeth and the federal attorney al low for an early full bearing — after Tuesday's election — and noted that had he heard the case earlier, his decision might have been different. “But in the final analysis, the relief is discretionary in nature and at this 11th hour . .. 1 feel that I ought not to exercise my diseretion in tavor of the granting of the pr beverages is covered under EE pr | rather than federal sought.” i rif m 108 City in Sicily h Eqitit Wy i [ 14 Taco star ‘amas, amat 111 Bonds 1M Chemical suffix 16 Explorer 117 Three-toed _| Average time of sotation 79 minutes. cayrroqurr YUK EK NNEM NEJIKA xAR YEGIND cx DTSK A ‘Today's Cryptoquip: FEZGUKEL x KIKLUMOSKHR NKAC chee: X equate 1 This Crossword Puzzle sponsored by the following businesses .. . 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