Dek Ban Ae QUESTIONS, QUESTIONS . . . Trio of university studen- ts have started asking Castlegar area residents their priorities on future community facilities. Students un- SURVEY dertaking the survey — which will be completed by the end of this month, are: (from left) Lorene Tamelin, Len Lauriente and Janna Sylvest. —CosNews Photo continued fromfront pege The first asks how long the homeowner has been a resident of Castlegar. The second asks which community facility they or their family would like to see “available for your use?” ‘The question then lists six options, which include: a waterfront park including a marina located at Zuckerberg Island; an arts and convention centre; an indoor swimming poo}; a library; “other”; and “no response". The survey also asks homeowners, “How often would you participate in an activity relating to this facility on a weekly or monthly basis?” of the will be held in the CITY OF CASTLEGAR ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING © KOOTENAY LAKE DISTRICT HOSPITAL AND HEALTH SERVICES SOCIETY HOSPITAL CAFETERIA Wednesday, June 15 — 7 p.m. The fourth question asks, “What is the maximum increase in your annual taxes that you would be willing to pay toward operating costs?” And the fifth question is, “What is the maximum increase on your annual taxes over 25 years that you would be willing to pay toward capital costs?” The sixth question leaves room for homeowners’ comments on future community projects. Sylvest said the survey will be finished by the end of this month and the students will tally the results and submit a report to the recreation commission later this summer. The survey is being funded by a federal government summer student grant. Guilty _ without | blood test COQUITLAM, B.C. (CP) — A 48-year-old New Westmin- ster, B.C., man will be sen- tenced June 16 in provincial court after being found guilty ty of impaired driving with- out ever having undergone a breath or blood test. Samual Anutooshkin also will be sentenced for danger- ous driving. . Both charges arose from a motor vehicle accident’ May 17, +1982, on the Trans- Canada Highway in Coquit- PROPERTY TAXES | 1983 Tox Notices have been mailed to all property owners of Castlegar. If you have not received your Tax Bill, notify City Hall, 365- 7227. NOTE: Explanation printed on the Bill re: ® Variable Tax Rate — values Homeowners Grants must be signed and filed at City Hall prior to final payment date. Final Payment Date — 5:00 p.m., July 4, 1983. Penalty — failure to receive bill does not excuse owners from a penalty of 10% after July 4, 1983. New Owners — check bil , bank, mortgage company) Taxes are payable at City Hall, or by mail (with bill) prior to MONDAY, 5:00 P.M., JULY 4, 1983 CITY HALL SUMMER HOURS — STARTING MAY 30, 1983 Monday fo Thursday 8 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. City Collector City Hall, Castlegar, B.C. for (sol DOES YOUR CAR TAKE YOU FOR A RIDE? (All over the road?) GOT THOSE ROCK ’N ROLL BLUES? NEED A LIFT? New Shock Absorbers will smooth the way for you and make your car ride like new, again! We can help you select the correct shock absorber for your driving needs! HELD OVER .. . NOW UNTIL JUNE 25 Buy 3 — get 4. Includes installation (gasp) 0.K. TIRES “BEAN IN THE JAR” CONTEST YOU COULD WIN — 4 New Firestone 721 Radials, Gabriel Shock Absorbers or a Trip to Spok Be sure fo enter 2701 Columbia Av. 65-3433 South Castlogar (Near Central Foods) OPEN SIX DAYS A WEEK lam in which Douglas Hazel- wood, 28, : thes ot New Democratic Pi Dennis Cocke, was killed. Crown counsel Grant Gray said the conviction without a blood test or breath test was unusual, although probably not unique. . ‘. Gray said the main evid- ence in court was given by a Royal Columbian Hospital 4 emergency room physician, who testified to Anutoosh- kin’s condition when he was taken to hospital after the accident. : The physician, Dr. Leslie Vertesi, said Anutooshkin refused to give a blood sample, but that his symp- tons included loss of muscu- Jar coordination in his extre- ~Mu rderer left clothes, ~- food in nearby ho CHINO, Calif. (AP) — Whoever committed four brutal murders at a posh hillside home left. bloody smears, fingerprints, clothes and partly eaten cans of food at a vacant ranch house less than metres away, authori- ties say. San Bernardino County Sheriff Floyd’ Tidwell told a news conference. Tuesday night the new evidence indi- cated the killer had stayed in the ranch house sometime within the last week. “The home had evidence in it that-leads us to believe the ' person that was in that home perpetrated the murders of the (Douglas) Ryen family,” he said. “We found blood in the Feaidence, smears -of blood, ~ some clothes that had been left there and. some othor items of evidence I'm not at liberty to reveal.” Ryen, and wife Peggy Ann, both 41, were slain‘ along with their daughter and a neighbor's -boy Sunday at their home. Their eight-year- old son survived.. The last occupant of the ranch house, a worker on a nearby ranch, told author- ities the house had. been cleaned before she moved out June 1. Tidwell said his inves- tigation now is focusing on a reported sighting of the vic- tims’ missing station wagon in Costa Mesa, about 64 kil- ometres southwest. of the scene of the crime. IN CUSTODY A man spotted near where a witness claimed to have Peck rejects seven awards VANCOUVER (CP) — Arbi- tration awards for 2,200 tea- chers in seven B.C. school districts have been ruled ex- .cessive by compensation sta- bilization commissioner Ed Peck, Peck said his office mailed statements Monday rejecting awatds for Vancouver Island school districts Alberni, Na- naimo, Qualicum-Mount.,Ar- rowsmith and Vancouver. Is- land North; and for mainland districts Peace River South, Peace River North,. and Sti- kine. Peck and B.C. Teachers’ Federation president Larry Kuehn said most of the awards were for raises of about 4.5 per cent, and that all were over four per cent. Kuehn said the highest teachers’ arbitration award upheld by Peck so far is for 3.83 per cent. Peck agreed that ‘'I haven’t approved anything much over 35." 5 Teachers in the seven dis- tricts face a choice of going back to their arbitrators or of bargaining with seen the car was in custody, Tidwell said. Detectives were questioning Milton August Bulua, 88, of Costa Mesa, who surrendered Tuesday and confessed to a liquor, store holdup Monday night, said Costa Mesa Police Lieut. ‘Tom Lazar. Bulua, booked for inves- tigation of robbery and held at the Orange County jail in Neu of $25,000 bail, has “not been linked with the murder at this time,” San Bernardino sheriffs deputy Alexis Tan- ner said Tuesday. Authorities said they have postponed further interviews with the family's lone sur- vivor, eight-year-old Joshua Ryen, whose throat was slashed in the attack that killed his parents, sister Jessica Ryen, 10, and a playmate, Christopher Hughes, 10. ” Joshua was in stable con- dition Tuesday under heavy guard at Loma Linda Univ- ersity' Hospital. In initial interviews Monday, the boy was unable to provide any useful information, said San Bernardino sheriff's Capt. to school boards. ‘With summer holidays just around the corner, many tea-: chers face the prospect of not knowing how much they will Phil A detective interviewing the boy Monday got him to scribble some things down, but nothing was legible and > the ‘ CAN Mat me his limited verbal responses were contradictory, he said. The boy had. undergone a tracheotomy to help him breathe. y VICTIMS STABBED County Coroner Brian Me- Cormick said all four victims had been stabbed at least 20 times and died within min- utes of the attack. Tidwell said investigators also planned to talk with a prisoner who. escaped from Chino Institution for Men, about eight kilometres from the Ryen's. home, the day before the killings. ’ Alboro Knori, 81, held on a burglary conviction, was re- captured Monday in Temple City, 19 kilometres northeast of Los Angeles. Another prison escapee and a 17-year- old youth who fled a local juvenile hall were still at large Tuesday. . Tidwell emphasized inve: tigators had nothing to link the escapees to the murders, The sheriffs department also said it had misidentified the other Chino escapee as David Trautman, when he actually was Kevin. Cooper, an escaped mental patient from Pittsburgh, who had been using identification stol- en from Trautman, Det. Chico Rosales said. earn in 1983 as bar- gaining begins for the 1984 calendar year, Kuehn sald. Awards for more than 60 school districts have been in Peck’s hands for five to six months, Kuehn said, but the commissioner has so far ruled on only about a third of them. Kuehn said it now appears many arbitration awards will not be ruled on until after teachers disperse for the sum- mer. That will make it diffi- cult to settle their 1963 sala-. ries until fall, when bargain- ing for next year would nor- «mally begin. ‘ A few school districts have been adding 1983, raises to, ‘teachers’ pay’ cheques ahead of Peck’s rulings, he sald, but most have been waiting for final approval. Single parenthood only ‘transitional’ KITCHENER, ONT. (CP) — About: half of today’s - children will live part of their lives in a single-parent house- hold, a family counselling specialist says. But William Silver, direc- tor of a child guidance clinic in Philadelphia, said the ing) it status is Department Store - The Friendly and helpful staff at West's will be pleased to assist youin selecting your special outfit. SLEEP AND cotton babydolls, etc. WWW WWW WWW WW WWW WWW WW WW WW WWW « Wee Loungewear blends and knits 25% night shirts, pyjamas, usually a transitional phase as most men and women “eventually remarry. A single-parent family is “normal in the sense that it is happening with great fre- quency and it is a sign of changing values,” Silver told about 160 doctors, social workers and mental health fe Kitch social issues. three ballots. SUSPENSE continued from front poge After the official opening Thursday, each candidate will speak three times Thursday afternoon and Friday morn- ing at policy debates on economics, foreign affairs and ‘They will make their final pitches Friday night, getting 25 minutes for a speech and demonstration by supporters. The voting begins Saturday at 8:30 a.m. Castlegar time and organizers say it will take at least two hours before the results are announced and there will likely be at least On each ballot, anyone with less than 76 votes and the lowest scorer above 75 are eliminated. The voting contin- ues until someones hits 61. per cent. . If all delegates vote, the magic number will be 1,568 votes. But organizers expect only about 2,800 to show up ‘and some may simply stop voting when their first choice quits, so the magic number will probably be between 1,800 and 1,400. CAMPAIGN continued from front page. between $100,000 and $200,000. Anti-metric crusader Neil Fraser scraped together $15,000. MOSTLY TRAVEL MONEY . The money goes for travel, hotels, office rent, stationery, stamps and telephones. Then there are campaign buttons, banners, badges, hats and other convention hoopla. 7 Most of the candidates expect to raise enough to: cover their expenses. But Pocklington could pay “a chunk: from, his own pocket,” says Pocklington organizer Skip Travel is by far the greatest expense for all candidates. Clark, for example, is spending about 60 per cent of his $450,000 on travel — although he has saved Waterloo Hospital recently. Mother & Daughter . Grad Specials. Specially selected for you DRESSES ¢g 25% or CLUTCH Assorted styles and colours Speciol .....46. 25% OFF All Includin, rms, WWWWWW $719 Jewellery 9 gold chains, pendants, ‘and jewellery bones. Department Store by using a free Air Canada pass issued him as a former prime minister. High-profile fundraising dinners have been one source of campaign money but most war chests have been complied quietly with small donations ranging from $10 Clark raised an easy $100,000 through his Christmas card list, computer-duplicated for a fund-raising letter. Crosbie's fundraising team went to work after Clark called the leadership convention in January ; and inconspicuously raised about $275,000 even before Crone offically entered the race March 21. lore than $300,000 of Crosbie's $750,000 has been raised in Newfoundland from islanders among the poorest in the country but keen on supporting their native son, _ Less is known about Mulroney's money matters. Criticized for running a lavish campaign in 1976, Mulroney has generally refused to given even a rough spending estimate this time around. - Only Crombie, the most frugal of the six major candidates, has promised to reveal where his money came from and how it was spent. . All candidates were required to disclose their sources in 1976 but the rule, which was observed by everyone but Mul: y who said he ised to many contributors, has since been dropped. os Although the leadership convention this week is: coating $1.3 million, organizer Russ Wunker says the party rome bo hires with that bill. e cos: be covered by registration f Detegstea pay ae alternatives and observers pay $250 and spouses pay $120. Some 6,500 - 3,187 of them delegates. esnle-wliettend 'Y HOMEGOODS FURNITURE WAREHOUSE Tues. - Sat., 9:30 - 5:30 China Creek “Drive a Little to Save a Lot” As it happens at -Winlaw School By LYNN LIDSTONE ; Three cheers for the sunny weather we've beon having! T hope it lasts; maybe we'll get used to the sunburns. Sithra Campos has already been swimming in the river, though it surely feels cold to me. Winlaw School is, as usual, a centre of activity. Much energy is going towards the Thursday, June 9 Spring Play Production. I have seen a bit of it and I think we're in for a, treat. Mrs. Lewis is getting good at scriptwriting, and the kids surely seem to enjoy playing their parts, Mrs. Conkin’s class will be making their own costumes; Grade 5/6 is writing it’s own play, £ . Everyone in the school participates in one way or another. This year's staging technique is a wonderful idea; we'll let that be a surprise, . A lot of hard work goes into a production like this, and Ithink that during the rehearsals the kids get a strong sense | of their school as a community of people working towards something together. i Also coming up Tuesday, June 14 starting at 11:20 a.m. is our Family Fun Day, We'll have games, sports, and a " potluck lunch, The theme is ethnic food, so, as Dodie Orlando said, bring what your family likes to eat. Last year’s day was fun, and I'm sure this year’s will be just as good. Remember the grand lap sitting? {2 A movie If You Love This Planet was shown at the Home and School Meeting, thanks to Mrs. Foulger. This controversial film is definitely worth seeing. Speaking on the subject of the nuclear age, Dr. Caldicott makes her point clear, and we saw pictures of survivors of Hiroshima. I felt good about this film being shown at Winlaw School; it is the same sense I have had at other times of this place as a community centre. , i Speaking of which, a good time was had by all at the Giant Yard Sale. People were picking up barguins left and right. Whoever did publicity did a good job because there were people there who came all the way from-Beasley as well as Slocan. ‘ ‘ We had the pleasure of hearing the Winlaw Band with flutes, clarinets, trumpets, drums, trombones, . bassoon, tuba, guitar and saxophones. It’s great to see teachers, kids, parents, and neighborhood people form the band. The junior band, which played for Home and School, is made up entirely of Winlaw School students. They played excellently, and fortunately we got to hear our old favorite The Blue Rock. Grade 2/3/4 centres are focusing on foods. There is a contest going on to describe a food chain. Another centre is food for thought; a popular one is a centre of magic powders, where students test unknown powders’ in different ways. The kids have a cooking class and learn to make various foods from around. the world. In June the entire school will get a chance’ to decorate the gym with a clown theme. Right now Grade 6/6 is working ona “painted Poem,” Thelr topic {s.a pretzel to form into 8 pretzel shapo,.. 2),/' } special choir made of the school’s most dedicated choir. members has been working ‘towards a. performance coming up in Nelson. Reins ' The Vallican Whole School came up to Winlaw to share, baseball games‘one afternoon, It: was a good mix for.all the ~ kids and hopefully there will be more activities together in the future, ‘t A Japanese high school teacher came to visit the school and demonstrated origami, paper folding. > Grade 4/5 made adobe huts in with studies At the annual conference of the British Columbia Asso- ciation for Hospital Auxil- faries, Teena Leitch was in- stalled as the West Kootenay area representative for a second term. She -is. the liaison officer between the Hospital Auxili- arles.of the area. and the of the Southwest Indians. A gadget that applies the principle. of rubbing two sticks together demonstrates to the class” how the Indians learned to make ‘fire. Grade 1/2 has a classroom store where they learn value of money, writing and figuring skills, and they have fun at the same time. The two were into building houses, “sod” © houses, made of clay. These kids are listening to stories * about friendships and’ getting along with others. Recess and lunchtime in this weather have been a great time for the kids. Baseball, soccer, badminton, fort-making, * jungle gym climbs, and playing help them develop their physical selves, One day Nicole. Hennelly was doing acrobatics on the lawn. zi As well mostly every day starts now with everyone running around the school. The classes each have a day in which those students have a card that gets marked with the number of Japs they have run. Kindergarten is spending the week with circus projects and already just about know their parts for the: play. In gym class the Grade 2 is told to reach as tall as thoy can with a partner. Matthew Gingras sets everyone to laughing as he climbs on his partner's shoulders and clowns around, j : Plans are going ahead for a NEED grant application to make an adventure playground at the school. This playground will be a very welcome addition, After school a group of youngsters had been heading into Nelson for a recreation program at the Aquatic Centre. There they learn to swim and work towards color-coded badges of achievement level. Another group has been playing T-ball once a week with the help of Kevin Murphy and other parents. These kids from kindergarten and up are ‘improving their throwing, catching and batting skills. Some can hit the ball pretty far. . Only one month of school left to go. Some teachers are reviewing; others have units yet uncovered. Our children have had the benefit of a school program that is varied yet also strong in academics. ‘i This year has been one of change, adjustment, and exploration, We are having to deal with economic realities. We are also learning to deal with one another. Words that come to mind are mutual respect and understanding. Hope- fully we can all grow in this regard. Have a great summer. This year I'm hoping that the vegetables grow faster than the weeds. visit- ing all areas to ensure com- munication and good working relationships in the Aux- : illaries. Leitch is also liaison of- ficer between the Castlegar Hosital Board and the local Auxillary; dnd is the treas- urer of the West Kootenay area council to BCHA. Also attending the con- ference, held May 30 to June 2, at Vancouver, were Castle- gar's Women’s. Auxiliary President Patsy Popoff, and Public Relations Officer Ann Stasila. The conference was an ed- ucational session as the Can- adian Hospital Associations of Hospital Auxiliaries com- bined with the provincial as- sociation thus bringing views ~~ Search for plane resumes FORT ST. JOHN, B.C. (CP) — A search resumed: today for a small plane with four people aboard missing in norhtheastern B.C.‘ The Cessna 180 single- engine carried a Fort St. John man and three ‘passen- gers who went on a fishing trip Friday. Tt failed to return Sunday. Search officials say no signal has been picked up from the SEARS STARTED TREND “VANCOUVER - (CP): -.— More and more of the “mer- chandise” some. department stores are offering today consists of services rather than goods. The retailing of legal ser- vices is part of the trend. Simpsons-Sears Ltd. started in the Vancouver area ‘two years ago and the success of the idea has led Sears to open more stores in Toronto. The move is part of a coun- try-wide effort to offer as many services as possible to customers, said Robert Knox, the retail giant’s public affairs vice-president. Most of the company's stores have a core of con- “cessions-that include an op tical department, a travel of- fice, a key shop and the All-State Insurance office, said Knox in a telephone in- terview from Toronto. “Our marketing philsophy is that, if we can make our store more i to en, peeiny eae Vancouver’ suburbs’ of Hor. naby and Surrey, have served about 2,000 people since they went on the “shelf,” the owner of the concessions says. He is Jack James, a Van- couver lawyer who has been fro a people by providing a wider variety of things, we will,” Knox said. “The lawyers’ of- fices meet a distinct need during store hours, a ser- vice that many people in this country don’t avail them- selves to. You know. what's said — only the rich use a lawyer. I don't know if that’s true.” The offices, in stores in the Police constable charged TORONTO (CP) — An On- tario Provincial Police con- stable was charged Tuesday with criminal negligence leath in connection accident in which one lada’s busiest telev- NEW IN TOWN? LET US PUT OUT THE MAT FOR YOU! he Mest Famers Erne ane on ® Joyce 365-3091 Deborah 365-3015 in death m and fined $5,000 by the Law Society because a law book- store,, The Law. Shoppe, operates on the same prem- Stores nowoffer services Vogyeo 1" x ot asd : store, bring the law to those ’ members of the public who either go without legal advice or, in the words on the an- nouncement on the Toronto expansion, “abrogate their rights.” BUSINESS GOOD Business has been good in Vancouver and could have even been better locally if the law society would allow him and the store t the ises as his Van- couver offices. (He is appeal- ing the decision to the B.C. Court of Appeal.) James said he approached a number of department stores about opening an in-store law office and Simp- sons-Sears was the most re- ceptive. He said he approached the stores because of develop- ments in the U.S. where the Supreme Court has ruled that restrictions on legal ad- vertising are a breach of the First A the “free- ision and film di was killed. . John Michael Trent, 47, died in a head-on collision with a police cruiser last Friday morning about 16 kilometres north of Bramp- ton, Ont. dom of speech” guaranteed in the constitution. That sparked a proliferation of legal stores or clinics. The Simpsons-Sears’ law offices, in the opinion of James and the department offices, James said. “By advertising you create a whole new market for law- yers," he said. “Unfortunate- ly, the law society is against that.” (The profession's adver- tising restrictions should be abolished, Yves Fortier, president of the Canadian Bar Association, said-recent- ly, and “dignified” advertis- ing should be allowed.) Services offered through the Vancouver stores focus on family and civil matters, James said. : Wills, for example, can be prepared at the two local law offices at s cost of $29.60 for a senior citizen and $85 for a couple.- \ ee we specialty level. Selkirk College (R ‘ TRAINING ACCESS SELKIRK COLLEGE TRAC is the new province-wide self-paced competency-based skills training program. The course takes approximately six months to complete from the common core through to the in the foll ing TRAC courses: © MILLWRIGHT Openings are © AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR © HEAVY DUTY MECHANICS pus) has op hi. at the R © ELECTRICAL © MACHINIST © INBOARD/OUTBOARD (Small Engines) in Nelson be- Jing, math and ginning Aug. 8. Following the August intake, students will be . selected on a continuous basis from wait lists... — Admission: 18 years or high school gradu i required, i 5) P Tultion: $65/mo. Plus $400 books, mate Application forms and more Information is available from rials. ation. Pre-testing in Services, S Pp 2001 Silver King Road. Telephone 352-6601. SELKIRK COLLEGE College, R locator ter aboard the craft. Meanwhile, the name of a Prince George, B.C. man killed last Friday night when his plan crashed in a lake near Prince George was released. Leitch nowliais half of the institution and act, 5. and ideas from across Can- ada. The conference was based on communication and public relations with sessions deal- ing with large, medium and small hospitals along with long term care facilities. Speakers from across the country reflected on “Stret- ching the Health Dollar,” “There's No Restraint on Caring,” “Caring in the Econ- omic Crunch," and “Leaping Into Volunteerism Enthusi- astically.” During the annual meeting and reports, it was noted that, more than 200,000 vol as emissaries for the in- stitution in the community. Also noted was the view- point of redirecting monies CASTLEGAR NEWS, Juno 8, 1983 on officer ge AS ~— by using a concept of pre- |} E ventative medicine rather than care facilities. It was pointed out that the hospitals are being overtaxed with health problems that preven- tative measures could have eliminated. Dr. LF. Mustard, Presi- dent of the Canadian Insti- tute for Advanced Research stated there is a choice, and with each choice he proved are directly associated with good patient care, that more than 10 million hours of vol- unteer services are given, and more than $50 million is raised annually. Auxiliaries are a major re- that pi di can reduce health care needs and create a better future in the caring support facilities. In September, the West Kootenay Area of Hospital Auxiliaries will be meeting in Trail. This will be an, in- ii fe asit will source for health i They contribute time on a voluntary basis, undertaking significant fundraising on be- (@ BRITT EDBLAD Top production for the month of February. I bring auxilians from the West Kootenays together to again compare views and - Castle Realty Ltd. “THE RESULTS PEOPLE” HAVE DONEIT AGAIN... WALTER TYMOFIEVICH Top production for the month of March. Congratulations for a job well done! over it al IS YOUR Before you renew, check these Koofenay Savings. mortgage advantages with your present mortgage: HOUSE MORTGAGE DUE FOR RENEWAL? FULLY ‘‘OPEN’’ MORTGAGE . . . can be prepaid in any amount! at any time! without penalties! 10! % . INTEREST por Annum . .. onfirst mortgage (*subject to change without notice) WEEKLY OR BI-WEEKLY PAYMENTS . . . reduces total interest paid!\pays off mortgage in less time! without penalties! CHECK WITH US! TRAIL © FRUITVALE © CASTLEGAR © SALMO © SOUTH SLOCAN We'll gladly give you a Quotation on these Mortgage Advantages. ME / Kootenay Savings: Credit Union JAKUSP * NEW DENVER ©: WANETA PLAZA TEENA LEITCH . - area representative ideas on fundraising, and general concerns of the vol- unteer. It will also give auxilians an opportunity to learn how we can better their know- ledge and skills for particular projects — a vital part of a strong and developing auxi- 365-3336. 1444 Columbia: Ave., Castlegar PETER BLACKWELL Top production for the month of April. for you