AB CASTLEGAR NEWS, January 24, 1982 ¢ CROSSWORD uh er... answer In Wed.'s paper YVXFCSOM MKNNVHV YGKQVRRKG QFONR 8K BCXVGRSFCX QGBRSGFSVX SVVC-FHVGR midapetiyploguy det Qoquls oa 3 Average time of solution: 66 minutes. 7 je 19 NO Ftd 12 13 an 21 Caffeine Babies. not victims | WASHINGTON (REUT- ER). —. Coffee drinking by pregnant women, contrary: to. U.S. gt who ‘drank: three or ‘more: cups of coffee or tea'a days tI: ,, This was ‘a roughly the same), does not appear to harm the unborn child, says a study published in the New En- gland Joyrnal of Medicine, The study of 12,400 preg- nant women by six. physi- cians found pregnant women who smoke give birth to an ly high - number ‘of *of abnormal” ‘births as among non-smoking ‘women jwho’drank ‘no coffee: or For pregnant smokers, the situation was quite different. of abnor- ', GROCETERIA & » LAUNDROMAT. & SHAKE SHOPPE: We Are: pen ser CASTLEGAR NEWS, January 24, 1982 Bl Reece. THE RIGHT R.R.S.P. Find out all about Registered Retirment Savings Plans by picking up a free copy of of THE BASICS at one o! right RRSP. ‘our offices. Once you know THE BASICS, you'll choose the Kootenay Savings Credit Union 1016-4th St., Castlegar Ph. 365-3375 _ Daysa Year uate lightweight. babies ranged from 11,1 to 16.4 per it. yf abnormally ‘small babies but .cen' not women who drink coffee. . The U.8. Food and-Drug ‘Administration warned in the fall of 1980 that pregnant women should» consume drinks containing caffeine, ‘such as coffee, sparingly. FDA officials elted studies ’ finding that caffeine can reach the fetus. There have also been studies of animals -that found: consumption of caffeine during Pregnancy led ‘to ~ the authors of Sugar a risk facton By Austin Rand WASHINGTON (cP) — Development of short-sighted- ness in children and teenagers can be linked to “DUARTE, CALIF. (AP) = ‘Genetic engineering, despite great: promise and, a: long consumption of refined sugar and of non-dairy proteins, in optometrist says. Ben Lane, of the Institute of Human Nutrition at Columbia University, New York; based his assertion on the results of a recently completed 110-person study: of. the relationship between increasing myopia, dietary intake and calcium and chromium levels, as measured by hair analysis. : “A large proportion of refined sugars in the diet is a signifiesnt risk factor in the development of myopic. disease,” Lane said. yf isugar depletes the body ofa variety of vitamins sect ‘aierals, particularly chromium, Lane said. Sufficient chromium is believed to be important for sustaining the ability of the eye to adjust readily to different focal lengths. « , LEADS TO MYOPIA the said, when combined with frequent and intensive close work, leads toan increase in the intra-ocular pressure of the eye. The increase in intra-ocular pressure eases to some extent the work that the ciliary muscles of the eye have to do in order to maintain focus in close work, Lane said, but this adjustment process sets the stage for the development of myopia. Eating simple sears | Shei unrefined forest in fruit and . insufficiency, Lane said, ‘alice t i mineral occurs va naturally in stich unrefined. foods. Lane also said that enough Sidon in a diet is crucial to warding off the _parti- cularly in children and Oa like is believed to have inip: in maintaini intra-ocular pressure. - Myopia develops particulary rapidly during periods of rapid growth, Lane said, because at these times calcium is readily shunted aside to contribute to the needs of the growing skeleton, the optometrist said. LOSE CALCIUM A diet rich in non-dairy proteins, particularly ee string of is (still a long way from providing cures for heredi- tary diseases, says a Nobel Prize-winning pioneer ; in the field. “There are so many hur- | dles still to be overcome and _most of them are glossed over by.people who want to. be optimistic,” biochemist Paul Berg of Stanford Uni- versity said. Asked how long before sel i entists might finally learn to replace defective genes, Berg said: “I don't: know. But cer- Mediterranean ‘and is ‘fatal: Gene transfers were first pay hanuapes an cancer- fighting interferon — have l in by Berg in 1978. With. sub- sequent improvements to the Process, ‘he said, an as- sortment .of functioning genes. — owhich produce insulin, including _ those . been switched between spe- cles. But the transplants were only.into cells grown in test tubes and, as difficult as that was to achieve, it is “really the ‘medical journal study conclude: “We found no rela- tion .. between ‘low — birth weight ... and heavy coffee consumption (and) there was no excess. of malformations among (children of) coffee drinkers.” . The study says the per- centage of babies with un- usually low birth - weights was less than six’ per cent For pregnant: smokers, who did not drink coffee or tea, 18.2 ‘per cent of the babies born. were unusually - light in weight, : a 4 Seat {8:30 - 10:30 p.m ‘Sunday & Holidays’ 9 = 10:30 p.m. 1038 Columbia 365 3 yw birth . weight and skeletal” abnor- malities. 278 8 Columbia Ave. ~ KOKANEE TAK SERVICE OPEN MON, -FRI., 9a.m.-S5 p.m. or Call Jill'or Janet for a special. appointment. 365-2416 king women | tainly these are the first-fal- § tering steps.” And although the problems y remain immense, under- standing increases at a. breathtaking pace and much of it is coming from Berg and his colleagues at Stanford. Berg won half the 1980 Nobel Prize in ‘chemistry: for’ his’ ‘research on DNA, the mat- erial of genes and the keeper, of heredity. Ata meeting to dedicate a molecular genetics research buliding at City. of Hope Na- tional. Medical Centre, Berg reviewed his lab’s research in transplanting genes between amounts of meat, is likely to supply to much too little calcium; Lane said. As extra phosphors 1 is removed from the body, he noted, it takes calcium with it, thus producing a calcium debt. tin Cline of UCLA, tried in 1980 to. treat a patient in Is- rael and another in Italy with © gene to correct an Just as not endugh calcium il " of myopia, Lane said, diets high in iy products are associated with ocular stability in young adults. inherited blood disease that is untreatable and fatal. which ap- Lane noted that he did not wish to d i the. importance, when doing close work, of having good lighting and a reasonable distance from the eyes to the focal point. “However, given two people who are both doing a lot of close work, the one with plentiful calcium in the diet and relatively’ little sugar will certainly be much better off in terms of running less risk of developing or increasing myopia.” The parently failed, was widely criticized. Cline stepped: down as a UCLA division chief, though he remained on the faculty, and lost $270,000 in federal research grants. Berg said in an interview he thought the effort was Rental grou ps oppose service VICTORIA (CP) — The Consumer Affairs Ministry has turned down a request by ~a Vancouver businessman for a licence to provide a listing of undesirable tenants to landlords, Milos Novak of the West- ern Landlords Association received a city licence to operate a service that would investigate tenants and store the information in’ a com- puter. The idea was strongly opposed by various rental YOU CA ieee || 17.70 25. | POUNDS IN JUST 6 WEEKS! _.__ And we'll teach you.. how to keep it off. In addition to the city licence, Novak needs a pro- vinelal licence under the Credit Reporting Act, but that has been denied. 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The 80, ,000 seat Silverdome in Pontiac, Mich., which some say reininds them ofa “Belgian waffle", is all set for today's Super Bowl XVI... VS ‘KEN ANDERSON «top AFC passer; COACH FORREST GREGG: Satisfaction is to win DEARBORN, MICH. (AP) —Reaching the Super Bowl ” ig the goal of every National Football League coach. But Forrest Gregg wants more. ‘The Cincinnati Bengals coach said Friday he won't be satisfied with anything less than a victory over San Francisco 49ers inthe Super Bowl today. “when you get this far, your team deserves to be here because you worked hard to get here, you sacrificed a lot to get into this football game,” Gregg said. “If you lose the'football game, all the. plaudits go to the winner. “Phat is the nature of the business. I'm sorry it’s that way, but it is that way. I'm not going to be able to say, ‘Well, even though we didn't win the football game, we can go away with a good feeling.’ We will not go away with a good feeling. if we lose the football game.” Gregg said the American Conference champions will be in top. physical shape to play in the Pontiac, Micha., Silverdome. The Bengals’ only seriously injured player, kick returner David Verser, ‘has not had a problem catching the ball in practice his week, Gregg said. Verser People everywhere set injured. his thumb in' the AFC championship game two ks ago. Grese aid ft took’ the Bengals time to adjust to the after playing and practising in the frigid weather. in Cincinnati. : “We went into practice this week in the Silverdome and our wide receivers and tight ends took their gloves off and could. hardly catch the football,” Gregg said Friday. “The rest of them have adjusted to it, however.” The Hall of Fame offensive lineman said coaching the Béngals this ‘week has given him the same feeling as playing in three Super Bowls with Green Bay Packers and Dallas Cowboys. “Tve been asked a lot of times this week: ‘How did it compare (coaching and playing in the Super Bowl?) I think it’s very comparable. “T feel the same elation, the same type of emotion that I did-as a player. ‘The only difference is that as a player I . was. only responsible for.one guy. As a coach, I's Sesponsinie for the play and the conduct of 46." to watch Super Bowl PONTIAC, MICH. (AP) — In millions of households, ° taverns and other gathering places across the country and. scattered around the globe, things will stop. today. The point of interest will be Super Bowl, San Francisco 49ers vs. Cincinnati Bengals for the National Football ‘League championship. , “It's more than a football game,” said Ernest Jones, general of the Mi Super'Bow! Inc. “It’s a world event.” Bettors are millions on th test — in office pools and Nevada casinos alike. Ray Lenzie of the Stardust race ahd sports book in Las Vegas estimates ‘he'll handle some $2 million in bets, here anyway, we'd close her. up-early.” e In Detroit, actress Cloris Leachman and the cast of Twigs will be excused from a scheduled Sunday matinee at the Fisher Theatre so theatre staff and Super Bowl visitors alike can concentrate, on the game and related hoopla. * In Dallas, patrons of The Filling Station bar will jam in’ front of an eight-by-eight foot TV screen. “We just get crazy,” says Gene Harris, the bar's proprietor. “If the Cowboys were playing, we'd be uncontrollable.” e From Phoenix ta New York, National Basketball Association arenas will be dark. The only NBA game Consider, too, the scenes to be sparked by the 1 p.m. PST kickoff in the Silverdome in Pontiac, Mich.: @ In-Reno, Nev., an MGM casino spokesman said the world’s largest casino will “come to a standstill” at game’ time as high-rollers of all persuasions scamper into rooms equipped with large-screen TVs or to their suites to watch the scoreboard. : ein i, where i i the Northgate Mall will close an hour tices Mall genera) "*manager Renald Tavolier said the operators of the 104 stores “decided that since hardly anyone was going to be Sunday is Portland Trail Blazers at Boston Celtics,’and that will finish before the 11:30 a.m. PST. pre-game festivities begin: The NBA acknowledges it has’ little hope of denting the Super Bow! audience. e In Denver, skiers at the Breckinridge ski area will be able to find out the score from lift operators posting it on large blackboards on the slopes. Jim Gill, area manager, says there'll be crowds on the slopes, but it won't be like Super Bowl: Sunday in January, 1978, when the hometown Broncos met Dallas and “: ‘you could have fespith in every direction and not hit anybody.” NATIONAL FOOTBALL CONF. San Francisco. }. Jim Miller, P 7. Guy Benjamin, QB bon ). John Choma, . Ray Wersching, K . Joe Montana, QB 20. “Amos Lawrence, RB |. Jack Reynolds, LB Eric Wright, CB Owri ight Hi Hicks, $ ~ arte Williamson, S : «SL Ran ehthorst, oF 8. Lynn Thomas, CB : Walt Easley, FB 92. Ricky Patton, RB COACH BILL WALSH: ‘H's a PONTIAC, MICH (AP) — From. the moment he ‘greeted his players dressed as a doorman at the hotel, Bill - Walsh made it clear that as far as he was concerned, the Super Bowl today can't be taken too sériously. All week, amid the crush of the media,and the festivities of the National Footbal! League championship game, the San Franciaco 49er coach has maintained his stance. “I just don't. believe there's quite the dramatic impact of all of this on the players,” he said. “It’s not that much of a_spectacle. oes a football gam At every turn, he Pe ualisised man has acted like Robert Young on the old television program, Father Knows Best. He wants his charges in bed early, but only so they won't suffer from the three-hour time difference’ between here and the West Coast. “Tin not a Marine sergeant, I'm not a drill sergeant,” "said the man whom some have called an offensive genius. “I think those days are over. “That's = threwbeck te the Second World War.” Walsh's players have responded well to his approach. There have been no major violations of the 1 a.m. curfew he imposed, and the 49ers have appeared relaxed and enthusiastic all week while preparing for the encounter with Cincinnati Bengals. Things have gone smoothly in practice, too. Although + wide receiver Freddie Solomon sprained his knee ‘Thursday, he was fit enough to practice Friday and will be playing today. ‘CONVEY THAT POINT’ “I think it’s good that he is trying to convey that. point to us, that it’s just another game,” said wide receiver Dwight Clark. “Because if we were to start thinking, ‘This is the Super Bowl,’ and any kind of different game, it would get us all uptight and the pressure would mount and we don't need that kind. of stuff on our team.” Offensvie guard Randy Cross said: “i think the guys are real relaxed — in fact almost to the point where guys Bulls favor 49ers NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street analysts, noted for their ability to turn up a financial angle in just about anything, have found one in this weekend's Super Bowl. Even the most avid reader of charts and graphs in the financial community doesn’t take it very seriously. But SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS . Johnny Ronnie Lott, CB Earl Cooper, FB football game’ * deeply personal reason for, trying to keep things in - knee Thursday after colliding with cornerback Ronnie SSS '. Dan Bunz, LB }. Keana Turner, LB . willie Harper, LB oc ; Ban Audick, OF . Walt Downing, C 65: LawrentePiilers: DE ee 6. allan Ken ennedy, OT 74, Davis, RB . msn, Mike Shomnnn W wR . Mike Wilson, WR . Charlie Young, TE 's Dwight Clark, WR. Ft I¢ Solomon, WR are sleeping in. It’s not showing | up on the field, though, because our practices have been good. Our guys are really executing, and their assignments are going perfectly.” : Walsh's idea of a curfew, said Cross, isn't lehts out with warm milk by your bed. * “It means be in the hotel,” he said. “So there's guys playing cards and dominos and hanging around each other's rooms and maybe having a couple of beers,” For most, this is their first Super Bowl experience, and they are soaking it up. Walsh, on the other hand, has a perspective, Coaches say four’ TDs needed PONTIAC, MICH. (AP) — On the eve of the Super Bowl, coaches Bill Walsh of San Francisco 49ers and Forrest Gregg of Cincinnati Bengals ian ome at least one thing on which they can agree, Both figure it will take four touchdown to win the big game today. “T don’t think 21 points will be enough to win,” Gregg said. “I think it will take 28 or more points.” Walsh wasn't quarrelling with that assessment. He had predicted four TDs would be required to win the National Football Conference championship game against Dallas, and the final score was 28-27. He sees the same kind of wid-eopen contest for the Super Bowl. “I expect ore or the other to score four touchdowns,” Walsh said. “It won't be a bitter defensive struggle with Ken Anderson and Joe Montana on the field.” i's and San F 7 who led their conferences in passing during the reguler season, will oppose each other in the Pro Bow! next week. GETS GOOD NEWS Walsh got some good news at the 49er workout Friday when wide reciever Freddie Solomon was able to practice. Solomon had left the field with a sprained left Lott during » passing drill. After the practice, the 49er changed Solomon's status to probable, which means his availability for today is 75-25. . hile, visitors pouring into the Detroit from the outcome of the football championship game, brokers say, it will be possible to infer a forecast of what the stock market will do in 1982. If the San Francisco 49ers win, they say, it will be a favorable portent for stock prices. If, on the other hand, , the Cincinnati Bengals prevail, a continued bear market may be in store. region for the first Super Bowl ever held in a Northern city. Hotel space was at a premium and the party atmosphere so prevalent at every Super Bowl was taking hold. The NFL's annual pre-game bash for 3,000 friends of football was held Friday night with the theme of America on Wheels, saluting the auto industry.