s Aé CASTLEGAR NEWS, August 24, 1983 Court reporters now on contract VICTORIA (CP) — The provincial government is re- turaing snotiicr traditional government service to the pri- vate sector, Attorney General Brian Smith said Tuesday. The 150 court reporters currently employed by the provincial government will be offered contracts with the government, said Smith. The change will reduce government expenses be- cause the government will no longer pay the costs of sup- plying certain transcripts the reporters have traditionally given to litigants. In the future transcripts will be supplied by the court reporters, but litigants will have to pay for them, he sald. Smith said the government will negotiate with the court reporters association to deter- mine what amount the con- tracts will be let for. area effective Septem! NOTICE Castlegar Provincial Court Service in Small Claims and Family Relations matters will now be pre vided to Castlegar and rl, 1983. Small Claims jurisdiction of this Court will in- clude the City of Castlegar and the following locations: Shoreacres, Glade, Thrums, Rasp- berry Village, Robson, Pass Creek, Gibson Creek, . Goose Greek, Genelle, Fairview, Brilliant, Syringa also be included. y Creek, O1 Creek, Deer Park. All parted R.R. No. 1 will All inquiries should be directed to the Court reaary: Ce Castlegar Provincial Court, S55 C Colum- if 365-7778. B.C. my card.. nagers: ick & Irene Donovan Phone (604) 442-2127 Z 2 Grand Forks Lodge Motel rench aday Brunch 11 -2p.m. sic So Caine Hours bacm. to VOp.m. Phoenix Dining Room & Restaurant ted on Highway #3 Weare Grand Forks, B.C. GUITAR HEADQUA P.O. Box Wary Grand Forks, B.C. VOH 1 OF THE KoOTENA rile ibra 840 notched Ave, Trail +. Washburn, 9 o ro Nomen custom-made ‘Electric Carol Magaw Dianna Kootnikoff ADVERTISING SALES CASTLEGAR NEWS 0 ORAWER 2007, CASTUGAR, BC..IN 24 OFFICE 365-5210 ALCON PAINTING & DECORATING 2649 FOURTH a vi Castiegan p.c. ME VIN 287 365-3563 STEPHAN SAMOYLOFF KAREN ANDERSON et SHSS graduates win ordi scholarships to - continue education iy “iste Stanley Hi 'y School have won major amon Castlegar school district hiiblinced Tuesda: ue ‘our of the students, Rob Adams, Dave Picton, Stéphiin Samoyloff and Kevin Semenoff, ca; captured pres- tigidud provincial scholarships, while two others, Karen Andetson and Renee Gallo, were named winners of district scholarships. 43. Both scholarships are worth $1,000 each, are funded by the provincial government, and are based.on the results of api wid eae lish Provin- di to write at least three other provincial examinations in thelr choice of grade 1 12 subjects. “District scholarship candidates vate: judged: on the results of the provincial English examination plus their standing in four Grade 12 courses. The two students with the-Highest average marks receive district ‘awards. All successful candidates must enroll in a bona-fide post-secondary institution of their choice, ora training school approved by the Ministry of Labor, no later than Sept. 80 of the year in which the award is’ presented in order to receive’ their award for this year. Ifa student wishes to spend the next year out of school, he or she must enroll within 18 months in order to receive the scholarship. x and SHSS. David's invereste last year included volleyball, basketball, and golf. STEPHAN SAMOYOLOFF Stephan, son'of Peter and Polly Samoyloff of Ootish- enia, is a graduate of the Castlegar school system. He was awarded two of the three medical scholarships this year during the graduation ceremonies, and plans to transfer from Selkirk College to U.B.C.’s School of Medicine in the future. & + KEVIN SEMENOFF Kevin is another product of the Castlegar school system, having attended Kinnaird Elementary, KJSS, and SHSS. Son of Mike and Lillian Semenoff of Kinnaird, Kevin was awarded the C.S.C.U. and U.S.C.C. scholar- ships this year. He also found time to coach Pee Wee hockey, and to take part in school curling and golf. Kevin will be attending Selkirk on the University Transfer program, and will go on to U.B.C. for a degree in Engineering. KAREN ANDERSON The daughter of John and Rosemary Anderson of Blueberry Creek, Karen received her early schooling in Fernie and moved to Castlegar in Grade 8 to complete her education in Blueberry Creek, KJSS, and Stanley ROB ADAMS “Rot the highest ding of all Castl scholarship candidates this year. His parents, John, who is'a nitémbér of the Selkirk College faculty, and Joyce a teacher for Castlegar School District, have resided in . Castlégar for all of Rob’s schooling... Bead feel to go to Selkirk College (lst ' ants tiniing on to U.B.C.: Engineerjhg. cule eat DAVID PICTON David Picton is this year's Stanley winnér, and the recipient of the Selkirk ( He plans to take University Trauster & in Business Administration, and then go on to Law.at UBC. : David, the son of Pat and Mary Picton, received all his education in Castlegar at Kinnaird Elementary, KJS8, Sart sonal, "y Schools. Karen is planning to take a year off, and then to enter a data-pi course, with the intention of working in the computer industry. She spent her final year at SHSS working as a counselling assistant. RENEE GALLO Renee has been an active member of the SHSS Grad Council and Student Council this year. Her education has been divided between Castlegar and the northern communities of Hudson Hope and Quesnel. . She now plans to enter Selkirk College's Business of Evelyn and Gary Gallo, she was awarded the Legion sod Local 480, Bursaries this year. -work in . DAVID PICTON KEVIN SEMENOFF. RENEE GALLO ee TNO RRERRNERNNRNNAD Blood. VICTORIA (CP) — The government has closed a loophole that allowed some drunk drivers to escape pro- secution. Attorney General Brian Smith announced that legis- lation has been proclaimed which, beginning Oct. 1, will allow blood samples to be taken from drivers injured in motor vehicle accidents. Previously, injured drivers could refuse to give a breath sample and unconscious drivers couldn't be tested. This led many “exper- fenced drunk drivers” to feign injury in order to avoid having to take the test, Sally ARTS are now even tougher,” Smith said. Gribble said it is a big step towards cracking down on drunk drivers, Smith said he believes the islation will wi Gribble, a for } Mothers Against Drunk Driving, told a news con- ference Tuesday. “It also means that the court challenges, even the B.C. Civil Liberties Associa- tion doesn’t oppose it, he said, because the govern- ment intends to use it only drinking-driving laws in B.C. which are already among the toughest in North America medically unfit, drivers who are Smith said that after speaking with federal Justice Minister Mare MacQi Friday he expects the federal government will soon enact similar legislation. But. for now Smith has issued a directive that tests be limited to those drivers undergoing hospital treat- ment for their injuries. Gribble said the legislation concentrates on drunk drivers doing the most harm. 2 Days: Fri. & Sat. 2 A DISTRES$ $ALE (at the back of our Warehouse) CHESTERFIELDS Below Our Cost! Odds ‘n Ends of LIVING ROOM TABLES. Slightly Marked. One of a Kind. AT OUR COST and BELOW COST. “Let's face it people that do feign injury are people that usually ‘should have been apprehended or should have been prosecuted ‘and do kéwn the ropes,” she said. “They're experienced drunk drivers.” She said doctors have said that 80 per cent’ of the drivers taken through hospi- tal emergency wards follow- ing an accident should have st loophole closed | been given blood-alcohol tests. Smith also warned that there will be a major crack- down on drinking drivers on the Labor Day weekend. All major highway routes into the Vancouver area, in- cluding ferry terminals and the U.S.-Canada routes, will be closely monitored for drinking drivers. _ Krug attends leadership eanip Stanley Humphries Secon- dary school graduate Beth has been selected by the Castlegar Rotary Club to participate in a leadership camp being held at Camp Gifford in Deer Lake, Wash- ington. The week-long camp got underway Sunday. with various lectures and a group ions in leadership meeting procedures, public. speaking and group dynamics. The camp is sponsored by the Rotary club to demon: strate the organization's respect and concern for youth, to assist and train po- tential youth leaders, and to publically recognize the high qualities of the many young people who are rendering service to their communities as youth leaders. Krug was chosen for her leadership potential and her sevice to the community. BETH KRUG ++. attends Rotary camp This past summer she has been an outdoor leader with the area Recreation Comm- ission. She plans to attend Simon Fraser University this fall. CLAIMED _15 LIVES Heatwave still sizzles i in the south /By The Associated Press ¢ A sizzling heat wave that has claimed 15 lives and “just keeps getting ‘hotter” marked time in the South today, locked in by a powerful front along. the Mason-Dixon line, with temperatures in the high 80a", ‘ expected through, the weekend. Students left sweltering schools early Tuesday, the ~ elderly stayed at air-conditioned abolers, soybean and hay crops and th hickens died in the heat. * “The culprit right now is a front that's wandering :. almost along the Mason-Dixon line; a barrier that won't allow cooler air in from'the west,” said Harry Gordon, a: . meteorologist for the National Weather, Service Severe *" second ‘tropical storm, Storms Centre in Kansas City, Mo. % “It\just keeps getting hotter all the time,” Gordon said today, adding that no relief is in sight at least until the weekend. _ The ioueearys pease over the 88-degree mark Tuesday in the, Carolinas, Georgia, Virginia, Alabama, , Arkatisas and Tennessee, but the hot spot in the U.8. was (Gila Bend, ‘Ariz. ‘where the high was near 42 degrees Celsius. In the South, Athens, Ga., suffered through 41-degree heat, the highest in the +) ‘Relief could come from rain spawned by the season's storm, Barry, now aobut 820 kilometres east of Florida's Atlgntic cost. But the slow-moving storm Jeu expected to eumme within 100 kilometres of a major Journalist saw ‘killers’ TOKYO. (AP) = A Jap- and translated from Jap- the two. disap) anese journalist who told a anese newspaper Ashai:,armed soldiers quickly news conference he saw Shimbun as com- ‘gathered at the scene. Philippine security officers ments that left it uncertain’ “I looked at ‘my watch. It kill opposition leader Benigno whether he actually saw the was 1:20 p.m. Everything Aquino in Manila was quoted fatal-shot. ~ happened at one. It took only in a Japanese newspaper as “I saw the officers draw saying he did not see the shot their pistols and heard the that killed Aquino, crack of two gunshots,” he At a news conference at was quoted as’ ‘saying. “I been rehearsed many times.” Narita airport, freelance didn’t see who fired the shots The Philippine govern- journalist Kiyoshi Wakam- at that moment. Aquino fell ment has said A quino was iya, 87, said Monday he saw forward without even bend- shot as he left the plane by an two security officers kill ing -his knees, with blood assassin dressed in airport Aquino as the politician des- gushing from this head,” cended from an airliner at Asahi quoted him as saying. Manila airport after arriving QUOTES REPORTER from exile in the United. The paper further quoted States, then saw them kill him as saying: the unidentified man who has+ “At that moment, I did not been officially accused as see -around. Aquino's assassin. Then the rear door of a truck “I saw from inside the that had been waiting at the plane that two of the three side of the stairs opened. I weekly), a magazine owned Officers who took him out saw a man come out, walk- by Sankei Shimbun, a major pulled out handguns and shot. ing’ unsteadily, and he too ‘Tokyo daily newspaper. at Mr. Aquino’s head from a_ was shot. Wakamiya said he returne close range,” Wakamiya said “That wasthe man who fell with Aquino from the U.S., in a portion of the news con- at Aquino’s side. The officers sitting in the same row of the ference that. was televised who appeared to have shot aircraft with pacino and the t 4 fies only ‘have been something that ‘was planned, that had maintenance worker's clothing, and the assailant was then killed in a blaze of gunfire by , soldiers.’ The alleged killer had not been officially identified. Wakamiya Aquino’s homecoming for Shukan Sankei (Sankei and latter's about five minutes. It could’ was covering | | Bank executive writes brother-in-law, Ken coastal city before Thursday or Friday, the weather service said. FIRES SPARKED Further west, torrential rains in Arkansas and Tennessee temporarily doused parched ground, but officials said lightning from the storm sparked a grass fire at Little Rock, Ark., a symptom of the summer's chronic dryness. The rains drove winds gusting to 100 kil an CASTLEGAR NEWS, August 24, 1983 AS Electricity demand down VANCOUVER (CP) — The latest long-range forecast by B.C. Hydro predicts demand for electricity by industrial hour through the middle of Tennesse on Tuesday, knocking out power to 12,000 customers, The storm's silver lining was an eight-degree drop in temperatures that peaked at 89 degrees in Jackson, Tenn. However, more temperatures.in the high 30s were forecast for In Nashville, schools closed after only one full day of the new academic year when officials measured indoor temperatures at 38 degrees in some of the city’s 1,214 non-air conditioned classrooms. Classes were also cut short or cancelled in Alabama, Georgia and Texas.:..., In the stores, there's a run on fans and air a dent for the ABC; In a written. statement, Wakamiya called the slaying of Aquino “a completely: pre- - mediated), murder", and blamed it on the government of President _ Ferdinand “My tears haye dried, but I am stunned,” said. the state- ment in Japanese. “I wonder if it is possible in this world: for ‘government authorities to arrange such a brazen murder in broad daylight, before the eyes of the public and the mass media of we Fitba rs yuck’ , BUCKLE UP! ‘Services held for Sokolowski Steve Sokolowski, beloved cand mill and later for BC Timber users will grow by 16.7 million kilowatt hours to 48,2 million kilowatt hours in ‘1998. ‘That is substantially lower than a forecast the provincial utility made 10 months ago, when it said demand in 1998 would reach 52.9 million kilo- watt hours, The report, prepared in July and released this week, says bulk customers, which include the top 100 companies , in the province, will use two million kilowatt hours less than it expected last Septem- ber. Hydro also has deleted from its probable load fore- cast Dome Petroleum’s pro- posed liquefied natural gas plant near Prince Rupert. How to Subscribe to the Castlegar Sox 0 Cestlegar, B.C. VIN 3H4 Yes, I'm interested in get- inp, hs the Castlegar News as i Carrier, Mail Please contac}. me with details. =n Name (Please Print) Address City Lenore Number Or better st 365-7266 husband of Jadwiga Sokolow- ski, of Raspberry Village, passed away Friday at the age of 65. - Funeral services for Mr. Sokolowski.were held today at Jan. 1, 1918 in Poland and came to Canada in 1949, , set- tling in Yorkton, Sask, Jn-1950 he moved. to Pass, Creek, to Robson in 1951, and has lived at Raspberry Village since 1971, sivad When he came to this. area he worked for Waldie's Saw- (Celgar), retiring in January. of this year. He was a mem- ber of the IWA and enjoyed fishing. -Mr. Sokolowski is survived by his wife, Jadwiga of Rasp- berry Village; one son, John, of Vancouver; three ters, Josephine Peet of Brent- LIGHTFOOT Dance Studio & Apparel Registration Open BALLET AND JAZZ ‘Beginner to Advanced Classes Available and cousin Joseph Holiak of San Mateo, Calif. . Funeral arrangements were under the direction of the Castlegar Funeral Chapel. in Nelson & S. Slocan FOR INFORMATION 359-7798 or 352-3775 — recipe for a =a ae Sore eo ya iobs _ Cc aie-as SAINT JOHN: NB. cr) — With the careful manage- ment of inflation, job creation * and increased productivity, Canada could create 700,000 jobs in 1963 and. 1984, an executive vice-president of the Royal Bank of Canada said Tuesday. Vincent Kelly, head of the, bank’s world corporate bank- ing division in Toronto, told the Association of Workers Compensation Boards of Canada that the way in which Canadians deal with unem- ployment and inflation will determine their standard of living in this decade and beyond. “Attacking one problem to the exclusion of the other just isn’t an option for Canada,” he said. ik Ra pe Kelly said Canada has been a world leader in employ- ment and the growth of the yaa force for more than 20 *rgince 1962, more than three million Canad en’ testities to ‘he’ “act "0 hat people want to learn and upgrade their skills.” Kelly said the combined strengths of business and government could make the Canadian I women and just over two million Canadian men enter- ed our workforce. Only the United States came any- where near our rate of growth in system a vital support system to deal with job loss. Education and technology are the tools for refitting the economy and in- creasing the productivity of the The key to increased em- ployment in the long term is training, he said. Business has already developed train- ing services parallel with the education system. The Royal Bank, he said, spent $13.5 million on train- “Technology training. and creative management are the instruments of change to shape a better, more produc- tive economic future and a higher standard of living for Canadians. But any program of policy we employ against ing and di in 1982, “The tremendous surge in adult education enrolment can only work for us if it works against’ inflation as well.” Special Selection a 's Shoes All Remaining Summer Naturalizers $30 F elie ee 2 48% off PACKAGE BUYS Seseeses toes eulbetine ~“ CARPETIN ONE PRICE — COMPLETELY INSTALLED Prices = — farpeting Include: — installation dense Alow Rigi very, very jux in 2colors. .. Completely installed with carpeting, pad and installation. 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