B4 CASTLEGAR NEWS, November 29, 198) At services today The new pastor for Cal- vary Baptist Church, Pastor Harold Duckworth, will be speaking at both the morning and evening service today. Pastor Duckworth, who was born in Courval, Sask., grew up in that province and at one time taught school in Moose Jaw. He served in the transport command of the RAF during World War II. After the war he attended Toronto Baptist Seminary, where he met Mrs. Duck- worth. Mrs. Duckworth, born in Port Rowan, Ontario, at- tended Toronto Baptist Sem- inary for two years. The Duckworth’s were married in 1949 and began their first pastorate the same year in Lanark, Ontario, near Ot- tawa. From 1955-1960, the Duck- worth's pioneered a work in Lively, Ont., near Sudbury. Pastor Duckworth earned a BA at Waterloo-Lutheran and an Honours in “Near Eastern Studies” at the Uni- versity of Toronto. During the years 1965-1975, Pastor Duckworth taught Hebrew, Greek, Christian Education and various other subjects at the Toronto Baptist Semin- ary. Simultaneous to teaching at Toronto Baptist Seminary, he pastored in Milliken, Ont., a suburb of Toronto, for six years. For the past six and one half years the Duck- worth's have pastored at the First Baptist Church in Kam- loops. Two of their grown children live in Toronto and two in Kamloops. The Duckworth's enjoy British Columbia and look forward to ministering in ft 3 Pastor and Mrs. Harold Duckworth Safety group demands recall WASHINGTON (AP) — An auto safety group said at least 16 people have been killed this year in accidents involving automatic trans- missions on Ford cars, des- pite a U.S. government-san- ctioned warning campaign by the automaker. The group, a coalition of 10 consumer organizations call- ing itself Campaign Ford Re- call, demanded the recall of the cars equipped with the transmissions, something the Ford Motor Co. has refused to do despite years of con- troversy over whether the cars are safe. ping automatically from park to reverse, arise from actions by motorists who fail to take proper safety precautions. In a move last December that avoided a recall order, Ford reached an agreement with the U.S. Transportation Department requiring Ford to distribute a warning decal to more than 16 million Ford owners whose cars contained the transmissions. (Voice of the People Pot and potties share Soliciting funds Editor, Castlegar News: It has been brought to our attention, for the concern of all, that there are two women claiming to be Sisters (Blue Nuns) who are combing the area of the Diocese and soli- citing funds from businesses and homes — ostensibly to build a church at New Den- ver (or some other conven- jent place), These “sisters” have no authorization from any Dio- cese in Canada, or any other legitimate Church authority. They are members of a dis- sident group of Catholics from Eastern Canada. Rev. Michael J. Guinan St. Rita's Parish Castlegar Approval sought to build plant VICTORIA (CP) — A Can- adian-Japanese consortium is dangling a $370-million carrot in its bid for B.C. government approval of a multi-billion- dollar liquefied natural gas project in northwestern Brit- ish Columbia. The Rim Gas Project, which included Petro-Canada of Calgary, Westcoast Trans- mission of Vancouver and Mitsui and Co. Ltd. of Japan, wants to deliver and sell liquefied natural gas to Japan from a plant it will build at Bish Cove, 10 kilometres from Kitimat. To get approval, the prop- Canada’s judges are criticized The problem generally in- . volves Fords sold from 1970 to 1979 with automatic trans- mission models FMX, C-3, C-4, and C-6, Ford has repeatedly said the issi id Castlegar. which involve the cars slip- Carriers offer ‘alert service’ VANCOUVER (CP) — Vancouver postmen and the United Way of the Lower Mainland have kicked off their Letter Carriers’ Alert program. * Under the program, deliv- ery of pension and disability cheques will be accompanied by an information flyer and an invitation to sign up for the alert service. Letter carriers who notice signs that someone may be in trouble, such as mail piling up, or lights left burning, would then contact an‘ alert centre, where ali the daia on participants will be filed. Visitor's A ati The K y d is accepting written applications for the position of Assistant to the Regional Manager The position is based at Nelson, B.C., and initially will be a 3- month temporary position. The did ill be TORONTO (CP) — Jud- ges in Canada are of “poor quality” and are appointed in secret by politicians reward- ing them for their loyalty, says a University of Western Ontario law professor. Robert Martin also says the Supreme Court of Canada has “a century long history of mediocrity” and is riddled with deficiencies. In the text of a speech released before delivery Sat- urday at an_ investigative journalism conference in Tor- onto, Martin says the Su- Small yet significent gn step taken EDMONTON (CP) — Can- ada is taking a small but significant step toward en- shrining the facts of the na- tion's ism in the preme Court issues judge- ments based on incompre- hensible logic and abysmal language. The highest court has also been a “dismal” failure in performing its duty to res- pond to contemporary social and political concerns. “It is not a question of whether one agrees or dis- agrees with the responses adopted,” Martin says. “It is simply that the responses are incoherent and unintelli- gible.” He said the court has “made a mess of its res- ponsibilities in defining and shaping Canadian federalism. The emergence of the fed-, eral-provincial conference as the key institution in federal relations expresses a long- standing lack of confidence in the judiciary.” CITES CONTEMPT Martin says lawyers, jour- nalists, politicians and legal ics have all been loath constitution, Saskatchewan Attorney-General Roy Ro- manow said Friday. communication oriented and posses extensive skills in writing and publishing, plus a thorough knowledge of the en- tire Kootenay Boundry region. Regional travel involving irregular hours and overnight stays must be acceptable, and the applicant must supply a vehicle. Please send application with Fn resume and stating salary fo: THE REGIONAL MANAGER, said the new section affirming Canada’s multiculturalism falls short of what he would like to have seen, but is a “beginning statement” that Canada is a nation of many cultures. who played a y Visitor's A P.O. Box 172, Nelson, B.C. VIL SP9 er NOW YOU'RE 19. INOW YOU HAVE . ACHOKEIN — TOMORROW ... you're on the Provincial Voter's List. To have the right to choose, you have to register to vote. It's easy. Just contact your nearest Registrar of Voters or Government Agent. But don't put it off. Do it today. And have a choice in tomorrow. <5 ta Oren OY ay a major role in negotiations which resulted in the Nov. 5 constitutional accord, praised Canada's political system as one that can knit itself to- gether with compromise ra- ther than through violence in the treets. Speaking at a banquet commemorating the 90th an- niversary of Ukrainian set- tlement in Canada, he said one of the most important developments in reaching the accord was the Sept. 28 Stipreme Court of ‘Canada decision. By establishing that only a majority agreement was nec- essary, he said the decision removed the legal and con- stitutional logjam that had either unanimous consent or none. to criticize the judiciary, partly because of the nature of contempt of court charges when criticism is aimed at a particular judge. He said in such cases, the standard of proof is unclear, there is no chance for trial by jury, the burden of proof is on the accused and it is even possible to be tried by the very judge being criticized. Another factor discourag- ing criticism of the judiciary is the widespread view that any comment which casts doubt on it is somehow sub- versive or immoral. Martin also attacked the method of appointment of judges, saying it is done in secret by politicians who do not have to justify their choices. He said loyalty to the political party in power re- mains of crucial importance in achieving appointments. In the United States, crit- icism is much more wide- spread and is eyen encour- aged, he said, but in Canada, the issue of how much and what kind of criticism may be directed at judges is yet to be resolved. ALPHONSO APA Ladies’ & Men's Wear Ltd. “WHERE SERVICE BEGINS” Introducing Phimtose Exclusively Original Designs jor women & style. All outfits in stock made to onents are prepared to spend $123 million in the first five years of a 10-year exploration program for more natural gas in the province, project man- ager Bob Dunbar said Thurs- day. During the second five- year period, they propose to spend a further $250 million on exploration and gas de- velopment work. He told a news conference this program would be above and beyond the exploration work each company normally would carry out. Dunbar said the project would export 270 million cubic feet of liquefied natural gas a day using 320 million cubic feet of field gas, most of it from B.C., supplemented as necessary with gas from Al- berta, Yukon and Northwest Territories. Must share utility's net work VANCOUVER (CP) — B.C. businesses now can use data pat a ward in science centre WINNIPEG (CP) — Pot and potties have co-existed peacefully on the fourth-floor ward of the city's Health Sciences Centre for nearly a month, While most of the floor is occupied by babies and tod- dlers in a day nersery, one room is used to investigate the use of marijuana to reliev nausea in cancer chemother- apy patients. Day nursery director Nor- ma McCormick said the room is usually used once a week, with the smell of marijuana especially evident at the end of the day when parents come to pick up their chil- dren. “Between four and five (p.m.) it starts wafting out,” McCormick said in an inter- view Tuesday, noting the door to the room is some- times left open. Both McCormick, whose own child attends the nur- sery, and study co-ordinator Dr. Martin Levitt say the odor is harmless. “The smell of the smoke may carry but the fact that it is used so infrequently should , not pose any hazard,” said Levitt. “There are no biolo- gical or medical effects on the children.” NO BEHAVIOR CHANGES Two parents have raised concerns, prompting the hos- pital to look for another lo- cation for the experiment. But the general reaction has been limited to the occasional joke and no parents have de- tected differences in their children's behavior, McCor- mick said. The study compares the effects of smoking marijuana and taking tetrahydrocanna- binol (THC), the drug's active from CNCP Telecommuni- cations without paying for CNCP lines into their busi- nesses. The Canadian Radio-tele- vision and Telecommunica- tions Commission ruled in a decision released in Ottawa Tuesday that B.C. Telephone Co. must allow CNCP the use of the utility's network for data and voice communi- cations. In return, CNCP must pay B.C. Tel an “access charge” equalling 25 per cent of the monthly line rate to compen- sate the utility for loss of private line revenues. The order brings private line interconnect in B.C. into line with Quebec and On- tario, where CNCP has had access to Bell Telephone's system for almost two years, At present, a business cus- tomer wanting the use of a CNCP message toll service — Telex and other document transmission services — must use CNCP’s wire net- work, entirely discrete from the telephone system. dit in pill form. Its purpose is to determine whe- ther THC or another mari- juana ingredient relieves chemotherapy-induced naus- a. During each session, the patient trieg both the pill and the cigaret, one of which is a placebo, Neither patient nor experimenter knows which one is not real. Levitt said patients smoke the marijuana or placebo cigaret through a water pipe to reduce the smoke's harsh- ness. Products used in the ex- periment are locked up and not stored in the ward room. GUARANTEED CERTIFICATES Ye ONE YEAR TERM On ian rust. Authorized Representative: Anderson Agencies Ltd., WE Fourth St, Castlegar, B.C. Telephone: 365: Interest rate subject to confirmation. YOU CAN LOSE 17 TO 25 POUNDS IN JUST 6 WEEKS! And we'll teach you how to keep it off. NO SHOTS * NO DRUGS NO CONTRACTS CALL TODAY FOR A FREE CONSULTATION 365-6256 7.a.m,-1.p.m, Mon. «Fri. 8:30-9:30 3392 GOOD TIMES were enjoyed Thursday evening as the Awana ‘Pals’ Was Boys’ Club held its second annual open house pot luck 60 moms, dads, supper. Over ing of and sisters 9 fellowship and entertainment at the Twin Rivers Elementary School. Pastor H. Duckworth of the Calvary Baptist Church officiated the an Pp g and closing y. The Awana Boys’ Club, , which meets os th : every Thursday at the Twin Rivers Elementary School, is o boys in grades 3 to 5. It places stron le of Christian principals an i in to all emphasis on the Bible'as an living. In September of ‘82 another club will be made available for boys grades 6 to.8. For more information contact Rod Kennedy. Club for computer enthusiasts A club for computer en- thusiasts has formed in the West Kootenay and inter- ested persons are invited to attend the next meeting to be held at 7 p.m. Monday at the Twin Rivers school in Castle- gar. The group is called the Kootenay Apple Users Club. Member Bill Thompson said “This machine (the Apple2) can do anything from ac- counting to serious compos- ing and playing music and can entertain anyone from the child who wants to play arcade games to a chess player. The variety means there is always something to discuss (at meetings).” For more information call Thompson at 365-7097. Crash kills one, injures the other CAMPBELL RIVER (CP) — One man was killed and another injured after a Ces- sna 1865 flying without a flight plan smashed into the side of a mountain on Quadra Island, near this central Vancouver Island . Sat. or by Appointment Anytime THANK YOU TO ALL the carididates who offered themselves in service to our community, making this recent municipal election a good ex- cample of democracy at work; TO ALL Castlegar citizens who exercised their democratic right to vote; TOALL those who placed their confidence in me; TOALL the people who worked in my behalf, MY DEEPEST THANKS. | reaffirm my commitment to work for the greatest good, for the most people, and for the community. SINCERELY, Bob MacBain 1° TIME EVER Microwave Oven Workshop | Sunday, Nov. 29, 12 p.m. - 5 p.m. In the COMINCO ARENA * Door Prizes Every Hour © 12 Months INTEREST FREE ON MICROWAVE OVENS NE-5720C c. Reg. $599.95 P 21 ’ Variable Power, Defrost Setting, Deportat ion date again extended VANCOUVER (CP) — An East Indian woman living in Surrey who was deserted by her husband was granted a third extension of her de- portation date by Employ- ment and Immigration Min- ister Lloyd Axworthy. Amarjit Kaur Sandhu, 24, due to be deported Monday, will be allowed to stay a further six months while she awaits enforcement of a court maintenance order against her husband, said Ax- worthy’s press secretary Pat Preston. Sandhu came to Canada last year to get financial support - from her hisband~ Sukwinder Marr, a nursery worker. Marr disappeared in February after Surrey Fam- ily Court ordered him to pay her $250 a month main- tenance. A bench warrant has been issued for his ar- rest. Sandhu was originally due to be deported July 28. Ax- worthy granted a second ex- tension on Oct. 1 and the third extension Friday. Sandhu’s lawyer, Calvin Community Legal Services, said she was granted a div- orce decree in B.C. Supreme Court on Thursday. The de- cree becomes final in three months. Sandhu married Marr. in India in 1978. He came to Canada, became a citizen and promised to send for her. She waited three years, then last fall came to Canada on a visi- tor's visa. Marr kicked her out after they lived together for sev- Could be $23,500 down tube VANCOUVER (CP) — The federal government spent $23,500 on a satellite dish that 50 convicts could watch television but now has learned that the dish may never be delivered. Jack Stewart, Canadian Penitentiary Service spokes- man, said Friday the money was spent last March for the dish to bring TV to the resi- dents of the Elbow Lake eral days in the A area. She applied for per- manent status in Canada saying” she feared a life of uprostitution ordeath by ‘sul- cide if forced to return to India. Her plea was backed by experts on Indian culture who told the federal immi- gration department the woman faces a life of disgrace at home because she was de- serted by her husband. “I'm pleased she doesn't have to go back Monday. If she can stay another six months she may be able to execute the maintenance 3 © said db Sandborn of A Wine merchants Fickle market TORONTO (CP) — Cana- dian wine merchants are’ being forced to change their products and their image be- cause of a fickle wine market that is expanding faster than anybody predicted. Sweet sherries and ports, the industry's old standbys, are fast disappearing as vint- ners switch to dry, .white table wines for the Perrier- with-a-twist crowd. Asim Ghosh, vice-presi- dent of marketing for Jordan and Ste.-Michelle Cellars Ltd. of St. Catharines, Ont., says white wines now ac- count for 60 per cent of the table wine market and sales are up 30 per cent over last year. - The rush to white has been Vintners have ‘commissioned dozens of market surveys to determine whether the trend to white table wine will last or whether it is a passing fad that will evaporate as fast as it grew. “Many pundits expect the market to change any day, but so far there’s no sign,” says Michael Conde, presi- dent of Chateau-Gai Wines Ltd. of Toronto. ity facility near Agassiz in southwest BC. ‘However, hie'said' the gov: erument-was advised three. weeks ago that the firm building the dish, Earth Sta- tion Technology Inc., of Rich- mond, B.C., is in financial trouble and the equipment may never be delivered. Olson $8 million aid | project suspended OTTAWA (CP) — Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Mark MacGuigan said Saturday the Canadian government has decided to suspend an $8 million aid project in Haiti because the island’s govern- ment has made it impossible for Canada to complete the project as planned. But MacGuigan said in a news release he is confident the decision will not affect relations between Canada and Haiti since other aid projects in the Caril ment and control arrange- ments, MacGuigan said. For the past seven years, th Canadian International Development Agency has been working with the gov- ernment of Haiti on the proj- ,ect in an attempt to provide basic health servites, educa- tion, hospitals, and schools to more than 800,000 Haitians living in a remote area be- tween Petit-Goave and Petit- Trou-de-Nippes. Problems of soil conservation, irrigation country will not be altered. More than'$21 million has beer spent on’ the regional development project in an impoverished rural area of Haiti since 1974 but phase two has been cancelled be- cause the governments were unable to agree on manage- Trial date stays VANCOUVER (CP) Chief Justice Allan McEach- date for trial he Shantz that when he set the said he ern of the B.C. Supreme Wouldn't be ‘inclined to ad- Court refused Friday to «Journ it further. He said he grant an adjournment of the bad heard nothing in court to ‘trial of Clifford Robert Olson, convince him that an adjourn- charged with first-degree Ment was necessary, but said murder in the deaths of 10 Shantz can reapply. young people in southwest- ern B.C. Olson's _ lawyer, Shantz, said he applied for a one-month adjournment be- cause he was having diffi- culty gathering material for 7% the defence. and P were also being studied. About 80 per cent of Haiti's 6 million inhabitants have an annual per capita income of less than $400. Robert Ashcroft, 25,’ of Black Creek, B.C., was killed when the single-engined air- craft went down Wednesday evening about 24 kilometres north of here. Quadra Island RCMP said the pilot, Alan Stobbe, 40, of Campbell River was in hos- pital with undetermined in- juries. The wreckage was located Thursday by a Buffalo air- craft from Canadian Forces Base Comox by ‘tracing the signal from an emergency lo- cater transmitter aboard the downed plane. The men, both loggers, were flying from Wakeman Sound, north of Campbell _ River, to Campbell River. RCMP Cpl. Richard Hall said the cause of the crash is under inyestigation.. He said ‘the pilot had been flying in the dark~ without: ‘a ‘flight plan. CASTLEGAR NEWS, November 29, 1981 HOMEGOODS > FURNIToXe WARSI OUSE qatt) Sar. 9:30-5:30 gy" China Creek “Drive a Litte to Save a Lot” Audrey Moore would like to express her sincere ap- preciation to the’ people of Castlegar for their support NOTICE TO PARENTS SCHOOL DISTRICT No. 9 (CASTLEGAR) The Board of School Trustees has ap- proved December 4, 1981 as a Prof | Develop Day for ALL ELEMENTARY TEACHERS/SCHOOLS. ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS Teachers in at- fendance ONLY - Friday, December 4, J. DASCHER, Secretary-Treasurer. Robert # ‘The trial was set earlier for 4 ¢ Jamy:4..'v . The. chief justice reminded AE. ATTENTION Slocan Valley - Residents The Castlegar News is available at: Village Market South Slocan Interest Rates Are Dropping. NOW’S THE TIME TO MAKE YOUR MOVE. Rose’s Restaurant Crescent Valley Maple Leaf Store Crescent Valley Slocan Valley Co-Op Slocan Park Carlson's Store Winlaw ly Extended Shopping Hours 7t ber 23 lh Wed d D Monday, D a Free Mon. to Fri. 9:30 a.m. to 9 p-m. Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Santa at Waneta Plaza Sat., Dec. 5 to Wed., Dec. 23 Monday to Friday: 10 a.m. to 12 noon 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. ; 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Saturday: 10 to 12 noon and 2 to 5 p.m. Every child who visits with Santa will receive ing book and a Free candy cane. during the election. family gatherings and thoughts of home. Find the perfect.gifts for your.family ... when you shop with us. blue stratos After Shave 125 mL. $549 Ch Blue Stratos Soap onaRope........ Blue Stratos After Shave & Stick Deodorant, somt.a759. ....... $399 Toilet Tissue New from the mekers of Kleenex. on att Christmas wrapping paper, cards * and decorations purchased in this store,” when you buy four of these six products ~~ _ ee Country Store If you have been thinking of building a new New Denver home in Castlegar, NOW IS THE TIME. Construc- - tion costs may never be lower. Tameriane Subdivision has some beautiful residential lots available at OFF SEASON PRICES. J SALES BY PRIVATE TREATY 197 Colombia Ave. SALES & SERVICE LTD. Phone 359-7750 for details. Conteger 8. 1338 Cedar Ave., Trail Phone 368-6331 . PHOTOS WITH SANTA AVAILABLE. @aWaneta plaza 8100 Rock Island Highway, Trail ° @ REGISTER Chief Electoral British Columbia Office 2) CASTLEGAR NEWS 1364 Bay Ave. fi Trail, B.C. b Ph. 368-5314 Carl’s Drug Mart Province of Open Sunday 12-186-7p.m.