Parks — Henkel The former Gertrude Henkel was married to John Nelson Parks on Oct. 1, at the Alliance Gospel Chapel, Rev. Dwayne _Barkman of- ficiating. The bride, daughter of Rudi and Elizabeth Henkel, was given in marriage by her father. The groom is the son of Harold Parks and Blanche LeBlonde. Best man was David Parks, the groom's brother from Merrit, and groomsman was Randy LeBlonde. Ring bearer ’ was Ricky LeBlonde. Music was by Eleanor Forese and a solo was sung by Marg Esau. e bride wore a white long gown in full skirt with long lace sleeves, a Jace ruche on the dress and five-yard long viel with sequins, on every lace petal. She carried a cascade bouquet of white daisies and pink baby roses. ; Bridesmaids were Helga Fege, wearing a. th a baby blue dress wi bouquet of pink daisles; Carolyn Henkel, the bride’s sister, wearing a pink dress with a bouquet of blue daisies; and Lara Henkel, another sister ‘of the bride, wearing a yellow dress and carrying a basket of pink, yellow and blue daisies. Reception was held in the Alliance Gospel Chapel auditorium after which the bride the bridal couple traveled to the Oregon coast. The bride wore a red pantsuit with stripped blouse as her going away costume. The newlyweds will reside at Meziadin High- ways Camp near Stewart. At the reception, the mother of the bride wore a long, light-green dress with gold and mauve flowers. The mother-in- law wore a long blue dress. Out-of-town guests included Mrs. E. Redekopp, Mr. Ben Redekopp and Mr. Jake Redekopp; cousin Marlene and Naomi; Mr. .and Mrs. Harold Parks; Mrs. Mary Parks, grandmother of the groom. Telegrams were received from the bride’s aunts and uncles in Winnipeg. Healthy baby born to mother in coma NEW YORK (AP) —A comatose woman, who is five months pregnant and is being kept alive by machines, has developed , pneumonia and is in poor er unborn, of er unborn, of coma.” yg oi althy;, .doctofs.,.:Hé said fie did bot Know si condition, bu childs heal said unday. They said it is unlikely the 27-year-old woman will survive, and if it becomes apparent she will die, “we would ultimately take the fetus.”" Atanews conference at Victory Memorial Hospital, where Rosemarie Maniscalco is on a respirator and other mechanical devices, internist and cardiologist Thomas LaBarbera said: “Her prognosis has been consistently poor. Ac- cording to statistics, it has heen practically impossible to sustain life in a person in her degree 16 @ ow if it would be ble. to keep her alive long enough to “‘take the fetus. The older the fetus, the greater the chance of survival.” However, he said: “If the patient's condition is deteriorating, we would ultimately take the fetus.” LaBarbera said the unborn child “is healthy. The heart beat is 130 per minute.”’ Mrs. Maniscalco’s neurosurgeon Dr. Wolodym Tyschenko said Sunday there is no sign the woman had been beaten. _A-.. neighbor. Lynn Schettina also denied:she made‘the allegation that prompted an _ investi- gation by the Brooklyn district attorney's office. Mrs. Maniscalco’s mother Marie Guarraci said she knew af no such beatings. The husband John Manisculo denied he beat his wife. , Tyschenko, discussing the apparent stroke that resulted in her being in hospital since Noy. 23, said: “I’m convinced it was spontaneous,” Montreal transit strike ; settlement turned down MONTREAL (CP) -— The end of a two-week transit strike which has paralyzed the city’s bus and subway service was delayed Sunday when maintenance and office workers rejected Management conditions for a return to work. Their decision, which will send the strike into its third week today, came within a day of a tentative settlement on major contract clauses. About 900 maintenance workers voted unanimously in a show of hands to stay off the job because of a refusal by the Montreal Urban Community Transit Commission to guarantee that no worker would be - derry Pate’s LARGO, Fla. (AP) — Jerry Pate dropped a 10- foot birdie putt on the final hole Sunday as he and partner Hollis Stacy borke a tie and scored a one-stroke victory in a $200,000 mixed team golf championship. Pate, the 1976 Canadian and U.S. Open champion, and Stacy, the current U.S. women’s Open champ, combined for a final round, two-under- par 70 that just held off a ate challenge by rookies Curtis Strange, 22, and Nancy Lopez, 20. Pate and Stacy, who had led or shared the lead since a fantastic 61 in the opening round, com- pleted 72 holes over the 7,015 yard North course at the Bardmoor Country Club in 270, 18 under par. subject to discipinary or legal penalties as a result of the strike. Al a separate meeting, office employees closed ranks with the mechanics by voti 109-31 in a secret ballot to turn down the back-to-work protocol, The workers are afraid of being prosecuted in court and dismissed from their jobs at the same time, a union spokesman said. The 2,200 maintenance and 400 office workers voted Saturday by a 70- per-cent majority to accept a Quebec government mediation report outlining the framework of a new contract. The union $200,000 win Strange and Lopez, who started the mild, cloudy day three shots back, caught the leaders with a birdie on the 17th but had to settle for second at 271. They shot a four-under- par 68 in the final round, It was the fourth second- lace finish of the season or Lopez and the second for Strange, each of whom joined their respective tours only at mid-season. Under the unusual format for this event, each member of each man-woman team hit off the tee. They played their second shot off their partner’s hall, then picked the one they wanted and played alternate shots on the same ball for the remainder of the hole. executive had recom- mended rejection. Commission chairman LawrenceHanigan promptly responded by announcing acceptance of the contract proposals which were submitted by two mediators named by Labor Minister Pierre- Mare Johnson on Nov. 21, the day the strike began. This aroused hopes that buses and trains would start rolling early this week, ‘But the workers, following a recom- mendation from union leaders, voted to continue the strike until the transit commission signs a protocol guaranteein that no criminal or civi action will be taken against any union member. a cit is the + Limited. FEES AST REAR RE RE RI NSE DEG RO NOTICE OF INTENT RE: LIQUOR CONTROL AND LICENSING ACT APPLICATION FORA “D” (NEIGHBOURHOCD PUBLIC HOUSE} LICENCE intention of the undersigned te apply; pursuant fo the provisions of the Liquor Control and 5 Licensing Act, to the General Manager, Liquor Control ~e and Licensing Branch, Victoria, B.C. for a Nelgh- 3 Dourhoad Public House licence to operate a licenced ® establishment on the pramises situated at Loft 1, O.L, 370, Plan 7569 Coast Range 5, Geeraert Enterprises iy .. The above type of ilcance permits the sale of all types ¢ of alcoholic beverages by ihe glass on the premises beiween the hoursof 9:00 a.m, and 11:00 p.nt. and also R Permits ihe saleof beer and B.C. Cider by-the bottie for ” consumption off the premises. wy --Residents or property owners located within a 6 f block arca or V4 mile radius of the proposed site are m4 requested to Register any objections by writing to the A General Manager, Liquor Control and Licensing # Branch, P.O. Box 440, Victoria, 8.C, VéW 2Pa. SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) — Scientists believe they may have found new evidence directly linking three ancient civilizations in Mexico, Guatemala and Costa Rica. The key is a jade amulet estimated to he about 2,500 ° years old found in a northern San Jose suburb in October. Michael] Snarskis, a Columbia University doctoral student who headed the excavation team, said the discovery in a small burial place marks the first time in Costa Rica that evidence of links among the three cultures has been found _ in its original site. Archeologists have -known that the cultures of the Olmecs of Mexico, the Mayas of Guatemala and the unnamed inhabitants of Costa Rica had in- termingled between 1 AD and 400 AD, Snarskis said. He added that preliminary studies of the amulet, or charm, in- dicate it was originally the work of the Olmecs between 600 BC and 300 The polished, unusually long pendant, possibly a badge of office for the pewerful priests of rain gods, started out as a smooth piece in the sha of a half clam shell, Snarskis said. But a bas-relief motif on the amulet's surface probably was carved about 500 years later by the pre-classic Mayan culture of Kaminaljuyu (300 BC to 300 AD) in highland Guatemala, he said. CONCLUSIONS TEN- TATIVE “I suspect the jade made its way to Costa Rica as an heirloom through priests of the rain gods,’ said Snarskis, who emphasized that all conclusions about the amulet are tentative. What is important about the charm is that it is the first known “seientifically’’ dt archeological evidence of a direct cultural tie, said Snarskis, 32, a native of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and head of the National Anthropoligical Centre at Costa Rica’s National Museurn. “Aesthetically, it is among the finest in the world,”” he said. "I don't know of another piece like it,’’ Costa Rican struction workers clearing a building site in the suburb of Tibas ac- cidentally uncovered the archeological find, in- cluding the burial ground of a teen-aged boy who lived sometime between 1 AD and 400 AD, Snarskis said. Museum experts then tock over the digging. . The carved, 13-inch, grey reen artifact was ound face down along the right arm of the boy, believed to have held high social status. The motif is of a slender, graceful human hand grasping an animal with a catlike head and a serpentine or insect-like tail. The wrist is covered by a bow or wristlet. RAIN GOD SYMBOL “Thoughout Middle America, the jaguar, and to a lesser degree the serpent, was portrayed as the symbol of the powerful priests who con- represented the rain god, Chace, among the Maya Situation eases in Washington and farmers assess flood cost SEATTLE, Wash. (CP) — Brown floodwaters were checked Saturday as rampaging rivers in Western Washington and the Yakima Valley crested, but farmlands and hundreds of homes were still in their grip as Some residents began to sift through the mud. Floods that claimed four lives crested early and did tess damage than some had expected but were slow to recede, said officials in affected areas on the coast and Snohomish County, north of Seattle. . : We're: recommending people, hold aft returnin their homes until w past the crest,’’ Bob Hamlin, Snohomish County emergency co- ordinator, said Saturday. He said floodwaters in the Snohomish River drainage area were receding, but very slowly, and that Sunday would be soon enough for residents to begin digging out. Governor Dixy Lee Ray and Representative Lloyd Meeds toured flooded areas to assess damage. Ray on Friday declared an emergency and officials were putting together a report to forward to President Carter if it was deter- mined federal assistance was necessary. Thousands were displaced by flooding, but many were: returning to their homes in the Kelso- Longview area Saturday as flooding caused by rainwater runoff and a high Cowlitz River hegan to recede. TEMPERATURES RISE Flooding began Thursday night when heavy rains combined with warmer tempera- tures causing the mountain snowpack to melt. Among the victims were a Fort Lewis soldier resumed drowned after alling into swollen Huckleberry Creek near the fort, an Ariel man swept into the Lewis River, a Portland man whose vehicle was buried by a slide on Interstate 5 and an elderly woman whose home fell into a river at Aberdeen. Though officials Kept a wary eye on dikes holding back brown, debris-filled streams running over their banks, skies were clear over much of the state and only showers were predicted through the weekend. . Officials, farmers and townspeople in areas affected were given a reprieve from heavier flooding early Saturday, as larger rivers, in- cluding the Snohomish, Cowlitz and Yakima, crested earlier Wines expected “and "began retreating’. oe master! Et “@P Air's New Winte “We have a few high rivers, but over-all the crews have the situation under control,’’ said Dave Hooper of the state Department af Emergency Services in Olympia. He gave credit to the many volunteers who helped fill and pile sandbags and helped evacuate neighbors National Guard helicopters evacuated residents in the small town of Lester which had been cut off since late Thursday as up to seven inches of,rain soaked the mountains. . THE HERALD, Monday, December 5, 1977, PAGE 3 Archeologists excited by Costa Rica find and Tlaloc and among the Nahuat (of Mexico),” Snarskis said. He said smaller, highly polished clam-shel amulets—ones that were not carved—have been excavated at the Olmec site of La Venta (1100 BC to 500 BC) south of Veracruz, Mexico, and at another Olmec site, Cerro de las Masas, in Vera- cruz. The wristlet's style has been observed only on columns at Kaminaljuyu, Snarkis said. Similar designs have been found in Mexican sites of the Izapu culture along the Mexican-Guatemalan border. Another less plausible theory of how the object got to Costa Rica is that people combining Olmec an Mayan cultures carved and fashioned it, he added. Snarskis said it is unlikely that the piece was brought directly to Costa Rica by the Olmecs. haveo# pramises sales of beer and B.C. Cider where so endorsed by the General Manager. .. An “A” licenced establishment was formerly known as a Public House and-or Cocktail Lounge. i block area or V2 mile radius of the proposed site are % requested fo Register any objections by writing to the General Manager. Liquor Control, and Licensing i “Branch, :P.0.,Box 640, Victoria7B:0 YAW 2PE ott ~ Is Now ln Effect. We hope that our schedule fits with your schedule. That's why we offer you a convenient selection of spirited flights serving the B.C. Interior, Yukon and Grande Prairie. Then there’s our frequent daily service from Vancouver to most major Canadian cities. ” Not td,mention our flights to Europe, the Orient, Hawaii, the South Pacific, California and Latin America. Come. And you'll discover that every single one of us from the ground on up, is out to show you just ' how good an airline can be. % .. i is the intention of the undersinged fo apply; pur- i suant to the provisions of the Liquor Control and { Licensing Act; to the General Managar, Liquor Control * and Licensing Sranch, Victorla, B.C. for an “A” ia Licence to operate a licenced establishment on the X premises situated at Lot 1, B.L. 370, Plan 7547 Coast Range 5, Geeraert Enterprises Limited. * .. The above typa of licence may be issued to: hotels, ‘6 resorts, clubs, recreational centres, aircraft, trains, » motor vessels, international airports, municipally and . Provincially owned cultural centres, universities, and military messes, and permits the service of all types of 2 liquor by the glass as approved by the General Manager of the Liquor Contral and Licensing Branch. Hours of sale are any 14 hours between 9:00 a.m. and 2:00 a.m. Certain of these establishments may also Briefs WILDEBEESTS POP P A newborn wildebeest learns to stand in three to five minutes after birth and 300 seconds jJater it gins to lope alongside the herd. JAMAICA I5 FIRST Since 1942, when large deposits of bauxite were discovered on Jamaica, the island has been the world’s largest supplier of alumium ore. TURQUOISE WAS PRIZED Ancient Egyptian pharaohs prized the turqucise and sent thousands of miners under guard to the Sinai Peninsula to find the gems. BEHAVE IN . VIRGINIA The Virginia state legislature has the highest percentage of lawyers in the country— 57 per cent. STEP ASIDE, BOYS Jockey Danny Jian- nine, ridin at the Meadowlands track in East Rutherford, N.J., is 57. : inineeinninineinninnemias NOTICE OF INTENT RE: LIQUOR CONTROL AND LICENSING ACT APPLICATION FOR AN “A” LICENCED ESTABLISHMENT SEE RUS See A RAK NG SURE SS PAN MN NG Sd SNE AG ee ES NS MS TEE r Schedule That's what our spirit is all about. So call your travel agent or CP Air for complete schedule information. And catch the spirit of people . who like people. People like us. Geto See Call your travel agent or us, and have a good Right. CPAir I