20 Sit Writer Patoraphe: : 7 “ | 3 : Page’2, The Herald, Monday, June'20,°1983 4 nr : Térrace, B.C. by. Sterling .Publishers © Lid. : ; Authdrized-.as: second class - tail... ‘Registration Number: }201. Postoge peld in ‘cash, return postage “aMarentegd : “Kelth ‘Altord “Reception. Classified: - Carolyn Gikson oo ‘NOTICE OF COPYRIGHT Circulation: - Tha Heratd retains full, complete and sole copyright an _°_inany advertisement produced and-or any editorial. ar photographle content published In the Herald.” .°:. - - Reproduction.Is net permitted without the written = permission of the Publisher. Punks condemned MOSCOW (AP) — A Soviet newspaper says punk rock ‘music groups in Britain and West Germany hate thé Soviel. ~~ Union and want to propagate the Nazi ideal of white ae supremacy. Writing in Sunday’ B edition of Sovietskaya Rossiya, an. organ of the: Communist party's Central: Commitiee, commentator V, Kovalyov said West German and British: , punk groups espouse the dame racist ideasand Strongyhan leadership that brought Adolf Hitler to power. in Germany 50 years ago. arene a —— "approves = Mec ot thew unarm . Published every, Weekday at 3010" Kalum: Street, - fe . Sue Nelaon 7 ~ “reat, ofa court. ‘challenge. if ‘the fe -In Britain, Kovalyov" said, “the new punk under the =~ me . leadership of rightists is propagating ideas of.‘pure Face’ - and ‘strong personality’ in the way in whieh they sounded i in the speeches of Hitler,”* British punk. rockers, he added, want “‘the elimination of |...’ democratic institutions including the. trade unions and parties of the working class, Such is the face. of the punk of the ‘80s.”” . The Soviet commentator quoted the lyrics of several punk ; Songs. He wrote that one West German group. “appeals in its songs: ‘Don't be soli t-bodied, hit harder until they stari to shriek." |. The intended targets of such songs are. Communists, foreign guest workers in West Germany “and generally ; everybody who is not German,” he said. . ne Some West German groups love to sing about sadism and spread hatred for the Soviet Union, Kovalyov. wrote. One group, he wrote, sings “your cruelty is nice to me;"". and another:;acreams, outs. {I-have ‘no ‘timé for ‘Political discussions. I only want: to kill Russians.” °°: It- was not clear why the newspaper published such a ‘denunciation of punk rock in its Sunday edition. The Soviet. government, has not admitted that punk or other forms of . western music have a hold on Soviet youth. But in Moscow, where yolng people are more exposed t to. westerners than in most other parts of the Soviet Union, the word “punk’'is occasionally sprayed or scratched on walls, and punkers make thé odd appearance at Pushkin Square, a favorite meeting place for young people.” _ Acceptance _ - expected — Trail, B.C. (CP) — United Steelworkers of America said ‘he ‘expects his members will vote to accept a tentative contract offer from Cominco Ltd. today, - . Ken Georgetti said after a membership meeting Sunday night that-although the offer gives the 4,450. employees no wage increase in the first year they will vote to end the strike at Cominco’s lead-zine smelter here and its fhine in Kimberley which started last.Monday. *“T felt the mood was positive,” Georgetti said of the - meeting..“I feela majority of the members will accept the contract.” He said it is important to note that the Steelworkers do not have to yield any .of the’ contract. concesstons which - Cominco had been pushing for during negotiations, There “are no Wage increases Jn the two-year deal and several ’ people leaving the meeting ‘were Alisgruntled about the terms. - But Georgetti said “it's g significant contract, given the " economie circumstances." .. . The union had been insisting it did not want to give up cost of living allowance payments bargained for in previous — years. Three payments schedaled to be applied to the base rate on May’ 1, 1989 will be delayed by one year, ; Three more installments will be made during-the second year of the agreement. Union literature circulated at the meeting states that those payments should amount to a total of 47 cents during the first year and 49 cents in the _ Second, based on a six-per-cent inflation factor. _ Georgetti said the union also gained an early retirement. ‘ clause and a metals’ trigger clause designed to give employees a wage increase if Cominco realizes what is termed “runaway. profits because of high metal prices:" : . ‘all ather crimes combined — about 330 people in B.C. in 1981: ‘= atcording to the Insurance Corp. of B,C. UCBC). ‘The president of the Trail, local of the: - : ~ Drunken: ‘drivers’ face odds: ~ _ VANCOUVER (cP): = “Ifyou drink and drive the odds are | on your'side — until-you kill someone. - Only about’ 1.3 per cent: of: “legally. impaired drivers are apprehended by police, says ‘CounterAttack, an agency of ' the Attorney General's ministry. : ie . And Counter Aitack’s estimate tay be conservative, The Traffic Injury Research Foundation: of Ottawa, gays only | one in 500 to one in 2,000 impaired rivers i is caught °° “It could be that we're shooting a pelle! gun. ata.charging. “ “elephant and we shouldn’t be eurprised ‘When it runs ub . over,” says Alan Donelson, the foundation's head, acientist. ‘Drinking and driving kills three times a8 many people as: Cleaning up: after drunk. drivers - costs. every ICBC” policyholder about $78 a year. » Educating the public is the key, says ROME sistant commissioner Don Wilson. -. But advertising is expensive. While profits from the sale ~ of Uquor in B.C.- reached $280 million in 1981 — the-most : recent ‘figures available — the Social Credit government | contributed just $330,000 for research and publicity against: - drunk driving. ICBC, the Crown corporation from which all: basle automobile i insurance must be parchaeee contributed: a similar amount. 3 : Police, judges and road-aafety experts: agree the best. deterrent té drunk driving is fear of detection. But creating | that fear means more police, more Fondblocks and mor . road.checks. "We would have to be prepared to allow police to stop us: a to be increased. - , According toa CounterAttack report, only five per cent of . ~ those currently stopped and.charged with impalred driving are caught In the police nets. Tips from the publie net twice. .a8 many. offenders. as roadblocks. However; impaired: drivers are often’ discovered too late, ‘ The report says almost 23 per. cent of L631 drivers charged. with being legally impaired (having. a blood- ‘ aleohol content of more than. .06). -were charged-after an accident; another’ 53. per cent were, yeaught after being abopped for’ speeding “or ome other ‘motor-vehicle “infraction. - “Most ‘Impaired: drivers. are ‘caught: on their way home : from’a drinklag ‘establishment; But setting police spot .. checks outside pubs'and bars would prove difficult: “ “It’s a good idea and I don’t quarrel with it — but which > pub: do you choose?" says: Wilson. He Said police: would _ probably fpcijs on a few troublesome pubs and then ihe “in Westera Europe starting in December unless the-U, 5. and Soviet Union make sigulficant progress "TORONTO (CP) — _ Columbia In that province's recent election. _ oun. Pepresentation : Hancotk ‘sald: the! Grete wilt iste ot hope, he: ‘sald. aS -NATO plans to deploy 572 crul limitation talks: being. held in Geneva.’ -) ; ‘ Stark sald a recent Liberal research: ‘paper on. the cruise * contfoversy shiows the government is fully. awelre ‘of the -., verification problems of the missile, “However, the government apppears ready { fo go ‘ahead : with the testing -for-political. reasdn3-on ‘the assumption _ technology will ‘everitually be found to overcarie the’ hurdle of verification, he-gald, “While it may. be: possible to ignore ‘the ‘verifleatioin : problerns of the cruise [n Parliament, it will not be: ‘possible ‘ in’ court of, Jaw,” Stark said. - ~ Axis confusing. — Aspokesman for the 1e Flediglitig Green... arty of Ontario says critics who say the Greens are.a-one- saue group are correct — “in a sense we bare, and the issue ea survival.” - Trevor Hancock, an m axiplryeo with the ‘ay of Toronto “Health Department, was one of about 70 members of the * ecology-conscious group who started to hammer o out party : policies during. a weekend conference, oe "Hancock sald the recently formed party doesn't consider : ‘itself leftor-right-wing. . “""” “We'sea another axis, and that is a big-small ‘axis; " he . "sald. ""The email left and the small right have:more in common than do the big left and small left or th big right cand the small right." - : i Hancock said the: Greens, based on the Green Party. of West Germany, have an ecological philosophy . ‘hat: will tranblate into policies on a wide range of issues Such. ‘aS. ' efiergy, agriculture and foreign policy, 2 oF _ The-first task facing the Greens is to gather: the 10,000 signatures required to become: registered a8 an ‘official political party. The Ontario Greens plan to run. candidates - in provincial elections, as did the Green Party’ of" Biltish ‘The B.C, Greens drew only 2, 600 votesin that el in-West Germany, the Greens won .27 seat election, thanks to that country’s system ‘of: proport similar system ln Canada. ace But the party will not. make it. a “fellsh to “Term: government, he said, adding a strong Green: Party ig une, , way to influence government policy.’ ’: ee a “Attainment of power isnot the issue, the issue is whether society will change,” said Hancock. ° At the weekend meeting, many of those present appeared fo vlew the Greens as the political arm of Canada's peace, environmental and anti-nuclear movements. Hancock and Simon Shields, an ‘organizer ..from” Peterborough, Ont., Suggested the party would take many of its Policles: directly from those groups. ; -A party pamphlet says the Issues ‘which concer the " ~ Greens the most are the arms race, the economic system ~ that demands growth and nonsustainable exploltation. of natural resources, "The profundity of the Issues we. are talking about are not being dealt with in the political arena,” Hancock sald.” - Hé said the party currently has less than 100 menibers, “<(But) like all good things greén, we're growing.” “ownera would complain the police were driving customers away. mo. “Some say ‘tougher petialitles would ‘iolve the problem, _ “It doesn’t appear that the. severity of punishment has . any bearing on those drivers who are gelng to be. picked up on & regular basis," says Donelson of the Traffic toy “ Research Foundation. vette ‘And the pourts would be ‘clogged with drunk “driving : eases, ‘which already represent almost 50 per cént of the -cases handled in provincial iourt, ‘ecording to Ansuraince © Corp. of B &. figures. ; “oy. 7. and another with separate beds — _ They say punishment doesn't work but how would they -8himaber habs, ~ Suite ready EDMONTON (CP) — The crown suite of the: downto ‘Westin Hotel where Prince Charles and Diana; Prin¢ess of Wales, will regally retire June 29 and 20 is: equipped with - evérything ‘a royal couple might require,’ Newly renovated at a cost of $30,000, the huge rach and _ green suite has two bedrooms — one with a’ ‘king-sized bed pai on ‘the royal at roadblecks for no apparent "reason other than to” determine if we have been drinking to excess," says Chief. Provincial Court Judge Laurence Goulet. . : Wilson says. roadblocks - work, but. to guarantee. consistent, effective surveillance, police forces would have. " gion Sein deere UALIDD spake for ane "The 20th-Eloor suite rents for $550 a day a and was s die f for ‘Her organizatiqn is ‘Tobbying | for. stiffer: fines and Fenovatton before the royal y I yisit, said hotel manager Steve sentences, ‘longer’ licence * ‘suspensions, mandatory blood. o oS “Wa t. el yy __ beats and raising’ of ‘the drinking age. 0 ju a“ erated, . Charles and Diana will be treated to hew carpets, drapes, " paint and wallpaper, as well as.a new $500 bedspread. « “They're not ostentatious people,” said Halliday “We're. fet treating them like regular. ViPs.' m ue a x m eprry. I haven’t laughed mo like’ this for months.”’ . Children give. allowances _ =e DUNCAN, B .C. (cP) — Children by the hundreds gave . their allowances, their talent and their time on the weekend toraise money for Veranica Shelepiuk, the Duncan girl who was paralysed when a tiger mauled her ata Duncan zoo ; April: +) oe By Sunday, ‘more than’ $10,000 had heencollected for’: Veran caa. star among her classmates, ; ~ AC the benefit. concert, the children performed. on stage and collected donations. in large paper boakets from, ‘the ‘packet: house. » . feel ‘hetier,” sald Brenda’ Langlois after het. class’ had the couple will be in Wart University Garnes, » The hotel will rollout its “arrival, and a hotel staffer Edmonton to offically’ opet ‘the ‘Which run from: July. 1 to 11: its 22-metre red carpet for their dressed.in tuxedo and-white | _ ‘gloves will be standing by day, and night Tor requests: for 2 “ay was ‘nervous going out, there, but 1 didit to. minke ‘her. , oom service,. said Halliday. ane Oe BEE) Nei "“Verdinied~ "lying in a bed: in Children’s Hospital in. ‘ Vancouver — aud her mother, Tossia Shelepiuk. ; telephone, from her Vancouver’ hospital bed. . getting, annouriced that, with the bid of parallel bare, the | . if "New. silverware, crystal. glasses, and special ¢ china have .| __been readied [or such occasions: Hair drier adapters andan - 4" iponing board have been officially: Tequeésted,.as Well -as :* Glamato ‘juice, :fresh: toney, ish “bi too, Haan ee Engl reakfast. te: arid «* Food manager Klaus Christiansen sald Malvern vmeazad . water, 8 known preference of Charles, has béén flown fn mesad, London oe Ee + He. will notice." ceo {Buck , ate has told veh ‘ota wit ‘Mike fest ‘ralt they like anything, I , entertained the audiénee with. thelr percussion’ music. ms collected at least $85:for her," |. . The money came to Dimcan tadio. statlon CKAY in a 7 id, steady ‘stream all day long, Saturday was declared One ‘of Veranica’ s closest friends, “ Nathalig, Veranica Shelepiuk’s day in’ Duncan and, the radio station : performed. a piano solo for her. frlend, “ie has took plédges:and donations: while’ talking to Veranica by visited Veranica Ai‘hospltal.- “She ba looking ss sad when I saw her. She ‘rhade mn h ib séeher that way," sald 1¢-year