| environment ahd the ‘energy supply) = cluded that! predent trends continue, the wotld in 2000 will 7 q be leas crowded, ‘leas polluted, more atable ‘ecologically, inva poluenioys report on global trends in populating and leaa vulnerable to fesource-tupply dlartption than the world: we lve in how. “We're not saying things are good; we' getting’ better, *-gald. Jolin’ Simon: of ts th ‘of: Binds, who ‘along: ‘with -Hernian ‘Kaha : Inatitute in ew York ‘rected the team that | prepared the ‘Pinball. parlor owner offers games to winners ’ “WINNIFEG (CP) ~ Players | - at Derils Lavigne's : # amusement parlor have at least a ‘theoretical chance of . something More than a Arson eae free game ona pinball on Thea could actually end | up owning the | ame i feeds enotigh 28-cent tokens into thomachine. ae ithe to play more than a thousand games to become an owner, Lavigne recently opened his Gtriusement arcade on the 4 north aide of downtown Portage Avenue, an area where local authorities feel that no more arcades are desirable, But Instead of seeking ‘an amusement parlor, permit, Lavigne ‘eaked for a retail business licence. Each machine displays: ‘@ price tag, Tanglng from $299 to $3,196, ‘e It's a Fetal sales business,” said Lavigne, who argued that players.at Game World are in fact paying toward the coat ofthe future purchase of a machine. - “MONTREAL _ (CP) - Four: Montreal - divers who recovered some twisted allverware from a sunken wreck off the ene Newfoundland are wanted for questioning by The Steainer Anglo Saxon, travelling between London and Quebeo' City, weat-down on March 27, 1663, about 100 - Kilometres east of. St.. John’s, taking 360, of its 460 ‘paiatngers to.a watery grave.” om Marcel ‘Robillard, a 37-year-old Montreal diver who lived in Newfoundland for 10-years, heard about. the tragedy: more than century later and decided.to do something about it. Thay ay they rescued the avery ‘nd ober booty the selentists.con- | “1900. is -).hat ‘ptudy’ “pecelved ‘patraiediiceil ida edreuintion, of the Hudson efforts: to- protect the. environment or, regulate : natural , “Fesources,, The ‘government ‘should taje no’ ‘action’ bo: “control: the. : production or distribution. of olf, ‘Slmion and Kahn said in “Mimmary of the report. The government ehould not “take: : tenet to make the publics more: ‘aware’ of inven concerning oF the report, released. at the ‘annual "nesting of he a American Alsoclation forthe ‘Advancement of Belence; Was _ Prepared tn responee to 2 study eumissaned by then- ‘and it has influenced crucial government policles,” ‘Simon . ‘anid, “But. itis: dead wrong, ne ‘ Sotietimes temporary broblemis arise," Bimon paid, but the’ solutions ‘usually leava’ us. better oft than if thee problems ‘had:never arisen.”... The ‘report. takes a strong atand ‘against. ‘government 7 “W's lke renting. TV with an option to buy.” : ' The machines only accept tokens. Customers buying the " tokens are given coupons that thay can save toward buying the unit; The machines may also be bought throughs... - combination of coupons and cash, or for outright cash. - GOT RETAIL LICENCE Lavigne sald he went through normal ‘bureaucratic . channels when he got an occupancy permit allowing him to run a retail business selling electronic machines. | - And by going for a retail business lcence, he avolded having to get approval from a community committee that—--- oversees and limits amusement parlor permits, = - City officials have made regular visits to the downtown arcade since Lavigne launched his business Thursday with - only a temporary occupancy permit. es “We're ‘watching, " gald Roy Darke, city planning RCMP. seek Montreal divers for questioning from the wreck, and now may be in trouble for what they ‘did with it. Robillard and his frlends Denis Bergeron, 45, Richard © Bernier, 24, and Raoul Fortin, $4, ralsed $15,000 and started - ‘working out a plan fo search for the wreck in January. “They left for Newfoundland in early March, but say heavy ive interfered with their search efforts. They only made’ ' their first dive to the Anglo Saxon on March 23. ~ Robillard spent more.than 100 hours underwater in frigid : conditions. “Once,"he said, “my regulator froze at the Te-foot. level «00 more air... when I surfaced 1 was white. He says he made his Inst dive May 23, . Highway campaign successful. * BOSTON (AP) — A campaign to take drunken drivers off ° - Massachusetts highways has been so successful that county i complain they are running out of jail space to house. , thousands ‘of tipsy motorists. Some. officials aay the get-4ough law, passed last Sep-- tember; may be working almost too well], Arreste‘are up, and ‘highway “fatalitios: ‘are dow jamsied with drinkers who choose a short jail term instead ofa longer hospital stay that could attack the root cause of drunken. driving. “The guys in jail, all they. can think about is an ice-cold brew when they get out,” said Paul Ruane, a former prison official who now works at an underused hospital program for drunken drivers near Worcester. Alarmed by the wave of new prisoners’ coming to their. jails and houses of correction, sheriffs say moat drivers recelve no treatment for alcoholism. — “We're just warehousing them,” said Eivward Hen- nebetry, sheriff of Middlesex County, the state's largest. counity. “We don't have the money. to do any treatment.’ Nearly one-third ‘of the 628 prisoners, now in his custody were arrested for drunken driving. . ' The stricter law was designed to siop a revolving door” in Massachusetts where motorist arrgated for drunken | | driving could avoid a conviction by agreatig~to~al alcohol education classes. Many drivers had been fiveor more times without a single coriviction because they repeatedly agreed to attend a class one night a week for “@ght weeks, officlals. Bay. Now those drivers face an automatic. seven-day jail term or 14 consecutive days at a state hospital for a second of- fence. A third conviction brings 60 days imprisonment. The state's public safety office estimated drunken driving arrests will total about 25,000 this year, up from $5,000 in 1983, About 5,000 repeat offenders. wil be forced to serve peleon: terme. Overaill highway deaths are sxpected to drop 10 per cent this year, from the 650 recorded in. 1982. But the county jails, where drunken drivers are sent, are operating at 42 per cent aver capacity. The state prisons, operating at 27 per cent over capacity, can offer no help. ‘The legislature's “safety valve’ tor jail. crowding was fupposed to be five alcohol rehabilitation programs at atate “Workers buried BENTON, Tenn. (AP) — As relatives’ buried workers killed ‘iit: an explosion ‘at an Megat fireworks factory, authorities charged. the own with the manslaughter deaths ‘of 11 people; incliding hls mother and brother. Dan Lee Webb, 20, operator of an isolated worm farm that housed the secret factory, walkéd: into jail-early. Eunday and sixrendered, Polk County Sheriff Frank® ‘Payne. said. U:8; Bureau of Alcohol, Tobateo and Firearmé hgehta questioned Webb more than four haurs, although: no federal charges had been filed Sunday ala ; . He was held in eu of | manslaughter charges and'on-&. ergs of possention ‘and manufacture of illegal The explosion Friday destroyed J a two-storey metal barn next td Webb's house, witneades said. Webb we not at home at the time. - My Aneatiig hes boon set for Sotsioas Courtca ‘Thureday. Webb’s mother, Beatrice Webb, 51, 12 to be buried. Tuesday in nearby Cleveland, Tenn. A setvice. for bis, brother, David Nelce Webb, wat scheduled today, in: Cleveland: Dr. C.C. Blake; Morita patel who mpervisod s imporary smog wet 1 te Polk County al, sa othere: among the 11 were buried: Siniday.” down, but *peiaen cells aed "F - hospitals or similar institutions. Repeat offenders would be given a final chance to get help for their drinking problems before being sent to jail. ‘But ‘only - one program — at. Rutland Heights State Hospital — — has-opened, and I has operated at 80 per cenit capacity. ; ie a on: Environmental Quality and: the Stata Department, “painted a bleak picture of life in the next two decades, It - gald the world in 2000 will be miore polluted, nore crowded, “.fésa stable and more vulnerable to ‘disruptions in the supply ; -of natural resources than the world of today. -"'Mhe’ Glopal 2000 “report concluded: “Barring any ends." ~ director, “Et we determine he's operating aa a parlor, thea . . he's going to have to'go through some pretty staunch hoops" ; —— and I'm not sure he can get through them. “It's not oing to go very long itit'aa scam. It'll backfire onhim.” — ‘One downtown arcade operator, Ross Cipriano, sald he's. angry because he has been trying for years to move from a " pecond-atorey Portage: ‘Avenue location on to the street ; .: level, ‘The community committee has always turned: him: a , Gown. “Phere in no juatice whatsoever,” said Cipriano, owner of ; Dr, Q's Billiards. — ~ Ciptiano has bad pinball and v deo games in his parlor for “five years. One epot be had wanted fo move into. was the | Stop Lavigne ix using. . That's ‘when the four: partners ran out of money ond the engine of their boat broke down. Fortin stayed behind with the ‘boat; which. he owned, and some of the cutlery recovered from the wreck, The other three returned to Montreal with the rest, an On their way, they. say they showed thelr booty to the : _ Newfoundland Museum in St.John’s to which they planned | ‘to donate the trove: , They also showed some of the Atglo -" Saxon silverware to the Nova Scotia Museum In Hallfax ‘before heading on to Montreal. , “We wanted to show Quabecers what. we had found,” Robillard said. “We wanted to alert thé Montreal media a0 that the news could be flashed across the whole country. . “We wanted publicity and we didn't think the news would — ‘go far if we kept-it.to the Newfoundland newspapers." Sunday, after they arrived here, Bergeron got a telephone call from Sgt.'Al Avery of the St. John's detachment of the RCMP. He sald the material in Fortin’s possession had been seized, adding that RCMP in Montreal ‘would be coming for the rest today. “Robillard said the officer told him it was against the law . to transfer treasure from wrecked ships across provincial boundaries. . Avery was unavailable for. comment Sunday: night. “Tle If only the last six, five, tour. three: -or two digits on ; . BR RP et RS OTN “nhs new repért, called Global 200 Revised, found a } «mn "bright future everywhere it looked, Among its conclusions: ‘Global 200, Prepared under the dlreclin ofthe Coune!l — Life expectaricy has been rising throughout the world, . ‘a sign of scientific and economic success. Tye blrth mate in” lest developed countries has-been falling. oe Tough there ‘are atill many hungry people, the food oo cee '— Nuclear power is probably chieaper than coal or-ofl, and “wl eau the los of many fover ven tan eal or i, re _ — ‘Threats of alr and water polluties| have been ‘vastly: aan . exblown." or. “ wal _ revolutionary advances in technology, life far. moat people : ” ---onearth will be more precious in 2000 than it is now ‘unless ‘the nations of. fhe ‘world: act Gecieively | to. alter ‘curreett \ "There will be no serious shortage of land for agricultur, - there is no‘cause for worry about the disappearance of ° ‘ world forests, and there is no evidence for the imminent ' extinction of many species of. plants and animals, - =|. changan ne emo fe of wena or Createnag oo ‘ aR "Provincial - woe ES _ 416]1/014/5/1 * ~ HG ABET WOST RECENT wna @Chack each draw date on your ticket and compare. - the number drawn tor that date v with the number on: - your ticket.” your ticket are identical to and in the same order as |, the-winning numbers above. your ticket is 8 eligible ” towin nthe corresponding prize. : F000 last 6 digite win- ~ woo > last Sdlgits win $1,000 ow Plast 4 digits win. “$100. “ste. 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