2 — The Prince George Citizen — Monday, April 10,1989 r Local, provincial Prince George Regional Correctional Centre recorded the major share of the city’s air pollution in the 24 hours td 8 a.m., with the provincial government’s Level B standard of 20 parts per billion being exceeded continuously since 9 p.m. Sunday. Tomorrow’s forecast. Temperatures: tonight’s low/tomorrow’s high. Sorority royalty Linda Patrick, left, was crowned the 1989 queen during the annual Beta Sigma Phi dance Saturday at the Columbus Community Centre. With her is her Princess Elaine Bjorgaard. The candidates are nominated by the different chapters of the sorority for their contribution to their group and the community, citizen photo by Dave Miine FROM PAGE 1 ij: Weather * Immediate Prince George area: t The forecast for today calls for ' sunshine with a high of 14. Tonight * is expected to be clear with a few 1 clouds and a low of -2. \ ' Tuesday’s forecast calls for sun- 2 ny skies with a few cloudy periods * ' and a high of 14. I The chance of precipitation is J near ?ero per cent for today, to- » night and Tuesday, i t. Sunday’s high was 12, the over- I ,. night low was -5, there was no pre-j ! ' cipitation and 12 hours of sunshine was recorded at the airport weath-L er office. A year ago today the higH was 15, the overnight low was zero, there was no precipitation and 2.7 hours of sunshine. • Sunset today is at 8:03 p.m. and sunrise Tuesday is at 6:19 a.m. Chilcotin, Cariboo, Prince George: Sunny with afternoon cloudy periods. High 15. Tonight, a . few clouds. Low -3. Tuesday, sunny with cloudy periods. High 13. Probability of precipitation in per cent o; • zero today, zero tonight and zero • Tuesday. J•" Bulkley Valley-The Lakes: v' Cloudy with sunny periods. High " 14. Tonight, cloudy with clear periods. Low 1. Tuesday, sunny with - ' cloudy periods. High 12. Probabili- ty of precipitation 20 per cent to--1 day, 20 per cent tonight and 10 per •y cent Tuesday. Parsnip: Sunny with afternoon * cloudy periods. High 11. Tonight, a few clouds. Low -5. Tuesday, cloudy with sunny periods. High 10. Probability of precipitation in per cent zero today, zero tonight and 20 Tuesday. f;< Greater Vancouver: Sunny and warm. High from 16 near the wa-- ter to 22 inland. Tonight, clear. Low 5. Tuesday, patchy morning cloud otherwise sunny. Cooler. ^ High 15. Probability of precipita- i,, tion in per cent zero today, zero to- night and zero Tuesday. Greater Victoria: Sunny and warm. High 18. Tonight, clear. Low 5. Tuesday, patchy morning cloud otherwise sunny. High 16. . Probability of precipitation in per cent zero today, zero tonight and zero Tuesday. Lower Fraser Valley: Morning cloudy periods otherwise sunny. Very warm. High 23. Tonight, clear. Low 5. Tuesday, patchy morning cloud otherwise sunny. S£ ; Cooler. High 18. Probability of pre-: cipitation in per cent zero today, zero tonight and zero Tuesday. Sunshine Coast, east Vancouver J* * Island: Sunny and warm. High 19. ; Tonight, clear. Low 4. Tuesday, » patchy morning cloud otherwise I sunny. High 16. Probability of pre- ; cipitation in per cent zero today, j zero tonight and zero Tuesday. Howe Sound-Whistler: Sunny I with cloudy periods. Warm. High ; 16 inland to 22 coast. Tonight, a * few clouds. Low -3 inland to plus 3 j coast. Tuesday, sunny with cloudy I periods. High 16. Probability of ; preciptation in per cent zero today, * zero tonight and zero Tuesday. . North Vancouver Island: Cloudy JJ with sunny periods. High 14. To- j night, cloudy with clear periods. * Low 4. Tuesday, cloudy with sunny " periods. High 12. Probability of * precipitation in per cent 20 today, « 20 tonight and 20 Tuesday. West Vancouver Island: Morning J cloud otherwise sunny. High 14 ■ coast to 20 inland. Tonight, in- m creasing cloud. Low 3. Tuesday, I cloudy with sunny periods. High 12 “ to 17. Probability of precipitation * in per cent 10 today, 10 tonight and 3 10 Tuesday. J Central Coast: Cloudy with sun- 1 ny periods. Slight chance of show- 5 ers. High 14. Tonight, cloudy. Low 2 L 4. Tuesday, cloudy. High 12. Proba- ■ • bility of precipitation 20 per cent I today, 20 per cent tonight and 20 1 ' per cent Tuesday. m Quake shakes Salmon Arm 2 1 SALMON ARM (CP) - The ■ ’ Salmon Arm area in the Interior of * British Columbia was jolted early Sunday morning by an earthquake ; that measured 3.5 on the Richter - scale. I The quake was relatively minor, gjj: I but shook people awake when it ; struck. There were no injuries or ST'S - damage. ' "Tremor was strong enough to Jf-! be noticed but not strong enough to — * be of concern,” said Bob Homer of S the Pacific Geoscience Centre. J “This is just one of the normal * kinds of events we see in this area * from time to time. J "Although, it has been a few » years since there’s been anything * like this felt in the Vernon area,” 2 he added. One Salmon Arm resident did ■ feel the quake and said that it ! woke him up. ; “Everything shook,’’said Doug 2 Bresen. “It shook the bed and the * whole house was shaking. My two , boys slept through it, but the rest 2 of the family woke up.” "Most recently we’ve felt earth-11 quakes a little more to the south in 2 Penticton, but it is (Salmon Arm) 2 in a zone in British Columbia " where you feel quakes like this evil * ery year,” Homer said. Williams Lake Prince George Temperatures Mackenzie Fort St. John TORONTO (CP) --- High-low Fort Nelson temperatures and precipitation Dease Lake in millimetres for the previous 24 Peace River hours issued today by the Whitehorse weather office: Dawson City Vancouver IS 6000.0 Yellowknife Victoria 19 6 000.0 Inuvik Comox IS 8000.0 Resolute Bay Port Hardy 14 5000.0 Eureka Prince Rupert 13 4000.0 Alert Stewart Misg Cambridge Bay Terrace 14 5 000.0 Calgary Penticton 14 -1000.0 Edmonton Kamloops 17 0000.0 Lethbridge Abbotsford 21 12000.0 Medicine Hat Cranbrook 9 -5 000.0 Swift Current Revelstoke 15 -3000.0 Regina Blue River 12 -7000.0 Saskatoon Puntzi Mountain 12 -7000.0 Prince Albert The Towncenter Business Association has submitted a letter to city council on today’s agenda asking the proposed parking fine bylaw be delayed. Ray Kondola, president of the association, said the decision to raise parking meter fines to $3 from $2 “could not have arrived at a worse time” in view of the lack of confidence in the downtown area and the recent launching of a Park’n Bus Token campaign to encourage shopping. In other business: ■ Prince George city council will consider an offer by Benner’s Refrigeration to investigate and make recommendations respecting heating and air conditioning systems at city hall. In return the company has asked for an opportunity to bid on the city’s annual maintenance contract. 13 -3000.0 North Battleford 5 -4000.0 12 -4000.0 Winnipeg 0 -8000.0 10 -9000.0 Brandon 1 -4000.0 10 -0000.0 Churchill -2 -16 001.0 13 -6000.0 The Pas 2 -4000.0 10 -3000.0 Kenora -1 -11000.0 7 -5000.0 Thunder Bay -3 -11000.6 8 -1000.0 North Bay 4 -10 003.4 Misg Toronto 3 -7 003.5 5 -8000.0 Ottawa 9 -5000.0 9 -7 000.0 Montreal 8 -3 000.0 -27 •32 000.0 Fredericton 7 -5000.0 -28 -36 000.0 Charlottetown 1 -3000.0 -28 -40000.0 Halifax 9 0000.0 -14 -25000.0 St. John's 5 -3000.0 8 -5000.0 Seattle 20 14 000.0 7 -5 000.0 Spokane 12 2000.0 8 -5000.0 Portland 21 13 000.0 7 -4000.0 San Francisco 32 12000.0 2 -3 000.0 Los Angeles 22 15 000.0 3 •3000.0 Las Vegas 35 21 000.0 6 -3 000.0 Reno 28 6000.0 5 -3 000.0 Phoenix 39 22 000.0 ■ Council has received a request to install a left turn lane off Highway 97 south into a commercial area involving Bino’s, Mr. G, Petro Canada, Carmel Restaurant and Bonanza Restaurant. Commercial developer, Harry Backlin, is the representative for the companies. ■ City manager Chester Jeffery will recommend a standing committee be appointed to raise funds and assist the development of a Northern Interior University. The recommendation is in response to a March 13 request for such a committee to represent local government in the evolution of the project. ■ Council is expected to approve 14 recommendations from the 182 recommendations made in the Justice Reform Committee’s report on improving the justice system in Prince George. Dental college let work continue NELSON (CP) — A dentist, who pleaded guilty last week to 17 counts of sexual assault, was allowed to continue his practice even after he admitted his guilt and promised to seek psychiatric help. Dr. Masuru Fujibayashi, who in 1982 was named Nelson’s citizen of the year for his two decades of volunteer work, was first charged with unprofessional conduct by the B.C. College of Dental Surgeons in 1966 after a complaint by a parent of one of the victims he had assaulted in 1962. The man, now 33, said nothing was done after his parents complained. “My parents wrote a letter to the college, it would have been in 1966 or 1967,” the victim said. “They (the college) said they would suspend him for three months or something like that, but nothing happened,” he said. “I was just a kid and I was doing what I was told by the dentist,” he said. "Nobody would believe me.” Dr. Brian Rocky, registrar of the College of Dental Surgeons, said Fujibayashi’s hearing in 1966 was adjourned after the dentist agreed to continue receiving pyschiatric help. The hearing reconvened in April 1967, and based on the evidence of psychiatrist Dr. G. R. Mansfield that the assaults would not happen again, the case was declared closed. Three years later, however, more complaints came in prompting another inquiry. But the council took the word of Fujibayashi over the testimony of two witnesses, said Rocky, and no criminal charges were laid. On Thursday Fujibayashi pleaded guilty to committing all the acts reported to the college more than 20 years ago. After his arrest in 1988, he sold his practice and resigned from the college. Forty-five charges were orginal-ly processed, but Crown counsel Dana Urban proceeded with only 15 indecent assault charges and two of sexual assault, all involving males and females between the ages of five and 21. Kootenay county court Judge Raymond Cooper refused to let Fujibayashi remain free while waiting for sentencing April 24. The charges against the dentist were the second major child abuse sex-scandal involving a prominient resident to shake this Kootenay town. In June 1988, Msgr. John Monaghan, a Catholic priest, who had served Nelson for 35 years, was sentenced to four years on 14 counts of indecent assault. Pipeline Delta area, will appear as a witness at the energy board hearings. But this time she won’t be the hard-line opponent to northern development she was at the Berger inquiry. Horte remembers her as one of his toughest opponents, when she was a founder of the Committee for Original Peoples’ Entitlement. The Inuvialuit eventually won 90,650 square kilometres and $152 million in a land-claim settlement. The victory has transformed Cour-noyea into a promoter of development as energy minister for the Northwest Territories government. With up to 60 per cent of the pop- Teenage play shows tonight Student actors from D.P. Todd secondary will perform Jerome McDonough’s one-act play, Dolls, at the Prince George Playhouse beginning at 7 p.m. today. The play, which deals frankly with the issue of teenage pregnancy and sexuality, is directed by Linda Riches and features 23 student actors and original music created by Steven Chow. The production received an honorary mention for technical merit in the zone high school drama festival in March. ulation on welfare, she says northern communities desperately need industry. “We’re not little primitives up there,” she says. “We are ready to take advantage of the opportunities associated with major development.” Coumoyea expects other native groups to get in step with the Inuvialuit as they flesn out tentative land claim deals reached last fall with Ottawa. The energy industry is looking for development on a gargantuan scale. Dubbed the Delta Project, the program dwarfs even the proposed Hibernia development off Newfoundland. Production facilities costing $4.65 billion are planned. They would extract 9.2 trillion cubic feet of gas at a rate of 1.2 billion cubic feet daily for United States markets over a 20-year period starting Nov. 1, 19%. The would-be exporters — Esso Resources Canada, Shell Canada and Gulf Canada Resources — were all members of Horte’s 1970s pipeline consortium. Pipeline development is forecast to cost $5.9 billion, counting expansion of southern transportation systems to handle the Arctic gas as well as a new, 2,300-kilometre link with central Alberta. Construction is expected to employ 5,000 tradesmen for three years. ALL-SEGUR ALARMS CANADA LTD. 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