2 % 9 AY zt: 5 tin te ig £) yt) {3 wf) LS #7 t 3 me F t % & 2% De yy a:% ; ad Gk A eo i 3 2 # = yy af - eg a 4 . +e $3 ? Hy . a. peat ag Py. 3 nn pt ae te at baal Me w am a te F: on my tw trapped in a forest of chains as he relaxes on a gulet afternoon. (lan Smith photo) Drug-abuse a problem among Canada’s pilots QUEBEC (UPC) - Drug and alcohol abus¢ among aviation personnel is becoming “more and more of a problem,” a transport Canada official told a federal government inquiry into aviation safety last week. “Many accidents occur when pilots are in a state of inebriety but it's very hard to prove without witnesses,” said Andre Paulin, the Transport Canada Quebec region superintendant of air safety inquiries. “In the Quebec area last year there were two or three cases of a pilot being in- toxicated,” he said. Paulin, who did not specify whether he was referring {(o private of Woodward CORRECTION Woodward's Food ad North Shore News Sunday, July 27 Orange Pekoe Ogluxe, Nabob Tea Bags, Pkt of 120, should have read 299, Cheer or Oxydol Powdered Detergent, 2 4 kg box should have read 3.49. Cantaloupe Size 23 should have read each 39 Woodward's apologizes to its customers for any in- convenience these efrora may have caused, | company pilots, said drug intoxication was less evident but could be noted by a pilot or air traffic controller's attitude of “laisser-aller.” “Drug and alcohol in- toxication is not limited to pilots alone,” he told On- tario Superior Court Justice Charles L. Dubin, the inquiry chairman, “I can't give you substantiated proof — you'll have to take my word for it —- but it has also happened with air con- trollers.” Paulin said that nearly half the aviation accidents in Quebec could be avoided if certain attitudes, such as aviation companies putting profits before safety, were changed. WASHINGTON (UPI) - American and Australian scientists now have direct evidence of the oldest biological. cells ever found on earth - the remains -of tiny, bacteria-like creatures that lived more than 3.5 billion years ago. Discovery of the so-called “cellular mummies” in two sets of rocks from western Australia was announced recently by the national Science Foundation, which supported the work along with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and by the universities of California at Los. Angeles and Santa Barbara. Although the same scientists recently reported, finding 3.5 billion-year-old rock formations in Australia that were probably built by Similar microorganisms, those cabbage-shaped rock layers did not contain traces of the once-living creatures themselves. ° A17-Wednesday, July 30, 1980 - North Shore News The team of scientists has possessed the fossils for some time but did not make their announcement until analysis confirmed their age and authenticity. Previous studies had established that relatively advanced forms of cellular life appeared 2.3 billion years ago. The latest discovery indicates biological cells lived about 1.2 billion years later than earlier estimates. Prof. J. Willidm Schopf, a paleobiologist at UCLA who heads the team of scientists, said the interiors of the old single-celled organisms have long since been filled in by silica and their mucous exterior coats turned to tar by the chemistry of aging.But, he said, in- dividual organisms can still be distinguished under a powerful microscope. The microscope, magnified the images of the microbes by a factor of 1,000, Schopf said. Schopf and his co-workers said they were amazed when they found: that at least five different. kinds of microorganisms were present. Some were no more than a third of'a micron in diameter and others were as big as 10 microns across. A micron is about 1-25,000th of an.inch. Schopf said alhough the ancient: microbes tended to build tong chains of single cells joined together like beads on a necklace, they were of sufficiently distinctive size, ranges and patterns to warrant the identification of five dif- ferent species. North Shore Credit Unions will be closed Saturday, August 2nd. North Shore Credit Union staff will have their day off for the B.C. Day holiday on Saturday August 2 and all branches will be closed. All branches will be open until 8 PM on Friday August 1 and resume regular working hours on Tuesday August 5. Have a Good Holiday. — Find your kind of fashion at Park Royal! go for more! Find it at Park Royal! The Newest! The Nowest! The WOW-‘est! They're all at Park Royal! Daytime, Night Time, Work Time, Playtime! Park Royal has all those Right-Now styles for men, for women, for the whole family! When you go for fashion, ‘