Page A10, August 12, 1979 - Sunday News ellsworth _ dickson_ . . , Most people are becoming more aware of the need to conserve energy and are taking steps to use less. There are many ways to Save energy around the home,such as using less hot water, drying your clothes outside, turning the thermostat down, not using air conditioners, not using the dry cycle on the a dishwasher, organizing car pools, and so on. This issue the Inquiring Reporter asks: “What are you doing to conserve energy?” Tom Davies . London, England I'm not driving. Actually, I just arrived. from England where the energy problem isn't ‘so bad, yet. - Jim Hull Vancouver I don't drive as much .anymore. I take the bus four out of five days. I burn a lot of candles at home. The time has really arrived when we do have to conserve energy. | Lyn Watson North Vancopver I don’t drive. If it wasn’t for my health problem, I would shut the ‘furnace off all summer. I'm very concerned about the conservation of energy. Rick Haines North Vancouver I don’t own a car. I shut my furnace off. I don’t use an air conditioner. In addition, J] barbecue often instead of using the oven. Jim Thompson Victoria I keep my furnace turned down. I don't use my air conditioner anymore. Also, I drive tess than I used to do. SELMA, ALABAMA: Young blacks signal bla es ck power as-they have their photographs taken in front of Ku Klux Klan members preparing Thursday to march from Selma to Montgomery, retracing the 50 miles march lead by the > ~"date Dr. Martin Luther King. About 30 KKK members participated in the march, w with a rally in the Alabama capital. (UPI wirephoto) | Quebec relaxes On use of English in advertising MONTREAL (UPC) - The Quebec government has - bowed to public pressure. and relaxed its laws restricting the use of English in advertising and com- mercial operations across the province, according to the Office de la Langue Francaise. Raymond Gosselin, president of the agency responsible for monitoring compliance and _ in- terpretation of the laws, listed a seven-point agenda Wednesday that will allow greater use of English in both non-commerical and public advertising, culture and private conventions. “We have received 44 memos, mainly from the world of business,” Gosselin SOVIETS SAY HE DIED 30 YEARS AGO, BUT... ‘ cot ~ ~ told a news conference, adding the office sought to facilitate implementation of the law by “widening the scope of certain exceptions and by defining the meaning of terms used in the law.” re e “The objectives of the law are not negotiable,” he said. “But the time and means to attain those objectives are negotiable.” hich was scheduled to end today or restrictions The revisions mean cultural products which are of English origin, such as books, records and films, need not solely be advertised in French. . Other changes govern the use of English in private conventions and meetings, labelling on non-commercial medical and pharmaceutical products and private ad- vertising. ; 4 Swedish war hero may still be alive BOSTON (UPI) - New evidence indicates a World War JI hero - a Swedish diplomat who saved the lives of thousands of Jews - may still be alive in a Soviet Union prison three decades after the Soviets said he was dead. The Boston Globe reported today a letter smuggled out of Russia by the..wife of a jailed Soviet Jew supports previous evidence that Raoul 4j—~Wealienberg is alive. The Sovieth said Wallenberg died of natural ‘ causes in 1947. He is honored at Yad Vachem, Jerusalem's memorial to the Holocaust’s 6 million vic- tims, as one.of the “righteous gentiles”, non-Jews who risked their lives to save Hitler's intended victims. The newspaper said the letter, now under in- vestigation by Soviet experts in the Swedish Foreign .,Ministry in Stockholm, has ‘sent from Mrs. (Evgenia Kaplan in Moscow to her daughter, Dr. Anna Bilder, in Israel... me “In it, Mrs. Kaplan's husband Jan, 65, writes about meeting “this Swiss or Swede Wallberg” in the Butryka Prison infirmary in 1975. By then Wallenberg would have been in Soviet jails for 30 years, and of- ficially dead for 28 years. During World War II Wallenberg traveled to Nazi- dominated Hungary to save as many Jews as he could. He was sponsored by the World Jewish Council and Franklin Delano: Roosevelt's War Refugees Board, and was. given: diplomatic cover by the Swedish Foreign Ministry. 1 HEAD START PROGRAMME. ANY SUBJECT. ANY GRADE. Our qualified teachers will help your child strengthen language skills, English composition or basic ‘mathematics. And, if your child is working for the | summer, evening ses- slons may be arranged We've heiped hundreds of students improve their marks Give your child a head start this summer by calling 734-5161 | ONE TO ONE EDUCATIONS 2110 West 12th Ave Vancouver, BC 734-5161 Our SPECIAL MATH CLINICS will be start- ing soon.