yen apes ya CaS ft TPR ey & sane netting se ATT! are ar YER ee aes shal 3 - Sunday, September 8, 1985 - North Shore News Business ....... Entertainment....... 31 Fashion.......... ..17 Lifastyles...........27° Miailhox.............7 Sports..........-..29 | Sunshine Girl........29 What's Going On.....35 Lifestyles: 27 Unique new church organ benefits community and musicians. Collins: 8 Absence of human rights _ in U.S.S.R. makes South Africa look tame. WEATHER: Sunny with cloudy periods — and isolated showers, Sunday and Monday. Tuesday, mainly sunny. Naw cookbook assures that everyone can create delicious dishes. Saget Oe oe SR Spee Lemire Teer = ai or <2 \\ Man can't give list of jobs away YOU CAN’T give jobs away these days — at least not if you’re competing with Canada Employ- ment. Entrepreneur Bernard Feay is now in the business of making up flyers witha list of jobs available across Canada. He sells subscrip- tions to those who can af- ford it and gives the maga- zines away to those who cannot. As a recently unemployed professional, Feay said it is important to him that jobless people who cannot . afford the magazine have access to the Canada-wide ads for employment that he puts together. But Canada Employment will have nothing to do with Feay'’s campaign to help the unemployed find jobs, Feay recently stood out- side the Lonsdale Canada Employment office in North Vancouver, handing out his flyers of 1,000 jobs to un- employed people entering the building, but an official from the office asked him to leave, and called North Vancouver RCMP. PROMOTION ; North Vancouver’s ‘ By BARRETT FISHER promotional vehicle for his business. “He was. handing’ the flyers out for free,’’ Lane said, ‘‘but the flyers request people to subscribe. The ma- terial is promotiona! for a business not in our premises,”’ . Lane said Feay is welcome to hand out “brochures as long as he is not on Canada Employment premises, . but when the office called the ‘police, Lane said’ it was because Feay was standing in the outlet’s vestibule, . Feay said Canada Employment has its own computerized job bank, and therefore the office thinks he is competing with their in- terests. But he said he can’t understand that kind of a reaction. “You are dn adversary, you must be discouraged,’ Feay repeats as the reaction he has received from Canada Employment officials. ‘‘It’s not about people anymore, 1 . ple. They have no sym- pathy.”’ Canada Employment. has a Metropolitan Order Pro- cessing system, Lane said, which is‘a computer list of jobs available from employers and a list of un- employed qualified. workers available. throughout _ the Lower Mainland and Vic- toria. Lane said the service will be expanding to include all of B.C. by next year. COMPUTER LIST The jobs Canada Employment .has:on record are those which an.employer has phoned in, Feay: said, but the job opportunities Feay prints are amalgamated from newspaper advertise-| ments from all.over Canada. “Thousands of people re- alize that their job isn’t available in their town,’’ he said. Feay used to work as a’ chief cost..engineer on. the Quintette ‘northeast coal: Project, but his job finished in May, 1984. After he was out of work, he wrote letters to several engineering _ construction companies, but. found: that KEN WALTERS' painting is number one and he’s proud of it. Walters’ painting was judg- ‘ed first in the juried art exhibition for the Coho Festival. Celebrating the announcement _ with Walters, centre in the photo above, are Gini Stephen of the West Vancouver Com- munity Arts Council, aad David Bakewell of the West Vancouver Chamber of Commerce. Canada Employment man- With the unemployment did not ‘succeed. Then he ager Aridrew Lane told the problem the way it is today, Wrote back to the officials of News Feay’s free distribu- there are a lot of very fierce the companies, : saying he tion of job flyers in front of feelings towards those See Jobs the Lonsdale office was a (Canada Employment) peo- Page 9 Ce oo DRS ET Hetenieuet: Sat ren sree TE Sytem TWO NORTH Vancouver brothers will face sentencing in November after pleading guilty to. charges of sexually assaulting their . younger sister. Following defence and prosecution summations in the pre-sentence hear- ing of the ‘brothers, pro- vincial court Judge J.K. “Shaw. said he. was con- - vinced that some acts of violence had been involv- ed in those assaults. : The summations, given Friday “in. North Van- couver provincial court, ‘followed two previous days of testimony by both: the accused and victim in the case. Aged 23 and 21, the caer | By TIMOTHY RENSHAW | brothers originally faced eight charges in connec- tion .with a series of inci- dents that allegedly took place between September 26, 1978 and‘ June 30, 1983. ; placed on publication of any information that might lead to the identity of the victim, which, - because the case— deats with charges of incest, 7 A court ban has been he merely approached his includes both the names of the victim and the ac- - cused. Because - guilty pleas have been entered, the purpose of the. hearing - was to determine whether violence was involved in any of the assaults. In the Crown's sum- mation, : prosecutor Jean Connor : characterized September 4 testimony from the eldest of the two brothers as ‘contrite and © selective’’. Connor described the “elder brother’s demeanor on the stand as far from credible. His claim. that 12-year-old sister out of the blue and asked her if she wanted sexual inter- course. “as if he were borrowing a bicycle’’. was highly ‘questionable, she said. Connor reminded the court that the witness had admitted to inaccuracies in his statement to police and had been evasive in cross-examination. While the victim, who dropped out of school soon after the assaults began and has since been diagnosed a's agoraphobic, ‘‘has suf- fered and still suffers. She has paid the penal- - ty,’”’ said the prosecutor, violence “There is no reason for her to make up stories.’’ Defence counsel Robert Reid argued that allega- tions of violence must be proven beyond reason- able doubt. The complainant, said Reid, had been involved in sexual activities with the younger of the two brothers almost two years | before having sex with. the elder brother. Her claims that she had become involved with the. younger brother because she feared her older brother were very strange, Reid told the court. : Assessing the complai- used _ acts of violence had been nant’s testimony, Reid characterized her as someone who did not seem weak-willed or fragile: ‘‘She spoke loud- ly and clearly. She did not give the impression of : being afraid of anyone.” In his final comments, Judge Shaw said that though he conceded there was no evidence pres- ented illustrating beyond a reasonable doubt that involved, ‘I am convinc- ed beyond a reasonable doubt that acts of vio- lence were used by the older brother.” The brothers will -ap- pear November 12.