PRINCIPLES OF BEH IN ORGANIZATIONS COMMERCE 220 * Space is still available in this course to commence on the Castlegar coerce on Thurs., Jan. 12 from 7 - 10 p,m,, until April 12, 1984. This course has university transfer credits to UBC, SFU and UVic and also to Professional Associations in accountiagand management. Instructor: Bruce Ketchum from the mining industry-and $1 from the indus: try. “Maybe it's as simple as, if there's a pothole in the road, everybody notices and that’s got to be looked after,” Kennedy said. ma *. “But if you have to delay the restocking of inadequately grow replanted. The B.C. Forests Ministry estlimates that of the one million hectares harvested annually in the province, nearly one-third isn't replanted: . Weyerhaeuser Canada ‘Ltd., three foresters, a couple of academies, the deputy ministers of the federal aid provincial ° H land for another year, or two, or three, or 10, who Course fee: $33, plus books But Kennedy said will require a of x , oF 10, wi . " the number of forestry graduates by the end of the 1990s. ' 8°ing to know?" Selkirk College DEMAND INCREASES Kennedy puts much of the blame on foresters them- x The only other option is more efficient processing and **!V°* CASTLEGAR CAMPUS facturing to get more from the same amount ‘We were quiescent until very recently. We weren't Box 1200, Castlegar, B.C. VIN 341 — 365-7292 of wood. But Kennedy said indications are that world **#cwlsting what was required.” demand for forest products will continue to grow. What also concerns him is where the foresters will comé NONE Te Sent opts, Sad ts rovenching eTocs ang 0% ry out the neceecry tnton mers maybe even the progratas. sector employers. © maximum aniiual allowable cut } by using the “whole bag of tricks” known to foresters. i That means adv igull | techniques, improved insect and disease control and better ir trimming and pruning to bring thé trees along as quickly as possible. OBTAINED A HEARING AID NEED DOUBLES Provincial and federal studies show the number of graduates should double from present levels. The UBC forestry faculty, the largest in Canada, has 500 students registered this year — the most ever — with nearly 100 in Residential sales to TORONTO (CP) — Despite a seasonal slump in several major markets recently, resi- dential real estate. sales will likely: show a big improve- ment in 1984, the country’s largest real estate firm pre- dicts. vice sales, stood at 149,600 F a 101,00," said’ Cormack. gests there will be a strong units for all-ef Canada, ‘But that statistic obscures rise in demand for hotsing in In addition, the realtar is ‘phe fact that close to 60 per the early part 6f 1984. In fact, forecasting an eiglit- to nine- ‘cent, of housitig in Toronto if interest rates remain sta- per-cent increase ‘in the av- ‘selis-for less than $90,000." ble and the overall economic recovery continues on its The same situation can be present course, there will likely be very good first and second quarters in residen- “There is a good stock of tial resale housing. : said~that. affordable housing listed for “The decline in mortgage while average price statistics sale well below the average interest rates obviously continue to rise in 1964 as are useful economic ~ indi- 9 in past played an important role in consumer confidence contin- cators, use of raw average decline in in- reviving the housing market 7 ues to pick up. prices has created a imis- rates, housing has be- in the ear,” WOR Sons LePage is fc @ leading impression for niany > for Iaing 10-per-cent rise in multiple potential homebuyers. i Cormack said, adding that the slight listings to 190,000 units in “In a market like Toronto, 1984, up from 174,000 in 1983._for example, the average In 1982, multiple listing ser- price of housing is now close Representatives of the Workers’ Compensation Board, Hearing Section will be at the W.C.B. Nelson area Office, 327 Baker St., Nelson on Wednesday, January 11, 1984 from 8:30.a.m. to 1:30 p.m. to poe counselling and service for persons with ring aids obtained through the Workers’ Compensation Board. It will be necessary to telephone the Nelson W.C. B. Area Office at 352-2291 for an appointment. means an average price of $83,000 by the end of 1984, compared with the current $75,500. But George Cormack, presi- dent of the residential divi- sion of A.E. LePage Itd., said residential resales will likely The 85 kinds of containers, which retail for an average of $2, vary from the popular juice dispenser to mixing bowls. They are sold in grocery and convenience stores, rather than through a special sales network, says ALL ITEMS AVAILABLE STARTING THURS. JAN. 5th ey CALGARY (CP) — Gone are the days when a gold Strike sent men across coun- try in search of overnight fortunes, but a récent Ontar- fo find has one: Calgary in- wvestment house offering roar 8 me fits with the needs of the publi¢ and private \ The déan wouldn't mind if some of the eouncil's corporate representatives. decided to give money to ‘the. forestry faculty either for programs or research. But he said he had no ulterior motive when he decided to set up. the body. improve increase in the trendsetting Bank of Canada rate over the past month is probably only a temporary situation. “Every indication points to stable interest rates in 1984. With federal elections in both Canada and the United States in the next year, it’s highly unlikely rates will be allowed to. climb much higher in the months to come.” Another thing that will augur well for the real estate president Normand St.-Jean. That way, they appeal to a shopper's whim, Coronet spent $500,000 during the last five years * developing a new clear plas- tie storage container with reinforced lid, and now is planning to concentrate on building its export market in Asia — notably Japan, Kor- ea, Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia. “Those markets now offer a n of industry is the mortgage rate insurance plan outlined in the federal throne speech, Cor- mack said. The fluctuations in interest rates in the past few years have seriously damaged con- sumer confidence, he said, and the proposed insurance plan is similar to what the industry has been pushing for some time. “Any form of reassurance for homeowners can only be seen as a positive move,” he said. Containers appealing but of course, it won't be for Jong,” says St.Jean. Frig-O-Seal has licensing = agreements with companies in Britain and Germany to manufacture its containers in Europe and plans to develop a satellite manufacturing plant in the Far East to man- ufacture the see-through product. The plant, which employs 100 people, was recently given a $200,000 federal grant to help it become 60 present announced reserves is easily understood.” The Bache report said the true Hemlo is an area 350 kilometres east of Thunder Bay along the north shore of Lake Superior. Its location is a key ingredient in making the field an authentic find. 4 COLOURFUL || __ GREAT WHITE || ciearance SALE ) i H j URRY IN FOR i ] XCEPTIONAL ; SAVINGS! wie Tst : e “The Hemlo gold deposits i the Enamel Assortments Famous Brand Sheet Sets Men's & Ladies’ Outerwear. Canada in-over 20 years,” the Bowls or mugs in Ba ¢ TWIN DOUBLE QUEEN Cieerance Boe 3255: Popes oat saiad low, blue or green. 99 o9 Assorted fashior a y “OUR Low PRICE @a. 17 sale 24 sale 29% Boye’ & Kiddies’ Oute: . over 50 page beng a rance Be per ton and the tonnage is Children’s Mugs or Bowls Thermal or Juvenile Blankets. | Scys' 8-16, Kiddies’ 2-6x. 16 still growing. Pacifie Railway.’ A major electricity line, capable of providing power to new mines, also cuts through the area. RESERVES LARGE “These conditions, coupled with the large reserves, will result in Hemlo gold mines being among Canada’s™low- est-cost_ producers,” the re- port said. Bache, which deals in sec- uritiesand- commodities, per cent by 1985. Big gold find Hemlo rated a winner easy to get caught up in. The investment house ac- cepts prospects that gold prices will not soon regain their Jan. 21, 1980, peak of $876 (U.8.) an ounce, more than double. current levels. Still, it advocates buying in the $425-to-$450 range for 1984, then escalate by just five per cent annually in suc- ceeding years. The investment firm lists key players in the field as: Lac Minerals Ltd., the Gold- en Giant group of Noranda Mines. Ltd; Goliath Gold Novelty rugs Maichise Ladies’ Fall & Holiday Blouse “OUR LOW PRICE = ca. ieee he Coveda sale hed 722,..16229 Universal Wrench “}xmode Truprest Ii Sheets | Winter. Gloves, Headwear & Replaces all sockets 48s TWIN DOUBLE QUEEN Mitts . Reduced to Clear! ““cuntowemes Mea. |@BE2 TOL? 1ZMW | Ladies’ St bo Disney Plastics ist Quality Caldwell Towels _ chara te 0 ee oe Dinnerware assortment ‘ as “oun LOW PRICE 3e8, 4%, Asst. styles, ~ 6°°,.1299 TT ‘facts of the day. ay ‘ In\his life and his writing, Orwell's style was plain and straightforward but in both cases what lay under- neath was far more complex. Tosco Fyvel, a friend during the early 1940s, remembers Orwell as “a very tall, thin man, with a long, thin, haggard face, with deep-set blue eyes, a poor skin,.a poor small moustache and deep lines etched in grooves down his cheeks.” His clothes were shabby, his voice was often weak and flat because of a bullet wound suffered in the Spanish Civil War, but he displayed the confidence of his class and school, Eton. He retained a military bearing and briskness, a legacy of his years in Burma as a policeman enforcing the empire's rules. NAME WAS BLAIR The writer known as George Orwell was born Eric Arthur Blair in India on June 25, 1903. His father, Richard, had a minor position with the Opium Department of the Indian government. In 1904, Eric, his mother and sister moved to England, leaving behind his father who passed on most of his pay cheque. In the days of the British Empire this arrangement was not unusual. Though his family was not wealthy, Blair was sent to boarding school from age eight to 13. Some writers have said Blair had a desperately unhappy childhood which led to the desolate vision presented in Nineteen Eighty-Four. However, Bernard Crick, in his biography of Orwell, says & there is no evidence Blair was unhappy. After working hard at prep school, Blair attended Eton where he took it easy for four years. He insisted later in life that Eton had little impact on him. That may have been so, but his experience after Eton certainly did have an impact. He was off to Burma for five years as a policeman. It was a position he grew to hate and one that formed his strong views about racism and imperialism. WANTED TO WRITE He returned to England at age 25 determined to become @ writer. During the Second World War he looked back on this period and recalled: “When I came back to Europe I lived for about a year and a half in Paris, hovels and short stories which nd one would publish. my money camé to ‘an end I had several years of fairly severe poverty which I was, among other things, a dishwasher, a private tutor and a teacher in a private school.” It appears that during this period Blair suffered lung pr which ped into the tubercul- osis that killed him. While Blair experienced poverty and even deliber- ately cultivated the poor while researching his books, he never became one of them. His Etonian accent and bearing and aloof character kept him at a distance. Later, when he would pour his tea into the saucer and slurp it, working-class style, it struck his friends as a curious affectation. SPARE PARENTS He first used the name George Orwell on his first book, Down and Out in Paris and London, in part because « he wanted to spare his parents the of "GEORGE ORWELL - ++ poor, skin, hagga: person, not quite comfortable within his own’ skin, ‘until late in his life.” ‘ He suggests Blair adopted Orwell as an ideal image, to live up to, an image of integrity, honesty, plain living, @, _pian with an almost re¢kless commitment to speaking un- weldome truths. 4 This image afd-his writings which characterized asa strongwill I f-appoi! ker of h; were at odds with his private personality. Orwll was gentle, tolerant, soft-spoken. His spare, clear iti style was a deliberate rebellion against the flowery prose which dominated the, period. i oly SPIRIT OF LEFT i During the 1930s he developed his political views as’ a socialist and came to see himself as a political writer, Through his newspaper columns and essays, he became known as the moral conscience of the Left, the writer who subjected every action or policy to rigorous scrutiny: His criticism of leftist actions in the Spanish Civil War made it difficult for him to find a pulisher for Homage to Catalonia, the book he thought the best of his early efforts. Orwell showed his courage in a rather quixotic fashion during the fighting in Spain.“Between his line and the Fascists was a field of unharvested potatoes. After determining a Fascist machipe-gun emplacement could not quite hit the field, he crawled on his’ belly, sack in hand to gather potatoes three times a week, Exch time, the Fascists fired but Orwell was right, they could not hit him. * During the Second World War, as he worked for thé BBG, wrote for Tribune, a socialist weekly and wrote his , his health became progressively worse. WIFE DIED In March 1945, just a few months before Animal Farm was published to critical and financial success, his wife Eileen died. Orwell was hit hard by the loss and loneliness, Over thé’ nékt year he fropésed Wa" at ast. four “woitien, some of whom he barely..knew. In the ena; Hava married Sonia Brownell just months before she died. They moved to Barnhill, an abandoned farm house on the island of Jura, off the coast of Scotland. The island was a long and difficult journey from London but Orwell's biographers disagree over Jura’s impact on his health. Some see the move as a death wish, but Crick insists the climate was mild. Orwell's enjoyment of the success of Animal Farm was short because of his deteriorating health. He was in and out of TB sanitoriums.as he tried to finish Nineteen Eighty-Four. The strain of typing and revising the book was too much for him. Six months after it was published, he died in January, 1950..He was 46. His request for a church burial posed a problem since he hadn't been a churchgoer, but his friend Malcolm rd rt lie down on any other mattress. Seamless their son writing such a book and in part to protect his other writing markets should the book flop. upon a minister and Orwell was er ata wee COMPARE THESE SOMMA FEATURES WITH ANY OTHER MATTRESS “Perhaps Orwell's request was not so surprising,” — He stuck with the name Orwell and gradually "Crick writes. “He loved the land and he loved England a rr re TUE FAMOUS SEAMLESS SOMMA documents. church. ‘Orwell-like’ cOmveys all these things; ‘Orwellian’ 4 Crick writes that “he was not fully integrated as a other things. He should be remembered for /both.” The most» viol In the Chumak’anr EOC ; ; ; CEEITY OF Reg CH Cleeve: We celivering POSITIVE CONTROL CYLINDER Dog to ER i irosistible, unma (corniog These ovo run for ‘CUSTOM COMFORT H The Somma Mattress offers you Custom pres ident — Comfort,.instantly forming itself fb your exact TORRINGTON, WYO. 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