64 Castlégar News January 10, 1988 There WillbeA GENERAL MEETING of the Castlegar Co-op eld Jan. 18 at 7:00 p.m. All Members Welcome! Pulpit & Pew By Rev. JIM FERRIER Grace Presbyterian Church A headline on the page following last week's Pulpit and Pew column caught my eye. Having a sometime fas cination with things large, the headline “Cathedral Sec. ond Biggest in World” was irresistible. It seemed to me upon reading this article and Ed Neufeld’s column, that each had something most worth while to say and necessary to be heard at the outset of a DIXIE LEE’S PEEL & WIN Every Time You Buy a Bucket You ‘Peel & Win’’ Your Own Discount of $00, $900 | $390. - A FREE BUCKET EVERYONE WINS WHEN THEY BUY A BUCKET OF GOLDEN DIXIE LEE CHICKEN. “PEEL & WIN’ FOR THE BEST CHICKEN IN TOWN GO SOUTH TO SOUTH DIXIE LEE 2816 Col. Ave. New Year. I hope that you'll bear. with my repeating the gist of these two articles. Rev. Neufeld's point is utterly crucial: If God is to make a difference in any community — Castlegar or wherever — we need to reflect in our lifestyles that transforming power that only God through Jesus Christ offers to each one of us. No one and nothing else can do it for us: God alone can do it to us. And it’s only through the visible witness that we Christians undertake that ahy community will know that God does make a dif. ference in our lives and is. to be taken seriously. The article about this mammoth cathedral in New York City (where else?) is a cause for hope as well. Ac cording to the article this cathedral is the concrete ex pression (pun intended) of the need for Christians to celebrate not only our spir- itual side but also our active dimension, What Dean James Morton had to say about the appar. ent contradiction inherent in a huge cathedral being sit uated in the midst of great poverty struck me as a most concise Christ repeating: “If you build stone towers and don't care about homeless people you are, I think, in heresay. Similarly, if you only feed people and house them and don't care about joy and exaltation and the spirit, you're robbing them of that whic hdiagnst precious in human exper. ience. You must do both and there is always a tendency to do just one.” There it is: food for the body; food for the soul. Ignore or diminish one while we emphasize the other and we suffer terribly. On the other hand, striving for the John Charters . . m Reflections & recollections JOHN MUNDAY SENDS HIS BEST WISHES FOR '88 A Christmas, letter from our mutual friend John Munday. It is already late but it speaks volumes, so I pass it on sans comment to his many concerned and loving friends without further delay, while I meet with the Selkirk College graphics class to start on the final stages of my new book Over My Shoulder. Casilla 2424, Quite, Ecuador, S.A., Nov. 18, 1987. Occasionally I'm tempted to sell the property, auction off the kids — all 45 of them — and run away. But where? I'm no expert where scarred and battered lives are concerned. But then I'm forgetting it's the touch of the Master's hand that brings out the music, that produces pure, sweet melody. When He picks up the bow, wipes the dust from an old violin and tightens the loose strings, a young and problem-packed life is transformed. lazy glue-sniffer he used to be. He has grown up, and is a grateful, hard-working Indian youth, with an interest in the Bible and in spiritual things he never had before. This week he began a night course in the next town that should give him his Primary Education Certificate in less than a year. From there he'd like to register at the local vocational high school where so many of my foster sons are now studying. Another one to return after a four-year absence is 13-year-old Marco. He is studying in the same night BUSINESS AIR B.C. MAY ADD HOT NEW JET TO FLEET Air B.C. Ltd. may buy an 82-passenger quiet jet that can be used for night-time charter flights to the U.S. well as scheduled runs during the day to northern B.C. ‘and Yukon points. Airline director of marketing, Ron Moore, said the British Aerospace BAe 146 is “the hottest ‘one in the stable. It is even quieter than our Dash 7s and that is very quiet.” Currently, Air B.C. is an all-turboprop operator, flying 10 19-seat de Havilland Twin Otters, six 50-seat de Havilland Dash 7s and four 36-seat Dash 8s. best balance between the body and the soul will keep us in obedience to the will of God and God's desire for all of creation. And that for me, is the core of our Christian witness. For 1988 and be. yond, may we be open to God's many blessings that we will walk in God's Spirit and act in God's name. prepare, to practise, to pei intermediate and senior level animals will again form part long-lived donkey. Prior to all that, a youn, He understands the world of a soul! In just over a month it will be Christmas. Before us and before then we have the Sunday school program to rfect and to perform with approximately 150 participating. This year it will consist mainly of Scripture reading of the Christmas story inter- spersed with appropriate carols sung by the junior, Is of the Sunday school. The of a life-sized manger scene our three remaining llamas, our dozen sheep, and our g Christian couple are being Ist Meeting United Nations Association Proposed Branch for Castlegar Area Wednesday, January 13 7:00 P.M. Room B16 SELKIRK COLLEGE Everyone Welcome! For More Information Contact Marjorie Malloff Alzheimer's may start younger WASHINGTON (AP) — Alzheimer's disease’ usually is diagnosed among the elderly, but a Florida researcher says his studies with laboratory rats show the process of mental decline may start during early adulthood Gary Arendash, a scientist at the University of South Florida, said the long-term effect of chemical lesions on specific brain sites in rats resulted after 14 months in physical and mental symptoms that mimic those of Alz heimer's disease in humans. He said the rats, because of their short life expectancy when compared with humans, developed the full-blown Alz heimer’s symptoms in what to them would be an advanced age. But the process that led to the symptoms was started while the rats were in young adulthood “This may suggest that the destructive changes in Alzheimer's may be under way for several decades before memory loss or other symptoms are evident,” Arendash said. This means that Alzheimer’s disease detected in patients in their 60s may result from a disease process that started when the patient was in the 30s or 40s, he said. A description of the study was published in the journal Science. Arendash and three colleagues divided male laboratory rats into two groups. At the age of two months, he said, one group received chemical lesions to the nucleus basalis mag nocellularis portion of the brain. A comparable site in the married here with 150 guests to share in the celebration. We're to decorate the chapel, prepare a buffet feast and oversee the whole thing. To top it off, the groom's father has asked me to give the “nuptial address” to the bride and groom — and I hardly know them. Then, of course, there are the inevitable hundreds of letters to acknowledge, and appropriate gifts to buy for our ever-growing family, not to mention the workmen and employees. Our first “diospaj Nan Album” is at the printers’, Dave having done most of the work, including almost all of the photography. Most of the write-ups are mine. It's going to be bigger and better than we at first envisioned. Since last I wrote, most of the family are back in school (some starting for the first time). Most of them are uniformed, reshod and equipped with most of the required texts and school supplies in general. We are getting back to a semblance of routine. Yesterday, 30- year-old Angel was pronounced “cured” of the TB (of the stomach) that has kept him on daily and expensive medication for the past two years. Amable has fully recovered from malaria, and on Dec. 2, I take Isabel to hospital where she is to undergo plastic surgery. Maybe her new palate, face and nose will be ready for Christmas? Remember Gerardo who ran away four years ago? He turned up out of the blue (actually it was dense green jungle) two months ago. I was so happy and relieved to see him I've allowed him to stay on and call this home. He is no longer the moody, dishonest and somewhat school as Gerardo. Last Sunday I had the privilege of baptizing him and 18-year-old Amable. By the way, the Sra. Blanca has replaced Antonia who left us two months ago. She is an excellent cook, a hard, hard worker, and goes out of her way to express her gratitude for my having given a home to her two sons and grandson for the past several years. She is the best thing that has happened to us for a long time and is obviously maturing in her Christian life. One of this week's surprises was the intervention of an outstanding electrical engineer, sent here by his North American boss (whom I've yet to meet personally), who was concerned over our need of such services. Little by little our entire electric system is being revised and corrected, and if our engineer friend gets permission, he will finish this enormous task next week. His services and all his equipment, breakers, witing, shower heads and light bulbs, as well as a new trans- former, and later, the new connection for a more effective water supply, are to be financed by this same “friend” and a group of fellow Christians who meet each week with our British colonel brother for Bible study. Could all this be described as “God's grace” becoming incarnate? Our sincere thanks, Tony and friends! At any rate, such highlights become personal experiences when I'm at my “low ebbs,” such lowness being caused in part by physical weakness as well as a non-stop load of human problems I attempt to share. Another doctor confirmed this week that I probably have sclerosis of the inner (middle?) ear, and I am exceedingly deaf. The trouble is that I'm also almost too blind to lip read any more. My right eye's cataract is growing by leaps and bounds and is settling directly in the line of vision. The cornea is also bulging out like a balloon, and while my Iranian heart doctor is keeping me more or less under control, the angina and general fatigue do cramp my style. Once Canada’s cold winter has passed I'll leave Dave and Sharon to hold the fort while I head north just in case something can be done. Please pray for several of the young men who have very real problems of a depressive nature that prevents them from functioning well. Unfortunately, I tend to be too sensitive and susceptible and so my own tendencies in that direction are affected and aggravated. There is always much, much more to share, but for my sake as well as yours I'll bring this to a close. (It's 10 p.m. Saturday and I'm still not ready for tomorrow!) John Munday P.S. Thank you for that delightful super-posteard of the Canadian Rockies, the Zuckerberg Island Heritage Park folder — most attractive and professional — and for your personal card which brought back memories of the Cowlins and the Killoughs. Give them all my love, please, and to those many more that right now do not come to mind. It all seems like yesterday. The Air Canada subsidiary is buying a further 10 Dash 8s and hae options on an additional six, but deliveries are sluggish. Moore said Air B.C. hoped to get four more Dash 8s this year but now expects to receive only two. Slow deliveries from de Havilland Aircraft of Canada Ltd. are hampering Air B.C.'s route expansion. The airline also needs to compete against the Boeing 737 services of rival Canadian Airlines on services out of Vancouver to northern communities. “The BAe 146 is attractive because it can be competitive on a 900-mile (1,448 km) route such as Vancouver-Whitehorse.” Feds won't fight Southam purchase OTTAWA (CP) — The federal petition watch dog has decided. not to chal- lenge the Southam Inc. take- over of a Hamilton area chain has an indirect interest in the Hamil isi station, CHCH, through the 40 per cent it owns of Selkirk Com. munications Ltd. Companies prepare for major disaster LOS ANGELES (AP) — “If it ain't broke, don't fix it!” A California consultant calls that poor business advice. Industrial accidents and product-tampering can ruin the reputation of a billion-dollar corporation instantly, says consultant Steven Fink. More and more corporations, acknowledging that dis asters can occur, are planning damage-control strategies, says Fink. In a 1985 survey of Fortune 500 companies, “nine out of 10 said crisis in business is an Inevitable as death and taxes,” says Fink, president of Lexicon Communications, a public relations firm jalizing in crisis “If Union Carbide's carnage in Bhopal, India, Johnson and Johnson's Tylenol poisonings and the Ohio bank failures have taught the world anything, it's that a crisis in business can occur with little or no warning, anywhere, any time.” Fink learned his job the hard way — as spokesman for Pennsylvania Governor Dick Thornburgh during the 1979 disaster at Three Mile Island nuclear plant. Fink, then 31, had been press secretary just two months when the radioactive leak occurred. His state tourism project swept aside, he was thrown into a crisis management team. CALM FEARS “From our perspective, we handled it very well in that We calmed the fears of a panicked public, whereas Metropolitan Edison (the plant's operators) did a terrible job. They were withholding information and lying to the public.” Three Mile Island forever altered the way Fink viewed business disasters. Communication is the key. One of the most effective communication strategies during the Three Mile Island crisis was a rumor-control hot line with a toll-free telephone number. Fink credits a similar hot line with helping create the relatively smooth way Johnson and Johnson handled the 1982 Tylenol crisis, when capsules were found to be laced with cyanide. The company also recalled all capsules and introduced tamper-free packaging. In December 1985, the fifth floor of what is now the Coast Federal building in Los Angeles collapsed while under Jonwary 10, 1988 Ca stlégar News _3 R.R.S.P. HOTLINE CURRENT RATES ON: GIC’s, T-Bills, Government emcecd lnvnsnnonts (Bonds, Strip Bonds, jortgage- Securities), Corporate Bonds ard More! “3 REDUCED Commissions on Mutual Funds (to Dec, 28, 1988 a CALL 364-2311 fw town ..........GALL COLLECT construction, killing three workers. Within 24 hours, the, projects's general contractor, San Francisco-baséd Swinterton and Walberg, brought in Fink. The company came away clean when it was determined that a subcontractor was at fault. Swinterton had learned the hard way. Four years earlier, it was involved in a similar fiasco in which two workmen were killed. COMPANY SUFFERS Because the company did not practise crisis manage. ment and did not talk to the media, Fink says, “they had the book thrown at them,” including manslaughter charges. “The point is, by talking openly with the media and responding to the charges, the company came out a lot better, a lot quicker, the second time around,” Fink said. Still, this was undertaken after the fact. Fink believes the best crisis management lies in planning ahead, not just reacting. “It's being prepared for the inevitable.” In his book, C: Management, Planning for the In evitable, Fink says most crisis share certain similar aspects. In the pre-crisis stage, small, seemingly insignificant warning sign§ can signal impending disaster. Then comes the acute crisis stage, when a crisis has erupted, followed by what Fink calls the chronic crisis stage, when “the carcass gets picked clean.” This often entails government investigations and newspaper exposes. Finally, in the resolution stage, business returns to normal — until the next crisis. “There are certain crises that don’t have warning signs, like the Tylenol tampering,” Fink says. “But that doesn’t ex. cuse a company from being prepared.” JANUARY SEWING SPECIAL TWO BASIC SEWING MACHINES SINGER MODEL 6212 ° MODEL * Buttonholer Now moum 168 holer © 5 Stitches $ 95 wor rFitiome"” sgzges 2 tuna SAVE $50 CASE EXTRA Carter's Sewing Centre 623 Columbie Ave. Castlegar © 365-3810 Now $29995 SAVE $100 CASE EXTRA Karl Hager Limb & Brace Ltd. ORTHOTIC & PROSTHETIC — MONTHLY CLINIC — * Foot Supports © Artificial Limbs * Orthopedic Shoes © Sports Injury * Body & Leg Bracing Bracing NEXT CLINIC NEXT CLINIC JANUARY 19 8:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. AT KOOTENAY LAKE DISTRICT HOSPITAL Nelson, B.C. O/T Department 4th Floor * Room 422 For appointment or information call Kelowna Collect 861-1833 SSS 365-2417 human brain experiences major Alzheimer's damage. The treated rats and a control group competed in a long-term study of mental abilities. These included maze tests that depend on memory For Your Convenience We're OPEN MONDAY WIN @ERZewoee TICKETS Two subscribers names are listed below Provincial ticket good tor draws for the next five Fridays! Te pick vp your FREE tickets, drop into the Castlegar Ni nesday until 5 p.m.. or phone 365-7266 by 5 p.m. Wednesday to and good luck! CASTLEGAR AUTOMOTIVE CASTLE THRE (1977) LTD. PK SALES A EAVCE Ag Orgs 365-3666 365-3311 ARROW BULOING SUPPLIES LTD 2240 0m Ave 365-2175 MITCHELL SUPPLY “0 or 365-7252 DEPARTMENT STORES FIELDS DEPT. STORE . 365-3255 365-7782 RESTAURANTS EASTGATE GARDENS #32 WESTS DEPT STORE DRUG STORES SHOES TRIOS SHOE SALON 465 Columbo A 365-7813 Hf your name appears. you're the winner of o office Tuesdey or Wed im. Find your name below WOODWORKING oo 365-7250 wOOowORK 222 \Gind Costiego NELSON HARDWARE THUNDERBIRD ELECTRIC & PLUMBING SUPPLY 7 » 352-6661 Ym STEREO 2 TV UNEAR ELECTRONICS, 042 Boker 5: w 10a St 352-3624 TRAIL RESTAURANTS BOSTON PZZA WANETA PLAZA 012 Boy Ave 8100 ®. 368-8285 TRAVEL AGENCY “e vi Get Your Message Across Fast! Classified Ads 365-2212 Fiddlers to jam in April members support their efforts and give The B.C. Oldtime Fiddlers held its first meeting of the New Year Jan. 3 in the seniors hall with 30 members present A report was given on the Dec. 14 Christmas party held in the Castlegar Legion Hall. Everyone agreed it was very successful and was enjoyed by all the members and their guests. Gordon McFadden re ported he has already booked the Legion Hall for Dec. 3, PREMIER VANDERZALM RADIO TALK SHOW | ® Today at 1 p.m. CKQR (740 on Your Dial) Telephone Toll Free — 1-800-663-9030 A 1988 for the next Christmas party. A request for the fiddlers to play for the Feb. 7 telethon Rossland was turned down. Due taillness of some of the members and other commitments, fiddlers felt they could not play on that date. lively: discussion was held on the April 9 fiddle contest in the Castlegar Community Complex. The arena has been booked for April 8, 9, and 10. A jam session for fiddlers coming from other parts of the province will be held on Friday night at the complex. Saturday starting at 9:30 a.m. the contest will be held. The finals will start on Saturday night at 7 p.m. and will be followed by a dance with music being supplied by the fiddlers. Sunday morning will fea ture a pancake breakfast and jam session, also to be held in the complex. Joan and Bill Marks have agreed to chair the contest committee this year and all FAMILY NITE SPECIAL —FINAL—— Every Monday & Tuesday FAMILY NITE SPECIAL —FINAL— Every Monday & Tuesday 4p.m. -8 p.m. were asked to them all the help they require. A meeting to get things in motion will be held at Gary and Annie Rayner's on Wednesday evening. The meeting was adjourn ed and followed by a coffee break and some lively music by the fiddlers. The next meeting will be 2:30 p.m. Feb. 7 at the seniors hall in Castlegar. New fiddlers are welcome Education meeting scheduled Area residents as well as Selkirk College students in terested in post-secondary education can meet coun sellors from Selkirk College, B.C. Institute of Technology, Simon Fraser University, the University of B.C., and the University of Victoria later this month. An information session be gins Jan. 21 from 7-9 p.m. and continues Jan. 22 from 9 a.m. 12 p.m. in the main lounge at the Castlegar Campus of Selkirk College. Students currently enrol led in area secondary schools will have an opportunity to meet these representatives during school visits in March SHOPPERS DRUG MART CORRECTION Re: Jenvery Cireule Vol. 21, No. 2 Nyquil Nighttime Cold of weekly newspapers. But Calvin Goldman, di rector of investigation and research under Ottawa's Competition Act, said his department intends to mon- itor the Hamilton newspaper market for three years to determine whether the take- over of Brabant Newspapers Ltd. has substantially les- sened competition. Southam, publisher of seven large metropolitan dailies across Canada includ- ing the Hamilton Spectator, purchased the eight-paper Brabant chain Oct. 30 for an undisclosed price. The deal strengthens Southam’s position as the major media player in the Hamilton market. In addition to the Spectator, Southam Since September 1986, the Spectator has been replaced as a separate daily for the suburb of Burlington. Goldman contacted Southam within days of the Brabant sale with a list of questions about the deal. But the official said in an inter- view his concerns have been tempered by the fact that the Spectator and the Brabant chain serve different markets in both content and adver. tising. Entry barriers to the com- munity newspaper business are relatively low and im- proved technology is making it easier all the time, he added. FACES COMPETITION A new independent weekly has been started in the Hamilton area in the last six months and now is widely Weekly stocks circulated, Gold noted. Goldman _ said Southam promiséd to operate Brabant and the Spectator as sep. arate entities’ pending his review. But the company will TORONTO (CP) — Stocks plummeted on major North America markets Friday, wiping out gains from a rally in the first week of the new year. Analysts blamed the sharp drop on several factors in cluding investor worries about the U.S. economy, program trading in New York and even a snowstorm that hit the city. In a massive late afternoon selloff, the Dow Jones in dustrial average dropped a whopping 140.58 points to close at 1,911.31 while the Toronto Stock Exchange's composite 300 index fell 118.01 to 3,151. The slide in New York was its third worst point drop for a single day in history behind two huge declines during last October's market crash. Tor. onto’s loss was the 10th worst point performance for one day on record. _— “I've had better days,” mused Toronto analyst John Ing. Analysts said a lot of in vestors backed out of the market after hearing specu lation that a report next week will show the U.S. trade deficit will hit $16 billion US for November. “There are a lot of rumors that the deficit will be a lot worse that anticipated,” said Laird Grantham, an analyst with Walwyn Stodgell Coch ran Murray Ltd. Econo Spots You can save up to 80% on the be under no obli, not to amalgamate from here on in. Enacted in June 1986 to replace the 76-year-old Com- bines Investigation Act, the Competition Act gives Gold man the right to apply to the Competition Tribunal within three years to block the deal should subsequent develop. ments provide grounds. Once found to have les sened competition under the act, a merger can be rolled back altogether or amended to satisfy the director's con- cerns. Premier plans for long term VICTORIA (CP) — A long- term development plan that can withstand economic pressures as well as “political whims” will be developed for British Columbia over the next year, says Premier Bill Vander Zalm. The development strategy, based on economic forecasts for a 10-year period, will include government plans for everything from education funding to taxation te-di- versifying the province's re- source-based économy. Policy decisions, regula tions and legislation will be developed based on the plan. “The longer it is in effect the more it becomes so much a part of things that even a The Bay head retires early TORONTO (CP) — Man agement changes continue to shake the Hudson's Bay Co. Wally Evans, president of The Bay, one of three major retailers owned by the Hud- son's Bay Co., is taking early retirement after a 35-year career with the company, Hudson Bay president George Kosich announced. just been appointed to suc. ceed Kosich as president of Zellers Inc. in June, will be replaced in that position by Hani Zayadi, vice-president of Zellers. Zellers is considered one of the most successful retail operations in Canada while The Bay has been plagued with disappointing sales in recent years. change in government won't change the plan,” said Van der Zalm. “That's .not only the hope, but realistically, the plan will not be subjected t6 political whims as it gets implemented over time.” Vander Zalm said the “economic white paper” will also form the basis of a major marketing program aimed at attracting business from other parts of Canada, the United States, Europe and Asia. The outline is expected to be ready for the next meet- ing of the premier’s economic advisory council Aug. 18-19 in Penticton. Until now, the premier said, provincial budgets have been drawn up based on annual projections and data from the previous year. “Old-time politics would dictate that you don't plan and you keep yourself lots of flexibility and in that way you can arrange things for whenever you have an elec: tion,” he said. Vander Zalm said the impetus for the plan came from two days of meetings with entrepreneurs on the advisory council. Our Action Ad Phone No. 365-2212 Happy 16th Birthday D.C. FROM THE TWO SHORTIES ! West Kootenay Power Appointments Dale J. Wolf J.A. Drennan, President and Chief Executive Of- ficer of West Kootenay Power and Light Com- pany, Limited, is pleased to announce the ap- pointment of John R. Baker and Dale J. Wolf as directors of the Company. Mr: Baker is Senior Vice-President ahd Mr. Wolf is Vice-President, Finance, of UtiliCorp United Inc. of Kansas City, Missouri. 7 John R. Baker Kosich took over as pres- ident of Hudson's Bay—last June after the position was vacant for two years. In a shuffle to fill the vacancy created by Evans's resignation, Bob Peter, pres- ident of Simpsons, will take over presidency of The Bay. Replacing Peter will be David Thomson, the 29-year old son of Kenneth Thomson, whose holding company owns 74 per cent of Hudson's Bay. Contact INTERCHANGE at B.C. V5C 5P2. ROTO-MATIC CONVECTION OVENS == * NO OIL/NO FAT means no 420-5559 - Box 82008 N. Burnaby to ciean. No danger of burns * GREASELESS/LOW CALORIE french fries or other preblanched food products. need for expensive ducting nor fire extinguisher systems. * EASY INSTALLATION Just plug ROTO-MATIC in and dy to produce any- where, anytime. * LOW MAINTENANCE no olf to filter or replace nor filters rom hot oll. David Thomson, who had of British Ci PUBLIC NOTICE ROYAL COMMISSION ON EDUCATION The Royal C ing a visit to Creston in March provided there is sufficient interest to hold a Public Hearing at that time. If you plan to present a brief please contact the (Public Inquiries Act, R.S.B.C. 1960, Chapter 315) non Ed ion is Alex Fasthuber, Donna Fasthuber, Son Alex Fasthuber and Marcelle Wright. Commission office by February 15, 1988. Telephone (24 Hours) Call collect (0) 660-4010 ¢ MIRRORS On behalf of the Commission Mr. John Walsh, Secretary Royal Commission On Education #350 - 900 Howe St., e PLATE GLASS * RENOVATION WINDOWS ¢ PATIO DOORS e SEALED UNITS e ALUMINUM DOORS e AUTO GLASS CASTLE GLASS AND WINDSHIELDS LTD. 2228-6th Ave., Castlegar Rocicine 170 mt should read 69. Vancouver, B.C. V6Z 2M4 cost of this ad! 365-5210 Display Advertising “atworecey Phone 365-5210 Res.: 368-3579 © 365-7666