50 H.P. JOHNSON V-4 $350. 50 H.P. Merc. $350. 15 ft. plywood hull and trailer $250. 65 H.P Evinrude motor. Ph, 365-8290 44 1974 16%) FIBREFORM. Full conopy. Easy-Load trailer. 399. 4158. 7/40 SYRINGA PARK MARINA Pp Mere. 35 Hi Comper topand trailer. 365-386" atter4 p.m. 7. ri GOOD USED 1984 Yamaha YZ80. Not @ scratch $1,099. 1980 Yamaha DT 125. Give us an of- ter. 1981 Kawasaki KZ 1000 only 18,000 km. pped with vetter fairing. ‘Bases 1975 Kawasaki 2900. ires, priced ton sia 178. Honda its of extras. Looks like new tos hod tender loving care $995. 1980 VW Trike, @ tun machine. Davidson short ¢ Glide. One year unlimited | miteag $8995. 9 Army 45 Yomahe authorized dealer 1366. Syd's Cycle Ltd. Hwy. 3, Trail. DL. 5543. 1982 YAMAHA 400. Excellent condition $1350 0.8.0. 365- iw HONDA 750 CC ih. 365- 289) or 365-7075. 3/44 1979 HONDA XL5S00 3,800 Km. new condition byt half price. Only $1 300. Work 365-7141, 365. 6358 enna °. * MUST sell! 1980 Honda CxS00 custom. 7,025 miles with ond fairing. Excellent condition $1,800. 0.8.0. Ph. 365 1979 HONDA Hawk 400. Ex cellent c 365-8385. 2/45 YAMAHA XS. 750 3-cylinders 365-3205. a WANTED 3-5 h.p. electric motor single phase. Wire welder. Ph 365-5180 3/44 1955-57 CHEVY or Ford for Tor | full restoration. 365- / 4 WANTED: Gas IT JUST SO HAPPENED JONACE JAN Stiew rourna WE! AUS PLUMBING, Commercial and residential installation and repairs. Call Alex Negreitf. 365. 23. 104,29 ae PRIME MINISTER HIGH SCHOOL “STUDENT for b SUMMER SCHOOL OF SOUND Enroll in our w conducted beginning July 8th. Brochures. Bullfrog Recording School, 2475 Dunbor sy Voncouver. B.C. VOR 3N2 (604) 734-46 DANCE Bans and Mobile ous in South FULL-TIME babys: August. Ex nces availa 295, je. Cathy at 3/44 20-YEAR-OLD male, with truck available. Will also till gardens, oF any other odd jobs. 365-7487 5 46 TIME MUSIC The right music for your wed. dings. parties, dances. Reserve now! 365-2539. 7/46 Need a job? High school and college students may offer their services under this category Drop us a line or phone the Ac tion Ad number at 365-2212. We will run your ad for 3 issues at no rge ttn/37 FEMALE spayed Husky / Malamute.‘ One-yeor-old. 5} 3 a4 RESUME SERVICE Need help in preparing your resume? 365-6383 The Typing Shop 2424 - 12th Avenve your ad for three issues tree of charge tha 37 work shopping. Cut expenses ond school trips, weekly ther with REE Share save money. Get 1 your neighbor in our Ride column. We'll run your ao © ‘experience looking tor -6084, 365-5101. 3/45 3 issues tree of charge. Phone our action line. 365-2212 with 15 irene WAYNE PEPPARD Licenced Plumber ‘and Gostitter Call 359-7137 collect Lost A large brown wallet containing Class A Choutteur's licence and trapper's licence. In yicinity of Senior Citizens’ Holl: 3/4 NEED A CARPENTER? Will work ph, by the hour or contract. Free Lanabid . Also concrete torms OST tin.41 Shepherd, black and tan, 2 ears-old. Silver dhokechain. if Teund pieose call 365-6038. 3/45 Home & Yard | *s=2"2- Maintenance 365-6292 Lost or found items ore not LOST: Small tabby cat with wi flea collar. Very attectiona’ Answers to CFer. Reward. 365: 2463. 3/46 charged for. If you've lost ceilings. Call Falcon Pointing 3 th Clean Cotton Rags Castlegar News 197 Columbia Ave 9 Jn phone the Action Ad number 365-2212 issues tree of charge Shermak Const. Co. Ltd. Hin/33 jlouse Framing * Form Work * Rooting ® Siding * Finishing * Arborite Work © Additions * Renovations ALL TYPES OF GENERAL CARPENTRY 365-2932 ¢ © 359-7191 SOBCAT SERVICES 365-3015 BOTTLE DRIVE: 1st Kinnaird Scouts ond Venturers will be having a bottle drive on June 12. boree which they will be atten: ding in July in Guelph, Ont 4% SCHOOL BOARD: Educational meeting, Monday, June 10, 6 TO RENT: 3 bdrm. house with full basement in Castiegor 863 evenings or Linde 365-7 GAS powered lawn working condition mower in 359. 730). ntertainment AN D> suitable for family viewing for talent show at Doukhobor Sports Day on June 16. For details, call Serge at 365-532! 3/45 A PERSONAL ATTENDANT is required for Casth Education Centre ( School) in Castlegor. The main purpose of the position is to provide assistonce so that children with varying handicaps training in working with special children o Av (Costleger), P.O. Box 3220 Castlegar. B.C. VIN3HS 2/46 WILL BABYSIT in your home. Call 365-6304 3/46 $10, hour. TREE CUTTING AND TOPPING Ph. 365-7980 thn/ 40 WESTK | ice CONCRETE LTD. Pipeline Pitt Rd. Genelle READY MIXED CONCRETE 112-800-332-2218 (Toll tree to all customers) Plant — 693-2430 Office — 365-2430 p.m. in the board office. The public is welcome. 46 ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS and 365-3663 104/76 CIRCUS ts coming to Trail 365-6292 (Trades Considered} SHRINE CIRCUS TRAIL COMINCO Ticket Soles BLOCK BROS. REAL ESTATE Our Action Ad Phone Number is 365-2212 1444 Columbie Ave Coniege: A.M. FORD 795 Highway Dr. tn glewnorry” Treil 04. 7336 ‘Your Ford Country Headquarters”’ Licenced & Fully Quolitied HAIRDRESSER otters SERVICES TO SHUT-INS Reasonable Rotes 365-6523 after 5 p.m. DELL “Save $$$ with the Auto Sellers at A.M. Ford’! 364-0202 DENNIS any type ot Scovsewret Si2-365-7336 tin, 93 NEXT SALE Sat., June 15 1 p.m. Sharp Open Mon. - Sat tor Consignments 9a.m. -6p. Phone 399-4793 EMOTIONS ANONYMOUS. Tues day, 8 p.m. Castlegar. Volunteer een ee Answering Service __ 52/42 WILL TOW unwanted vehicles away tor $15 tee. Castlegar and Robson area, until June 30. Er mie s Towing. 365-5690. 17.33 __ SESONAL ELECTROLYSIS - Permanent re- moval of unwanted hair by fully qualified operator. The Annex 365-374 “___tin/39 MN WITH HARASSMENT eats of violence, atraid tor yourself or your’ children’s soley? Call Transition Mouse, 364-1 oar Card Reading Etc. 1 can and will help No problem is too big Call me, | core. Dixie Powers, 365-5958 ARE YOU DESPERATE? helps. Phone The Crisis t Hours a Day v7 WHY RENT? W can own your own home tor LESS. Coll 365-5408 for appointment. 3/45 CARD READING. 365-5958, ask for Dixie. Talking a 24 inte CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY in Memoriam Donations. intor mation Box 2292, Costlegor: 365. 5167 7 Canby es en voout E PORTRAITS & CAMERAS LTO up your FREE tickets, drop tleger News offi Tuesday until 5 p.m. or phone 365-7366 by 5 p.m. eceday to claim. Find your name below nd good luck! 5 34 C8 Robson SAtmoriom’ donations which help promote Heart Research Cords sent to t-ot ieee bem 3023, Castlegar. MRS. POLLY POSTNIKOFF and Mr. and Mrs. Mike Barisoff are pleased to announce the engagement of their children Lorraine and Nick. Wedding will take place on June 22, 1985. /46 MR. AND MRS. G. WILLS of Creston, B.C. ate pleased to an. nounce the pa ye of their doughter Brenda to Louis Peter mon son of el Koreen of Castlegar Gnd: Milton Peterman maby, B.C. on August 3, 1985 4% SHERREL KOREEN of Costlegor ‘and Milton Peterman of ore pleased te thew daughter Lor: Anne Peter mon to Len Reimann son of Mr and Mrs. Cliff Reimann of Mon. trose. B.C; the wedding will toke place September 7, 19% WM. BERG Construction Lid would like to thank the statt nurses and patients of th Hospital tor during the r dition. Best wishes to all 46 WE WOULD like to thank the nurses on the second tloor and intensive care at Kootenay Lake District Hos thank you to the pallbearers gravediggers, singers, cooks friends and relatives who came to comfort us during our bereavement. Also a special thanks to Rev. Calvin Brown tor his comtort and prayers during this difficult time. God bless you all. Polly Markin, Jerry Markin, Michael ond Kathy Vincent and Fomily, Ron end Jean Pleniden end Family. WATER WISE Unlike driving *on streets and highways, boaters, swim. mers and waters skiers have few defined limitations such as marked roadways and dis tance indicators to guide their movements. The influence of alcohol on these aquatic sports enthusiasts is poten tially more hazardous than on operators of motor vehicles. For Your Convenience We're OPEN MONDAY = EXPRESS TICKETS below. if your nome appears, you're the winner of o Wedneedey’s dre 365-2912 ’ 365-3214 368-7145 “Camere ree 365-3717 365-2955 FLOWER SHOPS 365-7787 365-5191 365-2155 HEALTH FOOD 365-2175 365-7252 623 Columbre Ave 365-3335 sanTue @ orason 365-6141 an. 366-7702 RESTAURANTS EASTGATE GARDENS 365-7941 22 Columba Ave 365-7414 365-3255 365-7782 Above Bob s Poy 365-7813 HAIR STYLISTS CASTLEGAR HAIR ANNEX BECAUSE OF CHARTER Kinsmen in jeopardy SAULT STE. MARIE, 75, 80,’ you would be chang- ONT. (CP) — A Kinsmen Club official says a newly enacted section of the Char- ter of Rights and Freedoms could deal a severe, if not fatal blow, to the 65-year-old national service club. Bob Carswell, a local dis- trict governor, said Section 15 of the charter, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of age, sex, race, color, origin, religion or dis- ability, could be used against the club's practice of limiting membership to those between 21 and 40. Carswell acknowledges the club's policy of allowing only males as members might be challenged as well, even though the Kinettes were formed as a separate club for women. Carswell said the Kinsmen have received differing legal opinions on the matter, but if a court were to ban the age restrictions, “it could quite possibly destroy the club.” He said the club was founded to develop fellow ship and leadership among a particular age group and fears if that age group was expanded the nature of the group would change. “If you turn around and say, ‘By law you've got to open it to guys who are 65, Job openings Details of these and other job opportunit evailable ot Trail Employment Cen 835 Spokane Street Phone: 368-5566 Anyone inte: Miliary College may Forces Recruitmes june 7 of 7 ot the Conede Em: ployment Centre. Please call 368-5566 tor an appointme: Journeyman concrete blocklayers are required in Castlegar. Priority will be given dents. Rate of pay is hour. (238M) Two Certified hairdressers needed in Trail, (2554) ice tomorrow or 365-3744 365-3744 365-7750 365-7266 (365-6385 365-3522 on 365-5610 365-3717 HARDWARE 352-2518 352-6661 COMSIGHMENT SHOP EAR NEW SHO RESTABRANTS ost To List Your Business in This Directory THUNDERBIRD ELECTRIC & PLUMBING SUPPLY WEALTH FOODS PRODUCTS 354-4491 352-7221 352-7557 352-403) STEREO ATV 3se-ago2 “Cheers 352-3624 CENTRES WaMETA RAZA 368-3517 och stond they 368-5202 sports Own Codon how 368-5556 TRAVEL AGENCY HENNE TRAVEL 1410 Bay Ave Phone 365-5210 anctuns (368-5595 ing the structure of the club and guys might not want that might prompt members to quit. “If someone pushes us to the wall, we have one option — that’s climbing over the wall and disappea "he said, adding it The age issue has been raised a number of times within the organization, Car- swell said, but “we're tied by an old structure you don’t just change overnight “Until you get major oppo sition you move slowly.” This would have been his last year with the Kinsmen had Carswell, 40, not re ceived a honorary lifetime membership. Carswell said the Kinsmen is still the largest all-Can adian service club with 14,000 members in about 620 chapters across the country Loto numbers KAMLOOPS — Winning numbers Wednesday in the Pacific Express lottery: For $100,000: 261750. For $50,000: 210308. For $10,000: 239436. In the Lotto West Lottery, drawn in Winnipeg, there was no winner of the jackpot pool of $169,588. The eight numbers drawn were 19, 23, 24, 26, 34, 47, 53 and 55. The bonus number was 27. One winner of the five correct-plus-bonus-number category won $10,175.30. Fifty-five ticket holders with five correct each won $740.00, 2,088 with four cor. rect each won $56.80 and 27,032 with three correct each won $5. THE KITCHEN CORNER * For Every Kitchen Need * Ideal Gift Items FULL LINE OF WILTON PRODUCTS LOCATED AT WANETA WICKER 1458 Bay Ave., Trail 368-8512 PAVI BFA ip _— INDUSTRIAL — a aacial — RESIDENTIAL PAVING baste | Supplies * Grodin Sit Spraying (Dust Control) & Trucking 352-7333 Also Offering © Compacting 352-7333 ens MAY 10, 1985 ice 24 Hour Answering Serv! pial 12-800- 332-4475 For Free Estimates [FALCON PAINTING @ DECORATING 2649 FOURTH CASTLEGAR AVENUE c VIN 281 365 3563 Kits n Siler Good Stock of Lighting Both Accessories i's upstairs in Tro pe phone RAY CROTEAU 359-7923 BOB POsTLL & Waterbeds Towne Square Mall 8-5302 49-6537 = GAR NEWS 8c. von CASTLE 70 oaamne 1007 CASIUGAR The Plambing TD 24 REPAIRS & 4 HOUR EME: M.D. (MARK) FISHLEIGH RENOVATION: s RGENCY Service COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PLUMBING Carol Magow Dianna Kootnikoff ADVERTISING SALES OFFICE 365-5210 octor 399-4762 Victoria, B. V8V 1x4 Febs 28 . City backs library expansion By RON NORMAN Editer Castlegar council has pledged $150,000 for the proposed expansion of the Castlegar Public Library's downtown learned. branch, the Castlegar News has “We would be prepared to put $150,000 into the Castlegar expansion of the downtown branch,” Ald. Carl Henne, chairman of the parks and recreation committee, said in an interview Tuesday evening. Henne said the expansion will cost about $250,000, with the library board raising the additional $100,000. he said. When completed, the new library will be double the combined size of the downtown and Kinnaird branches. The city has sent the library board a letter outlining its “We would up front half of it,” support for the expansion, but adding that more specific provided. referendum. Instead, the city plans to pay for the $150,000 through a tax increase spread over five years. voters have turned down two previous proposals for a new library — one near the Forestry offices on Columbia Ave. which was part of a municipal complex, and another near Pioneer Arena. VOL. 38, No. 47 Henne said it is now up to the library board to get on with the expansion. Library board chairman Deb Chmara said in an interview Tuesday night the board will need additional funding because the $150,000 from the city will not be enough to build the expansion. “We're going to need more no matter what,” she said. Chmara said the board has looked at funding under the federal Modified ae fi om. guons na mee laa but said the {As well, the board has applied for fanding from the B.C. Lotteries Foundation. However, she said the only lottery money available for libraries seems to be for computeri- zation. Chmara said the feeling among B.C. library boards is it's “extremely unfair” to small libraries because they “will never be computerized.” Chmara said she plans to meet with Provincial Library Services director Ron MacKenzie in Victoria in July to discuss lottery fu nding. Meanwhile, Chmara said the library board plans to see price range. from council. what kind of expansion it can get for its money. She said the board already has a number of studies for the proposed expansion, all of which are out of its “We have to revise them,” she said. Chmara added that the board hasn't set a date for work on the expansion to begin because it was waiting for word She suggested a plan could be in place by fall with construction to start next spring. “A lot of that depends on the contractor,” she added. branch. ar News CASTLEGAR, BRITISH COLUMBIA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 1985 The library wants to double its size from a combined total of 3,000 square feet in the downtown and Kinnaird branches, to a total of 6,000 square feet at its downtown WEATHERCAST noon showers or showers. Highs 24 and lows 8. 3 Sections (A, B & C) Health unit additio set to go By CasNews Staff Tenders should be going out “within the month” for construction of a 3,000- square-foot addition to the Castlegar health unit, Central Kootenay Union Board of Health director Monty Arnott said today. And Arnott said the health unit staff hopes to occupy the new building “be- fore the end of the year.” The addition will double the size of the present health unit building from 3,000 square feet to 6,000 square feet, Arnott said. The addition became necessary after the provincial Ministry of Health amalgamated the Selkirk Health Unit in Nelson and the West Kootenay Health Unit in Trail under one name — the Central Kootenay Health Unit and decided to relocate the head office to Castlegar. Arnott said plans for the project are ready and were only awaiting a lease between Castlegar and District Hos- pital and the B.C. Building Corp. That obstacle was removed this week with the hospital board's ap- proval of a lease agreement. Hospital administrator Ken Talarico said today the hospital board has sent BCBC a letter confirming the lease agreement. Under the terms of the lease, the continued on page A2 Wheel moved unexpectedly, inquest told By CasNews Staff A giant cylinder which shifted last April killing a man at Westar Timber's Celgar pulp mill had also unexpectedly moved the night before the accident Lawyer Andrew Sandilands, re. presenting the dead man’s family, told a juried inquest in Castlegar today that, according to a Westar report, the five-metre wide Cascade wheel had shifted “sometime prior” to the ac. cident Frank Franta, 22, a third-year boilermaker's apprentice from Burn. aby, died April 11 while repairing the cylinder after it suddenly moved, causing him to slip between a crevice between the giant cylinder and a wall. The cylinder had previously never moved while shutdown for repairs until the night of April 10, said Peter Brittany, Westar superintendent for steam recovery operations. “Other than the chain bunching the night before, I know of nothing else,” said Brittany, who has worked in steam recovery for 13 years. He said while Westar didn’t have a brake on the cylinder to ensure it remained stationary, come-alongs had been installed on a chain connecting the wheel to its 60 horsepower motor which would have acted as braking devices. Earlier in the inquest, conducted by Castlegar coroner Paul Ogiow, a pathologist testified that the dead man had no chance of surviving “extensive inuries” sustained in the freak ac cident Franta’s injuries included: multiple bruises and abrasions, rib fractures, laceration of the left lung, collapse of continued on page A2 ey i Si le ell NEW SIDEWALK . . . City workers Bruno Tassone (left) and Alf Ambrosone install forms needed bet. sidewalk on 6th Avenue can be poured. Sidewalk will lore new run the length of the Community Complex property. City also plans to plant shrubs and grass as part of beautification project CosNews Photo by Ron Norman SCHOOL REPORT SAYS More instructors needed By ADRIAN CHAMBERLAIN Staff Writer Some students in the Castlegar school district who need extra help from learning assistance instructors aren't getting it According to a report presented at an education committee meeting Mon day from the district's learning as. sistance committee, 70 per cent of learning assistance instructors “believe staffing should be increased to meet population demand.” And 75 per cent of administrators in schools believe that “actual instruc tional time” is “insufficient to meet students’ needs,” and “that the number of LA (learning assistance) teachers in School District No. 9 is not adequate.” Added committee chairman Joe Beales: “My impression was that, although LAs are doing a very good job within the program, there are students that could use more LA.” Committee members Inga Lamont agreed. “Every one of the LAS said if there was more time, they could deal with children they can't now. Even the 100 per cent (full-time instrweters) said they have to pick and choose.” The report based qm questionnaires from parents, teaghers and adminis trators, also recommended that a room or portable be provided for Blueberry Creek and Tarrys elementary schools, and Stanley Humphries Secondary School to “allow adequate facilities” for learning assistance instruction Sehool board chairman Doreen Smecher asked if there wasn't already room at schools for learning assistance as a result of declining enrolment. Committee member Mike Balahura replied that some of the rooms avail able at schools are unsuitable. He said, for example, that using an available room in the basement of Stanley Humphries would cause learning assis tance students to feel cut off from the rest of the school. “I don't want to isolate or segregate my clientele,” he explained. “I think it’s important that a facility be set up as part of the school. I don’t think it should be set up away from the school.” Both LA instructors and adminis trators said in the report that the pro- gram needs more interaction and sup port from community agencies. Lamont said instructors usually get pertinent background information on students receiving help for personal problems from, for example, the Min. istry of Human Resources only if the situation is “severe.” “But by that time. she said. Other recommendations included in the report were: @ that each school have a screening committee composed of a teacher, administrator and learning assistance instructor; © this committee be responsible for recommending students to the pro gram; © more parental involvement in the program; @ additional learning assistance staff. © the district fund and provide time for in-service training for instructors at least twice a year; the director of instruction be given responsibility for co-ordinating com munity agency involvement in the pro gram Schools superintendent Terry Way ling proposed at the meeting that the committee's recommendations be for. warded to himself and the director of instruction, who will use them to for mulate a draft policy for October We need some teeth in this thing to make some sense of it,” said Wayling, “because a lot of good work has gone into it.” DBA eyes plan for downtown By CasNews Staff The Downtown Business Association is taking another serious look at revit- ilizing the downtown core. And Castle- gar council has agreed to lend a hand. Couneil Tuesday approved a DBA request to contribute up to $5,000 to upgrade the city's three-year-old down- town plan. The DBA revitilization committee will provide the other $1,000 toward the.estimated $6,000 cost to upgrade the plan which was completed in June, 1962. Ald. Marilyn Mathieson said the upgrading is necessary because “some things (in the plan) have already been done,” while other parts of the plan are no longer “appropriate.” Mathieson said the upgrading will identify revi tion projects that can be done “practically” while using the old study as a “backbone.” The city budgeted $10,000 for work in the downtown area this year and the $5,000 for the plan upgrading will come from that. Under the old plan, the city offered to pay 30 per cent of the cost of revitilization, but the plan was rejected by downtown landowners as too expensive. Mathieson said the city’s share of the improvements this time will be deter- mined by “what has to be done.” “It depends on what the projects are,” she said, adding that most major projects like storm sewers have al ready been completed Meanwhile, Bill Craven, one of three members on the DBA's revitilization committee, said today, “We would like ... to see a nice workable plan that’s not going to cost a great deal of money.” Craven said the old plan could have cost from $300,000 to $1 million, de- pending on what projects were under- taken. However, he said his committee is looking at spending $100,000 to $200,000. “We're dealing with a fairly. limited budget,” Craven explained. “We're not talking about tremendous amounts of money.” Craven said the majority of down- town property owners have — receptive to the proposal, committee will have to return to re owners to see just what they want done. Craven says he’s hoping that once the project gets moving, it will have “a snowball effect,” giving other land. owners an incentive to fix up their buildings. Under the provincial government's Downtown Revitilization Program, businesses are provided loans at eight to nine per cent interest to be paid over 12 years. Craven said that in the first two years the loan and interest payments are free. The loan is then amortized over the remaining 10 years. Asked if the low interest loans are an incentive for property owners to up grade, Craven said the interest rates are “preferential,” though owners continued on page A2 —inside SPACE AGE STUFF: Castlegar postmaster Ben Evans unveiled the local post office's latest piece of computer technology Tuesday — Intelpost. The elec tronic photocopier allows in stant communication with 50 Canadian cities and 43 countries throughout the world Be IMAGINE THAT: MOSCOW Prosecutor William Hamlett MORE SAY: The Castlegar Parents Committee says it wants to be in. formed before major school district decisions are made A2 Idaho (AP) prosecutor was shocked when his pickup truck was stolen from c porking spot near the courthouse truck unlocked ond the keys on the front seat I've lett my keys in my car in this town for 12 years,” said It a guy in Moscow, Idaho, can't leave the keys in his four-wheel-drive pickup without having it ripped off, | don't know what the world’s coming to. The truck was stolen Monday and retrieved by police later in the day several blocks from the courthouse 1 was most worried about my beseball gloves, They're irreplacoeable: fit like o second skin Only an eighth of o tank of gasoline and a package of cigarettes were gone when the truck was recovered Hamlett, who will become a Second District Court magistrate in about a month, said he has no idea who might have taken the truck The Latah County even though he had left the said Hamlett RINGERS: Six local horseshoe pitchers will head to Nanaimo Aug. } for the B.C. Summer Gomes after they earned spots on the Zone 1 team in playoffs over the weekend SWIMATHON: The Castlegar Aquanouts and Robson River Otters an- nual swimathons were both successes . . . 82 “