Rm ee ee te ee te FEBRUARY IS APPLE J TH SPRUBEL y igs Petit. Pkg. of 4 DELICIOUS APPLES Golden. Medium Size. B.C. Canada Extra Fancy 1.08/ kg Ib SPARTAN APPLES B.C. Medium Size: Wednesday February 3, 1993 B.C. APPLES Melntosh. Canada Fancy Grade. Fancy Grade. 1.30/ kg lb DELICIOUS APPLES Sun eae Blue Label. el or Ap Limit ime. 1 Litre. . Over limit price. 98 ea. BATHROOM TISSUE me x: convenience. Ready to eat. Fletchers. Bone-In. Ready to eat. Limit 1. 2.16/ kg CHICKEN LEGS Back Attached. yee 5 kg. box. 1 0 Frozen. Limit 1. FOR 2 3.09/kg 95 AN EASY, QUICK WAY TO PAY, NOW AVAILABLE AT ALL 86 B.C. SAFEWAY STORES. Here's how it works. When you are ready to check out, instead of paying by cheque, cash or MasterCard use your Interac Card. You input your personal code and OK the amount. It's as quick as cash and MasterCard and easier that writing a cheque. DIRECT PAYMENT, the way of the 90's SAFEWAY > ‘Advertised prices in effect until clo g Saturday, Feb. 6, 1993 at yo r Castlegar Safeway. Quantity right reserved. Saturday February 6, 1993 _— ey T5¢ NewsFLASH j@WEATHER iv, -” iw Mostly cloudy with sunny breaks Sunday. Mild. @ OUR PEOPLE Local educators continue to move towards the Year 2000 learning initiative. As Castlegar Primary School has discov- ered, there’s a certain strength in diversity and combining dif- ferent age groups. page 9 @ LOCAL SPORTS It was a case Of too little, too late for the Castlegar Rebels Tuesday. The local junior squad scored three in the final two-and-a-half minutes but fell 7-5 to the KIJHL-leading Grand Forks Border Bruins. page 13 @ WORK PLACE Rising unemployment among our youth requires new ideas to keep them working. The B.C. Young Entrepreneurs Conference slated for Feb. 16 at the Fireside Inn is aimed at doing just that. Our People Crossword Local Sports Work Place Action Ads Wheels ’93 HOT STUFF y Mary Voykin of Glade examines damage to her car after a fire on the dash board Thursday forced her to pull over on Columbia Avenue. The cause of the fire is still unknown and damage is estimated at $1,500. Staff at NRS Mountainview Agencies Ltd. and Kalawsky Pontiac Buick GMC Ltd. were able to extinguish the fire before firefighters arrived on the scene. News photo by Corinne Jackson Arrow Forest District fuming Neil Rachynski NEWS REPORTER Ken Arnett says he is furious with the media. The manager of the Arrow Forest District said Wednesday's front page story in The News gave the impression the district has something to hide. Arnett was referring to the end of the story that stated, “spokespersons from the Arrow Forest District were unavail- able for comment.” Arnett said regardless of what the state- ment was intended for, it implies district officials refused to talk to the media. 4 “That’s what really gets me,” Arnett said. “We make it a moral obligation to respond to the media.” He said the district never had a chance to defend itself against the comments in the article which he says ranged from innuendo to “out and out lies. “It’s got a lot of people annoyed here. We have no problem commenting on the situation,” he said. The news article centered around the announcement that the Association of B.C. Professional Foresters will be launch- ing a formal investigation of its members in the district. Pro- fessional foresters are employed by both the Arrow Forest Dis- trict and local logging companies. The investigation is set to be complete in June. But even though the district won't be probed, Arnett said the ABCPF should get the investigation over and done with if it consid- ers the issue so critical. “Some guy sitting in Vancouver doesn’t realize the politics in a small community,” Arnett said. “It’s hanging over about eight individuals’ heads here.” Arnett said the whole media event focuses on whether the right paperwork was signed or not signed, rather than the steps the district took to ensure that reforestation was per- formed responsibly on 56 cutblocks in the region. The News quoted an unidentified industry source that said the forest district’s technicians have little field experience. Arnett disagreed, and said the district’s average techni- cians have from 16 to 18 years experience. “They all get involved in training,” Arnett said. “Most if not all are graduates of a forestry technician school, such as Selkirk College which is excellent. “This ghost technician, and I won't mention names but I’m sure the person will know who I’m talking about, only works five months out of the year and then collects UI,” Arnett said. “(The unidentified source) can, at the drop of a hat, criticize people as long as he remains anonymous.” Colleen McCrory, chairperson of New Denver’s Valhalla So- ciety, said Arnett shouldn't be worried about the source. “The issue isn't who told who,” she said. “The issue is there is a big scandal going on in the Castlegar office and it’s being covered up.” FINANCE MINISTER GLEN CLARK TALKS TAXES IN CASTLEGAR, PAGE 3