= 24 Saturday, December 19, 1992 @ KMS honors § top students Following is a list of those students who have qualified for the Honor Roll and Hon- orable Mention lists during the first reporting period at Kinnaird Middle School. To be eligible for the Honor Roll, students must have a mini- mum grade average of 4.0 in qualifying courses. For Hon- orable Mention, students must have a minimum grade average of 3.5 to 3.9 in quali- fying courses. GRADE 8 HONOR ROLL Angela Briggeman, Charles Starling, Chris Cook, David Wong, Andrea Accardo, Adrienne Ne- grey. Shelley Postnikoff, Bradley Za- itsoff, April Plamondin, Trina John- son, Ken Esovoloff, Trevor Havi- land. Sheree Czechowski, Kriste Draper, Lindsay White, Chris Snauwaert, Heather Sheppard, Tory Merritt. Suzana Chaves, Sarah Floyd, Angela Osachenko, Laura Imrie, Garth Vatkin, Jay Antignani. Nicky Boultbee, Stacy Nichval- odoff, Eric Perrier, Tammy Sherbinin, Jamie Kalesnikoff, James Jmieff. Carrie Barabonoff, Matthew Healing, Jamie Furtner, Cheryl Wil- son, Daniela Soltesz, Monique Baillargeon. Many Nevakshonoff, Aaron Jankola, Laura Fipke, Bud Grego- HONORABLE MENTION Scott Carlson, Lincoln Giraud, Chris Rempel, Caleb Retzlaff, Tyler Thompson, Erin Profili. Selina. Malakoff, Nicole Ar- chambault, Cory Quiding, Dustin Heagy, Jordan Krahn, Kristel Pip- ke, Nathan Matell, Shannon Koochin. GRADE 7 HONOR ROLL Elizabeth St. John, Brian John, Deanna Ambrosone, Kristen McK- night, Keenan Richards, Nicolle Binnie. Bobbi Jo Haviland, Ashley Tompkins, Amanda Derhousoff, Bryce Phillip, Karen Dhillonb, lan Mosby. Chery! St. Denys, Thomas Courtney, Tashi Papau, Svetlana Rilkoff, Sarom Bahk, David Camp- bell. Chery! Ellis, Charlotte Ferreux, Lauchlan Jankola, Daniel Lepsoe, Caitlin Spilker, Melanie Streich. Nicole Watson, Aleta Runions, Sizanne Clement, Amadna Barre, Sandra Sawchuck, Jodi Tompkins. Sara Coutts, Cathy Switzer, Amanda Jones, Jennifer Lane, Leanna Schwab, Yuri Kinakin. Donovan Parks, Gwen Williams, Kim Makaroff, Melissa Poznikoff, Shelley Yofonoff, Maris- sa Balahura. Heather Caron, Nadine Evans, Suzanne Idie, Barton Keneway, Ayron Sklapsky, Lisa Stewart, Meghan Van Viiet. HONORABLE MENTION Brian Watt, Stephanie Casler, Reed Byers, Jennifer Bondaroff, Colleen Ferreira, Leanna Gritchen, Sasha Sapriken. Michelle Baillargeon, Meghan Grant, Nicole Virgin, Robyn Gies- brecht, Karen Walker, David Creighton, Cory Gordon. Brad Andreashuk, Sasha Teery, Ryan Carter, Manichanh Saenyavong. Cut from Canada Grade A Beef ¢ Family Pack T-Bone Steak or Wing ¢ 8.78 kg. 3° All Our Best From CASTLEGAR FOODS 635 Columbia Ave. ¢ 365-5755 Prices effective Thurs., Dec. 17 to Wed., Dec. 31 Grade "A" ¢ Frozen « All Sizes TUR 2.16 kg. LB. @ KEYS 98 od Burns ¢ Ready to Eat ° whole HAMS Approx. 8-10 Ib. ¢ 4.39 kg. 1 88 Fleetwood Black Forest Ham or Roast Beef 100 zg. .99 Approx. 8 Ib. box California Grown Sweet Satsuma MANDARINS *5.99 Castlegar Foods Dinner or Crusty BUNS 12's pkg. California Grown Jumbo YAMS -66 kg. ib, 89 LETTUCE ..69 California Grown head 1.52 kg. California Grown Fresh BROCCOLI 1.52 kg. .~69 Alberta Grown ¢ No. 1 , CARROTS 4 5 Ib. pkg. i 4 69 Foremost Gourmet EGG NOG 2 Litre at Foremost Small EGGS Dozen carton .99 Foremost Whip Cream or Sour Cream 500 mL. 43° Foremost ¢ skim * 1% *° 2% « Homogenized MILK 2 litre ¢ Limit 2 4°9 No Name Dill PICKLES 4 varieties ¢ 1 litre 17° Club House ¢ Pitted Black or Green OLIVES 375-398 mL. .99 Ocean Spray Cranberry Sauce 398 mL « limit 2 .99 Mott's Clamato Juice or Heinz Tomato Juice 1.36 Litre 47° Coke & Sprite Pepsi & 7-Up 2 litre Plus Deposit A/F Old Dutch or Nalley's POTATO CHIPS Assorted ¢ 200 g .99 CASTLEGAR FOODS RESERVE THE HOURS: Mon.-T OPEN SUNDA E! Molino Tortilla CHIPS Big 1 kg. box 37° LIMIT QUANTITIE hurs., Sat. 9-6; Fri. 9-8 > 10 a.m.-5 p.m IGHT TC Imperial MARGARINE 1.36 KG. 1/4's 89 } 2°29 | mhe ase ERE LAT Tv a { mo CASTLEGAR TORTA bales wey ty¥a-FEF “ Wednesday December 23, 1992 T5¢ NewsFLASH j@WEATHER — ag * +» * * . Chance of heavy snowfall Thursday and flurries Christmas and Boxing Days. ¢ OUR PEOPLE Santa Claus is pretty busy getting ready for the long ride he takes with the reindeer to- morrow, but he took some time out to speak with The News and talk about Castlegar’s wonderful children. page 9 @ LOCAL SPORTS The Castlegar Rebels could have done themselves a big fa- vor by beating Rossland Satur- day. Something must have gone wrong, though, as they ended up doing Rossland a big favor. page 14 @ ARTS & LEISURE The kids of Castlegar Prima- ry put on quite a show at the Community Complex on Dec. 15 and The News was there to capture some of the friendly faces of child in song: preview 3 Farside Harrison Letters Our People Short Stories Local Sports Action Ads The News will not be published this Saturday CHILD’S PLAY a” | please see page 3. News photo by Corinne Jackson Rossland-Trail MLA Ed Conroy took a little time Monday enjoying the company of some of his smaller constituents at the Tender Care Variety Centre. It wasn't all play for Conroy, though, as he presented the centre with a $67,871 cheque. For more, Celgar drops strike-time grievance @ Removal of Stage 1 grievance applauded by Pulp, Paper and Woodworkers of Canada Local 1 Scott David Harrison EDITOR Pulp, Paper and Woodworkers of Canada Local 1 received an early Christmas present. Local 1 was informed Thursday that the Celgar Pulp Co. was dropping a Sept. 24 grievance it filed with the union for prolonging this summer’s strike by four days. “It came as a surprise,” Local 1 president Mike Babaeff said Tuesday. “A nice surprise.” Celgar filed the grievance with Local 1 after it refused to re- move pickets from the Castlegar mill after the pulp industry shutdown ended on July 17. Castlegar’s PPWC workers claimed outstanding local is- sues preventing them from returning to the jobsite — some- thing Celgar said was untrue. Filing the grievance, mill manager Jim Browne said Celgar “would like to recover damages” for the numbers of days Lo- cal 1 workers stayed off the job following the province-wide ac- ceptance of the mediator settlement. Celgar has since changed its mind. “There's no specific reason why we dropped the grievance but we'll been trying to improve the relationship between us and the union and, every time we got down to negotiations there was that stumbling block,” Browne said. “We decided to take a look at it and said yah we'll drop it in the interest of pro- moting better relations.” Browne said Celgar is attempting to work out schedules to help it deal with overtime hours it expects to incur once the mill expansion is complete. He said dropping the grievance may just help the two sides reach an agreement. “The guys have been working their damnedest,” Browne said. “We didn’t need this in our ways.” Browne said dropping the grievance will save both sides some $30,000 to $50,000 in legal bills and travel expenditures “And that’s just a guess,” he said. Browne said union-management co-operation is crucial to Celgar’s operations. He said the removal of the Stage 1 griev- ance was done in the interest of overcoming past differences. “We don’t think it’s going to help solve everything, but we do think it’s one step in the process of developing better rela- tions. Currently, there is only one major outstanding dispute be- tween PPWC Local 1 and Celgar. That dates back one year when the union filed a grievance following the dismissal of one of its members. “We're hoping to wipe the slate clean,” Browne said. “It’s a new year and we're hoping to build better relations at Celgar.” Babaeff said Celgar’s co-operation is encouraging. “I think could be a step in the right direction,” he said. “At least, I’m optimistic and Id like to think that way.” FEDERAL NEW DEMOCRATS LAUNCH ANTI-NAFTA CAMPAIGN, PAGE 3