Castlegar News February 12, 1986 Goan Point |e mill el Ditiiitiititiativiitit Hote Bennett shuffles same deck THE C.P. po 12 NOON - 2M. See ote Monday TUESDAY NIGHT — POOL TO TOURNAMENT Prises ter Top Three Places 1895 RESTAURANT — Ph. 368- pag Open + Saturday — 9 a.m. - 2:30 p. Featuring SALAD BAR (Inc. Soup ert) 53.95 WE ALSO CATER TO BANQUETS & COCKTAIL By P. VICTORIA (CP) — priorities. Premier Bal Bill Bennett kept all the controversial ministers in his cabinet but respon- sibilities in 11 ministries in a major shuffle Tuesday he said would reflect the British Columbia government's new Opposition Leader Bob Skelly said the shuffle was not “Certainly I have premier said when asked prenng tf) y-sen “They understand that from time to time they won't efijoy all the news that's written or the way they are portrayed in the news. That's one of the penalties politicians pay. “But these are good. people,” Bennett said. in 1979 and re-elected in 1983, returned as minister Vancouver an international financial centre. Dunlop takes seniors on ‘trip’ At the Jan. 23 social meet- est in travel, photography and geology. Recently, she went on a cruise up the B.C. coast to Juneau and Skagway, Alas ka, and local seniors travelled with her by means of her Seniors stopped at Juneau, Alaska’s capital and acces. sible only by sea and air. They sailed up the Lynn Canal to Skagway, which was the jumping off place to the Yukon goldfields. They went call the time when Sitka was called New Archangel and was the capital of Russian America. This completed the north- ern cruise. Next Helen took seniors on a short trip to the on the famous Chilkot Pass of the old buildings and foot of Mt. Ranier where they and White Pass railway, by St. Michael's Cathedral re- saw the marks of past lava beautiful slides of the moun. tains and glaciers on the way. PARTIES FOR GROUPS OF 15 TO 120. onus to restore credibility in the Social Credit Eleven ministers were sworn in, among them three » Feeently rocked by the well Socred hers filling from the of probleme of several cabinet ministers involving women or three incumbents. ey PORTRAITS personal investments. Veterans Jim Chabot, Harvey Shrosder and Don logue pet Ld “It's a desperate move by a premier under heavy Phillips stepped down and will not seek re-election in the pressure to give a new image toa tired old government,” the next provincial election. NDP leader said. Backbenchers Russ Fraser, Jack Kempf and Elwood SPECIAL OFFER FROM VOGUE Bennett insisted the shuffle was a “political ‘coon Veitch were ‘brought in. WITH EVERY PURCHASE AT VOGUE that hi this gi ‘s new Russ Fraser, 51, who heads the new ministry of Receive | Set of Extra Prints 2 00 consultation and public involvement in tlnniins post-secondary education, is an engineer elected in 1963 Or 1-6"x7" enlargement for : e Gxtve The shuffle heralded the return of Tom Waterland as from South Vancouver. He takes over responsibilities for WE ALSO RESTORE OLD BLACK AND WHITE PHOTOS. agriculture minister following a brief stint as a backbencher. colleges — formerly under the Education Ministry — and ir =m “I'm sure it's going to be a very challenging portfolio,” he universities, previously under the Ministry of Universities, Screening wove | <7 1106 ed said. Science and Communications. Sane eearcr manweesiow! Ve ree Waterland resigned last month as forests minister over “The consolidation of the he, eollegee and universities a conflict of interest for investing $20,000 in a pulp makes sense to me,” Fraser said. partnership. He has since sold the investment. TWO AREAS 888- ROO F Jim Nielsen, the former health minister left with facial Pat McGeer, who ph spas Phillips as minister of sears from a beating by the estranged husband of a woman international trade investment, will retain his Congratulations > the munigement of the he was visiting, was named minister of human resources in responsibilities over Pics tee communications. “It'll be an 5p! in the su Pp charge of welfare and social services. opportunity to tie these two activities together,” he said. of their new high performance root Stephen Rogers, the former energy minister being Jack Kempf, 50, who has held the Omineca riding since J.P. Jensen Consultant Ltd. provided the d for the th of his req 1975, was sworn in as minister of lands, parks and housing. necessory roof evaluation, reroot specification, of personal investments, is the new minister of health. (nce known as an outspoken maverick, Kempf has toned end on-site quality control. KEEP JOBS down his image in recent months and said he is “pleased to As Roofing Consultants and inspectors, we Finance Minister Hugh Curtis and Industry Ministe? no end” by the appointment. provide a third Bob McClelland kept their jobs. Curtis has threatened to sue Kempfss predecessor, Tony Brummet, moved to become party service to solve | your roofing problems anyone who suggests there is conflict of interest in his minister of energy, mifés and petroleum resources. “I've PPO! investment in BC Rail, and McClelland was called as a had an interest in it for some time,” Brummet said. Be ee me aero defence witness in a prostitution-related trial last Elwood Veitch, 46, the Burnaby-Willingdon member WE WILL HAVE A REPRESENTATIVE IN THE CASTLEGAR AREA APPROXIMATELY February 17, 1986 May we be of service? Regular or Diet 355 ml Tins Canada Grade A Beet $978 TOM WATERLAND . back in cabinet Jim Hewitt, the new minister of education, said he wants consultation with school boards and the public. Former education minister Jack Heinrich, a hard-work- ing lawyer, is British Columbia's new forests minister. Grace McCarthy is the new provincial secretary, succeeding Chabot as minister in charge of the civil service. November. who served briefly as tourism minister before he was Chabot to quit Safeway Sandwich Meat Thin Sliced Assorted. 70 g Pkg. Radishes or Green Onions ved continuously since then. © Return? Are your investments really working? 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Bus.: 354-4834 * Res: 352-1807 Gestetner Inc.| ‘86 Equipment Show at the Fireside Inn Thurs., Fri., Feb. 13, 14 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Axel Hasenkox, Copying and Duplicating Consultant will be on hand. * photocopiers * binders * duplicators * cutters * laminators * collators * offset © typesetting equipment * overheads © decollators * shredders © plate makers © bursters * folders Your service centre for major appliances Fj & Heating Ltd. SHOW OF SUPPORT . . . Castlegar Rebels tan Tim Pretty urges on the hockey team as it began its playott series this week against the Grand Forks Border Bruins. ConttewsPhoto by Doug Hervey U.S. report criticizes B.C. forestry practices SEATTLE (AP) — The Pacific Northwest timber in- dustry’s future lies at least partly in its seedlings, a U.S. Forest Service report indi- cates. Competing regions, nota- bly the southeastern United States and British Columbia, generally do not replant after logging, and will lose ground in the future to the North west, where replanting is standard practice, says the report. “The Pacific Northwest .Egono Spots You can save up to 80% on the cost of this ad! 365-5210 Castlegar Plumbing & Heating Ltd. - COUPON: COUPON-COUPON: - Present this coupon to our service man and save $ OFF 5 ON THE Ist HR. of SERVICE a plumbing = Castleger Plumbing Coupon Expires Feb. 19 ‘NOdnod-Nodnos can again become the nation’s dominant supplier of lumber and plywood,” it says. Canada has tended to fol- low a policy of extraction — of treating timber in many cases like a mineral to be mined rather than a crop to be farmed, the report says. The South has long been touted as an example of suc- cessful tree farming, and economists as recently as 1983 rejected that harvests from that region would in- crease 50 per cent by the year 2000. But a study by Forest Ser- vice economist Con Schallau of the Pacific Northwest Re- Station in Corvallis, Ore. Wilbur Maki of the Univgsity of Minnesota says the of tree growth in the South leveled off in the late 1970s. “Timber removals are be- ginning to rise above net an- nual growth for the first time in decades,” the study says. Schallau’s study says ag- gressive harvesting in Brit- ish Columbia will dull com petition from the north. “The Canadian forests are being liquidated” he says. “Regeneration is not tak- ing place. The production of paper products as well as lumber and wood products could be drastically curtailed in the near future.” Unless British Columbia replants its big backlog of cutover land, the study says, its annual cut may fall by half to 1.75 billion cubic feet from 3.5 billion cubic feet. British Columbia now ex- ports 56 per cent of its har- vest to the United States. Schallau had no estimate of when the British Columbia harvest would decrease. Alan Chambers, professor of for- est management at the Uni- versity of British Columbia, said in a telephone interview the decrease would come over the next 25 years. VICTORIA (CP) — cial for a long time, after 23 years in the B.C. legislature. He entered the house as member of the legislature for Columbia River in the 1963 general election and has ser- New cabinet lineup VICTORIA (CP) Bill Bennett, premier Grace McCarthy, pro vincial secretary and gov- ernment services Brian Smith, general Jack Kempf, parks and housing Hugh Curtis, finance Tom Waterland, agricul- ture Elwood Veitch, consu- attorney lands, Alex Fraser, highways Austin Pelton, environ- tour- “There's nothing specific that triggered it,” Chabot said. “I just felt it was time to make the announcement now. There will be an elec- tion in the next 18 months and I thought it best to give those who might try to suc- ceed me an opportunity to make their plans.” As one of the legislature's longest serving members, Chabot is eligible for a pen- sion of about $60,000 a year. Chabot served as labor minister in W.A.C. Bennett's last government. He was named minister of mines by Premier Bill Bennett in 1976, thinister of lands, parks and housing in 1978, and provin cial secretary and minister of government services in 1982. Chabot, originally from JM CHABOT. leaving politics. Quebec, was a Canadian Pacifie Railway agent in In- vermere before he entered politics. Harcourt seeks NDP nomination VANCOUVER (CP) — Mayor Mike Harcourt hopes to run for the New Demo cratic Party in the next pro- vincial election. The decision follows an an. nouncement by Gary Lauk. NDP member for Vancouver Centre, that he will not seek re-election. New Democrat Emery Barnes holds the other seat in the two-seat riding. Harcourt, in a statement to be officially released today, said the state of the British Columbia economy and the recent controversy surround- ing the provincial cabinet were deciding factors in his decision to seek the nomin- ation. A nominating meeting is scheduled for March 28. Harcourt, 43, has been mayor of Vancouver since 1980, when he upset incum. bent Jack Voirich. He was first elected alderman in 1972. Meanwhile, veteran Ald. Harry Rankin said he will run for mayor. Gas lobby forms VANCOUVER (CP) — A coalition of business asso ciations has been formed to pe dich a campaign against in. creased gasoline taxes. The Gasoline Tax Coalition governmental relations a teday to lobby federal and provincial politicians with bumper stick ers, form letters and valen tines. Hansen believes Canada's higher gas tax has discour- aged tourism from the United States, and “if it were not for the low exchange rate, the most recent tax in- crease would have been a crippling blow to our (tour. ism) industry.” Time: 10:00 a.m Place: Selkirk College Saturdays self FIRST BUSINESS SEMINAR FEB. 14, 15 & MAR. 1/86 FOUNDATION . Developing a Marketing Plan for Your Small Business Instructor: Doug Glover, B.Comm.., Director, Enterprise DevelopmentCentre - 4:00 p.m. Feb. 14, 15 & Mar. 1/86 Friday, Monashee Wing, Room 14-24, Faculty Lounge MARKETING SEMINAR — Developing a Marketing Plan for a small business which consists of information gathering procedures in preparing the plan it- Seminar participants will increase their knowl marketing skills and market research, increase Personal attitudes to their business, and understand how the marketing and their purposes of ir analytical skills and caused our customers CORRECTION — FLYER, FEB. a 16 Lucerne Skim Milk Y 750 g Tub should have read $1 49 not 746. Sorry for any inconvenience this may have People’s Insulation Services *500 can CONTINUES 79° Pacific Evaporated Milk 385 mL Tin 63° Lucerne Skim Milk Yogourt 750 g Tub $149 jay — Heart-Shaped Valentine Cake OPEN SUNDAYS 10 a.m.-5. p.m ADVERTISED SPECIALS THIS WEEK IN EFFECT UNTIL SUNDAY, 5 P.M. Snow Star Ice Cream Assorted Flavours 4 Litre Plastic Pail $379 Edwards Gourmet Coffee Assorted Grinds 450 gTin $349 S paps ugh Sunday, Feb. 16 ir s Castlega Safeway Imperial Margarine 1.36 kg. Package $938 Kellogg’s Corn Flakes Cereal 675 g box $198 Mexican grown. by the bunch. Oranges New crop. Size 138. California Grown. Unpastuerized. Canada No. 1 Grade 15 kg $2995 A.B.C. Laundry Detergent 48 4 kg box $6 Purex Bathroom Tissue Assorted 8 Roll Pkg. +2" considerations fit into a total business plan. Fee: $200. Free to businesses supporting the Selkirk College Foundation's Card Campaign To Register: Telephone Selkirk College Enterprise Development Centre — Castlegar 365-5886 by noon, Thursday, February 13, 1986. Lun- ch included SAFEWAY CANADA SAFEWAY LIMIT — -NOdNO3- ‘NOdNOI -NOdNOI 4 Call 365-3388