ca Castlégar News ‘ February 7, 1990 4 JvackL, Parkin Bus. 365-6664 Res. 365-2694 ri Licensed wah Mutual Lite of Canada/Mutual Invesico Ine of The Mutual Group. **Let me help you with your financial needs. Financial Planning Life Insurance Disability income Annuities and RRIFs RASPs GICs and Saving Plans Investment Funds RESPs Employee Benefits Ri The Mutual Group Facing Tomorrow Together 1 WISH to expr great number thanks to a to my family tor their un: falling support ond above all I'm gratetul to my loving wite who comforted me ery single day. HARVEY JACK. 1 in. Memoriam CANADIAN DIABETES ASSOCIATION in Memoriam Donations, Box 1228 Rossland, B.C. VOG 1YO 104 73 CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY *— In { and Store Fi AUCTION CONSIGNMENT SALE Russell Auction House 2061 Hwy. 3A Thrums Sunday, February 11 1 p.m. Sharp! * Large Book Collection from Tony Flanagan Estate * C B y * Antique items USSELL UCTION CALL from tt's Mens Wear * Barber Chair * Household Items SK ree sed Le OR Od 3292, Castlegar, 365-5167 19/5 Legals NOTICE OF SALE OF MOTOR VEHICLE PURSUANT TO REPAIRER’S LIEN ACT WHEREAS Melvin Joseph Mortimer is indebted to i Ser th of Safety is no accident so PLAYSAFE! th WHEREAS a regional district may by bylaw establish a local service under the A copy of Bylaw No. 789 follows: REGIONAL DISTRICT OF CENTRAL KOOTENAY BYLAW NO. 789 A bylaw to establish a local service within Elec- toral Areas | and J to provide financial aid to an arganization responsible for the operation and maintenance of a public library service. provisions of part 24 of the Municipal Act; AND WHEREAS the Regional Board of the Regional District of Central Kootenay wishes to establish a local service for the purpose of providing financial aid to an organization responsible for the operation and maintenance of a public library service within the City of Castlegar and Electoral Areas | and J. AND WHEREAS the Regional Board of the Regional District of Central Kootenay has published notice under Section 797(2) of the Municipal Act that it intends to establish the local service within Electoral Areas | and J; AND WHEREAS no counter petitions were received in response to the notice published under Section 797(2) of the Municipal Act; NOW THEREFORE, THE REGIONAL BOARD OF THE REGIONAL DISTRICT OF CEN- TRAL KOOTENAY IN OPEN MEETING ASSEMBLED ENACTS AS FOLLOWS: 1. The Regional District hereby establishes a local service for the purpose of providing financial aid to an organization responsible for the operation and maintenance of a public library service. The boundaries of the local service area, as established above, include Elec- toral Areas | and J which shall be the participating areas for the service and shall be known as “Electoral Areas | and J Library Financial Aid Service.” . The maximum amount that may be contributed annually as financial aid for the service shall be Twenty-Two Thousand ($22,000.00) Dollars which does not exceed more than the equivalent of $.50/$1,000 of net taxable value of land and improvements included in the service area. The annual financial aid shall be apportioned 40% to Electoral Area | and 60% to Electoral Area J. The annual financial aid costs for this local service shall be recovered by the requisition of money under Section 809.1 of the Municipal Act to be collected by a property value tax apportioned by the method set out in Section 808(2) of the Municipal Act. This Bylaw may be cited as “Electoral Areas | and J Library Financial Aid Ser- vice Bylaw No. 789, 1990." READ A FIRST TIME THIS 27th day of January, 1990. READ A SECOND TIME this 27th day of January, 1990. The electors within Electoral Areas | and J may petition against the adoption of Bylaw No. 789 by signing a counter-petition. Counter-peti from the Regional District of Central Kootenay if requested in writing. Bylaw No. 789 will not be adopted if more than 5% of the electors counter-petition against the adoption of the Bylaw within 30 days after the last publication of this notice. This is the second and last publication of this notice. For the purpose of calculating the percentage of electors in Electoral Areas | and J, the Regional District Board has estimated 3510 as the total number of electors in the participating area. B.B. BALDIGARA, Secretar Regional District of Central Kootenay 601 Vernon Street Nelson, B.C. VIL 4E9 REGIONAL DISTRICT OF CENTRAL KOOTENAY PUBLIC NOTICE Please take notice that the Regional District of Central Kootenay proposes to adopt Bylaw No. 789 which will authorize the establishment of a local service aréa within the District with participants being Electoral Areas | and J. Bylaw No. 789 authorizes a maximum tax levy of $8,800 in Electoral Area | and $13,200 in Electoral Area J to be contributed as financial aid to an organization responsible for the operation and maintenance of'a public library service within the City of Castlegar and Electoral Areas | and J. jons may be obtained 7 CP News Analysis By WARREN CARAGATA MOSCOW (CP) — For Mik- hail Gorbachev, the U.S. offer of deep cuts in forces ope and who is trying desperat- ely to remake his own ponder- ous, unruly country. ry » it is in 's Gorbachev's year off to miserable start’ Economic problems increase ethnic tensions. Open warfare between ethnic groups exacts an in Europe has been about the only bright spot in an otherwise miserable start to the year. The proposal by President George Bush to reduce U.S, and Soviet forces came only a few days after Gorbachev publicly denied a report by a U.S. tele- vision network that he was con- sidering resigning as head of the Communist Party. The denial was rare in itself but was rare still was that it was reported by the domestic service of the official Tass news agency. Gorbachev is party leader, a post considered from’ Stalin’s days to be-the centre of power. He is also i to propagate such things,’’ Gorbachev said. Oleg Bitov, a columnist for the liberal Literaturnaya Gazeta, said in an interview that rumors about Gorbachev's resignation NALYSIS or downfall ‘‘are a perfect exam- ple of wishful thinking’’ by con- servatives opposed to Gorba- chev's efforts. The rumors began to circulate in advance of a meeting of the party's Central’ Committee on Monday and Tuesday. As the body that can elect members of the governing Politburo, which G h to a sometimes feisty parlia- ment, which he has tried to invest with new authority at the expense of the party machine. “All this is groundless,"’ Gor- bachev said of the report, which sent stock markets down as investors contemplated a future without the Soviet leader, who has helped remake Eastern Eur- heads as general sec- retary, its meetings of late have generated speculation that Gor- bachev’s opponents would final- ly bring him to heel. Almost fone of the p ic penalty, as is the case in Armenia where industgial pro- duction has been brought to a virtual standstill by a rail block- ade of Armenian freight in neighboring Azerbaijan. Any leader in any country con- fronted with such problems would be politically wounded, perhaps fatally. Bit it is a mark — so far — of Gorbachev's poli- tical skill that he has managed to hang on and even cement. his power in the midst of such mounting disorder. Part of the answer is that most people understand that change is necessary. Matveyev said even conservatives, who despise much of what Gorbachev is try- ing to do, are not prepared to unseat him. Politics is topsy-turvy these days in the Soviet Union. Most conservatives are from the left wing who hanker for old-fashion- can be quickly or easily solved. Many have been years in the ing or have been ignored and hidden from view. Many of ‘them feed on each other. ed i by such Gorbachev innovations as joint ventures with western capi- talists, like the one that-brought McDonald’s hamburgers to Moscow. Teachers scrambling By MARK BASTIEN The Canadian Press When Joan De Bardeleben walks into her classroom at Montreal's McGill University to teach her Soviet politics course these days, Invitation _ to Tender Tailrace excavation stage Il, Revelstoke Documents to be available from this office from 22 Jan. 1 upon prepayment, of $20 plus $1.20 tax for the first copy and $10 plus $.60 tox for each additional copy. (Non- refundable). Site visit to be held on 4 Feb Reference: Q0-3554 Closing Date: 14 Feb. 1990 Details available from office of B.C Hydro Purchasing Agent, 1265 Howe Street, Suite 200, Vancouver, B.C V6Z 2G8; 663-2577 or 663-2560 Sealed tenders clearly marked with reference number will be received in Room 226, address as above, until 11:00 a.m. on above closing da BGhydro & sometimes she’s not quite sure what she’s going to say. Things are changing so quickly in the once stodgy world of Soviet com- munism that like her colleagues in history and politics faculties across Canada, she faces a daily struggle to keep up. “In a way, this is the worst possible area toteach in at this time,’’ De Bar- deleben says. “Even the most recent textbooks are already out of date and it's dif- ficult just to get current (scholarly) journal articles.” How do you teach a subject and analyse issues that become more. complex, intriguing and elusive each day? Sovietologists and specialists in East European affairs at Canadian universities are doing their homework to come up with an answer. Some have tossed textbooks out the window and now rely on newspaper and magazine articles. Others spend hours on the phone gathering infor- mation from colleagues who recently visited the east bloc. SOME USE HUNCH Still others use a combination of history and hunches to explain the upheaval in the area to their students. “Where it becomes difficult is when we start doing analysis on the run,’ says David Jones, director of the Russian Microproject research REGIONAL DISTRICT OF 13, 1990 at 7:00 p.m toral Area ‘J No. 767, 1989 minimum lot size of two hectares ds subject property nan Planning Department Office, Regional District of Centr 601 Vernon Street, Nelson, B.C. Inclusive; and ot Castlegar City Hall Cad mbie Avenue between the hours 8. BALDIGARA Regional District of Central Kootenay NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE is hereby given thot a Public Hearing will be held on Tuesday, February at the Robson Community Hall, Roson, B.C. to receive presentations from all persons who deem it in their interest to make represen tations regarding a proposed amendment to Zoning Bylaw No. 422. 1984, Elec The intent of proposed Bylaw No. 767, 1989 is to amend Zoning Bylaw No. 422 1984, by: (1) adding a new zone, RURAL TWO FAMILY and a residential di ing unit per two hectares of lot area; and (2) rezoning Lot 130, District Lot ‘cotenay District, Plan 656A, situated at Cayuse i, map below) from RURAL TWO FAMILY FAMILY — D-3A, R2D-3A to permit the construction of a second cabin on the Copies of the aforementioned proposed bylaw may be inspected at between the hours of 8:30 «.m, te 12:00 noon, and 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. dolly except Saturdays, Sundays end holidays, from February 6 to 13, 1990 both , B.C. ‘of 8:30 a.m. 10 4:30 p.m. daily days. and holidays, trom February 6 to 13, 1990, both inclusive. DATED ot Nelson, 8.C., this 26th day of January 1990 CENTRAL KOOTENAY ~ D-3A, R2D-3A having o ity provision of one Creek, Arrow Lake (see —D-3, R2D-3 to RURAL TWO except Seturdeys, Sun- unit at Halifax. “Sometimes we have to explain complex situations that have only happened the day before,’’ Jones says. The microproject is a storehouse of Soviet research material — including such arcane items as testimony at Russian courts martial — available to libraries and.scholars. Professors at the Institute of Soviet and East European Studies at Ot- tawa’s Carleton University use Moscow-based information of another type to help teach their students. “We get about 40 Soviet newspapers and we also have live Soviet TV,"’ institute director Larry Black says. ‘‘We spent this morning watching Gorbachev in Lithuania."’ While timely textbooks on Soviet issues are not available, he says, the loosening of political strictures in East Europe has given professors easier ac- cess to government documents. Black is currently editing the 1989 edition of USSR documents Annual, a 440-page collection of political speeches, new laws, newspaper edi- torials and scholarly writing pub- lished by Carleton each year. Dalhousie University in Companions Column The Companions column in our Classitied Ads section is tor the guy or gal who has never met the right person, or who has lost their partner through divorce or death There are many men and women right here in the West Kootenay Fegion. singles of all ages, from_all es of backgrounds, who would to meet someone tor a meaningful relationship or marriage Bringing such people together is what this column is all about The cost is only $12 for three inser trons, for up to 50 words (additional words 25¢ each) Replies may go directly to you, or you can use our box number tor only $3 extra and we'll torward replies to you Writers are encouraged to includ @ second envelope to guorant although the paper w: maintain strict confidentiality if the e only. DO NOT REPLY TO THEM: SINGLE 51-year-old divorced male with excellent job would like to meet sincere (preterably slim) female trom Nelson-Castlegar-Trail area who is interested in exploring possible long. term relationship. NvS. My hobbies include camping, exploring. fly fishing, gardening, good music, wat. ching TV and relaxing with a good triend. Reply to: Castlegar News Box 3007-PP, Castlegar, B.C. V 3H4 LATE 40's lady would like to-meet a gentleman (age 45.55) tor com. Panionship who shares some or all of my interests. S/D, N/S. Enjoy sports music, good conversation, hiking and camping. A good sense of humor would be a big plus. Reply to Castlegar News, Box 3007-Xx Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3H4 42 YEAR old male looking tor on at tractive female. age between 30-40. tor sharing togetherness. friendship ‘and romantic evenings. My interests are fishing, travelling, walking and dancing. Send photo and phone number please. Reply to: Castlegar News, Box 3007-YY. Castlegar, 8.C VIN 3H4 SENIOR LADY would like senior live in companion. Reply to: Castlegar News, Box 3007-MM, Castlegar, 8.C VIN 3H4 Castlegar News 197 Columbia Avénue Phone 365-2212 SETGE] | BHEES| RRSREER) S¥a01 | Gosesnaee: saegereaes renee, / : Dy, February 7,.1990 C ‘astlégar News cs By DEAN BEEBY ‘The Canadian Press A note of anger creeps into Tom Delaney's Irish brogue as he describes the financial mess of an older couple who recently came to him for advice. The pair, in their 60s, had opened a self-direct- ed registered retirement savings plan, or RRSP, on the advice of a stockbroker and had loaded it with stock-based mutual funds. Soon share prices — and the value of their life savings — began to plummet. “| was livid. Every nickel this particular couple had was in mutual funds, and it was a dreadful situation,”’ said Delaney, a financial adviser and author of The Delaney Report on RRSPs. For the average Canadian, the easy decision is whether to buy an RRSP. The experts recommended RRSPs as one of the last great tax shelters, an ideal way to defer taxes to a time when income — and therefore income tax — will be low, normally at retirement. The tough decision is what to buy. The explosion of RRSP products in the last decade means consumers face not only a dizzying variety of investment opportunities but also more traps. SOME GUIDELINES Many financial advisers lay down some fun- damental guidelines — at least three of which Delaney’s couple did not follow. — Get unbiased advice. an I-fund who live off commissions are likely to recommend stock-based investments, which may or may not be Free RRSP may be a firm’s way to get your name for a hard-sell later. Even at banks these days, ‘‘every branch is a profit centre, and the performance of the branch and the manager is measured in terms of the bottom line,"” says Delaney. “*You’re as likely to get a pitch, especially in major centres, to buy some of their more speculative investments.” Get a second opinion, from friends, from personal-finance books and columns, or from fee-for-service counsellors with no financial stake in your choice. HANDLING EQUITIES — Consider keeping equities outside the RRSP. Dividends and capital gains from stocks already get tax breaks, so putting stocks inside a sheltered RRSP wastes a tax-saving opportunity. Ideally, interest-bearing investments such as term deposits or treasury bills should be held inside the plan while ‘equity mutual funds and stocks are left outside. ““The flaw in that reasoning is that many people only have one form of portfolio investment, and that is an RRSP,"’ cautions Gordon Pape, a personal- finance expert and author of Gordon Pape’s 1990 Guide to RRSPs. ; ; “Equities over the long term . . . will provide you with a much better rate of return than any other form of investment," Pape says. ‘Experts offer RRSP guidelines “So if you have only one investment portfolio and it’s your RRSP, then you must have equities in it’’ to get the extra return. — Choose the right asset mix. Most financial advisers tell older RRSP inves- tors to cut back on stocks and boost secure invest- ments such as bonds and guaranteed investment certificates. All plans should also have some highly liquid investments, such as Canada Savings Bonds or treasury bills, Pape advises. Not only are these a good emergency fund; you also have money to invest should a high-yield opportunity suddenly arise. Older plan holders should also consider hanging on to a few stock-based investments, Pape adds, because as life expectancy increases, inflation will seriously erode income from more secure invest- ments. Stock growth can help you win the inflation game. BE CDIC SAFE — Consider carefully the financial institution. Don’t be blinded by consumer-protection plans, which cover RRSPs offered by banks, trusts, brokerage houses and — as of Jan. 29 — most life insurance companies. The federal Canada Deposit Insurance Corp., for instance, pays depositors up to $60,000 for certain investments should a bank or trust company go into receivership. But all such plans have limits and exclusions; the CDIC does not cover term deposits for periods security of the longer than five years, for example. Many financial advisers warn that you could be selling yourself short by seeking out only those i fully p d by P lans. eeawat the same time, if a good deal comes along but is offered by an institution with no track record, you might want to limit the investment so that it is fully under the $60,000 CDIC maximum. ALL YOU CAN = Contribute to your limit. Those younger than 71 who had earned income in 1989 — generally, wages or salary — can currently put as much as $7,500 into an RRSP, although limits are lower for members of an employee pension plan. Put you fail te contribute before the March 1, 1990, deadline, the opportunity is forever lost. Only beginning in 1991 can missed contributions be carried forward and added to the next year’s limit. The 1989 taxation year is also the last in which all pension income — including Canada Pension Plan and Old Age Security benefits — can be rolled tax-free into your RRSP. You must make the contribution before March 1 to take advantage of this tax break. NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Resear- chers have unveiled a computer that uses light instead of electricity to process data, and they say it may beas revolutionary as the transistor which ushered in the computer age. may use more ‘‘photonic’’ componen- ts than electronic ones. “This stage says it can be done,’ said Bob Trier, technical program director for Research Consortium Inc., which studies high-performance “The next stage is to find The isp! by Bell Laboratories — which developed the transistor in 1947 — has about enough power to control the functions of an automatic dishwasher. Within a decade, “however, light- based computers could operate 1,000 times — perhaps 10,000 times — as fast as current machines, said Brian Monahan, a spokesman for Bell Labs. By the turn of the century, Monahan added, high-powered supercomputers tne corn EER. arplony AUTOMOTIVE 1507 Columbia Ave. .C. COMPUTERIZED ALIGNMENTS 2-Wheel & 4-Wheel Call 365-2955 out what can be done with this technology.”* For years, researchers have been looking at photons, the fundamental particles of light, as replacements for nm Such a shift promises confputers vastly more agile and powerful than WANT YOUR AD TO STAND OUT But don't want to pay for a B-1-G od? e Our ATTENTION GETTERS! Large ‘dom centered above the copy in your of PHONE 365-2212 New computer unveiled today’s machines. “Your only limit when it comes to those things is the speed of light,”’ said Jim Hammons, an analyst at the Sierra Group computer consulting firm. Unlike current computer chips, in- formation would pass not just from # chip's edges but also from its surface. Bell Labs physicist David Miller likened this to a city where cars sud- denly weren't limited to bridges and tunnels at rush hour, but could leap through the air. CLASSIFIED SHOWCASE This space available for: CAMPERS * MOTORCYCLES * SNOWMOBILES * TENTS * MOTOR HOMES * BOATS * SNOW BLOWERS ‘© FURNACES ® CARS * TRUCKS * DINING ROOM SUITES © CHESTERFIELDS * ETC., ETC Bring a photo, or bring the item & we'll take the picture! (Average $9.13 Each) Castlegar News PHONE 365-5210 © Full-size Spar * Double Wall Box intermittent Wipers * Dual Mirrors jologen Headlights * Cigarette Light © 2.2L Engine Shop Where You Like Cable packages touted 1990 MAZDA B2200 ’ Buy Where You Save! HULL, Que. (CP) — Cable com- should offer series of channel packages including a all-Canadian grouping. some Carleton University students told hearings into cable pricing policy panies low-cost, Tuesday. Two groups students choice between three or four packages of TV channels. f The option of creating various channel packages, or tiering as it is called by the cable industry, has been raised by a number of intervenors sin- ce the cable rate review hearings began Monday. - The commission knows the issue is subscribers a mass com- told the about having to pay for services they didn’t ask for, don’t watch and can’t receive without a converter. One person who shares those views is John Pepall, a Toronto cable sub- scriber who appeared at the hearings today. Pepall called specialty channels ‘eg CASTLEGAR 713-17th Street, Castlegar Ol. 7956 “THIS IS THE MAZDA WAY!" UNBELIEVABLE All New 1990 MAZDA 323 Hotch Back, 1.6 .F.I.. Engine 5-Speed @ NOW PLUS FREIGHT & P.D.1. munications Canadian Radio-television . and a sensitive one. haces C A that cable subscribers should have a It received scores of letters from in- dividual cable subscribers griping “compulsory pay TV”’ and chastised the CRTC for moving them from a pay tier to basic cable. PASTOR SIUARLLAURIE * 363 3278 Sunday Morning Worship 10.30 o.m ersery ren's Church provided Bible teaching tor all ages A Non-Denominational Family Church Preaching the Word of Faith! __ REE GRACE PRESBYTERIAN 2605 Columbia Ave. Morning Worship 11:30 a.m Church School 11:30. a.m 365-2438 CHURCH OF GOD 2404 Columbia Avenve Church School 9:45 a.m Pastor ira Johnson * 365-6762 FULL GOSPEL FELLOWSHIP (A.C.0.P.) Attend the Church of your choice! _——— EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH 914 Columbia Avenue 11:00 ALM. FAMILY WORSHIP SERVICE SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 a.m. Tues. 7:30 p.m. Bible Study Youth Ministries Phone: 365-2605 UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA 2224-6th Avenue 1'%4-Blocks South of Community Complex 10.a.m. Worship & Sunday School Mid-Week Activities for all ages 1 information. Regular Saturday Services Rev. Ted Bristow 365-8337 or 365-7305 Morning Worship 11 a.m Phone fo: ST. PETER LUTHERAN ‘= Fe . RECTORY T __NEW LIFE ASSEMBLY _ 602-7th Street * 365-5212 BE A PART OF OUR CARING, FRIENDLY GROWING FAMILY SUNDAY SERVICES 9:45 — A Class tor all ages 11.00 Morning Worsh 30 Evening Celebrat (Children s Church & Nursery — WEDNESDAY 7-30 Family Bible Study (Nurvery Provided — SATURDAY — 7.00 Youth Explosion OUR DESIRE IS TO SERVE YOUR NEEDS REV. RANKIN McGOUGAN ROBSON COMMUNITY MEMORIAL CHURCH Ist Sunday 7:00 p.m 2nd, 3rd, & 4th Sundays 11.a.m No Service 5th Sunday SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 1471 Columbia Ave., Trail 364-0117 Pastor Slawomir Malarek 365-7759 es CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH Below Castleaird Plaza Phone 365-631 ts ava PASTOR: BARRY WERNER + 365- __ SUNDAY SERVICES — Adult Bible Class 9 300. Morning Worship — 10:30 o.m Children s Church Ages 2! Evening Fellowship 6:30 p.m Wednesday: Home Meetings 7 p.m Thursday — Youth Bible Study 7 p.m HOM! R iE OF CASTLEGA' CHRISTIAN ACADEMY 365-7818 Office 365-3664 PASTOR GLEN BACKUS SUNDAY Sunday School 10:15 a.m Listen to the Lutheran Hour Sunday. im. on Radio CKOR LUTHERAN CHURCH -CANADA :00 a.m. 6:30 p.m. — Eveni ig Fellowship 713-4th Street Kids 1s Clubs Aged 3-Grade 6 Tuesday Nights & doy roups (Bible Study & Prayer) Vorious Week Nights Youth Nights Friday & Sundey EVERYONE WELCOME he Sh DIPS TE AOS AE AE ) We've taken the Guesswork out of Automotive Service at A.M. 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