2 Se keneermeneneninertaettan tein eataateadteeareninsamanttestoasten EARN BONUS AIR MILES™ Earn 25 Bonus AIR MILES™ All Week At Safeway! This Week at Safeway you can earn 25 Bonus AIR MILES™ with every $100.00 purchase fencing Prescription and tobacco products). That's 25 extra AIR MILES™ over and above the miles you'd normally earn at Safeway! ay! Shop Safeway and see your AIR MILES™ add up fast._ If you're not yet an AIR MILES™ member, join today! It's free. ! wiz. Just call APmg >) 1-800-854-8964 id | and remember > as y one AIR MILES™ 1 ye equals one actual ~~ mile of travel. N € OCEANS TUNA any 4 Dish. in. ea 3.06/ kg READY 10 EAT PRAWNS 0 Centre Cut. your — FOR le Loin. Convenience. Selected Flavours. 2 litre Plus Deposit. Wednesday, November 18, 1992 @ Perfect for Y ad Advertised prices in effect at your Castlegar Safeway. Quantity rights reserved. Some items may not be exactly as shown. Fresh. Regul Thawed for resh. Regular POINSETTIAS SAFEWAY SERVING THE CROSSROADS OF THE KOOTENAYS SINCE 1947 4gafa4, VYUT Variable cloud Saturday through Monday with a chance of showers. @ OUR PEOPLE Wednesday marked a day of mourning for Canadians from coast-to-coast. And Castlegar residents were, no different as they paraded through the streets to remem- ber war veterans. page 9 With 19 points already, the Castlegar Rebels are kilome- tres ahead of the pace they set last year, when they finished with 24 points, and coach Gar- ry Sauer thinks he know why. page 12 Castlegar has a federal voice through Mayor Audrey Moore. As an executive mem- ber of the Federation of Cana- dian Municipalities, she says her association with the group has paid off in spades. page 15 Farside Norman Letters Our People Crossword Local Sports Work Place Action Ads Wheels ’92 CASTLEGAR Saturday November 14, 1992 News photo by Corinne Jackson Some 300 war veterans and civilians gathered at a Remembrance Day ceremony in Kinsmen Park Wednesday to honor the comrades and loved ones who never came home. Coalition to fig Neil Rachynski NEWS REPORTER Ed Conroy is being armed by Columbia River, water users. Castlegar and District Development Board executive di- rector Harry Stan is spearheading a committee that he said will be a “co-ordinated effort”.to have water level concerns heard in Victoria. “Tt, will give a common voice in order to give the (Rossland- Trail) MLA some ammunition,” Stan said. With both barrels loaded, Conroy will be sufficiently armed to give his input to various cabinet members in Victoria, Stan said. “Right now all he’s getting is individuals approaching him,” Stan said. “He needs a united voice.” Stan said the committee, still in its infancy, will include wa- ter users on the Columbia River from Nakusp and Revelstoke to Trail. Stan said the development board got involved “because it impacts us all. “There's a great need for (the committee) but unfortunate- ly it’s going to need some funding to make it happen.” Speaking from Victoria Thursday, Conroy said he hoped to know the following day if that money would come through. “No guarantees,” Conroy said. “Quite frankly, people aren't sure what direction we’re supposed to be taking, but we’re ht water woes starting to nail down the parameters.” During the summer months water users, such as the two marinas at Syringa Park, were dogged by fluctuating water levels on the Arrow Lakes Reservoir. Both marina operators blamed B.C. Hydro for damaging the season’s tourist trade. Those concerns still exist. Syringa Park Marina co-owner Amber Smith said the Arrow Lakes Reservoir “has come up a little bit. But we're still concerned the lake is going to freeze over. We rely on the current to keep it moving and from freez- ing over.” Reflecting on the past season, Smith said, “this happened all over, it wasn’t just in our area. “It’s because of the spring run-off — at least that’s what they tell us,” Smith said. “I'm getting kind of, skeptical of what the government tells us. It would help us if they told us what they were going to do in advance.” Downstream from the Hugh Keenleyside Dam, the Castle- gar and District Heritage Society complained that high flows damaged the causeway at Zuckerberg Island. Stan said community leaders and concerned citizens along the Columbia River will be sought for input. In fact, he said the whole point of the committee is to gather information for Conroy’s use. “It gives it a lot more credibility,” Stan said. Once Conroy responds to the development board, Stan said he will have a clearer indication what direction the commit- tee should take and what criteria it must fulfill. SOCRED LEADER SAYS CONROY’S COMMENTS DON’T HOLD WATER, PAGE 3