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We'll refund the unused spend at portion of your subscription. Your satisfactionis participating guaranteed. Period. businesses. Every week we'll be publishing photos of ive vehicles with the Shop Local license plate. If you see your vehicle, drop by to pick up your Casbucks! OFFER ENDS MARCH 6! Absolutely, positively THE BEST. coverage of local news! CASTLEGAR Enter your no-risk subscription to The Castlegar News by calling us today. We'll rush your Super Savings booklet and your “Shop Local" license plate, and we'll send you 102 issues of The News. 365-7266 Your Super Savings Bookiet entities you to savings at the following Restaurant © Party's R Us © KelPrint ¢ Kootenay Klothes Kloset ¢ J.J.’s © Columbia Saw e Castlegar Bicycle & Sport Shop ¢ Cut 'n'Loose {oo 2 “ % z vA eet ZAEE Loa Wednesday February 12, 1992 ESS 715¢ 60SECONDS @ OUR PEOPLE Prison life-is tough, really tough. Monday, prison life came crashing home for News editor Scott David Harrison as he found himself locked up with some of Castlegar’s roughest and toughest cus- tomers, all in the name of char- a page 9 le LOCAL SPORTS | The Selkirk College Saints men’s volleyball team went a long way to atoning for last se- mester’s sins at a tournament here last weekend. But the club still has work to do in its run for a record fourth straight provincial championship: page 15 |e WORK PLACE Pulling up stakes in Pentic- ton four years ago, Gerry Hoodicooff looked east and headed home to Castlegar. Since then, the fitness parlour he opened has undergone three: expansions, making. him a happy man. page 19 Farside Harrison Our People After Hours Local Sports Work Place Action Ads TV Listings HAVIN’ A BALL Selkirk College Saints power-hitter Darren Ettles pr oves he can play defence too during a tournament at Selkirk last weekend. Ettles and the Saints swept three games at the tourney and are back in the hunt for a playoff spot. See story, page 15. oe News photo by Ed Mills i Community throws support behind Pope and Talbot bid Scott David Harrison EDITOR Score one for Castlegar. At a two-hour public hearing Tues- day, Castlegar may have ensured the survival of its forest industry thanks to an outpouring of emotion. Led by Mayor Audrey Moore and un- employed mill workers, a five-MLA com- mission studying Pope and Talbot’s pro- posed purchase of Westar Timbers’ local operations was asked to remember what Castlegar and wood have in common. The answer to that was plenty. “This is an all or nothing thing for our community,” Moore told the commission. “Either the transfer goes through as agreed to by Pope and Talbot and West- ar or there is nothing. That is not accept- able to this community.” : f : Moore,one of 10 scheduled speakers to argue for the swift sale and transfer of the Castlegar sawmill and the southern por- tion of Tree Farm Licence No. 23, said the community has been devastated by the closure of Westar. She urged the commis- sion to reopen the mill “for the sake of our families.” Tuesday’s hearing was the first of four being scheduled across the Kootenays. The hearings continue today in Nakusp, Thursday in Revelstoke and Friday in Sicamous. Some 400 people crammed into the Castlegar and District. Community Complex to throw their overwhelming support behind Pope and Talbot bid to Castlegar unites on transfer buyout financially-floundering ailing Westar. That large crowd had local MLA and commission member Ed Conroy beam- ing with optimism: “I’m really, really pleased to see what happened here tonight,” Conroy said, looking across the jam-packed room. “I warned the other members of the panel that this was going to happen, but I don’t think they believed me.’ Conroy said the large turnout would make it difficult for Forest Minister Dan Miller to reject Pope and Talbot’s $22 mil- lion U.S. offer. “It’s looking good for Castlegar,” he said,“but we have to remember that this is just the first night and there are three more hearings to go.” : please see CASTLEGAR page 5 5h ot Ceol ie fr i eae Z. Pi Pike. Cs