@ A2 Saturday, September 7, 1991 LOTTERIES These are the winning lot- tery numbers for last week: LOTTO 6/49 Sept. 4 1,5, 6, 15, 20, 22 Sept. 5 Match 6: 059372, 370062, 095361 Match 5: 97724, 23443, 64397 Match 4: 4363, 4030, 1181 Match 3: 245, 404, 583 Match 2: 66, 38, 48 it. 4 Mach 6: 693929, 437971, 788391 Match 5: 67600, 29907, 44754 Match 4: 0677, 6973, 5064 Match 3: 662, 507, 380 Match 2: 14, 83, 06 Sept. 3 Match 6: 522599, 884970, 080631 Match 5: 72442, 29886, 91908 Match 4: 7010, 8404, 7783- Match 3: 744, 485, 414 Match 2: 51, 65, 13 Sept. 2 Match 6: 724527, 861524, 645584 Match 5: 21191, 74426, 99549 Match 4: 4729, 3785, 6201 Match 3: 132, 903, 578 Match 2 : 43, 88, 71 Sept.1 Match 6: 370242, 418415, 924924 Match 5: 22502, 47712, 11818 Match 4: 7617, 3644, 3818 Match 3: 421, 061, 833 Match 2: 08, 11, 79 Aug. 31 Match 6: 031994, 388343, 855315 Match 5: 01297, 08468, 19576 Match 4: 1775, 3026, 5290 Match 3: 612, 836, 921 Match 2: 10, 34, 66 Aug. 30 Match 6: 230211, 303649, 476129 Match 5: 16824, 75331, 32017 Match 4: 4701, 6531, 2208 Match 3: 310, 430, 093 Match 2: 22, 22, 73 BCKENO : Sept. 5 5, 11, 34, 40, 51, 52, 53, 54 Sept.4 7,9, 13, 16, 19, 27, 33, 40 Sept. 3 3, 6, 11, 26, 31, 36, 40, 53 These are the official win- ning lottery numbers provided- by the B.C. Lottery Corp. In the event of a discrepancy be- tween the numbers published and the official winning num- bers list provided by the B.C. Lottery Corp., the latter shall prevail. Integrity Responsibility Reliability \, “A real tradition of community journalism since 1947.” The New Ss L, Castlegar Judo Club Registration Mon., Sept. 9 6:30 p.m. Twin Rivers School PRACTICE NIGHTS: Juniors Mon. and Thurs. 6:30 p.m.-8 p.m. Seniors Tuesday 6:30 p.m.-8:15 p.m. az | J Castlegar Minor Hockey REFEREE CLINIC LEVEL I, Il & Ill Sunday, Sept. 15 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Cc = c PLEASE BRING: Skates, Helmet & Whistle FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL GRAHAM READ - 365-3461 Your Castlegar SAFEWAY f": - (Ss Brings You DOLLAR DAYS SALE Whole ¢ Pork _.ROAST *. 1.48 Roasting CHICKEN Frozen. Limit 2 with family ind ib. 12" Ham & Pineapple PIZZA - 5.99 Cooked HAM 19 Long English CUKES .99 Fresh MUSHROOMS 1.59 Rustic BREAD 4° Fresh ¢ Tray Oxydol or Ultra Sparks: 5-years old at Castlegar Primary. REGISTRATION t Brownies/Guides/Pathfinders/Sparks For North and South Castlegar groups, will be held at Kinnaird Hall on September 11, 1991, $30.00. Parents-must attend and register girls. Brownies: 6-9 years, meet every Tuesdays at Woodland Park, Castlegar Primary and Kinnaird Hall. Guides: 9-12 years, meet Tuesday at Kinnaird Hall; Mondays Pathfinders: 12-15 years: meeting day to be decided. i Further information from Margaret MacBain, 365-3904. at 6:30 p.m. Registration fee is Royale ¢ Bathroom TISSUE “2.48 Prices in Effect Sun. Sept. 8 through Sat. Sept. 14 SAFEWAY |. & Sat. ¢ 9 a.m.-6 p.m Thurs. & Fri. * 9 a.m, - 9 p.m, Sunday « 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. We bring it all together % We reserve the right to iimit sales to j SecondFRONT All together now: Residents of the Hasty Creek area and their Supporters saw their protest of Slocan Forest Products’ Plan to build a logging road come to an end Friday morning as the RCMP arrived to arrest the protesters for violating a court injunction to clear the area News photo by Thomas Bink @ Officials to show maps, photos to illustrate site selection for new $22 m Castlegar-Robson span the end of the $22 million span on the Castlegar side just west of where Crescent Street intersects with Columbia A near the pears there are no major concerns with fisheries.” He said the most disturbance is old ferry ramp, and on the Robson Donna Bertrand NEWS REPORTER Any mystery surrounding why the Ministry of Transportation and Highways chose the site it did for a bridge linking Castlegar and Robson should be solved next week ata public meeting. “The sole purpose of the meet- ing is to explain why we did select the location we're looking at,” Don B. , the ministry's regional ager of ng, said Thurs- day. “We want to make sure people know why we chose this site and what the advantages are over the other sites,” A map of the site released with the announcement in July shows Site not OK, News Staff The Ministry of Highways has “chip trucks on the brain” when it comes tothe new bridge between Castlegar and Robsol Rossland- Trail MLA Chris D’Arcy says. D'Arcy said he disagrees with the Ministry's choice of sites be- cause of the angle it puts the bridge at across the Columbia River. He says the proposed lay- out of the bridge is designed more to accommodate Celgar traffic than local residents travelling be- tween the two communities. “If you think about the angle you’d be crossing the river, the highway, when it got to the Castlegar side, would be pointed at Celgar,” he said. “And anybody going to or from Castlegar would have to make a very sharp, acute turn loop . . . to go back up Columbia Avenue. What I've sug- side b Waldie’s Road and the train bridge. The meeting — Sept. 11 at 7:30 p.m. at the Community Complex — follows an open house that gets ‘underway at 4:30. Barcham said several displays featuring photos, maps and story- boards will be set up to illustrate the choice, Ministry staff will be on hand to answer questions, and dis- plays used at previous cpen hous- es will be set up again for back- ground information. The Highways Ministry is still discussing the bridge site with staff in the Ministry of Environ- ments fisheries branch. But Bar- cham said he doesn't expect prob- lems. “At the present time . . . it ap- D'Arcy says: gested is that they have chip trucks on the brain. “With all this public money be- ing spent, it ends up that it’s an inconvenience to the public and I’m saying the bridge should be designed and built to suit the ma- jor traffic patterns on both sides of the river. “So I’m not sure the public is completely aware of how inconve- nient the approaches are going to be to the overwhelming majority of the travelling public,” he said. “I think most people are just so enormously happy there's going to be a bridge.” : However, “in all fairness to Highways,” D'Arcy said, he sup- ports the way it has welcomed his input and the public's input. “I think the public meetings are a well-intentioned effort on their part.” Pp d to occur on the Robson side in an area that “gets pretty flushed out and isn't a particular- ly good spawning area.” However, some decisions still need to be made for the more sig- nificant spawning areas further downstream that the fisheries branch will want to protect, he said. “And steps will be taken to min- imize any potential 1h Barcham said he also hopes to have available information from a B.C. Hydro report on the area’s fishery and from an archeological report that the ministry is “ex- pecting any day now from the archeological branch.” Since the final site was chosen, discussions have been ongoing with experts on bridge and road designing. Ministry to give scoop on bridge Some preliminary sketches were completed before the site was osen, Barcham said. “But in a sense they are not that significant at this time,” he said. “What they did was help us final- ize the site. These (sketches) are not in any sense of the word final.” One or two sketches will be on display at the open house, Bar- said. “After this public meeting, we'll be getting on with the engineering design. There will be two designs prepared, one in concrete and one in steel. And we will certainly, in some way, keep the public in- formed of the progress.” Ministry staff are also working on a tentative project schedule to post for the public next week. If everything goes according to the ministry’s anticipated sched- ule, work on the foundations for the bridge could begin as early as next summer, Barcham said. News Staff Spanning the Columbia River between Robson and Castlegar isn’t just a case of building a bridge. So while the Ministry of Highways gears up for the main project, preliminary work on the bridge’s com- panion project — the Bril- liant interchange on High- way 3A — has begun. The Preliminary work begins on Brilliant interchange enough room for proper curves and lane works, and everything that’s required,” said Don Barcham, the min- istry’s regional manager of planning. “We're still pursu- ing all of them. We haven't rejected or discarded any- thing at this point.” He added that the public, and particularly the USCC, because of its concern for ministry drafted six opti le-line concepts and focus- ing on the functional de- signs to make sure we have the safekeeping of Verigin’s tomb, will be involved in narrowing down the op- He said he expects to know what the plans for the interchange are in about six ee eta