CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, September 2!, 1978 sonoeaae lative een ment: ‘Bldgs 501 Bellaville St bul be F leased Taste Tells Cut Green Beans Green Peas. Ovenjoy Bread White o Brown. : @ F @ ki 24 oz. Loaf ....., for y Margarine?i°*°:.,._ 49° 1 lb. Package ., or Assorted Green Giant Cream Corn 14 fl. oz. Tin. (0) C or Niblets. © 12 fl. oz. Tin... for : Standing Rib Safeway - Roast Beef Canada Grade 198 Ground Beef Home Freezer Feature’ Chuck Pak Includes Cross Rib Roasts. Chuck Steak or Roast. Approximate weight 45 |b. Weight loss in cutting & trimming Beef cuts increases the price per Ib. Includes Cutting & vor AS1.39 Canada Grade Captain's Cabin, Ready to Eat. Cryo Vac, Boneless ......ssecoscseessseesesseeee fl Regular Quality 9 New Zealand Lamb Leg Roast Frozen Whole lb. $] 59 Shoulder Roast s] 09 | or Butt Portion FrOZEN sescossececsessnesesesrsoeel DD. Shoulder Chopss 39 All Cuts. Frozen............. Ib. Prices Effective Tues. to Sat., Sept. 19 to 23 In Your Friendly Castleaird Plaza Safeway Store, F ection of Highway 8 in a Assorted Flavours... }Carton Shortening. Crisco BA. Tita cccsesesnsenoneses _ Meat Pies Manor House ¢ Frozen i ¢ Assorted. ....... rhe : Lucerne Medium Eggs =" A.89° Hash Brow Wns Scotch Treat Frozen, 2 ib. PRG. sseseeseses 3 for $] 06 Vinegar Town House. 128 fl. oz. Bleach 72.59 White Magic. 128 fl. oz. Jug Bathroom Tissue Brocade. White. 1.19 Pink. Yellow ............. 98° Valley Gol ergata 9] 29 93° Rolls Town House Dills No Garlic. Garlic. Polski $] ] 9 | Ogorki. 48 fl. oz. Jar ...... e Coffee $9 79 One-Stop Shopping! Light Bulbs G.E. Shadow Ban. é 89° 25 to 100 Watt Pkg. of 2 ou... Toots ost 99 Shampoo $1.99 Breck. Assorted. 400 ml ........ i eo Creme Rinse Breck. Reg. or Extra Body. $] 99 400 ml. Bottle ......sssssesecoressseees ce Playtex Tampons, . Deodorant or $9 79 Non- Deodorant. 28'S (sciocsesseatis e The New Illustrated Columbia Encyclopedia Volume 2 Bonus offer of a $ dictionary with PUIChASE. .....essrscesseseee e 5 x 7 Enlargement Available from Kodak, Fuji or Agfa color negatives or slides (excluding "110" size slides). 99° Deluxe folder included. ...........sc000 Onions Fresh Produce Norgold Potatoes B.C. Grown. No. 2 Grade . 15.149 Jewel Yams California GOWN scsssesessssesersereeee ID, McIntosh Apples B.C. Grown Commercial $ Grade. 6 Handi-Pak Case e Celery B.C. Grown. No. 1 Norgold Potatoes New. B.C. Grown. No. 1 B.C. Medium. 50 Ib. Sack ...scsess- Whole lone Hunt's Stewed or Crushed. a = Your Choice. “that the ceremony will take Sixth. Avenui Tomato Paste 3,81 00 Hunt's. 5% fl. oz. Tin .. Walnut Pieces ceneiken 9249 Dare’s Cookies $1.19 $1.09 White Flour $3.49 Liquid Detergent . $1.19 e i J e David's Biscuits « Cavalier ue Princess. 400 g. Bag. ........... Sunlight. 32 fl. oz. Container... Dial Your Local Football Station for Details‘ iz Enter with these Products: Facial Tissue Kleenex. 2-ply Box 200's. Rug Cleaner - Glory 2. 22 oz. Aerosol. CANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED Sales in Retail Quantities Only A Win tan ford icto ave. See, Page 'B7 ASTLEg Published Bright and Early Every Thursday Morning at “The Crossroads of the Kootenays” vel 3, Ne “80 Cents In today’s CasNews , ttn ¥ Yo 5S ros Section “C"’ CASTLEGAR, BRITISH COLUMBIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978 = Three Sections (A,B&C) ‘Premier Bill, Bennett will. officially open the 25- Adlonietre Castlegar-Salmo ribbon-cutting ceremony londay, the Castlegar News learned this week. “\ Asked about the. pro-., vpovernnigit'’s pur- of a newspaper ad- ‘vertisement announcing the ning, a highways minis- ‘try spokesman confirmed place at the highway’s view- ‘ point seven kilometres east “of Castlegar at 3 p.m. The spokesman said Highways. Minister Alex Fraser is also expected to attend the ceremony, after which a motor cavalcade will continue along the new "¥oute to Salmo for a public reception. Ne \In response to the news of the highway opening, Mayor Audrey Moore said she expected it would please many area residents, “not the least of whom will be the students travelling from Sal- mo to attend Selkirk Col- lege." 5 |. Premier to Open a ‘Highway Monday ‘ se News For -“Dog Pound's Neighbors +. Neight of the city's ‘South animal pound may find peace and quiet “within the next month or two,” * according to Ald. C. S. Fowler. : city council's: Fowler, works’ and services chairman, Tuesday said. city sia have 4 nara D ‘Williams would operate the and sn them..." proper fashion as ses by the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals—if such’): See Page A2 By RYON QUEDES CasNews Editor Selkirk College will accept the.$50,000 offered by the pro-” vincial housing ministry. for repairs to three abandoned student residences. , /After more than an hour of debate last: Thursday the col- lege council;agreed to assume responsil ity for-the buildings in return for the money, despite bursar’Alex Reibin's recom- mendation that the offer be warned council Council Eyeing New Tie-In Pact ~~ pound at his clinic at Blueberry Creek: st members the college i is not yet legally empowered to accept the transfer of residential build- ings and .the takeover of the residences would mean sub- stantial. ongoing. maintenance and operation costs. He said the needed roof repairs, which when completed would give no more than a three-year life expectancy to the buildings, would probably cost more than $50,000 by the time construction starts, Tak- ing tenders for the repairs would take at least 30 days, he said. CHARRED "RUINS" ofi:thouse- deat AMD, i night, Robson resident tte Churches (Inds an Council Warned of. High Costs, sts, Legal Difficulties The bursar said the facili- ties could operate on a self- paying basis for direct opera- tional costs only. The hidden costs of increasing the work- load of student services, main- tenance, accounting and food services employees would be substantial, he said. Council chairman Bob * Buckley: said, the education ministry “is not enthusiastic” about the proposed takeover of the residences and indicated the college will be required to “keep a separate set of-books.” ‘Buckley oad) the sollsee's le it Alchal cause of he tie: ts still under Inve: ~CasNe arate by Ayon Guedes solicitors, searching the Public Schools Act, found an institu- tion can provide facilities for students of school age but does not have the authority .to pro- vide for housing in post-second- ary education. He said the “next best thing” to taking ‘over imme-* diately -would be to order a deferment “until as a Crown corporation we have authority to make such a decisio: But because provincial government legislation desig- nating colleges as corporations is not effective until February’ Te ee located behind Anvil fron dock, reportedly caugh not oceupying it. In Closed Meeti A new proposed agreement on Castlegar's planned tie-in with CanCel’s Arrow Lakes water supply was the topic of a closed discussion by city council members Tuesday. After telling council in Its regular meeting the company's newly-drafted proposal would be ‘‘of great benefit to the people of the city If It is adopted,’’ Ald. C.S. Fowler, council's select water committee chalr- man, moved to refer discussion of it to the in-camera session. Fowler said CanCel sent the city the draft—which arrived a Tuesday ig city a MES ARE TAKEN Satur- day morning by RCMP Sgt. Ell Tetrauit as 12 person: {lve men and seven wome: stody. g been by cha arged with ‘elltully'e setting tire toa building. They y are to . 5 ry. 1979, the residences would not be open until the following September, he said. “The issue is whether to . use some political muscle or decide whether or not there isa real need (for the residences},” the chairman said. Student — services dean Blake Frisby told the council he believed residences “enhance the attractiveness of the cam- pus for students.” “The residences we have at the present time, in spite of the outlays which would be in- volved, are a very poor facil- “College fo Take $50,000 for Residence Repairs ity,” Frisby said. “Neverthe- less they do meet the needs of students who need to be close on site.” “There's no question that having a residence here is an advantage to the college and an advantage to our students.” Anderson agreed with Frisby that the residences would enhance the campus, and suggested it may cause an increase in enrolment. “There's no question that students are having a difficult time getting accommodation,” See Page A2 with the company’s senior ice P Roy Murphy, counsel Roger Duncan and local pulp mill manager Wil! Sweeney at the Union of B.C. Municipalities convention in Penticton last week, “This. matter occupied pretty well a full eight-hour day last Thursday,” the water com- mittee chairman said. “All the members of council who were there feel the negotiations were very meaningful and fruitful.” Following council's vote in support of Fowler’s motion to discuss the proposed agree- ment in closed session, Ald. Len Embree recommended a report on the proposal be released to the press after the discussion. He said a considerable - number of city residents were apprehensive about CanCel’s positions in negotiations over the terms of the tie-in. Fowler told Embree a deci- sion to release any information would depend on whether a decision was reached in the discussion. Contacted yesterday, Mayor Audrey Moore said council would not yet release Page A2 Ministry Picking Up City’ s Police Costs sepa has tidanea Castlegar’s 1978 police costs, Mayor Audrey Moore told the Castlegar News yester- day. . d her with a $135,000 cheque— at the Union of B.C. Muni- cipalities convention in Peni- tieton last week—to cover, the cost of RCMP service to the city this year. Enrolment Reaches - 1,267 So Far This Fall Overall enrolment in the Selkirk College system has “increased somewhat slightly” to 1,267 this year, the college council was told last Thursday. David- Woolley, Selkirk College admissions and records co-ordinator, told council mem- bers this year's enrolment of 694 full-time students and 267 part-time students is “close to 50 behind” the total of 916 students enrolled at the col- lege's Castlegar campus and the David Thompson Univer- sity Centre in Nelson in Oct. 31, But he added part-time enrolment “is just getting un- derway this week” and should close the gap. He said the Kootenay School of Art in Nelson, with 83 fulltime students, has “roughly what it had last year,” although part-time enrolments jumped , from 10 to 14. Fulltime enrolment at the 80% Survey Response Expected Meet on Master Plan Castlegar’s $8,000 master plan for. use of area recreation facilities in the next five years will be the topic of a meeting at the Regional Recreation Com- plex today, Ald. Jim Gouk said this week. Gouk, city parks and rec- reation chairman, told city council Tuesday consultant Ken Smith will attend the meeting and answer Castlegar and Area I and J residents’ questions about the plan. Scheduled to run from 6 p.m. to 9:30 p.m., the meeting will be informal and provide “an opportunity for people to drop inand discuss the areas they're concerned about,” he said. “This includes groups or any other people who feel they've either been left out or simply want to find out some- thing about it,” the parks and - recreation chairman told coun- cil. Reporting on the progress ofinformation gathering for the master plan, Gouk said the city is now collecting questionnaires designed by the Iting firm distributed to area households two weeks ago, and in the next three weeks will compile and interpret the data collected. He said 200 of the 800 uestlonnetres have yet to be “Based on the return rate we've been getting to date, they're anticipating an actual net return of 80 per cent,” Gouk said. “That's actually a tre- i See Page A2 college's Nelson vocational cam- pus is 309 and expected to reach 373 in late October, Woolley said. Hot-Cargo Bylaw Needed Here Too Castlegar’s city council should draft a dangerous- cargo bylaw similar to the one under consideration in Vancouver, Mayor Audrey Moore said Tuesday. . - . Referring to the Mon- day night accident in which deadly chlorine gas escaped from a ruptured 100-gallon canister in a residential industrial section of Van- couver, Moore noted that the city was preparing bylaw restricting the trais- portation of dangerou chemicals. S “I think we probably should follow that very care- fully and draft a similar one,” the mayor said. “We seem to have a fair number of volatile chemicals pro- ceeding by rail and by truck through this city.” ~ Ald. C. S. Fowler, pra- ~ tective services committee chairmam, agreed . with Moore's suggestion and ask- ed city staff to contact the City of Vancouver for in- formation on the bylaw. ESSE INDECISION: BI The only stumbling block for establishment of full Programs in theatre and education in the Selkirk College system. INSIGH shown more than that for which we usually give it credit. Ann Landers ... . Page AS BillSmiley . . . Page A2 Comics .... Editorials : age B4 \ Entertainment . Faxes Aa -A5 Stevenson and Kellogg and IT B4. The highways ministry has FOG this morning, clearing later to a mixture of clouds aunshine. Strong possi- bility of showers tomorrow a mixture of clouds and sunshine for the weekend. Temperature highs between- 20° and 22° with the over- night lows near 8° to 10°. Erma Bombeck . . . Page BS Interior Tips... . Page AS One Man's Opinion ‘i Page BS Outdoors Pulpitand Pew .. . cas Sports. . . . Pages AG-A7-A8 YourStars ... Page B2