Ps 665. just another face in t As the backs in ed c students like Mary are receiving less individual attention because classes are growing larger and larger. In a typical British Columbia classroom, children are excited, curious and eager to learn. Teachers are working hard to answer every child's question. But with larger. classes many questions will go On unanswered. limited. Teachers are concerned that educational No parents want their child to be — and neither do teachers for your children are being As parents you have always shown an interest in your child's education. Your help is needed now more than ever By working together, parents and teach- ers can help public schools look forward to a brighter future. November schoolboard candidates who will main- tain services and small class sizes A MESSAGE FROM YOUR CASTLEGAR & DISTRICT TEACHERS ASSOCIATION he crowd” 17th, vote for the Ethiopia during fiscal year 1964-85 and will be the larg- QUESTION: What does KAY JOHN- SON stand for? ANSWER: A STRONGER voice for ALL parents! QUESTION: What will she do? ANSWER: Put the TRUST back in trustee! KAY JOHNSON jsice PUBLIC SALE NOTICE Due to a special purchas THE WOOL WAGON : is offering to the public a limited number of 1984 Heavy Duty Zigzag Special Sewing Machines that are Made of Metal and sew on all fabrics, levis, canvas, upholstery, nylon, stretch, vinyl, even sews on er! These machines are NEW in factory sealed cartons with a 20- year manufacturer's warranty. Your Price Only $219.00. The price after the Advertise Your Products O: In This Choice Location L Call Display Advertising 365-5210 “= r Services le Will; bé~ s ote will Blo" Betaccep. ted. 4 DAYS ONLY! THE WOOL WAGON “KNITTING AND SEWING SHOP” Castieaird Plaza, Castlegar 365-3717 Connections! Flying on Time means Castlega flights six days a week, Sunday to Frida more fi it conr quency, with major cities or smaller communities. Whether you’re on your way to Cai r - Calgary y - to igary, Edmonton, Toronto, or points beyond, we’re looking forward to having you take Time. Welcome aboard! | ait: He hi cE i ? FF Nepean, Ont., has started a campaign urging Canadian parents to donate their No vember family allowance cheques to World University Service of ‘Canada to help finance its famine relief work in Ethiopia. Lewis pleas for more aid By AL COLLETTI UNITED NATIONS (CP) Ambassador Stephen Lewis's plea, contained in his maiden speech Tuesday to the UN General Assembly, was warmly received by family had wept as they wat ched tel Castlegar food, medicine and supplies for famine-stricken can sent iteither directly to OxFam in Vancouver or care of Castlegar News. “Satan hae tuobilioed a drive to got food aid medicing to the isolated northern region of Ethiopia — one of the areas hardest hit by the famine and drought. Oxfam is using the “Sudan back door,” which provides access for relief shipments from Europe to enter via the Port of Sudan. Official units to ensure distribution of relief through rural northern Ethiopia where an estimated one million people need immediate relief aid and another six million are threatened with starvation. Castlegar residents can send their cheque made out to Oxfam-Canada 2524 Cypress St., Vancouver, B,C. V6J 3N2 or to the Castlegar News, which will forward all donations to Oxfam. Residents may either bring their donations to 197 Columbia Ave. or mail them to Castlegar News Ethiopia Relief Fund, P.O. Drawer 3007, Castlegar B.C. V1N 8H4. we return to Earth. “We are no-go today and will have to scrub,” launch director Bob Sieck told the astronaut crew of four men and one woman just 32 minutes before the planned launch time of 8:28 a.m. EST. A weather balloon detected the stiff shear winds between 6,100 and 15,240 metres above the launch pad early today. When they failed to subside sufficiently, shuttle a3 tponed analysis here is we would exceed the structural load limits on the vehicle.” There was no from the when the launch was scrubbed half an hour later, and they returned to their quarters, They had been aboard the spaceship for more than an hour, and the countdown had until the The Jaunch of Discovery, rescheduled for 7:17 a.m. Clark appeals for donations OTTAWA (CP) — External Affairs Minister Joe Clark appealed Tuesday for private donations to bolster federal government aid for the starving in drought-stricken Ethiopia. Speaking to reporters after a meeting of cabinet ministers, Clark said his department is developing « program to more Ci to in whatever way they can. “I hope that we may be able to work out some way by which ie Canadi: - di towns, cities, service clubs (and) others — might be able to make a t to this terrible, terrible crisis in Ethiopia,” he said. Clark said he and David MacDonald, the government's co-ordinator of emergency aid to the African nation, met later Tuesday with the director of the Ethiopian govern- ment’s relief and rehabil to what kind of goods are needed. In addition to food, Canadians might send “all sorts of things large and small” such as planes, trucks and tents, said Clark, who returned from Ethiopia Monday night. Although he has vowed that Canada will increase its assistance to the millions of Ethiopians now facing death, he declined to indicate whether he has cabinet's backing. “We will not be ready today, I emphasize today, to make any announcements except to say there will be continuing Canadian official aid to Ethiopi@through a vatiety of sources.” : : «. Clark, the first Western leader to visit the country sitce the famine reached crisis proportions, said he went to if Ethiopia can deliver international aid ge of the widespread famine in Ethiopia and several other African countries. “I cannot remember in my entire adult life scenes of such unendurable human desolation,” he told the re porters. “It was heartbreak ing. There is no doubt in my mind that Canadians sat and wept as we did and would wish to respond with compas- sion, generosity, fervor.” He said the scenes promp- ted him to rewrite the speech sent him by the External Affairs Department to in clude his own feelings of shock and revulsion at the effects of the famine. ae CONGRATULATIONS George & Connie Southwell who have purchased KARNIES LADIES WEAR Betty MacDonald would like to thank her many loyal customers who have made her business oa success over the past 30 years! effectively. He said he is advising cabinet that his discussions with government officials and non-government aid organizations convinced him that the delivery systems are capable of transporting goods to those in need. The government plans to send more than $25 million worth of food and $16.4 million in food aid to Ethiopia during the 1984-85 fiscal year, about one-quarter to one-third of all international food aid. Some reports said food donations were rotting on ships because there is a shortage of trucks to deliver goods to remote areas but Clark said he thinks delivery arrange ments are adequate. Nevertheless, Canada is considering for the first time whether it should act specifically to improve the delivery system, he said, suggesting that additional planes and trucks might help. He said he hopes Canada’s response to the Ethiopian emergency will encourage people to take a greater interest in the problems of developing nations. Oxfam needs volunteers VANCOUVER (CP) — Vancouverites have opened their hearts and wallets to Ethiopia 80 much so that the local Oxfam office needs help of another kind. They are looking for vol unteers to help handle all the donations in the campaign to send aid to about six million Ethiopians starving to death in Africa's worth drought in 10 years. “The phones have been managers decided to call off the effort for the day. The winds ranged from 106 to 190 kilometres an hour, but from different directions. “The winds are very erratic,” launch control spokesman Hugh Harris reported. At about 12,200 metres, a shuttle is subj d to Thursday, will send the astronauts on a challengir~ mission. The shuttle carries two communications satellites — one of them Canadian. The astronauts’ goal: Deploy the two satellites for paying customers and then track down and retrieve the Palapa B2 and Westar 6 payloads, which have been drifting in useless orbits since February. Training for youth OTTAWA (CP) — The Conservatives have used maximum dynamic forces as it pushed up through the atmosphere toward orbit. The crew was informed of the potential problem just an hour before the intended liftoff. “We want to make you aware of a situation which is not very favorable for a launch today,” Sieck told them. “We have a significant shear in the upper atmosphere, and the new and something borrowed to create a training program for young Canadians announ- ced by Employment Minister Flora MacDonald Tuesday. The $27-million pilot pro- gram called the Youth Train- New Orleans fair fiasco an example for Expo 86 VANCOUVER (CP) — The New Orleans World's Fair fi asco has had “a sobering ef fect,” says Expo 86 chairman Jim Pattison. Pattison and Expo presi- dent Michael Bartlett re- turned last week from New Orleans where they ques- tioned officials on problems that fair has encountered. As a result, Expo 86 is re viewing its projections, he said, particularly attendance and financial forecasts. Expo officials had been working with a $1.2-billion budget, based on $800 million from the provincial govern- ment and $400 million from participating countries and companies. They have estimated 15 million visits at a proposed price of $20 each for the six-month world’s fair in downtown Vancouver. In ad dition, Lotto 6-49 is officially committed to providing $100 million to Expo by the end of the 1986-87 fiscal year to help cover any deficits. The New Orleans fair is at least $100 million in debt and lawsuits and bankruptcies are expected to follow after it closes Monday. Attendance, projected at 12 million, reached only seven million. “It has had a sobering ef fect on me — what happened at New Orleans; how they could be so far out on their estimates,” Pattison said in an interview. “The lesson | have learned from New Orleans is that we must be very conservative. I was down there as well be. fore the fair opened. They had just come off (the 1982 World’s Fair at) Knoxville and then they had all the reasons why they should do better.” “The thing that always worries you — and it cer. tainly worries me — is atten dance,” Pattison said. If the Expo review of at tendance figures results in a revised estimate, he said, Expo has alternatives. He would not speculate on what those alternatives are other than to say he is going to wait until the review is completed. Pattison is making no dir ect comparisons between the New Orleans experience and Expo 86 because the New Orleans fair is a business promotion whereas Expo 86 is a national and provincial endeavor. But if Expo 86's attendance is no better than New Or leans's, then “you would have a sharply increasing budget ary problem,” he said “This thing is like show business. You put up all your money, you build it, you set your pricing and then you pray “You pray the public comes, you pray the public likes it and you pray it cat- ches the public fancy for repeat visits.” The risks concerning Expo officials are attendance fig: ures, Vancouver's weather, the value of the Canadian dollar and the economy, Pat tison said. Any one of those factors could have an impact on the success of the fair. “The quality of the fair is not a gamble,” he said. “Expo will not be a flop. There is a certain risk in this business ... but Expo will be a source of pride.” Expo is a government backed project with the associated national and re- gional pride whereas Amer. ican fairs are sponsored by private enterprise, he said. “The New Orleans fair was put on by businessmen. They have neither the status nor the respect that national and provincial governments have.” Foreign participation in Expo 86 also is greater and more varied. Expo 86 now has 34 nations committed, compared with 23 in New Orleans. Government com mitment, missing in Louis iana, means Expo 86 has far more drawing power for in- ternational and corporate sponsorship than the New Orleans fair had, Pattison said @f /ILU1072 DIRECTORY) = Fellowship — Worship Bible Study Family Bible Hours 9:45.a.m Sunday Worship Service 11. a.m., Legion Hall Bible Study & Prayer Tues. 7:30 p.m at 1201-1st Street Pastor: Tom Mulder Phone 365-2281 1401 Columbie Ave. Sunday Services 8:00 a.m. & 10:00 0.m Robson Church 2nd and 4th Sundays 10a.m —cfhow Gratitude in Prayer EVANGELICAL ST. PETER LUTHERAN 713 - 4th Street Worship Service 9 a.m Sunday School 10:150.m Pastor Terry Defoe Office 365-3664 Residence 365-7622 Listen to the Lutheran Hour — Sunday, 9 a.m on Radio CKQR —— APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF PENTECOST Below Castleaird Plaza SUNDAY SERVICES Sunday School 9:45 a.m Morning Worship 11:00 Evening Fellowship 6:30 809 Merry Creek Rood Past Fireside Motel Pastor: R.H. Duckworth Morning Worship 11:00 a.m Evening Proise 6:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY NIGHT Study & Prayer — 7 p.m Church 365-3430 ing Option, is to provide training opportunities for between $3,000 and $4,000 young men and women when it starts later this month. initiatives would entail col- laboration with the provinces and the private sector. She said the program will provide a mix of classroom and on-the-job experience to help young people make the transition from ‘school to work. A spokesman , for the Department of Employment the private sector to develop training plans and locate training positions for youths between the ages of 17 and 21. Co-ordinators will be paid $300 per plan and $100 per between $50 and $150 per week during their training period, depending on whe- ther they must travel to take the course and whether they live at home. Those eligible to receive unemployment in surance benefits could con. tinue to receive them, the spokesman said. The program bears some similarities to the First Chance program announced by former Liberal prime the election minister John Turner during 1; itentiary at Walla Walla. U.8. Attorney John Lamp of Spokane said the convicts sought refunds totalling $8,751. A seventh defendant named in the 35-count in- dietment is an inmate's wife who lives in Walla Walla. The bogus income tax re- turns were sent to Internal Revue Service regional head- quarters in Ogden, Utah, in Psychic aid found body MONTREAL (CP) — Police say a psychic and a hypnotist helped find the body Tuesday of four-year-old Maurice Viens who had been missing for six days. Police discovered the boy’s bruised body in a crawlspace in a farmhouse in the rural community of St-Antoine-sur The child di d last In our flyer fective Nov. 5 to the 10 the Pink Salmon, Cod Fillet and Sole Fillets that are advertised as being fresh are frozen. We regret any inconvenience this may caused 1223 - 3rd St., Castlegar 365-6256 Thursday after he was lured into a car near his home in east-end Montreal by a man who offered him candy. Sgt. Fernand Gagnon, of the Quebec provincial police detachment in Tracy, about 60 kilometres northeast of Montreal, said today the hypnotist and the medium had been searching for the boy voluntarily since the weekend. The two were working with an off-duty provincial police officer from Portneuf near Quebec City who drove them to the Richelieu valley where the child's jacket was found Saturday. When the first clues from the hypnotist and clairvoyant did not pan out, the officer started his own search of the area and the three found the body in the empty farmhouse, about eight kilometres from where the child's windbreaker had been found. 4 ‘ \ : * - 4 nouRs 7 a.m. -1 p.m. Mon. - Fri. you SuperValu. 8a.m.-9a.m. | Westcoast Seafoods located at Castlegar Mohawk FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9 10 a.m. to7 p.m. MANUFACTURERS Wednesday: Bible Study Time Is Economy if you’re a Caigary - Edmonton commuter, take Time to save money. City to city, Skydash gets you there comfortably and economically. Time Is Commitment Economy is just.one Time-honoured commitment We have a tradition of dependable service to get you there on schedule. And a friendly staff dedicated to helping you on your way. PRE-GRAND OPENING ringing non-stop,” said Har. vey McKinnon, B.C. director for Oxfam. He said since the desperate situation was brought into Rev. Charles Balfour 365-2271 SEV -DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 1471 Columbia Ave., Trail and Prayer 7:00 p.m Thursday Youth Meeting 6:30 HOME OF CASTLEGAR 767-11th Ave., Pastor Rev Sundey Morning Services ot 8:15 a.m. and 11:00 o.m Fly Pacific Western for your loved ones 65 or ‘al ticket BS or obder af 70% of 1985 and can be used only byapas- are limited and subject to availability, senger 65 years of age or over. This so Call your travel agent or Pacific special offer is available only until Western at 365-8488 soon! November 10 and will not be repeated r <¢ this year. Hf you've already purchased MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL LTD. ——— ; 364-0117 Evening ' Pacific solves the p Regular Saturday Services Minietrios you're between December Pastor Cliff Drieberg 3 and January 7, and you buy your 365-2649 ticket before November 11, we'll sell you a@ second ticket for any of our destinations at 70% off regular fare! DEPARTURES Sunday - Friday: Depart Castlegar 1:20 p.m Arrive Calgary 3:25 p.m. (local time) Call toll free: 112-800-661-1484 WEST'S TRAVEL AGENCY HENNE TRAVEL {MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL LTD. 1217 - 3rd $#., Castlegar 1410 Bay Ave., Trail 605 - 18th $t., Castlegar 365-7782 368-5595 365-6616 your ticket for travel between these dates, you are also eligible to pur- chase these special tickets. Seats Hove your new kitchen lled before Christmas! FREE beccn semnce Call Collect — 365-3110 Costlegor 2228 ~ 6th Ave.. HENNE TRAVEL 1410 Bay Ave., Trail 368-5595 Sunday School 9:45 o.m Morning Worship 11 a.m Sunday Family Fellowship 6:30 p.m Home Bible Studies WEST’S TRAVEL AGENCY 3rd Sunday, 10 a.m 1217 - 3rd $t., Castlegar 365-7782 Rev. Ted Bristow