CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, January 19, 1978 Kids iui WORD SEARCH Hidden ate 15 words to citcle Words go across. down, diagonally, upside-down, and Dachwards CAN YOU FIND THEM? Neglect of B.C.’s Leading Industry “Here let the press the people's —— rights maintain, unawed by |. What kind of Sociol would aduck becom . What did one ow! say to the other? } Why did the baby pig eat somuch? What did the big firecracker say to the litle firecracker? . Why did Silly Sally throw tomato and lottuce around the room? |. Why did Silly Sammy take arulerto bed with him? "1d016 oy Guo) moyosso, ‘1 “pees pesco) © poluRM Oy) nok ueyy 106019 s1d0d AW “nosuyjo Bou Reveal oy 1 pyoenby * ‘9 s y e tnoge iooy & on 1uop | “2 “10190 t SHYSMSNV Put tts word up toa mirror and see whale says. MOOA AASSMOA 8 Y Q G P u a c F R B N K — — a A Tt u a T L — 8B K v A « NO-Z2QOO0xO2CBDCr> L ép tw FO oT Lo VR HL Ye zu AP MU GA Yd Zr Enzoo0oe-Fr44F xOxXCyO4ZH>TVME mM Erocmormaxxx ay ° u E— Ww P E Ww T i) ' T R H Antetope OOVDMHAHE XK NENDO NonrrmovrysOo<< DT 1s ETN FAD FMY ACA AWK Td GQR YOE HO xX CAM ace OFG LAO HEY KIDS" Ou wise enough to unscramble these words? Nudity is not freedom. It is ame. tI don't expect to make friends by saying so, Permis- siveness seems to know no bounds these days, and many people love to have it so. The moral revolution which was first oblique is now blatant. It saturates literature and theatre. It regulates fash- ions and films. It screams at us in our advertising. It is in- vading the television media with frightening rapidity. It is accepted fare in the entertain- ment world, Asa phenomenon of our sensibilities of millions of par- ents, young people and leaders at every level of North Ameri- can life. . Most Christians are out- raged and not a little be- wildered by it all. Many of us terid to respond ina reactionary matiner, while others just want to hide their heads in the sand. Neither course makes sense. What we ought to do is to return to our only rule for faith and practice, the Bible. + Surprisingly to. some, the Bible speaks with startling freedom and frankness about matters of sex and nudity. And it at once becomes evident that as eae God infused a beauty and glory into His creatures which was intended to promote intense ecstacy and bliss. The honest : Fie aod Pew By Pastor DONALD W. REED from God, is good and beautiful. Nakedness in itself is not evil but good. The Bible affirms the beauty of God's original order. student of cannot, even if he wanted to, miss the biblical expressions of the good- ness of sex. Is then the aversion of so many of us to public nudity just the reaction of a Victorian prudishness? Are we directed by Christian convictions or by cultural mores? After God had created man and placed him in the Garden, He told Adam to look among all the other creatures for a suitable helper. But he found none. So God created a woman to stand beside him and to complement him. The delight experienced by the man upon meeting the, woman finds ex- pression in the first poetry of the Bible. And then the author of Genesis adds this commentary: “Therefore a man leaves his father and his mother and cleaves to his wife, and they become one flesh. And the man and his wife were both naked and were not ashamed.” Nothing could better ex- press the positive meaning of life as God originally intended it. The human body, as it came the most beautiful thing about the Gar- den—openness and freedom. But then came the devasta- tion of the fall. Defying God’s authority, Adam and Eve re- belled against His order. In that moment their sin was accom- panied by a sense of shame. “The. author of Genesis again speaks: “Then the eyes of both were opened and they knew that they were naked.” With the coming of sin, nakedness took on a totally different meaning. Where ori- ginally it meant openness and freedom, now it means shame. Thus they took leaves in a piti- ful attempt to cover their nakedness. i Thereafter in the Bible, except within the intimacy of marriage, the exhibition or flaunting of nakedness is al- ways associated with shame and sinful indulgence. Of course, those with no concept of a holy God have no concept of sin. This may make modern conduct more under- standable, but it certainly doesn’t make it any more right. a church directory GRACE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 7th Ave., South, Castlegar Sunday’ School 9:45 a.m. Worship Service 11 4.m. Tuesday Bible Study 7 p.! m. A warm welcome toall. ST. RITA'S CATHOLIC CHURCH Rev. Michael Guinan Ph. 365-7143 Satuday Night Mass 7 p.m. Sunday Masses at 8a.m.and10a.m. ST. MARIA GORETTI Genelle 12Noon * SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 1471 Columbia Ave., Trail Saturday Services: Sabbath School: 9:30 a.m. Divine Service: 11:00 a.m. Pastor: D. Zinner, 365-2649 ST. PETER LUTHERAN cl 405 Maple St., Castigar Worshlp Service 11:00 a.m. “Everyone Welcome" Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Rev. Richard Klein: Pastor 365-3662 or 365-3664 Listen to the Lutheran Hour, Sunday, 11:30 a.m. CKQR Minister H. M. Harvey Ph. 365-3876 CHURCH OF CHRIST 612-101 th Aver: 8. Su Bible Study 7 10-00 a, m. Worship Service 10:45 a.m. Wednesda’ Bible Stud: 1y 7206 p.m. inister dack Shock Ph. 365-2580 usiness directory APOSTOLIC CHURCH Phone 365-6317 Below the Castleaird Plaza ANGLICAN fay UNITED IRCHES r— St. caus Anglican — Sun.: 8 a.m. Communion 9 a.m. Communion (except 4th Sunday when Service Is Morning Prayer) 9 a.m. Sunday School Wed.: 10 a.m. Service 7:30 p.m. Fellowship/ Study Group Wain} ;—— Castlegar United — Sun.: 10: at a un Sunday 1iam. ser Worship Tues.: 7:30 pe im. Youth Gro! Wed.: 10a.m. Bible Study Robson Communit: church Sun.:; 9:45 a.m. Worship Castlegar — Ghureh located a! 1401 Columbia Ave. MINISTERS Rev. Desmond Carroll (Anglican) Office: 365-8337 Home: 365-2271 Rev. Ted Bristow (United) Office: 365-8337 Home: 365-7814 Calvary Baptist Church 609 Merry Creek Road ‘Next to Cloverleaf Motel, Castleaird Plaza \NCALA BApr, RZ Sp a one Val Leiding, Youth Pastor Phone 399-4753 CHURCH OF GOD 804-7th Avenue South “Learning” “Worshiping” “Serving” s Sunday: 9:45 a.m, Class for all Ages. i 11 am, Family Worship Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. .. Opportunities to -serve Family Bible. Hour 9:4! Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. Evening Pralse 6:30 p.m. Wed., Bible Study 8p.m. Church Office: 365-3430 Rev. Donald W. Reed, Pastor: 365-2630 PENTECOSTAL TABERNACLE rer Fiat Avenue, North Pasi wv. H. H..Graham ‘Ghuren Ph. 365-5212 Sunday school 9:50 a, Morning Worship am, Evening Service Tuesday: Fsibie Study 7:30 p.m. Friday: Young People 7: 330 p.m. C, C. LENFESTY & CO. Certified General Accountants ¥* Auditors x Tax Consultants 609 Columbia Castlegar 365-2118 See Us For APPLIANCE REPAIRS cas PLUMBING & HEATING 1008 Columbia Ave. Phono 365-3388 Complete Range Repair on all makes & jodels. = ¢ Surface & If we don't have the part — you don't pay for 2. ser- vice calls. Dial 365-6141 a CADMAC RANGE REPAIR SERVICE CASTLE TIRE LiD.. SALES & SERVICE Commercial & tndustrial Tire Specialists Passenger and Off Highway Tires WHEEL BALANCING 24 * Service 365-7145 1050 Columbia Avenue Castlegar Contracting _ COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL RESIDENTIAL ELECTRIC HEAT — L, HOOLAEFF ELECTRIC PHONE 365-7191 Painrine ® Drvwau ~-. Wedo Wall and Calling Custom Texturing 365-3783 : Advertising Rates and Information Call 365-5210 oght on" “ Former Employee of interior Sheet Metal 5) Ltd. has gone Independent ey Tar & Gravel Roots Phone Genelle (collect) 693-5515 Lori or Bill Why buy or use an old- fashioned puah-and-pull cleaner when you can enjoy aCentra-Flo deluxe sanitiz: Ing system for less than the cost of some old-fashioned cleaners? For Information without obligation. call: K.C. Distributing Today, at 365-7497, Greep’s Electric CALDSET GROCETERIA AND LAUNDRET 1039 Col, A (Bottom of. sherbiko Hill, Monday oe Saturday 8.30 am, to 10.30 p.m. Sunday and Holidays 9.00 a.m, to 10.30 p.m. Groceries, - Tobacco, . Confectionery and General PHONE 365-6534 CASTLEGAR Jim's Masonry e FIREPLACES Brick, Block & Stone. ¢ TILE WO 365-2219 FUNERAL HOME Dedicated to Kindly - Thoughiful Service Ambulance — Flowers’ Granite, Marble and - Bronze Plaques FRAMING ° Bualty Workmanship Priced apt! 365: « FREE ESTIMATES ¢ Firm Estimates © Reisrentes on Heques' 365-3794 . nie Cabinets © Vanities © Doors © Refinishing © Free Estimates 365-7971 Roman Tischler 1612- 7th Ave., S. Inland Roofing & Sheet Metal Ltd. Formerly Interior Sheet Metal (1965) Ltd. ~ Intand’s Guarantee: Our company offers efficient, guaranteed work- Sam's Nursery Bl & Florist Sea Us for... © House Plants © Hanging Baskets _ * Azaleas NURSERY & FLORIST Beautiful Floral arrange- ments for any occasion or just a nice thought! SAM'S 1001 - 9th Ave S. 965.7312 In all phases of built-up tar and gravel roof- Ing, Insulating and sheet metal. work; backed by our own (3-year) guarantee or by the Master Sheet Metal and Roofing Contractors Association of British Columbia. (Under New Management) Ken Denneus, Manager 725 - 6th Ave., South Castlegar, B.C. Bus 365-7553 Res 365-5063 _ IVAN WICKLUM Licenced Roofing Contractor All Types of Roofing We in Shakes Thrums: 399-4713 rs Fine Carpentry including * Carports * Retaining Walls * Framing * Residential Buildings, etc. Free Estimates. No Job Too Big or Small Nelson: 382-2917 FOUNDATIONS P| ee Ee Fumare Santemonika UNION © PAINTERS Call Collect 226-7730 Box 51 Slocan Park PRINTING Computerized Typesetting | _ Creative Art Layout and Design “Quality & Service Count” CASTLEGAR NEWS 191 Columbia Ave. 365-7266 a) ; threats and rowd BURT CAMPBELL Publisher RYON GUEDES, Editor influence and unbribed by gain” ih Thursday Morning, January 19, 1978 With a Capital ‘P’ “We've got trouble, my friends, - Right here in River City, With a capital “T"’ and that rhymes with OE And that stands for Pool.” : River City, towa—the fictional setting : for Meredith Wilson’ ‘8 play : Castlegar Is not. Sut the tInes quoted above do display a striking similarity to the rattonale for a pro- posed city bylaw which would prohibit par- + sons under the age of 15 from entering the ) only “pool hall’? in town. Almed at Music Man— able amount of unexpended energy which has found no constructive outlets. Taking these problems into conaldera- tion, even the most casual observer can seo that if the young peoplo in this city are barred from one meeting place they will find another. And If a meeting place Is all the sneaiiragament Juveniles need for destruc- a: sinc ; about the behavior of juvenil the Wizard's Palace Funteria : the Intent of the proposed bylaw [s to } remove children under that ~-an unhealthy environment. city protective services committee's justifl- : catlon for adoption of such . belief that the youths pick up behavior on the premises. To be sure, It is diffi le customers of at91 Main St., age limit from Central to the a bylaw Is the thelr antisocial every meeting place, whether a pool hall or a supervised community centre, Is a potential school for vandals. Although described last week as the first step toward a solution to Juvenile delinquency In the area, the proposed bylaw may very well pose further enforcement problems. It is unlikely that would prevent vandalism In any a of the adoption clty outside the Main Street area, or that a cult to ignore reports o! 388 by youths frequenting Police. We Sell and Install Oil Furnaces, Electric Fur- naces and Mobile Home Fireplaces. All-Fual Chimney Always in Stock Phone Now: 365-3644 Kootenay Furnace #1, 401 Front St., Castlegar COHOE INSURANCE Providing a Complete Insurance Service’ 269 Col. Ave., Castlegar PHONE 365-3301 © Open Six Days a Week to Serve You Better RHC INS. AGENCIES LTD. 601 Baker St., Nelson Ph, 352-7252 Fire - Auto. - Boat Tralier - Life Call Peter Majesgey . 365-5386 “CURTAIN TIME” Is Anytime You Want cecal Windows. Free In-Home Estimates 24-Hour Service 227-9329 or 227-9341 Box 53, Gray Creek, B.C. Decorating Consultation Draperies La-Z-Boy Recliners Rods & Accessories Czsstom Upholstered Furniture by Troock IGOR'S TOUCH OF CLASS Gordon Wall Bullding Trail 365-2118 "Anytime Is Carpet Cleaning Time e Janitorial & Cleaning ° Fire Damage ¢ Residential & Commer- ial Cleaning COLUMBIA CONSTRUCT ION" © Commercial or Resldentlal Building © Remodelling © Free Estimates 365-6120 Refrigeration & Controls Sewicing Res. & Commercial © Air Conditioning © Refrigeration © Ice Machines e Sales ® Service © Installation 365-6512 365-2326 365-2696 . AIRWAY Maintenance Service Ray Plamondon DESMOND f. LITTLEWOOD D.O.S ‘OPTOMETRIST * 366 Baker St. Nelson, B.C. * Ph, 352-5152 @. Commercial Printing @ Office Supplies @ Office Furniture host Suggiicee = “The Difference is Quality” CROSSROADS PRINTING 105 Main Street N. 365-5525 ‘COLEMAN COUNTRY BOY SERVICE Sump .& Septic Tank Pumping PHONE 365-5013 1800 South 4th Ave. Castlegar Family Shoe. Repair NOW OPEN Next to Central ‘ood Mart soaks In T.V. Repairs . . . We Service All Makes. WARTIN’S TV REPAIRS Fairview Sub. 385-5349 Quasar Sales & Service —_—_—_——_———=>= Yes! Nee you. may also ™ purchase your Quasar Col- our TV from Wayne's. Wayne's TV Service : meee 362-7657 368-6110 “CASTLEGAR” *- CUSTOM UPHOLSTERY- Furniture Recévering Carpet & Draperies Phone 365-3632 But to belleve that Ht young people ore. new meeting place would be any easier to (f councll members ere committed to Protectina persons under ths ager ‘an unhealthy environment, they should be commit those acts 3 equally aifficult, “Although the Wizard's Palace provides a place for potential juvenile vandals to congregate, chances are that they have one fewersd si02 eects fore even setting foot on the : As city council members have acknowl- ‘edged, the destructive acts which have been ‘Identified with the young amusement hall customers have arisen from a variety of soclal problems In the community. The obvious breakdown of the family unit, coupled with a tike tomieondas he premises. for those youths seeking recreation other than organized sports, has resulted In a consider- to. study curfew for ihat age group. Rather than responding with arbitrary measures, council should adopt legislation keeping those under 15 6 off the streets completely. cd follow usiihe Bylaw, eliner independently or in conjunction with the human resources ministry, with more tangible solutions to ihe social problems from which juvenile de- linquency has resulted. But attempting to solve a complex problem wih a bylaw based on the popular poo youth will ‘only lead to ful ‘With a capital ‘‘T.”” an evening halls as, corrupters of her trouble. >. Remember? Castlegar News headline stories one year ago ‘First - FORESTRY - First’ By JOHN WALTERS (The author, director of the University of B.C. Forest at Maple Ridge, wrote the follow- ing commentary for the Van- couver Sun,) A FEW DAYS BEFORE Christmas I sent gifts to Premier Bill Eennett and his ministers, The gifts were lapel but- tons, They say “FIR$T— FORESTRY—FIR$T." They are to remind them that forestry is the most important industry in British Columbia -{and Canada) and that it should receive a proportional share of the provincial budget. 5 Thope they liked the gifts, Thope they wear them too, As they sit facing each other at cabinet meetings they will always be reminded that forest- ry is first. And forestry is first. IN 1976, B.C. EXPORTED $3.1 billion of forestry pro- ducts; $0.8 billion in mining products; . $0.6 billion in coal, natural gas and petroleum; $0.2 billion in fish; $0.05 billion in chemicals; $0.02 billion in trucks; $0,01 billion in apples; $0.007 billion in alcoholic bever- ages; $0.6 billion in all other products. The total: $5.387 billion. Out of which forestry account- ed for 58 per cent. . In 1976-77, agricultural ex- ports amounted to only $11 million, yet the budget for agri- culture was $3.2 million larger than for forestry. British Co- .. lumbians import most of their food and always will. That food is paid for by the foreign currency we earn from exports . of wood and fibre. ACTUALLY, FORESTRY is first only in the benefits it brings B.C. It is nearly last in the thoughts of our politicians. In 1977, our forests pro- duced $83 million in direct revenue and $4 billion in export * values. It supported 76,000 jobs directly. In return, we spent $19 million on reforesting our cut- over lands. In the same year we spent 100 times more on health and social services than on our most. After seeking public opinion following talks of a possible maximum security prison for the area, the newspaper vote taken by the Castlegar News shows citizens opposed to locating the facility here. : * 8 « Canadian Union of Public Employees members employed by five area schoo) boards receive notice of wage increase rollbacks from the Anti-Inflation Board. * 2 8 British Columbia, having one of the worst snow droughts on record, is told of possible water shortage for coming summer. -Hall, . 8 - Hearing is set for 29 Sons of Freedom who are charged with conspiring to burn down Passmore Anything Can Go Wrong... _ More Peter Principles By ERMA BOMBECK (From a syndicated daily icolumn.) . I'VE ALWAYS LOVED The Peter Principle by Dr. Laurence J. Peter and Ray- ‘mond Hull who observed that if ‘anything can go wrong, it will. :, I'd like to add some from my own experiences: Anything that requires a skilled laborer and is vital to ‘the running of your household will break down on ‘Saturday night. Any appliance covered by a warranty will last until the day after it runs out. ANY COLLEGE THAT would take your son, he will be too proud to go te. _ Know that a happy dieter has other problems. ~ A man who checks out of the express lane with seven items is the same man who will Offers Yo Planks 725 -.6th Ave. S. P |Castlegar Plywood © Over 100 Varieties of Wail Panelling © Everything In Plywood Products © Pre-hung Interior Doors © Mouldings, Casings and Hardwood OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK! (next to L&D Heating) Ue. 365-3514 wear Supp-Hose and park in the Reserved for Handicapped Spaces. Show me a child who has just been outfitted in 80 pounds of warm clothing, driven to an isolated hill at the edge of town and put ona pair of skis, and I'll show you a child who has to go to the bathroom. AN OLD CAR THAT HAS served you so well will continue to serve you until you have just put four new tires under it and then will fall apart. A pregnancy will never occur when you have a low- paying job which you hate. A BABY WILL SPEAK his first full sentence at three months only if you are the only one in the room. Parent - teacher confer- ences only serve to reinforce your mother's suggestion that you should have raised Irish setters. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING AT “THE CROSSROADS OF THE KOOTENAYS" CASTLEGAR NEWS FOUNDED ON AUGUST 7, 1947, BY L. V. (LES) CAMPBELL Pr AYON GUEDES, EDITOR ublisher trom Aug. 7, 1047 to Feb. 18, 1073 BURT CAMPBELL, PUBLISHER RENE BRODMAN, SHOP FOREMAN W.H, JONES, ADVERTISING MGR. LOIS HUGHES, MANAGING EDITOR Mall subsorioticn rate to the Castlegar News la $11 per year. The price by carrler and on newsstands its an [ast 2 ip soca m ind-class: ‘ell reglatration number 0019. re Castlegar News is a member of the Audit Bureau of the Canadian oe We spend only twice as much on forestry as..we . Spend on archives and mu- seums, Forestry is in serious trouble across Canada. Recent- ly, the federal government commissioned a study of forest- ry in Canada. The conclusions reached in that report should shatter the apathy of, our governments. Unfortunately, they won't. ‘The report tells us that in coastal B.C., 50 per cent of the timber reserves upon which we are relying to fulfil logging quotas are now not profitable to log. In the southern Interior 20 per cent is non-profitable. NEARLY THREE-QUAR- ters of B.C.'s timber reserves are in the central and northern Interior but now we find 50 per eent of the reserves in the central Interior and 80 per cent in the northern Interior are not profitable. The report by F.L.C. Reed and Associates states: “It is quite likely that some sub- stantial reductions in allowable cuts will be announced due to a combination of environmental pressures and a more realistic view of logging costs.” Seventy years of gross mismanagement and neglect by provincial gov- ernments has gutted large areas of B.C.’s forests and now we find that economic inaccessi- bility has wiped out half our reserves, THE 1975 B.C. FOREST Service annual report shows ‘that we had 4.8 million acres of productive forest land, suppos- edly managed by the govern- ment on sustained yield, which needed planting. Somehow this same statistic was reported to the Royal Commission on For- estry as 1.8 million acres. But in * the 1976 annual report it was even higher at 7.1 million acres. The simple fact is that B.C. doesn’t even spend enough on its forests to know how much land we need to plant. Compare B.C.'s perfor- mance in forestry with that of our competitors. SPEND 13 CENTS per acre on reforestation while Weyerh: in the U.S. pars Association, and the British Columbia and Yukon Community Newapapers Association. jews dence should be addressed to: The Editor, Castlegar Newa, Orawer A nhand at for publication must be sined with the corr: 3007, Castlegar, rect name and address of the wriler. ect name must be biliven The Castlegar News fterone Insertion. Its ted on the condition that inthe occur In the ca al of un saver da or servi eal T The offer may be sande at any time, spends $14 per acre—109 times as much. B.C, with its 130 Kootenay Furnace The replace} People 365-3644 #1, 401 Front St., Castlegar million acres of forest planted 78 million seedlings in 1976; Weyerhaeuser with only six million acres planted 185 mil- lion seedlings. In the last 10 years, B.C. has planted one million acres. Even Brazil out- stripped us during this period by planting four million acres. And what is the govern: ment doing about ail this mis- management and neglect? Well, it has just lopped $5 million off the B.C. Forest Service budget. Of this amount, $1 million is lopped off the already paltry reforestation fund. IN OCTOBER, FOREST Minister Tom Waterland pro- claimed a “new era in Canadian forestry" to the Canadian Insti- tute of Forestry at its annual meeting in Vancouver. He told an enthusiastic audience: “From now on, lip service about intensive forestry will be finished in British Columbia and the practice of it will be a reality. The exploitative days of forestry are over. Forestry -is for real in this country, not just a side. show, or we're. in trouble.” Well, October must ‘have been a side show because by November we were in trouble. In October, the British Columbia Forest Service had $20 million to spend on re- forestation. By November it had one tuillion less. AFTER 70 YEARS OF “lip service,” after 70 years of “exploitative” forestry, after 70 0 years of royal commissions and investigations, nothing has changed. The plunder of B.C.'s for- ests continues unabated. Our forests still are bled to pay for the extravagances of political expediency. Today before to- morrow. Us before our chil- dren. Votes before reforesta- tion. Renewing the forests we are logging today is a long-term proposition requiring a long- term commitment—a commit- ment by the government to put something back into the forests on which B.C. depends. TOM WATERLAND IS the most important man in British Columbia. Why? That’s an easy question which any school child in B.C. should be able to answer. Many people in B.C. re- eognize his importance. The trouble is, none of these people are in the cabinet. Regrettably, the cabinet doesn’t understand that forest- ry accounts for more than half of the B.C. economy. ‘ THE CABINET DOESN'T understand that forestry is 15 times as big as fisheries. The cabinet doesn't under- stand these things and so it doesn't understand the harm it does by not considering forest- ry first. So I. hope the cabinet ministers got my little buttons, I hope they got:the message too. 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