a ee te tp ee a SN — ~wTeEe wi2 Island districts shows the way Two Vancouver Island re- garbage limit program in some gional districts have restruc- tered their garbage fees to en- courage waste reduction and Promising results are evi- dent in both programs. The Regional ‘District of Nanaimo and the Capital Re- gional District (Victoria) have ey Recycling set flat rates for annual and = ag pickup from house- You hi areas of the district. They have not set any limit on the amount of material people may recycle throught the blue box program. After one year of operation the areas served by both programs have reduced landfill input by 29per cent. The costs of the blue box pro- gram are admittedly quite high, but are offset somewhat by the reduced costs associated with The flat rates allow one can per week per household. If h holders wish to dispose of more garbage, they have to purchase stickers from local out- lets for $2 apiece, and affix them to the extra garbage cans. The extra cans won't be picked up unless the sticker is attached. The Nanaimo area has taken one step fur- ther, and established a limit of three extra cans. This means that householders have a limit on how much they are allowed to send to the land- fill, even if they wish to pay extra money for ex- tra volume. The Nanaimo Regional District operates a blue box program in conjunction with the less overall materials going to the landfill. The Regional District of Central Kootenay and the Regional District of Kootenay Bound- ary are both reviewing options for waste man- agement strategies to reduce landfill input. Perhaps a good way to attract a lot more public focus to this issue be to implement garbage can limits to households in the various communities in the area, similar to what has been done on Vancouver Island. People would pay a lot more attention to their garbage disposal habits if they had to pay directly for their excesses each time it hap- pened. Have you got the look? If not... call Beverley Zaytsoff 365-3744 at the ANNEX Senior Special Oct. 28 & 29 Only ] — Scots ‘ASoeie ae 50~%Off Chemical services guaranteed with the purthase from salon of professional maintenance products. There's something for everyone! 365-7266 oe ie este Visitors from the civilized East have remarked that in the West, in Vancouver or There is no West side, Up- town or East end. The rich live among the There are only renments of ethnic neighbourhoods. One’s attire may or may not be a strong personal statement. On the streets locally, males are dressed as accoun- tants, teachers and workers. There’s the odd cyclist, biker, street kid or jock... and there are just functional clothes. Females may leave their homes looking like girls from BarbaraMMURDOCH hippies, ex-hippies, Hell’s Angel chicks, preppies or tidy churchwomen. They may dress like the ubiquitous mid-continent American in stretch-poly- ester pastel sweats or they may wear functional clothes. Kids dress like kids. Most of them sport bright, floures- cent colors to be seen in the Humans of both genders may shave the head or use any color hair dye. Anyone may wear ear- rings and hair may be long or short. In some places shoes and shirts must be worn. (Females must always wear shirts.) As a rule, people in the Kootenays, in these times, may wear whatever pleases them. There are no strict rules or expectations. An exception may be peo- ple in high school. These folk impose their own dress code. Last year their photos were all in the paper.All fe- males but one had long hair. That could not have hap- pened by chance. The males were not as strict. Some had long hair, some short. One may witness a range of bizarre hairstyles among Nelson youth, but Castlegar youth appear to be clones. What happened if you were young and female in Castlegar last year and your hair was short? CELGAR PULP COMPANY PUBLIC NOTICE On or about Monday, October 12, 1992’and for a period of up to 2 weeks, the Pulp Mill will be commencing to clean new steam lines associated with the Modernization Project. This process involves the intermittent blowing of high pressure steam through various lines to remove foreign materials such as dirt, rust slag, welding rod, etc. Excessive noise can be generated by this process as the steam is exhausted into the atmosphere. We will limit the times of these blows to between 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. on weekdays and the length of any single blow should not exceed 20 minutes. We request the indulgence of the Castlegar and Robson residents and any others who may be affected by these disturbances. Everything possible will be done to minimize the effect on the public. Thank You CELGAR MODERNIZATION PROJECT and you could win A Shopping Spree at the Castlegar Safeway Classifieds FRAUD HITS YOU IN THE POCKETBOOK. HIT BACK. CALL 661-6844 ) @ Wednesday, October 21, 1992 Win or lose, it’s In The News. Jonathan Green 365-7266 ON THE Selkirk College runners put in an impressive performance at a cross-country meet in Victoria over the weekend. Barbora Brych placed second for the ladies, while Candace Harper came in 15th. Vernon Remesz led the men, finishing third while Karl Schneider was 10th, Chris Owens 17th and Dana Lindhal 23rd. The men placed second out of four squads in the team category.. The college's next meet is the inter-provincials, set for next weekend in Kelowna. LOCAL FLAVOR Some of Castlegar’s hockey contingent are doing well for themselves on their respective clubs. As of Sunday, Travis Green led the way for the AHL's Capital District Islanders with eight points and 17 penalty minutes, while teammate Steve Junker is third in scoring with six points. Over in Hamilton, Dané Jackson has a goal and two assists for the Canucks while leading the team with 19 penalty minutes. Totals - for Kelly Hurd, Darcy Martini and Claude Vilgrain were unavailable. LocaSPORTS Devils win and lose in dramatic fashion News photo by Jonathan Green Hi Arrow Devils coach_Carlos Amaral (left) and son Carlos Jr. were out at the Community Co: x v 7 2 mplex field ea i i that day’s game with Trail. The Devils went on to defeat the Silver City Selects in a pr but their phe | nace eal danke naar coy cs the semi-final by.Nelson Savoy, 1-0. li WKMSL season ends on an unhappy note for Castlegar’s Hi Arrow Devils NEWS STAFF Although they pulled it off Saturday, leaving things until the last minute cost the Hi Arrow Devils Sunday. Competing in the West Kootenay Men’s Soc- cer League playoffs over the weekend, the Dev- ils started off at home in a quarter-final match against Trail Saturday. _ Playing like a team that was too busy look- ing ahead to its next game, the third-place Dev- ils never led against the upstart Silver City Se- lects, and had to go a shootout to advance. Coach Carlos Amaral said his squad be- lieved the victory was in the bag. “We thought that we would get the win just like that,” he said. But that wasn't the case, as the Devils were down 1-0 early when Vahid Pourmokhtari evened it up on a nice goal for the home team. Trail replied shortly after and took a 2-1 in- to lead halftime. _ Amaral said the Devils were guilty of leav- ing the sixth-place Selects open too often, al- lowing them time to set up and score. With that in mind, the Devils came out and forced the Selects in their own end, tying it up on Herb Amaral’s goal early in the second half. Things stayed that way for a while until the Devils went back to playing slack defensively, and Trail capitalized with two quick goals to go up 4-2. With time ticking away, the Devils threw ev- erything but the kitchen sink at the Selects, and the effort paid off with goals from Rob Mat- jasic and Mike Hawley in the last 10 minutes to force overtime. The extra 14 minutes proved nothing, and the two teams went to a shootout, with each team taking five shots from the penalty spot. The Devils scored on their first four shots, and when keeper Scott Harrison made his sec- ond save.on Trail’s fourth shot, the Devils had won. Amaral said the effort showed his isn’t a team of quitters. “When you’re down by two goals-with eight or 10 minutes left and you tie it up, I think that tells you something,” he said. With momentum in their favor, the Devils travelled to Nelson Sunday for a semi-final date with the Savoy, who were undefeated dur- ing the season. The locals matched Savoy stride for stride through most of the first half, only allowing the home team one good chance to score. But good teams take advantage of their chances, and Savoy did just that to go up 1-0 at the half. Playing like a team possessed, the Devils turned up the heat in the second half but couldn't find the equalizer. : With time running out and play in front of the Savoy net, the Devils put two shots off the Nelson crossbar but, unlike the day before, there would be no fairly tale ending as the home team held on for the 1-0 win. Although the outcome wasn't as good, Ama- ral said he'll gladly take Sunday’s effort over Saturday's. “I feel a little sad, but there’s nothing to be ashamed of,” he said. “I don’t think there’s any- thing else to be asked from our guys. “They played their hearts out.” With the win, Savoy moves on to host fourth- place Nakusp in Sunday’s final. Nakusp, the defending champs, advanced after surprising second-place Nelson Heritage in a shootout after the Devils-Savoy match. TTI Need a car loan? _ Well make it happen.