Wednesday, June 17, 1992 @ Your satisfaction is our main concern Cut from Canada Grade A Beef boneless cross rib roast 1.98 Canada Grade A Beef boneless blade wn» LBS 4.37/g. Ready to serve ¢ gov't inspected pork whole ham 2.18/kg. Gov't inspected poultry ¢ frying chicken crumshicks 2.18/kg. ..99 California grown ¢ sweet 138s valencia oranges From the Tropics rite ripe bananas 2/.99 long english se i cucumbers or radishes ea. i bunches SuperValu hot dog or hamburger buns Pe, peasant bread 454 g. loaf i) SuperValu french bread 397 g. loaf 99 OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK Sundays 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. ADVERTISED PRICES IN EFFECT TO SAT., JUNE 20 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT SALES TO RETAIL 365-2412 OUR PEOPLE With tuition costs and every- day expenses jumping all the time, it’s good to know that the Selkirk College Foundation is looking to the future of educa- tion. page 9 With the annual Castlegar Savings golf tournament next weekend, Brilliant’s Diony McArthur has picked a good time to get hot, winning two tournaments in as ' many weeks. page 15 The Insurance Corporation of British Columbia is making some more changes. The Crown corporation is tightening its GST repayment rules, much to the chagrin of one local au- tobody owner. page 18 j@INDEX Farside Norman Letters Our People Crossword Horoscope Pulpit and Pew Local Sports Work Place Action Ads Saturday June 13, 1992 — (ere r io News photo by Glen Freeman Nine-year-old Steven Yofonoff tried to remain modest as he hung out at the community complex park last weekend. = industry set for walkout Scott David Harrison EDITOR Stan Shewaga is crossing his fingers. The President of the Pulp, Paper and Woodworkers of Canada is hoping last- minute mediation will prevent a full- scale shutdown of his industry. “I don’t think anyone wants astrike,” Shewaga said Thursday. Shewaga said the PPWC and the Canadian Paperworkers Union are pre- pared to enter to into frank mediation ) with the Pulp and Pa- More strike] per speviaterel | Rela- : tions Bureau today. He COVETAQE | said the PPIRB better page 4 be ready to do the. same. “We can (reach a deal) if the industry would show up at the table with the money needed to reach an agreement.” Despite a threat of a full-scale walk- out Monday at 8 a.m., Shewaga said the union is ready to reach an accord. He said the only stumbling block is the PPIRB’s reluctance to anti up and it re- quest that one statutory down day be re- moved from the contract. “The time frame isn’t the problem,” he said. “I think if the problem is that the industry isn’t willing to put up the money needed to reach a collective agreement.” The latest contract offer, rejected by 89 per cent of the pulp industry’s 12,000 unionized workers, called for a $i an hour raises over two years plus the elim- ination of one statutory down day. The same contract was nixed by Celgar 325 PPWC Local 1 members by a 94 per cent majority. Local 1 followed that by walk- ing off the job Tuesday. A news release issued by PPIRB President Eric Mitterndorfer Tuesday called for an compromise. “We are willing to get together, but with the poor economic and market con- ditions our room to move is very limit- ed,” he stated. “To make this (mediation process) work we need to jointly address our competitive needs.” As of Thursday, five of B.C.’s 20 unionized mills have shutdown, putting 2,000 workers on the picket lines. CANADA POST SET TO MEET WITH CITY COUNCIL, PAGE = bea