che sana " TESA ST un eo oo hoa by CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, November 2, 1972 ; 9 Wwiee CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, November 2,.1972 CONSCIENCE : : ‘“COFFEE BREAK” By Jack Alouf The’ Defensive Driving Course’ will commence on Nov. 18 with three more sessions to follow on Nov. 14,20 and 21. All those who have not paid their re- gistration fee must do 50 rogram at the arena is go- g very well, Attendance is around 40 to 50. each sesaion, Pre-school hockey ifice, ’ We are atill looking for coaches for our Junior Bad- A. grou; 5 Reerestion Rows ~ From the Director's Desk minton and Junior Gymn- astic classes. For the gym class a basic knowledge is sufficient, At least one’ more coach is needed for the pre. school hockey for Friday afternoons. Anyone who can help with these classes can contact the Recreation ffice, you are wondering e@ time is at such a youngsters season which is about 80 up on last yo Tt is impossible to eep everyone happy with ice time but if we can keep the vast majority content we are getting somewhere, We can look forward to watching some good calibre hockey this winter with the Selkirk Hockey Games on Friday .and Saturday nights. Work Experience Project p of Regional and Community Planning - Technology students from Selkirk College are tackling a big project. It's the de- velopment of a $2,500,000 sub-division and recreation- al area 10 miles east of Kelowna, The students are: Kim- Brian and Stuart Lo’ and Phil Best and Don Wah of Nelson. The project was initia- ted. by Capozzi Enterprises of Kelowna. It involves a new approach to sub-divis- jon development with par- ticular emphasis on the pre- servation of a significant open. area. Selkirk College lectuy- ers Franz Braal. and rey deJong, who jointly devel- oped the Planning Technol- ogy P al, a civil engin- Mr. Braal, er said “consulting jobs of this nature are essentially educational exercises. They do not compete with the contributions of profession- the area.” he © said, formation and an alternat- ive opinion. prepared by young, enthusiastic people.” Capozzi Enterprises have offered -a grant of $5,000 for student supplies and travel expenses. The indi- vidual students will receive a sum of money -equal to the fees they paid year. Consultants hired for the project are Eric Clough of Winlaw and William Kane of Kelowna, BONUS SUBSCRIPTION OFFER that will be d long Here's a gift after the Christmas seas! on: a year’s subscription to rs ine plusa full-col Beautiful British C 1973 calendar-diary. You can give both for just $2 - the regular price of the magazine subscription alone. We announce your gift with a greeting signed In your name and the current Winter issue of Beautiful British Columbla.-The 1973 Spring, Summer and Fall issues will be mailed as published. This offer applies only to new and renewal sub- d for ing with scriptions, pi Wars. and the Winter, 1972 Issue. Please order early. ORDER IN PERSON ONLY AT CASTLEGAR NEWS PROCLAMATION. WHEREAS the National Poppy Committee of the recommended that the ob- Royal Canadian Legion has Week immediately proir to servance of a Remembrance November | Ith would do a great deal to encourage great- er interest on the part of the public; : : NOW THEREFORE be it resolved, we John Landis, Mayor of Castlegar, and Colin T. M Kinnaird, do hereby proclaim Friday, November 5th to Saturday, November | Ith as “Remembrance Week"” and urge all citizens to observe this week in-memory of the service and sacrifice of the Veterans of the two World BRISK BUSINESS was experienced by St. David's Thrift Shop Friday when doors were opened for the first time for this new joint venture of the Anglican and United Church Women. Mrs, W. E. MacCabe, left, and Mrs. John Sherbiko busy themselves pre- paring more price tags during a brief full. ‘The shop, located across from the Govern- ment Liquor Store on Maple St.:.in ‘Castle- & COMMENT School where the emphasis was on self-examination and Govern tended thodist tent the writers could be correct, But we question their gar, is open on day ys and Fridays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The wo- “men welcome contributions of good used clothes or household items, i ec ) they say, is following his funda: mentalist traditions to-'an obvious conclusion: — as a fiery moral reformer. What they may not know ieee SHSS Sports — Castlegar News Photo Rockettes in Provincial Championships Sr. Girls Field Hoc! The Rockettes travelled most of the situation. the first game they equalled the play of Crof- ton House from Vancouver Island. The game was score- Jess with three minutes left to play. Then the more ex- perienced Island team seored three quick goals . for a 3-0 win. Lake Cowichan and Kel- owna Secondary School do- minated the play in the next two games and soundly beat our girls 2-0 and 5-0. This put our girls in the consolation round Sat- urday morning. _ They defeated their old rivals, Grand Forks, 1-0 on a field covered with four in- of snow: . 2. : ‘<1 Fhe team? 7then. “met Crofton House, again to de- termine who would go on to the consolation champ- ljonship. The coast proved more experienced and won | a 3-0. The team placed llth out of 16, but the big fact- or was the experience of playing the strong teams. Now the team realizes the work and dedication that is needed to become champions. as i Jr. Field Hockey Our junior Rockettes travelled to Beaver Valley. to challenge their 16 year. and under team. Susan Culley and Trudy ‘Lyons each scored two goals and Fay Fodor scored one for a 5-0 score... Leona Barisenkoff and Pat West played ‘strong on defence: while Fay . Fodor and Teresa McGauley set up some nice plays around- the goal. : The © West . Kootenay being held in Beaver 2 e fon.’ gam won both easily. They de- the provincials s The C. T, Maddocks . Mayor Town of Kinnaird . laddocks, Mayor of Town of Castlegar y' feated Grand Forks four - games to one and then Lloyd Crowe three games to one. The girls with coach Mrs. Rogerson are play! a series of exhibition gam- es in preparation for the West Kootenay play-offs on te with teams from Trail, on, and Ni for the West Kootenay Champion- ships and the right to go to in Victoria. ’ game, Rock ers vs Nelson, .was played at 11 a.m. in an inch. of snow. The conditions were such that Nelson held very close for the first half but once the Rockers conquered the elements they ran away to a 5-0 win. $ Scoring were To: gle- Bob t q Osmechenko, and ‘Tom: Mor-. ‘ani O1 ding: ‘defensively Makaroff and Sam Stoochnofé. The second game pit- The a Trail, Ove: the neat, exciting and for the first’ 15 ton a defensive lapse from. a commer kick gave first goal. Maintaining their close checking, hustling play Bob Osmachenko tied it at 1-1. With 20. min. remaining Mike Conkin -made a. bdril- liant save on a Trail penal- ty kick after: which there was no stopping the Rock- ers. i Shortly: after Tony De- Rosa put Castlegar ahead to stay, Final score 2-1 Castle- gar. The victory was a tre- mendous team effort, not only in the play itself, but in the final preparation for the tourney. : Sperial. applause must. go to our strong defence who continually beat Trail to the ball throughout the Tony Costa, and Manuel De- Rosa and fullbacks Alex Josefatow and Don Makar- off played as good a defence as you will see anywhere. Next competition — The B.C, High School boys provincial championships a Victoria, Noy. 16, 17 and ment Saturday itvale in four inches of snow. the strong Tra- De- " goal with I (snow) settled 'Nelson-came, “away the winner’4-2.° -"' has rejt evangelical past and it is Nixon whose positions par- allel that’ religious view. For example Nixon widely believed to favor a “Give ‘em a shovel” — ap- proach to welfare. Perhaps not coincidentally the Bible 1s “If a man. does not work -neither «should he eat.” are ang. for the status quo pro- viding it changes gradual- spo i and preematic. that the poor are not some- times lazy.and that men are always improving is decided- ly unevangelical — and un- realisti be, the "8. im- ic, And it could heart. of * McGovern’s ... in pending politital-failure. ©’ Do You Le! Your Wife. Drive? men never let their wives drive while a vacation | trips = ty bet cause 0: cause they're afrald they'll end up in a crash. But husbands and wiv- es should take turns driv- agated by mei, coulbe) hat “women are terrible drivers.” Mr. Atkin- son suggests that men build WHO WILL BE CASTLEGAR "AND DISTRICT'S; CITIZEN of the YEAR — 1972 -- Organizations or Individuals are invited..to |: submit nominations ‘to: i 3 Burt Campbell, Chairman, Citizen of the Year Committee, Castlegar Kiwanis Club, ' P.O, Drawer 490, Castlegar, B.C. © Deadline: 5 p.m., Fri., Nov. 10, 1972 He's called Snow Pup. But he works like a beaver..Cleans a 50 foot driveway in tess than 15 minutes, Plows sidewalks, porenes and those tricky smaller areas na hur : a hurry. Yet he's a mere 22, or 24 pounds (de- ending on the model.) So the wife or ids can easily get attached to him. And housing is no problem, either..He’s fectly content to hang loose on a peg ur ara; < re ‘Allthese tal you can ;havesas & a 6 talet ea . > him for a little over. §160..: ‘Super Snow Hound is the dynamo of the family. Digs, through the deepest snow drifts. Down to the bare pavement. the first time. Gets rid of the wattest snow like the lightest feather. And throws more snow clogging. Plows up to a 32” swath. Ye! power-tuming to handle sffortlessly.: Why send a man to do a dog's job? * Mitchell Supply Lid. On Front Street in Downtown Castlegar Telephone 365-7252 a * * z: CONSTRUCTION Is underway on anew section of Highway 6 that will bypass the Slocan Bluffs immediately north of Slocan City. Nine bids were opened on the 4.65 mile ~ project in August, with J.E.T. Equipment the’ low, bidder with a /tender of $1,395,678. The new road starts. [ust south of Slocan City and will rejoin the present highway x } By LOIS. HUGHES Box 731, Castlegar Tell Lois: 365-5503 What has happened to Coffee Break? ‘his question has been ut to me lately and the good thing about It Is I ex- Perlenced a certuin amount £ satisfaction that people have at least noticed when the column didn’t appear, It has been faithfully ‘> written, but I have a prob- near Cape Horn, A new access road is also planned which will provide entry into Slocan City, The 74-foot-long tunnel and section of highway to be bypassed by the new road was first opened to traffic in 1928, — Castlegar News Photo civil marriages, driving, evangelism, and the inflation spiral were among enda' included ‘a report from Regional Ecumenical Parish of Castlegar-Kinnaird Send Delegates to the Kootenay Presbytery of the United Church Abortion, overpopulation, those who attended “Gen- impaired ational ussed at a year in jon. At this national meet- ing, the crisis in the deple- tion of natural resources, and the growing gap he- tween the rich and poor countries, was much discus- se 4 The problem was ilus- Adelle Yule, Tummett,: Francis Hunter, W, efit e erwin veo North America ~ consumes Part of the two-day ag-- in- spective mothers, |. \~ to their, he same amount of natur- ety,.we' must not move to- ward a much simpler way of life, as our.Christian re- sponse to the problem. The much debated Gen- eral Council decision to ap- prove abortion in some cir- cumstances, Presbytery del- egates were told, was pre- sented as far from the ideal of human existence. Abor- tion was supported, rather, as a concession to an imper- fect world where. some peo- “lem. Now having ‘the re- , Sponsibility of placin, news into the pages it the first cle I set a- side rather than miss some- one elses material when space becomes a premium. Tf you will excuse the timing of this -weck’s col- umn, this is how matters stood last week.— Short of those persons who like to snowmobile, too many kind words Clown Princes Of Baskethall . To Play Here “Clown Princes — of Baskeibali", the Harlem Clowns will be back in town again this year. The Clowns have per- formed to packed houses all over the world and are re- u g to Stanley Humph- ties ‘Secondary School Fri- day, Nov. 10. : This will be the third year in succession that these players have presented their ‘hilarious routine wi reminiscent of the great Harlem Globetrotters, In fact, several of the clowns are past Globetrot- Yeligious aspects of the cer- ters, emony, Delegates were asked the B.C. go - ing, and th drinking problems, for all those convicted of impaired driving. i The Kootenay Presby- i welcomed © United 9 their, , elreum stances, ‘to’ seek from* le- l_resources.as two hildren ‘in India. populated .countries, but a better use of. resources in the PRT areas legates’ at Presbytery were . challenged to ask themselves if, in our soci- , says John it president and managing dir- ector. of the Allstate Insur- ance Companies of Canada. “The husband and wife Bae a ot Sot ecome invol- ved in a, serious crash this 1 n ty of a traffic er by fatigue or ‘road hypnos-. ‘is'. Besides it adds a lot to the vacation to able to enjoy the scenery.” a Naat unwillagn ess to to Jet the women drive may be linked with the age-old : .SELKIRK COLLEGE presents - - TWO PUBLIC LECTURES ” by ce DR. IAN McTAGGART COWAN Distinguished Wildlife Ecologi and’ Pioneer British Columbia Conservationist. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6 AT 12:30 P.M. “WORLD EFFORTS FOR ANIMAL _ SPECIES CONSERVATION” . MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6-AT 7:30 P.M. “ENVIRONMENT CANADA” PLACE: SELKIRK COLLEGE MAIN LOUNGE - EVERYONE WELCOME! gontidenes «in their. ais them eae sek psi ence. ~ beta iJ i/2h'(> Goo, TEAR yal Suburbanite x © Sroed, inerlocking lodder-type deahs ot contre of freed ‘Semooth, eve chde—no “morning trernp” Gverarteed witha! limit 21 to time of mieage ON SMALL CAR O erg Tetra nba fos ors wos of ne NOVEMBER PERM SALE HALF PRICE Plaza Beauty Salon Phone 365-6577 3-43 “01 gal‘ or. illegal anyway. Along with ie osition ou abort ols Genel Coun- urged. pregnancy. coun- selling before tinal decis- ion is made, and more fa- iE. Delegates : mily pl E were told that a minority Position + against abortion was respectfully heard ~ at General Council, and accep- ted as part of the council's deliberations, Other items of concern at the Presbytery meeting ancluded the question of civil marriages. Some dele- gates’ expressed concern tnat couples. wishing a non- religious marriage ceremony can do so only between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday to Friday,-in a crowded office. Delegaves felt this sometim- es forced couples into a church service where they did not honestly believe the | United Appeal Drive | Now Nearing Completion If you haven't made =. - your contribution yet, Do So Right Away! “THANKS TO YOU IT'S WO Tey e an ’. all, denomination eee on evan- gelism. It was felt that or- dinary members of congre- ations need the opportun- ity. to express, out loud, their personal relationship with God. =~ The Regional Ecumenic- al Parish of this area is al- ready making plans for its parucipauon in ‘Key °73.’ Munisters’ salaries be- came a focus of attention on the rising spiral of costs and salaries. Presbytery ap- proved in principle that, in view of rising inflation, sal- aries for~ ministers should increase only in proportion to the rise in the consum- er price index. This decision was part of a search by the national iret for a fair salary policy. -* At General Council, many’ ministers recommen- ded turning back their next pay increase into the mis- sion fund of the Church, as a-small protest aguinst the mad rise of costs and in- comes. These ministers hop- ed other segments of socie- would also. try ‘to put e brakes on the inflation spiral. Lo delegates have stated they. will be pleased to’ discuss. these and other matters raised at Presby- tery with any interested per- son. “SELL WITH ’ CLASSIFIEDS” For your financial require- ments, there's only one answer... ‘LAURENTIDE * FINANCE _cin Nelson :at 367 Baker Street OPEN MONDAY TO FRIDAY FROM 6:30 A.M, TO 5 P.M, @ Cash for any worthwhile purpose “ @ Fast, efficient .. personalized service . DROPIN AND SEE US OF. Phone Doug Overholt - Branch Mgr, at 352-6626 CAURENTIOR FINANCIAL, 2) CORPORATION CimiTEO . 17-48 ple alike. But spectators are advised to come early as the Clowns are always an early sell out. ‘As an added attraction, staff have been said about ap- proaching winter, I will admit summer was too short, but if it tak- es the approach of winter to bring out all these beau- tiful colors, let's. just enjoy it while they are here, We had a fai excurs: jon a couple of times this month. We ues the excuse of needing firewood forthe fireplace, Our loads are ne- ver too large but the hours . quite long. We enjoy the color. Took special notice of the growing foliage and moss and-collected some to make a terrium, : But it seems once a person gets back into. their own yard, time once again rushes on. Even the fond thought of the terrium be- cumes a deed undone, I thought the best way to get the real feel of the color would be to see it from the air. ‘his was accomplished readily with a willing band who loves to fly at any excuse. The airplarie ride was glori- ous, bi has to be looked at from ground level. From the air the color was there but as fue? ble vivid bright yellow spl against each hill and moun- tain slope — giving an al- most unnatural coloring, Gone were the small patches of red and oranges that compliment the yellows so well. © ,.. These detailed colors ‘are best enjoyed with fallen leaves under foot. - But do enjoy it. A strong north wind will one day, and maybe even soon, strip the trees of their color and plunge us into. that snow- mobiler’s heaven. x ra] Collision No charges resulted from at hicle accident which the Stanley “Stars” are going to pre- sent their brand of basket- ball against the Trail staff in the preliminary game starting at 7 p.m.. ? “a The: Harlem Clowns will play the SHSS Rockers..at 8 Dm “The. proceeds. - from these~ games. will help ‘fin- ance ‘the SHSS athletic program. : occurred Oct. 21 at the jun- etion of the Pass Creek and Robson reads. A. vehicle driven by Michael M. Sookochoff ; of Pass Creek the’ rear. of.a vehicle driven’ by Way- ne Harry! Chernoff. Z «+ “It. bad been: originally reported the - Sookochoff vehicle had been struck by the Chernoff vehicle. CAREER OPPORTUNITY Kootenay Savings Credit Union has opening for a loan officer with minimum of 1 year loan granting experience, Salary commensurate with telated experience. Excellent fringe benefits and working conditions, Apply in writing to: A H. Krueger, General Manager Kootenay Savings Credit Union: Head Office, 1199 Cedar Avenue, Trail, B.C. WANTED IMMEDIATELY Certified Millwright for Sawmill fe) i 2 k stil Sh on. the ip Lake. Good working and living condi- tions, Union wages. Apply to: Personnel Supervisor, Federated Co-Op ld., Box 70, Canoe, B.C. Phone 832-2194, In VICTORIA Stay At.. day 4 * Close to Parliament Bldgs. * Handy to Downtown Shopping * Enclosed Heated Pool * Kitchen Units Available * Cablevision Television : * Attractive Coffee Shop and Dining ROTOR INN 455 Belleville St., Victoria Phone 386-2421 Free Reservation Service Through TERRA NOVA MOTOR INN, TRAIL Phone Trail 368-3355 Bayugy yaymenna Topropax waM HYRHN ABA IIPEICTABUTEDA JI HAI KOMIABMM B Kactuerapcxom pationee Han HYMN MyxUEN, xoTOpue MOryT TOROPHTS H MHCaTh HO=pyccke x TO— AAA oScxy Racenenna 9Toro pailonas ‘° fan y =pyerca xOpomuit sapadoTok B MAHCH ER TORGOMe B HOMep TexepoHA no axpecy | Mr. Dave McGregor,: Box. 484, Trail Waa awworo aHTepaBn Salgure = Ecuropy . 1491 Bay Ave., Trail B.C. a Chamber of Commerce , Proudly Presents NIGHT inthe Trail Memorial Arena Gymnasium This Saturday, November 4th - 730 DM. Until’? - $f Per Person DANCING - REFRESHMENTS FOOD. - ENTERTAINMENT