CASTLEGAR NEWS, ‘Thursday, July 27, 1961 CASTLEGAR NEWS NOTRE DAME COLLEGE “The announcement last week of the ‘affiliation of Nelson’s Notre Dame Uni- ty: Coltege with St. Francis Xavier University in Antigonish, Nova Scotia, is one that will, be greeted happily in the Kootenays. Notre. Dame has come a long way since its small’ beginning in’ 1950° with 12 students! in an old converted bak- ery. ~ : The residential ‘co-educational college offering first— and second-year arts and sciences will, according to the announce- ment, be offering third year for the 1962-63 term and will be granting de- grees as it graduates students in 1966. For Notre Dame rector, Father Thomas Aquinas, the affiliation is the culmination of a long dream..He has re- peatedly urged competition in higher ed- ucation and has criticized’ the fact that only the University of B.C. granted de- grees in this province. Father A always claimed that i and Forty-Seven .Is On Its Way couver to’attend UBC and;some feel that the big university is too large. Notre Dame's highly qualified. faculty and high faculty-student ratio has always insured individual guidance in both char- acter devel and d and students from all over the Kootenays, the Ok e nor n U.S. and southern Alberta. have’ done well there. Students from‘the Castlegar District have also done very: well there ‘and one local. stud a Prot it, was p' of the Students’: Union one year on the’ campus. He is now enroled in medicine at Dalhousie ‘University. Another local student, a girl, topped the list of stu- dents at the institution one year and was herself a candidate for president of the Students’ Union. Notre Dame, with an enrolment of 46 per cent Py that. will undout pursuits - IT HAPPENED ‘CANADA By, Mal - yp Coaphell, S \867- ys Sis Sir Joun A WITT JUBILATION, - 19M COMPLETELY SOL! A. MacDonato edly increase since -Roman ‘Catholics . eae only some 15 per cent of the. experience in the United States has shown that competition for ‘students has kept universities on their toes. He has said that many Kootenay students of the arts and do not y ducati because they cannot “afford to go to Van- WALKING BYLAW. The City of Fernie has passed a by- law restricting the amount of road that a pedestrian may use (in the absence of sidewalks) when walking. ’ This is a unique bit of local legisia- tion. It means there will be a fine for any walker. who takes up too much road or who walks on the street where there is a sidewalk. He also must walk on the left side of the “road, facing oncoming traffic. of the Kootenays, has always opened its doors and made welcome “students of all races, colors and creeds, and because of this it has had ‘a success- ful history up to reaching this inilestone and can only make greater gains ‘in the future, : For Hoggish Pedestrians ductive ‘to better health and longevity. But until provision is made on our main highways for pedestrians to peram- bulate in safety, the banning of careless strolling and hitch-hiking must, of neces- sity. be rigorously enforced. : Whether we like it or not, we live in a machine age of speed and‘more speed and only constant alertness, plus obedi- ence of the law will:.ensure.*that more of us 1 will live our allotted span. The purpose is to further di: ir age hitch-hiking and to increase safety factors on our congested’ highways. Among the penalties we of West Van pay for our addiction:to motor. trans- portation are the obstacles placed in the way of those who have a perfectly natural desire to use their legs . . .. a practice which was always believed to be con- SUMMER SPLENDOUR . Hard upon the tides of spring the | forest canopy closes and the splendour of- summer descends upon the woods. Still- ness there is‘and the serenity of full leaf and long shadow. The green coniferous growth takes on a fresher hue. Now and then thunderstorms may rend the after- noons and evenings, but mostly the boughs hang motionless, permitting motes of sun- a ride is b a ride and unless we want to develop into a Paty nation of bums we must refuse to pick up those who demand transportation and often bestow a contemptuous grim- ace on those who ignore them. A local bylaw such as was passed in Fernie, is a good start towards this end. —tion’s Gate Times, West. Vancouver °% Descends Upon Us and sugars, begins with the first unfold- ing of new leaves and reaches its peak in May. As summer wears on, the glucose of the leaves’ own manufacture is stored away in twigs, trunks and roots to provide energy for the burst of Browéit next spring. *- ‘ light on the forest floor tt hours. The voices of the feathered folk are muted save in the hours of dawn and dusk, Every transept of the woods is im- bued with the rapture of fullfillment, of growth completed‘ and work done. In June the turbulence of blossoms abates, Still, though the flowered embroid- ery | of the spring carpet has Sr a few lerant plants in the twilit arcades. In the tranwail weeks through July’ and ‘August ‘the trees will _ Settle down’ to quiet preparation for the year to come. Fruits will ripen, trunks and branches thicken’ in girth. The pro-- cess of Photosynthesis. by. which plants convert} inorganic: ial into st But is not wholly a time OF Itc triumph and abundance. For in the sultry ‘silences: of noon and night’s breathless. blackness, forces of destruction commence | their quiet work. Soon, ona billion’ pend- ant leaves, voracious mouths. bite lacy filigrees. And with the scourge of ‘insects .comes the ruthless summer drought, sear- ing ‘and scathing the. foliage.:Long before the nights grow cool the canopy. begins .to thin, admitting: with ‘the ‘intense ‘star- light premonitions’ of . the: - brevity of: life. All this despite, the plants . and trees get their work done. .Would ‘that :in the Thad? of MY New Party Will Fail On a Liberal Course The New Party will die unless it steers well to the left,.of the, “by its its Deeeent lead- erahip,‘a véteran COFer predicts ‘the recent issue of Maclean's, Colin Cameron, a former mem- ber. of | Parliament for Nanaimo, quotes from’New Party literature to support his ‘contention that the mentors of the New Party — such fellow COFers as Stanley Knowles and Premier Tommy Douglas are too conservative and ‘are’ allying themselves too closely to: what he calls a (dying”: business economy. ‘The “ flery left-winger sounds once egain: the old CCF clarion call for the nationalization of big corporations, ~ sys “Nothing leas than this is .an adequate raison d’etre for a new political party in Canada at time,” he says. “The attempt to seek pacaar aime Rela with the exist- ing corporate struct of the na- tion, #0 asturblagly ev evident in New Uterature, is an open invita- tion to failure.” ‘The corporation is nearing the end of {ts days, Cameron contends. “It is no longer functionally prac- tical. Its work has been done. It thes accumulated ‘the capital, dev- eloped the organizational structure, ane stimulated the © technological ances needed for mass produc- tion, but it is unable to release the resulting wealth for the benefit of the community.” He argues that the big corpora- tion, through automation, is damn- ing the flow of wealth, salaries and wages, to the public, “As this is the only method by which private in- dustry distributes wealth, the bene- fits of sutomation are denied to society a8 & whole,” Public ownership is the only answer to this problem. of distri- buting corporate surpluses, secord- ing to Cameron, And it seems to ama, that the New Party leadership is turning away from public owner- ship toward the corporative.system: “It is true that passing mention’ was méde of the possibility of pub- that . public should no longer occuny a central position..." Carteron . sees - in. New Party |E= pronouncements a strong tendency | = to back away -from basic social transformation. Without this social transformation — which means ae ic in the William’ S . MOVING: & STORAGE “The Family’ Mover” i LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE HAULING STORAGE : CRATING - PACKING - SHIPPING — For Free Estimates Call. Collect Trail 191 “Nelson 1471 Oo oso ee EVERY THURSDAY NITE‘ 00 P.M. St. Rita’s. Parish Hall, Front Street JACKPOTS ° ‘$72.50. &: $145.00 "55 NUMBERS CALLED ie NCL or 1% wed NoMa . TO: THEN. THE, or \UEACH OTHER oS Saa-—7 “Forest protection {s more then fire. prevention,” sald..Elmer J. ‘Palmer, president of, the Canadian Forestry Association of B.C, , “Keeping our forests green en- tails ‘an active: program of forest insect ‘and ‘disease control na well 144 CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, July 27, 1961 5 nature of the, forest cover,. all. of which remain more or less constant. Risk, on the other, hand, Js equated with the introduction of the less human clement 8 and is with Protect Foresis Fires & Insecis fic and the opening of new forest arens to the public, ‘The most ‘intensive’ fire pre- vention and ‘suppression program can be nullified by ong carelessly Hi smoke or a neglected support to all national and. pro- : »,[ vinetal forest ‘protection programs. :“Publio cilindes and. behavior in’ forested’ areas Ue he New Patty ‘will be only © splinter group, a neo-liberal party. Read the Gastlegar News Classified Ads Business, Professional Directory FIALA’'S FOR BEAUTY Custom Hair Styling PHONE 5818 Above Bank of Montreal of some bat this was coupled with the de-]- WORK buries - ee LECKIE, but half as well. —- Hugh reo in’ the’ Kaslo Koot CASTLEGAR NEWS_ qteo, Newspapers Advertising Bu 2 4 Cy ATL ONG iy % ~ ? od 1 ea*® Ail” correspondente ‘should’ ’ be’ “addressed to - The Editor, Castlegar News, Drawer 490," Castlegar, “BG. Letters. for publication’ must be’ accompanted , sir by}the correct name and ad¢ress of the writer. Pen ‘Rames: will. be used on. request. but..the correct ~ Casttegar News PARIS. eres SAFETY ‘TOES ’ LEITNER’S| Printing Supplies OASTLEGAR NEWS - Phone 3031 " lomes. a - Special -) Wislte ‘Box as, Betient, Ho. era * SMITE BOARDING | _ Forest Industry ° Loads’ IT Per Gent” ‘Altogether, the forest industries account for 27 per cent of all the freight cars loaded In Canade. "Thus practically one of ‘every| be five freight cara’ Jended consists of ‘wood or its ts'And the:pulp and paper mills account for foush more than half this.total. : :¢lPulp and paper and ‘pulpwood ‘ car loadings account some 10.6 per} is cent of all the revenue freight cars loaded in ©! ; A small propor~ tloii.of this Covers pulpwood ‘export shipments. The pulp. and paper mills alone are, Tespon- E tele ‘How can.I-get an unlisted © hone’ aeee” athle for at Teast 0 one of every 10 sal is conservatively estimated at #00 machinery, yy other raw materials and mill supplies as Well” as‘ oiit- bound shipments of finished pro- this aa about two-thirds ‘paid to rail carriers. The balance ig= paid for, highway and water - tion wl whieh the, industry sullen. ‘This includes inbound |) pores and Area CARS — “| thet Although’: ‘the ipatients, of: the Nelson district’ are” fortunate . in + the services of Miss Judy! ‘Weir with' the patients of Trail un- til July 31, the doctars,. the patients and Miss Welr would be very‘ pleas- ed if a fully qualified ;physiother- epista’s services: ‘could: be obtained to take’ ‘over ‘the’ patients when she leaves, Because, of the. great shortag. Canadian ‘Arthritis’ and Rheu- matism Soclety has been forced to’ carry a skeleton treatment service | sous out Be, this year, . ‘The centres’in’ Prince Rupert, Prince. George, Quesne),‘Trail ‘and the Fraser Valley ‘are either closed or‘on akeleton staff; A’ $70: biirsary has-been ‘set aside to provide a local girl with bursary Joang' for Dbsslotherey training, | - ynake this up: to while ean’ do‘ much to influence the ‘suc- «| cess’ of ‘failtire ‘of “the whole pro- tection program’ in British’ Colum- bia, However, since'we are ‘or the _| threshold ‘of tha’ 1961: fire" season, the stan Forest: Conservation: Week nthe." fire He od ventton “theme” 8 dustries ; Government and the forest. in- maintain ;,elaborate <.and costly fire; control oystems, Between them, they spent 5% million dollars by fighting fires in 1960, But.as any Seventies Ave greatly “by the additional cos’ of” azation which" the ine ees in- T chise, and capital, expenditures; ‘the | id, ‘traffic involving ‘the daily dire control officer ;kmows an ounce of are ablaze, ‘and here, Mr, Palmer points’ out, is, where’ every. citizen of British Columbia enters, the plc- highways | for hudeare or, play, com- mercial i ers, jHeadiog for or through the woods® is avery. year, ie these constitute what is known to forest officers a8 risk elements. Hazard conditions ere. those impos- ed by climate, . topography ., and the ‘os the “and : of forest tires,” he ‘said, “and the ‘public can do its: part-by lending’ ‘The number of people using ,our | the rapid growth of highway traf- “PICOT ‘SUEDE Picot's first st new’ perfume. in seven years A luxury extract for thie “elegant ‘woman. Joading of over 8 freight cars; and the publishing, construc- ton; chemical and textile industries which use: pulp or paper asa raw ‘material, $000, tt & qualiied, girl in this area| ter” can be found to enrol at the Univ- .| eralty of British Columbia this year. Because; they ere keenly aware of ‘the need of training rehabilita- tion staff; in Canada,.CARS, the Pollo Foundation and the GF. Strong: Centre have’ assisted finan- cially-in, the, establishment .of a, School of Physical Medicine Ther- apy at the :University:of British Columbia this fall. ‘The equipment and,sdlaries will be paid from’ Federal Government ..) grants, - All) organizations, in the * | province have been asked to assist y sistance, ‘may -be‘obtained from the] . or] of the 43, Rheumatism ;~ Society, to ensure the opening of the School Rt the’ sppolntinest “of! Dr. y | dent of the: ‘rake of industry and’ the earning ‘power of .money,’ Farmer’ s Integrity Is Very Important © Bey - Says CIBC. Official \The financial: integrity, of the farmer and his family is the, most important single factor to be -con- aidered ; in. granting’ farm. loans, John Proctor, : execiitive vice-presi- Imperial =e? capital been commensurate with the ordinary ‘in | Bank of eae told the annual i e. zenbol for physlotherapy:: and, ‘con- Ys very. few. high: schoo) lonal training” ‘is ‘available to them, “Most “high: school ‘gitis “do‘not know that a rewarding profession this.is, both materially and ‘spir- itually, With the acute shortages of therapists in all ‘countries of.the world,- the” travel _ possibilities “are endless ‘and. salary scales are high. courses meating of the Ontario ¥lue-Cured ‘Pobacco : Growers Marketing Board at. Delhi, Ont. “Most of the. time,” ‘ata har. Proctor, “This is the only real col-. lnteral we get, and Jit is fer more important to us than the farmer's financial strength, represented of- ten largely by the.;value of his land.” ar and. bursaries ‘to give financial®as- of British ¢ In British com 10 per cent ld, be train- om the Canadian -Arthritis: and 45 J West ed in some aspect a Civil Defence inorder. to cope effectively with an : | Broadway,’ Vancouver. We re Gis your cata free bumper-to» bumper safety check with each: Shellubrication. Even the fan belt and): ed! Make." windshield wipers are check sure you haye a‘ safe, comfortable ” holiday.trip this weekend. Drive in for your, Shellubrication, and free See safety check today! xo Love: SSX emergency of any nature... =. wo. WATER COOLED ROOM = CON ITIONERS : ND En GUO Pick up your free TREASURE Quiz card at your - SHOP. EASY. ‘checkout. Carry’ it with. you at all times. ‘Every time you shop at your Shop-Easy: Store, the cash- ier will ‘punch, the amount of your purchase. 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