ns Casta News April 30, 1986 Commencing April 28th, 1986 DR. ERIC L. BEAUCHAMP 560 Boker Street, Nelson, B.C. \ 4 the ret of his tric practice to or FOR AN APPOINTMENT, KINDLY TELEPHONE 352-7263 1-800-332-4476 We are changing our looks to make your visits with us more pleasant. For now . . . business will be as usual, during our facelift. Thank You Hnribal MICHAEL MAY Professional Photogropher tch for ovF Weew Look! Nee-ard Street 365-7515 Congratulations, Hazel The Castlegar News congratulates HAZEL KINAKIN, out typesetter, on having won the “WHO IS THE FASTEST TYPIST IN THE WEST KOOTENAY?” CONTEST Sponsored at the West Kootenay Trade Fair by Mitech Business Systems Ltd. of Nelson. Hazel won a new Olympia electronic typewriter. CLEAN CITY . . . Stanley band students wi Residents gather to see royalty VICTORIA (CP) — People sjarted arriving at the lawns of the British Columbia lature at dawn today to grab the best spots to see Prince Charles and Diana, the Princess of Wales. Nicole Picton, 16, of nearby Sidney, said she was at the legislative building at 5 a.m., almost 10 hours before the royal couple is scheduled to arrive, to make sure she gets a close view of Diana. “I want to give some flowers to her,” Picton said. “When I was about 12 years old, I started collecting things about her; I just always liked her.” Debra Dyke of Victoria was among the 20 or so people gathered on the lawns since about 8 a.m. “for front row seats, I guess.” The weather was sunny but cool and organizers expected up to 40,000 people for the arrival ceremonies. Officials said every precaution will have been taken to make the royal couple's seven-day visit safe and pleasant. Charles and Diana will be driven in a motorcade from the airport to the B.C. legislature where they will be d in a 45-minut y expected to be attended by 40,000 people on the front lawns. Police are drawing heavily on their experience from the 1983 visit by the Queen in planning for today’s visit. Hundreds of police and military personnel will be d to order, check the site for bombs, Humphries Secondary School trash collected during annual gar- OPEN MEETING to adopt Budget Bylaw Thursday, May 1 6 p.m. ot Board It took a force of more than 80 Stanley Humphries Sec- ondary School band students to clean the streets of Castle- gar on Saturday as the band hied its annual gafbathon. More than 415 large plastic garbage bags were filled with It’s hard to beat credit cards for shopping convenience. Or getting cash when you're a long way from where you But a lot of people don't like the pile of bills at the end of the month. And the interest charges on those bill if they aren’ paid in 5 And the fact that if you use your credit card to get cash, interest charges start immediately, even if you do pay in That’: -— be 's why credit unions With MASTERPLAN™, you get a Credit Union MasterCard card. You can use it in over 4 million outlets worldwide. Get cash at more than 102,000 banking of- ices. Even use it as a cash access card at your Credit Union d banking hines (where applicable). Here's the big difference: Your Credit Union MasterCard card can provide you with a line of credit — the line of credit is attached to your account at your Credit Union, not your card. This means if there's money in your account, you don’t use credit. If you do use your line of credit you pay Credit Union in- terest rates, not bank card finance charges, and you pay If you get cash, and there’s money in your account to cover it, you pay no interest charges at all! Best of all: At the end of the month you get one statement showing all your accounts. That's money management made easy! CREDIT UNION CASTLEGAR SAVINGS litter. The bands do this cleanup every year as a way of raising money for uniforms bathon on Saturday. More than 415 bags of garbage were collected by more than 80 students. - and travel. The students are appreciative of support shown by parents, citizens, businesses and city hall. Money raised through the garbathon will go for band trips to Penticton and Leth- bridge, Alta. This year, for the first time, Stanley Humphries has a junior band that will travel to Penticton to play several Students collect litter concerts. The band has new uniforms and looks forward to performing. The senior concert and stage bands will be visiting Lethbridge. On Thursday, May 22 the bands will be performing at a Pop Concert in the SHSS gymnasium. There will be pop music, free bottled pop and guest musicians from Penticton High School. Bennett joins singing VANCOUVER (CP) — Premier Bill Bennett shed his usual stiff public image Tues- eday and joined a song-and- dance routine along with the --cheering: staff-of the B.C. pavilion at Expo. Bennett appeared so roused by the enthusiastic singing of the pavilion staff during an Expo rally he jumped out of his seat to sing along with them. * INDUS; ° cea Minutes later, he was hop- ping and skipping to the music of the song, Some thing's Happening “Here, while the young people cheered him on. It happened during a rally held by Expo for the hospi- tality industry of British Col- umbia, people, such as hotel staff, transit operators and cab drivers. About 1,500 people had F.J. McLEOD Tp. CASTLEGAR, B.C. COMMERCIAL BUILDING TAMER LOADER & BACKHOE FaLtcon " PAINTING & “ DECORATING AVENUE 2649 FOURTH CASTLEGAR 8 © vin 2st R NEWS TSAR AC. v0 ae 365:3563 R.F. (Dick) M LEOD Carol Maga Dianna Kootnikotf ADVERTISING SALES been expected, but organ izers said about 2,300 turned up to hear pep talks by Bennett, Expo chairman Jim” Pattison and, Expo Fee aad Enric nods} BILL BENNETT . Song and dance RUBBER STAMPS Made to Order CASTLEGAR NEWS 197 Columbia Ave. Phone 365-7266 * 10% Discount to senior citizens * ICBC Claims provide bodyguards and drive and escort the royal motorcade. “Our major concern is going to be for crowd control, but we look at all the other things too — the security of the building, the adjacent buildings and the site itself,” Staples said. “We don't expect any trouble at all. Mind you, we are always alert to any problem that might arise, but generally speaking the crowd is going to be in a festive mood and we expect that everyone will enjoy themselves. LAST-MINUTE WORK The front of the 89-year-old building was alive with activity Tuesday. A dress rehearsal with the military honor guard and band was under way while workers with hammers and drills put finishing touches to the dais from which Charles will take the royal salute. The building and driveway were spruced up, and fresh flowers were planted. White barricades criss-cross- ed the immaculate lawns — which, trampled by perhaps 80,000 feet, will turn to mud if there is rain. “You'll have to talk to a higher source than myself,” about the weather, said Deputy Provincial Secretary Bob Plecas, co-ordinator of the visit. There were showers Tuesday, but the latest forecast called for mixed sun and clouds today with a high of 13 degrees. Building manager Doug Pletsch tried to look on the bright side and said files on the 1983 royal visit showed that the grounds recovered quickly after the blustery. Wet Match ‘decision: “We're well in hand for the event,” Pletsch said as a truckload of flagpoles and royal pennants went by Plecas said the time for worrying was past, and what remained was fine-tuning after almost seven months of preparatory work, “and making sure the public has as good a view as they could possibly get.” A Canadian Forces Boeing 707 piloted by Lt.-Col. Jeffrey Brace will land at Victoria airport at about 2 p.m. PDT with Charles and Diana aboard. The Prince of Wales last visited Victoria in 1982, but Diana was not with him. Rogers receives dinner invitation VICTORIA (CP) — The federal government now has invited Lt.-Gov. Robert Rog. ers to the state dinner in Vancouver in honor of Prince Charles and Diana, the Prin. cess of Wales. Michael Roberts, the lieutenant-governor's private secretary, said an invitation was extended by telephone by a federal official Tuesday The Company Metropolitan Matropoliten Really Stands By You! morning, after the publica- tion of news that no invi tation had been sent to Rog: ers. Roberts had no additional comment, but had said ear- lier he thought the invitation ought to have arrived al ready, if it had been sent. Provincial officials said the invitations to the state din- ner were being handled by Ottawa. Prime Minister Brian Mul- roney is scheduled to speak at the dinner, which the federal government is hold. ing for the royal couple. There has already been one protocol mixup for the dinner, when provincial Op- position Leader Bob Skelly and his wife Alex were in- itially left off the guest list. They have since received an Whatever the mood or occasion, the MARGARET CATLEY-CARLSON . .- facing dragons DEVELOPMENT AID FACES CHALLENGES By CasNews Staff “If we are to continue more or less safely on our journey through space and time, we need to do something about the way we run the affairs of our planet,” the head of the Canadian International Development Agency told about 120 people at Selkirk College Friday night. Margaret Catley-Carison, a Nelson native, whose speech was part of Selkirk College's 20th anniversary Distinguished Speaker Series, spoke on the “dragons, dilemmas and development” of helping Third World countries. “If we want to celebrate victories, rather than lament lost opportunities, when the clock strikes 12 on Dec. 31, 1999, we have just those 5,000 precious days left to put things in better order,” she said. Catley-Carlson told her audience that one of the most encouraging facts about the 20th century is that since the end of World War Two, it has become “quite normal” for rich countries to help poor countries. Catley-Carison said the very idea of development assistance is an important principle and a big step forward in the evolution of the nation-state. She said that when one sets out on the road to development cooperation there are some “fairly fierce dragons” to be vanquished. “And even after you get past all of them you must still find your way through a confusing forest of dilemmas. And then at last you might just catch a glimpse of your goal — that better world of the future that we all desire,” she said. Catley-Carlson said that at the beginning there will be a challenge from the three major dragons: contempt, skepticism and self-interest. The dragon called “contempt,” she said, “will bellow clouds of smoke and fire, telling you that you might as well go back home, that the Third World is full of apathetic people holding out bottomless begging bowls, too lazy to help themselves.” Catley-Carlson said the dragon called “sk Safeway’s Fresh, Young Ducklings «. tb, 9g G ¢ Flaked Light Tuna. ee Case of Equal to 12 $9.98 84° Each l Sun Crop Orange Juice Vegetables 12.37.98 670s Bathroom Tissue $149 Pkg. of Equal 12 $16.98 $1.42 cach Tomato Sauce | oe 2? | - Case of Equal 12 7.98 76° exch Tomatoes Sun Pic. Peeled rusted 796 mi Tin Pras Leowe ane 12) ST TL48 96° ccch OPEN SUNDAYS 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Advertised specials this week in effect until Sunday, 5 p.m. = 69% Case of 24 Case of 12 $13.98 $7.48 will make a shrewder attack. “He will try to cut the fact out from under you by claiming that development doesn't work, that progress is impossible,” she said. “And he's well armed with a lot of case histories of development efforts that have gone awry in more different ways than you could count.” The third dragon is the serpent, “self-interest,” she said “ ‘Charity begins at home,’ he will hiss at you. Deal with your own problems before you look abroad.” Catley-Carison said that once one is past the dragons, then begins the deep forest of dilemmas — the heartland of development The first dilemma is whether to give development assistance at all. “By giving assistance to a country, in essence you are giving that country something it can’t afford — because if it could afford it would be able to raise the money through its own devices,” she said. “According to some very thoughtful economists — some of the wiser dragons — foreign aid is wrong from the beginning, because it means putting into countries implants which the economies cannot sustain and it therefore creates an artificial pattern in their growth which simply will not be sustained,” she said. But Catley-Carlson said that obviously with $2.3 billion going out this year in Canadian foreign assistance, the decision has been that the benefits outweigh the risks, that each particular society can absorb the level of investment The second kind of decision faced is which country to Catley-Carison said the Canadian approach to this question “has really been really a little bit of everything.” “T think that is necessary, because it reflects the way the world is. Our allocation pattern has tended to reflect our own historical pattern of relations with, first of all, the Commonwealth countries of Asia, and then both Anglophone and Francophone Africa as these countries became independent “Fairly large chunks — especially on a per capita recipient population basis — have always gone to the people of the Caribbean, who are our nearest Third World neighbors and lately we have been trying to do more with our hemispheric Latin American partners,” she said. 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