April 18, 1990 HANDYMAN — Light carpentry, Tence itlo decks, painting, inside and ov resneneeie chose ‘iano discounts). 365. 2267 Lorne tin/30 [D A JOB? High school and college tudes may offer thelr services under this category. Phone our Action Ad no. 965-2212. We will run your od for 3 issues at no cl tin/26 For all your BACKHOE NEEDS A: Triple “A” Contracting 365-7124 R.U.4 CONTRACTORS © HOUSE RENOVATIONS * CONCRETE * SWIM MING POOLS 365-8355. tin/8 ARE YOU HAVING AN AFFAIR? For your next wedding, social or por fy. call us. Dance bands, mobile disco units, PA rental, musical instrument soles and supplies. Ph. 362-7795 ing, guoranteed work Same prices os last year. Doug. 365: ‘3703, 77 : COMPUTER TRAINING & CONSULTING Associate Systems now taking béokings for © Bedford Accounting training on a tive data approach * Intro DOS & Lotus 1, 2,3 Gov't Funding Available KEN HILLSTEAD 359-7889 ED SPAGETT'S Trucking. Hauling of sand, gravel, ashpohlt, fill etc. 365 a77s. Castlegar, B.C 12 Ba) Tax Service * Income Tox Returns * Bookkeeping Service BEV CALL 365-7033 1245-3rd Street * Castlegar For estimetes phone 364-2346. Hina SHINGLES © TAR & GRAVEL © ROOF REPAIRS Guaranteed Work 365-2307 “FREE ESTIMATES” GARDENS tilled with @ rear tined tiller. 365-6914. 7/27 What the great houses and cities of the world have in common TIMELESS ORNAMENTAL IRON RAILINGS ZAP WELDING 352-6978 TO NELSON — Monday to Friday, 9 a.m 5 p.m. After 6 p.m, 693-2470. 3/30 WORK, school trips, weekly shopping. Cut expenses and save money. Get together with @ neighbour in our FREE Share-A-Ride column. We'll run your ad Phone our Ac ‘ho: 3 issues tree of charge ur Ac tion Ad no. 365-2212 CUTE 8-MONTH-OLD small male to home, good with children. 365. rd pone 355: ; 3/29 iF YOU have an item you'd like to jiveaway please drop us a line or phone 2212. We'll run your ad for 3 issues tree of charge. WHITE 3-year-old cat with | blue eye, | green eye. missing in Robson.265-6538.- HOOD for ski-doo, Columbia Avenve, Saturday, April 14. Owner may claim by phoning 365-3359. 3v3t KEYS in black leather case, Wednesday. April 11 by Castlegar News. Owner ney / FREE!! immediate delivery oye Herbal weight loss. Lose 10-29lbs. per month. 100% natural, 100% guaran: teed, As seen on T.V. Order now, tlono 1522-4322. 1/90. HT PEOPLE, We pay you to love 10-29 The. tn 30 days. Doctor 100% guaranteed. 1 a 7/30 GRAND OPENING Gino's patm ond taro card; psyshic readings. Tells past, present and future Gifted through generations, answers all questions in lite — love, marriage business, etc. Phone this gifted lady today, 364-1436, Trait, B.C 3/31 ALCOHOLICS anonymous and Al-Anon. Phone 365-3663. 104/71 THE FRIENDS of John & Catherine Stadier are cordially invited to join them in celebrating their 50th wedding anniver- sary on Sunday, April 29, 1990.°At the Portuguese Social Centre, 421-13th Ave:; Castlegar, 8:C: From 2p.m. to6:00 p.m. No gifts please. 3/3) Your partitipation helps make our successful, Thank you very muc everyone who came ond supported us. T WISH to express my sincere thanks and deep appreciation to the Castlegar Kiwanis club for selecting and honouring me as Castlegor's citizen of the year for 1989. | further wish to thank the club for the wondertul dinner and social evening which followed and was attended by so meny—ot-my-tomity,_triends,-tormer citizens of the year", and of course many Kiwanians and wives. | also want to. thank-all_-the fomily friends sent and last, but not feast cloim at Castlegar News. SILVER tabby kitten in Homes area. 365-2787 3 29 FOUND " not charged for. if you've found something. phone our Ac- tion Ad number 365-2212 during regular business hours and we'll run your ad for Tissues free of charge Hin/15 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY: Stuff’ en- velopes at home. Earn $600/weekly- Free supplies. Rush self addressed stamped envelope. Hughes Enterp Department A-9, Box 964 borough, Ontario, K9J7AS.—_3/ BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY — Process mail at home. Earn big dollars. Free supplies Rush self addressed stamped envelope: G8E Enterprises, 197 Hunter Street, W the group of “Rossland Light Opera Players” who gave so unselfishly of their time and eHlort_te conte bt trom Rossiand, soley for the purpose ot singing on ode to and roasting “Joe Killough’, The whole was-e-highlight of my life.” God Bless You All, sincerely Joe Killough CANADIAN DIABETES ASSOCIATION in Memoriam Donations Box 1228 Rossland, B.C. VOG 1Y0 _ 104 73 CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY memoriam donations information: Box 3292, Castlegar, B.C. 365-5167. 104/23 ¢ tment No. 20, 9) ‘ompartment wah. Vinyl Deck Franchise, Castlegar and Trail areas! . 365-7086. 16419 NORTH CASTLEGAR Girl Guide Spring Tea at the Senior Citizens hall, Saturday April 21, 1-3 p.m, Bake table, s table, fish pond and door prizes. Ad- mission $1.00. 3 THE FISH TRUCK (formerly Westcoast Seatoods) at Hi Arrow Arms Parking Lot Friday! April 20; 10.0.m. to 7 p.m 1 Treat A SA with respect doctors say The Canadian Press It's become the drug for all reasons, @ veritable panacea to lower fever, relieve headache and ease ar- thritis pain, Recent studies suggest daily doses may even help prevent heart attacks and strokes. But—should—-the— ordinary ASA tablet, a mainstay of the Canadian medicine cabinet since the turn of the century, replace the apple — as in ‘‘an aspirin a day keeps the doctor away?” For the average person trying to stave off a heart attack or stroke, in Canada, where Aspirin is the trademark of Sterling Drugs — may help people live longer. The most recent study, published last week in the New England Journal of Medicine, showed daily ASA halved the risk of stroke caused by @ clot arising inthe heart” because of irregular heartbeat, a condtiion called atrial fibrillation. By far the largest and most con- troversial study is the U.S. Physicians Health Study, which tested 22,071 male doctors. Call 365-2955 many doctors answer with a resoun- ding ‘‘No.”" . “We have discovered yet another virtue of aspirin, which happens.to be. a very powerful, multi-faceted drug,”” says Dr. Viadimir Hachinski, chair- man of the neurological science department at the Universtiy of Western Ontario in London. “it’s just like a diamond — each time you look at it you see something you didn’t see before,”’ Hachinsky said in an interview. ‘‘The flip-side of. that is it should be treated with the same respect as a prescription drug. No one should take it without medical advice,’’ Ah... Let our Auto det Gary Wa CASTLEGAR THIS 1S THE MAZDA WAY a make your unit LOOK uy CLEAN UP! iN rotessionals DI LIKE NEW! FOR APPOINTMENTS CALL CARL JOHNSON COLLECT AT 365-7241 loucy 3 @mazpsa * CALL NOW CALI COLLECT 385 124 Cardiologist John Gill of Hamilton General Hospital agrees, saying ASA is a potentially harmful drug thai should not be taken lightly. “‘Here’s a drug that’s been available over the counter for _many, many years and it’s cheap,’’ said Gill. “‘But the message shouldn’t be that all of us, including our kids, need to be taking one of these a day.’’ __Studies have regular doses of acetylsalicylic acid — called aspirin in the United States and. ASA Jack L. Pi Bi ue Province of Ministry of British Columbia Forests farkin ius. 365-6664 Res. 365-2694 Investco inc.*, two of The Mutual Group. “‘Let me help you with your financial needs. Financial Planning Life Insurance Disabilityincome Annuities and RRIFs 99 GICs and Saving Plans Investment Funds RESPs Employee Benefits Ré The Mutual Group Facing Tomorrow of Canada/Mutual Together @ NOTICE INVITING APPLICATIONS FOR TIMBER SALE LICENCE A34167 Pursuant to Section 16 of the Forest Act, seated tender applications wilt be accepted by the District Manager. 845 Columbia Aver speaking r located at McCormick Creek East, in the Arrow Timber Area, thirty 5 (30) kilometers West of Castlegar To organize rec Invites 1, ENGLISH AS A. SECOND LANGUAGE INSTRUCTOR — CASTLEGAR CAMPUS | Education students in the creas of: grammar, listening. ag eading ‘ond writing skills. Applicants should have training and/or experience in teaching E.S.L. This 31, 1990). Salary in accordance wi 2. STUDENT ACTIVITIES/CAMPUS RECREATION CLERK — NELSON CAMPUS SELKIRK COLLEGE tl for the foll 9 P ition is full time, short term (May 1} to July the B.C.G.E.U. collective it. reation activites on the Campus by planning ond oreeviion oc: Kootenay Land District stiviti Species: 60% Lodgepol 30% Munusiry of Forests ree NOTICE INVITING APPLICATIONS FOR TIMBER SALE LICENCE A34165 Pursuant to Section 16 of the Forest DONE RIGHT... FOR : LESS! @ * Renovations |. fs * Commercial © Residential CLASSIFIED $165 $15 DISCOUNT FOR CASH! Call us for details! Classified Ads 365-2212 acre Castlegar News PROVINCE-WIDE |. more or less, of timber located at Gem Hill West, in the Arrow Timber Supply Area, thirty (30) kilometers West of Castlegar Kootenay Land District Species=4 20% Spruce, 15% Larch, 10% Balsam and 10% Other Species = Lodgepole Pine Term: One (1) year Bidding is restricted to persons registered in the Small Business Forest Enterprise Program. Category CHAPEL HOUSE Heritage Park doy. 8 a.m.-4 p.m Station, Mon.-Sot ther intormation. 365-6440. Castlegar RESPONSIBLE 16-year-old will babysit or do housework 365-2765 of 365-2492. A 14-YE D boy References on reques f looking for part-time job. After school and weekends. Coll David 365-2375. 3/29 SEAN will do odd jobs around house, yard work, etc. Call 365-2324 3 NZ all ages, desire housekeepin Zuckerberg Island Open Wednesday-sun : Rail District Manager at 845 Columbia 8a.m—5 p.m. For tur tin 90 One. Particulars may be obtained from the Avenue. Castlegar, B.C., VIN 1H3, or the Regional Manager at 518-Lake Street, Nelson, B.C te Pi Douglas Fir, and 10% Other Species. Term: One (1) Year Bidding is restricted to persons registered in the Small Business Forest &nterprise Program, Category One Particulars may be obtained from the District Manager at 845 Columbia Avenve, Castlegar, B.C., VIN 1H3 or the Regional Manager at 518 Lake Street, Nelson, B.C., VIL 4C ence work i ith student groduotes; have experience working wi have a St. John’s First Aid certificate and Class 4 B.C. part-time Position (10 hours/week) beginning as soon as possible to May 31, 1990 — commer Salary in accordance with the P.P.W.C. collective agreement. i rom 4 ernment organizations; Driver's license. This is o ic year (September to May). ncing again during the aci Please submit your resume. together with copies of transcripts and the names of three references, by April 24, 1990, to: PERSONNEL & EMPLOYEE RELATIONS Box 1200, Castieger. B.C. VIN 3J1 365-7292 @ ki & —_——— CASTLEGAR CAMPUS ———___ Se 4 * 4 CYLINDER 39° plus parts * 8 CYLINDER 5 g%5 plus parts * FRONT WHEEL 9 95 ALIGNMENT SPECIAL . cvs * FORD F SERIES 10.9 Ys mos or $750C.B. Safety is no accident so PLAYSAFE! arrangements in exchange for accom modation etc, 1-547-2020 anytime. 26 04 SaiAsi€ cConciion Sd Oa th A ' g PAINTING & DECORATING 2649 CASTLEGAR vIn 2S? SS Castle News Wayne Sto! Caro! ADVERTISING OFFICE 365-5210 °F line Soukoroff hz M. FO) FOURTH AVENUE ac 365 2795 MIGHWAY Deve TRAN. BC 3 rene 702 AX 365- vie 214 NAVE YOU DRIVEN A FRO Lare,y DENNIS BEDIN 367-7187 Q, * FORD RANGER 10.9 Yoi4s mos * FORD ESCORT 6.9% *# MERCURY SABLE 10.9 % 48 mos ¥ SP RS ER ARE * Spring Tune-Up Specials 95 * 6 CYLINDER 49 Plus Parts * GOVERNMENT g®5 SAFETY INSPECTIONS All Prices In Effect Until April 30th SENIORS 10% DISCOUNT _ ~ LOW RATE FINANCING #% FORD TEMPO 10.9 Yoo mos. or $750 C.B. Ly * MERC TOPAZ 10.9 Lowe mon *% FORD TAURUS 10.9 %iso mos *AMIFM electronic stereoicasse! ‘dual electric remote control mir ‘styled road wheels *power lock group #2 3L EFI 4cy! engine stinted glass full instrumentation group stilt steering/speed control Discount -$1, Reg, Price $14,819 “New Ford Mustang” —__ tte rors, ‘sbodyside molding accent sinpe So; THIS WEEK'S special price *12,8; 1900 F160 SUPER 688 ONTIAC PHOENIX ir cond 8 0B or rune, warranty 1986 TOPAZ GS 4 6000, fully (197204. power wvingowe & toc SOUS WN, end power eat 1987 CAMERO RS. Seyinaer 5 1001 loaded 1908 F180 Pv. mity one briced right TRANS Alt GTO loaded inctuging 1 100! ana ‘ants heft system Check st out Auto. i, orutae. 01 and pw tow hens 2708 eg SS ee BIE a A SH IAS Higl Drive, A.M. Trait sc. | MERCURY | nway tows call Trail, B.C — Out of Trail 364-0202 c 365-0202 tleger Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8:00-8:00 * Saturday 8:00-5:00 ALL MODELS ALL MAKES April 18,1990 Cl GET THE PERFECT FIT WiTH A KOOTENA' Y SAVINGS RRSP Kootenay Savings Getting agrip ong 4 arbage earching for viable solutions Editor's note: Garbage is a big Issue in communities across Canada and the United States. City dumps are filling up fast — and then what? This is the first in a series on North America’s garbage problem and efforts to recycle waste materials. By CAL WOODWARD NEW YORK (CP) — Seagulls cover Staten Island’s mountains of garbage like snow. They're fag They couldn't look any happier. S So much garbage, so little time. Their banquer-atop New York City’s main dump comes compliments of -a growing North American problem — wherre to put the trash. Across the United States and Canada, officials are wringing their hands. They’re urging everyone to Recycle, Reuse and Reduce, and coming up with some fanciful schemes to ease the crunch without riling the pesky. public. Fhe iB rush for solu is bling to U.S. garbage expert William Rathje — if anything troubles a man whose answering machine tells a Steady stream of callers he’s out saving humanity but will get back to you Soon, ‘‘buckeroo.”* Rathje, —an—anthropologist, has been cheerfully exhuming dumps for almost 20 years as head of the Univeristy of Arizona's Garbage Project. He offers this radical _thought—on—the- industrialized world’s trash overload: “Ever since governments began facing up to their responsibilities, the story of the garbage problem in the West-has been one of steady amelioration, of bad giving way to less bad and eventually to not too bad.” SEES NO CRISIS Rathje maintains there is no broad crisis, although he Says the problem is severe in the heavily populated U.S. northeast. He thinks effective recycling must be promoted ' = “eo A GROWING PROBLEM... . The jarbage continues to pile u; = 1g —#9. as North American g and experts consider ways to reduce the fresh heaps. as part of a mix of popular and garbage- management policies. In the United States, one-third of all dumps are ex- pected to be full in five years, 80 Per cent in 20 years. In Canada, authorities don’t know how many will fill up and when, but they know they have a problem. “Ottawa has a lot of empty area around it and it has to have a tandfill,” says~ Davitt Hay, Environment ‘Canada’s chief official on municipal_waste, giving just one example. “But you go outside the Ottawa boundaries and the Political forces there tell you to take your garbage and go some place dark and moist.’’ Vancouver has looked at rail cars bound for the B.C. Interior, and Montreal at old northern mine Shafts, in their continuing search for places to put it-_all. REDUCE WASTE The pressure is on in both’ the United States and Canada to cut the volume of stuff before it becomes gar- hinner throwaway CUps to ULS. states that would restrict or tax certain types_of. packaging or even disposable diapers. ““By the time you get to the waste, you've lose the case,”” says Konrad von Moltke of the U.S. Conservation Institute, explaining the incentiveto ut at the source. ‘We face a hanging judge on wastes.”* But Rathje says source reduction is one of the less Promising approaches to the garbage glut. It is, he con- tends, “‘straight elitism” rarely promoted by people who have to struggle the hardest to make ends meet. When you say no to disposables, you're really messing with something very serious," he said by phone from Tucson. ““Somebody’s going to have to ‘Stay home and do the cooking and the cleaning “Twenty-five years ago, there wasn’t any question who stayed home. I’m not sure we want to raise that question today.”” find his work valuable, even if they dispute his con- clusions. They know that no other Scholar has been so in- timate with our rubbish; Among the conventional wisdoms upset by the University-of Arizona’s Garbage Project is that natural Products break’ down easily in landfills—its ‘excavations have uncovered corn cobs that merely mummified and 40- year-old newspapers that could still be read. “That is a very significant finding and it’s one that has implications in terms of how we integrate the waste stream,"’ said Richard Denison, senior scientist with the Environmental Defence Fund, a leading U.S. lobbying group. Paper products, far bulkier than plastics, can no tonger be promoted as inherently kinder to the environ- ment, Denison says. ~ a “If you're looking for an ogre, pick paper,”’ agrees Hay of Environment Canada ‘You might get a bigger But governments and many environmentalists also Editor’s note: Recycling is the product Newsprint industry may import from U.S. to the United States, cent within 10 years. bang for your buck.” Canadians and Americans throw away about 1.7 kilograms of household garbage per person each day. Both countries recycle about 10 per cent of it, burn 10 per cent and dump the rest, and have set goals of cut- ting waste generation by half within 10 years. Not surprisingly, places with the most generally have the worst problems. “In parts of New Jersey, residents all but tie up their garbage with a bow. They sort, store and in some cases wash ‘glass, aluminum, plastic bottles, cardboard and newspapers, all subject to regulations on the shape, size and weight of the bundles. What's left costs about $30 US a month to have taken away. as people FRESH KILLS DUMP Across the Hudson. River,the garbage motchilis of. millions of New Yorkers become the mountains of Staten Island — the gruesomely named Fresh Kills Tandfill. From doorsteps to depots, the bulk of the city’s gar- bage is loaded on to barges and hauled non-stop to Fresh Kills, where mammoth trucks, filled to overflowing and blanketed with seagulls hitching a ride, rock and lumber up the slopes to plains that are 75 metres above sea level, and rising The dump, which takes in 24,000 tonnes a day, may be shut down in a few. years-because-it-is thought to be leaking poisons into the water. At the same time, a Proposed incinerator is being blocked by public opposition. “‘Americans want a silver bullet,” Rathje complains. “They just don’t want to have to mess with too many things.”” They need to focus their minds on garbage, he says. For too long, they’ve tried to turn @ moth into a but- terfly — building dumps that can some day become parks, designing incinerators that can turn waste into citywide supplies of energy. Let's just call a moth a moth, Rathje says. TAKE REAL STEPS Change freight rates to encourage the transport of recycled newsprint. Have governments-use double-sided copying paper to cut that portion of the paper-flow by half. Locate new landfills in places where few people live and the water tabie is low. Build incinerators that are the best for garbage — even if they only heat a swimming pool. Step on the moth. Meanwhile, Rathje advises the western world, face up to the “‘consumer guilt”’ that he Says is driving a well. intentioned public to believe garbage is such a crisis they ‘must tower their standard of living to cope with it Understand, he says, that we hate Plastic for the wrong reason — because it is the texture of industry, ar- tificiality and the conspicuous consumption of our tives. “We are the pack-rats of all time,’* Rathje says, EE 0 NeXt OF his nearly 50 phone calls a day “Everybody wants to do the right thing.”” Packaging put mew trend in the North American newsprint industry. And that’s going to have a major impact on Canadian forest and newsprint companies. By CALVIN WOODWARD The Canadian Press The Canadian newsprint _in- dustry, sustained for so long by the great natural forests, expects to start importing raw material from the “‘urban forests’’ of the United States. The material will be old newspaper destined for de-inking mills and a new life as recycled recycling movement to which more and more Canadians are subscribing could mean profound changes for the in- dustrial of Canada’s wilderness. The projected demand for recycled newsprint, especially in the United States, will affect the competitive advantage Canada has long enjoyed from its vast d ab almost all of it virgin fibre. That export makes up almost 60 Per cent of all newsprint con- sumed in the United States. CAPACITY LAGS But Canada can only make one- fifth the recycled paper of U.S. mills, and that’s what Americans increasingly want. “Virgin fibre always had Preference,’’ McClay said. “Up until six months ago, this remained true. “Today, I think without doubt, if you produce a recycled sheet you’re looked upon more favorably by publishers.” Despite the current glut of newspapers saved under Ontar- io’s blue-box curbside collection Program, McClay said the in- dustry will be short of supplies when more recycling mills are built. “Clearly, we're going to import lots of waste paper from the United States,’’ he said, adding that would be true even if all an energy, McClay of the Pulp and Paper Says Brian Canadian Association. Charles-Albert Poissant, chairman of Donahue Inc. in Quebec City, has predicted that recycling will shift newsprint Production to the United States “*It puts the Canadian industry in peril.”” Whether it goes that far, tran- sition of some sort seems unavoidable for a Canadian in- dustry that sends 70 per cent of its spapers sold across Canada were collected Newspaper recycling has caught on wildly across the United States, where many dumps are clogged and the average Sunday paper runs 350 pages. Paper and paper- board makes up about 40 Per cent of garbage, with plastics trailing at seven per cent. About 35 per cent of old U.S. newspapers are collected to be turned into newsprint or other products. The U.S. paper industry expects the rate to exceed $0 per The market for new material won't vanish because virgin fibre has to go into the mix to make new newsprint. But the percentage » of recycled fibre is rising. The American Newspaper Publishers Association has called for increased use and production of recycled newsprint, aware that more publishers may be forced by government to do what they can now do voluntarily The newsprint industry remains concerned that people won't buy as many papers if they have to be bothered with sorting them for collection Moreover, some Newspapers are shareholders in Newsprint companies using virgin fibre. “Despite these complications, however, newspapers know that solutions must be found because the tide of public opinion is Surging strongly in favor of recycling,”’ says Presstimé, the Journal of the U.S. newspaper Publishers association. The Canadian newsprint in dustry, which has admitted being caught off guard by the movement, is building several new recycling plants Recycled production capacity, now 340,000 tonnes, is expected to exceed 800,000 tonnes in two years, still less than a tenth of Canada’s overall newsprint Production “They won't be left behind by recycling,’’ McClay said of Canadian companies. continued on pege C3 Editor's note: The packaging, plastics and fast-food industries are facing pressures to reuse, recycle and reduce disposable material. But the disposable issue isn’t always as straightforward as it seems. By CALVIN WOODWARD The Canadian Press Janine Ferretti’s approach to grocery shopping is to make a little more work for herself and, in the Process, causes a little less grief for the environment. Toting a canvas bag and a couple of empty egg cartons, the executive director of Pollution Probe, a Toron- to-based environmental group, stops first at a health-food store where she can pack her own eggs from bulk Then _it’s_on_to-a-supermarket; where she unwraps a package of tomatoes, plunks them in her own small bag, and leaves the cardboard and plastic in the store. doing it,’’ she insists. they think you're a rube."* Ferretti can get a.bit radical in her views, contending, for example, that you don’t need a straw to suck — or pry — the goods out of a McDonald’s shake. But she believes Canadians are “‘just clamoring” for Products that, eliminate excess Packaging and vastly reduce throwaway materia! People with busy lives and stret ched budgets, she contends, would-be willing to pay an inflated price for disposable diapers — kind of an en- vironmental tax — and avoid many of “Otherwise the other things that the North “You have to explain why you're American marketplace has developed to make life @asier “We're looking at going back to basics, but back to basics in a semi- convenient style.”” Controls on excess packaging have been introduced by some U.S. com- munities and are being studied in Canada by a task force. COMING ABOARD The packaging, plastics and fast food industries are waking up to under pressure Pressure from consumers and gover- mment to reuse, recycle and reduce disposable things In the United States, used food containers made of plastic foam, or Polystyrene, like the Big Mac shell, are being reprocessed into pellets for a variety of products, including cassette casings, food trays and insulation The U.S. plastics industry has set a goal of recycling 25 per cent of continued on poge C4 CUTTING BACK . . . Th. ing, plastics and fast-foods o pecxeaing. oi s industries @re making changes that reduce disposable items. new to reuse, recycle and ry