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1 1 -<br />
lume 6, Number 30 Tuesday, July 23, 7996<br />
AuUit-will snow less wooa tna<br />
estimated in the SQQ timber sun r<br />
dre. s<br />
he forest industry in<br />
mish, after being hit<br />
recent reductions in<br />
allowable annual cut<br />
imber, may be in for<br />
ther unwelcome sur-<br />
the south of the So0<br />
r supply area -<br />
surrounds<br />
amish - is the Fraser<br />
ber has revealed that<br />
ventories have been<br />
ventory which was<br />
rt of the timber supply Corinne Lonsdale<br />
iew process to deterllowable<br />
annual cut in the Fraser timber<br />
pply area about 18 months ago is estimated to have<br />
en 23 per cent too high.<br />
th a recent 12 per cent cutback in the Fraser timber<br />
Upply area's allowable annual cut, the new estimates<br />
are really bad news" for the Fraser area, said Squarnish<br />
ive<br />
I<br />
Escaping<br />
om, some<br />
IIiJudy the heat<br />
rea lakes popular<br />
0s summer hecrt<br />
Mayor Corinne Lonsdale.<br />
The 23 per cent overestimation does not necessarily<br />
mean a corresponding 23 per cent reduction in the<br />
allowable annual cut, said the province's chief forester<br />
Larry Pedersen.<br />
The same type of detailed audit will take place in the<br />
So0 timber supply area in the coming year and there<br />
will be "no better news here,'' Lonsdale said, referring<br />
to the opinions of registered professional foresters to<br />
whom she has spoken about the issue.<br />
"A lot of contractors won't survive for another year,<br />
period,'' Lonsdale said, adding that silviculture workers<br />
- who do things such as tree planting, pruning and<br />
spacing - cannot get enough work either. As of Jan. 1,<br />
1996, the allowable annual cut in the So0 timber supply<br />
area was reduced by 13 per cent over the previous year,<br />
with promises of more cutbacks in future years.<br />
Paul Kuster, district manager of the Squamish Forest<br />
District, said the new audit in the Fraser timber supply<br />
area showed that the volume of merchantable timber in<br />
a larger percentage of old-growth stands was<br />
overassessed in the last timber supply review. He said<br />
the same scenario will likely take place in the So0 tim-<br />
ber supply area.<br />
"It could be difficult for us as time goes on - we have<br />
a good percentage of older growth stands in the So0<br />
timber supply area.''<br />
Bear warning<br />
issued<br />
Cold spring, lack of<br />
berries increases<br />
contact with bruins<br />
1')<br />
Page ad<br />
\~<br />
&2<br />
' ' *: :.<br />
This<br />
Looks<br />
93C + GST<br />
Internationally renowned<br />
Canadian artist G u ido<br />
Molinari admires a plaster<br />
cast of his own face made<br />
by plaster artist George<br />
Rammell at the Paridise<br />
Valley Summer School of<br />
Visual Art last week. Both<br />
were instructors at the<br />
highly successful camp for<br />
young artists. See story on<br />
Page 15. David Donakcison<br />
photo<br />
But the probable overassessment of incrchantable old-<br />
growth timber in the So0 could be at least slightly offset<br />
as a result of an indication from the chief forester that<br />
the growth of immature stands of timber may be higher<br />
than the Squamish Forest District allowed for in thc last<br />
timber supply review.<br />
A land resource management process - including a<br />
new timber supply audit - will take place in the So0<br />
timber supply area as soon as the provincial govern-<br />
ment makes a decision on the completion of tlic Lower<br />
Mainland region protected areas strategy and develops<br />
a management plan for the endangered northern spot-<br />
ted owl species.<br />
"Before launching into another timber supply review<br />
we want stability behind us," Kuster said.<br />
Lonsdale added that she is concerned about the NDP<br />
government's suggestion it may use some of Forest<br />
Renewal B.C.'s funds to work toward balancing the<br />
provincial budget, and said if that happened she<br />
"would like a provincewide revolt.''<br />
Forest Renewal B.C. currently has a balance of $800<br />
million.<br />
Forest Renewal B.C. funding - from increascd<br />
stumpage fees which forest companies pay for the right<br />
to harvest timber on Crown lands - is supposed to be<br />
reinvested into the forests, forest workers and forest<br />
communities.<br />
Indians aim at<br />
Founders Cup<br />
Lacrosse returns to<br />
Squamish to honor<br />
band's elders, fans<br />
21<br />
PQge 3 I
C<br />
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NEWS<br />
Water restrictions remair<br />
By Ron Enns With hot and dry weather forecast<br />
for this week, the stage two restric-<br />
Water restrictions, including a pro- tions may be needed to stay below<br />
hibition on lawn sprinkling, will the 2.5 million gallon figure, said<br />
remain in effect throughout public works operations manager<br />
Squamish this Kim Creed,<br />
week. who is ask-<br />
The District of<br />
Squamish prior<br />
to the recent<br />
ing<br />
conserve<br />
people to<br />
water. He<br />
hot spell enacted<br />
stage two of<br />
added<br />
with<br />
that<br />
last<br />
its water short- week's rain,<br />
age response people do<br />
plan after consistently<br />
be<br />
not<br />
sprinkling<br />
need to<br />
exceeding its their lawns<br />
2.5 million gal- anyway.<br />
lons per day The municiwater<br />
licence pality has<br />
on the Stawamus<br />
River, attempting<br />
also been<br />
to<br />
which is the lessen the<br />
mu ni ci p a li t y s draw from<br />
primary source the Staw-<br />
of water. amus River<br />
The imposed by tying in its<br />
water restric- distribution<br />
tions have the Mashiter<br />
allowed the Creek water<br />
municipality to system,<br />
remain well which usual-<br />
within its water<br />
licence. Late only 1Y Garibserves<br />
last week, dur- aldi High-<br />
ing cooler and lands. In this<br />
rainy weather, way, some of<br />
the amount of Brackendale<br />
water with- is now ser-<br />
drawn from the viced with<br />
Stawamus River hovered at about water from the Mashiter Creek sys-<br />
2.0 million gallons per day. On tem. However, unlike last year when<br />
Saturday the figure dropped to 1.8 Garibaldi Highlands was exempted,<br />
million gallons and on Sunday it this year the entire municipality is<br />
was 2.1 million gallons. subject to the water restrictions.<br />
Compliance with the restrici<br />
has been good, said municipal<br />
Joe Barry. Before the weather co<br />
and became wetter in the midd<br />
last week, the bylaw enforce]<br />
department had issued abou<br />
warnings to people who were w<br />
ing their lawns. Most of those<br />
were warned were unaware o<br />
restrictions. Barry said charges<br />
be laid on people who have<br />
warned if they are caught watt<br />
their lawns again.<br />
Under stage two, Squamish<br />
dents can still water their gar<br />
and flowers using sprinklers. N<br />
planted turf areas are excepted<br />
a permit from the public w<br />
depaTtment is required. There<br />
charge for the permit.<br />
If the water licence is still k<br />
exceeded while under stage<br />
stage three would be enactec<br />
which case all outdoor water<br />
would be prohibited. Garden w<br />
ing would be permitted wi<br />
hand-held hose or water can.<br />
one, in which Squamish resic<br />
were voluntarily asked to reduc<br />
amount of water they use,<br />
enacted about two weeks aga<br />
proved to be ineffective, prom]<br />
the district to move to stage<br />
about 1 1/2 weeks ago.<br />
Exceeding the water licence CB<br />
potential charges under the prc<br />
cia1 Water Act and the fec<br />
Fisheries Act.<br />
Any fines imposed by these i<br />
cies would be recovered throug<br />
water utility, which would ha<br />
direct influence on the<br />
Squamish taxpayers pay for v<br />
said public works director !<br />
Darbyshire.<br />
Slide site paving plans delayec<br />
By Andy Stonehouse<br />
RACE &<br />
COMPANY<br />
DOUGLAS A. RACE<br />
Commercial Lawyer<br />
0 Buying and Selling Land Residential and Commercial Finar cing<br />
Buying and Selling Businesses Commercial Contracts<br />
Negotiating and Assigrung Commercial Leases<br />
0 Incorporations and Reorganizations e Wills and Estates<br />
Squamish - 201-1365 Pernberton Ave. 892-5254<br />
Motorists looking for some long-awaited relief from<br />
hourly road closures on Hwy. 99 will be unhappy to<br />
learn that roadwork at the Cheakamus canyon slide site<br />
will not be completed as quickly as hoped.<br />
The Ministry of Transportation and Highways had<br />
suggested that reconstruction work at the site,. located<br />
about 30 kilometres north of Squamish, was to be fin-<br />
ished and paving to begin by July 23, but ministry offi-<br />
cials say additional rockslides last week have led them<br />
to change their estimates.<br />
Brenda Jones, regional communications co-or dinator<br />
for the ministry, says that recent budget freezes imposed<br />
by the province mean Highways will only be able to<br />
pave the slide site itself, and not add a new coat on the<br />
bumpy Powerline Hill pavement, as first suggested.<br />
Jones says that luckily the budget has allowed the<br />
completion of work at the slide site.<br />
"There's been a bit more slide action at the<br />
Cheakamus site, so engineers have been forced to revise<br />
the road plan and realign it a bit," Jones says. "We are<br />
trying to make the area as safe as possible for p'<br />
transportation."<br />
As a result, paving has been delayed until at least<br />
10, with approximately five to six weeks of paving I<br />
necessary to complete the project.<br />
Commuters used to the top-of-the-hour to 15 mir<br />
past opening schedule will have to ride out a few 1<br />
weeks of inconvenience, but Highways personnel<br />
said that drivers will face only 20 minute delays<br />
paving begins.<br />
The current schedule of 15-minute openings<br />
remain in place, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday thrc<br />
Thursday, and from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Fridays<br />
additional 30-minute opening will continue tr<br />
offered at noon each day.<br />
Workers have been involved in the challenging pi<br />
of removing some 50,000 cubic metres of -rock whicl<br />
from the canyon wall onto the highway during a s<br />
of slides in late May. An entirely new road surfacc<br />
been created, pushing the highway out further ont<br />
stream bank of the Cheakamus River, but will still<br />
ture a three-lane road once completed.
air<br />
he restric<br />
nunicipal<br />
weather cc<br />
1 the midc<br />
N enforce<br />
ued abou<br />
ho were w<br />
t of those<br />
tnaware o<br />
id charges<br />
iho have<br />
aught watl<br />
Squamish<br />
* their gar<br />
rinklers. N<br />
2 excepted<br />
public M<br />
ed. There<br />
e is still ‘t:<br />
ier stage<br />
be enactel<br />
oor water<br />
Garden w<br />
nitted wi<br />
ater can. b<br />
mish resic<br />
Id to reduc<br />
hey use,<br />
vveeks agc<br />
ive, prom]<br />
! to stage<br />
;0.<br />
r licence cc<br />
der the pr(<br />
d the fec<br />
by these i<br />
red throug<br />
would hz<br />
on the<br />
pay for v<br />
director<br />
lye( ZDs in stock for circulation. The library’s<br />
ible for p<br />
til at least<br />
3f paving I<br />
r to 15 mir<br />
3ut a few 1<br />
3ersonnel<br />
Ite delays<br />
openings<br />
onday thrc<br />
in Fridays<br />
mtinue tc<br />
lenging p1<br />
rock whicl<br />
during a s<br />
bad surfaa<br />
urther ontl<br />
it will still<br />
FER<br />
Ltd.<br />
21th E4 2001<br />
2 MB DRAI<br />
)n your PC]<br />
I Monitor<br />
o botics<br />
Idem<br />
ire details!<br />
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No funds for field upgrades<br />
School playing fields which have fallen into<br />
bepair will not be upgraded anytime soon<br />
Jecause the school district doesn’t have the<br />
noney. District of Squamish parks and recre-<br />
ation director Bob Kusch said that although<br />
IO formal authority has declared the fields<br />
insafe, ”I know the community is concerned<br />
about their safety.”<br />
Many school fields in the area are full of<br />
infilled pot holes, ruts and uneven ground.<br />
’They haven’t been very well maintained<br />
Jecause of money.”<br />
Kusch recently met with representatives<br />
From the school district who told him there is<br />
3 minimal maintenance budget for grass-cut-<br />
Ling only. The issue of liability for injury on<br />
:hese fields was also discussed. Kusch said<br />
jchool board staff said they are aware of the<br />
lssue and if it is a concern it is something they<br />
would have to look into.<br />
Maintenance of the fields is solely up the<br />
jchool board unless the District of Squamish<br />
Zhooses to put some money towards it. Kusch<br />
;aid this would be unlikely because ”that’s an<br />
awful lot of money coming from the District<br />
3f Squamish when (it) doesn’t have that<br />
money available.”<br />
Fire fighting training offered<br />
The Justice Institute of B.C. Fire Academy is<br />
looking for men and women who are interest-<br />
2d in careers as fire fighters. The fire acade-<br />
my’s recruit program screens and trains can-<br />
didates for fire service.<br />
Participants must be high school graduates,<br />
physically fit, well coordinated; team players,<br />
Zommitted to public service, able to commu-<br />
nicate clearly in English, and have a good dri-<br />
ving record. For more information on the fire<br />
3cademy call 604-528-5662.<br />
Library update<br />
The Squamish Public Library now has 43<br />
membership in interLINK has been approved<br />
md will commence Jan. 1,1996. Keep an eye<br />
)ut for the new library logo designed by Mark<br />
Kamachi.<br />
Quote of the Week<br />
LrA /of of confructors won’t<br />
survive for another year,<br />
period. 99<br />
- MAYOR CORlNNE LONSOALE ON LESS TIMBER<br />
AVAILABLE FOR HARVESTING, PAGE 7 I<br />
Air - __- Pollutant Index<br />
~<br />
kpamish daily maKimurn for the Iast week (in br&ts<br />
is the pollutant responsible for the maximum ding).<br />
uly 21 - 17 (ozone), July 20 - 11 (ozone), July 19 - 5<br />
total reduced sulphur), July 18 - 6 (ozone), July 17 -<br />
;9 (inhalable particulate), July 16 - 19 (ozone), July<br />
5 - 48 (inhalable particulate).<br />
L25 good. 26-50fair. 52-100 v, ~SOIE With heart UY<br />
gng ailmts sbuId Educe physical uctivity. Over 100<br />
my F, such peysrms should stay indoors.<br />
Sea to Sky corridor lakes and campgrounds are expected to be packed this week as temperatures return to summer lew-<br />
els. While you can park your air mattress anywhere you want on the lake, Squamish RCMP are reminding people it is ille-<br />
gal to park on the highway at Murrin Lake and Shannon Falls provincial parks. Those who do will have their vehicles towed<br />
away. Brian Goldstone photo<br />
-~<br />
New film policy designed<br />
to attract business<br />
Council continues to charge companies who wish to locate shoots in Squamish<br />
By Ron Ems<br />
Minutes after Squamish council<br />
approved what is to be a corridor-<br />
wide policy to not charge film compa-<br />
nies who wish to film in this region, it<br />
reverted back to its existing practice of<br />
imposing a $500 a day fee on a com-<br />
pany planning to shoot a feature film<br />
at the municipal airport.<br />
The new Licence to Occupy for<br />
Filming Purposes policy was devel-<br />
oped by a committee working under<br />
the auspices of the Sea to Sky<br />
Economic Development Commission,<br />
with representation from all Sea to<br />
Sky corridor communities. The policy<br />
is intended to be a standardized film<br />
policy to provide consistency<br />
throughout the region and to make it<br />
easier to sell the region as a whole and<br />
“indeed welcome” the film industry,<br />
said Robert Fine, Sea to Sky economic<br />
development officer.<br />
Fine, speaking to council last week,<br />
said existing fees should be dropped<br />
and instead film companies should be<br />
required to purchase a business<br />
licence and be charged a $125 admin-<br />
istration fee in addition to the busi-<br />
ness licence rate. He said municipali-<br />
ties could still create “film sensitive”<br />
zmes to discmrage tco much fi!ming<br />
in some areas. For example, he said<br />
some people have complained that<br />
film crews use the Smoke Bluffs too<br />
often.<br />
Fine added that the word is spread-<br />
ing around the Lower Mainland -<br />
where film companies are most active<br />
in British Columbia, and which is now<br />
referred to as Holljwood North -<br />
that film companies feel they are<br />
being - ---_ ”eouged” bv the $500 a day fee .u - which is intended to be rcvainpec<br />
LJ v<br />
for any activity‘at the airport -<br />
including parking - even if actual<br />
filming is not taking place. He said<br />
some companies are getting quite<br />
angry and could give Squamish a bad<br />
name in the film industry, which is a<br />
$500 million a year industry in B.C.<br />
He said the new policy would help<br />
alleviate the problem.<br />
Council unanimously approved the<br />
new film policy<br />
and is intending to<br />
bring forward a<br />
bylaw relating to<br />
the policy.<br />
However, when a<br />
location manager<br />
for the 20th<br />
Century Fox fea-<br />
ture film Firestorm<br />
appeared in front<br />
of council immedi-<br />
ately after Fine’s<br />
presentation,<br />
council chose to<br />
impose the $500 a<br />
day charge on the<br />
film company. The<br />
fee will only have<br />
to be paid for the<br />
six to eight days of<br />
actual filming<br />
which will take<br />
Robert Fine<br />
place at the air-<br />
port. During the six to seven weeks<br />
the company will be at the airport<br />
building the set, the company will<br />
have to pay a fee of $100 a day, up to a<br />
maximum of $2,000, for a business<br />
licence.<br />
The district does not have a filming<br />
category in its business licence bylaw<br />
- so it charges the $100 a day enter-<br />
tainment fee, as listed in the existing<br />
business licence bylaw.<br />
Firestorm location marlaser Bruce<br />
Brownstein told council the company<br />
is prepared to pay the business licence<br />
fees and the $500 a day fee for the<br />
actual filming days.<br />
Mayor Corinne Lonsdale said the<br />
concession was being made - past<br />
practice would have had<br />
the district chargxng $500<br />
a day for the entire eight<br />
weeks at the airport -<br />
because of the filming<br />
policy council just<br />
endorsed, even though a<br />
new bylaw is not in<br />
place. She said she<br />
believes council should<br />
follow the spirit of the<br />
new policy.<br />
Firestorm will be an<br />
action adventure movie<br />
set primarily in a forest<br />
fire. Howie Long will<br />
play the smoke jumper<br />
who risks life and limb to<br />
save people from a fire<br />
and to a capture a group<br />
of convicts who. are<br />
attempting to escape<br />
under the cover of a<br />
deliberately set forest-<br />
fire.<br />
The scenes to be shot at the airport<br />
will utilize the spectacular back-<br />
ground setting. The company will<br />
erect a group of buildings and tents<br />
which will simulate a base of opera-<br />
tions for forest fire fighters, in particu-<br />
lar, American-style smoke jumpers.
1’<br />
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NEWS I<br />
4-<br />
7<br />
Emergency Landing ome t<br />
A Blackcomb Helicopters helicopter rests on the field at Squamish Elementary School after an emergency landi<br />
Friday morning. The helicopter had engine failure and pilot Laurence Perry had to perform an auto-rotation landi<br />
during a Ministry of Forests charter flight from-Furry Creek. There were no injuries. David Donaldson photo fter tl<br />
Council sets Gulf Pacific backF2 m SDC)<br />
Developer will be required to present new proposal to the community putcc atistic<br />
By Ron Enns<br />
If Gulf Pacific Investments wishes<br />
to develop a proposed shopping<br />
centre on land along Hwy. 99 at<br />
Mamquam Road, it will have to gar-<br />
ner Squamish council’s support<br />
anew.<br />
Council last week rescinded the<br />
first three readings of the three<br />
bylaws it had passed last year which<br />
granted the development company<br />
approval in principal of the project.<br />
Council had yet to actually adopt<br />
the bylaws through the required<br />
fourth reading.<br />
The bylaws - which were<br />
designed to consolidate various<br />
pieces of property through rezoning<br />
- were rescinded as a result of Gulf<br />
Pacific changing its proposal from a<br />
148,000-square-foot shopping centre<br />
anchored by a 40,000-square-foot<br />
Extra Foods store and supported by<br />
Lonashoreman arieves susDensionE:::: I<br />
w<br />
By Ron Enns<br />
A union longshoreman working at<br />
Squamish Terminals is claiming his<br />
charter rights have been violated<br />
after his employer suspended him<br />
from work for setting up an informa-<br />
tion picket on his own time on a<br />
public access road leading to the ter-<br />
minals.<br />
Jamie Richardson, a member of the<br />
International Longshoremen’s and<br />
Warehousemen’s Union, Local 500,<br />
on July 2 between 3:30 p.m. and 4:30<br />
p.m. set up the information picket<br />
against the union just north the<br />
bridge on Third Avenue, which is a<br />
public access road to Squamish<br />
Terminals.<br />
Longshoremen and other workers<br />
crossed the information picket on<br />
their way to work. Richardson said<br />
he set up the information picket in<br />
an attempt to inform other union<br />
workers that he was being treated<br />
unjustly. Richardson said a Local 500<br />
union official refused to inform the<br />
British Columbia Maritime<br />
Employers Association to not dis-<br />
patch him as a first aid attendant,<br />
even though Richardson had<br />
numerous restaurants and small<br />
retail stores, to a proposal. in which<br />
the shopping centre would still have<br />
the Extra Foods and a few smaller<br />
stores and restaurants, as well as an<br />
80,000-square-foot Zellers store.<br />
Mayor Corinne Lonsdale said she<br />
was supporting the rescinding of the<br />
bylaws because the new proposal is<br />
completely different from the pro-<br />
posal that was originally presented<br />
to the public. Last year, a required<br />
public hearing generated enough<br />
interest to fill the leisure centre audi-<br />
torium. There were many propo-<br />
nents and opponents who spoke at<br />
the public hearing, after which<br />
council passed the third readings of<br />
the by laws .<br />
Coun. Paul Lalli said he would not<br />
support rescinding the bylaws<br />
because council is supposed to be<br />
dealing with a rezoning application<br />
rather than the nature of the devel-<br />
w<br />
obtained signed orders from two<br />
Squamish doctors to be exempted<br />
from first aid duty for medical rea-<br />
sons.<br />
A July 3 letter from. Squamish<br />
Terminals to the British Columbia<br />
Maritime Employers Association<br />
said that Richardson’s behavior in<br />
setting up the picket was unaccept-<br />
able and asked that ”the most severe<br />
discipline possible” be applied to<br />
Mr. Richardson.<br />
The British Columbia Maritime<br />
Employers Association, in a July 10<br />
letter to the union local, said<br />
Richardson was suspended from all<br />
work under the collective agreement<br />
for 15 days, beginning July 21 and<br />
ending Aug. 4.<br />
“As a union member, J. Richardson<br />
is fully aware of the impact a picket<br />
sign will have on fellow union mem-<br />
bers and other employees,” the letter<br />
reads, adding that the employer’s<br />
operation could have been shut<br />
down were it not for immediate<br />
reaction by responsible union m en<br />
bers. The letter said there is no<br />
excuse for Richardson having placed<br />
the picket sign on the access road.<br />
But Richardson said the Canadian<br />
opment itself.<br />
Coun. Bill McNeney in supp<br />
rescinding the bylaws, said p<br />
the proposal back to the first s<br />
“clean and neat” and all0<br />
developer to bring the proposal<br />
ward again.<br />
Coun. Ron Barr said the<br />
obtained legal advice that if co<br />
had chosen to adopt the byla<br />
likely the decision would have b<br />
challenged in court. Council<br />
have the option of amending<br />
Pacific’s development perm<br />
out rescinding the bylaws t<br />
the development to proceed.<br />
Voting in favor of rescinding<br />
bylaws were Mayor Lonsdale a<br />
councillors Barr, MsMeney and<br />
Ross, while councillors Lalli a<br />
Tom Bruusgaard voted against.<br />
If Gulf Pacific chooses to<br />
with its new proposal, anot<br />
lic hearing will be required.<br />
Charter of Rights and<br />
guarantees all citizens<br />
expression on public<br />
uson is grieving the suspensio<br />
behalf of Richardson, who says<br />
suspension is “illegal and unj<br />
He said his information picket<br />
used to inform union members<br />
not to disrupt operations<br />
Squamish Terminals.<br />
Richardson said he will hol<br />
British<br />
Employers Association le<br />
financially responsible for<br />
he incurs because the emplo<br />
association<br />
ly damage a citizen of Canada<br />
exercising freedom of e<br />
guaranteed by the Charte<br />
to protest on a public street.”<br />
Richardson said that un<br />
lective agreement, when<br />
is registered, the longshoreman<br />
suspended from worki<br />
employer - in this cas<br />
Terminals - until the<br />
dealt with. Richardson<br />
allowed to work for ot<br />
ing companies on the<br />
ing at the terminals d<br />
of the grievance procedure.<br />
I<br />
owe b
P L<br />
I<br />
1 4<br />
NEWS<br />
Communities given<br />
{ opportunity to diversify<br />
forest industry<br />
\\ Sea to Sky corridor communities intend<br />
apply for funding under an $lS-mile-year<br />
Forest Renewal B.C. prom<br />
that will enable forest-based comnities<br />
and first nations to plan, identior<br />
develop forest-sector business<br />
rtunities or projects.<br />
e forest community economic develent<br />
program was announced by<br />
ests Minister David Zirnhelt last<br />
Ekl<br />
the distri<br />
iat if coun<br />
a to Sky economic development offi-<br />
Robert Fine said the program is<br />
ed as an opportunity to deal with<br />
e the impacts on the forest industry.<br />
said it is anticipated that the<br />
ish Forest District will be the area<br />
ffected in the Lower Mainland<br />
er the government announces details<br />
f a regional land-use plan, which is to<br />
clude more protected areas and a mangement<br />
plan for - the endangered north-<br />
belief, Fine said<br />
jobs in the<br />
a to Sky corridor increased between<br />
1993 and December 1994, by<br />
over the previous year.<br />
jobs - which include the<br />
truck drivers - also<br />
time period.<br />
forestry job losses<br />
due to a declining land base allocated for<br />
logging, it is likely Sea to Sky communi-<br />
ties will apply for funding to do feasibil-<br />
ity studies for specific value-added<br />
industry opportunities. For example, in<br />
Squamish, funding could be sought for a<br />
feasibility study for a proposed wood<br />
waste incineration facility which would<br />
solve the forest industry’s wood waste<br />
problem and produce bio-oil as a<br />
byproduct. As well, a feasibility study for<br />
a District of Squamish community forest<br />
could be another candidate for obtaining<br />
funding.<br />
Zirnhelt said funds from the program<br />
“will provide locally driven opportuni-<br />
ties to develop stronger, more economi-<br />
cally diverse forest communities.”<br />
The program is designed for communi-<br />
ties and first nations which depend of the<br />
forests for their livelihood. Communities<br />
can apply for funds in three areas: forest<br />
sector planning, project deasibility and<br />
immediate response.<br />
The forest community economic devel-<br />
opment program will be delivered in<br />
partnership with regional economic<br />
development officers.<br />
Forest Renewal B.C. funding - from<br />
increased stumpage fees that forest com-<br />
panies pay for the right to harvest timber<br />
on Crown lands - is supposed to be<br />
reinvested into the forests, forest workers<br />
and forest communities.<br />
critic slams NDP plan<br />
. Ibylaws,it~orestrv<br />
- a<br />
Opposition forestry critic says his<br />
won’t let the NDP government’s<br />
posal to dip into forestry funds fall<br />
bureaucratic abyss.<br />
Friday, Liberal West Vancouver-<br />
ibaldi ML.4 and forestry critic Ted<br />
ling in an interview said that there<br />
hance the Liberals will keep quiet<br />
he NDP‘s suggestion the govern-<br />
ould use money from Forest<br />
ewal B.C. funds to help solve its<br />
Andrew Petter admitted<br />
eing questioned in the<br />
tion Liberals, that the<br />
onsidered dipping into<br />
funds alone, the latest develop-<br />
will at least keep the controversy<br />
e a surplus fund or a slush fund.”<br />
When the NDP government announced<br />
the FRBC program in 1994, it insisted<br />
that money raised would be returned to<br />
forest workers and communities. To date,<br />
the program has accumulated an $800-<br />
million fund from increased stumpage<br />
fees that forest companies pay for the<br />
right to harvest timber on Crown lands.<br />
Petter said FRBC will be reviewed<br />
along with every other government pro-<br />
gram in an effort to reduce costs.<br />
Nebbeling said the Liberals will not<br />
give up on their fight to keep the forestry<br />
funds in the FRBC program.<br />
“We will not stop fighting until they<br />
accept that and start using that money in<br />
such a way that it will indeed benefit not<br />
only the forest objective but the commu-<br />
nity objectives.”<br />
“It’s a tremendous amount of money. It<br />
must become a benefit of the communi-<br />
ties and not a tool for the finance minis-<br />
ter to hide his inability to balance bud-<br />
gets.<br />
Nebbeling said the Liberals have their<br />
own suggestions as to how the NDP gov-<br />
ernment can address its debt problems.<br />
“If this government was willing to start<br />
reducing the size of government and stop<br />
telling people how to live, how to work,<br />
how to run their businesses, and allow<br />
the people of B.C. to be in charge of their<br />
own destiny.. .they could make tremen-<br />
dous savings within the government<br />
infrastructure .”<br />
Nebbeling plans to travel this week to<br />
various parts of B.C. to discuss the FRBC<br />
situation with the public.<br />
”We are not just standing on the side-<br />
lines criticiziw 0 the government for<br />
doing the most unethical thing to the<br />
rural communities that have created this<br />
wealth, we’re also saying ‘this is what<br />
you can do to achieve the objective,’” he<br />
said.<br />
“As long as we do that we’ll be able to<br />
keep dialogue going.”<br />
THE SQUAMISH CHIEF JULY 23,1996 m 5<br />
(3ribsons Sea<br />
Cavalcade<br />
We’re Ba ck.... The 1996 Gibsons Sea Cavalcade<br />
is revivin the Lo gers Sports that in the past we<br />
mous r.<br />
were so iii!<br />
Date: Sunday, July 28,1996<br />
Place: Government wharf, Gibsons, B.C.<br />
Time: 12 - 5 p.m.<br />
Six events have been scheduled: 0 sidewinder obstacle race<br />
0 stick race<br />
0 burling competition<br />
*<br />
GIBSONS LANDING<br />
0 chokerman’s race<br />
0 crosscut saw<br />
0 obstacle pole buck<br />
Plus: We are also hoping to have a boom versus bush tug-0-war and splicing demo.<br />
Please come, visit us for Sea Cavalcade, and help us show the Sunshine Coast that we are proud of our<br />
industry and our skills!<br />
For further information and registration forms, please call Cheryle Bass at the So0 coalition - 892-9766 or<br />
Cheryl Baron at 886-2785.<br />
Preregistration deadline: July 23,1996 Fee: $5.00 per event<br />
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK, 24 HOURS 898151 21<br />
Located across from the R.C.M.P. and Fire Hall 40440 Tantalus Way, Garibaldi Highlands<br />
Get Personal, Choose Amy<br />
One Of Five Free Phones.<br />
Locai Calls Free<br />
Free Weekends<br />
I00 Free Minutes a<br />
Month During<br />
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Free Activation<br />
I& on a &month transferable contract. Month1 srvice fee of $25.95. Non-free time periods are cha at $65 a minute. New customtrs<br />
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"<br />
6 JULY 23, 1996 THE SQUAMISH CHIEF<br />
Passing is legal<br />
but dangerous<br />
in merge lane<br />
W<br />
'hen we put our foot in it, we like to make sure it goes in<br />
all the way to our ankle. Such was the case July 9 when<br />
we wrote an editorial berating some drivers for using the<br />
extra, outside lane at the new traffic lights at Hwy. 99 and<br />
Industrial Way as a passing lane.<br />
As it turns out, for reasons far beyond our comprehension, such<br />
driving actions are legal. The intersection was designed by the<br />
Ministry of Transportation and Highways, and for whatever reason,<br />
the extra lane was included. Perhaps it is in anticipation of the<br />
whole highway at some point being four lanes, but as usual,<br />
nobody at the ministry offices in Vancouver or Victoria was willing<br />
to comment on the record last week.<br />
In any case, that short outside lane which feeds into the merge<br />
lanes south from Industrial Way and north from Finch Drive are<br />
considered "traffic lanes," and passing is legal. We still think it is<br />
stupid, and potentially really dangerous, but it is legal.<br />
It also goes against the rule on every other two-lane portion of the<br />
highway in which the right lane is the slow lane. In fact, people can<br />
be fined for not pulling into the slow lane if they have reams of traffic<br />
backed up behind them.<br />
The Squamish RCMP have had many complaints from drivers<br />
about people using these outside lanes at this intersection for passing,<br />
but there is nothing they can do. They can only get involved if<br />
someone is acting in a dangerous manner and not merging properly.<br />
So if someone roars past you, slams on the binders and cuts in<br />
front of you and drops to 60 kilometres per hour because the 20<br />
cars in front of you are doing that speed, it is legal. (The speed limit<br />
on that stretch is 80 kilometres per hour.)<br />
Unfortunately. when something goes seriously wrong, as it surely<br />
will, it is the RCMP and the rest of the Squamish emergency services<br />
which have to pick up the pieces. And the families of those<br />
injured or killed have to live with the consequences for the rest of<br />
their lives.<br />
Surely Hwy. 99 already provides enough opportunities for stupid<br />
drivers to make it dangerous for the rest of us without adding one<br />
more, either by mistake or design.<br />
Sports changing our language<br />
A<br />
long with the thrill of victory and the agony of 45-minute<br />
retrospectives between five-minute events, the Olympics in<br />
Atlanta is confirming a drastic change in our language.<br />
For years, language traditionalists have railed against the conversion<br />
of nouns to verbs. Baseball players don't "hit home runs," they<br />
"homer." Mountain climbers no longer "reach the summit," they<br />
simp 1 y " s u m mi t . I'<br />
In recent Olympics and other world competitions, competitors<br />
have gone from winning medals to medalling, a verb. And now it<br />
has gone a step further.<br />
Newspapers across Canada have taken the metallic composition<br />
of the particular medals and turned them into verbs. Canadian<br />
swimmer Curtis Myden did not win a bronze medal in his event<br />
Sunday. In the Monday papers, we learned he "bronzed." And here<br />
we thought that was something doting parents had done with their<br />
children's baby shoes.<br />
Language is always evolving, with many words which started out<br />
as slang now recognized in the better dictionaries. Traditionalists<br />
have lust the battle. Rather than fighting it, we will join the fray<br />
and cheer wildly with the best of them if any Canadians gold.<br />
THE SOUAMISH CHIEF<br />
Publisher and Group<br />
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Jeanneke Van Hattem<br />
Editor<br />
A1 Price<br />
Re po rte is<br />
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Kama Woods<br />
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Ken Key<br />
Administrotlve Assistunt<br />
Jill Smith<br />
Circulation Manager<br />
Henry Lamix<br />
Receptionist<br />
Rustilla Swann<br />
The Squamish Chief is published weekly by WestMoiint Press Ltd. President:<br />
Robert W. Doull Vice-president: Keith Bennett<br />
Published Tuesdays. Telephone: 16041 892-91 61, Fax: [604] 892-8483 e-mail:<br />
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THf SQUA MlSH CHEF is published every Tuesday by Whistler Printing & Publii<br />
Box 3500,387 13 Second Avenue, SquamiSn 6C VOn<br />
Looting Forest Renewal B.C<br />
funds is playing with fire<br />
he NDP cabinet members<br />
are seriously underesti-<br />
T mating the mood of the<br />
people of B.C. if they think<br />
they can raid Forest Renewal<br />
B.C. funds without serious<br />
repercussions. All last week I<br />
listened to a variety of hedging<br />
over whether the $800 million<br />
fund would be pillaged, then<br />
reasons why it should from<br />
government ministers and the<br />
premier.<br />
As I noted last week, the NDP<br />
seriously underestimated its<br />
revenue last year and the government<br />
ran a budget deficit<br />
rather than the surplus it<br />
crowed about during the election.<br />
Those untouched funds in<br />
Forest Renewal B.C. have to<br />
look pretty attractive at the<br />
moment, as another deficit for<br />
the coming budget year looks<br />
like a real possibility.<br />
Part of the problem is Forest<br />
Renewal B.C. itself. Its funds<br />
are gleaned from an extra royalty<br />
on stumpage paid by forest<br />
companies. As the bureaucracy<br />
has evolved and renewal projects<br />
are assessed, it has not<br />
spent as much as it could have,<br />
thus the surplus. The structure,<br />
created by the NDP by legislation,<br />
earmarked all the funds<br />
for forest renewal projects such<br />
as stream rehabilitation, job<br />
retraining for displaced forest<br />
workers, road deactivation and<br />
other activities which would<br />
aid in making our forest<br />
resources indeed renewable.<br />
But the bureaucracy of Forest<br />
Renewal B.C. is larger than<br />
anticipated, and slower than it<br />
should be. Project assessment is<br />
taking far too long, and some<br />
of the expenditures which have<br />
been made are questionable.<br />
YIX §lkyhg it Shdd gG<br />
ahead and throw money at<br />
every proposal which comes its<br />
way, but there has to be a bet-<br />
ter way to get this cash into cir-<br />
culation. Squamish's proposal<br />
for a community forest has<br />
merit, and I'm sure there are<br />
many others from communities<br />
hard hit by reductions in the<br />
allowable annual cut, park cre-<br />
ation and other harvesting<br />
restrictions such as the forest<br />
practices code.<br />
Another part of the problem<br />
might be the NDrs, govern-<br />
As I See It<br />
By AI Price<br />
ment structure. There are three<br />
government ministers whose<br />
jurisdictions all overlap:<br />
Minister of Agriculture,<br />
Fisheries and Food Corky<br />
Evans, Minister of<br />
Environment, Lands and Parks<br />
Paul Ramsey and Minister of<br />
Forests David Zirnhelt. You<br />
can't take any action in the<br />
forests without considering the<br />
impact on fish and land. You<br />
also can't eliminate jobs in the<br />
forest industry without involv-<br />
ing Moe Sihota's staff at the<br />
Ministry of Education, Skills<br />
and Training. The problems can<br />
only be compounded when<br />
four or five ministries, each<br />
with their own bureaucracy are<br />
involved.<br />
If the government seriously<br />
wanted to save money so it<br />
didn't have to contemplate<br />
changing the Forest Renewal<br />
B.C. legislation to allow it to<br />
pilfer the funds for general rev-<br />
enue shortcomings, it could<br />
create one ministry of natural<br />
resources, and reduce the total.<br />
bureaucracy by more than half.<br />
It could drastically reduce the<br />
amount of money it pays for<br />
outside consulting and studies,<br />
because if government employ-<br />
ees can't perform these func-<br />
I<br />
tions they are already the<br />
wrong people for their jobs.<br />
And it could ban polling anc<br />
government advertising for I<br />
next few years and force ML,<br />
to get out into their constitue<br />
cies to actually talk to people<br />
solicit their ideas and explaia<br />
government programs and 1<br />
signal to everyone in the<br />
industry the government<br />
haven't thought about it<br />
against the government.<br />
industry might be in d<br />
but it is not without PO<br />
those funds are tampere<br />
that power should be bro<br />
to bear in any and every<br />
possible. People's livelih<br />
and their lives, are at sta<br />
this issue. The NDP is pla<br />
with fire.<br />
c-<br />
.<br />
LE<br />
Da<br />
yq<br />
to ~<br />
Received<br />
Teens, y<br />
rennan 1<br />
The five<br />
kg dama<br />
as more<br />
ride in o<br />
icility to<br />
h, !fended abuse<br />
lously is<br />
The que:<br />
hy this v<br />
.stead wc<br />
it that J<br />
te?<br />
The idea<br />
iers. So t<br />
ind, effo<br />
t takes a<br />
and be<br />
takes a :<br />
qat they<br />
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ooking f<br />
eat I h<br />
iitou,<br />
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)ociation<br />
I to re:<br />
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Publish<br />
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3. c<br />
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Eorce MI.<br />
constitur<br />
to peoplr<br />
Id explai<br />
ms and<br />
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and the<br />
n. Those<br />
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I of this<br />
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at stake i<br />
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vouth challenae<br />
to find solutions<br />
Received by The Chief for publication:<br />
Teens, youths and adolescents:<br />
Okay guys and girls, you've gotten our attention at the<br />
rennan Park Leisure Centre.<br />
The five broken windows and six broken lights total-<br />
ig damages in excess of $2,700 in the last three weeks<br />
as more than gotten our interest and attention. We take<br />
ride in our leisure centre to offer a safe, clean, friendly<br />
icility to our community. When people like you demol-<br />
h, abuse and destroy our work-play place we are hurt,<br />
ffended and angry. To vandalize and destroy anony-<br />
iously is the "limp wimp" approach.<br />
The question we had initially kept asking ourselves is<br />
'hy this was done? There doesn't seem to be an answer.<br />
istead we ask what? What are you trying to say? What<br />
it that you are trying to &ent, express or communi-<br />
ite?<br />
The idea of a skateboard park became a reality for its<br />
sers. So too can anything, if and only if you put your<br />
ind, effort and attitude towards a goal.<br />
[t takes a real act of courage, strength and guts to stand<br />
p and be accountable and responsible for your actions.<br />
takes a real man or woman with conviction to state<br />
hat they need and ask in appropriate ways.<br />
We invite you to organize yourselves and meet with<br />
ir director Bob Kusch and/or our recreation program-<br />
ers Michelle Wilcox and Angela Cohee to come to<br />
)me workable solutions. You are our future as well as<br />
iur own. You are bright, capable and energetic. The<br />
iallenge for us is to bring these talents and abilities out<br />
id use them to our advantage.<br />
The world and its people can no longer take the abuse<br />
id neglect. It's time to rebuild and we (you and I) are<br />
e generation responsible.<br />
,ooking forward to your positive actions.<br />
Shirley Baxter<br />
Barb Lane<br />
League. against drinking<br />
on school fields<br />
3ditoq<br />
The Squamish Slo Pitch<br />
;sociation (SSPA) would<br />
:e to respond to the<br />
cent public discussion<br />
ncerning the consump-<br />
m of alcohol on school<br />
strict piaying fields.<br />
iirst of all we would like<br />
make it undeniably<br />
,ar that under no cir-<br />
mstances do we<br />
dorse, encourage, or<br />
ndone the consumption<br />
alcohol on public fields.<br />
is has been league poli-<br />
since day one and the<br />
PA will have it no other<br />
iY*<br />
IS president of the SSPA,<br />
y telephone rings off the<br />
ok during the season.<br />
ice our season started, I<br />
ve not received a single<br />
ephone call regarding<br />
2 issue of consumption<br />
alcohol on school dis-<br />
ct playing fields.<br />
Ye, as an association, are<br />
ite prepared to deal<br />
th swiftly and assertive-<br />
on the issue of drinking<br />
Dublic fields.<br />
L<br />
However, without the<br />
matter being brought to<br />
our attention, it is difficult<br />
for us to do more than is<br />
already being done, name-<br />
ly condemning such activ-<br />
ity in the strongest possi-<br />
ble terms.<br />
The SSPA believes we<br />
can work together with<br />
the RCMP, the school dis-<br />
trict, and other organiza-<br />
tions and individuals to<br />
solve any potential diffi-<br />
culties that may arise dur-<br />
ing the course of a season.<br />
However, if we are<br />
excluded from the very<br />
process, then our effect on<br />
solving any difficulties is<br />
certainly limited at best.<br />
I strongly encourage<br />
anyone to call me at 898-<br />
9514 if they see the con-<br />
sumption of alcohol tak-<br />
ing place on school district<br />
playing fields. Our execu-<br />
tive will act swiftly and<br />
decisively on any matters<br />
brought to our attention<br />
on this matter.<br />
Jeff Dawson<br />
President, SSFA<br />
THE SQUAMISH CHIEF JULY 23,1996 7<br />
fl ffmu One Of Five Free Phones.<br />
Get Personal. Choose Any<br />
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in the Industrial Park"<br />
*CELLULAR *PAGING<br />
*AUTOTEL *SATELLITE*<br />
39002C Discovery Way, Squamish Industrial Park<br />
Phone: 892-2210<br />
v--<br />
at the Brennan Park Leisure Centre, Reception at 9 pm<br />
Amanda West Angie Daniel ,Heather Magee<br />
Miss Rotary Miss Squumisb Elks<br />
JennijiwHills Leanne Leuis Katie Bu&n<br />
Miss Squamisb Fireffgbters<br />
Miss Squamisb Nation<br />
/ 1<br />
Miss Stykzone<br />
Miss Royal Canadian Legion<br />
Jodi lewis Lidsay smith = iva&a SO..~~H<br />
Miss €€we Sound Business<br />
Miss Pair Tnee Wufr StyUng Miss Sarve-On-Fwds<br />
Tara Cbristiansen Whitney Franklin<br />
Miss Squamisb Cmdit Union Miss Mountain Building Cenfre<br />
c
I . :<br />
This month, 200,000 families with modest incomes will receive their first BC<br />
Family Bonus payment to help with the cost of raising their children.<br />
Families with a net income of $18,000 or less will receive a monthly payment of<br />
$103 for each child under 18<br />
m Families with net. incomes of more than $18,000 may be entitled to receive a reduced<br />
monthly BC Family Bonus based on income and number of dependent children<br />
For example, a family with three children and a net annual income of $30,000 will<br />
receive a BC Family Bonus of $149 each month; a family with three children and<br />
an income of $18,000 will receive $309 each month<br />
W There is no need to apply for this program - the bonus is sent to you auto-<br />
matically based on your family's yearly iiicome tax return<br />
W You should contact Revenue Canada whenever there are changes to your family<br />
situation - such as the number of children you have or your marital status<br />
W Watch for more information to be mailed to eligible families<br />
Making Work a Better Deal than Welfare<br />
For families on income assistance, the BC Family Bonus will replace the child<br />
support portion of the welfare cheque. Parents will now be able to take a job and<br />
continue to receive the BC Family Bonus - making it easier for them to move from<br />
welfare to work.<br />
The BC Family Bonus - Part of your government's commitment<br />
to cut taxes and ensure fairness for working families<br />
For more information about your BC Family Bonus<br />
call toillfree 1-800=648~6188 0 in the lower Mainland call 951-6892<br />
slalom photo<br />
PEDDLE CAR RACES<br />
Registration begins at the site at<br />
2:w p.m. 3-7 ym.<br />
:h -4<br />
squamish<br />
bp terminals<br />
LEG0 BUILDING CENTRE<br />
Registration begins at the<br />
site at 2:O p.m. 5-12 yrs.<br />
I<br />
OPINIONSLLETTERS -<br />
Council should se,w<br />
I<br />
those who are here fl<br />
Editor, support this growth.<br />
the defence.<br />
fax tern to 892-8483 or e-mail to: sqchief@mountain-<br />
BARBIE<br />
FASHION SHOW<br />
Register at the<br />
Barbie Fashion Tent at 3:OO<br />
clarity, legali and taste.<br />
COLORING<br />
CONTEST<br />
Drop in entry.<br />
SPORTS<br />
9<br />
Registration<br />
the site at 2:OO<br />
642 yrs.<br />
6" thiI<br />
I nsdale, Of<br />
eek, RCMP I<br />
.as also founc<br />
orth Golf Cc
?,Wt<br />
3re<br />
;h voted fo<br />
ling to get is<br />
condo own<br />
will proba<br />
lr relocated 2<br />
in go and :<br />
i managem<br />
ing diplomi<br />
tr official cc<br />
,'I We all kn<br />
rther examp<br />
veryone ha:<br />
itrategy, divi<br />
managemc<br />
this strate,<br />
ink increasi<br />
lling new st<br />
bple.<br />
start looki<br />
:ds of the pr<br />
re rather th<br />
of people w<br />
ild be a lot b,<br />
work counc<br />
1 the commun<br />
lave Colledi<br />
Brackendal<br />
1<br />
e d it o r.<br />
r0N 3GO,,<br />
untain-<br />
edand<br />
ed. We<br />
brevity, '<br />
I<br />
al<br />
NG<br />
ERS<br />
ITS<br />
it 2:Oo<br />
rs.<br />
L<br />
NEWS<br />
Council supports<br />
float plane operation<br />
2. Rail says it is ready to go ahead<br />
I the closure of Bmkley Crossing and<br />
extension of Queens Way, which will<br />
nect Dentville and North Yards via<br />
industrial park. Jim Cox, BCR<br />
3erties president and chief operating<br />
:er, told council that funding issues<br />
2 been resolved. He said he would<br />
to have the work completed by the<br />
of the year. Mayor Corinne<br />
sdale, however, said the district<br />
ild still like to consider the possibility<br />
t the same time reopening Castle's<br />
;sing as another route into and out of<br />
mtown. Castle's Crossing, which was<br />
ie time fully operational, is currently<br />
destrian and bicycle crossing linking<br />
dey Avenue and the north end of<br />
:ftain Centre.<br />
H<br />
uncil is considering the concept of<br />
ig telephone surveyors to ask ques-<br />
5 of Squamish residents to get a bet-<br />
ndication of the views of the public<br />
#pecific issues. Coun. Ron Barr said<br />
opinions of 5,000 people could be<br />
ived within a few days about issues<br />
I as aimort development and expan-<br />
on. May& Corinne A Lonsdale said it<br />
odd be up to council to pick the ques-<br />
on and choose the surveyor, but that<br />
roponents of developments should<br />
ve to pav for the survey. Coun. Bill<br />
A d<br />
cNeney said the method would allow<br />
uncil to obtain information in a non-<br />
Yhistler woman.<br />
Tam, 33, was last seen by her mother<br />
dy 13. Her vehicle was located at Rick's<br />
Loost trail July 15 and since that time,<br />
ides of her clothing have been found<br />
locations. Her jacket was spot-<br />
Roost area shortly after<br />
was located and late last<br />
feek, RCMP reported that her clothing<br />
.as also found in ponds on the Nicklaus<br />
orth Golf Course. RCMP divers were<br />
5<br />
/<br />
THE SQUAMISH CHIEF ~<br />
ouncil is supporting Mountain Spirit could be displayed to the public at public<br />
iation's proposed float plane opera- hearings. Council will deal with the issue<br />
n to be located at Golden Eagle at its next committee of the whole meetlrina,<br />
subject to approval from the fed- ing. .<br />
1 Department of Transport. m<br />
is proposed that float planes will take The district has received $6,377 from<br />
and land south of the 11<br />
the Ministry of<br />
booming areas near the &um'l Transportation and<br />
uth of the channel, and Highways for maintenance<br />
i back and forth to the - of the three-kilometre gravrina.<br />
el portion of Mamquam<br />
s well, Mayor Corinne<br />
Road within the municipalisdale<br />
requested and<br />
ity leading to the Diamond<br />
tncil approved an<br />
Head area of Garibaldi<br />
endmen& the motion "to encourage Provincial Park. The funding represents<br />
ther development of a boardwalk on the province's 40 per cent portion of the<br />
mquam Blind Channel." The develop- cost-sharing. The district is required to<br />
of Marina Estates, located next to pay for the remaining 60 per cent share.<br />
Iden Eagle Marina, is putting in a The district had also applied for $120,000<br />
irdwalk along the channel as part of in capital funding, which it did not<br />
development. District staff will be receive.<br />
estigating opportunities to extend the<br />
a<br />
irdwalk along the channel.<br />
Council's committee of the whole has<br />
decided not to place directional signs for<br />
iuncil awarded the contract for the the library in the community. However,<br />
relopment of the Squamish tourism council will be considering a policy relateketing<br />
plan and strategy to Economic ing to residents' requests for "Kidzone"<br />
ining Group of Victoria. The compa- signs to be installed in some neighborsubmitted<br />
the low bid of $14,927 for hoods.<br />
project, for which council set a bud-<br />
rn<br />
limit of $1 5,000.<br />
Members of the seniors advisory comm<br />
mission recently visited the large Sechelt<br />
Seniors Centre. Seniors are exploring<br />
options for a permanent seniors centre in<br />
Squamish.<br />
Council will not grant approval for<br />
Earth Tribe Productions to conduct an<br />
outdoor music festival near Cat Lake.<br />
The RCMP are not supportive of the<br />
music festival because of the alcohol,<br />
drug use and security problems associat-<br />
ed with these types of ventures. Council<br />
has requested that the Loggers Sports<br />
grounds be considered, subject to the<br />
approval of the Loggers Sports Society, as<br />
a site for concerts, since the site is fenced<br />
and can accommodate up to 7,000 peo-<br />
ple.<br />
Also, council is requesting that if such a<br />
concert is held that a percentage of the<br />
profits be donated to the Squamish Trails<br />
Society.<br />
m<br />
Council will form a secondary suite<br />
task force to review the issue of sec-<br />
ondary suites. The intent of the task force<br />
- which will consist of Squarnish resi-<br />
dents and district staff - is to provide<br />
for public input into the secondary suites<br />
issue as the current zoning does not per-<br />
mit secondary suites (unless there is<br />
duplex zoning). Council has identified<br />
concerns regarding finance issues,<br />
including taxes and garbage rates with<br />
regards to secondary suites. The task<br />
force is to report back to council by the<br />
end of January 1997.<br />
brought in to investigate the pond areas,<br />
but Cpl. Sharon Woodburn of the<br />
Whistler RCMP detachment said the lat-<br />
est clues have really been no help in the<br />
desperate search for Tam.<br />
As of last Friday, Woodburn said RCMP<br />
would concentrate on tracking Tarn's<br />
credit cards to see if they'd been used<br />
anywhere. Exhausting ground ,and aerial<br />
searches so far have led to no clues as to<br />
Tam's whereabouts. W-oodburn said<br />
searches will continue this week.<br />
Members from Whistler and Pemberton<br />
search and rescue crews join RCMP offi-<br />
cers in their search for Tam, a psycholo-<br />
gist with the Howe Sound School<br />
District.<br />
JULY 23,1996 9<br />
Come in and see all the new models and features.<br />
It's like a trip to the next century today.<br />
Y FRANKS<br />
50311 5th Street West Vancouver<br />
926-01 24<br />
SIERRA LITE<br />
HIKERS<br />
Nylon/Suede hikers<br />
with E.V.A. mid sole.<br />
Mens & Ladies.<br />
reg. up to<br />
$89.99 4999<br />
HI-TEC Sandals<br />
reg. $49.99<br />
LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED
- 10 @ .JULY 23, 1996 THE SQUAMISH CHIEF P<br />
' Please contact SQUAMISH GAS CO. LTD. (24 ho<br />
at 892-5455<br />
BEFORE COMMENCING ANY EXCAVATI<br />
in downtown Squamish, Dentviife, No& Wds, Governm<br />
Garlbaldi Estates, Hctspitai Hit1 and VkilleyCliffe<br />
We'll mark burled gas tiin<br />
Remembe E.. Safety Hrst<br />
SQUAMISH GAS COI LTDI<br />
FuLLTiMEpersons?<br />
.<br />
We \viU .d you QUALIFTED persons<br />
OVERM[GHT<br />
or within a few short HOWIS.<br />
L\rt. INTERVlEW<br />
check REFERENCES<br />
SAVE you<br />
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BOOK WORK<br />
Office Hours : 6 am to 12 midnight<br />
Box3377 Phone : (604) m8-9830<br />
Garibaldi Highlands, BC Fax : (604) 89&3930<br />
WN lr0 Toll Free : 1-<br />
$5eekErs on Becond<br />
Birthday Party<br />
1 Birthday Cake and coffee served<br />
1 Carnations for the first 50 people<br />
1 In-store specials on selected items ,<br />
1 Leos (July 23 - Aug. 23)<br />
get an additional 5% off<br />
Books e Crystals 0 Candles<br />
Gifts * Ince71se Tarot Decks<br />
Aromatherapy Oils Readers 0<br />
* Reiki 0 Reflexology Q<br />
Bring in this ad and get $5.00 off<br />
sf a 30-9. mim reading with DfBflC<br />
38129 Second Me., Squamish<br />
Phone 892-5225<br />
Man.-Sat. 10:30 - 508 Fri. till 6:30<br />
BARRISTERS & SOLICITORS 8<br />
$--<br />
B<br />
SUITE201 -<br />
I364 PEMBERTON AVE.<br />
@ d<br />
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FAX (604) 892-5239<br />
fi<br />
".<<br />
4<br />
I<br />
PHOTO FEATURE c<br />
Parks .Day delights the youngster!- E<br />
I nam<br />
4
1<br />
tari<br />
N<br />
NEWS<br />
E ’dred serious back and head injuries.<br />
m<br />
4 Squamish male will<br />
)pear in court Aug. 13<br />
ter being charged with<br />
istruction of a police offi-<br />
lr, A Squamish RCMP<br />
ember stopped a motor-<br />
rcle July 12 and attempted<br />
give the driver a 24-hour<br />
adside suspension for<br />
inking. “The driver faile d to cooperate, and was<br />
rested,” said Const. Fran B et hell.<br />
-<br />
Police<br />
Blotter<br />
ly 14 was party night in Squamish as RCMP<br />
ponded to seven complaints of loud parties from dif-<br />
rent parts of the community. Most of the complaints<br />
olved loud music.<br />
here is a noise bylaw in Squamish. We really<br />
ourage people to be considerate of their neighbors<br />
either include them in the festivities or keep the<br />
dows closed and the music inside,” said Const. Fran<br />
hell. ”The biggest problem is when the parties move<br />
side. Our first approach is to ask them to turn it<br />
n, and if they cooperate it is not a problem.”<br />
o rafters stranded across the Squamish River at 5:30<br />
m. July 14 at Anderson Beach at Mile 18 of the Upper<br />
amish had to be rescued by Squamish Search and<br />
scue after they lost their raft in a log jam. The rescue<br />
at was launched and the stranded pair were picked<br />
quickly said Ron Drewry of Squamish Search and<br />
m<br />
Squamish RCMP responded to a tip from the public at<br />
. July 15 and found a car partially over the<br />
ankment 500 metres south of the entrance to<br />
Cove Provincial Park. They determined the car<br />
en stolen previously in Burnaby, and another<br />
wn vehicle had been spotted attempting to push<br />
stolen car over the embankment. “If anyone saw<br />
ything or knows anything about this incident, we’d<br />
happy to hear from them,” said Const Fran Bethell.<br />
uamish RCMP are starting to have vehicles towed<br />
hat areparked illegally on the highway at Shannon<br />
and Murrin Lake provincial parks. Const. Fran<br />
11 said it is clearly posted as no parking zones<br />
Hwy. 99 in both places, and vehicles parked in<br />
areas are becoming a visibility and safety hazard.<br />
will be towing anyone who parks there,” said<br />
11. “It is just starting to build up for the summer,<br />
was a big problem last year.”<br />
I<br />
Squamish RCMP recently distributed a community<br />
leeds survey to approximately 20 per cent of Squamish<br />
~idents. The survey is an attempt to identify policing<br />
eeds in the community so the force can design more<br />
ff ective policing services. Answers are confidential and<br />
nonymous, and will be presented in statistical form<br />
nly. Those receiving the survey forms are asked to take<br />
le time to complete them and mail them or drop them<br />
ff at the RCMP detachment, 40439 Tantalus Rd.,<br />
quamish before Aug. 2. The detachment has a summer<br />
hdent from SFU who will be compiling all the data.<br />
If you have information about a crime,<br />
telephone Crimestoppers at 892-TlPS (8477).<br />
your call is free, you don’t have to give your<br />
name and you may qualify for a reward<br />
Basic Intimates Boutique<br />
UD -~ to I<br />
YO<br />
OFF<br />
receive<br />
pair panties<br />
OFF<br />
Enter to win a luxurious Olga Night Gown Join our Bra<br />
-<br />
Club and Save<br />
SAVE up to 40% on selected items<br />
[-’ 892-5833 [-]<br />
1371 Winnipeg St., Royal Bank Plaza<br />
REA<br />
Show and sell your hand crafted products directly to<br />
the public, seven days a week. without havinq c to
I NEWS<br />
MS search1<br />
I<br />
he 45th corridor bear was caught in a trap in Whistler Friday by conservation officer<br />
an LeGrandeur and it will be released in the AshIu River valley. The Ministry of<br />
nvironment has issued a provincewide warning about increasing bear problems.<br />
avid Donaldson photo<br />
E nvi ro n men t<br />
issues<br />
Eort4.h Beswetherick<br />
rhere is no tried and true method of<br />
roiding a bear attack but the Ministry of<br />
r<br />
* Avoid direct eye contact. Direct eye<br />
contact is seen by a bear as a form of<br />
aggression.<br />
Pepper spray has been found to be<br />
Is pleased to announce that it is now operating I<br />
and ready to serve the Squarnish community.<br />
FOR ALL TYPES; OF SAND $a GRAWEL, FlkL, '.t<br />
ROCK AND CRUSHED STONE<br />
Call Peter Heidenreich (Manager)<br />
BRJTISH<br />
COLUMBIA<br />
at (604) 898-9480 4.<br />
.. , . r<br />
. % *- < I... S I<br />
;.* -,ev 2;. -. imnwdiately<br />
but move slc?wly and do not run.<br />
CEloosc .I vcur C.SCC?~U ro;itc cari.f~~llv<br />
never get bet\vet.n a mothcr and lwr cubs.<br />
they are challenged.<br />
Squamish conservation officer Dan<br />
LeGrandeur said it has been an above-<br />
average year this year for bear problerns<br />
in the Sea to Sky corridor.<br />
"Last year all totalled we did 52 bears. It<br />
is unusually high and that's due mainly<br />
to the bad spring we've had - lack oi<br />
berries in the higher elevations aid it hac<br />
conccntratcd thc bears lov~cr doivn in tlic<br />
vc1Ilcy L~ottorn where ihtw are sornc'<br />
I!<br />
Le Ci*ii~~dc~l<br />
sCiid.<br />
t<br />
dild berries.. .i~i;Cl ~i?~t;agi.,
14 JULY 23,1996 THE SQUAMISH CHIEF<br />
I<br />
MUCH, MORE FUN!<br />
LulIaby Festival<br />
'*<br />
FRIDAY,<br />
Sponsored by Squamish AUGUST Credit Union & Squamish 2 Days Loggers 2 Sports Association<br />
ND = ~ P M<br />
at the Squamish Pavilion<br />
Contests: Barbie Fashion Show, McDonald's Colourin 9 Contest, Youn Logger's Sports,<br />
Slalom 1 -Hour Photo Peddle Car Races, Squamish erminals Leg0 I! uilding Contest<br />
SAT U R DAY<br />
SUNDAY<br />
MONDAY<br />
AT THE BRENNAN PARK<br />
LEISURE CENTRE<br />
PAGEANT AT 7 P.M.<br />
RECEPTION AT' 9 P.M.<br />
LULLABY-FESTIVAL AND TEDDY BEAR CLINIC<br />
2 6 p.m. at Squamish Pavilion<br />
HAULBACKHOEDOWN<br />
featuring Brent Lee 9 p.m. at the Brennan Park Leisure Centre<br />
KIWANIS ROTARY SENIORS BINGO<br />
CHILDREN'S SPORTS<br />
Bicycle Parade Sock Race<br />
Special appearance by Ronald McDonald<br />
BEEF BARBECUE<br />
at the Loggers Sports grounds<br />
Don't miss it!<br />
Everyone welcome 645 p.m. e 10 p.m.<br />
at the Royal Canadian Legion.<br />
-- -<br />
GET READY FOR THE.,,<br />
featuring HOT RAILS<br />
LOGG'ERS<br />
Y<br />
S'TOMp<br />
9 p.m. at the Brennan<br />
Park Leisure centre<br />
ELKS pANCAIK]E ROTARY BEEF SQUAMISH DAYS<br />
10 K RACE<br />
Starts 9 a.m. at the<br />
BREAKFAST BARBECUE PARADE BRENNAN PARK<br />
7 a.m. - 11 a.m. at the Elks Hall At the Loggers Sports Grounds Starts 11 a.m. downtown<br />
I LEISURE CENTRE<br />
GEAR UP FOR THE . featuring the COHV~;B%~B~<br />
9 p.m. at the<br />
GEAR T AMMER S BALL Brennan Park Leisure Centre<br />
Y<br />
Timber Gloves Tournament<br />
. . ~ ....._.<br />
.. .__-__ ~. _I . .- .<br />
~<br />
.- . . . . . . .. .- -- .<br />
. . ,. . . . . . . . -<br />
i p.m. at the<br />
L oggers Sports Grounds<br />
4<br />
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3rd<br />
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4rtists for Kids gives young talent<br />
x chance to work with the masters<br />
r here is a small camp nestled in the<br />
woods of Paradise Valley where<br />
gifted young people are learning<br />
develop their visual talents with some<br />
Canada’s finest artists.<br />
nternationally acclaimed modern<br />
:ist Guido Molinari, nationally<br />
iowned sculptor George Rammell,<br />
d Molly Lamb Bobak, Canada’s first<br />
)man war artist, guided art students<br />
cough week-long outdoor 5tudio<br />
ventures at the Paradise Valley<br />
mmer School of Visual Art this month<br />
th additional inspiration and instrucn<br />
from visiting artist workshops with<br />
rdon Smith, Toni Onley Pat O’Hara<br />
d Rick Harry.<br />
he program, held every year at the<br />
cth Vancouver Outdoor School on the<br />
eakamus River north of Squamish,<br />
s developed by the Artists for Kids<br />
1st. Artists for Kids was established in<br />
i9 by the North Vancouver School<br />
3rd and some of Canada’s premier<br />
ists to encourage and develop the talof<br />
young artists who, in the face of<br />
dget cutbacks, are not realizing their<br />
:entia1 with the instruction available<br />
:he regular curriculum. The trust is<br />
ided through the sale of prints by<br />
se artist patrons, and with prices<br />
ging from $200 to $2,700, this is a<br />
ierous contribution.<br />
rhree hundred Bill Reid prints adds<br />
to a half-mifion dollar donation,”<br />
s the tmst’s direcam Bi!! MacDcl?a!d.<br />
rketing these prints is an important<br />
it of the trust as it generates most of<br />
funding, he says, and along with the<br />
iblishing of the Artists for Kids<br />
llery at the Leo Marshall Curriculum<br />
itre in North Vancouver, the effort<br />
not only raised money for the trust<br />
has created many new collectors<br />
Karin Vengshoel, 14, of Coquitlam, works on her display of a plaster cast of her own face and hands in a tree at the Artists for Kids<br />
across the couiiiry mt expanded people’s<br />
interest in contemporary artists.<br />
But just as generous and perhaps a<br />
more valuable contribution is the artists’<br />
time. Coming from all over the country<br />
to participate in these workshops, they<br />
give the students an invaluable opportunitv<br />
to explore their talent and test their<br />
bo;ndari& with the highest quality<br />
instruction - something<br />
that is not available to<br />
many young students.<br />
Artists for Kids is a one-<br />
of-a-kind program in B.C.<br />
While most of the students<br />
come from District 44 in<br />
the North Shore, it’s open<br />
to students across the<br />
province and this year<br />
the camp has seen par-<br />
ticipants from as close<br />
as Pemberton and as far<br />
away as Fort Nelson,<br />
Yellowknife, and<br />
Massachusetts. In addi-<br />
tion to the summer<br />
camp, Artists for Kids<br />
offers after school pro-<br />
grams year-round in<br />
the North Shore. Even<br />
with the help of spon-<br />
sors Crown Life<br />
Insurance and the<br />
Rotary Club of North<br />
Vancouver, and the sale<br />
of patron artist’s prints,<br />
the trust requires a $495<br />
fee for each student<br />
attending the camp. For<br />
students who cadi<br />
afford this there are<br />
scholarship and bur-<br />
sary options v:hich can<br />
cover up to half the<br />
McDonald, left, shows students how to take pottery out of a raku kiln. Pottery from this cost.<br />
u kiln produces an extremely shiny glaze. David Donaldson photo<br />
Please him to Page 16<br />
Paul Karchuf, 13, of Victoria, puts the finishing touches<br />
on his major project which represents himself, his inter-<br />
ests and nature. David Donaldson photo .
16 JULY 23, 1996 THE SQUAMISH CHIEF<br />
SUNDOWNER<br />
Brunch iian - 2pm Sundry<br />
Deck Itam - Sunset Daily<br />
Dinner Spn - llpm<br />
Reservations call 921-8161<br />
4 km north of Horseshoe Bay<br />
SUNSET BEACH - WEST VANCOUVER<br />
DOG BOARDING TRAINING<br />
Send your dog on vacation to the beautiful<br />
Squamish Valley. It’s worth the drive.<br />
. 898-2847<br />
Injuries Stop Here.<br />
Adjust Your<br />
,c~pncll Road HeadRestand<br />
Buckle Up.<br />
INVENTORY CLEA<br />
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Grey<br />
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G rey/Blue<br />
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Multi<br />
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Tea I<br />
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Pindot<br />
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Terra Cotta<br />
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SIZE PRICE<br />
12~7~ $85O0<br />
12x1 8’ ‘225O”<br />
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UNCTE I<br />
The NIMBY philosophy flourishe<br />
P<br />
eople who bought lots on top of one of the<br />
busiest crags at the most popular rock climbing<br />
destination in Canada should not be surprised<br />
that there are climbers clingng to granite a few metres<br />
from their property lines. Neither should people whose<br />
property borders on school grounds be surprised when<br />
children are playing during recess metres from their<br />
property or when adults are playing slo-pitch on the<br />
same school grounds in the evening. People who live<br />
adjacent to the municipal airport in Brackendale<br />
should not be startled when aircraft fly overhead. But<br />
there will always be people who religiously subscribe<br />
to the NIMBY - not in my back yard - philosophy.<br />
In Squamish, the NIMBY syndrome has been quite<br />
evident in Brackendale, where many residents are<br />
opposed to development and expansion of the airport<br />
for environmental, safety and quality of life reasons.<br />
The NIMBY way of thinking has not pervaded the<br />
minds of people living next to school grounds - at<br />
least not to my knowledge - in Squamish. But<br />
NIMBYism is alive and well on top of Burgers and<br />
Fries, the aforementioned Smoke Bluffs crag. Harbor<br />
Heights residents who first successfully lobbied to rid<br />
the area of climbers’ parked vehicles - and ultimately<br />
aided climbers in their prolonged quest for a larger and<br />
better parking lot off Loggers Lane - are now lobbying<br />
to limit the hours climbers climb in the area.<br />
Climbers first started coming to Squamish in the late<br />
1950s, when the Stawamus Chief was the main attraction.<br />
As more climbers made Squamish their mecca, the<br />
Smoke Bluffs - technically known as the Little Smoke<br />
Bluffs - became a practice area for climbers. Then,<br />
with the growing popularity of sport climbing, it also<br />
became a destination in itself for some climbers. In the<br />
1980s, a Squamish entrepreneur who owned the land at<br />
the top of Burgers and Fries subdivided the property.<br />
Within the last few years, houses have been built on<br />
some of the lots. It is reasonable to assume that property<br />
owners knew they were moving into the heart of an<br />
internationally renowned climbing area. The<br />
Federation of Mountain Clubs of British Columbia in<br />
1987 bought some of the land at the base of the Burgers<br />
and Fries crag - which has a vertical height of about<br />
25 metres - to ensure access was maintained, and the<br />
rest of the cliff, including a right of way between the<br />
top of the crag and private property lines, is owned by<br />
the District of Squamish. The district has zoned most of<br />
the Smoke Bluffs as recreational.<br />
Some people enjoy living in the midst of this climbing<br />
area - and they are not just climbers. I wrote a feature<br />
article a few years ago about one resident who made it<br />
a practice to chat with climbers at the top of one cliff<br />
and the base of another, both bordering his property.<br />
He knew the value of climbing to this community, having<br />
met climbers from all but two of the states in the<br />
United States - and many others from other foreign<br />
countries - on the crags alongside his property. He<br />
appeared to have little problem living in harmony with<br />
his surroundings.<br />
But at the top of Burgers and Fries, the story appears<br />
to he more adversarid. Fortunately the Climbers<br />
Access Society of British Columbia has been attempting<br />
to diffuse the situation. The society in a climbers’ code<br />
of conduct it is developing, is requesting that clim<br />
voluntarily not climb on Burgers and Fries before<br />
a.m. and after 6 p.m. and not congregateat the to1<br />
the cliff. The society is trying to educate people, IT<br />
mize friction and promote reasonable behavior, so<br />
president Anders Ourom said last week. In fact, hl<br />
lauded residents in the area for becoming involve(<br />
the parking and access issues in the area.<br />
There will not be a great outcry or hashing of tc<br />
from climbers if access to Burgers and Fries is limi<br />
The climbs on the crag are popular, especially wit1<br />
people who are learning to climb, but they are on1<br />
some of the hundreds of routes scattered throughc<br />
surroundings<br />
By Ron Enns<br />
the bluffs.<br />
The issue is one that is much greater than the Bui<br />
and Fries routes. And it is an issue over which the<br />
District of Squamish should have grave concerns.<br />
issue is the future of Squamish. It is what this tow1<br />
increasingly becoming all about: visitors, be they<br />
tourists in motorhomes, adventure sport enthusias<br />
film production companies. The District of Squami<br />
has done little to welcome our visitors, who voluni<br />
come here and, in the process, bring outside mone;<br />
into this community, which has no choice but to<br />
become more economically diversified in these tror<br />
bled times for forestry, once the mainstay of this fo<br />
logging town. There have been recent cutbacks in t<br />
amount of timber available for logging in this area,<br />
with promises of more reductions.<br />
To its credit, the district has expanded and upgrac<br />
the parking lot for users of the Smoke Bluffs. But it<br />
done little else for climbers. Fortunately some of th<br />
best climbing around Squamish will be preserved f<br />
eternity because the routes are located within provj<br />
cia1 parks (most notably the Stawamus Chief and<br />
Murrin parks). Squamish residents as well should I<br />
ognize what the influx of visitors means to this tow<br />
will not become a ghost town as resource extractior<br />
industries are scaled back.<br />
It is heartening to see the Climbers Access Society<br />
British Columbia attempting to address access issw<br />
Squamish council should take note and do its sha<br />
preserving the very reasons so many people are n<br />
ing here permanently and visiting regularly. And<br />
Squamish residents - who have one of the great6<br />
back yards in the world - must realize that subs(<br />
ing to the NIMBY philosophy may be the short-te<br />
savior of their quality of life, but will also be the (<br />
fall of the future of the overall quality of life this t<br />
and its environs offer.<br />
program<br />
n<br />
encourages young artist<br />
Continued from Page 15<br />
From July 7-12/52 students aged<br />
nine-12 learned drawing and paint-<br />
ing with New Brunswick’s Lamb<br />
Bobak, and from July 14-19/55 13-<br />
to 18-year-olds had their choice of<br />
studying drawing and painting<br />
with Montreal’s Molinari or sculp-<br />
ture and assemblage with North<br />
Vancouver’s Rammell. The pro-<br />
gram is very structured with<br />
approximately five hours per day<br />
of rigorous studio classes, inter-<br />
spersed with meal breaks, recre-<br />
ational activities and evening pro-<br />
grams of presentations and discus-<br />
sions with guest artists. The camp<br />
takes advantage of the 186-hectare<br />
forest setting of the North<br />
Vancouver outdoor School by<br />
offering outdoor activities such as<br />
canoeing, hiking, archery and cave<br />
exploration. But the students, espe-<br />
cially the older ones, are very seri-<br />
ous about their art and often<br />
choose to work through the recre-<br />
ation periods, says MacDonald,<br />
who is also an art teacher. Many of<br />
the older students eat, breathe and<br />
sleep art and work on their projects<br />
from morning to evening and<br />
would work longer if they could.<br />
Molinari, who‘s work appears in<br />
the National Gallery of Canada in<br />
Ottawa and the Museum of<br />
Modern Art in New York, finds<br />
great satisfaction in helping stu- ,<br />
dents see their potential. “What I<br />
find exciting is to see their incredible<br />
progression day to day. They<br />
are going beyond their usual<br />
imagery and understanding, in two<br />
and three dimensions, the notion of<br />
positive and negative space.<br />
“We are teaching them to take a<br />
distance horn their preconceptinns<br />
and deal more with the process -<br />
not what they want to say but how<br />
they want to say it.”<br />
He says one of the benefits of the<br />
camp is it gives students a good<br />
understanding of what it would be<br />
like to attend art schol so they can<br />
decide if that is the way they want<br />
to go.<br />
Victoria student Paul Karchu<br />
says the camp has been enjoya<br />
and helpful. ”It’s a good way t<br />
different perspectives from dif<br />
ent artists.”<br />
At the end of the camp the st<br />
dents display their works in a<br />
for friends and family and fell(<br />
artists. Some of the larger worl<br />
that cannot be moved are “don<br />
ed” as permanent displays at ti<br />
camp.<br />
Artists for Kids has proven to<br />
an important and successful pn<br />
gram for encouraging young pf<br />
ple in the visual arts. The proof<br />
this<br />
I/ is in the painting.<br />
Mnlinari says we’re doing mi<br />
with 14-year-olds than he is ab1<br />
do with 25-year-olds,” MacDon<br />
says. “People don’t give young<br />
credit for their abilities and a 10<br />
times they don’t get a chance to<br />
pursue their talents.”<br />
With Artists for Kids they hav<br />
chance.
18 JULS 23, 1996 THE SQUAMISH CHIEF<br />
COMMUNI TY<br />
T-shirts for businesses still available<br />
B ooster<br />
T-shirts for businesses only which wish to<br />
promote this year‘s Squamish Days Loggers<br />
Sports are now available. The 1996 logo was<br />
designed by former Squamish artist Jim Bowes, who<br />
now lives on Saltspring Island. Flyers were sent out<br />
earlier to most businesses, but if you haven’t respond-<br />
ed yet or perhaps didn’t receive a flyer, there is still<br />
time to order your T-shirts. If interested please call<br />
Tracy at 892-5856 and leave a message and she will get<br />
back to you. This is the final week to place orders.<br />
m<br />
Youngsters in Valleycliffe and other areas of the com-<br />
munitv are still able to rePister for the last three days of .I<br />
Vacatihn Bible School be& held at Valleycliffe<br />
Christian Fellowship Church. Sessions are held each<br />
day until Friday from 9:30 a.m. to noon. There is no<br />
charge to children ages four to 13 years.<br />
The West Coast Railway Heritage Park is hosting<br />
Kidsummer ’96, July 30. This is for kids in the Lower<br />
Mainland who are registered in this program.<br />
However, the Heritage Park is open every day from 11<br />
a.m. to 4 p.m. for local residents and their visitors.<br />
It will be a first for the park on July 27 when a wed-<br />
ding ceremony will be held on the grounds.<br />
H<br />
Squaniish Days souvenirs including T-shirts, caps,<br />
pins, buttons and tickets to all the events will be avail-<br />
able in the souvenir booth set up in Field’s parlung lot<br />
and open each day from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. beginning<br />
July 29 until Aug. 4.<br />
rn<br />
A visitor at the home of Gwen Taylor recently was her<br />
granddaughter Kelly Taylor from Toronto. She enjoyed<br />
seeing other family members as well.<br />
STORK STORY - WALLACE - Chris and Erica are<br />
thrilled to announce the arrival of their first child, a<br />
daughter, Kaitlin Helen, born on June 20, weighing 7<br />
Ib. 10 oz. Just as thrilled are first time grandparents,<br />
Allan and Helen Wallace of Prince Edward Island,<br />
great-grandparents Orin and Mildren Wallace, also of<br />
P.E.I. and fourth time grandparents, Frank and Julianna<br />
Egyed of Squamish. Welcoming Kaitlin are cousins,<br />
Travis, Madison and Mackenzie and many aunts and<br />
uncles. Chris and Erica express special thanks to Dr.<br />
Martin and the nursing staff at Squamish General<br />
Hospital for their excellent care in helping bring Kaitlin<br />
into the world. Special thanks also to Coast-Garibaldi<br />
Health Unit’s home care staff.<br />
Linda Carney, who has been a member of the<br />
Capilano College governing board for the past five<br />
years, will be resigning from this position effective<br />
Sept. 1. This is a government appointed position and<br />
Linda has recommended a replacement for herself. She<br />
feels it is important another local resident be named to<br />
the board.<br />
STORK STORY - PAYNE - Brad and Robyn are<br />
pleased to announce the birth of their baby girl, Jessica<br />
Alexandra, born at 4:Ol p.m. on March 29 in Lions Gate<br />
Hospital. Welcoming home their baby sister were<br />
Melanie, Stephanie and Ashleigh. Proud grandparents<br />
are John and Joan Payne of Blind Bay and Harry and<br />
Cynthia Morey of Newton. Special thanks go to Dr.<br />
Kaye and very special thanks to Dr. Fothergill for her<br />
special care of Jessica before and after her birth.<br />
Participants in the Sea to Sky parent and tot drop-in ‘<br />
program are advised the program is closed on<br />
Mondays until Sept. 9 but will remain open on<br />
Wednesdays and Fridays.<br />
Calvary Community Church<br />
Sunday morning family worship<br />
senicc at Squaniish Pentecostal<br />
Church nt 10 a.m. a.m. Nursery<br />
and Sunday School at the same<br />
time. Terns are invited to Youth<br />
Night on Fridnvs at 7:30 p.m. at<br />
t k church. All uvlcumc. Pastor<br />
Joe F3rov.v at 892-3310.<br />
Highlands Gospel Hall<br />
Elder Cordon Ste\t*art, 898-5091.<br />
Sunday bwaking oi the bmad at<br />
930 a.m., Sunday School 11:30<br />
a.m., Gospel Meeting 7 pm.,<br />
Monday Bible Hour 7-8 p.m.,<br />
m<br />
Wednesday Bible Study, 7 p.m.<br />
St. John’s Anglican Church<br />
Sunday services 8 a.m. and 10<br />
a.m. For details call Rev. John<br />
Stephens at 898-5100.<br />
Squainish United Church<br />
Minister: Rev. Claire Bowers,<br />
892-5727. Sunday Worship<br />
Hour begins at 10 a.m. Infant<br />
Nursery provided. Sunday<br />
School is held at 10 a.m.<br />
Valleycliffe Christian<br />
Fellowship<br />
Sunday Worship Service: 10<br />
a.m.<br />
Red Robinson, a well known disc jockey and<br />
announcer, was a recent visitor to the West Coast<br />
Railway Heritage park. Red’s Classic Theatre feature<br />
on Aug. 18 on KVOS, Channel 12, will be about his<br />
trip to the Heritage Park. It should be worth watching,<br />
along with the movie.<br />
Nominations for the 13th annual British Columbia<br />
Senior Award are being accepted until Sept 13.<br />
Nomination forms are available at any branch of the<br />
Hongkong Bank of Canada, or through Brock House<br />
About Tmn<br />
By Maureen Gilmour<br />
Society, 3875 Point Grey Road, Vancouver, V6R 1B3, or<br />
telephone 228-1461.<br />
rn<br />
All proceeds from a fund raiser pancake breakfast on<br />
Saturday, July 27, from 8-11 a.m. will go to the Big<br />
Brothers and Big Sisters organization. The cost is $3<br />
each. It is being held in front of show suite #2,<br />
Shannon Estates, 39920 Government Road and spon-<br />
sored by Bjorn Nilsson and Sylvia Schnieder of NRS<br />
Sea to Sky Real Estate.<br />
On Sept. 29, the Squamish Lions Club is bringing the<br />
Maple Leaf Choir to Squamish for a performance in the<br />
Civic Centre. Complimentary tickets are available for<br />
all seniors, those who do community (volunteer) work<br />
and school children. For your ticket, drop into Raj’s<br />
True Value store in the Chieftain Centre Mall or phone<br />
892-5011.<br />
w<br />
STORK STORY - RUMMING - It is with great pleasure<br />
and pride that Jason and Tara Rumming announce<br />
the birth of their first child, a beautiful daughter, Kyra<br />
Leigh, born in Lions Gate Hospital at 8:24 a.m., July 13,<br />
weighing 6 lb. 7 oz. Proud first time grandparents are<br />
Sharon and A1 Rumming of Squamish, Carol and A1<br />
Wright of West Vancouver and the late Tony Sims. Kyra<br />
was also welcomed by great-grandparents Peggy<br />
Lockwood, Laura Beck, Eleanor Rumming, Hal<br />
Rumming and Rita and Jim Sims. Jason and Tara<br />
express thanks to Dr. Louise Martin, the Squamish<br />
Hospital nursing staff and nurse Sheilagh, of Coast-<br />
Garibaldi Health Unit.<br />
01<br />
There are some great entries in the upcoming<br />
Squamish Days Loggers Sports parade Aug. 4, but<br />
more family participation would be welcome. The<br />
Lillooet Begbie Review members will be strutting their<br />
stuff at the parade, along with stilt walkers, bands and<br />
lots of surprises.<br />
A television company from Britain will televise the<br />
parade as part of a series on loggers sports it will be<br />
broadcasting in October. Anyone with relatives in<br />
Britain might see you on TV this fall.<br />
Phone the parade marshall, Joan Forry, at 898-3661 for<br />
more information.<br />
R<br />
First birthday wishes to Jamie Sweeney whose special<br />
day is July 26.<br />
St. Joseph‘s Catholic Church<br />
2449 The Boulevard, Garibaldi<br />
Highlands. Father Angelo De<br />
Pompa, 898-4355. Mass:<br />
Saturday at 4:30 p.m./ Sunday<br />
at 9 a.m. and 10.30 a.m.<br />
Confession: Saturday at 4 p.m.<br />
or by appointment anytime.<br />
Catechism (CCD): grades K-7<br />
on Thursdays, 6:30 p.m.-7 30<br />
p.m., may register anytime.<br />
Squamish Baptist Church<br />
Pastor: John Crszier, 898-3737.<br />
Sunday Worship and Sunday<br />
School at 10 a.m.<br />
Squamish Pentecostal Church<br />
Pastor: Rev. Jeff Beckmyer, 892-<br />
3680. Morning Worship and<br />
Sunday School, 11:30 a.m.<br />
Sunday evening service at 6<br />
p.m.<br />
Church of Jesus Christ of<br />
Latter Day Saints<br />
Stan Thompson, Branch<br />
hsident. 42081 Ross Rd.,<br />
Brackendale. 898-3535.<br />
HOROSCOPE^<br />
8y C.C. Clark - oTVData Features Syndlcate mm<br />
am,<br />
e,<br />
.July 21 through July 27, l9$6<br />
Aries (March 21 - April 20)<br />
A loved one is more in tune with your needs than<br />
you might imagine. Tell him or her what is on your<br />
mind.<br />
Taurus (April 21 - May 20)<br />
It’s time to take control of your financial affairs.<br />
Tie up loose ends and don’t sign until you have all<br />
the facts.<br />
Gemini (May 21 - June 20)<br />
It’s a good thing Geminis thrive on change. Your<br />
adaptable attitude will get a workout over the com-<br />
ing weeks.<br />
Cancer (June 21 - July 20)<br />
Show your true colors in the workplace and let<br />
those in authority know just how impressive you<br />
are. No need to take the backseat any longer.<br />
Leo (July 21 - Aug. 21)<br />
Don’t set limitations for yourself just because you<br />
think you should. Let your mind be free to wonder<br />
and create.<br />
Virgo (Aug. 22 - Sept. 22)<br />
Creative projects are favored during this time. You<br />
will complete even the most mundane task with a<br />
special flare.<br />
Libra (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22)<br />
It is often difficult for you to convey feelings. Try<br />
your best to share your frustrations as well as your<br />
joys.<br />
Scorpio (Oct. 23 - Nov. 22)<br />
Check your calendar carefully: You may be forget-<br />
ting an important date. Take a walk to let off steam<br />
after a quarrel.<br />
Sagittarius (Nov. 23 - Dec. 20)<br />
A seemingly uninteresting social engagement may<br />
turn out to be fun. Someone close to you is looking<br />
out for you.<br />
Capricorn (Dec. 21 - Jan. 19)<br />
You may need to reorganize your personal life to<br />
accommodate new responsibilities. It will be worth<br />
your time to do so.<br />
Aquarius (Jan. 20 - Feb. 18)<br />
Stop sticking your head in the sand; you won’t get<br />
anywhere by doing that. Resolve to confront opposition.<br />
You may<br />
practical.<br />
after it.<br />
Pisces (Feb. 19 - March 20)<br />
want everything right now, but it isn’t<br />
Decide what you need most and then go<br />
Born this week:<br />
ly 21 -Jon Lovitz. Robin Williams<br />
y 22 - Willem Dah. Albert Brooks.<br />
July 24 - Lynda Carter<br />
July 25 - Estelle Getty. Iniart<br />
Danny Glover. Alex Trebek<br />
luly 23 - Spencer Christian, Woody<br />
July 26 - Mick Jagger. Dorothy Hamill<br />
July 27 - Peggy Fleming, Jerry Van<br />
Hmlson Dyke, Norman Lear<br />
SQUAMISH<br />
I 892-31 31<br />
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4:OO 6:30 7:OO 7:3O 8:OO 9:oo I 9:30 1 1o:oo [ 10:30 11:oo 11:30<br />
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(4) KOMO Videos Edition News ABCNews News Wh. Fortune Jeopardy! Roseanne Coach Home limp. Coach _- NYPD Blue<br />
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News I Summer Olympic Games<br />
INews I Sum rii e r Olvrn pi c G a rii es 1 News<br />
CHEK Bold & 6.<br />
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BCTV Oprah Winfrey<br />
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KNOW Socioloav Economics<br />
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CKVU<br />
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News I News I Hard Copy I Ent. Tonight<br />
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French French Destinos I Destinos Delia Smith<br />
Dinosaurs ]Wonder Yrs. Doogie H. IBlossom Home Imp. IM‘A’S’H Seinfeld<br />
Days of Our Lives Young and the Restless News Ent. Tonight<br />
Extra Fam. Mat. /Videos Roseanne Larroquette W5 CTV News News<br />
Seinfeld Secret Of ...<br />
Pa ran o rm a I Bo rd e rl i n e News<br />
Jeopardy! Roseanne I Drew Carey Home Imp. ILarroquette W5 CTVNews News<br />
News<br />
H. Patrol<br />
Hometime Nova 2 1 st Century Jet P.O.V. ‘Allo, ’Allo! Time Goes<br />
Watercolor Private Life of Plants Supersense I Monkeys Heart of the People Cooking Readers<br />
Murphy Movie: “The Last Ninja” I Paid Prog. Baywatch Star Trek: Next Gener.<br />
Simpsons Murder, She Wrote IMurder, She Wrote NYPD Blue Sports Page I News<br />
TSN I Blue Javs I Maior Leaaue Baseball: Cleveland Indians at Toronto Blue Javs 1 Soortsdesk I Motorina ’96 ISDortfishina I Real Fishina IOutdoors ISDortsdesk 1 Sportsdesk<br />
A&E Equalizer I Biography I Movie: “Inspector Morse: The Wolvercote Tongue” I Law & Order I Biography I Movie: “Inspector Morse: The Wolvercote Tongue”<br />
TNN IDukes of Hazzard lThe Road 1 Prime Time Country<br />
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‘Wh. Fortune [Summer Olympic Games News Summer Olympic Games Paid Prog. I J. Springer<br />
- SUP Movie: “Batman Forever” 1 Movie: “Troublemakers” Movie: “Lone Justice 11” Movie: “The Mask” Movie: “Mortal Kombat”<br />
CBFT Enfer-autres 1 Jeux olympiques d’Atlanta<br />
Jeux olympiques d’Atlanta Le Point Movie: “Le Club des monstres”<br />
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Early Ed. Atlanta Business Atlanta On the Line Atlanta Antiques Atlanta National Sports National Anne Petrie Antiques Atlanta Lead<br />
Sailor Moon Wishbone Rugrats Flintstones Earthworm Bump Reboot You Afraid? YlV News Cpt.Power Tarzan Heartbeat Rough Guide Catwalk<br />
~ ~~ ~-<br />
4:OO I 4:30 I 5:30 I 6:OO I 6:30 I 750 8:OO 8:30 9:30 1 1O:OO I 10:30 11:OO H:30<br />
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0 (4) KOMO Videos Edition I ABC News I News Wh. Fortune Jeopardy! Ellen Faculty Grace Champs Primetime Live News Nightline<br />
0 L5) KING News Summer Olympic Games News Summer Olympic Games News Tonight<br />
0 @ CHEK Bold&B. LateShow 1 News News Videos Extra Movie: “The Secret Garden” Law & Order CTV News News<br />
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*- --<br />
Baywatch News News Minor League Baseball: Tacoma Rainiers at Edmonton Trappers News Sports Night Comedy Star Trek<br />
Wh. Fortune 1Summer Olympic Games News I Summer Olvmpic Games<br />
Police Movie: “Storybook” I Movie: “The Whole of the Moon” Outer Limits Brett Butler Movie: “Bloodknot“<br />
LI nt ,inat e Obsession”<br />
__<br />
CBFT Enfer-autres Jeux olvmpiques d’Atlanta I Jeux olvmpiques d’Atlanta Le Point Sianature de femme I Siqn-Off<br />
0 KSTW News Murphy CBS News Roseanne Coach<br />
~<br />
Married ... Extra Dave’s<br />
~<br />
Movie: “A League of Their Own” News Late Show<br />
@ KCPQ Batman Rangers Full House Full House Simpsons M*A*S*H Home Imp. Simpsons Beverly Hills, 90210 Party of Five Star Trek: Next Gener. M‘A’S”H Cops<br />
I Bu sines<br />
NW Early Ed. Atlanta Business Atlanta On the Line Atlanta Futureworld Atlanta National Sports National Anne Petrie Futureworld I Atlanta ______- Lead<br />
YTV Sailor Moon Wishbone Rugrats Flintstones Garfield Mess Goosebmp You Afraid? Top 10 Hidden City Tarzan Madison Rough Guide Catwalk<br />
Learning To Sing<br />
With Feeling<br />
Young students at the<br />
recent Sea to Sky<br />
Summer Choir Camp in<br />
Squamish staged a con-<br />
cert at the Brennan Park<br />
Leisure Centre Friday<br />
night. Included in the per-<br />
formance was a medley of<br />
1950s pop tunes. David<br />
Donaldson photo
J<br />
i<br />
20 JULY 23,1996 THE SQUAMISH CHIEF<br />
SALE ENDS JULY 31<br />
(no other promo's apply)<br />
892-VINO<br />
(8466)<br />
0 Air Conditioned!<br />
SPECIAL<br />
Two premium 6 week<br />
on premise wines<br />
(approx. 30 bottles)<br />
WHITE ZINFANDEL<br />
reg. $115 - $100<br />
SAUVIGNON BLANC<br />
reg. $115 - $100<br />
0 Your Olppic Headpariten!<br />
8 foot TV screen!<br />
Live Entertainment!<br />
-Located in the Highlands Mall Complex-<br />
ZO-~OYO Of<br />
0 Club Monaco Osh Kosh<br />
I Want to say thanks and make sure eve yd<br />
knows why? Or maybe offer a little constr<br />
tive criticism without conflontation? Sl<br />
your Dart or Daffodil tome Editor,<br />
Squamish Chiefi Box 3500, Squamish, 6<br />
VON 3G0 or drop it of at our okice at 38.<br />
Second Avenue, between 9 a.m. and 5 p<br />
Monday through Friday. You can also,<br />
your message to 892-8483 or e-mail<br />
sqchief @noun tain-in ter. net.<br />
Arms full of daffodils to Camp Squamish and Dave<br />
Neil for the generous help all year. The bus, the field for<br />
our party the shirts. Thank you very much. HTP.<br />
W<br />
Art tins of daffodils to the parents and children from<br />
HTP and HSD. It has been a great year. Enjoy your sum-<br />
mer. See you in September. Staff rooms full of daffodils<br />
to the staff at HSD and HTP. Thank you for all 2 your hard<br />
work and your sense of humor.<br />
W<br />
A refrigerated truck fuli of daffodils to McDonald's for<br />
the generous donation of milk and juice to Howe Sound<br />
Daycare. It is much appreciated.<br />
W<br />
Big bright yellow daffodils to Debbie W. for all her<br />
help and hard work in the office. From an inept coworker.<br />
A Ford truck full of daffodils to Glen, Susan and<br />
Melissa for helping move Mom to her new apartment.<br />
From Mom, Jane and Peter.<br />
W<br />
Drums of daffodils to the Kiwanis Club for funding<br />
our music therapist Kristine for the summer. We're hav-<br />
ing a blast. HTP.<br />
W<br />
Daffodils and doggie kisses to all those people who are<br />
responsible for allowing the Sea to Sky Canines flyball<br />
team to use the loggers sports grounds. We want you to<br />
know how much we appreciate being able to use this<br />
ideal practice area. Rest assured we always pick up after<br />
our dogs.<br />
Daffodils, doggie kisses and baby coos to the SSC<br />
Chiefs flyball team members for helping to make<br />
Metta's first doggie event a successful one.<br />
m<br />
A million darts to the people who leave their dogs tied<br />
up all day with no water. Someone should tie you up in<br />
a fur coat in the hot sun with no water. Why don't you<br />
give the animal away if you're too irresponsible to look<br />
after it?<br />
m<br />
A theatre full of daffodils from Between Shifts Theatre<br />
to the individuals and organizations which gave us<br />
financial assistance in getting the group to the<br />
Mainstage Festival in Kamloops, including Squamish<br />
municipal council, Howe Sound Players, Howe Sound<br />
Secondary School, Spen Hinde and Brenda Caldwell.<br />
Between Shifts Theatre received the award for the best<br />
showcase production at the Kamloops festival and real-<br />
ly put Squamish on the map.<br />
~ Thank<br />
I<br />
Touched by love daffodils of thanks to all the pec<br />
who prayed and supported us on the news of my d<br />
illness. Our prayers have been answered. We are all c<br />
nally grateful. To the McDonald Place neighbors, w<br />
love you. What an unbelievable bunch you are. Vi(<br />
you are the true meaning of a friend. Jack and Shi<br />
you have touched us all. Bev and Bruce, you are cle<br />
all that is good. Everlasting thanks to you all.<br />
Daffodils to Phil at Sea to Sky Signs for his kind I<br />
with the Lions Club raffle, to Pete and Sam at Spe<br />
Auto Glass for their replacing the windshield, anc<br />
Dave Theti for selling the most raffle tickets for the 1'<br />
T-bird last week. Daffodils to Dan Cassell for selling<br />
most this week.<br />
B<br />
Alice Lake full of daffodils to Bobbie, Wilma,<br />
Gaetz, Kalen, two ambulance paramedics, Dr. Mor<br />
nurses at Squamish General Hospital and especi<br />
Garrett and his parents, for helping Michael after<br />
bicycle accident. Thank you, from his grateful parer<br />
A gold bag of daffodils to the pretty young lady I<br />
played golf in the Squamish Ford golf tournament, \<br />
treated the lowly gold course marshal to a cold beel<br />
a very hot day. You made the day very special. Th<br />
you.<br />
A very successful mutual fund heaped full of daffo<br />
to my very efficient and understanding mutual fi<br />
advisor, Lynda. Doing business with you is alwaj<br />
smile and no problems. Thanks from one of your si<br />
fied customers.<br />
Ball diamonds full of daffodils to Bob and Ben foi<br />
your help with our fields throughout the year. You<br />
very much appreciated. Thanks a million. And sc(<br />
keeper booths full of daffodils to Don John. Thanks<br />
all your help with our tournament and playoffs. Hc<br />
Sound Ladies Fastball.<br />
Seven years of daffodils to the greatest care give<br />
Garibaldi Highlands. The lives of our godchildren h<br />
been enriched by your love and guidance and we s:<br />
easier knowing they were in your care. Happy ret<br />
ment. From the grateful godparents.<br />
A pool pump covered in daffodils to Len Price i<br />
Murray Gallagher for coming to the rescue of the aqi<br />
ic centre. It is guys like you who keep the comrnui<br />
spirit alive. From the staff and all our patrons, tha<br />
again.<br />
you to the following businesses for their donations :<br />
I Dan Trevisan Pro Shop<br />
The Garden Centre<br />
Garibaldi Tire Service<br />
Finning Ltd.<br />
Greg Gardner GM<br />
Logger's Inn<br />
OKTire Store<br />
Westward Sales<br />
Squamish Ford<br />
B<br />
a<br />
rn<br />
A
on? Sen<br />
ish, B.<br />
at 3811<br />
-<br />
he pec<br />
mYd<br />
re all c<br />
xs, WI<br />
re. Vic<br />
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Id Shii<br />
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kin<br />
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d,<br />
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‘ilm<br />
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Pal<br />
lad,<br />
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nd<br />
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?rice<br />
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Why sit around home,<br />
& watch the ‘tube‘?<br />
Come on down?<br />
89213811<br />
37991 2nd awe.<br />
Summer<br />
Treat<br />
CONES<br />
69$<br />
Chocolate, Vanilla<br />
or Twist<br />
Have you had your break today?<br />
PRIME TIME VIEWNG<br />
Try Giselle’s<br />
Eggs Benny<br />
with<br />
Hash browns!<br />
$5.25<br />
Breakfast Lunch Brownbag Lunches!<br />
LOmhe) GWl? & cpndy invibe you to by their rrew Manu!<br />
6:30am - 2:30pm daily<br />
892-3811<br />
37991 2nd ave.<br />
Advertise in the<br />
Chiefs TV listings.<br />
892-9161<br />
~ ~~ ~~~ ~~ ~<br />
4:OO I 4:30 I 5:30 I 6:OO I 6:30 1 7:oo I 7:30 8:OO 8:30 I 9:OO 9:30 I 18:OO I f8:30 ll:OO 11:30<br />
(11) CBUT Summer Olympic Games Cont’d National CBC News Summer Olympic Games CBC News 4 Feathers<br />
(4) KOMO Videos Edition /News I ABC News 1 News I Wh. Fortune I Jeopardy! , Fam. Mat. Boy-World Step-Step Mr. Cooper 120120 News Nightline<br />
(5) KING News Summer Olympic Games News Summer Olympic Games News Tonight -<br />
@ CHEK Bold & B. Late Show News News Videos Extra I Due South lonesome Dove: Outlaw Nowhere Man CTVNews News<br />
(7) KlRO JennyJones News News IHard Copy Major League Baseball: Detroit Tigers at Seattle Mariners News News H. Patrol -<br />
:‘f:<br />
$.-- BCTV Oprah Winfrey News News News Wh. Fortune Jeopardy! Movie: “Stand and Deliver” Nash Bridges CTVNews News<br />
@I KCTS Creatures Wishbone Mr Rogers Business News-Lehrer Bill Nye Wash. Wk. Mysteries Wall St. America on Wheels Movie: “Din e r”<br />
KNOW Literature Watercolor Nobel Legacy<br />
Envirmmenl ~ Japanese Coilection Tesiament of Youth Therese Raquin - Goodnight - Luv -_<br />
Reap the Whirlwind<br />
@ KVOS Movie: “Annie” Cont‘d Doogie H. /Blossom Home Imp. I M’A’S’H Seinfeld Murphy Movie: “The Poseidon Adventure” M’A’S’H Star Trek: Next Gener.<br />
(D CKVU Days of Our Lives Young and the Restless News Ent. ,Tonight Simpsons Sliders X - Fi I es 20120<br />
sports Page j ~ews<br />
TSN Golf: British Senior Open -- Second Round CFL 1 CFL Football: Toronto Argonauts at Saskatchewan Roughriders Boxing: Holmes vs. Navarre Sports d es k LS - po r t sd es k<br />
A&E Equalizer Biography Movie: “Farewell to the King” Law & Order Biography Movie: “Farewell to the King”<br />
TNN Dukes of Hazzard Championship Rodeo Prime Time Country /Club Dance News Championship Rodeo Prime Time Coilnlry News<br />
,-<br />
-<br />
ClTV Baywatch News News Kung Fu: Legend Cont. ]X-Files Outer Limits News Sports Night Yuk Yuk’s Married ... NYPD Blue<br />
WDlV Wh. Fortune I Summer Olympic Games INeWS 1 Summer Olympic Games I Paid Prog. Friday Night<br />
SUP Movie: “Chili’s Blues” Movie: “Mad Love” Englishman Who Went Up a Hill but Came Down Mtn Movie: “Dillinger and Capone” LoversCon<br />
CBFT Majeurs I Jeux olympiques d’Atlanta Jeux olympiques d’Atlanta Le Point Movie: “Europa Europa” Sign-off<br />
a KSTW News Murphy CBS News Roseanne Coach Married ... Extra Diagnosis Murder Nash Bridges News Late Show<br />
I<br />
_.- $3; KCPQ Batman X-Men Feed-Mind Full House Simpsons M*A*S*H Home Imp. Simpsons Sliders X-Files Outer Limits ‘M‘A‘SW Cops<br />
NW Early Ed. Atlanta Business Atlanta On the Line Atlanta Big Life Atlanta National Sports National Anne Petrie Big Life Atlanta Lead Business<br />
YTV Sailor Moon Wishbone Rugrats Flintstones Dragon Ball Cpt.Power Hypernauts Reboot Felix-Cat It’s Alive 1Squawk Box Hit List Tanan Super Dave Streetnoise<br />
I<br />
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outing,<br />
SQUAMlSH VAlLEY<br />
GOLF dk COUNTRY CLU5<br />
2458 Momquam Rd. Pro Shop 898-9691 I<br />
_____- -<br />
I ‘ I I .. . .........<br />
Lazarus Man News U.S. Customs: Classified Land’s End Star Trek: Voyager One West Waikiki<br />
Cooking Business B.C. Summer Games News Hardy Boys Nancy Drew Medicine Woman Law 8 Order<br />
Gourmet Best of Kerr Cucina Kitchen Lawrence Welk Show Live From Lincoln Center Hidden Ring of Fire<br />
News<br />
2 ..I<br />
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Lorwsorne DOVC oL1tl;iiv CTV N W ~ NN:;<br />
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Sigh tings Xena: Warrior Princess Hercules-Jrnys. Star Trek: Next Gener. Extra Edition cops<br />
Marshal Coach Your Town News Rezldy-Not Chris Cross Murder, She Wrote Ready-Not Myst Is1<br />
Sportsdesk Expos<br />
Major League Baseball: Montreal Expos at St. Louis Cardinals CFL Football: Hamilton Tiger-Cats at B.C. Lions<br />
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Racetalk OPV Grand Opry Statler Bros. Yesteryear OPrY /Grand Opry Statler Bros. 1Yester-ye;lr - . . __ .<br />
WWF Wrestling Raw News Coach Star Trek: Voyager Star Trek: Deep Space 9 Highlander: The Series Movie: “Beyond Obsession”<br />
Summer Olympic Games Cont’d News Summer Olympic Garnes<br />
Movie: “The Mask” Movie: “Batman Forever‘’ Movie: “Jefferson in Paris”<br />
__<br />
Jeux olympiques d’Atlanta Cont’d<br />
Jeux olympiques d‘Atlanta Sport Movie: “Perry Mason: Le Verre empoisonn6”<br />
My Stepmother News CBS News Home Imp. Home Imp. Extra Medicine Woman Touched by an Angel Walker, Texas Ranger<br />
Movie: “Police Academy 4: Citizens on Patrol” Star Trek: Next Gener. Star Trek: Deep Space 9 Cops cops America’s Most Wanted Save Our Streets<br />
On the Line Atlanta Rough Cuts Atlanta Big Life Atlanta fashion File Review National On the Arts Sports Connection<br />
Woody Yogi Bear Yogi Bear Rocko’s Life Spider-Man Squawk Box Cpt.Power Goosebmp You Afraid? Top 10 Captain Power: The Legend Begiris<br />
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1 ’CITV I “Working Girl” Cont’d I News<br />
il (D WDlV Summer Olympic Games<br />
SUP Movie: “The Little Rascals”<br />
E[@ I @ I CBFT I Jeux olympiques d’Atlanta<br />
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I (11) I KSTW IMovie: “Her Alibi” Cont’d ICheers<br />
I Simpsons 1 Lois & Clark-Superman<br />
]My Life-Dog I Movie: “Mortal Kombat”<br />
I Cheers ICBS News /News<br />
I Nash Bridges<br />
Movie: “Kiss of Death”<br />
I Jeux olyrnpiques d’Atlanta 1 Le Point I Sport<br />
60 Minutes 1 Murder, She Wrote<br />
1 News I Summer Olympic Games I aid PIO~ Jpniij Prog - - - - - -<br />
Movie “Clear and Present Danger’ -_.I<br />
I Femme de ton prochain 1 Sign-off - 1-<br />
IMovie: “Incident in a Small Town” Jews - R oscn ri ne<br />
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@ 33; KCPQ “Enter the Ninja” Cont’d Movie: “Gremlins” When Animals Attack Simpsons Married ... New York Undercover<br />
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1<br />
NW On the Line Atlanta Passionate Atlanta I Passionate I Atlanta National Review<br />
Antiques Atlanta Passionate Atlanta<br />
I<br />
I YTV 1 Snowy River: McGregor I Woody 1 Garfield I Hamster 1 Rupert I Flipper I Small Talk I Anti-Gravity I Hypernauts I Felix-Cat 1 Rough Guide -_I_<br />
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National CBC News Summer Olympic Games<br />
--<br />
. .......<br />
.~<br />
1 Streetrmse 1 DOL H:)W<br />
CGC News Elcl)harii<br />
___ ______
24 =JULY 23,1996<br />
TUESDAY<br />
JULY 23,1996<br />
EVENING<br />
6:OO (D ** “Inspector Morse: The<br />
Wolvercote Tongue” (1 987, Mys-<br />
tery) John Thaw, Kevin Whately. A<br />
wealthy American tourist is found<br />
dead after declaring her intention<br />
to donate a precious gem to a<br />
museum. (2 hrs.)<br />
@ “Troublemakers” (1 995) Ter-<br />
ence Hill, Bud Spencer. A gun-<br />
slinger must lure his brother home<br />
for the holidays. (In Stereo) ‘PG’ (1<br />
hr., 38 min.)<br />
8:OO (D 0 t+ “The Last Ninja”<br />
(1 983, Adventure) Michael Beck,<br />
Nancy Kwan. A ninja-trained<br />
American art dealer fights to<br />
rescue a group of scientists held<br />
captive by terrorists in Dallas. (1<br />
hr., 30 min.)<br />
fD “Lone Justice II” (1995) Brad<br />
Johnson, Wes Studi. A cowboy<br />
returns to find his hometown be-<br />
sieged by outlaws. (In Stereo)<br />
‘PG-13’ (1 hr., 33 min.)<br />
@ g : j j ; **’I2 “Alien Nation: Body<br />
and Soul” (1 995, Science Fiction)<br />
Gary Graham, Eric Pierpoint. A<br />
murder investigation leads Matt<br />
and George to the shocking truth<br />
about what happened to the Ov-<br />
erseers. (In Stereo) D (2 hrs.)<br />
9:00 @ 0 *** “The Godfather,<br />
Part Ill” (1 990, Drama) (PA Part 2<br />
of 2) AI Pacino, Diane Keaton.<br />
Michael Corleone is forced into a<br />
bloody mob war despite his efforts<br />
to legitimize the family “business.”<br />
(In Stereo) El (2 hrs.)<br />
9:05 @ **1/2 “Le Club des<br />
monstres” (1 980, Comedie) Vin-<br />
cent Price, John Carradine. Un<br />
ecrivain est invite au Club des<br />
Monstres pour y trouver de I’in-<br />
spiration pour son livre. D (2 hrs.,<br />
5 min.)<br />
9:30 @ *** “The Mask” (f994) Jim<br />
Carrey, Cameron Diaz. A mask<br />
transforms a milquetoast into a<br />
mighiy man. (In Stereo) ‘FG-I 3’ Ei<br />
(1 hr., 41 min.)<br />
1O:OO (D *+ “Inspector Morse: The<br />
Wolvercote Tongue” (1 987, Mys-<br />
tery) John Thaw, Kevin Whately. A<br />
wealthy American tourist is found<br />
dead after declaring her intention<br />
to donate a precious gem to a<br />
0 @ *+ “Back to Hannibal: The<br />
Return of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry<br />
Finn” (1990, Drama) Raphael<br />
Sbarge, Mitchell Anderson.<br />
A friend’s dilemma reunites the<br />
two legendary adventurers, now in<br />
their mid-20s and pursuing professional<br />
careers. (In Stereo) @I (1<br />
hr., 30 min.)<br />
@ @ *** “The Natural” (1984,<br />
Drama) Robert Redford, Robert<br />
Duvall. The almost mythical ability<br />
of a middle-aged baseball player<br />
rockets a major-league team toward<br />
the 1939 pennant. (3 hrs.)<br />
8:30 @ 0 +*+ “A League of Their<br />
Own” (1992, Comedy) Geena<br />
Davis, Tom Hanks. An account of<br />
the women who took to the diamond<br />
in 1943 to form the All American<br />
Girls Professional Baseball<br />
League. (In Stereo) El (2 hrs., 30<br />
min.)<br />
9:30 @ “Bloodknot” (1995) Kate<br />
Vernon, Margot Kidder. Astranger<br />
is welcomed into the home of a<br />
grieving family. (In Stereo) ‘R’ (1<br />
hr.; 39 rnin.)<br />
11:15 @ * “Intimate Obsession”<br />
(1 992) Jodie Fisher, James<br />
Quarter. A bored wife and her busy<br />
husband play a game of seduction.<br />
‘R’ (1 hr., 31 min.)<br />
11:30 0 @ ***% “That Hamilton<br />
Woman” ( 1941, Drama) Laurence<br />
Olivier, Vivien Leigh. A portrayal of<br />
the tragic, scandalous love affair<br />
between Lord Horatio Nelson and<br />
Lady Emma Hamilton. (2 hrs.)<br />
12:45 @ **tl/2 “Killer” (1994) An-<br />
thony LaPaglia, Mimi Rogers. An<br />
assassin falls for a woman who<br />
wants to be killed. ‘R’ (1 hr., 35<br />
min.)<br />
1 :35 0 0 ** ‘/2 “Go Tell the Spar-<br />
tans” (1978, Drama) Burt Lan-<br />
caster, Craig Wasson. The ve-<br />
teran commander of a youthful<br />
platoon is mystified by the unan-<br />
swered questions surrounding the<br />
Vietnam War. (2 hrs., 30 min.)<br />
2:OO a ** “The Big Wheel” (1 949,<br />
Drama) Mickey Rooney, Thomas<br />
THE SQUAMISH CHIEF<br />
1 :00 @ ** “Congo” (1 995) Dylan<br />
Walsh, Laura Linney. A communicative<br />
ape figures in a search for a<br />
lost city. (In Stereo) ‘PG-13’ llsl(1<br />
hr., 48 min.)<br />
2:OO @ ++ “Lovesick” (1 983, Comedy)<br />
Dudley Moore, Elizabeth<br />
McGcvem. A married psychiatrist<br />
seeks holp from the spirit of Sigmund<br />
Freud after he becomes<br />
obsessed with a nymphomaniac.<br />
(2 hrs.)<br />
2:OS 0 0 ** “Good Guys Wear<br />
Black’’ (1 978, Adventure) Chuck<br />
Norris, Anne Archer. A Vietnam<br />
veteran launches his own investigation<br />
into the mysterious deaths<br />
of the other soldiers who were in<br />
his unit. (2 hrs., 15 min.)<br />
Q ::I:: *% “Vibes” .(1988, Comedy)<br />
Cyndi Lauper, Jeff Goldblum.<br />
Two psychics become involved<br />
in a fortune hunter‘s search<br />
for a legendary treasure in Ecuador.<br />
(2 hrs., 15 min.)<br />
FRIDAY<br />
JULY 26,1996<br />
EVENING<br />
2:35 Q ;:j:: *+ “Ninja Academy”<br />
(19’90, Comedy) Will Egan, Kelly<br />
Randall. A martial arts instructor‘s<br />
work is cut out for him training a<br />
motley group of students for a<br />
- contest. (2 hrs., 15 min.)<br />
@I *+ “The Toy” (1982,<br />
Comedy) Richard Pryor, Jackie<br />
Gleason. An unemployed man<br />
agrees to become a high-paid<br />
companion for a multimillionaire’s<br />
spoiled son. (2 hrs.)<br />
@ *** ‘The Englishman Who<br />
Went Up a Hill but Came Down a<br />
Mountain” (1 995) Hugh Grant,<br />
Tara FitzGerald. Welsh pride is<br />
hurt when a “mountain” won’t<br />
measure up. (In Stered) ‘PG‘ [IIJ (1<br />
hr., 39 min.)<br />
e :I$: *f%<br />
>The Survival of<br />
Dana” (1 979, Drama) Melissa Sue<br />
Anderson, Robert Carradine. A<br />
teen-ager who has gone to live in a<br />
new state finds her values challenged<br />
by her affluent, anti-social<br />
new classmates. (2 hrs.)<br />
3:07 @ (@ *** “Parents” (1989,<br />
Horror) Randy Quaid, Mary Beth<br />
Hurt. A series of nightmares and<br />
strange occurrences leads a<br />
young boy to believe that his<br />
picture-perfect parents are can-<br />
6:OO @ **l/2 “Farewell to the King”<br />
(1989, Drama) Nick Nolte, Nigel<br />
Havers. A World War II deserter<br />
becomes king of Borneo’s head- SATURDAY<br />
hunters, drawing him into warfare<br />
against the Japanese. (2 hrs.) JULY 27,1996<br />
@ ** “Mad Love” (1995) Chris<br />
O’Donnell, Drew Barrymore. Two EVENING<br />
passion-filled teens embark on a<br />
road trip to Mexico. (In Stereo) 6:OO a f+Y2 “Batman Forever“<br />
‘PG-13’ @I (1 hr., 35 min.)<br />
(1995) Val Kilmer, Tommy Lee<br />
8:OO 0 *** “Stand and Deliver” Jones. Batman faces threats from<br />
(1987, Drama) Edward James the Riddlerand Harvey Two-Face.<br />
Olmos, Lou Diamond Phillips. (In Stereo) ‘PG-13’ @I (2 hrs., 1<br />
East L.A. math teacher Jaime Es- min.)<br />
calante inspires his students to 7:OO (D ***% “The Boys of St.<br />
Mitchell. The son of a race-car<br />
take and pass an advanced- Vincent” (1392, Drama) (Part 1 of<br />
drive: W ~ O died oli the iiXk depiacemen!<br />
calculus exam. (2 hrs.) 2) Henry Czerny, Briar) Dooley.<br />
@I *f%<br />
cides to follow in his father’s foot-<br />
“The Poseidon Ad- Child abuse runs rampant at a<br />
steps. (2 hrs.)<br />
venture” (1972, Adventure) Gene Canadian orphanage supervised<br />
2:05 0 3:: **% “Slaves of New<br />
Hackman, Ernest Borgnine. by a disturbed clergyman. (2 hrs.)<br />
York” (1 989, Drama) Bernadette<br />
Oscar-winning special effects 8:OO @ *t+* “Jefferson in Paris”<br />
Peters, Adam Coleman Howard.<br />
highlight this catastrophic story of (1 995) Nick Nolte, Greta Scacchi.<br />
Tama Janowitz’s best seller about<br />
survivors trapped aboard a cap- Romantic troubles arise for aman<br />
aspiring designer striving for<br />
sized ocean liner. (2 hrs., 30 rnin.) bassador Thomas Jefferson. (In<br />
@<br />
museum. (2 hrs.)<br />
success in the avant-garde trap- *** “The Englishman Who Stereo) ‘PG-13’ @I (2 hrs., 16 min.)<br />
pings of Manhattan. (2 hrs., 5 min.)<br />
Went Up a Hill but Came Down a 8:30 @ 8<br />
11 :I 5 @ ** ** “Perry Mason: Le<br />
“Mortal Kombat” (1 995)<br />
Mountain” (1 995) Hugh Grant, Verre empoisonn6” (1990, Mys-<br />
Robin Shou, Linden Ashby. Three<br />
Tara FitzGerald. Welsh pride is tere) Raymond Burr, Barbara<br />
warriors fight to save Earth from<br />
hurt when a “mountain” won’t Hale. Mason defend une ecrivaine<br />
the forces of evil. (In Stereo) ‘PG-<br />
measure up. (In Stereo) ‘PG’ @I (1 accusee du meurtre de son ancien<br />
13’ @J (1 hr., 41 min.)<br />
hr., 39 min.)<br />
mari louche. @I (1 hr., 50 min.)<br />
11 :30 0 9) ** “The Shape of Things<br />
9:05 @ @ ** “Europa Europa” 9:00 0 @ *k1/2 “The Barefoot Exto<br />
Come” (1 979, Science Fiction)<br />
(1 990, Drame) Marco Hofschy- ecutive” (1995, Comedy) Jason<br />
Jack Palance, Carol Lynley. After<br />
neider, Julie Delpy. Juste avant la London, Terri hens. A network<br />
Earth’s destruction in a robotic<br />
Seconde Guerre mondial, une employee sees a chance to go<br />
war, a power-hungry renegade<br />
famille juive fuit vers I’Est et s’in- from mailroom to boardroom with<br />
seeks control of the survivors’ THURSDAY<br />
stalle en Pologne. @I (2 hrs., 20 a chimpanzee that predicts TV’s<br />
lunar city. (2 hrs.)<br />
min.)<br />
hottest hits. (In Stereo) Zl(2 hrs.)<br />
1:OO ** “To Be the Best” (1993) JULY 25,1996<br />
1O:OO 0 @ *** “Diner” (1982, (D “Beyond Obsession” (1 994,<br />
Martin Kove, Mike Worth. A kick-<br />
Comedy) Steve Guttenberg, Drama) Victoria Principal, Emily<br />
boxer’s hot temper makes him a EVENING<br />
Daniel Stern. A Baltimore diner is Warfield. A teen-ager and her<br />
target for blackmail. (In Stereo) ‘R’<br />
the hangout for a group of young boyfriend are charged with the<br />
(1 hr., 39 min.)<br />
6:OO<br />
1:30 (D riz) *** ** “Bodily Harm” (1995) men as the pressures of adulthood murder of her mother, an admired<br />
“Death Wish” Linda Fiorentino, Daniel Baldwin. threaten to disperse them. (2 hrs.) but domineering businesswoman.<br />
(1 974, Drama) Charles Bronson, A police detective’s former lover (D *+Y2 “Farewell to the King” (2 hrs.)<br />
Hope Lange. An enraged New may be a murderer. ‘R’ (1 hr., 31 (1989, Drama) Nick Nolte, Nigel 1O:OO (D **% “Beijing Watermelon”<br />
Yorker takes the law into his own min.)<br />
Havers. A World War ll deserter (1990, Comedy) A Chinese stuhands<br />
after hoodlums brutally at- 8:OO (D 0 **+l/2 “The Wild One” becomes king of Borneo’s head- dent in Japan learns about Jatack<br />
his wife and daughter. (2 hrs.) (1 954, Drama) Marlon Brando, hunters, drawing him into warfare panese culture when he befriends<br />
1:35 Q (iij *** “Fort Apache, the Mary Murphy. A small town is be- against the Japanese. (2 hrs.) a local grocer and his family.<br />
Bronx” (1981, Drama) Paul sieged by violence following the<br />
**% “Dillinger and Capone” (Subtitled) (2 hrs., 30 min.)<br />
Newman, Ed Asner. A tough cop arrival of a rowdy gang of motor- (1995) Martin Sheen, F. Murray 10:30 @ **?h “Candyman: Farewell<br />
battles crime and corruption in cyclists. (1 hr., 30 rnin.)<br />
Abraham. Two legendary cri- to the Flesh’’ (1995) Tony Todd,<br />
New York City’s South Bronx @ **Yz “Dream Man” (1995) minals team up fora massive bank Kelly Rowan. The vengeful ghoul<br />
neighborhood. (2 hrs., 30 rnin.) Patsy Kensit, Bruce Greenwood. heist. (In Stereo) W(1 hr., 35 min.) marks a New Orleans family for<br />
2:OO (D *+* “The Happening” A clairvoyant police officer is in- 11:30 0 0 +**% “The Four death. ‘R’ (1 hr., 34 min.)<br />
(1 967, Comedy) Anthony Quinn, volved with her suspect. ‘R’ (1 hr., Feathers” (1 939, Adventure) John 11:OO (D ***Vi “The Boys of St.<br />
Faye Dunaway. Four young 34 rnin.)<br />
Clements, Ralph Richardson. A Vincent” (1 992, Drama) (Part 1 of<br />
people are taught the finer points Q ++** “Driving Miss Daisy” British army officer redeems him- 2) Henry Czerny, Brian Dooley.<br />
of extortion after kidnapping a (1 989, Comedy-Drama) Jessica self from charges of cowardice Child abuse runs rampant at a<br />
syndicate kingpin. (2 hrs.)<br />
Tandy, Morgan Freeman. Four when he quells a native rebellion in Canadian orphanage supervised<br />
205 0 ::j:: lr+5/1 “School Daze” Academy Awards went to this tale Sudan. (2 hrs.)<br />
by a disturbed clergyman. (2 hrs.)<br />
(1 988, Satire) Larry Fishburne, of the relationship between an 11 :45 @ * “Lover‘s Concerto” (1 994) 11:30 0 @I *** “Just for You”<br />
Giancarlo Esposito. Musical elderly Southern widow and her Shelly Michelle, Ted Monte. A bal- (1 952, Musical) Bing Crosby, Jane<br />
riumbers underscore Spike Lee’s black chauffeur. (In Stereo) [Trl (2 lerina takes an interviewer through Wvman. A famous theatrical<br />
account of tensions erupting hrs.)<br />
her floor routine. ‘NR’ (1 hr., 30 prbducer struggles to find time for<br />
among the student body at an 9:00 0 *** “There Are No min.)<br />
his two teen-age children. (2 hrs.,<br />
alf-black university. (2 hrs., 30 Children Here” (1993, Drama) 12:OO @I ** “Playing With Fire“ 10 min.)<br />
min .)<br />
Oprah Winfrey, Mark Lane. Two (1985, Drama) Gary Coleman, 12:OO ***‘/2 “My Left Foot”<br />
young brothers try to survive in a Cicely Tyson. A troubled teen- (1 989, Biography) Daniel Day-<br />
Chicago housing project where ager turns arsonist in an effort to Lewis, Brenda Fricker. Christy<br />
drugs, gangs and gunfire are daily relieve anger and frustration over Brown rises above the debilitating<br />
hazards. (In Stereo) 01 (2 hrs.) his parents’ impending divorce. (2 effects of cerebral palsy to be-<br />
9:05 ** ‘/z “La Femme de mes<br />
h rs .)<br />
come an accomplished artist and<br />
WEDNESDAY<br />
amours” (1 988, Drame) Philippe<br />
1:OO B **+ “The Immortal Batta- writer. (2 hrs.)<br />
Noiret, Omella Muti. Un homme<br />
lion” (1 944, Adventure) David 12:OS @iJ *f% “Quigley Down<br />
JULY 24,1996<br />
dans la cinquantaine propose a<br />
Niven, Stanley Holloway. A lieu- Under” (1 990, Western) Tom Selune<br />
jeune femme de I’entretenir a<br />
tenant molds a group of British leck, Alan Rickman. An American<br />
condition qu’elle 1’8coute raconter<br />
civilians into a crack fighting unit to sharpshooter is abandoned in the<br />
EVENING<br />
ses souvenirs. @I (2 hrs., 15 min.)<br />
meet Rommel’s forces in North Australian Outback after raising<br />
6:OO @I ** 9:30 @ “Kleptomania” (1 995) Amy<br />
Africa. (2 hrs.)<br />
the ire of a ruthless cattle baron. (2<br />
“The Whole of the<br />
Irving, Patsy Kensit. A socialite<br />
1:15 @ **% “Naked in New York” hrs.)<br />
Moon” (1 996) Toby Fisher, Nikki<br />
(1 993)<br />
and a runaway each share the<br />
Eric Stoltz, Mary-Louise 12:30 @ *f1/2 “Killer“ (1994) An-<br />
Si’Ulepa. Two teen-agers in a<br />
same compulsion. (In Stereo) ‘R’ Parker. A young playwright must thony LaPaglia, Mimi Rogers. An<br />
cancer ward face their fears to-<br />
(1 hr., 30 min.)<br />
choose between love and career. assassin falls for a woman who<br />
gether. (In Stereo) ‘NR’ (1 hr., 40<br />
11 :30 0 @i~<br />
+ “Drum” (I 976, Drama)<br />
(In Stereo) ‘R’ (1 hr., 26 rnin.) wants to be killed. ‘R’ (1 hr., 35<br />
min.)<br />
1:3500 t*“TheGreatest Battle”<br />
Warren Oaies, Ken Norton. A rich<br />
min.)<br />
8:OO 0 a **lt “The Secret<br />
plantation owner is disturbed by<br />
(1 978, Drama) Helmut Berger, 1:OO g@ **Vi “Word of Honor”<br />
Garden“ (1993, Drama) Kate<br />
his daughter‘s interest in his male<br />
Samantha Eggar. Newsreel foo- (1980, Drama) Karl Malden, Rue<br />
Maberly, Heydon Prowse.<br />
tage narrated by Orson Welles<br />
slaves in this sequel to “Man-<br />
McClanahan. A murder case em-<br />
Friendship blossoms between an<br />
highlights this account of the<br />
dingo.” (2 hrs.)<br />
broils a small-town repqrter in the<br />
orphan and her bedridden cousin, fD **% “Better Off Dead” (1 993)<br />
combatants and strategies of issues of freedom of the press and<br />
as thev discover and nurture an<br />
Mare Winningham, Tyra Ferrell. A<br />
World War 11. (2 hrs., 15 min.) First Amendment rights. (2 hrs.)<br />
abandbned garden. (2 ha.)<br />
prosecutor changes her mind<br />
about a female convict. (In Stereo)<br />
(1 hr., 40 min.1<br />
3:OO<br />
. nibals. (1 hr., 53 min.)<br />
2:05 0 0 “Harper Valley<br />
PTAI (1978, Comedy) Barbara<br />
Eden, Nanette Fabray. A liberated<br />
mother takes on a group of small-<br />
town conservatives after they<br />
threaten to expel her daughter<br />
from school. (2 hrs., 15 min.)<br />
0 *t “Crooked Hearts”<br />
(1 991 , Drama) Vincent D’Onofrio,<br />
Jennifer Jason Leigh. The dis-<br />
covery of an extramarital affair<br />
triggers a disturbing chain of ev-<br />
ents in an otherwise peaceful<br />
household. (2 hrs., 30 rnin.)<br />
230 0 **Vi “The Last of<br />
Sheila” (1 973, Mystery) James<br />
Coburn, James Mason. A movie<br />
producer hopes to solve the mys-<br />
tery surrounding his wife’s death<br />
by inviting the suspects aboard his<br />
yacht. (2 hrs., 30 rnin.)<br />
3:OO @ **+ “Jefferson in Paris”<br />
(1 995) Nick Nolte, Greta Scacchi.<br />
Romantic troubles arise for am-<br />
bassador Thomas Jefferson. (In<br />
Stereo) ‘PG-13’ El (2 hrs., 16 min.)<br />
3:35 @ 0 ** “White Water<br />
Summer” (1 987, Drama) Kevin<br />
sacon, Sean Astin. A spoiled city<br />
youth learns lessons about<br />
courage and maturity while at-<br />
tending a demanding summer<br />
wilderness camp. (1 hr., 55 min.)<br />
SUNDAY<br />
JULY 28,1996<br />
EVENING<br />
6:OO @ *+ “Mortal Kombat” (1 995)<br />
Robin Shou, Linden Ashby. Three<br />
warriors fight to save Earth from<br />
the forces of evil. (In Stereo) ‘PG-<br />
13’ @I (1 hr., 41 min.)<br />
8:OO @ *** “Kiss of Death” (1 995)<br />
David Caruso, Samuel L.<br />
Jackson. An ex-con agrees to help<br />
dismzntle a S:G~B~ cai operation.<br />
(In Stereo) ‘R’ @I (1 hr., 41 min.)<br />
855 @ @<br />
“Le Decalogue: Tu<br />
ne convoiteras pas la femme de<br />
ton prochain” (1 988, Drame) Ewa<br />
Blaszcyk, Piotr Machalika. Souffrant<br />
dimpotence irremediable, un<br />
medecin encourage sa femme a<br />
prendre un amant. (1 hr., 5 min.)<br />
9:00 0 @I rt* “The Bonfire of the<br />
Vanities” (1 990; Drama) Tom<br />
Hanks, Bruce Willis. A Wall Street<br />
tycoon’s life becomes a shambles<br />
when an unscrupulous journalist<br />
implicates him in a hit-and-run<br />
accident. (In Stereo) @I (2 hrs., 30<br />
min.)<br />
0 0 0 C7:: “Broken Lullaby”<br />
(1994, Mystery) Me1 Harris, Rob<br />
Stewart. A woman’s search for her<br />
aunt’s ancestry brings her face-to-<br />
face with an art expert who may<br />
represent love or danger. (In<br />
Stereo) [SZI (2 hrs.)<br />
a @I *** “The Manchurian<br />
Candidate” (1 962, Suspense)<br />
Frank Sinatra, Laurence Harvey.<br />
A Korean War-era POW is brain-<br />
washed into becoming an as-<br />
sassin by his Communist captors.<br />
(2 hrs., 30 min.)<br />
a **+Vi “Body Heat” (1981,<br />
Suspense) William Hurt, Kathleen<br />
Tumer. The steamyaffairbetween<br />
a lawyer and a married woman<br />
unfolds into a crime of passion. (2<br />
hrs.)<br />
@ 0 **Vi “Incident in a Small<br />
Town” (1 994, Drama) Walter Mat-<br />
thau, Harry Morgan. A painful fa-<br />
mily secret rears its head when a<br />
.respected judge is charged with<br />
the murder of his grandson’s<br />
father. (In Stereo) L311(2 hrs.)<br />
1O:OO @ **+ “Clear and Present<br />
Danger“ (1 994) Harrison Ford,<br />
Willem Dafoe. Jack Ryan battles<br />
Colombian drug lords and vil-<br />
lainous feds. (In Stereo) ‘PG-13’<br />
ILI] (2 hrs., 21 min.)<br />
12:OO.m It*+ “The Night of the<br />
Iguana” (1 964, Drama) Richard<br />
Burton, Deborah Kerr. John Hus-<br />
ton’s adaptation of Tennessee<br />
Williams’ tale of a defrocked<br />
priest’s relationship with three<br />
women. Colorized. (In Stereo) (2<br />
hrs., 30 min.)<br />
12:OS 0 ** “Lies Before Kisses”<br />
(1 991 , Drama) Jaclyn Smith, Ben<br />
Gazzara. A woman’s idyllic’ mar-<br />
riage to a wealthy publisher is<br />
shattered when she learns that he<br />
was involved with a prostitute. (2<br />
hrs.)<br />
@ 0 ** “Medicine Man” (1 992,<br />
Drama) Sean Connery, Lorraine<br />
Bracco. Clashing personalities<br />
give way to mutual respect be-<br />
tween an eccentric cancer re-<br />
searcher and an investigating col-<br />
league. (2 hrs.)<br />
12:30 +* “Street Fighter‘’ (1994)<br />
Jean-Claude Van Oamme, Raul<br />
Julia. A military leader and his<br />
warriors battle an evil dictator. (In<br />
Stereo) ‘PG-13’ LII] (1 hr., 42 rnin.)<br />
1:35 Q @I * “The Last<br />
(1981 , Science Fiction) Lc<br />
jors, Chris Makepeace. In i<br />
istic society, a race-car drh<br />
a teen computer whiz fis<br />
government’s ban on a<br />
biles. (2 hrs., 15 rnin.)<br />
2:OO 0 *** “Sakharov”<br />
Drama) Jason Robards,<br />
Jackson. Follows the life of<br />
Sakharov, the renowned r<br />
physicist from the Soviet<br />
who invented his countq<br />
drogen bomb. (2 ha., 30 n<br />
ad *** “Lilith” (1964, 1<br />
Warren Beatty, Jean Seb<br />
young man employed in a<br />
institution for the very ric<br />
comes emotionally involvec<br />
patient. (2 hrs.)<br />
2:OS 0 ::j:: *+ ‘/2 “The Blob”<br />
Science Fiction) Kevin<br />
Shawnee Smith. An oozins<br />
of carnivorous gelatin de$<br />
on a Colorado ski town<br />
remake of the 1958 cult cla!<br />
hrs., 15 min.)<br />
3:OO @ **+ “Kiss of Death”<br />
David Caruso, Samut<br />
Jackson. An ex-con agrees<br />
dismantle a stolen car ope<br />
(In Stereo) ‘R’ @I (1 hr., 41<br />
MONDAY<br />
JULY 29,1996<br />
EVENING<br />
6:OO ***1/2 “The Righl<br />
(1983, Drama) (Part 1 of :<br />
Shepard, Scott Glenn. The<br />
tion and training of the firsl<br />
ican astronauts take placi<br />
political maneuvering and<br />
hype. (2 hrs.) .<br />
@ *+Vi “Storybook”<br />
Swoosie Kt~rtz, William<br />
mara. An enchanted tome<br />
ports a boy to a magical la<br />
Stereo) ‘G’ (1 hr., 28 min.)<br />
7:OO (D **% “A Summer<br />
(1 988, Drama) James Wilt<br />
ogen Stubbs. In 1902 Engl<br />
London barrister recovering<br />
minor injury woos a love<br />
country woman. (2 hrs.)<br />
8:OO @ ** “Reflections in the<br />
(1 995) Mimi Rogers, Billy Z<br />
prison guard probes the psy<br />
a death row inmate. (In Sterr<br />
(1 hr., 35 min.)<br />
tlj: * “Buffy the Va<br />
Slayer“ (1 992, Comedy)<br />
Swanson, Luke Perry. A<br />
school cheerleader reluc<br />
accepts her heritage as the<br />
in a long line of vampire kille<br />
Stereo) [Ill (2 hrs.)<br />
9:00 0 @ “Overexposed” (<br />
Drama) Marcy Walker,<br />
Lauria. A woman’s marria<br />
nearly destroyed when vide<br />
4<br />
of her brief affair with he<br />
band’s friend are made pub<br />
Stereo) @I (2 hrs.)<br />
0 ** “Green Dolphin1<br />
(1 994, Drama) Jeffrey Sams,<br />
Wesley Shipp. A pair of<br />
matched police officers breal<br />
rules in their efforts to keep(<br />
at bay. (2 hrs.)<br />
9:30 @ ** “Congo” (1995) 0<br />
Walsh, Laura Linney. A corn1<br />
icative ape figures in a search<br />
lost city. (In Stereo) ‘PG-13’1<br />
hr., 48 min.)<br />
1O:OO **+% “The Right<br />
(1983, Drama) (Part 1 of<br />
Shepard, Scott Glenn. Th<br />
tion and training of the f<br />
ican astronauts take pl<br />
11:30 0 0 *** “El<br />
(1 937, Adventure)<br />
Holloway. An Indian<br />
an unusual alliance w<br />
pachyderm he saved fro<br />
Adapted from Rudyard<br />
liam Wallace, Tuesda<br />
man becomes obses<br />
apartment’s former oc<br />
Stereo) ‘NR’ (1 hr., 33 rnin<br />
m<br />
1<br />
Coast-Ga<br />
Health Boar<br />
July 23 at th<br />
offices in Gib<br />
885-8632.<br />
Squamish<br />
Services am<br />
10 will be sh<br />
tation by Dr.<br />
and regional<br />
Campbell on<br />
drinking and<br />
given to HSS<br />
on Communit<br />
July 26 at 7 p<br />
27 at 10 a.m.<br />
again Sunday,<br />
and 3 p.m. I<br />
t<br />
Government R<br />
I All procee<br />
:aiser pancak<br />
Saturday, Jul<br />
a.m. will go to<br />
and Big Sister<br />
The cost is $3<br />
held in front of<br />
Shannon Estat<br />
sored by Bjorn<br />
Sylvia Schniedc<br />
Sky Real Estatt<br />
I Youth-in-Aci<br />
a good times 1<br />
with a DJ in th<br />
at the new Hou<br />
Brewing ComF<br />
July 31 from 8 1<br />
Tickets are $10<br />
me appetizer a<br />
non-alcoholic di<br />
wailable at The<br />
and Savory Slic<br />
I Youth-in-Act<br />
9 camping trip<br />
the Stawamus<br />
11, ages 12-14<br />
if 10 people. Cc<br />
ncluding dinner<br />
3egister at the I<br />
IThesecond<br />
5quamish Skai<br />
Session with lic<br />
and the Red Dri<br />
itration will be t<br />
Q 8 p.m. Aug. 2<br />
5aribaldi Buildir<br />
iext to the RCN<br />
>ost is $8.<br />
I Youth-in-Act<br />
I summer’s en1<br />
it the Brennan I<br />
=entre. Cost is !
I<br />
“The Last C<br />
:e Fiction) Lee Coast-Garibaldi Regional<br />
Ikepeace* In a Health Board meeting Tuesday;<br />
1 race-car drive<br />
uter whiz figh July 23 at the school board ,<br />
ban On<br />
15 min.) aut offices in Gibsons. For details ca<br />
k “Sakharov” ( 885-8632.<br />
n Robards, GI<br />
)ws the life of Squamish Emergency<br />
? renowned Services and Community Cab1<br />
n the Soviet<br />
I his country’ 10 will be showing the presena<br />
ith” ’ (2 (1964, mi D tation by Dr. Bruce Campana<br />
:Y, Jean .Sebe and regional coroner Larry<br />
nployed in a<br />
the very ric Campbell on the results of<br />
nalJyinvolved drinking and driving which was<br />
1<br />
given to HSSS students in May<br />
ion) Kevin<br />
ith.‘An oozini on Community Cable 10 Friday,<br />
s gelatin de! July 26 at 7 p.m., Saturday, July<br />
IO ski town<br />
1958 cult cla! 27 at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m., and<br />
again Sunday, July 28 at 11 a.m.<br />
and 3 p.m.<br />
iss of Death”<br />
so, Samuc<br />
K-con agree:<br />
tolen car op~<br />
@(I hr., 41<br />
m<br />
)6<br />
i “The Ris<br />
I) (Part 1 c<br />
tt Glenn. T<br />
ng of the fi<br />
its take pl;<br />
?uvering ar<br />
Storybook”<br />
tz, William<br />
hanted ton<br />
a magical<br />
hr., 28 min<br />
“A Summe<br />
) James v1<br />
In 1902 Er<br />
er recoverii<br />
woos a lo<br />
n. (2 hrs.)<br />
lections in ti<br />
ogers, Billy<br />
robes the p<br />
nate. (In Stl<br />
I<br />
uffy the ‘<br />
I, Comedy<br />
(e Perry.<br />
leader re1<br />
ritage as tk<br />
vampire ki<br />
rs.)<br />
erexposed’<br />
:y Walker<br />
nan’s marl<br />
!d when vidf<br />
fair with h<br />
re made pu<br />
rs.)<br />
Zen Dolphir<br />
Jeffrey Sam<br />
. A pair (<br />
officers bre<br />
forts to keel<br />
igo” (1 995)<br />
inney. A COI<br />
es in a Sean<br />
#reo) ‘PG-1:<br />
“The Right<br />
(Part 1 of 2<br />
Glenn. The<br />
; of the first<br />
, take place<br />
vering and<br />
r “Elephant<br />
ire) Sabu,<br />
dian native<br />
lliance witt<br />
iaved from (<br />
3udyard Kii<br />
rky Boys” (<br />
1, Kamal At<br />
iksters deci<br />
1 the Mafii<br />
hr., 21 min.<br />
ltory” (1 9941<br />
uesday Knig<br />
Dbsessed b;<br />
ner occupan<br />
ir., 33 min.)<br />
I pwa ’10s<br />
I All proceeds from a fund<br />
:aiser pancake breakfast on<br />
Saturday, July 27, from 8-1 1<br />
a.m. will go to the Big Brothers<br />
and Big Sisters organization.<br />
The cost is $3 each, It is being<br />
held in front of show suite #2,<br />
Shannon Estates, 39920<br />
Government Road and sponsored<br />
by Bjorn Nilsson and<br />
Sylvia Schnieder of NRS Sea to<br />
Sky Real Estate.<br />
N Youth-in-Action is hosting<br />
a good times youth dance<br />
with a DJ in the banquet room<br />
at the new Howe Sound<br />
Brewing Company downtown<br />
July 31 from 8 p.m, to midnight.<br />
Tickets are $10 each, including<br />
me appetizer and one exotic,<br />
ion-alcoholic drink. Tickets are<br />
available at The Depot Shop<br />
md Savory Slice Pizza.<br />
I Youth-in-Action is hosting<br />
I camping trip to the top of<br />
he Stawamus Chief Aug. 10-<br />
I 1, ages 12-14 for a maximum<br />
If 10 people. Cost is $10,<br />
ncluding dinner and breakfast.<br />
legister at the leisure centre.<br />
IThesecondannual<br />
iquamish Skate and BMX<br />
iession with live bands, prizes<br />
ind the Red Oragens demontration<br />
will be held from noon<br />
I 8 p.m. Aug. 22 at the old<br />
iaribaldi Building Supply lot<br />
ext to the RCMP detachment.<br />
bst is $8.<br />
I Youth-in-Action is hosting<br />
summer’s end dance Aug 30<br />
t the Brennan Park Leisure<br />
!entre. Cost is $10 pei person.<br />
. Notices for non-profit organizations run free in the Squamish Chief. Please phone 892-9161, e-mail at<br />
sachief@?mountain-inter.net or drop a copy off at our off ices before noon, the Thursday prior to publication.<br />
of pmbh drinkers. Call 1 -68&1716.<br />
WlMlXtbAnonymouzsmeetse4RlyWednesdayat<br />
7:30 p.m. at the library on the Stawamus Resene.<br />
.The HmveSound\Illbmen’scentreaflers inftmna$on *and<br />
relerrals by phone or dropin Mondaythugh ml noon4 p.m.<br />
m 892-5748.<br />
m bgal Aid is a free service provided under qualing arcurnstances.<br />
~onOntt7esecondfloorat141 seccmdA\~enue,<br />
SqUamiSh. phone 892-51 14.<br />
H- in Difficult Relationships -A mnfichtial mnselling<br />
group br women in or out of an abu& rehtionship.<br />
call Lise am-5796.<br />
H Reari’S PlaceTranSiti~n HOUS~. - Call 892-571 1.<br />
Wunteers milable to listen to and support wwnen experiencing<br />
abuse. Shelter can house women and children.<br />
.Parents Offering Support and Educabion (POSE), supporting<br />
families whii are raising children with physical, mental or<br />
emofwal challenges, meets the first and thirdTuesdays of the<br />
month at Sea to Sky Community Senices affioe.<br />
For details call Bev at 898-5052 or Susan at898-4212.<br />
.Canadian Cancer Society meets the second Monday ofthe<br />
month in the hosptal board room at 7:s p.m.<br />
Fbr pabent Senrices info call kty McIntosh at 898-3399.<br />
For dunteer inb call Thomas at 892-5664.<br />
overeaters ~nonymous: meets at Squamish ~eneral<br />
Hospital board room aery Sunday night at 7 p.m. For info call<br />
892-3359.<br />
ISenior citizens counselling servjce is a free service to help<br />
miors complete applications br pensions and other benefits<br />
and access other agencies. For more information, call Charies<br />
Wilberg at 898-9393.<br />
I Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Dissrder meet<br />
he third Monday of ewy month at 7 p.m. at tbe Bradscribe to the Lifeline<br />
Sept.16,Od21andNov.18.<br />
nonitoriq system. For details call sally<br />
The Squamish HanSets track and fW dub is starting up<br />
Jichd, 892521 1.<br />
again. For det;llls call Gary Enkel at 892-5839. I tf you or a Iwed one suffers from<br />
The Squamish Rod
26 JULY 23,1996 THE SQUAMISH CHIEF<br />
Beef Stroganoff Saucy Chicken Fettuccine<br />
Vegetable Pie Salads Desserts<br />
$1 1.95<br />
Everyone Welcome!<br />
Midway Restaurant<br />
AT THE SEA TO SKY HOTEL<br />
Onlv $5.95<br />
Karaoke with Jeny Kuntz 0 Friduys in the Lounge<br />
SEA TO SKY<br />
HOTEL 898-4874<br />
LUNCH: Wed - Sat Noon to 2:36 pm<br />
EVENINGS: Tues - Sun 5 pm to IO pm<br />
CLOSED MONDAYS I<br />
40022 Government Road 898-2533<br />
&Garden Cafe - &ii<br />
OCEAN<br />
PORT<br />
HOTEL<br />
37991 2ND AVENUE *<br />
892-381 1<br />
WlltlFRIES $5.50<br />
Our Coffee Shop is Now Open!<br />
Try a delicious breakfast or lunch soon!<br />
Monday to Friday & Sunday<br />
8 a.m. to 4 p.m.<br />
Saturday 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.<br />
§ummertime Dining Guide<br />
A good place to dwertise!<br />
In households everywhere<br />
FOR THE ENTIRE WEEK<br />
Give the Sauamish Chief a,call<br />
Reservations Recommended<br />
for Saturday nights.<br />
Private Parties available all week!<br />
70002 Government Rd., Cheekye 898-51 48 I<br />
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COMMUNI TY<br />
JULY 23, 7996 27<br />
Ways to make our food supply more sustainable<br />
II<br />
ears ago, we were I<br />
have been at risk for hunger or food insecurity. What if health region was left without an alternative sourcc of<br />
more self-reliant.<br />
Go to<br />
payday came just after th; shutdown and one couldn’t groceries: It was an opportunity for some to be cre-<br />
Many families had<br />
stock up?<br />
ative, car pool, bulk buy when shopping. But this<br />
rdens and storage rooms<br />
Health<br />
What if transportation is a problem?<br />
could also be a lesson to us as a community to think<br />
.ed with home-canned<br />
So what is food security? I have occasionally written about our time, resources, energy and ways to make<br />
getables and fruit from<br />
that it is access to enough food through normal food our communities’ food supply more sustainable.<br />
: summer season.<br />
distribution channels (not food banks) for an active, Support local farmers’ markets, plant a garden, or<br />
By Dania<br />
bet now only a handful<br />
healthv life.<br />
connect with a community garden. Community<br />
young people know how Matiation<br />
1 Mostpeople think it is only the poor who are food lutchens or cooking clubs and food co-ops arc two<br />
can and preserve their<br />
insecure. But as we have seen with the recent lockout- other powerful ways of recapturing our self-reliancc.<br />
id. In fact, some young<br />
strike at a couple of our largest grocery store chains Call your local health unit and leave me a message - if<br />
ildren have never been to a farm and don’t under- here in B.C., it’s a challenge for many to get adequate<br />
nd the food production system. As a society we are food at an increased price (sometimes) and concentrating<br />
touch with the farmers and with our ability to ed effort.<br />
self-reliant.<br />
In the meantime, we were lucky that other smaller<br />
iith the lockout of major grocery stores, more people grocery stores picked up the slack, and no one in our<br />
We all scream for ice cream<br />
uly is Ice Cream Month in the United States. What a<br />
fine idea. The official day is July 21. This year also<br />
celebrates the centennial of the invention of the ice<br />
- :ream cone. How could anvone have lived without<br />
cold comfort of ice cream? .<br />
eople have always gone to great lengths to find ice<br />
cooling drinks. Through the ages men mined the<br />
mits of mountains around the Mediterranean for<br />
and snow, carrying their treasures down to sell on<br />
hot coasts and plains. Alexander the Great had<br />
ches dug and filled with ice to cool wine while his<br />
y waited out the summer siege of the Indian city of<br />
tra. Fruit ices were so common in the Middle East<br />
at we borrowed the Arab word ”sharbia,” corrupting<br />
to sherbet. In hot countries ice-collecting was never<br />
sidered too much hard work.<br />
ong the curiosities brought back from China by<br />
o Polo was a recipe for a concoction made from<br />
ice and fruit flavors. The Italians soon developed<br />
ato,” a simple type of modern ice cream. The<br />
n dessert was taken to France by Catherine de<br />
ici in 1533, when she married the Duke of Orleans.<br />
French chef brought the secret formula for ice cream<br />
nd early in the 17th century. He was hired into<br />
a1 household of Charles I, who so loved ice<br />
e gave a pension to chef to keep the recipe<br />
t. After Charles was beheaded, a group of noble-<br />
bought the recipe. Within a century ice cream was<br />
opular in Europe that Beethoven complained in<br />
4, “It will soon be impossible to have any ice cream,<br />
as winter is mild, ice is rare.”<br />
cream migrated to America before the Revolution.<br />
h Americans took to it with a vengeance, eventual-<br />
making it available to anyone, not just a treat for the<br />
h. An American invented the hand-cranked ice<br />
m making machine in 1846, about the same time<br />
became a cheap commodity and ice was routinely<br />
livered in summer by the iceman. By the turn of the<br />
ury ice cream was well on its way to becoming a<br />
bo1 of American national identity. So much so it<br />
classified as an ”essential foodstuff in 1917, indis-<br />
ensable for the morale of the army. Little wonder they<br />
dicate an entire month to the chilly pleasures of ice<br />
wadays, honest ice cream made from just cream,<br />
ar, eggs and fruit is expensive. Just check out the<br />
ce of a small container of Haagen-Dazs. On the<br />
er hand, cheap ice cream is cheap because they<br />
ego the expensive ingredients like cream and eggs<br />
milk derivatives and chemicals (the ingredients<br />
ke for scary reading). What’s an ice cream lover to<br />
The old-fashioned ice cream of American folklore was<br />
grunt to make. Ice had to chipped and packed with<br />
It into the bucket. The hand cranking was 20 minutes<br />
hard labor. With all that effort, the ice cream was<br />
ound to be appreciated.<br />
A few years ago I gave up our antique bucket for a<br />
modern ice cream maker, the Donvier. No more salt<br />
and ice, not even the constant cranlung. It takes about<br />
20 minutes to make a quart of excellent ice cream. The<br />
Donvier cost around the same as 10 cartons of Haagen-<br />
Dazs. Now we celebrate the fresh fruit season with an<br />
endless parade of ice cream made as it should be from<br />
eggs, sugar, cream and fruit.<br />
Make up the one recipe for French vanilla ice cream,<br />
divide it half for making two kinds of fruit ice cream.<br />
French Vanilla Ice Cream<br />
11/2 cups whole milk<br />
1 cup sugar<br />
pinch salt<br />
3 egg yolks<br />
1 cup whipping cream<br />
1 cup light cream<br />
2 tsp. vanilla<br />
Combine the milk, sugar and salt in a heavy-bot-<br />
tomed saucepan. Simmer, stirring to dissolve the sugar.<br />
Beat the egg yolks in a bowl. Beat the hot milk slowly<br />
into the yolks. Return to the saucepan and cook over<br />
medium-low heat. Stir the custard constantly until it<br />
thickens enough to coat a spoon. This will take about<br />
15 minutes. Do not bring to a boil or you’ll end up<br />
with scrambled eggs in milk. If you’re concerned about<br />
curdling the custard, cook it in a double boiler, over -<br />
not in - boiling water.<br />
Remove the custard from the heat and stir in the<br />
cream and vanilla. Chill for several hours or overnight.<br />
The custard must be completely chilled or the ice<br />
cream won’t freeze properly.<br />
Mango Ice Cream<br />
2 ripe mangos<br />
1 small lime ,<br />
about 1/3 cup sugar<br />
2 cups chilled custard from the previous recipe<br />
Cut the mangos down the sides of the seed. Scrape<br />
the pulp from the skin - you should have about one<br />
or slightly more cups. Juice the lime. Using a blender<br />
puree the mangos, lime and sugar. Taste it. The sugar<br />
should be completely dissolved (if not it will feel granular<br />
in the ice cream) and should taste quite sweet.<br />
Freezing moderates the sweet taste of the sugar. Stir<br />
the puree into the custard. Pour into the ice cream<br />
maker and process according to directions. Makes<br />
about one quart.<br />
Strawberry Ice Cream<br />
about 2 cups ripe, fragrant strawberries<br />
1/4 cup sugar<br />
2 cups chilled custard from the French Vanilla Ice<br />
Cream recipe<br />
Blend the strav,;Zl?erries and sugar. Taste and make<br />
sure the sugar has ;iLssolved and ihe flavor is very<br />
sweet. Add more sugar if necessary. Stir into the custard.<br />
Pour into ice cream maker and process according<br />
to directions.<br />
Makes about one quart.<br />
you’re interested in any of the above initiatives.<br />
Dnr-ria Mntintiorr is the comrrirtnity riii fritionist zoiflr<br />
Coast- Gnribnld i Hen1 th Region.<br />
The Squarnish Senior Citizens Home Society<br />
invites tenders for Repairs to Siding and<br />
Re-siding specified areas of the Squamish<br />
Manor - a three story Senior’s Apartment Building.<br />
Work specifications may be obtained at the<br />
office of the Squamish Senior Citizens Home<br />
Society located at 38201 Third Avenue,<br />
Squamish, Vicky Robinson, Administrator,<br />
892-331 1,<br />
Tenders will be received at the above office<br />
until July 30, 1996.<br />
The Squamish Senior Citizens Home Society<br />
reserves the right to refuse any or all tenders.<br />
- __<br />
DON’T FORGET TO READ THE SMALL PRINT!<br />
fine print that works!<br />
Classified advertising 0<br />
To book a classified ad call the Squamish Chief 892-9161<br />
NOTICE ==<br />
INVITING APPLICATIONS 7.Y<br />
FOR A WOODLOT LICENSE<br />
FOREST ACT(SECTI0N 4 1)<br />
WOODLOT LICENSE NUMBER<br />
TAE NOTICE that interested and eligible<br />
persons are invited to submit applications tc<br />
the District Manager for a Woodlot Liccnsc<br />
Number W1666, over an area which<br />
includes 396 hectares of Crown Land in the<br />
vicinity of Owl Creek. The initial allowable<br />
annual cut of the Crown land is 1,000 rn3,<br />
Applications in sealed and properly<br />
designated containers must be received by<br />
the District Manager, at 42000 Loggers<br />
Lane, Squarnish, B.C. VON 3G0 on or<br />
before 3:30 p.m. on September 6, 1996.<br />
Applications are not to include a bonus bid.<br />
Weighting of the evaluation factors shall be:<br />
private land 40%; applicant suitability 35%;<br />
management intent 25%.<br />
Applications will be opened at the<br />
Squamish Forest District Officc, 42000<br />
Loggers Lane, Squamish, R.C. 011<br />
September 6, 1996 at 4:0 p.m.<br />
4pplication forms and further particulars<br />
nay be obtained from the District Manager,<br />
Ministry of Forests, Squamish Forest<br />
Iistrict at 898-2100.<br />
Ministry of Forests<br />
Province of British Columbia<br />
MNPWAb BC:<br />
A<br />
L c
I<br />
28 JULY 23, 1996 THE SQUAMISH CHIEF<br />
COMMUNI TY<br />
Seniors plan food festivities<br />
for Loggers Sports celebrations<br />
I 1 Low net: 1. Bruno Marini, 2. (tie)<br />
Squamish Days<br />
Loggers Sports Weekend<br />
The Tantalus Seniors Centre has a<br />
fun weekend planned for Squamish<br />
Days Loggers Sports celebrations<br />
which run Aug. 1-5. Friday night,<br />
Aug. 2, there will be a barbecue for<br />
members only. Bring your own<br />
meat to be barbecued. Salads, rolls<br />
and other goodies will be provided.<br />
The cost is $2.50 each.<br />
On Aug. 3, a turkey and ham din-<br />
ner is offered at $6 for adults and<br />
$3 for children under 12. You can<br />
enjoy all the festivities around town<br />
and then drop in for dinner (no<br />
cooking or dishes to do). It will be.<br />
w ond erf u 1.<br />
Plans are under way for Aug. 4,<br />
but I will get the details to you next<br />
week. The centre is open Monday<br />
to Friday, 1-4 p.m., closed week-<br />
ends and holidays.<br />
Mondays join our craft ladies for<br />
a relaxing afternoon knitting or cro-<br />
cheting or whatever you feel like<br />
doing. Tuesdays the crib tourna-<br />
ment starts at 1 p.m. sharp.<br />
Wednesdays, Thursdays and<br />
A<br />
I<br />
. the Hill<br />
BY Kay<br />
Wirachowsky<br />
Fridays are open days for cards or<br />
games of your choice, so please<br />
come out and join us.<br />
Senior Men’s Golfing<br />
Approximately 30 men turned out<br />
for their weekly get together on<br />
Wednesday mornings. An interclub<br />
match was planned with the Surrey<br />
Golf Club on July 8, but had to be<br />
cancelled because of a lack of par-<br />
ticipants at the Surrey club. It was a<br />
little disappointing for our guys,<br />
but they are looking forward to a<br />
visit from the University Club on<br />
July 29.<br />
July 13-14 saw approximately 40<br />
out for the senior men’s club cham-<br />
pionship. Low gross winners were:<br />
1. Jim Machan (champion), 2. (tie)<br />
Duncan Graham and Howie<br />
Jaquish, 4. Larry Allan.<br />
If you i<br />
woman..<br />
I.. on a street corner, in a<br />
store, at the pool or anywhere<br />
in Squamish, stop<br />
her and ask her for<br />
$5.00 off<br />
your 12 month subscription!<br />
Cec Vansickle and Armand<br />
CoFstantin, -. 4. .-. Peter Wilson.<br />
.-. Super<br />
seniors: Eric Strom and bd<br />
Wirachowsky. KP winners: Mike<br />
Fox, Ben Hubbard, Dunc Graham,<br />
Jack Currie. Long drives: Tom<br />
Casey George Broadbent.<br />
The weather was great and the<br />
men had a super weekend.<br />
Last week‘s walk was up through<br />
the trails beyond the gate at the<br />
end of Guilford Drive. This<br />
Thursday we meet at the golf<br />
course to pool cars up Diamond<br />
Head road to go on one of Ted’s<br />
walks, starting at 9:45 a.m.<br />
Over the Hill Hikers meets<br />
Sunday July 21 at Rika’s, 2537<br />
Lomond, Garibaldi Highlands at<br />
9:30 a.m. Degree of difficulty -<br />
long hike; hiking time - four to<br />
five hours. Particulars: Four Lakes,<br />
Debeck’s Hill, details at Rika’s in<br />
the morning; birthday party at 3:30<br />
P*m . - her 50th birthday.<br />
Condolences to the families of<br />
Loretta Pickering and Barbara<br />
Burroughs, who passed away.<br />
bee this<br />
New or Renewal Jill will sign you up<br />
to a savings of $5.00 offl<br />
Howe Sound Secondary School’s CounterAttack<br />
teamed up with Squamish Fire Rescue to organi<br />
presentation on the results of drinking and drivin<br />
school students in May. Captured on videc<br />
Community Cable IO, the program will be broac<br />
several times in the coming week. See Page 21<br />
details. Chief file photo<br />
HSSS CounterAttach<br />
group wins ICBC a.wai<br />
A commitment to road safety in their schools and 4<br />
munities has paid off for seven groups of young pec<br />
the provincial grand prize winners of the ICBC I<br />
Sense Contest.<br />
Gold awards of $3,000 went to Yale Secondary Scl<br />
Lion PRIDDE (People Responsible for Influen<br />
Drinking and Driving Education) from Abbotsford,<br />
Fultsn Secondary Student CounterAttack in Ver<br />
Silver awards of $2,000 went to Magee Seconl<br />
CounterAttack-Traffic Safety club in Vancouver, I;<br />
Road Junior Secondary CounterAttack Club in Cor<br />
UBC CounterAttack Club in Vancouver, Howe Sc<br />
Secondary School CounterAttack Club in Squan<br />
and Students Trying Other Possibilities (Richm<br />
District Counter Attack Commission).<br />
These seven winning groups were the top represc<br />
tives of 24 regional entries from across the provincl<br />
total, 51 groups won regional gold awards of $500<br />
12 groups won regional silver awards of $250 in ea<br />
contests held throughout the province.<br />
The Road Sense contest is open to young pel<br />
between the ages of 13 and 25 - an age group too<br />
quently represented in vehicle crashes. Contest entr<br />
are challenged to find creative and meaningful waj<br />
draw attention to topics such as impaired driv<br />
speeding, proper use of seatbelts and head rests,<br />
preventing auto crime.<br />
The winning groups staged mock crashes, participi<br />
in speed watch checkpoints on roads in their comm<br />
ties, set up information booths at community eve<br />
patrolled parking lots and sponsored speakers<br />
activities to qualify for their awards. The groups<br />
had to demonstrate that their activities gained pu<br />
attention and awareness about road safety or auto cr<br />
issues. Measuring attendance at events, media cove1<br />
and public awareness surveys were used to record<br />
impact of the groups’ activities.<br />
Judges for the provincial contest entries were RC<br />
Staff Sgt. Mike Clarabut, Debra Niccoli of BCAA, K<br />
Morgan of the Vancouver Province, Lui Passaglia of<br />
B.C. Lions, ICBC vice-president of public affairs 1<br />
road safety Darlene Hyde, and Doug Downing, I(<br />
northern Interior claims manager.<br />
In 1994,166 young people aged 11 to 25 died and m<br />
than 17,000 were injured in vehicle crashes in B.C.<br />
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Parks programs this week<br />
Programs for Alice Lake Provincial<br />
Park and Porteau Cove Provincial Park<br />
for July 25 to July 29.<br />
Alice Lake Provincial Park<br />
Thursday, July 25 - 8 p.m. Jeopartree.<br />
Let’s learn about the park in this version<br />
of the popular television game show. At<br />
the amp hithea tre.<br />
Friday, July 26 - 10 a.m. Time<br />
Travelers. Step back in time. We will<br />
explore signs of glaciers and old logging<br />
ruins. Great views from the top when we<br />
hike up DeBeck‘s HiU. This program will<br />
run approximately two hours. Meet at<br />
the South Beach information shelter.<br />
8 p.m. John Wedderburn Dunbar<br />
Moodie and the Ham. Action packed stories<br />
about the comic characters and the<br />
historic happenings of Howe Sound. At<br />
the amphitheatre.<br />
Saturday, July 27 - 10 a.m. Predator or<br />
Prey (Jerry’s Rangers-Proud Player).<br />
Who eats whom? And who will survive?<br />
An hour of active games. Kids under<br />
eight please bring an adult. Meet at the<br />
North Beach information shelter.<br />
9 p.m. Sea to Sky Ocean Sports. Ever<br />
wonder about the sport of SCUBA diving?<br />
Gear up as our guests demonstrate<br />
SCUBA equipment and provide popcorn<br />
for a slide show of underwater photogra-<br />
phy.<br />
Sunday, July 28 - 1.p.m Snippets at<br />
Shannon Falls. From basket trees to hum-<br />
mingbirds to barley brews and moose<br />
antlers. There are things to discover on a<br />
Sunday afternoon in the picnic area at<br />
Shannon Falls Provincial Park.<br />
8 p.m. Creature from the Bog and Other<br />
Slimy Stories. Help create the mythical<br />
creature from the bog and meet other fab-<br />
ulous real bog dwellers. At the amphithe-<br />
atre.<br />
Monday, July 29 - 10 a.m.. Paper Boats<br />
(Jerry’s Rangers-Safety Sense). Build a<br />
boat and set sail using origami, the<br />
Japanese art of paper folding. Kids under<br />
eight please bring an adult. Meet at the<br />
amphitheatre.<br />
8 p.m. Hunters of the Night.<br />
Creepy. ..very creepy. Let’s explore how<br />
some residents of Alice Lake Provincial<br />
Park pursue their prey in the darkness of<br />
the night. At the amphitheatre.<br />
Porteau Cove Provincial Park<br />
Thursday, July 25 - 8 p.m. White Ice to<br />
Red Brick - Howe did it Happen?<br />
Wonder what the connection is? It’s a<br />
Howe Sound mystery. Bring your<br />
sleuthing skills to this one - it’s cool. At<br />
the amphitheatre.<br />
Friday, July 26 - 10 a.m. Seashore<br />
Scramble (Jerry’s Rangers-Proud Player).<br />
A fun filled hour of games to help you<br />
learn about the creatures on the beach<br />
and how they eat. Kids under eight<br />
please bring an adult. Meet at the<br />
amp hitheatre.<br />
9 p.m. Sea to Sky Ocean Sports. Ever<br />
wonder about the sport of SCUBA div-<br />
ing? Gear up as our guests demonstrate<br />
SCUBA equipment and provide popcorn<br />
for a slide show of underwater photography-<br />
Saturday, July 27 - 10 a.m. Paper Boats<br />
(Jerry’s Rangers-Safety Sense). Build a<br />
boat and set sail using origami, the<br />
Japanese art of paper folding. Kids under<br />
eight please bring an adult. Meet at the<br />
amp hitheat re.<br />
8 p.m. As the Tide Turns. Living in the<br />
intertidal zone can be a real drama. The<br />
tide is the main character in this one, and<br />
meet some of the other stars of the beach<br />
theatre. At the amp hit heatre.<br />
Sound. Fun €or the whole familv. J Meet<br />
at the North Beach.<br />
8 p.m. Jerry the Moose Bingo. So you<br />
think that you know Porteau Cove? Well<br />
here’s a game to test your smarts. Win<br />
prizes too. At the amphitheatre.<br />
Monday, July 29 - 10 a.m. Treasure<br />
Hunt (Jerry’s Rangers-Earth Explorer or<br />
Dogged Detective). With a map of the<br />
cove and a list of clues, head out on this<br />
program at adventure exploration. Kids<br />
under eight years please bring an adult.<br />
Meet at the amphitheatre.<br />
8 p.m. A Wild Night Out at the Wildlife<br />
Inn. Explore trees like a real forest<br />
dweller in this program about the importance<br />
of homes for all animals. At the<br />
amphitheatre.<br />
Building Figure<br />
In Plaster<br />
Derek Junc works on a fig-<br />
ure at the direct plaster<br />
workshop at the<br />
Brackendale Art Gallery<br />
over the weekend with<br />
George Rammell of North<br />
Va nco u ve r. Part i ci pants<br />
got to learn the process of<br />
working in plaster from ini-<br />
tial design to the finished<br />
product. David Donaldson<br />
photo<br />
THE SQUAMlSH CHIEF<br />
JULY 23,1996 W 29<br />
Ministry<br />
of Forests<br />
NOTICE TO ALL SILVICULTURE STAND TENDING CONTRACTORS<br />
FUNDING FQR THIS PROJECT HAS BEEN PROVIDED BY FOREST RENEWAL B.C.<br />
Sealed tenders for Pruning Contracts PRY7DSQBOO 1 and PR97DSQI3003 will be rcccivcd bv the<br />
District Manager, Squamish Forcst District, 42000 Loggers Lane, Squaniish. British Columbia,<br />
VON 3GO. Deadline is August 13, 1996 at 330 p.m. when all tenders will hc opcrnctl at ;I pubJic<br />
opening.<br />
PR97DSQB001 is located at East Callaghan and East Cheakanius with ;I total ;irc;i of approsi-<br />
mately 32.7 hectares.<br />
PR97DSQB002 is located at North Creek with a total area of approximately 33.1 liectarcs.<br />
A mandatory office and field viewing will take place on August 6, 1906, beginning a1 thc<br />
Pemberton Field Office, 7410 Prospect Strcet, Pemberton, B.C., at 9:OO a.m. interested partics<br />
must provide their own 4-wheel drive transportation. It is necessary to pro-register by call irig<br />
Carolyn Wold at (604) 898-2 15 1.<br />
Tenders must be submitted on the form and in the envelope supplied.<br />
Tenders submitted by facsimile will not be accepted.<br />
Tenders will only be accepted from responsible contractors who haw success full^ completed<br />
pruning contracts of similar size in the past two years. First time contractors arc noteligible.<br />
Before any contract is awarded the successful contractor must satisfy the Ministry of Forests that<br />
competent experienced workers will be available to carry out this project, and that necessary cov-<br />
erage and equipment required under the Workers’ Compensation Board and Fire Prevention regu-<br />
lations is at hand.<br />
The awarding of this contract is subject to the availability of funding for the ycar the ficld work is<br />
required.<br />
The lowest or any tender will not necessarily be accepted.<br />
583-3300<br />
Advertise the stuff you don’t weed-.-<br />
and turn it into cash! Call 892-9161 today.<br />
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30 I JULY 23, 1996 THE SQUAMISH CHIEF<br />
Leftover Household Paint?<br />
Reuse it by:<br />
0 applying an extra coat for more protection<br />
0 storing it safe1<br />
Y<br />
for later touch-ups<br />
0 giving it to a riend or neighbour<br />
If you can’t reuse your leftover paint, dispose of it responsibly<br />
at your local PCA-authorized depot:<br />
CARNEY WASTE SYS’TEMS CARNEY WASTE SYSTEMS<br />
116 Queens Way<br />
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Phone: 892-5604 Phone: 938-9622<br />
Hours:<br />
Monday to Friday Sam-4pm<br />
Hours:<br />
Monday to Sunday 7am-6pm<br />
For more mformation, see your local paint retailer or call 1-800-505-0139.<br />
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New hunting<br />
regulations released<br />
ByhmthBeswetherick<br />
The Ministry of Environment has set new hunting reg<br />
ulations for 1996-97 which includes limited entry foi<br />
grizzly hunting.<br />
Environment Minister Paul Ramsey announced thc<br />
changes last week.<br />
The most significant changes to this year’s huntint<br />
rules are:<br />
All open seasons on grizzly bear hunting have beer<br />
replaced by limited entry hunting as part of the neM<br />
grizzly bear conservation strategy.<br />
Management unit boundaries in some regions ham<br />
been changed to make boundaries more recognizable ir<br />
relation to ground features. Changes are noted in tht<br />
regional sections of the hunting synopsis.<br />
Restrictions on duck hunting have been eased, going<br />
to a daily bag limit of eight ducks, rather than six, and E<br />
possession limit of 16 ducks rather than 12.<br />
Increases in waterfowl populations have enabled<br />
hunting regulations to return to these former levels.<br />
As well, due to safety concerns resulting from a grow-<br />
ing cougar population, the bag limit has been increased<br />
from one to two cats on Vancouver Island and season:<br />
have been standardized and extended throughout thc<br />
island.<br />
The 1996-97 regulations will be published in the B.C<<br />
Hunting Regulations synopsis which should be avail-<br />
able during the week of July 29 at B.C. Environment<br />
offices, government agents and other hunting licence<br />
outlets.<br />
Hunting regulations are changed each year to address<br />
conservation requirements and to improve hunting<br />
opportunities where conservation is not a concern.<br />
Proposed changes to the regulations are discussed<br />
with hunters, guide outfitters and other affected inter-<br />
ests. Regulation changes do not affect first nation rights<br />
to hunt.<br />
Ramsey also announced provincial funding of<br />
$105,000 through Forest Renewal B.C. for a full invento-<br />
ry of the Kootenay’s elk and mule deer populations.<br />
“Recent studies of elk suggest an imbalance in the<br />
ration of bulls to COWS,” said Ramsey. “This intensive<br />
inventory will provide the detailed information we<br />
need to improve the management of this important<br />
SDecies.”<br />
Under The Bridge<br />
Youngsters learned some fun new dances during the<br />
annual Parks Day celebrations at Alice Lake Provincial I<br />
I<br />
sors for tht<br />
race throui<br />
The loca<br />
Faulkner, E<br />
Chloe Lan<br />
now been<br />
Blackcomb<br />
480-kilome<br />
”We’re rc<br />
Faulkner, a<br />
/’ Salomon<br />
the race, br<br />
ing people,<br />
falling into<br />
In additio<br />
equipment<br />
has also a(<br />
income.<br />
Polar, a co<br />
rate with monitc equipr<br />
With a lit,<br />
race begins<br />
has now m
iting<br />
’eleasec<br />
j set new hunting re,<br />
des limited entry fc<br />
msey announced tl<br />
I this year’s huntin<br />
lar hunting have bee<br />
g as part of the ne1<br />
in some regions ha\<br />
more recognizable i<br />
iges are noted in th<br />
mopsis.<br />
ave been eased, goin<br />
rather than six, and<br />
r than 12.<br />
itions have enablel<br />
Lese former levels.<br />
2sulting from a grou<br />
lit has been increase(<br />
?r Island and season<br />
nded throughout th<br />
published in the B.C<br />
uch should be avail<br />
at B.C. Environmen<br />
)her hunting licencc<br />
each year to addresi<br />
to improve huntinl<br />
is not a concern.<br />
ations are discussec<br />
other affected inter.<br />
‘ect first nation right:<br />
vincial funding oj<br />
1.C. for a full invento-<br />
deer populations.<br />
an imbalance in the<br />
nsey. “This intensive<br />
[led information we<br />
it of this important<br />
idge -<br />
u dances during tC<br />
We Lake Provinci<br />
stone photo<br />
-I<br />
SPORTS TIPS? Call US (604) 892-9 16 7<br />
Of FOX (604) 892-8483<br />
to the top<br />
ly<br />
r<br />
David Donaldson<br />
he North Shore Indians<br />
Junior B Skexwa<br />
(lacrosse) team was<br />
ble to put on quite a show<br />
x its Six Nations elders fans<br />
Jhen it defeated the<br />
Janaimo Timbers 10-8 at the<br />
:isure centre July 13.<br />
There was initial concern<br />
le game wouldn’t count in<br />
le standings due to the<br />
Ssence of a league referee,<br />
)ut the game was allowed<br />
md after defeating<br />
isquimalt 17-10 the next day,<br />
he Indians finished the regilar<br />
season in third place -<br />
ust two points behind<br />
danaimo.<br />
The Indians usually plays<br />
ts home games at the North<br />
ran Rec Centre but sched-<br />
[led a game at Squamish to<br />
make it easier for our valley<br />
ieople to see a game,” said<br />
oach Byron Joseph. “They’re<br />
reat fans and give us lots of<br />
upport. We want to schedle<br />
more games for<br />
quamish next season.”<br />
With the team’s four<br />
quamish players - Alan<br />
ewis Jr., Cass Williams,<br />
alph Williams and Rod<br />
illy - giving “110 per cent”<br />
local fans were rewarded<br />
with an action-packed game<br />
despite the absence of key<br />
players Justin Baker and captain<br />
Jonas Lewis.<br />
The Indians began the bestof-three<br />
playoff series<br />
Saturday in Nanaimo,<br />
defeating the Timbers 11-9.<br />
The rematch back in North<br />
Van Sunday saw the,Indians<br />
trounce Nanaimo 20-7 with<br />
six goals and three assists<br />
from the returning ’Jonas<br />
Lewis, and a hat trick from<br />
Intermediate player Stee<br />
Baker.<br />
“It was a great game,” said<br />
Joseph. ”The whole team<br />
pulled it together.’’<br />
Their next game will either<br />
be against Delta or Kilarney<br />
depending on which team<br />
won its match Monday<br />
night. If it’s Delta, the<br />
Indians are in for a tough<br />
fight.<br />
”Delta beat us during the<br />
regular season - it’s hard to<br />
judge that team,” Joseph<br />
says. ”They come to play,<br />
those guys. Kilarney will<br />
have to watch themselves.”<br />
If the Indians win the play-<br />
offs it gets the opportunity to<br />
travel to Edmonton to play<br />
in the national event, the<br />
--1<br />
July 23, 7996 Page 37 I<br />
The North Shore Indians put on a great show against the Nanaimo Timbers for their many fans in Squamish<br />
July 13. The team has won the first round of playoffs and could be on its way to the Founders Cup.<br />
Founders Cup. The team<br />
took Tier I1 gold in last<br />
year’s cup, played in St.<br />
Catherine’s, Ont., and Joseph<br />
says he thinks the team has a<br />
very competitive chance of<br />
making it this year. The only<br />
barrier is money.<br />
“Funding is really low<br />
right now. We’re not in as<br />
good shape as we were last<br />
year.”<br />
To aid its fund-raising<br />
efforts, the team formed a<br />
non-profit society late in the<br />
season. Tax deductible<br />
donations can be made to<br />
the North Shore Indians<br />
Skexwa Society in North<br />
Vancouver.<br />
Whistler Eco-Challenaers draw mar s<br />
Sy Rahoul Ghose<br />
Eco-Challenge contenders Team B.C.<br />
Lave taken on some heavyweight spon-<br />
ors for the August multi-discipline team<br />
ace through the Sea to Sky Corridor.<br />
The local five-member team of Bob<br />
‘aulkner, Ross Nicol, Robert Hartvikson,<br />
L‘hloe Lanthier and Alex Blodgett have<br />
now been endorsed by Salomon and<br />
Blackcomb Mountain for the eight-day,<br />
480-kilometre race.<br />
”We’re really thrilled about it,“ said<br />
Faulkner, a part-time Whistler resident.<br />
”Salomon is taking a major position for<br />
the race, bringing in a bunch of market-<br />
ing people,” he said. “Everything is just<br />
falling into place.”<br />
In addition to providing the team with<br />
equipment for the race, the skiing giant<br />
has also added to the team’s training<br />
income.<br />
Polar, a company which produces heart<br />
rate monitors, is also aiding the team<br />
with equipment and funding.<br />
With a little over a month before the<br />
race begins, Team Salomon Blackcomb<br />
has now moved its training into high<br />
w<br />
gear, Faulkner said.<br />
Eighty-one teams are expected to participate<br />
in the international extreme<br />
adventure race, Aug. 24-31, which features<br />
a variety of disciplines including<br />
running, horseback riding, mountain<br />
biking, glacier and mountain climbing,<br />
whitewater rafting and canoeing.<br />
Over the July 13-14 weekend Faulkner<br />
and teammate Hartvikson participated<br />
in the Sea to Sky Mountain Bike Trail<br />
Ride from D’Arcy to Squamish, completing<br />
the two-day event in just over nine<br />
hours.<br />
”It kind of puts things back in perspective,”<br />
Faulkner said. ”Training weekends<br />
aside, you tend to forget the pain and we<br />
were feeling pretty beat up by five<br />
o’clock because of the heat and dehydration.”<br />
Faulkner said he and Hartvikson tried<br />
to do as much of the ride as possible<br />
using off-road routes such as the Soo,<br />
Wedge and Upper Cheakarnus.<br />
“By the time we got into Squamish we<br />
were feeling pretty fried ... it was a good<br />
trial by fire.”<br />
The team, now training seven days a<br />
d<br />
week with regular climbs up North<br />
Vancouver’s Grouse Mountain, runs and<br />
cycling trips, tuned their whitewater<br />
rafting skills this weekend in Squamish,<br />
shooting for class four certification.<br />
Faulkner also plans to compete in an<br />
Ironman event in California this week.<br />
“It’s a pain threshold thing,” he said.<br />
However, despite the team’s high level<br />
of fitness, Faulkner admitted his own<br />
attempts to bulk up €or the Eco-<br />
Challenge have not been too successful.<br />
“After you go out arid race for nine<br />
hours, no matter what you do, you look<br />
like a scarecrow,” he said, adding he’s<br />
currently seeing a nutritionist to stop his<br />
weight loss.<br />
If current weather trends continue -<br />
with temperatures in the mid to high 30s<br />
- Faulkner said teams will face similar<br />
dehydration problems as were encoun-<br />
tered during the 1995 event in Utah.<br />
”If it’s hot like this it will be interesting<br />
- we’ll be battling dehydration and the<br />
glacier.”<br />
As to the course, the commercial print-<br />
ing consultant said a lot of people know<br />
bits and pieces of the overall route but<br />
II<br />
nobody knows the cntirc circuit.<br />
”We’re going to be doing a lot of scrCiinbling<br />
to get through this OIIC,” he said.<br />
“It’s kind of scary looking forward to it<br />
in some ways. Until you fcd the pain,<br />
you don’t know how bad it’s going tu<br />
be.”<br />
Faulkner prcdicts racers will start the<br />
race north of Pernbcrton with the ride<br />
and run event before proceeding townrd<br />
Gold Bridge and across the Pcnibc‘rton<br />
Ice Cap for hiking and mount‘~inci,rinS<br />
d i sc i p 1 in e s .<br />
/I<br />
If there’s onc thing that’s impressive,<br />
it’s watching 1Oll-odd horses gcillopi ng<br />
out with a couple of huridrtd ru~~ners<br />
beside them,” he said.<br />
After the ice cap, Faulkrwr said ~ L ~ ~ ~ I I I ~<br />
might travel down the E1,1ho on rafts.<br />
Several areas of the course n ~iy be u,wd<br />
more than once.<br />
/I<br />
They might bring us back up again,<br />
niaybe on mountain bikes. It’s going to<br />
be pretty hairy.”<br />
Faulkner said the on1y rumor he can<br />
confirm is that cncc organilcr-s arc‘ ccm-<br />
stantly changing the course routc to keep<br />
teams guessing.
32 JULY 23, 1996 THE SQUAMISH CHIEF<br />
-21et Ann iversa rsp-<br />
h7gatulations!<br />
Linda & Ken<br />
Ryan, Curtis, Noel,<br />
Kachelle & Mark<br />
For All Your Fencing<br />
And Patio Deck Needs...<br />
- Cedar Only -<br />
* Direct Sawmill To You Pricing<br />
* Custom<br />
* Siding<br />
* Facia<br />
*Planed<br />
& Rough<br />
HOWE SOUND<br />
FOREST PRODUCTS<br />
“Located at Cheekye” 898-5671<br />
I ONLY $35 PERYEAR 1<br />
IN THE SQUAMISH AREA I<br />
I<br />
1 - Street<br />
Name:<br />
Address:<br />
Mailing : Postal Code<br />
I city: Phone:<br />
1 I<br />
Start Date: Expiry: -<br />
I Date:<br />
I RATES<br />
I 1YEAR-$35 (1 Yr-) Smiors $25<br />
3/2YEAW $28 (1/2 yr.) Seniors $#5<br />
I Paid By: wheque aVISA QM/C mash OMoney Order I<br />
I Amount Enclosed: I exhibition.<br />
Credit Card #:<br />
Expiry date:<br />
Signature:<br />
L-mR--Ir----<br />
I<br />
I<br />
I<br />
Fast-paced slo-pitch<br />
season finale<br />
A Squamish Elks runner is safe at second to win the A<br />
division final for the third year in a row, over the Bushrats.<br />
Windsurfing<br />
championship returns<br />
to Squamish<br />
After a five-year absence the Ocean Spray Canadian<br />
Windsurfing Championship returns to the shores of<br />
Howe Sound Aug. 7-11.<br />
Between 50 and 80 surfers from all over the Lower<br />
Mainland and Oregon’s Gorge on the Columbia River<br />
are expected to migrate to Squamish, considered a world<br />
wide windsurfing mecca for its consistent high winds.<br />
Hosted by the newly formed Squamish High Wind<br />
Club, the championship is a qualifier for the Professional<br />
Windsurfers Association with competitors vying for a<br />
minimum prize purse of $3,000.<br />
A windsurfing competition is similar to a sailing regat-<br />
ta with surfers competing in several different disci-<br />
plines. Course slalom involves a mass start with racers<br />
following a course of upwind and downwind legs, fight-<br />
ing currents and wind shifts.<br />
Downwind slalom, which Squamish is ideal for, is clos-<br />
1 er to a downhill slalom ski race with heats of 8-10 surfers<br />
jibing around buoys at high speeds in close-knit packs.<br />
Organizers are also hoping to have a speed competi-<br />
tion and an expression session, which is like a freestyle<br />
I club affiliated to a National Sailing Association.<br />
For pre-registration or more information contact the<br />
All competitors must be a current member of a sailing<br />
I Canadian Windsurfing Championship hotline at 1-604-<br />
SPORTS<br />
It was hit and miss for this Triton Heat batter as his team fell<br />
to the Athletics in the D final Sunday. The Slo Pokes bea!<br />
Squamish Nation in the C final. David Donaldson photos
c<br />
- I<br />
SPORTS<br />
met some good compe- Puchmayr, Nadine MacNeil,<br />
Jade MacDonald, Laura<br />
fter a slow start the DeCook, Megan Banting,<br />
ockers lost their first game Pauline Osborne, Sarah<br />
Kamloops by only one Osborne, Jaimee Keeler,<br />
n. They were very much in<br />
against Princeton, losing<br />
three, but lost to the even-<br />
ual winners, Newton, 13-6.<br />
In the final game game<br />
Amber Hamilton and coach<br />
Mike Puchmayr had a great<br />
weekend, playing well and<br />
exhibiting great sportsman-<br />
ship.<br />
Basketball star Summer Games-bound<br />
I Squamish basketball<br />
layer Monjef Peeters has<br />
breast: 12th, k31.40; 200<br />
I.M.: 2nd, 3:14.00; 100 fly<br />
Centre, Meadow Park<br />
Leisure Centre and variing<br />
bracket where one loss<br />
would have put the team<br />
ade the North Shore<br />
one team traveling to<br />
rail/Castlegar for the<br />
.C. Summer Games.<br />
{he Howe Sound<br />
econdary School student<br />
as one of 10 players chofrom<br />
among 60 trying<br />
in four days of skill<br />
rills and scrimmages. He<br />
ys the tryouts were ”a<br />
(5B): 3rd, k37.50. ous businesses in out of the tournament.<br />
Div. 6: Louise Carrico - Squamish and Whistler. Besides the first place<br />
50 fly: 2nd, Vo 1 u n t e e r s t ro p h yf Mountain<br />
0:36.90.<br />
are still Building n;,-l/nA **z..<br />
j YlLlKU up :c- L-zl<br />
L 3 Id11<br />
Six and needed for share of-the rest of the<br />
under: Bailee<br />
race day as hardware with Gary<br />
Keeler - 25<br />
course mar- Hallate named first base<br />
fly: llth,<br />
shals and for all-star, Barrie Woodard<br />
0:48.40; 25<br />
water . -- - --
34 H JULY 23,1996<br />
PENTIUM<br />
AND WINDOWS 95<br />
-HARDWARE<br />
-SOFWARE<br />
-CUSTOM SYSTEMS<br />
-UPGRADES<br />
-CONSULTING<br />
WE WILL BEAT ANY VANCOUVER ADVERTISED PRICE<br />
ON A COMPARABLE SYSTEM<br />
892-9209<br />
EXPERTS<br />
UNITED CARPET.<br />
Free Home Estimates Evening Appts.<br />
Patricia Fortin 892,3653<br />
~7,38921 Progress Way - In the Industrial Park<br />
A J<br />
PAINTING & CONTRACTING LTD,<br />
INTERIOR & EXTERIOR<br />
0 FREE ESTIMATES<br />
PRESSURE WASHING<br />
RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL<br />
BENJAMIN MOORE PAINT<br />
PH 892-5103 CELL 892-1 208<br />
GOT A LEAK?<br />
NEED A PLUMBER?<br />
Call Chris 898-5757<br />
THE SQUAMISH CHIEF<br />
Licenced professional<br />
- Certified Landscape Horticulturalist -<br />
- Licensed Pesticide Applicator -<br />
Year-round<br />
tawn G Garden Care<br />
898-4198<br />
PSYCHOLOGIST A''<br />
Stephen Milstein, Ph.d., R. Psych.<br />
Ulrich Lanius Ph.d., R. Psych.<br />
Assessment:<br />
Individual, Group, Couples 6 Family Therapy<br />
381 44 Second Avenue, Squamish<br />
BY APPOINTMENT - 892-5796<br />
Grand Opening in Squamish<br />
Introductory offer $1.5/1 hr session<br />
CALL 898-9266 for Appointment<br />
-a Very Experienced and<br />
4u Colour Consultation<br />
4 Excellent References<br />
Reliable<br />
SQUAMISH - -- -~ OPTOMETRY<br />
EYE HEALTH CLINIC<br />
103-1 365 PEMBERTON AVE.<br />
SQUAMISH 892-5055 1 -888-393 4897<br />
932-0888 898-4022 898-5488<br />
Whistler FaX Squamish<br />
STOKES 3<br />
CRANE C O m LTD- *<br />
For all your household plumbing<br />
repairs & installations.<br />
24 Hour Service Reasonable Rates<br />
28T Grove RT<br />
120' Reach<br />
5oT Gr~ve TMS 475<br />
142 R d<br />
Appraisals accepted for mortgages by the<br />
Royal Bank, Scotia Bank &<br />
Squamish Credit Union<br />
BILL BlLN R.I. (B.C.)<br />
898-2027 CELL 248- I736 FAX 898-2047<br />
Your Feet Can Make You Dc Frank Martin<br />
Hurt All Over.<br />
They may feel fine,<br />
but your feet can cause<br />
stress & pain in other areas. PRONAT~ON SUPPORT<br />
Our custom foot orthotics<br />
and chiropractic therapy<br />
bring relief naturally. TILT BALANCE<br />
Dr. Frank Martin - chiropractor<br />
38145 2nd Avenue 892-3964<br />
CHIROPRACTOR<br />
ADDITIONAL THERAPIES:<br />
- custom foot or tho t ics<br />
- ultra-sound<br />
-<br />
0 muscle stimulation<br />
interferential therapy<br />
38145 2nd Avenue 0 89213064<br />
Sea to Sky Stables<br />
Wild Onion t-tevbal -<br />
& I; IVLzrsetAy Stock p\ro,nathero.py<br />
37' 1654De pot Rda<br />
'& Reid, Brackendale)<br />
q-8 pm OP call<br />
-9564<br />
Karaoke at its best by Jeny Kuntz and You<br />
# DJ. for Canned Music<br />
# Parties<br />
# Special Functions<br />
Certified Professional Councellor f<br />
1<br />
I<br />
...<br />
Adult survivors of sexual abuse<br />
couple & family<br />
e alcohol & drug<br />
* post-trauma stress disorder hospice, loss & grief<br />
by appointment family violence<br />
892-2213 .<br />
a suicide and crisis<br />
...<br />
..... .:_..<br />
Now booking for Kids Day Camp<br />
Evening hay rides 31 trail rides with a campfire<br />
Trail rides everyday Drop In or Book ahead<br />
Beginner Lessons<br />
9 Team & Wagon for Hire<br />
0 Ponys at your Party<br />
BBQ pits available 898-3934<br />
Located at Cheekeye behind sawmill<br />
H M FAREWELL<br />
CONSTRUCTION<br />
The Framing Specialists<br />
SPEClill;lZING IN SfiES,<br />
SERVICE C CONSULTING<br />
Brad G Payne<br />
Owner/Operator<br />
Forming<br />
Framing<br />
Finishing<br />
090-4055 Fax: 090-0230 Dwayne Fi~gmwell 898-1 007<br />
support<br />
living Y<br />
in a Re:<br />
Candid<br />
minimL<br />
educat ic<br />
related<br />
experiei<br />
persons<br />
and a VT<br />
cer t ifica<br />
Hours o<br />
- 7:OO a.<br />
p.m. 0<br />
1.<br />
fiy:iil<br />
1995 is 4<br />
receipt c<br />
funds).<br />
Closinp<br />
Please se<br />
Wood, S<br />
Commui<br />
949 squr<br />
(604) 89<br />
-LcIcccccc<br />
F<br />
Bob Ni
-<br />
-<br />
1-91 61<br />
-<br />
able<br />
tin<br />
1.<br />
I.<br />
?S<br />
:am pfi re<br />
lead<br />
14<br />
umill<br />
-<br />
ON<br />
lists<br />
07<br />
-<br />
For classified, special classifieds or display classifieds:<br />
I PHONE: 892-91 61<br />
Monday to Friday<br />
-<br />
9 a.m. 5 p.m.<br />
Deadline is Friday 12:OO noon<br />
for placement in the upcoming issue.<br />
BY FAX MACHINE DIAL: 892=8483<br />
IN PERSON OR BY MAIL:<br />
[-JF] 0<br />
Box 3500,381 13 -2nd Avenue, Squamish, B.C. VON 3G0<br />
FULL Time work for TQ<br />
Roofers. (604)898-4661<br />
Pacific Res tor at ions,<br />
Squamish. 2 lTFN<br />
GAS Fitter - exp. with gas<br />
63 wood f/p - Independent<br />
sub contractor for work<br />
from Squamish to<br />
Pemberton, Phone Robert<br />
732-3470.30<br />
000cCCCCCILI0CeCIICC-00000000000c0<br />
P/T, f/t Electrolux a leader<br />
in floor care products since<br />
1932 (Canada) needs<br />
teachable, stable, p/t or f/t<br />
dealers to call on existing<br />
customers. No investment.<br />
Opportunity to earn $200 -<br />
$300/wk. Call 980-6507 for<br />
details. 306<br />
0ccIcI0Ic0Ic0c0c0cccCICICICICCCIIC<br />
CARETAKER - a f/t<br />
position in the Squamish<br />
area for an enthusiastic and<br />
self motivated person.<br />
Duties include mainte-<br />
nance, cleaning & contact<br />
with clients. Comfortable<br />
accom. is provided + salary<br />
& good employment<br />
benefit plan. Call Pete @<br />
898-3832 for an appoint.<br />
30<br />
0c0c00c000cI0cI0cI0I00c000000-0000<br />
RELIEF RESIDENTIAL<br />
:ARE WORKER<br />
REQUIRED<br />
Responsibilities will include<br />
xovision of care and<br />
iupport for individuals<br />
iving with mental illness<br />
n a Residential Facility.<br />
Zandidates must have a<br />
ninimum of Grade 12<br />
bducation, diploma in<br />
elated field and/or<br />
xperience working with<br />
lersons with mental illness<br />
nd a valid first aid<br />
er t ificate.<br />
lours of Work: Shift work<br />
7:OO a.m. - 3:OO p.m.; 3:OO<br />
.m. 0 1l:OO p.m.; 11:OO<br />
.m. 7:OO a.m. Salary:<br />
12.50 (rate as of April 1,<br />
995 is $13.20, payable on<br />
xeipt of government<br />
mds).<br />
:losine Date: July 26, 1996<br />
lease send resume to: Liz<br />
Irood, Sea To Sky<br />
:ommunity Services, Box<br />
49 Squamish, BC FAX:<br />
504) 892-2267.30<br />
Industrial land near<br />
Cheekye Substation<br />
ABBREVIATIONS<br />
The following is a list of acceptable<br />
abbreviations. Please use these<br />
abbreviations only Not only does it<br />
give our paper some continuity, but it<br />
makes it easier for the readers to<br />
understand.<br />
accom., apt., bsmt.,bath., bdrm.,<br />
bldg., mo., N/P, N/S, Cres., St.,<br />
Rd., Ave., Ct., Blvd., stand., auto.,<br />
p/s, p/b, p/w p/l, a/c,mi.,h.,<br />
am/fm cass., eves., cell msg.,<br />
appls., ap t., W, '(feet), "'hches<br />
A., in.,A/ F \ t<br />
,A/R,btwn., c 0, F/<br />
P/T, ea., etc.,int., ext., exp., refs.,<br />
reg., exc., f/p, hrs., wks., info.,<br />
mm., ma., misc., obo., days of<br />
week, months of year, cities,<br />
Drovinces<br />
RELIEF RESIDENTIAL LABORER'S Req'd for<br />
CARE WORKER Forestry Brushing &<br />
REQUIRED Weeding Projects. Pesticide<br />
' Responsibilities will include - ADdicator -cr --- - Certificate<br />
- -<br />
-<br />
provision of care and<br />
support for 4 adult men<br />
with Down Syndrome.<br />
Candidates must have a<br />
minimum of Grade 12<br />
education, diploma in<br />
related field and/or<br />
experience working with<br />
persons with mental<br />
handicaps and a valid first<br />
. aid certificate.<br />
Hours of Work: Shift work<br />
- days / afternoons / nights.<br />
Salary: $12.50 (rate as of<br />
April 1, 1995 is $13.20,<br />
payable on receipt of gov-<br />
ernment funds).<br />
Closing Date: July 26, 1996<br />
Please send resume to: Liz<br />
Wood, Sea To Sky<br />
Community Services, Box<br />
949 Squamish, BC FAX:<br />
(604) 892-2267.30<br />
c0cc0cccc~cc0I0000cc00000000000-0-<br />
Pn COORDINATOR<br />
Required to develop and<br />
implement a Perinatal<br />
Support Program in the Sea<br />
to Sky corridor. Preference<br />
will be given to applicants<br />
who possess the following<br />
skills and abilities:<br />
Knowledge of perinatal<br />
issues and resources, pro0<br />
gramming planning and<br />
evaluation, community<br />
development, excellent<br />
verbal and written<br />
communication, ability to<br />
work independently.<br />
Renumeration will be<br />
commensurate with<br />
experience. Please submit<br />
resume to Coast Garibaldi<br />
Health Unit 202-4380<br />
Lorimer Rd., Whistler, BC.,<br />
VON 1B4 or Fax 932-6953.<br />
Please submit resumes by<br />
July 29, 1996 at 4 p.m. 30<br />
For further information please contact<br />
Bob Nash at tel: (604) 623-3949, fax: (604) 3988.<br />
BChydro m<br />
preferred (Hard-cores only<br />
apply, no wimps). Contact<br />
L~s @ 898-5449. ~OCCW<br />
0000000c00c0000~00000-0000000000~0<br />
EMPLOYEES Wanted -<br />
Anyone looking for work.<br />
Payday everyday. Contact:<br />
Everyone's Employment<br />
Service, Box 3377<br />
Garibaldi Highlandi, BC,<br />
VON 1TO. Phone:<br />
(604)898-9830, Fax:<br />
(604)898-3930, Toll free:<br />
1-888-550-4555.33<br />
cI00-0000c000c0-0000IICCICCCICICII<br />
HEALTH l'st Natural foods<br />
needs p/t help. Resumes<br />
req'd. Apply within, 38157<br />
2nd Ave. 30<br />
ccccc0c~ccIIc0cccccc0000000000000-<br />
CANADIAN Avalanche<br />
Centre requires a seasonal<br />
specialist to manage P.C.<br />
based computer system and<br />
the industry information<br />
exchange. Prerequisites:<br />
Level 1 CAA course,<br />
strong background in PC<br />
based systems. Resumes by<br />
August 15 to Box 2759,<br />
Revelstoke, B.C. VOE 2SO<br />
Fax (604)837-4624 E-mail<br />
canav@mindlink.bc.ca. 3 1<br />
HELICOPTER logging<br />
superintendent, Squamish<br />
area, for hire. Asking<br />
$1 O,OOO/mo. salary.<br />
Friendly person, also good<br />
pal; speak some French.<br />
Phone WyIie Costain<br />
898*9396.30<br />
cc~c0cIc0c0IcIccc0c00000c000000-c-<br />
cc00cccc0c0c0ccc00c00000000cccc000<br />
0~0I0ccIc~00000cccccCCCICICCCCCCC) GOOD Carpenter, painter<br />
AVON<br />
and landscaper are avail. to<br />
Free sign-up. Free starter work. For reasonable prices,<br />
kit. Free samples. Limited call Bob 892476 or he.<br />
time offer. 89803379.31~~~ mg. 30<br />
--<br />
THE SQUAMISH CHIEF JULY 23,1996 35<br />
WESTPARK<br />
APARTMENTS<br />
Spacious 1 bdrm., $525, 2<br />
bdrm., $575 and large 3<br />
bdrm., $645. Suites incl.<br />
heat, hot water, quiet loca-<br />
tion, close to schools.<br />
38861 Buckley Ave. N/P.<br />
Res. manager 892-361 6.<br />
TFN<br />
00000c00000000ICcII00000000000000<br />
GARIBALDI<br />
GARDEN COURT<br />
1 And 2 bdrm, apartments<br />
from $520 - $67S/month.<br />
Heat, water and parking<br />
included.<br />
Please call 898-9882. TFN<br />
0000000.0000c000000c00~0000-000~0-<br />
GROUND Level 1 bdrm.<br />
bsmt. suite for rent any-<br />
time, $49o/mo. inch heat,<br />
util's, no pets. Call after 6<br />
p.m. 892-3563. Ref's req'd.<br />
30<br />
0c0c00000000000000000000000000--0~<br />
2 BDRM. Bsmt. suite for<br />
rent in Gari. Estates. Near<br />
school, shopping & bus.<br />
Avail. July 15, 898-4665.<br />
31<br />
C00CCCCIICIC0*000C0000~00c00000000<br />
GROUND Level 1 bdrm.<br />
bsmt. suite. Avail. anytime<br />
in Valleycliffe. Incl's f/s,<br />
woodstove & blinds. Call<br />
892-3106.31<br />
C0eILII0CCCCCLCICCCC00-00000000000<br />
2 BDRM. Unit in<br />
Dentville. Mature adults.<br />
Ref's req'd., carport, w/d<br />
hook-up, cable vision +<br />
new lino, N/P. Very quiet,<br />
local. Avail. Aug. 1,<br />
892-3754.3 1<br />
"The Self Employment<br />
Assistance Grant Program<br />
(SEA) offers atternatives to peo-<br />
ple looking for employment. If<br />
you are collecting unemploy-<br />
ment insurance, you may be<br />
interested in receiving more<br />
information about the SEA<br />
Grant and becoming setf-<br />
employed. Contact 892-5467 to<br />
register for our free 'Business<br />
Start-up" Workshop!"<br />
&9 LISTEL<br />
WHISTLER HOTEL<br />
We have an opening for a Night Audit<br />
& Accounting position. Hotel experience<br />
an asset. Apply with resume to:<br />
Listel Whistler Hotel,<br />
4121 Village Green, Whistler, B.C. VON 1B4<br />
Fax: (604) 932-8383<br />
AVAIL Aug. lst., 1 bdrm. -<br />
$410, 2 bdrm. - $510 &<br />
$450. Phone 892-9720 after<br />
6, lve. msg. 30<br />
0c000--c.c-c0c~0000~0000c000000000<br />
WONDERFUL 1 Bdrm. in<br />
quiet Brackendale log<br />
home, w/d, N/S, NIP.<br />
Avail. Aug. 1, $650/mo. +<br />
1/3 util's. Call anytime<br />
898-1089. 30<br />
0IcccI0c0c-00c00c00c00000000~00000<br />
2 BDRM. Apt. for rent.<br />
Avail. August 1/96,<br />
$585/mo., N/P, No chil-<br />
dren. Call 892-37 12<br />
Strathmore Lodge. 3 1<br />
eC0IC0CIC0L0CIC-C0IC00000000000000<br />
1 BDRM. New lrg. suite in<br />
Gari. Estates, near shopping<br />
centre, N/P, NIS. ref's req'd.<br />
Avail. Aug. 1 ) $600/mo.,<br />
898-4468. 30<br />
.c00~0c0~ccIccc000cI00000000~00000<br />
SMALL Suite to rent in<br />
shared house, $400/mo. +<br />
$50 util's. Call 898-4447.<br />
Avail. immed., N/S, female<br />
preferred. Pets 0.k. 31<br />
cc~0cIcIIIcIIIccc-0c00000000-00000<br />
1 BDRM. Bsmt. suite for<br />
rent. Private entrance, all<br />
util's incl. Two private<br />
entrance, w/d, cable, close<br />
to town, 892-3762. 30<br />
cI~sccc00c0~cccccc0c00c00000000000<br />
1 BDRM. Suite for rent in<br />
the Highlands, $600. Call<br />
898-9663 util's & cable<br />
incl. 31<br />
cc~cccccc0ccI~c00~~c~000000000000~<br />
1 BDRM. Ground level<br />
bsmt. suite for rent. Incl's<br />
f/s, w-w carpet, drapes.<br />
Close to Garibaldi shop-<br />
ping mall. Avail. immed.,<br />
rent $425 incl. util's. N/P<br />
pls. Phone 898-9454. 31<br />
00~cc0c0000-0-0000c00000000-0~0000<br />
ADVERTISING<br />
POLICY<br />
The Squamish Chief does I<br />
not guarantee the insertion<br />
of a particular advertisement<br />
on a s ecified<br />
date, or at all, a P though<br />
every effort will be made<br />
to meet the wishes of the<br />
advertisers. Further, the<br />
ublishers do not accept<br />
[ability for any loss or<br />
damage caused by an<br />
error or inaccuracy in the<br />
printing of an advertisrnent<br />
beyond the amount<br />
New 1 bdrrii. bsmt. suite.<br />
$525/mo. plus 1/4 utils.<br />
Garibaldi Estates. Avail.<br />
Aug. 1st 898-1696. 31<br />
000C-CICCr0C0C0ICC00-00000000~00-~<br />
SUMMER<br />
CLEARANCE<br />
AND NEW<br />
FALL STOCK<br />
by Hip Kid<br />
(Vancouver Based Children's<br />
Clothing Company)<br />
100% cotton,<br />
sizes 2-12<br />
Thurs., July 25<br />
lb7 p.m.<br />
Eagle Room<br />
at the<br />
Sea to Sky Hotel<br />
Ainsworth<br />
WANTED TO BUY:<br />
Good Quality a Sawlog!<br />
* Peelers<br />
OSB<br />
in Fir, Spruce, Balsam,<br />
Pine, Birch or Aspen<br />
For a competitive price anc<br />
Further information contact<br />
larnell McCurdy<br />
56-521 3 - office<br />
56-7359 256-5250 - - home fax<br />
72-6466 - autotel<br />
Business Computing I Instructor<br />
Capilano College requires an instructor to teach a<br />
business computing course at the Squamish Campus in:<br />
1. Windows 3. I (Program Manager and File Manager)<br />
2. Office 4.3 (Word and Access)<br />
3 MSDos<br />
Appointment: Temporary, part-time; (onc section -<br />
I Sept. to Dec. 3 1, 1996).<br />
Qualifications: Excellent knowledge of Windows 3. I,<br />
Office 4.3 and MS Dos. Some teaching experience<br />
preferred.<br />
Salary: Faculty Scale<br />
Closing date: August 9, 1996<br />
Applications to: Dean, Business, Human Services and<br />
International Education<br />
Capilano College<br />
2055 Purcell Way<br />
North Vancouver, B.C.<br />
V7J 3H5<br />
FdX (604) 984- 1758
I<br />
36 JULY 23,1996 THE SQUAMISH CHIEF<br />
JANE DARNELL<br />
PROPERTY<br />
MANAGEMENT<br />
SERVICES LTD.<br />
VIKING RIDGE<br />
3 Bdrm., gas f/p.<br />
Avail. now 6;<br />
Aug. 1, $950/mo.<br />
WESTWAY VILLAGE<br />
1, 2, 3 Bdrm.<br />
Avail. now & Aug. 1,<br />
$525 - $700/mo.<br />
DIAMOND<br />
HEAD PLACE<br />
1 Bdrm.<br />
Avail. Aug. 1, $600/mo.<br />
Waiting list available for<br />
the following properties:<br />
* EMERALD PLACE<br />
* MOUNTAIN VIEW<br />
* HIGHLAND GLEN<br />
TOP Floor, 2 bdrm. Condo,<br />
Diamond Head Place.<br />
Close to school & mall.<br />
Avail. Aug. 1, $695/mo.,<br />
N/P, 892-3 168.30<br />
000000000000000000.00c000000000000<br />
HIGHLAND Glen Estates<br />
2 bdrm. T/H, 2 112 baths,<br />
gas f/p, 6 appls. Avail. Aug.<br />
1, $1,000/mo. Phone<br />
898-3 109.28TFN<br />
OOO~OOOOO~OcOOcOOOOoOOOO.oOOOoOOOO<br />
2 BDRM. T/H, 1 1/2 bath,<br />
balcony & carport. Avail.<br />
Aug. Ist, $658/mo. Call<br />
898-8213.31<br />
0000000.000000000000~000000000000.<br />
HIGHLANDS Mall 0 3<br />
bdrm. T/H. Avail. Aug. lst,<br />
$700/mo. Call Jane Damell<br />
@ 892-9190.28TFN<br />
0000000000000000000000000000000000<br />
IN The Highlands, 3 bdrm.<br />
Duplex, beautiful view, nice<br />
backyard. Avail. immed.,<br />
$9m/mo., 892-5090.<br />
30TFN<br />
00.0000000000000000000000000000.00<br />
TOWNHOUSE 0 Eagle<br />
View, 3 bdrms., 3 baths, 5<br />
appls., f/p, 2 parking spaces,<br />
no pets, no smokers. Avail.<br />
Aug. 1/96, $850/mo., 898-<br />
5936.31<br />
00000000000.0000000000000000000000<br />
LARGE clean 2 bdrm<br />
duplex. Absolutely N/P.<br />
Must be clean and<br />
responsible. Rent $750/ mo.<br />
cable incl. Ref’s req’d.<br />
Avail. Aug. 1st. Phone<br />
898-4434. F ~x 898-4408.<br />
30<br />
, 0000000000000000000000000000000000<br />
DOWNTOWN, lrg. fenced<br />
yard, smaller house, w/d. .<br />
Avail. Aug. 1/96, $795/mo.<br />
Call 892-3 133 anytime.<br />
29TFN<br />
0000000000000000000000000000000000<br />
PARADISE Valley, 20<br />
minutes from town, 1 bdrm.<br />
studio for prof. N/S person<br />
or couple. Ref’s req’d.<br />
Avail. immed., $570/mo.,<br />
898-9182. ~ ~ C C W<br />
0000000000000000000000000000000000<br />
1400 SQ.FT. in Highlands,<br />
nice view, big deck, 3<br />
bdrms., 1 1/2 baths,<br />
$900/mo., 892-5090.<br />
30TFN<br />
3 BDRM., 1 1/2 bath, on<br />
main floor, in downtown,<br />
N/S, N/k Working prof.<br />
Ref’s req’d. Avail. Aug.<br />
I - 25. Phone 892-5520.30<br />
0000000000000000000000000.00000000<br />
NEAR new in Garibaldi<br />
Estates. Exec. style house, 3<br />
bdrms, family room, office,<br />
2 baths, suitable for professional<br />
couple, NIP. Ref‘s<br />
req’d. Phone 898-4928 or<br />
892-9902.31<br />
COMFORTABLE House<br />
on lrg. property to share in<br />
Dentville area of Squamish.<br />
Close to bus stop. lots of<br />
room, w/d, dlwasher.<br />
Everything negotiable,<br />
892-2237.26TFN<br />
0000000000000000000000000000000000<br />
2 BDRMS. for rent. Avail.<br />
Aug. lst, $3N/mo. Call<br />
892-4976.30<br />
000000000I00000~00000000.000000000<br />
SHARED Accom. for clean<br />
quiet adult, N/S, N/P, in<br />
Valleycliffe, $3 75/mo.<br />
Phone 89209892 anytime or<br />
lve. msg. 30<br />
0000000C0000000000000000000000~000<br />
RESPONSIBLE Roommate<br />
wanted to share Highlands<br />
Duplex, $3?5/mo. util’s<br />
incl., 898-5195 or<br />
93245424.31<br />
00000000000CC000000000.00~0~000000<br />
LOOKING for mature<br />
responsible N/S, single,<br />
F/M to share quiet, spacious<br />
upper half of duplex. Big<br />
yard, deck. Aug. 1st.<br />
$500.00 utils. incl. Ref’s<br />
needed. 898-3999 Ive. msg.<br />
30<br />
SIDE x Side Duplex 0 new<br />
roof, deck, cupboards,<br />
doors, carpet, lino, 5 new<br />
appls. Beautiful view off<br />
deck in both sides,<br />
$300,000.00,892~5090.<br />
30TFN<br />
0000000000~00.000000000000000000000<br />
FREE to a good home.<br />
Brittany Spaniel, 8 month<br />
old male, all shots, fblly<br />
neutered. Call 892-63 16.<br />
1700 SQ* ValleYCliffe, IN the rear of Bay -7 in th<br />
3 Mrms., lrg. comer lot,<br />
partly finished bsmt. Priced<br />
below market for quick<br />
sale, $169,900. Call<br />
892-9737, pls. lve/msg. 30<br />
112 DUPLEX, 1/3 acre, 4<br />
bdrms., 3 - 3 pc. baths., 5<br />
appls., gas f/p, dbl. garage,<br />
rec. room, window blinds<br />
and paved driveway,<br />
$185,000.00. Call lafter 4:30<br />
p.m. 89804904.30<br />
00~~00000C000000000I00000000~00000<br />
Industrial Park, on Queen<br />
Way (next to Newman’s<br />
Autobody). Lots of good‘<br />
for everyone. Every day,<br />
0 4.30<br />
0000000000000000000000000000000.<br />
GARAGE and craft sale,<br />
41946 Birken Rd.,<br />
Brackendale. 10 0 3 p.m.<br />
Sat., July 27. Great<br />
assortment of stuff. New<br />
handmade crafts. No early<br />
birds Dlease. 30<br />
000000000000000000000000000000~.<br />
GIANT garage sale at the<br />
Squamish Alano’Club 90 CH<br />
37978 Third Ave. Saturda to., 4<br />
10 a.m. to 3 om. Rain or reo, $<br />
MANOR n<br />
ALSO<br />
See our ad under<br />
Apartment & House<br />
Rentals<br />
WE SPECIALIZE IN<br />
STRATA AND RENTAL<br />
MANAGEMENT<br />
FOR MORE INFO. CALL<br />
892-9190. TFN<br />
00000c~000c0~0000000~00000.0~.00.0<br />
SPACIOUS 3 Bdrm. T/H<br />
Private yard, near down-<br />
town & school. Avail.<br />
immed., $790/mo., cable<br />
incl., N/dogs. Call<br />
892-5655 f (604)985-8888.<br />
26TFN<br />
-00CC0-C00-0-000CrC00.000-00000000<br />
BROTHERS PI., 3 bdrm.<br />
112 Duplex, 1 112 bath,<br />
fenced yard, gas f/p, 5 appls.<br />
Ref’s req’d, NIP. Avail.<br />
Aug.l or sooner,<br />
$1,00O/mo. Before 12/aft. 6,<br />
898-443 1. 28ccwTFN<br />
fE LECT ROLUX 1<br />
Vacuum Cleaners<br />
-Sales & Service -<br />
J. Robinson<br />
e92-58ll7<br />
Windfirm<br />
TREE SERVICE<br />
DANGEROUS TREE<br />
MeDougall’s Music<br />
WEEKLY SPECIAL<br />
MTC<br />
14 INCH COLOUR TV<br />
with remote $169.00<br />
Open Tuesday lo Saturday<br />
892-5310 898-9797<br />
2 RDF,h4. Mair, floor of<br />
house in Garibaldi Estates<br />
close to the mall, f/s, wood<br />
stove, 1300 sq.ft., N/F‘, N/S.<br />
Avail. immed. Call 898-<br />
9023. 28TFN<br />
c0c00--0~0c-0000c000000000000000~0<br />
SUNNY, Clean, bright<br />
house in Valleycliffe. Lrg.<br />
deck, fully fenced backyard,<br />
great for family. 3 Bdrms. +<br />
rec. room, $900/mo. +<br />
util’s., 892-3566. 30<br />
PARTS SALES SERVICE<br />
Jeff Shea<br />
Phone: 898-%2/ 898-2378<br />
BRACKENDALE, B.C.<br />
Commercial and<br />
Residential Wiring<br />
892-8400<br />
“BOWLS GALORE” non-nin’ Hosiery<br />
Open Daily Tights<br />
CLOSED Tuesday Children’s Tights<br />
38123 2nd Ave. I Jewellery<br />
892-8252 Squamish<br />
I<br />
FOR RENT 0<br />
Deluxe 28’<br />
Motorhome with fridge,<br />
stove, tv/vcr, a/c, $950/wk.<br />
incl. 1400 kms. fie€, .I6<br />
cents km. over. Jack<br />
898-3491.21TFN<br />
000000.00.000000000000000000000-00<br />
ROOM for rent in Gari.<br />
Estates. Cooking & laundry<br />
facility. Phone 898-3142<br />
after 4 p.m. 30<br />
~00000000000000000.00000.00.00.000<br />
COZY trailer w/addition, .<br />
furnished, hydro incl. View<br />
of Shannon Falls, lots of<br />
character. Must be seen to<br />
appreciate. Klahanie Park,<br />
$550. Van (604)889-4455.<br />
3OccwA<br />
0000.00.0000c0000000000~000000.000<br />
GARAGE Space avail.<br />
Private home in Gari.<br />
Highlands, 898-46 18.30<br />
TWO bdrm. trailer, w/d, f/s,<br />
microwave, cable incl.,<br />
wanting long term tenant.<br />
Avail immed. $700/ mo.<br />
Phone 892-9141.30<br />
M/F To share 3 bdrm.<br />
Mobile home in Squamish.<br />
Avail. August 2, $40O/mo.<br />
inch util’s. Phone<br />
552-1477 eves. 27TFN<br />
0c000000000000000000000.00000000I0<br />
MATURE Responsible<br />
couple seeks secluded 2 or 3<br />
bdrm. house for longeterm<br />
lease. Preferably<br />
Brackendale or Paradise<br />
Valley. Exc. ref’s, 938-0103<br />
(Whistler). 30<br />
NEWLY Remodeled 3<br />
bdrms., 1700 sq.ft., garage,<br />
s/room, formal dining/rm.,<br />
fenced lot, blinds, drapes.<br />
A must see 898-9435 by<br />
appt. only, $220,000.00. 3 1<br />
~00000I0.0c0000c00000000.0~0000000<br />
4 BDRM. Older Rancher<br />
style home in Brackendale,<br />
on 90’ x 180’ level lot, new<br />
roof, dbl.’ garage/carport,<br />
grape vines on patio, fruit<br />
trees, $185,000.00,<br />
898-562 1. 3 1<br />
0.00.00.0000000000000000000.00.00.<br />
2000 SQ.FI’., 3 Bdrm.<br />
home on Hospital Hill.<br />
Hard wood floor, oak cabic<br />
nets 6, railing, vaulted ceiL<br />
ing, nicely finished. Must<br />
see. Must sell. Price already<br />
reduced, $13,000.00.<br />
Asking $208,000.00,<br />
892-3826. 30<br />
0000000000000000000000.00000.000~0<br />
RING Creek chalet on the<br />
road to Diamond Head. Lot<br />
#24. Winterized, propane<br />
appls., hot water, furnace.<br />
On 0.6 acre heedhold lot.<br />
$125,000.00. Call 892-<br />
2394.306<br />
0000000000000000000000000000000000<br />
“COMMERCIAL SPACE”<br />
Two thousand sq. ft., air cond., office space, can be divided.<br />
3rd Ave., downtown Squamish.<br />
Mountain View Place, the new building on Second Ave., at Victoria. Now open<br />
for tours and viewing of offices. Excellent choice of ofice space available.<br />
Fantastic view from all offices.<br />
FOR sale. Here’s your<br />
chance. #34 Emerald P1.<br />
comer unit. 3 bdrms, 1.5<br />
bath, 6 appl,, also upgraded<br />
features in this home.<br />
$150,000 firm, Dave<br />
892-635 1.3 ~CCW<br />
0 b .A<br />
b I<br />
PRIME Commercial office<br />
space for lease, 38155 0 2<br />
nd Ave. Avail. now,<br />
$850/mo., 892-3064.<br />
07TFN<br />
000c000000000000000000000000000000<br />
“U STORE IT *<br />
Ministorage space avail. in<br />
new facility. Bay sizes vary<br />
from 10’ x 16’ to 10’ x 32’<br />
with garage door opening.<br />
Located in Squamish<br />
Industrial Park. Phone<br />
pager # 892-3335 for more<br />
info.” 12TEN<br />
0000000000000000000000000000000000<br />
“STOREFRONT avail. in<br />
new facility in Squamish<br />
Industrial Park, 1,500 sq.ft.<br />
with loading bay. Phone U<br />
Store It pager # 892-3335<br />
for more info.” 12TFN<br />
CLEARED, fully serviced,<br />
flat lot in prestigious gated<br />
subdivision in Garibaldi<br />
Highlands. No GST 0<br />
$99,900. Phone 898-4848<br />
or 892-7758. 15TFN<br />
0000000000000000000000000000000~00<br />
7600 SQ.FT. View lot for<br />
sale 0 Hospital Hill area.<br />
Open to offers, 892-9109.<br />
30<br />
00000.00.0000000000000000000000000<br />
$1 150/mo. three bdrm house, Valleycliffe, large fenced yard, possible fourth bdrm and<br />
large open area in basement. Has small work shop in back with 220 wiring. NP, NS.<br />
Avail. Sept 1/96.<br />
$750/mo. one bdrm house on Government Rd., newly finished inside. Avail Aug 1/96.<br />
$900/mo. two bdrm house, huge yard, on Wilson Cres. Secluded older home.<br />
Avail. Aug. 15/96.<br />
$lOoO/mo. Fantastic Rancher on NorthRidge Rd., very private, two bedrooms, four appliances, exceptionally well<br />
maintained. Avail Sept 1/96.<br />
$9OO/mo 3 bdrm Condo, Eagleview, on Government Rd., five appliances with wood stove, end unit, excellent shape.<br />
for rent, **----*<br />
000000000000I000000000.00000C0.<br />
SUNDAY, July 28 0<br />
Household item, some<br />
furniture, 1344 Judd Rd.,<br />
10 a.m. 0 4 p.m. No early<br />
birds. 30<br />
00000000000000000000000000000--. 06.<br />
birds pis. 30<br />
0000000000000L000000.000000000<br />
SOMETHING for everyone<br />
0 Sat., July 27, 9 0 2.<br />
Rain or shine. 38269<br />
Myrtle Crs., Valleycliffe.<br />
000000000000000000000000000000<br />
189 cci<br />
, .0 0 0 0 0 0 0<br />
ONDA<br />
We<br />
YARD sale, Sat., July 27, S .B Upho<br />
0 1 p.m. Used household ~ccOOOOOO.O<br />
items, fridge, stove, w/d se 181 ~ 0<br />
new tarps, rain suits and ,,, 4 spd (<br />
more. Mile 10.5 Squamish 892<br />
Valley Rd. 30.<br />
CALORIC Dishwasher -<br />
$275, GE washer 0<br />
$375,<br />
GE washer - $350, GE<br />
warranty by Kostless<br />
Appliances. Call 892-9 1<br />
24ccwTFNA<br />
00000.0.0000000000000~00.0000<br />
# 898-53 19. 53<br />
STFMWBERRIES 0<br />
~OccOOOOOOccOcOcOOOOOOOOO.oO.~<br />
mean Mom! 4 Year old<br />
portable (easy convert to<br />
built-in), $300., 892-844<br />
I<br />
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOO..~<br />
00000000000~00~000000000000000~<br />
18-3102.<br />
c0000-.000-<br />
.-- 0 00 c 0 0 0 0 0 0<br />
START early! Firewood f 8 FORD b<br />
Boss 302 7<br />
sale. Pick up or delivery.<br />
iles, restort<br />
Call Chris at 89242360.3<br />
st offer 89i<br />
30” WESTINGHOUSE<br />
Deluxe dryer 0 $75.<br />
size fridge 0 $50. Both<br />
very well. 892-9109. 3<br />
Apt.<br />
000000000000000000000000000.~~’<br />
PINE four e poster Qu<br />
waterbed with 6 drawers,<br />
triple dresser, wing mi<br />
armoire. Immac. cond<br />
89804618.30<br />
’--- c 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
n<br />
3me.<br />
3 mon<br />
hlly<br />
i-63 1 f<br />
c THE SQUAMISH CHIEF JULY 23, 1996 37<br />
?<br />
I<br />
7 in t<br />
L Quet<br />
rman's<br />
A gooc<br />
Y days<br />
CIIICI-<br />
aft salt<br />
3 parr<br />
at<br />
1 New<br />
Vo ear<br />
CC0CII0<br />
le at tl<br />
3ub -<br />
Saturc<br />
Rain<br />
availa<br />
for rei<br />
30av<br />
**#-***I<br />
*<br />
some<br />
jd Rd.<br />
o earl1<br />
0CCC*#*.<br />
re - Ss<br />
e gara<br />
90 eai<br />
00*CCCC.<br />
every<br />
,9-2.<br />
69<br />
~cliffe.<br />
C*CIIIC.<br />
uly 27<br />
iehold<br />
I, wid I<br />
ts and<br />
Juami:<br />
asher -<br />
$375,<br />
GE<br />
; dryer<br />
with<br />
'SS<br />
92-9 1'<br />
.C000Cd/<br />
ERIAI<br />
erials;<br />
x 12,<br />
2. Pho<br />
C I C I C O .<br />
e<br />
94-6Ot<br />
.00#-#-4<br />
gou ne<br />
I don<br />
c old<br />
vert tc<br />
,2444<br />
.*dCII--<br />
wood<br />
livery.<br />
1360.<br />
.*CCC---<br />
>USE<br />
. Apt.<br />
loth W'<br />
9. 30<br />
.*CIIC.~<br />
Queer<br />
bawers,<br />
mirrol<br />
md. ,<br />
. c * * *I -0,<br />
s. Bag of 100 assorted -<br />
s $25.00. After 5 p.m.<br />
puterized step machine<br />
sale - $200 ob. Call<br />
, see thru glass doors,<br />
lete unit, Montigo<br />
600.00. Also, 1996<br />
motoscooter. Exc.<br />
$1700.00 obo. 898-<br />
1987 FORD 4 x 4 P/up<br />
with canopy, 5 spd., V6,<br />
$5;500 ob., 898-5160.30<br />
YOUR Boat or R.V. need a<br />
new look? Cover or seats<br />
worn? Call 898-3227 for a<br />
fiee estimate, P & B<br />
Upholstery. 30<br />
~IIcIcIIIcccccIcccIc~00~0~0000~000<br />
0 ~ 0 0 ~ c I c I c C c I I I 0 c I 0 0 0 ~ 0 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ -<br />
1991 GMC 1500 Sierra<br />
EFI, 4 x 4 with canopy.<br />
Exc. cond., low kms.,<br />
$1 2,700.00 obo., 898-3 169.<br />
30<br />
cI~cIIIIcIOOcc/*OcccO.OOOOOOO~OOO~<br />
73 V.W. Wstfa. some rust,<br />
needs alternator, two new<br />
tires. Runs great, $800.00<br />
Pager 1 -604-9 7 7-3 540.3 0<br />
00CIC~000CCICIICI~CI~00000.0000000<br />
1990 F250 4x4 5L, 5 spd.,<br />
air, cr., am/fm, mint cond.<br />
$14,500.00, 898-4647. 31<br />
ccIcOcccccII~c~cIOcIO~O~.-~OOO~O--<br />
1991 FORD F250 XLT<br />
Lariat, exc. cond., Leer<br />
canopy, tool box, etc.,<br />
$14,500.00 obo. Ask for<br />
Dean or Sue 898-52 11.3 1<br />
)90 CHEVY Corsica, V6,<br />
~.cOcccccOcccOc~cc~O~~~OOOOO~OO~-O<br />
to., 4 dr., air, am/fm<br />
--<br />
treo, $5000 obo: Call<br />
1989 BRONCO II,4 x 4,<br />
18-5989. 24TFN<br />
exc. cond., fully loaded,<br />
new tires, $9,300.00 obo.,<br />
..C000L00CI~CI00CI/C0~0~0~0000~0<br />
189 CHEVROLET<br />
898-4890.30 &<br />
ccccIc0cccccIIcccccc00000.0~00~0~tretta<br />
GT. Exc. cond., one<br />
mer, loaded, $5,000. Days<br />
1987 SIDEWINDER Van<br />
18-1763 / eves 938-1406. 4 Capt. chair, 1 sofa,<br />
jccwTFNA<br />
124,000 kms., a/c. Good<br />
cond., great for traveling,<br />
gray color, 892-6351.3 1<br />
ONDA Civic Sedan<br />
186. Well maint., semi<br />
itomatic, s/roof, blue,<br />
!,800. Call 932-5 13 1<br />
lays), 898-4283 eves. ask<br />
r Lisa. Must sell!!!<br />
IccwA<br />
,.I~cIccc0ccIIcIcccI0~00~000~00~<br />
iATS Ripped? Need a<br />
w look? Call Pat @ 898-<br />
27 for a free estimate, P<br />
B Upholstery. 30<br />
81 VOLVO 240 DL, 2.<br />
t 4 spd. O.D. Good<br />
ipe, 892-9150 /<br />
8-3102. 30<br />
67 FIREBIRD Convert 0<br />
LO., $8,000.00 obo.,<br />
00~cIcIcII~cIcIc.c0cCC(CIICCCICCCC<br />
1988 CHEV Suburban, 3/4<br />
ton, 4 x 4, $8,500.00 obo.,<br />
898-1534. ~OCCW<br />
ccccIIcOcIIccc~c~cOcIIIIcIIcIcIcIc<br />
1990 CHEV 1 ton crew cab<br />
4x4, $1 1,500. 1992 1 ton<br />
crew cab 4x4, $14,800.<br />
1991 Ford 1 ton 4x4 PU,<br />
$8,950. 1992 Ford 1 ton<br />
4x4 PU, $13,900. 1989<br />
Ford 1 ton 4x4 PU,<br />
$10,900. 1988 GMC 1 ton<br />
4x4 lwb, 12 ft. deck, low<br />
kms, $10,900. Call (604)<br />
583-9992 ~OCCWA<br />
ccI~cccIcc0c00000ccc0000000~00-00-<br />
1989 Ford Ranger XLT,<br />
extended cab - 4x4, very<br />
good cond. in & out.<br />
190,000 kms. (hwy driven),<br />
4 speaker stereo, 16'' tires,<br />
canopy. Great price:<br />
$6,900. Phone 898-3669.<br />
3 lccw<br />
1982 TRAVEL Air mobile<br />
trailer. Exc. shape, $4,500<br />
obo. Phone 898-2063.30<br />
cIIIIcccI.~000cIIccc00~~0~~000.000<br />
TRULY a classic - 30'<br />
Schooner, 5 sails, head,<br />
stereo VHF woodstove,<br />
refinished wood, decks,<br />
inboard Volvo, penta<br />
outboard seagull. Must be<br />
seen to appreciate,<br />
$4,500.00, 604-889-4455.<br />
3OccwA<br />
cIcccIc~0ccc0~0ccIc~0000~0~0000000<br />
1986 SPECTRE, 15 feet, 70<br />
H.P. Yamahal Depth<br />
Sounder, ski bar, trailer.<br />
Great shape, $5,500.00,<br />
898-4762.3 ~ CCW<br />
c~0c0Ic~~c0c00cccII~00~00~00~000-0<br />
1992 36.5' 5th wheel 8'<br />
ext., w/d, micro, awning,<br />
much more. Immaculate.<br />
90 GMC ext. cab, fully<br />
loaded, dual pkg. deal,<br />
$47,500 obo. Phone<br />
Solveig Nault 898-<br />
2831.<br />
30av<br />
1979 YAMAHA 650<br />
special electronic ign.<br />
c0000c0I0c00000000000~000000~0~0-0<br />
1990 SUZUKI Katana -<br />
only 18,000 kms., mint<br />
cond., comes with 1 helmet.<br />
Call 898-2075 / 892-<br />
7463.30<br />
1978 SUZUKI 175 PE. Exc.<br />
cond. with extras, $950<br />
0bo.938-9041. ~OCCWA<br />
NUILOOK Kitchens<br />
Paul Bryant<br />
89202300.<br />
1 OTFN<br />
0~cc00ccI.cII~cc0~c~00~~0~00000000<br />
GARDENING/Landscapin<br />
g - Spring time, clean your<br />
yard. Rubbish removal,<br />
Power-raking, Trimming.<br />
Lawn installed, New yards<br />
or old. Complete yard<br />
services. Call today for Fast<br />
& Friendly Service. Call<br />
898-5942. 14TFN<br />
000CC~0C~C.IICCI~00C0000.00I000400<br />
CARPET & Lino<br />
installations. All work guar.<br />
Over 25 yrs. exp. U.K.<br />
Tradesman. Call Jim 640-<br />
0805. 25TFNA<br />
000~~0ccIc~Ic000cccc0000~00000000~<br />
CARPENTRY Services.<br />
Additions or renovations.<br />
Small repairs too. Phone<br />
892-6302.30<br />
c0cc~cc0ccI~0~0ccI~~0-000000~00000<br />
DRYWALLER / Tapers /<br />
Finisher - Texture, ceilings<br />
& repair. Free estimates,<br />
call Daniel 892-2304. 31<br />
cc~ccccccccIcccI.IIICCIICCICCCIICI<br />
GISELLE'S Catering since<br />
1990. Big or small. We<br />
cater to all. Banquets,<br />
office parties, weddings,<br />
etc., 898-8298. 30<br />
~cccI0cIIccI0000ccc.000~~0~0000~-~<br />
B I<br />
1 YR. OLD collie, male,<br />
house trained, great with<br />
children. 892-9753. 30<br />
OBEDIENCE DOG<br />
TRAINING<br />
Puppy &L Adults.<br />
Certified by Canadian<br />
Institute of Professional<br />
Dog Training.<br />
Private & Classes.<br />
Classes: Aug. 12 - Sept. 1 1 ,<br />
Mon. & Wed. (7 8 pm.).<br />
Call Carolynn @ 898-9424<br />
after 8 p.m. 32<br />
RISE &a PLAY<br />
PROGRAM<br />
FOR PRE SCHOOLERS<br />
Licensed<br />
for 3 4 5 year olds.<br />
From 9 a.m. 0 12 noon<br />
* Ear 1 y C h i id hood<br />
Education<br />
*First Aid Certified<br />
*Structured Program<br />
1048 Glacier View, G.H.<br />
*898-955 1. 22TFN<br />
0cIc0c0cIIIcc0cIcccc00000000-00-0-<br />
Place an AD here!<br />
Call<br />
The Squamish Chief<br />
892-9161<br />
Supports research,<br />
prevention-awareness<br />
programs, and help for<br />
cancer patients and their<br />
families through work<br />
done by the B.C. Cancer<br />
Agency, the B.C. Cancer<br />
Foundation, and the<br />
1-11 penrberton Ave<br />
892.3673<br />
'88 Suruki Samurai 4x4<br />
Hard & Soft Tops<br />
Excellent Cond.<br />
Stk. #UC7420.<br />
Fun for only $4850<br />
'89 Hyundai Sonata<br />
One owner.<br />
Well maintained.<br />
Sale Price $5,700.<br />
Stk. #UT2872<br />
'95 Windstar - Air amffm<br />
w/cass. Plus more!<br />
Huny on this!<br />
$18,750 One Only!<br />
Stk.# UT7920<br />
3-3506. 30 Society. Please include '93MW-4WD,<br />
~c-~0-0cIII~cccIcIcICCCCIICCICC<br />
34 PONTIAC<br />
nrunner. White<br />
:erior/grey interior;<br />
A/FM cassette player,<br />
,000 kms., factory war-<br />
ity, soft top. Great for<br />
nmer. Exc. cond.<br />
!,500. Call (604)<br />
3-3077. 31<br />
.C-CICCCC00~0~CICCI-)CICCICCCII<br />
37 AUDI 5000 Quattro,<br />
j,000 kms., fully loaded,<br />
e cond. $6500 OBO.<br />
j-1650 eves. 3Occw<br />
.0~0CCCCI0CICICC~0CC0~000000~--<br />
10 NISSAN Micra. 2 dr<br />
1. Good cond., well<br />
intained. Asking<br />
850.00. A great buy.<br />
:. 2nd car. Phone 892-<br />
IO. 30<br />
--ccccccc~c~0ccccc~c000~000000<br />
FORD Mustang Cobra<br />
loss 302 V-8, auto., low<br />
es, res tored, collectable,<br />
t offer 898-3812. 30<br />
16 MUSTANG convert0<br />
I, red on red, rebuilt 6<br />
engine, clean and<br />
linal. $1 1,000 obo 892-<br />
12. 30<br />
18 CORSICA car,<br />
1,772 kms. good cond.,<br />
/ tire, new brakes,<br />
rything 0.k. 892-6394.<br />
24' FIBERGLASS Sailboat<br />
- sleeps 6. stand-up Galley<br />
& Head, alcohol stove, ice<br />
box, $7,500 obo. Will trade<br />
for vehicle, 892-3938.<br />
28TFN<br />
~ccccccIcccccccIcIc0CIIICICIICCCCI<br />
name of deceased,<br />
name/address of next of<br />
kin and name/address of<br />
donor for tax receipt.<br />
VlSAjMC accepted.<br />
LastChanceForGreatDeals 1 P.O. Box 2213<br />
Deadline July 3 le<br />
OPEN TUESDAY TO SUNDAY 1105<br />
38490 Buckley Ave. (next to high school)<br />
692#9199<br />
Squamish, BC<br />
VON 3G0<br />
1 -800-663-2524<br />
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7 pass., sunroof,<br />
air, fulty loaded. $21,600<br />
stk. MI879<br />
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s leather interior. You<br />
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'95, F250 4x4 reg cab ~<br />
Air, tilt, cruise, cass.,<br />
5 spd. Hurry on this<br />
one! Only $21,980<br />
Stk. #UT7376<br />
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I $7.00 minimum for 20 words or 1088. 2S# pmr word thereafter. Doadline Friday noon. NQ exceptions.<br />
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I 381 13 2nd Ave., Box 3500 Squamish B.C., VON 3G0 Telphone: (604) 892-9161 FAX: (604) 892-8483<br />
1<br />
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,-&%”l.h,-.’: ,.. . .<br />
.- -<br />
. . - . .. . . - .. . . -. . . _. . . .. . . . .___ . . .<br />
Network Classifieds 47’<br />
COMMUNITY NEWSPAPERS<br />
A S S O C I A T I O N for25words To place an ad call<br />
British Columbia and YM&OH<br />
These ads appear in approximately 100<br />
community newspapers in B.C.and Yukon<br />
and reach more than 3 million readers.<br />
$275<br />
.~<br />
$6.00 each this paper or the BCY-<br />
additional word CNA at (604) 669-9222<br />
AUCTIONS B U S I N E S S EDUCATION HELP WANTED PERSONALS<br />
UNRESERVED REAL<br />
Estate auction, subject to<br />
bank discharge, Calgary,<br />
July 30/96, 4p.m. Industrial,<br />
retail bays, office condo-<br />
miniums, 2.56 acres indus-<br />
trial land. Call: Regal<br />
Auctions 1-403-250-8333. -<br />
AUTO<br />
F250 4X4’s, Explorers,<br />
Jeeps, Diesels. All makes,<br />
all models, lease, returns,<br />
trades. 0-Down, good fi-<br />
nancing. Free delivery.<br />
Phone for free approval ask<br />
for Grant 1-800-993-3673.<br />
NEW OR Used Car or<br />
Truck all make lease!!<br />
Payments from $199<br />
O.A.C. 0 down, no credit,<br />
bad credit, We deliver. For<br />
pre-approval 1-604-880-<br />
41 27 collect.<br />
BUSINESS<br />
OPPORTUNITIES<br />
GOVERNMENT FUNDS.<br />
Government assistance<br />
programs information available.<br />
For your new or existing<br />
business. Take advantage<br />
of the government<br />
grants and loans. Call 1-<br />
800-505-8866.<br />
PRESIDENT/OWNER<br />
$30M firm 1994. Now making<br />
others wealthy. Invest<br />
under $200. (604)951-<br />
2524, 1-800-434-43 1 7.<br />
$1 50,00O/YR POTENTIAL<br />
as information broker.<br />
Canada’s fastest growing<br />
franchise now available in<br />
B.C. Home based. Full<br />
training & support.<br />
Investment required.<br />
Limited territories. 1-800-<br />
763-5627.<br />
KWIK KERB - Own your<br />
own business. Part-time or<br />
full-time. Installing on-site,<br />
continuous concrete, land-<br />
scape edging, total equip-<br />
ment, proven system, train-<br />
- ing. 1 -800-667-KERB.<br />
BAKERYZAFE in northern<br />
British Columbia. Sales<br />
$300,000. Business and<br />
equipment $1 18,000.<br />
Building negotiable. Owner<br />
willing to carry some financ-<br />
ing. Video available. Please<br />
fax: (604)788-3192.<br />
OPPORTUNlTiES<br />
EARN UP To $8,400. a<br />
week on the internet! New<br />
company set up to take advantage<br />
of the explosive<br />
growth on the world wide<br />
web. Don’t miss out! John<br />
Sims, lD#827648166,<br />
h ttp ://ww w . so f tpage .corn .<br />
jesims @ mars.ark.com or<br />
Phone; (604)339-7829.<br />
WOOD-MIZER Canada<br />
now offers financing on the<br />
world’s most popular<br />
Portable Band Sawmills,<br />
over 15,000 world-wide!<br />
Money- bac k guarantee.<br />
Phone: (604)833-7 944<br />
Salmon Arm, B.C.<br />
BUSINESS OPPORTUNI-<br />
TY; For Sale 50% working<br />
share of well established<br />
Cabaret Nightclub in affluent<br />
Vancouver suburb.<br />
Small investment required.<br />
Reply: Investor, 501 -68<br />
Water St., Vancouver. V66<br />
1 A4.<br />
BUSINESS PERSONALS<br />
GENTS - DISCREET Adult<br />
entertainment by mailorder:<br />
personal photos, fantasies,<br />
videos: Call toll-free<br />
1 -800-93-KAREN or write:<br />
Karen, Box 670-GB,<br />
Kelowna, B.C. V1Y 7P2.<br />
11 9-t).<br />
SIZZLING! EXCITING! Live<br />
1 on 1. Beautiful girls ready<br />
to talk to you! Call Now!<br />
Only $1,99/minute. 1-800-<br />
9705558, 1-900-451 -61 15.<br />
01 1-995-328-624.<br />
COMPUTERS<br />
NEW PENT Class.<br />
Internet ready full multimedia<br />
including monitor 2 year<br />
warranty. $1,699 or $60.<br />
per month O.A.C.<br />
(604)734-7377 or Toll-free<br />
1-800-471 -1 131.<br />
EDUCATION<br />
COUNSELLOR TRAINING<br />
Institute of Vancouver offers<br />
correspmdence courses<br />
for the Diploma in<br />
Counselling Practise beginning<br />
this month. For a<br />
brochure phone Toll-free 1 -<br />
800-665-7044.<br />
A NEW Career? Trained<br />
apa rt me n t/condomini urn<br />
managers needed - all<br />
areas. We can train you<br />
right now! Free job placement<br />
assistance. For information/brochure<br />
call 681 -<br />
5456, 1-800-665-8339.<br />
BE A Successful<br />
Writer ... write for money and<br />
pleasure with our unique<br />
home-study course. You<br />
get individual tuition from<br />
professional writers on all<br />
aspects of writing-romances,<br />
short stories, radio<br />
and TV scripts, articles and<br />
children’s stories. Send<br />
today for our Free Book.<br />
Toll-free 1-800-267- 1829,<br />
Fax: 1-61 3-749-9551. The<br />
Writing School, 38<br />
McArthur Ave., Suite 2587,<br />
Ottawa, ON, K1L 6R2.<br />
HELI-LOGGING - TRAIN<br />
for an exciting, high paying<br />
career in the forest industry!<br />
Helicopter logging<br />
ground crew training school<br />
now offering comprehensive<br />
4-6 week program. For<br />
information call (604)897-<br />
1188.<br />
AUTO MECHANICS in<br />
Powell River September<br />
1996, Small classes. It’s<br />
not too late to apply.<br />
Ma I asp in a U n i ve rs i t y-<br />
College. Call (6041485-<br />
2878 or (604)485-5818 for<br />
more information.<br />
FINANCIAL SERVICES<br />
CONSOLIDATE ONE easy<br />
payment. No more stress.<br />
No equity-security, good or<br />
bad credit. Immediate approval,<br />
immediate relief.<br />
National Credit Counsellors<br />
of Canada 737-8285, 951-<br />
1073, 1-888-777-0747.<br />
Licensed & bonded.<br />
FOR SALE MISC.<br />
SAWMILL $4895. SAW<br />
logs into boards, planks,<br />
beams. Large capacity.<br />
Best sawmill value anywhere.<br />
Free information 1-<br />
800-566-6899. Norwood<br />
Sawmills, RR2 Kilworthy,<br />
Ont. POE 1GO.<br />
PELLET STOVES. Buy factory<br />
direct! Save money!<br />
Canada’s best seller.<br />
Enviro-fire freestanding or<br />
insert. 99% efficient, no<br />
smoke, no chimney required.<br />
For products/dealer<br />
1-800-667-6667.<br />
HELP WANTED<br />
CONTRACT A.M.E. required<br />
immediately. Must<br />
be endorsed on Bell 212<br />
and Bell 206 helicopters.<br />
Fax resume to: Director of<br />
Maintenance (604)485-<br />
6656.<br />
BUSINESS AGENT<br />
Required. The Cariboo<br />
Wood w o r ke rS Association<br />
in 100 Mile House is looking<br />
for a full-time business<br />
agent. The successful applicant<br />
will be familiar with<br />
W.C.B., Labour Law, arbitration,<br />
contract negotiations<br />
and mediation. For<br />
particulars Fax: 1-604-826-<br />
9025.<br />
KAMLOOPS CHRYSLER<br />
Jeep Dealer requires<br />
Journeyman Technician<br />
with fuel electrical experience.<br />
Top pay, full benefits<br />
pension plan. Moving allowance<br />
available. Jino<br />
/604)374-4477.<br />
LEGAL SERVICES<br />
MAJOR ICBC Injury<br />
Claims. Contesting wills<br />
and estates. Joel A. Wener,<br />
trial lawyer for 28 years.<br />
Call free 1-800-665-1 138.<br />
Contingency fees. Simon,<br />
Wener & Adler.<br />
MUSIC<br />
GUITAR STRINGS<br />
Wholesale. Great prices.<br />
Bass ML, 3 sets-$30.<br />
Acoustic mediums or lights,<br />
6 sets-$30. Electric 9’s or<br />
IO’S, 6 sets-$30. Call: 1-<br />
800-SLED DOG. Bonus<br />
pack with order. Money<br />
back guarantee. Sled Dog<br />
Music, A Canadian<br />
Catalogue.<br />
PERSONALS<br />
HEAVENLY PSYCHIC<br />
Answers. Serving over 50<br />
million readers and multitalented<br />
psychics. Free astrochart<br />
with your first reading!<br />
Relationships, Future,<br />
Career. $2.99/min 18+ 24<br />
hours. 1-900-451 -3783.<br />
CLAIRVOYANT PSY-<br />
CHICS! Master the power<br />
to choose your future.<br />
Truthful, accurate answers<br />
by authentic psychics.<br />
Problems solved, destiny<br />
awaits. 1-900-451 -3778,<br />
24hrs. 18+ $2.99/rnin.<br />
I.C.C.<br />
MONDON VIDEO. The<br />
best in adult entertainment.<br />
Discreet delivery. Call tollfree<br />
for a list of titles Mon-<br />
Sat 12p.m.-12a.m. 1-888-<br />
231-8888. Must be 18+ to<br />
order.<br />
DO YOU need someone to<br />
share your time? Outdoor<br />
sports, romantic evenings,<br />
friendship, companionship.<br />
Fran can help! The Swan<br />
and The Rose<br />
Matchmakers Ltd., 1-800-<br />
266-88 1 8.<br />
20/20 WITHOUT GLASS-<br />
ES! Safe, rapid, non-surgical,<br />
permanent restoration<br />
in 6-8 weeks. Airline pilot<br />
developed, doctor approved,<br />
Free information by<br />
mail: 1-406-961-5570,<br />
Ext.404. Fax: 1-406-961 -<br />
5577. http://www.visionf reedorn.com<br />
Satisfaction guaranteed.<br />
CANADA’S MOST Gifted<br />
psychics have answers to<br />
your problems or questions<br />
about health, love, relationships,<br />
money, lucky numbers.<br />
$3.49/minute. 18-t.<br />
24hours. 1-900-451 -4336.<br />
REAL ESTATE<br />
KELOWNA I ON Sale and<br />
the price is right!<br />
Exceptional buys on<br />
I ots/con dos/tow n ho uses/<br />
residential/business/lakefront.<br />
Call Donna or Guy,<br />
Realty Executives. Toll-free<br />
1-800-943-1 81 8.<br />
STEEL BUILDINGS<br />
STEEL BUILDINGS:<br />
“ C h e a p e r T h a n W o o d ” .<br />
Quonset-Straightwall quon-<br />
set, Structural Steel<br />
Buildings. B.C. Company,<br />
we won’t be undersold.<br />
Service and satisfaction<br />
guaranteed! Western Steel<br />
Buildings 1 -800-565-9800.<br />
STEEL ROOFING &<br />
Siding: Warehouse “Direct”<br />
Clearance; First Quality 3 6<br />
wide, 29 gauge, Painted<br />
and Galvanized panels;<br />
‘Seconds’ 47@ p.s.f. All<br />
building accessories avail-<br />
able. Metalmart (604)769-<br />
6967.<br />
from local schools *<br />
Program + access to<br />
recreational prograrr<br />
Full-time/Part-time a<br />
*Drop-in (3-5 years<br />
Call 898-2399. TFN<br />
.C,CCCCIC00CI-C.~CC00.c0.<br />
TINY FLOW<br />
CHILDREN’S CE<br />
Licensed Quality C<br />
Preschool Progrz<br />
* Has openings f/t,<br />
drop in.<br />
* Age 2 112 - 5<br />
* Kindergarten Droi<br />
Pick-up.<br />
* E.C.E. & First A<br />
qualified staff.<br />
38357 Buckley A<br />
892-5566. TFF<br />
IN MEMORY of Bar<br />
Hill - our mother, OL<br />
grandma, our sister, c<br />
daughter, our friend.<br />
year ago).Just when h<br />
seemed hghtest . ,]ut 1<br />
her hopes seemed best,<br />
called her from amongs<br />
her eternal rest. Sadly<br />
but God knows best. \J<br />
Love you Mom. Suzai<br />
Darren, Amber, Ebon<br />
Diane, Cliff, Johnnie,<br />
Family, many friends.<br />
cc.ccc~00cI~0ccI0c~cc00.0.<br />
IN MEMORY of Johr<br />
- our father. Rest in pt<br />
dear lowing father. Six l<br />
years have passed away<br />
are gone ,but still are lic<br />
the hearts of those who<br />
We Love you Dad.<br />
Suzanne, Diane, John<br />
30<br />
BURROUGHS - Sha.<br />
passed away peaceful1<br />
her home in Squamisk<br />
July 7th, 1996, after a<br />
courageous fight with<br />
cancer. She is survivec<br />
her loving husband,<br />
Donald, her mother, h<br />
(Doug) Caldwell of TI<br />
Mile Plains, Nova SCC<br />
two brothers, Douglas<br />
MacDonald, Newport,<br />
Nova Scotia, and Bill<br />
MacDonald, of Falmou<br />
Nova Scotia. She is ak<br />
survived by two sisters,<br />
Janet Clare of Tmro, h<br />
Scotia, and Joyce (Bill:<br />
Penie of Langley, B.C.<br />
She was predeceased by<br />
father, William, two sis<br />
Barbara Ann, and Kat1<br />
and a brother, Donald<br />
Ainsley. Memorial ser;‘<br />
was held at the Squami<br />
Funeral Chapel on July<br />
13th, 1996, with the<br />
Reverend John Stephe1<br />
officiating. If you wish,<br />
lieu of flowers, donatio1<br />
can be made to the<br />
Canadian Cancer Socie<br />
30<br />
& c *e c0 . 0 0 0 0 0 0 -<br />
0 0 c L e 4CC &. 0 0 44’<br />
quir<br />
iders<br />
i70<br />
mco<br />
1 or I<br />
#LA<br />
-<br />
I-<br />
I S<br />
who 1<br />
Plan<br />
A cor<br />
develc<br />
staff a<br />
develc<br />
partici<br />
organi<br />
If you<br />
2nd in<br />
Nork i<br />
-<br />
-orwar<br />
E<br />
-
‘ d Y GIANT<br />
Id group dayc<br />
pinceNov. :<br />
vic Center. L<br />
o 5 years - 0<br />
irst Aid Qua<br />
tructured Prc<br />
brgarten picki<br />
il schools * S<br />
+ access to o<br />
la1 programs,<br />
/Part-time -<br />
(3-5 years 01<br />
,2399. TFN<br />
c ~ - ~ c I ~ c ~ c # ~ c ~ 0 ’<br />
JY FLOWEI<br />
REN’S CEN<br />
Quality Da<br />
:hool Prograr<br />
ipenings f/t,<br />
drop in.<br />
;e 2 112 - 5 y~<br />
-garten Drop-<br />
Pick-up.<br />
:.E. & First A<br />
ialified staff.<br />
7 Buckley Av<br />
2-5566. TFN<br />
ORY of Barb<br />
ir mother, our<br />
l our sister, ou<br />
~ our friend. ((<br />
.Just when he?<br />
ightest . ,Just w<br />
seemed best, (<br />
fiorn amongst<br />
11 rest. Sadly n-<br />
mows best. W<br />
I Mom. Suzan<br />
hber, Ebony<br />
liff, Johnnie,<br />
zany friends. 1<br />
.IC#-CIC-dcC/CC--<br />
ORY of John<br />
rer. Rest in pe(<br />
lg father. Six lo<br />
e passed away.<br />
,but still are liw<br />
ofthose who s<br />
you Dad.<br />
Diane, J ohnr<br />
UGHS - Shari<br />
vay peaceful11<br />
e in Squamish<br />
1996, after a<br />
ws fight with<br />
he is survived<br />
ig husband,<br />
her mother, M<br />
Zaldwell of Th<br />
ins, Nova Scot<br />
hers, Douglas<br />
ald, N ewport,<br />
otia, and Bill<br />
ald, of Falmou<br />
otia. She is als<br />
by two sisters,<br />
are of Truro, N<br />
nd Joyce (Bill)<br />
Langley, B.C.<br />
predeceased by<br />
Iilliam, two sis<br />
Ann, and Kath<br />
Ither, Donald<br />
Memorial serili<br />
at the Squami<br />
Zhapel on J dy<br />
96, with the<br />
d John Stephefi<br />
kg. If you wish,<br />
owers, donatiof<br />
lade to the<br />
n Cancer So&<br />
claims that have been 1989 ASTRO Van for sale.<br />
received. As well as 1979<br />
3TICE TO ALL . Frank Robert Haar Oldsmobile. Call 898-9664<br />
tEDITORS AND Administrator after 6 p.m. 31<br />
rHERS<br />
MUNRO & --0-.~.~---0c#-cC--c~~0-.-~--~-0--<br />
ITICE is hereby given CRAWFORD FOR Sale - Honda Civic<br />
Barristers &I Solicitors. 33<br />
it creditors and others Sedan. 1986 4 dr.,<br />
ving claims against the<br />
ate of Mary Josephine<br />
hofield a.k.a. Mitzi J<br />
nofield, late of 38059 5th<br />
enue, Squamish, British<br />
Ilumbia, who died on the<br />
:h day of June, 1996, are<br />
pired to send full partic-<br />
rs of such claims to the<br />
dersigned Adrninis trator,<br />
nk Robert Haar c/o<br />
70 Yew Street,<br />
ncouver, B.C. V6M 3Y3,<br />
or before the 3rd day of<br />
mmber, 1996, after<br />
ich date the estate’s<br />
:ts will be distributed,<br />
ring regard only to<br />
PLEASE NOTE: Too late<br />
to classify ads are accepted<br />
only after 12:OO p.m. and<br />
before 5 p.m. Friday at the<br />
rate of $7.00 for 20 words<br />
or less, and 2% for each<br />
additional word. They are<br />
accepted on a first come<br />
first served basis, and are<br />
printed only if space per,<br />
mits. The Squamish Chief<br />
cannot be responsible for<br />
errors or omissions as<br />
these ads may not be proof<br />
read because of time<br />
constraint.<br />
NAVE A LOOK AT THIS PROPERTY<br />
It’s on 2 large lots in the Dentville area. The home has been<br />
rery well cared for with a new roof 4 yeats ago, a near new gas<br />
mce, hardwood floor in the living room, and new carpeting<br />
n the hall & bedrooms. There is a 6 k hgh basement under<br />
ideal for workshop and/or storage.<br />
1/3 of the house 0<br />
38744 Britannia Avenue $229,900<br />
’ALL I/ DAN SULLIVAN<br />
FOR MORE DETAILS<br />
)JR 892-5924 (24 hm)<br />
BLACK TUSK REALTY<br />
gold. Good cond.,<br />
$3,000.00 obo. Trek Mnt.<br />
bike $250.00 obo,<br />
898-4007. 30<br />
-0-----00~0-#~~-d--0-0-00.--0-.-d-<br />
GARAGE Sale Sat., July<br />
27, 10 4, 40309 Diamond<br />
Head Rd. Toys, clothes,<br />
furniture, dhl. size mattress<br />
0 $25, bunk beds with 2<br />
mattressess 0 $175. 30<br />
OrOl-~CrC--C-CI-OCOCd-~Ol.-.~~~~.l<br />
FREE - Lovable 1 112 ycwr<br />
old neutered inale cat,<br />
needs loving home. Great<br />
with kids, 898-4000. 3011<br />
THE SQUAMISH CIilEF<br />
FLIGHT TRAINING A 4<br />
All Licenses & Ratings<br />
Private Pilot Ground School<br />
-starts Aug 06 until Oct 10-<br />
Top row from left to right: Kathleen Winstaniey,<br />
Carol Mahedx Dianne Patterson (Manager)<br />
Bottom Row: Paulette Twiss and Carolynn Thomas<br />
Squarnish Insurance would like to invite you to<br />
visit or call one of our insurance<br />
representatives to discuss your insurance needs.<br />
HOURS<br />
Mon. to Wed. 9 a.m. - 6 pm.<br />
Thurs. to Fri.<br />
9 a.m. - 8 p.m.<br />
8984Q88<br />
Located in thc<br />
Saturday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Highlands Mal1<br />
1<br />
4<br />
Steerin<br />
Committee<br />
The District of Squamish is now accepting names of persons<br />
who wish to Volunteer their service on a Squarnish Tourism Marketing<br />
Plan and Strategy Steering Committee.<br />
A consulting group has been retained by the District of Squamish to<br />
develop a Tourism Marketing Plan and Strategy. Working with Council,<br />
staff and the Consultant, this Committee will play an important role in the<br />
development of a tourism market evaluation system. We are<br />
particularly interested in representatives from industry and community<br />
organizations involved in tourism.<br />
If you are interested, forward a brief resume outlining your background<br />
and interest in tourism. Please include your mailing address and both<br />
work and home phone number.<br />
Forward your application to : Ms. Myma MacRae<br />
District of Squamish<br />
P,O. Box 310<br />
Squamish, BC<br />
VON 3GQ<br />
Applications will be accepted until 4:30 pm, Wednesday,<br />
July 31 1996.<br />
Advisory Planning Commission<br />
The District of Squamish is now acceptin$<br />
names of eligible persons who wish to volunteer their<br />
services on the Advisory Planning Commission, The<br />
existing openings are for three year terms. The Advisory<br />
Planning Commission advises Council on all matters<br />
respecting land use, community planning or proposed<br />
bylaws and permits that are referred to it by the Council.<br />
If you are interested, forward a brief resume<br />
outlining your community interests in recreational and<br />
social areas. Please include your mailing address and<br />
both work and home phone number. An information<br />
package on the Commission is available at the Municipal<br />
Hall.<br />
Forward your application to :<br />
Ms. Myma MacRae<br />
District of Squamish<br />
P.0. Box 310<br />
Squamish, BC<br />
VON 3G0<br />
Applications will be accepted until 430 pm,<br />
Wednesday, July 31 1996.<br />
II<br />
JULY 23, 1990 39<br />
rr i<br />
TO ADVERTISE<br />
YQUR LISTINGS<br />
AND<br />
QPEN HOUSE<br />
LISTINGS .....<br />
892H9 16 II<br />
Calk Todky!<br />
Attention Prosram<br />
Instruct orsr Hobbyists<br />
and those whs have.<br />
Fail Program proposals<br />
Contract ,jnstruetar<br />
Opportunity<br />
The Squamish Parks &<br />
Recreation Dept. is looking fur a<br />
Babysitter Trainer to teach the Red<br />
Cross Babysitter Training, Fall Program I<br />
Qualifications for this contract position<br />
include Standard Firsf Aid Certificate,<br />
C.ER. Level 1. Applicants must have<br />
0xprisnce working with children,
Prime Downtown Waterfront Residences<br />
1215 Saturday, July 27<br />
10-5 Sunday, July 28<br />
Come on an escorted tour showing the integrity and quality<br />
of one of the best ever built residential buildings in Squamish!<br />
See for yourself our fire suppression system, sound proofing that<br />
exceeds all building codes and the all over construction quality<br />
of this prime location.<br />
DRSPLAY SUITE OPEN 12-5 EVERY DAY<br />
Walk through our filly furnished display home,<br />
see the finishing choices available dY exactly what you are getting!<br />
Take possession starting October, 1996<br />
Prices start at $119,000<br />
we haw the lowest price per sq. ft. in Squurnish &? the Lower Mainland!<br />
Your deposit money is held in trust and interest is accrued to you!<br />
SENIORS PACKAGE AVAILABLE THROUGH DEVELOPERS AGENT ONLY.<br />
We accept subject to sale offers. 5 Year National Home Warranty 5% Down Payment<br />
For more information call<br />
Deidre Weinstein or George Mearce<br />
892,BOAT (2628)<br />
loaning<br />
rniqu<br />
rt Po1<br />
ark ink<br />
low yc<br />
\e und<br />
age 3