rAGE 2, THE HERALD, Thursday. August 18, 1977

Ph. 635-6357

Terrace notes

Mr, and Mra, Andy Lambert of Terrace attended
the loggers competition in Grande Prairie, Alberta,
recently. Andy was 28 competitor..

He placed in the finals in six events. ° At ‘the

competition were loggers from the U.S. and all
rin Prince Geors f the Day:
ince George, Andy won Logger of the Day in
the iahermediate division. Congratulations to you,
iy.

al

- p_In another logging competition, this time in

' Prince George, Nick Palagian of Terrace placed
third in the Canadian championship obstacle pole.
Nick was accompanied to Prince George by his
wife and daughter, Sharalyn.

Another congratulations to you, Nick.

JoAnne Ames, once with the Herald but most

recently the student placement officer at Terrace’'s
Manpower office (now renamed the Canadian
Employment Centre) is off to complete her degree
at the University of British Columbia. JoAnne is:
taking a brief holiday before classes resume in
September.
She is in her senior year of a theatre program

leading to a Bachelor of Arts degree.

Just returned from travels with her mother down
_ south is four-year-old Marie-Eve Giroux. .

Joe Young is back in town after putting in a
“work week” with the Fed Up Food Co-operative in
Vancouver. Joe’s a member of the local Northern
Neighbours food.co-op and, as part. of the qo-
operative spirit, he was helping assemble
wholesale orders at the provincial organizational

Don’t forget. Just as Terrace is celebrating its

0th anniversary, so too are Emil and Bertha

Haugland. They've invited all their friends to an

'gpen houke this Sunday, from two to five p.m., at:

the Elks Hall. It should be an enjoyable afternoon,
Congratulations Emil and Bertha...and ‘thanks

for your contributions to Terrace over all these

years. ,

a

Dave Morton, ICBC’s claims supervisor for this
area, has had a couple of visitors these past few
days. Rick Olding, a mainstay of the en-
vironmental movement in Prince Rupert - he’s with
Save Our Shores - was in Terrace and stayed with
Dave out on Braun's Island.

Another
researching sites of old Hudson’s Bay trading posts
in B.C. She's been doing research here into the site
at Kitselas. Carol's working for the provincial
archaeology department.

Wedding bells will ring August 27 in Terrace for.

Rod Toovey, formerly of the city but now living in
Tahais, on Vancouver Island. Rod and fiancee
Debbie Parker, also of Tahsis, are staying with
Alvin and Doreen Toovey of Thornhill.

Relatives in for the wedding include Oliver
‘Desaultel and his family, from Alberta, and the
groom's grandmother, Belma Carlson of Regina,

t

e .

. Rae Nickolichuk, only 13 years old but already a
competitive swimmer, swam Lakelse Lake on
Sunday, August 14. The Prince Rupert Jad is the
son of the former Leslie Gravelle of Terrace.

Here’s a flash that we’ll be checking into more
thoroughly later. It seems that good ol’ Terrace
still holds the record for the largest salmon caught.

Recent reports of a 94-pound ‘‘King’’ salmon |

(that’s 4 spring in these parts) caught in Alaska
were a bit off the mark, our sources report. In fact,
the salmon “only” weighted in at 91 pounds, one
less than the 1959 world record holder caught, as
they tel] us on the menus in the Terrace Hotel, just
four miles from town in the Skeena.
‘ Another fishstory. Oh well, at least the Terrace
Hotel won't have to change its menus.

Talking about the Terrace, the hotel’s manager,
Augie and Lenora Geeraert have expressed their
thanks to their staff for the fine contribution they
made to the recent anniversary celebrations.

guest has been Carol Clark, at present |

Paes UN

tata e ae a”

STRATFORD, Ont. CP -
Martha Henry and Alan
Searfe, the reluctant levers
in the classic story of
Beatrice and Benedick in
Shakespeare’s Much Ado

ovation when the eighth
production of this Stratford
Festival season opened
Tuesday night.

Marigold Charlesworth of
Onttawa, the first woman to
direct a mainstage
production in the 26-year

Crowd in

_ Setting

_century
About Nothing, drew an Shak

history of the festival, gave
the play a straight , no-
nonsense interpretation,
it with Brian
Jackson’s designs in 17th
Italy. - as
espeare wrote it, .

And while Miss Henry and
Scarfe are veterans of many
productions on the Stratford
stages here, what sent
members of the audience at
this production scurrying to
look up naines in their

Oil drilling is
big business

EDMONTON (CP) — A
new United States company
will shortly begin
manufacturing drilling-mud
additives based on formulae
developed .by the Alberta
Research Council.

The company is T.I.M.
Corp. of Houston, Tex.,

which was set wp
specifically by Dale,
DeLong, -cOmpany

president, to manufacture

and sell humic acids com-

ounded by Dr.'S. E.
oschopedis, a scientist in

the fuel sciences division of

the research council. The
plant will be at Glenrock,
Wyo,

Oil-drilling companies use.
mud, which, among other.

things, acts as a lubricant

‘ for the drill bit, holds down

hydrocarbons encountered
in the well and carries u
rticles of materials whic.
indicate the type of
formation in which the rig is

illing.

The mixing of various
additives in the. mud, or
drilling fluid, has become an
exacting science as drilling

gets deepér, moves into ,
ontier areas and faces’
‘ tougher environmental-
- . protection requirements.

. Moschopedis said in an

’ interview that in deep wells,

one of the major additives
has been chrome, which
counteracts the effects of
heat on the drilling fluids’
flow characteristics.
However, because of its
toxic nature, éhrome has
been rejected in the United
States and in areas such as
the North Sea.

The three humic acid for-
mulae developed by

Moschopedis offer a
chrome-free alternative,
DeLong said. oo
The Moschopedis work
was patented and DeLoi
came across it in .th
Canada Patents office in
Ottawa about three years
ago. In September, 1975, he
signed an agreement to

manufacture and sell the

products. .

Attempts were maile to

raise investment capital in
Canada, with a
establishing a plant in
Alberta. However, the
equity was eventyally put u
by a group in Houston an
the decision was made to
manufacture in Wyoming

when .a plant became .

available there.

VANCOUVER (CP) —

The first academic con-
ference on monsters will be
held. at the University of
British: Columbia in May
next year and all. sessions

will.be open to the public. _

mate, Museum re An-
says the con-
ference “entitled Sasquatch
and Similar Phenomena,
will concentrate on
presenting evidence
currently available on
legendary creature of the
Pacific Northwest, known in
the United States as Bigfoot.
“The purpose of fhe

conference is not to prove or _
disprove the physical reality —

acta

“
FA ;

s

cs

secant

es

strangers.

ont

evil-minded?’

vatetatetatalatate'

make them “evil-minded."

Pe faPaLnhehac ace Bee Teenete cance te sarerataitlatelatatetelatateteteeeee

- He had no tags, but I di
ae him to the yet.

Ssasiietcanenerenem eee neninnninnnnmure ree acum netennaantl tity

. By Abigail Van Buren

© 807? by The Chicago Trinune-N.Y.News Synd. Inc.

’
3

ABBY: My husband has been interested in nudiem‘for
some time, and has tried to get me to go to 4 nudist ‘an
with him. 1 have nothing against nudist camps, but I’m’ -
just not the type who could strip.down naked in front of

We've had many arguments about this, and have even
come close to getting a divorce over it. I don’t sea how
normal people can go to a place like that without getting a
few “evil” thoughts. Am I wrong to think this way, or am J

Do you think a man who really loved his wife would want
her to go naked in front of other men? :

" MODEST

DEAR MODEST: Our attitudes about nudity are based
on our early training, acquired inhibitions and the accented
social customs of society. Some people go in for
unconventional behavior,. hut that doesn’t necessarily

[believe everything has ita place —including the fig leaf.

DEAR ABBY: Ididn't sleep a wink last night. Yesterday
while driving a well-traveled street, I felt a sudden thump,
and I knew I hit something. I stopped abruptly, nearly
causing an accident, and discovere
beautiful golden cocker spaniel puppy. .
"t want to waste precious time
FH trying to find his owner, so I put him in my car and rushed

that [ had struck a

# Unfortunately, the puppy had suffered a broken neck

anda severed spine and he died shortly after reaching the

RH vet's,

3 He was such a beautful dog, it nearly broke my heart.

dicates Much

Ad

HERALD »

Lifestyles

oa

ew to ©

-this issue,” a museum

-and ajzupresentations of

‘ Algonquin

SIS SOU a CLR EOCENE A

Abby..

programs was the.
emergence of newcomers to.
leading roles. Oo
Robert Benson, now in his
third season m
minor: parts to his credit,
played the leading role of

Messina,

aes

plants and

MARSH DELICACIES — Many of the
. animals found in marshes, streams or lakes provide
a readily available source of emergency food. For
example, the legs of the leopart frog (A}, though —
ie]

small, are a gourret’s delight. Crayfish (B} turn.
red like a lobster when beiled, their tails areeasily
shelled and.de-veined, and taste similar to ocean
crab, The starchy roots of the bulrush : (Scirpus
acutus) {C) can be roasted and eaten, and the seeds
of the yellow pondiily (Nuphar spp.) (D) can be
removed from the pod and eaten raw or popped
like popcorn, os ”

” Ducks Unlimited (Canada)

19 = "77

statement exsifically
adequate resolution of this
question is not yet
available.” — .
Instead, the museum
says, the conference will
concentrate on the ype of
evidence that is avaiable—
“modern Canadian beliefs” generated.
. Scholarly
monsters. . presented wi
Although the Sasquaich |
will be the main focus of the
conference, the visiting‘
scholars will also examine
other monsters such as the
cannibal Wiitiko of the
Indians, were-

Sasquatch
Alaskan Hairy
Monsters in Canada.

wee

DEAR ABBY: Wherever someone writes and asks what
they should do about a friend who has bad breath or body
odor, you always.say, “It would be a kindness to TELL the
person.” — Bo

Well, I know a woman whose breath was so bad she lost
three husbands.

I told her once that she needed a good strong
mouthwash, and she never: spoke to me again. ;

P.S, I sure didn’t miss her.
CO TABOO SUBJECT |

CONFIDENTIAL TO SEPTEMBER BRIDE: If you are
concerned only with what you will get out of marriage,
your marriage will fail. You.may never be divorced, but
your marriage will fail nevertheless.- ‘

DEAR ABBY; My boyfriend's parents are celabrating
their golden wedding anniversary this month, and haye
planned a big bash at a very fancy country club.

They say it’s only family and close friends, and you
guessed it—I'm not invited! I have lived with thelr eon for
three years, and if that doeen’t:make me “family,” I don't
know what does. . :

Teould marry him if I wanted to, but if I did I would losa
the alimony I'm getting from my last husband, and also tha

- child support from my kids’ father. (My second husband.) I

also think niarriage is very old-fashioned today.
Everybody in town, including my boyfriend’s parenta,’
knows that we have been living together, so why shouldn't
my kids and I be invited. .
I hear that my boyfriend's ex-wife and her kids will be
there. ask you, ig that fair? I think it’s rotten for his folks — -
to treat me this way. Am J] wrong? . ow
LEFT OUT - |

Leonato, governor of

with the dignity
and assurance of Stratford’s .
leading star, William Hutt.
-, Paul Batten, also in his
third year, proved his

H

award-winning worth. as
Claudio, a young Florentine
lord and one of the prin-
cipala in the two love
couples.’ It was only two
years ago that he won the
Jean A. Chalmers Ap-
prénticeship Award.

And Nennifer Dale, fresh
out of the National Theatre
School in Montreal this

t, was a winsome Hero,
nato’s daughter an
dio’s beloved.

ank Maraden was the
Don John, and Barry
Gregor the constable,
berry, who takes it as a
compliment when he is

“called an ass.

Miss: Charlesworth,

director. of numberous

productions in recent years
at the National Arts Centre
in- Ottawa and one of the

bout play

scene In which two fallstools
and a huge cross set the
scene, while the players. all
wear shades of cream, grey
and white for the abortive
wedding of Claudio and

Hero. . oF

“Much Ado is’ one of two

mid-season starters in

thecurrent festival. As You

Like It, directed by Robin
the festiva

Phillips V's ar- |
. tistic director, will open

ursday night.

The story of Beatrice and
Benedick is said by
Shakespeare scholars to be
one of the amster’s own
invention, and Beatrice hag
been described as the first
woman in Shakespeare’s

ys to show .she has a
ain and can use it, |

She tartly disavows love
and marriage, just as

Benedick boastfully

" straight-forward as the
 “There’ was little of the

beyond

phenomena might be

)
pers. will ‘be «
ted with such titles as
uropean Vampires and
Werewolves Immigrated to -
Canada; Anatomy of a
Foot; the
Man, and
The Cultural Role of

SOR has NR Noo

sCstetettatatalalelet delve SNH

eceeceeee

Latta iain wtacalen wees es anenreasatatatatatatatc!

veterans of Canadian Proclaims that no woman

theatre, kept her production will ever tie him down. But

: _ the. sch of their
of Much Ado as-simple and by ae. they are brought to:

Gectare thelr: devotion A
wedding life promises to be:
just as hectic as. that of
Katharina and Petruchio‘
in The Taming of the Shrew, :

Shakespeare text allows.

pageantry for which

Stratford often strives,
a simple cathedral

re tie ote

op

sh

- ByDR. BOB YOUNG |

* “Ol have tremor cordis on me; my heart dances.”

Many things affect the rate ‘and rhythm of our
heartbeat, and determing what used to be called
the “quality of the pulse” remains an important :

- part of a medical examination . today. -

" ; The average resting heart rate is about 72 beats ©
each minute, but. many. people withperfectly . .

- Mormal hearts have rates higher or lower than this.

Heartbeat frequency .increases ..with. exercise

nev. dkcitement and emotions, and the rate is controlled -~

- by several reflex mechanisms that help match the -

 bpart’s output of blood to the body's changing °

needs

‘A regular slow pulse seldom causes problems,‘
ut in extreme cases fainting speels may occur. A -
rapid regular rate, in contrast, is a characteristic |
4 several diseases including thyroid ‘gland
qveractivity, anemia and low blood pressure.
~ Changes in heart rhythm may also be of no
consequence, but frequently irregular heartbeats

. @o indicate the presence of heart disease.

While rhythm abnormalities can be appreciated
by feeling the pulse, or by using the stethoscope
over the heart, a much better indication of what is
going on is provided by an ECG, or elec-
trocardiogram. .
Modern electronics. now .allow us to feed a
_ patient’s rhythm pattern into a computer, over an :
extended period of time. The computer ignores
periods of normal rhythm but is triggered to
produce a tracing when irregular beats occur.
Once the abnormal rhythm has been identified .

~ and the cause determined, ‘treatment is started. -
’ Often long-term drug therapy will correct or im--

prove the situation satisfactorily. Vo
Frequently an acute rhythm change is a com-. -
plication of a serious heart disease ‘such as heart ©
failure or a heart attack, oe on
ese emergency cases potent drugs are given.
intraveniously or even injected right into the feart :
and, in addition, electric shocks are given to the’
; heart using special paddies applied to the chest

As Leontes discovered (in The Winter's Tale), a.

, heart may dance for reasons other than joy. Temor

cordis may even be a death dance unless rapidly

_ and effectively treated.

(Info “Health is a new weekly‘feature of the _

. Terrace Daily Herald)

S

EUROCAN PULP & PAPER CO.LTD.

Oo Kitimat Logging Divielen a

ona Steerer em Te

We will require a HEEL-BOOM GRAPPLE LOADER fo toad - fr
“logs in a coastal operation at Kitimat. This contract offers...

“steady employment to an efficient operator. Preference will ‘B-
is be given.to a rubber mounted machine for mobility. ‘in-,

Everybody dressed in pioneer attire and there = But I was blameless. I wasn't going fast. The dog should y
terested applicants to apply to: ;

- was a fine atmosphere in the place-well attuned to # not have been loose,

the spirit of the festivities. Thanks a lot. % Abby, please ask dog owners to keep their doge securely
; “tied up. Someone is grieving over the logs ofa precious pat,

a beautiful animal has lost his life, and I am feeling

s: heartsick over something that was not my fault.

. MAINE MOTORIST

DEAR MOTORIST; Weil stated. To quote an- old
polities! bromide: “As Maine goes, so goes the nation.” (1
hope.)

RSE

Po

, - ;

DEAR LEFT: Yes. On two counts: (1) Marriage ia NOT

"qld-fashioned"—It’s aa popular today as it ever waa. (2) ,

~ Your boyfriend's parents are free to Invite (and exclude)
whomever they wich. It’s thelr. party. oo

ar)

VAN. Maskulak, eo
Eurecan Pulp & Paper Co. Lid. |

Boxtaeo. om
, KITIMAT, B.C. 1 : : ,

a

_ Por Abby's booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,”
send $1 to Ablgail Van Buren, 132 Lasky Dr., Beverly Hills,
Calif. 90212, Please enclose a long, self-addressed, stamped
(24¢} envelope. . ;

' Steve and Molly Obzera and son Albert are
holidaying in the Lower Mainland and Vancouver
and.

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