a ee me A champ asks _ for some help By DON SCHAFFER , Herald Siaff Writer Archie Moore, the former undefeated light heavyweight champion of the world, has for the past several years been working with young teenagers, helping them develop strong bodies and moral values in a program called ABC(Any Boy Can). Moore is starting his program in Terrace, Kitimat, Prince Rupert and the Charlottes, going ~ to the areas, meeting the children he may be working with and the adults they depend on for guidance. His program has met with great success in the past, notably in Nova Scotia and: Nigeria, where he conducted his program and coached the 1980 Nigerian Olympic _boxing team. Moore will have trouble getting the same success in this areaShough, without help. The area is so large that one man can’t doa good job covering the area, he said. ““There are four places I’m working in," he said,”and it'll be hard for me to do the whole job in all four places.” Moore would like to get support from the businesses in the Terrace-Kitimat area, as well as from the other areas he'll be working in, to bring up three assistants he needs to keep the program running properly in all four areas at the same time. . “If I can have these three people, the job can be done well everywhere,"he said. ‘‘Usually we spend six months on basic skills in self defense and boxing and six months building skills and values to a higher level,” ‘The ABC program is designed not only for the development of physical skills, but for. the en- couragement of better values. . “T call what I do teaching the kids to put their hats on right,"Moore said. — Moore’s program deals with most of the major social problems facing youngsters today. Aims of the program are to discuss drug and alcohol dependency problems with young people and to compare them with the value of healthy alter- natives. He works with, advises and assists all groups who oppose vandalism actively, and to work to change negative attitudes of young people and adults to positive attitudes. “I try to point these peopleon the road to_ * success,” Moore safa:"“This‘road is filled with pitfalls, with distractions that can lead young people astray from that road. “I'm not against rock music, say, but I am against some of the things that go with it. Drugs, alcohol, those kind of things don’t help anyone and I don’t think young people have to fall into em.’” He said that rock music is fine but there is another side to it besides the one that many groups make a fuss over. _ “Tt is possible to dissociate rock music from drugs and booze,” Moore said,” and to show that there are other things as well on the good side of it, such as jazz, classical music, art, crafts and sports. head these things are part of the road to good Moore would like to enlist the support of the business community to make ils program as good as it can be. “T get paid everyday, when I get letters from the people I worked with in my other places,” he said. ‘In Nigeria, the program is paying its dividends now, and I’m not even there.” Moore says he works with the young people from the time he meets them, trying to teach by example that life has good things to offer them if. they are willing to work for them. Moore has been brought up through the efforts of the Northwest Native Social Workers ‘Association, a non-profit organization who are working on the program on behalf of the Indian Band Councils in the Northwest district of the Department of Indian Affairs, | Walter Woods, superintendent of social development in the Association, says that sup- port from the business community is essential to the success of the program. He feels that the program's positive effects will be enhanced by the addition of three assistants that Moore Is requesting. In a press release from the association, it 1s stated that all of the society will benefit from the project. Not only the people at the band level but also people in the surrounding area would gain from the project a8 Moore himeelf and his anti- vandalism and drug-dependence stance will help the entire community. Fight the lung cripplers.... Emphysema, Asthma, Tuberculosis, Chronic Bronchitis, Air Paltution Use Christmas Seals" , tt’sa matter of life and breath LaGendela 9% VENETIAN DINING LOUNGE 5. “CONTINENTAL ATMOSPHERE * frent ta the mupert Mater Ian Hsérisak ong the maybour DINE IN OUR EXQUISITE VENETIAN DINING LOUNGE Ope & Mami ll Mem, =. sacowous 624-2621 of 624-3359 6 ORIVE IN Tat foveal 6th St CHADS ARI CIES FOR BPSBA VATION, : While she thinks it might just have been a plot to get some sym- pathy and make it through the Thanksgiving weekend, Nadine Asante has been trying to help a turkey recover from a br- uen leg. ' The bird, one of several the Asante’s have, ap- parently suffered in a dispute with. one of the two horses belonging to the Asante girls. At first it looked like a quick trip to the pot for the young gobbler. Thanks to Dr. Louis Elorza, the local Nadine Asante checks out her charge Not a dumb cluck this veterinarian, the fowl was spared a premature demise. Although it was ap- parently the first such creature to come in for a cast, the fact that Nadine had splinted the leg made it easy to set. While the turkey was recovering from its ac- eldent, it maintained a place of honor in the family home, being fed by hand as it rested on a nest of cloth. The cast, which was duly autographed, is due to come off, anytime now and the bird seems RESTAURANT —FULL FAGILITIES— — CHINESE & CANADIAN FOOD— —AIR CONDITIONED— —DINING LOUNGE— ~BUSINESS LUNCHES—. Mon, to Fri. 11am - 2 pm ‘SUN.-THURS. 11 a.m.-12 pam. FRI. & SAT. 11 a.m. - 2 aim... His dream jaded VANCOUVER (CP) -- An Independent miner's vision of developing a multi- million-dollar jade mine is being obscured hy a tangle of red tape, the miner’s lawyer said Wednesday in British Columbia Supreme Court. Justice S. M, Toy reserved judgment in an application by the provincial govern- . Ment to extend an injunction restricting Kenneth Morris from cutting timber to build an access road to the mine. Morris's lawyer, Robert Gardner, sald his client has an agreement to sell the Mine for $23 million, provided the road is com- pleted by Jan. 1, 1981. Christopher Harvey, acting for the attorney-- general, said the 33- kilometre road would disrupt an environmentally sensitive area, ' Harvey asked that the in- - junction preventing the Hmber cutting be extended until the entire issue is decided at a trial. Court was told the govern- ment application for the in- junction represents the ‘latest chapter in Morris's eight-year battle to develop a jade mine on the site at which he has a legitimate ¢laim., Morris, who holds a Free Miner's Certificate under the Mineral Act, is the holder of claims in an area 2,100 metres up Antimony Mountain near Lytton, B.C. in the Fraser Canyon. Court was told Morris first encountered bureaucracy in 1974, when the New Democratic Party govern- ment introduced new mining regulations which effectively deprived him of his claims. Morris filed a suit alleging conspiracy to interfere in his business, in which he named then premier Dave Barrett, as wel] as the ministers of mines and lands and resources, The suit was adjourned sine die (technically, it is still before the courts) when the NDP government waa defeated in 1975. In 1976, Morris flled another. action agalnat government decision to. cancel his title to the mining claims, The B.C. Supreme Court decided in 1977 that hia claims were in good stan- ding. His Jatest problem is getting permission to build 1 $362 recovered. The incident, moreover, has made the feathered one just enough of a family pet thatit may see its way past Christmas too. ° the access road. 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