Ce Ce Oe ee re A12 - The Terrace Standard, Wednesday, June 7, 1995 A new bridge JOE MURPHY’S construction 12 class at Caledonia took on a bridge-building project last week. Here some of the eight students working on the bridge pour fresh cement to make concrete footings. The bridge, located at the end of Rowland In the Horseshoe, provides additional access over Howe Creek, and will be finished in a week. Past construc- tion classes have built similar bridges over the creek at the ‘end of DeJong and at the base of Lanfear Hill. Their other community projects include the Rotary’s Welcome to Ter- race sign and picnic tables. ORO) UP Wan SOY by Josh Berson and Tamara MacKenzie on PROJECT ACCOMPANIMENT IN GUATEMALA “GOING HOME : THE RETURN OF GUATEMALAN REFUGEES FROM MEXICO” SLIDE SHOW AND PRESENTATION WEDNESDAY Room 2001 JUNE 14, 7:30 PM Northwest Community College Sponsored by Northwest Development Reform candidates lining up - THERE ARE at least four poten- tal candidates out there for the B.C. Reform nomination in Skeena, says local party organizer Ron Town. . But he says the local organiza- tion isn’t yet ready to begin its formal candidate recruitment drive. They’ve hit and stalled at the party’s requirement of 300 mem- bers, but they’re still far from the other requirement of raising at least $6,000. “There are a number of people who have voiced interest,” Town said. ‘It would be premature for me to name names at this time.” He sald there are at least four such people who would make “excellent candidates,” Although some party members are still reeling from Reform’s Soon we will be back ig tying to defeat in the recent Abbottsford byelection to the Liberals, Town convince sympathizers that Reform will _ prevail, He predicts Liberals will not be able to put the concentrated effort they devoted to Abbottsford into every riding on election day. And he’s dissappointed at the amount of money that was spent by Gordon Campbell's Liberals in the byelection. “They outspent us 10 to 1,” Town says. ‘“When you consider the amount of money they pumped in, they should have beat us by 3,000 votes not 287." “Some people think that’s what you have to do to win an election. To me that style of politics is get- ting a little bit shopworn.”’ No candidates have yet stepped forward for the Liberal nomina- tion either. It’s now tess likely Kitimat mayor Rick Wazney —- an other- wise probable Liberal contender — will run, because of Gordon Campbell’s stance against the Kemano Completion Project. Many Kitimat residents believe Campbell’s early attack on the project was one of the political factors that prompted the NDP to cancel the deal. Terrace mayor Jack Talstra, an- other longtime Liberal who ran for the provincial party in 1980, has also given no indication If he will run. New Democrat MLA Helmut Giesbrecht has declared he will run again, but there has so far been no date set for an NDP nomination meeting. *, to Business-as- normal, with a brighter and better upper level showroom! Come in and make us a deal on anything In our lower level. ; PGearinoey, JUNE - >. ¢ €GOKE = Cire. Limit 2 per customer (no deposit) >, »? NS © en DON'T DELAY! - only 200 o each item in stock. STORE HOURS: Mon. ~ Wedd..n.asssesene4/30 am - 8:00 pm Thurs, + Pris ssessestsesseeee30 am - 9:00 pm SOHUTADY....esesseersneconed SO am - 6:00 pm With over 190 stores nationwide we can offer you aver 1/2 a billion dollars worth of buying power. Check out our ever changing assortment of great merchandise, lowest price in town, 4647 Lakelse Ave., Terrace, B.C. SUNGAY..sssssieseeeuneeesenne 10200 om = 5:00 pm