ae REP EE fea Lag rea Gee i Sae me pore ey tee OE Bo RI eer a aa eS lr, A peer Me nae ee 2 eee renee ee een ee ee ne IEE IEEE I EE IE OS II EE IOI EE OEE ‘ 75 een SST Se A ee D mt on't fault the mem appencd, nd they hey were just . fol wing : streets. : ity ba fen 7m me it theli it should have been 1 4 could :have- i od 2, Sc¢ an ae : oan ral au he downtown: Hallowe’ en. . ctor: Lawrence. “ghost. car ‘also, watched from he’ ‘consideted |“: the street. They leno. aut th use of. tear gas, - Ww il the srowd sed.on their own. os > éople.. forget that ‘until. thing’ illegal. happens, We OT Ss rare 7 But downtown ‘merchants $a} f wasn't ‘enough, ; 4 manager, L da Bretfeld. ‘They: 30k ah ing carts and barricaded: “street. " Nobody. could “/l through and th _ doing anything under, - what authority? an: ‘assault sa od he bi - . Joe Sullivan said tl the : a blocked. for. 30 to 0 45 na TERRACE — It’s the ultimate in recycling -- rescuing long- abandonned houses from a miin- - ing ghost town and trucking | them to become ‘‘new'® homes - elsewhere in B.C, and Alberta. ‘And, says Calgary. realtor Herb Styles, Tertacé .is the prime market for the houses. _ The 20-year-old, modular Sarthe q . TERRACE — What form the mesh. University of Northern B.C. will take here in the northwest is expected to become clearer when its president visits here | next week. UNB *s Geoffrey atin will *.. /, 12-13 to oe | ago a lived in. ‘tor about a year before a ‘cO- the mine closed: down and the - : : leg vi meat Come Michael, Mill on homes were left behind. . . said there ‘wasn't a lot of detail - Although now inneed of a how:-or where” in the paint job and new roofs, he said . the houses were otherwise in _ good shape. ‘They're not to be " confused with mobile homes,” “he emphasized, explaining all 51 buildings were, 2x4. construc: tion: = os 7 The structures hat to ‘be well: ii tie an ry that liné,” tis ; , rit looks god. I they're Serious: : ed to. as the Nee : ; added, explaining the buildings gg ; thern., pr Soe council." It?s . half and | then truck 7 : ; a monthly.” meeting .of © the. ones ‘presidents: of 'UNBC, the Open. Learning “Agency and. the: thres largerones were also. eaulpped with. a two-piece bathroom off - the master-bedroom. : ° Styles said the target was to: haul out up to 20. hic before joint meeting . ‘of the boards of f} ‘the three colleges ° and the university. >. ° NWCC hopes to conclude a computer .and - communications sharing agreenient with; the university, Hill. said, and much ~ effort is being aimed at building “ladders” between .NWCC's diploma programs . and the university's degree programs. . To begin with, he said, ladder programs are to be. established in business. administration, ani the pass. Bight ‘oft been sold so far some 0 ‘ots of enquiries’ from, ‘poten: i ‘Ter: o transportation ¢ cosis ; 7 forestry. nursing _ The he ae of her Sycted . s : work. 7 oS Be with REMEMBRANCE Day just around the comer, the Royal Canadian Legion branch:13 has. Wa, oa é mean. college. Aiglassif j become. more’ easily transfer-,. rable towards degree credits al: UNBEC. . - : And, , Hill said, the: i will, Nkely, have to. modify: ts program in: those areas, RS ‘ than the college to mnie the two. ee i: Le: ~ been: us). getting’ réady’all:the wreaths ordered by focal businesses, organizations and in: dividuals: yAbove, Ladies Auxillary vice-president Beverley Dickie and Legion president ' Howard'Cromarty show examples.of the different kinds of wreaths which will atthe - . Céfiataph on Monday,: Nov. 11, Committee chairman Peter Crompton reports.strong focal : "support once again-for. both. the wreath and poppy campalgns. For more on n Re ie ! Day and the parade timetable, see age. Bl. Lake ve, ¢ er set of ccaing AB bao NAT ROHR To Sag ‘Sk ii " that would direct . traffic away: - from their stores and all others