eo Ca RRL Png PR ; y 7 ncoaver'’s centennlal ‘and Designers.of Expo 86 have _. the 100th onniversary of the. been dreaming and ‘bullding frst. trgnacontjnentel rail”. ‘whi¢-bang models for. more tip. a ae than a year. now, but turning "But Expo 86 has brought’ it into ‘reality is something - protests over demolishing « elug. Boyt nec vthe’ CP.-Rail “roundhouse, ... JExyo ‘which hag since been saved. positio Pal. and restored, and demands — universal’ fair’ ‘such ° Sha. from the’ “clty."” planning ’- Montreal's Expo 67, was” recon, dubbed Expro" 86 Vancouver . - Sun ‘rise developments be ~. exposition’s' site.: City, cotneil eventually ‘agreed to a- 7e-metre-high, 400-roont hotel. and: two. 65- — metre - apartment towers. ~ “Lahor ‘leaders: have’ It rund from May 2to Oct.’ 18, “1886, ‘and ‘will coincide with ‘two anniversaries a CALGARY: CP) — Late- ‘night chats, bedroom banter. and-tender tete-a-tetes have the: power. to separate . g superficial from. satisfying Bex, BayS. * psychologist .Jeft Sheriff, 28, says of his. Kathleen ( Cairns. - .:°" and his wife Anne's’ love ' Cairns, of the: ‘University’ - life: “sometimes we start of Calgary, says some rm B:30 pam... ‘alto couples find they “talk 10:30 pam, ve: go. morg. readily after (sex). . “ut midnight ,. . and ait because they feel accepted; UP: eat ice ‘cream ‘and talk’ loves ‘and: gratified, * “It's” -again at 3 a.m.,”” oe eanier to “be honest and - He believes it's important mote giving in’ an accepting to “talk both before and atm Bry after.” . jasphere.” NO RULES . . But Sheriff notes “there are no standard “People i have rediscovered ‘how emply = sex can be if all you have is -constant diet of sheer . physical sex,” she Bays. But ‘whether + a couple : talks fore, di {tel ot y caiene hoe “doesn’t ‘ when it comes to pillow talk. ’ ' “When we first started - matter. is ;fust imps nporiant. out, Tconstantly had a slze,: department ‘that “only low-" allowed on the edge of the — threatened to declare the | ier “site olf! limits to members ii ‘dre, *'ror-union 4 » employers and : Vancouver... advertising ‘agencies have ] “réfused to bid on work until .. -Expo 36,'which originally . Offered. only’ one-third “the * rate, upped the ante’ to ‘normal. contracts to. major ° & ‘awarded :. “going” commission: . STAFF PROBLEMS” Expo 36° has algo had its _ problenis keeping staff, Six’ ‘senlor executives, including , two . vice-presidents of ‘finance;, . the director: "and | the. vice- ' president: ‘of “marketing, have, quit... : Expo 86 ‘chairman sim 19 Adidas in my: ‘mouth, ” the. Calgary bartender says of his relationship'-with ‘his: _ hair-atylis! wife. Now Sheriff knows thal oT don't talk’ about’ splitting : with the boys to go fishing the following day" because’ -wives "don’t like that." - ” . Despite the -‘pain®” the ’ wrong. -word can .bring, . Sheriff says he would rather . be, married with a- large: running shoe in his mouth. than single and forced to lie, “It’s .s0 much different,” | -he says of sex: during his ' when*, ‘de® oBgpeatedly. - asked: ministration « creative “BG Premier Bill Bennett justify” the ‘cost: ‘of the fair; which: has.not been made - public, ‘and: the’ province's $50-million: ‘pavilion, while , ad- . “cutting. his’ Social. - Credit '- “iB. spending in social services, edacation. and health. . Bennett says the two are. separate because Expo 86 ° funds come from . the province's Loto 6-49 profits, ‘yainbow to get her into bed: They will talk until they are - blue in the face before and after. Then they'll go out the door. and never see the eirl again.” . MAKE IT . PLEASURABLE Cheryl Fraser, 99, -has. been single for the Jast eight years. Previously married for 12 years, ‘the Calgary . -eounsellor ‘says ” - whether” engaging in ‘conjugal chat or single sex talk, she has learned there are rules and regulations. to ensure the... rules” .. bachelor days. “The stuff. you talk about is not even important. “Some ‘guys think you ‘have ‘to promise a girl a experience Is as pleasurable as possible: only” the “most admirable -* aspects 0 ‘of her partner. “And _ Trappers under attack ngRoNto (CP) — Wolves cringe in terror and shock, . held ‘captive in a foot trap: waiting: to die. Beavers thrash dea prately for more than 10 minutes while they slowly drdwp atte chewing off paws to escape a trap’ 3 Jaws. ‘images show.up repeatedly in the literature and . films ¢ of animal welfare groups in Canada, Europe and the United States — the organizations seen by” trappers as a . major’ t threat te Canada’s oldest industry. In. Europe, the powerful and tadical animal welfare lobby, which achieved a ban on ‘Canadian seal Palts, has wpe its attention, | to trapping, rpyeieige tees west etmaiiy ‘and ‘lobbyists have been calling for’ a Eurgpean Economic ‘Community. ban on Canadian’ fish unlegs trapping is stopped iri Canada. . Ih: ‘Ontario,’ a coalition of animal: protection groups is. rallying behind an NDP private’ member's bill that would jahi the use ‘of controversial leghold traps for "anything ; but ft Kes, wolves and’ coyotes. SEE Quick KILL sek ou say they would be forced to replace more tian $1: "Filton worth of traps immediately while they and government researchers try. to develop. more humane alternatives that will either kil the prey quickly or merely ‘cage it The: more radical animal welfare groups such as the Fund for ‘Animals want fur trapping abolished. The head of the group’ '4 Canadian branch, Marlene Lakin, scoffs at the idea of humane trapping. “Animals: are left out in the coldto suffer and die; there is nothing humane about it,” she said. “We're opposed to all . trapping because it isso unnecessary. People don’t have to. wear. fur coats to keep warm.” The ‘Carviadian Assocation for Humane “Trapping i is also lobbying against use of Jeghold traps and has invested more than #40, 000 toward quick-kill traps and changes in leghoid 4 in traps, Raccoons, lynxes and bobcats are crippled Fieople with fire ' coqts have been Sprayed with red [paint in _ “traps that do less damage to animals’ ‘legs and paws, Marietta-Lash, an association executive, says more than ji 90 per cent‘of animals trapped in Canada could be trapped © more’ ‘humanely, but governments are reluctant to spend ' money on either research or increased regulation of business. 100,000 people. ‘ACTORS Canada depend on-fur trapping fora’ living. But Lash:says her group is angry that only Ontarlo and British’ Columbia have’ mandatory rapper: education, am - REFUTES CHARGES. *~ ‘” Lloyd Cook of Barrie, Ont., a former head of both the ’ Ontario and Canadian trapper associations, said while he Tespects the association for humane trapping, most groups lobbying against his livelihood don’t know what they’ re ' talking avout. ‘Many foxes and wolves caught in leghola traps simply lie down and sleep,-he says, and most trappers check their lines . daily and are also. under provincial government supervision to ensure animais are being taken properly, Powerful traps that kill mink, marten and fisher almost instantly now are widely used, Cook said. Old-fashioned leghold traps with massive jaws — often portrayed in anti- trapping films — were outlawed long ago. “If those people who are hollering about humane trapping would come out and see-how it is.done, we wouldn't have anything to worry about,” he said. ''They would see that 90 per cent-of the animals die quickly, ' within three minutes of - entering the trap.” - — Cook, who said trappers “think a lot of those animals and they aren’t about to see them suffer,” also. pointed out trappers have a vested. interest in ensuring continued animal stocks, “We want trappers who are good managers of resources, god naturalists and mist of them are, There i isa trappers” code of conduct and they follow ite’ Natives - raise funds - ‘REGINA. {CP) — A planned $50-a-plate “fund-raising dinher is an example of the aggressive way the Regina Native Women’s Association approaches problems. The non-profit group, founded in 1971, is a, _No-nonsense organization whichi gets high marks from local officials for the: "ma her in which it operates. The Provincially backed association wants to construct -its‘own building and although it has $70,000 banked for the pro} fun praising.” . | SItkhas been, ‘going slow,” she’ said in an interview syupezed among a-rash of telephone . calls in the asséciation’ 5 over-crowded, second-floor office.’ “don't think we've been doing so well.”. e-high standards Scales aims: for have not gone un: notiged in the community. “They! rea first class, street-wise, resource-support organization for native folks, families and children," says Ald. Joe McKeowen, who has worked closely with the group ~ - since his election In 1979. Association workers help rinabiays, battered women, thone with drug-abuse problems : ‘and natives looking -for- ‘homes inthe Saskatchewan capital; Last year they assisted 9,000 people. “anytime [run into family of ‘tacthl problema in the neighborhood «... I call them in.Aind they do a classy job briefing the families and jalking'to them,” said McKeowen, whaaé north-central” ward pa a jerge.t native population. = HELPS RELATIONS | Mayor Larry Schneider says the association ‘has added. stability to race telallons in the €i ly. “What really impresses me about.the native women Is that they have not appeared before me at anytime with any ‘political motivation, that I could see,’ the mayor-sald. . “they were just a group of folks wanting to get a job done and,are willing to take time and exercise the patience to make sure it gets done right.” Education Minister Pat Smith, the minister- in-charge of. tig of women, said she has not met another group in. - the'atat the : Naat five years , whitch has the association's. deter-. mil iHion.: : Dg not dure what makes them nique,” Smith sald inan t, executive director Ivy Scales is worried about interview. “They: have: a ‘Jot of drive to improve not only themselves but others around them. - “They really havea deep feeling of shared responsibility when it comes to.({the) community and its problems,” During the asseciation’s- first fund-raising week last year, the group garnered about $40,000, including $13,000 from a banquet which attracted the mayor, Premier Grant _ Devine and a who's who of the local business community. ' Seales id looking forward to the 1994 dinner. _ She hopes to meet a mysterious businessman who has "anonymously donated 415, 000 to the association in the last year. an You. KNOW THIS SIGN ‘ws BUT Do You KNOW ‘JHESE SIGNS? © ’ Life ts full of signs. Signs that advise. Signs that ‘ warn, Signs that protect us. When it comes to -- gancerithere are important signs you should also know: - * Thickenin or herp in breast or elsewhere. ‘» Obvious change in. wart of mole, - | © Unusual bleeding or discharge: _|. * Nagging cough or hoarseness. . Ba aware of the possible siona of cancer, Tha odds are in” * your favour and of Canaan act on what you know. Contact your local Canadian Cancer Sadety Education ‘volunteer today, Can Cancer Be. Beaten? You Bet Your Life It Can! “million a’ year.’ : : Any additional funds will he ‘borrowed ‘at Crown — corporation, _will bring in $750 million in employment, * Public relations ° people “travelling with one: of. several models have to keep _ explaining there won't be a ‘ferris wheel out over the - . water.in False Creek as ‘in. a estimated at more than $100 . _. She didn’t always know. - (these things, Reflecting’ on Fraser: prefers. to notice -. The industry is worth about $000 million annually in * Canada, with more than half the furs exported. About vey the model. But there will he Pillow. talk has: ‘important: advantages _ ‘fo or both - exes, | she “recommends avoiding “talk about sexual problems” in hed, ~ Of course, says Fraser, her marriage, she says “T wasn't a lover when -I was ‘ married. I was a wife, “. “I would talk about kids,. mundane day-to-day things: © . Twas more into being a good . wife, cooking and cleaning, and children.” She concludes: “‘there’s ‘a difference between having . ”’ Besides, he says Expo. 86 ” the ‘world: ‘ipdngportation “additional tax revenue'and” create 50,000 mani, years of wiles on all kinds of ‘other exeiting o Fides, none of which ” “are the * province's - preferred ‘rate '’- ” for Expo 86, a provincial - ‘and’ ‘contirmed yet. Jess: Ketchim, vice- president - of . com- ~Minnications ‘for. Expo BS, ‘the. biggest, headaches for end, ‘conimunications * fair: _ate parking: and traffic. ° '— But, he says, solutions to both. are ‘imminent. The only problem Expo 86 may not be able to solve is construction. of the Cambie Street bridge, | the major connection to the ‘fair from the south. The, present’ one needs to be. Pillow talk plays a big part in making the distinction. ‘. J.J. Miles; a University of Calgary psychologist who ‘specializes in sex therapy, says “the more open people are.in the bedroom, the more:. «satisfying a. relationship will be.” - "We practise too much. clairvoyancy.” . - _ Miles: notes that women. are more communicalive than men. Even far the most progressive. male, it difficult. shedding the “strong-silent’” role society admits there are problemis.: i Ironically, he ‘says. two of: is i TheHeraid, Thursday, February 23, 1984, Page 7? difficult in real world Pattison says it’s inevitable : “fast-track. “operation” has ‘to: hire“an entire staff that. hes. never a worked. together before.-- “replaced, but money for a. new one. won't be voled on until this” fall, leaving less than 18 months to build it if. it’s. approved, . Meanwhile, ‘the site is growing ‘as contractors add fill to False Creck in front of © B.C. Place. negr the. city’s downtown to make room, for the fair and: the final placement of the 26 national pavilions. on the G4-hectare site is nearly completed: Organizers for. the World - Festival, a $i0-million cultural ~ - extravaganza, have started signing talent for the more than 200 per- formances at the - Queen Elizabeth, Playhouse and Orpheum theatres. .. They are also looking for per- : ‘formers for the more than 15,000 shows that will take place on the Expo 6 site either on the streets, in the 600-seat theatre or in one of several amphitheatres. Special events such as a parade of ‘tall ships, a gathering of locomotives and possibly a parade of DC-8s to coincide with the Abbotsford Air Show are being planned as. well as academic con- ferences to be held: in conjunction with the fair. Ketchum said interest in the exposition is growing. The’ Cariboo’ region in central. British ‘Columbia is . trensure hunt to ‘coincide with the fair with an 44- ounce solid gold Expo: 86 logo ag the prize. And through Toast: masters . International, there-are speakers willing to talk about Expo 86 across ‘the province, Ketchum admits he wakes up in the middle of the night worrying about the problems, but-he is still ' convinced Expo 86 will be a3 wonderful as the designers’ plans, steam. - Introducing RITTER- McEWAN Hair Stylist ‘Brenda would ike to Invite all her past patrons toseeher — at Bev’ 5 Head Shed. Bev's Head Shed sex and making love.” conditions him to assume. planning -a eg Srdsh ABLE ELECTRIC ELECTRIC & REFRIGERATION CONTRACTOR | Windshield & Auto Glass Specialists CALL 635-5876 "EMERGENCY NO. 635 9653 MOBILE HOMES on display in Pine Park set up, skirted, ready for occupancy Energy Efficient &. Affordable 7 3889 Muller Ave, 635.9418 . ICBC claims Handled Promptly 330 ENTERPRISE KITIMAT 632-4741 teeta ae eae rate rota! 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