. and With the peculiar weather we are getting in Terrace, this little boy doesn’t know what to do. He’s got all the fields covered, though, sa ~ he can play withhis sied and keep dry at the same time. - Col. Warwick Glasgow, commandant of the test school, located at the home of the U.S. space shuttle project, said Capt, Chevalier is only the second woman—the first was an American— permitted to take the course since it began in 1950. High-ranking fliers and flight test engineers from around the world come to the unique school for advanced flight training. Thirty-two 32 Canadians have been graduated. “Louise is quite a knowledgeable woman really handles herself well in the air. Ask any of the pilots with whom she flies,” said the commandant. ‘She's. so well-accepted in class as ‘one of the guys’ that I’m afraid some of the pilots forget to clean up their Laer in Aste jaan 3 aed ‘Female pilot well-accepted language when she’s around,” FOLLOWS TOUGH LIFE Since she arrived last winter at Edwards, Capt. Chevalier’s daily schedule has been long and demanding. It usually began with a mild-long jog, then into her bulley black flying suit to meet with her assigned pilot and take off for the first of two of the morning's high- altitude, flights, roaring over the desert terrain on missions she designed the night before. It's her job as flight- test engineer, she said, to ne Pree ee Gee menmeee! Pectire sabi Baath dearer Seog nape aegiesb fore? & WRN aie Ben monitor the performance of the aircraft and its pilot throughout the 90- minute lights. During one such mission in a jumbo military plane, the erew even allowed her to land the grey ship alone. Her quarters was a small, cluttered “bachelor” bungalow, filled’ with: -inelegant military | furniture, collections~ of desert rocks, flowers and semi- classical records and even a pair of snowshoes, a reminder .of her for- theoming assignment in lberta. Recently Capt. . Chevalier drove to Los Angeles to see Annie Get cara re | iy Your Gun, a well-known musical-comedy about frontier woman's dif- ficulties in finding a bay- friend while dressed in men’s clothing. “I thought it was so funny,” she said, “because Annie was singing how she ‘couldn't get a man while wearing a gun and men’s clothes, and I began to think how 1 must look wearing my flight suit every day.” WONDERS ABOUT APPEAL . The attractive - aerospace engineer, a small, slender woman with auburn hair cascading down her back, laughed at the image. “How can I be appre- ciated as a woman when everyone only sees me in this?’’ she smiled, tugging a r gay Canadien flight suit. She reflected for a moment, then said: “I really feel quite fulfilled with my work as a flight- test engineer, and with the closeness I have with ple, so 1 can't say that 'm missing anything as a woman just because I’m in a man’s field. . “As for competition, I lon’t compete with men at all but with myself. I found along time ago that the best way for me to learn about myself is to measure myself and my limits during all sorts of situations, whether I'm ying, or scuba diving or bac i i the Honor ‘Holl fligivility — Grades 6, 9 und 10. ‘All. subjects are considered with the exception of Physical Education and Guidance, which are participating subjects and not subject w scholarship. . .--Astudent must have 16 ints or better on the sis of 3 for A, 2 for B, i for Cl, O for C2 and +1 for “atetetatitetaobatetitatatalitetsitaby Set en CHE HE MAB La, Vhursdeay, Le eintan i4, 977, PAGE 7? 7 Skeena honour roll Sheena Junior Secondary Schual Novernber, 1977 -Astudent taust have at least one "A", ‘They must not have a “D" of “E" In Grade 8 the honor students in no particular order = are: Denise Kenney, Patricia Philpot, Denise Dunster, Gordon Hoekstra, Maienie Reid, Cathy Soutar, Donna Wilkinson. RR an Hardy ee oetbiettaatleltealtee Boys a cult - NEW YORK (AP) — In the decade after -he tumed 14, Parker Stevenson appeared in more than 100 TV com: » mercials, three motion pictures and episodes of Gunsmoke and Streets of San Francisco. A year ago, at 24, Stevenson began work with Shaun Cassidy on a television series of their own, The Hardy Boys, now in its second season on ABC. And yes, the rather sudden rise to stardom has Stevengon a bit bothered. “It’s a question that’s foremost in my mind, now that the show's successful, almost in a cult way,” the young man from Philadelphia said in an interview. ‘I’m worried about buming myself out. - . ; “Tt worries me because I’m more concerned now with where Tl be 10 years from now.” It is not so much that Stevenson, who mixed studies in architecture at Princeton Universit with screen tests an acting jobs, has planned his immediate future Use wood, paper - anything! Just make it yourself ! Prizes will be awarded for three best in Terrace and three best in Kitimat. ad FIRST $10.00 SECOND $5.00 THIRD $2.00 . Winners will be notified by phone immediately after judging. Winners will also be announced in the TERRACE DAILY HERALD on Dee. 19. COME! SEE! Decorations will be hung in the HERALD office after judging. Tape this entry form to your decoration. HAVE FUN! beyond a desire for more work in the movies, and maybe a return to school. "TD think I'm most concerned now with pacing myself, because doing. too much too quickly can be. com- mercially dangerous. An actor can get . overexposed, and I want to avoid that.”’ His career began when Stevenson, then 14, failed to land a camp coun- sellor’s job he was after. He took a shot at TV commercials, and filmed his first one at 15—for a facial cosmetic for teen- agers. His first starring role in a motion picture was in 1971, when he played a 17- year-old responsible for maiming his best friend in A Separate Peace. He entered Princeton, and before graduating starred in two more movies, Our Time and Lifeguard. His _ per- formance in Lifeguard led to the TV work. His show, The Hardy Boys, has become a hit despite Sunday evening competition from CBS's popular 60 Minutes. Honorable mention Hous Wa Lands MeConnel) and Maria DuSulva. In Grade 9 ihe honer roil consists of ‘Tony Appels, Julia Gowe, [als Cossett, Jill) Harris, Clinton Jeffrey, Doug McGhee, Michelle . Caulien and Lawrence Bell.. Honorable mention is earned by Roger Cook, Bruno Hidber and Harold von Pentz. The Grade 10 Honor roll includes: Dale Mac- Donald, Kathryn Dun- ster, James Palahicky, Susan Harris, Elsie Troelstra, Sain Reimer, Rogelio Valdez, Gayle Haugland, Mauro Cervo, and Diane Hoekstra. ° Honorable mention in the Grade 10 class goes to Renee Ann Black, Audrey Ann Black, Karen Froese and Dawn Gough. Lottery The Western Canada Lottery Foundation today announced that the first Provincial lottery bonus draw will be -held on Boxing Day, December 26th. It will take place in the Etobicoke Olympium, Toronto, and will be televised on CTV af- filiated stations in Western Canada. Check local listings for telecast time. . In addition to the three regular grand prizes of $1 million each and two of $100,000 each, there will be thousands of other tax- freee prizes ranging from §50 to $10,000. As a spcial bonues, 50 more complete numbers will - | generated. Each exact number will pay the holder $20,000 with no subsidiary prizes allot- Fred Davis, assisted by Faye Dance, will host the hour-long television show on December 26. TERRACE ENTRY FORM WAME.---_-_..-.--...- AGE ..-.---- ADDRESS. —~ — AGE LIMIT 4 to 12 years PHONE .--- DELIVER iN PERSON TO: Terrace Herald Office 9212 Kalum Road KITIMAT ENTRY FORM AGE LIMIT 4 to 12 years ADDRESS........----------------------- ao bs: DELIVER IN PERSON TO; 93 Anderson Street Kitimat: ep