Page 18, The Herald, Tuesday, October 31, 1978 HARDWARE STORES a Ae | j Guide | ; 25, now a PhD student in All listings subject to change without notice. . * a TUESDAY 5 p.m. to midnight KING CFTK BCTV 9 KCTS 2 (NBC) 3 (cB) 4 (CTV) (PBS) TT 00 © Carol Mary Tyler Six Mister 115 Burnet! Moore Million Rogers :30 News Hourglass Dollar Electric “45 Cont'd. Cont'd. Man Company :00 | Cont'd. Cont'd, 1 TNews Auction “7a 1$ Coni’d. Cont’d. Hour Cani'd. 30 Cont'd. Skeena Cont'd. Cont'd. 45 Cont'd. Journal Cont'd. Cont'd, -00 Seattle Paper Headline Aucilon 1 Tonight Chase Hunters Cont'd. 130 Name that Cont’d. What's Cont‘d. 4§ Tune Cant‘d. My Line Cont'd. 0 Grandpa Happy Grandpa Auction 15 Goes to Days Goes To Cont'd, 30 Washington © Rene Washington Cont'd, 45 Cont'd, Simard Cont'd, Cont'd. oo «6 Big Three's in the Auetion 1s Event Company Beginning Cont'd. 30 ‘Stranger The Taxi Cont'd. as in Our Fifth Coni’d. Cont'd. og | House” Estate Quincy | Avetion 15 Cont'd. Cont‘d. Cont'd. Cont'd. 30 Cont‘d. Beyond Cont'd. Cont'd. 45 Cont'd. Reason Cont'd. Coni’d. 00 News The cTV Auction 15 Cont’d. National News Cont'd. 30 Tonight Night News Hour . Cont'd. 45 Show Final Final Cont'd. 00 Cont‘d. Kojak Late a” g Auction 15 Cont'd. Cont’d. Show wag Cont'd. 30 Cont'd. Cont'd. ‘Smash-up Cont'd. 4 Contd. Cont'd. Alley Cont'd. WEDNESDAY 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Co go. _.p The New Canadian Kareen's Electric 15° | High Rollers Schools Yoga Company : . 30 Wheel of Mister What's M for Music 45 Fortune Dressup Cooking Word Shop 00 America Sesame Mad Natural Sclence 15 Alive Street Dash 2 Cents Worth ; 30 Cont'd. Cont'd. . Definition About Safety 45 Cant’d. Cont'd. Cont'd. Cover-Cover 1 00 Hollywood Bob Switzer Noon Specials 15 | Squares ~—News News Cont‘d. 30 Days of Search for Movle Contd. as Our Lives Tomorrow Matinee Cont'd 00 = | Cont'd, Bob ‘Banacek: Ari Starts 1s Cont'd. McLean 2 Million Inside-Out 30 The Show Clams of . Spinning Storles 45 Doctors Cont‘d. Cap'n Jack’ - Making Music 0 Another Edge of Another Stories of Amer. 1B World Night World: Music Place 30 [ Cont'd. Ta Be Cont'd. Book, Look 45 Cont'd. Announced Cont'd. Survival Econ. :00 Mavie Take Alan Over aL) ‘Seven Thirty | Hamel Easy 30 Brides Celebrity Show Book 245 For Seven Cooks Cont'd. Beat 20 Brothers‘ Flintstones The Price Sesame 15 Cont'd. Cont'd. Is Right Sireet - 1390 Cont'd. Carol Cont‘d. Cont‘d. 245 Cont‘d. Burnelt Cont‘d. Cont‘d. GEivayD ey i ie me, eG 4 Good overkenpeng: ome et Gordon and Anderson Ltd. 4606 Lazelle Ave., Terrace LINK MARAE STCES — a a ae Se | the incomperabie, the original Store Hours: Tues.- Sat. 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Friday 9 a.m.-9 p.m. CLOSED MONDAY . + With Easy Cleaning Removable Liner “cooks all day while the cook's away.” Ph. 635-6576 ‘ SLOW ELECTRIC STONEWARE COOKER CHARGEX VISA BOR THERN ARCHEOLOGISTS Pair brave arctic | ASTON BAY, N.W.T. (CP) . | — There are no trees in the high Arctic for fire or shelter, but at least you can see the polar bears coming. “Where I come from in Alaska there are grizzly bears and bush to hide them,” said Ellen Bielawski, archeology at the University of Calgary. Polar bears, she admitted ina recent interview, can be dangerous whether readily seen or not, “But other archeologists working in tropical climates," she said, “have to deal with snakes, which are probably worse.” Sad. Looking For A New Place To Try? WHY NOT HECTOR'S AT THE LAKELSE. TRULY A QUIET RELAXED AT- MOSPHERE WITH A VERY SPECIAL | MENU TO GET THE TASTE BUDS Ex. CITED. FOR EXAMPLE WHY NOT TRY THE TURNEDOS ROSSINI FOR THE LOVERS OF FINE BEEF OR SCALLOPS. SEAFOOD. TOR’S. For Reservations Please Call FLORENTINE FOR THOSE WHO LIKE WHATEVER YOUR LIKES IN GOOD FOOD ARE YOU WILL FIND THEM AT HEC. 638-814) iheir needs. ENGLISH PLACEMENT TEST | for Post-Secondary STUDENTS Students entering most posl-secondary. institutions in B.C. are now required ta wrile an English Placement Test. Scores from this test wil! be used ta assist in assigning students to English courses appropriate lo - The test will be offered al 7:00 P.M. on Nov. 1, in Rm, 215, Northwest Community College, Terrace. All students planning {o enter a post-secondary In- stitution in Seplember of 1979 are encouraged 10 enquire aboul the necessity for writing the English Placement Test on Nov. 1 by calling 635-6511. Bee ow, ERMODE LEANERS OPENING SOow Watch for the opening of Kermode Dry Kleaners in the new Skeena Mail. The unique process in Dry Cleaning done professionally by experienced personnel, Specializing in perfect pleat Draperies Evening gowns and Wedding dresses. The remarks, both op- timistic and depreciating her own courage, came as a surprise to this reporter who camped for a week with Ellen and her threemember crew 800 kilometres north of the Arctic Circle. As the crew leader debunked the assumption that it is difficult to live and work in the ‘Arctic, a north wind gusted across the sea ice and up the layered beaches of Somerset Island, making the tent in which we sat flap and shudder. “We don’t want 16 be por- trayedas people doing some- thing exceptional,’ Ellen said on behalf of herself and Sally Cole, a 27-year-old archeology graduate from Trent University in Peter- borough, Ont. “After all, the Inult have lived quietly in the Arctic for 5,000 years.” It was 11 p.m. The male members of the crew, two 18-year-old Inuit, were in hed—inside sleeping bags in one of the small tents set well apart from a food tent that was potentially attractive to bears. Ellen sat crouched .on a flimsy chair in the centre.of the large’ tent that served as kitchen, dining-room and office. She extended her fingers beyond the bulk of wool and downfeather garments that swathed all but her face, burned as much from the wind as the sun. Then she submerged her hands in a pan of steaming water to relieve them of the cold. Sally stayed up to drink hot chocolate. It was past bedtime and her face showed the fatigue of a day spent surveying the tundra for Inuit artifacts possibly dating back to 2,000 B.C. “Some people still like to think of themselves as the great Arctic explorer,” Ellen said. ‘But the hard- ships they like to talk about are exaggerated.” . Potential obstacles, she explained, often end up helping’ the crew in_ its painstaking work of finding, mapping and studying prehistoric campsites. _ The summer's. 24-hour ‘daylight means insomnia for the. uninitiated, but to,.the ‘ erew it means being able to work through a period of good weather after losing time ona rainy or bitter day. The scenery is bleak but the absence of trees and rotting vegetation means traces of a number of distinct Inuit cultures, dating from several time periods, can be found easily on the ground’s surface by a trained eye. . Isolatioxi meant having to be well prepared—bringing two month’s worth of sup- plies on one chartered air- craft. “But I] spent four summers digging near Prince Rupert (B.C.),” Sally said, “and we spent our only day off each week shopping for the next week's groceries.” Although the dehydrated food was unappetizing, the Inuit youths were allowed to hunt seal, which they did occasionally for fresh meat, Tranguility, not loneliness, zoes with the isolation, Sally said, although there was some disagreement on this point, “T like camping.but it's kind of ‘too isolated,” the stocky Joadamee Amagoalik had said in a separate in- terview. His family lives in Resolute Bay, 100 kilometres north of Somerset on Corn- wallis Island. “We could do with some. music and sqme girls,’’ Jassie Akpalialuk sald witha shy grin. He had come 1,500 kilometres from Pangnir- tung on Baffin island to work on the project. The group's low budget, scraped together from five modest grants, meant the crew had to camp under relatively primitive con- ditions. But after choosing a campsite they liked, the crew found they were right next to one of the largest pre- historic camping grounds on the island. The crew leader even had’ something positive to say about the weather, glorious at times but which had been miserable all day. . “Today we were working a couple of miles from here, mapping .some sites along the beach," Ellen said. “When :we stopped for lunch, our. first impulse was to build a little shelter with stones where we wanted to cook, Then someone said, ‘Hey, that's what they did.” The group, she explained, had shuffled stones around to focus on a communal eating spot in an arrangement that resembled some of the an- clent sites they were studying. So living primitively gave the group insight almcat automatically into how other peoples might have lived on the same spot ages ago. Every 12 hours, someone had to radio a weather report to Resolute Bay as part of an obligation tied to a federal grant. The duty could be annoying at 7 a.m. after a late working night, but the report meagt. someone outside knew: the, crew wus safe. shah 7 , The radioschedule, in fact, turned out to be a prime source of entertainment, Ellen said. “—In the evening, it's like listening to As It Happens.”’ Thirty other groups of scientists stationed everywhere in the Arctic Islands gave their reports one afler another. The re- ports were often sprinkled with humor and each broadcaster became iden- lifiable after a while. A few obstacles couldn't be turned to advantage, Ellen admitted. Guns had to he toted everywhere in case of bears. At the beginning of Sep- tember, the group reported it had not been bothered by bears. But last year, where the project began, the crew had to abandon one camping spot because several polar _ bears had moved into the area, Tipsy cancel _ sober service KEIGHLEY, England (CP) — Because of a vicar's claim that members of the Royal British Legion turned up tipsy for a Remembrance | Day service last year, this year’s Nov. 11 service will not be held in his church, “We shall hold it at the cenotaph instaad,” said Maurice Gowling, president of the 400-strong Silsden | (Yorkshire) branch of the British Legian. “I don’t deny that some of our members have a drink before the service, but there’s a differ- Pree between that and rhing up tipsy.” Another member of the legion said: "If that is the church's attitude towards ex-servicemen, we'll do without the church and warship in the open alr.” . The trouble began when the vicar, Rev. Timoth:; Gunter, told the paris! council that some legion members were ‘well oiled" when they arrived for the Remembrance Day service. “The church almost needed fumigating af: terwards," the vicar said.