Do you pian on using the new municipal swimming pool facilities? Alek Kontic | do, yes. I’li probably be using the weight gym more than the pool. | think a lot of people are going to use the facilities. My sister is. up there all the ‘time! me Ed Anderson Yes — walting for the hot pool. It’s a long way to Mount Layton Hot Springs. we've been _ Lena Chapplow Yes. | always use the swimming pool and feel it is well worth the invest- ment. It is really beneficial for senior citizens. Rhonda Christie Yes! Mike Smith Yes. I've just been waiting for It to be fin- ished. | particularly enjoy the hot pool. Martin Menzel i just moved here from Nanalmo, but I think | will. SR Ee BEE NI atte ORME gi aur Th LGR Gi eel A NC Sl So ELE ae Letters to. the Editor: Editor: ~ Save the: Seven Sisters as an inheritance _ To the Editor; This letter is concerned with . the Seven Sisters Planning Area,. which is located on the east side of Highway 16 halfway between _ Terrace and Hazelton. The plan- ning area, which straddles three Forest Districts, extends south of Kitwanga to Little Oliver Creek and includes several drainages flowing into the Skeena. River. The natural beauty of the Seven Sisters, the phenomena of the Queen’s face on one of the peaks, and the mature forests on the lower slopes of hemlock, balsam, cedar, pine and spruce, contribute to its value as world class scenery. The Kispiox Forest District has produced a draft plan for the area. Basically they plan to save and maintain the current existing trails with 100-meter buffer strips. These include Boulder Creek, Whiskey Creek, Cedarvale, Coyote Creek, Wat- son Lake and Oliver Creek trails. There is also the possibili- ty of creating new trails or exten- ding existing ones. The rest of the lower slopes are considered operable forest and, I expect, will be logged. Manager, .I would 4 like to see this entire area removed from the Kispiox Timber Supply Area. I feel we must save some portions of our old growth forests for future - generations. The Seven Sisters’ close proximity to Highway 16 provides excellent opportunity for public access. If indeed this area has an 80-year timber supply, why not put aside- this area for the last 20-30 years of that period. Let the next generation decide it’s fate of short-term profit versus preservation. My livelihood is directly dependent on the log- ging industry. If this area’s removal from the operable forest means a shorter work year and lower annual income, I am willing to accept this. It’s a small price to pay, as we are the keeper’s of our children’s in- heritence. If you are concerned at all regarding this subject, please respond to the: District Kispiox Forest District, Box 215, Hazelton, B.C., VOI 1Y0. Rod Naber Kitwanga, B.C, Tolerance now zilch To the Editor; My iolerance level is now zilch! I am fed up with these obsessed, self-appointed mes- siahs of the peoples morals. I have had enough of half formed © fetuses, women’s organs, and opinions on placards, bill- boards, T.V., newspapers, ad nauseum, and now for Pete’s Sake at a Trade show. I was under the impression “Trade” meant some kind of training in a specialized area, like mechanics, carpentry, engineering, artistry, with the end result of having a product for sale. Just what trade do the pro-lifers represent? If one stret- ched one’s imagination but kept it in the context of the Trade Show, and these pro-lifers had gone through any formalized training and come up with a viable product — say a designer condom, or a new and improved his and hers chastity belt with , matching. keys — would have had a _ credible reason for being there; but if opinion is the only criteria for obtaining a booth to display ones wares, next year can we look forward to, say, ‘The Ayatollah’s handbook on Cor- rect Forms of Religious Fanaticism’’, or perhaps a pam- phlet on ‘101 guaranteed ways of turning people against your cause and credibility”. If no guidelines. exist for displays at Trade Shows I would strongly suggest the Trade. Show representatives in Terrace come up with some. Enough already! Suzanne Verard, Terrace, B.C, Teach "good" lessons To the Editor; I tended to agree with the let- ter in the May 2 edition of the Review re: the placement of con- dom vending machines. I firmly believe our schools are meant to teach ‘‘good’’ les- sons and promoting premarital sex is not one of them. I understand the urges of first love — I’ve lived through that. I wonder how many of the young people who can’t say ‘‘no”’ truly think about the risks they are taking and the responsibility of both the male and female for the new life that might be formed by their actions. And how many of them realize that marriages _ where one or other of the part- _ mers had sex before the wedding night have. an 80 percent, rate of divorce. For the safety of those adults who need protection and those who defiantly want to do their own thing, putting vending machines in the malls etc. as mentioned is an alternative that shows there are other costs to those actions; perhaps this would help those wishing AIDS who are not in school anymore and also provide access to a multiplicity of other things to spend their time and money on. I just want to add that we have only lived here a short time but I am truly impressed and thankful. for the loving, warm caring community and the re- sources Terrace offers. Mrs, L. Buckle Terrace, B.C, perhaps they — ae ce ca aries SP ot es org igo,