@prefix ns0: . @prefix edm: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . @prefix geo: . ns0:identifierAIP "b1535f61-02b1-4de8-b317-8e100d917f42"@en ; edm:dataProvider "CONTENTdm"@en ; dcterms:alternative "[Sunshine Coast News]"@en ; dcterms:isPartOf "BC Historical Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:issued "2014-02-14"@en, "1993-02-08"@en ; dcterms:description "Serving the Sunshine Coast since 1945"@en, ""@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xcoastnews/items/1.0175986/source.json"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note " Victoria, ��������-��� ' i COAST^NEWS 50 cents per copy on newsstands February 8,1993 Volume 47 Issue 6 District forester pushing for final LRUP report by Jane Seyd Some people say il's not likely to happen, but dislricl forest manager Greg Hemphill is urging members of the Tetrahedron Local Resource Use Plan group (I.RUP) to come up wiih a final report soon. Speaking lo the LRUP committee Wednesday, Hemphill said if a final recommendation comes in lhe next six months, it can be included in the provincial government's Protected Areas Strategy deliberations. Under the strate- ~~������\" gy, lhe Tetrahedron Plateau will be among areas considered for wilderness preservation by the government Ihis fall. Within lhe area including lhe Sunshine Coast, there is currently aboul IU.6 per cent of land designated as wilderness area, said Hemphill. The government would like to increase lhat to 18 per .cent, which would mean an additional 15,000 hectares to be set aside. Hemphill added, however, thai a recommendation from Ihe Tetrahedron group will be competing wilh proposals from many other ureas, including the Lower Mainland. Proposals which are easiest to implement and have agreement from all parlies will likely be \"the ones thai gel designated (as protected areas) first 1 expect,\" he said. \"They would like lo sec a complete report sometime in early fall ... We want a report that's fairly clear and concise, saying whal should happen in that area.\" Not everyone thought lhal was likely. \"I don't think we're real close lo gelling a final report in,\" said Murray Cantelon of Ihe local IWA. \"If we're trying to reach one option I think we're wasting our time because we're pretty polarized now.\" If a final report presents Ihe government wilh several -Oiilt Htfttlpblll choices rather than a ������\"*\"~\"\"*\"\"~\" unanimous recom- 'We want a report ... saying what should happen in that area' tnendation, it may decide to choose one, to make a decision on its own or to recommend further study of the issue, said Hemphill. On Wednesday, Iwo subcommittee reports were presented lo Ihe LRUP. Both the recreation and wilderness groups recommended either complete or partial preservation of the sludy area. Further reports on jobs and the watershed reserve are expected soon. Meanwhile, members disagreed on how the past two years' work of the committee should eventually be presented to the public. \"If we're going to lake Ihe public process seriously, we have to have something the public can relate to,\" said Cantelon, who favoured a format which is concise and easily understandable. turn to page 3 Reflecting on a night and day well spent, Chatelech DaVinci program students pack up the bus at Camp Byng and head home Tuesday. Joel Johnstone pholo Education hikes expected across board by Darah Hansen Increase is Ihe word to use when describing what should be expected in the coming school year: increase in students, increase in teachers, increase in salaries, increase in teaching space, increase in busing. Unfortunately the smallest increase to be expected will be the amount of funding coining from the provincial Miii!��iy oc !'*U- ' cation - and lhat means a decrease1 in educational services. School district 46 secretary-treasurer Tim Anderson said the details of the 1993/94 education budget were worse than he had anticipated. Although the figures released by the Har court governmenl Jan. 24 show a $100 million, or three per cent, rise compared to last year's education budget, Anderson said Ihe real increase when enrolment is taken into account will be nominal. 'And wage increases are expected' In fact, with a 2.5 per cent jump in the number of students expected for the province next year, the monetary increase will equal less than one per cent, on a per- pupil basis. \"And that's without factoring an increase in the regular cost of living,\" Anderson said. On the Sunshine Coast, 250 new students are expected to swell the already crowded classrooms and while extra money will be provided by the ministry because of this, Anderson said most of it will be absorbed \"right off the bat\" by salaries for the new starf that will be required - teachers, maintenance and custodial. Add to that the $50,000 needed to provide for extra buses. \"If we then have a wage increase on top of that then we're in a deficit,\" said Anderson. And wage increases are expected. turn to page 2 Gibsons' community acquires 10 acres of farm land on Shaw Road by Charles Hart A municipal land deal that has been in lhe works for more than four years has finally been completed. Gibsons annnounced Tuesday that il has bought the former Christenson farm, Tuckwaway, on Shaw Road - a 10-acre parcel that comes with strings attached. The purchase price of $195,000 is estimated to be less than half the market value of the land, which Mildred and Thor Christenson purchased in 1947 and operated as a farm unlil recently. \"This is a very, very magnanimous thing for the Christensons lo do,\" said Mayor Eric Small. Christenson made the sale on condition that the land be used only for community benefit and he attached restrictions to the agreement. The specified uses include public park, public playground, community centre, public school, police station, library, community heallh facilities or non-profit housing for seniors, and will be registered against the land title in a restrictive covenant. Small said he made a verbal agreement with Thor Christenson to set aside a minimumiO per cent of the property as a park, land council agreed Tuesday to name formally as Christenson park in recognition of the family's generosity. Bill Merilees, a Christenson family relative, said Thor's concern was to ensure that the property would not be flipped or developed for profit. \"It has all worked out well and the family is quite happy,\" Merilees said from his Nanaimo home. He noted the proceeds of the sale are more than Thor Christenson, now elderly and in a nursing home, will need to care for himself during his lifetime. Mildred Christenson died in December. Council gave first reading to a bylaw which authorizes the town to execute the purchase and debt financing for a term not exceeding five years. Repayment of the Gibsons' new property on Shaw Road. Joel Johnstone photo loan will be an addition to this year's municipal budget, which must be finalized by the end of May Small said the town has no specific plans for the property at this time, \"but will consider everything within Ihe permitted uses.\" Acknowledging thai the whole property could be dedicated for a park the mayor commented: \"That's not very likely.\" Texada: a study in contrasts across Malaspina Strait by Jane Seyd Silting off Ihe mainland across Malaspina Strait, the low blue slab of Texada Island rises from the gulf like an object seen in peripheral vision; an afterthought. The largest of the Gulf Islands, Texada is geographically close, but it's not a place many people visit. \"It's not an easily hospitable place,\" says Jim Dougan, who grew up on Ihe island and has lived on the south end for the last 17 years. \"It's not easy to get to and there's not many places for moorage. The wind is never still where I live. \"There's a nice big island, bul only the north end has any population ... You step on certain places and you gel certain feelings.\" Despite a ferry lhat leaves Powell River for Ihe north end of the island regularly, there's still a quality of Texada that's unapproachable, which folds over its history and remains silent. A northern view of Texada Island. \"I loved the place. Other peo- manent settlement on the island. pie hated it because it was iso lated,\" says Dougan. Early on, both Sechelt and Sliammon people avoided per- Today, the island's rugged physical and emotional landscape still presents a challenge. \"It gives you a different per- Jane Seyd photo spective from any of the other Gulf Islands,\" says Phil Makow, who spent four years on Ihe island building a hobby farm. \"You couldn't just get by.\" The east side of Texada, mostly uninhabited, presents a blank face to the mainland, rising steeply from the deadheads floating in Ihe water to a mix of occasional logging scars and layered fringes of trees. Underneath Ihe ground, the lines of the island's past run through old veins of copper, gold, iron and marble. At Blubber Bay on the north end, a quarry sits next to the ferry dock wilh conveyers, Euclid trucks and hills of limestone. At an old loading site, down a dirt road strewn with chunks of rock, the remains of an old crusher sit inside now-crumbling foundations. The base is still held up by pieces of timber and there are bits of rock rusted into the huge gears. Blackberry bushes grow over bent strips of metal nearby. \"Texada Mines Ltd.,\" reads one sign. \"Mining: BC's 2nd biggest industry.\" \"Danger Explosives.\" turn to page 9 Teachers reach tentative deal by Darah Hansen There will be no teaching strike on the Sunshine Coast this year. Sunshine Coast Teacher's Association (SCTA) president Sharon Wood confirmed Friday that the contract bargaining leam has reached a tentative agreement with the school district, ending months of ongoing negotiation. Wood said the terms of the two-year agreement have yet to be ratified by members of the union. That's expected to occur at a meeting sometime next week. The school board will also be presented with the agreement at its regular meeting Tuesday. Until the deal is ratified by both parlies, no details of Ihe agreement are being released to the public. Prior to reaching the Friday agreement, Wood said the teachers had given their union the authority lo call a strike vole should lhe package presented by the school board be unacceptable. turn to page 2 .AMMHI Coast News, February 8, 1993 8 8 6 I O R O O R O N PIZZA OM-E-G-A RESTAURANT OMEGA'S NEW PIZZA HOTLINE 886-4241 (FOR 2 FORI) 2 FOR 1 PIZZA DINE IN TAire-OUT OR DELIVERY t* TWO SMALL PIZZAS v plu-i tan with chees? and 2 loppings V.l.ll.atll, Willi a- rati |t* HI f * J-k. ��� nil nrdiitrin P.*at Nrn nNdhr dttm) 'WUVn. 'Pirludraeifn-hr***-* OMEGA 4-2-4-1 886-4241 htta.r.i 1.D 2K9*)* ��� aVAlUAIIir COUPON aa *_m _ J Fa\\MILY CHOICE TWO M.--DIUM PIZZAS ONR PIZZA CIOPPINGS* POS THEAtXIUS OlNtt l'l/7Js liaTliw wnii 2TOPPIN<��* FOR I HE KIDS 2 umo. raua 17.99 mis tax VaW aataty aattla roupnas far lakeasasl. o�� mm US. Mai leffifaaeal available aa aaMalooal ram No. vaUd fo. drUveay oa*a. 'Eaxhadn e.tra atacac. OMEGA 4'2'4'1 886-4241 news Resource council lumbering toward reality mm _-,-_, ��� VAI'MBtJr.nsiPttN, f..pare. Farla *\",'*���. by Stuart Burnside After a year of discussion, deliberation and debate, an ad-hoc committee of Coasl residents is poised for tlte creation of a formal, govemmenl-sanctioned council to deal wilh any controversies surrounding Ihe use of Crown land within the Sunshine Coast Regional District. The proposed \"resources council\" will comprise representatives of all Coasl communities, according to ad- hoc committee chairman Harry Almond. Initially, il will advise the various government bodies on what Coast residents feel is Ihe besl use for Crown land. 'It will be independent... It's to be made up of interested and knowledgeable people from all over the Coast' ���Horry Almond \"It will be independent,\" Almond said of the council, \"It's to be made up of interested and knowledgeable people ftom all over the Coasl. The council can act lo serve the besl interests of the communily, but draw on Ihe (financial and technical) resources of Ihe governmenl.\" While the council will start out as an advisory panel, Almond and committee spokesman Barry Janyk, both feel that the resources council will move beyond lhal role once il has established credibility. Janyk noled a synopsis of the ad-hoc committee's expectations for the council reads: \"The proposed Resources Council would seek to fill a perceived gap in local government jurisdiction and pul Ihe provincial governmenl on notice that il would speak lor the Sunshine Coasl communities on issues pertaining to the current and future use of Crown land resources.\" He also noted that Ihe plan for the council was in keeping with a desire on lhe part of Ihe province lo make Communities more responsible for their own land-use decisions. \"ll was intended lhal the creation of the resources council would try to lie in wilh Ihe mandate of the (provincial) Commission on Resource and Ihe Environment (CURIO lo deal wilh land usage,\" Janyk said. \"... Part of CORE'S mandate is lo have land-use decisions filter down lo Ihe community level.\" He said lhat a number of the ad-hoc committee members had visited Victoria seeking the approval of CORF. Commissioner Stephen Owen, who supported the resource council concept, bul only on Ihe condition that the establishment of the council was done entirely through community effort without supervision or funding from the provincial government. \"Once we get it up and running and establish credibility, (Owen) will hack us all (he way,\" Janyk said. Almond said the ad-hoc committee hoped to have council representatives selected by the end of March, drawing upon communily ratepayer groups and associations to provide roughly two members each. \"Those, plus sis or eight members at large, should cover most of Ihe Coasl and give us a 24-member council,\" Almond said. \"Which is a pretty good number.\" \"The whole purpose of this (council) is to rise above personal interest and try to do what is best for the community' -Harry Janyk The ad-hoc committee, which will be disbanded once the council is in place, has spent the last year, among other things, hammering oul terms of reference for the council, with an emphasis on objectivity. \"lhe whole purpose of this (council) is to rise above personal inlerest and try to do whal is best for the communily,\" Janyk said. \"The council will have lo work together objectively with the community interest in mind in order lo establish any kind of credibility.\" According to Almond, Ihe idea for Ihe resources council was adapted from a proposal of former district forest manager Barry Mountain, who wanted to set up a council to deal primarily with forest use decisions on the Sunshine Coast. Focus on LRUP plan rather than procedure: Hemphill from page I \"We've had two years to study Ihis technical crap ... It still all looks like colours (on a map) to me.\" But Dan Bowman of the Tetrahedron Alliance disagreed: \"I believe the public has the right to see the hard information thai has been gathered.\" Hemphill urged the group to focus on completing a report and to not get bogged down in peripheral debates. \"Don'l get hung up on Ihis procedural stuff. We're trying to compiele a plan here.\" Hemphill said he has also met recently with Ihe Friends of Caren, who presented their park proposal to him. Unlike the Tetrahedron, the Caren Range is not included in the Protected Areas Strat egy. \"That puts ihem at a real disadvantage,\" he said. A Forest Service plan for a modified ecological reserve in the Caren is expected by the end of February, said Hemphill. It will likely include sel asides for some areas of old growth, but will allow logging in others. Hemphill said outside ihe reserve area, the Forest Service will also Iry to identify \"significant features,\" such as very old Irees and wildlife habitat areas which need pro- lection. Earlier Ihis year, a significant marbled murrelet population was found by scientists in Ihe Caren. Hemphill said Ihe ministry is currently seeking advice on that issue from its forest sciences division. ift SepTtaSystem j School wage criticisms rejected ��� f \\_w HSZSrQS 1 front page I of cancelled education programs gauged with the hours worke ��� Don't allow any vehicles to drive or park over any part of the septic system. ��� Donl pour paints, solvents or toxic chemicals into drains or toilets. (Tank bacteria action may be destroyed) ��� Don't dispose ol grease, fat, coffee I grounds, paper towels, facial tissues, , nair, cigarettes, etc. In sinks or toilets. | ��� Dont plant trees pr shrubs in or near the ' I disposal \"eld area, as their roots may ' ' affect the system. | ��� Don't overload the system with water I from dripping faucets or continuously ' running toilets. I This Information Series Presented by: BONNIEBROOK INDUSTRIES LTD. Septic Tank Pumping Services serving Gibsons, Sechelt, Pender Harbour areas. 886-7064 (collect) i front page I Anderson explained thai leachers have a built-in wage increment scale that automatically costs the districl $200,000 each year. Presently, teachers who have graduated wilh a four- year university degree and have sjpentone year in an apprenticeship will be hired ,at $34,916.' Over a 10-year period lhal figure will rise to $54,846', wage increases negotiated over subsequent contracts notwithstanding. \"So what happens?\" said Anderson. Traditionally, he said, Ihe heaviest cuts have hit the mainlenance and custodial services first, bul in lighl of Ihe continuous student population boom the staff is already stretched thin. So it might come in the form of cancelled education programs or classroom sizes getting a little bigger, he said. Anderson dismissed recent criticisms coming from school districts in the Lower Mainland alleging that top-hea 'V administration wages are > 'ighing down the system. Already one administration job has been cut, he said, adding \"it would not be logical lo look al removing further people from the board office.\" He listed the administration salaries, which include the school principals, secretary-treasurer, assistant superintendent and superintendent, as ranging from $67,000 lo more than $90,000. And though the figures may sound like a lot of money, when gauged with the hours worked, it doesn't equate to much, Anderson said. The president of the BC Teachers' Federation, Ray Wor- ley, has renounced the new education budgei, calling it \"insufficient to meet the changing needs of students\" and \"potentially disastrous\" to education. He said classroom services Will only be exacerbated by the lack of funding, leaving teachers unable to work effectively with increases in enrolment, in special needs students and in public expectations for schools to solve social problems. \"If we want to see the returns from a first-rate public education system,\" Worley said, \"we will have to make the investment.\" Book Space Now For Sunnycrest Mall's Hurry! Show Saturday March 13,1993 Find Out What Our Mall-Wide Indoor Show Can Do For Your Business Call Nancy at to reserve your space 'Flexible' negotiations end from page l At that time, she listed changes to the traditional distribution of power as the major \"sticking points\" in negotiations. Teachers were asking for more control in areas previously controlled by administration, including job posting and filling processes and teacher disciplinary actions. School district secretary-treasurer Tim Anderson said Friday that both the board and the SCTA had been flexible in their positions at the negotiation table, adding he didn't think either side got exactly what they were asking for. \"There was some pretty tough talk,\" he said, \"but I take my hat off to the teachers on the way they handled themselves.\" Elphinstone Secondary -NEWS- ���N Parents Mettle Monday. February 15 Topics: - Should some courses get more time than others? - Cafeteria update ��� Independent time for all students for teacher advisement The latter topic was addressed at the last meeting but more time was needed. All parents are encouraged to attend. BMtoflall ����� Elphi Jr. Boys Feb. 9 - 3:00 pm Report CerdaAwitohto Report cards will be distributed to students on February 16. School Hum On February 17, the student council will be putting on another successful school dance. They will be looking for parent chaperones. If they call for your help, please consider their request seriously. _t_mtm atM ���m news Party problems overstated, Wilson says by Jane Seyd They'YO said that he's arrogant and driven by a personal agenda, a Captain Bligh-style leader who doesn't lake advice when it's offered, and rarely seeks il. Thai's when they're being nice. In the pasl mouth il's often been much worse for Ml.A and Opposition U-ader Gordon Wilson. Hut il politics is becoming a strain, Wilson isn't saying much about il. Liberal caucus infighting? One or Iwti dissidents blowing ,ul'f steam, he says. Relationship .with Hie media? Basically unchanged from before the last election. As for his own leadership of the BC Liberal parly, Wilson iiComiltcnlSi \"I feel as secure now as I did in l')X7 ... The question .of the leadership blooms like ���tulips in the spring. The principal difference is as a Leader of .the Opposition il's a much more attractive position to go alter.\" He discounts rumours of a split within the Liberal ranks Juvcr that: \"One has to consider the source,\" he says. \"I really don'l lltittk It's a huge issue.\" Or alternatively: \"I guess we'll ,)tave to isolate which attacks we're talking aboul.\" Ml.A (itirdon Wilson lie prefers not lo mention former Liberal and party defector David Mitchell hy name, referring tn him as \"a Wesl Vancouver-!, iarihaldi MLA.\" Problem? Whal problem? \"Il's a problem lo the extent lhal il detracts from our ability lo do a job,\" says Wilson. \"...There's no question there are people who are uncomfortable wilh the philosophical direction I'm taking the party. \"When you're involved in politics you have lo make decisions ... I do listen and I do take advice, hill in Ihe final analysis I'll do whal I think is right. \"If that's arrogant, I guess it is ... When I lake advice, you don't hear ahout It.\" Among a list of early political mistakes made, Wilson says \"I gave a lot of latitude lo people who did mc a lot of damage.\" While everything's slill open for discussion, Wilson seems quick these days to build a wall of words around himself, piling up the successful example of his sland on the October constitutional accord in front of his more recent difficulties. One thing he's learned aboul public life is, \"It is extremely difficult to remain open and honest,\" he says. \"... The price of being open and direct is a good trashing in the media on occasion and a lot of people aren't going In want lo put up with lhal.\" Mosi recently, the questions put In him about his privale life were simply uncalled for and unfair, he comments, \"h wasn't affecting my job... Neither did they have any evidence fu support (he allegation,\" he says. \"Wli.it an individual docs in their private time is none of the business of Ihe public. \"You can't defend against lhal kind ol stuff.\" Meanwhile, Wilson says he has nn intention of giving up the BC Liberal leadership, or of chancing his philosophical approach to the parly: \"You have lo sland ou principle and sometimes you have lo fall on principle as well.\" Coast News, February 8, 1993 CRUISE SPECIALS Make ITP your first port of call Holland America Line A TRADITION OF EXCEX'LENCE* An incredible deal on a Hawaii Cruise... 50% SAVINGS off the second person, including FREE AIR and a FREE Pacific Coastal cruise! Choose from two Hawaii itineraries aboard the ss Rotterdam from $2100 Cdn 19-day Circle Hawaii Cruise 13-day Hawaii Discovery Cruisetour Your Escape Artists Suncoast Agencies CRUISK Df^ARTMKNT Sunnycrest Mall ��� 886-9225 OPENING Sandy Hook residents raise road safety concerns by Stuiirt llurnside A spokesman for the Sandy Hook Communily Association (SIICA) appeared al Wednesday's Sechelt council meeting demanding council act to remedy perceived dangerous road conditions in Sechelt's out- ' lying communities, particularly those located 'along Riisl Porpoise Hay Road. SIICA member Trevor Kirby cited a Dec. 28 accident in which a car containing a woman and her three children skidded off Sandy Honk Road and somersaulted down a 120-foot ravine due to black ice. He said lhe portion of llie road in question was kiiow'n In have serious ttesign Haws and his assi,'c.'al(Hh'lia;d iei|iie'sfe'(1 moW'/lii,.. 'ii' ' veiiti ago jfoilpwitig a sitnjlin, accident) that ' colmcil at least'e'rect barriers at Ihe Sile, . \"'There are two or three crevices in the rockfacc (at the sile of lite accident) Kirby explained, \"where streams of waler run oul.\" \"He said Ihose streams of waler. coupled wilh ItaVing the road slanted loward lite ravine, spell disaster eveiy lime it gels cold enough When we did ask over a year ago that a barrier be pul there, the request was sidelined because of costs -lit'i'tir Kiti'V to freeze, \"It makes for black ice,\" he said. \"And you don'l have to be speeding oh billet!;' ice,\" \"'Kifby s'ii'falt. \"This wnmaii (who had IliV'acci- .W\\\\l\\ JtViisn'i speeding ... When we did ask over a yeitr ago that a harrier be put there, llie request was sidelined because of costs.\" He noted that Ihe accident victim is \"talking to her lawyer\" about Ihe situation. \"I brought this up as a mailer of urgency,\" Kirby said, \"because in Ihe long run we as taxpayers have lo pay the court costs and whatever.\" Kirby went on lo list other areas of Hast Porpoise Bay Road which he said held potential dangei for drivers and required council attention, Mayor Nancy Mail arty noted that Hast Porpoise Hay Road and other mads in tha area were in poor shape largely because, prior lo becoming part of the District Municipality of Sechell, Ihe roads where simply logging toads paved over with a lack of consideration for design or specifications. She implied it wasn't realistic for the municipality lo contemplate upgrading Ihem lo'ililinicipal standards because of the cost, \"llie way in which (these roads were upgraded) wash'I even adequate by the standard*! we had as a village (ultddnlle Miami-' pal Act),\" Mncl.aily said. \"Now we have municipal standards which are (of an even higher quality).\" Kirby s concerns wlier, however, referred to Ihe public works commitle, which will meet Tuesday. 2 FORI PIZZA Take Out & Free Delivery Wilson Creek Plaza ��� 885-0321 [ sroFF I COUPON**\"'1 ^Cowrie revitalisation project requires cash infusion As a result of high lenders, Ihe District of Sechelt will be forking out something in tho neighbourhood of an additional $.10.00(1 to keep Ihe downlown revitalisation initiative alive. The tenders for work on the projecl came in recently (two of them) and the lowest bid. 5370,635 from Spani Developments, is some $60,000 over projected cost. In a split vote decided by Mayor Nancy MacLarty, council agreed lo apply for a grant from the Ministry of Municipal 'Affairs for half the cost of the increase and pay Ihe rest through a short-term loan. In the event Ihe ministry won't pay, Ihe districl of Sechell would have to cover Ihe entire cosl. Councillor Peggy Wagner, who noted that the revitalisation initiative was a partnership between Ihe municipality and local businesses, asked if Ihe businesses would be required lo chip in. \"Not without going lo referendum again,\" she was told, which could jeopardise the whole initiative. Wagner and councillors Shanks and Kolibas voted against the district paying more, while MacLarty and councillors Wilson, Whistler and Giles voted in favour. t'P(if S*A*L* 1010 ,..,:,'- Draw Your Own Discount s_^~\\ 10-30% J^fcU^ 3 Days Only Thursday, Friday, & Saturday Lots of New Spring Arrivals Mete's RESTAURANT \"Specials of the Week\" i Feb. 8-13 BRATWURST on a bun with fries $4.25 LIVER & ONIONS with potato & vegetable *____* Specials include soup or salad & GST EVERY MONDAY 15 SENIORS'DAY AU MEALS 10% OFF PLEASE NOTE: WE WILL BE OPEN SUNDAY, FEB. 21 AT II om FOR THE SKAT TURNIER ONLY * vcWcVu��\\���� .,,��V..Y I ,,e ���nV * <***? ^>*��> vt.**** ���*����'*& Had i^SssSsr* \\'3v_Ti��__V��f> mote os ��^��*��S+ taCSt all **' ��� �� 1993 ESCORTS STAWS*lHJ)5k * $500 repurchase certificate Mailable for mime new car lord oumm We Need To Clear Out These Vehicles! 1993 ESCORT LX DOOR HATCHBACK < I.t Crystal Blue Clearcoat ��� Blue Cloth/Vinyl 1 Manual Air Conditioning Power Steering 1 Light Convenience Group 1 Light Group 1 Dual Electric Remote Mirrors ��� Remote Fuel Filler Door Release ��� Power Deckliil Release ��� ESP 60/10,000 km Premium Car ��� 1.9L Sell Engine ��� 5-Speed Manual Transaxle ��� PI7S/70R1.-.BSW Tires ��� Tachometer Instrumentation ��� AM/FM Stereo Cassette Radio 17 Models to Chooee From: ���Doors, 4-Doors, 5-Doore & Station Wagonsl More Inventory Coming - We Need the Parking Spaceel RESTAURANT LICENSED PREMISES ��� 886-3434 SUNNYCREST I SOUIHCOASIFOUD Wharf Rd., Sechelt MDL 5936 PH 885 3281 (PARTS DIRECT LINE) 885 721 1 VAN TOLL FREE 684-291 1 ____________________________ .tiftiftfiatatfMHMil Co