Page 12 WE'RE HAVING A_PARTY: All work and no play makes Jaek, (Jack?? - ughi| ) Jacqueline a dull Bey, Girl and if anyone deserves something better than a dull life, it's our hard working nurses. On June Sth, they decided to "swing" and invited several others to join them at a party at the Residence. Elizabeth, Tanya and Margaret jointly hosted a very entertaining evening of dancing and socializing and really outdid themselves with the scrumptious, unusual lunch which they served. This party was also a good send off for Elizabeth and Frank who left on holidays two days later. lappy Holiday. (Who was the cute - beetle type character who joined the happy group after midnight - couldn't have heen Joe F. could it?) NOT THE "ROCK" FESTIVAL BUT???? A Wine Festival was held on Friday June 19, 1970 at the Ladies Staffhouse. The Hippie Section of Cassiar was in full attendance. They sat around till the wee hours of the morning smelling like a herd of "Moose" and trying to hide their smell by burning "Orange Blossom" incense. The music was "way out" as they say. Before midnight most of them were already in the promise land, visiting with their Creator. Everyone thanked their hostess Miss. Paddy Garret for the enjoyable evening spent with the flower children. ewe ww ee ww ww ow we wow oe om Bill Corrigan was the host at a Farewell Party on Saturday, June 20th, at the Senior Men's Staffhouse. The party was in honour of Keith and Clara White who will be leaving shortly. They have been in Cassiar for approximately 2- years now and Keith first started off as a welder and later started working for the school here at Cassiar. Keith, Clara and family are apparently heading for Prince Edward Island and we wish them all the best. An employer, interviewing an applicant, remarked: "You aks for high wages for a man with no experience." Well, the prospect replied, "it's so much harder work when you don't know anything about it." A quick thinking employee cam e up with a new one when the foreman demanded "How come you're sleeping én the job." "Goodness," replied the employee, "can't a man close his eyes for a minute of prayer." WELCOME TO: All the Students back home from a year out at school. Most of them are now hard at work within the Company and we wish them all the best. Lois Hernandez who came to us from Whitehorse and is working in the Reception Office. Diane Mac Donald who also hailed from Whitehorse. Diane is operating the Telex. Steve and Norma Tarasuk who arrived from Vancouver. Steve is working with Mr. Thornicroft. Steve and Norma have seemed to adjust quite well to the camping scene and Steve is seen quite often at the lakesides with his fishing rod - let us know about the first big catch Steve! Hine Kawerau and son John who hail right from New Zealand. Hine will be nursing here. Leonard Werner who is working in Geology. FAREWELL: Mike Ripco from the Geology Department has now left us and it seems as though Mike plans to travel and see the world - heading first for parts in Canada and then on to Europe - Good Luck and Happy Travelling ‘Mike. John “Mac Donald from Accounting is leaving Casstar and going back to Toronto to join his wife. The following is taken from the "Daily Colonist", Victoria, B.C. Friday, June 12, 1979 and is a re- print of an article by Navid Shaw, "Colonist Time Service", Los Angéles. LOS ANGELES: "His name looks like an accident on a Scrabble board, his demeanor might best he described as perpetual indignation and his temperament is more the volatile Greek of his ancestry than the calm sobriety of his profession. His voice, even in normal conversation is loud, and his speech - uttered in tones of unquestioned authority - is studded with profan- ity, interrupted by ethnic mimicry and accom- panied by flamboyant gestures. 1 An unlikely description for a judge? Yes. But Peter Katsufrakis is an unlikely judge - a judge fighting and winning, a private revolution unique in southern California jurisprudence. Katsufrakis ("most people just call me "the judge with that name") presides over small claims actions in Division 4 of the Los Angeles Municipal Court. Despite his gruff, commanding manner, Katsufrakis is not overawed by his position, and his courtroom is clearly more casual than most, with the sound of laughter as frequent as the sound of the gavel.