VN_-H/- — © our fantastic little omputer, you will remem- at it was given to us by rn Construction Co., the ‘preserve them. Their Ss manager, Jim Murray, n with responsibility st accounting the Por- Ountain powerhouse, was esponsible for program- ur computer when it was we grabbed Anthropology's hen grabbed Hendrick's er gift and finally, the st deal of all, we per- Jim Murray to come to s and teach E.D.P. in- ion systems to our ac- ag students on Tuesday ursday nights. So, round to the Business those nights and meet ‘Nova Scotian with great ment experience. , ‘., qos F d pO eb 'o, that was two corned beef on rye, a cheeseburger, tbo _- coffee regular, one black, and a prune Danish.” U~w-en. | , on i - rm. 4 * ~~ e Northern Construction now has a $20 million contract to build eight islands at the mouth DOUGLAS COLLEGE LIGRARY sre itt ARCHIVES of the MacKenzie, 200 miles north of the Arctic circle. They have already built two of these is- lands, named Immerk and Adgo, in the Beaufort Sea for Imperial Oil. Gravel has to be hauled across 60 miles of Arctic ice and there are many difficult logistic problems. Jim Murray is the manager of these head- aches, which include pack ice floes up to 50 feet thick driven by 70 mph winds, build- ing a floating 60-man construc-— tion camp, and timing the dred- ging schedule for mid-July to avoid interfering with the migration of the Beluga whale. i: On the mantlepiece in the Murray home is what at first appears to be a massive, crum pled copper shield. It turns out to be a cast of a dinosaur footprint, one of about 15 dis- covered in the bed rock during the construction of the dam. Jim tells me that clear trails of two adult dinosaurs were exposed, marching along neat Parallel lines, with a trail of baby dinosaur prints crossing behind on a frisky diagonal. Ton Mug