a ns Casthigitr News February 17, 1985 ENTERTAINMENT LUNCH IN THE 1884 RESTAURANT Open Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. SALAD BAR (Monday th: h Saturday ) — $3.95 eae 1) (Mon. to Sat.) Starting at 6 a.m. UNCHEON ECIAL — $3.50 Monday, tora Weoenan. 11 a.m. -2 p.m. Neale! Nahe Vly the new TT veil SITY wilt fel Pilitiiiit Ll ritit trail, bec. MONTE CARLO MOTOR INN FAMILY RESTAURANT OPEN DAILY ‘TIL9 P.M. BREAKFAST PANCAKES $1.99 Lunch Specials — From $2.95 Daily Dinner Specials — $6.95 Including soup or salad, végetable of the day. boked or duchess potato, tea or coffee and dessert 1935 Columbia Ave. 365-2177 Pair sang Weill's songs for 18 years NEW YORK (AP) — For nearly 18 years Martha Schl amme and Alvin Epstein have been collaborating, singing the Berlin and Broad way songs of Kurt Weill. It's an unlikely union be- tween a classically trained Viennese folk singer and an American actor whose exten sive theatrical credits range from Samuel Beckett to Rich ard Rodgers. Today, they are still doing Mack the Knife, Pirate Jen ny, September Song, Sur- abaya Johnny and other clas- sies written by the German- born composer in a revival of their Kurt Weill Cabaret, one of the few musical hits of this barren off-Broadway season. Their collaboration was born of desperation during the summer of 1967 when Schlamme found herself without a partner for a con- cert of Weill songs at Rav- inia, the summer home of the Chicago Symphony in High- A Sweetheart of a Deal! Valentine Special at De's Ranch House ratte bab Steak & Crab 8 Oz. New York Steak....... $10.95 1-Lb. Crab. .... Including sald, garlic toast, tea or coffee & dessert! Live Entertainment Country Rock DAVID ANTHONY Playing Feb. 14,15 & 16 8 p.m. to 12 p.m. Sun., 6 p.m. - 10 p.m. tN iodon will Matis cso eons —— HOUSE E RESTAURANT Cestlegor mC ry: Costlocird Plaza) For Reservations Ph. 365-2722 MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL EUROPE With Wardair HOLLAND - BELGIUM 5 Days Coach Tour From © 19 ror Person We. Saturdays 9am. to land Park, Ill. Her usual associate, Will Holt, who had written the script for their evening of Weill music, had decided to stop performing. A friend, Mark Epstein, suggested his brother Alvin as a replace- ment. “It wasn't all that difficult to persuade him to do the show because he loved the music,” Schlamme says. UNSURE SINGER But Epstein, despite a role in the Richard Rodgers mu. sical No Strings and several Restoring SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) — Fingers of light are being used to lift the sound from audio cylinders so old and fragile they could be classified as artifacts. The two-year-old Belfer Audio Labratory and Archive at Syracuse University is the first building in the world desinged to preserve and restore sound recordings. It is the only place where old cylinders, an early form of recording supplanted in this century by records, are played back using laser beams and fibre optics, says William Storm, director of the lab. Their use in sound restoration involves casting a pinpoint of light into the recording groove, capturing the signal and taping it for indefinite storage ‘and replays. Laser experi ion in other lab ies has been confined to dises, and Storm says no one else in the field was using fibre optics “Playing the cylinders with a normal needle literally wears away the record,” he says. “It would be like exposing a great painting like the Mona Lisa to harsh light.” Some of the cylinders are almost a century old — their mass-production began in 1888 — and their brittle surfaces cannot stand the weight of phonograph needles, which reproduce sound from mechanical energy, or friction. Early cylinders were wax over cardboard and played for two minutes. The more advanced blue amberol series discontinued in the 1920s featured a celluloid material over a plaster-of-paris core and played for four minutes. But they too now are showing their age. Moere-than-a decade ago, Syracuse-alumnus-Ower Lewis worked on a solution; scan the grooves with light. Lewis, now a consultant for the U.S. government, and a Latham, N.Y., firm known as Mechanical Technol old music replay recordings in better condition — the original equipment, if it does not damage the grooves, and magnetic cartridges. The 22-year-old archive is a branch of the university's library system with more than 250,000 phonodises, 7,000 cylindrical recordings and about 10,000 tapes. The centre maintains a museum for groups that are shown machines such as an 1877 tin foil phonograph, graphophones and phonographs from the 1880s and a 1906 Victrgla. The groups hear tapes of restored cylinders ts dises +. turn-of-the-century music, speeches, readings and instructional lectures. In a 1912 speech off a cylinder, President Theodore Roosevelt thunders: “We need leaders of inspired idealism, leaders who are granted great visions, leaders who dream greatly and strive to make their dreams come true.” John Phillip Souse and Victor Herbert contributed to the collection of marches, while other tastes in popular music ran to vocals such as You Ain't the Man I Thought You Was by Ada Jones and The Violin My Great-Grand daddy Made by George Ballard, a Syracuse native. Humor and vaudeville sketches make up another category of cylinders. Most cylindrical recordings were not produced in large quantities, and most in the archive's possession are rare, Storm says. use there is no worldwide index of sound, it is impossible to determine whether any of the cylinders is ‘one-of-a-kind: Last year the sound archives of the library of \ Congress, the New York Public Library and Stanford, aa Inc., have contributed expertise and equipment in experiments with lasers and fibre optics respectively, Storm says. He says the archive also has two other ways to off-Broadway musicals, was Yale and Sy universities pleted a two-year project to index more than 650,000, 78-rpm commercial dises cut between 1894 and the 1950s. Computer-keyed, the records may now be located through a six-category cataloging system. cs ee unsure about singing on stage. HENNE TOURS Reno Bus Tours March 2 — 7 Days Staying at the Comstock MARCH 9, 16, 23 & 30 NOW BOOKING $ 1 0 se for seniors Waylon Jennings & Willie Nelson IN CONCERT MARCH 12 Overnight at The Sheraton MARCH 23 iy $4192 Easter at Disneyland Fly Tour March 29th Visit the Magical Kingdom of Disneyland 11 Days, 10 Nights Fantasy Tour “New Price” Kids Fly Free Program 11 years and under $625%.. $38 Disneyland & San Francisco PRING BRE 11 Day, 10 Nights — March oo ‘ O'NEILL PLAY TOUGH TO STAGE Open 4 p.m. Daily LICENCED DINING ROOM FAMILY DINING Reservations for Private Parti: Located | mile south of weigh scale: — 365-3294 in Ootischenia TRY O Spinach, Onion & Feta Cheese Ask for our RESTAURANT SPINACH PIZZA 1432 365-6028 | CASTLEGAR UR New fice. The public is welcome Pot Luck Supper 5:00 p.m. p.m. Public meeting, discussion 7:30 p.m Bulletin Board SCHOOL Regular Meeting, February 18, 7:00 p.m. in the feord oF. SENIOR CITIZENS ASSOCIATION ALL PAPER CASH BINGO The Castlegar Aquanaut Swim Club is having an all paper Cash Bingo at the Castlegar Arena Complex on Saturday February 23. Advance tickets are $8.00 and are available at the Wool Wagon, Macleods Store, Central Food and Kel Print. Early Bird is 6:00 p.m. with Regular Bingo at 7:00 “LET'S TALK ABOUT SCHOOLS Graham School, Slocan, B.C. Tuesday, February 19. 1905, BOARD February 21 214 and video presentation at W.E $3.15 and ds (which must be used for Minimum charge is $3.15 ( Notices should be brought Columbia Ave. Coming events of Castlegar and District non-profit organizations may be listed here. The first 10 words are edditional words are 15¢ each. Boldtaced wor There is no extra charge for a second consecutive inser tion while the third consecutive insertion is half-price headings) count as two words whether ad is for one, two or to the Costlegar News at 197 * Deluxe p °One night in Reno © Knott's Berry Farm © Sea World © Tijuana, Mexico San Francisco * Visit Solvang, Danish capital of America * Tour escort oY 4 ye ee * Disneyland HENNE TRAVEL NEST’S TRAVE Jackson runs nine-act marathon NEW YORK (AP) — Shortly after a trans-Atlantic flight, Glenda Jackson sits in a Manhattan hotel room explaining why she has chosen to face the wintry blasts of Broadway again. « The 48-year-old English actress’ hair is dark red, bobbed flapper-style. She wears tailored gray pants and a white sweater. Her no-nonsense manner softens as she talks about the roles she has chosen in movies and plays over a nearly 30-year career that has earned her two Oscars. “I grab greedily with both hands when something comes along that I think is interesting,” she says. The object of her obsession right now is Eugene O'Neill's 57-year-old Strange Interlude, a nine-act marathon. Its language shocked Broadway in the 1920s and was even banned in Boston. In the role of the-obsessed Nina Leeds, it offers a part that most actresses simply wouldn't or couldn't be able to tackle. “It's a play I've known for a very long time,” Jackson says. “I'd read it when I was about 18 during that period of my life when I was reading all of O'Neill. I thought then what an extraordinary piece it was.” For years the play was thought too difficult to stage, although a revival starring Geraldine Page had a moderate run in 1963. The current production, a hit last year in London, runs four hours and 40 minutes, with two intermissions. The play's length has reduced the playing schedule to six performances a week instead of the customary eight. The producers are charging a record $50 a ticket for the best orchestra seats. But the first day tickets went on sale at the Nederlander Theatre, a line had formed by 8 a.m. It's a testament to Jackson's drawing power, although her last New York appearance, nearly four years ago, in the less than critically acclaimed Rose was not successful. That play withered after a run of less than two months. In Strange Interlude, actors express their inner thoughts out loud in long monologues and then slip back into the play as if nothing has happened. “The play seems virtually unstageable on the printed page, partly because of the spoken thought aspect of the play,” says Jackson. “But that's part of the challenge — to do something that you think is unstageable.” Jackson played the wife of Andrei Sakharov in a film about the Soviet dissident shown on pay television last September. She's completed work on a movie with Ben Kingsley called Turtle Diary, and another film, Return of the Soldier, with Alan Bates, Ann Margaret and Julie Christie, opens this year in the United States. Except for a two-year period after graduating on a scholarship from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, Jackson has worked steadily in theater or films “When I left drama school, I was told by its head not to expect to work much before I was 40 because I was essentially a character actress. Given the state of the British theatre, it was a very accurate assessment But then John Osborne's realistic kitchen-sink drama opened, and plays demanding actors who looked like real people were in vogue. After. a repertory stint, Jackson auditioned for the Royal Shakespeare Company — three times — before finally being hired by director Peter Hall. In 1964, the RSC brought her to Broadway where she starred as the demented Charlotte Corday in Marat Sade, Peter Weiss’ story of the French Revolution set in an 18th-century insane asylum. The role made her known in London and New York. Six years later, she won her first Oscar for her performance in Ken Russell's Women in Love, an adaptation of the D.H Lawrence novel. Her second Oscar arrived in 1973 for the comedy, A Touch of Class. Despite continued success, she's still nervous when she acts. “The anticipation is really trepidation before a performance. But then when you start playing, you don't have time for those kind of indulgences,” she says. “But it gets worse. It doesn't get better. There's the realization that it's very easy to act badly and very difficult to act well — the most painful lesson you can learn. That realization becomes stronger the more you do.” Famous duo soon in color LOS ANGELES (AP) — Soon you'll be able to see the bumbling antics of Stan Lau rel and Oliver Hardy in color. That's the promise of Hal Roach Studios Inc., which owns 105 Laurel and Hardy comedies dating back to the silent era. Says Victor White, Roach president: “We have to color — Help Mates of the Desert and Way Out West. The potential is trem endous.” The magic is achieved by scenes with an seanner, the scenes by computer OK VIDEO & PETE’S TV Spectacular New MOVIE RENTAL RATES Mon. - Thurs. (Overnight)... 1.99 rer movie Friday (Overnight) .......... 2 for $4.99 WEEKEND SPECIAL Sat.-Mon....3 Movies $8.99 MACHINE RENTALS Mon., Tues., ponptatl Thurs., Fri. $8.49 Wednesday vasme $6.49 6455 365-64: WORLD PETE’S TV — OK VIDEO OK VIDEO WORLD PETE’S TV Overnight PETE'S TV already converted three films Sons keying cole's to individual electronic then transforming Dr. J VANCOUVER (CP) — The British Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons has found Dr. William Jory guilty of infamous conduct, revoked his licence to practise med- icine for one year and or- dered him to pay a $30,000 fine. The college's ruling came after three years of private hearings by a three-member college disciplinary commit- tee. It investigated charges that Jory, 51, an ophthal- mologist and former B.C. Medical Association presi dent, had performed quickie eye exams on Indian children in 1981 and had billed the Medical Services Plan for ex- ing 78 or more patients in a single day — 11 different times that year. Jory was not available for comment but his lawyer, Robert Gardner, said “the (college) council meted out Kids' nuclear fears eased if parents answer questions OTTAWA (CP) — Parents can ease their children’s an xiety about the threat of nu: clear war by giving candid and well-informed answers to their says an ory loses licence the worst possible judgment and the most serious possible penalty” on “an extremely vague and wide-ranging charge.” Gardner said that an ap- peal will be filed in the B.C. Supreme Court along with a request for a stay of ex- ecution on the revocation of Jory's licence to practise. LITTLE PUNISHMENT But New Democrat MP Jim Fulton, who first raised the allegations against Jory, said the punishment was “absolutely minimal.” The allegations of exces- sive billing against Jory were first made public in the House of Commons by Fulton in April, 1962. At that time, Jory had been recently in- stalled, for the second time, as the president of the B.C. Medical Association. The year before, he had been a last-minute candidate for the post, which pre- They concluded that in stead of talking about mili. tary strategy after a shock- ing film about nuclear war, for example, there could be American psychologist. “The horror films and books (about nuclear war) should be followed by a dis cussion of what can be done to stop it,” Dr. Ralph White told delegates to the On tario’s Psychological Associ ation’s annual convention. “Give them two reassuring facts — first, there has been no real war since the first atom bomb was dropped and second, the peace about the growing strength of the peace move ment. “Peace isn't high on the list nuns viously had never been held twice, during a bitter feud within the association over medicare. Jory, who had headed the medical association in 1976-77 and was defeated in a 1979 bid to become president of the Canadian Medical Asso- ciation, was one of the lead- ers of a right-wing “reform group” of doctors seeking higher fees, extra billing and other changes to medicare. Gardner said he was un- able to comment on some as- pects of the case because under the Medical Practition- ers Act the college was able to hold the hearing in cam- e ° “We'll have to reserve some comments for the court- room,” said Gardner. “But I will say that I personally hate the in camera hearings. It's always better when the pub- lie and the press are able to scrutinize these things.” health problems in children. A questionnaire completed by 1,100 Grade 7-13 students in three Toronto school dis. tricts indicated children have grave concerns about war, but those who worry most are also the most optimistic something can be done to - : ce = kn antec cocci, BRUSSELS (AP) — An outburst of terrorist activity across western Europe has brought forth a wave of fear in government and industry that a European brotherhood of terrorism may be in the making. The attacks, mainly aimed at NATO's defence system and its suppliers, caused lit- tle stir last fall when they erupted sporadically. No lives were lost. There were no signs of Terrorists hit Europe cr ADVANCED UPGRADING COURSE FOR “e in: ee ATe nay, Ios weeks) For contect: of security experts to “ pao tet egpaie Bisons Selkirk College forts. ROSEMONT CAMPUS, L__ 200! Silver King Road, Nelson, 8.C. VIL 1C8 — 352-6601 J CASTRO ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING for a high-level on Casti P anti-terrorist measures to be bys ded by the 10 Ew “Maranatha Court" among terrorists. That changed on Jan. 15 with a joint declaration by West Germany's anarchist Red Army Faction and France's left-wing Direct Ac- tion that they were joining forces against the U.S.-led NATO military alliance and other “imperialist” targets in western Europe. Ten days later, Rene Aud- ran, director of arms sales at the French defence ministry, was ambushed and shot to death outside his suburban Paris home. Direct Action Common Market countries. Although the latest viol- ence is not as intense as during the 1970s when ter- stage of terrorism that was directed inwardly,” said Dany Wungaerts, a gist who is studying Euro pean terrorism at the Free University of Brussels. claimed The West German group struck next. Its target: Ernst Zimmermann, chairman of a West German company that makes engines for NATO's Tornado jet combat planes. He was shot in the head by intruders who burst into his home near Munich on Feb. 1. Other bombings and arson attacks directed at NATO installations, its personnel or companies that do blsiness with it have occurred in France, West Germany, Bel- gium, Portugal and Greece. The violence, and worries about more co-ordinates ter- rorist attacks, have promp- ted western European gov- ernments to increase secur- ity precautions and to con- sider co-ordinating their anti- terrorist tactics. e France and West Ger- many have set up a special The college started inves- tigating the complaint after Fulton said the specialist, then practising in Prince Ru- pert and living with his wife on a 14-metre ketch in the city's harbor while their two children attended private British schools, once exam- ined 100 Indian patients in less than an hour. The financial statements of the B.C. Medical Services Commission show that Jory's practice billed the province for $195,802 during the fiscal year ending March 31, 1983 — the latest public figures available. © That still placed him among the highest-paid doc- tors in the province. The previous year, Jory’s practice was paid $232,776. For the fiscal year ending March 31, 1981, Dr. Jory had billed the plan for $175,691. prevent it. About 51 per cent of stu- 0 beautitul room dents listed nuclear war as with satellite FV; one of their three greatest — enjoy Dexter's Pub worries (followed by personal ond Heartland Restouront career goals and family mat- SANDMAN INN ters), and 29 per cent said it Castleger was their greatest worry. 366-8444 Susan Goldberg, a psychologist at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children. “We need a think-positive strategy. We need to help kids and grown-ups know they're part of a caring com munity.” Goldberg and five —_ is growing and we parents think we can handle it,” White, a professor at George Washington University, sug gested at the weekend meet- ing. Recent studies in Canada and the United States con clude young people feel pow. erless to halt the arms race and this hopeless outlook af- fects the way they view their future. Some experts claim it is causing mental health problems. Participants in the sym- posium on the psychological impact of the nuclear war threat agreed greater em phasis should be placed on how the doomsday scenario can be avoided. medical p ducted a study last year tate the claim that anxiety over nuclear war is causing mental an TAE This Week in YEXTER’S PUB LESS THAN 2 MONTHS LEFT TO UTILIZE YOUR C.0.S.P. OIL CONVERSION GRANT According to the current W.K.P.&L. Co. comparison cheaper than oil CHROMALOX —— = Electric Forced Warm Air Furnace Ideal for add on air conditioning, electronic air cleaning and automatic humidification Adapts to present ductwork Model HAF electric heating is 200% CONSIDER CHROMALOX Electric Heating it makes sense. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: HOOLAEFF ELECTRIC LTD. 365-7191 HAPPY 40th PAUL! Still at K.J.S.S.? Tues., Feb. 26 7 p.m. at 767-1 1th Ave., Castlegar ALL MEMBERS PLEASE ATTEND ANNOUNCEMENT J.T. (Tim) Allen (B.Sc. O.D.) Optometrist Is pleased to announce the opening of his CASTLEGAR OFFICE at Ste. 2-615 Columbia Ave. Office Hours: By Appointment Wednesdays and Alternating Mondays There are times when you can't get to the credit union before it closes. And there are times when you just run out of cash. Kootenay Savings Credit Union has the answer for those times. The Kootenay Savings Cash Card. The Kootenay Savings Cash Card gives you access to your accounts 24 hours a day, 7 days a week from our branch locations in Castlegar and Trail. WIN 4000 Use your Kootenay Savings Cash Card at least three times a month and you could win one of four $1000 term deposits! Details at all branches. money get 24 hour cash without a hold up. Ask about the Kootenay Savings 24 hour Cash Card at any branch of Kootenay Savings Credit Union. When you're on the run and you run out of Kootenay Credit Union RAIL * FRUITVALE + NAKUSP + + NEW DENVER + WANETA PLAZA SLOCAN 4 ‘