oe. as Castlegar News December 2, 1987 “The New Epidemic’’ & Chicken Cordon Bleu # STEAKS * SEAFOOD = POULTRY * CAESAR SALAD Your Questions Answered SUNDAY FEATURE REE Prime Rib/York shire Pudding 36-Minute Video sr TORR The information in the Homemode Desserts ond Pastries video is exactly right. ANS PARED. — Dr. Roy Ward Avellable at Pete’s TV DOLL’ FAMILY . . . Han- dcrafted dolls by native Alaskan dollmaker Susie Brown are four of 40 dolls on display beginnin Friday at the Nationa hib Centre. IRINCESS\ BRIDES at y just $4Q IO, asco May Vist, 1988, for a spacious room plus Take a Calgary break — see the Flames, visit the Olym: pic facilities, shop for items not available at home WE'VE GOT IT ALL AT THE PORT O’ CALL — # Indoor pool and whirlpool * Steam room * Health club and racquetball * In-room movies. * Near Village Square Leisure Centre; easy drive to Calgary Zoo. GREAT FOR MOM AND DAD, TOO * Fine dining and family restaurant * Cocktail lounge and two pubs ¢ Conveniently located near shopping malls, easy freeway or rapid transit to downtown * Free airport limousine; heated underground parking, park and-fly program available CLIP THIS AD AND SAVE AT THE PORT O’ CALL! 1935 McKnight Blvd. N.E., Calgary, Alta. T2E 6V4 RESERVATIONS: (toll-free) 1-800-661-1161 INFORMATION: (403) 291-4600 Photo by Chee Arend, Eskimo dolls on display The West Kootenay National Exhibition Centre will present an exhibit of hand-crafted Eskimo dolls beginning Friday and running through Dee. 31. The exhibit includes 40 dolls collected during 1982 from 13 Alaskan communities. The dolls, fashioned from native plant and animal materials, reflect the cultural traditions and aesthetics of each locale. With the exhibit are photographs of the 18 dollmakers whose works are represented. The exhibit also presents information on the various events and activities the dolls depict, as well as a list of materials used in making each doll. Old whalebone, walrus ivory, feathers, seeds, caribou skin and seal skin are among the more common materials. The dolls in the exhibit are contemporary examples of a traditional art form that dates to 2,000 years ago. Recently, over a broad area of coastal Alaska, archaeologists have excavated human figurines carved from wood and ivory. Researchers believe these early dolls, which lay buried in the frozen ground of ancient villages and camp sites, may have been used for ritualistic and ceremonial purposes. VANCOUVER (CP) — The provincial government's film- JOIN US FOR . © BREAKFAST © LUNCH © DINNER © WEFKEND SMORG Senvicecau_ 365-6887 LICENCED DINING ROOM OPEN 4 P.M. DAILY WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED Wagon or Sleigh Rides at 365-3986 or 365-3294 Reservations for Private Parties — 365-3294 Sheraton Spokane Hotel 2} presents Sheraton Grand Ballroom »? December 28-31, 1987 Dinner Concert DECEMBER 28-30, 1987 $110.00 conodion per couple plus tax Some also may have been children’s toys. The Eskimo dolls of today, however, are craft objects made for collectors and tourists. Although children take delight in the dolls, very few are intended as toys. Nearly all are made for sale, with prices ranging from $75 to $1,500. Proceeds from the sales of dolls make up a substantial part of each dollmaker’s family income. The dolls in the exhibit are dressed in highly traditional and often historic clothing. The accuracy of the clothing style is an important part of the dollmaker’s craft, along with the quality of the materials and the fineness of the stitching and carving. Lifelike facial expressions are also an attribute for which many dollmakers strive. The exhibit was organized by the Alaska State Council on the Arts through a cooperative agreement with the Native Crafts Program of the Alaska Native Foundation. It is being toured in the United States and Canada by Visual Arts Resources of the University of Oregon Museum of Art. Admission will be charged to non-members for this exhibit. The centre is open Tuesday-Saturday, 9:30 a.m. - DUNAWAY ANNIHILATES Located one mile south of h Scales in Ootischenio. MOST COMPREHENSIVE MENU IN TOWN ror BREAKFAST. NCH... DINNER (Takeout Service Availeble) (WHOLE MENU) iss wwocren HOURS 36: ‘ondey 12 meow pom. Ave., Castlegar Sundey 12 neon-8 p.m. 1004 Col 4:30 p.m. The centre will be closed on Christmas. B.C. Film to fund three feature movies to three feature movies to be shot this winter, B.C. Wayne Sterloff Although contracts are yet to be signed, letters of offer from B.C. Film have gone out to B.C. producers Stephen Foster, Harry Cole and Bob Frederick, Streloff said. Foster and Northern Lights are producers on The Outside Chance of Max Glick, currently shooting in Mani- toba with post-production to be done in Vancouver. Cole is producing Lighthouse, to be shot on Vancouver Island. Frederick, production mai ager on the ABC series Mac- Gyver, will produce First Season in B.C. Originally, B.C. Film wasn't scheduled to accept applications from feature film producers until Tuesday. LEGION BRANCH 170 DANCE FRIDAY, DEC. 4 & SAT., DEC. 5 DALE EDEY Guests must be signed in Proper dress after 9 p.m Castlegar Aquanauts Lic. No. 62514 Annual cs With This Coupon = <= a GOING TO SPOKANE? | THE TRADE WiND$ MOTEL Help Celebrate Our 25th Year! One Bed $25 (U.S.) — Two Beds $30 (U.S.) DOWNTOWN W. 907 Third Ave. 509-838-2091 JAUST PRESENT COUPON AT REGISTRATION, NOT VALIO WITH ANY OTHER PROMOTI Coupon However, the recent funding freeze by Telefilm Canada — the federal government's film funding body — caused B.C. Film to move up its time- table, Sterloff said. “The Telefilm crisis is a desperate situation,” he said. “There is potential for real damage to B.C.'s film in- dustry. That's why we start. ed talking to pi a GLAMOR IMAGE By BOB THOMAS Press LOS ANGELES Glamor, says actress Faye Dunaway, is an awful burden, but she's only kidding. She may look the glamorous star with her sculptured cheekbones and her ice-blond hair, but she's not loath to poke fun at an image which she annihilates it in Barfly. In this film, she plays an enigmatic lush among the low-lifes of East Hollywood, a parttime hooker who connects with a poetic booze-fighter, Mickey Rourke. Why the image change? “If you've been on a certain terrain, you don't want to go there again,” she said. “I wouldn't want to play Network again, because I've done Network. “I don't think the roles I've played over the last five years have represented me in the right way. For better ‘or worse, one is identified with one's persona. “If I played one more queen, I'd been in trouble. You know — the larger than life, strong, overbearing women without being terribly wounded, but who can inflict pain. “Where is Bonnie, which is the part I've played that is the closest to Dorothy Faye, my real name.” Dunaway’'s role as the 1930s desperado Bonnie Parker in the 1967 movie with Warren Beatty, Bonnie and Clyde, remains her favorite role and she wants to do it again, so badly that she has formed her own production company to search for the part. MEETS ROURKE ; Barfly came to her through an accidental oe with Rourke in a Chinese restaurant in London a yeai while she was dining with her then-husband, British photographer Terry O'Neill. Said Rourke: “T’ve got something that would be good for you” and the “something” turned out to be an auto- biographical script written by Charles Bukowski, the poet laureate of Los Angeles’ skid row. “It was a godsend; Mickey was an angel,” the actress said. She was being offered a role that broke her film image. Dunaway hadn't known of Bukowski, but she under- went a crash course in his work and had a memorable meeting with the inconoclastic author. For openers, he derided Shakespeare in blistering language. She stood right up to him and they got along beautifully after that. She pumped Bukowski for details of the real-life Wanda, prototype of the role she plays in Barfly, and she did research in a lowdown bar on New York's Ninth Avenue, encountering an alcoholic whose own life paralleled Wanda’s. Weren't the boozers astonished to find Faye Dun. away sitting. among them? “To drinkers, there's only one thing that's important: that glass there, in front of them.” The actress had high praise for her co-star, calling him g and PLAYS ROLE Rourke played his role with matted hair and bloated face, causing her to remark: “You look so bad, and I look so good; what can I do?” He pointed to a small scar above her eye and recommended making it more noticeable. Other film beauties might be repulsed by such a suggestion, but Dunaway readily agreed. She has resisted pigeonholing almost from the beginning of her film career 20 years ago. Her co-stars and directors have called her difficult, tardy and in- furiating — also brilliant. Her mother, Grace Hartshorn, was the first to month ago.” B.C. Film, announced in September, provides funds to B.C.-based companies and in dividuals for script develop- her single “All the time t knew Faye wanted to be the best and the biggest,” she recalls. Dunaway, 46, lives with her son, Liam, in the same New York apartment she has had since Bonnie and Clyde. BROADBENT. ATTACKS BOTH VANCOUVER (CP) — The British Columbia labor movement's battle against both free trade and the government's pr plans got a rousing federal NDP Leader Ed “lt is no aecident, in my view, that (Prime Minister) Brian Mulroney and the premier of British Fed slams Vander Zalm Georgetti calls him an ‘old retread’ vanes (CP) — ies a Pond speech to more than B.C. of Labor 900 went for ae eee eeeacias cating jogs) roa Piven Bill Vander Zalm a “parliamentary illiterate.” Ken i's tone was set when the support a bad international trade deal’ and support de- regulation and privatization at the same time,” Broad- bent told a cheering, table-thumping crowd at the B.C. Federation of Labor's annual convention. He told more than 900 delegates to the week-long convention that Premier Bill Vander Zalm and Mulroney have an infelxible view of the economy that they put ahead of the long-range interests of Canadians. “Bach puts the ideology of the marketplace ahead of what has emerged as Canadian common sensé,” Broad- bent said. He said both leaders are attempting to make massive changes in the economy and the social of federation’s 82nd annual convention opened with an altered version of the Star Spangled before the singing of O The ended with the line, “Oh say will yet wave for this land, O Canada, on\can she still be saved?” may be one of the movement's direction in the coming year. Those decisions involve British Columbia's move toward privatization, free trade with the U.S. and the new Reform Act, he said. Canada and it all adds up to a sellout without public consultation. “Neither had an elected mandate for what he now is doing,” Broadbent argued. “Bill Vander Zalm now is busy selling off British Columbian’s public health and highways services and many others. “Brian Mulroney is busy giving away | i the province has announced it plans to sell off about $3 liticg Grows abccta and govormagns watVices'ty fat ani provincial labor laws that unions say will allow for more in 80 Georgetti did not specifically say How the federation will fight privatization, but made his feelings clear. To the cheers of delegates, he described Vander Zalm as an “old retread” from a previous regime and warned that privatization will result “in the biggest pork barrel in B.C. history.” Before his speech, Georgetti appeared distracted. But he warmed up as he pressed his attack against Vander Zalm and his majority provincial government. vision for B.C. is so blurred and out of step, it’s just ” he said. “The right-wing vision of British Columbia is elitist, but it's in keeping with the sytle of a man who in one short year has centralized all the power of government into his own hands.” Georgetti accused Vander Zalm of formulating government policy during news conferences while keeping his cabinet and caucus in the dark. “He makes major decisions on a whim,” Georgetti said. “He has turned his cabinet into a group of ignorant sheep who are paralysed with fear this man will publicly humiliate “them.” In sumniing up his first year as president of the 250,000- or, teem the youthful steelworker from Trail, aid tal changes have been made in the labor, ition, Georgetti, while criticizing Vander pr for failing to keep his election promise of a more Repair and Rewind of Motors Generators, Power Tools, Pumps General Machine Work Welding and Fabricating ad make Role Beow Sale, December 5, | - 3 p.m. Satter casts tam: Tickers $1 100. Door Prize, se CITIZENS: 3, 2:00 p.m. Dict. Business meeting, December December 17, 2:00 p.m. All welcome, government, said there is greater communication within the federation. But about two dozen picket outside the convention Canadian control over. our energy resources.” Vander Zalm has suggested, that a two-tiered health system could reduce lengthy waiting lists by allowing patients to pay for surgery at private hospitals, easing the burden on the public health system. The premier has also stood firm on his plans to sell highway maintenance operations to the private sector, prompting fears from within his Social Credit party that highway safety may be jeoy The 250, 000 member fe federation plans to escalate its fight against privatization and will decide during the convention on action against the free-trade déal which has yet to be approved by either the Commons or ngress. Privatization and free trade are seen as threats to the trade union movement because of the potential loss of ‘Broadbent said the labor group's concerns are supported by recent opinion polls indicating most respondents don't support free trade. He also said only half the agreed on free trade at last week's first ministers’ conference in province,” the labor leader said, “and the decisions we make over the next five days will impact on virtually every man, woman and child in this province.” centre app d to disagree with that statement. Betty Green, president of the Vancouver Right to Life Society, said some federation members feel ‘their voices were not heard when the organization took ‘a pro-choice stance and decided to support free-standing abortion elinies in Vancouver. She said many union members have no idea the federation has a pro-choice policy. Toronto. ‘The deal is Mulroney's most important betrayal of the Canadian public, the NDP leader said. i Zalm, of course, said it was fantastic,” Broadbent said. “That was the high level of his “Premier Bill Vander analysis.” ment, pr re-pro- duction and promotion and distribution. B.C. Film will allocate $10.6 million over the next three years, the money com. ing from B.C. Lotteries. Sterloff said Monday he has received six applications for script development fund- ing and one for funding a short-form (a film or TV epi- sode shorter than 75 min- utes) project. Contacted in Winnipeg, | where he is currently shoot ing The Outside Chance of Max Glick. Vancouver pro- ducer Stephen Foster said he expects to sign the agree- ment with B.C. Film by the end of the week. ei NON OR DISCOUNT (AP) — Actress Sally Kirk- land says producer David O. Selznick told her when she was a 17-year-old apprentice Niro. that she'd have to wait until middle age to be a star. Kirkland says Selznick right Now 48, Kirkland is play- ing a lead role in the movie Anna and has played oppo- site the likes of Robert De- SANTA MONICA, Calif. She says Selznick’s advice may have been a self-ful- filling prophecy. “I wonder, somehow, if he programmed me,” she said recently. Anna, shot in New York by emigre Polish movie maker Yurek Bogayevicz, stars Kirkland as a fading Czech- oslovakian actress. IME FOR A CHECKUP. Calendar . 4-31... The W.K.N.E.C. is presenting an Enel of eee crafted Eskimo dolls. Open Tuesday to Soturday, 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Grandma seeks answers VANCOUVER (CP) — natural grandmother of a three-year-old girl who suf- fered serious internal in- juries while in a foster home in suburban Surrey wants a government-appointed advo- over girl with a federal or provincial offence. Derek Finall, a staff law- yer for the legal services branch of the ministry, said when Stinson applies for an advocate “we will review the and make a cate to repi the child’s interests. Louise Stinson said it has been more than three weeks since Kristi McClain was i jured and she still has no proper explanation of what happened from either the Social Services Ministry or the RCMP. “Lm not too pleased with what welfare is doing,” Stin- son said Tuesday. “There should -have been some ex- planation. “Kristi almost died twice, and she is still not out of the woods. We still don't know what happened.” Kristi is in serious but stable condition in the in- tensive care unit of Chil- dren's Hospital following two emergency operations. She was taken to the hospital from the foster home Nov. 13. Police say they are in- vestigating the incident but have refused to divulge de- tails of the case. Under the Family Re- lations Act, the Attorney General's Ministry can ap- point a lawyer “to act as counsel for the interests and welfare of the child” in pro- ceedings involving custody, guardianship or maintenance or where the child is charged decision.” Social services spokesman Art Seott refused comment when asked why the investi- gation was taking so long. Stinson said her grand- mother now is sitting up in bed and seems to be re- sponding to treatment but doctors say it will be a long time before Kristi can leave hospital. Kristi and her younger sister Jaclyn were appre- hended for their natural mother Ilys McClain — Stin- son's daughter — by the Social Services Ministry in December 1985 and place din the foster home. Jaclyn was anent custody of the girls. The case has been adjourned to Feb. 16. Motive questioned SEATTLE (AP) — bery might not have been ie pooh in the killing of a young Victoria couple who were travelling in Wash- ington on business, investi- gators said Tuesday. Travelers cheques that Jay Cook, 20, and his girlfriend, Tanya Van Cuylenborg, 18, had been carrying before they disappeared Nov. 18 have been accounted for, said Mary Kermen, chief deputy of administrative services with the Skagit County sher- iff's office. The cheques were worth $300 Cdn. But saw the couple on Nov. 18 have revealed that Cook and Van © The couple's 1977 Ford van and some of Van Cuylen- untroubled when they stop- ped to buy gasoline in Allyn, Wash. Cook's body was found Thursday by two hunters about three kilometres from Monroe, which is about 40 kilometres northeast of Seattle. The body was identi- fied Sunday through dental records. Donald Carmen of the Snohomish County medi- cal examiner's Office said an autopsy showed Cook died of asphyxiation caused by declined Monday to say whether $260 Cdn. in cash the couple had been carrying has been re- covered. Investigators did say that discussions with people who kids an item such as 2 cord or wire. Van Cuylenbor'’s partiaitly clothed body was found Nov. - 24 in a wooded area near Burlington. She had been shot to death. Teachers ready. to walk out GOLD RIVER, B.C. (CP) — A contract dispute is threatening to escalate into a strike in a Vancouver Island school district because of new legislation that affects tea- chers bargaining. The 66 teachers in the Van- couver Island West Teachers’ Association voted 90 per cent Tuesday night to walk out in Gold River, Tahsis, Zeballos and Kyuquot if School Dis- trict 84 doesn't make a better contract offer by Monday. April. The teachers, who in- struct 980 students at five area schools, have been with- out a contract since school started. “Teachers have struck be- SMe Your satisfaction have accepted a wage pack- age — 1.9 per cent that was determined by an arbitrator in the spring. They remain deadlocked on other issues and can't agree on whether the dispute should go to ition. borg’s were found in Bellingham a week ago. RECEIPT FOUND Inside the van, investi- gators found a ferry receipt dated 10:16 p.m. Nov. 18 for the Bremerton-Seattle run. Detectives have been unable to contact any ferry workers who recall seeing the victims or their van. Skagit County investigat- ors have established the pair sailed on an afternoon ferry that day from Victoria to Port Angeles, Wash., then stopped outside Port Angeles to.ask directions.to Bremer- ton, Kermen said. But the couple drove south on U.S. 101 instead of driving across the Hood Canal Bridge Nov. 23-30 45" PRINTED Dec. 14-19 All Patterns WEEKLY SEWING SPECIALS FLANNELETTE Reg. $5.95m. .......Sele Dec. 1-5 All Fall Fashions .............30% Off Dec. 7-12 All Corduroy wide wale. rin woie ex. ...30% 2 CARTERS SEWING CENTRE ING OUR BEST TO SERVE YOU. . 63 columble Ave., Castlegar 365-3810 $3°°,, is our main concern PLUS MANY MORE LOW PRICES tithe : Caechestrd Plaza and at 9:30 p.m. stopped to buy gas in Allyn along Wash- ington 8, about midway be- tween Shelton and Bremer- ton. Kermen said the store 5, at the pamelor 7100 p.m. Various pochoges CRAFT FAIR Robson Hall, Dec. 4 and 5, }0.0.m. to 4 p.m. baa 365-5772 or 365-5633. Rattle tick: fe ye Watercolor le tickets for " available from Initiating Commitee members or phone Vi 365-5705. 4 rede ‘and District who bought gas. She said they “didn't display any stress and had ample oppor- tunity” because both were in the store talking to the pro- prietors. ‘The two apparently plan- A $15,000 reward has been offered for information lead- ing to the conviction of the D.C. Cromarty Mr. W.F.G. Arthur, Manager, is to Christmas 11... . The Selkirk Chamber Choir and or INCLUDES: One night accommodations, dinner. and Alberta grown * Canada no. 1 tickets for hoo. $150.00 conodion per couple plux tax New Year's Eve DECEMBER 31, 1987 INCLUDES. One night accommodations. dinner, tickets = dancing. and midnight festivities for two. FOR RESERVATIONS CALL YOU LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT OR 1-800-848-9600 Sheraton-Spokane Hotel N32 Spokane Falls Court Spokane, WA 99201 (509) 456-9600 Sat., Dec. 5 Arena Complex Early Bird 6 p.m. Regular 7 p.m. Same Payouts as Previous Bingos 60% Payout Early Birds 60% Payout Specialty Games PACKAGES AVAILABLE De PPP Pe Pre Pe Pe Pep New Year's Eve Dance Community Complex Thurs., Dec. 31 9 p.m. to2a.m. Music By. Goodtime Music Retreshments Available Tickets ote $17.08 Single £35 Double 2 Pharmaseve, Castlegar (one teed Spore chestras Messiah Concert will intertain with @ sing-o long on Friday, December 11 at on Satur doy, Dec. 12. 8:00 at the Brion! Cuttoral Centre. Alsoa periormance on Sunday, Dec. 12 at 2:00 p.m. a! the Nelson Civic Centre December 12... A Victorian Christmas for Christmas ot the W.K.N.E.C. from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Register by phoning 365-3337, Items for this bi-monthly feature should be telephoned to Lynda Carter of the Castlegar Arts Council at 365-3226. re Sponsored by CASTLEGAR SAVINGS CREDIT UNI ON J) FRANK'S SHARPENING SERVICE Castlegar, B.C. "Behind Costle Theatre ———_ For all Types of SHARPENING Saves (All Types) Chain Saws, Corbide Blades, Scissors, Ferri Shears, E — Mower blades Dolonced ond shor} _ Bondsaw blodes (up to wide) made up Most types of saw chains mode vp 365-7395 Viva © white © yellow * champagne paper towels ............. © wing steak oF or red © works out to only 10¢/Ib, aS go potatoes ..........50 Ibs./ cut from Canada grade A beef * regular cut t-one 3 8 steak ..........n9.8.33/Ib. 7 Prices effective up to and including Sun, Dec. 6, 1987 PLAZA SUPER-VALU OPEN SUNDAYS 10 A.M. - 5 P.M. ey TL!) Pacific evaporated milk 385 mt tin... cut from Canada grode A beet * tenderloin removed att, 2099 sirloin steak. kg. 6.59/Ib. Children’s Color Photo ‘with Santa “ez.” FREE With Sunday Brunch =" or $2.50 Each without the Brunch. Professional Photos By L i Our Fabulous Sunday B h includ. /7} o figgs Renedict © Corved Log af then © Lots of Fresh Fruit & Much, much more. FOR RESERVATIONS 365-8444 IN THE CASTLEGAR SANDMAN INN 1944 Columbia Ave.