ENTERTAINMENT BANQUETS & COCKT: PARTIES FOR GROUPS OF 15 TO 120. ELMER GILL ALL THAT JAZZ COME TO OUR CABARET! Sat., Jan. 11 — 8 p.m. Castlegar, Recreation Complex RESERVED TICKETS ONLY! Phone 365-3226 or 365-3834 or get tickets at either library, either drug store \ oF any arts council member. 1410 Bay Ave., Trail Arnold back on TV - LOS ANGELES (AP) — Danny Arnold sat on the edge of a chair, cigar in one hand, his spectacles in another, and talked about his return to television after an absence of three years. An Emmy was on the desk behind him: He has won Emmys for Barney Miller and My World ‘and Welcome to It. Barney Miller also won a Peabody Award, and this year the Writers Guild of America presented the Paddy Chayefsky Laurel Award to Arnold for a lifetime of excellence in television writing. Bronze statues of horses, some with jockeys, were all over his office. After Barney Miller left the air in 1962 after seven seasons on ABO, Arnold spent a lot of time racing his horses here and in Europe. “I closed down Barney Miller when the major writers left,” said Arnold,.who underwent heart bypass surgery in 1979 and turned most of the work over to his assistants. “After I was ill and came back everyone was burned out “I was faced with the possibility of having to do it alone. I couldn't sustain the quality and figured it was time to get off. “And on my new projects if I can't find the help to maintain the standards I won't do it.” The writer-producer has a commitment from ABC for three half-hour comedy series over the next two years. . LOSES WEIGHT Arnold, 61, is 45 pounds lighter than when he had surgery. His thick blond hair is graying at the temples. He usually has a cigar in his hand or his mouth, but after his illness he cut his consumption of 25 cigars a day down to three. The first sitcom he will do is called Joe Bash, which stars Peter Boyle as a New York City foot patrolman. “He's cynical, disillusioned, syspeptic and has written off the world,” said Arnold. “He's only got a few years to retirement and his attitude is that if everybody out there wants to kill themselves, let them. “He started out young and energetic and idealistic, but be found the more he did for disillusioned he became.” people the more He has some other ideas for pilots, including « romantic comedy. { “Pl do as many as I feel I can do properly,” Arnold said. “You can have a good pilot and a good cast, but if you don't have the people to write it each week it doesn't matter how good the pilot or cast is, there's‘ no sense going forward.” ‘After he ended Barney Miller, he spent time in Hawaii, then began spending time with his horses. “I did very little creative work. I read a lot of I found I had a writing block. When you've worked for many years at a particular pace and stop, everything collapses. “You have to rebuild and find a lot of motivation.” FILES SUIT Arnold also is involved in his lawsuit against Columbia Pictures Television over the syndication fees from Barney Miller. He contends he has not received his rightful share of the syndication rights, which he estimates are worth $150 million. In the future, he said, he'll syndicate his new shows himself. Why did he decide to come back? “You spend a lot of years working hard,” he said. “Then you achieve success and stop. I'd be in Hawaii or Europe and people would say, ‘Hey, you're looking good. Now that you're retired you're really having fun.’ “That used to kill me. It was like waiting around to check out. “Some people enjoy retirement. But others, like me, find that the work was what brought the enjoyment. I dodn’t need to work for money. But I felt I was vegetating. “I just needed to work.” “Music Greats” Floyd Cramer Boots Randolph e The Mills Brothers January 19, 1986 Sheraton Hotel Open 4 P.M. Daily WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED. for Private Parties — 365-3294 Located | mile south of weigh scales in Ootischenio Fifth Estate program banned CALGARY (CP) — An in interview conducted Dec. 16 Spring Break ’ Disneyland Fly Tour 9 Days and 8 Nights Departs March 30, 1986 ¢ Airfare from Spokane to Los Angeles and return * Deluxe accommodations * Disneyland ¢ Knott's Berry Farm Sea World * Universal Studios and much more! Spring Break Coach Tour Disneyland & San Francisco MARCH 27, 1986 11 DAYS — 10 NIGHTS INCLUDES: ¢ Deluxe coach transportation with Dicken Bus Lines ©2 nights accommodation at the Cecil Hotel in San Francisco ¢ Deluxe accommodations at the Conestoga Inn in Anaheim ¢Disneyland * Knotts Berry Farm eSea World Tijuana, Mexico Expo ’86 Tours Starting May 30th e 4 Day Tours (3-day Expo pass) LRT Tickets © Acc dati © Deluxe coach transportation *Reduction: Seniors and " Youths under 16 HENNE TRAVEL ,AVEL AGENCY SYLVESTER STALLONE TALIA SHIRE STARTS SATURDAY! 18 am © 2 Days room in the Fairmont Lodge plus tax * Day's pass to the Sports Centre where there is racquetball, squash. tennis, exercise room with hydrafitness equipment, jacuzzis, hot tubs and sauna © 3 Days’ use of the 10.000 sq. ft. of clear odorless mineral hot springs pools OTHER AVAILABLE ACTIVITIES — 18 hole golf course. helicopter rides. hiking. fishing massage therapy A special place for family reunions, weddings, group conferences, seminars, and your annual Christmas party. Ask the Newspaper running this ad for a brochure. oF phone INFORMATION (604) 345-6311 Calgary 264-0746 or 264-6061 RESERVATIONS ONLY junction preventing the CBC from broadcasting a program about convicted killer Daniel William Wood was granted Tuesday in Alberta Court of Queen's Bench. The program was to have been broadcast Tuesday night. Mr. Justice Willis O'Leary said he banned broadcast of the 30-minute Fifth Estate episode because there was evidence that the CBC breached its contract with Wood. Denis Harvey, CBC vice president in charge of the English television network, said the corporation will ap- peal the injunction. Noel O'Brien, Wood's law yer, told the court Monday that his client agreed to be interviewed by the network if the show could be pre- viewed before public broad. cast. CBC lawyer Ingrid Hutton said the agreement only re lated to the original Oct. 31 interview, which was scrap- ped, and no restrictions ex- isted in relation to a second STEAK AND we ex Vegetable Garni, Gorlic Bread. ALL ENTREES INCLUDE OUR NEW SALAD BAR Reservations phone 364-2222 TERRA NOVA MOTOR INN LIVING WATERS FAITH FELLOWSHIP ‘vision with vitality" proclaiming Jesus Christ as: — Lord & Savior — Baptizer in the Holy Spirit Healer — Soon coming King We are a new Christian fellowship in Castlegor, who welcome ybu to come and grow with us as ence the abundant life thot is ours through faith in Jesus Christ. Sunday Meeting — 11 a.m. (Nursery & Children’s Church provided) Home Bible Study & Prayer Meeting — Wed., 7:30 p.m. Located 2% miles from Cos on Hwy. 3 Towards Grend Forks — (Old PASTORS: Stuart Laurie — 365-3278 Jim Lawrence — 365-2902 at a Saskatchewan prison. The $26,000 Fifth Estate episode features Wood, 31, who was convieted last Sep- tember of the 1979 Calgary sex slaying of Merla Marie Laycock, 50, of Calgary. O'Brien plans to appeal the verdict and sentence, and ar- ee ae al HE'S GOT THE VIBES . . . Jazz great Elmer Gill will be here on the weekend with o unique program. Jazz giant here Saturday. One of the great names of the jazz world is alive and well and living in Western Canada. Elmer Gill, legendary vibes virtuoso, pianist extra- ordinaire, and much heralded It would be hard to find a jazz artist whose renditions and stylings are more aut- hentic and authoritative. Gill has been involved in the unique development of jazz for the past 35 years. a place in the world-wide Jazz Hall of Fame, appears in a unique new program entitled Elmer Gill and All That Jazz, Saturday at the Castlegar Community Complex. ill’s show, a continuation Man” series, is presented in conjunction with Harry Aoki, distinguished Japan- ese-Canadian arranger and bassist. Together, these two artists present a program that re- flects the gamut of human i as d in gued that a tek por- trait of his client as a serial killer could jeopardize chan- ces of a fair trial if a new one is granted. Issues of the TV Times and TV Guide said the CBC pro- gram was about a “murderer who couldn't stop killing” and “a man who found murder addictive.” A B.C. native, Wood has also been convicted of the 1982 sex slaying of Judy Delisle, of Toronto. O’Brien said that case is before the Supreme Court of Canada. Robin Taylor, executive producer of the Fifth Estate, said the CBC abided by the injunction and replaced its serial killer program with another examining abuse of animals during the making of nature films. the |) eppercorn Monday to Saturday January 6 to 12 $1 3% Restourent) musical forms over the years. His and part- ners-in-jazz constitute a cat- alogue of who's who in the exalted field of jazz greats. He has worked with Duke Ellington, Lionel Hampton, Charlie Parker and the Mont- gomery Brothers, among ot- her giants from the jazz world. Gill's program includes sel- ections from the following works: Fiddler on the Roof, The Sound of Music, My Fair Klein Nachtmusik, mention a few hundred more from 35 years of playing. Bleak House’s From AP-CP-REUTERS orders sanctions © Iran will consider every action taken against Libya as an action against itself, Tehran Radio quoted President Ali Khamenei as telling Khadafy. @ In Canberra, a Soviet Embassy official said the United States’s dispute with Libya is an artificial crisis bringing the world closer to war. Reagan said there were about 8,000 Americans in Libya when he asked them to leave in 1961, and there now are 1,000 and 1,500. RONALD REAGAN orders U.S. workers out of Libya Khadafy’s involvement in the Dec. 27 airport massacres in Rome and Vienna and called on Canada and Western European allies “to join with us in isolating him.” In other developments Tuesday: Canada’s ambassador accredited to Libya will arrive in Tripoli today to interview some of the 1,300 Canadians in the North African country and “assess the situation” ing the i i of U.S. i He promised unspecified “further steps will be taken” if the latest round of U.S. sanctions fails to end Khadafy’s ‘The president refused to disclose his evidence against the Libyan leader, saying: “There are things that should not be revealed.” ‘The passports then “found their way into the hands of those who perpetrated these acts,” in which 19 people, including five Americans and four Palestinian terrorists, died. officials, however, acknowledged that the of trade against Libya are unlikely to have much effect, and the prospects are slim that Libya’ major western trading partners such as Canada, Italy and West Germany will go along. 1 Affairs D: Sean Brady said External Affairs Minister Joe Clark told Ambassador Witold Weynerowski, Canadian envoy to Tunisia who is also accredited to Libya, to talk to Canadians in Tripoli and report back. About 80 per cent of the Canadians in Libya work in the on-shore oil fields in the Gulf of Sidra region, and the remainder in and around Tripoli. Most of the Canadians in Libya are employed by U.S.-owned oil companies. Us. reports back to Canada, Brady said. The ambassador was told to take as much time as necessary. “Civilized nations cannot continue to tolerate in the mame of material gain and self-interest the murder of innocents,” Reagan said in his statement at the start of his DEPENDS ON LIBYAN OJL “Khadafy deserves to be treated as « pariah in the world community.” Asked if the failure of the allies to go along wouldn't severely curtail the impact of the sanctions, Reagan said: “It may be but we're going to go on with what we think has to be done.” in W. Europe resists barr LONDON (AP) — Western European countries, many of whom have thousands of workers in Libya and buy oil from the North African coun- try, say they are reluctant to go along with U.S. President Ronald Reagan's move to cut economic ties with Libya be- cause such sanctions seldom work. Reagan's news conference Tuesday night, at which he announced a -total ban on direct trade with Libya, oc- curred in the early morning hours in Western Europe, and there was no immediate official reaction. The president asked West- érn Eurdpéaii alfies for help in “isolating” Libya's leader, Col. Moammar Khadafy. But U.S. government sources, speaking on condi- tion of anonymity, said Tues- day that Italy and West Germany, Libya's two lar- gest trading partners, have tl both indicated they will not go along. The sources said the de- cisions of West Germany and Paris news conference that his government “has always been very cautious as to economic sanctions, no mat- ter what they are.” Libya is West Germany's Fifth force possible NEW YORK (AP) — Phy- ducted in the early part of the century and published in 1922 by Roland von Eotvos, a Hungarian scientist. The jects composed of different substances and mass from a findings i Galileo's assertion that if a feather and a penny were dropped @ vacuum, each would fall at the same rate. Hypercharge works against gravity, and is a function of mass and the and thus the feather would fall faster, they said. ‘The study was published in the Jan. 6 issue of Physical Review Letters by Fischbach, Daniel Sudarsky, Aaron Szafer and Carrick Talmadge of Purdue Univer- sity, and S.H. Aronson of Brookhaven National Labor- volved the suspension of ob- _._. SENIOR. CITIZENS ASSOCIATION. Business Meeting, Thursday, January 9, 1986. 3/2 one per cent of the strengch of gravity, which is the weakest of the four known forces, and its influence may extend little more than 180 tn g it tl fi fi if if i aif tl ly i f nt! : 4 Mounternview And. vv IDER Fri., Jan. 10°— 7 p.m. Sat., Jan. 11 — 7 p.m. Sun., Jan. 12 — 2:30 p.m. Come out and hear Terry Condie Ministering under the annointing of the Holy Spirit. ( gig Royal Canadian Legion | CABARET wR oon 7 6 DAYS A WEEK Proper Dress Fri. & Sat. after 9 p.m. Guests Must Playing Sat: Be SIGNED In ASPHALT CANYON Elliott in demand LONDON (AP) — Some people return from vacation to stacks of unpaid bills, but when actor Denholm Elliott returns home to London, he is met with piles of scripts. “You get to a point where you're indispensable,” the 63- year-old Elliott said, noting his manuscript-laden kitchen table in an interview at his renovated house in north London's Kentish Town dis- triet. Recently, Elliott was back in London for 48 hours be- tween a holiday in Morocco and a trip to New York to promote the critically ac claimed U.S. public television broadcast of Bleak House, adapted from Charles Dick ens's + 1850s novel. Elliott plays the kindly philanthrop- ist John Jarndyce. One of several TV shows and films in which Elliott can be seen this season, the eight-part Bleak House co- stars Diana Rigg. Although he finds the Dickensian tale of the com- plex entanglements sur- rounding a court case “very convoluted,” Elliott thinks North American viewers may be more committed to the show than their British counterparts were. “They're prepared to work harder at following the show in America,” said Elliott, contrasting that with the “very lazy” attitude of his compatriots. “The British are very un- aware of their roots and their heritage; in fact, they rather resent it,” said Elliott, a native Londoner whose wife, Susan, is American. “Amer- jeans are more earnest.” Best known for playing the butler in the smash Eddie Murphy-Dan Aykroyd com- edy Trading Places, Elliott hopes that Bleak House will lend him “a bit of weight as an actor.” Elliott described Jarndyce, who takes care of two young wards at the country estate of the title, as “a potentially dark character passionate about the possibility of good ness and of being happy.” “I think I know the razor’s edge between God and the devil, between good and evil .. and I suppose that’s why they asked me to play Jarn dyce,” he added. Coming from a family of lawyers, Elliott said he brought a firsthand know- ledge of “the despair of people caught in the coils of litigation” to a work in which legal bureaucracy is seen as a crushing weight. Come Night ee Skiing Sun., Jan. 12 4p.m. - 10 p.m. Red Chair & T-Bar Live All Lodge Facilities Open! Entertainment ] Riedl Mountain Sha Area KHADAFY GETS DUMPED ON PORTLAND, MAINE (AP) — It’s anybody's guess how much trash has been mailed to Moammar Khadafy. But whether it’s enough to fill a wastebasket or a landfill site, an unmistakeable point has been made, says the manager of a Maine radio station which urged listeners to post “clean garbage” to the Libyan leader. Jack Roberts of WGUY-FM in Bangor said Tuesday, five days after the campaign began, that hundreds of calls, from as far away as Brazil and Europe, have jammed the station's listener line, 90 per cent expressing support. Georgia broadcasters who joined the campaign also have reported strong support. WGUY billed its effort as a way to direct the public's attention to Khadafy’s threats against the United States and his alleged support of terrorism. “Obviously, sending trash to (Libya's) UN mission won't stop terrorism,” Roberts said. “But it does show people that Americans are concerned, that they do care.” The campaign at the 3,000-watt rock music station began following a news report in which U.S. officials accused Libya of helping terrorists and Khadafy reacted angrily. “What a bunch of garbage,” exclaimed disc jockey Brian Mathews. Before long, he, his listeners and other lannouncers dreamed up the rubbish-mailing plan. So far, the Libyan mission to the United Nations in iNew York has apparently received only a handful of leandy wrappers, cigarette butts and a wadded napkin. That refuse spilled from an envelope sent to the Imission, said a secretary who refused to give her name. “If we get anything, we'll just toss it in the trash can during the first 10 months of iwithout opening it,” she said. Sports Fans Getawny February 26-March 1, 1986 WDNEY Italy mean the long-term ef- fect of the U.S. move against Khadafy is likely to be min- imal, During his news confer- ence, Reagan cited “irre- futable evidence,” that Libya was involved in the terrorist attacks at the Rome and Vi- enna airports Dec. 27 in which 19 people died — in cluding five Americans and four terrorists — and about 120 were wounded. Figures provided by the International Monetary Fund indicate that in 1984 Libya's exports totalled $2.5 billion to Italy and $2 billion to West Germany, compared with $9 million to the United States. SELL TO LIBYA Italy exported $1.8 billion worth of goods to Libya in 1984, West Germany export ed $885 million worth, and the United States $220 mil- lion. ” Hesse state radio quoted Juergen Moellemann, the state secretary in the West German Foreign Ministry, as saying that “military or econ. omic measures are not an ef- fective means of combating terrorism.” Foreign Minister Hans- Dietrich Genscher of West Germany said Tuesday at a young or Homes Costlegor Arts Council 1985, and figures from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries indicate that West Germany takes 23 per cent of Libya's produc- tion. Also, about 1,500 West Germans work in Libya, and they have made Bonn vul- nerable to Libyan pressure in the past. In 1983 Libya arrested eight West Germans on es- pionage charges and even- tually exchanged them for a Khadafy supporter sentenc- ed to life in prison for mur- dering an anti-Khadafy Lib- yan in West Germany. —-ARTS= Calendar The month of Janvery . . . The N.E.C. will present an exhibit colled Ted Harrison overwhelming tolor and immensity of the Yukon. ? The Presentation Series will display paintings trom ts from Stanley Humphries Hi te0d Soup and Sandwich Shoppe ‘on Friday, Jan. 10 ot 7:00 p.m. This 1s sponsored by Jen. 11. . . Elmer Gill ond All That Jozz at 8:00 p.m. on Set. Jon. 11 at the Castlegar Rec Complex. Tickets at both Drug Stores, both libraries or phone for reserved tickets to the cabaret at 365-3226 items for this bi-monthly feature should be tel to Lynda Carter of the Castlegar Arts Council at 365-3226. CASTLEGAR SAVINGS CREDIT UNION | HAPPY ADS Use HAPPY ADS to extend bir wedding or anniver- greetings to congratulate someone, or 10 simply wish someone a good day. Rates are reasonable, ond you can also use o it you wish. For details, call Display Advertising at 365- 5210 or drop in at the Castlegar News office at 197 ADULT iON Robson Recreation Hall, Jon. 14 — March 25. Phone 365- 5984 or 365- for more information. 23 CASTLEGAR COMMODORE COMPUTER CLUB Meets 7:30 p.m., Jan. 9 at Selkirk College. JOBS DAUGHTERS You are invited to the public installation of Honored Queen- ‘Shaune Hegon and her officers on Sunday Jan. 12 at 2 p.m. in the Masonic Hall 3 « and District non-profit here. The first 10 works ore ore 15¢ each. Boldfaced wor: Coming events of Cos! organizations may be list | words Minimum charge is $3.15 ( od three times). Deadlines are 5 p.m. Thursdays paper and 5 p.m. for W paper. Notices should be brought to the Castlegor News ot 197 Columbia Ave. Ti Jan. 9 hursday Bingo starts location: Near Sunridge and Deer- malls, five minutes to Airport and Village Centre, easy freeway or eT oom to © Banquet and meeting rooms, executive suites Square Leisure Centre Seven water slides! Canada’s largest wave p