ns CastléGar News 19.10 ENTERTAINMENT This Week in DEXTER’S PUB MON. THRU SAT Two Weeks July 13-25 Chris Burton Roadies A Very Popular Vancouver Group Sunday is Boston's "SM icc 0c Put some Pizzazz in Sunday nights with these special pasta prices at Boston Pizza! Every from 5 p.m. to 1 a.m. it's pasta Pizzazz c'mon to Boston so we can pasta on big 1612 Bay Ave. 368-6285 Trail SANDMAN INN @® Boston Pizza Upstairs in Trail’s Towne Square Every Fri., Sat. & Sun. Guaranteed $ 6 00 in Jack Pots Ist Call $300 2nd Call $200 3rd Call $100 GUARANTEED EVERY NIGHT 1. 190 Loto 6/49 Quick Picks 2. $100 Meat Hamper Draw 3. Good Neighbor Games 4, Lucky Cash Booklets $500 JACKPOT FLIMSY 52.NOS. $500 BONANZA POT OF GOLD] OR Less No Reservations Needed Call 364-0933 @ 1:30-9:30 p.m. “tl LET. presents For Lunch For Dinner always a favourite! Soup & Sandwich Special + Open Denver + ¢ Fruit Salad * Chicken Salad « Cup of French Onion Soup plus all our regular favourites! Steak & Crab Legs » + Spaghetti or Fettucini Carbonara « ina delicious cream sauce with ham, bacon & greén onion ¢ Half BBQ Chicken topped with our special barbeque sauce DANCE PARTY TV SHOW AFFECTS TEENS PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Contrary to Chuck Berry's lyrics, they're no longer dancin’ on Bandstand in Phil- adelphia, P-A. But 30 years after millions of bobby soxers rushed home from school to watch Amer- ican Bandstand, a new gen- eration of Philadelphia teen- agers is influencing national dress and dance styles with a daily cable TV show, Dance Party USA. These teens dress like Madonna or Tom Cruise ra- ther than Annette Funicello or Frankie Avalon, and their funky do-your-own-thing dances bear little resem- blance to the Jerk, the Twist and the Pony of their par- ents. But while 1987 American teens supposed to be more wordly, sophisticated “and less impressionable than those of a generation ago, these TV dancers have at- tracted the same kind of na- tional following, even ido lation, that Dick Clark's high schoolers did in the 1950s. “Our show is just like the old Bandstand used to be. We RESTAURANT We Specialize in WESTERN & CHINESE CUISINE JOIN US FOR © BREAKFAST ¢ LUNCH © DINNER ° yearend SMORG SeRvice ¢ 365-6887 senvice cau feature the kids,” said Mi- chael Nise, executive’ pro- ducer of Dance Party USA. “Our kids usually get 3,000 to 5,000 letters a week, and one of our dancers, Bob Cat- alano, averages 700 letters a week.” The 18-month-old Dance Party USA is carried six afternoons a week on the pay TV USA Network. About 75 dancers, most aged 15-18, perform first on the live local show, then tape one or two shows for cable. Each show features the kids dancing to three or four hits, a video clip and often a lip sync by one of the regu- lars. There are also old Bandstand standbys such as ladies’ choice dances, spot- light dances and advice for lovelorn teens. The host, disc jockey Andy Gury, quizzes the dancers about the status of their love lives and the pi of ‘WE SING’. . . or, in Quatemalan tongue, Kin Lalat, the tive member musical group which is returning to Castlegar July 23 at the Brilliant Cultural Centre. The group's repertoire is based on a variety of rythms and found th . Collectively, the group plays 30 musical instruments and sings songs of peace and justice. Photo submitted teens, such as parental div- orce, drug use and peer pres- sure. “We let the kids be kids,” Nise said. “Kids may be more sophisticated than they used to be, but you can't take the basics out of being.a kid. And that is, he is just. becoming attracted to the opposite sex. We don’t discourage that. We assure the teens that it’s all right.” Dance Party regulars were deluged with dozens of prom invitations this spring. “Many of the regulars have been offerd plane tickets to fly somewhere just to dance,” said Paula Beal, the show's promotion director. “These kids just have an unbeliev able following across the country. Dancing is in again, and our kids are good dan cers and good dressers.” attend a Sunday, In Honour Of Their 60th Wedding Anniversary A wan welcome is extended to relatives and friends of Charles and Ester Bates to “Come & Go" 2 to 6 p.m. 1921 Connow Road, Castlegar Good Wishes Only Tea, guly 26 Our Action Ad Number is 365-2212 Ee repeal Anthony's Pizza & Steakhouse #1 [ty Our New Menu Selections, Including G] [5 fae] = By Visit the Scenic Slocan Valley! Homestyle Cooking LOIS’ SOUP AND SANDWICH SHOP inthe SLOCAN MOTEL in downtown Slocan DELUXE CHEESE BURGER With Homestyle Fries. Reg. $3.25 2 FOR 1] £2tin Only. Bring a Friend! AVAILABLE 4 P.M. TO 8 P.M. . WE ACCEPT WESTAR, CELGAR & COMINCO MEAL TICKETS 365-8155 <: AIR CONDITIONED Eosy Access No Stoirs JOY OF STRESS Lives by the book NEWMARKET, ONT. (CP) — Dr. Peter Hanson lives by the book — hig book. “Yes, I practise whatI preach,” says the genial author of The Joy of Stress, the best-seller that-has made him a millionaire in a couple of years and keeps him hopping hither and yon at a stressful pace. The success of the book has been phenomenal — over 200,000 copies already sold worldwide in two languages and fast expanding into others. But Hanson, a family doctor with a homey, easy approach to patients, hasn't let celebrity status lull him into a life of ease. “I'm busier than ever and courting stress at every turn,” he says in an interview in his tiny, cluttered office in an 85-year-old house in Newmarket, a half-hour drive north of Toronto. “I’m certainly not tal it easy; I was up all night working on my next book.” QUOTES BOOK Yet there’s no apparent stress as he settled back in his chair, fingering the stethoscope looping the open collar of his sport shirt, and offers:a- quotation from The Joy of Stress: “Stress can be fantastic. Or it can be fatal. It's all up to you. As well as respecting the dangers of stress, you can learn to harness its benefits.” At 40, his lithe body hardened with the proper care he prescribes for others, Hanson knows the stress of publishing a book. He had to burn the midnight oil to write it, mortgage his Toronto house to the last nickel to print it and stand pathetically alone in a bookstore to market it — all while doggedly maintaining a medical practice. The Joy of Stress came out in hard and soft cover in February 1985. By June that year it was No. 10 on a national best-seller list for paperbacks, and by September, it had bumped the autobiography of Chrysler boss Lee Iacocca out of the No. 1 spot and stayed there for 11 weeks. The English-language version is still selling at the rate of 1,000 a week in Canada and has just penetrated the huge U.S. market and Britain, he says. A French-language edition — Vive Le Stress — has just been published in France and another — Les Plaisirs du Stress — is attracting French-Canadian readers. “The book is now in 80 countries, and by the end of the year it will be published in more than a dozen languages in at least 120 countries.” JULY SPECIAL! LOS ANGELES (AP) — They call him Action Jack son, and you'll find him in the mean streets of Los Angeles, solving multiple murders in his own unorthodox style. The movie is Lorimar Mo- tion Pictures’ Action Jack son, and supercop Jericho In addition to Hanson's busy schedule of speaking engagements across Canada and abroad, the father of two young children is planning a 14-day book-promotion tour “around the world” starting in late August — including stops in New Zealand, Australia and Singapore — as well as making numerous television appearances. And he will be starting a syndicated column for Canada’s Southam Inc. newspapers this fall. All this has inevitably cut into his medical practice. He has hired a junior partner so his 4,000 patients won't suffer and he spends only Mondays and Tuesdays at the office. A Vancouver native who grew up in five provinces, Hanson graduated from the Universtiy of Toronto Medical School and then spent a year as team doctor for the Toronto Argonauts football team. He saw first-hand how athletes perform well under extreme stress but it wasn’t until he set up his own practice that he witnessed the “terrible carnage” of people succumbing to stress through mismanagement of their lives.” NO ADVANCE A book on stress was in order, though he hadn't the financial resources to publish one and knew, as an unknown, he would get no advance from a publisher or hope for an initial run of more than 2,000 copies, which would have pushed unit costs as high as $40 each. So Hanson hired an editor through phone calls to the Toronto Press Club, and paid a student to drive his car to and from the office while he worked in the back seat composing a draft of the book. He and his wife mortgaged their house for $100,000, hired a printer and ordered 27,000 copies which they stored in their basement Then bookstores refused to stock it. He finally went to an outlet of a major chain bookstore and persuaded the manager to let him set up a little stand and well the book himself. After he sold 56 copies in 2/2 hours, the chain gladly took stacks of the book for its other stores and its competitors saw it as a sure thing as well It's a chatty — at times comical — read for $12.95 Hanson and his wife, Sharilyn, still live in the same house they mortgaged for the book, although it has been redecorated — “we have furniture now” — and they still drive their twin white 1980 Mercedes cars. Jackson hunts killers Jackson is played by Carl now. Weathers, best known as Apollo Creed of the Rocky movies. After 10 years of getting beaten up by mus: cular stars such as Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwar zenegger, Weathers figures to be on the winning side If Action Jackson connects with the audience, Weathers dreams of more such adven tures. “Some of us are fortunate to come at a time — and my time has come, I hope — when movies that are fun, action-oriented and have a potential for sequels happen to be popular,” he said. “And this film does have a poten tial to stroll down memory lane with Action Jackson NEW DEMOCRAT Chances ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. (CP) — Two years ago, Jack Harris would have thought his chances of winning as a federal New democrat in St. John's East were as likely As a few straight days of summer weather without fog. The chances of a fog-free St. John's summer are still pretty poor but Harris's chances of becoming an MP after Monday's by have So much so that even the Tories, who have won the seat in all but three general elections since 1949, are w “I'd be broken-hearted but not that surprised,” says Conservative campaign manager Bill Dalton when asked about the prospects of an NDP vi a A recent poll commissioned by the St. John's Sunday Express puts the New Democrats in first place in the riding, with 42 per cent of the decided vote. The Conservatives are in second spot with 34 per cent and the Liberals trail with 25 per cent. About 21 per cent of those polled were undecided. Frank Quinlan is the Rhinoceros party candidate. The St. John’s East byelection is one of three being held July 20. The others are in Ontario's Hamilton Mountain and Yukon. DOESN'T FIT MOULD The riding doesn’t fit the traditional mould of Newfoundland politics. Mark Graesser, a political scientist at Memorial University, says there are likely more professors in the riding than fishermen. More than half the voters are urban dwellers and most of the rest, living in small villages strung along the rocky Atlantic and Conception Bay shores in the northern part of the Avalon Peninsula, commute to jobs in the city. The voters, Graesser says, tends to be well-educated and much like voters in the rest of the country. improve That -could be a handicap for the Liberal and Gary Nixon writes ARROW LAK' i RECREATION KIDS SUMMER DAY CAMP ORY CREEK RANCH Deas Park, 8.C. Hart withdrew from the Conmrevaitys who are land politicians. Clyde Wells, the ene Liberal leader, calls them “old political warhorses. Tom Hickey, 54, the Tory candidate, is a longtime cabinet minister who was given his reward for faithful service last year when Premier Brian Peckford gave him a job as head of the Young Offenders Review Board. Liberal Steve Neary, 61, is one of a long string of unsuccessful provincial Liberal leaders. Between the two of them, they have been in politics longer than 88-year-old Jack Harris has been alive. Popular James McGrath, who held the riding for the Conservatives in every election since 1968, resigned the seat last year when Prime Minister Brian Mulroney him | What is powering the NDP to the top in St. John's is the same dissatisfaction with Mulroney and~ the Conseryative government that has dropped the Tories to third place in national opinion polls. The problem .for the Liberals is the same in St. John's as it is across the country — disaffected Tories are going to the NDP. It is a vote of protest directed at both the Tories and the Liberals, with what the NDP have once called the two old-line parties. Unty once before has the NDP won a federal seat in Newfoundland. Fonse Faour won Humber-Port-au-Port- St. Barbe in a 1978 byelection, held it in 1979 and lost it in 1980. But St. John's East is a less traditional seat and Grasesser says the byelection provides the NDP with a “fantastic historic opening for them.” D former president Richard Nixon wrote him a letter praising the way he handled “a very difficult situation.” Hart. quit the race after reports that he had a liaison with actress-model Donna Rice. “What impressed me most was your refusal to quit fighting for what you be- lieve,” Nixon wrote on May 11. “In polities and every other walk of life, there are more losers than winners. After all, there can be only one number ope; all the rest are losers.” Hart wrote back on May 21, thanking Nixon for his encouragement and adding, “Tm sure we agree that concerned citizens, leaders and opinion makers must try to focus national attention away from what is temporal, sensational and irrelevant to the real challenges confront- ing our nation and our world.” Copies of both letters were released Tuesday by political Roger Stone, who Canadian scientists dig for dinosaurs * EDMONTON (CP) — Ele- ven Canadian scientists will join about 25 of their Chinese counterparts in a dig for dinosaur bones in the Gobi Desert next month, says a spokesman for the Ex Terra Foundation. Susan Bramm said Thurs- day the foundation is spon- soring the project “to tie some of the pieces together globally. The isolated region of northwestern China and southern Alberta's Badlands are the world’s richest areas for dinosaur bones and other fossils. Bramm said the scientists are trying to trace the move- ments of the ancient cre- atures to see if any travelled between the two regions. They also hope to discover the bones of new species. Such a discovery was made last summer when a Chinese Womens Club meets “Flower Bouquets” was presented by the Castlegar Christian Women's Club July 16.at the Sandman Inn with 82 ladies in attendance. Maureen Hadiken of Tulips “Floral delighted the ladies with her novelty arrange ments using local garden flowers. Six ladies received them as door prizes. The scientist in the Badlands found the skull of the troodon formosus, a small, meat- eating dinosaur with bird-like features. The find helped sci- entists trace the -develop- ment of some dinosaurs into birds., STUDY CLIMATE Field trips are planned for the summers of 1988 and 1989. Glade resident passes away Peter James Lebedoff of Glade passed away on Tues- day, July 14, 1987 at the age of 79 years. Funeral service for the late Mr. Lebedoff was held Thurs- day and Friday at the Tarry's Hall with burial in the Shore- acres cemetery. Mr. Lebedoff was born Jan. 4, 1908 at Kamsack, Sask. and came to B.C. with his parents in 1912. Mr. Leb- edoff lived at Glade all of his life. He married Dora Pere- verzoff at Crescent Valley in 1930. During his life he farmed and worked as an iron worker in the construction field. After his retirement, he enjoyed working on his farm. He was a member of the Iron Workers Union and the Union of Spiritual Commun- ities of Christ. DOWNTOWN SPOKANE SUNTREE 8 INN $29.90 guest soloist was Elan Fer- guson and the inspirational speaker was Judy Mayfield of Spokane. Featured at the next Christian Women's Club meeting Aug. 27 at 9:30 a.m. is “Back to School Fashions” by Zellers. Reservations for contin. FREE AT PAR JACUZZI S. 123 Post (509) 838-8504 Mr. Lebedoff is survived by his wife Dora; two daugh- described himself as “a friend_ of Richard Nixon.” Nixon's letter was men- tioned in an artiele on Hart in the Washington Post maga- zine on Sunday. The article said Nixon wrote to say “he admired the defiant tone” of Hart's withdrawal speech, although it did not quote the letter's contents. to 6thry Mondoy ‘sand Girls 13° $18 up and Deliver to Scotties Maring Supplied © Will Picl MAPLES MOTOR LODGE 25% Discount With This Ad! * 73 Immaculate Affordable Units * 10 Minutes to Downtown Vancouver * Close To: Stanley Park, Grouse Mountain, Capilano Suspension Bridge, Many Ethnic Restaurants, Excellent Shopping Malls ° Kings © Suites * Kitchenettes ¢ Heated Pool © Children’s Playground ¢ Satellite TV © And a Laundromat For Reservations: CALL COLLECT: (604) 987-4461 TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1987 PRODUCE = ters, Polly Zoobkoff of Castlegar and Nellie Rey- nolds of Burnaby; three grandchildren; two brothers, SALAD PACK {Ted dae Ls Saal ot Clery 1 Bach 4 - oh of rem Onn Racha 1.49 Me. 1 Grade Walter and John of Glade; three sisters, Mary Poznikoff of Hills, B.C., Florence Pol- LONG ENGLISH CUCUMBERS B.C owe onikoff of Glade and Anne Relkoff of Grand Forks; and numerous nieces and neph- ews. Funeral arrangements were under the direction of the Castlegar Funeral Chap- el. TOP QUALITY MEATS CANTELOUPE COOKED HAM erat, Seed, 175 9 Pechoge. 1.49 arr 1. ‘49 SAFEWAY “KIN-LALAT” IS BACK SCHNEIDER'S PIES 1.49 # Fr Pohogs oltre - 115 9 Poe Thurs., July 23 7:30 p Brilliant Cultural Centre FARMER SAUSAGE 1.49 & Overionder, 250 9 AY Bin wows 1.49 1.49 MUSIC OF GUATEMALA Foraro SALAD Fanon 360» Cone $34.90 products we sell, or we will give This applies to all Sesary a | Suty Products Proof of purchase and return of unused ROYAL oe RICE 009 Me GROCERY "MONEY BACK GUARANTEE Your complete satisfaction is guaranteed NANTON BOY 1.49 2 Swedich or Mnlion. 450 g Pi. CASINO TEA BAGS 240 4g Pg. of 100 Tou Bogs LLS 1.49 22 1.49 a) Min 350 ml Cont. ye you Double Your Money Back" on at of the peraube ALLEY CAT T FOOD fe, Meats “i vt 1.49 BUTANE LIGHTER — ‘Le 49° CHOCOLATE CANDY are may 1.49 PLAYTEX HAND SAVER GLOVES ano saver coves TAQ GLAD GARBAGE BAGS Music from/Musique du again. ental breakfast and nursery 1.49 Se eas 1.49: = 1.4 1.49 a) 1.4 6§ We rese the to limit Sales to retail quantities 149 BANANA CLIPS 11.49 1.49 1.49 CROISSANTS 4: 1.49 1.49 are essential. Call 365-8025. Te °M Tom, Pig. of 10 ¢ Veal Neptune or Chicken Neptune + topped with crabmeat, asparagus tips & hollandaise sauce true Hollywood it bas taken me about 10 years to reach the point where suddenly I'm quote-unquote starring in my own movie LEAF ti TRAVEL CRUISE SPECIAL *400piscount PER COUPLE BOOK BY SEPT. 1 INCLUDES: Round tradition, Trail Athletic Association Lic. 59147 Friday Night Bingo riinon ZOO sac Sunday Night Bingo Trail Track Club Lic. No. 58046 Minimum $ 2 0 0 Jackpot Free Bus Transportation & Information Fruitvale, Costieger, Rossiond phone ferbue sported on of betore 4 p.m. dolly Ph. 365-5007 or 365-6646 1060 Eldorado — ex.Konkin irty Bird Buliding GUATEMALA “In_ the PHARM a RUBBING ALCOHOL $00 mt Cont. The Language & Literature Department of Selkirk College and TheA iation of Canadians of Russian D. ’ are presenting The Life and Work of Leo Tolstoy 19th Century Ri Friday, July 24, 1987 PART I: 1 p.m. — Readings and Dramatic Performance, Faculty Lounge, Selkirk College, Castlegar Campus. (Admission by advance tickets only, contact Gordon Turner 365-7578) For Dessert * Boston Cream Pie « * Carrot Cake + * Spumoni Ice Cream ¢ and Tony's very own, very special cheesecake - normal (covered with a strawberry topping) or mocha -a light & fluffy treat either way! Toornenusues MAPLE CAKE DONUTS 8 : 1.49 CRUSTY ROLLS 12 : 1.49 BAVARIAN CREME DOWNS 1.49 Fa esoltesesieslersleS) PART Il — 7 p.m. — Lecture, Brilliant Culture Centre, Castlegar, B.C. CHEFMASTER SPAGHETTI SAUCE Try out our delicious new pizza toppings too! Eat In or Take Out Free delivery within 4 miles 1101 - 2nd St., Castlegar Phone: 365-2188 Styne P MOUSSE Bones. Normal or Fine. 208 9 Cont SPEAKERS: llya Tolstoy — (great grandson of Leo Tolstoy) Professor, Moscow State University Lidya Lubimova — Director, Tolstoy Museum Or. Alexander Fodor — Professor, McGill University Thursday, July 23 - 7:30 pm Brilliant Cultural Centre Admission at the Door $6.00 (regular) $4.00 (limited income) 9 Lolat means We Create Song of 6 Fe rve right ADMISSION — $5.00 at door. ie 3] 365-6616 For more intormation call CASTLEGAR CAMPUS Box 1200, Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3J1 365-7292 PRICES IN EFFECT IN ALL SAFEWAY STORES EXCLUDING CHI —