as Castlégar News june 18,1906 SY vm ENTERTAINMENT PERFORMANCE 86 Royal Canadian Legion | Branch No. 170 Program puts students in jobs working near her hometown of MacRae. “Up until now they have hired co-op students from FOSTER First-year students enrolled in Computer Information student, Leora Saturday Dancing 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. OPEN 12 NOON 6 DAYS A WEEK Proper Dress Saturday after 9 p.m Guests Must Playing Set. Be SIGNED In "KALEIDOSCOPE L.A. Catering — Except July and August i] ep! Y ugu' (21) (22\(23)(2 By CasNews Staff The Vancouver Symphony Orchestra will open the Trail Society for the Performing Arts’ Performance 86 series in September. Other performances in the series, which runs until April 1987 are: The Goh Ballet, Arms and the Man, Devonian Duo, Moscow State Wood. wind Quintet, Kern, and Life After Hockey. The Vancouver Symphony Orchestra will perform on Sept. 17 Since its formation, the Vancouver Symphony has made giant strides in grow ing from a local organization to one that has earned both a national and _ international reputation In September 1985 Russian conductor Rudolf Barshai FOR EVERYONE ASTLE THEATRE & For a comantic getaway (your first 1. :neymo::) or your thirtieth), book one of ovr bridal suites, featuring: © 4eart-s*.sped “Luv Tub” for two © Priva*e +... deck overlooking one of the +rorld’s t..cst beautiful lakes, Waterton © :pacious, luxurious accommodation And the Bayshore’s other superb facilities will succeeded Maestro Aklyama as music director of the VSO The Goh Ballet will per form on Nov. 18 This distinctive company HAPPY BIRTHDAY LORETTA Love the four of us! showcases the high technical and artistic standards of young Vancouver dancers under the direction of an internationally recognized ar. tistie staff. Their program presents a diversity of moods and music. Consistent attention to de tail and gesture as well as a strong sense of reaching out to their audience is the hall. mark of this 12-member com pany. The play, Arms and the Man by George Bernard Shaw will be staged on Dec. Devonian Duo, a flute and piano duet, is set for Feb. 3, 1987 Audiences praise the Duo, Alberta’s Susan Hoeppner and Robert Kortgaard, for their fresh and exciting ap- proach to programming, which spans the music from Bach to the Suite for Flute and Jazz Piano by Claude Bolling. Moscow State Woodwind Quintet will perform on March 19, 1987. The quintet includes five musicians: Val entin Avereez, flute; Anatoly Lubimov, oboe; Gladimier Sokolov, clarinet; Boris Afan- asiev, horn; and Sergei Kra savin, bassoon. Piano laureate Lubov Tim ofeyeva will perform with the quintet. Kern, set for April 7, 1987, consists of a theatrical even ing of Make Believe from Yesterdays, the nostalgia of Jerome Kern's familiar hit songs of the 1920s - 1940s. Symphony opens series Audrey Leonard Borschel and Herbert Ray, two of North America’s finest singer-actors will sing and dance their way through Kern. The final performance, on April 28, 1987, is a one-man play, Life After Hockey. Straight off the prairies and right into the heart of every red-bloodéd Canuck comes Rink Rat Brown, the would-be hockey star of Ken. neth Brown's hit play. The 70-minute play is so authentically Canadian that even the hockey stars love it. Wayne Gretzky came to see the play and liked it so much STARTS Systems Technology (CIST) at Selkirk Collegg have ph of d two study and now, under Bonnyville, Alta., on a project to research and produce a schools in Ontario, due to a shortage in Forces Base, Cold Lake, Alta. particular in Alberta. They were pleased to discover ¢o-op student FRIDAY, JUNE 20 the Cooperative Education program, begin up to four Alta. employment opportunities in a neighboring province.” 10 a.m. to7 p.m, SOLO CAREER By DAVE LANG Canadian Press The VANCOUVER — David Foster doesn’t want to be mobbed in public; he just wants people to like his music. ‘The Vietoria-born record producer and songwriter has started a new solo career with the album David Foster, just released on Atlantic Records. Foster has produced hit albums for Kenny Rogers and Chicago and wrote and produced the Canadian famine-relief single, Tears are Not Enough. But he hopes his new career will put a personal stamp on his material and allow him the thrill of performing. In an interview aboard Chartmaker, his 10-metre cabin cruiser equipped with such features as computer assisted navigation équipment and a piano-shaped h Foster said “I (used to) live vicariously that he app. in it, read ing the role of Number 99, the godlike voice who advises and inspires Rink Rat. Broderick’s experience better than peers’ LOS ANGELES (AP) — Among the pack of young ac tors who dominate the film world, none has better cred. entials than Matthew Brod erick He was star of two Neil Simon hits on Broadway, Brighton Beach Memoirs and stars in the latest John Hughes paean to those lazy, crazy high school days, Fer. ris Buehller’s Day Off. Paramount Pictures is pro- viding a big push, convinced that Hughes’ golden touch with young audiences will continue. Biloxi Blues. In television he Broderick and Hughes appeared in the South Afri. make a good pair: Hughes, can drama by Ahol Fugard, the outgoing, overage adol Master Harold . . . and the escent who still wears his Boys. In films he has enjoyed hair like a teenager; Brod box-office success with the erick, quiet, thoughtful with suspenseful War Games. sad, wise eyes in a boy's face. This summer, Broderick In Ferris Buehller's Day LICENCED DINING ROOM OPEN 4P. WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED — AIR CONDITIONED — Reservations for Private Parties — 365-3294 Located | mile south of Weigh Scales in Ootischenia Off he plays a_ brilliantly devious high schooler who fakes illness to ditch school and romp through Chicago with a few pals — Alan Ruck and Mia Sara. In the film's rhajor scene, Broderick leaps on a parade float and blasts a rock number to the cheers of thousands, M. DAILY make your stay even more Festive meals in the Kootenai Brown Dining Room. © ils in the cozy Fireside Lounge, with five entertainment and TV movies. Dancing ari relaxation in the Thirsty Bear Saloon. A quick snack in the Koffee Shoppe Or visit our gift shop. Waterton offers a host of other attractions. A championship 18- hole golf course, lake cruises and private boating, fishing, tennis, hiking. swimming, abundant wildlife. Show This Ad To Your Loved One, Then Book Soon To Avoid Disappointment. To... OPEN HOUSE RETIREMENT TEA For... DONNA ARCHIBALD Wednesday, June 25 2 a -m.- 4 p.m. Castlegar Primary School RLOP to Everyone Welcome! It is over 32 years since musicians and audiences in the Trail area have had the opportunity to enjoy the wit and music of Gilbert and Sullivan's H.M.S. Pinafore. The Rossland Light Opera Players plan to correct this situation by producing the delightful operetta in Novem. ALL TYPES OF cc 1AL PRINTING terheods * Envelopes * Brochures * Rattle Tickets Castlegar News 197 Columbie Ave. 365-7266, Tickets Available From MALLARD'S SPORT PETE'S TIV CUTLER’S NEWS LIBRA MUSIC CHECKERS PUB $8 ADVANCE $10 AT DOOR Saturday, June 28 9:30 p.m. Sunset Dr Highway 3A, Castlegor ve-In PUBLIC MEETING The Board of School Trustees of School District No. 9 invites any group or individual wishing to make a presentation on the issue of school closure to attend a public meeting on June23 in the Board Office. Presentations will be allowed a maximum of fifteen minutes and will be placed on the agenda by appointment only. Presentations will begin at 6:00 and each group will be assigned a time when the op- pointment is made. For a fifteen minute place on the Agenda, contact must be made with the Board Office by 12 noon, June 23. Written copies of the presentations, in advance, would be appreciated by Trustees Se eateeinecennaeinaiill HI ARROW BEER & WINE STORE Open Every Day Til Christmas Eve HOURS: MONDAY - SATURDAY, 9 A.M. - 11 P.M. SUNDAYS — 11 A.M. - 10 P.M. Large Selection of B.C.'s Wine & Beer © ELEGANT GLASSWARE © CHILLED WINES ¢ COLD BEER © MUNCHIES © T-SHIRTS & HATS 651 - 18th St., Castiege Call 365-7282 “I was very seared,” the actor admitted. “Fortunate- ly, the sequence was care- fully choreographed before- hand. We worked out all the moves by rehearsing in a lit- Ue studio. At 24, Broderick’s youthful face allows him to play a high schooler, but he vows it's the last time. “In Project X, which I just finished, I played a 23-year. old,” he added. “I like playing adults, and I don't want to return to high school. But then, I've said that before.” Broderick came naturally to acting. His father was the late James Broderick, a stage and film actor best known for the TV series, Family. Neil Simon spotted Mat- thew and cast him as Marsha Mason's son in Max Dugan Returns, and then in the two semi-autobiographical plays. produce H.M.S. Pinafore ber. This represents quite a change in scheduling, but it is felt that this way, another major production could be launched shortly after and produced in late winter or early spring. The group also hopes to capitalize on the enthusiastic response which greeted their recent performances of Well Meet Again, the Royal Canadian Legion's 60th Anni versary Show. All interested singers are invited to attend auditions for principal parts at 7:30 p-m. Thursday at the RLOP Hall in Rossland. Once the show has been cast, it will be put into mothballs until rehearsals begin in September. through people like Kenny Rogers. “Rogers and I one time went into a McDonald's. I said, ‘You can't go in there,’ and he said, ‘Yeah I can, watch this.’ He went, in and bang! these people just exploded on him. “I think my career will not reach that proportion What I really want is people to like my music. I want my music to reach out to people with my name on it rather than my name as a producer.” JOINED SKYLARK Foster, 37, was a member of the Canadian group Skylark in the early 1970s and had a hit single, Wildflower. But the group later folded. Foster moved to California, where he now lives with his wife and two children in Malibu. He became a studio musician, then started producing. Despite his success as a producer — working with performers like Lionel Ritchie and Barbra Streisand as well as earning four Grammies — he became concerned about burning out and wanted to return to the stage. The break came with the love theme he scored for the 1985 movie St. Elmo's Fire. “All of a sudden I extracted this little piano piece from the movie,” he said. “So there was a record out with my name on it as the artist and it became a hit.” That led Foster to put together his new album. It features eight instrumentals, including the St. Elmo's Fire theme and Flight of the Snowbirds, a piece he wrote for the Snowbirds, the Canadian Forces precision-flying team. Flying is one of Foster's passions, but film-making is not his forte. When he got a chance to fly with the Snowbirds, a camera was mounted in the plane to record Foster for a documentary and video. Foster had control of starting the camera, but he was so excited he used up all the film before the plane even took off. The album also has two vocals, one of them a duet with Olivia Newton-John called The Best of Me The split between instrumentals and vocals may present a problem for Foster. He says he doesn't enjoy singing but the record company wants to push the vocals for radio play. “I think we potentially could be faced with a bit of a problem if the duet with Olivia has some success,” says Foster. “I'll still want to do instrumentals and maybe the public will be confused.” Foster is probably one of the few people in pop music who can afford to be concerned about too much success. His Love Theme from St. Elmo's Fire was among Billboard's top 20 hits, while the Chicago 17 album he produced sold more copies than any other Chicago record. “T'm about to step into a whole new area,” he said, “I don't know how I'll do. I don't know if I have what it takes to be an artist. But I do enjoy a challenge and perhaps that’s what this is.” Cable 10 TV ching Techniques — was the topic of the second day's presen tation by Linda Wil liams to the Annual Learning Assistance Teachers Conference held in Castlegar in SHAW CABLE 10 Access Television Thursday, June 19 6:00—Expo Update — A look at what Expo has to offer with host Wendy Brunelle. 6:30—Two-sided Mind Tea. May. This is part 1 pititiitirit cry al shite Llintitit day 2 of a continuing series. 8:45—Peace Through Com spray iilititt Open Monday - Satu: PARTIES FOR ‘ THE C.P. PUB OPEN 12 NOON -2 A.M. ence Spacek Monday - Thuredey TUESDAY NIGHT — POOL TOURNAMENT Prunes tor Top Three Places 1895 RESTAURANT — Ph. 368-8232 doy 230 p.m. 1 Featuring SALAD BAR (Inc. Soup & Dessert) $3.95 iant. Dr. WE ALSO CATER TO BANQUETS & COCKTAIL GROUPS OF 15 TO 70. munication Confer This is the first tape of a series on this conference which took place in August 1985 in Bril Thomas Perry of the B.C. Physicians for Social 226-7756 or 359-7135 NO MINORS y speaks on the topic: Conse quences of Nuclear War. 9:40—Countdown Canada A down of the top 10 video hits from July 1, 1984 to July 1, 1985. 10:30—Expo Update A continuation of Expo offerings with Wendy Brunelle 11:00—Sign off Fund Raising Dance Sat., June 21 ° Holt Doors Open 8:00 p.m. BAND—HUSTLER trom Seettie Top $0 ond much more TICKETS AND INFO CALL 531-2nd Strect, Trell, B.C. (Above Tony's Pub) Spaghetti House and Calabria Pizza Enjoy the true Italian All the Spaghetti You Private dining rooms at no extra charge. Spaghetti Dinner Can Eat — $6.95 Happy 28th 368-9399 Tracy FROM DAD months of paid employment in positions relevant to their college studies. The 12 co-op ed students have been hired by employers from Victoria to Toronto and have started their work terms at salaries ranging from $600 to $1600 a month. bee loyed to “I'm well pleased with the response to the co-op ed program on the part of employers in Nelson and Trail,” said Dexter MacRae, coordinator of Selkirk College’s Co-op Ed program. “Unfortunately, I was not able to place any of our students in Castlegar.” Forces Base, Cold Lake, Alberta. Three other Selkirk College students are employed by the federal government to work on projects at Canadian for work term Pp and Tim Dunlop of Trail, and Alex Webster of Salmo, have programs at other institutions. nm emp! inventory control systems for the base exchange and to assist the personnel interviews and the like. Employers screening co-op MacRae said co-op students apply for posted positions pe against classmates and often against students from co-op pet” IS ee “Co-op work terms go beyond simulation of - job department with i a P management system. Allan Santano of Nelson, d personnel often have a number of candidates after one job, is working in so it is as much a true-life job search situation as it can get.” aerospace research and d in Stereo People Ltd. of Toronto employed Ben Lee of design and other uti for MacRae's efforts in securing job placements for CIST commercial applications. students were rewarded as he now has students working in positions at the federal, provincial, regional and municipal levels of government as well as placements in industry, private business, utilities and even one out of province ing and Hong Kong, one of Selkirk College's first international students to enrol in the college's co-op ed program. His “My search for job pl were pleased to learn program in such close generated ble primary task with the independent retail electronics store is response from the Alberta Public Service C jon who to imp! anew ized payroll package system. Selkirk College's Co-op Education package system. ximity to their operations,” said Rossland resident Brian Savage secured a co-op work term position with the provincial Ministry of Forests in _ Victoria. Before enrolling in the CIST program at Selkirk NEW MACHINERY . . . Castlegar City Council members ts, alderman Albert Calderbonk, got a first-hand look ata teller-buncher on Saturday, working at Cayuse Creek on the Lower Arrow Lake. Looking at the new machine are (from lett) Castlegor Bob Korda, mayor Audrey Moore, woodlands ched 400 loads of logs manager tor Westar Timber's Southern Wood Produc- Mulroney's Paris trip cost $500,000 OTTAWA (CP) + Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and his entourage spent $811,665.68 on three foreign trips between October and March, figures released show More than half the money — $520,024.17 — was for a week-long trip to Paris in February for the first-ever summit of the world’s franco phone countries and a short official visit to France The expenses paid by the External Affairs Department included $38,708.15 for hosp: itality, $25,138.48 for the rental of motor vehicles, $27,630.72 for unspecified professional services and $320,837.35 for “travel re lated” costs such as hotels and meals. The Privy Council Office spent an additional $71,660,32 on the trip The figures were released in response to a request by Southam News under the Access to Information Act However, they do not appear to include the actual cost of transportation. The prime minister, his staff and the press corps are frequently carried on an armed forces Boeing 707 on such trips SPENDS WITH REAGAN The other expenses cover éd by the figures were for visits to the United Nations in New York last October and Appliance warning issued Owners of Toastess Wal. fler/Grill/Sandwich Maker, Model 575 should stop using them immediately because of a potential shock hazard. The units concerned are stamped on the underside Model 575, 120V, 1000W Toastess Ine. No other models are + HBC Clowns the meeting in Washington in decessors, Mulroney March of this year with U.S. routinely uses a separate President Ronald Reagan. armed forces Hercules air The New York trip cost -craft to transport his techni $62,225.10 and included more cal staff and their equipment than $13,000 for the rental of operatar tor Ellis and Good man Bob Pakula. The machinery has been in ope about two months and in that time has telled and bun- Contracting, and alder motor vehicles. The Washington trip cost $229,403.92, including about $50,000 for an official dinner given by Mulroney. There was no indication whether the expenses were higher or lower than those incurred by previous prime ministers. However, the figures follow the revelation last CHAMPION BINGO Town Square-Trail BINGO EVERY NIGHT Early Bird 6:30 p.m. Regular 7:00 p.m. A chance to win two $1,000 Jackpots anight week that, unlike his pre- WANT YOUR AD TO STAND OUT? But don't want to pay for a B-I-G ad? Use Our ATTENTION GETTERS! e Large “dots” centered above the copy in your ad. + BED, 2 smoll antique dressers ontique butter. 399-0000. 3. 30 LADIES 21 10-speed bike. ex cellent shape. $60. 365-0000 BE BEAUTIFUL ANTIQUE prono. Phone 365-0000 otter 4 p.m. 3/30 WHITE Generol-Electric Fre 15 cut. Good condition. $1 365-0000 tn /30 2-PCE. Kroeler chesterfield and chow. brown. Good condition, 0.8.0. 365-0000. 2/30 TRAMPOLINE. 16 fibre gics: canoe. Basic hardtop tent traster. 367-0000 33 LADIES Roteog S-speed bike Excelledt condition, two yeors old. 365-0000 330 STAINLESS STEEL COOLER: Son dwich tables desks. wooden of mmes<. 352-0000 or 365-0000 Your only charge will be an additional 25¢ insertion (minimum charge 75¢). And you'll tind respot to your Classified Advertising will in- crease with the use of these special Attention Getters! Phone 365-2212 College, Savage had worked for a number of years as a carpenter Hired by one of the most seasoned co-op student employers, Savage is one of six co-op students employed by the Forest Ministry, and first ever to come out of a community college program. The othets are from UVie and SFU Closer to campus, the City of Nelson hired two . Nelsonites currently in the program. Therese Toner and Peter Spearman are engaged in researching records for upgrading information on property tax master files and implementing computer files for cemetery records, & program developed by a second-year CIST student as part of a practicum exercies last year. Mark Teind! of Trail was hired by the Regional District of Kootenay Boundary to inventory the fixed assets of the district and enter them into computerized system files. Sony'2-31 ot the pagent en presen Michael Schwarz’s previous job experience serves him 30? Sponsored by the Costiegar Arts Council bw well for his co-op ed posting at Radio Shack in Trail. end District non jit Nel he rio werk ere joced Robson Recreation Percentage Bingo. Robson Hall, June_ 23. Earlybird 6:00 p.m. Regular 7:00 p.m. 2.497 ART EXHIBITION Entry torms tor the Schwarz, of Grand Forks, is president of DPMA’'s Selkirk College student chapter and has experience selling computers and electronic equipment. At Radio Shack he will be involved-in the retail sales of Tandy products as well as providing training seminars to customers and computer support Winlaw resident Janina Jankovics was hired by Selkirk- Tom ‘Hannah College under the Challenge "86 student employment program to evaluate computer software available for the charge is $3.50 ( times). Deadlines ore 5 p.m. poper ond 5 p.m 3 tor We ‘s paper Retices should be brought to the Castlegar News at 197 Columbia Ave. college's micr puters. Another employer involved with Co- operative Educa- tion at Selkirk College is West Kootenay Power and Light in lV. asterPlan in conjunction with a Kootenay Savings MasterCard card, is the most comprehensive. personal financial money management tool available in Canada today MasterPlan consoli dates your financial ser vices, and provides you with a comprehensive statement for all your Credit Union accounts and transactions The Kootenay Savings MasterCard card is the key to MasterPlan. It’s a payment card that can be used in place of a cheque or credit card. It is also a cash card that can be used for cash advances all over the world, or locally for ATM cash withdrawals MasterPlan also offers other financial benefits, suct as free MasterCard travellers’ cheques, free travel ac cident insurance, a discount on safety deposit boxes, and discount on Kootenay Savings Personal Financial Planning Services Our brochure “HOW YOU CAN BENEFIT FROM THE COMPLETE MONEY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM” gives complete deta MasterPlan, pick one up at ¢ your nearest Kootenay Savings branch today! ib Kootenay Where You Belong Trait « Fruitvate * Castlegar * Salmo * South Slocan * Nakusp * New Denver» Waneta Plaza» Kasto