RS ENTERTAINMENT LICENCED DINING ROOM Open 4P.M. Daily WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED. Reservations for Private Parties — 365-3294 Located | mile south of weigh scales in Ootischenia Castléiiir News October 2, 1985 = Open Monday thru Saturday 9 a.m. to_2:30 p.m. SALAD BAR (Monday through Saturday) — $3.95 OPEN FOR BREAKFAST AT 9 A.M. LUC EON SPECIAL — $3.50 Ys Ny la.m., - 2p.m. Us new ee SEIT TETT Cro wn (Poi igi FFOwN firth FHoint | LUNCH IN THE 1895 RESTAURANT. | trail b You. areinvitedtoa... GALA AFFAIR - A Salute to Past Presidents of Cast! “s Chamb SPLASH'S TOM.HANKS Star a product of TV NEW YORK (AP) — As a child, Tom Hanks spent most of his spare time sitting in front of a TV-set. Today, the zany actor and comedian has little time for the tube: He's too busy pumping out a string of movies." “Itcame to a point where I-could tell what time of day it: was from what was on television,” he said. totally a product of that medium.” For Hanks, who is now 30, there wasn't much for him to d6 as a child growing up in Oakland with his restaurateur father except watching television. It was a pastime that's paid off for the hot, Hollywood actor who starred in the hit movie Splash and who's now appearing in Volunteers with John Candy and The Man With One Red Shoe, a Victor Drai remake of the classic French farce The Tall Blonde’ Man With One Black Shoe. Though Splash grossed $80 million, The Man With One Red Shoe has been a summer flop. Volunteers is doing better, though. “T like the movies because it's the big time,” Hanks said in an interview at his art deco: Eastside Manhattan apartment. "The only reason I do movies now is because I can. “Iam almost “I did Splash which made me a star, and now I can make other movies. After all, how. many people are asked to make movies?” WORKS HARD Since Splash, Hanks has been churning out films. “Though it is emotionally draining and physically ce Saturday, Oct. 5 tthe Fireside Dining Room Enjoy Anna's Fabulous Buffet! Cocktails — 6 p.m. Dinner — 7 p.m. ~ Dancing to Amber" from 9-p.m.— —__ Tickets — $22.50 per person Semi-Formal Dress NOTE: There will be no speeches! Tickets At: Oglow%. Wests. Bosses, Pharmasave. Bank of Commerce (Plaza). Madeleine s or Chamber Ottice. Ee TERRA NOVA Coffee Shop Specials MONDAY TO SUNDAY, SEPT. 30 - OCT. 6 Homemade Stuffed Pe, rs Mashed potatoes, vegetable garni, fe | 5s dessert and coffee . ‘Breaded Prawns With cocktail sauce, mashed , I couldn't afford to pass up the opportunities that have come my way in the past year,” he said. He's in New York completing Steven Spielberg's The Money Pit in which he and Alexander Gudonov vie for the affections of Shelley Long. When he's finished, he'll begin his sixth movie, Nothing in Common, with Jackie Gleason. The comedy-drama will be a departure for Hanks from his usual: boy-meets-girl movie. It is that basic formula on which producers have relied + for every movie Hanks has done. Ever since his first movie, Hanks has been cast as “an everyman”’who somehow winds up in an unusual situation involving a beautiful woman. “Taking an average person and placing him in a non-average situation has been the basis for good drama dating back to Europides,” Hanks said. “My device as an actor is to display a wide range of emotion in a short period of time. I lose Tom Hanks and disappear into my characters.” Z Hanks spent the early years of his acting career doing repertory theatre in Oakland. He landed his first role while still in high school in a production of Tennessee Williams’. Night of the Iguana. While a student at. California State University in Sacramento, Hanks was invited to intern with the Great Lakes Shakespeare Festival in Cleveland. As_a-member of the ‘classical_company -he-made_his professional stage debut as Grumio in The Taming of the Shrew. Remaining with the company for three seasons, Hanks widened his classical repertoire by performing in such works as The Two Gentlemen of Verona, for which he won the Cleveland Critics Award for best actor. ‘50s TV SHOWS RETURN | By KIRK LaPOINTE = The Canadian Press Good eceve-un-ning, you are about to enter another dimension — on different television shows and on different nights. Two decades ago, two strong-performing anthology series that gained legendary status in reruns are returning - Two-day art workshop planne A design and color work- shop by Emily. Carr College of Art instructor Nora Blanck is scheduled for Nov. 9 and 10 at Selkirk College's Rose- mont Campus in Nelson. Artists, designers; crafts- people and the interested public will have 16 hours of concentrated study of color and its effects in desi the studio workshop. communities between Octo- ber 1985 and March 1986, the course requires pre-registra- tion by Oct.°31 at Selkirk College Continuing Educa- tion office. Blanck is a painter who currently teaches at Emily Carr and the University of B.C., and who has exhibited felyinB.C., Ontario and New York. to TV in two widely different forms. Whilé Alfred Hitchcock Presents will largely rest on its formidable reputation, The Twilight Zone will try to chart new territory in that middle ground between light and shadow, science and superstition. The Twilight Zone borrows only the name and mind-set of the original Red Serling effort — new stories have been written and up to four of them will surface each Friday on CBS's hour-long program. Writer Ray Bradbury, director William Friedkin (The Exorcist, The French Connection) and actors Elliot Gould and James Whitmore are in line to contribute. NBC's Alfred Hitchcock Presents, on the other hand, bears considerable resemblance to the macabre original — the cast is changed and the late director's black-and-white introductions are being “colorized,” but the stories will be kept virtually intact on the Sunday night half-hour program. Director Brian DePalma, actor-writer Buck Henry and actress Daryl Hannah are among those who will participate. For the principals behind the scenes-on the shows, there is the unenviable matter of living up to reputations. APPLES AND ORANGES “It's like taking a ‘55 Chevy and an ‘85 Chevy and comparing them,” says Philip DeGuere, executive producer of The Twilight Zone, who steps into Rod Serling’s creative shoes as the driving force behind the new series. “Apart from the~fact-they've~ got —tires—on,—ther: probably not much relationship between the two. Things week in Castlegar. ON DISPLAY . . . Vancouver Art Gallery Exterior will be one of works on display at an exhibit next Photo by Sten Douglas Gallery show Soviet doctor's body found in Beirut BEIRUT (AP-REUTER) — The boys of one of four d Soviet was found in an _ empty lot near a shell-battered sports stadium in southern Beirut today, police said. The body was found soon after an anonymous caller the kid rs said one of the Soviets to rep had been killed. f A second body was found later in the Tarik Jedidi district of mostly Moslem West Beirut after a-caller to a Beirut radio station claimed that another Soviet captive had been slain. Police said the body was that of a Lebanese construction worker who had falled to his death. Officials at the American University Hospital, where the first body was taken, tentatively identified it as that of embassy doctor Nikolai Versky. Druse-militia officers who accompanied Soviet embassy officials to the hospital morgue also said the body was that of Versky. Hospital officials said the Soviets had identified the first body.as one of the missing men, but spokesmen at the Soviet embassy refused all comment. Reuters news agency quoted Moslem BRITAIN, IRELAND LONDON (REUTER) — Britain and Ireland are nearing agreement on a’ treaty aimed at forging a political solution to Norther Ireland's sectarian violence. , government sources in London and Dublin’ say. The long-awaited deal could be ‘sealed at a summit between British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Irish Prime Minister Garret FitzGerald within the next few weeks, the sources add. fi It would hinge on-Ireland gaining a say in the British-ruled and Protestant-dominated north in return for stepped up Irish co-operation in the first against IRA terrorists. ;It-would also hinge on a tacit recognition by Dublin that Ireland would remain divided for the foreseeable Close to signing deal] in the violence, which has claimed 2,500 lives over the last 16 years: The architects ofthe new Anglo-Irish agreement a: are seeking a formula that has eluded Britajn since it sent troops in 1969 to stop fighting bétween Northern Ireland's Protestants and the minority Catholics. Seven other. initiatives have collapsed in the face of Protestant and Catholic intransigence and the two communities are further apart today than at any time since Britain created Northern Ireland. when it granted the south independence in 1920. Britain and Ireland hope Dublin's. involvement i in the North will the p 's Catholic into the political without F future, the sources said. The IRA is to wrest control of the province from Britain and unite it with the Irish_republi y The deal is expected to be underpinned by a substantial U:S. aid package for Northern Ireland and the republic, whose economies have both been seriously damaged by the strife. No one in Dublin or London claims the agreement will provide an immediate breakthrough and officials in both capitals fear that initially it might lead to an increase Parties representing the province's 500,000 Catholics refuse to play any part in the Northern Ireland assembly, arguing that it is just one more instrument of Protestant domination. Although anxious to end the violence and get its troops off the streets, Britain insists it wiil not cede sovereignty over Northern Ireland against the wishes of its one million Protestants, whose leaders say they're prepared to fight to stay British. ratnnnnnnon RENT-A-BOBCAI. (With Operator) = Light Excovoning * Rood Grove! Shop Castlegar, Oct. 4 to 18 CALL 368.9776 The world famous . “BYORS Restaurant CORNER OF 2nd & LAKE ST., SANDPOINT, IDAHO Dinner every day. Cocktails, prime rib, Iresh fish, steaks, seafood and salad bar. (208) 263-7123 Monday to Sunday, Sept. 30 - October 6 reporting the first Soviet body was that of Oleg Spirin, 2, an embassy attache. The first body was found soon after an anonymous caller claiming to represent the kidnappers said one of the Soviets had been killed. “We have carried out God's sentence against one of the ~hostages and we shalt execute the others one-after the other ___ if the atheistic campaign against Islamic-Tripoli does not stop,” the caller said. He claimed he_represented- the Islamic Liberation Organization, a Sunni Moslem fundamentalist group. The group has demanded a ceasefire in Tripoli and that Moscow condemn, the fighting in the northern city. Four militias backed by Syria, one of the Soviet Union's closest allies in the region, launched a drive last Saturday against the Moslem list’ Tawheed which controls most of Tripoli. Several gropus have claimed responsibility for abducting the Soviets. Islamic Jihad, which has claimed the kidnappings of six Americans and four Frenchmen, telephoned a western news agency on Tuesday and said it had killed two of the Soviets because of the continuing onslaught in Tripoli. Despite the death threats against the Soviets, heavy fighting continued in Tripoli. But Tawheed claimed it ;Withstood one of the fiercest onslaughts of the pro-Syrian forces, regaining control of several buildings and launching “suicide counterattacks.” In Moscow, Soviet press reported the of the IN SOUTH AFRICA JOHANNESBURG (REU- TER) — Riots sweeping South Africa are pushing churches to step up anti- apartheid protests, church sources say. 5 There is a long tradition in South Africa of church pro- test against racial segrega- tion, despite widespread op- position by worshippers who have urged priests and min- isters to steer clear of pol- ities. But amid 20 months of black unrest in which more than 700 people have died, some white A broad-based convention of clergy and laity from over 25 denominations has backed a call by Bishop Desmund Tutu for a day of prayer for reconciliation next month. And last week 151 church leaders backed the use of civil disobedience in the struggle to end white minor- ity rule. Theologican Johan Heyns said of his Dutch Reformed Church: “There is a lot of re- thinking going on. I wouldn't say it was a universal phen- omenon at- this stage, but there are e Church under pressure church leader in the northern Transvaal, said religi leaders “are faced with the question of whether they are going to show the courage of saying . .. that there is no theological justification for apartheid. I don’t think that is so easy.” tions, by its Latin American of lib ion the- its celibate ology and by _on greater commitments. Botha has consistently at- tacked South Africa's out- spoken priests. Advocates of the “godless Marxist ideol- priests, who are able to take _ The church has rejected racism as unbiblical, but did not go far enough to avoid being forced to leave world church groups, including the World Alliance of Reformed Churches. Church sources say the Anglic Church, led by the church which once found for three Soviet diplomats and Soviet doctor on Tuesday, a day after they took place. The official news agency, Tass, said “all necessary steps” were being taken to free them. a western cape university town which has educated many Afrikaner leaders, is pressing Dutch . ‘Reformed congregations to acknowledge South Africa's ruling ideology has gone apartheid — the Dutch Re- formed Church—have begun praying for forgiveness. priests like Brit- on Trevor Huddleston, took the initiative against apart- heid in the 1950s and 60s. Anglican sources said they detect increasing concern about apartheid among churchgoers who might pre- ogy” are at work in South Africa, he told young Afri- kaners earlier this year. i COLDEST OF WARM Humming-birds are the world's coldest warm-blood- ed animals. Pacific Scall Florentine Duchess Potatoes, Vegetable and Garlic Bread - ALL ENTREES INCLUDE O1 ‘our NEW SALAD BAR Reservations phone 364-2222 day rday Dancing 9: 30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. AT 12NOON Six x DAYS AWEEK. Proper Dress Fri. & Sat. after 9 p.m. Playing Fri. & Sot. ests Must = Be SIGNEDIn “ASPHALT CANYON THURSDAY BINGO, SUNDAY BINGO EARLY BIRD 6 P.M. _ CONTINUING EDUCATION There are spaces available in thefollowing courses. SELKIRK COLLEGE CASTLEGAR viously have: seen politics _—_Please call TODAY to register or stopping at the church Archdeacon John - Aitchi badly. wrong. seh Peart President P.W. Botha, whose government has made ifformation. Originally scheduled» for March of this year, but can- Air From Reuter, AP raid denounced member state, cannot be ac- potatoes, vegetable, dessey and cotlee Her works are represented have changed quite a lot.” in the Canada Council Art here Oct. 9 ility for the murders. Emergency Safety Oriented First Aid Jumbo Italo Burger With Ranch Fries NEW WINTER HOURS —6:30.0.m--to-9-p:m-Monday thru Sunday 1410 Bay Ave., Trail OCTOBER 25th Roger Whittaker SPOKANE OPERA HOUSE 1 Night at Sheraton NOVEMBER 30th Mitch Miller SPOKANE OPERA HOUSE 1 Night at Sheraton celled, the Blanck workshop is sponsored locally by the Nelson and. District Arts Council and Selkirk College Continuing Education. Part of a-series of 62 work- shops being offered by Emily "Carr College of Art in 52 B.C. Bank, Vancouver Art Gallery Collection, and other public and private collections. She last offered a course in Nelson at the Kootenay Lake Summer School of the Arts this summer called Explor ~ ations in Color Paint. RLOP auditions |- OCTOBER 10 — “Au pa Rossland Light Opera Players e e Auditions FOR FIDDLER ON THE ROOF RLOP Hall Rossland — 7:30 p.m. OCTOBER 7 — Deepen of roles Outline aigons for Principal OCTOBER 15 —. --Rutions for Chorus New members are very welcome ONE SHOVING. [PLEASE NoTE: | EACH Eveimic ROOM now {WED (THU [FRO SHOWING! MaTINEES SATURDAY _ SUNDAY land Light: Opera Players~ has—chosen—Fiddl on the- Roof for=its er spring production. Auditions start Monday with produc- tion slated for late February. Although all costumes, scenery ‘and lighting reflect the poverty of life in Tzarist Russia, Fiddler is a warm and sparkling musical, with ‘such well-known songs as “If I Were a Richman,” and “Sun- rise, Sunset.” Vigorous folk dancing, a bottle dance and a wedding dance all add to the production. Lorren Culley, who first served as music director for the RLOP p: begin Monday Mikado” three years ago irector for this year's show- The show requires an exceptional singing actor, Tevye, his wife, five. daugh- ters and village tradesmen — 22 roles plus chorus and dan- cers. Auditions will be held in the RLOP hall in Rossland with a general description of the play and the parts to be filled on Monday.” Auditions - for principals will be Oct. 10 an@ auditions for chorus on Oct. 15. Rehearsals will be held on —__———-} and works on paper which Menlicke collecting of the past five years at the Vancouver Art Gallery will be in Castlegar next week. Recent Acquisitions, presenting works by Canadian, American, and European artists, will be viewed by local students on Oct. 9, and an evening presentation for the general pub! has~been~scheduled atthe Stanley Humphries Secondary School cafeteria; from.7.9 p.m. the same day-A brief lecture by.a Gallery representative will begin at= While-a-small number of the works to be shown were- actually purchased by the Gallery, the majority were acquired through private and corporate collectors. It was not until a.move to new facilities in 1983 and the subsequent sale of the old gallery on Georgia Street that a trust fund could be set up exclusively for the purchase of art works; the 1985 budget has been estimated at $450,000. Recognizing that an articulate policy was required to responsibly allocate this fund, Director Jo-Anne Birnie Danzker presented her findings to the board and the public this past July. The purchase of works reflecting the new policy will begin in the autumn of 1985. Canadian artists represented in Recent Acquisitions include Greg Curnoe, Lynn Donoghue, Bill Featherston, Douglas Kirton, Jack Shadbolt, Kim Tomezak, and Tim Zuck. 1 works by international artists Dubuffet, Eric Fischl, Richard Hamilton, Michael Heizer, David Hockney, Ed Ruscha, and Andy Warhol, among others, can also be seen. Many governments, includ- ing Canada’s, denounced Is- rael’s air raid Tuesday on the headquarters of the Palestine Liberation Organization in Tunis but the United States called it legitimate retaliation against a terrorist attack. Israel said it hed tl = Commons: “We regret very we hich Tunisian officials UN-Secretary General Ja- “said killed at least 50 people, because~a—PLO~—unit- willed through a spokesma: —three_Isra External Affairs Minister cepted.” Joe Clark said outside the much that attack — that ry Speakes, said: “From our taking of lives. It is a vio- preliminary reports this ap- lation of the United Nations pears Charter and a violation of the against a terrorist attack and United _ Nations Charter is uch sources said ts of reprisal in the current_member countries, holding a—to Afrikaners.— tentative steps towards mod- ifying apartheid, is a prom- inent church member. “The church supported apartheid as~a God-given doctrine, seeing parallels be- tween the Old Testament Is- raelites South “Africa's _white Calvinist settlers,say- ing God commanded Israel to But President Ronald Rea- gan’s press spokesman, Lar- to be retaliation is a legitimate response and an expression of _self- defence.” Z ~vier~Perez—-de—Cuellar—said__European_Community keep itself pure as a chosen son, active in Anglican coun- cils in Natal province, said: “People who have been fairly conservative, conventional Christians are becoming wor- ried. Black clergy have be- come more imporrant in all churches, —and—are~telling white people what is happen- ing in the townships.” ° Aitchison said he* thinks — Standard First Aid Russian Conv: ‘CPR Heart Saver Drawing (Pen and Ink} Industrial Hunter Training —Managing| Criticism Air Broke: Word Processing on the 18M P.C. Business Applications on the IBM P.C. Fund Raising for Volunteer Organizations ‘Aid (2 weeks, days) Apple Works on the Apple Computer Films (a series of wonderful foreign films) —To-register or for more infor contact C ext.261. ministers of people and the same applied the Roman Catholic church h the—A moored in a-marina in | “situati naca, Cyprus, on Sept: 25. casualties and the violation of bourg, had a long discussion The PLO denied responsib- the territorial integrity of a of the raid and condemned it. ~- COMMUNITY Bulletin Beate ROBSON SCHOOL FALL FESTIVAL Saturday. October 5. p.m. Robson Elementary School. Bring yout meeaclor selling ond/oe displaying your products, baking. crafts, talents, etc. Deadline for tables, Sept. 30. For turther information con tact Laurie 365-3627, Geraldine 365-6095. 5/75 ~ TOOLS FOR PEACE Organizing meeting Wednesday, October 2, 7:30 p.m. Caftiegar United church. All interested in working on this project are welcome. 2/78 CASTLEGAR & DISTRICT PUBLIC LIBRARY The Castlegar and District Public Library, downtown branch will be holding an Akido demonstration and Book Sele. Saturday. October 5. weal ther permitting. The Book with the resulting—routine—meeting—in—Luxem-—__ MA ¥Y SHOW_COURAGE ——glican at the Heyns, theology professor at Pretoria University and now-over ofthe —F— Sell! 1217-3rd St., Castlegar 365-7782 Wy) 44 Department Store COMMUNITY Bulletin Board