as Castlegar News. 1990 -BAR- DINING LOUNGE AILY A Located | Mile South of Weight Scale in Qotischenio LICENCED DINING ROOM CELGAR, WESTAR & COMINCO MEAL VOUCHERS ACCEPTED ROSE'S RESTAURANT WILL BE CLOSED Tues., Oct. 2 through Mon., Oct. 8 Due to a family wedding. We will reopen for business Tuesday, Oct. 9. SORRY FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE Have a Happy Thanksgiving! From the Russian Food Specialists! PRIME RIB * SEAFOOD © STEAKS * CAESAR SALAD © SPECIALTIES FULLY LICENSED COMINCO & CELGAR VOUCHERS WELCOME most crtort CARO 352-5358 ‘ACCEPTED 646 BAKER ST., NELSON — ACROSS FROM PHARMASAVE Robson River Otters Sat., Oct. 6 at Arena Complex 60% PAYOUT PACKAGES AVAILABLE — Early Bird 6 p.m. Regular Bingo 7 p.m. Rossland Light Opera Players OryS E.DdLlp ia OCT. 11 — INTRO & SING THROUGH OCT. 15 — AUDITIONS OCT. 18 — FIRST CHORUS PRACTISE All at 7:30 p.m., 2054 Washington St., Rossland FOR INFORMATION CALL 362-5665 ENTERTAINMENT Pacific Heights on top LOS ANGELES (AP) = The yup- pie nightmare Pacific Heights finished in top spot at movie theatres over the US last weekend. The film stars Mat- thew Modine and Melanie Griffith as San Francisco landlords with a rent- withholding tenant (Michael Keaton). No. 2 was director Martin Scor- sese’s mob drama GoodFellas, which slipped by just six per cent to $5.9 Nelson artist L.X. Forde discu Grade 10 art class during ARTIST DISCUSSES WORK million in its second week of release. The supernatural thriller Ghost collected $5.4 million for third place, up by @ surprising seven per cent from the previous weekend and has now made $155.3 million. It was followed by the detoxing actress comedy Post- cards From the Edge, finishing with $4.1 million. Narrow Margin, the thriller with Anne Archer and Gene Hackman, made $2 million for fifth. In sixth was the new action-adventure release, I Come in Peace, premiering with ticket ry sales of $1.91 million. Jean-Claude Vah Damme's drama Death Warrant finished in seventh with receipts of $1.88 million. The medical school thriller Flatliners claimed eighth with a gross of $1.7 million. Funny About Love, a comedy starring Gene Wilder, fell by 46 per cent from the previous weekend to ninth on collections of $1.6 million. In 10th was the courtroom drama Presumed Innocent with sales of $1.4 million, his work with students from Mount Sentinel high school's nt visit to the West Kootenay National Exhibition Centre where Forde’s work is on display until Oct. 31. CAROLINE WOODWARD «+. reads Oct. 17 Woodward ‘opens series The language and literature depar- tment of Selkirk College begins its 1990-91 Canadian Writers Series with a reading by Nelson-based author Caroline Woodward on Oct. 17 at 1:15 p.m. in the faculty lounge at the Castlegar campus. Woodward emerged this year as a serious writer of Canadian fiction with the release by Polestar Press in April 1990 of her first-collection of short stories. Her book, Disturbing the Peace, chronicles in minute detail the emotional tone of small-town girlhood which Woodward experien- ced by growing up in the Peace district of B.C. During the summer, Disturbing the Peace maintained a solid grip on four- th place in B.C. Bookworld’s list of top-selling books by British Columbia authors. Asa writer, Woodward is no ighbours are j gone ond nig 5 Te nae 40th wedding anniversary OPEN HOUSE Harry and Nancy Knight Sunday Oct. 7, 1-4:00 pm. at their home (3499 Broadwater, Robson) no gifts please COMMUNITY Bulletin Board S.0.A.R. MEMBERS Please attend meeting Friday, October 5, 10 a.m.. Steelworkers Hall, Trail There will be a S.O.A.R. Convention Report by Jim Patterson, Kimberley. 79 CASTLEGAR SENIOR CITIZEN ASSOCIATION Business meeting, Thursday. October 4, 2 p.m., Whist, Thursday, October 11 p.m 279 S.H.S.S. OPEN HOUSE Thursday, October 4, 7-9 p.m. Meet your son or daughter's teacher and learn about their education programs 278 NORTH 2nd CASTLEGAR CUBS Start October 2, 6-8 p.m. Still room for boys. Grades 3. 4 and 5. 365-3226 278 ROBSON RIVER OTTER BINGO Saturday, October 6. Castlegar Complex 60% Payout. Early bird 6 p.m regular 7 p.m. Everyone welcome. 27 Coming events of Castlegar and Distirct non-profit organizations may be listed here. The first 15 words are $5 and additional words are 25¢ each. Bold faced words (which must be used for headings) count as two words. Th tra charge for a second insertion while the third consecutive inse: price and the fourth and fifth consecutive insertions are only half price for the two of them. Minimum charge is $5 (whether ad is for one, two or three times). Deadlines are 5 p.m. Wednesdays for Soturdays paper and 5 p.m. LEGION BRANCH 170 HOURS: Monday to Thursday 12 Noon - 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday 12 Neon to 12 Midnight EXCLPI BAND NIGHIS & SPECIAL OCCASIONS} BINGO THURSDAY scence No. 7 WEEKLY MEAT DRAWS EVERY SATURDAY AT 3:00 p.m. 365-7017 Lic. No. Mondays for Wednesdays paper. Notices should be brought to the Castlegar New at 197 Columbia Ave 72113 How Nifty, turning 50! Happy Birthday, Dad! love. Marlene, Dan, Pat Rob & Shoughn CABLE 10 SHAW CABLE 10 SCHEDULE Oct. 3, 4, 5, 7, 1990 5S p.m. (Wed) 9 a.m. (Fri) 5 p.m. (Sun) Steve and Maureen — From the Shaw Cable archives, this is an early 1980 performance of two folk singers from the United States who were at Selkirk College. Produced by Shaw Cable. 6 p.m. (Wed) 10 a.m. (Fri) 6 p.m. (Si Banjo’s Reunion (Part 1) — Musicians from B.C., Alberta and the northern United States gathered at Castlegar’s Banjo’s Pub for the second annual Banjo’s reunion. Money raised at this one-week fun- draiser was donated to local charities. Produced by Ray Bouliane 7:30 p.m. (Wed) 11:30 a.m. (Fri) 7:30 p.m. (Sun) Gold Fever Follies — This locally produced play about the early days of Rossland was taped during a performance at the Rossland Miners Hall this summer. Produced CASTLEGAR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE by the Rossland Rotary Club. 8:30 p.m. (Wed) 12:30 p.m. (Fri) 8:30 p.m. (Sun) Front Row Ticket — Tim Frewer and Lorna Eyolfson host this hour-hour program that highlights the upcoming free preview weekend Oct. 12, 13 and 14 on Shaw Cable. Produced by Shaw Cable in Vancouver 9 a.m. (Wed) 1 p.m. (Fri) 9 p.m. (Sun) Celgar Expansion Hearings (Part 1) — Coverage of the public hearings held in Castlegar. Coverage continues next week. Produced by Shaw Cable staff and having fiction, non-fiction, poetry and cartoons in numerous Canadian magazines and newspapers. Her scripts for stage plays have resulted in a number of i i a pr staging of Runs Good, Some Rust, by a Theatre Energy collective in 1988. Woodward lives in Nelson, and works as an editor, teacher and freelance writer as well as remaining active in the Kootenay School of Writing, Theatre Energy and the Images Ad Hoc Singers, a nine- woman a cappella singing group. Her fiction has appeared in the Malahat Review, PRISM International, This magazine, Canadian Fiction Magazine, Frictions: Stories By Women and Imagining Women. 11 p.m. (Wed) 3 p.m. (Fri) 11 p.m. (Sun) Sign Off. NOTE: This schedule is repeated on Friday at 9 a.m. and again on Sunday at 5 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 4, 1990 6:30 p.m. — Don’t Judge a Book By its Cover 6:45 p.m. — Candlelight Vigil 7 p.m. — Celgar Public Hearings in Nelson 8 p.m. — Nyetz 10 p.m. — Sign Off 1995-6th Ave. Costlegor, B.C Escape, to fantasy rooms AT COEUR D'ALENE, IDAHO Only 3 hours away to Bennett Bay on Coeur d'Alene Loke and 1-90 Private Spa Rms. «from $70 Regular Rms. .... 2. .from $30 CANADIAN AT PAR 1-900-368-8609 Her € as part of the Canadian Writers Series at Selkirk College will be followed on Nov. 15 by Kristjana Gunnars. The public is invited to attend this and all readings sponsored by Selkirk College. There is no charge for admission. Open 5:30 ‘ Ly, 5:30 p at st, Sunday Brunch e 10:30am. - 1:00 p.m Reservations 825-4466 Please recycle The NEWS YEAR ONE containment SCHOOL DISTRICT No. 9 (CASTLEGAR) (KINDERGARTEN) REGISTRATION — For January 1991 — Parents wishing to enroll their child in either the ENGLISH Year PRIMARY LOCAL NEWS n Susut was je off to wor CasNews photo THAT TIME OF YEAR repared with earmuffs and all as down Columbia Ave. Tuesday. Demonstration forest touted by valley director By CasNews Staff The Regional District of Central Kootenay director for the Slocan Valley says he'd like to see a demon- stration forest set up in the West Kootenay to show the compatibilty of different forest uses and to educate the public about forestry practices. Bob Barkley said he liked what he saw in a demonstration forest on-» Mount Seymour in North Vancouver. The Area H director, who toured the forest while in Vancouver to attend the recent Union of B.C. ici iti annual ec, said the forest shows different fores- try practices such as clearcuts, select cuts, thinni) ind replanting but also contains a fish hatchery and has cross-country skiing trails as well as areas for snowmobiling and motor- biking. “They seem to have a little of ‘everything the community could use,’’ Barkley said in a recent inter- view. ‘‘I guess what I liked most about it was the education factor.” He said he has suggested land owned by the regional district in the Slocan Valley might be a good place to set up a similar demonstration forest locally. “If that doesn’t fly, I'd certainly like to see one somewhere in the region because I think it’s great education for children and for adults.”’ Barkley said he hopes to set up a meeting with Arrow forest district manager Ken Arnett to discuss the idea. Turning to other matters, Barkley said he had meetings with several provincial ministries to discuss such matters as logging on private land in the Slcoan Valley, housing for seniors, lack of staff in the local of- fices of the Environment Ministry and the Ministry of Forests, and getting the town of Sandon declared a historical site. “*A lot of time was spent on that,”’ he said, referring to Sandon. ‘‘The direction has been given on steps to take and they’ ve been initiated.’” He said he has to work with Ministry of Crown Lands officials “and hope they work with us.”” Barkley said Environment Ministry officials indicated there’s going to be additional staff in the area. The director said he also discussed Highway 6 in the valley with Ministry of Highways officals. Answer to Sunday Crossword Puzzle No. 437 As E 0} G R Be >|x Lf o} EGE im| | m| a GE GhE OMERE Z\O|OlZ) mir} >|=x OGGSOUo m|<[>|O/>| ‘O}|m! 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