minutes each, rather «is the 30 allowed a al tea stil rules. yi oa Liberal House Leader Herb Gray and hile, counterpart, Nelson | they're ready to: any time. Both have r exte: Commons hours and limits on the: of Eger stent mh i s) Debate has virtually been ruled out for this week and there is only «sim chance af ading time next week. Tom Van Dusen, a spokesman for Deputy Prime Minister Don Mazankowski, said Tuesday, Othe flonse \oet'k, day ot wishing! Oat because of Monday's address by President Ronald Reagan. When businesses resumed Tyenitte MPs were spires M4 ‘CHANGES PLANS Mibskkowski tayed ith the idea of opening the debate last week but backed off after the Liberals and NDP refused to go along with ground Fules that would have taken egme of the pressure off the government. When capital punishment was abolished in 1976, it took , 365-6028 FREE DELIVERY up. to 30 minutes on each amend Bill Domm, the leading spok backbenchers who want the death panaiys soa ee oe of meeting the June deadlin: ate fig swa delay the introduction of low-cost vptish of new toch sin prescription drugs. The legislation, known as Bill C-22, has been effectively stalled by the Liberals and New Democrats who have loaded it down with more than 40 amendments requiring additional debating time. “We want to clear C-22 from the house before we throw a complicated, three-stage more’ to complete. Mazankowski wants to wrap up bd first round, consisting of debate in principle and a preliminary free vote, before the summer recess in Juhne. He has proposed that the House sit an extra three hours ‘on those days designated for debate on the death penalty and that MPs limit their speaking time to a maximum 20 eitiy rastgate Gar 932 Columbia Ave. Fully Licenced Taylor first siale” for pulp mill Show Times| 7:00, 9:20 p.m. BC Warning Freqvamt wolence. and very Coarse 13"y OFWONDERFUL TOUZ MARY STUART MASTERSON. Ar. OnHRBS 14 VEARS — 6 C WARNING. Some gory wolence and occas.wna' coarse !axg.age Clip thiz ad for your Mom and Dad Calgary’s Fun Hotel Just HYG S Oui Spétial price until June 30th, 1987. Families deserve a fun break, And the fun's fantastic at the Port O'Call Indoor pool Jacuzzi. Steam room. Sauna: Health club. Racquetball Good restaarants In-room movies The Port CY Call's a great break for Mom and Dad, too Conveniently located just five minutes from the Interna tional Airport. Near major Calgary attractions like the Zoo and shopping centres, See the Winter Olympics facilities Family Pass for Our Guests to Village Square Leisure Centre ONLY $9.10 (regularly up to $14.00) Huge wave pool! Seven water slides! Gyms, weight rooms. steam baths, hot tubs and more! Just five minutes from the hotel CLIP THIS AD FOR MOM AND DAD! THEY'LL ENJOY THE SAVINGS AND THE BREAK, TOO! That s all we change for a spacious comm wath rolla.ay ah reaquntesd 1935 McKnight Blvd. N.E.. Calgary T2E 6V4 TOLL-FREE RESERVATIONS: 1-800-661-1161 INFORMATION: (403) 291-4600 The Kootenay Art Club held a successful 5th An: nual Showing of Art and Tea at the Castlegar Se- nior Citizens Centre Satur- day. = Marnie Nevokshonoff | won a painting by Mar- jorie West and Jordi Wish- low won a painting by Ruth Groepler. Winner of the Easter bunny cake was Bea Lund- quist. The Kootenay Art Club was formed in 1982 by Shirley Torbic, with the help of Joan Roth and the encouragement of Dorothy Miller-Tait. The club's purpose is to promote and stimulate in terest in art through: ea study of artists and KOOTENAY ART SHOW A HIT their methods of their work, with special empha- sis on Canadian themes; # developing loca} inter- est and talent in all forms of visual fine arts; e@ the interchange of ideas and furtherance of artistic achievement, both collectively and individu- ally. Members meet every Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Centre. On these nights members bring paints, pen and ink, charcoal or whatever med. ium they wish and work together or individually. Next on the club's agen da is a Ukranian Easter egg demonstration by Heidi Berger tonight at 7 COME SEE EASTER BUNNY Sat., April 11 11 a.m. -3 p.m. at Iggies! !! vt Eentteger Call 369-8155 COMMUNITY letin Board SPRING TEA April 11, Saturday 1:30 p.m.-3:30 p.m. L.A. to Royal Canadian Legion. Sewing Table, Boke Table, White Elephant, Cake Raffle, Door Prize. Everyone welcome 2 SENIOR CITIZENS COFFEE PARTY April 10 trom 10:00 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Bake Table, Sewing Gnd White Elephant Table. Ralfles. Hondwriting Reading Everyone welcome 227 B.C. FIDDLING CHAMPIONSHIP The B.C. Old Time Fiddlers Kootenay No. 9 are hosting a B.C. Fiddling Championship Contest on April 11 at the Castlegar Complex at 10.00 9.m. sharp. Finals starting at 6.30 p.m. which 1s followed by a dance by the Fiddlers ‘and on April 12 0 pancake breakfast from 9:00 a.m 11:00 o.m. will be served at the Complex. Everyone welcome. 3/26 Royal Canadian Legion ) Branch No. 170 CABARET Saturday Dancing 9:30 p.m OPEN MON. - THUR. 11 A.M. - 1 A.M. FRIDAY & SATURDAY 12 NOON-2 A.M. Proper Dress Saturday after 9 p.m Playing Sat. COUNTRY REVIEW Guests Must Be SIGNED In 1:30 a.m L.A. Catering | Soul love > out luv tubs ART SHOW .. . Kootenay Art Club’s 5th Annual show and tea featured (clockwise from top left) Kathleen O'Flaherty with her Easter egg tree; Fred Voykin with traditional Doukhobor shawl; Nora Popoft and friend viewing paintings. Gothic Russell's best film LONDON (AP) — Ask film critics about his work and they often cry, “Enough!” Ask Russell himself, and his opinions are varied but to the point. He calls his Lisztomania an absolute masterpiece. Sav age Messiah was “very sub dued, but very faithful to the book.” And Valentino was “appalling, absolute rub bish.” But he says his new movie, Gothic, is probably the great est film ever made. The public will soon assess this last claim, but whatever Langham to show wildlife pieces The Langham Gallery in Kaslo is featuring the wildlife sculpture of Rick Taylor and the super-realist wildlife paintings of Bill Holder, both of Calgary Taylor's bronze sculptures come from the background of a lifetime of fishing and hunting all over the world and a previous career in taxi dermy. This native Albertan, with a second home in Kaslo, brings to bear this technical expertise and a great rev erence for his subjects to his work. Taylor's bronzes are now found in many pri vate and corporate collec tions throughout America Bill Holder's paintings take us up into the high altitudes at the very top of these craggy mountains of the West, to the beautiful and mysterious world of the big horn sheep. This majestic creature is a favorite subject for this sensitive painter. These two artists, who of. ten show together, have hunted throughout North America and explored the mountain ranges of many parts of the continent. The show opened Tuesday and runs until April 19. North BROWNIE /GUIDE/PATHFINDER EASTER TEA AND BAKE SALE Soturday, April 11, 1.00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. Kinnaird Hall Admission $1.00, tickets at door. Door Prizes 3 2¢ ROBSON BOY SCOUTS EASTER TEA To be held Robson Hall, Saturday. April 11, 1.00 - 4.00 p.m. Tickets $1.00 each, available at door Bedding plor ts, boke table. crafts 28 « SCOUTING BAKE SALE ‘2nd Castlegar Scouting Bake Sale at Safeway. April 10 00a.m..2.00p.m 28 DRAWING AND 2 DIMENSIONAL LANGUAGE COURSE Emily Carr Foundation Studio 1s holding an orentatior and late registration for their drawing and 2 dimension language course Apri! 10, 5.00 p.m. in back of Kinn Library Building, 650 23rd Street. Castlegar Any questions please call 365 2444 2 Coming events of Castlegar ond District nor organizations may be listed here $3.75 and addinonal words are 15¢ each Boldtaced wor ds (which must be used tor headings) count as two word There 1s no extra charge tor a second in third cc fourth charge 1s $3.75 (whether od 15 three Deadlines ore 5 p.m Thursdays tor Sundays poper and 5 pm. Mondays for Wednesdoys poper Notices should be brought to the Castlegar News at 197 Columbia Ave COMMUNITY Bulletin Board profit The first 10 words are rion while the consecutive insertion For a romantic taway (your first honeymoon or your thirtieth), ig hits Ly y one of our bridal suites, featuring: y Tub Jooking one of the world's most Waterton # Spacious, luxurieus accommodation * Heart-shaped © Private sun dec beautiful Lal for two And the Bayshore’s other superb facilities will make your stay even more Memorable Testive meals in the Kootenai Brown Dining Room Cocktails 7y Fireside Lounge, with live entertainment and g and relaxation in the Thirsty Bear loon. A quick snack in the Koffee Shoppe. 5 Danc Or visit our gift shop Woterton offers a host of other attractions. A championship IX hoe golf course, lake cruises and private boating, fishing, tennis, hiking, swimming, abundant wildlife WIN TICKETS 1011 WINTER OLYMPICS Tach guest and tirana 1 ay IK vears or alder « an enter a draw fora pair RKC alyary:V (on o nests Winners isill be required Show This Ad To Your Loved One, Then Book Soon To Avoid Disappointment. Bayshone J, mn on Lakes National Park, Alla Canada TOK 2M0 Phone (403) 859-2211 © reservations from Alberta, Saskatchewan and British Columbia atier May 1st: 1-800-661-8080 LICENCED DINING ROOM OPEN 4 P.M. DAILY WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED — AIR CONDITIONED Reservations for Private Parties — 365-3294 Located | mile south of Weigh Scales in Ootischenio the reaction, Russell stands firm. It opened Feb. 27 in London and opened one mon th later in New York. Gothic 1s the movie the controversial filmmaker says he wanted to make, and he could care less about his detractors “I've always done a movie the way I thought it should be done,” said Russell, whose films are known, and often reviled, for their excesses. Gothie seems likely to fan the controversial flame of the man whose first major film, Women in Love, startled viewers in 1969 with its un bridled on-screen sexuality FOLLOWS SUIT In its surrealist way, Goth ic follows suit. Set one night in 1816, the film tells of the odd triangular relationship among the poets George Gordon Byron and Percy By sshe Shelley and the latter's eventual second wife, Mary Godwin, who wrote the clas sic Gothic novel Franken stein. Gabriel Byrne plays Byron with a dark wig and a hob. bled walk The optium-addicted Shel ley, in love with both Mary and her half-sister Claire, is Julian Sands, last seen as the young paramour in A Room With A View Natasha Richardson, Van. essa Redgrave's daughter, plays Mary Godwin, who finds herself covered in in sects, muck and cobwebs be. fore the tortured night turns film, women's breasts have eyes, men's —_, Attend An Evening Seminar To QUIT SMOKING IN 3 DAYS With Lifestyle Training — $190 SUCCESS IS GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY REFUNDED! LIFESTYLE PROGRAMS do NOT rely on willpower to quit smoking. LIFESTYLE PROGRAMS will-teach you easy, effective ways to deal with your problem at the sour: Many doctors and hospitals now refer patients to LIFESTYLE PROGRAMS. FOR INFORMATION CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-663-8322 » YOUR MIND. mouths spew forth cock roaches. Its hallucinatory landscape was, Russell said, its attraction. ‘UP MY STREET “I felt all the visuals were really up my street,” the 59. year-old filmmaker said. Shelley's drug addiction was evocative of his time. “Everyone in England in th4e 19th century was on a per. manet trip. He must have been stoned out of his mind for years,” Russell said. “I know I am.” This $2.7 million film, like its predecessors, has proven contentious. In London, its subway posters of a midget perched on Miss Richardson's breast was considered in poor taste and had to be re touched Previous works such as Crimes of Passion and The Devils were trimmed to meet censors’ demands. But whatever his projects, Russell is prepared for dis sent. Cable 10 TV SHAW CABLE 10TV Thursday, April 9 5:30—Uniroyal World Ju nior Curling Cham pionships — It’s Can ada vs Denmark in draw four of this championship _ series recently held in Es quimalt 8:00—Uniroyal World Ju nor Curling continues with draw five be tween Canada and Norway 11:05—Sign-off. Shaw Cable will continue to televise the Canadian Team draws played during the Canadian Junior World Championship in the weeks to come. Note: This schedule will be repeated Friday at 9 a.m. and Sunday at 1 p.m. Lordy, Lordy Larry is 40! From the Sisters REAGAN VISIT: Opposition unimpressed OTTAWA (CP) brief visit to Ottawa this week went over like a lead baloon Tuesday with the op- position parties in the Com- mons. Liberal and New Democrat MPs castigated the Tories during question period for having let Reagan off lightly on the acid rain question and for not doing enough to pro- tect Canadian Turner quoted White House Marlin continues: to fall on Canada, forests and water- the Aretic. iis Opposition Leader John Turner complained that a va- gue promise from’ Reagan, made during his speech to Parliament on Monday, to consider an accord on acid rain abatement was no more than a pretext allowing the Fitzwater, who told report- ers in Washington on Tues- day thatthe U.S. govern- ment haf pledged only to consider an accord, not.nec- essarily to sign one. ‘The Liberal leader said the Americans now have set up an elaborate and complicated U.S. to delay any real work on the prob- lem. for work on the proposal, which will'keep the idea in limbo while acid rain Reagan warned two years ago over embassy WASHINGTON (AP) — President Ronald Reagan, confronted by an embarrass- ing spy scandal in Moscow, acknowledges he was warned two years ago the U.S. Em- medium-range missiles in Europe and a superpower summit. Reagan said the Soviets will not be allowed to occupy their new embassy on a hill- bassy there was and that Soviet employees should be replaced with Americans. Reagan raised the possibi- lity Tuesday the United States would tear down its new, unfinished Moscow em- bassy, which has already cost $191 million US, if that’s the only way U.S. diplomats can talk freely and communicate with Washington without Soviets listening. The Moscow scandal comes on the heels of the Iran- Contra affair that damaged Reagan’s credibility and diminished his popularity. It clouds State Secretary Ge orge Shultz’s trip to Moscow next week for talks on Lotteries Meanwhile, the five win- ning numbers drawn Satur- day ight for Lotto B.C. were: 5, 11, 28, 32 and 37. The bonus number was 8. The winning numbers for $100,000 each drawn in Brit: ish Columbia's Pacific Ex- press lottery were: 089615, 935658 and 661889. The free play number was 4. In the Lotto B.C. draw there was one winner of the $244,529.70 jackpot. The four numbers correct claiming a prize of $133.80 each. Next Saturday's jackpot will be not less than $150,000. In the event of a discrep- ancy between these lists and the official list of winning numbers, the official list will prevail. top until U.S. security concerns about its own new embassy are met, But U.S. officials say So- viet officials operating out of the residential portion of the new Soviet. compound, have been eavesdropping from that site since 1979. Reagan announced he has asked former defence sec- retary Melvin Laird to head an assessment review panel, and has directed his Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board to conduct a review of steps taken to protect U.S. embas- sies overseas from espionage. In 1985, the same advisory panel warned that the exist- ing embassy in Moscow was Easy Access no Stairs vulnerable and urged that Soviet employees be replaced with Americans, Reagan ac- knowledged. Reagan said then he had ordered cuts in Soviet per- sonnel at the existing em- bassy but there were diffi- culties putting Americans in their place. “I am deeply concerned over the breach of security in our Moscow embassy, and while all the facts are not known, it is clear that security implications are widespread and that addi- tional quick action is required to prevent further damage to our national security,” Rea. gan said. All Soviet workers were ordered out of the embassy last October by the Kremlin — not the Americans — in retaliation for the expulsion of some Soviet diplomats from the United States. Thursday, April 9 Trail Elks Lodge Lic. No. 58827 Come and Play The ‘SUPER PACK”’ New Games — Bigger Prizes Win Microwave in 55 nos or less Increased 2 nos. every Thursday 60/40 SPLIT trensportetion Ph. 364-2933 or 365-6172 1060 Eldorado — ex.-Konkin irty Bird Building Coming Soon to the KOOTENAYS North American Video ‘Your Friendly Video Store Watch For Us In Castlegar ways. Prime Minister Brian Mul- roney reminded Turner that the Canadian side did not ex. pect a break through from the president's visit. “Some progress is better than going backwards,” Mul. roney said. BACKTRACKING? Liberal external affairs critie-Don’ Johnson accused the government of backtrack- ing on the question of Arctic sovereignty by flirting with a deal ‘that would allow U.S. warships to. use, northern waters under camouflage of a security arrangement. External Affairs Minister Joe Clark, who took part in meetings with Reagan on the sovereignty issue, said Can ada still seeks a deal that will respect sovereignty: Failing that, the government is pre- pared to submit the dispute to the International Court of Justice. Replying to NDP external affairs critic Pauline Jewett, Clark said Canada has “con. fidence in (its) sovereignty and we intend not to just talk about it but to act on it.” PRINCE GEORGE (CP) — Fibreco Export Inc. has made Taylor B.C. its firstchoice for the site of a new $170-million chemical thermal, mechani¢al pulp mill, a regional district spokesman said Wednesday. Equipment for land clear- ing now is at the site near Taylor, a community 16 kil- ometres southwest of Fort St. John, said “Terry Me- Eachen of the Liard-Peace Regional District. Fibreco will neither con- firm nor deny the site choice: No government appfovals EARLY BIRD 6:30 P.M. tium of 38 ladaadeat saw- it would build the mill, em- ploying 84 workers, but did not choose a site at the time. eres cities sought the projec Maye Pat Walsh of Fort St. John said no official an- nouncement has been made by Fibreco but he welcomed the mill because of the de- pressed economic condition ofthe community. Champion Bingo H all ac ipe Mall Friday, April 10 Hosted by Local 480 Lic. No. 58084 Giant $ 1 000 Bingo Packages are $30 which includes all games on our new program. REGULAR 7:00 P.M. BUS RESERVATIONS MUST BE MADE BY 7:00 P.M. THURSDAY EVENING BY THE LATEST. CALL 368-5650 or 364-0933 AFTER 1 P.M. yea . enjoyable at the Regent Visit Victoria - Canada’s warmest winters, snow-free and sunny. ‘Whatever the season, views from each Suite or room. accommodations at reasonable * Golf year-round at Victora's 4 beautiful cies. ntain scenery, : Visit the world- orld famous Butchart Gardens, dozens 1234 Wharf St., Victoria, B:C. (604) 386-2211 TOLL-FREE: B.C. and Alta. - 1-800-663-7472 U.S.A. - 1-800-663-8347 7 ACCOUNT Introducing Kootenay Savings’ T-Bill Ac- count, a premium Inv estment savings account for people who are serious about their savings. Now you can enjoy investment-level interest rates and still enjoy the ease and convenience of a regular savings account .. With Savings Account Ease and Convenience Unlike other large deposit investments, your funds are not locked in with Kootenay’s T-Bill Account. In fact, you have 24 hour access to your money through Automatic Teller Machines. As well, you get two free withdrawals every month, and regular monthly statements showing all your transactions. Call Us Today. If you’re serious about your savings, call us today. After talking with one of our representatives, we're sure you'll agree that Kootenay Premium Interest Rates... Open your Kootenay Savings T-Bill Account and you'll receive investment-level interest rates on balances of $10,000 or more. And if your balance falls between $5,000 and $10,000, you'll still re- ¢ ceive regular Savings rates D Savings’ new T-Bill Account is the All interest is calculated daily Kootenay Savings Credit Union _ Sound investment for you. and paid monthly. 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