PRAYER ViGe FOR PEACE On Thurs., Sept. 22 at 6 p.m, sharp, ou! the Casti Sourthow The 10-minuie silent tigi wat be follc ot 30 by a showing of the Academy Award-winning film Si You Love This Planet’ at the Russian Hall on 2nd ae North Castlegar, Coming events of Castl: rotit organizations may be lis e. The first 10 words are $3 ond additional words are ze “each. Boldtaced words: {which must be used for headings) count as two words, There is no extra charge for o second consecutive inser: tion while the third consecutive insertion is half-pricu, Minimum charge is $3 (whether ad is for one, two or. three times). Deodlines are 5 p.m. Thursdays for Sunday's paper and 5 p.m. Mondays. for Wednesday's paper. Rotices should be | brought 10 the Castlegar News at 197, Columbia Ave. COMMUNITY Bulletin Board if-iZz- YOu ARE INVITED TO JOIN US FOR Lunch & Breakfast Mon - Sat 7 am-2 pm f ond District non. DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS Soup & Sandwich only $3.50 Let us help you plan your meetings ? get-togethers FIRESIDE DINING ROOM 365-6000. BUS TOURS ‘Sept. 2 Oct. 15 jeer... Oct. 2 ; Nov. 12 s<°~ (Discount for Senior Citizens) Pick Hobson Riverside 7-day tour, 6 seats left Pick Hob: Riversid PRICES PER PERSON IN CANADIAN FUNDS, SHARING We Pick Up in Nelson, Castlégor and Trail - HENNE TRAVEL .. 1410 Bay Ave., Trail 368-5595 * WEST'S TRAVEL 1217 - 3rd St., Castlegar 365-7782 ee em tainment productions — and theo Lama new “open skies” policy that will see them. f compete with many more TV services in Canada’ Te near ‘future.’ fascinating and turbulent Theatre Energy ‘play to open ‘Theatre Energy's second production of ‘the 1983-84 >) |"'season, .will be’ the ‘award: ‘year” for TV. broadedgters in Canada but “one of our best. | in a decade,” Peter: Herrndo vice-president, said this On the plus side;-ati ‘Were bigwer last "year for both CTV and CRC, “which saw a 20-per-cent growth, : Herrndorf said. That, he added, was in contrast to the . three U.S. whose p;has | dropped from a virtual monopoly five peyears ago to.an esi mated 78 per cent last year, competition from pay, cable On the minus side, budge CBC, Herrndorf told the nety which dozens of bleary-eyed Jotirnalis! country are closeted in a Térdntd'hotel for thfee’ days to + watch new CBC and hear CBC's English. ‘language. ts\from‘across the, called War. it: Gwynne, ye: Halted ‘with General Rair. simonyen, USSR | ral ry’ rategist.. f ‘Other locumentaries are coming from two-time Emmy. Award winner John Kastner on the. son.aystem and a study of-heroin trafficking ; In‘entertainment p: hi weral dramas from on the network's past and hoped-for PROMOTES CURRENT-AFF, if The trend this year by executives seems to be two- fold: promoting CBC's record in! current-affairs p: rogram- ming, while explaining what'steps they have vakek te to shore up their vulnerability: itertainment. shows. In current affairs, The Fifth Estate won an Academy ' Award this year for the docuiientary Just Another Miss- ing Kid, and wide praise for its investigative reporting of funded man’ Cal Ptyow 2 Ltd H Executives also boasted that their gamble in pioneer- sing the. hour-long, prime-timl’ éws: package of The National and The Journal had’ off, In 1981, The National averaged'1.2 million viewers ‘at. sty p.m., but that grew to 1.8 million last winter in the new _ 10:p.m: time slot, said current-affairs chief Bill Morgan. “The number of viewers watching CTV's 11 p.m. news show: grew to 1.6 million, an‘ increase of- more than | 200,000, Herrndorf. said. i “Meanwhile, The Journal averaged 1:6 to 1.6 million viewers. Segments of the program also have been used’ by the BBC's late-night and the aret (Ma) Murray; and The. Gaia bin ae set in ‘rural Alberta in the 1920s; e A Sunday night format aimed at family viewers, starting with shows such as Disney,:Fraggle Rock aa ‘The Beacheombers in the 6-to-8-p.m. time alot. Following will be.dramas such asiVanderberg and Seeing Things with Louis Del Grande, which returns in January, or variety specials. with performers such as Wayne and Shuster and Harry Belafonte. Major dramas and docu- mentaries also are planned for Sundays throughout the year, @ The Grey Fox,. named the best Canadian.feature film of 1983, which will be shown on OBC early next year along with the Jack Lemmon movie Tribute and Leonard Cohen's I Am a Hotel. e A variety of mini-series, including ‘The Tin Flute, Backstretchi and 80-minute profiles of Canadian historical figures’as well .as several hour-long Programs on ‘explorers of Canada. e The return of Fame and Walt Disney Presents, youth- oriented series that were axed ‘by. NBC but have been picked up by, independent stations in the U.! 8. and foreign MacNeil) ‘Lehrer Newshour on PBS in the U.S. _ ‘willgo planned : for the foithcoeniig'seazon ‘by CBC's sof-rveteran broadcaster, Patrick Watson mae achalf-hour ‘show: in which he will interview world leaders: Although CBC. says it can't yet name the leaders to be Profiled, the net- work is believed to be trying to arrange an interview * with’ Soviet chief Yuri Andropov. CBC also will air'a six-part program titled War. preaseare b have spent ‘nearly three years travelling to 10 h this on the ald of 5 “warfare, Bailey best f at Monopoly _the ne . -RORA FAMILY TREAT, ~ --DINE OuT! - DELUXE DAILY “LUNCHEON SMORG 11130 @.m. fo 2 p.m. $5.95. Salad Ber only: $9.95. \ale/ Nabey ‘Nabe/ :.pay the $50 and keep this,” oe New U.S. series, eluding Bay Gi Giir Blues a7.9 drama, “abéut’a' minor league made by the same. People wht 'prodiltéed the cetuiest Hill Street:Blues — “and Yes; But Pm Married; a sitcom starring Madelaine Kahn. witning play Boiler, Room Suite by. Canadian play- ‘wright, Rex Deverell. i «Winner: of!‘thée Canadian, ‘Authors Association Award. for Best Canadian Drama of ] ees Boller Room Suite has oli and ‘Richard Rowberry who Played last season in the company’s production of The ‘Tomorrow Box,- iby Anne Chislett,' Joining the reabieat com- pany will be Vancouver's Duntan Fraser, a Well-known ‘Vancouver ‘actor: who has many film, radio, stage, and nV Vancouver, Ottawa, Re- and Calgary credits, (7 Fraser, will come to’ the Ke direct from) Mid- in recent years. ‘The’, play is about two prairie outcasts who find re- fuge from winter weather in the basement of a large hotel. “They entertain and comfort each other as they pass the. time and the wine — pre- tending, remembering, phil- osophizing, and dreaming — giving’ each other, and us, a little’ relief from the world outside. The play will be directed by Theatre Energy's Artistic Director, Meredith Bain ‘Woodwar, ‘who recently re- turned from: touring to Tor- onto and Montreal with Van- »couver'’s Green Thumb Play- ers. In the cast will be Theatre Energy regulars Judith Cer- ‘BOOK REVIEW summer Nights Dream, the hit‘of the Vancouver Shakes- peare Festival this summer, ‘and will return to Vancouver to perform at the Playhouse’ immediately after Boiler Room Suite closes. “We are sure ‘audiences will enjoy this play as much as they enjoyed:The Tomar- row Box last spring,” com- ments Woodward. It’s an en- tertaining piece with plenty of laughter, but its characters and their predicaments are real, providing moments of sympathy and tenderness as well as. magic and humor.” Theatre Energy's produc. tion will’ open in Nelson Thursday running through Sunday, Oct. 2. Callaghan ‘rewrites story of Judas By ROD CURRIE ‘The Canadian Press In the gospel according to Philo of Crete, who was:no saint,, the resurrection of 1 Christ didn't. ere quite, T the way it is recorded jn the ... four Gospels. And poor Judas Iscariot, Specials on Glenn Gould, M: F the Royal Winnipeg Ballet (Romeo and Juliet) and the-Strat- ford Festival (As You Like It and Gondoliers). e And a new series of children’s dramas based on the work of such authors as Alice Munro ‘and Lucy Maud ona by. history, in fact betrayed Christ because He asked him to, and because: he loved Christ more ‘than any of the 11 other. Apostles.’ This is the/etuff of ‘A Time ‘for Judas, 8 new novel by : When famed crimninal ‘law- “with aasets worth $6,682 af- “yer F. Lee Bailey played ter only, one hour of playing Monopoly recently in Boston time, _tépromote = new edition Of.., into, his vest pocket, Auerbach,” in the Parker “HT go to jail I'm going to ‘Brothers Lortab ofa new. Morley C: who, at 80, “remains. .one of Canada’s Lae literary lights with More. became ‘a great friend and admirer of Judas, the most widely travelled, intellectual and worldly of ee eee, Apostles. SCRE aes by remorse, because, of the event itself.and because his- tory ‘would castigate him through the ages ‘for betrzy- ‘ing Christ for 80 pieces of silver, that he finally told one person, Philo, the truth. But he was so guilt-ridden at having broken the secret that he. committed suicide. Philo, in turn, was torn be- tween -Judas’s: se- abl rep- tation, The story is that the hier- archy of the Roman Catholic Church suppressed various sospels other than those of said Bailey, who also snapped. to ‘accelerate the 10900 game up flock of hotises and three with ‘loans, pees, and _. railroads Before cashing in action.” "eh and pains, Altes Sake Pools, saunas, Saale ry thew, Mark, Luke ia ou and that when the gospel’ of: Philo ‘surfaced’ in Rome the Church ordered it destroyed. But it wasn't. Philo was ideally situated to record évents-leading to, ~ ma including, the crucifixion 1 and resurrection: eret or recording the‘truth. Truth won out and Philo wrote it.all down, to be dis- covered 2,000 years later. In Callaghan’s hands it seems a simple, easy-to-read tale, and at times the reader ;may wonder why so much is being made of the retelling’ of the familiar story. But it is a much deeper yarn than. it—first. appears, and the twists and’turns of “ the story haunt the mind long Ro. “after the lal page i read | mar-governor of Jerusalem, ‘and as a Roman official with’ worldly tistes he was free’ to go wherever ke: wished, min. ‘'gling with:wealthy Jews, city progtitutes‘and papaite from: the desert. 5405) 3, “NOTICE ) Philo:— corrupt: and sen- sual — brings a more human touch to the drama, setting it against his own involvements with saints and sinners of the time. Although. his telling ‘varies little from the tradk tional story, it is these dif- ferences — the roles of Judas and Mary Magdalene, ' and + the account of the resurrec- tion — that make Philo’s ac- «count fascinating and ~con- iyincing reading. ea UREA. “Francis, the badgering stagehand on Milton Ber! The i Texaco’ Stan! eatre. Toda: ‘Afnold Stangris 6, sill diminutiv abd atilf fond ét bow: ties, But ‘the, eyeglasses. are| ‘up-to-date and: é famous.is softer ‘ee you're -looking fee ce mawhat er theatre produ ‘regio chusetta of ane and: The Diary: ‘of Anne | important, he © that T'can’t let it Bp. 1 SY.don' iknow how this will ook be more than a movie actress. s Aa Ad owns op Exp rit “preuenareas a and the Acad try’ S Her newest film is Cujo, in'which she band Christopher Stone, Daniel ‘Hugh-Kelly and'a rabid Rt Bernard. ‘The Stones: have been touring ‘for .Cuj ‘first ‘Europe, now 'in'this country,’ : hely fright ‘King on Good Mornin -America (“very:/scary”) King ‘aleo wrote. el, Cujo. Bhs de cease fallace Ciijo was the hardest work sho faye It was fled lat winter in‘ Calif. K Str 978" . fling ber eibar's teeauh: Ate toons New. she had appeared in-160 TV commercials, then decided He Be cadnied aati Seats with hee Wee Glaze workship “held at DTUC Connecticut é my. mother and father an ‘aaletary present and got on the ‘bus and went to New York,” hé saya. “I got lost a few times, but finally made it to the station. I recited Edgar Allan Poe's The Raven with gestures because I was going to be\a SERIOUS actor. They ‘tracked‘up and hired me.” a) He wont tn to snothit radio show for youngeters bet) | Pretend, then worked with: Ethel Barrymore, Dame 4 Stang says he'll Continue dong as much eens aye as possible. And thougit lie’ done TV series, ‘Bonanza. Batman to Busting Loode;ddn't expect to find the wiseerack, ing wimp of yesteryext,in another one. °° theatre as posible, ‘Aiié! though he’s done TV); cen Bonanza to Batman’ts'Busting: Loose, don't expect 'to find the wisecracking with of-yesteryear in ‘another. one. y- igus years apart cial ite movie ia natarally, hose and philosophically. 4 yy. brought yr. of Brother Rat was: aod rom New So led. Jason |. some’ young’ actor, id’ Albert, who stol jin the role of: Grand- Reagan; who’ has ‘sini Beper ee, intovanother'line of ven he’ adds,’ they Racal ia ten has put him in uy, athe battle against Benger ta, ot even Hough:t they are Honest Joe roles: ss favor. “the world. : CASTLEGAR ees September 21,) 1983. ‘A7 fj ROBERT’ Ss Restaurant I 6, Winlaw « FULLY LICENSED. % ont oe Phone 228-7718 fer W a.m. to 8 p.m. Closed Monday & >» Dencing 9:30 p.m.-1i 30 a.m. 2 NOO! (2 AYS A WEEK Proper Dréss Fri. & Sat. after 9. p.m. * Guests Must, Playing Fri. & Sot. Be SIGNED In “SKIP FRASER” Thursday and Sunday Bingo Shamrock Motel : 629 Sprague Avenue ‘spokane, Wash, U.S.A. 99202 Phone (509) 535-0388 “re New T.V.'s and New Queen Beds © New Queen Waterbeds © All New Movies Every Week! bf SHOWTIME T.V. f 24 PRIVATE ADULT MOVIES I E.S.P.N. SPORTS WITH CFL By Lee | Free. Continental Breakfast Daily - : . Free Local Phone Call é hor. tural . : the outs IPS 22 VEARS CATER’ k Yt + Geant weak ob top on thy ‘ 27:00-1 coats e Fatings® for ithe tie time’ ; Pea 9 ‘tel/Griffiths and Don" re Rossland’: * tion series, 5 “Union “Hall” ih ase 7:15—The 1988: ‘Union! of ¢ + Youth Festival'Part 4 — Featured on this Segment are the 10:18—Sign-off. |NORMAN BATES IS: Ca ies Z _./ each’ day. “A Glaze Workshop titled ° “Kitty Litter, Beach Sand ‘and ‘Other Rocks ‘Iv have . Known" will be given by Don Hutchison on’ Saturday/ ¢) Sunday Sept. 24/25 in the “Ceramics Studio at David: Thompson University Centre in Nelson. The workshop will ~ run from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. ‘The object of this “how to do it” workshop is to reduce glaze cost by-learning how to Tocate, identify, test and pro- ‘cess local rocks, beach sands, ete. into viable stoneware glaze. It will be geared to ‘those who wish to become ia .ceramically indepéndent of tirchased raw materials, 4 pa those who are ierebed in understanding or extend- ing their possibilities in alist: dio: t 16 years. He thas suc-- Cosafally, combined: his’. own. work with his teaching role: as head of the ceramics de- partment of Langara College for the past 12 years: He has exhibited widely throughout, Canada, and his ‘continuing * interest in geology has led him to extensive research and ‘experimentation | with ey raaceral ics: use as P Rosiatrilon jahould be made through Louise Souker- off, DTUC, 852-2241, local 78. ‘The fee for the workshop is $40 ‘payable in advanes. ture’ stare ‘Brian’ Keith*ns ia oe Fetired judge ‘Wwho'col- { Hugh "Ke be ie Wilbon pes Sess tion, NEC's The.A ‘Team, fin- | ‘week. ished fourth for’: Cannell. has, tongue-in-cheek average, of 16.2. CBS was]. second with’ 14.0 and» NBC was third with 13.8: The net- ‘works say this means that'in &n average prime-time min- ute 16.2 per cent of the ‘tele-| vision ‘sets in homes ‘across tHe United States were tuned to ABC. ‘| Boller Room Suite > Kosatke Cossacks ** gtedmons, Rassiond; Sears, Troll? PRESENTS a ae 2 SEASON TICKETS ONLY. "$35 ADULTS, $25 JUNIOR OR Senor CITIZEN i, AVAILABLE Fl Set Sopt23 Sones endae, 10.4.m,-4p.m. wy Wonete Pier, Beat .-Sp.m., Set., 10a.m. 4pm. H.C.R. Promotions Proudly Presents 1983 © BATTLE OF THE BANDS Sat. & Sun:, Sept. 24& 25 Starts 12 Noon Saturday As many as 12 Bands are ex Come and support your focal Bande! ‘Day Ticket — $8.00 (Under 6 Free) ‘atthe pia Park or Hospitality Ian, Ope South Calgary VILLAGEEAR PARK INN (hi) Hospitality Ian * Mon. - Sun., Sept. 19 - 25 rievae! Ferree is bahar fe Me lium and the INTERNA} TONAL SPECIAL Mall Brniwood Village and direct or Salad Bar, Steak Tyrol Hospital. with $12, ‘50 rowigba Calaway Part Soup Von Rar. Steok . $17.95 DUETO > PUBLIC DEMAND. “WE ARE NOW: : OPEN FOR LUNCH ‘Mon. to Fri.,. 1M a.m. nfo 2:30 p.m.” Smorgasbord | “Your Smotgasbord House of the Choice AT THE Nm Ci, of 3 ry & Menus Only $9.50 Sterting Sept. 21 legetoble du Jour, Potato or Rice, Peach Cake w/Ice Cream . Boz. New York steak dinner for two Thursday, So 2, 1983 at6 p.m. © Indoor pool, sauna, whirl “September 22nd to 24th ‘FALL FASHION SHOW : CENTRE COURT « Thurs. 7:00 - Fri. 7:00 — Sat. 2:00 The Castlegar Selkirk Lions Club is inviting ‘everyone to come out and celebrate the opening of the. renovated Kinnaird Park Thurs., Sept. 22 at'6 p.m. » The Lions Club willbe ‘turning the park over to the City . Of Castlegar. Come out and join the celebration, we will ‘have FREE hot dogs and hamburgers for you plus.” entertainment! SEE YOU THERE! Castlegar Selkirk Lions Club . D's Lounge. WE SERVE e Dancing nightly nightly in Sir TO PLEASE © Banquet thle meeting facilities © Weekend rates available 7 area opin FOR RESERVATIONS: We are now open for (403) 289-0241 1804 Crowchild ‘Trail N.W. BREAI LUNCH Dies ty Q OUTDOOR FESTIVAL SITE inet a a80 pra Also open tor private luncheons, FIRESIDE DINING ROOM 135 Southland Drive SE.) HIDDEN CREEK RANCH Reservations suggested for porties of 10 or more. Phone 364-2616 for Reservations ‘Toll-Free: AND COCKTAIL LOUNGE : stacked eal Highway 6; Salma For info., 357-2266 bomananinee 2 ena Next door to Konkin's Irly the Wat v1 Re n App d 365-6000. 2 \ en a ~ DRUMMER BOYS “:Chicken drumsticks breaded and deep tried. Served with rice and a 7 honey or iar WED., THuRS., FRI., SAT. 5 P.M. TO 8 P.M. SUN., MON., TUES — BY RESERVATION ONLY Semi-private areas available for group dinners. See tk Sun. + Food and Novelty Booths Both Days Lunch—Mon. on a y ‘Spm. -9 p.m. (| FOR RESERVATIONS: for both Hotels: 1-800-266-8993