Dining Room at the® savy Inn, NOW OPEN. FOR LUNCH. 11-a.m. - 2 p.m., Mon, - Fri. *- Featuring * House Salad. 2... Beef Dip‘... Roast Beef: Lunch: _ Daily Soup & Sandwich . . Club House. » SAVOY INN, NELSON, . ~ NELSON ENTERTAINMENT CENTRE PRESENTS OU! DAILY. MENU. : Sundoy through Saturday? 5 - 10 p.m, = 1 3°5 -A COUPLE S DINNER INCLUDES, A CHOICE OF: PRIME RIG ® STEA ALMON © A WEEKLY. SPI eta or: ‘alee Includ FRENCH BREAD * BAKED FRE! JONION SOUP , SALAO.* VEGETABLE * POTATO ORRICE: + (Children's Menu Avauteble) ; Phone 352- 7285 4 Freé Caver Charge into Kips “Nigh! C Club for Diners JARRETT MUSIC. AND: KIPS THE REAL ‘GUITAR SHOW COMMENCES MAY 12 ‘AND RUNS EVERY THURSDAY UNTIL JUNE 21ST ' DOORS OPEN 6:00 P.M. CONTEST 9:30 P.M. Seml-Finals: Thurs., July Fa 14 Finatss Thurs., July 21, Grond Pr Fender Gultar * Second Ca jectric Guitar Tuner © W Prizes: Gift Contficator. Prizes frown JARRETT musicn dss Werd st, Nelson. RULES Judges’ decision final. Contestents may ploy a set of music in a style of thelr own choice and are required to play 12 bar rock or rhythm with house band. Contest- ants play 5 min. to 7 min, max. Registration and prac- tice every Tuesdoy, 6:30 p.m. at Kips. Additional Entry Forms at Kips or Secetts Sound of Musta, Name \ SENT CASTLEGAR NEWS, May 15,1983 AZ -. BOB HOPE -More than | aU.s. | institution | LOS ANGELES (AP) — As national institutions’ go, he is not as old as the Statue of Liberty nor as big as Mount Rushmore, and he’ steadfastly declares he is not as rich as Fort Knox. But Bob Hope seeras al- most as durable as those other U.S. landmarks. Dur- ing the last 45 years he has been a regular visitor in North American living rooms, first with his radio show, then with a series of television specials. He has made 65 movies, countless - shows for the armed forces and charities, as well as for paying customers. He has starred in every medium of show business in this coun- try. He has made it all and still he wants to do more, despite the fact he'll be 80 on May 29. ee years old!” he says “How did it BOB HOPE .. durable tine for Burns and Allen; he wrote for me for five years. T've always known that mat- erials is everything.” A phalanx of joke writers have kept Hope supplied down through the years of vaudeville, Broadway shows with happen? God, it got here so fast! I feel like saying, ‘Stop the world, I want to count.’ He is marking the event in Hope style: with a three-hour NBC television special from the Kennedy Centre in Wash- ington on May 28. His old pal, President Reagan, will take part, plus performers rang- ing from Mikhail Baryshni- kov to Kermit the Frog. BORN IN ENGLAND Hope generally prefers talking about the future, but the fourscore birthday called for reminiscence by the man born in England as Leslie Townes Hope. His family emigrated to the United States when he was four years old and settled in Cle- veland, Ohio. “There have been some good times and some bad times,” he says, “But looking back, the bad times come un- der the heading of experi- ence.” “The worst time? I guess that was when I was starving in Chicago in 1928. Not really starving, but it was so bad I was thinking of going home Age Add: Phone FOR FURTHER INFORMATION Jarrett Music 352-5224 © Savoy Inn 352-7785 to Clevel: to do my laun- dry.” “At first I wrote my own material,” he says. “I studied College Humor magazine and ‘everything else I could get my hands on. Later I hired Al Boasberg, who had written the famous Lamb Chops rou- ea NOW AVAILABLE Great Selection of MOVIES New York in 1927), radio (The Rudy Vallee Show, 1934), movjes (starting with The Big Broadcast of 1938, ENTERTAINMENT the: film that produced his theme song, Thanks for the Memory), television and per- sonal appearatices. His comedy. and good works have brought him al- most every award and prize except the Nobel. He has long rated high in polls of the most admired MUSIC CONCERT . . . Grade 6 student Laurene Brown accompanies band on piano at Twin Rivers spring con- cert Thursday night. TI @ annual concert featured the GOING, GOING, GONE . held annual auction sale at cisliggae Kiwanis Club stleaird Ploza Saturday. ; . Funds raised will go towards community projects. —CosNews Photo by Chris Gratham TICKETS $150 EACH. junior band, division two and senior band as well as the Ukulele Singers, ~CosNewsPhoto by Genga Muttich FACED CRITICISM The Hope image came un- der attack for the first time in the late 1960s and early 1970s, when he was viewed by some asa supporter of the © Vietnam War and. the con- servative establishment, “I wasn't controversial; the war was controversial,” Hope says. “When I saw the sol- diers laughing in Vietnam, that outweighed the criticism 1,000-to-1. There was no way I could go back on those kids.” Aside from a physical regi- men of golf, walks and mas- sage, Hope maintains the sound .of laughter in what keeps him going. “The most fun I have is doing the shows,” he says. “To be around actors and writers, to be singing and joking, ‘tobe hearing the laughter — that's what enjoy- ment is, That's what keeps me healthy. “Retire? No, not as lose as Tm feeling good.” * Historic Paris ingly and by the man regarded as the ;father of. modern photog- raphy” will be on display at “the National Exhibition Cen. tre June 1-80. “Eugene Atget: 60 Photog- raphs” is an exhibition as- sembled and organized by Le Service des Echanges Ar- tistiques de France and cir- culated in Canada through the International Program- mes, National Museums of Canada. After failing as an actor and painter, Atget found his true vocation in photography in 1898 at age 41. From then until his death-in 1927 he photographed every visible aspect of his beloved city, Paris, especially the ancient and historical quarters, It has been said that no city has ever been more lov- SUNSET DRIVE-IN “Radio Sound Theatre, Castlegar MAY IT to 14, WEDNESDAY to SATURDAY (restricted) MAY 15 to 17, SUNDAY to TUESDAY “Bed Bunnies" (restricted) "Julia" (restricted) 45 Phono 365-5811 umented than Paris in oe monumental work of Atget, a ~ legacy@of' thousands of des- eriptive prints whose artistic merits are surpassed only by their historic value. It was Atget’s urgent con- cern to ensure that tangible records would be preserved ofa city fast falling victim to .the inroads of “progress.” Atget’s Paris . Photographs ~made a profound impression ‘on a Paris’ on display at NEC qualities previously unob- served, In addition to the exhibi-, tion, the NEC has tentatively, , phers, inspiring oe to ex- plore: the everyday world with new eyes and to dis- ‘cover in,their own environ- ments poetic and expressive a lecture/work- shop in conjunction with the Atget show over the June 10-12 weekend with well- known critic and educator Peter Wollheim. Crafts show at Langham. May is in the making with the ‘May Making’ crafts show that opened at the Langham Centre Galleries May 10. This visually beautiful ex- hibit includes skillful wood- working by husband and wife team Sally and Barry Lamare from the Slocan, with charm- ing items for the home and for children at affordable prices. A blaze of color is added by well known Nelson stained glass artists, Moss.Glass, ina spectacular display. The show also includes the trad- itional skill of toolmaking with work-by master tool- maker, Raymond Anderson. from Nelson. The art of the blacksmith is ARROW ARMS. MOTOR HOTEL . "PRESENTS shown with work by John Smith from Proctor. For more color there are the sub- tle designs in weaving of Kaslo‘weaver, Wendy Budde with clothing for women. To complete this show, there is a contrast of ceramic artists well known in ,the area, David Lawson's (of Nelson) delicate. porcelain and Chris Freyta’s (Ains- \ ey worth artist) charming spec- Kled functional pottery and Maggie Pender's lovely rice paper lampshades. The show runs from May 10 - 28 and is open through- out the Kaslo May Days weekend. Langham Galleries is open seven days a week from 9:30 am. to 5 pm, Sundays from 11 a.m. to 4 11-hour mauateal: a di lly" By ROD CURRIE TORONTO (CP) - Exalted One is the name and initiate to the Sun God is my game, or at least it was at the world premiere of the 11-hour, $150-a-ticket musical experi- ence called Ra. Asteely-eyed hierodule, or assistant to high priest Hier- ophant, summoned each. of us to her in turn to whisper one ‘of the 75 magic names of Ra “as a seal of divine protec- tion” to carry us through the night-long performance. pro- _ duced by Comus Music The- atre of Canada. Contrary to plot, i it was not the dem an , mons! that terrified half as the no-nonsense actors’ cast as hierodules. They run a tight ship. It’s a case of speak when you’ ‘re spoken to and do as you're told in the nether- world through which Ra and his audience of 75 must pass between sundown and sunup at the Ontario Science Cen- tre, where 10 performances of the epic are being staged. As the Ra handbook fore- warned: “The role of initiate isa challenging and reward- ing one.” No smoking or eat- ing — except at the post- midnight feast — no hand- bags, knapsacks or cameras. Practical clothing, preferably a track suit, is the order of the night of indoor-outdoor chanting, incense . burning, Writers talk money Canadian authoress Alice Munro, at a recent public reading in Washington, de- scribed 15 years of effort and rejection slips before her first book Dance of the Happy Shades came out in 1968. x All that time, she said, she knew no other writers. Now she knows many, but. still doesn't discuss: writing with them. What do writers talk. about, anyway, when they gather? . “Writers talk about money parading and foot-stomping. It's overshoes for the out- /door bits on damp grass; then ‘a change to sneakers for the inside cavorting, anointing ceremonies and hand-in-hand parade of blindfolded Initi- ates, Five short “comfort stops” were permitted and occasion- ally ‘warm tea was served. But anyone with allergies to . perfumes or incense, or a fear of close, dark places,, was warned in advance. % For the first three hours, hierodules instructed : ‘initi- ates in chanting, to bring forth good node a ane righten off'evil ones. Bi much as Ae’ the Bask at Beatie 3 ie huff and puff life into a fallen - god, and the study of per- fumes so as to recognize the’ scents of good and evil. - Exalted One failed: per- | fume. They all smelled the game, except a noxious mix: that smelled of damp ashes and was the scent of the god ’ of sterility and chaos. By .near-dawn, in a chilly rain, the great battle be- tween Ra and his most vile enemy, the paper dragon > Apophis, ensued. As a loyal initiate, Exalted One should have, chanted and stomped. But privately he ‘hoped Apophis would eat Ra and we could-all go home. « ‘After all that, the critics were generally cool. “Td rather be dead than Ra’d,” .quipped radio critic Urjo Kareds. “It doesn't work, or at least ‘it didn't for'me,” said Jacob Siskind of the Ottawa. Citi- zen. John Kraglund of the Tor- onto Globe and Mail remind- ed that R, Murray Schafer, creator of the work, has done opera. Yet, says Kraglund, Schafer “is not above pollut- ing a wilderness setting (and) has spent a fortane in public: grants and priva Johnson to MC fiddle contest | - The B, c Oldtime | Fiddlers Kootenay No, 9 held its reg- ular meeting at tho Castlegar "Senior Citizen's ‘Hall; May 1 with 16 members and five guests present.” During the meeting, the organization received an in- |. vitation from Carrot River, Sask. to attend a fiddle con- test July 8 and 9. Some members plan to attend. The minutes frém the gen- eral meeting of the provincial branch of the Oldtime dlers in Prince George. were read and discussed. It'.was noted that a plaque was mad. by , Mike St, Germaine of Prince George .to commem: orate past presidents of the provincial fiddlers branch. It was also feted that the has been completed. It was also brought to members at- tention that Bob Johnson ‘from Newport, Wash. has confirmed that he will act as B.C. ‘ship Fiddle Ciniest will be held May 21 at Haney. Members were also told during the meeting that Kimberley and Revelstoke have applied to become branches 13 and 14 of the é Oldtime Fiddlers. A report from the contest ‘committee stated that the advertising booklet for the upcoming contest on June 4 master of during the'contest. As well, he will supply the sound system needed. It was moved during the meeting that free passes to the contest should be given “away through the local radio station. Requests for the fiddlers to play at Jubilee Manor in Nelson and at the Silver City Days Family Picnic in Trail were received. But it was noted that duc to other commitments, it will be impossible for the group to play at this time. It is hoped that the fiddlers could play at some future date for these groups. The next meeting will be held June 15, yc se UP! Your Guide To Good Times ‘in the area. does the future hold? Come to the House of ee SPECIAL p or Salad Bar, P Tenderloin in pepper-saG to present Ra... at super- elitist prices.” » + William Littler of the Tor- onto Star,was kinder, saying Ra “was a dilly, one of the much * against ‘noise pollution and the elitism of traditional most ext inary events in the history of the Canadian musical theatre.” COMMUNITY. berey Cr Bulletin Board > SENIOR CITIZENS ASSOCIATION The regular social meeting will be held Thursday, May 19, ot2 pum, 7 2739 DALLA LANA’S SCHOOL OF BALLET E Presents Dance “89, Thursday, May 19 at 7 pam., ‘Blue, ROBSON RECREATION SOCIETY Is hetdiog a general meeting at the Robson Hall at 8 p.m. on Sunday, May 15, Everyone welcome. 3/37 " organizations mi Coming “events et ine legar one i Dietet Hon cy Be isted here. » $3.and additional aude are 12¢ asd Seldtaced words rotit irst 10 words are Vagetable Du-Jour | Lemon Snow for Der FIRESIDE DINING ROOM ‘ “FOR FINE DINING Dining Room ..2 Cocktail Lounge Open Mon. - Sat., 4- 10 p.m. SALAD BAR IS INCLUDED © WITH EVERY MEAL - COMMUNITY. Bulletin Board wel ‘ ACROBAT: S * aa eMPant OF a6! * BI KING Aceon “ STUKNING COSTUMES! «GLORIOUS VARIETY SPECTACULAR! RAVE REVIEHS EUROPE. &-AERICA! “Your Smorgasbord House of the Kootenays’ PONDEROSA BUFFET “Eat as Much as You Can" ONLY $8.50 .. THURS., FRI., SAT. 5PM, TOSP.M. SUN., NUMON, TUES — BY RESERVATION ONLY Seki lable for 4 Also open for private luncheons. waste 364-26 16 for Reservations Pantages and Find Out! Well-t known seer, Gregory | Dale of Vancouver, will ho: Tarot Card Readings May 11,1-5p.m. Appointment only. the new 367-751 1 Roast Prime Ribof Bee! for two, Baked Potato, Fresh Vegetables, Salad Bar, Dessert, Tea or Coffee. *17.99 MAY 13, 148,15, RESERVATIONS PLEASE VILLE-DU-PANTAGE Located in the Beaver Valley Motor-Inn, Frultvale YOUR HOST CHEF JEROME STEWART 367-7511 Columbia Steak House. Castleaird Plaza fe eSalad Bar —® Pizza's © Scampi © Steak © B.B.Q. Ribs e Lobster © Italian Dishes vA OUT DELIVERY SERVICE ueziae 365-2421 DELUXE DAILY LUNCHEON SMORG 11:30.a.m. to2 p.m. $5.95. Salad Bar only: $3.95. GIANT SMORG FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS $10. \aley [Groain leit “ our NEW CHEF IS SUPERB! TT | | J ell ‘i ! oe (mr ditvhurtal In trail b.c. CROSSWORD Let's Go Shopping . . . answer In Wed. paper Ay Average time of solution: 68 minutes. Next door / NO.52 Jz 7 fe 3 io fit iz [is zt 5 30 arbrough 5 AND HIS BAND LIVE CONCERT, MAY DAY WEEKEND LUCERNE HIGH SCHOOL. GYMNASIUM IN NEW DENVER SUNDAY, MAY 22nd TWO PERFORMANCES 3PM and SPM “Cathay Pacific" COLLAGE BOUT Tha AT THE FOLLOWING: Reais Non-! se Service TQUE- TRAIL = FRAME ART -WELSO aieguver Hong Kong TASTEOFART-CASTLEGAR m KASLO DRUGS. KABLD dae pore ty een SILVERTON GEMERAL STORE - SILVERTON ’ IN NEW DENVER: VALHALLA TRADING POST CALL MARJ OR NESTA THEAPPLE TREE NEW DENVERGRUGS | MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL Ltd. ARROW LAKES NEWS -MAKUSP 365-6616 Oliver's Books Nevo 18] Books, Trail; ADVANCE TICKET PRICES OPEN Tues. - Fri. i's Drugs, Castlegar. (8.08, CHILDREN UNDER 12.97.68, SEWIORS, #750 wry iam ocean arta Saturday 10.a.m. - I p.m. AT THE DOOR : $10.00 $8.00 RESPECTIVELY and MACHINE RENTALS. and contracts,” she says. STAND UP | COMEDY ACTS | Monday and Tuesday =. starting May 16 and 17 Featuring - ~ RICK ROCKWELL . Showtime 8 p:m, Don't Miss It! MOVIES $ Presented by DAVID THOMPSON UNIVERSITY CENTRE A loint venture of Selkirk College nd the University of Victoric., MAY 16 & 17 8 p.m. Recreation Complex, Castlegar Basy ogame Ti Arsblangult 3s Wine Sorcha ft Penn aoe per night cayProquiP CKTG, HBE HVG VUYLN. 6 Cryptoquip clue: Heqeals T. HONG KONG NON-STOP SBEVUNBEG CNKVM KSNGE CGTTGE LBYG LK M ‘Today NO MEMBERSHIP CHARGE CARLS DRUGS CASTLEAIRD PLAZA 365-7269 S/S OOO ODO DOO GY KOOTENAY FRAME GALLERY jrom Beaver Auto Folls 367-6279 BEAVER AUTO CENTRE *MAZDA-AMC DEALER Beaver Falls 367-7355 CYPRESS SAUSAGE ' one. ° Broce Lidell eta tems Fri. 10a.m.-9 BATHROOM ACCESSORIES, Town Square Moll_ COLUMBIA COIFFURES 200 Columbia Ave., Castlegar MAG CGMENTS j BRIDAL SALON — WE ALSO CATER — 1251 Cedar Ave., Trall Phone 17. This Crossword Puzzle sponsored by the following businesses... TICKETS: Adults $7.50, Students & Seniors $5, Children'$4. OOOOOOCOCOOCOOOO'"