Carmela's Spaghetti House and Calabria Pizza Enjoy the true Italian Spaghetti Dinner I the You Can Eat — $6.95 Private dining rooms at no extra charge. 368-9399 [Now SHOWING! (WED (THU|[FRI) (SAT) [28)}(29)(30)[31 Woody Allen - Michael Caine Carrie Fisher - Barba: Mia Farrow lershey - Lloyd Nolan The battle began in another. galaxy the Brown's back yar Us ae CRITTERS THE KOOTENAY ART CLUS Will be having a Tea and Bake Sale & Show of Artworks on Saturday, May 31, 1986, at the Senior Citizen Centre, 210-11 th Ave. in downtown Castlegar. The time will be 2- 5 p.m. and admission will ail be $1.00 fee adults, 40¢ for children, with children under 6 admitted free. There will 3 door prizes of pointings cree’ by the artists. Tayene is welcome and we hope you will come and visit with and support your local artists. Castlegar Arena be two $1,000 jackpots and over $7,000 Eorly Bird at 6:00 p.m. — Regula ce tickets ore $10.00 and availab! tral Food Mart and Macleods. $11.00 at door ENTERTAINMENT Rivers says she won't mellow LOS ANGELES (AP) — Joan Rivers fans may have feared that the comedian would retract her claws when she became the surrogate Johnny Carson. Not to worry “Me mellow? Forget it!” she says. “Sure, I lose a few targets like Liz Taylor, but few ones are coming along all the time. Now I've got ‘Fer gie’ Ferguson — you know, Prince Andrew's fiancee. And Sean Penn and Madonna — marvelous! Christie Brink ley — ideal! “Liz Taylor is out. Too thin. Jackie Onassis is out She's changed. But think of all the new ones I can have fun with.” DANIEL LEWIS The list doesn't Moammar Khadafy. “I tried him,” she said. “I used a line that he looked like Jackie Onassis without the makeup. Nothing ! The audi ence was silent. You see, not enough people know what Khadafy looks like. If they don't have a picture in their minds, they can't respond. I had to take out my Cyndi Lauper jokes because people can't remember what she looks like. Madonna has taken over.” A major loss to the Rivers joke file was Elizabeth Tay lor (“She piereed her and gravy came out:” “She stands in front of a micro wave oven and yells, inelude Actor shoots to stardom LONDON (AP) — He's the acting flavor-of-the-month in two of this year's most sur. prisingly successful films, but Daniel Day Lewis knows that fame can be fleeting “They'll find a different toy to play with in six months time,” the 28-year-old Lewis said. “People are easily bored. They want the new product, and at the moment it happens, for some, to be me. After virtual anonymity, Lewis burst upon American movie screens in March with the simultaneous openings of two British films: A Room With a View and My Beauti ful Laundrette. In Room, adapted from E.M. Forster's 1908 novel, he's the tight-lipped Cecil Vyse, who surrenders his intended bride to Julian Sands’ looser-limbed George Emerson. In My Beautiful Laund Let’s Rodeo! Castlegar June 7& 8 rette, Lewis plays the homo sexual skinhead, Johnny, who is devoted to his Pak istani lover (Gordon War- necke) and to the spirit of free enterprise. “It's just extremely lucky for me that I was able to play both these parts in quick succession,” the actor said in an interview. “It's not often that actors are given the opportunity to be as versatile as they're capable of being.” A veteran of eight months on London's commercial West End in the play, Ano- ther Country, Lewis mini- mizes the distinctions be- tween stage and film acting. “The camera is incisive; you cannot escape its pene- tration,” he said, “but in the end good performances come from the same source: the truth of thoughts and emo tions and instincts.” The recognition continues. “Peopie stare at me on the bus or the tube (subway), and sometimes they don't ever work out wht it is,” he said. “They just say, ‘Was it in the supermarket I met him last Sunday with my Aunt Lill? ” Coming events of Castlegar and District non-protit organizations may be listed here. The first 10 words ore $3.50 end additional words are 15¢ each. Boldtoced wor ds (which must be used tor headings) count as two wor There is no extra charge for o second insertion while the third consecuti enty-tive percent and the fourth consecut 1 If-price. Minimum chorge is $3.50 (whether od is for one. two or three times). Deadlines are 5 p.m for Sunday's paper and 5 p.m. Mondays 3s poper Notices should be brought to the Castlegor News at 197 Columbia Bullet n Boad Littttipit aT A irthneet Hotel THE C.P. rus oven 3 NOON 2AM. als Mondey TUESDAY NIGHT - - POOL TOURNAMENT Top Three Places 1895 RESTAURANT — Ph. 368-8232 Open Monday - Saturday — 9 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. Featuring SALAD BAR (inc. Soup & Dessert) ss. 95 WE ALSO CATER TO BANQUETS & COCKTAIL PARTIES FOR GROUPS OF 15 TO 120. ‘Hurry!). Not only did she have the audacity to lose all that weight, she also became friends with Joan Rivers. there will always be an England to provide victims for the Riv ers’ arsenal especially Queen Elizabeth: “I put a doily under the Kitty Litter, She was impressed. She took it home for a hat. Other favorites inelude Nancy Reagan, Prince, Mich- ael Jackson, Sophia Loren and — Joan Rivers: “On my wedding night, Edgar said, ‘Let me undo your buttons.’ I was naked at the time.” However, SPECIAL A different view of Joan Rivers is offered in her aptly titled autobiography, Enter Talking (Delecorte Press, $17.95), written with Richard Meryman. In When she burst into star dom on the The Tonight Show on Feb. 17, 1966, all her father could say was, “Nice . . Nice.” The with Car -_ she recalls her youth fat girl — the total rk as a would-be comic in the Catskills; her near. starvation while trying to make it in Manhattan. NO SUPPORT Enter Talking also tells of Rivers’ life-long struggle to win acceptance from her mother and father. He was a prosperous doctor and did not support her career. members of Doukhobor children’s choir ‘entertain students, paren- ts and teachers from Spokane’s Alternative Parent son climaxes the book. She rocked the audience with such self-deprecating cracks as, “When I'd get an ob scene phone call, I'd say, ‘Hold on a minute, let me get a cigarette.” Carson remarked on-cam era: “God, you're funny. You're going to be a star.” Twenty years later Joan Rivers is serving as Carson's guest-host during his vaca- the Participation Learning Experience tions. “If Johnny hadn't made the choice to put me on his show, I might still be in Greenwich Village as the oldest living undiscovered female comic,” the 52-year-old comedian muses. “I would have had to wait for David Letterman to discover me. “In those years, there were two places where you could literally become a star over night: the Ed Sullivan Show and the Johnny Carson Show. It doesn't happen any more, even on Johnny's (APPLE) during their three-day trip to Castlegar last week CosNews photo by Ryan Wilson Cruise takes risks LOS ANGELES (AP) — Tom Cruise recently learned how to deal with stardom. His teacher: Paul Newman. Cruise co-starred with Newman in Disney's The Color of Money, a sequel to The Hustler. “Naturally, I was awed at working with Paul Newman,” said Cruise in an interview. “I can't think of any actor who has handled his career as well. I pumped him for ad viee.” This is the gospel accord ing to Newman: “Learn what is important and what is not important You're gonna be pulled from every angle, and you just gotta learn what to deal with — on every level “Don't be afraid to take risks. The last few films I've done have been risks, and I've been getting Academy nominations for them. Oh, I've had my highs and my lows, Cruise, and if you stick around long enough, so will you.” Newman's dictum is pretty much the way Cruise has al ready conducted his movie career. An immediate sensa tion as the Red Beret fanatic in his first film, Taps, he re sisted being typed as a teen age psychotic Next came Risky Business, the sex comedy that estab- lished him with the young audience. He played an enter prising high schooler who runs a home for hookers while his parents are away BIGGEST RISK Free trade said bad for Canada Son ss pon. Them io ne whe Comes Rea ae TORONTO (CP) — Canada is more likely to lose than gain from freer trade negotiations with the United States, says Robert Reich, a noted Harvard Uni meeting of the Canadian Bu ers Association. “And once it's on the table it seems to me that its His advice to Canadian negotiators is to keep discussing trade talks but to stay away from the actual negotiations. Reich, who like more economists supports the theory of free trade as being the most efficient use of capital, said Tuesday he has come to the conclusion that freer trade negotiations with the United States will not be ficial for will be bargained away to some extent,” he said. Second, regardless of what is: negotiated at the bargaining table, the United States will continue to bring protectionist actions against individual Canadian industries that encroach on U.S. industries, he said. “The U.S. political system is almost incapable of Canada. He cited two reasons for his change of heart, and “they both have to do with polities.” First, it will be almost impossible to keep the auto pact, which turned in a $6-billion trade surplus in Canada’s favor last year, off the bargaining table, Reich told the annual B.C. rejects export request VICTORIA (CP) — The British Columbia govern- ment has rejected an application to export raw cedar logs because of the imposition of a 35-per-cent U.S. tariff on Canadian shakes and shingles, Forests Minister Jack Heinrich said Tuesday. “I have turned it down,” Heinrich said after telling the legislature there was a request made for the export of an unspecified small volume df raw western red cedar logs, used to make shakes and shingles. ‘The American tariff is expected to severely harm the province's shake and shingle industry and idle up to 4,000 workers, but forests officials said American producers may want to buy the raw materia! from British Columbia. Heinrich said the government has stated clearly it would not entertain any applications to export red cedar. = The rejection has caused some difficulty for market = loggers who telephoned to say that they have several thousand cubic metres of red cedar still in the water andz did not know what to do, he said. ‘The cedar was originally cut to supply B.C. shake and shingle operations, and could not be sold. Heinrich was responding to questions from Frank Howard (NDP-Skeena), the Opposition forests spokes- man, who criticized the government for not having done: enough to forestall the protectionist U.S. tariffs announced last week. Howard managed to get unanimous consent from the’ legislature to introduce a private member's bill which would have the effect of a bipartisan statement nein the U.S. tariff. He pressed for passage of the bill Tuesday, but it did not proceed further because of the objection of Industry Minister Bob McClelland, who argued “there are other remedies available without having to go through the legislative process in an unusual manner. Speaker Walter Davidson agreed with McClelland, i and said the bill could be dealt with later. The bill called the tariff “unwarranted and un; = It urges President Ronald Reagan to wii the Th free trade.” erence p= to press U.S. politicians for relief under the ijeterseneevt ti and so-called escape clauses of trade legislation that exist to protect U.S. industries from cheaper foreign competition. “There is nothing that a treaty can do to forestall that,” he said. “You cannot change American politics with the HALIFAX (CP) — The U8. tariff on Canadian lum- ber products should have been no surprise, says a member of the Canadian In- ternational Trade Advisory Committee. Prof. Alan Rugman of Dal. housie University says the tariff should be viewed as a prime reason why freer trade talks between the two coun- tries should continue. The U.S. position on the issue has been well publicized before last Thursday's an nouncement of the 35-per- away any kind of So catet trade in tho fore ot Coglan & Daeaneed pooaa But it is in Canada's interest to talk about free trade, he Canada are not really in favor of this free-trade pact,” and the forces of protectionism are working against it. “The most that Canada can get out of is to talk about free trade, to be a kind of moral foree wants to do cent tariff on Canadian cedar shakes and shingles, most of which are produced in British Columbia, Rugman says. “I don't see why these guys in B.C. didn’t see this com- ing,” said Rugman in an interview this week. “This. news was not all that unex- pected if you were informed about the nature be U: 8. shingles a: the United silly about, for example, the cedar North’ America’s standard of living is threatened by the reduced rates of productivity improvements, he said. Tariff ‘not unexpected’ from Ottawa and promipted calls for an end to the trade talks. Branding the tariff “pure protectionism,” Prime Min- ister Brian Mulroney sent a message Friday to President Ronald Reagan conveying “profound disappointment” with the announcement. The government, with ail-party trade laws and p The move by "the Ameri- cans, only one day after freer trade talks between the U.S. and Canada began, brought unanimous condemnation Statement misunderstood MONTREAL (CP) — Peter Americans will change their own social pi because Murphy, the U.S. in freer trade talks with Canada, “hadn't thought through what he was saying” when he declared recently that Canada’s social pro- grams will be on the bar. gaining table during negoti- ations, Canada’s No. 2 man in Washington said Tuesday. Jaeques Roy, the deputy chief of mission in the Can- adian embassy in Washing- = ton, told a meeting of the Conference Board of Canada that“ Murphy's were a comments~ of negotiations with Canada.” Roy later told reporters that “no one in Washington has ever suggested that social programs are on the table and they'll certainly be off completely.” Some opponents in the U.S. of freer trade have charged that Canadian pro- grams such as unemployment insurance are government unfair advantage over ‘their tariff and declare no additional tariffs or countervailing: duty would be imposed while Canada and the UnitedS States are holding comprehensive trade talks. It also calls on Ottawa to take all reasonable action to secure such actions from Reagan. U.S. not short of red cedar VANCOUVER (CP) Canadians are wrong in claiming there isn't enough red cedar for shake and shingle manufacturing in the western United States, says an American lumber industry spokesman “We have an inventory of 34 billion board feet of red cedar in the western states, enough to last until the year 2020 at 1979 rates of shake and shingle production,” said Gus Kuehne, of the Tacoma, Most of the red cedar in ventory isin Washington and Oregon, and about half is standing on U.S. Forest Ser vice land, Kuehne said. The Canadian industry ar. gued before the commission that the U.S. industry's prob- lems stemmed from a shor- tage of red cedar logs and competition from alternative materials, rather than from Canadian imports. British Columbia shake and shingle manufacturers, “When the Americans say everything is on the table, that is a fiction of the imag. ination,” he said. “They (social programs) won't be on the table for long because there's no way the LET US DO THE DRIVING WHILE YOU SIT BACK, RELAX AND ENJOY! NOW AVAILABLE Expo Tour June 21 Charlie Pride June 22nd American competitors. Roy also said he doesn't expect the trade talks would be curtailed because of the tariff imposed last week by the U.S. on Canadian cedar shakes and shingles. approval, di ded the U.S. lift the tariff. While cautioning he was not implying that Mulroney was ignorant of U.S. trade law, Rugman said the prime minister shouldn't have been surprised by the decision. “I think probably he was inadequately briefed on it and I think it was unfor- tunate that he made those con- ducted an inquiry into the Canadian shingles and shakes industry in February, Rug- man said, and ruled that American producers were being injured. It recommend- ed in March that action — in the form of a 365-per-cent tariff — be taken against the Minister James Kelleher on trade policy, said such groups as labor unions should not be calling for suspension of freer “The whole point of the . negotiations will be to get us exempted from such action,” he said. “Thursday's decision on shingles and shakes is the status quo — this is what we have to live with, with exist- ing U.S. trade law. “It’s an example of the reasons why we need to have a free trade agreement. If we suspend the negotiations, we're going to be subject to even more of these actions.” Rugman said Ottawa hopes that through the talks it will set up a joint commission that would impose more dis- cipline on U.S. practices and provide better definitions of how trade law is admins- Saturday, May 31 Sandman Inn, Banquet Room 9:00 p.m. Admission: $5.00 Couple/$3.00 Single OPEN 4 P.M: DAILY WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED. Reservations for Private Parties — 365-3294 Located | mile south of Weigh Scales in Ootischenio. THERE WILL BE: > tose e * Refreshments This is open to all ages to attend this special oc- casion located at 767 -. 11th Avenue EVERYONE WELCOME Mary E. Elliott EXHIBITION OF PAINTINGS Color with a Zing! NATIONAL May 1 to 31 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Weekdays 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Weekends ‘Simplicity — with strength dittused quality of rich watercolor woshes set ogoins! sherp contrasting growth forms Fairmont International Airport Now Open! ON THE a TO Wash.-based Northwest In dependent Forest Manufac turers. 1 night accommodation at Sheraton Hote!, Ticket to Show and Supper SPOKANE OPERA HOUSE After playing a high school football player in All the Right Moves, Cruise took his “We gave that information “biggest risk.” the Ridley to the U.S. International that American firms may try Scott fantasy, Legend. The Trade C i which to he their cedar log film opened last month to rejected the Canadian argu- supplies from British Colum mixed reviews, and his fans ment that we don't have bia in danger of being forced out of the U.S. market by the new 35-per-cent tariff, worry There’s No Fun Like Fairmont: © swimming in Canada’s largest crystal-clear, * tine dining and family snacl odorless, ral not pools © RV/trailer park with full al -ups, playground, * 18-hole cl jonship golf course horseshoe pit, mini-golf * hiking trails * tennis, racqtletball © horseback © aerobic and aquasize classes © helicopter sightseeing in the magnificent Rockies © jacuzzis, massage therapy * exercise equipment ° . lit This Fri., Sat. & Sun. |, SHRINE CIRCUS May 30, 31 & June I may have been perplexed at Dixie Burgers $459 PRIZES! PRIZES! PRIZES Just fill in an entry form and you could win! || These prizes from both locations Ist — ALL YOU CAN EAT sit down meal for 4 2nd — OVERNIGHT STAY AT SHERATON-SPOKANE 3rd — 15 Piece bucket of chicken MORE —- INCLUDE: 3—9-Pce. Economy Boxes, 3 Dinners, . § Burgers and 2 Large Pizzos — PRIZES DRAWN MONDAY, JUNE 2 GET IN ON THE ACTION AT BOTH LOCATIONS: Downtown Castlegar South Castlegar 365-5353 365-5304 Is Coming to Town! SHRINE CIRCUS Sat., June 14 at the Castlegar Community Complex You could win a trip to Disneyland by purchasing © program! finding him in a world filled with sprites and goblins. Top Gun returns C¥uise to the contemporary world. He plays a daring U.S. Navy jet pilot. Kelly McGillis, in the role of his instructor, sup plies the romantic interest Cruise, at 24, has main tained control of a movie car- eer in which his salary has risen to $1 million plus in five years. Royal Canadian Legion | Branch No. 170 Guests Must Be SIGNED In CABARET Seturdey Doncing 9:30 p m.-1 sao. 6 DAYS A WEEK Proper Dress Saturday after 9 p.m Plowing Set. “LEATHER & LACE” L.A. Cotering Thursday Bingo Except July and August enough supply to meet our own manufacturers’ needs,” business, there will be an he said Tuesday oversupply of red cedar. —-ARTS= Calendar June 1 - 30... The WKNEC is pleased to present Western Alienation”. it is @ collection of 30 political cartoons covering the period 1869 to 1946 and in addition includes ‘@ number of contemporary artifacts bearing messages of current alienation. Open 9:30 - 4:30. Weekdays, 10:30 ends If the industry is put out of May - June § . . . The Presentation Series is featuring Steve Amsden's acrylic ond watercolors at the Homestead Soup ond Sandwich Shoppe. This is sponsored by the Castlegar Arts Council 31 The Kootenay Art Club's annual Teo, Boke Mey Sale and Show of Art will be held at the Senior Citizen's Hall from 2 to 5 p.m. Items for this bi-monthly feature should be telephoned to Lynda Carter of the Castlegar Arts Council at 365-3226. rf 5 Sponsored by CASTLEGAR SAVINGS CREDIT UNION _ | Calgary Stampede * Parade Seats * * Afternoon Rodeo * * Evening Chuckwagon Race * * Grandstand S * 3 Nights Accom. Highlander, Calgary 42nd St. — Musical The Original Broadway Cast July 12-Day Tour SPOKANE OPERA HOUSE Fast * Safe * Economical Charters & Tours Ce ‘all today HENNE TRAVEL WEST'S TRAVEL V40 Bay Ave., Trail 1217-3rd $t., Castlegor 368-5595 365-7782 © superb accontmodations Great Values for Your Vacation canoeing. . sailing © alpine and cross-country skiing in season Save up to $145 Mid-Week Golf in Lodge. 3 days ONLY £14972 person 76 Superb Suites in Fairmont Villas 1-bedroom suites (condor table for 4 adults) FROM ONLY £70 per night Save up to SBS on Honeymoon P; 2 sights mid week falue $260 ONLY $B 7% penn FROM ONLY £35 per person. double occupancy 265 RV/ Trailer Sites Full hook-ups FROM ONLY ‘14 per day the Lodge Restaurant, relax in the Lounge, with live entertainment most nights. Coffee shop for — snacks INFORMATION: (604) 345-6311 Calga ey: 266 264-0746 or 264-6061 ER VA TIONS ONLY. Alta.»B.C., Sask., Call 1-800-663-4979