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Castlegar & District Public Library [Dewneteire) FIRESIDE®:-:° 1810-8th Ave... Castleger “SUNDAY BRUNCH 10.A.M.-2 P.M. OPEN DAILY From 7:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m Reservations Recommended 365-6699 & Member Group representoti ied epres. ves ore requested to REFRESHMENTS EVERYONE WELCOME | D-.sar-D DINING LOUNGE CELGAR. WESTAR & COMINCO MEAL VOUCHERS ACCEPTED Located | Mile South of Weight Scale in Ootischenia LICENCED DINING ROOM Anytime Bier is aN 2816 Columbia Avo. © 365-5304 Castlegar & District Chamber of C ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING Wednesday, September 26 Sandman Inn GUEST SPEAKER: Wally Penner + 6:30 p.m. — No-Host Bar Cost — $16 per person. All Chamber General Meetings are open to the public : PLEASE CALL TO RESERVE AT 365-6313. 7 p.m. — Dinner 7 RESTAU RANT] ‘ COMINCO & CELGAR VOUCHERS WELCOME MOST CREDIT CARDS 352-5358 RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED (WELCOME 646 BAKER ST.. NELSON — ACROSS FROM PHARMASAVE 5 Embetsu Residents of Castlegar Castlegar Thank you to all groups and individuals who. helped to make the recent visit of delegates from Embetsu such a success. Castlegar-Embetsu Friendship C City of Castlegar Selkirk College “> DEWDNEY | | - TOURS 1355 Bay Avenue, Trail Call: 1-800-332-0282 Wests Lravel 365-7/82 SPOKANE T Hello Dolly! November 6 3-Day Tour WEST EDMONTON MALL December 2-7 Take in the sights of this fabulous mall and entertainment contre with oll the dazzle of Christmas OURS October 17 8-Day Tour Sands Hotel October 28 November 10 8-Day Tour Sands Hotel November 17 8-Day T Riverboat $299 * courte /twin * With early bird ond senior discounts All prices based or: double occupancy ALL TOURS, NON-SMOKING ON BOARD COACH. ENTERTAINMENT Rocker learned beat early By BERNIE PILON Regina | cader-Post REGINA (CP) — Little Colin’s fir- st Travellers’ Day parade, Regina's decades-old romp of marching bands and floats, is something his mother remembers with almost cerie clarity. It was the summer of 1965. Her son was straddling a hip, one arm strung around her neck. They were stationed on a corner when some music prom- pted the minor miracle. ““He was beating out the tempo,”” recalls Joyce Munn. “I had him on my hip and I remember thinking that this is really strange."” As he continued to tap on her shoulder and pump his leg against her thigh, she noticed: ‘‘It (the beat) is right on.”” Not bad for a youngster still a mon- th or so shy of his first birthday. Then again, that boy was Colin James Munn — the Queen City rocker whose rising musical star has earned him a major record deal, tours with industry giants like Rolling Stones lead guitarist Keith Richards, and the late Stevie Ray Vaughan, and financial success at age 26. Yes, being the mother of Colin James has been colorful But it’s also been relatively tranquil, largely thanks to her son’s dropping of his last name. “*It doesn't bother me in the least,”” Munn says of James’ musical moniker. “‘But it makes for more anonymity (For me) and I'm very pleased with that.”" The different name, coupled with Regina’s small-town atmosphere — Colin can still occasionally come here without battling the mobs he faces in Vancouver, his current home — has given Munn the best of both worlds. ler name doesn’t attract attention, yet a photo album full of snapshots of her and James include casual poses of countless, well-known musicians. Yes, even those two guys mentioned earlier. It’s a nice situation to be in, she says between sips of tea at her Regina home. Turning 56 this September, the mother of four (she also has a step- son) is more in tune to the who's who of rock ‘n’ roll than most half her age. It's a throwback to the late 1950s and carly ‘60s, when she was “totally"’ into music. Entertainment then meant going to concerts and sing-sdngs at people's houses. Munn’s musical palate is an eclectic one. It helps explain why her son is com- fortable with the cross-section of ‘genres that weave themselves into his music. His latest album, Second Stop, is a mix of bluesy soul, with a hard-rock in late June, Munn well on the way to f-tithed debut album It would also made a great addition to his 1989 Juno as most promising male vocalist of the year. There’s a mother’s pride in her voice as she talks about the time James, then five or six, easily under- stood the lyrics of a local Gilbert and Sullivan production. “He was literally rolling in the aisle. | thought it was boring and he loved it.’” Then there’s the time he plucked a mandolin and a guitar as a guest with a local folk group called Sod Hut and the Buffalo Chips. He was only nine or 10. It was at similar folk gatherings that Colin could easily go up to the musicians, chat with them and even jam backstage — again, a benefit only a smaller city like Regina could offer. But his penchant for music wasn’t always a mother’s dream. .Munn recounts how he used to skip after- noons from school because he'd rather be “‘over at his folky friends doing an Irish jam.” And how his high school music teacher twice flunked him for failing to learn to play the violin. Mostly, he just didn’t show up. So his dropping out at Grade 10 didn’t shock her. “I never doubted school wasn’t the place for him,”’ she says. “‘Had any of my other kids left school, I probably would’ vt freaked “It didn’t bother me a bit think I just recognized Colin's gift.” At one point during the imerview, Munn, who teaches life skills at the Regina Mental Health Clinic, turns the subject back to her other children Montreal polishing his writing skills with a master’s degree im English: another son, a surveyor im Van- couver, and; a stepson at Wilcox’s Athol Murray College of Notre Dame. One senses she’s not entirely com- fortable being pegged 2s “Colin James’ mother.” Her daughter, im fact, positively “I reach oan oo them because I med my kids They (Collin"s siteiames) gen Well, is she Colm James” mom” “Now an amy mind.” she sews. “Dam Battle over film credit rages MONTREAL (CP) — The behind- the-scenes battle over Bethune: The Making of a Hero, which had its Premiere recently at the Montreal World Film Festival, resumed with a vengeance. _ Screenwriter Ted Allan says he ““may have to go to court’’ over asser- tions by actor Donald Sutherland that Dennis Clark is the. true writer and hasn’t been credited or paid for his work. “*This is libellous, it’s harmful and we may have to go to court on this,”” Allan said. ‘He cannot win that fight because it’s a lie.”” The $18-million film, which stars Sutherland and is the most expensive movie in Canadian history, is based on a script Allan wrote about Norman Bethune in 1942. Allan knew Bethu- ne, the Canadian surgeon who CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY Christmas In Victoria December 23-27 Chwistnas in the quaint city of Christmas in Reno [December 22-29 Fof those who would lke a faster pace FU U a glitter of casinos and show rooms became a hero of the Chinese revolution, and worked with him in Spain during the Spanish Civil War The movie went into production five years ago and was plagued with delays, partly a result of infighting between Sutherland and director Phillip Borsos, on one side, and Allan and the film’s producers, Nicolas Clermont and Pieter Kroonenburg, on the other. The producers sided with Allan and say they recut Borsos’s film to reflect Allan’s script better. But Sutherland, who attended the gala evening premiere, told three reporters that Allan’s script had been “sitting around Hollywood for 20 years and was unusabie:"" He said the real writer of the film, Friends & neighbours are invited to join James & Veronica Lenihan Sun., Sept. 30 EVERYONE WELCOME! 2012 Carol Rd.. Christina Lake ormett Dennis Clark, is owed $30,000 for his work on the film. in celebrating the 40th rani Wedding Anniversary OPEN HOUSE 1-5 p.m. Hey. ot Keel Trewt onte Kingaiey Please no gs by reques Allan, who suffered heart palpitations during the gala, lashed back in an imerview conducted from his hotel bed, where he was recovering “It is such a smelly, unpieasam piece of cgomania because he (Sutherland) didn’: get his way and he usually does get his way in a Canadian film,”” Allan said “They have convinced this poor deluded man (Clark) that he deserves “a writing credit.”” Allan said he can easily establish “Who did what. Each day I wrote a scene. Before it was shot, it was semt off and registered with the date.” Allan’ said he thinks Sutherland “deserves an Academy Award” for his performance as Bethune. But he says: “I think we have an egomaniac here who's -a brilliant actor They're trying to get ai\ the writer because it’s rare that thd writer is associated with the project “This is not a smmple, typical movie. It’s Bethune — someone 1 knew. They couldn’t treat me like the BRIAN’S REPAIR SERVICE SMALL ENGINES © AUTOMOTIVE GENERAL MECHANICAL 613-13th St. 365-7233 ordmary Hollywood scmeememne In *as Ey progoct. They thane chan, then FB won ou an the end ~ im an meres from is ome om tay Mizwne Isiend BC Clark smd he doesn’! sam 2 women’s credin — ine only wamts 0 be paid the mane ham $30,000 ihe sarws thes owed “I @eserve mm (the wminer’s cred) im terms of comortbation.~ saad Clark an Amencan who ives om the memouw B.C. istand of 300 resides. dimer Borsos among them “Bat descrume 1 and porsume in are two dxffcrem thes Clark said ie was callid imo che Production m 1957 by Borsos trecamer Allan’s scngu was “arch and op shootaiic.” “Domald asked for someome ap reerne a.” he sand Clark says the worked as 2 wmne om the film from Bamuary no April ISK7 including the Chima shoo, and from August to December IRR While the was om Chima, the saws cher Prodwcers sndidenh sipped pave fam because-they began oo rem oun of moncy and “I had 1 poy omy mcker home if Allan wakes the mssme wo on Clark saws he ts meady hocamer five Lange boucs fuill of Bewhume =n (co1ltel 7 Interior Scaling & the vocation as well as to provide $24 plus materials. Rm. TRA Emergency dev. Sept. 29.95 p.m $40.11 21 hospice movement. The first evening intro to Bedford Acc: 8 12 Fol Proning: A hands Pruning objectives. types o: Pruning. Sat You must pre-register for of! courses : Students will recewve Blinds: 2. custom-made fabric blind. Tues. Sept 25 First Aid: Leorn what to do in tT Program: Hospice 1s 0 group of peaple who care to improve tre quality of tne jor the dying. Volunteers are an important port of the Oct 2. is @ tree mtroduct Come and see if you want to be port of this worthwhile v Tues.. Oct. 2-nov. 20. 7-9p m. (8 sessions) $10 15 per couple Monday. Oct 1-Nov 5 630-930 pm $90 Rm Sprogdehoots Level }: Mon. Oct 1-Nov 19 6309 30pm $95 Rm te a on course so bring your pruning shears ond Sept. 29.91 p.m. $15. Rm B 17 TO REGISTER OR FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL Castlegor Campus 365-7292, local 208 or 273 o 7.830 Sor Oc 338 © medical emergency Sow Top choc of pruning trum trees and other to Uses BBC TV Techmquwes Free to those quolitied PHONE 368-5501 or -5502 Bhietes Fasges Weekly Special