Be Castlegar News August 8, 1990 CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Blas sad A Sunday Brun 10:30 a.m. - 1:00 p.m Reservations 825 4466 LEGION BRANCH 170 HOURS: Monday to Thursdey 12 Noon - 11 p.m. Weekly Special Friday ond Seturdey 12 Noon to 12 Midnight TRY OUR BREADED panes temo C BINGO THURSDAY Ingo ticence No 75616 WEEKLY MEAT DRAWS EVERY SATURDAY AT 3:00 p.m. Lic. No. 72113 Bluetop NEW HOURS 10 A.M.-9 P.M. 182) Columble Ave, 245,0208 365-7017 Anytime ‘ is... IME aN 2816 Columbia Ave. * 365-5304 yeni) Ss ENTERTAINMENT LOCAL/PROVINCIAL NEWS Roberts a rising star By BOB THOMAS LOS ANGELES (AP) — When Julia Roberts was 16, she saw the movie Becket, the Richard Burton- Peter O'Toole masterpiece about the stormy relationship between King Henry Il and Archbishop Thomas Becket, and her future was instantly determined. “That movie had a more profound effect on me than any | had ever seen,’” she remembers. ‘‘To see per- formances like the ones Richard Bur- ton and Peter O'Toole deliver, it made me want to be that wonderful — or, at least really try. Ait set a kind of standard somewhere in the back of my mind, and it was something that in my lifetime 1 hoped I'd get a moment to achieve. That’s real absolute great- ness. If I could do that for a second, I’d be a real happy actor.”” At 23, she has come a long way toward achieving that goal, faster than even she had hoped. Amid the gaggle of superstars in Steel Magnolias, only Roberts was nominated for an Academy Award. Next came Pretty Woman, as a Hollywood hooker to Richard Gere’s takeover tycoon. The movie astoun- BLUEBERRY CREEK RECREATION /REBEL SUMMER BINGO Sunday, Aug. 12 CASTLEGAR COMMUNITY COMPLEX Early Bird: 6:30 p.m. Regular Games: 7 p.m. Licence No. 762680 on PRIME RIB * SEAFOOD * STEAKS * CAESAR SALAD ¢ SPECIALTIES FULLY LICENSED COMINCO & CELGAR VOUCHERS WELCOME aaa ad 352-5358 646 BAKER ST., NELSON — ACROSS FROM PHARMASAVE RESERVATIONS WELCOME PARENTS! Returning to Work or School? i Wy hobbit hill 749-11th Avenue Castlegar CHILDREN’S CENTER 365-7200 ING REGISTRATIONS * — Quality licenced child care. ages 3-5 __Nursery School, ages 3 and 4 — Special Needs Services — Out-of-School Care, ages 5-11 WARM AND FRIENDLY CARE Focused learning, longuage, arts, music. independence skills. community eee iret on ploy ECE quolitied stall Sate attractive sething * NOW ACCE United Way Member Agency ded everyone with a $160 million gross, and still counting. She has a new film coming this month, In Flatliners, Canadian actor Kiefer Sutherland, Kevin Bacon, William Baldwin and Roberts are Film Becket inspiration, medical students who try to probe the afterlife by stopping their vital signs It’s a thriller that scared even the ac- tress. ‘‘It gets the heart pumping.”” ABEAUTY So does Robert’s beauty. With her long auburn hair, Raphael-like face, wide mouth and all-knowing eyes, she is a stunner, off-screen and on. Add to the look a languorous voice shadowed hy her youth in Smyrna, Ga. It’s no wonder that she has clim- bed into the $1 million-per-picture category. Pretty Women has no doubt raised the ante. She scoffs at claims she is an over- night sensation. “It’s kind of interesting how they can make five years seem like a long weekend,”* she said. ‘It was a road travelled. It wasn’t quick, although it came in a way I never anticipated. But 1 also never predicted the outcome of what I was attempting to do. I just delighted in the opportunities to keep doing it. That’s where the real ex- citement comes from: every time you get a job, you think you get another chance to show something.”” Robert’s career as.an actress was determined long before she saw was an she says Becket. Both her parents were actors. Her brother, Eric Roberts, preceded her into films and won an Academy Award nomination for Runaway Train. Julia admits that she might have enrolled at the University of Georgia, gotten married and become a housewife if she hadn't left Smyrna for New York after high school. She attended acting classes and en- dless auditions before landing her first role at 18 in a Crime Story segment. After a few low-budget films, she tried out for Mystic Pizza. The role called for a Portuguese waitress, so she dyed her hair black. She got the role. She terms Mystic Pizza a ‘‘nice sur- prise.”” “None of us on that movie had really done very much. It was a-chan- ce to show somebody something."’ WAS IMPRESSED Producer Ray Stark liked what he saw. He planted Julia amid the high- powered women of Steel Magnolias: Sally Field, Shirley MacLaine, Dolly Parton and Olympia Dukakis. The anticipated battle of temperments never developed. “They were all so available, loving, supportive, giving, tremendously caring women,”’ Roberts said. ‘I had such an immediate rapport that I never really got a chance to think how scary this might have been or should have been, really. It was just very familiar from the start. never expected the nomination. It’s a nice moment where they’re saying to you, ‘We accept you; when you're saying you're an actor, we believe you; we trust that you can do what you say you can do.’ That's a momentous honor,"’ As to the smash success of Pretty Woman, Robert said, ‘1 don’t ever look for the results of a piece of work. When I’m working, that’s what I’m doing that particular day: trying to make that work within the structure of the piece. I don’t take a movie thinking that it’s going to end up doing this particular amount of sales or that people will accept it in a cer- tain way. “*You can never know. That's the unpredictable, the reason all kinds of movies are made. If there was a for- mula for the kind of movies people would go to see, that’s the only kind that would be made. I don’t dwell on something you can’t figure out.”” Flatliners proposes the theory that another experience exists post- mortem. Roberts goes along with it: “I think there is. How could it all just turn black? I don’t believe that will happen. Something’s there.” Ghost reclaims top movie spot HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Ghost became the first summer movie to capture first place for three weeks as it swirled past Presumed Innocent, and two films touted as blockbusters fell from the Top 10 in the weekend box office derby. The supernatural thriller, starring Patrick Swayze, Demi Moore and Whoopi Goldberg, earned $10.7 US after adding 72 screens. It lost only two per cent of last week’s business. Ghost held first place for two weeks but was bumped for a week by Presumed Innocent before reclaiming the top spot. Ghost is about the return of a mur- dered man’s spirit to protect his lover and solve his own slaying. Presumed Innocent, the courtroom drama about a prosecutor charged with killing a former lover, earned $10.1 million and traded places with Ghost. Presumed Innocent added 31 screens to its distribution. In third place with $8 million was the debut of Young Guns II. The movie starring Lou Diamond Phillips, Emilio Estevez, Kiefer Sutherland and Christian Slater is a retelling of the fight between Billy the Kid and former compadre Pat Garrett. Problem Child, despite bade reviews, remained in the top five for its second week, delivering $6.8 million in ticket sales. In fifth place was creepy-crawly Arachnophobia, capturing $5.9 millign. Die Hard 2 was in sixth place with $4.8 million. Director Spike Lee’s Mo Better Blues opened-in limited release and sold $4.3 million in tickets for seventh place. The movie stars Denzel Washington as a jazz trumpeter playing notes and pursuing two women, Joie Lee and Cynda Williams. Disney’s Ducktales made its premiere in eighth place. The feature- length treatment of Scrooge McDuck and his misadventures earned $3.8 million. The Freshman ended its third week with $3.4 million for ninth place, and Disney’s re-release of The Jungle Book was 10th with $2.7 million. Out of the Top 10 were two of the most-touted movies of the summer, Days of Thunder and Dick Tracy, which earned slightly over $1 million, enough to put it in the six-digit category with $101 million in earnings over eight weeks. Days earned $2.6 million, for a total of $73.7 mil Turtle cartoons made in Ireland DUBLIN, _ Ireland “Shamrock,” says the poster, the only thing that’s green and comes from Ireland.”” Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles do, too. Their fans may not realize it, but some of the Turtle cartoons invading the world’s TV screens are made by aan D-sar-D DINING LOUNGE CELGAR. WESTAR & COMINCO MEAL VOUCHERS ACCEPTED 365-3294 Located 1 Mile South of Weight Scale in Ootischenia — LICENCED DINING ROOM an oft dious process in Ireland, a country that makes up with humor and_ motivation for its lack of any background in cartoon-making. The Irish may be unfamiliar with “cowabunga,”’ but they know a job- creating export opportunity when they see one, which is why the In- dustrial Development Authority of Ireland is willing to help pay its way. Working from rough comic-strip Horseshoe Bar & Cafe Opin 5 doys o week — i 1. 0.m to Midnight Closed Monday ond Tuesday $55 Specials Fridays All you can eat BBQ RIBS Sat. Nife . All you can eat SPAGHETTI & MEATBALLS Sunday Nite . BAKED CHICKEN Canadian money at par on Friday nights es 2" AUGUST (FRI) (SAT) SUN MON [TUE WED THU) [SHOWTIME WFORSATION} Dining Room tlegar FIRESID -8th Ave., C ——————— SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 A.M.-2 P.M. OPEN DAILY From 7:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m Reservations Recommended 365-6699 storyboards drawn at Murakami Wolf Swenson, the Burbank, Calif., owner of the animation rights, dozens of ar- tists and technicians hunch over drawing boards and photography machines, producing 35-mm_ films that will be sent back to Burbank to be made into videocassettes. Housed in a functional office block in the centre of the city, Murakami Wolf Dublin Ltd. turns out a 22- minute cartoon every month or so to feed the global appetite for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. WORTH EFFORT Each cartoon requires some 13,000 separate drawings, and the work that falls to the junior animators is tedious. But for Ireland, with its chronic double-digit unemployment, anything that creates jobs is worth a try, and the Industrial Development Authority sees the Turtles as Ireland’s ticket to becoming ‘‘a key player in animation for television."’ “One of the advantages of Ireland is a well-educated, young population. It hasn't. got a background in animation as such . . . but the people are very trainable,"’ says Eamonn Lawless, the Dublin accountant who manages the studio. ‘As well as that, they're culturally compatible with the United States and with Europe.”” Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, in case anyone hasn’t heard, are four terrapins who were dropped into a radioactive brew and mutated into talking, pizza-scoffing teenage wisecrackers. A rat named Splinter trained them in the ancient Oriental art of Ninja combat, and loosed them on America’s streets to battle for justice. Americans may take such amiable nonsense in their stride, but some Europeans have found it a trifle too manic. The BBC insists on the title Teenage Mutant HERO Turtles, ap- parently believing that British audien- ces may have difficulty with Ninja. “As far as they were concerned, it was too violent-sounding,’’ said Lawless in an interview at his Spartan office desk. Lawless hadn’t heard of the Turtles until he was approached two years ago to head the Dublin operation. But he says he quickly caught the bug. “‘Irish generally are fairly noncon- formist in their attitude, and they’re laidback to most things,’’ he said. Besides, ‘I'd not regard myself as a stereotype accountant. I have always liked cartoons." AGENCY HELPFUL The Dublin connection is a tribute to the Irish Development Authority’s broadminded approach, and to Jim- my Murakami, an accomplished American animator who has lived here for 17 years dreaming of bringing the cartoon industry to Ireland. The studio opened in February 1989, having promised to create 126 new jobs. It has, in fact, created 130. CABLE 10 AW CABLE 10 SCHEDULE Aug. 8, 9, 10, 12, 1990 6 p.m. (Wed) 9 a.m. (Fri) 6 p.m. (Sun) Rossland and its Mining History — Jack MacDonald, well- known Rossland historian, takes us on a trip through the history of Rossland its mining history. Produced by Rossland Rotary Club. 7 p.m. (Wed) 10 a.m. (Fri) 7 p.m. COMMUNITY Bulletin Board POWER SKATING Costlegar Figure Skating Club fall school begins August 20-Sept. 21. Power skating and Configure begin August 2 7. Register now at the Complex. 6 63 CHRISTMAS CRAFT FAIR November-J and 10, Castlegar Community Complex Creek Recreation Commission. For information L. Gallo 365-3878. R. Cook 365 7 305 Sponsors Blueberry 2/62 Coming events of Castlegar and District non profit organizations may be listed here. the first 15 words are $5 and additional words Bre 25¢ each. Bold faced words (which must be used for headings) count as two words. There is no es tre charge tora second insertion while the third consecutive insertion 1s halt price and the fourth and fifth consecutive insertions are only hall price for the Poo of them. Minimum charge is $5 (whether ad is for one. two or three times). Deadlines are 5 p.m days tor Wednesdoys paper at 197 Columbia Ave Thursdays for Sundays paper and 5 p.m. Mon Notices should be brought to the Castlegar News COMMUNITY Bulletin Board (Sun) West Kootenay Today — Eleanor Elstone talks to Jim Chap- man, author of The Horseman of Shandro Crossing. Elstone also looks at this week’s programming and fur- ther events. Produced by Shaw Cable staff and volunteer. 7:30 p.m. (Wed) 10:30 a.m. (Fri) 7:30 p.m. (Sun) Regional Swim Meet — This was day one of the two-day event that was held at the Wright Pool in Trail. The top three finalists from each event qualify to compete in the provincials that are being held in Trail EASTGATE GARDENS 932 Columbia Ave. * 365-7414 WE WILL BE CLOSED Mon., Aug. We will re-open Thurs., Aug. 23 at 11 a.m. Aug. 15-19. Produced by Ed Cher- noff. 10 p.m. (Wed) 1 p.m. (Fri) 10 p.m. (Sun) Sign Off. This schedule is repeated Fri. at 9 a.m. and Sunday at 6 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 9, 1990 6:30 p.m. — Don’t Judge a Book by Its Cover 6:45 p.m. — Tuning up for Taipei 7 p.m. — Beyond the Frontier 7:30 p.m. — Taipei Sinfonietta 9:30 p.m. — Couchiching Con- ference (Part 1) 13 - Wed. Aug. 22 Come join us Thursday, Aug. 9 at 8:30 p.m, for an excellent slide show presentation on how to survive in the woods and how to avoid getting lost on your camping safaris. Jerry's Rangers meet at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 10 at the amphitheatre. Earn yet another sticker, and * maybe even your Jerry the Moose pin! We welcome new members at each meeting, don’t be shy. PS: We have word that Jerry the Moose plans to visit Syringa this weekt Friday evening we journey back in time with Syringa Park this week By Elaine Kruse Park Interpreter historian Mark Mealing to recapture life as it was years the perfect day than with a good old-fashioned sing-a- - officials inspected the highway bridge ‘Sorry for any inconvenience” Starting week of Aug. 27, we will be closed Mondays THANK YOU — THE MANAGEMENT ago — right here on the ground wher 230 p.m. at the amphitheatre. Syringa’s Annual Sand Castle Con’ will be given. Prizes for the bestest, the wee tiniest sandcastles, and more. Meet at the beach Saturday, Aug. 11 at 2 p.m. for Saturday at 7:30 p.m. what better way to wind up ¢ you've camped! long with Skip Fraser. How about a tea party in the woods complete with Bambi, Yogi and all the other forest animals? Sunday, Aug. 12 at 7:30 p.m... . mug and a wee bit of an appetite and you can try some of the tidbits we'll raid from Bambi’s fridge (forest test. Instructions the biggest, and nibblies), it's a date! Bring your own Premier blamed for low Stein festival turnout TSAWWASSEN, B.C. (CP) — Hot weather, a | inute change of north of Vancouver, because-of a venue and a comment by Premier Bill Vander Zalm kept people away from this year’s Stein Valley festival, organizers said. “The leader of the province asked people to stay away,” festival co- ordinator John McCandless said as the four-day music festival wrapped up. ‘‘That had to have a measurable impact and I think it is very unfor- tunate.”” The festival is a mixture of native and non-native entertainment as well as speeches and panel discussions on the environment and aboriginal rights. The site was moved to the Tsawwassen Indian band reserve in Delta, B.C., just south of Vancouver, from the Mount Currie rodeo groun- ds near Pemberton, 120 kilometres by loggers. The loggers threatened the Sunday-at 23,000 — down 3,000 from last year, organizers said. And the Sunday estimat: y have been blockade in for set up by local Indians to show their support for Mohawks involved in an armed standoff in Oka, Que. Vander Zalm and Solicitor General Russ Fraser, expressing concern over possible traffic problems on a holiday weekend, asked organizers to switch the festival to the Pacific National Exhibition grounds in Vancouver in- stead. The Tsawwassen reserve is near a busy B.C. Ferries terminal. On Thursday — the day before the festival opened — Vander Zalm said “people better stay home’’ because the festival was going to be ‘‘awfully crowded and awfully confusing.”* Organizers had expected 30,000 to 40,000 people to attend the event. But this year’s total attendance peaked Derailment closes road SALMON ARM, B.C. (CP) — A closing the road for four hours while for structural damage. Road traffic was being detoured because of the derailment, which happened about eight kilometres west of Salmon Arm. No injuries were reported from the accident. RCMP spokesman Brian Moore said the westbound boxcars hit the posts that support the overpass. CP Rail officials checked the structural safety of the overpass before High- ways Ministry officials reopened the road. Some residents near the site of the derailment were advised to leave th- eir homes as a precaution but nothing was leaking from the boxcars, said Bob Faubert, another police * spokesman. “There's no need for alarm,”” said Faubert, who didn’t know what was in the freight cars. “‘If there was alarm, the highway would not be open.”” A witness said one of the derailed cars -reportedly carried compressed oxygen and carbon dioxide cylinders, which could explode in intense heat or fire. Moore said at least a half-dozen cars went off the tracks. 8 . Organizers placed the crowa@&t 18,000 on Sunday, while RCMP officers on site put it at 12,000. The reduced crowd and increased costs of the festival means the event will probably only break even, said McCandless. McCandless called the festival a “sterling success’’ despite the reduced numbers. Last year the festival raised $400,000, of which $170,000 went to create a cultural centre for visitors to the Stein Valley, the last unlogged watershed in southwest British Columbia. Police, crowd have tense Penticton meeting PENTICTON, B.C. (CP) — A ten- se confrontation between police and up to 1,500 rowdy youths during the B.C. Day holiday weekend .almost forced Mayor Dorothy Whittaker to invoke the Riot Act. She said council will meet today to ask for help dealing with the annual influx of revellers. This year, an estimated 25,000 to 30,000 party- goers joined the usual summer tourists. Two years ago, in an effort to reduce the number of visitors during the mid-summer holiday weekend, council rescheduled the Peach Festival and dnnual Square Dance Jamboree. . The confrontation arose when a crowd — mostly in their teens and early 20s —. gathered at an intersec- He said 80 people were arrested Saturday night. On Sunday, beer and wine off-sales were cut off at 3 p.m. and through the weekend, local establishments sold beer in cans, rather than bottles. RCMP say 182 arrests were made during the three days, 30 more than in 1989. Most people were charged with being drunk in a public ‘place and breach of the peace. HOUSE INSURANCE “Never Have a Home Without It! «1 5 CASTLEGAR SAVINGS INSURANCE AGENCIES For All Your insurance Needs! SLOCAN PARK Hwy. 6, 226-7212 CASTLEGAR 601-10th St., 365-7232 (365-3368 Insurance 226-7216 tion in the heart of the Of Valley city shortly before midnight Saturday night. “There started to be beer cans and projectiles thrown at the officers,”” said RCMP Insp. Trevor Thompsett. The crowd quickly became unruly and began ‘‘jumping cars up and down."” Police were concerned the crowd would begin to overturn vehicles, he said. A total of 250 police officers were on duty Saturday night. The local force was bolstered by a 40-member RCMP riot squad from Vancouver as well as officers from other detach- ments in the area. The riot squad was kept a half- block away from the crowd, out of sight, Thompsett said, but was not needed to disperse the crowd. A Sincere Thank You To the Royal Canadian Legion Branch No. 170 for the underground sprinkling system at the Rota Villa. May your bingo continue to expand so that others in the community will continue to benefit from your generosity. CASTLEGAR VILLA SOCIETY IN MEMORY Nick Ogloff Jubilee Hospital at age 66. mainly a carpenter in B.C. the Carpenters Union for 17 y Funeral Chapel. Nick Ogloff of Raspberry passed away Aug. 1, 1990 at the Vernon He was born on October 10, 1923 at Kylemore, Sask. and grew up there. He came to Castlegar in 1942 and lived at Robson where he married Olga Poznikoff on July 12, 1952. They have lived in Raspberry since 1973. He worked as a farmer in Sask. and then as a logger and ing in 1982. He.served as treasurer for USCC. He enjoyed going to ball games and hockey games. He is survived by his wife, Olga: son and daughter-in-law Rick and Sharel of Vancouver; granddaughter Brittany; and two sisters, Edna Kanigan of Grand Forks and Mary Coleman of Vancouver. He was predeceased by his parents and one brother. Funeral services were held on Friday and Saturday at the Brilliant Cultural Centre with burial at the Brilliant Cemetery. Funeral arrangements were under the direction of Castlegar 4nd was a lifetime member of the L— ove BChydro & BC Hydro wishes to advise the public that the roadway across Hugh Keenleyside Dam will be CLOSED fo traffic due to maintenance: Wed. Aug. 8 © Thurs. Aug. 9 © Fri. Aug. 10 From 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. We apologize for any this may cause. JOB OPENINGS For information on these ond other employment opportunities, contact the ‘anoda Employment Centre 835 Spokane St., Trail Phone: 368-5566 Certified den tant required in Castlegar; contact Kathy Ritchie at Dr Konigan’s office at 365-5220. Experienced short-order cook; contact Fred at Kozy Kettle, Waneta Plaza bet- ween 2 and 5 p.m Millworkars required; experience preferred but not necessary; apply directly to Selkirk Remanutacturing (mill site in Brilliant). Bartender/food servers; experience preterred, must be at least 19 years old: contact Susan at 364-2222 Answer to Saturday Cross M/O/ P/E >|] i-|0) (olm > imizMzim| ol DeEOGOSS G6 BO SEOWn | >) 1Z|>)0}—|=/0) | —|2|>'|O|> Br |Ola FIG) IE —|=|>|\=|\o R/O) SBOQOR 56500 50H OmS iim ||| a 2) —| OR O)m|D|—|0) mi) —|9 —[a|z|o BIWEIOE COC) GES edb ordi BO ODEO OOS OOSWee) WOOD) Obra OBS msc im||—|a/4 OOO8OAD BHO Oe We word Puzzle No. 4: CIAIRIT 42) —|-4|> |= —|Zimjio|= MORSE GIES) BOW OOBDO MrsWis OES Wade Oem GOS Bohs >of >a) >|m\o|\OMEC|O|}0O)—|= 4m. > HOD > RD >: > |S \-|>\0 SBE BEbbwWSs2) GEO EESWO WE OBOE OGRE BHGBWE OBS WHekw COESRIG) CoC dle iJ Gd a> |r Answer to Saturday, Aug. MERRY PARTYGOERS 4 Crytoquip: STARTED SIPPING CHAMPAGNE OUT OF SLIPPERS, BUT BARTEN- DER FOUND IT HARD TO FILL THEIR SHOES. _along with wages: Expetienced food preparer/catering truck driver; good driving record essen tial; contact Lana at 364-2247 Counterperson for equipment rentals and parts sales; computer experience necessary; contaet Nick Chernoff at 365. 3315. Auto mechanic; certified or appren tice. Driver's license and own tools a must. Apply to Artcliffe Motors at 364 1224. Long-term care facility requires registered nurses on a casual basis. Ap plications may be picked up at Kiro Manor, Trail, B.C Chinese cuisine cook with seven years experience; room and board provided must speak English and Cantonese is preferred. Contact Cindy Wong at 365-7414, Eastgate Gor An electrical drattsperson is required in Castlegar. Must have electrical or CADD experience. good references and be a non-smoker. To apply, call Ron Ross of EMCO Engineering at 365-8455 Experienced janitér required in Trail for permanent part-time. Contact Dwayne Vass between 3:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. ot 364-2876 Personal care giver required in Trail to feed an extended-care patient trom 8:30 to 10,0r 11:45 a.m, to 1:15 p.m./5 doys per week. To apply, contact: Mrs Luknowsky at 368-6777 An experienced sale son/assistant manager is required for a women's clothing store in Trail. Must be responsible and mature. To apply drop off a resume at Francines (Woneto Plaza) before Aug. 4 Delivery driver in Trail, must have own car, wage is $5/hr. and pay own car expenses. Apply to Panagopoulos Pizza 1501-2nd Ave. after 2 p.m A dishwasher is needed in Trail, wage is $5/hour, varied shifts, apply by con pleting an application at the Terra Nova Motor Inn. A night auditor is required in Trail The wage is $5.50/hr. This is a per manent part-time job, 11 p.m. to 7 a.m Must be mature and physically able to deal with security. Apply by opplication to Dan Kowalenko at the Terra Novo Motor Inn. A millwright opprentice is required in Castlegar, wage approx. $8/hr. to start Prefers pre-opprentice grad in millwright or machinist area. Phone: Bill Henne at 365.2378 for an interview Additional information’ on “out-of area” jobs can also be obtained through the Canada Employment Centre in Trail ALL MAKES 4 2 Parts Extra Regular Price $40 Singer Trained Technicion Selling ond Servicing Sewing Machines for 20 Years Sewing Machine Tune-Up SUMMER SPECIAL @~ Carter’s Sewing C Towne Square Mall, Troll, B.C. © 364-1744 PINGER “A vesoman of The Seeger Comoary| no cement will be fonvening an invited to attend The meeting will be held 7:00 p.m CELGAR EXPANSION REVIEW PANEL ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING The Celgar Expansion Review Panel is an independent panel established to review the proposed expansion of the Celgar pulp mill ip Castlegar, B.C. The Executi informal procedures for the public hearings to be hel Panel will not be present and the discussion will only address procedural matters. Representatives of interested parties are Thursday, August 16, 1990 Office of the Celgar Expansion Review Panel 1414 Columbia Avenue Secretary of the Panel m ang to discuss the by the Panel. The NOTICE *:»” The City of Castlegar requests the assi of Castlegar resid in keeping the city clean. The City and the Castlegar and District Development Board are currently engaged ina clean-up of the property in the area between 5th Avenue and the river. Residents are ad- vised that this is not a garbage dumping ground and to refrain from using it as such. OFF REGULAR 4 LITRE PRICE BREEZE LATEX AND GENERAL PAINT ALKYD PREMIUM QUALITY FINISHES INTERIOR/EXTERIOR @@ ALKYO FLAT Ww ALKYD SEMI-GLOSS MEALKYD EGGSHELL LATEX FLAT @ ALKYD HOUSE AND LATEX EGGSHELL TRIM GLOSS @ LATEX SEMI-GLOSS SALE ENDS SOON! Castlegar, B.C. (Telephone 365-7709 or 1-800-682-7607) [oo, sf “Your Home Decorating Centre” AINT & WALLCOVERINGS 613 Columbia Ave. 7229-Sth Street. Cc B.C. + 365-6214 Grand Forks, B.C. 442-2929 *