4 Ab Castlegar News January 4, 1989 ENTERTAINMENT MR. & MRS. IGGIE ARE BACK TO CELEBRATE. And to celebrate this they're having 2 SPECIALS. | DINNER SPECIAL for WE ACCEPT WESTAR, CELGAR & COMINCO MEAL TICKETS Ph. 365-8155 Happy | New Year! From the staff at CALL US ound Dixiclee 2816 Columbia Ave. 365-5304 1004 Columbia Av Nida wad COMMUNITY Bulletin Board CASTLEGAR AQUANAUTS BINGO Arena Complex, 2 jackg earlyoud. 6 regular / 201 SENIOR CITIZENS id Inursday’ Jonpory 12 at 2 jo meeting 201 tiegar and District non-profit organizations may be listed 0 words are $3.75 and additional words are 20¢ each. Bold 4s (which mus} be used for headings) count as two words. There is Wa chorge for @ apcond insertigh while the third consecutive insertion is ty-tive ent gnd the inserfion is. half-price. ad is tor one, two or three times) Thursdays tor Sundays paper and’5 p.m. Mondays for Notices should be brought to the Costlegar News at 197 . fourth consecutive Minimum chorge 1s $9.75. (whether Deadlines are 5 p:m Wednesdays paper Columbia Ave NOW SHOWING! WED THU FRI SAT [SUN MON [TUE EVENINGS EARLY SHOWS at 6:00pm An Adventtre In The Land Of The Dinosaur -NOW SHOWING !— WED THU PECIAL SHOW TIMES: 7:30 & 9:30pm * Journey_to the most wonderful place | OCGDN THE RETURN ECIA T 7:30 & 9:15pm "a Si SPLITTING MEDI ust A PARTY ‘ol DONT WANT TO EXD," PEOPLE MAGA: BILL MURRAY ai te ASTLE THEATRE@§S Seousenae UNSHINE SKIL MIEEK B.C WARRING —Some (QAATURE) Escape to ‘the Island in the Sky— and don’t come down to earth for a week!’ $385 - $415 cm "$405 - $445.0 FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 1-800-372-9583 from Alberta 1-800-661-1363 from Canada and USA For information call PO Box 1510 Banti A @ * . NATION’ Elvis tops music stories - By MARK BASTIEN ‘The Canadian Press He was seen filling his face at a Burger King in Kalamazoo, Mich He wrote to a West German senior citizen and waxed culinary about the overstuffed sandwiches she made him when he was a soldier stationed there in the late "50s. He even attended his daughter's Hollywood nuptials, presumably to ‘sample the wedding cake. It was a-busy year for Elvis Presley The King has been dead for 11 years, but in 1988 fans who refuse to believe the bloated singer went to rock 'n’ roll. heaven reported seeing him and- his trademark white jumpsuit all over the world Their morbid curiosity became biy business.” EI RADIO Thousands dial a pay-to-listen telephone number to hear Elvis explain his disappearance. A book and ‘accompanying tape titled Is Elvis Alive?, made the best-seller lists And a Cincinnati radio station turned .its sagging fortunes around by going all-Elvis 24 hours a day The year in music of kings past Fans also got all shook up about John Lennon, who was portrayed as an abusive, bisexual in a seathing biography by Albert Goldman, the same man who savaged Presley in print several years ago ALGIC pining for their musical was a remembrance norexic But-folks-wetent-simp heroes. Instead, they were restless and nostalgic of them being grown-up baby boomers — for the days when rock stars were musical outlaws who challenged the world they sang about How else to explain how Presley's estate made $15 million in 1988 and Lennon had a hit single, Jealous Guy, eight years after he was gunned down in front of his New York City apartment? And how else to explain how the current superstars of rock music rebels clause in their contracts to do social good — got together for the wildly successful Human Rights Now! support of Amnesty International? BACK TO BASICS 1988 was a which pop sensed something was missing in their music so they got back to basics. year's many without a worldwide tour in year in stars hottest new ‘performer was Tracy with-a-guitar who sang songs about the dispossessed Socially conscious Irish quartet U2 was the hippest band, rattling and humming its way to a No. 1 album, a hit movie and a successful group biography And the most pervasive trend was the return of rock 'n’ roll greats - including Canadian Neil Young, in 1988 ELVIS PRESLEY top story Rolling Stone Keith Richards and Elton John — with the musical magic that won them fans a.generation ago. Other musicians‘ returned to their roots, too. Country singers shunned showbiz glitz for down-home simplicity, with back-to-basics albums by such folks as Dwight Yoakam, Randy Travis and Edmonton's K:D. Lang being “big sellers In jazz, the voice was the thing. Bobby McFerrin didn't need an ompaniment to produce the rhythmic feel-good hit of the year, Don't Worry, Be Happy. And in 1988 the grand was put back in grand opera. In Montreal, a massive production of Verdi's Aida lumbered through Olympic Stadium in the form of 700 extras, a 120-member orchestra and a Noah's ark of animals, includifig five elephants and a four-metre-long Burmese pythory FISCAL FEARS But such extravagance wasn't in keeping with the fiscal fears some Canadian musicians -had-by year's end With the return of a majority Progressive Conservative government, the loss of Flora MacDonald as communications minister and the end of contralto Maureen Forrester's term as Canada Council chairman, some musicians fear that government aid to the arts will be slashed in 1989. And many people in the Canadian recording believe the arrival of free trade with the United States will make. the a vast clearing house for American music Others, though, say it’s no time for the industry to havean- identity crisis They point to the phenomenal record sales of such Canadian stars as Quebec's Michel Rivard) and Nova Scotia's Rita MacNeil, and the healthy industry-wide profit margin industry country 4 Cable 10 TV SHAW CABLE Teen Meal Only $2.99 WITH THIS COUPON (FAMILIES & GROUPS WELCOME) * Teen Burger © Small Fry *® Medium Root Beer 5 p.m. [Wed] 9 land Midgets tak Midgets in a game Dec. 13, 1988. 7 pam. [Wed] 11 ater good Sy saa gram — Betsy TRAIL A&W's ONLY Kruysse present AMET aa niet towed. & “ ‘ greater Trail area 7:30 p.m. (Wed 1:30 p.m. La a a me a ee od Jan. 4to Jan. 8 (Sun] Midget Hockey — {Sun{ Kiro Manor Awareness Pro changing senior population in the {Sun] Project Discovery 10 SCH (Part 8] — Produced by Shaw Cable in Edmonton this program highlights Alberta Musie -talent. This Helen Vedros/Kinrog and Mantis are featured m. [Wed] 12 p.m. [Fri] 2 p.m. (Sun] USCC Youth Festival (Part 7] This annual event was taped at the Brilliant Cultural Centre May 20-22, 1988. This week the Calgary Youth Quartet voice of Youth Choir Andba booslka Sookorukova are featured. 9 p.m. [Wed] 1 p.m. [Fri] 3 p.m. {Sun} Small Business Immersion Program — This program produced by Selkirk College talks about the a.m. [F week e on the. Nelson held in Nelson on a.m. [Fri] 1 p.m Ives and Martin the topic the ] 11:30 a.m. [Fri] a i — DINING LOUNGE Thank You for Your Patronage isis | From the Management um iN ly | and staff at the D-Bar-D CLOSED FOR THE HOLIDAYS! Located | Mile South of Weigh Scale in Ootischenia — LICENCED DINING ROOM — importance of pre-planning ‘your business and how the immersion program can help Please note this Schedule is ted on Friday starting at 9 a.m. and again on Sunday starting at 11 Rotary Bingo returns this Sunday, Jan. 8 at 6 p.m. Good T e is whot you will find.at the All Star Restaurant and Grill, With ‘our two separote restourants under one roof, we hove mony special things hoppening. Just take o look [ | RESTAURANT & GRILL 19 Siroot_ Netton 384-4431 Dining ficci« 5:30 p.m ed ea wi Sunday Brunch UG 10:30 a.m. --1:00 p.m Reservations 825-4466 THIS WEEK’S SPECIAL Coming Soon... . See Castlegar News of Sun., Jan. 15 nunc * °° TRY OUR BORSCHT & PYRAHI CALL AHEAD, DRIVE THROUGH SERVICE 1521 Columbia Ave. 365-8388 Benjamin LOS ANGELES (AP) — An ‘ld friend happened. to drive by Richard Benjamin's house and drop a $20 million movie in his lap. At least that’s the way Benjamin tells how he became involved with My Stepmother Was an Alien, the year-end release starring Canadian born Dan Aykroyd and Kim Bas inger It helps that the old friend was Jerry Weintraub, founder of the “instant major” film company, Wein traub Entertainment “Jerry drove down my street one day as I was getting into my car,” Benjamin said “He stopped me I got this seript. You've got to do. it. I'm not going to take no for an answer.’ “It's hard to say no’ to Jerry. I thought that when somebody pulls over, gets out of a car and stands on a that’s the way you ) and said: street. corner, should make a deal Benjamin had already half-finished version of Stepmothér and had admired it something terrifically real about a little girl saying to her dad: "But she’s from another planet! And the dad saying: ‘Now she's going to be your new mother. Tell me you don't like her cooking, but don't tell mé she's from another planet “There's something cally right about that.” Benjamin signed’ on as Having directed My Favorite Year, City Keat, Racing With the Moon, The Money Pit and Little Nikita, he now entered the whole new world of read a psychologi director. special effects. GREAT EFFECTS aha Dykstra Apogee, that did the special effects, are awesome they anything “You had to use your injagination, and then you had to be responsbile to that_imagination_because they_could “xecute it Aykroyd, a entered the and his company, because can do he said native of Ottawa, early., A Sat urday Night Live alumnus, he is part of the new of film actors. They work fast, and they don't like to do a lot of rehearsal,” “Neither does Kim, so that was all right “When we started, Dan said: ‘Do you want me to put anything else in, or do you just want the words in the script?” “T_said, ‘Ifyou something, just say it the camera rolling at the scene and just let him go. that stuff is in the although he Stepmother, project breed comedy Benjamin said want to. say I used to keep end of a A lot of movie.” doesn't appear in Benjamin did acting on the set SPECIAL ROLE The reason: he had to portray the al effects that-w6uld be inserted » actors were a stick explained F said, out of the looking at me that said “Shop, he Now this thing is coming stars! It’s beautiful! It's magnificent! It’s Then there aré these great super beings in the sky,” and I'm standing on a ladder doing them.” Except for-a-few-gray-hairs Dick Benjamin at 49 still possesses the preppie look he first displayed’ in Goodbye. Columbus. New York-born, he attended the famed High School for the Per forming Arts, then studied drama at Northwestern University, met his wife, awesome! where he Paula Prentiss. Rose’s Restaurant South Slocan Junction CLOSED For Renovations ‘til February BREAKFAST BUFFET 7-a.m. toa.m. Every Day! 99 SUNDAY BRUNCH $5.99 ws. MONTE CARLO RESTAURANT Open 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. © 365-2177 | Travelodge VANCOUVER COQUITLAM EASY OF F/EASY ON th Trans-Canada Hwy No. | e Exit at Bruneite. CALL TOLL FREE 1-600-663-2235 725 Brunette Ave., Coquitlam, B.C. V3K 1. (604) 525-7777 7 . LOW off-season rates ntre of Metro Vancouver Restaurant & Lounge. ‘THE TWO OF Us’ 60 Deluxe rooms, bridal suite, whirlpool & sauna Direct bus to Skytrain & shopping centres * Free oversized parking FAX 604-525-7777 ' BUSINESS January 4, 1989 eparNews 47 asi Off-shore proposals rise sharply OTTAWA (CP) — There ‘were 662 proposals to buy Canadian companies worth a total of $20.2 billion in the 1987-88 fiscal year, the federal investment monitoring agency said. That's up sharply from the 1986-87 figure of $12.5 billion, Investment Canada said in its annual report. “As elsewhere in the world, merger and acquisition activity in Canada was substantial in 1987-88,” said the ageney, which reviews foreign takeovers and promotes “Canada as a home for investment. foreign” However, the report said the massive increase was due mainly to three large takeovers worth a total of $10 billion. Dome’ Petroleum was purchased by Amoco Canada, a U,S,-controlled company, for more than $5 billion. Chrysler Corp. acquired American Motors Canada when it bought American Motors U.S. parent. And Cadillac Fairview of Toronto, a major real estate developer, was bought by JMB Realty of Chicago in the largest commercial real ontate deal in Canadian history. Of the 662 foreign investments reported in 1987-88, 178 were reviewed and approved -by Investment Canada. The rest simply requiréd notification, Direct foreign acquisitions of Canadian firms worth $5 million or more must be reviewed by Investment Canada,-which took the place of the Foreign Investment Review Agency in 1985. In the investments reported, about 70 per cent of the assets were to be acquired by American companies, 15 per cent by western European firms and three per cent by Japanese. companies. Texaco sale close TORONTO (CP) — The sale of Texaco Canada Inc. has moved a step closer to completion with the announcement the Toronto-based company is setting up a new company to own some of its exploration and producing assets. Stockholders will receive a share in the new Texaco Canada Petroleum Inc. for each share they own in Texaco Canada, leaving the U.S.-based parent with a 78 per-cent interest in the new firm. Texaco Canada Petroleum will consist of promising exploration interests in Brazil and Mauritania and 11 producing oil ‘properties in Alberta and Saskatchewan. Texaco Ine. of White Plains, N.Y., announced in August its intention to sell its 78-per-cent interest in the Canadian subsidiary. Bids are due to be submitted by Monday: The parent company said last summer that it wanted to keep its interest in overseas assets The properties are valued at $92 million and Texaco Canada will add $65 million in cash and securities to help fund exploration. Texaco Canada won't say how much oil it is pumping from the Canadian properties but said in a statement the transaction would have “no material effect on Texaco Canada’s current earnings.” The announcement came- after trading in the company’s stock closed on the Toronte Stock Exchange at $44.38, unchanged on the day, with 442,112 shares changing hands. The asset distribution is in addition to a $780 million, or $6.50 a share, payout to shareholders the company announced last month. Texaco; Canada said the dividend will be paid to shareholders of record as of Jan. 12, but said it has the right to amend the deal if there is a “material change” in the value of the properties before that ° Poor growing season fuels rise in coffee bean price By DAVID DISHNEAU The Associated Press Coffee drinkers should get ready to-swattow-a-price—increase: Poor growing and harvesting lems. conditions have pushed prices for green, unroasted coffee beans to their highest levels in two years, and roasters say. they'll pass the costs along to consumers. Procter and Gamble Co. says it'll raise wholesale prices of its ground, roasted coffees by 79 cents Cdn a kilogram Jan. 23 The Procter ‘and Gamble, which prod- recently uces Folger's coffee, also plans A 10-day increases of 71 cents a kilogram for its special-roast flaked coffee and $1.69 a kilogram for its: instant coffees. “All I can say is that coffee is a fluctuating market,” company spokes man Belinda Baxter Welsh in a telephone interview from her office the in Cincinnati, Ohio. “We try very zation. hard not to increase our prices any In December, delivery on Sugar the world’s largest producer, have soared this month as rise in North American consumption —_In focused—attention—on~—suppty—prob- Those problems range from droug ht conditions in Brazil to a _rain-de layed harvest in’ Colombia. coffee for March New York's Coffee, and Cocoa jumped from about $3.34 a kilogram “It to about $3.92 a kilogram. tight-supply picture eased Brazilian striked ended and the 15-day moving average of overall coffee prices rose 9:30- above $3-4 kilogram. That increase triggered a one-mil- lion bag increase in the amount of coffee that producing countries are allowed to export under the rules of International Analysts say'supplies-are still very the seasonal tight under — similar coffee —furures than $7 a early 1986, vonditions,—green prices’ rose to more kilogram “We are not up there yet but we may get up there,” said Arthur Stevenson, a coffee-market analyst with Prudential-Bache Securities In¢ in New York. depends how much further these weather conditions bite production.” Exchange has into LEGION BR. 170 DANCE SAT. 1:30 a.m. dockworkers’ BAND GOOD COMPANY Guests must be signed in Proper dress atter 9 pm Open Monday to Thursday le. Friday & Saturday, 12 noon -20.m 365-7017 “ences. cio09 Coffee Organi more than we have to, but the price of green coffee went up.” Analysts ’éxpect othert roasters to follow the ‘lead of Procter and Gamble, the _se¢ond-largest_U.S. coffee roaster behind Philip Morris ysis Cos.’ General Foods division. General Foods, maker of Maxwell House doffee, didn't comment The rise in green coffee prices may more quickly affect those| who buy frac Has, Sead NEWTON INN 7300 King George Hwy. ey, B.C., Canada Phone (604) 598-1561 Centrally located budget hotel with spacious modern rooms orjly 10 minutes north of US/CANADA couver,-25- minutes to Victoria Ferry and only minutes from major shopping cen tres (Surrey Place & Guilford) and Cloverdale Race Track Double $32, Quad $40 Triple $35 Plenty of free over sized Parking Colour Cable TV and Air-Conditioning & Meeting Room for Upto Restaurant, Lounge and 20 Pub 45 minutes from downtown Van bordpr on Hwy 99A freshly roasted beans from bins at gourmet coffee shops, said David Siefer, manager of the Coffee and Tea Exchange in Chicago RAISES PRICES Siefer~ said he planned to” raise prices by 79 cents a kilogram. “We don't have quite the capital the major companies have. They buy by the (16,875-kilogram) container load, but we generally have less than 2,000 pounds _(900-kilograms) on hand.” « Prices for green coffee from Brazil, (C.S. WILLIAMS-CLINIC__) IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THE ASSOCIATION OF Christopher H. Wake Practice confined to Paediatrics APPOINTMENT BY REFERRAL ONLY 901 Helena Street, Trail, B.C, M.B.ChB., F.R/A.C.P. (Paed) P sonrennrmersn S Sy FERRARO'S “Your Satisfaction is Our Main Concern” ‘Duncen Hines ¢ all varieties cake mixes 500g. pkg. limit 1 with every $25 in groceries junieoca’ .09 Country Cottage * sliced cooked ham 175g. pock limit 1 with every $25 in groc: local grown fresh mushrooms 350g. t iimitii with every $25 in grocate * purchased 1.49 SuperValu Californie grown * Sunkist navel oranges 20 Ib. box 5.99 mandarin oranges s bo: x “while stocks last! Prices effective Jan. 2 to Jan. 7, 1989 PLAZA, SUPER-VALU OPEN SUNDAYS 10 A.M.-5 P.M. Two locations to serve you: Downtown and Plaza! Manitoba out of oil business WINNIPEG (CP) —,The Manitoba government is getting out of the oil and ga$ business after a five-year venture which cost taxpayers at least $16 million. The province has sold Manitoba Oil Corp.,to a Winnipeg company for $3.05 million, Jim Downey, minister responsible for the corporation, announced. “One could say today's announce: final chapter on a book that should never have been written,” the Conservative minister ‘and Gas ment closes the said. NPP leader Gary. Doer, whose party. launched the corporation while in government, said the Tories have unloaded ManOil at a “fire-sale” price for ideological reasons. Liberal Leader Sharon Carstairs said the government should have received closer to $9 million for the corporation ManOil was meant to create jobs, provide a window on the oil industry and ensure stability in the southwest Manitoba oil patch, Downey said. Free-trade deal defied TORONTO (CP) Ontario is defying the section of the free-trade deal with the U.S. that calls for ,immediate elimination of 25 per cent of the price markup on American wines Liquor Qontrol Board of Ontario stores opened this week with only the usual small monthly price adjust province imposes a price differentiat —on foreign wines. While keeping his pledge not to implement that provision of the free-trade deal, Premier David Peterson suggested Tuesday he's backing down from his threat to ignore-a-simitar agreement with the European Community Like the Canada-U.S. free-trade treaty, it calls for most discrim inatory price markups to be elim. inated over seven years. WEST KOOTENAY ENTERPISE DEVELOPMENT CENTRE Immersion Program in Small Business A highly concentrated 120 hour course over a two week perrod involving studies culminating ino Business Plan drat?. Six instructors provide practical instryction ond experiences financial management ‘and accounting, human resource d management that leads toon hetsion Program in ‘ rc te n the field of computerd production Employers may quolify.tor financial support tor 1 ployment and Immigration Canada 21 employees through Em DATES: Jonvory 23-February 9, 1909 | 8 a,m. . 10 p.m. daily ( REGISTRATION DEADLINE: Jonwary 13, 1989 LOCATION: Cost! FEE: $250. Class size is limited to firs) 20 students with paid registration FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, OR TO REGIST PLEASE CONTACT: 1410 Columbia Avenue Castlegar, B.C. VIN 1H8 (604) 365-5886 ‘A Service of Selkirk College MAKE IT RESOLUTION: Lose weight Eot Healthier Save Money On Grocery LAURA WILLIAMS Bills Se, Nutritionist Phone: 365-7616 CTURE THIS. Processing & Jan. 5th, 6th & 7th $15” Double Prints Plus Free Roll of Konica Film 24 Exposure 36 PRINT PACKAGE Giftwore Portraits first job Look around, Some of the most successtul pi once newspaper carriers There s a good reson for that Being a carries.is.more than a job it's an unforgettable learning ex perience. It teaches young people frow to use their time wisely... to to deal with dif e. It gives them >ple you know were plishment important responsibi You don't have to be a boy Girls Make Excellent Carriers 7 Womens lib 1s here to stay Girls are very capable of handling o newspaper delivery route and more and more girls ground the country are taking on @ carrier job. Ito good way to meet new people learn good business practices and earn a little extra money, too Learning how to be a good help you throughout The Castlegor News female carriers. Join Citevlation Dept CASTLEGAR NEWS, 8c vin ame Parents. Your child's could make a difference even your own neighborhood For details phone 365-7266. Ask tor Heathe P.S. Were also interested in Seni: corriers. It pays well and there iso Heather ot 365.7266 gos allowance not consider this aspec