’ - = oo. Ae February 12, 1966 as __ Casthégar News = (et Royal Canadian Legion | Branch No. 170 CABARET Setui Dancing 9:30 p.m. -1:30 a.m OPEN 12 NOON 6 DAYS A WEEK Proper Dress Saturday atter 9 p.m Guests BeSIGNED In LEATHER & LACE Thursday Bingo You are invited to attend a special meeting with Operation Mobilization (Interdenominational Outreach) FEB. 14 — 7:30 P.M. PENTECOSTAL TABERNACLE 767-11th Ave., Castleger FOR MORE INFO CALL 365-5212 Fri. & Sat., Feb. 14 & 15 If you're looking for fine cuisine in a most romantic atmosphere . . . this is the place! OPEN 4TO 10 P.M. “Fireside Dining Room & Cocktail Lounge For Reservations — 365-6000 CP’s Expo film up for Oscar nomination By DAVE LANG VANCOUVER (CP) A film shot in Vancouver for Expo 86 has an Oscar nomin. ation even though the movie uses painted landscapes on indoor sets instead of the War, was produced for the Canadian Pacific pavilion at Expo by Bob Rogers and Co. Inc. of Los Angeles. It was shot last March in Vancouver with an all-B.C. cast and a largely Canadian crew. In November, it was sub- mitted to the U.S. Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences and is one of three nominees in the category of Live Action shorts. Adhering to Expo's theme different, challenging piece that we offered them.” Because of its style Rogers said the film could have been shot anywhere, but he did it in Vancouver because of the enthusiasm and expertise of the crews and actors. “They are a terrific bunch of people up here,” he said “They get excited about what they do... and, as a result, they really create a sense of ensemble and a sense of per. formance.” Rainbow War stars Van couver actors Gary Carre, Saffron Henderson, Jon Pal lone, Gillian Barber and Simon Webb. It will be pre sented in 70mm with a six channel Dolby stereo system in the Canadian Pacific pav ition at Expo. It is Rogers’ second Aca . demy Award nomination ships. It's been described as both a fairy tale and a fan y- Rogers said it was shot en. tirely indoors using fantasy sets which he describes as “big paintings in which there are people walking around.” “The entire story takes place in a child's pop-up book,” he said. “The book opens gnd the walls of the buildings that are portrayed fold up and we move into the book (where) the rest of the ventional plot. He said his firm offered CP several scen the standard Instead, Rogers says CP selected “the most daring, MONTE CARLO RESTAURANT Ballet Robotique shot for General Motors was nomin ated in the same category three years ago but lost. Rogers’ company, which specializes in shows for world fairs and theme parks, will have three productions at Expo. In addition to Rainbow War, there will be a live stage show at the General Motors pavilion and another film, which Rogers calls day in the worklife in B. for the B.C. pavilion. “In it, British Columbians talk to us not about what they do, but how they feel about their province and what they do in it,” Rogers said. “It's a very personal sort of portrait of B.C. It’s very loving and I think it's going to put a lump in the throat of 2 lot of people from B.C.” “so DEWDNEY TOURSAa. RENO COACH TOURS MARCH 2-8 7-DAY HILTON MARCH 8-15 8-DAY HILTON MARCH 16-23 7-DAY EXPRESS ONSLOW EARLY BIRD DISCOUNT OFF 8-DAY TOURS Prices listed Obi. /Twin — Seniors Discount of $10 on most Reno Tours. SPORTS FANS GETAWAY February 26 — March 1, 1986 Hockey Games in Vancouver vs. ‘Montreal and Philadelphia CALIFORNIA — ARIZONA 16 Day Coach Tour Departs March 12 SENIORS EDMONTON SHOPPING SPREE April7-11 DON’T MISS IT FOR THE WORLD! The 1986 World Exposition May 2 to October 13,1986 Vancouver British Columbia, Canada Coach tours to Expo 86. Your chorce of 3 days, 4 days, 5 days or 6 days. All tours include accom modation at Sheraton Hotels with meal coupon. Expo pass; courteous and reliable driver, ex perienced escort CUSTOM GROUP PACKAGES AVAILABLE see's, DEWDNEY aA Se me 1355 Bay Ave., Troil 368-6666 O8 TOLL FREE 1-800-332-0282 CASTLEGAR AGENT MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL — 365-6616 Bring Three, You Eat Free! BARE AS Amateur Stri Bring three guests for dinner at the Monte Carlo and your dinner will be FREE! OFFER GOOD FROM 5 P.M. TO 9 P.M. DAILY UNTIL THE END OF FEBRUARY. FOR RESERVATIONS Phone 365-2177 (Does not apply to children’s menu. ) aan When it comes to fun entertainment join us of Checkers Pub!!! ifridey, Fe Feb. 14 - — 9 p.m. You DARE: S ip Night Contest & —<= t a es nove ot Checkers Pub end yo tigible to *250.... © ENTERTAINMENT __ Recluse's daily musings make unusual diary By MICHAEL BEZDEK CAMBRIDGE, MA. (AP) — In 1963 when Arthur Crew Inman managed to pull off the suicide he had been contemplating for decades, he left behind a death note that was 17 million words long. Inman, heir to an Atlanta cotton fortune, actually left s diary of 155 volumes filled with his daily musings on current events and the unexpurgated accounts of family intimacies and those of strangers he hired to tell him their stories. A self-proclaimed invalid and an unsuccessful poet, he came to Boston to be near his osteopath. He worked on the diary for 44 years from a Back Bay apartment darkened because of his sensitivity to light. After seven years of work, a Harvard University professor, Daniel Aaron, has distilled all of Inman's ramblings into two volumes and about one-tenth the original number of words with the ie of The gentle voice to get people to open up to him and women to endure his incessant fondlings Inman's meanness and the salacious nature of some of the material has contributed to some strong reactions to the book Aaron said there are those “collectively drawing up their, skirts and saying: ‘Why Did Harvard Press publish this disgusting thing?’ ” Others have been skeptical heeause the diary was published and promoted with money fram Inman's estate, as he had requested. However, that money appears to have had little, any, bearing on the decision to publish. The work did not get serious consideration until about 15 years after Inman's death. Reviewers have been almost universally kind in their appraisals, although Aaron is curious about the paucity of Inman Diary: A Public and Private Confession. It'S published by Harvard University Press and is distributed in Canada by Book Centre Inc., Montreal, at $74.95. The entries, from 1919 until Inman's death at the age of 68 on Dee. 5, 1963, were written as one large block; there were no paragraphs. It took Aaron a year to read the diary for the first time. ‘Then he composed an outline that covered 1,200 single-spaced typed pages. The diary includes hundreds of characters and is, as Aaron says, “never my-secret-diary kind of stuff.” It is an often painfully honest account — right down to his mother's dirty corsets — by a well-bred, well-read recluse who also was, in part, a lecher, voyeur and sadist He had a profound memory and eye for detail. An only child, he was so self-centred that he could, for example, look back upon his youth and pinpoint a cluster of starlings outside an Atlantic City hotel as the start of his aversion to noise. Still, as Aaron learned, Inman was extremely successful in using his Southern aristocrat’s charm and y by women. The diary, called the publishing event of the year by some, is now in its third printing of about 4,000. However, Aaron said it probably will never get wide use, such as in a college literature course. Aaron professes to like all of the characters, whose names were changed and whose photographs were omitted to avoid legal complications. Some of the more obseure characters have tried to contact him but he must put off most of them because he's too busy with other projects. Aaron is president of The Library of America, which publishes American Classics. Aaron retains a special affection for Eveylyn Yates Innian, Arthur's wife, whom he considers the hero of the work. He got to know her while editing the diary and grew to hope she would never read the work and be forced to confront some of the cruelties her husband had kept from her. She died last June, three months before the diary was published Prior to her death, she told Aaron in words he paraphrased in his dedication: “I don't have to read it. I lived it.” Amnesty criticizes Nicaragua LONDON (AP) — A that Nicaragua's leftist government often jails SS leaders, lawyers and trade unionists for short periods to intimidate and harass them. The London-based human rights organization ped Nicaragua's Sandinista government has punished military men for murder and ‘rape of prisoners, but Se reported killings and disappearances have not been cleared It also said there have been frequent reports from deserters and witnesses of the torture, mutiliation and murder of prisoners by U.S,-supported Nicaraguan rebels. The number of victims “is believed to total many hundreds,” the report said. It cited a military manual previously distributed by the U.S. Central Intelli Agency that ag: such abuses. The manual was discontinued in 1983. Amnesty International said it has sent four missions to PHILIPPINE ELECTION since the d the forces of 5 gy -wing President Anastasio Somoza in July 1979. The missions uncovered human rights violations by both the government of President Daniel Ortega and the rebels, the report said. But the missions afterward. These detentions seemed to represent a pattern of intimidation and harassment. Prisoners have reported they were subjected to on alleged by the government, it said, because the organisation's role is to press governments to uphold human rights DENIED FAIR TRIAL Under the Sandinista government, political prisoners may be held for up to several months, denied a fair trial and be subjected to poor prison conditions, the report said. “Short-term arrests of prisoners of conscience have been carried out under a state of emergency in force since 1962,” it said. “Most of these prisoners are released without coming to trial, and prisoners of abuses” by g eee nny eweree S m and the reported killing of others in December 1961. It said those cases have not been sai investigated. convicted of crimes have usually been pardoned shortly Vote count drags on MANILA (AP) — Officials investigating the slaying of a they said was election-rig- ging by Marcos’s supporters, no's campaign in the central province of Antique, was official “quick counts” of re- turns from the country’s police and military personnel.” Pope suggests helping hand VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope John Paul, in his Len- the midst of this world full of suffering? Does the parable Play portrays Laurel MONTREAL (CP) — “Ollie likes horses and golf,” Stan Laurel once observed. “You know my hobbies — and I married them all.” Well, most of them. Laurel, the British-born half of the Laurel and Hardy comedy duo, was married eight times — to four differ. ent women. While his domestic life may have been a disaster, Lau rel's professional partnership with Oliver Hardy was a show business success story Gone With Hardy is the story of Laurel's stormy love affair with an Australian vaudeville actress named Kate. In Australian play wright David Allen's version of events, Kate was the vic- tim of success. For years, Kate was Lau rel’s stage partner, but she couldn't make the transition to film and was replaced by Hardy, a 305-pound southern gentleman who started out in law. Spanning the period from 1910 to 1926, Gone With Hardy is set in the gruelling world of the vaudeville cir- cuit where Laurel's comic touch took shape. Later, when he moved to the big sereen, Laure! team ed up with Hardy and be. came the object of the latter's seorn in scores of movies. MAKES DEBUT The three-character musi cal based on Kate and Lau rel’s relationship made its North American debut six years ago at Toronto's Inter national Theatre Festival It was brought to Montreal by Ontario-born director Ken Chubb. The play marks Chubb’s return to Canada after 15 years in London, where he did lunchtime theatres and children's plays and ran a 200-seat theatre. With his children reaching adolescence and the threat of cuts in theatre subsidies, Chubb and his wife decided LICENCED DINING ROOM FEBRUARY SPECIAL FEBRUARY 1 TO FEBRUARY 28 2 For Price of 1 — Steak Dinners ON Tub. Borre!. Box 25% Off Open 4 p.m. Daily Call 365-3294 CO-ORDINATED DINNER SPECIAL! ¢ Shrimp Cocktail * Roast Duck with Raspberry and Brandy Sauce ° Strawberry Cheesecake e and a fresh Rose $16.50 DINING ROOM SPECIAL FEBRUARY 10-16 VEAL OSCAR with all the usual delicious accompaniments $12.95 ““LOOSE ENDZ”’ from Spokane Plays Top 40 in the POWDER KEG PUB WEDNESDAY TO SATURDAY NO COVER CHARGE RESERVATIONS PHONE 262-7375 \___ the UPLANDER HOTEL __) to come back to Canada after feeling “a sense of dislocation in Gone With Hardy, he says, is a comment on the dyna mies of a durable relation ship. Chubb has been mar. ried for 20 years to his child hood sweetheart, whom he met in high school in Tills onburg, Ont “| perfectly understand what is at the bottom of a good partnership or mar riage.” he said. “A lot of cre ativity can come out of it. “I really don't think I'd have done half of what I have in theatre without Shirley.” A playwright, Shirley Bar rie is writer-in-residence at Essex University in Britain. Her most recent work will open at Toronto's Young People’s Theatre next sea son. NEC to feature Portugal The National Exhibition Centre in Castlegar will host an exhibit on Portugal in March. The exhibit, entitled Por tugal: Ten Centuries of His tory, has been organized by the National Archives of the Toree do Tombo in Lisbon, Portugal and is being cir culated in Canada through the International Program of the National Museums of Canada on behalf of the Por tuguese embassy The show opens March 2. J.C. Valadas of the Por tuguese consulate in Van couver, representing Portu guese ambassador Luis Hen rique Cutilerio Navega, will officially open the exhibit at 2 p.m. at a reception hosted by the NEC. The exhibition endeavors to bring to the public a living history of Portugal through documents which evoke past events and at the same time awaken the consciousness of a people who played a pre dominant role in the evolu tion of civilization and the creation of a Portuguese culture, says a prepared re lease. The exhibition encompass es a vast period dating from the 9th century before the birth of the Portuguese na tion to the 20th century, the release says. The documents chosen for exhibit include the oldest one, relating to the in dependence of Portugal and mentioning Alfonso Henri ques as king; the papal bull, Manifestis Probatum, issued by Alexander III in 1179, recognizing Portugal as a state; and the Proclamation Act of John I by the assembly of Coimbra, which calls to mind the crisis of 1383-1385. As for the era of “great discoveries,” vafious docu ments refer to! the many deployments which led to Europe's opening up to new worlds. Others give an ac count of the institutions or events which were parti cularly significant in the his tory of Portugal and its re lations with other countries. The archives of the Toree do Tombo are among the old est and richest in Europe, the release says. Established prior to the existence of Por tugal as a nation, they date back to Count Henrique, the father of the first king of Portugal. Alfonso Henriques. WOW SHOWING! WED THU. FRI Malpractice Made Perfect. SHOW TIMES | 7.00 & 9:00ra_ “SPECTACULAR...” —LENARD MAL TIN, TONIGHT ENTERT ASTLE SAT) SUN MON TUE, LOUIS GOSSETT, Jr. THEATRES ie Gra DENNIS QuaiD key opposition figure held a national police officer’ under “technical arrest” today, and the National Assembly scheduled another attempt to determine the winner of last Friday's presidential vote. The candidates, President Ferdinand Marcos and op- position leader Corazon Aquino, were studying U.S. President Ronald Reagan's plan to send- special envoy Philip Habib to help reconcile the bitterness created by a vote process flawed by fraud and violence. The assembly, dominated by Marcos's supporters, fail- ed Tuesday to begin can vassing the votes due to a lack of quorum. Opposition party members walked out to protest what and many members of Mar- cos's New Society Movement left early or did not show up, leaving only 78 of 190 depu ties present. Assembly members were scheduled to make another effort to begin the official vote canvass today. A spokesman at military headquarters in Manila said Gen. Fidel Ramos, comman- der of the national police, had ordered the “technical ar- rest” of Capt. John Paloy, in connection with the death of former governor Evelio Jav- ier, a supporter of Aquino. Technical arrest means that a person is confined to barracks or othe res. trieted, but not actually jail- ed or char, with a crime. Javier, c! in of Aqui- shot dead Tuesday outside the provincial capital build ing. Witnesses said a group of men chased Javier in an alley and fired at least 50 shots, hitting him more than 20 times. A report from the gover- nor said as many as six men may have been involved in killing Javier, and a military spokesman said a hunt was Authorities say more than 90 people have died in elec- tion-related violence since the start of the campaign Dee. 6. Latest figures indicated that Marcos and Aquino were maintaining their relative positions in the two main un- nearly 86,000 Marcos continued to lead Aquino by four percentage points, 52 to 48, in the count by the government Commis- sion on Elections. In that tally, Marcos had 6,449,552 votes to Aquino’s 5,906,206, on the basis of 58.4 per cent of the precincts. The 53-year-old widow of Marcos's former political ri- val Benigno Aquino led by the same four-point margin in the tabulations by the inde- pendent National Movement for Free Elections, or Nam- frel. That count, based on 65.8 per cent of the precincts, gave her 7,156,073. There are 26 million regis tered voters, and vote totals so far indicate that at least 21 million voted. Shcharansky calls family MOSCOW (REUTER) — Freed Soviet dissident Ana toly Shcharansky telephoned his family in Moscow from his new home in Jerusalem today and described his last days in captivity during a one-hour conversation, his brother, Leonid, said The brother said that Shcharansky reported he was rushed from a labor camp near the central Soviet city of Perm by KGB security police Liberi agents toa prison in Moscow on Jan. 22 and was not al- lowed to take any of his po ssessions with him. The Jewish human rights activist remained there until Monday, when he was flown to East Berlin for his release to the West on Tuesday, the brother said. During their talk, Shchar. ansky, 38, told his brother he was first informed by the a will take Duvalier PARIS (REUTER) — Li beria has told France it is ready to give asylum to ous ted Haitian dictator Jean Claude Duvalier “and the problem will be resolved in the next few days,” a French government spokesman said today The spokesman, Georgina Dufoix, told reporters after a cabinet meeting that Exter. nal Affairs Minister Roland Dumas had reported to col leagues on France's decision to receive Duvalier for a short time only “The Liberian government had made known that it could receive him but the president (Samuel Doe) was not there for the moment,” Dufoix quoted Dumas as saying. “Thus the problem will be resolved in the next few days.” The spokesman gave no further details. Duvalier has been clois tered in a luxury hotel in the alpine lakeside town of Tall oires since he fled Haiti last Friday. Duman had said Tuesday that France had offered Duvalier temporary asylum after a late-night telephone request from States, acting as “the only way to avoid a bloodbath” in Haiti. Earlier today, both the Ex. ternal Affairs Ministry and the Liberian Embassy in Paris declined comment on reports from Monrovia, Liberia's capital, on Tuesday that the African country, founded by returned Ameri- can slaves, would give Duva lier asylum if he requested it. In Brussels, Belgian offi- cials said they were unaware of the reported arrival in Belgium of Duvalier family members but said Duvalier himself would not be wel- the United ~ U.S. ambassador to East Germany on Monday that he would be part of an East West prisoner swap. Leonid, 39, said Anatoly seemed extremely tired and said he had wondered whe ther he would ever get through Tuesday's ordeal, which he called a “mad day.” “When they took him from the camp he was given no time to take his things, in- cluding some letters from his late father that he treas. ured,” Leonid said. “They didn’t tell him anything (about leaving the Soviet Union) and Anatoly did not want to raise his hopes.” Leonid and the rest of the family had campaigned, for Anatoly’s release since This —-ARTS= arrest in 1977 and sentencing to 13 years on charges of spying for the U.S., charges he denied. Leonid said his brother was deprived of his Soviet citi- zenship once his plane left Soviet airspace. “They said it was because of spying but Anatoly has always denied it.” Anatoly told him now that he is reunited with his wife, Avital, in Israel all he wants to do for the next few days is rest, The Shcharanskys’ mother, Ida Milgrom, said she and Leonid would be going to Ovir, the passport office of the Soviet Interior Ministry, to inquire about joining her son in Israel Calendar The month of February . . . The Castlegar Arts Council's Presentation Series will feature John de Jong. o local Nelson artist, at the Homesteod Soup and Sondwich Shoppe February 23 - March 30... The N.E C. 1s presenting Por tugal: Ten Centuries of History. I! encompasses o vast ten message on Ash Wed- nesday, urged Roman Cath- olies today to become Good Samaritans by extending a helping hand to the poor, sick Christian churches by fasting and penitence to commem- orate Jesus's fasting in the wilderness. “Charity rids us of our sel- the wall of our isolation, it opens our eyes to our neigh bor, to those more distant from us and to the whole of humanity.” Noting daily published re- ports on “desperate appeals of millions of our less for- tunate brethren,” the Pope said: “How can we remain in- different before those child- dren with their despairing faces and skeleton-like bod- ies? Can our Christian con- sciences remain uncaring in of the Good Samaritan still have something to say to us?” He said the Christians should be guided by the law of charity in the Gospel, “so well defined by—the words and the constant éxample of Christ, the Good Samaritan.” Charity does not hesitate, for it is the expression of our faith,” he said. Tues., Feb. 11 to Sun., Feb. 16 fensiaer $19°° eine $99 nen Sp $995 ALL ENTREES INCLUDE OUR NEW SALAD BAR Reservations phone 364-2222 TERRA NOVA M¢ Triple Seafood Platter Boked Potato or Pos! Vegetable Garni, 4% Gorlic Bread MON. - — 8 min. Ci Special Attraction AT THE MARLANE HOTEL SAT., FEB. 17 - 22 presenting Krista Lynn an exciting & unique performer with unique shows of varying times and lengths. Don't miss any of these shows! — 25min. Rubber Stamps Made to Order CASTLEGAR NEWS 197 Columbie Ave. “ ae e-store a — 22 min. Photograph — 20 min. MARLANE HOTEL Castlegar SAVE vr to $136 Enjoy the WARM B.C. Rockies, ski on man-made and natural snow and swim in Canada’s Largest Crystal-Clear, Odorless, Natural Hot Pools | TYPE SETTING Give your newsletters meeting bulletins, etc, @ professional appeoronce Comero-ready type for your photocopier CASTLEGAR NEWS 365-7266 February 28 April 6 you can help us telephoned t¢ period dating from the 9th to the 20th century. Open 9:30 4:30 weekdays and 10:30 - 4:30 weekends = The Enemy Within about the Premier, his cleaning woman ot 8:00 p.m. at the $.H.S.S. activity room sored by Unemployment Action Centre . The Castleger Arts Counc Calgory Boys Choir pertorm. We need people who would like. to billet one of these talented boys. Phone 365-3226 it Items for this bi-monthly feature should be Lyndo Carter of the Castlegar Arts Council at 365-3226. is CASTLEGAR SAVINGS CREDIT UNION —_ © political comedy restramt and you This 1s spon ts having the Sponsored by Announcement Canadian RED CROSS SOCIETY Castlegar Branch ANNUAL MEETING Will be held in West Kootensy Red Cross Communication Centre at Room 102, Sandman Inn Wed., Feb. 19 7:30 p.m. Valentine's D HI ARROW ARMS Invites you to their ISLANDS PARADISE PARTY FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14 Exciting ' Captive the Islands of the World” y Hl ARROW | MS Romantic make this a night to remember. Dance away to the sound of G-Force, 7 a Band from en @Mini SUNDANCE Package Sunday night through Thursday (3 nights) in the Fairmont Lodge Six full-day ski passes plus unlimited use of our world-famous Hot Pools Four two-hour lessons with a C-S.LA ski pro ial Awards Ni Tiro-thy pines 10 our Fabulous Sports Centre TOTAL VALUE (2 PERSONS) @Mini DRIFTER Package Sunday night through Thursday (3 nights) in the Fairmont Lodge. Reg season value $255.00 Six full-day ski passes honored at Fair Kimberley and Fer nie ski areas. Reg. season value Unili use of our world-famous Hot Pools. Reg. season value Two-day pass to our fabulous Sports Centre. Reg. season value TOTAL VALUE (2 PERSONS ONLY $132 UBLE OCCUPANCY 99.00 32.00 wie PER PERSON Western Night with pig-calling contest Live entertainment nightly season value $255.00 season value $434.00 ONLY $152 © Ski GROUPS: CONVENTIONS @ Nightly accommodation in the Fair mont Lodge (4 to a room). Reg. season value Four full-day ski plus unlimited use of our world. famous Hot Pools. Reg. season value FOUR PERSONS. TOTAL VALUE ONLY $27 PER PERSON FOUR TO A ROOM Relax and play in our Hot Pools Flambé dinners and desserts All Prices in Effect Until March 30, 1986. Book Soon to Avoid Disappointment! ES TABLISE {ED Ask the newspapers running this ad tor a brochure 264-0746 OR 264-6061 1-800-663-4979 INFORMATION. (604) 345-0311 Calgary RESERVATIONS ONLY: Alta. B.C. and Sask or phone Fairmont Hor Soo pd tal