July 5 1989 Fridey 8: Somer 12 Noon to 12 Midni sri aoepnanent 6 sPvca SecAnons) WEEKLY MEAT DRAWS very Sohurtay °F SUMMER a ae CNIC D-sar- D DINING LOUNGE OPEN 4 P.M. DAILY CLOSED MONDAY AIR CONDITIONED WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS.ACCEPTED RESERVATIONS FOR PRIVATE PARTIES “3294 Located | Mile South of Weigh\Scale in Ootischenia LICENCED DINING ROOM— 365-3294 OLA awe, W, NOW BOOKING SECOND BUS CROSS CANADA TOUR September | to October | SEE THE BEAUTIFUL PARADE OF COLOURS! FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL HENNE TRAVEL 1410 Bay Ave. Trail 368-5595 WEST'S TRAVEL 1217-31d St., Castiegor 365-7782 Canadiv:n Partner Castlegay, hearts beating our non-stop with great news! OUR NEW & 30 PM NON-STOP FLIGHT: TO VANCOUVER ervice, T r you. With th Vancouver, including a on to fly Its one more re t your tra ns, Ca s line agent meAur has even aree daily flights fternoon non-stop our way today. For Or Canadian TimeAir THE HEART OF THE WESTERN SKIES WATERCOLOR ARTIST! be on display at the Gal . The work of West Kootenay painter Dool. ry of the Kootenays from July 14 to July 19. LOCAL ART FEATURED McDonnell will New show. to open Kootenay Bay artist Ted Diakow will be exhibiting his ceramic works at the Gallery of the Kootenays from July 14 through July 19 along with the watercolors of Doolee McDonnell Diakow has worked in ceramics sin ce the late 1960's. Finding the three dimensional world of ceramics more complete and its ancient earth materials more compelling and demanding than his earlier experiences THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL DELUXE BURGER 1521 Columbia Ave. 365-8388 as a painter and printmaker, Diakow fully embraced this medium, a galler) news release Says His newest work includes sculptured forms, wall panels and plates. sized cutout containers, and the use of fired glass. Diakow’s works are in several permanent public collections including: Alberta House; London, England; Government House, Ed monton; Massey Foundation Collec tion, Toronto; and University of Calgary Collection. He has received numerous commissions from McDonnell, a life-long resident of the Wst'Kootenays, will show a collec tion of ber most recent watercolors during the exhibit yrant; full Her paintings ar ot color and hght, the release says. bach work retlects a sense of wonder of the colors of simple things wagon, hanging « the red of a child's a pair of shoes, a park bench drenched in rain, the release says There will be a reception for the two artists at the Gallery of the Kootenays July 14 from 6:30 to 9:30 The public is invited to meet the on Friday p.m artists and view their works. business firms. 10 TV SHAW CABLE Trail/ Castlegar July 5, 7,9, 1989 5 p.m. (Wed) 9 a.m. (Fri) 11 a.m. (Sun) Canada Post Today — John MacPherson talks to Lisa Turner from Canada Post media relations about the changes being made in Canada Post 6 p.m. (Wed) 10 a.m. (Fri) 12 p.m. COMMUNITY Bulletin Board SUMMER SCHOOL OF THE ARTS ourses in Music 9 35272402 July 17-29. 37 ¢ Theotre. Nel Thursdays tor Sundays paper and Writing: Visual Arts, Dance Healing A\ profit organizot y be liste 1al words are 20¢ each. Bold fo: s also half-price. Minimum ar three times). Deadlines are 5 p.m p.m. Mondays lor Wednesdays pape Notices should be brought fo the Castlegar News at 197 Columbia Av COMMUNITY Bulletin Board CASTLEGAR SAVINGS CREDIT UNION. YOUR COMMUNITY FINANCIAL CENTRE 601 FOR OVER 40 YEARST TLEGAR 365-7232 castt lath St SLOCAN PARK Hwy. 6 © 226-7212 (Sun) Kiro Manor Awareness Program Irene Page and Pat presented a talk on footcare 6:45 p.m. (Wed) 10:45 a.m. 12:45 p.m. (Sun) Faith Alive a repeat of the Christian informational (Fri) This is program locally produced by Living Waters Faith Fellowship in Castlegar 7:30 p.m. (Wed) 11:30 a.m. (Fri) 1:30 p.m. (Sun) CBC Newsworth: lim Frewer from Shaw Cable in Van: Donaldson Newsworld about the new couver interviews Jean from CBC channel which is slated to come to, the Shaw Cable servicts July 31 8 p.m. (Wed) 12 p.m. (Fri) 2 p.m. (Sun) AIDS in the Workplace This program was recorded from a live telecast linked hosts from Vancouver, Ottawa and Quebec The program deals with the problems associated with AIDS in the workplace and what should not do. 10:30 p.m. (Wed) 2:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. (Sun) — Sign Off NOTE: This schedule is repeated on Friday starting at 9 a.m. and again on sunday starting at If a.m satellite which an employer should and (Fri) STARTS FRIDAY! AVOID THE LARGE ee, NEXT ATTRACTION Canada promoted in U.S. market LOS ANGELES (CP) visiting Southern California might be surprised to see Anne of Green Gable or the kids of Degrass: Junior High unexpeciedly pop up on their hotel IV Canadians sets. Especially if the show is interrupted by commercials enticing Americans to vacation in-Super Natural British Columbia Promoting tourism and helping sell Canadian TV shows are two jobs ha died by Canadian government offices in Los Angeles. Four Alberta, Ontario,Quebec and British Columbia — have offices in the city along with the federal gover nment and Teletilm ¢ federal film- funding agency Each operates independently Sup pose an American film producer wan ted to take advantage of the exchange rate to shoot his movie in Canada. If he called the Ontario or B.C. represen tatives, they’d refer him to their film development officers in Canada Quebec, however employee in its Los Angeles office to provinces area anada,, the has a full ume deal with such requests, while Alberta American consultant to province as a pays an promote the location. Gerry Smith is that consultant. He movie has been in the movie business since 1949 as a still photographer, a union representative, an agent for directors and cinematographers, and a member of both the Los Angeles and Califormia film commissions KNOWS PEOPLE “My function is to production companies here that may have interest in going to Alberta,” Smith says work with Fibre, photo works to be displayed The Langham Galleries, as part of their summer season, open two new exhibits tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. Tradewinds in Gallery | explores movements in fibre with a strong em phasis on printed and hand-printed silks that literally move with the wind, a gallery news release says. Works by fibre artists from B.C. and Alberta are highlighted in what promises to be a very lovely, colorful and airy summer time exhibit, the release says. This exhibit was curated by the Langham Gallery In Gallerey II, the Langham is proud to present Animism, an exhibit of ex traordinary and unusual camera work by Vernon artist Pamela Mann Walker For some time this talented artist has been experimenting with a pinhole camera producing exciting photdgraphic effects, the release says The resulting grainy image has the ef fect of a pointellist painting. The pinhole method involves using no lens Sheuses 126 film and the equivalent of F stop 110 produce an incredible depth of field. No focussing is required. The exposures take several seconds. Mann- Walker is very interested in the ability to record movement and passage of time in this way. With the luxury of long exposure at times, Mann-Walker can dance into and out of her photos in a ghost-like fashion, the release says. “*I have never before felt so close to my material and my media,’’ Mann Walker says in the release, ‘as | do with this pinhole camera. By persisten- ce, experimentation, playing with errors and being open to the material and the process of pinhole photography, I have become much more aware of my own focus, Spirituality and sense of past, present and future. The media is the message and Lam listening toit Opening reception for both exhibits is Thursday, July 6 at 7:30 p.m. Shows run until Aug. 10 at the Langham in Kaslo. * Salads ¢ Fresh Fruit and Vegetables * Meats & Cheese OUR 30 ITEM SALAD BAR MAKES DINING OUT A DIETER’S DELIGHT! SALAD ater AVAILABLE sonresen. ax 651-18th Street BUSINESS . Economy bounces back OTTAWA (CP) — economy grew strongly from a sharp The country’s in April, “The average growth rate of 0.1 per cent in March and April is probably a in March, Statistics Canada says. The economy grew by 0.5 per cent in April after shrinking by 0.3 per cent the month before, The March contraction was the first decline in economic tivity since October, 1986. ¢ government agency cautioned that the early arrival of the Easter h oliday this year may have thrown statistics out of kilter. better of monthly economic growth at this time,”’ Statistics Canada said. Easter fell in March for only the second time in the last nine years, making results on the economy's per formance less accurate. Total production of goods and ser vices.in the economy, measured by in- dustry and adjusted for inflation and seasonal variations, rose to $405.2 billion in April from $403.1 billion the month before, Statistics Canada said. Three-quarters of the economy's April growth came from goods producing industries, with the biggest gains posted by mining and manufac- turing industries. Mining production rose sharply by 3.2 per cent following declines in the last two quarters. Manufacturing in- creased by 0.8 per cent following four might kill them. pokkuri byo alarming rate, researchers say long working hours under reduce their risk about 79. pany president Hirotoshi Inui, Fuji Sankei, Haruo Shikanai. MANY AFFE drivers, teachers, tenance workers. It’s called karoshi — death from overwork — or sudden death. The number of such deaths among Japanese businessmen is growing at an Victims share a common pattern: from heart attacks or strokes after months or years of heavy stress, Kiyoyasu Arikawa, who advises executives on how to Arikawa found that sudden deaths among tor executives have risen in the past 20 years, from 10 in 1969 to about 150 in 1987. Recently, he says, the number of such deaths has grown fastest among those in their 40s and 50s, men who on average could expect to live to The risks of Japan's competitive work world were highlighted by the sudden deaths in the past two years of several prominent men in their 40s. publishing executive Koremichi Noma, trading com- Fanuc Co. president Nobuo Hanaoka and chairman of the mass media group But sudden death is not confined to executives. Various reports show such deaths occur among taxi journalists; salespeople and main- Japanese businessmen's loyalty proves deadly TOKYO (AP) — Japanese businessmen aren’t concerned just about market shares and interest rates. These days, some are wondering whether their jobs A hot line set sudden deaths — line. says Dr. onit.”” They include death. hours for naps and western Japan. He work. inquiries from families of premature, sudden deaths estimates that as many as 600 Japanese may have died of overwork last year In Japan, where time spent on the job and personal sacrifice are viewed as key measures of company loyalty, the temptation to overwork is overwhelming, says Hiroshi Kawahito, a lawyer associated with the hot “People feel companies are more important than their individual rights and they’re praised by the com- pany if they work hard. Their pay and position depend Families of the victims are usually unprepared to cope with the loss of a breadwinner. The hot line coun- sels them on how to obtain government assistance and in some cases workmen's compensation. In more than 95 per cent of the cases, the gover- nment ruled against paying workmen’s compensation because it's difficult to prove overwork was the cause of death, Kawahito says. In the past, the government required that families of suddendeath cases prove the victim was overworked on the day he died. It now accepts evidence an overwork victim was under extreme stress in the week before his For years, Noboru Fujii directed traffic on 24-hour shifts, sometimes longer, every other day, with only six up by a lawyers’ group to handle people who suffered meals at the Kobe ferry terminal in died at age 60 of a heart attack at "Light butter" available only in Ontario stores OTTAWA (CP) — A new product called light butter will go on sale at On- tario grocery stores in mid-July — but nowhere else in Canada. Agriculture Canada says Lactantia Pure and Simple won't be sold anywhere else because ‘‘light butter’’ doesn’t officially exist yet. Ault Foods announced its so-called breakthrough butter in April, promising to get it into stores by July. Ault is aiming at about five per cent of Canada’s $420-million-a-year retail butter market. Store sales of butter have been dropping about three per cent a year for 15 years, as consumers increasingly trim fat, cholesterol and calories. Ault, a Johh Labatt Inc. sub- sidiary, claims to be the first dairy in the world to find the secret of churning a less fattening butter and expects to spend $6 million on getting the product from laboratories to grocery dairy cases. The product is made at its Win- chester, Ont., plant But Agriculture Canada says anything called light butter won't be sold in the rest of Canada until it becomes a standardized product under the Canada Agricultural Products Act. That could take another nine or 10 months. Under the act, light butter doesn’t Chahko-Mika Mall exist. There’s butter, calorie-reduced butter and dairy spread. But no light butter. The act says butter is made of 80-per-cent milk fat The products act governs products traded interprovincially and inter- nationally; it has no jurisdiction over a product made and sold within a province. Ault could only sell light but- ter in other provinces if it had plants there. “If they're going to use the name butter, butter is a standardized product and must contain 80 per cent butter fat to call it butter, so we have to write a new category for light butter,”’ said Jim Standish director of legislation and audit for Agriculture Canada’s dairy, fruit and vegetable division. * Rainbow Account aoe OVER 40 YEARS! CASTLEGAR 601-18th Hg Ses:7232 Chequing Savings CASTLEGAR SAVINGS CREDIT UNION YOUR COMMUNITY FINANCIAL CENTRE SLOCAN PARK Hwy. 6 © 226-7212 Ault has been wending along a bureaucratic trail since October to get approvals for a product that defies all categories The Department of Consumer and Corporate Affairs governs the use of the word light in regard to food. A product must have at least 25-per-cent less fat before it can receive the “‘light’” moniker. And the Food and Drug Act, policed by the Health Department, becomes involved over the use of the word pure in the brand name Pure and Simple. Ault’s butter is made with the same ingredients as regular butter. Cream is churned until it separates into butter fat and buttermilk. But Ault has figured out how to reblend buttermilk into the butter to lower the fat content. A Simple, Sate System of Money Management! yy 1150 Lakeside Drive, Nelson ‘The Meeting Place’ monthly declines in the last six months. Statistics Canada also said produc- tion by services industries increased by 0.2 per cent in April, recovering from a 0.2 per cent drop in March MORE SPENDING Strong gains in consumer spending after several months of weakness con tributed to the advanee But the financial services industries declined for the third straight month, reflecting a downturn in the housing market. “*The continued decline in the finan- ce, insurance and real estate industry was largely accounted for by lower ac- tivity by real esi agents in the resale housing market in the last three mon- ths,’’ Statistics Canada said. The government agency also repor- ted mixed news on inflation. The May price of raw materials, which ultimately gets passed on to con- sumers, jumped by 1.4 per cent from the month before. The biggest reason for the sharp rise wasa 5.5 per cent increase in fuel prices and higher prices for cattle and hogs. Raw material prices were 3.7 per cent higher in May than they were in May, 1988, as rising energy costs were offset by a 7.1 per cent drop in metal prices. But prices at the wholesale level were unchanged in May from the previous month and only 2.8 per cent above May, .1988 levels, Statistics Canada said Kiwanis Lic. 1656 Upstairs in Trell’s Towne Squere Tuesday, July 11, 1989 sa, $1000 $1000 © Advance Tickets Not Required * Warm Up Games at 5:50 p.m. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 364-0933 or 364-5650 Bonanza Blackout 30,000 NEW JOBS IN TOURISM BY 1992 hi wu can be ready! Investigate hov, Selkirk College's eight-month TOURISM CERTIFICATE PROGRAM FOR SUPERVISORS Can prepare you for mid-management positions ir Recreation and Resort Operations and Food and Beverage Operations Receive practical industry experience along with classroom instruction. The Tourism Careers Department invites applications for the course starting October 2, 1989 Contact the Admissions Office Nelson Campus, 352-6601 for details. This program is recognized by the Pacitic Rim institute of Tourism kirk &% NELSON CAMPUS——___ 2001 Silver King Rd., Nelson, B.C. VIL IC8 le 4 352-6601 S FERRARO’S Valu Your satisfaction is our main concern Tide * with bleach (8 L.) laundry 7 | detergent 10. 9 cross rib roast kg. 4.39 1 cut from Canada grade A beet * boneless 9 sliced T a - chicken breasts family pack kg. 5.47 Ib. a California grown * no.! gr seedless grapes kg. 1.94 Ib. bread California grown * no. 1 SuperValu * white * whole wheat gov't inspected poultry large cantaloupe kg. .73 Ib. Gret > yorietY| Big Dipper asst'd flavours 2t ice cream .99 Campfire ¢ slided side bacon 500 g. pkg. .99 ry $25.00 in groceries purchased, entitles you to GET ALL 4 of these products at these super low prices get | of each with $25; get 2 of each with $50; get3 of each with $75; etc. etc., ete. imported ¢ no. 1 cello carrots SuperValu tray buns doz. pkg. 3 Ib. pkg. AQ | .99 Prices effective July 2 to July 8 Two locations to serve you: Downtown and Plaza! PLAZA SUPER-VALU OPEN SUNDAYS 10 A.M.-6 P.M. OPEN THURS NIGHT UNTIL 9 FRI 7 P.M.! ‘SIDEWALK SALE CONTINUES ‘30 Stores To Serve You”