This Week DEXTER’S PU JULY 12-18 CALGARY STAMPEDE ROCKY MOUNTAIN TOUR HIGH ARROW ARMS Your entertainment centre of the Kootenays! Proudly presents Citizen One of Western North America's Premier Rock and Roll Acts 9:30 p.m. - 1:30a.m. May 6 to 11 651 - 18th Street Castiegor MAY 10 - 12 TRAIL, B.C. Dombasle returns to mini-series LOS ANGELES (CP) — The ABC publicist steers slinky Arielle Dombasle, one of the stars of the four-hour Lace II mini-series, into a room of television critics and painstakingly pronounces her name. “I'd like you to meet R-E-L Dome-Bahl,” she says. The network also hands out a biography of the American-born, Mexican-raised and Paris-based actress, director, dancer and singer, with helpful hints on how to conquer the French name. “And her name isn't hard to say,” it says. “R-E-L. Let it ripple, like the Seine. Let it bubble, like Dom Perignon. And think American-born. Like ‘AstroDOME.” Like ‘Take me out ot the BAHL game.” River, champagne and baseball analogies aside, getting a grip on her monicker's a struggle for many in this land of many dialects, none of them remotely related to French. The first question comes from someone who calls her “Aerial,” while another journalist later calls her “Miss Dumbell.” Neither automobile accessory nor terribly weighty, Dombasle is what the sexists love to call deceptive packaging. Sure, she’s so thin she has to swallow a walnut to hold up her pajamas, but the granddaughter of an b: dor and the di h of a busii man is anything but a bubblehead. HISTORIC QUESTION. It will be recalled that Lace was the 1983-84 TV season's highest-rated multi-part movie. It followed Lili (Phoebe Cates), an international sex goddess, through a (“x ridden, glitzy journey that revolved around the now-historic question: “Which one of you bitches is my mother?” Lace II, tonight and Monday on ABC, finds Lili and mother Judy (Deborah Raffin) reunited until peril rears what has historically been a very ugly head. Judy is kidnapped and held for a $1-million ransom in Thailand. Lili, who's been bilked out of most of her money and some of her credit cards, and friends Pagan (Brooke Adams) and Maxine (Dombasle) fire off around the world to find Lili's father to fork over the money. They have only one clue: Judy's autobiographical novel during her schoolgirl years describes three rapes. Only one of them really happened. One of the three men in this libellous work is Lili’s father; thus the need for triple-teaming the urgent search for the other parent. And yes, Lace fans, Lili will get to ask the question: “Which one of the bastards is my father?” ‘GLAMOROUS TRASH’ Lace and Lace II were Dombasle's first TV roles. Accustomed to arty French films — she's worked with Francois Truffaut was a good friend — she’s awe-struck by the clout of American TV and the allure of what she acknowledges is “glamorous trash. “It's successful, I think, because it makes people dream, especially women,” she says. “In France, we called it ‘la bovarisme,’ a woman in love with her husband who dreams ‘omance, wanting to find a passionate life, T'peastonate Her Four hours with Lace II, she says, is not unlike an encounter with a supermarket romance novel. directors Roman Polanski and Erie Rohmer and the late © MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL ALASKA! Night Cruise Coach- Trail of 98 Air Whitehorse - Von. Yukon River Cruise 2 Nights Whitehorse s Conodion trom VDD sarern Not included $38 tox) PS. Ask about toking your R.V. one way from $338 Happy 30th Shirley For more information coll Seturdeys ¥ a.m. te 12 neon APPOUNTMENTS APPRECIATED From all the guys! ENTERTAINMENT OPENING RECEPTION . . Hopland examines paintings of . Castlegar resident Alf Hope Whittaker during opening reception Friday night. The paintings of the local artist, whose media includes oils, pastels, acrylics and watercolors are on display until June 7 in in the Homestead Kitchens cafe. JOHN MURRAY Admires b LOS ANGELES (AP) — John Murray has a vivid memory of the first day he worked as the star of the new movie, Moving Violations. “It was at this big donut stand in (suburban) La Puente, with a donut so big you can drive through it,” he recalled. “I showed up at 5 a.m., excited about the start of my first movie. My first movie! The first thing I saw was a sign in front of the donut. It said very proudly that it was the location for a new film: Moving Violations, starring Sally Kellerman of M-A-S-H and Bill Murray of Ghostbusters. “By afternoon about 500 kids were hanging around shouting, ‘We want Bill Mur. ray! We want Bill Murray!" ” But John Murray has no hangups about sibling rival ry. “When you're one of nine children, there's no room for sibling rivalry. You learn to get along,” he said. The 26-year-old refers to his older brother Bill as “my hero,” both in boyhood and now. He admires his 33-year- old brother as a comedian and an actor and would like to emulate the way the older Murray constructed his car eer. “I never studied Bill's technique, but I learned just by growing up in the same house with him,” John said. “Humor played a big role in our family. My father was a funny man, and my mother has a wonderful, unconscious humor.” Murray was the next to last of nine children of a lumber company vice presi Anne Murray TORONTO (CP) — “See my Claude?” says singer Anne Murray in mock-ser ious tones about her dark brown coat by Paris designer Claude Montana. Flung casually on their separate chairs, Murray and her coat are in the Toronto offices of her management , Balmur Ltd., for a For Mothers of All Sizes . . . Open 4p.m. Daily Located 1 mil LICENCED DINING ROOM FAMILY DINING Reservations for Private Parties — 365-3294 outh of weigh scales in Ootischenia Other Shows Full Portion 365-7282 High Arrow Arms Proudly Presents MISS ASIA Mon., May 6 to Sat., May 11 ‘Afternoon Delight Lunch and Bath — 12:30 p.m. daily 1:30, 4:30, 5:30 and 8:00 p.m LUNCH WILL BE SERVED HIP OF BEEF With Dip and Pototo Salad $495 n0u 651 - 18th St., Castlegor $295 Portion conversation about her new stylish look. Over the years, Murray's stage costumes have some times left people asking? “Where did she get that?” — and not because they want to rush out and buy the same. But these days, there are new answers to that ques ion. “It started in Boston, but that was nothing like the dent I put in the card here in Toronto,” she says. “Oh my goodness, I went crazy.” The pleasure she takes in clothes is a reflection of a new attitude. “I mean I don't dwell on clothes, you know,” she says. “Td prefer to put on T-shirts and shorts, but I love to look nice, and when I go out, I do. I'm not nearly so self-cons- cious as I used to be.” Asked for an inventory of what she has on, the singer is quick to her feet. Her fingers turn down the waistband of her black, crinkled leather trousers to reveal the label. WEARS DESIGNERS They were designed by Pablo and made in France. A purple sweater with empha. tie shoulders is by Judit of Toronto while her black lea rother Bill dent and his wife, an Irish clan of Wilmette, Ill. An older brother, Brian Doyle-Murray — hyphenated because ano- ther actor had chosen the name Brian Murray — has been an actor and successful screenwriter (Caddyshack). STILL COMING “Joel, who is 22, is the latest up-and-coming Mur. ray,” Murray said in an interview. “He is making a name for himself at the Sec. ond City (improvisational night spot) in Chicago.” Moving Violations, is the latest entry in the goof-up comedy sweepstakes. The butt of the comedy is the traffie school. Murray is the leader of “a hapless band of misfits, malcontents and dreamers, their licences sus. pended, their vehicles im pounded.” John Murray didn't start out to be an actor. He studied journalism at Oakton Com. munity College in Illinois and spent two years working on the aborted Inside Sports magazine. He worked as an extra on Saturday Night Live, and appeared on the short-lived The New Show Seven months ago, he was tending bar at the Hard Rock Cafe in New York. “I was fast on my feet,” he recalled. “If a customer asked for a complicated drink, I went in the other direction Or else I suggested, ‘How about a Budweiser? " Shortly afterward, an agent persuaded Murray to try for an acting career, “and three months and one day later I was playing the lead in my first movie.” has new look ther athletic shoes are Ree boks, which she also has in grey, white, blue and pink It's all part of what her manager Leonard Rambeau calls “a more contemporary look” but Murray doesn't take full credit for what she wears. “I don’t know enough about clothes to be put in charge of them,” she says. “Not for one second do I know enough to be put in charge. “That's why I have Lee and he helps me buy these things and put them all together.” Lee is Lee Kinoshita. Vevington, who a year ago replaced Juul Haalmeyer as designer of Murray's stage outfits and personal shopping aid. He’s the one who knows, for instance, that a plaid out fit she wore on her most re. cent television special was from Hyper Hyper, an em porium devoted to young London designers. In the past, Murray's in- formal, candid, irreverent nature was sometimes im pinged upon by apparent at tempts to groom her for the middle-of-the-road market place. But Murray says her cur rent fondness for leather and dramatic shoulder lines does not derive from any effort to please an audience, but is her own choice. Kinoshita-Bevington ag rees: “What she wears in her private life is coming more and more on stage. She's very relaxed in how she wears the clothes.” Copies will deteriorate LOS ANGELES (AP) A home video company has an nounced its tapes will contain an anti-piracy device that causes copies to deteriorate. “Piracy is the single biggest threat to our industry, and for years we've been inves tigating anti-piracy devices said Andre Blay, chairman of Embassy Home Entertain ment. The system uses a Process that maintains the picture quality of original cassettes but causes consid erable picture deterioration in copies. NOTICE: ALL OVER CANADA THE ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION IS CELEBRATING IT’S 60th ANNIVERSARY IN 1986. For this event the Legion is offer i direct from Holland for your gordes movie thers tulips are a special red and will grow to about 24 high for @ spectacular show of colour in your den for years to come. gor 100 Bulbs for ‘25 SMALLER AMOUNTS CHARGED ACCORDINGLY Please Contact Legion at 365-7017. ~ NEW ART GALLERY Last week marked a rather special event in the life of Trail. The College Boutique in conjunction with the Trail Art Club opened an art gallery with the remaining art estate of Velen and Velenka Fanderlik, forming their first collection. The Fanderliks were Czech emigrees who had escaped first the invading German army in the last war and then the Russians as their land was ively overrun by the two armies. An excerpt from a column I had written on Velenka at the time of her unexpected death in March 1980 reads: “In a final tribute to Brutus, in the play, Julius Caesar, Shakespeare has Antony say: ‘His life was gentle and the elements so mixed in him that nature might stand up and say to all the world,’ ‘This was a man.’ “This tribute to the noble Brutus might apply with equal justification to the late Trail artist, Velenka Fanderlik, whose sudden and unexpected passing sent a shock wave of sorrow and dismay beyond the limit of the Kootenays and terminated a most promising career and a unique personality. “She was born Stanislava Eliska Zvedelikova, in Skalika, Czechoslovakia, the second of five girls in a family of six. “By the time she was 22, she was a teacher, competent in art and several languages, and was teaching expatriate Czechs in France. When the war broke out, she was in charge of a Czech refugee camp and, when the German armies swept through Belgium into France, she and her charges became a part of a hell of terror and despair which was the retreat to Dunkirk. “Unable to get passage to England, she and what remained of her charges made their way to safety, after terrible difficulties, to unoccupied France, near the Spanish border. “Later, she met and married her husband, Velan Fanderlik, a lawyer and fellow artist and teacher, and they moved after many more adventures first to England, where she taught refugee children, and later to Canada and Trail, where her career as an artist really began.” The article then goes on to discuss her extensive art training, teachers and exhibitions and describes her as the spiritual descendent of Varley (a member of the Group of Seven) who believed that “art must have feeling.” Velen was also an artist and teacher, as well as an historian, archeologist and scholar, and had been one of the judges at the Nuremburg trials. During the Nazi invasion of France he had served as a member of the Czech army with great gallantry in the rescue of fleeing Czech refugees and had been awarded the Distinguished Service Order, the second highest military decoration in the Commonwealth by King George VI at an investiture at Buckingham palace. At the time of his equally sudden death early this year, I was honored by being asked to deliver the eulogy at his funeral service, and even more honored and surprised to receive one of the paintings from his estate. It gift to be cherished. After Velenka’s death Velen continued with his busy round of activities — arts council, folk society, international scouting programs, commemorative scrolls for special occasions and even some teaching. He was a substitute teacher, for example, for a while at Stanley Humphries Secondary School. But it was obvious to me who knew him, that his heart wasn't in it; the fire and enthusiasm had gone and he was, in effect, dying of a broken heart On the occasion of the Thursday art show I was asked to give the opening address in recognition of the two exhibiting artists. Castlegar News publisher Burt Campbell was present at the show, heard the address, and asked that I repeat it in a column, so it is he who must take the blame. On the other hand, as became the occasion, it is relatively brief “If the second Book of Samuel, Chapter 1:20-24, you will find one of the oldest recorded eulogies in the world. It is the lament of David, the king of the Israelites on the deaths in battle of Jonachon, David's dearest friend, and of Jonathan's father, Saul. “It reads in part:‘Saul and Jonathon were lovely and John Charters... Reflections & recollections lenk AND C * art show at the University of N pleasant in their lives, and in their death they were not divided. They were swifter than eagles. They were stronger than lions.” “When I was asked to say a few words on the lives of Velen and Velenka Fanderlik, these words came instantly to mind, andif Iwere wise and cautious I would leave with that statement alone. (Unfortunately, I am neither.) Moreover, Saul and his son were being extolled for their skill as leaders of their people and their prowess and courage in battle. “Velen and Velenka, too, were well recognized for their oft-tested courage and their leadership in both war and peace, abroad and in this community. They too, were lovely and pleasant in their lives, and in death they were not divided. But they were also creators and p Kk and their by example and precept, will be felt in this community for many years to come. “Paradoxically, to see and understand them at their best was to see them at a small private dinner party or an intimate evening tea. Here, within the eternal circle of their marriage, their faith and their art, the Yin and Yang of their special ionship f joned in a d totality. “Tt was here one saw how Velenka’s compassion and understanding, her gentleness and her deep religious faith — all so well reflected in her art — d and MAY DAY FAMILY PICNIC Sunday, May 5, at Birchbank from 11 a.m. etreshments, children’s games, music, é to celebrate Worker s Day a3 WOMEN'S AGLOW Will be held Wi \ Fireside. Speaker is Mrs. Veria Stuart (nee Wii ot the Castlegar orea). All lodies ‘ provided at 704 - 21st Street. ROBSON RIVER OTTERS CASH BINGO ‘ 11 at Arena Complex. Advance tickets $8, at Johnny's Grocery, Castlegar Phormasove, Kel Pri Mountain Ski & Sports Hut, Central Food. Eorly Bird 6 p.m., regular 7 p.m. 2% MEETING 8 at 10:30 o.m. at the SELKIRK TOASTMASTERS CLUB ~ Dinner meeting at Hi Arrow Hi Wed., May 15 at 6:30 . Special guest — Gerry Frederick, past president B.C. Chamber of Commerce, will speak on “Doing Business in Tough Times’. All welcome. For tickets, phone 365.6448. 23% iegor and District aoe jed here. The first 10 ore . Boldtaced wor- ) count as two words. consecut ive inser- and 5 Monday’ Wednesday's poper. Notices should ‘astlegor News ot 197 Columbia Ave. Bulletin Board NOTICE The Board of Management of the Hospital requires directors to replace members completing their terms of office. Join the Hospital Society today. and Velen Fanderlik at his tirst one-man jotre Dame in Nelson, in 1971. Membership in the Society is open to all persons in the Hos; ital District: Castlegar, Robson, Brilliant, Ootischenia, Blueberry, Thrums, etc. DIRECTORS ON BOARD OF MANAGEMENT 4 appointed 6 elected Two new directors must be elected at the Annual General Meeting on June 13, 1985. (2 directors for a 3 year term). Candidates must join the Society betore May 13, 1985. HAPPY 21st! YOU may join the Society by paying $1.00 at the Hospital between the hours of 8.a.m.-9 p.m. Present members may renew their membership any time jore the Annual Meeting In June. CASTLEGAR & DISTRICT HOSPITAL SOCIETY modified the forceful, direct and intellectual approach of her beloved Velen, so that in her company he was always at his best “To recall their lives and their art as we are doing on this oceasion is to recall the words of the 19th century English artist, poet and mystic, William Blake, who like them felt that the greatest vision of life was: To see the world in a grain of sand And heaven in a wild flower. To hold infinity in the palm of your hand And eternity in an hour. “Such special people were our friends, Velena and Velenka Fanderlik who lived their lives fully, gave of themselves richly and in their death were not divided. In the light of Blake's wise words, therefore, I would invite lives, their paintings, displayed here tonight.” | you to examine these expressions of their wonderful Up In The Air? Mere ’ GO AHEAD! You Deserve It. You Could Win That #1 Mom In Your House These Prizes: Fully Catered Mom’s Day Family Dinner from Sunscan Catering (102 maximum of 8 persons) eBeautiful Bouquet of Flowers from Trail Plants and Flowers Just write a letter or poem telling why your mom is #1, drop it off in the barrel in centre court, we'll display it, for all to see. Judging Thursday, May 9 AND DON’T FORGET THE MOTHER’S DAY PANCAKE BREAKFAST Saturday, May 11, 9:00-11:00 a.m. Centre Court $1.50 PER PERSON—MOM IS FREE CARNATIONS TO THE FIRST 100 MOMS SPONSORED BY THE FRUITVALE KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS @awancta plaza