: aes as _ Castlegar News | Febrvory 20, 1985 duchess po FAMILY RESTAURANT OPEN DAILY ‘TIL 9 P.M. BREAKFAST - PANCAKES All you can eot Lunch Specials — From $2.95 Daily Dinner Specials — $6.95 Including soup or salad. vegetable of the doy, boked or tato. tea or coffee and dessert 1935 Columbia Ave. 365-2177 MONTE CARLO MOTOR INN $1.99 Branch No. 170 Royal Canadian Legion Dancing 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. OPEN AT 12 NOON — SIX DAYS A WEEK. Proper Dress Fri. & Sat. after 9 p.m. Playing Fri. & Sot. “ZIMMERMANS” Guests Must Be SIGNED In Thursday and Sunday Bingo Sunday Early Bird — 6 p.m. & Feta Spinach, Onion Ask for our No. 12 RESTAURANT Cheese 1432 COLUMBIA, CASTLEGAR TRY OUR New SPINACH PIZZA Schell’s had diverse and prolific career LOS ANGELES (AP) — Academy Award-winning actor * Maximilian Schell is not the type of performer who grew lazy in his work by repeating the same role that landed him the Osear. After being named best actor of 1961 for his intense performance as the defence lawyer in Judgment at Nurem- berg, Schell has enjoyed an astonishingly diverse career, Now 54, he is filming a 10-hour miniseries for NBC, Peter the Great, in the Soviet Union. He also recently played another lawyer in the movie, Man Under Suspicion, West Germany's entry for foreign-language Oscar this year. And he created Marlene, an award-winning documentary about Marlene Dietrich Schell had directed four films, including End of the Game with Jon Voight and Jacqueline Bisset, numerous plays and operas and has appeared on the European stage in Hamlet and Pygmalion. From 1978-81, he appeared in Everyman at the Salzburg Festival. The prolific Schell was here recently during a brief respite in production of Peter the Great, which is oceupying 10 months of lis life. His mission was to help draw the attention of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Seiences to Man Under Suspicion, of which he is proud. OVERCAME RESENTMENT “It won the Silver Bear award of the Berlin Film Festival for picture and actor,” said the actor in an interview. “I was happy and also surprised, because the German critics haven't been too friendly toward me. After all, I left the country in 1957 to come to America, and they resented that “But why shouldn't I come here? American films were much more interesting than anything that was being done in Germany. I continued working in German theatre, but it had been 25 years since I had worked in a German film.” He had, however, directed his own films in Germany. The Music Man plays in Trail Did you hear the one about Garbe, who were in last the travelling salesman and the librarian? You can watch HENNE TOURS The Sh The Sh Di * Knott MARCH 12 Overnight at MARCH 23 2 Nights at * One night in Reno * Tijuana, Mexico © Visit Solvang, Danish capital of America Tour escort 1410 Bay Ave., Trai IN CONCERT eraton eraton Easter at Disneyland Fly Tour March 29th 11 years and under sneyland & San PRING BREAK A Reno Bus Tours March 2 — 7 Days Staying at the Comstock MARCH 9, 16, 23 & 30 NOW BOOKING $ 1 0 sy for seniors Waylon Jennings & Willie Nelson Visit the Magical Kingdom of Disneyland 11 Days, 10 Nights Fantasy Tour “New Price” Kids Fly Free Program $625%.. $3852. Francisco 11 Day, 10 Nights — March 29 © Deluxe transportation & the whole story unfold before your very eyes in the Ross land Light Opera Players production of Meredith Will son's The Music Man, this Friday and Saturday and March 1 and 2 in the Trail Junior Secondary Auditor ium Keith Story and Wendy year’s Finian's Rainbow, this year are in the roles of the Music Man and Marian the Librarian. Michael Honeyman, 12, plays Winthrop. And there are six more travelling sales. men, a barber shop quartet, and a group of high school kids. The production will serve up a great score with music like Seventy-Six Trombones, Good Night, My Someone, a In ovr Beautiful Pool! 9a.m. to4p.m Cher gets FOR ONLY ye Harvard — Oe honor Enjoy the whirlpool 2 saunas, access to NEW YORK (AP) — Cher @ beautitul room with satellite TV. enjoy Dexter's Pub and Heartland Restaurant SANDMAN INN Costiegor & PETE’S TV Spectacular New Friday (Overnight) ........ MOVIE RENTAL RATES Mon. - Thurs, (Overnight)... 1.99 per movie will be joining the likes of past winners Katharine Hep- burn, Ella Fitzgerald and Meryl Streep when she is honored by Harvard Univer sity’s Hasty Pudding Club as its 1985 Woman of the Year. i hteas 2 for $4.99 WEEKEND Sct.-Mon....3 Movies $8.99 SPECIAL MACHINE Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 9 O'"" Wednesday vcesrmories RENTALS VORA 2 Movies $7.49 night "s Berry Farm HENNE TRAVEL WEST’S TRAVE! * Disneyland * Sea World ¢ San Francisco = A: PHOTOS OF PHOTO EXHIBIT . . . (Above) One of the photographs on display at the exhibition put on Feb. 6, 7, 8and 9 by the Selkirk College photography department (Below) Photo fans gather to see the display CosNews Photos by Him Is00. SHE LOVES HER GUITAR From jazz to classics HALIFAX (CP) — For someone who once thought the guitar was to'be played only in bars, Dale Kavanagh is now as deeply immersed in the classical instrument as Swiss clockmakers are in gears and wheels. The 26-year-old female per former didn’t discover the classical guitar until she be- gan studying music with a background in piano and clarinet at Acadia Univer. sity. “I don't know the classical guitar existed until I was in my mid-teens and I didn’t at tack it until I was 19," says the bubbly performer who once played folk guitar and COMN Bulletin Board pom. February 22, 6:00 p.m. parking lot Present Meredith Willson's Tickets at Carl's Drugs. SENIOR CITIZENS ASSOCIATION Pot Luck Supper 5:00 p.m., February 21 214 ALL PAPER CASH BINGO The Castlegar Aquanaut Swim Club is having an all paper Cash Bingo at the Castlegar Arena Complex on Saturday. February 23. Advance tickets are $8.00 and are available at the Wool Wagon, Macleods Store, Central Food and Kel Print. Early Bird is 6:00 p.m. with Regular Bingo ot 7:00 ANTI-NUCLEAR VIGIL sharp. Castlegar Courthouse 1's ROSSLAND LIGHT OPERA PLAYERS 22, 23 and March | and 2 at Trail Junior High, 8:00 p.m with Eli Kassner at the Uni versity of Toronto. Then she was introduced to the music teacher who has had the most influence on her work and is “probably the best music artist I have ever met.” jazz in a Wolfville, school band. Now one of five students in a graduate solo artists’ pro- gram in Basel, Switzerland, Kavanagh has travelled from Banff, Alta., to Italy and Spain to perfect her techni N.S. high que. Oscar Ghiglia, whom she “Sometimes I wish I did met at the Banff School of start earlier, but then I Fine Arts in Alberta five wonder would I have the same drive as I have now? When I decided what I wanted to do, I really made a decision.” After one year at Acadia in the Annapolis Valley town of Wolfville, Kavanagh studied classical guitar with Carol Van Feggelen at Dalhousie University in Halifax, and AUNITY years ago, has been her teacher ever since. She has studied summers with him in Banff, and in Sienna, Italy Now she isa full-time student of his from October to June at the Baselstadt Akadamie in Switzerland Though Ghiglia, who has studied under world renown. ed guitarist Andre Segovia, also teaches in Hartford, Conn., Kavanagh chose to study in Basel to experience the culture of Europe, dis- cover the level of playing in other countries and to learn about the guitar in its trad itional European territory. “When you go toa classical guitar concert in Europe,” she says, “it's always a full house. Classical guitar is much more accepted now in Canada, but not to the same t Kavanagh prac tises up to eight hours a day for master classes in her two- year program Kavanagh is currently taking part in her first Nova Scotia public and school con cert tour. One of her per formances is being taped for performance on CBC Stereo's Arts National. Cable 10 TV CABLE 10TV Thursday, Feb. 21 6:00—Sign-on and program information. 6:03—Let's Talk about Schools’ Public Meet ing — This event took place Feb. 6 at Kin naird Junior Secon dary School. The pur 214 The Music Man.” February a5 paper and 5 p.m. Columbro Ave ry Bulictin Board Coming events of Castlegor and District non-profit ds (which must be used for headin There is no extra charge for a second consecutive inser tion while the third consecutive insertion is half-price. Minimum charge is $3.15 (whether ad is for one, two or three times). Deadlines are 5 p.m. Thursdays for Sunday's Mondays for Wednesday's paper Notices should be brought to the Castlegor News at 197 pore of the meeting was to gain publie in put to the proposed changes to take place in the form of a new Schools Act. 7:00—Front Row Ticket — Margot Masterton re views the following movies currently available on First Choice - SuperChan nel. Included are: ys) count as two words. IT 1S A WORLD WHERE SANOWORMS 1.000 FEET Ses GUARQ CREATION'S GREATEST TREASURE — Flashdance, Blame It On Rio, The Lonely Guy, Videodrome, Elvis One Night With You, and Terms of Endearment 7:30—Trail's Second Annual Air Band Contest This event held at the Waneta Mall features the following groups: Vega, Raucous, Plati num Blonde, Black Mason, Saigon, Tiny and Wet Rain, Rampage, Crue 2. and Cyndi Lauper 9:15—Castlegar city council Meeting of Feb. 12, presented in its en. tirety. 11:00—Sign-off. SON. ‘ February 20, 1985 Castlegar News a7 Skelly slams Bennett VANCOUVER (CP) — Premier Bill Bennett's plans for partnerships and renewal “have been coined for the period that will lead us up to Expo 86 and coincidentally the next provincial general election,” British Columbia NDP leader Bob Skelly said Tuesday night. Skelly, responding live on regional CBC television to a speech by Bennett on Monday, said the program of fiscal restraint introduced by the premier three years earlier has been an unmitigated disaster. Tens of thousands of B.C. families have been plunged into poverty, and many thousands have lost everything, Skelly said in his 10-minute speech. He said there has been a general loss of pride and confidence, and “the long-term damage to our social services and institutions in immeasurable.” Now, he said, the government is making conciliatory gestures (for instance, the premier appeared to offer public-sector job security Monday in exchange for “responsible” pay demands). But, Skelly warned: “Co-operation and partnership cannot be turned on and off in accordance with some political timetable.” He said the Socred restraint ‘program was never necessary, and contrasted Bennett's approach with that of NDP Premier Howard Pawley in Manitoba. Pawley, Skelly said, had engaged in sincere consultation with government unions, and set up the Manitoba Jobs Fund. As’a result, he said, Manitoba's economy is one of the fastest-growing in the country. “There is no reason for British Columbia to take second place to any other province in Canada,” he said. “Our only confidence in the abilities and ideas of our people.” Skelly called for more consultation between the provincial government and other organized interests in B.C., and said he would continue his call for a legislature on ‘ The Opposition leader discounted Bennett's plan to set up a new ministry ible for trade saying: “We have too many well-travelled ineffective cabinet ministers right now.” He said economic plans “dreamed up in the rarefied atmosphere of the premier’s office are doomed to failure,” and concluded by saying that “Only when government expresses its confidence in the people of this province will the people of B.C. respond by giving their best.” SHERRODSVILLE, OHIO (AP) — The mayor was attacked, the village solicitor was the fire Fists flew at meeting fire department downstairs, and councillor Darletta station's pool table collapsed, a councillor was charged with assault and his father ended up in hospital with a heart attack. “I'm not used to having that kind of breakdown in authority,” said the solicitor, Brad Hillyer, on Tuesday, after Monday night's unusual council meeting in this northeastern Ohio village. The meeting was held in the fire station to accommodate the 40 citizens — 10 per cent of the village population — who wanted to hear discussions about a move to disband the local police department. It suddenly exploded into chaos when a member of the audience collapsed. Richard Richardson, 59, father of one councillor and husband of another, collapsed as witnesses began testifying. His wife and son were leading the fight to disband the two-man local police force, a controversial move ardently opposed by mayor Joe Stull. Emergency medical technicians were called from the rushed to her husband's side. Stull promptly adjourned the meeting. Mrs. Richardson, crying, said, “Are you people satisfied now? Are you people satisfied now?” “Don't blame us,” Stull answered. “If he was in that bad of condition, he shouldn't have been here in the first lace.” , Witnesses said councillor Richard Richardson Jr. then jumped onto the council table and at Stull. Both men fell on a pool table, which collapsed. Hillyer, police chief Chet Seran and patrolman John Miley separated them, with Hillyer being pummelled in the process. U.S. bails out Canada. dollar OTTAWA (CP) — The government has borrowed $500-million U.S. on standby credit to increase its inter- national reserves and bolster the sagging dollar, Finance Minister Michael Wilson has announced. Wilson, faced with block- age of a major money bill in the Liberal-dominated Sen- ate, invoked a cabinet order Tuesday to borrow the money. The dollar opened today at 74.04 cents U.S. It closed Tuesday at a record low 74.10 cents U.S. The government, seeking parliamentary approval to raise new cash, was counting on the Senate to pass a $19.3-billion borrowing auth- ority bill. The legislation has been stuck in the Senate fi nance committee since Jan. 23 after unanimous passage by the Commons in Decem- ber. The bill would"provide the governmen $7.3 billion for the rest of this fiscal year ending March 31 and an additional $12 billion in in- terim authority for the first few months of the 1985-86 fiseal year. Wilson said in a prepared statement he used an order- in-council under Section 39 of the Financial Administration Act, which authorized the government to borrow the new money from a group of international bankers. will eliminate any need for further borrowing under Sec- tion 39,” Wilson said. Wilson said that because of the Senate delay, the gov- ernment has already missed three opportunities to bor- row money and the delay has cost the treasury about $2 million. Wrong turn deadly VANCOUVER (CP) — Prince George taxi driver Daniel Bryce may have taken a wrong turn that proved fatal. The man charged with stabbing Bryce to death last October went “wild” when the driver got lost trying to find’a trailer court, B.C. Su- preme Court was told Tues- day. “He said, ‘That's one red- neck . . . that won't be ripping off anybody for fares any more, “ Kenneth Dillon quoted Matthew Gerald Mc- Donald as saying. Richardson Sr. was listed in critical Tuesday in the intensive care unit at Union Hospital in Dover, Ohio, undergéing heart treatment. Stull was released after treatment for a back injury at Twin City Hospital in Dennison. And Hillyer required no hospital treatment. Richardson Jr., assaulting the mayor. meanwhile, was charged with POLICIES NOT TO BLAME Gov't okay, says Waterland VICTORIA (CP) — Forests Minister Tom Waterland Tuesday rejected charges that the government's short. sighted policies are to blame for problems in the provincial forest industry Waterland said the ac cusations made by economist Leslie Reed, holder of the newly-created forestry policy research chair at the Uni versity of British Columbia, are sensational but not based on facts. Reed told the Vancouver Institute earlier this week Provincial gov't grows VICTORIA (CP) The British Columbia legislature gave final approval Tuesday to a bill adding 12 members to the 57-seat house. The legislation turns 11 single-member ridings into two-member ridings, and splits the two-member riding of Surrey into three single. member ridings. Getting additional repre sentation will be Boundary Similkameen, Cariboo, Cen. tral Fraser Valley, Delta, Dewdney, Kamloops, Lang: ley, Nanaimo, Okanagan South, Richmond, and Saan All except rently are held by Socreds. Standing in the current legislature is 34 Social Credit, 22 NDP and one independent Provision for the larger body of lawmakers is to be in place in time for the next general election. that reforestation isn't even close to matching the annual erosion of the timber base, that the annual allowable cut has been reduced to about 75 million cubic metres from about 100 million cubic me- tres in less than a decade, and that natural regener ation produces an undesire able species mix resulting in only about half the untended land returning a profitable growth. He accused the govern ment of following an implicit policy of forest liquidation for well over a decade. Waterland said Reed was giving “a rather uninformed opinion. “Les Reed is not a forester, but an economist though he has worked for the forest in. dustry ona consulting basis,” the minister said in an in terivew. “I don't think we can put tional silviculture work be- any credence at all in his capse it couldn't afford it. But judgment as to what species he said that work can be should be regenerated and where it shouldn't,” he said adding that these decisions are made by professional for. esters. Waterland said Reed's sting as an assistant deputy minister with the Liberal government in Ottawa “has taught him how to be sen sational and grab headlines” made up later... The minister said the B.C. government has reached agreement with the federal government to cost-share a $300-million reforestation program. Waterland said the agreement is awaiting fed eral cabinet approval. ROSSLAND LIGHT OPERA PLATELS Tickets available from Cast Members After February 4th from: L&aJ BOOKS, Trail, Al LPINE DRUGS, Rossland CARL'S DRUGS, Castlegar and GOING TO SPOKANE? 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