CASTLEGAR NEWS, June 22, 1983 Royal Canadian Legion Branch No. 170 Friday & Saturday Dancing 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. OPEN 12NOON 6 DAYS A WEEK Proper Dress Fri. & Sat. after 9 p.m. Guests Must Playing Fri. & Sot. Be SIGNED In “SKIP FRASER" Thursday Bingo RIVER OF LIFE MINISTRIES EVANGELISTS: Wes Morland & Randy Beatty Hi-Arow Arms Hotel 330 p.m. Thurs., June 23 Come and meet these youns Canadian Evangelists who have a burden to. reach canada 3 unreached with the Gospel of Jesus Christ, FOR PEOPLE OF ALL FAITHS HOW SHOWING! — (WEDTHU[FRI) CHEECH 8 CHONG THEY'LL HAVE VC OFrFMan) ne HS AML OFAN TOMATO | a gnat? By ROD CURRIE TORONTO (CP) — It's hard to imagine that Shirley MacLaine, spirited superstar of Broadway and Hollywood, could ever have been, or ever will be, a gnat. The possibility came up in conversation when she was here promoting her.new book, Out on a Limb, a long and spiritual bi tracing her search for herself, her acceptance of reincarnation and her belief in'a higher consciousness, It was her earlier suspicion that she had been on earth before, in different incarnations, living one life in India, for instance, that set her off on what was to be a 10-year soarch for understanding. The book, published by Bantam and priced, at $17.05, traces her early dabbling with the occult in’ California, * conversations with a medium in Stockholm and finally an ' expedition to the Peruvian Andes where she had her first. out-of-body experience. The business about the gnat come up when she relited a conversation with the late Prime Minister Nehru of India who, when she swatted a gnat, said: “You must not do that.’ You can never tell what that gnat might have been or might be.” ONCE A'GNAT? : MacLaine believes that she might have been.a gnat in the distant past but now that she has attained human form all her reincarnations will be human. She. “says we are’: elevated by each incarnation and in our series of lives we avoid mistakes of the past. “Once man came along, that became our vehicle, What Nehru was saying was that there is‘a reason for’ gnats and don't swat them out of existence.” “This has been one of my more pleasant incarnations,” she says of her present life as star of dozens of movies and Broadway shows and’as a liberal political activist: “I can't say I've ever been unhappy.” “We all make decisions, maybe subconsciously, about our next incarnation,” she said in an interview, sitting with suede boots tucked under a gypsy- style dress, topped with” lots of gold and diamond jewelry. _ If that’s true, wouldn't everyone choose. a nice, glamorous, exeiting, famous, wealthy. life? “No, I can see where we would choose to have a life of suffering in the next life, for the experience of it and 80 we- could help others. I know I Have’ had ‘incarnations | of suffering in the past.” Then, bursting into laughter, she added: “I've played a hooker so many times (as an actress) that I think I must have been a hooker once.” She is not at all alarmed that people might poke fun at her beliefs. “T'm an actress. I'm used to exposing myself to criticism and critical comment.” Anyway, she says, most people will understand and 3 brings'a ‘realize that by opening i tip’ her pergonal | ‘beliefsahe Y new, deeper dimension wo her} “public, per Crown Point Hotel 1399 Bay — 368-8232 Trail INTRODUCES Dinner for Two Special 1895 Dining Room MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY Mon.-Thurs. 5-8 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 5-10 p.m. KIDS ’n COMPUTERS | Selkirk College is offering two new courses in ig for ch prog dt 10 the Apple C ter. in- ua Plow-pulling contestan! Sports Day at Slocan’ Sports Held give it their Like father like daughter TORONTO (cP) — Jan psycho ward of New York's Kerouac saw her father Jack Bellevue ; Hospital at 14, only twice but describes him pregnant and on the road in as‘'a spectre, an all-perfading Mexico at 15, hooker in New Jan, believed to be the only other and said; ‘Tve read child of the alcoholic novelist some of your father’s books.’ who died in 1969 at the age of It was ridiculous.” . Marine Engineer Daniel Wiebe of.” ‘Castlegar: (left) ‘chats with martial artist-at a martial: ‘arts. demonstration in Kure, Japan, along with a, fel- CAPE. CAN, ‘VER, Li, FLA, (AP-CP) — American astronauts using a Canadian- built robot arm placed a sat- ellite into free-floating Earth orbit today, ‘clreled it at more than 27,000: kilometres an’ hour and then recaptured it in a rendezvous that: demon- strated-the U.S. space shut-- tle's ability to reach and re- trieve crippled spacecraft. ‘The West German satellite provided. the first photog. . raphy of.a shuttle in orbit,’ showing the shuttle. Chal- ylenger’ against ‘a brilliant |, backdrop of a blue, sunlit Earth. “) “There were lots of oohs /-and ahs” in Mission Control, a spokesman on the ground In the day-long chase-and- capture, astronauts John Fa- m-bian and Sally Ride used “low, member: of the HMCS Provider. Wiebe isa mem- ‘ber of the Canad! Forces, - Celebrities OTTAWA cr)’. = Canedicn celebrities were as star struck.as school children Tuesday night at a steak and salmon barbecue for Prince Charles and Diana, Princess of Wales, .The royal couple ended @ second day in the national : capital region as guests of Prime Minister Trudeau outdoors at the official residence of Commons Speaker Jeanne Sauve, Kingsmere Farm, tucked into the nearby Gatineau, Que., ~ hills. mas « couple. ’ At the official opening of the $21.5-million Ottawa police © station, excited crowds were’ six deep at barricades while Charles and Diana spent: 45 minutes in the. 80-degree | sunshine shaking hands and chatting. The prince and princess were showered with rattles aid teddy bears, birthday presenta for ‘William, and’ wilting flowers. Diana . told - several onlookers ‘she and ‘Charles telephoned their son ‘about 5 a.m. Castlegar time Tuesday. And Charles told others. that when he talked ‘to the young Challenger’s 13-metre-long Canadarm to lift the Shuttle Pallet Satellite, or SPAS, into space, reclaim it and re- stow it for Friday's shuttle return to Earth, WORKS CONTROLS Fabian, working ‘froin con- trola“on the’ shuttle flight deck, flexed the end effector ‘lead’ ‘hand’ — of Chal-’ _lenger’s robot arm, ‘picking up the West German sci- entific satellite and releasing “That. SPAS isa ni #8 flying “little: vehicle,” said’ Crippen .as the satellite’ ‘moved into its © own orbit about 290 ‘kilom- ppen and Rick Hauck ‘drifted the uttle about 800 metres away, then fired thrusters to accomplish the rendezvous. :\“We've got the SPAS on the arm,” confirmed Fabian. Then the crew broke for lunch. The rendezvous test is a major milestone for the shut- tle. The ability to pluck an _ ‘ object from orbit will be cru- cial when shuttles are sent aloft for satellite servicing and repair missions. The first such mission is set for the shuttle’s 18th mis- sion in April, 1984, when Crippen will head a team of astronauts to repair the Solar Maximum Satellite. It failed after three fuses blew soon after launch in 1980; the plan is for Crippen's crew to bring . the satellite. into the cargo bay, replace the control sys- tem and return the satellite to space, For ‘today's test, NASA's seventh. shuttle: crew arose an hour early — about 7:30 p.m. Castlegar time — to test the 1,364-kilogram SPAS. The the’ satellite ‘recovery * mis- sions was, bu ‘ada's Nation Council and Spar Aerospace Ltd. of Toronto. It had been used only once previously; in *_ April when it picked up a payload from the cargo bay of’ the space~ shuttle Columbia and returned it to position ‘without letting it go in the “interim. STANLEY HUMPHRIES SECONDARY SCHOOL AWARDS DAY to be held Thursday, June 30 commencing at 9:00 a.m. School Achi Students are requested to attend. Parents are welcome to attend. spectre,” The 31-year-old daughter : ‘of the Beat novelist says she dreams :a lot about him usually that he’s still alive and she is his lover. “And I have a funny feeling when I wake up that I might be my own mother,” she “gays, a look of wonderment momentarily flashing across her ice-blue eyes. ‘Kerouac, in Toronto to plug her book Baby Driver, subtitled A Novel About My- self, has led a life. dominated ; by’ ‘wanderings much like her father's, She was an LSD tripper at 12, heroin and cocaine user at . 18, patient in the notorious Mexico at 20, nomad in Col- ombia and Peru at 21. Her -autobiography, pub- lished by Holt, Rinehart and Winston, is called a novel partly because ‘the names were changed and partly be- cause several incidents: to- wards the end of the book were condensed, 47, emerged a year ago from | the shadows of Eugene, Ore., where she had been living with her. mother, Joan Stu- art, and. working in a bakery. | Home -now is. in Boulder, Colo., living with a ‘man she met last year at a Kerouac conference marking the 25th anniversary of:On'the Road, her father’s . ; moat famous “Miguel actually threat- book. ened to kill me five times,” she says matter-of-factly, re- ferring to a demon-ridden Argentinian she met in Costa - Rica. “My: editor, wanted. sit “only once — crisp. ‘The editor + Was. probably smart to do’ that. Truth is stranger than fiction sometimes, especially in my case.” . : * “At.. some “point, I rather, plastered and I fa, into the lap of this guy wear- inga white suit, It turned out. tobe John Steinbock Jr.; and suddenly. cameras and. flash-:. Not that th guns .. were - Boing | off all around us. ; : “At exactly the same. mo- ment, we turned: to. each’. (Community TU 1-Logo — troduction to programming through Turtle and Student Projects. Grades 4 to7. Il - Basle — he Apple C A Basic. Introduction to programing throught Graphics. and Student Projects. Grades 8 to 12, Dates July 18-21 icraseate Vatiog) Aug. 29 - Sept. 2 (Castlegar) Fee: $50 per course. Enrotment is limited to 20 piudante per course and tegistration is required by June 2: To register and for more celal Castlegar Campus, 365-7292; Crescent Valley, 359-7564. SELKIRK COLLEGE, Castlegar Campus, Box 1200, Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3J1; Crescent Valley Centre, Box 75, Crescent Valley, B.C. VOG 1HO. - CABLE WEST 10 Access Television Thursday, June 23 6:00~Sign-on and program information. 6:05—American Legion — the Trail Hawks took on Apple-. way Chevrolet of Spo- kane June 18 at-But- ler Park. Rick Schleppe of Trail and Jeff Bogart of Spokane provide the ‘play-by-play. 8:45—Cook's Corner. Chery] Bonowicz - presents - Part II of the selec- tion and preparation of unusual fruit, hosted by Jean Bonin. 9:15—A Tale of Two Plays’: — Charles Bailey in: terviews. Bette De- Vito - who ~ directed “Postcards”. and Lee | Mendosa who direc- ted “The Sandbox” re- APPETIZERS ENTRIES 8 oz. Top Sirloin The most flavorable 8 oz. New York Steak Known as the King .. 8 oz. Steak & lobster Tail with bytter sauce 8 oz. Steak-& Alaskan King Crab with butter sauce 8 oz. Filet Mign The most fieaore ofall steak .... Breaded Veal Cutlets with mushrooms Prime Rib au jus Chicken Cordon Bleu Our chef's specialty Mariner's Plate Prawns, oysters, scallops Rack of BBQ Ribs All above dinners Include salad bar, home-made buns, potato, vegetable of the day and coffee or tea Your Guide To Good Times in the area. DELUXE DAILY LUNCHEON SMORG 11330 0.m. to2 p.m. $5.95. Salad Bar only: $3.95. GIANT SMORG FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. $10.95 OUR NEW CHEF IS SUPERB! hotel the new ili lit Pee ti trail bic. Town (Fount RIVER BELLE Smorqasbord Castleaird Plaza © Salad Bar TAKE OUT DELIVERY SERVICE © Pizza's © B.B.Q. Ribs ¢ Italian Dishes 365-2421 Rosstand 362-7375 Steck ued Beep Fried Prowne © Vegetables & garnish ee _ INTERNATIONAL SPECIAL “Your S bord House of the K Deluxe Smorg Wed. through Sun. WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. 5 P.M. TO 8 P. SUN., MON., TUES wm BY RESERVATION ahi’ Seml-private areas avallable for group d dinners. Also open for private luncheo: Phone 364-2616 for Reservations Next door to Konkin's trly . © Coupe Helene «< ceaegsacaeeseeteeves OR ¢ Sor. New York Steak «garding the produc- tions. The two plays appear after the inter view. 10:15—Miracle Cures. Dr. --\. Péter Grantham talks £33 about ‘quackery; and “miracle cures on this tsegment of: the on- going series “For the | parra, Life of Me" sponsored, by the B.C. Medical ; Assoc. 11:00—-Sign-off. Frens Ex 0 26-30. , Phone 365-2411 dune 27... at tong, mural painting for t balloons ond birthde and enjoy yourself, 10:3 The be o Regional ‘History exhibit of Cas seum ai tifacts and Equipment for Eternity, an olga Me from the Royal ¢ Ootarle Museum of Egyptian arts and crafts In the Kingdom. Centre hours cre 10:30 a.m, to 4:30 p.m. ally. June 16 t0 July 7... . Watercolor Paintings by Sandor Tan- aes on view at Roberts Restaurant fromt i Sore pm. < Les Welsbrich Watercolar Workshop to be feld at ihe National Ceneae arense 9 Workshop fee 1s 50 and prereatetration can be made at ihe Exhibition, General Meeting of the Castlegar and District Community Arts Council to be held in the Kinnaird LUbrary p.m, duly t... Celebrate Conode’s * Birthday ot the Noti Exhibition ‘Centre. There will be a weiner rose! tint ‘It took Kerouac six years to write her book — and it only takes her to 1974. Flop -now a smash WASHINGTON (AP) = - Heaven's Gate, the biggest flop in motion picture. his- eer. is a box office smash at the Library of Congress, eae auch con- solation in that for the film's backers. Admission is free at the library’s tiny theatre. But ‘it was still SRO for the first public showings of the movie in more than:two years, and many were turned-away in their’ ‘attempt to seo just how. * ‘ada $45-million failure could ® bel see 5 1s ‘They came to see a picture that led ‘to the sale of the studio which produced it and virtually ‘stopped’ director "Michael Cimino’s career in its “I didn’t think there would be nearly this reaction,” said library — film”: programmer. Scott: Simmon after’he was ged: with phone calls and ‘by scores of people who awaited his arrival at the office the first day of the - Ais fvoday run. Calendar * ll games, music, pene is welcome. Come Council are FIRESIDE Dining Room . . . for fine dining Dining Room and Cocktail Lounge Open Mon.-Sat. 4-10 p.m. SALAD BAR...1S INCLUDED WITH EVERY MEAL Reservations Appreciated . . . 365-6000 fonniag s Sarmtvar Maoh ee + Goncarts wil be heldduring the lunch ihe a pam. ot the Kinsmen Park. Bring your ion ius come along to the park for on enjoyabl itt the Arts jefree concert. 3 - Items for: this bi-monthly feature should be telephoned to Mrs. D. Miller-Tait of the Castlegar and District Community Arts Council at 365-7850. Castlegar Savings Credit Union Sponsored by The 1,800 guests — including actor Gordon Pinsent, singer-songwriter Garden n Lightfoot, general manager Serge Savard of Mc world skier Steve: Podborski and’ Need photographer. . Yousuf: Karsh: —- engulfed the royal couple when their limousine arrived at the farm, -Earlier ‘in the day the prince and princess. ‘officially opened an-Ottawa police station and Charles addressed the Kiwanis Club's 65th’anniversary meeting. : Trudeau, dressed in an open-necked embroidered shirt and beige pants, led the couple through the crowd: aided by ‘determined bodyguards. - CHATEN ROUTE ‘ But Diana, hatless in a light blue dress with a white » collar and pink bow, and Charles, in an open shirt-and a sports coat, appeared delighted to! mop and chat on Toute to the barbecue pit. ° bis Ss + Savard said of ‘his brief encounter with iyalegs' “Ht was” * lke when I was four or five ‘ years old and I saw the Rocket,” ’- a reference to former Canadiens hockey great. ‘Rocket’. ’ Ric j Several times the crowd broke into impromptu choruses of Happy Birthday, in honor of the couple's son. William who turned one year old Tuesday and spent his; birthday in. London with his nursemaid. . The couple led the lineup at the barbeque, ‘then carried their plates of the-cob and bi the crowd to their table. couple, who leave Ottawa today for St. John’s, Nild., and end : much.” through The event was the only visit to Quebec for the royal : ‘prince’ all-he heard were “a few squeaks.” Asked if she missed William, Diana replied: “Yes, very” : - POLLUTION A ‘THREAT Earlier, Prines Charles told the Kiwanis luncheon that acid rain caused by air pollution is threatening lakes, rivers -and‘forests of North America and Britain. “Perhaps the Kiwanis, with their extensive contacts in business and in industry could have an important role in - trying to find ways to Mmit fhese sulphur dioxide emissions,” “she said. The potential effects of acid rain could be particularly devastating for ‘Canada, he said, noting that one-in 10 Canadian jobs: depend on the forest industry. The luncheon was marred by a 46-minute SPEND PART OF YOUR SUMMER WITH US... -. ' SUMMER SCHOOL OF THE ARTS DAVID THOMPSON UNIVERSITY CENTRE | NELSON ert There. is still time to register for massa: i. courses with Christine Sutherland of ¢ : Sutherland Chan School of Teaching Clinic, “Toronto.” oO. Introductory Massage CO Introd yA ig C1 Continuing Massa L C1 Continuing Massage Tect Hydro Therapy Each course features trips to, Ainsworth Hot Springs. ool opens duly 4, so register today ~ CASTLEGAR CHRISTIAN ACADEMY Where} your children can receive ‘ atotal education. @ MENTAL @ PHYSICAL *@ SPIRITUAL. * EMOTIONAL 1801 Connors Road, Castlegar 4 : +6317. E. Kristionsen $. Crandell ae Principal, Administration Sec.-Trecsurer Sch by Calling: DTUC, 352-2241. Registration deadline is June DAVID THOMPSON UNIVERSITY CENTRE 820 - 10th St., Nelson failure in ‘the city centre that left the: hotel -with just “emergency lighting and Ba $0-de; eat atride. Charles! began his speech Joking that “I can assure you, you wouldn't have missed very much” if the lights and- microphone | shad not been restored. ‘DIDN'T AFFECT RATE “He added’ that it was fortunate the failure wasn't the ' duration of-one that blacked out New York several years ago.” 1 vies “We all know: what happened after that," he said to. applause and laughter from the crowd, of about 700 who remembered how the city's birth rate soared nine months jut the royal ‘ola visibly hot, took the troubles i ine their 18-day Canadian tour in Edmonton on July.1. after the event. Soviets. catching up * LONDON (AP) — The ‘So- viet Union is steadily eroding the West's lead in military high-technology weapons and communications systems, says the editor of Jane's Military Communications Yearbook. “The irony of the situation is that the more advanced and sophisticated western electronic hardware be- comes, the easier it becomes - for the Soviet Union to ac- quire it,” editor Bob Raggett wrote in the latest edition of . the authoritative annual pub- : lished Tuesday. The Soviets are buying sophisticated western’ com- mercial equipment that: can -be used by the military and’ acquiring classified circuitry through clandestine .. deals hardware. it wants provided it is prepared to pay the right . price.” ‘Raggett said. cuts’ in “Cru- cial command, control, com- with western he said. ° “Recent evidence its shown a great increase in illegal dealing. .Ad d and it prograins” have ‘alowed west- ern, advances. He urged swestera: : “governments and F ig iin: ' Summer reading The B.D. Summer Reading Program, “Around B.C. in Books" ‘will be starting soon, Pre-registration will be June 27.- July ;2. at either. the ‘Caatlegar or Kinnaird Branch, western component and inte- grated circuit manufacturers have discovered direct copies of their classifi pods efforts ‘to. maintain their electronic edge. He also warned that the West's nucl issile build- circuit chips in Soviet elec- tronic equipment. “The situation appears.to be that the Soviet Union can up to counter Moscow's ar- senal is diverting badly needed funds from-high-tech acquire almost any electronic ' vital development that could -be-. pm. Yvonne McGuire, the supervisor of the program, will be at the Castlegar Branch Mondays 2-5 p.m.,, Wednesdays 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. and Fridays 10 a.m. - 12 noon. She will be at the Kinnaird Branch Tuesdays 2 - 5p. and ‘Thursdays 2-- 6 p.m. Concert "ARARE EVENING OF ENTERTAINMENT «featuring Artists from the U.S.S.R. * Lyudmilla Shirina — Soloist, Odessa Theatre Anatoli Duda - polelst: Odessa Theatre * Alexandor Boirenke - Accompanist/bayanist A SELECTION OF LOCAL TALENT ALSO! Fri., June 24, 8 p.m. AtU.S.C.C. Community Centre Grand Forks Adults $5, Children (12& under) $3 TESA AVAILABLE AT_ — ‘Ofiices Gren Forks. COMINCO RETIREES “GET TOGETHER '83 - TOMORROW, Thursday, June 23" Cominco Arena- ‘Trai =; ‘Victoria St. parking lot reserved fore retirees for. the day. OUR ACTION AD PHONE NUMBER IS 365-2212 GUTARA HE, L , ADQUAR’ OF THE KooTENAy Ys “hee! exo net Ave, bra Posie Ht ied 364-2922 Carol Magaw Dianna Kootnikoff ADVERTISING SALES CASTLEGAR NEWS 0. DRAMER 3007, CASTLEGAR, BC. VON 34 OFFICE 365-5210 ALCON PAINTING & DECORATING 2649. FOURTH Avene CASTLEGAR a. e VIN 257 365-3563 @ excavate, wuding © Fond oe eiail KE’S RADIATOR REPAIR OCATIONS, 785 Columba Ave., Castlegar