. he. As ENTERTAINMENT SS Castlegar News April 14, 1985 CAR 646 Boker St. CRESTAURANT Lunch — Mon. - Sat. Special $4 Dinner 5 p.m. Daily including Sunday 5 - 9 p.m For that special evening — Get away trom it all Hide oway in a cozy, upholstered booth and reiox! Reservations accepted. Phone collect 352-5358 $e Nelson LUN THE 1 STAURANT Open Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. SALAD BAR (Monday through Saturday) — $3.95 OPEN FOR BREAKFAST AT9 A.M. LUNCHEON SPECIAL — $3.50 Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday, 1! a.m. - 2 p.m. Nabe’ Vale Vly Pont Roe LL t pilitirt trail b.c. the new billititiiit LICENCED DINING ROOM FAMILY DINING Open 4 p.m. Daily Reservations for Private Parties — 365-3294 Located | mile south of weigh scales in Ootischenio Album will fight hunger We Are The World, the charity album to fight hunger in Africa and America, star- ted at No. 9 on Billboard magazine's pop albums chart, “roaring its way to No. 1,” an editor says. “A debut at No. 9 is ii credible — particulary so, when you consider that not all the dealers we polled had the album,” says Tom Noo- nan, an editor at Billboard. Noonan says the last pre- vious album to debut at No. 9 was Bruce Springsteen's Born In The USA, in June Heald's no Englishman NEW YORK (AP) — Actor Anthony Heald, who came to New York City at age 35 to find work in the theatre and made his first big money when he won $20,000 on a TV game show, wants everyone to know he isn't English. He has frequently played Dear General Public — on an event with little time and effort. fun events to sponsor or you may have 1. DIAPER DERBY COW CHIP TOSS SunFes+ 85 ABIG SUCCESS! °° SunFest is a Community Event. In order for it to be a success in ‘85, we need more events and help from you. Any organization or person is capable of putting Committee will guide you and promote your special event. How about considering one or more of these The SunFest other ideas — 1984. That album quickly went to No. 1 and “hasn't been out of the top four for 44 weeks.” Other top-selling albums, such as Michael Jackson's Thriller, and Prince and the Revolution's Purple Rain, started at the No. 11 spot, Noonan says. “It's easy to say it's headed for No. 1; it’s roaring to the top,” Noonan said of We Are The World. The album was certified gold, meaning 500,000 copies were sold, on the first week it was shipped. Englishmen, usually in off. Broadway ies, but, he Mask an ordeal for actor LOS ANGELES (AP) — It has been a year since Eric Stoltz acted in the movie Mask, and his face has almost recovered. Stoltz is the young actor who portrayed Rocky Dennis, the real-life youngster who endured his brief life with a grotesquely deformed face. He suffered from a rs | disorder of i bone growth called ecraniodiaphyseal dysplasia. The role required the punishing ordeal of three to four hours each day in the makeup chair so the actor's face could be overlayed with synthetic flesh. “That happened every work day for three months,” the actor recalled in an interview. “By the weekend, my face hurt all the time. I couldn't’sleep because of the pain. For months afterward I had sores and scabs. After a year my face is finally getting back to norm: He is 22, looks younger because of his pale skin and d hair. “It's dyed for another film role,” he said as he ate a hearty mid-afternoon meal at a health-food restaurant on the Sunset Strip. “My own color is even redder that this. It comes from my grandparents, because my own parents have dark hair — a recessive gene.” Stoltz had just come from two acting classes of two hours each. He is a dedi actor who is h disturbed by the spotlight that has shone on him since Mask. He recently made his first publicity appearance in New York for the film's release. Eric's uneasiness was car says: “If you get pigeonholed too early, then you're sort of stuck. While he was in The For- eigner, his 10th play in four years here, Heald longed for gnized by Cher, who portrays his free-living biker mother in the film. “Cher and I had a really great working relationship, and she continues looking after me,” Stoltz said. “She knew I was terrified by the TV shows in New York, and she went on with me and held my hand. No reason she had to take care of a young-punk actor. But she did.” ETS A BREAK ; His first real break came in a television movie with Robert Mitchum, A Killer in the Family. “I played a hard-edged dramatic story. Then I played an Irish rebel in three episodes of St. Elsehwere, and producers began seeing me in a different light. “I heard about Mask from a friend in an acting class. All I knew was the title and the director, Peter Bogdonavich. I had always liked Bogdonavich’s films, so I decided to try for it, But I was doing another Universal , that conflicted with it, so I thought I film, The Wild Li had lost out. Mask was postponed because of makeup problems. kid with a gun in a very . LOWER LAKE VANCOUVER (CP) — An American plan to lower the level of a huge hydro-electric reservoir that crosses the border into British Columbia would severely damage i land in the K says.a report released this week. A group of U.S. power companies wants to change the operation of Lake Koocanusa, which starts behind the Libby Dam in Montana. But a report prepared for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers states that the operational changes, which would lower the lake at certain times, would have “adverse impacts” on both sides of the border. “It is concluded that recreation on the Canadian portion of the reservoir would be severely affected and Stoltz had another chance at the role, and in his last interview with the director read his lines with pantyhose stretched over his face, only his eyes and mouth showing. “After I got the role, I spent a long time in tests to make sure the makeup would be believable,” said the actor. “it was a real challenge, because no such makeup had ever been used in a color film — The Elephant Man was in black and white. The hardest part was to make the face seem believable compared to the skin tones of th eother actors.” In the film Rocky Dennis before his death learns to accept his deformity with courage, largely because of the love and determination of his mother. Erie Stoltz acquired more than the usual actor's empathy for the boy's plight. “It was hard for me to see a different face in the mirror, hard to watch other people's reaction to the makeup,” he recalled. “The worst part came on location, which turned into a circus. Onlookers actually threw things at me. Imagine how Rocky must have felt.” a serious play, an American part, a romantic lead. Now, in the title role of Digby, he's using his own, Long Island accent for the first time. He's the romantic lead, but the cuddly bunny, funny kind. Roxanne Hart, playing the gorgeous girl he wins, lists one of Digby's attractions as “the sheepish way you hail a taxi.” Heald went to Digby, at the Manhattan Theatre Club's City Centre Theatre, straight from The Foreigner. The Foreigner followed Quartermaine’s Terms, set in an English school, in which Heald was Derek, an ac- cident-prone teacher. KITCHEN CORNER ** For Every Kitchen Need * Ideal Gift Items FULL LINE OF WILTON PRODUCTS LOCATED aT WANETA WICKER 1458 Bay Ave., Trail WOPPENROTH, GERMANY (AP) — Thou- sands of tourists have been trekking to this remote vil. lage to see the setting of a gripping epic film about Ger. many’s Nazi past. Focusing on three gener. ations of the Simon family in the fictional village of Schab- bach from 1919-82, the saga called Heimat was recently featured at the New Direc- tors Film Festival in New York. Heimat, Film on Nazis a hit WEST “homeland” in German, cap tured the public's imagina tion last fall when it ran for 11 episodes on West German television. Each installment was seen by an estimated 10 million viewers. The full-length movie pre miered at the Munich Film Festival last fall to rave re- views and has been praised by critics throughout West. ern Europe for its accurate and moving portrayal of Ger- man family life in a rural setting. Running 15 hours and 40 minutes, the film is the long: est ever made for showing in cinemas, director Edgar Reitz said. Reitz decided to tackle a film about Germany's Nazi past while watching the American TV series, Holo- caust, on the German net THE work in the late 1970s. DISCUSSES GUILT “I saw how it was all taken seriously and how the ques. tion of guilt in German his. tory was being discussed by all the great German intellec- tuals on the basis of this travesty,” Reitz said in an interview. “I watched which means the horrible 368-8512 crocodile tears of our nation.” Heimat focuses on a peace. ful farm society between two world wars, the destructive effects of Nazism and the Carol Magow community's ultimate recov. ery. Reitz spent more than five years shooting Heimat on lo- cation in Woppenroth and the neighboring village of Gehl- weiler, using dozens of local residents as actors and ex. tras. Since the TV series, the tranquil Hunsrueck (Hounds back) region in west-central Germany has enjoyed an un precedented popularity with tourists. Scores of visitors intrigued by the story have been ar. riving almost daily at Wop penroth as they look for Schabbach, many apparently unaware it was a fictional village. Not to disappoint the guests, Woppenroth Mayor Toni Sulzbacher every morn ing hangs up a sign reading “Schabbach” outside his vil lage. In the evening, he re moves the sign for safekeep ing. “The sign became so popu: lar that I take it home now because three of them disap- peared overnight,” Sulzbac her said. DEPICTS LIFE Sulzbacher, who was born in 1927, said Heimat became so popular because it is a “realistic depiction of life” in the region over six decades. Residents of the two vil: ? lages were glued to their television screens while Heimat was shown. Most of Woppenroth's 40 senior citi zens who lived there in the pre-Nazi era praised the accuracy of the film. Heimat depicts German life in the village from the end of the First World War, through Hitler's rise to power and the fall of the Third Reich, the economic recovery of the 1950s to the contemporary anxiety about nuclear weapons. It starts when a 30-year. old former soldier, Paul Simon, saying he is going to have a quick beer, deserts his wife Maria and goes to seek his fortune in the United States. Paul, who was a black smith in Schabbach, becomes a successful “self-made” man, but the action stays in Scha. bbach, centred around his family and other villagers and their daily lives. Reitz, 52, who was born in the Hunsrueck but lives and works in Munich, said some of the plot was borrowed from his own family history and youthful recollections. A cousin of his mother's also left Hunsrueck in 1928 with. out telling anyone Other characters in the film were drawn from real life, Reitz said. - SUDS SUCKING CONTEST (Baby Bottles) AR NEWS GAR OC NIE - TUG-OF-WAR CHALLENGE 3 4 5 6. MX BIKE RACES (a1! Ages) 7. CANOE RACES 8 9 10. CAR RALLY OR SLALOM 11. FRISBY COMPETITION 12. GRAND PRIX BICYCLE RACE (ons: 13. MARATHON RUN 14. SAILBOAT RACES 15. SMALL LOGGERS COMPETITION 17. LONGEST BASEBALL THROW 18. DART COMPETITION 19. HORSESHOE PITCH © BED RACES 20. TRICYCLE RACES (including Adults) 21. PUPPET SHOW 22. STREET SQUARE DANCE | 23. TALENT NIGHT 24. SOAP BOX DERBY | 25. FISHING DERBY 26. OUTHOUSE RACE ‘ 27. BOTCHIE BALL 28. BIRD CALLING 29. ELK CALLING 30. GONG SHOW 31. TENNIS SERVING (For Accuracy) EATING CONTESTS (watermeion, Hot AT THE SANDMAN INN It's Your Community — Help your S: Or Else! For more into. call of Commerce 365-6313 Sun Dianna Kootnikoff ADVERTISING SALES - SNOWMOBILE, ATV OR DIRTBIKE (75 Yord Sprints) -22 CAL. TURKEY SHOOT OR ARCHERY SHOOT - PAPER AIRPLANE OR KITE FLYING CONTEST 16. YODELLING OR HOLLERING CONTESTS FUN FOR ALL — IF YOU HELP! We eagerly look forward to seeing you! WED., APRIL 24 — 7 p.m. Larry Bosse reets of Castlegar) Peppers, etc.) unFest! Fest Chairman CASTLEGA ie | (FaLcon PAINTING & DECORATING 2649 FouRTH CASTLEGAR AVENUE c VIN 281 365 3563 Kelas n ber Bath Accessories Upstairs i Pho! RAY CROTEAU 359-7923 BOB POsTHi Mobile 149-6: ais oad Good Stock ate in Trail’s Tow ne 368-5302 Bulletin This year an ATTENTION ALL INTERESTED PEOPLE Youth C Inside jokes on NITY Board OFFICE 365-5210 to take place in Castlegar. p.m. to 9 p.m group. 365-2104 demonstrations available hting aterbeds Nordic Lodi ticipating in the organization of this exciting event can coll Perry, 365-6474 or Tim, 365-6716. 3/30 SPRING RUMMAGE SALE Castlegar & District Hospital Auxiliary, Friday, April 19, 6 Saturday, April 20, 10 a.m. to 12 noon Kinnaird Hall, 2320 Columbia Ave., Castlegar 2/30 CASTLEGAR LORDS AND LADIES We would like to introduce you to a new youth program in town, The Castlegar Lord's and Lady's Community youth This group is an extension of Castlegar Com munity Services and focuses on providiny tivities for our youth. Already in progr and Lady's Theatre Company. The Theat working on pertorming skits for the community, i vice clubs, day core centres, etc. This group will rely on St our community and fundraising activities to make it suc cessful. For more intormation please COIN AFFAIR Castlegar Lords and Ladies first fundraising activity hap. pens on April 20, 1985 at the Legion Hall, 248 Columbia Ave. from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. This affair will be for all ages It will offer game competitions, face painting and free Also included will be o boke sale. gorage sale and rag sale. Refreshments will also be CULTURAL WORKSHOP is hosting @ Cultural Workshop ot Selkirk College April 27 and 28, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day is Anyone interested in por TV show LOS ANGELES (AP) — Listen carefully to the paging calls and dialogue in St. Else where, and you might hear some trivia, a familiar name, or an inside joke from the people who write the MTM Productions show on NBC. TV Company is ser Often paged in the halls of Eligius is Dr. Steven Kiley, the character played by James Brolin on the old Marcus Welby, M.D. series. Once there was a reference that “Dr. Levine's wife needs another insulin shot.” Produ cer Mary Tyler Moore, a di abetic, is married to Robert 2/30 Levine. Visiting police officers paged include Pete Malloy ntact Penny at 2/30 Lessons in cooking. Rosemaling (painting), Hordanger MA ne Square Moll yor . roe os oo must. Poe PLE $10.00 per person for the 2 days includes lunch on Sunday LEAF by cooking class. Registration phone 368-8851 2/29 TRAVEL SENIOR CITIZENS ASSOCIATION Social meeting, April 18 at 2 p.m 2/30 BUS TOURS Coming events of Castlegar and District non-profit Castlegar Pick-Up $3.15 and additional words o poper ond 5 p.m Columbia Ave organizations may be listed here. The first 10 words are ds (which must be used for headings) count as two words 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 ry Mondays for Wednesday's paper Notices should be brought to the Castlegar News at 197 West Edmonton Mall June 17 - 22 — $229 Vancouver Island May 4-9 — $289 15€ each. Boldfaced wor a Aug. 17 - Sept. 7 — $1759 For more information coll NESTA O8 SHIRLEY 365-6616 Open Toes. - Fel 10 a.m. - 4:30 pm. 9am. te 12 noon APPOINTINENTS APPRECIATED Northwest Power Pool (about 20 power wants to lower the lake level to provide more water for power production at Libby and dams proposal would increase annual power output in the northwest system by up to five per cent. The Libby Dam was the fourth dam built under the Columbia River Teaty signed by Canada and the U.S. in diminish the value of the public investment in the existing park system,” says the report, prepared by Shapiro and Associates Inc. of Seattle with the assistance of Jones and Jones of Seattle and TES Research Consultants Ltd. of Calgary. The Corps had the report prepared because the Would damage land April 14, 1985 Castlégar News ay GRASSROOTS, DISCIPLINE ; Campagnolo reforms L iberals MONTREAL (CP) — Re- tothe party leadership witha roles of rank-and-file mem- tien, in cont Sear "i 5 forming the Liberal party is pledge to institute “parti- bers, the parliamentary cau- au’ y to a peepee bap bag green ony ar sd had rather like reforming a“para- cipatory democracy.” cus and the jeader, Campag- a rather strict dimension of up ¢ entenay River. military organization” that remains one nolo said. discipline and trust required long reservoir named Lake Koocanusa. The lake crosses the border about 80 kik of Ci and extends 68 kilometres into B.C. According to a statement Tuesday by the Seattle office of the Corps, the proposal would result in the lake not refilling completely about one year in four (currently this happens one year in five). There would also be lower lake levels in summer. The statement says the report shows the lower reservoir levels “would have adverse impacts on recreation, the area's economy, the reservoir fishery and cultural resources in the area.” e Koocanusa in B.C. is bordered by two provincial parks, Wardner and Kikomun Creek, and one private facility, Kootenay River Cruises. At present, the lake's most important recreational facility is fishing (particularly cutthroat and rainbow trout), followed by caniping, picnicking, swimming and boating. C. . The on pi when the lake level is lowered, the report says some swimming lagoons would or dry, some boat ramps would be so steep they would be unsafe, and the “visual resource” would be “moderately degraded.” The report mentions large areas of exposed bottom and possible wind-blown soil and dust storms. Turks change names SHEMEN, BULGARIA (REUTER) — “How would you explain to your 11-year. old daughter that she had to change her name?” the em- bittered father asked. Mehmet, a 35-year-old Bul- garian ethnic Turk, described how three months ago he was stopped by police as he left home in northern Bul- garia. They handed him copies of an official ap plication for him to change his name. “There was one of them in front and one behind,” he said. “They gave me three days to choose Bulgarian names for me and my family. There was no choice involved. They have the guns and I have a family to support.” The tale recounted by Mehmet, a construction worker like many of his kins- men, told of anguish and des. pair after Bulgaria's Com munist authorities launched a program early this year to force the 800,000-member Turkish community to drop the names of their ancestors and adopt Slavic ones. Diplomatic sources say resistance by some ethnic Turks led to many deaths in clashes in the Turkish-popu- lated south. The authorities deny there has been any co- ercion or casualties and say ethnic Turks changed their names of their own free will. Diplomats say the program is part of longer term plans to forge a more united Bulgaria. Bulgarian officials appear to reject the orthodox hi torical view that ethnic Turks are direct descendants of Turks who went to Bul- garia under the five centuries of Ottoman rule. They now describe them as “Turkefied Bulgarians" who have re- turned to the Bulgarian fam. ily. Hotel caters to non-smokers DALLAS (AP) — Three years ago, Lyndon Sanders opened a hotel catering ex clusively to non-smokers. Today, Non-Smokers Inn is making money, but Sanders isn't planning to expand. In fact, he recently turned down an opportunity to take over a small non-smoking inn in England. Sanders would rather talk about smoking and help other Many of the 80,000 to 90,000 guests who have stayed at his motel on the Airport Freeway, in western Dallas near Texas Stadium, have heard of the inn from others, he said. “We knew we were going to be a success, although some (in the industry) said we were crazy.” Those staying at Sanders’ inn sign an agreement to pay Mehmet, like thousands of others, weighed up the realities and finally took the line of least resistance, adopting a Slavie first name, patronymic and family name. same,” he said. “Nobody went to work for five days. They stayed inside, wran- gled, argued and wept and thought of ways to get out of it. He now is called Mikhail, although to friends and fam- ily he remains Mehmet. He is bitter, still confused, but re- signee. in the country. His account, given to Reu- ters earlier this week, said the town's authorities an- nounced the move in late January. Police went from house to house through the Turkish quarters handing out council do the same. “There was no choice.” “But we finally gave in.” Mehmet said he knew of no clashes in his region although he was quick to recount ru- mors of casualties elsewhere “The first to fill in the forms and take them to the offices were the (Communist) party members. Then most people decided to needs to preserve discipline while encouraging grass- roots participation, says Lib- eral president Iona Cam- pagnolo. And the problem cannot be solved by recriminations be- tween the old guard that held power under Pierre Trudeau and a new wave of reformers, Campagnolo suggested Sat- urday in a speech to Quebec members of the federal Lib- erals. “All this media speculation about our so-called old guard and new guard is, in my opinion, largely irrelevant,” Camapgnolo said in a text prepared for delivery to the general council of the Quebec wing of the federal party. “Surely our party needs its full reservoir of talent ...a party must use al] its re- sources and we cannot have the equivalent of loyalty oaths and political blood tests for members.” There have been repeated reports — consistently down- played by Campagnolo — that some Liberals are un- happy with the continued influence of such key players from the Trudeau years as Senators Keith Davey and Jerry Graftstein and long- time party pollster Martin Goldfarb. But Campagnolo said Davey was viewed as a re- former when he first became active in party affairs under the leadership of Lester Pearson. And Trudeau, though later denounced for excessive dependence on backroom organizers, came The problem of finding the “elusive equa- tion” that will balance the MICHAEL KERE! | Savings, rece’ ha “A political party is rather if political like a y org $1000 PRIZE WINNER FOR USING KOOTENAY SAVINGS "ATM" MACHINES Branch of IFF, right, ber of the Castleg es the $1000 term deposit prize from branch mi is an active user of our Cash Card facility in employed in the Celgar Pulp in Castlegar and is anager Jim Castlegar, Operations Next $1000 Draws May 1 & June 3 _| application forms. By then reports had begun to leak out of casualties among ethnic Turks in the south — something, Mehmet admitted, that weighed heavily in his final decision. He called a family meeting of his elderly parents, his wife and his 11-year-old daughter) to discuss the op- tions. “It was everywhere the This Week in DEXTER’S PUB MON. THRU SAT , Books Opening Sat., April 20 THE COURTYARD BOOK and CURIO SHOP In “the new" Downtown Square bought, sold and traded. ~ Antiques Gnd Collettables ~~ ~ ra taken on Consignments. 365-3737 So you too can have 24-hour access to your accounts! THE GREAT PEERLESS FASHION COVER-UP SALE DETAILS AT ALL BRANCHES OF KOOTENAY SAVING: | IF YOU'RE A MEMBER — Apply for our Cash Cord! IF YOU'RE NOT A MEMBER ~— Join us today! Credit Union TRAN * FRUITVALE * CASTLEGAR ® SALINO * SOUTH SLOCAN * NAKUSP * NEW DENVER © WANEIA PLAZA SHOWPLACE You can save over OQ” businesses expand their non. smoking facilities. “I have restaurants and motels calling all the time asking how do we do it,” he said. “That's what I wanted to accomplish — not build a chain of non-smoking inns. “I've divested myself of everything else but this so I can work on the smoking issue.” Sanders, 56, made 27 speeches last year to various clubs and organizations on smoking in the workplace and in public. He has a personal interest in the issue. “Smoking killed my father and killed a dozen of my close friends,” Sanders said. JUNE 17 - 22 JULY 12-18 CALGARY STAMPEDE ROCKY MOUNTAIN TOUR | a $250 cleaning fee if they smoke in a room. Sanders said there have been only about five cases where a guest broke the no-smoking agreement. Sanders said he became interested in building a to- bacco-free hostelry in the early 1970s because of his experience as an airline pass enger. “I began noticing how people appreciated non smoking sections.” The first experiment came in 1974 when Sanders des- ignated 15 units of a 218 room motel in Albuquerque, N.M., as non-smoking. The motel's restaurant also included a non-smoking sec tion. Mount Sentinel Secondary School Parents Night Weds., April 17 6 to 8 p.m. New Gym i | | | | | “Valuflor” Congoleum Manufacturer's Suggested Price $10.62 sq.yd. SALE $ 7? syd Peerless “Maxi Suede’’ Peeriess ‘’Velour Supreme’ Celesta Manutacturer's Suggested Price $40.95 sq.yd. su 9795 1985 Lada Cars $5998 1985 1.5 Signets now available in automatics Year-End Clearance of all new 1984 cars in stock. Reductions up to $500! CALL CARL OR VINCE in stock Starting at. . sp and save $ Phone 364-2555 bt? SALES\i4 PARTS(44 SERVICE ‘QUALITY NEW & USED AUTO SALES 1205 Bay Ave. CARPETS LTD Trait FLOOR COVERINGS HARDWOOD & CERAMIC TILES Oth Ave 224s Deoter Mo 7819 co ee.