CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, December 2, 1976 Exhibit to Run Until December 10 Phyllis Margole s Paintings on Display at Centre An Exhibition of Art by watercolorist Phyllis Margolin is being presented at the National Exhibition Centro in Castlegar from Nov. 29 to Dec, 0. In introducing the artist at the opening ceremonies on Monday evening, Ernie Under- hill of the Kootenay School of Art in Nelson commented that a more personal relationship is established with a particular work of art if something more ts Ernie Underhill — Duane Harder — Artist Phyllis Margolin COMMUNITY Bulletin Board CHRISTMAS TEA AND BAZAAR The Kinnaird Rangers, Guides and Brownies are holding their annual Christmas Tea and Bazaar this Saturday (Dec. 4) from 1:30 to 8:0 p.m. D.V.A. COUNSELLOR Mr, Jim Wilkie, D.V.A. counsellor, will be in the Royal Canadian Legion Hall on Fri., Dec. 10 at 11 a.m. Any veteran or veterans’ dependents wishing to make an appointment,. please , phone. Steve..Gallo, service officer, at 365-7669 or Steve Melnick at 365-8062, SENIOR CITIZENS MEETING The Castlegar and District Senior Citizens will hold a business meeting in the Centre tonight (Thurs., Dec. 2) at 7:30 p.m. THRIFT SHOP St. David's Thrift Shop is now settled in its new location at 535A Columbia Ave. (former school district maintenance office). It is open for business Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. BOTTLE DRIVE Kinnaird Venturers, Scouts, Cubs and Beavers will hold a bottle drive this Saturday (Dee. 4) starting at 10 a.m. Please support the boys and have your bottles ready. ANNUAL CAROUSEL ‘The Robson Brownies and Guides are having their Annual Carousel this Saturday (Dee. 4) in the Robson Hall from 2 to 4 p.m. Fun for adults and children with a bake table, tea, white elephant, fish Fond, crafts, bingo and door prizes. TURKEY BINGO The Knights of Columbus of St. Rita’s Parish will sponsor a Christmas Turkey Bingo this Sunday (Dec. 5) at 2 p.m. at the old Castlegar Arena Hall. Proceeds earmarked for donation to Meals on Wheels and other charitable organizations. Everybody welcome. CHRISTMAS TEA AND BAZAAR The United Church ‘Women’ are holding a Christmas Tea and Bazaar in the Legion Hall this Saturday (Dee. 4) from 2 to 4 p.m. There will be home baking, sewing and novelties for sale. JOB'S DAUGHTERS TEA The International Order of Job's Daughters is holding its Christmas Tea on Sat., Dec. 11 from 2 to 4 p.m, at the Legion Hall. Everyone is welcome to attend and support the new Bethel. There will be baking and Christmas novelties for sale. OPEN HOUSE AND GENERAL MEETING The Kootenay Society for the Handicapped is eased to announce a public meeting to view Dr. Mare _ Gold's film “Try Another Way” and to hear a speaker share the experiences of living in a L'Arche community. The meeting will be held at the Adult Activity Centre, 211 Maple.St., tonight (Thurs., Dec. 2) at 7:30 p.m. Open House will be held at the Activity Centre tomorrow (Friday) from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Free coffee and tea will be available as well as displays of ceramics and other handerafted items ideal for Christmas giving. HEART FOUNDATION SPEAKER known about its artist and his/her media, “Often some knowledge of associates, associations and en- vironments clues us into the person, the creative art, the finished work,” he commented, Mr. Underhill went on to present the following resume of Phyllis Margolin: She was horn Phyllis Klinck, in Medicine Hat, Alta., the daughter of H. O. Klinck, a school principal, and Isabel Ratcliff, who had been a soloist with the Conservatory Choir in Toronto. The family soon moved to Stouffville, Ont. where each had grown up. Her uncle Dr. L, S. Klnck, was a long-time president of the University of British Columbia. At age 10, Phyllis received scholarships to Arthur Lismer's Children's Classes at the Ontario College of Art, Her father used to drive her and her sister to art and music classes in Toronto—then a long drive of 40 miles, early every Saturday morning. Her sister, Agnes Herbi- son, organist and music teacher in Nelson, soon became Cana- dian Gold Medalist in piano at 1. Phyllis continued art Anticipated for 1977 studies at the Ontarlo College of Art and later at Central Technical School, where she worked under Carl Shaffer, Peter Haworth,*and Charles Gold Hammer, who later be- came the uncle-in-law. At this time, she met Varley and A. Y. Jackson of the Group of Seven, and on gradua- tion worked in illustration, display, a travelling puppet show doing voice parts and master of ceremonies, fashion commentating, as well as be- coming a member of the Canadian younger artists. Marrying Lewis Bockner, a Toronto social worker, sho moved to the States and continued teaching art classes and painting. Later widowed, with three small children, she married again, and began showing her art in mid-west galleries. As a member and presi- dent of Artists Equity As- sociation, she has shown all over the U.S.A. and is in several permanent museum collections, as well as private collections from New York to California and in Canada, More recently, she has taught and had shows in Micronesia (South Pacific) and Mexico, and has worked in London, Scotland, France and Florence. She has recently had showings in a number of Van- couver Galleries. Living in Argenta for the past six or seven years, she is again teaching and painting. Her three children; Rick, Debbie, and Peter Bockner, are living ‘and working in the Nelson area and Vancouver. Mrs, Margolin chooses as her means of artistic expression the most demanding of Community Access TV Studio ‘The community access television studio for the Nelson - area is expected to be in operation in the beginning of 1977. The directors of the West Kootenay Cablevision Society met on Tuesday of last week in > Castlegar with a representative of the Canadian Radio and Television slated for a studio operation and Castlegar will follow. Ed Chernoff, the com- cunity programmer employed with Community Video Ltd. for the Trail area, said that electri- cal wiring and partitions for the studio in Nelson are under way, . and-thata -local The channel cannot carry any paid advertising and the legal liability for program con- tent rests with the cable company. In some of the larger com- munity channels the production and ,cablecast. is -handled by medias—watercolor, Most artists are familiar with water- color, but as a sketch or planning media, where none but their own eyes view the re- sults, Itisa spontaneous medium that requires a great inner knowledge of drawing and a zen-like contemplation of con- tent prior to the action of doing. Such certainty—such inso- lence—can come only from one who has practiced long and Castlegar. North Volunteer Fire Department ANNUAL BALL : Saturday, Dec. 4 / Legion Hall 9 p.m. p— MUSIC BY The Plamondons $15 Couple Tickets available at: Bonnett’s Boys & Mens Wear | & ED's Barber Shop. hard and loves passionately the satanic art of In this significance of her message lies the sole worth of Coming to any artist. Technique, drawing, composition, color—these are but the implements through which his communication is the Colander forced. or To approach a work of art December 8, 9, 10 & 11 with humility and open heart— to lend one’s’ eyes and inner most soul sympathetically, not uncrilically but yet not ar- rogantly, is to discover a world of visual enchantment reaching far beyond the shores of norma! experience. To do so is to open oneself to the captivating innocence of a child’s drawing, the weird charm of an African fetish or the solemn dignity of a By- zantine Ikon. It is to accept gratefully the Hedonistic exuberance of a Fragonard, the frothy nonsense of a Dufy drawing, the pene- trating religiousity of a primi- tive Mexican crucifix or the frank exultation in the magic of the physical world of a Mar- golin watercolor. The German poet Rainer Maria Rilke has said that “works of art are of an infinite loneliness and with nothing to FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 364-1816 be so little reached as with criticism. Only love can grasp and hold them and fairly judge them". 1475 Cedar 364-1816 Would that this counsel Next Door to Eaton’s Across from Sears were more = Direct From Las Vegas ADMISSION: Wed. & Thurs. — $3.50 per person Friday & Sat. — $4.50 per person Showtime 9:30 p.m. with Dancing Afterward Spoghetti Dinner 5-9 pm. AS USUAL cepted. Then those who have. watched their taste for chroma- tic exuberance and wild license become exclusive and set from long exposure might learn to share with a craftswoman like Mrs, Margolin the unabashed, child-like fun that is always present in painting. , Then, too, bigotry and pre: ., might vanish, all , programmer, studio samcras and editi Commission and Community Video Ltd., the private cable company for Nelson, Castlegar and Trail areas. ‘The Cablevision Society, a group of private citizens, has been lobbying since 1973 to bring community access tele- vision to the West Kootenays. In the spring of 1976 a studio with cameras and editing equipment was completed and began cablecasting in the Trail- Rossland-Fruitvale area. Nel- son is the next community ARTS— Calendar ++ to Dee, 10—Phyllis Margolin Exhibition of Art ing: ill be Prove “hopefully in Janu- Studio production and seablecast would begin soon afterwards. According to federal regulations'set by the CRTC a cable company (in this case Community Video Ltd.) is re- quired to fund and provide facilities for a local television channel after the company has acquired a certain number of subscribers. Any organization wishing a speaker and film from the B.C. Heart Foundation please contact Mrs. Patrick Metge at 365-5970 or Mrs.. Wendie Ferguson- -Davie at 365-3274. ts of Castlegar and District non-profit Coming fone py listed hi here-th th rope the 2 courtes Canadian Cellulose's_ Interior Operations. Please submit or tea Patrectly to Castlegar News by 5 p.m. Mondays. A Public Service of Interior Pulp and Interior Lumber. Operations. on at the Exhibition Centre daily from 1 to 4 p.m. Dee. 4—Painting Workshop by Phillis Margolin, well known water-colorist from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Contact R. Wood at 952-7257 or D. Harder at 865-2411 for further details. « 8 * e Dec. 5—Nelson Overture Concert Series event “Georgian Trio” from the Soviet Union, at the Nelson Civic Theatre. Admission by season ticket. Contact M. MacBain at 365-7613. * . Dee. 6- 17—W. C. Symons, watercolors, and R. R. Symons, illustrations at the Kootenay School of Art gallery, 9 a.m. - 4:30°p.m, . 8 Dee. Festival Concert Society presents “Anjati" a classical East Indian dance at the Trail Junior Secondary School at 8 p.m. * 8 8 Dec, 11 - 22—Japanese Centennial Exhibit at the National Exhibition Centre. A pictorial and graphic look at the history of the Japanese Canadians. er eee Dec. 13—Stanley Humphries Secondary School's Annual Christmas Concert, featuring plays, music, ete., at 7:30 p.m. eos Dec. 15—Kokanee String Quartet in Concert at Selkirk College, 8 p.m. Sponsored by the Castlegar Arts Council, Don Mitchell, violin; Bob Eddy second violin; Chris Cowern, cello; and Don Wild, viola. Don't miss this concert performed by this excellent quartet! Hens oe this bi-monthly feature should be telephoned D. Miller-Tait of the Castlegar and District Cee RS Arts Council at 365-7 Sponsored by Castlegar Serine company emp in Nel- son, as in Trail, the company will assist local residents to produce their own programs. Mr, Chernoff said that the idea of community access tele- vision seemed to be slow to catch on in the Trail area, but is finding that more and more people are coming to him for assistance. Local residents have pro- duced and aired programs ranging from specials on Wolf- man Jack, History of Trail, History of the Doukhobors and local sports such as hockey and ice skating. Mr. Chernoff found that ‘Trail area residents were criti- cal of the finer points of some of the programs. Generally, they * were enthusiastic about seeing local people and activities, but many complained of the slower pace and lack of professional lighting. He said this is a problem, because through years of watching Hollywood-style pro- ductions, many people have come to accept the “slicker” productions as the norm. Mr. Chernoff thought that a period of adjustment is necessary before people will be able to fully appreciate locally produced television. President of the West Kootenay Cablevision Society, Bud Godderis, outlined some of the ways that the society will try to help the cable company with the channel. He sees the role of the society changing from one of a pressure group trying to bring the channel into fruition to a group that will promote the channel with the aid of the cable company. CRTC community pro- eran for B.C. and Ontario, Bruce Burgess, encouraged the society to aid the company in making the channel a viable place for community dialogue. The atmosphere of the meeting was friendly and some- times humorous. John Mans- bridge, WKCS director for Castlegar, joked ‘It’s time to beat our swords into video tape.’ Entertainment Pages News and Ads Deadline works of art, ‘regardless of school, made welcome and their deathless songs admitted fo more receptive ears. Guide Focuses On Women's Role in Society Copies of a resource guide on women's studies for use in the development of locally- developed courses have now been distributed to all school districts in the. province ac- cording to Minister of Educa- tion Dr. Pat McGeer. Material in the booklet, ~ called Resource Guide for Wo- men's Studies for High School Students, may be integrated into existing courses such as English, social studies and guidance. Permission of the board of school trustees is required be- fore a local course can be ~ and the 0G | Santa ryRee BEARS developed for use in a school district. ‘The material in the guide f iR8 Ann pS _LANDERS_ bw Anns received the following from the United States Post Dear Postal Customer: H Herieed accept our sincere apologies for this damage to your mall. Although every effort is made to prevent incidents of this ture, dama; occur f the great volume ‘we handle and the mechanized eatlpment which must be utilized to assure fastest possible service. We are constantly striving to improve our * processing fnethods eo that even a rare occurrence such as this can be liminated. | - Your mail is important to you and you have every right to éxpect it to be delivered In good condition. We hope this incident will not seriously inconvenience you. { Sincerely, Ver) D. Koons, SC Manager/Postmaater, Santa Nice? ‘Well—what am I supposed to do about this mutilated, pletely iegible letter from our son who left home five months pie ‘ We've been out of our minds with worry and now that we've heard from him we don’t know what he wrote because we can't ead it. What's worse, the return address is punched out by a machine and we can't write back. I am so frustrated and furious I scream. He With the price of postage sky-high, wouldn't you think they could do a better job with the mail? Please print this letter and suggest paces to calm my nerves, T'm ready to explode. H —Mother In ARage Dear Mother: I feel for you, dear. What a rotten piece of luckt Why couldn't they have mangled a piece of junk mail instead? Ever since automated equipment has taken over, when things go on the fritz they really mess up but good. (Before automation, people made the mistakes.) {Let's hope every son who left home and wrote for the’ firat time will see your letter and write again. It would be even better if every runaway son and daughter who hasn't written at all would do so now. Jusk think of how many happy hearts may result from your misfortune, ee Dear Ann Landers: When I was mixing cake batter last evening, our 12-year-old daughter came into the kitchen and ‘said, “Yommy", I turned my back for a minute and ahe put her whole hand into the batter. I was angered by her piggishness and gave her a light tap on the wriat with the cake-tin. She yelled as if I had broken her arm. Her father cane Tushing into the kitchen and chewed me out for “battering” the child. He said'all kids love cake batter and I had no right to hit her. Now, of course, I'M the beast and HE'S a saint. Will you comment, - please? _ —No Monster, Just Normal Dear Normal: Sure all kids love cake batter, but a 12-year-old should know about spoons, A sudden “reminder” such as you administered was perfectly 0.K. And if you didn't tell her to uso a spoon next time you should have. [ANN LANDERS SPONSORED BY ; Karnie’ 's Ladies Wear . “ : Now at. 25%. Off i be Thuradey, “Felday and gaterdey. \*. fis the to .Christmas! Shop. for £83 (Maple. / Tops on @ e Your iat @ CK F Radio CKQR ie conversational, I eee io Tearing Coming and Middle of the Road music throughout the day, with rock program in the evening, followed by all your favorite easy" tire night. We're always glad to iT cckuemee ied A of the Kootenays at 1290 00 your dialt . A i MONDAY TO FRIDAY SCHEDULE ‘Gas. — Uprising with Fred Jack to 9 azn, including News,; Sports, Weather, Manpower Report “7:50: Birthday Show |. was prepared’ by Dr. Jane Gaskell, of UBC's faculty of education, and Heather Knapp, a Richmond secondary teacher, in consultation with many groups and interested in- dividuals. It focuses on women’s roles in society and includes studies of such topics as the role of the woman in history, the family, the economy, the arts, politics, law and education. Its basic purpose is to provide an opportunity for stu- dents, both boys and girls, to acquire knowledge and an understanding of the role of ongaeyit women in society, both past and aa present, Dr. McGeer said. THE MOST SHOCKING FPISODE Mu HE HISTORY OF HUMAN SURVIVAL! ui enook "SURVIVE: - 8:00 News, Sports, Art (9am. Royal Canadian Legion: BRANCH No. 170 Invites you to Participate in these Functions: MEETINGS Ist & rd Tuesdays 730 P.M. Friday & Saturday BINGO Dancing 9 aa sale em Open 4 p.m. Mon. - Thurs. Every Thursday ee 1 pm. Saturday " 7 pm. Proper Dress Fri. & Sat. sin Me .m. 2 CRIBBAGE 1 be This Weeken' very Sat. 1 p.m. Soest in \" COMMODORES"” Linkletter, Recreation 2 Report, ‘Weather, ‘Words of Life, Earl Nightingale |. we mm of the Morning to 10:30 with BJ. Sys ‘Weather Baylin #. peak Calendar Trader Phone Al's Almanac to 12:15 pan. News, Weather, Sports Stocker Report Entertainment News Sports, Weather, Recreation ‘The Way I See It = Bob eth Alterscon with Black Jack to 4 pm. includes: Teter Phone, Weather, Sports News % Community’ Calendar News Rod Olson Show to 5:30 p.m. Sports, ‘Weather, Strange. Fale, aad Art Linkletter News Headli Fishing neat (Friday only) Earl Nightingale Major. News Major Sports, Weather Dinner Date a People's Gospel World ‘Tomorrow Back. to the Bible Music Rap to 9:30 pam. (Monday p.m. only —Top 20 Hits) "News, Weather, Spots rts "Midnight. 5; "6 am..jincludes: News, ‘The red-and-white strl oe ofthe pretest of looks like a silck of lighthouse at Hope Town, Aba Dh inte in ements * Out Island settlements, mint candy. One of the most intimate hotels pat hese i tbe F isthe i 4 vay at run by (wo former Canadian life's @ Puzsle a Creator of Crosswords Answer quickly: What's a 10-letter name for a man who reads dictionaries for fun, buys 10 Scrabble sets as a time, and rattles when he walks down the street? The answer is Chuck Davis, a writer and broadcaster who rattles because he carries Scrabble squares in brown paper bags. All the world is a puzzle to Davis. Mr. Davis invents word games, Give him a list of any- thing: city streets; terms that relate to the plumbing business, or names of musical composers and he'll give you hack (take your pick) a’ cross- word; a doublecrostic; a cryp- tic, a cryptogram or a ratzel. (A. ratzel is.a Germanic puzzle.) + Mr. Davis earns approxi- mately $400 a month designing crosswords, He. sells to a theatre magazine and: an out- door magazine and edits Rat- zels, a magazine of word games that is typeset in Germany, edited in Vancouver and printed in New Jersey, and cir- culated to an international audience. ~ “TL could earn $80,000 a year designing puzzles, but Pd gocrazy. AndI don't want to go crazy,” he says, emphatically. “But there is money to be made in crosswords, Aim ‘for the trade magazines. For instance, * + you might design a puzzle about plumbing for a plumber's trade journal. Now, that doesn’t exactly, make my heart beat wildly, but the market is there in small specialty magazines.” Recently at the University + simple rules to making up your , ‘own games. ‘The puzzle pattern is para- mount: it must be bi- symmetrical (look the same from the top or the bottom) and the black squares must not exceed 15 per cent of the total S: of all squares. If the puzzle is, say, 15 squares by 15 squares, as are those in the daily paper, it has a total of 225 squares and not more than 34 may be black. Next, the puzzle maker picks a theme, The names of Vancouver city streets is good for a beginner because all you need isa map of Vancouver and the streets are all lined up for you. “The first thing you do is fill in the longest blanks. Look for a 12-letter street nam next an eight-letter street name with letters that inter- lock. Not every word in the puzzle will bea street name—10 out of 60 would be acceptable.” Then: write the definitions (clues). Above all, don't use a pen, warns Mr. Davis. (His definition of a supreme egoist is someone who does a crossword puzzle with a ballpoint pen.) The rest of the. puzzle, as all crossword fans know, is made up of words that defy ordinary comprehension, cho- sen for their combination of letters, which explains ai (a three-toed sloth); adit (a slop- ing entrance toa mine) AMT, a Danish “It I'm going to use those words ina puzzle, I'll have fun with them, I'll say in the clue: “This word brought’ back by popular demand.” Mr. Davis first got in- volved with crosswords 12 years ago when he edited a “magazine for his fellow staff members at the CBC, He figured it would be snappy to° have a crossword init and made it out of his colleagues’ names. He started selling crosswords five years ago. He routinely depends upon two fat dietion- aries; a biographical dictionary and a geographical dictionary and the Readers’ Encyclopedia, may dip into about 60 more . books ‘occasionally. The People's Almanac is indispensi- ble, he finds.” “I don't do crosswords any more for pleasure, because they bore: me,” he said. “I design them sometimes. when. 1 get home. tired, because | they're CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, December 2, 1976 teenie eet wennal gs MIKE, MABEL AND STAFF WisH To THANK - YOU FOR YOUR PATRONAGE ROUND STEA MATURE GRAIN FED BEEF CANADA GRADE CANADIAN SWIFTS PREMIUM HAMS Ready to Eat RUMP ROAST WHOLE OR SHANK PORTION .. BONELESS MATURE GRAIN FED BEEI CANADA GRADE... PORK RIBLETS ==. ... BEET SAUSAGES HOMEMADE - BULK PACK soothing. But now there's something that will destroy your: mind, “Icheaton “ GARLIC RING. he confides. “Sometimes I bend the quote just a little. Nothing. serious. Whitmore Has Been Writing Since Age 13 James Whitmore Jr., the Capt. Gutterman of “Baa, Baa Black Sheep,” has been writing since he was 13, sold a story to ‘The Atlantic’ Monthly when he “ was'a seniok in high schodl arid would like someday to establish himself as a professional writer. He got into acting against strong advice from his father, actor James Whitmore, who- told him, “Acting is the worst way in the world for a man to make a living.” However, he says, - his father is now resigned to the fact that he's working in front of. the camera and likes his series. “My father doesn't like war,” young Whitmore says, “but he was in World War and can identify with aspects of e show,” « Lindbergh's Return, First NBC Special Did you realize that the first special events broadcast. over NBC, the nation’s first radio network, was coverage of Charles Lindbergh's return to Washington following his flight to Paris? 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A president of the United States was heard on network radio for the first time when Calvin Coolidge presented Lindbergh with a medal and promotion to colonel, and, when a band struck up after the cere- mony, reporter Graham. Mc- Onan, that notorious biblieal figure who keeps cropping up in puzzledom. STEAK & CHICKEN “Our Specialties” HOURS Monday to Friday 4 p.m. to 12 midnight . , Saturday 12 noon to 12 midnight Sunday 12.noon to 10 p.m, Sea us for . ‘WESTERN TACK Located one mile South of the Weight Scales A at Ootischenia ted to the listeners, “This is the first time that music is being transmitted from coast to coast.” SADDLE HORSES For Hire APPLES BANANAS GOLDEN RIPE FARM FRESH PRODUCE : 49¢ om $1 | TOMATOES 15° w $1 | CABBAGE FOR COLESLAW SAMMI RAR A BA OI ILI SIS AOA OE “WET RESERVE .THE ‘RIGHT TO" LIMIT. QUANTITIES : _ KINNAIRD CENTRAL FOOD: MART LID. WITH IN-STORE BAKE SHOP FOR QUALITY FOOD AT LOW Paces Darts: Mon.-Thurs. THURS. AND FRIDAY 9 AM. TO 9 P.M. SSAA MARU RIAA SATS RSS USES OOS Ss jpecial 5 p.m, Mondays Weather, Sports, Time Checks Ph. 365-3294 Ph. 365-5211 Bios sccueanmacucnaseatoewctetevasnnesscawerneaens Credit Union Canadian Cellulose : STORE HOURS; SAT., SUN., MON, TUES, WED. 9. AM. TO 6 P.M i