CASTLEGAR NEWS, June 27, 1982 Entertainment Hollywood likes Canadian-made f The Canadian Press Burt Reynolds and Goldie Hawn, teamed together for the first time in the coming romantic comedy Best Friends, recently sampled a TIME TO BOOK Fall Foliage 1982 taste of Canada in Holly- wood. L A Canadian-i Fiddler on the Roof and In the Heat of the Night. laxing on th elot in his Hollywood Norman Jewison, who is both producing and directing Best Friends, brought the two actors maple syrup from his farm in the Caledon Hills near Toronto, Between takes. on the movie set,’ Jewison was asked if the slender stars liked the sweet stuff. “Are you kidding?” replied Jewison. “Burt and Goldie’ Maverick Bus Tour * Sept. 25 departure only sates went crazy. Now I have to bring them some more. * Not only does Best Friends mark the first time that Hawn and Reynolds have worked together, it’s the first time that either has worked with the veteran Jewison whose numerous films in- clude And Justice for All, The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming, TOR MORE INFORMATION Call Marj or Nesta MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL Ltd. 365-6616 OPEN Tuss, - Fri. 1Wa,m. -4:30 p.m. Saturday 10.a.m, 1 p.m. The Amplifier and PA System Leader of the Kootenays "SALES AND RENTALS” Libra Music 840 Rossland Ave. 964-2922 COMMUNITY Bulletin Board eee OerHEL dl OF JOBS DAUGHTE! Cordially wane he public to the Inetellation of Honored Queen Sherri Hill and her officers on Sun., June 27 at Woodland Park School at 2 p.m. ROBSON RECREATION SOCIETY. Be, General mectivg will be held on Wed., July 7 at 7:30 p.m. Sine Robson Ha Subject: Election of Officers. SOCIAL CREDIT PARTY . Meeting to ra held oe; uae 28 at Trowelex at 7:30 p.m. Members plea: GETINTOS.T.E.P. Parenting skills classes start the week of July 5. Limited spaces evallable. Register now by phoning the Costl Volunteer pchenee at 365-2104 or come into the office ot 1215 - 3rd Street. Coming events of Castlegar and District (immediate area) flon-profit organizations are listed here through the cour- tesy of BC Timber's Celgar Pulp and Celgar Lumber Divisions. Please submit notices directly to the Castlegar News by 5 p.m. Thursdays. A Public Service of Celgar Pulp Division and Celgar Lumber Division BC Timber Ltd. personal midnight blue bus named The Bandit, Reynolds recalled he had auditioned before Jewison for a role in the movie, The Thomas Crown Affair. Reynolds recalled it being 10 years ago, but it must have been more like 15 be- cause the movie came out in 1968. “I didn't get the part, Paul Burke did,” sald Reynolds, putting on the “poor me" face he uses to such advantage on the screen. “But Norman was very nice to me. He really ex- tended himself. Maybe be- cause he'd been an actor himself, he understood the pain of being turned down.” As a young man, Jewison . did bit parts on BBC tele- vision shows that required an American accent. In Best Friends, Hawn and Reynolds play two: Holly- wood scriptwriters who've been living together for sev- eral years, then decide to get married. The movie has been shot in Buffalo and Virginia and is being completed in the studio in Hollywood. Asked when the movie will wrap up,. Jewison crinkled TWIN RIVERS VOCALISTS . . . Twin Rivers Elementary Schoo! music teacher Bob Ber- tuzzi conducts Grade 5 Ukelele Singers in performance for senior citizens at Rota Villa Wednesday. The Entertainers, a group of Grade 6 boys on piano, drums and organ, also participated in the outdoor concert. Jones still on booze NASHVILLE, TENN. {AP) — It happens at just about every Tammy Wynette concert. Someone in the audience yells: “Where's Ge- orge?” They want to know the whereabouts of George Jones, Wynette’s occasional singing partner and one of the country music star’s four } ex-husbands. “I don't know where George is,” Wynette says. “I doubt if even George knows where George is.” The audience usually laughs. The remark refers to f Jones’ well-known fondness for alcohol. For years, the Nashville music community has chuc- kled at Jones’ drinking bing- es, treating him as a lovable relative who keeps the family ined each Chri a string of scheduled per- formances he has missed and disillusioned because he's wasting his considerable sin- ging talent. The 60-year-old Jones has been arrested three times since March on drinking and drug charges, Between the second and third arrests, he spent about a month in a Bir- mingham, Ala,, hospital for treatment of alcoholism and drug abuse. VOCALIST OF YEAR Jones’ current problems come at the height of his career. He has been voted _ male vocalist of the year for the: last two years by the Country Music Association. His 1980 hit, He Stopped Loving Her Today, was cho- sen single of the year by the Country Music Association after polishing off a six-pack. But not any more. Friends and associates are concerned for his health, disappointed in Featuring... NOW OPEN - ‘Inn of the Rockias Dining Room & Lounge OPEN 7 DAYS For Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Please Phone Ahead For Weekend Dinner Reservations 300 Wallinger Ave., Kimberley 427-5301 and the Acad Music. It also earned him a Grammy Award. Inan interview last month, Jones vowed a new attitude on his part: “The world will see a big difference in me.” But Gerald Murray, a close business associate of Jones, says the Texas-born singer apparently has a death wish. “He's told me before he wants to be another Hank Williams,” says Murray, who's in charge of conces- sions at Jones’ concerts. Williams was a country music superstar who drank himself to death at age 29 in 53. “If something doesn’t bap- pen, he won't live much lon- “He needs of Country” STANLEY HUMPHRIES SECONDARY SCHOOL AWARDS DAY to be held ; Tues., June 29 commencing at 9:00 a.m. School Achievement Awards a.m. TO BE FOLLOWED BY ATHLETIC AWARDS to got into a hospital on his own to get straightened out.” Dan Wojcik, president of the Lavender Talent Agency, which books Jones’ concerts, says: “I've lost a lot of sleep asking myself what can we do to help him." Loyal fans still go to his concerts, despite his repu- tation for not showing up, Wojcik said. But Jones isn't picking up new fans. “George has to want to help himself,” Wojcik says, And his friends and as- sociates are behind him. Songwriter Ray Wylie Hub- bard has written a song about Jones called George, Put Down That Drink. A Nashville publication, The Country Music Inquirer, pub- lished an open letter to Jones last month, urging him to quit drinking. Jones, a former house painter, was arrested May 25 south of Nashville on drun- ken driving charges. He was arrested March 29 in Jack- son, Miss., on charges of public drunkenness and co- caine possession. A day after that arrest, he wrecked his car in Aberdeen, Miss., when it ran intoa diteh and overturned. Wynette, who divorced Jones in 1975 after seven years of marriage, didn't return a reporter's phone call for comment on her ex-hus- band's recent troubles. But in autobiography,- Stand -By Your Man, she says Jones’ drinking contributed to the breakup of their marriage. Students are req d to be in at Parents are welcome to attend. his brow and thought for a moment. “My garden at the farm is Every year he throws a party. for the Canadian film community in Hollywood, what's and I've got to get that in by May 24. Among Canadian movie industry types in Hollywood, Jewison is one of the’ most powerful — he's on the short list that gets offered Holly- wood blockbusters, though he generally prefers to do his own —and the most promin- ent Ganedian fagwaver. : ig, flags from the Canadian consulate in Los Angeles. “When you go through them all — Margot Kidder, Bernie Slade, Lloyd Bochner, Chris Plummer, ete, — it's quite a bunch. “It's wonderful," says Jew- ison, “we all stand around and talk about how different ilms things are in Toronto and Montreal.” Different indeed. Whereas Canadians tend to bemoan the fact that current movies such as Quest for Fire, Porky's and /The Amateur — made by Cana- dian producers with Can- adian crews and featuring Canadian actors as well as foreign talent — are not purely Canadian, Hollywood is delighted with them. That's because — they've done well in the only arena that Hollywood really under- atands — the box office. No Cuban romance for Boyd TORONTO (CP) — Fidel Castro caused Toronto classi- cal guitarist Liona Boyd to swoon when they met re- cently, but it wasn’t romance — it was the foul smell of the Cuban president's cigar. Last month, Boyd spent an : evening on the terrace of the Canadian Embassy with Cas- tro, and she says the con- versation touched on things from genetic engineering * ond (National TV no | joke for students TORONTO (CP) — For the best part ofa yon a group of students put in 14-hour days to fit in Royal Tally — but no talk mt romance. Ignoring the romantic set- ting — a tropical moon, the jungle darkness and the cry of exotic birds — Castro “went on about Cuba's re- search oath interferon (an " said researching and filming a college When friends asked them what they expected to get for their efforts, “we joked defensively that, of course, is was going on prime-time national television,” says the producer, Those doubting friends can tune in to CTV tonight at 10 p.m. when The Accident, the one-hour film produced by the Ryerson Polytechnical Institute students, goes to air. The time slot is normally reserved for the network's prestigious current affairs program W5. “National, prime-time television —I still don't really believe ‘it,” says journalism graduate Rae Hull, the producer, writer and narrator of the piece about the aftermath of traffic accidents, who is working on a CBC-TV training program this summer in Windsor, Ont. “It was a Ittle funny coming here (to Windsor) and wondering if I'd ever get my first 90-second piece on the air and then I'd think ‘Hey, I've got a documentary going on national TV,’ " said the 25-year-old Edmonton‘native. About 35 journalism and radio and television arts student worked on the documentary at some point, but at the core were Hull and two others — Patricia Darley, the director, and Graham Webster, the executive producer. Darley now is a clerical worker at CBC Toronto and Webster is still looking for a job. INSPIRED BY ACCIDENT The documentary, picked up by CTV after W5's executive producer Bill Cunningham saw its premiere this spring at Ryerson, was inspired by Hull’s own traffic accident. several years ago. “I was hit by a car and bounced 40 feet in the air. I , wasn't badly hurt, I was just sore for about a month, but I thought at the time how quickly an accident could change everything in your life. “It’s a topic everyone is aware of but they don't really get to take a second look at it,” says Hull, who claims 10 million people have been killed worldwide in such mishaps in the last 75 years. “You hear the words “seriously injured” or “critically injured” all the time. But what the hell does that really mena? That's what we wanted to find out — what happens to the victims.” To do that, the film-makers found about 65 accident victims and eventually chose five of them to tell their stories for the camera. The five were either badly injured : themselves or lost loved ones in an accident. While the interviews are often poignant, Hull herself admits “I wish we'd only had more time to tighten it up or do some of the shooting differently.” Boyd, 30, ‘whose classical guitar stylings have brought her international acclaim. Following a glittering em- bassy concert to celebrate the Canadian Constitution's homecoming, Boyd told Cas- tro her brother is studying genetic engineering “at uni- versity and he said; “Any- time, ‘your brother is wel- come in Cul “He did mention Royal Jelly — that stuff from bees,” she said. “He uses it to keep young. It’s good for your skin and gives you lots of energy. Fidel certainly has lots of energy.” ‘ALMOST DIED’ Asked fi she swooned when he came close to her, Boyd said “I almost died — it was the smoke — from his cigar.” “T'm allergic to smoke and I had a bad cold. I caught it after the (Canadian music in- dustry) Juno awards, -just before going to Cuba. I had a fever and was taking pen- icillin and, oh, when I started to play for Fidel I had a drop on th eend of my nose and I thought I'd start coughing. Boyd and Castro were never alone together. “There were always his armed guards, on the terrace and outside the little room we retired to. The house had been searched by security men before the concert. No one knows where Fidel lives and it was quite a coup for the Canadian ambassador to get him to come for the cel- ebrations.” Boyd said Castro was very A LADIES‘ AUXILIARY TO THE ROBSON VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPT. B-I-N-G-O Sunday, June 27 — 7:00 p.m. at the Royal Canadian Legion Early Bird Games 6:30 p.m. © Cash Door Prize © $250 rere ° $300. Jackpot. relaxed and friendly, making lots of jokes. “At one point, I was sitting opposite him but he wanted to know all the palces I'd travelled to, so he had a globe brought in and asked me to sit next to him so we could look at them together. showed him Elliot Lake, Kapuskasing, Espanola, Sud- bury — it was very funny.” TMUOS NOs! Seka as rennet b FAREWELL PARTY | farewell gifts from party. Cc WOODEN SHOE RESTAURANT International Cuisine _ ina Dutch Setting Mon. - Sat. 5 p.m. to Mid. Sunday 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. Travellers to U.S. & Other Points Unlimited yeor-round cover- ege for excess medical ex- pense is now available for you ‘and your family. No ni report each trip. Closed Tuesdays- Don t take chances on having big medical bills in- i outside Canada, ‘(3 COHOE Insurance Agency L 269 Columbia Dial 365-3301 \ ot the ‘Hobbit Hill centre. docks, who was Castlegar’s mayor when Collier was tued asa fe Norma Collier and Ellen Grant (pictured at left) receive bbit Hill Day Care Centre advisory committee chairman Kay Johnson. Collier and Grant retired after 19 years of combined service at the centre. ine gifts were framed artwork created jy Ae e children at the centre and presented ert Dale Ingram, aia Care Society, witha ‘cheque for $250 for the pre-school fh i centre, The donation was made on behalf of Bob Mad- CASTLEGAR NEWS, June 27, 1982 / Vital Statistics > SIRTHS CHAMBERS — To Mr.:and Mrs. Robert Chambers of Trail, o son, born June 18, FABRO — To Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Fobro of Castlegar, o daughter, born dune STRONG — To Mr. and Mrs. Robert Strong of Slocan, & son, born Ju TARASOFF — To Mr. and Mrs, Tom Tarasoft of Castlegar, a son, born June 19, in, died June 25 at the ‘ootenay Lake District Hospital, oe will be held Tuesdoy a! p.m, af Costlegar Funeral Chepal with Rev. Ira Johnson of- iclating. Cremation to fallow juneral, HENDRICKS - Walter Handricks, 85, died J1 7 in Richmond. ‘eston, he was active in Nelson community affairs as presigent.<¢ of the chamber: et member Kootenay Loke General Rospitel board and o member of the ‘OBITUARI ai PANGAN: _ Prone Hanham, of Nel lo cremation Chamber of Co as president of the Cham mmerce: ived by his wife Vera; tw ond Soughiers: in-law Gnd numerous grandchildren, He +. was predeceased by his son Ted In 1954, jDLOW — Jennie. Kathleen Ludlow, 87, of Nelson, died June ae Mi. St. francis Hospital. ene asa member of the Rebekah lodge, the IOE and the United Empire Loyalists. She is survived by three sons, Jack and Bill of Nelson, Louie of rendehiidren ichildret 8 redeceat by her husband Eddie and two sons, Bob during World War Il, and Di METHUEN - Peter Geoffrey jeale Methuen, of Nelson, died ee 18 in Willowhaven Private Hospital, Funeral orice were held in St, Saviour's Pro-Cothedral June 22, Canon R. "stan ollicjaied ond wed POPOFF — Nostia Popa s. of Glade, died Sunday, June 20 She Is survives daughter, Mrs, Sam batotl ct Giade, ‘of Moun’ St. Francis as vice-chairman of the board. He was also o charter member of the Nelson Kiwonls Club ond president of the Kootenay West kw, ABOARD THE MARGUERITE No kisses this time ’ VICTORIA (CP) — There are no kisses the second time around. Rory and Amanda, the Harlequinesque couple in- vented to entice tourists aboard the Marguerite are back, their adventure re- counted in a second brochure published by the B.C. Steam- ship Co. Ltd. But: they have changed since the last voyage. In an attempt-to appease Victorian merchants scandal- ized by the couple's romantic ' escapades, flame-haired, tem- pestuous Amanda, and Rory, the brilliant scientist she married, have cleaned up their act. There are fewer techni- color embraces on the return voyage. During her first trip be- tween Seattle and Victoria with Rory, Amanda “slowly puckered her creamy, full, rosy lips and kissed him right - on the promerade deck.” This time, she only laughs and he gets a twinkle in his eyes. Company. rehires Castlegar. driver. , “A Castlegar truck driver is‘ back behind the wheel of tractor trailers following set- . tlement of his complaint to the Canadian Human Rights Commission (CHRC). Robert Sherstobitoff, dis-j missed on Aug. 30, 1981 be- cause he failed CP Trans- Tourist Alert VANCOUVER (CP — The following persons are re- quested to contact the near- est detachment of the RCMP for an urgent personal mes- sage: g 1. Joseph Louis Omeniuk of Calgary. 2. John and Caroline Sal- keld of Duncan. 8. Al Vanalstine of Shaw- nigan Lake. port’s eye test, was "Fehired on Dec. $0, 1981 with $9,892 in back pay and his seniority restored. | : held a Class 1 Barry Margetts, steamship engers. This year, with a more agg sales pitch general says the business commun- ity, dismayed by the image of the Maggie and Victoria por- and a week head start on the season, the number. is up to 46,195 passengers. Look to the future says BCRIC head VANCOUVER (CP) — The B.C. government and forest industry should be looking to the future to find the way out of the current slump, the president of B.C, Resources Corp. said this trayed by the first seems “a little happier” with the sequel. But the real success story is in the response the $400,000 advertising cam- paign has drawn from tour- ism offices outside B.C., Margetts said in an inter- view. “Travel agents have been calling asking for more bro- chures because they keep running out,” he said. The 250,000 brochures that have been printed are disappear- ing fast. Meanwhile, in a tourist _Season made, shaky by the a general state ‘of the economy, the summer-season excursion ferry to Seattle is ahead of its record last year. To May 31 last year, the Maggie carried 41,460 pass- The iz also includes a 30-second tel- evision commercial, in which the couple are seen locked in anembrace on the deck ofthe Maggie. Rory drops Amanda for a closer look at Victoria's leg- islative building, remember- ing her just in time to save her from a nasty fall on the promenade deck. Meanwhile, as the second chapter of the couple's ad- ventures ends, Rory confes- ses to Amanda that there is another woman. Her cheeks flushed with jealously, she asks the wom- an’s name. 2 “Victoria,” he replies, sol- emnly. “Does she have a last name?” Amanda asks, fight- ing back tears. week. New Luthern ‘pastor St. Peter Luthern Church has new pastor. Pastor Terry Defoe will conduct regular 11 a.m. services starting July 4. The instal- lation service will be held July 18. The time for: the instal- “lation service will be either afternoon” or evening and those interested are advised to watch the church bulletin or contact Pastor Defoe at 965-7622 or 365-3664. B.¢, licence and had passed the B.C. . Motor Vehicle Branch’s eye test which re- quires 20-80 vision, with our without glasses, CP demand- ed at least 10-100 vision cor- rected to 20-20, because Sherstobitoff was driving petroleum tankers. When the commission in- vestigator contacted CP in November, 1981, he was told that the company was al- ready reviewing the stan- dard, which was subsequent- ly changed to conform with provincial norms. The company’s general manager voluntarily offered Sherstobitoff his personal apology; the CHRC approved the settlement at its June 21 meeting in Ottawa. - Francis Hanham service Tuesday Mr. Francis Hanham, 72, of Nelson, passed away Friday at the Kootenay Lake Dis- trict Hospital. He was born May 25, 1910 at Qu’Appelle, Sask. He later moved to Trail in 1935 where he began working for Com- inco until retiring in 1970. He served in-the Canadian Arm during World War II. After his retirement from Cominco, he moved to Slocan City and then to Nelson in 1980. He is survived by one brother, Tom Hanham of Grande Prairie, Alta., three sisters, Mrs. Jean Jones of Castlegar; Mrs. Peter (Dor- othy) Leslie of Penticton; and Mrs. Ivan (Annie) Thessian of Fort St. John. He is also sur- ‘vived by numerous nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. at Castlegar Funeral Chapel with Rev. Ira Johnson offi- ciating. Cremation will follow. Funeral arrangements under the direction of Castlegar Funeral Chapel. B.C. Waters ron Ready. FLYER CORRECTION WHOLE SOLE & SuperValu E StuMBIA BREWING COMPANY LTO CRESTOR aC, uni BEER: BIERE Lay | es Liberal Associction, In Richmond he continued his interest in com- Pee Hea edeceated by her husband €d- Funeral Chopel, Burial Glade Cemetery. Bruce Howe told the Can- adian Life and Health In- surance Association that the key to the forest industry's health is the ability of gov- ernment and industry’ offi- eials to co-operate in finding new, long-term markets. The traditional areas of co-operation in- harvesting and regeneration of the re- source are no longer enough, he said, and neither are the traditional markets. Demand from the U.S. housing’ mar- ket, the largest buyer of B.C. timber, seems to have lev- elled off, he said. LOAN-OUT CAMERA The Castlegar News has two simple-to- operate loan-out cameras (complete with film) which it is pleased to allow groups to use for taking pictures for use by the Castlegar News. Arrangements for the use’ of these cameras should be made through our News Department at 365-3517. CASTLEGAR NEWS News Deportment 365-3517 ‘Save Now on New Units Like These and Get Top Trade-in Dollar * % MILEAGE MAKERS kek BRAND NEW 1982 Acadian S from Pontiac List $6,589 Now $5,888 You Save $701 Approx. 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