A6 CASTLEGAR NEWS, July 17, 1983 CASTLEGAR NEWS, July 17,1983 AZ Actress wins Hustler suit © ing only that an appeal was with Playboy Models Agency CHICAGO (AP) — Actress LOS ANGELES (AP) — Actor-dancer Eddie Foy Jr. one of e's little Foys” who later starred ‘ " % ° Eddie Foy dies The second youngest child of comedian Eddie (Edward “seven Fil Foy Sr., Foy cut his teeth in show business, the d and film Bowies Robyn Douglass says a $2.5- without permission should likely, In‘closing arguments Fri- day before U.S. Judge Nicholas Bua, lawyer William Serpico told jurors tha District Inc., and subsequently signed a release with Playboy mag- azine for exclusive rights to use the pictures. She testified that after she actress, secret | with his parents, four’ brothers and two sis- that exploit celebrities. versions of The Pajama embarrassment, as well as Game, died Friday at age 78, Foy died of cancer of the pancreas at the Motion Pic- ture and ters. The act began in 1910 and continued into the 1920s. “There were seven of us and we tra\ with our in Woodland Hills, where he had: been admitted a day mother and father, a teacher and an aunt,” said Foy’s sis- ter, Mary. “We sang, danced earlier, hospital spokesman id. and did sketches.” TF CHUCKWAGON CAFE ANNOUNCES! OUR LICENCED DINING ROOM the ck “RUSTLERS DEN" FOR SUNDAY, JULY 17 And listen children 5 and under are FREE eineS Par for this Course! Canadian Money is at par on your room bill with this coupon. Advanced reservations ‘are required, and use of coupon must be esta- blisned when making reservation. Offer expires 12/31/83. Call Collect for Reservations: 1-509-624-4442 Jefferson Jtouse Motel 6th & Jefferson LUNCHTIME FUN .. . Bogus Towne Players from David Thompson University Centre were a big hit with youngsters at Thursday's second lunch hour concert. Troupe performed four ethnic mini-plays, 9 sideman By KIRK LAPOINTE ‘MONTREAL (CP) — If Britain's David Bowie is un- questionably the biggest rock , star of the year, band mem- ber Carlos Alomar has been the biggest rock secret for years. a Bowie's 50-date North ‘American tour sold out with- in hours and opened to rave responses this week in Que- bec City and on the They met more thana dee! ade ago in New, York, when Bowie was helping British singer Lulu recorda comes Z back album and Alomar was asession player in the ‘studio! ‘Alomar had Jearned’ the ropes in the house band at the Apollo Theatre in Har: lem, playing behind’ Jameq Brown, Wilson Pickett’ and the O'Jays at age 16. ~ { He taking the heels of an album that has lifted him. back atop the charts. _. But while attention has been riveted on the lithe sin- |. ger’s return to the stylistic vanguard of current music, few know how profound Alo- fy mar’s behind-the-scenes in- #4 fluence has been. this one set in Japan. Concert was scheduled for Kin- smen Park, but was moved into the Legion Hall er since 1975, arranges his di spite good weather outside. Two more concerts are material in the studio and on dfor this month. —CasNews Photo by Ron Normon Guatemalan troupe here July 22 A Guatemalan theatre troupe, Teatro Vivo, and mu- sical group Kin Lalat, will be bringing a special type of to Castl From ,1977 to 1980, Teatro Vivo ‘toured the barrios, towns; schools and prisons of Guatemala, performing plays at 7:30 p.m., July 22 at Kin- naird Hall, The troupe will present a series of plays accompanied by the musical group to bring alive the struggle and ex- periences of the Guatemalan ints. Both Teatro Vivo and Kin Lalat were born out of the growing peasant revolution- in ary NOW BIGGER THAN EVER! Close to 300 exhibitors will present exciting new items for FALL '63. Don't forget to see our New Product Display at the show. BUY EARLY, SELL EARLY! You'll find all the new items and best deals at Canada’s first Fall buying event, the VANCOUVER FALL GIFT SHOW. HOURS: Vancouver 2+ Fall Gilt Show AUGUST 7, 8, 9,.1983 — COLISEUM, EXHIBITION PARK, VANCOUVER WIN A. COMMODORE 64 COMPUTER PACKAGE Pre-register early and you can win a Commodore 64 Computer and software by Conti Computer Systems. Sunday, August 7 Monday, August 8 ‘Tuesday, August 9 10am-Spm STRICTLY FOR THE TRADE. NO CONSUMERS. NO CHILDREN OF ANY AGE WILL BE ADMITTED. 10am-8pm 1Gam-8pm which the experi- ences of the native peasant in a country of poverty, re- pression and violence. -By 1980, Teatro Vivo's identification with the peas- ant struggle made it too dan- gerous for the troupe to remain in Guatemala. Fear- ing reprisals from the coun- try’s military regime, the troupe fled to Mexico. Like Teatro -Vivo, Kin Lalat was also forced to flee Guatemala. The group now lives in exile in Nicaragua. A spokesman for the Unem- ployed Action Centre, which helped to bring the Guate- malan entertainers to the Kootenays, said the tour is part of a B.C. Guatemalan military. Guatemala’s bishops esti- mate that as many as one -million of the country’s seven million. people have been forced to leave their homes to save their lives. The UAC said tour for the Guatemala Relist Project. the two groups are on. a bea week tour of the province The . proj a are to Laas funding for food, shelter, as well as edu- we the rate Tickets for the iF fac- ilities and medical supplies for native Guatemalan refu- gees who have fled to Mexico to escape the routine mas- sacres of peasants by the at the National I Exhibition Centre, Carl's Drugs, Unem- ployed Action Centre and the Castlegar and District Com- munity porvices Office, He ‘found’ Roger Miller NASHVILLE (AP) — It was a Saturday night in 1957 in Nashville. Buddy Killen, who worked for a song pub- lisher, was playing pinball when a down-and-out song- writer introduced himself. Killen gave the writer $5 and told him to see him that Monday. The writer did, and Killen signed him to write songs for the Tree International Pub- lishing company. The writer, Roger Miller, became a superstar with such hits as King of the Road. And Tree International, which Killen has headed nibee 1975, publisher. Signing Miller was one ina litany of accomplishments for Killen, one of the most in- fluential people in the Nash- ville music industry. In the mid-1950s, he un- covered the song, Heart- break Hotel, which became Elvis Presley's first record to sell a million copies. In the early 1960s, he produced It May Not Kill Me But It's Sure Gonna Hurt, the first single record by a teen- ager named Dolly Parton. Killen has done some writ- ing himself, but now con- centrates on running Tree is now years as the No. 1 ees music Inter which has branch offices in 66 countries, for an P ‘S T.G. Sheppard, Billy-“Crash” Craddock, Buck Owens, Ron- nie McDowell and others. TOO MANY TO COUNT He oversees a staff of about 90 who Your Guide To Good Times in the area. DELUXE DAILY LUNCHEON SMORG 19:30 e.m. fo 2 p.m. $5.96. Salad Bar only: $3.95. trail ae “Your Smorgasbord House of the Kootenays” WED., THURS., FRI., SAT., JULY 13 TO 16 COMBO BUFFET Includes Seled Bor (a meol in itself) $10.50 — Children 4 - 10: $5.50 Under 4: Free — Salad Bar only: $4.95 Castleaird Plaza © Salad Bar © Scampi © Lobster ae OUT DELIVERY SERVICE Toss.-thurs. Me l0p. m. Fel, & Sat, — 5-10 p.m. . Sun. . 4130-9 p. ePizza's — © B.B.Q. Ribs ¢ Italian Dishes 365-2421 INTERNATIONAL SPECIAL - Soup, or Salod Bar, Salmon ‘Wellington with Sauce Choron, Parisienne Potatoes, Vegeta! Garnish, Lemon Meringue P! Toes evening pe Mon. to Sun., July 11 to 17 $1250 OR New York Steak Dinner ... WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. 5 P.M. TO 8P.M. SUN., MON., TUES — BY RESERVATION ONLY Semi-private areas available for group dinners. open for private luncheo Phone 3oa-2616 for Reservations Next door to Konkin's irly the 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 add 80 or 40 songs a week to is the burgeoning Tree catalog. It's to take a computer, which will be installed this summer, to figure out the total number of. songs be- longing to his 82-year-old company. “There's no telling how many,” he says. “I've never counted. It must be many thousands.” In his quest for good songs, Killen seeks the unusual. - “I look for something un- ique — something that jum) out at you. But it can be so simple and subtle you almost miss it. So many of the great standards were overlooked for awhile.” As an example, he cites Tree's biggest hit, Green Green Grass of Home. It was recorded twice, then Jerry Lee Lewis put it on an album. Tom Jones heard it in England, recorded it himself. and it became a The soft-spoken rhythm Bowie's band lead- ee taking the germ of an idea and fashioning it into what most critics view as music of utmost influence that is well ahead of its time. “David gives me full con- trol over everything... He knows he can trust my judg- ‘ment,” Alomar said in an in- terview. Basically, the 82-year-old - New Yorker's job is to make Bowie look good. He whips the 10-piece band into shape for two weeks before Bowie even takes part in rehearsals, scoring the music to fit the players and altering songs so the two-hour-plus show runs smoothly. RELATIONSHIP UNIQUE Their artistic relationship is unique to rock. Most singers want a hand in every et ‘of ‘their music and ind long-hours nit-picking nti they are satisfied. one hasn't got any time worry about it. He's busy on other things, like a film or other projects. But he knows that all he has to do is go home (with a song list) and know his own part. The rest is taken care of.” man “people in the theatre called the red-haired white dude” to. meet comedian Richard Pryor at the Apollo in 1978 and taking him home for food “because he was'so skinny.” Bowie, by then a star in Britain, was still little more than a cult figure in North America.. But he was inter- ested in black music, and his new friendship with Alomar lent support to his foray into that area on his next album, Young Americans.. The album was Bowie's breakthrough on this side of the Atlantic and was his big- gest seller until this year’s release, Let's Dance, a disc that effectively captures the spirit of rock and rhythm. STAYS OUT OF WAY How does the minister’s son, married to singer Robin Clark and father to a five- year-old, maintain the fragile artistic bond that shatters most other rock collabora- -tions? “Very simply, I don’t get in his way,” Alomar said. “He can always come to me for advice and discussion, but I don't hang out with him and impose.” Oddly enough, after being ‘inseparable for years, Alo- mar chose not to: play on Let’s Dance. He was busy his own music that he plans to rework into a solo album once the Bowie Ser- ious Moonlight '88 world tour ends about Christmas. The two also plan to pro- duce the next album by. British singer Iggy Pop and. Italian singer Alberto Fortiz. Cliff Robertson back in LOS ANGELES (AP) — It’s noon hour and only a few passers-by hurrying to lunch stop to goggle at the brightly illuminated scene being en- acted in the ornate TV role since he disclosed that David Begelman, then president of Columbia Pictures, had forged a $10,000 check in his name. That set off the so- to a downtown Cliff Robertson is playing a scene for the CBS series Falcon Crest. Acad hit, Killen said. “It’s been cut probably 600 times,” he said. As head of Tree Interna- tional, Killen’s favorite work ‘directing songwriters. “You'll always have fads, but country music remains constant,” says Killen. “I look for the same thing in a song I did 80 years ago.” an Award winner in 1968 for best actor as Charly, has em- barked upon his first tele- vision series since a three- month stint in the early 1950s in the Saturday morning show, Rocky Brown of the Rocket It also is one of the few film roles Robertson has Revolutionary Music from Guatemala KIN LALAT Fri., July 22 7:30 p.m. Kinnaird Hall called “Holly Scan- dal,” and Robertson says he was blackballed by the film industry. “The Hollywoodgate wind- mill took four years of exile,” he says. “Now there's less ‘creative bookkeeping’ in Hol- lyweoed. I've never consid- ered myself a Don Quixote, with or without portfolio. But I just feel we can't accept unfair treatment if you're an American citizen. It’s your obligation to stand up and be heard. “My agent called and said they were interested in me. ‘My 14-year-old daughter overheard the telephone con- versation. “She went into spasms of rapture ... She said more people would see me on one night on Faleon Crest than in my first six months of a movie. She wasn’t that ex- cited when I won the Aca- stlegar ICKETS: $4.00 EACH AT DON'T MISS THIS OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE MAZATLAN 2 WEEKS ON SPECIAL Depertures duty 23, Avg. 6, Aug. 20 *339 Avon All pochoge prices reduced by $50.00 per person, ond include air, hotel ° el, ‘ond FOR MORE INFORMATION Call Meri or Nesta MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL Ltd. 365-6616 OPEN Tues. y 1Oa.m.- 4 Seturday 10a. c JARDENERS inners of the Costlega: = Luciano and Noemi Quaia were ir Ch of C Ya Chamber committee chairman Lorne Hadikin (right) Bosuiicstion Contest { for the second year running. le with plaque and flower arrangement courtesy of sf Marie! ‘s Flowers: =CosNewsPhoto 20 missing in crash LONDON (AP) — A hel- icopter saris passengers to the Scilly Isles vacation resort crashed and sank in the English Channel Satur- day and officials said 20 of the 26 people aboard were miss- the worst helicopter accident in British history. The British Airways helic- opter had 23 passengers and three crew members aboard when it crashed, an airline spokesman said. ‘helicopter had broken up and “the main fuselage was be- lieved to be at the bottom of the channel, about 60 metres deep. “This makes it a very diffi- cult diving operation,” the {ng and feared The six others were res- cued after lifeboats and two Royal Navy helicopters raced to the crash scene two miles off St. Mary's, the largest of the five main islands. The survivors — two pi- lots, two women, a 12-year- Old boy and a 14-year-old girl — were taken to hospitals, officials said. One woman was Reported serlevaly. salarea. lng ty tl mouth Coast Guard, held out little hope of finding any more. “Had there been any other survivors, they would have been found on the sur- face,” he said. “It is a matter of looking for a number of bodies at this stage.” Officials feared it would be The hel was .en routé from Penzance on the Cornish peninsula to the Scilly Isles, 25 nautical miles off England’s southwest coast, when it lost radio con- tact’ just before noon (5 a.m. Castlegar time), the airline spokesman said. ‘There was no immediate indication of the cause of the accident and none of the passengers was identified. A team of farententore, fp, the Givil Aviation Auth was sent to the scene. The Royal Navy Rescue Centre initially reported seven survivors had been picked up’ by lifeboats. But the navy and the Department of Transport later said six people had been rescued. Lt.-Cmdr. Andrew Lock- ett, rescue co-ordinator at the navy air station at Culd- rose, said the Sikorsky 61 Typhoon leaves 24,000 homeless MANILA (AP) — At least 22 people were killed and about 24,000 left homeless as Typhoon Vera swept through the Philippines after eight: months of ‘drought, relief agencies said Saturday. ‘The typhoon battered the southern region of the main island of Luzon on Thursday The storm’s centre came within 80 kilometres of Man- ila,’ flooding _the capital's streets with as much as one metre of water. ‘because the depth gives di- vers only five minutes to work on the wreckage before they have to come to the sur- face. Seas were’ calm but visi- bility near the crash scene ‘was poor, the spokesman said. St. Mary’s Airport was closed to all traffic because of the accident and the fog. ilfred. Banfield, spokes- man for British Airways Hel- seopters.:s said five x gcheduled flights had been: cancelled Saturday morning because of ~ fog in the Scillys, but the fog lifted later. . y “We run two services to the Scillys,” he said, “one to St. Mary's and one to Tres- said, - co.” “When the report that the fog had lifted came in, we had passengers from both ser- vices waiting around. So it was decided to combine them into one service to St. Mary's. In that respect it was a ‘special’ flight.” The fog thickened again after the crash, he said. Britain's worst helicopter crash killed 13 oil workers off Great Yarmouth in the North on on 1 Aug. 18, 1 J981._ “I don't think they should loas.of income. He said she had been forced to hire body- guards and a telephone an- swering service to fend off. obscene phone calls that he ating the Playboy agree- ment. THE NEW ‘After deliberating for _ three hours, the jury of five Douglass, who was fea- tured in the movie Breaking Away, posed for Gregory in 1974 and 1975. At that time, she entered into a contract For the record ‘agreed to return all photos and negatives of Douglass to her. APPEAL LIKELY: Peter Bell, lawyer. for the magazine, left the courtroom without making any _com- ment about the ‘verdict, say- for the Kinnaird Junior Sec- ondary School awards article in the July 10 Castlegar News omitted Shelly Pakula in the Grade 7 Cobra Award list. As well, the girl in the STANDARD IN ENERGY EFFICIENCY * * * Super Insulated Passive Solar Home currently nearing ion in qt 3504 NORM SAPRIKIN A very talented avto Oy SESTReL DESIGN patnteciond the! (atest Perea igh igh quell sranaards To View, Contact: withurtora long tine. . MALONEY PONTIAC, ¢ on BUICK GMC LTD. e 700 Columbia Ave. 365-2111 Cas the article was identified as Leigh Halisheff, winner of the school's all-round student award. In fact it was Pauline ‘Orr, winner of the school’s top citizenship award. COMMUNITY Bulletin Board July 18 - 22, from 9.4. mation, Grace Presbyterian "church, 2 2605 Columbia Avenue. to 11:30 a.m. All children, three to 12, seaicome: Singing, crafts, study. For For infor. organizations $3'and additional There is no extra charge for Columbia Ave. Coming events of Castle y be listed words are 12¢ each. Boldiaced (which must be wee for headings) count as two words. ir @ second consecutive inser- tion while the third consecutive insertion is half-price. COMMUNITY rotit is ore words ir and District non; ere. The first 10 wi Bulletin Board YY Group sets out to find HALIFAX (CP) — Texas oil millionaire Jack Grimm, accompanied by a group of scientists, filmmakers and left Titanic and marine geophysicist on the expedition, says scien- ‘tists believe the discovery Eee, reveal what happens to area of the sea on his third attempt to find , the last resting place of the | Titanic. The expedition left, a shoerd ra during a 70 year period. Ryan describes the expedi- tion as “an unusual marriage of different interests” with a film d looking for a the U.S. search ship Robert D. Conrad for an area 360 nautical miles southeast of St. John’s, Nfld., were the Titanic went down ‘April 15, 1912, with the loss of about 1,500 lives. This is the third-and last attempt by Grimm to find the resting place of the luxury liner. He has spent $2 million since 1980 in the search, included 10 people, mostly night and Friday, knocki down power and communi- ¢ation lines and forcing the closure of government and private offices. ‘The Office of Civil Defence said 8,162 families, ‘or about 24,280 people, were housed in temporary shelters in six provinces. Most of hele who Bataan province west of the capital across Manila Bay.- Also killed were seven people hit by falling coconut trees in Quezon province on Luzon’s east coast, three people in a fire in Sorsogon province, a woman hit by in les north houses were damaged by Vera's pak winds) of 180 of Bataan and a man pinned under a d wall ina Manila suburb. F Mike Harris, who recorded the previous efforts,\said before the group finding the Titanic, there is the mystery of a diamond shipment, never listed on the ship’s- manifest but reputed to'be worth more than $125- million. Bill Ryan, chief scientist Before you Renew the Mortgage on your Home, CHECK THESE MORTGAGE ADVANTAGES at Kootenay Savings: 102% INTEREST P.A. — On First de | Mortgage ( BI-WEEKLY OR WEEKLY PAYMENTS — Reduces Total Interest Paid ! — Without Penalties! — Pays off Mortgage in Less Time! FULLY "OPEN" . —Can be Prepaid! — In any Amount! met any Time! — Without Penalties! FREE QUOTATION / CONSULTATION !. F Kootenay Savings Credit Union TRAN © PRUITVALE «, SOUTH SLOCAN SALMO MaRUee « MEM DENVER © WAMSTA IATA documentary record, an oil man seeking adventure, sci- entists wanting to study the .Ocean floor and oceanogra-' phers looking for a chance to develop instruments. The Robert D. Conrad, one of the first class of ships de- signed and built by.the U.S. Navy .for oceanographic re- séarch, is expected to reach the Titanic site in about three days. ' SHOWTIME MOVIES. Canadian News and Sports Network Canadian Channel By request onl: tional channel: ADULT movies on our op- the latest I © All Color TV © Queen Beds © Snack Bar © Direct Dial Phone Shamrock Motel E. 1629 Ave. Spokane! Weskington Telephone (509) 535-0388 RESERVATIONS ARE RECOMMENDED HIDDEN CREEK | Outdoor ROCK FESTIVAL At Hidden Creek Ranch, 3 miles north of Salmo, Highwe 6. The Ac Action Starts at 12 Noon, Saturday. SOUND & LIGHTING: KELLY-DeYONG S pee sso T.K.O. —S8OKt yy SELKIRK COLLEGE WV KIDS 'N SX4 ss COMPUTERS Selkirk Coll has limited opent nm iP g! children, grades 4 through 12. BEGINNERS 1 — Sivan lnicoduction to Pro- rile jects on the Apple computer. Recommended projectsion 7. (9.a.m. - 12 noon) BEGINNERS 2 — BASIC: Introduction to Pro- gramming through graphics and student projects’ on the Apple computer. Recommended for Grades 8 - 12. (1 p.m. - 4 p.m.) FEE: $50.00 per course. DATES: CRESCENT VALLEY: duly 18 - 21, 1983 NELSON: july 25 -28, 1983 CASTLEGAR: Aug. 29+ Sept. 2, 1983. -PLEASE REGISTER Or JULY 15 AT THE JARANTEED TRAIL CAMPUS, 368-5236, TO BE GU. A SEAT. REGISTRATIONS WILL BE fir space ON THE FIRST DAY OF THE COURSE I IEiSPATs 1S AVAILABLE. - WOODCRAFT STAINS Woodcraft Stains, specially made for our Western weather. Choose Semi-Transparent or Solid Color, in a full range of popular shades. They resist cracking, peeling, stain- ing and mildew. 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