A4 CASTLEGAR NEWS, May 13, 1981 Cable West TV schedule CABLE WEST 10 ACCESS TELEVISION Thursday Night Schedule §:30—Sign-on and program information. 5:35—Five-day weather re- port from the West Kootenay Environ- ment Office. 5:40—Castlegar Library Storytime. 6:00—Voyager I Saturn En- counter — Part X. An exciting and historic series of video tapes which highlights the Voyager I passage past Saturn, as it hap- pened! Presented through the cooper- eration of NASA and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Califor- nia. This is the final segment in this ser- ies. 6:30—Community Centre Opening — This is part 3 of the opening of the newly-recon- structed USCC Com- munity Centre in Grand Forks, . 7:30-WARP Update — Jo Wild and Burt Taylor present consumer tips, best buys and items to be boycotted by West Kootenay consumers. 8:00-—Sheep'to Shawl Con- test — Judy Bradford of the National Exhi- bition Centre organ- ized this unique event which attracted three teams of shearers, spinner weavers, live sheep and many spec- tators. 8:30—SHSS Report — Car- rie Proud, student, in- terviews Mr. Craw- ford, who explains career planning and programs available to students. 8:45—Tai Chi — Rex East- man, director of the Kootenay Tai Chi Centre and students, explain and demon- strate the ancient Chi- nese art, 9:30—Castlegar City Coun-, cil ting of May 42, = ite ential ca ? Oklahoma, has made-a habit - in its ‘entirety: 11:00—Sign-off. Pinsent is key figure in escape film... By Trish Worron TORONTO (CP) — Gordon Pinsent hardly fills the bill of the misfit from small-town Newfoundland any more — the rowdy youth has turned “into an intense and dedicated artist who seems to belong in the elegant surroundings of his home — until he takes a stapler to the hem of his de- signer jeans. ~ Still sporting the curly -- permanent he was given for a ie, #3 JUDY BRADFORD of the National Exhibition Centre holds two articles fram the "Sheep to Shawl Contest”, the trophy and wool. See The Shawls Thursday at 8 p.m, forthcoming television movie in which he portrays Ken : Taylor, Canada’s former am- bassador to Iran, he's trying hard to concentrate on this early-morning interview, ex- plaining the desire he has to contro! his own work, But there's a lot on his mind — he has been up for hours working on a screen- play and must soon. choose’ between making it into a movie this summer or star- ring in.a pilot for an Amer- ican television series, Then there are arrangements to be made with several govern- ment agencies for the film, deliverymen have chosen this time to stop by and friends are calling to say hello. BREAKS SPELL It’s only when he staples the sagging liem that he lets go with a gutsy laugh that brings back the memory of' vias CASTLE NEWS ENTER’ In Vancouver Folk music festival The time when you dust off the camper.and start think- ing where to take the family for the summer holidays is fast approaching. So, too, is’ the Fourth Annual Vancou- ver Folk Music Festival. Since he first stumbled across the festival four years ago, a doctor from Norman, of returning to it. So have Juried art exhibit closes this week participants’ in the Cc ity Arts Council, the Castlegar Community Art Exhibit and the second West. Kootenay Juried Art Exhibit are reminded that the show is ending and the time has come to pick up their work at the National Exhibition Cen- tre. All artists are asked to please come between 12:30 and 6:30 p.m. this Thursday or, if they are unable to do so, then on Friday from 9:30 to 4:30 p.m. during regular NEC hours, The show, sponsored by the Castlegar and District National Exhibition Centre and the West Kootenay Re- “hundreds of others from across Washington and B.C, The festival is a feast of fine music, good food and friendly folks, and children under the age of 12 and senior citizens are admitted at no extra charge. It takes place. in Vancouver's beauti- ful Jericho Park on the weekend of July 17, 18 and 19, and tickets are now on sale at an outlet near you for just $22 for the entire weekend. This year will see more than 180 from fAINMENT Play pays tribute The Rossland Light Opera ~ Players will have their an- nual general meeting May 20 at 7:30 p.m. at the Webster School cafeteria in Warfield. The meeting will include election of officers for the coming year, reports of the past year's activities and planning for the coming year. The major event for the club in the past year'was the production in Trail last fall of ~ the musical “Oliver!” Many members of the club are par- ticipating in the upcoming production of the “1906... And All That” show which is around the world bringing with them a variety of in- struments and musical styles, Chances are that most of the names will be unfami- liar to almost everyone, at the festival. That’s the way fes- gional Arts Council was termed “an immense suc- cess” with high quality work on display and a number of entertaining events happen- ing during. the month-long’ exhibit. These included the juried selection by Jack Wise, raku pottery demon- stration by Gary Graham and classical guitar selections by Doug Chapman et the infor- mal opening and later Jim Terral’s and Mark Mealing’s poetry readings. tival Gary Cris- tall likes it... no stars, just outstanding music and a chance for the audiences to decide who they like rather than falling prey to high- powered hype. In this way eople are more adventure- some in sampling different ° types of music, and a better chance, too, that they will find them enjoying more. Locally, tickets may be ob- tained at Carl's Drugs Ltd., or Doreen Knutson (865- 7260). 500 to study music Early registrations indi- cate a bumper enrollment for the 1981 summer programs at Courtenay Youth Music Centre. About 500 students from all parts of B.C. and across the continent will converge on this Vancouver Island community in July to study classical and jazz music in all instrumental disciplines, opera, modern and jazz dance and choir. Now in its 15th year, CYMC present a festival concert series featuring in- ternational concert artists in recital, two symphony or- chestras and big band jazz. The Opera Studio will per- form “La Boheme” and “The Music Man” in Courtenay with an extra of week modern dance work- shop with Judy Lasko, New York dance teacher and herine Lee, the musical in Duncan and two performances of the opera in Vancouver in Aug- ust. In addition to courses for students at all levels of musical study, CYMC pro- vides a teachers’ workshop in kodaly, dance and ukulele methods of music education, University credits are avail- able for this workshop, New programs this sum- mer include jazz dance with Jamie Zagoudakis, Vancou- ver choreographer, a three- Royal Canadian Legion | Branch No. 170 CABARET Friday & Saturday teacher, and a vocal jazz and concert choir program, For further information, write The Registrar, CYMC, 225 W. 8th Ave., Vancouver, VBY 1N3, phone 879-0838. being d by the Trail and Kimberley Arts Coun- cils. The show, a tribute to Cominco's 7th anniversary, be performed in Kim- berley and Trail in Septem- ber. Liz wows them in New York It was an autograph hunt- er’s dream-come-true. Scalpers hawked tickets for $100 apiece and police . held back crowds of curious bystanders as Elizabeth Tay- Jor made her New York stage debut in a revival of Lillian Hellman's drama The Little Foxes. Among the opening-night celebrities were. Liza Min- ‘Cicely Tyson, ‘Mike Nichols, Andy: Warhol, Lee Radziwill, Bill Blass, Claire Trevor and Halston. ‘And on hand to offer moral support were the star's mother, Sara Sothern Taylor, and husband, Senator John Warner. . The critics, for the most part, loved her. - Come To The The Badd Mano CABARET — ao Located under the i Fireside Dining Room, Castlegar - the carefree youth in The Rowdyman — the film based lopsely on his own boyhood in Grand Falls, Nfld., which he wrote and starred in— anda ‘conspiratorial glance, the trademark of Uncle Edgar in the CBC series A Gift To “Oh, gawd, it really does show, doosn’t it?. 've never done this before, I swear.” But he turns serious again, explaining that when his ser- ies Quentin Durgens, MP, ended in 1968 he spent six years in Los Angeles, where he had “guest shots and bad movies, mostly,” because there was little to do in Canada, When he was in the United States he would have jumped at the chance to star in the pilot he has just been offered by Paramount — is based on a character “who has the ability to be another J.R.,” the sinister hero of Dallas. BEGRUDGES TIME" “They keep telling me that if the series sells I'd only have to spend six months of the year on it. But then I'd need another two months to unwind and a month to gear up for the next season and I wouldn't have any time for my own projects. . “L left (the U.S.) because I wanted more control. I want to write and direct. I don't want to be a performer who waits for the phone to ring.” He is discouraged by Can- adians’ lack of confidence in their own artists and says that doing the American ser- ies might be the best way to get recognition from his countrymen, “This series is bound to have an element of trash to it and maybe I should go down and do it because that's what: Canadians watch. Maybe that way I can get an audience, “People don't seé . that underneath all that slick, the American networks don't really do an awful lot of good stuff. er who refuses to give up when the small town's mining company-¢ closes up. + He. has already had an _aispicious start on his now career with A Far Cry from Home, the highly acclaimed CBC drama about wife-beat- ing shown this season. And in October . his second film, Once, starring his wife, Char- . mon King, will be shown on the network. It has already been well-received at an international TV festival in Milan, Italy. And he has four or, five other screenplays that he would like to turn into fin- ished products, “Directing isn't the ful- filment ofa lifetong dream for me. I got into it for the same reason I started to write — I wanted control, to take res- ponsibility for my own work. “Though when the Iranian thing came along I was quite happy to be the hired actor again and just go out and do the job and go home. I'd like to do two or three of those things a year to keep my U.S, buys Edmonton comedy film EDMONTON (CP) — Pay television rights to the fea- ture film 4x4 have been sold to the United States on the basis of script alone, exe- cutive producer Fil Fraser announced Friday. Fraser said Wescom Pro- ductions of San Francisco has agreed to purchase the film, written by Pete White of Edmonton, for $375,000 U.S. The film, a comedy about a 4x4 vehicle road race, is scheduled for production this ‘summer on Vancouver Is- “We only follow trends - ~ that other people set. Take a movie like Hounds of Notre Dame. If it did well else- where then I bet it would be accepted here, That's. amaz- ing; it’s an embarrassment.” “PLANS TO DIRECT Pinsent, 50, is increasingly turning his energies to dir- ecting. He ‘should know shortly whether he can film the screen version of his play John and the Missus this summer in his native prav- ince. The drama tells about a stubborn old Newfoundland- wi enjoy 2 different Chinese Smorgasbords Friday — Hong Keng Sature ay = — shenahe including Helldays Manday to Thursday 7 pm. Friaay. "a Sorbrday 7a,m, $0.10 p.m. Sunday 8a.m. -9p.m. Sea RESTAURANT 952-3456 Seven 479 Boker A new family borscht and name up there in the public.” Pinsent has seen only a fow segments of Escape From Tran: The Canadian Caper, the movie recently shot in Toronto about the flight of six Americans from Tehran lost year. The two-hour show is not yet completed- filming ended only weeks ago-and the pro- ducers are still feverishly working to‘ready the piece for its simulcast May 17 on CTV and CBS at 8.p.m. EDT. “It looks very, very good and I know the people in Los Angeles are pleased with it,” says Pinsent. “But it's wrong to say that I'm the star — no he person is.” Pinsent regrets not having met Taylor, now the Cana- OPEN 5 p.m. until Midnight Monday - Saturday International Cuisine ina Dutch setting dian consul. general in New York, before filming. (That will finally happen Friday . May 15, as the two are sched- uled to appear on CTV's Canada AM program.) . “I understand that Ken was quite flamboyant, he liked te have a drink at a party and he surprised ev-" eryone and came alive during the crisis,” he says. “It would have been nice to know how he would react in a situation — would he.smile, or what would he do? ' A Unique Restaurant - The Crown Point 1895, fectur- Ing giant antique cobinets, of-the-ceniury English ond italian stained glass, ond | more. Dinner, lunch & breakfast: Surround yourself with G story. 1399 Za Ave. Trait femoris =s1i L NET SR rad ees THE AWAK! ENING snow ‘|e 7 & 9320). aes WARNING: Some sex 5 viotence. . ~_ = BC. Director WE'RE BRAND NEW al ‘an in bread as well as Western food Boas Rose's Restaurant. LOCATED IN 1,600 FT. AT THE PLAYMOR JUNCTION ON HWY. 6 Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Ph. 359-7855 ” yO A hoops che a - Prducedt by TUBE SURRY CASTLI * (SGN MUA BT NU tes LORELEI APE about 100 kilometres east Island. frosthite. KAMLOOPS (CP) — News: briefs’. oe BOYS FOUND YELLOWKNIGHT, N.W.T. (CP) — lost for four days 600 kilometres north of the Arctic Circle have been rescued by a search party. ‘ROMP Cpl. Bruce Wright said ‘Tom Esau and Fred Raddi, both 16, were found ‘wandering on the barrens Wright anid the two boys, who got lost in dense ice fog: while hinting caribou, were lucky to escape without The two slept huddled together in the stow. “VICTIM ID! A woman found murdered near this southern Interior city has been identified as Maureen Elizabeth Mosie, $2, of Edson, -Alta., police sald today. Her body was found Saturday by a woman walking her dog near the junction of the Trans-Canada Highway and “Highway 97 cast of here. She had massive | head injuries, ‘OTE P! ve SAANICH (CP) —A second referendum will be held in this Victoria-aréa municipality June 20 on the contro- ‘Two Inuit boys, of Bachs Harbor, on Banks ‘shopping. faulty tires and ‘lights, Bekaa Valley, Tuesday, The Israeli military versial issue of Sunday and holiday, shopping. The first last reject Sunday store openings, Monday night to hold another vote following the decision ‘ of-votera in neighboring Victoria city to approve Sunday FAILED STANDARDS . VICTORIA: (CP) — more than half of the 217 commercial vehicles checked in Greater Victoria over three days last week failed to meet safety standards, “confirming my worst fears”. that a lot of the vehicles should ‘not be on the road, Highways Minister Alex Fraser said Monday. Elevenivehicles were ordered off the ‘road immediately, | while another 42 needed brake adjustments | before continuing, Others were cited for MISSILES FIRED “CHTAURA, LEBANON |: (AP); Syria fired anti- -aircraft missiles at Israeli’ “jet, aircraft over” ‘the eastern None of the planes was shit in the salvo, Syria's first use of ‘the: Soviet-built missiles’ since it moved them. into Lebanon on ‘April 29 spurring ‘the: moat dangerous confrontation with Israel since the 1978 Mideast war. saw t! ‘bat council decided . had no comment. ‘what a police. union o} conciliation meeting befc air missiles were fired and said none of its planes was hit. It eaid the jets were-on a routine reconnaissance flight over the Bekaa Valley, but gave no other details. Syria TOV DARTMOUTH, N.S. (CP) — Joe Ross, president of the Police ‘Astociation of Nova Scotia, says the city has been made an offer.it can't refuse and if no progress is made, ithe vote: will be taken: : In Halifax meanwhile, “city “police “have decided to continue a slow-down campaign that $25,000 a week in lost revenuo from traffic fines and parking tickets. “* the surface-t Police here. have begun says may be their last ig’ a strike ‘vote. AON TAN Y BCRIC shares J Asks for proxies VANCOUVER (CP) — The British Columbia Progressive - Conservative party ne thrown its support behin committee of dissident share: holders waging a proxy vate battle within the B.C. Re- sources Investment Corp. Conservative leader Brian Westwood said Tuesday party members with BCRIC - shares will be asked to turn their proxies. over to. the Committes of Investors to Corporate Boards also Known as “BORIC is sick .. . and wo (the executive of the party's provincial wing) are in full support of the committee,” Westwood said at a news conference. Hug, Grant Carson: said the group's goal is to force BcRIG management to call a 1. meeting : of. share- “holders to vote on committee proposals “to ‘get the ‘cor- * poration kack on the rails.” To get management fo call the meeting, CIRCB ‘needs: the backing of five per cent, or about four million, of the corporation's voting shares. SHORT - “At BCRIC’s ‘annual’ meet- ing last week, CIRCB had the backing of about one million proxies, far short of the votes needed ‘to elect’ two ‘com- mittee candidates as corpor- ation directors. Carson ‘said the group is circulating « a petition among in its for the special meeting. The committee's target is two million proxy votes by May 26 and another 2.6 mil- Yon by early June, Carson Among committee de- mands that would come to a vote at a special meeting is a Prop that B.C. thousand: ‘invitations Wore sent out, but only seven day to- Leader . The initial blast from the Mount’ 8t. Helen’s- eruption last spring sounded louder in Victoria and Vancouver than. in Seattle, says John Dewey, , start buying up its own shares to raise their value. BCRIC shares, which first’ sold for $6 in 1979, have been trading around $5 in recent weeks, If the buy- back of shares :fails to get. them up to. $8 within a year, CIRCB. wants * the 's assets sold al y of Victoria phy- alciat. Dewey predicted the phen.. omenon casually afew days: after.the blast. Subsequent-. ly, he checked his predictions’ against 4,000 ‘personal »re- ports supplied. Py people at off and the proceeds paid to shareholders. hes’ body held’ Waiting for a BELFAST (AP) — British authorities refused Wednes- day to turn the body.of IRA hunger © striker: Francis «Hughes over to members of his family. unless’: they dropped : plans to’ take: it through Roman Catholic - : West Belfast for a hero's - farewell, Sinn Fein, the IRA's politican arm, re- The Northern Ireland. of- -fice said the Belfast coroner had “released the body to the * family” but declined further .. comment, ‘As thousands of people ¢ lined the streets of West Bel- ” fast waiting for Hughes" cof- _fin to. pass, spokesman said the body was being held in the city morgue until Hughes’. family ‘gave guarantees the body will not pass through: West Belfast.” - “The family is-at,the mor- tusry and will not sign any a‘ Sinn: Fein * ” the, spok Young Catholics had bar-. ricaded streets, set buildings on fire. and hurled gasoline bombs at British soldiers in angry overnight Hoting’ fol- lowing his death Tuesday. Hughes, 25, once the most wanted. Irish” Republican gunman in, Northern Army. Ireland, ‘died Tuesday. .He.. had “gone 59.-days ° without. food in a campaign to force. the British‘ government’ to reverse its pelley ‘of treating’ sooerilas pair Hughes with the same mili- tary-style. ceremony " ac- corded fellow hunger striker Bobby Sands after his death * last week. ‘As they did when Sands died, - women in Catholie blew whistles and banged garbage can lids on. the pavement to spread’ - the news that Hughes. was dead. Some Catholic women took to the streets with their: rosary beads to pray — while youths. attacked security forces, MARCH ON EMBASSY To the south in- Dublin, capital of the Maple Creek, in‘ southern Saskatchewan, 270 ° kilom-’ ‘air pressure waves from the blast moved: outwards, the, e through’ ‘warmer air, moved }: faster, so that the wave as whole tended to rise from the: earth, However, on. bree Catholic Irish republic, ‘2,000 , angry. demonstrators marched'on the British:Em- © charged into the crowd with batons, leaving some Protes- tors bleeding. Tn-Belfasty a Catholte tasa r: was ‘killed and ‘two British soldiers ‘wounded ‘in violent er the y Bl-year-old man, = Christian alternative school ees od neg: Mie ne ee ga” ‘Overwhelmir by fall orrawA (cr) — Energy Minister Marc Lalonde today shied away froma sug-, gestion there will be a: new: oil-price agreement by fall, i He warned again that the’, public must be realistic about . the range of items still to be thrashed out when he meets his Alberta counterpart Merv Leitch later this month or.in early June. Talks be- tween officials are progress- - ing, Lalonde told reporters, before going: into Liberal gaucus. ©” 5 Lalonde did not rule out an- agreement by the.fall.” “But on the other hand I would not'want you to con- clude from this that it will be between now‘and the fall... - meeting (in; mid-April), I have the impression at least that the government of Al- berta has not’ excluded some compromise and on that basis I remain hopeful.” He reiterated there are some 150 items still to be settled between the two gov- ernments but would not give further details. x) indoor Whit istpoot & Sauna Children wit Parents no chdrge Enjoy a ' Weekend “Deluxe “Room for Two Fo For One ne Night’ $3390, “EATURDAY nA iCalears} , ‘CALGARY (cr) — Stu _dents, and: teachers.in Cal- “gary “are lining up by the fundreds to ontor a Christian alternative school linked dir- | weet twith a public school: tem. | ' 5 eines: “it took over an el- mentary school in the fall of. for 979, the, Logos. Education Society’ has. received ‘over- whelming support for its program, which offers tradi-. . tional academic courses with a slight religious flavor.’ At present, the waiting list includes 550° students. Tea- chers have also been scram- -bling for the chance to work there. When the school open- ed,50 teachers applied for the 18 available positions. ~ The Logos society wanted toexpand into another schoo! next fall to accommodate some of the students on the waiting list but those plans. were scuttled-when the Cal- public school board : into dally acadomie acti ies. Calgary ch was instrumental in bringing the program: to. his. com- munity of Scarborough. “I see very little of the truly religious -aspect,- but there's a lot of fellowship,” ‘Wares said. School -: principal Wally Shoultes estimated only 10 per cent of the program in- volves ‘religious ‘training for the school's 870 students... The average day’ begins with The Lord’s Prayer — an unusual practice in regular schools — tobe followed by a" 15-minute discussion ‘on \ a: “It's basically an’ integra- tion of Christian thinking and the regular © public “school ' curriculum,” said’ Shoults. “When it is ‘Sppropriate: for Christian teaching ‘to ‘flow into the subjects being in atructed, it flows.”~ Teachers are instructed fot to. stress one. particular brand of Christian faith be- cause of the school’s mutli- ing between: thomselves, T will take them out into the: 7 hallway and: ask.them if: Jesus would act like this,” - said teacher Jacqueline Betts. Joan Hayhoe, a "grade six. said th fanity even among the senior ‘stadents of the school. - “Quite honestly, we just it, which ‘is: very Shoults said _beween seven’ : tor a teacher these and, nine denominations are ' represented, .and there are some. students without any © Feligious affiliation, |... UNS tend to use the Bible wide range of top. as ics. Once a week’ there is ‘a school-wide assembly with a religious theme and a- 80- minute formal ' Christianity lesson. ‘ Banners and signs with re- ligious “slogans .hang. in ‘the gary. voted to delay ‘Logos expan- - library. sion until 1982. The Logos society, named “create an. educational: community in” which. the Christian influence. perme- - + ates.all aspects of the. indl- | vidual’s growth.” ‘NO BRAINWASHING’ But while the cornerstone: of the gram ; religion, : students «are ” Woneta Ploza Fri., May 15 Sat., May 16 | not asthe only base for. religious educatio: : SOME OPPOSITION © However, ‘public. school trustee Ann Blough, an out-’ spoken: critic of Logos, :ar-, gued: that: Christian - values: could easily. be spreas throughout the school system. without the need for a special “The school claims ‘ution, the school takes a new. ” tral stand. “The points of view held by respected people..on . both sides of ‘the. scientific com- munity are presented.ot the _ students,” Shoults said. . Teachers are gi is, authority todecide how much be religion ‘should be, injected _ing,” the Chiistian education of. our. Program," sald, parents are askled ‘to donate $50 a child to a maximum ef $600 a it centres on loving and shar- « she said. “But other’ teachers I've . talked ‘to resent. the impli- : cation Logos has a monopoly on the concept.” A Logos’ ‘teachers respond that thelr students are better behaved due to the Christian environment. wit two children start ifight-. OFFICE HOURS 10-6 + 10-3 10-5 South Slocan Closed Nakusp 10-6 Closed gating::the. eat only... ‘part of ‘the. fee can -be dd. jucted.: Because it, ia a. public chool, Logos can’t turn away children whose families can't Trail, Fruttiate, Salmo, * Sastlegor, New Denver bassy. . Police: in’ riot’ {fpear. 7 pol spoke pateh ‘soldiers.’ ‘returned gunfire’ in the Catholic Divis. Flats ‘ neighborhood, -killing « VER, ::.W. {AP) — Selentists believe’ a series : of, kappa ‘that B.C.. : David Barrett saree? & a Ls cal ‘seminar- here, zera sald Tuesday." The. seven, .who- hear what was expected to be ; a lively debate between Bar- res and politicians fromthe three. major New. Zealand parties, had thelr money. re-. - funded .and the event , was cancolled,. / : The organizers did not say how much each of the seven “on Feb..18 measured 6.6'and- ‘a quake on April 80. meast 8.1 “the volcano," °! But he said earthquake ac: tivity. along. the fault prob ably was touched off by. the stress of the huge eruption of » the voleano on May 18, 1980. “Apparently: the eruption’ set-up: quakes. along :.on existing fault,” Adams said. An_ aftershock: three’ min utes ‘after ‘the: first tremor Tuesday recorded 2.6.0n:the scale, and other. aftershocks were reported up until mid-.- night after which. the: area : around’. the volando’ was: . quiet, ‘he said., ‘component. ‘ofthe program, ‘ family. Shoults said the sonation is It's a must for. every,small busin i “How to set up'Jou nals, record transactions, post the General Ledger and perform the © : preliminary steps for preparation of the Financial Statements. - a operator!” Sane IN CASTLEGAR “THE FIRESIDE PLACE On __Tues., May 26th trom 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM | Registration fee of $35 per person, luncheon Included. ie fot, turther information, please contact “5 Sharon Coventry hs tel” “426-7241 Sun., May 7 Mon., May 18 © Complete this coupon, and mail it along ‘with your cheaue t to the following address: a Closed. Closed alts Closed Closed to. 5, _ Closed - Closed _ 10-5 ot m.-1:300.m. : ee aang eth. Mon.-Fri Open from 8 p.m. - 2.a.m. Saturday - after7 p.m. ~The "' ht Spot of * 4 P.M. -7P.M., MONDAY, JUNE 8th ‘CASTLEGAR REGIONAL RECREATION COMPLEX 2101- 6th Avenue, Castlegar ‘ Management Seminar, Federal Business Development Bank, "30+ 11th Avenue South - Cranbrook, B.C. VIC 4V8 %.- Name(s) Canal Eee ae Address. Present this ; coupen A enter a Guasts Must Be SIGNED In the Kootenays" -_- Come and Enjoy | Goss.) tue CARRIAGE “HOUSE woron ns, 9030 Macleod T FOR RESERVED TICKETS PHONE: 365-5728 RESERVED TICKETS 5.50 Bingo: Every Thursday at 7 p.m. LA Sunday Bingo RUSH SEATS *3.50 Early Bird 6:30 p.m. Regular 7:00 p.m. ~ Postal Code ‘=