HOME OF THE HOMEMADE Potties-Fries-Jo-Jo's Soups-Pies-Muttins ot the bottom of the hill 1004 Columbia 365-8155 HOH Carmela's Spaghetti House and Calabria Pizza Enjoy the true Italian Spaghetti Dinner All the Spaghetti You Can Eat — $6.95 | Private dining rooms at no extra charge. 531-2nd Street, Trail, B.C. 368-9399 Royal Canadian Legion ) Branch No. 170 Cashma in Turning Thirty The Kootenay Lake Arts Celebration will present Chery! Cashman in Turning Thirty. - The critically acclaimed show that has delighted audiences and critics coast to eoast, wilt be performed in Nelson Sept. 6 and 7 at ‘Studio 80 on the David Thompson College campus. Turning Thirty has been performed only in large urban centres to date and this will be first in a smaller city “Usually I wouldn't do it but Nelson is a very special place,” Cashman says. “The show requires a certain kind of audience Fm really excited about playing it here I'm touched by the CABARET Saturday Dancing 9:30 p.m.-1:30a.m OPEN MON. - THUR. 11 A.M. - 1 A.M. FRIDAY & SATURDAY 12 NOON-2 A.M. Proper Dress Saturday atter 9 p.m Playing Sot. KALEIDOSCOPE Guests Must Be SIGNFD In L.A. Catering y spirit in Nelson.” Her connection with the area arose out of a professi Her connection with the area arose out of a profess ional relationship with play wright George Ryga of Estasy of Rita Joe fame, who instructed at the Kootenay Lake Summer School of the Arts last year When Hopper was looking for an Director Eleanor Presents * the Jonae McEachran Family SEPTEMBER 7 Castlegar Community Complex — 10:30 a.m. 2101 - 6th Avenue ond ot the Drive-in Church (Old SuperValu Parking Lot) 7 p.m. SEPTEMBER 8 - 12 Pentecostal Tabernacle — 7:15 Nightly 767 - 11th Avenue acting instructor for the 1986 summer shcool, Ryga recom mended Cashman As a result, members of the Nelson acting/theatre community had worked with Cashman at the 1986 Koot ONE WOMAN SHOW .. the Arts. t ; . Chery! Cash: ae enay Lake Summer School of ty t¢ Nelson this weekend, the first time it will hove played to a smaller city ENTERTAINMENT brin show Turning Thir- Performance 86 Presents the VANCOUVER SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Wed. Sept. 17, 8:00 p.m. Cominco Auditorium Sept. 5 end Sat. Sept. 6 at Phormasave pers Drug Mart Trail. Golden City Days wncil Booth (Sept. 6 & 7). Jarrets Music TICKETS: Friday Castlegar. Sh Arena, Arts Nelson Still 100 Full Season Tickets Left PL a FRIDAY September 5 7:00 p.m SATURDAY September 6 1:30p.m A Fall Fashion Show A ‘ Featuring Fashions available from the merchants of the f © Chahko- Mika Call \y © chahho- Situated on Beautiful Kootenay Lake 1150 Lokeside Drive, Nelson, B.C Open Thursday & Friday nights until 9 p.m Mika Mall « pared by Helen Lee, who has Museum honors Silver King Mine The Nelson Museum pre. Mines reports, geological sents a special exhibition in studies, and early Kootenay honor of the 100th anniver- newspapers. sary of the discovery of the Her illustrated booklet Silver King Mine on Toad “The Silver King”. has been Mountain, which led to the published by the museum to founding of Nelson and the celebrate the centennial of development of the Koote- the mine and to accompany nays as a major industrial the exhibition. region. Artifacts have been as The'exhibition opens Sept. sembled from the museum 8 and runs daily until Oct. 18, collection and with the assis except for Thanksgiving Day tance of the 1985-86 Koote when the museum is closed. nay History Class at L.V.R The exhibition includes Archival items have been photographs, artifacts, maps prepared by museum class. and archival items assembled and a map specially framed by the Kootenay Museum by Gordon Webb. Association and Historical Society from their own col Stand by Me tops lection, and borrowed from other private and public col lections. Of special interest is a copy of “Perry's Mining Map”. which is on loan from the B.C. HOLLYWOOD ‘(AP A Provincial Archives for the cast of familiar exhibit. jostled Photographs for the Silver tention as summer King Exhibition have been and Stand by Me emerged reproduced from originals in the favorite film of the week the museum collection by end. followed by the long Michael Cormie, using a pro cess designed to reclaim a high-contrast photograph from faded originals. Texts for the exhibit have been researched and pre characters for moviegoers’ at waned. running Top Gun Film crowds overall were larger over the Labor Day weekend than they had been during a lacklustre August, but ticket sales for the top seven films lagged six. per cent behind the take for the same weekend last year much of this year Ministry of COMMUNITY Bulletin Board GUIDES TION Porents please register your girls. North Castlegar Tuesdoy : Scout Hall 7.00 p.m. Robson Wednesday. September 10, Resker Holl 700p.m 27! spent pouring over CASTLEGAR FIGURE SKATING CLUB Foll School, September 8 to October 3. Register of Cor plex by September 5. Winter season begins October 6 Registration 7:00 p.m. on September 18 ond 23 at Com plex lobby. Beginner skaters welcome ay REGISTRATION /PARENT'S MEETING Brownies (6-9 yrs), Guides (9.12 Monday. September 8. 1986 7 00 Fee: $18.00. & Parents must regis! join ot any age. For information ca 3904 PATHFINDERS Find out about Pathfinders (girls 12 Challenge Day Saturday. September 6 a.m.-3:00 p.m. Kinnaird Hall. No obligation to soir into call Marg MacBain Coming events of Castlegar and organizations may be listed here. The first 10 words ore $3°50 ond additional words are 15¢ each Boldtaced wor hich must be used for headings) count as two words ‘3 nO extra charge for a second insertion while the e cent and the or three Sunday s poper ond 5 pm Wednesday + paper Notices should be brought to the Castlegar News at 197 Columbia Ave UNITY in Board SPLIT ENZ'S FINN NOW IN CROWDED HOUSE By TIM O'CONNOR Canadian P¥eai TORONTO — You have to wonder why some bands choose a name or album title that just begs to be made into a cruel joke by caustic rock fans and the/voracious rock press. The collective girth of Bachman Turner Overdrive earned the band Bachman Turner Overweight. Rod Stewart's Foolish Behaviour album pretty well says it all about the LP and ditto on Led Zeppelin's The Song Remains the Same. Neil Finn, coming from a group with a loaded name, Split Enz, almost fell into the same trap with The Mullanes. “Any name that can be mutated into The Dullanes, The Nfalaise or the Mundanes had to go,” recalled Finn, laughing Mullane is his middle name. “You don't want to give the press that kind of a tag too easily,” he said during a Promotional visit to Toronto. BAND A TRIO The new name, Crowded House, can also be misleading The band is only a trio, its first album is an economical treat, and the group is in largely unpopulated musical territory intelligent adult pop, reminiscent of The Beatles and Squeeze The head of the house is Finn (guitars, piano and lead vocals), who is joined by former Split Enz drummer Paul Hester. Nicholas Seymour moved in as bass player. Crowded House is negotiating with a major artist to join the band for a fall tour of North America. Originally from New Zealand, Split Enz split up after 10 years of largely cult status, even though the True Colors album was a U.S. hit in 1980 after it had broken in Canada first. The group drifted apart in 1984 after Neil's brother Tim, the band’s other major songwriter, left after doing a solo album. “Tim felt his heart wasn't in Split Enz and we thought the same,” said the affable Finn. dressed in a black sweat shirt and black jeans. “We thought about carrying on as Split Enz with me as the major songwriter, but I wanted the flexibility of a fresh start.” CAPITOL SIGNS Three weeks after the split, Hester and Finn put together demo tapes and found Seymour through auditions. Two months later, after numerous record company offers, The Mullanes signed with Capitol Records in Los Angeles. After an Australian tour, they went to Hollywood to record the album — and to change the band’s name They moved into a small house for what became a four-month party as bizarre characters and nighthawks dropped in or stayed for weeks. “I'd come home and find people sliding down the stairs on pieces of cardboard and stuff — stair-surfing I think they called it,” said Finn who, as the band’s songwriter and singer, spent most of his time at the studio “There is no direct correlation between the name Crowded House and the house but it pretty well sums it up. SONGS GOOD The tension and exuberance from that experience can be heard op Crowded House, a lively record chock full of good pop hodks and melodies. It has the flavor of late 1970s British pop, but it doesn't belong to any one musical category or era. They're just good songs. “It has modern touches, but it has traditional values in terms of being a song-oriented album,” said Finn. “We were concerned that everything had a performance angle to it. So that when you closed your eyes and listened, you could imagine the writer sitting down at the piano and singing it, and not put modern sound effects in the way.” BITE DRAWS BLOOD AND LAWSUIT CHICAGO (Reuter) — A woman has sued American Airlines for $10 million US in damages after an airline employee who bit her during a boarding dispute was found to have been exposed to the virus that causes AIDS, lawyers said Tuesday. The incident occurred at O'Hare International Atrport last February when the woman arrived late for a from Chicago. Her lawyer. Enrico j, said she was told to report directly to the gate her flight was about to depart. The lawsiit, filed in Cook County Circuit Court, said there was nofne at the gate for the woman to check in with, so she/attempted to go down the boarding ramp without a i at the ramp turned the woman away. The shit alleges that the woman grabbed the employee by the wrist and the employee responded by kicking her and biting her hand, drawing blood on the knuckles of her two middle fingers. Neither the woman nor the airline employee, whose sex was not specified, is identified in the suit The employee was suspended for five days and the woman caught a later flight to Denver. The woman's lawyer demanded a blood test, which showed that the employee had been exposed to the virus that causes acquired immune deficiency syndrome, the suit said. The woman's lawyers said there is no evidence that she has been infected with AIDS as a result of the bite but she has suffered mental anguish worrying about the possibility. Crew ignored warnings MOSCOW (AP) — A searching for survivors. Of Cable 10 TV CABLE 10TV Thursday, Sept. 4 5:30—Sign-on and program information. 5:32—Expo update — Hos tess Wendy Brunelle talks to visitors at Expo to hear their re actions. She then _/ talks with Saskatche wanites about their reunion, and presents a look at the prince princess of Wales’ tour of the Japanese Pavilion In Concert Jim Murphy, Denis Gunn and Heidi Steckle per form at the Rossland Miners’ Union Hall This concert was sponsored by the Trail and District Community Arts Council Man in Motion — Rick Hansen's World Tour — The cause behind Rick Hansen's world spinal cord re search, is the topic presepied by Rick Hansen and several others who have suf- fered spinal cord in juries. The 1986 SunFest This yea ganza of beauty and pageantry is pre sented. Master of Ceremonies is Jim Waldie Expo Update — Hos. tess Wendy Brunelle presents information on where to stay in Vancouver, and how to get around the Expo site. As well, she takes a look at the scream machine ride, some of the free en. tertainment available, and some of the sou veniers one can pur. chase. 10:30—Sign-off and night good tour. freighter crew ignored radio warnings of an impending collision with a Soviet cruise ship until the last minute, when its efforts to reverse course were in vain, official reports said today. Up to 400 people were feared killed Survivors said the cruise ship's passengers, all Soviet tourists, were unaware of the danger until the impact at about midnight Sunday. Some were dancing on deck, while others ate a midnight supper or slept. “It was very frightening. Everything went out from under our feet,” Alena Pav. livskaya, who was honey mooning on the Admiral Nakhimov cruise ship with her husband, Yuri, was quoted as telling the govern ment newspaper Izvestia “We slipped right over board. People were shout ing.” Merchant Marine Ministry spokesman Igor Averin said rescue teams still were the 1,234 people on the cruise ship, 836 were rescued, 79 bodies wete found and 319 were missing. Five children were rescued and two were found dead There were no casualties on the freighter, Pyotr Vasyev, which remained a float. “As long as there is a shred of hope, people will do every thing in their power to try to save people who may still be alive,” said the newspaper Sovietskaya Rossiya. MAINTAIN SEARCH Leonid Nedyak, deputy merchant minister, told a news conference Tuesday night that helicopters and about 50 vessels were search ing for survivors. “I believe that most of these (missing) passengers are still aboard the ship Until the divers do their work it will be difficult to confirm this supposition,” he said. Nedyak said 29 sur vivors were in hospital but did not give their conditions. The vessel was resting on Jet's pilot warned just before crash CERRITOS to 10 small plan Calif. (AP) — Controllers were tracking up when an Aeromexico DC-9 collided with a single-engined aircraft, and the jetliner's pi about one of them shortly before the crash, investigators said The Piper PA-28 Archer that smashed into the jetliner Sunday was among the planes on radar screens about the time of the crash but was not the subject of the warning, John Lauber, head of the National Transportation Safety Board investigation, said Tuesday. The 10 also included a Grumman Yankee whose pilot held a series of conversations with the controller just before the jetliner and the Piper dropped into this suburban Los Angeles neighborhood, Lauber told a news conference. All 67 people on the two planes were killed as well as up to 24 on the ground. A controller warned the DC-9 pilot about 75 seconds before the crash about a third small plane investigators discovered Tuesday by examining radar records, he said. That third plane wasn't in radio contact with the ACCUSED OF SPYING Reporter held for fifth day MOSCOW (AP) — The chairman of U.S. News and World Report called Nicholas Daniloff's imprisonment “out regeous” and demanded the American reporter's immed. iate release from detention which entered its fifth day today. Daniloff, the magazine's Moscow correspondent for 52 years, was arrested Saturday. The KGB state security police have accused him of spying, but U.S. officials, his family and peers say Daniloff was framed Mortimer Zuckerman, the magazine's chairman, saw Daniloff in prison Tuesday. “This case has no more relation to espionage than my left shoe,” Zuckerman said. “It's a sad commentary that the remains here . . . He should be released immed. iately.” Daniloff, 52, has told his wife, Ruth, eight KGB offi cers seized him after a meeting with a Soviet ac quaintance, who handed over a package he said contained press clippings but that was found to hold documents marked “top secret.” Gennady Gerasimov, the Foreign Ministry spokesman, told a briefing for journalists Tuesday the reporter was ‘caught red-handed with a sealed envelope, which was opened in his presence and Mrs. Daniloff and U.S. News and World Report that the journalist was set up and given the package without knowing what it contained, Gerasimov replied: “Nobody forced him to go there. He didn't have to have this secret meeting.” Daniloff, who was about to take up a post in the magazine's Washington of fices, has said he went to a park in the Lenin Hills section of Moscow for a farewell meeting with the acquaintance. His wife has said it was a routine meeting with a man who, like many Soviet citi zens, was fearful of having western reporters in his home. Gerasimov said he did not know. whether Daniloff's Soviet acquaintance was ar rested. Mrs. Danjloff and Zucker. man ay pt the jour. nalist's arredt appeared to be retailiation fdr’ the Aug. 24 arrest in New York of Gennady Zakharov, a Soviet citizen employed by the United Nations. Gerasimov, however, in sisted Daniloffs detention was a “separate” case Meanwhile, in Washington, Reagan administration offi cials say the charges are bogus, and Vice-President George Bush says the inci NOW STIOWING WED THU || FRI|(SAT| ROBERT REDFORD EBRA WINGER DARYL HANNAH (HoTE spacial snowTinas] S LEGAL goorsos. EAGLES .T) SUN) MON (TUE) About last ight... 700% 9.00, ae Rob Lowe ‘ « Demi Moore __ $<," mone gesee Sees 278 ey Conran Wan James Belushi So [PLEASE WoTE: ONE SHOWING \ gach eventnc ZOOrm PLEASE WOTE: OXE SHOVING EVENING | 9:00 The Part LI its starboard side about 47 metres below the surface, about nine nautical miles from the Black Sea port of Novorossiysk Pravda said Geidar Aliev, a member of the ruling Polit buro, was heading an in vestigatory commission. Party members expelled MOSCOW (AP) — Twenty seven members of the Com munist party in the region of found to egntain secret docu ments.” DESCRIBES PACKAGE Daniloff told his wife the package contained two maps marked “top secret” and photographs of Soviet mili tary installations Asked about allegations by dent could hinder improve ments in relations between the two superpowers “This man is being set up. and the whole world knows it,” Bush said. “He is being set up because of the spy that was apprehended in New York.” the Chernobyl nuclear power plant have been expelled for misconduct related to the April 26 disaster, the Com munist party newspaper Pravda said Tuesday Two of the people expelled were drivers who were bar red from the party because of “cowardice and panicking,” the newspaper said There have been periodic reports of party members being expelled, disciplined or sacked from their jobs fol lowing the explosion that ruined Chernobyl's No. 4 reactor and released a cloud of radiation Pravda identified only three of those expelled from the Kiev regional party, including the drivers and a worker at a local institute. The official death toll from the nuclear disaster is 31 FRANK’S SHARPENING SERVICE CASTLEGAR, B.C (Behind “Castle Theatre Name Address Phone No For all types of sharpening blades, shears, etc! PROMPT SERVICE 365-7395 THE QUESTION OF BALANCE DANCE THEATRE /SOCIETY ALL APPLICATIONS MUST BE RECEIVED BY SEPTEMBER 8. 1986 Il wish to register for the Technique Classes Only I wish to register for the Technique Classes and would like to be considered for the Dance Company Instructors: Lynnette Lightfoot and Sabbian Clover Announcing the Formation of a - Youth Dance Company controller, and because it had no position-indicating trans- ponder, the controller couldn't tell the DC-9 pilot the small plane's altitude, Lauber said WARNING OPEN 4 P.M. DAILY WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED. — AIR CONDITIONED — Reservations tor Private Parties — 365-3294 Located | mile south of Weigh Scales in Ootischenia. RECEIV! The Aeromexico pilot acknowledged iving the transmission, but the crew never responded that they saw the aircraft in question, he said. ‘The Grumman's pilot talked on radio for a minute with the controller just before the collision, possibly distracting the controller's attention as the paths of the DC-9 and Piper converged, Lauber said. Wreckage from the crash, which occurred as the Aero- mexico jet was descending toward Los Angeles Inter- national Airport, plunged into a Cerritos neighborhood. The resulting fire destroyed 11 homes. The confirmed dead included 58 passengers and six crew members aboard Flight 498 and the three people in the PLAZA $B Supervalu Open for Your Shopping Convenience SUNDAYS Piper. Numbers from various sources ii d up to 24 people on the ground also died. Garry Oversby, of the Los Angeles County Fire De- partment, said he had been misquoted in earlier reports that 15 had been found dead at one house. Federal investigators hope to wrap up their work in the devastated neighborhood today, Lauber said. Pieces of wreckage have been moved to Long Beach airport for further study NO PERMISSION Investigators trying to reconstruct the events leading to the crash, which occurred in clear skies shortly before noon, have determined the Piper was in-the airport terminal control area without permission, Lauber said. Its pilot wasn't in radio contact with controllers, he said. Lauber said he was unable to say whether the warning about the other plane may have drawn the attention of the Aeromexico crew from the approaching Piper. The Los Angeles County coroner's office identified the Piper pilot as William Kramer, 53, a Rancho Palos Verdes resident. Also on board were his wife, Kathleen, 51, and daughter, Caroline, 27. Afternoon /Evening Courses For Your Convenience Earn University Credits at times suitable to your schedule. Space is available in the following courses Anthropology 210, Intorductory Archaeology Business 250, Managerial Accounting Business 253, Income Tax | English 110, English Composition Psychology 101, Introductory Psychology 11 Psychology 230, Emotional and Social Disorders For further information contact Box 1200, Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3J1 365-7232 seit > ——_ CASTLEGAR CAMPUS —_—_ WIT CIALS All this week Cail 365-2393 Calendar September 3/30. . . The N.E.C. is presenting recent works by Pass Creek artist, Alf Crossley. An opening reception will be hiid Sept. i1. The centre is open 9:30 - 4:30 weekdays and 10:30 - 4:30 weekends 5 to October 2... The Art Council's Presen- tation Series is teaturing local artist Colin Pryce. A collec tion of paintings covering impressionism, expressionism ond abstract. Opening night ot the Homestead Soup ond Sandwich Shoppe will be Friday, September 5 Items for this bi-monthly feature should be telephoned to Lynda Carter of the Castlegar Arts Council at 365-3226. Sponsored by CS CASTLEGAR SAVINGS CREDIT UNION _, 705 RA LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATE NAY STREET * NELSON 352-19 OPEN MONDAY 8 os “DRIVE A LITTLE SAVE A LOT!” Corn Flakes we nt Kraft Slices SoS LDS Starting in 1986, The Question of Balance Dance Theatre will be recognized os 0 youth dance company made up of ‘aspiring young dancers ages 12 1019 Experience ond training ‘s preterred but not necessary as all of phe dancers will be expected to attend a minimum of two technique training classes per week in addition to rehearsal Closses and rehearsals will be held in the Art Folks Home in South Slocor All students will be considered, but only those students seriously concerned with the quolit their own dancing will be accepted. Student be trained as if they were ino protess company and will be expected to act responsible manner at all times Any student not doing so will be asked to leave the compony The technique classes are oF any student regordiess of whether they ore a compony member or not Young childrens bolle! classes oyarloble nce Co please fill out the form b ¢/oL. Lightfoot Box 34, South Slocan, B.C. VOG 260 | | | J Age ere Catelli Dinners Macaroni and Cheese 225 G box 2/89° Wetowater Monee a Punch Drinks ‘Cash & Carty Lunch Box $598 7 Peanut Butter olden Boy bd White Tuna S2. 12/t14 Floked McCormicks Cookies § 1 65 170 G tin Putts. 400 G bog Eech Wheat Thins ed 1 99 Stoned 600 G Box Apple Juice Sun-Rype Tetra Pack Tomato Soup Compbell s 284 mi tin 2/735* Sugar 32° 7/100 G Robin Hood 10¢/ 100 G % BULK FOODS * BULK FOODS # Quick Oats Fruit Snacks ome $ J 00 45° Bris Waffles Kellogg's Eggo ed 1 19 Regulor or Blueberry Pkg. of 8 % FROZEN FOODS * FROZEN FOODS $2.98 kg. /Ib. Apple Juice McCain 355 mi tin Oranges Sunkiet. Size 1135's FRESH PRODUCE & FRESH PRODUCE ® Tomatoes Fresh Large California Grown $1.96 kg. /l. 8 PRICES IN EFFECT SEPT. 2-SEPT. 6 We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities