a ENTERTAINMENT. All Paper Cash BINGO At the Arena Complex Sat., Dec. 12 Early Bird 6 p.m. Reg. Bingo at 7 p.m. ESTERN & CHINES! JOIN US FOR * BREAKFAST * LUNCH * DINNER * WEFKEND SMORG Tickets $9 at Door No Advance Tickets Pay out 60% Peckages Available. December 25, 1987 r todanuary 3, 1988 | By TIM O'CONNOR Press TORONTO — Clad in a black tuxedo jacket and dark sunglasses, the Eurythmics’ Dave Stewart sits behind a keyboard synthesizer looking every bit like a workaholic studio wizard. The blue floral curtains would be out of place in a recording studio, but Stewart has converted a luxury hotel room into a make-shift studio complete with a mixing board and reel-to-reel tape recorder. When Stewart is on the road, he keeps recording equipment on hand so he can get the music that's “always” running through his head on to tape. “When we go to make an album, we don't even worry about writing,” said Stewart, half of the British duo with singer Annie Lennox. “I have so many ideas on tape we can just pick and choose. And Annie has lots of prose and poetry that she types into her little computer. She's got reams of it,” said the soft-spoken Scot with the goatee and tangled long hair. Their most recent collaboration is Savage, to be rel .d Monday. Savage is less commercial than their previoius six albums, but it shows the Eurythmics can still produce mainstream music that’s inventive. It's their most adventuresome record and certainly their most wide-ranging. Savage combines R and B, pop, folk and even blues. Lennox snarls, vamps and does an amazing parody of Mick Jagger on the single I Need a Man. “Savage is a real turning point for us because all of the favorite things that we ever did on any of the other albums appear in Savage in little bits and pieces, but it still has the main thing that we always loved, which is to leave you wanting more,” said Stewart, 34. RETURN TO ROOTS Savage also marks a return to the drum machines and synthesizers that dominated Sweet Dreams, their first hit in 19863. The duo was helped in large part by Lennox’s andro- gynous image — complete with men's suits and close-cropped orange hair. It soon became apparent she was one of pop's most powerful female singers and Stewart was brilliant in the studio. He has since produced records for Jagger, Tom Petty and Bob Dylan. Their sound was beefed up with some soul on Touch, Stewart has ample ideas. while their soundtrack to the film 1984 combined syn thesizers and African drums. The film's producers, altered the however, k and the duo divoreed themselves from it. The next two albums — Be Yourself Tonight and Revenge — were a swing to R and B and Lennox let her feminine sexuality break loose. But some critics said the band stopped progressing with Revenge. “We did that on purpose because we were growing Stewart said. album (Revenge) that we could go out and play stadiums, and people could relate to what we were doing . . . then could go off another departure again.” While the songs might be gloomy, Stewart is happy these days: his wife, Sioban Fahhey of the pop trio Bananarama, recently gave birth to a son; his Anxious Records label is getting off the ground; and his animated film will be released next year by George Harrison's film ahead of our audience,” company. Eurythmics will also play some concerts, but only to audiences of about 800 people. “We aren't a big stadium rocking band that’s following around behind Def Leppard. We're a funny duo.” “So we did an and COMMUNITY NEWS December 6, 1967 Castlegar News Ay Sheraton Special $ 5 00 Canadian Currency at Par per night Single or double occupancy Enjoy... One night Accommodation Two Tickets to the Ice Capades Bottle of Champagn 20% Dinner Discount in “1881” Call Our Toll Free Number FOR MORE INFORMATION AND SHOW TIMES. FOR RESERVATIONS CALL YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT OK TOLL FREE 1-800-848-9600 Sheraton-s ne Hotel The Kane people of ITT Ss N. 322 Spokane Falls Ct. © Spokane, WA 99201 © (509) 455.9600 THE SHERATON SFOKANE HOTEL IS OMNED #Y SHURE FFL AND IS OUT KCUTED UNDE A UCENSE ISSUED BY SHERATON IRN. INC show featured Treasures of the Snow, a two-hour motion picture shot in the Swiss Alps, will be shown at Full Gospel Fellow- ship next Sunday evening. Based on Patricia St. John's popular novel of the same name, the film is intended for all-family viewing. The film's dramatic open- ing shows Lucien, a boy of 13, teasing Dani, a younger boy from the neighboring farm. Sheraton Spokane Hotel presents . 5 w heh bn e Sheraton Grand Ballroom BS) December 28-31, 1987 Se ¢ $110.00 canodian per couple plus tax. Dinner Concert DECEMBER 28-30, 1987 INCLUDES: One night accommodations, dinner, and tickets for two. $150.00 conadion per couple plux tox New Year's Eve DECEMBER 31, 1987 INCLUDES: One night accommodations, dinner, tickets, a dancing, and midnight festivities for two. FOR RESERVATIONS CALL YOU LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT OR 1-800-848-9600 Sheraton-Spokane Hotel velapuarenee Set N22 Spokane Fale Coun, Spokane, WA 95201 (509) 88-8600 vad the little boy slips and falls off a cliff. Dani is very serously injured, and although it was an accident, his older sister, Annette, vows to make Lucien pay dearly for his involvement. Annette’s bitterness to- ward Lucien festers while she tells others in the small mountain village about the emt into the mountain ravine. TREASURES OF THE SNOW . . be featured at Full Gospel Fellowship. he may eventually earn for- geance-versus-forgiveness . A two hour motion picture shot in the Swiss Alps will “accident”, all along subtly suggesting that Lucien de- liberately pushed her brother Annette’s grandmother im- plores her to “forgive Lucien and leave him to God.” But instead Annette's hatred in- tensified when she learns that the accident has left Dani crippled — apparently for life. Community rejection dri- ves Lucien close to despair, but he finds refuge with a (BREAKFAST WITH ) -- kind and wise old woodcarver GREWMAN ACR i i 365-3986 Day * 365-2570 Eve. LICENCED DINING ROOM OPEN 4 P.M. DAILY WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED Wagon or Sleigh Rides at 365-3986 or 365-3294 Reservations for Private Parties — 365-3294 Located one mile south of Weigh Scales in Ootisc! FREE With Sunday Brunch or $2.50 Each without the Brunch. A. Dee, 6, 13, 20 YA 10 am-2:30 pm. Children’s Color Photo with Santa giveness and regain accep- tance, even though his first efforts at reconciliation are rejected by Annette. “Hatred and the desire for revenge are powerfully des- tructive emotions and Ann- ette shows their force per- fectly,” says Glenn Carlson, vice-president of Glenray Communications, the film's North American distributor. “The director, Mike Prit- chard, has captured the ven- struggle very realistically and many viewers will recall their own Annette-Lucien conflicts when they see this picture. In any case, the story ends on a really upbeat note, and families who looking for an entertaining and morally uplifting film to go see together are the people this film was made for. The breathtaking Swiss scenery alone is well worth the experience.” MOST COMPREHENSIVE MENU IN TOWN noe BREAKEAST NCH...DIN (Takeout Service nN (WHOLE MENU) 365- 81 53 1004 Columbia Ave. GET Resutrs . Call 365-2212 MARSALIS STUNS STUDENTS CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) — Wynton Marsalis, snappy dresser, controversial trumpeter and young near- legend, stood among eight awed Harvard University students and displayed the difficult art of blowing into a trumpet while simultaneous- ly taking in more air through the nose. After more than 100 con. tinuous seconds of rotary breathing, Marsalis rested while the students looked at each other in disbelief. Then he explained the manoeuvre. “It’s just a gimmick,” he said. “I do that in jazz soI can get applause.” When he’s not performing jazz tunes or recording class- ical albums, Marsalis holds lectures and works with stu- its. The latest album for the 26-year-old Grammy winner is Standard Time. “[ have an enthusiasm for teaching that I can’t explain,” said Marsalis, in his trade- mark tapered suit and wire- rimmed glasses, after con- ducting a recent master class at Harvard as part of the university's Learning From Performers Program. is's father, jazz pianist Ellis Marsalis, who conducted a music workshop at Harvard the day before his son, made sure his children grew up in a musical en- vironment in New Orleans. Of six boys in the Marsalis family, four are musicians. Wynton Marsalis began studying classical trumpet when he was 12. As a child, he listened to his father and developed jazz heroes: Art €Z Maple HAWAII VANCOUVER 19 HONOLULU JANUARY 4¢ 14 NIGHTS. Call thonten or Vivien for more inte. 365-6616 iochedes return flights ‘ond one bedroom occommedation. Leaf Travel *1269:-.. ADULTS — $7.95 CHILDREN 3 CHILDREN UNDER 2 FREE The Selkirk Chamber Music Society HANDEL’S MESSIAH With The NELSON CHORAL SOCIETY Selkirk Chamber Orchestra Friday, December 11 8:00 p.m. — Brilliant Cultural Centre, Castlegar Sunday, December 13 2:00 p.m. Nelson Civic Theatre SING ALONG MESSIAH Presents ‘and the With This Coupon ce 7 PRESES NOT VALIO WIT ANY On Coupon & GOING TO SPOKANE? THE TRADE WiW S$ MOTEL Help Celebrate Our 25th Year! One Bed $25 (U.S.) — Two Beds $30 (U.S.) DOWNTOWN W. 907 Third Ave. 509-838-2091 INT COUPON AT REGISTRAT THER PROMOTION OW BISCOUNT inpires Apett yaad, New Year's Eve Dance Community Complex Tatum, Louis Armstrong, Charlie Parker, Duke Elling: ton, Max Roach, Charles Mingus, Thelonius Monk and John Coltrane. At 17, Marsalis spent a summer at the Tanglewood Music Center, a program for young musicians run by the Boston Symphony Orchestra. He then spent time at the Juilliard School in New York, where he joined Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers. His involvement with the group led to a contract with CBS Records and a deal touring with keyboard player Herbie Hancock. In 1982, CBS issued Marsalis’s debut album, Wynton Marsalis, which Hancock produced. It was dubbed album of the year by several jazz publi cations. Marsalis eventually be. came the first musician to win Grammy awards for jazz and classical performances in the same year. However, Marsalis has said he’s ashamed of his time with Blakey. “I put on my old records with Art Blakey and hang my head in shame as I listen to the confidence I had in dis- respecting the bandstand of that great man,” he told Down Beat magazine. “Every time I see Art Blakey now I apologize, then thank him for tolerating such an aberration and continuing to remind me that I was not playing much of anything other than the horn itself — and very little of that, come to think of it.” Marsalis hates the free form and abstract jazz of the 1960s as much as the rock-in. fluenced fusion music on to- day's jazz charts. At Harvard, he argued with a student who said to- day's jazz artists simply are evolving the music. “In order for the tradition to be maintained, you have to know what it is,” a fired-up Marsalis told the student. “If you think light bulbs are dead just because Thomas Edison isn't around, you're wrong.” Marsalis believes jazz is an “important expression of the 20th century black exper- ience in America . . . the nobility of the race put into ind.” & Chicken Cordon Bleu HONORED .. .C trustee George kin witha trustee Doreen Smecher presents retiring plaque Anutooshkin honored George Anutooshkin, a Castlegar school trustee for the past 10 years, was hon- ored Nov. 30 for his years of service on behalf of edu- cation: A come and go social was held at the school board office in the afternoon, and many teachers, principals, and support staff turned out to wish Anutooshkin and his wife, Nettie, well. In the evening, trustees and senior staff met to thank him for the thousands of hours of service he has given the district. In presenting him with a commemorative plaque, trustee Doreen Smecher commented upon the enthus- iasm Anutooshkin always brought with him to meet- ings. She also commended him for his stint as chairman, his help in fostering good re- lations with the Canadian Union of Public Employees, and his championing of the Russian bilingual program. Local guides selected for national camp Three local Pathfinders are among 12 young women in the West Kootenays selected to attend a national camp at Echo Valley, near Regina in July, 1988. Danielle Crockett, Tammy Giles, and Lorraine Paszty, all of the 1st Kinnaird Pathfinder Unit, will repre- sent Castlegar. This camp will include 2,000 Canadian girl members and 500 staff as well as 500 international guests. This means that each province will be sending some 200 girls be- tween the ages of 12 and 17. It is a unique opportunity to share a cultural exchange and learn more about other countries, as well as learn more about neighboring provinces. ‘The girls have been se- lected on merit and commit- ment to the ideals of Guiding and they will be working hard to further their under- standing of the local area and Canada so they can be good ambassadors, “We are especially looking forward to hosting visitors from Papaua New Guinea, a country with which Guiding in British Columbia has a Faith no excuse KELOWNA, B.C. (CP) — A B.C. Supreme Court jus- tice says a Seventh-day Ad- ventist was not discriminated against when told he must work on his Sabbath. Mr. Justice P.D. Dohm ruled against a decision by the B.C. Council of Human Rights that school janitor Larry Renaud should receive $6,250 in compensation from the Central Okanagan School District and the Canadian Union of Public Employees. Renaud said he could not work Friday nights because ft conflicted with his faith which celebrates the Sabbath from Friday sunset to Sat- urday sunset. Dohm said since schools ‘are normally open from Mon- “twinning” project,” District Commissioner Margaret MacBain said. “One of the accomplishments of this pro- ject has been the extension of a hostel for young women in Port Morseby, the capital of Papaua New Guinea. Young women are housed there while they study and learn skills which will allow them to hold jobs in the work force. “It is an honor to be se- lected to attend such a camp and we in Castlegar are very fortunate to have three mem- bers selected from our City. We certainly should be proud of these young women and I hope that the public will support fund-raising activi- ties to help assist’ these girls financially in this undertak- ing.” “Dixie Lee Kootenay” would like to thank the people of Castlegar for their patronage and support of Downtown Dixie Lee over the past eight years. This store has now become in- dependent of Dixie Lee. Dixie Lee South is now eager to serve all the people of Castlegar with its’ same delicious blend of herbs and spices, that the people in the South-end have enjoyed for the past 20 years. Divie [ee Kootenay 9-Pleces of Golden Chicken CASTAEGAR SAFEWAY ST ONLY FRESH PRODUCE TCONOMY BOX — = $8.9 South Dixie Lee Only 2816 Columbia Ave. PHONE 365-5304. KIWI FRUIT TOMATOES — CRs eee tester APPLES eta Desciows 0: toorton ‘Grown. Fancy Lorge Size 1.4! Re Dy rere cmesne payed AND ARROTS CARRO! = 1.49 AVOCADOS i Tore * POTTING 12:1,49:".__ SHSS Report By Cathy Paszty It is Dec. 6 and Christmas is coming fast. This means the annual Christmas concert is forthcoming. SHSS students will be expressing their many talents in the Christmas production. The title of the production is “As it Was .. . Sort of . The concert will feature the choir, the junior band class, and the acting class. The acting class will perform three short plays: Ledge, Ledger, Legend; Blue Murder; and A Marriage Proposal. The concert will be held on Dec. 14 and 15 in the Activity Room at 7 p.m. Admission is $3 for adults, and $2 for students and seniors. Come out for two evenings of enjoyment for people of all ages. A reminder that Dec. 18 is the last day of school for all students. From the staff and students at SHSS, Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! Bulictin Board ATTENTION Branch 170, Canadian Legion is now accepting donations fo Christmas Hamper Fund. Phone 365-7017 or 365-8274. 2 ones POTLUCK All welcome to Social Committees annual Peace on Earth’ cuisines Potluck, Su December 13 in the Kinnaird Hal 4:30; Potluck 5:30. Tickets ot Corl's ios 00 eti ren n Free Turkey and mm pre i some food 3/97 NDLELIGHT VIGIL Join Amnesty's U.N. Human Rights Day Vigil and protest Conodo's new retugee legislation on Friday evening, December 11 at 7:00 p.m. outside the Castlegar Cour: thouse. 297 RECREATION SOCIETY BINGO Monday, December 14, Robson Hall, 6:30 Earlybird, 7:00 p.m, — Regular ard Cards $1 0 each. FLETCHER'S DELI MEATS ReetedVeritios, 1009 TOP QUALITY DELUXE PIZZA 1,375 g Package WING DRUMS Chicken. TRIMMED DRUMSTICKS keg. $3.29/lb. 1 AQ oe kg. $3.29/1b. 1.4 9 EVERSWEET COOKED HAM Sticed/175 g Pockage SCHNEIDERS MEAT PIES Frozen Package, of Two 125 g Ples BURNS BOLOGNA By the Piece 3.29/kg OVERLANDER FARMER SAUSAGE MAPLE LEAF BOLOGNA Sliced, 375 g Package BURNS 1.4 1.49 weres__ GROCERY 2 5 71,49 " 250 g Package SAUSAGES ef 4 1.49 Nutty Club, 200 9 LUCERN' DISHCLOTHS opanar | 149... 1.49 ‘Small, Carton of | Dosen Conoinn2 sO Nutty Club, 190.9 oon | WITH PICKS W/2 Picks.tech Bast Onion” 1.49 ae 2} ve) CHAISYMAS “HERETO,” SBE OURETE man beQ sas BY eee” 49 sre 21,49 SANTA LAND Sort ons ‘149 MIX ae Me maw WAY 49 soo" Nawal the Pius Nutty Club, 2509 Pockoge MQ" w 260 Setots 1.49" 1.49 @ PLASTIC Set of 11 rivers CusAneS 6 LES JUBE AD Nutty Club, 250 9 Packoge 1.49 ~--. 33149 DELUXE MEASURING SET I. 49 BAKE SHOP 222 ses Aveiigote at Stores Polat be ae Rett EEE 250 g Pack JELLIES | 49°. Nutty Club.250 g Package @ AFTER DINNER Asstd. 198 9 pkg. mati CLOSE UP TOOTHPASTE MINTS pei pd pero So Si mcout war Rod. 100 mi Tube _ Nutty Club 200 g Pack te 5 TYPE os = < | SETTING ines oot Give your newsletters, Notices should be ‘acough Ye oie "Castlegar News ot 97 meeting bulletins, etc, @ Columbia A aa 352-5358 mesial ‘appearance 51. Nelson Comerc-reody type for your photocopier CASTLEGAR NEWS 365. * STEAKS * SEAFOOD day to Friday, the council's * POULTRY © CAESAR SALAD decision to award compen- sation was wrong. Saturday, Dec. 12 8:00 p.m. Nelson Civic Theatre Thurs., Dec. 31 novoen Pp, Picture 9 p.m. to 2.a.m. ay 7) Professional Photos By he geAkTL4y, i ee, Sing along paiticipants ond oudience Music By SUNDAY FEATURE ime Music Prime Rlb/ Yorkshire Pudding sPm. 109) Homemade Desteris ond Postries AMPLE PARKING Our Fabul: y Brunch Includ ° Eggs Benedict © Carved Leg of Ham * Lots of Fresh Fruit & Much, much more. TICKETS AVAMABLE AT THE DOOR O8 We reserve the r to limit SAFEWAY os hese Sale retail quanti ‘ FOR RESERVATIONS 365-8444 CC ’ (Eee ea re Bulletin Board ~ IN THE CASTLEGAR SANDMAN INN 1944 Columbia Ave. AVAWABLE AT: Pharmanove, Costlogos Sport Centre, Lion's Mead Sport & Sports RESTADRANTS Proceeds trom ol! 3 pertormonce inal CAPITAL THATS RESTORATION PROJECT