CASTLEGAR NEWS, July 3, 1983 Clay artist to lecture at DTUC David Thompson Univer- sity Centre's Summer School of the Arts and Selkirk summer Festival of the Arts Monday with a slide lecture by renowned Canadian clay artist Gordon Hutchens. The lecture will be held in Studio 80 on the Nelson campus starting at 7:30 p.m. and there is an admission. Since 1978 Hutchens has been a self-supporting clay artist. He has exh wide- ly in B.C. and Alberta and was featured in the exhibit of Canadian ceramic art at the Kofler Gallery in Toronto. His work is currently in- cluded in the UBC Museum of Anthropology. He has taught workshops for the B.C. Pot- ters Guild and Camosun and Malaspina colleges on Van- couver Island. Additional slide lectures in the Summer Festival of the Arts will be given by local I-k College will be opening their Caldsit GROCETERIA & LAUNDROMAT We Are Open 364 Days a Year Monday - Friday 6:30 a.m. - 10:30 p.m. Saturday 8:30 a.m. - 10:30 p.m. Sunday & Holidays YOUTH EMPLOYMENT. . Donna Ozeroft have been « Rachel Adams (left) and hired under the Youth Em- ployment Program to work at the Castlegar Chamber of C this 9 - 10:30 p.m. 1038 Columbia 365-6534 Les Weisbrich on July 11, and international artist Jack Wise on July 18. = COMMUNITY —- — e Bulletin Board FIRST ‘ALL PAPER’ CASH BINGO ‘At Arena Complex on July 7. Early birds ot 6 p.m..¢ at 7 p.m. Advance tic! Homestead Soup & Sandwich Shoppe and Carl's Dru $7 each. Sponsored by Robson River Otters Swim Clul 9 Coming events of Castlegar and District non-profit COMMUNITY Bulletin Board SHOWTIME MOVIES Canadian News and Sports Network Canadian Channel on our op- I By request onl; © All Color TV-* Queen Beds © Snack Bar ® Direct Dial Phone Shamrock Motel E. 1629 Sprague Ave. Spokane; Washington Telephone (509) 535-0388 RESERVATIONS ARE RECOMMENDED tional channel: the latest ADULT movies. '. The two just completed a travel counselling course offered by the Ministry of Tourism. The chamber office will be open Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Saturde from 9.a.m. to 5 p.m. NEW YORK (AP) — In the off-Broadway play Ex- tremeties, a would-be ra- pist attacks a frightened young woman alone in the summer house she shares with two other women. She kicks and screams, to no avail. Desperate, she blinds him with a blast of bug spray. He falls, screaming. She ties him up, angrily torments him, seeks the revenge she knows the courts will never give her. It's an exhausting play. Farrah Faweett, 36, grins when asked what battle damage the role has caused her. “Just bruises,” she says. She opened in Milliam \_Mastrosimone's hit drama last month and plans to stay in it through Aug. 21 — mind, body and supply of bug spray permitting. It's often the custom for those..who've made their name in television acting to claim they long to stretch their’ acting muscles in theatre, to say things like, “I'm tired of fluff and I'm going to do Shakespeare or Neil Simon.” To her credit, Fawcett refuses to carry on that way. “It wasn't the stage that atracted me,” she says. “It was really the role, purely the role itself. “I wanted to do it. I didn't say ‘I want to do stage and that's what I'm going to do next.’ ” FARRAH FAWCETT, ... just bruises The actress, who is tall, friendly, laughs easily and speaks in a soft, husky voice, sort of tiptoed into town to do the play (it opened to good notice last December, with Susan Sar- andon its original star). When she arrived here for her New York stage debut, she did few inter- Farrah takes on theatre) lay and Sunday —CosNews Photo: Dance is Wyman's life NORTH VANCOUVER (CP) — Fifteen years ago, & young, black-haired Austrian woman told a school board chairman she had taught creative dance in England and anted to.do so in Canada. M ‘The chairman told her to go to night school, get a degree id him in five years. ‘ Bi When Anna Wyman persisted she was offered a job _ teaching a fitness class. Discouraasd: ‘Wyman considered going back to Europe. But instead of boarding the next plane out of Vancouver, she opened her own dance school. mt Out of the school has grown a dance company that has performed its theatrical, modern works across Canada, the United States and Europe. Three years ago the company went to China. This year it was in India. “One thing took the next thing’s place,” says Wyman, who has developed the company to the point where it’s been described as the most successful modern dance troupe in the country, IMMERSED IN DANCE That success is due to Wyman's approach to dance. She lives it, sleeps it and works at it six days a week. She thinks of it when she watches a conductor leading an orchestra. It comes to mind when she sees clouds drifting across the sky. Most people connect elastic bands with ponytaijs, to Wyman they mean stretching exercises. Even when she lounges in the sunroom of the immaculate bungalow she shares with her boyfriend and a cat, Wyman gestures with the graceful flair of a ballerina. Clad in crimson tights, she stretches her legs in front of her. Her arms make symmetrical patterns in the air as she views and avoided the cover-girl hoopla ‘that seems to at- “tend even a quiet stroll she might take with her boy- friend, actor Ryan O'Neal. Her low profile has been deliberate: it’s because she had a few jitters about opening night and her re- ception here. “And yes, because I hadn't worked in two years since Murder in Texas” — a TV movie. “Everybody was waiting to see how I'd be in this role, would ask ‘Why did you do it,’ and all the obvious questions. And that's why when I first came in, I didn't want to do any press. I wanted my work to speak for itself.” ) ‘Matinee idol NEW YORK (AP) — It’s going to be another year of the hunk on television but, instead of chesty clones of Tom Selleck strutting across the screen, viewers can ogle the mechanical hunk. This year's matinee idol will be a helicopter. Car chases are passe. Every show has one or six so the networks have brought in a whole flock of whirlybirds to spruce up the action- adventure genre. No new medical series would be complete without rotor blades as regular cast members. If St. Elsewhere was anemic in the ratings last season because action was slow in the unit, the networks’ new hos- pital program remedied that with house calls from the air. In ABC's Trauma Centre, a half-dozen choppers come to the rescue when a hotel chandellier falls and ruins prom night. CBS’ Cutter to Houston also practises medi- cine on the fly. The pilots of these series have some identical plot de- vices. Both show explosions in which a character loses an arm. But in Trauma Centre, Lou Ferrigno (formerly the Incredible Hulk) manages to save the severed limb by storing it in an ice box before a reattachment operation. There's also the now- cliche, roving-g in-th Your Guide To Good Times in the area. »KUNCHEON SMORG Vals by aly the new DELUXE DAILY ae SITU Castleaird Plaza © Salad Bar © Scampi © Lobster TAKE OU He 10 p.m. p.m. © Pizza's © B.B.Q. Ribs © Italian Dishes IT DELIVERY SERVICE 365-2421 a helicopter emergency-room scene. Even the dialogue is identical. On ABC, James Naughton says “Whoa!” when the brandish- ed pistol is waved under his nose, Alec Baldwin says the same thing in Cutter to Houston, leaving the melo- dramatics to Shelly Hack: “T'm gonna save your baby. If you don't like that idea, just go ahead and shoot me.” These shows are classified many of the new fall pro- were hard-pressed to define the grams were shown, term. The programmers sought high-concept shows after the soaring success of NBC's The A-Team, which combined Mr. T, helicopters and as much violence as possible. It also doesn't require much thought or attention. Bud Grant, president of CBS Enter sai d ibes the pany’s trip to India. “The performances were extremely well received. They loved it. They laughed in all the right places. They liked the colorful abstract works because they'd never seen them before.” She says the tour by the Anna Wyman Dance Theatre marked the first time a contemporary dance company had visited India. LIKE GIVING BIRTH ‘Wyman says creating a dance is like having a baby. It is conceived, then nurtured along until it can stand’on its own. Modern dance, she says, is a particular brand of movement that reflects “the ups and downs of today.” For the five men and five women that comprise the Anna Wyman Dance Theatre, it means capturing the motions of sport on stage, interpreting how a bird feels in flight or attempting to give the impression of floating free of gravity. “It is an extension of the dances of yesterday. Yesterday's dances dealt more with stories, Modern dance can still deal with stories, but to me it has to be more realistic.” It can take Wyman as long as 18 months to bring a dance out of her imagination and on to the stage. It isn't always easy. STARTED AT FOUR :. Wyman, who'd prefer that her age be a secret (“I never tell it but I feel as though I've lived a long time”), wore her first ballet slippers when she was four years old. Asa young ballerina she performed in the Opera House in Graz, Austria, where she was chosen to offer flowers to a visiting dignitary named Adolf Hitler. In 1948 she went to England where she studied creative dance. She taught dance to juvenile offenders and to convicts in London prisons. She also taught blind and re- tarded children to dance. Theatre Energy granted $25,000 Theatre Energy is to re- CHIEF AWARD . . . Castlegar Mayor Audrey Moore presents scout with chief scout award badge during presentations made recently at Castlegar cour- thouse. The award is the highest achievement any “scout-age boy can: earn. —Conttews Photo by Phil Coldertonk More women priests VANCOUVER (CP) — In 1975, women seeking ordin- ation to the Anglican priesthood were an oddity. But by 1990, men could be the odd ones out. Archdeacon George Wilkins of the Anglican Church of Canada, New Westminster, diocese, says 75 per cent of candidates for the priesthood will be women seven years from now. : “The trend is well under way,” he said. “From a few applications in the early "70s it has grown so that today 60 per cent of the first-year students at the Vancouver School of Theology are |. women. “And it's not just in the Anglican church; this trend is obvious across North America in many Protestant chur- ches.” If women are poised to outnumber men for the priest- hood, how long will it take for one to break into the eccles- iastical ranks and become bishop? Archdeacon Wilkins won't commit himself on this one, but says it will come in time. The church's current policy is not to consecrate women bishops. One of the first women ordained in Canada, Rev. Elspeth Alley, parish priest'of Vancouver's Holy’ Trinity sparish, safd women ‘bishops would: “emtise-do-muth'stress” within the church she would not like to'see it. WON'T SEE IT “I don't think we'll see women bishops in my lifetime,” she said. i 3 While the other mainstream Protestant churches that ordain women reconciled themselves to it long ago, the Anglicans still have members who believe it wrong. Rev. David McKenzie of St. Stephen's parish in Burnaby is one of the dwindling number of clergy “My objection isn't because I don’t think they can do the job — obviously they can. I don't believe women to.be inferior,” he said. “But to a catholic — Anglican as well as Roman — the outward and visible not only symbolizes the inward and spiritual, but it affects it. +e Nea “Therefore, it’s essential to have accurate symbols. : . Scouts receive chief award The Chief Scout ‘Award was presented to scouts from the East and West Koot- enays last Saturday in a cer- sephson and Albert Calder~ bank officiating. Recipients of this award were: James Albert Balazs of the 2nd'Fernie troop, Chris- topher John ‘Beatty — 5th Trail, Aaron Henry Beau- chene — 4th Cranbrook, Tony. James Brooks — 1st Sparwood, Mark Everett — 2nd'Fernie, Paul Daniel Fisk — 2nd Sparwood, James Robert Hiibner’— 2nd Fer- nie, Blaine Eddy Hyggen — 2nd Sparwood, Daniel Alex- ‘ ander Marshal — 2nd Fernie, _ John Vance Mowatt — 2nd Fernie, Allan John Rookes — 2nd Fernie, Darryl Raymond Seguin — 2nd Sparwood, and Robert Lance Waswick — 2nd Fernie. Each boy received a parch- ment from Judge Josephson “and a Chief Scout badge from Mayor Moore, Also receiving Chief Scout Awards but unable to attend were: Iain Donald Sutherland of 1st Grand Forks, David James Ast Grand Forks. Following the presenta- tion, the boys and : parents were. taken for a buffet lun- cheon. Guests attending were: Mayor. Audrey Moore, Judge Josephson, regional president; Mrs. R. Ramsden, regional commissioner for the West; scout executive Bob Dyer from Vancouver; Albert Calderbank, Assistant Regional Commissioner for Scouts; 74 leaders, parents and friends. In order to receive the Chief Scout Award, the boys have to earn several badges on the gold level, do at least 50 hours of service, and talk to an adult group on prob- lems in the community. This award is the highest achievement any boy of scout age can earn, and takes sev- eral years of hard work and dedicated service to be ac- complished. by Ministers In the West Kootenay | Pulpit & Pew By Rev. HARVEY SELF As we all reflect on Cattada The coming of Christ into history de the of the priestly order. The sex of a priest has to be male in order to be an’ accurate icon of the Living Christ.” ‘ The church allows him to be a conscientious objector and his opposition to women priests, or his refusal to share the altar with one, won't cost him his job. And while he said he doesn’t aspire to become a bishop, he admitted that someone with his views would have little chance of one. Alley said women bring a depth of compassion to the ministry that men, because of society’s expectations, find hard to display. “T'll tell you about the first funeral I had to take. It was ata funeral home and I didn't know the people, but I walked in and said I'll do what I've seen Grant (another priest) do. “I got to the lectern and looked arousid at the pgople and realized how wrong I’ was. © i “This enormous feeling of compassion came over me. On the way out there was a very elderly lady — the sister of the women who died. She'd cried through most of the service and she was leaving with her head bent down. “I thought, ‘What can I do to make this better?’ I just put my arms around her and held her. for 10 minutes while she sobbed. “T at the time if, as a priest, I was supposed to object to women’s on traditional grounds. do that. But she stopped sobbing. I don't say a man wouldn't do that but maybe he wouldn't feel comfortable doing it.” this Dominion Day. it is an appropriate occasion toalso reflect on how blessed this nation of ours has been with so many good things of God's provision. At the very outset of Con- federation the founders of full-term babies and their mothers. These are the tragic results of throwing back in God's face the very blessings which He first gave to us in Canada. There will be many op- portunities this Dominion Day Weekend to sing our national anthem or at least to hear it sung. If you get such allow that Canada were with the thought of Psalm 72:8, “He shall have dominion from sea to sea.” They pictured this as speaking of Canada with her lers reaching from one “ocean‘to another. God has blessed “that fiitial ‘vision bountifully' through the years. Today, as we Canadians look at ourselves, we see a nation that enjoys a level of personal and religious free- . dom almost unequalled in the world. Although times have been hard of late, economi- cally, we still have one of the highest standards of living in the developed world. Medical / Vital Statistics “high concept,” which does not mean that they have to have helicopters in the plot. High concept is the latest in network jargon. Execu- tives interviewed at the re- cent TV critics tour, where best guess on high concept, M such a show as Dukes of Haz- ceive $25,000 from the Can- zard was high concept, The ada Council for operating Waltons low concept. The funds for its 1988-84 season. ship party held June 6 at the Art Folks Home in South Slocan. The event, held annually for bers and friends of plot must immediately be understood by a monkey. SPOKANE SHOWS ~ WILLIE NELSON — JULY 16 Two Days/One Night, Gateway Hotel ....... 60 GLEN CAMPBELL and SCOTTISH FESTIVAL — JULY 30 Three Days/Two Nights, Sheraton Hotel.... os ENGELBERT HUMPERDINCK — SEPT. 18 — TWO TOURS — One Day, Ticket, Bain then, is that its promise and Aristic Director of the com- pany, announced the news at the group's annual member- vies 569 Theatre Energy, celebrated the end of a‘ very successful season for the professional theatre company which has been operating since 1976, Entertainment at the party was by the Frobe Family's Nomad Donkey Magic Show, headed by Max Frobe, a popular actor with the company last season. Also highlighted was an auc- tion sale of set pieces from past productions, which net- ted $250 for the organization. Theatre Energy’s 1983-94 season will open in Silverton, July 2 with Mine Tailings, co-produced with the Silver. ton Gallery Society, Other productions for the season include Boiler Room Suite by Rex Deverell in September, a school tour of BIRTHS ARMITAGE — To Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Armitage of Nelson, a girl, born June: 26. = CESA — To Mr. and Mrs. Gerry cece, ‘of Nelson, a boy, born June DOIG — To Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Doig of Trail, a girl, born June 28: . * « GREGORICH — To Mr. and Dan Gi rich of Nelson, a Bon coeeir HARDING — To Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Harding of Castlegar, a boy, born dune B. KOSIANCIC — To Mr. and Mrs. Don Kosiancic of Nelson, a boy, born June 23. aE eu McCARTHY — To Mr. and Mrs. Wayne McCarthy of Castlegar, o , born June 27. Mrs. girl, * . PEREHUDOFF — To Mr. and Mrs. Jim Perehudoft of Castlegar, a boy, born June 23. ee SCHULTZ — To Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Schultz of Rossland, a girl, born June 21. Ls ANUTOOSHKIN — Irene Anutooshkin of Ootischenia sed away June 25 at the a; or 70 yeors. Services were held dui Russian Hall June 28 with burial in the Brilliant Cemetery. BOLTON — Samuel Edward Elisa Bolton of Nelson died June 26 In Kootency Lake District Hospital, aged 62, ‘ A Fe EVANS — Funeral services were held June 17 at St. Michael's and All Angels Anglican Church at Prince for former Nelson resident William Clifford (Bill) Evans. “FISHER — Helen Audrey Fisher of Rossland died of Mater Miser- cordice Hosptial June 23 at the age of 79 years after o brief illness. Funoral service was hel from St. Andrew's Ui ch, Rossland, dune 27. ‘. FINLAY — Nellie Finlay, aged 79 of Trail: died June 27 in Trall Regional Hospital after a brief illness, i vi held from Emmanuel Baptist Church, dune 29, KOWALCHUK — Alexonder John Kowalchuk of Genelle died sud- genly dune 4 in Calgary. He wos with Fother A. Maglio of- LEONARD — Margaret K. ficiating. Leonard of Trail died June 28 at the Trail Regional Hospital at the age of 75. She was born in Lithgow, New South Wales, Australia in 1908 and came to Trailin 1920. SOOKOROOKOFF — Elsie Sookorookoff, formerly of Shoreacres, passed away in Mount St. Francis Hospital in * Nelson Jone 23 ot tl bs : of if MARTIN — Margoret Martin, age Funeral service was held June 89 of Trail died June 22, in Trail in the Chapel of Thompson Regional Hospitol. Funeral ser- Funeral Service in Nelson, vice was held June 27 from Our followed by interment in lady of Perpetual Help Church Shoreacres ls Z. Job File Details of these and other job opportunities are available at: Trail Canada fru have own transportation. (847) * * * A Speech Theropist is required for Castlegar. Perma- nent Full-time position. Wage ranges $20, = $40,000 per An Occupational Theropist is Yea". DOE qualification. (947) required for the Trail area. Per- A Counsell Direc: manent Part-time ison Must Ned ing cont This le 4 tor Is $201 7month, § He ; Federal Job Creation Project. negotiation, (846) fas Fe Suitable opplicants will have exhausted entitlement to U.I. * * * Its end have strong human and adm skills. Salary is $292 per week. (1023) : APh tis ired for the Trail area. A full-time position until early 1984. Must treatment and a full edu- cation are available to a de- gree that makes Canada the envy of most other peoples. All these things are rightly to be seen as deriving from the hand of God. We Canadians, however, would do well to heed the warning of Paul, in Romans 6, when he said that those living under grace should never consider that an oppor- tunity for sinful license. In all too many spheres in Can- an line, “God keep our land glorious and free,” to be the prayer it was meant to be. If our hearts are not so moved we will enter upon’a future in which we will see § Canada’s foundations further ‘ eroded, and her blessings become but faint memories. This Dominion Day, 1988 the choice lies with each of us. CASTLEGAR NEWS, July 3, 1983 Why shouldn't a GIRL be a Newspaper carrier? Women’s Lib is here to stay. Girls are very capable of handling a newspaper delivery route and more and more girls around the country are taking on a carrier job. It's a good way to meet new people, learn good business practices and earn a little extra money, too. Learning how to be a good carrier can give you insights that can help you throughout your life. The Castlegar News I ’ female carriers. Join your friends today. : Phone 365-7266 _ “Ask for Circulation’ For Your Convenience We're OPEN MONDAY adian society this is precisel, what is happening. Because our society’ gives | great freedom to young peo- ple they are too often prone. to push those freedoms'to'th limit. The emergency wards of our hositals see far 'tho” many who fit into this cat- egory. Because our society has been blessed with. advanced medical technology it often proves easier to cease thou- sands of unborn lives than it does to care for the needs of CASTLEGAR 3 Sun. 4:30-9 p.m. { Dinner, Transportation....... Two Days, Ticket, Accommodation, Dinner and Transportation ... . RENO — FALL '83 FIRST DEPARTURE SEPTEMBER 3 PRICES START AT $269. CALIFORNIA & NEVADA — OCT. 16 16 DAY TOUR. EARLY BOOKER'S DISCOUNT IF BOOKED BY JULY 15 Bridge every Tues. evening THE ——— ¢ Rosstand”¢ S UPLANDER 362-7375 Mon. to Sun., July 4-10 INTERNATIONAL SPECIAL Soup or Salad Bar gx. New York Steck, plus . $10.50 B-B-Q Pork Ribs, Baked Potato, Vegetable & Garnish, Sherbet OR New York Steak Dinner . 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 Diltititirit Project Immigration in Oc. tober and November, a se ial Christmas project in De- cember, and a tour of The Tomorrow Box by Anne Chislett in the spring. Limitiitiitilt trail b.c. What is so important about Zuckerberg Island? PUBLIC MEETING CITY HALL Mon., July 4 7:30 p.m. WANETA HYDRO-ELECTRIC POWER PLANT TOURS | July 4 - September 2 Once daily at 1:00 p.m. Five days each week Monday to Friday (except August 1) MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL SAN FRANCISCO Pick-up in Castlegar, Trail and Nelson 3M Prices are in Canadian funds per person sharing accommodation (canadien, eerd Steve) \ % FOR MORE INFORMATION, PHONE: oneeine atte Ale Fate, HENPZE TRAVEL rane 1410 Bay Ave., Trail 368-5595 for 4-7- 10 nights, WEST'S TRAVEL FOR MORE INFORMATION Call Mar] or Nesta 1217 - 3rd St., Castlegar 365-7782 Smoradasbord “Your Smorgasbord House of the Kootenays” Deluxe Smorg Wed. through Sun. ZUCKERBERG ISLAND HISTORICAL RESTORATION PROJECT If you are interested in finding out what is being done on the is- land and what artifacts and infor- mation has been recovered so far, attend Mondsy,s meeting where future proposals will be on display and public input welcomed. Y WEW SHOP ‘716 Rosslond Ave., Trait For safety reasons, chil- dren under 12 years of age cannot be taken on tour. Tours last about one hour and we suggest comfort- able walking shoes be ‘worn. WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. 5P.M. TO8P.M. SUN., MON., TUES — BY RESERVATION ONLY Semi-private areas available for group dinners. Iso open for private luncheons. Phone 364-2616 for Reservations Next door to Konkin's Irly Bird Store on the Waterfront Esplonade. MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL Ltd, 365-6616 OPEN Tues, . Fri, 10am. «4:30 p.m.