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Sharing Canadian Funds For More Information HENNE TRAVEL 1410 Bay Ave. Trail 368-5595 WEST'S TRAVEL 1217-3rd St., Castlegar 365-7782 @#@e@e@e0e0e00820980 VANCOUVER (CP) — British-Columbia’s film industry may have been busy cobbling ther more than $60 million worth of Hollywood movies last year but that does nothing for local says V: Hollywood hurts filmmakers of talented technicians with no work. “The surge in Hollywood movie-making means that independent filmmakers can no longer afford the director Laurence Keane. Keane, who just finished shooting the $1.7 million historical film Samuel Lount in New Brunswick and Ontario; says the Hollywood influx often gets in the way. “Hollywood —— do provide work for an experienced group of but they do nothing for the producers, directors and writers,” says Keane. He made his film, a look at Canada's 1837 rebellion, in New Brunswick partially because that province's government gave him a grant of $50,000. “And what happens when the dollar goes back to normal or our technicians start asking for the same and they are no longer available in any case,” says Keane. Keane and his partner Elvira Lount, great-great niece of the title character of the film, faced one side-effect of the Hollywood invasion two days before they began shooting Sept. 5 when they discovered every appropriate and affordable camera was being used in other productions. They had to buy a camera in Los Angeles. This was not the only problem that Keane and Lount encountered. They say they got caught between the needs and desires of the government film-funding agency Telefilm Canada, which put up $525,000 of Samuel Lount’s budget and the CBC which provided $500,000 in and goes home?” money as American technicians and Hollywood packs up The answer, says Keane, is that there will be a pool the form of a licence fee under the provision of Telefilm's broadcast fund. “The way the broadcast fund is set up the B.C. filmmaker is forced to go to Toronto to ask for his money,” says Keane. “But, just like Quebec, we have a different culture in Western Canada and.no one asks Quebec filmmakers to go to Toronto to explain their movies.” In a telephone interview from Toronto, Pearson, Telefilm's program director, said he recognizes the problems that regional filmmakers have in having to deal directly with Telefilm’s decision makers. WANTS CHANGE “It’s not ideal, and I'd like to see it change, but we're avery small operation,” says Pearson. “There's only four people here in Toronto doing cultural, financial, legal and marketing analysis and four in Montreal with one person each in Vancouver and Halifax, who forward likely projects to us for analysis.” Pearson says that to provide day-to-day access Telefilm would have to duplicate staff in Vancouver and Halifax and other cities, like Calgary, where Telefilm may open future offices. Peter WITH DUNCAN, CORREIA Play a family affair By MICHAEL KUCHWARA NEW YORK (AP) — They are husband and wife, father and mother and now star and co-star. Sandy Duncan and Don Correia are getting equal billing in My One and Only, having recently replaced Tommy Tune and Twiggy as the leads in the long-running musical built around classic Gershwin melodies. Dunean has had her name above the title before, most prominently in the 1978 re- vival of Peter Pan, and it won her a third Tony nomination. Despite his extensive credits, this is Correia’s first starring role in New York. At the moment, they're prouder of their two other productions — Jeffrey, who arrived in 1982, and Mikey, born in early 1984. Parents and children are settling into backstage rou tine at the St. James Theatre where My One and Only is playing. The boys have a mursery next to Duncan's dressing room. Dad's space, complete with a barber chair to entice the children, is located one floor below. Ad justing to their new family life — revolving around eight performances a week — has taken some accommodation. “Actually, it's a combined effort,” says Duncan, a sprit- ely but determined woman who appears to have a handle on motherhood. You would not expect anything less from someone who was Peter Pan on Broadway and on the road for two years without miss- ing a performance. “I didn’t want to get up at eight this morning to eat, but we got up,” she says. “We adapt to the children’s sched. ule, and they adapt to ours. It's a lot of co-operation and good humor.” The adjustment is espec ially difficult when you're jumping into a show that has been running for a long time. Such Gershwin standards as Strike Up the Band, Funny Face, and Soon, are introduced into the proceed ings before the inevitable happy ending. Some minor changes in the musical had to be made. For one, with Tune tapping in at 6 foot 6 and Correia at 5 foot 10, the height jokes had to go. But with Duncan a more accomplished dancer than Twiggy. some movement could be added. Cable 10 TV CABLE 10 the topi¢ for area ‘Thursday, Jan. 10 health nurses. Includ 6:00—Sign-on and program ed is a film which information. graphically illustrates 6:03—Castlegar Library the issue. Storytime — with 8:00—Entre Act — Is a per. Judy Wearmouth formance by Beverly 6:15—Castlegar Primary Chiu playing flute and Travel Agency - Mr. Bourchier playing This year’s Christmas classical guitar. Re concert from Helland, corded at the Upland Germany, Russia and er in Rossland. Hawaii. 9:00—Dr. David Suzuki 7:00—Driving with Child Recently addressed Restraints (seatbelts) the B.C. Principal's Margaret Brooke Association on the of ICBC recently con topic “Toward the ducted a workshop on Year 2000: The Chal: lenge for Educators. The address and ques. tion period are pre- sented in their en. tirety. 11:00—Sign-off. OMM WHITCOMB'S WAR There's a new pastor in town and the light of his faith shines like the Lord's armor! Pastor Dovid Whitcomb is prepored to do battle for the souls of his congregation and by the picture, you know this midwestern town will p.m. Robson Holl. on Sunday, Jon Castlegar ALL PAPER CASH BINGO The Castlegar Aquanaut Swim Club is having an all poper Cash Bingo at the Castlegar Arena Complex on Saturday Jan. 12. Advance tickets are $8.00 ond are available at the Wool Wagon, Macleods Store, Central Foods and Kel Print. Early Bird is 6:00 p.m. with Regular Bingo 7:00 p.m. ROBSON RECREATION SOCIETY Annvel General Meeting, Wednesday Election of Officers to be held. Everyone welcome. Come support your © say. Get involved. Sponsored by Robson Rec Society 1.0. JOBS DAUGHTERS BETHEL No. 60 The public is cordidlly invited to the installation of Honoured Queen elect Sherry Bouthillier and her olficers 13 at 2:00 p.m. at “Twiggy was very stylized in the way she approached the part. It was almost a comment on the period and style,” Duncan says. “I don’t do it that way.” Duncan has kept Edith’'s English accent, submerging her own soft Texas twang. Her other big Broadway parts — Canterbury Tales in 1969 and the 1970 revival of The Boy Friend. — also re- quired English accents. “I think the English ac- cents help keep the distance between the two characters,” Correia says. “It exaggerates the coming together of two different worlds.” He and Duncan met in the early 1970s when she was in the middle of the television phase of her career.'A vet- eran of two TV series, she was, starring in a epecial called Sandy in Di: CLASSICAL COMPOSERS ‘DON'T EXIST’ WINNIPEG (CP) — Sometime during this century Correia was a dancer on the show. Correia was in the original national touring company of A Chorus Line, and later moved into supporting roles in a series of Broadway mu sicals including Perfectly Frank, Sophisticated Ladies and Little Me. During the summer of 1983, he was fea- tured in a Radio City Music Hall revue that also starred his_wife. The role of Billy Buck is his first starring role on Broad- way. “It’s the most responsibil ity I've ever had on stage, which is nice,” he says. Anderson enjoys his Night Court LOS ANGELES (AP) — Harry Anderson's first ven ture into acting was a gamble — literally. He was a street performer running a shell game in San Francisco, Aus tin Tex., New Orleans and other places. “The gambling got a little rough, so I turned it into a magic act,” he recalls. “I made it into an expose of the shell game, which led to the con man role I did on Cheers.” Anderson appeared in four episodes of the NBC comedy series, but he still isn't sure how he got tapped for the role. “I think someone saw me working as a street perform er he said. “Then, I've heard they saw me on Saturday Night Live.” Anderson was invited to play a hanging out judge on Night Court. The show, created by Reinhold Weege (Barney Miller), got off tog shaky start but is now a confirmed hit running in a Thursday night comedy block with The Cosby Show, Fam ily Ties and Cheers. Anderson took up magic when he wes a child and was being shuttled back and forth between his divorced par ents. By the time he was 18 he was on his own and per forming in Oregon. WORKS THE STREETS “I started street perform ing when I was 15 but I didn't make a living at it until I was 17,” he said. He developed the act into a comedy routine that pre pared him for the transition to acting. “I think I overestimated the challenge of acting in the in the bar on Cheers. “They thought maybe I could be a silly magician,” he said. “I suggested the con man.” Now Anderson is starring in his own series on NBC as the unconventional and fun saviaee Stone, the Bulletin Board PUBLIC SPEAKING COURSE Weekend of February 15 to 17. Stu McNish, Vancouver tion, Linda Hart, 365-5011, Castlegar Arts Coun 32 2/2 Jon. 23 at 7:00 ” he said. “I made it ‘too hard for myself. “I realized this season the best thing I could bring to the show is myself. Let the others do the schticks. Like Bob Newhart. He's the calm in the middle of the storm. Night Court made its debut last January, but the mid-season replacement cau sed hardly a ripple in the Nielsen ratings. classical s appear to have lost their spot in the vanguard of popular music but such wasn't always the case. Salieri, Mozart's 18th-century nemesis in the play and film Amadeus, said composers managed to attract large audiences because they were “celebrating men's average lives. One hundred twenty years later, Liszt caused audiences to swoon over his works as he performed on stage. But then came the 20th century. Audiences thrilled to the sounds of jazz and other music forms and composers of classical music went into a shell, sending out occasional sounds which tended to mystify the average listener. It's a situation that upsets the 30 members of the three-year-old Manitoba Composers Association “Most Canadian composers are treated as if they don't exist,” said Valdimir Simosko, a composer and a founding member of the organization When you look at the dollars and cents of things, composers couldn't exist. EARNS LITTLE According to a 1982 Statistics Canada report, the last year surveyed, composers earned an average annual income from their creative works of $1,000. “(It was) the lowest level of income from music of any of the groups studied in the survey,” said the report “You couldn't possiblly feed your family as a composer,” said hk Welch, pi of the M: Ib P s group, who supplements his income by editing a downtown advertising tabloid and working as a hypnotist. Manitoba composers say if money was the only problem they'd be satisfied. But they say the real test of a composer's work — the appreciative reaction of a knowing audience — is also absent. Music Inter Alia and Izmusic, formed in the late 1970s and 1980s in reaction to the lack of venues for new music, regularly attract about 200 followers. But the Manitoba Chamber Orchestra and the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra play very little Manitoba music. The symphony orchestra is weathering most of the composers’ ire. As the largest and most prominent performing group in the province, composers say it should be taking a leading role in the commissioning and performing of Manitoba works. LAMENTS RECORD In a recent letter to the Manitoba Arts Council, poser Bill Pura | d the sy y's record of programming compositions by Manitobans, calling the symphony “intransigent.” Symphony executive director Jack Mills admits the record “has not been as good as it could be.” But, he says, neither is it “as bad as the Manitoba Composers Association makes it sound.” Mills said the symphony is constrained in its programming choices by a combination of financing and public taste. In deep financial trouble in recent years, the symphony has made a concerted effort to program more popular works to attract a large audience, he said. On the other side of the coin, exception of one Mi Mpo receiving more than “two or three” composers during his four executive director. Still, the future for Manitoba composers is looking a bit brighter. Funding organizations are now underwriting various costs for organizations to promote Manitoba talent and despite budget cuts, the CBC remains committed to new work Mills said with the he can't r submissions from local years as the symphony's NIGHTLY " Monte Carlo Motor Inn FAMILY RESTAURANT SPECIAL PRIME RIB — $9.95 ae) Daily ‘til 9 p.m. Cold weather keeps tight grip on Evrope LONDON (REUTER) — Freezing weather, which has killed more than 20 people, paralysed transport in large areas of Europe and destroyed some crops, was expected to keep a tight grip on the continent today. In France, 18 people were reported to have died as a result of the worst cold snap in years. Olive growers in the south and in Italy faced disaster as frost destroyed most of their crops. In Austria, the death toll rose to five as two more people were found frozen to death Tuesday. Temperatures dropped to 29 in some areas and the River Danube, central Europe's main waterway, was closed to shipping. Thirty freight barges were trapped in the West German part of the river in the first heavy ice on the waterway in many years. Elsewhere in West Germany, officials in Munich said power stations working overtime to keep houses warm were pumping out waste which spread a layer of “acid snow” over the city that could harm children, In eastern Yugoslavia, sepres of villages were cut off by snowdrifts and a man was found frozen dead in the snow in the central part of the country. In Italy, rising temperatures somewhat improved the situation in Rome but heavy snow and cold affected many other parts of the country. AIRPORTS CLOSE Airports in Bologna, Pisa, Naples, Turin, and Venice were closed for all or part of Tuesday while flights at Milan and Rome airports were delayed. Schools in Bologna, Sardinia and other parts of Italy were ordered closed today. At least 50,000-cars caught unprepared were stranded on Italian highways and overland train transport was still chaotic with several major stations closed and dozens of trains cancelled. In northern and central Greece, heavy rain and snow disrupted communications and, traffic and many villages were isolated because of snow-bound roads. In North Africa, storms killed seven people in Morocco as winds of up to 59 kilometres an hour lashed the country’s Atlantic coast. Torrential rains in the south left hundreds homeless and the main highway east of Agadir was reported cut off in five different places, In Switzerland, some slopes below the famous Matterhorn peak were closed because if skiers were injured they would risk freezing to death before help arrived. At the village of La Brevine, nicknamed Swiss Siberia because of its'Tow readings, temperatures dropped ot -41.2 Tuesday night, close to its last record of -42.6 set 22 years ago. In Britain, hundreds of people were injured in falls on ice and frozen snow. A hospital in the southern English town of Cosham said it had treated so many broken bones that it has run out of plaster of Paris. SURROGAT THER Baby in custody LONDON (AP) — The High Court has taken tem- porary custody of a five-day- old girl, the first child known to have been born in Britain toa woman paid to serve as a surrogate mother. The baby’s natural father and his childless wife are Americans, re The Daily Star, which bought rights to the story. The action placing the baby in the eustody of the High Court's Family Division was announced Tuesday night by Leonie Cowen, principal lawyer for the northern London borough of Barnet. Cowen said the ruling “means the jurisdiction and Salvador receives gunships SAN SALVADOR (AP) — The Salvadoran air force has received the first of three the decisions as regards the child’s future will be made by the High Court, which has taken on the in $7,475 U.S. to have a baby for them, and said Cotton was artifically inseminated with this matter.” The Guardian newspaper that the court will allow “interested parties, in- cluding the natural father,” to apply for custody of the child. “The anonymous American father has no rights over the child because she is illegi- timate,” the newspaper said. “But for the High Court the baby’s interests must be paramount, and it might favor an application by him so long as it is not proposed to take the child out of the country.” The court action came as officials considered ways to outlaw sufrogate mother. hood for pay, a practice that a Church of England leader compared to prostitution. COST $7,475 U.S. The Barnet Council had obtained a lower court order Friday night, a few hours after the birth, preventing Kim Cotton, 28, from handing over her heavily armed U.S. that could have significant impact in the war against leftist rebels, American offi- cials say. The first of the gunships, a C-47 mounted with three .50-calibre machine-guns, went into action late Monday in a battle for control of hill country in the east-central province of San Vicente. Meanwhile, police reported that unidentified gunmen killed the conservative ma- yor of Santa Elena, a small town surrounded by guerrilla camps in eastern El Salva- dor. Police said the motive for the killing of Domingo Aviles on Tuesday was un- known. Kennedy met by protesters JOHANNESBURG (AP) advised to quit Princess advised to quit smoking LONDON (REUTER) — Princess Margaret has been smoking after undergoing a lung to the childless couple. The Daily Star said the couple, reported to be wealthy Americans, paid Cotton Wao thee child d's sperm. The tabloid, which bought exclusive rights te Cotton's story, says a British sur- rogacy agency arranged the birth. While the legal storm swirls around her, the girl, dubbed Baby Cotton by nur- ses, has been kept at Victoria Maternity Hospital in Bar- net. Cotton left the hospital Saturday. A Barnet Council spokes- man said he did not know who obtained the High Court order Tuesday, “but it was not ourselves.” The order supercedes the one the coun- cil obtained from a magis- trate’s court. The British domestic news agency Press Association said the High Court order could only stand temporarily. To have it extended, who ever applied for it has to present the case before a High Court judge. DISCUSS TIMETABLE Earlier Tuesday, Health Minister Kenneth Clarke said in a BBC radio interview that cabinet ministers will discuss HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS DEPT. Hove he Masonic Holl never will I forsake you This film ministers to all focets behalf of Kim on Sen. 13, 01 the Pow Covertin fee Coming events of Castlegar and District non-profit organizations may be listed here. The first 10 $3 ond additional words are 15¢ each. Boldtac~d words (which must be used for headings) count as two words There is no extra charge for @ second consecutive inser tion while the third consecutive insertion is halt-price Minimum charge is $3 (whether od is tor one three times). Deadlines are 5 p.m. Thursdays for Sunday's poper and 5 p.m. Mondays for Wednesday's paper Notices should be brought to the Castlegar News at 197 words are two or Featuring Paintings by ALF CROSSLEY Friday, January 11 7 p.m. rode m. in the Cedar HOMESTEAD soure SANDWICH SHOPPE HAPPY 16th BIRTHDAY HELAINE HAPPY 49th ANNIVERSARY MOM & DAD! (GEORGE & MOLLY SALIKIN From the For: Senator Edward Kennedy was jeered by black protes- ters Tuesday for the second time on his South African tour, and police used dogs to drive back the demonstrators in a brief scuffle. Earlier, in the major speech of his nine-day tour, the Massachusetts Democrat told South African business leaders they risk increasing world isolation unless they prod their government to take steps to dismantle apartheid, the system of racial separation instituted by the white government The protesters were from the Azanian People's Organ ization, a black faction op- posing white and foreign as sistance in the fight for black rights in South Africa Demonstrators were wait ing in the lobby when Ken- nedy arrived at the office of the black mineworkers’ union for talks with officials. Police pushed the protesters out onto the sidewalk and Ken- nedy, surrounded by security men, went upstairs for the 90-minute meeting. “Our goal and objective is a socialist workers’ republic of Azania,” one protester shout ed, using the name for South Africa preferred by members of the “black consciousness” group who contend only blacks can play a leading role in the fight for rights for South Africa's 22 million black majority. The crowd outside grew to several hundred, including many onlookers. When Ken nedy emerged, the protes ters again began chanting, “Kennedy, Go Home.” Police again dispersed them, and the senator waved and smiled to the crowd as he got into his car and left for his hotel The Azanian People’s Or ganization is considered to have far fewer followers than the mainstream United Democratic Front, a multi racial organization that wel comes all races in its cam paign against rule by the white minority operation at a London hospital. Newspapers reported that doctors and friends had told the 54-year-old princess to abandon a two to three-pack-a-day cigarette habit and Burke's Peerage, the chroniclers of royal lineage, warned her of a possibly hereditary chest weakness. A spokesman for Margaret, only sister of the Queen, said she was making excellent progress at Brompton Hospital after part of her left lung was removed in Sunday's opeation amid fears she might have cancer. Surgeons said the tissue removed was “innocent,” indicating there was no malignant growth. The princess's spokesman said no further bulletins will be issued, although it’s not yet known when she will leave the hospital. Close friend Norman Lonsdale was quoted in The Sun newspaper as saying: “She makes no secret of the fact that she loves smoking. I should think this would change her mind.” AFFECTS FAMILY Burke's Peerage executive Harold Brooks-Baker, the publication's director for genealogical matters, said Tuesday a chest weakness worsened by smoking had run through four generations of the Royal Family “It is something of which those close to the family are very conscious,” Brooks-Baker said. He said her former husband, Lord Snowdon, had tried hard but unsuccessfully to persuade her to give up cigarettes during their 18-year marriage. Brooks-Baker said Margaret's father, George VI, her grandfather, George V, and great-grandfather, Edward VII all had histories of chest trouble associated with smoking. A spokesman for the Queen said members of the Royal Family, vacationing at Sandringham in eastern England, had been in touch with Margaret but had no plans to travel to London The princess's 23-year-old son, Viscount Linley, and her daughter, Lady Sarah Armstrong-Jones, 20, flew home Monday fronf a vacation in Venice to see their mother. . TH ‘oming Soon... See the Coulnarh News of Sun., Jan. 13 *‘Cepacol’ Mouthwash 750 mL plus 250 mL more. 2° bl lation to the new sagas packs ¥0 sur: rogacy. But he added: “It may well to this child and one of the parents is the natural father. My own personal reaction is that if this is the case, it is united with the parents who want to offer her a loving home.” Commercial surrogacy has been widely condemned in Britain and, in the flood of news reports since Baby Cotton's birth, little has been heard from childless British couples seeking to employ it. The Bishop of Birmingham, Hugh Montefiore, chairman of the Church of England's council for social responsi- bility, said Saturday com- mercial surrogacy is “not wholly unlike prostitution.” A Roman Catholic theolo- gian, Rev. Carlo Caffarra, said Tuesday in the Vatican paper L’Osservatore Romano Litibiis HI Li 15, 1965 Branch No. 170 CABARET Friday & Saturday Dancing 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. OPEN AT 12 NOON SIX DAYS A WEEK. Proper Dress Fri. & Sat. after 9 p.m. that the love and makes procreation a mere “rent-a-uterus” prac- tice. ‘Sure & Natural’ Maxi Shields Reg. or Deodorant. Pkg. of 30. Toni FOR TOTAL Personal Perm For normal, hard to hold, extra body. Your Choice. 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