Pana. 9 AS A4 CASTLEGAR NEWS, October 25, 1981 Videotape recorders p Little chance of charges TORONTO (CP). — — People in Canada who record CASTLEGAR NEWS, October 25, 1981 Skilled workers ' “aitontiod Manel poval key in mining For Ail Seasons / It’s VICTORIA (CP) — The community with all the nor- instant town of Tumbler mal social and . municipal Miami Subtropical wonderland By APRIL ATHEY Miami is a_ subtropical FILM FESTIVAL, H One of Canada’s rock performers who spent his childhood in Europe said the music ig his biggest payoff. ROSE'S RESTAURANT PLAYMOR JUNCTION ON HWY. #6 Wy WINNIPEG (CP) — Dressed in an old black golf shirt and jeans, Bryan the largest tropical garden in the world, is located off Old with ‘native” South Floridi- ans; alligators, soft-shelled front-row spectators during daily shows and the Lost here “is even more outdated than the U.S. legislation — has been working on for years now.” to see them any other time, Small Banquet the studios want them to go Facllities Available television shows on their videotape recorders aren't likely to be hauled into court for doing it, says a TV ex- ecutive. Murray Chercover, presi- dent of the CTV network, said he sees little chance that people will be charged, He was reacting to a ruling by a California appeals court that hinted U.S. viewers could be asking for trouble by using videotape recorders at home to watch a show later at their convenience. The U.S. ruling said that such use infringes on the copyright held by the owners of the shows being broadcast. This was the second round in a case by the Disney and Universal movie studios to a theatre and buy tickets or go to video stores and buy, cassettes or discs with the shows recorded on them. Chercover, whose network holds copyrights on many of the shows it broadcasts in Canada, said copyright law our laws on the subject are almost antediluvian.” As a result, he said he’ couldn't see anyone launch- ing such a suit here. “At least not until our copyright laws have been re- written, something Ottawa CBC president Al Johnson agreed. i “I can’t see a case like this standing up,” Johnson said. “It’s-simply so difficult to ef- fectively control what people in their own homes do with their own TV equipment. Adams stalks across the stage, belting out his songs. At 21, Adams has a pair of critically-acclaimed albums and a comfortable future as one of Canada’s most prom- ising rock performers. But the son of a diplomat against Sony Corp. of Amer- § ica. Sony launched the home videotape recorders in 1975 & and the machine has become a world-wide rage, even more popular in Europe than in North America. The studios argued that they lease their movies to & television networks so they can be seen by people at home when they're broad- cast. But if those people want GODSPELL . Playwright Mary Coyle Chase dies DENVER (AP) — ‘Mary Coyle Chase, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of the play Harvey, has died at age 15. Chase died Tuesday after suffering a heart attack in her Denver home. ~ S, * Tues. -Sat. 5tol0p.m. Sundays 4:30 109. Closed , Mondays Nalté227% is Columbia Steakhouse 602-18th St. 365-2421 She was best known for Harvey, a light-hearted com- edy which chronicled the ad- ventures of a man and his companion, an invisible two- metre rabbit. It played in New York for five years to become one of the longest- running shows in Broadway history and won her a Pulitzer in 1945. Actor Jim- my Stewart later starred in a film version. Born in Denver on Feb. 25, 1906, she dropped out of the University of Denver to join the staff of The Rocky Mountain News, where she met her husband, Robert Chase, a retired associate editor of the paper. She is survived by her husband, three sons and 11 in a Dutch Setting Mon. - Sat. 5 p.m, to Mid. on Nelson Avenue Telephone 352-9998 WOODEN SHOE — RESTAURANT International Cuisine fe ay i] 3 Rd a . . LAST SHOWING TONIGHT AT Nelson Civic Theatre. CASTLERRAXCNEWS ENTERTAINMENT Using music as a link NEW YORK (AP) — Can Harry Belafonte make the music of Africa as popular as he once did the music of the Caribbean? He doesn’t predict he'll succeed, but he intends to try. His new record, Loving You Is Where I Belong, his first in seven years, has a Zulu song on it, sung as a medley with Bob Dylan's Forever Young. If the album succeeds, he'll make another, with more than one song from Africa included. He wants to popularize the music of Africa to interest Americans in Africa and African culture, to make ‘people think of Africa as a place with links to American and European life. “African culture isn’t Tar- zan and a constant beating of drums around a ritual of hostility,” he says. “There is a civilized culture.” Belafonte says: “Many jazz and pop musicians have pro- duced works in Africa and based on African music, but it hasn't gained the level of popularity I had hoped.” PUT IT OVER He'd like to be the one to put it over. He says, “I think I showed that it was possible to reflect images of a culture M that was alien to the United States, specifically the West Indies. When I sang Mama Look at Bubu and Smart Woman Smarter there was nothing at all that indicated this music would gain an international response.” Belafonte's career started 30 years ago, in the fall of 1951, when the then-24-year- old singer had a collection of American and adatped West Indies folk songs and a guit- arist. A two-week engage- ment at New York's Village Vanguard was extended, led toan RCA recording contract and record-breaking crowds in personal appearances. In the 1950s and ‘60s, Belafonte calypso hits were consistently on America’s record players and radios —The Banada Boat Song, Day-O, Jamaica Farwell, Matilda, Come Back, Liza.- And Belafonte starred in movies, Carmen Jones and Island in the Sun in the mid-i9503s, and Uptown Sat- urday Night in 1974. Oct. 5-31. Order Your Custom Made Drapes Now to By Christmas IN-HOME DRAPERY . SERVICE Your Singer Store at the Castleaird Plaza now of fers you in ho: Guarantee-Delivery Then, his recording dates dried up. “We woke up one day and everything was rock.” His movie roles dried up, not because he lost his looks. He says that the civil rights movement opened doors from the late 1950s to the mid-1970s. “Then the doors of Holly- wood shut on minorities and blacks.” “I say superstar, super- star, it mean’s nothing to me,” Adams said in an inter- view. “It’s a stupid hype term. I just do what I do. If it’s accepted, great.” Although he became disil- Russian & Western Foods ‘359-7855 lusioned early with the Vancouver performer al- ways had a goal. “When I was 16, I left school and decided I was. going to do it. I started playing in bands and that was it.” Eventually, he landed a deal with A and M records. “They didn't expect anything to happen at all and suddenly there they were with this hit song.” The song, Let Me Take You Dancing, was a disco hit in New York and has since sold about 250,000 copies in the U.S. and Europe, much to Adams’ chagrin. - He said the song wrongly identified him -as a disco artists but it led to an in- vitation to cut his first album, titled Bryan Adams, in Los Angeles. While the album. earned praise, it never made it big. THE BEAL AD. Now, Adams feels better about his new album, You Want It — You Got It. The consistant rock line through- out the album is the Adams he wants people to know. Recorded in 17 days last spring in New York, it is packed with guitar-heavy hard rock and a pair of gentle ballads. He put toegether another band, his fourth in the last year, to take on his current tour which has taken him to Winnipeg. Besides his reputation as a singer, he is also developing a talent for song writing. All of the 85 to 40 songs he has written with Jim Val- lance, former drummer with Prism, have made it to someone's record. _ = All Adams he wants for his career is 4 Chance to continue it. “['m really happy just make records,” he said. “If they take off, that’s the pay- off.” It’s a blow-up When Canadian actor Al Waxman loses his head, it's a big blow-up. A climactic sequence in Death Bite, a recently filmed Toronto horror movie, in- volves a special effect that was supposed to be kept under wraps. The gimmick is that Waxman's head, or rather 2 model of it, gets blown off when venom boils his blood. American makeup speci- alist Dick Smith regards it as DRAPERY the best he has created, and Smith is an expert on the subject. he masterminded the makeup for The Exorcist, Altered States and The God- father. But it’s not the first time a Canadian actor lost his head to the movies. Michael Iron- side had his blown off in David Cronenberg’s Scan- ners, a thriller that took in an estimated $16 million in gross revenues earlier this year in the U.S. and Canada. Piano Tuning Regulation & Repair ey 365-3737 02-937 7th Avenue Jounde: Te avoid New Year's revolutions about dieting, tke ec * Fonnow. Men tose bi 2lort now - Let Sonia vee you oso lover, Feuninrend dl los by Chittmas, Don't let the New Yeor tind TRere'of you "then you would Wie, We have e super program for children too! ' Pe ace Come in now. Together, we con make it hoppen. Give yourselt Sore in core ot ver va thinner, healthier, happier YOU. ft {ae Earl Hofidhy Special! wll thelr name entered in DCX rebounder! (Valve $199) AT CASTIEGAN DIET cain Ha : \| foretree the draw for’ Goon | 7.a.m. - 1 p.m. Mon. - Fri. 8:30 - 9:30 a.m. Sat. or by Appointment Anytime — 365-6256 COMMUNITY Bulletin Board ES AUXILIARY TO MINOR HOCKEY There will be a general meeting on Thurs., Oct. 29 at 7:30 p.m. at the old arena concession. GOSPEL ROAD TRIO A singing group from Trail will present a sacred concert ‘at the Evangelical Free Church in the Legion Hall on Nov. 1, at 11. a.m. The public is invited to.attend this service. WOMEN'S AGLOW FELLOWSHIP The Nov. luncheon meeting will be held on Wed., Nov. 4 at 10:30 a.m. at the Hi Arrow Arms Hotel. Dione 0 has been a missionary in Zambia, will be st speaker. Babysitting will be available. For further rmation, phone 365-2263 or 365-5443. All ladies are cordially invited. SENIOR CITIZENS ASSOCIATION Acribbage tournament willbe held by the Senior Citizens at their Center, 208 11 St., on Fri., Oct., 30 ot 7 p.m. Playing fee is: $1,per person. Non-member crib en- thososts are welaome to join. Refreshments will be ser- ab } i , KOOTENAY SOCIETY FOR THE HANDICAPPED General meeting will be held qn Wed., Nov. 4 at 7:30 f he Castlegar United Church’ (2224 6 Ave.). intlude New Vocaiional Servicps Policy. Society m ers and other interested persons are in- vited to attend. PUBLIC MEETING FOR AREA | (Thrums-Shoreacres) Subject: Fire Protection, on Sun., Nov. 1 at 1 p.m. — Tarrys Community Hall. All residents, please attend. KINNAIRD VALLEY VISTA PARENT TEACHER GROUP Regular monthly meeting, Mon., Oct. 26 at 7:30 p.m. — Kinnaird Elementary Library. ROBSON EVENING GROUP Keep Sat., Nov. 7 open for the Fall Tea and Bake Sale at the Robson Recreation Hall from 2- 4 p.m... . Hope to see you there. ‘TRAIL ART CLUB Fall Exhibition at the Cominco Arana Gym, Trail, on Nov. 6&7 from 2 p.m. - 10 p.m. daily. THE Invites you to a workshop on Sat., Nov. 7 at the Rotary Health Center. Film: “Foster Parenting in Adolescence"; questions and answering period. Special speaker, Donna Mcintyre. Subject: Runaways, Communicating, etc. Registration deadline Oct. 30; $5 — or $10 per couple (in- cludes lunch). For more information, phone 365-6782, 965-6509, 365-3322, 359-7344 or 365-5402. SOUTH SLOCAN HOSPITAL AUXILIARY Will be holding a Fashion Show, Craft jake Sale on weds Nov. 4 at7 p.m. at the W.K.P. & L. Co. Hall in South Jocan, 5S DAY PLAN TO STOP SMOKING This popular ‘and successful quit smoking program returns to Castlegar on Nov. 1 - 5 at 7:20 p.m. at Stanley Hum: phries S ry School, Room 216. program is a community service of Seventh Day Adventists and held in co-operation with Selkirk College Community Education, There is a $15 repistration fee to help cover costs of materials used at the 5 Day Plan. For further information one 365-2649, cosmopolitan hub of com- merce. Sprawling over a 86- square-mile region, Greater Miami encompasses some of Florida's oldest and best- known family attractions, and satellite cities such as Key Biscayne and Home- ' stead. Within the immediate Mi- ami area is the Italian Renaissance-style Villa Viz- caya, where one may leave behind the bustle of modern life. The palazzo, built in 1915 by James Deering of Inter- national Harvester fame, sprawls over 30 acres of what once was dense mangrove jungle of the shores of Mi- ami's Biscayne Bay. Inside the imposing stone palace are art treasures, rare tapestries and paintings, and furnish- ings from the 16th to 18th centuries. Visitors also may take guided walking or tram tours, through Fairchild: Tropical Garden's 83 acres of palms, cycads, bromeliads, ferns, aroids and orchids. This showcase of tropical foliage, Lady Di wrangles plush pad VANCOUVER (CP) = Cutler Road in Cora! Gables. Across the Rickenbacker Causeway — which connects mainline Miami with the is- land of Key Biscayne — is the city of Key Biscayne. An ele- gant and unobtrusive sub- tropical resort, it is home of Bill Baggs Cape Florida State Recreation Area, where visi- tors find a secluded beach, 165-year-old lighthouse and reconstructed lighthouse keeper's cottage. The Rickenbacker Cause- way also leads to the Miami Seaquarium, which recently celebrated its 25th year of operation. The, marine at- traction's sassy performing killer whale, Lolita, splashes Lady Diana writhed ecstat- * ically in her new palace while Prince Charles slept and ig-. nored her. i No, it's not the latest chapter in the Royal soap .opera. Diana and Charles are 1.8metre boa constrictors that have moved into a plush new cage at Capilano Col- lege’s biology lab. The snakes, named in a contest last spring, needed the new house because Lady Di was a little naughty a few weeks back. She didn't like so she left in.a rit w. the college's neighbors, es- pecially when she was seen eating a crow. It was sternly suggested that a new home be found for Lady Diana and her beau. So the castle was built. Islands offer a rare closeup view of giant sea turtles, aquatic birds and reef dwel- lers. Back on the mainland is Coconut Grove, which com- bines gaslights, cobblestone streets and delightful little shops and restaurants with tropical foliage to create a colorful Bohemian style vil- lage. And south of Coconut Grove is Homestead, gate- way city to Everglades Na- tional Park and home of Coral Castle, Orchid Jungle and MOnkey Jungle. Everglades Natiuna! Park offers ranger-led tours through several marked trails which aquaint visitors MIAMI BEACH ‘turtles, blue herons, pelicans and the unusual anhinga. Ridge, being developed by the provincial government to service the northeastern B.C. 1) ; in seeing the sights and sounds of Miami find the area offers hundreds of rooms — from plush to budget; and seats thousands in its array of dining establishments. Sea- food, beef and continental cuisine please the palate and are served in a variety of ways, from shanty-style to haute cuisine. And from Miami — as a vacation base — two-day or three-day excursions to Walk Disney World, Kennedy Space Center and Tampa may be booked through sev- eral tour bus companies. will provide im- portant lessons for the growth of northern mining in Canada, Energy Minister Bob McClelland said. He told a meeting of pro- vineial mines ministers that the mining industry is facing a critical bottleneck in: the coming years, as demand for skilled workers outstrips supply. McClelland said Tumbler Ridge will be a permanent Mayor says money amenities.” McClelland said Tumbler Ridge will make affordable serviced housing available to its citizens, “We are not establishing a temporary huddle of pre- fabs,” he said. “Tumbler Ridge will be a permanent community that serves to attract and retain a stable work force. The government already had learned the crutial lesson for mining in the 1980s, and that is that the human factor is the key factor, he said. HOMEGOODS URNITA OSE f F ‘ WAPRSNOUSE wea it. 9:30-5:30 China Creek “Drive a Litte to Save a Lot” not worth effort Pssst! Want to be mayor or councillor in a nice rural parish of 2,000, just a hop, skip, and a jump from Quebec City? It seems nobody in St. An- selme is interested. Nomin- ations for a No. 1 municipal election for mayor and three councillors have closed with no takers, ! “I can understand the lack of interest — the money the mayor earns just isn’t worth Humans to test DETROIT (AP) — Sci- entists at Wayne State Uni- versity say human testing is the next step in the study of an experimental drug that stops the spread of some cancer in animals. The researchers reported in June that the drug Naf- azatrom stimulates the pro- duction of a substance that interferes with tumor cells’ travel through the blood- stream to other parts of lab- .oratory, animals’ bodies. “Studies on human pa: tients will begin in three to six months,” Dr. John Tay- lor, chairman of the univer- sity’s department of biolo- gical sciences and head of a the trouble,” says Guy Fra- dette, a federal meat inspec- tor who is resigning as mayor to.devote more time to his family and job. Until now Fradette has been spending 16 hours a . week handling civic business — including contract negoti- ations with St. Anselme’s six GUARANTEED CERTIFICATES (192%. y en; ees — and earning $1,247 Anderson Agencies Ltd., 1129 Fourth St, annually for his trouble. Three of the six council seats,are also vacant. committee on cancer projects at the school, said Tuesday. Nafazatrom is an anti- clotting drug developed by Bayer Chemical of West Ger- many. Dr. Kenneth Honn, who headed the Wayne State study, found the drug ele- vates the level of prostac- yclin, a potent anti-clotting agent that occurs naturally in blood vessels. Writing in the June 1981 issue of Science magazine, Ae Borderline Transmissio New cancer drug FREE Estimates INCLUDES: road Castlegar, B.C. Telephone: 365-3392 Interest sate subject to confirmation. * . SPECIALISTS . FREE Towing within a 100-mile sadius with major repairs. We have Automatic Transmission Shift Kits in stock. Honn d that elevated levels of prostacyclin stopped the spread of cancer in labor- atory animals by disrupting the process by which tumor cells join certain blood cells and travel to other parts of the body. test, visual inspection, clean sum screen, adjust bands snd link- age, replace pan gasket and fluid. and Housing stats alarming VICTORIA (CP) — B.C. Housing Minister Jim Chabot finds predictions that as many as 100,000 families could lose their home as a result of high interest rates frightening. “If the figure is anywhere near 100,000, that’s a very frightening figure,’’ Chabot said. “I think the federal government has a respon- Vancouver man wins Seniors’ Lottery Associa- tion of B.C. has announced Stanley Nadin of Vancouver, B.C. as its Oct. 20 draw winner of $2,000. © Proceeds from the Seniors’ Lottery help seniors all over British Columbia. sibility to respond and they ticularly about support for have that op, come Nov, 3 when they propose to ; put, their budget out.’” He waa commenting on mews report 's ‘last week of an ef nireiesged Federal report that estimates 100,000 families in Canada may lose their homes in the neurlfuture because of ‘high interest rates. ¥ederal Housing Minisier. Paul Cosgrove has denied the situation is that bad. ‘Chabot said he is sure most Canadians are alarmed by the projections and the loss of the security of their homes. “So they must respond and respond very quickly. It’s frightening figures whether it’s 50,000 or 100,00 Those figures are alarming.’” He said the B.C. govern- rental and high interest rates. Chabot said the federal government's multiple unit residential building (MURB) incentives to encourage peo- ple to invest in rental accom- odation should be continued and expanded rather than dropped. i “Virtually there is no con- struction or rental accomoda- tion anywhere in Canada.”” He said the B.C. govern- ment is waiting to see how Ottawa will address the hous- ing problem before taking action. 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FOR AN APPOINTMENT PHONE CARTERS SEWING CENTER Castleaird Plaza, Castlegar 365-3810 NOW OPEN FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 P.M. and MONDAY en can Rom a 26:8: 8 eT Ox ST. DAVID'S ANGLICAN CHURCH The ACW will be holding their Fall Tea and Bazaar on Sot., Oct. 31 at the Legion Hall from 2 - 4 p.m. Plan to meet your friends there for a Halowe'en tea. AIR CANADA @ TOURAM A WEST'S TRAVEL AGENCY Wess 1217-3rd St., Castlegar 365-7782 weumay bh \| 74 EL 365-8451 SERVICE CASTLEGAR LTD. 1438 Columbia Ave. A Trusted Name in Travel For 23 Years Castlegar MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL 365-7232 Operating mines in British Columbia earned $418 million in 1980. Those same mining companies directly invested almost twice as much—$814 million—in.explora- tion and development and capital expenditures for new mine construction and expansion. This was more than double the 1979 level* This creates new jobs and steady 4 incomes, not only for people actually working in the mines, but for those who service and supply the industry and its Lee ve Coming events of Castlegar and District non-profit organizations are listed here through the courtesy of BC Timber’s Celgar Pulp and Celgar Lumber Divisions. Please submit notices directly to the Castlegar News by 5 p.m, Thursdays, Air, Land or Sea. Local, Domestic, International “"A Trested Name in Travel for 32 Yeers’’ i A Public Service of Celgar Pulp Division and Celgar Lumber Division BC Timber Lt SEE MARJ CULLEY AT CASTLEGAR SAVINGS CREDIT UNION Tues., Thurs., Fri. 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. MINING ° B.C?s 2nd resource industry The Mining Association of British Columbia