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Karlen and four other ex- ecutive members of the asso- ciation say they were pared to fight “The Battle of * Billy Bishop . . . a battle against lack of honesty in public film-making” to coun- teract the film's damage. They are prepared to enlist lunches to . . . full course meals . . . at these fine presents TUES. TO SUN. JAN. 31 - FEB. 5 Salad Bar, Prime Rib, With all the trimmings . WE SPECIALIZE IN CATERING WEDDINGS & BANQUETS For reservations call 365-7262. We Are Proud To Be The Only Full Service Union Hotel in Costleger. NOW1’'M JOHN . . . Winnipeg's Contemporary Dan- cers will.pertorm a tribute to former Beatle. John Lennon Tuesday at Selkirk College. Also included in the varied program will be a number inspired by Gershwin tunes of the 20s and 30s. — Protos by Robert Tinker Dancers here Feb. 7 Canada’s oldest modern dance company, Winnipeg’s Contetnpotary Dancers, will perform a varied program of dance Feb. 7 in the Selkirk College gymnasium. Among the works to be performed is “Who Could Ask For Anything More.” A collage of Gerswhin tunes inspired by images of the 1920s and 30s. Also featured are works entitled “Motor Party” and “Alternating Current.” controlled projectors flash 400 images throughout the hour-long performance. “The dance makes no attempt to dramatize his lif says publicist Lin Gibson. “Dance is central to the multi-media format. “It attempts to capture the spirit and mood of noe SURE WONT Highland dancers*tori of Trail (left) a issy Newlove of Fruit- ‘ARTS RESTAURANTS vale perform for crowd at Robbie Burns night = celebration Saturday at Royal Canadian Legion. ~Coshtewathoto by Chery! Calderbank uevevunsnnneeavaceauenueanoncesdeeduaiiecgnennegnnantate Producer loves food BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF. (AP) — High-rolling film- maker Dino De Laurentiis has returned to’ Hollywood for the premiere of his latest production — an extravaganza starring the joys of Italian cookery. . ‘No, the film producer hasn't given up movies — he has $100-million worth of product for release in 1984 and more in the works. But, as he said in an interview in his Beverly Hills Hotel bungalow, he is merely returning to his second- favorite pasttime —food. " “My hobby, bas always been food,” he said. “My father was a spaghetti manufacturer in Naples, and at the age of 14, before I got into the film industry, I travelled all over Italy ag a salesman for his products.” De Laurentiis has lived in the United States for 10 years, first here, now in New York, and he finds American food too attuned to quantity and not enough to quality. He said there are more projects in production this year, including the long-postponed Tai-Pan, for which he has finally cleared the rights and plans to shoot in Thailand on a $35-million budget. De Laurentiis obviously doesn't think small. Long a free-wheeling producer in Italy, he came to Hollywood in the 1970s and made King Kong, Buffalo Bill and the Indians, Orea, Drum and Hurricane, Though scorned by critics, his movies made money, he said. King Kong grossed $100, million, including $25 million from television, De Laurentiis said. But he said that his biggest failures were so-called quality films: Ragtime and Ingmar Bergman's The Serpent's Egg. What does that prove? Ma itad ie. i ¥ r May and Friday from noon to : ‘a p.m. and Wednesday from ‘exten 7 to 10 p.m. n exhibiting ¢x sively in group and one-man + shows unobtainable with any kind of seryli¢, no matter how lividly colored or athletically slung at the canvas.” since 1978, in'Toronto and ‘On- tario. % His work is also displayed through the public collections of the National Gallery ‘of Toronte Dominion Bank, and others. : In December 183 Klunder was elected to the presigions Royal Canadian Academ: DTUC Gallety viewing hours. are Monday, Tuesday, Thurs- TV_SERIES PROBES PAST | Young Americans won O ATHENS (AP) — A new television mini-series being filmed in the Greek capital revives the long-forgotten story of a group of American college students with little athletic training who tri- umphed in nine out of 12 events at the first modern Olympics here in 1896. The $7-million Columbia Pictures production is based on the memories of the late Robert Garrett, a meinber of the first. U.S. Olympic team and winner of both the discus and shot-put events. “I met Garrett shortly be- fore he died in 1962,” said Gary Allison, the film's pro- ducer and co-writer. “He was the only surviving member of that team and he asked me to tell this story because Amer- ica doesn't know it, and probably Greece doesn’t either.” The First Olympics — Athens 1896, a five-hour film to,be broadcast in, two.parts, ‘will'premiere simultaneously in the United States:on NBC and on major foreign TV net. works, probably in May, a few months before the 1984 Olympics get under way .in Los Angeles, Allison said. ° lympics The ancient Olympic games were staged in a wooded sanctuary in western Greece. But when a Freneh nobleman, Baron Pierre de Coubertin, revived them, they were moved to a Roman-era mable stadium in the centre of Athens, reeon- structed by a wealthy Greek. “At a time when there were no organized athletics clubs in the United States, 13 students from different col- leges were picked to repre- sent their country in the first-ever international track and field event,” Allison said. The pioneer Olympic com- petitors were coached by an eccentric Princeton classics professor, Dr. William Sloane, using javelins and discus copied from pictures of ancient Greek athletes on classical vases. TOOK SILVER The American student walked off. with nine out of the 12 silver medals awarded to winners at the first mod- ern games. “There were no gold med- als in 1896. Only silver med- als for victors and laurel wreaths att TT UU World-Travelling Illusionist ANDRE KOLE pertorms magic at Stanley Humphries School Mon., Feb. 6 - 7:30 p.m. Tickets $5.00 at Granny's Pantry the Deer. Daricing 9:30 OPEN Ai 12 NOON SIX DAYS A WEEK. Proper Dress Fri. & Sat. after 9 p.m. Guests Must Playing Fri. & Sat. Be SIGNED In GOING TO SPOKANE? = Makes this csytsccce, Speclal Serene wr | Money Savings Offer ONE BED TWO BEDS $28 $3200 plus Tax plus Tax Expires April 15, 1984 ' 1 GUITAR HEA Liu ee ee ee ee ee jDQUA Try the foremost in OF THE KOOTEN, elegant dining JAYS Lennon's music and some of the aspects of his life, his relationship with Yoko Ono . Beatlemania!” Ironically, “Now I'm John . . .” opened to sold-out audiences exactly two years to the day of Lennon's senseless death. This was not planned. Indeed, the work had been commissioned prior to his death. ‘That's why he travels with his own cook. That's also why he has opened three DDL Foodshows in New York and is introducing the gourmet shop in Beverly Hills this month, with others to follow in nearby Westwood and Santa Monica. ‘The producer has planned the food emporiums with the same thoroughness he would apply to a $30-million movie. “That we producers are showmen, and we should have and scrolls for respect for the audience and respect for the money we spend,” he sai De Laurentiis is a slender man of 64, and one wonders how he can remain this with his lifelong devotion to food. “I diet three days a month,” he said. “I will have coffee The centrepiece of the evening, however, is an insightful tribute to John Lennon entitled “Now I'm © Complete take-out menu John .. ." This work is a multi-media extravaganza of : Cher-broited Steaks & Seatood music, sound, dance, movement and visuals. haben d Vopeierian bichon ‘The music is Lennon's, interspersed with the voice of © Soloed Bor : his son Sean and old interviews of Lennon. Ten computer- Monte Carlo “Of course, it’s a topical runners-up,” Allison said. story and the Oscar-winning © “Those games were about suceess of Chariots of Fire— struggle, competition a feature film about two athletes — should add to FAMILY RESTAURANT We offer Children’s Menu and Senior Citizen Discount. Bring a Senior Citizen and everyone in the party receives the discount. 1935 Columbia Ave., +2177 | 2 Dining Rooms For Quiet Cozy Atmosphere | © SUPER MENU * REASONABLE PRICES ° LICENCED 362-7630 “A FAMILY PLACE” Fe. 1,2,3,4 BEEF & PORK COMBO OUR GIANT SALAD BAR, ASSORTED COLD CUTS, CHEESES. FORK CHOPS & SPARERIBS. POTATO PANCAKES & APPLESAUCE, BARON OF DCEF & BEEF ROULADEN, VEGETABLES, ASSORTED FRUITS & DESSERT 10. Children under 4 free. 5-12 yrs. 50€ per yeor. BRING THIS AD AND GET $1.00 DISCOUNT (1 per cvstomer) WED., THURS., FRI, SAT. 5 P.M. TOSP.M. SUN., MON., TUES — BY RESERVATION ONL Semi-privote areas available tor group dinners. Also open tor private luncheons Phone 364-2616 for Reservations Next door fo Konkin’s Irly Bird Store on the Waterfront Esplonade. DELUXE DAILY LUNCHEON SMORG 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. $5.98. Salad Ber only: $3.95. the new trail: b,c. * Motor inn 5 Nabe! \ahed Nahe Slew: Tr tee Pri.& Set, till 1 a.m. Tues. - Thurs. 5 - 10. Sunday 4:30 -9 p.m. Fireside Dining Room & Cocktail Lounge Open 4 p.m. - 10 p.m. For a scrumptious dinner. Mon. to Sat. SPECIALS Our specials include Salad Bor, Desstrt, Teo & Coffee. Reservations appreciated 365-6000 Carriage House RESTAURANT NIGHTLY DINNER SPECIALS! + Prime tis WE ACCEPT COMINCO MEAL TicKETs. OPH er 646 Baker Street, Nelson Before or after Skiing visit the Coffee Place in the Uplander. Open 7 a,m.’- 8 p.m. Daily. ARTS Calendar Feb. 1 - 29. . . Prints From the Interior is an exhibit of prints, lithography, graphics and serigraphy from three well known printmakers currently on view at the National Exhibition. Centre in Castlegar. * mstfang, Judith Foster o cluded Grid @ Monoprint Workshop tats. will.be held March 3 from 9 ¢.m. to 5 p.m, Pre- registration is required for this|workshop so contact the NEC Boon to register. Coming up in March is an exhibit from Atomic Energy Canada concening the Candy reac tor. Feb. 10 is the deadline for applications for tho: wishing space to display along with Atomic Energy. Feb. 1. . . lasf chance to.see “The Good Person of Set- zuan” gt DTUC Thestre of 8 p.m uyith m the Bruc Theatre Department pertarming this Bertold Brecht - feb. 3,4, 687. . . Harold Klunder painting workshop to be held at OTUC. Contact Jed Irwin at DTUC if you are terested in participating. . 2 S2Primadonina is o concert 'in the Performance in the Trail Junior High Auditorium af8 p.m. Season ticket holders please note change of date. feb. 16 and 1 Opera Play: present “Finian's Rainbow" at the Trail Junior Secondary $ehool Auditorium at 8 p.m. ++ The Rosstand Feb. 15. - on Overture Concert Series presents Caral McLaughlin, harpist, in the Nelson Civic Theatre at * 2:30p.m. Feb. 27 . . .Regulor general meeting of the Castlegar and Distriet Community Arts Council to Be held in the Kinnaird Library af 7:30 p.m. Peb. 29 . ... Closing date for entries in the fifth Kootenay indary Juried Art Exhibition to be held this yeor in Grand Forks April 6 to 14. Contact Joel Harris af DTUC for complete details. . The Kootenay Art Club is 0 local club: lo. will con #60) for this workshop by calling —_—————_ items for “this bi-monthly feature should) be telephoned,to re: D. Miller-Tait of the llegar and District Community Arts Council at 7850. Cable 10 TV Delta/Burnaby again- st Nanaimo/Parks- ville. 10:00—Rape Awareness — Terry Scarbo of the RCMP, the Judicial System and _ the Rapist. Defining inde- cent and sexual as- assault. 11:00—Sign-off. storytime. 6:00—Fitness Over 50 — Lisa Morris discusses the practical applica- ation of simple exer- program illustrates the use and necessity for Cpr technique on a heart attack victim. 7:20—Legion Zone Curling Bonspiel — This event took place Jan. 20-22. The seniors match be- tween BR 51 Nelson and BR 11 Trail was the final game taped Morse in TV series TORONTO (CP) — Barry for Shaw Cable. Com- Morse will appear with Dyan mentary by Sam Cannon and Donald Pleas- Brown, Ed Huitema ence in a nine-hour three- and Bill Lehman. night CTV miniseries, Mas- 30—Summers Games — ter of the Game, a story of a Women’s doubles ten- family’s diamond fortune, starting Feb. 19. RENO FEB. 25 — 8 DAYS, $279 0/1 4 ee seaneen® The Beverly Hills store has a 66-seat restaurant and a deli with take-out food at reasonable prices. De Laurentiis was equally enthusiastic about his movies, and he rattled off this year’s releases: ‘The Bounty, with Anthony Hopkins and Mel Gibson, May 4 The Fire- starter, with George C. Scott and Drew Barrymore, May 11; Conan II, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, July 4; The Saga of Werewolf, November; and Dune, the $40-miillion spectacle, Christmas. Nielsen ratings imprecise LOS ANGELES (AP) — Yes, there is a real Mr. Nielsen, and he admits his television ratings are not ex- act to fractions. A.C. Nielsen is the head of the company of the same mame, which each week sam- ples the television viewing of 1,700 households. From this the networks determine which shows to retain and which to cancel. “There's always going to ean error,” said Nielsen. Nevertheless, the prevail- view in the industry is that the Nielsen ratings do give a-pretty accurate gen- indigation of viewer, for breakfast, mozzarella cheese and an apple for lunch, the same for dinner, with perhaps a piece of bread. I can lose five pounds in three days.” An alternative, he said, is a dish of spaghetti with tomato sauce for lunch and dinner. “Take a can of tomatoes and put it through a strainer,” he said. “Add a close of garlic, peeled and whole, and cook for 10 minutes only. Most Americans cook tomato sauce too long and lose all the flavor.” . 800000 OHHCCHHHEE LOE people's interest,” he said. Sundowner Hotel & Casino MARCH 10 Sundowner Hotel & Casino MARCH 17 Pioneer inn & Casino ..... MARCH 20 Pioneer inn & Cosine .... MARCH 24 Pioneer inn & Casino APRIL 19 Pioneer inn & Casino... . 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