ENTERTAINMENT Dixiclce Dsar-D DINING LOUNGE OPEN 4 P.M. DAILY — AIR CONDITIONED WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED RESERVATIONS FOR PRIVATE PARTIES — 365-3294 Located | mile south of weigh scale in Ootischenia — LICENCED DINING ROOM — SUMMER cane a 7 HOURS Monday to Saturday, 5:30 a.m. - 8 p.m. 365-8155 coticger LAST PERFORMANCE . Another succeagful July Concerts in the Park season ended Thursday with 138 local residents of all ages en- joying the Kootenay Old Time Fiddlers in Castlegar's downtown Kinsmen Park. The series, which concluded its sixth year, is spon- culture. sored by the Castlegar Arts Council with the co-operation of the Castlegar News, CKQR Radio, Castlegar Legion. Financial support is provided by tl government through the ministry of tourism, r BONNIE'S FRUIT STAND B.C. Tidyman 59 ¢ B.C. Juicy Apples .. nectr 89° Plums .». 9° | Apricots «09° ‘DISCOUNTS ON rene ORDERS” OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. 2165 Columbia Avenue (beside Kal Tire) 365-2328 famous for our... — Prime Rib! — Charbroiled Steak — Seafood — Poultry Caesar Salad — Specialties — LUNCH —- Mon.-Sat. 11:15.a.m.-2 p.m — DINNER — 7 Days a Week from 5 p. RESERVATIONS 352- 3388. Across from Pharmasave 646 Baker St., Nelson COMMUNITY Bulletin Board HIROSHIMA DAY Vigil, walk and social. August 6 a m. sterting at the Castlegar Cour thouse and ending on Zuckerberg island. All welcome 59 Coming events of Castlegar and District non-profit organizations may be listed here. The first 10 words are $3.75 and additional words ore 20¢ ead Id faced words (which must be used for headings) count as two words. The: no extra charge for a second insertion while the third consecutive inserti seventy-five percent and the fourth consecutive insertion is half-price Minimum charge is $3.75 (whether ad is for one. two or three times). Deadlines are 5 p.m. Thursdays for Sundays paper and 5 p.m. Mondays for Wednesdays paper. Notices should be brought to the Castlegar News at.197 Columbia Ave COMMUNITY Bulletin Board woes eseg ond qeane L.A. Law sweeps Emmy nominations UNIVERSAL CITY, CALIF. (AP) — L.A. Law, a gripping TV show whose behind-the-scenes power struggles were as intriguing as its onscreen court- room dramas, swept the nominations Thursday for the 40th annual Emmy Awards. The nominations were noteworthy, too, for who was overlooked. NBC's The Cosby Show, television's most-wat ched program, had only one nomination, and the network's A Different World, the second-most popular series in the United States, did not have any. ABC's Moonlighting, an Emmy nominations leader in 1987, had just six nominations this year, none in major categories. For the second year in a row, L.A. Law gathered more nominations — 19 — than any other television program. The series was selected in the categories of best drama series, best actor in a drama series for Michael Tucker and Corbin Bernsen and best actress in a drama series for Jill Eikenberry and Susan Dey. NBC led the networks with 114 nominations, followed by CBS with 87 and ABC with 75. The Fox Broadcasting Co., the so-called fourth network, collected six Emmy nominations. Syndicated shows, anchored by Star Trek: The Next Generation, were nominated 13 times. Fox will broadcast the Emmy ceremony Aug. L.A. Law was followed by CBS's new drama series Beauty and the Beast and NBC's comedy The Golden Girls, each of which collected 12 nominations. EXCITES ACTRESS Betty White, who won three years ago for her Golden Girls role, said of her third nomination for best actress in a comedy series: “Isn't this exciting? I can't believe it. I don't take it lightly. It’s your peer group saying they like you.” NBC’ comedy Cheers received 11 nominations including one for new cast member Kirstie Alley for best actress in a comedy series. ABC's Thirtysome thing, a drama, gathered 10 nominations, including best drama series. CBS's new comedy Frank's Place, set in a New Orleans restaurant, attracted nine nominations while NBC's St. Elsewhere, a hospital drama taken off the air by its makers at season's end, had eight nominations. LA. Law emerged with 19 nominations despite a divisive flap that began last year between series co-creators Steven Bochco and Terry Louise Fisher. At one point, Fisher was barred from the L.A. Law offices. She subsequently was forced to quit the show. But Fisher received two nominations for L.A. Law scripts while Bochco had just one. Joining L.A. Law in the best drama series competition will be Beauty and the Beast, St. Elsewhere and Thirtysomething. L.A. Law won last year. Nominated for best comedy program were Cheers, Frank's Place, NBC's Night Court, ABC's The Wonder Years and last year’s winner, The Golden Girls. For best variety music or comedy program, the nominees were CBS's Irving Berlin’s 100th Birthday Celebration, CBS's The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, Fox's The Tracey Ullman Show and two episodes of NBC's Late Night with David Letterman. RECOGNIZE WORK Actors recognized for their work in a comedy series included five small-screen veterans. Selected for best actor were Ted Danson (NBC's Cheers), Michael J. Fox (NBC's Family Ties), John Ritter (ABC’s Hooperman), Dabney Coleman (ABC's cancelled The Slap Maxwell Story) and Tim Reid (Frank's Place). Joining Alley and White for best actress in a comedy series were Rue McClanahan and Beatrice Arthur for The Golden Girls and Blair Brown for The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd, which has been cancelled by NBC. Joining Bernsen and Tucker for best actor in a drama series were Ron Perlman for his catacomb- dweller role in Beauty and the Beast, Richard Kiley in NBC's cancelled A Year in the Life and Edward Woodward for CBS's The equalizer. The ndminees for best actress in a drama series were Sharon Gless and Tyne Daly for CBS's cancelled Cagney and Lacey, Angela Lansbury for CBS's Murder, She Wrote and Eikenberry and Dey for L.A. Law. Dicken Bus Lines Ltd. AVAILABLE FOR CHARTER JOIN US & TRAVEL IN STYLE TO: Cat’ s Sresewe Musical — Aug. 13 dation at the Sheraton. cure? I2S Anne Murray Rebo McEntre 42nd Street OCTOBER 4 FALL TOURS IN SPOKANE SEPTEMBER 28 Madam Butterfly . OCTOBER 2 Dream Girls . . OCTOBER 15 . NOVEMBER 5 October 1 to7...... October 8 to 15. October 22 to 29. November 5 to 12 ANNOUNCING... HENNE TOURS FALL RENOS! seeeeeeeeeeeeee 7 Days at the Comstock eee e eee eeceeccececes + 8 Days at the Sands eee eee eeeeeeeeeceee + 8 Days at the Hilton 8 Days at the Hilton PRICES START AT $279. Based on Double Occupancy. Senior Discount — $10.00. BOOK NOW AND PAY IN FULL BY SEPTEMBER 9, 1988 AND SAVE $20!!! ( FOR MORE INFORMATION ¢ HENNE TRAVEL 10 Bay Ave., — GIFT PACKAGE — For the 888th Visitor in the Summer of ‘88 to the ber df C ce Visitor Inf Castlegar Ch AVENUES — Gift Package BARTLE & GIBSON — $25.00 Cash CANADA SAFEWAY — CARL'S DRUGS — 2/$10.00 Gift Certificates CASTLEGAR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE — $20.00 Gift Certificate Guided Tour CASTLEGAR GOLF CLUB — Complimentary Pass CASTLEGAR NEWS — Advertising CASTLEGAR SANDMAN INN — Dinner for 4 (Value $50.00) CELGAR PULP — Celgar Momento CITY OF CASTLEGAR — 4 Souvenier Pins COLUMBIA AUTO SERVICE — $10.00 Gas COMINCO — Special Tour DIXIE LEE SOUTH — 2 Dixie Dinners FIRESIDE MOTOR INN — 1 Night Accommodation ~- HAIRLINES — 20% HISLOP’S HI-WAY CAMPGROUND — One nem Stay KOOTENAY BARBERING — 1 Haire KOOTENAY BROADCASTING STATION _ Certificate Advertising MAISON — 4 T-Shirts MADELEINE Py FASHIONS — $20.00 Gift Certificate STRONG & ASSOCIATES — Npectat Momento Certificate OGLOwW PAINT & WALLCOVERING — Wooden Spoon OKANAGAN VALLEY TRANSPORT — Hats PLAZA BAKERY — $5.00 Gift Certificate ROSE'S BOUTIQUE — Gift Package SCOTTIE’S MARINA — 2 Hats THE PICTURE PLACE — 3 Pack Konica Film WEST'S DEPARTMENT STORE — $25.00 Gift Certificate WILLIAMS MOVING & STORAGE 2 Sun Visors and 2 Pens TROWELEX — 4 Famous Hats the City of Sostreger, and the provincial’ tion and CosNewsPhoto by Burt Campbell * Freedom seized Associated Press JOHANNESBURG — All copies of the film Cry Freedom, a movie about the late black activist Steven Biko, were ordered seized from theatres across South Africa today, hours after the government gave permis- sion for it to be shown. Police Commissioner Hendrik de Witt issued the order in the evening under state-of-emergency regula- tions. The order came less than nine hours after the Publication Appeals Board, the white-minority govern- ment's censorship body, announced the film could be shown. “Cry Freedom endangers the safe- ty of the public, the maintenance of public order and will delay the ter- mination of the (current) state of emergency” in South Africa, de Witt said in a statement: 'He ‘said the filtti contains “propagandistic elements” likely to encourage unrest and is biased against police. The seizure order followed ex plosions at two theatres and bomb threats. No one was hurt. Thirty theatres began showing the movie this morning, a half-hour after permission was granted. The first showing at a downtown Johannes- burg cinema attracted about 200 viewers, white and black, to a 350-seat theatre. Blacks in the audience cried and sang along with the soundtrack at various emotional scenes during the film. Several left the theatre in tears. Moviegoers said police began ar- riving at theatres in the evening with orders to confiscate the film. The Publications Appeals Board ruled that the film, about the friend- ship between Biko and white South African journalist Donald Woods, could be shown uncut to viewers at least 19 years old. Later, the justice ministry noted that it had not given permission to quote Woods, as actor Kevin Kline does in the film, because of Woods’ banned status under national law. Our Action Ad Number is 365-2212 Nelson Ski Club's BEAT THE HEAT BINGO Sav Bingo Hall, Nelson Mon., Aug. | Early Bird 6:30, Reg. 7 Hl JEANNETTE Don't feel bad you still look nifty. But how does it feel now that you've turned .. . too old to play for the Forty-Niners? July 31, 1968 Hearing called for : VANCOUVER (CP) — A group upset at the sale of Crown-owned British Columbia Hydro's mainland hatural gas division to Inland Natural Gas has demanded the provincial government hold public hearings on the deal. £ “What we want is open, funded on hearings on this deal before 's icy. But Swanson admitted Pad council hasn't yet 4 the govern. ment with the demand, even though jts news'conference was on the front steps of Hydro's downtown Van- rouver headquarters. j Swanson’s noon-hour address to a handful of reporters through a por- table loudspeaker system drew little ‘attention from office workers head- ing for nearby restaurants and sand- wich bars. “It’s not enough for the govern- ment to pass legislation deeming the sale to be in the public interest,” she said, because a recent poll showed a majority of British Columbians were opposed to the sale. Legislation which authorized pri- vatization of the gas division allowed the to be leted man of B.C. Telephone Co. — have business ties .o Hydro. “It appears to us that the govern- ment has privatized the profit for its friends and passed increased costs to the citizens,” she said. * CHECK PRICE The actual price paid by Inland should be scrutinized, she said, be- cause there has been no mention of what interest rate Inland will pay on the $300 million it is borrowing from Hydro. The government is also lending Inland $150 million through the issu- ance of a debenture convertible into common shares of a new company that will hold the gas assets. “It seems to us that the taxpayers are subsidizing the purchase of our own utility from ourselves,” she said. Swanson also questioned the gas price freeze, which expires just after — the government would normally have to hold an election, saying the legis- lation allows cabinet.to allow « price increase. When it loses the gas division's $20-million annual profit, Hydro may be forced to raise electricity rates to cover the shortfall, she said. She said the council is also con- cerned the legislation may be used as model to privatize other utilities; such as Hydro dams, taking them at least temporarily out of utilities commission control. “Inland will be a gas monopoly in B.C.,” she said. “Yet it's restrained by no re tory body except the cabinet. That’s like putting the fox in ‘charge of the chickens. Privatized services need more regulation, not less.” Enterprise group expands library The West Kootenay Enterprise Development Centre, a service of Selkirk College, has recently ex- panded its business reference library without hearings by the B.C. Utilities Commission. FREEZE RATES Inland will pay $741 million over five years for the gas division, bor- rowing. about $300 million from Hydro to pay for the purchase. In return, Inland promised to gas rates for the division's 380,000 customers, as well as its own 140,000 customers in the B.C. Inter- ior, and spend $1 billion over the next 20 years to expand the gas distri- bution system. Swanson said the legislation gives cabinet the right to hold its own hearings on the sale, which is not final until Sept. 30. “We challenge them to do this,” Energy Minister Jack Davis, who is responsible for B.C. Hydro, was not available for comment. Swanson said any hearings should investigate whether business friends of Premier Bill Vander Zalm are profiting. from the sale. She noted that Inland’s president, Bob Kadlec, sat on the premier's economic advisory council until last year and that other council members — notably restaurant magnate Peter Toigo and Gordon MacFarlane, chair- Weekly stocks TORONTO (CP) — Declining infla- tion fears and a stronger American dollar helped fuel investor confidence and subsequent higher prices on major North American stock ex- changes on Friday. The Toronto Stock Exch and its training services to the business community. An open house at the Castlegar centre June 20, showcased the ex- panded library which contains a combination of books, files and video tapes making it the largest business library in the East and West Koot- enays. In addition, the centre's com- puter link with B.C. Business Net- work and the Selkirk College library allows access to more than 600 data banks worldwide. Increased funding this year from the Ministry of Advanced Education and Job Training means that the Immersion Program in Small Busi- ness, established in 1987, will con- tinue with two-week sessions sched- uled for Sept. 19-30, Nov. 21-Dec. 2, 1988, and Jan. 23-Feb. 3, 1989. The highly concentrated, 120 hour course covers all aspects of establishing a small business. This fall, a new series of 11 evening and weekend business classes will be offered in Nelson beginning Sept. 12 in Castlegar starting Oct. 17, and Trail on Feb. 6, 1989. Business owner/managers who complete eight of the 11 seminars for 30 hours of training will receive a Certificate in Entrepreneurial Skills. To offset the rising costs of oper- ating the West Kootenay Enterprise Development Centre, a nominal fee structure has been initiated, ef- fective Aug. 15, for the services pro- vided. An initial one-hour business consultation will continue free of charge along with access to the ex- tensive business reference library. “Our centre is dedicated to assist- ing local residents in’ starting suc- cessful businesses, and with our in- creased services, we should be able to excel in our own capabilities,” Enterprise Centre director Doug Glover said. “Individuals from other and regions, who have utilized our services to date, have indicated that nowhere else have they found this extensive service available to the public.” The West Kootenay Enterprise Development Centre is located in Castlegar at 1410 Columbia Ave. For more information about the services available, contact the centre. Hong Kong to open office HONG KONG (CP) — Hong Kong hopes to open an office in Canada by the end of the year to promote trade and ease the British territory's brain drain, a government official says. Canada is a logical site because of strong ties between Hong Kong and Canada, spokesman Vivian Chow said Thursday. “Canada is an important trade partner for Hong Kong,” she said, noting also that 600,000 people of Chinese descent live in Canada. Another official said the office will likely be in Toronto because of its large Chinese population and central location. Toronto and Vancouver are the most popular destinations for people emigrating from Hong Kong, with an estimated 16,000 Hong Kong citizens moving to Canada last year. Readers Please Note: "s composite 300 index closed at 3,376.73, up 26.37 points from Thurs- day but down 4.95 points from the closing a week earlier. In New York, the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials closed at 2,128.78, up 46.40 points. The Dow average’s gain on the week totalled 67.74 points. The New York Stock Exchange's advance gained momentum through- out the day, bursting the 2,100 level at midday. The rally in New York “took most "said Hugh senior vice-president at First Albany Corp., noting that many had expected “it would be a typical summer day.” Analysts attributed the advance to fresh strength in the U.S. dollar against most major currencies and ‘continued favorable reaction to com- ments by. Federal Reserve chairman who 19-100ths for the day, and 71-100ths for the week. 8 of Monday's holiday, most of the following businesses will be closed this Monday. Please phone first to learn if the business is open. Example: Pharmasave will be open. For Your Convenience We're OPEN MONDAY WIN ] TICKETS Two subscribers names are Ii winner of a Provincial Heket To, pick up your FREE ticket or Wednesday until 5 p.m. Find your name below and CASTLEGAR 365-7145 365-2955 365-2155 365-7782 DRUG STOR! pave srores TS aan wooowoRx 222.102nd, Costiegar NELSON 1612 Boy Ave WHO’S BACK? GINETTE’S BACK! With Her Entire Store On Sale ALL THE TIME! Opening Tues., Aug. 2 4 Hours A Day. 5 Days | A Week. / | A little different name cirerre’s sove-on Fashions A little less hours: itves. sar, 11 0m-3 9m Means less heat & electrical expenses Less staff Wages tu the some person A little bit of computerization and a few other little cost saving measures ADD UPTOA WHOLE LOT OF SAVINGS Hi There, I'm Back! I service Even though FASHION FLAIR in Nelson is coing very well, still miss the fun and enthusi of the people of C re) bed “the roots” of where the business began. Since “Reidun is doing such an excellent job in Nelson, | can now afford the time to be back in Castlegar, plus give my loyal patrons a GREAT Deal, ALL THE TIME! (5 days a week, 4 hours a day) on quality fashions you've come to expect from Ginette’s! Drop in soon and say “hi there’. See the stores entire inventory, including new fall and win- ter fashions, but don't wait too long because you know the best fashions here go fast, even if they were at regular prices. See You Soon, Susan van heusen Barkhor LONDON Foo CANADA BELT Collectables Tropic-Cal. OPEN TUES.-SAT. 11 A.M.-3 P.M, == 365-7776 Castleaird Plaza