Castlégar News ly 9.1% ENTERTAINMENT Bohay got early start LOS ANGELES (MP) — As a child, Heidi Bohay of ABC's Hotel got an early introduetion to acting and movies from her mother Her mother was not an actress but an old movie buff, and she would watch the classic films for hours on television. Beside her sat Heidi, taking it all in. “I used to dream about those movies, about Bette Davis and Lauren Bacall and Joan Crawford and the rest,” she said. “I always wanted to be an actress.” “I was inspired by all those old movies, but I never did anything about it until I got out of high school.” She was almost side- tracked on her way to becoming an actress. She thought about a career working with handicapped CHAMPION BINGO yTown Squere-Trail BINGO EVERY NIGHT Early Bird 6:30 p.m. Regular 7:00 p.m. Spaghetti House and Calabria Pizza Enjoy the true Italian Spaghetti Dinner All the You Can Eat — $6.95 Private dining rooms at no extra charge. 531-2nd Street, Trail, B.C. 368-9399 (Above Tony's Pub) ~ OPEN 4 P.M. DAILY WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED — AIR CONDITIONED — Reservations for Private Parties — 365-3294 Located | mile south of Weigh Scales in Ootischenia Royal Canadian Legion | Branch No. 170 Playing Set. COUNTRY REVIEW Guests Must Be SIGNED In L.A. Catering — Except July and August PLEASE NOTE: NO MOVIES Costleger Downtown Business Association Costiegor Arts Council operotson of CASTLEGAR MEWS ond CAQR RADIO children and was accepted at Ryder College. Two weeks before the start of classes a show business agent she knew persuaded her to try acting. Her parents were less than thrilled, but supported her with the understanding that if she didn’t find work in a year she would return to school. Within two months she got a role in a toothpaste com- mercial. After that she com muted by bus to New York to study acting and look for Bohay has continued her volunteer work with handi- capped children. Recently, she flew to Eeuador on behalf of the March of Dimes. RAISES MONEY She and other celebrities helped raise money for pro grams for retarded children sponsored by the president of Ecuador and his wife. Bohay stars on Hotel as Megan Kendall, who is mar ried to bellhop Dave Kendall (Michael Spound). She's the reservations clerk at the Hotel St. Gregory in San Francisco. The series is adapted from the best-selling novel by Arthur Hailey. The book was made into a movie in 1967 In adapting it to the series the hotel was moved to San Francisco from New Orleans. The exteriors are filmed at the Fairmont Hotel on Nob Hill in San Francisco. In the pilot, she played a scene with one of her child hood idols, Bette Davis, in the role of Laura Trent, the patrician hotel owner. Davis became ill in the summer of 1983 and didn't appear in the series. The scene called for Davis to reprimand Bohay. “I was supposed to look intimidated,” she recalled. “I Liz Thor-Larsen, seen her Park appearance in 1983 didn’t have to act, I was intimidated. Talk about “Bette Davis Eyes,’ the lady is incredible.” Davis was replaced by Anne Baxter, who played Vietoria Cabot until her death last December. The last episode of the season explained the death of Cabot and revealed that her will left half of the hotel to hotel manager Peter McDermott (James Brolin). GETS LINES “This year I had some nice story lines,” she said. “As with any ensemble show, some weeks you get a lot and some weeks you only have six or seven lines,” she says. “Next year all the regulars will have ongoing stories from week to week “The guest star stories will be for only that week. Our stories will continue.” After studying acting in New York, Bohay moved to Los Angeles. “I worked as a sales girl in Beverly Hills,” she said. “I typed for a writer. I house sat. When I came here I was 19 and I said I would support myself By ROB TAYLOR ‘The Canadian Press At the request of trivia buffs, here are more q' to test your knowledge of classic mysteries. The test is based on H.R.F. Keating’s book Whodunit?: A Guide to Crime, Suspense and Spy Fiction, and the challenge is to name the authors. 1. First she wanted to be a painter, then a playwright. She toured with a Shakespearean company, and finally settled down to twin careers as mystery writer and theatrical director. She rivalled Agatha Christie in popularity. 2. An Ameri@in knew Chinese before he spoke English, produced his first novel while at Cambridge, wrote a gourmet magazine column a@d, on the death of Edgar Wallace, assumed the title of king of thriller writers. 3. A lawyer wrote many of his hundreds of short stories while commuting to London by train. For a time he was legal adviser to Raymond Chandler and drew up his will. Among his most successful creations are two counter-intelligence agents, one of whom owns an aristocratic pedigree dog. 4. This onetime detective created a popular wisecracking sleuth who marries a_ millionairess, intending to settle down toa life of partying and counting his wife’s money, only to have her talk him into taking on another case. Two of several movies about their adventures were box-office hits. 5. When this author died leaving a brooding mystery novel of great promise unfinished, several other people “After five months I got a Trivia quiz tests _savvy of mysteries offered possible conclusions, one purporting to have come from the author himself during a seance. 6. After hankering to be, like his mother, an opera singer, this American turned to writing hard-boiled novels about love and murder seen from the viewpoint of the criminals. Successful movies were made from three of his books, one of which was filmed twice. i 7. A multi-talented Englishman was the author of several highly regarded mysteries, a scriptwriter, newspaper reviewer and anthologist, as well as a pianist, organist, conductor and composer of movie scores. 8. Best known for her 40-odd historical novels, this English author also wrote detective stories praised for the skilful plotting. One opens with the hero discovering a body seated in a car next to a beautiful woman who protests her innocence. 9. After a sickly childhood, an Irishman grew to be a giant and excelled in athletics as well as his studies.'He flirted briefly with a legal career, became secretary and business manager to the English actor Henry Irving and wrote several blood-curdling horror novels. 10. A Canadian married to a popular American author began writing mystery stories after being confined to bed with a heart ailment. A couple of the stories feature a Toronto police inspector, but most are set in California, where she and her husband were also active conservationists. Answers: 1. Ngaio Marsh. 2. Leslie Charteris. 3. Michael Gilbert. 4. Dashiell Hammett. 5. Charles Dickens (Edwin Drood). 6. James M. Cain. 7. Edmund Crispin. 8. Georgette Heyer. 9. Bram Stoker. 10. Margaret Millar. role in California Fever. I had two lines.” She followed that with parts in Hart to Hart, Buck Rogers, Quincy and many other series. She also co- starred in the feature film Superstition. The audition call for Hotel came on a Saturday. She'd just been turned down for another pilot and she got instructions to go to the wrong studio. “When I finally got to the right place they were all leaving,” she said. “They all went back in and let me audition. “And I got the role.” AAA Castlegar singer-guitarist her last Concerts in the returns to the series Thur- sday with a noon-hour pertormance at Kinsmen Pork. Book examines Fords By ROD CURRIE The Canadian Press It’s diffieult to picture Robert Lacey, a sophisticated, elegantly tailored Londoner, working in coveralls on a Detroit auto assembly line. But he worked for three days fitting fans and belts to Lincolns as part of two years of researching and writing his mammoth book, Ford: The Men and The Machine. The book is a penetrating study of men of great dreams and i and of incredibl iness and cruelty The plant job was the hardest physical work he did — “I was happy on the fourth day that I didn't have to go back,” he said in Toronto during a promotional tour. Nearly 800 pages long. the book covers such a glorious parade of characters and often outlandish events that it never’ grows tiresome Much of it centres on the original Henry Ford, the son of Irish immigrants, who produced the remarkable Model T in 1908, and was well on the way to becoming the world’s first billionaire by his mid-40s. COMPLEX MAN He Was’an @xtraordinarily complex and contradictory man — a teetotaller and a superb dancer, shy but with an easy manner in dealing with the press, a notorious anti-Semite but often a pioneer in arousing social conscience. He was also a devoted family man but found time for a strange relationship with Evangeline Cote, later Mrs. Ray Dahlinger, a vivacious woman of French-Canadian stock who was a particularly bright secretary in the Ford empire. When Evangeline’s baby, John, was born, Henry showed tp at the hospital and hired the head nurse on the spot to be John’s attendant. When the boy was four weeks old Henry presented him with a gift that was as lavish as it was inappropriate — a Shetland pony. That was only the inning. The D: s i got gifts of a farm, property and Ford dealerships. Evangeline and Ray became almost millionaires overnight, living on an estate second only to the Fords’ nearby mansion. Evangeline was even provided with her own plane. NEVER DISCUSSED Neither Henry nor Evangeline would ever discuss their relationship. And whether Henry was John’s father, as was broadly hinted, has never been discovered despite John's best efforts. Grand Forks Gallery presents photo exhibit Heidi Thompson, a Vernon artist, is currently featured in the East Gallery of the Grand Forks Art Gallery. Thompson presents a photo- graphic introduction of 30 Okanagan, Shuswap, and Kootenay artists and repro- ductions of their work. The painters, sculptors, printers and craftsmen rep- resented are those she has discovered during her in quiry about persons who are presently working on their art in these areas. The ex hibit is not a juried show, and by no means complete. VACATION ome Evongelical Free Church. July 14 Skits, music, stories, crafts, Jesus Shows God s Wisdom on Sunlight Mountoin. 4-12 The book is packed with tangy anecdotes, notably on the weird relationship between Henry and his only son, Edsel. But it also is a gripping account of the creation of the Ford empire, Henry's genius in devising the assembly line, his di in ishing the th ional $5-a-day pay scale that led to riots among the unemployed, and his involvement with organized crime and legendary anti-labor violence. He also created a Ford “sociological department” of men in Model Ts roaming the Detroit slums to instruct Ford workers on how to budget their pay, maintain their homes and lifestyles, giving rise to the slogan that “cleanliness was next to Fordliness.” ADORED SON Edsel's wife and son charged that Henry's cruelty in business matters often humiliated his son and that it drove Edsel to an early death at 49 of stomach cancer. The elder Ford adored his son, giving him a car at age eight which Edsel drove to school since there were no licence requirements. Even in adulthood they often were seen walking arm-in-arm. But in business matters Henry was relentless, despite the fact Edsel was a bright administrator and had a genius in car design. When his son was fatally ill, Henry dismissed it with the remark, “The boy is too fond of cocktails.” Henry Ford II, the grandson who eventually took over the company, also had the streak of Ford cruelty, particularly in dealing with those close to him. The manner in which he announced he was divorcing his first two wives makes for grisly reading. DENIED IDEA Lacey found extensive evidence that the elder Ford had plotted to exclude his grandson from succession as head of company but Henry II, when interviewed by Lacey, scoffed at the idea. Henry II, said Lacey, “has a paper-shredder in his mind when it comes to difficulties in his past,” remembering only what he wants to remember. In this he is similar to his grandfather, who in his later years spent great effort and money in rewriting his personal history. Henry II also has a real paper shredder with which, month after month, he destroys mountains of company and family documents, making the job for historians such as Lacey harder and harder. Ford, The Men and the Machine. By Robert Lacey. Published by McClelland and Stewart; 778 pages; $29.95. Cable 10 TV VANDER ZALM _PROMISES TO © BUTTON LIP”: By DON RAMSDER RICHMOND, B.C. (CP) — If elected leader of the Social Credit party, Bill Vander Zalm promises to control his tongue and avoid shooting from the lip. “I expect I will be curbing my comments i ly,” the Duteh said during an interview in his modest campaign office. Vander Zalm, 52, has been on a three-year sabbatical from provincial polities to attend to his nursery business and build the $10-million Fantasy Gardens family entertainment complex. Now competing with 11 others for the Socred leadership, he says the position “carries with it the requirement that I take it easier.” He made headlines after referring to former Quebec premier Rene Levesque as “a frog” and declaring he was fed up reading French on cereal boxes. THE CANDIDATES “Maybe the diplomacy wasn't applied as well as it might have been.” The list of controversies is a long one for Vander Zalm, who held the municipal affairs, education and human resources portfolios in the Socred cabinet from 1975 to 1983. 1S OUTSPOKEN He said at one time that Quebec independence would save British Columbia money by cutting down the number of transients who travel here seeking welfare. He also suggested that able-bodied welfare recipients be given shovels and that Indians return to reserves from cities and get off welfare. Vander Zalm took a run at the Vancouver mayoralty in 1984. Soundly beaten by incumbent Mike Harcourt, he expressed more disappointment that voters chose a “Godless Communist” over a Christian businessman for the final aldermanic seat. “Did I say that?” Vander Zalm asked during the interview. “Sometimes you regret things.” He also lost some support within cabinet prior to his resignation by accusing government colleagues of being BILL VANDER ZALM . .. curbing comments “gutless” for letting his proposed land use act die on the order paper. But it’s perhaps this outspoken nature that endears Vander Zalm to the public. With few exceptions, he has received the loudest cheers during party is topping even i Premier Bill Bennett. “I guess it's recognized generally that my platform or my basic philosophy is most in keeping with the majority of the people,” said Vander Zalm, pointing to his popularity as the reason for a 90-minute delay in arriving for the interview. “They see me as someone who is a doer . . . who is not afraid of innovation or change.” ‘The party recognizes that the name of the game will be re-election, he said, and delegates at the Whistler convention July 28-30 will turn to his grassroots style and away from machine politics. She began the project with two objectives in mind: One was to seek inspiration from those working seriously on their art to gain encourage ment for herself; the other was to bring, via the camera, these individuals closer to the public. Thompson was born in Vernon, and after high school graduation left for Switzer land in 1974, where she attended a four-year course in the Kunstgewerbie Shule for photography Upon completion, she ap- prenticed for one year with a scHOOoL 18, 9 - 11:30 a.m. Ages reteshments. Theme 3/34 painter, Oskar Koller, before studying drawing at the Nuremberg Art Academy and the Budapest Art Acad emy Langham displays ceramics An exhibit that will take you “beyond the usual” opens July 15 at the Langham Galleries in Kaslo. Space Around/Space Witn in displays the talents of five ceramic sculptors all of whom take chances with their work: Denys James of Cal gary. Richard Loel McCoy of Idaho, Pamela Stevenson of Ainsworth and Peter Wilson of Nelson. CABLE 10TV Th y, July 10 5:30—Sign-on and Program Information. 5:32—Expo Update: Hos tess Wendy Brunelle reviews the stars coming to Expo, talks about some of the on-site performers and shows off some of the interiors of some of Vancouver's turn of the century homes. 6:00—The 1986 Lower Uo lumbia Girls Softball Tournament: The Ge nelle Sluggers take on the Fruitvale team in this Junior Girls Di- vision Game played June 21 at Mclpnis Park in Fruitvale. Commentary is sup- plied by Al Lord TTS Lu iliititit TTI pililis and Wayne Zino. 7:30—The 1985 West Koot enay Regional Swim Meet: Tonight we present day two of this event which was videotaped Aug. 11 at the Wright Pool in Trail. Commentary is provided by Joe Q'Hearn, Ed Cher. noff, and Judy Hurt. Man in Motion — Rick Hansen's World world tour. Rick and several who have suf. fered spinal cord in injuries talk about the need for spinal cord research 10:30—Expo Update: On this program hostess Wendy Brunelle talks with Expo Commis sioner General Pat trick Reid. She then tours the V.I.P lounge, and talks to model creator Terry Log export rules changed VANCOUVER (CP) — The British Columbia govern- ment has tinkered with its log export policy to allow more exports from the nor- thern half of the province. The measures will help some loggers in those areas but others who rely on export markets say the don't lion-a-year industry without tions approved by cabinet last Thursday allow 100 per cent of all hemlock-balsam trees and the lower grades of spruce and fir harvested from the mid and north coasts of the province and the Queen Charlotte Islands to be exported. By doing so, the Forests Ministry has essentially ex- empted those areas from its controversial export policy which is meant to restrict log exports and promote more wood processing and manu facturing in the province. The new rules are to last one year and do not apply to those holding tree farm li cences, which are usually given on a long-term basis to the larger integrated for. estry companies to supply their sawmills. Independent logger Bill Thomson, owner of Thomson Industries in Prince Rupert, said the new rules won't help him much because they don't permit the export of the better and more marketable spruce and species such as yellow and red cedar. He added there is hardly any fir worth cutting in the north. Cliff Coulson, owner of Coulson Prescott Logging Ltd. in Port Alberni, said thie exemptions are unfair to on the south coast and Vancouver Island. PROBLEMS SIMILAR “| don't know why he (Forests Minister Jack Hein rich) would exclude the west coast of Vancouver Island,” Coulson said. “We have the same problems here.” Coulson, who with Thom son and other loggers has been pressing the govern ment to announce a longterm log export policy, says this is another interim Lecorgeary mil estry consultant Charles Widman. ih - company may export, with Doug Cooper, logging man- had not been sold could be ager for the B.C. Council of deemed surplus to domestic Forest Industries, said the needs and exported. new rules discriminate against holders of tree farm licences. Under “standing green,” a the government's per- mission, a percentage of an area it harvests if it shows it is uneconomical to log 100 per cent of the area for domestic consumption. Previously, logs that had been offered for sale on the Vancouver log market and asterPlan in conjunction with a Kootenay Savings MasterCard card, is the most comprehensive, personal financial money management tool available in Canada today. MasterPlan consoli dates your financial ser vices, and provides you with a comprehensive statement for all your Credit Union accounts and transactions. The Kootenay Savings MasterCard card is the key to MasterPlan. It’s a payment card that can be used in place of a cheque or credit card. It is also a cash card that can be used for cash advances all over the world, or locally for ATM cash withdrawals. MasterPian also offers other financial benefits, such as free MasterCard travellers’ cheques, free travel accident insurance, a discount on safety deposit boxes, and discounts on Kootenay Savings Personal Financial Planning Services. Our brochure “HOW YOU CAN BENEFIT FROM THE COMPLETE MONEY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM™ gives complete details of MasterPian, pick one up at (7 your nearest Kootenay Savings branch today! ib Manitoba reunion at Expo ~ seerecoy VANCO' (cP) — Manitobans who fee! left out of Expo 86 because they have 8,000 past and present Mani- tobans are expected to gather in the Pacific Coli- seum for a party that’s been in the making since the Manitoba government announced in January that it couldn't afford a pavilion at Expo. Shirley Muir, vice-presi- dent of the Manitoba Reunion Society and a former Winni- peg resident now living in suburban Coquitlam, said she didn’t think the idea would take off like it did after she mentioned it to friends last July. Muir said she and her friends sent 10,000 chain- letter-style invitations all over the world, and “we've had res from Hawaii, England, Ohio, Texas, Wash- ington and all over Canada.” She said any profits from the reunion will be donated to the Variety Club of B.C. Television personality Monty Hall, a former Winni- peg resident and president of the Variety Club, will be master of ceremonies. Other special guests will include Cactus Jack Wells, Bill (Hunky Bill) Konyk and former Winnipeg mayor Stephen Juba. A two-hour stage show with Manitoba entertainers and a cavalcade of VIPs will be followed by dancing to big band sounds of the "40s. Plaza SuperValu OPEN SUNDAYS 11:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. 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