Sa > a2_, Castlegar News February 6, 1985 Big Brothers bowl for bucks The Castlegar Big Brothers Bow! for Millions is. in full swing and will climax this Saturday with a cele- brity bowl. Bow! For Millions, a week- long fundraising event for the Big Brothers, began Feb. 2 and concluded Feb. 9. Currently, there are more than 200,000 boys in-Canada without a father living at home, says a Big Brother re- lease, and 5,000 of them are waiting for a Big Brother. The Castlegar Big Brothers have six boys in need of a Big Brother. Police file Castlegar RCMP are in- vestigating a weekend break- in at Grifone's Taxidermy at 2181 Columbia Ave. An undetermined number of articles were stolen, said RCMP are also investigat- ing a Friday night break-in at the Calvary Baptist Church. A quantity of food was stolen and later recovered. day skiing Sat., Sun., Mon. 9:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. HOURS OF OPERATION ADULT DAY TICKET: $8.00 NIGHT TICKET: $5.00 Box 394, Nelson, B.C. V1L5R2 (604) 352-9969 evening skiing Tues., Wed.. Thurs. 6:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m WEATHER 8 will cross Washington Sto! I moder: * > fey. © Castlegar -\ ms : A low pressure system and associate clouds moved down the coast on Wednesday and iods of snow will accompa! thern interior and due to the warmer air at mountain top levels a risk of freezing rain does exist. wi with day time highs of -4° to -6° and overnight lows - 8° to -10°. The colder drier weather will return on Friday ny the system over the OPEN 4P.M. DAILY Feb. 5to 15 2 Steak Dinners for the Price of 1! Reservations for Private Parties — 365-3294 Locoted | Mile South of Weigh Scales in Ootischenia. LICENCED DINING ROOM FAMILY DINING y else has a Savings Pian quite like our Accumulation Annuity. It offers competitive interest rates for choice of periods, an or policy fee. Jack L. Parkin 365-6664 income options, and there is no front-end load Before you buy an RRSP. talk to me. Mutual Life of Canada By CasNews Staff Debra Chmara is the new chairman of the Castlegar Library board. Chmara takes over from Sue Port. Port re- mains on the board as a dir- ector and past-chairman. Jane Lippa is the board's vice-chairman, Jud Dudley treasurer and Sally Knight secretary. New board members elec- VICTORIA (CP) — Legis- lation to prevent juveniles from getting violent porno- graphic tapes will be intro duced in the new session of the British Columbia leg- islature, Attorney General Brian Smith said Tuesday. Introducing When you're ready to file your income tax return your RRSP receipt is ready when you A great way to save for your future! i <¢ Kootenay Savings TRAN + FRUITVALE + CASTLEGAR * SALMO * SOUT) ™ MEW DENVER = WAMETA PLAZA When you invest ina credit union RRSP we'll issue your Official tax receipt on the spot — while you wait need it. Credit Union m SLOCAN Deadline: March Ist, 1985 SUNRISE: 7:13 SUNSET: 4:57 DEBRA CHMARA ted at the library's recent annual general meeting in- elude Kathy Hamham, San- dra Groepler and Faye Rod- gers. Patrick Donohue rounds out the board. In other library news, li- brarians Judy Wearmouth reports that January's cir- culation figures reached 6,343 with 145 people joining the library during the month. “There will be a classific- ation system for videos that we'll introduce in British Columbia,” Smith said in an interview. The attorney general said the video classification will be similar but not identical to the one already being used to rate films shown in cinemas in the province. It will bear some resemblance to video regulations announced by the Ontario government this week, he said. The Ontario regulations provide the criteria to be used by that province's Film Review Board to judge whe- ther a film or videotape is obscene. The board has the power to classify and censor video tapes, and all retailers and distributors of home vid- =] (2) LS) LJ New library chairman Two Canada World Youth students, Leena Wad and Manoue Hebert, are cur- rently working on general duties in the library, as well as conducting a series of puppet making classes for younger children. Twenty-seven children are registered in the program, which runs until Feb. 14. Curbing porno tapes eotapes in Ontario are re- quired to be licensed by April 1. “We're going to build on the Ontario experience and the British experience, and | we will be introducing legis- lation in the new session which will allow for the classification of’ videos,” Smith said. The move is aimed at limiting young people's ac- cess to “undesirable” video material, he said. The attorney general said he would like to prevent juveniles from getting “mat- erial that depicts sex and children, sex and violence, lieve such material should be shown at all. a FOR MY 3 SPECIAL VALENTINES! Love Pot& Dad Mill jobs for 54 The Smallwood mill in Sal- mo will provide work for 54 people when it begins pro- duction in about three months, according to its management. When it opens, the mill will employ 36 workers, in addi- tion to 18 already employed Although Crossley says he doesn’t know what percen- tage of the workers are local, Crossley said seven of the 36 mill employees are now working at setting up the mill's equipment — most of which has now been pur- chased. The equipment includes a debarker, a chipping system, the main sawing system, ed- gers, a lumber-sorting sys- tem and a planer, he said. Several items were bought at the sale of equipment from the Wester sawmill in Nelson which closed last year, said Crossley. Other equipment — both new and used — was bought at private sales in the Cariboo. Support unit opens By CasNews Staff The family support unit at Trail Regional Hospital was officially opened Tuesday. The family room has been provided by the Masonic Lodge, Fidelity No. 32 of Trail. The family support unit consists of two adjacent rooms — one for the patient, and the other for the family. Its purpose is to provide a private, comfortable area in which the physical and psychological familes can be met, said the hospital in a prepared release. Until the recent addition, there was not such an area available. “It allows that patients may have the support and comfort of immediate family members and significant others at any time,” says the hospital. As well, the unit allows family members to maintain their physical well-being throughout the vigil by hav ing the opportunity to rest at their convenience while re maining close to the patient. There is no additional charge to the patient for the unit. The fee for family use of the room is the usual public ward rate. The hospital's head nurse in consultation with other members of the health care team will arrange transfer of patients to the family sup- port unit following certain established guidelines. The prime concern remains meeting patient needs, said the hospital. The only concern so far is that demand may exceed supply, said the hospital. Masonic Lodge provided the total cost of the project. Our Action Ad Phone Number is 365-2212 continued from front poge BILL YOUNG . . Stresses involvement sible forest management — takes a non-partisan stance, Young declined to comment specifically on the timber industry in Kootenay West. Last December, sawmill operators in Nakusp protested that they are unable to obtain adequate timber because Westar Timber Ltd. — which controls a tree farm licence including the drainage area around the Arrow Lakes — has reduced its supply over the past three years. However, Young will speak at a public meeting in Nakusp tonight to offer information on forest tenures, obligations of forest tenure licensees, determination of allowable annual harvests, tree farm license management. LET’S TALK ABOUT SCHOOLS SCHOOL DISTRICT No. 9 (CASTLEGAR) CASTLEGAR, B.C., VIN 3H5 PHONE 365-7731 Let's Talk at Public Meetings at K.J.S.S. PARENTS OF SCHOOL DISTRICT STUDENTS WED., FEB.6 — 7:00P.M. CIVIC GROUPS (E.G. LEGION, ROTARY) THURS., FEB.7 — 7:00 P.M. GENERAL PUBLIC WELCOME AT BOTH MEETINGS WATCH SHAW CABLE JAN. 31,7 P.M. AND FEB. 7,6 P.M. FOR “LET'S TALK ABOUT SCHOOLS”. INFORMATION AND BROCHURES AVAILABLE FROM JEAN D. CHRISTENSEN Program Director Mon. a.m.; Tues., Wed., Fri., 8-4 areas. which must the review.” working plans and to give a description of timber supply He pointed out that if members of the public are dissatisfied with a licensee's handling of a forest meeting, be held after a management working plan has expired. Westar Timber's five-year plan expired last December. “The reaction to these types of meetings have been mixed,” Young said. “In some cases, no one shows up. In some areas, there has been active public participation in licensee's five-year: Amadeus and Passage score BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF. (AP) — Amadeus, the drama of Mozart's tor. mented final years, and A Passage to India, the saga of natives versus their British rulers in 1920s India, scored a leading 11 nominations apiece for the 57th Academy Awards for movies today. The Killing Fields, story of an American correspondent and his native assistant dur ing the Cambodian war, and Places in the Heart, a young widow's struggle to keep her farm and family in depression Texas, followed in the Oscar nominations with seven each. All four films were nom. inated for best picture of 1984, along with A Soldier's Story, a murder mystery among black soldiers at a Second World War army camp. Amadeus contributed two best-actor nominations for its players—F. Murray Abra ham as the villainous Salieri and Tom Hulce as the impish Mozart. Others nominated were Albert Finney, the burned. out consul of Under the Vol cano; Sam Waterston, the New York Times reporter of The Killing Fields, and Jeff Bridges, the gentle space visitor of Starman. Three actresses, all pre. vious Oscar winners, won nominations for their por. trayals of beleaguered farm women: Sally Field, Places in the Heart; Jessica Lange, Country, and Sissy Spacek, The River. Also nominated were Judy Davis, the English traveller of A Passage to India, and Vanessa Redgrave, who played Olive Chancellor in The Bostonians. Ralph Richardson received & posthumous nomination for his supporting role as the ec centric lord of the manor in Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes. Others nominated as sup. porting actor were four rela- tive unknowns: Adolph Cae- sar, A Soldier's Story; John Malkovich, Places in the Heart; Noriyuki (Pat) Mor. ita, The Karate Kid; Haing S. Ngor, The Killing Fields. Veteran British actress Peggy Ashcroft won her first Academy nomination as sup- porting actress in A Passage to India. Also nominated: Glenn Close, The Natural; Lindsay Crouse, Places in the Heart; Cfristine Lahti, Swing Shift; Geraldine Page, The Pope of Greenwich Vil. lage Woody Allen was a sur prise nominee for best direc. tion, his Broadway Danny Rose accounting for his third nomination as director (he won for Annie Hall in 1977). Three of the other dir. ectorial nominees were also past winners: Robert Benton, Places in the Heart; Milos Forman, Amadeus, and David Lean, A Passage to India. Also named was new. comer Roland Joffe for The Killing Fields. The nominees for best for eign-language film: Beyond the Walls (Israel); Camila, A Gea (Argentina); Dangerous Moves (Switzerland); Double Feature (Spain); War-time Romance (Soviet Union)., Stevie Wonder collected a nomination for best original song with I Just Called to Say I Love you, from The Woman in Red. Other nom- inees: Let's Hear it for the Boy, from Footloose, and the title songs from Against All Odds (Take a Look at Me Now), Ghostbusters and Footloose. & Berifax™ Discount Centre FAST CASH REFUNDS NOW OPEN Quolity Tax Preparations NELSON — No. 1-608 Baker St. 352-3725 TRAIL — 1300 Cedar Ave. 368-3333 OFFICIAL OPENING . . . Castlegar Mayor Audrey Moore cut the ribbon marking the opening Friday of new Century 21 Mountainview Agencies Ltd. Building. Helping with ceremony are Glen Wilson ss News TREET TALK LAST WEEK Stella Palpmaruk of Castlegar shared in a $5 million Lotto 6-49 prize. This week Street Talk learned that Corinne and Wayne Tamelin won $50,000 in the Jan. 23 Western Express. ‘It was a real shock,” says Corinne. Corinne and her husband were watching the Western draw on TV when their number came up. “We didn't believe it of course.” But she’s starting to now. The Tamelins plan to take a trip with some of their prize money. “That was the first thing that came to my mind,” says Corinne. And since they just got married and bought a house, they'll have plenty of things to do with the rest of the $50,000. Corinne says she doesn't usually play the Western. She normally buys Lotto 6-49 tickets. And she only bought the winning ticket the day of the draw. She says she was buying half a dozen 6-49 tickets when she decided to spend $4 on four Western tickets. “This was just a fluke,” she says. FORMER WEST Kootenay medical health officer Dr. Nick Schmitt is the recent winner of the prestigious Dr. Jim Robinson Memorial Prize. The prize was ii ited at UBC to recognize the contribution of physicians in B.C. to public health, and recognizes excellence in the field. Nick is the first recipient of the prize. He is well-known throughout the province, particularly for his work in the areas of environmental health and research during his time in this area. As well, the award recognizes his years of service in the control of tuberculosis among Coastal Ind A ROAST was held in Creston one night recently, but it wasn't barbecued beef or a fattened calf. The roast was held in honor of that community's parish priest, a man of the cloth who served St. Rita's Parish in Castlegar during the late "40s and early ‘50s. Rev. Joseph B. Barnes celebrated his 40th anniver sary in the priesthood and over 200 well-wishers turned out to honor him, and to roast him with humorous jibes. One of the guests was former Castlegar mayor R.C. of Century 21 and Sonja Freno of Sonja’s China Shop. Both businesses are located in the new building at 1695 Columbia Ave. CosNews Photo (Bob) Maddocks, now of Yuma, Arizona, who drove over 30 hours non-stop to be in attendance to honor his longtime friend. MC for the roast was Lem Folkman, who was resident partner here for Dunwoody and Co. for about a year when that accounting firm had an office in Castlegar. THE 50 YEARS AGO column in the Arrow Lakes News of Nakusp made especially interesting reading last week. In the Jan. 31, 195 issue the editor was apologizing for the non-appearance of the paper the week before. It seems he was returning from Nelson on Monday, Jan. 23, 1935, via the CPR train when he was held up at Rosebery and New Denver until the following Sunday! “Two days were spent in Rosebery before the plow opened the road from Rosebery to New Denver.” In fact, the snowfall was so heavy on the Sunday that “the government snowplow was unable to leave Nakusp until Tuesday morning. The present equipment for plowing snow is entirely too light. It seems ridiculous to expect a plow with a blade less than three feet high to plow snow up over six or eight feet high.” DO WE WANT a duty free shop at one of the three West Kootenay border crossings: Patterson, Waneta and Nelway? If the answer is yet, opportunity is knocking. Revenue Canada Customs and Excise is inviting applications from border locations in B.C., Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, New Brunswick and the Yukon. The deadline is April 4, and in B.C. applications are available from the federal customs office in Vancouver. Among those B.C. locations being encouraged by the federal government to apply for a duty free shop are Huntingdon near Sumas, and Roosville, in southeast B.C. A FREE TAX CLINIC for senior citizens in Castlegar is being held at the Senior Citizens's Hall on llth Ave. The chartered accountant co-ordinating the clinic is Henry John of Soligo, Koide and John. He can be reached at 365-7745 for more information. Clinic appointments can be made through Curtis Waterman, at the Hall at 365-5252. THE RIVERSIDE RESTAURANT in the Chahko- Mica Mall is now under a new manager: Len Zacharias. HIS PLACE Hairstyling on 3rd St. will be moving around the corner to the old Mike's TV location on Columbia Avenue between Sears and The Klothes Kloset. Glen Carew runs the hairstyling business. Canadian stars aid Ethiopia TORONTO (CP) — Anne Murray, Bryan Adams, Paul Anka, Loverboy, Neil Young, Gordon Lightfoot and a vir tual Who's Who of Canadian music are expected to be among the dozens of musi cians to record an all-Cana dian single Sunday for Ethi opian famine relief. Adams, the 25-year-old Vancouver native who swept four Juno awards in Decem ber, wrote the lyrics for Tears Are Not Enough for collaborator Jim Vallance, David Foster, who will pro- duce the project, wrote the music. The vocals will be recorded at a downtown location Sun. day. Work Charlie Says oD Make Your Want Ad ° uy He ii i 4 i my wi li i nin oe Get Your ot COHOE INSURANCE 1127-4th St., Castleger Classified Ads 365-2212 CHICKEN BREASTS My ha! svat 42%), $1 99 FRESH. UTILITY GRADE................... CHICKEN LEGS BA RO Ni tes BONELESS. CANADA GRADE A OR, 5s ¢hasacevesccsenxsebi saves | 9°07. $979 PORK PICNIC 2 Semel lad STEAK wsierom 7% 9G? FRESH WHOLE OR BOLOGN FLETCHERS BY THE PIECE. . 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