as Castlegar News _svov'23.:207 ENTERTAINMENT Visit the Scenic © Slocan Valley! Homestyle Cooking . . Lots’ SOUP AND SANDWICH SHOP Econo Spots You can save up 10.80% on the cost of this ad! SLOCAN MOTEL in downtown Slocan LICENCED DINING ROOM OPEN 4 P.M. DAILY WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED — AIR CONDITIONED — Reservations for Private Parties — 365-3294 Located one mile south of Weigh Scoles in Ootischenia. BREAKFAST SPECIAL We Accept Westar, Celgar & Cominco = 95 Meal Tickets. tk i... 8 2 Pancek: Avie er Friday, 8 a.m. - 11 a.m. NO TAKE OUT! MONDAYS 5:30: 6:00 9m. wronitin 365-8155 ‘Spm. 1004 Columbia Ave., Castlegar This Week in DEXTER’S PUB —THURS. THRU SAT. — August 27 to 29 Sea Cruise 1944 Columbia Ave. sal Castlegar Bulletin Board INITED WAY RUMMAGE SALE Drop off at Hobbit Hill, 749 - 11th Avenue or phone 365- 5616. 4/66 CHRISTIAN WOMEN’S CLUB Thursday, August 27, 9:90 a.m. Sandman Inn. Reser vations, 365-8025. 2/67 CASTLEGAR FIGURE SKATING CLUB Registration is being taken for Figure Skating Club Fall School. School starts Sept. 14 for 3 weeks offering figure skating and power skating. Forms are available ot the Recreatidn Otfice and must be in NO LATER than August! 28 Coming events of Castlegar and District non-profit organizations may be listed here. The first 10 words are $3.75 and additional words are 15¢ each. Boldtaced wor ds (which must be used for headings) count as two words There is no extra charge for a second insertion while the third consecutive insertion is 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 tor Sunday's paper and 5 p.m. Mondays for Wednesday's paper Notices should be brought to the Castlegar News at 197 Columbia Ave. COMMUNITY Bulletin Board Upstairs in Trail’s Towne Square Saturday, Aug. 29 Guaranteed Lic. No. 60214 = "$1000 Payouts Regular Jackpots increase to $1000 with attendance of 160 or MORE! BRING THIS AD FOR LUCKY CASH DOBBER PICK Sunday, August 23 Lic. No. 59394 $1000== in Jackpots Ist Coll $500 2nd Call $300 s.0cou $200 EARLY BIRDS GUARANTEED minimum * 100 a Game BRING THIS AD FOR LUCKY CASH DOBBER PICK Three Trail artists are currently exhibiting their paintings in a show that will travel throughout the West Kootenays. Olga D’Andrea, Mary Elliott and Pat Freschi are sharing an exhibition; now showing at the Grand Forks art gallery until Sept. 19, at the Homestead Restaurant in Castlegar at a time to be announced between Sept. 20 and Oct. 20 and finally at the Nelson Art Gallery of the Kootenays from Oct. 20-31. Each of the artists has a very individual, easily izable style. Short by each artist are among the paintings and help to give some insight as to their raison d'etre. The work of Pat Freschi is perhaps the most diffi icult its Artists show off paintings overwhelming strength, then keep that attention by the subtlety with which they move and’are laywered throughout the paper. Elliott says that painting for her is “a search for creative and innovative ways to express my ideas and emotions. Many realistic drawings and explorative bare elechredeasparten trode thay ahennoriedor Potala The PHILIPPINES .. Reporter writes about attack By CAROL TOLLER ‘The Canadian Press Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos had no idea what he was up against when he sent army tanks roaring up to a rebel camp last year. Hundreds of Filipinos rushed to meet his stony-faced military officers, leaving peace offerings of flowers and candy. But the tanks kept thundering toward the crowd. So the rebels clasped hands to form a human wall, bracing themselves for an attack that never came. That incredible display of Filipino people power was a turning point in the virtually bloodless four-day are This spontaneity gives a eae “and appeal ‘to Elliott's work despite it's boldness. The Forest Rose is one of the few works of Elliott's not dominated by red tones but by deep greens. It is water color and dry pigment and has an intriguing and very effective use of Heel asl onte: It has a freshness and vitality that is to understand and enjoy however one can app! interesting and cerebral qualities. Pat says that these works try “to solve the problem of combining figure in landseape with some design elements.” She uses metaphor but says “these works are not political but rather enthnographic which means they hope to convey some of. the cultural influences which inspired them.” It is difficult to see cultural influences in the traditional sense in Freschi’s paintings. Most have a female figure sitting or reclining with back to viewer looking out to water and including a checkered pattern. Most also have a lack of perspective which gives the compositions an unsettling flatness. Freschi uses sharply contrasting colors and often includes forms which are unclear or symbolic. A certain enigma is always present in Freschi’s work which tends to create something of a disturbing interest for the viewer. From the Field is Given, an oil on paper, is the only painting of Freschi’s with the female figure facing the viewer. It has a haunting, soft, far-away quality and is thick with undulating color. The other painting by Freschi easiest to appreciate is After the Bath, an oil and acrylic on canvas. This is a work with tremendous depth and subtlety, full of forms and muted color that somehow give the impression of a female figure. The works of Mary Elliott are similar to Pat Freschi's in their cerebral demands. They are at the same time visually agg and artistically har The strong reds, oranges and brown tones that are vividly present in most of Elliott's work may well become her trademark. They can grab the viewers attention by their and Misty Wood also have the same that brought Corazon Aquino to power. It remains a gripping memory for reporter Bryan Johnson, who covered the Filipino political scene for the Toronto Globe and Mail. Johnson provides a readable, fast-paced account of the uprising in his book Four Days of Courage. IGNORES MARCOS His description of the February 1986 revolution isn’t ness. Olga D'Andrea is clearly hing of a d with such sidelights as Imelda Marcos’s countless pairs of footwear. With the exception of a few Her soft, sensitive colors and forms are a strong contrast to Freschi and Elliott. D'Andrea says, “I'm just beginning to see what is possible in my floral and landscape series . . . I experiment and the experiments don't always work. But even a failed experiment is so much better than the boredom of a successful formula.” This experimentation in D’'Andrea’s work gives the same sense of spontaneity and vitality seen in Elliott's paintings. D’Andrea’s medium is watercolor and her colors are pastel. Her Iris series is ial: to terse to the gallon jars of perfume and almost four-metre-wide beds in the royal palace, he ignores the Marcos couple and their cronies. Johnson, who is married to a Filipino, focuses on the two million people who joined the movement against the dictatorial Marcos regime. His close ties with many Filipinos make the book more than a tale of four days in the history of the country. It’s a profile of the country's citizens, written with deep affection and respect. ¢ Donens of brief, but vivid and endearing character view with it’s soft, muted colors that successfully capture the intricacies of nature. The thought, care, and depth with which she represents the iris gives it an deservedly elevated position. The idea of calling some of the iris paintings quintets must aim to show a musical balance of color in harmony. Each painting has a different emphasis of color but the same enriching placid quality. D'Andrea’s other themes are in landscape. They contain the same softness and beauty as the iris paintings but have more strength in their lines giving more of a dynamic effect. This is a show well worth viewing. No longer do artists from Trail have to be thought of as a local attempt at culture. Each of D'Andrea, Elliott and Freschi could easily hold her own on a serious level and are to be congratulated for the quality of their work. All of the paintings are for sale. HAPPY 40th BIRTHDAY BARB LOS ANGELES (CP) — Frank's Place, a new series from CBS, is one of the risk. Frank’ major television risks s Place taking episode, previewed for the MTM Enterprises and cre- ator of WKRP in Cincinnati, geles, almost a minute passed says: “I know how this bus- media this month in Los An- the book — a 10-year-old con artist flags down cabs for would-be passengers in return for pizza, and a grey-haired man cheerfully lets rebels use his Mercedes to fill a gap in a barricade. To a large extent, the book is an attempt to explain foreign press coverage of the rebellion. Western journalists, says Johnson, were victims of a systematic ‘disinformation” campaign launched by the rebels after Marcos uncovered their plot to overthrow him. Separate careers take their toll NASHVILLE, TENN. “We waited until it felt (AP) — Sometimes country right and we found the right music star Ricky Skaggs has song,” he said. “This was the to fly halfway across the ideal song and obviously the United States to be with his people thought so, too.” wife. Because they have indep- Skaggs and his wife, endent and successful car. Sharon White, have separate eers, more work together is music careers. She, her unlikely. So this means ad sister, Cheryl, and their ditional time apart. DRAGON PLATES . . . The dragon collection of colum: nist John Charters got a boost recently with a gift from California resident Marcia Brask who, with her friend Floy Babbit, brought four plates and four cups decorated with pary Chinese dragons. Charters is writing a children’s fantasy story called Tamar and the Dragon Tree and hopes to incorporate these and othe: dragons in the stories. —CasNewsPhoto by John Charters Students become summer spies By DIRK E QUANTICO, VA. (AP) — A government agency is of- fering college students sum- mer internships but won't say exactly what they'll be doing or how much they'll be paid, and none of what they learn can go on their res- umes. “You cannot talk about what you did here,” CIA spokesman Sharon Foster said ‘Thursday from the spy The CIA has had a work- study program for years for students and summer intern- ships for graduate students. Now, the agency is open- ing its doors to up to 30 un- dergrads who might like to spend eight weeks next sum- mer learning about the daily grind of espionage. The CIA says it’s looking for students who “can meet challenges with imagination.” In return, the internship “Anybody who ‘works at the CLA could be in physical ly.” she said. “I mean, it's the nature of the beast.” To participate, a student must be a U.S. citizen with a Baverage and must pass CIA security, aptitude and psy- chological examinations. In- terns also must pass a sec- urity clearance ‘and plan to graduate by 1989 in order to work next summer. PICK UP TAB Once the interns complete the eight-week session, they can get the CIA to pick up the cost of their last year’s tuition by agreeing to com- mit 18 months to the agency. ‘They will be paid as in- terns, but the amount is a se- cret, Foster said. “They're paid at a flat rate,” she said. “We don't talk about it.” ri is billed as OZONE HOLE Atmosphere recovered LONGYEARBYEN, SPITSBERGEN (AP) — A- Norwegian scientist who detected an ozone “hole” last year over this remote Arctic region says the atmosphere apparently has recovered. But the physicist, Soeren Larsen, and other atmospher- ie specialists say the Arctic skies must be watched more closely for the possible onset of a severe ozone depletion, like the one that has developed in Antarctica. “We should try to do more measurements,” Larsen said. “What we are doing now is not good enough.” Spurred by the ozone problem at the South Pole, representatives of 31 countries meet on Setp. 14 in Montreal to seek final agreement on cutting down production of industrial ch Ils that can deplete ozone in the stratosphere. In the Canadian north, ground observers have charted a 2" per-cent drop in ozone since 1970. But the Canadians are “certainly not panicked,” since the decline followed a peak concentration of ozone in 1970, said Alex Chisholm, a Canadian government atmospheric scientist. URGE OBSERVATION Chisholm patnted Seay however, that no one has ‘ic dynamics and ozone Love Mom, Dad, and Family iest shows of the new fall season — a languorous, odd, can't-be-pigeonholed _ series about a black middle-class New Englander who inherits a restaurant in New Orleans. If you must have a label, MAPLE " sista producer of the series. “I mean, the first character walks on and right away yells ‘Hey, this is a sit- com!’ “After a while working in television, you want to do something different, a show that you yourself want to watch.” Wison’s Florida accent and plain casual clothing suggest a rube wandering among the Hollywood barracudas. But Wilson, a former writer at iness works. “You go on the air, you get a couple of 17 shares, maybe things change. Maybe I shouldn't say that — hell, CBS has been great with us and we've had total creative freedom — but I'm not naive. “We know it’s going to be tough and we're on in a kid- die hour. But we are a real alternative at that time. People are not going to say ‘Hey, I don't know whether to watch Facts of Life or Frank's Place.’ ” Reid, who played Venus Flytrap in WKRP and Down- town Brown in Simon and Simon, says his character “will be the eyes of the audi- ewnce” in the eccentric Southern setting. NOT HIP “All the jokes will not re- volve around me,” Reid says. “And I like the way this guy is not the hippest guy in the world “He's very intelligent, but he is not always able to deal with this situation.” father, Buck, are The Whites, a country music trio known for their lilting harmony Skaggs and White are separated nearly every weekend. In the summer, the separations can be two or three weeks at a time. “Thank God for Ma Bell,” the 33-year-old Skaggs said in an interview. “It's not un- common for us to talk two hours on the phone.” On Memorial Day, Skaggs decided the telephone was not intimate enough. He jumped on an airplane in Nashville and flew unan nounced to Huntington, W.Va., to be with his 33-year. old wife at one of her per- formances. Their separate careers, however, recently united when they released a duet, Love Can't Ever Get Better Than This. The song was in the Top 10 of the country music charts in mid-July. “People expected this for a long time,” said Skaggs, whose solo hits include Coun- try Boy, Heartbroke, Uncle Pen and Cajun Moon. ‘AIR CONDITIONED Eosy Access, No Stairs Skaggs is often asked how he and White manage to keep their marriage together. “We make it work,” he said. “This business will eat you up,” White said. When travelling separate ly, they keep a list of each other's hotel reservations, the concert venue and even the phone number of the con: cert promoter. They talk by phone almost” every day. They've hired an older couple to take care of Molly when they are out of town. “They're like a member of the family,” Skaggs said. “They are like another set of grandparents for her. She's really close to them, but she knows who her real grand. parents are.” SPENDS HOURS Even during their time to- gether, their careers are usually the main topic of con versation. “When we go to eat, we end up talking about music the whole time,” White said. “It’s just us. We have music in common,” said Ska- Births & Funerals variations at the poles, observations must be made. “Part of the difficulty is that the monitoring network is so sparse,” he said in an interview from Toronto. Within the next six months, he said, ozone-monitoring equipment will be installed on Canada’s northernmost island, Ellesmere. and said more extensive Foster could not say pre- cisely what the interns will be doing. “They wouldn't be writing papers for the president of the United States as under- graduates, or they wouldn't be out recruiting agents, be- cause they wouldn't be over- The valuable, but won't be any- thing the students can brag about if they go looking for another 5 “Anybody who comes to work for us, no matter what NOW TO BE MAILED TO YOUR ADDRESS FOR THE UNIVERSITY TERM. Only $15 for 8 months “As Good as a Letter from Home!" Phone 365-7266 Monte Carlo Restaurant their security has to sign a secrecy agree- ment,” Foster said. “They cannot talk about what they did or what organization they worked for.” Job openings The upper-atmosphere layer of ozone, an form of oxygen, is essential to life on Earth, since it absorbs much of the sun’s harmful ultraviolet light. Each one-per-cent decrease in ozone at high altitudes méans 200,000 Details of these and other job opportunities are available at: Contre, cases of skin cancer worldwide every year, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has estimated. The ozone thinning, or hole, over Antarctica was first detected in 1983. It appears each year in mid-September, at the end of the southern winter. The amount of ozone decreases by about 40 per cent before rising again to ozone normal levels in October. Ozone depletion would be even more troubling at the North Pole, since the world’s population concentrations lie nearer the Arctic than the Antarctic. HAVE FOUR STATIONS Spitsbergen, a Norwegian, island of fiords and ice-draped mountains just 800 nautical miles from the North Pole, has one of only four ozone-monitoring stations maintained by western countries in the Arctic. The others are at Point Barrow in Alaska, Resolute in Northwest Territories, and Tromsoe on Norway's North Cape. Each afternoon at the Spitsbergen airport, a Norwegian meteorologist wheels a bulky instrument, a Dobson spectro- BIRTHS BARBER — To Lori and Mike Bor ber of Yellowknite, a girl, born August 14. DUTOFF — To Pear! ond Fred Dutoff of Winlaw, a boy, August 15. LOUGH/PHILP To Sandra Lough ond Tim Philp of Fruitvale, a girl, born August 12, MALOFF — To Alice and Torey Malotf of Castlegar, a boy, August 19. MARKIN — To Marilyn ‘and Paul Markin of Castlegar, twin boys, born August 12 NEIL — To Denise (nee Bradford) and Keith of Fruitvale, a girl, born August 8. NITZ — To Nora and Myrton of Nelson, o boy, born August 14. PAKULA — To Theresa and Linus Pakula of Castlegar, a girl, born August 19. RAYNER — To Wendy and David Rayner of Wartield, a girl, born August 12. SIDEY — To Pat and bob Sidey of Rossland, a girl, born August 4 STOWE — To Brendo (nee Bor nes) and Norman Stowe of Vic toria, a boy, born August 12. SUUBAN/FOUNTAIN — To Non- cy Suuban and Steven Fountain of Nelson, @ boy, born August 13. TARASOFF — To Eloine and William Tarasott of Slocan Park a girl, born August 17 DEATHS BRENNAN — Gordon Ernest Brennan, formerly of Rossland died August 7 at age 72. He is survived by his wite Irene; two sons Bill of Cranbrook and Ron of rey; six daughters, Verna King of Trail, Joanne Bellmon of Edson, Alta., Joyce Girdler of and 12. grandchildren greot-grandchildren; Agnes Goodwill of Brandon: brother Cecil of Brandon; and numerous. nieces and nephews He was predeceased by four brothers and o sister IRWIN — Comet Talbot Irwin, formerly of Trail, died in Maple Ridge August 15 at age 84. He is survived by his three daughters, Pat Flanagan of Trail, Gaylene Zemptec of Port Smith, Ohio and ira Condon of Maple Ridge: 10 grandchildren and 13 grandchildren; and many n and nephews. H: deceased by his w 1958, grandson T 1961 and a brother Alec MARCON — Irma Luigia Marcon of Trail died August 12 at age 85. She is survived by her son ; three gran: dchildren at grandchildren; She was predeceased by husband Alexander in 1942: Renato in 1968; daughter Maria «11933; and two brothers and three sisters. $1000 =. $2$? MOONLIGHT DROP IN Play in any other Bingo Hall in the Kootenays and bring your cash register receipt to our Moonlight Drop-in and you receive A FREE DABBER and a chan ce to win a $50 Cash Draw! Minimum drop-in payout 1st Game, $100. Return transportation to Castlegar Area Available 2nd Call (Minimum $100) Ist Session Kiwanis Lic. 57516 2nd Session Rossland Rotary FRIDAYS cuoronteed $600 in Reguior Jackpots MON. - THURS. *500 Bononz0 Pot of Gold will increase one number per night ‘til won, starting Aug. 10 01 52 Play 22 Reg. Games For as Little as $5 TUES. COMBINATION EXPRESS NIGHT Call 364-0933 @ 1:30-9:30 p.m. Free bus Tronsperrenen & nfermetion Ph. 365-5007 or 365-6646 1060 Eldorado — ex.Konkin irty Bird Buliding \ Sheraton - Spokane’s Labor Day Weekend September 4-6, 1987 $49. B= Canadian at Pa Hey thi i your bea chance to Contact your local travel agent or CALL TOLL FREE 1.800.848.9600 $30 Early Bird $25 Special $ 2 0 Regular Game MINIMUM! Come Play the SUPER PACK Thursday, Aug. 27 TRAIL ELKS LODGE Saturday, Aug. 29 TRAIL GYROS Tuesday, ‘August 25 CNIB Lic. No. 57652 TRANSPORTATION 1060 Eldoredo — Trail PHONE ox.-Konkin Irly 365-5007 * 365-6646 ed Building START YOUR OWN BUSINESS, BE YOUR OWN BOSS Selkirk College offers preparatory programs for those interested in self-sufficiency in: «x FINE WOODWORK AND CARPENTRY Starts September 8 SMALL APPLIANCE REPAIR Starts September 8 (Power Handtools and Fractional Horse- power Motors) For details and application information contact NELSON CAMPUS ———— 2001 Silver King Road, Nelson, B.C. VILICB 352-660! Seige into the sunlight to measure the ultraviolet light reaching the ground. The readings indicate the density of the atmosphere’s ozone. A transitory ozone deficit was detected over Spitsbergen and Tromsoe in February and March 1986, at the end of the northern winter, but it did not reappear this year, said Larsen, a University of Oslo professor who analyses the data. Larsen’s charts show that the ozone over Spitsbergen fell to 350 Dobson units in March 1986, but in March 1987 stood at normal levels of more than 400 units. One hundred Dobson units is equivalent to a one-milli- metre layer of concentrated ozone. The ozone loss was worse over Tromsoe — 250 Dobson units in Kebruary 1986, when the level should have been 400. — PARENTS — Returning to work or school? sy \y-hobbit hill CHILDREN'S CENTER 749 - V1th Avenue, Castlegar, 365-7280 *& NOW ACCEPTING REGISTRATIONS * — Quality licenced child care, ages 3-5 sei 1, ages 3 and 4 WARM AND FRIENDLY CAI Focused leorning Sm involvement, rsh ou ploy, PAINTING & pain, 2649 FOURTH AVENUE CASTLEGAR 8 © \ vin 2s 365 3563 Gary Fleming Dianna Kootnikoff ri ADVERTISING SALES . ae ‘ASTL 70 eames Cc. OFFICE 365-5210 635 Spokane Street Phone: 368-5566 The Conada Employment Cen- tre for students is located on the 3rd Floor of the Federal Building. Businesses ond any job. Call 368-9126 — betore it's too late! This is our lost week. irdressers are required in theTrall area. (134 and 250) Certified Pre-School Pi required in Trail. (128) A Registered Nurse for \ position in Castlegar. (262) An Experienced Travel Coun: sellor is required part-time in .00 per hour. ting Instructor is equi Fruitvale area. Must have gold freeskate, gold dance and minimum Sth figure. Call for details. (318) RAY BYSTROM Strand and Mosby Realty Ltd. is very pleased to Congratulate Ray Bystrom on the successful completion of his REAL ESTATES’ AGENTS course through the University of British Columbia. DEVE WES This Initiative is being ordinate, support and facilitate growth in ‘Western Canada. ~ WESTERN DIVERSIFICATION INITIATIVE ANNOUNCING A MAJOR NEW ECONOMIC ENT AGENCY FOR IN CANADA The Government of Canada Western Diversification Initiative. has announced the undertaken to co- The foundation ss the Initiative will be the in agency located in Western Canada wal be header eet . The agency WHY WE NEED THE WESTERN DIVERSIFICATION OFFICE The role of the new office will be to address the of and sonoma on the cyclical and volatile world commodity. markets in non forestry and fisheries leave us vulnerable. Western Diversification Office Vancouver (604) 666-6256 Canad