June 30, 1985 ENTERTAINMENT —— |) €eppercorn Monday to Sunday, STUFFED PORK CHOPS wogetasia germ, gutcbreed. = GRILLED HALIBUT STEAK Win parsiey ber ond lemon wedge potato oF posta, vegetable ‘gorm, garlic br MESSAGE MUSIC... The Calvary Baptist Church in Castlegar features the Greiner Family in music and message July 3. Their program is varied with vocal and instrumental selections. Concert at 809 Merry Creek Road just beyond the Fireside Inn is open to public. SOUP OR SALAD Reservations phone 364-2222 TERRA NOVA MOTORINN This Week DEXTER’S PUB MON. THRU SAT Baskets on display in Nelson The woven baskets of Kathy Armstrong are on display at the Nelson Mu- seum until July 11, comple- mented by the woven rugs of Nancy Knight and the water- color paintings of Dave Adams. All three artists are from the Castlegar area, and have participated in exhibitions Kootenays Armstrong has visited museums and_ galleries throughout the Pacific North- west and attended many different weaving and bas- ketry in order to COLORADO LONDON (AP) — Britain's Royal Shakespeare Company is celebrating its 25th season with a troupe of highly ac- claimed young actors, am- bitious plans for expansion and yet another Tony Award for taking its production to : Broadway. <.,° “This is icing on a very, very rich cake,” Derek Jacobi told the New York audience upon winning this year's Best Actor Tony for his work in Much Ado About Nothing, which played in repertory on Broadway with the RSC’s pe Sunday Night Service IN ITS 25TH SEASON Shakespeare actors celebrate Cyrano de Bergerac. Back in England, theatrical insiders are congratulating the RSC for a quarter cen- tury of dramatic feasts. The acclaim has translated into full houses and expan- sionist aims for the company. This summer's London lineup of shows is largely sold out in the RSC’s two theatres at the Barbican Centre. At their two-auditorium home base in Shakespeare's birthplace of Stratford-upon- Avon, they plan to open a new, 430-seat theatre — The MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL With REV. MAURICE COVENEY Speoking on the Jehovah's Witnesses Cult PENTECOSTAL TABERNACLE Disneyland for Christmas? Now is the time for For more information call (NESTA OR SHIRLEY 365-6616 Open Tues. “Fri. a.m. - 4:30 p.m. 9.0.m. te 12 neon 1S APPRECIATED Swan — next spring. But the company has had to fight to get actors, audi- ences and money. Terry Hands, joint artistic director of the RSC, thinks the fight is being won. benefitted most from REACH TURNING POINT RSC push. His unabashedly “We're celebrating a turn- villai h expenses. Hands says the government subsidy has given the RSC “a degree of psychological security” which is matched by a newfound wealth of acting talent. The RSC has cultivated a new generation of leading actors to fill the star slots vacated by company stal- warts like Glenda Jackson, Ian McKellan, Peggy Ash- croft and John Wood. That generation has taken centre stage this season, with the triple-threat London of- ferings of Roger Rees as Hamlet, Kenneth Branagh as Henry V and Antony Sher as a manically crutch-wielding Richard III. The 35-year-old Sher has the has ing point,” Hands said, noting that the company has only recently been freed from being “on the bread line for 21 out of our 25 years.” Total subsidy for 1985-86 comes to about $6.25 million, which covers one-third of the Sunfest 85 PARADE EVERYONE WELCOME |! The Annual SunFest Parade will be held on}}5 July 20, 1985 and our parade committee extends © to you a personal invitation to participate in our parade. Would you please have entries in by July 3, 1985. Position in the parade is at the discretion of the parade marshall. We look forward to your participation. PARADE ENTRY FORM Nome of Entry _ ts your Entry a Float? Hf 80, how long is it in total, including towing vehicle? How wide? How High? Name of person in charge of entry Address Telephone Number of persons in entry Delegotes Nome of Delegote Adress Do you require o cor? Yes City Phone No. PLEASE SUPPLY YOUR OWN SIGN! CATEGORY OF EVENTS: (CHECK ONE) Youth Services ( Equestrian () Band ( ) ) Other ( Fraternal ( ) ) Decorated Bicyle( ) Commercial ( ) Novelty ( ) Parade begins at 11 a.m. sharp. Entries to assemble at 9 a.m. on Monashee Ave. and Selkirk Ave. Judging to take place at 9:30 a.m. Prize presentations will take place at 12:30 at the Kinsmen Park. Entry fee is free. Direct replies to parade com- mittee, Castlegar Chamber of Commerce, Box 3001, Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3K3. 604 - 365-6313 Remarks for T.V. commentary Entry forms available at all local Banks, Credit Unions and Drug Stores. Over $1400 in Prizes! See You There! NEW YORK (AP) — Since tour buses added the home of hi ‘ost i made Richard III the hottest ticket in town. WORK ELSEWHERE Fame within the RSC brings with it the lure of work outside, where pay is often greater. Hands himself will direct the musical Poppy, house in Washington's Georgetown section as a public editor Benja Bradlee to their routes, “at any given moment we might peer out the window to find 80 or so faces peering back,” says Bradlee’s wife, writer Sally Quinn. In the July issue of House “One very hot day, shortly after we bought the house in July 1983, we had left the front door open while we were surveying the construc tion, and after a while I heard a noise in the entrance hall. and Garden Quinn writes some people regard their 1793, 40-room brick 7 p.m. - 10 p.m. In the Cedar Room HOMESTEAD SOUP & SANDWICH SHOPPE ing there, in Washington Monument T-shirts and hats, were some Fred Clark Friday, July 5 On Highway 6, Winlew ( Ropert’s Restaurant ) For Reservations Phone 226-7718 re "eee, LICENSED PREMISES Scenic Dining Continental Cuisine Sunday Brunches Mexican Specialties Homemade Pastries SLOCAN CITY LOGGING SHOW Fitth annual event, July 6. starting 1! a.m Local and world-class competitors in tree cli sewing and chopping events. Don't miss it! mbing. log birling, 2/52 poper ond 5 Columbio Ave Coming events of Costlegor ond District non-profit organizations may be listed here. The first 10 words ore $3.15 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 o second consecutive inser tion while the third consecutive insertion is half-price Minimum charge is $3.15 (whether ad is for one three times). Deadlines ore 5 p. . p.m. Notices should be brought to two or tm. Thursdays for Sunday's lor Wi s paper the Castlegor News ot 197 which premiered at the Bar- bican in 1982, on Broadway this season. And Trevor Nunn — the RSC’s other joing artistic director — is reaping profits from his direction of the musical Cats. “We believe in letting our people go out and get fresh air and make some money,” Hands says. One such actor is Ben Kingsley, an Academy Award-winner for Gandhi, who will play Othello at Stratford in September. Kingsley played Demetri us in the RSC’s famous 1967 production of “A Midsum mer's Night's Dream,” dir ected by Peter Brook. He went on to appear in “Meas- ure for Measure, he Tem pest” and Gorky's “Enem ies.” Sher, who leaves the RSC in September to star in Torch Song Trilogy on the West End, has no doubts that he will return. “I hope the RSC and I have a long future together,” he says. Writer’s home invaded 12 tourists fanning out to take pictures and inspect the premises.” Rather considers future SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — If Ted Turner takes over CBS, anchorman Dan Rather says he'd have to mull over his next move. “I would take a long walk and talk to Jean (his wife) and decide what to do,” Rather said. “But I don't think the takeover will hap pen.” Turner, owner of Turner Broadcasting, bid for the CBS radio and television net work last month. “CBS has been good to me and I'm not looking to change that,” said Rather, who re cently signed a new multi year contract with CBS. nderstand traditional Indian and other early basketry methods. Her creations use mainly local materials such as pine needles, willow prunings, feathers, and grasses. Knight's woven rugs are patterned with link and star and other designs, and a sad- die blanket entitled “Nav- aho” is part of the four rugs she is showing. Adams’ watercolors include Kootenay landscapes, still life and forest and tree studies. Adams’ most recent showing was at the Home- stead Soup and Sandwich Shoppe in Castlegar, which has been featuring local ar- tists. The exhibition will close on July 11, with a reception and opportunity to meet the ar- tists, from 7-9 p.m. Until that date the show can be seen daily from 1-6 p.m. except July 1. Neighbors were spies NEW YORK (CP) — Gay Search was a teenager in suburban northern London in the late 1950s when the Krogers, a Canadian couple, moved in across the street. Helen Kroger would pop in most days for tea, lavish affection on Gay, and the Canadians soon became fast friends of the Search family. Then, one afternoon in 1960, the Krogers were arrested as Soviet spies. Pack of lies, the London hit which opened last week on Broadway, is the true story of a very normal middle-class British family — renamed Jackson for the stage — who discover their best friends are working for the KGB. They are called upon by their government to betray their neighbors, allowing M15 to spy on them from their daughter's bedroom window, while the Canadian couple — who turn out to be Americans named Cohen — continue to share their public lives with them. Loud-mouthed, endearing Auntie Helen continues to drop by for tea after the Jacksons are secretly visited by M15's frosty-smooth Mr. Stewart (played by Patrick McGoohan, TV's Prisoner and Dangerman, in his Broadway debut). . But honest, trusting, apolitical Mrs. Jackson (Rosemary Harris) breaks down emotionally under the strain of deceiving her closest friend, especially when it becomes apparent the Krogers are more than the unconscious accomplices Stewart at first implies they are. With police observers hidden upstairs and Stewart pressing for “co-operation,” Barbara has trouble understand. ing “how she could do it” but untouched by the abstract cold war struggle of the era, her sympathies plainly lie with Helen Kroger. 4 “I don't care what she's done, she’s still my friend,” she cries, though mortally wounded by her friend's insincerity. Years later, Gay visited Helen Kroger in prison and was told she never forgave her mother. Ruth Search, the real-life Barbara Jackson, never talked about the incident after the Cohens's arrest and died soon after the visit, at the age of 58. Pack of Lies bout the relative morality of deceit and betrayal, although author Hugh Whitemore never explores his theme too deeply. “What's the difference between one lie and another,” the distraught Barbara demands of Stewart “I've betrayed her as much as she's betrayed me.” Though the play climaxes with her agonizing choice between her country and her friend, Ruth Search’s dilemma is never plumbed for its allegorical potential — a dilemma in which E.M. Forester once said he hopes he would “have the guts to betray my country.” Adams stars in new series Don Adams, best known as the dim-witted Agent 86 on television's Get Smart series in the 1960s, will star this fall d s Out Vocals, Piano, Theremin, C Calvary Baptist Church Wed., July 3 — 7:30 p.m. Air conditioned comtort! The Greiner Family Ss, $, P Trumpet, Bells, horal Glasses to COFFE! JULY You Are Invited OPENING of THE COURTYARD GALLERY & E SHOP DOWNTOWN SQUARE CASTLEGAR CANADA DAY 5:00 p.m. the 1, 1985 in a CTV series. Cheek It Out, based on the British situation comedy Tripper's Day, is set in a large supermarket. Adams plays the perfectionist man ager who tries to run the shop amid employee indiff. erence The half-hour comedy, which will start filming in Toronto on July 19, is being produced by Taffner and As sociates. Taffner earlier ad apted British comedies to make such American shows as Three's Company and Too Close for Comfort. Adams will be supported by a Canadian cast, which has not yet been signed. The series will also be seen on USA Network, an American cable service. display award Jarrod Leitner, Amy e Rodgers, Graciette Medeiros, 4 Westinghouse, Karrie iven == Gavin M 7 Award winners in Grade 6 ‘ were Doreen Chaves, Travis Awards Day was held June Green. Grade 3: Tami Pion. EFFORT AND Shawn Murison and Jeremy Cokin Ariel McDowell and ’ 24 at Woodland Park School. Grade 4: Shawn Murison, IMPROVEMENT Fleet. Grade 5: Nancy Pere- Amy Zanrosso. Ait od\ FAMILY DINING Many parents attended the Faye Burgess and Tammy Grade 1: Robin Sylvester, polkin, Rory Perrier. Grade 1, addition, 19 students ait ne To all to whom theve pre presentations which were Ackerman. Grade 6: Rory Kris Dunn, Amie Dunn and 6: Katherine Moll and Lori | -cived awards for citizen- | CoM Open 4 P.M. Daily shall come — GREETING. held in the school gymnas- Perrier. Grade 6: Kim Cher- Kyle Bebelman. Grade 2: Stucky. ship. Reservations for Private Parties — 365-3294 Minister of Municipal Affairs ium. nenkoff. Harry Dhaliwal. Grade 3: MUSICE aCe In Grade 8, Vanessa Pope Located | mile south of weigh scales in Ootischenia "The following awards were PERFECT ATTENDANCE Greg Young. Grade 4: Amy Grade 1: Bree Tremble, 444 Benjamin Dixon received ba tare aad er given to the student by the Grade 1: Monica Miller, in, Auren , Robin Sy and Steven wards. Award winners in fhe Municipal Act, the classroom teacher. Steven Miller, and Lisa Woy. Cis isiina Evdokimoff, Laura Miller. Grade 2: Daphne Grade 4 were Ana Maria Govier Ses tncerpenenealy SCHOLASTIC in. Grade 2: Cyril Soukeroff, Peterson, Sheri Jackson and Jeremy Ross. 4 is Kerrie Abietkoff, Nic- Ha 34th Letters Patent issued the ACHIEVEMENT Ryan Hardy, Eugene Voykin, Greweock, Danny Perepolkin Grade 8: Anne-Louise Rob-