ENTERTAINMENT NEC elects T aa : | new chairman 7 Lucille Doucette, West been elected chairman of the Kootenay National Exhibi- National Exhibition Centre tion Centre director, has COMMUNITY NEWS This Week in DEXTER’S PUB MON. THRU SAT ~ New books at Castlegar Open for Your Shopping Convenience OPEN SUNDAYS Nov. 17-22 Magic! SANDMAN INN Castlegar i944 columbie Ave. HUGGINS HANDICRAFT Of Kaslo Will be displaying homemade goods at Blueberry Creek Recreation Commission Faire FRI. & SAT., NOV. 21-22 At the Castlegar Arena AGATE ROCK CLOCKS NIGHT LIGHTS $2495 $595 HUNDREDS OF COSTUME JEWELLERY ITEMS — $3.95 - $14.9511! Many unusual gold and silver items with stones. N AGATE [-) THIS TICKET GOOD FOR 1 % DISCOUNT ON STERLING SILVER AND GOLD ITEMS ONLY AT THE Castlegar Christmas Faire wember 21 to 22 and/or Nelson Christmas Faire December 12 and 13 TH by GILBERT and SULLIVAN At Trail Junior High Auditorium ADMISSION: $6.00 (Students $2.00. Thursday only) CURTAIN: 8:00 P.M. TICKETS AT: L&J Bookstore (Trail) Alpine Drugs (Rossland) Carl's Drugs (Castlegar) =) ANTHONY’S Pizza & Steak House LUCILLE DOUCETTE . .. takes over position Canada, has a mandate to en- sure the existence, pro- motion and advancement of these 23 diverse institutions that comprise the NEC pro- gram. Doucette has been em- ployed as the West Koote- may's centre's director since December, 1983 and has served as the representative for British Columbia on the council's executive since Oc- tober, 1985. Goh Ballet to perform in Trail Vancouver's Goh Ballet will perform Tuesday night at the Trail Junior high school auditorium. The performance, present ed by the Trail Society for the Performing Arts, will feature nine dances. Chan Hon Goh, 17-year-old daugh- ter of company director Choo Chiat Goh, is the principal MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL $2290 Poss Oraneylond Pius Mor For more information call NES’ dancer. The group's performance will include such selections as, Love is in the Air, The Jazz Piece, and the Ribbon Dance, a Chinese ribbon dance choreographed for bal- let. The Goh Ballet's program is accessible and presents a diversity of moods and music. Attention to detail and ges- ture as well as a strong sense of reaching out to their audience is the hallmark of the company. The Goh Ballet has per formed for schools and com munities in B.C. and presents a regular season in Van- couver. Their 1985 tour to China resulted in sold-out concerts and a return en gagement in 1987. The company was formed in 1984 to provide B.C. dancers a vehicle with which to showcase their art. The ballet made its debut in June 1985 to a packed house at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre in Vi : NORTH N. 3033 Division 509-326-5500 r | ! 1 q ! ! | 1 ! ! —< With This Coupon «= GOING TO SPOKANE? | THE TRADE WiW D$ MOTEL THIS SPECIAL OFFER rency 509-838-2091 sAUST PRESENT COUPON AT REGISTRATION NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER PROMOTION Coupes Expires OR OISCOUNT ‘Apel 18, 1987 ! | ! | | W. 907 Third Ave. | ! | ! 4 SPECIAL! Old English Style FISH & CHIPS Reg. $5.25 €och @ for 1 7s Wem 6OOpm 365-8155 1004 Colvmine Ave Costieger ART OPENING .. . A reception at the Homestead Soup and Sandwich Shoppe Friday night marked the on alot atte ist opening of an exhibit of paintings by Trail artist Max Richards La troupe circus-theatre comes to SHSS The circus is coming to town. La troupe Circus, Canada's sole circus-theatre company, will present a show Thursday to enchant both young and old alike on the stage at Stanley Humphries secondary school. Words take a back seat to movement set to an original score as Circus’ performers entertain and thrill you as they play with a giant rubber band, a see-saw, a cube. Clowns, jugglers, acrobats, and a trapeze artist have much in store in Creation 858, a game of shapes and movements played with simplicity and color. The six-member Montreal troupe has more than five years of training in acrobatics, and each member has specialized in one or more circus techniques: clowning, juggling, mask trapeze and acrobatics Circus, a professional theatre company founded in 1981, has toured Canada from the Pacific to the Mari times, the United States from the East Coast to the Gulf of Mexico and some parts of Europe. Its latest show has been chosen for a two-week tour of China in 1987. The company will also tour Japan and other regions in Asia as well as many areas of the United States. La Troupe Circus began with four members of Ecole National du Cerque de Montreal, the national circus school. La Troupe’s original synthesizer music was composed for them by Quebec city composer Francois Dupuis. The event is sponsored by the Castlegar Arts Council. CUSTOMER APPRECIATION DAYS Sunday Nov. 16 to Thursday, Nov. 20 ad —s — CLOWNS AND ACROBATS .. . The six member Mon treal circus troupe, specializing in clowning, juggling and trapeze, has been chosen to tour China han 9 hikene ee eS public library By JUDY WEARMOUTH eo Librarian Among the new goodies on the shelves this week is a} new Ruth Rendell, long considered one of Britain's best mystery writers. The Dark Adapted Eye is written under the pseudonym Barbara Vine. This suspenseful novel delves deeply into the heart of a family to uncover the unknown circumstances that led to a murder more than 30 years ago. Faith Steven's aunt was hanged for murder and the family has tried to forget the crime. Now, spurred by an enquiring journalist Faith pieces together the mosaic of passion and pain which brought her aunt to take a knife in her hand. * ee « More crime and suspense are packed into the savagely comic Prizzi’s Family by Richard Condon. Companion to the best-selling novel and smash hit movie Prizzi's Honor this novel tells the story of what happened gangland royalty in the late ‘60s the years Honor. We meet Charlie Partanna, the hit man in love with love, the devious Maerose Prizzi, in love with power, and the doddering Don Corrado, in love with the honor of his family. As we know, this family is busy with gambling, extortion, narcotics, prostitution but very honorable! * 6 6 Dorothy Dunnet has a fanatical following for her superb, historically accurate novels of the 16th century. Her latest novel Niccolo Rising is the start of a new series set in Europe in the 15th century. Niccolo Rising opens up ona world seething with a spirit of adventure, in which a man with wit and bravado can make the world his oyster Niccolo, the hero, is such a man, a young entrepreneur on the brink of discovering a secret which will bring him unimaginable affluence and power. But who is he? And what has he to do with a small brokerage company and its widowed owner Marian and her blundering young ward, Claes? . . . PROMOTION NIGHT . presents Castlegar air cad A new Peter De Vries is a real antidote to November blahs and, as his long term readers know is “a passport to the land of laughter and human vulnerability.” In Peckham's Marbles, De Vries introduces Earl Peckham, the author of a relentlessly highbrow novel which sells only three copies. Gnawed by the frustration of his failure with women and driven bu curiosity, Peckham sets out across the America’s heartland to find his three readers. On the way, he meets Poppy McCloud and autographing copies of her best-selling first novel, published by his own laggard publisher and which is trash in his condescending eye. Their affair is rife with mis. understanding and the sparks fly. . 8 6 As American's most dazzling ballerina, Gelsey Kirk land enraptured audiences all over the globe. Then the high pressures of the world of dance drove her to drug addiction and suicidal despair. In Dancing on My Grave, she reveals the harshness of Balanchine's regime, the torment that lay behind her legendary partnership with Mikhail Baryshnikov. Branded a rebel by the ballet companies and estranged from Baryshnikov, she began a descent into drug addiction which ended with her con finement in a mental institution. How she fought her way back to a tr . Otticer cadet Joe Robertson s with Leading Air Crat- tsman badges at promotion night held recently. Cadets receive awards Castlegar Squadron No. 581 Royal Canadian Air Cadets attended a special parade Nov. 5 at the Stanley Humphries secondary school activity room where they were presen with proficiency awards, camp certificates and promotions. Special guests attending the ceremoney were Mayor Audrey Moore, Dennis Tucker, president Royal Canadian Legion, SHSS princiap! Gordon Shead and Castlegar RCMP Cpl. Dave Day. They were joined by friends and relatives of the cadets. The Squadron Commanding officer, Capt. Trevor Smith, was unable to attend due to illness. Acting on his behalf was Officer Cadet Joe Robertson. The officers, cadets and sponsoring committee extended wishes to Trevor Smith for a speedy recovery. Officer Cadet Joe Robertson and Bob Harker presented the proficiency badges to the following cadets: First Year Proficiency — ACs Peggy Bacon, Trevor Bush, D. Christensen, K. Dubord, S.R. Graham, I. Moore, G. Scott and K. Sperling. Second Year Proficiency — J. Vandenploug, J. Verhauge, M. Thommes, C. Sperling, J. Rowsell, A. Robertson and J. Burgess. Third Year Proficiency — Sean Bacon. Fourth Year Proficiency — Deanna Neumann and Diana Churches. Fifth Year — B. Halliwell. Jan Neumann, chairperson of the Parent Sponsoring Committee, presented the following camp certificates: Basic Camp — P. Bacon, T. Bush, L. Crowe, D. Lewis and G. Scott Junior Leaders Course — ACs D. Christensen and C. Sperling. Air Traffic Controller — Fit. Sgt. Deana Neumann. The highlight of the evening was the presentatiions of the personal promotions. Officer Cadet Joe Robertson return, with the loving support of her husband and co-author Greg Lawrence, sounds more like romantic fiction but it's all true. * 2* 8 Carol Burnett sat down one day to write a letter to her daughters, telling them about her childhood as she didn't want them to be as ignorant of their background as she had been about hers. The letter grew and grew until it became a book. One More Time is the recollection of her early years, often full of painful events, the memory of| which threatened to overwhelm her until she got them written down. She grew up in the non-glittering side of| Hollywood, in a Depression scarred neighborhood with a Christian Scientist, hypochondriac grandmother who had a buried past. Her parents were divorced alcoholics. Burnett adored her family and found it a source of security and love, despite all outward appearances pr d the f g cades with their promotions to Leading Aircraftsman — ACs P. Bacon, T. Bush, D. Christensen, L. Crowe, K. Dubord, S. R. Graham, R. Kerkhoff, T. Roberts, G.V. Scott and K. Sperling. Student wins awar Castlegar resident James Zibin, a student at the Uni- versity of Victoria, was among 1,200 scholarship and award winners recently re cognized by the university at its annual awards ceremony. Zibin received the John L. Climenhaga Scholarship of SMALL BUSINESS ACCOUNTING COMPUTERIZED FINANCIAL STATEMEN: TS: For monegement or tex purposes TUTORING: Set-up 10 interpretonon. monvel or compurdt systems 15 Plus Yeors Experience to Help Y OFFICE AID s4s-sose $1,200. Bridge results Eight tables of duplicate bridge players competed at the Joy Ramsden Bridge Club on Nov. 10 Average bridge score was 84 with the following plac NORTH-SOUTH First — Myrna Baulne and Selkirk College BREBARUNG tel Gordon Shead presented Sargeant’s strips to corporals J. Burgess and A. Robertson. Mayor Audrey Moore presented Fit. Sgt. stripes to Sgt. Sean Bacon. These awards are for the ranks decided on by the commanding officer, the other officers, the cadets neos and the sponsoring committee. The next promotion, to the rank of Warrant Officer 2nd class, is decided by the Air Cadet League on dation from the C ding Officer and by the results achieved in several difficult tests. In announcing the promotion of Fit. Sgt. Diana Churches to the rank of Warrant Officer 2nd Class, Officer Cadet Robertson pointed out that the squadron was particularily proud of her accomplishment as Churches had completed her tests on short notice, under extenuating circumstances and had achieved very good marks. Dennis Tucker, president Royal Canadian Legion, presented this promotion to Fit. Sg. Churches. Following the presentations the guests, parents and friends were invited for refreshments provided by the Parent Sponsoring Committee. (“hs 4. -F ~/C> 1338 Cedar Ave. + Automatic relocation + Repeat key for all characters and functions HOMEGOODS FURNITURE WAREHOUSE Tues.-Sat., 9:30-5:30 China Creek “Drive a Little to Save a Lot” comme BONE O°" ooen sundays 10.2. -5 pm. Prices effective Syn, Mon., Tues. & Wed. pe wed Oe TANGCRYSTALS $429 ORANGE FLAVORED. 3 POUCH TRISCUITS ‘CHRIS TIES. We reserve the right to limit quantities Prices limited to stock on hand. “The leader in Transformation Technology”’ Save up to 20% on Selected Models. Reg. 249.95. Now 2 l 9” brother CENTRAL FOODS Swor-kasy€ UNION PETERS SALES AND SERVICE Phone 368-6331 You Don’t Have to Cook Tonight .. . Just Call Us! We'll deliver right to your door! At no extra charge OPEN HOUSE — Campus Tours — Door Prizes — Classroom/lab visits — Informative displays — Opportunity to talk to counsellors, faculty, staff CASTLEGAR CAMPUS BOBCAT Nov. 21 SERVICES 7-9 p.m. LTD. Nov. 22 * LANDSCAPING 10 a.m. -3 p.m. * BACKHOE Ph. 365-7292 + GRAVEL © SAND GRAND FORKS CENTRE CRESCENT VALLEY CENTER Nov. 20, 3-5 p.m Nov. 20, 2-6 p.m ro ym © TOPSOML © TURF 5 ° FIREWOOD iy MIDWAY CENTER NAKUSP CENTER KASLO CENTER 95 Nov. 19, 7-9 p.m. Nov. 20, 3-6:30 p.m. Nov. 20, 1-3 p.m. Reg 559.95. Now Dr. Ron Perrier 103; Second cansetie pasar — Donna Wiwcehar and Hu. febons bert Hunchak 89'2; Third — Dave and Margaret Thiel 88. EAST-WEST First Wayne Weaver and Ian Glover 100’; tied for second with 92‘ were Bill Gorkoff and George Reshaur, and Don Ellison and Lori McWatters. (e =>) L&M Model AX12 g% Financing A oro YE" Model CE40 + 96 character keyboard * Buritan handle and keyboard co-er Reg. 399.95. Now NELSON CAMPUS Nov. 21 6-9p.m. Ph. 352-6601 TRAIL CAMPUS Nov. 20 10 a.m. - 2p.m. Ph. 368-5236 > She and lid cover in correction system compatibte with co Nes avaiable including imternatonal ANTHONY’S PIZZA & STEAK HOUSE 1101 - 2nd Street, Castlegar CALL 365-2188 Free Delivery throughout Castlegar! Hourly or Contract 365-3467 OR MOBILE 498826 WL ABOVE ORDERS INCLUDE: * Salad © Stuffed Potato and * Vegetables Mon. to Thurs. 11 a.m. -2.a.m. Fri. & Sot. 11 a.m. - 4 a.m. Sunday 12 Neon - 11 p.m. Pe Fost & Efficient College & institute Week Service We all carry Brother Typewriter Accessories Nov. 16 - 22 '. such as: ribbons, c , daisy wheels & correcting ribbons.