“ AG CASTLEGAR NEWS, May 26, 1982 WOODEN SHOE RESTAURANT International Cuisine ina Dutch Setting Mon. « Sat. 5 p.m. to Mi Sunday 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. Closed Tuesdays. Below the Nelson Bridge onNelson Avenue Telephone woe 2798 4 The Amplifier and PA System Leader of the Kootenays . “SALES AND RENTALS” 840 Rossland Ave. 364-2922 Trall Libra Music Entertainment Community TV CABLE WEST 10 ACCESS TELEVISION Channel ne Thureday 5:25—Sign- 5: 30—The | Senior Chef. Part 8. This series of pro- grams is produced by the department .of health and deals‘ with meal preparation for senior citizens, pre- sented by Dr. Monty . Arnott director of the West Health Unit. 6:00—“Dance’ Me a Story’ — Year end recital by ie students of dancer, Lynnette Lightfoot. 6:30—Trail Silver City Days Queen Candidates Fa- shion Show —. taped May 11. 8:30—1981. USCC Youth Festival. — Part 3. This series represents one day of this festi- val which took place in Grand Forks in May 1981. 9:30—Castlegar city council meeting of May 25. 11:00—Sign-off. Kootenay || i E UYNNETTE LIGHTFOOT has trained: many young Castlegar dancers as well @s teaching dance at David Thompson University ‘in Nelson. Her students perform their year-end | recital Thursday at 6 p.m, on Channel 10. George Lindsé Lindsey Jack-of-all-trades By JERRYBUCK | LOS ANGELES (AP) — Hee Haw, one of television's HENNE TRAVEL TOURS JULY 10 — Reno Bus Tour, 7-Day JULY 24 — Reno Bus Tour, 7-Day $259 Shos ‘Staying at Pick Hobson's Riverside Prices are per person. Disneyland IN THE SUMMER JULY 17 DEPARTS We visit: % Disneyland * Knotts ay Farm * Sea World or the San Diego Zoo and more. FOR MORE INFORMATION Ph. 368-5595 | HENNE TRAVEL 1410 Bay Ave. tiost l weekly syn- dicated shows, is’ taking its ' music and corn on the road. The Hee Haw stage show was tried out in southern California and Washington state and will visit Virginia, West Virginia and North Caroline in May. “It's simply one hour of Hee Haw, the songs and the sketches, just the way we do it on the air,” says George SUNSET DRIVE-IN Radlo Sound Theatre Fri., Sat. & Sun. | May 28, 29, 30 o ee Caveman Lindsey, a co-star of the show for the last 12 years. “I do the special guest spot at the end of the stage show. It’s part of my night club act.” Hee Haw is a television phenomenon. CBS hastily threw’ it on the air in June, 1969, after cancelling The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour. It was meant only as a summer show, but it was so popular the network brought it back. It was finally axed by CBS in July, 1981. SYNDICATE SHOW The producers hocked | everything they owned to put the show into syndication —a smart move, since Hee Haw is now seen 52 weeks a year on 200 stations in Can- ada and the U.S. Lindsey, ‘perhaps best nown as Goober from The - “ Ahdy...Griffith ‘Show and Mayberry ] RFD, says: “I'm a ALSO Deadly Blessings (Restricted) . 9:15 p.m. on Hee Haw.’ Ido my own wardrobe, I write my.own material. I've been given carte blanche, or, as we say on Hee Haw, carte grits. Ido my ‘savers — that's what you do to save a joke. I pour milk over my head or LAURA GEMSER ‘lle “QUEEN OF SADOS. STARTS AT 8: 25pm/. ‘We don’t make any bones about the material being terrific.” Hee Haw, which is taped in Nashville, takes up only a small part of Lindsey's life. He has a nightclub act in Las Vegas and Lake Tahoe, his own celebrity golf tourna- ment, he has a comedy album just out, he recently taped a special for cable TV, and he makes frequent guest ap- pearances on such shows as M-A-S-H_ and Herbie the Love Bug. “I seem to play a lot of cowboys now that I’ve aged gracefully,” he says. “When I first came out here, I played a lot of villains on Gunsmoke and a lot of other shows. CANNES, FRANCE {CP) — Though the flags of nations still flutter ‘atop the festival palace, it has become increasingly evi- dent at the 36th Cannes Film Festival that movies should not be asked to compete for home coun: tries like Olympic athletes. What one is seeing at Cannes is the extent to which movies have become atruly international forum | for art and industry. Os- tensibly, the Americans have’ four of the 22 movies in official competition, yet only Smithereens, by first- timer Susan Seidelman, is the work of an American «director. | The movie Missing, a tale of American involve- ment in the 1973 coup in Chile, was financed by Hollywood and has Amer- iean stars Jack Lemmon _ and Sissy Spacek, and even drew the ire of the U.S. MISSING termine .a film's national- Film festival Attitudes changing A tale of American invaltemany in the 1973 coup in Chile starring Jack Lemmon and Sissy Spacek which drew the ire of the U.S. State Department. Coming to the Castle Theatre June 23 to 26. competition do not do their ' "The other French film is State Department. Yet Missing is above all the movie of Costa Gavras, a Greek director who lives in France and whose 1969 movie Z put the contem- porary political thriller on the movie map. The others to run under. the American flag are the Diane Keaton-Albert Fin- ney movie, Shoot the Moon, directed by Eng- land’s Alan Parker; and Hammett, a movie about detective fiction writer Dashiell Hammett marking the first American: movie by Wim Wenders, one of the most directorial talents cinema. \_ Several factors can de- of the new West German . ity, but increasingly the decisive factor seems to be who put up the money. Cannes, which prides it- self on Gallic good taste, now is trying to downplay a movies’ nationality. Actress Geraldine Chap- lin, the only woman mem- ber’of this year's Cannes jury, says she, for one, is pleased with the changing attitude. “It’s nice to know that a film doesn’t represent a country the way it used to,” said Chaplin. But the influential French critics still treat Cannes like a cinema Olym- pics: They are in an uproar because they believe the three French films in the national industry justice. Moreover, only one of the French films is direc- * ted by a Frenchman & Gerard Guerin's Douce en- quete -sur la violence (Sweet Study of Violence), a film about a terrorist kidnapping of a financier. The other French films in competition are by an Italian and American dir- ector. Italian director Peter Del Monte's Invitation au voyage, the haunting story of what happens toa young man when the twin. sister he loves and idolizes dies in a freak accident, is one of the few movies shown so far at the festival to de- serve to be called exqui- site. A toute allure, a one-hour film by longtime American in Paris, Robert Kramer, that is set in the world of professional roller skating. Ed. Note: The U.S. film Missing by Greek director Costa Gavras and the Turkish film Yo) directed by Yimaz Guney and Sherif Goren shared the top Gol- den Palm Award at the Cannes Film Festival to- day. Jack Lemmon won the best actor prize for his role -in Missing and Polish star Jadwiga Jankowska Cies- lak took the best actress award for her part in the Hungarian film Another Way. . Tops as rock.manager. “VANCOUVER (CP) — Bruce Allen has been called a Tot of things: the Mouth that Roared, the Ayatollah of Rock, even - the Muhammad Ali of rock 'n’ roll. But after 15 years in the business, Allen, 36, is one of the best rock managers around. “Bruce Allen has the best ears in North America for Where are you? Sudbury? Listen, send’ ‘em an (expletive) telegram right now. He'll have it on the doorstep Monday. Over the years, Allen has been compensated for sorting out problems like that. He estimates his personal worth to be “in the seven figures.” He owns a renovated, music,” says Norman Perry, a former who recently moved to Toronto. “He seems to lock i in with tomorrow's music today ... He’s demanding, he' 's aggressive and he's a man of his word.” But Allen js perturbed when he is called Canada’s hottest rock manager. “Why is it always just Canada?” he complains, “I've got to be one of the top three managers in North America. You know, guys say to me, ‘You're very lucky. Some guys are never able to have a rock act even once.’ But we've taken two acts from the ground up, from the basement up.” He did it first in the early 1970s with Bachman Turner Overdrive. Now he’s done it with Loverboy. There are indications that two other acts, Bryan Adams and Prism, may follow, HAVE GREAT TUNES ; The latest three acts are sitting in the Top 10 of American radio charts. Allen talks of luck, but mostly he credits bands 380-sq ‘tre home in Point Grey worth an estimated $800,000. The walls of his living room are adorned with the 65 gold and platinum albums won by his groups, as well as 16 Juno awards. Two ‘garish, life-size Elvis busts from Mexico serve as bookends for his substantial — and favorite — ‘Presley record collection. He also has a huge collection’ of ‘60s records and early ‘60s soul LPs. He hated the Beatles when they came out — still does — and he ignored the psychedelic era. & WANTS GRETZKY His current favorites in music are Shakin’ Stevens and Van Morrison — he's working on the North American management rights to Stevens, and‘has always wanted to manage Morrison (he also confesses he'd like to manage Wayne Gretzky). For relaxation, Allen likes action sports — watching and Donald ; Selma Sheldon. You can However, his ‘candidacy isn’t Badgley's only claim to fame. In fact, in the U.8, he is much better known for his new calendar which ‘is based on six days in the ., week, five weeks in every ;month, 80. days in every month and 12 months in a i year — every month being*. “Identical. Badgley calls-it (modest- ly enough)’ “the perfect ‘calendar.” ~~ present calendar is based on the sun and is an im- perfect 865 %4 days each year, while the Hebrew calendar is based on the moon and has 364 days, that fellow with the long gray hair, beard and crook seen walking the streets of Castlegar late last week i was none oper than one-time Us. Presidential candidate HE MAY HAVE ‘Tooked ‘a little: Ik Moses (and in one sense he is spreading the word), ue modern-day leased 60th annual report shows ‘Castlegar residents ' swallowed a total of $2.5 million in booze from April 1, 1981 to March, 81, 1882. Taking an estimated city population of 6,840, that means on average we spent $365 on quor for every man, or and child.’ drank a total of $8.5: The 63-year-old former insurance salesman from , Poughkeepsie, New York was in town to visit his niece, be ‘forgiven: if you don’t remember Badgley, but he ran for the U.S. presidency on ; the Republican ticket in the last general election. He told Street Talk he first‘got the idea to run in a 1968 “vision.” ‘“At that time I thought it was “ridiculous,” he says. He explained that the i DONALD BADGLEY His calendar is based on the earth or the circle — as he says “the truth” — and has 360 days. Badgley says the * idea came to him “through a revelation.” He now spends, his days new calendar, g around the CASTLEGAR DRINKERS take a back seat to no one — at least according to the latest figures from. the Liquor Distribution Branch. The Ltoeyes recently re- THE oes Trall valligs worth of liquor — or: about $850 for every man, woman and child. Samples of other area liquor stores show Nakusp sold $941,500 in liquor, New, Denver, $824,500, Kaslo, $548,500 and Rossland $893,900. And for the province as a whole? We consumed 59.1 million gallons of spirits, wine and beer last year, down slightly from 62.9 million gallons the year before. But net {neoms increased to $280.4 million from $224.1 foillion the ar before. i a weil drink ;to that! CONGRATULATIONS reporter Ray Masleck who. won the Jack Wasserman Memorial Journalism award this year fora 1981 series of articles on real estate transactions. the award in a ceremony at the newsman's club May 29. The Wasserman award goes to a junior reporter for ‘community. related stories'and was established by friends goes out to ‘Trail Times Masleck. will receive of the d list and ; THE ANNUAL COOK BOOK supplement prepared and distributed | by the Castlegar News continues to be popular. Mrs. W.O. (Grace) Devitt of Trail reports going ‘finding recipes for some through it and successfully. + baking. * Grace and her late husband Bill lived in Castlegar ' from Ci 1988 to 1965. When he = engineering division in 1965, they moved to Bridesville for two years, and then to Grand. Forks. It. was in Grand Forks that Bill passed away. Grace then moved to’ Warfield, in the ry area of Trail. ‘retired from CASTLEGAR NEWS, May 26, 1982 A7 Ban on extra billing By STEVE KERSTETTER OTTAWA (CP) — Federal Helath Minister Monique Be- gin. repeated today her call for a ban on extra billing by doctors under medicare and an end to other kinds of user charges. In a statement ‘to a fed- eral-provincial meeting of health ministers, Begin said extra billing is contrary to the spirit of medicare and a ban is essential for the pres- our prepaid health-care sys- " ervation of public health. tem.’ care insurance. “I would hope that all of us can agree that we must take steps to eliminate extra bill- ing,” she said. “We agree with the widely held view that if this practice continues to spread. it will seriously threaten accessi- bility and gradually erode ‘Falklands Begin provided few details of federal hopes to get rid of other kinds of user charges, but she spoke out specifically against the daily charges for hospital rooms levied in some provinces, Federal official said Ot- tawa does not intend to push for an outright ban on daily ‘hospital charges. Mandate given UNITED NATIONS (CP) — The UN Security Council gave Secretary General Ja- vier Perez de Cuellar a man- date today to renew hic mediation efforts to end the Falkland Islands war be- Jordan, Togo, Uganda and Zaire —. the. resolution re- quested the secretary © gen- eral “to undertake a renewed mission ... with a view to negotiating mutually. accep- table terms for a ceasefire, before renting a very Grace Devitt was a very active. community worker during her years here. She spent some time working for .. the post affice, but is best remembered for her work with the IODE (Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire), the Air Raid Warning group, and the St. David's Anglican Church Altar Guild. Another former Castlegar resident, Mary Ganbana, has a suite.in the same apartment block as Mrs. Devitt. ".Mrs.:Gabana and her late husband Tony lived in Castlegar from 1942 to 1953. He passed away 29 years ago, while still working at Cominco. Mrs. Gabana’s three sons, Joe, Norman and Raymond, all live in Trail and work for Cominco, with Norman being . Trail’s senior alderman on city council. and Ann Dower live in an tween and Britain. The ion, passed un- animously in the:15-member Council, contained no cease- fire requirement ‘and thus avoided a British veto. _ Jojntly sponsored by six + countries —Guyana, Ireland, if 5 for the dispatch ot United: Nations observ- onthe secretary general is requested to submit an: in- and not later than seven days from the adoption of the resolution, Both countries were urged to co-operate with the sec- retary general “with a view to ending the present hos- ar- . tilities.” The resolution is a wa- tefed-down compromise after Britain said it would veto any resolution calling for a truce while Argentine forces re- main on the South Atlantic However, Ottawa is prop- osing that federal cash pay- ments to the provinces be re- duced by the amount of any daily charges collected. Begin’s position paper on medicare also included the following proposals: — Governments should ‘work out some practical me- chanicms to ensure that doc- tors get reasonable com- * pensation..for their services —a proposal put forward asa way of ending the ever- increasing contract disputes between provinces and their medical associations. — Provincial governments should guarantee that all residents who qualify for medicare have access to in- sured services ~ even if they are in arrears in their pre- mium payments in provinces which still charge monthly medicare premiums, — The federal government. will consider the possibility of financial sanctions against provinces which don’t live up to the new ground rules for medicare. — Nursing-home care and care at home should:be cov- ered by.medicare in all pro- terim report to the Security Council as soon as possible archipelago. vinces by some unspecified future time. BEAVER VALLEY DAYS May 28, 29, 30 COATS A wHEK monrn JODAYEIN A MONTH . PERFECT CALENDAR rest car | HOonODAY onwoay Sam building near Mra. Devitt and Mrs. Gabana. Sam and Ann moved to Trail some years ago, but have lived in several places (including Christina Lake and Genelle) before returning to Trail. Their Barbara, who graduated from Stanley 1|2 5 7|8 NW 13 | 14 7 19:|:2051. FEE Humphries, here, is married to Geoff Pincott, who used to work at the Castle Theatre while going to high school, Geoff and Barb live in Vancouver where Geoff is with the Vancouver Public Library. Barb, a nurse, enjoys keeping a home for Geoff and ‘their two sons, And another name from the Devitt-Gabana era is that | of Bob Sommers. Bob was. principal a