yy. Castlegar News september 13, 1987 ENTERTAINMENT BBER STAMPS Made to Order CASTLEGAR NEWS 197 Columbia Ave. Phone 365-7266 MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL GOLF PACKAGE FROM VANCOUVER Jan. 23 to Palm Visit the Scenic Slocan Valley! Homestyle Cooking . . and tickets to: PGA BOB HOPE CLASSIC Lots’ SOUP AND SANDWICH SHOP end More! Return Jon. 31 at $ in the SLOCAN MOTEL Pr/Quap in downtown Slocan 365-6616 For more intormotion gel! VIVIAN LORNE GREENE DIES OF PNEUMONIA SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP-CP) — Lorne Greene “was Ben Cartwright to the end,” Michael Landon said after the death of his former Bonanza. co-star, the firm but Presents BEAVER VALLEY FIDDLERS FRI., SEPT. 18 & SAT., SEPT. 19 LICENCED, DINING ROOM OPEN 4P.M. DAILY He ED mimeo vOUCrans ACCEPTED. is Conmtinonee vations for Private Parties — 365-3294 Located one mile south of Weigh Scales in Ootischenia. SEPTEMBER SPECIAL RIMP DINNER Salod, Your Choice of dressing. Jumbo Shrimps JoJo's & Vegetable. Regular $7.95 2 FOR Vinten semen tem 65-8155 Tes. re DUNDAYS 7 sam 3pm 1004 Cohimbia Ave., Castlegar This Week in DEXTER’S PUB WED. THRU SAT. Sept. 16 to 19 Eclipse Fetches le INN 1944 Columbia Ave. father on one of television's most popular series. The Ottawa-born Greene died Friday, aged 72, at St. John's Hospital, where he had developed penumonia after surgery Aug. 19 on a perfophted ulcer. Tye cause of death was oieatary arrest followed by cardiac arrest, the hospi tal said. With Greene when he died were his second wife, Nancy, their daughter, and twins from his first marriage. “He was ready, with no complaints,” Landon said. “The last time I saw him he couldn't speak,” said Landon, who portrayed Cartwright’s youngest son, Little Joe. “IT took his hand in mine and held it. He looked at me and then slowly started to arm wrestle like we used to and he broke into a smile and nodded and everything was OK.” “Lorne Green had a pro- found influence on all those who came in contact with him, both personally and professionally,” said CTV president Murray Chercover “He was the mentor and “Let the little children come unto me,” Jesus said Sunday School is a good way to help this happen. Your children are most welcome at $t. David's Church School Sundays at 10am ST. DAVID'S ANGLICAN CHURCH (Between the Turbo & Mohawk Debra Tompkins SCHOOL OF DANCE Will be Accepting New Students Aged 4-8 Years for the Fall Semester! Debra is a member of the Scottish Dance Teaches Alliance recently valified as an adjudicator for the Scot fish Official Board of Highland Dancing Classes begin Sept. 21 365-2883 a Castlegar United Church helping hand to many young Canadians in their formative years. His work as a teacher and his pfofessional career a barrel-chested man with white hair, bushy black eyebrows and a deep, resonant voice, began his career as a newscaster in Canada, where he was born to Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe. “VOICE OF DOOM’ Canadians followed the progress of the Second World War through his nightly newscasts, for which he ac- quired’ the nickname the Voice of Doom, and the Can- ada Carries On series which he narrated. After the war, he started a SPINNING AND WEAVING . . . The West Kootenay school for broad ers which, though financially un- successful, gave basic train ing to many Canadian per sonalities who now are well known. His acting aspirations led him to performances at the Stratford Festival and on Broadway, but he was still a little-known actor in the U.S. when he was cast for the NBC series in 1959. After a shaky start, Bo- nanza gained an audience estimated at 400 million people in 80 countries. NBC cancelled the show in 1973, but the 431 episodes will be seen in reruns for years to come. After Bonanza finished its 14-year run, Greene took on a variety of other TV roles, playing a detective in Griff, a space commander in Battle- star Galactica and a fire chief in Code Red. He also appeared in the New Wilderness series on CTV. NEC is p By A Thread”, a new exhibit featuring pieces produced by the Selkirk Spinners and Weavers Guild. Above, Tricia Rasku (left) of Rossland and Donna Konkin of Castlegar discuss their works. — Coaniews Photo by Chery! Colderbonk Fall T.V. is deja vu By DAVE LANG Canadian VANCOUVER — If you get a feeling of deja vu while browsing through the new fall television lineup, it's under- standable. You have seen some of the names before. Twenty-one years ago, to be exact. The fall lineup includes a new series called Star Trek and another called The Monkees. There are also shows starring Ron Ely and Dale Robertson. In the fall of 1966 there were also new series called Star Trek and The Monkees and new shows starring Ron Ely and Dale Robertson. To be fair, the 1987 version of the Starship Enterprise and crew is called Star Trek: The Next Generation. There are different stars, but with the same mission to boldly go where no man — or Vulcan — has gone before. The simian romp is properly titled The New Monkees, with fresh faces but the same comic-music bent. At least this show has evolved somewhat from its predecessor — the new Monkees can play their instruments. Twenty-one years ago, Ron Ely swung onto the screens in a loincloth as the TV version of Tarzan. This fall he's splashing around in a wetsuit as the lead in the new Sea Hunt series. In 1966, Dale Robertson rode the rails in a western called The Iron Horse. This fall he'll be cruising around in a 1964 Lincoln convertible solving crimes as J.J. Starbuck. Both Sea Hunt and Starbuck were filmed in British Columbia. The similarities in — seasons don't end there. Viewers this fall will be dealt a series called Full House, in which three young single men find themselves tending three children. In 1966 it was Family Affair, in which two older single men (Brian Keith and Sebastian Cabot) found them- selves tending three children. There are also some major differences between the seasons. In 1966, 10 westerns were on U.S. television, not counting comedies. This year the closest you get to a western is Dennis Weaver wearing cowboy boots as surgeon Buck James. Weaver, of course was still limping along as Chester in Gunsmoke 21 years ago. The 1966 season had U.S. television offering 11 variety shows with hosts like Ed Sullivan, Milton Berle, Danny Kaye and Jackie Gleason. This year there's only one, as Dolly Parton stars in her own variety show. Only a few shows survive from 1966 — Walt Disney, the CBC's Front Page Challenge, and Jerry Lewis's annual Muscular Dystrophy telethon. COMMUNITY NEWS SUNDAY SCHOOL For Children 3 years and up Starts Sun., Sept. 13—10a.m. 2224-6th Ave., Castlegar BABYSITTING SERVICE AVAILABLE. Gallery offers new exhibits Beginning Sept. 22 the Grand Forks Art Gallery presents three new exhibi tions: Colette Nilsen: Recent Paintings; Seigfreid Noestal ler: Photographie En and The 1987 Stan Sponsored by Robson NO ADVANCE TICKETS Tickets at the Door $9.00. Arena Complex EARLY BIRDS 6 p.m. ¢ REGULAR GAMES: 7 p.m. River Otters Payout COMMUNITY Bulletin Board CHRISTIAN WOMEN'S CLUB Thursday, September 17, 7:30 p.m. Sandman Inn. Reser vations 365-8025 2/72 CANCER INFORMATION MEETING 7:30 p.m., Monday. Sept, 14, Castlegar Health Unit back door. Free Movie "I'm Not Superman You Know 272 30TH ANNIVERSARY TEA Castlegar and District Hospital Auxiliary 30th Anniver sary Tea to be held on the Hospital grounds on Wed. nesdoy, September 16, 1987. 1:30 10 4.00 p.m. The Public is Cordially invited to attend. NORTH CASTLEGAR BROWNIE, GUIDE AND PATHFINDER REGISTRATION Monday, September 14, 7:00 p.m. at Guide-Scout Hall 3rd Street and Bth Av: ven Robson Brownie. Sulde and esday 7:00 p.m at Resker Hall. $20.00 Tatonts MUST register girls thot night 371 THE ROBSON RIVERS CASH BINGO Saturday September 19 at Castlegar Arena Complex % Payouts. There will be no advance tickets. E.B. 6:00 er m. Reg. 7:00 p.m. Admission at the door will be $9 2/73 CASTLEGAR FIGURE SKATING CLUB skate Bodge 9 and priv DELAYED PAYMENT ACCEPTED FOR COMINCO WORKERS (post-dated cheque). Post-dated cheques olso accepted for Jon.-Morch portion of seoson One a week badge skoting will be oltered 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 1s seventy five percent and the fourth consecutive insertion 1s halt price charge is $3.75 (whether ad 1s for one, two times). Deadlines are 5 pm thursdays for Sundays poper and 5 p.m. Mondays tor Wednesdays paper Rehces should be brought to the Costlegar News at 197 Columbia Ave COMMUNITY Bulictin Board Upstairs in Trail’s Towne Square increase 1 No. Lic.'s 58525, 60671, 57767, 58836, 58084, 62219 PLAY FOR A TRIP FOR 2 TO RENO PLUS $400 CASH EVERY NIGHT! Bonanza Pot 'O Gold, 56's or less. Mon., Sept. 14, per $1000 JACKPOT PAYOUTS EVERY FRIDAY. $1000 EXPRESS PAYOUTS EVERY SUNDAY. for $500 if not won! +300, +400, Fri., Sept. 18 $ ] 0 Guaranteed in Jackpots rinirwn ® 100 $200 &' *100 Panty nROS a ALL SPECIALS GUARANTEED EXPRESS PAYOUTS Saturday, Sept. 19 Regular Jackpots ‘600 “Everyone Picks for Lucky Dobber Cash” $] Call 364-0933 Sunday, Sept. 13 $1500: BLACKOUTS Jackpots of $250, $750, $300 & $200 ley Boxer Workshop. The opening reception to meet the artists is at 7:30 - 10 p.m. Sept. 22. The exhibi. Colette Nilsen’s large can- vasses deal with the process of paint and painting, and the interaction of color, texture, shape, and line derived from the hurhan figure Her love of drawing is ex pressed consistently throughout her work, whether the marks are ap- plied on the surface in linear areas with dry pastel or oil stick. The line may be bold or subtle, but is used in direct response to the painting's color and form to create a unity of sensuous expression Seigfreid Noetstaller's ex hibition of large color photo- graphs is mainly of people of Peru, resulting from Noet- staller's recent two-month visit to South America. The 1987 Stanley Boxer Workshop is experimental works from participants of a painting workshop held at the Grand Forks Art Gallery in January, 1987. Boxer is an internationally known painter and sculptor from New York whose en- thusiasm greatly touched the 12 workshop participants. Selected works are by the following artists: Arvilla Lin- ley, Colette Nilsen, Richard Reid, Kay Senay, Faith Welsh of Grand Forks; Alf Crossley of Pass Creek, Pam Baker of Crescent Valley; Mousi Tchir of South Slocan; Pat Freschi of Trail; Colleen Meneer of Kelowna; Jack Stanley of Summerland; and Seka Owen of Edmonton. Colette Nilsen is the Cur- ator of this exhibition. Shalom Dance Theatre comes to Kootenay Coming in September is a unique cultural treat for the West Kootenay in the form of the Shalom Dance Theatre of Vancouver. This dance group has a varied repertoire of dances which portray the di- verse backgrounds and cult ural heritage of the Jewish people: traditional Israeli, Chassidic, Yeminite, and modern Israeli. Performing along with the Shalom Dance Theatre will $30 Early Bird $25 Special $20 reguiar Game be Alisa Kort, a Vancouver singer and actress. A vers- atile performer, Kort has ap- peared in musicals, plays and revues in theatres across and the United She has created her own concert of Israeli Art Songs that she has produced and performed in Vancouver and is now taking on tour through communities in B.C. Her accompanist is Jeannie Corsi, also of Vancouver. Corsi has been involved all of her life with music. Amongst her many credits are original performances in Europe and original and adapted music for contemporary dance companies in Canada and the United States. The Kootenay Jewis Cult ural Association is bringing these performers to Nelson Sept. 19 at Central School. An Israeli folk dance work shop is scheduled for Sept. 20. Friday, Sept. 18 Blackout John Charters . Reflections & recollections The story of Zuckerberg Island Heritage Park is bound up with the story of its signs; explicit (“Circle Walk,” “Chapel House” or “no bicycles”) or implicit (new gardens and flowers, improvements to the house or park, new éxhibits which indicate that effort and imagination have been invested.) When the city bought the island in 1981 it posted “Private Property, No Trespassing” signs at which points of the compass, which were probably not only illegal but totally ineffective in that all of the law abiding citizens stayed away from the island, depriving it of what little protection it did have and providing an irrestible challenge to the “baddies” who had a field day vandalizing the chapel house and surroundings. When the Castlegar Rotary Club started its park project in 1983, the college crew quietly removed the offending signs and replaced them with simple hand-pre- pared ones indicating what was being done. Vandalism declined sharply, and the number of visitors increased considerably. The first permanent sign was the park name and project sign made by craftsman Gordie Hill from a of solid cedar donated by Pete Oglow, president of the Kootenay Doukhobor Historical Society. It was erected at the park entrance and represented a long and of mutual support and cooperation. Other signs, first hand-done to guide the visitors and identify the project, then replaced’ by permanent markers, appeared on’ the paths, tables and benchés. ‘They marked the growing line between visitors, local and out of town, and the concept of the island as a people place where individuals or families could relax, learn and restore their soul. When the river rose and barred access other than by boat signs were posted warning of the danger. Two visitors ignored the warning and almost drowned. By Labor Day 1983 the first phase of the park project was completed and hand lettered directional signs were posted at strategic points leading to the island. Mayor Audrey Moore and Rotary president John Kennedy officially dedicated the island as a park and several hundred visitors found their way to join them. The visitors left but the temporary signs remained while their WARNING SIGN . . . Former Stanley Humprhies secondary school student Gail Seaton Moore displays poison ivy sign which has been posted on Zuckerberg Island. — Costtews Photo by John Charters And the signs have continued: The construction of the Kukuli at the end of the bridge linking college community to the island, the past to the present (it, too, will shortly have an explicit sign), the steady improve- ments to the landscaping of the island and the house, the of the Friends of the Island with their blue permanet got tied up in for two years before being posted — in inadequate numbers. At the same time the Zuckerberg Island Historical Restoration Report was published (another kind of sign) and the Castlegar Heritage Advisory Committee was created with myself as chairman to help carry out its recommendations, which included the restoration of the much vandalized chapel house. By the end of 1983 an, for a g ion grant of $42,000 had been submitted to the British Columbia Heritage Branch in Victoria. The Rotary Club carried on for a second year of its part of Project Zuckerberg Island Heritage Park. pins, to help maintain the island and the house as a people-place, the donors of artifacts, the new brochure prepared by committee directors Nancy Felde and Dr. Bill Sloan completed just in time to be flown to the B.C. Heritage Conference at the end of May and for distribu- tion to thousands of visitors to the chapel house and park since that time. Even the telephone lines are an implicit sign of the kind of support that the project has received. B.C. Telephone Co. had the option of stringing the lines on the existing power poles. Instead, in recognition of the heritage aspect of the park, the lines were strung on separate old. joned poles more in keeping with its Again, there are the signs: The big one ing the participants from the West Kootenay of the organizations who gave time, expertise and material to the exercise, and the carved cedar one, another gift from the Doukhobor Museum prepared by Gordie Hill honoring the members of the 44th. The implicit signs are the memories of a Cominco heavy duty machine operator giving up his weekend to help the engineers; the young soldiers working far into the dark to get the exercize finished on time and many others who gave of themselves to a common spirit. It is ‘such cooperation and understanding that makes the whole operation worthwhilé. “And the signery — explicit and implicit — goes on. In keeping with-the educational aspect of the project, a new sign will shortly be installed to replace an earlier, simpler one. Skillfully crafted with colored illustration by former Stanley Humphries secondary school graduate Gail Seaton Moodey it reads: Poison Ivy, Rhuus Radicans. It will be located is a specially reserved patch of the stuff. For obvious reasons it doesn’t add: Danger, Keep Off. Selkirk students win grants Oct. 2 by the, British Colum- bia and Yukon Community and their intent to work in the community newspaper industry. dents have been awarded scholarships by the BCYCNA, who confers scholarships on student: from among all of B.C.'s college's and institutes of- Rossland gets Expo cheque Provincial Secretary and Government Services Min- ister Elwood Veitch an- nouneed delivery of an Expo Legacy Fund cheque for $11,888 to the City of Ross- ind. ‘The expanded hall of fame will include the B.C, Ski Hall of Fame, already established in the museum complex. “This development will honor the skiers who have done so much to establish Canada’s international ski government funding of $34,000, is being used by the community's museum to build the Western Canadian Ski Hall of Fame. said Veitch, minister respon- sible for the Expo Legacy Fund. You’re Invited to Meet the New Teller INSTANT TELLER Ministerial group gets“together By MORLEY SOLTYS The Castlegar Ministerial Association met Sept. 8 at the Pentecostal New Life Assembly after a summer of activities. Six ministers and one vis tor, Stuart Laurie, were pre sent. Pastor Morley Soltys started with devotions. He focused on ministers in gen- eral, based on the scripture reading found in Ezekiel 34:1-T0, by saying: “There are too many men standing behind pulpits who have been called and ordained by man, not called and ordained by God. All they are doing is filling pulpits, doing the works of man that man has called and trained them to do. “Not a sign of any of the works of God follow their ministry. God is not against you, preacher, because you clothe yourself with the wool. “God said, ‘I am against you because you are not feeding the flock.’ They get sick, and you send them off to the doctor. As a pastor, as a minister of God, called of God, you are supposed to do what God calls you do do.” After the devotions and prayer, the minutes were read and business arising from the minutes were dealt with. A report was given by the ministers who were involved in the chapliancy program started at the Castlegar and District Hospial. The new schedule will be given out to the ministers. Stuart Laurie introduced himself to the ministerial as the pastor at the Living Waters Faith Fellowship. He gave a short testimony of the background of his life, his born-again ex- perience, employment and his most recent involvement in starting the new church on “the hill,” as most people would refer to it. ‘The rest of the meeting dealt with the financial re- Come Play the SUPER PACK Thursday, Sept. 10 TRAIL ELKS LODGE Saturday, Sept. 12 TRAIL GYROS Lic. No, 60942 Tuesday, Sept. 8 Lic. No. 57652 TRAN ton 1060 Eldorado — Treil INE ox.-Komkin Irty Bird Building *10 NO FRILLS SPECI Sunday, Sept. 13 Plays all games on Twenty game program cr minum PAvOUT "BO Come $1000 sisctout Moonlight session to follow. Minimum Payout"! 00 10th Game Sponsored by Kiwanis Lic. #61656 orUarygwne Talor alto your Hestye ‘and support you all the way. SAVE THAT MONEY! enky Sone wd see THE NEW QUICK START (PLUS) PROGRAM" Join by Sept.26th/87 at these convenient locations: Call Toll Free 1-800-663-3354 Tuesday 9:30 a.m. — Nordic Hall 6:30 p.m. — Nordic Hall « weeny Eaten fe 88 "Sooe" Se mahpoet thei [sen eg wench Bae WEIGHT WATCHERS EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 28, 1987, OUR NEW HOURS OF BUSINESS wi e Monday-Thursday 10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Friday 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Saturday CLOSED INSTANT TELLER AVAILABLE 24 HOURS A DAY Castleaird Plaza Castlegar B 3 if