ENTERTAINMENT Ab ir News July 27.1988 LJ fies SUMMER i HOURS Ménday to Saturday, 5:30 a.m. - 8 p.m. 365-8155 1 Eeticge ——————————— D-sar- DINING LOUNGE OPEN 4 P.M, DAILY — AIR CONDITIONED — WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED RESERVATIONS FOR PRIVATE PARTIES Located | mile south of weigh Oot — LICENCED DINING ROOM a GREWMAN ACRES Castlegar, B.C. (Formerly D-Bar-D Riding Stables.) — UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT — STABLES OPEN 9 A.M. DAILY * ALL NEW STOCK * A HORSE FOR EVERY TYPE OF RIDER © GUIDE AVAILABLE © SCENIC TRAILS * RIDING LESSONS * BOARDING FACILITIES * HOI ES (By Phone LOCATION: 1 mile south of weigh scale in Ootischenia 365-3986 next to D-Bar-D Dining Lounge. Follow the Signs. COMMUNITY Bulletin Board HIROSHIMA DAY Vigil, walk and social. August 6 at 6:00 p.m. starting at the Castlegar Cour- thouse and ending on Zuckerberg Island. All welcome 4/59 GENTS SUMMER HOCKEY Registration forms available at Community Complex Monday-Friday. Deadline August 5. 2/59 Coming events of Castlegar and District non-profit organizations may be listed here. The first 10 words are $3.75 and additional words ore 20¢ each. Bold faced words (which must be used for headings) count as two words. There is no extra charge tor 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 od is for one. two or three times) Deadlines are 5 p.m. Thursdays for Sundays paper and 5 p.m. Mondays for Wednesdays paper. Notices should be brought to the Castlegar News at 197 Columbia Ave COMMUNITY Bulletin Board Travel. NOW IN 1————-— WITH THIS COUPON —--—-——— THE 1st 200 CUSTOMERS ARE ELIGIBLETO... Name Address Phone Drow to Be Announced. L DROP OFF CASTLEGAR OFFICE ONLY. RAGTIME ENSEMBLE . . . The New England Ragtime Ensemble will take part i eason's Festival at Sandpoint. The 18-memi er En- semble has. made dozens of national tours and has played in the ° Soviet Union. The group has also won a Grammy award for its music. , Ragtime group at Festival The New England Ragtime En- semble is returning to The Festival at Sandpoint in North Idaho for its fourth consecutive year. Gunther Schuller, The Festival's artistic director, rediscovered rag- time music while he was president of the New England Conservatory of Music. Originally intended to reprise the works of Scott Joplin for a single performance at the conservatory, the Ragtime Ensemble achieved nearly instantaneous recognition. Request after request came in for appear- ances by the Ensemble, then comp- osed mainly of students, until finally it became necessary to form a permament organization with an agent and touring manager. The Ensemble has now made doz. ens of national tours and is able to honor only a fraction of the per- formance dates that are requested of it. Schuller still conducts every per- formance. In addition to a “Grammy” and several best-selling recordings, the 18-member New England Ragtime Ensemble has performed a major tour to the USSR. It was immediate- ly after this that Schuller, happy to Cable 10 TV SHAW CABLE TV 10 July 27, 1988 5:30 p.m. [Wed] 9 a.m. [Fri] 1 p.m. {Sun] — Castlegar Queen Pageant — The crowning of the new Miss Castle gar was part of the annual Sunfest celebrations held in Castlegar in early June. 7:25 p.m. [Wed] 10:55 a.m. [Fri] for busines or pleasure 365-6616 LISA STRELAEFF — TRAVEL CONSULTANT — Lisa can guide you in making your trip a most en- joyable one! Make your arrangements with Totem “A TRUSTED NAME IN TRAVEL!’ CASTLEGAR Located Under Castlegar Savings Credit Union AIRLINES* CRUISES *RAIL* TOURS * GROUP CHARTERS * INSURANCE = TOTEM TRAVEL: Trail © 364-1254 605-16th $t., CASTLEGAR (Below C.5.C.U.) * 365-6616 HOURS: Monday to Friday 10.6.m. - 5 p.m. Seturdey Wa.m. -4p.m. 3:30 p.m. [Sun] — Cable Connection — Ken Fowler, vice-president of planning and marketing supervisor Tim Frewer discuss the upcoming additional channels that will be in place in September. These channels are YTV/Vision TV and Family TV. 8 p.m. [Wed] 11:30 a.m. [Fri] 3:30 p.m. [Sun] — J.L. Crowe Grad Ceremonies — Coverage of the Sunday ceremonies held at the Cominco Arena. 10:15 p.m. [Wed] 1:45 p.m. [Fri] 5:45 p.m. [Sun] — Save Your Life This Summer — Learn some water safety and boating tips that will help you stay safer on the water this summer. Bill Gould — manager of the Wright Pool in Trail talks with Lesley Giroday, Red Cross Water safety Area Consultant for the Koot- enays on a number of topics con- cerning water and boat safety. LEGION BR. 170 DANCE SAT. 9:30 - 1:30 a.m. BAND JUKE BOX Guests must be signed in. Proper dress after 9 p.m Open Monday to Thursday @.m.-la.m. Friday & Saturday, 12 noon -2.a.m. 365-7017 eres be going home, created his now famous ragtime arr of 83864 or by calling (208) 265-4554 “Stars and Stripes Forever” by John Philip Sousa. Every show closes with that music and audiences around the world look forward to that piece even while in the midst of listening to such popular Schuller arrangements as “The En- tertainer,” made famous in the Aca- demy-Award winning film, “The Sting.” Information is now available on all Festival at Sandpoint events by writing The Festival at Sandpoint, Box 695 Sandpoint, Idaho, U.S.A. during b hours. Ticket prices vary from $4 to $15. Brochures describing the entire Festival at Sandpoint season includ ing chamber music and jazz concerts are also available. During the 1987 season, Schuller and the Ragtime Ensemble shattered the record for Festival attendance that they had set the season before. The Festival mainstage series, held at Sandpoint's Memorial Field, begins Aug. 5 and closes on Aug. 14. Chamber and jazz concerts begin on July 19 and also conclude on Aug. 14. Show of Hands display The exhibition A Show of Hands will be displayed at the Nelson Museum from Aug. 5 to Sept. 4. Just returned from a cross-Canada tour, the exhibit features 30 works by West Kootenay artisans who live from Rossland to Ainsworth and from Salmo to Winlaw. A Show of Hands was juried from 75 entries to a Kootenay-Boundary Artisan’s Alliance exhibit at the West Kootenay National Exhibition Centre in Castlegar, in 1984. Fol- lowing the exhibit, the Director of the NEC proposed a cross-Canada tour of the pieces, and with her as- sistance, a tour was set up from Cambelltown, New Brunswick and Bridgewater, Nova Scotia, through locations in Quebec, Ontario, the Prairie provinces, Fort Smith in the North, and B.C. Included in the exhibit are wall- hangings, raku and porcelain, wood craft, wool and soft sculpture, glass, batik, basketry, weaving, tatting and embroidery. Artists include Ed Bamiling, Mousi Techir, Jean Burt, Antonio Crema, Angelika Kraus-Werth, Mary Bara- valle, Sandra Donohue, Gunvor it Ruby Marsh, Barbara NOW SHOWING! [WED|[THU) on way Mitchell, Pamela Nagley-Stevenson, Peter Wilson, Harry Chernoff, Shar- on Pawliw, Arlene Ommundsen, Sheila Hogarth, Barry and Sally Lamare, Lou Lynn, Judith McLean, Harry Chernoff and Ingeborg Thor- Larsen. Jurors for the Exhibition were Marie Shaw-Rimmington and Les Manning, and exhibit co-ordin: ator was Sandra Donohue. Exhibitions at the Nelson Museum are assisted by the Department of Municipal Affairs and Culture and the City of Nelson. A small entrance fee is charged to those who are not memebers of the Museum. A Show of Hands is ex hibited through the cooperation of the NEC and contributions from a number of Kootenay businesses. Festival serves up Shaw NIAGARA ON THE LAKE, ONT. (CP) — When they asked George: Bernard Shaw to whip up a little something on William Shakespeare, Shaw attacked the project — and Shakespeare — with almost fiendish delight. The result was The Dark Lady of the Sonnets, a tasty morsel’of a playlet which is being staged by the Shaw Festival as this season's Lunchtime Theatre repast. « Director Paul Reynolds says heist convinced Shaw had a grand time: stealing and reworking Sha: peare's best lines as he lampalied the bard’s reputation for dalliance and plagiarism. 3 The young Shakespeare skilfully’ portrayed by Peter Krantz is an en- gagingly immature fellow who is: oddly clumsy with words. When he arrives on the terrace of London's Whitehall Palace for a sexy rendezvous with the mysterious lady of his sonnets, and is confronted by the Beefeater guard, he has awk- wardly forgotten the password.