Featuring watercolors by PHYLLIS MARGOLIN Friday, November 9 wits : hed ask m. HOMESTEAD SOUP & SANDWICH SHOPPE 115 young men and women from 13 Millions more have seen Up With People’s energetic casts on television. including three Super Bowls as well as the 1982 World's Fair, Sea World in San Diego and with the Boston Pops Orchestra. Recent world tours have taken casts to such diverse locations as the St. Peter's Square in Rome, Italy; Po- land; Corn Market Square in Belfast, Northern Ireland; Venezuela; the bullrings of Valencia, Spain and the Pe- king Conservatory of Music in The People's Republic of China. The performers are actu ally students between the ages of 18 and 25 who participate for 11 months in a multifaceted program of ex. periental learning. Each year these students travel an average of 35,000 miles living with between 80 and 100 host families in sev. eral countries experiencing different lifestyles, sharing in their interests and culture HOMESTEAD SOUP & SANDWICH SHOPPE LOOK FOR SPECIAL PRICES DAILY ON OUR HOMESTYLE BREAKFAST Saturdays — 8-5 p.m. Planning a small Gathering? Ask about our Cedar Room or our Catering Service. 365-8312 Now Licenced ti MAPLE LEAF HAWAII TRAVEL Ale Ist Class Werder eeting eirport-hotel transters, con tinental breaktas!, brieting 3 For more information call NESTA on BO3> 6616 (EXPO 86 EXPO 86 AND B.C. PLACE projects not only for the Lower Mainland Columbia provided and a detailed itinerary sent to parents of winners Fil in the contest 7, 1984 The winner will be drawn the same day random selection of winners wall be fina There will be 108 winners acr impressions of ther tnp in not more th names. and announced ir an 250 words tc CONTEST RULES Open to all residents of British Columbia between the ages of 1417 oupon in this ad and return it to this newspaper no later th 988 British Columbia and each will be required to Win a trip to B.C. Place, tour the Expo 86 site and see Michael Jackson live and in concert from a box seat at B.C. Place Stadium Nov. 16, 17, or 18. WHAT THE WORLD IS COMING TO! Your Provincial Government and this newspaper want young British Columbians to see firsthand the tremendous potential and excitement generated by these two world-class projects but for all British inclusive Chaperones will be lan noon on November the next issue of this newspaper The submit their the respective newspapers which draw their Developed from the WK Kellogg Foun- dation, the goal of this pro gram is to provide these youth with an insight into the community's needs. Each cast member assists in the day-to-day logistics of operating the cast including show promotion and) stage work. College credit can be earned in a variety of sub- jects through the University of Arizona. Eight thousand students have taken part in Up With People since it was founded in 1968 by its president, J Blanton Belk, as a non profit, apolitical, non-sectar ian, educational program. As many as 1,000 young people apply each month for the 550 openings available annually. Although musical talent and technical know ledge are assets, students are accepted on the basis of their motivation, maturity and po- tential to participate fully in a demanding program. The worldwide activities of Up With People are financed from ticket and product sales, show sponsors, student tuition fees, individual and corporate gifts, as well as foundation grants. “Our purpose is to give young men and woman a learning experience which Prepares them for a swiftly i world,” FLOWER ART. . . Twins Phyllis Bruce (left) and Kay Senay with one of their paintings. A few hardy souls battled the snowy roads Thursday night to view over { i % 30 paintings created by the pair, detailing plants and flowers. CasNews Photo Rivers one of a kind HOLLYWOOD — Joan Bivers gets a big kick out of the fact that she was once promoted as the “highest paid monologuist in Ameri: ca.” “If they had paid me a third as much, Id still have been the highest paid,” she says. “I was the only one.” Love her or hate her, Joan Rivers is still one of a kind. And her paycheck, along with her stature as an en. tertainer, has risen consid. erably since the days when her act defied meaningful Belk. MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL Her success as a stand-up comedian has skyrocketed in direct proportion to her exposure as Johnny Carson's stand-in for two months each season on “The Tonight Show,” making nonsense of the ancient “beware of TV” admonition to comics. This week, she flouts anu- ther jokesters’ golden rule — “Don't put your gags in print” — with publication of “The Life and Hard Times of Heidi Abromowits,” a string of to witz, and is confident it will be a Christmas best-seller. Also out this month is an update of Miss Rivers’s 1973 success, “Having a Baby Can Be a Scream,” a semi-serious fact book on childbirth. She's also busy on her own auto- biography, “Getting Start ed,” due in bookstores in 1985. Devotees of Miss Rivers will recognize Heidi as one of the new fictitious foils in an make a pris em blush. Delacorte Press has ordered a 260,000 first-print run for the “totally unauthorized bi ography” of Miss Abromo- act for gossipy sniping at real targets, from Christina Onassis to the British royal family to Eliza. beth Taylor. “I'd just die if someone I BURIED UNDER SAND was making jokes about turned out to be in the audi. ence,” says Miss Rivers. “I can't monitor who's out there when I'm doing the Carson show, but I'm pretty confi dent Mick Jagger or Sophia Loren won't get into one of my live performances with out me knowing about it.” She says her targets are “big people who can take it.” Some of them are friends who get offended when, in her never-ending quest to keep her material fresh, she drops them in favor of new patsies. Search for de Mille sets HOLLYWOOD (AP) When Cecil B. de Mille finished making The Ten Commandments in 1923, he buried the Egyptian sets for his Biblical epic film under the shifting sands of Guad alupe Dunes and joked about archaeologists someday find. ing them. It’s no joke to Peter Bros nan, head of Lost Cities Pro- ductions, or to Larry Wil fornia at Santa Barbara. Brosnan and partners Bruce Cardozo and Richard Eberhardt plan to film the excavation of the sets start ing next spring and to inter view participants in De Mille’s first Ten Command. ments — not the one he re. made in 1956 with Chariton Heston in Egypt. Guadalupe Dunes is a 50-kilometre expanse of sand Gees coxon, at the: University of Cali ing from i 220 kilometres northwest of Hi Arrow Arms SUNDAY SMORG With Salad Bar & Dessert from 4:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Los Angeles. It is part Pismo Beach State Park and part private land Wilcoxon a distant cou sin of actor Henry Wilcoxon, who co-started in the 1956 remake and was listed as its producer — is a PhD can didate in archaeology who stumbled De Mille’s dunes in 1977 while doing studies for an oil company onto In the process we essen tially discovered what was left of the movie set,” Wil coxon said in a telephone in terview Monday. “It’s prob ably one of the last great movie sets left from that era. “We intend to make a documentary about the proj. ect,” Brosnan said. “We also intend to donate whatever we uncover to various non profit institutions the Smithsonian, Hollywood Her. itage Inc. The documentary will be largely about the making of the original 1923 Ten Commandments. We found a lot of people who were extras in the film — old cowboys who were chariot drivers.” Hf | afitli ¢ bebiere F LATIN AMERICAN MUSIC . . . Six-person group SABIA will perform musical renditions from Latin America on 25 different instruments in a concert Friday at Castlegar Community Compl Opposition puts up fight By VIC PARSONS orrawa.(cer ~ Everyone values privacy, and that's why Jean-Robert Gauthier, the new Liberal whip, did a doublotake when Tory MPs sched to aus HAR ¢f He lobby after Parliament You have probably heard that a child’s training should begin at birth. Some feel that that admonition is merely to emphasize that it should be- gin early. But, really, that is not enough! The training should begin before the child is born, as was Sampson's, whose mother was divinely instruc- ted: “Behold, you shall con- ceive and bear a son; so then drink no wine or strong drink, and eat nothing un- clean.” (Judges 13:7) To a great extent, the per- sonality of the infant is de- termined by the mental at- titude of the mother, during the prenatal period, even by the food she eats then. In fact, we could say, a baby’s training begins when its mother is getting her training. From birth a baby is in fluenced tremendously by its environment — whether the sounds it hears are harsh or sweet, loud or soft; whether it is held tenderly or dis- interestedly or not at all; whether it sees color and how much. As the child grows it is influenced by the sounds that come over the radio or through the window from the house next door, by the stories it hears at mealtime, COMh with no desire to listen to the other. Parents, are you watching the kind of influences that are calling your children? Bulletin Board served Ploce. Babysitting provided. CONCERT & SOCIAL Friday. November 9 Castlegor Complex: Latin Americor jongs and music by “Sabia'. Doors open at 7 p.m. Concert tre'p_m Tickets from "Tools for Peace” committee CRAFT PA ROBSON Jecember Ist, Robson Hall 9 a.m. Robles call 365.6541 or 365.5772 Coles end lunch will bs Meeting to be held Nov. 7 10.30 om et the Fireside p.m. To reserve 10/87 resumes. Parliament watchers became eware of actomineda- tion problems in the House of Commons the night of Sept. 4, when Tory after Tory was returned in the federal election. Where, they muttered, would all of the 211 members of the governing party sit in the cramped Commons? About 145 of the Conservatives could fit on the government, or west side, of the chamber. That meant Capital Notebook the 66 remaining Tories, almost equal to the combined opposition of 71 members — 40 Liberals, 30 New Democrats and one independent — would likely spill over onto what is normally the opposition side of the House. The prospect was somewhat disconcerting to the opposition, who'd now have to listen to jeers of government members from three sides, but it would have to be lived with. Worse, however, was the idea pursued by the Tories that they now deserved to occupy half of the Opposition lobby, one of the rooms behind the curtains on either side of the Commons used by MPs to talk over strategy, make telephone calls or rest. There's a similar lobby on the aire side of the Commons, which is 30-per-cont- larger. ~ thap- the—.by Neil Macdonald at that time.” NIGHTLY SPECIAL PRIME RIB — $9.95 Open Friday ‘til 9. Remember — Book Xmes Partid’s Early! Gauthier, concerned about the privacy of Tories lurking in the lobby, put up a fight against the Consefvative claim. “The oppostiion side by tradition and by right is our side,” the MP for Ottawa-Vanier said in an interview. The New Democrats, although prepared to grant the Tories a share of the room weren't that enthusiastic either. Gauthier has another consideration in mind. He says the Liberals hope to set up a computerized system in the lobby fom use of their members. “We would want to secure our operations from their peeking.” After discussions this week among the party whips, the Liberals and New Democrats agreed to accept some rights for the Conservatives. The Tories can have a small desk for messages and will be able to use the telephones. But they can’t sit in the chairs — those are for government opponents only. Some new Liberal MPs seem to be struggling in an effort to bone up on their responsibilities as critics in the new Parliament — to the point that they want to inter- view reporters, rather than vice-versa. Recently, an aide to John Nunzianta, MP for York South-Weston and solicitor general critic, called a reporter specializing in the department's affairs with an offer of an interview. However, the reporter was told, it would be a meeting in which the journalist would do most of the talking. The reporter countered with a proposal that they set up @ session in which the politician responded to the questions. She suggested a good date might be the morning of Nov. 6, the day after the throne speech. “Sorry,” the aide said. “Mr. Nunziata is being briefed Pe for the Ottawa Citizen. LUNCH mp na THE reet Load epeaaige Open Monday SALAD BAR DREAKTAST i itn, = Sat) orion Monday, Toesdey & Wednosdog: Sree tipi eles \aled Vale the new Pe piliiittirit TTT TTL] eo TUTTI Point|'Hotet Lhinbiiit trail b.c. r > BAKERS SECRET Loaf Pan & Pie Plate $ 1 ss. sors —4 PULLOVERS _ V-neck, 100% eerytic. Poputor pattern. Sizes $-XL. Reg. rrr ean sate $997 Children’s Tea Sets 14 Pieces $3e° Prices effective Wednesday to Saturday, Nov. 7 to Nov. 10 SHEET SETS King ond Queen size.’ Assor ted designs ond colors Conedion mode. Regular $54.99 nn Oa PULLOVERS Bouche knit and Orien look Many styles ond colors Reguior $16.99. 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Aw B ( Sex, Ly ux EXPO 86 AND B.C PLACE Preview Centre and attend one of the sn the Staci overnight accommodation and and The Fou neals will be provided c Seasons Hotel compliments of Pacific SOCIETY The Conadion Doukhobor Society willl in the Hi ARROW HOTEL Bonquet Room o.m., Soturday, November 10, 1964. All Urgently requested to attend. Visitors welcome enco PAPER CASH Quality has never been so affordabie. a oer ot ag Johnny's Grocery, ohio tence meats Momnpuamteose fey thy Mosman bhi 8 Spore, C= 6 p.m., reguior 7 p.m. * Microprocessor Controlled * Front loading * 10 Function Wired Remote Control * 4 Event 2-Week Progrommability * Speed Search, Still Frame * One-Touch Record SEND YOUR ENTRIES TO Cc. events of Costh District oniaanions ons may be listed here. othe first 10 words Castlegar News Telephone Castleaird Plaza Store Only Parent/Guardian signature