Se Castlégar News ~ November 24, 1985 ENTERTAINMENT -SMORGASBORD “ALL YOU CAN EAT” EVERYONE WELCOME! Sunday, November 24 1:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. — Ootischenia Hall * Borsch * Nalesniki.* Cabbage Rolls * Lasagia * Chow Mein « Homemade Bread * Choice of Solads * Black Forest Coke ® Boston Cream Pie” @$10 Per Adult © $5 10 Yrs. & Under Children Under 5 Yrs. — Free! LOS ANGELES (AP) — Sakssvca across the screen in fuzzy black and white was a string of young, exuberant dancers, flipping gilded top hats'as they sang the rousing song One. “Back it-up a few feet,” instructed. a British-accented voice in the gloom of the recording studio. The dancers on £ the screen reversed their movements, ang ts song played ‘Chorus Line a gamble Francisco. But what would it do in mid-America?” To find out, he previewed it in San Diego and Orange, Calif. the previews went well. “But there were two moments that didn’t work,” hi said. “We needed a more salutary: placing of the lyrics — not just Placing but‘clarity as well. That's what we're doing now.” A Monday to Saturday, Nov. 25 - Dec. 1 or Vegetoble porn. gorie breads Sean pea INCLUDE OUR NEW SALAD BAR Ave., Trail Day Tours in Spokane Prime Rib $4295 Sule: Salmon Steak Reservations phone 364-2222 DECEMBER 26, 28 & 29 NEW LOWER PRICES! ne Jveppercom dae. ovat $Q25 TERRA NOVA MOTOR INN ICE CAPADES Seniors & Youths under 16... Adults -$41 NEW YEARS IN SPOKANE Includes Coach Transportation, Tour Escort, New Year's Eve Party, Deluxe Room, New Year's Dinner, Champagne at Midnight, Party Favors and more! $s Per Person 94 Cda/DbI. acc. . EXPO ’86 TOURS 4-Day Tours, Starting May 30 Includes Coach, Tour Escort, 3-Day Expo Pass, 3 Nights Hotel Accommodation, L.R.T. Transit Tickets. Reductions for Seniors & Youths! k din an i was repeated again and again until the voice ity “OK.” The voice dto Richard A +h, who was laboring with'a crew of sound and music experts in the main recording room at Warner Bros. Hollywood studio. The premiere of A Chorus Line was only a few weeks away, but Attenborough still had touches to add. — “I had never sneak-previewed a picture before,” said the 1983 Academy Award-winning director of Gandhi. ~ “But it seemed like a prudent idea for A Chorus Line. Unless the picture was a diabolical failure, it seemed likely that it would do well in New York, Los Angeles, San Texas tops in fiction Hifre are the week's Top 10 fiction and non-fiction books &s compiled by Maclean's magazine. Bracketed figures indicate position previous week. FICTION (1) Texas — Michener (2) The Handmaid's Tale — Atwood (7) The Mammoth Hunters — Auel (3) Lucky — Collins (4) Skeleton Crew — King (5) The Red Fox — Hyde (8) Secrets — Steel (6) Contact — Sagan (10) What's Bred in the Bone — Davies (-) Break In — Francis. NON-FICTION (1) Straight from the Heart — Chretien (2) Company of Adventurers — Newman (3) Elvis and Me — Presley (4) Iacocca — Iacocca (5) Dancing in the Light — MacLaine (6) Yeager — Yeager and Janos (7) The World of Robert Bateman — Derry (8) The Canadian Encyclopedia (-) I Never Played the Gime — Cosell (10) A Day in the Life of Canada — Cohen SOBIAnsAwwe Somrameenn Dec. 28 - Jan. 3 Join inall the festivities of New Year's Eve! ICE CAPADES DAY TOURS Dec. ao and 29 SPORTS FANS GETAWAY Feb. 26-Mar.1, Hockey game TRAVEL 1217-3rd St, 1410 Bay Ave., Castlegar Trail 365-7782 368-5595 Vancouver, Moi > and Philadelphia DEWDNEY TOURS 800-332-0282 sa.qco MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL 365-6616 This Week in Twas the month before Christmas And all through the town Pens were heard scratching Getting story ideas down - HEY KIDS! Surprise your Family, Friends, «Ne ighbors and Relatives by having a story published in the Castlegar News. All you have todo is enter the... Castlegar gh finished the morning session and breezed across Santa Monica Boulevard for a hearty meal at the Studio Grill and a discussion on how an English filmmaker became involved with a basically American musical. SAW PLAY TWICE He had seen Michael Bennett's hit play in London twice and had found it “an extraordinary entertainment.” Atten- borough hadn't the foggiest notion of directing the film until his longtime agent, Martin Baum, made the suggestion, reminding him that his first film as a director had been a musical. A Chorus Line has gone through many phases in its long route to the screen. Bennett, who created the stage musical, and others failed to arrive at a suitable format for a show that was simply 16 chorus people auditioning for jobs on a blank stage. “[ came to the conclusion that if you broke the theatrical concept, you would lose everything,” A said. PARTNERSHIP. CREATES BROADWAY ‘HIT NEW YORK (AP) — Six nights a week-on the stage of the Plymouth Theatre, Lily Tomlin ‘becomes a demented bag lady, a 15-year-old punk rocker, a sassy New York streetwalker, a bored Manhatten matron and a dozen other characters. The people are pure Tomlin, but their words are Jane Wagner, the star's longtime collaborator who wrote and directed the show, which has the unlikely title of The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe. The play is the biggest hit of the new Broadway season and may give Wagner the recognition that has eluded her during the 15 years she has toiled in Tomlin’s shadow. Ina recent interview, Wagner, a soft-spoken woman with a Tennessee twang and a warm sunbeam smile, curled up on a couch in her press agent's office to talk about her work and savor the success of the show which = was her 3 “It’s the story of 16 kids in the pressure cooker of the New York stage ona hot sultry day, facing one omnipotent figure (Zach, the show's director) who will determine whether they will be able to pay the rent, break into the theatre and work together as a team. “It would be a mistake to use flashbacks, for instance showing a girl's beginnings asa drum masoreue in Houston. But how to avoid bi ind By maintaining the Pressure over Whether they will get the | job. “It was a terrific gamble, to use the camera to capture every kid’s movement, each quite different from the others. No pyrotechnics, no special effects. Just a simple story simply told.” gh sought only to play the chorus people — “credibility would be eroded beyond repair if you saw a series of well-known faces.” However, Audrey Landers, who has appeared on TV's Dallas, has a part. Most of the others are “gypsies” from Broadway shows, including five from A Chorus Line. Alyson Reed repeats her role of Cassie, which she played on the road. ST thought of casting a stage actor as Zach,” Atten- asked if Zach had been cast yet. Martie said no, but they were looking for an unknown to play the role since the budget didn’t allow for a star. The results of Richard Attenborough's gamble will be known in early December when A Chorus Line opens in New York, Los Angeles and Toronto. Zadora dislikes DEXTER’S PUB — MON. THRU SAT. — critics’ attacks | “LOS ANGELES (AP) — Acress Pia Zadora says being rich doesn't make up for the pain of gibes from critics who say she is a poor performer. “A lot of people think I'm a joke,” she said. “I don't like being laughed at. I don't like being attacked. “People think that when you're very rich, nothing can GENELLE CHIP BINGO AT GENELLE HALL MONDAY NIGHTS 6:30 p.m. Eary Bird hurt you because you have all that\money to comfort you. That's really a joke. Those vicious criticisms can hurt.” Zadora, 28, who is married to wealthy businessman Meshulam Riklis, acknowled- ges that none of her movies has been good and says one, Lonely Lady, was a “real turkey.” “So you get wounded and you lick your wounds and smile like it doesn’t hurt even though you're torn up in- side,” she said. “You. go on with the show. That's show biz, isn’t it?” MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL MANZANILLO SALE! — Dept. Jan. 18 or Feb. 2 “There is something strengthening. in’ that,” she says. “To think that if you are left to your own devices, something good can come out of it. I think Lily and I-went to Broadway because we wanted that kind of purity.” As Wagner rewrote and refined this show during a long tryout that took the women from San Diego to Seattle to Boston and then New York, she discovered there were ways to interconnect the characters she had created. CHARACTERS LINKED The evening encompasses more than the traditional monologue, a form popularized by such people as Ruth Draper, and Cornelia Otis Skinner. There. are links © these that the i can = eventually recognize if the characters themselves can't. loth women drew from their roots for these people and Wagner mined her girlhood in east Tennessee. a4 - Her lean years were spent in the YWCA, and she worked at temporary jobs.She eventually got a job/ 4 designing bed sheets that she decorated with children's ~ a stories she wrote herself. They were called Teach Me, = Read Me.sheets. Parents could tuck their children into bed and read to them at the same time. | The sheets won her a job as a creative consultant at Kimberly-Clark, the Kleenex people. In between her four to six projects a year, she was able to write. Out of that writing came J.L., a television screenplay about a little boy growing up in Harlem. It won a Peabody Award and attracted Tomlin's attention. = At the time, the actress was ending a run on™ Laugh-In and looking for someone to help her write a record album featuring one of her creations, Edith Ann, the. precocious. five-year-old with the deadly. accurate “sense of humor. She contacted Wagner through a mutual friend. ALL EMMY WINNERS, s The partnership has produced three other albums as well as four television specials, all of them Emmy winners. The specials were not. without tribulation. On the first one, in 1973, a Cosmopolitan girl meets a Playboy for a date and the lady pops a birth control pill before answering her doorbell. One bittersweet sketch, written by Wagner, followed the ups and downs of a marriage as a couple spun giddily on a carousel. In her last special, broadcast in 1982, Tomlin played the president of the United States -and the subject was nuclear war. But in The Search, Tomlin and Wagner have created “an‘entirely new set of people who make audiences laugh “and then touch them before the smile is gone. Wagner calls that her “soft sensibility.” “I think that the most courageous thing Lily and I Shave done is not give up that quality,” Wagner says. “It is Eso easy to be hard-edged and mean-spirited in comedy.” haere may have painted BUSINESS November 24, 1985 By CasNews Staff — ~ Got a good idea for a small business? Then Wayne Schweitzer wants to hear from you. Schweitzer is manager of the Kootenay Regionat , a non-profit corporation established to wen the development of small business in the Central Kootenay. With the help of a $2.1 million Canada Works grant, KREDA has g mandate to lend $200,000 a year for the next five yedts to new small businesses. “It's all loans; no grants,” stresses Schweitzer, who heads a staff of three at KREDA's Nelson office. The office was officially opened Oct. 4, but KREDA has been in operation since Julfe 1984. Already the organizatior has lent $125,000 to five businesses, two in Castlegar, one in Nelson, one in Nakusp and another in Lemon Creek. It has helped create 87 full-time and 19 part-time jobs. The businesses have borrowed an additional $445,000 from the private sector. Schweitzer notes that KREDA.can only loan up to $25,000 per business per year. JOB CREATION ... Tony Pitaoulis of Anthony’s Steak and Pizza House in Castlegar is one of five small businessmen in the Cental Kootenay to receive loan assistance from KREDA Investment Corp. kreda provides low interest loans to new and expanding businesses creating new employment. —CosewsPnote KREDA is there to help He says the ¢orporation has had more than 40 applicants and more than 250 inquiries. “We have a lot of good ideas coming in.” a He adds that businesses must have been turned down by the Federal Business Development Bank before applying for a loan from KREDA. Schweitzer said the key to a successful application is job creation. The corporation's rule of thumb is that roughly one job should be created for every $7,000 loaned. The interest rate on the loans is anywhere between the prime rate and two per cent above prime. “We don't have a profit motive. We don't care about profit,” says Schweitzer, adding that the corporation is flexible in its lending terms. Schweitzer calls the job creation program “probably one of the least expensive” in the country. He that small i have to look “like good businesses.” KREDA also provides free planning services for ‘small businesses just starting out. It will help with things like cash flow charts and forecasting. 4 Weekly Stocks SANDRA LYN:; The Toronto stock market slipped back a little on Friday from its record high estab- lished a day earlier but an- alysts said it was only a mat- " ter of time before shares prices resumed their upward march. The TSE 300 composite index slipped 7.03 to 2831.70 as a very heavy 19.5 million shares changed hands. Ad- vancing issues outnumbered declines 365 to 325 with 355 unchanged. That reduced the weekly rise to 42.25 points or 1.51 per cent. The composite has now climbed for four straight weeks, gaining 7.55 per cent. In New York, the Dow Jones average of 30 indus- trials continued to travel into uncharted territory as it hit its third record this week. The index closed up 2.06 to 1464.33 on Friday. Gino Blink, an analyst with Burgess Graham PLOTNIKOFF Daughter of John and Katie come'down further and infla- Piotatictt of Cot tegor, B.C. has graduated from tion will not rear its ugly head until late next year,” he said: As a result, Blink pre- dicts the Dow Jones average will jump 30 per cent to 1800 in the next 15 to 18 months while the Toronto stock mar- ket will advance. a more modest 15 per cent to be- tween 3125 and $210. . Wrinkles top toy TORONTO (CP) — A cud- dly puppet has won the first Toy of the,Year award by the Canadian Toy Testing Coun- cil. Wrinkles the Puppet, man- ufactured by Ganz Bros. Toys His Ltd. int brroleben Oak: Sponsored by Women’s Institute, To book tables call See receiv ie aw: irom 5 Julie Creighton, -vice-chair- man of the council. - | “This award has not been previously granted,” Creigh- er Community College a: a Certitied Dental Assistant, She is.now wi SELKIRK WEAVERS AND SPINNERS Fashion Show, Exhibit and Sale. Saturday. ‘November 30, plex. Preview 10:30 a.m. t refreshments 12:00 - 12:30 p.m. Tickets mm phone 365-2670. Sale 12:30 - 4:30 p.m. Admission Free. a Friday, Naveen 29, 9:00 a.m. his gral m7. patokend bi wernber 30, 9:00 G.m. 10 4:00 p.m. Lunch availabl COUNTRY CRAFTERS Christmas Boutique, Friday, November 29 9:00 @.m.-9:00 p.m. Satut November 30 9:00 a.m.-5:30 p. yedar Rsom Homerieod Kitchen. Quality ha fits tor Ltd., said the markets should continue to track ‘higher in the months ahead. “Interest rates are going to nderotted 9) the hard-to-please, home accents with a country flare. ton said. “Fur it is q hristmas O: Cor ral staal hey the decision of the C.T.T.C. < that an award of this nature wiil be granted only when the merit of a toy so dictates. ID BAZAAR Castlegar United church, November 30 2-4 in Legion Hall. Baking, sewing. 29. Z Plans are und to “Come HOMECOMING ’86 rway for a fun-filled week acquaintances in Castlegar. fnvite your friends and relatives Expo” during the 1986. On your Syshall the Costlegar Expo Committee wili arrange a personal invitation signed by Mi sent to everyone on Your guest list. An easy and quick way jo this is to send us a copy of matting list, ACT NOW! Summer 86 is just eround the corner. Send to: “Homecoming Committee - CASTLEGAR EXPO COMMITTEE c/o Box 3001, Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3H4 ROBSON RIVER OTTERS CASH BINGO Saturday, November 30 at Arena Complex. Advance a tickets $8.00 at Johnny's Grocery, Castlegar Pharmasave, Mountain Ski & Sports Hut and Central Food Mart. Early EXPO i Birds 6 p.m. Regular 7 p.m. 2/94 ADVENT TEA Boking, Crafts. St. Peter's Church, 713 - 4th St. +3. Soturday, “November 30, 2/94 Coming events of Castlegar ‘and District_non renewing ted here: The.ti first 10 each. Boldf July 10 - 13, 1. Bob Brisco to be # your Christmas ‘Mondays. tor Wednesday's spore, _Rotices thovld Se brought to the ‘cowtlegar News ot 197 Colui COMMUNITY Bulletin Board ‘Temps’ on the increase WINNIPEG (CP) — The rowr Frown (Point unt] hotel 1944 Columbia Ave. Club Maeva Std. Room S $919 -. Reg. $989 1 Bdrm. Villa $1069 E/E Rag. $1279 Indludes rt on. For more idocwation coll NESTA OR SHIRLEY 365- 6616 Bird Carvings at -——Hummingbird te on exhibit of artwork by Sponsored by the Castlegar Public Library and the Castlegar News i's simple toenter: hort story of up to 300 words beginning with ste lew: “i os Cheetos thing started” ond ending with the line, No thought of Christmas. * Mail or bring your story into the Castlegar Public Library (Kinngird or main branch) or to the Castlegar News by 1 p.m. led. + Include your name, address. age and telephone number * The Christmas Short Story Contest has been divided into 3 oge categories: — Eight and Under Ages 9. 10 ond 11 — Ages 12. 130nd 14 « The three stories in each group chosen by the judges os the best in each group will be published in the Castlegor News" Christmes Greetings Tebloid on Sunday. Dec. 22. * Inoddition, $15, weit fiest, prizes ih each category. i ‘ds of woodcarver, KURIS I be the focus ol a week show ot the Hummingbird Gallery wn the Chahke. maiko Mall, mber 28 through the past two well) known h Columbia tor decoy ducks and most recently for his tree ‘standing birds. raw reat deol sotistaction ‘trom se slabs a one, pind ed os You are cordially invited ZN€ Kuris Raits a showing of woodcarvings Beginning Thursday, November 28, 1985 THE HUMMINGBIRD GALLERY Chahko-Mika Mall, Nelson, B.C. Show will continue through December 7 1112B Lakeside Drive, Nelson, B.C. Ph. (604) 352-2083 masterpiece A West Berlin art expert says The Man with the Gol- den Helmet, believed for centuries to be the work of Rembrandt, probably was painted by one of the Dutch master's students about 1650. + The latest brochure from the Kaiser-Friedrich Museum, which owns West Berlin's most famous pain- ting, lists it as the work of an “unknown artist”. Rembrandt era. from _the- fake,” said. Jan Kelch, an art historian and specialist in Dutch paintings. “It remains a great, masterful work.” He said important details in the painting, depicting an elderly man in armor, wear- itig a feathered golden hel: met, do not match Rembran- dt's style, including the brush method used. “The master always had people as the central motif, while this painting seems to growth in the use of tempo- rary. workers, supplied by specialty firms on demand, is changing the way many companies in Canada staff their operations. Spokesmen for businesses that supply temps — as they are called in the trade — insist they are doing no harm. But labor leaders are sure the trend is detrimental to the long-term interests of workers. “Employers are telling us that our services enable them to keep payroll costs at relatively fixed levels, whether business is up or down,” Ted Turner, - presi- dent of the Toronto-based Federation of: Temporary Help Services, said in a recent interview. : In less than five years the number of temporary worker in Canada has doubled and now about 50,000 jobs a day are handled’ by temporaries, a management tool to budget their businesses more. effect- ively during periods of exp- ansion or recession,” said ‘Turner. “In 1982, they began dis- covering that using temps was a way of making one of their biggest costs, labor, More flexible.” But Wilf Hudson, presi- dent of the Feder- He said companies will continue to maintain their core Work force with all the usual benefits and job guar-_ antees. “We're only providing a secondary work force for short peroids on special pro- jects,” added Coke. THE C.P. SUB Oren) 32! NOON: 2AM. TUESDAY nicht — “POOL TOURNAMENT locos ines for Top Three, 1895 RESTAURANT — Ph. 368. Ba82 Open Monday - Saturday — 9 a.m. - p.m. Featuring SALAD BAR (Inc. Soup & iibiaed 33. 95 WE ALSO CATER TO BANQUETS & COCKTAIL PARTIES FOR GROUPS OF 15 TO 120. He runs Manpower Temp- orary Services, the Canadian Ae Sh aa ation of Labor, claims the use of temporary help basedt Manpower Inc., the undermine the chances for workers to unionize, and in that way deprives them of a shot at bettering their wages and fringe benefits. “Companies should hire their own part-time help without the assistance of a temporary help service,” he said. The temporary help com- paniés employ workers dir- ectly, paying all wages and looking after statutory obli- gations such as unemploy- ment insurance contribu- tions. The then bills largest of its kind. Coke said up to 40 per cent of those workers his firm supplies to companies on a temporary basis go on. to become full-time employees. And those full-time em- ployees are better protected because of the temporary workers, added Turner. ; LICENCED DINING ROOM Nov. 1 to Nov. 17 Special 2 Steak Dinners for $15.95 Open 4 P.M. Daily WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED. Reservations for Private Parties — 365-3294 Located 1 mile south of weigh scales in Ootischenia concerned the federation estimates. There are about 200 firms with 600 offices across Can- ada providing temporary workers to businesses that need everything from secre- tarial to industrial help. CUTS COSTS “The prime. reason our industry is growing is be- cause companies have learn- ed they can use temps as _ ART & STAMP the client. Sometimes the temporary help service will attract workers with offers of train- ing on YOUR TAX DOLLARS . You can't get them back . . . but you can fell them where to go If you would like more control over how your tax dollars are spent and are iby the apparent -érosiors of excellence’ in post-secondary opportunities in your region then the Selkirk College Foun- For Your Convenience We're OPE N MONDAY hubs BESS TICKETS ‘Two subscribers names are listed below. If your name oppecrs, you're the winner of a Tickets for d raw. FREE tickets. drop into the Castlegar News office tomorrow 01 Tuesday until 5 pom.. or phone 365-7266 ‘by s ‘pum. Tuesday to clolm. Find your name below ‘end good luck! CASTLEGAR FLOOR COVERINGS HARDWOOD & CERAMIC TILE AUTOMOTIVE 365-2912 365-7145 365-2955 365-7787 365-2155 365-3666 eT scans pakiny” BAKERY Ua neoid Plas oman aly BUILDING SUPPLIES es rabies DING SUPPLIES LTD. PRINTING TUGAR MEWS Vwi Columba Ave KELPEINT 623 Columbia Ave 365-2175 365-7252 dation should interest you. Let the Foundation show you how you can direct your taxes to better serve — word processors for example. Bill Coke, who heads you and the students of Selkirk Collége. At the same time, becoming a of the Selkirk hey t Foundation will allow you to ) support the quality of p while r scores of pipehuses you make monthly! ig cas' on Your hly tax di ible membership fee of $15 ($10 for students and Canada’s largest Pp help service, disagrees that there is any real threat to da’s full-time workers. senior citizens) entitles you to discounts from participating merchantsain your 5 ship card titl rou ti everyday purchases such as food, gas and clothing that will offset the coat of your tax deductible membership. Take a positive step toward helping your Community College today by sub- scribing to the Selkirk College Foundation. ACT NOW._AND FILL OUT THE ATTACHED FORM Be focusing on the armor,” “The painting is nota said Kelch. Rose’s Restaurant Borscht & _, Homemade Bread # December 5, 12Annual NELSON CIVIC CENTRE Thursday 11 - 9; Friday 10 - 9; Saturday 10-6 The Marketplace of Kootenay Crafts! ADMISSION 50¢ COLLECTORS Robert Bateman Canada’s foremost artist,,has been commissioned to produce a limited edition print of Canada’s FIRST ANNUAL WILDLIFE HABITAT CONSERVATION STAMP Print and Stamps must be ordered by Jan. 31, 1986 for March Deliver. A FRAMED EDITION WILL BE AVAILABLE FOR YOUR INSPECTION AT: A TASTE OF ART Thursday, Nov. 28 Between 7-9 p.m._ FOR FREE BROCHURE CALL: A Taste of Art 1129 - 3rd Street Castlegar, B.C. 365-2727 ———— Yes, lam interested in b inga de Club b Name Address City Prov. Postal Code Enclosed is my cheque for () first month's membership $15 $10 for students and senior citizens (.) yearly membership $150 (save $30 (_) yearly membership $100 for students and seniors (save $20) ™ (.) 12 post-dated cheques for my year’s membership $15 each or $10 each for students and senior citizens Your personalized {oundation: card will be mailed to you Promptly. Enclosed will be a list of over 200 pa and di d instructions as to the use of your foundation card. Look for brachures outlining details at retail outlets displaying Foundation Club Cards. For more. information.contact: CONVENIENCE STORES JOHNS GROCERY & GAS Miv3 broueworer, Robson DEPARTMENT STORES STORE 1, 1455 Selhick Ave, 365-6141 PLUMBING BARTLE £ GIBSON 2317 6th Ave. 365-7941 RESTAURANTS 365-3255 365-7782 365-7813 365-3214 365-3717 }OOL WAGON Costleowd Plaza SOUTH SLOCAN- KOOTENAY INFORMATICS ‘Across from Mt, Sentinel Schoo! NELSON 354-4491 352-7221 Y NEW SHOP 776 Rossland Ave.. Trot RESTAURANTS STON PIZZA, 1612 Boy Ave. " SELKIRK COUTECEF FOUNDATION 1200, C Phone 365-7292, 2 tect 340