CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, November 4, 1976 Annual Halloween Party Masi Zales tho Centre of Aracion ia Her Clowa Coetune Complete with Flashing Light ) Hetin Board | FALL TEA AND BAKE SALE *Kootenay Temple No. 87 Pythian Sisters Fall Tea and Bake Sale, Sat., Nov. 18 from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Legion Hall. Sewing and novelty articles. Door prize. Tea tickets 50 cents each. NURSES The regular Le moet chapter meeting of the istered Nurses’ Association of B. C., originally scheduled for Nov. 8, has been cancelled. UNICEF CHRISTMAS CARDS A full selection of UNICEF Christmas cards and calendars are now available at the College Bookshop, main lounge, Selkirk College. Total proceeds go to support this very worthy cause. HAND-CRAFTED ITEMS Many interesting hand-crafted items are for sale at the Adult Achievement Centre, 211 Maple St. ° Castlegar. Drop in and browse. We may have just what you've been looking for as a special gift or just a little something for yourself. SENIOR CITIZENS The Castlegar and District Senior Citizens’ Association will hold a business meeting at the Centre tonight (Thurs., Nov. 4) at 7:30 p.m. WOMEN’S AGLOW FELLOWSHIP. A luncheon for ladies will be held by Women's Aglow Fellowship at the Castlegar Community Centre on Wed., Nov. 10 at 11 a.m. The speaker will be Gen Bredesen of Victoria. Please get tickets before Nov. 5 by phoning 365-7330 or 965-5443, Babysitting service $3 available. - BLUEBERRY FALL DANCE : For an evening of fun and relaxation, plan to attend the annual Fall «Dance sponsored by the Creek in the new Castlegar Community Complee elt ite Sat., Nov. 6, i raat oc A Clara Hancock, Chinese Mistress of the Door Bridge Club:Results: ;, Ten and a half tables took part in Monday night's play at the Joy Keillor Bridge Club with the following results: North-South Winners with an average of 121-1/2: First, Tommy Good- fies tis 8 6b SN sie alee More Entertainment Ads Page 2A frey and Claire Bradley 186; second, Gordon Boyd and Helen Keillor 184; third, Lois Cairns and Agnes Charlton 127-1/2; fourth, Don" Ellison and Joy Keillor 124-1/2, . East-West Winners with an average of 108-1/2: First, Doreen Camp- bell and Libby Weaver 130; second, Hert Tyson and Dr. Ken Wagner 127-1/2; third, Bill Ahrens and Margaret Vander- pol 123; fourth, Grace Donald- son and Jean Fischer 120-1/2. The champs are Doreen Campbell and Libby Weaver. E.R. W. McDonald, B.C. DI NUDINY AND SOARES «-. Musie by the popular will ba available and a hot chili ti ‘will be served. Get your tickets now from the Maples Store, the Yarn Barn, and Recreation Commission members. R.N.A.B.C. DISTRICT DINNER MEETING A dinner meeting for district members of the Registered Nurses Association of B, C. will be held on Tues., Nov. 9 at the Hi Arrow Arms. The Castlegar R.N.A.B.C. is hosting the dinner. Smorgasbord $6 at 7 p.m. Cocktails $1 at 6 p.m. Phone ward clerk at hospital by Nov. 4 to-put name on list. CANADA BOOK WEEK All schools were invited to participate in Canada Book Week being held from Nov. 1 to 6. The special week will end with a story-hour puppet show this Sat., Nov. 6 at 2 p.m. in the Castlegar branch of ‘the Castlegar and District Library. All are welcome to attend: A Public Service of Interior Pulp and Interior Lumber Operations Canadian Cellulose t ‘SELKIRK COLLEGE ‘SUNDAY MATINEE AT.2:00 MATURE Touring Money ’. Gout of Band Booster Club The Twin Rivers Band Booster Club held its first meeting of the 1976-77 season. ) The club is made up of in- terested parents that are help- ing the young band by raising money for uniforms and travel- ling expenses. During the last school year, vests were purchased for each member in the band. These vests are worn by the members during concerts, but the vests remain the property of the school. _This year the club is hoping to raise enough money to enable the band to tour other cities and perform in their school assemblies. ‘The band members are en- couraged to get involved in the money raising projects as well > as turning their efforts into a well synchronized group. Volunteers are urgently needed to help with planned projects. Interested parents are urged to contact either president’. Marg Bonnett or secretary Kathy Popoff. Relax. Ulcers are not tax-deducti- ble. (Health & Welfare Canada) + next celebration,” . Person for the group said. raws Large Crowd A multitude of gypsies ac- companied by princesses, clowns, shelks and assorted vampires and hob-goblins de- cended upon the Adult Activity Centre last week for a very lively halloween party. Colorful decorations, good food and punch kept the spirits high. Live music was provided by an ad hoc orchestra led by Dick Wayling. The volunteer musicians included Ray Gat- tinger, Marj and Fred Bonnett, Bill Watt, Bob Bertuzzi, and Trig Kaardal, Guests came from Trail and Grand Forks for this annual event which grows in popular- ity each year, “Many of our friends in the, community dropped in and joined the festivities and we hope to have an even bigger crowd at our. a spokes- Sand Dune Songs Remain A Mystery A deep boom intruded upon the desert silence, fol- slowed by a series of tubalike “oompahs.” Other sounds, like the bark of ‘seals, joined the general din. Jack Hereford was playing : the sand dunes again. Mr. Hereford, 70, spent two hours this week climbing 100 feet to the top of Kelso Dune, at Devil's Playground, Calif., then fell to his hands and knees and started a sandslide. The dune boomed in a deep basso as a large section of sand slid down, the slope. The air shook with vibrations from the shock’ waves. Mr. Hereford, a prospector and mining engineer, has spent the past 12 years seeking the answer to the eerie music emitted by certain sand dunes throughout the world. He heard the booming song the first time when he climbed Kelso Dune, a mass of sand located in the barren desert about 200 miles south-east of Los Angeles. Ralph Bagnold, a British physicist and an authority on sand dunes, has’ written ‘that there is “no real explanation of the mechanism by which the sounds are produced,” Mr. Bagnold has advanced a theory that the noise may be generated by a phenomenon known as “piezo-electric ef- fect,” the’ generation of electricity in the quartz sand crystals because of mechanical stress. ARTS Calendar Nov. 6, 6, 7—Selkirk College presents “Oliver”, a musical comedy at the NDU Theatre in’ Nelson, Evening performances at 8 p.m. daily anda matinee on Sun., Nov. 7 at 2 p.m. Box office Phone ta 352-9566 for reservations. . ee 8 i Now to Nov. 6—“Malaspina Printmakers Exhibi- tion" at the National Exhibition’ Centre, Running with folk art . oe Nov. 11, 12, 19—Trail Art Club annual Fal Art Exhibition to be held in the Mine-Mill Hall-in’ Officlal opening on Thurs.,’ Nov. 1 eee Nov.14—Nelson Overture Concert Series pre- sents “La Traviata” in the Nelson Civic Theatre. Admission by membership only..’Available from Castlegar Drug, Carl’s Drugs a: ecBain st 365-7613, Pik past tac ? Nov. 20—Selkirk Weavers Guild ‘annual Exhibi- tion and Sale of Weaving. To be held in the Castlegar and District Community Centre, >... ah Hens for this bi- monthly f feature should be tele; honed ‘o Mrs. D. Miller-Tait ie Castlegar and Community Arts Cana : "985-7 Sponsored b Castlegar Ser ngs Credit Union HIDE - TT THIS FRIDAY ‘AND SATURDAY in the Fully - MARLANE HOTEL _Entertalnment Nightly.” “CABARET Fri a SAT. NIGHT Presents the Musical Comedy OLIVER yy L. Walker directed by sot designed by G. MacDonald At N.D.U. Thoatre in Nelson | EVENING PERFORMANCES — 8:00 p.m. Thursday, November 4 Wednesday, November 3 - TICKETS Friday, November 5. © Saturday, November. 6 Sunday, November 7 EVENING $3.50 Adults $2.50 Students e MATINEE $3.50 Adults © $2.50 Students $1.50 Under 12 PREVIEW $1.25 Students & Children ADVANCE RESERVATIONS STRONGLY RECOMMENDED Book Office open Monday, October. 25 — Daily 9:00 --12:00 a.m., 1:00 - £00 bee For reservations call 352-9566. i oivme sigit iw Dining - Dancing. Polynesian Smorgasbord (Dress Optional) 6 p.m. _ live Music by Generation Gap 8 p.m. Full Adult Facilities Available Wednesday, November 10 Reservations: 365-7282 a Hi Arrow Arms Hotel Announces a Bie eueat: {Dear Ann Landera: In a recent column: someone asked if you Y believed that the positions of the stara (at the timo of birth) or the i £ phases of the moon had any effect on people's lives. You wore F,noncommittal in regard to the stars but said tho phases of the 2 tna met certainly affect behavioral patterns and cited the word Tam a serious student of the relationship between cosmic W influence and man's behavior. Recently I came across a fascinating. “study made in Florida from 1956 through 1970. The researchers also studies crime statistics in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, from 1958 f through 1970. t Nearly 35,000 criminal offenses were examined and the t findings prove you were correct, . ¢ Under a full moon there was a disproportionate number of | robberies, rapes, assaults, burglaries, offenses against telatives, tauto thefts and arrests for ‘ly conduct. YOUNG LOVE, tender and touching Sue dew displayed in ‘this scene from Warner Bros. “Ode to Billy Joe” now playing at the Castle Theatre. Robby Benson and Glynols O'Connor appear as the ni "Does this suggest something to you? —A Regilar Reader {Dear Reg: Yes. People should take extra safety when the basis of Bobie Gentry’s smash record hit of the same title that is the source of the story. story. } the moon is full, They should also b f thelr own. , to be a little “loony”. t ‘ Lash oe {Dear Ann Landers: I have an urgent problem that I cannot recall {ever seeing in your column. Please help me at once, ‘L_was engaged to marry a man I thought the world of. I was‘ teertain he respected me completely. Now I'm not so sure. We faren’t children. I'm a widow with four children. G has been ‘divorced for five years and has a married daughter. He knew I didn’t app here was ‘devotion, admiration and a commitment to marry. We went together for over a year before we became intimate. I knew G was.a man of the world and had known many women. But after we met he had no more affairs and spent all his free time with me and the children. * "Last week G suggested that I invite one of my women friends (it didn’t matter which one) to come to bed with us. My chin dropped to the floor. He said I shouldn't be upset because every ‘man has a secret desire to do this. T broke the engagement then and there and told him I never wanted ie see him again. He has been begging me to take him back. He swears he will ‘never suggest such a thing again. I love him but I'm afraid he is not normal, Are all men like this? Should I take him back? I really do love him and he is a fine person in 80 many ways. Please, Ann, give me Rethink —Unable To Think Straight Dear Un: All men are not like that, but this doesn't mean he isn't normal. Let's just say he went a little’ haywire. You've made your position abundantly clear. Now be careful that you don’t throw the baby out with the bath water. I believe - Mr. G is sufficiently chastened and that he will behave himself from now on. Give him another chance. . . Confidential to What's Happening in Our Country?: Your guess is as good as mine. In 1975, the death rate was down—so was the birth rate and the number of marriages as compared with the previous year. The divorce rate was up, however. The number of legal! slits has doubled in the U.S, since 1964. What does it mean?.The scene is changing. It’s a whole new world out there, == ANN LANDERS SPONSORED BY === Karnie’s Ladies Wear . . . Colour Canine SKI SULTS Styled., for- Action! Shortie = Jacket’ has “Storm Cuff, Pockets and two-way front, Zipper. High waisted Ski Pants, Zip Front, Elastic, Straps, Storm Cuff. All nylon. with, 100% ‘polyester fil “Ski Jackets, S. M. L Xt. Ski Pants — Regular & Tall * WE ARE OPEN ALL DAY MONDAYS! KARNIE’S Ladies Wear 33. Maple 365-7961 Doctors Speak Out : TV Series Dangerous The Gong Show, the world’s weirdest TV series, is off. and running in a new night-time slot. As it got under way, four top psychiatrists spoke about the dangers the show poses— for audiences as well as for participants. Scheduled acts inciude a 350-pound woman who belches ‘The Star Spangled Banner, an old lady who imitates Shirley Temple, a dentist who plays songs on his air hose and a man who pours chocolate sauce under his arms and spinach on his head. The show, a favorite on day-time TV last season in parts of the country where it was shown, is now being syndicated to most ABC affil- iates. “Its sort of a chance for the part of the public with strange talents to work out their fantasies without being arrested,” host Gary Qwens said. » A celebrity panel judges the talent, and a gong rung arbitrarily by one of the panelists signals the end of the act. ‘The winning act gets $996.- 83, a random figure. “Idon't think the show will offend anyone,” Mr. . Owens said, “It's just very funny.” But four psychiatrists agreed only partly. () “Watching the "show purges. most people of hos- tility," said Dr. Jean Rosen- baum, director of the Child * Development and Family Guid- ance Centre of Colorado. “But for a ‘small per- centage, it's very dangerous, because they're liable to see themselves in the contestants who are doing all those self- things—which is eC K Tops on R Your bia @ CK Radio CKQR is conversational, informational, and sensa- tional 24 hours a day, featuring Country and Western, and’ Middle of the Road music throughout the day, with a 1'/-hour rock in the evening, followed by all your favorite easy listening hits throughout the entire night. We're always glad to have you on our dial, 60 be sure to listen to Radio CKQR in the Crossroads of the Kootenays at 1230 on your dial! MONDAY TO FRIDAY SCHEDULE Uprising with Fred Jack to 9 a.m. including News, Sports, Weather, Manpower Report Birthday Show News, Sports, Art Linkletter, Recreation Report, Weather, Words of Life, Earl Nightingale News Top ‘ot the Morning to 10:30 with BJ. Sports, jews Community Calendar ‘Trader Phone Al's Almanac to 12:15 p.m. News, Weather, Sports Stocker Report Entertainment News Major News, Major Sports, Weather, Recreation Raper! Stock Report, The Way 1 See It — Bob Hesi Atenoil with Black Jack to 4 p.m. includes: jews Trader Phone, Weather, Sports News Community Calendar News Rod Olson’ Show to 5:30 p.m. Sports, Weather, Strange Fate and Art Linkletter News Headlines Fishing Report (Friday only) Earl Nightingale Major News Major: Sports, Weather Dinner Date People's Gospel World Tomorrow Back to the Bible Music Rap, to 9:30 p.m. (Monday p.m. only —Top 20 Hits) News, Weather, Sports Music'to 12 Midnight: News, Weather, Sports News, Weather, Sports ¥ Midnight Special to 6 “aim. includes: © euserereee & SB SSsnssensz Sess News, Weather, Sports, Time Checks very depressing. “And the kind of person who puts himself in such a position as a contestant has to be a masochist in the first place. “These people get their pleasure from subjecting them- selves to self-destructive im- pulses. “Such people have a high suicide rate and a high accident rate.” Dr. Marvin Ziporyn of the Illinois Department of Correc- tion said: “Some people get their jollies out of seeing others in ain. u “People who subject them- selves to it (The Gong Show) are very desperate. “For the contestants, it's another form of war, “The audience is there . to has already gol a. lot of CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, November 4, 1976 Stock Up Sale SMOKED PORK PICNICS. ROUND STEA 2 MATURE GRAIN FED BEEF CANADA GRADE .... A hostility, | sadistic and so forth, something like this could set him off.” All four psychiatrists a- greed contestants on The Gong Show run greater risks than’ those watching. A few years ago, for instance, a contestant on a similar show shot himself after he was gonged off stage, “I just wonder why they show that junk,” said Dr. Berthold Schwarz, psychiatric consultant to Essex County Medical Cen- tre in Montclair, N.J. As a spectacle, Dr. Schwarz said, the show is “not ~ much different from the gladia- tors in the.arena with the early Christians. “It would have as many effects on its audience as there are people in the world.” But he emphasized the possible hazards for the con- tentants. The show “obviously leads to highly destructive situa- tions,” he said. “It's all at such a low level as having a cripple or blind person on stage and laughing at him, “These people may be emotional cripples.” Dr. Chapman saw some hope in the fact the show features both masochistic and sadistic humor. “We “have a very well- balaneed . show here. , It's ‘a perfect marriage," he said, Little People Stand Up For Rights The Little People Of Amer- ica receritly rose up—to protest the way the world looks down on them. At their annual convention > in Miami Beach, Fla, the members complaints about how their everyday needs are put out of reach. ‘There were even problems’ at the hotel, the 400 midget delegates stayed in. The management had gone to elaborate lengths to accom: modate them—like placing ramps at doors so the delegates could reach the handles, erect- ing steps at the cashier's cage and hanging the towels low. But someone forgot about the telephones. “They still haven't. solved the phone problem,” said Diann Locicero of New Orleans, La. “That drives me crazy. Phones, see people Dr. William Chapman, a professor of payshatry at the Tis: aa adjusted person would not be affected by watching the show, “There are a lot of people who get vicarious satisfaction out of seeing other people hurt, On the other hand, it repels some people, luo." But ne added a caution about the show's nts. “If a contestant STEAK & ‘CHICKEN “Our Specialties” «HOURS Monday to~ Friday 4 p.m. to 12 midnight Saturday 12 noon. to 12 midnight Sunday, 12 noon to 10 Pm. See us for RS WESTERN TACK _ Ph. 365-3294 Located one mile South of the Weight Scales Z at Ootischenia phones 'y' » but I can't Fath any of them.” upkappy. - The world's smallest night club bouncer Pat Bilon, who is only 2’ 10" tall, dismissed suggestions he wasn't up to the job “I never have. problems with unruly drunks,” he said. “But, oneg, I had to yank a chair from under a six-foot custom: er.” SADDLE HORSES For Hire > @ half-hour -@ hour @ day But ue everyone was Ph, 365-5211 RUMP ROAST BONELESS. MATURE GRAIN FED BEEF CANADA GRADE .. A HEAVY CHICKEN ROOSTERS = ce MEATY SPARERIBS =. BEEF SAUSAGES =: 10... 97.47 EMPIRE BACON COCONUT MED, i: ai! 39 1% 14 OZ. BAG ............. 14 oz, HEINZ IN TOMATO SAUCE tins Ne BARS ROWNTREES FAMILY PACK BEANS HEINZ IN TOMATO SAUCE wm $189 FROM THE IN-STORE BAKE SHOP ® -HOT BREAD; white or brown APPLE ‘TURNOVERS 6 tm 89 DATE & NUT LOAVES, ea. 89 I INSTANT COFFEE MAXWELL HOUSE 10 OZ. JAR BABY FOOD Sis 9c. 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