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SPORTS FANS GETAWAY FIELD EARNS GRUDGING RESPECT By BOB THOMAS BURBANK, CALIF, (AP) — There is, Sally Field admits, a lot of Scarlett O'Hara in her. Not that she is possessive, fickle or vindictive. But she often harks back to the gospel according to Scarlett: “I'll think about it tomorrow.” That philosophy has helped Field survive 20 busy years in Hollywood, getting her through the years when she was known as Gidget or the Flying Nun or Burt Reynolds's girlfriend. Only with her Oscar-winning Norma Rae did she gain some grudging reapect And when she collected her second Academy Award for Places in the Heart last year, the scoffers cited her effusive speech: “You like me! You really like mbt” She “Brigtles slightly when the Oscar speech is mentioned. \ “Yes, I know it offered a lot of material for people to play with,” she said. “I have no regrets. What I said is lutely what I am. If I offended anyone by being honest, straightforward and emotional, I can't help it. I can’t turn away and cloak my feelings at a moment like that. Some people can play cool. I just can’t fake it.” Even with the awards, she still gets knocks from critics who deride her famous spunk. ‘IGET HURT “Sure, I get hurt feelings. I say, ‘Ouch — go away!" But you know something?Bad reviews hurt for a moment, but you don't remember them.” Field was reflecting on her life and career in the office she occupies just inside the gate at the Burbank Studios. It is RISKY BUSINESS . Talent sh at Expo this @ pert in the Magic, prepares to “swallow oe Tloming boat 5 during modest by Hollywood standards and strewn with the envelopes and cards presenters used for her two Oscars; posters of Places in the Heart and her latest movie, Murphy’s Romance; a bulletin board cluttered with future projects (she has five films in development); a Norman Il painting of a pi is as she holds a fan magazine photo of a movie star. “That's me, I guess,” Field said, “living in a dream world and playing dress-up, which is, I suppose, what I do for a living.” She was dressed casually — heavy-weave wool sweater, jeans, black-mesh high running shoes. But her attitude seemed businesslike, befitting her new role as head of her own production company, Fogwood Films. Murphy's Romance is Fogwood's first movie. It reunited Field with her Norma Rae director, Martin Ritt, and its co-star is James Garner. ROLES NOTABLE Her most notable roles have been as a small-town factory worker and a farm widow during the Depression. In Murphy's Romance, she's a divorcee struggling to herself and her son on a horse-boarding ranch. “T'm not a big-city kid. There is no aura of sophistication about me. I can't convey that well-bred, old-money kind of feeling. It's more of a rural, get-out-and-do-it-yourself feeling. Maybe that's because I grew up in the San Fernando Valley when it was all orange and walnut groves with horses everywhere.” She was born in Pasadena, Calif., 39 years ago. Acting seemed inevitable, since her mother was a Paramount contract player, Margaret Field, and her stepfather was Jock Mahoney, television's Range Rider and later a screen Tarzan. She started acting three weeks before her 18th birthday. Enrolled in Columbia's acting workshop, she was chosen for the TV version of Gidget, then The Flying Nun. The latter haunted her until 1973, when she electrified TV audiences as the split-personality Sybil. An Emmy award for that pertenpal helped win her better roles. “There are certain things you learn if you stay around the business long enough,” Field said. This Week in DEXTER’S PUB MON. THRU SAT Silverlode the K y regi for the B.C. tinve today at Stanley Humphries secondary school's s activity room Conterars Phot By Byen Witor Provinces provide credit counselling services says Sam Hastings of the Credit Counselling Service of Toronto. “We sit down and go over a complete cost of living with them. The difference between their take-home pay and their cost of living is the funds available for paying their If the counsellor finds you can handle the debts on your own, he or she will show you how to do it. If the money falls ee ae ses MT increasing your income or wh oh chet tate and theng'y no woy they cos get out of debt within five years, then we throw up our hands and say you might have to consider personal bankruptcy,” Hastings said. CAN COMBINE Avwumber of provinnsp have other aystemse that invalve ties io conrla 0+ ene SS default they are on their own and wide open to having their assets seized.” British Columbia, Alberta and several other provinces also have programs where a counsellor will try to help people dig themselves out of their debts on their own if he thinks they can do it. “The counsellor acts as a kind of mediator, making arrangements for the repayment of debts,” says Don Bench, director of Alberta's consumer credit program. “There is no involvement of the courts.” In Quebec, there is a simple court-imposed repayment. formula, where people who apply to provincial court have to {pve thaws Spor cont of thelr sileey 9 ae See O'Shea tak NEW YORK (AP) — Things are not what they seem to be in Corpse! says Milo O'Shea, analyzing the murder mystery laced with laughter that has brought him back to Broadway after a four-year absence. In 1982, O'Shea played Father Tim Farley, the pragmatic if pleasure-loving Irish priest in Mass Appeal. It was the perfect union of the right actor and the right role, winning cheers for O'Shea from the critics as well as a Tony nomination. In Corpse! O'Shea feels he has another good part. He plays Major Ambrose Powell, an incompetent hit man hired to kill the wealthy brother of an unsuccessful actor, portrayed by Keith Baxter. “There hasn't been anything written like this play before,” says O'Shea. “People have tried to compare it to Sleuth and Deathtrap but it’s not like them at all,” he adds, referring to two of Broadway's biggest mystery hits. “It’s sort of black comedy, like Joe Orton.” O'Shea, a dapper gentleman dressed in brown, sits in a theatre district restaurant while discussing the play that has kept him occupied for the last 18 months. He and Baxter first did Corpse! for eight months in London beginning in July 1984 and then went on a lengthy American tour where the play was refined. ALLOWS CHANGE “The playwright, Gerald Moon, is an actor and he's been very generous about revising the seript, within the framework of the play, of course,” O'Shea says. “We have changed it a great deal. “The London production was a bit blurred in that we didn’t have the comedy and the drama sharply defined. Now I think they are.” O’Shea’s career has taken many twists and changes that he has weleomed. “T'm not a conservative actor. I like to take chances,” he says. It's a pattern the 59-year-old O'Shea has followed since he began as a child actor in Dublin. His father was a singer who appeared in musical revues and operas, his mother a dancer and harpist. O'Shea grew up goihg to the theatre at least once a week. His father would take him to the Abbey and Gate theatres, the finest in Dublin. “So it came as no revelation when at 17 I said to my dad ‘I want to be an actor for life.’ He equipped me very well for it,” O'Shea says. O'Shea joined the Gate Theatre and took singing, acting and dancing lessons. He eventually ended up in London, making his West End debut in 1949 in an Irish comedy called Treasure Hunt, starring Dame Sybil Thorndike and directed by Sir John Gielgud. es chances jobs were few and he returned to England. His break came in 1967 What brought O'Shea to the attention of American audiences was the movie version of James Joyce's Ulysses, which is still being shown on the revivial house and college film club circuits. His success in Ulysses led in 1968 to Staircase, a play ahead of its time, according to O'Shea. The story of two aging homosexuals, it was later made into a movie starring Richard Burton and Rex Harrison. Now he moves easily from theatre to movies to television and back again “Most youpg actors have a very small target.” he says. “They want to be just an actor, a dancer or a singer. “I remember playing the gravedigger in Hamlet while filming Ulysses during the day. In my next production, I was playing the ugly sister in a pantomime of Cinderella” Today, he's just as busy He’s even finished a Duran Duran rock video, which was released in January. O'Shea's relationship with the group goes back to the late 1960s when he appeared in the Jane Fonda film Barbarella. “I played the mad villain, trying to pleasure her to death,” O'Shea laughs, “and my name was Duran Duran. These boys liked the name and used it for their rock group.” Quintessence to open series Quintessence, formerly Lenny Solomon, a violin Newfoundland offers some credit counselling, short, then the service will try to set up a pa; stretched out over as much as five years. ‘The money is paid into the service each payday and then to creditors. WASHINGTON (CP) to that of his advisers, makes no direct reference to Canada although it says “we are con- tinuing to explore the pos- Weekly Stocks known as Collage, will open the second half of the Trail Society for the Performing Arts concert series. Appearing at the Trail Ju nior High Auditorium Tues. day night, the group will present a diversity of musical numbers from swing to scar- latte, from Bach to blues. Two violins, a viola, cello and electric guitar make up this quintet. The music takes on a fun and humorous quality, ac cording to a prepared re lease. player in the ensemble, says the group has “an eclectic approach to music.” Solomon goes on to say the nature of the group “affords us the ability to play not only classical music, but jazz swing. blues, and the rest, with a little schtick thrown The group began playing educational school con certs in 1982. The members of the quintet had no idea of the popularity that awaited them. TORONTO (CP) — It was hard to read the market for trends in a roller-coaster week on the Toronto Stock Exchange. Even Friday's trading was a mixed bag of trends. The ‘TSE 300 composite index fin- ished the day off 2.15 points to 2,789.81 on volume of 18.8 million shares, cutting the week's losses to 44.15 points. But that represented a re covery from a 16-point drop at mid-session. The ratio of gainers versus losers, known as the market breadth, wasn't giving much of a clue either. Advances edged out losers by just 343 to 335 while 338 were un cha L In New York, things were just as mixed. The Dow Jones average of 30 indus- trials jumped 12.73 points to 1,613.42, the third record high this week. New ick has no such pr To find out what help is ; available, gris the relevant consumer or justice ministries. the He says it is the beginning of something very big — five ear models to be built com- pletely in the province some- time after 1968 by his com- pany, the Cimbria Group. Until then, the company expects to sell about 6,000 of its sleek Cimbria Viper sports cars — a locally built fibreglass body and plush in- terior mounted on a Pontiac Fiero chassis. The cars retail for about $30,000. NEEDS eee eure tag sn wotiouvar only qr betanie #2 ET thet eal tent enough, then the service will look at any difficulties you might be having. Free trade prospect hailed sibility of establishing bila- as ‘historic opportunity’ on the broadest possible package of mutually benefi- cial reductions in trade’ bar- STARTED TREND It said that back in 1935 Canada and the United to reverse the - States “took bilateral steps protectionism bilateral talks as a way to open markets “if more trad- itional multilateral steps are unsuccessful.” The advisers’ report notes that a U.S.-Israeli free trade pact was established last year and adds that “the United States now faces a historic opportunity. in - of that era, steps that became a catalyst for broader in- ternational co-operation then.” “The new Canadian-U.S. in- itiative offers similar pros- pects now,” it said. Te reports were submitted to Congress on Thursday. The White House has asked Congress for a go-ahead on free trade negotiations with Canada and an answer is not free trade pple with Canada.” “In September 1985, the Canadian government prop- osed that both countries con- sider bilateral negotiations d until spring under a lengthy approval In 1985, the United States imported $69.4 billion (U.S.) worth of goods from Canada and exported $47.2 billion worth to Canada. g There’s Always Something New For You Love Is Everywhere ES Consiglio’s plans are found. ed on his getting $10 million which he subsequently sold to others for $4 million cash, gave him “the credibility” to bring other investors — some are former fellow waiters — B.C. government's Discovery Foundation, set up to help high-tech firms, It brought in the Bentall family, owner of Dominion Construction, to build and finance the building at a cost of $6 million. An additional $2 million is avail- able in tax credits. But Consiglio’s rosy fore- casts, which include selling TTT TTT iututurtn THE C.P, PUB OPEN 12 NOON - 2 A.M. Open Featuring WE ALSO CATER TO BANQUETS & COCKT, PARTIES FOR GROUPS OF 15 TO 120. Hi ARROW ARMS Invites you to their ' ISLANDS PARADISE PARTY Special Homegoods Savings s, we are open this Sunday, Feb BIG FAMILY SIZE MICROWAVE OVEN © Touch Controls © Time Cook © Temp Cook With Probe Truly a Deluxe Full Size Unit > —/ Tellus... \ who you love and why Enter our contest and win one of two Valentine’s Day Prizes from Waneta Plaza TO ENTER Design your own Valentine! It can be acard, letter or anything you wish — as long as it can be placed on our Valentine board in Center Court. Be sure your name and phone number are on the back. February 26 — March 1, 1986 Hockey Games in Vancouver vs. Montreal and Philadelphia CALIFORNIA — ARIZONA 16 Day Coach Tour Departs March 12 SENIORS EDMONTON SHOPPING SPREE April7-11 DON’T MISS IT FOR THE WORLD! The 1986 Worid Exposition May 2 to October 13,1986 Vancouver British Columbia, Canada. Coach tours to Expo ‘86. Your choice of 3 days, 4 days, 5 days or 6 days. All tours include accom- modation at Sheraton Hotels with meal coupon: Expo pass; courteous and reliable driver, ex perienced escort In the early 1950s, he came to the United States, but ee eae ee YOU ARE INVITED ye CUPID TO HEAR AIN'T STUPID Pre BEN TORRES e eX, sate o Teacher § Evangel Chest Type Freezers XI GAMMA RHO TEA Will be held February 15 ot Logie Hell from 2 4 p.m. Door prizes. Bake table and white elephont table 212 — . When ifcomes to fun entertainment join us ot Checkers Pub!!! SFriday, Feb. 14 — 9 p.mz BARE AS YOU DARE: TWO BEST VALENTINES WILL BE geo SELECTED AT NOON — FEB. 14T — 1ST PRIZE — A romantic Dinner for Two and a Bouquet of Roses 2ND PRIZE — A beautiful Valentine's Day ALZHEIMER SUPPORT GROUP February 12, 7:30 p.m., Columbie View Ledge, rad. into Ph. 365-8103. 12 Castlegar Pentecostal Tabernacle Sunday Feb. 9 at 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. TOOLS FOR PEACE Meet Chryse Gibson, 8.C. Carpenter and CUSO cooperant Slides SHROVE TUESDAY PANCAKE SUPPER February 11. 4:30-7:00 p.m. Robson Recreation Hall. Alt you can eat. $3 adult, $1.75 child under 12. 365-5860 tor more intormation rr) PLEASE NOTE: 8-15 and 11.00 a.m. Services combined for this only Amateur Strip ae KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Ss of Cnacnore Pe atm ¢ Twin Rivers Lodge No. 70, Valentine Tea and Bake Sale 250. case Legion Holl, February 14, 2: 4 p.m. White Elephant Table rm fog Door prize, $1.00 ead " Y ‘ou are invited to attend a special meeting with Operation Mobilization lnterdenc minetonel Ovtreech) VALENTINES DAY DANCE Friday. February 14, 9 p.m. Sondmen inn Ballroom. Round tables available for for grove of 4-5 couples. Dance and but tet. $20. couple. 365. vn Coming events of Costlegor and District non-profit Flowers CUSTOM GROUP PACKAGES AVAILABLE exganizations mey be teted here. The first 10 words ore and additional words ore 15¢ each. Boldtoced ponzeo 4 eiSHCOCS PS $3.50 ds (which must be used for headings) count as two wor s There is no extra charge for o second insertion whil 3 third consecutive insertion is seventy-five percent ond the fourth consecutive insertion is Bay Ave., tre charge is $3.50 (whethe 368- -6666 + sees) iOacmnees ore 5 p.m. enier for Sundoy » Mondays poper ietices chovid be brought to te Costleger News ot 197 1-300-332-0282 Columbia A: CASTLEGAR AGENT V J Bulictin Board Furniture Warehouse Floor Covering Centre Phone 693-2227 2 2 rs iG OPEN 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL — 365-6616 FOR MORE INFO CALL 365-5212