Me sal Entre Dance Company will perform Friday at the R.E.M. Lee Theatre. ' The Entre Six Dance Company, described as the best modern dance company in Canada willbe performing in the R.E.M. Lee Theatre at 8 p.m. Friday. Tickets are available from Sight and Sound and at the door. The Entre Six Dance Company rehearsed for the better part of the summer. Aside from a gala _per- formance for the Com- monwealth Games in Ed- monton and a few benefit performances in the Mon- ireal area, dancers and artistic director Lawrence Gradus have been busy creating new works on music scores by Benjamin Britten, Johannes Brahms and Bella Bartok. The company officially launches its 1978-1979 season with perfarmances at the Toronto Dance Festival and Montreal's Octobre en Danse, Then Entre Six un- deriakes the long awaited praject of touring Canada's northwest regions, mainly the northern sections of Alberta and British Cotumbia, the Northwest Territories’ district of Mackenzie, Yukon as well as dates in Alaska. The tour will run from mid October to the end of November, Because of its size and vocation, Entre Six is |. Dance company here regarded as the travelling company, let alone a dance one, most suited for this kind of project. While, at the rate of 150 performances a- season, the company has in the recent years certainly proven its mobility, Entre Six has no less, through its constant work, maintained an enviable reputation for offering the highest artistic and professional quality. Its rapidly earned chain of successes include a rave debut in New York City in late 1976, touring and crenting with the National Ballet stars Karen Kain and Frank Augustyn, and more recently a contract for its exclusive U.S. management New Jaycee group starts The Terreena Jaycees, a women’s Jaycee group in Terrace, will hold its charter night on Nov, 25 at 7 p.m. in the banquet room of the Sandman Inn. Charter night is significant for the group because the Terreena Jaycees will be receiving its official charter and will become a recognized unit in the Jaycee International, said Betty Misfeldt, publicity chair- man. “This Is when we will be severing our ties with our parent unit, the Terrace Jaycees, and be an in- dependent unit," she said. The Terreena Jaycees will be selling Christmas coloring books during the holiday season. The books are two feet by three feet in dimension and they have Christmas prints for all ages to enjoy, she said. The group is asking any female between the ages of 18. and 39 whois interested in fellowship to pay the local unit a visit. The meelings are held on the first and third Thursday of every month al the Lakelse Hotel. Cocktails are al7 p.m. and dinner is at 7:30 pm, Person should make reservations with Rose Kerr, program chairman at 635-6792, who arranges the meals and transportation if it is needed. There are presently 14 members of the Terreena POLICE NEWS About $200 damage was done to a car belonging to Percy Sisson, of Kitimat, on Tuesday when a large rock struck his vehicle while he was driving to Kitimat on Highway 25. ; Anorthbound construction truck was carrying a load of yocks when one of the rocks . fell off the treck about 3 p.m, and hitSisson’s car said Kitimat RCMP, Aaron Bonnell, of Kitimat, turned some money he found in the -Kildala area over to = cst a poe pcaboetatenebeceatetstetetees i ate | We're Listed ' Here: the RCMP about 6 p.m. Anyone who lost some money in that area should contact the detachment office. Kitimat RCMP suspended one man’s driver’s license for 24 hours about 10:30 on ‘Tuesday. Terrace RCMP charged one person with consuming liquor in a public place and lodged another person in the cells overnight for being drunk. BIAL-AN-ORDER 632-3684 TERRACE ‘OLT'S PLACE - 790-2231 PETS BEAUTIFUL. 655-9253 Free - for ONE month courtesy of THE DAILY HERALD “ i¢ you wish your Business Phone * listed for your customers please call. 635-635 Jaycee. They were requested by the Terrace Jaycees to assist with the Jaycette functions of the regional convention in April, 1979. Misfeldt said the group would like to thank the Terrace Jaycees for spon- soring the new unit and in particular Doug Misfeldt and James Gillham for all the work, enthusiasm and assistance they gave in petting the group on its feet. WEATHER ew Business Not fisted in our B.G. Tel Directory. AURORA ANIMAL HOSPITAL - 625-2040 VETERINARY A low pressure center moving down the Alaska Panhandle is pumping milder Pacific air into the region, causing cloudy skies and periods of snow. There is a risk of freezing rain in somé of the lower lying areas due to trapped cold air. Some clearing can be expected tomorrow as the low pressure zone moves south and a ridge of high pressure builds in form the Northwest, and tem- peratures will be a little cooler tomorrow. Highs should reach around 2 degrees Celsius this af- terncon, and the mercury will probably dip to about -4 or -5 degrees Celsius tonight, The long range outlook is for slightly cooler tem- peratures and cloudy skies over the weekend. ghatatatntete SE ae a ed irs eee CENTRE 635-3300 ; ea tatgtate eastgatata’etalaletente® GS, ‘ a i" '* ‘ is with International Creative Management who handles among its few ballet at- tractions, Mikhail Baryshnikov atid Leslie Brown. The company’s intended program will alternate from a lighter choice of works including such Gradus signature pieces 2s ‘“Toe- cata”, ‘‘Nonetto'’’ and “Peter and the Wolf” to one that will highlight Entre Six’s new works ‘“Ex- cursions’’ and ‘‘Dances Formal and Light Hearted" choreographed to music scores by Britten and Brah- ms respectively. The tour is made possible through grants from the Touring Office of the Canada Council, the Recreation Branch of the Government of Yukon, as well as the Department of Education for the Government of the Northwest Territories. Performing arts lovers as well as newcomers have every reason to look forward to this upcoming first for beth Entre Six and the performing arts scene in the Pacific northwest. z a sa a ee: 13 ‘manded his TMS eae tae det oe uk SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Murder and mass suicide in Guyana, final acts in a religious sect’s weird fan- lasy of salvation, added the latest bizarre chapter to California’s history of cult- inspired horror, Rev. Jim Jones, who com- followers’ destruction and died himself in the carnage, took his cult to the South American country from California and thus lakes his place on a long list of demoniac “‘prophets’’ evsabalized by mass mur- ivver Charles Manson. ‘the cults—political and religious—seem to bloom each year in the state. What force draws the leaders and followers here? Some experts say the magnet is the sunshine that lures immigrants from colder climes. “People come to California because of the warm. climate and political liberalism," said Christie Kiefer, an anthropology professor at the University of California at San Fran- cisco. “‘They come looking for something new. Usually, they are disappointed with life itself.” Dr. Charles Glock, a sociologist at the University of California at Berkeley, sees the answer in the free lifestyle that has grown upin San Francisco. “People who move west are looking for new lives,’’ he said. ‘Los Angeles is a sort of square city. But ‘in’ San Francisco they know they can walk down the <=. sar ener tT a The Herald, Thursday, November 23, 1974, Page 3 California cults historic street naked and painted blue and no one will look up. “There's an old saying that you leave your religion behind when you cross the Rockies. But then they come here and find a new kind of religion.” “People who move in from out of stale are a little more lonely and searching for roots,” said Dr, Margaret Singer, a clinical psycholagist at the Uni- versity of California at Berkeley, The fanatics of the Sym- hionese Liberation Army who died in a_ suicidal shootout with police were kids from the East and Midwest, she said. Manson's ragged ‘communal family was a collection of misfits from scattered backgrounds. Charles Manson's followers believed he was Jesus Christ. Jim Jones’ converts saw him as God, 4 divine father who would lead them to heaven on earth. “When the group gets to a certain size,” Singer said, “the leader starts telling the group that the outside world is against them. A kind of paranoia grows up. It’s when they feel they have to defend themselves against the outside world that the potential for violence devel- ops.”” Singer sald the most powerful gurus become substitute parents to their lonely converts, and if the leader begins to believe his own myth of divinity, he must see his followers as “lesser than himself.” {6 — A great reat taste with half ay ae ) a \ e light beer _ forall kinds of reasons. A Dream Come True... If you've ever dreamed of owning a grandfather clock without having to pay $500 or more, this is your chance! Yes, for only a few days, you can order this 6-foot tall Grandfather clock direct from our B.C. fastory! Traditional cabinetry in a dark walnut finish, with a graceful swinging chime that chimes reliably on the half hour, and counts the full hours, omnamental weights, and the soothing rhythm of the old-fashioned TICK-TOCK you've @ KOT A Kit! 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