ja TL AOE ee ER Se - ns - an Rei eaten Lt ~The Herald, Tuesdays: Auguat. 14, 1983, REI Le eel aU POR ESE Sar Vom meensa bce ‘ 4; ( Quer reports; | that many. tennis players, ' ‘versely, should they win, for. a new one, | Con- On James” neck was. positively: determined by... the 5 years,. ‘the 1 name and the. wigalé too k - their. decision not to appear as. an. actor. in prime-time \ _ production 3 is scheduled to. make? its Broadway ; chatted for quite a while w with | ‘Duvall during a recent :pro- sue gis but her age'was oe ( against mak-. ‘especially women, can be | i. they. continue: with the ”. -West Coast doctors to be : |: resent .form...The. 32°. television >. shows: , bow this October,” -.”. Motional trip there and says . Ing the journey. More im- ' sa oft the tt True? a ‘same ball. . Sylvia: caitcerous.. -Folldwing :; vear-old Charo, wtio.has Anything to it? - P,D, Se AER ae fhe actors h patterns ptianty have ‘vatican and off the court. ret oe Hanika, the noted ‘West. surgery and treatments, : “a two-year-old son. by A. Happily thereis. Alda °: a tritoee don't | cent Ac waen't cri about the idea. ; -- E.G.” Super tit German tennis, star, in- - doctors. now. ‘say’ ‘the her. Swedish husband, ’...i8 currently producing a.’ turally Duvall wound very: at her discussing: the con: : ‘A. upe sti ton in Hi sists on driving herself to -’ situation -is. complettely “claims the dance-s. style - TV series based on his hit. much 4 he does onscreen troversial nature of her rela: - - sports is -rampani at _& match; to-arrive’ Other. -- under : ‘control... :Mean- -has ks origins only inthe” movie. .'*The... Four’ © only better. Although he's 8 tlonship with Pope Pius XII. Ss knows noage or gender. “wise, she feels would be'a™ time, Harry is continuing ©: most iidlike., Seasons.’* In that ‘film,” often cast’as @ no-nonsense. 9, Is. Brooke | Shields . ‘However, since.you ask, ” jinx! - ‘Further, the Merit.” ‘tO “make ‘appearances, int - -; Carob: Burnett: * played’. type of few words onscreen, nocence. ‘ fot Lo Lae a ‘survey: Mer gpnaticed, 7 Report shows that ‘Betty ~ and hasadateatCalifor-. | + & eo i + Alan's wife. Seems Alda’ . Duvall is in private an ar iene? OL La the Ragneee : > % ~ by the” Merit sport, - Stove; ° a Patch tenniy :.nig’s Disneyland in-tate-”..... Q. ‘Doesn't. crooner «Convinced Carol: to ap- | tieulate and voluble talker tion bit another h for her i reveals: tha a “certain “Player,” is ~ cateful to.“ July.-Harry Is: renowned Billy “Eckstine. have.:an -pear as'a guest'in the TV di who's smart, interesting and - moviecareer?—-VR. players, inc Indlng ng t rig avoid the tex of stepping as something. of “a. ‘unusual theory about the —¥ersion -of -the - film.. - distinctly non-British. A. Although h Evert anc tak An ball on a base line:prior to a fighter, and 1 wish hint - . music press? What exac- - When she agreed, friends oe bear that Linda a oe ae isn't foreign to Brooke and Jaeger, vont ake a ball.. match,. Plus, numerous :. only ‘the’ best. in his went to-work persuading Jerry ‘Brown of Califo, : her: mother-manager, a from the person Rath Women jin. tennis con- _ current battle, my Alda to step once“again “gre” now iiving pen! looks ae though the young. 20 . ter losing a pond ut tinue wearing the same -- - - wey *. v before the cameras a together. True? — y tresa is in earnest about at: bounce it back and waif lucky” dress as long as: | -Q. We receitly ‘aw “husbandly"’ capacity: 1 tending college: Shields, they’ré. on a winnitg Charo in a -night club, © hear he's decided to take. ‘ALNo, It isn't, No one ex- tarts a new bed at sireak (naturally, the and wondered where in the plungeand.appearon cept Linda and the ex- Princeton in the fall. Her. dress is laundered bet- the world she picked up -occasion. After all, why governor knows aol senior high school paper was ween games), her famous. cuchi-cuchi can’t Alan do the same “What thelr relationship is a report based on Brooke's wae .._°- dancing style that’s both - thing Carol will do? about but you cabot that one-month working stint, at RE Q. Is. bandleader Harry . funny and-sexy. Do you ae clltical animal to set @. We were intrigued with {2 San Diegoz00, She's not, LOT WITH 1972 EMPORER James seriously ill? know?--R.F. Q. We' re great fans of - up for that kind of “La Popessa,” the absorb- powaver, your ahs ladon at double wee on al ghee s the. problem? -- the “late Charlie poasip. adnda, who doean’t te alee ch divulges Princeton, "Brooke files to basement. ng , shares a ie Story o other . obo. Contact Royal Bank, Chaplin’s ; movies, , ‘anid once ng plone two roommates, Pascalina, the remarkable Paris to model thenewhaute Box 10, Casslar B.C. Phone 278-7385. -” (aug. 31-93)- ' FORSALE 1977 20 foot motorhome.. A. The bandleader _ \ about the origin of the dancing style -- more a: I asked Charo A. Billy told me recen= ‘tly that he looks to ~ Geroge Bernard Shaw when can how to. Billy this Oc- tober will round out 50. years in show: business, thinking about. ‘are anxiously’ awaiting ° the new’ Broadway musical hased on the life. and career of this legen- A. Yes to both counts. ‘Chaplin, " - boasting music and lyrics by. An- &@ Iman and & woman, both friends of hers. Interviewers are wondering what the story is with Brown. When . _ ww o*& : woman. who _ became con: fidante, advisor, friend (and some say power behind the throne) of Pope Plus XI1.. Is A At this point, 1 doubt it very, very much. Original- ly, plans were set for Mother Pascalina to visit-this coun- couture _ collections, then she'll make a Monte music reviewers, Shaw, dary genius. Will: Oona Ronstadt used to talk to the there any chance that she ite for a callege- bound 16 recounts the 69-year-old ' . Chaplin O'Neill, his last press she was open and can. Will come to the United ¥ We know that singer, likened critics to". wife, figure in the con- did, but now the singer is Stated to promote this- ac- iw wwe ny eat avery - eunuchs in a: brothel --.- text of this story? If so,. Very closed-mouthed and count ‘of Lt incredible life turecomes out, Roger Moore - they can’t do 'it-but they will she be referred to by - fetuses to-s: to-say a wordabout Story ~ is asked if he has plans -to sure like to tell those who. actual name?--S.B,~-* Personalllife. . star in the next 007 movie Doesn't he get fed with such questlons? — H. ve A. Yes he does but the star itl definite! sexy wiggle, actually:- first . as: in- ‘thony Newley | and try and ‘participate in“a of ‘‘Octopussy’’ has mutleegee cond sola otter Harry! 2 lonetin recently in Chicago; She’ - strumeitalist-bandleader Stanley Ralph Ross, will: - Berles of select media inter- devel a stock reply. -— ‘phone 638-8094, manager, Pee Wee Mon- Claims _in_ thickly ac-. and, most notably, as-a trace the. great film ar-_ views, including TV ap. “My tandard answer is —T. | (p10-29au9)' te, telismethat a growth ¢eNted English thatithas _ singer. Talent'is-proven, - tist’s colorful, Dicken-' pearance: However, ater haven't been asked to make _ nothing whatever to do says. Eckstine, ‘over.-a sian boyhood, — fight | Paneled ami fe her. lace Ro Pais Bond ae ‘lon an with being sexy..Seems tong period of time, and .. through to his final years Paul Murphy, co-author of alse has been put to his wife, HELP) WANTED that asa little girl, Charo his. best critics | are.-his spent. -in .. Switzerland. » @. We hear that one of . {then known as Maria audiences,-. Billy, .-. Since Oona O'Neill was terviews, “informants: in Roger's. next next is tee Bond f “Rosarlo Pilar. Martinez. _ whatever the. critics: say,, married’to. Chaplin for America’s best screen ac--. Rome say.that the 89-year- movie but some called « A Molina Baeza) used to - ‘meets any test of a: fit rst, - . over-30'years before his ‘ors, Robert Duvall, speaks; old Mother Pascalina, who's’ “Naked Face," which ' 4 UGHT LOCAL DELIVERY imitate the movements rate showbiz talent. death, her role will figure Doria Wop multilingual, would: have into production this fall fn Must'dress neatly, and speak clearly and have own | _ Of the family dog back in a accordingly in the broad... "P y made a marvelous oad unl. Chicago. Loe transportation, Above average Income, Dellvery | -Spain.. The :dog. was | Q. We hear! ‘alan Alda is is. canvas: .By the way, this 4 That's really wrong In: * : fee plusgas allowance. Must know area well, Full | | named Cuchi, and over ‘Teconsidering his: ; eagerly -Saticlpated formation. My. Chicago spy ~ and part-time available. agaghissssssssses. a '_. Terrace residents apply at: a, a No.1)-4546 Park Ave. ial “alge et Mc Nego iations define stalemate. f Friday. ... ° aa Kitimat residentsapply at: ; “A te ” 1643rd AGa ; ’ GENEVA (AP) — In U.S. government ‘offices here : on the Soviet proposal: Set equal ceilings on both missiles Jet between. Wam-Ipm and 1 2pi-épm Monday thru Avenue de la Paix and in Soviet offices down the same and warheads of NATO and Soviet medium-range nuclear . " Seturdey “Avenue of Peace," superpower diplomats duel in two seta. _ forces in Europe. But the missiles of NATO allies. Britain ‘ of negotiations that could define the shape of the great and -France, mostly single-warhead rockets, ‘must be . : nuclear arsenals — and thereby the stability of the world — ~ jounted, and a similar balance must he achieved in nuclear: . ca | for, years to come. co ‘tagh alrerat,. eon Bs a 4 aq 7 “FOR LEASE é nore urgent talks,’ whlch resuniied ‘May 17" naval . m mE : Paul Nitze, the U.S. negotiator, and his Soviet. counterpart, “Two possible compromises: anarticleby = , . — In exchange for cancellation of the U s. deployment, ., the Soviets reduce the SS-20s ell below 100, without full - ‘one-to-one compensation for thé-Britlsh and French missile * ‘warheads, but with U.S. concessions- on Europe-based “ warplanes. - Yuli Kvitsinaky, in a search for common ground on Hmiting nuclear arms in Europe. : ‘They ere working against a tight timetable. ‘New US. medium-range missiles are scheduled to ‘be introduced ‘in ‘Western, Europe by year’s end. The second set of talks, on reducing US. ‘and ‘soviet in- “1,000 square feet In Terrace Shapping Centre available September - 1st, 1983. Contact Steve Sell or Carmen Hedley, | Dominion Management Company, 2323 3’ Bentall Centre, P. 0. Box 49901 . “Michael A. Walker, "neces The Fraser Institute Don't et to | 4 v - BC. VIX 1B) -The Soviets obtain full compensation. or more for the . nn) q Sncouver, ; tercontinental missile and bomber forces, reconvenes in ‘t/ah and French missile forces and the United States... : oe oe . - early. June, Those discussions may drag. on for years, wlle deploys 100 to 200 cruise missiles, but none of the Pershing- : “Cc O n Cc UU sio a S wed Phone 688-4886 . “| a concerned world looks on. 2s, more feared by the Soviets, “The reat of the world couldn't care Jess if there isa little In either case, the Soviets would have to meet U.S. con- Well, it was an exciting week — the fiat week superiority on the Russian side or the American side," said ©. cerns about. the pdssible redeployment of excess SS-208 | of the aftermath of the new fiscalism in British | eed Yugoslav diplomat Miodrag Mihajlovic,: a longtime par: ° against Japan or China. re Columbia and perhaps the dawn of the new J * R ‘lcipant.in UN disarmament talks. ‘the U. S.has 2, 011 intercontinental missiles and bombers, .-flscalism for Canada, ~ ‘a ay "~All of the special interest groups in a predic- § table way have volced their disgust at the ellmination of their programs.' Others are still bewildered, unable to belleve-that thelr ox has: been gored and, of course, the media has been” describing in vivid detail the. calamitous results -which will-ensue-from the elimination of some of- the programs that had become a part of ‘the government structure. 7 ; ’ “What we seeis arme building full blast. What we want Is that they go to the table ard negotiate an end to it." . To do that, the negotiators must first devise yet another ~ delicate, balance of missiles and warheads adding” up to _ nuclear stalemate. - Interviews with officials in Washington, Moscow and Western Europe, and suggestions: by arms-con2rol---— Specialists, help sketch in the outlines of possible solutions: . The United States plana to deploy 464 ground-launched ‘cruise missiles and 108 Pershing-2 ballistic missiles‘ in Western Europe. The Soviets have a similar number of SS-: 20s‘and other medium-range ‘missiles, all but 100 or 80, within striking distanre of Western Europe. The American SUMMIT SQUARE APARTHENTS | TERRACE One & & Two bedrooms featuring: - - qFridge: stove & drapes aWall to wall carpeting eRAQUETBALL COURTS Gymnasium facilities aOn-site management with 9,691 warheads. The Soviet Union has 2,480 of these “strategic launchers,” with 8,781 warheads, -/,The U.S. proposal: Focus on warheads and on reducing jand-based missiles, the Soviet strong point. Slash total - “warheads on eich side to 5,000, with no more than 2,500 on land-based missiles. Moscow would have to shift toward. “Submarine missiles, now less t than | a third of its nuclear force.) ‘ The Soviet proposal: Follow the traditional arms-control — approach and: concentrate on launchérs..Set a ceiling of- 1,000 missiles and bombers, with each country deciding Its mix ‘of land and sea: missiles. Warhead limits could be : In.fact, judging from the reation in the press one would have said, and certainly I am sure that : people outside the province of British Columbia "are concluding, that this has.been a singularly: For your personal viewing visit our apartments daily af: . 2607 PEAR ST... a missiles have single warheads, and the §$-2s tres each, negotiated, but are e not specified, | unpopular budget. But before you jump to any | 3 or call The U.8. negotiating proposal: Set an equal, relatively ee, dl oft Ey real aes cureelt, Twant to British Co low ceiling on Ameciesa and Soviet, _ medium-range _ The road to compromise is clear, it difficult. ; pre-€ evelopmen - é ; umbia‘and the media’s role in it. nneied 4 warheads. The United States would have to back down in its attempt "AS will be bh Qe to restructure the Soviet strategic force. The Soviets would you remember, the overwhe! ‘ o aah ; -f -welght ‘of media comment and: attention was’ , tu 7) : Coes have to allay U.S, fears of-a “firet strike," in which an at- ’ HELP | WANTED tack b ‘focused in.a way that made a New Democratic ° y relatively few of the- huge Soviet land-based Party victory seem highly likely. I ly. Indeed, the ‘ misailes, carrying 10 warheads each, could destroy - most i “WuNTINGTON aPATMENTS TELEPHONE RECEPTIONISTS (15)| Us misioem ne ana el and dlpasslonshe eared | , ‘| Mvst dress ‘neatly .and speak = clearly ; r ; ‘sow 90 a6 Davis Ave Hourly wages plus dally bonuses, Full and part- a lee but nat regreernd rar tn ne . | ‘eclence at our univeralties to a man were totally . ' enineedrooms acho Ide ly at Washington come would be in thet thy all predictor Noe | _ orrace residents apply at: " Cc n Inquire ebaut our reduced rents ~drapes&carpet | | No.11-454é Park Ave. __ Af the same time, the Americans would have to deal with victory. It took the likes of stock promoter Mur- ~sforageroom & —Laundry faclitles between 9am-12 noon and Ipm-5pm ‘Monday thru ‘Soviet demands for low Umits or prohibitions on new U.S. ray Pezzim to predict the outcome of the election private marking on every floor Friday. alr-ind sealaunched cruise missiles, and might have to -[ deadon. —tpacious, quiet & clean sultes In excellent a _itinatrasdants appiyat on shelve temporary the Us. proposal for lower ceilings . Now you-may be inclined to think that that's wont Sminutes toSkeene Mallby caror bus ‘batwaan dam. Ipm and apm-Spm_ Monday. thru whieh the Soviets hed "r B power, & category foreccsting but L think Ht goes depen ed ; —ecotly ‘yen ri eae te mnanagermant a ove peat naar “an be geome’ tn the ap think k that the » media commentators and many “ f. : - a ct ec negotiations until East an Pi mply not’ J: COME FOR A VIEW — YOU'LL ENJOY OUR Terminal: z Express, framework of a Euromissile settlement. Some suggest. the | changed gears as the public mood has changed, - RESIDENCE. MANAGER ANYTIME : two negotiations will have to be merged. . * Back in 1979 in a Financial Post article on the . PHONE Mas 3525 ~ PICK. UP & DELIVERY One dea, for example lato set Nat limits of 2,000delivery | ‘prospects for the 198s I predicted that. the : ;, systems and 7,000 warheads on both sides — to include all -| Hallmark political development of the decade nuclear weapons, both long-and medium-range, both. a ‘would be a move to the political right and that this move would characterize the population at |. " . large and would be reflected ultimately in the’ {~ Policies and orientations of the major political . parties. As is becoming increasingly obvious, that is exactly what has happened not just in Canada but in all the major industrialized coun- , | t t \ Europe and on the superpowers’ home soil. pin 638. 8195. Ratio Message Answering Service For Pager | No.31 Few foresee quick agreements, For one thing, the usual political paralysis of U.S. presidential election year means important decisions are unlikely ‘in 1964. : Roger Molander, a former White House nuclear-arms specialist, said he would be astonished if the United States and’ Soviet Union sign any agreement before November, 1084; : “Them amount of work that has to be done is awesome,” he sai tries. . The reason why the political pundits have been getting it wrong and, in my view, are inap- . propriately assessing the public reaction to the Uae recent B.C. budget is because they are using a | model of analysis based on the way in which peo- ple used to react to public policy and the way in which people used to think about the appropriate - _ role of government. I think that the B.C. budget, ‘BUSINESS ROAD RUNNER. -" SERVICETO. TERRACE—THORNHILL~ . -, REMO—AIRPORT Diba 5 spastmont Loollng, bal, stove, carp ting, doapes undercover parking, - Molander, whose fears about the risk of nuclear war led him to form a public education group called Ground Zero, favors adequate nuclear defence coupled with arms con-. olrvatar ‘ancurity system, resident manager. trol. But he says a key third ingredient fa —4m- | although a path breaking effort by Hugh Curtis, _ “en . proved U.S.-Soviet relations. is more reflective of the public mood than the Lp E.A. GARNER LTD. “The fact that the pt “den of the United States has met | comments of the pundits. And it rather than the ia Phone manager anytime 638-1268. reaction to it by special interest groups and the | media is the mark of the future. J with his Soviet counterpart only once in the past Tis years is pathetic: and is a fundamental flaw in the process of. working U.S. Soviet relailons.” ‘Terrace Bus Terminal 635-3680