yy... as Castlégar News October 23, 1988 NO TAKERS . . It was international Credit Union day Thursday but you wouldn't know it by the response of Castlegar and District Credit Union customers. The coffee and doughnuts were un touched as the customers were more focused on nounced in recent days. their banking chores BUSINESS ! Weekly stocks TORONTO (CP) — The Toronto stock market rose late in Friday's session, while New York edged up slightly, hitting some resistance at its highest levels since last year's crash. The Toronto Stock Exchange 300 composite index was up 11.69 points to close at 3,416.78 in moderate trading. The index.was virtually un- changed on the week, up 1.27 points, In New York, the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials rose 2.31 to 2,183.50, setting a new 1988 high for the third time this week. The average gained a total 50.32 points for the week. “It was a funny day today,” said Toronto-based analyst John Ing of Maison Placements Canada. “One would have thought given yester- day's (strong) close that it would be rip-roaring. But we saw some pro- fit-taking.” The Toronto market, up 25.06 points Thursday, was weighed down as investors cashed ‘in on the previous session's gains, then rallied later in the day, Ing said. In New York, analysts cited a continuation of the “buyout fever” that created heavy .demand for stocks Thursday following several takeover and buyout proposals an- Interest rates rése moderately in credit-market activity, leaving stocks SUICIDE MISSIONS Women warned about jobs LONDON, Ont. (CP) — Women her she would have full backing by should beware of accepting promo- the company to implement the tions that are really “suicide mis- policies and programs she felt sions,” says a researcher who has necessary completed a two-year study of seven She says she hopes the case consulting firm McKinsey and Co. and the University of British Colum The others in the study asked that without support from the bond market. Toronto-based For App. Call r October 23,1968 BI THE WEST KOOTENAY ENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT CENTRE is open during SMALL BUSINESS WEEK 8:30 a.m, - 9:30 p.m., Monday through Friday * and 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m, Saturday October 24 - 29, 1988 Drop by for a free trial of our intere tive video disk for Business Simulation 1410 Columbia Avenue, Castlegar, B.C. VIN 1H8 (604) 365- . WEST KOOTENAY Enterprise DEVELOPMENT CENTRE SCHOOL VIEW By Gordon A. Shead, Principal A new process regarding report cards is now in effect for Stanley Humphries Secondary School students this year. This change is o result of several discussions amongst schoo! staff about the high number of parents who do not interim reports and formal reports during the year. For example, at the end of last year approximately 20% (over 140) of the final reports were not cdllected by students or parents. Many of these reports were still un: claimed when school opened this fall The new procedure will see reports (a1 addressed envelope whi ned and returned to the school following the October interim and the December and March reports. En velopes are kept by parents in June. This procedure will ensure that parents are actively intormed of their child's progress through the yeor. As well parents will hopetully check to see the end of the year report in June. clude newsletters) sent home in an The dates involved in this new procedure are October 20, December 6, and March 14. Please take an active interest in your child’s education. Read th report cards, sign and return the envelope, and contact the school if you h: © question or would like to arrange an appointment. If possi schedule any appointments to deal with the first interim for Octo! There will be no school for students on Friday, October 21. Teachers will be involved in conterences. The next non-instructional day before the Christmas Break is Monday, November 21 Flexible, easy installments. Ask about our Autoplan premium financing. Kootenay Savings « D Insurance Services ate twos, ase CROSS COUNTRY . . . Cross country league race number six was held at Kinnaird Junior secon- dary school earlier this week with schools coming from Trail, Nelson, Grand Forks and Runners compete Castlegar. Jason Ferris (below) of Stanley Hum- phries secondary school was the top local finisher in senior boys competition. He placed sixth, CosNewsPhoto Canadian corporations and institu tions. “Sometimes, they may end up in a job that really nobody could do — they're going to be a crificial lamb,” Dorothy Mikalachki, co- author of the study, said in an interview “Sometimes women..are offered jobs with wonderful titles but they're dead-end jobs that lead to no development or opportunities for advancement,” said Mikalachki, a research associate with the school of business at the University of Wes tern Ontario in London. Although many companies are promoting an equal number of men and women to management, “women are taking much smaller steps up.” “When you look at the actual results, it seems women have to prove themselves first before they get the same promotion as men Mikalachki told the story of Louise Piche, an employee of the Canadian National Railway Co. who was offered a (newly-created position called “assistant vice-president, em ployment equity.” Piche turned down the offer because she was afraid the job was a “suicide mission.” FEARS JOB “This was the highest position ever offered to a woman at CN,” said Mikalachki. “But she was afraid the job was not do-able.” She eventually accepted the pro. studies, sponsored by four Toronto- based corporations and the Canadian Association of Women Executives and Entrepreneurs, will encourage businesses to examine their attitudes toward women in management “Women should also talk to other women before accepting a promotion and ask whether it's a job that can be done,” Mikalachki said The study, partly financed by the federal government, will be part of the curriculum’ at Western's business school Mikalachki and her husband, Alex ander, a Western business professor who co-authored the project, re leased their findings this week They suggested classes be created for girls in grades 5 and 6 in which female adult “role models” talk about their careers SHARES STORIES “More likely than not, today's education system doesn't prepare girls for the realities of tomorrow,” Dorothy Mikalachki said Women in jobs from welding to medicine should tell their career stories in elementary schools. “Early conditioning is important,” she said, citing a U.S. study in which 90 per cent of boys and fewer than 50 per cent of girls aspired to high paying, male-dominated jobs. Many Canadian women have “this idea that life is raising kids, and the husband is the provider,” she said In the case studies, women in their names not be used: A chartered bank, wine maker, chartered accoun 5:30 p.m. 365-3803 The next meeting of the parent group is scheduled for Tuesday, October 25 in the library beginning at 7:00 p.m. Topics to be discussed include the Royal Commission Report, school philosophy and report cards. ting firm and a drug company We Want Your Recipes for our 9th motion after CN’s chairman assured managerial positions were examined Annual Cook Book Deadline for Receipt of Recipes is 12 Noon on Wed., Oct. 26 Nov. 25-26 — American Thanksgiving — Kingston Tric Dinner Show and City Tour and Shopping Special Dec. 4 — Nutcracker Suite — Day trip departing from Trail. Matinee performance of this traditional Christmas show. . Dec. 17 — Peter Pan — Day trip departing from Trail for a matinee of Peter Pan, featuring Cathy Rigby and Long John Baldry. RENO TOURS 8 days Circus Circus Bdays Comstock worsmorins CHRISTMAS SPECIAL December 21 — 8 days........... +++ ++ $289.00 INCLUDES: A welcome “Cup of Cheer”. A gift for everyone from Mrs. Santa Claus. Showroom ticket o see the Letterman Show plus many Christmas specials. Dec. 26-30 — Ice Capades — Day t: ip to Spokane. DISCOUNTS: Seniors $10; Eorly bird $10 (Except Express Tour) DEWDNEY TOURSH tiie ‘\ November 12 December 3 $279.00 $279.00 toa Send in the old family favorite recipe or your newest creation. Send us your recipes for: Main Dishes, Breads, Biscuits, Rolls, Meats, Soups, Stews, Casseroles, Salads, Vegetables, Pickles, Relishes, Desserts, Squares, Cookies, Cakes, Candy Fudge, Canning, Freezing, Wine, Wild Game, Microwave, or any other recipe ideas or General Cooking Hints. Send your typed or neatly written recipes to: Cook Book, Castlegar News Box 3007, Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3H4 or deliver to: kupotostetul fan your kite oe ful to core gravel 4 wie ay readers whe Mt Speitted Fei e® Cook Book, Castlegar News 197 Columbia Avenue, Castlegar REMEMBER: Include your name, address and telephone number. DEADLINE: 12 Noon, Wed., Oct. 26 Feel welcome to submit as many recipes as you wish, here Jason Schultz of JL Crowe won the senior boys six-kilo- metre cross country run held at Kinnaird Junior secondary school earlier this week. Jason Ferris of Stanley Humphries secondary school was the top local finisher in sixth place. Crowe won the senior boys team event with SHSS taking second. In the senior girls five-kilo- metre competition, Sarah Lid stone of LV Rogers took top spot. Tammy Bridges of SHSS was the top Castlegar finisher placing fifth. Teammate Joanna Harmston was sixth. In junior boys, Mark Wilson of Crowe placed first with Kinnaird Junior's Jody Carew placing fifth for the top local finish Trafalgar won the junior boys team event with KJ taking second Kendra Starr of Trafalgar placed first in the junior girls competition. KJ’s Nancy Chang was the top local finisher placing fourth. Trafalgar took first place in the junior girls team stand ings with KJ placing second. The next race will be held at Kinnaird Junior on Tuesday Lemieux leads Pens in four-goal win PITTSBURGH (AP) — Mario Lemieux, Randy Cunneyworth and Phil Bourque each scored twice to help the Penguins beat Chicago 7-4 Saturday night, extending the Blackhawks’ losing streak to five games. At 1-7-1, the Blackhawks have the National Hockey League's worst record and their most inept start since 1969-70. Paul Coffey had four assists as thé Penguins improved their record to 5-2-0 and 4-0-0 at home. Lemieux opened the Pittsburgh scoring with a first-period power-play goal and scored his 13th on a breakaway at 9:25 of the third period Cunneyworth’s first goal came at 6:18 of the second period when he deflected Coffey's shot from the right point, He scored his sixth at 18:29 when rookie goalie Ed Belfour couldn't control the rebound of Coffey’s shot. Between Cunneyworth's power-play goals, Denis Savard scored for Chicago, firing Doug Wilson's rebound in off goalie Steve Guenette's body for his fifth. Bourque broke.a 1-1 tie with a shorthanded goal at 19:02 of the first period. Bourque intercepted Wilson's eross-ice pass at the Pittsburgh blue line and beat Belfour on a breakaway. Bourque scored again at4:21 of the third period, firing a shot past Belfour on the short side. MONTREAL 4 BUFFALO 3 MONTREAL (CP) — Stephane Richer scored two goals and set up a third and Chris Chelios and Bobby Smith each had a pair of assists as the Montreal Canadiens edged the Buffalo Sabres 4-3 in NHL action Saturday night Brian Hayward won his first game of the year in goal for the Canadiens who moved into a three-way tie for second place in the Adams Division with Buffalo anc the Quebee Nordiques. Shayne Corson and Ryan Walter also scored for Montreal, which defeated Buffalo for the first time in three tries this season. Scott Arnie! had two for the Sabres and Kevin Maguire scored. The Canadiens, rebounding from their flat effort during a Friday night loss in Buffalo, came out aggressively, forcing the play and keeping the Sabres bottled up in their own end. That resulted in Montreal's first goal when Petr Svoboda intercepted a bad clearing pass at the blueline and fed Richer along the right wing boards. Richer found Corson near the side of the net and the strong Canadiefs centre muscled his way past defenceman Lindy Ruff before flipping the puck over Tom Barrasso’s shoulder at 3:13 TORONTO 3 CALGARY 3 TORONTO (CP) — Mark Hunter scored at 6:42 of the third period to give the Calgary Flames a 3-3 tie with the Toronto Maple Leafs in NHL action Saturday night. Vincent Damphousse, Al Secord and Tom Fergus seored for Toronto and Hunter, with two, and Al Malnnis scored for Calgary, who help the upper hand throughout the game but were frustrated by excellent goaltending from Toronto's Ken Wregget. Both teafgs wanted to extend streaks: Calgary had won four in a row and Toronto three in a row. Toronto's record moved to 6-3-1 and Calgary to 4-1-2. The Flames outshot the Leafs 33-15. Toronto scored the only goal of the first period despite being outshot 10-3. It took the Leafs 9'/2 minutes to get their first shot and on their second Damphousse beat goaltender Mike Vernon at 11:31. He took a pass from Daniel Marois, skated wide down the left wing around MacInnis and was approaching the red line when, instead of continuing on behind the net, lifted a quick shot over the unsuspecting goalie’s right shoulder for his seventh goal of the season. ISLANDERS 7 QUEBEC 3 UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) — Alan Kerr and Pat LaFontaine scored 25 seconds apart in the second period, leading the New York Islanders to a 7-3 NHL victory over the Quebec Nordiques on Saturday night. The second-period goals by Kerr and LaFontiane helped the Islanders overcome a three-goal perfor- mance by Nordiques rookie Joe Sakic. The Islanders generally dominated the action from start to finish, outshooting the Nordiques 43-22. With the Islanders clinging to a 2-1 lead, Kerr pushed a loose puck through a crowd of players at 15:15 of the middle period for his first goal of the season. LaFontaine then scored his fourth when he skated in front of the goal and fired a shot between goaltender Bob Mason and the post at 15:40. Sakic scored a goal in the second period and two in the third to give him eight for the season. Sakic has a point in each of the Nordiques’ first eight games and a total of 13. The Islanders took a 2-0 lead after one period on goals by Gerald Diduck and Derek King. WHALERS 8 FLYERS 6 HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Centre Carey Wilson figured in three Hartford goals and scored the eventual game-winner with 7:58 left as the Whalers beat the Philadelphia Flyers 86 in National League action Saturday night. Wilson, who scored with 49 seconds left in the second period ty’put Hartford ahead to stay, bailed out the Whalers after they let leads of 4-1 land 5-3 vanish in the second period. Wilson also assisted on Paul MacDurmid’s insurance goal with 4:25 to play. Kevin Dineen added a goal and two assists for Hartford, 3-4-0, John Anderson, Grant Jennings, Dave Tippett and Ulf Samuelsson also scored for Hartford. Rebels win first game 7-3 By CasNews Staff After a seven-game drought, the Castlegar Rebels finally hit the win column with a 7-3 victory over the Grand Forks Border Bruins in KIJHL action Friday night. Rebel head coach Daryl Weir said the victory in Grand Forks provided the Rebels with a much-needed boost in their confidence. It was their first win this season. “It sure feels good,” Weir told the Castlegar News. “I think the boys played with a lot more confidence.” He said a couple of key saves early in the game by Rebel netminder Stan Makortoff really got the Rebel charges going. “Makortoff made a couple of key saves early in the game,” Weir said “It gave the offence a chance to get going.” Grand Forks did score the game's first goal at the 1:38 mark of the first period. Colin Cameron finished on a play set up by Todd DeBoeck and Jamie Feltham. But the Rebels replied two min. utes later. Assistant captain Lorne Kanigan scored a power play goal from Keith. Semenoff and Shawn McAdie. The Border Bruins pressed ‘on as Jay Harper converted on a play from Chad LaHue and Rich Haldane. But the Rebels scored two more before the end of the first, Glen Ormsby scored after Jarret Watts put him in the clear at the 11:04 mark and McAdie converted on a play set up by Kanigan. The Rebels led 3-2 after the opening frame. The second period belonged to the Rebels as the Castlegar squad man. aged to net two goals with the Border Bruins in the penalty box. Team captain Wayne Saliken scor-. ed from Roger Carlson and Duane Weir and Kanigan got his second goal of the night with Semenoff getting the lone assist. Castlegar led 5-2 after two. The Rebels made it 6-2 early in the final period when Semenoff scored from McAdie at the 2:49 mark. Grand Forks got their final goal from Harper who did it all himself. The game's final goal came. from Carlson who finished off a play from Semenoff and Watts. Makortoff stopped 39 of the 42 shots he faced and Border Bruin net minder Sukie Lawrence stopped 44 of the 51 shots the Rebels fired at him. Johnson spends time at home TORONTO (CP) — Sprinter Ben Johnson, who used to bask in the public spotlight, has spent the past four weeks holed up at the only place he feels secure — his family home in the nearby municipality of Scar. borough. The public ordeal has taken its toll and the media circus has hurt his whole family, Johnson said in an interview published in the Toronto Globe and Mail. This should have been the most exciting time of his life, but a positive drug test at the Seoul Olympic Games enmeshed the 26-year-old in controversy. Still, he has been largely silent about:a scandal that has touched some of his teammates and has resulted in a yet-to-be-convened fed eral inquiry Sitting in the basement of his home, Johnson tries to make sense of a world turned upside down since losing the gold medal he won in the men's 100 metres after testing positive for the presence of a banned anabolic steroid. Home is the only place Johnson feels relief from prying, accusing eyes. Still, he insists, “I'm OK. I'm fine.” But peace of mind is hard to come by. Johnson also faces a court date Tuesday regarding an incident in volving a motorist who complained to police he had a gun pointed at him while driving on Highway 401 MAIL FRIENDLY His mother brings down the daily sheaf of mail, a weighty packet of letters, almost all of them suppor. tive, telling Johnson to carry on. He stares ahead, half-interested, at & sports telecast. For now, he just wants a rest from it all. Here's to the “new wave” in developing young hockey talent and minds at the same time. A couple of local hockey players have invested their time and effort into the pursuit of higher education while honing their hockey skills. Darcy Martini and Kelly Hurd are both students at Michigan Technological University in Houghton, Mich., and are also gearing up for a chance at professional hockey. Both are recipients of four-year hockey scholarships with the university and are studying business administration at the same time. The schedule, at times, can get pretty hectic. “You're busy until 9:30 every night,” Martini says over the phone from Minnesota-Duluth where his team is currently playing. “It's great to be here.” The six-foot, four-inch, 220-pound defenceman played for the Castlegar Rebels before moving to Vernon last season to play with the BCJHL Vernon Lakers. He says playing in the eight-team Western Collegiate Hockey Association is a bit different from his playing days in Castlegar and Vernon. “It's a lot faster,” he says. “And it's probably not as chippy as the BCJHL. When the other team gets a man-advantage they usually score. It’s really an offensive-style game.” But the challenge is not only in the hockey. He is constantly cramming for his first-year courses. Sporting Views By Brendan Nogie “Right now I'm taking geology, math, English, economies, sociology ,” he says. “You have to balance your schedule.” Hurd echoes Martini’s sentiments. Hockey is important to both of them but Hurd stresses the importance of the university program. It is his second year at MTU. “If you don’t make it to the big time, you've got your education to fall back on,” says Hurd, who was selected in the seventh round — 144th overall — in the 1988 NHL amateur draft. The Detroit Red Wings picked him up. While Hurd speaks of the importance of his education he does not hesitate to talk about the upeoming season for the MTU Wolves and. how Ex-Rebels do well ai KELLY HURD (left) AND DARCY MARTINI . . . benefit from college program Martini, a freshman, will fit in. “We're looking pretty strong this year,” he says. Hurd netted 18 goals and 22 assists as a rookie last season while playing on the right wing. He added he’s glad another Castlegarian is down in Michigan with him. “I get to show him the ropes,” he jokes. “He's fitting in really well.” But Hurd says everybody playing for the MTU Wolves benefits from the university hockey exper- ience. “You're treated really well,” he says. “It's a totally different atmosphere. Everybody on your team is like a brother.” Meanwhile, Martini has already studied the league and the competition to the point where he knows about each team. “The team to look for this year would be the Minnesota Golden Gophers,” he says. “They've got two people returning from the U.S. Olympic team.” Quite obviously the two former Rebels have made the best of both worlds so far and are quite happy with that. Judging by the number of talented college hockey players already playing in the NHL, they stand a good chance of making the big time. If they don't, they're still prepared for other areas of work. Here's to the “new wave”.