SPORTS DS ey Castlégar News August 31, 1968 Great Lakes swim ‘lot of fun’ TORONTO (CP) — Vicki Keith suffered muscle _five-lake hon July 1, ing 19 kil distance record for swimming 38 kilometres of the She es giggling hyéterically at photo- pain and vomiting in the final hours Tuesday before across Lake Erie. gruelling butterfly stroke, \ttering her own record 3 who led around her. she staggered out of Lake Ontario, giggling and She followed that two weeks later by making a of 19.3 kilometres set in 1984, met § don't start hallucinating until 36 calling her triumphant swim of all five Great Lakes 71-kilometre crossing of Lake Huron that took 47 Because she was feeling sick and battling strong hours after I've started,” said Keith, before being “a lot, of fun.” hours, Late last month, she took 53 hours to swim 72 currents, Keith said she wanted to “give myself a whisked away for a long rest. Lake Ontario was the final obstacle and one kilometres across Lake Michigan and crossed a break” and end her swim at the eastern part of “But I did experience hallucinations when I was Keith said left her body in the roughest shape. 34-kilometre westerly arm of giant Lake Superior Toronto Harbor instead of her original destination of — sitting in the boat after the swim and -in the “T've got a lot of aches and pains, but I'm sure I'll —_ about two weeks ago. the Canadian National Exhibition. apartment I was in.” live through the next few days,” Keith told a news Keith made her crossing of Lake Ontario 12 Keith was to have followed virtually the same Keith was hoping to raise $300,000 for an conference, hours after completing the 51-kilometre hours faster than planned, leaving Niagara-on-the- route as Marilyn Bell, who 34 years ago became aquatic wing at Variety Village, a sports centre for lake crossing. Lake at 6:25 a.m. Monday and arriving at the eastern Canada's sweetheart as the first to conquer Lake the disabled in Toronto but fell short with just over “If you're able to motivate yourself, it's very end of Toronto Harbor at 6:08 a.m. Tuesday, Ontario. Bell, 16 at the time, crossed the lake in 20 $200,000, possible you can take your dreams one step at a time spending just under 24 hours in the water. hours 55 minutes, arriving at the CNE on Sept. 9, Keith — who will be the toast of parades in both and reach your ultimate dream,” Keith told a crowd, Prime Minister Brian Mulroney sent a message 1954. Toronto and Kingston this weekend — is planning which included disabled children on whose behalf the commending Keith for “her commitment and courage As Keith waded ashore, covered in lanolin oil, more swims and hopes to undertake some in Europe. 27-year-old swim coach has raised over $200,000. in undertaking the swim.” the toll of a summer of marathon swims was But for now, \all she is thinking of is “a bit of a Keith, a native of Kingston, Ont., began her In Lake Ontario, Keith claimed a women's world apparent. vacation.” AGENT SAYS ; Taylor will return Red Sox fail to EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) view from his Houston office that ° stance Taylor was abusing, although — Lawrence Taylor might begin league officials would outline the Newsday reports the substance was F cH Heyl LE Heit: it Lit il ait SHEE eel in i Te Beerele bal ‘Ls, i elts a i He Litt Ki er ue Hi bee 8 ee watee af ; ; ie rare =! § gb Ee ip Hf ie b Hh Ha il Liana of ecea sisct) § Ply 4 a Hi ge £23,825 = it i on re i al AE id i PERFECT HOBBY FARM. HOME PASS CREEK 82.4 ACRES MANY USES $34,900 EXECUTIVE ~ 365-2166 | yy) 4.3 ACRES ON THE RIVER 2 NICELY KEPT MOBILE, $11,000. 2.68 ACRES OOTISCHENIA $25,000 WELL KEPT AND FRESHLY PAINTED. $50s. y) =m 2 , an P| ay un —_ ay Thursday, Sept. 1 through to Wednesday, Sept. 7 O). ei, ee it IMMACULATE MOBILE. LOCATED IN GENELLE 85'x100' FLAT LOT IN ROBSON $5,900 CLEAN AND WELL KEPT. NORTH CASTLEGAR. $50s. Dy substance abuse treatment this type of rehabilitation program they weekend, but his agent and the team say there is no guarantee the New York Giants’ all-pro linebacker will return to the field when his 30-day suspension ends. Giants owner Wellington Mara said Tuesday that Taylor would not be allowed to play until doctors running his rehabilitation program are satisfied he has successfully completed it. “We owe it to Lawrence Taylor to be as hard on him as we possibly can,” Mara said. “That's his only chance to lick thi “From what I have read, there is a misconception. This is not a 30-day suspension. This is a 30-day min imum. In order for him to come back, he must follow a rigorous program. To be easy on him would be unkind. He has to follow the program 100 per cent.” Taylor, a seven-time all-pro who has been one of football's dominant players this decade, was suspended Monday for 30 days by the National Football League for violating the league's substance abuse policy for a second time. Taylor has every intention of com- plying with NFL rehabilitation guidelines and plans to meet with league officials by Friday, said Gary Kovach, Taylor's agent. “What we are doing is waiting for the NFL to give us our lead and go from there,” said Kovach, adding Taylor might begin rehabilitation this weekend. Kovach said in a telephone inter. INLAND NATURAL GAS CO. LTD. Maurice A. Favell Mr. Ronald L. Cliff, Chairman of the Board, Inland Natural Gas Co. Ltd. is pleased to announce the ap poinment of Mr. Maurice A. Favell to the Board of Directors on July 22, 1988 Mr. Favell is a Registered Profes Sional Engineer and is Vice-Presi- dent, Gas Operations of B.C Hydro 8 Power Authority He joined B.C. Hydro in 1960 and served in various senior manage- ment positions until his appoint- ment as Vice-President, Gas Op- erations in 1982. Mr. Favell is also Chairman and a Director of the Canadian Gas Research Institute and a Director of the Canadian Gas Association On July 20, 1988 Inland entered into an agreement to purchase all of the gas utility assets of B.C. Hydro & Power Authority except those in Victoria. want Taylor to undergo. He did not know where Taylor would go for treatment. Taylor's treatment will be super. vised by Dr. Forest Tennant, the drug adviser to the league. Meanwhile, the New York Daily News, citing unidentified team and league sources, reports Taylor failed a drug test following the 1987 season. But the newspaper says Taylor was allowed to take another test, which he passed, a few days later. Because he passed, the pap cocaine. Taylor underwent rehabil itation for a cocaine problem at Methodist Hospital in Houston in 1986. Mara said he would not discuss whether the Giants would pay Taylor his weekly salary of $62,500 while he underwent treatment, but admitted Taylor is special to him, having “done more for this franchise.” Taylor will miss the Giants’ first four games this season, beginning with the season-opener Monday against the Super Bowl-champion Fe ; says, the matter was brushed aside. There was no fine, no rehabilitation and no publicity. The league has not said what sub. If he com. pleted his treatment in 30 days, he would be eligible to return for the fifth game of the season, also against Washington. Deer leads Brewers to win over Jays MILWAUKEE (AP) — Rob Deer remembers well his struggle during the final two months of 1987. Strikeouts came in bunches, he hit under .200 in August and September, then went home for the off-season a frustrated outfielder. With a month left this season, Deer is still bunching things toget her, but this time it’s homers. He hit his 19th and 20th Tuesday hight, giving him five in nine games, as the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Toronto Blue Jays 6-2. Deer is batting .333 in August with eight homers and 26 RBIs in 26 games. “It's a lot more fun than the other times when you go out there and can't figure out what you're doing and nothing happens for you,” he said Deer drove in five runs Tuesday, giving him 13 RBIs in the nine-game span. “Last year going into the last month of the season, I wanted to try to end up having the best month. I think I put too much emphasis on that rather than letting things happen,” he said. “I figured that wasn’t going to work for me. I don’t know how many games we have left but I really don't look at the stats, just let things happen. I don’t put any emphasis on trying to finish up strong or trying to do this or do that.” Deer's homers helped left-hander Teddy Higuera win his fifth straight game and raise his record to 12-8. Higuera, the American League earned-run leader, allowed two runs and eight hits in 7 1-3 innings with one walk and six strikeouts. Deer missed three weeks last month with a broken wrist and that time at home gave him time to sort out his thoughts and his swing. “I started thinking about things I could do to help me out and I came back and started working on it,” he said. “Ever since then it’s just a little timing thing about picking up my leg. The majority of the time it’s been working good for me.” Deer connected for his 19th homer with two outs in the fifth, a 410-foot drive to left centre off Blue Jays loser Jeff Musselman, 53. The homer, foll g a single by Robin MINOR SPORTS Sure We're Interested Phone the Castlegar News for details on how to get reports of your organization onto the sports pages. 365-3517 Yount, broke a 1-1 tie. Deer then lined a three-run homer to straightaway centre in the sev. enth off reliever Duane Ward, join. ing former slugger Gorman Thomas as the only Brewer to hit 20 homers in three straight seasons. Our Action Ad Number is 365-2212 gain on Tigers By the Associated Press While Roger Clemens found his fastball, the Boston Red Sox's search for first place in the American League East continues. Dave Stewart of the Oakland Athletics pitched a five-hitter to beat Clemens and the Red Sox 1-0 Tuesday night. For the second straight night, the Red Sox missed a chance to move into a first-place tie with Detroit as the Tigers lost 4-1 to the Chicago White Sox. Clemens, 15-10, allowed nine hits and had nine strikeout in 6 1-3 innings as he lost his fifth straight game. In the four previous games, he had allowed 21 runs in 20 2-3 innings. Clemens raised his major league-leading strikeout total to 257, one short of the club season record set by Smokey Joe Wood in 1912. Clemens had 256 strikeouts last season. “That was major league baseball at its best,” Oakland manager Tony La Russa said. The victory moved the first-place A’s nine games ahead of the Minnesota Twins in the AL West. Elsewhere in the American League on Tuesday, it was Seattle Mariners 7, New York Yankees 1; Cleve- land Indians 4, Kansas City Royals 1; Milwaukee Brewers 6, Toronto Blue Jays 2; Texas Rangers 8, Minnesota Twins 8: and Baltimore Orioles 5, California Angels 2. Stewart, 16-11, struck out eight and walked three in his second shutout of the season. He ended the game by striking out the side. WANTED WIN “It was just another game. We're not in a World Series or playoff situation. I got my 16th win, and I'm pursuing 20, so I wanted this one,” Stewart said. Glenn Hubbard scored Carney Lansford with a suicide squeeze bunt, the A's first successful one of the season, in the sixth inning. Lansford hit a leadoff single, stole second|and went third on a wild pitch. One out later, Hubbard broke the scoreless tie with a bunt down the first base line. White Sox 4 Tigers 1 Harold Baines scored the go-ahead run and drove in another as Chicago beat struggling Detroit at Comiskey Park to send the Tigers to their fourth straight defeat. Mariners 7 Yankees 1 New York lost its sixth straight as Seattle's Scott Bradley hit a three-run homer and Mike Campbell allowed four hits in 7 2-3 innings at the Kingdome. In the past 44 innings, New York has been out- scored 48-9 and the Yankees’ starters are 0-10 in the last 16 games. The Yankees are 8-20 in August, allowing seven runs per game. Indians 4 Royals 1 Tom Candiotti allowed five hits in six innings for his third consecutive victory as visiting Cleveland beat Kansas City to snap the Royals’ four-game winning streak. Rangers 8 Twins 6 Cecil Espy’s two-run homer with one out in the ninth inning lifted Texas over visiting Minnesota. Orioles 5 Angels 2 Dave Schmidt won his fourth straight game as Baltimore beat California at Anaheim. Schmidt, 7-3, is 4-0 since coming out of the bullpen after 32 relief appearances. He allowed eight hits in seven innings, his longest stint of the season. Tom Niedenfuer finished for his 15th save. Martinez blasts Expos MONTREAL (CP) — Dennis Mar- Montreal dropped 11 games out of that doesn't came through in a key tinez may be the best pitcher on the first place with the loss and the situation doesn't feel a sense of Montreal Expos but he won't be veteran pitcher claimed the Expos failure,” Brooks said, squeezing a ball winning any popularity contests “looked like a dead club (that had) tightly in his hand as he spoke. among his teammates, many of whom given up.” reacted with anger to Martinez Hubie Brooks said the pitcher was “Every man is entitled to his saying on Monday that the team has wrong and had no business “popping opinion, but nobody likes to hear that given upon the season. “It's not the first time he's said something that wasn’t the brightest thing to say,” an angry Tim Wallach said Tuesday. “It’s not good for the team or for players and somebody's going to take it wrong way. “It's not a healthy situation for a team, because we have a good club- off’ the way he did. “I don't think a person on our team not a good time for stuff like that.” from a teammate and I just think its Canadians split pair LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) — Gary suspended by rain Monday night. house,” said Wallach, who has beena Greene broke a ninth inning tie with The Canadians won both rounds of favorite public target of Martinez a sacrifice fly to center as the Las the PCL’s Northern Division champ- since last season. “But all it takes is Vegas Stars edged the Vancouver ionships. one guy.” Canadians 3-2 in the first game of Post season play will have Port Martinez, who has posted a 15-10 Pacific Coast League play Tuesday land play Vancouver for the North- mark this season, lashed out at the night. ern Division, while Las Vegas, a entire team Monday night after The Canadians won the nightcap first-round winner in the Southern pitching a four-hit complete game 48. and losing 2-1 to the Los Angeles Play continued Division, will meet Alburquerque, in the second the Southern Division's second round Dodgers. inning Tuesday after a 1-1 game was champion. 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Ci Thursday, Sept. 1 through to Wednesday, Sept. 7 Jt ass fat € Bh ¥ ine 10:30 GB TWILIGHT ZONE 11:00 © @ © @ News ‘A look at she politicking land lobbying that contr: uted to the patriation of @ CTV NEWS @®_ BEewina “Acro- BATIC COMPANY From the Beijing Na- tional Theater, a per the Canadian Constitu 11:30 © U.S OPEN TENNIS live in fear of 8 parolee who wages a campaign of terror against them "I Married a Center him right. A 1972 movie starring Agnes Moore. head and Burgess Mere ith. (Part 1 of 2) Toronto Biue Jays at Oe- troit Tigers. (Taped) cD JAKE AND THE FAT: MAN @ TONIGHT SHOW Host: Johnny Carson. 11:37 GB THREE’S COMPANY From Flushing, N.Y oi] HIGHLIGHTS Timothy Daley. inspired by his (1984, Comedy) Copley, co-worker’s bets to the contrary. an affable en- Qineer launches a daunt less pursuit for @ date Valo’ 1700 Columbia Ave., Castlegar an expensive bicycle. (R) ‘dl 365-2155 Collect “s CASTLEGAR REALTY LD. SOUTH END QUIET $70s. FAMILY HOME, $70s. LARGE VIEW LOT SOUTH END. $17,000 GROSVENOR PLACE. PERFECT IN EVERY WAY, $80s. tig ON DEAD-END STREET. 3.32 ACRES IN PASS CREEK $49,500 ey HUGE FAMILY HOME ri tm RALPH STRAND FR. RUB.C.) 365-9982 WAYNE McCARTHY D. wiew, This one won t last long at $79,900. — 2 bdrm. home on large 2-bay goroge Courtry-style home on ye 4\ne Sy ens ‘gna Coll today tor ~ large lot with garden area and i 1695 COLUMBIA AVENUE, CASTLEGAR 365-2111 DROP IN FOR A FLYER OR CATALOGUE! NEW LISTING SHOREACRES INXS NATIONAL REAL ESTATE SERVICE MOUNTAINVIEW AGENCIES LT long at $49,900. 5S acres plus 2 1200 sq.ft. unfinished CHEAPER THAN RENT homes. Won't last year-okt mentally re tarded cousin Philly s ‘struggle to relate to the Bough Host Johnny Carson S” (1986, Drama) From Flushing. N.Y @ BEST OF CARSON ® 11:37 @D THREE’S COMPANY @ NIGHTLINE © ‘When the Breaks varying ways. (R) 1290" news COSTAS 12:00 D MOVIE 1:30 D LATER WITH B08 Castlegar News Home Delivery 365-7266 63 53 8 ancinnats 10 6 purchase contract of base 1-800-663-2233 \ 6467 4091: Seattle 7 New ¥. Martiner trom Birmingham of the Miwoukee Brewers option pitcher Tom Denver of the American {604) 525-7777 FAX 604-525-7777 D HOLLYWOOD: THE Wont's Oscar-winning 1979 portrait of his 52: (A) (Part 1 of 2) are captured by the Japanese s0 during World War Il, i and Kristy McNichol plays an “Women of Susan Sarandon (I.) plays a nurse, Tuesday, Sept. 6. Tera (longer 11 pea ‘Mibeoukee (agus ge Cubs col up pundirs Mike Morkey ond ine Copel suttaiders Beg Dencenes ond M Moore ‘ond. catchy ick Wrone. from tow ‘oh the Amarin Associ burgh Pirates recall shortstop Felix Fermin trom Butfole ot the Amaricon Revociorion, send Pi cher Dove Rucker to bultale. rooTeau Hil his inh eetnabe pay iaftety . ji pili LE st i iit fi hi ie MOH il Ha 8.C. Lions activate trom practice roster guord Leo (Dopson pr Weburgh (Sreitey 409) a lencherd. tranater vi Cinco (Chortten 0:2), (Reuschel 17. mh Castle Bowl Now Under New Management! : of Palade Fewer) Come In and Meet Roland and Kelda Handley CASTLE BOWL 8. Louis Ferry 850 @. Seni nN = LEAGUE BOWLING STARTS TUESDAY, SEPT. 6 eiith Ave, Contlogar 28 ise tea OE BR OT ee merit Openings tor Individuals and Full Teams.in Some Leagues 308 roster, ‘nh ond release delens Gel 36 wide receiver Greg Krotzer 506 Header 7 on Roughriders octivate defensive LEAGUES AVAILABLE tsAouns now rons ccc- COUPON SS Sokmaten Ot Sne si 2 sock emcee Rovghrider te det EVENING — Mon.-Fri. 789 z \ ae Torente Argoraui ectivete running beck Ryon phon. Ture. 9:30-11.30 9. Leagues 1 Bonds, Pgh ore) Hanson. weneter to ‘ist guard Rondy Am pth ronater to reserve het Quo GOLDEN AGE ~ I pm oate. 2:18 YES OF AGE +104 ps OPEN PLAY Son Morthere = MECISTRATION SATURDAY. SPT. 10 Wi sep wockey John & Erme Mykyte would like to thank all 1 wine Soe COUPON BOWL 3 per for only 2. Sabres sign torwerds Froncow Guay end lod ‘aie . Buttole dad coupon good Wi ond ot Sept wee : Gront Thechuk ond defenceman Brod those who supported them over the past 12 years sins ems ts nh EN Zz ton 7 New York Islonders sign aatencemen Hank Lom Boston ‘Geough mens ond Peter Mc Colgory Stampeders ered hicker Mork ough & proctice roster setback Chris Bleve: reieawe hinebocer Billy Jockson: edd. to practice roster” linebacker Joe includes books includes books includes books STUDY SKILLS 095 includes books TELECASTS. a Mr. Roger Albert JUST WATCH Dr. Allan Markin Fee: $16.00 3 first year university credits ENGLISH 120 Literature and Composition Tues. Sept. 6 2:00 PM. (R) Sun. Sept. 11. 12 NOON Fee: $48.00 NORTH ISLAND The Knowledge Network PARENTING 099 Dr. Michael Catchpole $16.00 first year university credits Second Semester courses available in January, 1969 For information, cail (toll free) 1 TO REGISTER LEARN AT HOME Fee GV 4