; SS \ Castlégar News September 11, 1985 BRIEFLY NEW STAR VANCOUVER (CP: Karl Fried is owning radio station CJOR and will appear four days a week on Dave Barrett's talk show, ‘Barrett: announced ‘Tuesday. Barrett, former B.C. premier and New Demotra- tic Party leader, also told-a news conference he will stay oni: for at> least another “year at CJOR. Fri AT, was not r d by the Social Credit government when his six-year term as ombudsman expired last June. Barrett indicated Friedmann. will appear on his program in an ombudsman-like capacity to advise listeners on how to deal with bureaucratic red tape. DOCTOR ERASED VANCOUVER (CP):'— A Vancouver doctor who pleaded guilty to possession of a restricted drug for the purpose of trafficking in Alberta earlier this year |_will lose his right _to_practise icine in British U. Ss. sa tellite encounters comet GREENBELT, MD. (AP) — A U.S. satellite; sending a constant stream of valuable data, sliced through the tail of a comet today, the first encounter of a man-made object with the most mysterious body in the solar system. The satellite “emerged intact. “We have successfully gone through the tail of a comet for the first time in history,” said Jim Elliott of the Goddard space flight centre in this Washington suburb. “Everything is looking good,” he said. Scientists were surprised at indications that the satellite “spent about 15 minutes crossing the tail of the comet bini-Zinner. The trip, was d to take only about five minutes. Indications from the satellite. were that the tail was 16,000 kilometres wide, instead of the 4,830 kilometres scientists had calculated. “The plasma tail may be five to. six times larger than expected,” said comet. scientist Mal Niedner. Columbia starting Sept. 15. . Dr. John MeWhinnie, 35, will be erased from the B.C: medical registry effective Sept. 15, Dr. Craig Arnold, registrar of the College of Physicians and Plasma is composed of electrically charged-particles-of— gas forming one of two tails that trail the comet's head when it is near the sun. had awaited eaijata but the early reports were that much new information was gained about. magnetic fields around the comet that were said to be “clearly much smaller than the magnetic field of the earth.” “We are. getting significant scientific data that has never been found before,” Elliott said. The satellite had travelled seven years and more than a billion kilometres toward its encounter. It crossed the comet's tail an estimated 8,000 kilometres behind it's icy nucleus. Nearly 12 hours before the encounter, beginning about 9:30 p.m. Tuesday, scientists believed they saw indications » from the spacecraft that it was noticing the comet's presence. At 4:31 a.m., instruments showed the spacecraft had encountered the comet's bow shock, with ICE still 200,000 kilometres from the comet and closing fast. Bow shock was by h-like-the-waves_made [MARY_WAD: D Large family nome, rie on super. prize winning garden lot, Will cSmider trade for small hom: ment school on Fifth Avenue. Offers to $35,000. Well built home on 28th ‘guest br. i= iO. 3 2 nd iD = i< Rs I< ES > jac i< = ‘OFFICE 348.2111 HOME 265-3750 Cont inview Agencies Ltd. IMARY_ WADE A Installed by Professionals Aluminum or Vinyl! Soffits Facio Cover Aluminum Siding ood ur Aluminum Windows and Patio Doors COLUMBIA VINYL Day or Night 365-3240 7295 High MERCURY by a boat plunging through water. Deep space antennas around the world were tuned to The other tail is d of dust. the area halfway to the sun to take scientific data fh h vi Hed-IGE } t inGlenmerry. Tail Rata -said-in-an-interview~Tuesday: ~But MeWhinnie said Tuesday what he did was wrong by the letter of the law, but was not intended as a crime. MeWhinnie was in Edmonton in January 1984, when a patient of his, suffering chronic pain, asked him to pick up a prescription for a pain-killing drug called dilaudid. McWhinnie wrote a prescription and got it filled, but was arrested shortly after by Edmonton police. ‘FEW APPLY OTTAWA (CP) — Only about 20 per cent of the estimated 85,000 widows and widowers who became eligible for the federal spouse's allowance on Sept. 1 have applied for benefits. Health’ Department spokesman Carole Peacock said Tuesday between 17,000 and 18,000 applications have been received. Applications from Ontario have been especially light — fewer than 2,000 out of an estimated 32,000 have come in to date. _Under a bill passed by Parliament in June, the spouse's allowance was expanded to cover all widows and widowers in need who are between the ages of 60 and 65. At age 65, people in need qualify for the federal guaranteed income supplement. Widows and widowers with incomes of less than $11,000 a year are eligible for the spouse's allowance. The maximum allowance is $548.67 a month. * Applications are available from the department's income security offices across Canada. BOSS PROTESTS LOS ANGELES (AP) — Bruce Sprii will- th o ight-b. ee reducing the Neca output peer to send data back to earth. “I think I overestimated the hazard a little bit,” said flight director Robert Farquhar. “We haven't seen any dust at all. I'm very surprised.” After the spacecraft left the comet's tail, scientists pronounced it out of danger but noted the possibility of small rocks nearby and added: “We could still run into a golf ball or something like that, but it looks good.” The scientific return of data from the satellite still f Internati y Explorer. Tracking stations at Arecibo, Puerto Rico, Goldstone, Calif., and Madrid were locked onto the satellite for its historic moment. The observatory at Cerro Tololo in the Chilean Andes photographed the meeting with its large telescope. The risk was that the micron-sized grains of dust in the comet tail might damage or obscure the satellite's solar cells, robbing it of power needed to get the data to Earth. The craft has no dust shield. A.M. FORD -_ _rono September 11, 1985 Grand slam beats Cardinals 5-4 By The Associated Press Whitey Herzog isn't in-awe of Howard Johnson, but would have to concede the New York Mets third-baseman knows how to end a dispute. And pick his pitches. “It was a fastball right down the pipe, that’s the only pitch he can hit,” the St. Louis‘Cardinals manager said of the * ball Johnson ‘hit for a grand-slam home run Tuesday night. “He can't hit a changeup or a breaking ball.” That grand slam beat the Cardinals 5-4, handed them their fourth straight loss and removed them from first place in baseball's National League East as the Mets assumed the lead for at least one night. ‘ Johnson was the first batter following a bench-and- bullpen-clearing incident after George Foster was hit by a pitch from Cardinals starter Danny Cox. Johnson's ninth homer-turned a 1-1 tie in the first inning into a 5-1 lead that Ron Darling, 15-5, and Roger McDowell barely held. In other National League games, it was: San Diego Padres 3, Cincinnati Reds 2; Pittsburgh Pirates 2, Chicago Cubs 1; F “Phillies 5, Expos 2 in 11 innings, and Houston Astros 4, San Francisco Giants 1. Los Angeles Dodgers ran wild in a- doubleheader, pounding Atlanta Braves 10-1 and 10-4. : METS GET CHARGE ras - “You Have te see nee like that interfere with the Dave Johnson said‘of the aispuites™ “But any ines a pitcher hits one of your players vand the next guy hits a home run, it charges you up.” There were two on and, two out when the pitch caught Foster on the hip. “It was a fastball inside,” Cox said. “It Just happened to hit him.” The benches cleared, but no punches ¥ were thrown and order was restored within five minutes. PADRES 3 REDS 2 Ty Cobb's record was built to last, and it survived another night. Pete Rose went 0-for-4 in front of a sellout crowd of 51,045 and remained with 4,191 hits. Garry Templeton had four hits to lead San Diego over “Cincinnati and broke a2-2 tie with a run-scoring single in the seventh. The shortstop also put Rose out twice, on popups in the first and sixth innings. Rose flew out to left field i: in his other two times at bat. » LaMarr Hoyt, 14:8, gave up five hits in six innings for the victory. Goose Gossage pitched a-1-2-3 ninth inning for his 22nd_save.” PHILLIES 5 EXPOS 2 + “Mike Schmidt's three-run homer with none out in the bottom of the 11th was his 27th of the season and No, 452 in his career, tying him with.former Boston star’ Carl >Yastrzemski on the all-time list. Tim Wallach hit his’ 16th home run for Montreal and Mitch Webster homered for the fourth consecutive game, hitting his ninth of the year. His four home runs in four games is an Expos record. PIRATES 2 CUBS 1 Rick Reuschel pitched his sixth straight complete game and struck out 12 batters, just one short of his career high. He gave up only eight hits and walked one%atter. Reuschel, 12:7, lowered his earned-run average to 2.24, fourth best in the league. Mariano Duncan drove in five runs and Rick Honeycutt pitched a’ five-hitter'as Los Angeles crushed Atlanta in the opener. Greg Brock hit a grand slam in a five-run seventh as the Dodgers-mashed the Braves in the nightcap. Len . Matuszek and Mike Scioscia jered in-the second game for the L.A. Dale ‘Murphy hit his” league-leading 35th for the Braves. ASTROS 4GIANTS 1 a Bob Knepper, 13-10, pitched a three-hitter for his fifth © win in his last six decisions. He pitched his fourth complete game, did not walk a batter, struck out six and retired the last 14 to lead Houston to its 11th win in 13 games. With his 48th victory as an Astro, Knepper became the winningest left-hander in Houston history. 364- 02025 “Your ‘Ford Country Headq' hy DENNIS “Save $$$ with the Auto Sellers at A.M. Ford"! Archbishop enjoys ~ relaxed visit Christ Church Cathedral in this Yukon capital. He said the rest of the world has much to learn from pioneer communities which “worked together to proclaim the gospel long before ecum- enism became acceptable in the church ters of WHITEHORSE (CP) — Canadians should embrace an ecumenical spirit to discover what unites people is more important than what divides them, the Archbishop of Canterbury told Yukoners Tuesday night. Frustrated persecuted each other in the Yukon,” he said. Planners for the archbis- hop's 18-day Canadian tour who had hoped for personal contact and a departure from stiff formal events got what they wanted. In Whi where local “In parts of the. world like the Yukon there has always been an ecumenical spirit which finds ways round the Toronto or Canterbury, Gen- eva or Rome.” Whenever the gospel is / customs and of d, old churches which have too eas- ily come to acquiese comfor- tably in the anomaly of-sep- arated churches,” the Most Rev. Robert Runcie told 200 join his former E Street band guitarist Steve Van Zandt and at least three dozen other artists in an anti- apartheid record titled Sun City, due for release in early October. The record will be distributed by Manhattan Records, with profits turned over to the New York City-based Africa Fund, a non-profit, tax-exempt organization founded in 1966 by the American Com- mittee on Africa. The performers, collectively titled Artists United Against Apartheid, are an eclectic gathering including Pat Benatar, Miles Davis, Lou Reed, Eddie Kendricks, David Ruffin; Jackson Browne, Kurtis Blow, Jimmy Cliff, Bonnie Raitt, Bobby Womack, Nona Hendryx, Peter Garrett, and Bono Hewson from U2. PRAYER REJECTED WASHINGTON (REUTER) — The Senate de- feated by 62 to 36 votes a bill Tuesday which would have allowed-voluntary prayers by students in public schools. The bill would have ended the jurisdiction of federal courts, including that of Supreme Court which has ruled that such prayers violate the constitutional separation of church and government, over state laws on school prayer. Opponents of the bill said it would disrupt the balance of powers between the legislative, executive and judicial branches of government. The Senate last year rejected a constitutional amendment to permit school prayer. GET BACK TO SCHOOL ON THE RIGHT FOOT! Finally unveiling their windows! 1! SHOE SAL ON Featuring the latest i in women’s fashion, including a full line of Brazilian Imports. _ Open Monday to Saturday Located under the Yellow Awning _ ‘at 465 Columbia Ave., Castlegar Call 365-3411 who packed tiny fade, Runcie said. They seem less important thousands of. miles away from the coun- tries of their historical ori- gins. “Christians have never churchmen are known: by their first names, the at- mosphere was friendly and relaxed and gave Runcie a chance to meet the people of Canada's North. At an outdoor ceremony preceding the service, the archbishop was welcomed to the Yukon by church officials. xe Beauty Supply Sale... SHOWER MATE LIQUID BODY WASH Lody Patricia Conditioner & Shampoo 51.39 Vaseline Intensive Care BATH BEADS Sate KOOTENAY SAVINGS CREDIT UNION High yield. HOS Ask us! Conversion options. N.Y. Yankees straight game By The Associated Press and followed with four more New York Yankees have in the sixth to chase Ray ~-won If consecutive games for’ Burris, 9-12. the first time since the Ron Hassey's three-run American League baseball homer came with two outs . club reeled off 11 straight in and followed . a 1964. double by Mattingly in the The Yankees hit three fifth. Mattingly and Winfield, more home runs Tuesday who walked, scored on Has- night in outlasting -Milwau- sey’s 11th homer. _ kee Brewers 13-10. During . “You don't care how you the 1l-game streak New get a win right now,” said York has produced 22 home Hassey, whose.homer proved runs and now has hit 153 in to be the winning hit. “If we 137 games. keep winning and they (the The victory kept the Yan- Blue Jays) keep winning, it's kees 11/2 games behind first: «going to be quite a show- place Toronto in'the Ameri- down.” can League East after the two-run, Jays won a 2-1 duel with Detroit Tigers. The Jays and the Yankees meet in a four- game series starting Thurs- day night at Yankee Sta- dium. ____ Elsewhere inthe American BLUE JAYS 2TIGERS 1 Damaso Garcia singled in the seventh inning to break a 1-1 tie and Doyle Alexander, 15-8, outpitched Jack Morris, _14-10, as the Blue Jays-sent—] “Detroit to ii sixth straight League, it was: Chicago defeat. White Sox 7, Minnesota Alexander checked the Twins 2; Kansas City Royals Tigers on seven hits and 6, California Angels 0;-Cleve-_ twice pitched his way out of have new coaches By CasNews Staff Castlegar Rebels have sel- ected a head coach and an as- sistant coach for the 1985-86 Kootenay International Ju- nior Hockey League season. Joe Hanik of Trail has been named head coach, while Rod Zavaduk of Castlegar is his assistant. According to Rebels man- ager Rudy Martini, the de- cision was made in time for the first day of training camp. Training camp began this week with 30 players in attendance. Hanik is employed by! Cominco and has played hoc- key in Trail and some junior hockey on the prairies, said Martini. Zavaduk, owns Castlegar Sports Centre and has played both junior and senior hoc- key. At one time he played for the Trail Senior Smoke Eaters. Bass Columbians are switching to land Indians 8, Seattle Mar- iners 5, and Oakland A’s 10, Texas Rangers 3. Baltimore bases-loaded jams. He struck out eight and walked four. With one out in the sev Why? , MECCA SOAP Ponds TROPICAL BATH Cream and Coco Butter. Reg. 29S) 99 . Pharmasave's CONDITIONERS Balsam & Protein. Yardley GUEST SOAP ~ + ee_..°3,99 Henna Care - Conditioner & Shampoo 225 mt. FOAM B BATH 0 OIL 550 mt. 33.29 MOISTURIZER LOTION Vaseline Intensive Core HERBAL BATH men $2.99 BALSAM CONDITIONER pum. $2.99 * Ronda Dutton * M. Guilremin (Cos! WINNER OF OUR DRAI Dutton (Cestlega: ay? ““In the Heart of Downtown Castlegar” OPEN THIS SUNDAY. ws Winner of the 8 3-day aa ‘Poss a 4 365-7813_ Credit Unions. It isn’t just because of the friendly, personalized service we extend to all our members. - It's innovation. Did you know that B.C’s Credit Unions were the first to offer daily interest accounts? And we improved personal money management by introducing the “all-in-one” statement. Competitive rates aren’t the 0} one-quarter of all the resident are with Credit Unions. We’ve led the way, with open mortgages and bi-weekly payment plans. You see, since we’re not large, cumbersome organizations we respond quickly to our members’ needs. For example, we’re pioneering computer assisted financial planning. Nearly one million British Columbians enjoy financial security and superior service at their local Credit Unions. Find out what a,Credit Union can do for you. BCs CREDIT UNIONS Bank With Us reason why- mortgages in B.C. Orioles and Boston Red Sox enth inning, Jesse Barfield split a doubleheader. The singled and stole second. One Orioles took the first-.game out later Garcia, who had two 7-5; the Red Sox won the of the Jays’ six hits. off nightcap 5-3. Marris, singled to left to is what it’s all score Barfield. " said Yankee starter Ed Whitson, 10-7. “You're going to run into games like this. Smith hit two-run homers to —“But “everybody in the back the three-hit pitching of lineup is capable of coming up—Charlie Leibrandt as Kansas “and hitting the ball out of the City blanked California to in- ballpark. Any body. Any crease its lead over the An- pitch.” gels inthe AL West to 1'% LOADED WITH POWER games. The Yankees have four ~ players with 20 or more ORIOLES 7-3 RED SOX 5-5 homers — Don Mattingly Eddie Murray broke a tie (28), Dave Winfield (24), Don With a two-run homer in a Baylor (21), and Rickey Hen- Six-run Baltimore eighth inn- derson (20). Third baseman ing and Mike Young hit a pair Mike Pagiiarulo has 18, of homers inthe first game of The Yankees were down 2 doubleheader. Wade Boggs 3-1 after four innings, but doubled in the eighth for his scored’ five runs in the fifth 200th hit. Boggs came back with a 4-for-4 performance in the nightcap to raise his AL- leading batting average to .368 in support of Dennis Boyd, 13-11, as Boston gained the split. ROYALS 6 ANGELS 0 Frank White and Lonnie Pasquale WHITE SOX 7 TWINS 2 invited to camp Joel Davis, a 20-year-old rookie, outpitched veteran VICTORIA (CP) — Guard Bert Blyleven and Ron Kittle Eli Pasquale of Victoria has broke a 2-2 sixth-inning tie been invited to attend the with his 16th homer in lead- training camp of Chicago ing the White Sox to victory Bulls of the National Basket- over Minnesota. ball Association. Pasquale, who helped Vic- A’s 10 RANGERS 3 toria Vikings win five Bruce Bochte’s 12th home straight Canadian university run of the season sent Oak- championships before grad- land ahead in the fifth inning uating in 1984, played for and Dave Kingman-hit the Canada last month at the 15th grand-slam homer of his World University: Games in career in the seventh as the Kobe, Japan. A's ended a six-game losing He attended the NBA streak by downing Texas. camp of Seattlé SuperSonics last-year and was released at the final cutdown after being ~ Joe Carter drove in two drafted in the seventh.round. runs with an inside-the-park PasQuale, a native of Sud- homerun and Mike Hargrove bury, -Ont., was an all-star added two runs-batted-in ina selection this year in.the Los five-run fifth inning to lead Angeles: Summer League. _Cleveland over Seattle. INDIANS § MARINERS 5 TRAINING CAMP .. . Hockey player tires to impress coaches during drill at Castlegar Rebels training camp session Thursday night. There are approximately 30 players attending the camp. CostiewsPhoto by Chery! Caiderbank -More ~games on TORONTO (CP) — As Toronto Blue Jays’ pennant race with New York Yankees heads into the final weeks, two Canadian television net- works are scurrying to show more baseball games. Entering play Tuesday night, the Jays’ lead over the second-place Yankees in the American League East was just 1% games. And with seven crucial, games remain- ing between the two teams, CTV and The Sports Net- work are both involved in discussions to add more games to their original sched- ules. The Jays headed to New York today to begin a four- day series at Yankee Sta- dium. They then play a total of 15 games — seven at home and eight onthe road — be- fore winding’ up the regular season Oct. 4-6 at Exhibition Stadium with a three-game series against the Yankees. ACTV spokesman said the network has picked up the Jays-Yankees game in New York this Saturday — in addition to the regularly- scheduled Sunday telecast — and negotiations are continu- ing on future games. TSN, with eight Jays’ games left on its schedule, also said it's negotiating for more. Minor Hockey changes The age limit for minor hockey divisions is being in- creased by one year, as a re- out the summer in prepar- ation for the upcoming sea- son. sult of changes app at this year’s meeting of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association. And C: Minor Hoc- Other i for the 1985-86 season are: Ted Mc- Afee and Graham Read (vice- presidents), Patti Richard y), Don Davoren key Association, as a member (treasurer), John Phillips (ice of the will auto- matically these changes. Novice division will be for players age nine and under. Managers for the team are Don Davoren and Maynard Fauth. Atoms will include ages 10 and 11 with Howard Bondaroff as manager. Jim Lewis is managing Pee Wees (12-13). No manager has been announced for Ban- tams (14-15). Midget will consist of ages 16 - 17 and 18 - 19-year- olds will make up the juvenile division. For the 1985-86 season, the age of a player is based on age as of Dec. 31, 1985, ac- cording to a Minor Hockey release. Another format- change adopted by the CAHA con- cerns bodychecking. Body- checking is now permitted in the Pee Wee Division. Pre- viously, there was no bod; checking allowed in all divi- sions by Bantam. Meanwhile, Castlegar Mi- nor Hockey president Wayne make ), Art D Bill Pottle (equipment man. agers), Doug Coulson (West Kootenay Rep), John Loo (registrar, division managers co-ordinator and head coach), Karen Porsnuk and: Brenda Barr (ladies auxiliary). Castlegar Minor Hockey still has positions to be filled for: Bantam Division mana- ger, Bantam A team coach, Midget A and B team coach- es, and Juvenile coach. Anyone interested in these positions can contact Wayne Barr or Doug Coulson. This season, in order that there may be consistent administration of hockey operations, the minor hockey association, will conduct a division managers seminar and a house ieague coaches seminar. John Loo is con- ducting these seminars. To register players for-this year’s season Minor Hockey executive have planned two registration sessions. The first session will take place from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. this Saturday at the Castle- Barr and his have been working hard through- Cc. it Complex. The next session will take place at the same time on Saturday. Sept. 21. An equipment swap. is planned for each of these sessions. Those who have equipment for swapping should contact Brenda Barr or Karen Porsnuk. Ice will be available for hockey on Oct. 1 at the Castlegar Community Com- plex and a week later at the Pioneer Arena. Barr stressed that the philosophy of minor hockey, “Fun and Participation,” will be first and foremost in the minds of his executive and workers. The executive 1s also try ing to encourage new players to join minor hockey. Canadians win -PCL championship PHOENIX, ARIZ, (AP) — Bryan Clutterbuck threw a two-hitter and Jim Adduci’s tworun single sparked a three-run, sixth-inning rally as Vancouver Canadians beat the Phoenix Giants 3-1 Tues- day night to win the Pacific Coast League baseball cham- pionship.- The Canadians, taking the best-of-five series in three straight games, entered the sixth inning trailing 1-0 and with Phoenix starter Kelly Downs working on a one- - ‘ancouver loaded the bases on Dale Sveum’'s bloop single, Mike Felder's infield hit and a one-out walk. to Doug Loman. Chuck Hensley came on to relieve Downs and Adduci ripped a 2-0 pitch into right field to score two runs with a third crossing the plate when Giants rightfielder Jessie Reid misplayed the ball for an error. ‘Clutterbuck, who gained his second playoff win, shut down Southern Division champion Phoenix from there, walking two and strik- ing out five, including Reid for the final out. Luis Quinones accounted for the lone Giants’ run when he ted off the fifth inning with his second homer of the play- offs. Mike Woodard’s one-out double in the first inning was the only other Phoenix hit. The Giants were appearing in the PCL-playoffs for the first time since 1977, when they won the title. Rose still tied with TY Cobb CINCINNATI (AP) — Just because he’s got 4,191 hits under his belt doesn’t mean Pete Rose can produce one at will. Not even an uproarious, confetti-flinging, flashbulb- popping crowd of 51,045 at Riverfront Stadium could spur the Cincinnati Reds player-manager into a hit Tuesday night that would make him baseball's - most prolific hitter. Rose came up empty in four heart-stopping at-bats, leaving him sharing the hon- ors as baseball's hit king with Ty Cobb for at least one more night “Sure, I felt I was going to get a hit,” Rose. said, after popping out twice and flying out twice in San Diego Pad- res’ 3-2 National League vic- tory. “I didn't know what kind it was going to be. “My first three times up. there was nobody on base, and maybe I was trying to hit the ball too hard. “A couple of pitchés sailed on me, came up and in on me. Usually I don't swing at bad pitches. I might have been a little over-anxious.” With good reason. The capacity crowd had come ex- pecting to see baseball his- tory made with Rose's 4.192nd hit. Some had camp- ed out overnight at the sta dium to snap up a limited supply of standing-room-tic- kets. The crowd rose and chant- ed his name on each at-bat — a popout to shortstop Garry Templeton in the first, a fly ball to left fielder Carmelo Martinez in the fourth, a pop to Templeton in the sixth, and another fly to Martinez in the eighth.