as Castlegar News November 16, 1986 BUSINESS Crestbrook reports $1.7 million profit By CasNews Staff Crestbrook Forest Industries Ltd. reported a $1.7 million net profit for the third quarter of 1986, compared to a $2.3 million loss for the same period in 1985. For the first nine months of this year, the Cranbrook. based forestry company reported .a $5.2 million profit, compared to a $3.2 million loss in 1985. Akira Shibanuma, Crestbrook’s chairman and chief executive officer, and Stuart Lang, president and chief operating’ officer, attributed improved performance to inereased pulp sales and higher pulp prices. “Pulp sales at $22.6 million were substantially better than the $15.1 million reported § for the second quarter of this year and reflects both imp: d operations and ii prices,” Shibanuma and Lang said if a prepared release. “Markets for pulp continue to be good and a further price increase, effective for the fourth quarter of 1986, was announced.” But Crestbrook also said the inereased pulp sales helped offset a drop in lumber and plywood sales. Lumber and plywood sales fell to $18.4 million in the third quarter from $32.2 million in the second quarter. Lang and Shibanums attributed the lower lumber sales to the 16-week International Woodworkers of America strike. And the two company officials voiced concern about the strike and the U.S. duty on Canadian softwood lumber. “We reported . . . last quarter that two of the company 's Mill's value leaps ahead By The Canadian Press TORONTO — One of the plup mills that British Colum- bia Resources sold this sum- mer for $70 million has emerged worth almost three eee that much. pap Enterprises Inc. has wien up the Sheena pulp sawmills had been shutdown by the IWA,” said and Lang. “This action was expanded and all three sawmills (Canal Flats, Cranbrook and Elko), the (Creston) veneer plant and logging activities of CFI were shutdown from the second week of August.” The strike affects approximately 750 Crestbrook-IWA employees. “Demand for lumber and pricing was unsettled during the period, due to the uncertainty caused by the strike and the countervailing duties,” said Shibanuma and Lang. “On Oct. 23, the United States of America announced the ofa iP y sory deposit of 15 percent on all lumber entering the United States. “If the final ruling (expected in early 1987) continues, the imposition of a duty on the impact of lumber operations throughout the industry will be profound.” Shipbuilding bleak By MICHAEL BERNARD Canadian Press VANCOUVER — Forty years ago, Vancouver's North Shore waterfront would be lined at quitting time with thousands of grimy, tired shipyard workers waiting for the ferry to take them back across the harbor. Today, the traffic moves the other way, with the multi- tudes of office workers heading for home on the North Shore mountains. It is one more telling sign of the decline of British Columbia's once-mighty shipbuilding and repair business. Some bleakly predict a sunset industry — and the numbers support the pessimists. Between 1980 and 1984, the Canadian shipbuilding industry's workforce plunged to less than 11,000 from 17,000. In 1980, Canada had 69 shipyards; today it has 20. While the value of production from 1980 to 1984 remained stable at just over $1 billion, the figures hide the effects of inflation. When that is taken into account, actual business volume has in fact declined by about 40 per cent. WORKERS SUFFER Lost, too, in the jumble of figures are the human costs. Fifty-two-year-old Mike Milan waits patiently for work in the Vancouver shipyards. Having worked just two months in the last two years, Milan now survives on welfare. He hopes next year will be better. Terry Bennett has given up hoping. There aren't many employers interested in a 62-year-old arc welder. “I took a job cleaning toilets at a local golf club for a day,” Bennett says. “But it made me sick to my stomach. “Tm bitter about it. But I guess I'm lucky because I'm an old man.” Weekly Stocks TORONTO (CP) — The because of profit taking and Toronto Stock Exchange bounced back Friday from Thursday's dive but it wasn't enough to provide any over. all movement for the week The TSE 300 composite moved up 7.91 points in active trading on Friday to close at 3069.99, down an almost negligible .04 points from a week earlier. In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 11.39 points to 1873.59 cut ting its loss for the week to 12.94 points. Analysts at tributed the movement to rising bond prices and more takeover news and specu lation Gold bullion prices was off 25 cents an ounce to $407.75 in London but the Canadian mid-price quote based on concern over the inflationary pattern of economic indi. eators in the United States. The oil and gas subgroup increased 3.93 per cent for the week amid optimism for higher world oil prices and better tax and royalty deals for the industry, analysts said. Losing indexes included management, down 1.92 per cent; industrial products, off 1.68 per cent, and consumer products, dropping 1.41 per cent. Henry Walsh, president of the Canadian Shipbuilding and Ship Repairing Association, says the crisis is worsening. In an interview from Ottawa, Walsh said the industry has traditionally depended on government for about 20 per cent of its work. Now it's about 90 per cent. “But our position is we can't live on government work alone,” Walsh said. “Government work isn't ‘regular, it doesn't keep the yards full.” British Columbia's industry, which accounts for about 30 per cent of Canadian shipbuilding, mirrors the national trend. THE BOOM DAYS At its peak during the Second World War, as many as 15,000 men worked at the North Vancouver facility, now owned by Versatile Pacific Shipyard. In its heyday, the operation was sending a new 10,000-tonne cargo ship sliding down the greased ways at a rate of one a month. Only about 1,200 people work at Versatile today, half the total employed three years ago. The company’s wood-panelled executive offices look a little shabby, evidence of an industry that has no money to fritter away on things like office renovations. But David Alsop, Versatile’s’ president and chief executive officer, rejects the idea that the business is going the way of the Liberty serie iocce ue it onee built. GOALS DI He prefers it to be called a “mature” industry whose goals are different from other types of business. “The challenge is not to grow, it's to facilitate change and to seek out the special niches in the marketplace where we can be competitive.” A graduate of Harvard business school, Alsop arrived in Vancouver 14 years ago as an investment analyst hired by Burrard Yarrows Corp. to find out if the shipbuilder should buy another drydock. The expected short stay turned into a career. Alsop says there are certain facts Canadian shipbuilders must live with. “This is a global market. A ship can be built anywhere in the world on tidewater and be sailed to its home port.” That means Canada is competing with the. likes of heavily subsidized shipbuilders in Japan, Korea and more recently China, where governments have 7? industry and integral part of their national economic strategies, he said. But even those countries have dramatically cut back shipbuilding production after having overbuilt for the market in the "70s. Hundreds of ships tied up side by side in the Greek port of Piraeus, in Singapore and in Hong Kong are silent testimony to the industry's doldrums. The West Coast industry has its own set of problems. In the 1950s, local yards were busy building destroyers for the Royal Canadian Navy. In the ‘60s, the expansion of the B.C. Ferry fleet was the saving grace. The forest industry's need for barges and other vessels in the "70s seemed insatiable. Christmas Craft Fair Friday, November 21 Chicago markets dropped $10 § US to close at $397.50 US. On Bay Street, half of the subgroups were up and the other half were down in a week where there was a good advance for the first three days before Thursday's fall of 26 points. Analysts blamed it on events in New York, where stocks also dropped 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday, November 22 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. ADMISSION 50‘ 12 & UNDER FREE BAKE SALE BOTH DAYS 10 A.M. Located at the mill and operations it bought from B.C. Resources by $126 mil- Cominco accepts By CasNews Staff Cominco Ltd. has accepted a takeover bid from CanEast Capital Ltd. to purchase Vestgron Mines Ltd. for 66 cents a share. Cominco is majority share- holder in Vestgron. CanEast made the bid through its wholly-owned subsidiary, 683297 Ontario Inc. It had submitted a take- over bid of 65 cents, but in. creased it to 66 cents Oct. 17. A competing bid from Zen- mac Zine Ltd. expired Oct. 17. Zenmac had offered 50 cents a share. Contract reached KIMBERLEY (CP) — Cominco Ltd. has reached a new agreement with about 250 contract miners at its Sullivan mine in southeast- ern B.C. The contract miners are members of Local 651 of the United Steelworkers of America but they bargain separately from Trail, Cominco workers an addendum to the main con- tract. The addendum covers production incentives. A ratification vote is ex. pected Thursday or Friday, a union spokesman said. FANTASTIC OFFER! lion, bringing the value of the fixed assets to $199-million. The writeup, which ap- pears in’a preliminary pros- pectus for Repap’s first com- mon share issue, based on an appraisal done in Septem. ber by H.A. Simons Ltd., a Vancouver consulting comp- any. B.C. Resources executives are skeptical. At the time of the sale, Westar Timber had carried the Skeena complex and a Terrace sawmill on its books at $30 million, said Robert Chase, B.C. Re ’ vice-president for finance. Carmela's Spaghetti House and Calabria Pizza Enjoy the true Italian Spaghetti Dinner All the Spaghetti You Can Eat — $6.95 Private dining rooms at no extra charge 531-2nd Street, Troll, B.C. 368- 9399 (Anne Tony stan. Lak sah owrerte Rossland ot the toot pom tol ha — pa of the Bank will be in ib 19, 1986 to discuss your Business’ Financial and Management needs. Why not call us today at 426-7241 (collect) to arrange an appointment. Banque federale q Federal Business Bank de Canad& HALL’S GIFTS 1.2 Grand Opening Next Thursday, Friday & Saturday Nov. 20, 21 and 22 = VANCOUVER (CP) — The British Columbia Lions, who raced to a 21-point lead in the first half, needed a desperate goal-line stand late in the game to turn away the comeback bid of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers 21-14 Saturday in the Western Division semifinal game which opened the CFL playoffs. The Lions forced a fumble by Bomber tailback Sean Kehoe on third down from the B.C. one and defensive tackle Mike Gray recovered in the end zone with one minute and 48 seconds left to preserve the victory. B.C. advanced to the western final Nov. 23 against the winner of today's other semifinal between the Edmonton Eskimos and the Calgary Stampeders at Edmonton. Wide receiver Mervyn Fernandez staged a dazzling individual performance with two spectacular touch- downs in the opening half for the Lions, who swept four games against the Bogbers this season, including the last three games. Fernandez ran 16 yards for a touchdown on a surprise reverse on the last play of the first quarter and also scored on a 51-yard pass from Roy Dewalt in the cool ceria os BG: led 21-0 at halftime. The Bombers scored two touchdowns in the fourth quarter behind the passing of quarterback John Hufnagel, but came up short with their running game when it was needed. B.C. had 20 first downs and 325 net yards, compared with 19 first downs and 392 yards for Winnipeg, most of them in the second half. Dewalt completed 16 of 31 passes for 237 yards, with one touchdown and one interception. Fernandez caught five passes for 132 yards. Hufnagel hit on 21 of 31 passes for 362 yards for two hd: » with two ii Backup Jim Zorn, used briefly in the second and third quarters, completed one of seven for six yards. Murphy caught seven passes for 75 yards and Tuttle five for 129. The only effective runner was Anthony Parker of the Lions as he carried 23 times for 109 yards. Dewalt was sacked six times by the Winnipeg defence and the Lions had two sacks. ” ‘The aggressive B.C. defence, which forced with six turnovers, was at its best late in the game. The Bombers had a first down at the Lion four and Kehoe was denied three times from crossing the goal line on plui the par ny plunges up Kehoe, moved to tailback when Willard Reaves was ejected in the third quarter for a fight with B.C. end Walter Ballard, fumbled when hit by Tyrone Crews and Rick Klassen, with Gray recovering. Hufnagel, after a poor first half, threw 13-yard scoring passes to Perry Tuttle and James Murphy in the final quarter to make the game close. Lui Passaglia completed the B.C. scoring with eight points on two field goals and two converts. Trevor Kennerd converted both Winnipeg touchdowns. The Lios came away with only four points early in the game when two Winnipeg turnovers gave B.C. possession deep in Bomber territory. Lions advance to Western final Passaglia settled for a single on a missed field goal tea agt Seth itn 50h toat Sekowing on insereaptlon i? cornerback Keith Gooch and a 29-yard return to the Winnipeg 20. y Nelson Martin recovered a fumble by Kehoe at the Lion 24 and nine plays later Passaglia kicked a 20-yard field gerd ot 8:29. Dowel: threw 66 yards to Forntaitagay corner James Jefferson to spring Fernandez and give the Lions an 11-0 lead. Dewalt put together a seven-play, 70-yard series in the second quarter which resulted in a touch- down by Fernandez at 9:09. He took a short paés from Dewalt and made three cutback moves to elude semester detentess Veg: Bennett: Ratie Pingel ail Kos Hailey. Rebels win 12-9 over Smoke Eaters By CasNews Staff Dane Jackson's three goals sparked Castlegar Rebels to a 12-9 win over Trail Junior Smoke Eaters Friday night at the Community Complex. ‘The Rebels, who are on top of the Kootenay International Junior Hockey League's West Division, led 3-1 after the first period on goals by Jackson, Rick Viens and Andrew Zibin. Darcey Martini assisted on two of the goals, while goaltender Steve Voykin had one assist. replied with three goals of their own before the Trail team came back with one more to make it 6-3 in the Rebels’ favor after 40 minutes. Jackson, Dave Terhune and Randy Salekin scored for the Rebels with assists coming from Martini, Terhune, David Zarikoff and Andrew Zibin. The final period was freewheeling as the Rebels and the Jr. Smokies scored six goals each. Dean Sjodin scored two of the goals, while singles came from Jackson, Viens, Martini and Terhune. Plotnikoff, Salekin and Colin Carew also assisted. The game was also a scrappy one as the Rebels tallied 40 minutes in pen- alties and three players were handed game misconducts. The Smoke Eaters had 36 minutes in penalties and three game misconducts. The Rebels were in Kimberley Sat BUY A Panasonic * AND WE'LL GIVE YOU A FREE BONUS OFF PLUS A $60.00 GOURMET COOKING COURSE! * FREE BONUS OFFER x 1. $50.00 FOOD VOUCHER - $100.00 FOOD VOUCHER 3. $14.00 HANGING KIT $5.00 APRON & DELUXE CHEF’S HAT PLUS A $60.00 GOURMET COOKING COURSE @ Panasonic NE-9970 MICROWAVE, KOKANEE INVITATIONAL . . . Players from Mount Royal College (Calgary) try to keep ball in motion as opponents from Eastern Washington University detend territory Saturday. The match was part of the Kokanee Invitational volleyball tournament being played at Selkirk College and Mount Sentinel secon dary school. The tournament winds up ‘today, RECREATIONAL LEAGUE Knights defeat Shell By CasNews Staff Chief Mercer scored five goals Assists for the Knights came from Deschene with five, Mercer with three, goals. But they fell short as the horn sounded with the team one goal short Castlegar Recreation Complex 2101 - 6th Avenue, Castlegar Bring the whole family! Balloons for children! Face Painting! Entertainment by Kootenay Bear! ® BUY UNIQUE LOCALLY MADE CRAFTS SPECIAL ATTRACTION ® PRAIRIE LANDSCAPE ARTIST © ENJOY THE EXCITING ATMOSPHERE OF OUR 13th CHRISTMAS FAIR!!! DOOR PRIZES: WEST'S DEPT. STORE K&A TIRE PLAZA SUPER-VALU GINETTE’S BOUTIQUE IMAGE TREE STUDIO RUMFORD PLACE RIVERSIDE VIDEO THE PICTURE PLACE MONTE CARLO WOOL WAGON WOODLAND PARK SHELL BETTY’'S BOUTIQUE CASTLEGAR IMPORT BARTLE & GIBSON CENTER MOHAWK Sponsored by Blueberry Creek Recreation Commission Moving to White Rock or South Surrey? PLEASE CALL ME! at 531-5571 or 536-0271 Wolstencrott Realty MARY WADE ANDERSON = NOSYJONY JOVM AYVW 1812. 15231, White Rock RY_WADE ANDERSO’ Econo Spots You can save up to 80% on the cost of this od! 365-5210 Gutomatic programs assures cooking that's truly versatile. Features inctude 12 hour deloy stort nto wo oes 3 stage e@ Panasonic NE-8960 OVER-THE-RANGE SPACE SAVING MICROWAVE OVEN microwave. Programs an entire cooking cycle with the touch pha pri pbe ebmontgrsrsebp tion Features 0 12 hour detrost cooking even in kitchens with imited space Feotures 12 hour detay stort Quto-weight defrost, 3 stage memory and 4 outomatic sensor Controts with 8 automatic Looking programs Thursday night as Castlegar Knights charged to a 10-4 win over Woodland Park Shell in a Castlegar Recreational Hockey League game In other games, Castlegar Playboys edged Checkers/Mallards 7-6 Monday while Sandman Inn beat the Playboys 10-7 last Sunday In Thursday's game, the Knights led 5-1 after the first period on three goals by Mercer and one each by Don Des chene and Rick Sanders. Wes Mc Pherson scored the lone goal for Shell In the second period, Woodland Park Shell scored two goals, then the Knights replied with two before Shell got its final goal of the game with 2:11 left in the period Wayne Kinakin and Wayne Zino scored for the Knights while Shell got two goals from Bruno Tassone and one from Rick Shukin Knights goaltender Lawrence Cher noff held off Woodland Park in the final frame while his team scored two more goals for a 10-5 final Both goals were scored by Mercer Victor Jamaeff, Martin Sanders and Rick Sanders with two each, Bob Evans and Zino with one each Tassone and Neil Archambault got two assists each for Woodland Park Shell, Pete Moroso, Doug Makortoff and McPherson were credited with singles In the Playboys’ win over Checkers. Mallards, Randy Martin scored twice and Tony Nazaroff added one goal in the first period to give the Playboys a 3-1 lead over Checkers/Mallards. Al Akselson scored the lone goal for Checkers/Mallards. The Playboys took control of the second period, scoring four straight markers before Checkers/Mallards came back with two. Perry Samoyloff scored two of the Playboys’ goals, while Randy Martin and Tony Nazaroff also scored. Don Savinkoff got the two goals for Checkers/Mallards. Checkers/Mallards goaltender Mike Byrne shut out the Playboys in the final frame while his team scored three of tying the Playboys. Moose Morris, Al Akselson and Savinkoff scored the goals Bill Nazaroff of the Playboys picked up five assists, Gerry Tomlin had three, Lawrence Halisheff got two. while Bob Essaunce, Shawn Coulson and Tony Nazaroff had singles. Morris had four assists for Check ers/Mallards, Savinkoff got three and Akselson and Mike McCormack got one each Elsewhere, in Sandman Inn's win over the Playboys, the Playboys grabbed a 32 lead after the first period, but in the second frame, the Inn team scored five goals, compared to three for the Playboys, to go ahead 76. Sandman scored three more goals in the final period compared to one scored by the Playboys to win 10-7 Lyle Stoushnow scored three of the goals for Sandman, John Obetkoff and Kevin Kirby had two goals each, while singles went to Dan Markin, Dan Walker and Pat Farkas ‘The Jr. Smokies opened the scoring in the second period, but the Rebels NHL LAST NIGHT Terhune and Walter Sheloff had two then back home Saturday night to take assists each. Zarikoff, Zibin, Mark on Kimberley. Whalers outscore Oilers HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Power-play goals by rookie Mike Millar, Kevin Dineen and John Anderson led the Hartford Whalers over the Edmonton Oilers 6-2 in the NHL Saturday night. Goalie Mike Liut stopped 30 shots as the Whalers, 7-5-3, clicked on three of eight power plays to defeat the Oilers, 10-8-1, who have lost two straight games and slipped to 3-7 on the road. The Whalers took a 3-0 advantage in the first period by producing twice on the power-play after a wrist shot by Paul MacDermid opened a 1-0 lead at 4:13. Millar, recalled from the minors before the game, scored his first goal in his first big-league game at 11:56 to give the Whalers a 2-0 cushion. Millar knocked home a rebound after goalie Andy Moog stopped Paul Lawless. The Whalers went ahead 30 at 17:08 as Dineen intercepted a clearing pass by Mark Messier and scored from between the circles. Liut was sharp in the period making seven saves and blunted three Edmonton 2-on-1 rushes by sliding out to stop three quality shots. CANADIENS 4 SABRES 2 MONTREAL (CP) — Guy Carbonneau and goaltender Brian Hayward kept a pair of streaks alive for the Canadiens as Montreal beat Buffalo 4-2 in NHL action. Hayward stopped 25 shots to extend his undefeated string to four games, and the Canadiens now are undefeated in five consecutive games at the Forum Carbonneau scored his fifth and sixth goals of the season. His second came just over three minutes after the Sabres made it 3-2 on Wilf Paiement’s 12th goal of the season at 6:02 of the third period. Carbonneau slipped around Sabres defenceman Jim Hafford, and deked goaltender Jacques Cloutier, who faced 28 shots. Carbonneau's shot hit the post but a sliding Cloutier knocked it into the net. Bobby Smith and Mats Naslund also scored for Montreal. Jim Korn also scored for Buffalo, who have lost their last four games. LEAFS 6 RED WINGS 0 TORONTO (CP) Tom Fergus and Vincent Damphousse scored two goals each as the Toronto Maple Leafs defeated Detroit 6-0 to end a three-game NHL losing streak and move four points clear of the Red Wings atop the Norris Division Allan Bester made 21 saves for his second shutout of the Red Wings in two weeks and third perfect game of his goaltending career Wendel Clark and Russ Courtnall had Toronto's other goals in a brawl-filled game that saw referee Dave Newll assess four game misconducts to Basil McRae, Tim Higgins and Harold Snepsts of Detroit and Brad Smith of Toronto — as well as 10 10-minute misconducts and 17 fighting majors. Snepsts was given a major penalty and his game misconduct for spearing Leaf forward Steve Thomas Thomas was not injured PENGUINS 5 NORDIQUES 2 PITTSBURGH (AP) — Craig Simpson scored the first of three Pittsburgh first-period goals and set up Mario Lemieux’s 19th of the season to lead the Penguins to a 5-2 NHL victory over the Quebec Nordiques. The Penguins scored three times in the first 13:31 beginning with Simpson's fifth of the year at 6:35, which was set up by Ron Duguy’s steal John Chabot scored at 8:30 off a give and-go feed from Bob Arrey and newly acquired Dan Quinn made it 3-0 when he knocked in the rebound of a Jim Johnson shot. Quinn was playing his second game since joining the Penguins from the Calgary Flames in a trade for centre Mike Bullard. Brent Ashton got his 11th goal of the year at 14:28 and Mike Eagles scored at 1:49 of the second period for the Nordiques. Less than a minute after Eagies's goal, Simpson's pass to Lemieux gave Pittsburgh a 4-2 lead. Dave Hannan scored his fifth of the year for Pittsburgh at 3:17 of the final period. BRUINS 5 DEVILS 5 BOSTON (AP) — Ray Bourque and Steve Kasper scored third-period goals, rallying Boston to a 5-5 NHL tie with the New Jersey Devils in Terry O'Reilly's debut as the Bruins’ head coach The Bruins rallied after New Jersey's Claude Loiselle broke a 3-3 tie with a goal 16 seconds into the third period and Mark Johnson made it 5-3 with a goal on a deflected shot just 68 seconds later Bourque, set ip by Geoff Courtnall and Rick Middleton. pulled Boston to within one goal with a shot from the left faceoff circle at 9:16. The assist was Middleton's 900th career point in the NHL. At 12:54, Kasper took a pass from Nevin Markwart. split the New Jersey Wefence and went in to beat New Jersey goalie Chris Terreri with a shot to the stick side for his fourth goal of the season. Greg Adams gave New Jersey a 1-0 lead with his seventh goal at 1:46 of the opening period, but Boston went ahead on power-play goals by Reed Larson, Ihis second, and Ken Linseman, also his second ISLANDERS 7 NORTH STARS 3 BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP) — Pat LaFontaine and Brent Sutter scored in a 50-second span of the third period to break a 2-2 tie and Mike Bossy added two goals to lead the New York Islanders to a 7-3 NHL win over the Minnesota North Stars LaFontaine tipped Denis Potvin's slap shot past Minnesota goaltender Mike Sands 45 seconds into the third period while the North Stars Jari Gronstrand was in the penalty box Sutter scored his team-high 11th goal at 1:35 after taking a pass from Brian Curran and firing a drive that deflected off Sands's pad and into the net. The victory improved the Islanders record to 961 while Minnesota dropped to 5-9-2 Minnesota rallied from a 2-0 first-period deficit on goals by Marc Habscheid and Brian MacLellan Dwayne Sutter and Bossy put New York up early Dwayne Sutter scored just 10 seconds into the game to record the fastest goal ever scored against the North Stars. BLUES 4 BLACKHAWKS 3 ST. LOUIS (AP) — Greg Paslawski knocked home the rebound of his own shot with 4:28 left in the game to lift the St. Louis Blues to a 43 NHL victory over the Chicago Blackhawks. Paslawksi got off a quick shot after muscling his way past Chicago d Jack O'Callaghan. G der Bob Sauve made a stick save, but O'Callahan knocked Paslawski into the crease, dislodging the puck and sending it into the net The goal was Paslawski’s fourth of the season. It snapped a 33 tie created by Chicago right winger Steve Larmer, who scored his second goal of the night on a power play at 14:45.