| atric pene at t *: Fa a8 ff 5i\ Germaine Smith I suppose he’s an okay guy. John Knutson Politically for them, I think it’s a . Chretien is much better as a politician than Turner. bad choice . . Fred Sapriken I don't really think so. It’s the same horse, only a different color. Bernadette Archambault Yes, I think they made a good choice. I'm for Turner. were available. Ted Bell No, because he's too much of a free enterpriser. Bruce Taylor Yes, I do. I think they made the best choice of all the candidates that ogist at the Nova Scotia TRURO, NS. (CP). — eiagetha, Suing) stneanair ee William Brooks, a psychol- Teachers College. Addressing the eastern regional meeting of The Can- adian Press, Brooks attri- buted increasing numbers of heart attacks and strokes, and even headaches and » warts, to emotional pres- ) sures that are allowed to \ build. He said stress is a complex physical and psychological process that develops in the home and the workplace. Twenty-five per cent of the population suffers from “chronic stress response” that can lead to burnout. Brooks cited the newspa- per industry, which has un- dergone rapid technological change in recent years. Grad Special! 20% ort He said learning to use Leather modern equipment causes stress that can be controlled if the individual is made aware stress exists and takes measures to alleviate the problem. “Stress is an outgrowth of the way we deal with our- selves and it revolves around the kinds of things you say to yourselves. While (some) stress is desirable, too much is undesirable and its control involves mentally evaluating the situation.” It’s possible to change the way an individual responds to stress and the primary method is to learn to relax, even for short periods. Even 30-second breaks at various points during. the day have shown productivity in- creases. Brooks said stress are per- sonal, work-related and non- work-related. @eeeeeee? i] PS PHARMASAVE FROM ALL OF US AT PHARMASAVE! “In the Heart of Downtown Castlegar.” CLOSED THIS SUNDAY, CARL'S DRUG OPEN. Spedal Gifts For | Your Special Grad All Buxton & Pitt GS Products ¥ YOUR GRAD WILL LOVE THESE GIFTS! 1984 Coin Sets Shaeffer Pen & Pencil Sets Caligraphy Sets Polaroid Cameras Curling Irons Hair Dryers Musical China Dolls AND DON'T FORGET... Grad Cards 365-7813 Centuy 21. MOUNTAINVIEW AGENCIES Ta Jv LTD. 365-2111 HOW CAN YOU JUSTIFY RENTING WHEN THESE HOMES ARE AVAILABLE? 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Older but meticulous and cozy home with carport, double garage, sauna house, tractor shed. All set on edge of lovely creek. Must be seen. Offers!!! GOT A GREEN THUMB? Operate your own little nursery. Home is 24x36 double wide, cement footing. Lovely cedar wrap around deck. Two large greenhouses plus solid 2-storey garage, workshop. Large landscaped lot, residential Winlaw. All for $47,500. 10 ACRE FARM, fertile soil excellent water, sunny location, parital log home. Large barn & other solid outbuildings. Offers! Starter home in Slocan City. $27,500. 4.29 hillside acres. $14,900. Approximately 1% acre with well. $12,000. Call Eve, our valley expert about these and many other listings in the valley. 365-2111 By GRANT KERR VANCOUVER (CP) — British Columbia Lions have a perplexing logjam at the inside receiver positions with one exhibition game left to determine starting combination for the beginning of the Canadian Football League regular season. Rookie imports Henry Vereen and John Sandusky are battling for raster positions with holdover Canadians John Pankratz, Jacques Chapedelaine and Mark deBrueys. Vareen, from Las Vegas, Nevada, and Sandusky, from San Diego State, have been impressive in three exhibition games as head coach Don Matthews attempts to sort out the situation. Matthews hopes to find some answers Thursday in Winnipeg against the Blue Bombers, like B.C. 3-0 in exhi bition play. “We're not getting the ball to the backs like in the past because we're trying to sort out our receivers,” said Tuesday. “We're trying to find out if those receivers can play in the league.” " Matthews Roy Shivers, B.C. Lions still sorting out receivers and played in a tough league in Las Vegas before contacting ial teams coach, during the offseason. He's been most dangerous after he's caught the ball. Sandusky, 22, eame to the Lions with impressive credentials and a reputation of being a big-play receiver. The 5-9, 175-pounder returned kicks in college, but Vereen has drawn that duty in B.C. COMEBACK WIN ‘The Lions played four import receivers late in the game Monday when they came from behind with 16 points in the final quarter to beat Saskatchewan 24-18. It's unlikely the Lions can afford the luxury of four import receivers in the lineup at the same time; Pankratz is a proven receiver with enough speed to be dangerous from anywhere on the field. Matthews also will try to sort out the situation in Winnipeg. Roy Dewalt, last played briefly against Saskatchewan after missing the first two games following offseason surgery for a broken ankle bone. PAYOFF CATCHES Vereen has been the most effective receiver in victories over Calgary Stampeders, Edmonton Eskimos and Saskat chewan Roughriders. The 5-10, receptions and four touchdowns. 180-pounder has 17 Sandusky, slowed in training camp by a mysterious virus, has caught 12 passes, but hasn't found the end zone. Pankratz figures to be a starter, while Chapdelaine and de Brueys compete for a backup position. Returning imports Mervyn Fernandez and Ned Armour seem to have the outside receiving positions in hand. Vereen, 27, was out of organized football for two years Sutcliffe successful By The Associated Press Rick Sutcliffe’s first Nat- ional League baseball appear- ance in more than three years was a success thanks to a wing and a prayer. The wing was the sturdy right arm of Chicago relief ace Lee Smith, who put down a three-run uprising in the bottom of the ninth inning Tuesday night and retired four-time batting king Bill Madlock on a pop fly with the bases loaded to preserve the Cubs’ 4-3 victory over Pitts- burgh Pirates. The prayer came from Sutcliffe, who sought some divine intervention as Smith was in the process of walking three batters to force in Pittsburgh's final fun. “T said a little prayer,” said Sutcliffe, who blanked the By JOHN Mackill MONTREAL (CP) — Sather, Team Canada's coach and general manager, has a message for National Hockey League players who might be reluctant, hesitant or out of shape for the Canada Cup tournament this fall — “Stay home.” Sather, also coach and general manager of Edmon ton Oilers, was officially named to the two Team Can- ada positions by tournament chairman Alan Eagleson at a news converence Tuesday. He says he’s out to win and insisted on bringing Oilers assistants Ted Green and John Muckler with him. Sa ther also hired former Win. nipeg Jets coach Tom Watt tc scout the opposition and sean videotapes for the club. Sather didn't say so, but he's also expected to bring along many players from his Stanley Cup champion team, including Wayne Gretzky. Sather did make clear, though, that he'll demand total commitment from who- ever is selected. “Let me put. it this way,” said Sather. “If (Oilers for- ward) Mark Messier, after winning the Conn Smythe Trophy, shows up fat and out of shape at training camp, he won't be there two days.” In previous Canada Cups, some players have expressed misgivings about playing, and after the Oilers knocked off the four-time champion Islanders this spring, New Pirates in four hits over the first eight innings. In other NL games, it was: Montreal Expos 6, St. Louis Cardinals 3; Philadelphia Phillies 6, New York Mets 4; San Diego Padres 2, Houston Astros, 0; Atlanta Braves 11, San Francisco Giants 6; and Cincinnati Reds 10, Los An- geles Dodgers 4. In the American League, Jim Sundberg singled in the winning run with the bases loaded in the ninth inning to lift Milwaukee Brewers to a }5 wictory over the Blue Jays in Toronto. Elsewhere in the AL, it was: Baltimore 9, Boston Red Sox 7 with Eddie Murray hitting a grand slam home run for the Orioles; Detroit Tigers 7, New York Yankees 6; Cleveland Indians 7, Min » coach anada York sniper Mike Bossy said he wasn't sure he wanted to play. EVALUATED TALENT Sather, along with Oilers chief scout Barry Fraser and his staff, has already evalu ated the available NHL tal ent. Sather has also put to gether a six-member general managers committee to offer counsel about how to beat the Russians and the Czechs. Serge Savard of Montreal Canadiens, Harry Sinden of Boston Bruins, Washington Capitals’ David Poile, Scotty Bowman of Buffalo Sabres, Bob Pulford of Chicago Black Hawks and Bll Torrey of the Islanders comprise that group. The tournament format will be a departure from the first two tournaments, which were based in Montreal. This time around most of the games will be played in Western Canada, with six in Edmonton, including two games of the best-of-three final. Calgary wil also play host to six games, while two others will be played in Van- couver. Three games, including Canada’s opening game against West Germany, will be played in Montreal. Single games will be play ed in Halifax, London, Ont., and Buffalo. Dewalt looked rusty against the Roughies, while Tim Cowan and Mike Williams had strong fourth quarters. Cowan threw two scoring passes, to Armour and Vereen, while Williams hooked up with Fernandez for another touchdown. The Lions have scored 13 touchdowrs in three games, with Cowan throwing six touchdown passes without an interception. Williams has thrown for three touchdowns with one interception. B.C. will take 45 players Williams (foot), defensive back Larry Crawford (ankle) and linebacker Bernie Glier (ribs). nesota Twins 4; Texas Ran- gers 4, California Angels 2; Kansas, City Royals 6, Oak- land A's 2; and Seattle Mariners 8, Chicago White Sox 2. Sutcliffe, acquired from Cleveland in a_seyen-player trade last week, Struck -out nine and walked three before giving way to Smith in the ninth after a walk, an error and Tony Pena’s run-batted- in double. Smith yielded a sacrifice fly to pinch-hitter Doug Frobel and walked three batters before nailing down his 13th save. Keith Moreland drove in a pair of runs with a triple and a double for the Cubs against John Tudor. Grounders by Gary Matthews and Ron Cey produced Chicago's other two runs. EXPOS 6 CARDINALS 3 Tim Wallach slammed a tworun double and Jim Wohlford added a two-run single in a five-run third inning that carried Montreal to its fourth straight victorv. The Expos sent 10 men to the plate in the inning, chasing Ken Dayley. PHILLIES 6 METS4 Mike Schmidt and Ozzie Virgil hit home runs and Juan Samuel drove in three runs to help Philadelphia ex tend its winning streak to six OTTAWA (CP) — The na- tional men’s downhill ski team has a tough new coach who intends to keep it in the forefront of international competition despite decim ation by retirements. Heinz Stohl, a former Aus- trian downhill coach, arrived in Canada this week to con- tinue his whirlwind schedule of the last month. “We met with him in Kitz buhel June 1, hired him June 5, he arrived here June 18 and June 20 meets his skiers for the first time,” Andrzej Kozbial, Alpine program dir. ector of the Canadian Ski Association, said at a news conference Tuesday. “He won't even get time to unpack because . . . he's taking the team to Mount Hood and Mount Bachelor in Oregon for a dryland training Training camp will open at C@mp yntil July 7.” the Montreal Forum on Aug. 5 but shift to Banff, Alta., on Aug. 11. Stohl, 37, was hired to replace Joey Lavigne over competition from several quarterback year's starter, to Winnipeg, but may rest TRACK MEET . . . Kim Byers attempts high jump during Woodland Park and Pass Creek school intermediate page B? for full results track meet held recently at Pass Creek school See games and move 1" games ahead of the second-place OLYMPIC SWIM TRIALS Mets in the NL East. Ex-Met Jerry Koosman allowed four hits and two runs in seven innings. Al Holland pitched the last two innings and al. lowed home runs to Ron Gar- denhire and- Hubie Brooks. PADRES 2 ASTROS 0 Erie Show hurled the sec ond two-hitter of his career and allowed only three base- runners, one on a walk. The Padres scored a run off Bob Knepper in the second inning on singles by Graig Nettles and Terry Kennedy and a double by Carmelo Martinez. They added a run in the fifth when Show scored on Steve Garvey's sacrifice fly. BRAVES 11 GIANTS 6 Rookie Brad Komminsk's first major-league grand slam offset two home runs by San Francisco's Bob Brenly as Atlanta rallied after spotting the Giants a five-run lead in the first inning. The Braves scored three times in the bottom of the first and trailed 5-3 when Komminsk connec: ted against reliever Jeff Cor nell. Brenly added a solo shot in the eighth. REDS 10 DODGERS 4 Ron Oester doubled home three runs to cap a seven-run fifth inning that gave Cin cinnati an 8-3 lead. Davis lowers record TORONTO (EP) — Should you be watching the Los An geles Olympic Games this summer on television and see Vietor Davis swim to a gold medal, don't expect the Waterloo, Ont., native to go into a fit of celebration. A raised, clenched fist was the extent of Davis's out- burst Tuesday night after he had lowered his world 200- metre breaststroke record to two minutes 14.58 seconds from 2:14.77. Asked what flashed through his mind six seconds before runner-up Ken Kitz- patrick of London, Ont., touched in at 2:20.64, Davis replied with a shrug of his shoulders, “At last . . . yeah good.” With 16 national titles, his world record and various lofty rankings, Davis has come to take his success in stride while still flashing his self-confidence. “I can go a lot faster than that,” Davis said after he had popped out of the Etobicoke Olympium pool. “I wasn't gunning for a wortd record, “I was just out to have a real good swim.” Davis churned through the first 50 metres in 30.69 seconds and was at the halfway mark in 1:04.39. CROWD HELPED “I didn’t know I was out that fast over the first 100. I figured I was ahead of my splits (times) when I heard the crowd.” Sensing a record was about to fall, a crowd of about 900 began a rhythmic cheer as Davis bobbed and stroked his way to victory. “That gets the adrenalin pumping,” said Davis, who added he thinks he's capable of lowering his record at the Games. “I feel I can be at least one second faster.” Alex Baumann, another Canadian world-record hold er, finished fourth behind Davis and was unable to lower his 200-metre indivi dual medley mark about 90 minutes later. The Sudbury, Ont., native won the individual medley in 2:03.49, well above his world standard 2:02.25. “My stomach was upset by a pizza that I had last night and I was feeling kind of weak all day today,” said Baumann, who set a world record Sunday of 4:17.53 in the 400 individual medley. “But I'm very happy with this meet. “There’s been some ups and downs but, overall, I'm very satisfied.” Baumann's coach, Jeno Ti. hanyi, said: “Alex complain ed of weakness during his warmup and the breast. stroke is the most demanding stroke of all.” Rob Chernoffs time of 2:06.69 behind Baumann earned the Calgarian his berth on the Olympic squad. Peter Szmidt of Edmonton claimed his second gold med- al of the five-day competition with a victory in the 400 freestyle in 3:57.50, seven seconds off his Canadian and Commonwealth mark of 3:50.49. David Shemilt of St. Cath- arines, Ont., filled another seat on the plane to Los An geles with a second-place time of 3:58.30. Lisa Borsholt of Vancouver won the 100 breaststroke in 1:11.97 and Michelle Mac Pherson of Toronto the 100 butterfly in 1:01.63 in the women’s races. Torontonian Mary Lubaw- ski was runner-up to Borsholt in 1:12.35 and Marie Moore of Dartmouth, N.S., finished second behind MacPherson in 1:02.23. Ajax, Ont., native Anne Ottenbrite holds the Cana dian and Commonwealth rec ord of 1:10.63 in the 100 breaststroke and, if Otten brite recovers from a dis located knee in time for the Olympics., Lubawski would be asked to surrender her spot in that event. Lubawski, however, was the winner in the 200 breast stroke Sunday. The remaining spots on the team will be filled when the final seven events of the trials are held tonight. i coach likes program other countries also seeking his services, “including sev eral that would have paid him a Jot more money than we emis Kozbial, a longtime riend. NOT TOP CONCERN “But money was not his main consideration in coming~ here,” he added. “He likes Canada, he likes our skiers and he likes our program. “We're lucky to get him. We went for the best man and we got him. And he can be tough.” “It was the challenge I liked,” said Stohl, a person able blonde with a good com mand of English and no hint of the steel that kept him with the Ausiian team for 13 years and two years with the Australian team, one as men's coach and the other as women’s coach. “And 13 years was enough behind (Austrian national coach) Charlie Kahr: It was time to establish myself somewhere else.” He and Kozbial acknow- ledged that, while there is a strong base of developing skiers, the only international star left among the men is Todd Brooker of Paris, Ont., rated eighth in the world af. ter an injury-marred 1984 season Steve Podborski of Toron- to and Rob McLeish of Ot- tawa retired last year and Ken Read of Calgary the year before The highest-ranked Cana. dian behing Brooker is Gary Athans of Kelowna, 17th on the latest international ski list. Well behind Athans on the men’s list are Felix Belezyk of Castlegar, Paul Boivin of St-Lambert, Que., Donald Stevens of Rossland, and Chris Kent_of Calgary. CREATE TEAM This Yheans that by the 1988 Olympics, the national men's downhill team will be a Stohl creation. “We only give our coaches one-year contracts,” Kozbial acknowledged. “But if he does as well as we expect, the understanding is there that he could be around a long time.” By 1988 or 1992, the Stohl program will be the only one known to Canadian skiers. “I like to work the skiers for short, intense periods,” he said. “We work three hard days on the snow and then take three days off. Much longer makes them too tired for the training to really be effective. “But when we work, we work at a very intense level. We will work very hard and I expect to get good results, especially from the young kids. “Experienced skiers need only 14 or 20 days on the snow to be back in racing condition, but the young ski- ers need a lot more time. “And having a solid base of good young skiers is the only way to build a strong national team. It takes a lot of them to develop one skier of inter national class. “And that’s one of the things I liked about Canada — the good young skiers. “But right now my interest is meeting the skiers and seeing just what we've got to work with. Then, later, we'll sit down and work out a pro- gram for one year, two years or three years.” Trickey second in golf tourney Ruth Trickey of the Castle gar Ladies Golf Club emer as runner-up at the Ladies Open golf held Tuesday, Creston tournament June 12. Trickey narrowly missed capturing the title with her score of 90. Low gross winner Another Castlegar club member, Mae Moroso, was the low gross winner of the second flight with a score of 93 while Diony McArthur took the tunner-up low net title in the same flight. Mc- Arthur also had the longest drive in section A. Marie Kay Doige had a score of 86. Makaroff won the raffle.