News August 24, 1991 Little Leaguers are big time hitters WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) - Lamade Stadium was just too small for all the action as heavy hitters performed a version of the Home Run Derby during Thursday's session of the Little League World Series. Jason Barringer had two homers and four RBIs as San Ramon Valley, Calif., defeated Staten Island, N.Y., 13-4 to d to the ch i hip game. Waiting will be Taiwan, whose first two batters hit con- secutive home runs twice during a nine-run first inning on the way to a 17-1 rout of Glace Bay, N.S. Taiwan will be going for its 15th championship. “They're a terrific hitting ball- club and I take my hat off to them, ” said Glace Bay coach Ernie Pyke, who admitted his players knew the game was over after the first inning. “The kids said they were just going to have fun with this.” “Before the game the players were very nervous, but after the two home, runs, it boosted their confidence and they played the rest of the game relaxed, said Taiwan manager La Ta-Yuan. Glace Bay starter Robert Piercy, who had a 0.42 ERA in the Canadian national tourna- ment, gave up nine runs in the first inning before being replaced with two out. Reliever Geoff McLellan gave up two more runs in the inning as Tai- wan took an 11-0 lead. L:in Wei-Chu and Fang Sheng opened the inning with 240-foot homers. Teng Shih- Yang drove in two more runs to make it 4-0, Lin added a three- run shot and Fang followed with a 320-foot homer to the base of the scoreboard on the hill over- looking Lamade Stadium. McLelland replaced Piercy and walked Pen Chih-Chang and allowed a single to Lin Chung- Chun. After a wild pitch scored Pen, Liou Yu-Hung singled to drive in Lin Chung-Chun. D-sar-D DINING LOUNGE OPEN DAILY AT 4 P.M. * LICENCED * 365-3294 CELGAR, WESTAR & COMINCO MEAL VOUCHERS ACCEPTED Located 1 Mile South of Weigh Scale in Ootischenia ee MINOR HOCKEY REGISTRATION EQUIPMENT SWAP & JACKET SIZING Saturday, Sept. 7 and Sept. 14 10 a.m. - 2_p.m. Arena Complex NOVICE — $105 ATOM, PEE WEE, BANTAM & MIDGET -$135 Family Discounts and instaliment Plan Available SPECIAL: 1st Time Pia’ registered la: For more Information Call Debbie Fauth 365-6388 's and those not year ~$65 WE SURROUND YOU WITH SATISE ACTION ‘2 CASTLEGAR & mazpa_ 713-17th St., Castlegar DL. 7956 CALL NOW COLLECT 365-7241 MAZDA—IT JUST FEELS RIGHT! | | NEEDED PRE-SCHOOL RECREATION PROGRAM INSTRUCTOR ECE qualifications preferred. Contact: Susan 365-3386 [EARLY BIRD &] ADULT LAP Mon./Wed./Fri. 6:30-10 a.m. FALL PROGRAM BROCHURES AVAILABLE | Wednesday, Sept. 4 Registration starts Sept. 4 LAST DAY OF | PUBLIC SWIM AT ROBSON POOL Sat., Aug. 31 © 2-4 p.m. CASTLEGAR & DISTRICT RECREATION DEPARTMENT LAST SEASON: Won his second straight Centennial Cup with the Vernon Lakers of the B.C. Junior Hockey League in his final year of eli- gibility. THIS SEASON: Accepted KEVAN RILCOF, 18 NA NHL TEAM: LAST SEASON: Won a Centennial Cup in his rookie season with the Vernon Lak- ers of the B.C. Junior Hockey League. THIS SEASON: Will return to the Lakers camp in am DANE JACKSON, 21 NHL TEAM: Drafted in 1988 in the third round by the Vancouver Canucks. LAST SEASON: Played his third year at the universi- ty of North Dakota in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association. University of Alaska a three-year hockey scholar- ship at the University of Alas- ka, Fairbanks. He will study business administration. GOALS: Get degree in business administration, maybe take a look at Europe or other professional league's when he gets out of college. QOUTE: “It's pretty hard to get a constract to the NHL out of college unless you're one of the best players in the league. I'm just hoping for the best, whatever happens, hap- pens. “If I get a chance sure I'll look at other leagues, but I want to get my degree, so if I don't get anything out of hockey I'll have my degree to fall back on." Vernon Sept. 3. GOALS: Play as well as he can this year and try to get a scholarship to an American university. May play another year of junior after this if a scholarship isn't in the cards after this season. QOUTES: “Long-term goal is to get my education paid for by hockey. “The Centennial Cup was very exciting hard to equal. buyt it'll be hard to do it again. We don't have a lot of people coming back. “In the back of my mind (I think about a professional career) but I know it's a pret- ty tough road, so i don't want to rely on that.” University _ of North Dakota THIS SEASON: Going into his fourth year at North Dakota, taking a business management degree. STATUS: Jackson left for North Dakota Wednesday. GOALS: (From August of last year) To finish his degree then give the NHL a serious shot. QOUTES: (From August of last year) “This school won three: national championships in the ’80s, so I'd like to help to strat that domination in the 90s.” he scored 10 goals,-13 assists and -185 penalty minutes. he broke his own single-season record for penalty minutes which he set the year before |, an also was the team's high- DARCY MARTINI, 22 NHL TEAM: Drafted.in 1989 by the Ed Oilers est scoring defenceman in the layoffs. THIS SEASON: Back to Michigan Tech, where he is tion, for his senior year. GOAL: To improve point ducti r) on defen- in the eighth round, 162nd overall. LAST SEASON: Was named outstanding defence- man on the Michigan Techni- cal Uni ity Huski sive play in own zone and cut down on unneccesary pental- ies. QOUTE: “The long term goal is to some day put on an Ed Oilers jersey. DAVID GREEN, 18 TEAM: NA LAST SEASON: Started the yeear with the Junior B Castlegar Rebels, played with the team for four months before making the move to the B.C. Junior Hockey Penticton Panthers THIS SEASON: Will return to the Panthers. GOAL: Wants to score at least a point.a game over the season and get a hockey scholarship to an American university. QOUTES: “I was listed with the Portland Wlinter Hawks (of the Western hock- ey League) but I told them no, I'd rather complete my schooling through hockey. So just in case I don't make it in hockey I have something to fall back on. You only have a couple of years to make it in hockey, and if you don't you have to wn hing” League's Penti F DAVID VECCHIO, 19 : NA NHL TEAM: LAST SEASON: Won a Centennial Cup in his rookie season with the Vernon Lak- ers of the B.C. Junior Hockey League. THIS SEASON: Accepted a partial hockey scholarship McGill University to McGill University in Mon- treal. Will take a sciences degree with the aim of enter- ing medical school. GOAL: To be a contribu- tor to the McGill hockey team while pursuing his dream of becoming a doctor. QOUTES: “I'm not expect- ing too much in my first year. I know the hockey there is really good calibre, I'll be playing with a lot of older guys. “I'm not looking to go to the NHL or anything. I'm still playing the game because I love playing. If I can play it while I'm going to school , that's great. I don't know, col- lege hockey's probably as far as I'll go.” The "publisher is on vacation" sale! sd heat, © date cae — ure - a Wa lee es as Me Our publisher is taking some time off work. Now through August 31, you get to run your classified ad 3 times for the price of ONE! All ads must be paid for and placed at the CasNews office. Hurry, the publisher won't go on vacation until next year. Hot Box ads excluded. 365-2212 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT gs THE NUMBERS FOOTBALL 3 BO. 3, Chomyc, Toronto evece v~ eds00ccecce Sueeesstssesussse, io” ts aecccccecco-s-cs wun} 2 a Ro I ! ite th i ] 3 Pil itt i Be Fteeyeasacee BEET Detroit, 31; White, Toronto, 30; Fran. (11 dectatons) — 252 SBE88829 58) nt i> 3 B95 it f. Seskotchewan Storm octivetes forward Michee! Flory trom injured reserve; weives lorward Rob Met Mew York Giant sign oftemive techie Jumbo Hh iff i T i Richard Reld, director of the Grand Forks Art Gallery, will show his work, along with that of Nelson sculptor Jackie Reed, in a new exhibit starting Aug. 29 at the West Kootenay National Exhibition Centre. Artists interpret human figure in new exhibits Exhibition centre to feature works by West Kootenay painter, sculptor By LOU LYNN NEC Director The West Kootenay National Exhibition Centre’s ing shows (Aug. 29-Sept. 29) offer the public a chance to see work by two Kootenay-based artists working in a figurative vein but doing so in different media — and with very different objec- tives. . Painter Richard Reid is well- known in the Kootenays and his work respected nationally in Canada and beyond. Though some in the Nelson-Castlegar area will know Reid as the dedi- cated director of the Grand Forks Art Gallery, he was already a highly accomplished painter and art instructor before he took that post. He has contin- ued to paint. “The sensuous nature of paint, line, shape, color, texture, and layering become a metaphor for human experience in my Reed’s approach involves an implicit symbolism, expressed through an unbridled imagina- tion. Her current works are figures in stone or fired clay, with human bodies and the gently realistic heads of deer, lop-eared rabbits, fish, boars, or coyotes. Reed says that she started mak- ing images like these in high school, but that the current series goes back about four years. She has shown her work in the Kootenays and Vancou- ver. Reed hasn’t created her unusual images simply to be charming or off-beat. There is a philosophy embodied in them. “You and I are part of a much larger family than just the human species,” Reed says. “Unfortunately, as generations go by, we see less and less of our non-human relatives.” Against this fact, Reed sets a quote from arts-essayist John Berger, who assured us “the ani- mals of the mind are not so easi- ly dispersed.” Reed’s works seem to symbol- ize a coming together of human sympathies with non-human species, a development thankful- ly gaining um in indus- transfiguration and exp of the human figure,” Reid says about his current work. Born in Regina, Reid received ‘his bachelor of fine arts from the University of Manitoba School of Art in 1955. After living and painting in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, he became a painting instructor in the Uni- versity of B.C.’ s extension department in 1959. He taught in UBC’ s faculty of fine arts from 1971-79 and since then has taught through the Emily Carr College of Art outreach program. Settling, with his wife, in Christina Lake, Reid has guided the Grand Forks Art Gallery since 1984. Reid’ s offering at the NEC will consist of recent figure paintings. Jackie Reed, and up-and-com- ing Nelson sculptor, will also show figure studies at the NEC — ones whose difference from those of Richard Reid is only slightly accounted for by the dif- ference in their chosen media. While solidly grounded in the study of the human figure, trial societies as things get ever more desperate for the natural system of our planet. But it isn’t this insight that first strikes one on looking at her work. Rather, it is something in the object itself. Reed’s finesse with form and with her materials reveals a sensitivity to the movement and proportions of the human body similar to that of the artists of Classical Greece or India. It is this “realism” that, when cou- pled with the non-human heads, makes her pieces so engaging. Her creatures, with their casual postures and well-weighted limbs, appear peculiarly believ- able! See for yourself. The NEC welcomes all to attend an opening reception with the artists on Aug. 29, starting at 7 p.m. The National Exhibition Centre is located across from the Castlegar Air- port on Highway 3A. The NEC’s hours are 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and noon to 4:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. DRIVER NEEDED Driver with vehicle needed Wednesday and Saturday late afternoons. Ideal job for student or senior citizen with small truck and canopy, station wagon or van. pee 1991 %, GMC — $15 1990 4 TOYOTA RUNNER \ | 1991 PONTIAC GRAND AM SE 1991 CHEV CAVALIER 224 PRICES EXCEPTIONAL These four used vehicles represent trul WALUE exceptional value in every respect! 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