March 31, 1985 Supervalu Ss, * Chilian grown © Canada No. 1 Thompson seedless grapes kg 2.16 . a Foremost * olde fashioned cream Foremost sour 500 mi cream cn @ Foremost * asst. varieties Foremost 27.98 cheese ~~ @e q No Name no nome no nome * white Fresh, Fresh Produce varanteed Quality Meats “Holiday Ahead’ Super Values Fresh Bakery 500 mi cn 8 . yami 98° — yogurt 2, 2 s Grand Fe i Wise Choice Castleaird Plaza Store Only Prices effective Tuesday April 2, 1985 . Sax TUESDAY ONLY While Stocks Last! Bulk Food @ A Better Way To Save! bulk © Good Host ice tea . MIX ..216 @ bulk com kg 108 us. @ Vans ¢ bulk B.B.Q wieners kg2.16 wb. oe e216 w. 98 coo a 2 98 bulk © in shell picnic shoulder = kg 2.16 w. 938 = _— ~igg " 2. 98 —_ kg 2.16 wb. 538 La we. 98 Be crab kg 10.98 4, 98 Qld Dutch chips or snacks meat kg8.77 wv. Qe 2 Tortie Chips 300 gram @ An Easter Specials Basket Value Scardillo, part skim * whole Lowney’'s mozzarell cheese ‘See Oh Henry 5 Ib. block e S kg 4.37 w. a genuine * Halien parigiano fo cheese Ass :) ‘ a h hb 259 ‘oo! 010.98 tb. os More Super Grocery Prices sh Frozen Food SuperValu * family size a assorted at 2 a tooth- ice cream pail a paste 2'm Minute Maid froz. con. regular 98 orange vegetable 355 ml oil 3 "Tea _— juice on a We have just completed a renovation. We invite you to come in and see the changes we have made and enjoy the RENOVATION CELEBRATION on Tuesday with these Savings. CLOSE SHOT . . . Crofton (Vancouver Island) goalten- der stops shot by Local | (Castlegar) during Pulp, Paper and Woodworkers of Canada tournament being held at the Castlegar Community Complex this weekend. Seven teams from across the province are participating in the tournament which concludes today. Canadiens BOSTON (AP) — Montreal Canadiens had more to gain than Boston Bruins and the Adams Division rivals played like it Saturday. “We played very aggressive, the guys were ready,” Montreal coach Jacques Lemaire said after his team broke a 3-3 tie in the second period and rolled to a 7-3 National Hockey League victory. “They know it's tight for first, second and third place. “We still have a chance to finish first.” Said Boston coach Harry Sinden, “I didn't think we were going to win that game today after the fourth or fifth goal (by Montreal) no matter how well we played. We didn't have the drive after we fell behind by two.” Mats Naslund’s power-play goal at 13:20 of the second period snapped the 3-3 tie and Mark Hunter added a goal 28 seconds later to spark the Canadi “You have to be aggressive if you want to compete against Boston,” Lemaire said. “They specialize in forechecking and their defencemen are trying to get a lot of loose pucks in the offensive zone and if you're not sharp before the game starts, you can end up two or three goals behind.” DEVILS 6 PENGUINS 4 EAST RUTERFORD, N.J. (AP) — John MacLean scored midway through the third period and Rich Preston added an insurance goal to give New Jersey Devils a 6-4 victory against Pittsburgh Penguins. The victory enabled the Devils, 22-45-9, to tie Pittsburgh, 24-46-5, for fifth place in the Patick Division, five points behind New York Rangers, who now hold fourth place and the last playoff spot. The Devils also took the season series from the Penguins 5-2. Pittsburgh scored two goals in the third period to tie the game at 4-4 and set up MacLean's winning score, a 30-foot slap shot from the circle past Penguins’ goalie Dennis Herron at 7:55. Rich Preston had his 100th career goal at 15:34 to make it 6-4. Earlier in the third, Mario Lemieux scored his secoond goal of the game and 40th of the season 11 seconds into the period. Doug Shedden had his 35th goal of the season 57 seconds later as he took a pass across the crease from Mitch Lamoureux and banged it past Devils goalie Ron Low to make it 4-4 FLYERS 3 RANGERS 0 PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Ilkka Sinisalo and Murray Craven scored unassisted goals and goalie Bob Froese recorded a shutout as Philadelphia Flyers defeated New York Rangers 3-0. Froese, who had not played since pulling a groin muscle March 10, turned away 30 shots, including 15 in the opening period. Froese has won 12 of his 14 starts this season. Pelle Lindbergh recorded the Flyers’ only other shutout of the season against St. Louis on Nov. 9. The Flyers, who clinched the Patrick Division title Thursday, have won 13 of their last 14 games and 13 straight in the Spectrum. They are 60 this season against the Rangers, their likely first-round opponent in the Stanley Cup playoffs The Rangers entered the game five points ahead of Pittsburgh in the race for the fourth playoff spot in the Patrick Division. The Flyers were outshot 15-5 in the first period, but held a 1-0 lead on Sinisalo's unassisted goal at 7:42. The fleet Finn got a loose puck in his own end, skated down the right side, and flicked a wrist shot past Ranger goalie John Vanbiesbrouck NORDIQUES 3 BLUES 1 QUEBEC (CP) — Michel Goulet scored his 5ist and 52nd goals of the season and assisted on Quebec's other goal as the Nordiques beat St. Louis Blues 3-1 to remain in a first-place Adams Division deadlock. Goulet's second goal of the game at 12:08 of the third period snapped a 1-1 tie. Jean-Francois Sauve fed the puck from the right-wing circle to an unchecked Goulet in front of St. Louis goaltender Greg Millen and the left winger rifled home a wrist shot. Wilfrid Paiement added an insurance goal at 16:51 on a setup by Goulet Goulet and St. Louis's Denis Cyr had traded first-period goals and the clubs played through a scoreless second period With the victory, their fifth in their last six games, the Nordiques kept pace with Montreal Canadiens, who beat Boston Bruins 18 Saturday afternoon. Quebec has five games a crucial against the Canadiens in Montreal next Thursday. Montreal has four games to play beat Bruins CAPITALS 4 ISLANDERS 3 LANDOVER, Md. (AP) — Craig Laughlin scored two powerplay goals in the first period as Washington Capitals defeated New York Islanders 4-2. The Caps snapped a two-game losing streak while the Islanders lost their third in a row. Washington's Alan Haworth also scored on a powerplay in the second period against a penalty-killing unit which entered the game as the best in the NHL. All three New York goals also came on extra-man plays. The Caps took the season series from the Islanders by a 4-3 margin, the first time they have topped the Islanders in 11 NHL seasons. The same two teams will meet in the Patrick Division semifinals when the Stanley Cup playoffs begin in the Capital Centre on April 10. Laughlin scored at 3:44 and 12:14 of the first period, both times on assists from Bengt Gustafsson and Mike McEwen, before John Tonelli scored on an unassisted powerplay at 18:54. SABRES 2 WHALERS 1 HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Buffalo used a pair of late goals from Lindy Ruff and Gates Orlando to end Hartford's seven-game winning streak and score a 2-1 victory. The Sabres were trailing 1-0 until Orlando netted his first NHL goal at 13:19 of the third period. At 16:21, Ruff scored on a backhander from between the faceoff circles to win it. The Sabres outshot the Whalers 25-11 over the final two periods and are now 4-0-3 against Hartford this season. Goalie Tom Barrasso made 19 saves during the game and allowed a power-play goal by Sylvain Turgeon when his club was two men short at 10:29 of the first period. Hartford goalie Mike Liut stopped 34 shots. Buffalo tied the game when a giveaway by the Hartford defence was kept in at the left point by Jim Schoenfeld and Orland was able to beat Liut from 10 feet away. On the game-winning goal, John Tucker beat Hartford's Mike Zuke on a face off to Liut’s left and Ruff was able to backhand the puck RED WINGS 9 MAPLE LEAFS3 TORONTO (CP) — Steve Yzerman scored three goals and Danny Gare had two as Detroit Red Wings romped to a 9-3 victory over Toronto Maple Leafs. John Ogrodnick, Gerard Gallant, Ron Duguay and Kelly Kisio also scored for the Red Wings. Kisio also picked up three assists. John Anderson, Al Iafrate and Steve Thomas scored for the Leafs who were outshot 31-24 Detroit, third in the Norris Division, improved to 26-40-11, while Toronto, last in the Norris, slipped to 20-48-8. Detroit held a slim 2-1 lead after two periods but broke the game wide open with three goals in the first three minutes of the final period. Ogrodwick finished off a 3-on-2 break by redirecting a Kisio pass past Toronto goaltender Ken Wregget for his 55th goal of the season 31 seconds into the period. Duguay followed with his 36th of the season, on a power play at 2:13, tipping a long shot by Randy Ladouceur, and Yzerman capped the rally at 3:04, beating Wregget with a slap shot from the right wing faceoff circle. Local skaters pass tests By CasNews Staff skate test Members of the Castlegar In Junior Bronze Free Figure Skating Club passed skate, Stacy Gorkoff and their tests at a test day held Christi Stephoniuk passed. recently in Castlegar. Angela Olson and Chelsea Passing tests in the pre- Van Vliet passed in Dutch liminary figure were Shelley Waltz, Olson passed in Can. John, Laura Kosowan, An- asta, Janet Kalesnikoff and gela Olson, Averil Sheppard Leah Kennedy passed their and Chelsea Van Vliet. exams in Swing and Christi In the first figure, Andraya Stephoniuk passed in Fiesta, Hughes, Leah Kennedy and while Susan Ross passed in Christi Stephoniuk passed Tango. their tests. Stacy Gorkoff Also, Sarah Johnston passed her test in second passed her senior silver free figure and Janet Kalesnikoff skate at a high test day held passed her preliminary free- in Nelson. playoff round. Moncton, N.B., in 1980. percentage shots and call it quits. Hackner, meanwhile, gained an a steal in the first, stole two more points in the fourth and stole again in the ninth when the Americans decided to Hackner and his Thunder Bay, Ont., rink of third Rick Lang, second Ian Tetley and lead Pat Perroud missed few shots through the first five ends sate Wright and his Wilmette, Ill., rink. SNAP BROUGHT It marked the first time Canada has defeated a U.S. team at the world championships since Rick Folk won at Wright had a number of opportunities to wrack up points but several times chose to go for the low cost him dearly. rly advantage with The Canadian skip had his moments of indecisive Canadians advance to curling final By IAN MacLAINE GLASGOW (CP) — Al Hackner put on his own choreographed production of Robin Hood at Kelvin Hall on Saturday night, stealing and then giving away points before directing Canada into the final of the world men's curling championship with a 9-4 victory against a scrappy but overmatched Tim Wright of the United States. The win by Hackner, the 1982 world men's champion, sends him into the final against an experienced Swiss rink skipped by veteran Stefan Hasselborg. The Swedes advanced with a superb 4-2 semifinal victory earlier Saturday against Frants Gufler, whose young Danish foursome won the round-robin portion of the tournament but showed little of the fine form that sent them to a 6-3 record during the week. Denmark, Canada and the United States each had 6-3 records after the round-robin portion, but the Danes were awarded first place based on their wins against the Americans and Canadians during the week. Sweden had to go through a tiebreaker Friday night to qualify for the play, especially in the sixth when he needed a bump on the U.S. shot rock sitting on the front four to count three. Instead, he rubbed the American stone to second shot fare went on through the house to settle for one. A Canadian win over Sweden today would produce the first ever sweep of the world titles following victories by Bob Ursel of Winnipeg at the junior boys in Perth, Scotland, and by Linda Moore of North Vancouver, at the women's championships last week in Sweden. ICE PROBLEMS Despite the ease with\ which he handled the Americans, Hackner said it was Wright's early problems with the ice that proved the Americans’ “We didn't really give them that much in the game,” said Hackner, adding that the changing ice conditions through the latter ends was a minor problem. The Swedes, meanwhile, have to be looking to avenge a semifinal loss to Canada at the 1983 world championships in Regina when Hasselborg was involved in a verbal battle with eventual winner Ed Werenich of Toronto after the Swedish brooms left the ice littered with straw and husk Asked if it was an opportunity for retribution, Hasselborg’s brother, Mikael, said they weren't looking for revenge. “There's a big difference between Ed Werenich and the rest of the Canadian curlers,” said Mikael Hasselborg. “Al Hackner is a really big player . . . a superb curler.” While the Canadians have been dominant at the world championships in the past, they've never beaten the Swedes in a final. And Hasselborg, although he started slowly here this week, has a 53-7 record in competitive play this season. Hackner, aware of the Swedes’ controversial corn brooms, said his only worry is ensuring that the Canadian sweepers are a little sharper than they were in the round robin when the Swedes beat them 63. downfall. Sundstrom ends season VANCOUVER (CP) — Pat rik Sundstrom, Vancouver Canucks’ leading scorer, started the season late n ended it early — the victim of torn rib cartliage sustained during Thursday's practice. The stylish Swede will miss the final four games of a non-playoff season that con cludes April 6 for the Can ucks. “It was kind of a freak thing,” said team trainer Larry Ashley. “He pulled the cartilage in his lower right side while twisting around to take a backhanded shot. His side had been a little tender.” ‘Sundstrom, who had 25 goals and 43 assists in 71 games, missed all of training camp and the first five games of the season after suffering a fractured thumb while play ing for Sweden in the Canada Cup series in September. The 23-year-old centre had a club-record 91 points in 1983-84, his second NHL sea son. Sundstrom’s place will be filled by Gary Lupul, who has been sidelined since Feb. 27 with strained ligaments in both knees. Trainers Ashley and Ken Fieger, meanwhile, have be- come the sixth and seventh members of the Canucks to be named to Team Canada for the world championships next month in Prague. “They weren't chosen sim- ply because they happened to be among the first people available,” said associate coach Ron Smith, who still could be invited to join the coaching staff. “Toronto's trainers were available, too, and they're in the city where the team is being assembled right after the regular sea. son. Ashley and Fleger are Directors will evaluate VANCOUVER (CP) — Vancouver Canucks’ coach and general manager Harry Neale won't necessarily have his job saved even if the club wins its four remaining games. Four victories would give Neale a 24-234 record as coach since mid-December. But the general_manager coach's status will not be de termined by the NHL club's board of directors untél two to four weeks after the sea son, reiterates assistant chairman Arthur Griffiths. “We will take our time evaluating everyone in the front office,” Griffiths says. “Besides, we won't be able to approach several candidates for the coaching position until fter the playoffs.” Griffiths agrees that a manager more qualified than Neale might not be available, though the matter of money probably won't be a factor ir @ management transition. The club would have to pay off Neale for the two years remaining on his contract, in the vicinity of $300,000, and pay more money to the new man. The Canucks have lost more than $500,000 at the gate this season, but the bot tom line in the annual report won't be blotched in red. The club profitted handsomely by Wales will hold home advantage MONTREAL (CP) — The National Hockey League an nounced Friday that home. ice advantage for the 1985 Stanley Cup finals will be held by the Prince of Wales Conference champions as a result of March 28 wins by Philadelphia Flyers, Mon treal Canadiens and Boston Bruins against teams from the Clarence Campbell Con ference. The three wins improved the Wales inter-conference record to 148 wins, 185 losses and 37 ties in 320 games. A total of 330 of the 840 NHL games are inter-confer. ence, and the results of those matches determines the home-ice advantage for the finals. The conference champion ships feature the playoff winners from each of the four divisions and the home-ice advantage for those series is determined by inter-division records The Adams Division cham. pion has earned the extra home game against the Pat. rick Division in the Wales Conference, while the Smythe Division winner was the advantage aginst the Norris Division in the Camp- bell Conference. The 1985 Stanley Cup playoffs get under way April 10 with eight best-of-five Division semi-final series. selling Air Canuck and has received additional TV re. venue from CTV telecasts. Neale will be making every effort to land a prize free agent, namely winger Ray Staszak of the University of Illinois-Chicago, and the Can ucks apparently won't be backing out of the bidding eart: If the Canucks don’t get Staszak — likely to command @ one-way contract worth going because they're the best trainers in the league.” Smith. will also join the Canadians, pending approval of the general manager and head coach. Max McNab and Doug Carpenter will accept those roles when, and if, New Jersey Devils are also elim- inated from playoff conten tion. Vancouver forwards Stan Smyl, Tony Tani and Cam Neely and defencemen Doug Lidster and Doug Halward earlier were named to play in the Prague tournament April 16 - May 4. Neale more than $400,000 U.S. for three years — they will have to rely on the NHL draft for 4 fresh player capable of crack ing the lineup next fall The general consensus among NHL scouts is that only three players in this draft crop appear ripe for the NHL's 1985-86 season — Wendell Clark of Saskatoon, Craig Simpson of Michigan State University and Jim Sandlak of London. Lions could land top draft pick VANCOUVER (CP) B.C. Lions could land their top Canadian draft pick this weekend. Defensive end-linebacker John Ulmer, the third player chosen overall in this year’s Canadian Football League draft, has decided against waiting for the National Football League college set ections April 30. The son of former Winni peg Blue Bomber defensive back-punter Ed Ulmer, who is acting as his agent, is close to terms. Lions’ director of player personnel Bob Vespaziani was in Winnipeg earlier this week and held talks with the elder Ulmer. Vespaziani is due back in the Manitoba capital Saturday following a trip to the Maritimes and will attempt to put the finishing touches on a deal for Mons! top homebrew Ulmer. 62", 215 pounds, was an all-North Central In. tercollegiate Conference all star last season for North Dakota University in Grand Forks. He was projected as a possible NFL selection at linebackedr, the same posi tion Lions plan to try him. “He (Vespaziani) had some talks with my dad earlier this week,” said Ulmer Friday from his parents’ home in Winnipeg. “I was in school in the States so 1 wasn't in on them. But apparently it looks very good.” The Lions, who have an nounced just two new acqui sitions since the end of last season, had four selections in the first two rounds of this year’s draft. The other three high picks — defensive backs Rick Ryan of Weber State and Bruce Barnett of UBC and York University running back Joe Pariselli — are also expected to come to terms soon.