fi ‘ A8 Restitution CASTLEGAR NEWS, October 18, 1981 Gives responsibility WINNIPEG (CP) — Be- cause of the use of resti- tution, crime victims here are getting a better break from the courts than crime victims in other parts of the country, says Neville Avison of the al justice department. Winnipeg judges are such frequent users of restitution that the justice department is studying all cases handled in the city in 1981, Already, 5,600 questionnaires have been filled out. “The Winnipeg judges are really leading Canada in the use of restitution, so we are father of six, who issued two bad cheques totalling $400, was ordered to make month- ly payments of $50 to the store involved until the goods ying their practices to see what range of cases the judges find res- titution orders appropriate,” Avison, chief of evaluation and research in Ottawa, said in a telephone interview. For example, in one case, a S= Pulpit & Pew by Ministers In the ‘West Kootenay By TED BRISTOW Castlegar United Church Question: How many psy- chiatrists does it take to change a light bulb? Answer: Only one, but the light bulb must really want to be changed. Even if you've heard that one before, it’s worth think- ing about again. It's a good reminder that you can be given all the best help in the world, but you still have to do your part. i If you want to change for the better, you have to be determined, and put out the necessary effort. It's good news, though, that people can be changed. I was taught the old saying about how you can’t change human nature. That meant we were stuck with our bad habits and sick personalities, with nothing to be done about it. A one time, psychology seemed to confirm that peo- ple can't change, with all its talk about parental influ- ences determing your id and ego, and all those studies on rats and apes proving that our behavior comes from in- nate instincts, rather than our so-called free will. But psychology has changed its mind, and de- cided that we do have a free will after all. Modern psychology now makes people look not at their past, for an excuse, but at the future. The question is asked: What do you want your life to be like? The question is asked: What are you going to do about it? Good questions. It's good news for emo- Early start for respect of the law WINNIPEG (CP) — Pro- vincial court judge Ian Dub- ienski says people must be taught that the law is some- thing more than a set of rules to be followed. And he says the lesson could begin as early as kindergarten. Dubienski says law-related subjects could be taught in school from the earliest yei as part of the regular program. This could encour- age citizenship responsibility and recognition of the rights of others. Speaking to a seminar at University of Manitoba, Dub- ineski said too many people regard the law simply as a “commands that must ed under threat of nd requiring blind acceptance.’ He said money now used to combat vandalism in schools would be better spent giving students a better under- standing of the law's social role. , HAWAII FALL SPECIAL From $3 Includes airfare and 7 nights accommodation. Based on double occupancy. Marj Culley MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL Ltd. Castlegar Savings Credit Union 365-7232 HOURS OPEN Tues., Thurs., Fri. 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. tionally sick people (and which of would claim to be emotionally well all the time?) that we CAN improve, that we CAN change for the better — if we really want to. What modern psychology has come to realize, Jesus taught years and years ago. Jesus’ word for it was “repent”. The word “repent” means change, turn your life around, be a different person. It was good news when Jesus first taught it, and it’s still good news. Only, as both Jesus and modern psychiatrists would tell you, you must really want to be changed. The Beaumark kitchen is a convenient kitchen he p d were paid for. Under the Criminal Code, restitution can only be used as part of a probation order. When fines or jail without probation are imposed, resti- tution is ruled out. Murray director pered in any kind of criminal justice policy research or planning by the absence of hard data.” Studies on a smaller scale are now in progress in Moose Jaw, Sask., and Prince Ed- ward Island, the justice de- partment official added. Has rattlesnakes evicted BELLEVUE, WASH. (AP) — At the request of a police officer, daredevil Alan Jones has evicted eight rattle- snakes that were living in his apartment. Jones said he sent the snakes packing recently to eastern Washington “where snakes are pretty common,” after a local police officer acted on the complaint of an upset neighbor and told him the reptiles had to go. ‘The neighbor was upset to find one of the rattlers on a walkway outside her apart- ment, and filed a report with the police. Jones, who performs pro- motional stunts for local fitness centres, said he kept the snakes in an outdoor storage shed at his apart- ment for “multiple uses.” He said the snakes were relatively inactive since the weather was cool and are “generally not harmful to 4 healthy adult.” He should know. Jones said he has recently been perfecting a stunt where he leaps some six metres into a pool filled with rattlers and a small school of piranhas. Sometimes he performs the feat handcuffed. “I've been bit and it's a pretty painful experience,” he said. Jones feels he has ex- hausted that stunt and will probably not be doing it any more. He had been thinking about getting rid of the snakes anyway when the one escaped, he said. ~ CROSSWORD | of Mediation Services, said the loser in that case is the victim. “When this happens, the victim gets nothing,” Bark- man said. Mediation Services, estab- lished a couple of years ago by the Mennonite Central Cc for vic- ay, No Holds Barred . . . answer in Wednesday's paper. UNS It registers atmospheric * T3Verdl ‘opera Greek island Engraver's tool Put to Might rt The ditt (62 Senueless 22 Usetul 19 More vile Fortification 71 Fearful dramatist 10 Squalid eight 12h Eskers tims to meet offenders. Res- titution often follows. “Making the offender more responsible for his actions is a more positive approach to sentencing,” Barkman added. Avison said the justice department has been con- cerned about the rough fate accorded victims by the Can- adian system of justice. ‘The (Winnipeg) judges have been locking at every possible case where resti- tution would be reasonable. This has been a very good initiative given the present limitations of the code.” He said he hopes to have a draft report on the Winnipeg situation ready by March. “We are really very ham- ure rae 3 Education org. 81 froquoian 31 Moro Indian 33"— Alte" B2 Negative ‘Adenauer particle ‘$M Round casks 62 Caesar's fatal date 45 Tibetan priests "85 Nonmetallic 5 Overhanging @Dentitrice containers ‘7 Elliptical 123 Approaches 124 Dogma 125 Compas direction 4 126 Spreads grass 0 1f7 Mud volcano DOWN Rural festivity $8 Indian $2.Norse god Bird dwelling in bulldings Felt concern STA 8 The sea, in France Marine pressi airy Kupeinet 87 Old crone jooden shoe 98 Irregular, as pearls 102 Apbetic for Ecru ‘Indian of Vena se team 103 Degree above a 107 Undivided uel ‘SBHave, in the Bible 108 African river oR 15 WWII area crustacean 10 She starred in “Key Largo" 1 Babylonian 12 Cincinnati 13 Mets player WA surgeon's stitches ‘72Sartorially smart VPTOQUIP YKT WVFA-EOGGTHLFA YOHFULPT UVWLIT MHT FTITH PLFR YV MWIXKVWLI RHLJTHE i ‘Today's Cryploquip chee: P equals K Avera, 7 18 19 Coe On Ts e time of solution: 65 minutes. 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(Color $40 extra) einfinite heat elements eremovable oven door eautomatic preheat and variable broil edigital timer with built-in minute minder Our reg. 519.95 Prices in effect till Saturday, October 24, while quantities last. VALUEMAKERS, OUR BIG SAVING EVENT ON ELE NOW. PICK UP YOUR VALUEMAKERS FLYER AT TH Monday to Sa‘ Thursday & Friday STORE HOURS on S479 CTRONICS AND APPLIANCES, IS ON E BAY NEAREST YOU. turday 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. SAVE °5O on a convertible Beaumark dishwasher Indispensable is the word to describe the Beaumark dishwasher. From delicate crystal and china to heavily soiled casseroles, this 8 cycle Beaumark handles it all. Model 40080 in white, wheat or almond. (Color $10 extra) ethree wash levels ebuilt-in energy saver ebuilt-in soft food dispenser eporcelain enamel tub and door Our reg. 639.95 sate OOP Model 44080 built-in dishwasher with color pack including white, almond, wheat and avocado panels. Our reg. 609.95 Sale $559 Major Appliances, Trail (second) Bridsons Bay Company i tt CASTLEGAR NEWS, Bl October 18, 1981 CANADIAN National. men's volleyball coach, Ken was also givin Maeda was at Selkirk College Fridey duct ai volleyball Ma la, shown above, and Saturday to volleyball team. since 1977. g tips to the Selkirk College men's He has been with the Canadian squad CasNews Photo by Chery! Wishlow ISLANDERS 5 RANGERS 4 UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP). — Clark Gillies scored’ two" Chicago early in the first goals to help New York Islan- ders’ to a wild 5-4 National Hockey League victory Sat- urday night over New York Rangers. From the time Rangers’ left winger Jere Gillis poked in a loose puck 88 seconds into the game, both teams’ offences were in high gear. Islanders goaltender Billy Smith and Rangers netmin- der Steve Weeks played well in the face of high-powered attacks. Bob Bourne tied it'1-1 for the Islanders at 4:16. Weeks stopped Bourne from 15 feet on a power play but the Islanders left winger man- aged to hudge the puck away from Weeks and into the Rangers net. Less than two minutes later, the Rangers were on a power play but defenceman Barry Beck dropped a pass directly to Butch Goring of the Islanders. The pesky Goring — most valuable player of the 1981 playoffs and a penalty-killing special- ist — broke in alone and beat Weeks. It took the Rangers only 44 seconds to tie the score as Mike Rogers connected on the same power play, knock- ing a backhander behind Smith. Gillies then got his first goal of the game. Bryan Trottier stole the puck from Rangers’ defence- man Ron Greschner and fed Gillies a the side of the net for a short wrist shot at 16:57. Anders Kallur hit on a 40- shot at 6:08 of the second period for a 4-2 Islanders edge but, 54 seconds later, Greschner capped a two-on- one break by knocking in his own rebound. Gillies restored the Islan- ders’ two-goal margin on a power play at 15:44 when he converted a third rebound afteer he, Tomas Jonsson and Mike Bossy were stopped by Weeks. . BLUES 7 BLACK HAWES 3 ST. LOUIS (AP) — Bernie Federko asisted on the first of four St. Louis power-play goals and then he added tow of his own, lifting St. Louis Blues to a 7-3 win over Chicago Black Hawks ina National Hockey League game Saturday night. The Blues took advantage of. éonsecutive penalties to period, getting power-play scores from Blair Chapman and Jack Brownschidle 58 seconds apart. Federko then tipped in a goal-mouth pass by Mike Zuke less than three minutes into the second period for St. Louis’ third straight power- play goal of the game. One minute, 15 econds later, Federko circled the Chicago goal and, while being tripped to the ice, whilred and fired a backhander past Black Hawks’ goalie Tony Esposito. After Joe Micheletti gave St. Louis a 5-0 lead, Chicago's Reg Kerr scored 46 seconds later by blasting a 46-foot slapshot behind Blues goal- tender Mike Liut. Mkke Crombeen found the range with 5:16 remaining in- the second period, comple- ting a two-on-one break by the Blues. Esposito, who surrendered six goals on 19 shots, was replaced by Mur- ray Bannerman following the goal. . Keith Brown scored. a power-play goal for Chicago to cut the Blues lead to 6-2 after two periods. In the third period, Brian Sutter counted the Blues’ fourth’ power-play goal and Bob Murray converted the Black Hawks’ second power-play tally. R SABRES 4 CAPITALS LANDOVER, Md. (AP) — Yvon Lambert scored two power-play goals Saturday night to lead Buffalo Sabres to a 4-2 National Hockey League victory over Wash- ington Capitals. The Sabres had only one power-play goal in 15 att- empts this season before Lambert's first score at 15:40 of the second period. Buffalo managed to score during two of three power-play situa- tions against the Caps, as the Washington defence repeat- edly failed to clear the slot. Buffalo took a two-goal Jead in the first period on goals by Danny Gare and Lindy Ruff. Gare, the Buffalo captain, scored his first goal“of the season at 2:05 by putting Jean-Francois Sauve’s re- bound pastWashington goalie Dave Parro. Ruff scored with two seconds remaining in the period, getting two chances as the Caps left him alone in front of the net. PENGUINS 5 NORTH STARS 2 PITTSBURGH (AP) — Mare Chorney scored the winning goal in‘ the second period as Pittsburgh Pen- guins defeated Minnesota 5-2 Saturday and handed the North Stars their first loss of the National Hockey League season. The Penguins went ahead 2-0 after the first period on power-play tallies by Rick Kehoe and Greg Malone. Kehoe scored his fourth goal of the year at 11:03, and Malone got his third at 18:40. . The Penguins made it 3-0 at 7:17 of the second period when Chorney siapped the puck past Minnesota goalie Gilles Meloche. The North Stars, 3-1-1, scored 27 seconds later when Neal Broten beat Michel Dion for his fifth goal, and made it 3-2 late in the third period when Brad Maxwell scored. CANADIENS 10 VANCOUVER 4 MONTREAL (CP) — Steve Shutt and Mario Trem- blay scored two goals each to © NHL last night °® Claude Ruel but who has seen plenty of action under niew head coach Bob Berry. BRUINS 5 KINGS 4 LOS ANGELES (AP) — Defenceman Mike Milbury, who failed to score a goal last season, netted his first of the 1981-82 National Hockey League campaign on a break- away with seven minutes and seven seconds left Saturday night, giving Boston Bruins a §-4 victory over Los Angeles Kings. The win spoiled a third- period comeback by the Kings, who had battled from 4-0 deficit with four goals in a span of 4:38. 3 Lewis started the Kings’ third-period revival with a 40-footer at 5:10 and-Taylor got his first of the night at 6:06, Terrion then stole the puck and scored unassisted from 16 feet against former Los Angeles goaltender Ro- gie Vachon at 6:52, giving the Kings three goals in 1:42. Taylor rammed in a re- bound off a drive by defence- man Larry Murphy at 9:43 to tie it 4-4. : Milbury skated in from the blue line after taking a pass 0 lead Canadiens to a 10-4 victory over Vancouver Canucks in National Hockey League action Saturday night before 16,020 Forum fans. iy Keigh Acton, Pierre La- rouche, Guy Lafleur, Doug Jarvis, Doug Wickenheiser and Pierre Mondou scored single goals for the Cana- diens, who have scored 31 goals in four games in the young season while posting a 8-0-1 won-lost-tied ‘record in the Adams Division. Curt Fraser scored two goals and Blair MacDonald and Stan Smyl one each for the Canucks, 2-3-2 in the Smythe Division. The issue was hardly in doubt as the Canadiens car- :ried an 8-1 lead into the final period. Fraser scored for the Canucks at 1:33 on a pass from Thomas Gradin behind the net, and Smyl fired a power-play goal at 6:10 on a fancy passing play from Fraser and Gradin. Tremblay scored Mon- treal’s ninth goal at 11:41 on analert pass from behind the goal from Wickenheiser, the No. 1 choice in the 1980 draft who sat out most of last season under the then-coach from and beat Los Angeles goaltender Mario Lessard from. close range. Milbury had failed to score a goal in 77 regular-season games last year. He has one goal and one assist in six games this season. ‘WHALERS 8 RED WINGS 1 HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Rick Meagher scored three goals Saturday night as Hart- ford Whalers recorded their first victory of the 1981 National Hockey League sea- son with an easy 8-1 defeat of Detroit Red Wings. Meagher scored in each of the three periods, including a power play in the final period as he notched his first career NHL three-goal game. The Whalers scored all the goals they needed in the first seven minutes of the opening period. Dave Keon scored 53 seconds into the game and Meagher scored six minutes later to make it 2-0. Also scoring for the Wha- lers in the game were Rick | MacLeish, with two goals, and. Cris Kotsopuolos and Jordie Douglas with one goal each. Dale McCourt scored De- troit’s goal on a power play in the second period. aa Plan 24 Kootenay Savings Credit Union 1016-4th St., Castlegar AE) Checking Service on a Savings Account (For Businesses, too) <1fhPh. 36553975 Dodgers even series MONTREAL (CP) — Steve Garvey'’s two-run home run in the eighth inning Saturday, led Los Angeles Dodgers to a 7-1 victory over Montreal Expos and evened their National League cham- pionship series at 2-2, forcing a deciding game today. Dusty Baker also provided a big offensive punch for the Dodgers, driving in the first run, then batting in two in- surance runs in the Los An- geles’ four-run ninth inning. The Dodgers, who have never lost in a league cham- pionship series, will send rookie left-hander Fernando Valenzuela against veteran right-hander Ray Burris at 1 p.m. PDT today. Montreal, which needed to go five games against Phil- adelphia Phillies to win the NL East Division title, is seeking its first pennant in the 18-year history of the franchise. ‘The Dodgers won the West: by beating Houston in three straight games after losing the first two at the Astro- dome. Saturday’s game was & pitchers’ duel between hard- luck Bill Gullickson of Mon- treal and Los Angeles’ Burt Hooton, who got the win with relief help from right-hander, Bob Welch with one out in the eighth inning, and left- hander Steve Howe, who worked the ninth. Hooton al- lowed all five Montreal five hits. BAKER SINGLED Gullickson struck out Bill Russell to open the Dodger eighth, then Baker, who had doubled in the first Dodger run in the third, singled té left. That brought up Garvey, the Dodgers’ veteran first baseman and one of base- ball’s top clutch hitters. He hit Gullickson’s first pitch over the left field fence for his first home run of the ser- ies to put the Dodgers in front 3-1 and send the series into the showdown game. °* Hooton, who won 11 and lost six with a 2.28 earned run average during the reg- ular season, won the first game in this series, 5-1, also . working 7 1-8 innings. He appeared to be in control of his second win, using his key pitch, a knuckle curve, to work out of tough spots. Then in the eighth, the Expos knocked him out. Rodney Scott started with a single to centre, but was forced as Andre Dawson hit “into a fielder’s choice. Then Gary Carter singled to cen- tre, Dawson stopping at sec- ond. That brought out, Los An- geles manager Tom Lasorda, who summoned Welch?’ DID THE JOB Welch did the job. He struck out Larry. Parrish swinging and got. Jerry White, whose three-run home won Friday . night's game, to.fly out to seentre, ending the inning. tr The Lodgers, after threat- ening in the first two innings, reached Gullickson for an‘un- earned run in the third... Russell was safe :iwhen third’ baseman Parrish fielded his grounder,) but threw into the dirt ati:first and Warren Cromartie’eould not hold on to the bail... . Baker then doubled into the left field corner, scoring Russell for a 10 lead. Montreal tied it in, the fourth, also with an unearned run. Carter. reached * with ‘one out when his grounder. ryt After Parrish fouled \ White walked. Crom: hitting .167 in the series, then, singled, scoring Carter. White reacked third on:the hit, and C ie took: ‘third « third strike, and Hooton was out of the inning. Gullickson worked out of a big jam in the sixth. Baker opened with a walk and raced to third on a single by Gar- vey. The Expos’ right-hander got Cey to ground to Parrish at third. He threw home to get Baker despite the runner smashing hard into catcher Carter. Then Gullickson brought the crowd to its feet by striking out Rick Monday and Pedro Guerrero to preserve the tie. The Dodgers wrapped it up.in the ninth as many in a crowd of 54,499 startifig fil- ing out of Olympic Stadium. ‘Steve Yeager, who had. come to catch in the eighth, Btarted the’ ninth with a single. He advanced to sec- ond:on a bunt single by Der- rel',Thomas. The runners were sacrificed ahead by Da- vey Lopes. Russell was in- tentially walked, loading the bases. Raker ‘then singled hom two:runs to make it 5-1. ‘After Garvey flied out, Cey singled home the final run off Bill ond on the throw to the plate. Chris Speier was intention. ally walked, loading’ the bases. But Gullickson took a 5 s ‘fifth pit- cher of the game. © ‘In the bottom of the ninth, Howe retired three straight batters. Yacht club loses out to fog VANCOUVER (CP) — The ‘only. thing that could beat Royal Vancouver Yacht ub sailors, on English. Bay his wee! ‘fog. ‘They won all seven races in the’ Pacific Challenge match- race sailing series but Friday lost to the fog that shrouded the bay and made it im- le to stage the final heats in what is the unofficial match-race championship of Canadian sailing. Don Martin, skipper, and his RVYC crew of Dave Miller, Marsh Pardie, - Paul Rasmussen, Steve White and Gary Sutherland won every start but.one.in the series. Starts are vital in miatch- racing but the Vancouver crew soon overtook the Royal Victoria entry to go on and win.’ Although Royal Van won - every race, competition was close with little difference between the finish times of winner and loser. The Vancouver crew showed superior sail-handl- ing throughout the series. “Since the series started. Vancouverhas won ‘every; running of the biennial classic which started in 1971 and has been raced for in Toronto as well as English Bay. Evenly matched Martin 82 class boats were used for the series with all equipment, sails, rigging and hulls equal- ized. Boats were awarded by draw and alternated through- out the series. Each crew Miraculous touchdown By Mike Rutsey TORONTO (CP) — The Argonauts staved off playoff elimination on a miraculous pass-and-a-prayer 49-yard touchdown from quarterback Conredge Holloway to Mar- tin Cox with seven seconds remaining in the game, to hand Toronto a dramatic 20-14, victory over Montreal Alouettes in a Canadian Foot- ball League game Saturday night. The dramatic play was set up by a fumble by Montreal running back Dave Over- street at the Toronto 10yard line with just over a minute remaining in the game. The fumble was recovered by defensive back Don Rose. Holloway drove the club upfield to the Montreal 49, when, on second down, he fired a long sideline pass to Cox. A ‘ The ball went through thi hands of Montreal defensive pack Dave Dumars’ and tip- ped up in the air to Cox who pulled: it in and raced the remaining distance into the Montreal end zoné where he ‘was mobbed by the entire Argonaut football club. The victory lifts he Argos record to 2-12 — the same as the Alouettes. If the two teams remain tied at the end of the regular season, the Argonauts would advance into the playoffs due to a better total-points margin from their two meetings. Montreal won the first game 23.22 on July 10. Up until the Overstreet fumble, the Alouettes app- eared to have rallied success- fully from a 18-8 deficit. It took a gutsy third-down gamble by the Alouettes on the Toronto two-yard line early in the fourth quarter to allow Montreal to take the lead — 14-18 — for the first time in the game. Overstreet scored on the two-yard plunge for Mon- treal’s lone touchdown of the game. Their other points were scored by Don Sweet, who connected on two. field goals, a convert and a single. raced each other crew twice in the round robin series. - , Toronto's Royal Canadian ¥eehe=Club . placed. second “with four wins and two losses. Royal St. Lawrence, from Montreal, was third with three wins, three losses and Royal Victoria with two wins and five losses, was fourth. : Winnipeg's Northern Yacht Club had six losses and no wins to finish fifth. Winds were light through- out the series. Rebels wipe Creston in sudden death Dean Keller scored his. ninth goal of the Kootenay International Junior Hockey League season Saturday night in Creston 31 seconds into sudden death overtime to give the Castlegar Rebels 6-4 victory over the Creston Clippers. The first period saw Castle gar score one‘goal (by Yuri Jmaeff) and Creston two. John Obetkoff, Lyle Stous- hnow and Charlie Lind scored singles in the second period to put the Rebels ahead 4-2, but Creston came back with two goals in the third to tie the score and put the game into overtime. % REFEREES clinic was held Saturday at the Castlegar Ol Arena, with 27 persons taking post in the Level 1 and Level ii clinic, sponsored by the Canadi t Hockey id instructors for the West Kootenay area, including Spokane: The other:two clini ls the. We: e are Bill Thom- Cast! the were Gary Hyson and Sam Keith. They Ss. np vests clinic pson and Dave Fujibgy are two of four R is Fa