«2__ Castlégar News August 24, 1988 SPORTS BIG WINNERS. . nament. (from left) Back row Tony Nazaroff, Amigos sweep tourney . Castlegar Slowpitch team, the Amigos won the Ymir Slowpitch Tour- Kelly Johnson, Adrian Markin, Phil Koochin, Berquist, Janet By CasNews Staff A Castlegar team captured the Ymir Days Slowpitch Tourna ment over the weekend. The Amigos avenged an_ opening game loss to Vortex of Nelson by dumping the Nelson squad 10-7 in the tourney final. After its loss to Vortex on the first day of the tourney, the Mike Roloff, Larry’ Stanbra, Mark Wigen, Rick Newlove and lan Johnson. Front row: Nona MacKinnon and Kris Stanbra. Orienteering club in Manitoba contest Three members of the Kootenay Orienteering Club competed in the Manitoba five-day orienteering festi- val held near Brandon Aug, 6-14, There were approximately 500 competitors vying for honors in 10 age classes spread over eight dif- ferent courses. The courses are ranked from short (1.5 km) and very easy to navigate, to long (12 km), and requiring very careful navigation. The events were held in four dif- ferent areas surrounding Brandon. The competitors ran in temperatures from the low 20s to the high 30s, with the humidity between SO per cent to 100 per cent. There was a total of five days of in the two- Byrne, Rochelle pri Amigos rallied to win its next four games against Mallard’s T-Pros, Kaslo Screeners, Ymir General Store and Salmo ,Ro- dents to meet Vortex iW rematch in the final. Amigos’ Melanie Berquist was named the tournament's most valuable player, with pitcher Kelly Johnson an_ honorable mention. dey, total time Canadian National Championships. The competition areas were low sand dunes, covered with short grass, poison ivy, and a mixture of poplar, oak, and spruce forest. Vis- ibility and ‘‘runability’’ were gener- ally good, but the complex maze of five-metre high hills made navigation and route choice very difficult on the higher numbered courses. Many of the competitions were decided by being the first to recover from a major blunder in map interpretation. Ciccarelli jailed TORONTO (CP) — National Hoc- key League player Dino Ciccarelli was convicted today of assaulting an opposing player with his stick during a game last season Judge Sidney Harris sentenced Ciccarelli to a day in jail and fined him $1,000. The hockey player was led from provincial court in hand- cuffs For Ciccarelli, 28, of the Minnesota North Stars, it was his second con- viction in a criminal case this year. He pleaded guilty last January to an indecent-exposure charge. The assault charge was brought after a Jan. 6 incident in which Toronto Maple Leafs player Luke Richardson was hit several the head. Richardson, 19, helmet was wearing a and was not injured. Cic- carelli was ejected from the game and later given a 10-game suspension by league officials. A native of Sarnia, Ont., Ciccarelli told his trial last month that he swung his stick in self-defence and had “‘no intention’’ of injuring Rich- ardson. The eight-year veteran of the NHL said he had been the victim of several attacks by other players. Expos win in 13th SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The Montreal Expos were forced into extra innings Tuesday night, which was just fine with manager Buck Rodgers “We haven't won in nine innings very often lately,’’ he said after Mon- treal beat the San Francisco Giants 2-1 in 13 innings, breaking a nine game losing streak, the National League baseball club's longest since 1977. Th vetoey made the Expos 17-5'in extra-inning games this season and 29-6 over the last two years. Pinch-hitter Hubie Brooks drove Rex Hudler home with a two-out single up the middle to break the 1-1 tie “I hope we can win nine in a row Brooks said. ‘‘We lost nine, but in about half of the games we had chances to win and didn’t Montreal's victory ended San now,"" Tyson injured in street fight NEW YORK (AP) — Heavyweight champion Mike Tyson broke a bone in his right hand during a street fight early Tuesday with former boxing op- ponent Mitch Green, Tyson said Tuesday During a news conference at which he wore a cast stretching from the hand to just below the elbow, the hairiine fracture Tyson suffered was described as minor and the champion said he felt no pain Tyson’s manager, Bill Cayton, said he didn’t know yet whether Tyson's Oct. 8 fight in London against Frank Bruno of Britain would have to be postponed Tyson must wear the cast for three weeks and it'll then be determined after if there will be enough time for him. to train for the bout, Cayton said There were conflicting reports of what happened Tyson claimed Green, a one-time opponent, ripped his shirt and start- ed the fight as Tyson was getting into his car early Tuesday morning. The pair exchanged punches, with Tyson injuring his right hand, Tyson said He said the fight occurred around 4:30 a.m. outside a 24-hour clothing store, where he had gone to pick up a jacket Green’s version, according to po- lice, was different Police spokesman Sgt. John Clif- ford said Green told investigators the fight took place outside an after- hours club in Harlem. Green said during the argument ‘‘Tyson popped him on the bridge of his nose,’’ Clif- ford said. The injury required five stitches, he said Police were investigating and no charges had been filed “I really don't want to press charges because it's really ludicrous, the whole scene. I'm a victim and then he presses charges on me,” Tyson said Green, 31, comment Green was unbeaten in five years of professional fighting before losing a fight for the U.S. Boxing Associa- tion title to Trevor Berbick in 1985S. He lost a 10-round decision to Tyson in May 1986. At the time of the fight, Green was ranked seventh by the World Boxing Council and Tyson was ranked eighth. couldn't be reached for BOWLING IS FUN FOR EVERYONE! Castle Bowl Now Under New Management! Come In and Meet Roland and Velda Handley LEAGUE BOWLING STARTS TUESDAY, SEPT. 6 Openings for Individuals and Full Teams in Some Leagues LEAGUES AVARABLE Mon ‘Gower YOUTH BOWLING 4-\ REGISTRATION SATURDAY. SEPT. 10 John & Erma Mykyte would like to thank all them over the past 12 years At tm erie | iB YES. OF AGI OPEN BOWLING DANY: L¥e4p.m. 87 p.m.te 10pm. | those who supported LEAGUES NOW FORMING Francisco's six-game winning streak. “We'll just have to start another streak tomorrow,’’ said manager Roger Craig, whose team had a chance to move within 31 games of first-place Los Angeles in the NL West. Montreal's pitchers held the Giants to seven hits over the 13 innings and the Expos turned five double plays, including one that ended the game. MISSES CALL? Brett Butler, who grounded into the final double play after Joel Youngblood singled, ‘“‘was safe by six feet,’’ Craig said. ‘‘It’s a shame that the umpires just want to get games like that over with ‘‘We might not have won, but we should have had our fastest runner on first base. At least we would have had a chance. We're in a pennant race, and (the umpires) blow a play like that. It’s just incompetent um- piring.”’ Scott Garrelts, 3-7, who allowed only two hits in five innings, walked Nelson Santovenia to open the 13th and Hudler pinch ran. Luis Rivera sacrificed and Hudler stole third, his 24th steal in 26 attempts. Mike Fitzgerald pinch hit and struck out before Brooks, pinch-hit- ting for only the second time this season, singled to centre Andy McGaffigan, 5-0, pitched two innings of hitless relief. Joe Hesketh pitched the 13th for his fifth save. Will Clark had led off the seventh with his 25th homer, raising his league-leading RBI total to 91 and tying the score 1-1 Otis Nixon's third-inning squeeze scored Nelson Santovenia, who singled and took second on Luis Rivera's single. Mike Krukow went six innings, allowing five hits and one run, In his three starts since coming off the dis- abled list, Krukow has allowed just two runs in 17 2-3 CASTLE BOWL 206-1 1th Ave., Castlegar Call 365-5723 for More into. -—-- a --—- OPEN PLAY WITH THIS COUPON BOWL 3 pay for only 2. Coupon good till end of Sept. only ——) ig KOC were Sandra Sharp of Castlegar, competing in the ywomen's are 19-20 category; Shirley Donald of Rossland in the women’s 50-plus category, and Scott Donald of Rossland in the men’s 45-plus cate- gory. An ex-KOC memb Crystal Parks, now representing Vancouver Island's Cowichan Valley Orienteers, ran in the women’s 17-18 category. Shirley Donald finished 14 minutes ahead of her rivals on’ Day 1 with a flawless run. On Day 2, Pat de St. Croix of Ottawa was able to make a better route selection that allowed her to regain 12 of those minutes, but had to settle for second place on the winner's podium. In 1987, their posi- tions were reversed. Sandra Sharp built a 31-minute lead over Nina Waddington of Tor- onto on Day 1 when Waddington became confused when selecting one of several faint trails. On Day 2, Sharp made a series of small navi- gational errors and eventually rea- lized that she was uncertain of her location on the map. She relocated herself by running on a rough com- pass bearing to a large firebreak, but was unable to recover her lost time and finished second to Waddington. Scott Donald was able to put to- gether two consistent, slow days to finish in fifth place, 30 minutes behind the leader, Paul Golightly of Toronto. Second place went to Peter Smith, president of the Orienteering Association of B.C. Crystal Parks did poorly on Da She allowed herself to become dis- tracted by other itors early in class, and this was sufficient to put her into third spot in total time over the two days. In the men’s elite category (21-plus age group, running on the toughest course), the winner was Ted de St. Croix of Ottawa with a total time of two hours and 29 minutes over 24 km. De St. Croix has been the Can- adian champion 13 of the past 14 years, surrendering the title to Ross Burnett of Vancouver last year. Bur- nett erred in route choice of Day 1 and was unable to regain the time on Day 2. He finished in seventh place, 16 minutes behind de St. Croix. This year’s elite women's champ- ion is Pam James of Nova Scotia. She completed the two days on the second hardest course in two hours and 17 minutes (18 km total dis- tance). Magli Robert of Ottawa was second with two hours, 22 mimutes. James is stockier than Robert, and was able to short-cut through thicker, vegetation that Robert. She was able to pick up six minutes on Day 2, overpowering Robert's Day 1 lead of less than a minute. The next event that the Kootenay Orienteering Club will be the Wes- tern Canadian Orienteering Champ- ionships in Prince George on the Labor Day weekend. The Orienteer- ing Association of B.C. has reserved a train car on B.C. Rail for use by i KOC will drive the race, and was unable to regain her concentration. Her Day 2 time was the second fastest in her age AFTER SEVENTH WIN to the coast and party theit way north with orienteers from B.C., Wash- ington and Oregon. Dodgers wary of Mets By The Canadian Press New York owns the Los Angeles Dodgers this season, but if the National League division leaders meet in the playoffs it won't mean a thing, says Mets pitcher David Cone “It's always good to get up for a good team like the Dodgers,'’ Cone said after scattering nine hits over 7 2-3 innings Tuesday night as the Mets won S-1 for their seventh vic- tory in eight games against the Dod- gers this season. ‘‘But if we see them in the playoffs, you can throw all Race exhausts Johnson TORONTO (CP) — Ben Johnson has recovered from his leg injury and is simply tired, says Charlie Francis, coach of the world record holder in the 100-metre dash Ending speculation Johnson may have aggravated during his recent European tour the hamstring injury that forced him to miss two months of competition this year, Francis said ‘Ben was just plain exhausted”’ when he finished third in a meet last Sunday in Cologne, West Germany Johnson also finished third in a race last Wednesday in Zurich, which was won by archrival Carl Lewis of the United States. “The best thing is just to let him rest now,’’ Francis said. ‘‘He should start full training again maybe by the end of the week. He’ll go again when he’s ready.” Nelson golfer Brian DeBiasio fired a four-over par 76 in the final round of the Canadian men’s amateur golf championship Saturday to finish in a tie for 16th in a field of more than 150. ‘DeBiasio shot a total 296 on the par-72, 6,975S-yard Gallagher's Can- yon Club in Kelowna. He had a first round of 72 and followed with rounds of 76 and 72 before Saturday's final round 76. DeBiasio is well know throughout the Kootenays, and has captured the annual Castlegar Sunflower Open several times. DeBiasio was 11 shots back of the winner, Vancouver's Doug Roxburgh who fired a two-over par 74 on the final 18 holes to card a total 28S. It was Roxburgh's fourth Canadian title. these games out the window.” Elsewhere, it was: Montreal Expos 2, San Francisco Giants 1 in 13 innings; Pittsburgh Pirates 2, Cincin- nati Reds 0; Chicago Cubs 9, Hou- ston Astros 3; St. Louis Cardinals 7, Atlanta Braves 0; and San Diego Padres 9, Philadelphia Phillies 1. In the American League, Fred Mc- Griff hit his 29th homer, Jessie Bar- field hit his 14th and Ernie Whitt his 10th, and Jim Clancy, 7-13, scattered eight hits as the Toronto Blue Jays defeated the Chicago White Sox 7-2. In other AL games, it was: New York Yankees 5, Oakland Athletics 4; Minnesota Twins 7, Detroit Tigers 5; Boston Red Sox 10, California Angels 2; Cleveland Indians 6, Milwaukee Brewers 2; and Kansas City Royals 11, Texas Rangers 7. Seattle at Balti- more was rained out. In Los Angeles, where New York is 5-0 this season, the Mets rallied for three runs in the fifth on Mookie Wilson's RBI single, Wally Back- man’s run-scoring double and Keith Hernande’s sacrifice fly Cone struck out six and walked none in improving his record to 13-3 — a .813 winning percentage which is the best in the majors. His 2.36 ERA is second in the NL to Mon- treal's Dennis Martinez. Randy Myers finished with hitless relief for his 18th save and hit a run-scoring double in the ninth. be- fore Backman added an RBI single. “We match up pretty well with them,’’ Backman said of the Mets- Dodgers rivalry. ‘‘The teams are built around pitching. “I think we've got a better de- fensive ballclub. But when you get to the playoffs it’s a whole different story and these games are meaning- less."" Cubs 9 Astros 3 Damon Berryhill’s two-run homer and Vance Law’s two-run single highlighted a seven-run Chicago seventh. Jamie Moyer, 7-12, gave up 12 hits but went the distance for the third time for the win. Cardinals 7 Braves 0 Bob Forsch pitched a six-hitter and Tom Brunansky drove in three runs including two with his 19th homer. Padres 9 Phillies 1 Carmelo Martinez hit a pair of two-run homers and Ed Whitson, 11-8, pitched a seven-hitter for his first complete game in more than a year, Mid-Week Wrap-up FOOTBALL cr Eastern Division w Edmonton Sosk ees fee Bc Caigory CFL Scoring adore Ridgway. Sosk 5 NATIONAL LEAGUE East Divi BASEBALL NATIONAL LEAGUE Kost Division 32 West Division 7 Mattingly. NY ust ploce TRANSACTIONS feds Reds call ve Pitcher Keith Brown of the American Assoc ei Wo on 15-day disabled lat, retroactive to roorau cr Homilton Tiger-Cars trom prachce roster detensive end Romel And tivate from proctice bet Gory ‘Allen ond tackle Leon Hot dt tehor e receiver Roy Hurd and linebacker Rod Colloway: release detensive back Ken Harley and slovback hyn imos release trom practice roster ord Odd to practic defensive tock ‘ ») August 24, 1988 Castlégar News as THEY'RE OFF . . . Vicki Thompson (left) and Rotary excchorige student to Sapan,! i Teresa Lamb have left for foreign shores. Thompson is a Castlegar Rotary exchange student to. Germany, while Lamb, a former Rotary students off By JOHN CHARTERS Three Castlegar students have left the area for educational assignments overseas in the past two weeks and all have been related to the Rotary Interna- tional Student Exchange Pro- gram. The first to leave was David Bristow, son of the Reverend Ted Bristow and his wife Gwen. David will be spending his year of exchange near Sao Paolo. Brazil. Last Monday Teresa Lamb daughter of Bert and Jeanne Lamb left for Yokahama, Japan where, after winning a Pacific Rim scholarship, she will be studying advanced Japanese. Two years ago she had been a Rotary exchange student in Tok- yo and became so adept in the language that she was able to act as one of the interpreters for a group of Japanese students taking a short course at Selkirk College. The latest Rotary exchange student is Vicki Thompson, dau- ghter of John Thompson, past- president of the Castlegar Kiw- anis club, and Bonnie Thomp- son; and granddaughter of Ald. Bob McBain and Marj McBain, presently in hospital in Van- couver. Vicki has left for a year’s study in Nordenham in West to Japan on a Pacific Rim provincial govern- ment scholarship. returning CasNews Photo by John Chatters Germany where she will be the guest of Rotary District 185. She will arrive at the airport of Bremen and will probably be met by the first of her four sets of host parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bernhardt Pfeifer. She will attend German high school at the nearby town of Tassens and will be guided by her Rotary counsellor Koronel Udo. The Rotary club places a high priority on the student exchange program, both as a valuable educational tool for the youth of the world, and as a positive means towards establishing uni- versal peace and understanding. HONG KONG China’s storefront? By MAGGIE FOX HONG KONG — Just maybe it could turn out to be another one of those deals in which the little guy shows the big guy a thing or two — there's some in Hong Kong that think so. While many Hong Kong residents, nervous about the Chinese takeover of the tiny British colony in 1997, are heading off to Toronto, Vancouver, Sydney aid San Francisco to avoid the uncertainties of Communist rule, others aren't so worried. They joke that Hong Kong, reforms in China. “Hong Kong will be the storefront, and China the Helmut Sohmen, a businessman and legisla- factory,” tor, is fond of saying. With a large shortage, a lack of land and rising wages in the colony, more and more Hong Kong with economy, wil! influence its massive next-door neighbor more than vice vesa, and point confidently to economic said Anthony Wong, an economist at the Hang Seng Bank. “*Hong Kong will be an example of how an effective economy can work and should work.”’ China’s interest in Hong Kong’s prosperity is obvious. It's estimated as many as 3,000 companies in Hong Kong are controlled by Chin: Although there's no direct evidence, many brokers say China bailed out some Hong Kong companies after the October 1987 stock market crash. That would be quite a change for a Communist country that once severely punished anyone who dared speak up for its vibrant capitalists. In the 1984 joint for Hong Kong’s return to Chinese rule in 1997, China with Britain promised that the thriving colony could keep its economic system for at least 50 years. Stressed they were eager to learn from Hong Kong’s The Chinese success, Wong said. industrialists who want to set up factories are looking to said. China, zone of S the special across the border in southern Guangdong province “The saying is that Shenzhen learns from Hong and the whole Kong, learns from country learns from Guangdong,’ Kong's Chinese University. Hong Kong already employs more factory workers in Guangdong than in Hong Kong itself. Guangdong officials say 1.5 million people in the province are employed either directly or indirectly by Hong Kong manufacturers, compared to 900,000 in Hong Kong. AFFECTS CHINA “I think Hong Kong is affecting China right now an example of how a good economy can affect citizens, * said Joseph Cheng, a senior lecturer in politics and government at Hong “Hong Kong is Chinese,"’ he said. * adapt from Hong Kong. They can look at where Hong Kong was 30 years ago, how far it has come, and say, “We can do that.’ ’’ Most Hong Kong residents agree they must take full advantage of the consultatibn period now underway China is opening up to the rest of the world, but Hong Kong provides a more familiar example, Wong It is easier to before China draws up a basic law, which will be Hong Kong’s new constitution. Establishment critics like Martin Lee, a member of the Legislative Council, have said as much democracy as possible must be built into the basic law to prevent China from taking away people's rights. Amnesty International has recently criticized a working draft of the basic law as failing to adequately protect human rights. Grits to get lead out OTTAWA (CP) — A Liberal gov- ernment would speed up Canada’s campaign to reduce the lead content of gasoline, environment critic Char- les Caccia said Tuesday. Conservative party policy calls for lead content to be reduced to 0.026 grams per litre by Jan. 1, 1993. Current regulations allow 0.29 grams of lead per litre of gasoline. The Liberals would move that deadline up two years, requiring Canadian refiners to meet the 0.026- gram standard by the end of 1990, Caccia told a news conference. A new deadline should not pose a problem for the industry since American re- finers have been required to meet that standard since 1986, he added. While the commitment could form part of the debate leading up to a general election expected as early as this fall, Caccia avoided describing it as a formal campaign promise. He said his announcement was simply a response to the govern- ment’s refusal earlier this month to change the deadline on the basis of new medical studies on the impact of Dirty dancing just fun VANCOUVER (CP) — They may call it dirty dancing but it's just good, clean fun, says dance instructor Patty Duckworth. “It doesn’t feel as dirty as it looks,’’ Duckworth, 22, says of the dance craze from Dirty Dancing, a smash movie whose dancing is the hottest thing since the disco era spawned by Saturday Night Fever Duckworth said she giggled the first time partner Patrick Bonnell tried one of the seductive moves from the film, running his finger down the side of her torso. It tickled. Today she wears a slinky smile as they open their routine to the movie's hit song, (I've Had) The Time of My Life. The professional dancers pulse so erotically it looks like simulated sex with clothes on. While the singer on the record croons: ‘‘I've never felt this way before,"’ Duckworth slithers her hips between Bonnell’s legs, slowly rub- bing the back of her boyfriend's thighs with her hands. Flinging her legs around Bonnell’s pelvis, they both shake their hips ecstatically. And when their noses touch, Duckworth breaks out of routine and gives Bonnell, 25, a kiss. Bonnell says dirty dancing com- bines old-fashioned Brazilian mambo and American jive with some new, heavy-duty hip action. He says many women go to Dirty Dancing, a female coming-of-age movie, because they identify with the lead character. “The film’s music and dancing makes them still, feel sexy and wanted,"’ he says. One out of three people currently signing up at the studio in New Westminster, B.C., where Bonnell teaches ‘want to learn to dirty dance."’ Duckworth thinks the lead Huffam graduates Patricia J. Huffam, daughter of James and Susan Forrest of Castle- gar, recently graduated from the University of British Columbia with a Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy Huffam is a graduate of Stanley reflects a trend away from do-your- own-thing,* non-contact dancing to more orchestrated ballroom steps “Dirty Dancing’s the first film to depict female-centred sexuality,” says Vancouver health educator Charlotte Waddell, 32, who has seen it three times. Despite what she calls a hackneyed story, she and her female friends love the film Humphries 'y school and at- tended Selkirk College and the Uni- versity of Victoria before going to UBC. She has been commissioned as a lieutenant in the Canadian Armed Forces (Army) and has been posted as base pharmacist to Gagetown, New Brunswick She is married to 2nd Lieut. Chris- topher Huffam, who will be doing armor officer training at Gagetown. The studies show that it takes much lower amounts of lead pollution to affect public health than was prev- iously believed. Lead pollution af- fects children the most, creating learning disabilities and generally impairing their development. WOULDN’T COMMIT Health Minister Jake Epp recently told the Commons he would not commit the Tories to changing the deadline until Health and Environ- ment department officials have had time to study the new reports and whether the ge should move faster. The 1993 lead deadline is a result of policies adopted by the last Liberal government in early 1984. At that time, Caccia — i minister — the government would reduce lead content within three years to the current level of 0.29 grams per litre from 0.72 grams. The United States announced five months later that it would lower lead content to 9.026 grams by the end of 1986. then PATRICIA J. HUFFAM - pharmacist There was a lot of resistance to Canada’s initial reductions, Caccia said. While there may still be some resistance today to faster action, Caccia told reporters he doubted it would be as strong because refiners are already meeting lower standards in the United States. | JANNA LYNN SYLVEST . in Vancouver Sylvest gets law degree Janna Lynn Sylvest graduated in April, from the University of B.C. with a Bachelor of Laws. She grad- uated fifth in her class and received the top prize in labor law Sylvest graduated from Stanley Humphries secondary school in 1981, and she received a Bachelor of Com- merce with Distinction from the Uni- versity of Alberta in 1985. Sylvest will be beginning articling with the firm of Clark, Wilson in Vancouver on Aug. 29 indulgences?” histori that Here, Jacob, son of Isaac, mark. bread without straw. made unleavened bread, without any ingredients. Homer Did you know that ‘‘Martin Luther was nailed to the church door at Wittenberg for selling papal Or that ‘Sir Walter Raleigh is a al figure because he invented cigarettes?’’ Or ‘One of the causes of the Revolutionary Wars was the English put tacks in their tea?’’ at the request of readers, sampling of student bloopers from the collections of Anders Henriksson of McMaster University and Richard Lederer, an American teacher. stole his brother's birth Pharaoh forced the Hebrew slaves to Moses led them to the Red Sea, where they which also wrote The Oddity, Penelope was the last hardship that Ulysses endured on his journey. Actually, Homer was not written by Homer but by another man of that name. In the Olympic Games, Greeks ran races, jumped, hurled the biscuits, and threw the java. The is another reward to the victor was a coral wreath. History calls people Romans because they never stayed in one place for very long. DON’T! PLEASE! Nero was a cruel tyranny who would torture his poor subjects by playing the fiddle to them. King Alfred conquered the Dames, King Arthur lived in the Age of Shivery, King Harold mustared his troops (and) Joan of Arc was cannonized by Bernard Shaw. Finally, Magna Carta provided that no free man should be hanged twice for the same make offence. It was the painter Donatello’s interest in the is bread made Renaissance Theologically, in which mutation. female nude that made him the father of the Luther was into reorientation When Elizabeth exposed herself before her troops, they all shouted, went out and deft “Hurrah.” Then her navy Milton wrote Paradise Lost and he wrote Paradise Regained. Later the Pilgrims crossed the Ocean and this was known as Pilgrims Progress. When they landed at Plymouth Rock, they were greeted by the Indians, who came down the hill rolling their war hoops tall before them. If Louis XIV didn’t like someone, he sent them to the gallows to row for the rest of their lives The French Revolution was accomplished before it happened. The revolution evolved through mon- republican and tolarian phases until it archial, catapulted into Napoleon. OUCH! During the Napoleonic Wars, the crowned heads of Europe were trembling in their shoes. Then the Spanish gorillas came down from nipped at Napoleon's flanks. Delegates from the original 13 states formed the Contented Congress. Thomas Jefferson, a Virgin, and Benjamin Franklin were two singers of the of I . Franklin had gone to the Spanish Armadill Then his wife died Martin Luther nailed to church By BOB TAYLOR the hills and brothers. Boston carring all his clothes in his pocket and a loaf of bread under each arm. Lincoln’s mother died in infancy, born in a log cabin which he built with his own hands. When Lincoln was president, he wore only a ilk hat. He said, ‘In onion there is strength."” Meanwhile in Europe, the Enlightenment was a reasonable time. Gravity was invented by Isaac Walton, It is chiefly noticeable in the autumn, when the apples are falling off the trees Beethoven took long walks in the forest even when everyone was cal 1827 and later died for this. Napoleon III-IV mounted the French thrown. One thinks of Napoleon as a live extension of the late, but great, Napoleon. Queen Victoria was the longest queen. She sat on a thorn for 63 years. Her death was the final event which ended her reign. Charles Darwin was a naturalist who wrote the Organ of the Species. Madman Curie discovered radium. And Karl Marx became one of the Marx and he was g for him. He expired in