‘CASTLEGAR NEWS, Homes MIAMI (AP) — A team’ of and then advisod tho victims bogus police officers in three- to call police if they, have any piece suits has say. homes, served search’, war- “They're good, whoever rants, robbed the' residents,’ they are,” said police Sgt. ember 12, 1982. Tony -Monheim. “They. are polsed, confident and very” brazen.”. Since April, at least five of ‘the robberies have ‘occurred, usually ig five or six! well-dressed, ° ‘Awell;groomed? men who speak Spanish and’ also are fluent in English, The imposters, ranging in age from about 25 to 46, ar-.. rive at the victims’ homes in. vehicles similar to those used by plain-clothes police, They. carry badges and police :ra- dios and: flash | search ‘ war- * rants that yictims are never allowed to read, police said. “They | target: people who, havo large.amounts of cash,” Quality amateur jipkeiographer in- terested in’ gaining professional experience with the eastlegar News. : 4 Assignments in a variety’ of in- = a detest H , (i they surrot ie house like teresting community events. they're really serving” a . search warrant. : “They’ ve pulled it off in: broad = daylight, and that. CALLICHERYL V WISHLOW 365- 35° iy be in’a ‘nice neighborhood.” * CASTLEGAR NEWS _ Monheim said all of the victims have been Latins, - %& Great Discounts © : - %& Certified Installers: ‘ onsite. 0°” “Terms cash. or : Credit card: SUPER SWEEP CHIMNEY SERVICES LID. “Ph. aes-6ua1 their.employees. robbed: re Monheim ‘sald.,“Sometines' takes a lot of guts, especially: sic Auxiliary to thal Royal Canadian Legion Branch tinda’ oven for the, sitended cai Helen Leduc; cTaggart:an repres with the new microwave. ER: ~ him for. Our School Board Chose LONDON (AP)—The man. who captured ‘Great; iTrain robber Ronald Biggs in Brazil = 18: months’ ago ‘said -he “has tracked down Lord (Lucky) Lucan, the fugitive peer. sus- pected of kilting hi: He said he had sent “ikot graphs to Britain for positive identification of. the missing peer. “Ihave a Telex in my pocket which the’ tabloids have claimed o on. and off that, Lucan bas been: Luean, | whose areatgrest identity,” said Miller. nanny in -1974.. ‘ Luean_ is. living under-a false identity, asa German, ina South American country, former.: Scots © Guard John Miller said in a BBC radio in- terview from his hotel in Port of Spain, Trinidad. ./ ~ Miller declined to name the country where he said he had met Lucan ‘and. talked with three hours. to: ignore legal advice not to send out termination. notices for fear of legal recriminations. ' ignore lorig: standing’ service to the district by create a. CHAOTIC. environment: in-our school district with the dawning of anew school |year. be callous and cold in their method of dealing with the proposed budget. reductions. eliminate programs in.our school: district that many students and parents come to expect! -buy_an expensive computer and yet terminate | employees” gee a ae a Our School Board Chose Not To: standup and fight for the quality programs ‘and the CHILDREN. in our. school district. standup aad fight for their employees. exercise their mandate to MAINTAIN and PRO- TECT the education programs. in our district. be open, trusting and co-operative i in sheir deal: ings with their employees. INATION. CASTLEGAR & DISTRICT TEACHERS ASSN. work toganlion with their lemployees to Sider. other ALTERNATIVES. to the budget reductions. open their detailed budget for PUBLIC EXAM. Yard: tors, who have been: hunting Richard. John Bingham, the > 7th Earl of Lucan, since he vanished. eight; years..:ago, said police had not been con: tacted by Miller and had not Feepened thet investigation Wwe havet no new. evidence, the ‘murder . of. 29-year-old nanny Sandra Rivett on Nov. 8, 1974, Ever since, British Loggi ng VANCOUVER. (CP) —. They. are. crushed by trees, order for the ill-fated ‘Ghisee *stream Guards officer: who spent most of his evenings at London's gaming clubs... ‘Former > detective'.’ chief supt. Roy ‘Ranson, who. led - the hunt ‘for’ Lucan until his! retirement. in 1979, said :he ,was not convinced by the la- realed hi it , Britain and who aided him, > But ina telephone. “inter- ; view. with the “BRC, Miller . was quoted, as jsaying: three assistants “were with: him, but it was not'a‘case of holding him, although it was “ not officially by his own free ; tiga-: of the Light Brigade, 'was a will. ‘atraight-backed, former Cold- was ‘po slab: ‘oration. =", Miller. claimed ‘he located. ancl rallied hay * porter, who ‘showed him-:'a picture of a man reading a foreign newspaper. “The Daily Star quoted Mil- ler'as saying Lucan gave'him; the names of “famous and in-”’ ts everything clear: od up" and hopes to return to Britain. Lucan's fridnds claimed he his. was innocent’ of the Rivett murder. But in June,'1975, a: London coroner's jury named the earl as her killer. Miller, $8, and his accom- plices in March, 1981, abduc- ted Biggs from a bar near his fugituve. home at Rio. de Janeiro in what Miller claim-' ed was a contract job for un- ‘proceedings, y.the Barbados Supreme cae ~ Biggs :freed ‘ordered’: tho gang! Oat staged: the Great Train Robbery in 1963 eseaped from a London pris- ~ son two years ite - a ‘deadly’ occu pation ing lumber products in B.C.: than the number of British ripped by’ torn by, machinery. § They are loggers -in the ». B.C. woods, ‘ making. their + living ‘in ‘the: deadliest: oceu-.- pation on the west coast of this continent, More. Reople have died creating and mill- C jans who ‘lost’ their lives fighting-in the Second World War... Those ° deaths “have been chronicled by a former Catho-. lic ‘priest. °° ‘ Andrew >: Prouty, 64, of ‘Seattle; has written a. 503- page history. doctoral’ thesis: for the: University. of Wash. ington. ; He found that 4,250 BC. loggers and millworkers have been killed on the ‘job“bince’ 1917. In the Second World War, . 8,789 ‘British: Cotum- Now what could be more ; despite increased aafoty mea- sures, the deaths continue. ‘... Between 1919 and‘ 1929 there were 791 deaths;-769 from.1939-49;'777 from 1949-) 59;" 601 from 1959-69; 609 from 1969-79.- Logging in B.C., Washing-. ton, Oregon and. California has ‘left: 17,627 dead since 1917.5 > “These are ‘human lives et we're talking about,” Prouty’ On top ‘of ‘those’ numbers are tens of thousands of ac- ddents which' maimed, : dis- membered and ' injured bat didn’ t kill, he said; GH Prouty’s numbers how. - that six times as many people serontn9 than that?, ir nig cD REGISTRATON AND ; MEETING FEE OF $15.00," ‘OFFI are killed in logging than:in : any other occupation on the west coast. The: statistics, however, ,, re’ incomplete. Prouty “was- 5 workers, which :is how: ‘suck ‘usually are’ cited by, figures ; Occupational health and safe-° NOW: — SIX DAY SERVICE. OPEN SATURDA YS 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.’ could end’ Monday. $ ‘The threat of the NFL's 4 * theraselves with SuperBowl teams sre wondering if 1981 “was'a‘fluke or a portent. |)?" . “in Tiee Angelea/ fans’ of ‘a’ perennial’ winner:\are : splitting their’allegiance. between two teams coming off” stnenaracietia poor seasons, ' “The 1962 National Football League season begins ‘And if aniongh of the Players are suracieny. angry, it night, in what has been one - only one ‘The country’s sports pai quarterback-go-round.: lee roecamee of the most tumultuous. years inthe league's history. ges and airwaves (and locker rooms) will undoubtedly be filled with labor-maps ment "talk. But’ the fans await different words. Shey want to know. if Kenneth Sim irrival will pull together ‘New England Patriot's defence; ‘if Billy Sim's > :\ departure will tear apart Detroit Lions’ offence; if anyone in Pittsburgh ‘can fill the spiritual vacuum created with ‘the ‘Steelers’ by the departure: of Joe: Greene; if: Bert ‘ Jones'can fill a void in‘Los Angeles and end the Rams’ They want to know if new coaches Frank Kush with ‘ Baltimore Colta; Ron Meyer with New England and Mike’ Ditka with Chicago Bears will make a difference; if Dallas Cowboys will ever have another losing season (it hasn't _ eines 1964); if ‘workhourses Earl Campbell of Houston “* Oflers,’Franco Harris ‘in Pittaburgh, George Rogers of New Orleans Saints ‘and Walter Payton in Chicago still have: ‘to cry so. much of their teams’. fortunes. , HURDLE BAEBRIER «. In‘short, ‘they want. to know that from t now. nv. through contract with ‘the these major television networks — ithe sports, richest ‘contfact in the history of i But the league also suffered serious setbacks, Tt was unable to convince a jury in Los' Angeles that ' 3 Oakland Raiders should be forced to stay put — ‘and ‘Al: Davis, the owner ‘ofthe team, promptly moved the franchise to Los Angeles. Legal manoeuvering by both ' aides, to keep the tenn there or fore it back to the Bay. continues. ‘It: wae unable to achieve through congressional similar to baseball's, There, too, rrabaoeverise continues. mete, aneeerig cenit Ste friggered by che conteasion in Sports Ulusteated scandal, by a former player, Don.Reese, and fos by saline that cocaine and alcohol were in wid And it waa unable to eliminate the ominous prospect of no season at all. ji With ‘no collective bargaining agreement to: replace a on _' muses eens: i 3 Era = sees { sueuedsanafoat @. SUBS gy "Bengals ~have ‘potential ‘By JOEKAY * Associated Press. ;: CINCINNATI '\— . The’ road: ‘tothe Super Bowl ‘once ‘led: through ‘ Pitta- burgh, ‘but another, AFC . (Central Division’ team ‘is “aiming” to” build ‘a per- “manent detour this year... Coming off .their first; tepea tie Super Bowl, the : Cincinnati. Bengals aren't’ ‘merely thinking about re- ~. peating as‘American Con- ference, champions. They're ; talking. about a _ dynasty. : #1, think this will be the SURERE nal Rape Heese 2 Ft ABub lers .team of the. fu- ture,” All-Pro second-year. ,wide receiver. Cris Collins- worth said. “I think we've got that kind of potential.” : The. , Bengals :. churned through . the . rest.’ of | the: conference last season.on the) strength of a; ball- control passing attack dir- ected: by.-a. rejuvenated Ken Anderson. They're the “ only AFC Central team that plans to remain set- itled for the 1982 season. -The ‘Pittsburgh Steelers have revamped both their offense and their defense in’ an effort, to recapture their. winning form of ‘the: .1970s.:; The: Cleveland trying: to;;develop .an- of- " S fense that. doesn’t” begin Fight to stay “on top KEN ANDERSON cee tty again Cincinnati had one of its quietest training camps this year. After two years under Coach Forrest Gregg, the players |know the offensive and defensive systems, They looked for backup help in the 1982 college draft and will re- turn essentially the same starters froma team that went 12-4 last year and lost to San Francisco. in the Super Bowl. © The Steelers have made dramatic changes to try to avoid another year like last year, when the four-time Super -Bowl. champions sank to 83 There will be a lot of old names missing from the Pittsburgh roster, -how- ever... Five players have retired since last season, including Joe Greene, Jon Kolb, Sam Davis, Dwight - White and Randy Gross- man. i Picked by some observ- ers to go to Super Bowl XVI,.the Browns colla ~ from their’ 11-5’ record of 1981 to just 6-11 last year. ond heriocs in '81 weren't -able ‘to ‘deliver: when it ted: By ERIC PREWITT Associated Press 8AN_ FRANCISCO. — + The San Francisco 49ers, possessors of a bright new Super Bowl trophy, now face the never-easy fight to stay atop the National Football League. “If we've improved our- selves at three positions but regressed at four or five others, then we haven't improved,” Coach Bill Walsh said,. worrying aloud as his team began Preparing for the 1982 sea- nar broken leg suffered by Pro Bowl guard ‘ Angeles Rams, after eight '. S02 MONTANA . +. defending title The Atlanta. Falcons, division champs with a 12-4 record in 1980, dropped to 7-9 last season. The Los straight years in the play- offs, were 6-10. “Two years. ago we played injury free. Injuries Randy Cross in. an off- season accident was one cause for concern, | and other ‘troubles along the offensive line warned quar- terback Joe Montana that he may be throwing on the Tun even more than last season, * Itappears Cross will be ready for the regular sea- son opener today, but several of his Super Bowl teammates have departed in moves Walsh considered necessary ‘for improve- ment. Within the NFC West, which the 49ers won by a wide margin last year, are two excellent examples of how. quickly. NFL. teams can go downhill because of injuries and falloffs in per- formance from ey ° play- “offensive” linemen Doug Russ Francia ‘was acquired one of several Rams in- jured last season, has re-~ tired \along' with ‘veteran France and: Rich Saul, Former Baltimore Colts star Bert Jones is now the No. 1- quarterback, ahead of Vince Ferragamo, ‘who’ returned after an embar- rossi | season in Canadian eee 49ers, 2-14 just three years ago, are com- ing off a:18-8 season. Their Super Bowl: victory over the Cincinnati’ Bengals gave them an over-all rec- ord of 16-8. Walsh -made Bubba Paris, amassive offensive tackle from Michigan, his top draft pick’ this spring. Former All-Pro tight end” New arnalend: NEW YORK (AP) — Three-time:champion Jimmy Connors of the United States: advanced to the. final of the U.S. Open tennis: champion-, ships Saturday with a .6-1, 86, €2, 6-8 .victory over, Guillermo Vilas of Argentina.: . Connors will meet the win- ner..of. the other ‘semifinal Saturday. between | top- seeded defending champion John ‘McEnroe’ of: the U.S., and No, 3 seed Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia for the tour- nament jtitle today. Before:McEnroe and Lendl took \the: court, American Chris . Evert’, Lloyd battled Czechoslovakian Hana: Man- diikova ‘for: the women's championship: as a capacity crowd of more: than 20,000 fans jammed . the stadium centre court. Connors, ».winner - of | the U.S. Open in 1974, 1976 and 1978, reached the final for the | first time since: his last ‘title with the victory over, Vilas, who beat Connors to win the 1977 championship. It was a battle between a pair 80-year-old left- handers and Connors, the Wimbledon champion, was just too strong for Vilas. He broke service’ in: the - final fourth and sixth games of the first set to taki Inthe third set, Vilas was upset ataline call which gave’ Connors the fifth game. \ Vilas lost. his service in the next game, double-faulting.on the | point. Connors also won the ‘seventh ‘game* without then completed: the eee with his second ‘ace for. the gh neperic enya second set, breaking Connors in the fourth game when he won four straight points to rally from 16-40. : a point, to.take control. He broke, Vilas again int fhe eighth game to win the The fourth set remained on service until the eighth game when Connors broke again. - By then, Connors’ was * pumped, up, acknowledging: _ every piel by punching the ‘air. When he scored the de- disive point of the game, he leaped in the air, even though bad still chad another game to Vilas, winner of seven tournaments this year, had won ‘two of those titles at Rotterdam ‘and “ Milan “by beating Connors in the indoor finals.” But ‘Jimmy : reversed that trend this time with pin- ‘ point’ placement ‘of his' shots “and evened his career record against Vilas’ at: 5-5. Mario Anaretii WIAS. MONZA, ITALY (AP) — Veteran Mario Andretti of the United States shattered the lap record by five seconds Saturday in a turbocharged Ferrari ‘and won the pole position in the Italian Grand Prix Formula One auto race today.’ He turned . the 5.8-kilo- metre ‘lap’’at- the Monza Autodrome during the final qualifying round in the aston- «ishing time of one’ minute, 28:47 seconds — an average speed of 236 Kdlometres an hour., The Tealian-born Andretti, a 42-yearold resident, of > ‘Patrick Tambay of France drove another Ferrari to the third best time of the trials: position in Grand Prix — In a few laps, he drove his red Ferrari to top efficiency and to the lap record’ pre- and earned a d. start along with Italian Ric cardo Patrese, who was fourth fastest in a Brabham. - STARTS IN.THIRD ROW - French rivals Alain Prost and- Rene. Arnoux, ‘both in Renaults, had the fifth’ and sixth best times; respective- ly, in the two days of trials and will start) in ithe third row. Andretti a former. world champion whose only. For- mula One race’ this season was vat ane ees Calif., Pa, amazing’. determination and driving skill after only a few days of runs in the powerful Italian racer. Andretti, who decided to make a comeback in Formula One at Monza to’ help the injury-plagued Italian team, finished three-hundredths of a second ahead of Brasilian ace Nelson Piguet. 5 ‘Piquet, ‘the defending world champion seeking his second victory of the season, won a front-row start at Andretti’s side. Football ref dies CHAMPAIGN, ILL. (AP) — Referee: Richard McVay died of an apparent heart attack Saturday after collap- sing during the Michigan State-Illinois college football game, hospital officials said.. MeVey, 55, fell: suddenly to the turf at the MSU 48 yard. line, seconds. after a ‘play with about 10 minutes remaining in the first half. Several doctors and train- ers from both squads worked furiously on McVay for about 10\minutes, before he was rushed .to..hospital where efforts at cardio-pulmonary resuscitation failed. from thousands’ of Italian fans as he snatched the pole position, first: from Tambay and ‘then from Piquet.. Andretti, led ; the usual practice’ sweep ‘of. turbo- charged cars, which grabbed the first six positions, despite a long stop at the pits to regulate ground-effect de- vie vioulsly Arnoux, who had clocked 1:33.46 in'a. Renault last year. Keke: Rosberg of -Finland ‘was:;the’ fastest © non-turbo driver in a Williams, but he was'8.4'seconds ‘slower | than ‘Andretti, - z Rosberg, 83, who leads the world standings at 42: points’ with only one race to go, said. he‘ had.expected the ‘great. showing of the turbo, Facers’ in trials, “They have: more’ power _they are unbeatable in prac- tice,” said Rosberg, “Luckily ; venough,: I can’ hope‘ to have jmore, chances ' be Sunday's as closest ‘challenger in ‘overall standings, Prost, who trails him by 11 points, was 1.7 seconds faster than’ Ros- berg, but said reliability of his racer throughout the race’ was his major worry. Albuquerque leads PCL best-of-seven SPOKANE, WASH. (AP) — Spokane errors led to all of: Albuquerque's: runs in the Dukes’ 5&2 victory over the Indians in the Pacifi¢ Coast League champlonabip, series Friday AMMineesaue: bidding for its third. straight PCL crown, now leads the best- of-seven series 3-1, with a chance to clinch the title this afternoon, The Dukes took a 2-0 lead with single runs in the fourth and fifth innings against Spokane starter Dennis Ras- mussen. He loaded the bases with walks in the fourth and then walked Don Crow to force the first run after catcher Jerry Narron drop- ped_a foul pop for an error. Rasmussen's own throwing error in the fifth and a double steal by the Dukes led to the second run, Larry Fobbs scoring on Tack Wilson's ground ball. A throwing error by Nar- ron’ and Rasmussen's own ‘ wild pitch let in Dave Ander- son with Albuquerque's third run_.in the seventh, but Spo- kane bounced back with two runs on Rick Adams’ double to right center. That's when Alejandro Pena‘ took over for starter ~ Brian Holton, striking out five of the eight batters he faced. He struck out Scott Carnes to end the inning and gave up just one HL the wee of the way. :