News duly 11, 1990 a _Castlagar Ne LOCAL/PROVINCIALNEWS . Premier vague on powers of new act VICTORIA (CP) — British Columbians may have a direct voice in issues such as constitutional reform if the Social Credit government goes ahead with its referendum law. But then again they may not. Premier Bill Vander Zalm didn’t clear the murky waters when he said: “The one thing that we were clear on is that some_referendums perhaps should be binding whereas others should not be and it should (then) be a matter of seeking opinion.” He suggesied that ‘constitutional matters and matters that are of a provincial nature or that tend to im- pact things provincially’’ might be best decided by referendum. He was equally vague about specifics and about when referendums would be binding. No matter, the government's proposed Referendum Act has drawn widespread criticism, largely because it would allow government to pose questions, set dates and decide where in the province referendums would be held'and who would qualify to vote. The most contentious aspects of the act — known as Bill 55 — would allow government to dictate whether referendums are binding and the per- centage of voters required for them to pass. The Opposition NDP and political commentators have criticized the proposed act. New Democrats argue the “Vm ing a fashion statement - since | lost 92 Ibs. with Nutri/System. UP A POLE 4 thought | could wear jeans, attitude. T! ve m) a reat litt short shite or & rae Now not onthave tne body lo wear can. thanks to Nad Syston i ‘want, have Our comprehensive weight loss program will help over ONE MILLION clients this year! It includes: * SAFE, easy and permanent weight loss Professional Supervision No Calorie Counting No Gimmicks! OVER 1600 CENTRES WORLD-WIDE weight loss centres PAY FOR ONLY HALF THE WEIGHT YOU WANT TO LOSE* Call today for a FREE no obligation consultation! 368-8555 1435 BAY AVE., TRAIL *Speciol offer dows not include cost of exclusive Nutri/System food New clients only Offer valid at porticipating centres Over 19 yrs. of weight loss success! ts to an ted power grab that takes d making from members of the legislature. “It’s diminished democracy,” said leader Mike Harcourt. Although the Socreds hold 43 of 69 seats in the house, Harcourt said his caucus will delay passage of the bill hoping the current session finishes with the bill dying on the order paper. British Columbia passed a referen- dum bill in 1919, but it never became law because a similar law at the same time in Manitoba was stitutional for interfering wit of the lieutenant-governor. “That’s made governments y leery of referenda of this sort (bin- ding),”’ said Terry Morley, a Univer- sity of Victoria political scientist TOURIST ALERT Tourist Alert issued by the RCMP The following people, believed travelling in British Columbia, are asked to call the person named for an urgent personal message: John and “fillicent Quartly, St. Helen, Ore., call Leo. Frank and Dixie Smith, Spokane, call Brenda Sandeno. Linda and Randy Krisher, Edmonton, call Ed Bennett. Rev David Adams, United Kingdom, call Rev. Sheila Flynn. Bob Smith, Prince George, call Doug Smith. Alan and Glenora Tite, Nepean, Ont., call lan Tite. David Walchlie, Jacksonville, Fla., call Daniel Fry. Agnes Boom Winifred, North Vancouver, call Darlene Purdy. MOVING isn't halt so HECTIC... When it is followed by a Welcome Wagon call! Heather — 365-5490 “Meco AFETY STARTS WITH EDUCAKON Safety isa skilllikeanyother- // ithas to be learned. To. learn p you need the right teacher & the right tools Your Workers’ Compensation Board is North America's leading publisher of workplace safety materials. Books, brochures, videos and posters — all researched and.prepared by authorities in the field of occupational health and safety. With 700 video, film and slide/tape productions, 150 instructional books and brochures and more than 200 safety posters, the WCB offers you safety education on a wide range of topics. Everything from taking care of your back to July 11,1990 Castlegar News .61 sy Castlegar News SPORTS GET THE PERFECT FIT WITH A KOOTENAY SAVINGS RRSP KS Pivots compete for start VANCOUVER (CP) — Some football ctitics call Rickey Foggie and Doug Flutie the odd couple of the B.C. Lions, but in reality they have many similarities. The quarterback tandem, competing for the starting assignment in the 1990 season opener Friday against the Calgary Stampeders, are scramblers who improvise best after being flushed from the passing pocket. Foggie and Flutie have similar backgrounds in that they are still striving for recognition despite being professionals for several years. Flutie is the eldest at 27 as he begins his first season in Canada. The former Boston College star is making the u ition from, the NFL, where his height (five feet, nine inches) was considered a detriment. He had an impressive debut in an exhibition game against the Winnipeg Blue Bombers a week ago, throwing for 102 yards and rushing for 61 more in less than 30 minutes of playing time. “The biggest adjustment was the 20-second clock and having the ability to catch your breath after running the ball,’’ Flutie said. *‘I’ll get used to that.”’ Flutie signed a CFL contract late last month i whirlwind iati with Lions’ owner Murray Pezim, capped by a personal services contract for Flutie that includes lucrative off-season business oppor- tunities. Foggie, 23, is in his third season with the Lions, but the former University of Minnesota pivot has never had the opportunity to be No. 1. He played behind top-rated passer Matt Dunigan for two years and had little game time. Dogigan was traded to This week's picks, page 82. the Toronto Argos during the off-season, however, following a contract dispute. Foggie probably saved his job in the Winnipeg game when the six-foof-two, 185-pounder produced 20 second- quarter points. “I had to show the coaches I could move the team and put some points on the board,’’ Foggie said. ‘‘When they signed Doug (Flutie), there was a possibility one of us "s showing pushed two other quarterbacks — rookie Major Harris, 22, from West Virginia and CFL veteran Joe 'Paopao, 35, a Lion coach last season — off the active roster for the opening game at B.C. Place Stadium. Harris was placed on the injured list (slight ankle sprain) for 30 days, while Paopao was dropped to the practice roster after leading the team to victory over the Edmonton Eskimos in the other exhibition game. “I didn’t think I'd be the starting quarterback,"’ said Harris, ineffective in two brief appearances. ‘‘It’s just like going from high school to college. Flutie appears a perfect fit By GRANT KERR The Canadian Press The search for acceptance continues for Doug Flutie, in his third professional football league in six summers. The stubby five-foot-nine quarterback, blessed “It’s a new experience — a new offence and new terminology. It's just like coll is Harris was red-shirted his’ freshman year at Wst sitting out the season while learning a mroe Virgin: complicated offensive system. Flutie was disappointed he did't produce more of- fence in his B.C. debut. The Lions scored 13 points when Flutie was in the game, but he fumbled away an oppor- tunity near the Bombers goal line. “You always anticipate great things when you go in there,’’ he added. ‘‘I’m disappointed we didn’t put a couple more TDs on the board.’’ Head coach Lary Kuharich of the Lions likely won’t name his starter until the day before the opener against his former team. Kuharich coached the Stampeders to second place in the West Division last season. with and ible timing, is 61 seeking to overcome the rejection of his physical stature by NFL teams, He finally seems to have found a home, welcomed into the CFL by the,B.C. Lions, The Canadian game, with its wider field and accent on passing, appears a perfect fit. “I want a place where I’m comfortable and enjoy being out on the field,”’ Flutie said in a television interview. ‘All indications are it appears to be that way in Vancouver The 27-year-old Heisman Trophy quarterback from Boston College made an impressive debut in an exhibition game against the Winnipeg Blue Bombers. Playing less than a half — after only two full Practices — Flutie passed for 102 yards and rushed for please see FLUTIE page B2 Eugene Voykin of the Robson River Otters (foreground, lane 2) pushes off in the 50-metre backstroke during last weekend's Trail-Wartield swim meet. Voyk Castlegar Aquanauts brought home in was competing in the Division 4 boys category. The River Otters and the veral medals from the competition. Swimmers awash in medals By CasNews Staff Swimmers from the Castlegar and Robson clubs put in strong showings at last weekend’s Trail-Warfield swim meet which attracted more than 400 competitors from the Kootenays and Aquanauts, River Otters bring home hardware handling dangerous chemicals. This material is free, or available on free loan, to B.C. workers and employers. Last year you asked for almost 12,000 brochures and posters and 2,000 films and videos on safety. Safety at work. It starts with education. Whatever your trade, whether you're a crane or hoe operator, a rigger slinger, painter or tree trimmer, we can teach you how to do your job safely. After all, we've got the right tools. r--— PLEASE SEND ME THESE SAFETY & HEALTH BROCHURES: ] Back Talk O Construction Safety Guide } Electrical Safety for Construction Machine and } Hear Today Hear Tomorrow O Lock-Out Cl Low Voltage Electrical Safety the Okanagan. The Castlegar Aquanauts finished third with 913.5 points behind first- place Nelson with 1,104 and the host Trail team with 1,011. Colville, Wash., finished “fourth with 652.5, followed by Grand Forks with 179, Kimberley with 176, Beaver Valley with 168, Penticton with 157, ( Robson with 102, Creston with eight ‘ and Agassiz with seven. Although the team finished well back, the River Otters picked up two aggregate bronze medals at the meet. Kim Verigin took a bronze in the Division 4 boys while Kristy Verigin Kim Verigin shared his bronze with Mike Byers, a Beaver Valley swimmer. who previously spent thrée years with the River Otters: Kristy Verigin picked up 28 points for the River Otters while Kim Verigin earned 26. Other individual point- getters were Emily Watson with 18 in Novice, Lisa Woykin with seven in Division 3, and Paul Shingler and Heather Sutherland with one each in novice and Division 5 respectively. Meanwhile, the Aquanauts set seven new records at the Wright pool led by coach Wendy Pilla in Division Other individual records were set by Brian Preston in Division 1 100- metre free and Aimie Chernoff in Division 6 100-metre fly. The Division 4 boys broke two records in the free and medley relay while the Division 6 boys broke the medley relay record. Castlegar picked up 11 aggregate medals and two honorable mentions at the two-day meet. In Division 1, Brian Preston won the gold while Keith Kristian picked up the bronze Craig Hawkins collected the bronze followed by Trevor Haviland with an honorable mention in Division 3 Division 6 saw the Aquanauts pick led the way with the gold followed by . Wendy Gouk with the bronze on the girls side. Mario Fehrenberg and Justin Phillips led the way on the boys side tying for the silver followed by Mike Hunter with the bronze. In Division 7 girls, Pilla collected the silver while in Division 7 boys, Colin Carew and Alex Hartman tied for the silver followed by Neil Jones with an honorable mention. Most of Aquanauts will travel south of the border this weekend to attend the Colville Valley swim meet while a small group of 14 and 15 year olds will be attending the B.C. Sum- mer Games in Prince George. Coming up the weekend after these events is the Aquanauts meet to be held at the new Aquatic Centre. For complete results of the Trail meet, see Drought of hits in soaking wet all-star game CHICAGO (AP) — Pick a pitcher Any pitcher. American League manager Tony La Russia’s toughest job at baseball's annual all-star game Tuesday was get- ting up from his dugout seat to signal the bullpen. La Russa started Bob Welch then called for Dave Stieb; ~ Bret Saberhagen, Bobby Thigpen, Chuck Finley and Dennis Eckersley. The six pitchers combined on a two-hitter to beat the National * League 2-0. - “There wasn’t much to swing at up there,’’ La. Russa said. ‘‘They all pit- ched great.” The only. hits the NL managed were singles to centre field by Will Clark in the first inning and Lenny Dykstra in the ninth. In between, there were twa walks, 16 consecutive outs and lots of rain. The AL managed seven-hits. “There wasn't miuch strategy,"’ La Russa said. ‘‘Everyone I sent out there is a good pitcher. I didn’t have to do much work tonight.’” Julio Franco ‘isn’t a pitcher,’ but he helped the AL, too. Franco was selected the all-star most valuable player for breaking a scoreless tie with a two-run double in the seventh off Rob Dibble.- “IT looked at him as he was war- ming up,’’ Franco said. ‘‘I didn’t know much about him.”’ Franco had plenty of time to study Dibble, though Rain delayed the game at the start 15 minutes and again in the seventh for 68 minutes after Sandy Alomar Jr. and Lance Parrish opened the inning with singles off Jeff Brantley to put runners on first and third The weather at Wrigley Field didn’t co-operate. The wind was blowing in at a 2S-kilometre-an-hour clip and the air was damp. “Someone would have had to hit the ball 800 feet tonight to hit it out of here,"’ said AL third baseman Wade Boggs, who had two singles. ‘I thought it was going to take a squeeze play to get home a run.”’ The AL, long a doormat in the all- Star game, now has won three straight and this was its first shutout since beating the NL 12-0 in 1946 at Fen pitched two hitless innings and was in the game at the right time for the vic- tory. “Tony must have seen something, bringing in a pitcher with a losing record to the all-star game,’’ Saberhagen said. ‘‘My, first Wrigley Field experience was a very special one."” Big missing | ing CHICAGO (AP) — The big money took a “break at all-star time; this year. . Eight of ‘baseball’s 10 biggest con- tracts belong ta-players who didn’t make the 1999 all-star teams. The only two Big 10 players who made it to Chicago were Jose Canseco of Oakland, baseball's biggest earner at $4.7 million a year, and Will Clark of San Francisco, who pulls down $3.75 million “I’m not on the team, but that doesn’t mean that I’m not deser- ving,” said Dave Stewart, who has won 20 games in each of the last three Sgasons for Oakland Stewart negotiated a two-year con- tract last year that will begin paying him $3.5 million a year in 1991. At 11- 7, he probably did deserve to be on the all-star team But Tony La Russa, the AL manager and Stewart's manager at Oakland, left him off so he could make his regular start Sunday Nolan Ryan of Texas, at age 43, also arguably should be an all-star But others — like Don Mattingly, Mark Langston, Mark Davis and Robin Yount — didn't deserve it. The only numbers they’ve put up are at the bank Ryan, making $3.3 million next year, is 8-4 with a 3.79 ERA and 116 strikeouts. But La Russa assumed Ryan would like to rest his ailing back Langston, whose five-year contract Equipment Operators Publications and Posters 1 Excavation Work Catalogue *Fallers’ and Buckers Cl Working Near Powerlines Handbook } Safety...Make it Work for You ~ '*REVISED EDITION AVAILABLE IN JUNE, 1990 Please allow 3-4 weeks for delivery of all publications. Prices vary from $.50 to $1.00 per publication outside B.C SEND TO: NAME _ ORGANIZATION ADDRESS CITY OR TOWN | POSTAL CODE PHONE ¢# MAIL TO: WCB FILMS AND POSTERS SECTION P.O. Box 5350, Vancouver, B.C. V6B 5LS WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD 25255! L EDUCATION IS THE KEY TO A SAFER WORKPLACE won a bronze in the Division 2 girls. 7 50-metre free and 100-metre free. up more hardware as Aimie Chernoff way park. The Numbers, page B2 Saberhagen, 5-7 for Kansas City, averages $3.2 million, has an ERA of 3.71, but only a 4-9 record By TOM MALONEY The Canadian Press Look at almost any of baseball’s major offensive categories and Rickey Henderson’s name will be in the top 10 — slugging percentage, home runs, batting average, on-base percentage, stolen bases, runs scored. In his first full season since being released from the Bronx Zoo — Henderson was traded to the Athletics by the New York Yankees on June 20, 1989 — the cocky Oakland outfielder is having an MVP year But make that suggestion to him and he scoffs. To win that award, he needs votes from reporters. “In this generation, I think I’m the best player in the game, but . . . mostly it’s negative stuff from reporters and I never get away from it,’’ Henderson said after a weekend series in Toronto against the Blue Jays PROFILE For all his accomplishments over 10 seasons — he’s challenging or has eclipsed marks set by Ty Cobb, Ted Williams, Mickey Mantle and Lou Brock — Henderson's name doesn’t leap into print when time comes to review MVP candidates. **Maybe before it’s all over I'll write a book. I'll go 'way back and people will think, ‘Wow, Rickey did that great?’ It's because I always get the numbers."" But not the credit, Henderson implies For broadcasters, he’s a dubious interview. His ‘Bad rep’ makes Henderson unlikely MVP he had broken into the majors in 1979. “There's always 20-some guys and everybody's trying to get a different story,’’ Henderson says in explanation of his New York image problems. ‘*Everybody has different opinions, then you get upset with everybody and you don’t want to deal with that."’ In California, however, ‘‘the players, the press, they’re laid-back."* In his 10 full seasons Henderson has averaged 290 with 14 homers, 84 stolen bases and nearly 100 walks a year. Seven times he has scored 100 runs or more. In 1980, his first full season, he broke Cobb's AL clipped speech chalk listener running as rapidly as his legs take him over the basepaths. He built the ‘‘bad rep’’ in New York, where he spent 4% seasons before returning to Oakland, where g record of 96 steals, swiping 100. He ised the mark to 130 two years later. In 1985, his 146 runs scored were the most in the majors since Ted Williams touched home 150 times in 1949. In 1986, he led the league in steals for a record seventh consecutive time Henderson was hitting .247 with 25 steals last year when New York unloaded him for pitchers Greg Cadaret and Eric Plunk and outfielder Luis Polonia, now with the Angels. For Oakland he hit .294 and stole 52 bases. In the ~ playoffs and World Series, he hit .441, and eight of his 15 hits went for extra bases. : But after Henderson signed on for four more years at $3 million a year, there was speculation his inspiration would flag **I. don’t know how people look at me and say that,”’ he said *“When did I not have motivation; I play 150 games, I steal 80-90 bases a year, I score 120-130 runs. What is motivation? Do I have to steal 200 bases, score about 250 and hit .400? Would that be motivated enough?" *