OFF AND RUNNING . . . Saturday's Sunflower Run got off to a great start. Weather cooperated by providing sunshine for-the annual Appeal court upholds dec MONTREAL (CP) — Que- bec Court of Appeal has rejected an attempt by Ger- ard Niding, former right- hand man of Montreal Mayor Jean Drapeau, to overturn a lower court decision sending him to trial on corruption charges linked with the 1976 Summer Olympics. Niding — chairman of the city’s executive -committee when contracts to build Olympic facilities were handed out — was sent to: trial in 1981 by Sessions Judge Claude Joncas on charges of “fraud or breach of trust” in the awarding of contracts to an engineering firm owned by Regis Tru- deau. Trudeau was also ordered to trial on charges of bribing Niding in exchange for ob- taining contracts. The Ap- peals Court also upheld this decision Friday. Trudeau's firm . received jacent underground parking garage. Niding is also charged: with having “demanded, accepted, offered or arranged to ac- cept” from Trudeau's firm a “loan, reward, advantage or benefit” in exchange - for awarding contracts. NOT CONVINCED In the ruling Friday, the Appeals Court said it could overturn the sessions judge's decision only if it: could be determined that he had ex- ceeded his powers in sending Niding to trial on the basis of a complete lack of evidence. A publicity ban was placed one | 15 PIECES OF GOLDEN CHICKEN © during July AVAILABLE AT BOTH CASTLEGAR LOCATIONS. on evideiize heard at the pre- liminary hearing, on the re-- quest of defence lawyers. The ban remains in effect, meaning testimony mention- ed in the Appeals Court judg- ment Friday can't be pub- lished. The only defence wit-- ness called.at the preliminary hearing was Drapeau. In previous legal argu- ments before Superior Court, Sports Castlegar event and a good turnput of runners made the event a success. —CosNewsPhoto by Chris Grothom | ision added that the Criminal Code’ provisions for municipal cor- ruption specify that a direct link must be established with ‘a specific action. The charges say the of- fences’ took place between : January, 1978, and Decem- ber, 1975. The decision Friday was made by a three-judge panel of the ne a ae The Five lies sh Open, final round ire from n Reval Birkdale Golf Chet in South England, 8 om AUTO RACI Michigan tional S| rookiyes Miche, he the" at Micon Interna- chonne champlonship, 5 Men's metas Tournament, final day, 8:30.0.m. to 6 p.m., ‘to Texas Rangers YANKEES 3 Waeaad 1 NEW YORK (AP) — ie Ray Fontenot Rien five hits over seven innings and Dave Winfield drew a bases- loaded: walk that broke a fifth-inning tle as New York Yankees‘ edged’ Texas 8-1 Saturday, handing the Amer- ican League West Division- up a'single and a walk. Re- Hever Rich Gossage ‘struck vout the side and then pitched the ninth for his 11th save. Fontenot, making his third tnajor-league start since be- ing called up from Triple-A on June 19, struck out five and walked one. He allowed ‘Campese traded KELOWNA (CP) — _owna Wings announced to- day that the Western Hoc- wings for future consider- ation: 4 Campese was with the Winter Hawks when they won the’Memorial Cup in Portland last season. Golf club Castlegar senior men's golf: club. were guests of the Castlegar: ladies’ club, on Tuesday. Low Net teams yawarded-balis were:!O;Loeb- Carknoriand Janice ‘Kelley; Harry. Taylor, ‘Geo, Armstrong, and Mae Moroso; Geo. Wilson, N. Fishwick and Pat Verzuh; Bob Wadey, M. Waite, Ann Fishwick and Trott Leslie Johanson. ‘Balls were awarded for good putting to (1) H. Wil- liams, M. Verzuh, J. Kauf- man, Norma MacDonald, and (2) G. Crossley, R. Jacobson, i L. Makortoff, M. Johnstone. Mike Verzuh chipped in for FASTBALL — Kicnalrd Park. — SunFest Tournament, final day, 9:30 a.m., Kinnaird Pane ING — SunFest Cance Rall CANGENG — SuaFest lly Contest, 12:30 p.m. to 4:30 CAR RALL RALLY — Youth on Wheels rally, 1 p.m., arena.complex. MONDAY BASEBALL — Meter yee Sa sponoel aes nikolf, Inland field; Labait's ver Ca "Carling One Keele ‘Kinnaird forks game times 6 p.: er 730 po mena Leogue al Baltimore Orioles vs. Seattle ‘Marl. 1 Leegue: ‘Northwest Homes vs. Hi , infand’ Carling O'Keefe vs. Thrums, Kinnaird te Park, game times 6p. BASEBALL — i] one 5 Me Te, erry f Major lester cr inci naald Reds vs. Montreal Expos, FASTBALL — Commercial Leogue: Thrums ve. Koleeokelti:¢ p.m., Thrums field. WE WILL SELL YOU i Only the Bike for roma lta YOUR SIZE AND Sports Castlegar a Birdie on No. 7. A special decorated cake made by. Mae Moroso was won by Peter Murphy. \ , ‘The draw for July 19 is as follows: (Ace of Aces) 8 a.m. Dave Hostetler's run-scoring single in the second inning. New York scored twice off Mike Smithson, 6-8, ‘in the fifth inning as Roy Smalley and Jerry Mumphrey stroked one-out singles. An- dre Robertson doulbed in one ~ run and, one out later, Bert Campaneris and Winfield drew consecutive walks. OAKLAND 12 BOSTON 5 BOSTON (AP) — Pinch hitter Garry Hancock belted a two-run double to key a four-run seventh inning as Oakland A's snapped a six- game Am League base- ball losing streak with a 12-5 victory Saturday over Boston Red Sxo. The A's jumped on reliever Bob Stanley for seven runs in two innings to end a striae: of. 10 consecutive losses to the Red Sox. The victory was only the second for Oakland in 22'games at Fenway Park, and their first since Aug. 90, 1981. Oakland rookie reliever Keith Atherton, 1-0, allowed just two hits in 61-8 innirigs. He replaced rookie Gorman Heimueller, who gave up five runs in less than four innings, The A's trailed 5-4.when- Wayne Gross led off with the seventh with a double and Mike Heath got an infield hit. Rickey Henderson’ followed with an RBI double and Han- cock then delivered his two- run double to make it 7-5. Hancock later scored on Jeff Burrough’s sacrifice fly. WEEKEND WRAP-UP toca 3 F i all Ay aE F i pestis E WBDRBRESRE EEGSS S382 HuNER Debye Leslie Johanson, Sue For- OTe rest,- Verna Chernoff; 8:05 Mae Moroso, Judy Wayling, Sereisht. L. Makortoff; 8:10 Joan Mar- L, Ferworn, Ed. Woodward; 8:20 Anne Fishwick, Fran Henderson, N. MacDonald; the Intercontinental Cup baseball series Friday. Can- Ie d Mountain Ski Area . Take advantage of EARLY SEASON DISCOUNTS ‘now being offered on RED MOUNTAIN SEASON PASSES for 1983-84, Purchase your pass before July 31 and 1. Pay the same rates that were in effect bet- ween Aug. 31 and Nov. 15, 1982 (less than the rates that were in effect after Nov. 1 |. 1982). 2. You have the opportunity to for yout ss in two installments. Halt pojotte July July 31 with the remainder payable August 31. Applications are available and payment may be made at: MOUNTAIN SPORTS HUT (Costiegor) SETH MARTIN SPORTS (Weneta Piczo) ¥: CHAMPION SPORTS (rel) RED MOUNTAIN TICKET OFFICE ROSSLAND, ‘BC. ‘ada, which lost to Holland 14-9 on Thursday, is 0-2. 22 sersiesssney BesseNeNET eSSRBEs enbnebe f SeRBUBREES? ed pabbue sl gSsc1l Freon = szauee 7 Bee! BS uEERE geusescusy. 6. Home runs: Evens, San Frencisco, 21; + murphy. | ‘aitenta, 20; Guerrero, ‘Los 1%; Dawson, Montreal, x ee }, Bedrosion. Atlenta, 13; Levell roneace, LeSmith, 1 emul Sebbeos2 See aeseee: eessses sezansenen. 312 blestPerrish, patrol 27 ngerrish, Detrolt, 27: McRee, Kansas epee Minnssote, 20: Righet, New York ; Miiwoukee, 629980, 397 733, 3.81. BuBlsS VRRE> “S8xBar sBRB couwn cones 2nd Session July 18 - July 29 REGISTRATION July 18 — 9a.m. - 12 neon Phone 365-5106 for information. reads like ' “I guess thinking back, the best part about my life has been my swimming,” said Mary Wade Anderson to me on that rainy evening when she sat curled up on her couch sipping a cool glass of clear wine. (“I'm always looking for good wines . . ."). Surrounding her in her cozy living room are her antiques, photos, collections of glassware, wall hangings; momentos of places she’s been, things she's done, excursions she's taken. She's lived in four countries and has met and talked with famous people and has done things that most of us can only dream about. She has sailed on the Atlantic Ocean for weeks at a time, has single-handedly managed deluxe hotels, was Britain’s national swim champion and has feasted on some of the finest cuisine in the world. Her hobbies are cooking (she collects gourmet cookbooks), -politics and swimming. Mary was born in the north of England and with the encouragement of her father, Mary and her sisters began swimming, and swimming seriously. “My father was the greatest man in my life. He had the greatest influence on my life. He insisted that if we were going to become swimmers we would be the best.” She had one-to-one epee and this plus daily rigorous practice resulted in her first becoming the local and then the district champion. “Swimming occupied my entire life. Swimming is tremendously competitive in England. There are so many indoor pools. They swim all year.” She continues, ‘We could wear out a swimsuit in a few weeks. They were poor silk and were fastened with a button on the shoulder. It was strictly work in the water.” The war broke out when Mary was 12, and “at the age of 18 I was promptly dispatched off to school in Wales.” She attended the prestigious Trevethwick School and here too her leadership qualifies were evident. She became captain of her “house,” captain of her hockey team and “head girl” which meant she was the top scholastic achiever in her class of girls. ‘When she was 14 she earned the title of national swimming champion. Her ultimate now? The Olympics. Her dreams were dashed, however, when the 1948 Olympics were postponed because of the war. The four-year wait until the next Olympics would make Mary too old. “At 17 you were over the hill in swimming.” : In 1949 when she was 21 and supposedly “over the hill” she entered an international competition in Manchester, England and came away with the gold medal. “I missed the ceremonies and never-picked up my gold medal, and in those days the medals were real gold ~«.":-She added, “Somewhere in Manchester there is a gold medal with my name on it.” Why didn't you pick it up? “That wasn't the point. The whole idea was that I could win when I was supposedly was too old!” As a young adult, Mary came to North America, settled in Texas, and got a job as the “continuity director” RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — The more education a man’s wife has had, the more likely he is to develop heart dis- ease, a new study says. Men whose wives have at- tended college and are work- ing are more than times as likely to develop heart disease as men whose wives have had only a grade-school education and do not work, Suzanne Haynes of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the principal author of the study, wives sicken husbands Strike Up the Band .. . Answer in Wednesday paper (Never, in | pins ‘8 Fountain wn Electron Sites “iene 108 Geous of ar Barve {Breach 5 Correct - MASE” vet ft Fs Bo ave sew wm soa Si RSefer nactay ‘4 Camentine's rte i it if f i fi é ir i se if i cir Ll ii i iif i 5 i if il il r nui ie he i in rtaier t i ipa the Beguine” BTIPFE-I3-MPF ATHHFS BJE SFHZLFEX VFELZAF MX CEV- ‘Today's Cryptoquip cleat: J equals ©. This Crossword Puzzle sponsored by the following businesses... < wucnvnnestannence peguasonaduaccsenocoonsbucsagesonsanocnt FORMER NATIONAL CHAMPION ee 5 A ' swim champion in Britain at age 14, Mary for CBS radio and TV. “Now, you have to remember, this was TV in the 50's. I was even on a panel show. They would take a photo of something and blow up a little piece of it and we had to guess what it was.” In those early TV years she met and worked with such Grand Old Opry stars as Bill Mack and Porter Wagoner, and in her spare time she coached a children's swim team. San Francisco was her next move. “I had the choice then of going with a PBS-type of station or with Franklin © Mielui of the San Francisco 49ers football team.” She chose the 49ers, and became a “special assistant” to owner Franklin Mielui. The work was demanding. The hours were long and hard. She loved it. Each TV broadcast, she told me, was a major production which required hundreds of hours of advance: preparation. “From early morning until late at night every day of the week.” “When you hear those football announcers fill in whith little things they say off the top of their head, well, ‘those:are-all on scripts; sometimes 48 pages of them.” ~\And it was:Mary who'researched and wrote the lengthy scripts. Besides the football players who treated Mary as their younger sister, she also met other athletes such as tennis player Pancho Gonzales. “I met a lot of celebrities, said. The findings were based on a 10-year follow-up of 269 married couples who had completed psychological and Her study, published in the July issue of the American Journal of Epidemiology, found that men whose wives had completed eight grades tional. still keeps her hand in by lerson social questionnaires between 1965 and 1967, when three the husbands were between 45 and 64 years of age. Because the study was based on data collected at a time when it was unusual for women to work, the findings should not be applied without question to married couples today, Haynes said. COLUMBIA COIFFURES, eS “Ph. mbia Ave., Cast 65-6717 nine] $¢ JUILDING SUPPLIES LTD. MEMBER OF TUA-BR-MARTS LID. 368-6466 Weneta Junction TRA AUTO CENTRE MAZDA-AMC DEALER Beaver Fall or less had an 8.8-per-cent chance of getting of coronary hearth disease. The rate of heart disease in those whose wives had nine to 12 years of education was 16.4 per cent, while in those whose wives completed 18 years of school or more, it was 21.7 per cent. When the highly educated women worked, the heart Average time of solution: 67 min. CYPRESS SAUSAGE DELICATESSEN imming In the local recreation commission's Masters’ Swim Program. and you know, most of them are really nice people.” She also got to eat ir “fabulous” restaurants which probably fueled her love for.gourmet food. Being a women in the workforce during those years she was often not taken too seriously. Franklin Mielui . sent her once to check over and purchase the newest | invention, a high speed duplicating machine for copying tapes. She describes her reception by the engineers as “just ghastly. The mere idea that a woman could use a machine like this!” At the end of two years Mary moved to New Orleans and was asked to manage the rooftop area of the Royal , Orleans Hotel, a very posh place, frequented by loads of celebrities who counted upon Mary to keep their stay free of interruptions by bothersome fans and media people. Soon she was off to another challenging position, this time the Denver Hilton and the Brown Palace. It was in Denver that Mary met U.S. President Harry Truman. “Those days the president certainly didn't. have the ‘security around him like today. I went.up to the kitchen. It was the entrance to the stage and it was empty. I knew he would be coming through it, so 1 sat on the stainless steel counter and waited.” It wasn't long before President Truman and his entourage walked through the door. She continues, - peusngnnnncsccaneazenresasssonesscurseassannnascessoraz disease risk for their hus- bands climbed even higher, Haynes said. Children appear to aggra- vate the situation, too, she noted. “The more children that they had, the higher the rate,” she said. ycK Nid UP! en KOOTENAY FRAME GALLERY Across from Beaver Auto Beaver Falls 367-6279 SUMMER STAFF 6pm; Fel. 10a.m. -9 p.m. ir 365-5414 CASTLEGAR NEWS, July 17, 1983 B83 asnononsnssaeeuecgocensustscgoceensassanscasceccecgocosuunegccnsnesons “When you meet people in power they seem to have an atmosphere around them, an aura, a kind of charisma. I looked at this man. He had the bluest eyes I have ever. seen in my life. Stark. I said, ‘You look so much better than your pictures. You should really complain.’ ” In 1964 her husband's work brought Mary to Castlegar where she has lived for 18 years. “I really didn’t want to come here. It'was such a difference from a big city.” I was incredulous. After dining -with professional athletes, bumping into famous movie and TV person- alities like David Brinkley and Sidney Poitier and having conversations with political powers, what has kept you in Castlegar? She smiled and shifted her-position in the | couch. “I don’t really know. I'm terribly attached to the town now. It’s become home. There's something about this town that holds people.” When they arrived in Castlegar they lived in Robson and Mary bought the bookstore which she managed. Thirteen years ago she sold the store and. entered another demanding, competitive, long-hours job'— real estate. She was the first woman realtor in Castlegar, and still goes at’her work enthusiastically. “Buyirig a house is the most ‘important thing in people's lives,” she says. “It's not like buying a TV or a car. Cahadians are very home-oriented. They like to have their home and the piece of property.” And yes, Mary still swims. She doesn't miss a night of her Master's Swim Club where she through her. laps without stopping. “I swim minimum of three-quarters of a mile Tuesday and Thursday.” Even though she's basically a “big city” person, she joined right into Castlegar activities when she came. She was on the Bicentenniel Committee in 1971 which made the Doukhobor Village a reality. She was also, vice-president of the Rota Villa for a year and the first woman president of the Chamber of Commerce. ° From her childhood swimming to her hotels to real estate, has always been in very competitive positions. She's the kind of person who smiles best under pressure. MARY WADE + «. met Harry Truman oauagneccnssacuceusnasuesesenasasiouane « Regional Recreation Commission No. 1's summer program workers include (from left) Beth Krug, Martin Andrews an Kubos. The three will be leading youngsters in a summer filled we hiking, canoeing, community activities an: ts. id coordinator Pat special