Sy, eo _CastlegarNews october 0, 1983 Hi Arrow leads dart league By CasNews Staff « The Hi Arrow dart club leads the Castlegar Dart League with 20 wins. Dam Inn Diddlers follow with 16 wins. Mark Earle and Steven Spence of the Hi Arrow, lead team play with 17 wins, Frank Loukianoff and Elmer Pelerine of the Dam Inn are tied for second with Nick SPORTS Smith and John Wilson of the Hi Arrow with 16 wins each. Jim Burgess and Richard Maddocks of the Hi Arrow are third with 16 wins. Neil Denisoff and Fred Markin are fourth with 18 wins. Louise Denisoff still holds the record for high score of 154. Bob Makaroff's highest finish of 68 has yet to be beaten. MARINO MEETS DICKERSON Dolphins, Miami Dotphiss mite Dan hs Dan Marine, the hottest new passer in the National Football League, take on the visiting Los Angeles Rams and their league-leading runner, Eric Dickerson, today in the Orange Bowl. The two rookies are the primary reasons their teams are 5-8 and in the thick of their divisional races — Miami tied with Buffalo for first place in the American Football Conference East, Los Angeles tied for second with New Orleans Saints a game behind San Francisco in the National Football Conference West. Other games are: Houston at Cleveland, Tampa Bay at TRAIL AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL (16-38 YEAR OLDS) Invites Applications For: HEAD COACH th, Seattle at Los Angeles Raiders, New England at Atlanta, Detroit at Chicago, New York Jets at San Francisco, Kansas City at Denver, Dallas at New York Giants, Minnesota at St. Louis, New Orleans at Buffalo, Green Bay at Ci and at Phi On Monday night, Washington is at San Diego. Marino replaced starter David Woodley three weeks ago. He was thrown eight touchdown passes and has 11 for. the season. He has been intercepted only three times and is ranked No. 1 among AFC Rams in Orange Bowl Houston and Tampa Bay enter the second half of the season tHe way every team started out the first half — without a victory. Each came close to winning last Sunday, but lost by a field goal. NEAR RECORD The Oilers’ 16-game losing streak over two seasons, is three short of the club record and 11 from the Buccaneers’ NFL record of 26. Houston could be hampered even more if Earl Campbell, the AFC's rushing leader, fails to recover from a groin pull. The Browns, who have gotten into the habit of giving games away (they've lost the ball 28 times, 19 on interceptions), are hoping to avoid their third consecutive loss by They'll start ‘Paul McDonald in place of Brian Si Sipe. The Steelers have a two-game lead in the AFC Central. Pittsburgh, which has won its only two previous meetings against ‘Tampa Bay, is 16-1 in its last 17 games against’ NFC visitors. Quarterback Marc Wilson, who starred last Sunday “night with a th passing gainst previously unbeaten Dallas, goes es Bune for the Seahawks ASSISTANT COACHES FOR THE 1984 SEASON Terms Negotiable Submit Resume By Nov. 14, 1983 To: THE SECRETARY Box 424, Trail, B.C. VIR 4L7 NOVEMBER 5 EXTENDED passers. Dickerson, the second player taken in the draft, has gained 995 yards, 210 more than his closest commavees His 14 touchdowns and 84 points lead the league. this week. Steve Grogan’s next touchdown pass will bea Patriots’ record, breaking the mark of 182 he shares with Babe Parilli. Lions are ‘dein in penalties By The Canadian Press British Columbia is the least penalized team in the Canadian Football League this season, which helps. ex- plain why the Lions have clinched first place in the Western Division. The Lions were one of the most penalized teams until Don Matthews became head coach this year. “A penalty is a decision made He also credits an im- by a player in a split second’ proved ‘defence, with 39 during a play. interceptions, and the punt- “When we see it on film; + ing of Lui Passaglia. The CFL we applaud the ‘good’ de“ record for interceptions is 40 cisions. ‘Hey, ‘that was a’? set by Ottawa in 1973. really, good job of not throw-' Passaglia was bothered by ing that block and taking that’: a serious goin pull in 1982 but penalty.’ We have to’ make’ this year he's averaging 49.8 good decisions not to ‘beat yards on his punts and claims ourselves, ~ he has kicked better on the “It's just a ‘philosophy’ road than indoors in the con- The Lions will use a patch- work lineup in Regina. Joe Paopao and rookie Tim Cowan will share the quar- terbacking duties’ while Roy Dewalt rests a bruised knee. Gerald Roper starts at guard ahead of Glenn Leonhard and Ron Cherkas goes at defen- sive end for Brent. Racette. Gerald Bradley is the im- He is the AFC’s No. 3 passer, while Steve Bartkowski of Atlanta is No, 2 in the NFC. The Bears and Lions have a feud working, a spillover from their last meeting when Detroit's final touchdown came on:Eric Hipple's run off an’ apparently accidental fake field goal by placekicker Eddie Murray of Victoria, who'sald he thought he'd heard an audible to fake the kick. 4SERS TOUGH The Jets’ tailspin has reached three games and they go against the 49ers, whom ‘they’ haven't beat in three meetings. San Francisco owns the NFC's No. 1 offence and No. 2 defence. The Chiefs are in the running for their first playoff berth since 1972, Dallas was a 28-18 winner over New York at Texas Stadium on Sept. 18, but hasn't beaten the Giants on the road since 1979. Minnesota, a two-game leader in the NFC Central, is unbeaten on the road in four games this year while the Cardinals are winless in four at home. The Saints, 6-3, are off to the best start in their 17-year history. ‘The Packers, 4-4 this year and 2-2 in their four games against Cincinnati, have yet to put together more than one victory or one loss at a time in 1983. They pit their explosive offence against Ciricinnati’s, defence, ranked No. 1 fn the league. The Eagles have won their last three meetings with Baltimore and they haven't won in three games at Home this year. Philadelphia is three games behind Dallas in the NFC East, while the Colts, on a t akid, are only one game behind Miami and Buffalo, colesders in the AFC East. Soviet gymnast takes ‘all-round’ DEADLINE ROSSLAND, © B.C. has been called for 96 port receiver selected to re- in 14 games, one Discounts on S$ Applications available at all area ski & sport aP. shops and the Red Mountain ticket office. Pictyres will be taken and passes processed at the following locations: Red Mountain Racers Ski Swap Kinnaird Hall, Castlegar Uplander Hotel, R November 4 — 6:00 - 9:00 p.m. November 5 — 10:00 a.m. - 5: 00 p. m. less than Calgary Stamped- ers, while the other seven teams are in triple figures. \ The Lions and Stampeders both play on the road today during the second-last week of the’ regular-season sched- ule. B.C. plays Saskatchewan Roughriders and Calgary goes against Hamilton Tiger- Cats. “We try and work on the positive aspect of life,” Mat- thews says about the reduc- tion in calls against the Lions, we've tried to instill from the’ trolled atmosphere of B.C. beginning of the season.” Place Stadium. OTTAWA LOWEST “There are many, many In terms of yardage pen-’ areas in which the Lions have alized, the Lions were second improved,” added Matthews. behind Ottawa Rough Riders” “I think our players believe with two games left. Ottawa had been penalized 760 yards and B.C. 789 yards, although the Riders had the most calls against them with 125. Matthews 'said fewer pen- alties is one of the major rea- sons for the Lions becoming a 10-4 team, compared with last year’s finish at 7-7-2 and out of the western playoffs. $10}924] leseig 1YSIqNS}IW Se2}4q Joj2eds ®SD2 D 09°LZ$ 10 184]uUn pesn uo sypep suejjeoxe esow Aupw sng 669tsZSO0TISD 0#22;—X1069S9 _ 00Z1:—xssTsa OSSTs—aSZTWY You'll Flip OVER oer Prices We Desperately Need The Space For New Incoming Merchandise Sale Dates: Mon., Oct. 31 - Sun., Nov. 6 4201S Uj MON S1OMOAUL MOUS #99 42849 suey MON ou; 09€; INO MON place Sammy Greene, who was suddenly released Thursday after an apparent contract hassle. Greene set a club record with 75 recep- tions, but was deemed ex- BUDAPEST (REUTER) — Dmitri Belozertchev of the Soviet Union became the youngest man to win. the world all-round title when he triumphed over a high-class field at the world gymfastics they're a team and that certainly helps.” dable in order to team unity. Nattress insists he’s ‘not a bum’ ‘MONTREAL (CP) — Al- most daily, Ric Nattress goes through a gruelling workout on the ice and then heads for an equally arduous session in the gym, obsessed with prov- ing a point. ‘Tm pot a bum," said the set a goud example.” He vows not to be another Don Murdoch, a reference to the former forward who, when a member of New York Rangers, was suspended by Ziegler for a cocaine posses- sion conviction and hasn't the promise he sopho- more ocean “IT have so much to prove to so many people.” Nattress, 21, was suspend- ed for the regular season by National Hockey League president John Ziegler for a year-old criminal conviction for drug possession, but.the Montreal Canadiens’ sopho- more defenceman will prob- ably have his sentence com- muted to 30 games. That would mean a return to the lineup Dec. 11, and Nattress, a native of Hamil- ton, Ont., is determined to step back into the lineup in the best mental and physical shape of his career. He practises with the team, then heads to the gym where he works out feverish- ly, determined to return to showed in his rookie season when he scored 32 FULL OF HOPE Without trying to judge Murdoch, Nattress says he doesn’t want his career tu go downhill like that, especially after showing so much prom- ise last season, especially during Montreal's five play- off games. “Everything is ahead of me. I haven't lost confidence in my potential.” Nattress travels with the ‘fengert i team and has been given special spotting assignments te, by the coaching staff.. His teammates- have been en- secs couraging and sensitive, helping him recover from the initial depression he felt over the suspension. Te Team officials gave him a Detroit Friday. Belozertchev, 16, recorded. three maximum 10-point scores in the six exercises. He recorded top points on, the high bar, vault-and floor exercises and 9.95 in the other disciplines — the par- allel bars, pommel horse and “rings + to'score’69:85 points: “and*! afi «overall ‘total - of » 119.200. No one came close to the Soviet prodigy’s achieve- ments, with the surprise of the evening being the failure of China’s Tong Fei to mount any sort of challenge. Tong, the inspiration be- hind China's victory in the men's team competition, was first after the team compe- titions, but fell away to finish 85th out of 86. Koji Guishiken of Japan was second and China's Lou Belozertchev made a mark on the. international scene last * year’ “when he won! six gold medals out of a'possible seven at the European junior championships. pion, as well as winning gold medals on the rings, vault and high bar. No Canadians qualified for the men's individual all-round tied with Belozertchev for finals. Weekend Wrap-up jo-1~~3 C0000: the lineup in mid form. “There are so many people who doubt me and my ability to get a grip on my life. 've heard so many things said GL°Ss SCtTs—S2TdS about me... “I'm not a bum. Whatever Sty$ ‘Boy’, St ‘dSOZS | ny mistakes in the past, T 110 @}1\qowmous yesoho, 502-12 Ave., dng 59s wos SUaLV3H INISOUIN saa GLZ1s—O0TdS 059--Z09NU SLbs —OSUE [04 AayL INO INNZNS SNOW TRAI SMVSNIVH want to prove that by work- ing like I am, I can get back my place on this team and be Pesesuor...: a responsible guy who can ‘special p of for his sessions in the gym. He follows it religiously. In addition, he's on a spec- ial diet to keep him at his ideal playing weight. He lifts weights every second day and jogs and rides a sta- tionary bicycle every day. Nattress was fined by an Ontario judge in August for possessing a small amount of marijuana. Genelle Open Mon. - Sat., 8:30.a.m. to 9 p.m. *%01 $300g Bujpnjauy ONIHLOTD LS Sales & Service a ye REGIONAL RECREATION COMMISSION#1 Program starts Nov. taking place; if any perso: the rec 693-2382 soe, students 75¢, adult a ‘00 ocr. 31 Tiny. Tots Halloween costume Party 11:30. 12:20. 1 en. 50€ Complex Hall, Ages 3 - S years. NOV. 1 — Tiny Tot gymnastics 10:30 - 11:30 C lex Hall, ‘Ages3-5. Fee $700 phinaal te NOV. 2 — Lunch hour hockey 12-1. $1.00 NOV. 3 — Adult noon skate 12-1. $1.00 — Rebels vs Creston Clippers Game Time 8:30 Nov: r} Public skating 2:45 to 4: 48 and 7:15 to ry a3. Boy Registration now for the 2nd session of fitness classes, variety hour, skating fundamental and modern dance. Planning for the sinter! area, or has suggestions, pleats contact: Rod or Verona at 2601 - 6th Ave., Castlegar Phone 365-3386 10.4 p.m. children eation program-is now expertise in a particular SeSes Eeess sess Basses on--33 ~ 0-0) Results. Los Angeloe 3 ols a fOr} ‘CACCIAIS — KEEPING BUSY By DAVE) BLAIKIE OTTAWA (CP), — The surprising thing about Charles Caccia is that he has been full of surprises since taking over as federal environment minister ..in August. The job was one he welcomed, removing him from -the thorny labor portfolio he had held since joining the cabinet in 1981, but no one expected the quiet, slightly rumpled Toronto MP to start with quite sich splash. _ In his first two. months Caccia has: ” . © Presented cabinet with a program to put unemployed young people and retired Canadians to work on environmental and conservation jobs. e Promised action by year’s end to drastically cut the lead content of gasoline. e Reached a consensus with the provinces on how to tackle acid rain and made the front page of the New York Times for lecturing U.S. State George Shultz on American reluctance to join Canada in combatting the problem. i e Blasted Ontario Hydro for worsening acid rain by _ burning cheap im; coal. e Taken the side of Nova Scotia landowners in a landmark court battle against the spraying of herbicides 2,4. a ‘and 2,4,6-T. creation of a p: new Seaney ti and ch before they are ii di into the e Warned the forest industry to halt: greedy .har- vesting techniques or face a shortage of forestry resources. STRAIN SHOWS i The strain of all the activity shows as Caccia trudges. in and out of the Commons each day, laden with briefing” papers and d sag and he has an air of permanent Sessile “What is it today?” he sighs as reporters trap him on the stairs leading to his cramped Centre Block office, * Aides protest that he has ‘a meeting waiting but he waves them off, speaking in measured, accented English into a ring of microphones. “He's made to order for the environment portfolio," says aide. +. Asenior ParliamentHill aide says Caccia is “a classic. Liberal, an unremitting reformer. “He's made-to-order for the environment portfolio and he’s very high about getting it. After 15 years in Parliament he still has all his idealism, hasn't lost a bit of it” Caccia was born in Milan, Thaly: 68 gearsiago ‘aad came to Canada in 1955 with a degree in forestry economics from the University of Vienna, two suitcases and $300 in his pocket: He-found work first as a tree planter at the University of Toronto and later as a copper miner in northern Quebec. HELPED IMMIGRANTS ‘The mining job convinced him that immigrants were “being exploited as a cheap source of labor s0 he moved back to Toronto, determined to do what he could to improve their lot. One of his most important contributions was to help found the COSTI training and education centre, an to the i of new immigrants into Canadian society. He also produced a booklet identifying 1,000 key English words for newcomers to know. + When Caccia got into politics in 1964 it was as a Toronto sacra He served four years at City Hall, as a Liberal » then switched to tederal politics in 1968, sweeping the Toronto riding of Davenport in the Year of Trudeaumania, Caceia spent 13 years as a back-bencher, serving during that period as parliamentary secretary for three ministries — Solicitor General, Treasury Board and Manpower and Immigration. He also signed himself with a string of causes, freqt to the government. , STOOD ALONE At times the wrath of his down upon himself, Caccia at various times opposed additional natural gas sales to the United States, fought attempts to force new immigrants to settle in specific areas of Canada, worked to defeat proposals that would have taxed certain union benefits and stood alone among the Liberals to vote against pay increases for MPs and senators. A simple man who lists his hobbies as gardening, reading and family affairs — he is married with two children:— Caccia assumed his chances of becoming a cabinet minister had passed when the call finally came from the prime minister in 1981. Through it all Caccia has tended to the needs of his Davenport riding so religiously that he is referred to as “our prime minister.” From reporter to mayor CALGARY (CP) — Mayor Ralph Klein's secret of ' success is his ability, to come across asa victim rather thana » -says> a political science — pi at the win in 1980, when he won 44.5 per cent of the vote. How did he.do it after a three-year, term that saw University of Calgary. “He has been able to present himself just like the voters —suffering from the same financial woes,” said John Woods. “Normally politicians can't get away with that.” This city’s economy has plummeted since 1980, when the 40-year-old former TV neweman scored an Ypset win in the mayoral race. Voters, givera chance to take out their frustrations in the recent municipal election, chose instead to give Klein an ‘overwhelming vote of confidence. ‘Up against nine contenders, including popular Ald. Sue Higgins, Klein attracted more votes than any mayor in the city’s 108-year history — 182,167 or 85.2 er cent of the ballots cast. Higgins, his closest rival, managed only. 17 205 and, like the other Slee, lost her $100, deposit. VOTES WINS For Klein, it was even more satisfying than his upset, rise six per cent, municipal taxes 42 per cent and vacancy rates 15 per cent? Woods noted that Edmontonians, suffering the samo economic dive, dumped incumbent Mayor Cec Purves. “He was associated in. people's minds with interests which were ‘for the fon,” said Woods, noting Purves has well-known business interests that may have left voters feeling he was insulated from their. financial woes. In contrast, Klein spent 11 years ‘in Calgary living rooms reporting the news for the little guy from city hall. , Like any good reporter, he developed strong contacts throughout the city. All helped get him elected in 1980 and again in 1983, Today, Klein favorite funchtime haunt is still the St. Louis, a working-class beer hall in.a tougher section of downtown Calgary. The mayor usually walks to the place, as - he does to many appointments, preferring crowd contact to the back seats of limousines. Investment leads to big find CAMBRIDGE, ‘ONT. (CP) ° — A $25 investment in two vboxes of old documents may prove to be the bargain of a~ lifetime for an antique dealer. The boxes contained about $2.6 million worth of deben- tures issued by the former city of Galt, now Cambridge, between 1906 and 1964, and David Kergin and his lawyer already have cashed about $39,000 w. However, the City of Cam- bridge is not amused. Cambridge city treasurer John McIntyre has advised Kergin’s lawyer that the city considers the debentures “to be stolen property” and has told its bank not to honor City. of Cambridge . . . and belong to the City of Cam-: bridge,” wrote McIntyre. “I would therefore ask that you release them to us immedi- ately.” He added tht he has the records to prove it. Debentures are issued to individuals or firms who lend, money to citizens or cor- porations. They can be cashed once they mature. Most of the debentures Kergin bought have perfor- ations on them to show they were paid but about $240,000 have no markings at all, said his wife, Judi. The debentures were found about two years ago at maybe “40 or 50 (boxes) — there was a whole truck- load,” Nobes said. Nobes sold them to an auc- tioneer — who took a 20-per- cent commission on the $25 sale. Kergin bought them “strictly because of: their nostalgic value,” thinking that someone from Galt might want to buy an old de- benture to hang on their wall, Judi Kergin said. . . CASHED THEM IN Kergin held on to them for weeks, until:,a friend sug- . gested they might be worth collection. Kergin’s lawyer, W.D. Jen- kins, took ‘some of the de- bentures to the bank for He received a bank draft for about $37, which was put into a trust account. . However, the bank stop- ped payment on the draft. In the meantime, the de- bentures have been turned over to police on the agree- ment they won't return them tothe city without giving the law firm 21 days notice. “Our position is that they are negotiable instruments something. He took two to and the onus is on the City of the bank and later receiveda Cambridge to prove that $2,000 credit to his account. Kergin said he went to the bank and said: “Hey, this is a they have been paid,” said Jenkins's partner, Ted Well- hauser. “And if they are not payment on them. “These documents were previously presented for pay- ment and honored by the a city landfill site by Richard Nobes, who selected the two boxes because they had the oldest dates. There were mistake.” But the bank's em- paid, we would be advising ployees laughed and said it our client to present them for was no mistake. _ Payment.” Did You Know? You can contribute to United Way by... 3 1. Payroll Deduction 2. Bank & Credit Union Deduction 3. Cash Donation 4, Mail in Contribution Help Support. the United Way Koval al Scot Motor bi Golf, fishin, . Quiet, relaxing. Mescaramute. The Royal Scot offers you: * Quality * Value * Hospitality * Comp ly equipped ap suites. * Indoor ‘pool, saunas, jacuzzi whirlpool, recreation room. * Walk to attractions, museums, Legislative Buildings, tours, parks, shopping in Ol’ Town Victoria. * CAA/AAA Four Diamond Award + Attractive packages and weekly rates to April 30, 1984. Call or Write Phone (604) 388-5463 Telex Cees, 425 Quebec Victoria, B. & Vav 1W7 TorontoS NY Rangers Vancouver $ Hartford 4 (OT) Calgary 7 Winnipeg t a SCORING LEADERS. thy, janti, Ver . Stosiny, SSBBL2NNBR ‘Spor Is Castlegar SUNDAY HOCKEY — COMMERCIAL LEAGUE: Green Machine vs. Williams Moving and Storage, 12:30 p.m.; Carling O'Keefe vs. Mountain Sports Hut, 9:30 p.m. Both games at arena complex. FOOT — NFL: Dallas Cowboys vs. New York Giants, 10 .m., channel 7. Green Bay Packers vs, Cincinnati Bengals, 1 p.m., channel 7; Seattle Seahawks vs. L.A. Raiders, 1 p.m., channel 6. CFL: Calgary Stampeders vs. Hamilton Tiger Cats, 10:30 a.m., channel 9. B.C. Lions vs. Saskatchewan Roughriders, 11:30.a.m., channel 13, SKATING — SKATE CANADA ‘83: 5 p.m., channel 13. MONDAY . L — NFL: vs. San Diego Chargers, 6 p.m., channel 4, HOCKEY & FIGURE SKATES NEW & USED Cu-Dor Fitted & Shar, ~ TO YOUR NI Sports Castlegar IF YOU AHEARING AID THROUGH THE WCB... Representatives of the Workers’ Compensation . Board, Hearing Branch will be at the W.C.B, Area Office, 327 Baker St., Nelson on Wednesday, November 2, 1983 from 8:30 am. to 1:30 p.m. to provide counselling and’service for persons with hearing aids obtained through the Workers’ Compensation Board. It will be necessary to telephone the Nelson W.C.B. Area Office at 352-2291 for an appointment. WORKERS’ QD COMPENSATION Eedriitiry Bossi to 50% o . 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STORE HOURS Monday to Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Fhdsons Bay Company