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Maxi Lipsticks Come and see our great selection of Valentine Gift Gp a Ideas poe ml * Valentine Cards © Paper ‘ILove You’ Pillows By The Canadian Press Detroit Red Wings hope their 4-0 upset of New York Islanders on Tuesday night will start them on the way to a playoff berth in the Na- tional Hockey League's Nor ris Division. ‘The Red Wings are last in the Norris but their win, coupled with Toronto's 6-3 loss to the Blues in St. Louis, moved them within two points of the fourth-place Maple Leafs. Two goals from Ivan Bol direv and flawless goaltend ing from Greg Stefan enabled the Red Wings to beat the defending Stanley Cup cham pions and end a nine-game losing streak. Elsewhere, it was: Win. nipeg Jets 5, Quebec Nor: diques 3; and Montreal Can. adiens 7, Hartford Whalers 7. Stefan's shutout was the first in 1'/2 seasons in the NHL for Stefan, 23, a native of Brantford, Ont. who played his junior hockey for Oshawa Generals of Ontario Hockey league. He stopped five shots without a stick midway through the third period, drawing a resounding ova- tion from the 17,200 fans in Detroit's Joe Louis Arena. Reed Larson scored his 18th goal of the season after 4:35 when he knocked Kelly Kisio's rebound past Roland Melanson. while defenceman Gord Lane was off for high sticking. John Ogrodnick deflected a Ron Duguay slap shot for his 88rd goal of the season at 7:10 with New York's Denis Potvin off for tripping. Boldirev scored an unas- sisted goal at 9:03 of the sec- ond period. Lane tried to knock down a pass with his glove, but it went right to Boldirev who skated in alone and beat Melanson. Boldirev scored his second goal of the night and 19th this season on a power play with 6:16 left. Melanson made 33 saves on the night. BLUES 6 LEAFS 3 In St. Louis, Brian Sutter scored two goals and assisted on another to lead the Blues over Toronto, a loser an eight-straight time on the road. Bernie Federko, Doug Wickenheiser, Perry Ander son and Doug Gilmour also scored for the Blues. Rick Vaive, with his 39th of the season, Danny Daoust and Terry Martin replied for the Leafs. The Blues, with Mike Liut in goal, outshot Toronto 29-23, with Mike Palmateer taking the loss. Injuries stripped the Leafs, who won only one of their last 11 games, of left winger Walt Poddubny in the third period and defenceman Gaston Gingras in the first. JETS 5 NORDIQUES 3 Dale Hawerchuk and Paul Maclean each scored a goal and drew an assist to help Winnipeg snap Quebec's 14 game, home-ice undefeated string. Tim Watters, Thomas Steen and Laurie Boschman also scored for the Jets, while Wilf Paiement, Michel Goulet and Peter Stastny scored for the Nordiques. Winnipeg goaltender Doug Soetaert turned aside 38 shots, while Quebec's Clint Malarchuk stopped 27. CANADIENS 7 WHALERS 7 Montreal's Bob Gainey fired a wrist shot past Hart- ford goaltender Greg Millen with 61 seconds left to sal vage a point for the home team. Hartford's Ron Francis had scored twice in the per- iod to snap a 5-5 tie, but Pi erre Nondou made it a one-goal game at 11:59. The Whalers took a 31 first-period lead on goals by Sylvain Turgeon, Joel Quen- neville and Mike Zuke. Bobby Smith, with his second of the game, Ryan Walter, Guy Carbonneau and Guy Lafleur, who also had three assists, scored successive goals as Montreal stormed into a 5-3 lead in the second. period. Goals by Blaine Stoughton and Bobby Crawford late in the period tied it 5-5. Save % Off Regular Price ber in the Jan. £0 Provincial Hal Nash No. He'd better not. he was going to resign. I don't think he'll run. He did say He probably will. Centuy 21. MOUNTAINVIEW AGENCIES lottery ‘draw is: 2097909. The. most recent. winning numbers’ are: digits $25 and list two digits $10, 4 PHARMASAVE “tn the Heart of Downtown Castlegar". OPEN THIS SUNDAY, CARL'S DRUG CLOSED. 365-7813 EAIRD PLAZA 676 -18th St., CASTLEGAR NEW LISTING — Would you believe this ‘neor-new heme in South Costlegor? ‘with tour bedrooms, lireplace. two Priced to sell in the 60s. Celgor Rood. Large tomily home. car corport rock tireplate, idea! hobby tarm. Near new home in High Completely finished inside and out Sbbdrms, 3 baths, 2 mosonry fireplaces ‘of the many features of this ‘Must sell this lorge 3 bedroom fomily home with o mother-in-law suite downstairs, Close to schools ond sastlegor. Call now. tennis Get an eagle eye's view of Castlegar - = “geste ee oar™ mnimites trom the city on Pass Creek Rd. on. 4 'é tinted rec room. Call now. ESTATE SALE! Reverwe home. Close to alhamenities. Some TLC. specioculer view home. ‘with 3-pee. ensuite, covered sundeck. . Master bedroom “Blueberry Creek. 3 bedroom comer lot. Private. 70s. Reduced for quick sale. 1196 sq. ft. of ‘baths, suns. intercom. dotune living. 2% PLUS, PL Immaculate home close to schools and shepping in Oglow Svedivieion Beautiful lot. utmost privacy. Contractor built, Brand new, lorge Century 21 Mountainview Top Salesmen in Agencies Ltd. for 1983 DAVE DANIEL GLEN WILSON Congratulations GLEN & DAVID Compact ond immaculate home in Lakeview Drive on large lot. Otters to $31,900. Features built-in microwave, Priced 16 sell in the 50s. in South Costiegar. Lots of room for children to play. Coll now. ROCKER WIN Stanley Humphries Jr. Rocker makes pass to teammate in weekend home game against Midway. Rockers came away with 84-37 victory. — CasNews Photo by Ryon Wilson Williams victory Green Machine beaten By CasNews Staff Williams = Moving took ad- vantage of numerous scoring opportunities Sunday after- noon to defeat Green Ma- chine 15-8 in Castlegar Com- mercial Hockey Leauge ac tion. Tim Paul scored five goals for the winning team and Doe Savinkoff had four. In the evening game, Car- ling O’Keefe beat Mountain Sports 7-5 with Mal Stelck scoring four goals for O’*Keefe. In the Williams-Green Ma- chine high-scoring game, Wil- liams led 5-1 after the first period on three goals by Sav- inkoff and two by Paul. Credited with: the assists were Wayne Kinakin with four, Paul with two, Frank Costa, and Savinkoff and Bob Keraiff with one each. In the second period, Green managed ‘three goals, but Williams Moving scored four to lead 9-3. Williams Moving got goals from Mike McCormack with two, Paul and Keraiff with Canucks’ earnings fall VANCOUVER (CP) — Vancouver Canucks’ dismal nee on ice this sea- son was matched on its profit and loss statement in the last year ag, Earnings per share fell to 8 cents from 20 cents. Revenues. increased to one goal each. Assists came from Elmer Williams with one, and Wayne Kinakin, Costa, Savinkoff and Rod McKenzie with one each. Gerry Tomlin scored two goals for Green Machine and Terry Halisheff got one along with one assist. Terry Stre- lioff and Bill Nazaroff also as- sisted. Williams continued to fill up the scoresheet in the third frame with six goals, while Green Machine, replied with five goals. Mike Schmitt and Paul got two goals each for Williams Moving, and Kinakin and Savinkoff had one each. Cos- ta and Keraiff collected three Rebels assists apiece, Savinkoff had two, and Paul and Bruce Bermel had one each, Strelioff had two goals for Green Machine, while Brian Edwards, Tony Nazaroff and Halisheff also replied. Ed- wards got three assists, while Strelioff had two and Nazaroff had one. CARLING O'KEEFE 7 MOUNTAIN SPORTS 5 In the second game, Carling O'Keefe led 3-1 in the first period on two goals by Stelek and one by Jerry An- tignani. Tony DaRosa, Mitch Quaedvlieg, Jerry Antignani, and Perry Samoyloff, got the assists. Dan Walker scored for record 8-5 triumph By CasNews Staff In the Rebels’ victory: Sat- Castlegar Rebels Saturday urday night, the home team recorded their first.victory in jed at the beginning of the. five games with*an 85 tri, game and never looked back. umph over Grand Forks Bor. They were ahead 3-1 at the der. Bruins in Kootenay In end of the first period, and ternational Hockey League 68 after 40 minutes. my Soe er ks. Lie Armstrong and weekend, Rossland beat Kim- berley 51, Creston Lyle Stoushnow,.. Walter ‘Trait ¢3 apt Spokane Wasilenkoff and Scott Jones out Nelson 9-0. The Elk.Val- .triputed one each ley-Columbia Valley game nipped the Rebels 3-2, Grand Forks beat Trail 7-6 and Bea- Keraift, Terry ‘Argotow, ver alley doubled Nelson 8-4, Jones, Wasilenkoff, while Spokane. defeated Corbett and. Perebudoff. got Cranbrook 10-5, Columbia one each. Rebel action Castlegar son beat Grand Forks 1 Sports Hut. Perry Klit and Steve Simonen set up the 1. Mountain Sports scored twice in the second period, while O'Keefe added one to maintain a one-goal margin. Joe Antignani and Aaron Stoushnow scored for Moun tain Sports. Assists came from Pino Laurino, Dan Mar- kin, Simonen and Ken Gor. ABC signs Olympic deal CALGARY (CP) — Organizers of the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary said a deal announced Tuesday in which the ABC-TV will pay $386 million (Canadian) for U.S. television rights virtually guarantees the Games will be debt-free. The Olympic TV contract, signed after 11 hours of heated bidding in Lausanne, Switzerland, is the fattest in “antstoF: +f. “The television companies expressed through their bidding a willingness to go for broke,” said Frank King, chairman of the Calgary Olympic organizing committee. ABC president Roone Arledge, reached in Lausanne by USA Today, told the Washington-based newspaper network negotiators spent 11 hours with the Calgary group, during which time ABC increased its bid “three, four, maybe five times.” Arledge said the network's original bid was less than $300 million. “It was a tough fight — especially with NBC — all the way,” Arledge said. “It (the 1988 rights) was very desirable because of the timing and the location and the amount of live programming we could do. “It was very sought-after by all the networks.” TIME ZONE RIGHT Two major factors led to ABC's record payoff — Calgary is only a two-hour time difference from New York, meaning the network can televise events such as hockey and ice skating in prime time, and the 1988 Summer Games in Seoul pose problems because of the political instability in that country and the 13-hour time difference between South Korea and New York. Bidding for the Games in Seoul has not yet begun. King, who spoke to Calgary reporters by telephone from Lausanne, said the ABC contract “reduces for all Cal garians once and for all any risk or any doubts they may have had about the ability of these Games to finance them: selves.” He said the three private U.S. networks were eager to broadcast the Calgary Olympics because their North American location will allow live, prime-time coverage to the massive American audience, drastically increasing the rates charged to advertisers. In contrast, ABC is paying about $110 million to broad- cast next menth’s Winter Olympics in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia, while U.S. rights to the Summer Games in Los Angeles in July will cost the network about $265 million. ABC is receiving about $300,000 for every 30-second, prime-time ad from Sarajevo. SHOW SPECIAL INTEREST King said the networks also showed special interest in Calgary because, for the first time, the Olympics will extend through three weekends, which will provide extra advertis ing revenues. Details of the Swiss bidding war, which followed 18 months of preliminary talks, were not released because the networks must battle again soon to decide which will telecast the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, Korea. Olympic officials had already lessened the threat of ending up like Montreal, which was left with a $1-billion debt after the 1976 Summer Olympics, by getting the local, Alberta and federal governments to take responsibility for almost all construction projects. ‘The organizing committee must give $103 million from its ABC contract to the International Olympic Committee. Another $77 million must be set aside in an IOC trust to cover coats of providing worldwide TV coverage. ‘That leaves $206-million for Calgary organizers — $31.1 million more than they had estimated from all available TV rights in an earlier break-even financial plan. ea Nordics lead series Nordic Ski Tour- held Sunday at the Castlegar Golf Club trails. The Nordic club leads with 79 points to 23 for Blackjack Club of Rossland and 19 for the Kokanee club of Nelson. , Cross-country skiers in junior! held Sunday at Castlegar Golf Club. The race was the ‘ “KOOTENAY CUP . . wie ee ar ee girl eeinanty prepare for Kootenay Cup series race | « first of a. three-series competition. Costiows Phote by Ben Thor-Larsen $4.898 million from $3.620 while Cranbrook million.