The Stanley Humphries Secondary School swim team returned home from Victoria, tired but satisfied . with its third-place finish at the B.C. High School Swim championships held George told to pipe dc the Lions and asked us to re-- mind him this was nota B.C. VANCOUVER (CP) — Krazy George was got at Sunday and some people — not the B.C. Lions — might say that’s why the Toronto Argonauts had a victory par- ade Tuesday in Toronto. For George — the Cali- fornia balding blond who pounds a drum to drive Lions fans to a frenzy during Can- adian Football League games ‘THIRD IN| PROVINCE. . team placed third in pionships in Victoria o: Stanley Humphries swim high school swim cham- ern wi consisted of: back row (f Bx Balahura, Ken Kinakin, Carl Gruden, Alexis Walsh, have better access to a swimming facility. “These kids had to get up and be ready to climb onto a bus at 6 a.m. two mornings a week and trav- el-to Nelson and practice — has been said to be the Lions’ not-so-secret weapon, particularly under the B.C. Place Stadium dome, which drives the sound down to the playing surface. George's real name is George Henderson, and be- fore he became Krazy George he was a high school teacher. But for the Grey Cup he was both gagged and hobbled Dynamiters down Royals i KIMBERLEY (CP) — Kim. berley Dynamilers, led” by the two-goal performances of. Jim. Jarrett and Gerry Stoughton, downed the fifth- place Cranbrook Royals 7-8 in Western International Hoc- key League action Tuesday night. The Dynamiters led 2-1 after the first period and 6-3 after 40 minutes. Ray Greg- orash, Glen Leavins and Rick n WIHL Willey got the.other Kim. berley goals. , Dan Clark had two for the Royals, while Bob Murdoch added a single. Kimberley goaltender Roy Schultz made 28 saves, while Leo Karchie blocked 27 for. Cranbrook. The Dynamiters are in fourth spot with a 7-7 record. Cranbrook now has 4-8 rec- ord. f HOMEGOODS iNiga ET -) p TWINGE ' WN WAREHOUSE Tues. - Sat., 9:30 - 5:30 China Creek | “Drive a Little to Savea Lot’ before school classes be- gan, since am happy. that they were rewarded for their dedica- tion.” Of the eight relays, the — gagged from getting a noise going; hobbled to pre- vent him running into the stands. Basically, the CFL and his bosses, the Lions’ front of- fice, told him to cool it. ‘The previous ‘week, when the Lions beat Winnipeg Blue. Bombers. in the Western Conference final, some Win- nipeg officials complained their players couldn't hear the count because the home fans egged on by. Krazy George tried to raise the roof — and the Teflon roof threw back the noise. The CFL decided that wasn't going to happen to its Grey. Cup showpiece. w. Standidg: Se elaine Oleski;. Lisa Mathi in, Rishia McDowell, Missing from photo are Colin Harmston and Stephen Kreutzky: Stanley Humphries com- Wi peted in, the local team “an made finals in seven of them and were in the top four in half of them. The mixed free relay of - Lisa’ Carl Gruden, Alexis game but a CFL game,” ‘Lions’ marketing manager Rodger Upton said Tuesday. “As such, all aspects of the game were to be as a neutral, as possible. “He was also told that in good sportsmanship. when the Argos were approaching the ball, he should not try to get a good loud whistle going so as to confuse the call and interrupt play.” Upton acknowledged such a whistle has been done by George and the fans in past games. tured “th i while the mixed medley team of Walsh, Gruden, [chida and Ken Kin- the bron: own ‘Upton said the league also ‘banned *by the Canadian Soccer nal th By GRAHAM COX) te OTTAWA '(CP)''— ‘Tony, the) ‘traditional; way, ° nfirmed. (ready to.go again,” Wail Asso-” said Tuesday in Waiters has been: events. The, team already has. a Soccer heavy schedule laid out wi Canada’s‘ national a rubber match againit Mex.) ; ico either, Dec. 20'or 21 at a ite | to; be « eee gam Vancouver but losing 2-1 in + results. \ Dam Inn Diddlers defeated be Castlegar ‘Hi|Arrow Arms in wins and one tie, re top teams are Mark Earle and Frank Weilel of the Hi Arrow with85 wins. Sec-_ ond is Nick Smith and John Wilson of the Hi Arrow with 29 wins. Third are Elmer ‘ to. Pelerine and Frank Louki- curtail him to the field only.” He said George was “dis- - appointed ijt - understood and agreed with the ruling.” “The players won’ the game, not Krazy is said Upton. “If ‘results de- pend on a cheerleader, we'd have 85 or 86 Krazy Georges out there.” * League officials were on an after-season holiday and not available for comment. So was George, sunning his tonsils and his bald spot in Hawaii. i No rest for Cusson MONTREAL (CP) — Can- adian welterweight boxing champion Mario Cusson says his fractured left hand has healed properly, but he. ad- mits he wouldn't have objec- ted to a longer convales- cence. A further rest, however, is out of the question because Cusson has a date with fel- iuw-Muiireaier Dave Hilton, to.defend his title this Sun- day at the Forum. And Cus- son realized he would have been ridiculed had he at- tempted to postpone the 12- round bout a second time. “Maybe my hand would be better if there was a longer } period of time before the ® Enjoy yourself this winter. Let us chauffeur you to Red Mountain one day every week ina safe, luxurious highway coach. ° For the kids. . . total supervision from early morn ‘til late afternoon. © Both schools . . . offer a total fight,” said Cusson, following a training session. “But, it's been enough time;. I'm ready.” : The fight ‘was originally scheduled for Oct. 23, but had to be postponed last month, after Cusson fractured a bone on the outside of his left hand after tripping on a Toronto streetcar 5 here's no probiem with his hand — the bone is stronger than it was before,” said ‘Chuck Talhami, Cusson's trainer. “It was only one bone and it’s on the side of the hand. “When a boxer punches,‘ the other side of his ‘hand takes most of the pressure,” Gu-Dor Sports Castlegar HOCKEY- channel 13. said Talhami. One of Cusson’s sparring partners in Toronto was Canadian and former world junior middleweight (ama- teur) champion Shawn 0'Sul- livan, who at 166 pounds, has a style similar to Hilton's. O'Sullivan punches harder than Hilton, “He (O'Sullivan) caught me four or five times right on the * Jaw the first day, but it didn't hurt,” said Casson. “In fact, after the first time he hit me. he stood there stunned; he was so surprised that I was, still standing. “He gave me confidence because he's a bigger guy,” said Casson. x. THURSDAY [—NHL: Vancouver Canucks vs Boston Brul: 30 p.m: COMMERCIAL LEAGUE: Carling O'Keefe vs Green Machine, 10 p.m., arena complex FOOTBALL—NFL: Los Angeles Raiders vs San Diego Chargers, 6: P.m., channel 4, anoff of the Dam Inn tied for 27: with Jim® Burgess | and ‘Richard /Maddocks. - Earle with '154 points each. The high finish is still held by John Wilshire ‘with 115. Judo reps at playoff Castlegar was represented at the B.C. Winter Games playoffs for judo this’ week- end in Invermere. i Shalah Farhangi of Castle- followed the-Zone 1 compe- tition. Bantams == New Jersey over ‘Tegucigalpa. Waiters, 46, has had ; m outstanding career ea lend with four glind and in North Ainge ica. : ° John Horcelt, Carling (Don Welker, MSH. Iiiea Nevezshat nah Mike + Chiat Mercer, Coding both . in Before ‘coming here he ‘Mid-Week Wrap-up =B2Rse> wakes sussss~ 82348 1] Parade | In the West, but they'll still get a final chance to meet: UenUisguisaveitoervisoneeitcatassoeeunensars wpuENsseees wzs8s Ht fill # § HTT e Quebec Settee) Montreal Daryl: Weir and Wayne ‘fas Kinakin coached Castlegar ‘$1. tous Bantam A Reps to.win over... sdmonton Nelson and Spokane in West. Somy,. Kootenay Minor Hockey ac- {so Areee tion on the weekend. < 85538 FR5ez ‘went on to defeat Spokane Marspasrimitu\s ‘went on feat Spok: tg Das 7-1 Sunday morning. In the ‘fast-paced game Saturday at the old arena, Castlegar played a strong Kuri. second period to come from behind and stayed in the lead in the third period. Scoring I H HE : i SSNS SNNNY BUN esBREE. Hg ii itt i i vvnuseegencnevntonuuinnsnnty Police rescue ; Je | [ : ° § AMSTERDAM (AP) — Police raided an isolated warehouse before dawn today and rescued Dutch multi- millionaire brewer Alfred Heineken and his chauffeur, chained in concrete cells and forced to wear pyjamas during their three-week kidnapping ordeal. - _A ransom of an unspecified amount had been paid and some of it was recovered, police said. Earlier reports said the ransom demand ranged between $8 milllon and $12 million. ® While the rescue was being carried out, police arrested 24 people believed involved in the kidnapping during a three-city sweep in the Netherlands. Inspector G.A. van Beek, the policeman who found Heineken, 60, and chauffeur, Ab Doderer, 57, told a news conference: “The reaction was emotional. Doderer was more emotional than Heineken. There was no heating. It was chilly. Doderer did not really suffer from the cold but Heineken did.” ' Van Beek said a doctor in the rescue party examined the two men and said they were judged fit enough to leave in police cars. ; Police gave them clean clothes to replace the pyjamas that they had been forced to wear since Nov. 9, when assailants armed with machine-guns kidnapped 2 them on their way home from work. A For the first five days in the separate cells, said van H Beek, they were not allowed to speak and neither man = knew the other was being held nearby. g Afterwards they were allowed to converse, and were E armed guard in a corridor between the cells, but never together or at the same time. Each cell had a chemical toilet, emptied weekly, and the two were allowed to order food as they wished, which was apparently obtained from nearby restaurants, van Beek said. TIPPED POLICE Police said it was the purchase of take-out food at a nearby Chinese restaurant that confirmed their susp’ cions that the two were being held at the industrial site. They said one of the suspects in the kidnappin, ordered two meals to go at the restaurant Sunday, an took them to the warehouse. Police who had th warehouse under surveillance became suspicious. Police spokesman Kees Sietsma told the new: conference that the 6 a.m. raid on the warehouse in a: isolated industrial park on the outskirts of Amsterda entre set up at the brewery indicated that three peopl ‘who operated a. “dubious enterprise” in the industrial park might be involved in the kidnapping, Sietsma said The three operators, who police have not identified, ran an auto wrecking and carpentry firm in the Heining, an industrial park near the Amsterdam harbor. onnveusceanusgccaecanenrvsuecasscecuccoannessuccsoococansnsssegrassssscugnsstsiacusuitttfe: Trudeau arrives in Persian Gulf ABU DHABI (CP) — Prime Minister Trudeau switched hats to businessman from peacemaker today as he arrived in the Persian Gulf to try to boost Canadian trade. Trudeau's Canadian Forces Boeing 707 touched down at - this desert oasis at 10:40 a.m. local time from New Delhi, where he reported to Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi on his hastily arranged trip to Peking on Monday and Tuesday on his peace initiative. The Chinese told Trudeau they would support his + proposal’ for a conference of the five nuclear powers, including China, if the two superpowers first cut their arsenals by half, an official said, adding that the Chinese have ly stated that position at the United Nations. Trudeau reported to Gandhi out of courtesy because she was the chairman of the Commonwealth conference which ended earlier Tuesday. Trudeau flew to Peking on Sunday after gaining the endorsement of his fellow Commonwealth leaders. Trudeau met for an hour in Peking with Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping. “We cannot do exactly as you advocate in some respects,” Deng told Trudeau as reporters were being ushered out of the room at the start of their meeting Monday. “However, your efforts are important.” Trudeau professed to be encouraged by that message, telling reporters later Deng “insisted I must continue on my peace initiative to inject greater political will amonst the various political leaders.” i But, like Britain and France, China believes a five-power summit meeting at this time would only divert attention from the main area, the arms race between the Soviet Union and the United States. The prime minister seemed to suggest there is some doubt whether he will take his proposals to Moscow and freed from their manacles periodically for exercise under 2 ‘| CRIME PREVENTION . . . Local resident Sheldon Longworth receives crime prevention information from RCMP constable Helen Mahon at local booth: set Plaza through Thursday. Ritchie Rubinoff Suits © Men's and Ladies © Made-to-Measure © “Where Service Begins” | Alfonse Apa } Ladies’ & Men's Wear 1364 Bay Avenue, Trail — Phone 368-5314 Your Carrier is Collecting Your Castlegar News carrier will now be collecting for delivery of the paper for the past month, Please won't you have your money up at Sears in conjunction with Crime Prevention Week. The information centre will be at the Castleaird rece wien te orsne calls —CasNewsPhato This is one in a series of advertisements designed to explain how CP Rail is working today to meet Canada's transportation needs of the future. “GRAVITY AND COMPUTERS TEAM UP FOR IMPROVED RAIL SERVICE.” Harold E. McAfee is general yardmaster at CP Rail's Alyth Yard in Calgary. A CP Rail employee for 37 years, he heads a team of that sort up to 3,000 freight cars a day and assemble them into trains, with the help of Newton's law of gravity, a computer - and binoculars. have been proud. For years, CP Rail has been putting his apple idea to work, using gravity to sort up to 140 trains a day at key railway yards across Canada. Asa matter of fact, we've teamed computers with Newton's discovery of gravity to make car sorting and train assembly in our classification yards even more efficient and faster. Gravity is put to work simply by building a litle hill - which we call a hump - on the receiving end of our classification tracks. li Sorting and assembling trains is basically a simple proc Trains pull into our classification yard with freight cars from all over Canada. Most cars are pushed to the top of the hump; then uncoupled and allowed to roll down the slight incline. COMPUTER SETS SPEED FOR SMOOTH, EASY COUPLING That's where the computer comes in. The com- puter takes the car number and checks its memory (On 75 miles of track in CP Rail's Alyth Yard in Calgary, up to 3,000 freight carsa day are sorted into trains carrying e to market. Constant products | investment has allowed the Alyth Yard, with a 5,200 standing car capacity, (6 remain one of the most automated and advanced switching yards in North America. : 5 should roll down the hump and the distance into the Classification yard. The computer then applies the massive brakes built into the hump track to slow the moving car to the exact speed needed to get it to its destination track ~ just slow enough to couple up smoothly with the cars already there. UP TO 18,000 FREIGHT CARS SORTED EACH DAY ‘The final step in the process of sorting cars isto Pull groups of cars to a departure yard. There they are made up into new trains or delivered to their Our main yards are backed up by smaller yards for local assembly and distribution in other centers. By special terminals for containers and piggyback traffic. By special loading and unloading facilities for bulk commodities and automotive traffic. And by sidings for pick up and delivery direct to customers, or team track sidings for other customers to share. Together they give CP Rail the capability of moving the nation’s production to market. Safely, dependably and cost-effectively. For Canada's shippers, they mean improved service - getting things from where they are to where they are needed. package including transportation, ift tickets, instruction, lunches and equipment rental if you need skis, boots or poles. to find the car's destination, contents and weight. ining this information with the temperature and wind velocity, which affect the speed of the rolling car, it calculates in milliseconds, how fast the car FRIDAY ; up i BASKETBALL—TOTEM CONFERENCE: Selkirk College vs Va plays EUG Mate heehee local destination. sedver Comenunlty/ College. romen's| game, 6/30) n:m.,iimen's “Dane Jackson, Carl Overnay gam p.m. /—MIDGETS: Costlegar vs Trail, 7:15 p.m., arena com. | and defencemen Darey Mar: fe rn Fg _ plex. say 3 : | tint, Peter Tischler and ‘Gal -CSisey FOOTBALL—CFL: All-Star Game, 1 p.m.:channel 13. a tenraas Scott He wate BASKETBALL—TOTEM CONFERENCE: Selkirk College vs Van- Play Ber as the cekatoon couver, women's game, 10.a.m., men's game, noon. * game progressed. ii Monies HOCKEY—KUHL: Castlegar Rebels vs Spokane Flames, 8 p.m., +In the Sunday game, at. the Kembope Grena complex; JUVENILES: Costlegar va’ Spokane, 2:45 p. 2 arena complex, it wasa much sie", old arena; NHL: Vancouver Canucks vs Toronto Maple Leats, 5 slower game, but Castlegar New Weet was physically stronger and "*ewre p.m., channel 9. faster. Goaltender Steven ‘HOCKEY & FIGURE SKATES Manor kept the puck out un- > 7 ‘i NEW & USED Mi | til the third: period’ when Boston @u-VYor Fitted & Sharpen id. . Spokane, with a two-man ad- New Jervey = TO YOUR Sports ¥ ; 5 4 | Castlegar was accomiplished Detroit Castlegar = tatonkes: Rigs: i] by Lorie Kanigan, Dwayne : Weir,.Rod Fayant, Ed ae 5 "Rav Colin Carew, Greg Plotaikotf, : . Attention Men & Boysy | ec teeela Devan Witow are For All Seasons | | Susteren Ser ier. g Sen Ant # s id In league play thus'far, the \esang as Boys & Bantam A's have beaten and {Sime ae tied Nelson afd taken:three Seiden’ £ Mens. Wear 233 Columbia. 365-6761 games from Spokane. They. Des Remember 10% OFF for Cash Washington. Trudeau, whose travels on the initiative have taken him to six western European capitals, Japan, China as well as the Commonwealth conference in New Delhi in less than a month, repeated that he won't decide on a possible visit to the United States and Soviet Union until after a NATO meeting in Brussels on Dec. 8. Though he is “very encouraged” by the Common- wealth’s endorsement of his initiative Sunday, Trudeau said Tuesday he wants to see whether that message gets through to the Warsaw Pact and Canada’s NATO allies. RBSSESSNBRED Seeressstexs + mic Ha if ® Ladies . ..a two hour lesson each morning followed by lunch. 4 Free ski with your buddies in the afternoon & be home before. supper. Li Hf Notall trains use the yards. Each yard hasa run- through track to save time for express trains and solid or unit trains carrying a single commodity to one destination. MAIN YARDS HELP KEEP FREIGHT TRAINS MOVING CP Rail has five classification yards across the country: at i near Vancouver and at Calgary, Winnipeg, Toronto and Montreal. They range in size from 170 acres to 568 acres. The largest, at Montreal, ns 123 miles of track with a capacity of 5,000 cars in aday. CP Rail I aaasS~e! = ane HE “eZERRR oBNIIEE: 5 BB S8E5S Est » There’s more to Mutual Life than Life Insurance. When you're looking for individual life insur- ance, group life and health insurance, ‘annuities, registered retirement savings plans or estate planning, look at what we have to offer. Even if all you want is advice, get in touch. Jack Parkin Mutual Life of Canada Trad Seeous, bubseh Sehber scoring. for jiwot i i Gravity and computers. A simple idea and high technology. Working together. They help CP Rail keep the freight rolling. And that helps ensure a stronger, more competitive future for Canada and Canadians. ie $ : iH i i Carl Simms, train yard coordinator, and Peter Tibando, hump yard master, with a $12 million computer system at their fingertips, sort between 3,000 artd 3,300 freight cars per day at CP Rail's Toronto see | 5 bee BBESE: FF— $385, 28 HE 365-6664 ui if lost ‘two close “éxhibition games with Trail." “Detroit 103, 99. Next league action is Dec. Talos. i 8 in Nelson.and Dec. 16 when seamelis tera ina Nelson visits Castlegar. a f a8: