wien H . oe. Win it8 Pista Mike Save CAMP PARTICIPANTS . . . Robson River Otters swim club members participating in four day B.C. Summer g Association devel camp were: Back HELPED 165 SWIMMERS row (from left), Jeff Schuepter, Jason Schuepter, coach John Prescott, and Don McDowell; Front row, Risha McDowell and Coralea Schuepter. Otters at summer camp Top resource people were in attendance to share their knowledge and experiences Six members of the Robson River Otters swim club par ticipated in the second annual written one of the finest texts on swimming. His knowledge provided abilities have brought suc- cess and champions to the BCSSA and CASA. His ex. By CasNews Staff Ivan's Carpets beat Wool Wagon Arlington Hotel 20-9 Friday night in the junior division of Little Lassies SoftbalF League action. In the senior division, Cohoe Insur- ance defeated Efks Lodge No. 50 17-7 while Castle Bow! struggled to survive as they went down in defeat to Mal- oney Pontiac 32-28. On Thursday night, May 17, junior division action saw Trail Auto Body edge Speed- way Salvage 12-11, Ivan's Carpets nipped Elks Lodge No. 50 20-19 and Wool Wagon ‘ * ‘Soe: . Cup game while Castle- purs. le Saturday and ‘The Castlegar Stars placed gar Vikings’ host Grand Rovers at 11 a.m, ‘Sunday, Arlington Hotel beat Robson Volunteer Fire Department 11-6. In the intermediate ‘divi- sion, Castlegar Furniture Vil- lage beat Elks Lodge No. 50 19-16. Senior division action saw Trail Midgets defeat Castlegar Bantam All-Stars 21-14. On Wednesday, May 16, Trail Auto Body got by Wool Wagon Arlington Hotel 17-15 in the junior division, while Intermediate action saw Dixie Lee edge Castlegar Furniture Village 14-13. Elk's Lodge No. 50 beat Salmo Wool May 14 in the intermediate division, Valley Maid defeat- Wagon ed Elks Lodge No, 50 20-14 while Salmo lost 278 to Dave's Trucking. Weightlifting in Castlegar A novice and open weight- lifting competition was held in Castlegar May 12 at Stan- ley Humphries Secondary School. It was the first novice and open competition in the Koot- division, Gloria Joinson also placed second, lifting a total of 95 kg. In the men’s category, in the 56 kg division, Hardi Bhabra placed first, lifting a total of 162.5 kg. In the 67.5 four-day B.C. Summer Swim: with those attending the swimmers, coaches, adminis- pertise and techniques in ‘ . . ming Association develop: camp. trators and officials with a teaching the Level One Na P h e | | ° e et enays since the ‘Winter kg division Brett Poohaehaff ment Camp in Oliver May Howard Firby has coached rare learning experience. _tional Coaches course was Hill Ss g Games were held in Trail in total of 175 kg. In the 75 kg at the highest levels inter- nationally, helped develop the ESSO Swim Program and has been involved in de- veloping the National Coach- ing Association and the Na- tional Certificiation Program 18th through 21st. The camp was invaluable to the 165 swimmers, 40 coaches and 14 officials from as far north as Whitehorse to Colville, Wash. in the south, west from Vancouver Island to Vie Lindal, a consultant for 30 B.C. Sports organizations through the Recreation and Sport Branch in Victoria was another resource person. Some of his successes in coaching are Canada’s Na- valuable to the future coach es. Dave Chisolm, one of the most innovative coaches in the CASA instructed the Level II National Coaches course. Dr. Peter Vizolyi, a 10th v By The Canadian Press A three-hit night generally ranks as a weak performance ictory “We're real hungry to win, and the reason we're hungry is because we're all winners,” With more lifters becom- ing involved competitively, it is the B.C. Weightlifting Association's objective to make this Novice and Open Competition an annual event held in the Kootenays. division, Brod Fisher placed third, lifting a total of 145 kg. In summary, the Mount Sentinel team did exception- ally well in this Novice and Open Weightlifting Compe- tition, by being able to win a Nelson in the cast. for swim coaches. He has also {7 Sworvens, Volleyball former swimmer under How- but it was strong enough to Gibson said Tuesday night Representing the Kooten- trophy/An each of the weight team, V ’s Women's ardFirbyandaBCSSA coach give Philadelphia Phillies after the Tigers, 33-5 overa- ays this weekend were mem- classes they entered. Softball Champions, . B.C. isa general practicioner with their 10th consecutive vic- all, ran their unbeaten road bers of the Mount Sentinel Those interested in more Spring ‘“‘Wake-up” Can be crystal clear when you TRUST THE PROFESSIONALS AT CRYSTAL POOL PRODUCTS as Red Cross Swim Lessons Diving Champions and Van- couver and District's Track and Field high school cham- pions. Charlie Young, is one of instructing the course to the officials. t Bruce,Fisher, is a premier BCSSA swim coach. His cap- a speciality in Sports Med- icine. His ability as a drill de- signer for coaches and swim- mers was a tremendous asset to the camp. ciating within. the swim club and throughout the Kootenay Region. Mini-marathon tory for the longest streak in major league baseball this season. Ozzie Virgil collected two of the three hits, scored a run and batted in one as the Phil- ager Paul Owens said jok- ingly. “When you're going good, you win these kind of games,” he added. “Once you get it rolling, the players they can get record to 15-0 with a 3-1 AL win over California Angels. The Tigers ran their latest winning streak to seven games behind the combined pitching of Juan Berenguer, Lopez came on to record his sixth save. In other AL games Tues- day. it was: Totonto Blue Jays 3, Minnesota Twins 2; Milwaukee Brewers 7, Texas Rangers 1; Boston Red Sox 7, Weightlifting Club. In the women's category, in the §2 kg division, Stephany Dean placed second, lifting a total of 87.5 kg. In the 60 kg information regarding com- petitive weightlifting (Olym- pic lifting) contact Mike Mal- akoff at Mount Sentinel Sec- ondary School. place first Two Castlegar runners were tops in their categories at the 10-km Blossom Run years and over category while rookie runner Jason Ferris was first in the 13 and ‘83 PRICES PLUS , the best officials in the The six members of the ® renguer ne E OUNT es BCSSA He was a major par. Otters will share their ex- lies defeated Los Angeles who allowed three hits in six EFFECTIVE UNTU MAY 31, 1984 a ticipant in writing the new periences with other swim- Dodgers 3-1 innings, and Aurelio Lopez. . <= tule book which was used in mers and parents to better “We just overpowered Berenguer, 3-2, walked three Ooca r U n ner Ss Phone: 365-2242 techniques and to aid in offi- them tonight,” Phillies man- and struck out nine before . THOSE WERE THE DAYS . . . Vintage car show par- ticipant Alyce Botting of Summerland poses in: old- fashioned dress with an old-fashioned automobile " Dump débate divides town ASHCROFT (CP) — One However, environmental year ago, this drowsy little organizations claim the min- saa) 7 DAYS A WEEK! gommunity in British Col i nd ta ot CASTLEGAR WINLAW olum- istry and Genstar-IT are n 365-2262 7270 bia’s southern Interior was united in celebration — it had been 100 years since the providing enough informa- tion about their plans. Gen- star-IT has said its plans Canadian Pacific Railway aren't yet final. Om oo steamed into town to give it Environment Minister H EG DS life. Tony Brummet insists Gen- Over the years, residents star-IT’s final proposal will (top). The hub-cap of a De of the same car (b ). Soto mirrors the reflection = oy VINTAGE CARS Clarke's Pool — 750 10th Ave. oe mee ‘Mom & Tots & Yellow level ages 5&6 at. . - Cleveland Indians 1; Kansas held Sunday in Creston. under division. Both runners continued from front poge owners appreciate the updated modifications to older f Ss t d Owens praised winner City Royals 7, Chicago White recently won in their éate- actually a family heirloom. It belonged to his grandmother, models carried out by “hot-rodders,” but added that other on or ce | Uu r ay Jerry Koosman, 4-5, for Sox 6; Seattle Mariners 5, Veteran runner Ben Thor- gories at the Trail Silver City he says. clubs exist for that breed of car enthusiast. All Red Cross Levels & Adult . : working out of several jams New York Yankees 3; and Larsen placed first in the 50 Days 10-km run. “It's my first car,” explained Carpenter. “I drove it to Another rule — perhaps not written, but which seems 9a.m.-12 noon The seventh annualGreen- Special awards will be _in,his seven innings. Oakland A’s 6, Baltimore high school.” to exist in the attitudes of many vintage car owners — could FIRST SESSION JULY 3-JULY 13 wood to Midway Mini-Mara- given out, as well as draw’ “Koosman pitched a good Orioles 4. Although the automobiles participating in the May tour be simply stated as: older is better. thon will be held Saturday, prizes, and certificates to all ball game,” Owens said. Philadelphia's Al Holland represent a wide spectrum of ages and styles — from One owner of a 50-year-old car hesitated for a moment SECOND SESSION JULY 17-JULY 27 MOM & TOT JULY 30-AUG. 3 + ADULTS JULY 9-JULY 13 (EVENINGS) JULY 23-JULY 27 (EVENINGS) Instructors Patty & Rick Turner Phone 365-5106 FOR INFORMATION June 16 beginning at the Mc- Arthur Centre in Green- wood. The 14 km race will kick off at 8:30 a.m. at the McArthur Centre and finish at the Mid- way Recreation Centre. finishers. Registrations may be sent to: Andrew Jones, Mini- Marathon coordinator, Box 108, Midway, B.C. VOH 1M0. There is a $2 charge for registrations after June 6. TTENTION Bumper to Bumper is pleased to announce that they are your new CANOX dedler in the Castlegar area. “When you get that kind of pitching the night you don’t hit, you win anyway.” In other NL games Tues- day, Montreal Expos edged San Diego Padres 3-2, San Francisco Giants defeated New York Mets 5-4, Cin- cinnati Reds beat Pittsburgh Pirates 5-3, and Houston As- tros defeated St. Louis Car- dinals 4-3. Rain washed out the game between Atlanta Braves and Chicago Cubs and it was re- scheduled as part of a Thurs- day doubleheader. In American League play Tuesday night, Detroit won yet another baseball game and the Tigers’ Kirk Gibson says the team’s winning ways are going to continue. earned his 10th save of the season to tie for the National League high. He has pitched 142-3 innings without giving up an earned run. Losing pitcher Bob Welch, 3-5, gave up three hits and all three Philadelphia runs in four innings. Relievers Orel Hershiser and Carlos Diaz then held the Phillies hitless. The Phillies took a 2-0 lead in the third. Virgil got a single over Welch's head but in front of shortstop Bob Bailor and reached third when Ivan DeJesus sliced a single to right. Koosman dropped a sacri- fice bunt, moving DeJesus to second, Then Virgil scored and DeJesus advanced to third on a wild pitch. De- Handgun trials to be held in Nelson This year's B.C. Summer Games Zone 1 (Kootenay) trials for shooting handgun will be held at the Nelson Rod and Gun Club at 10 a.m. on Sunday May 27th. Juniors, under 18 on July 19, 1984, shoot .177 calibre or 22 calibre air pistol only. Seniors, shoot .22 pistol, centre fire pistol and .177 calibre, air pistol. The Kootenay (Zone 1) team will consist of two ju- niors and four seniors trav- elling to Burnaby July 19th and returning July 22. Transportation and accom- modation are provided. To register or for more in- formation contact Johu- Fuller 352-3935. Mid-Week Wrap-up Park; Bronco, Kootenay Savings vs. Maloney Pontiac, 6 p.m.. BASKETBALL Kit Pork. NBA nemene SATURDAY veya are Feu, Phone BASEBALL—MAJOR LEAGUE: Gegional coverage of Dodgers at verre Mets or Cordinals at Braves, 10 a.m., channel 6: Regional otchewan Re riders cut deten- 2 coverage of Orioles at Angels or Royals at Red Sox, | p.m., sive ends Poul :Digioacchino ond K eo channel 6; Son Francisco Giants at Montreal Expos, 4:30 p.m., by peroneal ot en: han 5 We Carry a Full Line of Quality Brand Products MARATHON TRIALS: US Olympic team, 1 30 p.m. chonnal 4 Mesos poe Keser Rs MEN'S 12 TE. MEN'S! NCAA es ps Mad sotto ee AM _.. 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Dance Saturday Castlegar i; bay np hy on ond det ces torwera Siero CONTACT RAY AT 359-7566 Merareen Koeee Sponsofed by Timbermen Slo-Pitch Club motorized horseless carriages to the finned-wonders of the 1950 — two main rules seem to prevail for vintage car owners. One is that all the cars are restored to the original stock model as much as possible. Carpenter said some old car WEAPONS COSTLY when asked how old an automobile has to be to qualify as a vintage car, then said cars build in the late 1950s could be said to be “vintage.” But he added: “I don’t think about those cars very much.” of the mining-dependent vil lage in the dry safebrush country remained content and protective of a slow, neighborly existence. These days, bingo or a Friday night dance at the Legion are as frantic as things usually get. But the prospect of a gov ernment-endorsed hazardous waste dump nearby has thrown the 2,500 residents into the throes of a political debate that threatens to div ide the community as visibly as the mighty Thompson River which runs through its heart. “We're creating a mon ster," says Mayor Ward Bis hop. “People have become suspicious “We are starting to set ourselves against each other.” The Ashcroft Journal has been deluged with letters to the editor. Most say they don't want a dump in their back yard, but others have been critical of “hysterical” local groups: which have organized rallies protesting the dump. “T'll lie down in front of a bulldozer if that’s what it takes to stop it,” says former mayor and long-time resident Oscar Johansen, head of a local action group opposing the dump. “There isn't one landfill in the world that doesn’t leach (leak). If they put a toxic landfill in, it probably isn't going to hurt me. By the time it causes a problem I'll be long gone. But I owe it to my next generation to stop it.” AREA SUITABLE The problems began in the fall of 1983 when the pro- vineial Ministry of Enciron- ment endorsed a joint prop- osal by Genstar and IT Corp. to develop and operate a haz- ardous waste treatment and disposal system in British Columbia. That system is to include a hazardous waste landfill and the ministry announced that Genstar-IT was to look for a secure site in the Ashcroft region. A ministry committee had determined that area to be suitable in terms of seis- mic, climatic and geographi- cal features. NATO must pool money could be achieved if Amer. ica’s European allies cut back WASHINGTON (REUT- ER) — Modern weapons sys- expensive that unless the al- liance organized joint de- We tems are so expensive that NATO could effectively dis- arm itself if it does not pool its resources, the alliance’s supreme commander was quoted Tuesday as saying. In an interview with Avi- ation Week magazine, Gen. on social prog’ popular concept. Weapons that capitalize on the West's technolgoical lead over the Soviet Union are so , an un BASEBALL ecosil MS ooSios te Bernard Rogers also said the a sacue ¢ ic Treat ¢ u-Dor a A Teer Division oneneey $) 4 ae North Atlantic ty Or wo. pcr. cm Ps 33 S44 567 © ganization is not meeting its ~ : chicoge ais "ms Puerto Rico 33 50 550 6 ai Sports Ssdeiptvo BAS So da sa Sa 8 goals for. building conven- >por's Game.) | now Yor ee ed ce tional forces that could halt a Castlegar ’ Stowe N32, 08, Ae Meno 13,3 ee 2 Warsaw Pact attack. ’ THURSDAY Lee Angeien “OM 20 ses Argentina! 34enco 3 He added the outlook is not WELDING FASTBALL—COMMERCIAL LEAGUE: Labotts vs. Thrums. Kinnaird ] Atlonre ns poclvguny 92 Pere Rice 4 encouraging for 1985-1990. UP TO Park; Hi Arrow vs. Royals, Inland field, games begin 6 p.m. [radarse4 no se ie = “Beyond 1986, Great Bri- eee SUPPLIES ca aA tereceent talleychtr Seninet: sche shonin ves fn ee tain will not be able to meet a : . inet; jartin vs. |ATIONAL y Klothes Kloset, Kinnaird Park, games begin 6:15 p.m. Pony wm Oo Rm, Pet. TRANSACTIONS three-per-cent_real_ growth For all your pool maintenance division, Castlegar Sentinels vs. Castlegar HightMeadows, 6 | Guynn so M4 BASEBALL annually and West Germany | 004s ‘call the experts. Filter. p.m., Kinnaird Park. is unlikely to meet that, too,” | heater, motor, pump repairs FRIDAY he told the magazine. and installations. Complete BASKETBALL—NBA: Conterence finals, 11:29 p.m., channel 7 Leapve Rogers called for a four- line of Bio-Guord Chemicals. BASEBALL—MINOR BALL: Mosquito Division, Oglow Building vs. Exon recall outtieidas Mike ; Fi Call Gary Hyson at Kootenay, Seviogs,, 15) i ‘ rom indianapolis of the per-cent yearly increase in 9s. p.m., Kinnaird Park; Pony Division, raptors it 365 7389 Castlegar High Meadows vs. Castlegar Celgar, 6 p.m., Kinnaird Argenie Solozer to Indienapolis of the Inter NATO financing. He added it -. IN THE REGIONAL and pr REC! OMPLEX “de facto disarmament” would occur because NATO would not be able to afford to replace aging systems. Election of new executive to be held. EVERYONE WELCOME CASTLEGAR & DISTRICT MINOR HOCKEY ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING Thurs.,May 24 have to satisfy his ministry that any waste buried in a landfill will be safe. He says a proposed site on Crown land 12 kilometres outside of Ash- croft will not be used unless drill tests show there would be no leaching into the water table. : But the minister's state- ments have done little to al lay the fears of Ashcroft residents like Johansen. CREATE PROBLEMS The 55-year-old town post- master and head of Citizens Opposing Dumping says a toxie dump near town could create health problems nad send property values plum meting. As well, he says the dump might leach and contaminate the nearby Adams River, a Thompson tributary which boasts one of the largest salmon spawning grounds in the world. Johansen's organization sponsored United States en vironmentalist Hugh Kauf- man's recent controversial visit to the province. Kaufman, an employee of the U.S. Environmental Pro- tection Agency (which said Jaufman was not speaking on its behalf), was critical of the proposed landfill and publicly debated Brummet, who wrote Kaufman off as a pub- licity seeker. Johansen’s organization has also created problems for Mayor Bishop. Bishop also is not satisfied with the information the government has provided so far on the dump. CASTLEGAR PLUMBING & HEATING LTD APPLIANCE SERVIC RATE SPECIAL $20 bers. 365-3388 FURNITURE WAREHOUSE Tues. - Sat., 9:30 - 5:30 China Creek “Drive a Little to Save a Lot” ae = f Yall IE 1 Wy : Mountainview Agencies Ltd. SALESMAN OF THE YEAR EAST & WEST KOOTENAYS ra " CONGRATULATIONS GLEN! Dale Bradley, Manager of Century 21 Moun- tainview Agencies Ltd., is proud to announce that Glen Wilson was the recipient of the Salesman of the Year Award for both the East and West Kootenays at the Annual Spring Meeting of the Kootenay Real Eastate Board held recently at the Fairmont Hot Springs Resort. Glen was also awarded the runner-up Salesman of the Year by volume Sales as well as the monthly sales winner for both September and December, 1983, through the Multiple Listing Service of the East and West Kootenays For friendly, courteous, professional service on all your real estate requirements . . . Call Glen at our office, 365-2111 or at home, 365-3407 KAL) Your Buy any Michelin tire and Provincial tax-free get all year TIRES BEFORE June 2/84 WE'LL PAY THE TAX. But hurry. This may be the best tax cut you'll Best Buy! get it Tire Sizes P17580 R 13 XWW TB/S P185/80 R 13 XWW TB/S P185/75 R 14 XWW TB/S P1SH75 R 14 XWW TB/S P21575 R 15 XWW TB/S P2575 R 15 XWW TBIS SPECIAL 95 includes setting camber, caster, tow- in centre steering wheel