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Club member Sharon Brown re- cently: competed at the Provincial ' Age Group Championships held in Vancouver. - Club Sharon Brown poriorme’ for judges at :Browiecial Although § Sharon did not placé in ‘any ‘event, her scores were very compe- titive against the over 30 : —Phat te Catena by Cammy topoine is >ymnast's s scores competitive vault, where’ she ‘scored 7.4. Competition at this level is scored identically to Olympic gymnastics, . which is a good indication ls in her age group. ain of _ Brown's accomplish- Brown's best event was ment. In other news, the gym club will be putting on a display ‘of local 1016 - 4th Street, across from the Post Office. sommes Canada pulls off “surprise in opener By NEILSTEVENS BUESSELDORF, WEST GERMANY (CP) —:Team Canada shook ,the haunting memories of last year, outskating Italy, to a 6-0 triumph Saturday in the opening “ round fhe 1983 ‘world hockey. championship. In‘ other -games, the Soviet: Union’ blanked East » Germany 30 and favored Czechoslovakia: dofeated Finland -2. At the tournament last year, the underdog Italians surprised Canada with a 3-3 draw and the lost point proved J costly: for the Canadians later in the tournament. *, However, this year, the National Hockey. League members of the Canadian team went to work on the ‘outclassed Italian squad, stocked with several Italo-Cana- dians. : .-Brian Engblow, Dennis Maruk and Mike Gartner, all of . Washington Capitals, Marcel Dionne and Charlie Simmer, both of Los Angeles Kings, and Michel Goulet ‘of Quebec Nordiques scored for Canada. . Goalie Rick Wamsley of Montreal Canadiens recorded the shut out. -A much tougher test comes todsy. when Canada takes on Sweden. The Soviets started out slowly in their match against the East Germans, showing little of the flowing style with which it. has r e in pi world | CHARLIE SIME MARCet DIONNE . single goals owned by Toronto Maple Leafs, managed to put.Czecho- slovakia ahead on a 2-on-1 breakaway and Darius. Rusnak clinched the game, scoring with just 2:38 left to play.’ . Peter Skriko, a draft choice by Vancouver Canucks of the NHL, and Peter Lehtonen, on a power play, scored for Finland. Jiri Lala and Vladislav Svozil got the other Czecho- championships. East. Germany, one of the teams expected to be in a struggle to avoid relegation to the lower Group B next year, held the Soviets scoreless in the first period behind the goaltending of Rene Bielke. However, Valdimir-Krutov and Sergei Kapustin scored within a 87-second span early in the second period and Jiri Skortsov added the third goal early in the. third period. Goalie Vladislav Tretiak got the shutout. The Czechoslovakians, runner-up to the Soviet Union last year but dressing seven players who will be in their first world championship this year, found themselves with a surprisingly stubborn Finnish team. : They were tied 2-2 with just five minutes left in the game before Vladimire Ruzicka, whose NHL rights .are “We lost, but it was an even game,” said Finnish coach Alpo “It will give us d when we go on.” Notes: Forward Carey Wilson, a native of Winnipeg who played in the Finnish First Divsiion last winter, was’ -dropped by Team Canada... Canada now is three under the . maximum 25-man ‘roster limit . . . Czechoslovakian defenceman Mroslav Dvorak, allowed to play for Philad- elphia Flyers of the NHL last season, is the first professional to play for Czechoslovakia in the world ch ‘The 6,000-seat arena here is covered but open on two sides and the brilliant h Cc and relaxing along the Dussel River just a stones’ throw away during the Finland game p: { an unlikely misting by Canadian norms, for a world championship hockey game. - Bruins even series 9 The Candidian Press - . game, ‘I said somebody's "the tea — they ¢ don't’ quit.” ‘goals int the: idebaa period With the prospéct of bein, sion final after an opening d, Bostot talents. Everyone .is in- vited to attend Cocoa Mats. 4 em x 70 cm Reg. 6.95 Men’s Work Socks. 100% nyton, 3’ per pkg. Reg. 6.49 Girls’ ‘Pullover. 100% “acrylic, colours " white,-pink or blue. Sizes 7-14, Reg. 7.97. Sterilite © Stacking ‘Storage : Crate. 3:3 mx st. Bom 24.1.6m. - Reg. 7.29 imperial Sponge Mop with scrubbing strip. 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Silver Broom final Canadian rink advances Werenich’s criticism of the League best-of-seven playoff performance of some of the series with 6-8 victory over By IAN MacLAINE REGINA (CP) — Straw ‘has been-in the curling news this week more times than it has made the grain exchange. Stefan Hasselborg, skip of the Swedish team, has. prob- ably had enough of straw: to last him until next season. - His last rock in the sixth end of a’ semifinal at the men’s world curling championship Saturday caught a piece of it en route to an 8-5 loss to Ed Werenich of Canada. _ His attempted freéze toa Canadian stone turned in when it caught the straw and edged behind three Canadian to lea tothe four-t playoff picture. final today for the . ae Can- It marks the second ada Silver Broom. against straight year a Canadian West Germany, skipped by team has been to the cham- Toronto-native Keith Wen- pionship final, won last year dorf, The West .Germans’ by Al Hackner of Thunder went an extra end to edge Bay, Ont. Eigil Ramsfjell of. . Norway, 43, West Germany has never ‘The final, set for 11 amy beaten Canada in 16 Silver PST, is to be televised by Broom cB. : Canada finished the round- robin section of ‘the ‘cham- Pionship” Friday morning with an 8-1 mark and a berth in the semifinals. Norway, West Germany, Sweden and stones, allowing draw for four. Werenich's Toronto Avon- | played games Friday afternoon and night to round out the ROOT OF EVIL . Straw had been the source of bitterness between the two teams in the fifth round when Werenich accused the Swedes of littering the ice with debris from their corn brooms and trying to upset the Canadians with their gamesmanship. Expos celebrate victory . HOUSTON (AP) — Charlie . Lea pitched 72-3 hitless inn- ings and finished with base- ball's second on-hitter in two days, while. Andre Dawson hit chis third home run in. three games as Montreal Expos beat Houston Astros 2-0 in National League action Saturday. Lea, bidding-for his second career no-hitter, lost it in the eighth when Melville, Sask., native Terry Puhl, batting for rookie catcher John. Miz- erock, pulled a clean single to right field. Lea finished with six strikeouts and.three walks. It was his second one-hitter against Houston. Last May 26, also in the Astrodome, he faced'one batter over the minimum but was tied 0-0 with Astros Don Sutton be- fore the Expes scored four runs for Lea in the 10th inning. : Ths one-hitter “followed. Milt Wilcox’s for Detroit Ti- gers on Friday night. Wilcox hada perfect ‘game going for 82-3 .innings before Jerry Hairston, hit a clean pinch single for! Chicago, the only baserunner against Wilcox in the Tigers’ 6-0 victory over the White Sox. Lea, 2-0, who pitched 52-3 perfect innings in winning his first game of the season against Los Angeles Dodgers on April 9, pitched his no-hitter against San Fran-_ cisco Giants on May 10, 1981. Montreal took the lead off Bob Knepper in the second inning when Gary Carter hit a one-out single went to sec- ond base on a single by Chris Speier and scored on Doug Flynn's single. Dawson clubbed a tower- ing:solo homer in the ninth inning into the upper deck, only the sixth ball hit there since the Astrodome opened in1965. Lea retired the firat eight batters, in order before yield- ing a walk to Knepper: in the third inning. Lea Walked Harry Spilman and ‘Kevin Bass with one out in the fifth but Mizerock then hit a solid grounder to Flynn at second and he started a double play toend the threat. Lea retired the next eight Astros batters prior the Puhl's hit. A two-run, pinch-hit dou- ble by Jerry Morales capped a three-run Chicago rally in the eighth inning, lifting Cubs to victory. The victory way the second in nine games for Chicago.- The Pirates lost their third consecutive home game after winning their first five games on the road. teams, particularly the Swedes,- shocked the staid curling community. The 35- year-old Toronto fireman the no Bruins coach Gerry Cheevers looked among his lunch: pail gang for someone to come up’ with a true blue-collar effort Friday. Cheevers got it in Mike Krushelnyski .who . scored twice as the Bruins found the swift-skating, hard-hitting and productive offence that had been missing and evened their National. Hockey Buffalo Sabres. “The most important thing always is skating, and skat- ing. leads to aggression and "said Boston was world class and that the organizers maintain that im- age by cleaning up some of the rules differences. The situation didn’t improve all that_ much in the game Saturday as ice cleaners had a harvest of straw and chaff at the end of the fifth. The brooms are Canadian- made but not as popular as they ance were. One of the Swedish journalists said they were made -with Mexican- grown husks,. “That rock in the sixth end changed a full seven feet — it just turned on the straw,” said Canadian third Paul Savage. Hasselborg has been a master of the freeze at these championships and seemed ready to come into the Can- adian shot rock on the four- foot ring when it suddenly changed directions and drew in behind two other Canadian stones, * “He got it going in that direction, but obviously the straw helped it,” Savage said. “Anytime teams that are using brooms that are that dirty and lose a rock it looks good on them. “You can't feel sorry for the guy cause it’s them that put the debris out there.” As it turned out, that was the crucial turning point in the game and gave the Tor- onto rink a 7-2 lead. The Swedes came back with two in the seventh and stole one in the eighth before Were- nich restored a three-point lead in the ninth, coach Gerry Cheevers, “In the locker room before the iing-to burst out and do it for winless in the Adams Divi- us today; that somebody was Krushelnyski.” In the three other NHL playoff games Friday night, the winners opened 2-0 leads ' in their division finals as Chicago Black Hawks dumped Minnesota North Stars 7-4, Edi Oilers The. Bruins: led. 4-0 ‘after two periods, but Phil Housley spoiled the shutout bid by Boston goalie, Pete Peeters with a goal at 12:19 of the third period. The Sabres scored on goals by Mike Ramsey and Mike. Foligno. ki got the Bru- beat Calgary Flames 6-1 and New York Islanders blanked New York Rangers 5-0. _ FIGHT OFF SABRES The Bruins still had to fight off the Sabres, who scored their three goals in the. final half of the third period. “We decided going into the third period to throw every- thing at them,” said Buffalo coach Scotty Bowman. “That's the big thing about Jackson leads | Angels to victory MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Reggie Jackson’s three-run homer. capped a seven-run explosion in the fifth inning to lift California Angels to a 9-5 American League base- ball victory Saturday over Minnesota Twins. Bruce Kison, 2-1, was the winner, yielding seven hits and striking out 10. Rookie Bryan Oelkers, 0-2, fell vic- tim to the Angels’ bats i in the fifth. California got arun in the third when Bob Boone hit his first home run of the year, off the foul pole in left field. The Twins replied with three runs in the bottom of the inn- ing when Ray Smith and Lenny Faedo singled and John Castino hit his fourth homer, to right field.$.~ Then came the big fifth. Oelkers walked Brian Down- ing and Bobby Grich. Tim Foli loaded the bases with an infield single, Boone drove in two runs with a single and Rod Carew followed with an-, other run-scoring single to chase Oelkers and give the Angels a 4-3 lead. 4 Rick Lysander came on it relief and, one out later, walked Fred Lynn inten- tionally to reload the bases. Boone scored on a sacrifice fly by Doug DeCinces and Jackson capped the outburst with a 400-foot drive right-centre field for his sec- ond home run of the season. DeCinces’ hit his third homer of the year for Cali- fornia leading off the eighth against Pete Filson. Gary Ward hit his first homer for Minnesota's final two runs in the bottom of the eighth. WHITE SOX 3 TIGERS 1 CHICAGO (AP) — Rookie Greg Walker's pinch-hit home run led to a three-run eighth-inning rally Saturday, giving Flloyd Bannister and Chicago White Sox to a 3-1 American League baseball victory over Detroit Tigers. _Walker slugged his first homer of the season with one out off starter Dan Petry and pinch-hitter Lorenzo Gray greeted reliever Howard Bailey, 1-1, with a single. Tony Bernazard doubled and when left fielder Larry Her- ndon misplayed, the ball for an error Gray scored the go-ahead run. Harold Baines then doubled to ‘score Ber- nazard. ins sat toa quick start when he scoret! on a shot from the slot 52 seconds into the game. The Bruins went ahead 2-0 when Rick Middleton got his fourth playoff goal on a breakaway. Boston added to its lead on second-period goals by Keith Crowder and Ray Bourque. * Buffalo defenceman Larry Playfair suffered a chip el- bow when he collided with Boston forward Mike Gillis. Bowman said Playfair will be out for the rest of the play- offs. BLACK HAWKS 7 NORTH STARS 4 Bob Murray and Tom Ly- siak scored lightning-quick fa Denis Savard added two third-period goals as Chicago - took a 2-0 lead in the best-of- seven Norris Division final; which now moves to Bloom- ington, Minn., for the third and fourth“ games ‘Sunday and Monday. Al Secord, Steve Larmer and Doug Crossman rounded out the Black Hawk scoring while Al. MacAdam, Dino Ciccarelli, Craig ‘Hartsburg and Willi Plett replied for the North Stars. ISLANDERS 5 RANGERS 0 Duane Sutter had his first three-goal game in his NHL career as the Inlanders grab- bed a 2-0 advantage in the Patrick Division final, enter- int Games 3 and 4 of this matchup Sunday and Monday nights at Madison Square Garden. Goalie Billy Smith posted his fourth lifetime playoff’. shutout. Brent Sutter and John Tonelli completed the Is- landers’ scoring. Newcomers in Whitecaps’ lineup VANCOUVER (CP) .— Vancouver Whitecaps will have’ new midfielders Fran O’Brien and Frans Thijssen in the lineup today when they meet New York Cosmos in the Spring Cup exhibition soccer game at Empire Sta- dium. The Spring Cup is a one-game affair this year be- tween the North American Soccer League rivals. Four teams competed in the tour- nament in 1982 which the Whitecaps won. The third newcomer in the Vancouver lineup will be Canadian fullback Mike Sweeney, acquired from Ed- monton ‘last fall before the Drillers folded their NASL franchise. Vancouver has a 2-1 record in exhibition play against NASL teams this spring and the Cosmos, defending Soc- cer Bow] champions, are 1-1. The Whitecaps are still awaiting the arrival of cen- tral defender David Watson and general manager Peter Bridgwater will leave Mon- day for England in an at- tempt to sign striker David Cross of Mancliester City. The game will be the final warmup for the Whitecaps before they open their -1983 NASL schedule at. home April 24 against Fort Lauder- dale Strikers. New York's star-studded lineup wilt include twin stri- kers Giorgio Chinaglia and Steve Moyers, plus four mid- fielders — Julio Cesar Rom- ero, Rick Davis, Vladislav Bogicevic and Roberto Cab- anas. Franz Beckenbauer, who returns to the Cosmos after two seasons in his native West Germany, will not be in the New York lineup until May 1. Johan Neeskins will man the sweeper position against Vancouver. ° ‘The Whitecaps are one of the few NASL teams to hold an edge over the Cosmos with an 8-4 record in recent years,