CASTLEGAR NEWS, June 14, 1981 Willi Krause — — the man behind tl Courtesy of Spartwest magazine By JIM KEARNEY Sportwest Editor-In-Chief A small matter of Willi-Power As movers and shakers go, he always goes full speed i twas said of boxing’s old mongoose, Archie Moore, that if you gave him 100 pounds of stee! wool, he'd knit you astove, In Trail and environs there are a few thousand Willi Krause believers who'd tell you their man could knit you. the same stove, using only 50 pounds. And still have enough left over to build you a waffle iron. What he has actually been knitting, with steely resolve rather than steel wool, the last several years is a plan to build British Columbia's first ever field house; an indoor training centre so the athletes of summer can train all through the harsh Canadian winter. It is Willi’s belief — and no one con- tradicts him — that track and field athletes are produced in the winter. Summer is merely the season in which they demonstrate, in competition, what they have learned and perfected during the off-season, For proof, one need look no farther than southern California, where 2 kind climate permits runners,. hurdlers, jumpers and heavers of as- sorted hardware to practice outdoors all 12 months in the year. It’s no coin- cidence the bulk of most U.S. Olympic track and field teams comes from California. But California winter weather being generally unavailable in the Canadian winter outdoors, there's only one way to go: bottle it and put it indoors in a building big enough to accommodate all the action, This, then, is the genesis of the field house that will start going up any day now in East Trail, next door to the J. Lloyd Crowe Secondary School. It will cost $700,000 and should be open for business by next winter, Atthe time of writing, no name had been selected for the structure. But people in Trail say there's not much doubt. It will be — indeed, must be — the Willi Krause Field House. Quite apart from the fact it rhymes, it must be-because the project is his idea; ae Tes, 71 yearld nel Senadian .B.C.'s first indoor tra ning centre’ who haven’t come close to Willi’s re- cord, All he has going for him are an Ger- many, has‘to ty Bie re B.C.’s most amazing citizens. Not only in sport, but in any activity. Learned physicists may not be gware of it, but he has proven exactly what happens when the irresistible force meets the im- movable object. The irresistible farce, if its name is Willi Krause, wins every time, A master pattern maker by trade, he emigrated to Canada in 1958, when he 5 3 was pushing 50, and came td Trail be- cause a friend who preceded him to this country had settled there. There being no market for pattern makers in his new city, the first thing he did was get a job at Selkirk College in Castlegaras acarpenter. The second thing was to organize the Trail Track and Field Club, now the second oldest such organization (the dean is the Vancouver Olympic Club) i in the pro- vince. The third was to get on with his passion, bee-keeping. If his bees keep as busy as Willi, they must be the honey producing champions of the worl When you talk about builders, this man is it, It’s tough enough to take an existing structure and add to it. But he started at ground zero and built an athletic program out of all proportion to Trail’s modest 10,000 population. Within his first decade there, his athletes won several national cham- pionships, set half a dozen Canadian records and one world record while harvesting silver and bronze medals at Pi i and C Games. Fight of his athletes eamed scholar- ships to U.S.-universities-and now a ninth, Theresa Lenardon, who just may have the potential to be the best of them all, is enrolled at Washington State L mostly because of his ity. and enerey, it is about,.to become real-" “There are coachés all across Canada, in bigger cities with more facilities, cinder track, the exper-. tise he leamed in his native Germany, unbounded enthusiasm and a non- stop supply of energy. Only the Haley Track, part way up. . the road to Rossland, stays at home when he takes those other assets on regular road trips to clinics in all parts of the country, andon a virtual shuttle service to Vancouver in his old beat-up . VW Beetle. He goes there regularly to coach three of Canada’s top four pole vaul- ters; also, in season, to get competi- tion for the kids in his track and field club, Takes out the passenger seat in front, to give the athletes he crowds into the back seat, extra leg room on the 10-hour drive to the coast, Ik it isn’t raining, they go all the way with the windows open, for Willi be- Hieves not only in fresh air, ‘but more fresh air, He stops occasionally to de- liver nature talks and to lecture his proteges, at ‘suitable sites, on the his- tory of their province. A man of many facets? All tumed on? He is. H: knows how to turn on his athletes to better performances, too. How could a youngster not be tured on by a guy of 70 who is still so _ young he’s up at 5 on summer morn- ings to paint the lane markers at the Haley track? hands and unbounded work capacity, built them an indoor facility for: weight training? “Willi lives me a little bungalow,” says Theresa’s dad, Norm Lenardon, the old Smoke Eater hockey player. “He decided to put the weight room in the basement. Only one problem —he didn’t have a basement. So he got ‘under the house and dug one. “He took the back seat and pas- senger seat out of his Beetle and used it asa truck to'take the dirt to the dump" as he excavated, Dug it all himself. Trucked it all hmself. Then built the weight room all by himself. Energy? The man’s unbelievable.” If the dominant Germanic trait is stubbom persistence in the face of all viscissitudes, Willi is a gold medal winner in this department. The field house campaign. started seven years ago and he never lost an opportunity to promote it to everyone he could corner, from cabinet ministers to stmen. Trail needs the field house, fe told them, so it can produce more and better athletes, Ithasdone Pretty well already, even without a field house. His fi Pro tege, Dianne Soe once ela world indoor high-jump record, won A Pan-Am Games ailver medal and placed fifth in the 1964 Olympics. Gerry Moro moved from pole vault and a bronze’ medal at the 1966 Com- h Games to the di where he set a Canadian record that has' stood since 1972. Bob Yard, another of his pole-vaulters, won at the 1967 Pan-Am Games, After win- ning the Canadian hammer throw - championship, Tony Tenisci moved Prize pupil Theresa . “How could they not warm toa ‘man, ; then in his late 60s, who with his own. - ment without a cha: pion f for * on ta acoaching career at Washington State. Monte Carlo - tennis tourney ‘without winner MONTE CARLO (AFP) —The 1981 Monte Carlo ten- nis-‘tournament will have no winner, organizers said Fri- day after attempts to set up a finish to the rain-postponed final between Jimmy Con- nors and Guillermo Vilas failed. The finalists were un- able to agree on a date, leaving the spring tourna- the fitst time ‘si ation in”1897. To sponsor girls’ clinic Commercial: Softball Roun: in field hockey Thrums’ win over Pass Frank L hit, Cut Throat, Dead Eye, Hit Me With Your Best Shot, Shoot Out, 1 on 1, Best in the West! It sounds like some- thing out of the old West. Well, it is west. The West Kootenay Ladies Field Hoc- key Association is sponsoring an elementary- and junior- age field hockey clinic at the Castlegar Sports Complex Aug. 11, 12 and 13. The objectives of the camp are to teach basic field hoc- key skills; to develop those players who already know the basic skils; to allow players to meet players from other areas, and mainly to have lots of fun competitions such as those mentioned above. Clinicans will be Sandi Cram, Patty Johnson and Verna Chernoff. As well, there will be special guest instructors. ? The camp is open to any girls from grade 4 up to and including grade 10. The girls will be divided into groups according to ages. Regis- tration fee is $10, payable to the West Kootenay Ladies Field Hockey Association. The fee will include field hockey instruction, a T-shirt, a noon swim, noon tennis, and a noon hour of roller skating. Application forms may be picked up in each elementary school, the rec- reation complex, or at the ju- nior or senior high schools. Deadline for registration is June 25. Field hockey has become a very popular girls' sport on the local scene. Last fall over 100 elementary girls parti- cipated in their schoo! tour- Monday June 8 Labatts 3 Carling O'Keefel - Labatts scored two runs in the bottom of the second inning and one in the fourth inning to beat O'Keefe’s and remain in first place in the league. P. Evdokimoff al- lowed only four hits with five strike outs and no walks while Terry Terranoff, pitch- ing his first game for O'’Keefe's, allowed four hits, struck out one and allowed six free passes. Elmer Wil- liams had a triple for Labatts, R. Laly a double, and M. Apels and Evdokimoff had singles. For O'Keefe’s Henry Ste- vens had two singels, T. Taranoff a double and T. Hughes a single. Ootischenia 9 Cubs 5 Qotischenia outhit the Cubs 15-14 Monday night and outscored them 9-5in a game whre 36 men reached base. K. Cox led Ootischenia with three singles, Voykin had two singles and two walks, G. Trubetskoff and J, Nazaroff had a double and a single, B. Gretchen and W. Tomlin had two singles each with Beetz and T. Trubeskoff getting the other base hits. For the Cubs, J. Nestroff had a.triple and two singles, Ward (Jr.) had a double and two singles, K. Gorkoff reached base four times and two walks and two singles. T. Sabourin, two singles, Pur- cival (?} Picton and Lum (?) each had singles. Tuesday June 9 Throms 9 Pasa Creek 2 Joe Tarasoff pitched a three-hitter and four strike- outs and ‘three walks in Creek, Alex Pereverzoff got a triple, Ken Sherstobitoif and Tim Krug with singles got the only hits for Pass Creek. Thrums collected 12 hits off Phil Zaistoff. John Moran had three singles, Tom Mran, JQe Tarasoff and Wayne Ku- zyk hag a double anda single each with singles going to Frank Loukianoff, Steve Pos- tnicoff and Bill Tarasoff. Texaco 16 Cubs 1 ‘Texaco Stars broke open a 1-0 game in the third inning when they scored seven runs on three hits, a walk and two errors and added eight more runs in the fourth on four hits, two walks and two er- rors to beat the Cubs in five innings. George Plotnikoff allowed one hit and two walks for Texaco —-: Dave Picton getting the only Cub. hit. EB Darrell Keys scored ;three’ runs had three hits’ and 3 RBIs for Texaco. Rocky Bel- langer scored three runs and had two doubles. George Plotnicoff had two doubles, Joe Kambic a’ double and Brad Rix and Jim Kellar each had singles. Carling O’Keefe vs. Cancel — Rained out. Wednesday June 10 ‘Thrums 4 Ootischenis 2 Thrums scored three runs in the sixth inning on three walks and one hit to overtake Ootischenia. Joe Tarasoff ” struck ouit : seven, walked one and. al-- lowed four hits for Thrums while Jerry Trub had a triple for Thrums with sin- gles going to J. Tarasoff, Wayne Kuzyk and Carl Kooz- netsoff; Alex Ozeroff had a double and a single for Ootis- chenia with-Jerry Trubet- skoff and B. MacDonald get- Paul Kinakin and Peter Evdokimoff combined for a twohit shutout over Pass Creek, striking out nine bat- ters and walking only one. Alex Pereversoff had , the only hits for Pass creek, get- ting a double and a single. Elmer Williams had a home run, a double and single off Es Creek pitcher Phil Zais- ae Savinkoff had a home run, Norm Deverney a dou- ble, and Mike Schmidt, Paul Kinakin and Pau! D'Andrea had singles. ‘“Garting O'Keefe 12 = Valley Jrs.3 Terry Taranoff got his firat win ever-as a pitcher and Fred Kooznetsoff was cred- ited with a save as the two “Gary Fleming. for a four-walk, win over the juniors, Andy Sapriken led” O'Keefe’s with a double and Size P155/80R13 Sot $55.95 ea. $1 | 1 on4 “They ay are just a few of his products, With’ field house to take advantage o! the’ unproductive. winter months, therecan be many more, This has been the’ message since he first started his campaign, Originally, he tried to get it * built at Selkirk College. But the plan fell through at the last moment and a gymnasium went up instead. ’ Undaunted, he founded the Trail *.’ Bleld House Society and went from there. Persistence paid off. About two years ago the breaks — meaning the necessary money — started to come his ” way. They ‘began with $144,000 from a NIP {Neighbourhood Improvement Plan) grant, followed by some recrea- tion fund money from the provinctal government. Then Trail citizens voted 55 per cent in favor of a referendum which committed the city to putting, up $85,000 if the community raisedan equa! amount. With Willi leading the way, it was a cinch. 7 The local SuperValu outlet threw “him a personal challenge. For every dollar he raised, it would contribute a matching dollar toa ceiling of $5,000. Now tetired and living on his pension, Willi took the store the whole way. Got himself a job as part-time janitor in the city school system, worked until he made $5,000 and tossed it all into the kitty. Then, just over a year ago, the biggest break of all. The school board came in for $300,000. The only stipu- lation: it had to be built next to, and be made available to, the high school. This completed the $700,000 pac- kage. The project was put out to Pro osals last fall. When will 70 by 200 fee x an also will be alae in that it’s a B.C. first. No other community in the rovince — not Vancouver, nor Vic: ¢: torta — has a field house. But then no - other community has a mover and‘ shaker quite like Willi Krause. The, city of Trail recognized this fact’in*: more salutary fashion just over a year when it named him 1979 Citizen the Year. His | dynanism," says Lenardon, in q summing up the man,’ ‘touches ° everyone.” Poe bea bare bones, multi-purpose, heated building with a synthetic floor surface 3 Save up to $208 on 4 Brunswick RANDY PURSE SAVE Size P165/80R13 Reg. $86.20 en. Pair $61.95 ea. Set $57.95 ea. $113 4 Size P175/80RI3 Reg, $91.20 ea. Pair $65.95 ea: SAVE $121 two,singles, Gordon Semen- off had three singles, Terry Taranoff a home run and a single, Henry Stevens two singles, and the other hits went to Jake Jacobs, Warren Hepner, Phil Angrignon and All hits for eho Valley Irs. were singles going to Brett, Kevon I, Roger E (2), Tim N. and Stuard 8. (2;. “SO THAT'S HORSE RACING I struck out one, walked four and allowed four. hits. Sentors naments, The high school Rockettes have been West Kootenay champions for the past nine years. Two of the junior Rockettes, Lana Hor- ning and Beth Krug have been invited ‘to a special training camp in Vancouver this August. If there are any further questions concerning the camp phone Verna Chernoff “a aS17, 000 Truck (iekets c canbe parchoceate from any $981 GNC Aad Pickup * "2.300 tick x en pried rare hold boty 26, 190) rocweds 10 Cestleger c 10% hours practical, 11 hours theory. All procticol sessions held ot Bob Brandson Pool stort! p.m. All theory classes held at Community Complex Bish hedie) at7 m1, Schedule; ie dune bre ie i, Ww 10} pe classe hr. clessroom, 1% hes. a. pool Theidlassroomy 1 hee . Thr. classroom, 14 hea, pool Regi: ster at the Recreation Office by 4:30 p.m, ‘MONDAY, JUNE 15, (Phone 365-3390 .- . more in- C.S.L. ployer or at Stanley Humphries 385- 7735. . ‘Sotrbalt REG. REC. COMM. #1 inholdingo BRONZE MEDALLION COURSE June 15-28 Fee: $20 plus $12 for manual, 4 yrs. of age/Rec Cross seyrcom 3 1% bra, poot | Size P185/75R14 Reg. $106.20 ea. Pair $75.95 ea. Set'$70.95 ea. STAT on Size P215/75R15 — Reg. $128.70, Pair $9195, Set $84. Size P225/75R15 — Reg. $136.20, Pair. $96.95, ses ab SAVE SIS ond. Size P235/75R15 — Reg. $154.95, Pair $110.95, Set. $102.95, SAVE $208 on 4 - Save up to °112 on 4 Wi! Brunswick Premium Polyester: ” Remember to my Tolating camera, And be SAVE Eq. A78-13 List 52.45, Palr 37.95, Set 35.95. SAV N Ea. 878-13 List 38.70, Palr 42.95, Set 39.95, SAVE. gee Soa a. s' 70, Pair 45.95, Sa 95. Ea, E78-14 List 66.2 eer anos, Sava cak cna Ea. F78-14 List 68.70, Pair 48.95, Set 45.95, Ea. G76-15- List 69.95, Pulr-50.95, Sot 46.05, SAVE $00 on 4 Ea, H78-15 List 74.95, Palr 53.95, Sot 50.95. SAVE $96 on 4 Ea, L78-15 List 84.95, Palr 60.95, Sot 56.95. SAVE $112 on 4, Save *46”° ea. on Heavy Duty Traction Tires Size 750-16, 8 ply — List $126, 20, Sale $79,95° ea. " Be Eligible to Win a trip is Hawaii ora Minolta Camera Size P195/75R14 Reg. $109.95 ea. Pair $78.95 oa. Set $72.95 ea. SAVE $148... ‘air 47.95, Set 44, Size P205/75R14 Reg. $113.70 ea. Pair $81.95 ea. Set $75.95 ea." SAVE STS TD ns SAVE $185 0n4 .95. SAVE $85'0n enter your name in our wi 2701 Columbia Ave. 365-3433 for o Minolta Weathermati ic A eekly drow “sh iat oat lng Grand rit of eld CASTLEGAR * “the wi Scholarships, burderigi and! igior everds Awards given'to grads “Scholarships and ‘parsariée were srrded: ‘to many. candidates of the ‘graduating class of “train carrying 149 tonnes of - y "Following is a list mn the awards resented and their reelplenta: WARD - Castlegar & District Hoopla Award Castlegar-Robson Legion Branch 170 Bursaries Bata Sigma Phi Bursary Columbia Beverage Award Castlegar Chapter R.N.A.B.C. Eastern Star Minto Chapter 79 .A. Haywood Memorial Bursary .R Union of Youth of US.C.C.C, Robson Women’s Initito Home Economics Award Robson Women's Institute B Ladies’ Auxiliary, Castlegar & Portugese Social Club Award “; United Steelworkers of. America Local 480 +: Castlegar Savings Credit Union « Bursaries » Pulp: Be Paper W Workers of Canadian Callose, Com mpany Bursaries Cominco Award: Castlegar Selkirk Lions Club * Herb Pitts Memorial Br Arrow: jorsary Lakes Tow Boat Society Bursary United Steelworkers.of America “Local 9705 Bursaries or ‘Aggregate Award Leaders Award ¢ KT&RE ursary ; District Hospital Stanley Humphries Award RECIPIENT Joni Heinrich Fail to stop train. TORONTO (cr) — “fuston relgned Friday ae anti-nuclear. protesters who - falled in thelr attempt to halt uranium concentrate from entering Toronto, Dan McDermott, a mem- | ber. of the train,. on. its. way to: the; Eldorado Nuclear Ltd, refin- ing plant in Port Hope, Ont. . Then Greenpeace sent'out’ a call 'to;ail protesters’ to gather at an overpass in the,: northwest end of the city along tho train's route, Few- er than 10 d the call. Gloria Bouchard Pat Achibald Estelle Cormier. 2 Seanette Hateaniet Because Archesnbault . Richard Kanigan Kathy. Ozachoff Caroline Zaitsoff Elizabeth Resendes Janna Sylvest’ «.’ Rita Silva Susan Tischler Patricia Forrest” Christine Postnikoff *:’ ‘Karen Stroes Alf Semenoff*'- Carolin Matt, + group had ‘ nounced his intentions earlier '! in the day to chain himself to * CP Rail tracks to SOP the Among :them was, Green- peace spokesman Kai: Mill- yard, But {he didn't, know. where McDermott, was seins. -RDCK.to dopear. in’ court Sept.9 The. Regional . District. of Central Kootenay in to ap- pear in court Sept. 9 to an- swer charges that it violated . $ me of a. pollution’ control April 24 by the as mana. gement branch. The regional district en- tered pleas of not guilty on. the charges during its initial court ae Or dump. Gloria Bouchard * Donna Hadikin Debbie. Nichvslodott Richard Kanigan - Gwen Kruetzke, "Caroline Zaitaoff ‘ Lawrence Tamelin : Lawrence Samoyloff Carolin Matt Marcella Doucette - San ft Marcella Doucette Teresa Perepelkin, = Marcella Doucette Terry Klapper Jeff Shmoorkoff + Jon Varabioff - Kathy Osachoff Teresa Perepelkin Val Poohachoft Jeff Shmoorkoff ‘anita Command Jeff Shmoorkoff Jack Normandéau “Voters take first: step. PARIS (AP) — French - voters: take the first step . toward choosing a national ‘assembly’ on Sunday, begin- ning a week-] long process that qvill determing whether Prem Heept ‘ae Mittgridnd |? most of his Runoff elections in the as- sembly districts will be the following Sunday, June 21. ‘Socialsits are calling for a Jeftist majority which,. in force of law,” and allow the reforms to be. voted through. The Communists,’ hoping to - bounce, back: ffom their poor showing in the. presidential -elactions, .want enough strength push their demands for posts in Iterrand’s eab-. inet. ‘The conservative opposi- tion, led by Paris Mayor and Gaullist leader Jacques Chirac since Mitterrand's de- fent of Valery Giscard d'Es-. taing..on’ May 10, is asking « voters. to retain the’ centre: right as a . rein on Mitter- rand’a ambitions. No French commentators ;Arabs. “destruction of : nuclear. centre : “OTTAWA: (CP) — About 150: members of Ottawa's. Arab community demonstra-: | ted in-front of the U.S. Em-’ bassy on Saturday to protest the destruction of an Iraqu}.- nuclear rese: centre last week during‘ an Israeli air: force bombing raid. The. demotstrators marched’ two’ blocks to the < embassy, ‘across ‘the atreet from: Parliament Hill; chant:: ‘ing anti-American and anti: ; Israeli slogans. The - Arab. community asked the Canadian govern- ment to condemn the raid in the strongest terms atid to, call on Israel to recognize the Fights of the Palestinian peo-:- ple. There were several shout- ing matches between the demonstrators and ‘passers- by, but the. demonstration ended Poseofully, atteat “are | banned: in” the‘ “final *, “ weekbefore the vote but ear ~ iMer surveys gave a‘ slight are calling the result. Polls protest = : 7 oun i anda per cont” as ‘The trial date,.was sot Wednesday during a prelim: inary hearing in provincial are in. Nelson. bree: chars. were tala” “BELFASH (AP) ~. Heaman was shot in the neck . and seriously wounded in a Londonderry shopping. dis-: trict Saturday and snipers wounded an off-duty British soldier -in: an ‘ambush ‘ina rural area west: of: Belfast, Northern Ireland: police ‘re-. ‘fhe foot patrolcian was struck once by. parently fired fro a sniper as afternoon shop. . Pers Elle about the’ area, im Craig, '& spokesman district failed: to meet con- to .chain himsolf ‘and was waiting for a call that would im. McDermott was also wait- ing for a phone call from lockouts posted in Bolton and | Woodbridge, west of the city, But‘those calls never cam which meant McDermott did not ‘Have time to chain’ him- self to the tracks, HUNT WASON. - ‘Assoonas the train passed © by, the hunt was on for Me: Dermott. After‘a quick look under.a nearby overpass and a series of frantic phone calls to Greenpeate’s office, it was ciaeovered he at some “socked Into. 'MeDermott said the spate” ters had lost‘ the train: be-:' cause: CP had changed en -gines and: Greenpeace been’ keeping’ "taba on ‘on the ® train by the engine | numbers, on May. gE Beat The WMB-alleges that on . Jan. 5, 6, and 7, the regional *. ditions of its permit requiring ° that wastes ae the dump are covel dirt. 5 ‘A of people: good cine of of getting sae through’ Dungannon,’ which ‘is‘ about 65 kilometres west of here, snipers ambushed: the® sol- Gler's \car and sturtied oe ite: Royal Ulster :Con- atabulary, ‘ here: me ‘officer ” tal in ser was taken to ‘ious pata The off-duty. soldier, a part-time member. ofthe 5 ays Ulster , De- it, sh H \. while driving Acar during the, _ Honors given. ve LONDON (aP) _ ‘Queen - Elizabeth today knighted one - ‘of Prince Charles's favorite ; conedians: a former editor of e Times of London and Britains chief rabbi'in the annual list of honors given during her official birthday” celebration. Comedian Harry Secombe, ment sources. saying ‘about a dozen low-ranking. civil ser- vants were removed from the | ted it to Buckingham Palace, Although itisknown asthe queen's honors, the' list. in fact is drawn up by the’ gov- ernment to ‘Teward merit, star of a 19503 radio show; . William Rees- Mogg, editor of the Times for « .14-years until ‘press tycoon Rupert Murdoch took it over in February, and Dr. Imman- uel Jakobovits, chief rabbi. since 1967, were among the 657 British and Common.’ wealth subjects included in he Queen's Birthday Hon- onthe list included enter- : tainers, politicians, business-” Central Somalia disaster. Bombs jnogadishu JAP} — Ethio- pian combat planes - bombed two provincial. capitals ik central Somalia, bea Pen Handicaps get) --a bréak:on: special devices VICTORIA (CP) — Hardi- capped pepole, will no longer have to pay the six-per-cent B.C. sales taxon transpor- tation aids.such as. wheel-, chairs, elevators and lifts, ramps and hand or foot con- ‘trots for motor : vehicles, he id * enipted from the tax work- related safety. equipment such a5 goggles, hard hats, . respirator, hearing protec tora, ‘special clothing includ-.- ing. pea ies and butchers’. ap- ‘rons, safety boots and traffic safety vests. The changes; pl kill 30. people and injuring | others, Somali officials: said - turtiny. ‘The described. the bomb- ‘ } igs Friday and Saturday as ~. j thp sverst this year. in the Jong: simmering ‘dispute be-" ‘twedn the two African neigh- bors over Ethiopia's Ogaden 3 + province. ‘The officials: ‘said 24 people were killed Friday at Gal- . cayo, 100 kilometres from the Ethiopian border, and six on :: Saturday at Dusa Mareb, 150 kilometres south of Galcayo. ‘The raids brought the death: toll to 42 from seven Ethi- opian air raids this week, _ they said. A;( Cairo newspaper, Al “sAbram, said | Somali », State visit to Egypt because of the latest air raids. He had planned to meet with Egyp- tan President, Anwar Sadat. ’ Saturday. Ethiopia and Somalia went’ to .war in- 1977 over hte- Ogaden that is largely Pop lated by ethnic ‘Somalis. An romised in the March isl bud- get, are retreactive to that “Gates the ‘ministry said in a: newsirelease,’ “backed by Cuban iia units, drove Somali. troops “from the territory, in 1978. ing a-pay dispute with. the Presi. dent. Siad Barre cancelled 3. . don’s new $@-million Ne or political services. The mon- arch. rarely - questions : thi names presented to her. o list is issued as part of | her official’ birthday '‘cele- bration Saturday. Her real birthday is April 21. New tennis facilities ready LONDON AP) — Wimble: lo. 1 _ court facility is ready for the opening of the tennis cham- lur- , plonships June 22, ‘The facil- government. ‘Press ‘Associaiton, Brit- * ain’s doméstic news agency, ia unidentified govern. ity includes » new grand- stand. with 1,250 additional, seats’ and. elaborate | rest rooms.and a restaurant for the players. Scientists expect” another eruption — "VANCOUVER, WASH. {AP) — Mount St. Helens is expected to erupt within the next two weeks,; probably 0; with little violence, in keep- ing with the volcano's eight- to-l0-week pattern of acti- -vity, scientists say. The advisory remained in effect Saturday despite a de- cline’ in selsmic activity, monitored by earthquake-re- cording devices in: Seatlle, - since it was issued Friday by the U.S. Geological Survey , and the Univeraity of Wash-. Peckham said. “The ‘restricted red zone‘: around the mountain remains open to permit-holders, and. scientists plan to keep work- . ing on the.voleand, ‘The advisory “means we should be on the outlook, but we won't be hauling bat Fee body off the mountain,” sai Bob Nortis at the | seorhaten centre. zs S Geologist Chris Newhall noted | Friday that~ the;'vo-": Icano's outbursts have oc- curred about once suey na ington, said the S , geophysics centre spokesman. Dave Peckham.. Since, a tremor Friday morning that. indicated a steam burst, “there's been nothing that, size. at all,” weeks, with ing from towering blasts of ash to quiet flowa of lava which have built up a dome- shaped formation in the cra- ter. The dome is larger than Seattle's Kingdome stadium. . day.: : Police and British troops “se sealed off a, oust complex: in.-mainly.: Roman ‘Cat ‘West Bal and search he the complex. ee ae weapons or no sign of any of." . the fugitives. ‘Four of the: 2 eight fugi e8 were convicted : in’ absentia ida army’ captain: in. 1980, and three’: others: were, “guilty of. weapons re The eighth was. awaiting public‘‘sines. his. return. to Tehran from the Bina war: -lieves: the than: 8 ‘GHICAGO"(AP) “ Newly ‘elected ‘Teamaters president ” Roy,:Lee. Williams and four “other ‘ men havebeen re-. leaped: ‘on’ $5,000 personal» Vi ‘recongizance bond ‘after pleading ‘not ‘guilty ‘to : : a arges of conspiring to bribe a U.S, senator ‘to influence legislation, U8, Distriet Judge Pren-} Marshall set: the ‘bond ». tiee:: Friday for’ ‘Williams, 6, and . propoerty. and he ts accused al of no} i prengtoing i th seh the “other ‘ Fecognizan i “does” not require the Arete 5 ‘he apokaman db be DRILLING was ‘underway crew collected soil sam; drill les out pe tests as part of the studies for B.C. pa eo s. beside joni eehubines Centre, at ihe lip of he Sank city. riday as a. overlooking’ and carried Columbia ‘River. Test’ cosulte wilPbe rt of.the data used Hydro” ‘hen It considers ne - feasibility of the project. The testing will » be continuing this week at sites in the eedtewnFote by Werren tggion'