Samantha Kelly You bet I would. Tracey Clark Doug Morrison It doesn’t bother me one way or the other. way. Betty Tolman Sure. Why not? No. I'm not into gambling any- Sure. I think with the economy . it's needed. There would have to be tight controls on it. Alex Barisenkofi No, definitely not. (Gambling) ruins the whole life of the family people... By CasNews Staff “The‘man who refuses to stock what he considers material in his convenience store is getting community support, he says. Ron Franks, manager of Roadside Place, had his mag- azine supply discontinued by a Trail distributor when he’ refused to accept magazines that depicted “explicit sex." Franks says he has re- ceived letters of support from the Castlegar and Dis- trict Teachers’ Association, Citizens United For Safety and Justice (a North Van- couver based group), Castle- gar school board, and the Kinnaird elementary Valley Vista Parent group. “['ve had many well-wish- ers come into the store, cus- tomers . . . I believe because of the response, people are tired of going into stores and being forced to view por- nography,” said Franks. “I think they're tired of seeing their children in stores seeing it.” Franks said no one has been critical of his anti- pornography stand. “I've had no bad response . . not one word.” Franks said he has tel- ephoned MP Lyle Kristian- sen (NDP — Kootenay West) and MLA Chris D'Arcy (NDP — Rossland-Trail) to comp- lain about the app: re- © Emeraude * Nuance ¢ L‘Aimant ® Sophia GIFT PACK Body Oil & Lotion Creamy Skin Perfume Pomanders CACHET By Matchebelli Spray Cologne, 18 Gr Partum, 4 mi Yalue 3 $24 SPECI GIFT SECTION — TO MOM WITH LOVE China, Frames, Vases & Mugs. Silk Bed & Dresser Dolls. Scented Long Stem Roses. Musical Ornaments & Cars. Alabaster Pin Boxes. fusal of Trail distributor Conacher News to supply him with non-pornographic material, but hasn't yet rec- eived a reply. 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A native of Winnipeg, Man., Mikuska is fresh from a successful year at the University of Manitoba where he is majoring in art -y: Before coaching in Castle- gar last season, Mikuska had coached the EKY Stingrays in Winnipeg, the Vernon Ko- kanee swim club in Vernon, the South Side Swim Club in Edmonton and the Dolphin Swim Club in Winnipeg. The challenges facing him in his second year with the Aquanauts include maintain- ing the positive momentum in the club which grew out of last season, particularly the i VINCE MIKUSKA . second season coaches for the Aquanauts. They will be helping Mikuska and improving the clubs stand- ings at the Provincials. He would also like to im- prove the club's status within the community as well as get more of the program to more of the swimmers. Last year Mikuska im- plemented a program to im- * prove the overall abilities of all the club members by en- couraging individual excel- lence through hard work. He plans to continue along these lines as well as improve the eight and under swim- mers with a learn to swim program. Some of his goals are bet- ter planning in order to take more swimmers to the pro- vineial swim meet and to im- prove swimming generally within the region through co-operation with other clubs. He will also get more of the older swimmers in- volved with coaching within the club. Rob MecGauley and Ray Yule will be back as assistant with his and will each be given a group 0 coach. This Friday night, the Aquanauts are sponsoring a dance and social evening to raise funds for the swim club. Dryland training started on Monday and will continue from 4 to 5 p.m. until Friday at the soccer field at the rec- reation complext. Registra- tions will be taken at this time for anyone interested in joining the club. The long weekend in May will see a number of swim- mers as well as coach Mik- ka and one assistant coach jena a four-day develop- ment camp at Oliver. The main purpose of the camp is to assist swimmers in achieving higher levels of performance through better coaching, better officiating and better information. In addition to pool sessions, there will be seminars on flexibility, weightlifting, psyching, diet, goal setting as well as many other inter- esting and pertinent topics. The Aquanauts are mem- bers of the B.C. Summer Swim Association which con- sists of over 4,000 swimmers in more than 58 clubs based in eight regions. The club has a membership in the B.C. Summer Swim Association which gives ac- cess to officials and coaches clinics, an insurance policy for swimmers and high cali- bre competition. The club was founded in 1961 as the KifWeird Aqua- naut Speed S Club and has grown in #@fength and size to over 130 swimmers. Basically, the swim club pro- gram is designed to develop the swimmer in competency in the four basic strokes, self-discipline and team spirit. Even for those swim- mers who choose not to enter into the competitive side of swimming, the program is still invaluable as it develops a well-rounded strong swim- mer. Tennis team wins match Stanley Humphries tennis team won its first dual match on the road against L.V. Rogers High School of Nelson. The team score was & convineing 7-4 in favor of the locals with the girls claiming five of the seven victories. The girls doubles teams of Connie Elasoff and Kim Sor- enson along with Lucianna Alvarez and Patty Plotnikoff played very, well, according to coach Barry DePaoli. Sorenson and Elasoff have played together for .three years and may be the stfong- est team in the West Koot- enay League this year, he said. He said Alvarez has im- proved a great deal since last year and Plotnikoff was es- pecially impressive. Linda King played her first-ever singles match as she usually competes as a doubles player. bles player. Julie Perehudoff, who usu- ally plays at the singles po sition was unable to make the trip due to another school commitment. King played a solid match, one which proved to be an important win fdr the team. Thé girls will have added depth when Maria Resentes is able to return. She has been bothered with a muscle strain for most of the season. Recording victories for the boys were the doubles com- binations of Keith Klimehuck and Rollen Raposo along with Jason Leitch and Brent Bet- tger. Raposo and Klimchuck Baseball pool tickets MONTREAL (CP) — While the federal government, major league baseball and the provinces fought it out in court Tuesday, Ottawa put three million tickets for its new baseball-betting pool on sale across Canada. Federal Sports Minister Jacques Olivier, who launched the pool at a news conference, said the provinces don't have an exclusive right to make money on gaming. He also dismissed three separate legal actions by the provinces, baseball leagues and Loto-Quebec aimed at blocking the scheme. All 10 provinces are seeking an injunction in Federal Court, alleging the sports pool violates a 1979 agreement granting them exclusive right to operate lotteries in return for giving Ottawa a percentage of the take, which now amounts to about $30 million a year. The Quebec government and Loto-Quebec filed for a separate injunction Tuesday just as hearings were getting under way into an injunction request by the National League and the American League and 15 baseball clubs. In their petition, American League president Robert Brown, National League president Charles Feeney and the baseball clubs argue the pool infringes on their copyrights and sullies the image of the game by making it part of a gambling attraction. By JOHN KOROBANIK BLOOMINGTON, MINN. (CP) — Edmonton de- fenceman Don Jackson returned home to score the “sweetest goal” of his career Tuesday night and help the Oilers enter the National Hockey League Stanley Cup final for the second straight year. The Bloomington native scored his first playoff goal early in the second period of Edmonton's 3-1 victory that completed a four-game sweep of Minnesota North Stars in the Campbell Conference final. Jackson, a former North Star who scored his first NHL goal here last season after being traded to Edmonton, took a pass just over the blue line, swept ,around defenceman Brad Maxwell and beat Gilles Meloche with a sliding shot into the opposite “I held up for a second and I don’t think he expected me to drive for the net,” said Jackson, who later required four stitches to his forehead after being run into a metal post holding the glass near the penalty box. “But what I'm really proud of is only giving up one goal against a good offensive team.” ALSO SCORE GOALS Dino Ciccarelli’s slap-shot goal for Minnesota was sandwiched between Edmonton goals by Ken Linseman, on a power play, and Jari Kurri, into an empty net, in the third period. It took an outstanding effort by goalie Grant Fubr, By JOHN MacKINNON UNIONDALE, N.Y. (CP) — Montreal got all the third-period breaks, but by that time New York Islanders goaltender Billy Smith had already broken the Canadiens with his biggest save of the National Hockey League playoffs. Smith beat Mats Naslund, stopping the left winger's backhand shot with his left pad on a penalty shot at 15:03 of the second period, to preserve a 1-1 tie. The Islanders went on to win 3-1 Tuesday night to tie the Prince of Wales Conference final at two games apiece. : The best-of-seven series now shifts back to Montreal for Game 5 on Thursday night. On the penalty shot, Naslund deked Smith and tried to beekhand the puck through his legs, but Smith wasn't fooled and blocked the shot with his pad. Islanders coach Al Arbour said: “It was a very big turning point for our elub right there. It really gave us a lift and we needed something because some of our guys were pretty ragged out there from killing penalties.” The teams had traded first-period power-play goals, with Tomas Jonsson scoring for New York and Steve Shutt for Montreal. But just when Montreal's patient, checking style seemed to be frustrating the Islanders, Smith did his job on his first playoff penalty shot. Less than two minutes later, defenceman Ken Morrow carried the puck deep into the Montreal zone, plowed Chris Chelios out of the way and backhanded the puek in front to Mike Bossy as he fell. Bossy snapped in his sixth goal of the playoffs at 16:40 to make it 2-1. Oilers advance N.Y. Islanders tie series 2-2 on sale Olivier told reporters Ottawa did not sign away its rights to operate a sports poo] when it signed the agreement with the provinces. He said the betting scheme is not a lottery but a game of skill since it is based on accurate predictions of baseball scores. Federal officials say they have at least 23,000 agents across Canada, mainly grocery store operators, to sell the $2 tickets. Store owner Ralph Damato said he agreed to sell the federal tickets despite threats of reprisal from Loto-Quebec. Loto-Quebee spokesman Richard Camiran said that even if the federal scheme is declared legal in court, it will remove its validating terminals from retailers selling the provincial lottery and federal pool. Camiran said all retailers with Loto-Quebec terminals signed an agreement stating they would not sell lotteries or games of chance other than those which it distributes. Olivier pledged that the Canadian Sports Pool Corp. will go to court to help any vendors who want to fight any province that tries to prevent them from selling both sets of tickets. The federal government has said the bulk of this year's pool revenues will go to the 1983 Winter Olympics in Calgary who missed Game 3 with a bruised elbow, to hold the fired-up North Stars to a single goal. “He made some captain Brian Bellows said of Fuhr. But Meloche, making his first start since the second game of the playoffs, was equally superb in the North Stars net. The North Stars fell behind 2-0 on Linseman's rebound goal, scored after Minnesota was called for too many men on the ice. The Edmonton defence did a good job in limiting the North Stars to 25 shots and virtually none on rebounds. DEFENCE WAS GREAT it was.a great defensive effort, that’s why the score was down,” Fuhr said. Cicearelli scored midway through the third period with a hard slap shot from the top of the right faceoff circle. “The shot dropped on me, it just caught the bottom of my glove,” said Fuhr. North Star forward Mark Napier said: “We gave them three pretty tough games. It would have been a lot more frustrating if we had come out tonight and not worked.” Kurri scored his league-leading 13th playoff goal in the final minute. The Oilers now await the winner of the Montreal New York Islanders series that is tied 2-2. saves, Rookie defenceman Gord Dineen, who had hauled down Naslund to prompt the penalty-shot call by referee Bruce Hood, made it 3-1 at 2:24 of the third period. With a 3-1 lead and penalty killers such as Butch Goring and Brent Sutter buzzing around effectively, the Islanders tightened their grip on the game, despite a string of third-period power-play chances by the Cana- diens. “I think we had all the breaks in the third period, but we didn’t take advantage of them,” said Montreal coach Jacques Lemaire. Montreal had 10 chances in the game, including overlapping penalties to Denis Potvin and Brent Sutter early in the third and a five-minute boarding penalty to Bryan Trottier after he knocked Bob Gainey unconscious with a vicious check into the boards behind the Islanders net. The Canadiens, who took the first two games of the series at home, returned to the Forum with their faith in their defensive system intact. “We know what it takes to beat the Islanders,” said defenceman Rick Green. Lemaire said Gainey, who suffered a facialcut and didn’t play after being hit by Trottier, was all right. The Islanders’ Dave Langevin appeared to reinjure the left shoulder he separated in Game 3 of the Patrick Division final against Washington Capitals when he was checked into the boards by Chris Nilan in the first period. Langevin went down heavily, then got up and skated to the dressing room. Arbour said Langevin will travel to Montreal, but was unsure whether he will play Thursday night. are new additi to this year's squad and are showing a great deal of potential. Leitch and Bettger add three years of experience to the team. For complete statistics, see ie Week Wrap-Up, page — next dual match will held at the Castlegar Tennis Club against league favorites, J.L. Crowe High School of Trail, on Thursday May 3. This Saturday SHSS will be involved in exhibition play against the _ Cardinals of Washing- Phillies triumph over Expos Coast League, pitched six ef- fective innings. Lezeano added a double and drove in five runs in Philadelphia Phillies, played major roles in a 7-4 National League baseball triumph over Montreal Expos. pos. Left fielder Lezcano hit two home runs and Bystrom, recalled earlier in the day from Portland of the Pacific place of regular starter Glenn Wilson. His three-run home run in the seventh broke a 4-4 tie. Lezcano normally platoons in right field with left- handed hitting Joe LeFeb- vre. Phillies manager Paul Owens said he had planned to start Lezcano in left even before Wilson came down with a bad virus. Even though Byrstrom did not get the victory, he al- lowed only seven hits and Lezeano's first home run of the night cut the Expo lead to