July 10, 1988 HERITAGE TOUR . . - @ representative from the Ministry of Tourism, Recreation and Culture, Ber nice Till inspected local heritage sites recently ment. Titt was impressed with progress on local projects and expressed interest in their future develop Tourism official visits By JOHN CHARTERS Bernice Till, Capital Projects Offi cer for the Ministry of Tourism, Recreation and Culture came to Castlegar last Wednesday and had breakfast at the home of John Char. ters, Chairman of the newly formed Castlegar and District Heritage society, and his wife Bunny. She then spent a busy day with Charters as her guide, conferring with officials and inspecting heritage sites throughout the area After a brief visit to the city hall to meet Mayor Audrey Moore and city administrator Dave Gairns, and to discuss the transfer of British Col. building had a great deal of potential and promised to keep a close and helpful eye on its development She then made a detailed tour of the Zuckerberg Island Heritage Park and the Chapel House. Tit! was im pressed by the amount of progress that had been achieved and warmly praised the efforts of the volunteers and the support of the industrial, business and community supporters of the project After lunch she toured the Koot enay Doukhobor Historical Museum, paid a quick visit to the Selkirk College campus, examined the old umbia Heritage Trust funds present ly held in trust by the city to the Heritage Society, she made a tour of inspection of the Castlegar Railway Station. Alex Lutz was directing the Castlegar and District Development crew in the construction of the first phase of restoration, the building of a station playform. Till, who started her career in heritage restoration, felt that the Doukhobor suspension bridge, visit ed Verigins’ tomb, the Hugh Keen. leyside dam area and the Robson ferry It had been a most interesting and informative visit, she said, for such a detailed and on the spot tour gave her a valuable and more in depth understanding of the problems of the area and she expressed a hope for an early return visit SUMMERTIME FAMILY PAK MEALS! We do the work all you have to do is enjoy! cau 365-5353 — HOURS — Saturday to Thursday 9a.m. to 9 p.m. Fridays 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. and all should be well! Yes, by 90.m. Sundays. you should be enjoying your Sunday Castlegar News If you're not, we wont to correct the matter astiegor News by 9 a.m. ne us Monday end complain. Call 365-7266 and ask for circulation Castlegar News 197 Columbia Ave. 365-7266 F HB Business’ A representative of the Bank will be in Castlegar on July 13, 1988 to discuss your Financial and Management needs. Why not call us today at 426-7241 to arrange an appointment. Lo Banque offre ses servic dons les deux long BACKING INDEPENDENT BUSINESS Development Bank Banque federale de developpement Canadit (from left) Pete Oglow, director of the Kootenay Doukhobor Historical Society, Bernice Till and Christine Faminoff, secretary of the KDHS. CasNewsPhoto Measles warning ed EDMONTON (CP) — A health ad- visory for measles has been issued to passengers who travelled Tuesday on Canadian Airlines flight CP8 to Vancouver from Hong Kong and flight CP643 to Calgary from Van- couver. A 13-year-old boy travelling on both flights has been diagnosed with the disease. The child would have been highly infectious at the time even though his symptoms hadn't yet developed. Parents who had .non-immunized children at the Vancouver Interna- tional Airport between 11:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. PDT or at the Calgary International Airport between 4:45 p.m. and 6 p.m. MDT are also to contact helath authorities. People over 30 years old are con- sidered to be immune because almost everyone had measles before the vaccine was available. susan oc ver ae STLEGAR NEWS sod? CAS CA! #0 canwte Prices in effect Wed. July 13th While Quantities Last! Ladies’ Summer Handbags Orig. Reg. 9.99 6°° Ladies’ Summer T-Shirts —Our Reg. 14.99 S.M.L. & Plus Sizes a ' : Trav Cl¢ UVC VANCOUVER COQUITLAM EASY OFF/EASY ON Bruneise North at TRANS-CANADA uwy. ‘5 Brunette Ave., itlam, BC, V3K 1C3 eee 525-7777 1 7777 * y accommods: at reasonable rates * Plenty of Free oversized parking ba + mes 4 to Loushood, New Coquitlam & Guilford Shopping Centres * Direct bus to Skytrain Call Toll Free 1-800-663-2233 inte The gool of er line bead to and all member: Sun ic peeure the federal government 's of par! ban ment to ensure legislation will Protect all human life from the moment of conception. SHOW YOUR SUPPORT FOR THE UNBORN BY WALKING IN THE RELAY HERE ON Wednesday, July 13, 1988 Telephone 365-3951 for More information PAINTING & DECORATING 2649 FOURTH CASTLEGAR vin 2s! Gary Fleming Dianne Kootnik ADVERTISING SALES OFFICE 365-5210 1800-66 35-4966 AVENUE ac 365 3563 FORD RD SALES (Tp. YOU ORVEN Foe rey 7to 14 Jam Shorts Our Reg. 8.99 99 Polo Tops or T-Shirts Our Reg. up to 14.99 July 10,1988 Bt Need a car loan? We'll make it happen. Rizzutto wins JimYoun By BRENDAN NAGLE Staff Writer The five-some led by former Vancouver Canuck Garth Rizzutto took first place at the Jim Young Celebrity Golf Tournament at the Castlegar golf club Thursday. Rizzuto teamed up with Larry Webster and John Peregrym of Castlegar and Dick Nelson and John Rice of Trail to win the five-man Texas scramble event with a 12 under par 60 over 18 holes. Another ex-Canuck, Dennis Kearns, had his fivesome take second spot with an 11 under 61. Kearns teamed up with Gus Adams of Nelson and Wayne Cox, Jeff Calder and Rob McPherson of Castlegar. The Bud Nameck squad was third. He and his partners Jim Carmichael of Kelowna and Otto Walker, Pat Metge and Ray Bystrom of Castlegar also carded an 1h under 61. Jim Young's fivesome finished the day well back with a six under 66 and Young was quick with an exph jon for his performance. “Well I'm not a golfer by any means,” he told the Castlegar News adding he was still happy with his team’s result. “We were very happy that we got to be six under, it took a lot of doing. BCTV sports announcer John McKeechie was more to the point. “Well, it is over and we didn't win it so that pretty well tells you what kind of golfer I am,” he said. “But the bottom line is I think we raised a bit of money for Red Cross and whatever fun we had'is a bonus.” Jays blasted by Mariners TORONTO (CP) — With the score off Stottlemyre, 3-8. The rookie gave tied 2-2 in the fourth inning, rookie Greg Briley told himself to relax, stay back in his stance and try to make contact. Then he sent a full-count pitch from Todd Stottlemyre over the wall in right field, igniting a decisive rally in a 9-3 route by the Seattle Mariners over the Toronto Blue Jays. “It was a fastball, down and in,” said Briley, recounting his first: major league home run. “I was just trying to put the ball in play but I knew I hit it pretty good. Steve Balboni hit a three-run homer, Scoitt Bradley went 4-for-4 and Scott Bankhead, 4-3, allowed seven hits over six innings for the win over the Jays, who committed three errors. Four Toronto pitchers combined to allow 15 Mariner hits. Amazingly, the crowd of more than 81,000 stuck around till the late innings- The official temperature was 34 C, but the heat registered 43 C on the Blue Jay thermometer in the stands. Most fans left in the seventh but they should have stuck around for the ninth, when the lumbering first baseman-designated hitter Cecil Fielder came out to play third. He made a play on Briley, forcing first baseman Fred McGriff to dig his throw out of the dirt. up eight hits and five runs in three-plus innings. “I just stunk,” said Stottlemyre. y felt like beating my head against the wall, trying to get one inside. “Every hitter kept going ball one and ball two. I just couldn't bet my breaking ball over.” Reliever John Cerutti replaced Stottlemyre with two runners on and appeared to be out of the jam when, with two out, Bradley's grounder deflected off his glove. It went to second baseman Manny Lee, who made a wild throw toward first to allow in a run. “One play, one pitch — that's what it came down to,” Toronto manager Jimy Williams said. “We could have got out of there, 3-2:* Mark Eichhorn entered and Bal- boni capped the five-run fourth with his three-run homer. “don't think he's throwing the ball the same as he has in the past,” said Balboni.““He used to be-more in control.” Toronto's best pitcher was Jim Clancy, who made his first regular- season relief appearance since July 4, 1979 and shut out the Mariners for three innings. The relief duty snapped a string of 282 starts. McKeechie, who said he'd rented a mulligan — a free stroke to be used once at any time during the tourney — for $5 didn’t make it pay off. “I used it,” he said. “(But) none of the mulligans on our squad worked.” Danny Gare's squad carded a 10 under 62 — just one stroke out of the prizes — but Gare said he had a good day. “T had an enjoyable day,” he said. “We had a really good time.” Castlegar's own RCMP Staff Sgt. Jack Keddy took part in the tournament and when asked how he played he replied: “Do you really want\to know?” Keddy and his teammates finished the day at seven under — out of the winning — but he said his partners g Tourney did all the good golfing “I wasn't shooting good, our team was shooting good,” he said. (But) I had a nice day.” Stu Kehoe, the general manager for the Vancouver Canadians baseball club, said just the opposite of his play during the tournament. “I tell you what, I was outstanding,” he said. “I hit the ball better than our teammates did, I carried them all game.” Kehoe also joked about his handicap and said it should have been far different “I should really be a seratch handicap,” he said. “They got me down as a 36, I think it’s wrong I'm really a scratch golfer.” The tourney raised close to $10,000. oa David Valle hit a two-run double in the sixth to make it 9-2. Ladies’ Swimwear Our Reg. 19.88 12 Kiddies’ 4 to 6X Shorts One Low Price Girls’ 2 to 6x Briefs Our Reg. 99¢ 3 499 for roo Ladies’ Anklets Our Reg. 69¢ Girls’ 7 to 14 T-Shirts Our Reg. 8.99 Boys’ 8 to 16 3 Pr. Pack Socks One Low Price 310 Col. Ave., ae Ph. 365-3255 “icc tve.n Foon n” Boys’ 8 to 16 T-Shirts Orig. Reg. 10.99 SAVE UP TO Seattle sent 10 men to the plate in the fourth to break it open. Briley kicked things off with his solo homer the first and Toronto. TOURNAMENT A SUCCESS . The Jim Young Celebrity Golf Tour- for the cup on the 18th from about 30 feet out but misses by about a Kelly Gruber hit RBI doubles in third innings for nament saw a mixture of local golfers and sports celebrities trying their luck at the Castlegar Golf Club. Danny Gare (left) makes a run Can't tell celebrities from locals Celebrity. Just what is a celebrity? The Oxford Dictionary definition describes it as fame; widely known person. Say celebrity five times in a row and it stops sounding like a word. Most of us who are not known as celebrities toil in obscurity while the people we watch on television in the news, sports or entertainment arenas reap the rewards of fame and fortune while isolating them. selves from us plebs. Well if that is the case, those weren't celebrities on the Castlegar golf course Thursday but were instead clever, golf club-wielding imposters clad in loud bermuda shorts and golf shoes It was quite clear that these celebrities were no more than people, like you and I, out having a good time in aid of a great cause. That familiar face of Long John McKeechie's you've grown accustomed to while watching the BCTV late night sports is not only the solemn and humorous TV sports face at all. In a performance Thursday night at the Jim Young Golf Tournament banquet Long John was’as different from his television persona as Dr. Jeckyl was to Mr. Hyde. His colorful language could have simply knocked'the buzzard off a manure wagon at 50 paces and his demeanour was a startling reminder that what we see on television is not 100 per cent of the person on the screen at all. It was the same for all of the 27 celebrities who showed up to help raise close to $10,000 for the Red Cross at the golf classic. Guys like former B.C. Lion John Blain and ex-Vancouver Canuck Darcy Rota looked more at home swapping tales with the locals at the golf club than they did while at work on television. If Bud Nameck and Scott Jellicoe hadn't only met until Thursday, I'd have sworn they were long-time acquaintances, although I don't know for sure if Jellicoe has any long-time acquaintances. The talk, of course, was about golf. The swings, the hooks, the slices, the missed putts and an overall concensus that the track in Qotischenia is one Sporting Views By Brendon Nagle Castlegar Golf Club members can take a lot of pride in were the hot topics of the day. Of course, Gordie Walker and Mark Lofthouse of the Philadelphia Flyers couldn't help but raise their. voices and glasses in praise of p: | hockey foot and Stu Kehoe addresses his ball on the 10th ee in a manner peculiar only to Triple A baseball club managers. CosNewsPhotos by Brendon Nogle Giants squash Cards SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Chris Speier hit for the cycle in the first five-hit game of his 18-year career and the San Francisco Giants hit five home runs en route to a 21'2 rout of the stumbling St. Louis Cardinals on Saturday. Speier, filling in for regular second baseman Robby Thompson, hit two doubles, a triple, a homer and a single to pace a season-high 20-hit attack. The Giants‘ 21 runs set a San Francisco record, surpassing the previous high of 19. Speier, Kevin Mitchell, Bob Melvin, Will Clark and Earnest Riles each homered. Riles hit his in the seventh and it was the 10,000th homer in the history of the Giants franchise. The New York Yankees reached that ealrier this season. and how they weren't golfing at all but improving their slap shot techniques on the tee. Even Bob McCammon, the Vancouver Canucks head coach, couldn't help but smile every time McKeeechie hurled one of his razor sharp gaffs at the Canuck organization and its apparent ineptitude on the ice last year. McCammon and the Canucks have taken the brunt of bad hockey jokes all year and I believe McCammon when he says things are definitely going to get better for the squad. Now if only they'd change their uniforms Of course McKeechie's co-conspirator, weather man Norm Grohman, couldn't help but liven up the party with his parody of a French-Canadian hockey player while loading his delivery with humerous anecdotes about local hockey players and golfers. The only good thing about Grohman's golf day was the fact that everybody blamed him for the tourney's great weather. And they even laughed at his jokes. Annis Stukas — a two-time B.C. Sports Hall of Fame inductee, and the first-ever B.C. Lions head coach told some jokes at the banquet that were so old, they were new to some of the younger guys attending the function. Stuke, still young and cantankerous at 74 years of age, is a mandarin of B.C. pro sports and his high-pitched gravelly voice will never be mistaken. He's still working for a Vancouver radio station and is a walking archive of sports history. His easy going manner and wicked sense of humor kept everybody in stitches over the day. When the smoke had cleared at the banquet's end everybody went home with a smile — some even with a prize and some extra pocket change — knowing that they could all get together and share a good time for a great cause. It made such good sense it’s almost frightening. Right-hander Kelly Downs, 8-7, pitched the first seven innings, yielding seven hits and two runs. By scoring twice in the fourth inning, the Cardinals snapped a string of 30 1-3 shutout innings by the Giants. John Tudor, who entered the game as the National League’s ERA leader, lasted only two innings after allowing five runs in the second inning. He fell to 4-4 It was the Cardinals’ fifth straight loss and their eighth defeat in nine games. ASTROS 6 METS3 HOUSTON (AP) — Nolan Ryan joined Cy Young as the only pitchers in major league history to win 100 games for two different teams, hurling the Houston Astros to a 63 National League baseball victory Saturday over the New York Mets. Ryan, 6-7, the all-time career strikeout leader, fanned out five to increase his league leading total for the season to 130 and his career total to 4,677. Ryan pitched 7 1-3 innings, gave up eight hits and three runs while walking three. Juan Agosto pitched the final 1 2-3 innings for his second save. - Rick-Aguilera, 0-4, was the loser in relief, going 1 2-3 innings and giving up four runs on three hits. He walked four and struck out one. Houston took a 6-3 lead in the fifth with a four-run rally After walks to Gerald Young and Kevin Bass, Glenn Davis singled in Young, and Buddy Bell singled in Rass. A single by Billy Hatcher drove in Davis, before an intentional walk to Rafael Ramirez loaded the bases. Craig Biggio walked to drive in Bell. New York took a 1-0 lead in the first after Wally Backman walked with one out, stole second, and scored on a single by Kevin McReynolds. The Mets increased the lead to 3-0 in the second when Howard Johnson led off with a walk and moved to second on a single by Dave Magadan. Johnson scored wheh Mackey Sasser grounded out, and Sid Fernandez drove in Magadan with a single. Houston cut the deficit to 3-1 in the second on singles by Davis and Bell, and a run-scoring double by Hatcher. Houston added a run in the third when Young walked, stole second, moved to third on a throwing error by catcher Sasser, and scored on wild pitch by Fernandez. Ryan's victory was his 100th as an Astro. He won 138 for the California Angels. REDS 6 PHILLIES 3 CINCINNATI (AP) — Eric Davis doubled home the tie-breaking run in the seventh inning and Nick Esasky followed with a two-run homer Saturday night to give the Cincinnati Reds a 63 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies. The Reds overcame a 3-1 deficit with two runs in the fifth off starter Bruce Ruffin and three in the seventh off Kent Tekulve, 2-5. A throwing error by catcher John Russell fueled the Reds’ winning rally. Chris Sabo singled with two out in the seventh, his second hit of the game. The Phillies then called a pitch-out as Sabo tried to steal, but Russell bounced the throw into centre field for an error sending Sabo to third. Davis then lined a full-count pitch to the wall in right-center to snap the tie. Esaskyk hit his seventh homer to cap the winning and send rookie Rob Dibble, 1-0, to his first major-league win. John Franco pitched the ninth for his 13th save. Russell, making his first start since being recalled from the minors Wednesday, had three hits off Tom Browning, including a second-inning homer for a 1-0 Ruffin gave the run back in the third, when he walked two and threw three wild pitches. Barry Larkin walked, took second on a wild pitch and scored from there on another wild pitch that skipped to the backstop. Phil Bradley put the Phillies ahead in the fifth with a tworun homer, his fourth. It was the 16th homer allowed by Browning in 18 starts. Ruffin's control got him in trouble again in the fifth, when the Reds tied the game. He walked Daniels with two out and gave up a single to Sabo that sent Daniels to third Sabo then stole second and the ball got away from second baseman Tommy Barrett for an error that let Daniels score. Esasky singled to score Sabo, ending + Ruffin's outing.