212 Wednesday, January 27, 1993 @ Knights and Sisters install officers for 1993 Joint installation of officers for 1993 was conducted by Twin Rivers Lodge No. 70, Knights of Pythias and Kootenay Temple No. 37, Pythian Sisters with ceremonies held on Jan. 16 in the Masonic Hall. Installing officers for Twin Rivers Lodge No. 70 were acting Grand Chancellor Seamen Dewis, Acting Grand Prelate Alec Gleboff, and Matitass Chenll)oend fusing Grane Becrenace ie i ing Grand Secre' Anton Schwiertz (Trail). oe Installed officers were Chancellor Com- mander Bill Bowolin, Vice-Chancellor Peter Majesgey, Prelate Earl LeRoy, Master of Works Gordon Ferguson (absent), Mike Liv- ingstone (Secretary; absent), Financial Sec- retary Al Richards, Treasurer Mike Bycroft, Master of Arms Anton Schwiertz, Inner Guard Seamen Dewis, Outer Guard Jerry Wanless (absent). . ing Officers for the Sisters were Act- ing Grand Chief Susan Bycroft, Acting Grand Manager Lil Neumann and Acting Grand Se- nior Mary Gleboff. New officers are Musician Joan Marks, Guard Kathleen O'Flaherty, Protector Lou Ann Bush, Manager Inis McAdam (PRO TEM) Excellent Junior Carol Churches, Ex- cellent Senior Bernice Barrass, Secretary Pa- tricia Moore, Treasurer Margaret Moore, Most Excellent Chief Pat Verzuh and Past Chief Jan Neumann. On behalf of Kootenay Temple No. 37, MEC (Pat Verzuh) presented a gift and card to Inis McAdam in recognition for her eight years as treasurer and a job very well done. . Jan Neumann was also presented with a gift and card in honor of her two years as MEC. Pat Verzuh named Carol Churches as Mother of the Temple and presented her with a corsage and floral spray on behalf of Koote- ~~ Temple No. 37. tertainment followed with the serving of refreshments. A mini-raffle was held with the sum of $43 being donated toward to cerebral palsy re- search. The Pythian Sisters will be involved with the Knights of Pythias Valentine Tea and me Sale on Feb. 13 in the Senior Citizens Several Pythian Sisters gathered on Jan. 16 as the club joined with their Knight counterparts to install new officers for the busy 1993 year. Exchange students exchange stories at fun-filled gathering John A Charters Members of the Stanley Humphries Secondary School Interact Club, family friends and classmates met recently in the band room. The pur- pose? The Annual Rotary Youth Exchange get-acquainted va- riety program. Each year vis- iting Rotary Exchange stu- dents from other countries, to- gether with Castlegar stu- dents just returning from abroad, and Castlegar candi- dates entering the plan meet about this time and give a pro- gram of slide talks on their homelands, exchange experi- ences, give demonstrations of national music or dance and enjoy a little refreshment, courtesy of the school and Mrs. Bonowitz of the SHSS Home Economics Department. This year, four inbound stu- dents, Marie Soderlund of Sweden, Christine Didier of France, Mitsue (Mimi) Hamamoto of dapan and Ro- Mitsui Hamamoto entertained her Rotary friends during the youth exchange’s get-acquainted gathering recently. " r drigo Barbosa of Brazil, with Mrs. Jim Gouk, and Shelley Miscavitch (Denmark), daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. John Mis- cavitch, presented the pro- Master of Ceremonies were Rotary candidates Bonnie MacDonald, daughter of Cam the returned Castlegar stu- dents, Wendy Gouk (Ger- many), daughter of Mr. and Skiers set to raise funds for heart research _ Cross country ski enthusiasts will be ski- ing to their heart’s content at the Blackjack in arene om Jan. 30th. than 1 jers are e: to - ticipate in the 40 kilometre ies There pal: so a 20-kilometre recreational course, as well as a Jackrabbit course for poner skiers. Participants in the Blackjack Loppet can raise for the Heart and Stroke Foun- dation by raisi Individuals w! donations are eli- gible for coe awards that include sportswear t. ‘ Skiers can promote Reert health in two jack Loppet — contact Gerald Klassen at Gerick Cycle ways — by raising pledges and by partici- pating. Scientific tests have phic ie that cross-country skiers are among the fittest of athletes. The sport offers an excellent full body cardiovascular workout, an important element in heart health. Pledge money raised will go to vital re- search and health promotion programs fund- ed by the Heart and Stroke Foundation of B.C, and Yukon. For information about joining the Black- — either as a skier or a volunteer and Sports at 364-1661. and Gay MacDonald and Seanan Sharp, son of David and Beverly Sharp. Sarah Sutherland a third candidate, was not at the concert. It was, as usual, an evening filled with laughter and enter- . tainment, in which one was re- minded that differences in cul- tures, once accepted, paradox- ically provide bonds of fellow- ship. Also, that misconception of customs abound on both sides of the world. Castlegar listeners were a little surpNsed to learn for ex- ample, that the normal means of travel in Europe even for students, is the train. Visiting students on the other hand, according Rodrigo Barbosa, were greatly relieved to learn that very few Canadi- ans are “attacked by their sav- age sled dogs” or die under their collapsed igloos. Barbosa also assured his listeners that contrary to pop- ular belief, volleyball and not soccer, was Brazil’s most pop- ular sport. “Soccer,” he said with a sly wit, “is a religion.” Barbosa, who had attended a Rotary dinner meeting earli- er and thanked the Rotarians for the best year of his life, was accompanied by his father Er- cirio and his uncle Donizete, recently arrived from Sao Jose do Rio, Brazil. They all left to- gether for home, driven next morning for the first leg of their journey by Rotary Presi- dent Dave Gairns. The route was a round- about one. Gairns first drove them to the coast for a brief visit to Vancouver and Victo- ria. He then drove them to Banff and Calgary “to see the mountains and the mall” and one to Edmonton from where they flew back to Brazil mak- ing short stops at Toronto, Ot- tawa and New York. Through translator Bonny Gairns, they thanked the au- dience and the citizens of Castlegar for their warmth and hospitality. Bill Furey, Rotary Student Exchange Sponsor, introduced the program and Ron Ross Ro- tary District 508 Student Pro- gram Co-ordinator thanked the parents and participants. Aglow members talk pregnancy Janelle and Terese Colquhoun will be the guest speakers at Castlegar Women’s Aglow Fellowship’s evening coffee meeting at the Legion Hall on Feb. 2nd at 7 p.m. ° Twenty-year-old Janelle will speak about teen preg- nancy and the resulting choic- es as well as the Biblical view of sex before marriage. Janelle’s mother, Terese Colquhoun, an active sup- porter of the Trail Aglow Fel- lowship and the Charismatic Catholic Prayer Group, will address the same issues from the perspective of her experi- ence as a mother of a preg- nant teen. Women’s Aglow invites all interested women and teenaged girls to attend their monthly interdenominational igs. All newcomers and teen girls will be admitted free to this special meeting. Wednesday; January 27, 1993 FastLANE Yr LocdSPORTS Win or lose, It’s in The News. Jonathan Green 365-7266 FUN RAISER Attention snowmobilers. Mark Feb. 27 on your calendars. On that date, the annual Snowarama will be held at the Nancy Greene Junction. Sponsored by the Castlegar Selkirk Lions Club and Kootenay Shogoers, the eventisa fundraiser for the B.C. Lions Society and Easter Seal House. All you have to do is pick up a pledge form, get pledges and complete as much of a trail ride ona snowmobile as possible. For more info, call Lawrence at 365- 7729, Leo at 365-3067 or Wayne at 362- 5143. WAYNE’S _WORLD | Young hockey players take note. Coca-Cola is offering you the chance to skate with The Great One at the Wayne Gretzky Hockey Camp in Quebec City in June. By dialing 1-800-463-COKE your name is entered in a draw to attend one of 23 Future Stars hockey clinics to be held across Canada in February and March. Two children from each clinic will be chosen ta attend the camp in Quebec City. Start dialing today. Rebels whip Warriors, rub out Rockies Rebels Derek Lalonde (14) and Kevin Leiman form a potent one-two punch as they bre: twice and Leiman added the third-period winner as the Rebels came from behind to down the East Division-lea News photo by Jonathan Green ak out against Columbia Valley Sunday. Lalonde scored ding Rockies 5-4. Jonathan Green SPORTS REPORTER weekend. Columbia Valley Rockies, 5-4. came out flying Saturday and the opening period. With assists going to team against the league's stronger It wasn’t pretty, but the Castlegar Rebels continued their mastery over teams below them in the Kootenay International Junior Hockey League standings over the |Columbia Val.15 19 0 191 20 Getting four goals from Bill Brewer, the Rebels downed the Rossland Warriors 11-4 Saturday, while |gandg Forks 29 Mark Graff picked up three points for the second. /gpok 25 straight game Sunday as the locals trimmed the |Nelson 13 1 234 124 43 Coach Garry Sauer said he was happy with the two games, epecially the one against Rossland. “I was pleased with the weekend,” he said. “Saturday's game was a good win. It was nice to see us get 11 goals that night.” Looking to avenge a 9-5 Dec. 18 loss to the Warriors, the Rebels Corey Flodell put the hosts up 2-0 less than five minutes later on the power play from Derek Lalonde and Graff at 11:33, a lead Ross- land would reduce to one seconds later. gar native Rick Fauth, Toby Hawley made it 2-1 at 9:50 with the first of four power play goals Rossland would score on the night. Sauer said that kind of penalty killing won’t do them any good 2 with 15 minutes left to play and it was all over but the crying. Things weren’t as easy Saturday against the Rock- p| ies, a team that’s given the Rebels fits all year. 30 Coming in, the hosts needed a win to avoid losing 22| the season series to East Division-leading Columbia 18) Valley and they got it. Kevin Leiman tipped Neil Schuler’s point shot past Kerry Reed with 3:40 left in the third period for the game-winner, only the second time the Rebels had lead all night. Sauer said he was pleased with the team’s never- say-die effort. “That was nice to see,” he said. “The guys really worked hard in the third period and it paid off.” Brewer opened the scoring when he cashed ina pass from Flodell at 7:11 of the first, a lead that stood until Rockie Gary Dickinson waltzed in and beat Vaughan Welychko high to the stick side to tie it at 2:19. Darren Farrarelli gave the visitors their first of three leads just under two minutes into the second when he walked around Steve Gropp to make it 2+1 at 18:17. With his first of two, Derek Lalonde tied it at 13:27 after finishing off a nifty two-on-one with Graff. . The teams traded goals before Columbia Valley took a 4-3 lead in- to the third on Christian Jensen’s goal at 1:06. Rallying in one of their best defensive efforts of the year, the Rebels KOOTENAY INTERNATIONAL JUNIOR HOCKEY LEAGUE {As of Jan. 24} EAST DIVISION WLT FA 4 44 23 0 163 223 9 25 0 175 302 Golden Elk Valley WEST DIVISION 3 0 257 83 58 9 1 253 169 51 Castlegar 10 1 176 138 39 Beaver Valley 14 21 0 190 256 28 Rossland 7 26 1 157 297.15 were up 1-0 on Brewer's first at 16:09 of scoring leader Lyle Feeney and Castle- teams. “If we're playing any other team, we have the chance of losing that game,” he said. “I was a little disappointed to see them score four goals the way they did.” were back on even terms before the period was even five minutes old. Picking up a loose puck to Reed’s left, Graff skated behind the net before feeding Lalonde in the slot and the local product made no mis- take, scoring his fifth goal in the last six games at 15:06. The Warriors made it 5-2 as it would get. Replying with four straigh Castlegar regained its two-goal cushion with three minutes left in the first on Jesse Oldham’s power play marker for a 3-1 lead after one. Coming out for the second, the Rebels added a couple more goals for a5-1 lead with half a game to play. Both teams had chances to take the lead in the last 15 minutes, but Leiman was the only one to score as Castlegar picked up its 19th win of the year. The Rebels next action is Friday when they travel to Beaver Valley to play the Nite Hawks, then return home to host, the Elk Valley Raiders Saturday. Game time is 8 p.m. at the Complex. at 8:14 of the second but that’s as close t goals, the Rebels widened the lead to 9- y ‘= Tumtimeintomoney. 53 Ask about RRSPs at "T-Bill rates". The RRSPeople