April 8, 1990 Clowning at Woodland Peck olen around septa y Scheel ane oe way ree jh the school's latest A ni roximately students at Wi land Park if in the play which has been taped by Shaw Cable for viewthg in the nour hetero. thier * Custom Homes to your specs starting at $165,000 a Lots for Sale starting at $25,000 Call: Ray Bartlett 365-2758 or stop by 3404 Windsor Place, Castlegar ‘SroRts | GET THE PERFECT Fir WITHA KOOTENAY SAVINGS RRSP. Have your a Fed ‘ photographed with ... . RS : , EASTER BUNNIES & 7 LITTLE E20) CHICKS April 9-13 Award Winning Photography BY MICHAEL MAYRHOFER 354-4402 BOOK Now! best times For IN OUR NELSON STUDIO ONLY! Please Give Support the April Cancer Campaign It will take you, and you and you to help put. an end to cancer. So, when your Canadian Cancer Society volunteer knocks on your door, remember that your dollars can help bring the victory over cancer a little nearer. Your-donation to the Canadian Cancer Society makes a big difference today & in the future. enerously Change in bowel or bladder habits. 13.4. Many things cause changes in bowel or bladder habits — what you eat, how much you drink. But take action if the bowel or bladder changes seem too extreme, or last for any length of time. A sore that ©! does not heal. e It may not be painful. But it may signal an early, furoble mouth or skin cancer, particularly if it lasts long... ‘Unusual bleeding or discharge. This serious sign should never be ignored. See your doctor immediately. Thickening or = lump in breast or elsewhere. Eight out of ten breast lumps are not cancer. If it is cancer and is found before it spreads, chances of cure are excellent. Indigestion or difficulty in ©) swallowing. e Indigestion is a common complaint, but persistent indigestion, heartburn, nausea, loss of appetite should send you to your doctor. Obvious change in wart or mole. If it gets bigger, blacker, or scaly, take action. ©) or hoarseness. If such a symptom persists, especially i , especially if you smok any form of tobacco, don't wait. Make’a doctor's appointment. SAFEWAY We bning tt all together (S CITY OF CASTLEGAR 460 Columbia Ave. 365-7227 Better... you Bet! CASTLEAIRD PLAZA, CASTLEGAR 2412 @) BC.Tel Nationwide through Telecom Canada Communications 711 Radio Ave., Nelson, B.C. VIL3L2 Ph. 352-3501 Dairyland Foods i elt yeaa JESS1 LELLIOT The 11-year-old at Tarrys elementary school can do it all in sports. From basketball and soccer to hockey and baseball **he’s a superstar in everything he does,’’ says Tarrys Prin- cipal Russ Rilcof. THURSDAY On April 12, 1980, Terry .Fox began his Marathon of -Hope_run_acrossCanada_to raise awareness and money to find a cure for cancer — the disease that took his right leg three yearsprior to the run and, in the middle of the run, his life. ‘tSomewhere,”’ said Fox, ‘the hurting must stop.” Wrench is world champ VASTERAS, Sweden (CP) — Ed Werenich admitted to a feeling of relief yesterday after beating Scotland’s David Smith and retaining the men’s world curling champion- ship for Canada. The Wrench, with his team of John Kawaja, Ian Tetley and Pat Perroud, downed the Scots 3-1 in the cham- pionship game at a fleet pace that was established from the outset because of keen ice at Rocklunda Arena Norway’s Dordi Nordby won her country’s first-ever women’s title, downing Scotland 4-2 in a demon- stration of methodical curling. The Norwegians, runners-up to Canada’s Heather Houston at last year’s worlds, scored in only two ends — deuces in the third and seventh en= ds — in a game that also was dictated by the straight ice. Werenich,the-outspoken_42-year- old Toronto” firefighter, came here under a great deal of pressure after threatening not to compete if the ‘Canadian Curling —Association—in- that one. I just couldn't let it get away now. “The pressure came from fear, relief and I guess a little bit of anxiety, obviously from what I've said before.”” Werenich, who won the worlds in 1983 in Regina, came to the round- robin event as the favorite, based on experience. Kawaja was his second on the 1983 team, and Tetley and Perroud won in 1985 as front end on the Al Hackner team at Glasgow. Nordby, with third Hanne Petter- sen and second Mette Halvorsen, lost to Houston in the gold medal game at Milwaukee, Wis., a year ago with Trine Trulsen at the skip position, Lead Anne Jotun was the fifth player on that team. The Norwegians, who beat Canada’s Alison Goring in Friday's semifinals, never gave the young Scots, skipped by Carolyn Hutchison, any room to move. “It was fantastic for us to play here,’’ Nordby said, later adding, “Perhaps with our success we will get more recognition for our sport back home. The Collie—Gampbell_ Memorial Award for sportsmanship and fair play voted on by the male curlers, went to Danish skip Tommy Stjerne for-the second year-in-a-row.—The women voted the Frances Brodie Award to German skip Almut Hege- Schott sisted that they be by coach Warren Hansen, the CCA's competitions’ chief. The CCA bowed to his wishes and Werenich admitted he felt” an DID YOU KNOW? That the basketball's Spalding _makes. for the NBA are unique (which means you couldn’t buy one in a store). For one thing the ball is made of Aniline leather which is different.from all other balls because of the process where the color is dyed into the leather to give the player the feel they are touching the leather directly and not the paint. The balls are also spun through a machine then fired against a wall at 1100 rpms to give the ball a worn in feel and look. QUOTE NOTE “I'm toying with them now and I enjoy that,’’ said golfer Ray Floyd who had a 6-under 138 and a one shot lead Friday after 36 holes at the Masters Championship in Augusta, Georgia. Floyd, 47, won the coveted green jacket in 1976. RECORD BOOK TRIVIA: Other than the Mon- treal Canadiens, which of the six original NHL teams most recently won the Stanley Cup? HINT: The other five teams are: Boston, Detroit, Toronto, New York Rangers and Chicago. Answer at the bot- tom of Weekend Wrap-up on Page B2. RADIO/TV SUNDAY AM 9:00 (KREM CH 2) NBA — Detroit Pistons at Cleveland Cavaliers. 11:30 (KREM CH 2) OLYM- PIC- WINTERFEST (KGQ CH6) WOMEN’S TENNIS — Famiy Circle Cup PM 1:00 (DBUT CH 13) SPOR TSWEEKEND — PGA — Masters (KCLY CH 4) AUTO RACING — Auto Works 200 (KHQ CH 6) SPORTSWORD — Superstars Competition 2:30 (TSN CH BILLIARDS - World Open pionship. 4:40 (TSN CH 15) NHL PLAYOFFS — Campbell Conference Semifinal 7:30 (CBUT CH 13) NHL PLAYOFFS — Campbell Conference Semifinal 11:30 (TSN CH 15) NHL PLAYOFFS Campbell Conference Semiftnal 12:30 (CBUT CH 13); NHE PLAYOFFS — Campbell Conference Semifinal to succeed. He needed to steal the ninth and 10th ends to beat Denmark-5-4 in Friday-night's-game to qualify for the championship game and defend the title won last year by Pat Ryan of Edmonton. “I told John (Kawaja) I was ner- vous, but the feeling wasn’t the same as the (Labatt) Brier,"” Werenich said. “*At the Brier I was very nervous on my first shot and very relaxed with my last shot ““Here it was almost a reverse... To come this far and come down to one rock. I sure don’t want to miss PATRICK DIVISION RANGERS 5 ISLANDERS 2 NEW YORK (AP) — John Ogrod- nick got his-second goal of the game during a three-goal burst in the second period, leading the New York Rangers to a 5-2 victory over the New York Islandérs on Saturday night and ‘a 2-0 lead in their NHL playoff s The Rangers got another solid ef- fort in goal from Mike Richter, who keyed their 2-1 victory in Game 1. Richter made 30 stops against a weakened Islanders team playing without leading scorer Pat LaFon- taine, out with a concussion suffered in the series opener With the game tied 2-2, the Rangers broke it open with goals by James Patarick, Ogrodnick and Bernie Nicholls in a span of 5:58. Referee Denis Morel called 14 penalties, inctuding eight for roughing, as he tried to keep the game in check following Thursday night’s controversial opener that saw two Islanders suspended for a postgame fight DEVILS 6 CAPITALSS EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) — Eric Weinrich scored a controver sial tie-breaking goal with teammate Brendan Shanahan in the crease with 6:48 left in the third period and the New Jersey Devils defeated the Washington Capitals 6-5 to even their NHL playoff series at one game apiece. Weinrich’s goal gave New Jersey a $-4 lead and Peter Stastny scored what proved to be the winning goal with 3:05 to play in the third period on a wraparound from behind the net. Washington’s Dino Ciccarelli scored his second goal of the game and fifth of the series with 1:06 left. The Devils, who blew a 4-1 lead, also withstood @ goalmouth scramble that saw the puck roll around near the crease with Capitals goalie Don Beaupre off for a sixth skater. Smith that the hitting game deteriorated as far as entertain- ment for the crowd because ice-con- ditions dictated the Scots play that way against Canada. “‘We thought if we got down we could get back, but the ice was an awful lot straighter today than it had been all week,”” said the Perth farmer. “IL think we had-orfe end, I believe it was the eighth, Eddy nosed on a cor- ner guard. “But he just smashed the knickers out. It was a skinny game after that You wish you had gambled a lot, you come around everything coming up short. But we didn’t. We lost the measure by a quarter of an inch. Af- ter that we didn’t have a lot of chan- ite it Apple ADAMS DIVISION BRUINS 3 WHALERS 1 BOSTON (AP) — Ray Bourque had a goal and an assist as the Boston Bruins scored all their goals on the power-play to beat the Hartford Whalers 3-1, tying their playoff series at one game apiece: The Bruins, who had the NHL's second best power play during the regular season, also got goals from Garry Galley and Bobby Carpenter Boston, which also finished the regular season as the NHL's second best penalty-killing team, held the Whalers scoreless on nine power plays in the game and all 13 so far in the series Bourque scored at 10:58 of the first period and Hartford's Todd Krygier tied the game at 7:42 of the second Bourque then set up Galley’s tie- breaking goal at 14:06 of the second period. Carpenter made the score 3-1 at 6:57 of the third. CANADIENS 3 SABRES 0 BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Mats Naslund had a goal and an assist and the Montreal Canadiens, bolstered by the solid goaltender of Patrick Roy, shut out the Buffalo Sabres 3-0 to tie their best-of-seven Adams Division semifinal at one game apiece Roy, who had the NHL's best goals against average this season, made 26 saves in helping the Canadiens snap Buffalo’s six-game playoff win streak over Montreal in Stanley Cup play dating back to 1975. It was the fourth playoff shutout of his career The Canadiens. who got goals from Naslund, Stephane Richer and Shayne Corson, took control of the game after they killed off a two- minute, two-mariv power play by the Sabres in the first four minutes. Buffalo mustered only four shots on Roy during the power play as Canadiens penalty killers Guy Car- bonneau, Craig Ludwig and Mathieu Schneider blocked shots and choked the Sabres attack By ED MILLS Staff Writer There it was, Grad 90 painted on the wall at Selkirk College Friday morning. But this time there was something different about it. This was no wanton act of vandilism by the city’s misguided youth. In fact, it’s not even an ordinary wall and what the students did was all on the up,and up. Which explains why the culprits responsible for the artwork are more than willing to make themselves known. They are Andrew Port and Peter Bullock, Christy Gritchin, Roger Carlson, Jennifer Small and Darren Tamelin, and they painted the wall as their show of defiance, to show that they conquered it, while at the same time leaving a constant reminder to the other team they trampled on their way. In the college's first storm-the-wall competition Thursday afternoon in and around the college, a team of young upstarts from Stanley Humphries Secondary School prevailed over the highly. touted college teams in winning the event in a time of 32 minutes, 42 secon- ds and 18 one hundreths of a second Storm the wall is a combination relay, endurance and strength eveni in which teams of six canoe, cycle, THE WALL . . . It stood as an ominous monolith at the end of a long relay race in the first ever Storm the Wall competition at Selkirk College Thursday. Twenty teams competed in the event and it was an upstart team from SHSS that won it all. SHSS conquers wall CasNews photo by Siemon Birch and run to reach the finish line and the ultimate challenge — the wail. A 12-foot-high and two-foot-wide structure, the wall was built by the athletic department at Selkirk for the sole purpose of staging a storm-the-wall com- Petition. College athletic director Rob Johsnon, in whose backyard the wall was constructed last summer, said the event made the wall more than worth the mon- ths of effort.needed to build it. **Certainly campus life and campus spirit was lif- ted because of the competition,” he said. Johnson’s own team of Laura Adams, Sally Willis, Larry Woapilenkoff, Andy Lefurgy and college principal Mal Stelck — all supposedly highly skilled athletes from the Castlegar athletic department — were just one of 19 teams left huffing and puffing at the end of the race as the SHSS crew celebrated “I can’t believe we lost,’ said Johnson, whose team finished third, 12 one-hundreths of a second behind the forestry and wildland rec squad of Erin Lindberg, Judy Wood, Dan Boles, Rob Couperous, Dean Bodman and Derek Wheeler who completed the course in a time of 33:09.43. Johnson said all 20 teams completed the event, which was so successful it will be an annual ritual at the college. Leafs only team 2 down in Campbell Journeyman centre Mark Lagyb scored the most im portant goal of his hockey Career Priday night Lamb's first NHL playoff goal, 4:21 into overtime, gave the Edmonton Oilers a 3-2 vittory over the Winnipeg Jets, squaring the best-of-seven Smythe Division semifinal at one win each “Our whole team battled back and that’s the way it’s going to be the rest of the way," said Lamb, who is from the tiny Saskatchewan community of Ponteix, population 700. Lamb togk a long pass from Jari Kurri at the Win- nipeg blue line and split the defence before beating goalie Stephane Beauregard with a high shot to cap an Oilers comeback from a 2-0 deficit SMYTHE DIVISION OILERS 3 JETS 2 Brent Ashton and Paul Fenton put Winnipeg up 2-0 in the first period and the Jets checked tenaciously to preserve the lead through the second period. Third-period goals by Craig Simpson and Joe Murphy forced overtime FLAMES 8 KINGS 5 Doug Gilmour scored twice and Joey Mullen, Gary Roberts, Joel Otto, Jim Korn, Joe Nieuwendyk and Dana Murzyn once each for the Flames, who led 5-1 before Los Angeles rallied. Luc Robitaille had two goals and Marty Conference McSorely, Larry Robinson and Dave Taylor one each for the Kings, who expect to have Wayne Gretzky back in the lineup for Game 3 Sunday. NORRIS DIVISION a BLUES 4 LEAFS 2 Brett Hull, Paul MacLean, Rich Sutter and Paul Cavallini scored for the Blues, who outshot Toronto 40- 28-and-werein-totat-controt.-Mark-Osborne and Dan Marois scored for the Leafs, who would have lost by a greater margin had it not been for some marvellous goaltending by Allan Bester and two disallowed St. Louis goals. HAWKS 5 STARS 3 Wayne Presley, with two goals including a short- handed goal,-Greg- Gilbert, Jeremy Roenick and Steve Thomas scored for Chicago after power-play goals by Brian Bellows, Shawn Chambers and Neal Broten had given Minnesota a 3-0 lead by the 12-minute mark. At that point, Chicago coach Mike Keenan sent in Ed Belfour to replace starting goalie Greg Millen, and Belfour stoned the North Stars the rest of the way. ‘*] didn’t have time to get nervous or uptight,’’ said Belfour, 24, from Carmen, Man., who had never ap- peared in NHL playoffs Islanders fined, suspended for instigating brawl NEW YORK (AP) — The National Hockey League fined the New York for what took place Forward Mick Vukota was given 4 pay for ‘‘a deliberate attack on a Ranger player who was standing some Islanders $25,000 US on Friday and suspended two players for triggering a game-ending brawl Thursday night against the New York Rangers. Islanders coach Al Arbour also was fined $5,000 by NHL president John Ziegler, who said he found ‘‘no m 10-game suspension for instigating @ fight with Jeff Bloemberg after the final buzzer of the Rangers’ 2-1 playoff victory at Madison Square Garden. NHL executive vice president Brian O’Nettt-atso-suspen- ded Islanders defenceman Ken Baumgartner for one game without See re RT 30 feet away at the (blue) line. The incidents came after Islanders star Pat LaFontaine was knocked un- conscious by a check from Rangers defenceman James Patrick with 1:17 in- the game--— The Islanders launched an appeal Saturday. POO OREN