@ AB Saturday, September 7, 1991 1991 Pontiac Firefly > 2nd Anniversary Sale Discount $620 7495 GM Cash Back $500 vou pay $6,995 INCLUDES FREIGHT & POI. NO HIDDEN COSTS 1991 GMC Sonoma 4x4 Extended Ca’ $19,650 iversary Sale Discount $2805 2nd Anniversary $16,845 GM Cash Back $1500, you pay $15,345 We Invite you to check and compare our PRICES!! These are the Greatest Savings of all Time!! Fantastic Selection Over 60 New Cars, Trucks and Demos in Stock. GM CASH BACKS TO YOU!! $500 + $750 $1,000 - $1,500 GMAC FINANCING IN LIEU OF CASHBACKS!! 12 mos. — 1.9% 24 mos. — 5.9% 36 mos. — 7.9% 48 mos. — 8.9% FIXED RATES, FULL TERM $20,092 2nd Anniversary Sale Discount $2,308 $17,784 GM Cash Cash Back $750 you pay $14,034 ‘91 Pontiac Sunbird LE Top line package with sunroof @ Your chance to prove it is coming up as the search is on for B.C.’s toughest tough guy News Staff Call it the Tussle in Trail or the Battle in B.C. Call it whatever you want, but if you think you're tough your chance to prove it — and pick upsome cash - in the process — is set for the Com- inco Gym in Trail on Oct. 26. That’s when the’ first-ever Province-wide Tough Man Challenge makes its Kootenay stop on an eight-city schedule in search of “the toughest of the tough” in B.C. “We understand that some of the tough man shows have been banned in various areas in Canada, but this is largely due to the fact that they've had flakey promoters,” said Challenge promoter Trevor Wallden. “It's easy to do a tough man show. The rules and the way these things have been promoted in the past have led to a dangerous exhibition of boxing, which is quite the con- trary to this series.” The event is open only to non- professional fighters in all age groups and in three weight divi- sions — 145 to 159 pounds, 160 to 184 pounds and 185 pounds and over. In each contest, fighters will clash for two, one-and-a-half minute rounds to a maximum of 12 minutes in each weight class. The three survivors pick up $1,000 each and can compete for the $10,000 grand prize event. “Safety is a major concern of ours obviously, and the fact is we're attracting more experienced fight- ers than some of these shows have in the past,” said Wallden. The championships are set for the PNE Agridome in Vancouver on Noy. 14, and will be broadcast to all host cities via closed-circuit televi- sion. Produced by Wallden and Don Arnott, the show will make stops in Vancouver, Prince George, Kelow- na, Nanaimo, Kamloops, Victoria and Prince Rupert. (News photo by Ed Milis Listen up: Girls volleyball coach Stoch Uchida holds court in the gym at Stanley Humphries secondary school Thursday afternoon. Tryouts for all four school volleyball teams got underway this week. $ Name the column, a really boffo contest @ Just phone the News with a name for Mills’ sports column and you could be a winner News Staff Mills is stuck. And now he’s going to pay for it. Faced with the terribly daunt- ing task of naming his Wednes- day column in the new and im- proved Castlegar Neivs, sports editor Ed Mills came up with ti- tles so lame it was sad. So now it’s your turn. All you have to do is come up with a catchy name for Mills’s weekly sports column, and you're a winner. Besides having your title appear on the column until Mills quits, gets fired, leaves or dies, you'll win four free tickets to the B.C. Tough Man Challenge in Trail on Oct. 26 (see story on this page). The bonus is you get to phone Mills at The News with your suggestions, maybe razz him,a bit about being a bonehead, and ask him if he really had to pay for those prize tickets. Phone 365-3517. Contest closes 9 a.m. Wednesday. 7, 1991 OF Jim KEARNEY No more enu zone dances. No more Ickey Shuffles on the side- lines. No more on-the-field praying. No more post-game handshakes by rival coaches. Spiking the ball, spinning the ball and sack dances are no- nos. The National Football League, now launched on its 72nd season, is legislating the fun and the eccentrics out of the game. If it’s not careful, NFL soon will stand for National Faceless League. New Orleans Saints general manager Jim Finks, who start- ed his executive career more than 30 years ago with the Cal- gary Stampeders, and now is chairman of the NFL compzeti- tion committee, has enuncia‘- ed the party line: “The show is on the field. We have the best athletes in tl.e fines ranging from $10,000 to $20,000, which is two to four times as much as-a star could earn a season in the bad old days when fun, frivolity and oddballs were tolerated. The change in attitude is 2 pity, but not surprising given the fact that football has be- come big business. And ‘ig business no matter what the product line, is serious b.si-