as Castlegar News Jorwory 31, 1900 BUSINESS Businessman in socialist heaven By STEPHEN WARD Canadian Press HALIFAX — Welcome to a socialist’s heaven — the spacious waterfront office of businessman Lloyd Shaw where left meets right, where Karl Marx joins hands with Timothy Eaton. Shaw, a 73-year-old millionaire, cuts an ambigudus figure as both an ardent leftist and patriarch of one of the province's wealthiest families founders of the L.E. Shaw brick company “There is no inconsistency here,” says Shaw, staring through his square-rimmed glasses and fidgeting with his tweed jacket. “A business has to make a little profit, so long as not all profits go to a few individuals and families.” Retired as head of L.E. Shaw Ltd. since 1978, he manages his social causes and remaining business interests amid the contrasting sights of his office. A huge abstract painting — moody shades of dark green and brown — hangs opposite a bright sketch of a lobster trap. Beneaih a vaulted ceiling, he watches the ferries ply the scenic harbor. In the distance, the dull grey stacks of an oil refinery stand like crooked toothpickts. HELPED FORM CCF A founding member of the Co-operative Common wealth Federation the predecessor of the New Democratic Party the university-educated economist speaks of social reform with intense passion. “My heart is in business, but not the type of business that ends up with the (stock) market crashing,” Shaw explained. “The government's role in the economy can't be left to business peopte, many of whom think only of their own welfare.” Shaw's political beliefs have been adopted by his daughter Alexa McDonough, who started out as a Liberal but now leads the province's NDP. His son, Robbie, is still a Liberal who served as executive assistant to then-pre mier Gerald Regan in the early ‘70s. The silver-haired Shaw, slim and somewhat frail, comes honestly by his capitalism through his grand father, Robert Shaw, who started the brick company in 1861 The firm has grown into the Atlantic region's largest brick manufacturer, employing 400 people at nine plants in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia with sales of over $40 million annually BEGUN BY FATHER Socialist principles were instilled in him by his father, L.E. Shaw, who applied left-leaning ideas to the firm four decades ago by reducing the work week, introducing pension, dental and medicare plans and guar. anteeing mortgages for workers’ homes made of Shaw brick In the early 1940s, Lloyd Shaw became research director for the CCF. In the Ottawa office, there was just him, party leader M.J. Coldwell and David Lewis, who later became leader of the federal NDP. In a bold move, the youthful Shaw helped the Canadian Labor Congress set up a union at his father's company back in Nova Scotia “The day the union was formed the headlines read Brick company has a love feast’ since it was unusual for a union to be formed in the ‘40s without a bloody battle,” he said : “Then, as company president years later, I had to go through tough negotiations with the very union I helped form — it served me right.” Shaw's playing on both sides of the labor-man agement fence puzzled other businessmen and sometimes prompted hostility. On one occasion, Shaw was not allowed into a meeting of the Junior Board of Trade in Halifax When he became president of L.E. Shaw in 1967, a position he held for 11 years, the company directors demanded that he stop his political activities or resign as president “So I said OK, got up, left the room and resigned — I had other things to do,” he said. “But, three days later they came back to me and asked me to continue.” DR. LECLERC . . . Dr. Denys Leclerc receives $25,000 grant to conduct plastics contamination research program. New study underway By CasNews Staff A new study is underway to find an effective means of preventing plastic contami nation of pulp production in Canada. Dr. Denys Leclerc, former. ly of Quebec, has been awarded a $25,000 fellowship through the Pulp and Paper Research Institute of Canada in Vancouver to conduct his plastics contamination re search program. The Science Council of B.C. awarded the new grant to tackle, “one of the most serious problems facing pulp mills.” “A single fragment of a plastic coffee cup is some- times all it takes to make tonnes of valuable pulp worthless,” a prepared re- lease states. “Pulp and paper companies are eager to have in place a method of identifying the tell-tale chemical spectra of pieces of plastic before they Weekly stocks TORONTO (CP) The Toronto and New York stock markets diverged Friday confounding forecasters who look to January's perfor mance for a clue about the next 11 months. An old adage right about 90 per cent of the time says that if the market is up for the first five days of January, it will be up for the month and that if it’s up for the month, it will be up for the year. January was a_ volatile month for the markets. In the end, the Toronto Stock Ex change’s composite index closed at 3,057.22, down more than 100 points from its December close of 3,160.05 and off 3.52 points Friday In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average fared better, thanks to a healthy 20-point rally in the last few minutes of the day. The Dow average rose 28.18 points to close at 1,958.22, up 20 points from its For Your Convenience We're OPEN MONDAY WIN SCRATCH-&-WIN TICKETS 2 subscribers names are listed below. H your nome eppeers, you're the winner of ! live Scratch-and-Win te To pick up your FREE tickets drop into until 5 p.m., or phone 365-7266 by 5 p.m. CASTLEGAR CASTLEGAR NEWS 365-7145 365-2955 “* rant Columbia A\ Castlegar News office Monday or Tuesday vy to claim. 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Because the Kootenays is where we belong « D Kootenay Savings Credit Union SPC January 31, 19868 You Said It. Skins-Broncs in Super Bowl Sunday By DAVE GOLDBERG The Associated Press After the New York Giants beat the Denver Broncos 89-20 in last year’s Super Bowl, Giants coach Bill Parcells was asked by a Denver writer to name the best National Football League team‘he had played all yotr. “Washi ” he replied This year's Washington team “enters the Super Bowl weaker and older than the team that lost to New York 17-0 in the National Conference title game last year. Outisde of John Elway, Denver, wracked by injury and retirement, probably isn't as strong either. Elway has a huge edge over Doug Williams — or Jay Schroeder, if Williams hits one of those five or 20 streaks and is replaced. Orson Mobley and the three amigos — or two, perhaps, if Vance Johnson can't play — give him quality targets. One of those amigos, Ricky Nattiel, is a rookie who missed last year’s fun. To figure out why the Redskins will beat the Broncos in the Super Bowl, examine the second halves of the last two big games that. Denver has played. Last year, the Giants outgained the Broncos 200-2 in the third quarter and that part of the fourth when the Super Bowl was still competitive. SCORING SPURTS Last Sunday, in the American Conference title game, the Browns scored touchdowns on their first four possessions and would have made it five or six had not Jeremiah Castille’s arm separated Earnest Byner and the ball. In fact, Jeremiah Castille tells a story. Can a team win a Super Bowl with a Tampa Bay reject as the nickel back? Not that the threats that Cleveland does, particularly at quarterback and running back. Williams can be decent, but he still throws 100-mile-an- hour darts at eight yards and he was nine for 26 against That makes Timmy Smith, a fifth-round draft pick, the principle running threat — and he's kind of an eastern version of Sammy Winder, Denver's best. Gary Clark and Ricky Sanders along with tight end Clint Didier are probably more dangerous than Cleveland's receivers. The probable return of Art Monk gives Williams one of the game's best possession receivers, and Bryant is a threat anytime he gets the ball short — assuming that Williams doesn’t drill a hole in his chest or bounce the ball off his helmet. Still, Super’Bowls are won on defence and that's where Washington gets its edge, particularly against a team that’s lost both experience and depth because of retirement and injury. CONTROLS LANES Dexter Manley and Charles Mann give the Redskins a two-sided pass rush and strong safety Alvin Walton and Dave Butz, who had the game of his 37-year-old life against the Vikings, should control the running lanes against an offensive line hurt by the loss of centre Billy Bryan. Moreover, the fact that Denver doesn't see many four-man fronts in the AFC will force‘them to spend a little more practice time on unfamiliar blocking assignments. Assuming that. Darrell Green is healthy, he'll shadow one of the amigos, probably Nattiel. That still leaves Elway, who has been stopped only by a 30-mile-an-hour wind in Buffalo wince the 98-yard drive that tied the Cleveland game a year ago. Most team shadow him with a quick linebacker, hoping to keep him in the pocket. Outside of Monte Coleman, Washington doesn't have any quick linebackers. But the Denver defence is small and tends to wear down in the second half against physical teams, of which Washington is one — Joe Collier's coaching genius can take you only so far. The Giants are physical, Cleveland is physical and w 's ive line isn’t known as the Hogs because Minnesota. He's playing because Schroeder completed just 48 per cent of his passes. The running backs? George Rogers has seen better days; the brittle Kelvin Bryant is primarily a pass receiver, and Keith Griffin is hurt they finesse people. Elway will score his points. But so will Washington. It might actually be an.interesting Super Bowl. By BARRY WILNER The A: You can throw around all the numbers you want, and there are some pretty impressive ones, but statistics won't matter much in this Super Bowl game. What matters will be personalities, perseverence and creativity. Give the Broncos the edge in all three. At one point this National Football League season, Derfver was 4-3-1 and staggering. Weakened by injuries and retirements, the Broncos were behind San Diego, which had an 8-1 record, the best in the league, and Seattle, the pre-season American Conference fav: When the offence clicked, the defence sprung leaks. When the defence was stingy, the attack was anemic. “After Buffalo,” John Elway said of a 21-14 loss, “we decided we had to get it going. “We began to look at each game, not look ahead to the playoffs. And we started winning.” They'll keep winning in their second consecutive trip to the Super Bowl when they meet the Washington Redskins on Sunday at Jack Murphy Stadium. Last year, the Broncos led a much better New York Giants team 10-9 at halftime of the NFL championship game. They should have been up 20-7 after moving the ball well throughout the half, but Rich Karlis missed two short field goals and Denver failed to score after a first down at the New York one-yard line. The Broncos shouldn't repeat those mistakes. They're a year older, more mature and more confident. The Redskins aren't close to the quality of last season's Giants. They might have the pass rush, but their linebackers can't cover Denver's quick backs on pass routes. Watch for Sammy Winder and Steve Sewell to have big games catching Elway passes. Denver’s Two Amigos — Vance Johnson was side- lined with a groin injury — ate up Cleveland's secondary, the best in the AFC and probably the league. If Mark Jackson and Ricky Nattiel could do so much damage against Pro Bow! cornerbacks Hanford Dixon and Frank Minnifield, they should be able to dominate Barry Wilborn and Darrell Green, too. And Johnson will be back. The Broneos also are that rare team that does not need to establish a running game. Winder had done well in the playoffs, but the most dangerous runs are the serambles by Elway. He's quicker than Minnesota's Wade Wilson and superbly anticipates where the pass rush will come from, then moves elsewhere. Elway’s stats aren't overwhelming, but the way he stamps his personality on a game is. Washington, which has had problems with scramblers, might find all of his defensive plans scrambled by Elway. “Every time we thought we had him stopped, he made something happen,” Dixon said of Elway. The same thing will happen to Washington. The Redskins will look to control the ball with George Rogers, Timmy Smith and Kelvin Bryant running, plug quick passes against a jumbled Denver secondary. The .myriad defensive schemes employed by the Broncos might confuse Doug Williams. The defence is determined to reverse last year's Super Bowl collapse. The Giants noted that Denver's defenders were too small and seemed tired in the second half. So the Broncos beefed up, moving Simon Fletcher from end to linebacker. Now, with Fletcher, Pro Bowler Karl Ecklenburg, Ricky Hunley and Jim Ryhan, the line backers are anything but undersized. The Broncos do have weaknesses, of course. Their pass rush is inconsistent, the safeties can be beaten in single coverage, and the kicking game isn't overwhelming. Can Williams figure out when the safeties are vulnerable, something only Bernie Kosar was able to do in the last six weeks? Not often enough. DENVER 27, WASHINGTON 17. REDSKINS, 35-34. RACE FOR PUCK . . . Spokane was at the complex on Saturday taking on the Castlegar midget rep team in minor hockey action. At the midway point in the final period Castl had a though they only had two lines 9 9-2 lead, even CasNews photo by Brendon Nogle NFL Commissioner looks for black head coaches SAN DIEGO (AP) — Commis. sioner Pete Rozelle said Friday he expects the NFL's first black head coach to come from the ranks of the league's assistant coaches and that he would like to see long-time nemesis Al Davis lead the way. Davis's Los Angeles Raiders are without a coach following the resig- nation of Tom Flores earlier this he expects the league to add two expansion teams within two years after ay the league gets a collective bargaining agreement with the players and says he thinks the effects of the 24-day '” player strike have been reduced ‘ey an exciting climax to the season. + Rozelle also said the league had permitted the financially troubled New Perles, but he turned it down Thurs- There are 41 black assistant coaches in the NFL compared with 14 1980, and Rozelle says that's evidence the league's minority hiring practices have improved. “It's unpleasant to be called a racist league,” he said. “I think the facts belie that.” month. Asked if he thought Davis might hire a black, Rozelle said: “I would welcome that. He'll hire a man he thinks will win for the Raiders. I'd like him to be a black.” In his annual pre-Super Bowl news conference, the commissioner also said England Patriots to withdraw escrow funds to meet their current payroll. Rozelle said at least three. black assistant coaches, Tony Dung Bennis Green and Johnny Roland, had been interviewed for the vacant Green Bay job. The Packers offered the job to Michigan State head coach George The collective agreement between the league and its players union expired last Aug. 31 and the NFL went through a 24-day players strike with- out resolving the issues that led to the walkout. Rozelle said NFL owners were hesitant to vote for expansion without a contract in place. Strike memories fade SAN DIEGO (AP) — For NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle, any pot- holes created by the September players’ strike - were filled by the Denver Broncos and Washington Red- skins on the road to the Super Bowl. For the Broncos and Redskins, that journey will have been a wasted trip if they aren't there to receive the Vince Lombardi Trophy from Rozelle as NFL champions after Sunday's game (6:18 p.m. EST kickoff). “I expected to be brooding for a year,” Rozelle said Friday at this annual State of the NFL address, which traditionally closes the pre- Super Bowl hype. “Thanks to tM” players and coaches, it didn't last long. We had competitive games and ¥ don't have a negative feeling about the strike that I thought I would. These games have and have contributed to ending the strike bitterness.” While Rozelle gave the teams high praise for salvaging what could have been a lost season, the commissioner's nemesis, Al Davis, p d the motto routed by 38-9 by Davis's bunch. “What sticks in your mind is the plane ride home after,” Clint Didier said of that demoralizing defeat to the Raiders. “We have enough guys who r ber how bad that felt. for the week. “Just win, baby” — Davis's slogan — is the stock answer from both sides as they look ahead to the NFL championship game. “Al Da knew what he was talking about,” Broncos linebacker Jim Ryan said of the Raiders’ owner, whose advice to his team rarely goes beyond those three words. “Making it here just doesn't make it. If you don’t win, it's like a lost season.” BAD RIDE That's how the Broncos felt last January after a 39-20 Super Bowl loss to the New York Giants. It's how the been tr felt in 1984 when they were “In reality, what is this but another game? But it's for all the marbles. It's our third Super Bow! and we've experienced each side of it. The winning is as high as you can get, the losing as low.” Both teams have used recent Super Bowl defeat as a motivating factor. The Broncos were hurting from February until they beat Cleveland in the AFC Championship game to earn a Coffey and Quinn. Coffey scored his sixth at 13: CF UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) — Mike McPhee had a goal and an assist as the Montreal Canadiens built a 3-0 lead after two periods Saturday night and went on to a 6-2 NHL victory over the New York Islanders. McPhee scored his 16th goal of the season at 13:54 of the first period on a 30-footer from the slot after taking a cross-ice pass from Larry Robinson. He set up Shane Corson's goal from the high slot at 18:23 of the second period that gave the Canadiens a 3-0 lead. Peter Svoboda scored Montreal's second goal at 5:14 of the second period when he beat Islanders goaltender Kelly Hrudey with a 20-foot shot from the left circle on a breakaway. RANGERS 4 BRUINS 2 BOSTON (AP) — Ulf Dahlen broke a 2-2 tie late in the second period and Tomas Sandstrom added an insurance goal on a breakaway with less than five minutes remaining, fifting the New York Rangers to a 4-2 victory over the Boston Bruins in NHL play Saturday. The Bruins outshot the Rangers 33-23, but were frustrated by goalie John Vanbiesbrouck, who had 31 saves as New York posted its third straight victory while winning in Boston for the first time in nearly two years. Chris Nilan, acquired from Montreal on Wednesday, scored his first goal with the Rangers and eighth of the season at 3:44 of the first period. FLYERS 4 JETS 3 PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Peter Zezel broke a 17-game scoring drought with a goal in the first period and added an assist as the Philadelphia Flyers downed the Winnipeg Jets 4-3 Saturday. Zezel tied the game at 1-1 when he beat goalie Daniel Berthiaune to the stick side with 2:45 remaining in the opening period. Four minutes earlier, Winnipeg had taken a 1-0 lead when Steve Rooney beat goalie Mark LaForest with a shot from the blue line at 13:13. Zezel got an assist at 5:25 of the second period when Scott Mellanby converted his rebound to put the Flyers ahead 2-1. PENS 4 HAWKS 2 PITTSBURGH (AP) — Dan Quinn scored a pair of power-play goals to help the Pittsburgh Penguins end a return visit. The Redskins have beéh ticked off for four years. “We've had only one thing on our minds since that game,” Denver running back Sammy Winder said of the 1987 Super Bowl. re winless streak at home with a 4-2 victory over the Chicago Blackhawks on Saturday night. The Penguins won their first home game since Dec. 26, ending a 0-4-3 cane at the Civic Arena and a three-game overall losing streak Pittsburgh took a 2-0 lead on first-period goals by Paul up centre ice and firing a 40-foot shot past goaltender Darren Pang’s glove. LEAFS 5 WINGS 5 TORONTO (CP) — Wendel Clark's second goal of the game knotted the score at 12:44 of the third period as the Toronto Maple Leafs and Detroit Red Wings skated to a 5-5 NHL tie Saturday night. It was the second draw in as many nights for the two teams, who tied 3-3 in Detroit on Frida: The teams started the third period deadlocked 3-3 and the Red Wings took a 5-3 lead by 6:34 on goals by Steve Chiasson, with his second of the game, and Steve Yzerman. Detroit was unable to hold off the Leafs, who were outshot 46-35. BLUES 5 NORDS 2 ST. LOUIS (AP) — Tony McKegney scored a goal and added two assists, helping the St. Louis Blues extend their winning streak to five games with a 5-2 NHL victory Saturday night over the Quebec Nordiques. Bernie Federko, Michael Dark, Tony Hrkac and Mark Hunter also scored for St. Louis. Cliff Ronning had two assists. The Blues’ victory, their seventh in their last eight games, put them at the .500 mark for the first time since Dec. 27 Anton Stastny and Peter Stastny scored power-play goals for Quebec. OILERS 5 HARTFORD 2 EDMONTON (CP) — Wayne Gretzky had a goal and two assists to pace the Edmonton Oilers to a 5-2 National Hockey League victory over the Hartford Whalers Saturday. The output gave Gretzky seven points in two games after missing 13 games because of injury. In his first game back Friday he had four assists. Saturday he set up Jari Kurri on a first-period power piay, scored himseif with Edmonton shorthanded in the seond, and then set up Glenn Anderson for a key third-period goal. Keith Acton got his first goal as an Oiler and defenceman Kevin Lowe scored his 50th career goal. FLAMES 4 CANUCKS 3 CALGARY (CP) — Joe Mullen’s second goal of the game at 13:34 of the third period lifted the Calgary Flames to a 4-3 win over the Vancouver Canucks in National Hockey League action Saturday night. Tony Tanti, named first star of the game, scored all three goals for Vancouver.