Wwe Si 1986/87 Castlegar Jr. Rebels First Home Game Sat., Oct. 4 — HOMEGOODS roan Sooene Floor Covering Centre 8:00 P.M. CASTLEGAR COMMUNITY COMPLEX Rossland Warriors BUY A SEASONS TICKET — SHOW YOUR SUPPORT (Contact any executive member) Where You Belong Girl makes ju nior football team NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) — Instead of the usual collection of rock and television stars, Anne-Marie Jack lined her bedroom with pictures of San Francisco 49ers quarterback Joe Montana. But that and other tell-tale signs — such as choosing football games as her favorite TV viewing — didn't prepare Richard and Yvonne Jack for the news their 15-year-old daughter delivered this month. “They were shocked,” Jack said of her parents when she told them she was trying out for her high school's junior football team. ‘They were even more surprised when she made the Worried about her daughter's safety but not wanting to let her down, Mrs. Jack had been confident the coaches of the St. Paul Patriots would end Anne-Marie's playing hopes when it came time to cut the 65 boys — and one girl — who tried out. “I didn't want to nip it in the bud,” she said. “I wanted that to be someone else's responsibility.” But Patriots coach Joe Brusutti says Jack deserves to be on the team. “When she gets hit, she’s right back up again.” said Brusutti. “She's doing relatively well for a rookie. expected to be one of them and isn't treated any differently.” FEW HOLD BACK While the five-foot-eight, 130-pound Jack admits a few of her teammates are a little easy on her during practice, the majority hold nothing back because they want her to get used to what it will be like in a game. “That's what surprised me,” Jack said. “No one has given me a hard time. “There's been no criticism. There's been a bit of teasing, but I expected that.” Instead of Anne-Marie Jack, she's now fondly known “And they tell me the lipstick has to go because I'm one of the guys now.” meetings. St. Paul played its first game recently — a 3-0 victory over a local rival, which gives the team one more win than it had last season. And while Jack got in for only one play, she enjoyed her debut. Available at the Arena Complex at the above games. NOTE: There will be no reserved seats at regular season games Factory Endorsed Sale! MALONEY = 1700 Columbie Ave. Cestleger 0.1 5058 CASTLEGAR SPORTS CENTRE Hockey-Skate Sharpening Figure Skote Shorpeni: Hockey Equipment & Uniforms Ski Jockets (Jones) in stock Athletic Weor Fly Tying Rod Busiding ROD ZAVADUK 2177 Columbia Ave. 365-8288 DARCY MARTINI Detense CASTLEGAR SPORTS CENTRE Hockey Skate Shorpening Figure Skate Shorpening Hockey Equipment & Uniforms Ski Jockets (Jones) in stock Athletic Weor Fly Tyi Rod Building ROD ZAVADUK " 2177 Columbie Ave. 288 STEVE VOYKIN Goal iG HOMEGOODS Feritre Warehouse Floor Covering Centre BO BICYCLE SHOP e884 713 13th STREET CASTLEGAR. B.C. VIN 2K6 pone (604) 365-5044 ERNIE BERGER —seoree ror HOCKEY SEASON IS ON NOW! SKATE SHARPEN THE DUPL-SKATE WAY! GET YOUR SEASON TICKET EARLY! — 538 WOCKEY — S301 ~ BARTLE | & GIBSON mick Right The Plumbing & Heating Centre American Standard Valley Fibrebath Jocuzz: * Crone Duro Pumps & Softeners coun Detence 3 viens Wing CAREW 2317- Factory Endorsed Sale! 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Open Sunday, Noon-6 p.m. Open Monday 'til 9 p.m. Castlegar Hyundai les & Service » Block N of Moloney MAGIC AUTO BODY 2308 - 6th Avenue, Castlegar A touch of magic with every job Tonvoanosa 369-6667 * ICBC * Custom Pointing * Fibergloss Speciolists * Windshields t ORLANDO VECCHIO Hs HOMEGOODS an jew Floor Covering Ceatre SCHEDULE OF LEAGUE GAMES: Cranbrook cv 8.V. — Beaver Valley = Kim Cotumbic Valley ad Kimberly OCTOBER Fri. 31 — Cast. at Spok. 8:30 p.m. NOVEMBER Cast ot BV. 8 30p.m Sot. 1 — Cran. ot Cost. 8.00 p.m Ross. ot Cast. 8:00 p.m Kirn. ot Cast. 8-00 p.m Cast. at Spok. 2:00 p.m Tras! at Cast. 8:30 p.m Spok. ot Cost. 8:30 p.m. Cast ot Kim. 8:00 p.m Cast. at Kim. 8:00 p.m. 8 Cos Kirn. at Cast. 8:00 p.m CV. at Cast. 2:00 p.m Trou! at Cast. 8:00 p.m Cost. ot B.V. 8:30 p.m Cast atCran. 1:30 p.m. Cast. at Trost 8:00 p.m JANUARY Fn. 2—C C.V. ot Cost. 8:00 p.m Cos!. at B.V. 8:00 p.m oss. ot Cast. 8 30 p.m B.V. at Cast. 8:00 p.m Cast. at C.V. 8:30 p.m Trail at Cast 8.00 p.m Cast. at C.V 1:00 p.m Ces! at Ross. 8:00 p.m Cost. ot Ross. 8:00 p.m Spok. ot Cost. 8:00 p.m Spok. at Cost. 8:00 p.m Cast. at Trail 8:00 p.m Cran. at Cast, 8.00 p.m B.V. at Cast. 8:00 p.m Cast. at Spok. 2:00 p.m Cast. at Ross. 8:00 p.m Cost. at B.V. 8:30 p.m 031. ot Ross. 8:00 p.m FEBRUARY Fri.6 Cost. at Trail 8.00 p.m Sot. 7 — BV. at Cost. 8.00 p.m Tues. 10 —Rogs.otCost. 8.00 p.m Sot, 14 — Cast. at Cron. 8:00 p.m ALL TIMES ARE LOCAL TIMES team as a defensive back. “We don't speak of it.as anything unusual. She's to her teammates as Anne-Marie Jock. “It's like a dream come true.” Canucks release Krug By CasNews Staff and News Services Former Castlegar resident Tim Krug has been given his outright release by the Vancouver Canucks of the National Hockey League. Krug was among 11 players cut Friday. The onetime Castlegar Rebel who also played hockey for the Univer- sity of Alberta Golden Bears, was one of several former college players invited to attend the Canucks’ training camp in Duncan. ' Krug, a defenceman, played in last year in Germany. In other moves, New York Rangers have sent Castlegar's Gord Walker and Nelson's Simon Wheeldon to New Haven of the American Hockey League. In the B.C. Junior Hockey League, former Castlegar Rebel Walter Sheloff scored a goal for Kelowna Packers Friday night as they extended: their unbeaten record to 4-0 with a 106 victory over the Langley Eagles in Langley Swimmer pulled out of channel DOVER, England (AP) — Jim Me Gowan, a 54-year-old Pennsylvania man paralysed from the chest down, failed Saturday in his attempt to become the first paraplegic to swim across the English Channel. McGowan was taken out of the water after 2'/2 hours suffering from the cold and was brought back to Dover harbor by boat. He was taken by ambulance to Buckland Hospital where staff said he waved cheerfully before going inside. Dr. Russi Natterwalla said McGowan was suffering from mild hypothermia, which is caused by below normal body temperature. Wearing a black wet suit, goggles and an orange swimming cap, Mc Gowan backed into the water at Dover's Shakespeare Beach under the glare of television lights and flashing cameras “Go for it, Jim!” “See you in France!,” supporters shouted as he set off, backstroking away from the White Cliffs of Dover toward France. Swimming the entire way on his back, the crossing to France, near Cap Gris Nez, was expected to take 18 to 20 hours. DELAYS SWIM After delaying the swim for two days because of high winds and choppy water, McGowan said he was confident he would make it across. His main concern, he said, was the cold water. “If I ean beat the cold water, then the channel belongs to me,” he said seconds before setting , out. The water temperature was 13.9 Cc and the sea was unusually calm at the start of the swim. McGowan was accompanied by an escort boat and a second boat for the press. McGowan arrived in Dover on Sunday. For the first few days. he swam two hours a day in the channel He did not swim Friday but spent an hour or so in a bathtub packed in ice to get used to the cold. McGowan, a graduate student in counselling psychology at Temple Uni versity in Philadelphia and a coun sellor in the school's Office for the Disabled, was partially paralysed in 1951 from wounds suffered in a stabbing by a street gang. REBELS GAME . . . Spokane Braves players try to block Castlegar Rebel from getting puck Saturday night during Kootenay International Junior Hockey League game at Community Complex The Braves entertain the Rebels this afternoon in Spokane in the local team’s final exhibition game CosNews Photo by Ryan Wilson 31-13 TRIUMPH Eskimos down Lions By JOHN KOROBANIK EDMONTON (CP) — Being stingy is one thing but the Edmonton Eskimos’ defence is getting downright penurious. Led by Dan Bass, Stewart Hill and Craig Shafter, the Eskimo defence again didn't allow an opposition touchdown while contributing two of their own in Edmonton's 31-13 CFL triumph Friday night over the B.C. Lions “We don’t like to give up anything, period,” said Hill, the powerful defensive end who has become Edmonton's key figure in its aggressive pass rush. 1 think it’s been about 10 quarters since we gave up @ touchdown. Hopefully, we can sustain that.” It was Hill's 45-yard interception return for a third-quarter touchdown that keyed Edmonton's third straight victory over B.C., a win that moved the 9-3 Eskimos into a share of first place in the West with the 9-4 Lions Without hardly moving, he accepted quarterback Roy Dewalt’s pass and rambled untouched into the end zone. “| saw the play coming so I backed off my pass rush,” Hill said later. “Roy threw it right at me. It was an honest mistake.” But it was a mistake, one of many the Lions committed that again led to their downfall. “Our game plan was fine but we didn’t get the execution we were looking for,” said a subdued B.C. coach Don Matthews, particularly annoyed with the number of easy passes his receivers dropped. DEFENCES DOMINATE In a game similar to Edmonton's 32-3 win in Vancouver a week earlier except for the heavy rain that fell throughout Friday's contest — defences again dominated. The Lions, at one point this season the best offensive team in the CFL, managed only 11 first downs, 143 yards in offence and got across the mid-field stripe only four times “We've got everybody making big plays,” said Bass, taking a satisfying drag on his “victory” cigar. “On this team you have to fight to make the big play because everybody's coming up big.” Friday it was Hill, safety Jeff Volpe with a 100-yard punt return touchdown, Bass with one sack and five tackles and Shafter with two sacks and six tackles who led the way The touchdowns by Hill and Volpe gave the defence eight touchdowns this season The teams were even through 30 minutes at 10-10. Edmonton had Brian Kelly's eight-yard touchdown catch, set up by Shafter's fumble recovery, and Tom Dixon's four ints British Columbia had Larry Crawford's touchdown on a goal line interception of quarterback Matt Dunigan and Lui Passaglia’s four points. But the second half belonged to the Eskimos, now a perfect 7-0 against West Division rivals In the half, the Lions got into Edmonton territory only twice and ran only six plays while there. Dewalt threw two incomplete passes, was sacked twice for 20 yards in losses. the Lions punted once and Passaglia kicked a 43-yard field goal We've been playing awfully good football and getting the breaks,” said Bass Jets beat Canucks 5-3 By JIM MORRIS WINNIPEG (CP) — Winnipeg Jet coach Dan Maloney had hoped for some answers Friday when he let rookie Eldon (Pokey) Reddick go the distance in an NHL exhibition game against the Vancouver Canucks. What he saw was Reddick face a meagre 13 shots as the Jets eked out a “It’s tough to assess a goaltender on that many saves,” said Maloney. “I think he'd rather face 40 than that many. It's hard on the nerves when the puck comes at you and you haven't faced a shot for a while. I'm pleased with Reddick. He worked hard.” The real goaltending story of the game was Vancouver's Richard Bro deur who turned aside 19 of 21 shots before being replaced by Frank Ca price midway through the second period Dale Hawerchuk scored twice and Finnish rookie Hannu Jarvenpaa added three assists for the Jets. Winnipeg. which scored on three of eight power play chances, also got goals from Dave Ellett, Thomas Steen and Mario Marois. SCORES TWICE Stu Kulak scored twice for Van couver and Barry Peterson once. The Jets, who staggered with a dismal 4.61 goals-against average last season, went to camp with 10 goal tenders this September. Of those, four remain, including Reddick, 21, 4 stand out least season with Fort Wayne of the International Hockey League, Steve Penney. 25, obtained from the Montreal Canadiens in a trade for Brian Hayward, former U.S. Olympic goaltender Marc Behrend, 25, and high priced veteran Dan Bouchard, 35 Penney, in Quebec City while his wife gives birth to their first child, has been the Jets’ best goaltender, al lowing two goals in 28 minutes of play After 123 minutes Reddick allowed seven goals, while Behrend has been scored on four times in 66 minutes. Bouchard has been stung four times in 29 minutes. Maloney won't say who will be with the Jets when their regular season opens Oct. 9 Red Ox clinch at least BOSTON (AP) — Dwight Evans homered, Bruce Hurst pitched a six-hit shutout and the Boston Red Sox clinched at least a tie for the American League East championship Saturday with a 20 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays. While improving their record to 92-61 with only their second victory in six games, the Red Sox moved to within one game of clinching their first division title since 1975. Boston needs one more victory or a Toronto loss to mathematically elimi- nate the defending division champions. Toronto's Jim Clancy, 14-13, retired the first 14 batters before Evans ended Boston's scoring drought with his 26th homer of the year. The Red Sox lost 1-0 to the Blue Jays in 12 innings Friday night. TIGERS 1 YANKEES 0 NEW YORK (AP — Jack Morris won his 20th game with a four-hit, 10-inning shutout and Larry Herndon snapped a scoreless tie by doubling home Lou Whitaker as the Detroit Tigers de feated the New York Yankees 1-0 in American League baseball on Satur day Morris, 20-8, won his fifth straight and became the fourth major league pitcher to win 20 games this season. His total of six shutouts this season leads the majors and is the highest since 1980, when Tommy John had six. Morris allowed only Dan Pasqua’s double and three singles in his 19th career shutout. He struck out eight and walked two, both intentionally. Whitaker opened the 10th with an infield single to short off the Yankees’ fourth pitcher, Dave Righetti, 88 Bruce Fields sacrificed Whitaker to second and, one out later, Herndon doubled to right-centre. Morris retired the first 11 batters before Pasqua’s single to right. He faced his first scoring threat with two outs in the sixth Rickey Henderson reached first on a third-strike wild pitch and stole second, then Don Mattingly was walked in tentionally. But Pasqua grounded out to first, ending the inning. Yankees starter Doug Drabek al lowed six singles in 72-3 innings. He was chased with two outs in the eighth when the Tigers loaded the bases. Bob Shirley relieved and got an inning-end ing groundout WHITE SOX 8 TWINS 2 CHICAGO (AP) — Jose DeLeon pitched a three-hitter and Jerry Hair ston hit a two-run homer in a four-run third inning Saturday to lead the Chicago White Sox to a 52 triumph over the Minnesota Twins in the first game of a doubleheader DeLeon, 45, retired the first 16 batters, struck out 10 and walked one as the White Sox ended a five-game losing streak The first Twin to reach base was Jeff Reed, who dropped a pop fly single in short centre field in the sixth. The shutout was broken with two outs in the ninth, when Kirby Puckett hit a tworun homer, his 29th of the season RS 1 ANGELS 0 ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) Charlie Hough pitched 6 1-3 hitless innings before finishing with a twohitter and Larry Parrish hit a fourth inning homer Saturday as the Texas Rangers beat the California Angels 10. Facing a makeshift lineup the day after the Angels clinched the division title, Hough did not allow a runner until the sixth inning and did not allow a hit until Ruppert Jones, one of two regulars in the California lineup, singted with one out in the seventh a tie Hough, 16-10, issued four walks — three of them in the sixth — and struck out six. He won his fourth straight game and broke a four-game losing streak against California that dated to June 1964. NATIONAL LEAGUE Astros 4 Braves 0 ATLANTA (AP) — Danny Darwin seattered six hits over seven innings Houston Astros to a 40 victory over the Atlanta Braves. Darvin, 4-2, pitched the Astros to their first vietory since they clinched their division title Thursday. He struck out seven and walked none. Larry Andersen and Charlie Kerfeld pitched the final two innings. David Palmer, 11-10, took the loss. CUBS 5 CARDINALS 3 ST. LOUIS (AP) — Ryne Sandberg hit a two-run triple in the 10th inning and scored on a single by Bob Dernier to power a four-run inning and lead the Chicago Cubs to a 5-3 vietory over the St. Louis Cardinals. With one out in the 10th, pinch-hitter Thad Bosley doubled to right off Ray Soff, 4-1. Chico Walker grounded to first baseman Andy Van Slyke, but Soff missed the bag with his foot. Walker was safe on the error ar~ Bosley moved to third. Sandberg then drove his triple to right-centre field. Dernier, pinch-hit ting, greeted reliever Pat Perry with a run-scoring single. Dernier later scored on Brian Dayette's sacrifice fly GIANTS 8 DODGERS 3 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Bob Melvin and Chili Davis homered as Vida Blue won for the first time since Aug. 12 and the San Francisco Giants rolled to an 8-3 victory Saturday over the Los Angeles Dodgers. Steve Sax extended his hitting streak to 25 games, high in the major leagues this season. His three hits gave him 200 for the season, the first time he has reached that plateau, and improved his average to 330. Chernoff captures race By CasNews Staff Kinnaird Junior secondary school student Aimie Chernoff captured her second cross-country running race in as many tries Thursday in Trail Chernoff won the junior girls cate- gory. She also took the Sept. 18 race in the first meet of the season In other results, Jason Schultz of J.L. Crowe in Trail won the senior boys event, Sarah Lidstone of L.V. Rogers in Nelson won the senior girls event for the second time, and John Greaves of Grand Forks again won the junior boys event In team standings, J.L. Crowe came out on top in the senior event, while Trafalgar of Nelson topped the junior boys standings and KJSS won the junior girls standings In local results, Jason Ferris of Stanley Humphries secondary school was ninth in the senior boys event. Brandy Howard of SHSS was second in the junior girls event, teammate Jennifer Small was fourth while Alena Terry of KJSS was fifth and Lori Picco, also of KJSS, was ninth