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Skoves Club Y Wallace in Jack and Jill routine; Ross in solo dance, Leah Kennedy in solo performance and Selena Foder, Kathy John and Tracy Strongman as Three Blind Mice. CosNews Photos by Chery! Calderbonk eel A4 | .44 word 44 on 1 44 2%-4", 4 44 = son t 44 NHL ROUNDUP Bruins nip Canadiens BOSTON (AP) — Keith Crowder’s goal at 5:45 of the third period Saturday gave Boston Bruins a 2-1 victory over Montreal Canadiens in a penalty-filled National Hockey League game Saturday. The Bruins’ fourth consecutive victory gave them 102 points, one more than Buffalo before the Sabres’ game at Quebec Saturday night. Each team winds up its regular season schedule Sunday. Mike McPhee had given Montreal a 1-0 lead with his fifth goal of the season at 19:49 of the first period. After a scoreless second period, Ray Bourque’s 31st goal tied the game at 1:32 of the final period. Crowder capped the comeback with his 24th goal at 6:45. Tom Fergus shot the puck fram behind the net. Montreal goalie Richard Sevignystoppped it with his stick, but it trickled to Crowder who Miaged it ih from the right corner of the crease. The Bruins combined a fierce attack with # solid defence the rest of the way. They had a 13-3 shooting advantage in the third period after being outshot 19-14 in the first two periods. Referee Kerry Fraser called 138 minutes in penalties, 75 against Montreal and 68 against Boston. There were 10 fights, including five in the second period when 82 minutes in penalties were handed out. The loss was the sixth in a row for Montreal, which has clinched fourth place in the Adams Division. It will play the either Buffalo or Boston in the first round of the playoffs this week. ‘The second place finisher will play to the Nordiques in the first two — of the opening best-of-five series. 4SABRES 1 QUEBEC cr — Michel Goulet scored his 56th goal and set up another to tie a season-record for assists by a left winger as Quebec Nordiques knocked Buffalo Sabres out of first place in the Adams Division with a 4-1 victory Saturday night. The assist was the 65th of the season for Goulet, matching the record set by Johnny Bucyk of Boston Bruins in the 1970-71 campaign. The loss was a severe blow for the Sabres, who fell one point behind the Bruins with one game to play in the regular schedule. The Sabres are at home ‘against Toronto Maple Leafs tonight, while Boston faces New Jersey Devils in an afternoon contest. ISLANDERS 3 CAPITALS 1 Landover, Md. (AP) — Mike Bossy's 50th goal of the season provided. the winning margin for New York Islanders, who. clinched a Patrick Division championship with a 3-2 victory over Washington Capitals. Bossy finished the evening with a pair of goals, adding an empty net-goal in the closing minutes as the Islanders ran their unbeaten stream to six games. The Islanders raised their record to 49-26-4, ‘while Washington fell to 47-27-5. Thé second place Capitals must | ‘ earn at least a tie in their game tonight in Phildelphia to remain ahead of the Flyers and gain the home ice advantage when those two clubs meet in the first round of the playoffs. FLAMES 10 NORTH STARS 3 CALGARY (CP) — The Flames were without their scoring leader, but it did nothing to stem their firing power as Calgary downed Minnesota North Stars 10-3. Flames scorers were Tim Hunter, with two, and Carey Wilson, Kari Al MacInnis, Steve T Richard Kromm, Steve Konroyd, Dan Quinn and Steve Bozek. Brad Maxwell scored twice and Willi Plett once for the North Stars. Calgary fired 41 shots on Gilles Meloche, who started in the Minnesota goal, and rookie Jon Casey who replaced him in the secondperiod. Reggie Lemelin faced 84 gbote in. the Calgary net. Many observers assumed the Flames would come out flat after losing Kent Nilsson for the season in their game Thursday against Los Angeles Kings, in which the Swedish star broke his leg. LEAFS 6 BLUES 4 TORONTO (CP) — Toronto Maple Leafs gave their suffering fans a parting gift a 6-4 victory over St. Louis Blues in the team’s final home game of the National Hockey League schedule. Terry Martin scored twice and Jim Korn, Dale McCourt, John Anderson and Bill Derlago had one each for the Leafs, who were eliminated from Norris Division playoff contention last week. They finish their season tonight in Buffalo. Rob Ramage, Jorgen Pettersson, Doug Wickenheiser and Perry Anderson scored for the Blues, who lost and a chance to clinch second place in the Norris with their third consecutive defeat. St. Louis outshot Toronto 41-26. Alan Bester, in his 25th straight start, was the winning goaltender and Mike Liut the loser. WHALERS 5 RANGERS 3 HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — A diving Ron Francis swept the puck into the New York net at 11:54 of the final period for the winning goal as Hartford Whalers set a team record for victories by defeating the Rangers 5-3. The Whalers’ 28 victories this 28-41-10 season are the most they have scored since joining the NHL in 1979. Ray Neufeld scored twice for Hartford, while Mark Pavelich got two for the Rangers in a close game that was tied at 3-3 until Francis’s late goal. Dave Tippett scored into an empty net with 11 seconds left in the game for the final margin. Neufeld's first goal of the game, on a 35-foot slapshot, gave Hartford a 1-0 lead midway through the first period, but Pavelich’s first — a short flip on the power play that went over goalie Greg Millen's left shoulder — tied the score at 1-1 with 2:57 left in the period. Nettles ends 11-year career with Yankees NEW YORK (AP) — Craig Nettles consented Saturday to a trade to San Diego Padres, officially ending an ll-year career with New York Yankees that saw him become only the third captain of the American League baseball team. The trade, announced Fri- day ‘night by the Yankees, will send the 39-year-old faire. baseman to the city of and end a some- ‘ines stormy relationship with club owner George Steinbrenner. As a five-and-10 player (five years with one club, 10 years in one league), Nettles had the right to refuse the deal. But the Gold Glove third baseman gave his ap- proval Saturday after a con- ference call from Fort Lau- derdale, Fla., with his agent, Jerry Kapstein, Padres gen. eral manager Jack McKeon and Yankees vice-president Bill Bergesch. Nettles, who followed Lou Gehrig and Thurman Munson as the only Yankees’ cap- tains, will sign a contract re- ported to be similar to the two-year deal he had with the Yankees, earning him about $1.8 million through 1985. The contract is also reported to contain a no-trade clause. Nettles was en route to San Diego and was unavail- able for comment. The deal will send rookie pitcher Dennis Rasmussen and a player to be named lat- er to the Yankees. Rasmus- sen, a six-foot-seven left- hander, was 13-10 for New York's Triple A farm club at Columbus last season, but the Yankees sent him to San Diego last August for right: hander John Montefusco. Nettles, who lives in Del Mar, Calif., asked to be traded after Yankees man- ager Yogi Berra said he would platoon him at third this season with Toby Har- rah, acquired from Cleveland Indians in February. The Yankees failed in an attempt to trade Nettles to San Diego in 1982. Most of Nettles’s problems with Steinbrenner centred on money, but a yet-to-be-re- leased book by Nettles is ex- pected to heavily criticize the Yankees’ boss. Steinbrenner, in a published interview, denied the book had anything to do with the trade. ~ “I didn't appreciate the things he (Nettles) said about me in it, but this was a de- cision that was made by Yogi and the coaches,” Steinbren- ner said of the deal. Kapstein said in a tele- phone interview from San Diego that he expects Net- tles to be in a Padres uniform today when the team plays Boston in an exhibition game. “He'll still be wearing No. 9,” said Kapstein. Nettles learned of the trade Friday night after the team returned from an exhi- bition game in the Dominican Republic, where he hit a two-run home run in a 4-2 victory over Houston Astros. The homer was Nettles’s fourth of the spring, tops on the club. Kapstein said Nettles called him about 11:30 p.m. EST, setting off a round of calls to the Yankees and the Padres to work out details of the trade. Kapstein said Nettles is pleased. “We had had some dis- unanimously decided there cussions with the Yankees was nothing else to do,” and think everything worked Berra said. “It had nothing to out for all parties,” Kapstein do with George.” ‘said. After spending parts of the Berra said Friday night previous three seasons either that Nettles “didn't want to injured or ill, Nettles re platoon and he didn’t want to bounded last season with a be here.” 266 batting average, 20 “So myself and the coaches homers and 75 runs batted in. Roger Neilson to be released? TORONTO (CP) — Roger other and see what we come Neilson, hired to coach'Los up with. He took that gam- Angeles Kings two months ble. He accepted it right from ago, is about to be released the start.” by the National Hockey Neilson coached in League team, says the Tor- Toronto, Buffalo and Vancou- onto Globe and Mail. ver before getting the job Neilson was fired as head with the Kings, who tailed off coach of Vancouver Canucks badly in the final six weeks of in January and hired by the the schedule and missed the Kings shortly afterwards. playoffs. The Globe and Mail says that, Neilson had bid to become in an interview with Roga- both coach and general man- tien Vachon, the Kings’ gen- ager of the Kings but owner eral manager declined to an- Jerry Buss named Vachon swer in the affirmative when manager after his coach - asked if Neilson would be rial shakeup this win- back as coach season. _ter that saw coach Don Perry “We haven't any an- and general manager George nouncement or anything Maguire removed. yet,” said Vachon. “It's def- “Tt was an unholy marriage initely not official.” right from the start,” the Vachon said he's talked to newspaper quotes one un- Neilson and “we're going to named source. “Neither had talk more about it and find any input into the status of out what his demands are and stuff like that.” Vachon said that when Neilson was hired he took the Neilson when asked about job only until the end of the the rumors, said: “I can't season. make any comment on that at “The understanding is that this time. I might be able to both parties are going to sit comment on it after the down and evaluate each season is over.” Strategy key to Canadians’ DULUTH. MINN. (CP) — One thing Canadians will notice about Mike Riley's rink at the world curling this year is that it won't have the brass pay eee ad ae Paul Gowsell or Ed Wrernich. In fact, the foursome has kept a low profile at its Pembina Curling Club in Winnipeg since winning the Labatt Brier for the Canadian title in Victoria earlier this month. Riley ‘said following the rink’s upset of defending champion Werenich in the Canadian championships that they'd test and coast to the Air Canada Silver Broom that get’s under way Monday. ‘They maintained that strategy during the three weeks that followed their win in Vistartas eng 3 &ifew practice sessions ai lub ae of them. wos te of a letdown Even their arrival Friday night in Duluth was hardly. that of a team bent on showing the curling world their They arrived ly, travelling in cars with friends and family. MUTUAL RESPECT But Riley, a 38-year-old investment councellor, said people should not take that part of their game plan too seriously. There's a lot of respect evident among members of the team he put together at the start of the Season. “They've been playing so good, they make it easier for me,” Riley said of his front. end. of ot er ® skipped for the fourth straight year by Toronto-born Keith Wendorf. Riley said his lack of international exposure could be beneficial:to his opposition and sought out advice of those who had been there before, among them fellow-West- erners Kerry Burtnyk, Barry Fry and Rod Hunter. “I even phoned Paul Savage (veteran third on the Werenich rink) to get some advice from him” Riley said. “He told us to watch out for the Norwegians, they're good curlers.” There are two draws each day — Monday to Thursday — at 11 a.m. PST and 5:30 p.m. PST — with the final ninth round scheduled for 7:30 a.m. PST Friday. Any rink that goes unbeaten through the round robin earns a bye into the final Sunday with the second- and third-place teams meeting in the semifinal Saturday. Success seven previous world championships, could be the rink the Canadians have to fear the most. his was a dark-horse entry at the 1983 Silver Broom in Regina and came within a whisker of upsetting some of the stronger, clubs, earning the respect of his peers. Riley feels he's probably in the same position in 1964 sitice most of the rinks he'll be meeting have been this route before. American skip Bruce Roberts put together the same team that won for him in 1976 — the last time the event was held in Duluth. Swiss ‘ekip Peter pe te is Arse hie fourth world will be represented by a ‘young but fihciersdbee: crew ey by Mike Hay, son of former Scotch Cup champion Chuck Hay. WANETA PLAZA HIGHWAY 3 TRAIL after ‘witinting (the; Brier" third Brian Toews said this week. prior to the team's departure for Duluth. “We Aidga't fool we wate letting Gown, Bayt we Just weren't as Otherwise, the top four rinks after the preliminary draw move into the medal round. CBC will televise the Se acer tes (nace PST) and final Sunday (11 a.m.). gian entry, skipped by Eigil Ramsfjell in Also entered in the competition are teams skipped by Gunter Mrker of Austria, Christian Thune of Denmark, Per Lindeman of Sweden and Italian veteran Andreas Pavani. Woolco Store Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Strategy will be « key to whatever early success the . Thursday &'Friday 9:30 a.m- to 9:00 p. Canadians have ‘since they'll open the 10-rink, round- -robin championship against 1968 finalist West ee