AS —_- February 10, 1985 Charlie SPRAY COLOGNE Reg. $22.75 Carl's is proud to offer a wide selection of beautiful Valentine Cards by “When you care = enough to send tallmmark the very best’ WATCHES Perfect Little Gif Castleaird Plaza “IL Love You" YFOR YOUR SPECLIALY Make the day Special on Feb. 14 with: * Decorations * Tablecloths © Napkins & Doilies All from Carl's ts — ALSO KIDS ASSORTMENT OF CUT OUT BOOKS CARL'S DRUGS 365-7269 Delight someon. this Valentine's Ooy Fresh tlower orrangements for every occassion! Plus a Free Manicure with every perm purchased. CALL 365-5841 ACCENT STYLING Cupid wants you... . For Accent Styling’s 617 Columbia, Castlegar Large Selection foses OUR SPECIAL TROPICAL PLANT SALE FROM FEB. 7 TO FEB. 17 TROPICALS now? 1.49 4-Inch, Reg. $1.99 HANGING P PLANTS 4,50 Now $6.50 6-Inch. Reg. $ 10-inch. Reg. $15.00. . now? 10.00 LARGE SELECTION POTTED PLANTS Azaleas, Cyclamons, Mums, Kalenchoes, Gratted Cactus, African Violets. Chang’s Nursery & Florists Ltd. The largest selection in the West Kootenay! 2601 - 9th Ave., Castleger OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK B-inch. Reg. $9.50 365-7312 THE HAIR & PLANT ANNEX 365-3744 1241 - 3rd St., Castlegar 3 Perm Sale Continues 2 Save 10% Until Feb. 28 at Betty’s Boutique Blueberry Creek 365-2252 “o For Your Special Valentine WICKER & RATTA ALL TABLES — UP TO 33% OFF! DOUBLE PAPASON CHAIRS OAK BAR STOOLS & BENT WOOD ROCKERS — All Specially Priced! — Many new & exciting items have arrived in our Kitchen Corner! WANETA WICKER & THE KITCHEN CORNER 1458 Bay Ave., Trail 368-8512 9 Dove You "Keb. Can be said in SO many ways. Express your sentiments with a gift from any of these fine stones. begins toc 1225 - 4th St., Castlegar acare: Bouguet, Valentine's Week Call or visit us WE HAVE HELIUM FILLED VALENTINE BALLOONS i helen's Flowers Your Enchanted Florist ’ February 8. Jay 365-5191 introductory Special = NOW AVAILABLE AT THE WOOL WAGON HEMMER / CUTTER ATTACHMENT Fits Most Sewing Machines NEW FOR SPRING! * Exciting New Fabrics * Fashion Patterns from Burda CASTLEAIRD PLAZA — (WOOL WAGON ») OVENS alentine’ s Day, PF 2PEP°P? 14 24 Hour Cash Card From Kootenay Savings Credit Union Orser skates to fifth crown | MONCTON, N.B. (CP) — Brian Orser won his fifth straight men's senior title, earning an unheard of seven perfect 6.0 marks in the process, at the Canadian figure skating championships Saturday night. Neil Paterson of Vancouver won the silver medal and Gordie Forbes of Brockville, Ont., took the bronze. Each of the seven judges displays two sets of marks. For technical merit, Orser was given four 6.0s and three 5.9s. For artistic impression, the scoreboard flashed three 6.0s and four 5.9s. Orser, 23, from Penetanguishene, Ont., drew a prolonged standing ovation as roses and carnations showered the ice. Orser was second last year at the winter and world jonships and he and Al d Fedacev of the Soviet Union are expected to fight it out for the world crown next month in Tokyo. The men's final followed the senior ice dance final, won for the fourth year in a row by Tracy Wilson and Robert McCall. Wilson and McCall were in a class by themselves with an innovative free dance. While most ice dancers create a free skate that alternates between fast and slow segments, Wilson and McCall were in constant motion, whirling about the ice with a combination of artistic flair and high level of athletic prowess few other couples could hope to duplicate. At the suggestion of former men's champion Toller Cranston, Wilson and McCall based their four-minute free dance on the music of Andre Gagnon’s Movements. The seven judges responded by awarding them seven 5.9s, of a possible 6.0, and the crowd showed its appreciation by offering a standing ovation. Karyn and Rod Garossino of Calgary won silver medals, barely edging out bronze medallists Isabelle and Paul Duchesnay of Aylmer, Que. “Again, the big thing was our consistency,” McCall said. “It doesn’t get any easier to defend a championship — it gets more difficult.” Wilson, 23, from Port Moody, B.C. AND McCall, 26, NHL ACTION LAST NIGHT Give the Gift of Mus tk Please the Girl in your Life With a Valentine's Gift from West's . . 2 Sor ALL LINGERIE Ex te selections of lips and fine by Kayser, Hanna, Vogue and Darling Arriving daily in the latest styles — cottons. Rayon blends in many prints and pastels to co-ordinate every outtit FABRIC DEPARTMENT New Spring Fabrics Arriving Doily! Shipment of Prints — Only $2.99/yd. Printed Flannelette — $2.49, 1217 - 3rd St., Castieger Phone 365-7782 New Spring Blouses DY Ne FASHION PANTYHOSE From sheers to opaques, colorful tints to the delicate patterns, and of course, great neutral tones! Support the Heart Fund in February! Vy REBEL ACTION . . . Castlegar Rebels clinched first place Friday night with a 9-5 win over Beaver Valley Nite Hawks. Game above show Rebels against Kim berley at the community complex. Rebels play last game of season tonight in Spokane, and begin playot fs Tuesday against fourth-place team. CosNews Photo by Doug Hor vey BUT THAT'S NOT NEW Chief's days numbered VANCOUVER (CP) Ron Delorme of Vancouver Canucks can’t remember a summer he hasg't worried about his job security in the game that “has given me respect with my people and turned me into a proud Indian.” The big right winger compares his National Hockey League career, now in serious jeopardy of falling one year short of 10 seasons, to his native status. “I've been living a borderline existence all my life, always wondering where I'd be playing next and where I actually belonged,” Delorme said this week. “Right now, this has already been a long summer for me.” Delorme’s summer arrived painfully and suddenly Dec. 23 when his left knee buckled and ripped apart in a game against Calgary Flames. Facing a long, lonely rehabilitation, he has been pondering a life without hockey to provide for his wife Joan and children, Blair, 11, and Leah, four. “T'll take a job as a laborer if necessary,” said Delorme, 29, whose labor of love outside hockey has been working summers with native children on the seven reserves in the vieinity of North Battleford, Sask “You bet I'm worried if I'll be able to play again and I'll worry right through training camp,” he said. “I'll be working as hard as I know how to get back next season. “But I'll understand if they (the Canucks) give me my termination.” Kinnaird Cobras second in Oliver Kinnaird Juniot Secondary edging Penticton High 17-15. School Cobras, led by tour. The championship game nament all-stars Carrie Gor saw the Cobras pitted koff, Arla Goolieff and Jenny against the team from Mc Rezansoff were runners up at Nicol Park. Turnovers the Ron D'Andrea basketball tournament held recently in Oliver Team defense highlighted the Cobras’ performance as they had little difficulty dis patching South Okanagan Secondary. School 22-12 and proved to be the factor as the Cobras saw a slim lead slip away in the dying moments Coach Doug Hickey praised his team’s overall performance citing their de meanor on and off the court Delorme, who was fluent in Cree before he learned English, said he is considered a Metis because “my great great grandfather apparently sold his Treaty rights.” He hopes to work full time with native people when his hockey career is over. Because of his rehabilitation program, he will be spending only a month this summer in his home town of Cochin, a resort 20 miles north of North Battleford. But this spring he will be visiting reserves in the Vancouver area and the Northwest Territories, counselling children and adults and speaking at banquets on behalf of community colleges and the federal Department of Indian Affairs. “I want to keep helping my people in any way I can because I know how difficult it still is for them to leave the reservations and go into the white man’s world,” he said. “I had to grow up only a couple of hundred yards from one of the two reservations near town because all I have is hunting rights. But I don't have an identity problem and I've always had to live with the insecurity of being a marginal NHLer. “But hockey has been my life. It's given me respect and put me in the limelight with my own people. A lot of Indian kids look up to me because I made it.” When Delorme, called “Chief” like other NHLers of native ancestry, was encouraged by his parents and future wife to play beyond the level of Indian league hockey. he encountered many instances of prejudice. FELT DEFENSIVE “I think I was one of only two Indians in the (Western Junior) league when I started at Prince Albert,” he said. “I was made to feel defensive about myself and my race They called me a lot worse things than just a dirty Indian. But I let it be known I wasn't going to take any of that verbal crap. I fought back to prove that I wasn't a bad Indian at all. Now, I'm proud of my heritage, proud to be an Indian.” Delorme has been giving considerable thought to his future after hockey, “not just since my knee’s been in this cast, because I'm determined to make it back “Coming back is going to be a lot tougher for me because I'm not a goal scorer and the game's changed so much in recent years. It's so much faster and geared to offence ‘I'm a role ‘player, someone who has always had to literally fight for every contract.” from Halifax, swept all three phases of the event, finishing first in the compulsory dances and the original set pattern earlier in the competition. Despite the excellence of their free skate, McCall said he felt that he and his partner did not do their best. “It took us a while to get into it,” he said. “By the slow piece and the last piece were were “It felt great. All of a sudden you clue into an audience. But for the first part it felt a bit tight.” The couple received 5,8s and 5.9s for techical merit and Wilson said those marks “would have been a bit higher if we had skated it out a bit stronger at the start.” Bossy and Trottier lead Isles to win UNIONDALE, N.Y. (CP) — Mike Bossy and Bryan Trottier scored two goals each leading New York Isianders to their fourth consecutive National Hockey League victory, a 4-1 decision over the slumping Pittsburgh Penguins. Pittsburgh is 0-7-1 in its last eight games. Bossy, who has six goals and five assists in his last thrée games, got the Islanders started at 7:54 of the opening period, blasting a 30-foot slap shot past Penguins goalie Denis Herron on a breakaway. Linemates Brent Sutter and John Tonelli — who along Bossy will start for the Wales Conference in the All-Star game Tuesday night — set up the goal with perfect advance passes. Trottier, the Islanders’ other All-Star, poked in a rebound with New York shorthanded at 14:35, making it 2-0. Then Bossy converted a backhander off a feed by Tonelli on a second-period power play. EDMONTON 6 DETROIT 5 DETROIT (AP) — Jari Kurri and Glenn Anderson scored third-period goals 45 seconds apart to lift Edmonton Oilers to a 6-5 victory over Detroit Red Wings. Durri, whose 52 goals trail only teammate Wayne Gretzky, beat Detroit netminder Corrado Micalef with a 40-foot slap shot at 1:23 and Anderson added 29th from a scramble at 2:08 to give the Oilers their 10th victory in 11 games. Detroit grabbed a 5-3 edge in the middle period when John Ogrodnick and Kelly Kisio both scored their second goals of the night, but the Oilers began their comeback with by Tim Kerr, gave the Flyers a 5-4 victory over Washington Capitals. After i i ’s three-g winning streak, the Flyers | moved to within nine points of the first-place Capitals in the Patrick Division. Philadelphia has played three frewer games than the Capitals. Kerr, who raised his season total to 43 while scoring four goals for the third time this season, twice game Philadelphia the lead, but the Capitals responded quickly to tie the score each time. After socring at 15:02 of the first period to match the first of Dave Christian's two goals, Ker scored on a power play at 7:12 of the second period and Made it 3-1 on a rebound shot at 11:51. CHICAGO 6 BOSTON 5 BOSTON (AP) — Bob Murray's power-play goal at 13:42 of the third period capped Chicago's comeback from a three-goal deficit and gave the Black Hawks a 6-5 victory over Boston Bruins. Troy Murray, with two, Steve Larmer, Curt Fraser and Ed Olezyk were the other Chicago scorers as general manager Bob Pulford improved his record behind the bench to 2-0 since firing coach Orval Tessier earlier in the week. Butch Goring, Ken Linseman, Ray Bourque, Tom Fergus and Rick Middleton replied for the Bruins who jumped into a 3-0 lead by the 5:21 mark of the first period. The score was tied 5-6 when Dennis Savard passed the puck from the left board across the slot to Bob Murray 32 seconds remaining in the period on Mike Krush i's second of the game and 35th of the season. Charlie Huddy and Krushelnyski gave the Oilers a 2-0 advantage before the game was seven minutes old, but the Red Wings answered with three goals in a°1:29 span late in the period. TORONTO 6 MONTREAL 2 MONTREAL (CP) — Right winger Miroslav Frycer scored his 23rd goal and set up two others as Toronto Maple Leafs stunned Montreal Canadiens with a 6-2 victory. Although the Leafs hav e the worst record in the NHL - 31 points in 54 games — and they entered the game with only one tie in their last four outings, they pounced on every ue to record their second victory inas many st the Canadiens this season. Frycer, who has 12 points in his last six games, was a dominant figure. He tied the score 1-1 late in the first period and set up Russ Courtnall's goal a few minutes later that provided the Leafs with a lead they never relinquished. The 23 goals are only two fewer than Frycer scored in 1982-83, his best season. The Leafs left the outcome in no doubt with three second-period goals by John Anderson, Peter Ihnacak and Rick Vaive, his team-leading 25th. RANGERS 2 HARTFORD 2 HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) Forward Reijo Ruotsalai nen broke in alone on the right side and snapped home a 30-foot goal to give New York Rangers a 2-2 comeback tie against Hartford Whalers. The Rangers, winless in their last six, rallied from a 2-0 deficit in the final 15 minutes on goals by Peter Sundstrom at 5:53 and Ruotsalainen with 3:10 left in regulation. The tie was the first point for the Whalers in their last seven games, as Hartford now is winless in its last seven. The Whalers used their specialty units to construct a 2-0 advantage on a power-play goal by Ray Neufeld and a short-handed goal by Mike Crombeen. Crombeen's goal came at 1:03 of third period PHILADELPHIA 5 WASHINGTON 4 LANDOVER, Md. (AP) — A goal by Brian Propp with two seconds remaing, the only Philadelphia goal not scored and the fired a 10-footer passed goalie Pete Peters for his third goal of the season. QUEBEC 2 NEW JERSEY 2 QUEBEC (CP) — A goal by left winger Michel Goulet at 14:06 of the third period helped Quebec Nordiques earn a 2-2 draw against New Jersey Devils. With time running out for the Nordiques, Goulet took a pass from Anton Stastny while he was posted at the side of the net and banged a bouncing puck by New Jersey goaltender Glenn Resch. The Devils held a 2-1 lead from midway in the second period on goals by Kirk Muller and Rick Preston Jean-Francois Sauve had the first goal for Quebec, a power-play effort midway through the opening period The draw moved Quebec into sole possession of third place in the Adams Division, one point ahead of Boston. The Devils entered the all-star break on a positive note, going undefeated in their last four starts, with a 2-0-2 won-lost-tied record. BLUES 4 NORTH STARS 2 ST. LOUIS (AP) —Left winger Jorgen Pettersson scored two goals as St. Louis defeated Minnesota 4-2 Saturday night. Pettersson's first goal of the game, a power-play effort at 4:21 of the second period, put St. Louis ahead 2-0 and proved to be the winner. Pettersson fired home a rebound from point-blank range after Minnesota goalie Don Beaupre made the save on a shot from the point by Rob Ramage Pettersson picked up his second goal of the game and 16th of the year at 1:37 of the third period when he beat Beaupre with a slap shot from the blue line. SABRES 6 FLAMES 1 CALGARY (CP) — Buffalo's Gil Pereault scored three goals — one in a shorthanded situation and another on the power play — as the Sabres crushed Calgary Flames 6-1 Other scorers for the Sabres were Paul Cyr with two and Mike Ramsey. Also starring was Phil Housley who contributed three assists. Al MacInnis replied for Calgary, midway through the third period. a power-play goal Vow to coach teams By CHERYL CALDERBANK Staff Writer Not all sports activities will be curtailed in the Castlegar School District as a result of a work-torule campaign by local teachers Two basketball coaches at Stanley Humphries Sec ondary School have said they will not support the work-to-rule campaign which goes into effect Monday Stanley Humphries athletic co-ordinator Kevin Morris, who coaches the SHSS Senior Rockers, and Jack Closkey, coach of the Senior Rockettes, both said their team’s activities will continue. Morris noted that working to rule is an individual choice. He said Friday that he didn't know if other coaches would be working to rule but added that he will continue to coach his team. No other coaches have informed him of any can cellations of games, Morris said. He declined to make further comments. Closkey also said his team will be operating 1 don't believe in it (work to rule),” he said, adding that he has never gone along with work to rule campaigns in the past 1 don’t believe in hurting the team.” he added. Castlegar teachers voted last Monday to implement escalating job action and a publicity campaign in protest over education cutbacks and the school board's layoff of 18 lunch-hour supervisors. The teachers charge that the supervisors are part of their contract