CASTLEGAR NEWS, July 12, 1981 7 COURT NEWS In provincial court Tues- day, two separate charges of driving with a blood alcohol count over .08 were heard. Fined $400 each or in default 30 days in jail, were Charles Morey and Wayne Latkin. * # «@ Terry Duff was fined $250 after pleading guilty to driv- ° ing without insurance. Duff was fined a further $400, or in default 30 days in jail, after pleading guilty to a charge of driving while impaired. ._ 8 * Richard McAfee was fined on two separate charges. Eight hundred dollars, or in default 60 days in jail for theft over $200 and $100 for remaining in a public estab- lishment after being re- quested to leave. o 8 @ Brian Haines pleaded guil- ty to a charge of driving while impaired. He was fined $400 or in default 30 days in jail. Haines was also given a suspended sentence and placed on three months pro- bation with 60 hours of work service after pleading guilty to a charge of hit and run. . 8 « Fred Bartsoff was fined $200 after pleading guilty to a charge of driving without due care and attention. In provincial court June 30 Mike Abietkoff pleaded guilty to a charge of driving with a blood alcohol count over .08. He was fined $200 or in default 20 days in jail. * 8 © Two separate charges of being minors in possession of liquor were heard. Cheryl Hadikin was fined $100 and T TOURIST ALERT VANCOUVER (CP) — Tourist Alert list issued yes- terday by the RCMP. Fol- lowing are requested to con- tact the nearest RCMP de- tachment for an urgent per- sonal message: Mr. and Mrs. Helmut Bu- dau, Chilliwack, B.C., Craig Devine, Dease Lake, B.C. Peter and Erika Durlacher, Vancouver, James Gunn, Prince George, B.C. David Hash, Washington, Kenneth Maloney, Centralia, Wash., Allan Michael Morrison, Lon- dor, Ont., Bill Roos, Bramp- -ton, Ont., Art and Bill Tau- ber, Queen Charlotte City, B.C. Douglas Spender was fined $125. Both entered guilty pleas, Spender also pleaded guilty to a charge of con- suming liquor in a public place resulting in a further fine of $125. . * © Nick Chernoff was fined $100 aftet pleading guilty to acharge of being a minor ina licenced premise, . . Barry Weeks pleaded guilty toa charge of failing to remain at the scene of an accident. He was fined $125. ._ «© « James Forture was fined © $550, or in default 30 days in jail, after pleading guilty toa charge of driving with a blood alcoho! count over .08. s * . Possession of a narcotic has resulted in a $50 fine, or in default two days in jail, for Shane Rody who entered a guilty plea. Forest strike effects many PRINCE GEORGE (CP) — Mayors in B.C. communities which rely heavily on forest resources are predictin; disastrous effect across the province should the impend- ing forest industry strike take place. “It will be close to disaster here,” Elmer Mercier, mayor of Prince George, said Fri- day. “Then again it depends on how long the thing lasts.” He said 75 per cent of the city's economy is based on the forest industry and he has noticed a marked slow- down in consumer spending in the last two weeks, “I think you'll find from Fort Nelson on down the line, Chetwynd, Fort St. James, Prince George, Williams Lake, Quesnel and so on, the effects will be felt. “I suepect if there is ec strike it will go into Sep- tember. Its time to go fishing I guess.” In Quesnel, Mayor Mike Pearce said more than 2,000 people nearly one-quarter of the population — are em- ployed in the city's pulp mills, saw mills and plywood mills, “It would be an almost disastrous effect on our local economy if there is a long strike,” Pearce said. “It will substantially re- tard any growth. On the whole, ‘interest rates are high, the lumber market is depressed and this third fac- tor, a possible industry-wide strike, could be almost dis- astrous for us.” Kitimat Mayor George Thom seid 2 full strike will pose a hardship for families of the 1,000 people in Kitimat who work at the three area mills, “It will affect the entire town quite dramatically,” Thom said, adding that about one in four workers in Kiti- mat are employed in the for- baat or forestry-related in- The lifeline for many northern and Interior com- munities is B.C. Railway, a line which threatens to be cut to a quarter of its operating Bees sting woman to death CAINSVILLE, MO. (AP) — Laverne Brenizer, 55, was stung to death recently by a swarm of bees as she was walking along a farm road with her husband, Mercer County Coroner Dr. Douglas Pearce said. Authorities said a man was mowing a nearby: field and apparently struck a swarm of bees that then attacked the Brenizers. JUNE ATHLETE OF THE MONTH. is priced to go from Akai. component system you ‘ve got a sun: Akal Stereo AM/EM Tuner er Speoker sep de Turntable* is alt drived with fonsarm return. Mode! APEI0C. Al ai Metal your components attractively. Model 1V5000. Optional Extra $179.95. ( Component system Buy this beautiful, big sounding Akai stereo for under $1,000, and sional bargain. Include se LED signal kal Semi: : KEN SHERSTOBITOFF.. JUNE ATHLETE OF THE MONTH Ken won the 1981 Sunflower Open Golf Ch hii club June 6 and 7. He managed a three under par 69 and a four under par 71, to give him a record total of 140. Congratulations Ken. held at the C capacity if a full-scale strike takes place. BCR depends on the forest industry for roughly 75 per cent of both its freight rev- enue and its car loadings, railway spokesman Hugh Armstrong said. Car loadings for 1981 were projected at 189,000 and freight revenue was priscted at $140 million. And because the members of the running’ trades em- ployed by the railway are on standby, any drop in business will be reflected immediately in their pay packets. “They won't be called in, so a strike would At fect the job numbers,” Arm- strong said, and loss of work will be spread througtiout the railway’s operations. “Staff. will be reduced proportionate: to trade.” He said BCR’s over-all fi- nancial position will not be affected “unloss the ‘strike goes on for a long period of. time.” Jose's Auto Repair Ltd. doing business as W. 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Deadline for entry must be postmarked no later than August 3, 1981. “futility, CASTLEGAR NEWS, July 12, 1981 LARRY KERAIFF, Into third on the first commercial playoffs at Labotts baseman, stirs up ‘the dust as he slides second > men’s d. Park. Observing is shortsto, for Texaco, R ocky Bellanger. Labatts, last year’s play winners, won, all three of their games Negotiations fail again. NEW YORK (AP) — Neg- otiations in-the 30-day base: ball strike. yesterday after management rejected a satan prop- osal- presented . by” federal mediator Kenneth Moffett. : The two sides met for about two hours yesterday morning and for about the same period of time in the afternoon before the . talks - were recessed. “We're temporarily stale- mated — broke down,” said Moffett, whose proposal which had been presented Friday had seemed to signal the first sign of progress in the strike which has can- celled 877 games since June 12. Marvin Miller, executive director of the striking play- to being useless as possible. Miller said that after re- jecting the mediator’s prop- osal, which the union ha pre- viously accepted, manage- ment sent word through Moffett that unless. the play- ers hada new proposal, “they did not care to meet.” - - “Consider that,” said Mil- ler. “It was an excercise in the whole after- noon.” MILLER BRISTLES There were reports. that management bargaining be- lieved that Moffett had not offered th “I don’t appreciate people casting doubt -on the medi- broke.down-again....ator’a impartiality,” be ssid... “That is a low, scurrilous tactic.” Ray Grebey, chief nego- tiator for the player relations committee, was reported to have made that suggestion to a reporter covering these talks. “He said it to a reporter,” “Miller said. “I labelled it the Dlageat | lie in a period of wil- ful li Moffett denied , his prop- osal had come from either ide. “One of the things a med- iator does is gather inform- ation tyring to work out the best road to reach a set- tlement in. bargaining,” hi said. “The- owners hed ae sipeared dead after Saturday's sessions.” WANTS BRIGHT IDEA “I hope someone gets a bright idea to get this thing solved,” he said. “! it there have been moves, ser- ious moves, by both sides.” Grebey. repeated manage- ment’s position that it could not accept “word for word, line by line,” Moffett’s prop- osal, “There were of it parts of Moffett's plan — the mining pee i formole for dete: t: compensation price tag ranging to 000 from $150,000 for each com- pensation claim. The owners’ latest. prop- osal would limit to 10 the. number of free agents re- quiring compensation in any, one season. “What you have is a strike being run for the individual negotiating rights of 10 play- ers a year for the next t! years,” Grebey said. “It's un- fair to fans, other players and the owners to conduct a 10-man strike.” Miller said Grebey’s char- acterization was incorrect. “The whole impact cannot be measured in terms of number of free agents ef- ticular year,” the union chiei said. “Direct compensation ruins the bargaining power of potential free agents, not just the ones who elect free agency. “Direct compensation on 10 free agents a year is closely‘ related and impacts on 70 to 80 potential free agents and reverberates on those eligible for salary ar- bitration. It is pure sophistry gt, say only 10 players. It is It is a that wer unsatisfactory,” he said. “whole row of dominoes.” Moffett said he would Prop- osal, but that it had eons instead from union sources. Miller bristled at that sug- gestion. of it that where unsatis- factory,” he said. bly be back ‘in touch with the two sides Monday. aortas about the tone of i Moffett- Specifically, has voiced objections to two aula “It's getting nasty.” Had permission VANCOUVER (CP) — Czechoslovakian hockey stars Ivan Hlinka and Ji Bubla had the premission of their. country’s hockey fed- eration .when they signed contracts with Vancouver Canucks, a federation official said Friday. The Canucks signed Hlin- ka, a centre, and Bubla, a defenceman, in April after the 1980-81 reguar season. Vancouver, drafting 10th, Jiri: was in no position to select any players. Miroslav Subrt,, Czechoslo- vakian federation vice-presi- dent, said Hlinka and Bubla, both 31 and. nine-time. par- ticipants in the world hockey championships, were free agents at the time of their no existed between the Czecho- slovak federation and the National Hockey League for the purchase of former na- tional team members. The NHL undertook a special draft of four veteran Czechoslovaks May 28 based on the standings at the end of signings: was the first team that approached our as- iation in January, 1981, to apply for permission to sign Players who were going to be by the national team,” Subrt explained. “They had our permission when they signed with Van- couver. There was no agree- ment existing between our association and the NHL. We still have not signed an ag- reement, but. we hope one will be signed soon.” Despite the apparent legal- ity of the signings, Winnipeg Jets, who selected Hlinka, and Colorado Rockies, who took Bubla, claim the Can- ucks broke the spirit of the special draft. Representatives of the Jets and Rockies are sched- uled to meet Tuesday in Chicago with NHL president John Ziegler, Canuck general manager Jake Milford, Van- couver governor Frank Grif- fiths and lawyers for Hlinka and Bubla in an attempt to _ work out a settlement. Invest in your Commonity! iG SUMMIT SAVINGS ..............15¥/2 % interest TERM DEPOSITS os Kootenay ‘Savings Credit Union 1016-4th St., Castlegar Hie TO CHANGE sesecee upto 17% Interest a Fastball playoffs Northwest Homes 6 Northwest Homes scored three runs in the seventh inning with two out to edge past the Indians. Warren Hutchinson was the winning pitcher. Joe Tarasoff was the losing pitcher. Carling O'Keefe 4 Ootischenia 1 O'Keefe's scored two runs in the first inning and added runs in the second and sixth inning as Ootischenia man- aged to get one run in the second inning. Bob - White winning pitcher, Walter Tomlin losing’ pitcher. Valley Juniors 4 Texaco scored four runs in the first two. innings’ and added three in the bottom of the sixth to eliminate the Ju- niors. George Plotnikoff was the winning pitcher, Grant Sookro the losing pitcher. Labatts 5 Cubs 2 ‘The Cubs came within two in the sixth inning but left two runners stranded on base and Labatts added one run in the sixth for the win. Paul Kinskin was the win- ning pitcher, Brian Cox took the loss. 4 Lebatts 4 Pass Creek 1 * Labatts scored two runs in the fifth and sixth innings to overcome a one-run lead by Pass Creek. Pete Evdokimoff was the winning pitcher, Phil Zaytsoff took the loss. ‘ Pass Creek 8 Valley Irs. 4 Pass Creek scored five runs in the first two innings and the Juniors couldn't re- cover for the win. Phil Zait- soff was the winning pitcher. Grant Sookro took the loss. Cubs 2 Cancel 1 The Cubs scored two runs in the top of the fourth inning anCal, Jim Molo- ‘Thrums: Oatischenia eliminated Thrums from the playoffs scoring five runs in the first inning and adding two in tho second and one in the fifth. iocing to: nip’ O'’Keefe's by ‘Winning pitcher was wasse yne Abietkefl, losing pit- cher Fred Sherstobitoff. ~. The playoffs finish today at Kinnarid Park with the final tournament game at 5:80 p.m. i New world awaits him KAMLOOPS (CF) — ‘chael Koebernick is a young man off to see the world and for him, there is a lot of world to see. 4 Koebernick lives ‘at the Tranauille School for the mentally retarded’ in’ this. central B.C: city, but he will soon embarif‘on a journey to places his 300 classmates may only see in pictures. Koebernick, 18, recently became the first Tranquille resident to earn a spot on the B.C. Special Olympic team which will travel. to Ottawa for’ the Games: fehl begin: 1 8:-“Grk=fitel the 80-,.100-, and 200-metre - Connors get his NEW YORK (AP) — Jim- my Connors would like noth- ing better than to beat Ivn Lendl of Czechoslovakia in the deciding Davis Cup sin- gles tennis match today. But fe may not get his chance — not if U.S. team captain Arthur Ashe’s. strategy wotks oul. Connors is scheduled to play ‘Lendi, the ace of tec se. vakians, in the second | singles: match. Ashe is hoping the best-of-five team competition will have been decided by “John has had a rough two weeks but I don't expect him to lose again,” said Ashe, referring to John McEnroe, 22, the Wimbledon champion who was upset by Lendl 6-4, 14-12, 7-6 Friday but will have a chance to clinch the series by beating Tomas Smid in’ today’s opening match. The U.S. grabbed a 2-1 lead yesterday when its veteran doubles team of Stan Smith and Bob Lutz raised its Davjs Cup record to 18-1 with a 9-7, 6-8, 6-2 victory. over Lendl and Smid at the Na- tional Tennis Centre. “By the end of the first match on Sunday, I think it will be all over,” said Ashe, “[’ve said all along our strat- . then. races, ball throw, Hurdles and relay. yl don't think Michael fully “Fealizes all that he will see or do in the next few. Sieh says Day says he's not only the trip of his life- making time, he's being exposed to a jteles facet of our society insti- tutionalized people do not — the em- Tranquille psy Susan Day. “Right now, about all he is really thinking about is the - plane ride.” For. Koebernick, the trip follows another major change in his life. - -He and a friend were re-: “justenent. may not chance egy was to beat Smid twice and win the doubles, and so far that’s holding up well enough.” Smid was outclassed by. Connors 6-8, 6-1, 6-2 Friday. He was never in the match, points at one stage. IMPROVE - He will have to play con- - siderabiy better to bave any chance against McEnroe, even the McEnroe who was short of his best form ‘in bowing -to Lendl. ‘ “Bven. at 85-per-cent ef- ficiency, John should beat Smid,” Ashe said. If he does, it will make Connor’s confrontation with Lend] meaningless to the team competition. But it won't be meaningless to Con- January's Masters tourna- ment, when Connors felt Lendl did not try Bis ree to win their fally phasis on winning.” chosen forthe 47- member. Special hb tae ‘has turned Koebernick int somewhat of a school here Friends will be saving news- * paper clippings and waiting for him to tell them all about ‘the world outside of Tran- quille. - ‘ He will travel with many professional athletes includ- ing Date (Tiger) ‘Williams of Gives praise to members of the league National’ Hockey League. “Tthink the NHL should be very proud of its people,” Watson, the former NHLer ine invoivement by. players in the Canadian Sum- mer. Special. Olympics which in Ottawa on July 16. Each of the 21 teams will — have at least one player at- tending the event as well as a three-day floor hockey train- ing camp at the University of Toronto on July 15-15. terparis. "Whats at stake in: bow ? mecstintions is +9 negotiations is ith | inf Jan Special Olyraples — will fats as an aid in the de- round match. At that stage both had qualified for the semifinals, but the match winner had to face Bjorn Borg of Sweden as his next opponent while the loser went on to play Gene Mayer, a lower-ranked foe from the US. . Two runners set world records. OSLO (AP) — Sebastian Coe, Britain's great middle distance runner, smashed «more than a second off his world record in the 1,000 metres, with a time of two minutes 12.18 seconds last night in the Oslo Games in- ternational track and field meet at lightning-fast Bislett Stadium. Coe’s mark was one of two world records broken during the early events. The other came in the women's 6,000 as Ingrid Christensen of Nor- way was clocked in 16:28.43. Earlier, Debbie Scott of Vancouver finished first in the women's 15,00 metre run with a time of 4:10.68. Ruth Smeeth of Britain was second in 4:12.71, Coe, the Olympic 1,500- metre champion, bettered the world 1,000 mark of 2:18.40 he had set July 1, 1980 at Bislett. likely hockey, perechry endl lgee ster exception of their response wa. ‘Great, how can I help and how dol go about doing it Pie Among those attending are six players invited to the training camp of Team Cana- da for the Canada Cup tour- nament next September. They are Mike Liut of St. Louis Blues, Paul Coffey of Edmonton Oilers, Marcel Di- onne of Los Angeles Kings, Bob Gainey of Montreal Can- adiens, Ron Duguay of New York Rangers and Bobby Senith of Minnesota North Stebbie Ftorek of Quebec Nordiques, for the United States squad, is among the group, a8 are Vancouver Canucks assistant coach Roger Neilson, referee Bruce Hood and linesman Leon Stickle. it F 38 view every member of the players have signed agents. Compensation in agreement with the ‘owners... they want total free agency — a situation under which there would be no compen- sation for a team losing a player. “We're completely against ion equally, whether he's a superstar or a journey- gleson said. of co-operation between man- agement and the player in “hockey. Hockey has survived dissolved franchises and mer- gers. It still does not have the or ‘the financial $4 million a yeark,” siad matter-of-factly. “There's no sense in us having a strike and getting total free agency if just. six teams are left in the league.”