Whole, Canadian Pride, Approx 12 Ibs. Limit 1 Ready to eat. 4.14/ kg 188 Ib U.S. Grown. No.1 Grade. Sized Just right. 1.08/kg Regular Brands. 9 kg and up. Frozen. 2.16/ kg POTTED MUMS oy Happy Easter! For your convenience your Neighbourhood Safeway will be open Good Friday, regular Sunday Shopping hours. All Safeway Stores will be closed Easter Sunday April 19, 1992 to allow our employees time to enjoy the holiday with their family and friends. Safeway will be open regular Store hours Easter Monday April 20, 1992 (9) SAFEWay : Adverti ices in effect closing Saturda April 19, 1992 at your Castlegar Safeway store only. Quantity rights reservi -ptgial eek pp yl lplati! Kevin Stoll (white shirt) gets some back-up from teammate Lenny Joe. Li. 4 ba = Cyclists wait their turns at the starting line. EDNESDAY, April 15, 1992 1B Taking it to the limit! The weather was perfect last Thursday for the Selkirk College endurance test known as Storm- the-Wall. A light breeze, overcast sky, the mercury in the low-teens. Just the right weather for taking it to the limit. A total of 17 teams rounded up six brave souls to tackle the course, The 18th team was a gang of one, Team Lonely, which was ironman Karl Schneider. He came in 12th overall, finishing the course in 40 minutes 37 seconds. It was the first time Schneider had run in a endurance race as long as Storm-the-Wall. He had been doing cross-country running to prepare. “I'm getting into Triathlons and Duathlons,” he added, having run a duathion at the University of British Columbia the week before. Like most teams, Lonely had trouble in the river. “I lost it bad in the canoeing.” For all the teams but lonely, two canocists had to paddle 400 metres in the mighty Kootenay after the starting runners had completed their two kilometre run to the shoreline. The problem in the canoes was not the first half. That was down- Stream. Many of the teams had trouble rounding the half-way point and heading back upstream to hand-off to the next team mem- ber, the runner who covered two kilometres along the shoreline. That runner then handed-off the rope baton to the sprinter, who had to return the team to the top of flats around the college. Though the sprinter only had to cover 450 metres, most of that distance was up steep banks. After handing off to the cyclist, the sprinter, along with the rest of Nobody said it would be easy. the team, had a few minutes to prepare for the final onslayght. The up and over. The wall. Most of the teams handled the walj with efficiency. The key word here was team work. Most impressive was the Trail RCMP team. Unlike their competition, they had not practiced storming the wall in the days leading up to last Thursday. Sally Willis, head of the stu- dent activities department at Selkirk, said that the event was successful again this year. And she wants to thank all the staff and students who helped organize and-run the event, helping make it succeed. For complete Storm-the-Wall results, flip to the sports section. Story and photos by Jason Keenan & Brendan Halper Pat Mclivor. runs the final section before passing off to his team canoeists.