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The Castlegar Sun Rossland seeks Warfield’s support TIRAIL TIMES : ’ ~ «The City, of Rossland is asking for the Village of Warfield to support its bid to have the aban- doned railway corridor between the tow municipalities leased to *Rossland, Hi ¢t5: A letter from Rossland recre- 'stion director Jack Richardson ‘said that the City of Rossland Syill assume responsibility for all to the transfer of the’ property from the (Ministry of Crown Lands) to the city.” Alderman © Ray © Furlotte expressed concem at the regular Warfield council meeting Mon- day that’ if Rossland paid all ‘the cost, it would assume all the con- trol over uses of the ‘corridor, “I thought we were in this together.” Richardson said in his letter to ' Oil of Olay Lotion - 200 mi or Cream - 120 mi YOUR CHOICE 77 Each costs and legal expenses relating’, in bid for railway Warfield council that once the strip of property is under local - control “a: joint management agreement between Warficld and Rossiand can be negotiated.” Alderman Arlene Parkin said the City of Rossland had: specified from the beginning it would pay the upfront costs of the land transfer, but then Warfield would become a full See BID 12A, Vidal Sassoon} Saion Formulat Shampoo or . Rinse - 300m or Ultra - 250 mi YOUR CHOICE 17 Each “1" for the money #2'" for the sho > A ring from is asure Diamond rings on sale Lobby-Fireside Hotel g 365-2128 & Wednesday, December 18;.1991. ea YE toe Teamsters picket—Local members of the team: .Sters union, local 213, are séen disassembling their information picket. The teamsters held the picket. to express their displeasure at not having recieved what they consider to be their share of work on the Celgar expansion project. “We've got nothing against Cel- gar,” one member said. “But there should be.a few more teamsters working on the site—the contractor is Violating his collective agreement by not giving us the work we deserve.” ‘SUN STAFF PHOTO / Brendan Halper Annie’s gol! Strepsils Lozenges Assorted Types - 24's YOUR CHOICE YOUR CHOICE To All Our Friends Mini Brass or Silver Frames Duracell Multipacks CorD -4’s or 9V- 2's $5.97 Without Coupon With $1.00 In Ad Coupon 497 YOUR CHOICE Each AA - 8's $6.27 Without Coupon With $1.00 In Ad Coupon 5% YOUR CHOICE Each peeeeececcecccccn é A ie OM Your Business Look Good: Newsletters, Annual Reports, Flyers, Brochures, Business Stationery, Logo Design and more— from concept & design to final printed product. GOLDRUSH T:Y2P-E2!& = G'RiA'PEH: CIS 362-9510 TM & © FOX/Bobby* Char, TM Alevy Prods, — : Help stamp out lung disease! THE ai LUNG ASSOCIATION 7 & Customers ‘We Wish You a Merry Christmas and a Very Happy New Year’ We look forward to providing all your fax and computer needs FAX / COMPUTERS & ACCESSORIES 1120 - 4th Street, Castlegar PHONE: 365-3760 No Special Paper Required a Sarr Sears ty at le See ak Be! iz Pl cs - Plain Paper Laser Facsimile No special paper is required for the Panafax UF-733. The UF-733 uses the same types of sheet-fed paper, your copier does. Plus, this cost effective plain paper fax delivers letter-quality text and superb photo reproduction. y oe The UF-733 also gives you other great features includ- ing: 20 page standard memory (expandable to 50and 80 pages), confidentiality and 11” wide document transmission. The Panafax UF-733 engineered for the office, designed for people. For a closer look at the. UF-733 call your local dealer today! oat ra o nog - al Geass rote Sos ae na) ‘Panasonic Facsimiles . ie oes i oes E. JIM. ZEEBEN Suni staff: oe _The final’ five players were trimmed from the roster. this morning but no names were available by press time. ! Junker has. already survived some prominent junior players go. °- Forward Brett Seguin, who leads the Ontario'Hockey League in scoring, was one of yesterday's roster fatalities, Blathion Castlegar is hosting Biathton time trials for the B.C, Winter Games on January 5. | The Kootenay region qualify- { | ing event will take place up at Castlegar towards Salmo. . | _ The biathlon is a ski and | shoot competition. The time tri- .| als will feature a sprint: three | laps of approximately 2 km. After the first lap athletes get five shots ata target from a £| Prone position. At the end if the : ¢| Second time around the skiers -{ Shoot from a standing position - 3] and then race one more lap to °81 the finish. Starting time is 10 a.m. For more information or reg- ~ istration contact Gord Gibson at 365-5381. Men's Curling The playdown to decide who represent Castlegar at the West Kootenay district finals gets under way January 10-12. Last weekend, five teams competed at the Castlegar curl- ing club with only two advane- ing. Bill Van Yzerloo skipped one of the winning rinks. Kelly Johnson, Alex Coutts, and Barry Perehudoff made up the four-man team. Bill Perehudoff was the skip on the other winning side. Yves Laganiere, John Horcoff, and <| Jim Perehudoff were team- The Castlegar men’s curling lub cash spielis gearing up for :| Its'start on the first weekend of es] January. : 38]. The spiel is a tune-up for the 4 é th games were cancelled week in the Kootenay West |” 3| Men's Basketball League. Christmas exams and other Activities made it impossible for the league to book gyms in the Laurel Closkey and a Roc “ the Cai Creek trails, 8 km out of | kette teammate try to tie up an home last weekend. This weekend they won a tournament opponenent in action at t in Calgary. Ee Rebels back in the doghouse JIM ZEEBEN ‘Sun staff Monday moming came awfully early for the Castlegar Rebels. First there was a 4-3 loss, which erupted into a bench-clear- ing brawl, Friday in Nelson fol- lowed with an 8-3 thrashing by Grand Forks on Saturday. It left Castlegar with eleven losses on the year—enough for Rebels coach Cheveldave to instigate 6:30 a.m. Monday prac- tises, Friday night, in a game that was overshadowed by close to 400 minutes in-fighting penalties after the match, the Rebels chased the Maple Leafs to the wire but ‘could never quite catch the Queen City club. Castlegar trailed 2-1 after the first period, 3-2 after the second, and were down 4-3 with time run- ning out in the third. With the puck in Nelson's end and three seconds left in the game, Castlegar sent out their best point-scorers to try for the tic. Time elapsed and then things turned ugly. “At the end of the game Nelson Players started roughing our play- ers up in front of the net,” Rebels general manager Don Joice claimed. According to Joice, Nelson players left their bench and a wild fracas broke out before coaches, management and team Hf Kevin Gheveldave “There weren't any fights the whole game until Angellilo jumped Lalonde with three sec- onds left,” Cheveldave said. “Our guys know they’re not supposed to fight with three seconds left.” But when Nelson’s goaltender got into a shoving match after the whistle several Leafs left their bench, According to reports in the Nelson Daily News, Cheveldave then sent his players to help out. “Laying the blame on us is easy for a paper from Nelson to do but if they never sent guys off the bench and their goalie didn’t join in nothing would have hap- pened. We had no choice to do what we did.” Ch could separate the two teams, It's the first bench clearing brawl . Joice says he’s ever seen in his two years with the Rebels. . According to Castlegar’s coach the whole thing started when Nel- son’s Joe Angellilo started on diminutive Rebel Derek Lalonde, as Castlegar tried to tie the game. Lalonde did not fight back. wouldn’t .on whether he encouraged his Players to leave the bench, “The first few guys were just trying to pull Nelson players off our out-manned players,” he said. “But we wouldn't be a hockey team if weren't backing our own was for "Everybody that's been here is - an awesome player," Junker said from his hotel room in Kitchener, "There's a lot of guys who can score. I'm more of a defensive Player." If Junker makes the team he has a lot of travelling ahead but it can't be as bad as it was just get- tingtocamp. ~ After getting leave from his major junior team, the Spokane Chiefs, Junker it was supposed to be a simple six-hour flight to the national team bus in Toronto. "In started in Spoke but my Rockettes The Stanley Humphries senior Rockettes basketball team man- aged to do on the road what they couldn’t at home, The girls finished first at a tournament held at Calgary's Southern Alberta Institute of Technology. “It gives everyone on the team lots of confidence,” says Jack Closkey, in his 24th year as coach of the team. Last weekend the team lost in the final game of their own Blue and Gold tournament to Fernie Falcons, In their first game at SATT, the Stanley Humphries girls tripled a school from Olds, Alberta, 66-22. Rory Perrier netted 21 points almost equaling the Alberta team’s entire output. Kelly Davidoff scored 18 points while laurel Closkey had Shell retak JIM _ZEEBEN Sun staff Plane got delayed and the only way I could get to Toronto was to take an all-nighter," he said. The flight went to San Fransi- co where Junker waited six hours before he caught a flight to Chicago. “I went to Toronto from there and they picked me up.” Another wait for more players to arrive and then another wait as the equipment van, Junker rode in broke down. “It was a long time without a shower, without food and without sleep.” Castlegar’s second game was a little tighter as only nine points separated them from Hanna, Alberta. , Laurel Closkey led the Rock- etfes scorers Provincial rankings: fy 5 ‘ten With 19 points, Pemba A Top Tat idol had 18 and Perrier settled for 13. The pair of victories was good enough for a trip to the finals, In the other semi-final, Femie took on perennial sin- gle A provin- cial champion, Ron Pettigrew Christian from Dawsen Creek. The rematch between the Rockettes and the Falcons that SHSS coach Closkey 10. Windsor Honourable Montion: Corretiou, John Barsby, Robron slack as he scored twice and helped on two others. In the first game of the week, last Tuesday, Kootenay Comput- ers grabbed a firmer hold of sec- 29nd place in the'standings, .,._, Computers jumped ahead of Woodland Park Shell 8-1 after two periods. Garry Sauer was in on all but one of Computer goals as he ‘assisted on five while also firing two goals past Shell keeper Tim Horcoff. And then Sauer picked it up. A natural high trick in the final peri- od countered a five goal period by Shell. The game ended 11-6 with Sauer’s point spree climbing to ten on the night. Thursday featured a match-up between first and last. Five first period goals, including a hat trick by Clay Martini, led Banjo’s Pub to an upset 8-4 victory over Castlegar Pressure Wash. Pressure Wash was without their top two scorers, Gord Walk- er, who leads the league, and Tom Trubetskoff. Don Soroke tried to pick up the Rockers finish third JIM ZEEBEN Sun staff The Stanley Humphries boys basket) guys up.”” Ch du team finished third at a See REBELS 10A South Ok in "Kootenay Intemational Junior Hockey League : Z on Standings as of December 1 ; 3 ‘West Oliver, 3 The Rockers stomped on Spring Valley 87-48 in their open- ing game. The Kelowna school had been given an honorable mention in the provincial rank- ings. : Marcel Dusscault, who was named to the tournament all-star team, led the way with 23 points. Dan Kooznetsoff was second in Rocker scoring with 19 points. ‘In their. second game, Stanley Humphries lost to the hosts from Oliver.'82-67. Dusscault led ¢ Castlegar scorers with 19 points, oy We, got into some carly foul ‘trouble against the home team," Rick R picked up the win in net for Banjo’s while Barry Grunrod had the loss for CPW. In the first of two games on Friday, Shell crushed Castlegar was hoping for didn't happen. Pettigrew beat Fernie to move into the final game, -., 0): +") Again Castlegar.’ was pab very a Davidoff led the Rockettes with 18 points while Laurel Closkey with 10 and Perrier with 8 backed up the girls’ 68-49 victory, =: Closkey and Perrier each eamed all-star honours. Last Tuesday the team played their first league game of the year beating Grand Forks 88-27, Perri- er had 21 points while Closkéy scored 14 and Rhonda Dawes 13. The Rockettes also played last night in Northport but results were unavailable by press time. Stanley Humphries first leagtie home game of the season goes Thursday against Trail’s J.L. Crowe at 6:30 p.m.. es top spot in CRHL Sports Centre 12-1. With goal keeper Rick Rogerson borrowed from Banjo's, Shell tumed out their best defensive performance of the year. Dwayne Weir scored the lone goal for Sports Centre «while Benton Hadley responded ‘See CRHL 10A~ Woodland Park Shell's Jim McMullan skates with the ~ : puck in a 11-6 loss to Pressure Wash. Rocker coach John Ritchie said. “We had three starters sitting on the bench and they beat us up a bit.” The loss relegated the Rockers to a battle for third place against Osoyoos. Dusseault again spurred his club to victory with 19 points as Stanley Humphries won 58-31. “We have to, work on our defense or we’re going to have troubles,” Ritchie said. “They're a young inexperienced team play- ing defense with their hands instead of their feet.” Earlier ‘in the week , on December 10, the boys gave away ten points too many as they lost 75-65 to Grand Forks. It was the first league game of the season for the Rockers. Ritchie said part of the problem was 14 three- Pointers scored by Grand Forks against Castlegar’s ineffective ( SUN STAFF PHOTO/Jim Zeoben in Oliver. The Rockers travelled to See ROCKERS John Ritchie