Page 4, The Heratd, Tuesday, February 21, 1976 Two coals \ win : for Nanaimo By THE CANADIAN PRESS ‘Nanaimo got two goals late inthe third perlod Sunday to score a 6-4 win over Bellingham Blazers and take back’ first place in the Coastal Devision of the Brit- ish Columbia Junior Hockey League. The Blazers had moved one peint ahead of the idle Clippers Saturday with a 7-6 win over Abbotsford Flyers. “In other Sunday action, Merritt Centennials stret- ched their lead in. the league's Interior Division, trouncing Revelstoke Bruins Buckaroos downed Langley _ Lords €1. On Saturday, the Lords de- feated Vernon Vikings 53 while Penticton Vees edged Revelstoke 43. . Penticton remains nine points behind Merritt but 12 ints ahead of third-place lowna. Kamloops are in fourth and Revelstoke hold down fifth, four points ahead of the cellar-dwelling Inthe Coastal Division, the Flyers remain five points be-. hind the second-place Blazers. The Lords are last. SCORES WINNER Bob Clavette scored the winning goal for Nanaimo at 16:04 ofnthe third period Sunday and Arron Rucks added one into the empty ne “to insure the win against the hometown Blazers which had a 40-23 edge in shots on goal. mandy Keller had two goals for the Clippers with trie Robertson and Greg Adams adding one each. Ken Berry had’ a pair for . Bellingham while Steve MacDonald and Glenn Anderson potted singles. On Saturday, Don Fraser got the winner for the Blazers at 15:31 of the final period. Berry had three goals, Al Anderson had two and Romeo Profeta had one as the Blazers moved briefly into top spat. Abbustord led 31 after " gnebut the Bellingham came back to lead 6-5 after two. Rick -Greenwood had two als for the losers. Anthony” acMurchy, Pat :-MeGill,; < Sim Dobson and Don W beniuk scored one each In ‘Merritt Sunday, Ed Boers got three goals as the Centennials led the Bruins 4- A-after one period and &1 afte two. : Matt Howes and Bob Des- champs added two goals each while Gary sikkia, Blake Stephen and Ken Stroud ‘completed the Merritt scoring. Ian Ramsey and Stewart Robertson got the Revelatoke goals. SHARE SCORING _ Kelowna, fa aingles from recording its Wills, Dan Hiushko, Darryl Carlton and Jim Crossor all beat Langley's Randy MacMurchy who stopped 2 shots, The Lords’ Randy Hall scored at 6:05 of the third period to spoil a shutout bid by Randy Struch who made 26 saves.” The Lords led 3-2 after two periods Saturday in Langley but Vernon came back to tie it on goal by Darren Halasz, | his second of the night, early + Aes in the third Langley’s Terry Vogle ngley’ cal deflected the winning ¢ past Vernon’s Darrell Morin at 10:53 and the Vikings’ attempt to even it again backfired when Randy Hall fired an empty-net marker. TERRY GETS TWO Terry Lescisin with two and Bob Taylor were the other Langley marksmen. Mike Winther’s powerplay | goal rounded out the V! scoring. -Morin. made 17 saves while Langiey's Kevin ; Quinn blocked 33. In Revelstoke | Saturday, — the Bruins celebrated prematurely and it cost them at least a polnt. George Crookshank scored late in the game to tie the score 9-5 and the ecstatic. Bruin — players left the bench to congratulate him. But the referee dampened their celebration. with a delayof-game penalty, and Penticton's Kevin Maxwell got the winning goal with B erconds left to play. Ward Sparrow scored two goals for the Yees and Ron. Jobson ‘got one, Evan Williams and Doug Twidale got the other Bruin markers.’ fot the other Bruit markers pl ey. and Revelstoke plays a - return match in Penticton © ‘when league . tionncontinues Tuesday. EEE . ; THREATENED CARTER ‘PROVIDENCE, R.1, (AP) — A Providence man was - being held by U.S. federal. authorities Wednesday in lieu of $100,000 bail after te edly threatened to Pe ident” “Carter? ae “Namaka, 34, who was Of- : - vested: Monday, bas’ committed. for 60 aye of peychiatric obéervation “to see whether he is fit to stand trial, : SELL TORPEDOES ‘WASHINGTON (Reuter) —. The U.S. . defence department Wednenaey ormed Congress it to sell Britain 600 Mark-46 torpedoes for an estimated $72 million. Congress has 90 days to disapprove the pro- posed sale. The department "also notified. Congréss.of its ‘intent to. provide. Saudi Arabia with .$604-milliori in military constructlon . ser. ces. "East German skiier © ‘wins Nordic. title “can, Finland (AP). — Konrad Winkler of Bast Geemany skied « steady 15- ilometre cross-country race today to win the Nordic combined tile in the 32nd World Nordic championships abead of Finland’f Rauno Miettinen. 3 Jt-was the second gold for the East Germans, Mathias Buse had won the 70-metre gpeciel hill jumping turday. : Winkler, 23, had to beat Miettinen by more than 49.3 seconds in the cross-countrx to lake the championship after trailing by 7.4 points in Sunday's sii jumping. fourth in the first 10 kilometres, Winkler fell back: to finish sixth, but defeated Miettinen by more than 1.19 minutes for a clear The East Ger- ‘iisinnfinished with an over- ail: score of 435.24 points while Miettinen had 431.66. ~ Miettinen, 28, still without big win in his long career, ran neck-and-neck with Winkler until the mid-way rath He wound up 14th, but time was enough for the eel Germans _— also finished 3-4-5, Olympic champion Ulrich Wehling talking the bronze medal with 430.63 ‘points, Andreas Langer placing fourth with _ $97.28 and Gunther Sch- roleder fifth with 423.48, . ‘Arne Morten Granlien of ‘Norway won the final cross- country race with a time of 46:92.27 and fincshed 10th over all with 415.10 points. dim Galanea of the United States waa second in the race and Zith in the cumulative sandings wilh 364.94 points. FINNS WEN Helena ‘Takalo_ iedn- Finland to a one-two ‘finish ahead of the favored Soviets in the women's ‘five- | cross: country kilometre race. Takalo, a 30-year-old veteran, covered the sprint - distance in 16:53,50 to retain the world title she won at the 1976 Olympics in Tansbruck, . i976 Olymap , Hilkka Rilhivuori, startling from the 46th and last position, finished secorid a 18:58.49. The partisan ¢r went wild ‘as tae croszed the finish litie to beat Russian Raisa’ Smetanina's time by less ‘than three seconds, Smetanina, silver medallist. . ‘ahead of Riihivuori in kilometre race Saturday, clocked 19:01.30. Another Soviet skier, all-time ‘great | Galina Kulakova, was fourth in 19:08.83, dinaida Amosova, the Soviet Union's 1¢-kllometer by Garry Rix The.Terrace Reds played ‘hockey this weekend, losing 7 to vi to the Kitimat Win-, ‘terhawks. The Reds came out going tosh broke and the first period _@nd with the Reds ahead 4 to “4, Art Frenette collected all _of the first three goals for the -Reds, assisted by Doug ‘Matheson | Lance ” Legouffe - in ‘the first, Lagouffe and Dale Kushner on the second and Matheson and Tim Kolner on the third. The Winterhawks got one back on the first frame when Scott Marleall blasted on past Reds’ goalie Roy Garb. Assisting were Ron Egan and Trevor Sandberg. Steve Radford closed the scoring in the first period Teerace Reds ‘lost to Kitimat Winterhawhs. tn ‘Saturday night's PNWHL game. | Reds lose to Winterhawks Lin close exhibition game — tor the Keds on a pass out front of the net by Guy Farkvam. The Winterhawks came back in the second with three goals while the Reds picked up two goals. The second period ended with the Reds leading 6 to 4. The Reds came out in the third period and slowly died. They took needless penalties .. ‘Paul Vincent, 4 U.S. Marine Corps staff sergeant from ‘Keane, N.¥.,cruised to four of the five fastest timesx- emday arid eagily won the North. american two-man nee championsh Vincent, the ‘defending national four-man cham- pion, clocked one minute, 6.98 seconds on his first run- the fastest time all day-as his regained the title he won in 1976,- then lost last year to Bob Huscher of the U.S.Navy. . Vincent added times of 1:07.48, 1:07.74 and 1:07.68 to hist hfugat time for a total of 4:29.68, more than Bob ‘Hickey of Keane, who had “ 39.91 for second, +. Mi¢key who won the ‘natlonal two-man title Saturday in 4:52.68, was the only man Sunday to break Vincent's :monomploy on quickness with a 1:07.66 on his first run, Brent Rushlaw of Saranac Lake, N.Y., the 1977 national two-man champion, was third in 4:54. 7 followed by winner, hadtosettlefor sixth [J place in 19:17,.14,. three seconds behind Christel . VICE DUBLIN (AP) — The Post Office restored | some- telephone and Telex circuits between Ireland and the reat of. the world Thuraday, easing a communications , blackout‘ that isolated: the Trish Republic for two days and was crippling business. The Posts and Telegraphs Department sald: a: small number of lines. to ‘Britain, the European continent and | the United States, plis 2,600 internal telephone lines, fF: . were hooked up. The ahul- down waa caused My a labor dispute. Howard Siler of Brushton, N.Y,, in 4:35.07 and Colin Nelson of Ottawa in 4:36.71. Huscher,whose fastest time did not come until the fourth heat when he clocked '1:08.62., wound up elght at . 4:37.29. After-a 1:00.62 inthe ° first run, he-was never in the ao ‘ghase, ©. °° : Tim Marvin °° of Elizabethtown, N.Y., who finished third in the nationals after leading for two heats, seckbered troubles with his sled Sunday and could not make the final run. _Marvine, was not the only driver to encounter troubles aver Mt. Hoevenberg’s 1,000 metre, 16-curve course ‘which has become bumpy after three consecutive weeks of competition the world two and four-man titles were settied here in the previous two weeks. The sled of Bill Bruce of Lake Placid drifted up onto the wall inturn No.8 and jarred loose brakeman Fred - Froelich. Froelich, who was taken to the bottom of the Il by the National Guard U.S. Marine wins bobsled champs LAKE PLACID, N.Y. AP- ambulance, sustained only a minor injury to his left. leg. In addition, the Canadian sled of Marain Glynn lost its belly pan in the notorious Shady curve-a high-banked __170-degree righ turn andhad -| | * me heat.2’ x ito retire after oul,” said brakeman Brian Pool. “It was like a snow plow all the way down the snow was flying in my face.” CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — When an airborne Jeep crashlanded into his den in the middle of the night, Calvin DuPont wasn’t as upset as one might expect. “T was having weird dreams anyway,” he sald | Tuesday. Charleston County police sald the driver of the vehicle, Anthony Craig Inabinett, had walked out of the house uninjured after the Jeep erashed through the wall. . Police said the Jeep went out of control on a curve and became airborne when it struck an embankment. It travelled about 40 feet in the alr. before landing in the house. and the winterhawks, a hard, fast skating leub who never quits, skated the Reds into the ice. If the Reds could ever keep their momentum past the first. and second: period and -stay out of the penalty box, they would probably end up winners in the league. The Reds took 33 of the 43 _ minutes of penalties and they out-shot Kitimat 46 to 37 on the whole night. Many thanks: to the 500 fans who showed up to cheer their hometown club, - Driver injured at Daytona DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) — A.J. Foyt, Injured in a crash during Sunday's Daytona 500 stock car race, checked out of - Halifax Hospital Medical Centre . Monday with his left arm ina sling. A private jet was waiting * taken. himnhome to. Houston. The four-time Indianapolis 500 winner spent. ‘8 “reasonably anor «for the lead Sunday at two: “ander par 142 after two ‘rounds of the 25th Orange “Blossom golf tournament. night, " hospital’ spokesman said. ; Foyt is reported to have. --wanted to leave Sunday: night, but doctors wanted to. -hold him for observation, . | just as they had done with . stock car champion Richard Petty, who suffered similar. injuries Friday. — - Foyt loft consclousness, badly wrenched his _ shoulder, and picked up ‘a variety of bruises in the. tumbling ride that his Bulck _took after being rammed in the rear by Lennie Pond’s . : after Friday's first round Oldsmobile. : Foyt, who had been losing ground to the leaders because of handling problems with his car,: was slowing down for an ac- ejdent. It took rescue workers sev- eral minutes to free Foyt from his pancaked car. Doctors at the race track hospital] said Foyt was conscious by the time they finished examining’ him. ‘They sent him ta the ccty” hospital for x-rays and tesis for possible internal injuries odors Fitness istun.- ; , Try some, G a. | and brakennbones. Foyt was. also checked for pussible cervical spinal injuries. AH tesis were negative, | doctors said. Golf Ties ST, PETERSBURG, Fla- (Reuter) — Hollis Stacy, de-. fending: United States women's open champion, and. three others were tied. ’ Joining Stacy was veteran Jane Blalock, 24-year-old Debbie Meisterlin and Sandra Spuzich, another former U,S.. women's open. champion. Sandra Post, former Oakville, Ont-, resident now living Florida, had a 73 in -second round, ‘putting her one stroke behind. the leaders. Post was one stroke behind: when she shot a 70. m4 Stacey, Blalock and Meiaterlin have shot iden: tical 71-71—142 totals on the 6,340-yard Pasadena Gol{ Club layout. Spuzleh “recorded a 7 Sunday to go along with her 72 Friday. The second round of the tournament, the oldest co-sponsored event on thé Ladies: Professional Golf Association tour, waa scheduled Saturday but wag . postponed by rain. The M final round of the 54 ‘-hole tournament will be . played today. Pal Bradley was even with ’ the leaders after 17 holes but double-bogeyed the 18th and _ Stood at even-par 144, along with Pat Bradley: and Shelley Hamlin. . . ie : . ‘gnd‘the bottom’ dropped - A visit from British Columbia Development Corporation a ; loans to — _ The B Business Assistance Division ¢ of the British: “discuss their financing needs with their representative’ _ who wil be visiting your area on the following. dates: TERRACE VISIT | February 23rd from 10:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. re Mr. K. F, Cassidy, Business Assistance Division, will be at the Lakelse Motor Hotel. Telephone: 635-2287. °.:.- For appointment phone: Vancouver, 669-84) 1 (Colleen * Or write: ' Business Assistance Division - British Columbia Development Corporation EX Qa 272 Granville Square 200 Granville Street Vancouver, B.C. V6C 184 ondary. pad aw aout "ta . “38 | Wr | _“l your travel agent or us, and have a good flight. “CP air ‘ch