nament. Page @, The Herald, Thursday, November, 1, 1977 Skeena’s Tom Esperson at the net during last weekend's volleyball tour- Zone finals here senior zone this Junior and secondary school playdowns happen weekend in Terrace. Caledonia Senior Secon- dary is hosting the zone finals in boys soccer. Teams from Queen Charlottes, Prince Rupert Senior Secondary, Hazelton, Kilimat, Nisgha and Caledonia are expected to play. Friday at 3 p.m., Mount Elizabeth Secondary from Kitimat plays Nisgha Secondary from New Aiyansh at Caledonia to decide the semi-final berth. Saturday at 10a.m. the semi- final games are played, with the finals at 1 p.m, Thornhill Junior Secon- dary in Thornhill is hosting the Junior A and B boys volleyball finals. A teams from Booth Junior Secon- dary in Prince Rupert, Skeena Junior in Terrace, Thornhill, Houston, Hazelton, Port Simpson, Nisgha, Chandler Park in Smithers and Mount Elizabeth will be playing. B teams from Thornhill, Skeena, Booth, Mount Elizabeth and Kitwanga will be competing. All games will be at Thornhill Junior, and action starts at 9 a.m. Saturday. Skeena Junior hosts Junior A, B and Grade 8 girls finals and grade 8 boys finals this weekend, A teams from Skeena, Booth, Thornhill, Mount Elizabeth, Port Simpson, Nisgha, Hazelton, Chandler Park, Houston and a junior team from Prince Rupert Senior will compete in the Skeena gym. At the Caledonia gym, B girls from Skeena, Thornhill, Mount Elizabeth, Booth and Kitwanga will play, with the grade 8 girls from Mount Elizabeth, Skeena and - Thornhill mixed in. Grade & boys from Thernhill, Skeena and Mount Elizabeth will play at Cal as well. Games for this final will also start at 9 a.m. Saturday. Familiar faces return MONTREAL (CP) — There will be a host of familiar faces when a pair of touring Sovie! Union hockey teams arrive in North America on Dec. 23 for Super Series 1980. The Soviets plan to bring 17 of 23 players who par- ticipated in the three-game Challenge Cup series at Madison Square Garden last February, in which the Commer. Hockey results Two fights netted four players game misconducts in the Juveniles’ 5-2 win over the Terrace Hotel team Wednesday night in Com- mercial League action last night. Terrace Hotel's Cary Humphrey and Steve Whyte, and Chris Renerkins and Bab Dempster from the Juveniles were assessed the penalties at 16:51 of the third period. Under league rules, a game misconduct is automatic after a fighting penalty. After a scoreless first period, Terry Olson put the Juveniles shead 10 from Renerkins and Dempster at 1:24 of the second. The Terrace took the lead with two straight goals, Hum- phrey from Steve Beck and Murray Hill at 6:14 and Whyte from Hill and Homphrey al 19:31. The third period was all Juveniles, though, as they scored four unanswered goals for the win. Doug Ritchie assisted on all four. Dave Smyth started {t from Simon Dodd and Doug Ritchie at 1:59. Reneerkins picked up a goal from Ril- chie and Dodd al 4:44, Darcy Mallet scored at 14:09 from Ritchie and Kenny Wideman, and Walter Degerness finished the period at 19:28 from Ritchie and Smyth. Tonight's commercial league action features the Skeena Hotel team taking on Westend Chevron. Game time is 9 p.m. at the Terrace arena. Soviets won two of three games against a team com- posed of the National Hockey League’s top performers . The latest series of nine matches against individual NHL clubs will begin Dec. 26 when Moscow Dyname faces Vancouver Canucks, while the second Soviet squad, Central Red Army, plays New York Rangers the following night. Leading the Central Red Army team are 35-year-old centre Boris Mikhailov, who was voted the most valuable player in the Challenge Cup series and goaltender Viadislay Tretiak, another veteran of international hockey competition. Viacheslav Fetisov, one of the Soviet Union's budding superstara, is also listed on the roster after missing the Challenge Cup because of injury, Rounding out the list of former Challenge Cup performers who will suit up for Central Red Army are Sergei Kapustin, Sergei Makarov, Victor Zhluktav, Helmut Balderis, Valeri Kharlamov, Erik Gimayev, Vladimir Petrov, Sergei Starikov, Gennadi Tsygankov and Sergei Babinov. The team is coached by Victor Tikhonov, who also handles the Soviet national hockey squad. Veteran - forward Alexander Maltsev heads the Dynamo roster, which has five members from the Challenge Cup team, in- cluding Valeri Vasilyev, Vasil Pervukhin, Zinetula Bilyaletdinoy and the Golikov brothers, Alexander and Vladimir. Dynamo, which has eight players listed at 22 years of age or younger, is coached by Vitali Davidov. After the game againat the Canucks, Central Red Army meets New York Islanders on Dec. 29, Montreal Canadiens on Dee, 3), Buffalo Sabres on Jan. 3 and concludes its tour against Quebec Nordiques an Jan. 6. Dynamo faces Winnipeg Jets on Jan. 2 before playing Edmonton Oilers on Jan, 4 and Washington Capitals on Jan, 8. . Negotiations for television coverage of the series are still in progress. Bugs, Midget House Terrace Minor Hockey House League results from last weekend have come in from the Bug and Midget divisions. In Bug play, Legion deat the Chipmunks 6-5, and the Fire-fighters took the Elks 8- 3. in Midget action BCGEU battled to a 4-4 sawoff with Kalum Electric, and Kalum. Tire edged the Moose 4-3. This weekend there will be a Level 1 and 2 Hockey coaches’ clinic in Terrace. For furlher information, phone Ray Flaherty at 635- 5314, . NBA STATS EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division WoL Pet, GOL Philadephia 6 1.889 — Boston T 2 778 New York 6 4.00 22 Washington 305 «07S ave New Jersey 2 7 .222 4 Central Division San Antonio 6 3 6672 — Atlanta 6 § 445 7 Indiana § 6 .d56 2 Detroit 4 § 44402 Cleveland 3 68.271 4 Hauston 2 68.200) dia WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwant Division Milwaukee 89 7 900) — 5.500 4 Kansas City 5 Chicago 3 6.273 (6'4 Utah 207 «222 é4 Denver 2 6.200 7 Pacitic Olvision Portland 9 2 «6018 — Los Angeles 709 «400 «(14 Phoenix 7 636 Golden State 5 § 400 J Seattle 5 0 YA San Diego 4 6 400 dM Wednesday Results Boston 114 New Jersey 79 Washington 114 Cleveland 105 Atlanta 102 Phiiadeiphia 9? Indlarra 133 Houston 129 Kansas City 125 Utah 108 rogtlwoukee 110 Los Angeles Golden State 111 Portland 106 Son Antonio 130 San Dlego 123 Seattle 97 Denver 6 Tonight’: Games Cleveland at Detrolt New York at Utah Hawks beat Sixers Philadelphia *7éers lost the battle of the boards, the game and their status as the National Basketball Association’s only un- defeated team Wednesday night in Atlanta, “The big key was what wince KSpo, Sauve shut ’em out area of their strength,’’ W6ers coach Billy Cun- ningham said after the Hawks’ 102-97 victory broke his team’s cight-game winning streak. Elsewhere, Washington Bullets defeated Cleveland Cavaliers 114-105, Golden State Warriors beat Portland Trail Blazers 111-106, San Antonio Spurs defeated San Diego Clippers 190-123, In- diana Pacers downed Houston Rockets 133-129, Seattle SuperSonics dumped Denver Nuggets 97-8), Boston Celtics humbled New Jersey . Nets 116-78, Milwaukee Bucks edged Los ‘Angeles Lakers 110-106 and Kansas City Kings blasted Utah Jazz 125-108. “We went afler them,” said Hawks coach Hubie Brown. “We fought them on the boards. Down the stretch, the big, big baskets were by John Drew. It was one of his all-time great games,” Drew’s game was only 23 minutes long, but the small forward got 23 points and seven rebounds. Drew caught three fouls in 18 seconds of the first period and sat out the final 3:31 and the entire second period, Jack Givens replaced him and scored 16 paints. “This is the first team that has outrebounded us,"’ said ‘téers star Julius Erving, who was the game’s top scorer with 26 points, Bullets 114 Cavallers 105 Bobby Dandridge, who missed four games recently with a sprained ankle, scored 14 of his game-high 31 points In the fourth quarter to spark the injury-plagued Bullets to their win. Warrlors 111 Blazers 106 Forward Purvis Short scored 37 points, Including 17 in the final six minutes, as Golden State handed Por- tland just its .second loss after nine straight wins and became the first team to score 100 points against the Blazers during the current campaign, Spurs 130 Clippers 123 George Gervin connected for 33 points, including 13 in the fourth quarter, to power San Antonio past San Diego. The Clippers’ Lioyd Free was the: game's top scorer with 35 points, Pacers 133 Rockets 129 Clemon Johnson and Joe Hassett came off the bench to spark Indiana to the overtime victory, Hassett scored 21 points, hitting three three-pointers as In- diana remained unbeaten in five home games this season. Johnson finished with 14 points, Sonics 97 Nuggets 89 Fred Brown came off the bench for a season-high 19 points to lead Seattle past Denver. Brown scored 10 points in the fourth guarter as Seattle, 5-5, overcame a 76-71 deficit at the three- quarter mark. Celtics 115 Nets 79 Cedric Maxwell scored 25 points and rookie Larry Bird added 18 as Boston humbled New Jersey, sending the Nets to their seventh defeat in nine starts, Bucks 110 Lakers 105 Dave Meyers and Kent Benson scored four points each in the last 2:34 At Pittsburgh the ticket- takers weren’t taking any tickets, At Chicago the goaltenders weren't allowing any goals. And at Toronto, the crowd rose to salute the return of ari ald favorite to the National Hockey League Wednesday night as Dave Keon scored a goal and set up another in Hartford Whalers’ 4-2 vic- tory over the Maple Leafs. Despite a strike by service employees at the Civic Arena in Pittsburgh which limited attendance to a meagre 4,173, the Penguins broke out of a threegame losing streak to defeat Colorado Rockies 4-2, It was Colorado's fifth straight game without a victory, At Chicago, Tony Esposito of the Black Hawks and Bob Sauve of Buffalo Sabres dominated proceedings in the first scoreless tie of the season, It was the 70th career shutout for the Chicago veteran and Sauve's second in as many starts. In other games Wed- nesday, Minnesota North Stars defeated Detroit Red Wings 5-3, Winnipeg Jets dawed Quebee Nordiques 4-2. and New York Islanders and Vancouver Canucks battled to a 2-2 tle. . Penguins 4 Rockles 2 After calling off last Satur- day’s game against Phila- delphia Flyers because of the strike, Pittsburgh Management personnel manned the box office, the ice-scraping machine and a few concession stands and the Penguins rewarded them with a third-period goal by Gregg Sheppard and an empty-net tally by Greg Ma- ' lone, his second of the game, Colorado, which has one victory and two ties in 10 starts, overcame a two-goal lead to tie the game early in the third period but managed only 15 shots on goal to Pittsburgh's 23. , Whalera 4 Maple Leafs 2 Keon, the Leafa’ leading point-scorer who joined the World Hoekey Association when he failed to come to terms with the club in 1975, teamed with former Leaf Blaine Stoughton for two goals and John Garrett, who played goal for “Toronto Toros inthe WHA, stopped 37 shots to seal Hartford's victory, The Whalers’ final goal came fram §l-year-old Gordie Howe, who rifled an accurate shot to the top corner of the net after being set up by his son Mark. Jets 5 Nordiques 2 Winnipeg moved into a threeway tie for second place in the Smythe Division and ran its unbeaten streak 43 free agents up for grabs NEW YORK (AP) — At least 43 major league players will be available for claim at Friday's baseball re-entry draft — the free- agent auction that often creates instant millionaires. The list is headed by Nelan Ryan, California Angels’ flamethrowing right-hander, and includes a host of familiar names. Besides Ryan, some of the pitchers who have declared for the draft are Fred Norman of Cincinnati Reds, Al Hrabosky of Kansas City Royals, Don Stanhovse of Baltimore Orioles, Rick Wise of Cleveland Indians, Dave Goltz of Minnesota Twins, Lerrin LaGrow of Los Angeles Dodgers, Rudy May of Montreal Expos and John Curtis of San Francisco Giants. Other players up for grabs include Bob Watson of Boston Red Sox, Tony. Perez of the Expos, Joe Morgan of the Reds, Jorge Orta of Chicago White Sox, Fred Patek of the Royals and Jose Cruz of Houston Astros. One of the more in- teresting free-agent declarations came Wed- nesday when Don Kessinger, former player-manager of the White Sox, who quit last summer in hia first year with the dual jobs, filed his notice. Kessinger played in 6&6 games last season, batting 200 in 110 at bats, Also declaring for the draft was Jesus Alou, who served as Houston’s first-base coach and a part-time player last season. Alou batted .256 batting just 43 times, Also on the list are Ed Kranepoo] of New York TENDERS KITSUMKALUM SKI HILL ‘ACCESS ROAD SNOW PLOWING & SANDING Seated bids relating to the above mentioned contract will be accepted at the Regional District of Kitimat- Stikine offices untll 4:30 p.m. Friday, November 9, 1979. The contract will be for a three year perlod and all bids should specify: 1) Rates and types of equipment 2) Access lo and cost of sand 3) Confirmation that this cleaning will be done on a priority basis, All tenders must be sealed and marked ‘‘Kitsyumkatum Ski HiIl - Access Road Snowing Plowing and Sanding Tender’. LOWEST, OR ANY TENDER NOT NECESSARILY ACCEPTED. Klitsumkalum Sk! Hilt Regional District of Kitimat-Stikine No, 9-4644 Lazelle Avenue Terrace, B.C. VG 156 (n1,2,5) Mets, Willie Horton of Seattle Mariners, Milt May of the White Sox, Merv Rettenmund of the Angels, Rowland Office of Atianta Braves, - Jay - Johnstone - of San Diego. Padres, .Rannie Stennett of Pittsburgh Pirates and Greg Gross of Philadelphia Phillies. In addition to the 43 players who have already declared their free agency, another dozen players were eligible to enter the draft. to three games with a two- goal performance by Peter ‘Sullivan and solld goal- tending by Gary Smith, who stopped 25 Quebec shots. Real Cloutier contributed his eighth goal of the season for ‘the losers, North Stare 5 Red Wings 3 Two goals 69 seconds apart early in the third period by Al McAdam and rookie Tom McCarthy broke a 3-3 tie as Minnesota won its third straight game and moved into second place in the Adams Division, a point behind Buffalo. Detroit led 2-0 early in the game but fell behind when the North Stars scored two powerplay goals early econ priod, Islanders 2 Canucks 2 © Vancouver goaltender Glen Hanlon made 13 of his 22 saves in the scoreless third period and New York .centre Bryan Trottier hit both “goal posts aa the ‘Canucks hung on to earn their point against last A St-foot shot by Garry Howatt of the Islanders eluded Hanlon midway through the second period to set up the tle, Sabres 0 Black Hawks 0 Both goaltenders made key saves late in the game to preserve the double shutout. First Esposito came far out of his net to foil a breakaway by Buffalo centre Don Luce. Then Sauve made a brilliant glove save on a slapshot by Chicago defenceman Doug ope ito stopped 21 shots sposito stoppe ' one nore than the Buffalo netminder. ; Hold Old Skis . ' CALGARY, Alberta-If you are buying new skis, hold on to your old ones. Use them the first few weeks of the ski season, when rocks and generally rough ground conditions can prevail. A skiing cab driver here, preparing for the aki season, also said if you don’t have old skis, rent a pair the first few times out. Olymple Medals INDIANAPOLIS~—An Olympic gold medal symbolizes top world performance, but its actual cash value is about $10. The gold medal is basically silver, coated with about six grams of fine gold. The silver medal is _pure silver, estimated at $75. The pure bronze medal is worth about $32. Can halt baldness Finnish scientists say LONDON — Two Finnish scientists said they have developed a scalp treat- ment thal can halt baldness and even start new hair growing in many cases. The scientists, who are pulling the treatment on sale in.the farm of q solu- tion, say that among volunteers who applied it to their scalp for 28 weeks. hair growth resumed in 60 er cent of the cases and air loss decreased within four weeks. The claim. however, was ° greeted with initial reserva- tion by some medical ex- - fallicles — the tiny sacs in perts. The product contains a synthetic detergent, which clears awway dead hairs and other dirt clogging the which hair grows. Another ingredient, a compound, then sets in mation a process which allegedly results in the growth of new hai, For further information write to: Bioscal Canada, Dept, T K Box 113, Adelaide P.O. Toronto, Ont. MSC 2H8 or call (416) 364-5498 KITSUMKALUM SKI BILL SCHEDULE OF OPERATIONS SEASON November 23, 1979 to April 6, 1980 (Weather Permitting) HOURS OF OPERATION November to January , February to April Evening 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. 9:30a.m,. to 4:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. Lifts open at 9:00 a.m. to weekends. P DAYS OF OPERATION & FACILITIES OPERATING T-Bar Chairilft ope Tow] Mini Rope | Monday e Tuesday ‘HILL CLOSED Note: All lednesday a Facilities Will be Thursday operating Friday Dally Saturday through Sunday the Holidays, *kRope Tow wit! operate only as demand req fram 12:15 p.m. to 1:00 p.m. ®INDICATES LIFT IS OPERATING (Days & hours of operation are sub|ect to changes) TARRIF STRUCTURE 79-8 Area Day Passes: Adult Half Day’ (weekdays only) Junior (12 & under) Pre Schoolers Golden Agers (65 & over) Area Night Passes: Adult Junior (12 & under) Alp! Rope SEASON PASSES uires and will be shui down on weekdays PAdult Single Student (13 to 18) Child (iz & under) eer First Two per family Each additional student or child per family Maximum family Season passes on sale commencing Monday, November 5, 1979 at the Regional District of Kitimat-Stikine Office No. 9-4644 Lazelle Ave,