Harry Hadikin I wouldn't agree with it; store is enough. Liquor is a problem a liquor as it is. Mike Robinson I think it's handy, but as for alcohol and teenagers, it’s not that great because it means it's easy for them to get. Jacqueline Moyer Yes, defintely. I believe it should because liquor stores don't price it very well. If corner stores sell it, prices will go down Dan Elzinga Definitely. It is more convenient, I think. Kate Mitchell I think I would say no. It’s too much blatant advertising to the young kids. to the park at 6:30 p.m. and have a great slowpitch time. Battle of Sexes © As well, plan to join us at Pass Creek Park on Friday for the Battle of the Sexes. We challenge all of the guys and gals in this community to join forces and compete against the opposite sex. Events include canoe race, uneducational relay and ob- stacle races and a wind-up female versus male slow- pitch game. All action starts at 1 p.m. Come on out — we dare you to decide who's superior. Hike-Swim For all students nine to 14 years we have a full calendar of events next week. Regis- ter now for Old Glory Hike and Swim at Nancy Greene July 17, Canoe Races and fun at Nancy Greene Lake — July 18, Diseover Pass Creek Park, — ‘July 19. Dance This summer we are offer- ing a two-week dance school geared towards all levels of dance and all ages. The pur- pose of this school is to pro- vide a learning experience METAMUCIL 340Grom ‘3.99 Natural Source.Laxative jeet Assorted Types wom 1.59 Pharmaseve Price *3.99 ELTOR AF NEW CLAIROL ESSENCE SHAMPOO Assorted Types 40s. Allergy 20s. Allergy GELUSIL NEW! SASSOON MOUSSE 170 gram. Light $3. 1 9 ORNADE AF +1.99 $3.49 Formula Formula 100s. Antacid, soft tablets $4.99 TOYLAND SPECIALS! 5-Piece Sand Sets $4.99 Uno Card Game or Extra Light. PHARMASAVE PRICE . PHOTO SPECIAL ON DEVELOP & PRINT! Kodak Color Film Processing — Standard Prints 12 Exposure .. $3.99 15 Exposure 20 Exposu' . $5.99 24 Exposure .. 36 Exposure $9.99 FREE strip of 5 Tickets for Playland Ride supplied with each color roll brought in for developing & printing during the month of July Zillion Bubbles Fun tor Kids Canodion Guild 750-Piece Jigsaw Puzzle $3.49 Julie Postnileff Yes, (beer and wine) should be available. but also to have fun. Audrey Maxwell will be instructing. The classes that are being offered are variety dance class for three to five-year- olds, open tap class, modern dance and adult dance class. For more information give the recreation office a call. Register today. “In the Heart of Downtown Castlegar” CLOSED THIS SUNDAY, CARL'S DRUG OPEN. 365-7813 vy LTD. : HOW CAN YOU JUSTIFY RENTING WHEN THESE HOMES ARE AVAILABLE? | | Centuy 21 MOUNTAINVIEW AGENCIES 365-2111 CASTLEAIRD PLAZA 676 -18th St., CASTLEGAR NEW LISTING Blueberry, over 1,400 sq. ft. of beautifully finished home and grounds. Central air con- ditioning, heated pool and a fantastic private setting. Must sell! $64,900. Fairview — New onty $69,900 3100 Columbia Ave. — $69,500 2424-12th Ave. — $97,500 2249 Columbia Ave. — $69,500 302-32nd Street — $104,500 Woodland Park —- Low 70s 3317 - Sth Ave. — $105,900 661 - 11th Ave. — $46,900 50) ass CS 217-4th Ave. — $36,500 656 - 10th Ave. — $53,000 LAST CHANCE Tamberlane Ss Subdivision oO Superlot! , | Mid-twenties. p LAST CHANCE! South Castlegar, 100'x150° super lot! Last available lot like this in the city. Reduced to $25,000. e) wy see 601-1st Street — $92,500 Oglow Subdivision — $71,900 te 2428-11 th Ave $72,500 42 5O o> Quiet location - ee Budget Priced 104 Ferry Ave. — $69,900 804-5th Ave $74,500 Y Genes FY An absolutely first class 14'x70' mobile home on a super rental lot. Immacu- late and tastefully decor- ated. Low 20s!! 2205-10th Ave. — $49,500 BIRCHLAND HEIGHTS LOTS Prices Slashed For Clearout! $19,000 each lot!! AS “ 144 Col. Ave. — Large Assumable 525-9th Ave. — $49,900 Whe 3404 Southridge Dr. — $79,500 THOUGHT Where have you been, where are you now, where ore you going? All good things have a beginning 914-3rd Street — $48,890 1312 Grosvenor Pi. — $79,900 Ootischenia — $21,500 MASTERING TECHNIQUES .. . Field Hocke strates ftiel Association technical director, hockey techniques with participant at Jenny John (left) B.C demon- field hockey camp. The three-day camp is being held B Several athletes left off of team Canedian Press largest Canadian in history enough for everyone with dreams of winning gold at the coming Los Angeles Games. “Oh my God . it’s a catastrophe,” moaned coach Ivan Pintaric of Toronto, who tutors three throwers who were left off the team an nounced Tuesday by the Canadian Olympic Associa. tion. “The people who decided are not thinking of the future,” Pintaric said. “This will destroy some people. It will take eight to 10 years for the program to recover. “I do not think I can go to Los Angeles. I think I might resign as a protest and stay here to coach my athletes.” Pintaric coaches shot put ters Martino Catalano and Rosemarie Hauch and discus thrower Jack Harkness, all Canadian champions. In naming just 51 track and field athletes, the COA left off numerous prospects who had met the standards of the International Amateur Athletics Federation but not the tougher, and controver. sial, COA standards. GETS LAWYER One of these, 10,000-metre specialist Peter Butler of Vancouver, said Tuesday he had engaged a lawyer and begun legal action against the COA in hopes of ob- taining a court order that would allow him to compete in Los Angeles. Walter Kostric, coach of Toronto long jumper Richard Brock, said the relatively small number of field-event athletes on the Olympic team reflects a bias in favor other disciplines, especially sprint: ing. “Of all those runners who met the COA standards, just a few did it on Canadian soil,” Kostric said. “The sprinters at Kinnaird Junior Secondary Schoo! and is being con ducted by the West Kootenay Ladies Field Hockey Association, About 30 players are participating in the camp. f . +s CosttewsPhoto by Chery! Calderbank Team Canada named By NEIL STEVENS TORONTO (CP) — Eight Edmonton Oilers are among 30 National Hockey League players named today to Team Canada '84 for the Canada Cup tournament in Septem ber Tournament chairman Alan Eagleson said one or two additional players could join the team at its training camp at the Montreal Forum, Aug. 5-10. The team will shift its operatings to Edmonton and Banff, Alta., on Aug. 11 be fore playing the United States in a pre-tournament game at Edmonton Aug. 15. Canada, the U.S., the So viet Union, Czechoslovakia, Sweden and West Germany begin tournament play Sept. 1 with Canada playing West Germany in Montreal and Sweden meeting the U.S. in Halifax It's obvious from the choices made by Edmonton head coach Glen Sather that he feels the style employed by the Oilers in winning their first Stanley Cup in May will stem the European threats posed particularly by the Soviets and Czechoslovaks. Seven of the Oilers form ing the nucleus of the team centres Wayne Getzky and Mark Messier, winger Glenn Anderson, and defencemen Paul Coffey, Kevin Lowe, Charlie Huddy and Randy Gregg — move the puck well out of their own end and are explosive in the offensive zone. The eighth Edmonton play er selected to the squad by Sather and his staff — as sistants Bruce MacGregor, John Muckler, Ted Green and Tom Watt and super seout Barry Fraser was goaltender Grant Fuhr. Five members of the New York Islanders — whom the Oilers routed in five games to end the Islanders’ streak at four straight Stanley Cups were also picked for the team along with four Boston Bruins. The Islanders selected were wingers Mike Bossy and John Tonelli, centres Bryan Trottier and Bob Bourne and defenceman Denis Potvin while Boston's representation will come from goaltender Pete Peet ers, defenceman Ray Bour que, winger Rick Middleton and centre Barry Pederson. Others selected to attend the training camp included three Chicago Black Hawks centre Denis Savard, win. ger Al Secord and defence Death t PEKING (REUTER) — China today joined a growing list of Asian countries who say they have received death threats against their athletes at the Los Angeles Olympics. A Chinese Olympic Com mittee official would not give details of a letter received here and purported to have been written by the Ku Klux Klan in the United States, but said it contained “very base language.” Olympie committees in Malaysia, Singapore, Sri Lan- ka and South Korea have also received letters threatening death to their games ath- letes. China is sending a 360- member squad to Les An geles, including 225 compe- titors. Some are already in the United States and the others will leave during the next few days. Singapore and Seuth Kor. ea — which will host the 1968 Summer Olympies — today joined Sri Lanka and Malay- sia in saying they have re ceived letters carrying the Klan emblem. “If your curs dare to come to the Summer Olynipiecs in Ameriea, they will be shet or hanged,” the letter to Seoule said. man Doug Wilson — and two members each from Wash ington Capitals — defence. man Scott Stevens and wing: er Mike Gartner — and Que- bee Nordiques — winger Mi chel Goulet and centre Peter Stastny Stastny, a former member of the Czechoslovakian na. tional team who defected to Canada four years ago, has since become a Canadian cit izen and is eligible to play for Team Canada Also invited to the camp — Team Canada will be allowed to dress 22 players for each game — were winger Rick Vaive of Toronto Maple Leafs; goaltender Rejean Lemeli; centre Sylvain Tur geon, Hartford Whalers; winger Brian Bellows, Min nesota North Stars; defence- man Larry Robinson, Mon treal Canadiens; defenceman James Patrick, New York Rangers and winger Brian Sutter, St. Louis Blues. The tournament is a round robin affair with the top two teams after the round robin meeting in a best-of-three final. Canada won the _ initial Canada Cup in 1976 but lost to the Seviet Union in 1981 hreats received “The blacks and yellows will not be permitted to defile America's stadiums. We have forced the Soviets out of the Olympics, we shall not per. mit the apes to be present either.” A South Korean Olympic official said he believed sim ilar letters were sent to all non-white countries taking part in the games. Singapore Olympic official 8.8. Dhillon said the US. government has not been in- formed of the letter received there because Singapore is confident the organizing com mittee and Los Angeles po lice will provide necessary security U.S. State Secretary George Shultz said Tuesday in Simgapore that the threats are sq outrageous that he could not believe they were made by the Klan Shultz said he almost be lieved the letters were a dis information campaign, but refused to say if they were al huding to the Soviet Union. Area golfer second after first round 100 MILE HOUSE (CP) — Tim Scholl of the Kelowna Golf Club fired a three under-par 69 to take a one- stroke lead after the first found of the 72-bole British Columbia junior men's golf championship at the 108 Re- Vancouver's Shaughnessy was at Tl. Tied at even-par 72 are Miron Osadchuk of Marine Drive in Vancouver, Dan Dupuis of Rossland-Trail, Ja son Seharfe of Point Grey in Vancouver, Doug Mcintosh of Point Grey. John Fram of Royal Colwood in Victoria and Doug Morgan of Royal Cotweod. First-found highlights in ALL-STAR GAME NL records SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — In the twilight zone, the all-star clock turned back 50 years. Only it wasn’t Hubbell, but Valenzuela and Gooden. And the victims weren't Ruth, Gehrig, Foxx, Simmons and Cronin, but Winfield, Jackson, Brett, Parrish, Lemon and Davis. “| heard over a loudspeaker what was going on,” said Dave Winfield, the top hitter in the major leagues. “What could we do?” Not much, as the National League took advantage of power pitching, power hitting in the form of home runs by most valuable player Gary Carter of Montreal Expos and Dale Murphy of Atlanta Braves and the lengthening shadows Tuesday to record a 3-1 triumph over the American League in the 1984 baseball all-star game. It was the 12th victory in 13 games for the NL and its 20th in the last 22, a dominance symbolized by the pitchers Tuesday night. Five NL hurlers struck out 11 batters, five AL pitchers fanned 10, and the combined 21 strikeouts eclipsed by one the record for a nine-inning all-star game set in 1968. But what had both teams and a crowd of 57,756 at Candlestick Park buzzing started in the top of th fourth inning With Fernando Valenzuela of Los Angeles Dodgers pitching, New York Yankees’ Winfield, hitting .370, stepped up to lead off the inning. Winfield went down swinging at a fastball. Next up was Reggie Jackson, the slugger for California Angels. He fanned on a half-swing. GETS ONLY RUN Up stepped Kansas City Royals’s George Brett, whose home run in the second inning accounted for the AL's only run. Brett was called out on strikes, looking at a Valenzuela screwball. Valenzuela, second in the majors in strikeouts but a late replacement for injured Joaquin Andujar on the NL roster, gave way to 19-yer-old rookie Dwight Gooden of New York Mets, the strikeout leader, to start the fifth. Different pitchers, different batters: same results. Lance Parrish of Detroit struck out swinging. “It was not my best day,” said Parris, who had fanned against starter Chaftie Lea of Montreal in the second. Detroit's Chet Lemon struck out swinging “It was hard to pick up the rotation of the ball Lemon said. Next was Alvin Davis and history. The Seattle Mariners’ rookie, pinch-hitting for AL pitcher Jack Morris, went down swinging on a 2-2 count. The six consecutive strikeouts by Valenzuela and Gooden brought the record set single-handedly 50 years ago to the day by Carl Hubbell against future Hall of Famers Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Jimmie Foxx, Al Simmons and Joe Cronin in the 1934 game. Hubbell, now 81, threw the first ball before Tuesday's game. The pitch bounced before reaching the plate. It only got better for the NL after that. With the NL dugout shouting to Gooden to “get another,” Detroit's Lou Whitaker ended the strikeout string by grounding out to start the sixth. Cincinnati's Mario Soto pitehed a hitless seventh and eighth innings, striking out one, amd Rich Gossage of San Diego Padres fanned two in the nimth for a save as the NL finished with three fastballers against a league where breaking-ball pitchers dominate. The AL pitchers also did well, especially Oakland A's reliever Bill Caudill, whe pitched the seventh inning and struck out the side. Valenzuela, Gooden and Capdill became just the fifth. sixth and seventh pitchers in afl-star history to strike out each of the three hitters they faced in an inning. Before the game, more was made af the tricky winds at Candlestick than the &30 p.m. starting time. In the last all-star game in Candlestick, played in 1961, there were a record seven errors. There were only two errors this time and both were committed by the AL in the first inning, which led to an un- earned run off Toronto Blue Jays’ Dave Stieb, the starter all did theirs in Provo, Utah, 2,000 feet (610 metres) above sea level. Richard hasn't been able to leave the country to compete because he has to work to support himself. “He goes to trials, makes the Olympic standard... We have never had a better long jumper in this country. But after this, I don't thin) Richard is going to step on the runway any more.” Butler agreed with Kostric that the COA standards are “hopelessly” inconsistent, that the 28:03 requirement in the 10,000 is far more diffi cult than others. No Cana dian had ever run that time, yet Butler's best this year — 28:29.9 — and the 28:11.0 turned in by Paul McCloy of St. John’s, Nfld., are well within the IAAF standard of 28:25. McCloy also missed the Olympic squad The COA guidelines, adop: ted in 1982, require an ath lete, based on previous per formance, to achieve a rank- ing in the top 16 or the top half of the anticipated Olym- pic field. Responding to the critics, COA president Roger Jack- son said Tuesday: “We're taking no athletes as fringe athletes simply to allow them to gain experience. The (gov ernment sport) federations know the criteria and have known them since 1962.” Wrestler Gary Kallos of Montreal got word this week that the COA selection com mittee had turned down a recommendation by Cana dian Amateur Wrestling Association that Kallos's Greco-Roman weight class be included on the Olympic team. It was crushing news. “I'm very disillusioned,” said Kallos, 28, who was a member of the 1980 Canadian Greco-Roman wrestling team which did not compete in the Olympics because of the Moscow boycott. 3-1 victory and winner in last year's 13-3 victory by the Al which snapped an 11-game losing streak. With two out, San Diego Padres, Steve Garvey singled to right and continued to second when Jackson lost the ball in the NL insignia painted on the grass and let it skip between his legs for an error. Murphy followed with a single through the hole to left, and Garvey seored when catcher Parrish dropped Winfield’s strong one-hop throw for an error Brett's one-out home tied it in the second before Carter drilled a Stieb pitch over the left-field fence in the bottom of the second. Carter's home run earned him MVP honors, only the second player, along with Garvey, to win the award twice, as lead in the series to 35-19-1 _the NL, stealing a record four bases, stretched its overall Lions to face Argos in By GRANT KERR VANCOUVER (CP) British Columbia Lions will put added emphasis on their special teams Sunday in the Canadian Football League when they meet the Argo nauts in Toronto in a rematch of the 1983 Grey Cup final. The Lions used a blocked punt by defensive back An. dre Jones to set up their opening touchdown last week during a 44-10 thrashing of Edmonton Eskimos in Van couver. Toronto had two punts blocked by Winnipeg safety Seott Flagel during « 28-26 loss to the Blue Bombers in Winnipeg. On another occa sion Argo punter Hank [lesic elected to run on third down and failed to gain enough yardage for a first down. “Special teams have al- ways been a big part of our emphasis,” Lions’ coach Don Matthews said Tuesday “Last week the blocked punt set the tempo for our game.” Jones, a defensive back used primarily on passing downs, made his block early in the second quarter and James Parker recovered on the Edmonton 13 yard line. On the next play Roy Dewalt threw to Mervyn Fernandez for a touchdown, giving the Lions a 10-0 lead and sending them to a 24point second quarter. “The blocked punt got our offence excited « little bit.” Matthews said. “You can really pick up momentum from something like that. “When you watch a special teams’ film, it’s really in teresting to note that after every big play on special teams the next thing that comes up is an extra point rematch We always stress that point to our players.” The Lions have three roo kies designated as kick re- turners this year in slotbacks Jim Sandusky and Henry Vereen, plus defensive back Darnell Clash. Veteran de- fensive hack Larry Crawford handled the bulk of the re turns in 1983. B.C lost three times to Toronto last season, includ- ing an 18-17 setback in the Grey Cup game when the Argos scored 11 unanswered points in the second half at B.C. Place Stadium. Joe Barnes came in at quarterback for Holloway in the second half to orchestrate the comeback. RUSH NEEDED “The key to the success of Barnes and Holloway és their ability to scramble and buy time so the receivers can get open,” said Matthews. “We have to get pressure on the quarterback as quickly as possible.” The Lions got to Edmonton quarterbacks Matt Dunigaa and Johnny Evans seven times last game and B.C. had 10 team sacks under the CFL's new definition of a sack, which can also involve 4 running play stopped behind the line of scrimmage. “We anticipate that Holle The Argos were without reevivers Terry Greer and Emanuel Tolbert in the game at Winnipeg. Greer had a sprained ankle and Tolbert a problem with a toe.