“A DAILY INTEREST ACCOUNT THAT HAS IT ALL’’ LG Kootenay Savings Credit Union 1016 - 4th Street, across from the Post Office. Wow SPECIALS FOR YOURFAMILY, YOUR HOME, AND YOURSELF - JUST SAY “CHARGE IT” Navratilova wins fourth Wimbledon fourth time in six years. The American John McEnroe and Peter Fleming won the men's doubles title for.the third time in five years when Connolly in-1952, and was probably the most cheerful they beat the Gullikson twins, Tim and Tom, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4. loser in the 106-year history of the championships. McENROE IN MEN'S FINAL Lai and joking McEnroe is expected to collect another title today, looked at the clock and thought I had better make the when he faces unseeded Chris Lewis of New Zealand in as long as possible, because the match was the men’s singles final. . % too fast.” Navratilova p won nine out of. ‘When Navratilova won the first set in 15 minutes she 10 this year, losing only to Kathy. Horvath in the French had a slim chance of setting a Wimbledon record. The Open. She won Wimbledon without losing a’ set and shortest final was in 1911, when Dorothea Lambert ‘i _ dropped only 25 games. - aie Chambers walloped Penelope Boothby 6-0, 6-0 in 26 “I couldn't figure out what was going on,” she ‘The left-hander’s path to the title was eased when minutes. explained later. “Martina went up to be presented with second-seeded Chris Evert Lloyd; suffering from a But in the second set Jaeger found her confidence _the trophy. stomach upset, was eliminated by Kathy Jrdan in the and broke Navratilova’s service, to a roar of encourage- “I thought a gentleman told me to leave the court, so third /round. : Perens ment from the crowd. I walked in that direction. But then I realized they were Lloyd had won the U.S8., Australian and French Navratilova broke right back, but Jaeger battled on going to give me my little medal.” opens and appeared on course to be a Grand Slam winner. and appeared unlucky in the sixth game, when the She turned back, went up to the Duke, and forgot to “I-was disappointed she: didn't’ make: the final,” champion broke again for a 4-2 lead. At deuce a shot by _curtsy. Wimbledon finalists have curtsied to the royalty Navratilova was called in. Jaeger and most of the crowd _ for the last 100 years. : thought it was out. Navratilova, standing with her trophy, looked hard “Some chalk came up, but that was from the ather and bent her knees slightly asa signal. But Jaeger baseline. The shot was wide,” Jaeger siad. did not see her. a Record-braking morning at University Games EDMONTON (CP) '— It was the opening of the World University, Games, but Friday seemed more like a double birthday party. : Prince Charles officially opened the Games, but the crowd of 60,000 who packed Commonwealth Stadium seemed more appreciative of Canada Day and the birthday of Diana, Princess of Wales. As the prince delivered his speech, noting that Diana “had the good sense and excellent taste to be born on Canada’s national day,” the crowd roared in approval. ‘The i him with_appl: ashe finished the last duty of his 17-day Canadian tour. He and Diana left for home immediately after the opening. Jaeger was the youngest finalist since Maureen It gave Navratilova advantage point, and she, went on to get a vital break. Navratilova won 42 points in the second set and Jaeger won 87. But Navratilova was a regal figure as she advanced to the net, and though her young opponent hit some superb shots past her, she remained generally in command. When the Duke of Kent, cousin of Queen Elizabeth, presented the trophy and medals at the end, Jaeger lost her way and headed toward the locker rooms. SALES PRICES EFFECTIVE FOR ONE DAY ONLY OR W 144 Feature | Sissons: 8'" (20 cm.) Stainless steel. WELS: LADIES’ QUALITY BRIEFS: 100% Geeta we 1.44 TT EXERCISE ee ia [UM a AM | antron lll, cotton gusset. 90 cm or 150 cm wide. page toomeyeneset or LAA ua 144 || HOOPS LADIES’ BIKINIS:.100% cotton 2 mel 4 bisuoLeTus: ae a 1 “ : CHILDREN’S WEAR CuMIR aps: un LA4 Red Grille Feature teow sevens wen 1.44 ‘Scrambled egg BREAKFAST English 2 1.44 Muffin with two strips of bacon. Your foal. or 100% nylon. SM-L. CHILDREN’S AND GIRLS’ k BIKINIS OR BRIEFS: Cotton! Manat dha PMENTEX: 70 yard hank. s. choice of tea of coffee. wer 1.44 . 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It took only 80 minutes for the first one to fall. Shigehiro Takahaski of Japan, the No. 1 ranked 100-metre breastroker in the world in 1978, won his heat in one minute, 3.95 seconds to shatter the Games record of 1:04.88 set in 1981 by Nick Nevid of the United States. style record was broken three times. Andreas Schmidt of West bettered the 1981 mark of 1:62.62 set by Andry Schmidt of the U.S., with a time of, 1:52.85. a But that time lasted only minutes before Alex Bau- mann of Sudbury, Ont., won his heat in 1:62.09. Baumann, who arrived here Thursday afternoon and carried the Canadian flag in the opening ceremonies Friday, showed no sign of weariness. He went out strong and never gave the rest of the field the opportunity to catch In claiming the first Games him. record of 1983, Takahaski re- corded the event's fastest time in the world this year and won his heat by nearly three seconds. Less than 30 minutes later, the women got into the rec- ord mood. Irina Gerasimova of the Soviet Union put her name beside the Games 400- metre individual medley re- cord listing with a heat- winning time of 4:64.88. The previous record was 4:55.45, set in 1981 by Mayuki Yoko- yama of the United States. The men's 200-metre free- In volleyball, Canada swept Rwanda in straight sets Saturday in the opening game of their preliminary round in men's vollegyball at the World University Games. The strong Canadian squad overpowered the central African team 16-4, 15-2 and 15-0 to win the best-of-five match. Led by husky spikers like Alex Ketrzynski, the Cana- dians simply dominated the slight Rwandans. Bob Harrison, assistant coach of the Canadian team, said the victory in the opening sortie will give the team a boost. “It's a good thing,” he said. “This is a long tournament, nine’ days in a row, and this kind of win is good psychol- ogically.” Coach Ken Maeda was able to get some of his second- string players into action, which Harrison said will im- prove their confidence and save the best players for the long haul. “They have a different style, but they’re good,” he said. Harrison, a Winnipeg na- tive who coaches men’s vol- leyball at the University of Victoria, said Canada looks * good in volleyball. “There's a chance for a medal. Our stiffest competi- tion in this pool will be China.” The top two teams in each pool advance through the next round of competition. Halisheff records 5-0 shutout By CasNews Staff Hi-Arrow Arms’ pitcher Lawrence Halisheff threw a 60 shutout against Thrums Indians in Castlegar Com- mercial Fastball League ac- tion Wednesday night. Incother games this week Carling O'Keefe defeated Kalesnikoff 5-2 Tuesday night. Grant Sookro was the winning pitcher: Bob Hut- chinson led Northwest Homes to a 5-2 victory over Labatts’ the same night. Monday night action saw Northwest Homes crush Carling O'Keefe 11-1. The winning pitcher was Wayne Abietkoff. Also on Monday Labatts’ pitcher Pete Evdoki- moff pitched a 3-1 victory over Kalesnikoff Lumber. See Wednesday's edition of the Castlegar News for complete statistics. 7-6 victory Jays edge Mariners TORONTO (CP) — Bar- ry Bonnell singled in Lloyd Moseby from second with two out in the bottom of the ninth off Seattle relief ace Bill Caudill as Toronto Blue Jays rallied from a 6-0 deficit to score a 7-6 victory over the Mariners in an American League baseball game Satur- day afternoon. ‘With two out Moseby sin- gled off Caudill, 1-6, stole second on the first pitch and scored easily as Bonnell drove a 1-2 pitch down the right-field line for his first record to 6-1, holding the Mariners to one hit the final The Jays tied it 6-6 in the fifth, an inning that featured: poor baserunning by the Jays and shoddy defensive play by the Mariners, The Jays loaded the bases on singles by Garth Iorg and Willie Upshaw and a walk to Clift Johnson. Lloyd Moseby followed with a fly to left and Torg, who raced a third of the way down the line after the routine catch, was caught for the second out after the throw to the plate was cut off by third baseman Jamie Al- len who made the tag. Bonnell followed with a long drive to centre that outfielder Dave Hender- son appeared to misjudge and it sailed over his out- stretched glove for a double driving in both Upsahw and Johnson. Buck Martinez then’ brought Bonnell home with a double off the fence in left. Dave Collins hit to first for what should have been the third out but pitcher Bryan Clark dropped the easy toss. Martinez, who was loafing on the play, stopping at third. Alfredo Griffin drove in the fourth run with a single to centre but Collins was caught trying to advance to third. The Mariners, who tied a club record with seven dou- bles in the game, had opened a 60 lead with four runs in the second. Dave Henderson opened the second with his eighth homer of the season and John Moses followed with an infield single. After Spike Owen walked, Doyle Alexander came in to mark his first appearance as a Blue Jay. After getting the second out of the inning, Ricky Nel- son doubled in two runs and then scored on Richie Zisks's ground-rule double down the left-field line that bounced into the seats. the first inning on a run- scoring sacrificefly by Zisk and Pat Putnam's RBI dov- ble. The Jays started their comeback in the third with two runs. Griffin led off with a triple and scored on a double by Damaso Garcia who came home on Upshaw's double off the fence in left- centre. ORIOLES 7 TIGERS 2 DETROIT (AP) — Eddie Murray drove in three runs with a home run and a double and Scott McGregor pitched asix-hitter to lead Baltimore Orioles to a 7-2 victory over Detroit Rich Daver and Jim Dwyer also homered for the Orioles, who handed Detroit its fourth straight defeat. Cal Ripken and Murray hit consecutive doubles for the first Baltimore run in the first inning. Murray hit his 18th home run of the season off Tigers starter Dan Petry, 7-6, after Dauer singled to open the third inning. Dwyer led off the fourth with his third home run and Dauer hit a two-run shot, also his third, in the same inning. Tigers reliever Howard Bailey had retired 15 con- secutive batters until Rick Dempeey’s two-out infield hit in the ninth. John Shelby fol- i » In the ninth, Enos Cabell had an in- field hit and continued to COA eases drive against companies OTTAWA (CP) — The Canadian Olympic Associa- tion is easing up on its drive to force all companies using Beattle 20 lead in henwroeie OU mpc) er! 67a 2 is associated with the international games to pay it for the privilege. “It was too confrontational, we weren't getting anywhere,” says Wallace Halder, president of Olympic Trust of Canada, the associ- ation’s fund-raising arm, ex- plaining why the organiza- tion was backing away from its decision to take those using the name and symbols violate trademark rights be- ing ignored, the association has decided to leave most firms operating under the name Olympic alone Halder said. “We're trying to get a bit pay to use the name, the five-ring symbol or other “It's difficult to give them exclusivity and then let some other company use it as well,” he says, Royalties from paying com: without to court. With letters warning hun- dreds of Canadian companies that use of the words Olym- pic, Olympian and Olympiad panies have brought the trust an estimated $6 million, about half its four-year bud- get for supporting Canada’s