as August 10, 1986 Celebration Days at SAFEWAY ... With ANTIPASTO Town House BLACK PITTED OLIVES Small or Large. 398 mi Tin $1.49 Heinz KETCHUP 1 litre keg $2.99 Consumer Wide Mouth MASON JARS 500 mi +6.48 Heinz KETCHUP 2.84 L tin *§.99 Sea Haul FLAKED WHITE TUNA 184g *1.58 Sea Haul CHUNK LIGHT TUNA 184g $1.28 Green Giant Fancy Grade CUT GREEN BEANS 88° Success Stems & Pieces MUSHROOMS 284 mi tin 1.49 Town House Stuffed MANZANILLA OLIVES Loose Pack. 250 mi jar California Grown RED PEPPERS $439) 519 B.C. Grown GREEN BEANS 32**/,99° California Grown GREEN PEPPERS S17 1.19° Prices effective August 10 to 16 only, in your friendly Castlegar Safeway store. We reserve the right to limit quantities. Sales in retail J quantities only. Working hard to be your favorite food store! B.C. Grown NO. 1 GRADE CAULIFLOWER B.C. Grown No. 1 Grade SILVERSKIN ONIONS $1°9/.89° CANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED Aap be te HEAD-TO-HEAD .. . TAR BLANK SPURS Cc Stars won Kootenay Soccer Ss! | eee high in the air to battle Trail Spurs’ Ed Canzian for ball in front of the Stars’ goalmouth during mat- 10 in a Kootenay Soccer League match at the Community Complex's Kiwanis Field. League contest 1-0. Costews Phote by Ron Norman away with the shutout. game is next Saturday at 6 p-m. at the Kiwanis Field. Pasqua's homer gives Yanks win YANKEES 3 ROYALS 2 NEW YORK (AP) — Dan Pasqua led off the bottom of the ninth inning with his 10th home run of the season Saturday, lifting the New York Yankees to a 3-2 American League baseball triumph over the Kansas City Royals. Pasqua's drive off Bud Black, 46, came on an 0-1 pitch and was only the fifth Yankee hit against three Royals pitchers. TWINS 9 OAKLAND 2 OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Frank Viola pitched a two-hitter over seven innings and Gary Gaetti drove in three the the A’s. Viola give up one run, struck out six and walked three. Mickey Hatcher went 4-for-6 with a walk and scored three times for the Twins, who led 3-0 before A's starter season, opened the game with his 18th, a drive to right field. REDS 6 DODGERS 2 CINCINNATI (AP) — Buddy Bell's two-run homer off baseball with the score 1-1, snapping Valenzuela's five-game winning streak and giving Cincinnati its third consecutive triumph over the Dodgers. PHILLIES 4 CUBS 2 CHICAGO (AP) — Juan Samuel hit a pair of doubles and a single and drove in two runs Saturday, leading Philadelphia to a 4-2 National League victory over the Chicago Cubs and ending the Phillies’ five-game losing streak. Charles Hudson, 7-10, was the winner but needed help from Kent Tekulve to get out of a sixth-inning jam. Steve Bedrosian got his 14th save. Dennis Eckersley, 6-7, was the loser. Samuel went 3for-5, sparking Philadelphia's 13-hit attack. He hit a two-run double in the third following a walk to Steve Jeltz and a single by Jeff Stone. Soccer fans riot twice LONDON (AP) — English soccer hooligans rioted for the second time in 24 hours early Saturday, prompting calls for fresh government action with the new domestic league season still two weeks away. Several hundred youths clashed with police after a preseason exhibition match in Plymouth on England's south-west coast. The youths, backers of the local Second Division Plymouth Argyle team and London visitors Chelsea, chanted soccer slogans as they overturned a police car, pelted officers with bottles and other missiles and blocked roads. No injuries were reported. The violence flared just 24 hours after a North Sea ferry en route to the Netherlands was forced to turn back to England when 2 bloody brawl broke out between rival English on their way to watch their teams play exhibition matches on the continent. Five fans were injured, three with stab wounds, and 14 Sports Minister Richard Tracey said the brawl late Thursday and early Friday on the Dutch ferry, Koningen Beatrix, could set back English hopes of returning to European club competition for years. English teams were barred indefinitely from major Green off to camp By CasNews Staff Castlegar Rebels centre Travis Green left this week for Kimberley where he will try out for the Pacific Region under-17 hockey team. Green, 15, is the only player from the West Koote- nay who will attend camp. He joins 21 other players from British Columbia and 22 from Alberta who will com- pete for positions on the squad that will play teams from the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia and Sweden at the Esso Invitational hoc- key tournament at Christ- mas. Green, who said he has professional ambitions but also wants to earn a scholar- ship and play in Canada’s Olympic program, will try out at all three forward positions in Kimberley. After the seven-day camp, the under-17 team break up but will get back together just before Christmas to pre- pare for the Esso tourney. Whether he makes the under-17 team or not, fol- lowing the camp, Green will head off to Vernon where he will try out for the Junior A Tier Two team in that éity. which will be coached by Wayne Naka, who will coach the major junior Victoria Cougars this year, consists of players who turn 16 in 1986. Green's 16th birthday is in December. LIONS' NEW GM Golfer scores two aces ULRICEHAMN, Sweden (AP) — Swedish golfer Erik Hallberg hit two holes-in-one and missed a third ace by just less than a metre during the same day, it was reported Saturday. Hallberg, 72, who is retired first aced the ninth hole on the Rattvik golf course during a recent vacation. He used a 7-iron on the par-3 hole. Returning to the course in the afternoon, Hallberg scored his second hole-in-one with an Siron at No. 13, another par-3. Galat a smooth talker By GRANT KERR Canadian Press VANCOUVER — The British Columbia Lions finally have a working general manager with the arrival of Joe Galat to direct the front office of the Canadian Football League team. Galat is the seventh general manager in the 33-year history of the CFL club and succeeds Bob Ackles, who left last month to become vice-president of pro personnel of the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League. The newest Lion lived up to his reputation as a smooth talker during his first day on the job. “I run the restaurant and I've got the best chef in the business,” he told reporters in reference to head coach Don Matthews, an unsuccessful applicant for the front-office job. “My job is to see he has the finest food to cook with.” Galat, 44, was general manager of the Montreal Alouettes for the 1964 and 1985 seasons — and head coach for all but two games during that period — and was in charge of the Montreal operation until the arrival of new Alouette president Norm Kimball from the Edmonton Eskimos during the off-season. “The responsibility in Montreal was more than just a job, it was a life,” Galat said. “It took a little bit of the edge off when Norm came in, I have to be honest about that.” Galat said his responsibilities with the Als were reduced with Kimball in charge. “I think I learned a lot from Norm in the short period of time we were together,” Galat said. “He's a solid guy in the personnel department. “It was a great experience for me, but I guess if you honestly look back on it, Norm's arrival made me free to go.” Galat promised he will not interfere with Matthews and his coaching staff. When he first applied for the B. Cc. position, Galat said the first thing he would do is give Matthews and the assistant coaches a pay raise Matthews said he applied for the front-office job — he was interim general manager for a month after Ackles’ departure — because he is looking for long-term security The Lions have won three Western Division regular season titles and one Grey Cup championship since Matthews became head coach in 1983 and B.C. leads the CFL this season with a 5-1 record going into Saturday's game at B.C. Place Stadium against the Saskatchewan Roughriders. “I think Don's the best man who has ever coached in Canada,” Galat said. “I'm going to treat him that way. “T'm going to talk to him about his contract. If he wants to stay in Vancouver, we owe it to him to keep him here.” an assi coach in Es for six years before joining the Lions, has a three-year agreement running through 1987. pean club g last year's Heysel Stadium riots in Brussels at the European Cup champions final between Liverpool of England and Juventus of Italy. Liverpool fans were widely blamed for starting the vio lence that led to 39 deaths, most of them Italian. Denis Howell, the opposition Labor party's spokesman on sports, demanded Saturday an “urgent and penetrating” government inquiry into the shipboard brawl. ‘STOP THESE ANIMALS’ “It is quite ludicrous for the government to pretend that it does not have the powers to stop these animals leaving the country,” Howell said. “What has happened is that friendly foreign governments are being forced to do our dirty work.” The Press Association, Britain's domestic news agency. says Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher recently held a meeting of soccer authorities and government ministers to review what had been achieved as a result of previous efforts to curb soccer violence. Those efforts included increased police powers of arrest, a ban on alcohol inside ‘grounds and closed-circuit monitors to pinpoint instances of violence. Castlegar pro-am golf team third third place in a 3i-team tournament to see who will Aug. 28-29 in St. John’s. Vietoria Golf Club won the 18-hole tournament and will represent B.C. at the cham- ionshi The Victoria team with pro Mike Parker and amateurs Ian Craig, Don Straith and Hal Hallatt had a Stapleford DENNY McARTHUR led team to third Mark Forest of Shaugn essey Golf Club and Mike Burrows from Glacier Green tied for the low score for pro- fessionals at 70. The 31 teams in the tournament raised $20,000 $12,000 goes to Children's Hospital in Vancouver, while the remainder goes to the B.C. Golf Association. Since the Canadian tourn ament began in 1973, $631,000 has been raised Last season, there were far fewer cases of soccer violence in domestic games. When English fans generally behaved well at the World Cup finals in Mexico in June, soccer bosses hoped that UEFA, the European soccer body, would lift its ban on English teams playing in the three major European club competitions. ‘The national English team so far has been unaffected by the ban. “In fact ibe whole situation has been aggravated. “If this continues, they have no chance of getting back.” Mueller takes training run LAS LENAS, Argentina visibility. (AP) — Peter Mueller of In the day's run, Pirmin Switzerland was fastest Sat- Zurbriggen of Switzermnd urday in a trial for the in- came in second at 2:06.16 and augural men's downhill race Markus Wasmeier of West of the 1986-87 World Cup Ski Germany third at 2:06.30. cireuit, covering the 3,480- Also in the top 10 were metre Jupiter course in two minutes 5.39 seconds. The completion of the trial Switzerland, 2:07.24; Michael ensured a start today, wea ther permitting, for the race itself, which was postponed a day because of delays in con- ducting the training runs due to warm temper atures. Another trial scheduled for this afternoon was cancelled when a light fog reduced Mair of Italy, 2:07.26; Roman Rupp of Austria, 2:07.50, and Alberto Ghidoni of Italy, 2:07.53. Today's race will be tele- vised in Canada by The Sports Network cn a delayed basis starting at 2:30 p.m. Castlegar time. KIJHL player fined, jailed By Canadian Press CRANBROOK — A one-day jail sentence given a B.C. Junior B Hockey League player for assaulting a referee last winter shows the courts are clamping down on violence in hockey, says the league's former president. president. Provincial court Judge Michael Hubbard fined Ian Walters of Invermere, B.C., $500 and ordered he spend one day in jail for cross-checking referee Ed Bannatyne from behind, then beating him as he lay on the ice. Walters was playing for the Columbia Valley Rockies at the time. “I think it’s a message by the judicial system that even the courts aren't going to tolerate this as part of the game,” said Terry Skarbo, past president of the Kootenay International Hockey League The incident took place Feb. 22 during a playoff game against the Cranbrook Colts. Skarbo, head of the Junior B division of the B.C. Amateur Hockey Association and an RCMP officer said there have been hockey players charged with assault but he believes this is the first jail sentence given to a junior player He said considering the severity of Bannatyne's injury — he was off work a month with severe whiplash _ Walters, 22, is lucky he didn't go to jail for six months. Skarbo said if Bannatyne, 35, had been hit several centimetres higher, his neck could have been broken. His association would support more jail terms, if warranted, as a means to clean up violence in hockey, he said.