HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1971-09-09, Page 6See theft now!
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THE WHITE GOLD OF INDIA
A small girl in the Kodai mountains of Southern India
carries away a tin of USC powdered skim milk. She is already
thriving on the USC's latest public health scheme which selects
the most undernourished children in the area in one of its
most successful feeding programs. At a weekly distribution
children receive milk, raw carrots, protein-rich biscuits, a
package of wheat flour or lentils as well as tonics and vitamins.
A second program helps to feed some of the oldest members
of the community who are served a nourishing mid-day meal
six days a week costing the USC only 10 cents a head per day.
Future generations will judge us on how we cared for our
oldest and our youngest. The Unitarian Service Committee is,
at 56 Sparks Street, Ottawa.
6 Clinton News-Record, Thursday, SeptaMbar 9,1971
Colts play .Hagersville
Saturday for OBA crown
ead OBA semi-final series
BY BERT CLIFFORD
Two victories over Wilkesport
put the Colts into the OBA
championship for the second
time in the past three yeers.
A 1-1 tie stood up until the
sixth when the Colts romped for
six runs including an opening
home run shot by Laurie
Colquhoun. Colquhoun's homer
opened the door to three more
hits in the inning by Stu
Mustard, Butch Fleet and Don
Bartliff.
Scoring in. the 7-1 victory
were Archie Pickett (2),
On Sunday, August 29 the
Clinton Water Polo team went to
London and placed fourth in a
six-team tournament,
The bench-strength of
London-Gibbons,
London-Glencairn and Brantford
outlasted the Clinton team who
played four games with no
substitutes as compared to the
other teams who played two,
games with substitutes.
In the opening game the local
boys sent Mitchell on their first
loss 6-0. Scorers were Pete
The Huron-Perth
Tuberculosis and Respiratory
Disease Association plans to do
Lung Function Tests at the
Stratford Fair. This was
announced by Mrs. Edith Fisher,
Mitchell, Education Chairman of
the organization at a recent
meeting in Seaforth.
Routine reports were given by
Mrs. Fisher, Rev. Garbutt Smith,
Stratford, Mrs. David Schenck,
Seaforth, Tom Leiper,
Londesboto and Mr, Lloyd
Dodgson, Stratford. President
Ivan Forsyth, Kippen, presided.
Mr. Smith said industries in
the area were being approached
systemically regarding lung
function testing of employees
and that four surveys already
had been completed. Mrs.
Fisher reported that the two
bursary recipients would be
Colquhoun, Bob Livermore,
Fleet, Brad Dutot and Don
Bartliff.
During the first five innings
Pickett, Mustard, Hans
Leppington and Brad Dutot had
hit out scattered singles, Archie
Pickett who returned to his fine
control pitching chucked a great
game. He gave up an opening
walk which eventually scored on
Wilkesport's first hit, a double
into centre field. From then on
he gave up five further singles
and walked only one.
Pickett picked up from
Saturday's game his control on
Cameron (3), Robbie MacAuley
(2), and Rob Andrews (1).
An hour later, Clinton was
outclassed 81.0 by
London-Gibbons. Another hour
after that game Clinton walked
over Ingersoll 10-4. Scoring ,for
Clinton was Pete Cameron (7),
Doug Peterson (2), and Rob
Andrews. In the night cap game
for the consolation,
London-Glencairn beat Clinton
5.0, In the championship game,
London-Gibbons outlasted
Brantford 5-4 to take the
addressing members in the near
future and that Mrs. Schenck
and Mrs. Edith Brothers,
Stratford, who attended the
International Union Against TB
meeting in Russia, would show
slides and give a travelogue to
members. Mrs. Schenck has eight
engagements to speak to area
groups but Mrs. Brothers
unfortunately, is hospitalized
and unable to participate for the
time being.
Mrs. Schenck said that Dr.
Norman Epstein, Director of
Allergies, St. Joseph's Hospital,
Toronto, will address a public
meeting on Friday, September
24th, in Stratford. She added
that inhalation therapy
compressor pumps are still in
great demand and that drugs had
been provided these and other
respiratory disease sufferers. If
to preview the
Sunday in Wilkespert by
allowing only five hits and no
walks, The Colts pushed across
three runs in the seventh,
enough to take the game 3.0 and
the series.
Pickett was just as hot at the
plate. He picked up three hits
and was safe on two errors by
the shortstop, With two out, two
on (Brad Dutot and Don
Bartliff), Pickett drove in the
two runs on an error by the
shortstop. Wilkesport committed
three errors in a row to help
Clinton in the three run seventh
inning.
Wilkesport never had a man
reach third base and only in the
seventh two men on base.
Manager Len Fawcett expects
to begin the three out of five
series this coming weekend with
Hagersville. Watch the ball sign
downtown for the time.
tourney. Final standings were:
Dondon-Gibbons, (2-0);
Brantford (7-1), London.
Gibbons (2-1), Clinton (2.2),
Mitchell (0-2), Ingersoll (0-2).
Players and positions for
Clinton were: Rob MacAuley
(LW), Rete Cameron (C), Rob
Andrews (RW), Doug Peterson
(ROVER), Bill Irwin (LD), Ray
Wheeler (RD) and Paul Wheeler
(GOALO. •
Although Clinton didn't place
in the top three, they came out
on top of the new teams.
parents consent, children with
asthma in the counties of Huron
and Perth are to be researched at
the University of Guelph, which
has received a grant from the
Ontario Tuberculosis and
Respiratory Disease Association
for the project,
.41•••••••00TOTIP.....•PWM..P.I.WW.NW...
EVEN CANADA'S
FOREST LIMITED
A -major future forest
management problem in Canada
will be to satisfy the many
demands placed upon forest
land. Some uses such as
accessible recreation and wood
harvesting are compatible, while
othere',, like wilderness
preservation, require reservation
of large single-purpose preserves.
Ponies
ay BERT CLIFFORD
A hair raising finish gave the
Ponies a 6-5 Win over Bolton in
the third and final game of the
Ontario Baseball Association
quarter finals.
:Bolton was leading 5-3 in
the seventh when Robert Harkes
lead off the inning with a pop up
to short, Pat Phillips followed
with a single and went to third
on Terry Gordner's ground-out
to first Wee.
With two out, Pave Counter
worked his way to a 3-2 count
then fouled off seven straight
foul balls and finally the Bolton
pitcher put one outside to put
Counter on.
The Bolton manager changed
pitchers and on the first pitch
Don Peterson cracked out a
double, scoring the two runners,
Neil Colquhoun sent a long fly
into center field for the third
out.
A young lady from the
Clinton area recently returned
from Calgary where she
participated as a member of the
Kitchener Kieswetters Ladies
Fastball Team, in the Canadian
women's fastball championships.
The Kitchener team
demonstrated its Ontario
domination by defeating teams
from Milverton, Willowdale,
Agincourt, Toronto, Waterloo,
Tilsonburg and Fort Erie in the
Ontario elimination tournament
earlier in August. This gave them
the right to participate in the
nationals against teams from
Newfoundland, Quebec,
Saskatchewan, Alberta, British
Columbia and the Yukon.
The Kitchener Kieswetters
representing Ontario, defeated
the teams from Alberta, Quebec
and British Columbia to win the
1971 Canadian women's fastball
Championship. This is the first
time the trophy has been East
since 1968.
Miss Sandra Graham played
fastball both during the 1970
and 1971 seasons with the
Milverton Winstonettes but
Kitchener elected to pick her up
for the Canadian tournament.
Miss Graham is a 17-year-old
student at the Central Huron
Capital outlays
The impressive amount of
money earmarked for new fixed
assets this year provides reason
for confidence about the
Canadian economy, The
Financial Post comments.
The year-to-year rise in
capital outlays is the largest
since the expansive days of 1966
when Canada was building
rapidly towards Expo 67 and
other centennial celebrations.
The $19,622 million program is,
moreover, very likely to be
accomplished despite the
uncertainties created by last
week's U.S. import surcharges.
The Financial Post points out
that the program is heavy with
government spending.
Outlays by governments of all
levels are expected to be up
Terry Gardner had a
ground-out and a strike-out
before giving up a single in the
eight. Shortstop Robert Harkes
got the third out.
In the eighth, Paul Priestap
lead off the inning with a
chopper to second base, the
fielder over-threw on the .throw.
Paul stole second, went to third
base on Dave Clynick's hit, then
scored on Mark Nieholsan's
second hit of the game.
Mark had scored two early
runs, one in the second and one
in the fourth. The little left
hander from Bolton held the
Ponies to three hits until the
seventh, Robert Harkes with a
double, Dave Counter and Mark
Nicholsan with singles. Clinton's
other run came in the sixth
when Neil Colquhoun walked,
stole second third and scored on
"Moses" Priestap's sacrifice -fly.
The pitching for Clinton was
Secondary School in Clinton.
She resides with her parents at
R. R. 1 Brucefield. Active in
high school sports, she
participates on volleyball,
basketball, badminton, golf and
track and field teams. During the
1968-69 season, she was noted
the most valuable junior athlete
at the school. As a catcher, Miss
Graham has been playing
organized fastball since age 12
first with the Brucefield
Bombers then with the
Milverton Winstonettes. The
Milverton team competes in the
Ontario Senior "A" league
against teams from Agincourt,
Willowdale, Toronto, Fort Erie
and Kitchener. In her first year
with Milverton, Sandra was
noted the most valuable member
of her team and at the Ottawa
'mutational Tournament was
named the batting champion.
In Calgary, Miss Graham was
a valuable member of the
Kitchener club until she was
stopped in the final day of
competition by an ankle fracture
while sliding into second base.
Nevertheless, Miss Graham was
named to the All—Star team as
catcher for her valuable
contribution both as a catcher
'and battef:
from last year by 13 percent.
The largest increase in spending
by business and government will
be in construction, not in
machinery which may be
adversely affected by the U.S.
moves.
For the longer haul, however,
the 4 percent decline in spending
by manufacturers (to $3,049
million) is a matter for concern,
The Financial Post comments.
Business activity is plainly not
growing quickly enough to
encourage faster expansion on
this front. Manufacturing is a
key provider of jobs. If the U.S.
surcharges remain in force for
any length of time, there may
even by a further scaling down
in this area.
done by Mark Nicholson for five
and one-third and Terry Gordner
for the last third innings,
Nicholson gave up only five hits
while striking out seven. In the
fifth, Bolton scored three runs
On a home run which shot
between Peterson and
Colquhoun and went almost to
the track before Donnie could
catch up with it, Although
Clinton has gained the Ontario
Baseball Association playoffs the
past three years, this is the first
time they have advanced past
the first round. The three games
ended 10-3 for Clinton, 8-5
for Bolton and 6-5 in the third.
O.B.A. SEMI—FINALS
Clinton 3 — Rockcliffe 0
After their exciting finish
with Bolton on Saturday, the
Ponies had to travel to Ottawa
the next morning to play CFB
Rockeliffe.
The bus left ,at 6 o'clock and
the club arrived right on time at
2 o'clock.
• One hour and 20 minutes
later Terry Gordner pitched his
club to a 3-0 win and a one
game lead in the best of three
series for the Ontario Baseball
Association semi-finals. Gordner
had just a fantastic game,`
striking out 13 batters and giving
up one hit in the fifth which
shortstop Robert Harkes just •
missed in throwing out the hitter
at first base. Eventually this
runner was tagged out at home
when he tried to steal home on a
pass ball.
Rockcliffe had only one
other runner and he earned the
only walk off Gordner in the
second. Although the records
show a one hitter, right fielder
Mark Nicholsan robbed
Rockcliffe of two sure home
runs on two great catches.
Nicholsan came up with a diving
catch in the seventh to help
preserve the one hitter.
Clinton started off with the
bases loaded on a hit player, a
walk on Neil "Wiener"
Colquhoun's single, but three
strike-outs nullified the rally.
Paul Priestap picked up a single
in the third with two out. He
stole second then went to third
on Mark Nicholsan's hard infield
hit. With Harkes at the plate,
Priestap stole home on a pass
ball. In the fifth, Neil
Colquhoun scored on Dave
sacrifice hit.
Colquhoun belted out three
singles for his best hitting action
since returning to the lineup
after injuring his finger early in
the summer. Dave Counter
scored in the seventh on
Colquhoun's third hit.
At the conclusion of the
game, the team coach for
Rockcliffe was evidently deeply
put out that a team could travel
for nearly eight hours and be
able to come up with some of
the best ball playing that area
had ever seen. Rockcliffe is
supposed to be here in Clinton
this Saturday, but their manager
is not sure if the team can make
the trip. In the event that
Rockcliffe doesn't come, then
the Ponies will play Dresden in
the first game of the Ontario
Baseball Association
championship. Dresden
eliminated Hagersville this past
weekend in two straight games.
If Rockcliffe does make the trip,
then if a third game is necessary,
it will be played Sunday
morning at 10 o'clock.
Team members are:
Pitching, Terry Gordner, Pat
Phillips, Mark Nicholsan;
catchers, Dave Counter, Steve
Steep; first base, Doug Riehl,
Dave Archibald, Mark Nicholsan;
second -base, Dave Clynick,
Ricky Blake; shortstop, ftebert
Harkes; third base, Paul Priestap;
left field, Don Peterson; center
field, Neil Colcmhetim right
field, Mark Nicholsan, Pat
Phillips, Paul Wise, Doug
.$ c h oe n h als; manager, Bert
Clifford; coaches, Oord
Rick Fortune, Wally Gordner;
batboys and girls, Errin Phillips,
Dave Clifford, and Ricky
Gordner,
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Water polo team places well in London
TB association to give lung tests
at Stratford fair
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