HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1976-01-08, Page 12SOUTH HURON DISTRICT HIGH SCHOOL
Exeter - 235-0880
Evening Class Programme
for Courses Beginning the week of January 12, 1976
1. Pottery
2. Sewing 1
(Beginners)
3. Sewing 2
(Learning the Basics)
4. Sewing 3
(Intermediate)
5. Sewing 4
(Knits, men's pants:
shirts)
6. Lingerie Sewing
7. Furniture Repair
& Refinishing
8, Bridge Instruction
9. First Aid
(St. Johns Ambulance)
10. Metric Conversion
11, Pet Care
12, Parent Workshop on
helping your child
with reading problems
13. Theatre Workshop
14. Personal Growth
& Awareness
15. Basic-inside the
house-Repairs
16. Woodworking Course
for Women
17. Basic Cabinet Making
10 sessions
10 sessions
10 sessions
10 sessions
10 sessions
10 sessions
10 sessions
10 sessions
8 sessions
5 sessions
8 sessions
5 sessions
10 sessions
10 sessions
10 sessions
10 sessions
10 sessions
Thursday 7:30-9:30 p.m. $7.00.
Thursday 7:00-9:00 p.m. $7.00
Tuesday
7:30-9:30 p.m. $7.00
Monday
8:00-10:00 p.m. $7.00
Monday
6:30.8:00 p.m. $7.00
Wednesday 7:30-9:30 p.m. $7.00
Tuesday 6:30-8:30 p,m. $7.00
Thursday 7:30-9:30 p.m. $7.00
Thursday 7:30.9:30 p.m. $12.50
(The fee includes book and material)
Thursday 7:30-9:30 p.m. $5.00
Thursday . 7:30-8:30 p.m. $5.00
(to start Feb. 17)7:30-9:30 p.m. $5.00
Tuesday
7:30-9:30 p.m. $7.00
Tuesday
7:30.9:30 p.m. $7.00
Tuesday
8:30-10:30p.m. $7.00
Thursday
7:304:30 p.m. $7.00
Wednesday
7:30-9:30 p.m. $7.00
INTERESTED PERSONS PLEASE NOTE:
1. Please call the school - 235-0880 to register for the courses. Only those courses in which
there are sufficient registrations will be given.
2. The school will not be open on a regular basis for calls during the Christmas holiday period.
Please call during the first week of January.
J, L. Wooden, Principal
Intermediate "C"
Lucan Cyclones
VS
Petrolia
Tuesday, Jan. 13
8:30 p.m.
LUCAN ARENA
• Shoot-A-Rama
• $50 Door Prize drawn last home
game each month
Adults $1.25 Students 754 Public School 254
Pre-Schoolers - Free
Fast, Exciting
/11/011
EXETER ARENA
Friday, Jan. 9 - 8:00 p.m.
Belmont Sunsets
VS
Exeter Hawks.
LUCAN ARENA
Sunday, Jan. 11 - 6:30 p.m.
Lucan Irish
vs
Exeter Hawks
Steer
This
Way
BY
LARRY
SNIDER
Got a few chipped surfaces on
your car? Use touch-up paint
before rust sets in.
Recycling old tires, a new com-
pany has come up with a
rubber-wheeled chock to pre-
vent a parked car or truck
from rolling. They say it works
better than natural virgin
rubber.
* '
A good breakfast before a
day on the road reduces your
chance of an accident, accor-
ding to surveys.
*
Cars equipped with catalytic
converters must use unleaded
gas. Cars built in the U.S. after
1971 CAN use it, But earlier
models will develop valve
damage and engine knack on
unleaded fuel.
Drive
carefully.
ITS BEHIND ME - Hawks goaltender Randy Lovie looks back into the net after he was
scored upon in the game Tuesday night against the Seaforth Centennaires, The Hawks,
who were playing with a skeleton team of 11 players, lost 11-1. Jim Ferguson and Brian
Taylor are the other two Hawks in the picture along with Rick MacDonald and the uniden-
tified scorer from the Centennaires. Photo by Youngs.
The downtrodden Exeter Haw-
ks, plagued by injuries and the
lure of warmer climates like
Florida, dropped three games in
a row over the past week. The
three losses run their total to four
in a row.
The dismal week for the Hawks
started January 2 when they
were dumped 8-1 in a rough game
against the Lucan Irish, The
game was played at the Exeter
arena.
After a scoreless first period,
Lucan opened the scoring on a
power play goal, Jim Ferguson
had been off for 13 seconds on an
elbowing call when Craig Cor-
man set up Jim Maguire for the
, first goal of the game and the
first for the Irish.
Ed Robb added to the Lucan
total less then a minute late and
just 55 seconds after Robb it was
3-0 when Randy Kraul got the
first of his two goals, on passes
from Gary Issac and Maguire.
Exeter finally got on the
scoreboard at 10:11 when Brian
Taylor set Noel Skinner up for
Exeter's only marker.
It was all Lucan in the third,
Maguire, Robb and Kraut got
their second goals of the game,
and Mike McIntyre got an
unassisted marker.
Exeter got called for 15
penalties, including two majors,
for a total of 36 minutes. Lucan
managed to score four times
while they had the man ad-
vantage. Lucan also had a high
run of penalties, taking 18, in-
cluding three majors and a
match misconduct to Craig
Corman. Skinner's goal came on
a power play effort, with Gord
Moon off for interference.
A three goal third period gave
the second last place Port Stanley
Sailors a 6-3 victory over Exeter
when the two teams met Sunday
in Port Stanley.
Brian Taylor put the Hawks
ahead at 7:34 of the first when he
popped in the first marker on
passes from Rick Mommersteeg
and Matt Muller,
With 1:43 left in the period Jeff
Hoge tied the score to send the
two teams to the dressing room at
one apiece.
Ross Weaver put Port Stanley
ahead for the first time in the
game when he shoved the puck
behind goalie Randy Lovie at 8:46
of the second.
Rick Ingram came, back to tie
the game, on an assist from
Taylor at 14:39, just 30 seconds
before Rob Erison put Port
Stanley ahead again.
Taylor, who figured in all three
scoring plays for the Hawks, tied
it up for the last time when he
beat Roland Carey with assists
going to Don McKellar and Rick
Mommersteeg.
The game was all over within
the first minute of the third
period when Erison scored the
winner. Glen Golem added the
insurance marker at 6:10 and
Mark Weaver finished off the
scoring.
Port Stanley had the majority
of the penalties, taking 8 of the 14
called.
The lasting result of the game
for Exeter is not really the loss,
but the injury picked up by
captain Steve Jennison, who was
out of the lineup for the Hawks
match against Seaforth.
Jennison may have been happy
to have missed Tuesday night's'
game against the Centennaires,
as Exeter got bombed 11-1. They
played with only eleven players,
including goalie Lovie and as the
game wore on the pace began to
tell on them.
Seaforth opened the scoring at
50 seconds of the first. The puck
was left loose in front of the net
and Don Nicholson banged at it
before Cam Doig put it in for the
first goal.
The Centennaires came close
on several other occasions, in-
cluding one where Lovie was
caught out of the net and Jim
Ferguson was called on to block a
shot.
Seaforth increased their lead
on a power play goal by Doig, and
then made it 3-0 on a goal by
Steve Southgate.
Exeter had two late period
rushes stopped, one by Seaforth
netminder Lou Arts, when he
stopped three shots in a row from
point blank range before his
defence could get back to help
him, The other rush was nullified
when three Hawks broke in on a
lone Centennaire only to have the
play halted because of an injury
to teammate Cam Haist. Haist
was helped from the ice with a
bad ankle but returned later in
the game.
Seaforth made it 4-0 early in the
second when Nicholson let a short
shot go that caught the upper
right hand corner of the net.
Minutes later, after pressure was
applied by the Centennaires, the
Hawks started out of their own
end, only to have the puck stolen
at the blueline. Kevin Bennett
split the defense and broke in on
Lovie to score the fifth goal for
Seaforth,
After considerable pressure,
and some good goaltending which
tended towards acrobatics by
Lovie, Seaforth made it 6-0 when
Don McKellar was off for a
roughing call. The puck was
Twelve seconds into the third,
Steve Bennett picked up a loose
rebound and lifted it over the
prone Lovie, and a minute later
the puck was dumped in front of
the net again and Nicholson made
it 10-0 for the home team.
The Centennaires had to
contend with a much more
concerted effort by the Hawks
who began to press them in their
own‘end, but were unable to beat
Arts.
The Centennaires killed off two
back to back two man ad-
vantages, but were unable to kill
off a single penalty as Exeter got
on the scoreboard at 11:19.
Ingram set up McKellar who took
a shot and Fred Mommersteeg
banged the loose rebound to the
left side of the net for the Hawks
only point.
The Hawks continued to press,
but Arts foiled them time and
again. On several occasions had
the net been inches to the left or
the right, the Hawks would have
had more goals, but shots were
just missing corners.
Gerald Weido and Mom-
mersteeg put on a fine display of
forechecking and rushing, but the
combination of Arts and the lack
of men began to slow them and
they had to relax the pace again.
Randy McClinchey finished off
the scoring when he broke in
alone on Lovie added insult to
Injury plagued Hawks dump three
Standings as of December 19,
1975.
With half the regular schedule
behind them the Sassenachs
continue to hold down first place
with a total of 52 points. Close
behind in second spot are the
D.R.'s with 48. In third place
there is a three way tie between
the Scotties, Last Chance and the
Itchy Niters who each have 44.
Most number of games in the
mens division is held by Bill
Sanford of the Robins with 24.
Followed by Harvey Hillman of
the Scotties and Bill Lenk of the
Sassenachs with 21 each. In the
ladies division Marg Wragg of the
Last Chance has a total of 19,
Barb Hearn of the Itchy Niters
has 18 and Terry Heywood of the
Flying Highs has 17.
Schedule for January 8:
8:00 p.m.
Last Chance vs Supremes
Flying Highs vs Double 'W's
Wraggtime '4' vs Dead Enders
Scotties vs Inlaws
9:30 p.m.
D.R.'s vs Night Hawks
Sassenachs vs Itchy Niters
Robins vs Shiphunters
Winkers vs Outlaws
Gabian Stone
Calcium Chloride
in 100 pound bags
Sand & Stone
Gravel
Stone for
Weeping Beds
EARL LIPPERT
TRUCKING LTD.
Crediton 234.6382
Shades of the thirties! Hood
ornaments are back on some
new cars.
passed across the crease and
Jamie Caldwell .slid it under a
sprawled Lovie.
Arts came up with more
brilliant goaltending in the period
to preserve his shutout as the
Hawks tried to mount attack, At
one point he made a spectacular
save off a shot by Rick Ingram
that was destined for the lower
left corner had it not been for
Arts doing the splits and gloving
the puck.
The pace of the game began to
tell on the Hawks again, who
were not getting enough relief in
between shifts,
With Steve Bennet off for
Seaforth, the Hawks managed
only two shots on Arts in the
entire power play.
Rick MacDonald scored a
picture goal when he split the
Hawks defence and beat Lovie as
he was being hauled down by the
two Hawk defenders. Caldwell
finished off the period with a goal
to give the Centennaires a more
then comfortable 8-0 lead for the
third period.
Dart scores
injury for Seaforth's eleventh
goal.
Seaforth is running an
amazing total of goals up over the
past two games, In their previous
game they defeated Mount
Budges by the incredible score
of 23-1.
The three consecutive losses
drops the Hawks to sixth place.
Our cars have come a long way since
the thirties at Larry Sniders, Count on
the newest in comfort and safety
features.
Larry Snider
MOTORS LIMITED
EXETER 235-1640
LONDON 227-4191
Huron County's Largest
Ford Dealer
Page 12 Times-Advocate, January 8, 1975
Ali:kat Spor;
Be-bop-baloo the NHL seems to be all right, healthy
even. Clarence Campbell is a happy man . . . Canada revels
in its glory . , . New Year's Eve is a happy one . • hockey
is played like the old days, for now, anyway. Yes indeed, the
NHL comes through in the pinch, but will the NHL get
pinched?
I felt sorry for Ken Dryden on New Year's Eve,
There's no particular reason that I should, as the ubi-
quitous Mr. Dryden makes a lot of money, has achieved
considerable fame and is one of the best at ',what he has
chosen for his profession . . goaltender on a professional
hockey team, but New Year's Eve I felt sorry for Ken
Dryden.
As nearly everyone now knows, the Montreal Canadiens
tied the Soviet Central Red Army team 3-3 in one helluva
hockey game. Tying the Soviets is pretty good, but all of
Canada would like a chance at Ken Dryden now, to tell him
what a schmuck he is for letting in three goals, particularly
when he only faced 13 shots all night. It is, however, one of
those ironical things that the Canadiens superlative play
and brilliant game are what tied it for them.
Dryden may have faced only 13 shots all night, but con-
sidering that six of them came in the third period, he may
as well have gone into the first two periods without war-
mup. He was cold, he is used to facing six or seven shots a
period and when he doesn't meet up with them, the reflexes
tighten up and I can imagine a rather large lump forms
somewhere in the back of his throat as the anticipation of a
concerted effort by the Soviets and their incredibly over-
powering shooting looms in the back of his mind. When it
comes that lump chokes him, and what happens is that
goals are scored, like those New Year's Eve . . goals that
Mr. Dryden rarely lets in.
So, I felt sorry for Dryden. But, despite my feverish op-
position to these series, and my trepidation towards the
nationalistic fervor that they whip up, on Wednesday night I
was proud of les Canadiens.
Being the only truly Canadian representative in this
series, they stood up well, and in the end, the Soviet Red
Army team did not tie the Montreal Canadiens 3-3. No,
Vladistav Tretiak tied the Montreal Canadiens 3-3. The
other Russians were incidental and after the fact ac-
complices in a game that showed us exactly who was the
best goaltender in the world.
The Canadiens were superb, though. Bowman came out
and said that they would try and tie them up in their own
end and let them shoot from the boards but they had to keep
them out of the slot, and they did.
Each one of them came up with an effort that would
easily win them a Stanley Cup, and they showed exactly
why they have created such an incredible hockey dynasty.
At the end of the game they had Peter Mahovolich on
with the intermission hosts for a brief interview.
Mahovolich, who is humble in the most exciting of cir-
cumstances. was downright embarrassed I thought. He
apologized for not winning. It wasn't like the Soviets walked
across the Canadiens. or they stomped them into the
ground. Not as if the Canadiens hadn't skated like men
pbssessed, shot from every angle, forechecked their collec-
qive posteriors off. killed penalties like no one has ever
seen, passed with pinpoint perfection and held the Russians
like they were a team from the OHA. No, it seemed like
they had been stomped and Big Pete, who's excitement was
visible from the moment he skated onto the ice, felt bad
about it. He need not have, as the Canadiens proved
themselves admirably and in the end, it was one of, if not
the greatest hockey game every played between two of the
greatest teams ever.
Sunday was a slightly different story. Not to take
anything away from Buffalo, the Wings are a much weaker
sister to the Red Army. They also play without the benefit
of a Tretiak. in fact, their goaltending is downright dis-
gusting. However, Buffalo did put on an impressive show.
Considering the fact that they scored an even dozen, we can
allow them the defensive lapses that led to six going by
Desjardines.
The game was not as well played as the Montreal con-
test, but the Sabres did resurrect the image of hockey
before 1967 and they did make the previous contest between
the Wings and the Pittsburgh Penguins look absurd. Judg-
ing by the activities of the Wings on Sunday, the Penguins
should have won because the Wings looked that bad, and
there is a crucial reason that the Penguins lost and the
Sabers and Montreal did so well.
Montreal is one of the few, if not the only team that has
not chanted its style of play with the inception of expansion.
They are one of the two teams in the league who rely on
skating and out and out finess to win games and with the
possible exception of Pierre Bouchard, they have no real
physical players, and even Bouchard has slowed down.
Aha, you say, that klutz Youngs really blew it, pointing
the finger of stupidity at me as you think: but Buffalo is an
expansion team! However, to clear up any misconceptions
remember who is behind the Sabers. Punch Imlach, the
man who built the Leafs into the power house team that
they were in the Sixties has done the same sort of job in
Buffalo with the same style of players; real hockey players.
He and Sam Pollock of the Habs are old style types, the kind
who watch for skaters and play makers over top of fighters
and stick swingers. This is the important point to
remember when you consider the past two games against
the Soviets. That they were beaten by real hockey teams
who know the finer points of the game.
Also, this is the reason that the Central Red Army is go-
ing to put down the Philadelphia Flyers and the Boston
Bruins and the Wings will beat the Black Hawks.
The Flyers game is the important game in that they are
the defending champions but if they play their pattern of
bra wlomatic hockey they will have difficulty.
Coach Fred Shero of the Flyers has as much of a
system as the Red Army, but the cornerstone of his system
is intimidation and the Russians will not be intimidated as
witnessed by the New York Rangers.
In the beginning of this series Clarence Campbell said it
would be the most important series the NHL has yet
entered. He's right, but in a way that he didn't intend. Peo-
ple may well not want to settle for the sock 'em knock 'em
brand of glorified shinny that is now practiced by the ma-
jority of teams.
Arenas will still be sold out in the better hockey towns,
and there will still be money to be made from television
rights and youngsters will flock to enshrine Bobby Orr but
there will be the lingering memory of New Year's Eve 1975
when hockey was reborn, only to stumble its way back to
mediocrity and mundane play, In the end the NHL gets
pinched.
by Fred Youngs