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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1998-01-28, Page 15SOUND NLASTFN 16 3 Vear P 8. L W., rani, 2.0 GB oqf 33.6 Fax Dalt •Modem est Vear Onsite Service 16X CD ROM DRIVE 2 MB ATi VIDLO M,tresott 97 IPC SB•5200m Intelligent Personal Computers SOUND NLASTEN 64 3 Vear P & L war...tny 3.2 GB . 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PredenMlNy *so. ovaro• Wale 97 •l11ee1w77 • M c rIc11 eMn Yee !89 Activity Boodle • Virtue Wier K • mail • _ • 3 VC.di Warrior movies $69 fita Brother 1111.Law 730 '11;arsiii .399 fitik Canon 250 /•rrwrw :'199 Internal Voke 411% N/,- 33.6....9 56_109 NIS ADD A MONim $41 -ire 17M SVGA 6649 MTC COMPUTER SYSTEMS l,7tt SCOTT 5T.. KINCARDINE • !.1c1 :ISLE. a?74 OI%,rr+l fY/$.. A. Amami -.41~1 r. (411,01r.111 #( eel •/./4"., rb tbl,.'we, b• C /ell r.-rr- W 444.44e 4.4.44 ww,wee •'-,••/, .e.r-.. t.A,r .,Vr,,r,•yN-en A- .'suye . nl •. 44111,1le /MN MM„ M Nr-r..t".rW+,Il AMP 15, . Nb 41 4, Peel Yr 14111014 .rr in .0. •en.*Y• few.- 'e - t Mee 4•.r .'4M,M1 •,e-V,.M • v. 414..1•." ,1 '• AV -r„ free', • nm% 32MB EDO RAM 14 -THE MOON EXPOSITOR, danwry 211. 1!M `Heart and Stroke Month' kicks off in town with special events Friday Help kick oft "Heart and Stroke Month" in Seaforth. this Friday. From 11 a.m to 2 p.m. enjoy a soup luncheon at the local curling club, including soup, sandwiches, dessert and beverage, all for the low price of $5. At 3 p.m., a flag- raising ceremony will be held at Town Hall. On Saturday you can come out and "Curl for Heart," open to all ages. Entry forms and more information can be obtained by calling Mike or Nancy Hak at 527-2936. Come out and enjoy Great Fun and Great Prizes. Frozen "Meals on Wheels" are available in Seaforth. The service is flexible, with meals delivered every two weeks for regular oven, toast- er oven or microwave. Choose from regular diets, diabetic diets, vegetarian diets, puree diets, and vari- eties of soups and desserts. You can choose and prepare your meals to suit your indi- vidual schedule. This service is offered by the Town and County Support Services. For more information please call them at 1-800-563-8246, or 482-9264. First NHL goal Boyd gets ape off back It took a long time coming, 31 games in fact, but Seaforth's Boyd Devereaux finally got the gorilla off his hack. He popped his first goal in the National Hockey League late last Tuesday night. It came at 1 l :17 of the third period at Edmonton and was the Oilers' final goal, against Nikolai Khabihutin, capping their 6-2 triumph over the Phoenix Coyotes. it was Edmonton's sixth - straight win. Boyd'sfirst goal was assist- - ed by detenceman Boris Mironov and Oilers' goalie Curtis Joseph, in front of the 14,842 fans who officially attended. The goal, along with four assists he had previously recorded this season. in which he has been used rela- tively sparingly as a rookie, gave Devereaux a total of five points. Until this weekend, recently Boyd was filling the spot of injured Tony Hrkac in Edmonton's lineup. Meanwhile, fellow Oiler Rem Murray from Duplin, in his second NHL season, had six goals and eight assists for 14 points after 35 games. Another local player under contract with Edmonton but currently down on the farm at their American Hockey League affiliate at Hamilton, rookie Mike Watt of Egmondvillc, was fifth in team scoring for those Bulldogs as of last Wednesday with 14 goals and nine assists for 23 points in 28 games. He scored his first NHL goal, and a couple of assists, when he was up with the Oilers for 14 games short- ly before Christmas. `Triple A's' second season Well into its second season. "triple A" minor hockey in this region has beeli'a mixed success on the ice: As, of last week, the six teams of Huron -Perth Lakers in the Pavillion League of the • Ontario Hockey Alliance had a combined record of 33 wins. 105 losses and 19 ties, which works -out to a,winning percentage of :309. Those half-dozen teams had scored 331 goals, and had 767 scored against them, according to last week's sta- tistics. The Huron -Perth grouping had seven teams in its inau- gural season hut,did not ice a midget squad this year. The most successful age level for the Lakers this sea- son has been major bantam (aged 15), coached by Roy Gingerich of Seaforth. The H -P major bantams led the five teams in the Pavillion's West Division by seven points last week from 17 wins, six losses and four ties, ' and had scored 117 goals and allowed 87. On the other hand, thc H -P minor atoms (aged 10) were pointless in 26 starts, 22 points to the rear of thc fourth -place team immediate- ly above them in thc stand- ings. They had scored 23 goals and given up 320. Seaforth and arca has a number of players who opted for triple A this season. Tyler Vandcrmolen from Broomball... CONTINUED from Page 8. lions of saves and the rest of the team all played superb. However. Winthrop were not really Warriors. They couldn't do anything right, as thc score indicates. Royals 0 Grads 1 Royals seemed to hit every- thing around the net except into the opening between thc posts. Better luck next week guys. The Grads had trouble all night and were lucky to score by Tony Van Den Heuvel with assistance from Joe Vink and Craig Smith: Cyclones 1 Juveniles 0 Juvies always give teams a run for their money. i do mean run as they can all run like deer. Thcy also have more wind and seem to last longer on the ice. The seniors seemed to loose their cool and turn to physical contact, but first they have to catch thc Juvies. The Cyclones finally pop in a goal, credited to Adam O'Neil, assisted by brothers Mac and Willy O'Neil. McKillop Township plays for those atoms. Tyler Elligsenfrom near Walton play for the major atoms. and his brother Nick plays for the H -P major, pee- wees. Calahan O'Reilly from Tuckersmith Township plays .for the major atoms. and his father Brian coaches. Steve Henderson from Egmondvillc plays for the major peewees. Derek Akcy plays for the major bantams and A.J. Larivec plays for the minor bantams. Larivec also plays as an affiliate with the Ontario Hockey Association's Thamesford Trojans. Darren Akey also helps out with the Laker bantams, and his father, Const. Charles Akey, of Seaforth, remains president of the organization. A couple of area players who went triple A in its first season, returned to play in the Seaforth and District Minor Hockey Association this year. Curtis Wilson of the local,bantams and Chris Longstaff of the peeyrees. , f Recreation Preview by Marty Bedard The Seaforth Co-operative Children's Centre offers an exciting after-school pro- gram. Activities planned are cooking, growing crystal gar- dens, working with ceramics and playing basketball. if these interest you, call the children's centre and ask The local co-operative chil- dren's centre also realizes that seniors could make a wonderful and important addition to its learning envi- about joining this group. it runs from 3:30 to 6 p.m. each weekday after school. ronment. There are many opportunities and experiences seniors could participate in there. For more information on the above please call them at 527-0682. Please note that today's shuffleboard (Wednesday) will end at 3 p.m. and there won't he any shuffling next Wednesday (Feb. 3).Other than that, senior shuffleboard continues every Wednesday afternoon at the Seaforth & District Community Centres starting at 1:30 p.m. Last LACAC organizes groups Seaforth's local architectur- al conservation advisory committee is "tentatively organizing a special meeting of all the LACACs and her- itage groups in the county in an effort to discuss and plan for restructuring and its The meeting is scheduled impact on heritage groups." for our Town Hall on deputy -clerk Cathy Garrick Heritage Day" in the reported to council on Jan. Ontario, Feh. 16. 13. County museum director Claus Breede is helping with the agenda, and inviting members of the defunct Huron heritage network, per- haps to resurrect it. Ice-flooder soon needed The five municipalities who run the Seaforth and District Community Centres may end up contributing about $7,235 Tess to its operation this year. compared to last. In draft budget discussions. the management committee has set $17.500 in municipal contributions as its target for 1998. This amount is down from $24,735 in 1997. "The target amount will include $10,000 for capital expenditures thereby reduc- ing the municipal contribu- tion for revenue fund expens- es to $7.500 for 1998," min- utes of December's manage- ment committee meeting state. "The committee also dis- cussed the need to fund the replacement of the ice-flood- er in the very near future which will be a capital expense of approximately $75,000. "Some of thc ideas dis- cussed to supplement the Bedard finally gets computer Seaforth Council approved the purchase of a new com- puter for recreation director Marty Bedard at its 'Jan. 13 meeting. It cost $1,799.75, which includes a $150,trade-in on his old system. from Computer Planning Centre of Seaforth. `the Intel Pentium 166 MMX CPU unit was the low- est of three re -submitted quotes. municipal funding of major capital equipment were the establishment of a Foundation for capital equip ment and enlisting the help of service clubs." weeks winners were: Ladies: Elsie Southgate Beth Pryce Inge Lindemann Men., Gordon Murray Earl McNaughton Bruce McLean 361 358 341 374 309 283 Winners on Jan. 14 were: Ladies: Jean Lunn Joyce Bailey Elsie Southgate Men: Bruce McLean Earl McNaughton Gordon Murray 397 371 333 388 387 358 6uperstations arrive There are now four new. "superstations" to watch for those television viewers in the area who subscribe to Mitchell Seaforth Cable TV Limited. Atlanta, Chicago, New York and Boston "supersta- tions" were moved to thc arca cable company's regular package, from its movie net- work package, on Jan. 14. To make room, other sta- tions were moved to new locations. The cable company says phase two of its channel realignment will follow this spring. 18" GREY MARKET UPGRADE PROGRAM Trade Your 18" U.S. System in for the Equivalent Amount of Programming THE BEST CANADIAN & US PROGRAMMING STAR . CMO/CE ASK THE EXPERTS Allen Stubb.40 ...Fwt lot BgFmtlaiwweNi. THEDFORD Your Authorized Sales, Installation & Service Depot Phone Orders Accepted Fax 519-296-5566 1-800-263-0626 www.allenstubbs.com STAR cHoscE Thiniil business PC solution. IPC SB•5166m MINI SIntelligent Personal Computers TOWER MINIM' CASE Microsoft ,mss: Office 97 • 11ersntt nerd • Minna End - snail business edition • Slimed! Mawr is inchoate) with all • Mho Oudot WCs/ swifts stows. •r or trier. r.r. Visit our web-sf• at: www.ipc.ca or call us toll free at: 1.888.446.4472 •