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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1990-02-21, Page 11THE Ht1RON EXPOSITOR, FEBRUARY'21, 1990.'-,- ll.l caster Sie on ..SUFIANCE., 0,11PI ERs INC. Aute •;Holme • �'alt°ngi Branct�Fyjlganage`rx/p� ' Qjpy�� �j 4 1i3'�fLL �M) N►7d.14+MON COMMERCIAL & ME INSURANCE P.tq'0oz488 � ° 911CO". 88 On'q rIe Rd., . $us.9411.8150,__ . MITCHELL. OM.. ,34488tf ELECTRIC'LTD. 2294222.::.. +Electrical Contracting & -Maintenance - ......— . !Electric motor sales & service *Pole Line Construction •Bucket Truck Service •24 Hour Emergency Service w el. after 6:00 PM Cali 1-800-265-2938 TOM RAPSON 527-1643 LOOKS EASY ENOUGH... Sensei Murray Waldman, 6th Dan, demonstrates a move on his son, Sensei Robert Waldman, 4th Dan, during a Ju-Jitsu workshop at the Seaforth Karate centre on Saturday afternoon. The workshop continued until Sun- day afternoon with a number of local enthusiasts in attendance. Elliott photo. FREE FALLING - Chuck Hasson is assisted to the floor by his wife, Jean, during a two day Ju-Jitsu workshop at the Seaforth Karate Centre. Elliott photo. Fanshawe College offering basic seminar on athletic injuries SENIOR SHUFFLEBOARD continues every Wednesday afternoon from 1:30 to 4 p.m. at the Seaforth and District Com- munity Centres. All Seniors are welcome. Come out and enjoy Shuffleboard, Table Tennis, or Carpet Bowling. No Admission fee is charged. Last week's shuffleboard winners were: Ladies: Audrey McLean - 422, Isabel Gar- diner - 403 and Rose Pringle - 384. Men: Oliver Pryce - 369, Bert Welters - 346 and Gordon MacKenzie - 338. The Seaforth Recreation Department will be offering a MARCH BREAK PROGRAM again this year. It will be held March 12 to 16, 1990 at the Seaforth and District Community Centres. Activities will include sports, games, arts and crafts. Please watch The Expositor for more information, or call the Recreation Office at 527-0882. There will be no Public Skating this weekend due to the hosting of the AN- NUAL. ' KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS HOCKEY TOURNAMENT. This Tourna- ment will be held at the Seaforth and District Community Centres on Saturday, February 24 and Sunday, February 25. On RECREATION PREVIEW by (Recreation Director) Marty Bedard Saturday the Junior teams will play, and games will be held between the hours of 12 noon and 6 p.m. On Sunday the Senior teams will also play between the hours of 12 noon and 6 p.m. Come out and cheer on your local schools. Admission is $3 per Adult. FANSHAWE COLLEGE SCHOOL OF CONTINUING EDUCATION will be hosting a seminar on BASIC MANAGE- MENT OF ATHLETIC INJURIES. This seminar is designed for the weekend coach, teachers, or anybody interest to learn about basic athletic injuries. Course content will concentrate on identification and assessment of several specific athletic injuries, how to treat these common in- juries and basic tips on prevention and re- hab of the most common injuries. Lab por- tion will emphasize hands on skills such as taping, bandaging and basic joint assess- ment. Shorts and T-shirts required! This seminar will be held at Fanshawe College on Saturday, March 17 from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Registration Forms are available at my office, please drop in and pick one up. WORLD DAY OF PRAYER will be held on Friday, March 2 at 2 p.m. This year's host is the FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. The theme is "A Better Tomor- row - Justice for Alli';. Men, Women and Children are welcome. Babysitting will also be provided. THIS WEEK'S FITNESS TIP: Do you skip breakfast because you would rather get those few extra minutes of sleep? or just can't find the tame? Do you find breakfast boring and eat the same foods day after day? Do you suffer from Seaforth Atoms win WOAA title, Q -n• wee The second game of the Mitchell-Seaforth Atom best of three playoff series was - played in town on Saturday. Seaforth had won the first game in overtime and Mit- chell was determined to even the score at one game each. St* James bowlers in race for top spot The race for top spot in St. James bowl- ing league play becomes closer with only two points difference between each of the top five teams. The Coons moved up to third place this week by taking seven points from the Pythons. Top scorer for the Coons were Cathy Broome 200-580, Pat Nolan 220-577 and Bert Kloss 212-556. Jack Ryan led the Pythons with a 210-586 followed by Todd Caldwell 204-481. The Tigers moved into first place by tak- ing rive points from the Monkeys. Top scorers for the Tigers were George Love 290-711, Janice Morris 263-622 and Dave Moody 239-615. Murray Bennewies led the Monkeys with a 254-720 followed by Ken Moran 288-633. The top place Kangaroos fell back to se- cond place losing five points to the Leopards. Top scorers for the Kangaroos were Francis Feeney 223-631, Don Nolan 251-629, Rob Taylor 251-584 and Reg Chap- pel 208-515. Sue Stokes led the Leopards with a 246-673 followed by Karen Hoegy 226-605. The Ladies High Single this week was won by Janice Morris with a 263 and Sue Stokes took the High Triple with a 673. George Love took the Men's High Single with a 290 and Murray Bennewies the Tri- ple with a 720. Team Standings are: Tigers - 76, Kangaroos - 74, Coons - 72, Pythons - 70, Monkeys - 68 and Leopards - 59. Youth bowlers participate in steps to stardom 'competition The Youth Bowling Council held a tour- nament this month for four steps of stardom. Participants had to bowl eight games each. These people complete singly against others their age. They are Anette Haney, Tawm Bannon, Rob Holmes, Judy Horne, Tanya Boniface and Craig Harris. The YBC is also sending two teams of boys (one Bantam team and one Junior team) on in the competition. Team members are: Bantam - Chris Hoffman, Nick Dannhan, Tim McNaughton and Jeff Barry. Junior - Luke McMillan, Kevin McDonald, Shawn Anstett, Daryl Haney ane Chris Bach. Mitchell came outflying in the first period scoring two unanswered goals. Seaforth got on the scoreboard on a goal by Jason Smith assisted by Rob Craig and Derek Smith early in the second period. Mark Van Dooren then rushed down the ice and shot to the far side with a backhand but it went just wide. 'Chris Marion picked up the puck from the boards at the edge of the circle, manoeuvred into the slot and put it home with his spinorama. Chris gave Seaforth the lead for the first time in the game 15 seconds later. He took the face off and broke in on goal. He was checked by a Mitchell player who tried to clear the puck out of his end. Brandon picked off the pass and threw it into the corner to Jason Smith who slipped it in front to Chris Marion who drove it home. Mitchell wasn't 'about to give up yet as they came back in the third period to score two more goals only eight seconds apart. With only two minutes left in the ' game, the score was Mitchell 4 Seaforth 3. The play was in their end. Josh Dietz pass- ed the puck out of the corner to Chris Marion in front. He shot a backhand at close range. The goalie didn't hang on & Jason Smith picked up the rebound anu flipped it in over the sprawling goalie. This tied the score at 4-4 at the end of regula- tion time. Overtime again! The two teams played excellent hockey and kept the fans on the edge of their seats. Eight and one-half minutes went by before a goal was final- ly scored. Brent Hulley took a shot from RRSP DEADLINE is next Thursday March 1 WE'RE OPEN Friday, February 23 till 8 p.m. and Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Thursday, Feb. 26-28, March 1 till 5 p.m. TOP 1/2 % 1 Year t RATE interes TO / ... paid annually VARIABLE RATE now paying 11 % interestnue;y Clinton Community CREDIT UNION 70 Ontario Street, 374 Main Street, South CLINTON - 482-3467 *Rates subject to change EXETER - 235-0640 1 HURON SUPERIOR MEMORIALS ESTABLISHED OVER 60 YEARS morning blahs? Are you tempted to sneak a snack before lunch or nibble at other times in the day? If you answered YES to any of these questions, you may be in a BREAKFAST RUT! ! " In fact, breakfast is the meal most often skipped. Yet eating something nourishing in the morning helps you to get going. It provides energy and nutrients to work and think until lun- chtime. Children do better in school and are more lively as they play. Teens may be less likely to snack on "junk" foods during the day. Teens may be less likely to snack on "junk" foods during the day. Adults feel better, are more alert and more productive in their work. It is easy to find an EXCUSE for not eating early in the day. You may be on the run, watching your weight or not hungry for a meal in the morning. But breakfast can be a snack, simple and quick to prepare and eat. Skipping breakfast is no way to lose weight. It only tempts you to nibble bet- ween meals or eat more in the day. So remember, don't skip the most important meal of the day. e . d Serving Seaforth and It of 6Aavron County MICHAEL FALCONER 153 HIGH STREET, CLINTON Bus.: 482.9441 Res.: 482-3664 Evening appointments available the point but it was blmcked by a Mitchell player. Brandon Nash poked the puck in- to open ice. Mark Van Dooren picked up the loose puck and blasted it from the top of the face off circle over the goalie's stick side shoulder. With nothing to lose, Mit- chell pulled their goalie with one minute to play. The puck was in the Seaforth end. Pat Gridzak threw the puck up the boards to Chris Marion. Chris shot it off the boards to Shaun Anstett who was flying up the ice. He skated all the way to the Mit- chell net and steered the puck into the waiting goal. There were only 30 seconds left in the game. The final score was Seaforth 6 and Mitchell 4. This win gave the Seaforth Atoms the WOAA championship. Good luck against Exeter, guys! RRSP'S are not all the same Why save for retirement with an or- dinary RRSP. This year combine complete convenience with a flexi- ble RRSP that offers: *several savings choices *Mutual Fund options available •no ai xhiinistration costs *competitive rates *creditor protection if a family member is designated as beneficiary *instant Tax Receipt CALL TODAY Tony G. Arts 107 Main St. Seaforth, Ontario Seaforth: 527-0794 London 432-18. SunLife NOW DOES THIS WORK AGAIN? IT'S EASY: •Do you have papers, orders, documents, that have to be in Toronto, Vancouver, New York, Los Angeles, Paris, Rome, or Listowel today? Right now! *Ever faced with deadlines? MEET THEM WITH FAX Instant Document Transmission The Huron Expositor has a FAX machine In our office that lets you contact any other FAX machine in the world ... instantly. The Expositor offers you the service of the FAX for $4.00 for the first printed 89/2" x 11" sheet and $1.00 for each additional 81/2" x 11" sheet for transmission to Canada or the continental U.S. For transmissions to machines outside that area, or for sheets larger than 89/2" x 11", call for details. Our FAX number is also your number so If you want to be reached Instantly — we will receive your FAX message for $1.00 per 89/2" x 11" sheet. 01 �r Huron ositor p ,r> 527-0240 CaII us at 527-0240 for details.