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Orono Weekly Times, 8 Apr 1981, p. 4

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4-Orono Weekly Times, Wednesday, April 8th, 1981 SPORTS Tennant Fuel Atoms final player statistics Kevin Mumford Brent Hutton David Bailey Brian Hill Brian Goodwin Ted Gaudet Cti . ^ '±T > ^ ■ O O < D-i P-i 57 23 58 '81 20 56 48 28 76 6 56 41 33 74 24 56 29 27 56 12 56 17 19 36 8 57 13 11 24 8 Patrick Woods Todd Thertell Laurens Kaldaway Doug Bedford Jan Vanderheyden Mark Vanderheyden Todd Hutton Jeff Martin Jeff Graham 57 1 56 12 52 53 55 53 56 22 23 10 7 19 4 11 17 6 8 10 16 9 9 0- 7 7 9 6 6 2 Goals against avg. 2.69 Goals against avg. 2.89 Stutt Bantams eliminated in finals by Langton Stutts OMHA Bantams lost to Langton on Sunday, .April 5th in their fifth game of the Ontario Finals. It was a great series with 3 games being decided by one goal and one overtime decision. The Orono boys played very well and pushed Langton to the limit every gàmé. Game 1 - Orono 4, Langton 9 On March 25th Orono travelled to Langton to open their best of seven Ontario finals. Langton caught Orono off guard after a long 3 hour bus ride and the boys could not get on track. Scoring for Orono: Greg-Vey 3, Mike Hamel 1. Assists: Randy Tennant l, Mike Hamel 1, Ken Bailey 1, Steve Sawyer 1. Game 2 - Orono 2, Langton 3 Orono played host to Langton March 27th in their second game and came away with an overtime loss. Again penalties played a big part with Orono not being able to score from the penalty box. Fred Cashin put Orono on the scoreboard in the third period, assist going to Glyn Jenkins. Glyn Jenkins scored with 47 seconds left to tie it up at 2 all to force overtime, assists going to Mike Hamel and Greg Vey. Langton's Kevin Trembley scored on a deflection from the blue line, the puck eluded Geoff Green in net for Stutts., Orono put on the pressure but could not even the score. Game 3 - Orono 6, Langton 7 On March 29t.h Orono again travelled travelled to Langton and had them on the run but collapsed at the end of the seconcf period. Orono had Langton 6-3 midway through the second with Glyn Jenkins scoring number 7 only to have it called back on a penalty in Orono's end This seemed to turn the game around as the local boys became disorganized allowing Langton's No. 8 Neil Anderson to score 3 unanswered goals to tie the score at 6 all at the end of the second period. The third period was a 1-0 game again With Langton coming up with the win. Scoring for Orono: Mike Hamel 1, Greg Vey 3, Glyn Jenkins 1, Fred - Oashin 1, assists going to: Mike Hamel 1, Paul Morton 1, Steve Sawyer 1. Game 4 - Orono 4, Langton 3' , Back in Orono Langton again opened the scoring with 2 goals before Orono got on track scoring 4 unanswered goals. As in the last two games it was a close contest but the local boys gave it, all they had including great goal tending from Geoff Green and Rick Martin,to come up with a big well-deserved win. Scoring for Orono: Glyn Jenkins 2, Steve Sawyer 1, Mike Hamel 1, assists going to: Paul Morton 1,. Mike Hamel 2, Greg Vey 3. Game 5 - Orono 5, Langton 8 On April 5th Orono again travelled to Langton for their fifth meeting of the series, Langton again scored the first goal to set the pattern forcing Orono to come from behind. At the end of the second period the score was Orono 2, Langton 4. The Orono boys could not buy a goal with Glyn Jenkins beating Langton's goalie and bouncing it off the goal post, Greg Vey sliding it by the open corner and Murray Dennis missing the open net on a shot from the point. In the third period Orono scored 3 to Langton's 4. The boys never gave up being in the game to the very end pushing Langton to the limit. It has been a very good season for Stutts Bantams setting many records. They gave it all they had losing to a great team from Langton in five games. Scoring for Orono were: Greg Vey 1, Mike Hamel 2, Randy Tennant 1, Fred Cashin 1. Assists going to: Derek Mumford .1, Mike Hamel 1, Glyn Jenkins 1, Greg Vey 3, Paul Morton 1, Fred Cashin 1, Steve Sawyer 1. Stutts Bantams would like to thank their great fans for their support during the season and playoffs, see you next year at the arena. Statistics <D E C8 O ' 5 5 4 5 5 5 5 5 .5 5 5 D. Mumford M. Dennis R. Tennant P. Morton F. Cashin M. Hamel G. Jenkins S. Sawyer G„ Braechvogel Bailey Vey : Geoff Green Games played 5, goals against avg. 6 Rick Martin Games played 5, goals against avg. 6 Penalties 8.5 per game. Total goals for: 21; total goals against, 30. Total games: 54, won 47, lost 8, tied 3 0 0 0 1 0 3 5 4 1 0. o' 7 <d l 0 1 3 1 6 2 3 0* 1 0 2 3 4 11 6 4 0 1 14 ctt e <o a, 2 7 0 3 3 3 13 6 0 5 1 1 Midgets in • Ontario finals The second game of the Ontario finals was played on April 1st at Grand Valley. Orono came out on the short end by a score of 8-1. The only goal scored for Orono was by Steve Stec, assisted by Scott Prescott and Kirk Carr. Orono were never really in the game. On April 5th, Grand Valley returned to Orono for the third game of the series. In H this game Oronq played very sound hockey and before a packed house came out with a 3-2 victory. Orono went out in fronton the ■ 1st period with Steve Stec scoring from Ken Farrow. Orono went ahead 2-0 at 14:08 of the second period on a goal by Dennis Klawitter from Steve Stec and Paul King. Grand Valley came back late in the second to tie the score 2-2 going into the third. The winning goal came at 13:37 scored by Kirk Carr from Scott Richards and Teddy Oster. Qrono's next game is in Grand Valley Wednesday, April 8th and also back in Grand Valley Saturday, April 11th. To consider busing Lawrence French students denied The Northumberland and Newcastle Board of Education Education are to study a request for transportation for those students attending French Immersion classes in Bow- manville and Cobourg. The decision came when some 60 parents attended last Thursday's Thursday's meeting asking for partial or full transportation for French Immersion students. students. John Higginson of Bow- manville headed up the group and said it was unfair to those who could not afford to pay the cost of transportation from outlying areas to the french immersion classes. He said it cost at least $480 a year for a student and of the 185 students enrolled in Bow- manville 87 must travel to the school through transportation provided by the parents. The request has been plam ed before the transportation and finance committee. W.H. Carman, Newcastle trustee said the board was only leading the delegation down the garden path. "You know we can't afford this," hé said, tie pointed to the present debate in Newcastle over educational costs and said this added to it would make it intolerable to some local politicians. Some board members took exception to Carman's statement statement and said he had no right tp speak on behalf of the whole board. Mainstream Canada Millions for polls By H. Roger Worth Governments, in Canada spend millions of dollars per year on polls and surveys, yet most are reluctant to advertise the results. The reason: the results provide provide an advantage for the party in power. That advantage is denied to opposition groups, Roger Worth is Director, , Public Affairs. Canadian iederation of Independent Business. , Naturally, politicians on the government side argue that the results cOuld pit ont# government, ' one region, or groups of Canadians against each other. The Opposition argues jujl as strongly .that Canadians have a right to the information. And it's not only the federal government that is spending heavily to research voter attitudes and intentions. By now. Virtually every provincial provincial government has set up similar polling systems. The broader question is whether, in fact, polls and surveys should be used at all. While government leaders claim polls are, simply a tool to ferret out problems, many observers contend government government ppliticians are so hung up on survey results that new policies are accepted or re- ject'edyon the basis of a thousand thousand or so interviews. The pollsters, of course, have* been known to be wrong. No polling firm, for examples examples caine'dose to projecting President Ronald Reagan's landslide victory in last fall's , tl'.S. elections, even though the moSt sophisticated methods methods were used. Nevertheless, a lot of Canadians believe that if taxpayers taxpayers are forced to foot the bill for having themselves 1 polled, they should be able to see the results. In a recent survey, members members of the 58,000-member Canadian Federation of Independent Independent • Business voted 19% in favor of immediate publication of all polls taken at public expense. The taxpayers who are. pacing the piper, it seems, would like to hear (he tune: information Iger Gauzenko, a Russian who defected to Canada in 1945, brought documents with him which have put Northumberland Northumberland MP Allan Lawrence Lawrence up against a wall of . silence. • Gauzenko's documents uncovered uncovered the biggest spy ring in the Western world at that time, 61 spies were named in his documents, all but five of which have been identified. Gauzenko believes that at least one highly placed Russian Russian spy is still operating in ' Ottawa. . It was decided in 1946, 4 when the documents were investigated, investigated, that they would remain secret for 30 years. In 1976, the government made another another decision, based on the need to protect the privacy of individuals involved in the events, to extend the ban on publication for another 10 years. MP Allan Lawrence' is making little progress in his attempt to see Gauzenko's files. Lawrence stated that he was getting the runaround from Ottawa's civil servants and discovered that, except for some members of the privy council, no one in the government had seen the files either. , One of Lawrence's colleagues, colleagues, MP Tom Cassit, posed the question of whether anyone mentioned in the files is a former cabinet minister, as yet he has not received an answer. Orono Building Contractor Brick - Block - Concrete ' Stonework Carpentry - Cabinet Work ' Floors - Tile * Phone 983-5441 ORONO School tax increase $30.00 It is now expected that the average home owner in the Town of Newcastle will face a tax increase of ' $30.00 in educational taxation this year over that of 1980. The average tax bill is .expected to increase to $420., a hike of about eight percent. , The budget however for the Board qf Education has not as. yet Seen finalized but no one* expects any great alterations from the eight percent increase.'In increase.'In 1980 the tpx levy for school purposes increased 8.7 percent. 1 1 1 The Northumberland and Newcastle Board expects to spend $47.9 million in 1981 compared to $43.4, million in SAV E Enel Have yçur furnëGe cleaned v and properly serviced bÿ 1 Harvey Partner . & Sons 'Phone 983-5206 Orono, Ontario PARTS POLICY AVAILABLE

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