Oakville Beaver, 3 Mar 1993, p. 17

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The War Amps has been hard at work on programs for child amputees. 5 4 z hJ %,‘ "â€" 3 ‘p. \ 4 Six local wrestlers are bound for the Ontario Federation of Schools Athle:ic Association championships, tomorrow (Thursday) and Friday at the University of Windsor. Dave Elder, Tariq Sheikh, Nige! Paris, Chris Walker and Troy cMullin of White Oaks Secondary School and Trevor Martin of Queen Elizabeth Park school qualified by finishing first or second in their weight classes at the Golden Horseshoe championships at Burlington Central High School, Thursday. Winning their divisions were: Elder at 47.5 kilograms, Sheikh (57.5), ‘Walker (77 kg) and McMullin (95 kg) while Paris, at 72 kg, and Martin, at 84 kg, finished second. White Oaks finished third in the team standings with 58 points. First was Bishop Ryan with 103 points and second was E.C. Drury with 94. QEP tied for eighth with 11 points and St. Thomas Aquinas was 11th. There were only two other local medalists: White Oaks‘ Sam Kham and Glen Veinotte, who finished third at 54 kg and 77kg, respectively. Mike Elder (51 kg) and Peter Shields (57.5 kg), both of White Oaks, earned fourthâ€"place finishes Midgets need a winâ€"â€"bad It went to overtime before the Oakville midget Rangers dropped a 6â€"5 decision to Kitchener Greenshirts in the second game of their Ontario Minor Hockey Association sixâ€"point AAA playâ€" down series in Kitchener, Saturday. The locals find themselves down 4â€"0 entering tonight‘s (Wednesday, 7 p.m.) third game at Oakville Arena. Scoring for Oakville Saturday were Scott Walsworth, Duncan Stewart, Ryan Smith, Deni Terenzio and Blair Downevy. Chris Chapman (3), Matt Swain (2), Brent Davis, Joe Geffros, Stewart and Walsworth drew assists. In game one, Ryan Smith and Geffros counted the Ranger tallies. Saturday‘s overtime loss was a vast improvement over the 7â€"2 loss in the series opener last Wednesday. DOé Grapplers going to OFSAA Continued from Page 16 intraâ€"squad games against one of the top pitching staffs in collegiate baseball. "I told them, ‘I‘m not ready. I don‘t want to waste a year of eligibility for you," said Fozo, who has yet to play any games for the 10â€"3 team. The redâ€"shirt idea seems a sure thing. Gilligan, a respected coach at Lamar for 15 years, has told Fozo that he is "his project." Not a bad one, either. Fozo is 6â€"footâ€"3 and 200 pounds and "still growing," his dad, Ron, proudly points out. He hit well over .300 in the Central Ontario Junior Baseball Association last year, clubbing a home run in the allâ€"star game. And then there‘s his arm, which was pretty much wasted at first base where he had played most of his career. His throw from home to second base was timed at 1.86 seconds at a Florida camp in December. Those are Benito Santiago numbers, although, Fozo admits, "in game situations, it all changes." THEN NOW we have JUMPSTART â€" computer training â€" for multiple amputee children we started PLAYSAFE and Matching Mothers, offering more specialized assistance FIRST Fozo lands at Lamar there was CHAMP, providing specially designed artificial BASKETBALL QOUARTERFINALS (Tuesday) MDGET Loyola at Milton; White Oaks at St. Thomas Aquinas Notre Dame at Nelson; Burlington Central at L.B. Pearson JUNIOR Milton at Oakvilie Trataigar; Queen Elizabeth Park at White Oaks Burlington Central at Netson; M.M. Robinson at L.B. Pearson {Winners advance to semifinals Thursday) RHOCKEY SEMIFINALS (Tuesday) M.M. Robinson at Appleby; Bishop Reding at Nelson {Winners meet in Halton final, Thursday, 2:30 p.m., al Central Arena in Burlington) )0 grar The War Amps ional Headquar 27 Riverside Dr Imps 02868 9C4 an work or 68â€"89 JY Frankovic, Joudrey, Jason Gauthier, Michael Muldoon, Hamilton and Brad McDonald had Kirk Joudry had three goals in the two games, others coming from Sasha Frankovic, Jeff Hamilton, Jeff Kubacki, Chad Blundy, Scott Nelson and Jeff Wilson. two assists each Richards broke out of a sixâ€"week slump when his team captured the consolation title at the Quebec International Peewee Hockey Tournament, last week. He mainâ€" tained the pace by scoring twice in an 8â€"3 win over Streetsville then adding two more in a 5â€"0 decision Adam Richards scored four goals and added five assists as Oakville Rangers took the opening two games of their Central AAA Hockey League peewee series with Streetsville. Paperweight.......1987 â€"1989 Tyke..:................. ] 8t YL. ~1986 issimscirsrise...<2nd yr. 1986 Novice................ 18t yr. â€" 1984 Reo en erscccskssczissâ€"sass. @nd y1. 1988 Peewee.............. 1st yr. â€"1982 ieeeim essm seag end yr. 1981 Bantam............... 1st yr. â€"1980 inmmontitiaccasn.send y 1979 Midget................ 1st yr. â€"1978 irrnistaitinisnsses»+â€"â€"»miendyf. 1977 FREE INTRODUCTORY CLINIC DATES éTO BE ADVISED AT REGISTRATION BOOTH) Also canvassing for Coaches, Convenors and Volunteers. People who are interested can contact Ken Watt at 825â€"3547 Doug Cann 847â€"2501 Brian Colm 825â€"4161 Russ Andrew 8479225 OMLA.â€" REGISTRATION DATES Registration Fee $85 Tyke/Midget $20 Paperweight SATURDAY, MARCH 6/93 Oakville Place 9 a.m. â€" 6 p.m. SATURDAY, MARCH 27/93 Oakville Arena 7:30 a.m. â€" 2:30 o.m. MOHA HOCKEY WEEK Glen Abbey Arena MONDAY, MARCH 29 FRIDAY, APRIL 2 6 p.m. â€" 9 p.m. SATURDAY, APRIL 3 7:30 a.m. â€" 4:30 p.m. REGISTRATION 983 982 981 980 979 978 977 Devils earn a volleyball sweep Continued from Page 16 controversial penalty point assessed to BC for an illegal rotation. Red Devils now advance to the Golden Horseshoe Athletic Conference championships, Friday at St. Thomas More in Hamilton. Game time is 4:15 p.m. Their opponentâ€"â€" the Hamilton public or separate championâ€"â€"was not know at press time. In that third game, the Red Devils took a 5â€"2 lead thanks mainly to BC miscues. But the Trojans roared back to take an 11â€"6 lead on OT errors, the towering net play of Dana Cooke and two fine serves by Kim Kirby. OT though didn‘t waver. A good serve by Tara Trbovich, kills by Heather Cole and Julie Vanier, a tip by Emily Patrick cut the BC lead to 11â€"10. Trojans seemed poised for victory when backâ€"toâ€"back kills by Cooke put the score to 14â€"12. But two BC errors and a . winning serve by Kristy Turton put OT ahead 15â€" 14. And then head referee Hal Watson of Oakville called Anne Brisbin for being out of rotation. "There was a frontâ€"row player standing in the back corner," explained Watson. "She was the farthest player from the net. It‘s hard to end a game like that but when it‘s so obvious you have to call it." OT coach Maria Seto would have liked to see the match end in a more conventional matter but it‘s all part of the game. "I wasn‘t really looking for it (violation)," Seto said. "I was more worried about Tara to find a Saturn, and only the coupe and the sedan to buy. Now there are 251 places in North America to shop, with more on the way Iwo years ago there were only 28 place Left to their own devices, they‘ve been known to multiply. C THE OAKVILLE BEAVER "The Family Business That Service Built" (Trbovich) getting the ball over the net on her serve." "I can‘t comment on the accuracy of the call," said a dejected BC coach Doug Lampman. "It‘s an awful way to end the season. These were hardâ€"working kids. "The girls got tougher as the match wore on," Seto said. "We got our serves in, they gave us some free balls and we attacked them. We threw everything at them..." It was a nervous and tight Red Devils squad that took to the floor against Georgetown. In game one, OT made numerous passing and servâ€" ing errors and the mistakes continued in game two. But with the score 9â€"3 Georgetown, the Red Devils got the boost they needed when Brooke Ruschiensky served five straight zingers. Georgetown took a 14â€"11 lead but the Devils reeled off five straight points, two of them on net violations. In game three, Georgetown went ahead 14â€"9 but Ruschiensky produced her serving heroics one more time. Five tough deliveries and two Georgetown errors eave OT the match. "I was thinking they‘d better go over and in," Ruschiensky said. "I was saying to myself they need to count right here (in the second game). If there was ever a time for one, it would be now." "We played well when we had to. We were definiteâ€" ly nervous in that first game...We knew we could do it and we did." "The girls just had to relax and play," said OT coach Kirsten Campbell. "They never lost their confidence." Saturn SW Saturn SC and seven Saturns to choose from, including JUNIOR come on by. As we‘ve always said, the more the merrier. two brand new wagons. So One of the world‘s finest snooker players is coming to Oakville. Thirteenâ€"time Canadian chamâ€" pion CJiff Thorburn will be showâ€" ing his stuff at Avalon night club on Friday and Bronte Legion (Branch 46) on Monday. He‘s there from 7â€"9 p.m. the two nights. Born in Victoria, Thorburn was the world professional snooker champion in 1980 and scored the first perfect game in the 56â€"year history of the world championships. He captained Canada to two world titlesâ€"â€"three times runnersâ€" upâ€"â€"and was awarded the Order of Canada in 1983. At Avalon, he‘ll demonstrate trick shots among other things. Admission is free. Snooker ace in Oakville It will cost you $10 to watch Thorburn play at the Legion, Call Reg Phillips at 632â€"7068 to arrange a match. 17

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