Oakville Beaver, 12 Jun 1974, p. 36

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36 THE OAKVILLE BEAVER June 12,1974 Intermediates tie 4-4 T he O a k v i l l e Intermediates of the National Soccer League had a sour first half but stormed back in th second frame to tie Toronto Polonia 4-4 last Sunday at Bronte Field. Goals by Buzny Michal, Lis Andrzej and Rygiel Vito gave Polonia a 3-0 lead after the first period. The first was controversial as Oakville netminder Peter Dickie had made the save but was knocked into the net for the goal. In the second half the Intermediates came alive and hammered in four consecutive goals to take the lead. Tony Mantel started things with a hard, 15- yard drive. John King got the second on a beautiful header of Kevin Thorn's corner kick. Atti la Kovaks knotted the score at 3-3 on a kick from the penalty area. That set the stage for a spectacular go-ahead goal executed by King. He fell backwards and kicked the ball over his head behind him and into the crease. With little time left on the clock it appeared as if a win was at hand however a momentary lapse on defence resulted in the tying marker. POOL R EP A IR P A R TS Do It Yourself & Save! C om plete Parts & Service For Jacuzzi, Swim- qu ip & Coleco {i.e. Castings, M otors, Bearings, Seals, Gaskets, etc.) SPEEDOCANADIANA DESIGN BATHING SU ITS(men'S & ladies'} IT'S BARBEQUE TIM E * NATURAL GAS * PROPANE * ELECTRIC All A re Rust-Free, Troub le-Free , C a re Free , Die C a st Alum inum , Perm anent Briquettes G ive N -itura l Flavou> & Less M uss And Fuss. .. j N A TU R A L GAS BARBECUES W e'll Put It On Your Gas Bill! APARTMENT DWELLERS O ur Tempco Electric Barbeque Is Just The One For You -- A pproved By M ost Apartm ents. This M ode l O ffe rs All the Robust F lavor o f N a tu ra l C h a r­ coal B riquettes W ith o u t The D anger & Mess. To Avo id D isappo in tm ent Check W ith Your A pa rtm en t M an a g e r First. HOURS MON. TUES. WED. & SAT. 9:30 6 THURS. FRI: 9:30-9 S SERVICE «D. P lT A s u R E ^ y P O O L S L T D . ( S A L E S & S E R V I C E ) 4118S.SERVICERD. BURL. c i o t c r c (Between Wdken i Appleby Line) " J L, I U U D The championship Eastview girls' softball team Janice Blom, Lyn Wyatt, Kathi Shannan. Back row; poses with the Halton East Trophy. Front row (left to Mike Lucas (coach), Michelle Russelle, Cathy Court, right); Cindy Pelky, Linda Axford, Miriam Bennett, Sandra Press, Betsy Cornan, Don Thorpe (coach). Linda Dodds. Second row; Nancy Rigg, Sandy Szebini, Absent: Sharon Perkino. Lorraine Bowen (coach). The Eastview boys' team softball winners are; Cartwright, Cam Puff. Back row; Steve Press, Philip (front row, left to right) Joel Johnston, Jim Wright, Martin, Mike Foerster, Pete Lentz, Craig Martin, Kim Brian Ketchum, Dwayne Clarke. Second row; Norm Franklin, Stuart War burton (coach). • Hingston, John Evans, Mike Drysdale, Scott Two cham pionships to Eastview Eastview Public School came through with a fine display of power to capture both the girls' and th e b o y s ' championships in the East Halton Public S ch o o l s S o f t b a l l Tournament held at Trafalgar Park on May 25. It was the second consecutive year that the boys team captured the title. THREE STRAIGHT The competition was an The eighth annual Brethour Pro-am- Golf Tournament will be played at Wyldewood Golf Club on June 19. A field of 160 players will be out. including 40 eight-team knock-out elimination which saw both Eastview teams take three straight games to secure top honors. In the first round the Eastview boys took on New Central and blanked them by a score of 13-0. The Eastview team then took on Woodside which had eliminated E.J. James to obtain a berth in the semi-final game. Eastview won that one top pros from across Ontario. They will be after over $3,000 in prize money. The tourney gets underway via a shotgun start at 1:00 p.m. by another convincing score, 10-3 and proceeded to the final round against Montclair which had dumped Oakwood on the way to the finals. The final contest was a tight one with Eastview edging their opponents by a score of 3-1. C o ach S t u a r t W a r b u r t o n w as enthusiastic about his teams performance. " Th e boys d e m o n s t r a t e d good concentration and a good attitude. We had a solid infield this year and that was a big factor in the victory." he commented. " We also were helped by c lu tch h i t t i ng and excellent baserunning. We managed to steal home a couple of times." POWER HITTING The Eastview girls demonstrated awesome power at the plate to forge their championship effort. In the opening contest they took on Morden and throttled them 26-0. They then proceeded to trip E.J. James 13-9. The final contest saw E a s t v i e w p o s t a comfortable 10-3 victory over Montclair. Coach Don Thorpe commented, "Our hitting was the most importardfe factor in taking t h ^ championship as is evidenced by the high scores. The girls also put in a strong fielding p e r f o r m a n c e . Our pitcher, Miriam Bennett, has to be given a lot of credit and Cathy Court led us in the hitting department." Both teams received t r o p h i e s fo r t h e championship wins. P ro -a m sla ted

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