Oakville Newspapers

Oakville Beaver, 8 Dec 1993, p. 23

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Hoops Christmas Camp The first annual Hoops Christmas Basketball Camp will be held Dec. 27-31 at Sheridan College's Oakville campus. The camp will run from 8:30 am. to 3:30 pan. from Monday to Friday and is open to boys and girls of all ages. The cost is $75 for the week. For more information or to register, call 335-5679. Basketball camps set for this winter and summer SUPER CURLING Harold Beswetherick takes aim and fires a rock down the rink at the Seniors Super Spiel held by the Oakville Curling Club last week. The three-day event ran Wednesday to Friday and had 28 teams com- pete for $2,500 in prizes. Overall tournament winner was Wilbur Good, of the Bayview Curling Club. He received the Senior Super Spiel Trophy. Winner of the main event consolation prize was Ewart Carherry, of the Oakville Curling Club. (Photo by Rirrerc Venom; Tommy Armoumww $639. Mit tttp 19% Ill" mm Wis m. Bw My Gal tit . Miam Ball Gloves " Selection ol Immiclional Books d Videos " " t Baseball Mtrthmdise Arriving Daily M Clothing was th Gift Chile ff" AWWEG WWW“ "aiiii'i Best selection of Persian, Tribal and Oriental rugs for your home and cottage. I tf tho/o off _ m and ORIENTAL RUGS J Umost rugs [ Cer-er-----------:-." 134 Dundas St. West ontederatjon Parkway & Dundas Mississaq9_a @251in IO) 50 §6§-8663 Home Court Basketball Home Court Basketball will be holding its Winter Break '93 bas- ketball day camp for children and youths between the ages of 7 and 17 at the Oaklands Regional 4117 Centre. The camp will take place between 9 am. and 4 pm. For more information. call 825. Birdlife Suppliers of Gourmet Bird Seed, Feeders, A.V., CD. Recordings, Gifts for Naturalists of all ages. 2070 SPeers Road 347-SEED (7333) CHRISTMAS DINNER 'w AT... 'Bltr W Serving Ontario 's Birders Thurs. & Ai' Treat a Bird to "rm"""""--,---,..-,--,,-. gar-Adm , 2resierd, , gallery A Special Christmas Editia by Trisha Romance Services ruum a auuigner , 100 Bronte Rd. 847. WE DELIVER EOWDPEN an: , until 9iGi S399OO at a Specidl' - Christmas Price N 010 ayailable 'Silent Nigh? Since 1951 in”? gakville Sun. 11-4 ’SPOR TS The Double-Blue Basketball School. a four-week developmental basketball camp. will be held July 4th to 29th at Sheridan College. Four summer axiom. for boys and girls between the agesof8 and I7. will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Pom: Gym at the Oakville campus. Junior development school. for boys and girls between the ages of 8 Double-Blue B-Ball School G/G u3973 iijdsran COLLECTION ITHEOA help you to express those Special Feelings this Open 7 days, Gifts that Delight from the Shop known for Original Gifts A; 1111'! Tiiremmihltrf,lllr, '_, OAKVllLI Bronte Harbour 67 Bronte Rd. CHRISTMAS utttt.M00. ytll. HOURS ll"'" [tth, 171 Spears Rd. Oakville EQUIPMENT PACKAGE', ms. CORKERS. CAPPE oo'it' iiiiiiiiis new!!! _),'itlr?iss 6/015 (adiill"iliii'ii'i; iis.fsp: sid jj?ii1iilt)sag tartmii,,liiit DUCKS Thursday & Friday till 7 pm mum: BEAVER I cm 845-5116 HE'S we?“ smcno~ or QC WM ' am M45130 summs mammal}; By Cord Kalle Special to the Beaver etter late than never. That's B the way the Minor Oaks _ Hockey Association is feeling after a provincial mediator last weekend settled a year-long long insurance dispute between the Ontario Minor Hockey Association and the Ontario Hockey Federation, which sanc- tions minor hockey tournaments on behalf of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association. "l think it's good, but I just wish it could have been settled sometime before our Christmas tournament," said David Hussey, Minor hockey insurance dispute ends in time for Oakville hockey tournament tournament." said David Hussey, president, MOHA. The problem now is that even though the settlement clears the way for 80,000 Ontario players to compete in hockey tournaments this month. many of those tour- neys are now filled. The MOHA has the same dilemma and must rush to get its own own tourna- ment up and running. The MOHA hosts the Second Annual Oakville International Hockey Tournament. a three-day and I3. will be held July 4th-8th. July Ilth-15th and July l81h-22nd. Thecost is Sl30 per week. $250 for two weeks and $350 for three weeks. Week 4. July 25th-29th, will be an all-star development camp for boys and girls between the ages of N and I7. The cost isSl30. Deadline for registration is June 20th. Contact the athletics department at Sheridan College fot more details. Mom-Wed GES, WINE KITS, BEER 'PERS, BOOKS, MOPS ... HHS!) 5 930-430 D 'trg?? V" k; _ _ I' F".'-.' Hhv, 22+. 3":2'27'5" c'-'rcl'-'-'iii'/y f:?t.s, Dr. _Mc_Al_§ste_r}}§oyld‘li‘ _ Egbliixivite you tm’irfifdj‘A'bbéy'i’CI’firébfltic for alfomphmel‘lta‘FS/SBI'BAI 'iii1'iiitimen/. disTO/‘iik: adrjiniaiiitr thiii's) opporgunit; siniiiiy bring in a non- Pegsliableif929,:5.gerfi'bwrxrawed 's'yii,t,,N,).?.,ltetielii't'h"is' SalviirGffvk'..Us, A 'AUTY Give this Eli'wrheé‘uh‘ ".,...utyr':( yank} i1if4, i:y,,!,i,i'i',"liiiiii"iui' a Mlgjgfsétfi‘éfifiéifi m v..,.uuu inem or unwrapped enefit the Salvation Army. 1 l' -' Pr yfl-rgig-zg-z-gss . __. l T T x=-?'>i--'~‘;"-"-r-:-:-i:':'»'-I:r-‘-*’?=3:5:3:3:s:3:3:.-‘:::5?W :), For details, call sii/;'//////,r5' ()1ti' l (- w l W;I:}j:jif\-‘_:j-\‘ ' .1"; Carol at , ycr:'W.r,'.'y V Ws event held Dec. 27th-29th. It's a significant showcase for the MOHA's teams and it's a money maker for Oakville businesses which like the revenue the tour- ney generates. But Hu§sey said he's afraid most of those teams may have entered tournaments held by the Metro Toronto Hockey League, which was not involved in the insurance dispute. It was expected that 15 teams from the United States and two from Ottawa would enter the con- test. "lt would have been good for business in Oakville to have got- ten these teams. Now we're scrambling to get them," said Hussey, Monday. "The thing is our tournament represents a lot of money for Oakville businesses, too. I spoke to the province earli- er in the year and I know the issues could have been resolved months ago." Under terms of the deal every OMHA player will pay an addi- tional $6 for CAHA insurance this season and the 1994 season, on top of SM for the OMHA's own policy. It all means that the to come up with an Duvld "may m need: "V" , _ . an Army. l ".'i.iiir'iii:yig _ _ ri'. p, £315333'5:1:3:5:?:3:3W1§ c/iijjj'i'/i'jXiir la, fy,r," A si'jj'rj'i'/:i't'j//yjf y T 3 , Y? "i'r'.'///itt/r -: (vh7ir. 23:; <:3:I:i:=*:3:\':;:3:-':525:523:22:: _ iiil'(?i'/r',jjji,i' (v.', 1‘35}; V 'iik::ir'r':'iy/g?li' if $154455!” il? _ [:ii:ij':'i",i'iliii.i'i:iiiut,ii' .'.',C' I .. an“; uu'Pptu'r 'l think it's good, but I just wish it could have been settled sometime before our Christmas tournament. ' MOHA has additional WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1993 Page 23 $20,000. But the MOHA was expecting a figure like that in the settlement, so the increase was already vectored into the cost of: joining the association this year/ said Hussey. I The North American number is l- 800-0NTARIO. Toronto-area callers can get downhill reports at (416) 314- 0998. Cross country skiers, please call (416) 314-0960. The MOHA may not get all the', teams it wanted for its tournament: but there may be light at the end', of the tunnel. , Many popular tournaments like; the Esso Cup, Quebec Peewee and Young Nats Midget Showcase' have no more room for teams. I "We're hoping to pick up a few', MTHL teams. They're some ot the best teams around, so if we get some of those in our tournamenti we'll get a benchmark of how our,' teams are doing," said Hussey. ', The annual report omcally started broadcasting Dec. 3. A special toll free telephone line enables skiers from across North Amercia to access the phone for up-to-date information on Alpine and cross country ski condy- dons. Wax those skis and shine those poles, the provincial ski report is once again providing daily information on ski conditions throughout Ontario. Waring 's hat tid leads Blades to win over Derbys _, Hotline provides daily ski reports "We've scoring from two good lines and we're working on a third line," said Walker. We're starting to peak at the right time." The Blades will play three games during this week, including gunfights with Burlington and Hamilton, the top two teams in the league. Walker said this is a perfect time for the Blades to be getting it together. Walker said the emergence of two solid goal scoring lines has given the team much needed fire- power, instilling player confidence in the team's ability to win tough games. By Gord Kalle Special to the Beaver The Blades hung tough and dished it out Friday night, beating the visiting Streetsville Derbys 6-3 and improving their season recorf to 13-9-1. ' Consistency. Great marriages and award-winning pastries depend on it. So do winning hockey teams -just ask the Oakville Blades. l In the second period, Waring got the hat trick on a goal assisted by Sikora and Bengen and the Blades led 4-3. For Blades GM Murray Walker', this is good. After all, it wasn'it long ago when the Blades were one win, six losses - on a down- hill slide with all wheels spinning, Mike Sekora assisted on all of Waring's goals, while other helpers came from Jason Bengert (2), Richard Raymond (2), Matt Swain (2), Gord Kalverda and Jud Richards. Waring opened the scoring on a nice feed from Sekora. The Derbys tied it three minutes later but the Blades regained the lead on Waring's second goal from Sekora and Bengen. Then Slaney added a goal assisted by Kalverda and Richards. In the third period, Williams suddenly came to life, putting the game away with two goals, each assisted by Richard Raymond and Matt Swain. "The difference now is consii. tency," said Walker. “ "In earlier games we would get tremendous leads then just sit back and let the other teams peck away. Now we're playing with consisten- cy through three periods." Cory Waring had a hat trick for the Blades. Kent Williams with two goals and Jason Slaney with one rounded out the Blades scoring.

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