Oakville Beaver, 30 Jan 1994, p. 12

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Aboutowne Realty Corp., Realtor WINTER SPECIAL 2 % OFF ALL SERVIC! eP ALL SERVICES Call For Appointment $414â€"5556 Briarwood Business Park 418 North Service Road East Unit #2 Oakville, Ontario L6H 5R2 Independently Owned and Operated Bus 842â€"7000 Res: Fax: (Continued from page 3) demanding sport calling for 60 minâ€" utes of distance run for every 60 minâ€" utes played. According to coaching duo Lynda Saunders and Marlene Hume, both relative neophytes to the game, their girls were fullâ€"measure for their berth at OFSAA, a 16â€"team, threeâ€"day playâ€" down, this year hosted by the Town of Exeter. They said losing in the quarter final, in a cold, muddy, doubleâ€"overâ€" time match to the eventual silver medalists was, though disappointing, a moral victory. Proud and a little drained. The experience of taking a team to the provincial high school championships was a terrific high for both coaches. Saunders is a physical educator, and Declared Saunders, "We lost in a game in which we played magnifiâ€" cently. I was proud of our girls." __. Coaches proud of effort from girls‘ team Phone: Burlington Burlington Hamilton * Three Rooms accommodating from Featuring 100 to 300 guests * Three hotels within 10â€"minute drive * Easy access to the QEW Lots of free parking * Round tables with padded chairs # Each room has a combination of carpeting and parquet flooring 4 Currently undergoing remodeling to include attractive lighting, plants and artwork 4170 South Service Road (between Walker‘s Line Appleby Line) Burlington, Ontario Carmen‘s Off Premise Catering Ltd. For more information contact our ‘sales consultants. PRIME TIME BANQUET and CONVENTION CENTRE Operated and managed by (905) 335â€"2883 (905) 634â€"1485 (905) 574â€"8998 Hume a specialist in the Social Sciences. ‘Intense‘ is a word they used repeatedly to describe the tournament. Intense â€"â€" from the Wednesday night when the 20 squad members and athâ€" letic trainer Kevin Walsh, piled into the two rental vans â€" "Where is Exeter, anyway?" â€" to the Friday afternoon when they returned to Oakville slightly shellâ€"shocked, boneâ€" weary. and numb from the cold. Of course, there were lighter moments. You cannot take 20 redâ€" blooded, teenage girls on an extended field trip without lightening striking once or twice. And they had fourâ€"star accommodations. Exeter (the reader may or may not know), is a small town northwest of London, Ontario, so small that several of the field hockâ€" ey teams â€" QEP amongst them â€" were lodged in the nearby resort communiâ€" ty of Grand Bend, where the sumptuâ€" ~ PARTIES AND ; SURCHARGES FOR _ . SMALLER DINNER PARTIES HALL RENTAL MAY APPLY Complete Deluxe 7 Hour Bar: INCLUDES, all bar staff: ice, mix, soft drinks, juices, disposable glassware. All premium brands of rye, rum, vodka, gin, scotch peach schnapps, beer and ale. Red white dinner wines will complement the meal. CANDLE LIGHT BUFFET: A serviced buffet of hot Italian bread pizza squares, assorted pastries, or CARVED FRUIT TRAYS, coffee and tea. Serviced on disposable dishes. Deluxe Service comes with six lace skirted presentation tables with silver candelabrum accents. We will provide all linen tablecloths, coloured linen napkins, china, silverware, wine and water glasses. Arranged bud vases will adorn the guest tables. Your party will be professionally staffed for complete setup, service and cleanup. European Style Dinner: Assorted European Rolls Butter RELISH PLATTER APPETIZER. Choice of Two: CARVED SIRLOIN OF BEEF « CUTLETS CREOLE « LEMON Chicken de John » GLAZED ROAST PORK » SEASONAL SAUTED VEGETABLES +« Oven Roasted Potatoes « Tossed Chef Salad * DESSERT SELECTION + Coffee, Tea PRICE BASED ON MINIMUM 100 DINNER GUESTS. PLEASE INQUIRE ABOUT SAVINGS FOR LARGER / FABULOUS 1994 PRIMEâ€"TIME WEDDING SPECIALS ous Oakwood Inn (Golf and Country Club) catered to their every whim. _ Meanwhile, at the pitch, 20 minâ€" utes away by van, the calibre of teams and the level of play was very high, indeed. Every team in this annual event comes with high expectations. So the competition was tough, much tougher than league play had ever been in Halton. "Our first game was 9 o‘ clock Thursday morning," recalled Hume. "It was against South Huron Park School of Exeter, They‘d won OFSAA the year before, and they had the home advantage." It was a significant advantage, too. The school was dismissed for the morning and 800 partisan fans enveloped the field, many shaking Javex bottles filled with rocks. "It was unbelievable. The din was such that you couldn‘t hear the umpire‘s whistle half the time; they crowded the sidelines so it was diffiâ€" cult for our girls to take a full swing on a hitâ€"in," Hume recalled. "It was wild." The tumult was something new for QEP, where fan support tends to numâ€" ber in the tens rather than the hundreds. They were caught flatâ€"footâ€" ed. The girls from Exeter blasted out of the gate. The home side played an aggressive style; no prisoners. Three minutes into the game, Boom! The first ball hit the back of the goal. "Our girls had never experienced anything like it before," said Hume. Before they knew it, Boom! Another goal was in the net. But that was the wakeâ€"up call. From that point on, QEP played even with the 1993 Champs. "Really," said Saunders, "we had no idea how competitive it would be. We learned a lot. It toughened us up." Queen Elizabeth Park would win the afternoon game (2â€"0) against Don Mills and tie their third pool match (1â€" 1) with Oshawa‘s O‘Neill C.V.L., Friday morning. This was enough to put them into the quarterâ€"final that Give all the hope you can. THE KIDNEY FOUNDATION OF CANADA BOOK BY JAN. 31/94 AND RECEIVE COMPLIMENTARY PASTA COURSE OR WEDDING CAKE. APPLIES TO NEW BOOKINGS AND ONLY ON SPECIFIC DATES afternoon against Lorne Park Secondary School. The weather was abysmal. The game was a scoreless endurance match, played at a torrid pace in near zero degree temperature. In the end, the Mississauga school won on strokes. Scores do not tell the whole story. This particular QEP team began the season in September with the objective and expectation of going to OFSAA. From day one, they were confident and focussed. They accomâ€" plished their goal and came away from Exeter more interesting, more aware, and more capable young women, eager for a return engageâ€" ment. It was Saunders who started the field hockey team four years ago in her first year at QEP. She asked Hume to help out. Both women had played field hockey in high school, but never competitively. Saunders had coached briefly at MMR, in Burlington, the year before. As for coaches â€" Saunders and Hume â€" it doesn‘t get much better. The first year, 44 girls came out for the team on the first day. Only then did they realize just how many kids needed and wanted a fall sport to chalâ€" lenge them. The enthusiasm has never dwindled. "Our philosophy has always been that we want our kids to play their best. We want them to enjoy themâ€" selves, but give it their best shot, as a team. Win or lose, if they have done their best, then we can feel positive," explained Saunders. "We feel very positive about our experiences this "We‘ve been learning along with the girls," Saunders said candidly, adding that the first couple of years were a little painful. Bottom line, they had a hard time figuring out what the umps were calling. "Oh, we‘re not allowed to do that?"" â€" was a popular expression in those early days. She laughed. "Basically, we drove people crazy." NO CHARGE FOR INITIAL CONSUMER CONSULTATION TALK TO US ABOUT THE ALTERNATIVES FEE ARRANGEMENTS POSSIBLE PROPOSAL TO CREDITORS BUDGET COUNSELLING

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