Penetanguishene Newspapers site banner

Penetanguishene Citizen (1975-1988), 14 Dec 1988, p. 17

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

tl --, f a | Recreation Preview by Bryan Peter ae, Midland's fourth an- nual Winterfest has many new events planned for Jan. 18-22. Starting Jan. 18, the Askennonia Seniors Center will hold its of- ficial opening from 1 p.m.-4 p.m. with many activities scheduled. Jan. 19, the Winterfest Sports Awards, presented in recognition She shoots, Gearing up for Winterfest of sports in the Town of Midland, will take place at the Civic Center. The public is invited and the presentations begin at 7:30 p.m. The Montreal Old Pros will be in town Jan. 20 to face the Midland Saints at 8 p.m. Advance tickets are on sale . The musical "Tanglefoot" form at Ste. group will per- Marie she scores Among The Hurons Jan. 21. The Schooner Bee Brigade will have special displays set up at the Civic Center from» 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday's new event will be the chili lunch from noon to 2 p.m. at the Civic Center, sponsored by the YMCA Junior Day Care Center. The Midland Grand Squares invite all ex- serge gceeraane re perienced square dancers to join them on Friday nights at 7:30 in the Civic Center. Modern square dancing will have its final night for 1988 Dec. 16 and will re-start in mid-January. Seniors can enjoy skating at Centennial Arena each Monday from 1:30 p.m.-3 p.m. There is shuffleboard at the Civic a cod Penetang's Georgina Gage (9) slips a shot past the Parry Sound goalie while taking a penalty shot. Penetang Petra's defeated Parry Sound 4-3. Other Penetang goal scorers were Janice Holmes, Patty Beausoleil and Dale King. Avco Finance in right Atoms standings tighten- ed up a little on the weekend in Midland Houseleague hockey. Avco Finance got into the winning column by upsetting 5-3 Midland Police who went into the weekend in sole position of first place. The win put Avco within one game of third-place Realty World. These two teams meet Saturday. Homelife dumped Real- ty World 4-3 to tie Police in the standings. Kevin Borsa gave Homelife the lead in the first minute of play and went on to rack up a hat- trick while Aaron Dorion put in a single. Scoring for Realty World were Aaron Coutts with two goals and Scott Blake with the other. Cory Bath also netted a hat-trick while leading Avco as his team rallied from a 2-0 deficit. Bren- dan Mackell and Stephen Bottineau got the singles. Jeff Langley, Adam Desroches and Robert Richardson scored for Police. In novice play, fourth- place Royal Lepage grabbed a share of third spot by handing Bike Shop their first loss of the seaon, 6-0. Darryl McGib- bon earned the shutout while Chris Cooper led the attack with three goals. Troy Jamieson, Mark Clifford and Jay Dorion were the other marksmen. Bourgeois Motors nip- ped Free Press 1-0 with John Gignac getting the shutout and Jamie Desjar- dins notching the marker. The outcome of these games left Bike Shop still holding a three-point lead. But only one point column separates each of the next three positions. Tykes play had Dynas- ty Inn, led by - Jeremy Sauve's seven goals, over- powering Wings 11-1. Matthew Murdoch got three dynasty goals while Jamie Hamelin put in the other. Justin Neilson answered for Wings. Meanwhile Stoneleigh Motors clipped Bertram fuels 6-4 led by Chris Franz's hat-trick. Nicholas Jeffery, Joshua Jeffery and Chris Hurst found the range for the other Dynasty Scores. Bertram scoring was shared by Paul Blake, Brock Lavin, Ryan King and Mike Larmand. South Simcoe bantams schedule had the two Midland teams facing each other. Wye Heritage shutout Smith's Mobile 4-0. Rod Land, Steve Gar- roway, Jeremy Tobin and Sean Rourke scored for Wye. South Simcoe peewees play saw Midland #2 tie Stroud #2 3-3 on the strength of goals by Shawn Asselin, Jason Hirlehey and Keith Crerar. Coldwater dumped Midland Times 10-0. WOMAN LASTS "BURGHER BITS" Happy 20th Anniversary Jackie & Arnold 20 YEARS WITH Congratulations Jackie BOOP ROOT Ob yb t Quasar Sales & Service Doug's Electronic Service, Balm Beach Rd. Midland HHH 4K re KK 526-6070 : hes Dae. OSt. @.On. Gir. o.ae.s Oak Ridge. Mental Health Centre Volunteer Services requires Six Male Volunteers To meet one night a week with pa- tients from the Rehabilitation Unit at If you would like more information on this program, please contact: Linda Woods, 549-3181, Extension 2219 98 Center Mondays and Wednesdays from 1:30 -m.-3 p.m The following i is an ex- cerpt from "Softball News" November 1988, which in turn was taken from Softball Saskat- chewan's "8th Inning." The title is "Coaches Never Lose." "A team can lose, any team can lose. But in a sense, a very real sense, a coach never loses. "For a coach has two tasks. The minor one is to teach skills; to teach a boy/girl how to run faster, hit harder, block better, kick farther, jump higher. "The second task, the major task, is to make men out of boys and women out of girls. It's to teach an attitude of mind. It's to implant character and not simply to implant skills. "It's to teach boys/girls to play fair. It's to teach them to be humble in vic- tory and proud in defeat. This goes without saying. But more importantly, it's to teach them to do their best and never be satisfied with what they are, but to strive to be as good as they can be if they tried harder. "For a coach, the final score doesn't read so many points for my team, so many for theirs. In- stead, it reads so many men out of so many boys, sO many women out of so many girls. And this is a score that is never published. This is the score that he/she reads to himself/herself and in which he/she finds his/her real joy when the last game is over."' For a Complete Theme and Colour * e Wrapping Paper « Gift Boxes by the yard e Glasses Coordinating ¢ Balloons Plates ° Decorations J } a, Napkins e Advent Table Covers Calendars e Christmas Crackers e Garlands & Streamers e and much, much more Party Look! THE PAPER Coordinated ° a 18 Cundles E. 721-1748 | FACTORY ®ARRIE Bayfield Kozlov entre Cundles 'Tis the Season! And Kozlov Centre is brimming with imaginative Holiday Gifts. You'll find over 85 extraordinary stores, one-of-a-kind shops you won't find anywhere else. Plus our fabulous food court "a refreshing change of place!"' So this Holiday Season, shop Kozlov Centre because there are gifts and gifts and gifts -- and then there are gifts from Kozlov Centre. Corner of Bayfield/Cundles - Barrie Mon. - Fri. 9:30 - 9:30 p.m. Sat. 9:30 - 9:00 p.m. Wednesday, December 14, 1988, Page 21

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy