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Oakville Beaver, 26 Mar 1999, p. 22

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22 com pucQfrre 1 <m•& octr -ft.Vo C o m p u te r s t o r e . B esfegoju tj B e s t pfi^SS . ^ ^ b s c v u ic t ■ THE OAKVILLE BEAVER Friday, March 26,1999 Providing Canadians with computer products since 1976 CamPUCEHTREit COMPUCENTRE is a registered Trademark of Multimicro Inc. OAKVILLE PLACE MALL, 240 Leighland Avenue 849-1291 By Zarak K. IQcxWvAUe PWcgj ' n X *-' 5 , ®AKVHLE PLACE P A R T O F Y O U R L I F E l 10 Fine Stores Including The Bay • Sears 1 QEW & Trafalgar Road 842-2140 www.oak.villep lace.com By Kaitlin M. IGA River Oaks Bruins Tier 1 Champions By Cheryl Alderdice and Nikki Atherton-Kotack The River Oaks Bruins and the Falgar- wood Falcons hit it off at Blakelock High School on Wednesday, March 3rd, with fans from both sides cheering for their team. Both teams fought hard and were up for the challenge, but only one could come up with the win. It was the River Oaks Bruins who took home the pennant, which placed Falgarwood in 2nd place, with the score of 39-33. The other teams in Tier 1 included the E.J. James Hawks and the New Central Cougars. It was a tough match for both teams, but the New Central Cougars won, placing them in 3rd place and E.J. James in 4th. The other teams who played in the season included W.H. Morden, Heritage Glen, Pil­ grim Wood, Q.E. Park, Eastview, Montclair, Appleby and Brookdale. The River Oaks basketball team consisted of Adam Fieldhouse (captain, Noah Gatavakas, Harjeev Brar, Adam Lawton (grade 8's), James Little, Henry Duke, Brent Lukowski, Graham Stewart, Jordan Miller, Brock Kiely, Gareth Taylor, Jeff Turnbull (grade 7's), Josh Fieldhouse, Dean Kenwood (grade 6's). The coaches were Steve Richard­ son and Peter Stratford. The boys finished off their season with 12 wins and one loss. The River Oaks Bruins moved on to play Falgarwood again in the Halton Semi-finals. Then again they won with a score of 40-37. M.O.HA - Preventing checking from behind W e M ake Simple By Graham J J L Stewart Throughout the hockey world, there are problems. One of the biggest is checking from behind. It is also the one that can cause the worst injuries. Many people have been put out of hockey because of this injury. The M.O.H.A. is starting a new plan to get rid of it. It does not ig i really prevent checking, but it is giving a motive to kids to not check from behind. If the kids do end up checking some­ one from behind, they get kicked out of two games including the one they are playing in already. HEY KIDS! Justin Maydanski, an enforcer who plays for the Vikings Minor Pee Wee Red team said, "I think this rule is good because then we can go into the comers, or along the boards without having to worry about break­ ing your back." Mr. Fruden- thaler, who coaches the Minor Pee Wee Red 'Vikings' said the rule is great. He thinks it has lowered the amount of checks from behind in the league by about 30 to 40 per cent. Also, as a dad of three, he feels like his children are safer. Overall people seem to like the rule. Create your very own + advertisement right here! Draw your very own Oakville Place ad and you have a chance to WIN great prizes! Drop o ff your Oakville Place drawings to our Concierge Desk at Centre Court where they w ill be displayed until A p ril 3. Judging will take place Saturday April 3 a t 3 p.m . in Centre Court fa 3 age categaies: 5 and under, 6-9 and 10-13. ®AKVII1E PLACE P A R T O F Y O U R L I F T 1 10 Fine Stores • QEW & Trafalgar Road 842-2140 N am e__ Address: *Note: Names & personal information will not be displayed. Phone _Age http://www.oak.villeplace.com

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