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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 24 Dec 1974, p. 17

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l tiririii'fii has to - Wat-doc Ctteoetidtt. Tuna-v. 0m M. 1974 -1einWate_ritttt1fstwee* isBNevaieColiegiate-t thertratgapteirtttteirtw yearhiatoer.Attttettegirr nirtgufttoseastmBtt-aie coachBotrktmidtsaidhis Bluevale wins firl!rt basketball match 66-49 GREAT GIFI’ MAKING IDEAS for CHRISTMAS Waving . Knitting . Embroidery . Crochet WESTMOUNT WEAVERY by Dominion Store, 576-5470 Daily 9:30 _ S:30 Saturday to 6 ttidtttttrstttmfltr tettm-itt"sarTtriseafew people" and it led: a if hitomdietioaoreetiattr: [need game that gives them ,riniesaGrandRiverRe- till!!) ai-t win-kmrecord Meanwhile, Waterloo Coli- egiate Vitus gave some can null in the final Jerome, 70-6711: dar's aetiet,. A Wtterloo: "ltr Jim Young’s three goals and two assists sparked Wa- terloo Siskim to a 9-3 win over Preston Raiders Thurs- day in Waterloo-Wellington junior B hockey action. V The victory was the sixth in a row for the Sistins and it stretched"their lead to seven points over Hespeler Shamrocks who tied Elmira Crippled children snowarama planned The largest snowmobile rally ever held will be this winter's Whippet Watson Snowerama for Timmy which organizers hope will raise $250,000 for Ontario‘s crippledchildren. On Sunday, February 2, as many as 30,000 ma- chines from various snow- mobile associations, clubs' and individuals 'will em- bark on a 100-mile rally over any one of a dozen of- ficial courses planned in a dozen different areas throughout the province. Courses are planned in Kitchener, the Bruce Peninsula, Newmarket, Smiths Falls, Haliburton. Cornwall, Eganville, Port Carling, Sudbury, Timmins, Thunder Bay and Sault Ste. Marie. The Snowerama will be held in much the same fashion as a walk-a-thon where donations or pledges are taken and check points areset up along the route. 'Flfty per cent of the proceeds will go to meet the needs of crippled chil- dren at the community level. a. m In beautiful " 'aiilt Downtown a! Conestogo ".-iictl.v,r:," C, Fit-ii' (t 'ji? A FOR RESERVATIONS' PHONE 664-2223 Siskins extend trirrstreak - remainder will be Come Out ad Celebrate " tliihil't BE with us ) $3000 a couple includes ' refreshments , hot buffet 8 to 10 pm l party favours dancing to the Big Band sounds With the fabulous KCI are tied in first place with bl records, burned by St. Jerome's in the 'ttIMF her mo spot, with Bluevale in the third place slot trail- ed try the slumping Rene- Sides. Spirits are high in corrupe~ titiou for play-off berths as Sugar Kings " in the other game Thursday. In Preston. Young scored the only two goals of the first period and completed his hat trick at 12:31 of the second period, giving Wa- terloo a 5-3 lead heading into the final 20 minutes. Young now has 21 goals used to support regional and provincial rehabilita- tion services, beyond the scope of individual com- This unique event is sponsored by the Ontario Society for Crippled Chil- dren and affiliated Easter Seal service clubs in the 12 areas. The Ontario Snowmobile Distributors Association and the On- tario Federation of Snow- mobile Clubs are also strong supporters of the Snowerama. munities. Among those individuals who have indicated their desire to participate are John Rhodes, Minister of Transport; Leo Bernier, Minister of Natural Re- sources; and Claude Ben- nett, Minister of Industry and Tourism. Whipper Watson, who tours the country at his own expense on' behalf of the nation's handicapped youngsters, hopes that the Sncwerama will become an annual event if enough interest and support is generated. _ Brass 'n Blues" Est. 1830) for days without action mun- ing 'i'ldtrg to. T Al annual! hud- ed into the final qtsarterheitts only a two point land. they rallied to outscore Grand by Al Rich in point-scoring with Ar. Bruce Mmteith with 18 in 24 games and is only two at 9:17 ot the third period goals behind league scoring gave Shamrocks the tie. leader Dave Barrow who Mark Gray opened the popped in two more against scoring for Hespeler at Preston. 13:15 ot the first period but Steve Beaupre,-a recent- Bruce Martin tied it up at addition to the Sistins, fired 17:11. Steve Beaupre, . a recent- addition to the Sistins, fired his first goal of the year with the others going to Chris Chappell. Gary Thiel, and Brian Ringie. Chappell add- ed two assists. Grant Kuhn had two goals and Jim Kerr one for Raid- ers while Ken Stewart drew three assists. Siskins took six of the 10 minor penalties and held a 43-19 shooting edge. Waterloo sports a 17-6-3 won-lost-tied record while ttie last-place Raiders are 1-21-2. In Hespeler. Brian Ella- cott's 21st goal of the vear Finnish team to play in Elmira J. mem.' , The Elmira and District Minor Hockey Association will be ushering in the New Year by playing a midget team from Heinola, Fin- land on January 1, at 7 p.m. at the Elmira Arena. This is the first time an international match will be held in Elmira, and pro- Shier benefit night planned Condors end drought with 5-1 hockey win Conestoga College Con- dors ended a two-year home A benefit night involving four exhibition games will be held Jan. 8 for Dave Shier, a lS-year-old forward with the Waterloo minor mid- gets who lost his right eye in the Gold Puck tourna- ment last month. ice win famine by beating Georgian College from Four minor teams from Burlingtonwillplay against Waterloo clubs, with the proceeds going to Shier. The series was origin- ated by the Burlington mi- nor midgets, the team Shier was playing against when the accident happen- "The Burlington club phoned us the day after Dave had his eye out and they insisted on coming to Waterloo to play the series for Dave's benefit." a Wa- terloo spokesman said, Kevin Durst sent Elmira ahead at 13:35 of the second period. Doug Rose had two assists for Hespeler ,while Chuck Drexler had two for Elmira. The single point lifted El- mira into a third-place tie with Kitchener. The two teams have 26 points, four behind Hespeler. Kitchener travels to Guelph for tonight's lone sa; All six teams swing into action Sunday with Preston in Waterloo, Hes- peter in Elmira and Guelph in Kitchener.' points teamed " View“) -topmaresmestasttteret- scoredSt.Jeemne's forth. win. 'We Viking: took 21 pointstottieLioetailO+ final 15 minutestoregistet thevictory. Mitactioetlast-*saw Grand RiverwttipBhsesraie ceeds from ticket sales will go to the upgrading of minor hockey in Woolwich Town- ship. pe. Tickets are available at minor hockey games, in El- mira. from any member of the minor hockey executive, at the door, or by calling Barrie 5-b in Ontario Colleges' Athletic Associa- tion hockey action Wednes- day at Queensmount Arena. The Condors, sparked by the two-goal scoring of Dave Zamke and Jeff Jarram, also captured the first an- nual Condor Cup, presented to the winner of the game between the two schools. The win snapped a 17- game regular season home ice winless streak for the Condom, stretching back over two seasons. In addition to the scoring punch supplied by Zarnke and Jarram, Mark Carney added a single goal for the winners and Chris Czerrty chipped in with a strong four-assist playmaking role. Conestoga also got a strong effort from goalie Paul Fletcher as the Geor- gians outshot the Condors 37-26. Only a second period goal by Tim Bryant, cutting into a 2-0 Conestoga lead, spoiled Fletcher's bid for a shutout. Eight penalties. included a pair of fighting majors and a pair of game misconducts. were divided evenly betweer the two teams. ,

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