In vumoow mu m. mum: pun, Page " - Waterloo Owoniclo, WM, March 14, 1979 titv-tncstattr-ittuo oCLAMCHOWDER a FISH & CHIPS oSTEAKONABW oBACttBACtm0ttASuN . SEAFOOD . BURGERS ms WEEK my oun LAKE renew 295 lumen FREE COFFEE FAIYM‘TAKEM "Nit Loied m In Town†GRAND PRIZE: A HOLIDAY "I BRITAIN FOR TWO OH 31 .000 CASH At the and of the Smock comm. than will be a spec!“ draw trom I" correct entries summed. inducing dilly and weekly can Manon. MI (',t,,','g'cigTo'gl',pd,'n'.1',' "" i;i'GGi,% persons in London. England. on a cash Pri" of $11130. Intervack Holidays by Wardair MEN MALL, WATERLOO Eggs - 886-1260 YOU CAN WIN CASH PRIZES WHEN YOU PLAY 6itigiigrjff1j,ip.t, 7Gry das/in 1"he Record until March 24th! Fun, fair play tint By Rick Campbell Chronicle Staff Writer What do National Basket- ball Association stars Paul Silas, Wes Unseld. and Dave Cowans have in commdn with Debbie Glasz and Bruce Bailey? YBA was created in 1974 as a combined project of the NBA's Players Association and the YMCA. The NBAPA markets the program to the Y's throughout the continent and contributes various manuals, films andso on as well as players for clinics to They aré all firm be- lievers in the Youth Basket- ball Association program: -- Competition de-emphasized fiii%iBl Each week for six weeks. one entry will be chosen at random from the correct submitted entries for that week, including daily prize winners. The draw winner will receive $100 and will be eligible for the grand prize. kcévénoX-non Dov w- mo 'hroog't Gorrq. a“. “an! no [new put across the message of the program. - _-_-- 7 Last Thursday a YBA coaches and officials work- shop was held at the Kitchener Y and at that meeting Bailey, the Ws youth director. and Glasz, his counterpart at the Wa- terloo Y, outlined the pro- gram to volunteers. "Debbie and I are here to provide the support tools, enthusiasm and direction so you people can make the program happen," said Bai- ley to the attentive audiem ce. The Kitchener youth director spent a great deal of time outlining the fun- damentals of the program, which includes such ca- tegories as fun, fitness, teamwork, fair play and fa- mily participation. 'l.. instead of focussing on competition, YBA looks at good sportsmanship and skills," said Glasz. “In a world where life skills have been neglected the YMCA is taking a second look." The YBA is divided into six time segments, starting with the coaches workshop and advancing through the "First Whistle" tregistra- tion), Practice Session, Tip Off. Halftime, and year end Celebration. Registrations for this " YEARS I tllrAmtlUNt Sill-G "5‘00" SHRED COMMEITS All ACCESSOIIS l0. OVERHEAD CI l0. PRICES [EllEEECfE CirllEEEEEE Each day. three entries will be drawn at random from the correct eligible entries for that day. Winners will receive a prize of $25. $15 or $10 by mail. Daily prize winners also qualify for weekly prize. and the grand prize. DAILY PRIZES Kitchener-Waterloo Record Glasz indicated that com- petition is de-emphasized in the program, a fact which goes a long way in eliminat- ing hostilities, angry parents, peer pressures and disillusionment among the participants. Games scores are kept but no league standings or leading scorers are publicized. "It is especially good for the younger kids, it gives them a great opportunity to play without having to be a superstar," she said. "At the same time we are not trying to eliminate com- petition, we're just trying to make the kids see the other aspects of what competition can mean. Learning good values and team work does not make a person less ag- gressive in the sport." - Both YMCAE have been circulating their program to schools in the area and are Any boy or girl aged 8-16 IS eligible to participate. Games are played Saturday afternoon in Kitchener and Wednesday 18-12-year-old , and Saturday (13-le in Wa- terloo. ‘ area's third season has already begun and will con- tinue until March 17. Prac- tice starts March 28 in Wa- terloo and 31 in Kitchener with games beginning the week of April 16, talking with high school physed departments to en- courage the older players to help out. A coaches tech- nical workshop is planned for March 22 in Waterloo and UW Warrior coach Don McCrae will be present. , YBA is a refreshing pro; gram and one which is avai- tlable in this area through Kitchener YMCA youth director Bruce Bailey out- lines the fundamentals of the Youth Basketball As- sociation at a coaches and officials clinic la Thursday. a By Rick Campbell Chronicle Staff Writer Silently, Jim Saddler has been living in fear all year. What was routine to KCl was absolutely amazing to the Brennan Cardinals of Windsor, who watched Raiders hit on 61 per cent of The KCI basketball coach has hinted many times dur- ing the season that sooner or later his team's strength was also going to be its weakness, and that was poignantly illustrated Satur- day. The Raiders had advanced to the Ontario regional finals in Windsor by virtue of their CWoSSA-winning effort one week earlier. and had dazzled both the opposi- tion and spectators in open- ing game action in Windsor. Imam FFiTiECe WES DAILY 10 AM. - 7:00 P.M. WEEKENDS 10 A.M. - CLOSING NO OPEN BOWLING MON & WED 1-4 PM FAMILY BOWLING .55: Per Game on Weekends ALL YOU CAN BOWL $2.25 PER BOWLER Sundays from 10 a.m.-12 Noon (3 per Iane) for information call 14 Princess St. West 886-2900 or 886-2370 for Students 3 Games 31.25 - Up to 12 yrs. 3 Games $1.50 - Students with Cards No 9 Wes E.riiTilll!fWE SPRING BREA K SPECIAL OPEN BOWLING But it still needs more participants and more vo- lunteers to make it a suc- cess. Your entire family unit stands to gain tremen- dously from its ideals. the efforts and hard work a people like Bailey and Glasz, as well as many vo- lunteers. their shots in an easy 74-52 victory which advanced them to the regional semi- final. But in that contest Raiders could not get heated up and because of mediocre outside shooting, plus their inability to handle 7-1 centre Jon Antonides, dropped out of the all-Ontario picture with a 67-63 loss at the hands of Samia Central. That school went on to win the regionals by defeating Windsor Lowe 59-57 Satur- day night, but both schools advance to all-Ontario. " Antonides hooped M points for the winners while Bob Urosevic with 21 and Scott Hannah with 19 paced KCI. Hannah was Raiders most effective shooter in the tourney.