iï¬i@ on 13 e s l 1 45y SH | Bm D)/&\|[ | «ooo PAGE 34 â€"â€" WATERLOO CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1982 150 Weber St. South,Waterloo 743â€"0300 Daily Mon.â€"Thurs., 9 to 9; Fri. to 5 â€" Sat. to 150 Weber St. S., Waterloo PAUL GRIEVE iss\ and you‘ll get a I ]FREE ! ® ALIGNMENT I . ALIGNMENT CHECK Sm THERE Yes! we will check your front end alignment FREE! If you need any work we‘ll give you a ‘"no obligaâ€" tion‘‘ estimate. Then we will do the work for the special price of A BIG pIFFERENCE 804â€"2170 Open Daily 8 a.m.â€"6 p.m., Thurs. & Fri. til 8 p.m., Sat. t S p.m. e All products Warranty Approved e 4 Bays for fast service e % million cars serviced to date King & Fairway Roed _ 401 Weber St. N. KITCHENER WATERLOO FOR ALL CARS OIL, LUBE & FILTER 14" Includes: Up to 4.5 litres Guit Premium 10â€"30, 10â€"40 oil, 1 oil filter, 1 chassis lubricaâ€" tion, 18 point inspection. Bernie Adlys (4) and Matt Wickie (2) of Waterioo try to block out Toronto Marlie snipers during Toronto‘s 5â€"2 win in Oktoberfest atom hockey tourney action. wiz MarBanzaia ahata Vic MacBournie Chronicle Staff W hile W a y ne Gretzky is busy smashâ€" Larry Atkinson Kathy Goetz UW Athletes Larry Atkinson, the Warrior Athlete of the Week, is a 4A System Design student from Toronto, now in his last year of eligibility. Last weekend, Larry captured two medals in the OUAA Track and Field Championship, a bronze in the shotput, and a gold medal in the discus. Waterloo‘s fourth place finish in the meet was brought about largely by performances from Warâ€" riors in technical events with Larry foreâ€" most among them. Larry came to Waterloo in 1978 as the OFSAA gold medallist in discus and shot. Through his years at Waterloo, he has been a consistent medal winner in these events, though always frustrated in the race f gold. Last weekend Larry hung on rig(lï¬ through the discus competition, and finally won his gold medal on his last throw not just in that competition but also as a Warrior. Kathy Goetz is a promising freshman on the varsity field hockey team. Kathy plays on the forward line at both the wing and inner positions. She has tremendous speed and quickness and very importantly, can score goals. For the first time ever, Kathy, as a freshman is our second leading scorer. Each game Kathy plays she gets stronger. She has represented her province on the Uâ€"19 team the past two summers, winning a silver and gold medal. This summer she was a member of the Ontario Uâ€"23 team in the International Tournament. Kathy is another of our St. Mary‘s High School graduates where she helped that team to two OFSSA entries. Athenas look forward to building a team around Kathy in the next few years. Oktoberfest tourney expands quality, size ing National Hockey League records there is a little nineâ€"yearâ€"old out of Galt who is getting close to breakâ€" ing The Great One‘s marks. Scott Walker, a deâ€" fenceman with Galt AA major Atoms, scored 268 goals and added an additional 43 assists in only 65 games to lead Galt to the championâ€" ship last year. Walker is just one of 700 atom hockey players comâ€" peting in this year‘s Oktoberfest Bauer atom hockey tournaâ€" ment which began last Friday. Another name that might come up o?ten at the tournament is Brett Gretzky, 10â€"yearâ€"old brother of Wayne. Both Gretzky and Walker will be coming into town this Friday for the second half of the tournament featurâ€" ing outâ€"ofâ€"town teams. Because of the lack of accommodation for the 700 players and family members, tourâ€" nament .organizers have divided the tourâ€" nament into two parts. Win Worsley, tourâ€" nament convenor, says the tournament is growing in size and popularity. With 32 AAA teams from all over Canada and the United States, Worsley says it is quickly beâ€" coming known as the best atom hockey tourâ€" nament in North America. The tournament is so popular teams have alâ€" ready paid their regisâ€" tration for next year‘s tournament. Worsley has received phone calls from West Gerâ€" many, Houston, Texas, San Francisco, Atlanâ€" ta, Georgia and British Columbia interested in getting in on the action. Coaches are even pickâ€" ing their teams as early as July to get their teams ready for the tournament. And don‘t think just because the players are only 10 years old that the calibre of play Despite the number of players in this year‘s tournament there are hundreds who are still looking to get in. is not good. ‘"There are no ankle pushers here," he says. Next year they‘ll get their chance, explained Worsley who expects to bring in a second diviâ€" sion of hockey teams with a double A or under rating. ‘"When we :%roduce this other division we will have close to 95 teams competing and within five years we want to break the 100â€" team mark." The only problem with bringing in more teams is the problem that has plagued the tournament since the beginning, accommoâ€" dation. ‘"‘The biggest killer is accommodation. There are no two ways around it," he explained. Toronto Marlies, Oshawa, Hamilton and Toronto Young Nationâ€" als all won their three game series to advance to the second round. In weekend tournaâ€" ment action four teams survived the eliminaâ€" tion roundâ€"robin tourâ€" nament. Marlies defeated Waâ€" terloo 5â€"2, Niagara Falls 41 and Wheatâ€" field 41 to win their series easily. Oshawa had wins against Kitchener 5â€"4, Wexford 3â€"0, and Don Mills 7â€"2 while Hamilâ€" ton did away with Lonâ€" don 11â€"1, Oakville 5â€"0 and Detroit 10â€"1 to win their series. Toronte Young Naâ€" tionals shut out Welâ€" land 3â€"0, and Brampton 20 on Saturday and then easily defeated Orchard Park 12â€"1 in tournament action on Sunday. Vic MacBournie photo