Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 30 May 1984, p. 14

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

PAGE 14 â€" WATERLOQ CHRONIGLE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 30. Will be open from 8:30 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. from now until October 26, 1984. Waterloo Regional Health Unit Offices 850 King Street West Creme De La Creme Ice Cream (1 Litre) CAMBRIDGE â€" 621â€"6110 Bronze Silver Gold KITCHENER 744â€"7357 55 ERB ST. E. //V\/V\/\l‘\\‘ WATERLOO 884â€"18 HOURS: MON.â€"WED.â€"9:30â€"5:30 THURS. & FRI.â€"9:30â€"9 SAT.â€"9:30â€"5:30 Holiday Juice Lemonade DOOR OPENING SPECIALS Hot Dog Buns (8‘s) Hamburger Buns (8‘s) Lincoln Plaza Weber & Lincolin (May 13 â€" June 3/84) 46 Dickson Street Custom made solid wood wall units available to match your present decor. (Free estimates) SAVE 50¢ 885â€"6470 1 Litre WV (while quantities last) OPEN 24 HRS. Reg. 2.09 Now 1.59 Reg. 2.39 Now 1.79 Reg. 2.59 Now 1.99 5Q° 5q IS NOW OPEN TV & APPLIANCES SALES AND SERVICE SALE STARTS: 10 a.m. Friday, June 1 HOURS: Tues. to Sat. 10 to 4 PLEASE NOTE: We close June 5 for Summer Holhdays. Watch for our grand reâ€"opening ad midâ€"September Spring & summer clothing for women, boys, girls infants, maternity 714 Belmont Ave. W. Kitchener 745 25 ANNUAL ENDâ€"OFâ€"SEASON Nearly New Shop Visit us for a great looking hairstyle at reasonable prices! MEN‘S CUTS ....... $7.00 LADIES CUTS ....... $7.50 BOY‘S CUTS . ....... $4.75 GIRLs CuTs ........ $5.75 SENIORS CUTS ..... $4.00 (ABOVE INCLUDE BLOW DRY) COMPLETE ROLLER SETS ............. $6.50 PERMS ... . . . compiete, $35.00 CLEARANCE SALE May (Cuil â€" 884â€"1 842 % OFF ALL TICKETED PRICES! EVEN the reduced ones 7454412 $7.00 $7.50 $4.75 $5.75 $4.00 Mark Bryson Chronicle Staff Hockey fans came out in herds last Saturday to see personality Don Cherry â€" and he didn‘t disappoint them. Cherry, a broadcaster on CBC‘s Hockey Night in Canada and former coach of the Boston Bruins and Colorado Rockies, was in his usual outspoken form as he expressed his views on Canada‘s national pastime during a promotion for Bast Tire‘s new RR 1 Waterioo outlet. Like many hockey observers, Cherry was baffied by the perforâ€" mance of the New York Islanders in the recent Stanley Cup final. Don Cherry still in position to ‘call the shots‘ ‘"I thought the Islanders looked tired throughout the whole series. They were all flat, especially Billy Smith. He may not be back next year," said Cherry. Although Cherry feels the Oilers deserved the cup this year, he thinks the playoff system should be changed so the Oilers do not get a free ticket to the finals every year. He said that the Oilers‘ conference is so weak it will be years before any team will legitimately beat them before the finals. Oneâ€"man team takes WLU stock market Cherry said his view on fighting in hockey will not change despite pressure from CBC executives. . "I think fighting is part of hockey and always will. As long as the sticks stay down, a good fight is sometimes necessary,‘‘ said Cherry. Although Cherry enjoys his broadâ€" casting career he hinted there is a chance he may return as a coach, under his own terms. Hockey Night in Canada broadcaster Don Cherry signs autographed pictures at Bast Tire grand Opening. Mark Bryson photo The first winner in the national event was 19â€"yearâ€"old Borys So zanski, a oneâ€"person team from Dunbarton High School in Pickerâ€" ing, Ontario. Wilfrid Laurier Uniâ€" versity has gone naâ€" tional with its stock market competition for high school students and the first winners received their awards and cash prizes at a recent dinner at Toronâ€" to Hilton Harbour Casâ€" tle hotel. Besides taking part "I would have to control which players I was going to use. Nobody is going to tell me what players should go up and down. I still get offers every year, but until I get control, I‘ll stick with broadcastâ€" ing," said Cherry. Cherry found the transition from coaching to broadcasting an easy one and his recent Actra award for best sportcaster verifies the fact he is doing a good job. ‘"As long as I‘ve got some guy beside me asking the questions, I‘ll be all right," said Cherry. Despite the recent accolades heaped on Wayne Gretzky, Cherry feels Bobby Orr is the best player of all time. He said that if Orr was still around today he would score 65 to 70 goals a year. Gretzky does not provide the excitement that Orr once did. On the topic of the upcoming NHL draft, Cherry said he would not like to be in the shoes of the Pittsburgh Penguins. It is a well known fact the Penguins will make Mario Lemieux from the Laval Voisins their numâ€" ber one pick. Cherry said the Penguins have to take Lemieux because of his scouring records in the Quebec junior league but are passâ€" ing by the best junior player in Canada, Kirk Muller of the Guelph Platers. Questions of all types were thrown at Cherry during his fourâ€"hour appearance, but far and away the most popular one was *"where‘s Blue?‘" (Cherry‘s Boston Terrier). Cherry, well rehearsed, replied, ‘"it‘s not in Blue‘s contract to make road trips." Speaker at the awards dinner was J. Pearce Bunting, presiâ€" dent of the Toronto Stock Exchange, which has coâ€"sponsored the event, along with Bell Canada for many years. in the Laurier competiâ€" tion, he has played the stock market with real money since he was 14 and has done well. He attributes his success to a heavy reliance on technical and fundaâ€" mental analysis.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy