Parents night Parents of Joe Vienneau's younger karate students got a chance to evaluate their children’s progress Thur- sday evening, as the Yellowhead Karate Club held a ‘parents night.” Most of the youngsters. pictured above have been enrolled in the Yellowhead Karate Club from just 15 days to 2 months. Kerate Club in- structor Joe Vienneau holds kids karate classes every Monday and Thursday evening from 6-7 P.M., and adult classes Tuesdays and Thursdays from 7-6 P.M., — and some of his students have shown remarkable progress, Anyone interested in enrolling in the classes can give Joe a call during the day at 635-3967, EDMONTON’S DRESSING R OOM Just a quiet, relaxed celebration TORONTO(RP) — For Tom Wilkinson Sunday's 20- 13 Grey Cup victory over Montreal Alouettes was not sweet revenge, it was just “sweet.” The veteran quarterback sat ina corner of a quiet but happy Edmonton Eskimos ‘ert se eee eee ee te Unique dressing room looking tired as he answered questions from reporters who wanted to know whether he saw it as retribution for a 41-6 loss to Montreal last year. Wilkinson, selected the game's outstanding of- fensive player, explained the ASAE EeDOoOOSCOGs Howenre “INVITES” you to attend our “CHRISTMAS SHOW” on November 19 from Wide Variety 4 \ i of CAristmas Items Will Be Displayed. 20% discount on all orders placed on this day. 191 HAISLA BLVD. Me j Looking For A New Place To Try? WHY NOT HECTOR’S TRULY A QUIET AT THE LAKELSE. RELAXED AT- MOSPHERE WITH A_ VERY SPECIAL MENU TO GET THE TASTE BUDS EX. CITED. FOR EXAMPLE WHY NOT TRY THE TURNEDOS ROSSINE FOR THE LOVERS OF FINE BEEF OR SCALLOPS FLORENTINE SEAFOOD. FOR THOSE WHO LIKE WHATEVER YOUR LIKES IN GOOD FOOD ARE YOU WILL FIND THEM AT HEC. TOR’S, For Reservations Please Call.....638-874) hector at LAKELSE MOTOR HOTEL toneddown celebration by his obviously happy team-mates this way: “We've been shooting for this and have reached It. It’s : a relaxed thing.” Asked if he has any retire- ment plans at age 35 and after 10 Canadian Football League seasons, Wilkinsgn said he’s not thinking about the future at the moment. “Right now P'm going to enjoy winning the Cup, and that I take about 142 mon- As for his selection as the game’s best offensive per- former, he said a quar- terback doesn't make things happen himself, Jt takes blocking, catching and running to make a quar- terback look good. Wilkinson said Dave Cutler’s four field goals “were a big thing in the win—they made the dif- ference,” and the Edmonton deie..ce deserved a lot of credit. _ He said the defence played Olsen, Brill are the best VANCOUVER (CP) Lhil Olsen of Nanaimo and Debbie Brill of Burnaby were named the oulstanding male and female athletes of the year Saturday by the British Columbia Track and Field Association. Both won medals at the Commonwealth Games in Edmonton this summer, where Olson earned the gold for throwing the javelin and Brill won the silver in high jumping. Ken Porter of Victoria, a member of the Canadian Officials Committee, was 632-4205 athletes chosen the outstanding of- ficial. Coach of the year honors went to Tim Young of Rich- mond Kejacs while Shirley Longergan of Vancouver Olympic Club was selected administrator of the year. Naomi Miller of the West Vancouver Recreation Association was awarded master of the year. Pat Wellman of Victoria's Flying Y, who won three gold medals in the B.C. junior development cham- lioships, was named out standing among midget- class women. “a Now, the Special Hallo- ween Draw portion of your Draw 10 ticket can win you up to $100,000 in any one ol the 6 Special Friday Draws UH your Spectal Hal- loween Draw tetter and humber match those drawn you win Vey te eseerl ad disc repent “super” after he and run- ning back Jim Germany misjudged a handoff and fumbled deep in Edmonton territory on the last play of -the third quarter, The Alouettes turned the break into a touchdown that put them back into the game. Middle linebacker Dan Keptey said that touchdown shifted the momentum to Montreal, which had stumbled to a 17-3 deficit in the face of pressure from the Edmonton defence. The defence rose to the eccasion, Kepley said, describing it as a case of ‘12 guys going after the ball and wanting to make the tackle.” “We knew we couldn't go back to Edmonton without the Cup," said nonimport defensive tackle Dave -Fennell, chosen the game's best defensive player., Running back ~ Don Warrington, smiling despite a partial shoulder separation suffered in the first quarter, jokingly suggested to Angelo Santucci that he deserved a share of the award Santucci received for being named the game's outstanding Canadian player. “You wouldn't have got it if I hadn't been injured,” Warrington said, Head coach Hugh Camp- bell said the Eskimos had intended to use Warrington extensively but had no qualms when Santucci had to fill in. “]'ve been saying for two years that he's a starting-ca- libre player who doesn't start,” Campbell said. Santucel said he just did his part in making some important runs and short- pass’ catches that helped Edmonton build up a 14-3 lead in the first half. Campbell said both teams played good football and he wasn't confident of victory until ‘‘two guys picked me up and carried me across the field."* Defence leads Es*.ies TORONTO (CP) — A tough Edmonton defence led by tackle Dave Fennell shut off the Montreal attack and the Eskimos avenged their 1977 Grey Cup loss with a 20- 13 victory in Sunday's Canadian Foothall League championship. Fennell, named the out- standing defensive player of the game, was the leader in shutting off the, Montreal running game, keeping the Alouettes from getting a touchdown until the fourth quarter. Quarterback Tom Wilkinson, meanwhile, was successful in his usual short passing game, backed by the running of Angelo Santucci and Jim Germany which built a 14-3 half-time lead. Kicker Dave Cutler provided the bulk of the Edmonton scoring with 14 points on four field goals, a single and a convert on Germany's first-quarter touchdown. A crowd of 54,386 at Exhibition Stadium saw the Eskimos control the game through the first three quarters, in sharp contrast to last year’s game at Montreal where the Alouettes humiliated Ed- monton 41-6, : It was the fourth Grey Cup meeting of the two clubs in the last five years and evened the record at two wins each, Wilkinson was named the top offensive player of the game while Santucci won the Dick Suderman Award as the game’s outstanding Canadian. The game started under sunny skies with a dry field in contrast to last year’s icy , Surface at Montreal, and the Eskimos’ quick start in the first quarter made it look as if they might blow the Als out of the park. Edmonton's first scoring drive started at the Montreal 50 and five plays later Cutler booted his first field goal from 37 yards. David Green, the star of the Montreal running game in recent games, fumbled on the next play and the Eskimos took over at the Als 3 The Eskimos then moved to the two-yard line ‘in six plays, including a' Wilkinson ‘pass to Tom Scott off a faked field goal setup, and Ger- many completed the drive with his two-yard touchdown run up the middle. On the ensuing kickoff, Green suffered brulsed ribs and although he stayed in the game, his running abillty wae hampered for the rest of the game. Joe Barnes finally got the Als moving late in the opening quarter, driving from his own 26 to the Ed- monten 19. Then, on second and eight, Eskimos de- fensive end Dave Boone _ sacked Barnes for a seven- yard loss and the Als had to. settle for a 33-yard Don Sweet field goal. Both defences stiffened in the second quarter with Sonny Wade's punting helping to keep the Eskimos pinned deep in thelr own zone. Cutler finally got in range for another field geal at- tempt from 31 yards but missed and collected only a single before Montreal again turned over the ball on a fumble. This time it was Randy Rhino dropping a punt at his own 28, recovered by Ed- montan's Brian Fryer to set up a 35-yard Cutler field goal. While Wilkinson com- pleted 11 of 18 passes for 81 yards in the first half for gains of 61 yards, Barnes tried to throw only twice and picked up only two first downs. Montreal head coach Joe Scanella sent Wade in at quarterback late in the second quarter but the veteran drop-back passer found himself under teo much pressure, Wade, famous for his ability to come off the bench and get the Als moving, continued at quarterback through most of the second half but managed only seven completions in 17 attempts for a total of 74 yards. Wilkinson, who completed 15 of 25 passes for 111 yards on the day, ran into trouble on the final play of the third quarter when his handodF to JIM Germany went astray and Montreal tackle Gord Judges recovered the fumble at the Edmonten 10. Barnes went back in at quarterback, and after an in- complete pass, rolled to his right and took off for the end zone to score the Als’ lone IN ‘78 CUP GAME Few new records set TORONTO (CL) — In sharp contrast to the 1977 Canadian Football League championship game, Ed- monton Eskimos plodding 20-13 victory over Montreal Alouettes in Sunday’s Grey Cup final produced only nine records. | Montreal kicker Don Sweet, whose 23 points highlighted last year’s game at Olympic Stadium in Montreal which saw 25 records either broken or tied, set both individual marks. He upped his career scoring record to 52 points with two field goals and a conyert while increasing his field-goal mark to 14. Sunday's encounter bet- ween the two clubs, their IN GREY CUP WIN TORONTO (CP) Halfway through the first quarter, Joe Barnes and his Montreal teammates knew why Dave Fennell had been chosen the Canadian Football League’s defensive player of the year. Edmonton Eskimos' big defensive tackle came calling on Barnes on the {| Alouettes’ first offensive series and threw. the quar- H--1149, eeoe «$200 H-- "149. eee «#100 H---~-49 ated 6320 wy between the above number and the official computer peint-out. the latter shall prevall Loto Canada Thé National Lottery terback for a 14-yard loss at the Montreal 42-yard line, Half a dozen plays later, Dave Cutler's 37-yard field Boal gave Edmonton a 3-0 ea Montreal scrimmaged on its 35 and promptly lost the ball again as Fennell pounced on a fumble by Montreal halfback David Green. Edmonton responded with a touchdown drive and T.G.1L.F NOV.24th: WINNING NUMBERS. H141149.+. ‘ +o $1002000 H- 4119 eee ee $1 2000 Winning ticket numbers trom the Halloween por- tion forthe TG.LF Draws will be randomly drawn trom the Super Surprise packages available lor purchase at any time up to the Main Drdw on December Ist. I fourth Grey Cup meeting in five years, appeared ideal for an all-out assault on the record book. But the best playing conditions in years— sunny skies, temperatures around and a dry field with little wind—resulted in a conservative football ebhibition. The seven other records were team marks, with the Alouettes taking four to Edmonton's three. None were especially noteworthy, except perhaps one by the Eskimes. They increased their Grey Cup lead in turn- overs to 36. Other records: -—Most field goals (team): Montreal increased its lead 17. Dr. Death was a big led 10-0 with the game barely 19 minutes old. By the end of the afternoon Montreal had won 20-13 with Fennell being credited with five more tackles and ear- ning a new car as defensive player of the game, The 25-year-old Edmonton native who played college football at North Dakota repeated what he had said after winning his first award—that the Individual awards were secondary to the game-over score. “I couldn't have spent an- other winter in Edmonton if we had lost," he said. A year ago, the same two teams had met in Montreal and the Eskimos had been embarrassed, 41-6. “Everyone reminded us all winter long,” Fennell saij. ‘We were hoping for the chance to ease the pain a little bit, : “The plane ride home is going to be a lot shorter this time.” He had praise for the losers. “They stuck to their game plan,” said the five-year Es- kimo veteran. 'They never really got into a panic ‘to Grey Cup victory touchdown from 10 yards. Pulling guard Pat Bonnett provided the key block on defensive back Ed Jones. The Eskimos, who had padded their lead to 17-3 with a third-quarter Cutler field goal irom 42 yards, suddenly faced a fired-up Montreal -team with only a touchdown margin and a quarter remaining. The Edmonton defence forced the Als to punt twice. Then Montreal's Vernon Perry picked off a Wilkinson pass and the Als converted it into another Sweet field goal from 38 yards to make the score17-14. Wade again replaced Barnes but the Edmonton defensive secondary maintained tight coverage and the Als quarterback had trouble finding receivers while Fennell and his linemates kept on the pressure up front. Cutler’s 25-yard fleld goal in the last minute closed out the scoring. Fennell, named the out- standing defensive player in the CFL, earned a 1978 automobile along with the Labatt Award as‘ the top defensive player of the Grey Cup game. Wilkinson earned the same award and car a5 the top offensive player. Among Fennell’s big plays in the game werean early hit on Barnes for a 14-yard Als loss on Montreal's first possession of the game and the recovery of Green's fumble that led to Ger- many's touchdown. Santucei. earned top Canadian player honors in the game after he replaced the injured Don Warrington as Germany’s running mate. Warrington suffered a shoulder injury on a first- quarter kick return and Santucci took aver to run up gains of 30 yards on six rushing attempts and 25 yards on five pass recep- tions. Santucci earned tickets for two to anywhere in the world on CP Air. The game was expected to feature Edmonton's passing game versus Montreal's rushing but the final statistics showed Montreal with 147 yards gained on passing compared to Wilkin- gon’s 111. And Edmonton lopped Montreal in rushing 102 yards to 76. —Most puntreturn yar- dage (leam):; Montreal seta record with 536; Winnipeg held old mark of 466. : ~-Most yards rushing (team): Edmonton in- creased its lead to01,58 drom 1,478. —Most yards passing (team): Montreal sets record with 2,293; Hamilton held old mark of 2,221. —Most pass completions (team): Montreal sets record with 149; Montreal and Hamilton held old mark 1K. —Most kick-off return yardage (team): Edmonton sets record with 676; Hamilton held old mark of factor situation where they were desperate offensively.” But even in the second half, when the Eskimos’ offensive bogged down a bit, the defence was able to do what it wanted to do. “We were able to stop thelr’ running game and force them to pass. And we made their quarterbacks run around a little bit and throw be passes. We shut down ust about everything th wanted to do” gue Tt had been a matter of preparation, he said. The Eskimos had been well briefed on the contrasting styles of quarterbacks Barnes and Sonny Wade. And their Western Football Conference opponenta had given them adequate practice in coping with a running attack. “Byery team we played against out there had a 1,000- yard-a-year ball carrier.” There will be no vacation for Fennell in the immediate future. “I have to go back to school,’’ he said, referring to his law studies at University of Alberta, “T have exams to write in two weeks,”