Totem For PAGE Al2, THE HERALD, Wednesday. March 9, 1977 Lewis wins scoring title McEWAN GM 9 G&A 7 In the second game of the evening last Monday night ‘ McEwan Motors outscored Gordon and Anderson 9-7 to close out a successful season. Rick Lewis won the . scoring race in this game _ scoring four goals and 4 adding two assists to overtake Larry Hackman, ‘ who finished three points behind Lewis. Rick Lewis and Keith Colwell scored goals in the first period to give GM a 2-0 lead by the end of that : period. Steve Dillabough gave : McEwan a 3-0 lead shortl after the second started, : scoring while playing a man ‘, 2 iq t ae ee a ee ey short, Lewis fired a shot from just inside the blueline and McEwan had a 4-0 lead. Terrace Juveniles have * taken the first step towards winning the Commercial League playoffs. The loca frame with a 5-0 lead. Juvenile team. skated and hit their way toa rather easy 11-1 victory over the Pohle Lumber squad. Juveniles scored on their first two shots on goal and went on from there to lead 2- 0 after one period of play. They scored three more in the second and finished that Pat Flynn made the count 5-0 ona goalmouth scramble before Gordon and An- derson could get on the scoreboard. Don Clifford got the first G&A goal with less than six minutes left in the second frame. Dillabough gave GMa 6-1 lead, shoving in a pass from Marcel Tookenay. Barry Heinen drilled a slapshot into the GM cage with three minutes left in the period. Rick Lewis scored his third of the night from Scott Corp on a goalmouth scramble. Jim Gustafson scored a disputed marker at the 19:59 point of the period and McEwan Motors had a 7-3 lead to start the third period. Tookenay got things going for GM with a goal at the Pohle erumbling 'Pohle Lumber scored their first and only marker to start things off in the third, but that was all, as the Juveniles again took over. Juveniles scored six goals in the third to wrap up a very well deserved victory. All players dn this team played well and will give the: other three teams something to think about if they get by the first round. iCOMMERCIAL) TERRACE COMMERCIAL HOCKEY LEAGUE STANDINGS: WEEK ENDING MARCH 6, 1977 Games Win Loss Tie ‘Pts. Totem Ford 26 20 5 ' 4) McEwan GM 26 yy 6 ] 30 Gordon & Anderson 26 é WV 3 15 Pohle Lumber 26 4 21 1 9 SCORING RACE Name Team Goals Assists Pts. Rick Lewis McGM 2 5. q7 Larry Hackman T.F. au 4l 95 Bob Peacock T.F. 24 39 63 Dick Shinde T.F. Ki) 28 61 Marcel Tookenay McGM 21 32 53 Rino Michaud T.F. 2 21 50. Frank O’Brien McGM 12 q ag . Darryl Dewynter | P.L. at} 8B 4} *, COMMERCIAL RESULTS %, Tuesday, March 1 “ Juveniles 11 Pohle | ; (Juveniles lead best of three 1-0) a Thursday, March 3, ‘ McEwan GM 6 Totem Ford 2 s Monday, March 7 « Tatem Ford 14 Pahle 1 sc McEwan GM? Gordon & Anderson 7 , PNWHL PNWHL PLAYOFFS Saturday, March 4 Prince Rupert 9 Burns Lake 7 a Smithers 4 Kitimat 2 x {Both win sernl-finais 3-0) four minute mark of the third, stealing the disc off a G&A defenseman, goin around the second one an deking the goalie. Gustafson scored from LeBlanc to make the count 2-4 with a hard drive from close in. McEwan took two penalties, one at 14:35 and the other at 14:28. Gordon and Anderson put the pressure on and scored two goals to get within two. John Losier scored an a rebound. Jim Gustafson brought the score to 8-6 with a shot from the faceoff circle; assists to Bob Bogart and LeBlanc. Rick Lewis scored the final marker for GM, picking up a rebound and flipping it in. Bob Bogart made the final count 9-7, deflecting a perfect pass from Gustafson into the open net. Is there a way of rever- sing the reward system in sport? The two areas which spring to mind are minor hockey and swimming. As my area of expertise is more aquatic oriented, I would like to just revise what is happening and explain what some professionals are attempting to do about it. At ages when children should be more interested in enjoying life and having fun just being and doing, they are faced with the un- necessary physiological problem of coping with the attitude enforced upon them by people who should know better, that winning is important and necessary. I agree winning helps, but somewhere there should be Last Saturday, March 5, the 5th Northwest Zone Badminton Playday was held at Hazelton Secondary School. Unfortunately only four schools were able to attend because of poor road conditions and the senior division was cancelled, In the junior division ‘A’ Flight events there was ‘a continuation of the Skeena success story. Two Skeena teams contested the final of the mens doubles; Jim Chow and Lance Henderson finished first in front of Les Jack and Dave Kenney. In the mens singles, Jim Chow and Lance Henderson, both from Skeena, were first and BABE PLAYED HERE Did you know that the mighty Babe Ruth once played baseball in Van- couver? He did and the complete story and photos are inthe B.C. Sports Hall of Fame. . For Sale | Terrace Transfer (1975) Ltd. Local lowbed and hiboy company Active Business Fordmen blitz hapless woodsmen TERRACE TOTEM FORD 14 POHLE LUMBER 1 There were no great surprises Monday night in the Commercial Hockey League as the season wound down, the final games were won by the two top clubs, Totem Ford who finished the season in first spot and McEwan Motors who came in second. Totem Ford took the Pohle Lumber squad apart to the tune of 14-1 in the first contest and McEwan Motors survived a last period drive by Gordon and Anderson to win 9-7. In the first game Totem Ford scored first when the puck was shot off.the back- rds, came out in front, hit Miles Green and went into the net. Hans Stach and Bob Middleton drew assists. Pohle Lumber notched the only goal they could muster at the 10 minute mark of the emphasis placed on sharing ‘ and enjoying experiences wilh others. Swimming is one area which has a highly. struc- tured reward system where badges are presented at the end of ‘the lessons. Most parents have witnessed children at the end of the swimming lessons, line up to get their badges. The ones that pass are happy and ecstatic, but the ones who do not reach the required standard and receive no badges feel in their minds that they have “failed”. Our prime concern should be to teach skil development and de-emphasize the badges. The aquatic professionals in Port Coquitlam decided period. Randy MacDonald checked a Ford defenseman in his own end and whipped a shot into the Ford net. Dick Shinde got that one back before the period ended with a hard drive from the slot assisted by Bob Peacock. © ; When the second period started Ford really went to work. Before this frame ended they had gone ahead |, ‘Larry Hackman scored his first of five from two feet out. Mike Scott made the count 4-1, picking up a puck behind the Pohle defense. Hackman sccred from 10 - feet out, Owen Greaves flipped in a deflection from the point and Dick Brown scored on a rebound as the Pohle defense and team asa whole folded. Seven _ goals were registered in the third by Totem Ford as they con- three years ago to phase out Red Cross badges, however, the first thing that had to be done was to educate the parents as to the reasons why the badges were not hecessary. They explained fully to the parents that the children were assessed and evaluated throughout the lessons. At the end of the lessons they were told that each student had attained a certain skill level but not on a pass or fail basis. By evaluating at every lesson, this hopefully will eliminate any detrimental © com- etition between = par- icipants. Initially they found there was tremendous request for Skeena takes badminton playday second respectively. Meanwhile in the ladies singles, Skeena’s Gay Kawinski won first place from team mate Janet Parry. The remaining “‘A” Flight Finals were closely contested between Skeena and Hazelton. In the ladies doubies, J, Parry and G. Kawinski of Skeena were first ahead of D. Wilson and R.’ Morrison of Hazelton, This order was repeated 31 the mixed doubles finals when the Skeena team of J. Parry and L. Henderson narrowly defeated D, Wilson and L. Sargent of Hazelton. In ‘B’ Flight only three events were played. Dave Kenney of Skeena won the mens singles, Susan Janda of Thornhill won the ladies singles and Dorothy Stauffer and Georgine Shinde, ~ RECREATION CHATTER _. tinued on their merry way. Hackman scored when he was sent in all alone by Dick Rino Michaud scored on a three-on-one break and Peacock found the range on a three-on-one situation. Shinde scored after three shots had been stopped by the goalie, Ives Dugay shot from the point: and found a corner of the net. -Hackman stood all alone in front of the net for Ford’s 13th marker and Hackman again, scoring the final marker of the game on a three-on-one break. | Larry Hackman with five goals and an assist took a. four point lead in the scoring statistics after this game had ended. Playoffs are already underway in the league. The next game will be played this Thursday night and following Thursday's en- counter two will be played Saturday evening. Red Cross badges, however as time moved on requests became minimal and now there is no demand for badges in Port Coquitlam. The.aim is to get as many _ people to learn to swim as possible and the badge system is detrimental to this because people do not like to fail, even ‘‘little people’. How about eliminating * badges? There is enough competition in this day and age, without bringing en- joyable pursuits into a possible life or death situation. How would you feel if someone told you they did not want to take, swimming lessons because they did not want to fail? Let’s be positive and let people enjoy. Pastershank, also from Thornhill, won the ladies doubles. The final team positions were: Skeena first, Hazelton second, Thornhill third and Smithers fourth. In view of these results Skeena must have excellent prospects for winning the N.W. Zone _ Badminton Finals which will be held in Terrace on Saturday, March 12. SOME OF THE FIGHTERS YOU'RESTICKING UP FOR The thousands of crippled children in Canada all strugale from the Easter Seals people, using your moncy. The moncy d wins league title | McEwan GM closes gap McEWAN MOTORS 6 TOTEM FORD 2 The two top clubs in the Commercial Hockey League met head-on on last Thur- sday evening al the local arena. McEwan Motors was the better team that night and are now within two points of the front-running Totem Ford squad. Marcel Tookenay got things underway for McEwan with 6:56left in the first period. Marcel carried . the puck down the right side, around the net and fed Scott Corp who was five feet in front of the cage. Scott made no mistake. Steve Dillabough gave McEwan a 2-0' lead four minutes later. The puck was cleared from the McEwan end of the rink. Dillabough kept after it, while Ford, thinking it was a two line pass stopped skating. It wasn't called and Steve beat Lamming high to the glove side, Hans Stach closed the gap to one goal as the period was coming to an end, Tony Gilliard won a faceoff in the McEwan end, swept the disc back to Stach who scored on a hard screened shot, The second _ period belonged to McEwan Motors. Marcel Tookenay scored a beautiful unassisted marker within ‘the first two minutes. . Marcel also scored the next McEwan goal. Lanny Nevison controlled the disc in Ford's end unti] Tookenay could get set up in front, then fed him a perfect pass and the score was 4-1. Rick Lewis was also given an assist. Dick Shinde got that one back for Ford on a power play, Dick knocked the puck out of the air and into the net; Larry Hackman and Bob Peacock assisting. Frank O’Brien gave McEwan a 5-2 lead with less than three minutes left in the second, slipping the disc into the cage from three feet out; Corp and Tookenay assisting. McEwan scored one more in the third. Totem Ford had two men in the penalty box at the time. Marcel Tookenay, playing his best game of the season again controlled the puck, fed it to Lewis who fired into a wide open net, ; Forest harvest summary The Prince Rupert Forest District summary of cut for the month of February indicates that the harvest for the first two months of 1977 have more than doubled the cut recorded last year. The total harvest to the end of February stands at 44,840,949 cubic feet whereas last year at the same time the cut was 22,711,600 cubie feet. The breakdown for the month of February shows that the harvest includes 232,681 cubic feet of fir; 1,913,779 cubic feet of cedar; 7,103,343 cubic feet of- spruce; 4,073,087 cubic feet of hemlock; 3,293,800 cubic feet of balsam; 12,211,933 cubic feet of lodgepole pine; 122,446 cubic feet listed under miscellaneous and 154,678 cubic feet of fair wood return. The total harvest for the month of February 1977 was 29,105,747 cubic feet. CANADIAN TRANSPORT COMMISSION Clifford Sharples, Raymond Skoglund and Herman Neubacher proposing fo incorporate a company to be known as Terrace Air Ltd. - Application. for authority to operate a Com- mercial Air Service. _. Clifford Sharples, Raymond Skoglund and Herman Neubacher proposing to in- corporate a company to be known as Terrace Air Ltd. have applied for authority fo operate a Class 4 Charter Commercial Air Service using fixed wing aircraft in Group A from a base at Terrace, B.C. On request to the committee, further particulars of the application will provided. be 1 .Any person interested may intervene to support, oppose or modify the application in accordance with the Canadian Transport Commission general rules. An intervention, if made, shall be endorsed with the name and address of the intervener or its solicitor and two (2) copies ‘shall be mailed or delivered together with any supporting documents fo the Acting Secretary, Air Transport Committee, 275 Slater Street, Ottawa, Ontario, KIA ON with copy of the intervention and documents served upon the applicant or its solicitor not later than April 7th, 1977, The name and address for service of interventions is: Clifford Sharples, Box 458, . Terrace, B.C. - The applicant or its solicitor may, by a reply, object to an intervention or may admit or deny any or all of the facts alleged in the intervention. A reply, if made, shall be signed by the applicant or its selicitor and two (2) copies shall be mailed or delivered to fhe Acting Secretary, Air Transport Committee, 275 Slater Street, Ottawa, Ontario, KIA ONS with a copy of the reply served on the intervener or his solicitor within ten (10) days after receipt of you send to Easter Seals once a year supports these courageous children all year ‘round. When Easter Seals arrive inthe mailbox, use them. amounts of help to doit. i And senda cheque. To back And they get all they need nngs, these fighters. BACK A FIGHTER Help Easter Seals help crippled children. under a variety of handicaps. What they haveincommonisthegritand _ spirit to work hard to work themselves into shape. They need differing an intervention. . Proof of service shall be made by Declaration Under Oath and filed with the Acting Secretary. ,. The Committee will not receive any in- tervention or reply filed out of time unless the party making same satisfies the com- mittee that he could not have done the same within the time specified for reasons beyond his control. . F.S. Steel for _ . A-Secretary . Air Transport Committee Interested parties phone: 635-7195 or 635-6344 Evenings 635-7822 Send your contribution to Box 533, Terrace, B.C.