i wae ens PAGE A106, mark hamilton PORT 635-6367 the herald Serving Terrace and area First win for Terrace Terrace and Kilimat water polo teams clashed for the second time last Wednesday in Kitimat and the resulls were much like those recorded the Cents split. The Terrace B-teara didn't fare quite as well, dropping their mateh to Prince Rupert. Those games end competition beiween cilies for the next little ek a ee “ Prince Rupert Halibut King + ‘center Paul Horak opened and . hosed the scaring ina two game 2” weekend series ‘against the * Terrace Centennials in Terrace: His first goal helped the Cen- , lennials lo a §&-3 victory i Saturday, hissecondkilled their : -chanees of another victory. ‘ That first goal off the stick of * Paul Horak went into the + Rupert nef, ‘to give the Cen- : lernlals a one to nothing first period lead Saturday night. The, 4 second goal was scored after * exactly three minutes of overtime play Sunday to give the Kings a 6-5 victory and a split for ihe weekend. . In Salurday night's game, Rupert. carried much of the play, but the Cents came back strong. On the goal Larr: » Wonds, converted to forwar for part of the weekend, swepl . in behind the Kings net and fired a' center pass: out front. Hordk knocked down the pass and then lipped the puck into his “own nel. . The Kings continued to press alter the goal but Barry Dubnyk showed why he. was one of the hottest things between the pipes this year, making innumerable > excellant saves in the early minutes of the period, ** In the last seven minutes of first period play the Cents added two more to their totals before. Rupert could find the range. Tommy McMasters scored: the first on a face-alf drive from the slot and Graeme Bevington taking a pass at the * Rupert blue-line and unleashing a hot shot into the Rupert net. ° The Rupert goal came in the last two minutes of play with John Mandryk finding Richard Wright with a perfect break- away pass‘al the Cents blue- line, * Weight had little trouble _ beating Dubnyk in close. - In the first period there were only two minor penalties, in a, nine . minute. stretch in’ the second, ten were dssessed, five ta ewch club. With all those penalties being . CLUB TOURNAMENTS Members of the Terrace Badminton Club are reminded of tha. Club tournament un the 30\h af November and the Ist of “December in Terrace. . ‘The entry fee is $2 and as well ag the badminton’ action there will be a dinner and danca. _ Further information -is eavailable 10 club members from executive members of the Club. job bee RT RE REN ey 4a * LS a ” t c Pe eae tee cette te te eda we, 5 BP PP ASE. Pf RA A ea ee ee ee ie te Pre with Rupert committed and called, neither team had much'time, or op- - portunity io score despite “manpower advantages at both ends of the rink. . The score remained 3-1 at the end of the second. . In the third, Rupert roared back, scoring twice before the five minute mark. More Kmyta found the range first, with a --lasi portion of the game but lest slap shot from the point, a shot that Dubnyk never saw. One of the, reasons for thal was the presence of Richard Wright, ‘directly in front of Dubnyk. A minute and seven seconds Jaler Paul Horak scored his first goal (o the right net, avoiding a check from Gord Cochrane at: the Centablue‘line and walking’ in on Dubnyk ‘alone. Al 13:34 mark of the period, the Cents got the break they heeded when defenseman Kevin Willison was assessed a minor for hooking. Tommy Mec: ° Masters and Graeme Bevington pul on a brilliant display of penally killing for several seconds and then walked over the Rupert blue-line and in on Olmstad, McMasters hit Bevingion with a perfect goal mouth pass and Bevington made no mistake, scoring his second of the night and the winning goal. The final goal came some minutes later, Dave Sharpe look a pass from Gord Cochrane and split’ the .Kings defense, _ going on all alone. One of the Kings has other ideas though « and hauled Sharp down. The puck rolled to Olmslad who gloved it. Sharp and the King offender slid into Olmstad and the puck slid into the net for the fifth and final Centennial marker. Sunday: Terrace fans were . treated'lo sixty minutes of see- saw battle as Rupert took the lead, on several occasions, only to have the Cents come back and (ie the score, The Cents next home game is this Saturday evening against . “Ibe Houston Luckies. _TCHL stats TEAM g.w. Lt pts of. gm MantiqueBlazers 5500 10 30 18 Terrace Hotel 5410 826 18° Gordan@& Anderson $230 4 25 22 Buller Glass °° 5140 21831 Pohia Lumber 6150 222 39 SCORING LEADERS : _ NAME & TEAM op. oa. pie Darrel Johnson, Man, 5611. Marcel Tookenay, Halal s5é411 Martin Hamhuis, Hotel $7310 Dan Gillespie, Man. 555 10 Rine Michaud, Hote! 5444 Rick Olson, 9A §52 7 Keray Wing, G&A 543 7 Larry Hackman, Buller" 543 7 Frank O'Brien, Man, S347 Carry! Dewynler, Hotel $25 7 \ TOP CRAFT. CHOICE OF CHICAGO BEARS INTIS RRL, WALLY CHAMBERS LAST YEAR PICK AS NFC ROOKIE OF JHE YEAR, ALSO THE ONLY BEAR WAS CONCENSUS first time the two cenlers met, while and the Terrace Waler Polo League wil! he going back into league action. A new schedule is being drawn up al present. . \ a Kitimat ‘B' team and wound 12-8. with Rupert during the past season against out of town The Terrace ‘B" team took on zone finals : was again Kitimat unseating Skeena in an upset. final. Kitimat won (wo sets 16-14 and > 16-10, Chandler Park of Smithers was third and Thor- nhill finished fourth. - Skeena fared far betler in the awards catagory, placing a _ total six. team members on all- slar ledms and in the most valuable player voting. . Onthegirls side Janet Walker of Skeena was adjudged MVP, Leslie Cain was givena berth on Kitimat. earn the victory {ne all-star team and Teresa though, never losing by more. - Macintyre received » an than seven points, - “honourable mention. + ; For ‘the ‘boys Clayton The, Booth A ieam from Williams and ‘Ernie * Froese Rupert finished third with | were named to the first all-star Houston in fourth place. : e. team while Kevin Earl was Tn the Junior Boys division it named to the second squad. ~ up on the wrong end of an 8-2’ score, : The ‘A’ team hit.the waters - next and, although they led 2-0 al the quarter and 3-1 at the half, they eventually were | defeated 11-6. The first time these \wo leams mel, Terrace had the score tied going into the Last week we were unable to report lhe results of the zone volleyball finals from Skeena Secondary School, The reason was ihat Dave Ross was lied up all day Tuesday and efforts te contact him met with failure. We do have the full results ' this week and here they are. In the junior A girls division, _ Skeena advanced lo: the finals against Kitimat bul lost to the Aluminuni City crew in two of - three sets... The girls made Terrace teams alse did batlle week, those games being played’ in Terrace Sunday. . Terrace fared far better Sunday when they mel Rupert, picking up their first win of the competition. The Terrace A leam pul logether a stellar performance and eked out a 9-8 decision over their Prince Rupert counter-parts. -Moto-SkiNuviki the last word in snowmobiles. There's anew word on'the snowmobile scene,and the word is Nuvik* ot It's the latest model from Moto-Ski®, acompletely . new snowmobile for 1975. Two models —4 300 cc. anda = °° 340 cc, The 300 comes with manual or electric start, 0" - rugged bogies.and a 15-inch track.’ i aren f “The 340 features “Torque Reaction” sliders with. double-action shock absorber. And both models carry... the new "Vortex Cooling” systern, which gives you_most. .-. \,_ ofthe advantages of a water-cool ee -.system’ without the cost, You also geta list of standard ~ ‘features that will make *,. -youreyes pop. — Moto-Ski Nuvik. Try it You'll buy it: - moto-ski—=2. Ww Trademorkset Moto Skee Lined . DAG rights pe SNOWMOBILE SUIT — li You Buy A Moto-Ski Before Dec. 20, ‘74 We're getting better all the time. () DOWN PAYMENT { Payment Until January 1975. AND ONLY FARST-YEAR-MAN TO of EARN PRO BOWL RECOGNITION, | GRADUATE OF EASTERN KENTUCKY NO. e a UNIVERSITY, CHAMBERS (8 QUICK, re TOUGH DEFENSIVE TACKLE AT a - 616% 250 POUNDS, ATLAS : os ‘YEARS OF AGE, AE COULD BE WELL 635-6555 | = ON HIS WAY TO BECOMING ONE ee ma ae FE ALL-TIME GREATS . . a HAD Jol REGULAR SEASON TACKLES, ~ yy 4 in % 4 i On Any Snowmobile O.A.C. ‘ 159" Chiefs tomahaw Graeme Hevinglon and the “Terrace Centennials took on a crew of Chiefs tast Wednesday night and needed'a three goal third period to convert a 5-2 second peried lead lo an &5 victory. Bevington rales special mention for his three goal showing and a good-all round performance in the mid-week match against. the Smithers Chiefs, The-Cents took a 2-1 lead in the first period, stretehed that lead to §-2:in the second and then watched the Chiefs roar back and Lie it up in the early minutes of the third period. They won the game on three unanswered goals late in the third, however, and held off'a determined eleventh hour at- lack from the Chiefs. Ii was the Chiefs who opened the scoring for the night and it (ook thema mere ten seconds Lo hit the score-board with Errol Rause, a fifteen year old whiz kid from Quesnel, sneaking a puck past Dubnyk on a low back-hand. o By the lime the period was half over, though, the Cents had that goal back, DesChamps scoring from MeMasters and Ames, and were pressing hard for the go ahead goal. They got il at tha 15:50 mark with Tommy .McMasters finishing off a perfect lwo man break with Bobby DesChamps: after the Chiefs defense gol tangled up at their own blue- line. _ Shortly before that goal, Barry Dubnyk had made a sensational save off Len Dies on what had to be considered a | sure goal. Dies poked the puck toward the open side of the net after (aking a pass from Rause, but Dubnyk somehow materialized a leg in front of the puck, making the save. Most of the early minutes of ihe second period were played al center ice, due as much to loose play as lo light checking, - and it took a Chief's marker al thes: 08'mark to bring the Cents. back to life, : ‘ Don Oulton scored that goal, blasting a shot from the point . after Dave Fraser had: won a face-off deep in the Cents end. . The puck was going wide when it hit a Cent defenseman and bound into the net past Dubnyk. Seven minutes laler, with the Chiefs playing a .man short, Dave Sharpe agaln gave ihe Centennials the lead, scoring on the rebound of a shot from Pocza. Pocza's shot had come off the rebound of Tommy MecMasters. ‘ Minutes after that Graeme Bevingldn had his first of the evening.’ Tommy McMaslers threw a puck out front, Chief » poal guard Dale Neilson poked it away Dut right onto the stick of Bevington who lifted the disk high into the net. Lance Legotiffe ended the Cents second peridd flurry with a goal with three seconds showingon the clock. Againthe goal came from a goal mouth scramble with Christensen and Sharp drawing assists. The Cents ‘took their three goal lead into the third and watched il dissolve in short order, Afler 1:49 of play Len Dies scored the third Smithers ked goal after Dubnyk had robbed Fraser, Minutes later Dies was pack, sweeping in a centering ~ pass from Errol Rause and closing the scoring gap lo one. Ten seconds later the tine of Rause, Dies and Fraser had ” (heir third goal of the period and fourth goal of the game, Errol Rause scoring his second of the evening froin Len Dies. The Cents came to life and fifty seconds later were back in the lead, this time to stay. Larry Woods carried the puck over the Chiefs bluc-line and back behind the net. He threw the puck out front, Nielson tried to clear it back behind the net and the puck wound up in the nel. “At 12:49 Bevington finished “his hat trick with a hot-shat from the face-off circle after taking a pass from Tommy McMasters, “ Lanee Legouffe wrapped up the scoring for the Cents at 17:38 from right out front. In the last two minutes of the game, the Cents picked up two penalliés, an interference call against Bevington and a cross- checking call to Gerd Cochrane who had sent Errol Rause crashing to the ice infront of the Cents net. Smithers, playing with the two man advantage, pressed and, on al least one occasion. ame close. Bul the gods and Dubnyk were on the Cents side and whal Dubnyk missed, Lhe goal posts slapped. ; Picketed =. . It had (to happen. A_ strike - where the pickets were picketed —seoms as if their sighs were .-- from a non-union shop! SUITS AND SPORTS JACKETS . By Hyde Park. | wd and Champlain | ‘SPORTS JACKETS - In Stock Reg. 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