PAGE 10, THE HERALD, Tuesday, March 14, 1978 Victorious after several hard fought hockey matches the Moricetown Canyon Bears pose for a quick pick. All mem- bers of the team recelved trophies, as well az one for the club. Regional badminton tourney a held in Kitimat = The Kitimat Open Bad- minton Tournament was held on Saturday and Sun- day. Itincluded players irom Prince Rupert, Terrace, Kitimat, Smithers, Kemano and Vancouver. ‘ ta were as follows: Ladies ‘A’: singles — _ Debbie Anderson, of Terrace. _ Men's 'A’ singles — Bill Chudyk of Smithers, runner- ‘up, Bob Warren of Prince Ladies ‘A’ doubles — Pat’ Kenny and Fran Power of Terrace, runners-up Debbie Anderson and = Debbie Hallam of Terrace. . - Mens ‘A’ doubles — Bill Chudyk and Allan Leung of Smithers, runners-up Norm Chatfield and John Ross of Kitimat. ‘ Mixed ‘A’ doubles — Norm Chatfield of Kitimat and Pat Kenny of Terrace, runners- Allan Leung of Smithers _ and .Debble Anderson of Terrace." Ladies ‘B’ singles — Jean Eby of Prince Rupert, runner-up Sue Lortcher of Smithers. - Mens ‘B’ singles — Hob Heran of Vancouver, runner up Tony Knott of Terrace. Ladies ‘B’ doubles -= Jean Eby and Carol Stegavic of Totem wins 5-2. "BY JACKSTEWART . Totem Ford 5- —s. Gordon & Anderson 2 Thursday night in the last game of sem|-flanl action in § Terrace Hockey, Totem Ford did it to G&A by a score of 5 to 2. It wes a fast moving end to end game that saw only 14 minutes in minor penalties, 8 minutes to Totem and 6 to G&A. | It was G&A first on the scoreboard at the 7:35 mark when Harold Cox assisted by Les Thorstenson drilled one past Jerry Lamming. It waa e only goal of the period even though Totem had shots on G&A netTotem had 15 shots on G&A netminder Richard Bullen. Totem’aLamming hadonly 2 stops in the entlre period, In the second period, ’ Totem scored 4 unanswered goals. The first one came with 18:26 left in the period, it was Sean James, sssissted by Peacock and Farrow. With 16:10 to go, Reno Michaud, assissted by Peacock and James got his one. And then with 3:56 to go it was Michaud again with help from James and Farrow, and with 1:26 to go it was ‘Alberta champs hold Commercial Scott Corp from James and Farrow to end the second period 4 to 1. ; The third perlod saw G&A out -hustle=- Totem, -bit*-the-.. story. was defenice.Althiough. y hed ia tio on Last . ming nothing went in until th 15:44 mark, when Kevin Olsen assissted by Darrel. DeWinter Seymour got G&A’s second and final tally. : At the 17:57 mark, Totem sewed it up when Farrow, assissted by James and Ken Harder scored the final goal. In shots on goal Totem had 32 and G&A 20... . The three stars of the game had to be first, Sean © James with 1 goal and 4° assists, then Tom Farrow with 1 goal and assists, and finally, Richard Bullen for a number of excellent saves on Totems forwards, It was an excellent game that saw fast action, hard hitting, and end to end rush’ after rush by both teams. There is more of the same starting this coming Monday night when Totem F'ord hosts Skeena Hotel in a best of 3 outof Sseries, - .Remember game time is 8 p.m. In the start of the final series in Terrace Com- mercial Hockey. curling ground — Defending champion _ Alberta was one of four tatiana th rinks Sunday a) ofnthe Canadian Sunice women’s curling cham- plonship.. " . Alberta, skipped by Kathy ' King of Edmonton, New Brunswick and British _ Columbia were at‘2-0, while Saskatchewan, which had a second-round bye, was at 1-0, ‘King, who has second Maureen Olson back from jast year’s championshir team, salvaged a ‘10-7 —opening-draw gictory over B arbara Thompsc Winnipeg foursome with a fourender in the ninth. In the afternoon draw, she needed only six ends to dispose of Prince Edward Island, skipped Sandra ‘ Sauruiers: of Charlottetown, New Brunswick, skipped by Denise Levigne of oncton, had the easiest time of the leaders Sunday, Newfoundland 12-0 and downing Quebec 34. HAD TROUBLES . However, B.C., represented by Sandy - McKenzie of the host ' Chilliwack club, had more. than her share of troubles with those two rinks, She fell behind in both games before coming Need by defeat e 8 : jane Nett dna apa foun 8 Elate Cooper of aie od. ‘Against, Quebec, “McKenzie was down 7-5 heading Into the eighth end. She scored once in that end, stole one more in the tenth ‘and then stole two in the extra end for the victory. In th e Newfoundland was up %1 after four ends, but McKenzie got two in the fifth, Hole two tn the sixth and was never headed. Saskatchewan, represented by Colleen. Sielke of Saskatoon, turned back Cindy Duncan of Tealln, Yukon, representing Yukon-Northwest Territories 13-7. : Innthe other first-roun game, P.E.1 defeated- nOntarlo, skipped by Becki Ross of Sudbury, 10-7, Nova _ Scotla’s Kay Smith, of Truro, roundnaction, had the bye. - In‘ second Ontario damped Manitoba: 10-3 and Duncan edged Nova Scotla 8-7. . and «© Jerry” - , ’ Jets and then the media. afternoone. Prince Rupert, runners-up Joyce Paul and Ellen Fitzgerald of Prince Rupert. Mens ‘B’ doubles — Blair Peacock and Lauri Bateman of Kitimat, runners up Gordon Case of Prince Rupert and John Wiese of Terrace, - Mixed ‘B' doubles —- Tony Knott of Terrace and Ellen Fitzgerald of Prince Rupert, runners-up Jim Wilson and Davene Bater of Kitimat. Ladies ‘C’ singles — Barb Smithe of Kitimat, runner-un -Cey and Eileen . Dave Langwoa ‘of Terrace. Ladies ‘C’ dovbles — Anue Kawa and Malla Galaski of Kitimat, runners-up Diane. irkedal Men 'C doubles — Frank -Biondo and Bob Keefe of Kemano, rumers-up Gary Snider and Seppo Rouhonen of Ki and Dorothy Kitimat, runner- up John Wiese. of Terrace and Joyce Paul of Prince Rupert. . Hutchins Cheyne of Somnor pulls — the Bulls By JOHN KOROBANIK THE CANADIAN PRESS - . Birmingham Buils’ members ofnthe Winnipeg “If (referee) Ron Harris thinks that’s how to keep the | Swedes in this league he's crazy,” Somnor said af- ternhis Bulls lost 3-2 Sunday to Winnipeg Jets in a WHA game, “Wait until. ;Dave Dimn gets to Birmengham.., He'll be looking into the barrel of a few guys.” When queationed about the Bulls recent lack of success ‘as they-continue trying. to. brawl their. way into the Playoffs, Somnor stormed away into the dressing room. “Who does that guy think he is, asking me those questions? What's he’s doing askingnme why we lose 9-2 . of 6-3 in games when we've been ? . -LINSEMAN ENTERS . And then there was "19 yearold rookie Ken Lin- seman, who précipitated a third-period bench-clearing brawl, interrupting a con- . versationnbetween ‘Sommor and the only members of the media he would talk to, to shout his piece. “Go ask (Winnipeg goalle Gary). Bromley what . he he's doing giving mea shot just becawe I’m in his _crease,” said - Linseman. “What the hell is that? And - there's no penalty.” . ‘One thing was obvious, the Bulls werehot after faillng to duplicate a feat they- achieved earlier this season when they rallied to beat the Jets after a bench-clearing brawl | : Sunday, the Jets scored two goals innthe first four minutes of the third pertod,ntook some of the Bulls’ best shots dnd gave some of theiraown In the benchclearing incident late - in the period and then hung on for the victory. Barry Long, Anders Hedberg and Peter Sullivan scored for Winnipeg. Steve Altléy and Pat Westrum replied for the Bulls, the only other game Sunday, defenceman John Schella scored twice to pace Houston Aeros to a 6-3 win over Indianapolis Racers. Larway, Rich Preston, Steve West and Morris Lkkowich also scored for Houston, Rene LeClerc, . Michel Parizeau and Peter Driscoll: replied for the Racers.n 5 The win moved the Aeros into a second-place tie with New England Whalera, 14 points behind . teading . Winnipeg. GAME FARLY OVER the Bulls had EMIAGLeS 0 handing Duon, Winnipeg -. defen- ~ ceman, off with.- minor penaltles at 17:42 but before they got to the box the pair ‘had squared off: Birmingham’s Phil Roberto . thennjumped ‘into the LinfemanDunn fight and Bobby Hull moved in to haul Roberto off. Tmat's when: § Steve. Durbano.’ charged offathe Birmingham. bench, ‘taced full speed across the width of the ice and slammed into Hull from behind. That immediately emptied both benches and before peace was restored, Win- nipeg coach Larry Hillman had taken the Jets to the dressing room for a cooling- off period. The Bulls fol- lowed suit. m . It “took game ° officials ~ pearly 30 minutes after the end ofnthe gaine to sort out all the tles and when it was: tallied, Harrls mad cessued 136 more minutes. Director of officials,: Bob Frampton, ‘was ‘In. .at- tendance-at the game and afterwards he fingered three players—-Linsemen, Roberto and .Durbano—as' the in- Btigatorg.... -.. * - Hull, who scored his 1,000th professional goal Saturday night, was for- tunate to escape without injury. ' CAANNWILL DIRECT ‘Screen star James Caan will direct hig £irat motlon picture, Hide In Plaln Sight, ~ this spring, says Metro — Goldwyn-Mayer. : FESTIVAL RETURNS. Britain’s second Malvern © Festival takes place between. May 22 and June 11 this year, once again concentrating on’ George Bernard Shaw. : One of Rene Simard’s shows seen in December has — been entered in the Mon- treux Television Festival held in Switzerland this - spring, BASEBALL RETURNS mop 6 marks the return of , league baseball to. CBQ,TV, and Toronto Blue Jayavand Montreal Expos. w featured in 87 shows. SEAWAY CLIMBS Between the time an oceangoing vessel enters the St, Lawrences: seaway . and reaches Thunder Bay, Ont., it climbs 600 feet, . ~ ANY ARE IRREGULAR The Finnish language has more than 4,000 irregular verba, ue timat. . Mixed ‘C’ doubles — Ken ENTER SiMARD'S SHOW The Morleetown Canyon Bears captured the zone 5 natlve championskip last Sunday as they beat Kispiox §-2 in the final round of play at the Kitimat arma. Teams representing each area of the zone, five teams in all, travelled to Kitimat for the weekend tourney. Friday Friday night the Can Bears took on the Skeena Crossing team and won 7-3. Saturday they continued thelr winning streak against Kitwanga beating them 3-2 in sudden death overtime. | Canyon Bears clean-up Kitimat What caused this great rally for the champlonship? Well, it could have been the support of the fifty enthusiastic fans who came along with the team from Morice town. As champs the Hears will go on to Prince George where, on Easter weekend, they'll play for the provincial native championships. Other than one small in- cident involving a tax! and three team members, the Bears: harmoniously com- mented in the parking iot of the arena, “It was 2 goed, ‘good time.” Blind curler hooked “TORONTO (CP) — Rick wart thinks Ati ia “the rt go a = “ht a team sport and it really gets me worked up,” ’ Rick, 23, is classified as to- ‘tally blind, But he’s taken _ part in other sports like wrestlig, hockey and bowling. Since he Joined the Metro Toronto Blind Curling League. four years ago though, most of his absorbed in curling. n He haunts the down- sheets, practicing through the week and curling com- -petttively each Sunday night in an eight-team league. Though legally blind, Muzzo does have some light perception. 5 ~“Most of us have enough sight to see the rock or the house,”’ he says. “But most ‘of our curling is still through sound, “My akip shouts what he wants me to do and then I line up my shot, When you curl so many years, you ge& toknow what you are doing," The eight teams curlregu- | lation ceight-end games during a . round-robin scheduled. The only aspect the sweeping. ‘That i left to ¢ sweeping. That t to the fighted members of the league, who also double as skips. n ‘ “We evennenter bonspiels for. sighted people,” he mused this week. “We don't do well, but we have fun and gain experience. And we have won some games," Next. bonspiel for Muzzo and his team-mates is the provincial blind curling championships in. Kingstonnwhere they'll meet rinks from Barrie, Hamilton, London, Kitchener and the host city, LINE-A-BED is a molded liner/ protector for your truck bed that’s virtually inde- structible. Because it’s made of the same high-impact material you'll find in ‘football helmets and golf-club heads. — The purpose of LINE-A-BED is to protect ". ing his truck bed: the bed of a new or used pickup truck, . . ‘to enhance ‘its appearance, to insulate ~ -the bed when it is used In conjunction - with a topper or recreational equipment. 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Nicklaus missed by that rab on a fourth wedge shot of the Gay, this for a birdle that would have tled it on the final hole, Weiskop!, three times before frustrated in emallenges for this title, moved into a four-stroke lead over Nicklaus with a 67 in the morning round while Jack shot a 72.- Their af- ternoon soures were 68 for Wel , 95 for Nicklaus. Nicklaus holed wedge shots for eagles on the 10th and 12th holes, but Weiskopf yedite 10th, 11th and 12th e-birdiebirdie. “I had to make putts of 15 and 12 feet to keep from losing two shots on both the 10th and 12th holes,” he sald. FOR PRIVATE USE OR BUSINESS AUTOVEST Before you buy, Investigate the advantages of this rent: fo-own plan. All monies paid apply to purchase. Why tle up your cash or borrowing power. Ist and fast months rent and drive away. 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