Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 5 Jun 1974, p. 16

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16 In this league and. every league in town the name of the game is fun and as the players walked off the field Wednesday night their faces told you that win or lose. they had lots of fun. After all that‘s what coaches. conve- nors. umpires and parents are ut on the diamonds every ight for. TYKES T-BALL Appollo 11 Coiffure 15 York Provincial Ambulance 11 YPA were hitting well, with Paul Crowder having a homer but to no avail as Appollo 11 charged to a win. Both teams played well in a hard-fought contest. Town Auto Body 25 Baymar Sports 20 Both teams were hitting and fielding well. The turn- ing point came in the third inning when Town Auto got three outs. Due to rain the games were cancelled and are re-schedul- ed for June 6 on Diamond 2. SQUIRTS Sovereign Water Conditioners 33 RH Auto Body 9 Sovereign’s pitcher had 13 strikeouts. Catcher Wes Whi- taker hit a grand slam and Joe Bilotta connected for a homer. Hodgins Hardware 6 R. F. Mote 1 Murphy Real Estate 6 N. S. Smith 5 James Levitt played a strong game at first base. PEEWEES Kenzie Pharmacy 9 Bill Best Tire 8 Glen Sutherland‘s bases- loaded, two out two run single in the botton of the fifth was the winning hit. Rickey Gerber of Bill Best had two homers and five RBIs Richmond Hill Judo 7 Dynes Jewellers 5 Ray Sherar doubled in the winning and insurance runs for the Judo club. Kevin Shipcott. Blair Clair and Rodney Nelson all played well for Dynes. Bob’s Boys 4 City Wide Rental! 2 Jim Majury pitched an ex- cellent game for Bob’s, as he allowed only three men to reach base and also fired seven strikeouts. City Wide runs came on Len McVeigh's two-run homer. BANTAMS (Continued from Page 15) youngsters 10 yegrsrholdJ-an‘d under. FISH STORY Finally, a fish story. For the young ones. Eight-year-old Brucie Marshall Jr., of Rich- m‘ond Hill went fishing recently at Lake Wilcox and came up with a “Whopper” as they say. Well, I guess it was. Don’t know much about fishing. Anyway, it was a 39-inch Pike. Not bad, eh? He got it with a minnow. Congrats, Brucie. Kinnear Pontiac 7 Rumble Transport 3 Dan McVeigh of Kinnear pitched a fantastic game go~ ing on the mound the full seven innings with a total of 21 strikeouts. Mark Porter played a very good game at second base. Alliance Sports 3 ‘ Commercial Credit 2 Craig Clack of Alliance struck out nine batters. Greg Henderson hit a double for CC, Steve Shadoff went two for two at bats with a single and a double. INTERMEDIATE GIRLS Rice’s Flowers 7 Powell Fencing 4 Loughlin Lumber 5 Lazenby’s Ladies 1 The weatherman was not too co-operative as the girls played in a steady drizzle. Most parents watched from their cars as the brave las- sies played some fine ball Ellen Querengesser and Susie McWatt hit homers for Rice's, while Jackie Blanchard and Kim Irwin each got one for Powell. In the second game a pitcher‘s battle lasted until the final inning when Lough- lins finally found the range and scored four runs to win 5-1. Terry Wells hit a homer to provide all the scoring for Lazenb‘s Ladies. SENIOR GIRLS Dairy Queen 18 Hanson’s Flowers 14 Aloi Bros. 13 Micro Mets 8 Darlene Nelson recorded 10 strikeouts for four innings while Lori Hope and Cinby Sutton hit four for seven at bats in the second game. Melinda Naylor and Christina Barbour recorded seven strikeouts while Mary O’Sulâ€" livan hit two for four. one being a homer. wnue 1401'1 nope anu blnDY‘ 7 ~- Sutton hit four for seven at his" '1 S O COlloge on Wheels , bats in the second game‘ With woll-to~woll carpeting, 0 kitchen that hos llglellifda Naylordandd Christina everything including 0 kitchen Sink. lce»box, Toble. ar our recor e seven , . _ t r t l t < strikeouts whlle Mary 0 SUI- S 0 age cabinets and closets. I has two beds ho com “van hit two for four. one lOFlOblv sleep tour. Even louvered 0nd SCreened Windows. being a homer. Literally, 0 home away lrom home. In the first game Janet x . wens, Kim Anderson and And when you do get bOCk hOme, the VW Como Heather Cross all played well mobile turns into 0 station wagon with olmost mice for Hanson's only to go down the sooce (ond gas mileage) of an ordinary wogon. " Yet with all that spoce insmle. it's mirOCUlously, lust l4 inches l0nger outSIde than (1 Super Beetle. So vOU con pork it in most little blg city spots and eosilv moneu~ ver it throUgh the thickest City tn)ch ' & Act now and toke odvontoge of this §two-lOr-one sole. Borgoins like these ore \§e\\§§ pretty rore these days \e“ W 8. P MOTORS LTD. ; ¥» m; . .. Hm issnvglcgn ism-men 10 Strikeouts For Darlene Nelson In 4 Innings RICHMOND BILL - THORNEILL O AURQA NEWMABKET " ‘ THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Wednesday, June 5, 1974 Sport Spots torus-vat.) to a hard hitting Dairy Queen nine. Barbara Miller and Heather Smith were very strong at the plate. NOTE: There are a few openings for senior girls. Please contact Senior Girls' Convenor Mrs, Lynda Price at 884â€"9782. SHOEWORLD RAIDERS The Richmond Hill boys opened their league season May 26 with a 9-4 loss to a hard-hitting King squad. The game saw the Hillers give up 10 hits and commit five errors while KC recorded only three strikeouts. The Raiders cer- tainly hit the ball. but- a fine defensive effort by King City held them back on the score- board. Keswick had two Ibase runners and both were left stranded at second base. EARLY HOME RUN Philip was also the offen- sive leader by cracking a homo run leading off the lfirst inning. In all the Hillers had 15 hits led by Philip and Tom Smith with three,each. yDoug Lewis. Bill Dickinson and Chris DeGeer followed with two hits (DeGeer having ltwo doubles and Dickinson ‘one), and Pete Tipold, Glen ;Mor(-land and Greg McMillan had single safeties. All of the players scored at Ileast one run with Philip again leading the way with four. DeGeer had five runs batted in Lewis, Tipold and Philip two and Smith and The Hillers travelled to Claremont in a light drizzle and fought out a very im- pressive game May 28, only to have the umpires call it off due to the weather. Ken Topley tossed till the end with an excellent three hit, three walks and seven strike- outs to his credit. The Raid- ers came from behind a one- run lead by Claremont to tie and then go ahead on Top- ley‘s single and Rick Scran- nage‘s triple, scoring on the overthrown return. Big hitter for the game was Scrannage who had a triple and a double. Other were Topley, Brian Charles Ron Price and John Peden with a single each. The home game againstKeswick June 2 saw the Raiders overpower their op- ponents 10-5 in a well-played match. Glen Tatum credited the win with Topley the saver. Tatum recorded eight strikeouts while giving up two hits and seven walks. Topley took three strikeouts and four hits to end the game. Dan Powell or “Boog” sure lived up to his nick- name as he hit three for three with two triples and a single, five RBIs and one stolen base. Another hot stick for the Raiders was Price who hit two singles and stole a base. Others were Mark Street with a single and an RBI. Tatum with a Single and an RBI, Ross Simpson with a single and two RBIs and Ke- vin Smith with a single. Kyle Chatfield sacrificed. This week‘s play will see the Hillers travel to Pottageâ€" ville June 4 and host Ux- bridge June 9 at Crosby Park, game time 7:30. See you there! ‘ The Volkswagen Campmobile. like gerlling two cars + for , the pme of one. 1044‘0 YONGE ST., RICHMOND HILL 889-7701 or 884-6661 'Bantam Carpenters Win Two ° Defeat Oak Ridges, Keswick The Richmond Hills Ban- tams. sponsored by the Unit- ed Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners Union of Ameri- ca. Local 3233, opened their season in the York Ontario Simcoe Softball League in convincing fashion with 8-1 and 17-0 victories over Oak Didges and Keswick respec- tively. At Crosby Park May 31 they outclassed the Keswick team behind the classic no hit Ditching of Paul Philip. who had exceptional control and had the Keswick batters gues- ‘ing as to what to expect. Philip pitched to only 23 bat- ters, two over the limit in the seven inning game. He struck out 12 batters and did not issue a walk. Ali of the players scored at least one run with Philip again leading the way with four. DeGeer had five runs batted in Lewis, Tipold and Philip two and Smith and Mort-land one. At the Town Park May 28 the Carpenters turned a 2-1 ball game after six innings into an 8â€"1 victory over Oak Ridges by scoring two runs Mic Mac Juveniles Manage A Tie, Win The Richmond Hill Dairy Queen Mic Mac girls manag- ed a tie and a win last week in softball action. Thursday night they edged Aurora 7-5 on a three-run come from behind homerun by Bonnie Bryan in the se- venth inning. The juvenile girls tied Kleiniberg 3-3‘ in Kleinberg Monday night of last week. The game against Aurora saw Richmond Hill leading 4-3 going into the top of the seventh when the latter squad squeezed home two runs to lead 5-4. Then came back to back singies by Ernadette Thomp- son and Donna Querengesser in the bottom half of the seventh. This set the scene for Bonnie Bryan's line-drive homerun in left field to win the game. Tlle tie game was a pitch- er's duel all the way. Richmond Hill took a three- run lead in the fourth but Kleinberg came right back with two. The final Klein- berg tally came in the se- venth to tie the game. Querengesser struck out 11 batters and added a double via 1he bat to pace the Rich- mond Hill team, Carol Huns- date had two singles, Pat Purves had seven strikeouts for Kleinberg. tne seventh inning. The game was called after eight innings due to curfew. PITCHERS’ BATTLE Harold DeGeer of Oak Ridges and Glen Moreland of Richmond Hill hooked up in a real pitcher's battle for six innings. which was even more impressive since the game was played in the rain and they were throwing a wet ball. The two runs in the se- venth were scored on three errors around a walk and a sacrifice which increased Richmond Hill's lead to 4-1 and then the eighth inning saw the game wrapped up by a three-run out-of-the-park homer by Moreland. Out standing plays were made by Rookies Greg Wal- ton in left field who went far to his right to snare a line drive that was headed for extra bases and Ian Forsythe who made a perfect throw to the plate to cut down a run- ner attempting to score from second base. Moreland was the winning pitcher, allowing four hits. while striking out 11 batters and walking three. Pitcher DeGeer allowed 10 hits while striking out three and walk- ing four. Moreland led the scoring with four. Tipold added two and Steve Madden and Danny Girard plated single runs. More Sports On Page 28 91 DIRECT TO YOU WAREHOUSE PRICESâ€"SAVE 30 T0 50% MON. - TUES. - SAT. 9:30 AM - 6 WED. â€" THURS. - FRI. 9:30 AM - 9:30 N0 FANCY SHOWROOMSâ€"NO HIGH PRESSURE 'SELLING SUPER SAVINGS ON ALL DRAPERY FABRICS While they last Choose from white, ivory, gold, green and more. 42” wide, machine washable FADED BRUSHED DENIM 45” wide. Choose from‘plain or washed out. Perfect for pants and tops. Machine washable. 40” wide. Cute little prints, ideal for summer tops. Machine washable. JUST ARRIVED CHEESE CLOTH PRINTS FREE PARKING We reserve the right to limit quantities OXFORD PLAZA-RICHMOND HII.I. CONTINUES NEW SHIPMENT 100% COTTON FISHNETS AVUL 'READY TO HANG 100% POLYESTER DRAPERY 884-0139 COMPARE $1.98 YD. COMPARE $4.50 YD. COMPARE $3.00 YD. HOURS {Rams Stars Aid Hockey School ‘ Former Richmond Hill Rams’ hockey stars Daryl Rice and Gary Carr will 'be ‘lending their considerable lskills to the annual Rich- mond Hill Hockey Camp which kicks off August 19 land runs tq August 30. They's be joined by pre- sent-day Ram stars such as Billy Stephenson and Dave "Digger" Dunkley. Brimblecombe. who will be starting his fourth year as coach of the Rams, will also work with Ins- tructor Charlie Cerre, for- mer coach of the St. Ml- chaels Junior “A” club and a physical education direc- tor at Alderwood Colle- giate. The school will feature a complete course in drills and lectures including puck con- trol, shooting, passing on and off the ice. “I'm especially elated by the availability of Carr and Rice." said Brimblecombe. “They were far and away the most popular kids that ever donned a Ram outfit. Not to mention the most talented." Carr was an outstanding. goalie for the Rams for two years and was equally specta- cular in his freshman season at Michigan State University and is almost a sure bet to make the NHL in the near future. “We received 10 applica- tions from youngsters as soon as they heard Carr would be “We have '70 youngsters registered already." states Richmond Hill Rams’ Coa- ch Karl Brimblecombe who will be chief instructor at the school. “We’re aiming for 300 kids.” Yd. instructing here," said Brim- blecombe. “He's simply great." Even more popular is Rich- mond Hill homebrew Rice who spent three years with the Rams and has been all star winger at Michigan State College for the past two seasons. Then there‘s Defenceman Stephenson and Winger Dun- kley who are also both Rich- mond Hill products. Stephenson was recently drafted by Sault Ste. Marie of the Junior loop and- was an allstar defenceman with the Rams last season. He's also tabbed for future star- dom. "Digger" Dunkley has been a mainstay with the Rams for the past two seasons. was an all star last season. and an excellent penalty killer. “Anyone joining our school has to benefit from the ex- perience of these talented youngsters." said Brimble- combe. "They just aren't run-of-the-mill athletes. They know their hockey." Brimblecombe said that the school will feature a full day from 8 to 5 pm program. “They'll be working all the time with each kid getting full-time instruction from the above-mentioned players and myself. There will be one and a half hours of active ice- time in the mornings and afternoons. “In between time we’ll have such activities as ball hockey in the 01d arena, ping- poing and even baseball out- side plus a few films of in- structional hockey. The ten- nis court will also be avail- able. dllstfi'butorg SLIGHTLY IRREGULAR 100% COTTON 60” WIDE. Great for blouses, tops, summer dresses. Machine washable, 36” wide Sews up great into slacks, dresses, tops and children’s wear. Be sure to come early for this season’s top shades. GINGHAM OXFORD PLAZA 36" CORDUROY DOUBLE KNI'I'S ELGIN MILLS RD GOOD SELECTION OF COLOURS RICHMOND HEIGHTS PLAZA TRAYBORN 100% POLYESTER MACHINE WASHABLE COMPARE $5.98 YD. COMPARE $1.69 yd. "There will also be other instructional period plus con- ditioning exercises. It’ll be definitely a full day. “This won't be like the camps the high-priced pro's hold where they only show up once a week to sign auto- graphs and then disappear," said Brimblecombe. “We're going to be there all the time." Cost of the school is $55 a week and it‘s open to young- ster from age 5 to 20 years. “Providing we get enough youngsters we will extend the school,“ said Brimblecombe. The instruction sessions are sponsored by Richmond Hill Hockey Power Skating Schools Ltd. For further information call Brimblecombe at 884-8087 or Ed Sackfield at 884-8384. “mumm\u\umuumuuummmun“mmuumuuummmu Power Skating Registration Registration for the 1974 edition of the Richmond Hill Power Skating School will be held from June 11 to 18 at the old arena. Times will run from 6 pm to 9 pm. This year’s sessions will feature eight one-hour ses- sions for those participat- ing at a cost of $17 per persons. Applications are avail- able at all local sports stores as well as the Rich- mond Hill Arena. The school itself com- mences September 2. Returning as instructors will be Ted Wieczorek and Bryant Wasdell. INDUSTRIAL RD ELGIN MILLS RD. RICHMOND HILL FABRICLAN D WAREHOUSE 785i SAFEWAY «mu WI "'3" IIYWUIII Aurora opened the scoring on a disputed off-side and scored their second one off a defensive error by Centre ‘Half Jimmy Leitch who thought he was passing the ball back to his goalie. The The Richmond Hill Rang- ers came from behind a 2-0 deficit Saturday to down the 1973 League Soccer Cham- pion Aurora United by 3-2 at Pearson Park. Rangers Rally To Whip Aurora United Champs 3-2 Ten minutes of shaky soc- cer on the part of the Rang- ers found them trailing 2-0. Aurora forward moved in to blast the ball home. That second goal really shook up the Rangers and from that point on it was their game. After hitting the post two or three times and the Auro- ra goalie coming up with some fine saves, the Rangers finally broke through. Christy Nolan- of the Rangers finally put the ball into the net on a lovely passing play from Jan Dorst and Andy Brennan to make it 2-1 at the half. Both teams came out fightâ€" ing in the second half with Aurora trying hard to hang onto their led and the Rang- ers fighting for the equalizer. Richmond Hill C a p t ai n John White started the drive for the tying goal when he passed the ball to Andy God- chalk who speeded up the No obligation. Drop in to Dodge Ontario and enter our daily draw for an Olympic Lottery Canada ticket to be drawn July 16, 1974. I LEASE ALL CHRYSLER PRODUCTS FOR INDIVIDUAL AND COMPLETE COMPANY FLEETS automatic, power steering, power brakes, radio, vinyl roof, factory air conditioning, defogger, power door locks. Serial No. 268745, Serial No. 259383. _ $3595.00 A CUSTOM 2 DOOR HARDTOP, V8, r '13 "4 POLARAS wing and made a beautiful pass to Nolan who shot the ball home for his second goal of the lizer. The Ranger defence of Ralph Crabb. Dave Carlisle. Tom Wilson and Jimmy Leitch were like a brick wall after the tying goal. Richmond Hill’s third goal seemed to catch Auro- ra sleeping as the ball never touched an Aurora player as it went from Leitch to John White to Andy Brennan who right- footed it home. There was still 15 minutes to play but Ranger goalie Ron Binsell held the Aurora forwards out. Coach Tom Young noted after the game that “every- one played their hearts out in this game. A special men- tion should go to Sean Con- sidene who has just moved up from minor soccer. He's only 17 'years old and he’s playing 'great soccer with a first divi- sion team." Fullback Jim Henry played his best game of the season to date. The Rangers travel to Orangeville Saturday in the first round of the Jim Ri- chardson Cup play. Kickoff time is 6 pm at Orangeville High School. game and the equa-

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