Ontario Community Newspapers

Oakville Beaver, 12 Jun 1974, p. 42

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r a 42 H 3V A 38 3 J J IV 3 A 0 3HT THE OAKVILLE BEAVER KG I ,SI sn o l June 12,1974 Oakville minor soccer weekly results • Road Test • Drain & Refill Fluid • Remove Pan • Visual Inspection • Adjust Bands & Linkage • New Pan Gasket Clean Sump & Screen Condition Permitting In c lu d e s N E W F L U ID 8 4 4 -8 7 2 2 147 Church St. Oakville International/Coast-to-Coast Check your local Yellow Pages fo r centres in H am ilton and Toronto. M O N . T H R U FR I. 8 to 6 • SAT. 8 to 1 Cont. from p g .4 0 s c o r in g punch for Clarkson as that team downed B.D. Wait 2-1. Angela Bosada, who played a strong game for B.D. Wait, Scored their only goal. Terry O'Connor, M P , b l a n k e d E l i z a b e t h Balloch 2-0 on goals by Andrea O'Reilly (on a p e n a l t y k i ck ) and Suzanne McNicol. Beth Hoskins, the O'Connor goaltender played an outstanding game and stopped a penalty kick. Rose Melia in the Balloch net played an excellent game as well. O Savage Girls l s 844-1392 Mary-Eska De Josselin De Jong scored a hat trick and was named the g a m e 's ou ts t an d ing player as she led Larry Payette to a 3-0 shutout of Cablevision. Bronte Legion edged Braddock Spectacle Shop 1-0 on N a n cy Vanstraalen's goal in the second half. Karen Meijer was the game's outstanding player. Jel inek - vs. White H e a th e r Club was postponed. Royal Trus t beat Fireside Fabrics 3-2. Fireside scorers were Karen Alexander with two and Leslie Robinson with one. Ilka Soeder and Joan Olive replied for Royal Trust. J.R. Wagner Real Estate and Insurance battled to a 1-1 draw with People problems can be serious problems. This is what Ontario is doing to help solve them in advance. Recently arrangements were made fo r a group of Indian children to attend the public school in a northern Ontario town. The principal of the school in the town was aware that Indian children sometimes had arough time at the hands of other students, and to try to forestall this kind of situation, he called in a Human Rights Commission counsellor to talk to the other children. The counsellor asked the children if any of them had ever moved to a new school, and what they thought it would feel like if they were the strangers. In this way he helped them understand how the Indian children would be feeling when they ar­ rived. and the integration proceeded relatively smoothly. Community counselling is one of the major roles of your Ontario Human Rights Commission. We hold seminars and dis­ cussions with police in areas where there are communication barriers between them and minority groups, to help relieve ten­ sion and promote mutual understanding. We attend meetings of immigrants and native-born minority groups to explain to them both the irrights underthe legislation and their responsibilities as citizens of this Province. We also help bring people into contact with local agencies like home-and-school groups, community and government agen­ cies, and churches, which are available to help but which many people don't even know exist. Wherever there's a difficulty based on race, language, colour or creed, the Human Rights Commission is available to generate discussion and motivate people to develop understanding and re­ spect for the other's point of view. Our job is to help bring people together and encourage healthier relationships among all groups. If you would like more information or as­ sistance, contact the Human Rights Com­ mission at any of the follow ing addresses: HAMILTON 1 West Avenue South Postal Zone L8N 2R9 Telephone: 527-4501 KITCHENER 824 King Street West Postal Zone: N2G 1G1 Telephone: 744-5211 OTTAWA 2197 Riverside Drive Postal Zone K1H 7X3 Telephone: 731-7200 SUDBURY 1538 LaSalle Boulevard Postal Zone P3A 1Z7 Telephone 566-3071 TORONTO 400 University Avenue Postal Zone M7A 1V7 Telephone: 965-5251 KENORA 808 Robertson Street Postal Zone: P9N 1X9 Telephone: 468-3128 LONDON 362 Dundas Street Postal Zone: N6B 1V8 Telephone: 438-7291 SAULT STE MARIE 125 Brock Street Postal Zone: P6A 3B6 Telephone: 949-3331 THUNDER BAY 235 Bay Street Postal Station "P " Telephone: 345-2101 WINDSOR 500 Ouellette Avenue Postal Zone: N9A 1B3 Telephone: 256-8278 Ontario Human R.ights Commission. Ministry of Labour G o v ern m en t o f O ntario W illiam G. D avis. P rem ie r McTavish Travel Center. Brenda Ford got the lone Wagner marker and Susan Rogers kicked one in for McTavish. P E E W E E U A W 707 defeated Lance Shoes 4-1 on goals by Brian Johnston, Scott Patterson, Paul Hyde and Declan Whelan. Allan Beech scored Lance's lone goal. Miguel's Upholstery romped to a 10-0 win over Sheridan Ready Mix with goals by Andrew Grant (2), Gary Wood (2), Brian Penny (4) and singles from Jash Singh and Paul Barrett. Kiwanis t roun ced Schlegel Weather Seals 8- 2. Danny Vargas and Bruce Saunders each scored three for Kiwanis. Allan Keil and Tim Ireland got the singles while Daryl Mahler and Ted Sadleki scored for the Schlegel team. B P Oil edged Kerr Cadillac 3-2 on two goals from Paul Thompson and one from Rory Gibney. Jim Beemer and Gary Palmer got the Kerr markers. Jo e J uve Carp e t Installers won their first game of the season when they beat Flippance and Carr 3-0 on two goals by Mark Green and one by Peter Kessler. A two-goal second-half outburst gave Milton a 4-1 victory over Streight Jewellers. Oscar Traynor scored twice for Milton, while Allen Best, and Mike Traynor each added one. Marcel Berube got the lone Streight goal. Danny Vargas' goal proved to be the winner as K iw a n is edged Miguel's Upholstery 1-0. Lance Shoes nosed out Streight Jewellers 3-2. Scoring for Lance were Allan Beech with two and Tim Jones with one. Marcel Berube and Steve T a y l o r s c o r e d for Streight. Milton downed U A W 707 3-1. Oscar Traynor got two for Milton and Bill Harkin added the other. Declan Whelan scored for U A W. Kerr Cadillac blanked J o e J u v e C a r p e t Installers 4-0 on two goals by Richard Guiot and singles from Harry Oldenburg and Gabriel Bordas. Flippance & Carr and Schlegel Weather Seals fought to a 2-2 standoff. Ian Chesterton and Chris Mul ler s co red for Flippance & Carr while Kevin Cameron and Ted Sanecki replied for Schlegel. Sheridan Ready Mix edged B P Oil 3-2. Andrew Norman scored twice for Sheridan and Jay Monteith added the single. Paul Thompson scored both the B P markers. B P Oil squeaked by Flippance & Carr 2-1 on goals by Mike Gremmen and Mark Izzard. Henry Bekker got the lone Flippance & Carr goal. Miguel's Upholstery Fjgul stung Joe Juve Carpet Installers 7-3. Jeff Cooke led the attack with four goals. Singles went to Bob Graham, John Jensen and Gary Wood. Geoff Payne scored twice for Joe Juve and Beckwith added other. M i l to n b o m b e d Sheridan Ready Mix 12-1. Mike Traynor found the goal four times for Milton. John VanderVliet added three , O scar Traynor two and Paul Borland, A1 Best and C. Chimonides one each. Barry Hood scored for Sheridan. Kiwanis blanked Lance Shoes 3-0 on singles from Danny Vargas, Bruce Saunder s and Ken Bradford. Schlegel Weather Seals edged UAW 707 2-1. Schlegel scorers were Kevin Cameron and Ted Sanecki. The lone UAW marksman was Brian Johnston. Streight Jewellers beat Kerr Cadillac 3-2. Peter Stanton and Steve Taylor scored for Streight while G a r y P a l m e r and Giusepp i Marchiol i replied for Kerr. A dded T o u ch win The Oakville 'Added Touch' Peewees played in Georgetown last week and returned with a 3-1 victory. The locals missed s e v e r a l s c o r i n g opportunities in the first half which would have made it an even more convincing win. Scott MacClure, Wayne Preston and Melvin McClure hit the post with t h e i r s h o t s and c o n s e q u e n t l y th e halftime score ended at a 0-0 deadlock. Sco t t W aker put Georgetown into the lead as he beat Oakville's netminder Kyle Balloch on a breakaway. Their lead was shortlived however as Wayne Preston evened the count after being set up for his goal by Jeff Otto. Rayner Pade scored what turned out to be the winner as he received a pass from Mark Brophy. Melvin McClure scored on a breakaway with 10 minutes left in the game. In an exhibition contest in Milton on June 8 the Added Touch team prevailed for a 7-2 win NEW TOYOTAS ST%T TOYOTA COROLLA 1200 32.5 MILES PER GALLON From ! AKVILLE " YOUR SMALL CAR t d . EXPERTS" 827-1021 1504 SPIERS RD (AT THIRD LINE) 827-1114 SHOWROOM OPEN Mon. -- Thurs. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

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