2a oN a ad ASAE er SRE Ee Sr tel Ero SME USS ES SORE ; ER SE SHES " ' 4 TRO o UST R PRES SE ESA 14-- PORT PERRY STAR -- Wed., February 25, 1981 by Danny Millar Port Perry Juveniles exploded for seven goals in the final period to take a 9-2 decision over an understaff- ed Lakefield squad Saturday February 21 at Scugog Arena. The win puts a hammerlock on the series as Port leads two games to none. Port Perry also finished strongly in the opening game, which they won 86 after trailing 6-3 at the end of the second period. Center Tim Thompson led the Port Perry scoring parade with three goals. Lakefield showed up in Port Perry with only eight players, just two extra skaters. They figured to tire down the home stretch but even seven goals in the final period is surprising. Appar- ently three of its players were serving suspensions, and four others play on that town's Midget A team which is also currently playing Port Perry. It is likely that the midgets stayed . home because of a hectic schedule that would have seen them play a possible six games in seven nights between the two teams. Port Perry also used two midget A players in its line- up against Lakefield. Defenceman Todd Blayone, the standout rearguard who captains the Menzies Pacers was signed before the play- offs began but had been on the sidelines until now. He played a regular shift, work- ing on the power plays and while Port was shorthanded. He was victimized on the first Lakefield goal in the first period, while Port was shorthanded, when he was bumped off the puck and coughed it up in his own zone. He replaced Craig Mullen in the line up. Port Perry regained the lead before the first period ended on goals by defence- man Dale Geer and left wing Brian Mikkellsen. Geer's shot came from the point on a power play and deflected in off a Lakefield rearguard's skate. Mikkellsen scored on a sneaky play when carried the puck around the net and came out the other side to shove it in with 23 seconds remaining, the type of goal that often has a draining effect on the team scored against. 2 It didn't seem to affect the visitors, however. Tim Parker and Brian Dickson were off when Lakefield tied it up on a slap shot from the blue line but Port Perry went ahead to stay before the second frame closed out. Port's third goal was a picture perfect passing play that involved three forwards and indirectly one defence- man. Carl Durward picked up the puck in Lakefield's end after a shot by Pat Taylor had been blocked. He shovelled it off to Mikkellsen and then relayed to Jim Kane, who pumped it in late in the period. Dickson and Mikkellsen had excellent chances in the last minute of play but were foiled. So far, the Juveniles are one of three PPMHA teams to make it to the second round, and the second to play against Lakefield. The Pee Wee B's are still awaiting a second round opponent while the Midgets are embroiled in a close series. The Juveniles chances of continuing on look better each day and they could wrap up this series in straight games i RN OY BT CHER anh an SS NRE Lan ¥ RIPLEY TR, NRA 1 BD ¢ A 3 AAR IY LS Juveniles take 2-0 series lea Port Perry captain Jim Kane takes puck out of at the Scugog Arena. Port Perry had an easy time harm's way during Juvenile play-off game Saturday over Lakefield an five series. ow hold a 2-0 lead in the best of Port wrestlers hit gold by Danny Millar Mike Barton and Mark Beamish finished in first place in their respective weight classes at the Lake Ontario Secondary School Association high school wrestling meet Thursday, perfectly When you're a florist,good form starts from the ground up. Ask Lynn. She fills out the UI Record of Employment every time an employee parts company. When you're in good company, stay in good form. February 19 and have advanced with three other grapplers to the COSSA tournament this week. Barton took the 119 pound class and en route captured the Most Outstanding Wrest- ler award for the day. Barton was Port Perry High School's representative at the all-Ontario meet last year and has resumed his winning ways in tour- naments so far this season. He was the weight class winner at the Port Perry tourney earlier. PPHS also had another representative in Barton's category as teammate Rob Huggins took the third place honours at 119 pounds. Beamish was the winner in the heavyweight classifica- tion, which is an unlimited category. Two younger and lighter wrestlers will also be advan- cing to COSSA. Andrew Goss came in fourth position in the 90 pound class while Pat Bertrand, who also had been highly successful this year, came second at 112 pounds. Port Perry Coach Don Westlake, in his second hr a 1 ~N ec NGREDIENT season at PPHS, said he was pleased with the results. "It shows we're a competitive team," he stated. The top two place finishers at COSSA advanced to the Ontario Federation meet. Coach Westlake has start- ed a new Port Perry Wrest- ling Club this year, which apparently has been quite successful as well. They meet Thursday evenings at the high school and atten- dance has been good. It is open to other wrestlers outside the PPHS Rebel team. Lynn is in charge of personnel and finance for a local florist. And she knows that one of her responsibilities is to fill out a UI Record of Employment form every time an employee has an interruption in earnings. She knows that if she doesn't get it right the first time, she may have to do it again. So Lynn took the time to get the booklet "How to Complete the Record of Employment" from her nearby Canada | Employment Centre. . Leaving in good form. oi The Record of Employment is one way we can make sure no one gets short-changed and no one gets overpaid. This saves time and money for everyone involved. Lynn found out that the most common mistake is in reporting the "Insurable Earnings". Insurable earnings are not necessarily the same as payroll earnings. Because Lynn fills out the ROE accurately, ex-employees don't have to come back to her for changes. And neither do we. It's just good business to be in good form. At Unemployment Insurance, we process about 4,000,000 Records of Employment every year. Last year, employer mistakes in filling out the form cost at least $125,000,000 in overpayments. Plus the cost of recovering those overpayments and penalizing or prosecuting. We're out to cut down that $125,000,000. And we're going to do it, together. i Employment and od The UI Emploi et Immigration Canada Lloyd Axworlhy, Ministre Immigration Canada Lloyd Axworthy, Minister Ud Record of to " Employment. It's just good business form. 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