TERRACE BAY NEWS Vol. 15 No. 27 July 5, 1972 15¢ Per Copy BOMBARD IERS LEAGUE CHAMPIONS The Royal Canadian Legion Branch 223, Terrace Bay held their annual Bowling Wind-Up in the Legion Hall on Saturday, June 24th. Pres ident, Dave Gunter gave a few opening re- marks before the presentations began. League Champions were the Bombardiers = Paul Coupal, Captain; John Teniuk, Pat Jones, Addie Daley, Ethel Boyd and Emil Hammann; presentation by D. Gunter. Roll off Champs were also the Bombardiers. Roll off Consolation Winners were the Irish Regi- ment = Sam Ballentine, Captain; Mary Milks, Bea St.Louis, Marg Hamann, | rene Kettle and Harold Milks. Ladies Hi average was won by Dot Coupal; Men's Hi average = Jim St. Louis; Ladies Hi Single = Jean Fisher; Men's Hi Single = George Churney; Ladies Hi Triple = Edna Beddard; Men's Hi Triple - Dave Gunter; Ladies Hi Single w/hcp-Yvonne LeClair; Men's Hi Single w/hcp-Ernie Kettle; Ladies Hi Triple w/hcp-Stella Gusul; Most | mproved Lady Bowler-Irene Kettle; Most | mproved Man Bowler- Henry Duriez; Mystery Prize~Marg Duriez; Mystery Prize-Benny Comeau. 300 Club - A. Daley, 355; J. Fisher = 300; J. St. Louis 347 and P. Coupal 320. Statistician Edna Beddard was given a hearty vote of thanks for the excellent job done all year. Edna thanked Dot Coupal for her assistance, George Churney for running a raffle enabling the League to buy prizes and a large trophy; also to Jim Beddard for sending schedules to the Terrace Bay News and publicity. Photos page 8 ........ ONTARIO HYDRO "ON STRIKE" Local 1000 struck five of Ontario Hydro's Thermal Generating Stations early last week. About 950 employees'were withdrawn from the Hearn and Lakeview Stations in Toronto, the J. Clark Keith Station in Windsor, the Lambton Station near Sarnia and the giant Pickering Nuclear Plant east of Toronto. Together, these five stations represent about half the generating capacity of the Ontario Hydro net- work . Hydro's transmission and distribution systems were so far unaffected by direct strike action, although supervisory personnel worked long hours last week to restore service after storms associated with Hurricane Agnes swept the Province. "Management staff has been handling the iority of off-hours trouble calls, " said Jack Hamer, Area Manager for Ontario Hydro. "In cases of clearly defined emergencies we have called on Union mem- bers through their stewards to help restore service to customers." The 12,000 member Local 1000, Canadian Union of Public Employees has been in a legal strike pos- ition since June 21st. The Union has withdrawn overtime and on-call duty as part of its strike action and has picketed work locations across the Province. There has been no progress at the bargaining table since the Ministry of Labour temporarily suspended talks on the eve of the strike. Mr. Hamer said that the last contract agreement between the two parties had increased Hydro's annual operating costs by $17,372,000.