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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 61

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
61
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

61 Msrch 11. 1979 BOWLING LEAGUES MIBEUStFT ran rang C.H. WALLBANK CO. 14 STAT10M ST. S0SIXESS MACHINES is 0 caqys Gm Cass.5i Market Basket.

923-1500 is the nwlxi to cafi they're what you're seUsng' I 1 A- 3RD ANNUAL EASTERN BOSTON SUNDAY GLOBE BASKETBALL NeVt011 Norfll, Westwood win titles By Anne McGrath and two free throws. Walsh, a junior point Globe Correspondent guard, shot 70 per cent from the floor for It was, according to Westwood coach 14 points. Freshman Cheryl Aaron added Kathy Delaney-Smith, "a little cold, defi- six points and some key passes, nitely wet, but very exciting." Claire McCoy (eight points) and Sue It was a hero's welcome for the West- McMullen (six points) brought down the wood girls' basketbaU team, which defeat- most rebounds for Westwood. ed Abington, 64-33, yesterday at Stonehill Abmgton Donovan cooled off after a College to take the Division 2 South 10-Pmt ftrst half and managed to land crown just two free throws in the second half. Fire engines and a fleet cf about 50 Doughty, who scored 23 against cars met the team bus at the Westwood Bishop Stang last week, scored four, town line yesterday, and the team rode on In Ae "ision I South championship top of the fire engines through town to 8ame Netm North beat Hingham, 61-37, the high school at Stonehill Newton led throughout the Westwood was tasting sweet revenge.

8ame- takin8 a 13-10 lead after the first Abington beat Westwood in the first game Juarter and a commanding 32-19 lead by of the season to end Westwood's 94-game, i 4 6, our players scored double figures five-year winning streak. Since then, "6uie for Aewton. Sandy Smith, who played for estwood had not lost a game. Before a crowd of 2500 fans at l' Stonehill College, Abington took a 16-10 nLf I ij i I it had 13. and Donna Yaffee added 11.

lead the first quarter behind the shoot- "We're really peaking," said Maureen mg of senior forward Sharon Donovan, Enos, a third-year coach at Newton. "The who scored six points. kids are playing like winners. They don't But midway through the second quar- choke out there." ter with Abington up by five, Westwood's Newton shut off Hingham's leading Lynne Walsh drove downcourt on a fast scorers, preventing them from getting break and scored. For Abington coach inside, and easily broke Hingham's press, Dick Kelly, that was the turning point.

according to Enos. For Hingham, Mary "I knew we were in trouble," said Kel- DeLuze.and Melissa Lang each scored 11 ly. By halftime, Westwood led, 32-27. points, but DeLuze and Nancy Roundtree Wrestwood outscored Abington, 18-3, in (eight points) fouled out early in the the third quarter, and 14-8 in the fourth fourth quarter, for the win. tVestwood, 64-33 If UV i vv.

I I MARCH 14-18, 1979 i jT i SHERATON AS n7 ninug, INN 1-495 Exit 28 iRIe. 111) halfway between Lowell Marlboro 4 miles south of Rte. 2 ENORMOUS FISHING TACKLE DISPLAYS BOATS MOTORS HUNTING EXHIBITS LODGES FREE PARKING -de SEMINARS RETAILERS For Westwood, senior forward Anne Deacon scored 26 points on 12 field goals Newton North, 61-37 i The Sports Show Strictly For Sportsmen! Most Complete Advanced Clinic Program In The East Wed-Fri 2-10 PM Sat 10 AM-10 PM Sun 12 Noon-7 PM at Stonahlll College WESTWOOD (64) Lynne Walsh 7-0-14: Cheryl Aaron 2-2-6; Sue McMullen 3-0-6; Becky Carver 1-0-2; Anne Deacon 12-2-26: Jane DeSisto 1-0-2; Claire McCoy 3-2-8; Totals: 29-6-64. ABINGTON (38) Jane Brett 0-0-0; Patrice Fay 1-0-2; Patty Comeau 1-0-2; Dottie Chartier 5-3-13; Kim Doughty 2-2-6; Amy Dwyer 0-1-1; Sharon Donovan 5-2-12; Andrea Hill 1-0-2; Totals: 15-8- 38 halftime: Westwood. 32-27.

Team Records: Westwood (22-1); Abington (24-1). 25-11-61. HINGHAM (37) Mary DeLuze 4-3-11; Melissa Lang 5-1-11; Donna DeLuze 2-1-5: Nancy Roundtree 4-0-8; Karen Shaw 0-2-2; Totals 15-7-37. Halftime: Newlon North, 32-19. Attendance: 600.

GIRLS OIV. i FINAL Stonehill Collage NEWTON NORTH (61) Sandy Smilh 6-2-14; Judy Hinchey 0-1-1: Diana Proia 1-0-2: Susan Armstrong 0-1-1; Laura Flaherty 6-1-13; Donna Yaffee 5-1-11; Pat Ackerely 1-0-2; Sherry Levin Adults S3.00 Children Under 12 Ann Deacon of Westwood, who scored 26 points in team's 64-38 triumph over Abington, shoots over Patricia Fay for two of them. Westwood took Division 2 South title, now moves into state action. (Globe photo by David L. Ryan) Team Records: Newton North (15-5), 5-3-13; Mary Beth 8radley 1-2-4; Totals Hingham (16-5).

EMASS St. John's romps 1 HOCKEY iartil By Bill Doherty Globe Correspondent While the touted battle of the North Shore turned out to be a Bull Run of a hockey game yesterday, the definitive war has yet to begin. What St. John's did last night at, the Garden was to destroy Saugus, 9-1, and arrange a rubber match against Matignon in the all-Catholic (Conference) EMass final tomorrow evening. Soon after the Prep's Bobby Carpenter crashed from an opening faceoff hip-check, his comrades proceeded to do little for Matignon's ego while publicizing themselves in spread-the-wealth fashion.

It was only 1-0 a John Delande rebound past George Parrott with St. John's in front at the end of one period. It was only the beginning. Bob Bradley started the five-goal onslaught of the second period by rerouting Kyle Woodman's point howitzer and Bobby Carpenter came in 10 seconds later with a cannon shot under Parrott. Paul Silvio then finished a Neil Wysocki steal and feed at 8:07 before brother Mark Wysocki made it 5-0.

Saugus sealed its own fate at the 11 minute mark of the second period when it got hit with a costly double minor to Mike Stewart for an elbow check. Dave Tewks-bury cashed in for the Prep. The way the period ended (6-0) typified the Sachems' frustrations. Two players were watching from the penalty box. Bill McCallum gave Parrott, sensational throughout the tourney, a third pe- St.

John's, 9-1 riod rest but couldn't stop John Turner, Matt Madden, or Bradley in a two minute stretch. The Division 2 final will have a similar ring to it, but this time the token Cape Cod representatives will travel over a different bridge to collide with Arlington Catholic, the defending State Champions, tomorrow afternoon (4 p.m.). In case you guessed wrong, Falmouth is the team and Bourne is the bridge. Falmouth eneded a marvelous tournament for Shawsheen, and Joe lozzo in particular, yesterday with a 4-1 victory at the Garden. Superior skating and depth.

Falmouth held those two precious tournament cards from the outset but still led by only a goal early in the third period. A quarterfinal overtime loser to Arlington Catholic last season, Falmouth initiated the scoring at 2:40 of the first period on a 15-footer by Jack Irving and went up 2-0 when smooth Dave Connors finished three sharp passes through Iozzo's pads. But Shawsheen stayed tough despite incessant pressure and closed to within one on a powerplay goal early in the final period. Dave Biamonte collected a faceoff and backhanded one over Eddy Monteiro as Todd Taylor watched from the penalty box. Percentages overhauled the Commonwealth Conference Champions, though, as a George Young chip shot and Tim Smith's unassisted effort before the buzzer sealed things for Falmouth.

Falmouth, 4-1 DIVISION 2 SEMIFINAL at Boston Garden You've probably had your present stereo for several years now. And it's given you good service. But you're ready for something better. You're ready for Music Systems Limited. MSL is an unusual stereo store.

Because MSL stocks only peak-performing stereo components. From such respected manufacturers as Allison, Celestion, Denon, Klipsch, Kenwood Purist, Revox, and Thorens, to name ards for demonstration and service facilities. MSL does. What's more, MSL protects your investment in stereo with such important warranties as a one-week full refund, a three month defective exchange, and a one-year loudspeaker trade-up plan. Of coursewhat MSL sells, MSL services.

When you're ready for better sound, try MSL's $1220 music system. Falmouth (19-1-3) 1 1 24 Shawsheen (17-3-0) 0 0 1-1 Scoring: Falmouth. Jack Irving, (Shawn Chicoine), 2-40; Falmouth, Dave Connors (George Young, Chicoine), Shawsheen. Dave Biamonte (Joe Williams), Falmouth, Young (Jeff Connors), Falmouth, Tim Smith (unassisted), 14:31. Saves: Falmouth.

Eddy Monteiro, 15; Shawsheen, Joe lozzo, 30, Dean Sousa, 1. St. John's, M. Wysocki (Scott Barker, Dan Carnevale). St.

John's, Dave Tewksbury (M. Wysocki, Barker), St. John's, John Turner (Paul Silvio, Bob Carpenter), St. John's, Matt Madden (unassisted), St. John's.

Bob Bradley (Woodman), Saugus, Fred Fusi (Dick Ross), 4:25. Saves- St. John's, David Howell, 21, Bruce Irving, Saugus, George Parrott, 19. Bill McCallum, 5. DIVISION 1 SEMIFINAL at Boston Garden St.

John's (18-2-0) 1 5 3-9 Saugus (16-4-2) 0 0 1-1 coring: St. John's, John Delande (Al Auger, Alan Gordee). St. John Alan Gordee (Bob Bradley, Kyle Woodman), St. John's, Bob Carpenter (Kevin McKenna), 1 St.

John's, Paul Silvio (Mark Wysocki, Nell Wysocki), The loudspeakers in MSL's $1220 system are ADS 710 ll's. They offer remarkably natural, transparent sound. It's little wonder you'll find ADS loudspeakers at Symphony Hall -where musical sensitivities are greatest. An elegant Micro Seiki DD24 direct-drive turntable (with a highly praised Ortofon FF15XE cartridge) completes this magnificent system. Whether you'd like to spend $300 or $3000, visit PREP BASKETBALL Thayer champ 1 It features a LUX 1040 receiver.

The 1040 displays the quality finish and superb musicality that have earned LUX components world-wide admiration. And if you're a dedicated FM fan, you'll really appreciate the way the just a few. UJX. You won't find these components in most stores that sell stereo. Because many stereo stores don't meet these manufacturer's stand Music Systems Limited.

We have your next stereo system. 1040 deals with difficult reception 1 conditions. drive around a Derek Spears bucket. After two free throws by Thomas, it was Dixon again from the base line to make the score 73-72 Gov. Dummer with :14 remaining.

When Dixon fed the ball to Roundtree with 3 ticks left, he didn't have time to think. "I saw all these guys coming and said 'I got to shoot so I did," said the happy Roundtree. Dixon was the main man for Thayer, so why didn't he shoot? "I saw all these red shirts on me, so I thought I'd hit the open man, and Tree was it," he said. After falling behind by six at the half (36-30), due mainly to 22 first-half points by Thomas, Thayer outscored the Governors 12-5 to open the second half. Gov.

Dummer regrouped through, and Thayer never led again until the buzzer. "Our experience won it for us," said Thayer coach Bill Elliott. "We've had a lot of games like this so we're used to the pressure situations." Thayer won its last four tournament games by a total of five points. Worcester Academy placed four men in double figures, led by MVP Rick Carlise's 24 points to defeat Northfield Mt. Hermon, 95-79, in the Class A final.

Worcester broke open a close match by scoring 57 points in the second half. Joining Carlise were Jeff Nocera (21), Dennis Verni (17) and Manny Quintela (15). By Tom D'Angelo Globe Correspondent It was the shot heard 'round the world. Sophomore Steve Roundtree entered the game in the second half with 20 seconds remaining as a backup for center Maurice Mitchner. Twenty seconds later he was the "King of Braintree," as his falling down, twisting bank shot gave Thayer Academy a 74-73 comeback victory over Gov.

Dummer of Byfield, in the Class New England Prep school basketball final yesterday at Brandeis. Pressure shooting, some unbelievable individual moves and the finishing touches from co-MVP's Tony Thomas of Gov. Dummer, and Robin Dixon of Thayer. Thomas had 42 points, which included a variety of drives to the basket, and sneak away layups. But it was Dixon who kept Thayer in the game before "Tree's" heroics.

With three minutes remaining and Thayer trailing by a 60:65 count, Mitchner (19 points) and Dixon cut the gap to one. In the last 2:16 each team traded hoops, until Thayer missed three free-throw opportunities in the last 10 seconds. After Dixon's hoop it was Thomas from the baseline. Then an 18-foot swish by Thayer's John Guenard, The Governors' talented sophomore Terrence Talley responded with an offensive tap-in, and Dixon sandwiched a jumper and base-line MICRO SEIKI "tf WWit Jr II I Systems American Express, Visa and Mastercharge accepted. Worcester 95-79 CLASS A FINAL at Brsndels WORCESTER ACADEMY (95) Peter DiPersia O-J-2: Manny Quintela 15; Jell Nocera 9-3-21; Rick Carlise 10-24; Bill Mollelt 1-2-4; Tom Blackburn 0-1-1, Steve Oulfley 2-0-4; Mark Oliver 3-1-7; Dennis Vernl 6-5-17; Totals NORTHFIEID-MT.

HERMAN (79 -Doug Kirk 3-2-8; Tom Drlscoll 2-0-4: Marty McDonough 7-11-25; Andy Goodwin 6-3 15; Lindsday Stewart 4 5-13; Rob Smith 6-3-12: Jim Shaw 1-0-2; Totals 26-27-79. Halltime: Worcester, 38-34, Team Records: Worcester (22-2); Northfield-Ml. Hermon (17-6). Attendance: 800. 65 Mt.

Auburn Street, Harvard Square, Cambridge 492-6446 279 Main Street, Worcester377 Temple Street, New Haven.

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