.JO THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, Mey 10, 1960 ELECT OFFICERS SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR "Everything From Soup To Nuts' At one of the best-attended meetings in the history of the Osh Minor Softball Associa- GEORGE DUDLEY passed away 'on Sunday and Canada lost one of its greatest sports leaders while Canada and the entire world, or at least wherever hockey is played, suffered a personal loss. A lawyer by profession and a hockey executive by choice, his own and that of hockey men in general, George Dudley made a tremendous contribution to the game he loved. His expert administration ability, enhanced by his legal training and that gift of human perception referred to as psychology, made him both a tower of strength ina committee room and a fountain of advice and guidance for teams anxious to keep out of trouble, The combin- ation of these qualities earned him the title of : Mr. Hockey"--a title that was in itself a significant tribute and pointed up the esteem and admiration in which he was held. You had to admire George Dudley, even if there were times you didn't: like him, And he wasn't always liked but he always had the respect of his associates, It has been said that "the fellow who never offend- ed anybody was the same fellow who never tried to do anything." It has been phrased also that nobody can take a pot-shot at you unless you stick your neck out. George Dudley wasn't afraid to "stick his neck out", he wasn't afraid to try to do something, make a sugges- tion, express an opinion, give a ruling or mete out stern discipline. Like many others interested in hockey and its ups-and-downs of the past quarter-century and like some even more closely associated with the sport than being just an interested fan or even a sports scribe, we have on occasions (admittedly not many) disagreed with the action taken or the decisions given by "Mr. Hockey". So have dozens of others connected with OHA and CAHA activity. This was bound to be--such action or decision was contrary, not so much to our thinking, but it was thwarting personal desires, But in the vast majority of such instances, it was the rights of all, rather than the privileges of a few, that determined George Dudley's decisions and his actions. That's why, it "Hockey" in Canada had ever appointed a Commis~ sioper, to be a one-man, administrative boss of the game inthis country, then George Dudley would have been, we. believe, an almost unanimous choice. That's why ~®ewwas known as "Mr. Hockey"--and that's why Can- a's National Game will sorely miss his safe guidance, ---- BRIGHT BITS: Oshawa Minor Softball Association -- a fine meeting last night at Simcoe Hall, ong of «the best-attended organization meetings in many years. whey have 14 Bantam teams and six entries in the Midget League, both with schedules to open June 1st. ~A full account appears elsewhere on this page. OSHAWA LAWN Bowling Club is holding its annual spring meeting at 7:30 o'clock on Thursday evening of this week, at the clubhouse and president Jack Anderson will ask various committee chairmen to make their witports. . .. DON'T THINK the diamond will dry enough, but in case it is, the Tony's senior softball @ltb is holding a practice tomorrow (Wednesday) night, «galled for 8:00 o'clock, at" Alexandra Park. Tony's are » Te-entering the Toronto Beaches Fastball League this hear and all players interested, are asked to report fo. this workout. .,, FRED GLOVER of Cleveland "Barons was voted this season's most valuable player ' the American Hockey L with Rochester goalie ¥d. Chadwick as runner-up for the honors, but far back. . . . WEATHER, which will surprise no one, ruin- "¢d the major baseball league schedules yesterday, only «three games being played. In the International League, "Richmond Jets edged Rochester 2-1; Washington beat Kansas City 3-1 in the lone American League game and in the single National League tilt played, Charlie Neal hit a three-run homer for the Dodgers in the 9th, to hand Pirates another licking, this one 7-4, a -- a tion, Oshawa Neighborhood Park representatives cleared the decks for their summer's action in boys' softball, last night at Sim- coe Hall Main items of business in- cluded the acceptance and clos ing of entries for the 1960 sea- son, with a near-record entry of 14 teams lining up for action in the OMSA Kiwanis Bantam League and six clubs paying their entry fees for the OMSA Midget League, The team delegates voted unanimously on most of the busi. ness items put before them, but not before long and thorough dis- cussion of all phases pertaining to each question. Both Bantam and Midget teams agreed to com- mence schedule play on Wednes- day, June 1. ARRANGE PLAYOFFS With the large entry-list of 14 teams. in the Bantam League, and keeping in mind that all schedule play is pended dur- With few exceptions, both the Bantam and dget schedules will call for league games each Monday and W y evening. Rained-out or postponed games will be automatically scheduled for Friday of the same week and if this date is not met, the execu- tive will set a new date. Other items of business per- taining to the 1960 season, in. cluded the allotting of neighbor- ing areas, to be included as a ed zone for the various Midget teams. Both Bantam and Midget delegates voted special "outside player" concessions to certain individual team requests. Clubs also signified their team colors and diamond facilities. Sweater sizes are to be submit. ted by team managers by Satur- day of this week, NEW OFFICERS ELECTED The election of Oshawa Minor Softball Association officers for the 1960 season saw "Joe" Vic- tor, a vice-president of the Asso- ciation since its inception, receive an acclamation. to the position of ing the GM holidays, first two weeks of August, the clubs agreed to play a round-robin schedule, up to July I5, Starting July 18, the top four teams in the league standing will com- mence semi-final playoffs to de- cide which team will represent Oshawa in OASA Bantam provin- cial playdowns, while the other 10 clubs will commence their own Kiwanis League playoffs -- all teams being included. In the Midget League, similar procedure will be followed, ex- cept that the six teams will play a lete double schedule, their league continuing until July 30, then resuming on Aug. 15. How- ever, as in the Bantam League, the top four teams will stage OASA elimination 'playoffs stari ing July 18. At the conclusion of the complete Midget schedule, the top four teams will then wage their own league championship playdowns. preside:t : Fred Kitchen was elected vice- president; Norman Attersley, As- sociation treasurer since the group was first formed, was re- turned to office and Geo. Camp- bell was elected to the position of secretary. In each instance, the elected officers received an ac- 1 tion, other i de- clining to stand. At the conclusion of the elec. tions, an enthusiastic vote of ap- preciation was tendered to the two retiring officers, immediate past-president "Bert" Salter and secretary "Tim" Nelson. Fred Kitchen and Joe Zak, mover and seconder respectively of the offi- cial motion, paid sincere tribute to the many hours of hard work and to the efficiency of adminis. tration displayed by the two offi- cers during their many years of serving the Association. The dele- gates endorsed the motion with enthusiasm, Pirates By ED WILKS Associated Press Staff Writer Pittsburgh's stumbling, fum. bling Pirates still are at it, losing the National League lead with a six of seven since spurting into nine-game winning streak. They dropped their fourth in a row Monday night, giving up a pair of unearned runs and losing 7-4 at Los Angeles as Charlie Neal slugged a three-run homer in the ninth that tagged the once unbeatable Elroy Face with his third defeat. The Pirates now are 1% games| behind idle, first place San Fran-| cisco and only one game ahead of Milwaukee's third place Braves, who were rained out at Chicago in the only other NL game scheduled. Rain also halved a two-game schedule in the American League. Righthander Camilo Pascual, wig- SCISSORED SPORT Fight Manager Ask CBF Help S MONTREAL (CP)~The Cana- optioned outfielder Lou Johnson American candidate so far for! dian Boxing Federation has been Monday to Houston of the Ameri. asked to help arrange a title|can Association subject to 24- match between heavyweight hour recall. Johnson had five hits champ George Chuvalo of Tor-|in 24 trips for a .208 average with onto and Montreal's Bob Cleroux, the Cubs. the top contender. TORONTO BID FOR BOUT less since the season opener, pitched his second three-hit vie. Argonauts Choose Illinois Guard 'GRBA Giving Minor Softball LL. Hitters Opens On June 1 Tough Time By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ell Grba is a tough man. Not only does he have one of the toughest names in baseball to pronounce (it's Grr-ba), but he is giving the hitters in the Inter- national League fits trying to make something of his pitching, The Richmond Virginians hurler won his third straight Monday night, 2.1 over Roches. ter Red Wings, and ran his earned run average to 0.50 in 36 innings. All other IL activity-- Buffalo Bisons - Columbus Jets, |th Miami Marlins-Montreal Royals, Havana Sugar Kings - Toronto Maple Leafs--was rained out. Grba scattered five hits and struck out eight. He has allowed only two runs--both earned--in four starts and has given only 23 hits. What's more impressive is his 24 strikeouts against only 11 walks, and three complete games, two of which were shut- outs, WILD THROWS HELP The Vees pushed over the win. ning .run in the eighth after two were out. Deron Johnson reached first on Julio Gotay's error, went to second on a wild pitch and continued to third on catcher Dave Rickett's wild throw. He scored one batter later when Jim Pisoni singled. Grba scored the first run in the third when he was forced home by Pisoni, who walked with the bases loaded. Rochester pulled off its second triple play of the season in the second inning. With the bases loaded and none out, Bill Shantz' liner was snared by third base- man Bill Harrell, who stepped on third to get the second out and threw to second baseman Bob Sadowski to complete the triple play. Sadowski caught Granny Hamner off the bag. Duke Carmel's double and Ricketts' single scored the Wings' only run in the fifth, SPORT SNAPSHOTS SPORT SNAPSHOTS By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Staff Writer John Gibson adjusted his rum- pled six-foot frame in an easy chair, stroked his frisky Irish terrier and confided with a deep- throated chuckle: "Now I'm starting to live, I retire on Aug. 1 and you're likely to see me at the races quite a bit," There's nothing unusual about is--except: He's an Anglican 'minister, 83 years old, He is probably the only parson in North America with thoroughbred race horses among his worldly assets. "There may be others of my calling who race or own horses," sald the big, friendly minister in creased, food - stained trousers and slightly tattered shirt. "But as far as I know, they haven't come out to admit it." OFF-TRACK BETTING His views on horse racing and gambling 'are broad enough to make church elders wince, He has bought, sold, trained, traded and given away horses all his life and to " 1 most wh sports there is." He believes off-track gambling should be made legal. Mr, Gibson, who gazes at the world with ever-twinkling eyes behind horn-rimmed glasses, was interviewed in the living room- office of his old brick home on the seamy west side of downtown Toronto. It is a section inhabited by bookmakers and bootleggers-- "and I know them all"--amid a babble of many tongues. It has been his parish for more than 50 years, The furaiture of his home is frayed. The walls are lined with pictures of his children and grandchildren; the book cases filed with worn and faded religi- ous vol Scattered on his SPORTS CALENDAR desk are pictures of his beloved horses and a book telling how to train them, NEVER BETS "I never did get around to reading that book on training Still On Toboggan tory as Washington clubbed Kan- sas City 8-1. The Cleveland at Boston game was postponed. The Pirates, who committed 4 errors Monday night, and 15 in their last five games, were shut out on one hit for seven innings by Don Drysdale. The Dodgers' ace righthander struck out 13, but gave up two-run homers by Bill Mazeroski and Bob Skinner the eighth and ninth before re- liever Larry Sherry took over. Sherry, back to doing what comes naturally after a fling as a starter, came in with the tle- breaking run on first, struck out Don Hoak and then retired Gino Cimoli on a grounder to end the | Pirate rally. Neal's gecond home run of the season, following a single by Maury Wills and an in- tentional walk to Junior Gilliam got the job done. It was Sherry's third straight victory in relief--all the Dodgers have won in their last nine games. It made him the champs' top winner at 4-3. The young right. hander has only a 1-2 record to show for his shot as a starting pitcher. TORONTO (CP)--Toronto Ar- gonauts picked up a ninth import {lineman Monday the 20th [the Big Four team. Willie Brown Jr., 225 - pound |guard and linebacker from South- lern Illinois University arrived as |a long-shot contender for a place lon the team. Cleroux's manager Al Bachman said Monday night in a long- distance telephone call from New York tha' he made the request in wires to CBF president Merv McKenzie of Toronto and Gene Letourneau of Quebec City, the CBF's national commissioner. Bachman said promoter Eddle Quinn of Montreal has agreed to stage a bout "at the earliest pos- | sible date." He said he held talks with Quinn, in New York Monday and in Montreal last week. SNEAD WINS TOURNEY YORBA LINDA, Calif. (AP)-- Sam Snead won the $50,000 round- robin all-star golf tournament by Joi strokes Monday and the. top 'priac' of $10,000. Second in the 54- hole competition were Jimmy Demaret and Cary Middlecoff, each with 209 for $7,000 each. OPTION FIELDER CHICAGO (AP)--Chicago Cubs Triandos Hard T Be Replaced | | IMORE (AP)--The Balti- | Orioles apparently have | against some blank walls | * search for a catcher to : disabled Gus Triandos. MacPhail, Orioles presi- and general manager, said | ontacted "six or eight" big | dtle clubs in an effort to ac- se a right-handed-hitting re- giver. «BIg Gus, who will be lost to She Birds for at least a month, § scheduled to undergo surgery Nednesday for relief from pres I¥€ on a nerve in the inner side his right thumb, facPhail's primary target ay is believed to have been Jarrell Johnson, third-string St. Louis Cardinals catcher who gaught briefly for the 1954 Birds. ss There is a strong possibility dhat the Orioles will recall catcher - outfielder Gene Green from Miami, Baltimore's Triple-A affiliate in the International League. NEW YORK (CP) -- Toronto] Head coach Lew Agase is al- has been suggested as the site ready expected to keep a mini- for the Archie Moore Eric/mum of one quarterback, three Shoeppner light-heavyweight box- halfbacks, an end and two de- ing title bout July 18. The World- fensive specialists in his United |Telegram and Sun says Dave States quota. Log MGR fight with | Tiger-Cats Balk At Player Release James Parker in that city in 1956, | made a bid for the Moore-Shoepp- | ner bout in conversations with Feature Sports Inc. here during the weekend. INGO WORKS OUT | Tiger-Cats of the Big Four foot- GROSSINGER, N.Y. (AP) --|pall league have rouse to give Heavyweight champion Ingemar centre and linebacker Jim Taylor Johansson, warming up for his hig release to play for Houston of |June 20th defence against Floyd the new American Football | Patterson, boxed two rounds each|League this season {with light - heavyweights Artie! Taylor, a Texan who joined the Towne and Bill Johnson Monday. Tiger - Cats last summer after SOUTH AFRICA LEADS |three seasons in the National DERBY, England (Reuters) -- Football League, requested his {The South African cricketers|release in February. maintained their grip on the| "I don't really care where I {match against Derbyshire Mon-|play football," Taylor, who day, gaining a first-innings lead moved back here two weeks ago, of 235 runs and capturing two of 53! Monday. "I'd just as soon the county's wickets for 56 by play in Hamilton," HAMILTON (AP) -- Hamilton | 5; | Bob Friend lasted seven innings for the Pirates before giving |way for a pinch-hitter in his 12th |consecutive unsuccessful try for {a complete game against the | Dodgers. Los Angeles scored [twice in the fifth, when singles |by Norm Larker and Bob Aspro- monte sandwiched Don Demeter's double, and another in the sixth on Larker's second of three con- secutive singles. It followed two errors by shortstop Dick Groat on |Wally Moon's grounder, giving |Groat five boots in two g TODAY'S GAMES No games scheduled. WEDNESDAY'S GAMES PRO WRESTLING Exhibition, three bouts at the Whitby Arena. Starting time 8.45 p.m, Major League H. R. Sluggers Falling Behind NEW YORK (AP) -- Mickey in|Mantle of New Uork, Eddie Mathews of Milwaukee and Rocky Colavito of Detroit are high on the list of sluggers drag- ging their feet in the major league home run races. Mantle hus hit only one homer in 16 games. Mathews, last year's National League cham- pion with 46, has three in 16 games while Colavito has three in 15 and none in his last 11. In the same number of games a year ago, Mathews had eight, Colavito four and Mantle three. And that's not all. Washington's Harmon Killebrew, who shared the American League crown with Colavito with 42 in 1959, has wal- loped only two. However, Killer brew has been sidelined with a leg injury. Willie Mays of San Francisco also has two. And Charley Maxwell of Detroit, a 31-homer contributor for Detroit last year, has yet to get one this season, The leaders through Sunday's games were Willie McCovey of San Francisco with eight in the National League and Woody Held of Cleveland with six in the American, |in homers, the Giants' star con- |tinues to pace the National in ames, | batting with .425, BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | American League AB R H Pct.| 48 11 22 458] 70 1628.400 65 7 26 .400 Maris, NY llison, Wash Skowron, NY Runnels, Bos Lumpe, KCy 72 627 375 Runs--Mantle, New York, 20. Runs batted in--Skowron 20. Hits--Allison 28, Doubles--Allison 9. Triples--Fox, Chicago, 3. Home runs -- Held, Cleveland, and Lemon, Washington, 6. Stolen bases -- Aparicio and Smith, Chicago, Power, Cleve- land, and Kaline, Detroit, 3. Pitching--Staley, Chicago, and Coates, New York, 3-0, 1.000. Strikeouts -- P: 1, Washing- TTT ast | Walter Alston NIGHT Loss For Words By T LOS ANGELES (AP)--Walter Reais ASSOCIATED PRESS Alston faced his audience like a Trenton, N.J.. stopped CLs || man who had mislaid his notes lins, 133%, New pped igs Rol-lfor a speech he didn't want to Philadelphia--Stan. "Fitzgerald, "4y® Jo the Uirst place. 10 Fikiab, and Mel Middleton, yoy» said the irl of pon 3 re Hagolhia, drew, n world champi on Los Angeles Ross, 140, Hertlora: on) Dodgers. Td like to say some. stopped Tommy Garrow, 197, a 3 there's just nothing aremon t » NA, 9, "We must be hitting about .027 Sydney, Australia--Clive Stew- " art, 161%, Australia. pie men on base, I don't know what th Tony Dupas, 15, New Orleans, they're i me oe Wi "It's not just one or two guys. Tokyo -- Funio Kaizu, Japan, 1t' knocked Foi Jiro Kanazawa, Ja- pan, middleweights, 9. The Dodgers had just suffered Swansea, Wales--Wally Swift, | their 11th loss in had 148%, England, outpointed Larry! just lost a series to Philadelphia Baker, 148, New York, 10; Brian --a team they beat 11 straight Crys. 2,00 Wd Sutptited here last year. eorge Barnes, , Australia, 15| Alston told reporters there will (for British Empire welter title).'be more Bop changes. wv had a chance." 8 the whole club. They've all| ton, 42, National Leagu Mays, SF Aaron, Milwaukee Curry, Phila Clemente, Pgh Burgess, Pgh , Runs--Skinner, Pittsburgh, 20. Runs batted in--McCovey, San Francisco, 27. Hits--Mays 34. Doubles--Pinson, Ci ti Triples--T. Taylor, Chicago, 3. Home runs--McCovey 8. Stolen bases--Pinson 9. Pitching McCormick, San Francisco, 4-0, 1.000, . .Strikeouts--Drysdale, Los An- geles, 55. American League | Kansas City 001 000 000-1 8 0 | Wash 320 100 10x-- 8 13 2 Herbert (2-1) Johnson (1) Kiely (5) Larsen (7) and Chiti; Pascual (2-3) and Battey. HR: Wash- Lemon (6) Allison (2). AB 80 65 39 87 53 9 21.306 HR . | Cleveland National League Pittsburgh 000 000 022-- 4 6 4 Los Angeles 000 021 013-- 7 9 0 Friend; Face (0-3) (8) and Smith, Oldis (8); Drysdale, Sherry (4-3) (9) and Roseboro. : Pgh-Mazeroski (4) Skinner (5); LA-Neal (2), Milwaukee at Chicago ppd, cold weather. (Only games scheduled) International League Rochester 000 010 000-- 1 4 4 Richmond 001 000 01x-- 2 3 Sadecki and D. Rickets; Grba and Shantz, Havana at Toronto ppd, rain. Miami at Montreal ppd, rain. Buffalo at Columbus ppd, rain. American League WwW L 6 6 7 8 9 Chicago New York Boston 10 8 9 Baltimore 10 Washington 8 10 Detroit 5 10 Kansas City 6 1% . Today's Games (And Probable Pitchers) Detroit (Mossi 0-2) at Washing- ton (Kemmerer 0-2) (N) Kansas City (Herbert 2-0) at Bal- .|timore (Wilhelm 1-1) (N) at New at Boston Cleveland (Perry 1-1) York (Short 2-1) (N) Chicago (Wynn 0-1) (Casale 20) (N) Wednesday's G While Mays has been lagging 0(See all 5 tips until lately and there's hardly anything in it that I haven't practised," he said with the indulgent. air of a connois- seur of horseflesh, "And do you know there are a few stunts I've tried that the author doesn't even know about." He has never bet a horse in his life. He has rarely gone to the races; has never read a rac- ing form or manual "although I read the sports pages and race charts every day." Last week he gained national prominence when his filly, She's a Gem, won a six- furlong sprint for three- and fo ~- year-old maidens at Fort Erle, Ont, J Son of "a strait-laced father who many times thought I was going to the dogs," Mr. Gibson told how he got into thorough- bred racing, Five years ago he bought for $75 the brood mare Locker Shot, by Buniy Lawless, 1938 King's Plate winner and one of the greatest sires in Canadian racing history. MARE MISHANDLED "I knew she was a Bunty Law- less mare. She didn't kick or bite, but there was something wrong about hes and = thought it Windsor Field Cops Friar Rock Stakes TORONTO (CP) -- Windsor Field, owned by Mr. and Mrs E.P. Taylor and ridden by a substitute jockey Dick Morreale, won the $7,500 Friar Rock Stakes as Toronto's 101st consecutive year of thoroughbred racing op- ened at Old Woodbine Park Mon- |day | Morreale was given the mount when Avelino Gomez became ill. Although the weather was wet {and cool, a surprisingly good |crowd of 8,657 welcomed the re- |turn of racing to Toronto. LAWN- CRUISER super-quiet rv» | REDUCES POWER 4 L a {{l l us MOWER NOISE TO y A SOOTHING HUM Lawn-Cruiser models plus the Ride-On Tracior ot your dealer's, Has Horse Racin ¢ him racing is "one of the ¥ WINNER'S CIRCLE -- She's A Gem, three-year-old filly, stands in the winner's circle with her owner and breeder Rev. John Gibson, 83-year-old sports-loving Anglican minister was up fo me to find out. She'd been mishandled and no one could ride her. I took her to my farm, put a saddle on her back and away we went." His old friend, Trainer Morris Fishman of Toronto, owned the stallion Selector , and they made a deal. She's a Gem was the re- sult, "My filly is the first thor- oughbred I've ever raced. If was a betting man I'd put my money on her. Now that I'm an | Curvis Captures Welterwgt. Title SWANSEA, Wales (AP)--Local boy Brian Curvis won the British Empire welterweight boxing title Monday night, outpointing cham- pion George Barnes of Australia over 15 rounds. The young Welshman, who has been fighting as a professional less than a year, was the clear winner with exhibition of cool and clever boxing. Both weighed 146 pounds. Earlier British welterweight champion Wally Swift outpointed [Larry Baker of New York in a dreary 10° - round bout. Swift iP from Toronto. She's A Gem won her first race this season, a six-furlong dash at Fort Erie, Ont. Mr. Gibson (right) says horse racing is the 'cleanest sport there is because you may owner I don't have to do that, Now I'm really living." People in his p ish have stopped him on the street in the last two years and whispered "when is she running?" BC. IES' FTIEND "Everybody thinks it is wonder- ful for a minister to race a horse Even though they couldn't get to the races to see her run, I was glad they were able to bet on her through a book-maker. It makes Retired Anglican Clergyman g As Hobby corrupt the men but you can't corrupt the horses." A track assistant holds the filly. for this winner's photo,the jockey is Avelino Gomez. ~CP Photo shoul 1 be made legal, We are not civilized when we have to go un- derground to bet. The laws should be changed. There won't be an increase in betting." Does the church approve of his racehorse ownership? "I don't know. I haven't heard officially, Anyway, now that I'm retiring I'm thrilled that I have an interest in life." He has one tip to offer. She's A Gem has a brother, A Padre's them feel as if they have an in. terest in her. "And the bookmaking business Scamp. "He might be racing next {year and if he can run like his isister, he'll be okay." Ye WHITB Wb WEDNESDAY, MAY 11th 8:45 P.M. 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