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Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Nov 1961, p. 15

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Pr rer rere ae a 'Syd Arnold Leads UAW Point Race Rightwinger Syd Arnold of)'Snedd" leads in goal scoring | Merchants has slipped into first|with 9. Al Myles of Unionaires| place of the Oshawa UAW|is next with 13 points. Lynn) Hockey League individual scor-|Middleton also of Unionaires is ing race unnoticed. Arnold,|in fourth place with 12 points. former Scottish "League ace,/Ron Wright of Merchants and thas been in the top ten point/rookie Doug McPhee of Union- iS dante wane gettérs since the season started jgires are tied for fifth spot with| nee a Gn ee but has been living in the lime-|11 points. Wright has 9 assists) Sgn 2 gotta. s] light of Jackie Sneddon, Alland leads the league in that) again. ; Myles and Lynn Middleton all|qepartment. ! Well, for Pete's sake back- who have shared first place at} In the mnetminders' goals-|check, eh?" said the youngster. one time or another. \against-average per game de-| With that the entire dressing Last week-end when Mer-|partment Mike Cirka of Union-|room broke into laughter. chants trounced Baker Vending|aires still leads' reducing his) The guy who got the biggest 8-2, Arnold scored two goals|average to a respectable 2.71) kick out of it was Alfred George and picked up two assists to|mark. Cirka has permitted 19| Richard (Red) Carr who was give the speed merchant 15| goals in 7 games. Al sg playing organized hockey six points. His total is made up of has an average of 3.00 = oe 7 goals and 8 assists. |Melnick of the upsurging peg fo Arnold was scoring champion| Refreshments sextet has a mar nd now claims )of 3.40. see be tar mae now than| Merchants and Meng oge: are when he won the title. Arnold|tied for first place in the league is toiling with the Midland| standings with 10 points -- Flyers this winter in the OHA|Unionaires are er Ba Central Intermediate "A" loop|3 wins and four ties. Merc van and is one of that league's pod bed ee at ae rd snipers. claims that extra)e : ice. tine ' regained his ac-|games. Tony's Le gps? = curacy thus he's hitting for more|third with 5 pore "ui acts on ven tat < pena cade of Jackie Sneddon of Tony's is|with only 3 polr ss * 3 ped point back with 14 andione win, a tie in seven starts. NANAIMO, B.C, (CP)--You playin' tonight, Red?" asked young teammate was born. Abner Haynes Back On Beam With Texans DALLAS (AP) Haynes of Dallas Texans, talk 0 Hen He now is 44 and spends most of his time coaching Nanaimo Abner THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, November 29, 1961 15 of the Vancouver Island Ama- teur League. He plays only when his team is short-handed --that's happened twice this season and he scored in each game. There are a lot of twists in the trail followed by Carr in his 25 years of hockey. It started in Winnipeg, and there were stop - off at half a dozen minor league cities. It includes an all-too-short chance with Tor- onto Maple Leafs. trial with the Leafs the next finally, back in Nanaimo. finals in years before his wisecracking) ge THREE B.C, TITLES } Carr has coached the Nan- ; aimo intermediate team for seven of its last nine years. In 7 that space he has brought back the B.C. title three times, and in 1959 he took the Clippers as | far as the Canadian final be- fore they lost out to Fort Fran- ces. His players kid him unmerci- fully about his age, and make pointed remarks about his play- ing ability when they know he is within earshot. But they worship f| him. The knee never healed prop- erly. Carr got another brief season, but was soon in the Pa- cific Coast League with San Bernardino and Portland, and' Carr's active days came to an end when he collapsed between! periods in the Canadian semi- Nanaimo in 1959. It was feared he had suffered a 'MAULER'S MOUTHPIECE--HE INTERPRETS FOR BOB CLEROUX Bob Cleroux Intends Going Into Business | | } | | ast 40 years, After Fighting Days | Bookies Cautious the American Football League last year, has come back to prominence this season. He did it with a one-man show against On Grey Cup Odds y} - is its got NTO (CP) -- The book: | ton is not that the Argonau' a. oat pti ic of the East|scuttled 48-2--but that they ac- in every Grey Cup game for the|tually should have won. Ima- |the Scullers proved to be, rep- Greyjresenting the East " the pat f x day is 6 to 5 and|Cup. It would have been suffi- pad pip ete cient excuse for calling off the close to the West this year. The opening line on the Oakland Raiders Sunday as he ran for 158 yards to take over ithe league's rushing lead. | Haynes surged past Paul \Lowe of San Diego Chargers,| |who was idle last week end.| |Haynes has run for a total of) are playing it)gine a pack of patsies, such as|689 yards to Lowe's 669. | George Blanda of Houston Oilers continues to lead the} passers with 131 completions in| |265 throws for 2,342 yards. Al) Carr played his first hockey with the junior Winnipeg Fal- cons in 1936 That same season he was with Nelson Maple Leafs, playing senior A hockey at 19. From there he went to Trail, Rossland, Kimberley, back to Nelson, and in 1941 to Nanaimo. That season he got a letter from Hap Day, then general manager of the Toronto Maple Leafs, and later signed a con- tract. HURT HIS KNEE "T played on a line with Ted 'Red' Carr Is 'Youngest Puck Veteran In West heart attack but it was pneu- monia. "It will take a few years but eventually we'll have good junior hockey in B.C.," Carr says. "The talent will be of junior calibre by then." One of the prospects here is a nine-year-old left winger of pee wee age playing in the higher bantam league. His name is Gene Carr, and he's a left- winger, like his dad. --- Translated, it means youjcarnival. -- i --but; " hap- "With heavies, style doesn't/But the victims were what the must put up $6 to ee he yet berg Rta Mies hy 4 pad asked Bob Cleroux what hejmatter," says Bachman whojtrade charitably refers to asjyou may take your choice (Bane ns eeuiaas necwenn taale wants to do when he quits box-|handles Cleroux jointly with|nobcdies, soft touches such as|teams. é al Th robably 'isn't an- ing. Bob's dad. "You've got to be/Cornelius Brown, 3am Hughes,) There is no point Haghng Bet lother teams in Canadion football "Go into business," came the|able to get that big punch in|Miguel Alvarez and Mickey|no Se a tater can Iright down to the sandlot i i g ere 's what c a The Bull) Carter jting fraternity was | ; 4 swift reply. ee ee ey ee * i i is convinced that by game|level, that could gain posses- '" é : The high point of four years} Asked about it some time|ada is convinces 2 yg jlevel, wae aw -- of pro campaigning for Cleroux|ago, Bachman snapped: day oc a Dp teagachtie po nod the ball at the other ie 2 i ' came after he defeated George) "What do I care what they|favore | by abou ret § he "No. A big business." Chuvalo of Toronto in Montreallsay. I'm bringing Bob up the|take Winnipeg Blue Bombers. |ute = ba Poascpeier 4 ar ne The exchange, in French be-jjast Aug. 8. It was the third ofjright way, picking the shots for; The penser igh raet Calslone Wear auld sae PP and cause Cleroux speaks only ajthree Canadian title fights be-|him until he's got his legs forjdrawn up after the Tiger-Cats) win-- ie go 7: a gives anitween the pair and the gate|faster company. This way, if he| overcome a 25-7 ane as the Argonauts nsight into his thinking. was $198,000. has it, fine. He can develop, If|cit in the two-game, "pc . ; The Canadian heavyweight! The decision carried Cleroux|not, we find out soon enough eee a eens cre Aiden age hang champion, a square - set young-|to No. 6 ranking by the U.S./and no one gets hurt." against Toronto { « Ha-} s : "is bi 5 t lati i ssociati {mi k 55-27 injest defensive stands any team ster of 23, is big (205 pounds and| National Boxing Association and . {milton took the series a Genel 114 cs bi I i 's Ri agazine |HAS NO JAB overtime. had ever made in Canadian 6-144) and thinks big. Nat Fleischer's Ring Magazine. Clerhit' tea fulliie nonetyh| Tne wah LOWEN football history and it would That sort of thinking also goes} Where does he go from here? ARGO Z ae is mane 3achme Fi i » inlist. He plods ahead in a semi-| jad Toronto won, the bookies|have been a grave injustice if for his manager, Al Bachman of|First, there is a Dec. 5 date in A a : ts." y lai F ri i crouch, gloves high to protect|say they would have gone into|they had lost to Argonauts. New York, who has proclaimed|Montreal with Archie Moore,)° { say, 3 C h "9 bi " as 'oy 7 { 77 his face with his elbows in|the Grey Cup as the first def-| All agreed that Toronto threw a big push" for a shot at Floyd|the world light-heavy champ i 1 A the Grey I | Me eu addne Patterson's crown. From there Bachman, in the|front of his midriff. inite eastern underdogs. Tor-jaway the game by MONTREAL (CP)--Someone 26-yard line with a min-| |Dorow of New York is second|Kennedy and Mel Hill," he re- jwith 163 connections on 353 at-|calls. 'In 10 games I had four jtempts for 2,118 yards. {goals and four assists. Then I Gino Cappelletti of Boston Pa-|tore the cartilage in my knee, triots has 121 points and a 25-/@nd never played again that |point lead in scoring. season. i REMEMBER WHEN... | WED SECRETLY NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) --| By THE CANADIAN PRESS {Wilma Rudolph, 21, Olympic] Larry O'Connor, Toronto hur- jtrack star from Tennessee Adler and sprinter, was awarded jand I University, confirmed) the Norton H. Crowe memorial] | |Tuesday that she was secretly|trophy 22 years ago today as married Oct. 14 to a fellow}the Amateur Athletic Union of] : {member of the school's track;Canada named him the out-| ; jteam, William Ward, 25, of Lin-| standing amateur athlete of the \den, N.J, Wilma won three gold/year. O'Connor had been a |medals in the 1960 Olympics and|member of Canada's team at {was voted the woman athlete of|the British Empire Games in ithe year in the U.S. 1938, and the Olympics of 1936. % ; ; | kes little pretence at Whether Cleroux can go alliclassic style of a fight manager,|, He makes litt a the way to the top is a moot|talks about a title shot in a/Jebbing ee ae Py question. Only one Canadian-jvein that excludes virtually Close Hach bain Ask Sar pe ie pi born heavyweight ever did it levery other course. e takes a pu | ily. 'That was Tommy Burns, born jnot cut sane ' e Noah Brusso fn Hanover. bor"| mosTLy NOBODIES | Whitey Bimstein, the emin-| the titleholder from 1906 to|. Cleroux's record in 31 projent trainer and Cleroux's tutor 1908. fighst is 28 wins--23 of them|for the last year or so, has not Cleroux meanwhile provides|knockouts -- with two defeats|sought to alter the boy's moves Canada with a headliner, jad a draw. But the string isjin any drastic fashion. color guy of international class.|' t as impressive as it sounds.| 'With a guy like that you can se It took recent wins over Roy|do him more harm than good HAS POWER Harris and Alex Miteff to wipe|by trying to change him," says As a fighter, he is crude andjout much of the scepticism|Bimstein. "You try and make unpolished, a mauler wholabout him that lingered from|him fancy and you spoil him." makes artistic - minded old-|the early part of his career, his} But Bimstein has improved timers wince. But lack of fin-|first 20 bouts or so. Cleroux's defence and added a esse is balanced by power and| From that start, Bachman|passable left hand and the up- an intuitive sense of how tojnursed him along, selecting the|percut to the youngster's attack, finish off an opponent who is opposition with extra care. Bob/skills in which he was sorely hurt. piled up a list of knockouts.|deficient before. | onto sports writers saw it the same way. Wrote Milt Dunnell in The Star: "The most horrible aspect of Saturday's upheaval at Hamil- three time-consuming line plays {that went wrong. By the time Dave Mann was given the ball to kick, he was back on the 45. The dead-ball line was 70 yards laway. SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY'S GAMES HOCKEY Oshawa Minor Assoc. -- City League Midget Games -- 6.30 p.m., Local 222 vs Firefighters; 7.30 p.m., Navy Vets vs Lions and 8.30 p.m., Canadian Legion Head Injuries Chief Cause In Grid Fatalities DENVER (AP)--Head injur- ies are mainly responsible for the 32 known fatalities in foot- ball this season, an American Medical Association expert ' : 9 | awa Children's Arena. | t Be Lakeshore OHA Intermediate|been vastly improved, "there is 1 League -- Port Hope vs Belle- still much to be done before May Be 'Giant Killer By M. McINTYRE HOOD Special London, England Correspondent To The Oshawa Times ' LONDON -- Four of the littl teams, the non-leaguers who in- giant- killers in the English Cup Com- petition are still in the running. Weymouth, Lynn are through to the third round first and second division teams. They tbeat third and fourth division providing variably provide some Three of ; Morecambe them, and King's into which come all the jteams, King's Lynn still from being the conquering heroes of last season, lost their first game at home, going down 2-1 to Leicester City, whom they beat in the cup final last May. Incidentally, Leicester was the first team to beat the Spurs at home last season. Liverpool are carrying all be- fore them in the second divi- sion, and after a 5-0 win over Swansea, are eight points ahead of Leyton Orient and Rother- ham, who are tied in second place. Behind them by one point come Scunthorpe, Sunderland e ithe greatest shock by going to and Derby. Liverpool look to be {Coventry and beating City on fourth Margate, County by were leading by 1-0 up to the 86th when Notts County scored an equal- jizer to earn a reply at Notting- their own ground. The non - league team, missed beating Notts' four minutes. Margate the minute © of game, ham, The other cup matches jturned out very much as pected. Peterborough a fine 3-0 win water. Queen's had little difficulty in over all ex- showed great power in winning 4-1 at Torquay and Crystal Palace had Bridge- Park Rangers getting} certainties to go back up to the first division next season, but there are eight teams with only three points between them batt- ling for the second promotion spot Charlton, with only 9 points from 13 games, are sunk deep in the cellar of the second division, and appear to be in a |vs Kiwanis. All games at Osh-/S#YS- ye ounae : While football headgear has protection approaches ideal standards," Dr. Allan J. Ryan of Meriden, Conn., chairman of the AMA's Committee on Med- ical Aspects of Sports, said Sun- day. He presided at a confer- ence on the opening day of the HOCKEY 15th clinical meeting of the OHA Metro cage ices AMA, Whitby Mohawks vs Brampton) p, Ryan said his reports gg a at Brampton Arena,| show 22 high school football 30 p.m. eer . | deaths this season. This was two OHA Little Big Five Junior!tor each 100,000. participants, ville, at 8.30 p.m. CURLING : Oshawa Curling.Club Ladies' Bonspiel, 9.00 a.m. and 11.00 a.m. GAMES FOR THURSDAY [hopeless position even at this jstage of the season. Losing jmoney every week, they simply }cannot afford to buy any play- jers to help them out of the jcellar DUNDEE RAMPANT "C" -- Oshawa City Le agueirne other fatalities were seven Dundee are rampant in the| Juveniles vs Newmarket Red-| iniversity students, two semi- Scottish first division. They| men, at Newmarket Arena, 8.30) pros and one sandlot player. p.m A rigid plastic helmet using went to Edinburgh and beat Hi-! p. ' bernians by 3-1 to take a seven| Oshawa Minor Assoc. -- City) ,, interior suspension system is point lead over Rangers and|League Juvenile Oshawa the best available headgear, Dr. |Kilmarnock, tied for second|Dairy vs Hayden Macdonald, atlpvan said, but not all football place. Rangers, however, have|8.30 p.m. and Beaton's Dairy|; oo. are equipped with this played two fewer games than| vs Tony's Refreshments, at 9.30 type. because of its cost. their rivals. [A 7 at Oshawa! "He said his committee consid- Clyde are forging ahead to| Children's Arena. --4,/€Fs pre-season all-star games at the first promotion spot in the| OHA Lakeshore Intermediate) ,). high school level eety bad second division, five points) League -- Trenton vs Bowman-|),..46, usually the players are jahead of Queen of the South,| Ville, at Bowmanville Commu-| | ))j) top physical condition." with Arbroath one point andjnity Arena, 8.30 p.m. Dr. E. M. Burgess of Seattle f told the conference that 'water Montrose two points further) ~~ skiing offers more chance of in- back With only two defeats in| pe eg oe posit dl US. Bowl Games jury by far than snow skiing." ss Combined, these sports are the Are Lining Up OSHAWA BOWLING NEWS ahead to the second division championship. fastest growing in the United | JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)--|States with at least 1,000,000 |The Gator Bowl announced participants, he said. : Monday night that Pennsylva- The injury rate for snowski- nia State has accepted an invi- MOTOR CITY MIXED Points Happy Gang 7, Jets 6, No- Name 6, Goofers 4, Atoms 4, Hopefuls 4, Sober Six 4, Deadheads 3, Shooters 1, Lucky Strikes 1. Triples -- Ron Brown 728 (281, 270); through 3-0 at Ashford, and Wat-| Alan Jamieson 723 (210, 202, 311); Joan 'ford went to Romford and won 644 (26 3-1, but had a hard fight Now the little teams are wait-|Morey 604 ing anxiously for the third round} draw, which can be a money if they are drawn against some of the top| Wally : 3 s. 88 230, teams in the first division on the} Brice spinner for them latter's grounds. IN THE LEAGUE The first division of the Eng-| Jackson 651 (235, 213, 203); Nick Jaksits ; Inez Curl 622 (247); Aura (234, + Bob Kitchen 619 Sadie James 606 (223); Bud (281). Singles -- Josie Westlake 212, 240; Ralph Jackson 237, Dave Peebles 233, 19; Jack Brown 232, Chris Collins 221, Dorothy Sykes 221, Russ Clark 221, (253, 211) Olga MacDermaid 213, Archie 209, 211, Mae Jamieson 211, Earl Westlake 206, 210, Audrey Bailey 210, Roy Mann 208, Flo Lister 208, Archie Bruce Jr. 206, Ken Bailey 201 LEGION SUNDAY LEAGUE lish League, apart from the fact|,,,With one week of bowling left in the that Burnley have a three-poin lead over second place Ipswich|the Pinheads. This gives the former a/!d Ford 215, 206, Pat McCloskey 214, rst section Art. Cocker led his Roll- tling Pins to a three game sweep over Town, is the tightest that it has|tut! of 18 points, three better than the ae § as} been for three or four years.|very comfortable lead with only one|Barclay 201 and Ted Smith 290. Menaces and 'the Atom-Bombs, and a Arsenal and Leicester, tied for|"°e* temaining. Art had a 635 (264), seventh place, are only In a losing cause Flo Hale bowled a Six|very nice 288 in the first game points behind Burnley. Ipswich) The closest series of the day was continue to amaze and confound) Petween the Menaces and the Goofniks, the soccer critics by keeping up|were decided by only 12 who split the four points. Two games pins. This their winning pace, a 3-0 win at! split kept the Menaces in second place Cardiff against the City being a splendid first division babies. Everton, beaten at West Ham 3-1 are tied with that club in the fourth position. Tottenham yi Eloi Landry took nd are now tied with the Atom Bombs. |The Bombs whitewashed the Sputniks performance for the! in their three games very handily when three of their five bowlers had over 600 scores. Tops of the three was Anne ,| Landry with 664 (291), followed by Reta Hughes with 624 (257), and Bill Smith with 609 (257), the men's high Bittorf 203, 216, Eileen Anderson|° ers is four per 1,000, Dr. Mack leati j e here|L. Clayton of Denver said. single and also showed the way for|tation to play in the gam his team with a 706 (348) to trounce the| Dec. 30. Rockets in their three game encounter.| Penn State has a 7-3 record Top Bowlers -- Art. Cocker 635 (264); my i lio Hale 2:8, Eloi Landry 706 (gag),|for the season, Georgia Tech, Inga Nugent 236; Leo Gorman 226, Rud-; which already has yg Sin the} dy Roznik 229, Anne Landry 664 (291); j i s | eorgia,| {Reta Hughes 624 (257); Bill Smith 609 bid but still must play G 8 | (257); Lloyd Corson 278; Harr:.t Johns has a 6-3 record. 650 (227); Norma Norris 232. Doug Sanders Is Third Top Winner | DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP) -- It's IRE AND HARNESS In New York it was an-jbeen a long, tough grind for Team ashen er aii 12| nounced that Utah State has ac-| professional golfer Doug Sand- Head Pins 11, Go-Getters 7, Lucky| cepted an invitation, to play injers but it's paid off. lore OH Lae', Stee, S255, Jest-the Gotham Bowl game there) Sanders has played in 38 tour- mio i ""'Dec. 9 and that Auburn has|naments so far during the 1961 sara sharon ah (un aa: [een ed 88 Via State's OP vee ea in the upper money pgs Same avo: Shieh tae | Dorion. |placed in upper ey er 620 (Mass Syd Hobbs 607 cane, So, Auburn has a 6-3 record and|brackets 10 other times for win- and Howard Walker 602 (206, 223) a game remaining Satur dayjnings of $56,763. He is third on ver 200 -- ' 3. C. g ; ' cise Se Matz eentl Ac (Sate fashed is Tegulat.sem-loers isist by the Protos Keenan 239, Ray Gillard 230, Audrey|State finished its regular sea-|ners Iss! y tl |Burrill 226, Flo. Johnston 221, 210, Doro-|sgn with a record of nine vic-|Golfers Association. jthy James 218, Cyril Weeks 216, Har-|+\i4¢ and one tie. | Gary Player sti!l leads with $64,540, followed by Arnold The University of Miami bel a with es ' | Bill Casper Jr. is fourth with Hebert fifth |Red Demuse 214, Slim Bell 205, Marty Muller Art Moreau 201, 209, Tom | Lemon League -- Lorne Gillard 98,,Selected as Syracuse Universi-| |Alice Neville 97 and Norma Bradburn.|ty's opponent in the third an-|$37,766 and Jay NICKEL PLATE LEAGUE nual Liberty Bowl game at ithe $35,583. We have another addition to the|delphia Dec. 16. Syracuse, wi i} charmed 300 circle. "Barney" Williams |a 7-3 record, was chosen last) REVERSE DECISION of your family. Take one, take all -- you still save. Call and see. For instance, only $50 re- turn TORONTO to NEW YORK (or $38 if you can travel on Excursion days). Ask your travel agent for further details. TRANS-CANADA AIR LINES (@) AIR CANADA bowled a nice 313 this week veek Vic Williamson has the High Aver- week. jage so far with 218, followed closely by "'Auke" Vyfschaf with 210 221, L. Gibson 215, G. Pappar 213, J./directors Tuesday made Phila- This week's high triples were: C. Wil-| Ruiter 212, G. Morgan 212, D. Wyrozub delphi 1-0 vict in Sunday's liams 712, V, Williamson 662, J. Smith ©. Dawson 207, J. McGillivary 205,|@@/PMla a 1-0 victor in Sunday's} 635, "Moose" Wilson 633, M. Carl 618 V. Vasey 201, G. Carr 200 and R./game with New Haven because] and B, LeBlanc 604 ndensmith 200 lew , 30 5 od The 200 bracket finds R. Balser 206,; Only one in the Lemon League this New Haven used a suspended 200, "'Auke"' Vyfshaft 227, W. Sostiow-|week with R, Wanmeer getting the|Player, Jerry Casey. New Ha- jski 226, "S. 5. M." Bailey 225, L. Fogal honors with 8 'ven had won the game 4-3. NEW YORK (AP)--The East- ern Hockey League's board of! SERVICE MO 8-3304 DONALD TRAVEL 300 DUNDAS ST. EAST WHITBY HOWARD TRAVEL BUREAU AJAX SHOPPING CENTRE WH 2-6690 MEADOWS TRAVEL 22 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH, OSHAWA SERVICE 723-9441

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