a 'St. Mikes Wiajors Edge Mohawks On G e By GERRY BLAIR Whitby Mohawks gave the St. Michael's College Majors their most difficult struggle of the Metro Junior "A" schedule be- fore bowing to the Irish, 1-0, last night at the St. Michael's ' s Lone Tally contest. Neither club was hit- ting to any alarming degree. . « St. Mike's increased their league-lead to nine points over the second place Marlboros. Whitby remained in third spot two points behind the Marlies erratic passing and close check- ing by the Irish. } St. Michael's rearguards, led by Terry Clancy gave a flaw- less performance by smother- ing Whitby players around their goal, giving them little chance HAMILTON SPORTS FIGURE GETS A REWARD Norman (Pinky) Lewis, vet- eran Hamilton football train- er, hockey coach and general all-round sports booster, was honored this week by almost 1,000 loyal Hamilton friends. Lewis was honored especial- ly for his work over the years, with children. Here he holds telegram from his many friends from coast - to- | coast. "Pinky" has been well cutee By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR eo 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' WEEK-END REVIEW: -- At a quick glance, the big sports event of the week-end would appear to be the National Football Browns visiting New York Eagles playing the Lions in League bill, with Cleveland Giants and Philadelphia Detroit. The Eagles have to win! If the Eagles win -- they may finish up tied for first place in the Eastern Division -- providing the Browns beat the Giants in New York. If the Giants win. tomorrow -- it's all over, and they're in -- in the finals, against Green Back Packers. But if Browns win and Eagles also triumph, then there'll be a play- off game next week, betwe en Eagles and Giants, in New: York. The Giants appear to be pretty hot right now and if they stop Cle veland's Jimmie Brown, then they've got a good chance to take it all tomorrow. Plum, the Cleveland quarterback, hasn't shown too much against the Giants and the Giants, on the other hand, have both Tittle and Conerly ready to give their all for dear old Alma Mammy. The U.S. professional football games attract a great deal of that we feel the Canadian interest here -- so much professional club owners, bosses, directors, sports writers, etc., shouldn't even consider that Ottawa sugges tion that Canadian rules be changed to an 11-man team and four downs, instead of three. If we ever lose the little bit of Canadian iden- tity we have left -- you can start forgetting professional - football in this country. We'll be about as third-class as we are in professional bas eball rating. DETROIT LIONS will likely lose to the Eagles to- morrow. The Detroit players hanged their general man- ager Edwin J. Anderson "in e ffigy" from the goal posts known and highly regarded in for more than the past quarter- Hamilton sports circles to gain a clear shot. Whitby's defence also played well, and were especially ef- fective in covering up on Per- ani's rebounds. George Ashby, making his second appearance jin a Mohawk uniform, Bob Perani blocked three labelled|Tripp and Cnic Carnegie made drives in the opening period, | up the Whitby defence. Bill when the Majors applied their) Smith filled in on occasion when most pressure of the night. not taking his regular shift The Irish outshot the Mo-|alongside Bili Collins and |hawks on an average of two-to-/Elmer Tran. | one, but managed only one} SHORT NOTES -- The Mo- | counter. hawks have not scored against |. The two clubs battled score-|St, Michael's in 120 consecutive jless until 10.28 of the second| minutes. Gary Smith blanked period when Gary Dineen tip-| Whitby, 6-0, in their last appear- College arena. One player stood aloft of all others -- Whitby Mohawks' net- minder, Bob Perani, who turn- ed in a sterling performance before 500 fans, and only two ahead of Union- ville Seaforths . on Sunday afternoon at the Gardens, the Seaforths meet the Marlies, with a. chance of pulling even with Whitby. ... The next home action for the Mohawks is one week from tonight, Decem- ber 23, when the powerful league - leading St. Michael's club moves into the Whitby Community arena. That one should rate a packed house. WHITBY -- goal, Perani; de- fence, Ashby, Carnegie, Tripp; forwards, Fletcher, Shearer, Kowalski, Luke, Dowe, Moore, Tran, Smith, Collins. ST. MICHAEL'S Goal, -of the Tiger Stadium in Detroit, yesterday. Seems that | 'the Detroit players were more than a bit irked over the «news that the Lions' three top college draft choices for ©1962 had all been lost, committed to other teams. I'll all come out in the wash, later, before they start next > season -- but it begins to look as if the draft system "in U.S. football ranks has more than a few loopholes * and it's a case of first come, first served -- provided ! the first come, comes with the mostest. BRIGHT BITS: -- Montreal Juniors Habs knocked + off Niagara Falls Flyers 5-3 last night and moved within two points of Hamilton Red Wings, the league-leaders . . * GUELPH ROYALS blanked Petes 6-0 last night and it + begins to look as if the Junior "A" race is flattening out, 'long before they hit the home stretch . . . ST. MIKE'S i got the only goal of the game last night to nip Whitby + Mohawks 1-0 . . . SUDBURY WOLVES nipped Hull- * Ottawa Sr. Canadiens 2-1 last night to move within *three points of third place in the EPHL standings. . + CHARLIE NEAL of the Dodgers was traded to N.Y. * Mets yesterday, biggest deal of several that occurred 'in the last-minute activity before the big league trading # season closed . .. SAM JONES has also been traded to ! Detroit Tigers but if his bad arm continues, it's the end of the line for "Sad Sam". Jackie Jensen century. --CP Wirephoto ISt. Thomas Causes Stir 'Dropping Out LONDON (CP)--St. Thomas Royals caused not a stir while in the Senior Ontario Hockey Association but their suspension last weekend affected the other |eight teams. Not only did it change the league standings, it!- reshuffled the scoring leaders. | The league statistician, who |said he spent 30 hours just sub- tracting the 111 goals and 169 assists the Royals gave up, has jissued a scoring report that |leaves four Windsor Bulldogs on top and knocks three Strathroy Rockets, earlier contenders, al- most out of the picture. Strathroy had piled up 73 points in three games against the Royals, Galt Terriers gained 77 points in two games. The Bulldogs had scored 29 points in one game against the Royals. Irwin Gross of Windsor dur- ing the last week gained two as- sists to pull farther ahead of the scoring pack. He has 33 points, six more than his two nearest rivals, teammates, Tommy Walker and Lou Bendo. Goaltenders didn't escape the eraser. Boat Hurley, of Galt, Gord Mallin of Waterloo, Norm Harris of Strathroy and Al Cul- len of Woodstock had shutout games wiped out. \ | Jim Strachan, half of Strath- ' roy's goaltending tandem, still/ has the best goals-against aver-| age, 2.7, slightly better than Hurley's 2.8. Ross. Childs of Windsor is third with 3.4. Barrie Hayton, Bulldogs de- fenceman, leads in penalties with 47 minutes. Figures do not |games Friday night. 'Czechs Wallop | Our Bearcats -- | PRAGUE (CP) -- Czechoslo- | vakia's hustling national hockey jteam scored four goals in the first seven minutes of play and) |went on to defeat the touring |Port Arthur Bearcats 10-1 Fri- day night" The Czech team took a five- | goal lead in the first period and }increased it to 8-0 during the second period. Rudy Migary tal-| jlied the only Port Arthur goal at the two-minute mark of the final period. _The Czechs, with their quick first - period start, threw the Bearcats off stride and Port Arthur couldn't recover the style| that enabled them to hold the same team to two goals Wed-| eee when Port Arthur lost |_ On the Bearcats' scoring play, |Pete Johnson split the defence and came in alone on the Czech| t c ( include the ble in the title 'race, game at Detroit. ped in Rod Seiling's goalmouth|ance November 26, pass while in full flight. Perain|Leaf Gardens had no chance on the low shot,!coach Turk Broda was an in-| |which caught |just inside the post. the short side, Whitby's only dangerous threat came in the first stanza\key players on Thursday night when Bill Smith broke into the) when they trounced the Seven- clear from' the St. e blueline. He pulled out goalie) was netminder Ken Broderick,|alski 8.10. Gary Smith neatly, but skated| who too far past thé net and was| school exams, finally checked by Smith as he| arena attendant suffered a nasty lay face down and jabbed the|gash around his eye when hit puck away from Michael's the Whitby forward. : The Mohawks had difficulty mustering any other serious scoring opportunities because of Giants Favored By A Touchd NEW YORK (AP)--New York Giants are favored by a touch-| Francisco today. down to beat Cleveland Browns here Sunday and win the Na- tional Football League's East- ern Conference championship on the final day of the regular sea- son The oddsmakers have also es- ablished Detroit Lions 244-point) favorites to defeat Philadelphia Eagles, the only team which sould still give the Giants trou- in their The defending champion Ea- gles, trailing the Giants by one game, can do no more than tie the New Yorkers and necessi- ate a playoff for the eastern srown in New York Dec. 24. If the Giants become eastern champions, they will advance to|Alex Webster and Bobby Gait- the NFL title playoff against the| ers. western flag-winning Packers in ireen Bay Dec. 31. 'Other games Sunday, none of which has any bearing on first|the Browns to discard the run or second in either division, sendjning of Green Bay to Los Angeles, Min- nesota to Chicago, Pittsburgh to St. Louis and Dallas to Wash-| passing. fap | ee! smith; defence, Clancy, Du |Pont, Polonic, McKendry; for- lterested by-stander at 1ast| Wards, Champagne, Conlin, Cor- |night's encounter. He said that|bett, Dineen, MacMillan, Seil {Brampton were short several|ing, Therien, Watson, Walton. First Period No scoring. Penalties -- Corbett 1.49, Kow-| Ups 8-1. Among those missing Second Period 1, St. Mike's: Dineen (Seiling, MacKenzie) 10.28 Penalty -- Therien 13.00. Third Period studying for high ...A St. Mike's was by a flying puck, He required 18 stitches to close the wound.| No scoring. .. . Only seven minor penalties} Penalties -- Champagne 3.40, jwere called by referee Joe|Kowalski 6.21, Ashby 9.01, Wat- |Sadler in the 'mild - mannered/son 14.20. |Uxbridge Boys 'Double Score OWT) Over Oshawa UXBRIDGE -- Last night at) ington. Baltimore played at San i Uxbridge Arena, the hometown| Detroit, for certai in the NFL's runner-up bow! at/Generals 8-4 in OHA Little Big Miami Jan. 6 with victories Sun-|Five league play. day. The Lions would clinch sec-| Ron James triggered three ond. in- the- west. The Browns) goais for the Chicks with John would get the Miami trip if the/Taylor adding a pair. Singles Eagles lose to Detroit by virtue|went to Gary Pariliment, Gary of a 65-51 margin in total points|Geer, and Keith Stewart. scored in the two Cleveland-) For Oshawa Generals, Philadelphia games, which they! Armstrong netted two split. "The Giants downed the Browns 37-21 Nov, 26 and coach| "The Juvenile Generals Allie Sherman undoubtedly Willlsee action Tuesday night (D | give Cleveland some of the same}j9) at home, playing Trenton medicine that was effective the| Juvenile in the second of a first time--a lot of passing by/qoxble-header at 9.00 p.m. Y. A. Tittle or Charley Conerly| y:; the lid-lifter, Oshawa Mid- sprinkled with the running Of) 61; meet Trenton Midgets at 7.30 p.m. Between the games, 10 jlucky draw prizes will be made. |Tickets have been on sale for some five weeks now. The big bil ile Terry Peters and Bob Watt add- ed one goal each. xt Sherman has already served notice to the Giants he wants them to score early and force Jimmy Brown, the league's top rusher, and Bobby Mitchell in favor of Milt Plum's Eleven. Buyers Frank Selke Share Chisox CHICAGO (AP)--Eleven suc- The sale at an_ estimaetd $3,500,000 brought to an end the association name with the White Sox. The club was founded Charles key's grandfather. of the Comiskey A. 'Comiskey, Comis- The purchasing group, headed by Chicago attorney Thomas A. Reynolds Jr., 36, said it hoped to work in harmony with Arthur C. dent who owns 54 per cent of the club, All are Chicagoans and Allyn Jr., White Sox presi- in 1900 by} to Allyn. We just have a group cessful young men, all wanting|in which everybody wanted to to own part of a baseball team,| own part of a ball club."' Friday purchased 46 per cent of| , Chicago White Sox stock from)any previous Charles: Comiskey. No one in the group has had connection with baseball except for. William C Bartholomay, a 33-year-old busi- ness executive who owns two shares of stock in Chicago Cubs and five in Baltimore Orioles. Reynolds and Bartholomay jare expected to get two seats on jclub's five-man board of direc- tors which will be reorganized Monday. Allyn controls the other three seats. Comiskey, who has been affil- iated with an oil investment company and a theatrical pro- duction in Chicago, said "I am out of baseball completely but jprizes are five turkeys. Two |more special attendance prizes | wil! be awarded, making a total jof 12. A capacity crowd is |expected. | Appeals For | Eddie Quinn | MONTREAL (CP)--The Mont- real Athletic Commission Fri- jday made public a letter from |Frank Selke suggesting that Ed- |die Quinn be reinstated as a li- jcensed boxing promoter be- }cause of Quinn's support of PLANNING STRATEGY FOR SUNDAY'S GAME New York Giants' coach Allie Sherman (centre) is flanked by his two strong right arins, quarterbacks Y,. A. | Tittle (left) and Charlie Con- erly, as they review plays dur- ing a Yankee Stadium workout this week. Leading the Na- ti.nal Football League's East- ern Division, Giants meet Cleveland Browns tomorrow in New York in a game that can clinch the title for the Giants. fe 4 --AP Wirephoto Since Punch Is tional Hockey League is Mont- because Toronto Maple Leafs' coach Punch Imlach is happy. Imlach recently prediced that} witit Blake's Canadiens for first} place in NHL, would go on to) land, possibly, would gain berths|score over the Oshawa Juvenile|@"¢ then capture the Stanley)m up. "Now I have nothing to worry) about,"" Blake remarked when informed of Imlach's cheerful forecast. "I was thinking of taking a holiday in Florida and coming back just in time for the play- offs. But Imlach has the play- offs figured out too, so maybe I'll just stay down south." However, there are strong su- spicions Blake will hang around long enough to prepare the Ca- nadiens for their two weekend games, here tonight against Boston's lowly Bruins and in Detroit Sunday. He suspects the Bruins, who are bound to finish last accord- ing to Imlach, still may come up with a tough game against| the Canadiens. | MAY TURN TABLES | Bruins get their chance to) prove Imlach wrong Sunday when they meet Toronto in Bos- ton. It should be interesting to see how Don Simmons makes out in his old home territory Simmons, dropped to the mi- nor leagues by Boston when he turned in what they considered an unimpressive record as their regular goaler, is now goaling for Toronto in the absence of injured Johnny Bower. ; Without the durable Bower the Leafs are still managing to win They play host go New York's upstart Rangers tonight. Detroit Red Wings, who have a day off tonight but meet Montreal Sunday, had goal- |By TH ECANADIAN PRESS | tending problems of thelr own | The happiest coach in the Na-|for a little while. Regular Terry Sawchuk, re- jreai's Toe Blake. He's happy|placed for a number of games by Hank Bassen so he could get a rcst, came back to action last Thursday and shut out Boston |the Leafs, currently struggling|5-0. It was: his fourth shutout of the season, making him. the n, and Cleve-|Uxhridge Chicks doubled the |Peat Montreal for first place|league's leader in that depart-| ent. New York goes to Chicago Sunday to take on the strangely- quict Black Hawks, last year's Stanley Cup champions and this year's fifth - placers, in the only other NHL action, MANTLE ENTERS TOURNEY PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) New York Yankees Pat Boone are two of the ama- teurs scheduled to play for the first time in Crosby's national pro-amateur Jan. 18-21. Toe Blake Happy Henry Hank Wins Decision DETROIT (AP)--Henry Hank dropped Scotland's Chic Calder- woed once with a flurry of punches to the mid-section Fri- day night and went on 'to score a unanimous 10-round decision. The sixth - ranked middle- weight from Detroit knocked e slugger Mickey Mantle will play in the $50,000 Bing Crosby golf tourna- ment next month. He and singer! ithe British Empire light-heavy- |weight champion down for a | mandatory eight count in the thir¢ round and turned Calder- | acwood's a blooysm aer ntod wood's face into a bloody smear in the final four rounds. Referee John Weber gave Hank the decision 49-44 under Michigan's five-point-must sys- tem. Judge Abe Abeloff scored it 47-43 and judge Al Goodman 50-41. The defeat was only the sec- ond in 34 fights for the Scottish boxcr. His only other loss was to Von Clay of Louisville, Ky. He has one draw and 31 vic- tories. Hank, who weighed 168 pounds and gave away six pounds to Calderwood, won his 50th fight in 66 starts. Save! Save! Save! AT LEAST 13 OF YOUR HEAT... INSTAL MINERAL WOOL INSULATION BY THE BLOWING METHOD All Work Guaranteed and Insured » CALL NOW .. McLAUGHLIN COAL & SUPPLIES LTD. 110 KING ST, EAST @ FREE ESTIMATES @ PHONE 723-3481 |charitable works. | Selke is managing director of [the Canadian Arena Company, jowner of the Montreal Forum where Quinn has promoted box- ing and wrestling programs. His letter said Quinn has sup- ported charities sponsored by Paul - Emile Cardinal Leger, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Montreal, and Father Paul Aquin, the Montreal taxi- drivers' chaplain. + = 5 range in age from 33 to 41 years./i¢ opportunity should offer a| Quinn's licence was sus- i Basic Facis At End BOSTON <AP) -- Jackie Jen- 'sen's brilliant but controversial sathletic career--which included tfootball stardom and one of «baseball's highest awards--ap- *pears to be at an end. « The 34-year-old outfielder in- 'dicated to his Boston Red Sox "employers Friday night that: he 'will retire from baseball to de- «vote himself fulltime to busi- gness in Nevada and California. « The apparent decision fol- 'lows by only a few days an- «Mouncement by the Red Sox of *a unique travel scheduled to fit 'around Jensen's much - pub- «licized fear of airplane travel. * The Red Sox had only this *week worked out a special rail- 'road itinerary for..tbe broad- «shouldered athlete which would "enable him to forego all of the {Red Sox chartered planes and *miss only eight or 10 games. 'Under the plan, Jensen would «have been docked for the games * missed. * But Red Sox publicist Bill «Crowley disclosed Friday night "that though the club had sent «him a 1962 contract, 'we didn't * expect him to sign it." | {TENDS TO BUSINESS » "Jensen indicated to Red Sox; *vice - president Dick O'Connell| Hley said. "Jackie said he had tthat he didn't think he would » be playing next season," Crow-| snew business ventures planned sto Lake Tahoe, Nev., where he) Pa Of Line lives, and that they would de- mand too much of his time) The apparent decision to quit baseball was not much of a sur- prise. Jensen quit the club with one game left to play at the end of} the 1959 season--only one year| after he was named to Ameri-| can League's most valuable} player--and returned home. He} later announced he was quitting the game for good. JUMPS AGAIN P He came back after being out! the entire 1960 campaign and| played most of the 1961 sched-| ule. Early last season he} jumped the club again, without first telling manager Mike Hig-! gins, but returned several weeks later. He had little success at the plate, however, ending the sea- son with a .263 batting average for 137 games. Crowley disclosed that the Red Sox had been trying to trade Jensen to the Los Ange- les Dodgers for infielder Charlie Neal. But Neal went to New York Mets Friday for $100,000 and outfielder Lee Walls. START OF ERA First. gasoline motorcar in Canada is believed to have been an American - built Winton bought by John Moodie of Ham- ilton in_1898. goalie, The goalie came 10 feet| out of the nets and tried to fall on the puck but Johnson passed/ to Migay at the goalmouth and! Migay flipped the puck into the! empty, cage. Pokorny and Doalna led the Reynolds said: "We realize/suitable big league job in the our group can't. buy majority | future, I would take it under control although we have talked! consideration." pended when he called off an |Archie Moore-Bob Cleroux fight scheduled for Dec. 5 because of poor advance ticket sales. HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS Czechs with two goals each and Bukac, Serny, Golonka, Potsch, Starsi and Sventek each scored once, YANKS GET RELIEVER | NEW YORK (AP) New York Yankees obtained relief southpaw pitcher Marshall Bridges, 30, from Cincinnati Reds Thursday in exchange for catcher Jesse Gonder, 25.) Bridges was 0-1 with Cincinnati last season before being farmed By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Eastern Professional Ww ~ | Kitchener Kingston Hull-Ottawa Sudbury North Bay S. S. Marie - LTF 15 8 14 9 11 9 8 11 5 4 1 9 9 3 16 4 2 6 7 4 7 79113 102 93 73 90 69 Friday's Result OHA Senior WLT out to Rochester of the Inter- Galt national League, where he, Windsor wound up with a 6-8 record,| Strathroy Gonder spent most of the last Waterloo season with Richmond of the|Chatham \International League 266. 75-YEAR-OLD IS TOP WINNER | RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) A 75 year-old athlete, coni- peting in the 16th Olympics of Strong Men, won two events Thursday--the 1,500- metre freestyle swim and the tug-of-war. None of his competitors was over 30. Francisco de Souza Valente is a retired government of- ficial. and hit| Stratford Sarnia 4 12 5 il 9 7 5 3 2 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 Hull-Ottawa 1 Sudbury 2 F 90 80 66 58 56 53 37° 75 Friday's Results Galt 4 Woodstock 3 OHA Junior A WLF Hamilton {Montreal St. Catharines Guelph , Peterboro Niagara Falls 154 2102 6932 Waterloo 0 Stratford 4 14.4 2 95 79 6 10 512 412 3 3 2 4 71 73 97% 457 12 65 7912 Friday's Results Peterborough 0 Guelph 6 Montreal 5 Niagara Falls 3 Tonight's Game Niagara Falls at St. Catharines Sunday's Game Hamilton at 'Montreal Western League |Edmonton 4 Vancouver 3 A Pt|Calgary 2 Seattle 2 85 34) Portland 4 San Francisco 3 80 304 Okanagan Senior 68 28 : 88 95 Vernon 2 Penticton 6 y) 13 3 | Whitby ] Mazxitoba Junior Winnipeg Braves 6 Winnipeg! Rangers 5 A Pt Saskatchewan Junior 49 24|Saskatoon 2 Weyburn 5 49 23/Estevan'1 Regina 3 44 19) Ontario Junior B 77 14\ Windsor 4 Dresden 6 64 10/Teamington 0 Chatham 14 86 : Peterborough 3 Belleville 6 Metro Toronto Junior A J 0 Toronto St. Michael's 1|in Selke wrote the commissfon Dec. 8 that the only reason Quinn had not fulfilled all the rules of the commission was that he is seriously ill, ' Rev. Marcel Laniel, chancel- \lor at Cardinal Leger's house, said that "'without checking the record, I do not believe that promoter Eddie Quinn had her eg the works of the card- al," : Father Aquin said he had re- ceived help from Quinn. The commission also sus- pended Quinn's wrestling. pro- motion permit Friday, saying that oral and written testimony jat a hearing left it no alterna- tive. The commission said the |Suspension was "in the inter- ests of the public and profes- sional sport." i F A Pt 53 30 76 17 110 KING ST. W. nearly DRY HARDWOOD SLABS Excellent wood for fireplaces _ McLAUGHLIN COAL & SUPPLIES LTD. e PHONE 723-3481 Nearly everybody reads a newspaper every day.* Practically every sale of every product manufactured by your company (or by your clients) will be made to a news- paper reader. Hence, the newspaper is basic and the effective use of its advertising columns constitutes the most powerful force in existence, any day and every day. *Market Research Corporation of America THE OSHAWA TIMES |