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Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Jan 1962, p. 10

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Se a iS a iu NSE ve 10 THE GSHAWA TIMES, Menaey, vanuary ©, 170s THE HOCKEY version of the twist is shown above as Montreal Canadiens whoop it up after Jean Believau had scored against N.Y. Rangers (22), Bobby Rousseau (15) and Phil Goyette. Looking de- jected are Rangers Larry Ca- han (5), Karry Howell (3) and Ken Schinkel and, of | in Saturday night's NHL lea- gue game in Montreal. Beli- veau got the goal but he isn't even in this picture. Happy Habitants are Don Marshall course, goalie Lorne (Gump) Worsley, who is lying on his back away out in front of the net. Canadiens won this one, 5-1, --(CP Wirephoto) : | pean fgur. PORT ARTHUR (CP) -- A Swedish amateur hockey offi- chal, who a year ago blasted Trail Smoke Eaters for unsport- smanlike conduct, had nothing but praise for Port Arthur Bear- oats, coach Lee Fogolin said here Saturday night when the team returned from its Euro- Fogolin, former National Hockey League star, said he re- ceived a letter of congratula- tions from Rusy Elkow, presi- dent of the Swedish Ice Hockey Federation. "It congratulated us for our 5-3 victory over Dijurgaarden and said it was a great game without fouls and bad feelings which saved the tournament fi- nancially," he said The game was the last of 15 played by the Bearcats of the Thunder Bay Senior League during a month - long tour of any team travelling overseas is to get used to their rules and} then the way their officials in-\ terpret the rules. MANY FALL DOWN , "Our players are stronger on their skates than the Euro- peans, When we go in to sweep check them while forechecking they fall down a lot. Whether they're taking a dive or not it's a tripping penalty. We took a few dives ourselves the final couple of eed and penalties ! were a e E U "Bunny Ahearne (head of am- i Bearcats Win | High Praise, Also Trophy ateur hockey in Europe), told] ~ me he'd never seen a telegram, such as Elkow sent us, ever sent to a Canadian team be-| before a record crowd of 21,500, fore." The Bearcats resume league] | action this week, meeting Fort William Beavers Wednesday. Gordon Juckes, secretary-ma- nager of the Canadian Amateur who tra- Czechoslovakia, East Germany Hockey Association, and Sweden. ; ; |velled with the Bearcats, said The team won 10, lost fourlin Toronto that Czechoslovakia art ae ol ee cee the team to beat in the world| ies in the inaugural Ahearne Trophy series for the Euro- pean hockey championship. BIG CROWD AT AIRPORT An overflow crowd, led by at Colorado Springs in March. Juckes was interviewed when the team landed at Malton air- port on their way to Port, Ar- thur. Mahovlich Leafs Win Mayor Sau! Laskin and other Port Arthur dignitaries, met the team at the kehead airport in Fort Wiliam. A civic recep- tion will be held at a ldter date. Fogolin said he was proud of the way the team performed. "Every hotel manager, air- line stewardess or anyone else I talked to said this was the Clicks, Couple "The Bearcats lost two games to the Czech national team by 2-1 and 10-1 scores and Galt Terriers, who represent Canada! at Colorado Springs, will beat the Czechs if they play the right style of hockey," Juckes said. By that Juckes said he meant the Canadians must learn to amateur hockey championships| ~~ EAST TALLIES -- Leroy Jackson, 21, of Western Iili- nois, bucks over the goal-line for a touchdown in the sec- ond quarter, for the East team, in yesterday's U.S. South Bowl game. Jackson took a pass from quarterback Bob Ply of Baylor and rammed for the touchdown from the three-yard line. Other players of Alabama an@ Pete Per- reault (61) of Boston U. West--Bobby Hunt (11) . of Auburn and Pete Kakela (73) of Michigan State, are East, Jack Rutledge (63) --(AP Wirephoto) And West By THE CANADIAN PRESS Big Frank Mahovlich was up to his old scoring tricks during the weekend and Toronto Ma- ple Leafs reaped the harvest much tougher opposition at De-! troit Sunday. | They needed two unusual | goals and a splendid goaltend-| Earl Ingarfield, Andy Bath-|vost. Gilles Tremblay also gate and Pat Hannigan scoredjscored for 'Montreal while In- for the Rangers. | garfield tallied for the Rangers. The Maple Leafs got a big} At Detroit, Howie Glover ing by Jacques Plante to sal-|scare late in the second period|twice sent the Wings into the play the international rules which call for bodychecking only in the checking team's half of the ice. Juckes said the Czechs and best behaved group they ever saw. "We had some bad press re- ports over so - called rough play in our early games in Win Bowls Over jvage a 2-2 deadlock with the for two important victories. a Red Wings. The husky left winger scored Czechoslovakia, but not in our jwhen veteran goalie Johnny/lead with goals in the first and|C final four games there. In Swe- |Bower fell bleeding to the ice second periods. three goals and helped set up three others -- a feat reminis-| cent of the big Saturdays and) Sundays he had in 1960-61 on! his way to a 48-goal season. Sunday at New York he re- trieved his own rebound and scored on a whirling backhand shot with less than five min- utes remaining to hand the Ma- ple Leafs a 4-3 triumph over the slipping Rangers. He assisted on two of Toronto's earlier goals. Against Chicago Saturday, the| 23-year-old hotshot scored two third period goals after hav- ing set up an earlier one when Detroit, striving to get out ofjafter he was hit at the hair- fifth place, romped to a 6-2 winjline by a shot off Hannigan's| ovr lowly Boston Bruins in a/Stick. But after six stitches and Saturday matinee game. |a 17-minute intermission, Bower) more going for them at Chicago|from the big New York crowd) Sunday. They got one goal while| of 15,265. | shorthanded, another in an| Saturday the Leafs lost the} empty net and backed by roo-|services of winger Dick Duff as| kie goalie Don Head's spec-ja result of a charleyhorse. They tacular netminding blanked the/also are without Red Kelly and Hawks 2 Eddie Shack, both recovering) Billy Hicke got the first Mont- real goal on a shot that glanced into the net off Detroit defence- man Pte Goegan's stick. Roo- | But the Bruins had muchjreturned and drew an ovation|kie Bobby Rousseau got the tie with a goal while Canadiens were shorthanded. Saturday, it was Gordie Howe and Alex Delvecchio who led he way for the Wings against the Bruins. Howe got his 19th goal and helped set up two den, the country which objected so strongly to Canadian tactics last season, we were praised. "T think the hardest thing for Swedes told him Canada needn't worry about Russia. Juckes added that Czechoslo-| vakia and Sweden expressed a desire to send teams to Canada next winter. Crush N. Junior Canadiens Falls North NEW YORK (CP)--The U.S, college football bowl season ended during the weekend showing the same pattern that dominated the early games -- the strength was in the west and south. In the Senior Bow! the South overwhelmed the North; in the U.S. Bowl the West beat the East, and in the Hula Bowl East And East |Gros each rushed for two touch-| In the U.S. Bowl Sunday at downs as the South shut out the; Washington, quarterback Galen North until the last minute of/Hall of Pennsylvania State play. passed for three touchdowns to The North moved downfield|lead the West to a 33-19 win. from the opening kick-off with|The all - star game matched a series of plays that gave the\draft choices of the eastern impression they would be un-| and western divisions of the Na- beatable. | tional Football League. DRIVE STOPPED | SCOUTS LOOK BAD The standings were not alt- ered by the weekend's play.' The Rangers, dropping below) the .500 mark for the first time this season, remained third. The Hawks are still fourth, two} the Leafs spilled the Stanley Cup champion Black Hawks The two victories propelled] the Leafs to within one point of! points behind the Blueshirts. TIES FOR THIRD Mahovlich's game winner at New York was his seventh this from recent injuries. goals in the second period and were never others. Delvecchio had to set-| Dave Keon, Allan Stanley,|tle for four assists, failing to} Olmstead and Litzenberger/come up with his 200th NHL| potted Toronto's | | against the Hawks. Ron Mur-| phy, Eric Nesterenko and Stan Mikita tallied for Chicago. | TAKE BIG LEAD goals|8oal. : : Detroit's five other goals came off the sticks of usually |weak scorers. Defencemen War- ren Godfrey, Marcel Pronovost and Pete Goegan each-had. one as did forwards: Leo Labine and Val Fonteyne. other The Canadiens rapped in four threat- By THE CANADIAN PRESS |and Jacques Madore of Mont- Montreal Canadiens, highest-\"¢al. Up to that time only four scoring team in the Ontario|Minors had been called. Hockey Association Junior A) series, came up Sunday with thal "Se ead' ines rere dows! Ds aed goal production of any's.9 midway in the second pe- ¢ " pees ca rae lriod at St. Catharines but came e st_~ piace Canadiens) back with a goal in that frame es Niagara Falls Flyers|and two more in the third. i .| But the South stopped the| Hall completed 28 of 49 passes - Wan Payee © et ee |drive on the six and a North| for 338 yards and was wold the In the Senior Bowl at Mobile,| field-goal attempt was blocked.| game's outstanding player. Ala., Saturday the powerfui|Then Bull, Gros and company|Hall's brilliance embarrassed running of Ronnie Bull of Bay-|t0ok over. |the NFL scouts in attendance-- lor and Earl Gros of Louisiana| Bull, who made a 58 - yard/he was the only player selected State led the South to a con-| Scoring jaunt in the third quar-|to play in the game who had vincing 42-7. Both squads turned| 'er, carried the ball 16 times) not been drafted by the NFL, professional with the game, the|and gained 133 yards. Gros, 8 Bobby Ply of the East con- winning players each receiving|220 - pounder, carried 19 times! nected with 17 of 38 passes for a cheque for $600 and the los- for 114 yards. |200 yards, seven to Jim Collier For the third-place Teepees, |, Bill Miller, Miami's all-Amer-| o¢ Pao jSlipped two points off Mont-\who moved five points up on| Halfback Bull and fullback ica end, was brilliant for: the| jreal's pace, although they have|Guelph Royals but still are 13|--- South, playing as a flanker) seriously ened thereafter in their game against the Rangers. Jean Beliveau and Dickie Moor,' criticized earlier by first place in the Natioia]|season, tops in the league. It Hamilton Red Wings} Hocke : jalso was his 18th goal this year) y Lang jand pulled him into a three-| LUCKY TO LEAD way tie for third place in the + Actually front-running Mont-| individual scoring race. real Canadiens were lucky to} Before getting the winner, he stay on top of the heap. Thejset up tallies for linemates Bob Habs had an easy time beat-\Nevin and Eddie Litzenberger.| ing New York 5-1 on home ice|Bert Olmstead got the other Andre Pronovost and Jerry Toppazzini tallied for the Bruins. At Chicago, Charley Burns gave the Bruins a 1-0 margin in coach Toe Blake for lacklustre|/the second period and Toppaz- performances, led the way for)zini iced the game in the final the Habs. Beliveau scored twice|minute of play after Hawks' ers getting $500. East and West all-star squads in the Hula Bowl at Honolulu, | Hawaii, Sunday were similar to ithe taams which played in the {East-West Shrine bowl in San |Francisco last week, which | West won 21-8. a game in hand, by battling to|hack of Hamilton, the scorers| jback. He caught four passes-- a 33 tie with St. Catharines)were Jack Stanfield, Paul Po-| |half the South's completions-- Teepees Saturday. peil and Bill Ives. | |for 67 yards. : Bill Inglis, Rejean Richer,| Pit Martin, Lowell MacDon- The South attack was di- Germain Gagnon and Bob Char-|ald and Joe Budjosa replied for rected at. quarterback by Billy who Canty of Furman, whom Tor- - said representatives of the! Saturday night but ran intoiToronto goal. while Dickie Moore got one and)goalie Glenn Hall had been re- 'set up another for Claude Pro-|moved for a sixth attacker. OHA MEETING Coach Hap Emms Is Fined TORONTO (CP)--By mutual agreement, an Ontario Hockey Association hearing of a Wood- stock protest about a defaulted senior game has been post- poned. OHA President Lloyd Pollock a By THE CANADIAN PRESS |Sault Ste. Marie 3 Hull-Ottawa 3) National League OHA Senior A | WLT F APt WuTt FF Art 20 910134 93 50)\Galt 0125 66 34| 2210 5129 91 49) Windsor 1102 72 31| 15 16 8 118 120 38) Woodstock 0 95 80 26) 12 15 12 100 104 36) Strathroy 1 88 85 23 1417 7 103 117 35| Waterloo Montreal Toronto iNew York $90.00 jx" ae iach Detroit ater Ai marten' Hok tur Some Boston 925 4 102 161 22\Chatham ing referee Bill Brethour after Saturday's Results Stratford a game in Guelph several weeks|New York 1 Montreal 5 Sarnia ago; Boston 2 Detroit 6 Granted Kingston's Intermed- Chicago 3 Toronto 6 late A entry a bye into the OHA Sunday's Results 0 97 7318 1 8413413 1 60118 5 Saturday's Results | Windsor 5 Strathroy 1 Stratford 4 Sarnia 3 HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS: 0 82105 22\game, which ended in a brawl|Onge scored for Peterborough, lebois each got two goals at|Hamilton. The Teepees, Montreal where the Flyers bat-/have lost only three of their tled on something like even/last 16 games, drew 12 of the erms only during the first pe-|22 minutes in penalties. riod. Jacques Laperriere, Andre| In a Toronto Metro Junior A} Boudrias and Johnny T a y1or| game Sunday, St. Michael's Col-| scored the others. lege Majors whipped Brampton) For the fifth - place Flyers,|6-1. ; Billy Knibbs and Gary Dorn-| The Petes defeated Toronto hoefer scored in the first pe-;Marlboros 5-2 in an exhibition riod, Ron Hergott in the second|rounding out the Maple Leaf and Howie Dietrich in the third. |Gardens Sunday doubleheader. | The Baby Habs' sharp passing) Danny O'Shea with two, Claude made the _ difference in the|Larose, Bill Reid and Fern St. jthat cost major penalties to|Denis Mercier and Arnie Brown Richard Morin of the Flyers'for the Dukes. t Playoffs against the winner of Toronto 4 New York 3 Woodstock Athletics and Water-|the Lakeshore group; Montreal 2 Detroit 2 leo Tigers agreed not to appear| leard a bid from Belleville to Boston 2 Chicago 0 at an OHA executive meeting|recognize its team, which has| n American League here Saturday, The protest will/becn playing in the Lakeshore! ' | Eastern Division be heard at a future meeting. Woodstock filed the protest when Waterloo refused to play in Woodstock Dec. 22 in place of the now - defunct St. Thomas team. Mr. Pollock said the OHA still has not reached agreement with Chatham Maroons over a game St. Thomas was to have played in Chatham the night the team folaed. "Chatham is' asking for $1,500 as compensation," said Mr. Pol- lock, "'and we feel this is too high. There will have to be a better adjustment." Mr. Pollock announced that Ralph Kosowan, Waterloo Tig- ers forward, has been given a ofie - year suspension for hitting linesman Gerry Hesse of Strat-| ford in a game in Stratford Dec. 29. He said he believed Wat- erlog would appeal the suspen- sion. Hesse was hit when he tried to break up a fight be- tween Kosowan and a Stratford] player. REJECT TWO APPEALS The OHA turned down ap- peais by two junior players who were given one ~- year suspen- sions. They are Ralph Houston of Strathroy and John Black of Simcoe. Houston was suspended a month ago for hitting a ref- eree and Black was suspended last spring for hitting a referee 'during a playoff game between Stratford and Simcoe. Mr. Pollock said the draft meeting for Junior A clubs, nor- mally held in March, will not be held: this year until early May. He said legislation con- cermng the draft may be intro- duced at the OHA's annual meeting in April. "There has been quite a bit of criticism about the draft," said Mr. Pollock. In other business, the OHA: fined coach Hap Emms of P # Intermediate A group, as a sen- ior entry and set a meeting with Springfield |officials of the western senior| Hershey |group in London Jan. 21 to dis-|Providence cuss Belleville's possible playoff| Quebec role Pollock indicated the ma- jor problem is to find playoff jtime without delaying the de- Rochester jclaration of an OHA senior win- Buffalo ner for the Eastern Canada fi- Cleveland 1716 2111 115 36! nal Pittsburgh 727 1 8714515) Saturday's Results | Bi i gham |Quebec 5 Cleveland 6 | Ties Hotspurs {Rochester 2 Hershey 4 | Wit ¥ APt 2410 2153 99 50) 1912 4111 94 42) 1915 1131117 39 1622 1111116 33| Western Division L F APt 1818 2123 132 38) 1818 1114 123 37) Buffalo 4 Pittsburgh 3 (Replay part of protested Dec.| |\9 game) | | Buffalo 3 Pittsburgh 0 | | LONDON (Reuters) ~-- Totten-| Providence 2 Springfield 8 jham Hotspur, English League Sunday's Results champion and cup holder, was|Quebec 3 Buffalo 1 | dramatically held to a 3-3 draw| Pittsburgh 4 Providence 11 | after being three goals up Satur-|Cleveland 4 Rochester 1 | day in its Soccer Association Western League Challenge Cup third - round! Northern Division game away to Birmingham) WLT F APt City. |Edmonton 2112 213711444 After Briming ham fought|Calgary 1915 3155 128 41 |back to equalize, hundreds of|Seattle 1817 3138 111 39 fans swarmed on the pitch to| Vancouver 924 3 95153 21 congratulate the hometow n| Southern Division Players and the referee threat./ Portland 2710 1149 101 55 ened to abandon the game un-|Spokane 1918 4142 138 42 less they withdrew. |Los Angeles 1322 5 148 182 31 Jimmy Greaves, Spurs' £100,-/San Fran 1323 1107 141 27 000 buy from Milan, scored two Saturday's Results Tottenham goals and Welsh In-|Seattle 4 Calgary 2 ternational Cliff Jones got the|Los Angeles 5 San Francisco 3 other. Then came Birmingham's Portland 2 Spokane 4 magnificent fight-back. Sunday's Result Jimmy Harris thundered in a\San Francisco 4 Portland 7 left-foot shot before half-time, Eastern Professional and two goals in four minutes WLT F APt by Harris and Ken Leek after| 2112 4133 107 46 the interval earned Birming-|Kingston 1911 3127 103 41 ham a replay. |Hull-Ottawa 1412 7 8&8 8835 There were two big-form up-|Sudbury 1313 7122 123 33) sets. These were provided by|North Bay | third - division Peterborough's. S. Marie 821 8 111 147 24) United 1-0 away winner over| Saturday's Results second-division Newcastle, and|Sault Ste. Marie 6 Kingston 3 | second - division Plymouth Ar-|Sudbury 2 Kitchener 5 gyle, which downed first - divi- Sunday's Results ision West Ham United 3-0. 'Kitchener 2 North Bay 1 Kitchener 1218 5 95108 29 54 t v Sunday's Results | Woodstock 3 Waterloo 2 |Galt 1 Windsor 4 OHA Junior A WLT F APt Montreal 20 6 3140 8443 Hamiltohi 18 5 5132 9141 St. Catharines 1110 6 110 104 28 Guelph 914 5 105 135 23 Niagara Falls 515 8 9211418 Peterboro 518 5 6111215 Saturday's Result Hamilton 3 St. Catharines 3 : Sunday's Result Niagara Falls 4 Montreal 11 SATURDAY Eastern League New Haven 1 Clinton 6 Charlotte 2 Greensboro 7 Philadelphia 5 Johnstown 13 Nova Scotia Senior Windsor 3 Amherst 7 Halifax 4 Moncton 1 SUNDAY Northern Ontario Senior A Porcupine 5 Kapuskasing 2 Abitibi 3 Rouyn-Noranda 4 Metro Toronto Junior A |Brampton 1 St. Michael's 6 Ontario Intermediate A Milton 5 East York 10 Eastern League Philadelphia 4 Long Island 3 Greensboro 4 New Haven 2 Clinton 1 Johnstown 4 Charlotte 0 Knoxville 2 International League St. Paul 2 Minneapolis 3 Omaha 3 Indianapolis 2 Fort Wayne 2 Toledo 4 Exhibition Marlboros 2 Peterborough 5 NHL LEADERS Windsor Bulldogs Threaten Terriers Will Try Out Sunday Games OTTAWA (CP) -- Sudbury Walves of the Eastern Profes- sional Hockey League are the fifth team in the six - team league to announce they will ex- periment with Sunday afternoon games. Teams in Hull, Kitchener, North Bay and Sault Ste. Marie made such announcements ear- lier this season after Ontario's amendment io the Lord's Day Act made Sunday sports possi- ble on a local option basis. Kingston is the only city in the league which has not had a vote on Sunday sports. The Sudbury vote was held late in 1961 The Wolves have scheduled their first Sunday game for Jan. 14, against Kingston Fron- tenacs. The game originally onto Argonauts drafted. But this week the east "5 the West to one touchdown. could score only once itself ORFU : | however and the game ended | uniors jin a 7-7 tie. | A soggy field hampered the M T k I joutstanding runners on both ay a e n jsquads and 10 interceptions -- |six by the West--kept things in | Western U a continual flux. : . All-America Bob Ferguson of | WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- The} Ohio State galloped 72 yards in Ontario Rugby Football Union's the Ba quarter for the East's junior series gave tentative ap-| touchdown. : proval to an entry from the Uni-| Less than three minutes late versity of Western Ontario at| all - America quart John its annual meeting that ended|Hadl of Kansas flipped a five- here Sunday. yard pass to all-America end Represeniatives of Windsor|Buddy Les of Texas Christian AKO, Sarnia Knights, St. for the West's touchdown. Thomas Jayhawks and Kitch-| encr - Waterloo Dutchmen|iaent. Edward (Trip) Trepanier showed no opposition and West-|of Sarnia was re - elected t ern was asked to file a formal|vice - president and Frank application before the schedule|Hodges of Windsor was named meeting at Sarnia May 12. second vice - president, suc- Windsor Bulldogs are on the move again and Galt Terriers' occupation of first place in the Ontario Hockey Association Se- nior A series appears in jeop- ardy. The Bulldogs, 5-1 victors over Strathroy Rockets Satur day, turbed back the Terriers 4-1 Sun- day and narrowed the margin to three points: The Bulldogs have played three games fewer than the Galt club. Woodstock Athletics, five points back of 'Windsor, went three points ahead of Strathroy by nosing out the Tigers 3-2 Sunday in a penalty-filled game at Waterloo. Stratford Indians rounded out the weekend action with a 4-3 victory over the luck- less Sarnia Rams, who aregees their 10th straight and have won only two of their 20 games. Two second-period goals by Bob Brown after Galt's Bill Wy- lie had tied the score at 1-1 finished the Terriers Sunday. Irwin Gross had scored for Windsor in the first? period and Walt Pawlyshyn added a clin- cher in the third. Brown's goals came within 71 seconds. BROWN AGAIN BUSY The Bulldogs routed the Rock- ets with four third-period goals, Brown again getting two. Don Emms of Strathrey epened the scoring in the second period but Jack Costello tied it up and got another goal to open the third By THE CANADIAN PRESS Standings: Montreal, won 20, lost 9, tied 10, points 50. Points: Bathgate, New York, Goals: Provost, Montreal, 22. Assists: Bathgate, 37. Shutouts: Hall, Chicago; Saw- chuk, Detroit, 4 Penalties: .Fontinato, real, 107 minutes. Mont- riod. Tom Walker scored be- ween Brown's pair. Referee Jack Clancy called 29 minor penalties at 'Waterloo, 16 to the Athletics, plas a mis- conduct to Rio Caron of Wood- stock in the third period. Jerry Theberge shot the win- By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Micallef, a defenceman who hadn't played goal in his 10- year career, went into the Wa- terloo nets to start the game when regular Chuck Jewell was late arriving. He stopped shots in 7% minutes of shutout goal- tending. Butch Graham's second goal of the night at Sarnia gave the Indians their victory. He was hit by two Rams as he raced towards the net. All three fell but the puck rolled past goalie Jim Helkie. Jackie MclIlwain and Marv Shantz added the other Strat- ford goals. Doug Sanglais, Bruce Jones and Tim Clarke scored for the Rams. Cornwall Cops Cage Tourney BROCKVILLE (CP) -- Corn- wall oepete Raiders won the Eastern Ontario Secondary School Association's first pre- season basketball tournament. Led by John Morgan, who scored 23 points, Raiders turned back Kingston Collegiate and Vocational Institute Blues 67-43 in the final game Saturday night. Cornwall built up a 21-3 lead early in the game. KCVI ap- to be making a come- ack in the second quarter, but because of atrocious shooting gradually lost ground. KCVI's attack was led by! Dave Heustis and Doug Fraser. Heustis scored 16 points and ning goalwhile Byrle Klinck and Jerry Stringle got th: other: | Waterloo scorers were 'Tom Mi- callef and Bob Browa. , Fraser 11, In the consolation event, St. Lawrence High School of Corn-|fied $10 or suspended for one| Smiths Falls 68-26. game. | lwall crushed Jack Rockett of Windsor was|ceeding Otto Yaworsky of Kit- was scheduled for Jan. 8. i returned as ORFU Junior pres-!chener. ry OTHER CHANGES The EPHL also announced| these changes in the schedule:| March 27, Kingston plays! | Sault Ste. Marie in a game or-| by vp E Cc I iginglly scheduled for last Nov.| & 12, "but cancelled because of | Memorial Day services, Jan, 24, Kitchener plays at/ Zipper front, Sizes 6 to 12 in the group Hull in a game which had been) scheduled for Dec, 7. | Feb. 7, Kingston at Sudbury, | instead of Feb, 5. Feb. 13, Hull at Sault Ste. Marie in a game originally scheduled for Dec. 12. | Feb. 28, Sudbury at Hull in a game cancelled Dec. 31. | March 6, 'sage Bay,| sty a Feb. A ieren 1. Sudbury plays at North Bay, cancelling an April) 1 contest. - | OHA Levies Fines | Also Suspensions ST. CATHARINES (CP) The Ontario Hockey Association} has levied fines and suspensions | against 17 players following a brawl at the Garden City Arena| here last. week between mem- bers of St; Catharines and Stam- fora Bruins of the Niagara Dis- trict Junior B group. The OHA also suspended St.' Catharines coach Vic Teal for three games and Stamford coach Jack Bond for one game. Penalties totalled 303 minutes) following the brawl. Jim. O'Brien, St. Lightweight for Dress Heavy-duty for Work ONLY 3.99 Men at this price you can't afford Cold, Wet Feet... fined $20 or a two - game SUS: | DAVIDSON'S |pension for leaving the penalty 'bench to join the fight. | SHOE STORE Nine §St. Catharines players) 31 SIMCOE ST. NORTH | Catharines} \-aptain and leading scorer, was| and séven from Stamford were} 725-3312

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