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Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Feb 1963, p. 14

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"14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wanesdey, February 27, 1963 ' ONLY KNOWN SHUTOUT Hansen Rink Drubs Kimberley Quartet By FRANK SULLIVAN SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)--It was fair obvious Tuesda night that Ina Hansen of Britis Columbia was not happy to see her two-year, 13-game winning streak end in the Canadian women's curling champion- ships a It happened Tuesday after- noon, Tuesday night Mrs, Han- sen and her Kimberley, B.C., rink rebounded with a venge- ance to wallop Manitoba 16-0. It was the first known shutout' registered in any of the na- tional curling championships -- and they didn't bother playing the last two ends. The B.C. gals--all of whom skip their own rinks at Kimber- ley -- showed little mercy to Manitoba's Irene Burton. They counted three in each of the first two ends, four in the third, two in the fourth then kepv plugging away with one in the . fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth ends, The rink that raised the ire ing foursome from Moncton, N.B., skipped by Mabel De- Ware, Mrs. DeWare scored an upset 9-6 win over the defending champions from British Colum- bia in the fourth round, TIE FOR LEAD Going into the sixth and sev- enth rounds of the round-robin competition today, British Co- lumbia, New Brunswick and Al- berta were tied for the lead with four wins and one loss apiece, The competition ends Thurs- day with the eighth and ninth rounds unless there is a tie to force a playoff Friday. Tuesday's was the toughest schedule of the four-day com- petition with three rounds. Other fourth- round results: Quebec' 12, Manitoba 5, Ontario 12, Newfoundland 4, Nova Sco- 10-4 and Quebec defeated Nova Scotia 13-10, It left Ontario, Saskatchewan and Quebec tied behind the three leaders with 3-2 records, Nova Scotia next with two wins and three losses, Newfoundland and Manitoba 1-4 and Prince Edward Island winless in five starts, The only New Brunswick loss was at the hands of Ontario vet- eran Mrs. Emily Woolley of Toronto in a thriller Monday, RESULTS SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP) -- Fifth round results in the Ca- nadian women's curling cham- pionship Tuesday: Ontario 030 110 101 x-- 7 Alberta 102 003 030 x-- 9 334 211 11x x--16 NEW BRUNSWICK scored an upset 9-6 win over British tion of the Canadian women's curling championship at Saint left to right, sweeping in the vice-skip; Mrs. Marjorie Fra- fourth end in which NB, ser, le@d, and Mrs, Mabel De- Full House Watch Whitby, Brampton Battle To 4-4 Tie Brampton Seven-Ups and Whitby Dunlops aided Oshawa fur Ange piayott spots. ea ce it in the Metro Junior "A" stand: Julian Kowalski, traded to the Seven-Ups by Whitby earlier in the season, came back to haunt his former mates with a goal that produced a 4-4 standoff be- tween th. two clubs. Both Whitby and Seven-Uj are tied for fourth place with 28] 2%" points, One point behind are|< tag Reempio yk 9.96 ( Oshawa Generals who took a 4-3 upset victory from Toronto wy LaRue pongienasies 947 49.50 3. Mariboros in Toronto last night. ' The tie couldn't have come at] 5, a better time for the Generals) or at a worse time for either of the other two teams searching' for the final playoff spot, Had Whitby or Brampton won, B.C, Manitoba Sask. PEI. Nfld. tia 14, Prince Edward Island 6, Alberta 10, Saskatchewan 7. In other fifth-round games, Alberta edged Ontario 9-7, Sas- katchewan edged Prince Ed- 103 000 232 0--11 of Mrs. Hansen was a surpris- ward Island 12-11, New Bruns- wick outclassed Newfoundland Nova Scotia 221 010 003 10--10 'SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' Quebec 000 107 110 03--13 Fourth round results in the Ca- nadian women's curling cham- ships Tuesday: Quebec Manitoba Newfoundld Ontario New Bruns, Brit Columbia P.EI 410 410 101 x--12 001 001 030 x-- 5 100 010 020 x-- 4 021 300 303 9--12 001 230 300 0-- 9 120 001 001 1-- 6 410 100 000 x-- 6 OSHAWA GENERALS staged a brilliant comeback in the third period last night at Maple Leaf Gardens when they scored four goals in the third Marlboros 4-3. Meanwhile, back at the ranch -- Whitby Dun- nies were holding Brampton 7-Ups to a 4-4 tie. Actually, the Brampton boys were a bit fort scored a goal in the last minute of the second stanza and then tied the game at 4-4 with another last-minute tally in the * final period. However that's all dust had cleared, Whitby Dunlops had made good their boast " of staying in fourth place while Oshawa Generals had also ~ gerved notice that they were still very much in the running, by knocking off the Marlies. Last night's results served to further heighten the importance night when Generals play in Whitby. With the schedule al- most over -- it may well prove : for this year's schedule, hinge night's game in Whitby. Certainly beating Marlboros last night vaulted the Generals right back into the thick of the playoff scramble. x x LADIES' Diamond 'D', Canadian women's championship » curling classic, currently in full swing at Saint John, N.B., " saw three teams tied for top honors following yesterday's play. British Columbia, Alberta and New Brunswick each have four wins and one defeat. the 'clippers' but Emily Woolley and her Ontario representa- tives have fallen on evil days. Meanwhile, at Hamilton, Osh- awa's Al Parkhill and his fellow-veterans, scored a 14-4 win yesterday to remain one of the still-unbeaten skips in the annual Ontario 'Senior' Tankard competition. The Oshawa Curling Club today, the Rotarians of the local club and surrounding area, will spiel, x x 002 041 232 x--14 Alberta 030 130 201 0--10 Sask, 003 002 010 7-- 7 x--did not finish By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadian women's curling championship standing after five rounds: Nova Scotia period to nose out Toronto unate to escape defeat, they ame, When the P hed British Columbia Alberta New Brunswick Ontario Saskatchewan Quebec Nova Scotia Newfoundland Manitoba Prince Edward Island Bosox Star Strides To Limelight SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP)-- Two years is a comparatively short time in baseball, but in the case of Carl Yastrzemski, those 24 months have trans- of the big game this Friday that Oshawa's playoff hopes on the outcome of Friday SH wewenene Cb hed wwe ee tt 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 x x Nobody has entirely escaped And here at be holding their annual bon- 000 000 00x x-- 0 020 261 000 1--12 000 011 101 x--- 4 New Brunswick 111 400 030 x--10| BRIGHT BITS: -- N.Y. Rangers upset Detroit Red Wings 43 last night right in Detroit three goals in the middle period with Camille Henry potting , to help turn the trick... . TOMORROW night, here at the Children's Arena, Oshawa Pee Wees and Oshawa Midgets will both open their second rounds of Ontario Minor Hockey Assoc. playoffs -- this time against Liftlock City opposition. bleheader. . . . MINOR SPORT "Neighborhood Association level' awa Minor Hockey Association, Should be an interesting dou- in Oshawa, especially at the * (which is embraced by Osh- Oshawa Minor Softball Asso- ciation, etc., and similar groups doing a wonderful job for formed him from a boy into a man, From a wide-eyed, frightened rookie he has grown into a full- blown major league star who understands and is willing to accept his role as the big gun of Boston Red Sox of the Amer- ican League. There's hardly a member of the Red Sox who doesn't think that the 23-year-old outfielder is ready to take his place alcng- side such American League su- per stars as Mickey Mantle and Columbia in fourth round ac- John, N.B., yesterday. Here, By THE CANADIAN PRESS Lou Marcon summoned from the minors by Detroit Red Wings as a replacement for bad boy Howie Young, played How- ie's role too well Tuesday night. Marcon tripped Camille Henry of New York, resulting ina penalty shot goal that helped launch the Rangers to a 4-3 win in a National Hockey League game at Detroit. It was the/schedule's only game. There is another single game tonight, the league-leading Chicago Black Hawks against the third-place Maple Leafs in Toronto. Henry wound up with three goals Tuesday night in the come-from-behind victory be- fore 9,040 fans. Rangers are 16 points behind Detroit with 11 games to play. The Red Wings have a game in hand in the struggle for the! fourth and final playoff berth.|, The penalty shot was the New York spotted Detroit a/fourth awarded this season and pair of first-period goals. In the the third to result in a goal. second period, the Red Wings | Toronto's Red Kelly and Bobby} got another and Henry rapped Rousseau of Montreal got the in his three. jearlier ones. | SCHINKEL WINS IT A goal by Ken Schinkel--his | fourth of the season--set up by Andy Bathgate's pass, gavel New York the edge at 13:21 of| the third period. | The Detroit goal-getters were) Gordie Howe, Bruce MacGregor and defenceman Bill Gadsby. It Flyers Grab | Howe and lifted him into a 65-| First Spot point tie w Shicago's § | On 7-2 Win HOWIE YOUNG MISS EXTRA MAN Henry got his second when| Mikita for the individual scor- ing leadership. him 27 for the campaign. é athe a His first game at 1:46 of the ie nace pay Mal ty clinched second period after the referee) iiocie blew the whistle on Marcon,| called up from Pittsburgh Hor.| Junior A group with a convine- Henry Hat-Tricks To Give Rangers 4-3 Win Over Wings jhimself,"" scored two, are New Bruns- the victory would have moved Ware, skip, of Moncton. tiem into sole --(CP Wirephoto) wickers Mrs. Harriet Stratton, HOCKEY SCORES STANDINGS | By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League a slim but commanding two- point edge. As it stands now, Whitby and Brampton must beat Oshawa in the last two games of the season this weekend. , Wayne Weller and Don West- brooke traded goals in a penalty-studded opening frame, : sandwiched second period goals WLT FA Pt from Scott LaRue and Bill Col- 30 15 14.172 139 74|lins to leave the teams at 3-3 24 16 18 186 145 66) going into the final period. Chicago Montreal Toronto the ice during a line change, But defenceman Doug Harvey, | who drew an assist, jumped off 'the ice before the officials not- iced the extra man, The Red Wings suspended Young indefinitely Tuesday after he failed to show up for a player meeting. The move came at the end of a three-game suspension im. posed by NHL president Clar- ence Campbe!l! for Young's run-in with referee F vari in a game against Mont: real Canadiens Feb. 17. The blowup netted Young 27 min- utes in penalties and gave him an all - time league seasonal mark of 210 minutes. Said Detroit coach Sid Abel: "We've bent over backwards to help Young numerous times © but he has not shown any de- sire to help either the club or FIGHTS LAST NIGHT {By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rangers had seven players on/José (Stonewall) Badillo, 153%, json, 148, Los Angeles, stopped! |Charlie Shipes, 145, Oakland, 7.|New Haven 2 Philadelphia 8 H }; . | | enry s three-goal effort gave) 5. wae CANADIAN PRESS | Ontario|and Niagara Falls' y Association provincial|Glashan were each given match|Glace Bay 0 Sydney 2 New York -- Lenny Mangia- pane, 151, New York, outpointed Puerto Rico, 10. rank Ud-| {Guelph 2 Niagara Falls 7 St, Catharines at Montreal 28 21 916115565) Brian Fletcher put the play- 24 21 13 161 150 61\offs at a finger's length when 17 3111172 202 45)he counted near the middle 13 9215 179 241 41/mark of the last period but Tuesday's Results Kowalski pumped the tieing New York 4 Detroit 3 peerage past on Reeson in the Games Today as' nute ay, Brampton \Chicago at Toronto coach, Johnny McCormack pull- Eastern Professional ae po hig in favor of a ba : cake it Both teams hawe a chance to 3315 8 229 173 74 oe et pore ~-- this Sudbury 21 23 11 229 231 53 dag Whpsieyighel pg St Louve 1533 8200 255 38 face them. Generals play Whit- |" ane, "3 , by in Whitby, Friday and | Tuesday's Result Brampton in Maple Leaf Gar- St. Louis 8 Sudbury 5 dens, Sunday, Today's Game If either team beats the Gen- St. Paul at Kingston erals it would assure them of at Ontario Junior A least fourth place tie. WLT F APt Detroit |New York Boston | Hull-Ottawa | Kingston Pp of fourth spot in the standings with « (slashing) 5, (oross checking) 9.52. ii BOXING MAN DIES CHICAGO: (AP)--William J. (Pep) Kerwin, 68, veteran box- ing announcer for the Illinois State Athletic Commission, died Tuesday. Kerwin. suffered a stroke Oct. 1. A veteran of more than 34 years as an- nouncer for the commission, he also was active in the Catholic Youth Orgenization, * °° OLD COUNTRY SOCCER SCORES LONDON (Reuters)--Results of soccer matches played, in Britain Tuesday night: English e Division ; Coventry City 2 Colchester Bristol Rovers 1 Reading NAMED HOGTOWN -- Toronto was nicknamed Hog- town more than 100 years ago because of the number of pigs then roaming the streets. U.3 L) |Niagara Falls | Montreal 25 14 9 190 142 59 | Peterboro 20 16 11 139 118 51 |Hamilton 2010 8 183 166 48 \St, Catharines 14 22 11 155 201 39 )Guelph 8 34 6 150 250 22 Tuesday's Results Oshawa Montreal 1 Peterborough 4 Games Today iin | Tankard Montreal (NHL) 4 Hull-Ottawa| HAMILTON (CP) -- Three (EPHL) 2 [Toronto rinks and one from Ontario Senior A Oshawa edged their way into Woodstock 0 Windsor 5 the semi-finals Tuesday for the (First game of best-of-seven Ontario, Curling Association's semi-final) ' Seniors' Tankard, ing Metro Toronto Jr. A The semi-finals today--with Beaumont, Tex. Mickey Brown, 160, Houston, Tex., out- Brampton 4 Whitby 4 Sones 4 Marboros 3 Roy Smith and Stan Jones of Toronto Granite in the m finals later in the day--will see aini|A. R. Tarlton of Rink . To Semi-Finals In Bonspiel Hamilton bowed out to A, T. Pollock of Galt: 11-10.0n an ex- tra end, Other rinks scored vic- tories on wide margins. In OCA trophy second, ound Papeete al. ened W. J, Reuter of Welland downed last year's champion, pointed Alonzo Harris, 160, MeNeil 5 Knob Hill $ Oklahoma City, 10, International League Oakland, Calif.--Mel Fergu:|Omaha 3 Fort Wayne 2 Eastern League Neil | Saskatchewan Senior | | \tinal period. Billy Taylor scored|Saskatoon 7 Regina 8 }on a. power play and Sandy n Ottawa and District Jr, A Fitzpatrick hit for the final/Smiths Falls 0 Pembroke 5 Royal tally. |. (Best-of-seven semi-final tied Gary Sabourin of the Royals 1-1) Billy | Cape Breton Senior | Jenkins of Dundas Valley. Har- event with A. J. Parkhill of Oshawa, past president of the OCA, and C. A. Harris of Wes- ton. The bonspiel is for curl- ers 60 years of age and older. Smith beat Dr. C. T. Moyle of Hamilton 86 in his third- round match while Jones. took a 10-7 decision from Archie Hamilton Thistles, (13-3), and A. J. Park- hill of Oshawa Jefeated Geotge Doggett of Toronto (14-4) to re- main among the unbeaten skips. $2.50 Gets Voucher For Season Tickets REGINA (CP) -- Saskatche- wan Roughriders this year are ris edged W. J. Reuter of Wel- land 8-7 and Parkhill elimi- nated Ed Smith of St, Thomas letting season ticket purchasers penalties in the second period | (Best-of-nine semi-final. t ied|®"3: name their own prepayment the youth of Oshawa) received a harsh blow this weekend in the sudden passing of'Cliff Bradley, one of the stalwarts of all minor sports in this city and particularly, of the Woodview Park Neighborhood Association. Cliff had a big family of fine sons and he steered and helped them all "grow up" through Oshawa's sports facilities, but he himself also con- tributed more than his share, one of those willing helpers who was always ready to drive a load of players, if the team had to play out-of-town, etc. Woodview Park Assoc. will miss him, so will Oshawa Minor Hockey Assoc., for he was almost a permanent fixture at the Children's Arena, during the winter months. One of those sincere, quiet but energetic workers that no community can afford to lose, since there's never enough of them -- he will truly be missed, not just by his family but by his friends -- and he had a lot of them. Dumps Old Pals| Fronts Top nets of the American League as|!"& 7-2 victory over the last-|for a stick-swinging session. | 2-2) | In the third event, for the 0 plan terms, Young's defence replacement, |P!ace Guelph Royals Tuesday; In Peterborough, the Petes Nova Scotia Senior Dofasco trophy, S. B. Williams The Western Football Confer- ence club hopes to have vouch- ers for season tickets available in more than 300 business es- tablishments in the city by. the Al Kaline. I hope I don't sound ego- _|night. - |exploded with three goals in the|New Glasgow 4 Moncton 1 jof Oakville took out Charles tistical," said the "personable |ethe, Fivers. increased their| final period to break a tle and) (New Glasgow leads eed hat Bilin ode doer ou Ithink T an reas Asian Flu Strikes Post} to & -- over haga red the Canadiens out of thé/seven semi-final 3-2) lc re) 'Tatham of Woodstock 9-6 , unior Ca s, WwW ave | itax 5 la mt, : ue hye , ; . . : only two games lett atter losing| George boil fired what W (Halex rena entotdorinl Sone tae eee Bur. wader the aoe se plan BER IB eck pies on Flying Finnlander a ee Petes Tues-| proved to be the winner with| Semi-final 3-2) ~e lington and C. Burton of Guelph|a season ticket bo for a ti a Baa eee : __ {less than five minutes left, then Western 'League feated George Doggett of Tor-|minimum down payment of Re coneed fi competing for the Posty bg ved Be deca os BER oy - po pense Roepe a on the clincher by|Winnipeg M. 2 Brandon 5 -- adel /$2.50, can obtain a cele ; : 'le d place by ng TJopli ine conds| (i st - of - fiv : ji "I know that's a big orderjholds the world indoor and out-|three points up on Hamilton see Wee ns Seal tne ahaa" ping: five | SOWARD WINS te ay is. buying ..: .epapon for a fellow who has yet to hit}door marks for pole-vaulting, is|)Red Wings. Both teams have by scoring in an open net in ee | The fourth event,.for the Mc-| Frox then on, the size and .300 in the big leagues, But Ija victim of Asian flu which|three games left wf | ntario Junior B , ra m ; ' think I have matured. I am|probably will wipe out his| In Niagara. Falls Tuesday (UC, 2st minute. |St. Thomas 2 St. Marys 3 |Murtry trophy, saw Ed Howard|frequency of payments on 'the stronger. I have the experience|United States campaign. (plttt ths Piveta caaiek acer! mpntees) Bee aeen 1.0 lead " ret best-of-seven Stone of Hamilton, s-year-old buyer. oe cee and confidence. I'm no longer| 'The slim farmer's son, who|the hapless Royals behind two.| 0", # goal by Norm Dennis be./tmal series: 1-0) D A. E. Walkey of i ilto .|the scared kid who wondered/nas soared 16 feet, 2% inches\goal efforts by D vrey lore the game was two minutes tT. A. E. Walkey of Hamivonr whether I'd ever make good in| outdoors and 16 feei, 8% Inches| Gary larmer oad 'red Snel [4 Chath irae wl rad Nndrewa, NY. 74, Rollie the majors." ndoors. is i t \Gdotain Torey Ceca Nea equalizer midway through the Andrews, N.¥., 74, | indoors, is running a 102-degree! Captain Terry Crisp fired the tirat period Dodds of Guelph beat Dr. A. A. Yastrzemski has one other|temperature and is under doc-jother Flyer marker, while) 8! Pero Wood of Toronto 9-6 and H. G. | 1963 goal--to drive in 100 runs.|tor's care in his hotel. Wayne Maxner came up with). In Metro SCORES ) | He came close last year, knock- ) Toronto Junior A |Turndull of Hamilton whipped FECTS ESTER EES With 3 Goals In 8-5 Victory By THE CANADIAN PRESS When Sudbury Wolves of the Eastern Professional Hockey League were sponsored by the National League Detroit Red Wings last season, Dennis Kas- sian was one of their most im- portant players. But ¢ year they're mot " sponsored by Detroit--and they ; -- a ft don't have Kassian. After Tuesday night's game in Sudbury against St. uis Braves, the Wolves--sponsored this year by New York Rangers --are probably wishing they had Kassian back. Kassian scored three goals for the Braves, including two early in the third period which broke open a close game and sent the Wolves down to a 8-5 help from Don Grosso tray Hall, with two " goals apiece, and Phil Esposito, who scored once. Gord Labossiere, Bruce Draper, Dave McComb, Marc Dufour and Ted Taylor scored ~ for the third-place Wolves. St. Louis, mired deep in the cellar of the four-team league, jumped to a 2-0 lead in the first = on goals by Kassian and TOsso. Sudbury narrowed the count to 4-3 after two periods, but the Braves coasted to the win after Kassian potted two in the third. jing in 94 while hitting .296 in 160 games. The left-handed |slugger from Southampten, |N.Y., was the club leader 'in Point Race InEPHL OTTAWA (CP) -- Kihgston| Frontenacs left winger Don Blackburn scored five points last week to join teammate Jeannot Gilbert at the top of the Eastern Professional Hockey League scoring race. League figures released Tues- day show Gilbert with 77 points on 31 goals and 46 assists. Blackburn is five points behind with 72. Last week Blackburn was in fourth place. Marc Dufour of Sudbury Wolves is in third position with 71 points. Murray Hall leads the league in assists with 48. The St. Louis playmaker also holds down fourth spot in the scoring with 70 points. Gord Labossiere of Sudbury is in fifth place having 68 points, Billy Carter, assistant coach of the Hull-Ottawa Cana. dians, is in sixth place with 66. Alain Caron, the league's leading goal-getter with 40 goals, is in eighth spot. The rookie right winger has played 37 games with the St. Louis Braves. The best. goaltending average belongs to Hull-Ottawa with 2.94 goals a game. hits (191), doubles (43) and to- tal bases (303). pete in the Knights of Columbus games here next Friday night,/ Martin in the the Cleviand K of C games Saturday night and the Chicago COUNTS IN FINALE ad News indoor meet March scoring race, A LITTLE BRIGHTENER Oshawa Generals moved to a the Metro Junior "A" standings Toronto Mariboros 4-3 in the second game of a Tuesday night a Gardens. Generals were forced to do ail their scoring in the final period to salvage the victory. In the opener Neil McNeil Maroons belted Knob Hill Farms 5-1, Jim McCloskey who usually holds down a rearguard spot with the Marlboros opened scor- ing from his right-wing vantage point near the middie-mark of the first period, Brit Selby, the 16-year-old flash with the Dukes made it 2-0 on a Marlboro power play four minutes later while Bobby Orr cooled his heels on a hook- ing call. Both teams played a wide- Generals Outs single point of fourth place in last night when they dumped joubleheader at Maple Leaf hi open second period but both -_ maa Ne goaltenders thwarted scoring attempts. Jim Couch, the Osh- awa netminder, held the Gener- als up in the frame with four or & five exceptional saves. f Bill Little cut the Marlboro Ff lead in half with a 15-footer in the first minute of third period play when Jimmy Peters stole the puck from a Marlboro at- tacker in front of the Dukes net. Dune MacDonald pushed the Marlie lead to a pair when he slapped Pete Stemkowski's re- bound past Couch. Ron Budhanan retaliated with a 204oot slap shot 23 seconds F later. Bob Dear, tied the count when he banged his own rebound past Marlboro goaltender John Louis from 10 feet away. Generals won the game when |George Vail streaked in on the jright side, took Mike Dubeau's ipass and fired a shot at Louis. GEORGE VAIL Nikula was scheduled to com-|two assists to open an. eight.|2cUon, the first-place Toronto |point bulge ovet Hamilton's Pit Nell McNeil Maroons scored a With the game out of reach,|boros 4-3 Guelph scored both goals in the |lops tled Brampton 4-4, } dropped away from him, strad- died the goal line and finally 'rolled into the net. . stopped it and then |By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Generals upset! National Association the second-place Toronto Marl-|San Francisco 128 Boston 112 §-1 victory over Toronto Knob Hill, Oshawa Ted Fitch of Detroit 12-5, One-sided victories were reg- istered in both first-and-second- round play earlier today. At Whitby, the Dun. Dukes 4-3 MH Louis stopped it, juggled the 'puck between his pads and be- gan to fall to the ice. The puck "I never even saw it go in," said, Vail. "T just' shot and thought he I turned away." "It was a team effort," said Doug Williams, coach of the Oshawa club, "but our defence) and Jim Couch held the club up in the first two periods." "T'd like to make special men- tion of Vern Batte, too, if I could," continued Williams. "It takes a great player to sit on the bench all season and them come off in the last five gamés to play with the desire he has. Fm really proud of him." Terry Vail, 19-year-old scorer with the club had withdraw from play in. the first period when he suffered a gash top to| § The only close game in Doo- |New York 125 Los Angeles 116 little Trophy first round play "St, Louis 114 Cincinnati 107 : Olympic Star Wont Take Part In Tokyo Games ROME (AP) -- The spring sensation of the 1960 Olympics in Rome, Livio Berruti, doesn't plan to face the starter's gun in the Games next year in Tokyo. He'll probably quit running because of the strain and re- sponsibility of remaining a top competitor. "It means having to accept all the duties of a professional) without having the advantages rn and rights of a professional,"' ¥s.|Berruti said Tuesday. Livion wen the 200 metres SEOONO PERIOD jdash at geen a pete Scoring -- 4 tying the world record shared 43s Moore Cinterterence) 11.000" Ore by Peter Radford of Britain and (tripping) 12.17, Chipchase (slashing) ay Norton a one Jackson wpe lg cee. Dy saa of the United States. 2. Oshawa, Little (Peters) Then the career of the be- '4 » MacDonald |spectacled, 24-year-old engi- pote eg er am 4.02 neering student went into a tail- a2s spin, Italian sports writers ac- 5.50/cused him of lack of interest. The accident took place when Vail tried to split the Marlboro defence on a rush late in the period. OSHAWA -- Goal: Couch; defence, Batte, Orr, Domm; H T. Vail, White, Buchanan tte, G. Vail, Peters, bens. is: Dean, » Dubeau, Lit- |» Gib- MARLBOROS -- Goal: Louis; de- fence: Ridley, Moore, Chipchase, Foley; forwards: kowski, Mac Donaid, itis, Canleton, McCloskey, Watson, Milroy, Selby, McKay, Cun- ningham. FIRST PERIOD 1, Marlboros, McCloskey (Watson) 2. Mariboros, Selby (Milroy) Penaities -- Orr (hooking) 11.47, ley (kneeing) 19.25, AS 7. Oshawa, G. Vail came when H. G, Turnbull of} Reject Summer Schedule | CP from AP-Reuters GLASGOW .--Scottish League soccer teams have rejected a plan to switch the season to summer from winter. Three First-Division clubs had led a movement for summer soccer as a way to heat snow- bound pitches; which have caused widespread disruption o: soccer throughout Britain this - winter. special closed meeting In a Monday, the 18 First-Division nd 19 Second. - Division' Scot- tish clubs voted to hold next year's season in the usual Au- gust-to-April period. Twelve of the clubs: voted for summer } football, 25° against. The current British cold spell, which has prevented some s in Scotland from playing since the middie of December, vided ammunition for the clubs in favor of summer soccer. But two of the most powerful clube in Scotland, Rangers and Celtic, strongly favored leaving the season as it is, After the meeting, Scottish League secretary Fred Donovan there seemed a general feeling among clubs that the season be extended perman- ently until the end of May. Such a proposal would have to be ratified at the annual gen- that took five stitches to close. . Oshawa, (Little, Peters) as..| Berruti said it was lack of time 8. Oshawa, Dear (Orr) (Dubeau, White) r Penaities -- None, to train properly, eral meeting of the league June,

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