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Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Feb 1964, p. 14

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Yq THE OSHAWA TIMBS, Wednesday, February 26, 1964 Oshawa Generals Top St. Kitts Black Hawks, ould Using the results of schedu'ed ames between St. Catharines lack Hawks and Oshawa Gen- erals as a measuring stick, it would appear that Ken Camp- bell's lads will have to rely on their home ice, and not Osh- awa's, if they expect to survive the tentative best-of-seven quar- ter-final playoff series, Generals whipped St, Kitts 8-4 last night in Bowmanville, for their fourth win in as many con- tests with Black Hawks at Bow- manville, And the present OHA Junior "A" team standings with St, Catharines in third place and Oshawa in sixth, points to a tre- Be Pl mendous playoff set between these two clubs, BILLY LITTLE SHINES Once again it was Billy Little's } night to romp in a scoring way as he fired three goals, all in the third period, and added two | assists. Little's goals total for the season is now 29, one better than his final output last season, with Oshawa in the Metro Junior "A" league, Most of his goalscoring this season has baen confined to the final half of the schedule, which is a healthy sign, with Generals prepping for post-season activity, Little has been really rolling offensive- ly in his last three games, with Six goals and six assists. Other Generals not too prom- inent in goalscoring in recent games, but pleasant surprises last night, were Wayne Cash- man with a pair, and Bill Lastic| goals. His over-anxiousness was|in penalties on a neat breakaway effort after returning from serving ajwhen he shot wide on one andjabsence of star rearguard, Doug hit St. Catharines goaltender'Jarrett, out with an ankle in-!16.09 and Hull (slashing) 17.13 penalty added a single. iit BILLY LITTLE | The other goalscorer was no a surprise, Ron Buchanan, pot four games, ORR IS BLANKED tion Bobby Orr, obvious on two breakaways, Merchants And Tony's Catholic Church Win UAW Twin-Bill Pee Wee Playoffs The Oshawa Merchants open- ed the weekly UAW Hockey League doubleheader on Sunday with a 6-2 win over City-Wide Answering Service. Merchants were fortunate to come out of the first period holding a 1 lead as City-Wide had the edge in territorial play. Ross Hawe, Merchants' goalie, turned in a real perfor during the opening" period as City-Wide were continually bombarding him. Captain Jack Armstrong scored two of his four goals for Merchants in the middle stanza, on power plays, giving his team a-3-0 lead. Once again City-Wide pressed the winners to the limit but could not blink the light. On two occasions City-Wide's fast skat- ing forwards hit the post on }of play to put his team out in jinx in the third period as he put City-Wide on the score) sheet on a shot from just in-| side the blue line, Wright pick-| ed up his second goal of the game on a picture goal which put Merchants ahead 4-1. McMahon scored his first goal when he blistered a slap shot past Hawe thereby jumping his team into contention again. Merchants really put City- Wide's goalie to the test in this final period as Mike Cirka made some dazzling saves. Armstrong finaily broke through for two more quick goals in the final four minutes ted number 48, and needs only|r two more to reach that proud|°! Wo 50-goal plateau in his remaining It was a heartbreaking eve- ning for youthful defence sensa-| second, Y who with ajgot in some good licks against trifle bit of luck could easily Kelly in the last frame. Referee 10 have come up with a hat fu'! of Bob Nadin assessed 63 minutes),, ayoff Sign Bob Sneddon's pad on another. But Sneddon really robbed him jury... respectable job in his place, but with a stout effort in the second|it cut down on his effectiveness frame. Although Orr was unable|up front, to find the mark, he managed! ST, CATHARINES -- goal: to ald in three of his team-|Sneddon; defence: Graham, mates' goals, with heady mah-|Eichler, Freeman and got vres, forwards: Laidlaw, Hull, Kelly, a nl Hodge, St, Catharines McDonald, Shelton, Hodge. sturdy rightwinger, just hehind|Green, Kish, McAlpine, Tefford Buchanan in the leaguv's scor-| and Cherevaty. : ing derby, scored two goals and) OSHAWA = goal: Gibson; de- icked up one assist, Chuck/fence: Orr, Smith, Roberts and D Pp Kelly and Graham Freeman)Kilger; forwards: Buchanan, added singletons. Vail, Little, O'Shea, Dubeau, SHORT NOTES: Generals|Cashman, Lane, Zaine and Las- have the dubious chore of|tic, travelling all the way to Mon-| ; treal on Thursday night for a| ° tilt with Jr, Canadiens, Oshawa] 2 is at home this Sunday night to Kitchener Rangers, where play-| | (o'Shea, Dubeav) ers like Buchanan, Orr, Liltle,) 4 Cre. canyon O'Shea, Smith and Vail hope to! 5 osnowa: Lostic (Vail) "3 have a field day in a scoring) | Penaition ts Hull | tinterference) A 00, re 5.25, and (roughin Way a+ St, Kitts defenceman) > o8. "shetton hooking) 1297 and Free: Art Graham wasn't too popular) man (interference) 19.10 iwi fone 4 y s RI with local fans when he clubbe d : Pg PERIOD Lastic over the head in the sec-| "ine uchanan) t;ond period, He drew five min-) 7, st. Catharines: Hodge _jutes for highsticking and Lastic Pdi le Be ppagkenttak jneeded stitches to close a couple|ponaid (highsticking) and Orr (highstick unds .., Generals indl-|ing) s2aaronarn {maler, highsticking) cated they don't intend to be/2°% Orr (hooking i shoved around by St. Kitts!(enarging) 7.34, Elchler (tripping) 15.42 come playoff time should they 8uchanan and Freeman (slashing) 17.02 happen to meet. Mike Dubeau\*"? S'#?e™ (ewine) oD jtangled with Freeman in the} 8. oshawa:cittle and Wayne Cashman FIRST PERIOD Oshawa; Buchanan (Little, Orr) Vabibed St, Catharines: Kelly (Hodge, Stanfield) Oshawa: Cashman 2 2.14 3.44 Dubeay and (Buchanan, Vall) 9%. St, Catharines: Hodge (Kelly, McDonald) St. Catharines: Freeman (Stanfield, Shelton) Oshawa: Little (Vall) Oshawa: Little (Orr) Pendities Cashman and Kelly (majors, fighting) 9.37, Smith and Hull (highsticking) 12.08, Smith (tripping) 8.23 St, Catharines \2 were weak on defence with the The Catholic Church League . Fred Stanfield did a} 9.16| Liverpool, by virtue of a 2-1 win 8 over Birmingham, now have 39 10.20 burn and Everton, with Arsenal 1.4s;next on 87 points Freeman (majors, fighting) 7.34, Laidlaw 9.29 12.49 teams are knocking each other 15,08 the game I saw at Stamford Bridge, in which Chelsea won by 4-0, Ipswich looked like a disorganized, _spiritless side compared with the swift raiding Chelsea team, and the score might easily have been double what it was, Bolton, Birming- ham and Stoke are al! in danger of finishing up in the second By M. McINTYRE HOOD Special London, Engiaud Correspondent To The Oshawa Times | LONDON A sensational transfer and tactical move by Tottenham manager Bill Nichol- son has entrenched the Spurs more solidly on top of the first division of English League foot- Tottenham Hotspurs Buy Arsenal Ace And He Shines In Opener Sunderland went into a two- point lead in the second division, as second place Leeds United were held to a draw by Hud- dersfield, Right on the heals of Leeds are Preston and Chariton Athletic, and on present form indications I would not be sur- prised to see Charlton finish sec- ond in the division, Relegation possibilities tn the second division are still uncer- tain, but Plymouth, Bury and Scunthorpe should provide the two teams to go down, with the margin quite narrow. WATFORD CLIMB Watford are climbing fast, and Coventry are slumping in the third division, Another Coventry draw, at Wrexham, league tail. enders, cut their lead over Crystal Palace to a single point, and Watford, after a long win- ning run, are now only two points behind the Palace in third place. Bournemouth are four points behind Watford Four teams drop down to the fourth division, and at the mo- ment Notts County, Wrexham, Laton, Millwall and Barnsley are all in danger of taking the drop, Fourth division leaders, Gill- Fawn 1 i oe ae on warn, nav inehem; winning touch, and are now only four points ahead of Cariisie United and Exeter, with Bradford City one point further back. Yet |these are the four teams most likely to win promotion. KILMARNOCK SLIP Two draws by Kilmarnock, with Aberdeen and Hearts, while Rangers were winning ad over Queen of the South, have enabled Rangers to overtake Killie at the top of the Scottish first division, Third place Hearts dropped a point, and with Celtic and Dundee both winners, the race for the title has tightened up somewhat, with Rangers again the favorites, Hibernian are digging them- selves out of the relegation zone, and a 40 win over St, Johnstone lifted them two points up the table and nearer safety, net. See lost the ball, Nicholson paid Arsenal a fee of $120,000 for their former England amateur international jcentre-half, Laurie Brawn---and then put him into the game against Arsenal at centre-for- ward, replacing Bubby Smith. | The gamble paid off, for Tot- ltenham 'eat Arsenal 3-1, and \Brown played a part in two of his team's goals, Brown played clever football, and fitted well into the Tottenham style of play, As a result of this victory, Tot- ltenham led, the first division with 42 points from 31 games, points. but have played 29 games. Manchester United won 3-1 at Blackburn, and are now| " tied in third place wii Biack- LISTEN AND It looks more than ever as if the title will be decided in the two vital Easter weekend games when Tottenham meet Liverpool twice, at home and away. The only other team | se2 having the odd chance of being cham- pions is Manchester United, who have the talent to go into a win- ning streak while the top two Learn French by listen off. Ipswich are doomed to go down to the second division, and they certainly looked like it in guage experts, this syst 12" -LP,. Hi- tains one were tied 1-1 at the end of the opproach to conversational French. Penalties Cockerton (slashing) 5.26; Wallace (slashing) 12.25; Cockerton (trip ping) 16.33, THIRD PERIOD 4, City Wide: Marshall (Myles, Samsen) §. Merchants: Wright (Matthews, . Sneddon) 6, City Wide: McMahon (Myles) 7, Merchants; Armstrong (Mapes) 8. Merchants: Armstrong (Wallace) 19.01 Penalties -- Wallace (charging) 9.22, TONY'S STAY ON TOP Tony's Refreshments. continu- ed their hold on first place with their 6-8 win over Vendomatic. With Merchants only two points behind, in the dying stages of the schedule, every game is a . 15.39 16.11 front to stay. FIRST PERIOD 1, Merchants: Wright (Westfall) 18.45 Penalties -- Mathews (kneeing) 10.40. SECOND PERIOD 2. Merchants: Armstrong (Westfall) 6.14 what seemed like sure goals. Marshall finally broke the 3. Merchants: Armstrong (Johnson) 19.01 SPORTS MENU! By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR , 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' CASSIUS CLAY, who has to go down in history as "The Big M" of boxing, is the new world -- at 22 years-of-age. Bu heavyweight champion of the t don't ask us to explain how or why. We watched the fight on the Regent TV screen, cour- tesy of Al Hartshorn and while even a good TV picture of a fi actual happenings--we neverth never again to criticize the the we are willing to admit that ght doesn't always reveal the eless came away 'determined spians of the wrestling game, At least they openly book their affairs as "exhibitions". In our opinion, it was a pretty good Clay, who can move his feet scrap for four rounds, with just as fast as he moves his mouth, being quick enough to easily stay out of serious trouble from the slow-footed Li ston, who at the end of three rounds was plodding around the ring, flat-footed, and already obviously tiring or at least not X x AS WE SAW IT -- the dirt-b. round. This(was the round th trouble. close-up of his corner, during eyes,sharp and glinty, like a fe around throughout the fifth row aa It was"alleged he could hardly see, "eager". x xX ag hit the fan in the fifth at Cassius Clay had his eye- yet a good the intermission, showed his rret on the prowl. He moved nd as if he couldn't see very well -- merely held out his left arm full-length and pushed Liston away. But Liston has the longer reach -- yet he didn't land any more than a couple of was supposed to have Cassius made a miraculous complete re Liston plodded even slower th blows in this round, when he at his mercy , Clay's eyes covery in the sixth round and an before. But the part we didn't like came at the intermission, real early after the sixth round had ended. Clay suddenly jumped to his feet, doing a jig and waving his hands on high, We thought his timing was a little out --neither the referee nor anybody else had yet announced that Liston wouldn't be coming out for the 7th round, x x x must win for Tony's if they hope to win the league pennant. Both of Tony's sharp shooters, | |Tran and West, were absent) jfor this game but Al Morden Ifilled the gap successfully scor-| jing the hat trick. Vendomatic; turned in a listless first period |finding themselves' down 3-0! before Johnson and Copeland teamed up to pot a pair, The second period proved a jlittle more interesting for the jfans, Vendomatic seemed to jrealize the job they had ahead jof them and started to play a jmore offensive game. Tony's only drew one penalty to the losers' two but had to split the scoring at one each With the league-leaders only ahead 4-3 tostart the final frame, Tony's seemed to in- jerease the tempo. Veridomatic |flustered at this increase and jallowed Tony's to score twice jas they dropped their defensive guard. Brooklin Arena has informed |the League's executive that they will be taking the ice out on April 6, so therefore there is \a possibility that the UAW Hock- jey League will begin their play- offs on this Sunday, March 1. FIRST PERIOD Tony's: Bobbie (Davis, Irvine) Tony's: Morden (Bobbie, Davis) Tony's: Morden (Reid) Vendomatic: Copeland (Johnson) . Vendomatic: Johnson (Copeland, Gibson) Penalties --None SECOND PERIOD 6. Tony's: Morden (Davis, Bobbie 7. Veridomatic: Copeland (Gibson) 12.09 Penaities--Tamblyn, Woodcock (rough- Ing) 9.25; Woodcock (holding) 14.00. | THIRD PERIOD j §. Tony's: Bobble (Keenan, Gray) | 9% Tony's: Keenan (Tamblyn, Gray) | Penalties -- Reid (hooking) 12,10. 3.30 1.58 17.10 WLTEA Pts, 9 22 69 45 20 | 2 68 52 18 | 970 9 sn s Tony's Merchants Vendomatic 83 486) City Wide 210 1 TOP TEN GPG A Pst. PIM 11:18 32.47 4 12 18-22 40 6 12 16 20 36 22 1014 21:35 6 Tran, Tony's |Sneddon, Merchants Armstrong, Merchants Copeland, Vendomatic Toronto at Hamilton 6 Association, in an all-out effort Pee Wees opened their playoffs/first. Brian McLaughlin, Doug Tuesday night with St. Joseph's|Freeman and Wesley Lack and St. Mary's of the People|scored for the winners, Bernie winning their games, St, Greg-/LaCroix and Wayne Buiahood ory's and Holy Cross played to/}tallied for St. Gertrude's. a 3-3 tie in the other playoff THIRD GAME IS TIED zame. SHUTOUT FOR ST, JOSEPH'S| In the tie game, a goal by St. Joseph's had little trouble|John Wiedmark enabled _ St. blanking St. Hedwigs-Phillips|Gregory's to gain the draw. 6-0. L. McAvoy and Tutak led|Other St. Gregory's goals were St. Joseph's with two goals each.|scored by Cass Mielewclyk and Coutie and Clynch added the/Rene Beauchman, Rick Kola- jothers. jezynski, Wayne Stovell and John |CLOSE WIN TO ST. MARY'S|Boiven fired the Holy . Cross Scoring two goals in the/goals. Holy Cross twice held a second period, St. Mary's edged) one goal lead but could not [st. Gertrude's 3-2, The teamsicontain St. Gregory's. HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS | American League Vancouver 2 Denver 4 Eastern Division International League WLT F APt)Des Moines 6 Fort Wayne 7 3425 1 211 183 69 Cape Breton Senior 29.36 3191 201 61/Glace Bay 3 Sydney 2 26 a Heed os 56](First game best-of-nine final) Providence 26.28 3 207 190 55 leva' Scotia. Seat Springfield 20 $1 3179 210 43 Waite Cee or WeStern Division Mi pe Bee ree Cleveland 3221 4.204 155 68) ( "a game best-of-seven seml i 30 26 2184 169 62 i sochesier 29 27 1202 196 59| New Glasgow 3 Windsor 8 Buffalo 19 30 7 156 208 45/(Firet game best-of-seven semi- ina Tuesday's Result : >rovidenc 1ebec 3 Ottawa-St, Lawrence Senior erie 2 Cornwall 4 Morrisburg 9 Tonight's Games ¥ villsbutah at Buffalo (Morrisburg 'ere best-of-seven Cleveland at Hershey aac rw - F Junior A ntario Senior piaree or LT F Apt Welland 6 Port Colborne 5 85 9 7292 184 77, Guelph 3 Woodstock 5 $3.14 5 270171 71 Saskatchewan Senior 2718 6 227 205 60| Moose Jaw 3 Yorkton 11 2421 7195 169 55|(First game best-of-seven seml- 23 20. 716517253) final) 19 27 6 219 226 44 Ottawa-Hull Junior Hamilton 1032 9174 aS My Cornwall 11 Arnprior 4 Kitchener 838 5 128 285 2 |(Cornwall wins best - of - seven Tuesday's Results , | quarter-final 4-0) | St. Catharines 4 Oshawa Raith -- Ma | gham 3 Brockville 8 Kitchener 4 Peterborough é (Buckingham leads best Toronto 4 Niagara Falls 3 seven quarter-final 3-1) Thursday's Games Ottawa 8 Hull 2 Oshawa at Montreal Best-cfseven" quarter-final tied St. Catharines at Peterborough ( 9.9) 1 Western League Quebec Hershey Baltimore Toronto Montreal St. Cath Niagara Falls Peterboro Oshawa of- interior compartments, Saskatchewan Junior key, sturdy carry hand Estevan 3 Melville 0 Flin Flon 9 Moose Jaw 2 Exhibition Montreal Junior Canadiens Halifax All-Stars 4 COMPARE Junior Soccer ae <> Loop Planned | For Oshawa _ Facts And Figures On Sunday, in Hotel Genosha, Last Night's Fight the Oshawa and District Soccer MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) Facts and figures of Tues- day night's Cassius Clay- Sonny Liston heavyweight ti- tle fight: " Attendance--8,297, Receipts (estimated)--$402,- 00. 6 to make their 10th Anniversary} Year successful, held an im- portant meeting, which was) mainly concerned' with the! organization of a Junior Soccer League. A committee was appointed! 0 LEARN FRENCH SPEAKING FRENCH Albums ing to It and repeating it! A revolutionary way to achieve fluency! Prepared by lan- em provides a fast and simple Each album con- Fi record featuring 24 French lessons, a covering Conversational Manual, plus a Grame mar end Vocobulary Guide. COLES SPECIAL! OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE Open Every Friday Night 'Til 9 P.M. SORRY .., NO PHONE OR MAIL ORDERS We Reseerve the Right to Limit Quantities MASTERPIECE 'OILETTE' PRINTS Beautiful, full color decorator prints, ready for FRAMED, FULL COLOR REPRODUCTIONS hanging! Landscapes, flower arrangements, street scenes, sacred subjects, by the world's greatest painters, Elegantly finished in heavy, two inch, motilded gallery frames. COMPARE AT 1.98 a BRIEF CASE Handsome, tan finished 17" brief case, with three variable position lock with le and re-inforced edges. 2.99 WEBSTER'S NEW WORLD Le Te YN ARY WEBSTER'S DICTIONARY Webster's 'New World', desk dictionary, with over 70,000 entries. Packed with more than 400 pictures, clear definitions ond useful supplements. COMPARE AT 1.85 99: THEN CAME the supreme in ridiculous behavior, The screaming Cassius taunted all and sundry, telling how he was "the greatest'. Cassius yelled that he had predicted he would West, Tony's Myles, City-Wide Redshaw, Vendomatic Samsen, City-Wide 91213 2 $| ui a Seg es Falta: 1311 149 5 |With chairman Walter Rohrer, 8 10 12 2 0 |who is also associated with the} Guaranteed receipts--$625,- 00. #1210 22 0 |Oshawa Recreation Department. | eet PL meas win the fight in the 8th round but . the referee thwarted him by not letting Liston come out for the 7th. Then the TV announcer got into the act -- he whispered something to Clay -- who promptly said, yes -- he had tol end in seven rounds and annou d the announcer that it would ncer Ellis then picked up his line -- and said -- yes, that's what Cassius told me. The rant- ings and ravings were more like those of a demented person, rather than one merely overly-excited. Don't know 'when they'll have their re-match but you can bet all the teams in China that the next fight will be outdoors, likely about | September, in some large. ball park. But whether or not it will be the biggest gate in boxity history is another thing. The wrestling folk never seem then the mat fans are a breed o fans will buy more of the same past few weeks, remain to be to run out of gimmicks but f their own. Whether the mitt that has been rampant for the seen, , jChicago Sept. 25, 1962, 13 12 10 22 28 | 128132114] Magden, Tony's oot City-Wide TV SETS RECORDS MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)-- Nate Halpern, president of The-| atre Network Television, said the closed circuit television at- tendance for Tuesday's Cassius} Clay-Sonny Liston fight set rec-! ord~ by substantial margins. He said no accurate figures would be available for several days until' all outlets had been checked. The best previous at-! tendance was 560,000 in the the atres and arenas for f Liston-Floyd Patterson fight in th t he st Liston's share of guarantec (40 per cent)--$250,000, Clay's share of guarantee (224% per cent)--$140,625. | Inter - Continental Sports' share (37g per cent)--$234,- 375. Liston's share of Inter-Con- tinental (50 per cent)--$117,- 187. Liston's total purse live gate--$367,187, Closed - circuit television-- | No esttmates available except that old records. of 560,000 paying a tota! of $3,320,000: | were topped by substantial | margin' | He had word that the Recrea-| tion Department is willing to} give all the assistance needed to get soccer started on a larger scale in this area. It was agreed that the association is going to try to arouse interest for soccer! in the youth of Oshawa, and that coaches and training films will be provided Persons, who wish to referee in this season's and future games, please contact Bill Simp- son, 710 Eastwood, phone 728-0680 The next meeting will be on March 1.00 p.m. in Hotel Genosha and anyone interested is welcome. | BALL PEN Smart tri-engular design! Push button, the point ap- pears, touch the clip, it re- tracts, Handsomely . finished in a variety of colors. trom at CROSS WORD PUZZLE BOOKS Test your 1.Q. with these prain crosswords! Each book packed with puz- zles . . . and answers tool °F twisting COMPARE AT 35¢ PAINT-BY- NUMBER SETS A beoutiful oi painting the very first time you try! Complete with 8 jors of oil color, 2 pre- sketched COMPARE AT 1.50 panels, ortists brush and_ instructions. 77:

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