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Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Apr 1965, p. 9

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r < a HOCKEY SCORES ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I Notts F 0 Sheffield U 0 Division 11 Bolton 1 Newcastle 1 Cardiff 3 Coventry 1 Division Il Shrewsbury 1 Bristol C 5 Division IV Halifax 1 Notts C 1 York City 3 Lincoln 0 Lee gr Nard Bg gp THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, April 20,1968 @ Chuvalo Wins Via TKOIn 8th By JERRY GLADMAN {Canadian hehvyweight champ, TORONTO (CP) George|was unable fo put his unranked ; Chuvalo of Toronto, who feelsjopponent on the canvas. he is "ready for anybody in| "He's a rugged, tough guy," the world", needed almost!saiq Chuvalo, listed No. 5 by SCOTTISH LEAGUE Division I Partick 0 Dundee U 0 Division II Brechin 2 Forfar 3 | | Niagara Falls | | Blanks Garson _ In Second Game SUDBURY (CP) -- Although) " \coach Joe Protulipac thinks he 4 |has partially solved the problem 4 \of Niagara Falls' offence, his chief concern now is how to get his Garson-Falconbridge Native Sons past the Flyers' defence.| Niagara Falls, the Ontario Hockey Association Junior A champions, defeated the Native) Sons 6-0 Monday night to take} la 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven jeastern Memorial Cup semi-fi- nals, | Garson Falconbridge, the, \Northern Ontario Hockey Asso-| ciation Junior A champions, lost) ithe opener 18-3 here Saturday. "They have a real good de-| fence," said Protulipac after Monday night's loss, 'We couldn't do a thing from the! : iblueline in. soon revived, The first three "But I think the boys were} line, to win the 69th annual MARATHON WINNER, Morio Shigematsu, 24, of Boston A.A. Marathon, in to finish and two of the next |still a bit nervous with the puck.| Japan, collapses into the record time. The Japanese three, were all Japanese run- (They weren't passing the way) arms of policemen, seconds runner, who ran the 26- ners, they can." | after crossing the finishing miles, 385 yards, in 2:16:33, --(AP Wirephoto) NEW RECORD Japanese Sweep Boston Marathon *=# S BROWN Wallingford said after the oo |victory. He finished in 2:17,46.)race that he was "very disap- At 80-Years Young BOSTON (CP)--Morio Shige-| yoshikazu Funasako and Ka-|pointed" with his performance. ® matsu, who became lost last)zy9 Matsubara were fifth and| He said a long Canadian win- She Still Skates week while training for the Bos-/sixth in 2:18.18 and 2:19.17. |ter hampered his training an es ton Marathon, had no trouble} 'The first five runners bet-|prevented him from getting) NEW YORK (AP)--"Ice skat- finding the finish line Monday|tered the Belgian's old record|used to light Japanese shoes|ing," says Miss Rosaline Dunn,| and won the event in record] of 9:18.58 set in 1963. |which he wore for the race. |'keeps you young." She is in a position to know lbecause at the age of 80 she time. _| Top Canadian was Gordon) He said his thighs felt "a bit The 25-year-old Japanese un'-| Wallingford, 3l-year-old assis-/stiffish."' |be , : versity student seemed to know|tant professor of physical edu-| Wallingford, who has held Ca-|still swings along with the best his way around the 26-mile,| ation at McMaster University,|nadian records for the 5,000 me-jof them at the Rockefeller Cen- 385-yard course Monday as he/ramilton, who finished 11th in/tres and the steeplechase, was|tre outdoor rink. : finished in 2:16.33, 2:23.36. lmaking his fourth start in the| She was the national figure It was his first try at the) He led early in the race and|Boston event |skating waltz champion from famed Boston race. ~~ looked like a strong contender/ELLIS' DROPS OUT 11924 through 1928, the first time The victory by the five-foot-| until late in the event. Ellis, a sixth-place finisher|with Frederick Gabel as part- seven-inch Shigematsu led Jap-| "}je finished third last year injlast year and considered a good|ner and the other three years anese runners to a_successfull9.99 51, fastest time of the event|prospect this year, couldn't|with Joe Savage. In 1927 teamed return to the event. They nailed| for 9 Canadian. keep up the grinding pace and|with Savage she won the 14- down the first three places and| F dropped out at about the 20-mile|step national title took five out of the top sixi|ARE NEAR FRONT mark She was 40 when she won the spots. | The Japanese were among) pickson, a 32-year-old ac-|waltz title in 1924. They had been absent from|the leaders from the start. For! wountant and first-place finisher| 'The national champions the event for five years after|the first half, Wallingford, Dave)i, Canadian Olympic trials in|were much older than they are winning three times in the|Ellis of Toronto Olympic Club) Cajcary last fall, also faded and|now," she said, She seemed a 1951-55 span. and Gordon Dickson of Hamil- placed 55th in 2:47.04, little scornful of the current Hideaki Shishido was second,|ton were closely bunched. Wallingford received the Ca-jcrop of teen-agers. 'People 2:17.12, and Takayuki Nakao} In the second half, the lead |nadian-Amerjcan Trophy, given|went on skating longer back in third, 2:17.31, jers were cut down to the Jap-|,ach year to the top Canadian|the twenties," 'Fourth place went to Bel-janese, and the Belgian as the rinisher in iin event. After her competitive days gium's Aurele Vandendriessche,|hilly course took its toll, _ Other Canadians to finish in-,ended, there was a period of 23 an AIAG: a a RENESAS cluded Geoff Hodgson. of Ham-|years when she was off the ice ilton, 28rd in 2:33.20; Dave|--"couldn't afford it."' Prokop of London, Ont., 42nd in| But she is back on now unde 2:40.15; Paul Hoffman of Tor-|terred by minor matters such onto, 46th in 2:42.46 and Her-/as a fall at the start of the cur- bert Monck of Hamilton, 47thirent season which broke her in 2:44.18 shoulder. SPRING CLEARANCE CREDITS CHECKING | Protulipac credited the fore-| checking of his squad with hold-} ing the Flyers to 12 fewer goals than in the opening contest. Bud -Debrody sparked the Flyers with two goals, while! Gilles Marotte, Ted Snell, Jim| Lorentz and Bill Goldsworthy) scored the others. | Coach Bill Long said it was) difficult to get the Flyers "up" for the game, | "But what can you do after an 18-3 win?" he said. | siaiteisdeineabiniensincsinsansaaaieliee Sherbrooke Win Over Woodstock WOODSTOCK (CP) -- Sher-|series with Rouyn-Noranda A}- brooke Beavers picked speediouettes last Friday, outskated as their weapon against Wood-|and outp layed Woodstock stock Athletics Monday night/through the first two periods and it paid off with a 5-2 win.!building up a 4-0 lead, The Beavers now lead the| Only In the third period did best-of-seven eastern Allan Cup|the Athletics revive, outscoring the Beavers 2-1, but by then it finals 1-0. : = Next game in the senior|was too late hockey playoffs will be here) ; Welnesday night with the series| HAD WON 10 Until Monday, Woods{ock had ; o Sherbr: K r then shifting to Sherbrooke fo consecutive playoff andwon 10 a games, Their home ice hex was Monday, if necessary. 4 *, Tf ne The Beavers, fresher than the|Kept alive, however. Of foo, Athletics who just finished a/seven playoff games the Athlet- ------_____-- j{cs have dropped, five have been in the Woodstock arena. H F ll | A goal post may have spelled mit S$ a $ the difference between a late; HOLIDAY ROSE FOOD -- surge by the Athletics and 5 Ib. bag oe Gets 3rd Win Sherbrooke's three-goal win. s tees aoeeeeventns With the Beavers ahead 4-2, aS \captain Gerry Stringle of Wood- pag any ROSE FOOD 59 SYDNEY, N.S. (CP)--Sydney|stock hit the post vane Shere 7 Ps POG cess ese eee seen eeeeaeens Cape Breton Post showed signs|brooke goalie Serge Aubrey was of ata to life Monday night/out of position. About three HOLIDAY AZALEA FOOD -- 95° and Lachine Maroons could be|minutes later, the Beavers] Sib. bag.......... Ce isa heels the ones to suffer scored to salt away the win. Sydney could play the spoil- Claude Cardin scored two] SHEEP MANURE -- 90° ers' role tonight in the doublejgoals for the Winners with} Sth, bag .............ccccuceueveedn | Cup|Skip Burchell picking up a goal eastern jithior hockey tourna-|and two assists. Other Sher- ment. Smiths Falls Bearsjbrooke goals went to Simon downed Sydney 5-3 in the fifth)Nolet and Rene Pepin. game of the three-team tourney; Art Sullivan, leading scorer Monday night but the host club/for Woodstock, picked up his --now eliminated--showed that/12th playoff marker and Gus it may be inhospitable from Mortson netted the other. now on. The game was the eithth in The Bears jumped into a 3-0 two. weeks for the tired Ath- lead in the first period butjletics, who are aiming for the Sydney came back to tie' it 3-3) Allan Cup finals for the second before Smiths Falls went ahead/consecutive year. The winner of late in' the third and put the|the Woodstock - Sherbrooke se- game away with an empty-netiries will meet the western goal with 20 seconds left. champion for the Canadian senior championship ASSURES TIE | ------ --------- It left Smiths Falls with a 3-1) loss record and assurance) '\ st irst-place tie, La-| @s ® ee eee ad' and) Sign Three Canadians tiey (0-3) meet tonight and) OTTAWA (CP)--The Ottawa wihney victory would put the|football club today announced d Maroons out of the run-ithe signing of three Canadians) A Lachine. win, however,|to new contracts, including the} * force a playoff game be-|club's long - pass threat, half- tht the Maroons and Smiths' back Whit Tucker lar, Fullback: Rick Black and aniey Was eliminated by los-;guard Jim Cain are the other yet third straight game, -- isigners. " ' round - robin Memorial HOLIDAY WEED and FEED -- 18 Ib. bags cover 5,000 square feet. 4 50 | ¥ i Reg. 5.95 bag. NOW HOLIDAY LAWN FERTILIZER -- 22 Ib bags cover 5,000 square feet. _ Reg. 4.95. NOW | ee ee ee oy . We Carry A Complete Line Niagara Brand INSECTICIDES Ask about our 6 Month Deferred Payment Pion MILLWORK | & Building Supplies Ltd. 1279 Simcoe North 728-6291 Ottawa Rough Riders @.A. be 2 Open Daily 7 A.M. till 6 P.M, Friday till 9 P.M. cer s games to three. eight full rounds to dispose of|the World Boxing Association, out-of-shape Bill Nielsen ofbut I had no trouble with Omaha, Neb., Monday night. him." The scheduled 10-round bout,) 4; | Nielsen, 25, offered no trouble before a small crowd of bagel the form of punching power, was stopped at 2:47 of theinut his sharp left jab had the eighth round when refereejoo9 sound Chuvalo's nose bleed- Jackie Silver ruled that Niel- ing fromthe first round to the sen, 199, was in no condition tO} ond of the aistek continue. Bie re: ' While leading throughout the Chuvalo's strategy was. evi- match, Chuvalo. the 27-year-old| dent from the opening: bell--to aninninmmenninen SUA TUS OODONANt Ann tiv. t0 wear him down with a crushing body attack. While the body |punches took their toll, Chu- valo was unable to put over anything resembling a knockout blow until the eighth round. Nielsen, whose plan was to s s Oil Kings Oust Pats |Stay out of range of Chuvalo's }punching power, backpedalled EDMONTON (CP)--A crush- throughout the fight, offering @. ing four-goal assault in the little more than his jab, In the third period Monday night car-|second and fifth rounds he ried Edmonton Oil Kings to a ae hae some good combina- 6-2 victory over Regina Pats/tions;~but did little damage. and gave them a berth in the! '}1e jc a very tough guy and Western junior hockey final for)m only sorry I ran out of a record sixth consecutivel steam," the handsome, curly- VOR ick X haired Nielsen said in the The Oil Kings combined mus-\dressing room after the bout. cle and hustle to take the best- : cae f of-seven western semi-final four Poco page Sg Bice yo small cut under the left. He said he had trained only five weeks after a seven-month lay- off. Both fighters were warned on separate occasions for hitting They open the best-of-seven Memorial Cup semi-final at home Wednesday against Win-! nipeg Braves. Ron Anderson sparked Kings| with a pair of goals. The others were added by Ted Rogers,| Ross Perkins, defenceman} Brian Hague and. Brian Ben- nett. money is." HUCK SCORES BOTH | He said he would like a re- Centre Fran Huck, who daz-;match with Floyd Patterson, zled the 6,505 fans with brilliant/former world heavyweight stickhandling and shifty skating,|champion, who won a 12-round accounted for both Reginaldecision over Chuvalo in New goals, his 14th and 15th of the|York in February, | series, He also had six assists! "We'd like to get Patterson| and was easily the top scorerjin June, but I think Patterson on either club. is backing away from George," The teams were tied 1-1 afterjhe said. "He was supposed to Leaf Gardens last night. Nielsen is shown here, sway- ing against the ropes. A crowd of less than 6,000 saw Chuvalo win handily, the SWING-AND-SWAY, but not often enough! That was the story of Omaha's Bill Nielsen, in his fight with George Chuvalo, at Maple bout being stopped in the 8th round, when the Toronto fighter was awarded a TKO decision. --(CP Wirephoto) ~ Irving Ungerman, Chuvalo's manager, said his fighter would |fight "anywhere--anywhere the York-West Bowlers $\357" ie bine Saat Vo jmp tn that tas - Lead Championship KITCHENER (CP) -- Toronto York West made a dramatic comeback in the final game to take the lead in one division There Are Special Benefits For All BUSINESS EXECUTIVES AND SALESMEN 20 minutes and 2-2 after 40.|be- here tonight, but we haven't\@"d trail by only four pins in For personal use or for @® ACADIAN Other The Oil Kings unleashed their/heard from him," the other in the first day of the]! Company use there are @ PONTIAC Models winning drive in the final period! Chuvalo's end for the fight|Canadian five - pin bowling}! definite advantages when On by taking advantage of miscues|was a choice of either $8,000 or|championships Monday. you lease anew... @ BUICK Request No insurance costs . . . No maintenance costs ,, . One rate covets sverrwes on one or two yeor lease items . . . Phone or come ip wi je" THE MILLS AUTO LEASE PHONE 723-4634 LTD. 266 KING ST. WEST by the pressing Pats, 30 per cent of the gate, which-|' In the men's division, York tems pfohb gpa ever was greater. Nielsen re-|West leads North Surrey, B.C.,| ses strengthen for the playoffs un-|ceived a flat $5, a ee. | less it reaches the "national fi-| Promoters Vie Bagnatoana|ith ay Chie ccd pho Piatee® nal, is almost sure to pick up|Gus MacLellan dropped money|i"& the fifth game trailing by Huck if it gets by Braves inion the fight. They needed a/ll4 pins. the western final, icrowd of 6,800 to break even.| Vancouver leads the mixed! 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