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Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Sep 1966, p. 8

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vf ee ee OSHAWA MINOK LACROSSE BANTAM CHAMPIONS Charlie Barron Memorial 'Trophy is presented to Ron Bell, coach of the Get- Together lacrosse club, Oshawa Minor Lacrosse Bantam champions of 1966. Get-Together Club defeated 'Local 222 6-3 to win the championship three games to two. Charlie Barron Tro- phy was presented to the OMLA for Bantam competi- tion by General Motors Parts and Service depart- ment in 1962. In the final game Tom Simpson and Ron Bragg led Get- Together with two goals each while Gord Buchanan and Dan O'Brien added singletons. Local 222 scor- ers were Doug Bannon, two, and Tom Vermoin, one goal. Members of the cham- pionship team are: Brian Howell, Mike Dionne, Den- nis Grady, David Hart, Ken Wasiluk, Gord Buchanan, Rick Maddock, Dan O'Brien, Garth Johns, Ron Braggs, Tom Simpson, Don Wilson and Murray Cawker Hockey Trainers Busy While Players Holiday By KEN PRITCHARD NEW YORK (CP) -- What does a hockey team's trainer do when summer turns the caverns between Yew York ekyscrapers into parboiled ovens? If his name is Frank Paice, he goes to work every day at Madison Square Garden, where 19 years ago he began to take care of the physical and mental bruises of the Na- tional Hockey League's Ran- gers. He finds lots to do. When 61 players report to the Ranger training camp at Kingston, Ont., Sept. 19, Paice will be waiting there for them. He'll be adequately armed with pucks, sticks, skates, medicine, tape and--above all ~enthusiasm, All of these he will have accumu- lated during & summer shop- ping spree--except the enthu- aiasm. That he carries with him always. Paice, a native of Montreal and now a United States citi- cen, will be mother hen for 35 to 40 of the players who start skating in Kingston. The oth- will be cared for by the Knights staff. The a Ranger farm club Central Professional are last year's St. Minn., team. » whose parents live in » Que., is starting his with the Ranger or- in a career that a chance meet- with Frank Boucher, for- mer Ranger star and coach. BEGAN AS STICKBOY Not husky enough to go far in hockey himself, (he tried to D right wing as a youth), ice became stickboy for the yiaiting teams at Montreal He s 4 ie g Forum. That's when he first met Boucher. During the Second World War Paice joined the RCAF and became trainer of the Flyers hockey team in Ed- monton, under coach Tony Savage. Boucher, searching for a trainer for the New York Rangers and Rovers, ran into Paice one day late in the war and offered him a job. The fol- lowing year Paice was trainer of the Rovers. He moved to the Rangers two season later. How. did he learn about training? "I read books -- medical books,"' he says. "But the best experience is practical expe- rience." Paice's job has turned out to be far bigger than remov- ing sutures (put in by doc- tors), giving whirlpool! treat- ments, applying ice packs or massaging ailing muscles. He aiso is chief equipment buyer and inventory keeper, dressing room housekeeper, road secretary -- and No. 1 bench rooter, HIS BUSIEST DAY A bony kind of fellow whose receding hairline betrays his age--"more than 40 years"--~ Paice becomes totally in- volved with the fortunes of the men under his care. "He's another competitor out there for us,"' says Emile Francis, general manager- coach of the Rangers. On the day of an NHL game, Paice works at least 12 hours. His first duty on reach- ing Madison Square Garden is to see that every needed piece of equipment is on hand, He also makes the arrangements for catching a plane or train after the game, to the next NHL game. He gives special attention to the needs of players on the limp. He fixes equipment, darns the players' socks and even washes their underwear, in a laundry machine in a spare locker room. Just before the game he dis- penses aspirin or friction tape with equal magnanimity, on demand And when the NHL folds its tent each spring and the play- ers turn to other jobs or begin a summer of loafing, Paice labors on ORDERS EQUIPMENT He writes many letters to find out exactly what each player needs in the way of sticks, skates, boots and pads --and orders them. A pro doesn't wear just any hockey boot--he has each one made to order. "'Perhaps one foot is a little larger than the other, or special padding is needed," said Paice. Sticks come in a bewilder- ing variety of lengths, weights and angles, "Each player has his own particular model of stick," said the trainer. 'Fifty per cent of them order their sticks from a St. Johns, Que., firm, Most of the others get their sticks from a Minnesota man- ufacturer." Paice does take a holiday-- like every other New Yorker on a year-round payroll. He usually heads south early in the summer--'I've been to Miami 16 times." But three weeks of that is enough, and it's back to regu- lar office hours until training camp begins. Then for a few hectic months there simply aren't enough hours in the day. YESTERDAY'S STARS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS OTTAWA (CP) -- Shotgun pellets can be fatal to ducks even when they mice, Expended lead shot eaten by waterfowl from lake bot- toms has killed up to 1.000,- 000 ducks a year in North Amerien cave Canadian Wild. life Service biologists. Lead poisoning was esti- mated in the 1950s to have claimed 630,000 mallards a. year, That adds up to more "than produced in all Manitoba waterfowl management areas. Most losses occur in winter. after the hunting season. Loss of 1.000.000 ducks that time of year means 1,700,000 fewer birds when the next hunting LOS ANGELES (AP)--With |reminiscent Don Drysdale showing better control and Claude Osteen out of a slump, Los Angeles Dodg- ers head into -the pennant stretch with the National League's most formidable ar- ray of pitching power. The weekend's four succes- sive shutouts of Houston Astros --a Dodger club record--gave Los Angeles a league-leading total of 18 shutouts. The staff earned-run average, which also leads the loop, is a shade under 2.70. The Dodgers'. current pace is of a year ago, when. the pitching erew was |jstingy in the stretch. Winning j15 of the last 16 games, the staff |pitched eight shutouts and gave Batting--Jim Fregosi, Angels,|Up Only one run in four other drove in five runs 'with a grand-| slam homer and a double as! games. Sandy Koufax, who gave up California edged Baltimore|8ix_hits in . winning Sunday's Orioles 6-5, Pitching -- Ron Perranoski, Dodgers, pitched four shutout innings in relief, helping Na- tional League-leading Los An- geles to its fifth straight vic- tory, a 3-2 decision over New York Mets. Four out of five forest fires are caused by negligence. Be careful, Forest fire destroys thing. every- EXPORT | PLAIN Or FILTER. TIP CIGARETTES : REGULAR and KINGS , Weekend Shutouts Bring Dodgers Near Pennant first game 4-0 over the Astros, has been pretty steady through- out the season despite arthritis in his pitching elbow. DRYSDALE'S IMPROVING Drysdale, though his 9-16 rec- ord doesn't indicate it, has shown improved form since Aug. 14, when he allowed only two runs in nine innings against Chicago Cubs, a game. the Dodgers eventually won in 14 innings. Last Saturday he went 8 1-3 innings, combining with Phil Regan for a four-hitter, 1-0, 10- inning victory over Houston. Regan is a bulwark of the Dodger bullpen, with a 13-1 rec-; ord and 15 other saves. Osteen started the sweep of Houston, giving up three hits} Friday night, when the Dodg-| ers won 7-0. Though normally a} slow . starter,, Osteen finished; the first half of the season 11-7.| | is as Shotgun Pellets Fatal Even In "Food Form season starts, v. E. F. Sol- man, a wildlife service re- searcher, told the 1965 fed- -eral-provincial wildlife con- ference. One answer is 2 eubctitute for lead: pellets. Iron is sim- ilarlv priced but harmful ta gun barrels. Nickel is more expensive yet appears a more likely substitute, and can be obtained as a nickel refining by-product. Solman explained the cost comparison this way: Lead shot costs 16 cents a pound. Nickel is about $1 a pound, But the difference is less significant when com.. pared to total hunting ex- penses, . COST BOOST MODEST A 1961 survey showed the average waterfowl hunter Spent $80 a year. About $11 of that went for ammunition -about 75 shells. The amount of lead in the shells was worth about 80 cents, and nickel . pellets would add $3.20. So with nickel shot the hunter would spend a total of $83.20 a year. Teflon-coated iron shot is also being considered, as well as copper and zinc, None of the shot substitutes heavy as lead, and therefore less effective. This would also mean more birds injured, and more birds lost to hunters. Solman says he wants a shot developed that will kill ducks at a range within which the hunter is likely to recover them, and at a range within which the hunter can avoid losing crippled birds. He. said reducing lead pois- anyone? -- Bac 11 the Tyr01, festive occasions celebrated by the men of the vi doing the Schuhplattler. Each dancer claps his then slaps his shoes, knees, and the seat of his leather pants; setting up a remarkably catchy rh' BOAC travel agents can tell you where you can see this unique dance performed. That's because they are pere haps the most widely-travelled people you'll ever meet. They can tell you about fascinating local customs, and special things to see, eat and do. All these little "extras" won't cost you a tape more. So before you plan your trip, see your BOAC travel agent. = BOAC , BRITISH OVERSEAS AIRWAYS CORPORATION WITH AIB CANADA ¢ Complete Travel Arrang and Travel information Call or See FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL OSHAWA--WHITBY--BOWMANVILLE---BROOKLIN 57 King St. E. Oshawa--728-6201, 728-6202, 728-6203 Call Now For Complete Travel Arrangements MEADOWS TRAVEL SERVICE 25 KING ST. E. 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