) lle and burned burned. ya club men in time in not stop up two of Co- d Belle- Oshawa 7 points lhe only but the een tied ie Larry it break up with of some played ne. by both and few n exam- ily twice of play. | in the id in the outshot uld only zoals, to at the score at > put in the net, d in off wo min- put Osh- to stay. k a pass ed on a from a 1 off the st. The "shawa of the a goal is later, last ef- Feeley's pal. e 4-2 at 'ird per- t 5-2 ex- "on the ame. rs, Ger- ned in a ted with n goalie, ng the second > teams e. ast goal r power he puck DDUG 1 last e game ause of » broken _ at his EL will day and nst Co- 'on, with 1e Belle- ay. OUTDOORS Five Still Undefeated |," THE OSHAWA TIMES, Soturday, February 18, 1967 JF ltoot wooden railing and rammed an eight-foot chain \link fence surrounding a high voltage transformer. ness Horse By Bill Owens Times Outdoor Writer In Games' Badminton Electrocuted The weight of the horse THE in Ontario can be counted with a fair degree of accuracy because of the licences sold, but to assess the number of NUMBER of hunters people who fish, camp and otherwise use the outdoors for a playground can only be es- timated. We can therefore safely assume that the total number must be in the hun- dreds of thousands. All of those people are more than aware of the various threats that exist and are directly or indirectly detrimental to the outdoor recreational pursuits. Air and water pollution are rampant in municipalities large and small. Water pollu- tion is of greater significance at the moment, and although there is some policing in this matter by the Ontario Water Resources Commission, new cases of pollution occur prac- tically every week. The com- mission is loath to prosecute offenders, whether old or new, tions 80 we can expect very little in the form of an extensive crash program of pollution abate- ment. A JOURNEY into the coun- try in the early spring shows that despite all the facilities available from the Depart- ment of Agriculture, farmers still do not practice good land use. We see little contour ploughing, grassed waterways are virtually non - existant, sheet and gully erosion are evident everywhere and the trend is to strip every avail- able inch of land of its cover for more crops. The result is that greater and greater amounts of our top soil is ending up in the Great Lakes, while tons and tons of com- mercial fertilizers are used to keep up the nutrient value of the less productive residual soil. Our forests are being util- ized at the fastest rate in history, and although some of the more astute ushers of this resource are engaged in con- trolled cutting programs, a great deal more must be done. The same can be said of fishing and hunfthg, and management units working on this phase of the problem are hard pressed to keep up with the demand. AND WHILE this is going on, "what are the hundreds of thousands who use all those resources doing about the problem? The answer is a great big nothing. In Oshawa we have three rod and gun clubs, totalling about two thousand members. In looking at this figure more closely we find two clubs have memberships of about one hundred each, while the third has the remainder. This club attracts about 1,800 members by offering a boat, motor and By BRUCE LEVETT Canadian Press Sports Editor QUEBEC (CP)--It's the East jagainst the West today as the first Canadian Winter Games nears the end of its eight-day run, | After a six-day medal harvest, which saw the marathon basket- ball tournament wind up, action tightened in badminton and hockey. Badminton goes into semi- YONKERS, N.Y. (AP) -- Ajforced the metal fence to give five-year-old pacer was electro-|way and the animal fell into cuted and the horse's driver- the transformer wires. It was katchewan 39, Nova Scotia 24,!Barry Howson, won the gold|/OWne? barely escaped tragedy| electrocuted. New Brunswick 17, Newfound-|medal for Ontario in men's|!" 4 freak accident at Yonkers Thomas Flynn, a member of land 15, Prince Edward Island basketball. The title was| Raceway Thursday. rity. ati y 4 wa ind) , os the security staff, freed Young, 9, Northwest Territories 8, Yu-|clinched for them by Mani-) The driver - owner, Julian) whose Jegs had been caught in kon 5. toba's 53-49 win over Nova|Young, 50, of Harrington, Del.,/ine horse's equipment. Flynn MUST BE COMPLETE Scotia in the third-last game of|was saved because of the quick! ot the harness off the driver Games statisticians award the round - robin tournament.jaction of one of the track's|j1<¢ pefore the fence gave way. points only on the completion{Both Ontario and Manitoba|security officers 0 . : RN I : : " i | Young was unhurt. of a sport. If 10 provinces or wound up the five-game six-! The pacer, Miss Gladys|/---- territories take part, the winner|team tournament with identical|Marie, was being sent through gets 10 points, graduating down|4-1 records. But Sarnia won the)a training spin when, apparently Ontario 57, Quebec 49, B.C. 47, team made up mostly of col- Manitoba and Alberta 44, Sas- lege chums of playing - coach CANADIAN TIGERS trailer as inducement to buy a membership. In all cases, only about one per cent of the members attend a business meeting of these clubs. All three clubs operate their con- servation programs with about a twenty-member work- ing force. These are the people who browbeat a few others to en- gage in programs of planting trees, banding ducks, stream improvement, attend conser- vation lectures and in many other ways try to provide something for future genera- to enjoy. This mere handful are the workers the rest go hunting, fishing and camping. So what can be done about the matter? IT HAS OFTEN _ been pointed out by conservation- ists that if every person who hunts, fishes or camps would plant one tree for ten years, we would have greater forests. With more trees there would be more water in the ground, soil would _ stay where it would do mankind some good, and our lakes and streams would be clear and cold. If everyone who utilizes our outdoors would utter one sentence in defence of air and water pollution, we would have pure water to drink and clean air to breathe. Or it can be as little as joining a rod and gun club or a conserva- tion group and supporting their programs. AND THIS must be done, because otherwise the day of retribution will surely come. The apathetic attitudes of our present population must be re- placed with a massive desire to have lush grass, green forest, fish in our lakes and streams and game in our fields. And last but not least we must have good land use, for the increasing future gen- erations will need food. If we do all these things, it is then, and only then, that we will truly be good citizens and Canadians worthy of our heritage. Four Third Period Goals Give Collingwood Victory By THE CANADIAN PRESS The losers fell hard Friday night in Ontario Hockey Associ- ation Senior action. The closest game was Colling- wood's 6-3 decision over Barrie Flyers, and in that one Colling- wood got four unanswered goals in the third period for a come- back victory. It was even more embarrass- ing for Woodstock Athletics, who permitted six unanswered goals by Guelph Regals in the third period and fell 6-2. In other games Kingston Aces ot two goals in each of the ast two periods to drop Orillia 7-3 and Belleville Mo - Hawks scored three times in the first period to crush Oakville Oaks 40 goals for Collingwood and Ar- nold Smith, Don Keith and Joe Hee Brainard scored Var faie Mar Gary Gresdahl, Ed-|onteith out of action, have re- Hamley one each. Doug Selby, Jon Weeks and Lorne Knowles replied for Barrie. Wayne Boddy and Don Mac- Gregor put Woodstock up 2-0 before Guelph exploded in the third period with two goals each by Butch Martin, John "Columbia facing Alberta and final stages today with British Quebec against Ontario. The winning West team will play off the triumphant easterners for the gold and silver medals, with the losers meeting to decide the third-place bronze. In section A hockey, Nova) Scotia and Alberta are tied for) first with six points each; in| section B, it's a three-way, six- point tie between British Colum- bia, Ontario and' Saskatchewan. In all five badminton sections there is an undefeated record. Yves Pare of Montreal leads EVEN MANAGER WORKS Man- Schoendienst | gets his kicking in early dur- Louis Cardinal "Red" St. ager ing spring training session | at St. The National Baseball Lea- Petersburg, Florida. In New York NEW YORK (CP) -- Dave Patrick, a 20-year-old Villanova University junior, ran a 3:59.3 mile Friday night in the high- light of the New York Athletic Club indoor games It was the first mile under four minutes this season, in- doors or out. Among Patrick's victims was Dave Bailey of Toronto's East York Track Club, third in 4:02.3. Richard Romo of South- ern California Striders was ahead of Bailey at 4:01.9. Veteran Ergas Leps of Tor- onto Olympic Club, having one of his winningest seasons with- out setting records, won the 1,000-yard run easily in 2:11.7. Bill Crothers of the East York Track Club failed in his bid to win the Matt Halpin half mile for the fourth time. He was nipped at the wire by Franz- Josef Kemper of West Germ- any, with both athletes timed in 1:53.4, Crothers had won the event in 1963, 1964 and 1966, his time last year being 1:50.0. Tom Laris of New York Ath- letic Club won an exciting two- mile race in 8:48.4 after a neck- and-neck battle with Ian Studd of New Zealand, timed in 8:48.8. This was a three-man race most of the way, with Dave El- His of Toronto Olympic Club the third, challenger. Ellis led for) the first 17 laps of the 22-lap race on the Madison Square Garden track. Ellis faded after McMillan and Ray Ross. Peter Weston and Tom Carty; each scored twice for Kingston! as the Aces got their 13th con- secutive victory. | John Ford, Jim Gebhardt and} Davey Jones got the other King-| ston goals with Allan Micks,| George Ford and Dunc Brodie scoring for Orillia. Steve Rex was the hero for) Belleville -- he stopped 31 shots} the first 1% miles, and finished) third in 8:55.1. Varsity Blues Trim Mustangs By THE CANADIAN PRESS University of Toronto Blues, Ergas Leps Easy Winner | gue manager was on hand to jthe men's _ singles after 11 to one for the last-place proy-|sold on the basis of its defeat ince. If only five provinces en-|of Manitoba, represented by a ter, the top province takes only |senior Winnipeg team, in an} five points. earlier game, Sarnia's only loss From the standpoint of med-|Was a Squeeker, 57-56 in an) als, allowing three points for aopening game against Nova) gold, two for a'silver and one|Scotia, winner of the third-| for a bronze, the provinces Place bronze with a 3-2 record. | lined up this way: Fourth was Quebec with a 2-3 Ontario 69, Quebec 49, Mani- record, followed by Alberta 2-3 toba 31, Alberta 27, B.C, 16,/and Saskatchewan 0-5. Saskatchewan 7, Northwest Ter-| A senior Vancouver team, na- ritories 5, Nova Scotia 1. Notional senior woman's cham- other provinces had won med-|pions the last two years, won als up to the end of play Friday.|the gold medal for British Co-| Hockey: Saskatchewan's bid|lumbia, sweeping the women's to finish first in section B tournament with eight straight stalled when underdog New wins, including three prelimi- |matches without a loss. Allison Daysmith of Vancouver carries) a similar record in ladies' sin- jgles. ARE UNBEATEN | | Charlie Marriott and Ken Delf} lof Calgary are undefeated in imen's doubles as are Angus Brunswick beat them 8-4 in the nary games, The silver was) hockey upset of the week. won by Ontario, represented by Saskatchewan, with five Hamilton Kittens, while the games played, has a 3-2 record bronze went to St. Vital Grads for six points. British Columbia of Manitoba. and Ontario also have six points), Curling: Manitoba, third each but have a game in hand.|i1eq to win one of its two Fri- In. section A, Alberta and)q., games: and must win to- " infi i ; 7 Nov, i y ix welcome infielders needing |petrie and Jean Bardsley of/Nova Scotia have six points, qa\+. came against the Yukon extra work before the full squad reports.. (AP Wirephoto) Track Meet 196-29, Nova Scotia 26-29, Saskat-|three P.E.I. goals. macist, ran his usual sensa- tional fourth leg for the East York one-mile relay team, fin- ishing a close third after having jbeen 40 yards back when the) last-lap gun sounded. New York Athletic Club won the event in 3:17.7._ Philadelphia Pioneers were second in 3:18.5 and East York was timed in 3:19. In the one women's event on the program--a 600-yard run-- {Roberta Picco of Toronto's Don Mills Track Club finished last. The race was won by Francie Kraker of Detroit in 1:22.4. Miss Picco's fifth-place time was 1:28.6. Bob Seagren won the pole vault with a meet record 16 feet, 644 inches and Neal Stein- hauer's 65-1 captured the shot put. Ten-leam AFL 'Speed Merger MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)-- American Football League own- ers voted Thursday to move to- ward immediate expansion after a meeting that president Milt Woodard said may have advanced for one year a com- plete merger with the National Football League. Woodard said the AFL will Vancouver in the mixed dou-| bles. : | Leading the ladies' doubles} and undefeated is the team of} Judy Humber and Mimi Nilsson of Vancouver. With the semi - final battle lines established, there are eight teams with no games left} to play. Their won-lost record: Manitoba 36-19, New Brunswick| chewan 22-23, Prince Edward) Crothers, a 27-year-old phar- [sland 11-44, Newfoundland 10-|day. 45, Northwest Territories 9-46, Yukon 2-53. Sarnia Knights, representing Ontario, won the gold medal in men's basketball Friday. Manitoba took the second- place silver medal and Nova Scotia came third to win its first medal. In women's basketball, a Van- couver senior team won the gold medal for British Colum- bia. Ontario won the silver and Manitoba the bronze. WINS GOLD In skiing, Denise Chrichton of St. Sauveur, Que., won the gold in the women's giant slalom, followed by Antoinette Svensma of B.C. with the silver and Diane Culver of Montreal with the bronze. In the men's giant slalom, the golf medal went to B.C.'s Bob Calladine with Dave Bruneau and Pierre Lebrun, both of Montreal, coming second and \ third, At the end of the first day's action in wrestling--which dou- bles as the Canadian junior championships -- Ontario had a 10-2 card; Alberta was 9-2, Que- bec 8-3-1, B.C. 8-4, Newfound- land 5-3, Saskatchewan 3-9, Ma- nitoba 0-1-7 and New Brunswick ~10. When the smoke cleared after the action, the official games standings were: chise in the league and hopes to decide upon the new member by June. | Cincinnati, which will break) ground in April on a new 55,- 000-seat stadium, is believed to have the inside track. A bid by a Seattle group was weakened recently by defeat of a new| stadium bond issue. | Woodard said it is "remotely send representatives at once into cities seeking a 10th et one more than Quebec and Ma- nitoba. Prince Edward Island has two points while the Yukon is still seeking its first victory. Manitoba, showing an 8-2 rec- Alberta trounced P.E.I, 8-3/9Fd, lost 7-6 to second - place Friday, with Brian Harper scor- Alberta in the 14th round, Al-| ing twice. Other goals went to|beria is chaising Manitoba with) Gordon Jones, Del Billings,|@ 7-3 record. | Terry Culter, Gerry Braunber-| Volley Ball. One day of action ger, Ron Cebryk and Ralphjin volleyball sent Ontario into! Jorstad. Mike Kelly scored all|the lead with a 7-1 record. Brit- ish Columbia {s in second place! Hockey action winds up Sun-|with six victories and no losses. | They have two games in hand Basketball: Sarnia Knights, ajover the leaders. to pick the curling gold medal. up frightened by high winds, it) John Hiller and George Kor- bolted and went out of control.jince, rookie Detroit Tiger pit- The horse jumped a three-ichers, are both Canadians. O.H.A. JUNIOR "B" HOCKEY SUNDAY NIGHT at 7:30 P.M. OSHAWA CRUSHMEN ae VS. ee Cobourg Cougars Adults 75¢ -- 18 and Under 50c CHILDREN under 14 FREE if accompanied by an adult OSHA CIVIC jeg motorists Continental team Bath @ WHIRLPOOL @ MASSAGE THERAPY Hours 2 p.m. te 11 p.m. (CLOSED MONDAY) Sundays 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. CALL 728-2460 16A ONTARIO Service! Some members say they belong to the Ontario Motor League because of Emergency Road Service. Who blames them? It's a comfort to know that you'll never be stranded if your car breaks down. But there's 60 much more. A Travel Service, What made 300,000 join the Ontario Motor League? Legal Service? You get a summons. We'll help you sort it out. After consultation with us, we'll even pay for your lawyer, if necessary. This service is world-wide too. And there's more. Bonded repair service, for instance, and a beautiful to bring the Mo-Hawks their just another team for the last first shutout of the season. Bob three weeks with winger Hank die Martineau and Wayne)aained the style that has be- Brown were the scorers. come their trade mark now that Three Of World's Fastest Will Contest By AL EATON VANCOUVER (CP)--Three of the world's fastest track stars meet head on in the "super- mile" at the Achilles interna- tional indoor meet, here tonight. Kenya's Kipchoge Keino said he probably will "get out in front" and press. the race against Australia's Ron Clarke and Dyrol Burleson of the United States. Keino, 27, has run the world's second fastest mile. Although he considers Jim Ryun of the U.S. the only distance runner better than himself, he isn't Rough Night | On Referee By THE CANADIAN PRESS A referee has his tought nights, but he always wins. Wally Harris had one of those nights Friday as Cleveland Barons defeated Providence Reds 7-4 in American Hockey League action. Harris called 18 penalties in an attempt to tame the rough- house tactics of the teams. He tried to restrain Cleveland's Bill Needham, who was intent on tearing Eddie Kachur of Providence apart. But Needham, attempting to retaliate after Kachur knocked him to the ice, broke free and caught linesman. Chuck Scherza wit wild punch on the chin.|rowski, former holder of two|f heve en ollotment of 850 Units jj Buttalo Bisons defeated Que-|world records, 800-yards Bill|] during EXPO. Groups or Individuals |) bec Aces 5-4 in the other sched-|Crothers and Abby Hoffman, call immediately $76-3131. sled game, lboth of Toronto. in action. | The Blues, who in recent jgames have won by such pro- lsaic scores as 6-4 and 7-2 after 4 2 # opening the year with 14-3, 9-1, Su r-Mile |9-3 and 19-0 wins, walloped Uni- | versity of Western Ontario Mus- ; tangs 10-4 in Ontario - Quebec predicting victory over Clarke|Athletic Association intercolle- and Burleson. giate hockey action Friday "T would look foolish later if|night. | they beat me," he said Thurs-| The powerful line with broth-, day. ers Steve and Paul Laurent | Ryun is the best in the|contributed five goals and eight) world, according to the African|assists in the rout with Laurent physical education instructor.|scoring three times and the} "If I was running against him|Monteith brothers once each regularly, I think he would win|while assisted on four goals one day, and I the next." each. | | Keino ran third behind Ryun| In the only other game, Uni- | and Jim Grelle, another Ameri-|versity of Waterloo Warriors | can, when they met in an out-|tightened their grip on second | door meet at Los Angeles last|place behind the Blues with a) summer. 5-2 victory over Queen's Uni-| Although he is the world's|versity Golden Gaels, | |second fastest miler--3:53.4 in] Behind the Blues' power line | London last August -- he saidjwere Pat Monahan, with two) he preferred to run in the three-'goals, and Ward Passi, Don and two-mile events. He holds|Fuller and Peter Spayer with! the world mark for 3,000 met-jone each. | res. The Western goals went to, The Achilles mile will be the|/Paul Courneya and Gord} |30-year old Australian's first try/Knightly who scored two each. at the indoor mile. Burleson,| Bob Clayton scored both goals , 26, of Albany, Ore., had. run|for Queen's while Waterloo more than a dozen sub-four-|scoring was shared by Terry minute miles and has a best|Cooke, Neil Cotton, Ron Smith, time of 3:55.6. The world's in-/Bob Murdock and Leverne door mile record is 3:56.4, set| Miller. by Tom O'Hara of Chicago in, - 11963. j Harry Jerome of Vancouver, co-holder of the world's 100- yard and 100-metre records, will be aiming at the 50-yard mark of 5.1. He ran in it 5.2, at last years Achilles meet. | |the classy sharpshooter is back | ry Excellent Accommodation located VY Mile from EXPO site Other top Achiles partici-| one pants will include U.S. shot- riced for economy putter Parry O'Brien; Doris 1 ag 4 -- $24.00 Brown of Seattle, holder of ($6.00 per person) three world records including the women's mile; Irene Piot- FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL ! possible" that a full merger and inter-league trading might be} started a year earlier than the; 1970 target date. J STREET ~ O.HLA. Junior "A" Hockey Saturday GAME TIME 7:15 P.M. OSHAWA GENERALS -- VS. -- TORONTO Season Ticket Holders use Series No. 21 fer this game. BUS SERVICE Leaves Downtown 6:00 -- 6:30 -- 7:00. Return after the geome BARRY WILKINS TICKETS AVAILABLE AT... @ Bolahood Sportsheven Downtown Oshawe NEXT HOME GAME GENERALS vs ST. CATHARINES SAT., FEB. 25th @ Jim Bishop's Sporting Goods Downtown Oshawo @ Auditorium Box Office THORNTON ROAD SOUTH OFF KING ST. WEST motoring magazine. And more yet. A call to our office will bring you the full story. So join the Ontario Motor League ° for Emergency Road Service if you like, but don't forget all the other great services you'll get as a bonus, for instance, that will route you anywhere in North America -- and guarantees not to get you lost. Or it will make all the arrangements for an overseas trip: tickets, hotel reservations, tours, car rental (at a nice discount), and very special arrangements for world-wide service if you'll be driving. Then there's Personal Accident Insurance that covers you wherever you travel, And you know you never have enough insurance. What about the Now in Oshawa there's a new oltice to serve Vou: 172 King Street East Tel: 723-5203 y,