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Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Dec 1967, p. 8

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8 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, December 22, 1967 SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell Associate Sports Editor --!Cougars And | Mustangs Tie For Top Spot In the Oshawa Recreation De- partment's Ladies' Basketball League schedule action last night, at Sir Albert Love Sep- arate School, Cougars and Mus Maniag Shutout By GRAHAM COX ar Canadian Press. Staff Writer |in Cesare Maniago came back to/th 'arth with a horrendous thump) hi Thursday as Minnesota North With Rally In Third | By CLIFF GORDON behind 2-0 at the end of the first}jand Len Bobbie each scored WHITBY -- Whitby Mel-Rons| period, and trailed 3-0 at thejonve for the Hawks who were last night staged a tremendous|end of the second before Lynnjreally flying in the opening two third period rally to overcome a| Middleton the big blond centre periods and caught the local 3-0 lead and tie the Uxbridge|of the locals made his late ap-|team napping defensively. [Black Hawks 3-8 here at the|pearance and sparked the falter-; Lynn Middleton who played On- Whitby Arena last night in|ing Mel-Rons on to their second only the final period scored one This year's OSHAWA GENERALS play playdowns in Kitchener tonight against tario finals are being held in ta, og. gs continued their ding-dong the Rangers and tomorrow Unionville, on January 20 battle for first rid bs ; f 2 ia é bd 5 st place, but failed Lakeshore Intermediate 'B'|tie at home against the Hawks/goal and assisted on one more pens os een age eo fg gid . - jto break the tie, when they both [hockey action. |and preserved the local's un-|as the Mel-Rons used the power itars absorbed * aon . ott wa 675 'Tis the season dian Championships tor the. ("ates wits. | The Mel-Rons were hardjdefeated string at home. play to advantage in the third ie Hane i of ee National se - ae ; P Ps Showing just enough terri- |pressed all the way as they fell! George Gaston, Art Rennick| period scoring two of their three thie " pace ponies ached: - i a: ---------| goals while enjoying the extra ave dts j you know, to be jolly but to expect upsets also. Kitchener and Hamilton Red Wings play- ed to a 5-5 tie last night in Hamilton. In the only other Junior 'A' game on tap, To ronto Marlies scored a 7-3 vic- tory in the Liftlock City. Those results protected Osh- awa's three-point lead over the "Petes"' while Kitchener maintained their one-point Jead over Hamilton, in third place. Marlies took over first place alone, but this also gave them one more game played than Niagara Falls, who can climb back even again to- night, when they host London Nationals NORMALLY, tomorrow.. night's game would be con- sidered a cinch two-point gain for the Generals. But there's one catch, the Ottawa 67's have been improving lately and the Generals suffered -a couple of casualties last week- end that have seriously de- pleted their scoring strength. Dale Tallon has the most as- sists of anybody on the Osh- awa team and he's out with a shoulder injury, for at least another week. Fred O"Don- nell's injury was more ser- ious, a dislocation or separa- tion of the sacroiliac joint, which at first was feared to mean a_ six-week recovery period. However, Fred has responded particularly well to treatment and by Wednesday, they had him take short ses- sions in a wheel-chair. He has gone home to Gananoque, for Christmas, but will take ther- apy treatment in a Kingston hospital. They hope to have him back on skates within three weeks and then likely able to perform again, in an- other week -- all of which adds up to about January 20, when Ottawa plays here again. OSHAWA CRUSHMEN face an acid test tonight. Their roster has been depleted in the past 10 days, as the Gen- erals called up a few of their top forwards, to fill gaps cre- ated by injuries Te Crush- men, in turn, hav® gone to their most available source of supply, the Oshawa Minor Hockey Association's 1967 On- tario championship Midget team. Several members of the City League's Midget All- 6tars have been working out with the Crushmen this week and they'll get their chance to show whether or not they are ready for OHA company, in the big game tonight against the Junior 'B' Petes. If Crush- men can knock off the league- leading Don Byes here to- night, they'll move up into a tie for first place in the Lake- shore 'B' race. SCHOOLBOY curlers for this area (District No. 5) will be in action here at the Osh- awa Curling Club tomorrow. Barry Timbers and his power- ful rink from Uxbridge will be prime favorites to repeat. He has two-out-of-three of his last year's rink still with him to defend the trophy they won Jast year, when they were Ontario's schoolboy cham- pions and representatives in the Canadian Schoolboy curl- ing championship finals. This session tomorrow will entitle the winners to move into the second round of provincial SPORTSCOPE > TODAY HOCKEY OHA Junior 'C' League: Ajax at Oak 8:00: p.m OHA Junior 'A' League: Oshawa Gene vs - Kitch- ener Rangers Kitchener Auditorium OHA Junior 'B' Lakeshore League:. Peterborough Don Byes vs Oshawa Crushmen at Civic Auditorium, 8:00 p.m Oshawa NHL Mite League: at Civic Auditorium, 6:00 p.m to 7:30 p.m Lakeshore Juveniie League: Stouffville at Brooklin, 10:00 p.m Lakeshore Bantam Pickering at Brooklin p.m. and Uxbridge. at Perry, 9:00 p.m Lakeshore Pee Wee League: 8:00 p.n League 1% Port Stouffvile at Brooklin, 6:00 p.m Lakeshore Novice League: Port Perry at Uxbridge, 6:30 p.m SATURDAY HOCKEY OHA Junior 'A' League Ottawa 67's vs Oshawa Gen erals at ( c m OHA Intermediate League: Newcastle at Sunderland, 8:00 p.m OHA Junior 'C' League: Milton at Ajax, 8:00 p.m Protestant Church League; at Civic Auditorium, 7:00 am to 12:00 noon OMHA NHL Novice League: Canadiens vs Maple Leafs, at 12:00 noon and Red gs VS Bruins, at 1:00 pm: both games at Civic Auditorium. n Schoolboys, will be played in Port Arthur, Feb. 19 - 23. Osh- awa's "high schools" have several teams competing to- morrow but Barry Timbers' rink is heavily favored to take the honors, for this dis- trict ON THE BUTTON! THERE are two schools of thought, among the average members of the curling fraternity, con- cerning the OCA ruling with (we refuse to say '"'against") Alfie Phillips Jr. and his Ca- nadian Brier championship rink, for accepting prizes, valued higher than the amount allowed by the OCA, Personally, we think the As- sociation has been complete- ly "chicken". This is not the first time this season that the Phillips rink has accepted prizes above the stipulated value -- they won a big one in Kirkland Lake earlier this season. Secondly, they were quoted before the final CBL tournament game was play- ed, that they intended to ac- cept the prizes. That's delib- erate flaunting, if we ever heard of it. When they did, then the OCA automatically should have suspended them instead of that chicken, pussy- foot move they made, of ex- tending the time when Phil- lips could say yes or no. They put Phillips and his rink on the spot, to let themselves off the hook, because they didn't have what it takes to issue a ruling, right at the time. WRONG TURN? The con- duct of the Phillips' foursome, when representing Canada in the Scottish Cup world cham- pionship play in Scotland last year and to get closer to home, the exhibition they put on at the Annandale Club, during the Dunlop Bonspiel playoffs, a few weeks ago, hasn't endeared them to the curling fraternity and in our opinion, accounts for the lack of support they have received from other top-ranking curl- ers in Ontario, But to be fair to them and to all other young up-and-coming curlers, this sport in the past six or seven years, has graduated com- pletely from the strict, old- time confines of "amateur"' and "fun and_ fellowship'. The value of the dollar isn't as good but the amount has increased and all kinds of bonspiels are being run with major prizes. It's time the old-timers who dominate the Ontario Curling Association either '"'woke up" or got in some new blood and new thinking. Their restricting prizes rule is antiquated. Curling, like most major sports, now has two groups with a distinction that is very evident. There are us ama- teurs -- but there are also the "'pros" -- who compete strictly for prizes, seeking the loot and "'to show a profit" for the season. There are two groups -- let's admit it -- but ALSO -- and this goes not just for the Ontario Ass6cia- tion but for every curling club in the province, let's do some- thing about it. Let's force them to admit and declare themselves -- let's make two separate groups -- merely by the size of the entry fee and the value of the prizes -- in two different groups OMHA Pee Wee League: Exhibition game; Novice' All Stars vs Harman Park; at Newcastle Arena, 11:00 a.m OMHA Midget Exhibition Game: at Civic Auditorium 4:15 p.m, Bowmanville Minor Assoc.: ibition Doubleheader; chmond Hill vs Bowman- vil Juveniles, at 7:00 p.m. and Trenton Midgets vs Bow k Manville Midgets, at 9:00 p.m.; both games at Bowman ville Arena Lakeshore Novice League: Bay Ridges at Markham, 11:00 a.m Lakeshore Pee Wee League: Markham at Whitby, 4:45 p.m Lakeshore Bantam League: Whitby at Lindsay, 4:30 p.m ® Skis he ¥ 61 KING ST. EAST BLBGRNES o:ek B.OGHG atu Se A OAM eteteunteer ge T We have on hand gifts galore for the sports minded, ® Skates EVERYTHING FOR EVERY SPORT © GOLFER © HUNTER 2 BOLAHOOD'S SPORTSHAVEN jtorial edge to enjoy more shots at the basket, Cougars. led |Thunderbirds 23-16 at halftime land finished up with a 37-30 vic- \tory, as they' matched each lother in the second half. Anne Bronsema again paced Cougars with a 15-point con- tribution and teammates Mari lyn Schultz and Aggie Thrower jadded nine and eight points, re spectively. Karen Chasczewski jand Ann Smith each scored two [points and Lynd Vanderzwet |potted one 'foul shot."' | Sharon Sneddon was the scor- ing ace for Thunderbirds, with 14 points, followed by Carol |March with seven, Beryl Johns- ton with six and Joan McClel- land, who had three MUSTANGS KEEP UP a In the second half of the doubleheader, Mustangs kept pace with Cougars, with a 49- Toronto Maple Leaf, Mar 39 victory over Jaguars, who Ce! Pronovost, isn't usua ly given a soft ride at Maple trailed 21-13 at halftime and failed to improve their position Sue Marlowe with 17 points and Carole Roughley, who scored 13, were the top horses among the Mustangs, with Lorna Cameron scoring eight points, Doreen Roach six, Judy Spencer three and Carole Rob- erts two, to round oyt the total Carol Hughes was top scorer for Jaguars, with 17 points. She was.supported by Kathy McRae with ten, Margaret Hughes seven, Barbara Barnes three and Myrna McCullough with two. | The league schedule will re- sume on January 3 and there is room for five or six players Any basketball-minded girls in terested should contact Paul Wright at 725-3974. | Three Midgets Join Crushmen Oshawa Crushmen will have three new faces in their line- up tonight when they host the Peterborough Don Byes in an OHA Junior 'B' hockey game at the Civic Auditorium Crushmen, currently third in the Eastern Ontario junior 'B' ' league, have called up Dusty Lynd, Don Hudgin and Scott Wilson from Oshawa 'Alnor' midgets of the Lakeshore league. If they are impressive. they |may find themselves a perma- nent spot on the team, now/ § °°) © down to 14 players. STANDING WLT F A Pts, |P'borough 10 5 1 89 68 21 Coboung 9 6 2100103 20 cag : A 7 5) te JOHNNY Bower's seven- Belleville 014 1 54 121 | ee ae rubs her | Peterborough Nips Oshawa e e e e nish attack with two goals. In their Lakeshore Juvenile Ir i j hy ' LILI 1atl1o! l Ser 1es | Other were scored by Pekka |League game, played here at Kusisto, Matti Harju, Lasse we ny aa . anes a ie NEW YORK (AP) -- Four na-'winner is a club other than thejpreviously lost a challenge in Oksanen and Esko Koanpaa, ast night, Peterborough Juve-|tigns--Australia, England, Royal Sydney Yacht Club, the 1962. Veteran centre Ron Tookey! niles nosed out Oshawa Juve- prance and Greece--will get a 9 ; jniles 2-1, in one of the best) chance in 1970 of wresting the Lakeshore tilts of the season. | america's Cup from the Unite Bob Clarke and Jerry Kemp 'States, which has held it for 116 shared the scoring honors for|years. a | the Liftlock City team in this} phe New York Yacht Club close-checking, hard-fought tus- ae be en ee sie and Dave Mosier saved the sedan May. plans A0r 8 hsinesta e Tsk a whitbwash round-robin series of elimina- fet tions to determine the next chal treatment lenger for the bottomless mug Brees i Minor Association which has become the symbol of Bantam - Major League action, world yacht-racing supremacy. also at the Children's | Arena The eliminations would be Westmount Kiwanis thumped, ) tf : the Police Association boys 6-2 held off Newport, R.1., in the and Local: 2784 won a 6-4 deci-(Aumen,,% co) Prior to the « : et ff a's ries itself, es over Local 1817 probably in September. Such Terry McKee scored twice for eliminations are unprecedented bedetaat Kiwanis and four In a press conference Thur layers shared the I Ce oe ree Veet ae hws Garry: Matthews As da Commodore Percy Chubb art Spiers, Colin Lockie and 20mounced the New York Yacht Don McKenzie each getting one! lub had accepted the challenge goal of Royal. Sydney Y t Jel: Rorabeck and' Derry en oe Neate Or Aad Thompson accounted for the ©OUPled with the acceptance two tallies registered by the was the understanding, he said, losers that the' Australians would Clarence McPherson was in pare' ae pelts Sh pres top form for Local 2784. He tests with ans or all of three scored four of their half-dozen pets who ave issued chal goals with John Neal and Jeff ae rae Roya Dorset Yacht lub of England, the Royal Mason each getting one Don LeBlanc, Robert Suther land, Ricky Parfitt and 'A Boivin, with one apiece, shared WOULD STEP ASIDE the honors for the losers If in the elimination series the Yacht Club of Greece and the Yacht Club d'Hyeres of France. Play Santa to your Sportsman Sty © Hockey Equipment © Ski Accessories EMBs © FISHERMAN © ARCHER, etc. pee es 723-2711 + a Leaf Gardens, but son Leo decided to give him a treat at the Leafs' annual Christ- bling to the ice during Leafs' annual Christmas party. Players and their | |triple crown winner, |with another honor in winning his second American League | slugging championship. Official figures announced today by league president Joe Cronin showed Yastrzemski | official times at bat. Baltimore's Frank Robinson, the 1966 slugging missed considerable action be- mas party at the Gardens, 'Yastrzemski Captures 'Slugging Championship | BOSTON (AP) -- Carl Yas-|1967 ltrzemski, the Boston Red Sox'| major league records and 12 AL, Brian Fletcher another work ran off| marks were equalled. Wilhelm extended five of his in-| \dividual. career major league scored the equalizer with less lrecords. They were most con-\than two minutes secutive errorless games (247),|/took a lot of steam out of the most games as a reliever (813),|Hawks' sails. |compiled a hefty slugging mark most games in relief (107), most} lof .662 on 360 total bases in 579) games finished in relief (515);] untracked. in the opening rey a imag pitched in re- periods as Glen Jackson in the jief (1,8 F champion, BREAKS RECORDS |man. Elmer Tran, the little work horse of the Mel-Rons, who last night doubled as a defenceman despite his small 129 pound | weight, added one goal and let a few of the Hawks know who was boss at several stages of 19 the game. season. In addition, horse of the Mel-Rons who sel- i i itcher Hoyt} Chicago relief pitcher ry turns in a poor game, |dom to go and Mel-Rons just could not get two Uxbridge goal was fabulous with his glove and leg saves, Mickey Mantle of New York |This fellow appeared in the first cause of a head injury and was ang Dean Chance of Minnesota|two periods to be a direct cut runner-up to Yastrzemski with a! broke two major league marks. from the NHL, he was so good. (CP Wirephoto) een mark of .576 in 129 games. ton with .511. topped AL sluggers in 1965, also five, double plays, compared) Baltimore's Brooks Robinson. Killebrew drew lead the league for the second) Harmon Killebrew of Minneso- | strikeouts ta was third with .558, followed| years striking out 100 or more they did, they made it hot for by Al Kaline of Detroit with .541/ times and Frank Howard of Washing- cords for a pitcher by striking corners that with the pressure out 58 times for a four-year|the Mel-Rons were putting on in Yastrzemski, whose .536 mark total of 251. drew 91 walks, including 11 in- league club record with 100 ho- tentional, and as hit by four| mers, the 44th season in which|Come out second best. | pitchers. He grounded into just|they have hit 100 or more. with the league high of 21 by/ clubs set |league low by hitting only .236.|dropped out of the league. Next LEADS LEAGUE The previous low of 239 wasiaction for the Mel-Rons will be E . ee |shared by the American and\ja Boxing Day effort in Port 131 walks to : National Leagues in 1908. career It took Whitby over 40 minutes were most 1 most to solve his slants and when (1,613) and Mantle's (8). Chance set his re-|the Hawks. It was felt in many the final few minutes that had the game gone another two min- major utes, the Hawks would have The Yankees set a JUST TALING . . . There will American League's 10|be no home game next week for The an all-time major |the Mel-Rons as Woodville have Perry. straight year. He and Bill Free-| han of Detroit tied for the most intentional walks with 15 each.) Howard struck out the most times, 155. The champion Red Sox won the team slugging title with a .395 percentage. Detroit was {second with .376, followed by! Baltimore with .372 and Minnesota with .369. Cronin announced that 24) | major league records and 23 AL |marks were broken during the! Finns Defeat 'Edmonton 6-3 | EDMONTON (CP) -- The| Finnish national hockey team) |picked up its first win on its) tour through the Western Can-) ada .Senior Hockey League Thursday night beating Edmon- ton Nuggets 6-3 before 1,200 fans, | | The Finns led 2-0 after three| * |minutes of play and held a 2-1) lead going into the second pe-| - |riod. They led 3-2 after two | periods. | Edmonton tied the game) jearly in the third period, but Finland exploded for another % families turned out for a skate and a party after- wards. (CP Wirephoto) '(Four Nations To Compete ("hrivo'sin latter has agreed to step aside in the Cup series. Australia and France already have agreed to the eliminations, Commodore Chubb said, and word is expected in the near fu- ture from England and Greece The decision must be made by July 1, 1968 Since the frigate America won the trophy in a race against British vessels around the Isle of Wight in 1851, the 'United States has defended the Cup 20 times, never losing. The 1970 challenge will be the 21st. This last summer the U.S. 12- metre yacht Intrepid, sailed by Bus tralia's Dame Pattie in jlic, million-dollar J-boats used {deal with one and have the oth- Mosbacher, defeated Aus-| E four|ruary, arrived here Tuesday by Straight races, The Australians' plane from Athens. | three goals in the last four minutes of play. The game counted in stand- Matti Keinonen paced the Fin- scored two goals for Edmonton, This marks the first challenge ' while Bryan Bennett scored the for Greece and France. Ameri- other. O.H.A. Junior "A" Hockey f | Saturday, Dec. 23rd GAME TIME 7:15 P.M. OSHAWA GENERALS -- VS -- OTTAWA Season Ticket Holders Use Series No. 14 for this game. BUS SERVICE Leave downtown 6:15 - 6:45 + 7:15. Return after the game. a JERRY WELSH @ Bolahood's Sportshayen Downtown Oshawa @ Jim Bishop's Sporting Goods NEXT HOME GAME SAT., DEC. 30 GENERALS vs PETERBORO @ Auditorium Box Office can victories in the past have been scored over Britain, Aus- tralia and Canada with majes- prior to World War II. Commodore Chubb said the Sydney Yacht Club was chosen for expediency. "We decided it was best to ers accept the provisions if one of them qualifies." FLY IN OLYMPIC FLAME PARIS (AP) -- The Olympic! flame, which will burn at the Grenoble Winter Games in Feb- | Rete Terry O'Reilly ADULTS 75c¢ O.H.A. JUNIOR "B" | Auditorium OSHAWA : Crushmen PETERBORO Children under 14 eecompanied by en edult admitted FREE it HOCKEY TONIGHT AT THE Civic 8:00. P.M. CHILDREN 50c No smooth whisky selling at any price delivers as much rich rye flavour as Adams Gold Stripe. The sales go up as the whisky goes down. Adams Gold Stripe Canadian Rye Whisky. THOMAS ADAMS DISTILLERS LTD, TORONTQ. > pros ood d m faniago had caught the hock-| Pz y world unawares with three/10 wuecessive shutouts before run-| ric jing into the Western Division} eaders and was one scoreless) as victory away from making histo-| sy ty. "Only Bill Durnan of Montreal| sanadiens, during the 1948-49|;, jeason, has recorded four con-| pr, secutive shutouts during the! p, nodern NHL era. bs The Flyers had to win to stay| At thead of Los Angeles Kings, 4-1) ric winner over Pittsburgh Pen-| guins Thursday, in the west/st since the Kings are a bare two! fr oints off the pace. iW, Minnesota, by losing, dropped! Ei five points behind Los Angeles Pe p third place. Ri Durnan ran up 309 minutes! ' "Only A Mati Before Seals | OAKLAND, Calif. (CP) -- 8arend Van Gerbig II says he's|mz 'onvinced Oakland will support) | 1 National Hockey League ex-|me yansion team--and he's willing o gamble on it. we Van Gerbig, the majority) | rwner of the Oakland Seals ofjvei he expanded NHL, says it is|Mz mly a matter of time before the wh ans start supporting thelpa eague's last-place expansion) ) 'ntry. Va Barry Van Gerbig--as he was |er; tnown while a part-time goal-/no; ender with the U.S. nationallan tockey team before inherited) co, noney allowed him to invest|fra 12,000,000 in the Seals--says he| vanted to bring major league} ,., iockey to northern California);, ind is "prepared to stay here." t "JT don't believe the Seals will les ye a financial success for atley east two or three seasons," he oy said. 'We'd be kidding our-) ~, selves if we thought otherwise. | "We're in a building program.| Once we get a hard core of real| See vol vockey fans they'll bring oth- wa ors." |pai USES A PLANE for Lay Van Gerbig, 28, who follows po fhe Seals in his own private plane on almost every road trip, tays he is retired now, but he) .,: yas become increasingly drawn) ip in the operation of the NHL) hi g0% : expansion team. tes Earlier this month, ne was|q, quoted in the Vancouver Sun| taying he was seeking a NeW) Ao] tity for the Seals and actively)... ronsidering Vancouver, Sun_ columnist quoted the young majority pwner of the Seals as saying: | "For us to. stay (in Oakland)| we'd have to show a considera-| ble increase in crowds after the] football season ends: I can't see) us doing that." | Kearney also quoted Van Ger-| big as saying Oakland's lack of interest in the team. "filters down to the locker room" and| "affects the play of the Seals." | Van Gerbig later denied the report and said: | "We definitely will finish the Russian Team Tops Spokane SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) -- Russia's national hockey team tkated to a 5-1 victory over Spo- kane Jets of the Western Inter: national Hockey League in an exhibition game Thursday ilot Jim resys| en hight. ttraight world tournament championships scored three) goals in the first period and a pair in the second. Spokane goaltenders shut out | the Russians in the final period | and turned back 45 Russian} tries to 26 saves by goalie Vic- | tor Konovalenko. | The Jets managed their goal) in the third period--at 16:33 by | Grant Warwick. The Russian goal-scorers | were Igor -Romishevsky, Boris Mayorov, Alexander Yakuchov, | Vikulov and Vyacheslav Starshi- nov. SKIROULE SNOWMOBILE For comfort and speed try the SKIROULE 17 H.P., 20 H.P., 30 H.P. twin See this Canadian made snow- mobile at Art Flieler SUPERTEST 668-3954 Ye mile east of Ajax Blinker light on Highway No. 2. Buy now end pey later. ete ea? anes Chain saw rental GASOLINE 39.9 The Russians, winners of 1 ane i le ey A

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