cry LEAGUE Lions And Rotary Midgets Play Tie; Macdonalds Edge Beaton's Juveniles Only two games were played in| ROTARY: Goal, D. Kelly; de- Referees: Rube Waddel, Mickey the local City League in Bowman-| fence, Taylor, Barriage; forwards, McMaster. ville on Saturday. Coaches and| Lawson, Cole, Gledhill, Wills, Nor-| FIRST PERIOD managers, as well as the players,| ris, Cullen, Humphries, Sprager.| 1. Hayden MacDonald-- are looking forward to the opening FIRST PERIOD B. Simcoe (Lawrence) ... 4.13 of the new children's rink in Osh-| 1. Lions--Cockerton 2. Beaton's Dairy--Shaw ...18.39° awa, as travelling back and forth (Snedden) 3.15| Penalties: Duffield. to outside arenas the past few! 2 Ljons--Knocker (Maly) 3, SECOND PERIOD seasons is becoming quite a hard- 3 Rotary--Lawson 14' 3. H. MacDonald--Tureski ship on all concerned. | Penalties: Miklas, Lawson, (B. Simcoe) A larger league is anticipated sprager. | Beaton's D.--E. Westfall by the Oshawa executive when SECOND PERIOD ! (Shaw) they do move into the new arena, Rotary--Sprager 7.10 5- Beaton's D.--Wilson with approximately twenty-two! Penalties: RN aniall Middleton | (T. Chasczewski) bantam teams entered from alll Joyce, Sprager, Taylor, Cole. | H. MacD.--Lawrence schools in Oshawa, six midget : vay or * | _ (Cockerton) teams and four juvenile teams! + JUVENILE GAME ,.| 7. H. MacD.--B. Simcoe from the different areas in the| Once again Hayden Macdonald's (G, Westfall, Duffield) city. Watch this paper for further, Showed their class around the g H 'MacD.--Lawrence information concerning the above,| Nets as they defeated Beaton's| penalties: Cockerton. MIDGET GAME | Dairy by the score of 5-3. George| EXHIBITION GAME In one of the best midget games| Lawrence and Bob Simcoe led the. Tn an exhibition game played at played this year. Lions and Rotary Way for the winners, while Jim! the Whitby Arena on Monday clubs showed plenty of fast hock- Shaw and Neil McMahon were| night, the Oshawa Juveniles tied ey, with the game ending in a the Pick of the losing team. with the Whitby Junior "C" team 2:2 tie. Quy tw yeasities were handed by the score of 2-2. : Danny Cockerton and Eddie| W a last, clean game, welll "Both clubs played fast, clean st | + Bop bhi : Westfall were the pick of the| handled by coaches Harold Hud- hockey, with Whitby showing a lit- Montreal netminder Bob Perreaut| lta entered hospital a week ago| Lions crew, while Gary Lawson Son and Ronnie Nelson. [tle more condition over the Osh- at 5:25 of the middle period with a for treatment of phlebitis in his/and Lucky Wills showed up well HAYDEN MACDONALD: Goal, awa boys. 20-foot shot from the side of the| :8nt leg and was to have been for the Rotary team. Melinick; defence, Tureski, Joyce:| Coach Ronnie Nelson has a big Canadien net. Perreault i €lreleased Wednesday. Nine penalties were handed out| forwards, Cockerton, Payne, Law- job in cutting down his Oshawa for the injured Jacques Plante by sreferees Rube Waddel and rence, Simcoe, Drayton, G. West-| crew, but once this is done, this vartially stopped the drive hut the FONTANA LOSES | Mickey McMaster. gall, Duffield. | young Juvenile team will make it puck dribbled behind him Zetec) ALCUTTA. India (Reuters)--In- LIONS: Goal, L. Kelly; defence,, BEATON'S DAIRY: Goal, Field-| interesting for any minor club in the 20s) Tine _CALCUTT/ » india Reuters) --in Westfall, Joyce; forwards, Nick- er; defence, McMahon, E. West-| ihe province. the Toronto - Dominion Bank Armstrong scored the insurance | 312' Naresh Kumar Tuesday elim- plishen, Ehaszewski, Disney, Ring iall; yiorwerds, Shasmweki, otf Ps sag Hanagement wishes to { =D " oh a a : 3 in| las, Cockerton, Frolick, Snedden, son, MacDonald, w, Cole, Muir, | thank t Whit thi with Gordon Miles, manager of |80al--his seventh this season--at|inated Don Fontana of Toronto in Middleton, Knoeker, Maly. Vaughan. 8, Shay Cele | exhibition ane espe for this fhe local uptown brane of tire {15:9 with some Rise Sicknandiivg}ihe | third Found of He me's ominion Bank, making the pre- § s check, Montreal's singles in the Asian lawn tennis p . Canada's Young Ski Star Hockey scores, To Study History On Trip sentation. Bert Olmstead, got around de-|championships. The scores were AND STANDINGS | By DON PEACOCK (mal education much. | after the capital's first snowfall in --Times-Gazette Staff Photo. |fenceman Dollard St. Laurent and|7-5, 7-5, 6-4. Press Staff Writer | | November. OTTAWA (CP) Skiing won't be She flunked her physics, algebra) pi i ra By THE CANADIAN PRESS (ne only thi the mind of Ot 80d French last year when she Anne is one of four Canadian |the only thing on the mind of Ot . : in| Olympic skiers chosen despite the National League {tawa's Anne Heggtveit when she broke her lez while practising "yo "Cirrored broke legs 1 22 7 7103 57 competes for Canada in the winter slalom runs and had to miss | inier "Each had to sass sit 1610 6 94 74 Olympics in Italy Jan. 26-Feb. 5./ couple of months of school. She medical examination Rats 3 or 101112 75 68 If she gets any spare moments figures she'll be away from classes ing final approval ore 2 1116 8 84403 on the trip, Anne expects to study! this winter for about three months. P . X 1218 6 72793 history--"1760 to the present." But she's determined to catch up Se. 84d hie ip LIE Tomuiy 817 9 59 92 , = th vi i Wednesday's Hest the medical test with little trouble al 0 Toronto 2 That was her intention when she when she comes back. in November. The fourth, Monique Thursday's Games 16 9 A week earlier she had won Nor- WLTTF A Pts. | left to begin training at Mont! Turning from learning to skiing, Langlais of Quebec City, didn't Toronto at Montreal The petite blonde, in Grade 11,! During the summer she spent a Ski competitions in Europe aren't T F A Pis INJURIES INTERRUPTED |fence around Rideau Hall, resi- two winters ago. She made the 1111 5 9 93 | el {and was leading the field by two Pittsburgh 1 Cleveland 4 By JACK HAND in the case of all our 500 ball| way's Holmenkollen giant slalom, 28| pitching left to rate as favorites OTHER POSSIBILITIES later. Toronto Leafs Blank Canadiens With Superb Checking Display By THE CANADIAN PRES |banged the puck into the cage from Mis harg ¥ beat Montreal Cana-|close in. jens when it comes to checking.| Lumley, in his fourth year with Wodnesiay night Toronto Maple yeafs, was both brilliant and lucky eats ag. in stopping 28 Hab shots. His best ey shut out the league-leading|stops were in the second period on Montrealers 2-0 in Toronto with a veteran Maurice Richard, who was dazzling mixture of fore and back- seeking the 500th goal of his career checking and some outstanding Na-|and in the third period on a low tional Hockey League goaltending. |drive by centre Jean Beliveau, the i ded ue i" jhe Hi seventh| league's leading scorer. ora: Of the 1935-45 campaign, [nyo victory sent Leafs into a The Leaf: eye Sd Ae ad 5 eet In one fourth-place tie with Chicago Black they 'overpowered Canadiens with|Hawks. They each have 30 points, two second-period goals with pos- 21 pehind Canadiens, eight off the sibly their finest performance of|Pace set by the second-place New the season. York Rangers and two behind the It wzs the only engagement of|third-spot Detroit Red Wings. the night and the crowd of 14,247| There wasn't a doubt that Cana- diens missed all-star def an fans--largest turnout of the sea- son at Maple Leaf Gardens--was| Doug Harvey, on the sidelines with delighted. a hand injury. Leafs were without rearguard Hugh Bolton, recovering LUMLEY'S SECOND Ron Hurst, a rookie right winger, |from a fracture below the sinus. Boston Bruins, idle Wednesday and veteran right winger George Armstrong provided the scoring night, ran into a bit of trouble. power. Goaltender Harry Lumley Forward Vic Stasiuk underwent was the strong man defensively emergency surgery for removal of and picked up his second shutout ofa blood clot # his right leg and may be out of action for a month. the "year. Stasiuk, a native of Lethbridge, 4. 5. 6. ..15.30 ...19.00 tured top honors here vesterday. | they are Alf Higgs, Geo. Camp- The Oshawa rink, one of four | bell, Irv MacLeod (holding the . : local entries, which came out | Douglas Waugh Memorial Tro- tario Teachers' Bonspiel has | o top over 28 out-of-town rinks | phy), Elgin Munday, skip, re- been held here at the Oshawa | of teachers from all over Ontar- | ceiving one of the handsome Curling Club, a local rink cap- | io, is shown above. Left-to-right | coffee percolators, donated by ' I SPORTS MENU Oshawa Rink Wins Honors "Everything from Soup to Nuts" | Annual Teacher Ss Bonspiel by Geo. H. Campbell | | #m octock puaw First Games SPORTS EDITOR For only the second time in | the 10 years that the annual On- | The Ontario Teachers' Bonspiel, blankets, donated by T. Eaton Co. a traditional event each Christ-| Ltd., Ab Robins, president of Osh- | mas week at the Oshawa Curling awa Curling Club, making the pre | Club, was inaugurated by the late| sentation to the members of Bert! J. Douglas Waugh, former OCVI| Tancock's rink. "ar 3 : ' v .. teacher, just 10 years ago and in : Re THE PEDAGOGY held sway at the Oshawa Curling Club yes the 1935 session hete yesterday, Meni da. Jepresenting , the LAF Beare. terday when the 10th annual Ontario Teachers' Bonspiel was held. an Oshawa rink emerged victor ank of 1 ontreal, presented their| ni y " "WwW h., OCVI teacher and curling inc 4 . 8 y prizes, wool cardigans, to Aub Len Peer, skip, 8; Orgauized by ihe late "Doug gs = ous, for only the .second time Rpamey's third-place winners and enthusiast extraordinary, the event now has province-wide appeal since the event came into being. Wm. ' McLarty ol behalf of the and each year is over-subscribed for entries. They had rinks here A full entry-list of 32 rinks was| gank of Commerce Presented O. Price, yesterday from Niagara Falls, Windsor, Tillsonburg, Simcoe, on hand 'for the big event with four silver trays to Bob Roginson's!y wo. NN ahbs Guelph, Peterborough, Orillia, Lindsay, Haliburton, etc. Elgin Mun- | first-time entries pom Windsor, fourth-place winners. B. W. Switzer, day, one of those quiet, mild-mannered little chaps who becomes a Niagara Falls, Tillsonburg, Sim- i INN I skip, 11; i ip ol coe, Blackst nd Haliburton,| OTHER WINNERS | veritable fire-ball when in competition skipped his rink to the tro- poe wall ook 4 Haliburton Fifth prizes, highest in the two-| TORONTO phy honors here yesterday and so became the second Oshawa skip various Toronto secondary schools, | Win bracket, went to G. Pleasance Stan Rendall, to get his name on the Doug. Waugh Memorial Trophy. It was a Guelph, Hamilton, Peterborough, |and his Simcoe rink, with a total| stan Rivers, well-earned triumph too, with Munday coming through in great Lindsay and Orillia. Three com-|°f 13. They received silver butter, Cee Cannon, style in the clutch, time-and-again, just like skips are supposed to bined OCVI and Central rinks and| dishes donated by Henry Birks skip, 9; skip, 7 do, to cop the laurels. Good fellowship and sportsmanship prevailed the Board of Education rink, ad Sons. Sixth prizes, barome-| " ; which the commit. comprised the four local entries. ters. from the bonspiel commit TORONTO ORILLIA all day and it was a truly successful event, for c! e Figin Munday KDE Ho Do tee, went tp F. J. Clute's Windsor|y. w. race ar tee members can take due credit. Prizes, thanks to generous don-| ET Wi id Sobre in ester Tink and sandwich toasters, also|H. A. Races. Bare sil. ors, were of high order also and more than one-third of the entries day's play, winning his three| from the committee, went to Wes|R. H. Norman, H. M. Steeper, went home with "loot." games in the 11.00 o'clock draw| Switzer's Peterborough rink, who|H. V. Tancock, Norman Post, i |for a total score of 20 plus 5,| finished 7th with two wins and a| kip: 14; skip, 2. The news that Johnny Podres, hero of the 1955 World Series |. becoming the second Oshawa Score of 11. The Liftlock City won and Brooklyn Dodgers' triumph, has been declared LA by his | | draft board and so eligible for U.S. army service, came at an {rink in the history of the event| the trophy in 1954. Clute's rink unfortunuate time, Sports Illustrated had just named Johnny 51 38 32 30 30 pra 2 Montreal New York Detroit Chicago | Toronto | Boston GUELPH Greg McFadden, | John Morrison, HAMILTON C. G. Clarke, A. Cameron, S. Hawkes, D. W. Diehl, skip, 6. | | Montre PETERBORO BD. OF EDUC. Ted Johnson, Jim Souch, Father Coffey, Lew Beaton, skip, 3. TORONTO Providence Buffalo Pittsburgh Cleveland Hershey Springfield 19 10 16 10 0. 0. Worden, Tremblant, Que., with nine other Anne, who'll be 17 Jan. 11, sad members of Canada's Olympic ski|it wasn't easy to get her broken ; team. |leg back in shape for this winter. make it, however. Her leg had not Chi N yet healed sufficiently. Gocokn Bl New York planned to squeeze text books into lot of time exercising, walking and| YOUTHFUL VETERAN of | her suitcase for the flight to Eur-| bicycling. She started using her Ameri League ope at the end of October. | cross-country skis alongside the new to Anne, despite her youth F A She represented : 2 1 30g 40 Skiing hasn't helped Anne's tor dence of GovernorGeneral Massey world hi Bg 2 the § 5 2115 81 3 best Canadian showing, : At 15 then, she placed minth in $17 3 mus i Johnny Podres May Be | the downhill, seventh in the slalom ednesday's Result } secunds in the giant slalom when Pi | 11 on the icy trail mear th Hoven Headed For U.S, Ar ee Hershey at Cleveland [ ead e or ae m finish line, OHA Senior A | OSHAWA BROOKLYN (AP)--Johnny Pod-| players throughout the system, we defeating Trude Klecker, an Aus- Jack Bentley, 44ires probably will be in the army know Uncle Sam's interests come|trian who won the women's world 30|but Brooklyn still has enough| first." slalom championship a few days Dave Jamieson, M. F. Kirkland, AGINCOURT R. J. Green, D. G. McDonald, C. F. Lawrence, H. C. Burwash, Kitchener Windsor Stratford 20 9 4 164 130 14 11 2 113 110 13 13 2 111 109 Owen Sound 11 17 1 105 105 {to capture the Douglas Waugh 3150 had a score of 11 but they {Memorial Trophy. Munday's four-| Won the "draw" playoff. as "Sportsman of the Year" in their annual poll. He was given |some included Alf Higgs, George the award because it was felt that he is the living personifica- |Campbell and Irving MacLeod. tion of an American boy's dream--the baseball star who won | AD" Robins the big game in the World Series, over the mighty Yankees, right in Yankee Stadium. As they put it "he did what he had to do and did it well." Johnny is a grandson of a miner from Czarist Russia. His trophy is an ancient Grecian urn, commem- orating an ancient sports event and dating about 510 B.C. The full trophy design will be ready for presentation early in '56. |e | Munday's men defeated N. Sis- | {co of Haliburton in their first game, R. tured by skip Mundgy draw shots, over the @. HOCKEY SCRIBES, both in Western Ontario (where Senior "A" OHA hockey is operating) and in Eastern Ontario (where the best Senior "B" group operates) are far from being in accord with the recent proclamation out of Whitby that their Duniop team is ready and wants to move into Senior "A" ranks. George Carver, Belle- ville, refers to the financial wizardry of the Whitby mentor as a deep, dark secret and states that Whitby Dunlops do not average 1,100 customers per game. Frankly, we wouldn't know, so we don't press the point, merely pass the statement along. We do know this, Whitby hockey fans are a 'solid group of loyal supporters and they do back their team, but on the other hand, it would take a large- clinch the laurels. CLOSE COMPETITION in finished the runners-up Rhamey's Toronto rink, wit Charlie MacRorie skipping. They | had 13 for three wins while R. H. Robinson's Toronto rink was Oshawa victory in 1953. | and a Merchandise certificates, donat- d by Simpson-Sears, went to L. E. skipped the other|Peer's Guelph rink for two wins score of 10 plus 2, prizes #nd Joe Walsh's Oshawa rink, in 9th place with two wins in the second draw and came up|for a score of 10, won the certifi- Maskintosh of Toronto| cates donated by Tamblyn Drugs. with a Icean-cut 14-1 victory, fea-| The 10th prizes, donated by Great 's deadly| Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co., were Pleasance| won by E. McPherson's Toronto Simcoe rink, in the final game, to! rink, with two wins and a score of nine plus six. High Sne-wia prizes for 11th, 12th| « " , ani th prizes respectively, were Bert" Tancock's Toronto Tk donated by Labatts. J. with three wins and a score of 14/ 20d Son and Copp, Clark Co. Ltd.| Gordon Reid, ; : |and MacMillan Co. These were E. D. Blair, plus 4. Third prizes went to At won, in order, am's Peterborough rink, R. Mac-| kintosh's Toronto entry and Dr. | 8th M. Dent by Bert Smither- O. Worden's Toronto rink. fourth with three wins and a plus| COMMITTEE PRAISED Ab Robins, skip, 19; skip, 1. TORONTO R. T. Russell, Bert Dool, Oliver Pitts, Roy Sherk, skip, 9. PETERBORO Ken Best, J. R. Barnard, H. R. Wilson, F. B. Smitheram skip, 5. LINDSAY J. Endicott, G. Atkinson, E. C. Dettman, W. S. Battersby, skip, 5. GUELPH A. MacKay, B. McLennan, H. Helmer, Carm Burton, skip, 10; TORONTO . Barnard, . P. Garbutt, . W. Fair, . H. Robinson, skip, 9; GUELPH | Geo. Haidley, T. J. Reynolds, skip, 6; 11:00 O'CLOCK DRAW First Games Chatham 917 1 92 132 : Wednesday's * Results Kitchener 4 Windsor 5 Owen Sound 3 Strat'ord 5 : Friday's Game Kitchener at Stratiord . NOHA Senior A North Bay 0 Sudbury 4 * oy A Junior B Dixie 3 Woodbridge 1 : OHA Junior ¢ Midland 7 Parry Sound 4 (1) Intermediate A Stouffville 5 Brampton 3 Lakefield 8 Bowmanville 6 Meaford 7 Durham 5 OHA Intermediate B Leamington 12 Electric 5 OHA Intermediate C Bobcaygeon 15 Omemee 4 Oakville 5 Orangeville 3 ;Laurier Cup Montreal 3 Barrie 3 23ito 19{ pennant. win another National League The Dodgers certanly will miss | the 23-year-old lefthander who beat | j Brooklyn lists 17 pitchers on its roster, including Don Elston, who came from Chicago in the Randy ar University of Montreal's Before her injury last Jani at Mont Tremblant, Ange won the and Sins was second to } deal. Don N: b {the New York Yankees twice last| Erskine and Billy Loes form the|Langlais in the Quebec senior {'all, including a brilliant shutout|,;.jeus of the staff. It will be up| women's champi |in the decisive seventh game. | Still his 9-10 record in the regular |season shouldn't be too hard to | make up. | Podres learned Tuesday he had {been reclassified 1-A by his draft] | board at Ticonderoga, N.Y., and |is subject to immediate call. Al-| {though the head of the draft board |said he doubted very much that Podres would be called before spring, it was unlikely that he; | would be around for much of the | 1956 season. Walter O'Malley, Dodger presi- dent, observed: "We like to think of the Dodgers| coming out first in the National| to manager Walter Alston to re- place Podres from the others. Perhaps Karl Spooner will be the man. Roger Craig and Don Bes- sent, the rookies who made such a solid possibilities. Sandy Koufax, the bonus pitcher who came on fast in late season and Ken Leh- man, back from Montreal for an- other whirl, could take over the p job. Podres, unmarried, had been listed unfit for military service since 1952 because of a bad back. He had to wear a leather harness onships. Anne's only regret is that the Canadian team didn't leave earlier |for training in Europe, instead of | waiting until early January, | - "All the other countries' teams | splash after moving up from the are over there," she said. "We're | minors in mid season, are other| the only team sitting at home.' . But she wasnt bitter about the | CASAs decision to have the Cana {dian skiers train at home before | moving into the last stages in | Europe. | "That's the way they work things, I guess," she said. Then she excused herself from the inter- view. "My homework," ghe ex- plained. Stan Leonard Joins FIGATS LAST Lachute Golf Club "veces" days to start the 1956 chalked up his second shutout of ard, whose appontiment as senior|tour and 'the Los Angeles Open|the season as the Maple Leafs Jesse Owens [playing professional at Lachute,|will be first." | blanked Montreal 20 at Toronto. |Que., golf club was announced| "I'll definitely play the British/ - Insists Games total of 10. Acclaimed by many as the most! winpsor Munday's rink won the J. Doug-| successful bonspiel in the history|p,. Sinclalr, las Waugh Memorial Trophy, don-|of the annual event, members of Gordon Werte, ated by Trophy Craft and a shield| the committee responsible for put-|Frank Clute, | replica for permanent possession |ting on the 1955 Ontario Teachers' Clare MacLeod, {donated by Canada Life Assurance Bonspiel came in for high praises ap, 8; Co. The Toronto-Dominion Bank from all quarters. The committee|njacara FALLS . oresented electric percolators to| consisted of Dave Jamieson as . rs ; | J. R. Thompson, each member of the winning rink,' past-pres.; Jack Judge as presi-|J Parkinson, with Gordon Miles, manager of| dent; Jack Bentley, as secretary-|M. E. MacLeod, the local Dominion Bank branch, treasurer (all of Oshawa) and/W. E. Thompson, | making the presentation. prize committee chairman, Aub| skip, 11; | The runners-up received woollen| Rhamey of Toronto. TORONTO Coach Phil Watson Will Put ~~ 2 Danny Lewicki Back At Centre Walt Lavender, Len McNeil, skip, 9 . By ED SIMON teaming him with speedy Pet Candaian Press Staff Writer Conacher and rugged Andy Heben ood competition. The step up to higher company seems a logi- When shifty Danny Lewickijton in the hope that the new posi- Eo¥ one ape the Whitby jp fg g pany E broke into the National Hockey|tion will give Danny more room , League five years ago his boss tag-| to manoeuvre. The experiment was BRIGHT BITS: -- Oshawa schoolboy curlers will hold their dis-|8ed him as ihe hast rookie he had fried with wiispectacular Jesulls by trict elimination playoffs here at the local club on Friday, starting Ver seen. But today, after one|Lewicki's former employers in early in the morning and playing throughout the afternoon until season of glory, Danny is baffling Toronto but Watson hopes it will ; : nobody except his coach. take this time. they have a representative for the Ontario finals, to be played at| When he broke in with T. By rg 10 | . | oronto| In the reshuffle, Ron Murphy Orillia on Saturday, Jan, 14 ca K-w CANUCKS are being picked by Maple Leafs in 1950, managing di {moved alongside Dave Creighton many to win the OHA Junior title this winter but the way St. [rector Conn Smythe couldn't find| and Wally Hergesheimer on a sec- Mike's are going, it looks as if they must be rated highly also, not enough superlatives to describe the/ond line. The top-scoring Ranger to mention Marlboros and Teepees . . . MAHOVLICH, ace scorer for Fort William-born left winger, who|trio of Larry Popein, Andy Bath | St. Mike's, is leading the league with 44 points, but McDonald of the had oS omoralized the nate fate Fisia Dean Prentice was left| s is Ti ' Is wi hie EN LAUFMAN | Hockey Association wi is bril- ct. Seopess 18 Fight gu his heels With 42 a KEN L UrMay i the liant stickhandling, AGAINST CHICAGO - utchmen, is tops in the Senior scoring race "Ban | Four indifferent seasons later| The second-place' Rangers will and George Scholes, also Dutchmen, in second and third spots . . . the Leafs quietly dealt Lewicki to/try the new offensive alignment 3 GIL DODDS, the great Boston runner, won the James Sullivan Me- |New York Rangers, having re-| against Chicago Black Hawks at|cpe, K raaRorie morial Trophy award, 12 years ago today . . . PHIL WATSON is ceived 21 goals and approximately| Madison Square Garden Thursday| © skip, 9 going to put Danny Lewicki back at centre-ice spot, to see if he !he same number of headaches| night. can regain his scoring punch. Despite the improved showing of from their one time boy wonder| Besides Thursday's Chicago-New OSHAWA N.Y. Rangers this season; Lewicki, their ace last year, has remain. as 4 e Fesult of four years' work. York fixture, the Leafs and Cana-|G. Pearce, Wy Ry Ri fey e change of unfform appeared diens will go at it again in Mont |Ewart Nichoi, {to work wonders. Last season Le-|real while the third-place Detroit|joe walsh, Ee |wicki sniped 29 goals--the same|Red Wings entertain the last-place jack Judge, skip, 8: |number as Detroit's redoubtable| Boston Bruins, [ Seif | Gordie Howe. When Phil Watson| {took over as Ranger coach this| year Lewicki looked like the one] marksman he could count on. | WAS DISAPPOINTING Sport Scribes Rebel At Secret Workouts = ie smo, !the highest scoring club New York MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--Coach Jim for secrecy mostly because of inci- has seen in years. But Lewicki,| Tatum's intent to hide his plans for dents he said happened before an 18-goal man at this stage last Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl be-| Maryland and Oklahoma met in year with a fifth-place club, has hind a brick wall got him into a the 1954 Orange Bowl, finally of- Produced only seven this season. fuss Tuesday with reporters for| fered to let the Miami press in if| Today Watson announced plans Miami newspapers. coach Bud Wilkinson would. {to make a centre out of Danny, They protested vigorously his or- FINALLY AGREED hom nday, der to keep them out of the daily, Wilkinson, saying he didn't want three meals with them, ride the] Pep weighed 128%, Arel practices. Some threatened to take to become engaged in such a give busses back and forth to practice.| The . to helicopters and spy from over-|and take, agreed to permit writers| head who accompanied the team from|pre Another sports editor Morris Mc- Oklahoma and those in Miami to|claimed, "but one of them might| trouble in the Lemore of the Miami Daily News, watch his practices. | inadvertently wrote "If Tatum persists in this| "But I don't want any of those | doing somethi rather ridiculous attitude, I shall|guys with Maryland," he decreed.| He explained a writer unfamil-lhad piled up plenty of points to|sherk do everything in my power to dis-| Coach Tatum had intended to in-|iar 'with Maryland operations all|carry him through. i Tetry, cover all and any information, ru-| vite only his "home" press to the|season 'might say that so-and-so, Arel, 22, from Massena, N.Y.,|McPherson, mor or report on the Maryland practices. is a great pass catcher. And we tried desperately for a knockout Jude. plans of attack and defence and He offered McLemore and the might never have thrown a pass/but Pep kept away from him for] MacRorie, rint it or pass it on to Oklahoma other Miami representatives com- to him all season, but were trying the rest of the ninth and rallied] Munday, n some fashion plete freedom to talk with the play- to surprise Oklahoma next Mop lo win the 10th by a narrow mar: Fo i : y Waugh, Tatum, after arguing his reasons ers in the dressing room, eat their'day." gin We Tompoons Quebec League Montreal 3 Three Rivers 1 Western Junior Medicine Hat 0 Regina 6 Western League New Westminster 2 Seattle 7 Winnipeg 4. Edmonton 2 Atlantic Senior Fredericton 3 Moncton 6 Amherst 2 Saint John 3 PETERBOROUGH Norm Gainer, Don Haynes, Jim Burns, 0. M. Steer, skip, 2. sized shoe horn to get 1,500 people into the Whitby rink and unless all the Senior clubs (like the Inter-County Baseball men) are pre- pared to operate on a much more sensible financial budget, then a small arena can not produce enough gate receipts for a high-priced Senior "A" hockey club. TORONTO Geo. Lawson, Bill Bailey, Jim Wylie, Phil Terry, sip, 8. Lloyd Johnston, Kitchener-Waterloo scribe, says that it Is extremely doubtful that Whitby Dunlops will make the grade in Senior "A" ranks. With no Senior "A" teams in Toronto or even Hamilton, Whitby Is in a bad way geographically, to be accepted as a member of the Senior OHA "A" group which is actualiy a Western Ontario circuit. On the other hand, one big fact should be faced--if the Senior "A" OHA group needs new clubs (and they do) where can they get a better prospect than Whitby Dun. lops. Sure it's a long way from Windsor to Whitby but if Strat- ford folds next season, then they're going to need "new blood" and certainly, from a calibre standpoint, the Whitby Dunlops look like the one Senior '"B" club that is ready to move to high- er company. They are practically "running away" with the Eastern Ontario group race--they appear much too good for their opposition, so good in fact that some games are not even | VANCOUVER (CP)--Stan Leon- couple of TORONTO Jack Porter, Colin Farmer, Mac Tolmie, Sid Reynolds, skip, 8. SIMCOE Don Macdonald, Paul McPherson, Ivan Hill, Geo. M. Pleasance skip, 10; TILLSONBURG J.*W. Reid, W. Parkhill, W. P. Kirkwood, R. J. Sinclair, skip, TORONTO Sam Hollingsworth, Abe Pike, | George Hayes, « | Ross Mackintosh, skip, 10; TORONTO H. B. Pickrell, D. Kerr, E. E. Maynard, E. H. McPherson, skip, 3. HALIBURTON Ben Whitney, Ed. Kirk, Cliff Godwin, Norm Sisco, skip, §. OSHAWA Alf Higgs, Geo. Campbell, Irv. MacLeod, Elgin Munday, skip, 13; BLACKSTOCK Bruce Heaslip, Grant Campbell, Roy Turner, Bill Miller, skip, 8. TORONTO Reed Holmes, Aub Rhamey, TORONTO J. H. Mitchell, W. R. Clapp, D. M. McNaught, Freeman Waugh, skip, 4. ERNIE CAY 4: LUMBER 7 ALL YOUR BUILDING NEEDS PHONE RAndolph 5-0122 $23 to $1,500 Games Burton, Peer, Sherk, Diehl, Beaton, Post, Robins, Switzer, McNeil, Judge, Waugh, Terry, Sisco, 8. Reynolds, W. Thompson, Mackintosh, Second T. Reynolds, 8; Robinson, 7 Battersby, Veteran Willie Pep 'Decisions Andy Arel rats. ™ Burwash, MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)--|Tancock, Willie Pep, the old featherweight!D. Sinclair, boxing master. stood up under a|MacRorie, {vicious late assault by youthful | y¢asance, Andy Arel Wednesday night to NY neTaon score a unanimous decision over|R. sinclair, his former sparmate in the 10-| Miller, round main ,event at the Auditor. <. MacLeod, "Amount Repoy i in 2 Wess $ 50.47 100.93 | No. of Monthly Payments i Re, rd Month $ 51.00 102.00 Amount of Tuesday, said Tuesday night the/Open and would like to play in job was too good to turn doen. the French Open while I'm over One of Canada's outstanding|there."" | vrofessional golfers, Leonard saidt gig first appearance at Lachute| Not Dual Test of the U.S. Professional Soliers June he said. The Lachute season| Association, which he joined early| tarts May 15 and ends im Sep- wSliCAc0 wap) -- Josse Owens this year after giving up, his pose tember. : es A 3 ian off with the|tion as pro at Vancouver's Marine} ~ 5¢ Montreal, Gilbert E. Ayres, ympics Tuesday decried a/prive Club. ident of the Lachute Golf and meet" between the United States involve 'making brief appear- i 2 -1 A 4 at Lachute about 40 miles west ay Rusa Pe Pig Olympics. | ances there during the playing|or ontreal will be named early ernment-assigned good wil ror Seagonel Bale 30 actisl Yo he ey ks th er e hadi 0." The appointment marks the sec-| India, Malaya and the Philippines, "It's the first job like this that, 4 time a western professional--| interview that "unfortunately the "di : |. . . there should be more of them." |gian golf--has taken over one of] Dyess ls tying to make the Olym-|" 'His plans for the comng season,|(je big jobs in the East. Shortly| "I think, on the other hand thi {he said "involve playing a lot of hefore Christmas Pat Fletcher of will be one of the most interesti IS|golf. . . It would be safe to. say{he Saskatoon Golf and Country] | Eresing|ahout 15 or 20 tournaments. Club was named senior pro at said Owens, an administrative as i | sistant for the Illinois youth com-| He heads south within he next) mission. | WON TRACK EVENTS Owens won the 100 and 200 and anchored the winning U.S. 400 me're relay team in the 1936 Games at Berlin. i "We're overlooking the fact a lot of countries have one or two great middle distance men, and fine runners in Finland and Ger- many," said Owens. Owens said he tried to combat a "defeatist' attitude in India, cerning the Olympics. "They just dont see any reason to compet with favored countries," said Owens. he will continue on the pro circuit| ould be around late May or early tendency to build up a "dual He said his Lachute duties will Country Club said a teachng pro the 42 year-old Owens said in an has ever happened to a Canadian|poth of them top-ranking in Cana-| Olympic competitions ever held," | wiLL HEAD SOUTH Royal Montreal. metre events and the broad jump individual stars -- like England's Malaya and the Philippines con- QUALITY FUEL OIL -- EXPERT SERVICE 3. ABER 50.00 ai =r 1.57. 100.00 | Amount You __ Obtain Payments $14.00 28.00 30.00 40.00 10; 13; 10; PIAA B ULB IRRATRS 13115. | ; 33-year-old Pep, who ruled| rancoek "It isn't that T don't trust the the featherweight division through | Beaton, ss to watch the practices," he/most of the '40s, was in serious|Burwash, ninth and 10th | Robins, write a tip we were (rounds after Arel opened a gash|R: Robinson, ng new." over his left eye, but old Willie| paso" Third 1 1 Games D. Sinclair, Post, Burton, Smitheram, T. Reynolds, Worden, Battersby, Diehl, Sisco, R. Sinclair, 1 0; 8; 5(W); 11; 7; 11; 7: EXPORT CANADA'S FINEST CIGARETTE ASSOCIATES BUDGET PLAN LIMITED 111 SIMCOE ST. §. ebsve Canadian Tire Corp. RAndolph 5-6531 313 ALBERT ST. DIXON'S Mackintosh, 8. Reynalds, McNeil, TT aw pm A EE 1 EAR Pf 8 Sh CGT fe eh