Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 16 Nov 1959, p. 11

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i re T------------------ ALL-AMERICA QUARTERBACK HONORS EVERY TIME oy By DON ATTFIELD 'anadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--Coach Frank Clair's investment of confidence in Canadian quarterback Russ Jackson is' paying off hand- and probably sooner than ex] r Jackson scored both Ottawa touchdowns with flashy running performances in Rough Riders' 17-5 win Saturday over Hamilton Tiger-Cats, The second half of the total point Big Four final is slated for Hamilton next Saturday, and will be televised nationally by the CBC. Hi At the start of the season, while Ottawa was losing its first five games, Riders' quarterbacking battery was the envy of just about no one. Now Jackson, backed up bv triple-threat import Babe Parilli picked up in mid - season from Green Bay Packers, has every other coach in the league green- s: eyed SPORTS IN BRIEF | bir i Jackson, 22, comes from Ham- ilton's McMaster University. Ot- fawa had third draft choice two yedrs ago and grabbed him after I La0B0s CUY TWO CEOOTBALL DEATH (ott Btw, 190 pounds *#'ORO} (CP) Toronto. WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) hy : eco of te Ontario Hockey Fi 'ootbal] 'claimed the life of a an honors gradusts jn ath, and Mssociation Junior A series an-|third Massachusetts teen - ager teaches high 5 oy ore ig nounced Sunday they have given|Within a week Saturday with the| Last year he play e spare netminder Bill Moxom and|death of Bruce G. Mackenzie, 16, tight winger Bobby Davidson) Who was injured Wednesday their outright releases. |while playing in a sandlot game. Marlboro manager John (Pea- Two other boys, both playing mats) O'Flaherty said that sandlot football, suffered fatal Moxom will be returned to the|injuries earlier last week, Helleville OHA Junior B club| and Davidson has the opportu-| Lg Back Th nity of joining up with any club|, = Yh hé can make. {American Power Boat Associa- "Professional rights to both|tion decided Saturday that the : ; plivers still belong to the Tor- 1960 Gold Cup race, the associa-| better scoring opportunities Sat- onto Maple Leafs of the. National| lion's top event, will be held on|urday, and got close enough on Lake Mead at Las Vegas, Nev.,|three occasions to try field goals. Hockey League. Nov. 13. Steve Oneschuk completed one LAFAYETTE, La. (AP)--Billy| Teachers Retain Unbeaten Record Gasper of Apple Valley, Calif., 'blazed over the Oakburne Coun- | ty Club course with a two-under- par:69 Sunday to win the $15,000| ette: open golf tournament | a Thole total of 273, 11) In Civil Service League action less then ten minutes in the 3 |at Bowmanville, the Firemen and game Hogg gave Teachers a 2 to ol MacNEIL CUT {Dairymen won, while Teachers/1 lead. Robinsons fought back TORONTO (CP) -- Defence- and Robinson's tied. au tied the score two minutes man acNeil of Toronto The first game saw the Fire- later. a Wéple Leafs has been, optioned men take tg to 2 deci ne from | Robi led in penalties pick- tb Rochester Americans of the Smith Transport. Firemen took ing up four to the Teachers' two. Atierican Hockey League. Mac-|the lead before the game was two LEAGUE STANDING Nell, 'a native of Sydney, N.S. minutes old on Graham's first NO.V 12 was with Americans last season. goal of the night. About. three Leafs manager Punch ch|minutes later Graham got his Teachers said MacNeil will replace play- second to give Firemen a 2 to 0|Times Tea by Steve Kraftcheck, side-|lead, only to have Myles score Robinson by injuries. (for Smiths to cut the lead to 2 to |Firemen A WN THIS ASE oP SPECIALISTS HES backs who were let go at the end of the season. Ottawa ob- tained veteran Frank Tripucka but Jackson became the first string quarterback this year aud Tripucka eventually was re- leased. Parilli backs up Jackson and does the punting. Hamilton appeared to have the off par. George Bayer of| agles, Ill, shot a 68 to fin-! sh. second at 277. ~ | - " w= oy Sop Quarterbacking Helps Ottawa Defeat Hamilton shadow of two import quarter-| from Saskatchewan in a trade, '00TBALL SCORES STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS UBC 7 Western 34 by West was blocked--and the| (At Toronto) safety touch. They led 8-4 at half Eastern Junior time after Oneschuk kicked his|Montreal Notre Dame de Grace field goal and first single, and| ¢ Toronto North York 14 went ahead 17-4 in the third quar-| (Sudden-death final) ter on Jackson's second touch- Western Intermediate down and two singles, Vancouver Columbians 8 Winni- Oneschuk closed out the scor-| peg St. Vital 14 ing in the final period. (Sudden-death final) Riders gained 18 first downs Nova Scotia glate and Ticats 15. Paced by fullback|St, Francis Xavier 30 Dalhousie 1 Dave Thelen, with 103 yards|(Sudden-death final) rushing, tops in the contest, and Ontario Intermediate B Jackson with 86 yards, Ottawa 0 Niagara Falls 14 rushed for a total of 215 yards.|(Sudden-death final) SUNDAY Hamilton gained 156 yards rush- National League Pittsburgh 14 New York 9 ing, with Gerry McDougall run- ning for 88 yards and Ralph Gold- ston for 42. Chicago Cards 17 Philadelphia 2 LITTLE PASSING Baltimore reen Bay In the air, Riders gained a|Cleveland 31 Washington 17 total of 79 yards, with Jackson Los Angeles 17 Detroit 23 completing three of seven at-|San Francisco 3 Chicago Bears 14 RIDER LINE TOPS tempts for 58 yards and Parilli Eastern Intermediate Ottawa's 'other points were|two of three tries for 21 yards. Brantford 0 Montreal Lakeshore scored when the hard - rushing Team ptain Bobby Simp Als 15 . 'Rider line rouged quarterback all-star offensive end, took three | (Sudden-death final) {Bernie Faloney behind the goal passes for 58 yards. | Western Junior |line for two points in the first] Faloney completed six of 17| 61 V. |quarter; on Merv Collins' long attempts for 102 yards, with| Shore 7 y kickoff which went for a point; Howell taking two heaves for 43| (Sudden-death final) | Parilli's punt from 42 yards out yards and Gene Jones, two for East for another; and Davey West's 39 yards. Dartmouth 21 Cornell 12 conversion of Jackson's second The hard-hitting plav was re-|Yale 38 Princeton 20 touchdown. [flected in penalties, Ottawa los-| Syracuse 71 Colgate 0 Ottawa took a 80 lead in the|ing 65 yards on five and Hamil- Penn 24 Columbia 6 first quarter on Jackson's first| ton 73 on eight. Many of the calls| Penn State 46 Holy Cross 0 touchdown--the convert attempt'were for rough play. Pittsburgh 28 Notre Dame 13 Brown 16-Harvard 6 Boston U. 26 Boston Coll. 7 Navy 16 George Washington 8 Rutgers 12 Villanova 6 Rochester 31 RPI 0 South Louisiana 8. 27 Mississippi S. 0 Mississippi 37 Tennessee 7 William and Mary 9 Florida S. 0 Georgia 14 Auburn 13 Duke 27 Wake Forest 15 Maryland 28 Clemson 25 Alabama 9 Georgia Tech 7 Tulane 6 Vanderbilt 6 Midwest Detroit 14, Western Michigan 0 Indiana State 19 Hanover 16 for three points and missed two others for singles. They lost the ball on downs on fthe Ottawa 30 on another occa- sion. Jackson, who guided Ottawa in the first quarter, uncorked a 25-yard run from scrimmage for Riders first touchdown. He ran the end on the option play he likes so well. Ottawa didn't get close again exoept when Jackson slashed through in the third quarter for 37 yards to the Hamilton three. He carried across on the next play. Clair sent Parili in for the second quarter, but wind, rain and mud played havoc with any attempts at a passing game and |Jackson played out the second A Qacks North Grads Net 105 For Fifth Win In an Oshawa Industrial Bas- Cay Lumberkings in a league fix- ketball League fixture at Simcoe! ture. Hall the red hot first-place Grads; GRADS -- Booth, 22; Davidson, {chalked up another convincing 18; Wrubel, 2; Upshaw, 2; victory by thumping the d|J., 18; Kolodzie, 14; Cheski, 27; Islane 'Coca Cola squad 105 - 85. Worsley, 2. Fouls, 19 out of 21. Grads opened up the game at, COCA COLA -- Olinyk T., 12; a terrific pace as they pumped Anderson, 2; Fuller, 8; Horton, home 24 points to the losers 12/4; Mech, 18; Reynolds, 20; An- to jump into a fast lead. Big|drey, 16; Kelly, 5. Fouls, 9 out Bob Booth came through with of 15. some fine shooting ») Jute She wicirs witie Dun' Autrey kewt| CROSSWORD PUZZLE The winners widened their lead in the second period 34-31. Carl ACROSS {Cheski, Joe Olinyk and Gord § Social class Davidson all combined to push of India |{the Grads ahead while Bob Rey-| @, Not mamas inolds, Myron Mech and Dave | 31, Alaskan Kelly tried in vain to keep within river reach for the Cokemen. 22. Convex moldings 13. Grasps firmly Iowa 16 Ohio State 7 Missouri 26 Kansas State 0 Tulsa 17 North Texas State 6 Purdue 29 Minnesota 23 Indiana 26 Michigan 7 2. Dawn of day 3. Light military encounter 23.To an : Od a SINIAIRIEIS] sheep KIAIRIEN 26. French. [TIA SE [EILISIE] Coa Cola tried to fight back into contention after the halftime in- termission but the hest they s urance 07, Nu-Way Michigan S. 15 Northwestern 10 Standing THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, November 16, 1959 17 OSHAWA BOWLING NEWS (381); Barbara Reesor 420 phe sed ih HL i 0- 9, Schofield's Rugs 0-6. RADIATOR LEAGUE i f i di FH £2 £ i HE il t { Be L{ 1 ic nat LE ] ol : BE i |] - ! | , [1 deh ger fd Biz pH 7% ) PI REEER EI) (258, 214), and M. Robson 604 as). Lemon League: D . May 91, G. 90, H. 1G. A GOOD FUTURE AS A DRAFTS. "AMERICAN SCHOOL 100 DUNDAS ST. DESORONTO. ONT. Send, without eny obligation, come on Training' Book | ELECTRONICS MECHANICAL ENGINFFRING FILEATRICAL ENGINFERING CVI. ENGINEERING RISINESS MANAGEMENT PRIVATE ETARY ACCANINTIVG ARPNITEFTIIR ~ONTRACTING AND BUILDING triples Ketelko 755, B. Morey 685, A. J. old Grasshopper McLean himself 251. 638, V. Morey 627, L. Peebles Nice bowling fellows but you can do better. The Nickle Plate are watching our scores pretty close. FIREMEN'S MIXED LEAGUE There were only four 600 triples last week, €%0 triples -- Harry 693 (256, 234, 203), Palmer Knight 649 (243, 223), Al Prout 615 (226, 212), Keith Knox 604 (217, 207). 200 singles -- Diane Robinson 248, Gord Young 236, Mary Mallette 231, Anw- {pg drey Keys 230, 203; Joan Batten 227,|A Bruce 201. Ernie MacKenzie 224, Eddie Smith 223,| Lemon League -- 0. MacDerma'd 95, Joan Marks 215, 206; Art 213.3. Bevan 94, V. Bittorf 91, E. Davis 82. Connie Little 212, Gord Brough 212. Ken Gibson 210, Art Tuson 208, Sid WHITBY TUESDAY NIGHT BOWLING Merringer 207, Don Thoms 203, Don Marks 200. Lemon League -- S'd Merringer, Vern Johnston, Jack Peeling, Ann Gibson, Doris Vermoen, Sylvia Logeman, Con- nie Rowden, Pamela Constable. Points taken --False Alarms 4, Lag- gers 0, Dummies 4, Slow Pokes 0, Co2's 3, Smokey Six 1, Fire Balls 3, High Pressures 1. Team standing -- Dummies 8. Co2's 7, False Alarms 7, Smokey Six 4, Fire Balls 4, Slow Pokes 1, High Pressures 1, Laggers 0. RAINBOW LEAGUE -- Brown 3, Yellow 0; Or- ange 3, Purple 0; Black 3, Mauve 0; Pink 3, Marron 0; Rose 3, Beige 0; Red 3, Tan 0; Lime 2, White 1; Grey 2, Coral 1; Jade 2, Nacy 1; Gold 2, Silver 1; Green 2, Blue 1. doubles --Edna Baker 453 Jus Dutslle CAR COAT TORONTO (CP) -- Yvon Du- with the purchase of any relle, Canadian light Boris] J J seca] MEN'S SUIT! what tired of trying to make the 175-pound limit, figures the ex- L tra weight will give him strength bd when he seeks to lift the Domi- nion heavyweight crown from] George Chuvalo Tuesday. Peebles 304, E. Westlake 281, C. Litster 262, B. Morey 277. C, Holt 25, J. West- 368), 760 (316), J. Cassells 758 (357), J. ton 746, Chuck Gill 744 (316), W. 744, Ron Swartz' 741, M, Jordon 736, Men! Look at This! FREE | SUBUREAN or gy OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT AMACKAY WINS SINGLES |" "POKYO (AP) -- American ten- nik star Barry Mackav captured championship Sunday by beating Minutes of play. Davis Cupper Atsushi ls Miyagi 62, 63, 63. Y.. SPECTATORS HURT Be CAO (AP) -- More than a Fry put the puck past Robinson Dodsworth, Times spectators suffered minor/to end the scoring when a wooden bridge cgllapsed over the track Sunday getting four minors to Smith's C. Kemp, Robinson's With five minutes left in the ame Lyon got his second goal score 5 to 1. With one minute left Sf . Firemen also led in penalties, during the first lap of the Macao one misconduct. Grand Prix on this Portu- ese island hugging the Chinese inland. Ron Hardwick of Hong| ng, driving a Jaguar, won the | DAIRYMEN WIN The Dairymen nosed out Sub- way Lunch 4 to 3 in a fast, rough 228-mile, 60 . lap race in three 8ame that saw 11 penalties hand- Hours, 35 minutes. SPORTS WRITER DIES ed ol Dal {lead on McKee's goal to take a , six to Subway and five to en. Dairymen took the ARREN, Pa. (AP)--Charles|1 to 0 lead. Subwav Lunch came . (Chilly) Doyle, 75, ball tional p of the B retired back with goals by Nicholson, H.| Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph base- Wilson and Rotor to take a 3 to 1/ing writer and a former na-|lead. Durno cut the lead to 3 to 2/champion Ingemar Johansson ball about a minute later and Beaton Said Sunday concerning Vincent The Firemen came back on (Dairy goals by Higgens and Lyon to Smith's the Japan national singles tennis ive them a 4 to 1 lead after 15| LEADING SCORERS T Copeland, Robinson's |Hogg, Teachers {of the: game which made the Myles, Smith's Subway acanrace ET) NANO N-D RD © pt bt BD Creag =t=t--3 1 Bean8 N e = 5 7 ELLE ECE |D. Taylor, Times Miller, Robinson Durno, Dairymen |{Cole, Times | Hooper, Firemen Johansson To Fight March 1 NEW YORK (AP)--"He's talk- to himself," heavyweight Ree RN an aR oneness Writers Association of America, tied the score at 3 to 8 five min-|J. Velella's ammouncement that died in hospital here Sunday after|utes later. a long {liness. Doyle was an out- With ten minutes left in the the Ingo - Floyd Patterson re- match will be held March 1 in fielder in the old Pennsylvania- game Welch broke the tie for the Miami's Orange Bowl. Ohio league before joining the Dairymen giving them a 4 to 3 Pittsburgh Gazette - Times, now win. TEACHERS TIE ROBINSONS defunct, in 1914. WINS CONSOLATION PACE "I'll fight before the end of | June, definitely," Johansson said |during a break in rehearsals for a television show. But he ruled The last game of the evening INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP)--W. saw Robinsons hold the Teachers| D. Direct poured on the speed in to a 2-all tie in a fast game that that the out a fight before May or June, Velella said in Miami Saturday "fight is on" for March | the stretch and coasted home was a goaltender's battle all the 1 and he might trv to ad easfly to win the $10,000 Ameri- way. 8 advance ion Robi can Pacing Classic d the scoring Battirday in 1:59 3-5. The winner on B. Kemp's "goal only to have returned $8.60. Lumber Bill was Teachers tie the score four min- the date to Feb. 26. He has ar- ranged to rent the Orange Bowl for $60,000. The lawyer and politician and could do is battle to a 24-24 draw. Tom Oinyk, Myron Mech and Bob Reynolds led the losers while Carl Cheski and Ed Kolodzie kept the Grads set out in froat 82-67 at the three quarter mark. The Grads pushed father ahead in the final quarter as they out- netted Cokes 23-18 to be the first team this year to break the cen- tury mark. | HIGH SCORERS Carl Cheski, Bob Booth, Gord Davidson, Joe Olinyk and Ed |Kolodzie with 27, 22, 18, 18 and 14 points respectively led the Grads to vietory while Bob Rey- nolds, Myron Mech, Don Andrey and Tom Olinyk with 20, 18, 16 and 12 points' were best for Coca Cola. This victory was the fifth in a row for the Grads and it gives them a six-point lead over their closest rivals. Carl Cheski contin- ues to lead the league with his sensational shooting and seems to be well on his way to another scoring record. . Tuesday evening at Simcoe Hall, {Coca Cola tangle with Ernie prises, said he would notify Jo-| hansson by letter, telegram, tele- phone or in person. Johansson sound skeptical at hat, remarking: "I don't talk to 14. Small anchor 15. Correlative of neither 16. Headlands 17. Adorned, as a royal cloak 20. Right (abbr.) | 21. Followed 22. Flat-topped hill 24, Foxlike 25. Coin of Peru 26. Exclamags, tions of disgust 28. Select 81. Type measured $2. Body of water 33. USSR. 36. Wander about idly 87. Mary Ann Evans 38, Portion 40, Taut 41, ---- space 42, Endured * 43. Gardener's 9. Author Horatio's charm 10. Spanish nap 28. Mandarin 16. Boy's tea 29. 38. Troubles 30. Senior 39. French citizens marshal $2. Quoted had The Baie Ste. Anne, N.B. fish- erman said Saturday he will be at his normal weight of 188 and much stronger than he was dur- ing his two unsuccessful shots at Archie Moore's world light heavy title. "I weakened myself by shed- ding too much weight to make the 175-pound limit for Moore," Durelle said. "Right now I feel much stronger and I'm in better shape." 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