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The Oshawa Times, 4 Mar 1960, p. 10

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70 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, Morch 4, 1960 sa CANAD Victoria Park, owned by E. P. Taylor of Toronto is : : 'Genosha Hawks : Capture Opener | | | | Oshawa Hotel Genosha Hawks |took a big step toward entering the second round of Ontario Bas- ketball Association playdowns last night when they trounced Toronto East Riverdale Inter- mediates 87-61 at Armstrong Community Centre in Toronto. The Hawks will carry a 26-point lead into the second game of the two-game, total-points series, to be played here at Donevan Col- legiate gym, Saturday night. The Oshawa club was never behind. They pulled ahead of the Toronto and District champions, early in the first stanza and never looked back. It was 11-0 at one stage of the first period and Toronto never got a score until the eight-minute mark in the game, Gord Davidson and Tom Olinyk were the sparkplugs in Oshawa"s first half offence as the former hit for 12 points and the latter 8. Bill Thompson was top man for East Riverdale scoring CARL CHESKI 9 points. The Hawks led 36-23 at halftime, and then they really turned it on. The Riverdale club threatened It was a team effort from there to move in front early in the|in, with Tom Olinyk excelling off ™h T 1enal with a outside shot could keep pace. But the Riverdales showed poor con- ditioning in the latter half and were no match for the Oshawaaus. High scorers for Oshawa were Carl Cheski and Gord Davidson with 22 points apiece. Tom Olinyk, who turned in a brilliant two way game, was next high with 20. Oldfield added 11 and Newey 6. Thompson was tops for Toronto with 21 points and Bob Perry scored 19. Bill Wright add- ed 10. In foul shooting Oshawa ex- celled as they've never done be- fore. They hit on 25-0f-33 at- tempts while East Riverdale scored 9-for-21. The Riverdales lost three players on fouls late in the game, which was very rough. Second. game of the series is this Saturday at 7.30 p.m. at the Donevan Collegiate gym with the winner entertaining either Wel- land or Barrie in the OBA sec- ond round. TORONTO EAST RIVERDALE -- Perry 19, Thompson 21, Bell 1, Hardy, Johnston 8, Russell 2, Dunn, Fonanna, Baker, Wright |Czechoslovakia's Olympic team. SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY'S GAMES Exhibition: Whitby Dunlops vs at 8.30 p.m, in Maple Leaf Gar- dens. i SATURDAY'S GAMES OMHA Playoffs: 'City League' Bantams vs Peterborough Ban- tams at 7.45 p.m. and 'City Lea- gue' Midgets vs Peterborough Midgets at 9.00 p.m. Both games at the Children's Arena. Union Tournament: Ford (Local 707) vs DeHavilland Factory (Local 112) at 10.00 a.m.; An- chela Brass (Local 399) vs De- Havilland Office (Local 673) at 11.30 a.m.; Trailers (Local 252) vs Massey Harris (Local 439), and Local 222 (Oshawa Tony's) vs Local 222 (Oshawa Belko's) at 2.30 p.m, All games at the Brad- ford Arena. Elimination Series. OHA Senior 'A' (Round-Robin): Kithcener-Waterloo Dutchmen vs Whitby Dunlops at 8.00 p.m in the Whitby Arena. BASKETBALL Y's Men's Biddy League (semi- final): Parts and Service vs Mun- dinger at 8.30 a.m. and Centre St. vs Southminster at 9.00 a.m. Both games at Simcoe Hall, Y's Men's Minor League: Fire- fighters vs Jaycee Whites at 9.30| am. and St. John's vs Police Whitby Dunnies Oppose Old Mates Four members of the Whitby Dunlops will, on Saturday night, find themselves playing against the men who were their team- 'mates last week. The four, back in Dunlop uniforms this week again, will be in the Whitby line- up when they host the Kitchener- Waterloo Dutchmen. The Dutchmen, silver medal winners in the Olympics last week meet the Dunnies at the arena here in the first game of a round robin series. It will be interesting to see how the Dutchmen stack up against the Dunnies, who many say, are headed for another Allan Cup win this year. Four bers of the Di Bobby Attersley, Fred Etcher, George Samolenko and Harry Sinden, were with the Dutchmen in their trip to Squaw Valley. They returned early this week and now find themselves facing former team-mates but it is ex- pected that the Dunnies can take the transition in their stride and not err and put the puck in the, wrong net. One of that quartet, Bobby At- tersley, suffered a knee injury at Squaw Valley, an injury which kept him out of Wednesday night's game in Belleville. This was the first game Attersley has missed Association at 10.15 a.m. Both because of injuries, in the six BOB ATTERSLEY years he has been with the elub, says manager Wren Blair, It is expected that he will take to the ice tonight in Toronto Maple Leaf Gradens against the Czecho- slovakian team and will be out again Saturday night in Whitby against the Dutchies. Kk [of hooks and Be at IAN HORSE WINNER seen winning The Seminole at | Feb. 20. Hockey is Manuel Hialeah Park, Miami, Fla, ' Ycaza. --CP from AP | second half as they sank six points in a row, cutting the Osh- awa lead to seven points. But 10, and Lloyd. Total 61. OSHAWA GENOSHA HAWKS -- Chewsi 22, Tom Olinyk 20, Old-| [the backboards pulling down a total of 11 rebounds in the second half and 21 in the game. [Carl Cheski picked this point to| Davidson continued his hot |get hot and turned in a tremend-|pace as did Cheski, and the Osh- {ous performance with a variety/awa club just coasted to their set shots that|win, John Newey chipped in six baffled the Toronto defence. points in the last two minutes of It didn't take long for the Osh-{the game to add to an already awa club to pick up, as a whole, |big lead. Only Bob Perry and field 11, Davidson 22, Dickenson, | Joe Olinyk 2, Newey 6, Kolodzie| 2, Rupert and Booth 2. Total 87.| Officials: S. Crowley and S.| Abrahms, Toronto; scorers, J Bush, Toronto, and B. Eagleson Oshawa. » | scored for Montreal, Billy Harris for Toronto. By THE CANADIAN PRESS Montreal Canadiens have done Canadiens Wallop Toronto Leafs 5-1 feared Horvath and linemates Vie Stasiuk and Johnny Bucyk, SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' | Hamilton Ti-Cats 'Sign Paul Balonick HAMILTON (CP)--Coach Jim {Trimble said Thursday that Ham- |ilton Tiger-Cats have signed Paul Balonick, North Carolina State's co-captain, The Big Four Tiger-Cats have been looking for a crack centre |what every sane observer pre- [dicted they'd do six months ago |--wrapped up their third consec- utive National Hockey League championship. The lordly Habitants demon- strated their superiority in con- |vincing fashion Thursday night, whipping Toronto Maple Leafs-- the only team with a chance to catch them--5-1 before a cheering audience of 14,715 Montrealers. for a league-leading fifth shutout. games at Simcoe HALL. Simcoe Hall Major League: Ontario Steel 'B's vs Walt's Bar- ber Shop at 11.00 a.m.; and On- tario Steel 'A's vs Jaycee Roc- kets at 11.45 a.m. OBA Intermediate 'A' Playoffs: Toronto East Riverdale vs Gen- osh Hawks at 7.30 p.m. in Don- evan Collegiate, SKIING Oshawa Ski Club championships 10.30 a.m. Senior Men's Cross- Country, four miles, once around the course and at 2,30 p.m. Senior Men's Downhill. Senior Ladies' Downhill immediately following. tioned as the fighter most likely to replace Chuvalo if he doesn't Eddie Machen May Fight Geo. Chuvalo VANCOUVER (CP) -- Fourth- ranked heavyweight Eddie Ma- chen will definitely box here with or without George Chuvalo, pro- Toler Tommy Moyer said Thurs- ay. Moyer said in a telephone in- terview from Portland there was a 50-50 ch that Machen would Ski Conditions Reported Good | TORONTO LED Leafs carried a 1-0 lead into the second period. Then Canadiens exploded for three goals within two minutes and 40 d Marshall started festivities at 8:50, Geoffrion banged in a re- bound less than a minute later| and at 11:30 Richard scored Montreal's 51st power-play goal this season. McDonald added the fourth late Hull -- almost everybody's choice for the league's most glamorous player -- scored his 36th goal in the second period and isted on centre Bill Hay's goal into an empty net one sec- ond before the game ended. He now has 39 assists and 76 points, one more than Horvath. Eddie Litzenberger, playing for the first time since a car acci- dent Feb. 4 killeu his wife and TORONTO (CP) -- Skiin | centres reported excellent to 25 |conditions as fresh snow blank- |eted the province. | Ideal conditions prevailed at Bancroft, Batawa, Bracebridge, Burlington, Cobourg, Markdale, Dagmar, Haileybury, Huntsville, Kirkland Lake, Britannia, Larder Lake, London, Madoc, Midland, Newmarket, North Bay, Orange- ville, Oshawa, Owen Sound, Pal- fight Chuvalo, the Canadian champion. Difficulty in reaching a finan- cial understanding was given as the reason for delays. Willie Besmanoff was men- Jean Beliveau Returns Sat. MONTREAL (CP)--Star centre Jean Beliveau of Montreal Cana- diens will Hockey League action Saturday. return to National Beliveau, virtually out of action for a month, saw the doctors GENOSHA HAWKS, this city's brand new Interme- diate "A" basketball elub, gunning for the provincial honors in that category, after mediate "B" title last year, last night, when they won their first 1960 season OBA playoff game, over East Riverdale in Toronto. Being a total-point series, the win puts the local '"cagers" in a good position to win the round, when they play the second game of the series, back here in Oshawa, at Don- evan Collegiate gymnasium, this Saturday night. Whitby Dunlops knocked right in Belleville, last nigh OHA Senior "A" round-robin playoff series, That vic- tory, coupled with the "home-ice" wins we expect the Dunnies to accomplish, just Allan Cup playoffs already--and when that happens, we'll pause for about one minute--no more--to wonder what ever happened to the Kitchener-Waterloo Dutch- men, the team that represented Canada in the 1960 Olympic Winter Games. BRIGHT BITS:-- Weather permitting, the Oshawa 8ki Club championships will be held this week-end, Saturday March 6-7, The Junior section championships have been postponed until a 1 annual Schoolboy Curling B tomorrow and the competition could prove very keen . . N.Y. RANGERS ha the U.S. Olympics team goal-tender sensation . . . . STRATFORD has made a bid to return to Inter-County Senior "B" or Intermediate ranks, with a view to coming up with a Senior team, a few years from now , MIKE GUZZELL, president Ski Association, predicts th Olympic Games will be abandoned and that each sep- arate sports group, skiing, stage its own individual championship meet. He could be quite right. But we find it hard to go along with the other story appearing today, namely that Guzzell is pre- paring for the 1964 Olympic (Winter) games at Banff «+... PETERBOROUGH J night to even up their OHA Junior "A" playoff series at one win apiece . . .., BOBBY LOCKE, South African golf star, is expected to have a complete recover, from the automobile accident of a few weeks ago, in which he suffered a serious eye injury TI-CATS have signed Paul State's co-captain, a talented centre, since Jake Gaudaur hung up his They fired 41 shots at netminder in the period and Moore scored injured him, assisted on Hull's grave, Parry Sound, Sault Ste. agree to the match, In Toronto, boxing promoter Frank Tunney said that if there was a Machen-Chuvalo bout it would be in Toronto. "Chuvalo is under contract to fight in Toronto in his next bout, which will be after the National Hockey League playoffs" at Maple Leaf Gardens, he said. boots, and the 23-year-old, 225- pound Balonick could be a key candidate, particularly as it ap- pears likely the club will lose its bid for Jim Taylor of Houston Oilers. Jr. Petes Tie Series PETERBOROUGH (CP) Peterborough Petes defeated Barrie Flyers 6-3 Thursday night in the second game of their best- of-seven Ontario Hockey Associa- tion Junior A quarter - finals. Barrie won the opener Wednes- day night 6-5. It was 2-2 in the first period and 4-3 for Petes going into the third. Flyers drew five of the 11 pen- altles in fast, clean action. It was a tight fray until Petes showed a stronger finish in the third period. Ed Butler of Barrie had his shoulder injured in a board crash in the first period. He returned briefly in the second but then re- |tired for the night. { Third game is in Barrie Satur- |day and fourth here Monday. Doug Senior and Bob Rivard leach fired two goals for Petes, |Wayne Connelly and Reg Mul- {holland counting one apiece. Con- nelly, Senior and Claude Larose |got two assists each. For Barrie, Pierre Gagne {scored two and rookie Wayne | Mayner one. Stratford Back In Inter-County Play | GALT (CP) -- Stratford made jan official bid to return to the {Inter-County Baseball Association fold as either a Senior B or inter- copping the Ontario Inter- got off on the right foot off Belleville McFarlands, t for a good start in the about puts them into the ater date , ... OSHAWA"S onspiel will be held here ve signed Jack McCartan, of the Canadian Amateur at after 1964, the Winter skating, hockey, etc, will uniors defeated Barrie last HAMILTON Balonick, North Carolina HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS {mediate entry at the association's | March meeting here. Absent from {the senior baseball picture in re- By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League A Pts. Montreal Toronto Detroit Chicago Boston New York Thursday's Results Chicago 2 Boston 0 Toronto 1 Montreal § Saturday's Games Detroit at Montreal Boston at Toronto New York at Chicago Eastern Professional League WLTTPF APt 168 177 61 172 163 60 8. Sudbury Montreal T. 'Rivieres Hull-Ott S.S. Marie Kingston Thursday's Results Montreal 1 Trois-Rivieres 1 Hull-Ottawa 4 Sault Ste. Marie 2 OHA Junior A Series B (Best-of-seven Quarter-final) w Saturday's Game Peterborough at Barrie Nova Scotia Senior Amherst 11 Windsor 1 (Amherst leads best-of-seven final $1) 6 winnipeg Rangers 2 Brandon 2 |cent years, the Stratford group has reorganized this year. They {hope to play Senior B or inter- mediate with a young club and eventually move back into the 1-C's Senior A series. | 1-C officials will investigate the {possibility of reforming the dor- Cape Breton Senior Glace Bay 2 Sydney 8 (Sydney wins best-of-nine final [ Western International Rossland 3 Nelson § Manitoba Junior Saskatchewan Junior Flin Flon 3 Saskatoon 4 one OHA Intermediate Collingwood 2 Durham § Metropolitan Junior game ries and enter OBA playoffs as| intermediates. Johnny Bower and held Leafs to a total of 17. Jacques Plante was called on for only two saves in the second period. In Boston, Chicago Black Hawks and netminder Glenn Hall shut out Boston 2-0 to move four points ahead of the fifth-place Bruins. Hawks' left winger Bobby Hull collected a goal and an as- sist to wrest the scoring lead away from Boston eentre Bronco Horvath. Don Marshall, Bernie fron, Maurice (Rocket) Richard, Ab McDonald and Dickie Moore in the third. Just before the game ended 808 Marie, Peterborough, Sundridge, Sudbury, Teeswater, Toronto and after skating practice Thursday and was advised to rest his groin Heating Problem ? For the finest in * OIL HEATING * GAS HEATING * GAS WATER HEATERS Installation by Experts HEATING SALES W. Borrowdale RA 3-4878 the crowd came to its feet when Montreal's Marcel Bonin and Toronto's Gerry James mixed it along the boards. James was floored by Bonin, a muscular one-time bear-wrestler, in Tor- onto recently and fans were hoping for a rematch. But both were sent to the dressing-room before a punch was thrown. Geof-|STYMIED BY HALL Hall was Chicago's star, stopping 25 shots, many from the A snowstorm delayed the ar- rival of regular goalie Harry Lumley and centre Charlie Burns and Don Simmons played in goal. Simmons was beaten 74 by Hawks the last time he played but came up with a good effort Thursday night, stopping 27 shots. Saturday Canadiens host De- troit Red Wings, Boston is in Toronto and New York Rangers visit Chicago. Sunday Montreal is in Chicago, Toronto in Boston and Detroit in New York. PORT ARTHUR (CP)--Mike Guzzell, president of the Cana- dian Amat Ski A jation predicts the Winter Olympics will be abolished after the 1964 games and replaced by a tour- nament open to amateurs: as well as professionals. Guzzell, who attended the 1960 Winter Games at Squaw Valley, Calif., said the move would come 'because of the professionalism attached to so many of the athletes and the commercialism which has turned the games into a carni- val stage." Many sport officials agree that there is no point in mak- | ing hypocrites out of Olympic competitors, with few being able to qualify honestly under the Olympic code, he said. The answer would be an open championship. | Guzzell said that under such CANADA'S SKI PRES. SAYS OLYMPICS 'OVER' a system the state - employed athletes from Communist coun- tries would have to compete with the best in the United States and Canada. This would open the way for top Canadian professional hockey teams to participate. That's the only way Canada will win another hockey cham- plonship, he sald, because of the great prejudice against the Canadian entry. '""We knew right from the first that the Dutchmen weren't going to win," said the ski official. "There are just too many things against them, And that's not just an excuse, it's a fact. "The hockey officials force Canada, who invented the game to play their way--their style. It's not even international rules really because the referees that handled the Canadian games Safied them for any rough stuff at all." Jackson Second School Figures VANCOUVER (CP) -- Carol Heiss of the United States breezed to her fifth straight women's world figure - skating champion- ship Thursday, night, then gave her competitors a hint at bad news. She might go after a sixth crown next year, she said, but that's only '"'maybe." The 20-year-old ice queen from European champion Sjoukje Dyjkstra of the Netherlands fin- ished d and Barbara Ann {Lachine 3 Sorel 6 | (Sorel leads best-of-seven semi. | final 1-0) YESTERDAY'S STARS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Goaler Glenn Hall of Chicago] Black Hawks who held the Bos-| ton Bruins to a 2-0 shutout. | Montreal Canadiens' Bernie! Geoffrion who scored the winning goal as Montreal swamped Tor- onto 5-1. | | Greensboro 4 New York 2 | International League Mi lis 10 Indi. lis 2 NHL LEADERS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Standings: Montreal, won 87, lost 13, tied 11, points 85. Points: Hull, Chicago 75. LUTON, England (CP)--A new Goals: Horvath, Boston 37, Anglican church in this Bedford- Assists: McKenney, Boston 43. shire town has a window extend-| Shutouts: Hall, Chicago five. |ing from ground level 35 feet to Penalties: Brewer, Toronto 138|the roof, enabling passers-by to 'minutes. watch the services. VISIBLE WORSHIP Roles of Los Angeles was third --the three ending in the same order as they did a week earlier in the Winter Olympics. WENDY GRINER 7TH Canada's top competitor was Wendy Griner, 15-year-old Cana- dian champion from Toronto who placed seventh in unofficial fig- ures. The pert youngster, making her first appearance in the tourna- ment, slipped a notch from her sixth - place standing after the compulsory school figures but her showing was considered spectac- ular. Offi~ial figures gave Miss Heiss 1,69¢ ° points, 642.3 points and Miss Roles 1,- 600.7. | Regine Heitzer of Austria was (fourth, Joan Haanappel of the [Netherlands fifth and Jana |Mrazkova-Docekalova of Czecho- |slovakia sixth. | The Czech girl's great free |skating moved her from ninth place after compulsory figures. Miss Heitzer also moved up with her free skating, reversing places with Miss Haanappel. Miss Griner had 1,520.1 points. Canada's other two entrants were well down the list. Sonia Snelling of Toronto was 13th with 1,440 points and Shirra Kenworthy of Vancouver 15th with 1,395.7. LADY IN BLACK Miss Heiss, a blonde beauty in a black silk crepe outfit with pleated skirt and deep V-neckline, skated with the confidence of a champion and drew the apprecia- tion of the judges as well as the crowd of 2,500. Shortly after she left the ice, she told reporters she wanted two things to be clear: "One, I'm not going to turn pro and I'will never join an ice show. Two, I don't know what I'm go- ing to do next year. As far as competing goes my answer is maybe. The only reason I would| compete next year is so I could complete my college studies and skate at the same time." Miss Heiss attends New York Miss Dyjkstra 1,-(University. She has been linked|three-tenths ahead of Canada's romantically with Alan Hayes| Jenkins, world ehampion four| Ingemar Will Fight Archie But First § FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) Ingemar Johansson said Thurs- injury a few more days before Woodstock. playing. Centres reporting good econdi- tions were Hockley, Collingwood, Kitchener, Snow Valley and New Hamburg, Misses Hole-In-One By Mere Inches BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) Two and a half inches isn't very far, but golfer John Ru- edi found out it's as good as a mile in the first round of the $15,000 Baton Rouge Open Thursday. Tournament officials are of- fering $1,000 for a hole-in-one during the tournament. On the 120-yard, par 8 fifth hole, the pro from Pine Val- ley, N.C. dropped his tee shot Just two and a half inches from the cup. Travelling < a day he was willing to defend his world heavyweight boxing title against Archie Moore, current light heavyweight champion, but 'there won't be a fight anywhere the Patterson fight." Johansson's share of the re-| cetps from the June 26 fight in| which he dethroned Floyd Patter- son is being held by the New| York Athletic Commission to fh- sure a return bout. The champion stopped here en route to the Gaza Strip where he will put on a series of exhibitions for UN forces. He said he planned | to return to Geneva March 26] and start training for the return | bout with Patterson. It now is| tentatively set for June 22 in New | York. | REMEMBER WHEN. . .? Way back in hockey history, the Toronto Wellingtons hockey club notified the trustees of the Stan-| ley Cup they would be unable to compete for the trophy because of injuries to their players. That was §7 years ago today, and the Ottawa Silver Seven won the cup that season for the first of |three straight triumphs. The cup was donated by Lord Stanley, the governor-general, in 1893 and in |its early years was open to chal- |lenges from any team for the amateur championship of Can- ada. years ago and now a lawyer, Carol declined comment on ine reports, MEN'S FIGURES The championships continued today with the completion of men's compulsory figures and the compulsory portion of the ica- dance event. The men's free skat- ing and the free dance are set for Saturday night. Alain Giletti, 21 of Paris held a small lead over Don Jackson of Oshawa after the first three of the six men's figures. But Jackson is acknowledged as superior in free skating and con- tinues as favorite to win the title unless Giletti's 9.3-point margin is increased in today's figures. Jackson, 19 came from behind with his free skating perform- ance in the Olympics to take the bronze medal and leave Giletti |fourth. ; Fifteen-year-old Don McPher- son of Stratford, ranked second to Jackson nationally, was in eighth place with 255.9 points, other entry, 18 -year - old Louis Stong of Toronto. 1 if I don't get my money soon for Hy COSTLY DIKES LITTLEHAMPTON, Eng. (CP) More than £320,000 will be spent on building flood embankments WHY NOT FLY For information regarding any form of travel ... DIAL RA 3-9441 'We have a direct Toronte telephone line for prompt Alrline Reservations MEADOWS TRAVEL SERVICE 22 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH, OSHAWA Overseas 'The modern way to travel is by air.' DIAL RA 3.9441 West Sussex. 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