Cm owe Se ew ewww WCW w ei Nie I Ti i Me ee ' ainsi a ee ee i ae ae 16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, March 21, 1962 picture. That's Bill Gadsby (4) stretched out at the left | and goalie Hank Bassen( on | his stomach in front of his net) has his MISSING ! Looking like a freak--with one head and four feet, like two bodies join- ed together, these Detroit players supply an interesting Hull Scores His 48th As Hawks Blank Wings By THE CANADIAN PRESS the goal was the last in a 3-0 Bobby Hull scored his 48thVictory over the Red Wings goal of the season. Tuesday Hull now has two more games night, setting off a wild demon---at Montreal Saturday night stration by fans at Chicago Sta-and New York Sunday night--| dium. He connected in the lastin which to equal or surpass the) period against Detroit Red0-goal scoring record of Cana- Wings diens' Maurice Richard tied by} Screams. shrieks yells werebernie Geoffrion, also of Cana- mixed with the toots of horns in "¢"s, last season the demonstration that lastedcosSTLY DEFEAT eight minutes. The victory meant It was Chicago's last homethe Black Hawks, game of the 1961-62 Nationalclinched third place Hockey League schedule andleague standings. But ISPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR nothing to who have in the for the 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' THE SCOTCH CUP, put up for annual competition as the world's championship emblem of curling, by the Scotch Whisky Association, is apt to take on a definite. flavor of Canadian Rye, if the current trend is maintained. They started the competition in 1959 and the Richardsons from Saskatchewan won it that year, again 1960, then Hee Gervais and his Alberta rink won it last year. Yesterday, the 1962 Canadian Brier champions, the Richardsons once again, claimed the Scotch Cup for Canada for the fourth- straight time. They won the curling trophy in appropriate manner, via a clean sweep -- using brooms, that is, and not the brushes. Yesterday, the Canadian curlers nosed out United States 9-8 in what was the closest game in this year's round-robin tournament, Then to wind .up, the Richardsons beat "Wullie'" Young and his Scotsmen 13-8 and instead of using their favorite "knockout" style, they played the Scottish "draw" game and promptly amazed the Scottish curling enthusiasts. In the last end -- the Richardsons drew six of in before arms hiding Gadsby's head. Closer to camera, defenseman Warren Godfrey (5) of the Red Wings looks on. There outstretched | isn't a Chicago Black Hawk | game in Chicago Stadium 3-0. Stanley Cup playoff berth, it) was a costly defeat The Wings still trail fourth- place New York Rangers by one point and each team only has two more games to play the 70-game_ schedule ends Sunday night The Black Hawks concen- trated on setting up Hull for Red Wings, struggling for the shots Tuesday night. He had 11 clean ones, missing five and having goalie Hank Bassen of the Red Wings block the others, before teammate Bill Hay helped him for a goal. Hull appeared reluctant talk about the possibility matching Richard's record. LAUDS TEAM "All I want to talk about how the fellows on this team are with me all the time out there, trying to set up shots for me, giving me all the chances they Iilness to of is Sad Sam Jones NEW YORK (AP)--A medical report showing "a low-grade! |malignancy'"' has delayed Sam) Jones' comeback try and| clouded Detroit Tigers pitching} picture in the American League, | Jones, whose trademark is a} |whiplash pitching delivery, will) |be lost to the club for an indefi- nite period while undergoing special treatment. The 36-year-old righthander, one of the National League's | STRATEGY TEST European Soccer Cup semi-Final Is Tonight By PAUL WESTBROOK LONDON (CP)--A teak-tough Scotsman. and an ebony idol from Mozambique fight a flood- lit duel in Lisbon tonight. Craggy wing-half Dave Mac-} Kay and sharp-shooting inside- forward Silva Eusebio are the key contestants in the European *|Cup semi-final between Totten- * {ham Hotspur and Benfica. {| Eusebio, a dusky 19-year-old from Portugal's East African 'icolony, is rated the deadliest shot in Europe. He represents the most serious threat to Tot- tenham's cup hopes. To neutralize the danger, Tot-| tenham is relying on the tough ; | defensive work of MacKay, plus tia 'retreating' defence system that Gutmann may make some changes to get a heavier attack and Nicholson will juggle his lineup to get a stronger rear- guard. Benfica won Cup last year, beating Barcelona 3-2 in the final. An English team never has won the competition. In the other semi-final Spain's Real Madrid meets Standard Liege of Belgium. This is re- Spaniards, who have won the cup five times in the last six years. See Queen's Plate the European} ; garded as a walkover for the| § Queen Mother Will dreamed up by manager Billy Nicholson, WILL DROP BACK Mother will present the tradi-) back towards its goal when Ben-|the 103rd running of the Queen's fica launches an attack. This|Pjate at Woodbine June 16, presents a solid barrier to the) Jt will mark the second time probing shots of Eusebio and the'the Queen Mother has witnessed } in range of the camera in this picture--but they were around--they won last night's ward Jose Aguas, Nicholson's strategy is to keep|ica and the top race in Canada. down Benfica's score until the|In 1939, as the reigning queen, return game. European Cup/she accompanied King George matches are played on a home-|VI to Toronto and watched the and-home basis. The second race. game is in London April 5. In 1959 Queen Elizabeth and The condition of the pitch fa-|Prince Philip attended the race. TORONTO (CP)--The Queen) ' a at tional gift of 50 guineas to the) be The Spurs' defence will drop owner of the winning horse at penetrating play of centre-for-'the plate -- oldest continuously) ° run stakes race in North Amer-! THE SCOTCH CUP comes | back to Canada for the fourth | successive time. Above, Rob- | ert Cummings, chairman of the sponsoring group (Scotch jvors the Finglish team. Torren- tial rain has turned it into a morass, a handicap for the ball- playing Portuguese and a head- ache for manager Bela Gut- a HAD A SCORE Neither manager will name eleven until just before the kick- off. Reports from Lisbon say can. We've got two games left, and I'll go out in them shoot- ing,"' he said The goal extended Hull's late- season drive. He has scored 33 times in his last 29 games. It also tied the NHL record for most goals by a left winger in one season. The mark was established last year by Frank Mahovlich of 'Toronto Maple Leafs. It also brought his point total for the season to 81, just one behind pace-setting Andy Bath- gate of New York Rangers Almost forgotten in the excite- ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)--Did | Cincinnati win the National League pennant last year with | the help of some cloak-and- | dagger sign stealing? Pitcher Jay Hook, a Redleg | hurler last season who is now Heavy Program Hockey Jaunts | with the New York Mets, | | cat Oo Watrewel beau | 1962-63 Season | ger poe had a man posted the centre field scoreboard at some home games to. pick off signs flashed by opposing | catchers The signs telephoned dugout. Reports that Cincinnati was | using Brooks Lawrence, vi KITCHENER (CP) -- Hockey \traffic across the Atlantic will be heavier than ever next sea- son, President Jack Ro~burgh of ment about Hull was the perfor-|the Canadian Amateur Hockey mance of Glenn Hall in the|Association said Tuesday in an- Chicago nets, Hall kicked out/nouncing details of a series of 28 Detroit shots for his ninth/tours and exhibition games. shutout of the season--tops in| Canada will send a_ senior the league team on a Christmas tour of reportedly Cincinnati were to the mer Redleg pitcher who is now a scout, in the scoreboard REVEALS CINCY REDLEGS BOARD SPY role have been rampant this spring. "IT don't know exactly what games, but I do know that | Brooks Lawrence was out there (in the scoreboard)," | | Hook said "It was common knowledge on our club. Other clubs were doing it at their home parks, Hook said he suspected Chi- cago Cubs. and Milwaukee | Braves. | "I didn't say anything about it, but now I'm on the Mets and I want to protect the Mets against that sort of thing. I think it's wrong," Hook said. | "The commissioner (Ford Frick) should see that a ruling | is put in. Stan Mikita's goal gave the|Czechoslovakia and will prob- Hawks a 1-0 lead in the first|ably dispatch a selected junior period and Bob Turner got the|team to a tournament in Prague second goal, early in the third,/late in March. Sweden will probably send a Frontena Point On John (Bunny) Ahearne, Euro-- By THE CANADIAN PRESS | pean president of the Interna-| Second-place Kingston Fron-| tional Ice Hockey Federation, is|tenacs and third place Kit-| arranging. A 15-game_pre-tour-|chener-Waterloo Beavers battled nament tour of Europe for Can-|to a 4-4 tie in Eastern Profes- St. Louis Cardinals in 14 innings|ada's 1963 world tournament|sional Hockey League action at St, Petersburg, Fla. A wild|team. Tuesday night and each gained throw to first by second base-| canine SER SETS ja point on the front-running man Pedro Gonzalez, attempt-| of oe ee ee - Ottawa Canadiens who ing to complete a routine double vith 50 a és Fi Bt in addi jwere dumped 3-1 by North Bay play that would have ended the| Th died abate obi a Trappers. inning, let in the winning run. ee | SUE FS Sree Kingston has played 64 games i Rly Ape aL. pees eight countries -- Switzerland,| i Two 'of New York's five errors! ~yechoslovakia, the Soviet Un.|of the 70-game schedule--two allowed the other two runs. j ion, East and West Germany,|!ess then Hull-Ottawa and one Mays hit two triples and .2/Sweden, Finland and Nocraen less than Kitchener--and trails single and. drove in six runs iN! and will start the last week in|the Canadiens by three points. the Giants' 14-3 rout of Los An- January. sees Kitchener is two points behind geles Dodgers at Sarasota, Fla., The West German team will| Kingston in the three-way battle strong touring side to Canada in late November although de- tails are only in the preliminary stage. cs Gain Habs Last-place Sault Ste. Marie,| with 43 points, has been elimi-| nated from playoff contention. | LED BY LEITER Kingston was led Tuesday night by forward Bob Leiter who slammed in three goals, the third with less than a minute to play for the Frontenacs' tying goal. Kitchener had taken the lead early in the final period on a goal by Mel Pearson while his team was a man short. Kingston's other goal was scored by Norman Leclair. Len Ronson, with two, and Jim Neil-| son were the other Kitchener who clinched her fourth consecu- tive world curling championship earlier in the tournament, Tues- day kept her unbeaten streak jgoing to the end. from Regina defeated Scotland's Willie Young crew 13-8 in the afternoon round after nosing out the United States earlier in the day 9-8. with six wins and no losses; the |United States was second with 4-2 record; Scotland third 2-4; and Sweden last, 0-6. ley Townsend's rink entered today's fourth|were to meet New Brunswick, round in the Royal Canadian Le-|with a 1-2 record, this morning, gion curling championships as|and go against Nova Scotia (2-1) the only undefeated foursome in} in |the 10 rinks competing. Whisky Association) is shown | ment. They also won the tro- presenting the world's cham- | Phy in 1959 and '60. Posing pionship curling trophy to the | with the trophy left-to-right, z | are Wes, Arnold, G Richardsons of Regina, un- vi a salesetiunen ; | skip Ernie. beaten in this year's tourna- --(CP Wirephoto) The Richardsons Win Scotch Cup In Clean Sweep EDINBURGH (CP)--Canada,jald S. Cumming, chairman of the Scotch Whisky Association-- the tournament sponsors--said: "This is becoming a habit. "But we all recognize that the |Richardsons are truly the world's greatest curlers. In the six games here and at Falkirk, the Richardsons counted 94 points to 36 for the opposition." The championship is a double |round-robin affair. The Richard- Canada won the tournament|sons--Ernie, Arnold, Garnet and Wes--won in 1959 and 1960. Hee Gervais' rink from Edmonton won last year. Skip Ernie and second Garnet Canada has won the tourna- are brothers--cousins of Arnold The Ernie Richardson rink ment each year since it was in-| and lead Wes. augurated in 1959. In the only other afternoon ac- In presenting the Richardson|tion Tuesday, the U.S. downed rink with the Scotch Cup, Ron-|Sweden 15-6; Sask. Can Claim Top Honors In Legion Curling FREDERICTON (CP) -- Bur-) The Granite Kings, defending Saskatchewan |champs in the annual bonspiel, the afternoon. Townsend |should have clear sailing in to- |night's sixth draw-of the 10- Townsend's Regina Granite! ound, round-robin tournament. their eight stones right "cold'"' to the button. Oshawa Curling Club members would get quite a bang out of this morning's issue of the G and M -- in which the Toronto paper carried leading pitchers until he slipped| Orlando Cepeda contributed his to an 8-8 won-lost record and|first homer of the spring play a short exhibition tour of|for the league, championship. Canada and the United States! }ifth-place North Bay moved Kings stretched their record to 3-0 Tuesday by conquering two previously-unbeaten rinks. They |He meets winless Quebec. mele British Columbia, tied with Al- Two goals by Joe Szura and a full-page spread of pictures showing expressions of various Scots watching the curling classic. The most Scottish indi- vidual in the group of five was the first one -- Oshawa"s own "Lew" Beaton, who attended the Scotch Cup games again this year, complete with his tam and pipe. BRIGHT BITS -- The way the Saskatchewan rink playing in the annual Canadian Legion curling champion- ships, it looks as if that province will claim that title as well, this year HOCKEY REPORTS from CAHA president Jack Roxburgh are to the effect that several teams will be crossing the Atlantic next winter, for exhibition tours, with a couple of Canadian teams going to Europe and a Swedish team expected to make the jaunt to Canada... Sweden gave their world's. champions a rousing welcome home at the airport in Stockholm yesterday ELMER FERGUSON, well-known Montreal sports columnist, last Fri- day wrote a column recalling the "dark and stormy memory" of the riot that followed Maurice Richard's suspension, seven years ago. On Saturday, some hoodlums, figured to be two or more, threw a 12-foot plank through: Ferguson's living room window . . . OXFORD CREW has decided not to use that new extra-light racing shell, they had specially made in Italy. Seems they are afraid the water on the Thames may be too rough for the flimsy craft . CANADA will seek to have the world's figure-skating championship held here, possibly at Maple Leaf Gardens in 1965 OSHAWA JUVENILES were defeated in Owen Sound last night, They go back for the third game, next Tuesday night Appears there's not too much rush in the Juvenile category Is was bothered by arm trouble with San Francisco' Giants last year, was aiming at a come- back this season. Tiger manager Bob Scheffing| said he was hoping to use Jones) as a principal backup man to his big three, Frank Lary, Jim Bunning and Don Mossi. Hurlers Early Wynn and Herb Score appeared sharp for Chi-| cago White Sox in a 2-1, 12-in- ning exhibition victory over Los Angeles Dodgers at Palm Springs, Fla., Tuesday. Wynn, who will be shooting for his 300th victory this season, | worked the first three innings and allowed two hits. Score, who had a 1-2 record last season, became the first| White Sox pitcher to go five in-| nings and was nicked only for an unearned run in the eighth.| A two-out, bases-loaded single by. Nellie Fox won for Chicago in the 12th. YANKEE JOSE New York Yankees' first loss of the exhibition season and aj sensational performance by San! Francisco's Willie Mays were other major developments The Yankees, who had won nine straight battles, lost 3-2 to Canada To Request | World Championships | In Figure Skating TORONTO (CP) --~ Nigel Ste- phens, president of the Cana- lian Figure Skating Association says the CFSA want the world figure skating championships to be held in Canada soon Stephens said he has written international au horities about the possibility of holding the championships here in 1965-66 If they are interested, we will make a formal bid," he said Toronto, with 16 clubs, prob ably could not be matched by any other city and the champ- ionships, if held in Maple Leaf Gardens, would generate great interest Most of Canadian team which took part in the recent world championships in Prague will be skating in the Rotary ub of Toronto: ice revue at Maple Leaf Gardens April 25-28 Included will be world pairs champions Maria and Otto Je! Canada has 216 figure skating inek, men's world title clubs affiliated with the CFSA, holder Don Jackson, Canadian "probably more than any other ladies' champion Wendy Griner, country in the world." 'Canadian dance winners Vir-/ the singles Mc- and US gina Thompson and Bill lachlan, Barbara Wagner Bob Paul, and former Olympic star Dick Button Eddie Shack of the Toronto Maple Leafs will skate in a spe- cial number, but show produc- ers are not sure what form it will take "We haven't quite worked out a number for Eddie yet," pro- ducer Stan Reid said He added Maple Leaf general manager Punch Imliach has suggested Shack should be -al- lowed to 'whirl around on his own." | BAN MAGAZINE termined later" "ito within eight points of the idle AMMAN, Jordan (AP)--Jor-| An extra attraction in the|fourth - place Sudbury Wolves. dan has banned the American|United States is a scheduled|North Bay, with five games left, magazine role The govern-|Christmas week tournament at|has a mathematical chance to ment claimed the magazine,|Colorado Springs where it is ex-| i e ; which specializes in travel ar-|pected tint ame from Canada, |°@tch Sudbury, which has: six ticles, has carried pro - Israel|the United States and Sweden|sames to play, for the last play- propaganda. {will play. loff. position. the goaltending of Claude Du- four sparked North Bay of its win over Hull-Ottawa. in turning back 35 Canadiens shots and held them at bay until the final period when Fred Hilts hit for Hull-Ottawa. John Sleaver added the other North Bay tally. | =| EPHL Playoffs started Gordie jrink 8-6 and in the third round Dufour was often spectacular|took Alberta 12-6. disposing of skipped by Bob Woods. Playing|tario beat Nova Scotia 14-6 be- jtaaat rollicking take-out game,|fore bumping into the powerful ithey grabbed two in the second and/Scotia beat jstole another 'pair in the third.|third round. From then on it was clear sail-| Manitoba, P:E.I., Newfound: ling, a big four-ender in the 11th|land and New Brunswick have \clinching the win. Start April 4 ¢ |berta, bgp ge Nova Scotia --|with 2-1 records, scored a close Ontario|9 § win over Prince Edward Is- land. In other action Alberta Townsend had little difficulty|trounced Newfoundland 10-4 be- the Albertans,/fore losing to Townsend and On- the day by defeating MacDonald's blanked the end, /Saskatchewan curlers. Nova B.C. 12-10 in the first |1-2 records. HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS OTTAWA (CP)--The Eastern Professional Hockey League an-| nounced today that playoffs in| the six - team loop will start! April 4. After the 70-game ends April 1, two best-of-seven} semi-final series will be held-- tween the second and fourth- Place clubs. League officials said the first game of each series played April 4 in arena of the first and second-| place clubs. Both series must be} ended no later than April 18, The two winners then will Start a best-of-seven final series no later than April 20. These games must be concluded by April 30. Further dteails will be an- nounced once the top four teams)Kingston 4 Kitchener 4 | Hull-Ottawa 1 North Bay 3 | | in the league have been deter- mined. BASKETBALL PLAYERS LIKE BALLET DANCERS | Rich Williams | §8-85, to advance to the tour- National Invitation Tourna Duquesne won } ment game in New York's Madison Square Garden, iast night. At left, is Bradley's | Duquesne's aul Benec over Bradley's Bill Spar lin, who goes down after miss | ing a scoring attempt, in the | f flies | ney semi-finals. --(AP Wirephoto) | = 1147, *|Flores, 149, Philippines, 9. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT | By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Houston, Tex.--Garland (Rip) Randall, 145, Dallas, Tex., out- pointed Virgil 'Akins, 148, St. Louis, 10. Bangkok -- Samart Sordaeng, Thailand, stopped Terry SET FIGHT DATE LONDON... (AP)--Boxing moter Jack Solomons announced Tuesday that Eder Jofre of Bra- zil_ will defend his world ban- tamweight title against Britain's Johnny Caldwell at June 5. ' |Montreal schedule |Toronto Chicago New York one between the first and third-| Detroit place teams and the other be-/Boston Detroit 0 Chicago 3 will be|Toronto at Montreal the home!New York at Boston Hull-Ottawa Kingston Kitchener Sudbury {North Bay S. S. Marie Kitchener at Kingston Portland 6 Los Angeles 3 Spokane 5 Vancouver 8 Seattle 3. Edmonton 9 Verdun 2 Nationale 3 Shawinigan 2 Quebec 8 Montreal-Nord 0 Victoriaville 5|English pro- Collingwood 4 Meaford 3 London Macedonians 5 Oakville 3 By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League WLT F APt Ontario Minor Juvenile A Tillsonburg 3 Wallaceburg 9 (Wallaceburg wins best - of- 39 14 14 245 160 92| three semi-final 2-0) 37 20 10 225 169 84 Eastern League 31 24 13 213 177 75| Johnstown 0 Knoxville 2 24 32 12 187 203 60) (Best-of-five semi - final tied 23 32 13 180 212 59) 2-2) 1446 8 169 298 36 International League Tuesday's Results Minneapolis 1 Muskegon (First game of best-of-seven semi-final) Omaha 2 St, Paul 5 i (First game of best-of-seven semi-final) Oxford ti Gives Up On New Shell LONDON (AP)--Oxford Uni- |versity rowing eight Tuesday night announced it has aban- |doned its sleek new Italian-built shell for the traditional race against Cambridge on the River Thames April 7. After only one day's practice (Best-of-seven final tied 1-1) |with the Italian boat on the Quebec Junior A Thames, Oxford decided to ga back to the English boat which (Quebec wins best-of - seven it used in beating Cambridge in semi-final 4-1) 1960. Last year, using another baat, Oxford was Thursday's Games Eastern Professional WLT F APt 35.20 11 215 161 81 36 22 6 248 203 78 33 22 6 245 199 76 25 30 9 210 248 59, 2135 9 169 210 51 17 38 9 187 253 43 Tuesday's Results Tonight's Game Western League Montreal Metro Junior A (Victoriaville wins best - of-| beaten seven semi-final 4-1) The Italian boat was built spe, Georgian Bay Intermediate | cially for Oxford and cost $1,400, Critics who watched it in prac (Collingwood leads best - of- tice on the Thames Monday said seven semi-fina! 1-0, one game it locked too narrow and flimsy tied) to stand u» to the rough water Central Ont Intermediate: A (which often 'churns up for the 13-year-old race between the riy (Best-of-seven final tied 2-2) | val universities.