14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondoy, December 31, 1962 a diens, even though they blew a three-goal Jead in New York Sunday night and had to settle for a 4-4 tie with Rangers. At home Saturday night Canadiens flashed some of their old-time class, drubbing Detroit 5-1, The results of the two games put them in third place, a point ahead of Red Wings and two behind Toronto. Canadiens and Chicago were the only teams to see action twice during the weekend, as only four games were scheduled. NESTER STARTS RALLY Eric Nesterenko started Chi- cago on the way to victory Sun- day night with two goals after the last-place Bruins had taken a lead on goals by Tom Wil- 'By THE CANADIAN PRESS + Boston Bruins won't soon for-' et the last 10 minutes they 'spent on the ice with Chicago Black Hawks in 1962. In that short space of time the Hawks: playing before an en- 'thusiastic home crowd, clawed their way from behind with four goals to beat Bruins 4-2 Sunday night and finish the old year as undisputed leaders of the Na- tional Hockey League. The victory put Chicago two points ahead of Toronto Maple Leafs, breaking a deadlock that persisted when the two teams fought to a 1-1 tie in Toronto Saurday night. Other big gainers in weekend action were Montreal Cana- SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' HAPPY NEW YEAR! The age-old greeting, a traditional expression of friendliness, good-will, per- sonal wishes, etc., always carries a nostalgic "other view". It's like one of those special mirrors which gives back the usual reflections on the one side, but when used from the reverse, is actually a window -- in this case, a medium of mental reflection -- one can look back over that has gone on the year before, what transpired before we arrived at the point of greeting the New Year. Canadian sports fans can look over on 1962 with justifiable pride and here in Oshawa, we can record a few "firsts" that are worthy of special mention. Having devoted our Saturday's pillar to Don Jackson and his world's championship feat, we'll not dwell on that any longer, except to repeat, he gave Canada and Oshawa, one of its greatest "hour of triumph". This city claimed a few provincial championships, including basketball and softball (three of the latter) and of course, one of the big items in our 1962 record is the return of the Generals. . . LOOKING OVER the world events, at this closing 'of another year, brings back a warm glow to the winners and happy memories to those who have a special interst in those sports where high success was achieved. Every sports fan has his favorite game or recreation, either as a hobby, spectator or participant and to each, the beginning of a new year brings hopes, ambitions 'Ye-anticipation of pleasure. But -- just as we pause, to let the bells toll out the old and welcome the new -- we.can all take time, and should, to remember those "good sports" -- whether they were international athletic figures or a close friend or loved one, who left our midst in 1962. No matter how much any of us won -- many also "Jost" in 1962! SPORT SHORTS: --.Didn't have room to men- tion it Saturday (didn't get the results until after the column had been written) but congratulations are in order for Oshawa Golf Club. They launched their Boxing Day Bonspiel event this year, intend to make it an annual event and unless we are far off base, we can predict this will prove one of the most popular seasonal events at OGC... LEFT oUuT, due to crowded space, was the fact that three fine fellows, Allan Cay, "Cam" Henderson and "Bert Neil, were members of the rink that won the high one-win prize in the 11.00 o'clock draw, of the Box- ing Day 'spiel at The Oshawa Curling Club, last Wednesday. Wouldn't want them to think they had any more handicap than they already had! And to Ed. "Old Cheese" Lupton, a Happy Nw Year to you and yours, also !... JEFF McGRATH was this year voted 5th spot in the Ontario Golf Association's official ratings. Champion Nick Weslock topped the poll, as would be expected .... SPEAKING OF GOLF, the local "fore" buffs, who are unable to make Florida or Bermuda, will be pleased to look forward to an armchair tour of some of the world's most famous courses, in Shell's annual sries, 'Won- derful' World of Golf', staring on CTV, Jan. 20... DID YOU KNOW? -- Curling in Canada was, accord- ing to reports, started by the soldiers of General Wolfe's army, who used melted-down cannonballs for stones, imported directly from Scotland. PS. ae The first "bonspiel" must have been after 'The Plains of Abraham" . . . CURLERS, across Canada, as this country's fastest--growing sport, will be pleased to know that starting on Saturday, Jan. 5, we'll be able to see those key games, via videotape, of key games played last season... MINOR HOCKEY, across Canada, will celebrate its annual 'week' starting Saturday, Jan. 26. Plaudits to Jack L. Christie of Toronto, who edits the minor hockey section of "Hockey Canada". He insists -- and we fully agree -- that age-limit hockey in Canada is "over-coached, no over-organized". Jack means that a lot of adult coaches and managers put too much stress on win- ning, rather than on teaching the game itself, plus sportsmanship, to the very young competitors. He - makes a definite line between "need to win" and "desire to win' -- and we heartily concur, There will always be a need for "desire" with any youngs- ter, but this business of will-at-any-cost has been overpalyed and this corner still agrees that "it matters not, who won or lost, but how you played the game"! Let's face facts--the coach, manager or even the league president, is not likely to be a future "Premier of Canada" -- but some little winger, out there struggling to do the right thing -- he migh Gee see Black Hawks' Late Rally Puts Them In Top Spot liams in the first period and Don McKenney early in the third. Hawks' re-united line of Bobby Hull, Red Hay and Murray Bal- four, which used to be called the 'million-dollar line," then sprang into action with two quick goals that provided the margin of victory. Hay scored first, Hull and Balfour assisting, and then Balfour scored from Hay and Hull. Andy Bathgate, league scor- ing leader, connected in his seventh consecutive game as Rangers tied Canadiens Sunday night. It was Rod Gilbert, a rookie right winger, who pro- vided the spark for Rangers, however, with two of their four jing Saskatoon Quakers won two} goals, His second came with less than three minutes to play and tied the game 4-4, Dave Balon opened the scoring for New York in the first period but Canadiens roared ahead on goals by Henri Richard, Ralph Backstrom and Bernie Geoffrion before the period ended. GUMP GROUNDED Rangers goalie Lorne Worsley was shaken up late in the first period and the game had to be stopped temporarily. At this point it appeared Canadiens were well on their way to vic- tory. The New York club physician described Worsley's ailment as a temporary paralysis of the right arm and it kept him out for 20 minutes. When he returned, he made 35 saves in the last two Se ie A i A al | AMATEUR HOCKEY ? periods and limited Canadiens to Richard's second goal of the night while Rangers were catch. ing up on the scoreboard. Gilbert and Bathgate clicked with goals in the second period: setting the stage for Gilbert's tying score late in the third, Geoffrion broke out in a scor- ing rash Saturday night, getting three goals in a game for the 14th time in his 13-year NHL career, to lead Canadiens to their win over Detroit. Billy Hicke got the two other Montreal goals and Alex Del- vecchio scored for Detroit. BIG JEAN HELPS Jean Beliveau, who hasn't scored a goal since Nov, 18, as- sisted on all of Geoffrion's week- end goals to pile up four as- sists for a league leading total of 24, He has only four goals. Toronto winger Frank Mahov- lich, the leading goal scorer with 22, had a five-game scoring streak stopped Saturday night Sets Punishment On Pay-By-Game? TORONTO (CP)--The presi- dent of the Ontario Hockey As- sociation's Metro Toronto Ju- nior A group Sunday accused OHA president Lloyd Pollock of di f crimination in gene Metro League players reporte to him for disciplinary action, Perc Topping, Metro presi- dent, speaking for all Metro of- ficials, said it was their unan- imous opinion that Pollock seemed to be favoring the rival provincial Junior. A group. They shouted the instance where Doug Jarrett, a defence- man for St. Catharines Black Hawks of the provincial loop, was given the option of a five- game suspension or $50 fine for slashing Sandy Fitzpatrick of Guelph Royals across the mouth in a game Dec. 23. The Metro officials compared this with a 10-game suspension, with no option, handed out to Dune MacDonald of the Metro League Toronto Marlboros and Bill Smith of Whitby Dunlops following a stick-winger battle several weeks ago. Said Topping, following a meeting of the Metro League's six teams: "We believe we are being discriminated against in favor of the other group." RULES ON FACTS Pollock said in an interview from Windsor that he rules "only on the facts presented me and only on the facts."' He cited the report of referee Joe Sadler on the MacDonald- Smith incident in which Sadler, said the clash was one of the worst of its kind he-had ever seen, Pollock said referee Frank Slota of Kitchener in reporting Jarrett said there might have]: -- been some provocation for his attack on Fit-patrick. Pollock said that contrary to earlier re- ports Fitzpatrick was not come. Pollock said he didn't give the Metro players the option of a fine because "they only get $2.50 a game and I don't think they can afford to pay a fine." He said provincial group play- : ers are better paid. Leaves tied Chicago 1-1. Ron Stewart tied the score for Leafs early in the second pe- riod after Chicago had gone ahead on Hull's first - period goal. Two games will open the 1963 program Tuesday night, when Rangers, in fifth place, 12 points behind Montreal, visit De- troit tonight in the only NHL game New Years Eve. Two games will open the 1963 program Tuesday night, when Toronto plays at Boston and Detroit at Chicago. Syracuse By THE CANADIAN PRESS The last-place Syracuse Braves played "buddies" for Kingston Frontenacs this week- end, The Frontenacs ended a seven-game downhill slide in| the Eastern _ Professional| Hockey League Saturday night when they came up against the Braves and won 7-4 in Kingston. Syracuse gave the Frontenacs another helping hand Sunday night, upsetting the first-place Hull-Ottawa Canadiens 6-2 for their sixth win of the season, The results moved second- place Kingston to within four points of Hull-Ottawa. The Frontenacs scored six un- answered goals in the first two periods, then had the Braves Help Frontenacs Braves outscore them 4-1 in the final frame, Red Ouellette and Don Black- burn each scored twice for Kingston. Pat Stapleton, Dick AT LEAST THE DOG KNEW DUCK SEASON WAS OVER SAN MATEO, Calif. (AP)-- It is illegal to shoot ducks from certain levee areas along San Francisco Bay, On a day last week--cold, windy foggy--it was a good time as any to take a chance . While a hidden fisherman watched, a car came rumb- ling along a levee that flanks the southwestern end of the bay in San Mateo County. The car screeched to a hait as it came abreast a flock of ducks, The ducks took off. A man of about 25 leaped from the car, a shotgun at the ready. He fired five times. Three ducks fell, some 25 yards off shore. The man ran to the rear of his car, opened the trunk and hid the gun. He ripped open a rear door and a large re- triever bounded out. The man led the dog to the water's edge, pointed to the floating dead ducks and said, "Go get em!" The dog sniffed the cold salt water and wouldnt' budge. The man picked up a stick and held it in front of the dog. He threw the stick as far as he could and it landed smack among the three dead ducks. "Go get 'em!'"' the man said, by now a little desper- ately. The dog whimpered, pawed the levee but still didn't hit the water. The man shoved the animal and the big tan hound tumbled in the water, sank, came up, and set out swimming strongly. Then, while the man waited nervously, the dog went out and brought back the stick. Cherry and Ken Steph added singles, Alain Caron had two goals for the Braves and Merv Kuryluk and Murray Hall got one each. Syracuse outshot the Fronten- acs 35-34. At Syracuse, the Canadiens trailed 3-1 after two periods and answered only one goal to three in the third, Al Caron, Bert Fizzell, Red| Ouimet, Merv Kuryluk, Phil Esposito and Hec Lalande tal- lied for Syracuse. Jacques La- perriere and Terry Harper scored for the Canadiens. Quakers Win Two Games But Lose Prestige VIENNA (CP-AP)--The tour- weekend hockey games over Czech teams but again received sharp criticism for rough play. The Czech news agency Ce- teka said that in a game in Prague Sunday--in which the Quakers beat a Central Bohem- ian team 5-3--the Canadians 'not only fought the local play- ers but converged on the fans behind the boards as_ well." Play had to be stopped while the referee admonished the team captains. In a Saturday night game at Chomutov, Saskatoon defeated the Chomutov V.T.Z, team 7-4 and the news agency conceded that the Canadians "though playing a hard game were not as rough as in previous games." However, it called the Quak- ers "surely the weakest" Qana- dian team ever to have played in Cechoslovakia. The two weekend victories evened the Quakers' record at four victories and four defeats in their 10-game tour of Cezcho- slovakia, Two games remain. EACH COUNT TWICE Jackie McLeod and Jerry Esch each had two goals while singles went to George ifun- chuk, Maurice Oftebro and George Senick on: Saturday night. McLeod, Oftebro and Senick also scored Sunday night along with Herb Jeffrey »nd Don Smith. A sellout crowd of 11,000 watched the Chomutov game but only 5,000 turned out in Prague. Ceteka blamed the low attendance on the "fact that the Canadians had piled up a bad reputation during their tour this time." "The first 10 minutes of the game. was merely a free-for-all with both sides engaged in blows and fisticuffs," the agency said. WEEKEND STARS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Bernard Geoffrion, Montreal right winger who scored three goals in a game for the 14th time in his NHL career to lead Canadiens to a 5-1 victory over Detroit Red Wings Saturday night, 5 Rod Gilbert, New York rookie | right winger who scored two) goals including the tying goal) late in the third period, as! Rangers fought Canadiens to a 44 tie at home Sunday night. Eric Nesterenko, whose two goals in the third period started Chicago Black Hawks on their] way to a 4-2 home-ice win over! Boston Bruins Sunday night and be -- so let's have him thinking! undisputed possession of first place in the NHL. , NHL BIG SEVEN By THE CANADIAN PRESSQ New York's. big man, Andy Bathgate, held on to the Na- tional Hockey League scoring leadership during the weekend, getting one goal as the Rangers held Montreal Canadiens to a 4-4 tie Sunday night. The goal, his 16th of the sea- son, gave him a total of 38 points, two more than Frank Mahovlich of Toronto. Mahov- lich was held scoreless as the Maple Leafs tied Chicago Black Nawks 1-1 Saturday night in their only weekend game. Mahovlich's 22 goals are the most in the league so far. New York's Dean Prentice picked up an assist on Bath- gates goal and Murray Oliver! of Boston got two assists while Bruins were losing 4-2 in Chi- cago Sunday night to move into a third-place tie with 33 points each, The leaders: G Bathgate, New York 16 Mahovlich, Toronto Prentice, New York Oliver, Boston Mikita, Chicago Howe, Detroit Oshawa Generals Tie Knob Hill 2-2 Oshawa Generals fought back with the tying goal in the third period yesterday afternoon, to tie Knob Hill Farms 2-2, in the second game of an OHA Junior 'A'? Metro League doublehead- er, at Maple Leaf Gardens, before a crowd of 2,353 cus- tomers, 7-UPS STOPPED Brampton's winning streak in the Metro Junior A_ hockey loop didn't last long. Playing its third game in four days Brampton dropped a 5-2 decision to Marlboros in tne first game of the doubleheader. The. Seven-Ups' had_ beaten Knob Hill twice to give them a two-game win streak, MISS CHANCES The tussle between Generals and Knob Hill was a see-saw affair which saw both clubs miss plenty of scoring chances, in the close-checking game. After Ray Winterstein had opened the scoring, shortly after the five-minute mark, Generals fought back to knot the count at 1-1 when Terry Vail scored on a nifty three-way play with Bobby Orr and George Vail. Knob Hill enjoyed a definite margin in territorial play throughout the second stanza but thanks to the brilliant work of Jim Couch, in the Oshawa goal, the Knob Hill team was limited to one lone tally, by Jim Fuller, with Collins and goalie Kelly earning assists, in an unusual '"'clearing" play that started the goalward attack. In the third period, Oshawa Bucyk, Boston 32 Generals came up with their best hockey, a crowd - pleasing brand of up-and-down attack that finally paid off when Denis Conlin scored, with help from defenceman Domm and Terry Vail.. Dave Kelly, in the Knob Hill net, had to perform yoe- man service in this frame to prevent Generals from copping the decision. f Knob Hill coach Johnny "Pea- nuts" O'Flaherty used his 18- year-old son John Jr. on a line with Ray Winterstein and Bob Kilger and "Junior" performed well, Knob Hill recently acquir- ed young O'Flaherty's release from the Schomberg - Junior "B" club, OSHAWA: Goal, Couch; de- fence, Orr, Eaton, Domm, Batte, Forwards, White, Peters, MacDonald, T. Vail; G, Vail, Conlin, Buchanan, Dubeau, Lit- tle, Gibbens. KNOB HILL -- Goal, Kelly; defence, McClocklin, Phair, Wallace, Kelcher; forwards, Pender, Baylis, Johnson, Stroud, R. Winterstein, O'Fla- herty, Regis, Collins, J. Fuller. OFFICIALS -- Referee, Gord Fevereau; linesmen, Cliff Phil- lips, Dan McCombe. First Period 1--Knob Hill, Winterstein 5.50 2--Oshawa, T, Vail eovceee 15.15 (Orr, G. Vail) Penalties--None, Second Period 3--Knob Hill, J. Fuller (Colins, Kelly) 7.02 Penalties -- Phair (tripping), 15:58; Kelcher (tripping), 18.05, Third Period 4--Oshawa, Conlin (Domm, T. Vail) ..... 13.01 Penalties--None, HOCKEY SCORES AND STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League j w iar. 2A 1710 9 92 82 43 14911101 8139 1611 6 84 8138 New York 1119 5 108 116 27 Boston 521 8 9414118) Saturday's Results Detroit 1 Montreal 5 | Chicago 1 Toronto 1 Sunday's Results | Montreal 4 New York 4 Boston 2 Chicago 4 Today's Game New York at Detroit Games Tuesday Toronto at Boston Detroit at Chicago Eastern Professional WLT F APt 21 7 3121 9045 1911 3 134 104 41 Sudbury 1412 5 139 130 33 Syracuse 618 6 9212418 Saturday's Result Syracuse 4 Kingston 7 Sunday's Result Hull-Ottawa 2 Syracuse 6 American League Eastern Division WLT F A Pt) Chicago Montreal Detroit Hull-Ottawa Kingston 1612 7104 98 39 1713 3115 9937 1612 3129 101 35 Hershey 1614 2116 100 34 Baltimore 15 16 2100 116 32 Western Division 1912 1108 99 39 1219 4109 141 28) Rochester 1117 4108 124 26) Pittsburgh 1118 2 88 99 24 Saturday's Results Quebec Providence Springfield Buffalo Cleveland Quebec 3 Hershey 3 Buffalo 2 Pittsburgh 4 Rochester 2 Springfield 9 Sunday's Results Quebec 2 Baltimore 4 Cleveland 3 Buffalo 6 Rochester 3 Providence 9 Ontario Senior Minneapolis 5 Muskegon 5 Nova Scotia Senior Windsor 8 Halifax 6 Moncton 9 New Glasgow 3 b. .. Cape Breton Senior . .. Glace Bay 7 North Sydney 2 Saskatchewan Senior Yorkton 5 Moose Jaw 8 WLT F APt 20 6 1168 98 41 18 8 0131 9436 17 9 1130 83 35 Saskatchewan Junior Regina 1 Estevan 2 Melville r Weyburn 2 Moose Jaw 2 Flin Flon r Windsor Woodstock Chatham Baltimore 1 Cleveland 3 914 0 67 10518 815 2 88 10418 323 0 90190 6 Sunday's Results Chatham 3 Windsor 5 Galt K.-W. Sarnia | | Kitchener-Waterloo 3 Sarnia 4| Tuesday's Game Galt at KitchenerdWaterloo Ontario Junior WLT F APt Montreal 12 6 6 99 6730 Peterboro 12 5 6 85 6030 Niagara. Falls 127 5100 75 29 Hamilton 10 9 5100 9025 St. Catharines 712 6 81 116 20 Guelph 418 4 75 13212 Saturday's Result Guelph 3 Peterborough 5 Sunday's Result al 4 Stm Catharines 5 Tuesday's Games Montreal at St. Catharines Montre Peterborough at Niagara Falls} |Johnstown t Long Island 4 }Clinton 2 New Haven 4 {Knoxville 7 Charlotte 5 SATURDAY Western League Vancouver 2 Seattle 7 Spokane 2 Calgary 1 Eastern League Johnstown 2 Cleveland 2 Philadelphia' 5 Nashville 2 International League Fort Wayne 3 St. Paul 4 Exhibition Saskatoon 7 V.T.Z. Chomutov 4 Ontario Junior B Dresden u Leamington 0 SUNDAY Western League Vancouver 3 Portland 0 Northern Ontario Sr Kapuskasing 9 S. Porcupine 1 Timmins 3 Abitibi 4 Metro Toronto Jr A q Brampton 2 Marlboros 5 Oshawa w Knob Hill 2 Ontario Junior B Weston 11 Bowmanville 2 Detroit 1 Wallaceburg 6 Dresden 4 Chatham i Manitoba Junior Winnipeg R. 1 Winnipeg M. 8 St. Boniface 4 Winnipeg BM 4 Saskatchewan Junior Moose Jaw 0 Flin Fion 5 Eastern League PHEW! "Was that close" --is what Vince Lombardi, coach of the Green Bay Pack- ers appears to be saying, as Green Bay Packers in a gruelling strugge with the New York Giants, at Yan- kee Stadium. AP Wirephote he reflects over yesterday's National Football League championship final, in which his Packers retained their titie 5 Retain NFL Crown In Detfe NEW YORK (CP) -- Green Bay Packers proved again Sun- day they are the best football team, Green Bay, a dwarf in com- parison to other National Foot- ball League cities, is so proud of its Packers it calls itself Titletown, U.S.A. The name fits for the city of 72,000. The Packers whipped New York Giants 16-7 Sunday at Yankee Stadium to win their second successive NFL title in a muscle - crunching playoff hampered by bitterly coid winds. Last year the Packers rompec 37-0 win he Giants in the title gaiie, but they had more trouble Sunday as they won their record eighth championship, Television audiences in the United States and Canada and 64,892 paying customers watched the Packers, with a tremendous defensive exhibi- tion, overcome the Giants in 17- degree temperatures. WORE MITTS, MASKS But the Packers are used to the cold, Temperatures in Green Bay the last two weeks have dipped well below zero and the Packers wore mitts and ski masks as they prepared for the Giants. The story of Sunday's game is best told by the voting for the most valuable player. It wasn't Jim Taylor, Green Bay's oak-ribbed fullback who was a star despite unmerciful abuse from such New York strongmen as Sam Huff and Andy Robustelli. And it wasn't Y, A. Tittle, the Giants' celebrated quarterback. The choice was veteran Ray Nitschke, the Packers' six-foot- three, 220-pound middle line. backer who played as if he in- tends to be an all-star for the next 10 years. Nitschke recovered a Phil King fumble on the Giants' 28- yard line late in the second nse Classic ing a perilous 3-0 lead. Twojonly scored one touchdown. plays later, after a 21-yard pass|Hell, the defence has to wave from Paul Hornung to Boyd/someone on its side. You don't Dowler, Taylor charged head-|win the world champion: long into the end one on 'ajwithout scoring some points. seven-yard burst for Green|IS MARKED MAN Bay's only tuochdown. Earlier} Taylor, 26-year-old backfield Nitschke deflected a Tittle pass|ace who scored a record 19 that was intercepted by Danjtouchdowns and rushed for Currie. a than are May in reg- ar-season action ¢t year, POUNCES ON FUMBLE * ee iy A be A Pa Phan sieht ae -- a scored their only touchdown--| Bp; from when Erich Barnes . blocked iene ofr Poagger hd Max McGee's third-quarter/verbal Giant jibes that were punt-and rookie Jim Collier re-/meant to unsettle him and covered in the end one--Nit-| rubbed it in with his touchdown athe -- ate ry again.| blast, e pounced on the ball on the} Taylor, 215-poun Giants' 42-yard line when Sam|the oni gualiaer ts = agg re giesgpe gg Five mcr abe 85 yards on 31 car- s , Jerry Kramerjries, kicked the second of his three|30 Ari rahe field goals. The kicks travelled| "I don't remember ever be- 26, 29 and 30 yards. ing hit so hard," Taylor said "You couldn't throw the long/in the dressing room as he dis- one on a day like this," said| Played a collection of ugly cuts, coach Allie Sherman of the/Scrapes and bruises, Giants, whose club won the} The only points the Giants Hastern Conference title on the|Scored were turned in by the passing of Tittle. "Of course, it|defence on the blocked punt by quarter with the Packers hold- was the same for them." It was 20 degrees at game time. The weather soon turned for the worse, slipping to 17 de- grees. A wind that hit about 40 il miles an hour in gusts yer York started to move with Tit- passes, punts, hats, dust an even the Packers' bench (un- occupied) across the frozen turf. The wind proved to game started. The. Packers couldn't keep the football on the tee and finally had to have a man hold it for the opening kickoff. "The Giants are much, much better," said Packer coach Vince Lombardi, comparing the 1962 team with the 1961 club. "You just can't compare the two games." Huff, who, like all members of both defensive units, played a fine game, had this comment: "They are a good ball club. But they can be beaten. They Bowl Games On New Year's Day By THE CANADIAN PRESS Eight of the top 10 college teams in the United States col- lide New Year's Day amid a profusion of roses, oranges, Sugar and cotton in the annual extravagana of the bowls. Today can be called a sort of preview for the football fiesta. At El Paso, Tex., West Texas State and Ohio Univer- sity clash in the Sun Bowl, both boasting 8-2 records. But the big competitions come Tuesday and fans are talking about the big four. Here's a rundown: ' Rose Bowl at Pasadena, Calif.: Top-ranked Southern California with a 10-0 record, vs. No. 2 Wisconsin, 8-1, in the biggest of the bowl games, to be televised by NBC at 5 p.m. All-American players on dis- play will be Southern Cal guard Danmon Bame and Wisconsin end Pat Richter. Sugar Bow! at New Orleans: Third-rated Mississippi, 9-0, vs. Arkansas, 9-1 and sixth-ranked, getting the television treatment over NBC at 2p.m. ROYAL IS COACH Cotton Bow! at Dallas: No. 4 Texas, 3-0-1, vs. Louisiana State, 811 and seventh ranked, via CBS at 3 p.m. All Amer. International League | Muskegon 6 Port Huron r | Lakehead Senior | Red Rock 3 Fort William 6 | Exhibition Saskatoon 5 Central Bohemia 3 icans sharing the spotlight are Texas Longhorn guard John Treadwell and Louisiana half- back Jerry Stovall. The Texans are coached by Darrell Royal, former coach of Edmonton Es- Orange Bowl at Miami: Ala- bama, 9-1 and No, 5, vs. Okla- homa, 8-2 and No. 8, telecast over ABC at 2 p.m. One ail- American will be on the field, Alabama centre Lee Roy Jor- dan. In the stands will be Pres- ident Kennedy. The last weekend of concen- be troublesome even before the Barnes and the recovery by he e Giants stopped the first Packer drive in the first quar- ter and forced Lombardi 'o set- tle for a field goal. Then New tle hitting Del Shofner twice and then King until Currie broke it up with an interception on the 10-yard line and ran it back to the 40. Willie Wood, the Packers' all+ star safety man, was 'hrown out of the game for. striking an official, backfield judge Kelleher, after he was called for pass interference in the third quarter, The official said it was an act that called for a disqualification. Wood gets an automatic $50 fine. The championship: was the |Packers' fifth in seven s, They won three Peed ' 1930 and 1931--before the league split into two divisions. The Giants have lost four playoffs in a row and have a sad 3-10 record. Each Packer gets $5,888.57 and each Giant $4,166.85 from the gross ng of $1,243,110, all records. The figure includes -- for radio - television ights. Kingomine And Native Diver Win Big Ones NEW YORK (CP) -- trated activity started Satur-/Mine won the $68,625 California day. Florida upset Penn State|Breeders' Champion Stakes and 17-7 in the Gator Bowl on two|Native Diver raced to an easy touchdown passes by Tommy|ttiumph in the $20,300 Malibu Shannon, The East defeated the West 25-19 in the Shrine game, the} Stakes Saturday in a racing doubleheader at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif. : Blue whipped the Gray 10-6 and|SA crowd estimated at 45,500 the Small College All-Stars up- ended the Major College All- Stars 14-13 in the All-America Bowl. SCORES UPSET WIN Florida pulled one of the big-\" gest upsets in Gator Bowl an- nals against Penn State as sophomore quarterback Shan- non passed seven yards to Larry Dupree and 19 to Hagood Clarke for touchdowns. Bob Lyle started the Florida scoring with a 43-yard field goal--ithe first of the season for the .eam and the longest in Gator Bowl history, East quarterback Daryle La- monica of Notre Dame fired TD passes of 41, 69 and 29 yards and steered the winners to ihe clinching touchdown on an 88- yard drive. Iowa's Larry Fer- guson plunged two yards for the decisive tcuchdown with a min-| ute, 27 seconds remaining. Sonny Gibbs of the West also os. passed for three scores. : watched jockey Willie Shoe- maker pilot Kingomine to a hard-won triumph over a field of 16 California two-year-olds for his fourth win of after- oon. ; Shoemaker went on to win five races, the fifth time he has hit this figure riding at Santa ita Switchback, coupled as an entry with Kingomine, came with a rush to take second ey Royal Grounded was The time for the seven fur- longs was one minute 23 3-5 sec, onds. Kingomine paid $3.80, $4.20 and $3. The winner's purse was $46,- The Malibu Stakes was no contest. Veteran jockey Ralph Neves turned Native Diver loose and he ran off and hid from 12 other three- winning by 6% lengths, ;