Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Jan 1964, p. 14

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14. 'THEOSHAWA TIMES, Thurndey, January 30, 1964 Russian Pair Wins Figure Skating Title Olympic Games Upset INNSBRUCK, Austria (CP)-- The Soviet Union, already @ established Olympic power in the more muscular winter sports hockey, speedskating and women's nordic skiing, today holds an Olympic championship in a new and more artistic area, Ludmilla Belousova, year-old husband Oleg Protopo- pov skated away Wednesday night with the figure-skating pairs championship to win the first gold medal of the ninth Winter Olympic Games. 'For Russia, contesting the Olympics for only a third time, it was the first Olympic figure skating championship -- and the victory prompted Protopopo- poy to shed tears of joy. Tears were shed, too, by Ca- nadian judge Dr. Suzanne Mor- row Francis of Toronto, who was uently jeered by the crowd jammed into the ice arena, but they came behind the scenes after the competition was over, Protopopov and his wife, who skates under her maiden name, turned the tables on the Ger- man pair that topped them last year in the world champion- ships and they outskated the leading North American threat, Canada's Debbie Wilkes and Guy Revell. FINISH SECOND Marika Kilius and Hans-Juer- gen Baeumler of West Ger- many, the 1963 world cham- pions, finished second Wednes- day just as they had in the 1960 Winter Olympics when Can- ada's Bob Paul and Barbara Wagner of Toronto won the gol medal, a slim was nervous before, during and after--far more Debbie." Tears mingled with kisses and hugs when Mrs, Francis, who as Suzanne Morrow teamed with Wally Distelmeyer to win the bronze medal in pairs at the 1948 Winter Olympics, con- nervous gratulated Miss Wilkes. Taunted by the audience throughout the competition, she was red-eyed and sobbig amid all the gaiety. "T have no comment," ior," SHOW DISPLEASURE The standing-room-only crowd started showing displeasure when she cast her first vote. Spectators continued the .slow, bird-like whistle each time she walked to the ice to give her score, Mrs, Francis gave no indica: tion during the judging that she} inals. was upset by the display. George Sherwood, 48-year-old team manager from Vancouver, said the crowd always "turns against' someone who scores low. "She scores low," he said./35.5 ordinals and 98.5 points,| "But she is consistent -- sheljyst enough to beat a surpris- scores low for everybody." Otherwise, "highly delighted." than she said, "I am a judge and we do not comment on such behav- lands, the current world cham- pion, is heavily favored, FOLLOW GERMANS The Soviet pair, ninth in the 1960 Olympics and second in the 1962 world championships to Maria and Otto Jelinek of Oak- ville, followed the Germans in the skating order Wednesday and they knew they had to go all out to win, They did, risking their more difficult program with its char- acteristic ballet movements. Their remarkable - smooth pre- cision drew the applause of the crowd as they went through a complicated program of grace- ful lifts and jumps, Five of the niné judges gave them higher marks than the and his wife wound up with only 13.0 ordinal points and a high total of 104.4 total points, The ordinals are based on the judges' placings and the better the placings the lower the ord- Miss Kilius, a 20-year-old ash blonde, and her 21 - year - old partner, had 15 ordinals and 103.6 points, German couple and Protopopov] dop' SEES LOOPHOLE TORONTO (CP)--Magistrate 8, Tupper Bigelow, chairman of the Ontario Racing Commission has stirred up the controversial issue of off-track horse -- and, in the process, of some opinions on the doping of race horses and "crooked" jockeys. Betting houses away from race tracks would be legal if the proceeds were funnelled into pari-mutuel machines at the track, he told the Ontario leg- islature's standing committee of commissions Wednesday. He said this was his interpre- tation of cértain sections of the criminal code and the time may be ripe now for such off-track betting. r. Bigelow also volunteered these observations: 1,' While the large majority of race-horse owners are hon- orable, there are possibly a few who night dope a rival's horse and some 'disgruntled' em- ployees who may use various eS. 2. The dishonest jockey is ex- tinct in Ontario since the rac- ing commission suspended 10 jockeys and a trainer in 1950, ORPEN STALEMATED Expanding on off-track bet- ting shop. However, the late| James G. Gardiner, then fed- eral agriculture minister, threatened to close the place immediaetly by order-in-coun- Miss Wilkes and Revell got jing U.S. pair, Vivian and Ron- Sherwood wasjald Joseph of Highland Park, |l., who got 35.5 ordinals and} "I told them before we jeft|98.2 points, Olympic Village for the stad-| RUSSIANS FIFTH ium that we'd bring home medal--and that's just they did," Canada's other two entries--|prother-sist Faye Strutt and Jim Watters of "Ata Vancouver and Linda Ann Ward and Neil Carpenter of Galt.--|certain winners after they saw] were not expected to be among) the jthe leaders in this competition./their' performance. He broke The 17-year-old Miss Wilkes, FINISH MTH ftom Unionville, Ont., and her 22 - year - old partner, Revell, from Newmarket, Ont., finished third to take the bronze medal. Their hopes of repeating the Wagner-Paul victory of 1960 were all but gone when the nine judges displayed their sian pair a few minutes before the Canadians skated. But the Canadians were a happy bunch anyway, Miss the Miss Strutt and Watters, 1th)the sh i sana this Woon champion: e shoulder of a Russian offi ships from which Miss Wilkes! qressed in severe all-dia i and Revell had to withdraw ating Saati aay ee ga Tikes was" inlet' iiss |thinestone clip in her hair, is was : Shed smiled ha y. 14th here. ler Page! | Miss Ward and Carpenter, injyniforms of the Soviet marks for the champion Rus-|their first international compe-|they stood together on the ros- tition, finished 16th in the field) trum to receive their medals jof 17, But Watters was probably the/plew kisses to the crowd. happiest of all the Canadian) "The Wilkes-Revell duo took last' minute when Wilkes and Revell having come/8"u away with a medal in their first Olympic bid. SHE'S HAPPY show off her bronze medal, centrated." what p. "T'R never forget tonight," hejsion that came as the Russians said. "Just the privilege of com-|finished, The Canadians opened |peting here was thrill enough." |with a double twist-lft oF aan? bo ag | Today the Reger, Pro-| whirled . w what to say,|gram sends the women's singles ¢j . mi T'm just too happy to put words|competitors -- including Sh a a oa i " together," Debbie said as she|dian champion Petra Burka and) 'The other two Canadian pairs arrived at the dressing room to|runnerup Wendy Griner of Tor-|displayed the nervousness of Feceive kisses and hugs andjonto and Shirra Kenworthy Of/newcomers and a fall by Miss 10 |Vancouver--to the ice for the|strutt and one by Carpenter T was terribly nervous be-|first three of six compulsory fig-/helped bring their marks down fore we started, but once we got} The other three figures will/Miss Strutt and Watters had on the ice I relaxed--and con-/be completed Friday with free-/129.5 ordinals and 85.3 points |Skating scheduled Sunday./Miss Ward and Carpenter 128.5| Another Soviet pair ,Tatyana Zhuk and Alexandr Gavrilov, (placed fifth and the Swiss team of Gerda and Ruedi Johner were sixth, Protopopov and his wife were judges' points following! jinto tears and put his head on cial, His slender, blonde wife, Later, wearing .the sealskin team, and the delighted Protopopov ithe ice following an intermis- and through a sparkling i Habs Surprise Club Owners By Late Rally cil, Legal Betting Alarms Bookies ent now, the magistrate sug: gested, explaining that there was some supporting opinion in interpretations of section 178 of the Criminal Code, Mr. Bigelow also felt the pari- mutuel tax on race track bets should be reduced rather than increased, His statement came in answer to a question whether the province could enlarge its budget with more .race - track revenue, The present tax should be cut three per cent to 12% per cent, he said, Experience in the United States showed that taxes over that amount brought dim- inishing returns. ISN'T ANY PROFIT The magistrate said that no owner would dope his own horse, But he might slip a dose of go-slow medicine to a rival horse. "Nobody dopes his own horse because there's no profit in it. Supervision is too strict and the penalties are too heavy." Mr, Bigelow said that in all but one-tenth of éne per cent of doping cases "is a sgrun- tled groom or former groom, stable employee or another owner" who is involved, The 'medicine' might even be some coffee to stir the horse to faster action and throw sus- picion on thé owner, But, Mr. Bigelow added, pre- cautions are taken by the au- The situation might be differ- | | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Punch Imlach said they'd fin- ish out of the playoffs. Frank Selke aaid he'd be sur- prised if they finished first Guess where Montreal Cana- diens are now? That's right, they are out in front of the Na- tional Hockey League and they defeated Imlach's Toronto Ma- ple Leafs to get there, The Montrealers parlayed a 2-1 win over Toronto in Mont- real Wednesday night with a 2-2 tie between Chicago Black Hawks and Detroit Red Wings to gain a one-point lead over Chicago. Selke wasn't overcome by sur- prise. The Montreal managing director prepared himself two weeks ago when he beamed: "We're not in first place yet but we will accept the nomination." That was just after Montreal blanked Chicago 1-0 td pull within a point of Chicago, Cana- diens still have a game in hand over Black Hawks, "Not me," said Revell, 'IiSjoukje Dykstra of The Nether-|ordinals and 84.2 points, Sport Celebrities Prove Just That 'TORONTG (CP) -- Warrenjat last summer's Pan-American} Spahn, winningest left - hander|Games; pitchers Whitey Ford of! OLD COUNTRY | SOCCER SCORES The way to first place for Ca- nadiens was through Bobby Rousseau's stomach, SCORED WINNER The 165-pound right winger, | who sat out Sunday's game with thorities to expose such cases, The goal broke a 1-1 tie with just less than five minutes left in the game and Canadiens withstood a Leaf rally in thet final minute when defenceman Terry Harper took a penalty and Toronto pulled Bower in fa- vor of another forward, Toronto took a 1-0 lead eahly in the second period wh scored his ninth goal of the sea- son after picking the puck off the boards and banking it into the net from a difficult angle. His shot glanced off goalie Charlie Hodge's arm, Dave Balon pulled Habs into a tie at 18:40 of the second pe- riod, before two penalized Leafs could get back into play effec- tively. Pappin and defenceman Car! Brewer were banished together at 16:34--Brewer for holding and Pappin for roughing. BOWER TESTED Taking advantage of the big edge in manpower, Canadiens were vege J Bower dance with shot after shot. The Leafs pen- alties expired, but before they could get back into the play Balon batted in Jacques Laper- riere's rebound from 15 feet. Pappin received half of the a hip injury, scored the winnin goal when his own rebo LONDON (AP)--Results of |Wednesday's Old Country soc- jeer games; English Cup Fourth Round Replay in baseball history, put in a bid/New York Yankees and Ron|West Brom 0 Arsenal 2 for the underdog. His pitch was/Taylor of St. Louis Cardinals, |Ipswich 0 Stoke City 1 for the second-division World Series loot: was hailed by clubs,/and Rafer Johnson, 1960 Olym-|Leyton Or 0 West the ones that don't share in the|pic decathlon champion whol : 'aa toastmaster English League Division I jtrickled off his stomach past Toronto goalie Johnny Bower. LG. TROPHY six penalties assigned to Leafs, one in each period. Referee -- Udvari called a total of 0. 2 Quebec Rinks rookie winger Jim Pappin| Howie Young On Waivers CHICAGO (AP) --. Defence- man Howie Young of Chicago Black Hawks was placed on waivers by the National Hockey League club Wednesday, General manager Tommy Ivan of the Hawks sald if no other NHL team picks up the 26-year-old Young for the $20, 000 waiver price by midnight Saturday, the Hawks could do what they want with him, In this case, big could be shipped to a Hawk farm club, Or he could be made eligible to be' bought by any minor league team, "Phe decision to place him on waivers was made pobrg| on his playing ability," said Ivan, "At present we have a better defenceman in Autry Erickson,' Erickson was brought up from the Hawks' Buffalo farm club of the American Hockey League recently when YOung was served a five-game suspension, The suspension was meted out by Clarence Campbell, league president, for Young's miscon- duct in a game at Toronto. Young, obtained by the Hawks from Detroit Red Wings early this season for goalie Roger Crozier, missed practice Tuesday, He attended Wednes- day's noon team meeting of the Hawks and later was notified he was placed on waivers, |500-metre speedskating final, CONTESTS MOVE OUTDOORS -- Russia With the Soviet Union off and running toward another first- place finish in the unofficial team standings, the competition at the ninth Winter Olympic Games moves outdoors toda: for three finals in which com- petitors from other European countries are favored. Skiers from the host nation of Austria are the choice in the day's glamor event--the men's downhill, scheduled on the treacherous, hard-packed run on Patscherkofe!l Mountain where an Australian skier died in a training accident and where several others were hurt. Any one of the first two dozen skiers down the course might win the gold medal, but the favorites ane Austria's world champions, Egon Zim- mermann and Karl Schranz, On the 30-kilometre ' cross- country ski trail, Finland's world champion Eero Maenty- ranta is considered far and away the best. And Germany's Helge Haase is the choice in the women's ENTERS ALL 3 Mrs. Irwin's Rink | To Represent Zone TORONTO (CP)--Mrs. H, S. Irwin of Dixie Tuesday won the} | central zone Association the second ing for championship time. Two years ago, Mrs, Irwin skipped a Toronto St. George's rink to the title. She now makes a second bid in Ontario Silver D playoffs at Cornwall next month, In Tuesday's wins, she stop- ped a string of victories by Mrs. L. BE. Woolley of Granite with an 8-7 extra end win in the third game of the fourth-rink round- robin playoff, This forced an ex- tra game which the Dixie crew took 8-6. Unionville Rink Wins Zone Playoff | PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- A lrink skipped by Mrs. Harold Lawrie of Unionville, Ont., earned the right Wednesday to represent the province's south- eastern zone in the Ontario women's curling championships in Cornwall Feb, 11. The Unionville foursome com: pleted the round-robin south- eastern Diamond D bonspiel un- defeated with a 12-5 win over Mrs. Grace Ough's rink from Barrie in the final round, Mrs. Lawrie's rink of Mrs, Marjorie Coulter, Mrs. Shirley Cornwall and Mrs, Ernie Law- rie earlier defeated a Lindsay, Ont., rink 14-5 and a Peterbor- ough rink 12-4. 4 Versions To Injury Of Pitcher lis rated a chance to add to the \bronze medal Canada picked up | Wednesday as the 1964 Games southern Ontario Ladies' Curl-|the figure-skating pairs after a Canada has entries in all three events, but none of them | got under way with three hockey games and the finals in jceremonious official opening be- fore 60,000 people, The bronze medal was won for Canada by Debbie Wilkes of Unionville, Ont., and Guy Re- vell of Newmarket, Ont., who finished third in the pairs fig- ure skating, The championship was won by Russia's brilliant pair, Lud- milla Belousova and Oleg Pro- topopov, whose five minute skating exhibition propetied Takes and Hans-Juergen Baeumler, to give the Soviet Union its first Olympic gold medal in figure skating. The Germans took the silver medal, just as they did in the 1960 Games when Canada's Bob Paul and Barbara Wagner of Toronto won the gold medal, The Soviet victory in the ice arena came after Canada, Rus- sla and Czechoslovakia had won handily in their opening games in the eight-nation round-robin hockey championships, HAS 12 POINTS Coupled with a fifth - place finish by another Soviet pair-- Tatyana Zhuk and Alexandr Gavrilov -- the victory gave, Russia 12 points in the unoffi- cial team standings. Expected victories in other events during the 12-day games should propel the Soviet Union to another overwhelming total in these standings, calculated on a 10-5-4-3-2-1 basis for the first six placings in each final and not recognized by the Interna- tional Olympic Committee. In 1960, Russia ran up 1654 points, 94 more than second- place Sweden and the Soviets dominated the 1956 Games--the first Winter Games they'd en- tered--in similar fashion, Germany got five points for its pairs silver medal Wednes- day, Canada got four, the U.S. three and Switzerland one. In the hockey action, Canada whipped the Swiss team 8-0 as expected, Russia downed the defending champion United States team 5-1 and Czechoslo- vakia overwhelmed the Goer- mans 11-1, SKATE WELL The young Canadian team, with only two of its players ex- perienced in international com- petition, skated well against the them past the world champion Lead In Team Standings INNSBRUCK, Austria (CP)--,German couple, Marika Killus tougher task today when the clash with the tough Swedisi squad, Switzerland piays its second' game of the cham ip: round today, too, mi ig Fine land, but the other four have the day off, Papeete the eight teams in: consolation round all 5 their first action. , Figure skating compstition continues today, too, he wom- en's singles getting under way with the first three of six com- pulsory figures to be run off. And the Winter Olympic's newest event--the men's and women's luge (toboggan) com- petition--opens with first runs down the Igis course in men's and women's singles, HAS ONE ENTRY Canada had only one entry in ---- Doug Anakin of Mont- real, Doreen Ryan of Edmonton and Doreen McCannell of Win- nipeg entered the women's speedskating final while Garry Battistella of Kimberley, B.C., Jean-Guy Brunet of Ste. Agathe, Que., Peter Duncan of Mont Tremblant, Que., and Rod He- bron of Vancouver were' in the men's downhill, Eric Luona and Franz Port- mann of Calgary, Don McLeod of Ottawa and Martti Rautio of Long Lac, Ont., were in the cross-country skiing. Petra Burka and Wendy Gri- ner of Toronto and Shirra Ken- worthy of Vancouver are the Canadian singles figure skaters. Miss Wilkes, 17, and Revell, 22, making their first Olympic bid, brought joy to the Cana- dian figure skating camp Wed- nesday night, alth they missed the championship. Team manager George Sher- wood of Vancouver said he was Swiss, but they'll have a much "highly sre " by the Ca- nadian showing. Young Canada Squad Tackles Sweden In INNSBRUCK, Austria (CP)-- Canada's young national hockey team, its first Olympic test saf- ely tucked away with an 8-0 tri- umph over Switzerland, faces a much bigger task today when it tackles Sweden in the second round of championship play at ithe ninth Winter Olympic |Games, The Swedes, who crushed Italy 12-2 in the preliminary round here Tuesday, will be a much more difficult foe than kept the score down Wednesday only with a spectacular perfor- mance from their netminder. | The Canadians, having split a pair of exhibition games with the tough Swedish squad in Can- ada earlier this year, know lwhat they're up against today and their coach, Rev, David Bauer, says they're determined \to do their best, | Switzerland also plays its sec- ond game of the champi i the less-experienced Swiss, who opening games, The Canada-Sweden game is scheduled at 3 p.m, EST. The Switzerland - Finland game starts at noon EST. HAVE .DAY OFF Russia and Czechoslovakia, the other giants of the tight-na- tion round-robin hockey compe- tition, have the day off today while the eight teams in the consolation group B section be- gin their 'action with four games. The Soviet Union, favored to regain the Olympic hockey title they first won in 1956 and lost to the United States in 1060, whipped the defending - cham- pion U.S. squad 5-1 Wednesday in the first competition here since the games were declared officially open Wednesday morning. The powerful Czechs then romped to an 11-1 triumph over Germany, round today, tackling Finland, which was idle along with Swe- The Canadian squad, picked from across Canada and welded whelmed their opponents in Winter Olympics by Father Bauer, was held te a single goal in the first pe- riod against Switzerland as Swiss goalie Gerald Rigolet played magnificently. But with centre Gary Dineen of Montreal and Roger Bour- bonnais of Riviere qui Barre, Alta,, set the pace, they rammed in five goals in the sec- ond period and two more in the third, SKATES BEST Father Bauer said in the dressing room later the squad it vegan its. pre-Olympic Cana: egan pre ic Cana- dian and European exhibition tours. But he wasn't satisfied with the marksmanship, "They've got to keep after their shooting," the Roman Catholic priest said. He had high praise for the Swiss goalie, however, b- ing him as the star of the Swiss club after Rigol t had made 61 saves against the Canadians. together at the University of|"He's a very. sharp boy," the CARACAS, Venezuela (AP)--j\den Wednesday when Canada, British Columbia in Vancouver|Canadian coach commented. Jim Owens, big right handed} Russia and Czechoslovakia over-' pitcher of Houston Colts, was) recovering from a cut in his) right leg Wednesday but cir cumstances leading to the in- jury were cloaked in confusion. | There were four different. ver- jsions, | 1. Police reporters of two newspapers said Owens was stabbed by an unidentified knife wielder in a Valencia barroom argument and stiched up in a hospital. Valencia is a suburb of southwest Caracas. 2. Valencia police said Owens intervened in a fight on behalf of a friend and was stabbed while attempting to act as peace-maker, 3. The president of the Val- encia club, with whom Owens has been playing winter ball in the Venezuelan League, said the) pitcher was cut as a result of a swimming pool accident. | 4, Owens said he slipped in a, -"Someone should send them|Johnny Wayne as "probably, the/Scunthorpe 2 Southampton 7 a telegram saying 'thanks for most talented athlete of all! Division IV participating,' the 42-year-old time. Stockport -0 Bradford C 1 southpaw told the 13th annual VETS ARE GUESTS - Sports Celebrities Dinner spon-| ' y ¥ | sored by the Ontario Sportswrit- " eteran oo -- Johnny} 3 owers, Doug Bentley, Jack os -_ Sportscasters "Associa-|Stewart' and Loren Carr, foot. tion ballers Jim Taylor of Green Bay} « Befitting a function organized|Packers and Russ Jackson of At Olympic Games to benefit the Ontario Society/Ottawa Rough Riders, curler) BY THE CANADIAN PRESS for Crippled Children, the under-/Tom Ramsay and skeet-shooter|What Canada did at the Olym-lanteed that at | f th dog frequently was the hero in/Barney Hartman were other|pics Wednesday ee seven ends and miss ol the addresses, both humorous/head-table guests, | Figure-Skating pairs: Debbie we ay sulter . Seine time "he 'said aatbiod i and inspirational, by the head-| Timmy," representing On.(Wilkes, Unionville, Ont, and) uae . Rael oe Abba hea table guests. tario's crippled childrens *' Guy. Revell, Newmarket, Ont. side, "A bert Lahaie of) ough beaten once in ear- . Spahn, Milwaukee Braves'|10.vear-old Charlie McMuil was\third; Faye Strutt and Jim Wat- Capdete-aadeletie, Qee., aed er cnmpetiiies, five other rinks perennial ace, brought up the winderc le McMullenof oe Vancouver. "lath: Lindale? peusie of Shawinigan, Que.,/advanced to the second roun: plight of the pitcher who has I kG i ; 'Ward and Neil Carpenter Kit- all owed records ,of five Winsiwith victories Wednesday and just thrown a home-run ball, He)», ack Gate¢liff, president Of /chener, Ont., 16th. Field 17 iene oe er or an stasis ek te Ts cee Urged a ruile-change giving the |, : edie gir and sports edi- Championship hockey: First gre + the acerest Queene with byes. The winners unfortunate hurler "a box of (OF of the St. Catharines Stand-) ound Canada defeated Switeer! International. Bonspiel. were Bloc-Andersen, B. Bolth: things to play with' while his ard, said the attendance Otland 8-0 . But today's draw sent Lahaie,|auzer of Burlington, Ont., Mon- 1,150 was a record for the func-| : Quebec's representative in thejast, Don Schaeffer of Montreal, tormentor circ! h ses, : 4 : ' ome Boag oth A so ot ion, which has raised a total /1988 Brier, against Belisle.jand John Kilburn of Frederic- his four brawls with Sandy Sad-/°! $280,000 since its inception. | Snowcroft meets U. Bloc-And-|ton, . ' mae ersen of Toronto, who has al-| Those reaching the second e decribed ins ani orm] Chas, Finley, HOCKEY Marciano as "very colorful) | fighters--we used to bleed a) Gets Ch | STANDINGS m | ance der fo worl | r the id featherweight ready lost once, round via the bye were Bob In Second Tilt QUEBEC (CP) -- Two Que-jadmitted. "They took one on the bec rinks and a -crew from/first end, we got two on the Prince Edward Island remained)second and from there on in we undefeated as they entered to-idid everything wrong--off the day's second round of the Lieut-/boom, no. weight." enant4Governor's Trophy event 2 but the fate of the draw guar-/HAD 7 MISSES "I had last rock on the last Canada's Success ANNOUNCEMENT TO OSHAWA BEERDRINKERS sea ai ---- aan ead title during the 1950s, i J s. proudly, The big upset of Wednesday's|Ash, Kirkland Lake, Robert iplay was the 9-2 walloping|Chalmers, Fredericton, Ford i q | jhanded favored Frank Butorac|Loucks, Port Alfred, Que., Bill step Bie sins hae Rasa lof -- in ee oe crete, Toronte and tear. Oue.| | ing round, by Quebec's Robert city skips, Francois Poul- | |Monast, Butorac, who won allliot, V. E. Lyon, Robert. Versh-\Olympic Championship Group) \three major prizes here last|cuere and Guy Chenail. Canad: 8 Switzerland 0 } lyear, suffered his first defeat) Widest margin of victory was| Russia 5 United States 1 F APtlafter winning 28 consecutive|turned in by H. ¥. Rice of Ham-|C2echoslovakia 11 Germany 1 Algames over three years here.jilton, who stunned Jean Hubert! Nova Scotia Sealer "We were terrible," Butorac/of Quebec with a 14-0 thrashing, |Mencton 4 Halifax 3 North Shore League HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS described himself and former O'Keefe Blended | is a blend of two great ales, for a flavour that really satisfies. We used to call it O'Keefe Extra Old Stock Ale, but that was too much of a mouthful so now everybody calls it | O'Keefe Blended |. Including us. | By THE CANADIAN PRESS RERE BLANCHFLOWER GROUP A Danny Blanchflower, who led, BOSTON (AP) -- American Tottenham Hotspur to the @ague president Joseph E. heights in British soccer but Cronin said Wednesday Charles /Canada ayed 50 times for less success-\0: Finley, owner of the Kansas/C'slovakia bi Irish international teams, (City Athletics, has been granted) Russia lectured on gamesmanship in|® two-week extension to nego- United States Support of te argument that| tate a lease for Municipal Sta- beard 'you can make a success of ae \Switzerlan failure if you're clever enough. Cronin said. the league/Sweden Bill Crothers, Toronto middie-/granted Finley an extension of Finland distance runner who was hon-|the deadline date of Feb. 1 to! Wednesday's Results | ored as Ontario's athlete of|Feb. 15 in which to negotiate|Canada 8 Switzerland 0 | Montreal ~ = "er fs4 eeoorrts ~ Th, eosoooor~ SOSH HUH wD ~ eoomrurnsS coocoown diens was ended by a serious/by his office in Boston. He is No play Wednesday injury jast' season, He urgediconfined to his home in subur- Thursday's Games parents not to. let his accident ban Newton by a respiratory in-/Poland vs. Romania deter them from' encouraging fection Italy vs. Hungary their youngsters to play hockey. The illness forced cancella-| Yugoslavia vs. Austria Other celebrities honored at tion of his scheduled appear.'Japan vs. Norway the dinner *ncluded Willi Weiler ance before a Senate subcom- Friday's Games of Camp Rerden, Ont., winner mittee in Washington Thursday/ Norway vs. Poland of eight medals in gymnastics'in connection with a sports bill.|Japan vs. Romania Southern New Brunswick |Fredericton 3 St. Stephen 3 Nerthern Ontario Senior A National Cleveland 28.15 3164119 58'seuth Porcupine 3 Rouyn-Nor- WLT F Apt/Pittsburgh 2559 1.156 137 51! anda 8 4 2s 24.13 10 137 117 58/Rochester 2220 0 154.135 44) Big Six mous amateur athletes, "'who/ficials for use of the city's sta-/Russia 5 United States 1 Toronto 2217. 7.123 118 51) Wednesday's Results { i ici _ "who a 2 y's Re Lethbridge 0 Medicine H compete because they enjoy it"/dium. | _ 'Thursday's Games | Detroit 1721 8 114135 42|Springtield 4 Cleveland 7 [eer Geterts Susler 8 need and with no hope of special The American League presi-/Canada vs. Sweden iNew York 16 23 7.134.152 39/Rochester 4 Hershey 5 iDresden 4 Windsor 5 "I have no complaints," said/ granted at the request of Louis Friday's Games Wednesday's Results Pitts " i <ings Lou Fontinato, whose National|Nizer of New York, attorney|United States vs. Germany \Toronto 1 Montreal ? wpe 'vane OF gy Hockey League career as a de-/for Finley Russia vs. Czechoslovakia |Detroit 2 Chicago 2 Vancouver 2 Portland 3 Lacambe 6 Edmonton 2 New York at Boston | Muskegon 3 Chatham 2 Queen's University 5 St. Law-| American League \Toledo 1 Fort Wayne 3 |" rence (N.Y.) ad =e Eastern Division Saskatchewc. Junior Ontario Intercollegiate BR apog 0 179 155 568 Regine 4 Saskatoon 6 soaeere aU peRarEceg st 26 18.1 152 143 53 Eastern League 1927 4134 160 42| Long Island 3 New Haven 6 ADDITIONAL SPORTS 'FOUND ON PAGE 20 Quebec Hershey Baltimore Providence 'Springfield 1 Campbellton 3 By THE CANADIAN PRESS Western Division Kapuskasing 5 Timmins 3 League 1963, spoke in praise of anony-|With Kansas City municipal of-/Czechoslovakia 11 Germany 1 (Chicago 24.15 9 148 109 57 Buffalo 1426 4113 170 32/Okotoks 1 Calgary Cowboys 2 privilege or publicity dent said the extension was/Switzerland vs. Finland Boston 12:26 9 112 137 33 Tonight's Game Ottawa-St. Lawrence Senior fenceman with Montreai Cana-| Cronin's statement was issued GROUP B Game Thursday International League Exhibition WLT F Apt Flin Flon 8: Moose Jaw 9 | Ryerson 6 Waterloo Lutheran 3 1824 3 166 162 39) Knoxville 2 Johnstown 3 1525 2135 162 32'Clinton 1 Nashville 6

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