Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Jan 1964, p. 11

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. Jack Nichlaus marks his ball, on the 12th green, at La Quinta Country Club, Palm Springs, yesterday, after just missing a hole-in-one by 18 inches, during the second of the $100,000 Palm Springs Gold Classic, If he had sunk his tee shot, it would have won him a bonus payment of $10,000. Shoop up, he missed the putt and took a par 3, for this hole. --AP Wirephoto Sanders And Sifford Tied After 36 Holes PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) Sanders shot a four-under- 68 and Charlie Sifford a 71 to reach the 36-hole of the 50,000 Palm Golf Classic tied at 137. 30-year-old Sanders, us- it putter for the BF EE 2 eeeeie a2 Dunes, La Quinta, Eldorado and Indian Wells. Four players were dead- at Goalby, Brit- ish Open champion Bob Charles with @ 72, Gene Littler, 78 to trail well behind with a total score of 149, ' Tommy Jacobs, who tied at 66 with Sifford Wednesday, had a 74 and was grouped at 140 with Don January, who shot a 71, and Zell Eaton, 69. Sanders, whose last tourna- ment victory was last April, said he recently bought four a He tried one in the Bing rosby tournament, the second at San Francisco last week and Of|the third one here with one club Jack Nicklaus shot a 72, fol- lowing his first-round 73, for @ 145 and Arnold Palmer cut s|stih to be tried. seven strokes off his finst-round Sanders was not over on any hole, He had three birdies with putts of 10, six and four feet on the first nine, and a four-footer for another birdie on the 18th, i INNSBRUCK, Austria CP)-- Rev. David Bauer, coach of 's young Olympic hockey team, was a casualty of the Canada-Sweden champion- ship game won 3-1 by Canada Thursday night. He was struck on the fore- head by a stick thrown by Swe- den's Karl-Goran Oberg. The Roman Catholic priest suffered a cut just above his "He ident eonrd e incident in the GM Basketball Loop 'Has Four Good Games; In the first game of the week- ly four-game schedule played in the GM Basketball League, at McLaughlin Collegiate gym, on Wednesday evening, Ac- counts Payable easily waltzed over Maintenance by the score 7 * The Payables were paced by 'John Fowler, newly acquired from the disbanded Sales team with 16 points and steady Mar- cel Boivin with 11 points, For the Maintenance team, it was Len Tompkins, Al Ridout and Bill McKee with six points each. - MAINTENANCE -- Stirling 2, McKee 6, Ridout 6, Tompkins 6, Vaughan 5, Peirson, Whalley 2, Holland and McArtney. ACCTS, PAYABLE -- Pem- 'berton 5, Longley 0, Boivin 11, Clark 8, Haggett 0, O'Reilly @, Fowler 16, Hardn OFFICIALS ey. ' -- Bill Gingerich and Jim Lutton, referees Mike Plancke, scorer. PAYROLL STILL PROFITS The second game featured un- defeated Payroll and winless Office Services with little doubt as to the eventual winner. Pay- roll scored an easy 45-31 victory with an all-round team effort. Each of their nine players present hit for at least two points and Frank Sobil's high of 14. The undermanned Ser- vices team were led by Dave * Anderson with 14 points made up six field goals and two free throws. PAYROLL -- J. Piatti 2, D. Piatti 4, Sobil 14, Breau 7, Mont- gomery 4, Edmonson 2, Redman 2, Eagleson 3, Winter 7. OFFICE SERVICES -- Jacula 1/2, Burke 4, Lambert 4, Kemlo 2, Rowden 5, Anderson 14. Referees -- D. Seeley and J. Kolodzie, \ EINGINEERS BEATEN In a very dull and lack-lustre affair Student Engineers upset Engineering 16-28. With only one substitute pres- ent on either bench the players were trying to conserve their energy by merely walking through the motions as indicated by the first quarter score of 43 in favor of who does it matter? The Engineers were without their ace playmaker and leader Don Mallet, who was injured in the previous week's game. However, the pace gradually increased, with the outcome in doubt until the final quarter in which the baby Engineers out- andiscored their older brothers 14-8 to gain the 8-point victory. ENGINEERING -- Roiniden, Souch 5, Walker 10, Hickey 7, Pascoe 2, Guglielmi 4. STUDENT ENGINEERS Wylie 12, Tucson 4,Radovich 15, Wills 5, Thompson, Latter. Referees -- Gingerich and J. Brady. WIN FOR PURCHASING In the final game Purchasing looking stronger each time out lpicked up their second-straight win but not without a struggle from the winless, tieless, hope- less Spyders from Cost Account- ing who were outnumbered 10 to 5 The final score of 39-29 could have been much closer but for Letter From Banff Group May Have Been Answer? INNSBRUCK, Austria (CP)-- Canada's representative on the International Olympic Commit- tee said Thursday a letter al- legedly from a Banff citizens committee was not brought up at the IOC meeting Tuesday which voted to have the 1968 Winter Olympic Games staged in Grenoble, France Sidney Dawes of was questioned in an interview about a letter allegedly signed by J. D. Anderson, who de- scribed himself as chairman of the Banff Citizens Committee, telling the IOC to take the 1968 games "elsewhere." Banff, the Rocky Mountain re- sort 80 miles west of Calgary, was beaten by Grenoble, 27 votes to 24, in the final vote or. the site for the 1968 games. "I don't want to talk abvut it," snapped Dawes in the brief , interview in a downtown hotel lobby. SEEN BY BRUNDAGE He said the letter was re- ceived by Avery Brundage, IOC geewond and was seen by (OC vice-presidents Lord Burgh- ley, the Marquess of Exeter, and Armand Massard of France. Dawes quoted Lord as saying "burn it." geen or read at the closed 10C meeting Tuesday or whether it in any way affected the vote! which gave France the games, | Dawes bellowed: ' "It's a lie. It's a lie--and you! ean quote me." ; to The Canadian Press said: "Before you decide on a site| Montreal) Rurghley| Asked whether the letter was) for the 1968 Winter Olympics, please be advised that most of the people of Banff are vehe- mently opposed to having them in Banff. "It is strictly the idea of sev- eral promoters in Calgary who are looking for some fast money and who do not care what hap- pens to Banff National Park. "We do not want you here and will do our best to make things most unpleasant if you decide to ignore our feelings. "Our town is far too nice to be loaded with so-called Olym- pic competitors who in the main are just ski bums and that ilk. "So take your Winter Olym- pics elsewhere and leave our town for decent people, not Olympic tramps." some erratic shooting by the Spyders in the latter stages of the game. By losing this game Cost Accounting keeps alive its unique recond of two years standing (that's a long time in one position. Bob Reynolds the tall centre of the Wildcats was a one-man show as he pumped in 22 ipoints. Gil Graham was next with 5 points. For the Spyders Larry Wells and Norm Fisher kept things respectable with 12 and 7. PURCHASING -- Lyons 2, Robson 3, Jermyn 0, Barton 0, Maly 2, Reynolds 22, Salyer 2, -- 5 Jennings 2, Clemens COST ACCT.: Lutton 5, Wil- liams 4, Hinchley 2, Fisher 7, Wells 12, Anderson 1. Referees ---B. Gingerich and J. Brady. ANOTHER SUSPENSION Commissioner Ed Kolodzie was forced to hand out a one- ara suspension last night, ringing the season's total to three, The first two suspensions ied to a loss for the Engineering team as both players had to sit out the same game. Complete . statistics were not available but it appears as if Bob Reynolds is the leading scorer with an average of ap- proximately 23 points per game. In last week's story it was erroneously reported the Payroll was the only undefeated team, however Accounts Payable are atso undefeated. In fact the Payables are in first place hav- ing ng one more game than Following is the current cor- rected standings: | | oad Accounts Payable ececees 2 Purchasing Maintenance --......00 GMI Grads .......+. 1 Cost Acctg. ....csccee 0 0 seseseees 2 Ceuunwnsoo SHORGAS HEATING &. APPLIANCES industrial and Commercial The established, relichle Gas Dealer in your eree. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of AtheD third period, with Canada lead- ing 3-1 at the time, when Oberg broke his stick near the Cana- dian nets. He skated by the Canadian bench and threw the remnant of his stick into Father Bauer's ace. DREW MINOR Oberg, who had a tryout with Toronto Maple Leafs of the Na- tional Hockey League last aut- umn, received a_ two-minute penalty for the offence. As play halted, Sweden's cap- tain Sven (Tumba) Johansson went to the Canadian bench and apologized to Father Bauer who told him: "That's okay." Father Bauer, blood oozing down his nose from the cut, prevented what could have be- come mayhem on the ice. The crowd booed lustily and outraged Canadian players on the bench jumped up, appar- ently ready to clamber over the boards after Oberg. The coach, probably the cool- est person in the arena, shouted: "Sit down." He or- dered the players to stop and said: 'I'm okay." Canadian Judge Criticized For Her Ratings INNSBRUCK, Austria (CP)-- Angry German fans Thursday cabled protests to Olympic offi- cials against the scoring of a Canadian figure skating judge, Dr. Suzanne Morrow Francis. She picked Germany's world Mrs, Francis picked the gold medal winners, Russia's Lud- milla Belousova and Oleg Pro- topopov, for first place as did four other judges. Four judges voted the Russians second place. The Russians won the title with the Gemans getting the second-place silver medal. Mrs. Francis, who won a bronze medal in the pairs at the 1052 games, picked Debbie Wilkes of Unionville, Ont., and Guy. Revell of Newmarket, Ont. for second place, the highest of Swede Throws Stick, Canadian Coach Hurt" Immidiately after the game, Oberg also apologized to the Canadian coach ans was told to "forget it." Another Canadian official was not so charitable, however. Art Potter, president of the Canadian Amateur Hockey As- sociation, said after the game: "That was one hell of a thing to do. That had no busi- hess pulling that kind of stuff. He should have been thrown out of the game or at least given a 10-minute penalty, "But this is the kind of thing we get from the Swedes." MINIMIZED IT Father Bauer minimized the incident to reporters after the game. "I guess he didn't mean to throw the stick at me," he said. "T guess he just wanted to get rid of it and I happened to be in the way." About the game, the Cana- dian coach, who welded the team together at the University of British Columbia after se- lecting players from across the country, said: 'We got the breaks and they didn't, The Swedes are a good team and they fought us all the way." 3 Sweden's coach Arne Stroem- berg said: "Canada could well beat the any of the judges, champions for third place in the pairs skating competition, One cable demanded "throw the Canadian out" of the inter- national judges panel, the Aus- trian news agency APA re- ported. Another asked for a pistol go that, 1 can shoot the Cana- dian. The competition in the new Olympic tea here was held up for several minutes by fans booing Mrs, Francis. The for- mer Canadian skating cham- pion, a Thornhili, Ont., veterin- arian, was in tears. Mrs. Francis rated the fav- ored German couple of Marika Kilius and -- Ae yy Baeumler third, ne Oy rn Mae Germans for Ss iret -- and four for second. THE LAST DAY For e Chance to Purchase @ 1960 Vauxhall Victor Sedan Fully Gueranteed For @ Total Price 1.00 For details see the classified section. Seaway Motors 200 DUNDAS ST. W. WHITBY 728-9441 eee eCeteeeeseseseseesreseseeesesneeseeeeees e meee eee ee 88 8 JUST DIAL 725-358) uae 43 KING STREET WEST, OSHAWA © QUALITY of Fuci Oi! with sure automatic deliveries © QUALITY of Service, 24 hours, radio-controlled every day, every night You're sure of QUALITY with Lander - Stark ' @ of Workmanship with all fu i ind QUALITY sf Nieto? pase oath Tale Russians and the Czech's on to- night's form." Frank About MONTREAL (CP) -- Frank J, Selke, managing director of Montreal Canadiens, said Thursday Nationa! Hockey sible in about five years. He said Los Angeles and San Francisco, two cities most often mentioned as good possibilities for an NHL franchise, play in the Western Hockey League. "T have reason to believe tha' the Western Hockey League have formed some sort of ar- rangement, or agreement, to stick together for five years," Selke said, "In other words, no two Western League teams would leave for the next five Selke, elaborating on com- ments he made on a television broadcast Wednesday ni ght, said he was speaking personally, NHL or the Canadiens. He said he is in favor of ex- pansion in the form of an inter- locking schedule between the ig and six western U.S. cit- es. "If six of the best cities in the U.S., and Vancouver as a representative of Canada, joined us as a unit, so tha: the two branches could form an in- terlocking schedule and cut down on the travel, it is. my personal opinion that this would be the best solution." not as a representative of the|j THE CSHAWA. TUMES, Friday, Jenepry 31, 1965 U5 Selke Sees NHL Expansion In Five Years League expansion may be pos-|"There hi tional Hockey League. The opening race will be run "We are stymied at the mo-jAug, 4, save William Rowe, one ment by lack of major leaguejof the backers of the new track. facilties in some of our cities," |The ORC set Aug, 4 to Dec. Leader said in commenting on alas Windsor's race dates, CONTINENTAL STEAMBATH 16A Ontorio St. Oshewe Finnish Soune Ph, 728-2460 ing together but I'm certain the NHL has no desire to break up our league. OSHAWA MINOR HOCKEY ASSOCIATION EXHIBITION HOCKEY Oshawa Children's Arena SATURDAY, FEBRUARY Ist 8:00 P.M. St. Michael's Juvenile All Stars ve. Oskawa Juvenile All Stars ADULTS 50c STUDENTS AND CHILDREN 25¢ VADIANT CLEANERS (Formerly Radiant Cleaners) OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE VADIANT CLEANERS ARE HAVING THEIR ANNUAL "BE SMART--BE THRIFTY" 7 DRY CLEANING. ODcllar Days SALE | (Feb. 1 to Feb. 15) Sulla... . . Woe DRESSES .. . 1.00 AND UP FOR SAME DAY SERVICE -- FULL PRICE

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