1Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Prid jay, February 28, 1964 Hull Sparks Hawks Howell co: they ey, Hockéy League is in getting off that shot with 4 aim of fuss. and prepara: Give @ goaltender an unim- peded line of vision and a chance to set himself and he'll facepee you right out of the e It's the sneaky ones that give him trouble. But a couple of fellows cat count 'em on sheet velocity in their shooting and one of them winding up at the drag-end of seciitive season and they've got Paces Blues even from, that old bromide, the mathematical. viewpoint. It the Red Wings pick up so much as a single point or the Bruins drop one between now and the windup of the schedule, Boston is out. So all the Bruins have to shoot for now collectively is to avert among them apart from Only a a would carry Hull the 50-goa Rocket Richard. the standings for the fourth con- 10 points to make up on the Rangers. The Black Hawks, performing before a hometown crowd of 14,- ing rise to heady speculation, "his production fell can get them that way, perhaps Montreal's Bobby Rousseau and Jean Beliveau most notably Bobby. finishing kick even close to record he shares with Bernie Geofftion and They were talking in terms of & 60-goal season for Hull some time back, He was always con- sideréd a slow starter. But he pushed off big this season, giv- off this is Bobby Hull, the blonde kid with all the ripply muscles and Grecian profile, He scored his 87th goal of the poong K oné such typical ef: fort rsday night and his Chi- cago Black Hawks bounded back into 4 share of first place in standings with a 4-2 win over Detroit Wings, a club oh a hot streak up to that point, HOWELL HURTS BRUINS New York's Harry Howell, never known as a wizard on the atack, meanwhile scored once and helped set up two goals, powering the Rangers to a 4-2 win over Boston Bruins in a gamé between two clubs headed nowhere. | By implication, the Rangers) SCORING SHOT SIZZLES nine games, But the Canadiens have cago and 14 in Montreal, Ro Murphy, Red Wings. month for some reason and now 683, swihg into a 75-point tie with Montreal Canadiens at the head of the standings by beat- ing a club that had won seven and tied one in the previous pine t0 play to Chicago's nine, hey tangle twice more, the first meeting Sunday night in Chi- the second one, March defenceman Pierre Pilote and Chico Maki) were the Chicago goal-getters| ¢ alohg with Hull while Larry Jef-| Leo Boivin counted for Boston. frey and Norm Ullman found|Green clicked on a power-play. the mark for the fourth-place But he was one of the two Bos-| Canton, to reach 50, PENALTIES HURT BRUINS 14/8c0red for New York while the gers Bob Toronto trade, Earl Ingarfield was the other New York scorer. Defencemen Teddy Green and ot an insurance goal from jtn players in the box when Howell and Gilbert scored, The. schedule resumes Satur- he needs 13 goals in nine games Before 10,241 fans in Boston, Howell and Rod Gilbert both Bruins were two men short be cause of penalties and the Ran evin; a principal in the HERE ARE FOUR of the seven new. members of profes- | sional football's Hall of Fame, who were named yesterday, at Ohio. Left-to-right, | showed in last weekend's Swap| Hull simply. overpowered day night with New York at Schnell with Toronto Maple Leafs that/Terry Sawchuk to score with a| Montreal, a Sawchuk saw it all off aspirations this season. And|the way but the puck streaked| Boston's chances along the|over his shoulder before he| | they have foresaken any play-|50-footer, same line can hardly be dis|could react. cussed realistically any moré Only a handful of performers' York. Chicago at Toronto afd Detroit at Boston. Sunday night, apart from the Chicago- | Montreal gaifie, it's Toronto at Boston and Detroit at New) Crothers And Both Win At MSG NEW YORK (CP) The} track and field crowds at Madi- son Square Garden whoop it up every time Tom O'Hara, Bill Crothers or Bruce Kidd is intro- ind no wonder. | The three athletes gave the 13,000 at the Garden for Thurs- day's Knights of Coumbus in- door games some real runs for) their money. yards. lornERs ANTI-CLIMACIC ing seven feét, one inch; pole vault, ter inch, and Gary Gubner ahead in the last 1% laps of the 22-lap twu-mile race to beat Australian Ron Clarke by two The high jump, where John|urday, Thomas of Boston won by clear- the} on by John Uelses) |with a jump of 16 feet one-quar| fourth in 4:19.7 | "i $18.7; Kidd indoor mile in 4:03.6. Leps was more than 30 yards behind at the finish, but his time was far better than his 4:09.6 posted as he won the U.S, Amateur Ath- letic Mnion title here last Sat- | Dave Balley, 19-year-old Tor- jonto high school senior making his first indoor mile start, was O'Hara, the 21-year-old, 130-\shot put victory with a heave|WINS BY 10 YARDS | : : pound Loyola Coilege senior|of 62 feet 84 inches were anti-| Crothers, winner at distances|the compulsony figures, which) were second and third after the/Snelling had 2,004.3 points and/championships that a Krats has pe Chicago, ran the second climactic, 'astest indoor mile in history , ' and en route set a world indoor po ara Alay record for the metric mile. | as a Crothers, 23-year-old Toronto pharmacist who runs for the East York Track Club, raced away with an easy triumph in the 600-yard mun, then came back with a sensational final qurter-mile anchor-leg romp that brought his East York team from 20 yards behind to victory in the club mie relay. Kidd, 20-year-old University of Toronto student who also runs for East York, spurted in in timed seconds timed in 3:56.6, 1961. three in earlier indoor meets this win- the|ter, mile--jess than two seconds offjin the Casey 600--four-tenths of| the world indoor record he set/@ second off the listed world) two weeks. ago when he wasirecord, He stayed behind the) Ergas Leps of Toronto, fin- ished second, running his best of 500, 600, 880 and 1,000 yards| count 60 per cent towards the|two figures, | DORTMUND (CP-AP)--West|title, and then coasted in with) Miss Dijkstra scored 347.6) vital in preserving pro foot- ball when others failed; Clark Hinkle, Green Bay Packers fullback who led NFL in scor- ing and field goals; and Lynk they are: Jimmy Conzelman, coach of champions at Prov! dence and the Chicago Cardi nals; Art Rooney, operator of Pittsburgh Seelers, who was dortfer Is Methodical Champ FORMER GRID GREATS NAMED TO HALL OF FAME Germany, the host country, has|a steady but colorless free-skat-|points on the first two figures. won its second gold medal in| the 1964 world figure skating) championships, but men's sin-| ing program. The German placed first on was\and Miss Burka 303.6. of champion the cards {Miss Heitzer had 328.8 _ points Two other Canadian skaters gles champion Manfred Schnell.jeight judges and had 10 ordin-|finished well down. Former Ca- dorfer had to share Thursday's} honor. with an 18-year-old Amer-| ican, While Schnelidorfer was add- pic crown, Tommy Litz of Her-| shey, Pa., was winning the free. Style section of the men's com-| petition with a spectacular per- formance. Innsbruck, Aus- this month, commanding lead pic crown at tria, earlier built a als and 2,222.1 points. jnadian champion Wendy Griner Alain Calmat of France, a 23-|0f Toronto was in ninth place year . médical student, was points, | old University of Paris/@2@ Shirra Kenworthy of Van- 'ag second|couver and Albertina Noyes of ling the world title to his Olym-|with 23 ordinals and 2,180/the U.S. were tied in 10th place. Donald Knight, 16,0f Dundas, 'Ont., made the best Canadian TAKES WOMEN'S LEAD W showing in the men's singles Oss Dijikstra took the lead/placing 10th, with Dr. Charles earlier Thursday in the wom-|Snelling of Welland, who ended Schnelidorfer, a 20 - year - oldjen's singles with two of the six'a four-year retirement by win- tra Burka of Toronto, who fin-|in official standings. 106.0 ordinals, {Munich student, used the same compulsory figures' skated. Rening his sixth Canadian cham- jtactics that won him the Olym-|gine Hetizer of Austria and Pe-jpionship this year, placed 13th|races, All 112 take to the hills Heljished second and third behind) Knight scored 2,062.6 points} in|Miss Dijkstra in the Olympics, and had 79 ordinals while Dr.|nine-year history of the junior|shaw. | Northminster won its second istraight defeating King Street won by 10 yards in 1:09.7 jother three men in the race un-| Official times caught him in'til the last two laps, then pulled) $:43.6 at the 1,500-metre mark,|@way with ease, | a full three seconds under the; The strong Toronto runner|Montreal listed indoor mark set by Hun-|was much more sensational in|Chicago gary's Istvan Rozsavolgyi, who)pacing his hit 3:46.6 en route to his 4:01.8 team to its victory over three] Detroit victory in this same meet injothers in the club mile relay./New York East York relay) | Dave McClure, George Shep-| jherd--who finished fourth in the} 1,000-yard run--and Don Me- Carter, running in that order,| SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' |had fallen 20 yards behind by| jthe time Crothers got the ba- | Crothers streaktd away, cov- ered the distance in 47.2 sec-| onds and hit the tape four-|Montreal at Chicago tenths of a second ahead of the|Toronto at Boston New York Pioneer club's an-| chor man. | Kidd, his arms flapping and occasionally his left hand INA HANSEN skipped her rink of housewives from Kim- berley, British Columbia, to the Canadian Women's curling championship, the coveted "Diamond D Award' out at Ed- monton yesterday and it marked the second time in the early history of the Canada'wide women's curling classic that this B.C, rink has copped the buhdle. They won it in 1962 and lost out by a one-game margin to New Brunswick last year. Now the interest of the besom an' stane exponents turns towards Charlotetown, P. E. I., where "The Brier" will get underway on Monday morning. The '"'Curler's Special Train' pulled out of Montreal late last night, headed for Moncton. A large Oshawa party will take in the men's Canadian curling classic, including Mr, and Mrs. A. J. Parkhill, "Lew" Beaton, Fred Garrard,. Jim Souch, Bert White, "Waddy" Oke and Harry Gay. While Ernie Richardson's defending champions are fav- ored by most to repeat as winners of the '64 Brier and earn the right to defend "The Scotch Cup', out at Calgary, later in March, the Ontario rink from Hanover, is also rated highly this year, since they are repeating their bid and with the add- ed experience should make it tough for all concerned. aA X X p 4 THE VARIETY of opinions, concerning Tuesday night's world's heavyweight affair between Cassius Clay and Sonny Liston, are now coming to light. We find them all interest- ing reading. Arthur Daley, well-known columnist, in his weekly contribution to the Toronto morning paper, writes that this fight was no fake, that Liston, 'the bully", quit cold. He decries Liston's unwillingness to take what was looming as an inevitable defeat, out in the middle of the ring -- in- stead, Liston spat out his mouthpiece and declined to get off his stool. Daley admits one point, Liston's failure to club Clay, when he was partially blinded, throughout the fifth round, has to be viewed with suspicién, Wilf Grimsley, an Associated Press sports writer, writes that Liston still holds Clay in contempt as a fighter. Grimsley points out that every- body knows Clay can talk but that he still has to prove that he can fight. He punches holes in Clay's 20-victory record by pointing out that most of his opponents were fighters "going downhill" and even then, some of the fights were close, One thing is certain, if they get into the ring again -- before this calendar year is out -- Clay will get his chance to convince all that he's a wizard of speed, with both feet and hands, for * g heavyweight and whether or not Sonny Liston is too old to go the distance any more, x xX x BRIGHT BITS: -- Oshawa Generals came up with a bril- liant victory last night, knocking off the Junior Canadiens right in Montreal 7-4. While this was going on, Marlies thump- ed Hamilton 12-2 and Peterborough moved into a tie for fourth place with Niagara Falls by beating St. Catharines 3-1. Petes piay the Flyers, tonight in. the Falls, so that a tie will not last very long. . . . CHIHAWKS continue to cling to their grip on the top NHL rung, along with Canadiens. They beat Red Wings, 4-2, last night, with Bobby Hull getting what proved the winning goal -- but at the time it made it a 3-0 lead. In the other game last night, the score was the same, with Harry Howell scoring the winner and assisting on two more as Rangers won in Boston 42. clutching at his jersey, turned on the steam in the last two laps of the two-mile run to over- take Clarke and then hold him | off to the finish. Minor Basketball Round -- Robin Set Simcoe Hall Boys' Club Minor Basketball League enters a round-robin series to determine) league championship, starting| Saturday, February 29. The following is the play-off) schedule: | February 29: Atlas vs Nickis,| 10.30. a.m.; 'Redstones vs Sat-) urns, 11.00 a.m. and Polaris vs Beaumarks, 11.30 a.m. | March 7: Beaumarks vs Red- stones, 10.30 a.m.; Nickis vs Polaris, 11.00 a.m. and Saturns} vs Atlas, 11.30 a.m | March 14: Polaris vs Saturns,| 10.30 a.m.; Atlas vs Redstcnes,| 11.00 a.m. and Beaumarks vs} Nickis, 11.30 a.m, | March 21; Atlas vs Polaris,| 10.30 a.m.; Saturns vs Beau-| marks, 11.00 a.m. and Nickis vs} |Redstones, 11.30 a.m, | March 28: Saturns vs Nickis,| 10.30 a.m, Beaumarks vs Atlas, | 11.00 a.m. and Redstones vs! Polaris, 11.30 a.m, The winner shall be the team jwith the highest point standing | throughout the,5-game series.) In the event of a tie, the winner shall be the team. which scores} the most points in the round- j robin series, Snow -- From» Oshawa Ski Club There is still good skiing at the Oshawa Ski Club, despite the lack of snow in the city, Conditions on the Bowl Run, g00d to excellent; Divebomber, good to excellent, windblown at top; New Property, good to ex- cellent; West Hill, windblown at top, good below; Ben's Bumps, good and Practice Hill, wind- blown at top, good below. Pee Wee proficiency tests for the Snowflake badge, will be held Saturday morning. Buses leave S. J, Phillips School. at 9.15 a.m, as usual and leave the HOCKEY SCORES AND STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Nationa League Whur fF APt $2 16 11 181 142 75 32 18 11 188139 75) 26 22 10 150 143 62 24 25 10 151.170 58 20 31. 8 166 201 48 Boston 14 36 10 139 180 38 Thursday's Results Toronto |New York 4 Boston 2 Detroit 2 Chicago 4 Saturday's Games New York at Montreal | 'ton for the last quarter mile. |Chicago at Toronto Detroit at Boston | Sunday's Games | at New York American League Eastern Division WLT F APt. 35 25 1217 18471 30 26 3196 201 63 26 31 4170 192 56 Providence 26 29 3 208 196 55 Springfield 2031 3179 210 43 Western Division 3222 4 204 160 68 31 26 2187 170 64 29 27 1202 196 59 1931 7157 211 45 Thursday's Result Providence 1 Quebec 6 Detroit Quebec Hershey Baltimore Cleveland Pittsburgh Rochester Buffalo Cenral Professional | Nova Scotia Senior WLT F APt\New Glasgow 2 Windsor 6 3814 6 25016182) (Windsor leads best-of-seven 29 25 7 269 231 65|semi-final 3-0) 2929 3205 218 61/Halifax 0 Moncton $ Minneapolis 27 25 6 229 21860) (Halifax leads best-of-seven Cincinnati 10 40 6 152 294 26|/semi-final 2-1) ' Thursday's Results Ottawa-St. Lawrence Senior St, Louis 5 St. Paul 4 |Hull 4 Ottawa 3 Cincinnati 4 Omaha 2 tinal 3-1) inal 3- Ontario Nae § ', 4 pt Morrisburg. 10 36 9 7304 186 79) (Morrisburg 33.15 5 274 178 71/Seven quarter-final 3-1) 2719 6 228 208 60/,.. Northern Ontario Senior 24.20 7168 173 55\ mins 4 Rouyn-Noranda 6 2421 7195 169 55 Saskatchewan Senior 90 97 #919 98 ag |Saskatoon 4 Regina 1 20.27 6 219 230 46 8 A as eae ti Saskatoon leads best - of- Hamilton 10.38. 9176 263 99) (ask Kitchener 838 5198 285 91/8even semi-final 3-0) : : Ottawa-Hull Junior Thursday's Results Brockville 4 Buckingham 1 Oshawa 7 Montreal 4 (Buckingham leads best - of- St. Catharines 1 Peterborough 3 seven quarter-final 3-2) Toronto 12 Hamilton 2 Smith Falls 1 Pembroke 5 Tonight's Game (Pembroke. eads best - of- Peterborough at Niagara Falls!seven quarter-final 3-2) Internationa League Northern Ontamo Junior Muskegon 6 Des Moines 7 Garson-Falconbridge 4 North Eastern League Bay 2 Johnstown 6 Philadelphia 6 Cape Breton Senior Glace Bay 2 Sydney 0 (Glace Bay leads best-of-nine final 2-1) Omaha St, Louis St. Paul Cornwall 3 Toronto Montreal St. Cath'ines Peterbor'gh Niagara Falls Oshawa Thunder Bay Junior Fort William Hurricanes 4 Fort William Canadiens 4 Saskatchewan Junior Flin Flon 6 Saskatoon 6 GOAL JUDGE GETS LITTLE | Marlies Cinch SYMPATHY FROM 'BENCH' OAKVILLE (CP) -- Magis- trate Kenneth Langdon said Thursday being hit in the throat by the butt end of a hockey stick is one of the haz- ards that a goal judge ac- | cepts with the job. He dismissed a charge of assault causing bodily harm against Robert. Maxwell, 29, of Niagara-on-the-Lake Walter Bishop, 26, of Tor- onto testified that while act- ing as a goal judge he was struck in the throat by Max- well's stick, which was pushed through the wire mesh, The incident took place here Feb. 9 during an Ontario Hockey Association Senior Series game between Oakville Oaks and Welland Burloaks. Bishop said he was in hos- pital for three days and has Top Berth In been unable to work for a full | Jr. OHA Race day since the incident, Maxwell, a player on the | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Welland team, was assessed | Toronto Marlboros have a. match misconduct penalty /¢clinched a first place finish in at the time and has been un-|the Ontario Hockey Association dey suspension since, Bill jJunior A series, Hanley, business. manager of} Thursday the Marlboros the OHA, said after the court |crushed Hamilton Red Wings hearing that Maxwell's sus- /12-2 to push their total to 79 | . (Hull leads best-of-seven semi- pension would be reviewed by the OHA Monday. Magistrate Langdon said Canadian Athletic Hockey As- sociation rules provide for penalties for such offences in- volving officials and that offi- cials are actually consenting to the possibility of injury when they take the job. LAST NIGHT'S STARS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Defenceman Harry Howell, who scored New York's third goal and helped set up two oth- ers in a 4-2 win for the Rangers over Boston Bruins Chicago's Ron Murphy, who collected a goal and an assist when the Black Hawks ended Detroit Red Wings 4-2 ANOTHER WINNER ARCADIA, Calif. (AP) -- Vet- eran jockey Johnny Longden won the sixth race at Anita Thursday--his 900th vic- tory here and the 5,793rd of his long career. The | Name Geo. Trafton | To Hall Of Fame | CANTON, Ohio (CP)--George Trafton, a member of the ori- jginal Chicago Bears and later coach of Winnipeg Blue Bomb- ers, was one of seven members named Thursday to the U.S. professional football Hall of Fame Trafton, who joined the Na:| new! 1920 after a year at Notre Dame was an all-star centre for eight years and the first to roam on defence He coached the Bombers from} }ern Interprovincial Foothall Un.| ion title in 19 and losing to points with four games left on the schedule, Meanwhile Mont- real, who were dumped 7-4 by Oshawa Generals, have 71 points with only three games remaining. The only other scheduled league game saw Peterborough Petes grab a share of fourth place by downing the third- place St, Catharines Black Hawks 3-1, By virtue of the win, Petes moved into a tie with the idle' Niagara Falls Flyers. Nick Harbaruk carried the Mar boros to victory with a ix-/ point output, including three goals. Paul Laurent, Andce Champagne and Ron Ellis counted two goals each. Pete Stenkowski, Brian Watson and Grant Moore had the others. |John DeDiana and Pete Verver- gaert replied for the Red Wings. Ron Buchanan, who ranks be- lhind Montreal's 58-goal scorer UP*\tional Football League club in| ¥Va@n Cournoyer in that depart- ment, paced the Generals with a goal and four assists. It pushed his total for the season to 49 goals. Peterborough got a goal: in Santa/}1951 to 1953, winning the West-/each period--from Bob Jamie- son, Mickey Redmond and Jim Paterson--with the final goal 57-year-old Hamilton Tiger-Cats in the Grey/going into an empty net. Brian Club to return at noon and 4 Longden, who started racing in Cup final the following year af-/McDonald scored for the los- 'p.m, 1 _ 1927, rode Miss Twist. 'ter a third-place finish. ers. [wrapped up the Ontario Hockey iresise, Hare leads best - of- Scoring championship with only|Cer Harding, Robinson, Sher- | | |He now has 41 goals, tops in the) Was Knox's second, in a row. | ' | | } | | Kingston Kingston Midgets defoated Oshawa Minor Hockey Associa- tion Midget All-Stars 6-1, here at the Oshawa Children's Arena last night, to tie up their On- tario Minor Hockey Association Bastern Ontario playoff series at one win apiece, Kingston won the toss for the third and deciding game, which will be played in the Limestone City tomorrow (Saturday) after- noon at four o'clock, Oshawa struck for a goal less than two minutes from the open- ing faceoff, when Allan Griffin scored on a three-way play with Phil Solomon and. Bob Cam- eron, but after that, the Oshawa attack was hejd completely in Midgets Tie OMHA Series In the third period, Reid ada. jed his second goal, aided by Smith and late in the game, Finalgen scored o a from pps, to complete Ringsion's six-goal total, KINGSTON = goal, Lovett; defence, Smith and Balson; for. wards, Babcock, Feeley and Nicholson; alts., Apps, vier, Reid, Breck, Shea, Mackay, Murphy, Flanigan, Macera and Gavel, sub-goal, OSHAWA -- goal, Moore; de- fence, Dionne and Bowen; for- wards, Solomon, Griffin and Cameron; alts. id, Ewart, Graham, Luke, Wilson, Ostle, Morrison, Hewer, Stroud and Wayling, sub-goal, Lyman, factor in development of modern line play who was with champions at Canton, 1922-23, and Cleveland, 1924, check and they never scored! ., Officials -- Mel Suddard and again, Mike Babcock, from Paul Reid, tied the score after the midway mark with Jess than 50 seconds to go in the period,| (Apps, Smith) .. avinis AGM Reid put Kingston @head, on al a Brown (inter) and Apps three-way play with Syl Apps " SECOND PERIOD and Ricky Smith, 4. Kingston, Apps (Flanigan) Apps from Mike Flanigan and] ® Sygvon, Newer iy Apps, to complete Kingston's! Penaities--Graham (holding), Cameron Scott Nicholson, from Babcock bd A sha (elbowing) and Kl seal and Gary Feeley, made it 2-1 in THIRD PERIOD the middle frame, when Osh- 6. Kingston, Reid (Smith) awa served three penalties to| 7.Kingston Fisnigan (Apps) on by the visitors, Penalties --Reid (holding) 3, Kingston, Reid --(AP Wirephoto) John Krats Is Junior Champ CAMP FORTUNE, Que. (CP) Winning cross « country skiing championships is a family ef- fort with the Krats' of Sudbury. Their latest success came Thursday when John Krats Jr., just one day away from his 17th birthday, outfaced 33 others to take the Canadian boys title, one of two decided on opening day of the Canadian junior ski championships, The other crown went to 17- year-old Anhe Rowley of Ot- tawa, She topped a field of 17 in the Canadian girls' cross- country event, covering a 34%- mile course in 26 minutes and 41 seconds, Only about half of the compe- titors here -- representing ev- ery province but Saskatchewan --took part in the cross-country \Gill, Gunn, Church League Hockey Action Holdaway; Wotten, T. McKee, D. McKee, Griffin, Lambert, Welsh, White, Saunders, Walls and Werry. In "B" Division, St. Paul's edged St, Andrew's 21 in the final game of the regular sea- son schedule. A goal by Jim Andrews with 25 seconds re- maining gave St. Paul's the victory, Jim Andrews scored the other St. Paul's goal. St. Andrew's lone goal was scored by Brown, ST. PAUL'S -- goal, A. Drew; Beamish, R. Bolton, Laing, Northey, Brent, Nicholls, An- drews, Thompson, Patterson, G. Brick, D, Brick, Bolton, Barnes and Germond, Harmony overpowered Christ Church 6-2 for their first win of the Church Hockey League round-robin playoff. Three play- ers, G, McDonald, P. McGill and D. Orton, divided the Har- mony scoring with two goals each. Howard scored both goals for Christ Church. HARMONY -- goal, P. Me- Donald; McNaughton, Mcinally, Burley, Loverock, Orton, Me- Griffith, G. Me- Donald, Ibey, G, Bone, C, Bone, Hancock, Bracey and Hender- son, CHRIST CHURCH -- goal, McDermaid; Prest, Salmers; McIntyre, Band, Houghton, Laughlin, Crawford, Howard, |today in the giant slalom. This is the third. time in the |won the boys cross - country. |John's brother, Karl, twice held the honor and was runner-up in jother races, Ron Hergott Has Clinched Senior Title By THE CANADIAN: PRESS Right winger Ron Hergott of} Galt Hornets has all but Association Se nior A series a week remaining in the regu- lar schedule, Hergott picked up four goals and one assist in the last week to stretch his lead to 11 points.| league, and 34 assists for 75) points. | Welland Burloaks' high-scor-|g0als were scored by S. Blake) 9» and Goodwin. | ing duo of Vance Millar and| Jimmy Robertson trail by 11) and 12 points respectively, Mil-|Maclicod, ar has 36 goals and Robertson G, Blake, Clements, Clark, Nes-| 47 i bitt, | Dave Dryden, Hergott's team-/Dougall, Murdoch, G. Saarinen,| Hall, goaltenders |Christie, Fisher, Goodwin and|real, 6 1 28 | the mate, leads with a 3.66 average in 38 ap- 8, Blake. d pearances, ae fRushnell and Holland. Cay, Locke, Kaufman, Swin- son, J. Howard, Maidlow, Dawson, Broadbent and Ram- ST. ANDREW'S -- goal, D, Britton; Holmes, Pooler, Pen- ney, James, Bryan, Bennett, Rockbrune, Brown, Famme, Andrews, Stapleton, McBean, Zwicker, Frayer, Mackie, and Kitchen. FINAL STANDING "BY DIVISION WLT Pts, 11 2123 8 6 016 6-2. It was King Street's second straight defeat. Eric Nichols paced the Northminster attack with four goals. Alexander and Sloggett added the others. Rob-| inson and Pierson scored for|Simcoe King Street. St. Andrews NORTHMINSTER -- goal, F./st, Paul's 75216 Jay; McVerty, Wood, Sloggett, Westminster ou 1.1 Alexander, Gage, Nichols, Grif- " FINAL SCORING were G fin, Leaming, Hicks, Stephen- son, Jeffrey, Wilbur, Vander- coort, Popham, and MeGahey. KING STREET -- goal, D. Cutler; Suppelsa, Don Suppelsa, Pietson, Cuth- Holmes, St, Andrews 19 Rockburne, St. An'ws 18 Andrews, St. Paul's 8 Beamish, St, Paul's 8 Thompson, St. Paul's 4 Ogden, Reeson, Pearse, |Germond, St. Paul's 4 | Knox moved into a first-place) tie with Northminster blank-| ing Westmount 4-0. The victory) NHL LEADERS | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Satndings: Montreal, won 32, st 16, tied 11; Chicago, won . lost 18, tied 11, points 75 | Points: Mikita, Chicago, 75 G, Blake scored two goals to lead Knox to the win, Other lo KNOX -- goal, B. Martin; ' i , 37 Carmichael, Racz, a eo | Assists: Beliveau, Montreal, Manning, Saarinen, Mc-) Shutouts: Chicago; Boston, Mont- 136 mih- Johnston, Hodge, |; Penalties: Mikita, WESTMOUNT -- goal, B.\utes -- HOW TO CATCH A BEERDRINKER THIS LEAP YEAR O'Keefe Blended will do the trick. Give him a case of Blended this Leap Year -- and he's yours. Once he's won, keep him true with |O'Keefe Blended | (full name O'Keefe Extra Old Stock Ale). It's a blend of two great ales for a flavour that really satisfies, BL. 5648