16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, April 2, 1964 Hockey Game To Help Civic Arena Hockey night will be held Friday Binge at the Whitby_Arena aid of the Oshawa Civic ptitortam Build- ing Fund. The main event of|Gei the evening will be a hockey ame between the Oshawa olice Athletie Associa- tion squad, composed of mem- bers of the Toronto Argonauts Football team, former' Champion Whitby Dunlo -- Bani for fary ar ect has been guaran ani rear the building is rising on the Thornton road south site, Finance Chairman Terence . V. Kelly says that special events will continue to be held to pro- vide revenue to suitably equip the building. with additional features to make it an enviable structure. The funds collected on Friday will go towards equipping a first aid room. William Kurelo, who so suc- cessfully chaired committees during the campaign to collect funds, namely the Target Day Committee and the Parade Committee is in charge of ar- rangements fer the evening and fun and entertainment are guaranteed. Festivities will start at 8 p.m. in the Whitby Arena which has been donated for the evening by the Whitby Arena Commis- sion, a fine gesture from the neighboring municipality. Aside from the hockey game, which will feature such stars as A ey, Be Jimmy Greaves 4 English Squad LONDON (AP) -- England's soccer selectors Wednesday pulled one of the biggest sur- prises in years by dropping goal poacher Jimmy Greaves for the match against Scotland at Ham- pden Park April 11. Greaves has played in 18 matches for England since he returned to Tottenham Hotspur from Italy in late 1961. He has been an automatic choice for England from the moment he came home--except for illness. But in recent weeks Greaves has lost his touch near goal in a spell that has seen Tottenham slump to fifth place in the First Division--five points behind Liv- erpool. Roger Hunt, Liverpool's inside, forward, will take over from} Greaves. England's team for the match! against Scotland: Banks (Lei- cester); Armfield (Blackpool, captain); "Wilson (Hudders- field); Milne (Liverpool); Nor- man (Tottenham); Moore (West Ham); Paine (Southampton); Hunt (Liverpool); Byme (West Ham); Eastham (Arsenal), and Charlton (Manchester United). Scotlands team will be: Forsyth (Kilmarnock); Ham-| ilton (Dundee), Kennedy (Cel- tic); Greig (Glasgow Rangers); McNeill (Celtic, captain); Bax- ter (Rangers); Henderson (Rangers); White (Tottenham); Gilzean (Dundee); Law (Man- chester United); Wilson (Rang-|]. ers). Bobby Attersley, Gordie Myles, Ted and Tom O'Connor of the Dunnies and Dick Shatto, Gerry orton gee Nykoluk 4 the Argos, Kurelo has lined up a Wes Bs Band and several dancing num- bers featuring local tal>nt. Slim Gordon and his Ontario County Boys will be featured and he will have along his daughter Shirley, June Eikhard. Neil Matthews, Barry Dunsmore and Cletis Glazier. The Oshawa Police Associa- tion team, which won the On- tario Police Athletic Association Championship in 1963 will line up as follows: B. Gearing, J. Foreman, J. MacDermaid, C, Hiltz, G. Ouellette, E. Stone- man, C. Olson, D. Tobin, R. Mc- Hugh, R. Reid, B. Wolno, R. Jemison, L, Middleton; A Whit- ney, N. Attersley, S. Bosak, B. Prentice, D. Bulloch and P. Mandryk, Chatham To Enter Junior 'B' League CHATHAM (CP) -- Chatham Junior Maroons of the Border Cities Hockey League have been assured of acceptance by the Western Junior Hockey League|*™! next season, says Harold Mac- Farlane, urer, The Maroons have applied for membership in the WJHL and several Ontario Hockey Associa- tion executives have given as- surances that the application will be accepted; MacFarlane said, Chatham would replace Till- sonburg in the six-team league with London, St. Thomas, Sar- nia, St. Mary and Ingersoll. following outlets or at the door on the night of the game: Miko's Place; Slim's Gordon Curral; Disc Shop at the Oshawa Shop- ping Centre; Henderson's Book Store; Whitby Arena and the Tickets are available at the!Oshawa Children's Arena. club__secretary-treas-| . OSHAWA BOWLING NEWS CATHOLIC LEAGUE Blowstrikers 10, -S irs, Pokes 6 points. john A, Carding! with 331, and Over 200 bowlers Men's With twe weeks more of the reguiar(High Triple to John also with 872. Ladies' schedule, Hootenannies are leading the|High Single to Helen Burrows with 267 pack with 16 points, Teachers Pests next/and Ladies' High Triple io Marle Koster with 13 points, Lambe's cores 13 points,|with 658. hamrocks, Debona were as follows. --- re Untouchables ali tied with 8 points|Marie Koster 241, 233, Audrey Brennan Siow 254, Mary Ekker 20], Helen Burrows. 267, Men's High Single for the week was|Barry Leach 206, Rita Wrubel 203, Dan Rukaruk 200, Fred Watts 208, Adrian Brennan 220, Mary Noordman 205, John A. Cardinal 331, 273, 268, Rite England| 201, Harry Dickison 254, 249, 235, Ted Powers 227, Alex. Lambe 221, O'Malley 204, 257, Fred Noordman 205, 224, Ed Giles 222, 329, Betty Sagriff 213, 237, John Hroncich 22, 27, 43 and Mary Giles 2. Lemon Leaguers -- Marj Baker 83 Bill NEW YORK (AP) -- If the Beatles are a sort of shriek- ing yellow, what color are New York Mets? Turn in the new Shoa Stad- jum scoreboard and find out. The scoreboard, largest in the world, is being built for the new stadium which the Mets will open against Pitts- burgh Pirates April 17. The board has 28,000 lights, shows movies, plays music in color and even keeps score. A model was unveiled Tues- day at a Manhattan Hotel, and the press was duly im- pressed. First, the inventor, Bob Ros- METS' SCOREBOARD WILL BE COLORFUL DISPLAY ton, played some music on a tape recorder. Each musical note produced a different co- lor on the white shell behind the scoreboard. The board will play music, flash the colors, display the words for songs, and show co- lor slides of each player as he comes to bat, The board can also movies or television programs if a game is held up by rain. This. brought suggestions that the board be used to bring in other games on those frequent occasions when the Mets are behind 13-1 in the third inning. show | Burke 90, Eleanor Horrigan 91 apd Rose Watts 91. i , WESTMOUNT UNITED CHURCH | Points taken -- Squirts 3, Sting Rays 3, Beatnicks 2, Smilers 2, Odd Balls 2, Won- ders 2, Zingers 1 and Go-Getters 1. | Team Standings -- Squirts 26, Sting Rays 14, Go-Getters 14, and Beatnicks 13. High Triples --- Morris Love 705 (258, 206, 241); Les Barany 701 (213, 310); Almond Brintnell 658 (315), Ron Flewell 645 (207, 242); Jack Wilson 641 (218, 224); Ken. Cobb 627 (209, 231); Annabelle) |Cobb 625 (229, 234); Herb Wiley 606 (230), and Gord. Wherry 605 (229, 201). High Games -- Bessie Welsh 243, Stan Pollard 238, Harry Bennett 228, Audrey White 223, Lorne Martin 212, Theima Owen 208, Irene Rahme 207 and Joan Slater 200. LEGION LEAGUE | The Legion Bowling League ended the season with a banquet and dance at the) The C Trophy was won by the Legionnaires -- Fred Taylor, Flo Bracey, Russ McEthanny, Ray Dewitt, Ted Roberts and Ernest Beaudry | Consolation winners were the Snapups -- Tab Parish, Eileen Smith, Barbare Smith, Howard Pigdon, Doug Nolan and | Pearl McKeegan. The executives for next year are: President, Lou Black; first vice-presi- dent, Frank till; second vice-president, Ron McKeegan; secretary, Betty Black and- treasurer, Vi Brown. Retiring officers Walt Devinish, Herb Bath, Fred Taylor, Retta .Hughes and Eileen Smith wish you the best of luck and hope you will have a good year. We |would also like to thank Mr. Campbell, the~SportsEditorfor printing our bowl- ing In the paper. Cheerio until next sea- son, Have an enjoyable summer. --YOUR SECRETARY. PLAZA FAMILY DOUBLES Team Standings -- Twisters 37/2, Rol- lers 36, Hillbillies 33, Players 32, Hooten- nanys 30%, Lucky Madeline Morrison 690 (213, 240, %37), Al. Haley 670 (297); Harold Cornish 668 (282); Doug. Pelow 659 (216, 278); Edne Ward 650 (238, 209, 203); Ron Davis 646 (217, 257); Tom Rae 645 (233, 225); Art Taylor 640 (201, 210, 229); Dave Peebles 639 (208, 206, 220); Bev Gutsell 638 (276); Jim Huxtable 629 (271); Ann Cornish 629 (255); Norma Norris 628 (218, 218); Bruce Laverty 625 (244); Norm Mooney 617 (231, 238); Ed Leslie 610 (273); Vera Burr 607 (230); Nan Bennet 607 (203, 272); Ted Monaghan 605 (212, 227) and Jack Barta 602 (218, 218), 259, Mo. Allin 234, Al Hardsand 233, Fred Taylor 229, 202, Betty Byrne 226, 205; Lily Rae 226, Harold Nugent 222, 215, Haley 222, John Norris 221, Stan Johnson 220, Judy Brooks 212, 203, Art Korry 212, Clare Hardsand 210, Steve Barta 209, Inge Nugent 208, Alex Alexander 206, Len 200 -- Thelma Lesiie 260, Pete Wight Hamilton Kittens Ousted In Finals VANCOUVER (CP) -- Van- couver Mount Pleasant Legion hung on during the last half to defeat Hamilton Kittens 56-51 and win the Canadian junior women's basketball champion- ship in three games, Defending champion Vancou- ver finished the first half with a~seemingly comfortable. 32-25 Sotliead, but Hamilton, striving to get back in the best-of-five se- ries, outscored Vancouver 26-24 in the second half, to close the Byrne 205, 201, Eleanore Laverty 205 and Eric Hughes 203, 203. gap. npr Breaks 26, Untouchables 26, Champs 25, Fliptstones 24'. cris Jolly Six 23, Hamitulg 20, HI ~Spots 17¥a and Jets 10'4 High Triples -- Clarke Hubbell 813 (283, 257, 273); Bill Gutsell 773 (209, 241, 323); Art Bryant 750 (315, 232, 203); Ethel Tonkin 751 (248, 243, 260); Jim Morrison 74S (256, 246, 243); Harry Fayle 738 (273, 225, 240); Harry. Keys 706 (259, 218, 232,); There Are Specia For personal use or for @ Compeny use there ore e Legion Hall on'March 8, when everyone) had @ very enjoyable time dancing to] Jack Dodd's orchestra, Trophies were presented to the fol-| lowing -- High Averages -- Betty Black and Herb Bathe; High Triple -- Flo Bracey and Fred Taylor; High Singles-- Lou Black and Jean Robinson; High Triple (with handicap) -- Vi Brown and! George Smith; High Single (with handi-| cap) -- Retta Nolan and Ray Brown. John Ovens, 0.2. OPTOMETRIST 8 BOND ST. E., OSHAWA PH. 723-4811 definite advontages when e you lease a new... No insurance costs... PHONE 723-4634 BUSINESS EXECUTIVES AND SALESMEN PE op Lge eee P eve on one or two year se Bs for tat) devel MILLS AUTO LEASE 1 Benefits For All ACADIAN Other 'PONTIAC °% BUICK aquest Models + +45 One rete covers 'Phone or come in 266 KING ST. WEST ZELLERS RETAILERS TO THRIFTY CANADIANS SHOPPING CENTRE AND DOWNTOWN STORE Zeller's! Laminated "Or Rouyn-Noranda Hopes To Break Four-Year Jinx NORANDA, Que. (CP) --| Rouyn-Noranda Alouettes of the Northern Ontario Hockey Asso-| ciation will attempt to break a four-year jinx when they open the Eastern Canada senior hockey semi finals Friday against Woodstock Athletics of the Ontario Hockey Association, In five seasons of operating in the NOHA senior circuit the Alouettes have won' the title four times but have. never ad-| vanced past the winners of the| OHA series. | Last year, Alouettes were! eliminated in the Eastern Can- ada semi-finals by Windsor Bull- dogs who later went on to win the Allan Cup. In the 1950-60 Allan Cup playoffs the Als were defeated by Chatham Maroons. The previous year Galt Ter- riers defeated Noranda on their way to the Allan Cup. Second game of the best-of-| seven series will' be played in Noranda Sunday with the series) then moving to Woodstock for} the next two games April 7-8. 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