MN ATE TIED » @ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, Jenuery, 29, 1965 y | BOTH ARE 'HUNGRY' By THE CANADIAN PRESS George Chuvalo, Floyd Pat- terson and fans expected to be jammed into Madison Square Garden Monday night will find out which of the two principals is the hungrier when Patterson and Chuvalo meet in their scheduled 12-round heavyweight boxing elimination bout. Both are admittedly hungry fighters, but each has a dis- tinctly different hunger driving him. At his Marlboro, N.Y., train- ing camp, Patterson says he hungers for "vindication" after winning and losing the world heavyweight crown twice. And at Monticello, N.Y., 50 miles away, Chuvalo is hunger- ing for his biggest step up the ladder and the $30,000 he has been guaranteed for the fight-- more money than he's ever made in a ring before. : Patterson, an admitted mil- lionaire, says the money, though considerable, isn't the ; |compelling interest for him. HE BELIEVES IN USING COUNTRYSIDE -- BUT NOT DESTROY IT Vernon E. Johnson has dedicated himself to the job of how to make use of the countryside and yet not spoil or destroy it. The 68- year-old former baseball player and head of the Ca- nadian International Paper Company came to Canada from Massachusetts in 1920. Soon after he started his campaign for the conserva- tion of natural riches in Canada. Here, he handles a _live salmon on the Mira- michi River in New Bruns- wick during a demonstra- tion of how eggs are collect- ed from early salmon run for removal to a hatchery. CANADA OUTDOORS Not Enough Canadians Appreciate Outdoors By JOE DUPUIS MONTREAL (CP) -- "We've had too much outdoors too long for too few people," says Les Morrow,. president of the Out- door Writers of Canada. : "Canadians have, been ori- ented to using and enjoying the outdoors but not to protecting it. "Urban centres are sending more people out to sit by the side of a stream at their cottage or to boat on the "erg! ee people get annoyed at hunters using the outdoors in a tradi- tional way." Leslie David Morrow, 46, has many deeply rooted and deeply felt opinions about the Canadian wilds--fishing, hunting, camp- ing or first-hand study of na- ture--and he can talk on the subject forever. He acquired a love for the outdoors at an early age from his late father, David Morrow, a pioneer western farmer who settled in Tugaske, Sask. David Morrow parlayed an interest in farming and mining into "a bit West and Ontario like a gypsy. His wife and son followed him. From age 11 to 14, Les recalls he had 21 different mailing ad- dresses, and says this moving about probably gave him a gen- uine love for his country. Recently he put it into poetry, dwelling on the developing strains to Confederation. "Oh Canada I weep for thee, "Your coasts, your hills, your plains, "Your mountains and your people sing "So many different strains," |SWITCHED COURSES The family's roaming ended in Perth, Ont., where the father settled permanently when Les was 14. He went through high school there and came to Mon- treal in 1937 at the urging of his cousin, the late Ken Norris, then principal of Montreal's Sir George Williams University. Les worked with grocery bro- kers and'a paint company. while attending Sir George Williams of money" and moved about the at night. Harman Park Boys Lead In Tight Pee Wee Race Following Saturday's schedule} of nine games at the Oshawa Children's Arena, Harman Park's win over Valleyview kept them two points ahead of Eastview Park, in the very tight race that is featuring the Neigh- borhood Association Pee Wee Boys Hockey League race. WLT Pts. 10 0 20 218 Harman Park Eastview Park Connaught Park Woodview Park North Oshawa Lake Vista Baker Park Nipigon Park Kingside Park Fernhill Park Bathe Park Sunnyside Park Storie Park Valleyview Brookside Southmead Radio Park Rundle Park ra ao egeges wearer ay x SOV NOL SEU BMAIVIABSO eh DOOR Ce Oe ee om Oo SOUS SSHE PNW SOSP REN YER HOOFF ee In the first game on Saturday morning, Brookside tied Storie Park with Ball scoring in the first period for Brookside, on a three-way play with Johns and Cook then Tom Rorabeck tied it up in the second stanza, on a pass from Pete Boswell. Baker Park blanked Rundle Park 4-0. G. Hancock scored twice while I. Strachan and B. Millar each notched one. B. Boyco, Millar, G. Elliott, P. Mc- Mahon and B. Powless each earned an assist. Woodview Park won their! game over Radio Park by de-| fault and the two teams played| an exhibition game, during their! time period. | Bathe Park blanked Lake! Vista 3-0. T. Lloyd with two and| §. Patechson with the other,| accounted for the scoring with/ Patcheson and J. Kewin earning | assists. | North Oshawa blariked .Con-| naught Park 1-0 in one of the best games of the morning.| Allan Bathe got the only: goal of the game, on a pass from Larry Hopkins, | Eastview took a 3-0. shutout] verdict over Southmead. D. i|Gray,:Tom Vermoen and |Smegal were the goal-scorers with Ken Stenson getting an assist. Sunnyside Park won over Fernhill Park by default and jagain the players on hand play- jed an exhibition game. | Harman Park stayed in front of the pack with a 2-0 win over Valleyview Park. Morris Rebat and Nick Sirko did the scoring for the winners with Rebat, Ray Noble and Sirko all getting as- sists, Nipigon Park shutout King- side Park 2-0. In this one, Kim Zwicker scored both goals with Randy Kurello and Jim Nemish getting the assists, "T had a chequered career in college," he says. He took one year of com- merce, decided it wasn't his jcalling and took arts. Later he jswitched to science. But the college studies ended abruptly jwhen the Second World War |broke out. He served variously jthrough the war as a machine- jgun instructor, federal muniti- jtions inspector and an RCAF navigator flying weather and coastal patrols on the west coast. Discharged in 1945, he went to work with an engineering firm at $140 a week. But one night about a year later he picked up a magazine which contained a chart of job classifications for returning servicemen. He went down the list, checking off each one, un- til his eye rested on "'writing."' He quit his job the next day and joined the staff of the Montreal weekly NDG Monitor for $25 a week. He left the weekly in 1947 to join a daily, the old Montreal Herald, for $37.50 a week as a municipal reporter. WAS CHARTER MEMBER Soon he was writing two widely-read columns, Outdoors with Morrow and Marketing with Morrow--the latter advis- ing housewives on how and what to buy. These led to radio and later, television shows. Currently he has a jmonthly trans-Canada radio out- |door show and conducts an out- door television '"'sports shop" \for the CBC network 10 weeks ja year | He abandoned journalism in | Remember When? ... By THE CANADIAN PRESS Stan Musial, 37-year-old outfielder and National League batting champion, signed. a contract with St. Louis Cardinals, seven years ago today -- in 1958 -- that called for a $100,000 salary, the highest in National - League histony. 5 Year Guarantee made by. B food plan, Free delivery, PRI BAD BOY perinitety SELLS FOR LESS! | FREEZERS - 21 CU. FT. 1956 for public relations and now is with a chemicals firm. Morrow was a director of the Montreal Anglers and Hunters Incorporated for 14 years and vice-president for two years. He was one of the founding mem- bers of the Outdoor Writers of Canada formed in 1957, He organized, coached and played on the first basketball, hockey an4 ski teams at Sir George Williams. A keen hunter, he has a treasured col- lection of 40 guns, ranging from the old flintlock muzzle-loaders to modern weapons, He likes te hunt with bow and arrow too, and is an accomplished skeet and trap shooter. Morrow is constantly cha- grined by his belief that Cana- dians haven't a deep enough love of their land. He has put his belief in verse: "Where is the lilt I cannot hear? "Where claim? "Where is the drive to make us great "And set our hearts aflame?" OPENS HEADQUARTERS OTTAWA (CP)--The Cana- dian Olympic Association de- cided Sunday. to open a perma- jnent headquarters in Montreal. President James Worrall of Tor- onto said after a one-day meet- jing that the work of the associ- twice-|ation now was such that it could) no longer be done from private homes and offices. eatty, Free CED FROM R.C.A, VICTOR 3-WAY HOME FM/AM Radio, 4 Speed Changer, 23" TV all in on || Cobinet. Free Home Service, VALUE $198 THEA 999.0 Automatic e Walnut $479.00 former. 23" BIG SCREEN TV Hand wired circuit, full power trons- Up-front tuning, AGC circuit, Swin-out chassis, Convectoire Cooling, Fidelity tone audio system, With trade 198 WE ARE OPEN INCLUDING 4# WEDNESDAY TIL 9:30 P.M. FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE Everybody Knows the Place--Bad Boy--King St, E. 728-4658-4659 EVERY NIGHT is the 'pride we} He already has it made. MONEY ISN'T EVERYTHING "You can be hungry for more things than money," he said Wednesday. "There are such things as vindication, victory and things like that. "I can't be considered hun- gry for money anymore. Hun- ger is something you can't cre- ate. It has to be there." Patterson, who defended his title only once each time he held it, losing to Ingemar Johannson and Sonny Liston, says he is a much better fighter than he was then. "This will be my fourth fight in 13 months. I am a lot sharper now. I have more confidence and I feel that I punch bet- ter." The Canadian champion, who goes in with four consecutive knockouts behind him, sees the fight as a direct step to a shot at the world championship, DRAWS SUPPORT A fighter who once was con- sidered clumsy and ill-adapted \for such heights, and who had to work at odd jobs selling cars, in packinghouses and dig- ging ditches to support his wife and four children, Chuvalo has drawn considerable support from former boxing greats for Monday's go-round. Barney Ross and Joe Louis watched him in his last heavy session and wound up picking Chuvalo to win. Wednesday Jack Dempsey, told a Peter- borough Ontario audience Chu- valo would knock Patterson out and "with proper conditioning" Chuvalo, Patterson Admit Driving Force could take either champion Cas- sius Clay or former champion Sonny Liston, A big punch and the ability to absorb punishment appear the deciding factors in his fa- vor. Chuvalo limited himself to a two-round sparring session Wed- nesday with another three rounds scheduled today before he takes his pre-fight medical examination. But whatever the ontcome, (Madison Square Garden still is likely to be the biggest winner with New York buzzing over the prospects of the first major fight scheduled there since Clay knocked out Doug Jonés. in 1963. The garden is reported to be al- ready sold out for the branni- gan. PAYS BIG DOUBLE ARCADIA, Calif. (AP)--The daily double paid at Santa Anita paid $966.80 Tuesday. Battlement paid $23.80 in the first race and Isobar $85.20 in the second, It was the track's highest payoff of the season and third highest ever. CEPEDA GETS RAISE lando Cepeda, whose 304 led San Francisco Giants batting averages last season, has signed for 1965 for about a $2,000-a- year raise to $55,000, second highest salary of the club. Wil- lie Mays is the highest paid Giant, and major leaguer, at $105,000. 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