mem SRUenit Thr ttt & AiVtiaw 4550 UU n glish Soccer Officials Worried About Their Fans LONDON (AP) -- The World Cup soccer finals come to Eng- land next year, with the fear of possible riots and bottle-throw- ing hanging over them. Sixteen teams will play in the finals in four groups July 11 to July 30, and English officials are worried in case over-excited fans stage riots at various grounds. The soccer year of 1965 was marred by riots in many ways and on many grounds. The English Football Associa- tion, for instance, ordered bar- riers to he erected at two grounds because goalkeepers had been pelted by missiles. Things became more serious in an English League match be- tween Manchester United and Liverpool in October, Fans hurled rubbish on the|zil, the defending champions; |the European Cup of Champi-| Manchester manager Matt Bus- by's office. CLIMAX IN ITALY The climax to all this hooli- ganism came when Chelsea played Roma of Italy in the Eu- ropean Inter-cities Fairs Cup in Italy. ' Fans started throwing any- thing at hand and two Chelsea players complained they had been hit and injured as a re- sult, Suddenly the tough hand of the law stepped in, the tough hand being the Inter-cities Fairs Committee. Roma was banned for three year from competing in the In- ter-cities Fairs competition for not taking sufficient steps to keep its fans in order. | The teams through to the fi- nals of the World Cup are Bra- Mexico, Uruguay, Argentina, Russia, Hungary, Portugal, Chile, West Germany, France, Spain, Switzerland, North Korea and Italy. The final place will be decided in a playoff between Belgium and Bulgaria in Florence, Italy, Dec. 29 DRAW JAN. 6 The draw for the four groups in the championship will take place in London Jan. 6. Soccer is often plagued by ex- uberance of players and the |partisanship of fans. | Despite this, the fans still |stream through the gates, espe- | cially for matches involving club jteams in. Europe in competi- ltions like the European Cup of} National Champions and the Eu-| ropean Cup of Cup Winners, | Internzionale of Milan won field and broke a window in|England, the host country; and'ons on a sea of mud in Milan Parker MacDonald Is Be Back With Red Wings By GARY McCARTHY {Dillabough and defencemen Al jsons and then he was traded to Canadian Press Staff Writer |Langlois and Ron Harris in ex-|Boston. As 1965 fades out, at least one National Hockey League player|Cord and Ken Stephanson andjanda, Que., may look forward to a happy New Year. The big news for Calvin Par- ker MacDonald came Thursday | against Chicago Black Hawks in| when the lowly Boston Bruins announced they had traded the veteran left winger to Detroit Red Wings for centre Pit Mar- tin. The trade transfers MacDon- ald from a sixth-place hockey team to one which is a cham- pionship contender. The Red Wings are no strang- ers to the 32wear-old MacDon- ald, a native of Sydney, N.S. He was a member of ichange for defencemen Bob Mc- \forward Ab McDonald. It is expected that jald will play for the MacDon- Wings Detroit tonight the scheduled game. Detroit drafted the five-foot- 10, 175 pound left winger from New York Rangers in June, }1960 and in the 1961-62 season he scored 14 goals and finished the season with 26 points. HAD BEST YEAR oe | | The following season he came} jup with his best NHL effort as in only the|he scored 33 goals and added 28 Wings for five years before be-|assists. ing traded to Boston last May 31 along with left winger Bob lta However, his goal production iled off in the next two sea- Russians Blank Czechs, |troit would move them Martin, 22, a native of Nor- had played in 10 {games with the Red Wings this season before being sent to the} |minors. He scored one goal and picked up an assist in those 10} games. Martin is expected to join the Bruins in Toronto for Saturday night's game against the Maple Léafs. New York is at Montreal) for a game with the Canadiens! in the other Saturday night con-| test The Black Hawks will be out to increase their lead in the standings tonight. Haying won three of their last five games) they hold a slim one-point lead over the second-place Canadi ens. However, for De.) into a tie for second-place with the Ca nadiens, 8,500 AT WORKOUT a victory May 27 before 80,000 fans pay- ing $302,000. Inter Milan's victory over Portugal's Benfica Lisbon gave the Italian team a_ second straight victory in the money- spinning European Cup of Champions. PLAYED TO 100,000 In London, West Ham United defeated TSV Munich 2-0 in the European Cup of Cup Winners competition and a sellout crowd of 100,000 paid $228,000 for the privilege of watching. Inter Milan's victory in the European Cup of Champions qualified the Italians for a world club championship se- ries against Independiente Bue- nos Aires of Argentina. The Italians won that series on an aggregate score of 3-0. In- ter won 3-0 in Milan and then tied 0-0 in Buenos Aires. The playoff between the champions of Europe and South America shows the growing in- terest in soccer throughout the world. The team winning the European Cup suddenly. can find| itself playing before anything up} to 200,000 in South America. | The year saw Manchester United back on the European} scene after seven years of ago- nizing rebuilding. Manchester, returning from a European Cup game in Belgrade, lost eight players who died in the Munich air Crash of 1958. The world of soccer also Saw a great tribute paid to Eng- land's retired Stan Matthews, recognized as the master wing player throughout the world. The Queen made him the first knight of soccer. Divisional Standings LONDON (AP)--Old Country standings after Monday's games: ENGLISH LEAGUE wre 1 soccer aP Division Liverpool u" Burnley 21 32 3 28 30 \harness racing's BOB FARRINGTON (left) who had 310 victories in 1965, to capture The Na- tional Driving Champion- ship Trophy, is shown here, following a ceremony at Roosevelt Raceway, New DRIVERS HONORED York, on Wednesday. Group- ed around the champion are the runners-up, two of them young Canadians, From left, they are Bill Haughton, 222 wins; Ron Feagan of Gode- zich, 221 wins and Gilles La- chance, of St. Andrew's East, Quebec, 206 wins. Each received a watch, suit- ably engraved --CP Wirephoto cw The Four Horsemen Old Country '65 Harness Racing N.Y. (CP) --/|Ron Feagan, 23, of Goderich, | were among/|Ont., and Gilles Lachance, 27, | best drivers,|of St. Andrews East, Que. all members of the exclusive! Feagan, the Canadian cham- society of drivers with 200 or|pion with 213 victories, and | more wins in a single season, | Lachance, who had 206 wins,| honored Wednesday at a spe-|were the youngest and second- cial luncheon at Roosevelt| youngest to scale the 200 - vic- | Raceway. tory mark in harness racing Honored along with such{history. They were also the WESTBURY, Two Canadians {American drivers as Bob Far-|first Canadians ever to reach| opening night action, returns rington of Richwood, Ohio, who/the 200 mark. part of the United States, All drivers honored--with watches engraved with the number of wins--will be on hand opening night for the start of Roose- velt's 52-night meeting. Lachance plans a brief cam- paign here with a six - horse stable while Feagan, angry t) racing in Saturday matinee eee "THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, December 31, 1965 @ CANADA OUTDOORS GUELPH, Ont. (CP)--Why do waterfow] pass up swamps that experts say are ideally suited for them? Aside from the 500,000 ducks shot each year in Ontario, what are the causes of death? Can black ducks, wood ducks, common goldeneyes, buffle- heads and hooded mergansers be enticed to breed more often? These are a few of the ques: tions for which answers are be- ing sought at the Frank Kort- right Waterfowl Preserve, a 110-acre patch of bush, field and bog on the south shore of the Eramosa River eight miles southeast of Guelph. It is the year-round home of more than 500 wild ducks of 50 North American species and the stopping-off point for as many as 1,000 waterfowl each day during the migratory season, a private duck sanctuary 15 years ago by Horace Mack, a Guelph industrialist and natur- Valist, After his death in 1961, it |was bought by a group of On-} jtario businessmen and sports- |men who set up the Ontario | Waterfowl Research Founda- | tion. | Operated under federal law jas a waterfowl sanctuary, the |station and park were opened jin October by former premier Leslie Frost and Frank Kort right, founder of the Ontario Sportsmen's Show. William Carrick, resident managing-director, says three years have been spent erecting additional pens, preparing lab- oratory space and turning a section of the land into a public park, PRIVATELY OPERATED The station is privately oper- ated and gets no government jaid, The $1,000-a-month upkeep jis financed through paid ad- {missions (50 cents a person) land private contributions, Although it is not affiliated with any government depart- and forests lands biologists | riments. The preserve was founded as) ment or university, Ontario} often use its facilities for expe- A. T. Cringan, assistant pro- Scientific Duck Study Should Provide Answers perts. The only other station of its kind in Canada was the Delta Research Station in Man- itoba which studied only north- ern and western waterfowl. Increased leisure has meant more duck hunters, Prof. Crin- gan says, but the waterfowl population has barely been able to maintain its numbers. INEED MORE DUCKS "If we are to keep enough birds for the hunters and for those who are interested in wildlife, we must find ways te breed more, eliminate some of the fatal diseases, replace ha- bitat that is ruined by urban expansion and find solutions ta many other waterfowl prob- lems." If experiments are successful, Prof. Cringan says, the duck hunter should benefit within a few years from increased num- bers of waterfowl. The station hopes to begin full-scale grild duck breeding on its premises in a year or so, releasing the |birds to bolster some depleted species. EPECT DECISION MONTREAL (CP) -- David Molson, president of Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey League, said Thursday a decision 'should be reached within a month" on location of a new arena for the club. PURRT Y GOOD! A? om a | | | | fessor of zoology at the Univer- sity of Guelph and the founda- tion's executive secretary, says that in the past there has been no major study of prild water- fowl in this part of Canada. All| information about these birds) had come from American ex-! i i i y 'i vi ter race) had 310 wins this year, and Bill! The luncheon was held prior London, Ont. He will la Haughton of Oyster Bay Cove,|to the earliest opening of the 15 horses when Windsor Race- N.Y., with 222 victories, were harness racing season in this)way opens Jan. 6. 30 29 15 27 33 27 27 2% 35 25 31 25 29:22 43 22 45 21 a2 32 20 32 20 % | Toronto pragtised Thursday|Man United before 8,500 youngsters, guests | Tottenham of a supermarket chain. Stoke [West Brom |Sheffield U | Chelsea | Arsenal | Leicester | Everton Clinch Tourney Trophy COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.) Czechoslovakia tonight in the| (CP-AP) -- The Soviet Union| tournament's final game. | won its 'second consecutive; The Czechs defeated the HOCKEY SCORES bated scat fl pity 4 'one cy Bl pneu AND STANDINGS Sungeriand feating Czechoslovakia 3-0 for| Swedes are in fourth place with) BY THE CANADIAN PRESS |Blsckooo its third straight victory in the|two losses and a tie Ontario Junior A lee round-robin tournament. | : WLT F A Pt|Norinempton The Russians, world amateur} lOshawa 16 675140 9437/Fuihem and Olympic champions, swept| |Peterborough 15 7 5130 GOYETTE INJURED NEW YORK (AP)--Phil Goy- | ir Q.B's Two NFL Clubs, Armchair Q.B's _4 wo u S| etie will be sidelined for a }month with internal injuries, | | Ds . |New York Rangers said Tues-| 6 Face Long Day Bid For Rice? day. The National Hockey| pa M4 | | League club said the veteran SHICAGO (AP) -- Two Na-| is | Of Bowl Games Paaey -- ete stomach and ie yd hog ioe By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS|have accepted Chicago Bears'| n° wide otal tcl se |Notts F |Sheffield W \Aston Villa 0S ee Sera eoeawne centre suffered damage in the Football The all-Conadion IAC Group of Companies Goalie Victor Konevalenko turned back 23 Czech shots to ARORA ROAREEDAVHOUEER Division : is | 96 35) Huddersfield through the tournament by de-| feating Sweden 4-3 and Canada) 6-2 in its other games. The So- viet Union also won the inaug-| ural tournament last year. | Canada tied 5-5 with Sweden) in its other game Wednesday) night and has a chance to take! over second place by upsetting |; Canada Plans Centennial Tournament COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo .{CP) -- Plans for a Canadian centennial hockey tournament, bringing together the top world amateur hockey powers, were announced Thursday by the Canadian Amateur Hockey. As- sociation. Gordon Juckes, secretary- manager of the association, said tentative plans call for a, 12-game schedule across Can ada during the centenary of Confederation in 1967. . So far only Canada and the United States are committed to the tournament, Juckes said in an interview, but invitations have been extended to Russia and Czechoslovakia, and Swe- den will also be invited. Juckes, here for the Walter Brown Memoria! Trophy tour- nament the centennial tournament a' "'sensible al- ternative to Canadian hockey fans, in that we were not able to bring them the 1967 world championships." The 1967.world championships were awarded to Austria and will be held in Vienna Tentative dates for the tour mament are Dec. 8-23, to be played in six different centres throughout Canada. The cities have not been selected. Juckes also announced the CAHA has invited the Japanese national hockey team to play in Canada in 1967, in a tour not connected with the centennial tournament. said is GOLFER DIES BOSTON (AP)--A memorial service was held Tuesday for Margaret Curtis, 82, a three- time winner of the U.S, wom- en's amateur golf champion- ship, who died Christmas Day The Curtis Cup, awarded the winners of biennial golf matches British and American golfers, is named for her and her sister, Harriet between A. E. JOHNSON, 0.D. OPTOMETRIST 1412 King St. East 723-2721 score the first shutout of the tournament. He made brilliant! saves in every period and was helped by a strong Russian de- fence that kept the Czechs from working in for close shots. Czechoslovak goalie Viadi- mar Zurila stopped 22 of 25 shots the Russians sent his way n the game before a capacity crowd of 5,100. Scoring for the Russians were Viadimir Brezhnev, Vyaches- lav Starshiney and Anatoly Fir- soy. After a scoreless first period, |Russia moved ahead early in the second when Brezhnev scored with a 45-foot slap shot on a power play. The Soviets added to their narrow lead with Starshinov scoring unassisted on a 30-foot slap shot with 3:39 gone in the third period and Firsov wrapped it up with less than five minutes to play when he scored on a rebound, COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (CP) -- Standings after Thurs day night's game in_ round- robin play for the Walter Brown Memorial Trophy Pha Ae xRussia Czecho Canada 11 Sweden AL 37 x-clinched championship Thurs- day night, CBS Buys Rights Televise NFL Play NEW YORK (AP) The Columbia Broadcasting System has purchased the rights to televise National Football League games for at least two more years, signing a contract which calls for more money than ever and which will en- able more people than ever to see professional football on television CBS and the NFL agreed Wednesday to a $37,600,000 con- tract for two years. CBS also has an option for a third year-- at additional money, of course.| The. new agreement is a healthy increase over the $28,- 200,000 paid for the past two seasons. Each club in the NFL will receive an additional $200,- 000 a year, or $1,200,000. } 6 Niagara Falls 12 6 6111 Montreal 11 9 4104 Hamilton 11 12 Toronto 810 Kitchener 710 St, Catharines 714 4 95 13318 London 619 3 8714715) Thursday's Results | St. Catharines 5 Montreal 6 Oshawa 2 Hamilton 4 Niagara Falls 2 Peterborough 7 Saturday's Games Toronto at Oshawa St. Catharines at Niagara Central Professional Ww > wee 15 79 30) 90 26 4118 129 26 7 107 119 23 6 75 80 20 Falls A Pt 80 80 90 25 79 24 3 23 Memphis Oklahoma St. Louis Houston Minnesota Tulsa ry 34 26 26- 72 76 85 78 10 3 87 Thursday's Result Minnesota 2 Houston 4 Eastern League New Jersey 3 New Hayen 3 | Central Junior Buckingham 5 Cornwall 7 Pembroke 2 Hawkesbury 0 Saskatchewan Junior Regina 7 Flin Flon 1 Weyburn 3 Brandon 3 Saskatoon 4 Melville 4 Walter Brown Memorial Russia 3 Czechoslovakia 0 Ahearne Cup Sherbrooke 8 Djurgaarden of Sweden 5 | Exhibition Finland 8 NOHA Jr. Stars 5 4 4 1 4 } | | } | A All- _ | Chesterfield Remember When? ... By THE CANADIAN PRESS Just how far a hockey team could go without be- ing shut out was established 23 years ago today--in 1942 --when New York Rangers were blanked 2-0 by Detroit, Since Nov. 2, 1940, Rangers had played 117 scheduled NHL games (126 including playoffs) without failing to score. Heavyweight football teams from the U.S. Air Force Academy and Texas Christian University clashed , Bournemouth Man City Coventry Wolverhampton Southampton Bristol C Derby Rotherham Norwich Preston Crystal P Bolton Sen neurre®eeeescses Portsmouth Middlesbrough Cardiff Birmingham Ipswich Plymouth Carlisie Bury hariton eyton Or ee ee en SOS e- eS eenunousvaaw Cc u Division Hull C Millwal ity 1 Grimsby Queen's PR Oxford Workington Swindon Scunthorpe Gillingham Shrewsbury Watford Peterborough Walsall Brighton Bristol Exeter Reading Mansfield Swansea Southend York City Brentford nt al Ow RR RARAWURO OB V0CSERS--SE5 R eee ee er Tes Oldham Division Torquay 4 Tranmer Colchester Chester Darlington Doncaster Barrow Luton Bradtord Southport Barnley Notts C eee Stockport Rochdale Newport Lincoln Port Vale Halifax Crewe Alex Aldershot Hartlepools Wrexham Bradford € IRISH LEA c OPPO IR BRU OORR UW COWNOSAHUMNRARS BUH -VURROTRRRRANANVRORRE Linfield Derry City Glentoran Ballymena Glenavon Coleraine Crusaders Distillery Bangor Ards Portadown Cliftonville WOR RRB SI Ga UUracanucemuMcue 10 ® n SCOTTISH LEAGUE No games scheduled Monday, ings unchanged from Sunday, stand- at Dallas' Cotton Bowl seven years ago today--in 1959--and played to a score- less tie. 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The se championship, | invitation to negotiate with the| the country's longest svinning Bears' now-unwanted top draft! of prestige go on the line panes Rtg odd aay Rice of] weekend in the U.S. college) "OU!s!ana state. : football's annual wind - up ex-| "I can't disclose which clubs travaganza -- the major bowl expressed interest in Rice be- jcause that would be putting The television line-up is such|them on the spot," Bear presi- that armchair quarterbacks|dent George Halas Jr. said can watch at least portions of} Wednesday. all four of the big ones New| The Bears dropped Rice as a} Year's Day--the Rose, Cotton,| prospect because owner-coach Sugar and Orange bowls, |George Halas Sr. refused to It starts at 2 p.m. EST. andjcompete in a money derby | goes continuously until about|Wwith Houston Oilers of the) American Football League for} And if that isn't enough,|the services of the 260-pounder. viewers can start working on| Rice, who can't be signed their red eyes New ear's Evejuntil after playing in. Satur- and the|day's Cotton Bowl game, was all-star game, The|Houston's No. 3 draft choice. against Boston. 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