s ils ss, but I wn future and work- number of ig forward ing job."" ENCE man takes experience ning pro- ton Bruins -- he sign- vem, while | Generals i in the h Hershey Western 2 Rockets. Senior 'A '- Bulldogs 1 him in ying mem- inlops. He with that diate suc- two Allan rld Cham- orway, in S appoint- ne Whitby saded the ague that he Boston e appoint- ario area post for jigned to Crushmen several served as vernor of Hockey to have ef scout, day. He deal of ience in and I am tstanding ation. Tf 'outing is uccessful jue club, tS rs gener- ir made incement engaged special HL? a pen Thursday, April 6, with at foot weighed 20214. Meague announced Wednesday ry Fs ere up 5.2 per cent over last » day-Sunday until The end came at 1:48 of the seventh round from a chopping right to the jaw. Another right By MURRAY ROSE NEW YORK (AP) -- Heavy- eight champion Cassius Clay ps finished off the last of a st of fighters who could be alled -- with kindness -- con- nders with his seventh--round | ockout of Zora Folley. Argentina's Oscar Bonavena ill be the next sacrificial lamb r the super-fast, invincible ampion in Tokyo, May 27, un- ss Clay's legal appeal for a y from army induction April is rejected. Folley, 34-year-old No, 1 con- nder, was knocked out when lay, or Muhammad Ali as he ers, decided he wanted to the trigger Wednesday jround, These were the highlight} one-sided when Clay decided to oper. up in the third round. Be- fore that he danced around the ring, virtually conceding the first two rounds to the plodding, methodical challenger. ZORA PAYS TRIBUTE Folley, a prohibitive 7-to-1 longshot for his first shot at the title, said after his encoun- ter with Clay: "There is no one around to- NEW YORK (CP) Thelfive games, the fifth game will anley Cup hockey playoffs will day, April 15. lames on Saturday afternoons | APPROVE REFS or continent - wide television| Campbell said the governors | wing, the National Hockey |@PP : a 8 ¥ | dation of referee assignments, ght. ) Playoff dates were approved| Mt a day-long meeting of the HL governors. Representatives of the six lubs also gave solid backing to feferee-in-chief Scotty Morrison in his assignment of officials; cided that next year's 12- am schedule will open Oct. 11, week earlier than usual; and ard that league gate receipts playoff duty. All four senior} Skov and Vern Buffey. Pavelich, Neil Armstrong, Bren Casselman and Pat Shetler. ar jin recent New York games. esident, said that if one semi-)game five weeks ago Ashley al series goes a maximum geven games and the final ®eries goes seven, the CBS-TV network will show five Saturday Biternoon playoff games under its new contract with the lea- gue. All Saturday games will start at 2 p.m. EST. penalty. 3 SPOTS UNDECIDED REJECT JENNING'S VIEW Chicago Black Hawks have! 'Jennings' point of view has players on the ice and that a Chicago bench throw a new jstick to Red Hay clinched first place but the|beén rejected and the recom-| , va torm hurt|Hockey League standings. -- | order of finish of the next three |mendation of the referee-in-chief Pagers tie con areipts, There have been rumblings} téams has not yet been decided. |approved," said Campbell. however: of $244,471 broke the around the NHL lately that the Asked about an incident in P 3 were on their way Prior to Wednesday night's| games, New York and Toronto were tied for second and Mont- real was two points back. Hawks will meet the third- place team in Series A and the ond and fourth teams will fay in Series B. The winners Toronto Saturday night in which Skov had threatened to quit after being hit by a program allegedly thrown by Leaf presi- dent Stafford Smythe, Campbell said Skov should have given Toronto a bench penalty at once. 'Clay Flattens Folley; iBonavena, Army Next? day who can beat him, I know, I've fought them all. had dropped the bloody-nosed|of the fight was a right--right veteran for nine in the fourth|on the chin. After that I just don't remember." rounds of a bout that became} swer to a question, that he had 'carried Folley. was a better fighter than Sonny Liston or Floyd Patterson or Ernie Terrell, tricky and a good boxer." came after he was floored in the fourth round, combination to the jaw dropped him on his face. He sat up with a startled look at the five-count and was up at nine. LANDS HARD RIGHT Folley fought back like a wounded may still have been dazed, he instinctively fired back with both hands and a hard right sent Clay to the ropes. S. : _ | punc' ' pee network TV Satur lat 211% pounds over his six- approved Morrison's recommen-|in the next two rounds with streams over-riding a New York Ranger|bleeding nose and the lump un- bid to bar John Ashley from/der Folley's left eye. referees will work in the play-|Scored with a good right to the loffs--Ashley,- Bill Friday, Art|head that brought a roar from ie |the crowd of 13,780. The roar The linesmen will be Matt/had barely died down when t|Clay let loose with his finishing lright that dropped Folley for! Rangers' President, Bill Jen-|the second and last time. he would ask that Ashley be|SPewing from his nose, fell flat barred because of two incidents|0M his s |slowly us | ' ; wobbled to his feet on rubbery | ' Clarence Campbell, NHL| Rangers claimed that in 8/legs, and then fell back to his| | F knees fai ' bxpeaie ailed to see seven Boston|piancg week ago he failed to see the WAS NINTH DEFENCE who hadjdefence within a year and his broken his while the Hawks|ninth in all. His record is 29-0, were a man short through ajincluding 23 knockouts. Folley, suffered his eighth defeat and jsixth knockout loss, as his un | beaten string of 12 was snappe' {He has won 74. Garden fight record of $239,959. evision Clay collected about $260,000 on| his 50 per cent of the net gate) and $150,000 from the ancillary rights. Folley earned his largest). as ae lin Toronto, giving the Rangers} Purse, Apout eo yo On ae per sole possession of second place "All I remember of the end Clay heatedly denied, in an- "TI was not carrying him: He He was slick, Folley's greatest moment A left-right When Clay came after him, tiger. Although he "He hurt me with _ that h," said Clay, superbly fit é ' three frame. Folley Clay started chopping away of left jabs to the in the seventh Folley But THE END -- Challenger Zorra Folley heads for the nings, é.ad announced last week! The six-foot challenger, blood| floor as world heavyweight | boxing champion Cassius soMetn, He ree ee ss at the count of seven, | Referee Johnny Lo- signalled the end. This was Clay's seventh title By THE CANADIAN PRESS New York Rangers would ra- than switch places a ther fight | in the National with anyone |Rangers bisa but they haven't given up. The Rangers fought to a 3-3 tie with Chicago Black Hawks in Chicago Wednesday night while Montreal Canadiens de- feated Toronto Maple Leafs 5-3 National and international tel- swelled the receipts. 97 in a season set by Bobby Clay follows through on the right that knocked Fol- ley out in 1.48 of the seventh round of their title Detroit J oins Boston Voigt Sade a On Playoff Sidelines 2::sc"< for most points in a season. He has 92, six short of the record Hull last season, Mikita also needs one assist to break thei record of 59 assists in one sea-|i son, which he set in 1964-65. After allowing Dennis Hull to beat him with his two goals in the .first period, Giacomin set- tled down and turned in a bril- liant perfolmance as the Hawks blasted him with 43 shots. New York had 34 shots at Hall. The Canadiens led the Leafs 1-0 after the first period and ENDS DROUGHT ] will meet in a best-of-seven| He said a 1963 rules amend-|cent of the net and $25,000 for|°® : final. ment, passed following an inci- is reiAnee: sun ea, } with 68 points, one more than|4-2 after the second, As usual, the first two games|dent involving player Howie the Canadiens and Leafs. Young and Mrs. Smythe, cov- ered the situation. With the league expanded to 12 teams in two sections next season, the schedule will run 25 weeks instead of 24, beginning Oct. 11 and ending March 31. Each team will play 74 games| instead of 70. Attendance in the six cities now in the league was 126,000 higher for the first 166 games of this season than in the same period last season, aided by increased seating in Detroit and Toronto. Boston showed the big- gest gain--41,000. Toronto was up 25,000, New York 24,000 and Detroit 22,000. of each series will be played on the home ice of the higher- ranked team and the next two games on the home ice of the lower-ranked team. The series will then alternate between cities until one téam in each series wins four games. Because of a Chicago arena! ice - show commitment, the second game of Series A will be played Sunday, April 9. The second game of Series B will be on the CBS TV network Sat- urday, April 8. : Games will be played each Tuesday, Thursday and Satur- the playoffs are concluded. If Series A goes Glasgow Rangers Triumph. Over Spain On Coin Flip By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Glasgow Rangers qualified for the semi-finals of the European Cup of Cup Winners soccer competition Wednesday by win- ning the toss of a coin over Real Zaragoza of Spain. The teams played an extra period of 30 minutes at Zara- goza in an effort to break a 2-2 tie on aggregate goals in the In a first leg quarter-final match of the European Fairs Cup tournament at Bologna, Italy, Bologna defeated Leeds United of Britain 1-0. At Rome, Lazio of Rome and |Spartak of Trnava, Czechoslo- vakia, tied 1-1 in their first leg ter-finals. cer team defeated the Greek) quarter-final elimination round. But neither team scored and it was decided to toss a coin. Real Zaragoza won 2-0 in the regular 90 - minute .match.|Mexico City. A return game will Rangers had won 2-0 in the first|be played in East Germany match at Glasgow March 1. {next month. The game was one of sev-; In an eral European soccer playoff| Florence, Italy, the Italian na- matches Wednesday. tional amateur team defeated Ri ae ee the Yugoslav Olympic team 2-1. At Nicosia, Italy Henderson Cyprus 2-0 in a Group 6 match in the European nations cham- L d B pionship. By THE CANADIAN PRESS | LONDON (CP) -- Results of Hershey goalie John Hender-/- Wednesday night's soccer son turned in a slick perform-| games: ance Wednesday night, fending ENGLISH LEAGUE off 31 shots as he led the Bears Division I to a shutout victory over Balti-|Everton 0 Tottenham 1 more Clippers in the American Division II Hockey League. Cardiff 0 Portsmouth 0 The 2-0 victory increased Her- SCOTTISH F.A. CUP shey's lead in the Eastern Di- Quarter-final replays vision to eight points over sec-| Aberdeen 3 Hibernian 0 ond-place Baltimore. | (Winner away to Dundee In the other game Wednesday United in semi-finals April night, Jacques Lemieux scored 1) two goals to lead Cleveland Bar-| Hamilton 1 Clyde 5 ons to a 4-1 victory over Spring-| (Winner away to Celtic) field Indians. \/ SCOTTISH LEAGUE Henderson was espe cially) Division I strong in the third period bai Pk 4 Clydebank 2 the Bears when he turned back 16 shots. Howie Yanoski and Gary Dornhoefer scored tor| FIGHTS LAST NIGHT Hershey. |By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cleveland's victory moved the} New York --Cassius Clay, team within four points of Roch-/2114%, Houston, knocked out ester Americans in the race for|Zora Folley, 102%, Chandler, second place in the AHL's West-|Ariz., 7. Clay retained world ern Division. heavyweight title. Playing - coach Fred Glover; Auckland, New Zealand--Ed- and Joe Szura scored Cleve-|die Cotton, 177%, Seattle, land's other goals. Gerry Foley Wash.» stopped Bobby Stininato, scored for Springfield. 171%, San Francisco, 9. defeated | petition. --j|final round of the champion- jship, meets Scotland again this East Germany's Olympic soc- one for the victory. Olympic team 5-0 at Athens in|defeated Switzerland 14-3, Swe- an elimination match for next\|den beat year's Olympic tournament in|France defeated Germany 13-10. exhibition game at) cweden | | | Vie Hadfield sparked the Rangers with two goals, includ- jing the tying goal at 7:35 of the third period. Reg Fleming scored the other New York goal. Canadians Seek Title Chicago's scoring with Dennis PERTH, Scotland (CP)--Can-|Hull getting two goals and older ada will be after a repeat vic-|brother Bobby adding the other, tory today as the four topjhis 52nd of the season, two teams in the world curling|short of the record he set last championship advance into/year. straight knockout playoff com- GETS TWO FOR HABS Jean - Claude Tremblay led Montreal with two goals and Ralph Backstrom, Henri Ri- chard and Jean Beliveau scored one each. Ron Ellis scored a pair for the Leafs and Bob Pul- ford got the other. Hadfield's tying goal came while Chicago's Pat Stapleton was serving the only penalty of the third period. The play lead- jing to the tying goal was started when Ranger defenceman 1 { Harry Howell passed to Rod last two ends against a rink|Gilbert in the right corner. Gil- skipped by Chuck Hay, left the/bert relayed it to Hadfield, who team in second place, Scotland) was parked to the left of Chi- placed third. cago' goalie Glenn Hall. Two perfect shots by third) Bobby Hull's goal came when John Ross had set up Canada jhe slammed a 25-foot shot past for two in the 11th. In the 12th|Rangers' goalie Ed Giacomin at Hay tried to draw to Canada's/4:48 of the second period. The Alfie Phillips Jr, rink from Toronto, which came from behind Wednesday to defeat Scotland 7-6 in the seventh and afternoon in one semi - final round, The undefeated United States rink goes against fourth- place Sweden. The final will be played tonight. Canada's final - round victory Wednesday, fashioned on the inches, enabling Canada to steal|centre, was held off the score- sheet in his bid to set a record Beliveau's goal, his first in 21) \games, was a hard slapshot \from about 50 feet out that jcaught Toronto goalie Bruce Gamble off guard. Gamble made 30 saves. The Hull family took care of) filis's two goals boosted his jseason total to 21, making him Toronto's first 20-goal scorer of the season. | Pulford's second - period goal |was his 15th of the season and the 200th of his 10-year NHL career. It came when he let go with a blistering slap shot from about 20 feet out that beat undisputed winner over Pappin|the United States and Czechos- after he knocked the Toronto|lovakia, showed that the Amer-| player down and sat on him. said he was particularly happy|three Czech goals were scored with the victory although he|on breakaways while the win- didn't feel it was an easy one, |ners were playing short-handed. | us in the playoffs. That's all I|son hopes he has dampened the| cared about," he said, ated Detroit Red Wings fromjone THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, March 23, 1967 g Finns Pull First Upset, Top Czechoslovakia | | Leod said,on the eve of the U.S. game, VIENNA (CP) --Finland de-|pect fewer openings from the feated Czechoslovakia 3-1 today|Americans than the Czechs got. in a stunning upset in the world) For. his lineup, McLeod said jhockey championships. the plans to put Seth Martin of | The Czechs, having won their | Trail, B.C., back in goal after |three previous games, were'giving Wayne Stephenson of lrated, with Canada, strong}Fort William, Ont., a game in challengers for the title being!Canada's 13-1 demolition of defended by Russia. : West Germany Tuesday. Two brilliant goals by Juhani. Defenceman Paul Conlin. of Wahlisten late in the first period | Winnipeg, who bruised his back rocked the Czechs. They gavejin the West German game, is the Finns a 3 - 0 lead, Pekka lexpected to sit out the session Kuusisto having opened the/against the Americans. McLeod scoring at 12:51 of the period. | will play five defencemen and The Chechs came back with|dress winger Ray Cadieux of! their only goal when Jaroslav|Ottawa for the first time in the Jirik scored at the 13-second| tournament. i I. Everybody but Conlin went on it Finns|through a light workout in fought a tight defensive 'action. |sweatshirts Wednesday. The At the end the crowd of 4,-| Canadian embassy held a re- 000 erupted, with Finnish play- ception for the team Tuesday ers and officials swarming On| night. ' to the ice in a delirious dance; Conlin spent Wednesday with of joy for the unexpected vic-/ an ice pack on the small of his tory. back. | McLeod was concerned about VIENNA (CP) -- Canada {s|the defensive performance of a community of quiet elegance located in oshawa's northern residential crea. f you are looking for a lot to buy . . . visit cedar ridge -- use a builder of your choice for shaping up confidently for his front attacking line of Gary |] . : tougher assignments ahead in/Dineen of Montreal, Jean Cus- | '?/O"™!!99 iithe world amateur hockey son of Verdun, Que., and Bill : championship, but with fresh|MacMillan of Charlottetown. phone 723-1194 + evidence that only the best will oT |MUST SHARPEN UP OSHAWA + do from now on. a ; With three easy wins against That Dineen line has got to the three cellar teams behind |Sharpen up in positioning," Mc- them, the Canadian nationals face the - high-spirited United * States squad tonight and open : |the home-stretch run with the; top contenders Saturday night against Czechoslovakia. 4 "You'd think the distillery noted for its well-aged whiskies fight in New York's Madi- Today's schedule, times EST s S Gar Wed- (Czechoslovaki s. Finland, 4 A setae ere Garden Wed mcr sweden vs, East Germ-|@ Would have the oldest Canadian (AP Wirephoto) (any, 8 a.m.; Russia vs. West whisky available in Canada." ~iGermany, 11 a.m.; Canada vs.! United States, 2:30 p.m. | While the defending-champ- "It has: Wiser's Oldest - 18 years old." (And it's too good to save only for special occasions.) COISECR'S Drink a whisky that's older and Wiser's Wiser's De Luxe, 10 years old: Wiser's 101,6 years old: Wiser's Old, 5 years old, in a protective cartons Wiser's Special Blend, 4 years old. WISER'S DISTILLERY LIMITED, BELLEVILLE, CANADA Jackie McLeod sees_ trouble jenough getting past the Ameri- cans and the Czechs. The last game played before the champ- Wednesday, the one between jicans could be troublesome and All four players were penal-|the Czechs murderous. zed five minutes each for fight-| The stark 8-3 decision scored ng. \by the hard-skating Czechs un- Montreal Toe Blake|derrates the U.S. potential. But coach "The main thing is that it put} U.S. Coach Murray William-| offensive ardor of his players The Montreal victory elimin-|just enough so that at least| will hang back during the playoffs. The Red Wings,|power plays to guard against} fifth with 54 points, have six|breakaways. | games remaining and trail the| Coach McLeod said this 1s\ Canadiens by 13 points. preparing his Canadians to ex-| es KS PYAD Koqy se as a Montreal goalie Rogatien |Vachon, who made 38 saves. | The game was marred by an} joutbreak in the first period in-| |volving Jim Pappin and Larry} | Hillman of the Leafs and Terry| [Harper and John Ferguson of | |the Canadiens. Hillman and Ferguson traded | punches while Harper was the | NHL STARS | | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Jean-Claudle Tremblay, who {scored two goals to spark Mont-| real Canadiens to a 5-3 victory) jover Toronto Maple Leafs. Vic Hadfield, whose second} goal of the. game in the third| match of the Mitropa Cup quar-|shot rock and missed by two) Stan Mikita, the Hawks flashy|period earned New York Ran- gers a 3-3 tie with Chicago Black Hawks. In other final rounds, the U.S. | Norway 9-5 and In the sixth round earlier in| the day, Canada whipped France 17-4, the U.S. defeated 12 - 4, Switzerland downed Germany 14-6 and Scot- land defeated Norway 13-3. THE STANDING | By THE CANADIAN PRESS } Final standings in the world) curling championship at Perth,. Scotland. Top four meet in} 'knockout tournament today. | PW U.S. Canada Scotland Sweden Switzerland France Germany Norway IAAI eer Aannwwesoe OSHAWA TIMES | PICTURE | RE-PRINTS NU-WAY PHOTO | SERVICE | 251 King St. E., Oshawe 8 x 10 -- 1.50 each Sx 7-- 1.25 each 20% Discount on Orders of S er More Pictures and Breathtaking Interi SCHOFIELD-AKER Beau Valley "THE MOST PLEASANT PLACE TO LIVE" by Kassinger The Location The Setting The advanced method of construction The Quality and The Beauty of the Homes Are Unquestionable | Without Comparison In Oshawa 10 different Model Homes with Delightful Styling TO KEEP BEAU VALLEY HOMES SPARKLING CLEAN, THESE HOMES ARE SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT ONLY or are on display now. LTD. -- 723-2265 SPECIAL ! -- DISCONTINUED LINE : SLAB ANDLOUVRED-PINE AND MAHOGANY BI-FOLD DOORS os From 2' to 4' wide openings q 6' 6" High Complete With Hardware g PRICES STARTING AT . 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