PAGE FIFTEEN BOWLING NEWS OSHAWA ain: this week, most teams were shorthanded. Hope we'll see an im- | provement in the attendance next week at the half-way mark of the | last section. The standing of the | teams changed not a bit after Thursday night's bowling. The Cans | and Crates remained in first and second spots as they fought tu : tie. The Covers had the advantage DAIRY LEAGUE I "of two extra men as tae) .are all in there fighting for the hon- SY the Cappers 3-1, Defeating the Caps to the tune of 3-1, the Carriers are still tied with the Covers in third spot. Art Lymer was high bowler with 656 followed by Vera Sargeant 649; Stan Sargeant 644; Elwood Hager- man 618; Bruce Henderson 618; Tom Neal 617; Bill hg kg ee High Singles were rolled by: A 226, 254; Stan Sargeant 236; i) Hagerman 227; Bill Gouldburn 231; | . 'Henderson 251; Ken Gibson 246; Tom Neal 254; Grace Suddard 215; Doug. Hart 230; Vera Sargeant 204; Bruce Henderson 254. Lemon League: Jean Boyd 87; Joyce Hart 98. Prizes were won by 'Helen Hender- son, Bruce Henderson and Art Ly- mer, Vera's Cans Claire's Crates Stan's Covers Grace's Carriers Tom's Caps Ed's Cappers MOTOR CITY MEN'S LEAGUE Four teams are tied up on the top rung, and to three of them it really means business. Gay Construction has already earned a play-off berth, but Skinner's, Rinker's and Fittings ours in this final section. Gay's this week trimmed Jury and Lovell for all three points. Alex McKay was high man tor the winners with 773 and Fred Ashworth rolled 740. No one on the Druggist squad showed a 700 triple. wounner's Limited whitewashed Duplate Limited, who also failed to tally a 700 score. Bill Metcalfe and Bob Hess for Skinner's had 727 and 725. Rinker's Cleaners cleaned up on Berg's Men's Wear for three coun- ters. Chuck Harrott, for Rinker's, turned in 795 t5zv), with Ab. Moss hitting 783 and Pop Bemis 722. On Berg's sheet, Wib Newlands racked up 758. Fittings Limiter ° were up against sally stiff ,oousition this week. They mé& the hard-hitting Burns' Jewellers, who chalked up the high included a single which must be team triple of the night, 3743. This somewhat of a record--1522 (low score in this total was 279!). However, Fittings' triple was a scant 24 pins behind that of Burns' and was suf- ficient to net them two points on games. Ron. Keeler, for Fittings, was in great form, toppling a total of 907 (333), high for the night. Stan. Brooks had 771 (330) and Don Storie had 712. Burns' showed four men over the 700 mark. Bill Fisher had To; Lou Hyman 755 (315); Alex Donaldson 748 (347); Sonny Bircham Gay Construction .... Skinner's Limited .. Rinker"s Cleaners ..... Fittings Limited Burns' Jewellérs Jury & Lovell Duplate Limited ..... Berg's Men's Wear MAYFAIR INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE The entire picture in the race for the last section, changed last night. Maytair Grill after tying the first game and winning the second by a scant 50 pins, finally took tne game, with the hap of 3 head pins | in a row by Libby's in the iast| frame, thus giving all the 4 points and a tie for the rirst piace with Zel- lers. The Zellers crew having grab- bed up 3 points from Oshawa wood Box, without the aid of some poor | bowling by A. Kuney, J. Ristich and | P, Shody. Mayfair Boys turned on | the neat as three men went over the | 800 mark and one got over Tou. ri. neliuck rolled a neat 369 for high | single with handicap. This was | done at the expense of the Alger | Press team who managed only one point. Hobbs Glass had a rough | night with Dixons and dropped points, High Singles: H. Kelloch 369, W. Zacharko 299, A. Davidson 285, B. Blake 279, B, Clayton 276, B. uiin- | unette 287, J. Masowich 276, H. Price 263 A, Callisen 264, A. Barta 264, | S. McKinlay 255, B. Turnstall 253. | High Triples: 'H. Kelluck 757, M. | Dutchack 699, S. McKinlay 695, J.! Masowich 678, B. Clayton 667, B. Minnette 661, H. Price 672, B. tun- cock 634, W. Zacharko 634, B. Blake | 633, B. Turnstall 636, E. Jordan 628, B. Barta 612, B. Fry, 609, E. Weber wu Team Standings Zellers ...... ... a Mayfair Grill' Alger Press Hobbs Glass . Dixons Coal .. Libbys ... ....... Mayfair Boys .... v2 13 G.M.C. CUTTING AND SEWING Team Standing Alley Cats ............. ollers ..... Deuces ........aes Slack Cats....:... Lucky Strikes ... Aces . 1721784 1721880 | vo 1T--sdino | sees 17--21386 | +. 16--22264 | . - 16-2193 PERE TP sesssnsannnne add Pins Lucky Six Happy Gang aul wsORS .e Honor Roll: 'Ladies' 'High Sing with H.C. 8S. Patrick 358; Gent's | High Single with H.C. B. Dingley | 379; Ladies' High Triple with H.C. | 8. Cardinal 880; Gents' High Triple with H.C. B. Dingley 921 and Team | i Single with H.C. Lucky Strikes A. Fitches, D. A. Bickell and | Lemon League: Cairney, N. Fines, J. Parfitt. i iL seems as though the news comes in spurts. Last week there was prao- vay lultiaig Wo aepUle, LIS week | there is practically nothing we shouldn't report. Starting at the top, we see that it | was an underdog's night. In each case tne high lean Was vIOURIL sUW | by the determined underdog, This, badly upset the siaDuiigo. wie, « 8st place Tot Dogs remained in the sante position and they're feelin' mighty low. Rollers take over top spot as Alley Cats dropped four .to | Deuces and slipped to second in the | tour place tie for top honors. Deuces | and Black Cats are also in the top| spot tie with Lucky Strikes and | Aces just one point' behind. It looks | like a photo finish for this section. | Scores were excellent with nine | over seven hundred and another nine over six-fifty. At a closer look | we notice that they are still trying to top Bert Dingley's high single. Lorn Keech came within rour pins of this with a 376 game. Better luck "ext time Lorne, but we think since % has held this since the first sharks for the night. The 650 class | vestigate night perhaps 'he deserves to keep it. As you would expect Lorne Keech rolled top triple for the night with an 805 triple. Leo Parks 754, Lillian Hamlyn 745, Ken Cowle 741, Bud Perry 737, Ruby Spanner 733, Bill Rod Hendrie with 707 makes up the Rowden 714, Marie Williams 710, and was lead by Bill Harmer with 694, followed by Anne Reece 691, Elsa Cardinal and Rudy Pine 679, Jean Falconer 675, 'Mike' Pilatzke 677, Muriel Muelmeester 670, Floyd Gavas 662, and Len Tyrrell 650. Eleven others made 600 or over. Not bad at all! Doreen Foley ' bowled only 520 but wanted to be mentioned because the rest of her team did O.K. and she had a sore finger or something. The Lemon League lgst three and picked up one leaving them with five, Don't forget to get your entries for the G.M.C. Tournament In by next | Friday, March 23rd. Sports Commentor Has British Rughy Officials In Tizzy By EDWIN S. JOHNSON Canadian Press Staff Writer London, March--(CP) -- Charges that under-the-counter payments are being distributed among ama- teur rugby players in Britain and allegations of other shady practices, have provoked a storm of trouble for G. V. Wynne-Jones, top-rank- ing Sports Commentator for the British Broadcgéting Corporation. The charges, made in "Sports | Commentary," a recently- -published | book by Wynne-Jones, brought | quick action from Rugby authori- | ties. The author, assigned to broadcast a running account -of the International match between | Wales and Ireland at Cardiff | (March 10) was barred from the grounds by the Welsh Ruby Union. The decision was taken after the BBC refused to withdraw him. | It was a chapter entitled "Back- | Room Boys of Sport" that offend- | ed the Rugby chiefs. This is What the author said: "We know that Hany al player has drawn expenses in ex- | cess of his actual outgoings. We know too, as indeed do members of the Rugby Union, that some clubs make a habit of remunerating their players. "In Wales in does happen with | certain clubs and in England too, it needs a bit of explaining why, at some periods, there has been a great influx of Welsh men to some | Western clubs of England. ". . # Things I have said may be difficult to prove, but I aver that I have seen money change hands | at the end of games in such quan- | tities that it penses." Union's Reaction After 'the book was published | { Rugby Union officials called on Wynne-Jones to produce the names of the Clubs involved. He offered to disclose the in- formation in confidence. The union, however, replied that such an undertaking could not be given as the purpose was to in- the + allegations openly and take strong action should they be substantiated. Indignant over the ban imposed and the stand taken by the Union, Wynne-Jones protested he was be- ing pilloried for telling the truth. "I did not wish to bring anyone into trouble or Welsh Rugby into disrepute," he said. "What I have written I stand by and I am still | willing to meet .the Union and | | give them the information they re- quire in confidence." | A Union spokesman said the | question would be dealt with fur-| ther at the next meeting of the | | organization, and added: "It is| easy to make such allegations but | they must be. proved." Classified ads are sure to pay -- Phone 35 with yours today \ WIT, i PRICES / ON TERMS "A 1174 A THIS POWERFUL 8.F.GOODRICH BATTERY 209% DOWN Easy Monthly Terms! B.F. Goodrich Store King at Ritson Phone 247 far exceeded ex- | * Sport Shorts From Britain By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer London, March 17--(CP)--They take their soccer so seriously in these islands that a really big vic- tory for the home team on Saturday means more work 'the following week in office, mine and factory. Defeat, on the other hand, means gespongency and drooping produc- tion. This link between the football field and the workshop is unearthed in a 25-page pamphlet just publish- ed by a Government Research Group, Political and Economic Plan- ning. Intrigued by the social impact of Britain's greatest spectator sport, the researchers write: "Perhaps the most interesting... is the view put forward by many club managers that a team's vis- tories or defeats -- especially those suffered or enjoyed at home--have a psychological effect on the 'hard- core' supporters which is reflected in their standard of work during the week." Though the emotional "carry - over" may not be vivid in individ- ual cases, the report says, it does appear emphatically in group work. It is most noticeable in conditions where effort is related directly to output--for instance, in small en- gineering shops rather than in a large steel works. This certainly raises points for the statisicians. Next time coal pro- duction drops, they can blame it all on ' Little Piddlington's lucky victory over the coal miners fhom Upper Whipsnade. The pamphlet has other inter- esting' things to say. In terms of paid - attendances, it notes, soccer is by far the most popular of all qx Copr. 1981, Fiold Enterprises, uc. All rights reserved "Just pay no attention . . . that's Henry . . . and he'll never let you forget that he stroked Number 8 oar at Cornell . .." British games, Every year between 70,000,000 and 80,000,000 spectators attend games across the country. This compares with 50,000,000 for dog .racing, which operates all the year round; 12,000,000 for speedway racing and 5,000.000 for cricket. Thus Britain, branded by Napol- eon as a nation of shopkeepers, | teams with open arms. thing, heavily-populated London Borough | seems to have become in the 20th century a nation of spectators. "They say in the North of Eng- land that the sound of a referee's whistle down 'a pit-shaft will bring up a complete football team," says political and economic planning. ",..harsh critics might be tempted to add that it would also attract 20 times as many spectators." Local authorities welcome soccer For one says the spokesman for a Eddie Haddad Home, Recovering from His. Shoulder Operation Victoria, March 15--(CP) --Petty Officer Eddie Haddad, a Navy lad with ballet form and volcanic fists, is fighting to beat the count toll- ing over his athletic career. The fight didn't seem a tough one when it started, not for the Winni- peg-born southpaw, whose fists car- ried him into the 1948 Olympics and the British Empire Games in New Zealand. Haddad was serving aboard the Canadian destroyer Athabaskan in Korean waters when a nagging pain started in his left shoulder, a paih that increased until the arm was nearly useless. Examination showed a torn shoul- der muscle, a souveni*r of a ring battle, and it was the sick bay for Eddie. He was flown home and an operation followed. Now the 23-year-old battler is re- cuperating, down to 130 pounds, but hiding his health troubles with a steady grin. He's looking forward to a long- delayed shore leave with the girl he married two months before sail- ing for Korea -- and some day stepping back into a boxing ring. "Just wait," he says, "until I get home and start tying on the feed bag properly." An indication of the swinging sailor's future, health allowing, is the boxing coups he has pulled in the past. He won 46 of 48 fights. '23 of them | club buildings pay higher rates than an qrdinary area under dwellings, and p! services such as cleaning and lighting are not required to the same extent in the area of a stad- ium. Winning clubs attract money, proprietors in one area reporting | an increase In sales of 20-25 per- by knockouts. In 1948; he won the Dominion and Western Canadian lightweight titles. He went to the quarter-finals in the Olympics be- fore losing on a decision scorned by the British Press. He received The Norton H. Crowe Memorial Award, as Canada's outstanding Male Ath- lete, along with other honors. From then on Haddad was busy pleasing the Navy. He made the Empire Games trip but there, too, he had to fight injury as well as his opponent in the ring. All the punching power was gone from his right hand, and the shoul- der pained him continually. He lost in the first round of the eliminas tions and hasn't boxed since. a The shoulder trouble recurred when arduous, duties in the Korean theatre aggravated the injury. NEW METHOD DARTMOUTH, NS--(CP) -- A ° revolutionary method of housing construction 'using 'foamed slag, manufactured at Sydney, is being adopted by a local comp:ny, One house already built is believed the first such in Canada, although the method has been developed in Brit= ain. 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