Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 4 Jan 1956, p. 14

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44 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Wednesday, January 4, 1956 "Silent Treatment' Is Not Snobbishness TOUGH LUCK STILL - Canada Ski Team Member. Canadian Skiers Say It's Psychology By DON PEACOCK now, broke into bigtime Canadian|Snow caved in under him at the foot of a slope in thy. Fatineau Canadian Press Siafl Writer hills north of here. He broke his Sp | skiing by winning, at 15, the Que- Ca a Andy Tommy. Breaks Leg, OTTAWA (CP)--Hilltop psychol- ST. ANTON, Austria (CP)--Andy| pital before we go to Cortina, we'll ogy can be unnerving at the last Tommy of Ottawa, 23 - year - old|take him along with us, even if minute in an international skiing member of Canada's Olympic skijhe won't be able to ski," said Mrs. competition, say two Ottawa olym- bec Taschereau senior B downhill. | i | They've shared similar honors re- right leg" gularly since. Art, meanwhile, carried. the When Andy flashes down the Tammy colors to victory in the ] month he'll| Canadian slalom championship last {team, will be operated on today Ramage pic skiers. slopes of Italy next e'll| Ca Ne al for a double fracture of his right! In Oftawa, W. G. (Budd) Clark,| "It isn't snobbishness,"" says represent a major triumph of mind|winter on the same flying mile a leg. president of the Canadian Amateur| Andy Tommy of the silent treat- over matter. His troubles started Tremblant, He also took the Que Tommy, who thrice before in the Ski Association, was surprised and ment he's had from top European With a broken left ankle in 1952./bec Kandahar downhill, slalom last four years had suffered broken saddened to learn of Andy's acci-| skiers in races abroad. "It's all He got over that and was warming and combined. bones, slipped Tuesday while prac- dent. He said he doubts if there is| psychology." up at Stowe, Vt. late the next ANOTHER BREAK tising on a slalom course here time tn send a replacement. "You can't Help but be. affected winter for the United States na- He and Andy were on their wa) "He twisted his leg, and they Sending a replacement, Clark by it.' added b % u Art. "It ¢ tional championships when he fell to Sun Valley, Idaho, for a crac think it broke even before he fell,' said, depends on whether the ath- y ol ce rother Art. €an and shattered his left hip and at the U.S. nationals when they Cay TOR profes! comm And 1 given terfer clubs, Tha 100 8 ers V anny SPORTS MENU International League Accepts Miami League MIAMI, Fla. (AP) the International Baseball League| voted Miami into the league Tues day after being assured the team will have stadium facilities here. Miami will replace Syracuse when the league opens its 154-game schedule April 18 The league unanimously en dorsed the proposal of Sid Salo- mon, Jr., St. Louis insurance ex- ecutive, to transfer the Syrcause franchise to Miami after Salomon received a verbal agreement from the city commission on the club's ways been violets, Andy said he won his first big race in 1946 when he captured the| (eastern Canada junior downhill and slalom combined champion- ship at the age of 14. Art, who's 21 "Everything from Soup to Nuts" by Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR SELL TO ROYALS CHARLESTON, W. Va. (AP)--| Charleston Senators of the Amer- ican Association announced Sun- day the sale of Leo Christante,! 29-year-old righthanded pitcher, tol Montreal of the International |League. He had a 1-1 record with Little League May Have Buffalo last year. -- | Its Iujunction Lifted | HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS: uci mbit eral Judge Frederick V. Follmer, has extended until Friday a tem- By THE CANADIAN PRESS Exhibition HOCKEY FANS of the arca are getting a special apreal to night. Whitby Dunlops Senior "B"" hockey club are adding a spe- cial feature to their home game in the County Town tonight. They have added the sum of ten cents (.10¢) to the regular admission prices--and the sum total] end of this extra levy is to the Kitchener-Waterloo Dutchmen. The Dutchmen, head overseas for the 1956 Olympic Games (and world's hockey cham- pionship) are seeking financial assistance. Quite a few clubs are giving the Dutchmen a direct donation. Whitby Dunlops have seen fit to charge an extra "dime" for their tickets to tonight's sched- uled game and the proceeds go to the K-W Dutchmen. It's King- ston Goodyears in Whitby tonight so for the real hockey fan, this looms as a special attraction. said Mrs. Patsy Ramage of Brant- lete could get away on short no- dq gt . thigh. were involved in a motor accident ford, Ont., leader of the team.'tice and whether the necessary, The Tommy brothers were dis- Doctors said he'd never ski near Woodstock, Ont. Art suffered "We've got one of the best bone money could be raised. jcussing in an interview the dif- again. They had to do considerable a hroken leg and hurt his back surgeons looking after him." Ken Farmer, president of the ficulties they expect to find when phone-grafting just to keep him = The Tommys' injuries, plus The accident left only Tommy's Canadian Olympic Federation, said | they, along' with eight other Cana-| walking. broken legs for two top womer brother Art and Andre Bertrand of in Montreal he doesn't think it|dian skiers, represent Canada in| But Andy set out gingerly on skiers -- Ottawa's Anne Heggiveit Quebec Ci'y to compete for Can-| could be practical to try to get a/the winter Olympics at Cortina, cross-country skiing jaunts before and Monique Langlais of Quebet ada in the alpine section of the replacement. {Italy, Jan. 26 to Feb. 5. the next winter ended. He got a Cijty.created a piroticm for the Olympics, to be held at Cortina He said that while entries do not PLUS PSYCHOLOGY job with a survey party and spent Canadian Amateur Ski Association, d'Ampezzo, Italy, later this month. close until Jan. 10, it would be! There are plenty of obstacles to the summer climbing mountains whose' job it was to select the WILL TAKE HIM 'necessary to get a replacement in overcome before they get to Itlay, and hills in the Yukon. Imembers of Canada's Olympic "If Andy is released from hos- shape to send to Italy. but even then there's this psy- BACK IN THE GAME team. . i [Cana business. | It paid off. Last February he| The CASA finally Seided te . ! : Art and Andy had a taste of it, whistled down the flying mile atiname all four of the injure ers » B.C. Lions Club Notre Dame Grid Star last Winter dosing an unofficial Mont Tremblant, Que. ® Win the to the team on {ondition they past : : : : H our they made of several Euro-| Ryan Cup giant slalom. He added a stiff medical examination an a Made Most Money | Signs With Philadelphia pean countries including Italy, the Quebec provincial slalom prove themselves in a training | PHILADELPHIA (AP) Don Austria and Switzeniand, They en- championship to his Jurels. u period in Canada before they A | Schaefer, Notre Dame's all-Amer- tered several races against some "I thought it was all over then," leave. Any Football Club ica fullback and a star running|of Europe's best. The silent treat- he said, referring to his accidents,| Art and Andy passed the medi. VANCOUVER (CP) -- The 1655 ouarterback, has signed up with| ment, they said, was the same in "but I did it again last spring." cal examination. ; x i 5... the Philadelphia Eagles of the Na-{3. of them. : 4 ' - ? h 4 . ania] Statement for British tional Football League. the Eagles| They (Jonlant sven look at . . i ee 3 A ¥ Rinlde 0 3 4 Columbia Lions, it was reported announced Tuesday night. you." sai ndy, eldest of the atten oT SER Tr SA mr ll Ni 38 orem tui 1 Tuesday night. will show the great | brothers at 23. "It made you won-| i ' {est profit ever recorded by a Cana- der what you were doing there." CANADIANS PLAY CZECHS IN DEM UNSTRATION HOCKEY GAME dian football team. terprovincial Football Union team | He said the other competitors The Harringay Racers, an | above, as they drove a goal into | hone to get much practice from | senta'ives, Kitchener - Waterloo | The report said the statement, cerried a $57,000 surplus into 1953) stuck © Hlemselves between races. English Hockey I ue pro- the Czech met, during a demon- | the games with Canadian play- | Dutchmen, in the upcoming to be released later today, willand now has an accumulated sur- pen y ile the entrants are wait- fessional team composed m=in- = stration game in Prague. TI ers so as to be in better posi- | world's championship ~tourna- show a surplus of more than $38,- plus of more than $145,000, the ren jug at Ve 109 of he trail for their ty of Canadian players, is shown teams from behind the curtain tion to face the Canada repre- | ment. 000 for the year. The We-tern In- port said. bi Bi isp RY lone Canadians. | | The brothers, with a d-na- | ' , good-na-| | tured shrug, seemed to accept the 'Toronto St. Mike s | psychology as just another part of | | competitive skiing. 'Beat Ottawa Team |SKIERS AY FIVE | H v Art and Andy- have been skiing | OTTAWA (CP) Toronto St. _. ny ng skiing Michael's Majors of the OHA Jun-|Since they were five. It hasn't al:| ior A League Tuesday night de-| feated Shamrocks of the Ottawa Directors ofjuse of Miami Stadium. {rom Richmond, the southernmost junior cit Joop 72 in an exhibition Salomon and his associates, Bill U.S. member, to Havana Shamrocks were bolstered by the Veeck, former president of the President Roberto Maduro of the dditio 15 their lineup of five Cleveland Indians, and Elliott Stein Havana club predicted that Miami hig from other PR city St. Louis investment banker, would draw 400,000 customers in teams. i J bf | bought the franchise from Martin its first season in the league I At | Haske for a reported $100,000. Montreal will be at Columbus, HaRAk Mhoslich scored yore GOAL IS MAJORS Toronto at Richmond, Buffalo at Howard Frank Sullivan. Noel The ultimate goal is to get Miami; Miami and Rochester at Havana Price and Nick Foster netted one into the major leagues, Salomon in the league's opening games. goal each Shamrock scorers were said, and he hopes that possibility| Northern cities will open at home Rovden Kealey and Phil Fong will materialize in four to five! May 2, with Columbus at Mont- = . - go to shortly to year real, Richmond at Toron'o, Miami Entry of Miami will break up| at Buffalo and Havana at Roches- the long trip the teams must make! ter. This Lumley Tries To Put Puck In Net OWEN SOUND (CP A pair of goals by Johnny Lumley sparked porary injunction barring former Little league commissioner Carl E. Stotz from forming a rival or- The high-stepping' Whitby Dunlops, leading the league by a comfortable margin and filled with the zest of conquest and OHA Junior B Simcoe 9 Seaforth 6 DH A FETE VR oe E Ek a PE ac Sila EE tA NWS 3 PERTERETLAL - new fields to conquer, are making what looks like an honest bid # to enter Senior "OHA" ranks next season. In our opinion, they should be prepared to .de something for the K-W Dutchmen on their own (if only from a good-will gesture standpoint) but be that as it may, they are going te pass along to Canada's Olym- pic Games representatives the excess profit that may be ac- crued tonight by charging the fans a dime extra. K-W Dutchmen have named Bobby Aftersley, Whithy's scoring star, as a possi- ble replacement but the facts are general knowledge, if they have enough of their own, few of the replacements named will get the trip overseas. Maybe they are saving it as a surprise, but Dunlops would be making a smart move, if they matched every extra dime turned in tonight--and so give the Dutchmen a worth-while contribution. ST. THOMAS ELGINS aren't fooling! Latest home of the 1955 Inter-County senior baseball word from the champions is that this week-end to establish r i baseman Aub Edwards, Ray Urban, hitti outfielder and pitch er Gene Florcyk. Don Butler has already e ished residenee he's '""firing" on the Chesapeake and Ohio ay and they expect Mare Reaume back in the fold--but y can he, before the hockey season ends? They plan a gala Fan Club night on the 16th of this month, with Commissioner John Gillies as one of the panel to answer questions. Warning boys, don't John the first he'll talk so long ng an a r that nobody e get a chance to anything--even if they knew the idence in St. Thomas. Thev are also ask ques tion---or will answers Simcoe Hall--Get-To-Gether Club Junior basketball team, the Golden Bears, are to play at home (Simcoe Hall gym) to- night against Central Collegiate Juniors. On Friday night at the OCVI gym, the Bears take on OCVI seniors. If the Bears fail to take Central Juniors--they should give up for the season, but aside from the relative abilities of the two teams, it should provide some interesting entertainment. Tom Olynik is current. ly setting the scoring pace for the Golden Bears with Brent Old- field and Jack Owens running a close 2nd and 3rd. Tonight's game at Simcoe Hall is called for 8.30 p.m. and it's eight o'- clock on Friday at OCVL BRIGHT BITS: Andy Tommy. a Canadian ski sta= who has suf ered broken bones in hip, leg and ankle and had to take a spe- in order to qualify for Canada's ski has suffered a double leg fracture on an Austrian ski course Actually it may be a good 'break' for Andy Tommy, because ac- despite the ballvhoo we shouldn't expect Canada many points in Olympic competition LOCAL that K-W Dutchmen ames but actually, while they lead the Senior by 14 points--they've played seven more games second-place Windsor team HENRI RICHARD, ac from Montreal Canadiens, will be out of action PITTSBURGH foothall club has not squawked too if they didn't much of a break from t in the Sugar Bowl game yesterday ASSOCIA. TED PRESS poll has named Ho d (Hopalong) Cassady, Ohio State's all-Ame an football star United States male ath What happened baseball track-and- cial medical examination test team tual really ski to cop too HOCKEY t thei enthusiast points out not only have last thr a report t begins to look as get e officials as No. 1 of the vea y field men. et Richard Brothers Pace Habs But Beliveau Retains Lead MONTREAL (CP)--Five teams in the ional Hockey League are wishing some of the bro'herly love ith Christmas and New vould rub off on Montreal's hrot stars, to their shut out in their other start last Maurice, making another deter- mined bid for the scoring crown that has always avoided him in his brilliant 13-year carcer, fired twe goals and picked up four assists to climb from fourth place to the runner-up Ss the individual race, Henri, a leading contender for the Calder rookie trophy, potted one goal and four assists to climb connected Yea Richard Maurice .and his i did to the oppo eck was any 'he s~a- hev accounted for two games liens were eleran ther Her ames } nirit of victories. The Can: both SBEST QUALITY STOVE OIL 3 Dial RA 5-109 20 10 v an. VIGOR OIL CO. LTD. . OSHAWA ® Prompt Delivery! Ee ® 0 ° c - ° ° c - "vw ® 2 a ® ~ © «= Oo z o "w - £3 Owen Sound Mercurys to a 4-3 win over Windsor Bulldogs in a rugged hard-hitting Ontario Hockey Asso- ciation 'Senior A game Tuesday nignt, The win lifted the Mercs to within three points of the Bulldogs who are tied with Stratford for second ce in the league standings Ed Louttit and Jerry Reid were the other goal scorers for Owen Sound who led 1-0 and 3-1 at the | rest periods. Gord Haidy connected twice for Windsor, and Walt Pawlyshyn once, Owen Sound outshot the Bulldogs 37-20 but misfired on several good chances HIT WITH STICK A third-period skirmish ened to erupt into more rouble when Windsors Jack Arm trong clouted Tom Jamieson over the top of the head with his stick Armstré'lr was given a major penalty. The had been stopped 1 to e Windsor goalie a nenalty for slashing. with a man advantage yulled Dale for the last 50 seconds scored one goal with 10 sec- left. But time ran out on threat- serious from 20th place to a tie for 15th with 24 points Big Jean Beliveau of the Cana liens still has a comfortable four-- lead over Maurice in first Beliveau has 23 goals, tops in the league, and 21 assists for 44 points. The Rocket has 22 goals and 18 assists Andy Bathgate of New York had another good week. picking up four points to retain third place with 19 points. Bert Olmstead of the Canadiens was held to a single 15sist and toppled from second to fourth place with 38. His 31 assists are the most by any player, how- ever Gordie Howe of Detroit picked up four points and held fifth place with 37 points. There's a six-point drop to the next man Dave Creighton of New York. Lined up hehind him are Alex Delvecchio of poin* place Petroit with 30, Tod Sloan of Tor-| onto with 29 and' Earl Reibel of Detroit and Doug Harvey of Mont- real with 28 apiece HEADS GOALIES Jacques Plante of Montreal re- mained comfortably in command of he goalies' battle for the Vezina Trophy honors. Plante's personal average is 1.56 goals per game, but the team average that counts for the trophyv--is 1.63 Glenn Hall of Detroit is in sec- ond place with a 2.05 average and Gump Worsley of New York is third with a 2.34 mark. Hall had the most shutouts--seven Defenceman Lou Fontinato of New York ran his penalty total for the season to an hour and 40 min- utes, the same as Ted Lindsay's of Detroit, ---------- - ------ the one Boston (NHL) 4 Providence (AHL) ) Mon'real (NHL) 4 Shawinigan Atlantic Senior Amherst 4 Fredericton 6 Laurier Trophy Marlboros 1 Montreal 2 Exhibition St. Michael's (OHA Jr tawa 2 OHA Senior B Whitby 3 Belleville § Elmira 6 London 2 Dundas 1 Crowland 8 Fort Erie 7 Port Colborne ? Stamford 4 Niagara Falls 1 Junior Habs Edge Marlies MONTREAL (CP)--Andre Pro- novost's goal late in the third per- iod Tu v night proved the clincher Montreal junior Cana- diens took a 2-1 victory from Tor- onto Marlboros in a ragged, close- checking game played before 2,326 fans. was the Canadiens' second Laurier Trophy win over the Tor- onto club and increased Montreal's lead over the rest of the pack to even point Claude Ruel gave Montreal a 1-0 lead in the middle period while Bob Pulford of the Marlies watched from the penalty box and at 11:44 of the final stanza, Ken Girard tied it up while the junior Cana- diens were shorthanded Both clubs were at full strength when the Montreal captain let fly with a hard 10-foot shot while he was being checked by Toronto de- fenceman Harry N Castellani Seeks 10th-Straight Win CLEVELAND (AP)--Rocky Cas- tellani will be shooting for his 10th straight victory at the Cleveland Arena and a step closer to a shot at the middleweight title when he meets Gene Fullmer in a 10-round bout at the arena tonight Castellani, a former coal miner from Luzerne, Pa., who now calls Cleveland his home, is the third- ranked middleweight behind cham- pion Sugar Ray Robinson and former champion Bobo Olson. U.S. Hockey Team Plans Ex. Games In Englan LONDON (AP) The United States ice hockey team will break its journey home from. the winter Olympics to play two games- in England--against Nottingham Pan- OFFICIAL WATCH FOR OUR OF OUR NEW SHOW ROOM 84 SIMCOE ST. S. Oshawa Wood Produds LIMITED OPENING Woodbrioge 3 Leaside 3 Dundas 2 Woodstock 5 OHA Intermediate A Lakefield 1 Cobourg 2 Bracebridge 10 Orillia 6 Mil'on 3 Stouffville 0 Durham 7 Meaford 8 7anization Follmer said Tuesday that he "pected to hand down a decision 'riday on whether to make the in- inction permanent or to dissolve it, thus giving Stotz the right to 10 ahead with his plans for a sec- md baseball organization for boys ght to 12 years old Little League obtained the tem- (porary injunction after Stotz filed a $300,000 breach of contract suit and announced plans for the rival group. The league removed Stotz OHA Intermediate B Dresden 1! Blenheim 4 OHA Junior C Parry Sound 13 Lindsay 9 Thunder Bay Junior iFt. W Canadiens 3 Ft. W Hurri- canes 1 Western League | Saskatoon 1 Winnipeg 6 filed have expired Thursday. The temporary injunction was to! REGULAR © PRICES 23 "CHOICE OF THE HOUSE" | as commissioner after his suit was 'Eskimo Grid Fans | 'Weren't Too Hanpy Even If Team Won MONTREAL (CP) -- Montreal EDMONTON (CP)--Edmonton's point lead over their nearest oppo- Grey Cup champion Eskimos willsition in the battle for the Laurier 'once again present a formal com- Trophy plaint" concerning the handling, The Canadiens, beaten only once and distribution of Grey Cup foot- nq tied three times in 13 starts ball tickets, treasurer Bruce Col- pau. 9 points--dive more than lins said Tuesday night Kitchener Canucks Collins, reporting to a meeting =~ mpo" ctandioc. of the Eskimo executive and the e stanoug affiliated Touchdown Club, said Eskimos, as a competing team in Montreal the Canadian grid final. received| Kitchener Montreal's Jr. Habs 'Have Five-Pt. Lead thers. Feb, Canada's team will play Paisley Pirates in_Scotland on Jan. 16 as a warm-up fot the Olympic HAVE YOU NOTICED YOUR OLD PLUMBING FIXTURES LATELY? and 3.200 of which went to season Hamilton the $5.50 range. He said the $6.50- [fhe "eh the field. He said this gave ""GOODYEARS" WHITBY ticket-holders in Edmonton Barrie ¢5.50 seats were behind the goal the club 2.800 unhappy seat hold- 20 and Brighton Feb Senior "'B"' VS. COMMUNITY 4,082 seats, 850 of which were St. Catharines He said that of the 4,082 seats,| 9, O07 ¢ line, 400 of the $8 seats were also ers at Vancouver eplit among club directors, play: Marlboros 2,392 were in the $8-a-seat bracket, behind the goal line and 700 of | Only 409 seats were between the " " | 'DUNLOPS \ PY . ers, press and radio and others St. Michael's 716 in the $6.50 range and 974 in! those seats on the cinder track SPORTS 35-yard lines. At 8:30 p.m. BREWING COMPANY LIMITED QUALITY FIXTURES ore QUALIFIED PLUMBER Coll L. B. 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